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Five Songs To Hear This Week - Turbowolf, Alright The Captain, Jennie Abrahamson, Red House Glory, Vessels

Five Songs To Hear This Week - Turbowolf, Alright The Captain, Jennie Abrahamson, Red House Glory, Vessels
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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…

Until recently, there’s been a bit of an extended silence in Bristol sleaze rockers Turbowolf‘s camp. However, as most of their die-hard fans will attest, this riff-slinging quartet are ones to take their own sweet time when conjuring their noir-laced brand of fuzzed madness. It took them nearly four years to unleash their self-titled debut album back in 2011, so the fact their first taste from their long-awaited follow-up LP, the bouncy, irresistibly hooky Rabbits Foot, only comes a few months before its release next year is a cause for celebration.

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Many people say maths is hard, boring or both. Not when post-rock derby trio Alright The Captain get hold of it and whizz it round their space-gaze blender. They may have time signatures that’d look like algebra if written down, but their tunes, as demonstrated by Ben And Barbara, are mind-flexing riff puzzles packed with fun and melodicism.

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Currently on tour with ex-Genesis front man Peter Gabriel, Swedish artist Jennie Abrahamson generates a soaring sound befitting of her gigging appointment with The Prog-Father. Her latest single, The War, with its tribal drums, swelling strings and ethereal vocals, will certainly draw comparisons with the likes of Kate Bush, The Knife and Bat For Lashes.

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If Noel Gallagher ever decided to down-tune his guitar and jam with Brighton riff monsters Royal Blood, the result would probably sound a lot like Red House Glory’s swaggering Living A Lie. Seriously.

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Leeds-based one-time post-rock crew Vessels’ penchant for house music has always been evident in their output, but their new cut On Monos shows a complete turnaround in their sound, from widescreen-rock epics to shadowy, Jon Hopkins-echoing electronica. Post-rock’s loss is clubland’s gain.

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