Itโs not every day we hear a quintessentially hip-hop track with the magnitude of enriching classic rock riffs, say, as Gerry Raffertyโs Baker Street or Pink Floydโs The Great Gig in the Sky.
Agreeably the nineties downbeat and trip hop era unleashed some masterful acts, particularly of the Bristol scene. And thereโs shards of precisely this too, of Massive Attack and Portishead, in Canโt Come Home, a new Wise Monkey single from Stockwell featuring Storm Jae and Nory.
If I retain through rose-tinted specs, a passion for those naughty nineties itโs fuelled by nostalgia; I was young, once! Can even recall some bits of it. But rather than the drifting layers sluggishly building of aforementioned trip hop, the wailing guitar here hits you full in the face, more akin to said enriching classic rock tracks.

Even all this said and done, thereโs nothing content to rest in a time of yore here, as the alignment of beats, astute male rap and uplifting female vocals of Canโt Come Home is fundamentally fresh and contemporary. Enough, I feel, to cross the barrier from myself to my teenage daughterโs musical taste, and that rarely occurs! This combination makes the song especially unique and substantially epic.

With the attitude and gumption of Stevie Nicks, and the mezzo-soprano range of Joni Mitchell, Storm Jae is a jolt in the right direction for an enveloping new era of singer-songwriters. Nory seems more elusive, I canโt find any information on! But teaming up with the trailblazing hip-hop-come-rock crossover musician and producer Stockwell is a match made in heaven, a heaven you can hear for yourself.
Itโs agelessly sharp, emotionally elevating and an impactful grower, which will tease the palate of rock and urban adherents alike. If I make you wince to note Run DMC walked this way with Aerosmith some thirty-five years ago, or if you have to ask Siri what I mean by that, neither matters, this tune will appease either.
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