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Album reviews

3Mar

Review: The Gutter Twins - Saturnalia

the gutter twins saturnalia

Fans of Greg Dulli (ex-Afghan Whigs, Twilight Singers) and Mark Lanegan (ex-Screaming Trees, Twilight Singers, Mark Lanegan Band, *breathes*, QOTSA, etc) have been drooling in anticipation for this long-awaited collaborative release, and as one of those fans, I can safely say it lives up to expectations and then some. It's a joy to sit back and absorb the dark, brooding, bluesy atmosphere that this record projects; as always Lanegan's rusty baritone sends chills right to the bone in a way that only his voice can.

Highlights include the moody but upbeat 'Idle Hands' which sees Dulli and Lanegan sing in unison over swooshing strings and ploughing guitars, a stark constrast to gentler songs such as 'Seven Stories Underground' where Lanegan uses a lighter vocal tone we haven't heard in a while. The stunning 'Bete Noire' brings a bluesy style and harmonies, and 'I Was In Love With You' has a dark feel despite it's simple melody and Beatles feel to the accompaniment (impossible to miss), and is as close as you're going to get to a love song.

Whilst Lanegan's voice is always the object of much praise, 'Circle the Fringes' is where Dulli really comes into his element. It begins with a swirling synth and string intro which then breaks into a catchy as hell bass line, followed by Dulli's sultry vocals. The chorus is hauntingly beautiful, and Lanegan's entry into the song towards the end builds intensity, before it is stripped back down again.

This truly is a stunning album, with no weak tracks in sight. Dulli and Lanegan really are a match made in heaven. Or perhaps hell is more appropriate?

Overall

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27Jan

Review: Rockabye Baby

Rockabye Baby

Babies are funny things. All they seem to do is cry and poo themselves. They also have no taste whatsoever when it comes to music. Baa-baa black sheep over the Beatles? Madness.

However - the Rockabye Baby series seems to be a good way to bridge the gap and make a large number of bands as child-friendly as possible. Essentially if you vist the website, there are a number of albums you can purchase. Each album is a collection of songs by a certain band or singer which have been transformed into lullabies. Guitar licks and drum solos have been swapped over for glockenspiels and twinkly bells and like the best things in life... these albums are waaaay too good for just kids.

The great thing is that there are many different albums on the website to choose from. Whether you want your sproglet to become the next Thom Yorke or the next Nick Oliveri, the choice is vast. Each album is accompanied by adorable cover art which makes even the most scary genres of music seem child-friendly.

Okay - admittedly some of the albums sound better in this format than others do and some of the more earnest rock fans may feel that this isn't exactly their cup of tea. Radiohead, Pink Floyd and Coldplay are made for this format though and have a very etheral vibe to them. There is the opportunity however to play a preview of the album though before you purchase. Shame you can't do that with kids really.

Albums cost $16.98 each.

babyrockrecords.com

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26Sep

Review: Shout Out Louds - Our Ill Wills

Shout Out Louds - Our Ill Wills

The Shout Out Louds are a Swedish band of indie persuasion, and are up to their 3rd album with 'Our Ill Wills' - released earlier this year in their homelands, but only just released in Canada and the US.

I must confess, I'm not a big fan of indie in general - it's dull tripe for the most part - but this comes across as an extremely well polished record. From the first track, 'Tonight I Have To Leave It' - the first single from the album - the sound is well defined, expertly executed and perfectly formed.

The instrumental mix is great, too - a perfect blend of guitar, piano, and more exotic instruments - and is coupled with a qualified vocal performance. The whole thing is glossier than a glossy thing on a particularly glossy day.

The song writing does verge on indie blandness some of the time - it's more a fault of the genre, really - but as a fairly laid-back, easy-listening kind of album, it's nice. There are some uplifting parts - 'You are Dreaming', and the epic 'Hard Rain' in particular, and a mix of more low-key songs.

'Out Ill Wills' is an album by a band at the top of their game - near flawless in execution, and some really good songs. It lacks ambition in places - there's no 'edge', nor anything particularly new sounding here - but what is here is extremely pleasant, and very accomplished.

The Good

  • Uplifting, polished, impressive performance
  • Varied use of instrumentation & vocals
  • A whole array of great singles lurking on these platters

The Bad

  • Lacks dynamism, ambition

Overall

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17Aug

Review: Gravy Train!!!! - All The Sweet Stuff

gravy train!!!! = all the sweet stuff

Yep, that's 'Gravy Train!!!!' with four exclamation points. And with the members going under the monikers of Chunx, Funx, Hunx, and Junx - you can tell they're certainly not run-of-the-mill.

