It was about a year ago that this guy on UK label Robot! Records thought it would be a cool thing to do something together with Korean label Pastel Music. Towards the end of 2005 a joint project took off and early 2006 they were done. The result: Siamese Flowers. The UK version should be out soon, but I already got the Korean version which was released this summer ^^
Two songs from four artists from each label are featured on here. From Pastel,
OldFish,
Tearliner,
Misty Blue and
Jelly Boy participate - all with songs from their first albums so nothing new there (except for a couple of English titles). Robot! paricipates with
Former Miss America,
tuco,
Greenwich Resident and
Loufu - all artists I hadn't even heard of before finding this album. I might like just about every artist from Pastel, but I do think some of the other music they distribute isn't all that great. Still, I did not hesitate to get this because there is also a bonus CD.
This bonus CD features two previously unreleased song from each of the four Pastel artists.
OldFish is first with 도둑 고양이 빈센트, a pretty good song that doesn't offer any surprises. 보니2 is pretty much 보니, but more acoustic during the first half and without
황보라. It's probably the acoustic thing but I like this newer version a lot more than the old one.
Then comes is
Misty Blue with a typical Misty Blue song called
Slow Days. The other track from them is a remix of their 1.5 album track 날씨맑음 done by
Jelly Boy. Like what could be expected, this is more electronic. Pretty nice, but I prefer the one and a half minutes shorter original version.
Jelly Boy himself is next up with 춤추는 소녀와 빨간 구두 and
Close Encounter . 춤추는 소녀와 빨간 구두 is reminiscent of
Deadman Singing from his first album, but this one has more of a "freak circus" feeling to it. Very nice!
Close Encounter had me surprised with guitars and a much rougher, almost industrial, sound. Had it not been for the melodic refrain it probably would've taken me a while to acknowledge that this really is Jelly Boy.
Finally, there's
Tearliner. The first song is the original version of
Dist Rush, that Yoshiya Sato had redone for
Letter of Nowhere. I never liked the remade version with all the Japanese talk, so just the "background music" is a major improvement to me. Still, I don't really like the song. I do like the
English guide version of
Snowbird however. I've never heard the original version of
Snowbird (which was featured upon Naomi & Goro's Presente De Natal/Winter Songs for Nostalgia), but this is Tearliner just like I like him.
Back to the original CD. While I already knew what I would hear from the Pastel artists, I was pleasantly surprised by all of the participating artists from Robot!.
Former Miss America I had checked out already before recieving this album, but they still surprised me.
Balloon is pretty decent, but too upbeat compared to the rest of the songs on here.
Norwegian wouldn't on the other hand is love. When Anthony Carter sings "I'll be your girl tonight" it somehow turns into one of the best lines ever written. Slow paced and beautiful, like early
Tiger Lou but more acoustic and with more people.
"
If film score style chord changes, hip-hop beats, big electronic noise, frenetic power pop songs with audio warfare guitar shrieks and soft psyche-soul songs with surreal narratives sounds interesting to you, Tuco is the group to hear." That's what Robot! says. I don't know how to describe them myself, but I can't say any of that is off and I do like what I hear.
Meckanikal Dialling is pretty nice, but the mellower
Can't Tell (the Good from the Bad) is awesome.
Despite sounding like a male singer/songwriter,
Greenwich Resident is actually four people.
Not quite the actress and a bedroom recording of
Silos are featured on here and they're both mellow. And they're both incredibly nice.
Not quite the actress even has some strings! After hearing nothing more of theirs than these two songs I'm already expecting their coming debut EP to be one of the best this year.
Last of all comes two songs from Danish
Loufu. Louise Fuhr's voice is very nice to these quite laidback songs and my only complaint would be that they're too short. I don't know what it is about it, but Loufu's
Wind Blow is a song I've found myself needing to hear every now and then the past few days.
Makeover Needed is nice as well and I would've thought that out of the two, this one would stick easier because of the melody and cleverness - "makeover needed in your heart", probably one of the best lyrics about getting a break-up I've heard.
All the illustrations are done by Kim Jiyoon and it goes in the same style as Jiyoon's works for the Misty Blue albums. The actual design is done by z'nbug and it looks great! It's one of those small LP sleeve covers in cardboard (of the same high quality type that so many children's books had when I grew up). The folder features info on all artists in English on one side and lyrics (translations for Misty Blue) all in English on the other. Though I've been something of a fan of both Misty Blue and Tearliner since their first releases I still knew next to nothing about them and it was really nice to finally be able to read something on them I could really understand. The only flaw would be that there's no lyrics or even info on the bonus CD songs, but that matters little.
This is a very nice album, recommended for anybody interested in hearing a few artists from any of these two labels. I'll defintily check out more stuff from these Robot! artists (once I've written about enough CDs to allow myself to buy a few more that is...) and I'll probably try any other Robot! artists as well later on ^^