An Endless Summer with Braydon-Lee’s New Single

If, inspired by the likes of Ed Sheeran and James Arthur, the majority of Gen Z loves a good power ballad, the beginnings of the next generation, Alpha, seem to be following suit. And if that’s the thing, fifteen-year-old Calne singer-songwriter Braydon Lee was already in the forefront locally, but in my unprofessional opinion, his second single newly released, Endless Summer, provides the truckload of potential necessary to make this a nationwide phenomenon……

Oi kids, we had heartbreakingly emotional roller-coaster power ballads in the eighties too, you know; practically invented ‘em?! Just with a lot more guitars and hairspray! Yet, I’ve been reconditioned by gigging with my daughter, where Noah Kahan at the O2 impressed me on a Springsteen level, into appreciating these soulful melodic beats, derived, debatably, of folktronica and contemporary RnB. If I’ve acclaimed anyone on the local scene for adopting this in a manner marketable on an international level, it has to be Swindon’s Brandon Clarke, aka Weather. It just so happens, Brandon has produced this track, and together, Braydon and Brandon, their dedication illuminates on this ingenious and poignantly buoyant love song.

This is an absolutely wonderful tune, a hefty guitar riff bassline drifting you along a crestfallen narrative with euphoric backing and Braydon’s eloquent vocals shining through. Braydon has penned a sublime anthem to pluck any heartstring, and he delivers it with the passion and emotion of a professional singer twenty years further down their line.

It’s this bucketload of unpatronising top marks from me, which though I thought I’d seen him before, searched my own blog and came up trumps, (I caught the end of his superb appearance at last year’s FullTone Festival) I predict one day soon, no one will need to search for Braydon Lee; they’ll all know him, love him, and have brought his merch from the O2 shop!

“It was my YouTube cover of Sam Barber’s Straight and Narrow that started getting me attention,” Braydon explained. Now, I’m just a two-bit blogger not wishing to put stars in anyone’s eyes, but while running off a quick cover will gain attention, Braydon needs to concentrate on carving an original style, with the noticeable hook, and herein lies the groundbreaking moment, Endless Summer accomplishes this. 

You can pen a thousand good songs, but finding that awakening hook is key. An Endless Summer, working outdoors through the night, I like this idea, although this is metaphorically akin to the Summer of ‘69 when Bryan wished the season would go on forever, so Braydon might romantically hook his duck, I reckon. And on those levels this works, and will gain more than the attention of his heart’s desire. The first geezer I’m sending this review to will be Mr Threlfeall at BBC Introducing, hoping Braydon is already on his radar.

It comes with a professionally shot video created by Swindon’s 1988 Media, and as a package this has impressed me. I urge you to pay it some attention, or at least pass this message onto your offspring; Braydon is one to watch….

LinkTree Facebook Instagram


Trending……

Leave a comment