"House of the glass red/where we repeat all our past regrets/in a dream from which we never wake/don’t we know/house of glass red’s the end." The lines
that Rosalie sings from the third track of her sole self-titled debut album,
delves into this darker view of insanity and revealing our own worst enemies
are about to unfold.
I could imagine she took some of the inspirations from Damon Fox of BigElf, Alan Moore, Neil Gaiman, and Lewis Carroll by taking it a step
further and moving beyond the sounds of Purson. After the band folded in 2017
with the release of their farewell single, Chocolate
Money, Rosalie took a break. That same year, she recorded an incredible
version of The Beatles’ Strawberry Fields
Forever with help from her Dad on drums and percussion.
In 2018, she presented some of the material she had been
working on last year on her YouTube page on January 13th. And in
October of that same year, she launched a PledgeMusic campaign for her solo
album. But then, it took a different turn this year. According to the articles
by Tosten Burks and Colin Stutz on January 24th from the SPIN and
Billboard websites, eight of the acts told Billboards that the website owed
them money for completed campaigns.
PledgeMusic which launched 10 years ago, allowed fans to not
just pre-order music, but help some of the indie acts fund the albums through
direct sales with their fans whose pledges pay out within 30 days for the
completion on their projects. But throughout some of the accounts that several
managers and artists are struggling to receive payments from their campaigns
with PledgeMusic.
It must have been a crushing blow for Rosalie to receive
this devastating news in which she talked about the situation along with Danny
Vaughn who mentioned about the nightmares of PledgeMusic on his YouTube page on
January 23rd. But then on March 28th, something wonderful
had happened. She landed to the world of Cherry Red’s Esoteric label.
Home to reissuing bands/artists such as Squackett, Fruupp,
Curved Air, The Move, Barclay James Harvest, Renaissance, and Anthony Phillips to
name a few, she feels right at home to be a part of the Esoteric Recordings
family. Her sole self-titled debut release, is a welcoming return of brining
her music that she worked on for two years, is a flower that is ready to burst
open.
From its opening riff,
Ride on my Bike is Rosalie pounding both the guitar and piano chords
through a swirling orchestrated adventure by riding towards the psychedelic
dooming grooves that is worth the trip. So you might prepare yourself to do
some head-banging in that section before it changees to the fork in the road as
she channels some early Pink Floyd by swimming towards The Piper at the Gates of Dawn while the bursting guitars and the drums
sound like a tidal waving climax before returning to the center stage for
Rosalie to land back on Earth with a high note.
Listening to F**k Love,
I could tell that she uses the piano that Bob Dylan did during the sessions for
Highway 61 Revisited, but with a
different tone as it shares the same journey with the string sections of the
Mellotron. Rosalie is very much like the master of ceremonies throughout this
song that is about…..well, you get the general idea.
It has this 1920s ragtime sound during the Scott Joplin-era
while featuring more of those swirling riffs with a vaudevillian twist that can
take you towards the highest landscapes with some heavier clean rhythm sections.
I love how on Riddles & Games
feature the Marching rhythms with a ‘60s Vox Organ sound before they revved up
the motorcycles to kick in with a Garage-Rock attitude.
You can imagine Rosalie is ready to use the battering ram to
swing down very hard to blow the doors open with a hardcore punch that is ready
to hit at any second. Butterflies is
Rosalie’s nod to The Beatles White Album sessions as she tips her Homburg to
the fab four as acoustic guitars and mellotron’s fly towards the heavenly
snowflake skies.
A Yarn from a Wheel
begins with the melodic structure of Dumbo’s Pink Elephants on Parade that Rosalie sings in the style of the
composition before changing into a mellowing bluesy tone, revved up rhythms,
and into the progressive structures of Peter Hammill as if he was making tea
for the Welcome to my Nightmare-era
of Alice Cooper. This isn’t just a prog epic, but it has everything in there
that goes beyond the Purson sound and Rosalie nails the closing epic to channel
both Van Der Graaf Generator and It’s a Beautiful Day before screaming her
heart out in the last three minutes of the piece.
I have enjoyed listening to Rosalie’s debut solo release
this year. And this is a welcoming return to let the fans of Purson know that
she’s back in action and she’s not stopping for anyone blocking traffic for
her. She continues to keep the flaming fires burning. And it will keep on burning
for eternity.
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