New Music Musings

Favorite Songs of 2023 – Part 2

Happy Saturday and I’d like to welcome you to part 2 of my 2023 in review series. This second post highlights some of my favorite new songs that were released during the second half of the year. In case you missed it and are curious, part 1 is here.

The Arcadian Wild/Shoulders

Led by songwriters Isaac Horn (acoustic guitar, vocals) and Lincoln Mick (mandolin, vocals), with Bailey Warren on fiddle, The Arcadian Wild from Nashville, Tenn. have their roots in formal vocal music and influences from progressive bluegrass and folk. They have been around for about a decade and released their eponymous debut in 2015. From their third and new full-length album Welcome, here’s Shoulders – love that warm and beautiful sound!

Cordovas/Fallen Angels of Rock ‘n’ Roll

If you’ve followed my blog or know my music taste otherwise, you won’t be surprised to see Cordovas in this post. I’m a fan of this East Nashville, Tenn.-based Americana and country rock band. They were formed in 2011 by singer-songwriter, bassist and vocalist Joe Firstman after a six-year stint as bandleader for former NBC late-night show Last Call with Carson DalyCordovas who have named The Allman Brothers BandGrateful Dead and The Band as influences released their fourth and latest studio album The Rose of Aces in August. Here’s the fantastic opener Fallen Angels of Rock ‘n’ Roll co-written by Firstman and Cory Hanson, frontman of Los Angeles rock band Wand. If I would be asked to pick my favorite song of 2023, this would be it!

The Natvral/A Glass of Laughter

The Natvral is a music project of Kip Berman, who previously founded American indie rock band The Pains of Being Pure at Heart and was their main songwriter during their active period between 2007 and 2019. In April 2021, Berman released his debut solo album Tethers, and I included one of the tracks in a previous installment of this weekly feature. His sophomore project is titled Summer of No Light. Here’s A Glass of Laughter, a great folk rock tune penned by Berman. Just as I felt when listening to the above song from his debut album, I can hear a Bob Dylan vibe. Gosh, I love it, we need more artists like him!

Tré Burt/Traffic Fiction

Tré Burt is a Sacramento-based singer-songwriter I first included in an October 2020 installment of this series. During his childhood, he was exposed to music by The DelfonicsOtis ReddingMarvin Gaye and The Temptations. As he became a musician himself, he tapped into American folk and blues. Bits of those and other roots were reflected on the August 2021 studio album You, Yeah, You, the result of what Burt’s website calls his “first proper studio sessions.” His latest, titled Traffic Fiction, is an “alchemy of soul, dub, and more than a little punk.” Here’s the great-sounding title track penned by Burt – so good!

Jake Thistle/The Dreamer

Among young music artists I’ve come across, Jake Thistle is the one I feel most excited about. The 19-year-old singer-songwriter from New Jersey first entered my radar screen on Facebook in 2021. Last summer, I saw him perform a Jackson Browne tribute show at a free summer outdoor concert. Browne is one of the artists who’s not only an influence but who Thistle actually has met, along with the likes of Tom Petty, John Hiatt, Stevie Nicks and Foo Fighters – in fact, he played or shared bills with most of them! Following his June 2021 home-produced debut CD Down the Line, Thistle is now out with his first studio EP The Half Left Out (see my reviews here and here, respectively. My favorite track off the latter is The Dreamer, which reminds me of a young Jackson Browne.

Harp/Country Cathedral Drive

This brings me to my final pick in this 2003 songs in review mini-series. Harp is a music project created by musician and songwriter Tim Smith, which also includes his wife Kathi Zung. According to their AllMusic profile, Harp combines British folk rock, vintage alternative rock and prog rock. Smith initially gained prominence as the primary songwriter of Texas indie rock band Midlake who he co-founded in 1999. After his departure in 2012, he met and married Zung, an artist and puppet fabricator with a career in stop-motion animation, who also is a musician. Off AlbionHarp’s first album, here’s the gorgeous Country Cathedral Drive.

