#MusicRelease of Forgotten Pharaohs – New Album – King of Mirrors on behalf of #WastedYouthMusic @wastedyouthpr #Music #Gig

I am sharing this on-behalf of Wasted Youth Music. giving people a second chance in their music careers. Find out more after this release:

FORGOTTEN PHARAOHS  

WILL RELEASE THE ALBUM ‘KING OF MIRRORS’ 

ON 20TH SEPTEMBER ON CREATION YOUTH

LISTEN TO DEBUT SINGLE ‘CAROUSEL’ 

WATCH THE LYRIC VIDEO

Credit: Gary Walker

Introducing Forgotten Pharaohs, the first signing to Creation Youth, the new label from former Creation label boss and artist manager Alan McGee and Grammy-winning producer and Killing Joke bassist Martin ‘Youth’ Glover. The album ‘King Of Mirrors’ will be released on 20th September. 

From the beach fires of San Francisco, via the vistas of the Sierra Nevada to the Welsh mountain hideaways of ancient princes, the Forgotten Pharaohs debut King of Mirrors is a worldly wonder, crafted by a classic rock journeyman. Born in Frome in Somerset but raised on the sounds of the American west coast, frontman Christian Pattemore is the archetypal man out of place and time; a Laurel Canyon dreamer from 1973 materialised amidst the ancient landscapes of rural Wales.

Released in June, debut single ‘Carousel’, an elemental voodoo blues, seems to transpose Christian’s blue-collar struggles in Wales to a metaphorical US Civil War setting. “The ‘frontier town’ in the lyrics, is actually Hay-on-Wye because it’s a border town,” he says. “The ‘ten years crawling through the trenches’ is literally working in the trenches on a lavender farm. It’s about my life in Wales, and what I’ve had to live through. It’s very authentic.” This track has a timeless, pan-Atlantic quality with its Laurel Canyon style layering of blues, folk, rock and dark psychedelia.

Between shows as a session bassist, Christian makes a living as a handyman on a lavender farm. Working the land provided him with plentiful inspiration for the songs he was composing out in the wilds. “For six months I had to cycle to the lavender farm which was 10 miles over the mountains,” he recalls. “I’ve done that in all sorts of weather. I remember riding in a hailstorm over the mountains to get to work to earn some money. It’s a proper Victorian existence, but it’s character building and I’m glad I did it.”

He further fed his Seventies Laurel Canyon obsession by taking a second job in a record shop in Hay-on-Wye. “I never took pay,” he says. “Instead I got as many LPs as I could by artists like Neil Young, Crosby Stills and Nash, Joni Mitchell, Little Feat, Steely Dan, anything Seventies Laurel Canyon, to learn more about this amazing music.”

Such natural talent naturally finds the sun. One fateful school sports day, Christian’s croc flew off as he crossed the finish line as winner of the dad’s egg and spoon race and landed at the feet of a fellow parent by the name of Alan McGee, the music industry legend behind the Creation and Poptones labels. “He looked at me and he goes ‘okay, that kid’s got some fight in him, I’m intrigued’,” Christian says. A demo changed hands, and eventually things fell into place during a writing session at Alan’s London flat around 2018 which resulted in a stirring canyon ballad called ‘Drive’, which features on the album, about finding strength in the personal in a world gone mad: “foreign nations go to war, turn the light off, you can do no more”. “I don’t do the politics thing but I was so upset about the Trump administration,” Christian explains.

Alan passed the song to Killing Joke bassist and celebrated producer Youth. “The original version was six minutes long and Youth goes ‘it sounds like Zeppelin but it needs a chorus’,” says Christian. “He just took it onto another level, raised the bar completely. He said to Alan, ‘Chris has got an album in him and I want to do this’.”

Meanwhile, accompanying Alan on a 2022 Cast tour reacquainted Christian with the band’s guitarist Liam ‘Skin’ Tyson, whom he’d previously known through Robert Plant camp connections in Bath. Recognising a fellow rock soul, Skin agreed to join Christian in Forgotten Pharaohs, adding volcanic riffs and primal fire to his songs at sessions in Wales and at Youth’s studio in the Sierra Nevada, near Granada in southern Spain later that year. “Working on the songs with Christian was very easy,” Skin says. “Like discovering some great lost music that I missed, but really we created something brand new.”

