Fresh Juice

Fresh Juice 3rd November 2025

Josienne Clarke – What Do I Do?

Josienne’s latest album ‘Far From Nowhere’ is a record created and recorded in the isolation of a remote Scottish cabin. Deliberately lo-fi and intimate, it is a fine piece of work that sits together well as a suite of songs wrestling with questions, anxieties and motions that play-out as if being processed in real time. There are no easy answers, in fact often there are no definitive explanations at all, just questions, and this song is a good example of that. It also stands as a singer-songwriter album that honours the tradition of artists charting their journey through life via music; when real experience and feelings are the source, it is often reflected in songs that have more bite and depth, as heard in the music of Josienne Clarke

The Len Price 3 – Gypsy Magick

New music is always welcome from a trio with some of the purest sixties garage rock sounds you can find in 2025. As the title of their new latest album ‘Misty Medway Magick’ indicates, they are a power pop outfit from Kent who have been heavily gigging and recording for over twenty years with all original members, none of whom are actually called Len Price. That sound is hard to resist but I never warm to mere retro photocopyists, it is when bundled in with creativity and original ideas in composition, as the Len Price 3 have always done, that the music comes alive, fizzing with energy and vitality. It is a big part of the Fruit Tree Records ethos that design classic sounds and genres can continue to be enjoyed outside of their original eras, provided they are approached with the right attitude. As far as I am concerned, ‘Gypsy Magick’ is just a rollicking 2025 pop record, so dig it.

Tristen – Because Your Love Is Mine

Tristen (full name Tristen Gaspadarek) is an American singer-songwriter and musician based in Nashville, Tennessee who first came to my attention around 2018 with the swooning song ‘Glass Jar’ that appeared on the album ‘Sneaker Waves’. She has released several records at this point and is about to put out the brand new ‘Unpopular Music’ LP on Well Kept Secret. As heard here, the melody driven sounds and personal narrative infused lilt to the lyrics remain at the fore. There is a deceptively gentle, hazy energy to the music of Tristen that ensures any new recordings are always worth checking out. Of this new song she confides it is “about the healing power of connection, something we are starved for in the age of artificial intimacy”.

Neko Case – Wreck

Neko Case first came to my attention when she topped the John Peel Festive Fifty over 25 years ago, the legendary DJ’s championing of new country artists around this time may not have been a huge part of his celebrated legacy, but I think the fact that Neko is still making essential new Americana today proves he knew a good thing when he heard it. Her latest album is called ‘Neon Grey Midnight Green’ and is out now on the Anti- label; she describes is as a “love letter and a testimony” to her friends and influential musicians, producers and activists who have passed away in recent years. In focusing on these departed souls Neko Case has once again produced a work with a deep timelessness that pushes country music into the stratosphere.

Good Flying Birds – Fall Away

Newly signed to Carpark and Smoking Room, the Good Flying Birds are a jangly guitar-pop outfit from the Midwest who have just released ‘Tallulah’s Tape’, a mix of stripped down home recordings that includes this falling tumbleweed of melancholic pop timbre. It features backing vocals from Wishy’s Nina Pitchkites along with Kevin Krauter on drums and demonstrates a fine appreciation of the DIY aesthetic and the enduring persuasiveness of melody and hooks. Earlier this year they sold 300 copies of a self released cassette in under a month but now sound poised to take it to take it a lot further on down the road.

Pino Palladino + Blake Mills ft. Chris Dave – Taka

Blake Mills is a guitar hero with a difference, a genuine sonic explorer and visionary who takes the absence of macho posturing adopted by indie guitar gods and pushes it into progressive territories others could not even imagine are possible. This piece is taken from his second collaboration with Welsh bassist Pino Palladino following on from their first 2021 set ‘Notes With Attachments’. New record ‘That Wasn’t A Dream’ picks up and expands upon the innovations from before, recorded at Sound City Studios it again features contributions from Chris Dave and Sam Gendel. Another dimension to the work this time around is Blake Mills’ use of a prototype fretless baritone sustainer guitar, making for a unique, woodwind-like texture to the sound. ‘Taka’ was the lead track from the album and here we capture them cooking up their magic in the studio.

