PETE GIOCONDA is a unique, edgy singer, a protest poet with penchant for historical reference. This mix of punk attitude and psychedelic-folk feel teases the audience to take sides . . . like a Johnny Rotten (who hasn't slept in four days) meets Times they are a-changin'-era Dylan and strolls into Cat Power's bedroom for consolation. Pete has taken the empty culture of materialism and is attempting to untangle it.
Pete has taken the empty culture of materialism and is attempting to untangle it. His song Hey You, Out with Shopping Bags has acquired new meaning in the wake of recent looting. Shadow shopping. The unseen forces which control our perception, which leave us ?dreaming of money gods?, form the subject of Wake Up or Be Captured. ?In one sense, 1970s punk had it easy,? Pete comments. ?All it had to do was attack nice fluffy hippies. It's much harder now, because mainstream youth culture is filled with aggressive patsies of consumerism. Being aggressive back doesn't work. I've tried. It just makes minds smaller.?
Some people make shopping mall music. Big, calm, blandly elegant. Somewhere to pass the time and feel comfortable. Pete does not make that kind of music. He makes the music of cobblestone streets, winding alleys, shady lanes. Dimly lit bars. The music of cold, still dawns. Of desolate, wild country.
Pete's poetic style is influenced by the freedom he found hitching and wandering in his 20s, and by his love of classic literature. His aim is to merge story, theatre and poetry with his music and songs. In 2008, Pete performed many Bristol-written songs live on BBC3 TV's ?Upstaged?, as guest of performance artist/musician Badgertrap.
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Learning to See (album) by Pete Gioconda
PETE GIOCONDA's 2011 album Learning to See contains songs fused from new wave, pop and folk/rock influences, mingling poetic lyrics with a punk attitude and playful unpretentiousness. Youthful songs of mischief, desire, loss and sadness, plus transcendent perceptions.
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REVIEWS
?If ever there was a lyric that summed up the 20th/21st centuries ... The Time of Great Waste should be a song everyone knows.? ? Nomenclature Standard
?The Time of Great Waste is a rather fine song.? ? BBC Radio Bristol
?Teases the audience to take sides.? ? Badgertrap
?Sounds rather Bolanesque to me (praise indeed!)? ? Attila the Stockbroker
?This music is the sort to get you bopping joyfully without even realising it. Loads of cheeky lyrics and strutting guitars. It could have been made yesterday, five years ago or ten years ago . . . music that any girl in a flowery dress with a '60s haircut is bound to love ? one for the students.? ? Tubs, scout at Besonic.com
Tubs' recommended tracks: ?The Charm of Making?, ?Darkened Images?