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The Psychic Echo



Last Updated: 11/22/2009

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Status: Single
City: Wales
Country: UK
Signup Date: 8/1/2007

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Sunday, October 18, 2009 

Current mood:  adored
Category: Music

The Psychic Echo - music review




'The Psychic Echo' are a two-piece band from Newport, mainland UK, consisting of two wold-class artistes in their own right. The lead vocalist is the beautiful & exeptionally gifted Eva, backed up by a very brilliant, but seemingly unassuming artiste/producer, Darkstar.

They have completed recording their debut album 'Into the light' which is available from I-tunes, CD-baby, Amazon & other good outlets. I understand they're shooting their first video soon too, so watch this space. www.bebo.com/thepsychicecho

The Psychic Echo describe their music as "Dark, alternative, electronica" however, there is a pleasently-suprising acoustic (almost unplugged) sound & feel to it. The songs frequently feature tastefully & very expressively played, acoustic piano, & bowed string sounds, backed up with refreshingly imaginative rhythms, arpeggios & effects.
The unmistakingly classical influence is just one of many characteristics which makes
The Psychic Echos' music unique - but what really sets them apart, are two main things;

1. Evas' voice: - rich, sweet, ultra-feminine, full of nervous angst, emotional power,
& quite possibly the most gorgeous voice I've yet heard! (Hand-on-heart.) On first listening, Eva put me very much in mind of Siouxie Sioux - except that, I really believe that Siouxie would kill for a voice like this! ".......hand around the killing jar." ey Siouxie? You'll keep coming back to listen again & again.  She has a way of reaching in through your ears to grab your soul. But don't take my word for it - listen to 'Dark Angel' - this is a truly beautiful track, (my personal favorite) with a trippy, dreamy feel - & Evas' slightly breathy vocal is simply devastating! Eva is definately an undiscovered superstar.

2. Their melodies are the second thing that sets them apart - not just the lead melodies, (which are strong, delicate & emotional) but the subtlely interwoven riffs & pulses in the background - showing Darkstars' endless creativity & ability to explore musical avenues. It all sounds so clear, crisp & the arrangements always work brilliantly. Speaking as someone who has ventured into musical production - I find Darkstars' production work simply amazing - & very inspiring!

'Kill me if you dare' is a song (basically) structured around a single piano arrangement, quite melancholy - & giving a great sense of morbid gothic dispair. This proves that less is definately more. Even when there's plenty of instrumentation, it never feels like too much - it always feels just right.

'The dead don't bleed' is another beautiful track, with quite an 80's Gothic feel at the start, which is probably why I love it. Sisters Of Mercy (Floodland) fans will be impressed here - but then it builds up to a kind of techno-rhythm, which is unexpected but perfect at the same time. There's a great building of tension in many of the songs - this is another thing The Psychic Echo are really good at.

One more song I'd like to mention, is 'The butterfly effect', which starts with a kind of
Sixties psychedelic soundscape, but gradually builds towards a synthy, tech-style trip,
as it draws rowards the climax. This is another song which shows Darkstars' flawless arrangement/production skills, & Evas' uniquely expressive vocal style.

But no amount of discription can do justice to the way this music effects you on an
emotional level - because that's what is really important in music. The Psychic Echo - as the name suggests, is ultimately an instrument of emotional, musical & I would say, spiritual expression. They are very Gothic - & so, their music is moody, melancholy, touching, mysterious & intriguingly compelling. An acquired taste for some (think Siouxie meets The Doors, with a dash of Kate Bush) but even then, you'd not even be half-way there.......you'll have to listen to get it - & you'll be glad you did!!

www.myspace.com/thepsychicecho

www.bebo.com/thepsychicecho

Nyal Purcell - Eternal Music








Sunday, May 24, 2009 

Current mood:  blessed
Category: Music

Review: Into The Light (The Pyschic Echo)

May 3, 2009.

Filed under: album review, newly discovered, stream | Tags: , , , , , , , ,





Hailing from South Wales (like me!) are alternative duo The Psychic Echo. It is quite hard to pin down their actual sound, so I will use their own description which seems to fit nicely: they play ‘a distinctive collision of ethereal dream pop, gothic and emotionally charged electronica with heartfelt lyrics’.


The Psychic Echo, previously known as The Butterfly Effect, formed in 2006 & consists of female vocalist Eva Valentine & instrumentalist DarkStar. They started recording Into The Light in 2006, completed it in February 2008 & released it in January of this year.


