Dear City: EP

December of 2008 brought us Dear City‘s first EP, a seasonably chilly little collection of five ghostly gems, to end the Oxfordbands.com year on a high point. Their follow-up, broadly speaking, is just as evocative, inventive and delicate, although one or two of the songs seem this time round to be a little mechanical.

‘Stranger Guest’ begins inauspiciously, with a conventional minor-key acoustic guitar pick and some uncertain singing from vocalist Camille Baziadoly, but producer Phill Honey soon works his magic, threading percussive electronic glitches and winking, spectral keyboards through the texture, before uncoiling a menacing tom figure over Camille’s ever-more maddening schoolyard chant.

After this strong start, we have something close to a misfire. ‘Among Three’ may be Dear City’s weakest song to date, a repetitive triple-time two-chord guitar vamp which admittedly benefits from the horns, pads and beats Honey throws protectively around it. Baziadoly’s singing is intense and focussed, but the tune as a whole is not brilliantly memorable.

Quality is restored on the compelling stomp ‘Sideways’, which combines hushed, intensely sweet Cocteau-esque close-harmony with romantic sweeping strings. In Honey’s original but non-alienating production work, we’re not too far from Radiohead’s superb ‘In Rainbows’.

And that also goes for the lush, expansive ‘Deep Crawl’, a lovely, otherworldly daydream shrouded in chorussed guitars and strange, echoing sounds that could be a voice or a keyboard or some instrument yet to be patented. In all then, although this record lacks the ‘shock of the new’ factor of their debut, and there is the odd misstep along the way, Dear City remains a novel, fascinating act, capable of many moments of transcendent beauty.

Dear City Myspace

  • jamess

    apart from myspag being resoutely bloody minded and slow, so i can’t actually hear the song, i’d just like to say that the review genuinely made me make the effort to find out more, therefore job well done!

  • colinmackinnon

    Very kind words, jamess. Myspace is a cranky old grid, innit?

  • Big Tim

    Haven’t checked this EP out yet, but I listened to the first batch of songs after the great review it received on here and was well impressed. Seriously good stuff, hope this batch is as good.

  • phill

    Cheers for the review Colin. You will be pleased to hear that ‘among three’ is Camille’s least favourite out of these 4 songs too – however, it’s my favourite and you’re both wrong, so there!

    Also, this (and the other one) are both demos, not EPs. We haven’t released anything yet but hopefully will do soon.

  • jamess

    doing anything live?

  • phill

    Might do James. I’m just getting my head around Ableton Live and my midi pedalboard. When we do go live it’s not just going to be playing to a backing track, we’re going to be looping all the guitars, and hopefully the vocals, live.

  • jamess

    sounds loopy! scherioushly though – finally got myspag to fire up your tunes, and really like them. more than happy to bung you on as & when you’d be up for it.

  • http://www.smilex.co.uk leesmilex

    just wanted to say that i am a huge fan of dear city (again so biased but hey!) and think camille is fiercely talented (shame about that phill bloke haha!) even if between her and delta freq, boywithatoy is not getting a look in! (my fault as well) hands off jamesss i saw them first and i urge everyone to check out dear city immediately! :-)x

  • martyn

    Just checked out the myspace page….sounds pretty cool. Defintaley not going to be just another one of listen.
    Phill is Ableton a better option live than Cubase?

  • phill

    Martyn – for Dear City, yes. I don’t want to just play to a backing track, I want to re-create it live and with the looping and sample triggering options in Ableton Live it’s easily better than cubase (at least the old version I have anyway).

  • Big Tim

    Yeah, Cubase is great for straight up recording and production, but it’s in no way designed for live reproduction/remixing of songs. Ableton is much better for that kind of thing.