Press & Reviews
Comments & Reviews for Katie and the Questions
Comments & Reviews for Ian J Cole's work:
General Comments:
Reviews for Deconstruction - Demolition - Re-invention:
- Best of York CD Launch gig review 25th April 2012 (Not Quite Music Journalism)
- Absolute powerpop, their wonderful! Chris Thomas, (Vibrations Magazine).
- This band are one of Yorks hottest new acts (Stereo)
- Katie and the Questions have put women in rock music back 20 years, A strange sort of 80s girl group. Sharleen Spiteri (Texas).
- Stylishly retro, twenty4seven music, (The Press).
- It's rubbish man!!! Dizzie Rascal.
- You will be dancing!!!! Helen Francis Barlow, Vibrations Magazine podcast.
- 'A pulsating brand of powerpop' Local Independent Music.
- There's a real buzz going on for Katie and The Questions right now. (York Nights)
- Katie and the Questions play a pulsating brand of powerpop, new wave and punkpop : Adam Simpson (Stereoboard.com).
- Katie and the Questions take inspiration from the great pop groups of the 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s and 00s (Leeds Music Scene)
- NOT to be missed.... see you on the Dancefloor........ (Wherevent)
- Katie and the Questions announce debut EP release (Leeds Music Scene)
- Katie And The Questions - What Katie Did EP Review 7.2 out of 10 (Croon Magazine)
Comments & Reviews for Ian J Cole's work:
General Comments:
- A Sound Designer with a stroke of genius (ME'Di.ATE Art Group)
- Interview from the 7th Streaming Festival (Dec 2011)
Reviews for Deconstruction - Demolition - Re-invention:
- A summer's Day is perfect, seriously well done, beautiful little introduction - love the bird song. 4/5
- Deconstruction good, but it's difficult to do the whole fractured vocal thing - the listener needs to be in the right mood. I was a little too jolly to get into the spookyness on my first listen! ***
- Parting is Such Sweet Sorrow is really nicely conceived, the start and the end especially are effective in the use of atmospheres behind the melody. The playing sounds so tentative, really human, despite the processing. ****
- Bellows has a nice kind of evolution from 'Parting is Such Sweet Sorrow', it doesn't feel like a separate piece of music, in fact the whole thing flows, it felt very coherent. ***
- Hollinshed's Three Sisters A nice shift. It's got a whole church vs ZX spectrum thing going on. The variation in the central set of tones makes it sound less obviously accordion. 5 stars
- Re-invention (Buttons' in C) Excellent. the sound sources are so processed as to be unrecognisable. There are some seriously great noises in the background, like someone opening and closing a rusty elephant. I could see this being used in a computer game, it's got that whole tension of approaching something threatening at the end of the level.The use of the vocal is superb. Sounds faintly islamic! This longest piece holds together as a central part of the work. The most distant from musical sound sources, and yet very intuitively musical in the journey it takes the listener on. Perfect ending the way it just cuts is a brave and right decision. 5 stars
- Demolition (Radio Transmission from the Sea) Some unsettling spaces. Lovely use of sudden changes. 4/5
- The Cottage The accordion comes back in recognisable form for the conclusion. Nice bass building in the background and weird swooping ( cat? ) noise. ***
- Walking On Marbles... very impressive..Amazing stuff.
- Not quite Jean Michel Jarre but not far off. Weird and wonderful!
- Highly impressed by the work(SoundFjord).
- A privilege to have the opportunity to listen (Re/Flux).
- Walking On Marble sounded like it was made halfway between the Klang Studios and wherever Throbbing Gristle made their early industrial tracks.
- Tape Factory Rewind - very nice, beautifully simple and effectively executed. You know how to end a track! Nicely done! 4 out of 5
- The random computer - the central melody is really quite effecting, but the crash gets intrusive? I really like the actual tone of the synthetics that were programmed. ***
- Walking on Marbles - It's reminds me of a track from John Peel many moons ago where he would play archive recordings of parts of the British sewage system. Extremely subtle and effective. The second half works well as part of the same piece, bringing to mind some of the scary parts of a computer game. It really takes the listener on a journey. 5 stars
- The Random Quartet - Sounds like water lapping against the side of a boat. Very nice. Lulled me back to normality and off to bed. ***