RECOMMENDED RECORD: Sam Bambery: Rubricator (digital outlets)

 |   |  1 min read

Mountain and Me
RECOMMENDED RECORD: Sam Bambery: Rubricator (digital outlets)

From time to time Elsewhere will single out a recent release we recommend on vinyl, like this which comes in a matt carboard sleeve with an insert slip of credits and a surreal piece about what a rubricator is (most of which is bewildering and tangential!)

Check out Elsewhere's other Recommended Record picks . . .

Until we send experts to sample the water or embed sociologists there, we'll never quite know what effect Lyttelton has on songwriters or those who record there.

Maybe it's the ocean air, the seeming isolation, the old buildings and cold climate (which worked well for the first generation of Flying Nun in Diunedin) but . . .

Such a lot of takent and great music coming out of there.

Sam Bambery being another.

In a country which embraces idiosyncratic pop (from Split Enz to Tall Dwarfs, Tokey Tones and Voom), singer-songwriter Bambery should have an in-house audience for the melodic folk-driven pop on this intelligent second album.

Immediately appealing are the wide-screen, Pasifika-influenced The Burnout with a wash of slide guitar as counterpoint to his lyrical anxieties, the casual backyard strum behind the equally expansive Life in Tandem and the delightfully quirky Doctor.

The Burnout
 

Bambery's expressive and impressive vocal range -- from intimate (Spring, Tricks of Light) through the uneasy shapeshifting stalk of Parasite, to Jeff Buckley-like confessional art-rock on Mountain and Me andthe dramatic Uncertain – carries these diverse, skilfully arranged songs which sometimes include seemingly random vocal samples.

The final song is the DIY home recording of the dark Myself, Vindicated.

He is.

On the tiny Under Underground Records run by his friend Hannah Everingham – whose recent Siempre Tiene Flores is also worth attention – Rubricator confirms the emergence of a real talent.

Vindicated

.

You can hear and buy this album at bandcamp here

Share It

Your Comments

post a comment

Elsewhere at Elsewhere

SYBIL: SYBIL, CONSIDERED (1989): An album to walk on by

SYBIL: SYBIL, CONSIDERED (1989): An album to walk on by

Pulling this album off the shelves at random has been an education. It is beautifully unplayed and of course there is no rational explanation for how it came to be on the sagging shelves at... > Read more

OLIVER JAMES INTERVIEWED (2004): If You're Happy and You Know It . . .

OLIVER JAMES INTERVIEWED (2004): If You're Happy and You Know It . . .

Five floors up in a swanky Auckland hotel room someone else is paying for, Oliver James should be happy enough, but he's concerned. He is grappling with the issue of happiness. Or more specifically... > Read more