I’ve been seeing a lot of live shows lately, and there are more album/concert combo reviews coming soon. In the meantime, here’s a review of a band I would love to see live but no such luck yet…
Disc 1913 is…Firedancer
Artist: Son of the Velvet Rat
Year of Release: 2013
What’s up with the Cover? Based on the album title we might be led to believe that this is a firedancer. However, this person is clearly wearing a swimsuit and pirouetting above an ocean. This leads me to believe they are a waterdancer or possibly an airdancer.
Earthdancer is right out.
How I Came To Know It: I fell hard for Son of the Velvet Rat a few years ago and I’ve been buying their records like nobody’s business. This one was just another statistic of that spree, which I have yet to regret.
How It Stacks Up: I have seven Son of the Velvet Rat studio albums (plus two EPs and a live record, but those don’t count here). Like I said, there has been a spree. Honestly, I don’t know my Son of the Velvet Rat catalogue as well as I should. Part of my writing these reviews is ensuring I do a deep dive, but that hasn’t happened yet. So, without knowing how it will all go, I’ll just say I liked this record a lot, but mindful of leaving room around it, I’ll put it third…for now.
Ratings: 4 stars
“Firedancer” is one of my many recent purchases by Austrian alternative folk/rock band Son of the Velvet Rat, and while it isn’t the divine perfection of “Dorado” (Disc 1810), it is solid.
“Firedancer” was released immediate prior to “Dorado”, but there are four years between the two and the distance is noticeable in the stylistic approach. While “Dorado” is a moody selection of Leonard Cohen/Nick Cave style poetic explorations, “Firedancer” has sections that are much livelier and rock-forward.
The structure of the songs is similar underneath, with singer Georg Altziebler still delivering his raspy whisper vocals over music designed to evoke mood. The difference is that mood can manifest as stormier and more turbulent in nature. The guitars are heavier, and the horns are as likely to paint in full peal as they are to meander in airy pastel.
But more importantly, how did I feel about this stylistic shift? As it happens, perfectly fine. Yes, I was pining for the sound of “Dorado” but that is more about that record’s brilliance, and less about arrangement and tempo.
The band likes Spanish undertones and knows how to mix these with blues and folk elements to make something unique. When the record doubled down on the blues portions it lost me a bit, but when that was just one ingredient among any, the old magic returned. A good example of this is “Trapped Sunlight” which has some lovely Spanish influenced guitar laid over a core riff that is all blues. Just the riff would be boring, but the other elements create a tense undercurrent that catches your ear with two familiar sounds, making unfamiliar beauty together.
The title track is the folksiest offering and one of my favourites. Stripped down guitar and Altziebler’s vocals stand stark and let the poetry do the heavy lifting. My favourite line is:
“the city’s a permanent rumble
A subtle quake, a distant drone”
As it reminded me what it felt like, coming from a small town to the city and realizing that this new environment would always have some sort of ambient sound. At first it can be disconcerting, but then reassuring once you acclimate.
The record does a lovely job of sense-shifting, applying descriptors from one sense to another with good effect. On the contemplative “Day at the Beach” we get a good example in the final stanza with:
“Lay and listen
To the sound
Of the sun going down
And the sound of the sand.”
Like the cityscape sounds earlier, there is an imminence to sunset at the beach palpable enough to feel like a sound, even when it’s quiet. This image also calls up all the sounds of the beach at that time of day (the tide, gulls) referenced earlier in the song.
These quieter moments are sublime and while on first listen I felt the intrusion of the more raucous numbers, after spending some time with the record I realized that the tension of these different arrangements gave the record range and made it more interesting.
Overall I was left excited (and a bit ashamed) that my constant flitting through new music sometimes prevents me from settling in on great new discoveries. Fortunately, I will have many years to grok Son of the Velvet Rat in their fulness. My experience with “Firedancer” only whetted my appetite all the more for the journey.
Best tracks: Trapped Sunlight, Firedancer, Guardian Angel, Friends with God, Day at the Beach




