Let’s start with a singer gone solo, Jenny Lewis, better knows as lead singer in Rilo Kiley, a favourite band of mine. She recently released The Voyager, with a sound that is unmistakably Rilo Kiley, happy pop music with a twist of lemon in the lyrics. The album was five years in the making, but she also managed to get a duo album with her boyfriend Jonathan Rice during that time. Jenny also has an acting career to manage, she has appeared in a number of TV series, including Pleasantville and American Dad.
Taster:
We’ll remain in the US, but musically we are on our way to France and to French pop in the sixties. Who can forget Jane Birkin and Je t’aime Moi Non Plus. Got a Girl couldn’t either, and the duo have now released an album with the catching name I Love You But I Must Drive Off This Cliff Now. Mary Elizabeth Winstead copies Ms Birkin in many ways, but the Got A Girls songs are more interesting in 2014 than the French tracks from 1960s. Mary Elizabeth Winstead also copies Jenny Lewis, by the way, as she is also making a career as an actress in TV and films. Taster: Got A Girl – Everywhere I Go
We find a similar duo on the other side of the Atlantic, in Sheffield, England. Slow Club also digs its roots into music of the recent past, but with less humour and pizazz than Got A Girl, but their new album Complete Surrender, their third so far, is beautiful and with a rich sound. The two members of the group Charles Watson and Rebecca Taylor handle most of the instruments themselves on the album. Taster: Slow Club – Dependable People And Things That I’m Sure Of
I have added two English male artists that both have made an impression on my ear drums and beyond. Dan Clews was taken under the wings of George Martin, which isn’t the worst start an artist can have. He has gone on to be a darling of BBC’s Radio Two, performing live there a number of times, and this summer he made an appearance on the Glastonbury Festival in connection with the release of his album Tourist in My Own Back Yard. Taster: Dan Clews – Pixie Poem
Benjamin Clementine is an amazing new artist; with a voice it is hard to forget once you have heard it, which may be why he has been compared to Nina Simone and Anthony Hagerty. He doesn’t sound like any of them, but if you listen to his songs you will soon understand why the comparisons are made. Benjamin’s parents are from Ghana and he himself is born in North London. I really look forward to seeing him perform live in Oslo this coming Sunday. Taster: Benjamin Clementine – London
Tiken Jah Fakoly from Ivory Coast has also impressed music journalists and audiences alike. He is a political activist as well, and has been on the barricades for the people of his country and performed a number of charity concerts. I have to admit that I find a lot of world music from Africa on the tedious side, but Tiken Jah Fakoly’s music is different. Firstly it must be considered reggae with a definite African twist, both in the instrumentation and slightly different reggae rhythms. It is also refreshing to hear reggae being sung in French. His newest album out now is called Dernier Appel. Taster: Tiken Jah Fakoly – Tata
As alien as African reggae may sound, classical pianist and composer Girma Yifrashewa’s African touch to classical music isn’t less surprising. The Ethiopian pianist is clearly fond of European composers like Chopin, but if you listen to the two lovely tracks I have added, you may definitely hear chords and music lines that are inspired under a different sun. I have played Love & Peace a lot the last month, so I hope you will give it a chance as well, even if classical music isn’t your thing. Taster: Girma Yifrashewa – Chewata
On to another artist I have listened a lot to lately, Loudon Wainwright III. His latest album, I Haven’t Got the Blues (Yet), is filled to the brim with strong, well-written, powerful songs. I urge to listen to the whole album, and I dare you to find one track that isn’t well crafted. Talent runs in the Wainwright family, and I am a great admirer of many members of the clan. This album proves that the best of the all may in fact be Loundon senior. Taster: Loudon Wainwright III – Harmless
Continuing with men in hats: One of the most copied American artists is John Hiatt. His 23rd studio album is called Terms of My Surrender, and having listed to these brilliant bluesy songs released in his 62nd year alive, I am sure that artists will line up covering a number of them in the future as well. Blues can ealily be repetitive, not so with John Hiatt’s blues tracks. Enjoy! Taster: John Hiatt – Old People
Kodaline is a rock band from Ireland, instantly reminding me of Coldplay and similar groups. In Ireland the group’s popularity has grown with every album, and listening to their latest album, In a Perfect World, one can easily understand why. The song writing is impressive, many songs stick in your mind. The group has fought hard for their home spun success. I see no reason why their popularity shouldn’t expand to other countries. Taster: Kodaline – All I Want
We end our trip around the world and through a number of genres with King Creosote from Scotland and his album From Scotland With Love. The album is in fact a soundtrack to a film, released this summer to coincide with the Commonwealth Games taking place in Glasgow. King Creosote is also a genre hopper, he is hard to pin down, delving into everything from gypsy music to songs clearly being inspired by his lovely home country.
Taster: King Creosote – Bluebell, Cockleshell, 123
Henry Priestman, Making Marks, Roseanne Cash, San Fermin, Suzanne Vega and Switchfoot are all leaving us now, so if you have a particular fondness for one or more of them, you are on your own in Spotify-land. Sorry.














































































