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43162
Type: Ep Release date: 07/11/2008
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It’s often hard to get excited about folk music, simply because it’s existed since time began. So, you can’t help but admire the confidence of artists like Justin Hayward Young, strident in their belief that their music is worth something to all and sundry. Let’s be honest, it’s hard not to think there’s not much new that can be said, let alone to be said.

So, instead, Happy Birthday You does what you secretly hoped it would – it conjures up an authentic fireplace romance, full of gestures we all take for granted, but which means so much when you first fall in love. It’s easy to let this pass over you, untouched, but Justin’s haunting voice pierces the veil of musty, sepia coating. This subtle musical layering – stunning falsetto backing vocals, xylophone, urgently strummed acoustic guitars – worms its way under your defences.

You may be sitting back thinking how tired it sounds, how this could’ve been made any time in the last century; yet, it’ll be a concrete-hearted soul that doesn’t react to these songs favourably. Tenderness flows through their duration, stealthily snatching a piece of your imagination. You may even catch yourself getting misty eyed and reminiscent.

This four track EP can too easily be dismissed, and is likely to. Perhaps that’s the spoilt little music fanatic in us. We’ve heard it all before, we’ve no need for anything that doesn’t tickle our synapses, right? Like a coasting relationship, it’s time to reassess, appreciate the little things and remember that the shock of the new isn’t always what you need.

*fella's

the new and the old

i know folk isn't typically known for its appetite for all things new, but i have to say that there's more in there than just a sort of consistent old-worldliness. good folk music is regenerating all the time - tonally, in subject matter, in its influences, its personality, even in its (generically predictable) instrumentation. I think those subtleties are subject to the way in which we engage with the music in the first place. we don't all get folk music. sadly i get it a little too much... that may sound elitist, but that's not how it's meant. it goes both ways. every genre should have it's own 'genre' of evaluation...

jay jay pistolet is excellent.

mOnkton x

www.monktonvsplankton.co.uk

m0nkton...

You have definitely read into this too much/smoked too much/both. He is great though, yea. Saw him supporting Laura Marling and that was the first I'd heard of him. Love his voice.

yep....

i have to concede....next time i feel the need to spill i will call my mother :)

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