(Make Me A) TRISTE© Mixtape Episode 222: Hotel Artesia

Hotel Artesia

Kevin Wright is a unique figure in British pop music: his career has flourished with cult labels such as él, Cherry Red, Le Grand Magistery, Siesta, and more. In the late ’80s, under the name Always, he issued the exquisite Thames Valley Leather Club and Other Stories (él, 1988), a suite of literate miniatures that fit perfectly in that label’s eccentric constellation, and Looking For Mr Wright (Suburbs Of Hell 1990). Soon after, as Mr. Wright, he released a string of fragile albums across cult imprints such as Siesta and Le Grand Magistery (The Fancy Man, Le Grand Magistery 1997; Star Time, Le Grand Magistery 1998; Hello Is Anyone Out There?, Le Grand Magistery 2001 Metropolitan, Siesta 2004; Diary Of A Fool Series Two Records 2009). In the new millennium, under the guise of The Dreamers (with Sarah Nyberg Pergament) the cult indie folk record Day For Night (Friendly Noise 2007). His work with él Records, in particular, remains extraordinary, not only for its crisp production and cultivated sensibility, but also for the way it captured Wright’s nostalgic, intricate songwriting at its most intimate. Fast-forward to more recent years: under the moniker Hotel Artesia, Wright quietly released fourteen lo-fi pop tracks on YouTube between 2021 and 2023. These tracks, collected as Everywhere Alone, were lovingly assembled into a vinyl release in November 2024 by Honey Muffin Records, thanks to the support of Noah Wilson (aka Mr. Muffins), who felt these songs deserved a life beyond the obscurity of YouTube. Reissued on CD in 2025 by fabulous Brest-based label Too Good To Be True, the album was followed last week by the Something to Sing About EP, the eighth in the label’s 2025 EP series, featuring lush dream-pop textures, tight arrangements, and wistful lyrics typical of Wright’s unique style.

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(Make Me A) TRISTE© Mixtape Episode 221: Blueboy

Blueboy

Blueboy were among the finest bands to emerge from the Sarah Records roster. Formed in Reading in the early ’90s by Keith Girdler and Paul Stewart after their time in Feverfew, the group was later joined by Mark Cousens (bass), Gemma Townley (cello, vocals), Harvey Williams (guitar), Lloyd Haggar -and, later, Martin Rose- (drums). Their debut, If Wishes Were Horses (1992, Sarah Records), distilled childhood nostalgia into just twenty-six minutes- what childhood might sound like, if it were an album, a dreamlike whisper amid jangly guitars, cello, and hushed voices. They followed with Unisex (1994), a quietly daring exploration of identity and emotion, still shimmering with fragile honesty. Their final record of the period, The Bank of England (1998, Shinkansen), felt like a farewell—gentle, bittersweet, and true. In all, they released eight 7-inches and three LPs on Sarah and Shinkansen. Keith Girdler’s passing in May 2007 seemed to close the story. Yet in 2024 Paul, Gemma, Mark and Martin reunited to play live and record new material. That year brought two singles (One and Deux), followed by a return to the stage—culminating in November, when they headlined Jakarta’s Joyland Festival before 10,000 fans alongside Air, St. Vincent and Bombay Bicycle Club. On September 5th they released A Life In Numbers, their first album in twenty-seven years.

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Constant Follower – Gentle Teaching (video)

Let’s get this straight: we love Constant Follower, and The Smile You Send Out Returns To You, released in February via Last Night From Glasgow, is further proof -if any were needed- of their talent and the heartbreaking beauty of their music.
Again, today, we find ourselves drawn into their quiet splendour, into their music that glides between chamber-folk and dreams (or nightmares?), with the release of a hand-made stop-motion film for Gentle Teaching (one of the highlights of the album -though, frankly, every song there is a highlight), animated by Tsumugi Yagi, a rising star in Japanese animation. We’re not talking digital shortcuts or AI trickery: no, just patient human hands. Tiny movements, captured frame by frame, hour into the wee small hours. Sets and puppets submerged in real water, trembling under the pull of sea and sigh of the Selkie myth (the half-seal, half-human of Scottish folklore, caught on land, yet imprisoned by memory of the sea, longing always for the tide) at the heart of the song.

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(Make Me A) TRISTE© Mixtape Episode 220: Prism Shores

Prism Shores

Prism Shores are Montreal, Québec, janglers with one foot planted in ramshackle C86-indebted indie pop and the other in the shimmer of early English shoegaze. Their sound is reminiscent of perennial genre reference points (Sarah, Creation, Flying Nun) while leaving its own idiosyncratic stamp. Out From Underneath, out in January via Meritorio Records, is their second album (preceded by the EP Youth in Abstract out in 2019 and the debut Inside My Diving Bell, in 2022) and finds the band widening their sonic palette by combining live-to-tape performances with atmospheric overdubbing and studio experimentation, confidently settling into more ambitious textures and arrangements. Lyrically, the album tackles young adult ennui and the adjustment of settling in an unfamiliar city, detailing the growing pains experienced during a time of upheaval. It is contemplative and chock-full of emotional depth — a nighttime album that channels self-reflexive melancholy into some form of catharsis.

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Shopfires – Oh Winston (Single Premiere)

Shopfires is the solo vessel of Leicester’s Neil Hill, a one-man band aiming to jangly intimate pop, formed in December 2023 with the lovely Summer Bruises — a DIY bedroom-pop whisper that caught the ear of Subjangle’s Darrin Lee and earned Hill a debut-album release. His self-titled debut, released in March 2024, follow-up Holding On to Let Go, arriving in July, same year, and the new We Are Not There But We Are Here work within the ambits of beautiful jangly guitar pop — brushing close to Brighter, The Field Mice, Heavenly, and Television Personalities — yet radiant with a simplicity and warmth that feels both nostalgic and newly minted. Hill conjures shimmering cascades from a humble setup: acoustic guitar, gentle keys, introspective lyrics — all executed with such artful restraint it amplifies the emotional pull. His songs ripple like sunlit echoes, capturing that tender 80s indie-pop intelligence in a hushed, intimate modern form. There’s a rare beauty in that lo-fi clarity. Today we’re delighted to share his latest single with you: the premiere of Oh Winston, out on Friday, but streaming now on TRISTE©.

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