Reviews originally published in Issue 106 of Electronic Sound magazine, October 2023:

JUNKBOY
Littoral States
(Woodland and Wayside)
Some records belong firmly to the âbigâ seasons, their songs either drenched in summer sunshine or coated in a crunchy layer of freshly-fallen snow. Littoral States falls charmingly between the gaps, illuminated by both the pale, steely skies of springtime and the syrupy sunshine of slow, autumnal afternoons.
In 2020, brothers Mik and Rich Hanscomb lost their father. The album is a bittersweet ramble in his memory, an elegant pootle along the South Coast, and â indeed â the scattered home towns of all three men. âCormorant At The Mouth Of The Ouseâ is our breezy starting point, its wistful fingerpicking accompanied by the kind of mellifluous strings that once lent Nick Drake albums such an air of stately melancholy. âWitch Of The Watery Depthsâ adds the crystalline vocals of Sussex folkie Hannah Lewis and keening folk-rock electric guitars.
Lewis is the unsung star here, providing two sympathetic lyrical contributions and a strident voice that may raise goosebumps for anyone still haunted by Toni Arthurâs ethereal 1960s folk vocals. âOnce upon a forest, sunlight beams / Natureâs blossoming, it must be spring,â she sings on the breezy âChase The Knuckerâ, while âThe Sea Captainâ is grief with open-hearted dignity: âIâd sell my soul to the waves that flow / To reach youâ.
There are tranquil field recordings (sometimes made in actual fields), immaculate guitars and strings that flow with effortless grace. From Hanscomb Snrâs birthplace Bognor Regis we roam, through the urban sprawls of Brighton and Newhaven, to the coastal suburbia of Seaford. By the time we reach the impudent banjo and recorder of concluding track âTall Grassâ, our flushed complexions and pleasantly aching calves are testament to the joys of an afternoon well spent.
Itâs certainly a worthy sequel to the Hanscombsâ similarly exquisite 2019 collection, Trains, Trees, Topophilia. Their own modest description of their efforts? âMusic that finds solace and joy in the beautiful banalitiesâ. If such banalities include a stirring walk in celebration of a loved one who â not so long ago â would have been a willing and welcome companion, then theyâve succeeded with no little joy and an absolute surfeit of the aching beauty theyâve been chasing all across the South Downs.
Album available here:
https://waysideandwoodlandrecordings.bandcamp.com/album/littoral-states

IVAN THE TOLERABLE
Under Magnetic Mountain
(Library Of The Occult)
Magnetic Mountain? Itâs a 1933 volume of poetry by Cecil Day-Lewis, with its mysterious summit the symbol of a brighter, less conventional future. Itâs unclear whether Middlesbrough polymath Oli Heffernan was gazing idly towards Eston Hills when he made this darkly hypnotic album of psychedelic jazz, but the soft guitar lines and drifting saxophones of âOpening Bellâ encapsulate the same yearning for open spaces and clear heads.
Heffernan cites Delia Derbyshire and Holger Czukay as specific influences, and the likes of âAn Apologyâ and âThe Scaleâ boast suitably radiophonic swirls⌠and, indeed, mesmeric beats from Unit Ama drummer Christian Alderson. Elsewhere, Heffernanâs own crisp guitars perfectly complement the impressionistic sax lines of long-term collaborator Ben Hopkinson. Itâs a combination most affecting on âFeathersâ, an amniotic daydream underpinned by a throbbing bassline and â entirely appropriately â snippets of an ancient, crackly Sun Ra interview. He might modestly claim to be beneath the mountain, but this is Heffernan reaching an impressive peak.
Album available here:
https://libraryoftheoccult.bandcamp.com/album/under-magnetic-mountain

EMMA ANDERSON
Pearlies
(Sonic Cathedral)
âBeen in the warming sun alone / Swimming through space when timeâs postponed / See if I can make it on my ownâ. Itâs 35 years since Emma Anderson founded shoegaze behemoths Lush, and she also spent a decade as precisely 50% of dream-pop duo Sing-Sing. Itâs not a bad grounding on which to build a solo career, but the lyrics of Farfisa-drenched opener âI Was Miles Awayâ suggest the experiment still feels somewhat tentative.
No need to sound so uncertain. Itâs a terrific album. Anderson and producer James âMapsâ Chapman have crafted a crisply contemporary take on British psychedelia, with Suedeâs Richard Oakes lending tastefully trippy licks. And Andersonâs gossamer fragile vocals hit their mark with a deceptively steely confidence. âThe road is empty, the sky is black / Makes no sense to be turning back,â she sings amid the charming shuffles of earworm single âBend The Roundâ. Itâs a determined mission statement on an album of melodic delights.
Album available here:
https://emmaanderson.bandcamp.com/album/pearlies

LEO ROBINSON
The Temple
(Prah Recordings)
The baroque harpsichords of The Serpent set the tone for an album of morbidly elegant lyricism. âSkulls snap off from their respective spines by the long row of pines / Where Jesus and the Whore, dripping with sweat in their forest bedâŚâ Robinson is a multi-disciplinary artist from Manchester, and this powerful collection infuses Blakeian imagery with Northern grit. âThe Winteringâ is a nod to Bob Dylan (âWhat did you do, my skin and bone son? / I chopped all the tomatoes in Withingtonâ) but Robinsonâs haunting baritone owes more to the drizzly Pennines than the dusty Mid-West. Stunning.
Album available here:
https://leorobinson.bandcamp.com/album/the-temple

FIELD LINES CARTOGRAPHER
Phases Of This And Other Moons
(Castles In Space)
âStanding on the surface of one of the moons of Jupiter, or perhaps observing a satellite of Uranus transit across its host planetâŚâ Travelling from Lancaster to the outlying bodies of the solar system canât be easy, especially when Mark Burford has only a Buchla Easel Command synth at his disposal. He must have missed the No 41 bus. But heâs crafted an album of ambient tranquility with a splendidly sinister undertone, and the likes of âFenrir In Retrogradeâ and âCharonâs Pullâ emphasise the stark loneliness of this icily beautiful cosmic journey.
Album available here:
https://fieldlinescartographer-cis.bandcamp.com/album/phases-of-this-and-other-moons

HOWARD JONES
Celebrate It Together â The Very Best Of 1983-2023
(Cherry Red)
Forty years after âNew Songâ, this four-disc retrospective is a delightful reminder of the giddy window when mainstream pop got weird and even spiky-haired chart stars came accompanied by interpretative mime acts in chains. Jones is our suitably idiosyncratic curator here, splitting the discs into âPopular Hitsâ, âElectroâ, âChillâ and âCuriositiesâ. And while vintage synthpop gems like âHide And Seekâ and âWhat Is Loveâ still delight, there are newer charms to be found in the likes of 2019âs bombastic âEagle Will Fly Againâ. Throw off your mental chains and â ahem â get to know him well.
Album available here:
https://www.cherryred.co.uk/howard-jones-celebrate-it-together-the-very-best-of-howard-jones-19832023-4cd-clamshell-box-edition
Electronic Sound â âthe house magazine for plugged in people everywhereâ â is published monthly, and available here:
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