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Jake Marsh reached the epitome of sublimity the indie pop boy-next-door bubble of candour, ‘edge of the bed’

Being a bedroom pop artist never used to be a badge of honour, yet Jake Marsh has helped elevate the intimate genre with his debut album, edge of the bed. The record ticks every box for that candour-by-candlelight immersion, or the blue glow of a screen at 2 a.m., carrying the familiar sensation of a diary entry drifting across the airwaves. Marsh’s songwriting leans fully into that closeness, allowing listeners to sit in the quiet of his thoughts rather than merely observe them from afar. The album opens confidently with magnets, where Marsh fuses his cultivated command of a fretboard with the humility that defines his lyrical presence. There’s a disarming sincerity in the way he lets the listener wander through the dreamy hues of infatuation. The grooves lock the opening track firmly into a new-wave pop lane, while the soft sonorous production constructs a weightless corridor of reverie to stroll through. Across the record, Marsh reveals an eclectically constraint-less songwriting approach, guided by vocal melodies that feel effortlessly mellifluous. It’s the sort of LP that provides refuge when the weight of reality becomes too loud, wrapping you inside a bubble of boy-next-door charm and understated warmth. Rather than glorifying […]

The post Jake Marsh reached the epitome of sublimity the indie pop boy-next-door bubble of candour, ‘edge of the bed’ appeared first on A&R Factory.

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