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Music Album Reviews |
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Hayley Hutchinson - Independently Blue (album/ R N R Music)
Release Date: September 6th 2004.
By Steve Rudd
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This 12-track, 43-minute album is packed with some of the most beautiful and heart-breaking
songs that I've heard in years, and singer-songwriter Hayley - now living and working
from her base in York after a childhood brought up in Scotland - is only in her early twenties.
Listening to these astonishing tunes, all of which are morally astute and emotionally
captivating, you'd think that Hayley has lived through a lifetime of experiences in
order to produce such engaging and touching songs.
But no, she's young.. and quite simply beyond-her-years in maturity.
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The daughter of John Hutchinson (who played and toured with David Bowie in the early 70's
and who is presently playing his own solo material and gigs in and around Yorkshire),
Hayley calls on both her dad and ex-Seahorses member Chris Helme to be just two of the
many special guest musicians that feature on her album, along with Shed 7 drummer
Alan Leach for her Here's The Love tune.
The album opens with one of its catchiest numbers in Deadman, a lush and vibrant acoustic-based
song in which the overall musical vibes share much in common with Sheryl Crow's earlier,
mid-90's days. Climb Through is a far more fragile and delicately soulful lullaby of a tune,
that's subtly melodic but oh so sublime and touching, and is in fact quite a technically
complex arrangement, involving as it does at least two guitar parts and strains of cello
neatly packed behind Hayley's extraordinary and distinctive voice.
The title track, meanwhile, in Independently Blue is just as anthemic and catchy as Deadman,
propelled by a great drumbeat, a background banjo that sounds sultry and pure Country-styled roots.
This is before her Minor Key hears yet another different instrument brought into the album's
fray, as the sound of Dobro hits some exquisite notes.
This, Hayley's debut album, really is a masterpiece of exceptional songcraft.
Long has she been musically inclined, after been inspired to start fiddling around with the art
of songwriting around the age of thirteen when she got her first keyboard. A year later,
circa 1995, and she was singing in a band called Freeb (an outfit that split up largely due
to the fact that the other members were slightly older than Hayley and had different types of
personal responsibilities to attend to).
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After Freeb split, she concentrated her efforts into learning to play the guitar, and the year
2000 heard the emergence of her first demo recording which was championed by BBC radio's Bob Harris
in due course, and the very fact that she didn't rush into releasing her first album proper is
reflected in the fact that all songs included on Independently Blue are diverse, wistful and
played and sung intimately.. as though she really does cherish the songs that she writes.
Still, the actual recording of the album - somewhat ironically - was completed in just six days.
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Other album highlights include I Have To Say I Love You, in which she sounds at her most
serious and hopefully romantic, and Fall Down.. the latter tune being borne out of a
spellbinding fusion of acoustic guitar and piano melodies, sublimely creating time and
space for Hayley's voice to drift into proceedings in a thoroughly angelic manner.
Hell, in this instance she sounds to an incredible degree like all-singing and songwriting
genius Tori Amos. Yes - Hayley's voice does have that much unforgettable impact.
Say My Goodbyes, in its wake, busts further heartstrings courtesy of a strong
acoustic-based riff and her pensive ponderings. What's love? What's it for?
One thing for sure, when all is sung and done, is that Hayley Hutchinson is a young,
beautiful and immensely talented singer-songwriter, producing material that's genuinely
in a league of its own. As a result, her father - along with everybody else who hears
her - surely cannot help but smile on and be proud.
So listen out.. 5/5
For more info please e-mail..
haylomedia@hayleyhutchinson.co.uk
www.hayleyhutchinson.co.uk
rnrmusic.com
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Album Reviews -
The Boxer Rebellion - Code Red (single/ Mercury) By Steve Rudd
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These guys have led a lucky couple of years since Alan McGee spotted them playing their hearts out
in the New Bands tent at Glastonbury.
So impressed was he that he signed them up to his Poptones label, through which two severely
limited edition/ scandalously sought after
Read more...
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Album Reviews -
We Start Fires - Caught Red Handed (11 tracks/Head Girl) By Steve Rudd
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Proudly keeping the DIY punk spirit alive, Darlington quartet We Start Fires
(in which female members outnumber the male contingency three to one) aren't ones
to wait around for a record company exec to get out his chequebook.
They believe in their music to such an extent (which they
Read more...
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Album Reviews -
Cathy Davey - Something Ilk (album/ Regal) By Steve Rudd
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This 14-track release is an infinitely interesting and beautifully conceived album, opened with Come Over,
which is reminiscent of the sultry sounds that Italian-born singer-songwriter Elena is making.
Complete with a cool riff and sexed-up PJ Harvey-esque swagger, this is
Read more...
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Single Reviews - Still Life at the wheel By Michelle Dee
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After a promising start, a distinctive vocal, which can only be described through emotions rather than words,
tells a story of a road trip gone sour.
Short chords punctuate the verse and, at the wheel, gathers pace.
The chorus kicks in followed by rolling guitars.
One or two of the backing vocals seem superfluous but
Read more...
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Single Reviews - Yellowcard - Ocean Avenue (Parlophone) By Steve Rudd
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Release Date: September 6th 2004.
It's been one hell of a couple of years for this American pop-punk-rock quintet, and deservedly so.
This is the title track from their ever-so-popular Ocean Avenue album that was released to instant
acclaim earlier this year, and - somewhat
Read more...
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Single Reviews - Sam Roberts Band - Brother Down By Steve Rudd
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Release Date: August 30th 2004.
This guy - and his band - has long been big business in Canada from where they hail, going so far as
to be awarded with Best Artist and Best Album awards at this year's Juno Awards.
Now it's time for the UK to see and hear what all the amassed fuss
Read more...
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Single Reviews - Ricky - That Extra Mile/Beat The Best Out Of Me By Nick Quantrill
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Release date - 6th September, 2004.
Following hot on the heels of acclaimed debut album, The Summer Sun Still Echoes, Portsmouth's finest,
Ricky return with a double A-side that will (hopefully) accompany some long awaited summer sun.
The single picks up
Read more...
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Single Reviews - The Hot Puppies - Green Eyeliner (single/ PURR) By Steve Rudd
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Release Date: September 27th 2004.
I've got a funny feeling that this Aberystwyth quintet is about to become very well known indeed
over here in England, following a prolonged spell of relative fame in Wales, courtesy of their
last Dawn Of Man release
Read more...
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Single Reviews -
The Beastie Boys, Death Cab For Cutie and The Departure By Steve Rudd
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After all these years, The Beastie Boys are still making amazing music, here
presenting the second single of 2004 from their To The 5 Boroughs album.
These Manhattan-obsessed guys have long been respected for their refreshing fusion of
rap, hip-hop and dance elements, and if
Read more...
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Single Reviews -
Single of Week - Cornershop Presents: Bubbley Kaur Topknot By Lee Cassanell
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Only in a world of George Bush and Sudanese Genocide could Busted be riding high in
the Charts with the theme from Thunderbirds so in the spirit of such rampant insanity
I've decided to make a little deal with you the good people of Kingston upon Hull.
Every Saturday I'm going
Read more...
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CD Reviews -
What Ya Cryin' For by The Landau's - By Tony Bates, Jim Hines and Leigh Lee-Roy Stancliffe (Aussie Radio)
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Every now and then a new band comes along, complete with biography promising a new
sound and telling one and all that to miss this band and their release will be at their peril.
I've heard it all before; haven't you?.
Well this time I have to say that I have received a couple of releases from
The Landau's, but without the usual hype.
Read more...
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