Field Music: Flat White Moon review – cerebral crew soften their sharp edges

(Memphis Industries)
The Brewis brothers have built a reputation for deliciously difficult indie funk, but their eighth album puts the emphasis on ease

Followers of Sunderland’s Field Music – David and Peter Brewis and associates – revel in the band’s on-beat, cerebral funk. Any simplification of their filigreed sensibility might be seen as dumbing down. But simplify is precisely what Field Music have done. Do Me a Favour is an out-and-out pop song with a 4/4 beat and simple chords elevated by the elasticity of the brothers’ twin falsettos. With a wry wink, the video for No Pressure literally breaks down the track for the listener.

The album from which these songs come – Flat White Moon, the band’s eighth – comes with all sorts of olive branches, dialling down the brothers’ more forbidding instincts and amping up their love of soft rock. Sweet Beatles harmonies and body-friendly time signatures are foregrounded; the band’s unorthodox melodies come across as inspired, rather than as a secret handshake exchanged between initiates; much emotion is packed into these precise lyrics.

Not When You’re in Love manages to recall Talk Talk rather than XTC, a song in which Brewis actually offers to “shoot the shit” with someone. Throughout, there’s a feeling of being in safe hands, in sync with the Brewises rather than merely being impressed by them.

Watch the video for Orion from the Street by Field Music.

Contributor

Kitty Empire

The GuardianTramp

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