23 Mar 2023
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No Broadcast - Single/Video Review: The Shore

15 Dec 2022 // A review by Kev Rowland

When I first started listening to this, I felt there had been quite a change in the sound of No Broadcast, and I certainly wonder if this is a new direction for the band or a one-off experiment. It is hard to tell, as although there has been a change in the personnel, singer, guitarist, and songwriter Josh Braden is not averse to bringing in different people to work on different songs and here he has been joined by Thomas Isbister (drums, bass), Ryan Fisherman (lap steel) and Tom Harris (keyboards and string sonic texture). Somehow, we have here a mix of sounds which manages to combine Radiohead, U2 and Crowded House in a very pleasant manner indeed.

The basis of this song is multi-tracked picked acoustic guitar, with keyboards layered on the top, gradually building, with other instruments added as the song develops. The vocals are clear, with some nice reverb to provide depth, and a concentration on long-held notes. In many ways this is brave music, as there is no room at all for Josh to hide, no massive accompaniment to hide behind, this is about confidence and breath control.

The production is superb, with an arrangement which takes what is in many ways a quite simple song into something much larger than one might imagine. It is something which demands to be played on headphones so one gets the full value, as there are many touches which would otherwise be lost, and when it climaxes it then has a suitable ending so one does not feel cheated but instead has the urge to play it again.

It could be argued that this is an arty song, and that carries through to the video which is in black and white and features Josh on a beach, for the most part standing still and miming to the track. This is nice and fits in well with the music, but they possibly should not have stayed on Josh while he is singing all the long notes as it looks like he is yawning. He collects some driftwood to make some words, and while this is again low key and simplistic, the camerawork fits in with the music and the two combine well together. One wonders what the next album will be like as this is quite a move from Lie In Orbit which only came out earlier this year.

Rating: ( 5 / 5 )
 

About No Broadcast

No Broadcast, a three-piece band formerly known as Anthesiac, move post rock and alternative rock into a dynamic powerhouse of sound, reminiscent of fellow New Zealand bands HDU, Kerretta and Jakob. Their music is surpassed only by the live experience.

Established in Christchurch, NZ in 2007, as Josh Braden (vocals, guitar), Sam Hood (bass), and Chris Self (drums), the three chaps formed a strong musical chemistry that is increasingly rare in bands today. Priding themselves on their ability to instinctively move their music where it wants to go, the group make for a live act audiences can't take their eyes off.

No Broadcast have gigged extensively over the past 5 years, playing various festivals and shows around the country with a variety of other local and national artists. They have played alongside rockers Beastwars, post-punk heavyweights Die! Die! Die! as well as supporting Mountaineater (former HDU members) and internationally renounced six-piece An Emerald City on the South Island leg of their 2011 New Zealand tour.

Visit the muzic.net.nz Profile for No Broadcast

Releases

Lie In Orbit
Year: 2022
Type: Album
Defined & Divided
Year: 2022
Type: EP
The Blueprint
Year: 2015
Type: Album
No Broadcast
Year: 2014
Type: Album
Live At The Dux
Year: 2014
Type: EP
1736
Year: 2013
Type: EP
Null And Void
Year: 2011
Type: EP

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