Week 24: Tom Grennan- What ifs and Maybes

Well, as you will recall, I had the pleasure of reviewing Tom’s previous album, “Evering Road”, which I enjoyed for his maturity and ability to show humility for all the things he had done wrong in past relationships. This time, he is back with “What ifs and Maybes”, which was tactically delayed to avoid a battle with Foo Fighters, and Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds—then postponed another week to avoid a fight with Niall Horan. This week, despite the competition, it was easier for Tom to take the top spot with his 80s-inspired album that echoes that of Abel Tesfaye, Coldplay, and Ellie Goulding of late.

The record opens with ‘How Does it Feel’, one of the teasers. It is an uplifting 80s synth-pop track that makes you want to dance. The second track, ‘Remind Me,’ is quite peculiar. I believe it’s a song about Tom’s forgetting lyrics when performing. Has this happened at all during performances? Tom fans, let me know. Also, what is apologising for? Something has happened in his life? Or forgetting lyrics during a performance? Going by “Evering Road”, I’d say the former.

My only complaint with the record, including on the Apple Music Edition, is that most tracks need to be longer. You get going with the uplifting melody, cancelling the melancholic lyrics, and then the song ends. I am trying to remember any song being over five minutes. The longest is over four minutes.  Some might moan that melancholic lyrics over uplifting melodies don’t work, but it’s been done for centuries and is still being done. How anyone can take issue with it is a right miserable bastard who doesn’t understand that art is abstract. ‘Crown Your Love’ is one of the slower ballads where Tom brings melancholy lyrics with an optimistic delivery, and why not? Not every ballad has to have a vocal delivery that matches the nature of the lyrics. It is pretty refreshing. He also adopts this on ‘Here’. It was nice to hear Tom move on from “Evering Road” with a more uptempo album. I like his take on 80s synth-pop mixed with slow ballads and, of course, conscious lyrics.

If you listened to the Apple Music Edition, as I did, you will like the club banger ‘Lionheart(Fearless) featuring Joel Corry. I have heard it in a FIFA game or something. Anyway, it is uplifting club music. I gave the album 7/10 for the tracks being too short and that some sounded like they were put on the record to add more tracks. Some even sound like B-sides.

Song recommendations: ‘How Does it Feel’, ‘Lionheart(Fearless)’, ‘Crown Your Love’

7/10

Week 15: Ellie Goulding- Higher than Heaven

Much criticism was given over her last “Brightest Blue” in 2020, with quite a few critics saying the album lacked excitement. I cannot remember what I said, but in all fairness, it was recorded during the lockdown, so if the record was more downtempo, then it is easy to understand why. This time Ellie has decided to bring more uplifting dance-like music. The album is full of synthesisers and thumping basslines. The record doesn’t give you time to settle because it is more like going to a club, and the DJ playing song after song that makes you not want to leave the dance floor. ‘Love Goes on’ is the only mid-tempo track, but even that still has some energy.

The album begins with ‘Midnight Dreams’ to start the disco-themed adventure and is followed by ‘Cure for Love’, a song about breaking up in a relationship with an infectious chorus. The title track shows off the best of Ellie’s vocals so far in her career. She then goes into that 80s disco, which has been used by the Weeknd of late on ‘Like a Savior’ and ‘Let it Die’. You will see what I mean by hearing them and the dirty deep bass on both.

What is a shame, but probably understandable on the record, given its disco and uplifting instrumentals, is that Ellie focuses less on her brilliant songwriting. Her vocals also need more energy on ‘By the End of the Night’. The record also ends with the trap beat inspired ‘How Long’, which seems totally out of place with the rest of the instrumentation that comes before it. I wonder why that happened. Ellie may be teasing her next album sound.

Regardless of the lack of songwriting and the peculiar addition of ending with trap, the album mostly doesn’t lack energy and is uplifting and fun to listen to. You feel alive and get this sense of being on that dance floor in the club. Also, what a way to shut your critics up who lambasted her last album.

