Davey Lane – The Good Borne of Bad Tymes (11/11/2013)
After his hit track, You’re The Cops, I’m the Crime, which has received significant airplay on Triple J, Davey Lane has gone on to release his debut EP.
The Good Borne of Bad Tymes manages to display the capable musician that Lane is, with songs crossing multiple genres in the mere five tracks.
Following on from the hit track and opener of the EP, Lane’s song Sinking May has the potential to reach the same status. Starting off as an acoustic number, the track quickly changes with the addition of sweeping keyboards and a synth bass line.
Adding a new element to his EP, Lane works with a metronomic synthesizer in his track Comfortably Dumb to create a hazy futuristic track.
Keeping things short and sweet at just two-minutes, Ronnie and My Baby is reminiscent of pop songs from the 80s but with a new edge.
You Got Me On Side, slows things down drastically and if it weren’t for Lane’s vocals would be forgettable.
Amanda Sherring
The Good Borne of Bad Tymes manages to display the capable musician that Lane is, with songs crossing multiple genres in the mere five tracks.
Following on from the hit track and opener of the EP, Lane’s song Sinking May has the potential to reach the same status. Starting off as an acoustic number, the track quickly changes with the addition of sweeping keyboards and a synth bass line.
Adding a new element to his EP, Lane works with a metronomic synthesizer in his track Comfortably Dumb to create a hazy futuristic track.
Keeping things short and sweet at just two-minutes, Ronnie and My Baby is reminiscent of pop songs from the 80s but with a new edge.
You Got Me On Side, slows things down drastically and if it weren’t for Lane’s vocals would be forgettable.
Amanda Sherring