DOTMUSIC.COM REVIEW
Two years ago, Wigan's Witness were warmly praised for the radio-friendly
indie-rock of their debut album 'Before The Calm'. Since then, they've
relocated to Bristol, where they added former Strangelove percussionist Julian
Pransky-Poole, and have sought to transform press adulation into stonking
commercial sales by recording this rather fine second opus.
'Under A Sun' is a mature and assured collection of
country-tinged, rootsy rock, sometimes mellow, sometimes brash. Sounding like
a mixture of REM -as is often remarked singer Gerard Starkey does have a touch
of the Stipes about him- the steely twang of 'Harvest' era Neil Young, the
jangling prettiness of The Byrds, the cocky riffing of The Verve and Oasis and
the rootsy, folk-rock of Hothouse Flowers, this is a compelling, more coherent
follow-up.
Fleshed out with tenderly tickled piano, harmonica and
Hammond, these huge melodies ebb and flow from
sparse, warm and touching fragile passages to grandiose rocky stompings,
Starkey's seen-it-all vocals rich, human and emotive.
Best of the bunch here are melancholy recent single 'You
Are All My Own Invention', the piano-powered
gorgeousness of 'Till The Morning' and the upbeat harmonious rock of 'My Time
Alone'. Fine tunes all.
Although, whether this down-to-earth, earnest, image-free concentration on
crafting decent tunes will be lost
amidst all the R&B pop pap out there remains to be seen.
Cyd Jaymes
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