Wednesday 29 December 2010

Albums of the Year 2010: 5-1






















You've seen the albums that nearly made it, and the ones we couldn't stand; now it's time to reveal the Popscener's records of the year 2010. It's the final countdown...

5. These New Puritans - Hidden (Angular/Domino)
Proof that innovation is alive and well outside the claustrophobia and one-upmanship of London’s inner city scenes, Southend-on-Sea’s genre-hopping connoisseurs created a tour de force of art-rock experimentation. The unsettling murmur of children’s choirs met shuddering bangra-beats, meticulous woodwind and brass arrangements (provided by a Czech orchestra) and Richard Garrett’s 19th century poetry, while the eccentric time signatures framed a sound at once menacing and oddly moving. Hearing is believing.



4. Mark Ronson and The Business International – Record Collection (Columbia)
Beyond the bleach blonde pompadour and colourless panel-show appearances, 2010 saw Mark Ronson drop the faux-soul whimsy of his previous musical excursions for a more cutting edge contemporary up-date on '80s synth-pop and electro. The results could have been inconsequential – Ronson’s limp attempts at singing on ‘Record Collection’ are testament to that – but a superb revolving-door supporting cast, including Q-Tip, Kyle Falconer and Rose Elinor Dougall, brought to life a series of brilliantly crafted pop songs. Bringing Boy George (‘Someone to Love Me’) and D’Angelo (‘Glass Mountain Trust’) back to commercial coalface added tenderness and explosive vocal virtuosity to the inescapable hooks.



3. Kanye West – My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy (Roc-A-Fella/Def Jam)
A recording budget of over $3million used to fund sessions with a vast myriad of co-producers and supporting artists – including Jay-Z, Pusha T, Chris Rock, Bon Iver and John Legend – at what amounted to a gated ‘Rap Camp’ ad-hoc community in Hawaii seemed a unsurprising move for the most egomaniacal rapper on the planet. However, what followed was no bling ‘n’ bitches celebration of life in a tropical paradise. Instead, 'Yeezy' carved up critical preconceptions with an album of open-hearted vulnerability, the puffed-chest moments always splintered with an underlying quiver of inadequacy and aching discontent with the rap-star caricature. Beauty prevailed in spades on this undoubted magnum opus.



2. Everything Everything - Man Alive (Geffen)
To describe Everything Everything as a rare beacon of success in 2010 for the kind of angular ‘indie’ long the preserve of many of England’s finest bands would be doing them a disservice. Despite similarities with the naughties’ scatterbrained post-punk resurgence (best realised by The Futureheads and their contemporaries), Everything Everything offered a great leap forward. The  familiar jerky hooks and hyper-melodic art-pop choruses were embellished with rhythmic math-rock precision and spiralling guitar trills. Meanwhile, the dexterous falsetto yelp of frontman Jonathan Higgs was ideally suited to an engaging, articulate examination of the vacuous quick-fix realities of popular culture.



1. Laura Marling - I Speak Because I Can (Virgin)
Folk revivalist Laura Marling’s precocious maturity has been heavily documented, but this should neither boost nor detract from assessments of the 20-year-old’s stunning sophomore record, which stands apart as a majestic landmark in her remarkable development. I Speak Because I Can eschewed the casual immediacy of her debut for something more intricate and captivating. Lyrically, Marling excelled, taking on the role of brow-beaten but stoic daughter (‘Hope in the Air’), girlfriend (‘I Speak Because I Can’) and lover (‘What He Wrote’) in a series of stinging mini-dramas which asserted themselves like epic short-stories amidst a serenely elegiac masterwork. On ‘Goodbye England’, the album’s desperate emotional fulcrum, she countered former lover Charlie Fink’s despondent assessment of their disintegrating relationship (from 2009’s The First Days of Spring) in a breathtaking crescendo. ‘I tried to be the girl who likes to be used / I’m too good for that / there’s a mind under this hat’ she spat – as moving a trichotomy of feeling between rage, sorrow and dignity as was heard the year over.




Don't forget to check out the rest of the albums of the year and the songs of the year for 2010.

Tuesday 28 December 2010

Worst Records of the Year 2010

Hadouken!: PLEASE MAKE IT STOP...























Amidst the abundance of wonderful, inspiring records released in 2010, there were also a handful of stinkers so unspeakably bad that they deserve to be shamed. Some were merely coma-inducingly tedious, others were self-important in epic proportions; the worst were so sadistically unlistenable they would cause nightmares for even the least discerning of listeners. Be warned: approach this catalogue of horror at your peril...

10. Blonde Redhead – Penny Sparkle (4AD)
Ditched guitars for electronica and experimental self-indulgence. Failed to sparkle.

9. Interpol –
Interpol (Matador)
Gloomy post-punk and droning baritone stuck to type, but this time: no songs.

8. Crystal Castles – Crystal Castles (Fiction)
Destined henceforth to be scene but not heard.

7. Teenage Fanclub – Shadows (PeMa)
Ageing early fans cooed – proving a band now better suited to dinner parties than teenage fanclubs.

