Review Summary: Old indierangement arranged nicely.
Let’s get into this!
The opening track is a nice accordion piece with some nice singing. How gentle and sway-ish. But the album doesn’t stop at the first track. We still got oodles of tracks left in this giant whale.
The second track gets you with a very smooth indie sound with extremely folksy acoustic twangs, electric piano. It’s fine but the track is quickly forgotten.
The third track starts with what sounds like cricket noise and electric piano. A lovely singing voice comes in over the cricket noise. I’m suddenly transported from a cheesy video game into a picnic at a Catholic Church.
The fourth track is lovely strings and piano united in sexual harmony.
The fifth track sounds like Medieval Zelda or some ***. Pretty cool if you want to pretend that you own a time machine.
There are more tracks, but the gist is that you get nice melodies with intertwined instruments in a very folksy arrangement. The piano playing is excellent as well as the floaty, airy singing. The album will put you at ease, but also make you think about the piano arrangements and melodic choices. I’m not particularly into this type of music generally, but I can see its appeal. It’s very creatively put together. Not my jam per se but it’s worth the look.