If you want to be a pop star, and your name is Benmont Tench, I would have suggested changing your name. You don’t have to have dyslexia to have trouble with a name like that. The funny thing is that his real name is Benjamin Montmorency Tench…. Benmont made his career by playing keyboards in Tom Petty’s band, The Heartbreakers. He has toured and recorded with a great number of artists, including coincidentally Rosanne Cash’ father. This year Benmont released his first solo album at the age of 61, proving that it is never too late. A reviewer called the feel of the album, I Should Be so Lucky, “casual professionalism”. I couldn’t agree more. The music is relaxed and sophisticated, both the standards and the originals he has chosen to perform.




Moving one notch up, the album Six from Norwegian singer Thom Hell, would never have existed either if it hadn’t been for The Beatles during the later years. It is my guess that Hell likes the symphonic, melancholic songs of Abbey Road, perhaps Supertramp as well (listen to the opening of The Smell of Home) For the sixth time he brings us his inspired art rock songs, hauntingly beautiful tracks, where the listener doesn’t know what’s hiding behind the next musical bend.
Maybe I should add Ireland to this shortlist. The output certainly consists of more than boy bands and Johnny Logan. The Gloaming is among the most exciting new sounds around. The group, consisting of some of Ireland’s most accomplished musicians, has taken traditional Irish music and done something to it that I don’t understand. The result, however, is mesmerizing, haunting songs played on acoustic instruments, mostly with lyrics in Gaelic . The more I listen, the more I am hooked. The album The Gloaming is just different from most of what I have listened to before, nothing less.

The duo Sassybeat from Asker, Norway made waves in 2011 with the single The Mouse and the Bear. I added it to my blog list then, eagerly awaiting more material from the band. This year their debut album, Snakes and Ladders, was finally released, and few were disappointed. The local reviews were great, so this may be Sassybeat’s big year. There is nothing very complicated about the songs, straight melodies painted with broad strokes, and with the ever-beautiful harmonies of Anna Melkild and Ingrid Rennemo. I have added a taster of three tracks.
Finally, a revisit to another Norwegian band, heavy on the female ingredients. Highasakite, with their new album Silent Treatment. It is already number 1 in the band’s home country, but this is an album that deserves world recognition. Their sound is so unique, with a lot of echoed percussion and harmonies, and the album has a distinct Eastern influence. I can’t get enough of it. The song writing and the production are outstanding. I have added six tracks, if you enjoy them – and don’t already count yourself as a Kite fan, listen to their previous releases as well.
Perhaps when an artist gets older he or she can let go of pretences. That goes for Bruce Springsteen as well. His new album is more likeable than many of his previous ones. I have always enjoyed The Boss’ music, but never been an really avid fan. I was thoroughly entertained when the crew of Lilyhammer was invited by Little Steven last year to see the E Street Band in concert., but I felt like an outsider next to true fans. The new single High Hopes is one of his best ever, in my opinion, full of energy, great and surprising orchestration and with an ability to stick in your ear. I have added three other songs from the album with the same name.
Boy & Bear is described as an Australian sensation. The indie band with the soft sound has issued two albums, and I have added four songs from their latest, Harlequin Dreams. There is something old fashioned about their new songs, reminding me of both bands like Oasis at their softest, but also true Americana. Their sense of melodies is brilliant; this is hummable and still sophisticated.
Another great Norwegian singer-songwriter is Susanne Sundfør. She has produced an album with the Norwegian-Canadian duo Bow to Each Other. The album, The Urge Drums, has a much more modern, electronica sound than any of the other tracks added this week, but the girls still write and perform classic songs. There’s a sadness and an elegance in these songs that grow on you. Try it. And if you haven’t listened to the producer, Susanne Sundfør, you’re in for a pleasant surprise if you do.
I have reluctantly added the last artist, Sigurd Julius, this year’s winner of the Norwegian Urørt (Untouched) Awards, celebrating new talent, reluctantly because I don’t normally fancy this Norwegian folk rock expression and particularly when it is performed by a light tenor male voice. Still I have to admit that Sigurd’s songs are small gems, even for those who cannot understand what he is singing about. The main reason for adding three tracks from the album called Sigurd Julius, is to celebrate that music with distinct roots in previous generations can actually win a new music contest in 2014, proving again that contemporary music, if you look hard enough (and that’s exactly what I am doing on your and my behalf), permeates all trends and decades and times.