Tuesday, 26 December 2023

Fall Again. Fall Better.

Round 2 of the Fall Cup has now finished, and we are into the knockout stages.  Check out the story to date at The Fall Cup if you a) know lots of Fall tracks, and b) want to be annoyed that we don't like the same Fall tracks you do.

Once again, I've decided to share all the comments I made.  This time, the voting was complex, and we were able to distribute a total score bank between 12 tracks each match, but I just commented on the 5 tracks to whom I'd given the lowest score each match, so that the process was in line with round 1; the difference, of course, is that I was giving low marks to more tracks that I actively enjoy, so there are fewer snide put-downs, and therefore more abstract flights of critical fancy.  As with Round 1, it's interesting to see how many times I repeated myself over the weeks - sorry.


The Birmingham School of Business School: A lead-footed funk number with one of Smith's most deliberately ugly vocal noises at the start  ("Mum, can we have wah-wah guitar?", "Oh, no we have wah-wah at home").  

Youwanner: Relentless yet building in intensity, like being trapped in the engine room of a rickety ship at full steam, cogs and sprockets flying off at all angles. 

Victoria Train Station Massacre/ New Facts Emerge: Like the novel Cujo if it had been glam rock that had gone rabid.

Arms Control Poseur: A guardedly wary shimmy, marred by hideous guitar scribbles.

ROD: Eeriness from the dressing-up box, not the heart of terror.

Can Can Summer: Beautifully twitchy, a Talking Heads for those who prefer brown ale to cappuccino.

I Feel Voxish: Peak Shanley insistence plus MES as inscrutable life coach.

Petty (Thief) Lout: Crepuscular, if not spectacular.

Das Vulture Ans Ein Nutter-Wain: Unidentifiable fragments of matter floating in a greasy ramen.

YFOC/ Slippy Floor: The sound is great on the LP version, but the final band did one or two too many of these anonymous unriffs.

Two Librans: A lumbering dyspeptic churn of a song.

Copped It: Love the way the serrated guitar vies for space with the huge rolling bass.

Sons Of Temperance: There's a lovely furry mould growing around the low end, but the song itself is an indie chant by rote.

Rainmaster: A fun, but ultimately inconsequential, rectilinear stomp.

Amorator!: Another with a brilliant sound, like a transcription of a long uncertain growl from a tipsy dog, but there's not quite enough musical material here for me.

Barmy: It should be illegal to rhyme barmy with army, especially if you've already doen it in a different song.  Good Velvety pounding track, though.

The Aphid: It's pretty much Rainmaster with extra pep, isn't it?  Decent, but nobody's conception of the greatest Fall song, one suspects.

Coach & Horses: A rather charming miniature, better than many of the longer and more imposing tracks on RPTLC.

Pacifying Joint: That dumbass keyboard line can be pretty annoying if youre not in the mood.

Over! Over!: Everything about this sounds forced, it's a hothouse bloom, and withers under scrutiny.

All Leave Cancelled: Fungus growing rampant on a folk rock tune, or perhaps a possessed R.E.M. song.  Sometimes more fascinating than good, but proof that Fall Sound is more than krautabilly.

Bombast: This is possibly the twentieth-century Fall track that most anticipates final line-up Fall.  A great noise, with one of Shanley's heaviest anchors.  Still maintain "bombast" doesn't make sense as a synonym for "tirade", mind.

I Wake Up In The City: In the inevitable comparison, Classmates' Kids has better lyrics, and this has a much better forward-leaning performance.  There's not enough of it to get many points, but it still deserves a nod.

Cosmos 7: One of the tracks for which the illogical mixing of EGB works in its favour, it does sound like a broadcast picked up by a 60s cosmonaut.

My Door Is Never: I have officially run out ways to say that it's sad that a band as good as the dudes made such an undercooked album.

Backdrop: It's Wings: The Opera.  Some amazing lines, though the gin couplet always felt a bit facile.

Cab It Up!: That synglock line is so much fun, it sounds like something from a Ronnie Hazelhurst sit-com theme.

Dktr Faustus: A lot of the criticism directed towards Brix seems to be unfair enough to border on misogyny, but I have to say her vocals spoil this track.  Banana, yourself!

Contraflow: My wife always says this sounds like Rage Against The Machine.  Not sure I agree, and I like it a lot, but it will never be more than an album track.

OFYC Showcase: The album version has an excellent sound - perhaps those Domino studio types weren't such a chain around the neck as has been reported - but there's still not enough of it for me to love.

Junger Cloth: The words are great - Yog-Sothoth gets an eye test - but the music plods somewhat.

Carry Bag Man: Middle-tier Fall in every respect.

Guest Informant: We spent so many years trying to make out that "Bazdad" bit we didn't notice how annoying that "Bazdad" bit was.  The rest of the song's good.

Cruiser's Creek: Big chunky Duplo blocks of musical material laid out far into the distance.

No Respects: MES in catarrh hero mode, band set to "forgettable".

Elves: If you can ignore the Stooges larceny, this is a great song; but you can't, can you.

Pine Leaves: 90s Fall had some wonderful moments of quantised melancholy.

Impression of J Temperance: This song is so strong, that I'm always let down that it concludes "ha, he fucked a dog, mate".

Oxymoron: In some ways it would be perfect if a bashed out thump featuring vocal samples from another song won the cup.  Smash the canon, destroy hegemonies! Amuse our friends, enrage your enemies!  Sorry, where was I?  Oh, this track - it's OK, I suppose.

Second House Now: Forceful, but nondescript rock.

Gross Chapel-British Grenadiers: The murky, photocopied-newsprint texture is wonderful, but it may not need to last for over 7 minutes.

The Chiselers: Cracks along like a funicular railway at the highest setting - loses points because we didn't really need so many versions where the same sections are just shuffled into different orders.

Black Monk Theme Part I: One can't really improve on The Monks, but the dizzying fiddle encompassing Mark's deadpan vocals is a nice touch.

Brillo De Facto: Excellent vox on this one, a superb example of the late MES strangle-gurgle delivery, and tightly played, but the riff doesn't stand out from the crowd.

The Crying Marshall: A gold-plated example of a track that works excellently on its album, but feels featherlight in isolation.

50 Year Old Man: The epic collage album version is great, but I've docked points for some live versions that just bludgeon the joy out of it (the From The Basement performance is excellent though).

Mountain Energei: A gorgeous repurposing of The Passenger, for which I wish I had more points.

Words Of Expectation: An example of true krautrock discipline, I would just prefer it without the wormy section - and the lyric dissing Leicester Poly is pretty unadventurous.

Cyber Insekt: The atonal Ballroom Blitz trundle of the album version is glorious, but again, this is a track that got smoothed out and bleached in live performances until there wasn't much left to get excited about.

Solicitor In Studio: Some good lines, and a nice tortured glam feel to the music, but it lacks the cohesion and power of so much other 1982 material.

Various Times: A jaundiced travelogue through the twentieth century.

What You Need: Riff, list, and chant, the three main ingredients for a Fall song - but perhaps this track needs another flavour to be one of the greats.

Gut Of The Quantifier: The gruppe as funk revue.

Fall Sound: Some choice lines and delivery, but arguably the music is too on the nose, Fall-soundwise.

Ol' Gang: Way to ruin a glorious dirty groove, Smith.

Look, Know: The most lumbering lifestyle tips in history.

Gibbus Gibson: A cheeky Monkees-flavoured bit of bounce.

Joker Hysterical Face: Ramshackle and untethered.

Deadbeat Descendant: Played with passion and vim, but the riff is frustratingly uninspiring.

Jam Song: This is so nearly very good, but falters at the gate.  Maybe stop jamming and start honing?

Janet, Johnny & James: That good ol' boy clawhammer riff just keeps on scuttling.

Crop Dust: A texture so loamy enough Percy Thrower is probably the studio engineer.

My New House: It's the layers of detuned guitars that make this track.

Reformation!: Blindness without the shimmy.  Worked live, but isn't an essential Fall document.

Wolf Kidult Man: A functional thump, arguably, though an effective one.

The Quartet Of Doc Shanley: Steal a bassline, turn up the distortion, cut up some spoken nonsense, go down the pub.

Fiery Jack: A fantastic piece of CnN that I may have worn the sheen off on first discovery.

Jim's "The Fall": If Mudhoney were bewildered wasps at the end of the summer, they might make music like this.

Auto Tech Pilot: Played with boxing gloves on, but none the worse for that.

Auto Chip 2014-2016: I'm not sue why I don't love this as so many other people do: I like The Fall, I like Neu!, what am I missing?

Gramme Friday: Blues rock fractured, dispersed, and awkwardly reassembled.

The Remainderer: The grimy gurgle of a bath full of custard emptying in 4/4.

Sinister Waltz: The whispering of a guilty conscience in 3/4.

And This Day: Imposing and brutal, but - whisper it - too long.

Tommy Shooter: A gloriously sleek and honed band working through threadbare material.

Fol De Rol: Ludic and malevolent in equal measure.

Powder Keg: Sounds like a traffic jam made into pop music.

Loadstones: A good song, but it also sounds like The Oysterband.

(Jung Nev's) Antidotes: I love the cement-mixer churn, and regret that there aren't more points laying about for this one.

Sir William Wray: Throwaway by design, it seems that giving it points would be against the spirit, fun though it is to listen to.

Monday, 4 December 2023

Father, Son, and Phone-In Host

Here's a review from the latest Nightshift.  It was a good gig, but I fear that the Hallowe'en theme behind the review is a bit hack.


GODCASTER/ LIFTS/ LEE RILEY, Divine Schism, Port Mahon, 31/10/23 

It’s Hallowe’en, and Lee Riley’s guitar lies on its back on the darkened stage. If it resembles a corpse, then like Bela Lugosi’s Dracula projected onto the ceiling above the stage, it is not one that rests easy. Using bows, bludgeons, and just possibly a vibrator, Riley the necromancer invokes clouds of sound that seem to haunt, rather than fill, the room. There are soft misty tones that evaporate when you try to focus on them, there are dense thickets of sonic furze at the bottom end, and, fittingly, the ear-scouring screams of the damned courtesy of a bowed scrap of metal.  

If Hallowe’en is a night for encountering the strange, then Dublin’s Lifts deliver by placing a violin and viola centre stage at the Port. Their opening number pairs these with pounded piano and some repetitive Glassy sax to create a blasted cabaret tune like a zombie Jacques Brel fronting Dirty Three. If none of the rest of the set quite hits that height again, their sawing, soaring crescendos and intricate drum tattoos make them A Chamber Mt. Zion. Only the vocal, which tends towards a ruptured pirate growl, occasionally mars the effect. 