6. The Miserable Rich – Of Flight and Fury (Humble Soul)
Throttled the tongue-in cheek whimsy out of Neil Hannon’s chamber/baroque shtick. The bon mots and personality, too.

5. The National – High Violet (4AD)
Insipid, lumbering (and critically acclaimed) heartland-post-punk guff made by the most boring people in the world for the most boring people in the world.

4. Midlake – The Courage Of Others (Bella Union)
Wearisome, timid progressive folk drivel made by the most boring people in the world for the most boring people in the world. No great critical kudos, either.

3. The Courteeners – Falcon (Polydor)
A record so aggressively dreadful musically that you would be forgiven for missing Liam Fray’s wretched, misogynistic lyrics and nauseating cornball delivery.

2. Tobacco – Maniac Meat (Anticon)
Genuinely murderous faux-rap/crap-hop/psycho-rock effort from screw-loose loon Tom Fec. Impossible even to make it through one full play of two cuts featuring Beck’s moderating influence.

1. Hadouken! – For The Masses (Noisia)
The Leeds quintet proved their shamelessly disgusting genre-hopping trend-following bandwagon-jumping ‘career’ had run it’s course with this risible dance dirge which even the most chemically elevated scenesters couldn’t dance to, and the horrified casual radio listener couldn’t avoid given a chart placing (#19) which categorically proves the record buying public can’t be trusted. One positive: bad enough to give genuine hope there won’t be a next time.

Try some better records released in 2010 or check out the best songs of the year.  

Monday 27 December 2010

Albums of the Year 2010: 15-6

The Soft Pack: Instantly likeable and eminently listenable



















Part two of the best albums of 2010, as chosen by the Popscener...

15. Vampire Weekend - Contra (XL)
Still in thrall to Paul Simon and his adventures in Afrobeat, the unashamedly preppy New York quartet nonetheless put their Columbia book-smarts to more considered effect than on the carefree frolic of their debut. The result: a series of laments on the uncomfortable post-college disquiet in realising that youth is transitory, all held together by Ezra Koenig’s bittersweet lilt.



14. Happy Birthday - Happy Birthday (Sub Pop)
Initially coming across like a Sub Pop surf-craze cash-in, breeding Wavves’ devil-may-care insouciance and Magic Kids’ ‘60s pastiche, repeated exposure revealed Happy Birthday to be a far more formidable beast. The melodies were too thrillingly warped and the musical palette – switching from 90s alternative rock (‘Pink Strawberry Shake’) to synth-psyche ballads (‘Subliminal Message’) – too varied to be rooted in artifice. Their next could be very special.

13. Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti - Before Today (4AD)
Resident oddball Ariel Pink had, until this year, spent his time barely-coordinating a stream of lo-fi oddities (such as 2008’s Oddities Sodomies Vol.1, no less). Before Today fine-tuned Pink’s musical schizophrenia and streamlined his half-formed ideas, creating something no less weirdly eclectic, but more compact and coherent. The rewards were deliciously decadent, frequently inspired – and manifold.

12. Les Savy Fav - Root For Ruin (French Kiss)
Following up 2007’s Let’s Stay Friends – a career zenith unlikely to be matched – was always going to be a thankless task, so the under-appreciated New Yorkers could be forgiven for talking several years to carefully devise their next move. They chose a sidestep rather than a great leap-forward, retaining Let’s Stay Friends’ masterful manipulation of rhythmic fluctuation, but filling more of the dry open spaces with visceral guitar shapes. And the post-hardcore pop song (‘Dear Crutches’) was a delight.

11. Laura Veirs - July Flame (Bella Union)
Seven albums and eleven years into a still-burgeoning career, July Flame found the alt-folk singer at her shrewdest ebb yet. She played to strengths, negating the thin reediness of her voice by double-tracking her vocal and embellishing her choruses with the kind of ornate harmonies (often beefed up by My Morning Jacket’s Jim James) which did justice to her sumptuous grasp of melodic resonance. The words were pensive, even forlorn, but never maudlin.

10. Ted Leo - The Brutalist Bricks (Matador)
After the disappointment of 2007’s sprawling misfire Living With The Living, sprightly 30-something social-idealist punk Ted Leo went back to basics on his Matador debut, firing out a succession of curt, bristling punk-rock tirades which soldered instantly claimable hooks to intricate guitar stabs. As usual, the political moments (‘The Stick’, ‘Ativan Eyes’) brimmed with passion and conscience; as usual, the personal as political cuts (‘Bottled Up In Cork’, ‘Even Heroes Have To Die’) jumpstarted head and heart with cracked-macho displays of vulnerability.

