.

. GONNA KEEP ON ROCKING TIL MY BLOOD RUNS BLACK.

Featuring four power-packed covers of London Boys, Jason B. Sad, Sara Crazy Child and Zip Gun Boogie. These are T.Rex/Bolan tracks that I’ve always loved but I thought the original production/mix on most of these songs was a bit thin and/or over produced (apart from John’s Children’s version of Sara Crazy Child which could never be accused of being over produced!) so I slowed the tempos down a little and generally beefed them up a lot, dragging them kicking and screaming into my idea of what they should sound like – I think they just about survived the process so I hope you like them!

Apart from that I’ve tentatively started work on a couple of new songs and also hope to put a ‘Best Of’ compilation together soon… watch this s p a c e.

At an age when he should be more concerned about whether the government will stick to its promise regarding the Triple Lock, shocked at the price of Lurpak and wondering what the hell he went upstairs for, Barron instead embraces the philosophy of Ronnie Van Zant on Sweet Home Alabama and proceeds to ‘turn it up’.

I should warn you (SPOILER ALERT) that Cruising the Void begins benignly, lulling the listener into a completely false sense of security with the opener Molly’s Theme, a short, lovely, semi-classical piece, bringing to mind pictures of Mozart snorting coke in a Viennese garret, quill in hand as he runs off another timeless classic while watching Series Three of Game of Thrones. At this point you might be tempted to pick up the CD cover – just to make sure this is a Peter Barron album – and if you’re wearing earphones you’ll quickly drop it again as Fifty-Fifty assaults your aural appendages with power chords straight from an overload on the National Grid. This is Heavy – with a capital ‘aitch’.

It’s a bit like what a combination of Judas Priest and AC/DC would sound like if they were a Buddy Holly and the Crickets tribute band playing Not Fade Away. Barron growls his way through it like a half-starved dingo while drummer, Nick Harradence obviously has no need to work out at the gym – as he gets all the exercise he requires behind his kit. I hope he appreciates that Barron must be saving him a fortune.

Let It Rock is more in the way of mainstream, with Marc Bolan, Chuck Berry and the Stones jamming in a parallel universe – and what’s not to like about that? It has a great groove about it and if your toes aren’t tapping then it must be because you’re legless. The barrage of sound continues with She’s Too Tough (For The Boys), Barron’s tribute to pioneering Punk Princess, Joan Jett. Excellent riffing here with an interesting change in melody in the chorus which I found myself singing as I was preparing my fish fingers next day.

There’s now a welcome chance to catch our collective breath with Brighter Day, a song with a sixties vibe – I could imagine it playing on the car radio in an episode of Randall & Hopkirk – Deceased, and maybe a nod to Donovan’s Museum. Barron hopes for better things to come when his sins are washed away – don’t we all! Nice 12 string guitar embellishments and it’s an excellent song with a feel good factor that’ll put a smile on your face.

…until Frankenstein, in which Mary Shelley meets Black Sabbath and they all live happily ever after in Transylvania in Boris Karloff’s ruined castle where they hear I’m Cryin’ – and proceed to jive to images of The Beatles singing Everybody Wants to Be My Baby while Francis Rossi and Rick Parfitt are writing Paper Plane with Igor in the next room. There’s no let up as Backs Against The Wall continues the ‘Air Guitarist’s Guide to Heavy Metal’. Is this a song about climate change – or just a paean to the Universe in general being shafted? Gloom is the keyword here anyway – the Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth has ended up in the paper recycle bin and been carted off.

Brand New Shoes is a breath of fresh air – it could be a duet by Harry Belafonte and Paulo Nutini. It sounds deceptively cheery, but the lyrics belie that – he bought her new shoes and all she used them for was to walk out on him, Better stick to a Prada handbag next time Peter. Annabella is a return of power chords in a wind tunnel with Edgar Allan Poe strutting his stuff on a radio mic. It’s the heavy metal equivalent of the folk standard She Moved Through The Fair – Barron has past form for entering these quasi Twilight Zone regions – and he’s perfectly at home there. God only knows where Nick Harradence gets his energy from – it’s got to be more than a Vitamin B supplement, surely?

