Short, expansive and loud. These are just
three adjectives, which sum up the latest release from Midlands upstarts, ‘The
Hiding Place’. Having been a band since 2010, they’ve developed a decent
following of fans on social media and in their base city of Stoke-on-Trent.
Combining furious guitar playing from guitarist, ‘Jonny Wood’ with ‘Dominic
Webber’s’ croons and screams brings together an EP of such promise, ‘So This Is
Home…’.
Opening salvo ‘Maybe You’ll Drown’ is quite
calm, echoing the intro of many ‘Of Mice & Men’ songs, a dark brooding riff
with ‘Webber’ very quietly singing, before an avalanche of riffs, drums and
bass hit with a great scream. The opening song may only be just over two and a
half minutes long, but it is impactful and shows intent. Whilst the EP is just
shy of fifteen minutes long, it hits all of the right notes and shows off some
expert playing. Lead single ‘Guts’ could be the song which garners them the
most attention, with it’s heartfelt lyrics and an expansive palette of sound, it’s
a solid choice for a lead single.
Moving onto ‘Barfly’ a song named after the
legendary London venue was always going to incorporate themes of alcohol wasn’t
it? With a harmonized chorus and a crunchy riff, the song is one of the
strongest the band has. ‘The Whole World Is Ending In My Head’ shows off the
vocals again with a quiet-loud dynamic which just works, whilst closer ‘Long
Winters’ sounds like ‘Anberlin’ but a whole lot heavier. This isn’t a bad
thing, and it closes the EP with a barrel full of sound.
Overall, ‘The Hiding Place’ could be on the
cusp of joining the ranks of the national alternative rock scene, and could
prove to be one of the leaders if this EP is anything to go by. They’ve got the
tunes, now they need the overwhelming support that they deserve. Fans of
‘Mallory Knox’, ‘Finch’ and ‘Anberlin’ will love these guys.
‘So This Is Home…’ is out now via iTunes
& http://thehidingplace.bigcartel.com/

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