๐๐ผ๐ป๐ป๐ผ๐น๐น๐โ๐ ๐๐ผ๐ฟ๐ป๐ฒ๐ฟ - this week: Canโt Stop Feeling - Blue Royals
- Charles Connolly

- Aug 26
- 8 min read
Welcome all to ๐๐ผ๐ป๐ป๐ผ๐น๐น๐โ๐ ๐๐ผ๐ฟ๐ป๐ฒ๐ฟ, a series of weekly reviews by Charles Connollyย - an artist in his own right. Here, Charles delves into the greatest brand new singles brought to you by the best unsigned artists on our electrifying and eclectic set of ๐๐๐ฌ ๐ผ๐ง๐ฉ๐๐จ๐ฉ ๐๐ฅ๐ค๐ฉ๐ก๐๐๐๐ฉ playlists.
๐พ๐๐ฃโ๐ฉ ๐๐ฉ๐ค๐ฅ ๐๐๐๐ก๐๐ฃ๐ - ๐ฝ๐ก๐ช๐ ๐๐ค๐ฎ๐๐ก๐จ
Charles is backโฆ
Did ya miss meโฆ? Yes? Not particularly? Well, either way, Iโm back. I have been not hither, but thither. Not only was I taking a break from this here Corner (it can get a tad claustrophobic at times), but I was busy being elsewhere. Not London, not England, and not even Britain. Europe in the Summertime - THATโS whatโs been happening! Yes, I know Britain is in Europe, but, ya knowโฆ It is but it isnโt. Itโs a different kind of Europe. Britain is just not very โEuropeanโ. I needed to feel that European thang. Sometimes I do Italy, but this time I did not. This time, my girlfriend and I went up into the sky and landed in her original turf of Poland. Thankfully, the aeroplane did not burst into flames or do anything it shouldnโt have done. I donโt think I have ever had such an absurdly packed schedule while on holiday. Aside from buses, trams, tubes and cars, we were taking trains almost every single day. Not to mention a ridiculous amount of walking. Doesnโt sound much like a holiday, does it! The thing is, I have never been one for lying on a beach for a week. Even the idea bores the hell out of me, as the sun burns the pale out of me. This constant movement is the very momentum that keeps things bubbling. Then and now, I just canโt stop feeling! There was modern urban city. There was beautiful old city. There was countryside. There was beach. There was river and sea; food and sun. Museums and memories; nature and manners. We covered so much yet really very little of this vast land of Po. I live for feelings, and feeling was basically all I did for those ten days.
Both of us were wandering with the innocent delight and joy that children so effortlessly carry. There was no strict itinerary or anything like that - there lies the feeling of chores (not the feeling I was craving at all), but we had a rough plan. This place, that place, this place, that place, and potentially, this place, if weโve got time. We had time. We made time. Everything worked because Poland allowed it to work. Itโs that kind of a place. It doesnโt make things difficult. Itโs an affable sort of a place designed extremely well, made BY the people, FOR the people. Not by the SYSTEM, for the MONEY. But what was one of my favourite things about Poland? Nope, not the pierogi (dumplings). I donโt think Iโll bother with the guessing games, Iโll just tell you. Itโs the Polish themselves. Poland is full of Polish people. Now, this might at first sound rather obvious, but just think about it again properly. The world has changed a lot in the last ten to twenty years, as you know. Most countries have gone full-on multicultural. Now, while this is somewhat freeing in one way, it does mean that places can start to lose their identity. Cultures can dilute or fuse. Again, there is good in this, if done with respect both ways. But what I really wanted in going to Poland was to feel the Polish way. I wanted to be immersed in Polishness. Surely this is the purpose of travel, no? I donโt want to go to a different country and go to shops that I have in London, eat food that I have in London, speak and hear the language that I have in London. Otherwise whatโs the bloody point in travel at all?! I always find it weird when in London I see Italian tourists shopping for clothes in shops that they have all over Italy now. Or Chinese tourists eating noodles in Chinese restaurants. Or Irish tourists drinking Guinness in Ye Olde Irish Tavern (established 2009). Poland is so far being kept Polish by the Polish, and it is just so bloody refreshing! Itโs good for us, and itโs good for them. Despite that big old language barrier, I just couldnโt stop feeling. Despite not understanding a single word of what anyone was saying, I felt warmth, manners and humble pride (yes, I know that shouldnโt be a thing, but thatโs how it was). I felt care, happiness, ease, comfort, politeness, respect and the sweetest sense of humour. Of course, you will get the odd young, loud, swearing, drunk thug, but with this rarity I am able to turn my feelings towards being knee-deep in pierogi. Why waste feelings on young thugs when thereโs so much beauty around? Besides, Iโve got yet another train to catch!
One final thing that was just SO refreshing, was how much the Polish evidently care about culture and the arts. I felt like I must have been surrounded by intelligent people. Every kind of train (and tube) we took had little screens dotted about the carriages (something that London - surprisingly - does not yet have). I should hate this. It's unnecessary, itโs distracting and itโs uglyโฆ Rightโฆ? Well, in somewhere like London, it would probably be all those things. But these screens are not blaring out colours loud and fast, telling you to โChew Goodโ. They are not adverts at all! Well, they are advertising, but theyโre not paid sponsors. Whichever city youโre in, theyโre advertising cultural things to do in said city. An open-air classical concert, an open-air cinema in the park, an art exhibition in a nearby gallery (closed-air). Or theyโre showing you how theyโre making the city better. Actually genuinely better!! So, on these comfortable, clean, quiet, air-conditioned (and cheap) trains, I just canโt stop feeling. Now, THATโS what a holiday is supposed to be.
