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Category: song review

Wild Pink Teams With Wyatt C. Louis on Lovely “Oh Vibrant Sky,” a Soft & Sweet Folk Dream


Wyatt C. Louis and Wild Pink’s new single “Oh Vibrant Sky” arrives off the Plains Cree singer/songwriter’s forthcoming debut album, and showcases the delicate, nuanced and subtly rich nature of what both sides do best: Make harmonious music that invites a second (or third) listen.
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Stream: “Oh Vibrant Sky” – Wyatt C. Louis, Wild Pink


There’s a special sort of alchemy when two artists complement each other and play to their strengths – not a complete overlap of a musical or sonic Venn diagram, but a pleasing sort of intersection all the same.

That intersection of sorts is on display right from the jump in “Oh Vibrant Sky,” the lovely collaborative new single between folksy singer/songwriter Wyatt C. Louis and New York indie rocker John Ross of Wild Pink.

The single arrives off the forthcoming Chandler, which is due out May 24th on Royal Mountain Records.

Oh Vibrant Sky - Wyatt C. Louis ft. Wild Pink
Oh Vibrant Sky – Wyatt C. Louis ft. Wild Pink

A mix of softer and more classically rock n’roll influences dot Louis’ music, not unlike the discography of Wild Pink, which has spawned comparisons to everyone from early-era Death Cab for Cutie (on its harder-rocking, slightly more emo-tinged debut) to The War On Drugs (see: releases like 2018 Wild Pink LP Yolk in the Fur).

The balance between the two weaves in and out of the song, as Royal Mountain Records notes.

The duo “shared ideas, textures and lyrics over a series of months during 2023,” as Ross’ vocals sit lower in the mix and lilting guitar carries the sweetly sung track forward.

“I was glad Wyatt asked me to write this song with them,” Ross said. “I’m a big fan of their songwriting and this came together pretty organically. They’ve got a way of making this song sound laid back but poignant at the same time.”

Chandler - Wyatt C. Louis
Chandler – Wyatt C. Louis

The release adds to a prolific array of singles already released by Louis ahead of the album, including “Carefree,” “In Emerald,” and “Bobtail Road.”

The collaboration was a natural fit that immediately played to the strengths of both artists, Louis said in a statement.

“Writing with John, this song quickly found its footing,” they said. “It gives me nostalgia for my early festival days. All packed together with friends, waiting for the next band. Or volunteering and signing up for the early morning shifts, just so you could sneak in a soundcheck.”

Nodding to “the other side of this,” Louis added, “I feel very fortunate to share these experiences with nîcimos (the Cree word for sweetheart).”

Wyatt C. Louis © Vanessa Heinsedit
Wyatt C. Louis © Vanessa Heinsedit

Louis also appreciates the sense of community and healing that comes with it.

“Oh Vibrant Sky” is the softest track on the record. I wanted to slow things down, and reflect on how all of this has shaped me throughout the years,” Louis said.

It also adds to the growing, ever-prolific discography of both artists: Wild Pink just debuted a three-song EP Strawberry Eraser, led by the genre-blurring track “Air Drumming Fix You.”

At this rate, one would certainly welcome future collaborative releases from Louis and Wild Pink together, as “Oh Vibrant Sky” lives up to its beautiful name and lush sonic backdrop handily.

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:: stream/purchase Oh Vibrant Sky here ::
:: connect with Wyatt C. Louis here ::
Stream: “Oh Vibrant Sky” – Wyatt C. Louis, Wild Pink

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Oh Vibrant Sky - Wyatt C. Louis ft. Wild Pink

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? © Vanessa Heins

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Another Lennon-McCartney Original: James McCartney Teams with Sean Ono Lennon on “Primrose Hill”


James McCartney and Sean Ono Lennon team on the tender “Primrose Hill,” marking their first co-write – but not their first collaboration – in a dual family history that is immortalized in the annals of music history. In the summer of 1957, two schoolboys played hooky and scrawled a song in a composition book. They’d only recently learned of each other’s songwriting hobby and, in a sendup of the Rodgers-and-Hammerstein duos of the day, decided to signify their collaboration as a portentous moment. Atop the page they wrote the title, “Too Bad About Sorrows,” and a caption: ‘Another Lennon-McCartney original.’
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Stream: “Primrose Hill” – James McCartney


Many composition books, one legendary partnership and an additional generation later, a new Lennon-McCartney team has made its debut as James McCartney released “Primrose Hill” to streaming on April 12, 2024.