“This album sounds like a record from 1974 that got forgotten about,” says Christian; a dusty supergroup collaboration between CSNY, The Band and Steely Dan perhaps, remixed for the modern day by Queens of the Stone Age. Certainly the crackling power and rich imagery of King of Mirrors – along with its expert Laurel Canyon style layering of blues, folk, rock and dark psychedelia – have a timeless, pan-Atlantic quality. Lead single ‘Carousel’, an elemental voodoo blues, seems to transpose Christian’s blue-collar struggles in Wales to a metaphorical US Civil War setting. “The ‘frontier town’ is actually Hay-on-Wye because it’s a border town,” he says. “The ‘ten years crawling through the trenches’ is literally working in the trenches on a lavender farm. It’s about my life in Wales, and what I’ve had to live through. It’s very authentic. When I’m writing about things it’s like synaesthesia. You play a chord and it just tells you what to write. I don’t question it too much.”

Failure for King of Mirrors doesn’t seem an option. This is the record that galvanised McGee and Youth to launch a brand-new label Creation Youth, with Forgotten Pharaohs as the first full-length release. “It’s early stages but there is a lot of buzz about it,” Christian says. “It’s very exciting. it’s a real honour.” For this musical visitor from 1973, his time has finally come.

TRACKLISTING
1. Carousel
2. Life To Burn
3. Yes I Believe
4. Soul On Fire
5. Drive
6. Bryn Yr Hydd
7. Cable Bay
8. From The Heart
9. Chameleon
10. Giving The Best Away

LIVE DATES
28th August – Water Rats – London
25th Sept – 100 Club – London
15th Nov – Barrowlands (Embrace support) – Glasgow
5th Dec – Dingwalls (Huey Morgan support) – London

About Wasted Youth Music

Wasted Youth Music began as a PR company in 2002, founded by Sarah Pearson who went on to be nominated for Woman Of The Year at the Women In Music Awards and PR Campaign Of The Year at the Music Week Awards, building the company to become one of the UK’s leading music and culture PR agencies.

Alix Wenmouth joined in 2010 as senior publicist, heading up the PR department. She has spent the last decade building an enviable roster of clients, working with major labels, independent labels and artists directly such as John Lydon, Moby, Anton Newcombe, Brix Smith Start and Wendy James.

Wasted Youth Music has evolved to include artist, label and event management and is proud to represent and work with some of the leading lights in music, art, events and more.

#Review of Behind The Curtain By Anita D. Hunt #AnitaDHunt @between_pr #PsychologicalThriller #Thriller

Behind The Curtain
By Anita D. Hunt

Rating: 5 out of 5.

A bit late, due to illness, here is my review on the Reading Between The Lines blog tour for psychological thriller, Behind the Curtain. Can Penny escape and what happened to the first wife? What happens Behind The Curtain isn’t all a bed of roses… Let’s pull back the curtain bit by bit as you discover the cover, blurb, then my review. If you choose to read the actual book, you’ll finish up wanting to pull the curtain wide open after many peeks in.

Behind The Curtain

Blurb

Two wives:
One dead,
One alive,
One 
perfect husband

Penny-May cannot quite believe her luck when the handsome and charming Sam is interested in her, especially so soon after the death of his first wife, Lucy.

As the relationship develops and Sam’s true nature begins to emerge, Penny-May believes that it is all her fault for not being perfect, for not doing as she is told, for not being Lucy.

After all, according to everyone else, he’s the perfect gentleman. Isn’t he?

As desperation sets in, Penny-May is stunned to come across the diaries of Sam’s first wife.

Will the legacy of Lucy’s hidden diaries finally give Penny-May the strength and upper hand to escape Sam?

Review

Dare to slowly peel back the curtain to see what you’ll find…

Is Sam so perfect or is he too good to be true? That’s the question. He’s the perfect gentleman, comes across as treating people well enough and is seen by people as a bit of a heart-throb to boot. He’s the type of man Penny-May fell for and Lucy, before him, until she died. He comes across as a lovely, unfortunate guy who was recently widowed… until more details emerge…

Behind the Curtain examines men like this, who come across as easy to fall for, who are deceptive in their nature, with the dark-side being well hidden, until a moment in time comes and bit by bit it starts to break out.

