December 2006 ~ Slow Thrills

Friday, December 29, 2006

Highlights (and lowlights) of 2006

2006 roundup

Highlights:

Bringing up baby was the everyday highlight of 2006 and everything else kinda pales into insignificance behind that.
Consequently I went to about half as many gigs as usual, and I didn't go on holiday anywhere so this isn't going to be as sprawling as previous years!

Every year there seems to be more and more cultural overload - so much DIY web based music and writing it is now impossible to keep on top of everything. Frustratingly there is always something great we are missing!

I'm still wading through albums released this year - Carla Bozulich is playing as I type, not an easy listen, but neither was Scott Walker's the Drift nor Joanna Newsom's sumptous 'Ys', but in this current musical climate they are too extraordinary to ignore.
Other albums jostling on a bit piece of paper which started out being a top 20 of the year include Destroyer's Rubies, Casiotone for the Painfully Alone, Sonic Youth, Bonnie Prince Billy, Current 93, Asobi Seksu, Midlake, Burial, Lambchop, Jarvis, AFX's Chosen Lords, and about 30 others. I will attempt to bash this into a coherent list this week.
I bought a lot of jazz albums this year, this proves that I am properly old.

Gig wise the year started brilliantly with an astonishing performance from We Are Knives in the first week of January in the Empire Music Hall.
What else? Crazy antics from Dj Scotch Egg and co in Laverys (twice!), an impressive but overlong show from Broken Social Scene in QUB and a lovely intimate performance from the Evens in the City Church Hall just as spring arrived. Ian MacKaye hang around at the end and let people have a go on his Danelectro gtr.
Quack Quack played on the floor of the Pavilion, Lightning Bolt showed up late and deafened everyone with their seven foot tall stack - the first night I tried my new earplugs as well, they worked a treat!
Boredoms (or whatever they are called now!) were simply astonishing in Dublin in May, gig of the year by miles. Six Organs of Admittance became a psychedelic trio in the Pavilion, Arab Strap just pre-retirement got it together in the Empire, Sunn0)))) did their satanic pantomime in the Black Box, complete with Attila from Mayhem crawling up the venue's altar, and Acid Mother's Temple faithfully recreated 70's prog excess at a blistering gig in Auntie Annies.

A few new good music venues in Belfast, in particular Lavery's Bunker. Locally the leading lights for me are We Are Knives on a good night (believe me when they are good they are very very good!) and the cutting edge electronica of Boxcutter. There will always be something going on, the scene is vibrant at the moment.
Local festivals seemed to be thriving as well, and the biggest of all in October brought the fancy Spiegeltent to Belfast.

The rise of YouTube added to the cultural overload - unearthing all that archive music material is amazing, not to mention the quick share of the wrong guest on BBC News 24, or RTE's Late Late Show heckler - and the rise and rise of blogs and podcasts shows no sign of slowing.

Season 5 of Curb your Enthusiasm, the final season of the Sopranos, Pulling and Tittybangbang on BBC3, great archive music on BBC4, I can't remember any other great TV off the top of my head. Oh, and Charlie Brooker's TV critiques of course.

I only went to the cinema twice - enjoyed both 'A Cock and Bull Story' and 'Little Miss Sunshine'. I will go to at least 3 films in 2007 I hope!


Lowlights

Some people that I have greatly admired for a long time died this year - Ivor Cutler, Arthur Lee, Syd Barrett and most shockingly of all the Go-Betweens Grant McLennan.

The general lack of good music TV and radio in the UK, and the absence of good music magazines (bar the Wire and the occasional OMM) it REALLY IS all about the internet now - which is actually a good thing I think!

I missed a few shows I wanted to see - Autechre, Mazarin, Comets on Fire, and particularly Casiotone for the Painfully Alone, the latter because I thought I had caught mumps and had to stay in!

'Lost' getting swallowed by Murdoch and his Sky empire, leaving us long standing fans to ignore the message boards and wait for the dvd.

The England cricket team performance - I mean, wtf!! Ireland nearly took them in June in Belfast.

The worrying trend on TV food shows that because you see the animal being bred and killed 'humanely' that this is somehow alright. "OK kids, let's see make friends with the turkey before we kill it and eat it".

Gillian McKeith and her shitty tv programme. I don't hate a lot of things but I hate everything about that show.

TV con announcers talking over the end music on programmes (sadly a trend that it is here to stay), especially the super-loud BBC 3 announcer who seems to have some sort of music-ducking compressor on his mic which sends the whole thing into overdrive.

Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Slow Thrills Christmas Mix!
I’ve finally compiled a seasonal mix of music masquerading as a podcast. No prattling from me, that will return in the new year! It should be available now from the podbean site.

