Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Sit Back and Wallow in the Beauty - #38 Elbow - Build a Rocket Boys!

Oh crap. It's here. The album that I've been looking forward to since I started this whole thing. My favourite album of 2011. Probably one of the best that I've ever heard. How on earth do I do it justice? My clumped together words and a complete lack of knowledge about music journalism might cause me some problems here, and you are more than likely about to read a fair few words muttering on like a lovestruck teenager. Taking that into account, I wouldn't blame you for stopping here, but please, stick with me, and we'll get through this together.

So, first things first, were my first few sentences there a little over the top? Answer? No. As the title of this piece suggests, this album is filled with such beauty that it could make an angel weep. Hmm... Perhaps that one is a going a little too far, but you get the picture. It. Is. Magnificent.


After the outrageous success of the band's previous album, The Seldom Seen Kid, the Manchester five-piece finally emerged from the shadows. Often hailed as an excellent band, they never really embraced the big time, until the Mercury Prize panel rewarded them for what was a fantastic album, and Elbow have never looked back. Touring the country in some if its biggest venues, being second on the billing at a lot of festivals this summer, this album is full of songs which will sound majestic as they float over a Saturday night Pyramid Stage crowd at this year's Glastonbury.

Opener The Birds gently builds up, but posseses a chorus so mighty that it could take over a small country. But that's the beauty of Elbow, and something that isn't a one off on this album. It's music that, when I have on in the house, I much prefer to listen to through headphones. The band produces a sound that is so, well, huge, that through headphones it almost encases you.

Once that behemoth comes Lippy Kids. This was actually a working title for the album for a while, and, according to Mr Guy Garvey himself, is about growing older, but never really wanting to. Realising that you are now part of that crowd who doesn't like gangs of 'hoodies' on the streets. It's the song that includes the album's actual title, but it showcases Mr Garvey and his gang of merry men in a more sombre mood.

Although the next song doesn't exactly crack out the rock and roll, With Love is another quite lovely song, the words could improve any day, and it has an excellent sing-a-long section which is bound to go down a storm at festivals.



Ok, as with the other albums that I've looked at so far, I've promised not to do a track-by-track breakdown, so I'll only mention a couple more, having swooned over the first three there.

Neat Little Rows brings back that huge sound that I was talking about. It's littered with catchy sections, and when the band steps it up a level for the chorus, they make such a grand sound that, on listening to it for the first time, it made the hairs on my arms stand up, and sent a shiver down me. I'm actually not exaggerating.

I'm not sure what my favourite track on here is, which, in my eyes at least, proves the quality of the album as a whole. Not one of these 12 songs dips in quality, and each compliments the next perfectly. If I was forced to choose which I liked best, I'd probably say Open Arms. It's chorus is, and I hate to use this word, epic. Click this link for the video, and go see for yourselves what I mean.

So, that was Elbow, and Build a Rocket Boys! I know that I may seem to have gone a little over the top at times there, but I can assure you I haven't. The band really are right at the top of their game right now, and I personally can not wait to be able to see them live for the first time (I once won tickets to see them, but had five hours to get from France to Newcastle if I was to do so). If they were to just play this album in full, I'd be more than happy, but when you add it anthems such as Grounds For Divorce and One Day Like This, I can't see how they will be anything other than magnificent.

If you won't be joining me at Glastonbury, my advice is try and see the band this summer. Whether it be at a festival, one of their gigs, whatever, just make sure you catch them somewhere, and somehow. I can be almost certain that I'll either be singing along at the top of my voice when they were playing, or shrivelled up in a ball in tears. Whichever it is, I honestly can't wait.

Oh, and if you haven't got this album, get yourself on a music purchasing website, or down to the shops, and buy it right now. A word of warning though, you may end up buying their entire back catalogue afterwards.




Monday, May 30, 2011

Burn Baby Burn - #37 Friendly Fires - Friendly Fires

I'm stumped as what to write for this album. It's been a mainstay in my weekly listening schedule for the last couple of months, but I'm so preoccupied by tomorrow's offering, Elbow's Build a Rocket Boys!, that I'm not sure I'll do Friendly Fires justice here, I'll certainly try my best.


I'm honestly unsure what it is about this album that enjoy so much. It's probably just that it seems like a lot of fun, and has a summertime feel to it. Friendly Fires definitely prefer to do things with a dance and a swagger, and although they have the instruments to be an indie band, they are definitely better placed at the front of a rave than they are a moshpit, although the two may not be entirely mutually exclusive.

After a promising start, the album really comes to life at track three, Paris, where a rattling cowbell is actually the driving force behind the track, and the naturally optimistic lyrics and euphoric chorus really open the album up. If a song like this doesn't improve your mood, there's something a little wrong with you. You can check it out by clicking anywhere on this link. Don't remember to come back though!

The cowbell (a criminally underused instrument) is evident in quite a lot of this album actually, and it's testament to Friendly Fires sense of fun that it is there in the first place, to have it featuring heavily on songs is testament to the confidence that they have in themselves, but also a mental strength not to take themselves too seriously.

I'm tempted to keep this short from now on. Strobe sees the band slow everything down a little, and to be honest, the album is more enjoyable on its more upbeat tracks, but that's not to discredit the slower numbers. It's just easier to imagine being in a small room, dancing like a moron to songs such as Lovesick, that have a catchy beat throughout.

I honestly have no idea how to categorise the band, and it seems wrong to try to pigeonhole them into one genre. Are they an indie band? Possibly. Should we be calling them an electro outfit? You could argue for it, yes.

For now, I'll just let you know that they are a great dance band. From everything that I've read about them, they also put on a fantastic show, and thanks to this album, and their recently-released second LP, Pala, I know that I'll certainly be checking them out.

An afternoon slot in the sun, taking in some dance(ish) music, surrounded by friends and full to brimming with beer sounds like a hell of a day to me.

See you next time, Elbow are up *he says with an excited smirk*.


Yeah, What He Said - #36 Plan B - The Defamation of Strickland Banks

Ah, Mr Benjamin Drew, welcome to the Glastonbury Challenge my friend.

Well, you might know Mr Drew better as Plan B, which incidentally, is the name that he came up with upon realising that rapping about skull-fu*king corpses and raping old women won't get you to the top of the charts. It was out of that realistation, and the need for a something a little different, from which the phenomenon of Plan B, and the chart-topping album, The Defamation of Strickland Banks, was born.


It's probably fair to say that not many people could see a young and angry rapper switching his musical genre from anger-rap to soul, especially when the soul is designed to fill a concept album, but no-one can argue with the fact that Ben Drew pulled it off spectacularly.

This is a genuinely great album, and one that I didn't expect to like. My first experiences of Plan B were seeing him singing She Said live at a number of festivals last year, and I have to admit that he always sounded to be putting the voice on and struggling with it too. Meaning that I never thought he sounded all that good. On the album however, the vocals are more polished, and it really gives him a platform to enjoy a bit of rapping in and among the soulful high notes.

Actually, the chances that he gets to really vent a bit of frustration and showcase a bit of attitude are the best tracks on here. The 'nice' tracks are all well and good, and will no doubt have made a far bigger impression in the charts, but it's when Plan B gets angry that he produces the best tracks.

Stay Too Long has a trademark catchy chorus, but really motors into action when gets the chance to tuck into a really angry-sounding rant. It's top stuff, and a world away from She Said, the song that almost everyone associates with this album, thanks to it topping the UK charts.

I'm not saying that was a bad song, but it certainly suffered from being overplayed on British radio, and I wouldn't be surprised if it got 'retired' for the live shows before long. Much in the same way that MGMT don't play Kids, and even Bruce Springsteen stopped playing Born in the USA, you can't really blame an artist for not wanting to perform a song that they have played 1,000s of times.

It's interesting to think that Drew doesn't even seem to really like this music. When he went back to his record label after this hit the bigtime and said that he wanted to revert back to 'proper hip-hop', he was told that wasn't an option. But rather than tow the line, he launched his own record label, and will do things as he likes in the future.

It will be interesting to see what comes next, as rumours suggest that a reggae album might be on the way, but only after he has returned to his musical roots, and made another rap/hip-hop album first. 

