Tag Archives: London Grammar

London Grammar, Californian Soil. Album Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating * * * *

Sensuality is often coupled with a sense of joy, the conclusion of pleasure and rapture in knowing that you are bold in your charm, that you are seen as desirable enough to bring your sexual freedom to the arms of another human being.

What if though, sensuality was in fact the acceptance of melancholic thought patterns and the truth behind the open soul of benevolent love, that by exposing the mind as being as naked and vulnerable as the body in the grip of passionate encounters, we become more in tune with the physical reality of the universe that carnality is for the lustful, but that the fragility of the mind is for the true believers of absolute love and the authority of sexual confidence.

London Grammar, Truth Is A Beautiful Thing. Album Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating 8.5/10

If You Wait provided a glimpse it seems at what London Grammar could show to the world, an album that rightly had the group propelled out of the lecture halls of University and into the serious consideration of many a music fan’s dearest desire. A group to whom the meaning of substantial and forceful was to become a huge compliment and whilst the band were in their infancy, there was huge hope that the trio would eventually be heavyweights; a case of very soon rather than later.

London Grammar, If You Wait. Album Review.

Liverpool sound and vision Rating * * * *

Nottingham has changed in the last 30 years; some parts may be unrecognisable to those who first made their way to the city and outlying areas at the start of the 1980s in the hope of catching their favourite bands perform in some of the town’s more interesting venues and even more salubrious settings. The surface may have changed, even become more welcoming in some places as Nottingham realises it has a duty to the next generation of its young and not be the hotbed of tourism mania in which to grab the next pound from unsuspecting sightseers and day-trippers