The album ends on a poignant note with My Dreams Don’t Know You’re Gone – a personal tribute which those of us of a certain age will identify with only too well. It features a superb lead guitar solo that made my eyes mist over.

I read last week that Katy Perry has sold her back catalogue for $225 million. I wonder what Barron would get for his? A fine from the Noise Abatement Society probably. It’s an unfair world – but he knows that.

Davy McGowan.

Well a couple of years have flown by since my last album but I’m pleased to announce the arrival of new release ‘Cruising The Void’. Eleven new tracks – no covers this time, all my own work! Quite a varied bunch of songs this time around from heavy ‘Sabbath’ inspired riffing to chamber music, taking in some gospel, 50’s rock n’ roll, glam, punk and some acoustic whimsy along the way. A video for the single ‘She’s Too Tough (For The Boys)’, a song about Joan Jett – is up and running on YouTube. The album is available to stream/download from all the usual places and as always there are CD copies available to order directly from this website.

As usual I have been ably assisted on this release by Mr. Nick Harradence who has excelled himself with some fine drumming and percussion as always and none of this would have been possible without his invaluable help. Neil Seymour added some much needed organ to the gospel inspired ‘Brighter Day’ and my thanks to Mark Snashall for arranging/transforming ‘Molly’s Theme’ into a little slice of pop baroque! The wonderful space turtle featured on the front cover was bought to life in oils by Mr Steve Hammond.
Looking ahead to next year, I am planning to put together a compilation/best of album comprising the most popular tracks from the last six releases, so if you’ve got a favourite let me know! Also getting near to completion is a four track E.P. of Marc Bolan/T.Rex covers, but none of that will happen of course until ‘Cruising The Void’ has completed its inevitable long run at the top of the charts

The horror movie ‘Swipe Right’ featuring my song ‘One More Crow’ is STILL beset with release problems but we live in hope…

That’s all for now folks, stay groovy and don’t forget to boogie! x

Hello and welcome to the newly updated site! Due to circumstances beyond my control the website has been in ‘cold storage’ for some time now. Personally I’ve been anything but inactive and a new album (“The Fifty Fifty Affair”) consisting of 5 original songs and 5 covers, was released last Summer so you should now be able to find info/links/reviews/videos/etc. for that. CD copies are still available (see the ‘BUY’ page) or for downloads/streaming just check out iTunes/Spotify/Amazon, well pretty much all the usual sites really. Sorry no vinyl but maybe one day…

A new video was shot for the album’s opening track (‘Human Race’) a link can be found below. Also my cover of ‘Top Cat’ has proved to be very popular and a SoundCloud link to that is also here.

I have just started recording some new material for the next album – it’s early days yet but as usual I will be previewing new songs as they get finished so keep an eye on my SoundCloud page and for up-to-the-minute information follow me on Twitter: @_peterbarron  The first new song preview should appear in a few weeks.

The new album may not see the light of day till next year but will be all-new original material with the possibility of a (separate) EP featuring 4 Marc Bolan covers… if all goes according to plan!

The title track from my ‘One More Crow’ album is featured in a new Horror movie starring Toyah Wilcox and Sophie Ward called ‘Swipe Right’ it’s had an official premiere at the Cannes Film Festival but distribution for DVD/streaming etc. seems to have been delayed.

My song ‘Bad Bad Girl’ (from the ‘Retro Activ’ album) has recently been put forward for a new TV series currently in pre-production but that’s about as much as I know. I’m keeping my fingers crossed!

That’s about it for now – stay groovy and don’t forget to boogie!

 

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Why ‘The Fifty Fifty Affair?’ Is it about marriage? Sharing the takeaway bill? The chance of a Labour government at the next election? Best cancel that last one….and get on with the job of listening to the album.