Whatever he chooses to do, there will be plenty of interest from around the world, the only variant is how many of those that rush to listen will like or approve of the direction that he chooses to take next.

For now though, grab a copy of this album, and listen to it all the way through at least twice. It takes both listens to fully appreciate how good it is.




Saturday, May 28, 2011

Please, Make Them Stop - #35 Battles - Mirrored

Vermillion. Cheese flan. Quantum Leap. Marjorie. Toenail. Clock face. Grey pube.


So, at this point, someone might care to point out that everything that I wrote there was complete jibberish, and none of the words seemed in anyway connected (unless you believed the stories about the substandard food at the bakery near my student house, that is).

Jibberish is, I'm afraid, the only term that I can come up with for this terrible stain on the history of music. To even release it is an album in the first place is pushing taking the piss to a whole new level in the first place.

I could be nice. I could say it is different, unique or thought-provoking. I won't though, I'll say it's garbage.

It sounds like the result of leaving 30 toddlers in a room filled with things to make sounds with, while one four-year-old sits and pushes every button on a soundboard to a drumbeat. It really is that random, and that unbearable.

I can see why some people would label this as 'interesting', but to me, the complete abandom of structure is just jarring. So much so that this 'fun' album actually makes me unhappy when I listen to it. I've read positive reviews of it all over the web and I just can't figure it out.

If anyone reading this is a fan, please, please get in touch and explain it to me. I fear that, like Wild Beasts before it, I'm probably just not cool enough to understand. In fact, I hope that's the case, as at least it would prove that there is actually something here to understand in the first place.

I think that Atlas went on to be a big dance tune. I'm not convinced. Have a look at it and see what you think. To me, it's just awful. It's a musical equivalent of putting fingers in your ears and shouting 'la la la la la'.

The only redeeming feature that this has is that I'm intrigued as to how they convert this onto the stage. If it's some guy with a laptop playing the tunes, they should be ashamed of themselves. If it is (mostly) done live, then it might be worth going along to see how it comes together.

Until I find out which it is, I'm off to do something a little better with my time. *Fingers go in ears* La la la la la la la la la la la.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Great, Honest Fun - #34 Cage the Elephant - Cage the Elephant

So, after Anna Calvi, where on earth do we go next? To Cage the Elephant land, that's where.


I first heard this album quite a few months ago after considering buying it for months, I heard one track and decided that I had to have it, thankfully, it's a decision that I more than stick by.

After yesterday's example of how to create a haunting sound find Anna Calvi here, this band are more of an exercise in having fun. If I had to compare them to someone, I'd say that they sound like the Arctic Monkeys, only when all they were interested in was making cracking singles, not pissing about in the desert with Josh Homme.

Album opener In One Ear might not be the most original of songs in its subject matter (the band not being interested in critics and their opinions), but at least they have the good sense to actual tell everyone that they know this. The vocals are some kind of semi-rap, and there is definitely a hint of Alex Turner in there, despite the band being from Kentucky.

Thankfully for those listening, that track is excellent, but it's also a sign of things to come. Straight after In One Ear comes James Brown, another excellent indie-rock song that rattles along at a fair old pace. A sing along that begs for a crowd sing-a-long makes this song catchy as any on here, and the guitar solo (yes, they do still exist outside of Muse) really adds a lot to the track.

Which brings us on to Ain't No Rest for the Wicked. The guitars give this one a bit of a county feel, but it has brilliant lyrics and I strongly recommend giving this one a listen. Singer Matt Shultz talks us through a number of scenarios where people are getting hold of cash in less than righteous ways, and it really is a good listen. Unsurprisingly, after a bit of research, it turns out that it's single that's done the best in the UK charts for the band.

I really don't want to go through and talk about every song on here, and I would do, as the next one, Tiny Little Robots, is a cracker too, but I'll refrain. All I will say is that there are AT LEAST another four or five cracking tunes on here, meaning that's about eight out of 11. As Sum41 once (falsely) called an album, it's "All Filler, No Killer".

I'm looking forward to payday ticking by, so I can get the band's second album, if it's anywhere near as good as this, I'll be delighted.

And with that I'll leave you be. Cage the Elephant are a must at the festival, and probably one of the bands that I'm looking forward to seeing the most. If you're lucky enough to be coming too, I suggest you do the same. If you aren't coming, make sure you check out this album, as unfortunately, I can't see the BBC's coverage taking in much of this set.

And just as an after note, if you like this, feel free to have a look at a few of the blogs down the right hand side. There are all the ones for May, and April if you click the dropdown arrow. We covered some good stuff at the beginning, wouldn't want you to miss out.

Next up? Battles. *Sigh*

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

A Diva for the New Era? - #33 Anna Calvi - Anna Calvi

Oh Anna Calvi, how writing about this album has caused me much concern. If only you had made something simple to talk about, or boring, or something even close to the norm', then I'd be ok. But this, this majestic, atmospheric, moody and frankly baffling album has me stumped. I just don't know how to do you justice, but I'll give it a go.
Far from just hearing about Ms Calvi – and she does certainly now seem to have quite a huge, almost overnight following – I became aware of her when she toured with Interpol. Never one to overlook an Interpol support band (possibly the best gig I've seen was them being supported by Secret Machines in Nottingham). Downloading her album on its day of release (yes, I would prefer to buy it from a proper music shop, but I can't, I'm in France), it quickly became a mainstay in my listening schedule.

However, this is the stage when I really start to struggle to put together the rest of the blog. I'd love to tell you what this sounds like, but my brain falls over itself every time I begin to try. I'm certain that you won't have heard too much like this before. Reviews on Amazon point out influences in Patti Smith and PJ Harvey, but I'm not best placed to comment on that. How about I provide you with a video, and you can make your own mind up? Anna Calvi - Blackout.

Blackout is actually one of the more conventional tracks on the album. It opens up with Rider to the Sea, two and half minutes of gentle and building guitars with a haunting vocal that drifts in and out. No words I might add, just a hint of what we can come to expect.

There is definitely a lot of confidence on show from Ms Calvi, but, 'if you have it, flaunt it', seems as good of a phrase as any to use in this instance. She was part of the BBC Sound 2011 list, and has since gone on to become the headline act on the NME Radar Tour, which has launched more than a few bands into the limelight in its time.

The interesting thing about Anna is that no songs on here, apart from possibly Blackout, really seem like they will fit the bill and become part of the Radio One playlist. Whether this means that she won't get the exposure that she deserves is debatable, but it also means that over-exposure to her music isn't likely. With bands like as the Vaccines being played so much on the radio, or NME TV (MTV Rocks, VH1 etc), there is a very real chance that people have the chance to grow tired of the songs that they originally loved. Just look at Razorlight. There doesn't seem to be that chance here.

Other highlights for me on the album are Desire and The Devil, which sees almost all sounds apart from Anna and her guitar stripped away to showcase her voice.

I shouldn't have gotten so far through this actually without mentioning her voice. It contains such power, but, as The Devil shows, she is more than capable than bringing it down a notch. Her voice has a real haunting sound to it when the song is stripped down to its bare bones, and I imagine that seeing live would send shivers right down the middle of your spine. In the world of cartoons, men would be drawn in by it, spirals in their eyes and wandering aimlessly towards the sound of her voice.

A friend of mine went to see her in concert recently and said that she puts on an amazing show. If I can get anywhere near the stage when she performs at the festival, I'll certainly be happy to find out what he was talking about.


Tuesday, May 24, 2011

AAAHHH! (Guest blog number two) - #32 Primal Scream - Screamadelica

Remember back when it was U2's turn in the 60 Day Challenge, and I looked at the Joshua Tree (well, ish)? I said at the time that I didn't think I could do it justice. It went down in history as a hugely important album, but personally, I wasn't such a huge fan. I could appreciate that it was good, just not as good as people were making out.

So I called in a ringer, if you like. Steve Askew, U2 fan extraordinaire took the reigns and posted what was his rather magnificent take on it. Have a look on the right hand side if you haven't seen it. It's called Tear Down the Walls.

