Categories
Albums

Best albums of 2023: #5 Pale Blue Eyes “This house”

Things are getting real now on this list of my favourite albums of 2023. The number five album comes care of a band that I’d never even heard of three months ago and now I can’t imagine this year without it.

Pale Blue Eyes were formed just a handful of years ago in southwestern England when married couple Lucy and Matt Board met Aubrey Simpson at a music festival. They recorded the bulk of their debut album amidst the lockdowns of the COVID pandemic and it was largely informed by the sudden death of Matt’s father. I have yet to listen to 2022’s “Souvenirs” but I have every intention of rectifying this in the very near future.

“This house” followed that debut by one day short of a year. This album is considered by the group to be the debut’s older and wiser sibling, not just because it benefited from the band’s ability to perform live and hone their craft and that it was recorded with the band together, rather than locked down in separate places. The sophomore record was finished in the shade of another parental death, this time after Matt’s mother had endured a long terminal illness. This was a sustained mourning rather than a bolt of lightning, but this mourning was extended to the ending of many things. The house on the cover, as an example, was the house that frontman Matt grew up in, where both of the band’s first records were recorded, and that needed to be sold, inciting the band’s relocation to another city.

Reading this, one might think that the music would be dour and melancholic, but this is not the case at all. The music is a blend of the various band members’ favourite music and so dream pop, jazz, electropop, and disco all bring an upbeat and hopeful feel to such difficult subject matter. It is 44 minutes of transporting music, songs that stick to your bones and seep into your skin, and make you want to live in the music and let it delay what comes next just a little while longer.

There isn’t one out of the eleven that I dislike but these three picks for you are ones pulled from those near the top of the heap.


“Takes me over“: “Surrounds me, like a living dream.” The first single released off the album nearly closes the album at track 10 of 11, practically the climax before the climax. It begins with a driving bass line that might be pulled from Peter Hook’s playbook and then the drums take over and we’re really off to the races. This frenetic track deals with release and how music can get you there. As Matt Board says, it’s about “embracing, processing and letting go through music making and any artistic or creative process”.

“Spaces”: Jangling guitars and shimmering synths and punishing rhythms, oh my. Matt Board’s vocals are there, right on top, urging us all on. “Forget about life. Forget about what was, it’s always changing. Let go, let go, let go. You’re already gone. These feelings, they’re temporary.” It’s another track that’ll leave you breathless by the end of its three minute duration. Pale Blue Eyes want you to accept change and get on with it and have a great time in so doing.

“Simmering”: This last one here is pure joy, the height of the evening, a night out with friends and forgetting all that ails you. It’s banding together for support and appreciating all the little things that add up to greatness. It is a driving guitar that doesn’t know where the brakes are. It is rapid fire drumming and a piece of 80s synths that teases and flirts. It’s Matt board asking “In the morning it’s over, where is my mind? Is this a party inside?” This is a song that would have had me on the dance floor in seconds back when I was young enough not to know my limits and didn’t care. And I still think it would get my butt out there. It’s so beautiful.


We’ll be back in a handful of days with album #4. In the meantime, here are the previous albums in this list:

10. Bodywash “I held the shape while I could”
9. Boygenius “The record”
8. Depeche Mode “Memento mori”
7. The Clientele “I am not there anymore”
6. Eyelids “A colossal waste of light”

You can also check out my Best Albums page here if you’re interested in my other favourite albums lists.

Categories
Playlists

Playlist: New tunes from 2023, part three

Ok. Fine. I’m really late with this one. I typically try to post my quarterly updates to my ongoing playlist featuring new tunes of the year within a couple of weeks of the end of the quarter. We’re getting near the middle of November and it’s already starting to feel like winter. Summer would normally be a distant memory… except…

Except it was an excellent summer.