9. The Wave Pictures - Susan Rode the Cyclone (Self-released)
The midlands trio further cemented their cult status with this limited edition LP, which appeared only to be released in infuriatingly small numbers on the continent. A missed opportunity perhaps, as David Tattersall’s blend of off-kilter indie-pop, psyche-folk and unique inside-out tremolo-arm soloing emphasised enough ingĂ©nue and songcraft to prompt a broader following. The hooks were reined in by the usual heady lyrical mix of misanthropy, romance and tongue-in cheek violent imagery. Always peculiar; often brilliant.

8. Medications - Completely Removed (Dischord)
Vying with Outrageous Cherry [see below] for the most underrated record of 2010, Completely Removed was bafflingly overlooked outside of a brief flurry of interest stateside. A first record in 5 years from the instrument swapping DC duo of Devin Ocampo and Chad Molter saw them move beyond the exhilarating post-hardcore of 2005’s Your Favourite People All In One Place, exploring styles as diverse as bossa-nova (‘Brazil 2007’) and prog-rock (‘Country Air’) with enviable chops and airtight synchronicity.

7. Outrageous Cherry - Seemingly Solid Reality (Alive Records)
Amidst a plethora of contemporary upstarts peddling hazy, stumbling '60s pop with surf-textures and '80s baritone vocals, Outrageous Cherry’s 9th full-length record since their 1992 inception should have provided closure for their long-suffering commitment to the cause. However, despite a deftness to their arrangements and open-hearted gutter-romanticism placing them streets ahead of the competition, Seemingly Solid Reality was not so much overlooked as completely ignored. Lucky they know just how to articulate life not being fair.

6. The Soft Pack - The Soft Pack (Heavenly)
In a year where many pre-eminent acts took their lead the lush, overloaded arrangements of Pet Sounds or the claustrophobic saturation of 80s wall-of-sound guitars, The Soft Pack's dryer, rhythm-heavy sound counterbalanced their snaking surf-guitar licks with the heart-racing recklessness of The Replacements and The Barracudas’ sense of fun. The result was instantly likeable and eminently listenable; lighter perhaps than contemporaries, but never flimsy – singer Matt Lamkin’s thinly-veiled reverence for Jonathan Richmann’s lyrical clout made sure of that.

Try the Spotify playlist for some of the best tracks from Albums of the Year 2010: 15-6

Don't forget to check out the Albums of the Year 2010: 25-16 and the Albums of the Year 2010: Honourable Mentions.

Take a look at the Songs of the Year 2010

Sunday 26 December 2010

Songs of the Year 2010: 25-1

Japandroids: Chords for celebration


















No gimmicks, just part two of the run-down of the best 50 songs (including album tracks and singles) of 2010, as chosen by The Popscener...

25. These New Puritans – Drum Courts (Hidden, Angular/Domino)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lAtzrQtNJfU
24. Shimmering Stars – I'm Gonna Try (n/a, Almost Musique)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HNDtpoLfM9U
23. Good Shoes – Way My Heart Beats (No Hope No Future, Brille)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ozkxEI-EfI
22. Mark Ronson – Bang Bang Bang (Record Collection, Columbia)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PzE5dS6fnFk
21. Les Savy Fav – Dear Crutches (Root For Ruin, Frenchkiss Records)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zUlrkstmTfE
20. Kele – Tenderoni (The Boxer, Wichita)


19. Cee Lo Green – Fuck You (The Lady Killer, Elektra)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pc0mxOXbWIU
18. Soft Pack – C'Mon (The Soft Pack, Kemado Records)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XgU2NhcoqWg
17. Black Francis – Cinema Star (NonStopErotik, Cooking Vinyl)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jOIWV_UMSGA
16. Band Of Horses – Laredo (Infinite Arms, Brown Records/Fat Possum/Columbia)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f-DWW3SHPyI
15. Warpaint – Baby (The Fool, Rough Trade)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AedHv7geXcU
14. Allo Darlin – My Heart Is A Drummer (Allo Darlin, Fortuna Pop!)


13. Medications – Seasons (Completely Removed, Dischord)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5VNVykX6OXs
12. Everything Everything – Photoshop Handsome (Man Alive, Geffen)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6udfNIzRUX0
11. Wave Pictures – Marie Again (Susan Rode the Cyclone, Self-released)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b38O_Lz3F-0
10. Summer Camp – Was It Worth It (Young EP, Moshi Moshi)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EE0MhXo05M4
9. Spoon – Trouble Comes Running
(Transference, Merge)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hwxpJD8HTQo
8. Kanye West – Runaway (My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy, Roc-A Fella/Def Jam)


7. Broken Social Scene – Sentimental X's (Forgiveness Rock Record, Arts & Crafts)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q48MJGZZxEg
6. Ted Leo – Bottled Up In Cork (The Brutalist Bricks, Matador)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VoOZn3x7Smk
5. Laura Veirs – Life Is Good Blues (July Flame, Bella Union)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GrTIa1B0nkA
4. Robyn – Dancing On My Own (Body Talk, Konichiwa)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CcNo07Xp8aQ
3. Mark Ronson/D'Angelo – Glass Mountain Trust (Record Collection, Columbia)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=62mn553xel4
2. LCD Soundsystem – Drunk Girls (This Is Happening, DFA/Virgin)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1xT6cdfP_cM
1. Japandroids – Younger Us (n/a, Polyvinyl)


What do you think? Leave your comments below

There's also a spotify playlist for those of you who want to listen to the songs of 2010 in one place.