Penny-May does the classic thing of examining herself and wondering if the problem is her, if she isn’t perfect enough for Sam, if she just isn’t good enough when his behaviour changes. The love wasn’t skin deep, it had penetrated further, she really fell for him and the abuse that emerged crept under her, harming her, slowly penetrating into her psyche, chipping away. She comes across diaries from his first wife and they’re so revealing about what happened to her. You wish she came across them earlier, before she fell in love with him, but life doesn’t work like that, so that wouldn’t have been realistic. The book has a realism about it, it’s so well done.

For some, Behind The Curtain may be a difficult read, but I found it fascinating, even with it striking a certain chord, hitting all the emotional points and compels that will for Penny-May to be alright in the end and to get through it and escape.
It’s very well written. 

 

#Review By Lou of Private Investigations – A Lara Arden Crime Novel By Rob Gittins @Gittins2Rob @HobeckBooks #Thriller #BlogTour

Private Investigations
By Rob Gittins

Rating: 5 out of 5.

I am thrilled to receive the second instalment of the Lara Arden crime series for the blog tour after the rather chilling debut, Can I Trust You? A bit late, due to illness, here is my review of Private Investigations, but first, take a look at the cover and blurb…

Rob Gittins

Blurb

Private InvestigationsA young girl is in a coma after a tragic road accident. Another young girl has washed up on a remote beach, her identity unknown. An old man is murdered and hastily buried in a makeshift grave. A tormented pastor is unable to erase old misdeeds.

Different souls, but with one common link – the past.

Detective Inspector Lara Arden has her own demons to deal with. But as she investigates this raft of seemingly disparate crimes, she begins to suspect there’s a further common link at work here – her own past.

When all roads lead back to a former children’s home called Kenwood – and a macabre half-size windmill sited in its grounds – suspicion hardens into conviction.

Lara always believed that Kenwood had to be destroyed. Its old stories haunted it too strongly, like spirits yet to find their voice.

But do the tendrils of its past cling to everyone associated with it, too?

And do they need to be destroyed as well?

Review

Near death and actual death gives DI Lara Arden a lot to hit her desk that requires investigating. All leads to former children’s home, Kenwood. From there, it becomes increasingly darkly atmospheric. Windmills can either be romantic, curious or dark objects. This one errs more to the dark side. It has a past that lingers across it and the grounds. I imagine if you stood there, you would feel it in the air above. It can certainly be felt as the pages turn.

Weston, now in a hospice, gets a visit from DI Arden. She has a letter in her hand and wants to know more about what went on in the place. It’s brutal and highlights a dark truth of some places and of some people who become corrupt and of the secrets kept by the victims.

Whilst trying to solve the crimes, DI Arden isn’t without her own demons from her past. There’s fascinating character exploration within the book as well as the mystery to solve, all culminating a surprise ending.

Second books are some of the hardest, lots of authors say so, well this one was well worth the wait!

“Rob Gittins is a highly acclaimed dramatist whose work has been enjoyed by millions
in TV and radio dramas.’
Nicholas Rhea – author of the Constable series, adapted for TV as Heartbeat.”

#Review of Peter May In Conversation with Craig Robertson @BloodyScotland Inc Link To Watch @authorpetermay @CraigRobertson_ #BloodyScotland

Peter May In Conversation with Craig Robertson

The Black Loch cover

Black Loch is Peter May’s latest book, set 10 years later than the previous Hebridean/Lewis book. You can find out more here: The Black Loch

I saw this talk in person. You can watch this until end of September online. The link at the end of my review.

He discussed his career as a journalist and working in tv and becoming an author. It came as quite a surprise how challenging it was to get published and how no one initially wanted to publish The Black House, which later became book 1 of the highly successful Lewis Trilogy. Now, he’s been tempted back to writing more set in this area all these years later. The Black Loch is out now! You won’t be disappointed. It turns out, it was as wise move to return to the Hebrides.

He wrote a series set in China, which was intriguing to hear about as he talked about actually going over to the country. He divulged about a “propaganda office” which was not as scary as it sounds and was a marketing department for books. It was interesting to hear about how things work in a different country to the UK. He also talked about his publisher liking this series and urging him to carry on, but how he. at a certain stage, wanted to move onto writing other things.

Overall, it was an insightful, interesting talk.

You can watch this until 30th September from the Bloody Scotland site here: Digital Link

*Please note I am not affiliated nor gain from Bloody Scotland, just merely sharing the digital link.

