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The Noyelle Beat

Standard Fare

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Album Review

The Sheffield-based Standard Fare are, on the face of it, exactly the kind of perfect indie pop that generations of critics constantly dream of — they're British, they make a virtue of being understated and ragged around the corners, and they're dedicated to the idea that the basic guitar-bass-drums format will never die. But given that generations of bands have pursued the same combination, the trio needs to aim higher to stand out. On their debut, they show promise without fully making a stamp of their own yet. Their strongest point lies in the singing of bassist Emma Kupa — there's an unsettled, quavering edge in songs like "Love Doesn't Just Stop" or "Fifteen" that steers clear of prim formality for something just that much messier, much more yearning, which matches the romantic angst featured throughout. At her sweetest, as on "Married," she still has a catch in her singing that suits the sense of a big step taken in life, while her turn on the closest thing to an anthem on the album, "Philadelphia," captures the sheer rush and frustration of long-distance love perfectly along with the music. In contrast, guitarist Danny How's singing is fine enough but somewhat more anonymous in comparison — in a way, it's a parallel to the band's contemporaries the XX, even if the music is radically different. For all of the band's sense of their hearts being in the right place, though, The Noyelle Beat has the feeling of those many acts who loved the Smiths two decades earlier but didn't quite have the range both Morrissey and Marr brought from their backgrounds to the form — it's a pleasant album for what it is, but the bandmembers need to build on their best qualities in the future.

Customer Reviews

Wow!!!

Wow! they're going to be BIG! amazing lyrics, melodies, vocals. I love Fifteen, Married, Philadelphia, and.... Dancing!!!

very good!

I just stumbled upon them at SXSW - and they were a lot of fun live! They definitely brought it! My favorite right off was 'Wrong Kind of Trouble', cause oops yeah, i been there... I had to immediately buy the whole album and I'm glad I did - while not quite as raw as they were live, it captures their spirit pretty well. Reminds me a bit of Heavenly.

Biography

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '00s, '10s

Standard Fare is a three-piece indie pop/rock band from Sheffield in the U.K. Comprised of bassist/vocalist Emma Kupa (whose mother was a member of the early-'80s anarcho-punk band the Poison Girls), guitarist/vocalist Danny How, and drummer Andy Beswick, the group drew inspiration from both classic C-86 groups and U.K. guitar rock heroes like Orange Juice, as well as American indie rock bands of the '90s. Their sparse and energetic sound, topped off by Kupa’s arresting vocals, soon drew interest...
Full Bio
The Noyelle Beat, Standard Fare
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