I sometimes wonder how performers choose their stage names.
Is Trent Graham, Shadowcaster’s ringleader, taller than
average?
Do they moonlight as some kind of mage?
Are they one of those morbid depressionists that bring a contagious darkness
wherever they go? You know, a “Debbie-Downer”.
I ask, because despite the connotations of the band name, their new single, Friends, is the opposite of dark.
This is not the scuffed black metal I was expecting, which anyone who heard their last single Cast a Shadow would know. It’s more… Rufus Wainwright…? Is that the guy from Powderfinger? No. That was Bernard Fanning. The pop world is a bit murky for me…
Shadowcaster sounds like one of them. Or both of them. Though the music is closer to Bernard Fanning. Stripped back to the bare essentials, semi-acoustic, the human elements of live performance intact, and complete with a sing-a-long section. Like a live band in a Morris St flat, albeit performed better than any such spectacles I heard in my days down the student streets.
The song’s alright; the recording is crisp and clear, the band performs well, and because the vocals aren’t polished you can hear that Trent can actually sing. Personally, the sentiment is a bit too frivolous for my tastes though. You don’t become a writer by having a lot of friends, so it’s more than a little difficult to relate to the lyrics. But I can imagine this track being a summer anthem for those twenty-somethings that still go outside, attempt to maintain relationships, and find joy in the company of other people.
It’s almost a novelty to hear such upbeat, wholesome
releases in these dark times.
Let’s see if their next release lives up the
name, or if Shadowcaster remains the light we need in this world.
5/5 stars. They did what they do well. It’s not their fault I’m a “Nigel-no-mates”.
You’ll find Friends on Spotify sometime around New Year’s Eve.
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