Tracks:
El Vez - Feliz Navi-Nada
Captain Beefheart - There Aint No Santa Claus on the Evening Stage
The Fall - Hark the Herald Angels Sing
Run DMC - Christmas in Hollis
The Sonics- Dont Believe in Christmas
The Wedding Present - Step into Christmas
Big Star - Jesus Christ
Casiotone for the Painfully Alone - Cold White Christmas
Cocteau Twins - Frosty the Snowman
Shonen Knife - Space Christmas

Friday, December 15, 2006

Christmas podcast and end of year round-up next week I promise!
Once the first wave of drunken festivities has ended new content will magically appear, I've got a slackish week.

Thursday, December 07, 2006

A podcast!
It's been a long time coming, but my first attempt at a podcast is now available for a short time here. I woud hope to do two more before the end of the year, one will be a Christmas one of course!
This has temporarily derailed my end-of-year round-up, but as I always tend to do one after everyone else that's nothing new. I hope the podcast catches on because it's a lot quicker to do than writing reviews!

Here is the track listing:
PLAYLIST -
Yo La Tengo - Blitzkrieg Bop [1993]
originally issued with an unknown Japanese fanzine this popped up on the album: Genius + Love = Yo La Tengo [Matador 1996]
Buy it here

Asobi Seksu - Thursday [2006]
Album: Citrus
Buy here.
Download here . http://www.myspace.com/asobiseksu

Flying Saucer Attack - Outdoor Miner [1995]
Domino 7" Single
Out of Print.


Six Organs of Admittance - Bless Your Blood [2006]
Album: The Sun Awakens [Drag City 2006]
Buy here.

Current 93 - Then Kill Caesar [2006]
Album: Black Ships Ate the Sky [Durtro 2006]
Buy here.

MC5 - Skunk (Sonically Speaking) [1971]
Album: High Time (Rhino)
Buy here

The Users - Sick of You
Damaged Goods 7"
- it may be available at Action Records

Ramones - Bonzo Goes to Bitburg
Buy here

Friday, December 01, 2006

2006 round-up part 1: It starts with the familiar people...
I was putting together highlights from the year in the approximate order I heard them, and it turns out that January and February saw a lot of familiar acts releasing albums.

MOGWAI: Mr Beast
CATPOWER: The Greatest
TORTOISE AND BONNIE PRINCE BILLY: The Brave and the Bold
BELLE AND SEBASTIAN: The Life Pursuit
THE FLAMING LIPS: At War with the Mystics

In fact, due to the internet and pre-release chatter I had acquired a copy of 'Mr Beast' late last year. I was excited by the comments of Alan McGee who had described it as being as good as Loveless by MBV, if not better, and also buoyed by my last live encounter with the band - at the Slint ATP - which had won me back around again.
When 'Mr Beast' saw the light of day in March this year, they had bored me again with a lacklustre show in Belfast and despite its lovely artwork and limited edition packaging (a 'making of' DVD no less!) it languished at the back of the pile for a long time before I filed it away.
I've just revisited it this month and I'm glad I did. It's no 'Loveless' of course, such a comparison is daft, but for me it sits well as a companion piece to Kevin Shields' 'Lost In Translation' soundtrack. Maybe I thought that because of the presence of Tetsuya Fukagawa (of the Japanese hardcore band Envy) on 'I Chose Horses', which is the most upfront vocal on the album even though it's in Japanese. Presumably the rest of the vocals are in English, though Mogwai always tend to bury their own lyrics, I don't know why they're still so reticent to have them heard.
'The Greatest' was neither a Cat Power best of, nor her greatest album ('Moon Pix' and 'You Are Free' get my vote), instead it was a collection of new Chan Marshall songs arranged in a Memphis soul style. Again, I wasn't impressed with this at first listen, but it has stayed with me all year and some of the songs are pretty great. If you ever had an urge to hear Chan deliver something more mainstream than her previous lo-fi efforts, this will impress you.
'The Brave and the Bold' was almost dismissed as an internet rumour before anyone heard it. Tortoise and Will Oldham collaborating on a selection of covers ranging from the Minutemen to Elton John? Surely not! However, it saw the light of day in early 2006 and as suspected it was a bit of a hit-and-miss affair. Milton Nascimento's 'Cravo E Canela' works surprisingly well, and Melanie's 'Some Say I Got Devil' is my favourite track here. An attempt at Bruce's 'Thunder Road' makes you realise why they called the album the braveand the bold, but I think it works and I like those synths!
'The Life Pursuit' was the first album to really impress me this year, but ten months later it hasn't stayed with me. I love B&S so I'm sure I'll return to it at some point, and 'Another Sunny Day' and 'Dress up in you' are two of my fave tunes of the year. I did laugh at some of the newspaper reviews of this at the time, which suggested this was the album were B&S got rude and started swearing and writing about sex. They've always done that since the start, if only the papers had been paying attention!
'At War with the Mystics' is a difficult one. Once again it didn't impress on first listen, but I'm still listening to it, it's still on my iPod and I think it's a far better album than 'Yoshimi'. Given that the Lips can pretty much do whatever they like nowadays, this is the record where they do just that! Hints of Krautrock and 70s Californian rock mix with their usual left-field songwriting to create something interesting. Not the most immediate record of the year, but I didn't hear anything else like in 2006.