The Nottingham, U.K. trio Food People stay true to the DIY loose-ethos freedoms of what is considered lo-fi without being unfaithful to the band’s own hazy, cryptic romanticism.
A track from their new full-length release, Many Glorious Petals, the four-and-a-half minutes of “Eat Paper” rolls forward as a placid soundtrack for travelers on the road with the vaguest of directions and not a map in sight. Kicking off with an analog-synth whistle, “Eat Paper” builds itself from the ground up with a warbling, circular guitar motif. The arrival of a minimal drum machine beat, sawing violin, and clacking percussion are the de facto chorale for the wordless instrumental.
Whether through default or design, the takeaway from “Eat Paper” evokes the meandering, only-fans-favorited soundtrack-era of Pink Floyd as much as the contemporary experimental boglands that Food People inhabit. Fans of musical day tripping with no fixed destination in mind would do well to take the veering ride with Food People.
My Morning Jacket, Ringo Starr, Blondshell & 7 New Songs to Stream Right Now
Khruangbin to Bring ‘A LA SALA’ Tour to St. Augustine in April
Shannon and the Clams, Rahill, Levitation Room, Ghost Funk Orchestra to Headline JME Soundstage Series in 2025
Chicago Alt-Country Faves Wilco Return to St. Augustine with Indie-Folk Great Waxahatchee
The Tiny Desk Contest is Back for 2025! Here’s How to Enter
Local Darkwave Duo Limo Scene Set Their GPS for ‘80s Dancefloor Gloom with Latest Single, “Angelic Three”
Japanese Breakfast, Tom Misch, SPELLING and 6 New Songs to Stream Right Now
With “Immediate,” Local Indie Act Soft Glades Make a Gentle Introduction to Jacksonville Music Scene
Grammy-Winning Singer-Songwriter and Guitarist Billy Strings Returns to St. Augustine for Three Shows of ‘Highway Prayers’
JME Screening of the Algorithm-Directed Doc ‘ENO’ Offers Brian Eno Fans a Once-In-A-Lifetime Cinematic Event
JME Live Music Calendar
Want more live music? We got you…