Home Read Albums Of The Week: David Brewis | The Soft Struggles

Albums Of The Week: David Brewis | The Soft Struggles

The ambitously creative Field Music co-founder channels the earthy, earnest vibe of early Van Morrision through a gorgeous marriage of blue-eyed ’60s soul, folk & jazz.

THE EDITED PRESS RELEASE:The Soft Struggles is the first album that Field Music’s David Brewis has released under his own name. Though it’s hardly his first extracurricular release. After three albums as School Of Language — culminating with his funky Trump-themed concept album 45 from 2019 — Brewis’s next contribution to the ever-expanding Field Music universe is this jazz-inflected acoustic record. It will also be the second album release on the band’s new Daylight Saving Records, intended as the home for the Brewis brothers’ projects.

The Soft Struggles veers away from Field Music’s eclectic palette and instead leans into the luminous spontaneity of Van Morrison’s Astral Weeks and the breathy, string-laden chamber pop of Colin Blunstone’s One Year. Several of the tracks were built around a single day of live recording at Field Music’s studio in Sunderland, with David’s brother (and Field Music bandmate) Peter on drums, Sarah Hayes (Admiral Fallow, You Tell Me) on piano and flute and Faye MacCalman (Archipelago) on clarinet and saxophone.

“There’s something a bit magical about a bunch of musicians together in a room being thrown in at the deep end,” says David, “So many of my favourite records were made quickly by musicians sitting a few feet from each other, playing songs they’d never even heard before the session began. That’s what I tried to do with this album. A chord sheet, a set of lyrics, a brief chat about tempo and then, ‘OK comrades, see you at the other side.’ ”

The soft struggles of the songs themselves touch on weariness and loss, disappointments allayed or accepted, anxieties overcome or temporarily elbowed aside, sometimes grasping for romantic, or parental, wisdom, and when wisdom isn’t quite in reach, there are songs of consolation and wry hopefulness.

The album also features contributions from singer Eve Cole, trombones by David Smith and Craig Hissett, saxophones on The Last Day by Pete Fraser, and strings courtesy of regular Field Music collaborators Ed Cross, Jo Montgomery, Chrissie Slater and Ele Leckie.”