Author Archives: admin

Mike Smith, Paint Your Sky. Album Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating * * * *

The wagon was painted quite some time ago, but as with most lives, we often come into our own story later than others who have been waiting patiently for us, who have erected the scaffolding, laid out the hopes and the brushes and await eagerly for you to Paint Your Sky, to put down the colours in which have defined your life, your vision, your meaningful, and honour-bound art.

Whisper With Humilty, (It Might Be Coming Home).

 

It started out as a whisper,

a small national joke

at the expense of our once

blighted, blind devotion,

to a game, a pastime,

we believed with arrogance

that should always be ours

to hold aloft the greatest prize.

Like conquest, of Empire,

of taking what wasn’t ours,

we demanded it and we became

barbaric.

The whisper turned,

not out of self-importance

or crass, dogged egotism,

but out of hope,

that we might once again

be civilised about such things,

Little Sparrow, Just 3. E.P. Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating 9/10

The power of 3, a number that cannot be divided by the whole, it is a symbol of strength, of divinity and legend, the three-fold person to which we all see in the long mirrors that adorned tables of old and into each face there were the reflections of glory, of inspiration and of beauty; Just 3, there is no need to crowd the room with more, there can be no greater affection bestowed.

The Room In The Wood. Album Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating 8.5/10

If we cannot see the wood for the trees, then how may we be able to see The Room In The Wood, how may we feel at the thought that there is no place to step into that isn’t natural, that all around is the synthetic and the over polished, no gnarls, no knots, no rings in the tree which indicate growth, no notches on the bedpost which suggest evolution and gained knowledge.

Dentist, Night Swimming. Album Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating * * * *

Whether it is by looking across the marshy end of the Atlantic Ocean that surrounds New Jersey’s Benny’s Landing, the quiet splendour that engrosses the seasonal visitor to the once colonial outreach of Cape May, the thought of Wild Wood or the cacophony of noise that bombards the breakers and the casino halls of Atlantic City; what comes across all the time, is the sheer honesty that made the state culturally rich when it comes to music. Whatever the genre, whatever the time in which it lays downs its line of intrigue, New Jersey is arguably the state to visit if you want music to dig deep down into the roots of your soul.

Tas Cru, Memphis Song. Album Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating * * * *

If you can’t play the hand that your God gave you, then the least you can do is acknowledge that the Devil holds all the aces and only allows a select few to witness them and play the Blues in return. However, if you are going to go all the way, the only logical place to see the Blues at such close quarters, where you can feel the rhythm of the saints urge on any almighty card shark, and the Devil slyly hold his own deck under the table, is to Tennessee, to listen to the Memphis Song that shines against the light above the table and the reflection of the Queen of Hearts breathing in excitement is held in the dealer’s visor.

Lethal Weapon: Series Two. Television Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating 8.5/10

Cast: Damon Wayans, Clayne Crawford, Jordana Brewster, Keesha Sharp, Kevin Rahm, Johnathan Fernandez, Michelle Mitchenor, Chandler Kinney, Dante Brown, Thomas Lennon, Hilarie Burton, Tony Plana, Andrew Patrick Ralston, Andrew Creer, Kristen Gutoskie, Rex Linn, Peter Coventry Smith, Chase Magnum, Sophia Woodward.

If there is an American drama that frames the modern situation on the streets of its major cities, then perhaps Lethal Weapon is the one that in the future television and society psychiatrists might look to as being the one that understands the dichotomy of its relaxed gun laws and the mess in which such lives are quite often driven into.

Words In The Desert.

 

The desert, when in full swing

of parching you dry,

will always compound the problem

as you seek to stay alive

reckless, thirsty for some meaning

as the words of the day become stagnant

you wait for the Earthquake and dream

of French fries, a bowl of cooling

ice cream or a thick, headache inducing

milk shake, or just a snowflake

to drift down from the heavens

and make you feel like Superman,

or at least give you hope…

compounded and complex,

Addie Brik, I Have A Doctor On Board. Album Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating * * * *

Addie Brik is resolute in her delivery, but then that truly should come as no surprise, an individual driven, not by the joy of success, but by the calm need to understand all that comes before her, to feel the answers being considered, reflected and pondered upon, in what is an impressive mind, and then with her discoveries mused upon, the thoughts giving way to the experience of writing.

Distorted Force, Curves Of A Sidereal Cosmos. Album Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating 9/10

If you can have the best of both worlds, then why not seek out more than one flavour of jam to put on your toast, love with both intensity and feeling and if all works for you across the board, then meld the forces of the Progressive and the crash of symbolic Metal to the point where the boiling cauldron of the instantly creative overflows and destroys the path of ignorance with first class precision. For this once thought conceptual distorted force, only dared to be breached by the timeless Iron Maiden in Seventh Son of a Seventh Son or in the incomparable Queensryche, has more than come of age since those tentative steps.