“Ashfield Skyline” – Family Fold

There’s not a lot of flash about Ashfield Skyline, the sophomore album from Family Fold. It’s an album full of the kind of pleasant pop-rock music that most of us don’t pay too much attention to. It sounds nice enough, but without big vocals or edge we let it fade into the background. I must admit, I fell into that trap myself at first. I listened almost all the way through while I was working on other things, enjoying myself but deciding the album didn’t grab me enough to warrant a review. It actually took the final track “Greater Union” to really wake me up and force me to properly listen not just to this number but the rest of the record.

That song is still my favourite, a beautiful ballad with poetic lyrics and some of the most powerful vocals on Ashfield Skyline. But on that first half-listen missed how heartbreaking songs like “Crying in the Carwash” and “Brother’s Name,” about life without Family Fold’s singer-songwriter Paul Andrews’ late brother, are. I missed the humour in tracks like “Saturday Night, No Fever” and “Big Wedding.” I had so much fun listening to “Let Go” that I got up out of my desk chair and had a spontaneous boogie in my home office.

It’s fitting that the image of a heart graces the cover of Ashfield Skyline. These songs might fly under the radar, but together they form an album that has the power to move any listener that really taps into them. Something tells me that matters more to Family Fold than whether or not big media pays attention.

Ashfield Skyline is out now. Family Fold will officially launch the album at The Union Hotel in Newtown on November 25.

Image used with permission from Revolutions Per Minute

Family Fold Remember Countdown With “Molly Meldrum’s Eyes” Single

Gathering around the TV to watch Countdown is a ritual many Australians still hold dear. Family Fold have celebrated that beloved time Aussie music history with their new song “Molly Meldrum’s Eyes.”

Family Fold frontman Paul Andrews actually wrote the song in his mid-twenties but rediscovered in just a couple of years ago.

“I was clearly pining for the old days when I was in my 20s! My old band Lazy Susan did an online release in 2016 of a couple of unreleased/demos/live albums and I rediscovered ‘Molly Meldrum’s Eyes’ when I was sorting through old boxes of tapes and CDs,” he explained. “I thought it was too good to throw away on a demos album, so put it aside for consideration for Ashfield Skyline and it ended up making the cut.”

Something tells me that if Countdown were still alive, Molly would give the clip a spin. It’s a gentle homage to Cold Chisel’s “Cheap Wine” video, filmed in a 1970s fibro house in Sydney’s west.

“Molly Meldrum’s Eyes” comes from Family Fold’s forthcoming sophomore album, Ashfield Skyline. They’ll launch the single tomorrow night in Marrickville, then play shows in New South Wales in the coming months, including some album launch dates.

15 September 2018 – Gasoline Pony, Marrickville (single launch)
30 September 2018 – Dashville Skyline Festival, Belford
4 October 2018 – Some Velvet Morning, Melbourne (album launch)
13 October 2018 – The Noble Hops, Redfern
25 November 2018 – The Union Hotel, Newtown (album launch)

Family Fold Releases Pop-Rock Gem “Crying in the Carwash”

Family Fold, the latest musical venture from Paul Andrews of Lazy Susan fame, has just dropped their brand new single “Crying in the Carwash.” It’s a straight-up pop rock pleaser with a soaring string section and solid lyrics.

“I recorded the track in Nashville with a guy called Brad Jones who has worked with lots of Australian artists like Bob Evans, Missy Higgins and Melody Pool,” Paul explained. “When it came to recording the solo … we were stuck for what instrument we should use. I suggested strings and Brad’s face immediately lit up. ‘I have a guy in Kentucky,’ which sounded so awesome I wouldn’t have cared if it was someone scraping a piece of cut glass across a toy ukulele, I had to go with it.

“We sent the track away, with no parts having been written, to this ‘guy in Kentucky’ and it came back magically a few days later with the most stunning string parts. ‘I have a guy in Kentucky’ has now entered my every day vocab for something a bit ‘on the down low’ that comes through with the goods.”

“Crying in the Carwash” gives us our first taste of Family Fold’s new album Ashfield Skyline. It’s set to drop in August, but you can get a cheeky sneak peek when the band played The Hideaway Bar in Enmore on July 21.