Tag Archives: Erja Lyytinen

Erja Lyytinen, Another World. Album Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating 9/10

Another life, we all claim it as the ultimate reset, the chance to do over from all that we have endured and perhaps taken part in, and atone in some way, or at least see Another World in which we are the hero, in which we are the true player within our story, and with that tentative but hopefully confident, step into different territory we might find a way to create an alternative version of ourselves, even if it just a slight variance in how people see and respond to us.

European Blues Award Winner, Erja Lyytinen, Comes To Merseyside As Part Of U.K. In March 2019.

European Blues Award winner Erja Lyytinen returns to the U.K. in March 2019. The 12-date tour will include shows in Brighton (March 18), Sheffield (March 21), Glasgow (March 23), London (March 26) and Birmingham (March 28). The tour will also be coming to the Atkinson Theatre in Southport on March 29th.

Erja will release her new studio album in 2019 on her own record label Tuohi Records. The new album will feature guest performances from Sonny Landreth and Jennifer Batten (Michael Jackson). The album will include Erja’s two new singles Without You and Another World, which were released digitally in 2018.

Erja Lyytinen, Another World. Single Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating * * * *

It is no surprise these days when the mainstream finds the understanding of the power of the belief in parallel universes, the worlds in which we inhabit, the different turns that we could have made as a species, as individuals, the decisions that would have made our lives infinitely nobler, more virtuous, perhaps more deranged, more exciting, less convincing, the enormity of a single fated moment in time dictating the rest of your life, judging you for a single snapshot of left or right at life’s impossible junction.

Erja Lyytinen, Stolen Hearts. Album Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating 8.5/10

If anything comes close to being the proverbial man eater then music should be the one that is all consuming; it should also not confide itself to one gender, to one specific gene pool, it should consume with passion everything in its path and lick its lips as it salivates over the next soul posing as a tasty morsel to eat.

Erja Lyytinen, Live In London. Album Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating 8.5/10

The 100 Club in London may be the scene of many a clandestine gig that has caught the music lovers of the city unawares over the years but one name certainly caught the attention of the audience when she performed there. Thankfully now it is a gig that can be heard for what it was in the new release, Live In London, one of sublime entertainment and guitar to fuel the passion of 21st Century Blues whilst paying homage to the true greats of the previous century.

Erja Lyytinen, The Sky Is Crying. Album Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating * * * *

One of the being alive in the 21st Century is finding more and more music in which to take a certain degree of delight in. Not only in the extravagantly opulent amount of new songs paraded by people with something extraordinary fighting in their soul, the ones that refuse to lay down and take a metaphorical punching from successive people underestimating their age, their attitude, stance or particular opinion on a subject, but also in the fact that never before has so much been available from every decade, every century in which the combination of right tones, breathes and flickering beauty has been captured.