Currently browsing Posts Published February 2012

Rattling coins, mobile phones and alarm clocks are featured instruments in Young Magic’s new album, Melt

Artist: Young Magic
Album: Melt
Released: 14th of February, 2012
Label: Carpark Records

I was instantly drawn to this album, initially feeling like it was a wave of musical freshness. A 5 kiss rating for sure. But the more I listened to it, the less it gave me.

It’s a surprisingly cohesive work considering that it was recorded in several different countries. Two of the band’s members are Australian ex-pats and one is a native Indonesian, and all have traveled to multiple continents.

For me, the heavy use of reverb gets a bit much, but perhaps it was a conscious production decision in an attempt to bind these diverse sounds into a textured whole. The use of guitars are rare, but when they are present in the mix, they are processed to sound like part of the texture as opposed to chorded instruments. The melodies are often pumped out by exaggerated synths, and the percussion mostly makes use of household objects – rattling coins, pitched water jugs, mobile phones and alarm clocks.

It is an interesting album, and one that I do recommend listening too, but for me, one or two listens was enough to keep me satisfied.

I give it 3.5 out of 5 kisses.

Written by Amy Bastow for the Kiss My Arts Show on Joy 94.9 – All opinions are mine. Copyright 2012.

Audrey Tautou and a balding toothless Swede make for a beautiful film

Delicacy (La Délicatesse) Film Review

One of the many highlights of the 23rd annual Alliance Francaise French Film Festival, which opens nationally from the 6th of March to the 9th of April.

A beautifully exquisite film about love, loss, grief and starting again. After a fairy-tail opening, a tragic event sees Nathalie, played by Audrey Tautou, distracting her thoughts by throwing herself into her work. Just when she’s convinced she’ll never find love again, an out-of-the-blue kiss to Markus (Francois Damiens), a balding toothless Swede, changes her life forever and takes us on a journey that is sure to leave you with a smile.

I give it 4.5 out of 5 kisses.

Written by Amy Bastow for the Kiss My Arts Show on Joy 94.9 – All opinions are mine. Copyright 2012.

A gruesome but somewhat intimate journey into the disposable world of finance

Early One Morning (De Bon Matin) Film Review

One of the highlights of the 23rd annual Alliance Francaise French Film Festival, which opens nationally from the 6th of March to the 9th of April.

Jean-Pierre Darroussin plays Paul, a successful bank executive whose life, as we see in the film’s quietly explosive and gruesome opening, has gone off the rails. Writer-director Jean-Marc Moutout creates a complex psychological drama, which shows Paul’s seemingly perfect life falling apart as he discovers the darker side of the financial world. An incredible journey into the disposable world of finance, and an even more incredible journey into the mind of one of its employees.

I give it 4.5 out of 5 kisses.

Written by Amy Bastow for the Kiss My Arts Show on Joy 94.9 – All opinions are mine. Copyright 2012.

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