Their sound is described as 'queercore' - a particular branch of punk rock to which I've been previously unacquainted with. Essentially we're dealing with a mixture of the sounds of electroclash, coupled with the energy of punk rock, with a certain level of campness that you might expect.

The album art is reminiscent of the last New Young Pony Club offering - retro logotypes on a white background, with a gratuitous band photo (including gold hotpants, no less), and heaps of campiness and retro charm.

The music is bold, unrelenting - the first track kicks in at full velocity, and it never really lets off till the last beat. The songs are relatively short, showing their punk roots. I enjoyed the retro analogue sounds - from the classic organs, through raw sawtooth synths and sojourns through the electro gamut - from raw electro sounds through smoother electro funk organ riffs and guitar licks.

If nothing else, the album is interesting - and in many ways, that makes it good. The no-holds-barred approach is relentless, and the sounds are wild and varied.

The lack of finesse in song writing, and some aspects of the performance, makes me wonder - without these imperfections you'd lose a lot of the soul and energy, but with them your left with something that borders on amateur. It's a difficult line to tread, I fear.

I do love this album. If you're after a electro-neon explosion of energy and raucous youth, you'll probably love it as well. But you won't be able to shake that feeling you only like it because it's ever-so-slightly ironic to do so.

The Good

  • Full of an infection youthful energy
  • Great electro sounds & beats
  • Cowbells get their due

The Bad

  • There's no break - it's full-force, full-campiness, balls-to-the wall punk from start to finish.
  • Some of the songs verge on drossiness

Overall

Like Fischerspooner mixed with Cansei der Ser Sexy and a touch of Blondie, turned up to 11. And totally camp with it. Quite fabulous - in more than one sense.

Links

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6Aug

Review: Jamie T - Panic Prevention

jamie t panic prevention

Jamie who? Exactly. Even with the media made moniker of "one man Arctic Monkey", America is still largely ignoring Jamie T. I think I know why.

His brand of "all up in ya" Englishness makes some of us scratch our fat heads. We just can't relate to it. I mean, he makes no mention of shooting thugs or beatin' down ho's and he's certainly not a mopey mall rat secretly dreaming about how to off his whole family. Dude might as well be an alien, you know.

Me? I'm a fan of the English. I tucked into this record with a completely open mind. Still, Jamie leaves me frustrated. There's a few absolute gems in there but you'll have to dig through the shit to get to them. It's akin to being served this incredibly tasty appetizer only to have it followed by hobo chili and kool-aid.

The Good

Salvador: the mental imagery of Anglo-Saxons at the disco and young girls sneaking out to party puts a smile on my face. The twangy Mexican guitar doesn't hurt either. Calm Down Dearest: a hard pill to swallow at first. If you can get past the drunken rambling, you'll be rewarded with the most beautiful chorus you've ever heard. Can't seem to shake it from my head. The icing on the cake has to be Sheila which randomly tells the story of a drunk girl who accidentally drowns in the Thames, a shady drug dealer who can't catch a break, and girl who OD's to escape abuse. Subject matter aside, it's catchy as all hell.

The Bad

Every other song that isn't Salvador, Calm Down Dearest, or Sheila.

Verdict

Panic Prevention is inventive and wonderfully British but is ultimately dragged down by too many throw-away songs.

Jamie T is currently playing the summer festival circuit throughout Europe followed by a short tour of the US and Canada in the fall.

Links

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14Jul

Review: Slip - Melisma E.P.

Slip's 'Melisma' is a mini album/EP from Leeds-based label Perception Records. Blending electronic lounge beats with ambient and nu-jazz influences, Melisma is a warm, pleasant-sounding collection.

With the laid-back but solid grooves of loungetronica and wonderfully warm synths, the tracks are a pleasant halfway house between pure ambient and more uptempo stuff. Vocal track Melisma is the lead track, and in the same vein as the others.

There's some nice beats on this EP, and the whole thing makes for good listening - if perhaps more suited to the background. The slightly glitchy/electro infills add a little dirty spice to the laid-back vocals and ambient pads, but apart from that there's little to bring the music out from the background.

Good

  • Warm sounds and spot-on production
  • Dope Beats

Bad

  • Wallflower.

Overall

Slickly produced, warm sounding, and pleasant on the ears, but lacking in hook or character.

