The West Order Release New Single ‘Girl Without A Name’

The exciting four-piece rock band The West Order return with their triumphant second single, ‘Girl Without A Name’. Hailing from Prestwick in Scotland, the band turned heads with their debut release ‘Falling Down’ which led to The West Order playing headline shows as well as finishing off 2022 playing at the legendary King Tuts Wah Wah Hut in Glasgow.

This new single, ‘Girl Without A Name’ was written back in 2017 by the band’s vocalist and guitarist Dylan and since then The West Order have been tweaking the song as a unit. Of course, a couple of years of a global pandemic stunted the band’s momentum but now they are set to realise their ambitions with this frankly incredible new single.

About ‘Girl Without A Name’ the band said:  “..it’s a little bit different to our other tunes, it’s a bit softer in the verses with a light floaty guitar riff over an acoustic guitar which then smashes into a heavy chorus with loud guitars and tight drum fills…almost Nirvana-esque.”

Both this new single ‘Girl Without A Name’ and The West Orders’ debut single ‘Falling Dawn’ appear on their upcoming ‘All Is Mine’ EP which is out on May the 25th. The band are to play a special hometown show at The Buf in Prestwick on June the 3rd.

The West Order are Dylan (vocals and guitar), Cammy (guitar), Daniel (drums) and Darren (bass and vocals). Meeting while at school, Daniel, Dylan and Darren were joined by Cammy in 2021. Their influences range from The Beatles to Green Day to The Snuts.

Emily Marsden – Editor
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@MusicSceneWales
musicscenewalescymru@gmail.com

Scott Marsden In Conversation With Dictator

Holy Coves singer-songwriter Scott Marsden sits down with Mick from Dictator to talk tours, talent and the indpendent music scene

Scott – Hi it’s nice to meet you, so do you like to be called Michael or Mike?

Mick – So actually, I’m affectionately known by alot of our fans as Mick.

Scott – I like that, nice to meet you Mick!

Mick – Nice to meet you too.

Scott – So if you could give us an introduction to yourself. Who you are and where your from?

Mick – Well, as you can tell by the accent, we’re up in the North of the border, we’re right in between Edinburgh and Glasgow, so if you know anything about accents, regional dialects, we have the worst of both accents! We have a mix of Glaswegian and Edinburgh and whenever we go Edinburgh they think were Glaswegians, whenever we go to Glasgow they think we’ve got an Edinburgh accent. So we’re right in between in a place called West Lothian. Snuts, Lewis Capaldi, there is a lot from West Lothian. The old adage is that there is something in the water, I genuinely believe there is, so yes that’s where we’re about. If you listen to our music eclectic is quite a good word to describe it. We first formed, thinking about Gorillaz, as in they weren’t really tied to one thing, eventually we started evolving, we are starting to find our sound, it’s like a quirky, poppy, indie type vibe. It’s really fun to play live. So if we had a tag line it would be “It’s really fun to play live” that’s what were going for.

Scott – I definitely get the fun vibe, I’ll let you in on a little secret, I have three boys, 14, 11 and 10, a wife and a dog and you guys are our family band, you’re one of my favourite bands, my whole family know and love your songs, I swear even our dog knows your songs! You definitely bring the fun vibe to music. I definitely see the evolution in what you’ve done, it’s massive. That could piss old fans off couldn’t it?

Mick – That’s kind of where we’re at, I’m glad you noticed that. We come from an indie background, ‘Sad Boy Bangers’ we used to call them, we’ve got a song called ‘Hide and Seek’ which is the penultimate ‘Sad Boy Banger’. Love playing it live when I can sing it, when I go on tour it can be harder to sing it, I will be honest, especially if we’ve had a few pints the night before. We were an indie band and that was a vibe but you almost play like a characateur of it, let’s play some ‘Sad Boy Bangers’. We are not those people! You start being authentic to you, Some of us have a dog, a wife and kids and so we are essentially those people and so trying to pretend that we’re these kind of cool, indie rockers, nah! It’s going to fall flat on it’s face. We might write some decent indie rock tunes, but we’re not going to be involved in that, we’re not going to be all in. When you are just completely yourself and playing stuff you enjoy, it’s good both ways because you can play the stuff you enjoy and people enjoy it.

