Westbam, Beatbox rocker (Mute) 12"
Sounds like an old Run DMC tune of "It's like that vintage" sharpened
up for today's dancefloor in a modern electro manner that's more
respectful and appropriate than Jason Nevins' pumping chop
job. Remixed for extra box rocking by Freq Nasty and BLIM.
Discordia, Y sun over Discordia (Fortuna Pop) 7"
Discordia is a lost kingdom, the ruler---or Disc Joq'hee, as he is
known---is Joni formerly of John Sims and this track is one of the
picks from last year's "Muzico Discordia" album (what am I saying?
they're all gems.) It's a hip hop loop, some vaguely Arabic wind
instrument and a rippling, tinkling sample that might just be from the
ITV weather intro layered up into a pocket money DJ Shadow with an eye
each on the clock and the main chance. Smashing.
Butterflies of Love, Wild/It's different now (Secret 7/Fortuna
Pop) 7"
Was it really 3 years ago that I was playing "Rob a bank" on the
radio? And, apart from the UK reissue of that single, is this really
the first I've heard from these Butterflies in that time? Yes and yes
is the answer. It's easy to understand, when you hear the emotional
depth and quality of these two singles, why releases are few and far
between. The gut-wringing that must go on before these songs are
scraped together would finish most bands off before they even got out
of the garage. "Wild" chimes and sparkles amongst the Big Star/Galaxie
500 chords and yet still reminds of "Sunday morning" while on the flip
"The brain service" adds deft touches of country slackness ala Willard
Grant Conspiracy or Palace. "It's different now" mixes into
meticulously crafted melody the melancholic drone of a violin and
what's not really slowcore, but could pass for it, results with "I'll
never be long gone" exploring more trad country ballad territory but
never speeding up or losing the beautiful intensity. If I had only one
word to encourage you to buy these records, it would be:
Vivabeautyslowsubmissionplot.
Mogul, I was starving hungry in Tescos (Fortuna Pop) 7"
File next to Mogwai...in your alphabetic record collection, otherwise
slip it into the 80's electro pop pile as you set your dansette going
and join Mogul in bedsit land to the soundtrack of tinny Casio beats
and pinging Casio melodies on the b-side. The title track track, on
the other hand, is a lo-tech fuzzed up pop stomper that Sean at
Fortuna Pop likens to Felt or Denim, mostly on the basis of the
vocals, I think.
Spy Versus Spy, Spy Versus Spy (Subjugation) CD
Wrestling both melody and milk-curdling clamour out of just guitar,
bass and drums is not something that most hardcore acts even bother to
attempt. SVS, by slowing down and upping the emotional intensity do
both simultaneously and come in somewhere between Buffalo Tom and Bob
Tilton on this 6 track mini album. Corking stuff. PO Box 191,
Darlington, DL3 8YN
Chris t-t, Beatverse (Wine Cellar) CD
Ex-Magoo man in solo bedroom recording shocker! 13 tracks, to be
precise, of guitar quirk and variety with beatbox and the occasional
electronic bleep or bloop. Generally pretty mellow, tentatively
eclectic and written in a personal, narrative style, Chris draws the
listener into his stories, into the life of his protagonists. Nowhere
more so than on "sk," the disturbing tale of a serial killer in the
first person to a ticking casio beat and increasingly tense washes of
guitar. A nice collection of songs that are fresh and yet mature,
sketchy and yet full. A kind of Badly Drawn Man. 22 The Limes Ave,
London, N11 1RG http://arrive.at/winecellar
Norma Waterson, The very thought of you (Hannibal) CD
You may have caught Norma on Peel's "Sounds of the Suburbs" when she,
her husband and their daughter sang some moving acapella folk in their
kitchen, a glistening diamond amidst the dull as dishwater crud that
made up much of the show. Her last album was pipped to the Mercury
Music Prize in 1996 by Pulp despite only minimal publicity, an
achievement based largely on the strength, range, soulfulness and
myriad spirituality of her voice which is as comfortable on the
jolly-sounding fairground rush of "Blaze away" as the deeply affecting
Nick Drake cover, "River man." Almost all the songs here are covers,
but recontextualised and made personal by pairing them up so that, for
example, Freddy Mercury's "Love of my life" precedes "Reply to Joe
Haines" the Mirror journalist who was less than sympathetic to the
Queen singer when he revealed that he had AIDS. Played by luminaries
such as Richard Thompson, this is folk music but, despite your
preconceptions, you don't need an Aran jumper, a tankard of cider or a
fiddle-de-dee to appreciate this beautiful music, just a pair of ears.
