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Reading: A Ghost From the ’90s Reborn: A Vivid Review of Hovercraft’s “New Pine Overcoat / Angel”
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Singles

A Ghost From the ’90s Reborn: A Vivid Review of Hovercraft’s “New Pine Overcoat / Angel”

Graham
Singles

Hovercraft’s “New Pine Overcoat / Angel” arrives with the kind of mythos most modern indie bands could only dream of — a band formed in the 1990s in Grimsby, England, lost to time, only to be resurrected thirty years later through dusty cassette tapes, analogue hiss, memory, and AI reconstruction. As the trio prepares to unveil their long-lost final album, Blown Away, this double single marks the concluding chapter of their James Bond–inspired trilogy — an unlikely yet fittingly cinematic return. Their story alone is gripping, but the real marvel is how these songs, revived from their earliest demos, feel not like relics of a bygone era, but like unfinished emotional conversations suddenly restored to clarity. If the band describes this release as “the antidote to Christmas singles you didn’t know you needed,” that’s because these songs cut through the seasonal clutter with something raw, human, and unmistakably real.

“New Pine Overcoat” is the first half of the pair, and it immediately reveals Hovercraft’s quieter, more introspective side. Born of the Britpop era but never beholden to it, the track drifts in with breathy vocals and a feather-light indie-folk sensibility — a striking contrast to the era’s machismo-soaked swagger. There’s no bravado here. Instead, it’s intimacy, restraint, and a lyrical potency that hits harder than any stadium-ready anthem. The simplicity is disarming: soft acoustic textures, subtle melodic turns, and a sense of fragility that feels almost voyeuristic, as though the listener has stumbled upon a private confession. And then comes the line — “If you kill yourself, please send me a note.” It is devastating in its bluntness, chilling in its ambiguity. Equal parts dark humour, existential resignation, and emotional nakedness, it’s exactly the kind of lyric Britpop could have produced but rarely did. This is Hovercraft, not only scratching at the edges of their influences but transcending them, revealing an emotional acuity that was ahead of its time.

“Angel,” the second track, emerges with a different kind of energy — richer, more expansive, and more structurally daring. What begins as a melancholy slow-burn soon shape-shifts into an uplifting alt-pop meditation before finally erupting into defiant release. Hovercraft blends 90s indie sensibilities with tones that foreshadow the tenderness of artists like Phoebe Bridgers or Arlo Parks. It feels unexpectedly modern for a piece originally born decades ago; a testament to how timeless songwriting can be when honesty sits at its core. Lyrically, “Angel” navigates the bittersweet terrain of nostalgia, reassessment, and lost innocence. What starts as a soft reflection on someone once cherished gradually reveals itself to be a reclamation of power — recognition that those warm memories have teeth, and that letting go is a kind of liberation. By the time the defiance takes centre stage, Hovercraft have woven an emotional arc that feels less like a demo reconstruction and more like a cinematic short film.

Beyond the songs themselves, the story of Hovercraft’s resurrection deepens the resonance. These are not just tracks pulled from an old shoebox — they are fragments of a band that almost was. Charlie, the band’s enigmatic songwriter, disappeared in 1996 and has only resurfaced briefly since, the kind of mystery that turns forgotten demos into cultural artefacts. Yet through modern studio finesse and careful restoration, “New Pine Overcoat” and “Angel” feel alive, relevant, and startlingly contemporary. There is something profoundly moving about hearing music that might have been lost forever, especially when that music still pulses with emotional clarity. Hovercraft’s revival is not simply nostalgic, but restorative. It bridges time, technology, memory, and grief, turning the act of musical resurrection into an artistic statement of its own.

Taken together, these two tracks form a microcosm of what the Blown Away project seems poised to become: a reclamation, a tribute, and a long-overdue spotlight on voices that nearly slipped through the cracks of history. “New Pine Overcoat / Angel” feels like listening to ghosts who never got the chance to finish telling their story — but now, somehow, thirty years later, they finally can. And the astonishing part is how current these songs sound, how easily they could sit beside today’s indie darlings without missing a beat. Hovercraft’s past has been polished, but not overproduced; honoured, but not rewritten. This delicate balance makes the listening experience feel like discovering a rare gem rather than a nostalgic novelty.

In the end, the brilliance of Hovercraft’s double single lies not only in the music itself, but in everything it symbolises. These tracks remind us that art endures — even when creators drift, when tapes decay, when time intervenes. Hovercraft’s return is a reminder that the songs we write in our youth can still speak to the adults we become, and that unfinished stories sometimes find their way home. “New Pine Overcoat / Angel” leaves us hungry for Blown Away, eager to hear what else was hiding in those lost cassettes, and grateful that a band almost forgotten has been given the chance to step into the light once more.

For more information, follow Hovercraft:
Website – Bandcamp – Facebook – Spotify

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