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13Jul

Review: Justice - Cross

There are few albums that leave me flabbergasted from the first few bars - but I can confidently say this was one of them. I put the needle in the leading groove with a certain naivety - having never heard of Justice before, I wasn't quite sure what to expect. From the first track I was hooked, surprised, and in love with 'Cross'.

justice cross

The album cover and disc reveal little of what lies in the dark grooves - a gold cross atop a black background are the only clues you have, but from the moment the first beat kicks in on the aptly named opening track 'Genesis', you are in no doubt - this is French house of quality not seen since Daft Punk.

The biblical theme evident in the album title and iconography is prevalent in the song titles, too - from Genesis, Let There Be Light, to Waters of Nazareth. But that's not what this album is about - it's about the archetypal compressed beats, perfectly executed with funky basslines and quirky organ synths.

From the second side (or the third track to you digital folk), the album loses some of the pomp from the brooding opening and opens up to the wonderfully upbeat D.A.N.C.E., with disco-esque strings supplemented with a mashed-up lyric sung by a children's choir. Currently available as a single, it's arguably not the most chart-friendly track, but remarkable nonetheless.

Newjack follows the upbeat nature of D.A.N.C.E. with a healthy dose of filtered samples from the soundtrack to Tenebrae, and has a grittier, noisier groove to it - and leads on to Phantom seamlessly - the album has obviously been carefully crafted as a whole, rather than some set of disparate tracks.

The third side (Track 8) sees the return of a vocal, provided by indie-electronica musician Uffie. The track in question, Tthhee Ppaarrttyy is cute, and one of the more memorable tracks as a result - despite slightly banal lyrics.

The final side starts with the dirty distortions of Stress, which brings to mind the disco stylings of David Shire's Night on Disco Mountain, later opening out into a chunky sample-laced floor filler. The ultra-distorted synth lines continue into Justice's first single, Waters of Nazareth. The last track, On Minute To Midnight, rounds things off nicely with an almost end-credits feel to it (albeit with the same hyper compressed beats and funky synths).

And then - nothing. That's it, show's over, end of the album. But what an album - Cross is most certainly a keeper. I may not have heard of Justice prior to my first listen, but now I'm certainly a believer.

Overall

Good

  • Fantasticly French
  • Gives Daft Punk a run for their money

Bad

  • No real standalone tracks - it works best as a composite

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6Jul

Review: Jahtarian Dubbers Vol. 1

Ah, summer. As the weather heats up, and my pants get shorter, it's time to start making my holiday plans. I've settled on somewhere tropical this year, and Leipzig, Germany is at the top of my list. Yeah, I know the Fatherland is nowhere near the equator, but you wouldn't know it from the fantastic reggae being produced there by the Jahtari label.

Reggae purists might be spitting at their screens when they read this, but the artists on the label construct their island sounds solely by laptop. Jatari says "we have a burning passion for old school dub and reggae, but wanted to experiment using our laptops to see if it was possible to draw something soulful from a machine". Thank Christ, they seem to have succeeded.

Of the two songs we've made available for download below, Jahtari Massive by Afrikan Simba and Roota most closely resemble the type of reggae your used to; echo-y vocals and a bit of the old "hey, lets just add some beats and synth to the mix". Vigilante Dub by the Jahtari Riddim Force on the other hand, is much more out there and indicative of what the collective are really about. I feel high just listening to it. But I know for a fact Jahtari are way better than these two selections. If you happened to catch their live set on Mary Ann Hobbs' show last week, you know what I'm talking about. 20 odd minutes of innovative, psychotic irie. If they happen to play a gig anywhere near you, go. No excuses.

So go ahead and take your easyjet to Spain, or the Balkins, or wherever it is you go dogging these days. I'll be packing the board shorts and sunscreen and heading to a German city center in search of laptop reggae.

In short

Soulful dub with a 2.66 GHz heart.

Jahtarian Dubbers Vol 1 is out now.

Links

Download:

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30May

Patti Smith is Back - A Review of 'Twelve'

patti smith twelve

To me, Patti Smith will always be known for three things: her role as the punk poet laureate, her fall from a high stage in Florida, breaking several vertebrae in her neck, and her propensity to perform on elevated stages in short skirts and without underwear. None of these is a bad thing (she survived the fall), but they do rather set her apart from the norm.

