New Release Reviews

Ella Clayton – Could It Be You?

It can sometimes feel that an artist stating they were aiming for a warm analogue sound has lost its impact with chronic overuse. There is actually an important ideal at the roots of an ambition like that, but such is the ubiquity of the claim it has almost become shorthand for non-electronic music. But if the meaning is lost to some then please allow me to point you in the direction of this new sophomore release by East London singer-songwriter Ella Clayton. Yes, she has declared the natural live sound of musicians playing together in a room, vibing off each other and responding to feelings in the moment as her intent, but you know from the very first listen that she also understood what this meant in practice. There is a looseness to the grooves, not an everybody must get stoned lethargy but a connectedness, like the music is untethered and free to flow exactly how the main narrator wishes to steer it. There are stops, moments where the emoting is given space to be felt just as there are fevered flourishes of exhilaration and vigour. I mean the recipe is almost so basic that there is a danger in over intellectualisation; the simple rule for realising that warm analogue sound is just play your music, feel it, live it, breathe it and if you are good at what you do, the magic will appear. By ensuring all the rhythm tracks were laid down live, Ella Clayton guaranteed she had the best natural canvas to unlock precisely what her music needed to do.

Essentially what I am describing is a soulfulness and within her singer-songwriter template, Ella surely has moved into a soul-folk lane that is not always so easy to access. And if real soul is to be attained in music it helps if the artist is pouring something of themselves into the grooves, which it seems Ella actually is as the singer herself confides with this assessment. “This record is a journey through longing and self-interrogation, the search for something or someone outside of myself to tell me who I am and what I want. I hope that people recognise themselves in these snapshots from my life and take comfort in the shared experience.” Opener ‘Please Me’ wastes no time in making a case for Ella as soul diva, the tumbling dice of the vocal raining down at the end of each verse tells us we are in the realms of tracks possessing a heart wrenching, late sixties southern soul distinction. The lyric is holding out for something real as it also does on ‘Mouth Said Money,’ about a manager whose promises never transposed to real life, demonstrating too that Ella has range that can meet with grungier flavours. She even stretches her voice to its boundaries, happy for some imperfections to shine. Let it be noted here though that there is no lack of light, hope and even amusement amidst the frustrations expressed. The title track especially, whilst set up as a meditation on longing and the search for companionship, still manages to tell the story of a first date that went comically wrong.

“I trace the lines of the Dolomites and you curse the day I was born” Ella sings on ‘Dolomites,’ a track that begins as an icy waltz before erupting into an explosion of frustration at the denial of a space to be alone, brilliantly executed it is too. ‘Ripples In Bedsheets’ is the folkiest sound we have heard thus far, and the weight of the lyric welcomes a dynamic string arrangement, again all for the good of the song but I come back again to that Clayton voice as the centrepiece of all that is profound in these numbers. She is fearless in her letting go, even on a more becalmed number such as this, when Ella goes route one and lets her voice convey the feeling, she really soars. ‘I Miss Strangers’ can be added to the overflowing well of 2020’s songs inspired by lockdown and the absence of fresh human interaction, but it earns its place at the table with a nice boxed in guitar hook and a lyric born out of genuine distress. ‘Rain All Day’ mournfully misses someone lost with a more forgiving thought, gorgeously demonstrating too the power in a well written middle eight. Expanding her range further still, there is a soothing country lilt to ‘October Trip’ before ‘Seagull Song’ arrives with the easy lift of a sea breeze until ‘Tell Me Something’ brings a little sombre violin to the table. It transpires that this tranquil three song suite is tactfully sequenced as a set up for the return of Ella’s lolling, soulful folk free form truth seeking on spectacular extended finale ‘As You Are.’ Before playing out to the most satisfying of closing instrumental breaks, we hear Ella celebrating the warmth of love, platonic as much as romantic, felt with the most intensity in moments of mundane everyday life. It is a fine place to end because firstly, you are hungry for more but secondly, it cleverly wraps the essence of deferential respect for the unexpected tangents in life as mirrored by the unplanned diversions heard in this music. So, I come back to where we started, by admiring how Ella Clayton is effortlessly attaining an honest integrity to her work that many declare an ambition for but far fewer actually realise. The sound on ‘Could It Be You?’ is music creation that is wholly uninhibited to be what it feels, that is free to be true.