The one thing that strikes me most about this album is how open & honest it is. It is clearly a very personal & emotional album, particularly to Eva. In an interview the band did with Mick Mercer recently, Eva revealed that she went through a serious mental & emotional breakdown before working on the album. She said that she really bared her soul through her lyrics & expressing herself in this way finally gave her something to live for. After such a serious breakdown, the music would naturally delve into the dark & disturbing aspects of life, but it is not all doom & gloom. There are some tracks that are uplifting & about recovering; as they said themselves, this album is about ‘coming out of the darkness & into the light’. Haunting & ethereal in places, the music sounds as though Switchblade Symphony, Emilie Autumn & Siouxsie Sioux collaborated.


My favourite track on the album would have to be ‘Dark Angel’, a song about death but also escaping it, battling & overcoming depression & suicidal thoughts. I also like the beautiful piano & strings of ‘Beautiful Broken Butterfly’. Another favourite track is opener, ‘The Butterfly Effect’ which reminds me the most of Switchblade Symphony. As you can probably tell, butterflies is a theme that runs through the album. It is meant to symbolise that every action has a consequence, which the band strongly believes.


Unfortunately, the album isn’t as strong in the second half & I tend to zone out when listening to it. However, this does seem to happen to me when I’m listening to any music of this type at length, regardless of its quality. I (as a shuffle-fiend) will probably listen to the tracks individually rather than as a complete album in future. I am also unsure about the male vocals on ‘Crawl’, I understand what they were attempting with the track but I don’t think it worked quite as well as it could have. Overall, I think it is a good debut, but I’m sure the best is yet to come from this pair.


You can currently stream the full album at Last.FM.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009 

Current mood:  contemplative
Category: Music



THE PSYCHIC ECHO


An Interview By Mick Mercer

With one of the albums of the year in their debut ‘Into The Light’ The
Psychic Echo are a duo to be reckoned with, for the emotional honesty
of the lyrics and the shifting style of their melodies.

Come reckon with them. It will be worth it.


Reflecting on my life, while contemplating what felt like my imminent death, I realised I wanted to somehow leave my mark on this world before shuffling off this mortal coil. I desperately wanted to leave some kind of legacy, however humble.”

So then, Eva Valentine and Dark Star, what musical adventures had you been up to before you formed this band?

Eva – I had never been in a band or sang before we met.

DarkStar – I have been in bands to varying degrees of success since the age of about 14 – it was good in lots of ways to experience the band thing before becoming a duo as it gave some perspective on what other musicians would add to the pot.

Why did you form? How did you meet and decide this would work?

Eva – I always wanted to sing, so I decided to find a music tutor (DarkStar) who helped me build enough confidence to do so. After a while I began writing lyrics and creating melodies for songs, which we recorded with DarkStar providing all the musical backing. At this point we didn’t realise this would continue track after track – until we eventually made a whole album! We didn’t initially set out to make an album. It was a completely natural progression.

DarkStar – Eva had a really creative voice from the off-set but it became really strong and I felt it would be an interesting journey to wrap music around her powerful lyrics. It was a great challenge to build up sounds that reflected the strength of emotion in her writing.

You were originally The Butterfly Effect – but found out there was another band of the same name? In fact there seems to be eight or nine of them out there.

Eva & DarkStar - Yes, we initially became aware of a signed band in Australia of that name and then realised there were quite a few more out there. So even though the name said a lot to us it had to go. We really wanted our name to be as original as our sound. The Butterfly Effect encapsulates the philosophy from the lyrical standpoint that small events can have far reaching consequences. We felt ‘The Psychic Echo’ had the same essence without sacrificing the originality.

You list yourself as ‘Alt/Electronica/Gothic, which is rather a loose-fitting description. Which type of music do you naturally feel closest to?

Eva – I would say we are primarily ‘alternative’. Purely because we don’t want to be restricted by a ‘genre’. Alternative, we feel, has a wider scope for experimentation and influence as a wide variety of music can fall within this category. Although as a young teen I began my appreciation of music in the ‘Goth’ era. It was my first love musically, so I’m sure I’ve been influenced by that vocally and lyrically, even if it was quite some time ago!

DarkStar – I recognise that the feel of most of our music is essentially dark as are the lyrics and Gothic is as good a box as any to express that certain feel.

Eva, your myspace page also states ‘this album saved my life.’ Could you expand on that please?

