Agent
Starling is an unusual duo, a pairing of hurdy-gurdy player Quentin Budworth with
Louise Duffy-Howard (aka Lou Loudhailer.) Back in the 1980s, the latter was the
bassist with one of my favourite indie bands, Red Guitars. When lockdown restrictions
scuppered their usual musical projects, the two decided to create Agent
Starling and record European Howl, a complex, immersive and at times
disorienting listening experience. Its opening track ‘Helicopter Arms’ set the
tone – pulsating, intriguing, the distinctive droning, buzzing but melodic sound
of the hurdy-gurdy and whispered, spoken-word vocals (à la Traffic’s ‘Hole in My Shoe’.)
So,
I was delighted to hear that Agent Starling had decided to follow on from this
engaging and original debut with the Northern Lights Trilogy EP or, as
Lou describes it, “three new festive singles that add a bountiful sprinkling of
bells, twinkles and festive spirit to our catchy hurdy-gurdy tunes, hypnotic
drones, live bass grooves & strings.”
The
three festive singles in question are ‘The Cordwainer’s Lament’, ‘Northern Lights’ and ‘Stockport
Polka’. ‘The Cordwainer’s Lament’ sounds like an atmospheric musical walk down
a snowy country lane. ‘Northern Lights’ is not – in case you were wondering - the
1978 hit by prog-rock band Renaissance but a totally different song, which mixes
spoken-word with musical quotes from Prokofiev’s ‘Troika’ (if it was good
enough for Greg Lake to borrow, it’s good enough for Agent Starling.) It’s a
joyful, wintry offering. Amid a soundscape of sleigh bells and church bells, Lou
sings “I know you yearn for calm, long for night, but my heart dances with the Northern
Lights.” Finally, we have the exuberant ‘Stockport Polka’ (familiar as the tune
that Jona Lewie used for his unlikely 1980 Christmas hit, ‘Stop the Cavalry’)
but here performed with plenty of cymbals and a warbling sound on the
hurdy-gurdy that sounds strangely like steel drums.
But that’s not all! I’m reliably informed that Agent Starling are poised to release a second album in 2022. And, as if these weren't enough glad tidings, Red Guitars have reformed and, if the fates allow, will be touring in 2022.
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