Showing posts with label Young Gun Silver Fox. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Young Gun Silver Fox. Show all posts

Sunday, September 23, 2018

Young Gun Silver Fox - AM Waves

Styles: Vocal, Guitar, Pop/Rock
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:21
Size: 97,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:11)  1. Midnight in Richmond
(4:01)  2. Lenny
(4:02)  3. Take It or Leave It
(4:40)  4. Underdog
(3:33)  5. Mojo Rising
(3:48)  6. Just a Man
(4:20)  7. Love Guarantee
(4:00)  8. Caroline
(5:06)  9. Kingston Boogie
(4:36) 10. Lolita

The 1990s saw a mostly UK based nostalgia of American 70s RnB and jazz-funk, demonstrated by the rise of acid jazz acts like Jamiroquai, The James Taylor Quartet, Brand New Heavies and Incognito. As the 90’s turned into the Aughts, another figure in that general space emerged, the insanely talented producer and instrumentalist Shawn Lee. He’s not a household name, but with his work for video, movie and TV soundtracks like Desperate Housewives and Malcolm in the Middle, he’s certainly been widely heard. Furthermore, Lee has mastered as many music styles as he’s mastered musical instruments, which is to say, a whole lot of them. Lately, one of Lee’s main projects has been a collaboration with Andy Platts (Mama’s Gun), a composer, producer and multi-instrumentalist too, and a gifted singer to boot. As the two-man act Young Gun Silver Fox, Lee and Platts seeks to serve a slightly different kind of nostalgia, for late 70s Southern California pop. The smooth, rich, analog-washed sounds of Young Gun Silver Fox began with 2016’s West End Coast, an album particularly well received in the Netherlands. Two years after that album, which reflected an inviting Fleetwood Mac/Philly Soul vibe, Young Gun Silver Fox returns with AM Waves. Fender Rhodes, clavinets, tight bass lines, and smooth harmonies…all the hallmarks (the good ones, anyway) from that era are present. Apart from the horns, Lee and Platts handle virtually all the instruments and craft some catchy tunes. There isn’t a single track lacking hooks, and Platts is a rather solid lyricist: On the opener “Midnight in Richmond” he spins off stanzas like passages in a best selling novel (“Cross the bridge where the river threads silently like footsteps in the dark/where my mind comes alive with a new memory igniting up another spark”) or the kind of lines that are very much of the time being celebrated (“I wanna be so high, so free/Where I can feel my mojo rising”). “Take It Or Leave It” (video above) is a virtual rewrite of “What A Fool Believes” and “Mojo Rising” lifts its groove from “How Long,” that 1974 hit from the Paul Carrack-fronted band from England, Ace. A good depiction of RnB inflected rock from the Jimmy Carter years isn’t complete without a horn section on at least a few numbers and Young Gun Silver Fox take care of that by bringing in a platoon of brass and reeds dubbed the “Seaweed Horns,” making “Love Guarantee” a lost Earth, Wind & Fire gem and give the funky “Underdog” a hard, uplifting kick in the pants. Another 70s nostalgia act Lenny Kravitz figures into a couple of songs: Platts imagines him as a bartender serving him liquid salve for his pain on the Hall & Oates-like “Lenny” and again as the namesake for a festive bar sung about on the four-on-the-floor dance tune “Kingston Boogie.” Anyone who liked the MOR music coming from the radio forty years ago will find everything to like about Young Gun Silver Fox’s AM Waves, from Fat Beats. Yacht rock has a new soundtrack, and it’s a good one. http://somethingelsereviews.com/2018/07/06/young-gun-silver-fox-am-waves-2018/

AM Waves

Wednesday, September 19, 2018

Young Gun Silver Fox - West End Coast

Styles: Vocal, Guitar, Pop/Rock 
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:26
Size: 93,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:19)  1. You Can Feel It
(4:06)  2. Emilia
(4:02)  3. Better
(3:35)  4. Distance Between Us
(3:19)  5. See Me Slumer
(4:58)  6. In My Pocket
(4:02)  7. So Bad
(3:48)  8. Spiral
(3:46)  9. Saturday
(5:26) 10. Long Way Back

“Whenever I’m feeling blue, you make me better. Whatever I’m going through, you make me feel better.”~ “Better,” Young Gun Silver Fox