Don't forget to check out the Songs of the Year 2010: 50-26 and Albums of the Year 2010

Thursday 23 December 2010

Songs of the Year 2010: 50-26

Wolf Parade: Oh YES, old things...
















No gimmicks, just a run-down of the best 50 songs (including album tracks and singles) of 2010, as chosen by The Popscener...

50. Kelis – Acapella (Flesh Tone, Interscope)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U8D9xCBcfzw
49. Pernice Brothers – Fucking and Flowers (Goodbye, Killer, Ashmont Records)
Spotify link
48. Jenny and Johnny – Big Wave (I’m Having Fun Now, Warner Bros)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BwtV7L5bxtk
47. Bad Religion – Devil In Stitches (The Dissent Of Man, Epitaph)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5G_kxQY3Ng8
46. No Age – Glitter (Everything In Between, Sub Pop)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j3_t3q1tjH4
45. Male Bonding – Year's Not Long (Nothing Hurts, Sub Pop)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CeUn11bkuZk
44. Aloe Blacc – I Need the Dollar (Good Things, Stones Throw Records)


43. Eels – Nowadays (End Times, Vagrant)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c6_2E0MF2bY
42. MGMT – It's Working (Congratulations, Columbia)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JyaDTiXH3R4
41. Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin – Everlyn (Let It Sway, Polyvinyl)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wWs4Q2mNBBE
40. Sky Larkin – Tiny Heist (Kaleide, Wichita)
Spotify link
39. High Wire – Hang From The Lights (The Sleep Tape, Grandpa Stan)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PKJMvcdQmA4
38. Wavves – King of the Beach
(King of the Beach, Bella Union)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C5biCmyJQtM
37. Hold Steady - Hurricane J (Heaven Is Whenever, Vagrant)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bG4ABgTuCqA
36. Tokyo Police Club – Favourite Food (Champ, Mom + Pop Music Co.)


35. Gyptian – Hold You (Hold You, VP Records)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YKlCEUngHB0
34. Blur – Fool's Day (n/a, Parlophone)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V8ixnqRyfzU
33. Laura Marling – Made By Maid (I Speak Because I Can, Virgin)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wjQN_n3KQ9c
32. Wolf Parade – Oh You, Old Thing (Expo 86, Sub Pop)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yV3Zgc_tnJg
31. Drive-By Truckers – Daddy Learned To Fly (The Big To-Do, ATO)
Spotify link
30. Tinie Tempah – Pass Out (Disc-Overy, Parlophone)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QzvGKas5RsU 
29. Summer Camp – Round the Moon (Young EP, Moshi Moshi)


28. Young Veins – Take A Vacation (Take A Vacation, One Haven)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cM58bE_WPCc
27. Fools Gold – Surprise Hotel (Fool’s Gold, IAMSOUND)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e9zFEAda0_g
26. Vampire Weekend – Giving Up The Gun (Contra, XL)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bccKotFwzoY

Want it all in one place? Try this handy spotify playlist

Don't forget to check out The Popscener's Albums of the Year 2010

Albums of the Year 2010: 25-16
















 Part one of the best 25 albums released in 2010, as chosen by The Popscener...

25. Black Francis - Nonstoperotik (Cooking Vinyl)
The Pixies man returned to twisted, ingenious form on Nonstoperotik, which could have been the soundtrack to a film-noir/porn crossover with Francis as the lusty master-criminal protagonist.






24. Best Coast - Crazy For You (Mexican Summer)
Bethany Cosentino’s always-stoned homage to 60s garage-pop and simple ruminations on love was perfect late-Summer listening.

23. Caribou - Swim (City Slang)
Mixing burst of psyche-pop with pulsating dancefloor shakers and brooding electronics, Dan Snairn tempered the math-geek in him to produce his most accessible effort.

22. Drive-By Truckers - The Big To-Do (ATO)
Streets ahead the endless country clichĂ©s they imbibe and subvert, D-BT’s lived-in sound added their best batch yet of grim, insular and morbidly detailed small-town tragedies.

21. LCD Soundsystem - This Is Happening (DFA/Virgin)
Going out on a ‘high’ is the easy quip, but James Murphy and co had never sounded as level headed and focussed on what is purported to be their final studio album. The hilarious yet empathetic ‘Drunk Girls’ was also one of the singles of the year. 





20. Allo Darlin' - Allo Darlin' (Fortuna Pop!)
Ugly as the tag of ‘twee-pop’ might be, Allo Darlin’ strummed their ukes with pride and pristine melodic vigour, while Aussie singer Elizabeth Morris decorated the hooks with mournful short-stories on the lukewarm thrill of life as a going-nowhere-fast 20-something in London.

