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...if I could
understand it all, then I would...
I’ve been here
before, in this place, when all around me is chaos, when the day to day goings
on of all that surrounds me is a maddening, frenetic race that nobody ever wins.
I’ve seen all this before, all the frantic chasing around that defines modern
life, and I know that I don’t like it, and I know that The One Who Flew
provide the perfect antidote to it all, I know that when I slip this collection
of lush, sweet, achingly beautiful, yet menacingly dramatic lullaby’s,
epiphanies and swansongs into the player I will be ushered away from the madness
and the chaos into a world of calm and respite where even the bad days are
tempered with a little positivity, hope and confidence. I know that the warming
arms or reassurance will collect all my hopes and fears into their tight embrace
and put right all that is wrong, I know this, I know it well.
This record is
the follow up to last years Corporate Love Songs and shows the band
improving on what was already a great record. The styling is similar, the
delicate harmonies, the fragile melodies, the glints of light shining through
the inner city murkiness and most importantly the hope, yeah, the hope, that’s
what it’s all about – well, it’s all still there, only this time, it’s a little
more intense, the delivery is that bit more secure, this is a band taking what
it does best and working through it all perfectly. It’s impossible to know
whether these songs just come naturally to Chris Flew and Jackson Taylor or
whether it’s something that they have to invest many hours perfecting, if it’s
the former then it’s a god given blessing, if it’s the latter, well, then they
know what they are doing, and they are doing it well.
Leaving S.F.
opens the record, it’s a swooning, gliding instrumental, the sort of song that
you hear in your head when you are on a plane or a train, plugged into your iPod,
whilst the word goes about its business and you slip, slowly into dreams, into
thoughts of home and where you’ll be soon. This is followed up with the real
album opener The Last Word, it’s a shimmering, towering block of acoustic
thrum, totally stripped back to the bare necessities which builds and builds to
a thrilling crescendo, replete with guitar lines, balancing on the edge of
control that rip open the cold dark skies of the city. After the gentle,
soothing prelude, this songs really makes you sit up and listen, this isn’t
supposed to be an easy ride, this is far from AOR coffee table pomposity, it’s
battered and bruised, it’s fragile and flawed, but it’s here, and it’s going to
make you listen to what it has to say.
Drowning
and Audrey
consolidate what is already a stunning opening to this record with tales of love
and loss, of the inability to cope which is suppressed by a desire to appear on
top of it all, the stiff upper lip, the male reserve, don’t let them see you
cry, don’t let them know that there is a chink in your armour. The emotions laid
bare are ones that we can all identify with, we have all felt these things, we
all know of the chances that we didn’t take, of the opportunities we lost, of
the beautiful girl on the exotic holiday island that we never pursued.
...I want to
be your soulmate, I want to be the song stuck in your head, glitter in your eye
like stars stuck to sky, yeah, you were mine in summertime, yeah, you were
mine...
What would be
side two of this album opens in a similar manner to the first section with
Littlest Waltz, it’s a hazy, lazy, dreamy and drifty lilting melody that
rather than bringing you down to earth sends you up into the stratosphere and
leaves you floating there amongst the clouds.
‘Til the
Morning Comes Around is a
stuttering, swaggering, upbeat experiment in self preservation, disbelief and
optimism, and is chased up neatly by Christmas on Ward #7, without doubt
one of the highlights of the album. Christmas... is a piano lead ballad
that is worthy of the admission price alone, the story within, again, is one
with which we can all identify with – as long as we are being honest with
ourselves. It’s not often a record comes along that really speaks to me on the
level, a record that is a peer, a friend and a confidant, a record that knows me
inside out, and a record that I know equally, but this is one such record. The
aching beauty of Kingston Bridge, and this track in particular makes all the
chaos of everyday life better, it soothes you, it holds you and it makes you
understand that everything will be o.k, maybe things won’t be perfect, but
they’ll be o.k, and sometimes we just have to accept that as the best that we
can do.
...I didn't see the christmas lights,
I started seeing red
fighting losing battles
with the voices in my head
I'm holding onto next year
praying that it comes real soon
I'm holding onto next year
praying that it comes real soon...
The album heads
towards home with the sub-country strum of R+J a song that compares the
characters involved to the starcrossed lovers of Shakespeares classic, revisiting the lap steel adds presence, body and emotion to what is yet another
fine example of saying it like it really is. We have all been in these
situations, we all sit here and say, “yeah, I know what he means” but it
takes a special talent to actually put these feelings down on tape, to commit to
posterity a picture of modern life as it really is lived. Closing track Take
the Money and Run searches out a more electronic route, yet brings us back
full circle to the airplane flight of the opening sweeps of aural delight, here
the plots and plans of a suicidal airliner pilot are debated, and how the
actions that bring us to the end can be so exhilarating, so intense and so
revealing. So much so that perhaps it is inevitable that you can only experience
these things once in your life, and that is right at the end.
Again The One
Who Flew have put together a set of songs that reaches deep down into the
confines of your heart, of your gut feelings and your most suppressed emotions
and drags them all clear of the fray, that reminds you about what really
matters, they remind you that outside of the fray, the madness, the frantic
comings and goings of the daily grind there is a life worth living, and it’s
worth living to the full.
...I remember
the stars and the sirens as the trucks raced out across the tarmac waiting for a
plane to never land.
I held your
hand, like it would have made a difference, if someone would listen, or even
take the time to understand. But I'm not that man...
In a word,
beautiful.
Johnny Mac
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