Showing posts with label This Town Needs Guns. Show all posts
Showing posts with label This Town Needs Guns. Show all posts

Saturday, 24 April 2010

You Need Arms

Brakspear hangover. New Fall LP on fat double vinyl. Planning tonight's gig. Oddly pleasant Saturday afternoon.


THIS TOWN NEEDS GUNS – HIPPY JAM FEST (THE LIKES OF WHICH HAS NEVER BEEN SEEN BEFORE) (Big Scary Monsters)


Having spent an evening in a field with Redox, we feel we’re qualified to comment on this sort of thing: whatever they may promise, This Town Needs Guns have not recorded much of a hippy jam fest. In fact, with its elegant dynamics and controlled emotional outbursts TTNG’s music is about as far from a stoned freeform ramble as it’s possible to get, which is probably the point. We may as well get the Fell City Girl reference out of the way now. Yes, TTNG emerged at the same Battle Of The Bands, and, yes, they yank some of the same emotirock chains, but TTNG have replaced Fell City Girl’s nebula-sized progpop choruses with the sort of glacial melancholy that underpinned undertheigloo’s recent Circlesend album.

The title track opens in the middle of choppy waters courtesy of a clinically rocking guitar that oddly recalls Days Of Grace. If the seas are becalmed for some quite lovely vocals immediately after, it doesn’t take an aged seadog to tell that the storm’s brewing on the horizon again. It’s an effective chunk of wideangled pop, oscillating between serene folky lacunae and tom-thumping crescendos that actually work, lifting the emotional level of the song. Our only complaint is that the louder vocals sound like they’re snatching swiftly at the notes, like an unfit man touching his toes for a microsecond. We’ve got an excellent vocal reference point to use here, but we promised not to mention a certain band again.

“Denial Adams” just sounds like a more successful rewrite of the opener – far from being repetitive it makes a pleasing balance, and the voice sails across the sound with far more authority. It’s in the sense of brooding menace that this track succeeds, some simple strings adding a treacherous undertow to the delicate rhythms. The piano parts do tinkle slightly redundantly, and threaten to step over into Keane territory on some unpleasant occasions, but this aside the song is hugely successful.

CD bonus “Like Romeo & Juliet” – but, err, you get a free CD copy whenever you buy the 7” anyway, which is a pretty wayward marketing technique – flits by pleasantly, but pretty much sounds like offcuts from all their other songs swept form the rehearsal room floor and squeezed together like slivers of soap, and some well-controlled drum work can’t lift the song into anything very memorable. A very assured record, then, from a band that are improving in leaps and bounds, and our only major criticism is a slight feeling of bluster around the music, that feels too eager to get straight into pushing the emotional buttons. Let the songs stretch out a little, give them time to breathe, and who knows what might happen? Oh, and think of a better title next time, for God’s sake.

Thursday, 28 January 2010

Scry Me A Riverside

I'm sure I went to the whole of Charlbury weekend in 2007, but for some reason I only reviewed one of the days, can't think why.

CHARLBURY RIVERSIDE FESITVAL, Saturday 16/6/07

“Got midgets on my mind”. “Sitting on a tall cushion”. Well, that’s what it sounds like Dave Ellis is singing, anyway. We can’t be sure, he has this slurred blues style that is as impenetrable as it is attractive. As his husky voice weaves its way around the slapped strings of his trusty guitar, it doesn’t take long to realise that Ellis isn’t doing anything too revolutionary, but it’s a good listen all the same. And, seriously, who doesn’t like that old John Lee Hooker boogie clomp just a little?

It may sound a bit like “You don’t sweat much for a fat lass”, but over on the main stage, Life Of Riley prove them selves to be pretty good for their age. Musically there are no great ideas, but the performance is tight and the vocals are surprisingly strong and melodic. I mean, I can’t remember a note of it now, but it sounded fine at the time.

A sudden downpour means that the Beard Museum tent is packed full for Lagrima, which is exactly the way it should be. You’d go some way to find an acoustic duo in Oxfordshire with more variation: Roz’ vocals can leap from sinister whispers to operatic howls (is she the rootsy equivalent to Ivy’s Itch’s Eliza Gregory, or am I getting carried away?) whilst Gray’s assured guitar work can recall The Cocteau Twins and Andres Segovia in the space of one song. And he has the best reverse reverb sound ever.

Is there anyone left who doesn’t revere The Family Machine? Not only are they movers and shakers behind stage hosts The Beard Museum, but they also write some wry country-inflected pop that can raise a grin and wring the heart simultaneously. Admittedly, there was nothing particularly special about this individual performance, but we can listen to songs like “Lethal Drugs Cocktail” and “Flowers By The Roadside” forever.

A dub band with a Tunisian vocalist singing in Arabic? Implausibly, that’s Raggasaurus. They get a huge response, but what impresses me is the control over their material. It would have been easy just to have everyone soloing at once, and to throw everything at the wall like a million crusty festival reggae bands, but Raggasaurus know exactly when minimalism works, and make sure that very little gets in the way of their taut bouncy rhythms and soaring vocals. OK, it might work a little better in a smoky dive than in a sunny field, and perhaps the keyboard could be toned down a little, but this is good stuff.

When my esteemed colleague Colin saw Earnest Cox recently, all he could see was some pub rock. Well, we heartily disagree, and can say nothing against their simple wired rock, which revels in draping a world weary vocal sneer over glorious endless two chord chugs. The lyrics to songs like “My Favourite Walk” and “State Of That” seem to recall tedious bar room conversations with spitting vitriol, and as ever we’re reminded of an amphetamine version of The Blue Aeroplanes; or we would if the fruity organ parts didn’t sound like they’d come straight from a Stax soul revue. A fascinating band.

We’re big admirers of Baby Gravy’s cubist prog-punk melange, but perhaps a balmy afternoon in Charlbury isn’t the ideal place to experience it. Iona (who may have had a couple of shandies) is swearing and insulting the crowd, desperate for a reaction, but ultimately we’re just too relaxed to plug into Baby Gravy’s abstract new wave. However, stick us in The Cellar and fuel us with cheap lager and we’ll be up there with the best of them.

Is it patronising to call a band “charming”? Well, fuck it, we don’t care, because we’re always charmed by Foxes!, especially Kayla’s honest and unadorned vocal. They have a home made bass, and in fact, the entire band has a wonky, school woodwork project feel, all odd angles and unplaned surfaces. But beneath all this lie some beautifully constructed melodies and a quiet sense of rock dynamics. Foxes! Is a band that has unobtrusively grown in stature to become one of Oxford’s favourites. We shall miss them when they move away later in the year.

If Foxes! slid into our consciousness slowly, then Witches did the opposite, bursting onto the scene with the whole package intact: baroque pop arrangements, dense and forceful live shows and even beautiful collaged record sleeves. By rights the prominence of the cabaret mariachi trumpet should become cloying, but somehow Witches never crumble under the weight of their own ornamentation. It’s odd to watch a live show with such a black density of sound, and still walk away humming the melodies.

Fearing we’d neglected the main stage, we leave the fine This Town Needs Guns to their own devices and investigate Souljacker. What we find is a bunch of young groovers giving it some chest beating wah wah rock action. They sound like Free, but they should be locked up. Ah, well, it’s a festival, let’s cut them some slack – plus they have a tune called “Jimmy Page Drank My Tea”, so at least they don’t take themselves too seriously. They’re perfectly good players, but it’s all somewhat stodgy, and we don’t imagine they’re a band who’ll be troubling us again soon.

Just goes to show, Charlbury is a fine day out, but the Beard Museum is the reliable option.