19. Bad Religion - The Dissent Of Man (Epitaph)
Perhaps a last shot at the ‘big time’ – as far as their tightly-coiled double-time, four chords and oozin-ahh harmonies allow – Graffin and Gurewitz sharpened their songwriting chops, stuck closely to tunes with words rather than words with, well, anything and fashioned their best for a decade.

18. Afrocubism - Afrocubism (World Circuit)
14 years on from the original aborted sessions between Cuban and Malian musicians in Havana, Afrocubism’s mesmerising culture-clash turned out to be worth the wait. Beautifully played, and imbued with an air of almost symbiotic chemistry and serene relaxation.





17. Male Bonding - Nothing Hurts (Sub Pop)
Unashamedly rough and raucous, the lone Sub Pop Brits’ debut nonetheless polished the sharp edges of the rambunctious garage-punk-rock of their live shows enough for the songs to shine. Moreover, the London trio displayed a breadth to their sonic palette – including an acoustic number, no less – which had been hitherto unrealised.

16. Jenny and Johnny - I'm Having Fun Now (Warner Bros)
Jenny Lewis may have found her muse in boyfriend and co-collaborator Johnathan Rice. His half-flat dourness perfectly tempered the sometimes-cloying sickliness of Jenny’s vocal whine, while the relationship sub-plot added a layer of intrigue to call and response arguments (‘My Pet Snakes’) and an unhealthy obsession with razorblades. Hearty surf-pop, alt-country and shoegaze flourishes provided ballast.

Check the Spotify playlist for a aural overview of Albums of the Year 2010: 25-16

Wednesday 22 December 2010

Interview: Shimmering Stars

Shimmering Stars: Rock 'n' Roll saviours?


















Having forthrightly plugged Shimmering Stars’ latest single, ‘I’m Gonna Try’ (released last Monday), which made a late run for one of my favourite songs of the year, I thought it might be an idea to talk to let the charming Vancouver quartet introduce themselves and do some plugging of their own. I caught up with singer/guitarist Rory McClure to get his views on the internet, time travel, and the band’s plans for 2011. Turns out he’s quite a funny chap...

Give people who haven’t heard you the lowdown on Shimmering Stars in 10 words or less...
Dreamy downer pop. Recommended for the heartbroken and the insane.

I started a band because....

Rock and roll needed to be saved and clearly I was the only man for the job.

What plans do you have for 2011? Can we expect a full length record next year?

2011 is either going to be a huge year for us or a huge, embarrassing failure. But one thing I’m sure of is that we’ll be releasing a full length in 2011. It’s 95% done and I’m really happy with it. We’re very hopeful that we’ll be playing SXSW and doing a European tour as well.  We’re also very hopeful that Andrew will spontaneously combust on stage, as countless drummers do each year. 

I’m told that your influences include “anxiety attacks” and “antisocial behaviour” – please explain.

If my group of friends is any indication, a lot of people in their 20s exist in a weird state of prolonged adolescence where there aren’t any guidelines or expectations as to what we should be doing with our lives. To have this kind of freedom is a mixed blessing. The possibilities are endless, but with all this possibility comes a kind of paralysing anxiety about what to do, who to be, and ‘The Future’. These kinds of themes inform a lot of the lyrics for Shimmering Stars...

This interview was conducted for The Line Of Best Fit. Go here to continue reading the full interview.

Brief Lives: 5 Tracks from 2010's Dearly Departed

With every year that passes, another sorry constellation of musical bright lights see their stars burn out forever, their souls going to join John, Freddie, Jimi and the rest in rock-star Valhalla. Whilst any passing life is distressing to contemplate, at least musicians can continue to touch people posthumously through a legacy which will far outlive them, and may even grow in breadth, stature and popularity in their absence. As 2010 draws to a close, we thought it proper to revisit the work of some of this year’s departed musicians, to remind old fans or downright inspire new recruits. Below are five less heralded but emblematic cuts from artists such as Alex Chilton, Gregory Isaacs and Ari Up.















Gregory Isaacs: ‘Let’s Dance’ (available on Cool Ruler, 1978)

Before reggae icon Gregory Isaacs succumbed to lung cancer earlier this year, the “lonely lover” had sighed his way through a 40-year career with such melancholic vocal purity he could make a grown man swoon. When Isaacs signed to Virgin Records in 1978, mainstream stardom beckoned, but beyond a ripple of success for signature track ‘Night Nurse’ his brand of lovers rock never took-off. This loping minor-key masterpiece from his major-label debut epitomises Isaacs’ understated brilliance – a tale of rudimentary dancehall passion brought to life by the tender ache of Isaacs’ delivery and lines like “I want to feel your lips resting my mind”, which said as much about his wearying addiction to crack-cocaine as his need to feel loved.

This article was written for TheLineOfBestFit. Click here to continue reading.

