Richie Triangle; Imposter Syndrome

Coming around to Devizineโ€™s fifth birthday has got me reminiscing on how all this started in the first place, who is really to blame?! It wasnโ€™t Richie Triangleโ€™s fault, really, for he cannot help who comes to see him play, but as for our mainstay support of local live music, a hefty portion transpired from a rare occasion the better half and I dropped into the Black Swan and was surprised and blown away to hear some live music in town, this good.

Here’s the thing, there is and always was a lively music scene in Devizes, I know this now, but I went from the raver-clubber into parenthood and neither of them warrant the angle to have gone searching for a band in a pub, not that it was something I disliked, far from it. At the time my local rant column for Index;Wiltshire was becoming tiresome and heavily edited, it was time to spin it around, reflect on what was good about living in Devizes. Richie Triangleโ€™s residency at the Black Swan was the catalyst, and I ventured off to find Tamsin Quin, and the rest erupted from there.

Times move on, landlords of pubs do, and so did Richie, now residing on the Kent coast, yet, I still think we owe it to him to mention his latest album, Imposter Syndrome, released this week. Itโ€™s a far cry from the acoustic young man belting out Irish folk songs and pop covers in the same format. Richie is a force to be reckoned with, an intricately weaver of wordplay and original compositions, and if David Gray coined the term folktronica, Richie has epitomised it.

Here’s your for instance; twelve songs blending acoustic goodness into pop, with echo-delays of dub, an acapella intro with oddities of voice synthesisers, followed by The Tide, a modish-come-country angle, much in the flavour Elvis Costello, or what Jon Amor achieved with Red Telephone. From there thereโ€™s really no pigeonholing, Trying to Get Home rolls with a slither of old eighties soul-disco, and Richieโ€™s not afraid to add a rap.

It gets a deeper melting pot track by track, Hope in your Eyes, definitely electric blues rock, while Sign of Times, hints of electronica of yore. From there oneโ€™s ear settles on this wavering style, but thereโ€™s surprises again towards the ends, nothing is off the cards as folky goes rap and a non-compliance theme and jazzy piano bridge. Itโ€™s systematic, purposely blending and experimental, the finale characteristic of Adrian Sherwoodโ€™s On U Sound, who while Iโ€™m unsure if this is produced by them, Richie has worked with them in the past.

All I do know is, even if you recall attending Richieโ€™s regular gigs at the Black Swan as he camped out the back of the Devizes pub, or not, hereโ€™s a upcoming marvel, who once graced our town with his presence, and proved himself as a inimitable talent then, this album is a pleasure to listen to; itโ€™s long overdue you checked in on him again.


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