HUMAN RACE – Be prepared. Barron doesn’t hang about – as the opening bacon-slicer of a riff proves. It’s the musical equivalent of Alex Ferguson’s hairdryer, and rocks you back on your heels. Fortunately, I remember the 70s – when riffs like this were the norm from The Stones, Bowie, and T. Rex. (God help the Millennials!) All human life is here, from the Chinese Tao to Donovan, as Barron tries to get his head round what’s happening in his life. He’s looking for serious answers to the serious questions he has, as all great artists do – even though they know they’ll never find them. He’s monumentally pissed off with things, but will probably forego all the philosophy and follow Hendrix’s advice when he said, ‘That’s alright – I’ve still got my guitar.’

TOP CAT – This made me smile – surely even Officer Dibble would have a chortle at this quasi Nelson Riddle arrangement of the old TV favourite, Drummer Nick Harradence must have loved having the chance to showcase his jazz skills, instead of battering the hell out of his kit and losing half a stone every session, and there’s also an excellent Nina Simone-esque piano from Neil Seymour. A very original cover.

FREEZE – Did you ever wonder what the Stones would sound like if they merged with U2? Well, I think it might be something like this. Barron’s had a rough time. ‘The hurt runs deep,’ he sings – and you can feel it in his cutting guitar. It’s a rock song, but it’s a singer/songwriter lyric. Maybe if Robert Lowell had been in a rock band with Sylvia Plath on bass they’d have come up with something like this. There’s rage, anger and confusion in Barron, which he condenses like an alchemist into a strict rock format. Great guitar playing – what a joy it is to hear someone playing like it’s 1974 – and wonderful drumming from Nick too.

LOW DOWN – For me, Tom Waits is the greatest songwriter who ever lived – and you have to be careful when you cover him – but there are no worries here. This is certainly low down dirty rock and roll – it’s ZZ Top jamming with Bowie and the Spiders. You’ve got to hear this to believe it. Wonderful stuff.

LOCKED IN THE GROOVE – This is the equivalent of hearing Donovan’s ‘Hey Gyp, Dig the Slowness’ after snorting 6 grams of coke and dropping two acid tabs! There’s no shortage of angst on this album – it’s not for the Wokerati or the faint-hearted. A wonderful production job with echoed guitars and a sense that Barron’s nicked Phil Spector’s Wall of Sound – now that Phil has no more use for it. This is heavy man!

YOU DON’T HAVE TO BE IN THE ARMY – A punk rock version of the Mungo Jerry classic written by Ray Dorset – who many people think is actually called Mungo Jerry. Dorset’s early lyrics give sexism a bad name – but Mighty Man and Baby Jump still soared high in the charts – of course that was before the snowflakes took over and decided it was sexual harassment to tell a pretty girl she’s pretty. This is in many ways a protest song. I don’t know where Dorset got the title from – he probably saw someone wearing a t-shirt with that printed on it. The original jug band, happy-go-lucky sound belies the fact that it’s really a desperately sad lyric at bottom, with a man who has ended up with nothing becoming the victim of police brutality in the end. Barron rattles through it at the pace of The Damned, occasionally glancing at drummer Nick to see if he’s struggling to keep up – but he’s got plenty left in the tank.

YOU CAME CREEPING – A heavy riff, heavy rock song with dark lyrics that pound like a steam hammer. If there’s a jukebox in Hell this will be on it. The Dr. Who Radiophonic Workshop intro lulls you into a false sense of security before it fades out, and then AC/DC featuring Ted Nugent take control. A very personal song written for someone very special who is no longer with us. The pain of loss is locked in the groove here. Dylan was surprised that so many people could say ‘Blood On The Tracks’ was great – when there was so much pain on it (as the title implies) The same might be said of this album. Barron takes his pain, anger and angst and turns it into great music.

WILD CHILD – I’ve heard it said of Lou Reed that he’s like Marmite – you either love him or hate him. To me he’s more like HP Sauce – essential on everything, except ice cream. I grew up with Transformer and Berlin – but I think my favourite Reed album is New York. When I first heard Reed’s ‘Wild Child ‘I was struck with the notion that musically it was a mix of elements of Dylan’s ‘Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues’ and ‘Visions of Johanna’ – it’s a fine song anyway and Barron does it full justice, beefing it up into a grunge like rock anthem.