Before beginning work on our album I had suffered a serious emotional and mental breakdown. During this time I had become suicidal for a long period of time. Reflecting on my life, while contemplating what felt like my imminent death, I realised I wanted to somehow leave my mark on this world before shuffling off this mortal coil. I desperately wanted to leave some kind of legacy, however humble. I did some paintings and toyed with the idea of writing a book, but realised I needed something more, something which would ignite a spark of life in me again. I had always wanted to sing but never had the courage to before. It was a life-long ambition. I dug deep to find the courage and really bared my soul through my lyrics. Expressing myself really helped my emotional suffering and every track gave me a reason to keep going. This experience could not have come at a more pivotal point in my life. I’d reached a cross-roads and music gave me a path to tread. The album saved my life – it really did. Now music gives me another reason to carry on.




"This song lyrically is about accepting the loss of a loved one. Realising that their pain is over and appreciating through grief how precious life is.”

To put the album into context, how soon after you formed the band did you start writing it, how long did it take, how many songs did you have to choose from to whittle down for the final selection (assuming you’re fairly prolific)?

Eva & DarkStar - We began writing the album a few months after meeting. We worked on the first track – Fade Away, for a couple of months and recorded it in September ’06. The whole album took around a year and 7 months to complete and record. Although we discarded some musical ideas along the way, we did use every track we created and finished.

The Butterfly Effect’ – is a superb introduction on the album, with impressive vocals, a sweet chorus and good percussive nuances, now how does all that come about in a duo, as usually people are good at their own speciality but can find one area lets them down?

Eva – Thank you. We are really pleased with this track. My strengths seem to be in my lyric writing, song structure and vocals. DarkStar’s strengths are in the musical arrangements and instrumentation. So I feel we work well together.

DarkStar – I have worked in various capacities in bands as a multi-instrumentalist. I have a grasp of what sounds good in relation to the lyrical structure that grew around the song. We knew what kind of feel this song demanded and developed it. Knowing how Eva wanted to present the vocals and lyrics made it far easier, as I know how this would fit to produce a full musical picture.

Fade Away’ – delicate and sorrowful, why is that? Are emotional worries a lyrical inspiration?

Eva – Yes. This was the first song I wrote. It was inspired by the loss of one of my dear friends to suicide. It also expresses my own battle with depression and suicidal thoughts and feelings around that time. All my lyrics are inspired by my life. My own, very personal and emotional experience of being human.

Beautiful Broken Butterfly’ – where does the appreciation of gentle pop come from?

Eva & DarkStar - We think pop music can be equally valid to alternative music as long as there is strength in the song. Songs that have weight emotionally, lyrically and musically can fit the pop structure without sacrificing there essence. Occasionally something that is musically easy to listen to can communicate a powerful message. This, I hope, is what we achieved in this song.

Scars’ – this has an unusual filmic quality, why is that? There’s something intentional about the unusual development of the song isn’t there?

Eva – We wanted to experiment with the development of this track and break away from traditional song structure. I also feel the change to a narrative ending really helped to communicate the emotion within the song.

DarkStar – I love the work of film composers such as Angelo Badlementi, Danny Elfman and Graham Ravelle and feel that as with many of the songs on the record the lyrics were so descriptive that they lent themselves to this particularly descriptive soundtrack style musical backing. The development in the song mirrors the urgency of the lyrics and creates quite a intense sense of claustrophobia.

The Dead Don’t Bleed’ – all the songs so far have had clear differences in tone and texture, was that intentional? What’s this one about?

DarkStar – We wanted to create an album of tracks that hung together as a whole but also retained a sense of musical experimentation. I have always found albums that didn’t deviate from a specific sound to be quite boring after about the third song. So here we wanted to change direction slightly.

Eva – I suppose it is intentional to change the tone and texture of each track to a degree. We want to constantly change, experiment and evolve. This song lyrically is about accepting the loss of a loved one. Realising that their pain is over and appreciating through grief how precious life is.

On a stylistic front, where do your ideas come from if there is a great variety, is it through experimentation, through personal preferences? Obviously bands usually have quite a melting pot of influences which will govern how their music changes or develops through time, but with a duo you’d expect quite a narrow defined area. Not the case here though. Are you ever surprised by what you come up with, as though it was wholly unexpected?

Eva & DarkStar - We both have quite broad musical tastes and we are really keen to explore our influences, while still maintaining an original feel to the album. We are quite open to experimentation and have a pretty clear idea of what we want to produce musically, but sometimes we stumble across musical mixes that sound new and exciting.