The Black Heart Procession, 2 (Touch and Go) CD
Imagine a man with a voice about equidistant from Paul Vickers (Dawn
of the Replicants), Mark E. Smith and Daniel Johnston, fronting a
funeral-fixated band orchestrated by Tom Waits. Pall Jenkins is his
name and this particular band (he's also in loopy rockers Three Mile
Pilot) is called The Black Heart Procession. This is the second album
(surprise!) and is a thing of dark beauty, an ebonite pearl polished
bright by the constant fingering of hands heavy with grief.
Jim's Super Stereoworld, Bonkers in the nut(Fierce Panda) CDS
Frankly, after one listen you'll never want to hear this crock of shit
again. After two listens you'll begin to think that perhaps the
prit-stik hodge-podge of dreamy nonsense, Italian Job whistling, faux
gospel and even "When the saints go marching in" is not so bad after
all and by the third listen you'll be crooning along with Jim from
Carter USM (for it is he) and wondering why a young, drunk, Jarvis Cocker
never thought to sing the hits of the Salvation Army in the style of
the Orb when it sounds this good.
Brown Derby Junction, Leaving home CD
As the members of the band head off to college BDJ have recorded a CD
to remember the good times by and it's a set that, I imagine, is a
reflection of their live show: a range of mostly up-tempo jazz
originals in a comfortable trad/(small) big band style. "Nothin' to
say" slinks into smoky Nina Simone territory while "Say what" is more
in the Glen Miller mould, all bold, riffing brass and swing bass
parts, "Glimpse of you" gets the elbows flying in a banjotastic Dixie
knees-up and the pseudonymous "Brown Derby Junction" is almost a
Charleston. It's foot tapping, horn-heavy stuff that's no different to
what you might hear in hundreds of pubs the world over of a weekend,
but it's guaranteed to put a smile on your face and a spring in your
step. http://gonow.to/bdj
Rev. Corps of Teenage Jesus, Righteous Lite (Creeping Bent)
CD
Glasgow's always been known as the industrial city in Scotland,
contrasting sharply with Edinburgh's sweetie-tin touristyness, and
thus the first to suffer as traditional industries closed down. So, if
'Righteous Lite' had been made anywhere else other than Glasgow then
results might have been quite different, even although legendary
NYC'er and Suicide main man Alan Vega provides vocals on this
album. Steven Lironi, sometime Black Grape producer is the other party
involved, but what you expect is not what you get - this album should
carry some sort of health warning, as although RCTJ do indeed purvey
dance beats, the casual clubber could be lured into taking Righteous
Lite home, and what they will get is something quite different - a
massive sound clash which if played LOUD brings to mind crashing
machinery, replaced by computer-generated noise and rhythms as
progress stamps all over the traditionally generated sounds replacing
them with something more incessant, pounding. The industrial
revolution is here, brace yourself.(Stuart)
The Needles, We Got The Soul (Lithium) CDS
Aberdeen never really had any punk bands in the 1970's, the only
Scottish city to be largely untouched by the onslaught of safety pins
and gobbing (rumour has it that the City Council took steps to avoid
any loss in oil industry visitors by rounding up all the punks and
keeping them offshore until the New Romantics came to the
rescue...) anyway, the Needles make up for lost time, reproducing the
sounds, not of the Clash or the Damned, but more the second division
bands where pub and punk crossed over. We Got The Soul is the most
Punk Rock of the 4 tracks here, but all 4 tracks come across like the
Boys or Eddie and the Hot Rods or their ilk. Not a bad thing in my
book, harbouring fond memories of Dr. Feelgood on Top of the