Scott – I can see the joy on your face as your talking about it, so you are all loving exactly where you are at and what you’re doing.

Mick – Yeah we are. The thing for me, right is, the way to look at it in terms of each time we go on tour, we’ve only just started doing tours but we’ve been a couple of years as a band. You get this false sense of being well ahead of yourself, you play to a hundred cap and sell out and then you think we may as well book out an arena. You get like ‘Guys, we’re on the trajectory, we’re going to reach the top, let’s leave our jobs!’ and then you go play another couple and it’s like actually no one knows who we are! No one knows outside of our close circle of friends and family. There’s been a couple of times in the last year or two when we’ve played gigs outside, success to us at the start, was playing outside the central belt of Scotland, that was successful and then after a couple of months we played Newcastle. What’s mental though is that when we started off we went to a pub in London last year, our sound engineer nearly…so he reversed into the venue and he thought he had killed the drummer. A part of the van is etched onto the pub. I can’t think of the name of the venue. We sold 60 tickets there, phenomenal. A year later we went there we sold out and I think it was 150 cap, that was mind blowing. The more we get into this rabbit hole of success and enjoying it and seeing people react to the songs, selling a 150 cap venue out in a place you’ve never really been and you don’t know many people there, that is the most fulfilling thing ever. It makes it totally worth being in a crowded wee van!

Scott – Ha Yes! We know how that goes. I love playing to people, I love the interaction, I love connecting to people I like being able to look people in the eye. Someone said it’s like a new shoegaze has been invented except you don’t look at your shoes, you look them in the eyes and make eye contact. That’s what it’s about isnt’t it? You’ve got to connect to the audience. I don’t want to be there rocking out and being fake, I want a real connection to people. I’m trying to portray my song because it means something. As much as your having a laugh with your pals in them songs, you mean those songs, mean those lyrics, they’re heartfelt. They have a story.

Mick – Definitely. That’s the kind of vibe your trying to get to. We’ve got a song coming out soon, I’m not going to mention that because I don’t know the exacts, it’s all cloak and dagger, it’s good to go, we just need to get it approved, but we wrote that as though we were playing live. You start making songs you know you’re going to enjoy when you play them live. That’s mental and to even consider that when you’re writing a song, that you’re going to enjoy playing that, because you’re making tunes and it’s heartfelt and it’s great. But it’s actually a good laugh to play. Alan has this SBD pad, for drummers, I don’t know if you’ve seen these, basically it’s a computer behind Dictator and there’s a little bell on Rubik’s Cube our song and he goes to town with that, quirky little things that we have built into our songs. We chuck rubiks cubes out to the crowd sometimes and he tinkles the little bell, see stuff like that, that’s what we love.

Scott – Brilliant! it’s good and you can see that you’re thinking outside the box, you’re thinking bigger. It is a completely different dynamic writing a song from home and it’s just a song you’ve written for home and then writing a song with the interaction in mind. Going back to Gorillaz like you mentioned earlier, they definitely thought outside the box.

Mick – How they did the visual element was phenomenal but there’s also a performance they’ve done, I can’t remember the song name just because I am being interviewed and it’s going to escape me even though it’s one of my favourite songs. But the one with the school choir and they’re at the Brit Awards and they play with a school choir. It was phenomenal, and they weren’t even there, they were, but they were behind the curtain. They managed to create this amazing thing. Everybody was enjoying being involved in, everyone was enjoying watching. And the music is one part, the boring part is having to be clued up about tours, then you’ve got the actual reason for why your doing it which is playing shows and for us it’s like you need to have a bit of theatre.

Scott – Ofcourse! I plan to watch you live this year, I’m figuring out which show I can make it to, we’re on Anglesey. West Lothian is becoming quite famous isn’t it? We’re from a little place on Anglesey and they’re trying to say that there is something in the water here aswell! For such a tiny island there is massive talent here. Ren, have you seen him popping up online?

Mick – No, I haven’t but I will look him up, anyone else to listen out for?

Scott – Ren, he is one that has gone viral. He’s from Anglesey, Megan Wyn is from down the road too. She has got a phenomenal voice and for her age she is a phenomenal songwriter, and ofcourse you’ve got Holy Coves.