Anyway, my point is that the same thing has happened again. I know that Screamadelica is meant to be magnificent, and I know that the band will be playing it in full at the festival, and while I do like it, I know someone who is genuinely passionate about it, and would do a lot better job of it than me.

So I hand you over to the lovely Emma (@pollyatrocity - Twitter) to guide you through an album that has, like the Joshua Tree, been showered in praise since its release. I'll warn you now, this isn't my usual guff, this is fantastic.

P.S I'm sorry if the blog won't let you comment. Dunno why that is. You can always get me on Twitter @daninfrance or leave comments on my Facebook page if you like.

They say that if you remember the sixties, you weren’t really there. Similarly, when Danny asked me (unusually politely) if I’d like to write a piece on Screamadelica, I had no idea what he was talking about. Then I got out the shower and saw this. And it all came flooding back.

Cough.

Photobucket
(Ignore the stitches. I had a mole removed. Don’t worry, it was benign.)

That is obviously an exaggeration. But struggling to write a coherent paragraph or two, I was advised to share experiences of gigs and whatnot. I’d love to. But all I remember from most of them is that I went. Probably.

I don’t know many people who go to the trouble of seeing any band as many times as I’ve seen the Scream over the years. And the bottle of Rolling Rock that Andrew Innes bought me still sits proudly on my windowsill.

The first time I saw them, at Shepherds Bush Empire in summer 2000 was probably the best gig I have ever been to. I remember that one unusually distinctly because I was 15 and unitiated. I’m sure those jealous of my placement that I’d arrived unfashionably early to secure right infront of Mani’s amp took great pleasure in (quite possibly) breaking at least several of my ribs.

On another equally memorable occasion, I woke up in a hospital in Tottenham Court Road on a drip and been called a ‘silly bitch’ by one of the nurses, I slurrily dribbled ‘When at Primals, do as the Primals do’.

In my eyes, they’re a supergroup. Bobby Gillespie was briefly in the Jesus and Mary Chain during the Psychocandy period, on drums. He taught himself to play using dustbins and I’m pretty sure Mani was in some band or other before he joined. Duffy was in Felt, but no one remembers them so we’ll skim over that. I first discovered them several months prior to that first gig, when they had recently released Swastika Eyes, and Xtrmntr was on the cards. I was a late starter. But much as, aged seven I happily wore my brother’s acid house tshirt hand-me-downs, actually getting involved was a bit out of my reach. And until a few years later, the closest I’d come to Screamadelica was seeing it in the Nice Price section of Our Price. I probably looked at the cover with as much confused intrigue as most people, whose general consensus is that it looks like an amoeba covered in vomit. But having purchased Xtrmntr and loved it, it was apparently the next step.

And I’ve probably never loved an album as much since.

Screamadelica does not belong on a cd. It CERTAINLY does not belong on a digital file. It’s an album that was made for vinyl and an album very much of two halves, one half to come up, one half to come down. Very little can come close to witnessing Higher than the Sun onstage in all it’s glory. Perhaps the strangest aspect of my love of Screamadelica is that it’s two stand out tracks, for me at least aren’t actually on the album. The 7″ mix of Come Together, which as opposed to the much more well known Weatherall mix, and the piece itself entitled Screamadelica, the final track on the Dixie Narco ep. I will never know why neither were a part of it, but having only discovered either after I had physically worn out my third copy of the album they made a very, very pleasant dessert.

Screamadelica won the first ever Mercury Prize. Primal Scream lost the cheque at the ceremony. It is the first album I play every year when the sun first comes out and I want to sweep away the winter cobwebs. It’s going out music and it’s getting in music. Whereas many albums from the early 90′s now sound horribly dated, Screamadelica sounds ageless. There isn’t a song on there worthy of being skipped. It has soundtracked seminal days and hundreds more that were in no way important but invoke memories that make me smile. It’s pure sensory overload. As soon as you hear the opening bars of Movin’ on up you can smell the smoke, sun cream and sweat. The band may be old, fat and churning out utter rubbish these days, but Screamadelica will always be a wonky primary coloured ray of sunshine. And the only way I’ll forget it is if I emerge from the wrong side of an MRI machine.

Maybe When I Was 15... - #31 Jimmy Eat World - Jimmy Eat World

A bit of a poke around the Internet suggests to me that the first actual rock concert I went to was in 2001. I was a bit of a late starter on the whole gig scene, but like to think that I've more than made up for it since.

I actually remember the whole thing perfectly, which isn't always the case with gigs that I've caught as I've got older. It was the Manchester Evening News Arena, the support bands were A and AFI, and the band in question? The Offspring.

The night was rather excellent too I might add. The band were on top form, as were the supports. All in all, cracking stuff.

But why are you telling us this? I hear you ask. Well that was the time in my life that I associate with bands like Jimmy Eat World.
(sorry for the huge gap, the image has a massive border)
Feel free to tell me that I'm wrong if I am, but I've always lumped them in a pile with bands such as The Offspring, Less Than Jake and Reel Big Fish.

Unfortunately, I just don't think that this album is half as much fun as the above bands. Maybe that's because my categorisation policy is poor, or maybe I'm just correct? There is, after all, a first time for everything.

It's the drums played at a million miles per hour, and thrashy guitars that conjure up the images of the other bands that I've listed. That, and a Green Day(ish) sounding vocalist. Actually, I should have added Green Day to that list a little earlier, shouldn't I?

Now I'm not saying that this is unpleasant to listen to, it certainly isn't, but it's something that I would have enjoyed all those years ago. I think these days, I prefer vocalists to not sound like they are shouting (or at least on the verge of shouting), Songs to have more variety and (sometimes), something a little calmer. I could feel sweaty just listening to this album.

I mean, there are some good songs on here, but it's difficult to tell them apart from the others. Everything is just. so. similar.

I mean, there are some great songs on here, but it's hard to tell them apart from the others. Everything is just. so. similar.

(see what I did there?)

I think I'll leave the rest up to you guys. If thrashy, teen-rock is your kind of thing, then you may well love this, and probably have it already. If you used to like Green Day, before they got whiny and a bit crap, you may well enjoy this a lot, so give it a go. If you like Reel Big Fish, but aren't so keen on the brass instruments, the same applies.

Jimmy Eat World. They may rock your world, but not mine.

Next.

Monday, May 23, 2011

He's Never 'Bin' to Scunthorpe - #30 Tinie Tempah - Disc-Overy

"Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish, and you feed him for a lifetime" - Old Chinese proverb.

"Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Give a young man a rhyming dictionary, and he will have a best-selling album and border on musical world domination" - New Dan proverb.

Ahh. Mr Tempah. Or Patrick Chukwuemeka Okogw, as his mum probably calls him.


I really don't know what to make of this one. I'd like to say that I can't stand it, as it really isn't something that I'd listen to out of choice, and the young fellow does come across as an arrogant t*** who created an entire album boasting about the fact that he's done alright for himself.

Then again, why shouldn't he? I suppose my main gripe is that, as the first couple of lines of this piece suggest, he does seem to have just grabbed hold of a rhyming dictionary and strung almost anything together, as long as it sounds nice. "I've been Southampton but I've never bin to Scunthorpe" from his hit Pass Out is a prime example of the kind of garbage lyric that features on here, but at the same time, it's something that youngsters lap up, so again, can't really blame him. I even remember a Facebook group being started with the very same title. *sigh – maybe I'm just getting too old*

The singles that came from this album are actually very good. Pass Out might have appalling lyrics, but as a dance tune, it's up there with the best. Written in the Stars is also very, very catchy. Not necesarrily because of Tinie's parts, but the chorus would hook anyone in.

Thankfully (for my brain) - there is some crap on here for me to moan about. The last track, Let Go, is awful, and tells the story of a break-up, I think. I can't concentrate on it, after 12 songs, my head had had just about enough of Tinie.

I have seen him before actually, through coincidence though, rather than choice. Making my way over to the Pyramid Stage at last year's festival to watch Vampire Weekend, I caught the second half of Snoop Dogg's set, featuring special guest Tinie Tempah. I've even dug out the video for you, if you want to see what it sounds like live. Check it out here.