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Fresh Juice

11th September 2023

Hania Rani – Dancing With Ghosts

Hania Rani is a Polish pianist who, in the 20twenties, has carved a natural patina on her instrument and presented a sound that is wholly her own. It is a glacial sound, a floating cloud of ambience, tension and release which seems to make most sense to me in the early sunrising hours of the day when the world seems so still. Equally, her beautiful music could bring calm to the most stressful of days even though there is a sharpness to its edges that evocatively expresses the eastern European industrial machinery of her homeland. This is a graceful song (a departure from the Rani instrumental pieces I have become accustomed to these past three years) taken from her forthcoming ‘Ghosts’ album released on Gondwana Records…

Esther Rose – Chet Baker

From the album ‘Safe To Run’ on NewWest Records which is a record well worth spending some time with. I admit the hint of Velvet Underground wearing cowboy hats might have been a strong factor in this tunes ability to reel me in but still, what a combination and she certainly pulls it off with some swagger. Also, this proves you don’t need a big budget to make a great video…

Susanne Sundfor – Alyosha

Susanne is a singer-songwriter artist from Norway who is perhaps best known for her ongoing appearances in electronica with Royksopp. Her own music however, reaches far and beyond the confines of one style, hers is a creative odyssey that encompasses lush orchestral pieces, minimal chamber folk, musique concrete and widescreen string laden ballads. It is the latter that features in this romantic piece with an accompanying film that cuts in personal scenes from her own wedding ceremony to powerful effect. It is taken from Sundfor’s stunning sixth album ‘Blomi’ which is a work that showcases her impressive range indubitably…

Blake Mills – There Is No Now

Blake’s own solo music is a deceptive beast, it can appear to be light as a feather and slight but do not be fooled, there is always a lot going on in those grooves. By now he has more than established himself as a go to man for his production skills; even a passing listen to the most recent albums by Fiona Apple or Bob Dylan prove that he can efficiently realise the sound that a song needs. But his own work remains a place of progression and sonic flexing, the space in which he develops those phonic ideas that mark him out as a thrilling talent. This one is from Blake’s latest album ‘Jelly Road’…

Gena Rose Bruce – Lighting Up

Adding to this weeks collective is Australian Gena Rose Bruce who has been favourably compared to the likes of Angel Olsen thanks to her brooding country sound and an outer shell that seems to have risen from the dark, dangerous underground. It is no surprise to learn that she has collaborated with Bill Callahan and you cannot argue with Bill’s taste either for Gena, seen here preforming the title song of a 2023 EP, does come across like an artist with potential ready to be tapped. She first came to my attention with 2019’s ‘The Way You Make Love’ which I would strongly recommend checking out on our monthly playlist too: https://fruit-tree-records.com/2023/08/30/september-2023-playlist/

Zoe Rahman – Roots

Rahman’s trio are captured here in a brilliant live film playing a track from her latest album ‘Colour Of Sound’, already one of my favourite Jazz releases of the year (should be in with a shout at next years Mercury’s I reckon seeing as they’ve finally remembered to actually listen to the Jazz nominations and realised they’re worthy of a gong). Zoe is an outstanding pianist whose playing never fails to delight me. There is something in her touch and the flow of her compositions that has always caught my ear in that magical, inexplicable way some music can. A while back I was on holiday watching a play at the Minack Theatre about Charlie Chaplin and Stan Laurel and became weirdly distracted by the piano score only to find later of course, it was written by Zoe. That sort of confirmed that there is something to her work, an extra quality that I cannot quite put my finger on but despite this, what I can do is strongly urge you to listen to her music, that is what all this waffle comes down to in the end after all…

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