Where Were You’ – did you get my Althea & Donna comparison? It’s got that same cheerily loping style. How did this acquire the shape it has?

Eva & DarkStar - This track came from our musical love of Dub. Reggae and Dub, such as ‘Althea & Donna’ usually feels uplifting, so it was quite an interesting experiment to play with this formula and create something that plays with a contrasting musical and lyrical dichotomy.

Crawl’ – how odd is it sharing vocal duties? There’s a touchier modern edge to this track, is that intentional? If so, why? It does rather jar against the rest of them?

Eva – Although sharing vocal duties on this track was a necessity, it was another experimental musical avenue we wanted to travel. I really wanted to portray the feelings of both the stalker and the stalked though a conversation/argument and express the feeling of love turned to hate on both sides. Musically it is rather edgier, yet softer in places in order to portray the extremes of emotions involved. I feel the sudden appearance of a male vocal on this track really suits it, as feelings of ‘intrusion’ are a big part of the concept behind the track. We intend doing more tracks like this in the future.

DarkStarI found working with Eva on vocal duties quite a natural progression of the musical elements of the song. We really wanted to play up to the duality of the track and I think this works quite well. Again we wanted to explore another musical avenue and rather than jarring I find it an interesting variation within an album that is quite thematic.


I have always found albums that didn’t deviate from a specific sound to be quite boring after about the third song. So here we wanted to change direction slightly.”

Dark Angel’ – is this emotional melodrama or personal fact, as it mentions death having a grip on you?

Eva - This is personal fact, I have battled with a depressive illness since a young teen. I have periodically become very ill during my life. Unfortunately, I have also had more than my fair share of trauma and personal tragedy in my life and many other obstacles to overcome. Over the years I have lost two very close family members, a friend to drugs and three of my friends to suicide. It’s at times like these when my battle with my illness becomes even more difficult, as I become weakened by my illness. This is when my ‘Dark Angel’ can over power me and when I have to battle against the depression the hardest. This track expresses my battle with that illness. However difficult it becomes I always somehow manage to “struggle free” from carrying out the ultimate conclusion to depression. ‘Dark Angel’ is a metaphor for that conclusion.

Kill Me If You Dare’ – lovely piano, where does that come from? Piano lessons as child you always hated but suddenly informing your mind later on?

DarkStarI write most of the initial backing on keyboard but am really self taught in relation to, musical performance. The piano sound does seem to give this track some weight and I think it really lends itself to the general feel and tone of the song.

Come To Me’ – why does this sound a bit mental?

Eva & DarkStar - We feel that far from ‘mental’ this track has an urgency and an unusual cadence in the vocals. It’s quite hypnotic and we think this lends it an abstract quality.

Lotus’ –  seemed a bit skimpy to me, and didn’t know if it was going in trancey direction or not. What is it, in your minds?

Eva & DarkStar - Lotus has a lighter feeling but it was not an intention to make it a trance track but again to give an ethereal quality. We like the lightness of this track as it is in good contrast to some of the other darker material on the album. We tried to evoke an underwater and esoteric feel.

Turn’ – a charming closer, and was it intended as a final track? Did you worry about orders (some bands don’t)?

Eva & DarkStar - It wasn’t intended as a final track, it just was, and seemed to sit nicely where it was. We didn’t worry too much about orders. The most important aspect in relation to the order were the first and last tracks. We felt it was important to end on a positive note, as the album expressed much pain and sadness. We are primarily positive people and the album is about coming out of the darkness and into the light, looking to the future and not dwelling too much on the past.

How was it as an experience for you both, you must be proud of your small round child, but do you regret anything you have done, is there any aspect of the record you’re determined
not to repeat next time around?

Eva - It was an amazing experience for both of us. There were some tears along the way but there were many happy times too. The buzz of completing each and every track was amazing. We are both extremely proud of our achievement. We hope it will be the first of many. We regret nothing.

DarkStar - This album feels very much like a living and breathing fruit of our combined emotional expression. Working with Eva allowed me to express myself musically in ways that I had not explored before and so much of it touches me on a profound and very personal level. I have no regrets in the recording of this album because I think its purity is very much part of its essence.

Eva – being partially deaf, can you explain how you work around the problem, because you’ve obviously worked out how you adapt to the recording process?

Eva – Yes, my hearing isn’t great. I am completely deaf in my left ear so only really need one headphone but they don’t make them like that! Basically I just concentrate on listening and have the volume turned up! DarkStar pans the backing tracks into my working ear to compensate for the lack of stereo.

