Josh Pyke - Feeding the Wolves - Mini Album
12 October 2006
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Its taken Sydney troubadour Josh Pyke a bit of time to find his true voice. Actually, its taken Josh Pyke a little time to finally become Josh Pyke. Until earlier this year, Night Hour was the guise for his one man band a name to perhaps hide behind while Josh worked out where it might all lead.It didnt take long before Joshs unique voice and songwriting style, influenced by the likes of Elliott Smith, Evan Dando, and Sparklehorse, began to find favour amongst music tastemakers in Australia. The first taste, the assured Kids Dont Sell Their Hopes So Fast, found a ready fanbase and soon Silver and the gently sweeping Doldrums followed to similar praise.Earlier this year Josh traveled to New York for some further writing, performing and demoing and upon return set about recording his debut release under his own name, a mini album entitled Feeding The Wolves, which will get a UK release on October 16th under a new deal with Island Records. The album will be available digitally from 2nd October 2006. Feeding the Wolves signifies a great deal more than a change in name: it reveals a huge step in the development of Josh as an artist and songwriter. The subject matter is as broad as titles like Beg Your Pardon, Private Education, Middle Of The Hill and Goldmines suggest, however its Joshs lyrics that draw this collection of songs together into a complete package. He cleverly dissects human emotion and feelings and shows them for what they are: complex, abstract, fascinating.There is hope in the opening track Beg Your Pardon and in Fill You In there is emptiness and longing. The first single, Middle Of The Hill, is a near-stream of consciousness of a suburban childhood family affection coloured by those sometimes darker, sometimes trivial details that for some reason stay with you. Goldmines is a vision of a land, or maybe a talent, stripped of its riches but here and there a flash of colour survives. A relationship that seems to be an ongoing test is at Private Educations centre. The title track finishes it, with Josh quick to point out the Wolves are not those wanting a piece of you for whatever reason but those uncontrollable, irrational, emotions inside yourself that you have to keep in check.With production by the much-lauded Wayne Connolly (You Am I, Underground Lovers, Youth Group, just about any Australian act of note ),Feeding The Wolves has the artist now rightly known as Josh Pyke letting his talent flow without constraint. The words seem to tumble out of him: honest, evocative, and emotional all at once. The playing again mostly all Josh is one moment sweetly melodic, then turning urgent and insistent as needs be. This range of feelings, packaged so they bounce around inside your head like good songs do, and given so generously, go together to make Feeding The Wolves the sound of an artist beginning to realize an enormous potential.Josh Pyke0Comments | Be the first to comment!





