What if the remedy for the current turmoil in our troubled societies were a folk album like they don’t make anymore, as fascinating as it is elegant? Two years after Waiting for The Piano To Fall, Nick Wheeldon is back, accompanied by The Living Paintings, to deliver a new chapter in his discography: Tadpoles.
In this album, as sunny as it is moving, the collective energy of the band radiates through the compositions of the British songwriter, whose talent knows no bounds. Without abandoning his obsessions, always introspective and deeply humanistic, Nick Wheeldon combines melancholy and optimism, hope and nostalgia. After more than a year of silence, it took the band just seven days to record these nine new tracks. Recorded entirely in analogue, enhanced by a brass section, giving pride of place to the saxophone and violin as well as a good dose of improvisation, Tadpoles is a reflection of its author: a breath of fresh air in an increasingly anxiety-inducing world saturated with artefacts that play on authenticity, which is rediscovered here.
Having arrived in Paris a dozen years ago, the man who long carried his voice and guitar around Sheffield, on the other side of the Channel, has never been one to do things by halves. A prolific author of a handful of albums produced with as many bands as the multiple facets that make him up (Os Noctàmbulos, 39th and The Nortons, The Necessary Separation), Nick Wheeldon once again unpacks his bags along with what he has in his hand: his heart. Here, everything is alive, everything breathes, everything encourages contemplation: luminous harmonies, adventurous melodies, meticulous arrangements, raw emotions and spontaneity are at the heart of this sensitive and refined masterpiece, carried by poetic lyrics with naturalistic and dreamlike images from someone who knows how to reconcile the forces of nature and the elements unleashed with his most exalted feelings.
The live recordings were made in Lüe, a small town in the Landes region, with Stephane Jach on violin, Sam Roux on piano, Luc Martin on bass and Nico Brusq on drums. Not forgetting, of course, Paul Trigoulet, a faithful companion who plays guitar and trumpet, but also works behind the controls at the Fausse Boutique studio in Lille, producing a dazzling mix from start to finish, a subtle blend of infinite clarity and rediscovered warmth. This dream team is joined by Marc Mouches (saxophone), Michel Roux (mellophone) and, above all, Laurent Rigaut (saxophone and bass clarinet) with his free approach to his wandering instruments. From the dreamy pragmatism of You Can’t Have It All to the unstoppable groove of Summer Prey, a whole sensitive world slips into our ears and never leaves. This record could therefore be the story of a tadpole that has become a frog for good; but that would be to misunderstand Nick Wheeldon, and we are delighted to once again savour such a powerful revelation of his exceptional talent.