Aldous Harding Review – A Star In The Making

“New Zealand’s latest export is a compellingly theatrical performer of her extraordinary songs,” writes Kitty Empire in an article for The Guardian.

“Aldous Harding fixes a person in the front row of this tiny venue with a basilisk stare. It seems to last an age,” writes Empire. Then she announces her first song – Swell does the skull, which Empire describes as “a tapestry of specific details and oblique leaps.”

“Because Harding is nothing less than amazing – a nuanced musician, a startling writer and a presence so intense you can’t help but worry that her compelling theatricality might overshadow her other strengths,” she Empire.

“Evolved though Harding’s fingerpicking is, her colour coordination (all white, including guitar), her Chrissie Hynde fringe, her confrontational stares and her bass-faces belie the folk musician tag,” according to the article.

“The textural leap from her self-titled first album (2014, Flying Nun) to Party (4AD) is one of greatly expanded ambition: a flavour of cabaret, a little jazz.”

Article Source: The Guardian, Kitty Empire, May 28, 2017
Image Source: Twitter – The A.V. Club


Tags: Aldous Harding  Guardian  Party  

Amy Brown’s New Novel Inspired by Women and Art

Amy Brown’s New Novel Inspired by Women and Art

Like many writers before her, New Zealand-born Amy Brown takes inspiration from the Australian feminist icon Stella Maria Miles Franklin in her captivating debut novel My Brilliant Sister – but instead…