Mick – Exactly, number one.

Scott – Ha! I wouldn’t say we’re number one but we have got another act which I really hope he comes out with a record, Caine Jones-Williams. No one has really heard him in our world, online and getting out there but when they hear this guy they’re going to be blown away. So West Lothian, you started out from West Lothian?

Mick – So we all went to a school called St. Margarets, Allan and Zach, Zach is the guitarist and Allan is the drummer, they’re a few years older than us, they’re our big brothers right, however we all grew up together in West Lothian, we were in different bands but all on the same scene. And you should see the size of this place, you would be wondering how there is even a scene. But we’ve all played together and we all played in different bands and that’s kind of how we grew up. The kind of thing where you play a gig in a pub when your fifteen to other bands. That’s who you’re playing to, to other bands. Honestly at the time you think it’s rubbish, but no, it’s the best! Make the most of it, enjoy it because it is quality. As soon as you play in front of people who have bought tickets you have to be good. So yeah that’s where we all grew up and because we had had a few jams together we realised we enjoyed it and we had a gig where we had five different instruments each, we were too outside the box, we were a bit weird at the start so we had to figure it out to bring it back into the box slightly. But then we were like let’s just be weird and see what happens. Let’s be weird together.

Scott – Well it’s definitely doing well, it’s getting bigger, it’s growing and I’m always pushing you to as many people as I possibly can. For me that is what independent music is about, you don’t get to where your going or where your heading without everyone who is supporting independent music. Have you got any plans for touring?

Mick – September, October. September 8th is Liverpool, September 22nd London, 29th Birmingham, 30th Newcastle and then end of October, 27th is Leeds 28th is Manchester. So that is our first chance to go touring, our first proper tour.

Scott – It’s a big tour.

Mick – We’ve been trying to figure out who follows us and from where and then we have announced this, these are our first cities that we can then start branching out from. The hope is, is that next year if we can do another tour if this one goes successfully and doesn’t pull us into financial oblivion then we will be able to go back and also pick more cities as we go. Hopefully it becomes one of those things you can start branching out from. The other thing aswell is being able to play decent venues. You’ll know, you want a decent venue and to be able to put on a good show and there is some that are basically a guys hut and there is nothing wrong with that, it’s amazing but also you can’t really do what you can in these bigger venues and put on the same level of show as you’d like. You can’t bring a brass section with you because it would just get drowned out. So we’re at that point, trying to build on these central places. If people like us then maybe we can branch out, build up to an arena tour in a couple of years.

Scott – Ofcourse, it’s possible and you’re on that path, I’ve got no doubts about that. You’re doing it carefully, planning it meticulously. You’ve done your graft and now the pennies dropped, you know what you’re doing. Is this tour done by you or with This Feeling?

Mick – It’s with This Feeling. We’ve been working with quite a few promoters but This Feeling have been good, they help alot of bands who are up and coming, they’ve got a lot of festivals and stages. When we first started working with them we weren’t sure if we were going to fit the mold of what is a This Feeling band because we had it in our head that a This Feeling band was something. I think we’re doing really well of changing that preception. Hopefully we are one of those bands that is coming along a changing that perception. Normally for This Feeling it’s been Rock n Roll. Not that we aren’t Rock n Roll.

Scott – You are! You’ve defnitely got a bit of that. I know what you mean.

Mick – But This Feeling have been helping to put on the tour and there’s alot we don’t know. I’d like to think we are self aware enough to know that we don’t know so we rely on these guys to help us start building decent coverage of all the areas. It’s a simple as we’re going to Manchester, they’ve got about eighty venues that they can say here are the different venues, the different capacities, the availabilities, you just can’t get that doing it yourself, you could in time but you’d have to start way back.

Scott – I know Mike from This Feeling, I work with them myself with Holy Coves aswell, I understand everything you just said. They get alot of flack off bands who maybe don’t get on some of the festivals, what I think they’re missing the point of is they’re promoters at the end of the day, I’m not saying they don’t give opportunities to bands, because they do, but sooner or later if you’re not selling tickets in an area then you can’t keep bringing these bands over to go play gigs. I’ve seen things online where they are copping a bit of stick, but it’s the nature of the game, they are promoters at the end of the day, they are more than that but the bigger picture for me is that they are helping out with exactly what you’ve said in the way you said. They know what they’re doing, they are experienced and I trust them fully and I think what they are doing is absolutely amazing.