If NYC sextet Godcaster were to make a horror film, it would be the colour-saturated camp of Hammer or Amicus, and judging by the frontman’s stomps and pirouettes, it would be about a rock vocalist possessed by the revenant spirit of a cursed flamenco dancer. These preening theatrics are lightly amusing, but the band don’t need them, the music is easily engrossing enough. The set careens between spiky blasts of noise slashed with awkwardly tricksy guitar, and the breathy, diaphanous ‘Pluto Shoots His Gaze Into The Sun’, which is half hippy campfire meandering, half Broadway ballad. But they’re at their peak when they stretch out over hypnotic Holger Czukay basslines, and the penultimate number powers along like a Kraut reworking of Floyd’s ‘Astronomy Domine’ powered by Dr Frankenstein’s harnessed lightning. It’s a thrilling experience, and we hope there’ll be an even more garish sequel. 


 

Friday, 10 November 2023

Fall Downers

I have been fortunate enough to have been invited to be part of a select coterie of judges to vote on a massive competition to rate every track recorded by the mighty Fall by Steve Pringle, author of the excellent You Must Get Them All, a guide to The Fall on record.  You can find the whole monstrous endeavour here.

We have just finished stage one, in which every track was rated in a series of 15-track groups, using Eurovision scores (if you don't know how Eurovision scores are allocated, who even are you?).  This meant that 5 tracks per group got zero points.  We were invited to share thoughts on each round, and I elected to write about those to whom I gave the goose egg, which probably indicates a negative outlook, but hey ho.  Steve only had space to quote a few notes from each of us in the final blog posts, so here for your edification or enragement, are my full comments on all 160 tracks which scored nothing.  Feel free to disagree (the rest of the voting panel often did, after all).  Also, you can se how many times I repeated myself over the weeks.

The Littlest Rebel: There’s a question on how one should judge a track, of how one discerns its purpose.  On Extricate, this track fits in nicely and does its job well.  I feel that the album would be less without it.  But, do I want to put it on and listen to it in isolation and then walk away?  Do I want this tidy but foursquare 60s bop commanding my full attention?  I’m not sure I do.  So, bye then.  (The harmonica is good, mind.) 

Laptop Dog: Computers are rubbish, says man who decided what they were in 1983.  Laptops are rubbish says man who has never used a laptop.  People who like laptops are rubbish says man who once saw someone he didn’t like using one, which is a bit like criticising socks because Kenny G wears them.  Course, I’ll tell you what’s really rubbish: uninteresting snare drum rhythms mixed too loud. 

The Joke: Everyone likes tracks that begin Fall gigs, because no matter how average they might be compositionally, they are the gateway into an hour or so of gigging excitement (or, in many cases in The Joke’s tenure as opener, at least confirm that the gig will go ahead in some form or other).  But, you know, it's not really good musically or lyrically, and we must confront that truth. 

Jap Kid: Why hasn’t this been merged with I Come And Stand At Your Door?  It’s getting short shrift on its own.  Of course, Levitate is a mystery wrapped in an enigma wrapped in a MES production credit, and this track works perfectly as part of its half-arsed half-drunk half-finished genius, but outside of that environment where logic is jettisoned and sense is a distant memory, it can’t stand up for itself. 

ROD: This is the track I suspect I’ll be alone in down-voting.  There’s a lot that’s good about it, and it very near made the grade, but ultimately I find the attempt at gothic eeriness in the verse too obvious, and the chorus too short and clunky, and I wish that Craig would stop noodling about and play a riff or go away.  You disagree, you think this is brilliant, but you’re wrong and if this competition helps you to realise that, then it was not entirely pointless. 

Rose: You hear that wah-wah going?  Remember you started it.  Now make it stop and think about what you’ve done. 

Pearl City: Of all the songs exploring why businessmen might want to eat Chinese food, this may be the best.  Pyrrhic victory, though, because it’s going down. 

Why Are People Grudgeful?: Mostly they’re not.  There’s nothing wrong with this, it’s unlucky to lose out, but still, Sir [Joe] Gibbs’s version is better, and Lee Perry’s People Funny Boy which inspired it might be even better.  Mark had great taste in Jamaican music, but he didn’t have the knack of replicating it. 

Muzoweri’s Daughter: I’ve always found the migraine guitar and the spavin-gaited changes of tempo incredibly annoying, but it’s the lyrics that really turn me away from this song, which always just sound like “ooga-booga, silly Africans” to me. I’m prepared to believe something else is intended, but I’m damned if I can tell what it is. 

Last Orders: I do love the sound of extremely early Fall, that clash between punk snottiness, nursery rhyme simplicity, and preposterous stadium tom fills, but I’m not sure that this is the track to celebrate them with. 

High Tension Line: Some tracks achieve no points, and some tracks have no points thrust upon them.  I always expected the give this mostly harmless single a point or 2, until I found that I hadn’t.  Them’s the breaks.  It always makes me want to listen to Lamonte Young instead, anyway. 

Rollin’ Dany: I don’t begrudge The Fall kicking back and knocking out an old rock n roll tune every now and then, but it rarely results in gold. Dany has already been a double A-side, which is more than it could possibly have expected, so I’m not going to give it points as well, otherwise it will have to go and have a lie down. 

Get A Hotel: As forgettable and inoffensive as the artworks in the Travelodge lift lobby.  The best part is a Big Youth lyric. 

Don’t Call Me Darling: Another that lost because it didn’t win. A plump-bellied roadhouse boogie enlivened by Brix’s grunge-angled chorus delivery. 

Hands Up Billy: Awful song, end of.  The only real pleasure I get from this is imagining it’s about James Herriott examining a goat for bowel troubles. 

New Formation Sermon: This is a backroom jam.  The Fall should improvise, extemporise, and ad lib, but they must never jam. 

Junk Man: I respect the ugliness of this cover, it sounds like a Punch & Judy show with a terrible hangover, but that may not be something we always want in our ears. 

WMC-Blob 59: I think that this works perfectly on the album, and always feel it’s unfair when it is referred to as one of the first piss tracks, but I can’t vote for it in isolation; Jesus, I’ve already given points to Papal Visit, the Fall Fans’ Proper Song Protection League  will be after me as it is. 

A Lot OF Wind: Oh, great Mark, share with us your searing insights into our society!  What’s that?  Giles Brandreth’s knitwear is garish, and the discussion on Pebble Mill At One tend towards the inconsequential?  Truly thy satirical eye is laser-focussed, Lord. 

I African Mancunian: This could have been good had it been finished, but it wasn’t so it isn’t. 

Age of Chang: Group 5 is pretty tough, and this would have got through on other rounds.  Musically this is generic, but the vocals sound as though they’re played from a musty cassette found in the vestibule of some eldritch monastery, which is a vast tick in the Pro column. 

The City Never Sleeps: I like the way that the cheesy synth has a different voice pretty much every time it shoulders its way in, but a one-off clunky cover was never going to make it against such opposition. 

Anecdotes + Antidotes in B#: Less a song, more a pitched pile of rubble. I like it, actually, but not enough. 

Wise Ol’ Man: A typical, but perhaps forgettable, example of a late Fall pop tune.  Yet another that I’d like to have given a point to in round 5. 

Hark The Herald Angels Sing: I fear that this is a joke I don’t get. 

Tragic Days: What is this?  There is no musical or non-musical reason for this to exist.  It is meaningless to judge it against any existing parameters.  It can consider its lack of points a victory, I guess. 

Tom Ragazzi: If Anecdotes got zero, then Ragazzi definitely gets zero. 

Pilsner Trail: Like a sketchbook for ideas that would reappear in different songs, this is interesting, but was rightly discarded by the group. 

The Ballard of J.Drummer: A pervading myth in Fall criticism is that Mark was a great story-teller.  In fact, he was mostly pretty poor at linear narrative, though he could sketch a great lysergic vignette.  Sadly, as well as being a barely coherent Western exemplum and/or spot of half-arsed Burns-baiting, this track is also musically valueless. 

Hungry Freaks, Daddy: In which The Dudes take a bludgeon to a cornerstone of counter-culture rock, and flatten 80% of the song.  Incidentally, I’m always surprised MES liked Zappa so much, I’d have thought a lot of it were too smug and muso for him (I know it is for me). 

Hey! Fascist / Hey! Student: It’s not terrible as a clod-hopping grease-punk track, but what really disappoints is that in 1993 MES sat around and thought “What’s as bad as actual Nazis?  Oh yeah, students. They’re the same.  They’re exactly the same, let’s suggest they all get kicked in the head.  That’ll tell them”.    

Birthday: If John Quays did indeed get “out of his face to The Idle Race”, this hideous cruise-ship rendition of one of their songs would have sobered him up in milliseconds. 

Recipe for Fascism: Levitate is a gloriously strange experience.  The bonus disc is merely a strange experience.  This track is barely an experience. 

Victoria:  Good song, I feel obliged to note.  And not a bad cover, they bring some new things to the original.  But there’s just not quite enough to it to get to the next round.  We are very slightly amused. 

Insult Song: Of all the micro-genres of Fall songs, the “Mark ribs the band” category is my least favourite; I don’t give a shit about your japes, I’m not your friend.  This is definitely the best of the batch, but it’s still getting a duck egg. 

Outro: Dum dum dum....dum dum dum...dum dum dum...dumb dumb dumb... 

The $500 Bottle Of Wine: SHanley’s rolling millwheel bass nearly got this one over the line.  The wine might have been rich, spicy and full-bodied, but this is a thin and tasteless concoction. 

986 Generator: Why are The Fall playing this generic country vamp, and, more to the point, why are they doing it for what feels like nine hours? 

Over! Over: That forced “I’m mad, me!” laugh destroys this hasty respray of a half-inched tune, which otherwise might have snuck into the victory paddock.  I don’t love it, and I never did. 

White Lightning: Give me enough snakebites and black and I dare say I’d wow the indie disco busting moves to this sprightly take on an old rock warhorse, but ask me to pick it as a Fall track worth celebrating, and you’ll expect short shrift. 

Mr. Pharmacist: Extra!  Extra!  Garage chug staled by extensive exposure!   

Stay Away (Old White Train): When Simpo couldn’t find Karl Burns when writing The Fallen, I can only assume he was hiding from the shame of this vocal. 

