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Christian Schormann

Christian Schormann – The Ballad of Captain T: A Warmly Resolving Attack of Satire

Lockdown has inspired artists in many ways. Christian Schormann created the perfect Pop track after witnessing the lack of leadership in the US during the pandemic. Sounds dreary right? Wrong.

In The Ballad of Captain T, disdainfully playful rage pours over the warmly resolving instrumentals which ooze soul-soothing choral appeal. Tracks such as The Ballad of Captain T can all too easily fall into the novelty category, yet, there’s enough nuance and prowess for it to easily diverge away from that pigeonhole. There’s a sincerity within the single, a sensitive understanding that the problems which the lack of leadership has caused have had a detrimental impact on peoples lives, and deaths.

In short, you couldn’t ask for a more perfect Pop single. The unexpected guitar solo was the aural cherry on the cake.

You can hear it for yourselves by heading over to SoundCloud now.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Seattle singer Christian Schormann brushes our tired hearts with peaceful Paint a Flower in the Sky (feat. Liel Bar-Z)

Christian Schormann returns with his new song that adds a bit of beauty and is called ‘Paint a Flower in the Sky (feat. Liel Bar-Z).

Christian Schormann lives in Seattle in the USA, after growing up in Germany and passing through the eternal spring of the Canary Islands, the cold winters of Montreal and the beautiful weirdness of San Francisco. This is an experienced and well-traveled singer-songwriter who loves to write indie-pop and instrumental music. His style ranges from pop to minimalist-inspired music and this is a single who keeps things very chilled.

Paint a Flower in the Sky (feat. Liel Bar-Z) is a very peaceful song that has a mellow indie vibe that has good energy. This is all about a warm and welcoming vibe, set with the clear blue skies and cute vocals from the talented Liel. This is one of the more happy songs of the year during the global pandemic.

Click here for the YouTube link.

Reviewed by Llewelyn Screen