And that's probably enough from me. If hip-hop and rapping aren't your thing, I'd give this a miss. If they aren't, but you like a good club track, give it a go. And if you do like rap and the such, then I've probably not said anything so far that you didn't already know about Mr Tempah (and you'll probably disagree with everything that I just wrote).

Aside from the music on here, with 30 albums down, and 30 to go, I thought I'd share a few stats and such with you, as I am amazed at how many people read this blog each and every time I come on here.

So. The original plan was to reach 1000 views before the festival. Halfway through, and the stat counter is showing almost 1500. Thank you everyone. I've had readers in France, England, America, Spain, Switzerland, Denmark, China, The Philippines, Sweden, Germany, Ireland, New Zealand, Australia, Japan, Singapore and more. I've even had one read in Uruguay. Thank you again. I'm fascinated by how the blog reaches these parts of the globe, so please leave a comment if you are reading from afar.

And that's me done. Halfway home. Still waiting on the fame and glory though...

False Attitude, Real Rubbish - #29 Deacon Blue - Raintown

Has there ever been a song that you liked, but didn't really know why?

I know there have been a few for me. One of them is from the next album in this list, and another features on this album.

I think it must have been my mum's influence when I was merely a young gun, but I've always liked Dignity by Deacon Blue. As I say, I'm not sure why, as I'm pretty sure that it's not really all that, but something about it drew me in, and I've always been a huge fan of it. However, I've never got around to actually listening to any of their other work – until now.

Hmm. I really don't want to be overly critical of Deacon Blue, but it's difficult not to be. Ok, so Dignity is still a good song, but the rest, well, the rest is fairly poor to be honest.


I don't know what it is about this that leaves me feeling so cold towards it. Is it the tunes themselves, mostly cheesy pop melodies that float around in the background? Maybe.

Actually, it's a combination of the two singers. For songs that have such little about them, Ricky Ross (Scottish – would you believe?) churns out the vocals like a distressed animal. It's not screechy or anything, it just sounds like he is trying so hard to sing with attitude that he might have a hernia at any moment, or pass a pine cone. Lorraine McIntosh (thanks Google) doesn't fare any better really, she just does exactly the same as him, just a little higher.

It's not all bad though. Chocolate Girl isn't terrible, and like I said, Dignity is a good, solid pop song. It's just a shame that the rest of the album contains absolutely nothing of interest.

When discussing the band with someone the other day, this is the description I was offered. "Man sings and parades around like the Messiah, while his wife screeches in the background."

Now I can't comment on the parading, I haven't seen enough of them to know what they would do live, or even on their videos. But I'm not in a hurry to find out either. Raintown? Worst album I've looked at so far.

Friday, May 20, 2011

The True Definition of a Masterpiece - #28 Coldplay - A Rush of Blood to the Head

"Urgh, can I get my money back". "Most boring band in the world". "Crap, Eavis has failed again".

Thankfully, none of the above statements were made by me when it was announced that Coldplay were to headline the Pyramid Stage again this year. They were all comments popping up on Twitter, presumably from people who have never seen the band live.

I have. And they are phenomenal.

It was 2003 when I first got to see the band in action. Standing in a field in Staffordshire, at V, my first festival, I split from my friends (who were of the opinion at the top of this page) and took myself off to see Chris Martin and co in action. It's a day that I will never forget.

You see, although a lot of people can't sit through an entire Coldplay album, they are a totally different proposition in the live arena. Yes, they still have slow songs, but they are eerily beautiful, drawn-out affairs that send a shiver down your spine. And when they are in the mood to have some fun, they are equally mesmerising.

From that set, it's Clocks and Yellow that will always stick with me. I didn't know what to expect from a Coldplay crowd, but when I found myself in the company of a huge gang of friends, all of us with arms over each other's shoulder, jumping as Chris played that unmistakable intro, I knew that I would always be a huge fan of the band. I've dug out their performance of Yellow for you too, if you fancy being a part of one of the most amazing nights of my life - Yellow - V 2003.

Since then, well, I've seen them as often as possible. Their gig at the Reebok Stadium in Bolton was another absolutely superb night, with Doves supporting, and they even filmed the video for Fix You while I was there. If you watch it closely enough... You can't see me. It's a huge crowd, don't get silly now. I know that there are rumours of Chris Martin's ego getting too big for him, demanding his own bus on tour and such and trying his hardest to become as disliked as Bono, but trust me. Put all that behind you, and if you will be at the festival this year, go and see Coldplay. You won't regret it.

It is testament to the band that I've got this far without actually mentioning the album that I'm looking at for the Glasto' 60 Day Challenge.

And so on we come to this magnificent piece of work/art/music. A Rush of Blood to the Head.

My instincts tell me that it may actually be better not to go into detail, and instead to plead with you to go and listen to it for yourself, immerse yourself in its beautiful qualities, and its catchy tunes. I apologise if this reads as me laying it all on a bit thick, but I really can't stress just how good this album is.

From the frantic beginning of Politik, to the reflective tones of In My Place, both of which precede the frankly magnificent The Scientist. If you aren't familiar with the song, it's one of the band's famous slower numbers, but has been remixed by dance DJs all over the world. It works equally as well at 120 BPM (that's beats per minute for the uninitiated) as it does as it's regular pace.

Then of course comes Clocks. The haunting piano, the deleriously happy chorus, everything about the song is brilliant, and live, it just gets even better.

I'm not going to go into any more. Please go and listen to them yourselves. Throw away any negative thoughts that you might have about the band and go and find out just how good they are for yourselves.

And once you have done that, I'll see you in front of the Pyramid Stage, when that night in 2003 will rush to the forefront of my mind, but this memory will be better, as I'll be surrounded by the people that I love, and quite honestly, I can't think of a better place to be.

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Springsteen's Favourite Band? - #27 The Gaslight Anthem - The '59 Sound

Ah the Gaslight Anthem. One of the few bands that I was desperate to see at Glastonbury 2009.

Unfortunately for me, I slightly overdid it on the Friday night, meaning that while they were chugging through their set in a packed out tent, I was asleep in mine, feet dangling out of the door (much to the amusement of Mr Besch and Ms Waterson when they found me in that state).

But anyway, anyone unfamiliar with the band might question the title of this piece. Meaning that they probably didn't see the afore mentioned set at the festival. Meaning that they didn't see none other than the Boss himself, Bruce Springsteen, join the band on stage to play the title track from this very album.



That's right. While I was snoozing off the litre of Jack Daniels that I drank because some guy dared me to for being 'the quiet one' sat at a little camp site, Springsteen himself was on stage with the band. I'm sure there will be footage on YouTube if you fancy taking a look, and it is more than worth it, as I'm not actually sure that he knows all of the words to the song. Treat yourself, go have a gander. Bugger it, I'll even do the hard work for you! The '59 Sound.

Honestly, the similarities between the band and early Springsteen are easy to draw. The fact that they are both from New Jersey does it no harm either, nor does singer Brian Fallon's voice. If he wasn't in a hugely successful band, he could easily make a good living as a Bruce impersonator.

The album itself isn't half bad either. If you watch the above video, you'll catch the kind of thing that the band are into, and although they don't differ a great deal from the formula that makes '59 Sound such a great tune, they have no real reason to.

Opening track Great Expectations rattles along in a similar vein, and the album is littered with songs that would make excellent singles. I suppose they are something of a cross between Springsteen himself and someone a bit more, urm.. Kings of Leon maybe, well, without being shite.

I'm definitely going to make sure that I'm awake, and in the crowd this year when the band take to the stage. Interestingly, they've been promoted to the Pyramid from the tent that they were in last time. I'm not entirely sure that's justified, or that their music doesn't sound better in a smaller, more enclosed space, but I'm more than willing to find out.

Unfortunately, I can't see Bruce turning up this time around, however much I, and almost every other fan of this band, wish that he would. But if this record is anything to go by, the Gaslight Anthem do just fine on their own, and that's more than enough for me.

Punching in a Dream - #26 The Naked and Famous - Passive Me, Agressive You

The BBC's Sound for 2011 poll has thrown up quite a few cracking acts, it has to be said. I'll leave it up to you to decide whether they are popular on merit, or because they have received such hype, that's not for me to get into, but a list including The Vaccines, Yuck, Warpaint and Anna Calvi will do nicely for me (and all except Warpaint have or are to appear on this blog at some point or other).

