Pip Blom - Welcome Break (2021)

  • 11 Nov, 14:38
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Artist:
Title: Welcome Break
Year Of Release: 2021
Label: Heavenly Recordings
Genre: Indie Rock, Lo-Fi, Female Vocal
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 39:24
Total Size: 95.9 / 281 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. You Don't Want This (03:28)
2. 12 (03:10)
3. It Should Have Been Fun (03:42)
4. Keep It Together (03:16)
5. Different Tune (03:39)
6. I Know I'm Not Easy To Like (03:34)
7. Faces (04:21)
8. I Love The City (03:44)
9. Easy (03:07)
10. Holiday (03:29)
11. Trouble In Paradise (03:54)

Actively seeking out moments of creative-authenticity, be it via a slightly- out-of-tune guitar or proudly-fuzzed vocals, Pip Blom take us back full circle and introduce us to their Welcome Break- an eleven-track release which resonates with about as much decisive allure as it’s Boat precursor, but this time with a bit more contemporary chaos to boot. Where Boat reckoned as a fresh-faced, yet gloriously fearless game- changer, Welcome Break is the self-assured older sibling who, with an additional year or two behind themselves, isn’t afraid to speak out, take lead, and instigate a liberated revolution-come-bliss-out.

Following an extensive touring schedule which saw the Dutch 4-piece roam over field, oceans, and Glastonbury’s John Peel stage following the release of their debut record Boat, any such cool-cat would be forgiven for wanting to kick back, and indulge in some very appreciated, time off. As is often the way, such timely-abandon cannot be said for Pip Blom however, who immediately began to gather up all her soaked-up inspirations taken from the road, and manifest a re-energised sense of self, and ritualistic songwriting. It’s at this stage in our indie-fairy-tale that things start to get ever so 2020. Whilst the world was suddenly put on hold as a result of Covid-19, Pip Blom, who’d made plans to return to their favourite ‘Big Jelly Studios’ in Ramsgate, England, were suddenly faced with a very sticky, kind of dilemma. “We’d scheduled to go into the studio in September but summer started moving and there were a couple of countries not allowed to go to the UK anymore... a week before we had to go, the Netherlands was one of those countries”- notes Pip.

In total, three weeks were spent recording what would become the groups sophomore release; a Al Harle engineered love-affair which was self- produced entirely by the band and culminated in a legally intimate, fully- seated album play-back, to six, of Ramsgate’s most chorus-savvy and ‘in- the-know’ residents. Getting out of their hometown and into an environment which removed all notions of “normality” or personal space, was an atmospheric godsend in terms of motivation; an act which encouraged Pip Blom to re-adjust and buckle down as a unit again, after spending so long in mandatory isolation.




  • mufty77
  •  18:40
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Many thanks for lossless.