Punktastic.com
Wecome Guest, please login or register.
Sponsorship Message
News Forums PT Recordings Bands Reviews

Submit news | Band of the Week |Reading Festival Live| PT RSS:RSS Feed

James Black split, Mia Riddle
I came to this CD having listened to neither Mia Riddle nor James Black previously, so you’ll get a very ‘face value’ dollop of opinion here. Arriving in its hippy-ish too-cool-for-school sleeve (well, the Mia side, at least), I thought that Mia Riddle was going to be a complete snooze-fest. Thankfully, opening track ‘Ship of Dreams’ is great. Its melancholy, wistful laments are sort of a more indie-folk version of Rilo Kiley. A few more songs of this calibre and you’d have a cracking little EP. ‘Homesick’ is next and it’s the complete opposite; lacking any emotional punch and I was left completely at odds attempting to engage with the lyrics. ‘Snow storm’ fares a little better but it’s still yet to get anywhere near the standard of the opening track.

I do have to give credit for the range of notes that Mia Riddle hits; under-stated, low whispers contrast with pitches beyond my pitiful non-canine ears, and both are demonstrated in ‘Thunder storm’, another decent song. ‘Treehouse’ is great in terms of the acoustic guitar – probably employed best as something in its own right here rather than as an accompaniment to the vocals. In summary this has one great song, one not bad song, and a trio of tracks which tread the (Ria) middle ground at best.

On this showing, I’m not a massive fan of James Black. It doesn’t take a genius to figure out that Mr Black is a rather large fan of Billy Bragg and his entire style on this CD seems to be based in his shadow rather than attempting to venture out into a corner of its own. As such, you can guess the politicised content of his lyrics, with the BNP getting a good ripping (in ‘I wonder if I’ll ever play this song in Birmingham’). I know it’s purposefully done for the ‘sharp’ twang effect, but the fact that the guitars are permanently too loud in every song is really off-putting.

To be honest, his lyrics are honest and raw – something you’d expect of someone of this ilk, but the lack of polish is evident. Nice for a quick listen, but there’s a bit of work to be done here. As a package, it’s definitely one for the indie-folk crowd. Add another star if you’re a genre fan but it’s not going to persuade the masses.

www.myspace.com/miariddle
www.myspace.com/jamesblack

Spud

starstarstarstarstar

» Want to review this record? Click here to leave your comments

Posted by Paul
9:23PM, 12th May 2006
250 Views

Tell a Friend about this item


No other reviews have been added for this band.Options:
Reviews Index «
Back a Page «
 Subscribe to PT Mail

Menu
Releases
Reviews
Interviews
Gig Calendar
Punktastic TV
Columns
FAQ
About/Contact
Calendar

TV

Shop

Reviews
The End of an Error
Houston Calls
14th Oct 2008, Paul
image
The Bright Lights EP, This...
Live Fast, Go To Bed Early,...
Greetings From, A Rocket To The...
S/T, Shuteye Unison
Hurry Up Hurricane, teamABC
Rocket To Riot City, Bankrupt
Big Bold Letters, Cruiserweight
Fiction Fever, The Bigger Lights
That's What She Said, The Friday...

Gig Reviews
Innerpartysystem
London Camden Underworld
9th Oct 2008, Paul
image

Interviews
Innerpartysystem

13th Oct 2008, Paul
image

Competitions
image

Today's Gigs
Goldblade, North East
View all »

Sponsorship Message

Content © Punktastic 2008 - Design & Scripting by Robert Bethell

PT Recordings PT Recordings News News Reviews Reviews Bands Bands Forums Forums