Good things come to those who wait. In 2012, Andy Platts (U.K. soul-rock band, Mamas Gun) and Shawn Lee, a multi-instrumentalist producer (AM & Shawn Lee; Shawn Lee’s Ping Pong Orchestra “Kiss the Sky” feat. Nino Moschella) began to work on an album they had wanted to make for nearly 10 years. The result: West End Coast, a soon-to-be critically acclaimed album that pays homage to the warm, analogue So-Cal pop-rock classics of the mid-to-late 1970s. Classified as Yacht Rock, Young Gun Silver Fox have created a debut album that is a testament to the AOR Studio Sound. Hands down, West End Coast is sonic gold. Young Gun Silver Fox is the talented UK-based duo comprised of Platts, a.k.a. Young Gun, and Lee, the “Silver Fox” who hails from Wichita, Kansas. Independently, Platts and Lee have over forty album credits to their names (Lee leads with about 33 albums) including work with Jeff Buckley, Kelis, Amy Winehouse, Rod Temperton, John Oates, Brian Jackson and Ben Oncle Soul. “Tasteful, soulful and very real” are words Lee, who relocated to London, England after spending seven years in Los Angeles, uses to describe the album. “Speaking for myself, this is an album I’ve wanted to make for some time and Andy was the only person I felt I could make it with. Andy understands the classic melodic pop side as well as the soul funky side that was absolutely vital to the creation of this music. What a voice!” Platts calls Lee a “mechanic” for his ability to take a pop song apart and put it back together. Together, Young Gun Silver Fox have created a “musician’s album”, rich with complex instrumental melodies, smooth vocals, and positive lyrics.

West End Coast has been compared to America, Hall & Oates, Loggins & Messina, Fleetwood Mac, Steely Dan, The Doobie Brothers, Carly Simon, and Ambrosia. The album’s vocal harmonies, lyrics, and production echo Prince, Stevie Wonder, and Earth Wind and Fire. Platts and Lee’s infectious chemistry deliver again and again. What’s old is definitely new again in West End Coast’s original material. It’s hard to pick favourite tracks from such a solid album. As soon as I hear Lee’s smooth guitar riff in the opening track “You Can Feel It”, a smile creeps over my face and induces a fuzzy, heart-warming buzz that recalls the seemingly more simple times of yesteryear. This was actually the last song written for the album, inspired by a riff and some chords Lee texted to Platts one night.  “By the morning, Andy had written and demo’d the song ready for production,” Lee explains. The lyrics and hook from “Better” are contagious and make you want to cruise down California’s Highway 1. The lush orchestration and wah-wah syncopation in “Long Way Back” recalls Curtis Mayfield. The harmonica riffs, horn lines, fat bass lines from “In My Pocket” evoke Hall & Oates, Prince, and Earth Wind and Fire. But Young Gun Silver Fox make the catchy synth pop licks and short electric guitar solo digestible. West End Coast is a warm ray of sunshine on a dreary day. It soothes some of life’s harsh edges through its laid-back west coast vibe. Ironically, the album’s title references both sunny California, as well as grey West London, where the album was written and recorded at Lee’s Trans-Yank Studio. “The most important thing is to make good music that you love and put it out into the world,” Lee, the “Silver Fox”, explains in an online video. “When your music lives out in the world, independently of you, that’s a beautiful thing.” Many iconic musicians may have left us in 2016, but we also gained West End Coast. As we shake off troubling headlines and over-produced, digitized pop, Young Gun Silver Fox brings back cozy love songs and hopeful anthems to help us glide over the snares that life throws at us, reminding us there is hope in life’s chaotic ups and downs. Whatever your personal connection to Yacht Rock or the ‘70s, West End Coast is a much needed audio-ceutical for many. It will warm you up, open your heart, and take you back to the simple things. Young Gun Silver Fox is wrapping up a European tour and will hopefully visit us across the pond by next summer. Live, the band includes Adrian Meehan (drums) and David Page (bass and vocals). Platts plays the Rhodes and does lead vocals while Lee plays the smooth, lead guitar. http://spillmagazine.com/spill-album-review-young-gun-silver-fox-west-end-coast/

Personnel:  Andy Platts (Young Gun): lead & harmony vocals, guitar;  Shawn Lee (Silver Fox): drums, bass, keyboards, vocals and many more guests

West End Coast