THE END OF THE PIER SHOW – A much more acoustic feel to this – and a hint of nostalgia, like Donovan’s ‘Old Fashioned Picture Book’. Yeah, we’re all getting older, old and nostalgic. A song about the passing of time and the changes that involves, like watching re-runs of The Sweeney on ITV 3. Really nice Wurlitzer organ sound, again evoking those….well, those end of the pier shows and Archie Rice in Osborne’s The Entertainer. Excellent.

MY BABY’S LIKE A CLOUD FORM – Barron ends up where he began all those years ago in 1970 with Marc Bolan. He’s really flummoxed me with this. I thought I had heard everything Bolan ever recorded (including Unicorn Horn!) but I’ve missed this one. It’s actually very good and has an outtake from Electric Warrior feel about it, though I’m unclear as to when the original was recorded. Nick is perfect as Mickey Finn on the congas. So, Barron finishes on an upbeat note, though I think this song contains some sadness for him – but he’s moving forward determinedly – because he knows we’ll all meet up again somewhere down the line.

Are five stars the most I can give? Pity – this album deserves more.

LISTEN TO PEVENSEY WHALE SONG ON SOUNDCLOUD

Zoom Time: Perhaps the best Peter Barron work to date

Editor of the local broadsheet newspaper, the Pevensey Bay Journal, Simon Montgomery, said “this is perhaps the best Peter Barron work to date, only four tracks, but each one a gem.

“What we see is his ability to compose and write music and lyrics working within number of genres,. The work demonstrates real accomplishment.

“The last song about the Pevensey Whale is a gem of some description. Kind of early seventies/punk inspired take on the story of the Pevensey Whale, and amazingly, historically accurate. There is mention of the size of the whale and the coastguard that first saw the monster mammal on the shoreline in November 1865 and his name really was Bill Richards

“People will remember that when the Pevensey Timeline Association discovered the words to the skipping rhyme that was sung by school children in playgrounds in Sussex in November 1865 about the whale, the rhyme was recreated by the BBC.

“They came to Pevensey and Westham Primary school and recreated the rhyme with the schoolchildren reciting the rhyme, the first time that the words had been heard since 1865. The broadcast was seen by a million or more people on both BBC South East News and BBC Look East.

“Here we have got an original punk inspired song and lyric crafted by the masterful Peter Barron. Perhaps what we are about to see is a return to the story of the Pevensey Whale by the BBC broadcast again to a big audience.

“Who knows, maybe the Pevensey Whale song is a hit in the making. This is certainly an interesting song and would not be the first time that a famous local historical incident has been turned into song”.

“I could see this song as part of a documentary or part of an advertising campaign, who knows even a hit for the originality in the song”.

IMAGE ARTWORK: Jan Barron

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article reprinted by kind permission, Bay Life
listen to first track from new album, One More Crow, “Turn it Up‘” here

The new album, “One More Crow”, is published by Copro Records, a specialist label based in Henley-on-Thames.—Bay Life, 6 October 2016

“Listen with the volume set to 11”, he said grinning as he put on the first track, Turn it Up, of his new album, One More Crow, writes Bay Life.

In come the jangly guitars, Big Country style. The tune locks into your head, and you end up hearing the song all day along the Eastbourne Road.

The new album is a revelation. Coming away from Coast Road in Pevensey Bay, where Peter lives with wife Jan, you start to wonder if we may be about to witness someone local on the road to success.

One More Crow, is published by Copro Records, a specialist indie label based in Henley.

They argue, “we always make sure we release stuff on Copro that we are 100% behind and believe in”. If a demo is still being played in the office a week later, it stands some chance”. Peter now has that chance.

The standard of music is such that it is possible to imagine tracks appearing on a BBC4 documentary, specialist radio stations, a new social media advertising campaign for a company or even airplay on the mainstream radio channels.

Catchy is the word for the songs. And catchy in a way that draws on an era of music that is beginning to resonate again now.

As well as writing the compositions, Peter sings and plays guitar.