Speaking of culture and the arts, I should probably talk about some artist or other. Supposedly the very reason you came hereโฆ! I think many of you assumed I would review โAnd So We Fallโ, by Sano Hill and Emily Grayโฆ The thing is, it is already number one in the New Artist Spotlight charts (congrats to both of you!), and it was my own production and mix, so it felt a bit funny to come back to my Corner and write about an arrangement that I arranged. But I do urge you to listen to it, should you not have already done so. I think itโs rather fab. It is also proof that the NAS family still has wings that can fly together effortlessly without the whole thing bursting into flames. This week, my continued stream of feelings is not halted or even slowed down. It is, however, moved from Poland to Montrรฉal, Canada. And as we all know, Canada is one of the greatest countries when it comes to music. Please welcome for the second time on Connollyโs Corner, Blue Royals, with their latest single, Canโt Stop Feeling. I had hoped that this song would come crashing into the Top 10 or even Top 5 of the NAS charts a couple of weeks ago, but it did not. I then had refreshed hopes that THIS would be the week. Again: nada. It has not entered the charts! I canโt stop feeling this is wrong. I had only to assume that it has simply not yet been heard. Hence the main reason I do these things every week: to show you what you might have missed (and to rave about the brilliant singles that you would inevitably hear). Duty calls, and I must both show and rave! Blue Royals is a duo made up of Kristian Carvajal Velk and Mattia Demaz-Hรฉbert. I will boldly (and perhaps rudely) abbreviate these to Kris and Matt. Firstly, I do hear subtle elements of a few other NAS artists: Talking to Sophie, Faded Element (but softer), Amaury Laurent Bernier, Electric Sol, Paul McCormick and Coumarin, which is nice. There is the most easy ease throughout its sections, just like a summer stroll. From the old days there is perhaps influence from bands like Fleetwood Mac, and from the new(er) days, thereโs bits of Travis, Toploader and Keane. Making an easy sound ainโt easyโฆ
On to Kris and Matt. Although (I think) mainly written by Kris, Canโt Stop Feeling was penned by both members. However, I am missing out one major member for this song and their forthcoming EP. A third writer was involved, and he did a lot more than writeโฆ Montrรฉal is lucky enough to claim ownership of yet another great band by the name of St-Eugene. One member of said band is Vincent Mombleau, and it is he who is the third and final writer. Writing, however, is just one of his many talents. He played almost every instrument on this record. And not only that, but he co-produced, mixed and mastered the record too! And I simply LOVE that the band has credited him properly with everything he has brought to this brilliant record. Too often I see that artists are not crediting mixing engineers, producers and musicians, and it always hurts me. I mean, Iโm not crying when I find that a flautist was only credited as playing the flute despite the fact that they also played the piccoloโฆ! But I do feel it should be compulsory (and natural) to credit everyone involved in making a record. Iโm not even talking about royalty splits. Just simply mentioning them!! It doesnโt cost a penny. Anyway, thank you to Blue Royals (and Sano Hill) for doing this. So! Kris mainly (I think) wrote the song, played guitar and sang backing vocals. Matt sang the lead vocals and other backing vocals. Vince(eebaybee) - perhaps rather informal for a man with whom I have never had contact - played piano, bass, keys, synth, guitar, drums and percussion, and even sang some backing vocals.
Might I advise headphonesโฆ? Classic guitars and electric piano dance with light feet around the wide, open drums. These drums, while airy, are deep and snappy, as they underpin the perfectly regulated bassline. The best of intros: under ten seconds. Enter those vocals, as the guitars take a breather. These vocals are full, close and personal. No low end, leaving space for the body of the bass, kick and keys. As the pre-chorus begins to unfold, various synths and guitars are brought in to fill out width, but also to suggest that something bigger is to come. And indeed, something wicked this way comes. Thereโs a bump in volume and energy as we enter the first chorus. But what a brief chorus! Back into verse two, then a doubled second chorus. But thenโฆ At 1:51, the song explodes in depth, layers, bass, width and body. Everything is fuller and more rounded. The backing vocals take hold and come forward. The hi-hat is given a rest as the ride cymbal is given a good beating. Itโs my favourite kind of ride cymbal: it still has the โtingโ, but it has a lovely washy background quality. The snare, toms and kick really have such punch, being the absolute driving force of the song. At around 2:21, it seems as though everything is thinning to a closeโฆ But NO!! Only seconds later we wind it up again and go for a final 55 seconds. The guitars are now at the forefront. Then all the voices intertwined with one another. Then the most scintillating piano line right from the โBook of Chris Martinโ Itโs just GLORious!! This mix is what excites me the most. Itโs like controlled fireworks! A truly trojan track from three sublimely talented Canadians. I canโt stop feeling!!!
As for Poland, I pity the natives for having to put up with so many mannerless tourists. It brings a new meaning to the term โspit and Polishโ.
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Please share this post and let me know your thoughts in the comments below









Iโm glad you got a summer holiday, Charles! โ๏ธ A nice tune for Sunday morning. Builds well.
A good song overall! The sound invites you to stay and listen, travel with its sounds, and let yourself go. I really like the change in dynamics and how the song is reinforced by the choruses, well-crafted and deep at times.
Fantastic track that I had not listened so good recommendation on that. Great voices and the mix and arrangement sound brilliant. Love city holidays but also love the beach. Sometimes doing nothing but swimming and chilling suits me nicely.
A very delicate and well-crafted song. It's one of those songs that you hear once and it immediately gets stuck in your head. I like the chorus because it gives me a sense of freedom.
I'm the same at holidays, Layingen on the beach is no holiday...travelling is to get to know the country and the peolpe!Poland sounds interesting!
And the Song is great, thanks for reviewing it!