Fresh Juice

Fresh Juice 9th June 2025

The Milk – I Need Your Love

Top new retro soul tune taken from this now well established band’s fourth album ‘Borderlands’. The only thing that gets in the way of music that references another era is if the style outweighs the substance but if, as is very much the case here, the backbone is a great song then things really do start to happen. I first caught sound of The Milk back in 2012 when their anger fuelled ‘Broke Up The Family’ really spoke to a personal situation unfolding for me at the time but real class tends to be permanent and thirteen years later, here they are proving to be one still tasty milk that has definitely not gone off with time.

Natalie Bergman – Dance

Add this insistent little beast to the quite fertile crop of grainy, sixties go-go inspired alternative girl pop splendour currently abounding, most recently witnessed here in the hands of Lael Neale. The thing I cannot escape with Bergman’s music is that underlying current of sorrow and melancholic reflection which even manages to seep through on a groove driven dance number like this one. Delve deeper into her back story and some unspeakably tragic events are not too far from the surface, events which she was working through during the healing hymns of her last album ‘Mercy’ but here the life and light at the end of that tunnel feels like it is within touching distance. New album ‘My Home Is Not In This World’ is coming soon on Third Man Records.

Richard Dawson – More Than Real

Speaking of hymns, this really does have that sombre meditative quality that prompts a listener to stop and just listen, to absorb and reflect. Taken from Richard’s latest album ‘End of the Middle’ released on Weird World / Domino which to these ears is a work of outsider genius. Richard’s style is akin to that of a primitive painter, you know the kind that get dismissed by people saying “I could do that”, but his uninhibited melodic lines and wayward form defying structures cut straight to both the minutiae and emotional core of everyday and, as in this song, overwhelming real life traumas and situations. I find it impossible not to be moved by the identifiable realities he touches upon in his work and believe him to be a genuine national treasure.

Jorja Smith – The Way I Love You

A real change of pace with this one and the first of this weeks new music recommendations that could be placed in terms of its club friendly sound alone in the modern era. I feel that there is a lot of new R&B with roots and echoes in urban grime culture that loses me with an over produced, all-too-clean sheen airbrushing out a lot of the human heartbeat that makes soul music so special. But there are artists for whom that complaint does not apply and Jorja Smith is one, even with the face-slapping, bass driven, studio template this track is built around. There is still that jazzy voice carrying it, the punch and pull of Jorja’s authentic, un-contrived personality pumping everything that you hear which all serve to make this tune impossible to ignore.

The Horsenecks – Baker City Blues

This duo are an Oregon based husband and wife duo comprising Gabrielle Macrae (fiddle, guitar, bass, vocals) and Barry Southern (banjo, guitar, dobro, vocals) and they play an old time fiddle and bluegrass grain of country-folk. So much of the new music I feature these days might have a style that harks back to a long gone era (like the old soul sounds of this weeks opener or the many sixties garage and psych bands I play) but the thing that always bumps an act up into current relevance is if they are creating something wholly new and original within that framework. That is what the Horsenecks do here, playing a classic sounding tune newly written by Macrae which also appears as the opening track on their forthcoming ‘In The West’ album released on Tiki Parlour Recordings.

Robert Forster – Strawberries

I have just returned from a couple of days of rural escape in North Norfolk during which a meal in a village pub was rendered excruciating by an entitled, middle-class family invading the dining space of everyone else in the room due to their need to set up a phone tripod and film themselves dining and playing cards for Instagram, wilfully unaware as to their invasiveness on the evening of others. They even roped in bar staff to take photos. The mother spent so much time exacting her camera angles and poses that none of her meal was spent actually interacting with her own children, one of whom felt the need to apologise on his mothers behalf to an elderly couple and attempt to explain to them what Instagram is. Anyway, I say all this because this charming new film by Robert Forster and his partner does nothing more than address the very middle class problem of identifying the person who ate all the delicious strawberries. It is delightfully charming and I could not wipe off the cheery smile it put on my face, taken from Forster’s new album on Tapete Records.

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Fresh Juice

6th March 2023

A half dozen weekly fresh picks of tasty new music

Theo Croker ft Ego Ella May & D’LEAU – Slowly

The video to this new track, from Theo Croker’s new EP ‘By The Way’ is said to be a ground breaking movement in music and AI. It does have a head spinning effect for sure although at the core is some tasty trumpet playing and sleepy soulful vocals that are, to these ears, cut from a vintage cloth and very fine indeed…

Waco Brothers – In The Dark

This is the first single from The Waco Brothers latest album ‘The Men That God Forgot’ on Plenty Tuff Records. This video features live footage of the song being worked through with a pounding conviction at Kingsize Soundlabs in Chicago where the album was recorded in 2022 with Mike Hagler…

Robert Forster – Always

This is the Brisbane singer-songwriter and Go-Betweens co-founder Robert Forster playing a live acoustic version of the superb ‘Always’, a song from his new and eighth solo album ‘The Candle and The Flame’, at Lightspace in Fortitude Valley, Brisbane. The making of the record became a traumatic affair two thirds of the way through when his wife Karin Baumler received a stage four cancer diagnosis. By his own admission she is his most dependable conspirator in the music creative process and so it is so good to hear that, upon completion of the album, the pair are once again playing together, the healing power of music helping Karin navigate the other side of her ordeal…

Big Thief – Vampire Empire

Big Thief continue to spill over with creativity as heard in this clip of them performing a brand new song on the Stephen Colbert Late Show on TV in the US. There is some acid-folk style flute giving this one a delightfully pastoral wave, something which contrasts rather well with the crunchy electric balladry of front woman Adrianne Lenker…

Emiliana Torrini & The Colorist Orchestra – Hilton

Always a treat to get any new music from Emiliana, this is taken from the album “Racing The Storm” set to be released 17th March 2023 via Bella Union…

Gorillaz – Silent Running

Gorillaz are letting their heart wrenchingly beautiful melancholy side come to the fore on this MTV performance of ’Silent Running’ featuring Adeleye Omotayo, from new album ‘Cracker Island’, out now…

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