Mick – Yeah definitely and it’s crucial to helping us build a profile in areas that we have never been to before and what we see is that you get certain support slots with certain people aswell and we went down to Manchester and London with This Feeling in February and the reception was amazing, there is people that have come along who have never heard of us but they have come along because it is This Feeling. It helps you to grow it. It’s cool to see your reach growing because then you’re writing songs for people to hear, so when people hear them the happier you become.

Scott – Exactly that, that’s what it’s all about. You dont’ just write these records for nothing, wether you write a happy, pop, fun record or a rock record that is heartfelt, the aim of the game for me has always been to play songs to people and connect to people and more so now more than ever. I feel like I’m at the age where I have for the first time sussed it out, I was away for a long while but when I came back to music this time I came back with a plan. I decided to set up my own record label and do as much things in house as possible, learn all the tools that are available. That’s one thing I have been explaining to younger bands, everything is there for you to learn. If you were to give advice to any young up and coming band would you have any advice for them?

Mick – I would say buy tickets to our tour! Nah, just that, you’ve hit the nail on the head there in terms of even when we are given the best opportunity possible, we supported The Fratellis in a venue up here and that was a learning opportunity, that is the best way to describe it is as a learning opportunity, you get to play in front of like 1500 people, when are you going to get the chance to do that again? It’ll be interesting to see what you need to do in order to do that. Every single thing that you get is a chance to do the next thing. That’s the best way to describe it. This tour is a chance to see if there is a tour next year and so on. We were like ultra planned, probably a bit intense, sometimes we were like seventeen steps ahead in our planning. My main thing is to anybody who’s starting off in music have a little bit of a think in terms of what your after because sometimes in music, even if your just wanting to enjoy playing it, double down on that, do the things you enjoy then, don’t play songs you don’t and also take everything as a learning opportunity to do the next thing and never stop, you’ll never make it, even if your on an arena tour and you’ve sold your double platinum, you’ve just got to enjoy it because that is the main thing, because you’re never going to resent that or regret that, that even in 40 years time when you look back and that’s us done after the last couple of years I know we would look back fondly and say that we genuinely gave that everything we could and that for us is our main goal as a band. We’ve been in bands before where we thought we were done, thought our life was over at 18 and then suddenly you just think lets just go an enjoy this, make the most of it and be present while we do it so that when we look back we can say we gave it a very good shot. So yeah enjoy it and don’t just think there is a level you reach and that is it. Enjoy the process.

Scott – Yeah for me it’s to keep believing in that dream, keep that drive, that passion. You’re right, unless you love it then there is no point doing it.

Mick – Sometimes you don’t enjoy it, anybody who enjoys being stuffed in a van for about three or four days with your pals, sweaty, it’s uncomfortable, you’re tired, loading in and loading out, that part is not enjoyable but it’s worth playing live music for. And that’s what you need to remember, it’s always worth it.

Scott – I always find on tour by the time I come back my body feels battered, I’m exhausted, my body and my mind, I feel like I’ve done a heavy session of training, my body aches, that’s the reality of it!!

Mick – The worse thing about being a singer is you can’t drink, if you want to be performing optimally. When you start charging money for shows and there’s a couple of hundred people coming, you actually can’t have a couple of pints that night because you feel like you need to be ready and that sucks! Because you just want to see everybody, speak to everybody and catch up but you actually can’t.

Scott – Well exactly, it’s work. You’re there to work. We’re the same, we pretty much keep away from all that on tour, we want to be professional and that’s also another piece of advice for other bands too. You can have a couple of beers and have some fun but if you want to be professional then you’ve got to knuckle down and give people the best show you possibly can. So you’ve just recentely sold out King Tuts, congratulations!

Mick – An amazing venue. Each time you do that stuff you just don’t believe it’s happened. Feel like you’re on the mega party bus. Ha! You just keep rolling on and then it’s in six months time when you look back and you think ‘that was class’. It doesn’t sink in properly, too many dopamine rushes!

Scott – What an experience, you will remember that for the rest of your life.

