Okay, sure, with "Run Out" the first thing you may think is - hey, this reminds me of the first Harry Howard and the NDE LP! Well, it does me. And, if you don't have any of Harry Howard and the NDE's LPs or CDs, that's not my fault, because they're excellent and available right here.
One of the several things which makes me excited about what Harry'n' Ed do is that it's all really, really simple. And I love it. I doubt that it's as easy to make as it is to create, but there's an elegance of expression, of repetition, in both the lyrics and the musical codas.
A number of things mark "In Every Dream Home": the introduction of Ben Hepworth's drum machine and synthesisers, which complement Ed's keyboards, and Harry's expert guitar. Ben creates a consciously old school vibe, providing a vivid platform for Ed and Harry's alternating vocals.
Oh, dear. Harry has just poked his head over the backyard wall with a couple of corrections; "Reading now I should have told you to streass Harry'n' Ed' 'n' BEN because he is REALLY important and he wrote the basis of "Runout" and "Russian" (and "Follow Me" with Ed), and his style influenced the way we did everything. I should have said so before." So, back to listening to "In Every Dream Home"...
When the second song ('Russian') comes on, you might be forgiven for thinking Cindy Wilson or Kate Pierson from the B52s has joined the team. Thing is, a lot of women think they shouldn't sing that way - in fact, I'd say the Tina Arena or Aretha Franklin way is the exception rather than the rule. Ed's voice has absolutely developed from that first NDE LP and we're now listening to greater depth, and a greater range of emotions.
And dank lyrics, too;
I'm nothing like herI don't speak French
I would not go to such extraordinary lengths
I'm nothing like her
She's got no spine
You would not pick her out of a very long police line
Such potent jealousy, such rage at the interloper - and such humour that she can see it so clearly. Intelligent, scything contempt.
So Ed Preston won't be on "The Voice" anytime soon. Too idiosyncratic, too full of intelligence and actual emotion. Also, she's an author, and a good one, and has proper academic qualifications. More soma, Mr George?
So by the second song we know there's a pulsing, icepick humour rubbing shoulders with a dark heart. Rather than Atom belabouring a bucket o'woe, you're invited to notice it yourself. When you do (as you will), the effect is a bit like going out of a dark, damp room at the fag end of winter into a rather glorious spring day, with everything clear and bright and full of pink blossoms ... erm. Right, that's enough of that. As you know, I ain't Wordsworth (just wordy).
By the third, "I Used to Win", after being drenched by a sonicsynth holocaust we know we're in an alternative universe where Harry and Ed singlehandedly record LPs which are the equivalent of an entire Pebbles or Nuggets compilation - but with no duff or 'joke' tracks.
I might add that Atom's lyrics are extremely short and simple, conveying just what is needed in a couple of verses. For example, from the 4th track, "Parasite": "600 days and nights/ I've been asleep/ 'Cause no-one sees me..."
I won't talk about the other songs, except to say - "Every Dream Home" is an excellent LP, a step forward and up from the NDE - though I suspect Harry and Ed think of it more of a sidestep - and it needs your love and sticky fingers. Recorded by Simon Grounds in Melbourne, mastered by Mikey Young, I can only urge you to forget the grandkid's education fund, sod the kid's inheritance, and hasten to both It Records and stock up on greatness.