I am completely deaf in my left ear so only really need one headphone but they don’t make them like that!”

What do you have planned short-term or long-term?

Eva & DarkStar - We hope to record a number of new tracks and get our music out to listeners. Hopefully we can eventually recreate some of this material in the live setting and keep experimenting and creating music that touches us and hopefully emotionally engages others. The second album will veer more towards a heavier sound and further musical evolution.

And as a duo, how do you find it – with certain limitations, or allowing limitless opportunity?

DarkStar - I think working as a duo opens up a number of challenges musically but also allows us to steer away from the dilution that a number of groups find eventually stifles creativity.


Eva
– We can’t give a definitive answer here. I suppose we are  limited to only two minds whereas a band may have more ideas to throw into the pot. Although with too many members musical direction can often be destroyed. We are a fortunate pairing as we both are so open minded musically and don’t stay within the confines of a particular genre. This we feel allows us limitless opportunity for growth and experimentation. There is also a trust between us and a respect for each others opinions which is essential, as we listen and respond to each others ideas. That is are biggest strength we feel.

www.myspace.com/thepsychicecho

www.bebo.com/thepsychicecho

www.last.fm/music/The+Psychic+Echo

www.facebook.com/pages/The-Psychic-Echo/71617631437












Monday, March 23, 2009 

Current mood:  validated
Category: Music

Hi friends! Please take a look at this great book by Mick Mercer about alternative bands/music past and present. It a great reference and resource for anyone looking to find music from all genres of alternative music. We are honoured to be included in it. Please add the myspace page (in our Top Friends) and spread the word. Thanks!

Love & light,
Eva Valentine & DarkStar :-)


Here's Micks info:-

MUSIC TO DIE FOR


BY MICK MERCER


Cherry Red Books £17.99



 
Mick Mercers fifth book concerning Goth has now arrived. It is 624 pages long, containing individual entries on 3,581 different bands, from 70 countries, with 183 photos. It covers bands from the beginning of these scenes to the present day and wherever possible contains full line-up details and discographies as well as unusual facts revealed by many of the bands. This is the biggest guide ever printed about the underground scenes in which Goth, Post-Punk and all things noir co-exist with equal splendour....

http://www.myspace.com/musictodieforbymickmercer 

You can find this on Amazon, Barnes & Noble (etc) but if possible please use the link below to buy direct from the publisher. They accept Paypal and for such a chunky book they’re doing a very cheap deal on postage. They have shown faith in Goth and have their own excellent series of Goth CD releases so I think it is only right people buy through them if at all possible.

Musical representatives from these distinct and Goth-related genres:

‘Alt’ (covering a multitude of sins) – 336, Ambient – 71, Classical/Ethereal – 33, Comedy – 1, Deathrock – 12, Electro – 99, Electronic(a) – 79, Folk/Country – 67, Glam – 11, Gothic – 1042, Gothic/Metal – 449, Historical – 4, Horror – 25, Indie – 99, Industrial – 117, Other/Exp/Minimalist – 135, Post-Punk – 356, Psychobilly – 93, Punk/New Wave – 234, Rock – 238, Shoegaze/Psychedelic – 36 and Surf/Garage – 44.

Please spread the word now that it’s out! I hope you find it worthwhile and useful, and I obviously want as many people as possible to do likewise. Your help in circulating the news is much appreciated.

http://www.cherryred.co.uk/books/musict..odiefor.php

Monday, March 23, 2009 

Current mood:  contemplative
Category: Music


Follow the link below to read a great review by Carly @ Wireless Pirate Airship - thanks Carly!


The Psychic Echo




Friday, January 16, 2009 

Current mood:  sad
Category: Music


....
'Little Life Lost' - Hope you like it.

This was the most emotionally difficult song I have ever written. The lyrics are up too (Just lick on the 'lyrics' tab on the player).  So glad DarkStar did it justice with his beautiful music. I hope its a fitting tribute to my beautiful angel. Hope you like it.


