EP Review – Lucas Laufen’s Goodbye – a melancholic and spine-tingling voice

by | indieBerlin

Released midway through his national tour, Lucas Laufen’s debut EP, Goodbye, makes a timely arrival this month, with its underlying melancholic sound ready to ease us reassuringly into autumn. It would be hard to guess that the Australian-born songwriter recorded these tracks in his sunny coastal hometown last year, just before uprooting and heading to the German capital.

The lyrics betray a feeling that will chime with many young wanderers

Though his home by the ocean was a big influence on Laufenโ€™s writing, thereโ€™s undeniably something about his mournful, often spine-tingling voice in songs such as โ€˜Dead Daysโ€™ that evokes the encroaching chill of Berlin outside the window. The lyrics betray a feeling that will chime with many young wanderers embarking on a journey away from their ancestral homeland: โ€˜If I forget this, Iโ€™ll forget meโ€™.

Folk without the rousing campfire refrains of the genreโ€™s banjo-toting megastars

The intricate guitar-plucking throughout perfectly complements Laufenโ€™s layered vocals, and bar the addition of a double bass and a solitary trumpet interlude (a throw-back to the singerโ€™s first instrumental excursion, aged ten), thereโ€™s little need for anything other than the formula that undoubtedly works best for him: man and guitar.

This is folk without the rousing campfire refrains of the genreโ€™s banjo-toting megastars, and the subtleties perhaps owe more to those across the Atlantic like Fleet Foxes or Iron & Wine than any stalwarts of the British scene.

Either way, Goodbye is a smart and often moving debut, and gives a promising flavour of the future full-length to come.

Read Indie Berlinโ€™s recent interview with Lucas Lauren here.

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