Where’s The F***in Taxi? C**t: I have been to the Jude The Obscure pub in Oxford on a few occasions.  It gets mentioned in this track.  You’ll have to take my word for it, because you’ll never listen to it again. 

North West Fashion Show: It’s Mark Ribs The Band: The Remix.  oh joy.  Also, surely Richard and Judy couldn’t have bastard offspring...at least, not with each other. 

My Door Is Never: Shoots for krauty hypnosis, hits clumsy playground chant.  Like lots of RPTLC it was better live. 

Hollow Mind: In the name of all that’s holy, let the corpse of Jerusalem rest, this shambling reanimated cadaver can aid no man. 

Afternoon Disco: This is a lightly diverting funk sketch.  I can imagine it sprouting into a good track, but this never happened. 

The Bad Stuff: Some of the sawdust bulking out the budget-range sausage that is RPTLC.  

Clasp Hands: Unlucky not to make the cut in a tough group, this cheeky rocker trundles like a toy train, held together by elastic bands and fuelled by Woodbine butts. 

Overture from “I am Curious Orange”: An attractive, melancholy chord progressions with some elegantly simple picking.  It’s a pity Brix didn’t make something more of this, or at least had the courage to leave it an instrumental. 

The Usher: Unlike lots of the shorter tracks on RPTLC, this feels slight, rather than unfinished, and it’s actually rather pleasing.

Symbol of Mordgan: What training do you need for discussion, at your own level, regarding whether someone failing to learn a riff whilst listening to the radio is worth putting on an album? 

Hot Aftershave Bop: This track was destined for a half-cut boogie, not the hallowed pantheon.  It won’t mind getting voted out. 

The Book of Lies: The pronunciation of “lah-hah-hize" is surely one of the least appealing moments in The Fall’s catalogue.  The rest of the song is alright. 

Live at the Witch Trials: Like a little pond snail, this does a very useful job in its natural habitat, but shrivels and dies swiftly on removal. 

The Coliseum: Sometimes the thing that turns an OK track into a good one is someone stopping the tape after the first four and a half minutes. 

O.F.Y.C. Showcase: Created in a lab to work well opening gigs, this doesn’t excite as much as the rest of the album when isolated. 

Vixen:  Passable whiny chug 

Bournemouth Runner: There’s a hollowness here, a feeling that the constituent parts don’t hang together, that something is missing, whether it be more musical material or just a bit more chutzpah in the performance.  Funny topic for a lyric, mind. 

Beatle Bones ‘n’ Smokin’ Stones: A pretty decent stab at the Beefheart song, considering it was almost certainly unrehearsed – but that harsh guitar tone sounds like toothache. 

Jingle Bell Rock: My colleague used to have a reindeer that sang this song, which she’d turn on multiple times a day every December.  This version is much better than that, but the trauma runs deep.  

Idiot Joy Showland: Congratulations, barn door hit confirmed, Marksman Smith. 

Underground Medecin: Far from a bad little piece of early Fall, but we just don’t need so many “we’re ace cos we take drugs, yeah?” songs. 

Cruiser’s Creek: A very unfair zero for a chunky, if slightly overlong, single. 

Touchy Pad: The second zero I regret having to award, for a concise and mysterious piece of late Fall weird. 

No Respects/No Respects Rev: It mostly lost points for that pointless non-version that fades out. 

Cloud of Black: I just listened to this, to check what it was like, but I’ve alredy forgotten. 

White Lines: Pffffft. 

D.I.Y Meat: The Fall do classic rock.  I’m quite fond of this one, actually, but someone’s got to go. 

Zandra: B-sides gonna B-side, I guess.  Good on ‘em, not doing nobody no harm. 

Just Waiting: This is the round where we test the truism that the covers are the worst tracks.  This is fine, quite a nice little indie country lope, and probably better than the average cover, yet here we are. Props to Grass Grow for sounding great. 

Popcorn Double Feature: Poor song + overly smooth reading = 0 

Legend Of Xanadu: I adore this song, just one of Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Titch’s corkers, but MES just can’t manage the vocal.  I’ve voted for Light/Fireworks anyway, so it still sneaks in. 

Hit the North: Frankly, this only got relegated because all those mixes dilute the taste. 

Second House Now: Frankly, this only got relegated because the lounge band intro gets on my thruppenies. 

Ivanhoe’s Two Pence: Nice enough little track, though it’s essentially what you get if you cross Time Enough At last with Paintwork, and take out the oomph. 

Zagreb: There’s nothing wrong with this, but since when has adequacy been an artistic yardstick? 

Gotta See Jane: Worst cover of all; there, I said it. 

Pledge: Pleasingly ramshackle, but yet another entry into the catalogue of 21st-century songs where Mark is angry about something despite clearly barely understanding it. 

Xmas With Simon: Christmas songs annoy me at the best of times. 

Butterflies 4 Brains/Whizz Bang: Far from being a bad song, but if only it whizzed and banged a little more. 

White Line Fever: MES as Tony Clifton, serenading a suspicious audience, with equal contempt displayed on both sides. 

Oswald Defence Lawyer: One of those Fall songs where everything’s in place, but it doesn’t gel.  Here we have a repetitive riff, revisionist history, and baroquely obscure imagery, but it still drags. 

Noise: Mark ribs the band, but this time over a loop; be still, my beating heart. 

Louie Louie: Meaningless to judge this: they’re playing Louie Louie badly, they know they’re playing it badly, they’re happy they’re playing it badly.  Shorn of experiential context there’s very little we can do with this except file it historically.   

The Crying Marshal: Crunchy and chunky, but doesn’t have the strength to hold onto the life raft. 

Cheetham Hill: Equally scrunchy sonically, but again a touch featherlight, so it’s out.  There’s no need to go berserk. 

Life Just Bounces: A mildly annoying ascending/descending figure coupled with lyrics that were clearly written as prose and squeezed into the metre. 

O! Zztrrk Man: The murk is commendable, but the net impact is minor. 

The Wright Stuff: As much as I adore Eleni singing the riff between her teeth, this one is going down. 

Assume: A good honest barrel along a greasy riff which doesn’t deserve zero, but neither does it deserve to win any awards.

The Acute: Do I look like I have on my forehead “I’ll accept any quarter-arsed shit with The Fall on the cover”? 

Squid Law/Squid Lord: Tell us you want to cover Junk Man without telling us you’re covering Junk Man.

Solicitor in Studio: There’s an awful lot to like here, but 1982’s output was so preposterously brilliant that this pales.  Killed by context. 

I’ve Been Duped: It was always nice to give Eleine a spotlight/Mark a fag break, but on record it’s somewhat lacking. 

Happy Holiday: I own 2 versions of this.  Sometimes I’m not proud of my choices. 

Latch Key Kid: IWS is a great album, but really this sounds like all the other bits of the album squished together.  

Kick the Can: Who will win in this epic battle between thin garage and stunted rockabilly?  Boredom will. 

Say Mama / Race With The Devil: I actually rather like Say Mama, but the forced and unnecessary smash into that boozy take on Race infuriates. 

Nate Will Not Return: This is not great, with the power to irritate, it is dead weight, I have sealed its fate. 

Room To Live: Round 21 is so tough I’m reduced to slightly arbitrary choices for what to eject.  I’ve never liked Riley’s chintzy little guitar line on live versions of this track, so, farewell, then...   

Octo Realm / Ketamine Sun: Octo is hilarious.  Ketamine is a decent example of The Fall’s “clearly influenced by” category, but it isn’t enough in a tough group. 

Susan vs. Youthclub: Speaking of ketamine, this sounds like a pop song in a K-hole after a couple of bongs and a Benylin spritzer. 

Mask Search: This is what people who haven’t heard a Fall album since 1987 think they sound like after 2000.  in their defence, they did this once. 

Choc-Stock: Its heart is in the right place, but it’s just too much of a bloody mess to truly love.  

Spinetrak: Not so much bad, as overly typical of the era. 

Italiano: Why on earth wasn’t this lumped with Oleano, when it’s clearly the original demo idea?  Obviously never going to get through.  It doesn’t even sound very italian (though On My Own does). 

Van Plague?: I nearly put this through for “rancid kid drowned in lagoon” alone.  

Ol’ Gang: Had this been an instrumental, I’d be pouring points on it.  Alas, Mark’s input is not only unnecessary, it mars the whole experience with poor timing, lazy rhymes, and tedious moaning about management types.

On My Own: Nice little track, but nice gets you nowhere in this world, bub. 

Tuff Life Boogie: Adequate B-side shimmy let down by annoying vocal hook.

Theme from Error-Orrori: Such a sluggish performance, it’s like some rough beast slouching towards Italy to be ignored.

Irish: You know when you make a bar of soap from all the slivers from the other bars of soap, and it works, but it’s a bit sloppy?  That’s what this is regarding final-era Fall songs. 

Serum: Quite good, in its way, with a fat rhythmic punch, but lacking in true character. 

Terry Waite Sez: I never worked out what this is for.  The only thing of which I am certain is that the tale about it being about a different Terry Waite from down the pub is steaming shite. 

And Therein: A song that is not bad at all in its original form, but proved too easy to teach new band members, and so we are burdened with a clutch of uninspired plods along its riff. 

Dead Beat Descendant: There’s a little clutch of terpsichorean late 80s tracks, about bops and boogies and dances.  They’re all perfectly alright, and none of them are particularly special.

The War Against Intelligence: Fine, but ironically short on ideas. 

Gibbus Gibson: A strange ditty, and one to which it is sad to give no points, but equally one which cannot command anything more. 

Jam Song: If you need to have it explained why a Fall track called “Jam Song” gets zero you’ve missed the whole fucking point. 

Middle Class Revolt: A socio-economic trend report wandering in a digital miasma, albeit one with a slightly annoying keyboard line. 

I’m Frank: Jaunty, priapic, and rather good.  It lost a point for sounding cock all like Frank Zappa, which was enough for an early bath in this group. 

Extricate: This chugs mightily pleasantly, but it won’t chug its way to the medal podium, will it? 

Arid Al’s Dream: That lovely guitar part should have had a better song to house it.  This is decent fare, but you can see why it was thrown away on a compilation. 

Stepping Out: Strong, in its way, and must have been powerful at those very early gigs, but it;s an example of nascent promise, rather than fully fledged glory 

Psycho Mafia: Like my comment on Stepping Out, only much more so.

2×4: Merely one of the crowd from the Beggars era.  It’s a nice crowd to be part of, mind. 

