However, despite the coffee being one you could easily drink all day, you find yourself reaching for a different taste – the flavours on your tongue are getting a bit stale after a few mugs of the same brew. You’re looking for a pick me up to carry you through the rest of the work day. Wrong provides that something a little different. It starts with the familiar, deep vocals over gentle piano, before building up to more of an anthemic sound, incorporating a weird 80s metal guitar line before ending with a fade-out. Unfortunately for me, the song ends up living up to its name. The Excess suffers the same fate, with a strange jazzy start and 80s metal-esque ending.
It’s at this point that you find yourself reaching for the first batch of coffee that you ground that morning. You realise that there was nothing wrong with the first cup – it was dependable, likeable, and much more enjoyable than the others. Which is good, because Andriano’s brooding voice and stunning lyrics in both The Rest Of You and Into Your Dream (The Sophie Moon) take us back to the original blend of the album, carrying us through to the end, ensuring a strong finish with no bitter aftertaste.
Stream and download Dear Darkness in all the usual places and like Dan Andriano & The Bygones on Facebook here.
This review was written by Lara Roberts.
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