And so to The Naked and Famous, who are certainly deservedly part of said list. Putting the fun back in indie-electropop, the New Zealand band look like taking the country by storm, a foreign equivalent of what the Vaccines are currently up to.



I'm not entirely sure where I first heard of them, but I'm more than glad that I did. I don't want to delve into all that NME terminology about what genre the band should be listed under, I'm sure they would come up with something like electrosummerindiebreezepop or something equally ridiculus, but I just see them as good fun, and they have made a full album that is great to listen to. It's summer music through and through, and will no doubt be a highlight of the festival. I'm almost certain that there will be a huge crowd for these guys, but that's not putting me off seeing them. They are actually playing twice, like the XX did last year, and after making the mistake of not catching either of their sets, I won't be so foolish this time around.

'But what about the actual album?' I hear you all ask? Well it gets off to a flyer with All of This, a catchy electro-filled blast that really sets the whole thing up, but is soon bettered by Punching in a Dream, an absolute peach of a track, my personal highlight on here, and the song that may well be the soundtrack to my summer. The background melody is infectious, the vocals are borderline strained, but just about right, and when it needs guitars, it gets guitars. The song sounds awesome when it's nice weather here, and if the forecasters are right, we might be getting even better weather than 2010 for the festival this year. If that's the case, this song is going to sound unreal when the band belt it out.

Young Blood's another one that really gets the summer vibe across. I'm not sure that I realised how much of a feel-good album this was until just now, but it'll definitely be what I'm listening to the next time that I'm at the park, taking in some of France's rather nice weather.

That's not to say that every track is a fast-paced blend of indie and pop, the band are more than capable of slowing things down too, as in The Ends, but they are at their best when making tunes that just make you want to dance.

The more I listen to this album actually, the more I like it. And given how fondly I think of it now, that can only be a good thing.

So, The Naked & Famous, one of the BBC's bands of the year, and certainly one of mine. They'll get the chance to impress me further when I see them at the festival, and I have no doubt that is exactly what they will do.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Just Be Good to Green - #25 Professor Green - Alive 'Till I'm Dead

Hands up who is a big fan of the chart-topping rap artist Stephen Paul Manderson? Anyone? No, I joke, I imagine that only his mum still calls him that.

I am of course referring to Professor Green, yet another one of those artists that I was desperate to dislike, for a long time, until seeing him live. I've got to admit that when I did, I actually warmed to him, quite a lot.

I think the main reason is that 'the Prof' isn't a manufactured act at all. He actually won the freestyling rap battle world championships. Which, I suppose, gives him the right to do all the rapping that he wants to. Okay, so he might rely on using samples to make the tracks that he releases as singles hits, but it is hard to argue that his samples aren't pretty good.

He first came to prominence with I Need You Tonight, a catchy tune featuring Ed Drewett that flew to number three in the UK charts. Sampling INXS's Need You Tonight. Fans of the original song might not take kindly to some young upstart messing with their favourite songs, but he honestly does make a good job of it.

The strange thing about Prof' Green is probably that he looks, and sounds like an 18-year-old, however he is actually approaching his 30s. His high-pitched voice makes him sound like a kid rapping about drugs and such, that is easy to dislike, but a bit of research has made me respect him a little more.

To be fair to the lad, I was never going to truly dislike him when he got Lily Allen involved on a track. Just Be Good to Green may well be less of a sample and more like a remake to the SOS Band's Just Be Good to Me, but Allen's vocals set it off really well against the backing track. The pair tell the story of a woman no longer interested in the Prof, and he doesn't take it well. As narrative tracks go, it's a bit of novelty fun, but also very good. I can see why it did so well in the charts.

His other chart hit to date, Monster (featuring Example), takes a step away from the pop that the previous two singles featured heavily, concentrating more on being a 'dirty' grime track, but sees two of the UK's brightest stars in the field doing what they do best. Don't be surprised to see the duo featuring in each other's sets when the festival comes around.

Elsewhere on the album, contributions from The Streets and Maverick Sabre show how much the young(ish) man is respected in his chosen field, and I can honestly say that my initial thoughts about him were wrong.

I saw him perform live at Bingley Festival last year, and really wanted to dislike him, but couldn't. The music was infectious, and for a drunk fat lad in a field, it was almost impossible to not want to dance to. I can only imagine that said fat lad, who will almost certainly be drunk again, will be busting out a few moves when Green hits the stage at this year's Glastonbury.

The SOS Band's "Just Be Good to Me".

A Whole Load of Noise - #24 The Kills - Blood Pressures

And moving on in our little musical extravaganza, we stumble nicely upon The Kills.

Now, the little research that I've done about this band screams to me that I should know who they are, one of them is going out with Kate Moss for God sake, but no, they've passed me by, as so many bands do it seems (I blame Villagers for this - if Becoming a Jackal wasn't such a mind-shatteringly brilliant album, I would have listened to more music over the past six months).

Despite only being a duo, the band make a lot of noise. A. Lot. In a way that possibly only the White Stripes have done before them, and it's easy to make comparisons between the two, The Kills certainly use their limited personnel to excellent effect. Unlike the White Stripes, that seemed to be Jack White, with Meg in the background, smashing away like a 10-year-old speed addict on her drum kit, Alison Mosshart and Jamie Hince are more than happy to share the workload.

Heavy drums and a catchy guitar riff are the order of the day as the album kicks off with the excellent Future Starts Slow, and things don't let up in second track Heart is a Beating. Despite the kick drum pushing us through the tracks at a reasonable pace, there is still quite an atmospheric feel to things here, although it compliments the music well.

Nail in My Coffin isn't dissimilar to the first two tracks either. The guitars are a fascinating electronic affair, while Mosshart warbles with power over the top. Infact, the first three songs on this album are all very good.

Unfortunately, we don't really stick to the same formula throughout. It's commendable that the band try to mix things up a bit, but Wild Charms is some kind of dark(ish) shoegaze affair, and a real let down considering what has come before it.

That's not to say that later tracks don't drag the record back to its former glory. DNA is an enjoyable jaunt, as is Damned If She Do, while The Last Goodbye actually shows that the band have the capability to make a good slower song, and it harks back to a sound of times gone by.

I can see the band being an excellent proposition live, but imagine that the crowd will exclusively comprise of the 'cool kids'. Maybe I'll be the one to break the mould.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

A Nice Way to Spend the Day - #23 Laura Marling - Alas I Cannot Swim

Laura Marling was always one of those artists that I didn't want to like, before I even gave her a chance.

I think it was the media lovefest that met her second album that did it for me, so thankfully, this is her debut offering, and even if I didn't want to like it, I most certainly do.

I'm not sure at what point in my life I started to share music taste with my mum. It must have only been within the last six months, but I imagine that she would like this a lot, and I do.

I can see why people wouldn't like it, it's all a bit ballady, but in the right circumstances, it's just right. Her voice is that of someone much older (Marling is only 21 now, and this album came out in 2008), and her lyrics guide you on a journey throughout.

Opening tracks Ghosts is probably the most upbeat song on here, which in itself is something of a shame, as it's probably also the stand-out track.

The thing is, it's difficult not to like Marling if you read up about her. There is one cracking story about her performing on the pavement outside of her own gig after being denied entry for being underage. In an age of epic divas and megastars, it's great to see someone so young, and so popular, being so down to earth.

Although this album was nominated for the Mercury Prize, I'm not sure that the hype is fully justified, as it was hailed as a masterpiece, whereas I think it's more something to nicely pass the time. It causes no offence, but nor does it have me singing along. It's the perfect accompaniment to a lazy Sunday afternoon.

Perhaps the gods of fate will be kind to me, and she will be performing on the Sunday, when huge crowds nurse three-day accumulative hangovers and don't want anything too strenuous to be going on. Last year, Jack Johnson filled this slot, and Laura Marling would be the perfect act to fill that particular void.

Fingers crossed.

A Feel Good Hit for the Summer? - #22 Queens of the Stone Age - Rated R

Ok, hands up who noticed that the challenge had stalled a little recently? Anyone? Good.