Mick – Yeah definitely. Two of us are into golf.

Scott – Gareth Bale too!

Mick – Exactly, legend. We wore the white boiler suits that the caddies wear and spray painted King Tuts in green writing and even just keeping that, that’s just class.

Scott – It looked like an amazingly, brilliant show, I wish I had been there. But I will make sure I get to watch you this year. So you’re last release was the Rubik’s Cube EP.

Mick – It’s an EP with a couple of interludes through it. It’s five tracks. We released that September last year. Since then we have been away cooking up some stuff. It’s difficult to know what to do and how to do it beyond that EP. Also the hardest thing in music is to give it time to run, to just let it happen, let it out into the ether and let people digest it.

Scott – Yeah I found that difficult.

Mick – So we’re currently at that moment in time, we have got a few things up our sleeves. The EP smashed every expectation we had for it. But no matter what you do in music, you only feel as relevant as your next thing.

Scott – It’s like a healthy competition within, I’m at that stage myself with the next record, Druid and Bards Part Two. We’ve written that and we’re going to record it soon. I’m really excited to see what comes from you guys next, in all aspects, live and visually but especially new music.

Mick – You have to make a release worthwhile. The release is one thing but you have to make sure you maximise the amount of people who are going to hear it, plan to do a video at the same time. Basically, don’t half arse it. That’s the best thing we have realised. Don’t just take it for granted because it will be recieved like that. We need to treat every release like it is our favourite song in the world. So yes, few things up our sleeve and hopefully in the next few months we can start teasing everything out because it feels like an age since our last record but it is for a reason.

Scott – It’s good to take your time. You should get yourself down to Wrexham, it’s all really happening down there at the moment.

Mick – So are you a Wrexham fan? Are you happy with the whole situation?

Scott – I am, I took my wife and kids to watch the game that weekend and we soaked up all the atmosphere. One of the best days of our lives, it was absolutley amazing. What’s your team?

Mick – I think it’s brilliant, they’ve done it in the right way, I’m a celtic fan. They’ve got the best intentions for Wrexham but also everybody wins. The team wins, the fans win, they win, the whole city wins. From the outside it is just the most perfect thing. Look at Salford, it’s all egos but they were like, didn’t have a clue and I think that’s better.

Scott – But in a way it makes them more clued up, and even the whole family vibe. There is something there to be learnt for everyone, even bands, looking at how to do something right. Absolutely brilliant comparison you just gave of Wrexhams and Salford.

Scott – It’s been a pleasure talking to you Mick. Thankyou so much for talking to me today, I really appreciate it.

Mick – No worries at all, thankyou for having me. Cheers.




Emily Marsden – Editor
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@MusicSceneWales
musicscenewalescymru@gmail.com

Josienne Clarke Releases New Album ‘Onliness’

In her own words, Josienne Clarke viewed her 2021 album – A Small Unknowable Thing – as a leap into the abyss. Finally free from the industry structure that had been built around her over the preceding decade and more, she released the album via her own label, Corduroy Punk Records, and handled every aspect of the album’s writing, recording, and release herself, on her own terms. Free from her previous role as one-half of a duo and losing the genre constraints she was quickly and lazily placed within, she came out of that chapter emboldened – but still not truly free.

From her home on Scotland’s Isle of Bute, Josienne began thinking about the idea of reclamation. Cutting her teeth in an industry that so often works against the artist it’s supposed to support – and with a lingering idea in the wake of Taylor Swift’s ‘Taylor’s Version’ project – Josienne began revisiting the songs in her back catalogue that felt buried somehow; that had never had the spotlight she felt they deserved, for myriad reasons. 

Onliness is both a wholesome project and a spellbinding work in its own right. Opening with one of her earliest compositions – ‘The Tangled Tree’ – and closed by a brand-new song, it presents a career retrospective viewed through a new lens. The album is comprised of reworked versions of fan favourites and hidden gems from a back catalogue that always glimmered, but this time they’re entirely hers, carrying everything from booming drums to intimate acoustic guitars, with Josienne’s powerful yet, at times, fragile voice whispering and screaming straight into the listeners ear.

