If isolation and alienation are the products of living in London, then London has been the factory for HotBeds’ debut EP.
IntenseCity carries the notion of seclusion over a synthy wave, and across dance floor rhythms; sounding almost like a product of the ‘80s. It reflects the intense disaffection that can be generated when living in a big city- literally as it says on the tin. The songs are extremely lyrically focussed, and so the storytelling element confirms a genuine truth that can easily touch upon empathy and also make for sing-along material. Tracks such as Stop Forgiving and Frantic particularly epitomise life in London, and the latter could surely prove to be a club hit.
The band’s influences have often been cited as Gary Numan, Joy Division, and the Pet Shop Boys. I would add The Killers and present-day Madonna to the list, but having such a marble jar of influences will sadly always strip individuality away from composition.
The album is also tediously repetitive, and the lack of texture and refusal to alter from an incredibly monotone formula prevents HotBeds from striking out with any particular audible impact. The last official album track Christmas Started in October seems to provide the first break from continuity, but the most soul is revealed in the bonus unplugged tracks at the end.
London electro-rock duo HotBeds stand on the verge of releasing their debut album IntenseCity on September 6th, when their hybrid genre will be available on CD and download.
IntenseCity carries the notion of seclusion over a synthy wave, and across dance floor rhythms; sounding almost like a product of the ‘80s. It reflects the intense disaffection that can be generated when living in a big city- literally as it says on the tin. The songs are extremely lyrically focussed, and so the storytelling element confirms a genuine truth that can easily touch upon empathy and also make for sing-along material. Tracks such as Stop Forgiving and Frantic particularly epitomise life in London, and the latter could surely prove to be a club hit.
The band’s influences have often been cited as Gary Numan, Joy Division, and the Pet Shop Boys. I would add The Killers and present-day Madonna to the list, but having such a marble jar of influences will sadly always strip individuality away from composition.
The album is also tediously repetitive, and the lack of texture and refusal to alter from an incredibly monotone formula prevents HotBeds from striking out with any particular audible impact. The last official album track Christmas Started in October seems to provide the first break from continuity, but the most soul is revealed in the bonus unplugged tracks at the end.
London electro-rock duo HotBeds stand on the verge of releasing their debut album IntenseCity on September 6th, when their hybrid genre will be available on CD and download.
Thanks for reviewing our album, some interesting points there. Never had Madonna mentioned in a review before. How did you get hold of a copy of IntenseCity? It's hard to work out who you are from this blog!
ReplyDeleteHello there :) Sorry for delay, only just noticed the comment :S But I wrote this review for WithFlaws. magazine in london... hope you got a copy? x
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