What About Us?: Not a bad tune, all things considered, but I’ve always thought the response to a serial murderer in the healthcare profession being “drugs are cool, heh heh” to be a little depressing.

Hilary: I might have scored this more highly if they’d not recorded Grass Grow, it's like Houdini revealing his tricks. 

Groundsboy: Sad to see this one go, it’s an odd and unforced little track painting a micro-vignette. 

Distilled Mug Art: The “three voice memos playing at once” feel is good, but that guitar noodling is so drab. 

Greenway: Beware of Greeks bearing riffs, in case you end up making stodgy pap like this. 

Dice Man: I like punk attitude and Bo Diddley as much as the next man, but this, alas, is inessential. 

Snazzy: The strangely antiquated slang of the title is the best thing about this.  In that spirit, I declare it to be “cruddy”. 

Funnel of Love: A fair shot at a cover, but it doesn’t quicken the pulse. 

Two Face!: For (another) Batman-influenced song, this is somewhat lacking in BIFF!  POW!  and KRAKK! 

Reprise: Jane – Prof Mick – Ey Bastardo: Mark ribs the band, except it’s only one of the band and there’s some boring drums and I don’t bloody know it’s just atrocious and can I turn it off now? 

I’m Not Satisfied: Mark’s love of Zappa doesn’t seem congruent with many of his opinions (although I think really Mark had a love of Mothers of Invention, not the other twelvety hundred solo albums).  This is not a great shot at a cover. 

Pittsville Direkt: The only interesting thing about this song is how uninteresting it is.  Even giving it a listen for this round, I found it hard to pay attention. 

Married, 2 Kids: Has some funny lyrics, but musically it leaves the Colman’s uncloven. 

Session Musician: Top tip: if you’re going to write a song berating hack musicians, ensure your own composition isn’t generic.

To Nkroachment: Yarbles: I prefer the instrumental version (and would have merged them together, but I’m not in charge, so whatever).

Don’t take the Pizza: The song is OK, if hardly top tier, but the coy obscuration of the word piss annoys me, from the band that would release Where’s The Fuckin Taxi, Cunt? 

Lucifer Over Lancashire: That “son of shave and a haircut” rhythm becomes rather annoying after a while. 

Das Katerer: The timing is clunky on The Unutterable. The version on Post-Nearly man is better, but I suppose is not admissible as evidence.   

Breaking the Rules: Why not just play the cover, instead of writing some new but not very exciting lyrics?  Is it a tax dodge? 

Mad.Men-Eng.Dog: I’m a big fan of a Smith tape collage, but in this case the tape is apparently made from hessian and silt, and it’s just a bit too art brut(ish).

Scenario: Two found texts shoved together without any real meaning, plus a riff you already stole once this album, does not equal songwriting glory. 

Happi Song: A very nice little ditty, but little ditty it is, and little ditties aren't quite enough to go through.

Jungle Rock: I love the greasy barely tuned sound of this, it feels as though it will leave a sticky residue on your speakers, but the novelty song is not precisely towering genius. 

Segue: A travesty.  At least it’s short. 

Loop 41 Houston: I’m rather fond of Loop 41.  I’d like to hear the previous 40, instead of a chuckle-headed Dean Martin cover. 

The Steak Place: Better than I remembered it; not as good as I’d like t to be. 

Portugal: Kind of a fun bubbleglam pastiche, but I just feel achingly sorry for the letter writer, supercilious though his tone is.  If someone threw snotballs at me at work I’d quit too.   

Systematic Abuse: And then a little later, the band filed the same charges.  Anyway, this should be a great krauty groove, but somehow it isn’t - just more evidence of RPTLC being undercooked.

Unutterable: I was going to write something about this track after listening but I have already forgotten how it went.

Rude (All the time): Blaney may well have been a good friend to Mark, but he certainly added some crappy old guitar strumming to some of the songs...and here there’s not really anything else. 

Ibis-Afro Man: Unlike many people, I see this as a noble failure rather than a farce, and I salute it as it inevitably disappears form the competition. 

Quit iPhone: Certainly the best of the “Old man yells at iCloud” group of late Fall songs, but it can’t quite hold onto a point here. 

Cary Grant’s Wedding: I’ve just never worked out what this is supposed to be.  Is it time for “What do you mean, ‘What’s it mean, what’s it mean?’?”?   


Tuesday, 31 October 2023

Yo, Windrush The Show

Whether you like this record or not, you have to agree that Dubwiser is a corking band name.  It's a good record, though it could be a bit dubbier.


DUBWISER – THE EMPIRE WINDRUSH (self-release) 

It’s only about 20 minutes since Dubwiser’s last EP, yet here they are again, slipping out a four-tracker to coincide with Black History Month. The tracks mostly use personal histories to highlight the ups and downs of racial integration (or lack of it) in twentieth-century Britain, proving that a human story will nearly always make a point better than a political harangue. The title track focuses on a single woman sailing to the UK on HMT Empire Windrush, but your ears will focus on the fantastic horns borrowed from Birmingham band KIOKO, especially the stretching-taffy trombone. The vocal melody is unexpectedly old-fashioned and romantic – the opening notes sound as though they’re going to go into ‘It Started With A Kiss’ - and ‘Amazing’ is similarly easy to hum along to, celebrating one of those unsung female heroes every family can point to. ‘Johnny’ is just as close to home, about the father of two of the band members, who hailed from Sierra Leone and flew in the RAF in World War II. It’s a funky reggae shimmy, and if the vocal sometimes grasps for the big notes, the emotion is palpable. ‘Take Down Colston’ advocates, as the name suggests, for the removal of the statue of the Bristol slaver...which is a great sentiment, though you do wonder whether Dubwiser know this already happened!  The lyrics might not be subtle, but the track may take the musical crown, with some gritty left-hand clav lines worthy of The Wailers’ great Earl “Wya” Lindo. If we get another Dubwiser EP next month, you won’t hear us complaining. 

Wednesday, 18 October 2023

German Bite, Perhaps?

Really nice record, this.  I only reviewed it because one of the band is part of the team behind Supernormal, which regular readers will know is my favourite festival.


TEETH OF THE SEA – HIVE (Rocket Recordings) 

This is Teeth Of The Sea’s sixth album, and fittingly it sounds like six albums at once. Locked within these 41 minutes you’ll find alt-rock, techno, fluffy pop, EBM, a whiff of teenage metalhead guitar, and even a soupcon of easy listening. Hive mostly consists of melodic instrumental oddities, but a pair of pulsating pop monsters show themselves early on. 'Get With The Programme' pushes low-key vocals against an aggressive square wave arpeggio, Depeche Mode’s doomy tunefulness doing battle with Front 242’s shiny leather shimmy, and is followed by 'Butterfly House', a hothouse-ripe synthpop track with the slightly wry vocals of Kath Gifford (previously of such great acts as Snowpony and Moonshake). Occasional slashes of guitar could have come from INXS’s Kick, and if that’s a surprise then God help you when the sugar-coated shredding arrives half-way through, direct from a Van Halen tribute. 

'Powerhorse' couples its rough sandy textures with a sinuous synth bass, sounding a lot like a macabre reptilian version of Boards Of Canada’s 'Roygbiv', but the album’s centrepiece is 'Megafragma'. Fortunately – or tragically? - this is not a 9-minute avant-garde cover of 'Toca’s Miracle', but a hypnotic, endlessly cantering piece of Terminator dub, with gaseous billows of guitar and keys erupting and receding above a relentless train-track ostinato. It’s somehow spacious and claustrophobic at the same time, and feels longer than ice ages whilst also being far too short. 

Hive's real wild card though, the hoverfly in the bee swarm, is the trumpet. The opener 'Artemis' uses chintzy synth notes that sound as though they’re being picked up on long wave, but it’s the descending horn line that is stands out, sounding like something from James Last (imagine the joys of the albums Post-Rock-A-Go-Go, or Non-Stop Techno Kraut Party). On 'Æther' the mournful trumpet is lost in a synth miasma, and it’s a close cousin of Jean-Michel Jarre’s funereal space-sax workout, 'Last Rendezvous'. Whilst Jarre was memorialising those lost in the Challenger disaster, Teeth Of The Sea celebrate the Apollo moon landings, commissioned by The Science Museum. The track 'Apollo' closes the album, and this time dusty, fuzzy guitar is a springboard for a defiantly melancholy trumpet line, letting you know how Morricone’s 'Ecstasy Of Gold' might have sounded had The Good, The Bad And The Ugly been set in a VHS warehouse. Hive could have been a messily ornery experimental effort, but all of these very different elements tessellate like honeycomb.  


 


 

Wednesday, 4 October 2023

o, screw capitals, i say

This is a lovely album.  You cold argue it's just more stuff that sounds like Slowdive, but I'd argue that there's no harm in that.


SLOWDIVE – everything is alive (Dead Oceans) 

Around the turn of the millennium, a lot of musicians became obsessed with the movies. Every trip-hopper turned in a “soundtrack to an imaginary film”, and every post post-rocker pledged that their latest release was “cinematic” (it was just accepted that cinematic meant breath-taking and adventurous, whereas strictly speaking 2001: A Space Odyssey is exactly as cinematic as Carry On Emmanuel).  The new Slowdive album – only their fifth, and a full six years since their self-titled return to the studio – doesn't sound like either of the above, but does bring to mind a few film soundtrack styles in its opening three tracks.  

There’s a stately sequencer at the beginning of shanty - capitals are verboten on all track titles here – it’s time to get all nostalgic for early ‘90s electronica credits and Designers Republic chic - which very much resembles something from one of Tangerine Dream’s mid-80s soundtracks. This is overlaid by a blanket of guitars, some reverby vocals curling like mist on a moor, and a rhythm that edges towards being groovy but which is played with such funkless froideur it could have been what High Llamas had in mind when they named their 1998 album Cold And Bouncy. The track is light and airy, but somehow still quietly epic, like a Bond theme made from candy floss. 

There’s a cosy yet sombre atmosphere to prayer remembered, an instrumental which is all glistening guitar and breathy pads across a rock solid but a wholly unaggressive rhythm, and it’s like a reticently gothic cousin of a big celluloid heartstring-puller from 30-odd years ago, such as Eddi Reader’s Nobody Lives Without Love from Batman Forever (and no, we didn’t expect that this would be a connection we’d be making either). alife, however, is an echoey emotional dream-pop beauty, and sounds like a song from the closing credits of a John Hughes knock-off teen comedy playing in an air hangar – it even has a sudden unceremonious fade, as if there are no more stylists and legal advisors left to name onscreen. If a lot of shoegaze is a rich luxurious chocolate truffle, then this delightfully fluffy tune is a pocketful of Fun-Size Milky Ways, and none the worse for that. 

