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Johan Palm - My Antidote (2009)

Johan Palm - My Antidote (2009)

BAND/ARTIST: Johan Palm

  • Title: My Antidote
  • Year Of Release: 2009
  • Label: Sony Music
  • Genre: Pop, Rock, Indie
  • Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
  • Total Time: 36:58
  • Total Size: 96/287 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Teenage Battlefield
02. Emma-Lee
03. Come On
04. All The Time In The World
05. Danger Danger
06. Antidote
07. Satellite
08. You're Killing Me
09. More To Her Than Meets The Eye
10. Let The Dream Begin

Famed for his androgynous image, Swedish Idol contestant Johan Palm, who finished fourth behind Kevin Borg, Alice Svensson, and Robin Bengtsson in 2008, has eschewed the adult contemporary rock and pure pop output of his higher-placed counterparts in favor of an authentic indie sound he first displayed through his talent show performances of songs by the Cure, Coldplay, and Suede. His debut album, My Antidote, co-written with the likes of Niclas Frisk (A Camp), Peter Kvint (Andreas Johnson), and the Motorhomes' John ME, certainly has a pretty credible pedigree, but Palm's expressive and attitude-laden vocals, which sit somewhere between the seductive angst of early Brett Anderson and the girlishly rasping tones of Delays' Greg Gilbert, also add to the alternative nature of its ten tracks. Flashes of kaleidoscopic synths may kick off the opening track "Teenage Battlefield," but it bears the only electronic touch on an album, which wears its influences of the mid-'90s Brit-pop era firmly on its sleeve. The impossibly infectious "Emma-Lee," a number one in his homeland for three weeks, recalls the jangly guitar pop of '60s backbeat revivalists Cast, the gorgeous "All the Time in the World" echoes the sweeping anthemic balladry of Shed Seven, and the driving Beatles-like singalong "You're Killing Me" could have been lifted from Oasis' much-maligned Be Here Now. Elsewhere, there are shades of Parklife-era Blur ("More to Her Than Meets the Eye"), the Bluetones ("Come On"), and Suede ("Danger Danger"), while the album's few contemporary-sounding efforts also have a distinctly British feel, such as the melodic, Embrace-ish title track and the chiming guitars and pounding rhythms of the Snow Patrol-inspired closing number "Let the Dream Begin." My Antidote doesn't live up to the quite ambitious David Bowie comparisons the supremely confident Palm has reportedly claimed, but it's an energetic and lively first offering which provides a welcome alternative to the schlager pop-influenced material usually associated with Swedish Idol alumni.



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