By day, Peter is a furniture restorer, but his spare time is taken up with restoring the early seventies to its rightful place in the cannon of musical history.

It all started with Peter riding a white swan in the shadow of Windsor Castle in 1970. Born in the winter of 1957 in the shadow of Windsor Castle (but sadly lacking any blue blood as he emphasises), he first picked up a guitar at the age of 14 after hearing ‘Ride a White Swan’ on the radio.

He explains that, “I immediately put it down again as I hadn’t a clue how to play it – but after a while, the necessary two chords were mastered and I went on to play in various rock and pop ensembles throughout the 70s and 80s”.

The music, draws from various strands of key influence.

“At the beginning of the 21st Century,” he explains, “I was reborn and rocking with a new attitude, new guitar (new hat) and a whole host of new and original tunes”.

‘Jupiter Diamond’, his last album, was conceived, writtenº, recorded and published at the beginning of 2014.

The album saw Peter fronting a strong rhythm section (with Nick Harradence on drums and Danny Lectrow on bass) performing ten original songs.

Pinning down the sound is quite hard, but there is a theme than runs like a stick of rock through the sound that references the early seventies and in particular the work of Marc Bolan and T Rex.

The sleeve notes pin down the sound in a particular way. “Rooted a little in the 70’s/80’s but with its (bleeding) heart in the 21st century, the songs are mostly up-tempo electric rock numbers with catchy hooks”.

A couple of the songs were picked up by the rock radio station ARfm.

They liked the album enough to feature tracks on three of their radio shows. (‘Bad Blood’ being a particular favourite). Catchy hooks is where we come in with the new album, One More Crow, as well.

The album is something of a more mainstream sound with still the same seamless feel in the compositions. Peter has created something of a synthesis, mixing a number of styles and genres into his own recipe book. So is he on the path to the success?

Think Sweet meets Suzie Quatro riffs with an underlying T Rex kind of shape and you get the point, except that you do not get the point.

The synthesis is pure Peter Barron, which I guess partly explains why his tracks have been picked by specialist radio stations and the record companies have come calling.

Something about 2016 says that the ensemble pieces he creates, moving from teeny bop rock, early seventies into more classically composed three chord wonders, says that his sound is right for the times in which we live.

The sound draws from the greats, much like painters study old masters.

As well as stories, the songs are visual, if that makes sense.

‘Blood Runs Black’ on YouTube, for example, from the album ‘Jupiter Diamond’, sees him white faced growling about burying those rocking bones.

Think Screaming Jay Hawkins meets a cranked up Tom Waits.

When we met up in a local cafe to talk about the record deal, the obvious first question was whether he is still riding a white swan in the shadow of Windor Castle.

He is fond of quoting the Lou Reed line, “One chord is fine. Two chords are pushing it. Three chords and you’re into jazz”.

We wanted to dig into what makes the new album work.

One More Crow seems to take the last album one stage further with a mix of genres and styles, would be a fair estimate?

“Yes I suppose so, but nothing is really deliberate, it’s just how things turn out although I did aim for a harder edged sound with this one…..”

The harder edged sound is definitely there, but most certainly not at the expense of the tunes or the writing.

We pointed out that the first track “Turn it Up” starts with swirling guitars and has an infectious poppy hard to pin down tune with finely crafted words. What kind of steps go into getting the distinct sound?

“Musically, this track has a lot in common with early Alice Cooper, although it didn’t occur to me while I was writing it, but I recently listened back to the ‘Killer’ album and I can now hear the influence.

“Lyrically it deliberately references Bolan and finding salvation in rock & roll but the seed of it came with the opening line – Things sound different with your eyes wide (open or shut) so it became about sound so ‘Turn It Up’ seemed the obvious chorus”.

It has been said that some of his couplets are stand out song writing, bearing comparison to Elvis Costello, was he aware of these comparisons?

In ‘Blood Runs Black’ for instance, on the album Jupiter Diamond, we get “My knees are shaking, I can’t sit still/I’m hyperventilating as I write my will”, which is Ramones territory, but the lines could equally have come from something like “My Aim is True” by Elvis Costello.

