Cardinal Black Ignite Alt-Country Urgency with “Need More Time,” a Burnt-Sugar Ballad of Love, Longing, and Locomotion

 

Velvet locomotives barrel through the mind when Cardinal Black’s “Need More Time” spins: a rush of citrus-bitten guitar, Hammond organ plume, and harmonica wail that tastes like burnt sugar on rye, and gorse smoke. The Welsh trio, exporting its alt-country fervor, marries Buck’s glass-cut fretwork to Hollister’s alarm-clock tenor, propelling a narrative of lovers who blinked and found the calendar sprinting ahead. The song’s brisk 3:29 feels deliberately claustrophobic; every bar throbs with the ache of postponed rendezvous, compressing longing into locomotive momentum.

Camenzind’s analogue varnish gifts the track a lived-in warmth—dust motes of Royal Albert Hall still cling to the cymbals—yet that very glow sometimes softens the lyrical blade. Hollister’s metaphors, while heartfelt, occasionally drift toward homily; one wishes for a crimson streak of dissonance to counter the sepia. Still, the chorus detonates like corks freed from over-fermented wine, urging repeat pours.

Contrasted with the swampy predecessor “Keep On Running,” this single radiates urgency rather than menace, trading thunderstorm whistles for sunrise harmonica, and the pivot suits them. If Midnight At The Valencia truly encapsulates their ten-thousand-hour pilgrimage through dive-bar nebulae, “Need More Time” is its glowing waypoint—proof that labour can crystallise into melody.

Yet perfection eludes: the fade-out, too polite, undercuts the kinetic spell, and Roberts’s snare, glossy in the mix, lacks the visceral pop that live audiences cherish. Even so, the track gallops like an espresso-steeped mustang—imperfect, invigorating, obstinately alive. Expect it to cling like neon dust upon the tongue of memory after the last chord evaporates.


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