Sunday 12 December 2010

Politics/Music #5: Bad Religion

Check out my politicsSLASHmusic column in this month's splendid Notion Magazine as I offer up some free PR work for punk-rock legends Bad Religion and their excellent new record, reliving my youth as a 15-year old punk in long-shorts and Vans hoodies in the process. Includes a potted history of the band's finest sub-30 minute classics, plus an exploration of how they fitted into the early-80s recession overseen by Thatcher and Reagan, and why they're now more relevant than ever. One small step in my mission to make punk-rock cool again.

The article is on page 28 of the magazine's digital reader



Wednesday 3 November 2010

Interview: Everything Everything

Interview with Manchester-based art-rock chart champions Everything Everything. Check out the condensed version over at Spoonfed.co.uk, or the expanded reissue below. 

Hype can be a poisoned chalice. The balloon can quickly burst on some poor feted next big thing, whether commercially or critically. Worse still, a band can be left trailing in the triumphant wake of their like-minded peers, labeled as Johnny-come-latelys to a party they might have helped start, or simply engulfed by the hot air cloud surrounding contemporaries and forgotten.

It’s a fate which could have befallen Everything Everything. Labeled part of a spurious ‘Manchester scene’ – although the quartet formed in Manchester, none of their members hail from the musically fertile metropolis – the band had been forced to play third fiddle whilst fellow leading lights Delphic and Hurts saw their stock soar. All three were long-listed for the BBC Sound of 2010 poll, but only Everything Everything failed to make the final shortlist. As 2010 stuttered to life, Delphic hit the top ten with debut album Acolyte, while just a day before the release of Everything Everything’s own debut Hurts scored an unlikely singles chart hit with the icy synthpop of ‘Wonderful Life’. Meanwhile, the band was left fretting over their prospective fortunes as trailing single ‘MY KZ, UR BF’ stalled at a hundred and twenty-one.

They needn’t have worried, as Man Alive duly gate crashed the UK top twenty, picking up open-mouthed plaudits en route. It was a fitting prize for a record which fizzes with invention, often flitting seamlessly between unconventional time signatures before peaking in a series of beautifully melodic art-pop choruses, all held together with the dexterous falsetto yelp of frontman Jonathan Higgs.

If the music both challenges and rewards, then the band themselves are a far more straightforward proposition. Preparing to perform at a Spotify/3G sponsored show at Shoreditch Town Hall, I find Higgs and drummer Michael Spearman in genial spirits. Articulate and warm, they riff off one another; touching upon in-jokes without ever seeming exclusive, while their answers exhibit a sharp, self-deprecating wit underpinning thoughtful reflections – starting with their reaction to music scenes.

Thursday 28 October 2010

Politics/Music #4: New New Labour and Brothers in Arms

Go and check out the PoliticsSlashMusic column in this month's Notion Magazine for a (not very) detailed exploration of the Miliband's infighting and the death of New Labour. And then a few columns of guff about brothers in bands who liked to fight one another, like The Kinks and Oasis. You can thank me later.

The article can be found on page 37 using the Digital Reader at the following link:

 http://theenvironment.vfolio.co.uk/notion/67/


Tuesday 12 October 2010

Under the Radar Indie Labels

Guest blog on 'Under the Radar Indie Labels' for Virgin.com/music...

As another week of the X Factor bites the soporific dust, in its wake 21st century music aficionados could be forgiven for feeling a little left out.

Simon Cowell owns the airwaves; High Fidelity-esque niche independent record stores continue to close at an alarming rate. Oh, and Phil Collins is back in the top five of the charts. These are dark days, are they not?

Well, actually no. The charts may seem like a watered down recreation of a Friday night playlist at a cheap club, but that hasn’t stopped independent record labels springing up left, right and centre to get great underground music out into the public domain.

Some of our best loved bands of the past decade – from British Sea Power to Best Coast – have been housed by efficiently run and artistically fertile ‘indies’. Beyond these, however, there exist scores of tiny labels who put out records purely as a labour of love. Here are a few of the best under-the-radar UK independent labels you might never have heard of...

Read the rest of this blog at Virgin.com/music

Sunday 10 October 2010

Interview: Gang of Four

Go and check out my interview with post-punk legends Gang of Four for my politicsSLASHmusic column in Notion magazine...


http://theenvironment.vfolio.co.uk/notion/64/ - Page 40 of the Digital Reader

Interview: Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin

Some words I did for Spoonfed.co.uk after a chat with SSLYBY...

They are firestarters, twisted firestarters

Being as easily amused as small child at Christmas, I’ve always tended to love bands with faintly amusing names – ‘The Yummy Furs’ (snigger), ‘Japandroids’ (guffaw), ‘Roy Division’ (somebody stop me). Presumably the exact same strand of my uncomplicated DNA encourages a partiality to hummable, easily digested power-pop.