Much love & light

Eva Valentine
x





Tuesday, January 13, 2009 

Current mood:  happy
Category: Music


Please have a look at the review of our debut album by Mick Mercer (author of Gothic Rock, Hex Files & 21st Century Goth and former writer for NME and Melody Maker)

The Psychic Echo

Click on the pic or on the link! To read the full review.
http://mickmercer.livejournal.com/843871.html

THE PSYCHIC ECHO
INTO THE LIGHT
Own Label

Over the next few days I'll be maintaining a study of current UK action before returning to some amazing International fare, and you will be encountering everything from Seventh Séance, Walk On Water, Pretentious Moi? and Fleshing Eating Foundation, to Screaming Banshee Aircrew, NFD and History Of Guns, which means a very wide variety of styles, and experience, but funnily enough I suspect there is a common link. All of them would have loved to have made music of such assuredness, so early on in their existence as this, a wonderfully enchanting debut. Okay, The Psychic Echo may have been working on this for five years, but somehow I doubt it. In fact they've only been together since August of 2006, including a recent name change (from The Butterfly Effect) so they're a creative duo who are perfectly matched. To cut to the chase, if you can imagine a meltdown between PJ Harvey (with a natural grace in place of psychosis), Queen Adreena (minus mania) and Portishead (without the cloak and dagger angst) you're close to the little treehouse The Psychic Echo have constructed for themselves. They have aslender carpet of alluring designs, which they beat viciously, or stroke luxuriously.

It isn't brilliant throughout, tailing off in terms of insistent ideas, but the overall charm is impossible to resist and you'll be mesmerised at times, impressed at others. Being a duo leaves them free to explore but also restricted in some areas, so when they're good they're fantastic, but when they're seemingly treading water it really required someone else to stick their oar in. That said, we have a tremulous but determined Eva Valentine singing, with the enigmatic DarkStar on the music, and it's a fragile and delicious 'The Butterfly Effect' that introduces them, with a quivering chorus gently sidling out of the pattering bulk. This is indie noir with inventive rhythmical lustre and a haunting vocal style, understated but overwhelmingly cool. The winsome 'FadeAway' is demurely pretty, almost translucent, while the simply inviting 'Beautiful Broken Butterfly' maintains the sunny beauty of their approach, another gorgeous chorus peeping out and looking around in a track akin to neo-classical pop where the only shame is the slack ending.

The sonar blip of the ominous backing to 'Scars' changes the landscape nicely, as does the narrative over the bright keyboard trail. 'The Dead Don't Bleed' is moodier with agitated electronic intestinal pain, burbling and bubbling, a slickly hypnotising shape track that is then swept aside by the cheekily loping 'Where Were You' which will remind you of Althea & Donna, but with a troubled and nicely resentful tone.

'Crawl' is saucier, indecently capriciousand gangly, with DarkStar intruding vocally, as a De Sade gone demented, Eva the unimpressed protagonist in a gruesomely gripping number. 'Dark Angel' is a woozy, noisier lament although more conventional than their other songs and therefore carries less impact, which is where their grip tends to soften and the album begins to lose detail and become lacy and wan. 'Kill Me If You Dare' is touching, the vocals flopped over a jumpy piano, and 'Come To Me' nicely strange with high wavering vocals over a lolling bass, like unhinged ethereal.'Lotus' is a bit of a holistic dawdle, and the doleful 'Turn' with its stark simplicity is a latter day Kate Bush daydream enlivened by some strings. Actually, that all sounds rather good, doesn't it? It is too.

They'll be aware of their shortcomings, and I'm sure they can toughen up and expand next time around, or scoop the sound out even more to let the softer vocals breathe with clarity, as it's mainly when they plateau during the second half that they seem to drift too much, but this mustn't detract from the fact they should feel proud to have made such a fine record. As debuts go it's a serious success.

Mick Mercer



Saturday, January 10, 2009 

Current mood:  accomplished
Category: Music

Hello friends! Yes! Good news! Our debut album is finally available for download!

Recording of our debut album - 'Into The Light'  began September 2006 and after much hard work, determination (and a few tears!) it was completed in february 2008. We are extremely proud of our efforts and our achievement. We are proud to announce that our debut album is now finally available! You can purchase our album from most major download sites, including CD Baby, ITunes, Amazon, Rhapsody & Napster, etc.

We have recorded 12 tracks. The album tracks are -

1. The Butterfly Effect
2. Fade Away
3. Scars
4. Dead Don't Bleed
5. Beautiful Broken Butterfly
6. Dark Angel
7. Crawl
8. Kill Me If You Dare
9. Where Were You?!
10. Come To Me
11. Lotus
12. Turn

To purchase the album from CD Baby please click on the CD Baby link/pic below. Here you can download an MP3 Album. This is a zip file containing 12 individual MP3s (very high quality - so will play on any hardware), a JPG of the album cover (a painting by Eva Valentine) and a text file with all the info from the album page, song titles, notes/biography & links.

