The Carousels and The Honest Mistakes

The Carousels

The Carousels “Sail Me Home St. Clair”

The Carousels are a Scottish band with a knack for California psyche-folk, think The Byrds Sweetheart of The Rodeo era and Gram Parsons. Opening with the easygoing “Josephine,” it features a steady strum, slide guitar, and layered Beach Boys-styled harmonies. “Lord Speed My Hurricane” jangles away and “Silvio” builds into it’s laid back melody, with its pedal steel guitar accents after each verse.

With the addition of violin, banjo, and harmonium the overall sound of each song is rich and yet it allows for nuance. The stronger melodies and storytelling are present in “Like A Loaded Gun” and “By Your Side.” It gets trippier on “Man Out Of Me,” but most of the music is very consistent, although the lack of a distinct lead singer gives the music less focus. Still, those harmonies are simply gorgeous. Give this one a shot.

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The Honest Misakes

The Honest Mistakes “Burn it Down”

Once again, The Honest Mistakes rock out alongside the forceful vocals of Joylene Dalia. Much of the album was recorded in a practice studio, and as a result, the music has a looser approach.  The grinding guitar riffs on the opener “Go Ahead and Try” are strong and the 50’s styled rhythms on “You Better Say Something” are also a lot of fun.

Songwriter and guitarist Chris Ehrich does his best to utilize Joylene’s vocals on “Here We Are Again” with a lighter touch. The country styled rocker “I Could Care” is a big highlight here with its jangling melody and message about standing tall and being there for someone. Not all of the songs resonate, and there are times I feel the guitars and vocals aren’t on the same page (“Broken”)  but when everything comes together it’s worth it. Check it out, cause this is a band that deserves to be heard.

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Younghusband and Carousels

Younghusband

Younghusband “Dissolver”

One of the young bands I found scouring SXSW’s performers list was British quartet Younghusband. Like other neo-pyschedelic artists (Jacco Gardener or The Junipers comes to mind) lead vocalist-guitarist Euan Hinshelwood does a good job with melodic guitar lines framed by catchy rhythms. Opening with “Waverly Street” its a light harmony with fluid guitars underneath, similar to early Apples in Stereo, but the slower plodding followup “Heavy Expectations” has more of a Velvet Underground aesthetic.

Its the upbeat gems that will win you over like the catchy “She Lies Awake” and the densely packed gem “Blonde Bending” with its sweetly layered chorus. Sometimes a very simple arrangement like “Better Times” grows into a winner with its unexpected chord shifts. While not every song hits the melodic mark, enough do to make this a worthy investment of your time. I look forward to this young bands continued development.

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The Carousels

The Carousels “Love Changes Like the Seasons”

2014 debut release from this eight-member Scottish band delivers impressive psychedelic folk/country songs with captivating vocal harmonies. The use of chiming 12-string guitar chords is the main accompaniment here. “(I Hope I Never) Get You Off My Back” will appeal to fans of Paul Starling and the audiophile will hear an echo of The Beatles “Please Please Me” in “Call Along The Coast.” The music is lovely and stylistically consistent but the drawback to this is that no single track stands out and it makes for homogeneous listening.  The slide guitar on “Deep Mid Winter” and the Pet Sounds-like production techniques on songs like “Drifting Back” distinguish it a little better than the rest. Still its worth exploring if you love group harmonies like The Hollies, Byrds or The High Dials.

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