Well it's back, and this time, I mean business. No skipped days, no excuses, just another 30-something days of top music before it's time to get on a plane, fly over the Channel and visit the greatest music festival on the planet.

The catch-up begins here, and will continue throughout the day, so I apologise for taking up so much of your time, but stick with it yeah? You might even find something you like at some point!

Right, back to the album in question, and it's one of my favourite live bands, Queens of the Stone Age. Do I jump straight into talking about the music, or take you on a trip down memory lane? I have a couple of good stories about QOTSA, both of which, unsurprisingly, involve my good friend Steve.

Actually, Steve has had a huge influence on my music tastes. When we met, I was only really interested in listening to rave music, but he forced a bit of taste into me, which has served me well in the years since. I would thank him for that, but his music-based ego is so large I doubt he would fit in his house if it was to grow any bigger.

So, first time I went to see Queens was in Manchester. Steve and his mates had gone down early, with me and my other former uni housemate Sean to follow. We were of course, merely stupid 18-year-olds. And what do said young men do when arriving in a room of people that have been drinking for a few hours? They play catch up. And what happens when you play catch up using absinth? You have a little snooze as the band come on, and get brought back to life by your friend's palm cracking your cheek.

Did I fall asleep at the loudest gig of my life? Only for a few seconds. Sean was out for longer.

The other story? Same two troublemakers. Have you ever tried to drag your barely conscious friend from a mosh pit that's on the verge of kicking off? No? I have. Sean went green, and I had to run before the spit started flying and the boots were a kicking. Thankfully, after I dumped him outside of the crowd, I went back to see the band do what they do best all over again.

From that first day onwards, I've been a huge fan of the band. Although most people will recognise them for No One Knows, I suggest that anyone who only knows that song has a listen to this album. It came out before Songs for the Deaf, which houses No One Knows, and is packed with excellent tunes.

Festival favourite Feel Good Hit of the Summer kicks things off, and pretty much just lists a whole load of drugs that lead man Josh Homme obviously thinks will brighten up an August afternoon. Few people that listen to Queens' in the first place would disagree.

If you were lucky enough to know about  the band before No One Knows, then it may actually be track two, The Lost Art of Keeping a Secret that got you into them. It's heavy guitars are complimented by the afore-mentioned Mr Homme, and it's as catchy a rock song as you're likely to hear.

Leg of Lamb ramps up the rock even further, as does Auto Pilot. Infact, I'm tempted to not even mention anymore specific songs on here. The whole album is a heavy rock masterpiece.

The good news for you is, dear reader, that if you want to purchase it as this stage, you can get hold of a 10th anniversary re-release with bonus tracks and live performances. I got it to review a few months ago, and I can tell you now that it is brilliant.

If buying it isn't your thing, get on Youtube now and at least take in the best tracks. By which I do, of course, mean all of them. Go... Go now.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Now I Can Talk - #21 Two Door Cinema Club - Tourist History

Two Door Cinema Club, one of the highlights for me of Glastonbury Festival last year.

I have to admit that I went into the set blind, but had heard good things about the band, and wanted to see what all the fuss was about. I am delighted to say that I wasn't disappointed.

Dragging the missis and a mate along to the first set of Saturday wasn't their idea of fun at the time, but by the end, both were suitably impressed, and I would imagine that she'll be back with me when they make the shift from the Other Stage to the Pyramid this year.

The shift of venue for their set reflects the success that the band have had in the past 12 months, and I'm happy that they are now deemed worthy of a 'bigger' appearance.

The album itself more than justifies this, by being excellent. From start to finish, it's jangly indie-pop at its best, and a real pleasure to listen to. Although the band may look like a group of schoolkids just out enjoying themselves, and I have little doubt that they are, they know how to make crowd-pleasing anthems, and I'm certain that now I've become a fan, there will be plenty of sing-a-long opportunites throughout the course of their show.

Kicking off with Cigarettes in the Theatre, the album gets off to a flying start, and signals its intentions from the very beginning. There aren't necessarily any slower songs on here, and I could understand if someone were to complain that everything became a little samey at times, but also imagine that the people with that opinion have only given this a passing listen, and it deserves much more than that.

Personally, my favourite track is I Can Talk, although Do You Want It All? and This is the Life have both received a fair amount of airplay on NME TV. On a channel that seemingly only has about 12 songs, it is always a relief when this comes on, and provides a welcome break from Noah and the Whale and that new Arctic Monkeys track.

I would suggest that you go over and see what Rachel had to say about this at some point, she is a big, big fan of this album, and I'm looking forward to seeing what she comes up with.
In conclusion (yeah, that's right, conclusion) - Two Door Cinema Club are what bands should be about. A group of mates having a good time and making music that everyone can dance to, sing-a-long too, and pretty much just enjoy for what it is.

You won't get any complaints from me for approaching making music with that kind of attitude.

A Third of the Way There Already - #20 John Grant - Queen of Denmark

Right, a quick word about the title, not explaining it obviously, it does that itself.

20 days ago, Rachel and myself started this challenge with the intentions of taking in some new music, and letting anyone who cared to listen know our feelings about it along the way. I hope, for those of you that have read some of these, that you've found something that you like, and will come back for more in the future.

My original hope was to get the blog past 1000 views by the time the festival came around, and we had reached our 60th album. At the time of writing, with 19 albums down, and this one not included, the current tally stands at 990. Wow.

It would be unkind of me not to mention that a lot of this may be down to two artists that featured a few days ago. When Dan le Sac and Scroobius Pip both sent out my piece via their Twitter feeds, the numbers went a little crazy over the course of one morning. I am eternally grateful to both, and so should you be, but for their music, not the championing of my cause.

Arguably, the even more fascinating thing about getting almost 1000 views is just where they have come from. UK, understandable. France, understandable. Even America isn't as much of a surprise, although I'm not sure how I gained a following over there, only promoting this on my Twitter and Facebook. The power of the Internet never ceases to amaze me... However, the most interesting following is probably those in Denmark. Hi Denmark? How are you, and how did over 50 of you find my blog? When I add in China, Russia, Switzerland, Spain, Ireland, Germany, Australia and more, I am truly amazed. To anyone in any of these countries reading now, thank you.

You didn't come here to listen to me patting myself on the back though, did you? You came to learn about Mr John Grant, and his Queen of Denmark album.

I'd be delighted if today was the day that I could wax lyrical about a masterpiece that I loved from start to finish. It's not.

I don't actualy have anything against this album, well, apart from one song, but it's not one that I'll be revisiting with any great urgency. There are some fine tracks on here, but it's all a little too odd for me if I'm going to be honest, and not enjoyable odd really, just, well, odd.

Grant seems to enjoy being melancholy, but then, who doesn't from time to time? I seem to remember reading somewhere, a while ago, that he was talked into making this record, as he wasn't very interested in music anymore, something that he references in one of the songs actually, talking about thinking of killing himself.

For me, Chicken Bones is the highlight. It's just another day in life, but one of those days where everyone drives you mad, and you'd be happy if everyone just fucked off and left you alone. His words, not mine.

There is also a pretty good track about feeling like Winona Ryder, and Sigourney Weaver. That's odd too, but in a good way this time.

Oh, and the song I couldn't stand? That's the Good News. Some electrocrap, with the vocals in a crappy accent. It's, well, you know, crap.

But, onwards on upwards fair reader. Take a look at the list, there's a lot to look forward to for the rest of the week, including tomorrow's offering, a band that I saw at last year's festival, and plan to again this time around.

Monday, May 9, 2011

And we were singing... #19 Don McLean - American Pie

If you've ever been near a karaoke machine at the same time as me, you'll know that this is going to be positive from the very start.

One night, a long time ago in Howden, me and my friends invaded a pub and decided that having a go on the karaoke would be a laugh. If I'm totally honest, I don't think we were welcome, and it was possibly even a birthday party that we had gatecrashed. Fortunately for me, and everyone else in there, I was amazing *note to self - may not have actually been that great*, got the crowd on our side *note to self - pretty sure we got thrown out almost straight after* and I've been crooning like Mr McLean at every opportunity since *note to self - not sure I sound exactly like him to be fair*.

