Edgar Allan Poets – Noir Rock Band | Eternal Young Pearls is Saint Louis' Single Out Now
Eternal Young Pearls is Saint Louis’ Single Out Now

Good Day Noir Family,
welcome to Edgar Allan Poets indie music corner. A space dedicated to the best new artists and bands we find around the web. Today’s feature artist is Saint Louis and his single Eternal Young Pearls.

Eternal Young Pearls is Saint Louis’ Single Out Now

It is evident from the very first notes that we are dealing with a songwriter with a great compositional experience behind him.

The thing that struck me immediately is the voice, a vocal timbre capable of speaking directly to the heart and soul of the listener.

The chord progression of Eternal Young Pearls is fantastic with light jazz/blues overtones that I enjoyed especially after the choruses.

The dynamic of this song is fascinating, and it alternates intimate moments with more energetic moments with melodies that invite you to sing along.

The lyrics are deep and the song is accompanied by a video made of frames of past revolutions. This song takes you back to the ’60s when young people were more rebellious and still fighting for their rights.

Saint Louis is a very interesting artist that I recommend everyone to go and listen to.

Eternal Young Pearls is Saint Louis’ Single Out Now!


Intense!


Saint Louis’s letting his pop romanticism roam free all through a folk music swept along with arrangements that are sometimes choral, sometimes flowery, whose meticulous aesthetics draw an architecture shrouded in nostalgia. Mischievously mixing gospel and hippy, a warm and delicate timbre under a languorous pen borrowed from Californian songwriters of the 70s, Saint Louis emanates an air of forbidden loves, glorious adventures, and angelic troubles “sur fond d’azur de Louisiane”.

After decades on the road or in studios with multiple bands, Saint Louis began to write a handful of songs intended for a solo act. Immersed in folk poetry from Nick Drake to Jim Sullivan and Graham Nash, he first produced an EP entitled “Philters”, which he would finally never release, rather opting to expand it to an LP format. (To be released Spring 23!!) He thus remains focused on always keeping the same consistent creative method: first recording a guitar without any metronome, then adding the drums. From there, the rest of the arrangement naturally follows. The music then holds a living movement that he loves so much—the breathing of tempo as a Galatea, and the particular sound of analog tapes as an Aphrodite. And considering that songs come to him most often in a global visual piece, like a kind of architecture, the texts are all the more poetic and therefore inseparable from the melodies and sounds.




Find Saint Louis Here:

Spotify
Instagram


Discover New Bands Click Here


Leave a Reply

© Edgar Allan Poets 2023 - All Right Reserved - (Refund policy / Privacy policy / Terms of service)
Mastodon