Pops. Remember, the Clash never got there (we can brush aside the
reasons for the sake of argument), so maybe the Needles have got the
right idea. (Stuart)
Lungleg, Maid to Minx (Southern) CDS
New label, new line-up, and thus a new recording of the title track of
their debut album. New image too, as though most of the band remain
from the original lineup, they do look quite different on the
sleeve. Anyway, Maid to Minx was the best track on the aforementioned
album, so this slightly cleaned up version sounds pretty fine, for the
uninitiated, think bis, Yummy Fur, add an extra dollop of attitude,
and serve loud. (Stuart)
Hardwire, Dope jam (Kingsize) 12"
It was Sparks that wrote the song that sings itself but it's Hardwire
that've got the one that auto-reviews. "Dope jam" is indeed a dope jam
and, as the vocal line says, it lays back to "let the big beat lead."
A mid pace breakbeater with lashings of brass and the odd flute it's a
cert for the summer.
Belle and Sebastian, Tigermilk (Jeepster) CD
Not really much that needs to be said about this one, it's the long
awaited Bootleg-busting re-release of Belle and Sebastian's
legendary, limited-edition debut, originally issued on Electric Honey
records via the Stowe College music course. You'll have heard the
opener, "The state I am in," already no doubt on its later single
release and more than likely you're familiar with the recent material
anyway. Which means, and it's a rare treat for the reviewer of a debut
album, that I don't have to cast around for comparisons like "Peter,
Paul, Mary and the Tindersticks" and can instead say "it sounds
like Belle and Sebastian as you know them, only better."
Quannum, Spectrum (Quannum Projects) CD
Quannum Projects is essentially Solesides, the label that brought us
the superb Latyrx album a couple of years ago, now reformed, re-badged
and refocussed on a picture wider than just the hip hop canvas. An aim
that is realised on the record, where a collaboration that includes
the Automator, Jurassic 5, Company Flow, Blackalicious, Latyrx and DJ
Shadow serve up not only the quality beats and rhymes that you'd
expect but also soul (slick female and gruff male) and
funk/disco. "Bombonyall" is a high point, a beatbox face-off just a
small step away from the street corner hip hop of the early 80s, b-boy
basics in place and quality as a result. "One of a kind" follows a
similar line but embellished by driving piano and ending up not unlike
Moby's "Honey."
Nyugati Palyaudvar, (Something Nothing) CD
NP were round here the other night, listening to the Shovels' album
and drinking tea. I asked them who they would say they sounded like
and, quick as a flash, Srid (drums) said "Primus." He's right, of
course, but there's melodic bursts that could've come straight off
Ned's Atomic Dustbin's "Are you normal?" album---Jozaq (bass): "I grew
up on Neds"---along with some tricky space/funk bass moments direct
from a seriously hyper mother ship and even a couple of
tongue-in-cheek Pearl Jam moments---Jozaq: "I like Pearl Jam." For the
most part, though, the duo jerk and spasm angular rock music out of
just drums and bass, riffing and lurching in a proggy splatter. www.jozaq.com/np 202 Milton Rd,
Cambridge, CB4
Pop Off Tuesday, See my ghost (Pickled Egg) CD
Everyone's favourite Japanese astropop experimentalists back on Earth
with 6 new tracks of madcap tumbledryer sample complexity and
adenoidal vocals. Not quite...it's certainly the same duo and there
are six tracks but the madcap tumbledryer has been replaced by the
linear simplicity of a washing line and Mother Nature's own sweet
breath. On this ep, Pop Off Tuesday are graceful and classy, freshly
minimalist and even ambient drum'n'bassists on "Adverse," my pick of
the six, which also sprinkles a little of their magic fairy dust on a
Tipsyish lounge daydream.
