
With the release of his second offering on said label, Costa’s gift as a multi instrumentalist is ever present throughout ‘Unfamiliar Faces’ – a heartfelt and honest body of melodically syncopated work.
‘Unfamiliar Faces’ attempts – and in many respects successfully achieves – to transcend and explore a musical timeline of pop, country, folk and rock; playing with their elements with the craftsmanship and maturation that reaches far beyond his tender age of twenty-five years.
Each track evokes a certain sense of meaning combined with skilful dexterity: from the playful romp of the piano-lead Beatles-esque “Mr. Pitiful” to the blissful Shins-washed fluidity of “Vienna”. As well as being musically adroit, lyrically Costa is incredibly open in covering his life’s loves, losses and woes. Whereas many would see this as a sincere offering at an attempt to relate and possibly empathise with Costa’s personal feelings, philosophies and reflections, the honest gesture of letting others in can wear thin – like reading someone’s diary who doesn’t really have anything significant to articulate.
On face value, it is a strong album, if a little derivative: where the influences are clear and well worked, the songs lack the originality and spark that would make it noteworthy. Costa’s attempt to grasp and please everyone in a sycophantic way has left him like the modern day BBC Radio 2: slightly wet and as original as a bar of soap.
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