Debut album from highly touted North East trio, Once Home, No Longer via Prefect Records
Mt. Misery became a band in 2019, initially a solo project of Andrew Smith they quickly established themselves on the live scene in the popular North East fraternity by touring constantly until the Covid-19 pandemic took hold of the world.
This album is a marker of intent for a young trio of male musicians, incorporating the best of west coast Americana but with a Northern England sensibility with daydreams and soundscapes of halcyon days in the sunshine. As I write this review, the South of England is being bombarded by a deluge of rainfall in stark contrast to the blistering mini-heatwave of a few days prior. So putting on this album helped overcome the sadness of the never-ending rain and helped dream about days by the foreign shore which remain a long way away personally.
Full of the time capsule capabilities reminiscent in contemporaries from across the pond such as Whitney with that magnificent eye to the tradition of Laurel Canyon song-writing but also recalling that mainstream busting album by Irish band The Thrills which was the archetypal love letter to Brian Wilson and the Beach Boys.
Opening with 'The Dreaming Days Are Over' which exudes romantic realism with trembling guitars and gentle percussion; yet for all the sunshine on the exterior of the songs there is an underlying internality such as 'In The Blink of an Eye' which is about Andrew's unemployment and feelings of directionless.
This personality of the record speaks volumes as it helps the album become both universal and welcoming to a listener to take the song on as their own:
“We
tend to labour over songs for a long time before committing to them, but with ‘The Thought of Losing You’,
being a bit more spontaneous led to one of our favourites on the album. In this
instance, I’d been tinkering with the piano part since before we formed the
band. With an hour to spare at the end of a long day tracking drums, we came up
with a loose structure and built the song around that.”
The record incorporates the geography of the band themselves hailing from Hartlepool; but the restrictions of working as a band during lockdown does lead to happy accidents such as the album being unexpectedly mixed by Kenny Gilmore in Los Angeles, a far cry from the North Sea coast. This helps a track such as 'Taken by the Tide' become something more akin to Denis Wilson and Neil Young.
The album is a perfect antidote to the gnawing antagonism and angst of the pandemic coming to an end; while the sun may be shining here is an album that is the perfect partner to it with warm weather goodness running through its veins and through the airwaves.
Once Home No Longer is out now from Prefect Records
My thanks to One Beat PR for the review opportunity.
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