Silver Summer - Die of Love (2026)

  • 03 Jul, 18:00
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: Die of Love
Year Of Release: 2026
Label: Precious Metals Records
Genre: Rock, New Wave, Alternative
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 43:30
Total Size: 294 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Closer (3:50)
02. White Boots (4:30)
03. Princess Bitch (4:57)
04. Teeth (5:19)
05. Witness (4:10)
06. Ocean Drive (5:04)
07. Breath (3:34)
08. Catch Me (4:17)
09. Trouble (4:27)
10. Silver Screen (3:31)

Synthesizers dominate. “Princess Bitch” engages in a synth-pop aggregation closer to disco-era Sparks & their “The Number One Song In Heaven.” Silver Summer has a significant presence in their songs, but no whiskey. They tangle along the perimeters explored by others & try with muscle to push the right buttons & emerge with an original peak performance, but seem to fall short because they dabble in falsetto instead of investing in 1 or 2 dominating vocalists.

“Teeth” has falsetto, but here they do mix it up nicely in a Prince radiance & they lay down the funk without getting too soulful. The song has “teeth,” & the backup vocalists are fully fueled. Die of Love isn’t a disappointing set – far from it. It has lots of danceable tunes, good vocal varieties, & strikes the ear with intensity. The tunes do touch upon many “little deaths” as their PR informs. Deaths in the backseats of old cars, small motels, drug den apartments (shooting galleries), dance floors & highways.

However, I don’t hear much tragedy in the melodies, but I do hear sadness like “Witness.” This is arranged a bit chaotically. The sounds vary & are implemented well, but it’s like the sound of an old engine. The vocals are imbued with tones but need to be far better produced. It’s too generic, & the harmonies aren’t fine-tuned. The ideas are fascinating, but that’s where a good producer is gold.

This set doesn’t have a Lou Reed streetwise influence (I’m from NY & I didn’t detect any). The darkness, danger, & seedy topics of the Velvet Underground, with Reed’s intensity, were not apparent. Songs like “Ocean Drive” are more California sand. The vocals are applied sensibly, & the harmonies come together better. It just doesn’t come soon enough. Whereas one voice begins “Breath,” & it starts quite well until the Bee Gees-type vocals enter & it dissipates. Their signature “sound” does develop & it’s appealing as a hint in “Trouble.” A good driving pop-synth identity. They have it…it’s still in the box & needs to get unwrapped.

Highlights – “Closer,” “White Boots,” “Princess Bitch,” “Teeth,” “Catch Me,” “Trouble,” & “Silver Screen.”

Musicians – Colin Scharf (vocals/guitars/piano), Hanna Cesario (vocals/synth/piano), Ed Avila (bass/piano), Tyler Vaughan (drums/percussion) with Federico Sagolpa (synth bass), Evan Bierer (tenor sax), Ryan Shirk (trombone), Dustin Voges (trumpet), & Chestnut Squares (handclaps).




  • whiskers
  •  20:46
  • Пользователь offline
    • Нравится
    • 0
Many Thanks for Flac
  • mufty77
  •  00:21
  • Пользователь offline
    • Нравится
    • 0
Many thanks.