#Review By Lou of The Rest is History @BloodyScotland panel – Elini Kyriacou, David Grieg, AJ West #EliniKyriacou #DavidGrieg @AJWest #HistoricalCrime #Thrillers

The Rest is History
Elini Kyriacou, David Grieg, AJ West

Rating: 4.5 out of 5.

The Unspeakable Acts of Zina                 Columbas Bones                The Betrayal of Thomas True

The Unspeakable Acts of ZinaElini Kyriacou’s novel, The Unspeakable Acts of Zina Pavlou  was chosen for Between the Covers on BBC2. I seem to remember watching this episode.
Based on true events. it tells the story of the penultimate woman to be hanged in Britain. The audience were told about how it is told from the translator’s view.
It’s set in the 1950’s and she fascinatingly talked a bit about these times and how she indulged in researching the different cigarette brands, what the branding looked like, thinking about how her characters would feel and what it meant to have a certain brand… After watching a documentary about the last person to be hanged and being impressed by the balance the presenter/historian presented, I felt it would be interesting to hear about this particular case too. 

Columbas BonesDavid Grieg’s book, Columbas Bones takes readers into Vikings times, so pretty different for a crime novel. One Viking wakes up the next morning to find himself alone, hungover, and abandoned by his crew mates. He can’t swim, there are no boats, and the only surviving monk on the island has taken his sword….
He’s looked at the period of 835 and is steeped in the history of real monks in Iona, philosophy, meditation and a time of religious change. He talked about Christianity spreading into countries and communities of people who had different standards and beliefs and some people taking on this new religion. Crime, he reassured people, does happen as it is a crime book after all. He also talked about how this was interesting to research. 

The Betrayal of Thomas TrueAJ West’s book, The Betrayal of Thomas True, essentially takes readers into a little known part of  history. We’ve all heard of the term, mollycoddling or mollycoddle, but probably have not ever thought about its origins or that you can split the word. So, splitting the word for a moment we have – Coddle – to treat someone gently and Molly, which has its origins as far back as at least the 18th century, the time of Molly Houses. Mollies was the term used for effeminate homosexual men. It was fascinating hearing about this, since language evolves as it is a living thing (so said Melvin Bragg in The Adventure of English), but certain words remain in some way or another.

His book promises to take readers on an emotional journey to the Molly Houses. He tells of some horrific things that happened to gay people, but how the Molly Houses were places of sanctuary and refuge. What was pleasing and perhaps surprising to hear was that it wasn’t always other gay people taking them in, they were straight people who wanted to protect them. So, it sounds quite a book of exploration.

#Review By Lou of Immoral Dilemma’s @BloodyScotland panel with Jack Jordan, Andrew Hunter Murray, Nilesha Chauvet @JackJordanBooks @andrewhunterm @NileshaChauvet #Redemption #ABeginnersGuideToBreakingAndEntering #TheRevengeOfRitaMarsh #CrimeFiction #Thrillers

Immoral Dilemmas
Jack Jordan, Andrew Hunter Murray, Nilesha Chauvet

* * * * *

Redemption          A Beginner's Guide to Breaking and Entering            The Revenge of Rita Marsh

Jack Jordan has written 8 books, but I discovered him in the books, Do No Harm, Conviction and most recently, Redemption. He cleverly asks in the books:
“What Would You Do?” as he places characters in challenging situations that pose immoral dilemmas to solve. Although quite dark and to some extent, cerebral, they are gripping and it was talked about having that hook so you keep wanting to turn the page.

RedemptionHe has set Redemption in a rather isolated place, in desert land. He talked about this setting and how he wanted the location to also marry up with the isolation feeling that the parents of the deceased when a gay teenager kills their son. The 5 stages of grief interestingly runs through the book. It is an intriguing concept. He talked about the fascinating subject of revenge and twisting things on their head.

                            Andrew Hunter Murray’s book, A Beginner’s Guide to Breaking and Entering is A Beginner's Guide to Breaking and Enteringquite different as it follows a male squatter. He seems an unusual squatter as he enters the homes of the rich. It sounds a rather unique premise with a bit of snooping around how the other half live thrown in. The book tackles themes of rich people’s second homes with their luxurious swimming pools, homelessness and more…

The Revenge of Rita MarshNilesha Chauvet talked about themes of vigil anti-ism, paedophilia, carehomes, women in her debut novel – The Revenge of Rita Marsh. She talked a bit about these themes that run through her book and how you can see why something is done by her characters and how the immoral dilemma is there. She also talked about settings being important in her book.