Turin Brakes – Outbursts

May 17, 2010

(Cooking Vinyl/Shock)

3 stars

Iโ€™ve never taken much notice of Turin Brakes before. Iโ€™m sure when they were first getting signed and designed in the first years of the decade, I was too busy following up my passion for twisted electronic music and discordant experimental rock to take much notice of a winsome folk duo.

Perhaps Iโ€™ve just gotten older and mellower, but their fifth album has a sound imbued with just the right colours for late Autumn into Winter.

Outbursts could be criticised for lacking vigour and dirt under the nails, and worse, for playing it safe. I doubt that the songs will be remembered in 50 yearsโ€™ time, either. But right here, right now [groan] it does have something going for it.

If you like heart-on-sleeve, folk-oriented music thatโ€™s nicely arranged and โ€“ at times โ€“ a wee bit ornate, then this might be a good fit. At its core this is an acoustic record, but itโ€™s full of sophisticated touches and subtle 21st Century technological tweaks. For instance, โ€˜Sea Changeโ€™ has a nice harmonised choral background, and towards the end, strings and tabla add to the swelling climax and denouement. โ€˜Mirrorโ€™ benefits from some grainy double bass, and by the time we get to the memorably woozy โ€˜Paper Heartโ€™, the vocal harmonies are reminding me of the lesser-known early โ€˜70s work by the Beach Boys.

Ollie Knights and Gale Paridjanian both have clear, high voices, and a penchant for the dramatic, that occasionally makes you wonder if Radioheadโ€™s Thom Yorke has got the folk bug. The music never gets close to Radioheadโ€™s extremes, however, and will ultimately appeal more to those who like their music to be reliable and pleasant and unchallenging.

The album is very nicely recorded, and all the elements are mixed with a lushness that makes it a pleasurable listening experience, while the occasional flourishes of percussion instruments are caught with a good sense of dynamism. GARY STEEL

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Steel has been penning his pungent prose for 40 years for publications too numerous to mention, most of them consigned to the annals of history. He is Witchdoctor's Editor-In-Chief/Music and Film Editor. He has strong opinions and remains unrepentant. Steel's full bio can be found here

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