Song recommendations: ‘Midnight Dreams’, ‘Like a Savior’, ‘Higher than Heaven’

8/10

Week 6: Celeste- Not Your Muse

I might put this in the bio somewhere because this is getting to be something of a soundbite on my reviews (Albeit it is utterly authentic.), but once again, it was through Later…with Jools Holland that I discovered Celeste. I remember she performed “Lately” and “Strange” with just her incredible vocals and the piano to accompany her (I’m pretty sure that Jools joined her on one of the tracks.). At the same time, the likes of Liam Gallagher looked on, on that October night in 2019 at the original home of the Later series. From there, Celeste would go on to more extraordinary things. In the year just past, she won BBC Sounds Artist of the Year, joining the likes of Adele, Ellie Goulding, and Michael Kiwanuka, and that’s an excellent accolade to claim to look at the success it has brought for the artists. I wouldn’t be at all surprised if Celeste followed their path. Since her debut, she has featured on Later twice to discuss the music she likes and what inspires her in the lockdown edition of the last series and the socially distanced 2021 Hootenanny on New Year’s Eve.

Of course, this long-awaited album has seen her popularity soar, and you hear her songs everywhere, from the supermarket to the radio to the television. If anyone complains about that, I don’t know why; she has such a fantastic voice and reminds me of a rising star back in 2006 called Corinne Bailey Rae, who was heading to the top until a setback put her career on hold. She is now steady in her career and will soon release an album that attracts mainstream listeners. My point is that Celeste sounds like her, and I will also throw in Lianne La Havas. I hear that when Celeste sings a mixture of Corinne Bailey Rae and Lianne La Havas, respectively. It’s not a bad combination if I say so myself.

When I was referring to Celeste’s tracks being pretty much everywhere, here are two examples I mean: You have “Stop This Flame”, a track with a piano riff that, when I heard it, felt very familiar to Rhythm is Rhythm’s “Strings of Life”, which in turn inspired Noel Gallagher to write “AKA…What a Life!”, so, yeah, the track sounds like those two combined. It is also very commercial, and one might be categorised under pop. It is also very different from the kind of music Celeste has sung or put out in the past. The uplifting tempo and optimistic lyrics encouraged Sky Sports to use it to open their Super Sunday programme since the start of the 2020/2021 football season. Of course, an advert was released in October last year to promote the Christmas period. The advert in question was for John Lewis/Waitrose, and the company chose Celeste’s “A Little Love”. You can certainly hear Lianne La Havas coming through in that one. The fantastic thing about Celeste is even if you are unaware of her, I guarantee you have listened to her wherever you have been, heard on the radio, or watched on the television. You might have bought a magazine, and there’s been an interview, article, or even an advert promoting her music. She is very much like her fellow winners of BBC Sounds because she can cause an earthquake with her vocals, be tender with almost a whisper, and sound fragile while delivering a song about heartbreak. For example, “Stop This Flame” shows off her ability to sing with passion and loud, “A Little Love” to sing very quietly and softly, and “Strange” where she can sing with a fragile voice and appear broken-hearted to match the song’s subject.

I disagree with the comparisons to Adele in terms of the vocals. I think elements of this album sound more like what the late Amy Winehouse would do (I should have mentioned her earlier in what this record sounds like. I felt it had Amy Winehouse-esque songs, sonically.), I can also imagine Mark Ronson teaming up with Celeste at some point and producing an album with her. Jamie Hartman is one of the producers on the album and has worked with the likes of Rag n Bone Man. The only comparison I can draw with Adele is how the record goes from pop to ballads with Celeste, just like Adele, singing with just an acoustic guitar to accompany her. Funnily enough, the album starts just like that. Celeste is singing “Ideal Woman” over just an acoustic guitar. Another comparison would be her ability to be melancholic and tracks of that nature. She doesn’t fake the delivery on the more sombre tracks. Just like an actor, she goes into character effortlessly.