Imagine then how palpably excited I was upon learning that Springfield, Missouri tykes Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin had returned with a brand new record, the ripsnortingly catchy Let It Sway. Excited enough to hunt them down and ask them about it (and a bunch of other things), that’s how.

Important matters first: what’s in the name? I’m sure you get this one a lot.

We were teenagers. We thought it would be good idea to have a really long band name. Boris Yeltsin was in the news a lot because everyone was making fun of his alcoholism and political ineptitude. We used his name without thinking anything about it. He was a terrible president, so I'm sure we've offended a lot of people.

You guys are originally from Springfield, Missouri – is there much of a burgeoning indie scene there? Do you think you found it tougher not being East or West coast boys and tied to a big city?

In the 1950s there was a nationally televised music show in Springfield called The Ozark Jubilee. Patsy Cline and Johnny Cash appeared on it regularly. Also, Jonathan Richman recorded an album here with a Springfield band called the Skeletons in the '80s. It's called 'Jonathan Goes Country' and I recommend it highly.

Anyway, I think the internet makes it somewhat irrelevant where you're from. My life has been too busy lately to think about the scenes in Brooklyn and LA. I'm sure they have cooler jeans, but mine were really cheap...

Read the FULL INTERVIEW here

Tuesday 2 March 2010

Gecko - New Bands

New music highly recommended by The Popscener.

Today's hotshots: Gecko

Not necessarily the usual fare The Popscener vibes, but two beautifully sunny days to start this week mean that Bristolian duo Gecko have my stolen my affections with their acoustico-pop and bonhomic cheer. However, that's not to damn them with the faintest praise; they certainly know their way around a melody and are refreshingly neither surf, shoegaze or folk - perhaps making them unique amongst their current peers.
In short: Mariachi El Bronx + Jamie T + Summer boozing = Gecko

Try: Guanabana Juice (live) below, but there are far better tracks (What You Gonna Do?) on the myspace.



http://www.myspace.com/gecko

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Wednesday 17 February 2010

Black Manila Beach Parade - New Bands

More highly recommended new and underground music from The Popscener.

Today's hotshots: Black Manila Beach Parade

Mindful of the grand tradition of bands surf bands (The Beach Boys, The Barracudas, The Surfaris) named thematically to correspond with their sound, unsigned London trio Black Manila Beach Parade take it upon themselves to move things a step further. And so, the obligatory 'Beach' reference is joined by the mysterious 'Black Manila', hinting at the dark twinges of psychedelia (and creepy facepaint), and 'Parade', which more or less accounts for the large segments that sound quite a lot like The Doors. By no means the finished article, but ArtRocker certainly haven't been splashing about in the rip and kicking up hype foam for nothing.

Try: Jean LeLoup on their Myspace or the epic Calavera Catrina below



www.myspace.com/blackmanilabeachparade

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Wednesday 10 February 2010

Montage Populaire - New Bands

More highly recommended new and underground music from The Popscener.

Today's hotshots: Montage Populaire

With that winning, oft-desired mix of hook-heavy tunes and an air of arch detachment, Montage Populaire are an indie blogger's wet dream. The brainchild of singer-songwriter Luke Donovan, their pleasantly underproduced demos approximate elements of post-punk and jangle-pop for the laptop generation - to thrilling effect. In fact, they're so good that even though they only formed last Autumn, Montage Populaire are already making their way around the South-East's nether regions and popping across the channel in March for 3-day Gallic excursion. Misery for every jobbing indie-rocker from Birmingham or Leeds; delight the rest of us.

Try: Break up the Band on their Myspace or Last Among Equals below




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Friday 5 February 2010

Everybody Was In The French Resistance....NOW! - New Bands

More highly recommended new and underground music from The Popscener.

Today's hotshots: Everybody was in the French Resistance...Now!

Any work featuring the considerable talents of Art Brut's Eddie Argos - the indie Stephen Fry - has a better than average chance of tickling the ribs whilst stimulating the ears, and this new side-project, imaginatively entitled Everybody was in the French Resistance...Now! doesn't disappoint. This effort is less garage rock and more baroque pop, and may feature the lumbering frontman's most energetic vocal yet, whilst losing none of his usual acerbic wordplay and dry charm. All of which would have made a late charge for the TOTP appearance Argos so craves a possibility had the show not been defunct for almost four years...oh well.

Try: G.I.R.L.F.R.E.N.


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Wednesday 3 February 2010

Surfer Blood - New Bands

More highly recommended new and underground music from The Popscener.

Today's hotshots: Surfer Blood

Despite a name which appears to point to some sort of anti aquatic-sports based death metal, luckily Surfer Blood are a far less scary proposition. Instead, the Florida natives present a fairly novel take on the emerging (and soon to be omnipresent) 'nu-wave' surf-rock thing, mixing 70s/80s power-pop a la Cheap Trick with the usual chirruping guitar work, doo-wop melodies and songs about, erm, surfing.

Try: Swim (to reach the end)


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Sunday 31 January 2010

Mixtapes and Cellmates - New Bands

More highly recommended new and underground music from The Popscener.

