Old Fruit

Old Fruit 17th October 2025

Deradoorian – A Beautiful Woman

This week’s vintage selection of tunes jumps back exactly ten years this month and re-investigates some of the new music Fruit Tree Records was getting excited about in October 2015. Top of the pile back then was this debut release by a former member of the Dirty Projectors. Working under the solo name Deradoorian, this genre surfing experimental art-rock artist had released her first album ‘The Expanding Flower Planet’ and, just as that title was a self-proclaimed attempt to represent “the expansion of consciousness”, so too did the music display a bold visionary leap into the realms of multi-layered exploration and spiritual open minded release. The hypnotising opening track is performed live here in a stunning video highlighting the artists sense of sonic purpose and clever mix of technology and soul.

John Howard & The Night Mail – Intact & Smiling

It wasn’t all just young sonic space cadets making the most musically satisfying sounds this month a decade ago. I was also thrilled by a new release from the legendary Pretty Things as well as this slice of late (two decades late) period Britpop from John Howard. His career had begun in the seventies with the debut album ‘Kid In A Big World’ on CBS being regarded as a bit of a cult classic. This track from the then new album with the Night Mail was released on Tapete Records and it sat well in the catalogue of a label known for its support of artists crafting intelligent pop and song writing. Having at one time retired from performing, the album was a key part of his second act and he continues to release new music to this day.

Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats – S.O.B.

The opening pair of tunes this week were top drawer musically but they remained decidedly underground in 2015. This one on the other hand was a major breakthrough for the artist and enjoyed some major exposure on mainstream TV (as seen in this Jools Holland clip here but the big one for Nathaniel in 2015 was probably his Jimmy Fallon performance of the song) as well as numerous commercials and TV shows including ‘Fargo’, ‘Brockmire’ and ‘Two Doors Down’. It also represented a significant shift stylistically for Nathaniel whose previous work had leaned into more of a folk style but here, on his bands full length debut, they grabbed this gospel referencing soulful groove with both hands and ran with it to memorable, shoe-shuffling effect.

Widowspeak – All Yours

This dreamy dose of Americana sounds like a cross between Mazzy Star and The Cranberries which is no bad thing. Widowspeak are a duo comprising Molly Hamilton and Robert Earl Thomas and this was a tune featured on their third album ‘Captured Tracks’ released in 2015 representing a shift in their creative process towards a more organic style of writing and playing. They managed to exude both an intimacy and a grand expressiveness with their sound; the former is clear enough in the emotive manner Molly brings to the reflective lyric but the latter is evident too in the depth of the sound and those echoes of vintage rock ‘n’ roll heard in the sumptuously twanging guitar.

La Luz – You Disappear

It is no surprise upon returning to this track to recognise that La Luz and their main woman Shana Cleveland have become firm Fruit Tree Records favourites over the last ten years. Everything I rate about the bands sound was already on display here, those heavy sunset sonics in the keys and melodies combined with the organic rough edges of their garage band aesthetic. They were also writing some damn fine pop songs which appeared on the second La Luz album ‘Weirdo Shrine’ that year, a record that undoubtedly found the right producer in the shape of 21st century garage rock king Ty Segall. If you haven’t woken up to them already, then just ride the waves of those surf-sounding guitars and let this sensational band take you there.

Timo Lassy – Hip Or Not

It was not just acts with garage band sensibilities summoning up the echoes of sixties vintage music in 2015. This track has all the elements of a funk-infused sixties Blue Note jazz classic waiting to be heard in its grooves. ‘Hip Or Not’ is from the album ‘Love Bullet’ released by the Finnish saxophonist Timo Lassy and whilst it does conjure thoughts of a golden era, it can also claim to possess a timelessness and true class in the production. This was Lassy’s fifth studio album and it was to be a record he regarded as a reaction to a few colourful years of his life, which maybe accounts for the inviting intimacy of the music in tandem with its infectious warm grooving. This one, as have the other selections this week, has been a welcome resurrection and is ripe for rediscovery, so dig in.

