EP Review

Red Vanilla – Days Of Grey: EP Review

The debut EP from Dundee alt-rock newcomers, Red Vanilla, offers a wide range of options for their way forward

Release Date:ย  7th June 2024

Label: Self Release

Formats: Digital

Formed in 2022 and influenced by the likes of Wolf Alice, The 1975 and Foo Fighters, Red Vanilla are a band with potential.ย  Thatโ€™s an understatement, you understandโ€ฆย  Their lineup comprises: Anna on lead vocals and rhythm guitar, George on lead guitar, Lucas on Drums and Sam on bass.ย  Theyโ€™re competent and confident and, on the evidence of their debut EP, Days Of Grey, theyโ€™ve got a lot of options with regard to where they might go next.

Days Of Grey was recorded, in Dundee, in 2023, under the auspices of producer Kieran Smith and, between them, band and producer have done a solid job in showcasing many aspects of the bandโ€™s sound โ€“ a portfolio that includes gentle intimacy, tight inter-band play and widescreen drama, often all within the same song.ย  It bodes well for the future.

Days Of Grey is described as an EP release but, at some 27 minutesโ€™ duration, it had me posing the question: When is an EP NOT an EP?ย  Days Of Grey has the playing time, the presence and the variety to, perhaps, deserve the more appropriate description of โ€œalbum.โ€ย  Is that how it will be remembered?ย  Time will, of course, be the decider on that one.


The bandโ€™s first ever recorded output was their 2022 single, Embers, and thatโ€™s the track theyโ€™ve chosen to launch this new collection.  Itโ€™s a fresh, relaxing, opener, with Georgeโ€™s twangy guitar licks, Samโ€™s rich bass and Lucasโ€™s trademark drum patterns all proving a dreamscape backing to Annaโ€™s soft, vulnerable, vocals.  But donโ€™t be lulled or misled; Red Vanilla are quick to show their versatility as they kick into the grungy Outside In.  Driven along by distorted guitar riffing, topped off by chiming high notes from George and anchored by Lucasโ€™s drum rhythms, the band provide the perfect platform for Annaโ€™s soaring, urgent vocals.

An outstanding characteristic of Days Of Grey is the way in which several songs evolve from folky or, even, jazzy beginnings to grow into full-blown epics and Oria is a typical example of this approach.ย  Georgeโ€™s echo-y guitar provides the theme to the songโ€™s gentle, jazzy, verses, before the whole band erupt, prompting Anna to put her entire heart and soul into her vocal delivery.ย 

Red Vanilla are great admirers of Britpop and those joyful proto-grunge offerings of the mid-1990s and, with All These Better Things, the albumโ€™s lead single, they get right inside the Britpop groove.  Awash with fuzzy guitars, the song almost visibly bounces as it follows the โ€“ now familiar โ€“ Red Vanilla build softly/explode with energy routine.

Thereโ€™s more of the same with Velvet, except, this time, the drama and energy is saved for the songโ€™s final verse.  Elsewhere, the ambience is provided by gently-strummed guitars, Annaโ€™s cracked, intimate vocals and another of Samโ€™s intricate drum patterns.

Commenting on The Know How, the bandโ€™s latest single โ€“ and the albumโ€™s penultimate track โ€“ Anna had this to say: โ€œI remember when I was learning to play guitar, reaching a point where I could start writing material of my own, and this song is the first one that came about.  I actually wrote it about Ellie Rowsell (Wolf Alice), a major role-model of mine, and how desperately I aspired to be like her.  Itโ€™s really heart-warming, because the know-how I reference in the song that I wanted her to โ€˜teach meโ€™ back then, is all the stuff Iโ€™m perfectly capable of doing myself now.  I love that my lyrics capture various versions of me, so I can look back and truly appreciate how much Iโ€™ve grown and changed along the way.โ€

First effort it may be, but itโ€™s a great song โ€“ one of the real highlights of the album.  Itโ€™s another song that blends the vulnerable side of the band, complete with Samโ€™s mystical drumbeat, with their penchant for anthemic drama โ€“ and this time, George coaxes that wonderful bagpipe sound from his guitar!

Days Of Grey is rounded off with another Red Vanilla mini-epic, the multi-facetted Detach.ย  Themes switch between soft intimacy, via controlled full-band involvement to all-systems-go lunacy.ย  Itโ€™s a song that I can imagine becoming the bandโ€™s long-term live show climax, and itโ€™s a glorious way to conclude an intriguing debut collection.ย  We wonโ€™t have heard the last of Red Vanilla, you can be sure of thatโ€ฆ

Plague masks, costume jewelry and bodily emissions. all are present and correct in the official video to The Know How – the latest single to be taken from Days Of Grey. watch it here:

Red Vanilla online: Facebook / Instagram

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