But then, Patti Smith's life and career, even in the surreal world of rock and roll, could never easily be described as normal. Born in Chicago in 1946, her mother an atheist and her father a Jehovah's Witness, she was off to a good start. In her early years she drifted towards an acting career and moved to New York where she met Robert Mapplethorpe, the photographer. They were friends and sometime lovers, despite his homosexuality, until his death in 1989 from AIDS.

It was Mapplethorpe who financed Patti's first single, the charmingly titled 'Piss Factory' in 1974. But it was Patti's first album, the seminal 1975 release of 'Horses' on the Arista label, which began to get her noticed. It was produced by John Cale of Velvet Underground, a relationship that was edgy from the start but which spawned one of her best ever records. A mixture of rock and roll, early punk and poetry, it received wide acclaim

In 1978 she released 'Easter', containing perhaps her best-known single, 'Because the Night', co-written with Bruce Springsteen. It was something of a rock anthem, but very little she then did inspired more than passing interest from anyone but her die-hard fans. Her following album, 'Wave', was much less successful. Following its release Patti, now separated from long-time partner Jim Carroll, met Fred "Sonic" Smith, former guitar player for legendary Detroit rock band the MC5, who adored poetry as much as she did. The running joke at the time was that she only married Fred because she wouldn't have to change her name. Patti and Fred had a daughter, Jesse, and a son, Jackson. Through most of the 1980s Patti was in semi-retirement from music, living with her family north of Detroit in St. Clair Shores. In 1988, she released the well-received album 'Dream of Life'. This album was considered more mainstream than her earlier punk-influenced work.

When Fred died in 1994, friends encouraged Patti to perform and tour again and since then she has worked with a wide variety of musicians, from Dylan to Michael Stipe. A number of albums still received luke-warm praise until 2004's 'Trampin', her first for Sony, which finally made the Billboard Top 200.

Since then she has performed with Red Hot Chilli Peppers, received awards for her contribution to the arts from the French government and headlined the final gig at CBGB, the legendary New York music club.

So why, after all this, has she released an album of covers, 'Twelve'? Apparently, it had been on her to-do list since the late Seventies, when she scrawled a list of potential songs on the cover of a book she was reading.

'Many of the songs I thought to record somehow slipped away,' she says, 'and unexpected ones filled their slots. Twelve truly had a mind of its own…'

So we hear her hugely evocative voice on an eclectic mix of tracks. From 'Gimme Shelter' to, believe it or not, the Tears for Fears song 'Everybody Wants to Rule the World'.

There is also an unusual take on Paul Simon's 'Boy in the Bubble', and she matches, perhaps excels, Grace Slick's rendition of Jefferson Airplane's 'White Rabbit'. On 'Smells Like Teen Spirit', her voice, including the intoned poem at the end, is just perfect for the song.

Throughout the album there is superb musicianship from Lenny Kaye, Tony Shanahan, Jay Dee Daugherty, and a range of part-timers including Flea from Chilli Peppers on 'Gimme Shelter'.

Does 'Twelve' add anything to the world of popular music? It is not going to change the world but, previously a Patti fan or no, this is a worthy addition to anyone's music collection.

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22Apr

Avril Lavigne - The Best Damn Thing

Avril's back with her third album, 'The Best Damn Thing', and with the production talents of Dr. Luke (of P!nk, Kelly Clarkson and Lady Sovereign fame) , she looks set to assault to pop charts with her infectious femme-teen-rock stylings. So how bad is it?

avril lavigne the best damn thing

Curiously upbeat. Avril's ditched the faux-emo façade in favour of the more popular approach she took with Sk8r Boi. Banal and repetitive lyrics abound, then - most of the tracks employ the 'hey hey' technique of song-writing, notably 'Girlfriend' and 'The Best Damn Thing'.

A lone 'motherfucking' in the lead track earns the album the sales-boosting 'explicit lyrics' badge of honour, but apart from that it's all rather clean cut. Most of the songs are about vacuous teen relationship issues - in fact, the whole damn album is.

But, if we ignore the shallow nature of the songs, the forced smiles of the upbeat choruses, and the odd bum track, 'The Best Damn Thing' represents a good return to form for Avril. She's got the right selection of songs, the right production, and is poised to do well over the coming months in the singles charts.

Best Tracks?

The leading single, 'Girlfriend', the upbeat (although lyrically awful) 'Everything Back But You', and 'One of those Girls' are amongst the better tracks.

Worst Track?

The cringe-worthy 'I Don't Have To Try'. The intro is particularly painful.

Overall

It's not as bad as you might have thought. It's as good as an Avril Lavigne album could be expected to get. Read into that what you will.

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