“To be honest I really don’t think of Costello as being much of an influence – the only album of his I have ever owned was Almost Blue, where he covers lots of country standards so I can thank him for introducing me to country music perhaps but have never been much of a fan otherwise.

“Cohen and Dylan are probably more of an influence lyrically I would think and probably Robyn Hitchcock too but he’s not so well known… I do like things to flow and rhyme well though”.

Whatever the influences the songs are certainly strong on hooks.

It led on to a question about the synthesis, starting in the early seventies, that seems to be the hallmark of the songs. Sometimes, we suggested, you hear Tom Waits, sometimes we hear Iggy Pop.

He talked about T-Rex being such an important source of material with the early seventies sound, but what we are hearing is pure Peter Barron, how we asked, do the compositions take shape, does he consciously start with an idea to write something in a particular genre?

“I rarely sit down and try hard to write a song, that won’t usually work.

“I tend to wait until a line or a melody hits me so hard, I can’t ignore it – it’s usually a phrase or hook line that acts as a catalyst.

“I can often have the whole song written or mapped out in my head before I’ve even picked up the guitar – although I didn’t used to be able to do that.

“I suppose the mood of the lyric will dictate the pace and delivery of the song, whether it’s going to be a ballad or an up tempo pop song’.

Last we asked about the excitement of the indie label record deal, where would he like to be a year or so with his music?

“That’s a tricky one – I enjoy the writing and recording process but I’m not really interested in performing live, so promoting myself as an all round artist is a bit tricky but I’d love to see one of my tracks picked up for a soundtrack or maybe covered by another artist, so it may lead me somewhere or it may lead me nowhere but whatever happens, I’m not going to stop writing songs”.

With the troubadour style picture on the front cover of his album, “Time Stands Still”, shot sitting beside a groyne in Pevensey Bay, it is not impossible to envisage a scene in which Peter Barron comes back to where it all began to film a sequence in different circumstances. The pot holes will no doubt still be in evidence.

Maybe not Highway 61 Revisited, but what ever happens next with the music of Peter Barron, what seems sure is that we will be hearing more from the quiet man of Coast Road.

The Peter Barron music platform is here, You can listen to ‘Turn it Up’, the first tack from his new album, ‘One More Crow’, on Soundcloud. www.peterbarron.co.uk

© Bay Life, all rights reserved

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article courtesy Bay Life

News that will be of interest to budding musicians in the Bay seeking contracts with their music that will give them access to a wider audience.

Local musician, Peter Barron, who lives in Coast Road in Pevensey Bay, by day works as a furniture restorer, but in his spare time he crafts music.

He has recently heard that there has been a take up with one of his tracks by a publisher in the States. The track, ‘Running on Empty’ comes from his latest CD, ‘Jupiter Diamond’.

His music is a kind of retro take, with a strong influence from the Marc Bolan era but reviewers also hear Tom Waits and some of the rhyming couplets in his songs have been noted as having the simplicity and sophistication of early Elvis Costello songs.

Peter himself describes the music as being ‘rooted a little in the seventies, eighties, but with its (bleeding) heart in the 21st century, the songs are mostly uptempo rock numbers with catchy hooks’.

His latest track ‘Ghost Dancers’, that will form part of his new CD, to be published in Spring 2016, has been well received. One local reviewer said “In my view, the latest track is the very best. All the songs are you, but this is you maturing and working and crafting words/music in a way that is distinct and marked”.

“The words are just peach, you are an accomplished songwriter and the way that the song is shaped is you working with your own music in a kind of synthesis that is individual and marked”.

Added to the mix in the work of Peter Barron are catchy hook lines and a raw feeling. As compositions the songs stand in their own right and have both aural and visual appeal. They are the kinds of songs that are interesting as a listen and catch you unawares with their well crafted structure.

It is possible to see them utilised as backdrops in documentaries, for example. They have a strong ‘story telling quality’ and their catchiness sees them enjoying repeated plays on specialist radio stations.

