BREATHE reviews

Reviews - As we're an honest bunch... we've decided to give you the all reviews as and when we find them... the good the OK and the constructive!


R2 - ROCK & REEL MAGAZINE



















































FATEA MAGAZINE - Fatea Showcases:
 http://www.fatea-records.co.uk/magazine/2014/LexieGreen.html
"Breathe", Lexie Green opens her account with an impressive debut album.

Lexie Green has been likened to both Katie Melua and Tift Merritt, so let me take those reference points, the vocal phrasings that remind me of the former and an attitude and style of the latter.
Lexie Green walks a long way along the acoustic spectrum, taking in pop at one end and blues at the other calling in on Americana, country rock and even folk on that journey, but regardless of the style, there is one thing that links all of the nine tracks on, "Breathe", presence.

There is a confidence in here voice that simply say, "I'm Lexie Green,listen to me" She can sound like an artist that is ripping her guts out because she's hurt, she can sound like an artist swirling around a corn field in a summer dress, simply because the sun is shining and the mood takes her.

This is an album that is impressive not only as a debut, but as an album compared against it's peers with no qualification. In fact the only niggle I have is the use of a slightly suspect storm effect at the start of "Goodbye Herotio", the song writing is of a quality it doesn't need a cheap scene setter and it certainly doesn't need to be used to close the song. It's a niggle that is frustrating because it detracts from an otherwise solid album.

I get the feeling that Lexie Green is a name that you are going to hear more of, so don't bother delaying, leap in at the start.

Neil King
 


http://www.liverpoolsoundandvision.co.uk/2014/05/15/lexie-green-breathe-album-review/
Lexie Green, Breathe. Album Review.
Published on May 15, 2014 by in Music

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating * * * *

You can only imagine what goes in the minds of musicians before the On-Air sign goes to red, the dawning realisation that this is the moment in which to shine or even fall, the many questions that buzz like pregnant Queen Bees and spawning more and more self-interrogations and pricking the conscience in their own self-defence.

The On-Air light goes on and that instant the artist realises that whatever happens next, they can only give their best. As an outsider that process you can only hazard a guess to the emotions but in the lyrics, the small trembling voice which is hidden deeply in perhaps just a single word or large expression catches your eye and you know that the artist has poured out their soul. This is arguably what you find when listening to Lexie Green’s superb debut album Breathe.

Inhale the sound, gasp at the feeling of listening to somebody perform something so beautiful that any doubts that may have lingered about sharing these songs with the wider world are soon diminished and most of all, play with the thought that Lexie Green in just over six years she has gone from somebody who had perhaps looked at a guitar and wondered just what the attraction may have been to somebody whose musical company is not just lauded but requested with authority.

Breathe is poised, measured and sophisticated. It has the dignity of a woman who is placing her trust for the first time in something new and yet knowing deep inside that it will be accepted for what it is, an album in which to really immerse yourself into without all pretence or pretension of some her more established fellow musical travellers.

With tracks such as the opener Frozen Photographs which clings to the memory like an ancient lithograph hanging loosely on somebody’s mantle-piece, the excellent Born This Way in which the outpouring of understanding is so passionate, so untamed, it makes the hairs on the back of your neck feel as if they have stood in a wind tunnel for a few hours and the exceptional No Rainbows have the growing sentiment of needing to be played at least once a day just to really hold the desire as close as possible and for as long as the musician will allow.

The biggest surprise might be that you discover it is a debut album, for surely something as sweet, crushingly beautiful and straight forward as Breathe can only have been imagined by somebody with many of experience in recording may have thought of.  Don’t just inhale the smell of beauty; drink it in, savour the taste for Lexie Green will surely offer so much in time.

Breathe is released on Fifty Road Records.

Ian D. Hall

 


Northern Sky Webzine 3/5
"...Although Lexie, the shortened derivative of Alexandria, has only been a singer/songwriter and musician for a relatively short period, it's hardly noticeable in these songs. From the soulfully slick and arresting groove of the opener Frozen Photographs to the more whimsical Just a Minute of Your Time, which comes in at precisely sixty seconds, Lexie turns her hand to storytelling in an unexpected excursion into a passionate world of Central American (presumably) with the dramatic Goodbye Herotio, complete with atmospheric tropical rainstorm effect and scary gunfire. BREATHE also has it's joyful finger-clicking radio-friendly fare with the bouncy In This Together, which is sure to have shoulders swaying at venues in the southern counties."

http://www.allanwilkinson.co.uk/node/3426

 


Bolton Standard  
'As the clouds darken she has released these little rays of sunshine... with her soulful voice, she can only go higher and higher.'
 

Exit Pursued By The Blues
'9 Fantastic tracks taken from Lexie’s back catalogue shows her growing confidence in writing and singing her own songs and A Breath of Creative Fresh Air and an Exciting adventure that I hope you will enjoy.'
 


Get Ready To Rock Radio station: Featured album w/c May 26th

 


Metal and Prog Rock Webzine (yes I know METAL!?!?!) 3/5  
'...the material on Breathe has far more  in common – vocally and in substance – with the likes of Katie Melua.   '...Bettys Car is a clear pick of the bunch (opening with echoes of Eleanor McEvoy’s cover of True Colors) and signals that with the right moves, Lexie Green could be one to watch.'
(We'll have to make sure they get a copy of 'Twenty Ten' if they prefer to hear a rockier sound!) ~x~
 


Amplified webzine: June 2014
SIX years ago, Lexie Green had never strummed a guitar, let alone written a song or sung in public.  But, here she is with her debut album and she has already been a semi-finalist in an International song writing competition.
Most of the numbers on this nine-track album were written sometime ago and Lexie has been saving them for a rainy day – and as the clouds darken and a few spit spots of drizzle fall from the skies, she has decided to release these little rays of sunshine.
Her songs are influenced by folk, rock and blues and with her deft touch she has crafted the songs into a relaxing set.  Reminiscent of the likes of Katie Melua, Lexie has been gaining a strong reputation on the live circuit and with compositions like Frozen Photographs, Born This Way and Betty’s Car; she is showing a maturity beyond her years and experience. Not only has she written the songs, Lexie has arranged them and she plays a thoughtful acoustic guitar and some chilled out piano. With her soulful voice, she can only go higher and higher.