Showing posts with label the junipers music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the junipers music. Show all posts

Thursday, 24 October 2024

JUNIPERS FEATURE in NME ARTICLE from 2006..

 


25.AUG.2006

Former Alfie frontman Lee Gorton has launched a campaign to form a 'psychedelic supergroup' for a special project.

The singer has asked The Flaming Lips, The Zutons, Elbow, Snow Patrol and Athlete to lay down vocals for a compilation album which will be written and recorded be a host of up and coming bands.

He told NME: "I've talked with all these heads and they've all said, 'Lee you fucking nutter, sounds great'. So I've planted the seed and asked them and now it's my job to find a load of great songs that will suit them which will be written by up and coming artists and bands like Jim Noir, The Monks Kitchen, John Stammers, The Draytons and The Junipers because they're all dying to write the songs. Then we'll just try and get the big boys in to sing them'.

'I wanna have proper folk tunes on there, psychedelic tunes, northern soul and straight up Beatles-esque, Wings-esque pop classics."

The project entitled 'Red Thread' after Lee's Manchester roots has been set up to try try and bring a host of unsigned bands to the fore through major artists.

He explained: "We're just trying to get loads of bands working together, writing with each other, dropping all the stand-offish playground mentality attitude that bands have with each other sometimes when they think they've got to scrap it out. A lot of em have got good hearts and are doing it for the right reason and that's why I don't mind going (Guy) Garvey and all the others and saying 'C'mon don't you remember what it was like to be unsigned and what it was like trying to get a break when you started out?."

Although the project is still in it's tentative stages, the singer is currently on the lookout for a studio where tracks can be laid down for the record.

He went on: "All I need now is some crazy old last of the English eccentrics, some old dude who's got a decrepit old mansion anywhere, even if it's in Bulgaria, The Isle Of Skye, Wales, anywhere that'll have us for two or three weeks a month. I'm aiming to take a few producer mates, a few laptops and mics and just cane it. So if anyone has got a fucking mad mansion gis a shout."

Monday, 23 September 2024

PAINT THE GROUND REVIEW on TERRASCOPE...

 THE JUNIPERS - PAINT THE GROUND

(LPs from Sugarbush Records)

Specialising in limited edition re-issues of hard to find psych/pop albums, Sugarbush records are doing a fine job if theses three releases are anything to go by, beautifully pressed with delightful artwork and a touch of quality about them.

    Originally released as a download in 2012, “Paint the Ground” is a wonderful collection of jangly, gently flowing pop psych that is ideal for those hazy summer days. Opening sweetly with the rippling melodies of “Look Into My River”, the band hook you in immediately, a mellow 1971 West-Coast vibe pervading the air as they get into their groove. On “Dandelion Man”, there is a more up to date guitar jangle, a slightly heavier edge although this is softened by gorgeous harmonies and a a dancing flute, summer is definitely here. Easily an early highlight. “Everywhere Was You” is another gentle tune with an almost Eastern motif running through it, the song ending far too soon, although the delightful softness of  “In My Reverie” make up for this the song re-defining mellow with ease, reminding me of The Lilac Time jamming with CSNY in their laconic approach. To end side one “Phoebus Filled The Town” maintains the delicate air, notes shimmering in a musical heat haze, taking back to 1967 and the summer of love, or at least your rose-tinted memories and wishes of the era.

   After a flawless side of music, I am pleased to say that side 2 is just as good with opener “Antler Season” glowing like a evening sun, a radiance of sound that sets the tone for the rest of the side. Reminding me of Gorky's “Golden Fields in Golden Sun” sounds just as it should, the flute adding a delicate beauty to the tune, whilst “Song to Selkie” has an upbeat approach that will get you grooving around the garden whilst smiling like a loon.

   Certain of their quality, the last three songs turn out to be the best, proving this is a band of quality and substance, the listener easily immersed in the flowing contemplative mood of “Willow and the Water Mill”, blissed out by the pastoral wonder of “They Lived Up In The Valley” and then energised and amused by the sweet pulse of the Beatle-esque “Pearly Home”, the song leaving you with a smile on your face.

  Damn this album is good, those in need of a warm summer sparkle need look no further.

BUY THE ALBUM HERE!

The Junipers - They Lived Up in the Valley


Meadow Song - Single Review by The Reconnoiter..

A peaceful meadow-like inner space that initially feels like refuge from pressure and pain.  Over time, the person realizes this calm place ...