Some have argued that this album is too safe and Celeste hasn’t taken any risks, but I beg to differ. I never expected her to try something like “Stop this Flame” or “Tonight Tonight”. I didn’t expect a Mark Ronson-inspired production with “Love is Back”It was an outstanding effort by Celeste, and there are a few surprises along the way on the album. I listened to the deluxe edition, so the record ends on her rendition of “Twinkle Twinkle Little Star”, which is an unusual way to end an album, but it works. I recommend buying or listening to “Not Your Muse” because Celeste is an incredibly talented artist, and more is to come from her.

Song recommendations: “Stop This Flame”, “Ideal Woman”, “Strange”

9/10

Week Thirty: Ellie Goulding- Brightest Blue

This is more like it. After last week’s piss-poor album on the top spot, we have an album that deserves to be there for its lyrical content, production, and delivery. I remember when I first heard Ellie (I’m pretty sure we all can.), it was the song that started it all for her back in 2010, “Starry Eyed”. Although it is not one of her best or even one of her favourites, in her own opinion, it was still a strong song, and the dubstep break was pure genius, considering how popular the genre was becoming around that time. I can’t say I know much about her debut 2009 single, “Under the Sheets”, which only charted at no.53, but no one will forget “Starry Eyed”, even though it only charted at no.4 and therefore isn’t her highest position of that year, let alone her career. It was everywhere. You walked into a shop, you heard it. You switched on the radio, you heard it. You went to a fast-food restaurant, heard it, switched on the music channels, and heard it. From all that promotion, it saw her debut album “Lights” hit the top spot in her homeland and chart at no.6 in Ireland. A year after being signed, all the hard work paid off in only the beginning of what has been an eleven-year career. She has since had success with the singles “Burn”, “Love Me Like You Do”, and “River”(“River” being a Joni Mitchell cover.) scoring top spots. And every album save for “Delirium”, which was her last, has reached the acme. Bizarrely, it has been half a decade since Ellie last released an album, and it appears that “Brightest Blue” was worth the wait.

This record has been recorded over three years, with the majority done in 2017. I heard a snippet of one of the tracks on the lockdown edition of Later…with Jools Holland. Now, it was difficult to gauge any opinion from it as, as I have mentioned, it was only a brief clip of the music video for “Power”, which subsequently was released a month after the show aired. From the snippet and Ellie’s discussion with Jools about “Brightest Blue”, it sounded promising. I will go into details of how that did indeed turn out to be the case.

The album starts strong and explosive in terms of the production and language with a track aptly named “Start”. The song features a crowd cheering, then Ellie starts to play the piano and what sounds like a slow jam with serpentwithfeet singing through a vocal tube. I don’t know what they are called, but the late Roger Troutman and Jodeci were big fans of utilising the device. Okay, so maybe I exaggerated a bit on the “explosive” part, but the production is, all the same, outstanding. I was leaning towards the language used by Ellie rather than the production. It doesn’t fit in with the slow jam, but it is refreshing to see Ellie pour out her feelings and go with them in a way she seldom sees in terms of swearing in a song.

“Tides” caught my attention much later in the record, and it sounds like a song produced by Jamie XX or, indeed, a song for the XX. I wasn’t too keen on the features as, once again, the artists resorted to using that dreaded autotune. It spoiled some potentially impressive tracks on the second disc, which only renders “Overture” and “Sixteen” worthy of listening.

“Wine Drunk” is a very short track, but you can tell that Bon Iver has inspired Ellie as she used the same vocal effects that Justin Vernon uses. The title track that ends the first disc is a powerful song, and when you look at the lyrical content, it is very poetic. Here is an example of what I mean:

“Even in the calmest seas, now it’s all I wanna be, a semi-precious mystery, yeah I love me more than you, doesn’t mean I can’t be true.”

I love lyrics like that. You could use it for rap as well as for just poetry. Ellie has done a great job on this record, and both discs end strongly with “Brightest Blue” and “Sixteen”.

Ellie is cementing her place in music history, and you can understand why she is still relevant with unique vocals, catchy choruses, lyrics that strike a chord, and her desire to mix up her songs. This is one of her best albums to date. “Brightest Blue” captures your imagination from the very first listen.

Recommendations: “Start”, “Ode to Myself”, “Woman”

8/10