Reading's finest tag team prepare split record.
After a 2011 spent touring the nation with the likes of Frank Turner, two headline tours of England and his first ever festival headline slot at Cheltenham's 2000Trees festival in support of his debut album (Outside There's A Curse, Xtra Mile Recordings), Ben Marwood spent most of 2012 constructing a second record, taking a break only to play to a sold-out Camden Barfly with Billy Bragg and - at the invitation of aforementioned Turner and Xtra Mile - half-dance, half-shuffle on a replica of Glastonbury Tor at the opening ceremony of London 2012 in front of a TV audience of seventeen squillion or so.
Marwood's four offerings on Lay Low make reference to none of these things, but instead switch from brief piano led ballads to a full-band showdown via the type of lone finger-picked folk guitar that decorated the first album and if his songs on regret, blind optimism, temptation and even more temptation aren't quite your thing, perhaps you'd prefer six-piece epic songsters Quiet Quiet Band and their songs about poisoned fudge, dashed dreams and.. wait, poisoned fudge?
Led by one Paul Smith (but probably not one of the ones you've already heard of) QQB specialise in writing pastoral arrangements that could almost pass as traditional folk (viola, keys, harmonies) until you realise a lot of their songs are about murder; from the "all I want to do is wear your face" of 'Fudge' to the illegal stand-offs of 'Homemade Pistol',QQB's contributions shift cleverly from folk-stomp to brooding, subtly overwhelming tales. Home-recorded production discourages gloss, exposing Smith's dark, tuneful and highly perceptive storytelling. Expect more murder ballads later in 2013.