EP Review: THE VELVET ADDICTION ‘Volume 2’

here's in no way like thinking back about recollections of the mid 2000s with a Corona close by and lazing about in a deck seat. One may even ask for the opportunity to return in time, or if nothing else that is the feeling that Melbourne musical crew The Velvet Addiction give on their 5-track, sophomore EP 'Volume 2'.
This awesome new expansion to their discography opens with 'Precious stone in the Sky', a track that establishes a striking first connection and has an ordinary turn-of-the-thousand years Australian shake nature to it. Close to a smart percussion for a passageway, 'Surrender It' offers an alternate sort of furrow and dives assist into an advancing blues an area.
'Dark Hearts' seeps through to the beat of an alternate drum. Moderate paced guitars throb in melancholic-like design as lead vocalist Stefan West sings of what could be deciphered as approaching depression through the verses,
'… in a world that hates to love.'
It is conceivably their most crude track and declines to modest far from powerlessness.
Having officially tended to one of two characterizing classifications for this EP, 'Lost In The View' presents 70s blues in full. It contains everything from sleek musical guitars to the smooth deliverance of vocals that characterize being made up for lost time in a minute.
The EP closes the drape with 'The Others', a foot tapping agreeable stick that joins both shake and blues as a synopsis to the sound-related involvement of this EP, while pondering their 'Loners' picture. It is their most grounded track and is ensured to leave the audience with a positive generally speaking impression.
The 'Volume 2' EP investigates the long existing association amongst shake and blues while penetrating their gathering of people's ears with fluctuation in topic on each track.

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