A lilting acoustic ballad punctuated by lush strings, McCartney’s new track features double-tracked vocals and a tender reminisce on early love:

We laid on Primrose Hill,
didn’t know it still, you meant what you said

An overcast sultry day,
I didn’t know what to do, I didn’t know what to say

We laid there, forgot everything, kissed beneath the stars
Shooting to the hill the stars exploded into a flame
Always remember Primrose Hill
Primrose Hill - James McCartney, Sean Ono Lennon
Primrose Hill – James McCartney, Sean Ono Lennon

McCartney shared on Twitter that his lyrical sentiment was inspired by a childhood vision on his family’s farm in Scotland.  “Letting go, I saw my true love and saviour in my mind’s eye.” The second single in this album cycle, “Primrose Hill” follows the moody “Beautiful,” co-written and produced by one Paul McCartney. (Paul has written at least a handful of songs since co-penning “Too Bad About Sorrows”).

The track comes in the wake of two very tender public statements by the younger Lennon-McCartneys, each about their parents- but not the set one might expect. Sean Ono Lennon, accepting the Oscar for best animated short (War is Over, co-written by Dave Mullins), rushed over the play-off music to wish his mother Yoko Ono a happy 91st birthday/mother’s day and asked the crowd to chant “Happy Birthday, Yoko!” In an equally sweet mother’s day gesture, James McCartney recently shared a polaroid of his mom Linda atop his piano with the following caption:

“Mum always inspired me to love life to the max and sing from my heart. There was a time I thought I better not think of her dying, as it would happen. And then it did. It breaks my heart that she’s gone, but I want her to be here now, thus I pursue music, the real spirituality in my life.⁣”

Linda and Yoko both feature on the rare Lennon-McCartney family collaboration, the Ono-penned “Hiroshima Sky is Always Blue.” To date, it is the only instrumental collaboration between Sean and James, on harpsichord and guitar respectively; Sean is credited only as a writer on Primrose Hill.

Yoko Ono and Linda McCartney pictured in 1969 and 1995, photographed by Mary McCartney at Hog Hill Mill Studios, Sussex © Aidan Moyer
Yoko Ono and Linda McCartney pictured in 1969 and 1995, photographed by Mary McCartney at Hog Hill Mill Studios, Sussex © Aidan Moyer


Given the historical weight of their namesakes, there is an implicit fanfare and built-in expectation for a Lennon-McCartney co-bill (in this case, McCartney-Lennon). The notion of a “Sons of Beatles” act has been batted around by the younger McCartney in interviews, beginning with a Dhani Harrison guitar cameo on his 2016 song “Too Hard.” The notion can prove tempting when selfies of musical forty-somethings emerge in various permutations and  resemble The Act You’ve Known For All These Years. However, Zak Starkey, Ringo Starrchild and live drummer extraordinaire for the Who and Oasis, said the following in November of last year:

“If we had spent 3 years sleeping on flea infested mattresses in the back room of a Hamburg club it might have chemistry – but we have been swaddled in silken robes in houses so big that it’s too far to go and make a piece of toast – seen?”

So there.

As it stands, “Primrose Hill” serves as a strong entry in the James McCartney catalog and a delightful music history curio in the ever-unraveling tapestry of pop’s greatest songbook saga. Sean Ono Lennon is active in the Claypool-Lennon Delirium, GOASTT and countless solo efforts and collaborations ranging from Miley Cyrus and Mark Ronson to Lana Del Rey and-as both have teased intermittently-his half-brother Julian Lennon. James McCartney has released several albums and EPs since contributing guitar to both his father’s “Flaming Pie” and his mother’s posthumous “Wide Prairie.” Wherever “Part II” of this saga may lead, the weight of Yoko Ono and Linda McCartney’s creative daring and singularity of vision is sure to echo. Their legacies are indelible.

In memory of Linda McCartney, who passed away 26 years ago on April 18, 1998 © Aidan Moyer
In memory of Linda McCartney, who passed away 26 years ago on April 18, 1998 © Aidan Moyer

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Stream: “Primrose Hill” – James McCartney

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