French, Brooklyn based songstress Julie Peel has the rare ability to pen beautiful and touching songs - and she does it with enviable consistency. Here's a dreamy, rather sad gem from her debut album "Near the Sun". Julie just announced she's nearing completion of a new record, shceduled to be released before the end of the year.
Julie is ridiculously talented as well as funny, charming and sweet with just the right amount of sour. I concur with previous comment, add her to her to your playlists, share her with your friends. I shit you not. xo. Hestia.
JP is rad. You will like her. If I had a choice between the best pancakes ever made or one of her songs, I would totally take the song. Your ipod is an embarrassment if you don't have her in rotation. srsly.
Which of these acts should be The Deli's next NYC Artist of the Month?
This might sound kind of trite, but imagination is one of the most crucial deciding factors that makes us pay attention to music we get introduced to. This is a quality that is definitely not missing from Night Manager's music, lead singer Caitlin Seager's melodies in particular. The Brooklyn via Paris/San Francisco band offers some of the most refreshingly catchy pop lines we heard in a long time. The gorgeous single "Ghost" (streaming here) is a glorious melange of genres, somewhat reminiscent of the carefully constructed songs from The Throwing Muses' pop masterpiece "The Real Ramona" - one of the most underestimated pop album of the 90s. Unpredictable melodies blending Cocteau Twins' heavenly beauty and The Beach Boys' harmonizing mastery, float on top of what could be described as a grunge-style track, although drenched in reverb and filtered through the NYC DIY sound of the new millennium, with all its homages to the new wave and the garage sound of the 60s. But the sonic character of the track is kind of contingent here, because the actual song is so good that it would work in any instrumental context. The other two tracks on the 7" (the band's third release), present a similar recipe, with a heavier influence of the 60's surf pop element, which awakens comparisons to west coast breakout band Best Coast.- PDG