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Five Songs To Hear This Week - Rathborne, White Arrows, Taylor Locke, The Princess, Bang Gang

Five Songs To Hear This Week - Rathborne, White Arrows, Taylor Locke, The Princess, Bang Gang
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Sorting through the week’s new singles and songs that have surfaced online over the last seven days, Jamie Skey (@jamie_skey) presents five songs you need to hear this week…

Garage-crashing young gun Luke Rathborne has been tweaking the antenna of the likes of The Strokes’ Albert Hammond Jr and folk-freak Devendra Banhart, and it’s no wonder, as you’ll discover via the fruity, two-minute power-chord outbreak of Why. The track’s hormonal overdrive coupled with Rathborne’s sweetly deranged way with a melody brings to mind Brit 70s art-punk revivalists Charlie Boyeur And The Voyeurs hot-boxing a runaway mustang with Ty Segall.

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“Nobody fucking cares”, gargles the icily detached voice of Mickey Church, lead singer of California spooky-pop trio White Arrows, as if already whirling down the great digital plug-hole of indie-rock obscurity. Church penned the existential-crisis-turned-synth-pop-meditation Nobody Cares after reflecting on “living in a self-obsessed society in a world that moves so fast”. In the case of this hauntingly melodic humdinger, Church’s pain is most definitely our gain.

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Historically known for its spiked cocktails of sunshine pop and desert-dwelling psychedelia, the west-coast scene has rarely sounded so, well, resolutely British, thanks to ex-frontman of Rooney Taylor Locke‘s stomp-box-sustained salute to The Beatles’ Come Together that is Call Me Kuchu.

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Ordinarily, it takes at least three or four people to make sounds as richly intense, inscrutable and hypnotic as the ones that flare up in the near three-minute delirium of Black Window, but Irish noiseniks The Princess do it with just two. By way of their hammering rhythms and catch-a-breath riffs, the duo seem to trip over themselves trying to prove they’re the most intoxicating outfit in rock right now.

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Though they’ve been on an extended break of seven years, little has changed in the camp of Icelandic mood rockers Bang Gang, as proven by the pulsating, Joy Division-worshipping Out Of Horizon.

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