I've actually liked the title track from this album from a very, very young age. Despite my dad having a huge vinyl collection, and it containing some absolute classics, I seem to remember playing this 7" single a lot in my youth. It was the only vinyl that I ever really played actually, apart from my Mr Men album, *note to self - probably shouldn't let on about that part*.

But, then again, who can blame me? American Pie was, is, and always will be a classic song. For those unfortunate enough to not know, it sees Mr McLean singing about how and when he discovered that Buddy Holly had been tragically killed in a plane crash. It's eight and a half minutes of wonderful music, and I may be biased for all of the above reasons, and for my affection for Mr Holly too, but it is easily one of my favourite songs of all time.

Admittedly, the rest of the album isn't really my kind of thing, but again, that's not a slur on it at all. I can appreciate it for what it is. There are a lot of ballads in here, although Everybody Loves Me, Baby is an upbeat affair, complete with crowd noise, that really perks up an album that has become a little samey by the time it reaches track seven.

Honestly, my bet would be that at the festival, the veteran crooner won't be taking the risk of playing American Pie first, and seeing how many people stick around for the rest of his set. I will of course be there for the duration, hopping around like an excited five-year-old on Christmas morning, waiting to hear the song, that I have butchered on countless occasions, sweep over the Pyramid Stage, and create possibly the biggest sing-a-long that the festival will see this year.

Right, so that's us back on track. I shall do my best to not get behind again.

Well, there had to be a downside to doing this - #18 Hurts - Happiness

And a downside there most certainly is, for i have to listen to stuff like this.

Can someone please pass on a message to Hurts to me if they happen to bump into them? Or perhaps you could hold up a huge sign at the festival or something, as I won't be going anywhere near the stage when these guys are on. I'd like it to go something like this..

HURTS. Stop it. It isn't 1983 anymore. Spandau Ballet have done this before. They even came back and did it again. That's enough. Thanks.

Admittedly, it would have to be a big sign, but it's an important message. We could maybe get a banner that the whole crowd could hold?

Am I being unfair? No, not really. See this isn't the first time I've had to listen to this album. I used to do album reviews on a weekly basis in my previous job, and this was one that I got sent to have a listen to. The strange thing is though, the rest of the media seemed to be going mad for it, whereas I just thought it was whiny, over-the-top pop crap.

I still do.

I don't want to go into much more to be honest. If you want a 'proper' music journalist's views on it, go and dig out the NME review or something. I think they gave it 8/10. Personally, I wouldn't have strayed past three.

Understated, but Not to be Underestimated - #17 Eels - Beautiful Freak

Hello avid readers of mine... Did you enjoy Steven's Joshua Tree?

Maybe I'll commision a couple more of these before time is up. If I get some voulenteers, and they have to prove that they are HUGE fans of the album in question, then I may do that. Then again, as Rachel so happily pointed out, perhaps it's cheating and not really in the nature of the Challenge, so maybe I won't.

So, apologies for the delay in getting this to you. I've been back in Blighty for the weekend to attend a good friend's wedding. Needless to say, the whole situation was a little messy, so that's why we've fallen behind in the Challenge, but I'm here to put that right now.

And put it right we certainly will with this offering.

Eels. Can't say that before this I'd listened to them in about 10 years, but I was more than aware of Novacaine for the Soul, the opening track on this album. I don't know what it is about this song, but I think it is magnificent. It's a little creepy, it sounds old and new at the same time, and the lyrics are, to be honest, great. 'Life is white, and I am black. Jesus and his lawyer, are coming back'. I mean, come on, what is there not to like? The singer's gravely voice sounds like he's spent too many years in clubs and pubs filled with smoke, which he may well have done by the time that this album came out.

Elsewhere on the album, the title track, My Beloved Monster and Mental are probably the other highlights for me, and while this record doesn't scream and shout at you, it's certainly a very enjoyable way to pass the time.

Will I go see them at the festival? This one's going to come down to what happens when the clashfinder is released. I really wouldn't mind going along, if only for Novacaine for the Soul to be fair, but they may have to be passed upon if there is something else happening that takes my fancy.

So Eels, not the most exciting album we've looked at, but certainly not the worst either.

Next up, Hurts. Balls.

Friday, May 6, 2011

Tear Down The Walls - #16: U2 - The Joshua Tree

Good afternoon reader. I have a confession to make.
When I discovered that I had a ticket to this year's festival, U2 popped straight to mind. Back story - Bono and his bunch of Irish merry men were meant to be performing last year, but pulled out due to the singer's back problems, leaving us with the frankly piss poor replacement Gorillaz.
However, they are going to be there this time, and are therefore part of the Challenge.
Admittedly, I'm not the world's biggest fan of the band, but thankfully, I know someone who loves 'em. Someone who could actually do this album justice, and write about it as if it is one of the greatest albums ever made, as it probably is. For me, I can take it or leave it - but for my guest reviewer it's a bit special. 
So this is my confession – I have bent the rules of the challenge, and drafted in a ringer, as it were... I hope you enjoy his dissection of what is undoubtably Bono and his boys' finest hour. I will be back from tomorrow to guide you through the 44 albums left on our list, but for now, I'll leave you in the capable hands of a man who knows his stuff... 
Ladies and gentlemen, Mr Steven T. Askew...

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If ever there was an album that sounded better on vinyl than CD, it is U2’s The Joshua Tree. The sense of openness, of space and air and sky, deliberately implied in the record’s production simply cannot be replicated by the number-crunching constraints of a condensing and edge-flattening digital format.

It still sounds good on CD and, doubtlessly, through iTunes – that’s the strength of the songs but modern formats have compressed everything to the interior. Current technologies just cannot replicate the vinyl that massive “might burst at the seams” exterior-rush of Where The Streets Have No Name. Built for the open – Glastonbury, get ready the album opener expands from a majestic keyboard introduction with glistening layers of chiming guitars, then kicks in with skittering toms, a four-to-the-floor bass drum and proto-techno bassline.
The music is on dramatically tight and tense reins, threatening to snap free and go off in any direction at any moment as it surges inexorably forward like an adrenalin rush. Bono's primal howl calls out into the wind like an on-the-prowl beast raging against the unknown.
Boxed-in frustration, ecstatic epiphany. Limitless possibilities. That has always been U2’s trick one they mastered, honed and refined on this album.
It can’t be understated that this record was born from a difficult time for the band, unsettled by their performance at 1985’s Live Aid (where, to the outside world they were amongst the handful of acts that ‘stole the show’, but within their own camp were convinced they had ‘completely blown it’). The Joshua Tree is, arguably, the sound of a band only recently aware of what they actually are and, having discovered it is confusingly not quite what they thought, questioning their relevance, questioning whether they actually had anything worthwhile to give. It sees them driving themselves much harder than they need have done to become something bigger, bolder and better than before. As if accepting what you are, standing still, means turning to stone. Or the Rolling Stones.
The Joshua Tree is a record built by a hardworking, twitchingly ambitious band trying to achieve something over-and-above the public’s expectation of them but it is no mere rebranding exercise. It’s admirably, selfishly, shiftingly artistic. It’s the sound of a band trying to confound themselves, willing themselves to say something more with what they’ve discovered they’ve got, pushing to elevate themselves as auters, striving single-mindedly to stand among the greats.
The band pushed the sonic experimentation of their previous album The Unforgettable Fire. Producer Brian Eno’s quirkily different take on the world both educated and challenged U2 – and he continued to nurture fresh and invigorating attitudes to songwriting and recording in them, encouraging new ways for the group to think outside the sturdy and efficiently dynamic post-punk powerhouse they had constructed. Tear down the walls, indeed.
Eno's intellectual approach complemented the band's more visceral songwriting, his technical expertise and intellectual depth enabling their discovery and exploration of previously uncharted sonic territory. Newer, gentler, cleverer, harder, wilder, nobler textures abound. 