“It’s a mixture of songs that were singles, that I wanted to reclaim in some way, and then other songs, some really great songs, that never got the attention I think they deserved,” Josienne explains. “Artists are constantly required to create new content, this content is consumed in the short term and forgotten about,” she continues, speaking of her other motivation for the record. “When a big label owns the masters of your songs forever you earn little to nothing from those recordings, it’s not surprising that an artist would have to explore re-recording from a financial standpoint alone. I’ve found that it’s no longer financially viable for me not to revisit material, even being a prolific songwriter it’s just not sustainable for me in the long term.” 

Throughout the process, Josienne was clear that she wanted the album to work on its own terms, that it could stand tall as a brand new chapter even to those unfamiliar with the initial recordings. She also wanted to approach each new recording as a singular exercise, to follow the instincts that she’s honed over the past few years, adding synths, electric guitars and found sounds to the recordings. “Great songs can wear a variety of interpretations and perhaps the idea of one definitive recording is a bit rigid and reductive,” she says. “Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy has been revisiting his own songs, reworking and re-presenting them wonderfully over and again throughout his career. Anais Mitchell’s XOA is on constant rotation in my house and I love the reframing of songs I know from her other projects in that stripped back simplified setting. So it’s not a new idea, or one that’s exclusive to me, but it’s a much more creative endeavour with much more for the listener to gain than a consumerist driven ‘best of’ compilation.”

Onliness opens with ‘The Tangled Tree’, a song Josienne wrote back in 2004 and one that she considers very important. “I wrote that song so long ago, I always liked the guitar part I’d written. I never felt like a great guitarist, but it was mine, and I lost that over the years when I stopped playing it,” she explains. “Now I’ve put it on an electric guitar with some distortion at the edges, and I’m playing it exactly how I want to play it. Going back and reclaiming that, and playing it myself, felt like it captures the spirit of this whole project.” 

Elsewhere, ‘Anyone But Me’, a study in possessiveness, taken from 2013’s Fire & Fortune LP, doubles down on the paranoia that permeates throughout and presents an even more frenetic three-minutes than its original take, while ‘Homemade Heartache’ showcases Josienne’s softer side; a woozy country ballad that appeared briefly on an EP a few years ago. “I used to joke that I wanted to sell it to let Emmylou Harris or Dolly Parton,” Josienne confesses, “but I always saw the potential in it, even if initially it was a little bit too country for me.” 

Onliness concludes with a brand-new song, ‘Words Were Never Answer’. Set against an acoustic guitar, Josienne’s words are sharply enunciated as she sings of the power in letting go, despite all the words you have that you still might want to say. “I introduce this song as the sum total of everything that I’ve learned in my forty years of life” she explains. “Many times, I’ve tried to explain things to people that are never going to understand, and I’ve learned that there’s a moment to stop explaining, to stop talking, to stop using words.” 
Onliness is a striking collection of songs, a real overview of an artist who has beautifully traversed their own path, no matter how rocky it became. The album takes its title from a word Josienne thought she’d invented, only later to find it already exists. Onliness: the fact or condition of being alone. “It means both solitude and singularity; being one of a kind, but also alone in the sense that you are apart from other things,” Josienne says of the title’s meaning. “So, it has both a positive connotation and a really melancholic one – and I feel like that fits every song that I’ve ever written.”

Emily Marsden – Editor
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@MusicSceneWales
musicscenewalescymru@gmail.com

Hazy Sundays Release New Single ‘Hear The Truth’

The brilliant Four piece Indie Rock Band hailing from Glasgow are back with their latest single ‘Hear The Truth’. This high energy song is serious rock n’ roll with significant, relatable lyrics and a 90’s nostalgic feel. These are definitely a band to watch on the independent music scene!

The band consists of Shaun Kenny (Vocals, rhythm guitar), Mark Devlin (Lead guitar), Ross McDonald (Bass) and Pete Cannon (Drums).

They have been featured on John Kennedy’s X-posure show on Radio X. The band are playing the Recovery Connects Festival this year plus even more exciting gigs throughout the year.

Emily Marsden – Editor
#MusicSceneWales
@MusicSceneWales
musicscenewalescymru@gmail.com

The Kaves Release New Track ‘1000 White Lies’

The Kaves are the 4 piece alternative indie/rock band hailing from Glasgow in Scotland consisting of Dave MacDiarmid on guitar and lead vocals, brothers Liam Prior on lead guitar and Sean Prior on bass guitar, and Evan Hunter on Drums.

