woensdag 27 mei 2020

Music World

Fred Pach van Muziekwereld

I always send him new music, because he's very supportive for four albums now!


zaterdag 16 mei 2020

Review in Bluestown Music!

Well, this a pleasant surprise to my eyes. A  lovely review from Bluestown Music!



Joos TVD – Doesn’t Ring A Bell
Format: CD – Digital / Label: Eigen Beheer
Releasedatum: 2020
Tekst: Peter Marinus





English:
It is an annual ritual. Joos TVD delivers another album. This time for the sixteenth time! And still Joos TVD is not an established name in Dutch pop music. However, I keep insisting to bring it to your attention.

This concerns singer-songwriter Joost van Dinther, also known as the Vanished Dutchman.

At least he has a fan in the British artist Tom Robinson (known from 2-4-6-8 Motorway) because Robinson played a number of Joos song in his radio program on BBC6.

A characteristic of Joos's music is the adventure that resonates in his music in which all kinds of musical examples of Joos crop up.

On his new album Joos clearly has the summer in his head because in almost all songs there is a languid, sunny sound in which I often encountered the sound of Kevin Ayers.

Right in the opening track The Heavy Donut Discount Blues you are already in the Caribbean, rocking your hip with a cocktail in your hand, musing about a heavy donut. Joos sounds like our own Kid Creole here. The cocktail atmosphere lingers in Flower Power Festival, a sultry heaving song with a great Kevin Ayers content, which is not surprising since Ayers also liked a “Caribbean Moon”.
In When U Go Rong, Joos moves to an intimate Spanish village, where a la Kevin Ayers / J.J. Cale release a loom number on us. A song that is so good that it makes you spin. The warming Do It Without Love reminds us of the early work of Todd Rundgren and Fay Lovsky with frolicking keyboard work.
Smart then has a funky 80's wave sound a la Orange Juice with a wonderfully grooving funky bass and a suddenly emerging tear guitar.
Then Joos goes on a sultry cradle tour with the almost bossa nova-like And Again. With Midnight Cowgirl it's time for a grinder. An instrumental song that sounds like a lazy mix of nightclub jazz and “Don't Cry For Me Argentina”.
It remains romantic in the fragile romantic ballad Cold with a beautifully strumming acoustic guitar, which evokes a true After Eight atmosphere. And Joos keeps it cold.
The funkbas returns in Get Your Facts Straight. Funky as Heaven 17 or Talking Heads. U Save Lies also functions more in a sparkling angular way.
After the gracefully floating instrumental ballad To An Inchworm with his melancholy crying synthesizer, Joos closes the album with the absurd ragtime of Over My Very Dead Like. And I have the word on it, Joos. Over my dead body….

Joos TVD again manages to come up with an album that is full of all kinds of musical adventures.

Once again I call on everyone to give this album a try! 





 

zondag 10 mei 2020

The first round of Reviews of "Doesn't Ring A Bell"

The critics are never kind, they say. They have been to me through the years. Some critics know me better, so the bar is set high. Yes, I've been piling up songs man! I've got a lot of albums done.

To my surprise, this time the reviews are not all that favorable. Not that bad, but not that great either. That can be a good thing if they are constructive. It can help me further in the end, it can and will challenge me! So tickle me! Next time....
To my surprise, because to me this album is my best and the most accessible album I've made so far, but that's maybe the point: too predictable, too close to comfort for some who know me already.

The most important thing about staying creative, is to challenge yourself. I've worked very hard on all the aspects around creating these songs.
These songs came from the heart, I didn't force them.

Well,.... listen for yourself I'd say! Spotify release

Written In Music

Leon Pouwels (first time reviewer, says I'm a bit by the safe side)



Keys And Chords

Marino Serdons has written favourable about me before (2x), he has a point about the "no surprises".




Timpaanmuziek

They also wrote about me (2x) before and they think it doesn't add anything to what I've done before.

Rock'n Rollest of them all

There, next from me on the left there's a picture of a wild, wide eyed screaming guy, the Rock'n rollest of them all (with Chuck Berry, Jerry Lee Lewis):  
                             
                                                               Little Richard.

I owe him a lot! Even as kid I was aware of those primal, energetic movements that stirred the earth since the mid fifties. I wasn't even born! But I had roll models. My parents (my mother mostly) always had a smile on their faces when stories about the start of rock'n roll came up. They always had had to turn up the music, loud! To feel it. To express their frustrations, anger but mostly joy!

                                                                 Tutti Frutti!

Sometimes in a low moment on some of my teenage parties, in my self appointed DJ days I could always put on some Little Richard and everyone would go beserk in da house!
I guess growing up hearing Beatles, Stones, the Kinks, the Who indirectly showed me back into history, to the path of this powerhouse that will echo for ages. Look at Prince on stage and I see the same urge and power. Maybe that's why there was an urging, lingering gut feeling inside my belly that had to and would let my hands and feet learn to play the drums someday. To vibe. To get people on the floor. Even now, I always try to get that primal ball of energy back to get in the mood to funk. Thanks Man, I've had a blast!

Next to me
Bluestown Music