Eno pointed each of them out to view the horizon, and facilitated the outer edges of their imagination. His curious aesthetic offered the band the opportunity to stop scrawling on the walls of their writing-room with rudimentary-but-effective one-colour wax crayons, and begin painting the broad widescreen technicolour vistas they envisaged.
The Joshua Tree, exuberant and restrained in all the right places and washed in faint nuances of Americana, was firmly brushed in sepia of course – a stylistic choice but, my God, it’s a rich, immersive and expansive experience.
Pretentiously ambitious and artistically arrogant? Perhaps. But, listening back almost a quarter-of-a-century on, The Joshua Tree still sounds like the most remarkable success on all fronts – the sound of a band kicking down the doors of preconception.
Sure, it takes itself seriously and can be a touch po-faced at times – but forgive and forget that earnestness. The Joshua Tree rages, it rues, it romances. It's reflective. It’s restless, listless, literary. The youthful angst of their previous albums is replaced with a burgeoning maturity, a recognition that enlightenment almost always never comes but that the search must always continue. It's a spiritually unsatisfied – but not unsatisfying – record. The essential 'struggle' of U2, the rage at injustice, is still there but the sloganeering (not that it was ever mere posturing) has been deliberately muted, a deeper, more entrenched, worldview taking root. From Boy to man in only four albums. This is the most poetic record, the defining artistic statement, of the 1980s. And, probably, the greatest achievement in U2’s career.
I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For – a roughly hewn and utterly gorgeous attempt at a new type of gospel music – yearns to find the higher ground, the homeland, the heart of our matter. Anyone who ever doubts Bono’s motives or authenticity should listen to his voice in this humbling and restless push for meaning and purpose. Straining right up against the very top end of his register, it is utterly compelling. Not the sound of a man who ever fakes it or opts for the easy path.
Lead-off single With Or Without You sits comfortably amongst the ‘classic’ songs of all time, and will be familiar to anyone with a radio. But let’s think about it from a side-angle for a moment - what an achievement, for a quirky little song about longing, with little more than a tumbling drum machine beat, a plodding underpin bassline, a sci-fi guitar shimmer, and only four chords. It’s a masterclass in ache, control and release – and, if you’re in ‘that’ mood, it can both collapse and heal the heart.
Running To Stand Still, a reflective comment on heroin abuse amongst the high-towers of estate Dublin, is mournful, resigned, celebratory and defiant all at the same time. In God’s Country is as evocative a lovesong to the American dustbowl as you could wish to hear, with acoustic guitars and The Edge’s trademark bell-like arpeggios fluttering around each other.
One Tree Hill is a heartbreaking – but ultimately uplifting hymn, dedicated to the memory of Bono’s personal assistant Greg Carroll, who died in a road accident during the album’s recording. One man’s small shadow against the grand scheme of things is utterly acknowledged – with caveats… The capability of a man to be a huge part of those he touches, however brief those moments, throughout his physical life is a theme the band would explore in more explicit and active fashion with the 1991 stadium-pleasing single One. Here, though, the spirituality of that notion is expressed in romantically impressionistic poetry. Personal grief never sounded so blurrily poignant, comfortingly beautiful or optimistically universal.   
The original name for The Joshua Tree album was The Two Americas. Very U2 – to examine the grime and underbelly of life alongside the grandeur. Standing amidst the epic red-rock desert vistas they conjure on this record, they are not content to be mere tourists. They simultaneously stare out to the grandeur of the sun on the skyline and turn over the nearest rock for a close look at the darkness, the dampness and to poke at the insects.
Mothers Of The Disappeared and Bullet The Blue Sky paint a very different portrait of the country than the smitten In God’s Country. They deal with areas of American history that are difficult to stomach.
Sonically, Bullet The Blue Sky captures the hell of El Salvador, Vietnam et al – blood, guts, grime, death, destruction, degradation, defiance. Poundingly huge Led Zeppelin drums strong-arm Adam Clayton’s relentlessly warlike bass as it throbs underneath, and the chaos and confusion of The Edge’s fighter-plane guitar work rips devastating holes in the skyline. Over this maelstrom, Bono – for the first time really pushing himself to achieve an album of coherent and tonally connected lyrics – exorcises his inner beat-poet. It’s a remarkable piece of work. In their own canon, the vicious and vivid wordplay knocks the tabloid-headline pitched outrage of Sunday Bloody Sunday into a cocked cowboy hat.
The Joshua Tree is a grown-up record of adult extremes. It’s a record of experiments. It’s a record of achievements. Sometimes naive, often wise. All human life is here.
The fact that the record falls just the smallest distance short of transcendance is, paradoxically, a large part of what makes it utterly transcendant. Despite its flaws, it's jaw-droppingly mesmerising in its strive and ambition, astoundingly good at capturing the physical places it attempts to position itself in, and breathtaking in the way it speaks of the human condition in terms that are accessible and easily understandable whilst also seeming arcane and almost unreachable. That openness, space, air and sky I mentioned earlier is truly crucial – but, in the end, utterly secondary to the sheer heart of it all.
An unsettled but questing U2 had the surety of purpose and scale of ambition to push themselves onwards as far as they could, and the magical alchemy conjured by The Joshua Tree continues to pay undiminished cathedral-sized dividends for listeners almost 25 years after release.

For a band sometimes accused of having Godlike pretentions, that they incidentally wrote what became their own Bible during a period of existential meltdown and spiritual regeneration is one of music’s most worthwhile and rewarding ironies. 
 

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Please, no MOR - #15 Cold War Kids - Mine is Yours

Dear reader, I am happy to announce that yesterday's instalment in the Glasto' 60 Day Challenge was a complete and utter success. Not only did I get to write about one of my favourite bands (dan le sac vs Scroobius Pip - the link is at the side of this page), but both le sac, and Pip RT'd my piece on Twitter, meaning that presumably they both liked it, which is pleasing in itself, but it also meant that my little old blog went from 400 views in 13 days to over 750 as I write this. That, in my book, is a successful day.

It does of course pile pressure on me to keep up the good work, and I hoped that Cold War Kids were going to provide me with a belter of an album to aid me in that, but, alas, the world is never so kind.

I've heard good things about this band, from a lot of people, which means I must have chosen the wrong album, but as I said when the list went up (again, see the links - left), I was looking for albums which I think the bands will be playing from, and if an act has a new album out, it seems fair to presume that at least part of it will feature pretty heavily in their set.

This album though, the band's most recent, is quite poor. Well, no, it's very poor. It's a middle of the road, play it safe borefest.

My initial thought was, confusingly, that this sounds quite a lot like something Cher might come up with. Not only did the voice activate that part of my brain, but also the mundane tunes. There seem to be no risks taken here, it's just 'safe' throughout, and when I say safe, it only serves as a euphemism for dull.

Unfortunately, it wasn't a case of me missing anything on first listen either. On repeat attempts, it still offers little. I have it on right now, but I'm up to track four, and still nothing has actually made me stop and listen. It's just there, in the background, not doing a lot.

I'm not sure what type of music the band has played in the past, as it isn't in the spirit of the Challenge to go poking around in the back catalogues of the acts that I'm unfamiliar with. I'm not even sure how to describe this. It isn't rock music, and I suppose it could be seen as pop, but it's certainly not your more conventional pop music, it's just, well, meh.

It sounds like a lot of effort went into it, which makes me feel bad for having so few strong opinions on it, but despite my best attempts, I can't really offer anything else. There is actually little variation too between the songs. At least with other things that I haven't liked so far, there was a reason. Wild Beasts was just, well, odd, whereas this is just genuinely dull.

I suppose in a way, every song is some kind of ballad, but again, not in a conventional sense. I'd like to pick a highlight out for you, reader, but I just think you'd be better off not bothering with this one. I can remember seeing NME's review of the album, in which they gave it 4/10 and said it was boring, perhaps I should have listened to them, and saved myself the hassle of finding out for myself.

I wouldn't give it a lower mark, as that would suggest that it's got something specifically wrong with it, but it doesn't really, it just potters on by, keeping a close eye on its own ability to be dull. Infact, and I am truly sorry to say this, the most enjoyable bit of this album was when it finished. I wasn't happy about it, I wasn't sad, I was just, well, meh.

Onwards on upwards though, and a true classic is next on the list. And actually, I'm considering doing something a little different for tomorrow, make sure you pop by and see what's happening.