Tuesday 30 October 2012

Artist To Check Out: The Cry Baby

Article by KevW


This captivating new quartet from London are led by singer and songwriter Anna Waldmann who doesn't bow down to convention in her themes, that's for sure. Since she was a child, Anna had the responsibility of caring for her mother and grandmother, an experience she draws upon lyrically, especially on 'Anaesthetic' which is stark but beautiful in the way it details with its subject matter about pain and morphine. The Cry Baby have a very distinctive sound that feels like a lesson in restraint. The sounds are subtle and anything else wouldn't offset the voice so brilliantly. And that voice is the most unique aspect to what they do; child-like but ghostly, it draws you in as though you're being absorbed into some kind of fairy tale. The experience is certainly like falling into another world.

Musically The Cry Baby don't fit any particular category; there's a hint of folk, echoes of trip-hop, the escapism of dreampop and occasionally a stripped-back baroque sound. It's all carefully considered without being so perfect that it becomes sterile. As such, this combination of subtlety, experimentalism and almost lullaby-like sounds is quite beguiling. At the moment the tracks online are still demos, although they sound better than that. The plan is to begin working with producers and look at a debut single in the new year. If they continue making music as spellbinding and ethereal as this we have a hunch that this won't be the the last time you hear from this excitingly promising new band.







The Cry Baby's website





For more news, reviews and downloads follow The Sound Of Confusion on Facebook or Twitter

soundofconfusion@hotmail.co.uk

3 comments:

  1. You are quite right they do defy cataegorization - so why waste part of para. 2 doing just that!
    I found them by accident at Cornbury festival where they were playing a late night tent - they were quite simply one of the best acts at the festival - almost worth it for them alone.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks Guy!

      Dave (Producer)

      Delete
  2. The reason being to give people some grasp of where they're coming from musically. Even music that doesn't fit a particular genre will take inspiration from or be comparable to other work that has preceded it. They are unique but it's worth giving some reference points for people who are new to their sound.

    ReplyDelete