Dean Garcia of
Curve fame has a current project in motion. His most recent incarnation is known as
SPC ECO and features daughter, Rose Berlin, on vocals. Berlin has more than four years' recording experience under her belt - in fact, she's been around long enough for myself to be familiar with her early MySpace recordings. That experience shines through on
SPC ECO's third record,
You Tell Me, but not so heavily as her studio-veteran father's.
The sound is unmistakebly Dean Garcia: thick, bouncy basslines with subtley biting guitar-work over sleepy - and ocassional - trip-hop beats. There is no doubt that Berlin's vocals are at least in part owing to
Curve's Toni Halliday, but she lacks the depth and richness of Halliday's delivery, instead resting on smoothness and sensuality. On tracks such as 'Big Fat World' she comes into her own, but this can be put down to the lighter production values which can otherwise feel polarising on the album.
The fact that 'Lef It Out' samples
Curve's own 'Something Familiar
' is perplexingly self-referrential, but perhaps more importantly indicative of how Toni Halliday's presence could instantly have turned this record into another
Curve one. Is this a bad thing? Only if you are willing to cede that
Curve's output felt decidedly less-inspired towards the end of the duo's often tumultuous working relationship.
While there is nothing distinctly sub-par about this album, it
ultimately does have the feel of Dean Garcia turning all the knobs and pulling all the strings behind a new lead singer and set of willing studio musicians. A lack of energy drives the album into chillout territory, but the melodies so often fall flat and lack the lift or beauty (seen on 'Fall a Million Ways') to sustain the attempted, laid-back vibe without things becoming a little
too pedestrian. Here's hoping Rose Berlin brings some of her own personality to the table on future releases.