THE PSYCHIC ECHO: Into The Light


Click on the link below if you would like to buy our album from ITunes, or if you only want to purchase your favourite individual tracks from the album.

The Psychic Echo


Our album/tracks for our album are also available from Amazon & Rhapsody, just click on the links below :-

The Psychic Echo

The Psychic Echo

You can listen to all the album tracks by clicking on any of these links and even post your own review if you like!

Thanks for all your support & encouragement. It means a lot to us. We really hope you enjoy the album.

Thanks for supporting independent music!
love & light

  Eva & DarkStar




Monday, December 29, 2008 

Current mood:  luminous
Category: Music


Hi Everyone!

Please take a look at our very indepth, honest and personal interview with Mick Mercer, available now in 'The Mick' a great Dark, Alternative, Gothic Music Magazine. Issue 45 and also a Xmas related interview in issue 46. Download it for FREE!!!

Click on the link below if you would like to know a bit more about us and our music. We hope you enjoy! 


The Psychic Echo


Love & light,

 Eva Valentine & DarkStar



Monday, December 29, 2008 

Current mood:  happy
Category: Music
Hey friends!

Go check out DarkStar's new page & his awesome music - If you like the music we make together then your gona like this too.

 'David Merrick' - First in our 'Top Friends' list ok.


Go have a listen!

Much love,
Eva x
Friday, December 05, 2008 

Current mood:Horrified
Category: Pets and Animals

Please sign petition to stop the Chinese skinning strays ALIVE!!!!

An estimated 2 million stray cats and dogs are skinned alive (because that is 'easier' for the bastards doing it) in China for the fur trade, then their furless bodies thrown aside and left to die in agony. The people running the petition are obviously organised and believe signing can make a difference so please do, then pass the url to everyone you know.

DO NOT WATCH THE VIDEO ON THE PAGE. The realisation this happens is bad enough.

http://www. animalsaviors. org/petition. html

Thank you.

(Please, if you care, re-post this as a bulletin, message or add it to your own blog - thankyou.x)

Tuesday, October 28, 2008 

Current mood:  contemplative
Category: Music





Bebo
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Independent Unsigned Artists and Bands - Unsigned.comThe Psychic Echothepsychicecho

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The Psychic Echo

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Hope you enjoy browsing our pages. Why not sign up yourself?! - If you do we hope you add us to your friends!

Much love,
Eva Valentine & DarkStar ;-)  




Saturday, September 13, 2008 

Current mood:  sad
Category: Writing and Poetry

My Dark Angel

My Dark Angel says she loves me, but there are wrong ways to be loved. I tear her away from me with my bare hands and toss her away into the sea. Falling fast through the air she crashes into the blackest water. She sinks below the blackened mirrored surface and disappears. Here my Dark Angel sleeps, the deepest, darkest sleep, but never dies. She is not human, although she is me. She needs no air, as she needs not food or water, or warmth, or friends or anything. She needs only me.

She feeds off my pain and my suffering. She needs only my sorrow and guilt, my losses and grief. She feels safe in the knowledge that all is lost for me and soon I will follow her into the sea of my tears. She knows too much, has seen too much. Knows all I have lost and all I will never have. She tempts me into the water to sleep the deepest darkest of sleeps, the sleep of empty dreams. I wish she would sleep for a hundred years. That I may live in peace from my saddest of memories for the rest of my life. But, she is stirred, awakened by my arising sorrow. She returns, she leaves. She wakes. She sleeps. She waits.

She has bled from my veins, but is still here. She has fallen from my eyes until I could fill an ocean, but she is still here. I know you love me my Dark Angel, and want only to end my sorrow, but, there are wrong ways in which to love. Please, leave me now. Shhh, sleep now. There are other ways to end my saddness.

She sleeps, she wakes. She sleeps, she waits.

Eva Valentine ©

Friday, August 22, 2008 

Current mood:  cynical
Category: Music

Hello bands!

Occasionally we will  disable 'Add To Friends' for bands. If you try unsuccessfully to add us during that time  bands who really want to add us can still do so by messaging us (We will enable messages from non-friends during that time). We are doing this to try to filter out 'Random Adders' & 'Spammers', or those bands who have no interest in our music and are solely trying to promote their music through our page.