Danny Neill

Get your order in for ‘Could It Be You?’ here: https://amzn.to/4cpGIja

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Fresh Juice

Fresh Juice 13th April 2026

GALVEZTON – Roll To G-Town

The heritage behind the musical journey of Robert Kuhn is rich with iconic Americana singer-songwriters, names like Bob Dylan, Townes Van Zandt and Bruce Springsteen all filtering into the young Kuhn’s subconscious via the tastes of his father. But post pandemic, the GALVEZTON project, under which Robert creates his music, has evolved naturally into a territory that the mere troubadour characterisation can no longer contain. This is a helter skelter dive into a cosmic-Americana sound that is dizzy with the heat and punch drunk on ideas and expression. This track, an audio interpretation of bouncing back off the ropes, is from the new GALVEZTON album ‘Ocean Cabaret’ and you can find out more about the LP by heading this way https://www.galvezton.com/

Brother Wallace – Who Do You Love

This very tasty slice of hot buttered soul is taken from Brother Wallace’s debut album ‘Electric Love’, set to be released on the 8th May via ATO Records. The West Point, Georgia-bred singer, pianist, and soul revivalist is about to deliver a whole albums worth of the authentic, pounding and infectious, real-deal music that resoundingly kicks the doors wide open with ‘Who Do You Love.’ A new artist he may be to many, but this is the sound of a talent and a passion that has been slowly boiling for years and is about to overflow with a sonic territorial take over that should ensure the dancefloor is a wonderful place to be in 2026. The album was produced by Dan Taylor of The Heavy and recorded at Peter Gabriel’s studios near Bath, if this is the your first exposure thus far I can confidently predict it will not be your last. Pre-order the album here: https://amzn.to/4cjup6z

Ella Clayton – Please Me

Talking about new music that is authentically emotive, there is some fresh soulful folk just appearing on the horizon that also threatens to grab the attention of listeners with an ear for multiple genre mash ups and honest, heartfelt songwriting. Just taste the way Ella wraps some unforced, passionate soul-bearing around the lyrics of this, the opening track on her forthcoming second album called ‘Could It Be You?’ The record is set for release on April 24th with a launch show taking place at London’s 100 Club. Of the new album Ella says it “is a journey through longing and self-interrogation, the search for something or someone outside of myself to tell me who I am and what I want. I hope that people recognise themselves in these snapshots from my life and take comfort in the shared experience.” Check it out for pre-order here: https://amzn.to/4mnpc2e

Strange Fruit – Monopolar

The electronic / dreamgaze outfit Strange Fruit have just released their ‘Drips’ EP on Gentle Tuesday Recordings from which this hazy psychedelic space trip is taken. Fans of Stereolab, Kraftwerk or Broadcast, not to mention the head spinning loops and distortions of the original Shoegaze movement, are going to find much to love in the work of this Jakarta-based collective. They are futuristic and electro yet their sound still has the audible touch of the human hand to it, which brings the music a heartbeat that allows it to generate all the right kind of responses in our listening brains. And following eleven years of experimentation, the band themselves see this as a big leap forward step thanks to the involvement of world-class producers Hardway Bros. along with Tom Furse and Jonathan Kusuma. Get yourself a copy via this link: https://amzn.to/4mK2KRj

Aja Monet – Elsewhere

In its own way, this is a psychedelic melange as well, albeit with a far more urban, jazzy swagger. Featuring the jazz-soul talents of Meshell Ndegeocello and Georgia Anne Muldrow, this is a tantalising leap into a literary and spiritual space, a place where the consequential poetry of Aja Monet can breathe and let the dreamy, spoken words cast their spell and work their magic. It is not exactly rapping, Aja is far more hypnotic than that as she resists pushing her verses into a rhythmic pattern, more like letting them hang in the air for the mystic music to find a connection to gravitate towards. Either way, the effect is stunning and the forthcoming Aja Monet album, ‘The Color Of Rain,’ promises to be a stunner. Be sure not to miss out by clicking here: https://amzn.to/4sySFHY

Eggs On Mars – Shooting Stars

We finish this week with some liquid sugar in the hands of Eggs On Mars, playing a song from their latest album ‘Good Morning (I Love You).’ They are described as a soft-pop band from Kansas City, Missouri but I would argue there is a flowery melodicism to their music that sails closer to the psych-pop waters, drinking deep from them with good intent to achieve winning results such as this. The album is a collection of love songs infused with melancholia and an advanced facility for head-melting major-minor changes, it is out now via Enigmatic Brunch Records. The band themselves have said “through our midwestern lens we try to summon the sound of the Monkees if they were chosen over the Velvet Underground to be Warhol’s Factory band. We like Harry Nilsson, Foxwarren, and Chris Cohen a lot!” You can get yourself a copy of the album from here: https://eggsonmars.bandcamp.com/album/good-morning-i-love-you

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