Talking to Bay Life last Friday (28 August), Peter told us; “It was only signed/confirmed the other day but I have just been offered a ‘single song contract’ from a music publisher in America (Nashville) for my track ‘Running On Empty’ from Jupiter Diamond .

“I just sent him three tracks (so he’s still yet to hear the rest of the album) and he particularly liked that song and thinks he may be able to ‘place’ it, either for film/advertising/rerecording by another artist or maybe even as it stands”.

The news will be of interest to local budding musicians whose talent often struggles to be heard in the world of streaming music that sees millions of tracks recorded but few ever reaching a wider audience.

Peter commented; “I’ve been added to his ‘songwriters list’ and will be contacted monthly with certain types of material he’s looking for. So that’s a step in the right direction”.

Peter points out that “as well as ARFM radio, I am now getting loads of plays on an online 24 hr music station called ‘The Shift Radio Station’ I sent them the Jupiter Diamond CD a few months ago and they still play about four tracks a day!”

Unassuming Peter added “If I was getting that kind of exposure on Radio 2 I’d be famous by now”.
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Letter, 22/12/14 [extract]
Danielz
, Vocals & Lead Guitar, T.Rextasy

Hello Peter,

Many thanks indeed for sending your latest album, ‘Jupiter Diamond’. I get a lot of Bolan fans sending me their recordings, and I must admit that when I saw your letter with ‘enclosed CD’ I thought “oh no—what am I going to say about this”, as most of what I receive are, shall we say, not too professional—I think you must know what I mean!

I have played it through twice already and, for what my opinion is worth, I think it’s absolutely brilliant. From the first track ‘Electric Boogie’, through to the sublime title track, it all falls together beautifully. Nicely recorded—to me like a 2 sided vinyl album put together as one CD. I love a lot of your lyrics as well, which I feel mean a lot to you, as much as the music does.

I do hear, of course, the Bolanic influence on some of the songs (not to mention lyrically), but also in-between, I can hear your own originality too. I hope the album has been doing well for you as it deserves attention from the public and the media. Being in the Brighton vicinity, I would think that there are people there that could pick this up running.

danielz1

Danielz
Vocals & Lead Guitar, T.Rextasy

The World’s Only Official Tribute Band to T Rex and Marc Bolan
Voted as the UK’s number one live tribute band by a BBC1 ‘Battle of the Fantasy Bands’

Dead-Man's-Hand

republished by kind permission of Bay Life

Local musician, Peter Barron of Coast Road, Pevensey Bay is celebrating today (October 23) with news that his latest track has been picked up by well regarded specialist radio station, ARfm.

It is to be featured in their weekend programme on Friday 31 October. ‘Dead Man’s Hand’ crafts a story in a late seventies groove, with lyrics that lean on the idea that ballads can be cranked up into a tuneful blitzkrieg to tell a tale.

This particular track takes up the story of the death of Wild Bill Hickok and turns it into a memorable tune with the kind of hook lines beloved of bands like the Ramones.

Peter describes his work as ‘rooted a little in the seventies, eighties but with its (bleeding) heart in the 21st century’ featuring up tempo electric rock numbers with catchy hooks.’

Noted for its Marc Bolan influence, his latest album, Jupiter Diamond, caught the attention of music journalist David McGowan, “Jupiter Diamond? T. Rex immediately came to mind when I saw the title – Ballrooms of Mars and Diamond Meadows – a different planet (queen) I know, but still within the confines of our solar system.

“Hope it sees some commercial success – it certainly deserves to. It has passion and for me that is a pre-requisite for the arts, and it’s sadly lacking in this X-factor world of no-talent wannabees. I commend it to the House!”

Talking to Bay Life today (October 23) Peter explained “Just heard back from Colin Noble at ARfm – he will be playing the new song ‘Dead Man’s Hand’ on Friday 31st October. The show is – The Colin Noble Unsigned Show and it airs Friday nights from 7 – 9pm

“I will post the song on SoundCloud the day before (30th) and it will be available as an audio and free download for 14 days only (until 13th Nov)”.

You can find out more about the Pevensey Bay unsigned musician who is attracting attention, here on his web platform or you can follow him, here on his twitter feed.