We welcome genuine supporters of our music and/or music we will appreciate and want to support also. So if you fall within that category please take the time to send us a quick message (eg, Please add us to your friends) and we promise to visit your page and add you

We seem to get a lot of friend requests from bands we never ever hear from again. We always take the time to respond to friend requests & messages. Unfortunately very few give us the same courtesy. This is very time consuming and frankly we have better things to do with our time, ie - Making music!!! & keeping in touch with our true friends & the supporters of our music.

We really do not care about the size of our friend-list. We are aiming for quality not quantity. If you do genuinly like our music please take the time to send us a quick message - we really do appreciate your support.

Thank you for taking the time to read this blog.

We look forward to hearing from you soon!!!

Much love,

Eva Valentine & DarkStar ;)

PS: We would love to know your opinion on this issue. Please comment below. Thanks! ;-)

Sunday, May 11, 2008 

Current mood:  happy
Category: Music


Please have a look at the review of our debut album by Mick Mercer (author of Gothic Rock, Hex Files & 21st Century Goth and former writer for NME and Melody Maker)

 The Psychic Echo
Click on the Mick's pic or the link to read the review in his on-line journal.

http://mickmercer.livejournal.com/843871.html


THE PSYCHIC ECHO
INTO THE LIGHT
Own Label

Over the next few days I'll be maintaining a study of current UK action before returning to some amazing International fare, and you will be encountering everything from Seventh Séance, Walk On Water, Pretentious Moi? and Fleshing Eating Foundation, to Screaming Banshee Aircrew, NFD and History Of Guns, which means a very wide variety of styles, and experience, but funnily enough I suspect there is a common link. All of them would have loved to have made music of such assuredness, so early on in their existence as this, a wonderfully enchanting debut. Okay, The Psychic Echo may have been working on this for five years, but somehow I doubt it. In fact they've only been together since August of 2006, including a recent name change (from The Butterfly Effect) so they're a creative duo who are perfectly matched. To cut to the chase, if you can imagine a meltdown between PJ Harvey (with a natural grace in place of psychosis), Queen Adreena (minus mania) and Portishead (without the cloak and dagger angst) you're close to the little treehouse The Psychic Echo have constructed for themselves. They have a slender carpet of alluring designs, which they beat viciously, or stroke luxuriously.

It isn't brilliant throughout, tailing off in terms of insistent ideas, but the overall charm is impossible to resist and you'll be mesmerised at times, impressed at others. Being a duo leaves them free to explore but also restricted in some areas, so when they're good they're fantastic, but when they're seemingly treading water it really required someone else to stick their oar in. That said, we have a tremulous but determined Eva Valentine singing, with the enigmatic Dark Star on the music, and it's a fragile and delicious 'The Butterfly Effect' that introduces them, with a quivering chorus gently sidling out of the pattering bulk. This is indie noir with inventive rhythmical lustre and a haunting vocal style, understated but overwhelmingly cool. The winsome 'Fade Away' is demurely pretty, almost translucent, while the simply inviting 'Beautiful Broken Butterfly' maintains the sunny beauty of their approach, another gorgeous chorus peeping out and looking around in a track akin to neo-classical pop where the only shame is the slack ending.

The sonar blip of the ominous backing to 'Scars' changes the landscape nicely, as does the narrative over the bright keyboard trail. 'The Dead Don't Bleed' is moodier with agitated electronic intestinal pain, burbling and bubbling, a slickly hypnotising shape track that is then swept aside by the cheekily loping 'Where Were You' which will remind you of Althea & Donna, but with a troubled and nicely resentful tone.

'Crawl' is saucier, indecently capricious and gangly, with Dark Star intruding vocally, as a De Sade gone demented, Eva the unimpressed protagonist in a gruesomely gripping number. 'Dark Angel' is a woozy, noisier lament although more conventional than their other songs and therefore carries less impact, which is where their grip tends to soften and the album begins to lose detail and become lacy and wan. 'Kill Me If You Dare' is touching, the vocals flopped over a jumpy piano, and 'Come To Me' nicely strange with high wavering vocals over a lolling bass, like unhinged ethereal. 'Lotus' is a bit of a holistic dawdle, and the doleful 'Turn' with its stark simplicity is a latterday Kate Bush daydream enlivened by some strings. Actually, that all sounds rather good, doesn't it? It is too.

They'll be aware of their shortcomings, and I'm sure they can toughen up and expand next time around, or scoop the sound out even more to let the softer vocals breathe with clarity, as it's mainly when they plateau during the second half that they seem to drift too much, but this mustn't detract from the fact they should feel proud to have made such a fine record. As debuts go it's a serious success.

Mick Mercer