Today's hotshots: Mixtapes and Cellmates

Actually formed back in 2005, this Swedish quintet are now starting to make a bit of a splash. Their unfathomable name might make them sound like a bedroom-emo band, but fear not - they actually mix a driving alt-rock sound with equal parts noisey guitar squeaking and pop hooks. One Little Indian have picked them up, so based on the law of record label averages they must be at least OK.

Try: Soon


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Saturday 2 January 2010

Best Albums of 2009... and more!


The below was originally a feature for subba-cultcha.com but the powers that be have decided to scrap the writers' best ofs this year - presumably because we are all ignorant trend-followers devoid of an independent thought. Regardless, here it is anyway. Enjoy!

Official Secrets Act – Understanding Electricity – One Little Indian
Amongst the saturation of guitar-noise, vocal effects and synth-splurges that characterized 2009, OSA shone like a beacon for what matters most: the songs. This criminally overlooked record melds the Beatles’ White Album with smatterings of XTC rhythm and lyrics recalling Blur’s middle-class dysfunction (personal favourite: “Well Victoria, I have seen the x-rays”). The pop album of the year.

Wild Beasts – Two Dancers – Domino Records
Genuinely enthralling record likely to provoke an immediate sensory response from those who hear it for the first time – if only due to the piercing falsetto vocals and dissonant, ringing guitars. Once ears acclimatize to the din, however, what we are left with is the most well executed attempt at innovation heard this year; a record which marries experimentation with both confidence and memorable songs.  

The Horrors – Primary Colours - XL
Shoegaze has been making a rather conspicuous comeback this year, and much as it might pain some to back these spider-limbed trendsters, credit where credit’s due: this was the best of the lot. Extra points for the single of the year, ‘Sea Within a Sea’, for making 8 minutes breeze by in blissfully eerie fashion.

The Antlers – Hospice – Frenchkiss Records
The heart-wrenching tale of living through a close friend dying of cancer, Hospice gains an extra point for being that most elusive of things: a concept album with a purpose (i.e. not a sprawling, LSD-fuelled examination of ‘space’ or ‘colours’). Musically it cultivated a melting pot of both electronic and electric noise set back in the mix, while vocals dripping with childlike emotion wove simple patterns over the top. A must hear.

The Joy Formidable – A Baboon Called Moaning – Pure Groove
Admittedly only a mini-album, but worthy of mention nonetheless – largely thanks to a perfectly formed sound which welded yet more shoegazey wall-of-noise with a poppier aesthetic. Bonus points for the airily sexy vocals and the (ever receding) tendency for repetition, flattering listeners with the assumption that their attention spans are not so short that they need a new song figure every 15 seconds. Tres bien.


I also had to pick my favourite books/DVDs/Live shows of the year. Here goes...

LIVE – Blur @ Hyde Park – 3 July
Wonderfully triumphant return for the most adaptable (and indeed talented) of the Britpop troupe. Songs which seemed very of-the-time have mostly dated well, the musicianship was sublime and even the weather held up. All well and good, but when there’s 50,000 palpably delighted people aged 15-50 bouncing up and down in unison to ‘Girls and Boys’, frankly nothing else matters anyway.

LIVE – Pixies @ Brixton Academy – 6 October.
Older, balder, fatter, but no less relevant. The Pixies proved they can still produce the goods live with this unique cover to cover performance of their classic record Doolittle (plus attending b-sides). Omitting ‘Where is My Mind’ from the encore will have irked some, but the overwhelming majority were too busy savouring the moment. Joyous.

LIVE – Lemonheads @ Forum, Kentish Town – 19 September
Much-maligned by credible indie types in the 1990s, but this show was living proof that trends are fickle and talent will invariably outlast the contemporary whims. Sure, the songs may be simple as a rule rather than an exception, but add in the magnetic presence of the lumbering Evan Dando – not to mention his superlative vocals – and magic springs forth. Bonus points for the welcome variety afforded by the rapid-fire acoustic interlude.

DVD – Nirvana: Live at Reading – Universal
Spine-tingling vision of the legendary band. From the tongue-in-cheek entrance of Cobain in a wheelchair to the sprawling, feedback tracked instrument smashing finale, Nirvana sparkle. The camera pleasingly divides its time fairly evenly between band members, whilst their visceral, ear-splitting sound is pristinely recreated. Best bit – Cobain: “this is our last show ever...,” Novoselic: “...for today” – surely a worthy insight into the band’s personality dynamic.

BOOK – John Harris – Hail! Hail! Rock ‘n’ Roll – Sphere Publishing
Former NME editor John Harris proves once again that he is witty, erudite and engaging with this compendium of all things weird and wacky in pop and rock music from the last 50 years. Best bit: collection of the worst lyrics ever and Harris’ response i.e. Travis’ ‘Turn’ referred to as “greeting card-esque wisdom that occasionally suggested work of optimistic eight-year olds”.

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