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Fresh Juice

Fresh Juice 2nd June 2025

Deradoorian – Set Me Free

Angel Deradoorian first gained wide reaching attention as part of Dirty Projectors, especially for her contributions to their outstanding 2009 LP ‘Bitte Orca,’ but it is as a solo artist that her ethereal honey has been allowed to mature into something quite mysterious and lush. Her debut ‘The Expanding Flower Planet’ in 2015 is a fascinating starting point, bringing strands of art-rock and Kraftwerk-esque electronica to the table so it is superb news to report that this evolution continues with a third solo record released on Fire Records entitled ‘Ready For Heaven’. Of the album she says it “is partly about watching humanity erode. It’s about mental struggle, and it’s avowedly anti-capitalist. I mean; would we have all these identity labels we have to live by, if we didn’t live in a capitalist world?” Whilst this outlook might sound rather bleak in tone, it would be a whole lot worse if we did not have redemptive music of the kind created by Deradoorian to help us get by.

Robert Jon & The Wreck – Better Of Me

Sometimes it feels like the biggest present day, and certainly highest selling, country albums do not really sound like country at all. The production is a pop one in all but name and to these ears, a hint of token fiddle and a quick slide guitar drive-by do not a great country album make. Luckily, scratch the surface and there is still some authentic shit-kickin’ southern rock style country to be found as heard here by these Orange County amped-up troubadours. The quintet have been harvesting this good stuff since 2011 and are about to release their tenth LP and on ‘Better Of Me’ they say “it’s a rollicking, heartfelt track about staying true to yourself and moving forward — and will be featured on our upcoming album ‘Heartbreaks & Last Goodbyes’, we are so excited for you guys to hear this one!” They can afford to be excited too, people are going to love this one!

Ewan Currie – Big Pine Key

Where did this one spring from? It is positively fizzing with hot sunshine-pop vibes and a classy production that references the Beach Boys, High Llamas and Stereolab with just a splash of tropicalia, a light breeze of exotica and a flashlight of psychedelia. A little internet research tells me Ewan is best known for his work as the frontman of The Sheepdogs and BROS although I confess these names are not on my radar yet. However, this could be the trigger that is about to change all that because ‘Big Pine Key’ is from an equally superb new album called ‘Strange Vacation’ which is available now on Right On Records.

Tanita Tikaram – This Perfect Friend

Often when an artist has big mainstream chart success early in their career, as Tanita did back in 1988 with her first release, they never reach those heights again because that early burst of inspiration was the pinnacle of their potential and post-success, the motivation that originally pushed-on is lost forever. This is certainly not the case with Tanita Tikaram; if anything the 37 year old ‘Ancient Heart’ record represents her more primitive and unrefined mode for the work she has produced ever since has reliably matured to form a catalogue that is quite outstanding in the eloquent, fervent sophistication of its writing. That she has comparatively flown under-the-radar since her debut remains one of the inexplicable injustices of the music industry for Tikaram is genuinely one of our finest singer-songwriters; this is a live rendition of a song taken from upcoming new album ‘LIAR (Love Isn’t A Right)’ which is excellent news indeed.

Beebe Gallini – Begged Borrowed And Stealed

OK so, this is a cover of a fuzzy sixties garage tune probably best known to lovers of that retro movement after it’s inclusion on the 1998 expanded ‘Nuggets’ box set being performed by The Rare Breed. While this quirkily re-named version by fuzz fanatics Beebe Gallini may not deviate too far from the familiar 1966 45 (re-issued in almost identical form a year later under the name Ohio Express), it is absolutely played with the right kind of conviction and all the energy and rough edged exuberance can be felt vibrating out of these grooves newly released on Soundflat Records. There is always a place here for garage rock played with unpretentious attitude and this, indisputably, is a band who do it right!

Ebba Asman – Lately

The sound may be smooth and soulful with a production that is equally Jazz FM approvingly plush but over the top is a vocal that is positively teeming with ache, regret, hurt and loss. Ebba Asman is singing this like she means it which is very often the one element that can lift something out of the realms of background music and into the kind of music that grabs you by the ears and demands an emotional response. Ebba Asman is a Swedish trombonist and songwriter who is on the first rung of the ladder career wise but is definitely showing enough here, with a tune from her newly released ‘When You Know’ album, to mark her out as one to watch.

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