Not every track comes with the air of OSTs past, however. Lead single kisses is a cheery mid-paced pop breeze which has a little New Order in its understated vocals and nearly jangly guitar, whereas skin in the game is only a few dozen effects pedals away from late-80s literate pop (imagine Black if they swapped their espressos for milky tea with three sugars and some MDMA). The album’s high points are very different. andalucia plays is a hushed countryish paean of the sort which a lovelorn Midwesterner might strum to himself in the dusty back room of a Texaco, which is smothered with blissful 4AD guitars and lucent first-rays-of-the-dawn synth notes. Even better is chained to a cloud which is built on a bright pointillist synth arpeggios that could have been nicked from old Frankie Knuckles classics like Baby Wants To Ride or Your Love (as nicked by The Source & Candi Staton for You’ve Got The Love) and which blossoms into a ball of noise with a lovely contrast between the clinical precision of the drums and the  warm blurriness of the rest of the song. 

Slowdive’s discography stretches back 33 years, and there’s not much on this album which will raise the eyebrows of anyone familiar with their previous work, as it falls somewhere between the fuzzy glow of 1993’s Souvlaki and the dispassionate chill of its follow-up Pygmalion. But everything is alive is joyful listen regardless, taking the cloud tunnel bliss of the best shoegaze and adding some pure pop pleasure. Cinema for the ears?  More like dream visions for the soul. 


 


 

Monday, 2 October 2023

Forty Sense

This might not have been the greatest day of music I've ever seen, but it's the sort of thing that should always be celebrated.


FORTY YEARS OF PROMOTION, PRODUCTION & PERFORMANCE, ITS ALL ABOUT THE MUSIC, Port Mahon, 2/9/23 

This event is part of a month-long celebration of local promoter Osprey’s career spanning 40 years onstage, at the mixing desk, or at the helm of multiple gigs. There’s palpable love for the man himself on display from today’s punters and performers, and this reflects Osprey’s greatest trait as a promoter: passion. There are legions of successful musicians who got their first break at one of Osprey’s nights, as he took a chance on some nascent promise, and there are other acts to whom Os has stayed loyal for years, even if they’ve never picked up a following. Every healthy music scene needs this sort of supportive underpinning, just as much as it needs hip young gunslingers and breakout successes, and with that in mind this review will highlight acts who may not have had much previous coverage in this magazine (and if you need to know that he didnt, Beaver Fuel, The Foam Heads, and Matt “Charms Against The Evil Eye” Sewell are worth your time we prescribe Nightshifts passim, stet).  

The garden hosts a surprisingly varied roster, and starts strong with uke-slinger Bill Frizzell. His runaway -jalopy run through the top 10 singles from 40 years ago is unpretentious fun, but his musical setting of diary extracts from his time building Australian railroads in the 70s is brilliantly funny and dramatic: a one-man Edinburgh show surely beckons. Nash also has a playful approach to covers, mashing up contemporary pop culture tunes with a bit of hip-hop and a bourbon-blessed blues growl, but Paul Lodge makes him look predictable by comparison: the garden might have the vibe of an open mic night, but how often do you see people setting words by Nietzsche, Wordsworth, and a 12-century visionary abbess to delicate Dylanish music at your local? 

Tiger Mendoza is a name well known to Nightshift readers, of course, but how many times have we seen Ian de Quadros barrel through his tunes with only a trusty acoustic? Even shorn of their electro-hip-hop settings his songs stand up and his voice proves to be strong enough to take the spotlight...also, weirdly, he does the second cover of the day of ‘No Diggity’ - the Blackstreet revival starts here, we guess. Ben Jacobs deserves praise for turning in two sets of fluent, assured songs, but our favourite new find is The Station, a Newbury trio whose high-energy romp-pop falls somewhere between The Jam’s socially conscious concision and the fringe-flicking sensibilities of early Gene. Finding yourself in a small room, tapping a foot to a band who look like they’re having the time of their lives might not make the headlines, but captures the spirit of an Osprey event. We're looking forward to the fiftieth anniversary already. 

Thursday, 31 August 2023

Armageddon Bored Of John Lydon

I thought that this was a very disappointing record.  I suppose the best way to spin it is to say that it wasn't made for you or for me, but for someone who is now dead.  I respect that...but I still think this is pretty crap.


PUBLIC IMAGE LTD. - END OF WORLD (PiL Official) 

If clairvoyants and oracles were real, there’d be proper proof. Instead of telling us that Brazil would win another World Cup, or that there’d be further conflict in the Middle East, if just one seer in 1977 had said “You know that Johnny Rotten? One day he’ll ask to do Eurovision with a soft croon about love and loss” the Society for Psychical Research would have a billion members today. Of course, PiL were not successful in their bid to present Ireland in Liverpool this year with Hawaii, and it’s not the sort of thing liable to win the contest in the twenty-first century (although it can’t have fared worse than the tedious bluster of the Kelly-green Keane they did send), but the song remains a tiny gem, and closes End Of World, their eleventh studio album. For those of us used to Lydon the trickster imp, it’s a surprisingly sincere song, with glistening guitar and an undulating bass softly ebbing and flowing like waves lapping a calm shore, the line “remember me, I’ll remember you” landing especially poignantly once you know the song is about Lydon’s wife Nora who lived with Alzheimer’s. Nora died in April, and the album is dedicated to her memory. 

The intimacy of Lydon’s vocal on Hawaii isn’t repeated on the album, which is full of his familiar trademarked style where stentorian pronouncements teeter at the edge of becoming a yelp, like an ironic carnival barker, or a muppet doing high priest cosplay. Lydon sounds cracking for the most part, but the music is rather less consistent. The album starts with the pirate-rock romp of Penge, and if the relevance of that part of south London to a lyric about harbours and longships is a mystery, the song rollocks along in fine fettle, as does Car Chase, a glam disco stomp – “a smash and grab of a song” as Lydon puts it – about a mental institution resident escaping and going on minor nocturnal sprees. But there’s rather too much uninspired vamping on the album, and tracks that sound half-finished: the title track has a doughty Thin Lizzy guitar line, but it's tethered to an unedifying and dumpy rock rhythm, and Down On The Clown (nothing to do with circus fellatio, incidentally) is similarly lead-footed. There’s nothing hugely wrong with this, but it’s a long way from the paranoid, febrile dub skirmishes of the majestic Metal Box, or even the stadium fist-pump of mid-eighties hit Rise.  

Being Stupid Again has a strong groove, with a phased guitar sliding io and out of focus, as if a wasp circling your picnic were playing How Soon Is Now, but is let down by the lyrics, all about students espousing left-wing causes. People, especially iconoclastic antistars like Lydon, should be able to ridicule whatever part of the society they want, but it has to be interesting. Only the pronouncement “All maths is racist!” has any satiric bite here, unlike repeating “Ban the bomb” in a silly voice. The real message comes out near the track’s end, the Daily Express mantra of “I’m not paying for that” - if anger is an energy, snide moans about public expenditure would barely power a glimpse of your commemorative God Save The Queen NFT*. On an album where ex-Pistols are labelled “liars, fakes, cheats and frauds” Lydon is beginning to resemble Morrissey, harping on old grievances and a nebulous social malaise - it’s hilarious how much Lydon sounds like one of Mark Heap’s self-important windbag characters when he announces “Your ignorance shall be your fall from grace” at the start of Walls. There’s material on this album that’s fun, from the bouncy Blondie backing vocals on Pretty Awful, to the yob jazz of Dirty Mucky Delight, but it’s hard to make a case for most of it being essential listening. Apparently, Nora loved the album. Actually, that’s probably justification enough. 


*Yes, this exists: ‘GOD SAVE THE QUEEN’ COMMEMORATIVE COIN + BONUS NFT! - Sex Pistols | The Official Website (sexpistolsofficial.com) 

 

Wednesday, 30 August 2023

So Not Now Here?

Some frankly purple prose about a bunch of fuzzy noises, but I do think that Lee is excellent.  Even people who would never listen to drones and noise tend to find that they like his stuff, especially live.


LEE RILEY – FROM HERE WE ARE NOWHERE (Eyeless) 

It’s common to talk about textures and colours in music, but this new EP from Oxford’s leading experimental musician is more likely to make you think of space and volume: chasms of unfathomable depth, or vast corridors without end. The title track, a complex and fuzzily capacious drone, sounds like Zeno playing a cello with an infinitely long bow that will never finish its stroke, and the following track, ‘Lifting Undertow’, pits rumbling bass against what we can only describe as a hollow hiss, and feels like swimming slowly across the ocean’s murky floor on a manta ray the size of a city. Like many of the six tracks, in place of thematic development in the standard musical sense, this piece progresses towards a change in focus, with an intense sombre rattling stealing the attention (imagine the sound of a corpulent spectre dragging its chains through a paddling pool full of gravel). 

But not everything here is ominous or oppressive, and ‘Undoing These Knotted Times’ creates a warm cocooning atmosphere by adding airy sonic wisps to a deeply resonant hum, and is probably what you’d hear if Brian Eno and David Lynch tried to teach an industrial ventilation system the ocarina. By the time you get to the gritty scouring noise of final track ‘No One Knows What’s Inside’, which feels as though you’re trying to clean a desert with your ears, you’ll be surprised that half an hour has gone by.  Although there’s often no sense of traditional pitch to this music, let alone melody, it feels structured, varied and immensely satisfying. This release is arguably Lee’s finest work to date and we advise you to get on board...or at least tumble in and get lost. 


 


Tuesday, 8 August 2023

Bear Bum?

And today, on Albums By Bands I'd Never Heard of That I Reviewed Because Of The Name...


MOON PANDA – SING SPACESHIP, SING (Fierce Panda) 

The Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy addresses the question of what’s unpleasant about being drunk: “Ask a glass of water”. Similarly, listen to the second album by Danish/Californian dream pop duo Moon Panda and you might get a taste of sultry summery parties from the perspective of a melting ice lolly. Every one of these twelve tracks is sweet, sticky, and liable to evaporate before your ears. A track like 'Machina Sky' lets a breathy pop vocal lounge across a shuffling beat, whilst synth and bass sink slowly into a treacle well of reverb – there are even languorous choppy guitar chords that have wandered in from Spandau Ballet’s 'True', but stopped for a few sangrias on the way and are now a bit sleepy. Elsewhere, 'Mixed Up' is the sort of sophisticated groove-pop which lies equidistant between Sade and Brand New Heavies, but instead of swaggering through the urban night it seems content to sag contentedly in the afternoon sun – is this the start of a new flaccid jazz movement?  