Following is a Spotify playlist of the above songs and 16 additional picks from the second half of the year. I hope you’re going to check out the playlist, which includes many other great songs I didn’t get to feature in this post.

Sources: Wikipedia; AllMusic; YouTube; Spotify

New Music Musings

The Natvral, Bakar, Dope Lemon, Frankie and the Witch Fingers, Hey Colossus and Joel Stoker

Happy Saturday and hope your weekend of off to a great start. It’s time to take another look at newly released music. Unless noted otherwise, all picks are included on albums that dropped yesterday (September 1).

The Natvral/A Glass of Laughter

The Natvral is a music project of Kip Berman, who previously founded American indie rock band The Pains of Being Pure at Heart and was their main songwriter during their active period between 2007 and 2019. In April 2021, Berman released his debut solo album Tethers, and I included one of the tracks in a previous installment of this weekly feature. Now he’s out with his sophomore project titled Summer of No Light. Here’s A Glass of Laughter, a great folk rock tune penned by Berman. Just as I felt when listening to the above song from his debut album, I can hear a Bob Dylan vibe.

Bakar/Right Here, For Now

Bakar (born Abubakar Baker Shariff-Farr) is a British experimental indie rock singer and songwriter. After debuting with the mixtape Badkid in May 2019, followed by the September 2019 EP Will You Be My Yellow?, Bakar released his first full-length album Nobody’s Home in February 2022. Right Here, For Now is from his second album Halo, which is scheduled for September 22. The song is credited to Bakar, Daniel Chetrit and Zach Nahome. The guitar sound reminds me a bit of Counting Crows.

Dope Lemon/Miami Baby

Dope Lemon is the solo project of Australian singer-songwriter Angus Stone. He’s another artist I previously featured with the title track of his fifth album Rose Pink Cadillac. Prior to releasing his April 2009 solo debut Smoking Gun under the moniker Lady of the Sunshine, Stone had been part of Angus & Julia Stone, a folk pop duo with his sister. From his upcoming sixth solo album Kimosabè (September 29), here’s Miami Baby, a song that got better each additional time I listened to it.

Frankie and the Witch Fingers/Empire

A band called Frankie and the Witch Fingers was bound to get my attention. Formed in Bloomington, Ind. in 2013 and now based in Los Angeles, the progressive psychedelic rock group was started as a solo outlet by Dylan Sizemore (vocals and rhythm guitar). Their debut effort Sidewalk appeared on cassette in 2013. Off their latest album Data Doom, here’s Empire. It’s a bit long but it rocks!

Hey Colossus/Curved in the Air

English rock band Hey Colossus have been around since 2003. Since the group came together in London, they have had various line-ups around their original members Robert Davis (guitar) and Joe Thompson (bass). On their Bandcamp, they describe their style as “‘heavy’ sound, DIY ethic, prolific output, and stylistic experimentation.” Curved in the Air is a track from the band’s latest studio album In Blood.

Joel Stoker/My Own War

Joel Stoker is best known as lead vocalist of The Rifles, an English indie rock band he co-founded in 2003, who have released five albums to date. Stoker’s Bandcamp notes his new solo debut The Undertow is very different, seeing him entering completely new sonic territory, the ’70s funk-flecked grooves, festival bangers and fiddle-assisted stomps reflecting touchstones ranging from Bob Marley to Arcade Fire to fellow Londoner Michael Kiwanuka. Stocker handled all vocals, guitar, bass and percussion. Brendan O’Neill, currently with Nine Below Zero and formerly with the late Rory Gallagher, provided drums, while Rifles member Dean Mumford played piano. Here’s My Own War, written by Stoker.

Sources: Wikipedia; The Natvral website; Last.fm; Dope Lemon website; Frankie and the Witch Fingers website; Hey Colossus Bandcamp page; Joel Stoker Bandcamp page; YouTube; Spotify