01.04.07 The Eiderdowns - Wishful Thinking, The Informer
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Tyneside duo The Eiderdowns have entered the mature creative league after
releasing their first all-original album. Wishful Thinking finds
singer-guitarist Guy Bainbridge and violin maestro Patrick Lawrence conjuring
up a rich and varied collection of songs, pitched somewhere between the West
Coast and Whitley Bay.
Album opener Dancing In The Seats is a tale of transient love or lust at 30,000ft, as a travelling musician becomes a makeshift pillow for a sleeping stranger. The track highlights the fruitful interplay between voice, guitar and fiddle that is one of the Eiderdowns' greatest strengths.
Writing heart-felt love songs with strong melodies is no easy matter, but Wishful Thinking is blessed with several minor classics of the genre, including the entrancing Throwing Pebbles, a thumbnail sketch of wide-eyed young love, while Everyone Wants to Know would not be out of place on a new James Taylor album.
But the Eiderdowns can also explore domestic or urban angst (Looks Like Rain), turn their hands to some John Martyn-style folkie introspection (The Silent Pool), and even evoke nostalgic parlour music with The Only One. The punning instrumental closer, Hoi An Rain, showcases Paddy Lawrence's delicate violin playing, wrapped around a haunting melody.
Wishful Thinking is a big musical step forward for one of this area's best-kept musical secrets. Do yourself a favour: catch The Eiderdowns live after buying this album at www.theeiderdowns.com.
TERRY KELLY
13.03.07
The Eiderdowns - Wishful Thinking, Maverick Country Magazine (to
be published)
* * * *
Newcastle
based duo, The
Eiderdowns, combine forces to deliver a
warm acoustic album of all original material.
Northumberland’s Guy Bainbridge first
teamed up with Detroit, Michigan native Patrick Lawrence when the two met as
colleagues at a college in Newcastle. Both men teach English, to international
students, but quickly discovered they share a musical empathy too.
Guy
has a history of solo and band work; he is foremost a fine acoustic guitarist
with a beautifully rich and soulful voice. Patrick plays violin; he has a
sweet tone creating evocative moods. The duo co-wrote the music to all
thirteen songs while there is an even distribution of lyric writing. One
track, The Only One, has words
penned by Guy’s mother Sybil.
The
opener, Dancing In The Seats, serves
notice that The Eiderdowns are serious ‘contenders’. This irresistible
song tells of an airplane flight from Tokyo to ‘the motor city lights.’
The lyrics, by Lawrence, depict the author sitting next to a Japanese girl;
‘What can you do when a strange girl decides to lean on you?’ Beautifully
written, and performed, with authentic contributions from one Miwa Bain who
plays Japanese Flute and Japanese vocals too! If an influential DJ where to
promote this The Eiderdowns could have a hit on their hands!
The
fact that Patrick and Guy are from opposite ends of the pond creates a
fascinating contrast in writing styles. Throwing
Pebbles is a good example; again with lyrics by Patrick Lawrence. This
romantic song has a Shakespearian quality to it but with Americanisms; the
character throwing pebbles at the girls ‘screen’, ‘like Romeo’, or
looking at the stars from the ‘hood’ of his brother’s car. The playing
is impeccable, picked acoustic guitar, mandolin and a sighing violin solo.
Guy
Bainbridge’s lyrics balance out the ‘English side’ of this musical
relationship. The catchy Looks Like Rain,
name-checking ‘garden sheds’ and ‘Kitchenettes!’ Guy excels on the
haunting Return To Paradise and the
James Tayloresque Everyone Wants To Know.
Guy’s mother, Sybil, wrote the lyrics to The
Only One, a quirky old fashioned love song that mines Hoagie Carmichael
territory. Violin and Saxophone combine to create a laid-back mood.
There
isn’t a weak track here. What a pleasant change to receive a small budget CD
resplendent with professional artwork, top notch song-writing, production and
musicianship. Wishful Thinking is a
real winner and a great advert for the power of independent music making at
its best.
JOHN BRINDLE
09.12.06
Gig Review: The Eiderdowns - The Jolly Steward, Marsden, South Shields
(From Tom
Kelly's 'Voices
from A Small Town and Beyond'
Singer-guitarist Guy Bainbridge and violinist Paddy Lawrence have bags of musical warmth and - I keep using the same word about them, but I think it's the right word - charm. Opening with Bill Withers' Ain't No Sunshine, Guy and Paddy brought a touch of musical class to the frankly not overly jolly Jolly Steward as they breezed through a first set, taking in covers like Lindisfarne's Meet Me on the Corner, The Beatles' We Can Work It Out and a lovely, slowed-down but jazzed-up version of Jones the Groan's It's Not Unusual, before showcasing tracks from their new album - being pressed this very week - called Wishful Thinking. And it's no exaggeration to say that The Eiderdowns' self-penned numbers rarely seem dwarfed by the famous covers. Dancing in the Seats (a catchy song about escapist lust and fear of flying at 30,000ft) is the opening track of the duo's latest release and was nicely complemented by Throwing Pebbles and album title track Wishful Thinking.
Sadly, Val and I had to split after the first half, but by checking the the band's website: www.theeiderdowns.com
I know the boys pleased
their small but appreciative audience with covers ranging from Sting's
Fields of Gold to the James Taylor standard You've Got a Friend to The
Jungle Book's King of the Swingers. (A catholic selection, or what?) And the
aforementioned barroom dog (an occasional critic for The New Yorker) barked
and wagged his tail in appreciation.
Catch The Eiderdowns any chance you get - and look out for their new album,
Wishful Thinking.
TERRY KELLY
06.09.2007
'Dancing In The Seats' by The Eiderdowns
(Reviewed in 'Sid Smith's
Postcards
from the Yellow Room', a weblog)
Every once in a while you fall
head over heels with a song you had no idea you were going to meet. Dear
reader, this is it.
Call me an old romantic fool but "Dancing In The Seats" by
It’s a simple tale of unrequited love on a plane at 30,000 feet told with
style, grace and not a note out of place.
I gather from their website they’re a covers band (hence the great name) who sneak their own material in under the radar. I suspect playing covers offers them some protection from an indifferent pub audience but listening to the other original songs they've put up on myspace I reckon they've got nothing to worry about.
"Wishful
Thinking" neatly pokes fun at the legend-in-your-own-lunchtime syndrome
and "Looks Like Rain" has a bit of broken relationship shoegazing.
However, its
Guy Bainbridge writes a wry lyric (anyone who can a line in about not sleeping in a military jeep has to be onto a good thing!), and sings in a voice reminiscent of Gordon Haskell minus the 30 years of whiskey, smokes and bust record contracts.
Multi-instrumental furnishings come courtesy of Paddy Lawrence who decorates the scenario with delightful pizzicato violin adding a suitably eastern interval to the proceedings.
Do yourself a favour and go listen to "Dancing In The Seats" – an exquisitely crafted song as you’re likely to hear.
SID SMITH