The Kaves who formed in late 2019 released their  debut single ‘Migraines’ in September 2021 followed by a run of shows in their native Scotland before releasing their second single ‘What’s In Your Head?’ in March 2022. After a sold out headline show at Glasgow’s infamous venue, Nice ‘n’ Sleazys in the spring, The Kaves headed back into the studio to record their hat trick single of  ‘Premonitions’ in October 2022 and which received high end radio play from the likes of Sirius XM in America as well as plays all over the world in Australia and Canada and South Africa.

The Kaves, although only relatively still in their infancy as a band, have made impressive inroads with their single releases to date, showcasing them in headline gigs in and around Scotland. The single  ‘Premonitions’ was launched by the band at their headline show with new music taste makers This Feeling at their Glasgow Broadcast gig and was also performed by the band during the Man City vs Liverpool football match.

The band have also received critical acclaim from the music press such as:

RGM – “an outstanding effort can’t wait for more to come”.

When The Horn Blows – “They’ve relit the flame of that classic indie rock sound.”

Our Sound Music – “They bring energy in opulence and maintain complacency in scruples. We are impressed by this band… Just imagine what they’ll achieve in years ahead.”

Spruced Up Reviews – “Glasgow’s musical chops have never been in question, there’s no denying there’s something in the water up there… and it looks like they’re at it again with The Kaves.”

The brand new single from The Kaves ‘1000 White Lies’  is a beautiful melodic offering with its slow and measured strumming guitar intro. It immediately gives the listener a sense of the track having been deliberately stripped back to allow the wistful  lyricism with their contrasting gravelly vocals to come into full effect. The chorus hook of “Tell me a 1000 white lies and I’ll be satisfied…. Tell me a 1000 more truths and I’ll run away from you” tells a story. There’s a sense of knowing, of foreboding but begging not to be told the inevitable truth. The track then takes a turn as it builds and bubbles into a crescendo for the final act, the pace picking up in a certain defiance before a final mic drop sudden fade out moment, signalling ‘The END’ – epic stuff indeed!

The band have said of the new single:

“‘1000 White Lies’ was written around this time last year. It’s our first real stripped back acoustic tune. Having played it live at the likes of King Tuts and Nice n Sleazy, it got a real positive reaction live, so we decided it was time to release it as a single!

Essentially the track is about having a hard time facing the reality of certain parts of life. Whether that be in relationships, your passions, goals or growing up. Not having the ability to embrace the truth as it can be tough to accept so believing all the “White Lies” is sometimes easier to deal with.”

The band have several live gigs lined up in the coming months which are yet to be officially announced and fans are therefore advised to keep an eye on the band’s socials listed below for updates. 

Emily Marsden – Editor
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@MusicSceneWales
musicscenewalescymru@gmail.com

Voldo ‘Melting Pot’ Album Review

When you hear an album described as “unpigeonholeable”, it normally means one of two things.
One: This album is a mess of genres, no one done particularly well.
Two: You’ve heard it all before.

This is NOT one of these albums and I’m not about to embarrass myself by trying to come up with an genre title for these guys.
Melting Pot is an album from Ayrshire based 4 piece, Voldo (a band as flexible as their classic video game character namesake).
The record is packed from start to finish with quirky and polished tracks, from Beck like opener ” Propaganda Machine” all the way through to “Happiness” which bizarrely enough had me thinking of Led Zeppelins foray into Reggae (D’yer Make’r); just, you know… Good.

Everything here is what you want from an all time great album, “Butter Gravy” brings in some Avalanche like moments, “Caley Line” sounds like Nick Cave and Tom Waits trying to stay warm on a freezing cold train station in the middle of nowhere, while “Tellumavision” fills in the gaps and throws in a dose of Flaming Lips just in case.
This truly is a special album, one that instantly gained a permanent place in my rotation and one that I’ll be dropping into conversation to gain credibility for a long time to come.