Maddy Myers’s vocals are charming throughout, warm, soft and intimately aspirated as if Wendy Smith from Prefab Sprout had swapped the literate angst in chilly County Durham for lunchtime cocktails by an LA pool. The music is lush and lazy and every track, from opener 'Come Outside'’s shimmering mix of glossy keys and smiling staccato vocals – think Space meets early Moloko – is a sunshiny delight, but isn’t all wilting synths and heat-haze guitars. There are some snaky basslines scattered throughout that might have come from one of Thundercat’s slinkier outings, whilst 'CURRENT'is one of a few tracks with a hiccoughing rhythm that is clearly influenced by the intricately controlled stumbling of a J Dilla beat (or perhaps by DOMi & JD BECK’s adaptations of the style). But perhaps Sing Spaceship, Sing’s pleasures can cloy over a dozen tracks, and by penultimate number, 'Rain Mouth', you might long for something other than a woozy lope. Closing track, 'Dance', really breaks the spell, an agonisingly sluggish weeping guitar part sounding like a half-arsed take on the knowing airhead schlock of Willie J Healey, or George Harrison: The Benylin Years. This is a collection of beautifully produced songs, ripe for sampling on playlists and dipping into for loving compiled mixtapes, but maybe doesn’t have the variety to truly satisfy as an entire album. After all, man cannot live by Calippos alone. 

Monday, 31 July 2023

Totally Wired

 ...And here's my other review in the latest Nightshift, a more traditional gig write-up.


CRANDLE/ LEE SWITZER-WOOLF/ PLAGUE ARISH, ALL WILL BE WIRED, Library, 14/7/23 

Plague Arish is standing in at late notice, and whilst his improvised noise is a substantially more abstract and aggressive proposition than the rest of the line-up, he admirably doesn’t try to temper his material to mollify the small crowd, and dives straight in with some distorted buzzing stutters like a crossed-line conversation between Mr Punch and a robotic auctioneer. Crouched on the floor behind a jumble of devices in a voluminous black hoody and looking like Satan’s Little Helper, Plague Arish takes us on a sonic journey through digital waves crashing on a modem shore, rain that rusts itself as it falls, and the Metatron with nagging heartburn...or, if you’re less fanciful, a whole bunch of skreeps and blatters. Whatever it is, it sounds good (or occasionally horrible, which is, we suspect, the point). 

Like a grandmother advising you take your coat off indoors or you won’t feel the benefit later, Lee Switzer-Woolf could not have asked for a better contrast to bring out the melancholic delicacy of his songs. Built from a sparse palette of acoustic guitar, hissing drum machine, and spindly vocals, his songs cast a bittersweet spell which recalls Arab Strap at their least beered-up and potty-mouthed.  One track features a seasick loop which sounds like 20% of a RZA beat and a mordant spoken tale of a decaying relationship something like Croydon’s Superman Revenge Squad, but is immediately followed by a chirpy pop rhythm which could have been used by Tiffany. A surprisingly varied, but consistently enthralling set. 

If David Lynch ever managed a wedding band, they’d sound like Crandle. The duo turn their keyboard, tremulous vintage guitar tones, and cheesy programmed drums to a wide range of covers, moving from Shakira to Shania Twain via Alex Chilton and Leonard Cohen. They play these pocket torch songs like a Kinder Egg Chris Isaak and a Happy Meal Lana Del Rey, and if this might not be a set to shift anyone’s musical paradigms it’s certainly reason to shuffle some shoe leather, which is more than enough on a Friday night. 

Sonny Delight

I have two reviews in the latest Nightshift. This one was supposed to be for next month, but the editor asked for 200 words on deadline day to fill a gap, so in I went.  It truly is a cracking EP, seek it out.


MID AIR – THERE'S A SON (self-release) Well, this is a gem. There’s A Son might tell of someone “tongue-tied and compromised” who fails to ever fully connect, but the song hits the emotive bullseye, with a lilting and cultured melancholy like the R.E.M. of “Sweetness Follows” - imagine the weepy emoji carved meticulously onto age-varnished mahogany and you might catch the elegantly misty-eyed impression. Barney Morse-Brown from Duotone adds cello, which is as near as one can get to a kitemark for sophisticated music in Oxford. The closely twined lead vocals hang suspended in an amniotic pool of soft synth and stately guitar, but “On a Distant Shore” gives their lush sound a clearer setting, atop an unhurried urbane countrified riff that’s a tasty double portion of classic Fleetwood Mac (hold the cocaine). “Corpse in the Copse” might look like Elf on the Shelf for baby goths, but it has a breezy folk darkness as if someone described Nick Cave's “Where The Wild Roses Grow” to All About Eve then pressed record. The tinkling piano might edge a step too far towards the paddock of prettiness on this one, but this debut EP is hugely promising overall.

Wednesday, 19 July 2023

A Spanner & Their Works

You're not really supposed to read these bits, this isn't actually a blog, by any meaningful definition.  Good, that's that sorted, then.


ANOHNI & THE JOHNSONS – MY BACK WAS A BRIDGE FOR YOU TO CROSS (Rough Trade)  

The highlight of Julian Schnabel’s film of Lou Reed performing the entirety of his classic album Berlin is the luminous vocal on 'Candy Says' by Antony (as ANOHNI was known at the time). At the end of a light and quavering but surprisingly sinewy reading, Reed holds ANOHNI with a long appreciative gaze, allowing a fraction of a smile to brush his lips - which for that uneffusive old boulder was the equivalent of a 21-gun salute. The respect between the two musicians is highlighted by 'Sliver Of Ice', which is based on one of the last conversation Reed had with ANOHNI, in which he told her of the beautiful intensity of elementary experiences at life’s end. As ANOHNI puts it, “the simplest sensations had begun to feel almost rapturous; a carer had placed a shard of ice on his tongue one day and it was such a sweet and unbelievable feeling that it caused him to weep with gratitude”.  Over the sort of warm jazzy haze, you might find in the Elysian Fields Holiday Inn, ANOHNI’s delicate croon captures the experience with Hemingway bluntness: “A taste of water on my tongue, it was cool, it was good”. 'Go Ahead', the track immediately preceding this, makes a sonic nod to Lou Reed, visceral squeals of guitar noise threatening to engulf a sparse stately clutch of chords. The vocals, a parody of rock which would feel far more at home over a NWOBHM canter than this NYC noise edifice, scamper with deliberate awkwardness across the top. No wonder the track lasts only 90 seconds, any longer and the tensions in the song might yank it apart.  

Despite this pairing, Lou Reed is far from this album’s primary reference point. Instead, ANOHNI’s strong but spindly voice, and many of the lush arrangements, will recall that breed of vintage soul vocalists who balance suave sophistication with gut-wrenching emotion: think Smokey Robinson, Al Gren and, especially Marvin Gaye. 'Why Am I Alive Now' captures the essence of Gaye’s classic, What’s Going On, the gorgeous syrupy vocals, the shimmering strings and the hazy vibraphone managing to communicate cosy safety and self-critical uncertainty at once. 

ANOHNI’s voice has always been a glorious thing, with the lopsided, stumbling beauty of an hours-old foal or a butterfly slowly unfurling from the cocoon, but My Back Was A Bridge For You To Cross is filled with lovely complementary arrangements, like the tiny flute phrases in 'Can’t' that melt away like ice on the tongue. The track has flavours of the well-bred soul of the 90s, urbane if not quite urban, and one might draw a line to Erykah Badu, D’Angelo, and even McAlmont & Butler...if you really get creative, 'Can’t' sounds like a slowed down and hollowed out version of Hue & Cry’s burnished yuppie pop. And just to prove that her voice is not just very pretty but also malleable, on 'Scapegoat' ANOHNI’s lines fracture as they drift into the distance like Horace Andy’s, and two registers appear to be in conversation on 'It’s My Fault', as on Cat Stevens’s 'Father & Son' (and the opening line “I didn’t do it, but I know that I did something wrong” seems to paint ANOHNI as the direct inverse of Shaggy). 

Divas and talent show judges spend whole careers selling the concept of “good” singing, a dead-eyed and lead-footed virtuosity which flattens all compositions and makes a mockery of interpreting a lyric. Although there are a couple of songs on this album which don’t set up camp in your memory, the vocals always astonish, from the sound of Jeff Buckley floating on a soul bisque on 'It Must Change' to the greasy gospel crescendo of 'Rest'. There’s one moment in this track where ANOHNI phrases the word “stone” in the zen-like line “Rest like a stone waits for the sun” with a micro-melisma, slingshotting swiftly across three notes: the phrasing is gorgeous, but it’s neither self-conscious nor showy, just a tiny perfect moment.  Lou Reed would doubtless give it a barely perceptible but heartfelt nod. 


 


 


 


 

Sunday, 9 July 2023

The Pen Is Mightier

And here's your second review of the day, this time of a very famous international act  also worth listening to, but I suspect you know this already.


SWANS – THE BEGGAR (Mute) 

People used to say “Swans can break a man’s ear with just one beat of a drum”. At their inception, Michael Gira’s band of less-than-merry men were known for their sonic brutality, especially live, where many an exciting new career as a tinnitus-sufferer began. The addition of singer/keyboardist Jarboe heralded a new melodic sensibility, but the underlying aggression remained, a misanthropic sonic gall hidden below the sweetly tuneful surface. When the band reformed in 2010, after 13 years of silence, their sound was a little different, more spacious and subtle. A Swans album was still intense, but it was more often the intensity of a cold unwavering stare than of a spittle-flecked harangue. The Beggar, their sixteenth studio album, makes good use of the quietly ardent tone, and whilst listening is intentionally oppressive, it’s like the insidious continual whisper of conscience rather than the brimstone sermon, and even when songs reach a clangourous attack they tend to build frog-boilingly slowly from hushed beginnings. 

