From the banks of the River Mersey to the forest outside Paris, the atypical trajectory of Peter Deaves brings you Ceol Agus Grá (“Music and love” in Gaelic), his first album to be released on March 15th. The singer-songwriter from Liverpool celebrates “old forms of life” and the beauty of nostalgia, illuminated by abundant live instrumentation (lapsteel, double bass, mandolins, banjos, flugelhorns, flutes, etc.) and the analog warmth of tube amps.
Close to the broad and deep tones of Townes Van Zandt and Ricky Nelson, Peter Deaves’ voice is a common thread of an album where shadows of The Beatles (“Nowhere Boy”), Leonard Cohen and Elliott Smith also creep in (“Quarter Past”). Hat-tips also to Johnny Cash (“The Long Green River”) and Neutral Milk Hotel and Radiohead in the brilliant Britpop compression of “Gasoline”, Blaze Foley’s longing fingerpicking (“Liverpool”) as well as the celebratory raucousness of The Pogues (“Bury Me Under The Mersey”).
Sensitive and introspective, Ceol Agus Grá is an album of solemn beauty, as well as an intense celebration of life and love. It can have you crying into your beer at the bar, or dancing on the tables, or both.