Track Of The Day #1027: White Room - Take Me Away

Track Of The Day #1027: White Room – Take Me Away

Brighton’s White Room have been proving their worth lately with a string of great releases that pull from a directory of genre-defining sounds. Describing themselves as ‘sky-gaze’; “The feeling when you’re listening to music and you get a sense of overwhelming euphoria so you close your eyes, crack your head up and give internal praise to the sky,” the young five-piece build their tracks around thick guitar riffs that you could swear you’ve heard before.

Their previous single, ‘Stole The IV’ was an incredibly front-facing slice of ’60s indebted psychedelic rock with echoes of Primal Scream and Skying-era Horrors embedded within its Bohemian swagger. Shaggy-haired frontman Jake Smallwood’s vocals are at one with the music in their latest track ‘Take Me Away’, a drifting sea-raft of a song that coaxes you into a mirage of expansive guitars, cool baselines and semi-conscious bliss. Get lost here…

  1. This track could be reviewed in one of two ways.

    “Nice enough shoegazed-influenced psyche”
    or
    “This track could be describes as ‘Nice enough shoegazed-influenced psyche’, if only it wasn’t 2017 and if only this track wasn’t as boring and pointless and irrelevant as the Beatles and Elvis and basically anyone with a guitar who is so fucking wet.”

    There is literally no difference between this and someone saying “I want to make records like SAW did in the ’80s” or “We need a trad. jazz revival, I’m gonna make records that sound like Chris Barber”. Horrid.

    That is the trouble with serious / eclectic / indie sites like this nowadays – you’re trying to treat music with a seriousness that out of context it may deserve, but in the context of the year we are in it really does not, it just deserves slating a derivative boring crap.

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God is in the TV is an online music and culture fanzine founded in Cardiff by the editor Bill Cummings in 2003. GIITTV Bill has developed the site with the aid of a team of sub-editors and writers from across Britain, covering a wide range of music from unsigned and independent artists to major releases.