Bablicon, In a different city (Pickled Egg) CD
The pretentious theologian might try to draw an analogy between the
thrusting juxtaposition of musical languages on this album
and the biblical Tower of Babel. while others might prefer to
extrapolate from lexicon, a collection of words or lexemes,
to make Bablicon a collection of babbles. Both would feel justified
when "The Green Line" jerks the record into life with the ancient
2-track warmth of stereo-separated mad Coltrane horns and a fuzz metal
guitar riff. Jazz and rock, but surely that's jazz-rock, home
of the terminally precious artiste and not worth the time of day?
Well, yes and no. It is jazz-rock, but this is worth the
antique carriage clock from your Gran's mantlepiece, and then some. It
sounds at times like two bands sharing a rehearsal space and
occasionally hitting the same key/chord/time signature/wavelength. at
others like a cohesive, full-sized orchestra writing scores for classy
Chicago gangster flicks ("Francis Locrius") or even like Ravi Shankar
riding the Magic Roundabout on LSD (single "Chunks of syrup.."). Like
label-mates Pop Off Tuesday there's a total disregard for, and often
disdain of, convention and a boundless yearning for new sounds,
outer-space sounds, ancient jazz sounds, mis-matched and unsound
sounds.
The Auteurs, How I learned to love the bootboys (Hut) LP
Intensely retrospective, opaquely introspective and with a fuzzy sense
of temporal perspective, "How I learned to love the bootboys" sees
Luke Haines with a set of songs that reside in the council estates of
a several misty youths. Various decades are plundered (current single
"The Rubettes" in the 60s, for example) for a soundtrack of a troubled
adolescence full of fights, old cars, older brothers, crying,
unrequited love and, of course, school. Closer in spirit to the Baader
Meinhof project than the more recent Black Box recorder, "..bootboys"
scalds and soothes in almost equal measure, ending on the hope that
the next generation can learn from previous ones' mistakes.
Sweep The Leg Johnny, Tomorrow we will run again (Southern) CD
LP opener, "Early October," is Public Enemy's "Night of the living
baseheads" played by a paranoic Morphine and recorded, on the
outskirts of Hell, by Steve Albini. A torrent of incessant, barbed sax
honks, splutters and riffs amid punctuated guitar chaos, textured
noise and technical beats all topped off with the occasional shouted
lyric. It's incredible, brooding stuff that is relieved by the
remaining four tracks (all 5 clock in around the 10 minute mark) which
weave alternate implosions and explosions of the same ingredients into
a windy and often staccato blur that sounds almost like a less-erratic
Cardiacs.
Various, Fortified stereophonic (Vapours) CD
Instrumental hip hop of the tense variety. Trundling breakbeats laced
with barely concealed menace loop through the length of this
collection backed up by film samples, a dash of echo and the
understated malevolence of a simple, deep bass line. All the
practitioners employ essentially the same devices, but the best
results come from The Groove Criminals, Khroma and Form.
Various, Extracted celluloid (illegalart/Seeland) CD
Part 2 in the illegalart/Seeland series of, excuse me while I precis a
complex philosophy, fuck copyright experiments. Last time out
it was Beck, this time it's films and shows that are looted for sample
material which is then gleefully manipulated by an army of bedroom
sonicists for ambient/difficult listening pleasure. Pick of the 20
tracks is Pechiney Par(k) Heavy Industries' "No phunk last night"
which slaps down several tin pan drum loops and then steals from
Prince amongst others to break them up. There is a serious point being
made (Negativland are involved) but there's times when the random
collages can get a bit much and the enjoyment comes from the trivial
fun of spotting the sources. www.detritus.net/illegalart
Read the rest of Robots and Electronic Brains