Jam on Bread
Melanie McGovern | Thursday 2 December, 2010 21:38
There’s nothing like a bit of self-deprecating modesty. Jam on Bread—aka Steve Carlton—describes his music as having “basic ukulele, rubbish voice, amateurish recording”. But the lo-fi, sounds-like-it-was-recorded-in-a-bathroom thing is what makes his songs so captivating – there’s a simplicity in the sounds and a striking, silly smartness in his lyrics. Hailing from Manchester, he recorded his recently released nine track album ‘A Railcard Adventure in Hackney’—a series of darkly comic, adorable accounts of hope, heartache and hypochondria. The LP offers a delightful selection of oddball titled tracks such as ‘I Wish I Was a Manatee’ and ‘Wikipedia Says I’m Dying’. ‘Let Jason Donovan Do The Talking’ sees Carlton writing love letters to girlfriends using lyrics from 80s pop songs “because the 80s say it best”. All are perfectly messy pop songs sung with the voice of a forlorn folk troubadour. He claims he is inspired by “the melancholy sounds of the ocean” but much remains mysterious about this bearded chap – his songs that are fictitious and often ludicrous, but also somehow relatable. The jammy man is one to watch for those looking for some kind of ukulele playing version of the ridiculously entertaining brilliance that is The Wave Pictures.
Snipe Highlights
Some popular articles from past years
- Diary of the shy Londoner
- An interview with Desiree Akhavan
- Silencing the Brick Lane curry touts could be fatal for the city's self-esteem
- Nice map of London's fruit trees shows you where to pick free food
- Hope and despair in Woolwich town centre
- The best church names in London, and where they come from
- Number of people using Thames cable car plunges
- Only 16 commuters touch in to Emirates Air Line, figures reveal
- 9 poems about London: one for each of your moods
- The five spookiest abandoned London hospitals
© 2009-2024 Snipe London.