Starsailor – All
This Life
Release date 1st
September 2017
This review was originally posted via Gig Junkies.
Some 16 years after their critically acclaimed debut release, ‘Love Is Here’, Starsailor return with their 5th studio album ‘All This Life’. It’s also 8 years since previous studio release ‘All The Plans’. Prolific is not a word you’d associate with Starsailor.
Some 16 years after their critically acclaimed debut release, ‘Love Is Here’, Starsailor return with their 5th studio album ‘All This Life’. It’s also 8 years since previous studio release ‘All The Plans’. Prolific is not a word you’d associate with Starsailor.
2001’s
platinum selling ‘Love Is Here’ reached Number Two in the UK album charts. In
the same year they won the Brightest New Hope at the NME awards. Some might ask
where did it go wrong for Starsailor. The simple answer is it didn’t. These
long hiatuses lead to exemplary quality control. There is very little filler on
a Starsailor album.
In ‘Break
The Cycle’ James Walsh sings of “Running out of words to write”. I find this
very hard to believe. It is Starsailor’s lyrics and Walsh’s unbelievably,
achingly beautiful delivery that has always set the band apart.
There are
songs on ‘All This Life’ that wouldn’t be out of place on any previous
Starsailor album, that is not to say the band haven’t progressed. Opening track
‘Listen To Your Heart’ with its pounding drum intro and wailing guitar could be
Biffy. Then the keyboards kick in and it’s The Killers. It’s not till we hear
Walsh’s unmistakeable voice pleading as he sings the title that we know we’re
listening to Starsailor and by that stage it couldn’t be any other band.
Starsailor
have always delivered emotionally wrought lyrical masterpieces backed by some
of the most haunting melodies. We still get that with tracks like ‘Blood’ and
‘Sunday Best’ but we get out and out pop with the title track and forays into
funk with ‘Take A Little Time’ and ‘Caught In The Middle’. ‘Fallout’ harks back
to big music epicness. It is Starsailor’s most complete album. It swells with
the maturity of a band knowing they are (again) on the crest of a massive creative
peak.
To pick a
stand out track is tough but if I must it would be ‘FIA’. In a world of OMG,
LOL, LMAO etc I was wracking my brains as to what FIA could mean. It was a
genuine, and pleasant, shock when I heard Walsh’s unwavering ‘Nothing’s
impossible when you say F*** It All’. It’s a beautiful, builder of a song,
Barry Westheard’s echoing piano in particular taking us on a slow determined
journey full of hope.
I first saw
Starsailor as four nervous young lads supporting The Beautiful South right at
the start of their career. They showed then that they had something special, if
not a tad raw. I was lucky enough to catch them at The Isle Of Wight Festival
this summer where they played to a rapturous packed out Big Top. They were
magnificent. They head out on tour with ‘All This Life’ in October. Buy this
album then go catch them live. You won’t regret it.
12th Oct – Cambridge, Junction
13th Oct – Norwich, Waterfront
14th Oct – Bristol, Bierkeller
16th Oct – Leeds, Beckett Students’ Union
17th Oct – Birmingham, O2 Institute 2
18th Oct – Sheffield, Leadmill
19th Oct – Liverpool, Academy
21st Oct – Newcastle, Boiler Shop
22nd Oct – Glasgow, O2 ABC
24th Oct – Manchester, O2 Ritz
25th Oct – Brighton, Concorde 2
26th Oct – London, KOKO
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