English singer/songwriter
Stephen Fretwell declares his lonely and amorous intentions during the first few seconds of his Fiction/Interscope debut with a solitary piano note surrounded by the distant screeching of seagulls. Listeners turned off by the image may as well give up right there, as the remaining tracks on
Magpie expound on the mellow ache of heartbreak and self-doubt with nary a crack in the sun to be had.
Fretwell's soft and breathy delivery is reminiscent of
Wilco's
Jeff Tweedy or a less brooding
Leonard Cohen, and his soft, sparse arrangements help set the mood for the kind of melancholy that feels good. Even the more fleshed-out tracks like "Run" and "Lines" sound as if they were made by the artist alone in an abandoned barn by the seaside, and it's a testament to his misery that they when the chords shift into major the songs lose nothing of their self-imposed isolation. Fans of dreamy adult contemporary Brit-pop who have always wondered what
Coldplay,
Travis, or
Elbow would sound like without all of the bells and whistles will find an answer within the forever-moribund world of
Stephen Fretwell's
Magpie. [The U.K. version of
Magpie includes bonus tracks.] ~ James Christopher Monger