This is the case form the very outset, 'The Parasite' opening with 6 chilly, spare guitar notes which sound like the start of Ennio Morricone’s theme to a new Dollars film set in purgatory, before building to a stentorian drone to leave us eight and a half minutes later trapped in a church organ with some wasps - and if you think eight and a half minutes is exhaustingly long for a track, then strap in! 'Michael Is Done' begins with barely voiced moth-wing string flutters and an oddly sprightly nursery rhyme melody before swelling slowly towards the sudden eruption of a Spector wall of sound, complete with rattled tambourine and girl-band backing vocals (incidentally, the Michael in question might be the apocalyptically battling archangel, rather than the lyricist, but regardless, “He’s the hate in the love […] his words are burnt meat” seems to sum up the Gira aesthetic). Even when tracks start off imposing, they tend to get even bigger and darker. Take the title track, which grows from a sinister bass groove to relentless slave-galley drums, but 'Ebbing' takes the bombastic biscuit and, despite its name, swells and waxes a folky little vocal melody to a crushing crescendo: this is the soundtrack to a short alternative version of The Wicker Man where the locals just decide to sacrifice themselves and the entire island ends up in flames.  

Essentially, The Beggar has two flavours, gliding between sweet and sour, heavenly and harrowing, or – to borrow from first two tracks’ titles – paradise and parasite. Variations of these  are mixed and swirled on the confusingly named 'The Beggar Lover (Three)' for a shade under 44 minutes. Such is the density of this fascinating collage that it would take an entire review of its own to cover, but in lieu of a map, here is a list of notable landmarks: a paranoid miasma of strings, like a particularly fretful Ligeti; sinisterly sepulchral tubular bells; a smooth voice-over actor intoning lines like “Its appetite is endless and will never be filled”, as if on a 1990s guide to setting up your expensive stereo in hell; a percussive flurry, like summer rain heard from inside a cello; a lead-footed industrial rhythm paired with luxuriant siren vocals; disconnected robot phonemes strangely reminiscent of Jean-Michael Jarre’s Zoolook; sub-aquatic trip-hop; a timpani duel; a kid singing playground classic 'This Old Man' and totally fucking it up.  

For all their power, sometimes Swans’ portentous bleakness can become a bit, you know, silly. It’s hard not to giggle when a zombie-Cohen croak repeats “come to me, feed on me” for 45 seconds straight. There are also times, such as the 60s garage chug of 'Los Angeles: City Of Death', or the stately chord progression and gospeloid choir of 'No More Of This', that edge towards a safe rock stodge, like Spiritualized’s blackened goth cousins. Some might wish for more of the pounding drums and hellish vocals of old, others might hope for more of the experimental blasted patchwork of 'The Beggar Lover (Three)', but the album succeeds best through its unwieldy, unmanageable length. They say Swans can break a man’s spirit with just two hours of unstinting grimness. 

Aired Broadcast

Two posts coming at you like Cleopatru (pardon my accent), today.  Here's the first, of local acts nobody's heard of, but they're wroth bending an ear towards.


IN-FLIGHT MOVIE/ JUNIPER NIGHTS/ TIGER MENDOZA, Oxfordshire Music Scene, Port Mahon, 3/6/23 

Ian De Quadros has his finger in so many pies Environmental Health probably keep a dossier on him. He’s worked with such a roster of people, as collaborator or remixer, that no two Tiger Mendoza gigs are the same, in terms of either line-up or style. Tonight, Ian is joined in person by Dan Clear on guitar - chunky chords, delicate picking, or righteous shredding, as required - and virtually by the fantastic vocals of Emma Hunter and Mike from The Deadbeat Apostles (whose chunk-hop soul-revue guest spot ‘Easy Tiger’ is equal parts Propellerheads, Gomez, and Blues Brothers). ‘Green Machine’ gets a more organic reading than usual with hints of Mike Oldfield, as well as reminding this old Oxford electronica head of The Evenings’ version of the Channel 4 News theme. You truly never know what you’ll get from a Tiger Mendoza gig...unless you count quality. 

Juniper Nights also raise eyebrows slightly, their latest incarnation having ditched most of the Radiohead moves for a blurry psych-indie sound that threatens to go stratospheric but never quite does, which we christen faux-gaze. This is not a criticism, though, and their way with a fuzzy groove is pleasing. ‘Stop Motion’ is the set highlight, a bonsai Foals tune anchored by bass which is somehow elastic and staccato at the same time. 

Pairing synths with live drums works so well, it’s a wonder it doesn’t happen more often. In-Flight Movie are an object lesson, melding the propulsive neon sheen of 80s Tangerine Deam to the long-fuse explosions of 65 Days Of Static. They have a track about the flight patterns of red kites, which is about the most perfect concept for Oxfordshire post-rock anyone could ever dream up. Immersive yet often slyly funky, this set is excellent. Perhaps the slow and overly reverbed vocals could be improved, their dour goth tempo often pulling against the John Carpenter purity of the sparse passages and the hyperactive percussive climaxes, but this is a minor quibble. In-Flight Movie are such a strong addition to Oxford’s scene that it’s surely only a matter of time before someone suggests they work with Tiger Mendoza. Oh, we just did. 

Tuesday, 20 June 2023

Percolator, With Jools Holland

 I love Sparks...but not so much that I can't sneak a Fall reference into the first line of a review!


SPARKS – THE GIRL IS CRYING IN HER LATTE (Island) 

Rather like Mark E Smith stating that he kept The Fall “at arm’s length”, Sparks have never fully revealed themselves. They are arch and artificial, but rarely resort to wielding the smug and clumsy tool of pure irony. Partly this is because of the music, an improbable triangulation between art rock, bubblegum, and Broadway, which is playground simple and post-doc complex by turns, but it’s also down to the performative vocal delivery: if Bowie is grandly theatrical, Russell Mael is more like the kid in the school production of King Lear who grins and waves at his mum. Tonal ambiguity is evident from the get-go on this album, it being impossible to decode whether the title track is a snide swipe at the urbane sad-gurl consumerist with Phoebe Bridgers on her AirPods, or a sympathetic lament that life is hard. 

A queue of identical weeping women stretching across Caffè Nero would make a good René Magritte painting, emotional and cold simultaneously, and this lightly unnerving atmosphere is reinforced by the surprisingly abrasive glitchtronica loop underpinning the bouncy melody, which could have been lifted from Fennesz, whilst 'Veronica Lake' boasts an undulating digidub pop rhythm which is pitched somewhere between Pole and Yello. Clearly, even after 50 years, Sparks are still expanding their palette, and though this is their first album on Island since the rollicking unglamorous glam of their mid-70s work, only 'Nothing Is As Good As They Say It Is' even slightly resembles that era, although it sounds more like They might Be Giants, with an ascending vocal line that recalls The Divine Comedy’s 'Everybody Knows (Except You)'. Incidentally, the song is about a 22-hour-old baby wanting to return to the womb because the world is rubbish – clearly you can become a sad boi/gurl before leaving the maternity unit.  

A strange subject for a pop tune this might be, but other tracks make this micro-vignette feel like a three-volume Wilkie Collins novel. 'Escalator' is tinny suburban Krautpop, and is written of the point of view of a commuter who sees a woman on an escalator then...doesn’t talk to her. It’s hardly 'Teenage Kicks'. 'A Love Story' has someone repeatedly ask someone politely to hold his place in a queue whilst he goes to score some dope for his girlfriend. It’s an unusual clash between middle-aged respectability and youthful hedonism, and a yobbish one-note keyboard part keeps barging into the bubbling synth backing, intimating that that the relationship is not healthy. There are plenty more pop concepts to be slyly detourned before the album is out: 'When You Leave' is about how much fun it will be when the boring guest goes, an inversion of the “get the party started” trope, making it the opposite of P!nk - presumably L!me Green - and 'Take Me For A Ride' twists the classic rock topics of fast drivin’ and law-breakin’ into harmless middle-class cosplay, expertly illustrated by a disconnected metal guitar smashing into skittish woodwinds direct from an MGM musical. 

'We Go Dancing' is the most gloriously unexpected musical gambit, a chunk of martial minimalism recalling Steve Martland or John Adams in his very fastest machine, which claims Kim Jong Un gets massed ranks to “dance” in formation at will because he’s the world’s best DJ (Run DMZ, if you will). Kim may be an easy, though valid, target for ridicule, but does the track draw comparisons between club music’s exhortations to dance and totalitarian commands? And, if it comes to that, does 'Gee, That Was Swell' intentionally nod toward the valedictory heroics of 'My Way' even as it becomes the first break-up song in history to conclude “Sorry, that didn’t work, but lovely knowing you, bye”? This album asks far more questions than it answers. 

Although The Girls Is Crying In Her Latte might not be quite the joyous nugget of recent peak, Lil’ Beethoven, it’s impressive that, on their 26th album, Sparks are incorporating new sounds and concepts, whilst till sounding exactly like themselves. They’re a band we should all embrace – at arm’s length, mind. 


 


 

Sunday, 28 May 2023

Common People

I bought an early Simple Minds album today in the charity shop.  We will find out whether they were not shit before I'd heard of them, as some people claim - NB, it turned out not to be true for Genesis.


OH! COMMUNITY, DIVINE SCHISM, Common Ground, 7/5/23

Divine Schism’s Oh! Community all-dayers have been a regular highlight of Oxford’s post-lockdown music palette. By holding them in community-run spaces like the Common Ground coffee shop and art space they seem to attract people who might not explore classic dingy beer-dungeon venues, and today we see intrigued passers-by decide to step in, as well as some under-18s who can’t access most gigs. But, crucially, the bills have not been tempered or diluted to comfort the casual listener, and today’s line-up spans the delicate and the discordant, above a valley of the absurd.

Sensibly, the day starts with the approachable. Young singer Beth Pirrie has a lovely, unshowy voice and gives an excellent reading of a song by Corinne Bailey Rae (even though she can’t pronounce Corinne Bailey Rae). Green Hands are a pleasingly relaxed threepiece, recalling Wilco or Silver Jews at their least threatening, but The Bobo – with regular collaborator Kid Kin – are more memorable, their ethereal synthpop icily austere whilst being attractively melodic – imagine if the 3 ghosts who visited Scrooge had been the members of A-Ha.  

Suep deliver the sort of scrappy organ-led pep that has been played loud and tipsy in garages since 1963, and often remind us of old-school Truck favourites Fonda 500. They have a synth line that nicks to tune from ‘Love Will Tear us Apart’ which they put above a countryish lope, and some Bow Wow Wow buoyancy with a keyboard that sounds like a disappointed kitten. They merge into Garden Centre, sharing members, but with Max “King of Cats” Levy at the helm, giving them a more foscussed Monkees flavour (plus the best parasite shanty you’ll ever hear). Sinews, although having a hardcore underpinning and a taste for Bleach-era Nirvana, are fitting bedfellows with a surprising ear for a tune despite vocals delivered with the angry belch of a killer whale with a hangover.