Dan Careless
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musicscenewalescymru@gmail.com

The Kaves release brand new single ‘Premonitions’


The Kaves
are the 4 piece alternative indie/rock band hailing from Glasgow in Scotland consisting of brothers Liam Prior on lead guitar and Sean Prior on bass guitar, Dave MacDiarmid on guitar and lead vocals, Evan Hunter on Drums.

The Kaves who formed in late 2019 released their debut single ‘Migraines’ in September 2021 followed by a run of shows in their native Scotland before releasing their second single ‘What’s In Your Head?’ in March 2022. After a sold out headline show at Glasgow’s infamous venue, Nice ‘n’ Sleazys in the spring, The Kaves headed back into the studio to record their hat trick single of  ‘Premonitions’ which is out now.

The brand new single from The Kaves ‘Premonitions’ starts off with a slow almost melancholy strumming of a guitar leading you into a false sense of security as out of nowhere, in come the pounding drums and sonic guitar riffs. The vocals are crisp and decisive being delivered with a certain degree of passion. The chorus hook of “Might have mentioned that I hate you, Might have said I don’t care, Well this feels like a beautiful Sunday. For the premonitions in my bed.” will have you chanting along in unison. Then at around the 2 minutes in mark things are taken up another notch as marching drums kick in and a chanting mantra becomes evident in the bridge and the lyrics are spat at you with evident power and meaning “I’ve been staying out of sight, Trying to get out my mind, Trying to find a little peace, From all these thoughts controlling me, Rain Clouds covering all that I can see, I feel like I’m going in circles, While I’m here all make a change, Take control take the reigns, I won’t let them go again, Take me to the promised land, Rain Clouds covering all that I can see, I feel like I’m going in circles.” couple this with the pounding drums and electrifying guitar solos and well, wow it’ll blow you away!

The band have said of the new single:

‘Premonitions’ is a  song about feeling trapped in dissatisfaction. The feeling of constantly obsessing over the next thing ready to trip you up instead of just living for the moment. And how worrying about the future can be tough on those around you in the present. The bridge is about trying to get enough resolve to get out of that cycle which is a good way to end the song.”

‘Premonitions’ was launched by the band at their headline show with new music taste makers This Feeling at their headline gig at Glasgow Broadcast and was also performed by the band during the Man City vs Liverpool match.

Emily Marsden – Editor
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musicscenewalescymru@gmail.com

MIIRRORS Release Debut EP ‘Lookout’

Alternative pop duo MIIRRORS hail from Glasgow’s East End and is made up of Chris Greig on Vocals and Craig Russel Horne on Vocals and Production.

The band promise and indeed deliver, an endless supply of feel-good, synth-led bangers that give a flavour of summer at any time of year. So it’s no surprise that their brand-new EP, ‘Lookout’, is an absolute remedy of joy as the dark nights start to draw in.

Behind their sound, the band capitalises on their shared knowledge of production, songwriting and all-round immersive performance not only to plug a gap in Scotland’s thriving music scene, but simultaneously transmit something to the music world that’s as new, fresh and exciting as it is addictive.

Combining soft, accented vocals with ‘80s-ready melodies to create gorgeous grooves is what this outfit does best. So much so, their singles thus far have garnered them some incredible and notable acclaim including Amazing Radio’s ‘A-Class’ artist status for in excess of six consecutive weeks.

Following the triumphant trio of previously released singles, ‘Lookout’ (the title track of this new collection), ‘Who Is She?’ and ‘Feeling Much Better’, the dazzling debut EP is set to cause quite a stir and you can expect the same warm and addictive, play- on-repeat vibes that you’re accustomed to from the pair.

What comes as an even more pleasantly shocking surprise is that not only was the entire EP written and produced by the duo, but it was also recorded, mixed and mastered at Craig’s home studio!

‘LOOKOUT’ EP TRACK LISTING

  1. Lookout
  2. Who Is She?
  3. Feeling Much Better
  4. Living Without You

UPCOMING GIGS 

Chris and Craig will be embarking on a HMV in-store tour to promote the ‘Lookout’ EP. Dates and venues to follow in due course. The band have also secured gigs and festival slots into 2023 and you are advised to keep an eye on their social media accounts for updates.

Emily Marsden – Editor
#MusicSceneWales
@MusicSceneWales
musicscenewalescymru@gmail.com