I started off July at Ottawa’s Bluesfest and saw some excellent sets of music over the course of its just over a week and a half duration. Then, a road trip at the end of that month brought new experiences, beaches, a hike on a mountain ridge, great food, and craft beer. In August, there was a hiking trip in Algonquin park and in September, a quick getaway to squeeze in the last dregs of summer. Definitely one to remember, especially with all the other craziness going on in the world.

Musically, there wasn’t a lot of new music that came across my desk that caught my ears and attentions. However, and as you will see below, what there was was all very excellent and in fact, many of the albums in which these songs appear will likely find their way on my on to my year end best albums list*.

If you want, you can check parts one and two of the playlist before you peruse further or you can just skip to the new songs below. If you’re one of those that find twenty-five tracks overwhelming and you just want some highlights, you could do worse than start with these:

      • Canadian singer/songwriter, Colter Wall, and his deep, deep voice are back with a new album and “Corralling the blues” is just a tumbleweed blowing across the deserted highway
      • “The narcissist” by one of my all-time favourite bands, Blur, spearheads a surprising new twist and turn for the band on its latest reunion album
      • Speaking of returns of favourite bands, the eight and half minutes of “Fables of the silverlink” shouts The Clientele from far and away and allows the echoes and reverb speak for themselves
      • Drab Majesty recently toured with Slowdive while supporting their new EP of dark and shadowy dream pop, of which “The skin and the glove” is the most upbeat and accessible
      • “Simmering” by Pale Blue Eyes is anything but – boiling over is more like it and like it a lot I do
      • Canadian indie pop quartet The Beaches invoke a lot of memories and laughs with “Shower beer”, just one of the many fun tracks on their latest
      • Soccer Mommy has released an EP of great covers by bands like R.E.M. and Slowdive but I am really digging her version of Sheryl Crow’s “Soak up the sun”

Here is the entire playlist as I’ve created it:

1. “Portrait of a clear day” Julie Byrne (from the album The greater wings)

2. “Independence day” Palehound (from the album Eye on the bat)

3. “Corralling the blues” Colter Wall (from the album Little songs.)

4. “The narcissist” Blur (from the album The ballad of Darren)

5. “Fables of the silverlink” The Clientele (from the album I am not there anymore)

6. “Close to the clouds” Art School Girlfriend (from the album Soft landing)

7. “Jaws” Dizzy (from the album Dizzy)

8. “Too far gone” Islands (from the album And that’s why dolphins lost their legs)

9. “The skin and the glove” Drab Majesty (from the EP An object in motion)

10. “Home” Hannah Georgas (from the album I’d be lying if I said I didn’t care)

11. “Morning zoo” Ratboys (from the album The window)

12. “Kisses” Slowdive (from the album Everything is alive)

13. “Simmering” Pale Blue Eyes (from the album This house)

14. “What’s the point in life” Coach Party (from the album Killjoy)

15. “Weak in your light” Nation Of Language (from the album Strange disciple)

16. “Between the past” Woods (from the album Perennial)

17. “Shower beer” The Beaches (from the album Blame my ex)

18. “Bug like an angel” Mitski (from the album The land is inhospitable and so are we)

19. “Stop talking” Will Butler + Sister Squares (from the album Will Butler + Sister Squares)

20. “Soak up the sun” Soccer Mommy (from the EP Karaoke night)

21. “Foreign land” Teenage Fanclub (from the album Nothing lasts forever)

22. “Dead man” Postdata (from the album Run wild)

23. “Everything at once” Bleach Lab (from the album Lost in a rush of emptiness)

24. “Cramps” Slow Pulp (from the album Yard)

25. “Snowman” Blonde Redhead (from the album Sit down for dinner)

Apple initiates  can click here to sample the above tracks as a whole playlist.

And as always, wherever you are in the world, I hope you continue to be well. Above all, enjoy the tunes.


*If I ever get it pulled together and drafted…

If you’re interested in checking out any of the other playlists I’ve created and shared on these pages, you can peruse them here.