
Red Carpet – The Noise Of Red Carpet CD
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Red Carpet – The Noise Of Red Carpet CD
"One of the kingdom’s busiest live bands returns to the ring with new alleys. The style of Red Carpet is still a traditionally conscious guitar pop, which, however, is seasoned in places with even the most exotic spices. The genre is challenging in that, in addition to a kind of orthodoxy of the compositions, the interpretive nuances of singing and playing are of considerable importance when assessing the personality of music. The experience of the band, which has gained experience, is even safer and more rolling, and the stemm songs sound honey-like without any singer above the others. The advantage of the band is clearly that it is influenced by several songwriters (although on the album cover, the credits are diplomatically recorded in the band’s names), all of which make great and suitably different songs. Everyone also interprets their own outputs as a factor. The division of labor of the band is reminiscent of the harmony pop veterans who began their best days in the 60s and 70s: The Beatles, The Buffalo Springfield, The Byrds, The Beach Boys and Big Star, where several visionaries with big egos fought for their position but got it. despite - or perhaps for that reason - creating an incredibly beautiful imprint.
But so does the Red Carpet. The first song performance Blood, Sweat And Tears, which follows the album's opening surf instrumental, sounds in the spirit of pop classicism and is quite a great track. What Have I Done is a concise champion of its kind. The set can accommodate a couple of intermediate jobs, but small defects will be fixed in an instant. Golden Days charms all at once with its great soul vibe and End of the Season ends the reel boldly. The sound of the album is full-bodied, and the sound and arrangement details have been carefully considered. Examples of this are Reminder's mellotron violin, or Sigh's beautiful oboe, which takes you completely to other spheres. The band's pop is easy and nice to hear, but it hides a lot of slowly revealing subtleties under its shell, as long as you can dig deeper into it." - Sami Nissinen