Fresh Juice

Fresh Juice 19th May 2025

Kassi Valazza – Your Heart’s A Tin Box

The warm hazy country shimmer in Kassi’s music certainly caught my attention in 2023 with her wonderful ‘Kassi Valazza Knows Nothing’ album and she has pushed on further up and further in with this years ‘From Newman Street’ LP. That same analogue tone remains but do I detect a little more bite and punch this time? That jumps out of this song with an opening lyric that seems to pull its own limbs out in frustration at the state of the music business now. Honestly, if I won the lottery I would make sure artists like Valazza are worrying a lot less about making ends meet and just focusing on their craft as they should be. You hear too much these days about artists playing sell out shows and still running at a loss and I guess this song is evidence that Kassi endures similar battles. What we fail to understand is that the real artists are in it because their craft is a calling, they do not see it as a ticket to wealth and luxury. They just have to make their music. We should be glad that Kassi Valazza is doing just that, this is the authentic sound of country in 2025 and it is pretty damn marvellous…

My Morning Jacket – Half A Lifetime

Jim James and his rootsy rocking band are reliably dependable when it comes to new music. There may not be reinventing the Southern rock templates they perpetually swim around in but their music is full of crunching melodic groove and to this day, every time they put out a new record (as they have here with ‘Is’) you can be sure there will be at least a handful of classic sounding pop/rock hooks to stimulate the senses of the listener…

Greentea Peng – Raw

Here is another artist who I have raved about in the past, in this case around the time of her stunning ‘Man Made’ debut LP back in 2021. Well, Greentea Peng has now released ‘Tell Dem It’s Sunny’ and in addition to reporting on it being a sharp, confident and attention grabbing step back into the ring, it is also thrilling to observe how her sound is evolving. Where before I would say the dominant vibe was a dub heavy throbbing rumble, in 2025 there is a real soul in the voice breaking out of these tracks and the music itself, as heard on this undeniable live clip, is a tasty mix of trip-hop and jazzy motions. Dig into this right away…

Father John Misty – I Guess Time Just Makes Fools Of Us All

Not exactly a new one as it appeared on the Father John Misty album released late last year, ‘Mahashmashana’, but it is new to me and jumped out of the radio speakers the other day demanding some attention and love. The Misty baroque chamber pop aesthetic remains, as you would expect, but it is just such a head turner when an artist can occupy this space with songs that sound so simultaneously fresh but also like they have been around forever (well since 1971 or thereabout anyway). Sometimes it happens that a songwriter stumbles on a bit of low hanging fruit, a title that surely has to have been used before but it is available and they then tack a brilliantly crafted new song to it, which seems to be what has occurred here…

St Vincent – Violent Times

While the Fresh Juice weekly offerings were away for a time on this site, I guess I missed quite a few releases and tracks I would have loved to have featured. So, here is another recent live performance by an artist whose 2024 album ‘All Born Screaming’ has subsequently won Grammy awards but even more significantly, remains a worthy inclusion in this weeks Fresh Juice half dozen. I personally do not believe St Vincent to have fallen short with any releases for more than fifteen years, which basically covers the whole of their career. Annie’s execution of art-rock presentation alongside beautiful, sometimes abrasive, occasionally challenging but always worth listening to music makes her one of the definitive artists of the early 21st century period in music. Digitally witness her in action on late night TV here…

Wet Leg – Catch These Fists

Finally for this week another selection from the recent highlights of music on TV file. Wet Leg have reawakened and sound like they will not be among those who suffer from underwhelming second album syndrome. Their debut record was three years ago but from what I can see here, the time has been well spent pushing their sound into far rockier, a lot edgier and even a possibly more violent realm? Obviously if you perform on TV with an angry zombie sitting at the back of the stage then you are consciously not presenting something too cute but the jagged edges on display with this one suggest that new Wet Leg album could well be worth waiting for…

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Fresh Juice

20th March 2023

A half dozen weekly fresh picks of tasty new music

Pynch – London

From the bands debut album ‘Howling At a Concrete Moon’ which is due out on April 14th 2023, this is a take on melancholic pop music that lands its punches. As seen in this nostalgia tinted video, the song sets the hopes and aspirations associated with a city like London against the stark reality of trying to penetrate its societal brick walls as the debris of failed endeavour disfigure the landscape. As Pynch sing in this song, “have you ever dreamed of owning your own home? That’s just a bourgeois fantasy, better leave that shit alone”. Welcome to the real world, check this lot out now…

St Vincent & The Roots – Glory Box

As much as this magical pairing refrain from altering the structure of this Portishead classic, it is nevertheless a very welcome cover version. Performed with a live string section, Annie squeezes every last drop of drama and passion out of the lyrics whilst also taking full advantage of the understated guitar shredding opportunity the song offers. I never have a problem with respectful cover versions as a general rule, great music should be kept alive and played; this is as strong an argument for that view point as I can offer today…

Esther Rose – Safe To Run

Esther’s 2021 album ‘How Many Times’ was one of my outstanding albums of the year, I wrote more about that one here https://fruit-tree-records.com/2022/05/23/esther-rose-how-many-times/ This is the title track from her forthcoming LP release on New West Records, it shows her music is continuing to show mouth watering hints of future mass recognition (if there’s any justice) and if I need to add any more inducement to listen, this song and video feature an appearance from Hurray For The Riff Raff’s brilliant songwriter Alynda Lee Segarra…

ThirtySeventy – Acceptance

Either written as above or as 30/70, this delectable slice of jazzy soul is the work of a musical collective from Melbourne, Australia. Taken from the newly released Energy Exchange Records album ‘Art Make Love’, this has a truly spiritual, laid back vibe that just seems to reel me in. They describe themselves as a musical family rather than a group and with this, their fifth album, it sounds like their hypnotic communal flight is really beginning to take off, check this out today…

Seth Martin – I Still Love You

In so many ways, folk music remains the true underground music of the people, even in the 21st century. What the people at #gemsonvhs have done, for a few years now, is set themselves up as the modern day version of legendary folk archivist Alan Lomax, collecting field recordings of below-the-radar singer songwriters playing their own original material, building up an online archive of these tunes. They also do a ‘in the rough’ new music contest which is currently running and has received an avalanche of entries. I would suggest you go and lose yourself in a treasure trove of exciting new talent but as a taster, here’s a lovely, rustic selection from Seth Martin, who says of his song that it’s “a ballad about recovery from heartbreak, but maybe more than that it’s a reflection on the idea that nobody’s an island, and how much we need one another even when we don’t know how to ask for help”…

Kokoroko – RAPT

Finally this week, here are Kokoroko with their first-ever official music video, a beautiful short film soundtracked by ‘Ewà Inú,’ ‘Home’, and ‘Age of Ascent’ from the band’s debut album (released August 2022 on Brownswood Recordings). The film is directed by the multi-disciplined filmmaker, writer & video artist, Akinola Davies Jr. It re-imagines the music as a soundtrack to a triptych of interconnected stories set in Makoko (sometimes known as the Venice of Africa), a community originally settled by fishermen, excluded from official census records, and under threat of demotion.

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