The day really belongs to a pair of bands who are part high-concept performance art, part farcical prank...which is what all great pop is, ultimately. Dream Phone toss nasally pitch-shifted Auto-Tune vocals above infectious electro-punk à la Blectum From Blechdom, at times sounding like nightmare pier-end entertainers, Daniel Bedingfield & Orville. Shake Chain are more intense, and as the band begins Kate Mahoney is crawling agonisingly from the middle of the street outside, before delivering the second number from under a rug. When The Fall’s final line-up morphed into Imperial Wax, they had a vocalist conundrum: an MES impersonator would have been crass, but a standard rock singer leached some of the magic. Shake Chain sound like an alternate reality version of the group, where lean wiry post-punk is paired with a Diamanda Goulash of visceral howls and startling sobs.

The only way to follow that is with good tight bands. Ex-Void play sweet-minded college rock with a nod to Throwing Muses, or even Juliana Hatfield. They do a nice sprightly Arthur Russell cover, though they aren’t experts at mid-song gear changes. Holiday Ghosts splice in some classic rock ‘n’ roll chug driven forward by Gedgey hyperstrums, and are frankly excellent. Oh, and those kids we mentioned earlier? They got into the day, and went bananas for Shake Chain; there may be a future for mankind after all.




Wednesday, 24 May 2023

Cooler Shakey

I'm sort of amazed that this record isn't terrible.  Like everyone sane of my age, Shakey was my first musical love, so I was glad to give him some props.


SHAKIN’ STEVENS – RE-SET (BMG)

It would be hard to explain to a Gen-Z pop fan just how big Shakin’ Stevens was for the first half of the ‘80s, winning the hearts of the nation with his twin weapons of smooth rock ‘n’ roll vocalising and signature dance moves, which looked like someone had just cut half the strings on an Elvis marionette. But best not to waste too much time trying to get our putative zoomer up to speed, though, as Re-Set, Shaky’s third album this millennium, is as different from most of his career as the name suggests (and the fact that the cover shows him standing, windswept and scarf-wrapped in a disused slate quarry like he’s a lost post-McGann Dr Who regeneration does nothing to dispel this new-beginning notion).

Firstly, the lyrical concerns are rather more weighty than the classic Stevens songbook themes of boy meets girl/ boy tries to gatecrash next door’s party/ boy conducts disappointing structural survey. There’s a clear ecological message running through the album, and 'Greed Is All You Need' is an unequivocal swipe at any dastard who puts profit above people or planet. Sometimes the message doesn’t get much beyond “like, the government, man”, and we probably didn’t need both references to 1984 within the first verse of 'Hard Learned Lesson' to make the point, but throughout the sentiments are clearly heartfelt and sincere. The best of the political songs is 'Beyond The Illusion', a paean to the men like Shaky’s ancestors who worked the Cornish copper mines, which sounds like something Ewan MacColl and Peggy Seeger would have included in a Radio Ballad, delivered with the brawny warmth of Show Of Hands. 

Re-Set is also far more musically mature than the pop rocking that constituted most of Shaky’s career. Not only is his voice beautifully raw and burnished, but the songs, whilst not structurally complex, are elegantly persuasive, from the self-assured Tom Petty chug of 'Not In Real Life' to the Dylanesque shimmy of 'Hard Learned Lesson'. 'Dirty Water' even cuts a ZZ Top strut across dusty hardtop towards a roadhouse boogie session, where some atmospheric backing singers can be heard through the window. Only 'It All Comes Round' feels featherlight, a timid Levellers song that needs another few pints of scrumpy to build its courage. The last Shaky album to crack the UK Top 40 was the slightly anaemic Lipstick, Powder & Paint in 1985; Re-Set is more Politics, Gunpowder & Pain, and if it doesn’t score him his best sales for many a long year, then the world is an even worse than we thought.


Monday, 1 May 2023

Bueller Shaker

 There are a few extra lines in this review than appeared in the magazine.  Editors gon' edit.


BIG DAY OUT, BIG SCARY MONSTERS, Florence Park Community Centre, 15/4/23

As the delightfully bonkers, chaotic scurf rockers DITZ point out during today’s final set, the Florence Park Community Centre is not unlike a scout hut. One can’t be too precious in a somewhat over-lit suburban room lined with stacks of chairs and darts trophies, and performers and punters leave their egos at the door for this excellent all-dayer, to create a welcoming atmosphere with a pleasingly high musical bar. Things start tunefully, with Cheerbleederz’ cheeky jangle punk, while SUDS are the sort of band who bring their own tape hiss and seven-inch crackle, coming off like Madder Rose without the Velvety drug outlook and Yo La Tengo at their sweetest. Soot Sprite don’t quite hit the same melodic high, but still give us some Mazzy Star fuzziness and soothe our Cocteau twinge.

A few solo acts play in a tiny side room (if this is a scout hut, the second stage is where they store the old tents and Akela’s secret medicinal brandy) the best of which is Oxford’s EB, whose magic realist pseudo-rap is like an alternate reality inversion of The Streets, with a statistical love song coming off like an electro Jeffrey Lewis. “I put some feedback into this intro to annoy sound engineers” she grins, which tells you all you need to know. The incredible liquid steel of Pet Sematary’s voice is also a joy, and when Gaby starts singing a small shrubbery of recording phones spring up round the room.

Neo-emo might be a strange concept – it’s certainly a silly looking word – but Spank Hair wear the badge proudly, turning in a strong sinewy set, whilst also considering which is better, a horse or a donkey: as a pacifist Harry Hill might observe, there’s only one way to find out...pontificate at length whilst tuning. Jack Goldstein is as impressively maximalist as ever, cramming an improbable number of songs into a single segued ultra-minstrel set. As Jack crawls round the floor with water dripping from his clothes we don’t know whether he’s a hyperpop prophet or Margate’s most abstract floor polisher, but we approve.

As the evening darkens and the bar runs dry, the more raucous bands bring us home. Playful punks Lambrini Girls prove that, if you’ve got something important to say, say it incredibly loud, but temper it with a bit of humour (and if you can offer your listeners a wee drink whilst you rant, that helps too). Heroes of the day, however, are Other Half. One definition of a great new band is one that reminds you of lots of excellent acts, whilst not really sounding like any of them. Comparing notes with audience members post-set The Jesus Lizard, At The Drive In, Fugazi, Part Chimp, and Mcluskey are bandied about, but none of these capture the cheery insouciance of the twin vocals nor the 70s rock maelstrom behind the drums. Seek them out. If today’s event was an avant-scout jamboree, excuse us, as we’re off to sew on our new badges for Beer Tasting, Feminist Discourse and Incipient Tinnitus.


Thursday, 27 April 2023

I'm Bringing Flexi Back

An unusual one today, it's a brief piece I wrote for a my friend Russell's zine, Lunchtime for the Wild Youth (https://lunchtimeforthewildyouth.bandcamp.com/). The issue is all about covermounts, so I wrote this.  Turns out that everyone else pretty much wrote "this free tape changed my life" type stuff, so I'm glad I took a different tack.  Why not buy a copy of one of Russ's mags?  I recommend Ghost Zine, written - or scribbled - by his son, it's a work of art.


The Oinkletts – The Oink Song/ Uncle Pigg – Oink Rap (Free with Oink! Issue 1)

 I was always the ideal editor’s target market, one who would scour the newsagent shelves every week and month and buy any magazine with a sufficiently tempting cover CD (or tape, in earlier days).  I still have reams of these, from dodgy old Q compilations, kept because of a ropy R.E.M. live track, to a surprisingly diverse range of films included with Sunday papers in the noughties, to a complete set of The Wire’s Tapper CDs.

The first ever covermount I got, though, was not a tape or CD but a flexidisc, a concept already pretty dead by 1986 when I bought issue 1 of puerile periodical Oink!, aged 10 (for those who don’t know, Oink! was to Viz what Grange Hill was to The Sweeney).  Unsurprisingly, the disc flexed one too many times well over 30 years ago, so I shall write this review from memory; sure, it’s bound to be on YouTube, but searching the music out seems the wrong way to approach this little piece of pink ephemera (I think the disc was a shade of porcine pink, but that might be the first of many mnemonic fumbles in this article).

Side A was a scrawny nasal little punk pop smirk which I’m surprised to discover wasn’t actually called ‘Poo Poo Tinkle Tinkle Parp Parp Oink’, as this was both the main refrain and what we listeners were encouraged to sing when life rubbed us up the wrong way.  I now see that it was heavily indebted to The Goons’ ‘Ying Tong Iddle I Po’, though it lacked most of the charm.  I heard later that it was written and performed by Marc Riley, so now I know what he did between being in The Fall and turning up on Radio 5 and launching his DJ career; he’s allowed a lacuna of crap between these two, I think you’ll agree.  I remember wanting to like this song, but actually finding it acutely annoying.  The nadir was the verse about teachers, stating

They make me wear school uniform

And stop me chewing gum,

I wish I were a bumblebee,

I’d sting them on their....elbow!

 Even at this tender age, I was aware that the verse-end non-rhyme swear-dodge was a hackneyed ruse deserving of my finest supercilious sneer.  Also I didn’t like chewing gum.  Also, I had heard that bumblebees die when they sting you, so pre-Lard’s staff-room victory would be pyrrhic at best.  Nowadays I’d doubtless link the adenoidal singalong to the work of Frank Sidebottom, though this is notably less really really fantastic.

 The B-side – or were both tracks on one side?  Yes, that seems more likely - was far superior, a chunkily minimal drum-machine clunk which was effectively a rewrite of Grandmaster Flash’s ‘The Message’, though if I knew this at the time I certainly only had the loosest conception of the original.  “Don’t eat pigs cos they’re made from ham,” advises Uncle Pigg (the fictional editor of the comic), “eat the nasty butcher man”.  The leap from vegetarianism to cannibalism in a single couplet amused my half-formed mind, as did the authoritative vocal presence.  Although I reasoned that people eat pigs precisely because they’re made from ham, and so was not swayed by this argument, the track was a hit on the Dansette-style turntable my parents had found in the attic for me. 

 This cheap and brash little artefact is not one that I advise you to seek out, more a sonic Kinder toy than a forgotten treasure, but even the terrible music we listened to when young shapes us.  Tellingly, I can still sing at least half of the lyrics from memory.  “I’ll sing it till I stop”, as ‘The Oink Song’ claimed in its dying moments.  Quite zen, really.  For a record made by a pig.