Irish Daily Mail

Blossoms’ new found maturity is in full bloom

By Adrian Thrills

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BLOSSOMS: Ribbon Around The Bomb (Virgin EMI)

Verdict: Bucking the trend ★★★★☆ NORAH JONES: Come Away With Me (Blue Note Anniversar­y Edition) V erdict: Jazz classic ★★★★☆

WITH solo artists dominating the charts, the days when rock bands reigned supreme appear to be over.

Former BBC Radio 1 DJ David Hamilton argued as much in this paper yesterday and he had a point: solo acts cost less for record labels to sign and nurture; it’s also far harder for bands to create hits on a laptop from the comfort of their own bedrooms.

But if we are witnessing the slow death of the traditiona­l group, nobody has told Stockport fivepiece Blossoms.

The band, named after a local pub, have paid their dues the oldfashion­ed way, building a loyal following by playing live ever since getting together in 2013.

They’ve been rewarded for their efforts. Two of their three studio albums to date have reached No 1 in the UK but unfortunat­ely didn’t have quite the same appeal here.

Alongside peers such as The Lathums (from Wigan) and our own Fontaine DC, who’ve both topped the charts in the past six months, their success proves there’s still a healthy appetite for decent guitar bands.

They’ve stepped it up on fourth album Ribbon Around The Bomb, trading in some of their early, upstart charm for a newfound maturity.

Co-produced by regular collaborat­or James Skelly (of The Coral), the album isn’t especially groundbrea­king, but it’s still a bold statement.

Amid the expected jangling guitars, there are bright orchestral strings and breezy nods to Paul Simon. As they showed last October, when they surprising­ly teamed up with Rick Astley to play two gigs celebratin­g The Smiths, Blossoms are happy to delve into the pop heritage of the north of England: you can hear traces of The Smiths in Cinerama Holy Days; The Writer could be Noel Gallagher in acoustic mode.

But Ribbon Around The Bomb is the band’s own coming of age. Ode To NYC is a love letter to The Big Apple. The swirling disco of 2021 single Care For is tailor-made for those festival stages.

On penultimat­e track Visions, a seven-minute ballad, singer Tom Ogden, 28 — who married his girlfriend Katie last year — looks back in wonder at everything he has achieved so far in his 20s.

On the evidence here, though, Blossoms are just getting going. O WHEN Norah Jones put out her ‘moody little record’ Come Away

With Me in February 2002, expectatio­ns were modest. The album was on the jazz label Blue Note and Jones, then 22, was an unknown who had only just left Dallas to try her luck as a singer and pianist in New York. But her supposedly low-key effort became a phenomenon. Its mellow mix of jazz, country and soul ended up on 30 million coffee tables. It scooped eight Grammys, including album of the year, and its warm, reassuring sounds struck a soothing chord with

Americans still traumatise­d by the previous year’s terrorist attacks. Out again today in a range of formats to mark its 20th anniversar­y, it has dated remarkably well. Available as a single CD (€13.99), single vinyl LP (€27.99), triple CD set (€29.99) and quadruple vinyl LP (€200), the latter out on May 20), it is resurfacin­g with bonus tracks that give an even fuller picture of a classic debut.

The original album was a combinatio­n of old standards and original songs that sounded like old standards. Its soulful simplicity is still striking. Among the bonus tracks, there is an abandoned early version of the album, one rejected by Blue Note for straying too far from Norah’s jazzy original demos.

With Bob Dylan and Tom Waits covers, and a sprinkling of electric guitar, it’s both a glimpse of what might have been and a pointer to the more eclectic artist Jones would become.

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Rock on: Blossoms’ Tom Ogden and, inset, Norah Jones

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