Jamie Lenman – ‘Muscle Memory’ [Review]

As regular readers will know, Jamie Lenman is a big deal where I’m from. My Facebook feed literally blew up with the release of the double-A-side Fizzy Blood/Pretty Please, news of his secret set at The Boileroom in Guildford, and the dates for his Heavy / Mellow Band’s recently completed tour. On top of all that, of course, there is this album. Not just a standard-length LP, but a 70-minute double album that takes in so many styles that I felt compelled to delay this review and let it all sink in and mature for a while. Now, however, it’s ready to go. Read more…

Posted on 07 January 2014

Dials – ‘A Pounding Headache’ [Review]

One of The Musical Melting Pot’s Six Artists To Watch In 2014, Dials have followed through on their promise to kick the New Year off with a brand new video. And here it is. The EP to which A Pounding Headache belongs was previously reviewed here – and although I was quite critical of the production in that review, it’s definitely grown on me, and also fits the video extremely well. As for the video itself, check it out below and keep Dials on your radar. These guys are going places… Read more…

Posted on 06 January 2014

A Guide To Project RnL – Part Two

project rnlWelcome to Part Two of The Musical Melting Pot’s Guide To Project RnL! Click here for Part One, where we looked at Project RnL’s YouTube-based output to date. This time around, we’ll be looking at the extracurricular work of Project RnL’s core members: keyboardist Eyal Amir, and vocalist Ray Livnat. Read more…

Posted on 04 January 2014

Dani Rosenoer – ‘Whoa Whoa Yeah’ [Review]

Opinion

Given his day job as live keyboardist and backing vocalist for alt-metal titans Three Days Grace, it’s safe to say that Dani Rosenoer is a busy guy. It’s equally safe to say that he can hold his own as a world-class musical talent; and Whoa Whoa Yeah, despite its (ironically?) clichéd title, simply serves to cement this assumption as a stone cold fact. Read more…

Posted on 18 December 2013

Hazlitt – ‘Battlecat’ [Review]

Opinion

One of London’s best-kept secrets, Hazlitt is an artist with a very unorthodox history. Following a decade-long stint as part of experi-punk outfit Tiger Force came Requiem For Little Bird – a complete 180-degree creative turn encompassing classical influences, lyrics in Latin, and a violin in place of her formerly treasured guitar. Since that gutsy debut Hazlitt has attracted a wide variety of followers, including eclectically inclined Strapping Young Lad frontman Devin Townsend,  shared a stage with said legend, and thrown herself into a range of collaborative projects.

Battlecat – Hazlitt’s second solo album – has its own unconventional tale to tell. For the past year Battlecat has only been available to the people who paid for it to be made – an arrangement facilitated by crowdfunding platform Pledge Music, and necessitated by the destruction of Hazlitt’s home and studio in the 2011 London riots – but as of now it is up on Bandcamp to be enjoyed by the rest of the music-loving world. I’ve lived with this album for twelve months, and it still sounds as fresh and invigorating as it did on that hotly-anticipated first listen. Read more…

Posted on 09 December 2013

Dials – ‘Dials’ [Review]

Opinion

Since Paris, nothing has been quite the same. Despite my silence here, the last few weeks have been extremely productive – the novel project that originated with this post has occupied almost every spare moment I’ve had (bar a visit to the Boileroom to check out the excellent Wilde Eyes supporting The Computers) and as a result I’ve been neglecting The Musical Melting Pot a little bit. Hopefully those of you who enjoyed those fiction-flavoured posts will forgive me for this. For the rest of you, let me introduce you to an EP by one of Guildford’s hardest-working bands: the most excellent Dials. Read more…

Posted on 25 November 2013

The Computers / Wilde Eyes / The Greasy Slicks [Live Review – The Boileroom, Guildford, 20/11/13]

Opinion

The Greasy Slicks

I made a pretty big mistake in missing these guys. I timed my arrival with the start of Wilde Eyes’ set, but by the end of the evening I wished I’d experienced some more rock ‘n’ roll awesomeness. I’m told these guys delivered in spades, and now very much regret missing them. Read more…

Posted on 20 November 2013

Doomed From Day One / Dye The Flux / Stone Giants / Change Persona / Origami Hearts [Live Review – Surrey Uni, 31/10/13]

Opinion

Change Persona

Unfortunately I missed the evening’s openers, Origami Heart – but Change Persona kicked off my evening with a fun and entertaining set of well-practiced punk tunes. Throw in a Sum 41 cover, an enthusiastic crowd, and a frontman in a dress, and you have all the signs of an act with great punk-centric potential. Nice job! Read more…

Posted on 01 November 2013

The Swears: ‘Things We Found In The Sea’ [Review]

Opinion

With Things We Found In The Sea, their first release since second album Europa back in 2010, The Swears have taken a very interesting creative turn. Their old organic and earthy pop stylings have been entirely abandoned. Where once there were acoustic guitars and happy-go-lucky summer vibes, we now find a pair of gently unsettling alt-pop meditations. Read more…

Posted on 30 October 2013

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