Thursday, May 31, 2012

live review: Japandroids/ Cadence Weapon, Upstairs at the Garage, 29th May 2012

Before I get into how great Japandroids were, I have to give some credit to Canadian rapper Cadence Weapon who treated us to 40 minutes of smooth hip-hop and totally won the audience over in the process. I had never heard of him before this, although he has released a few albums and actually been nominated for Canada's version of the Mercury, The Polaris Prize. Fellow Canadians Japandroids have taken him on all the dates on this short UK tour, and if all the shows have gone as well as this, his profile over here will certainly have risen. Unsurprisingly he plays quite a lot from his new album 'Hope in Dirt City' as it had just been released today, and he gets this sold-out crowd clapping along by the end of his set
The last time I saw Japandroids (in the ICA) they were super excited to be playing London, and tonight they seem even more so, as Brian was already instructing us to "destroy this place" over the opening barrage of guitar noise that announced their arrival. The excuse for this is that tonight is the last night of a short UK tour, playing small venues like this, and having as much fun as possible in the process. They launch into 'The Boys are Leaving Town' and there is no stopping them. New song 'Adrenalin Nightshift' follows, and then we are into the first real classic tune of the night, 'Younger Us', which was a great single a year or so ago, and is now on the new album.
New songs like 'The Nights of Wine and Roses' fit in perfectly tonight, with lines like "yell like hell to the heavens", but it's really the material from the first album that get the venue going wild. By the time they play 'Wet Hair' the moshers are unstoppable, and relatively new tune 'The House That Heaven Built' is one of the most anthemic things they have written.
Brian is wearing a funny t-shirt with four black cats in a Black Flag logo pattern, with the inscription 'Cat Flag', which is not only cool, it also helps to pinpoint a key influence to this duo. They have always embraced the ferocious punk energy of Black Flag and their kind, although some of this new material comes across like they have been listening to Springsteen.
The colossal beats of 'Heart Sweats' rival 'Wet Hair' for more insane crowd reaction, and someone emerges from the mosh to add vocals to 'Darkness on the Edge of Gastown'. Old faves 'Crazy/Forever' and 'Sovereignty' keep the intensity up before 'Young Hearts Spark Fire' finishes up with a mighty blast. They are keen to wring every last second out of tonight's sold out crowd, and they conclude proceedings with 'For the Love of Ivy' a cover of a song by Jeffrey Lee Pierce's Gun Club which underlines this duo's traditional psychotic rock n roll tendencies.
It was a bit unfair on other bands to play one of the gigs of the year in the same week they release one of the best rock albums of 2012 with 'Celebration Rock', but that's what they just did.

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

WATCH: Not Squares 'Fall Far'



Last month this month impressed me with a slight change of direction on their new tune 'Fall Far'. Today they've released a great video for the song which features some creative costume action to say the least. Just a reminder that you can download 'Fall Far' for free, via their own tumblr page.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Looking forward to Field Day this weekend? Here's a playlist and a preview

Something that interests me as a voracious consumer of new music is the rise of multi-venue festivals where you can try and cram as many acts into your day as possible. The SXSW festival in Austin, Texas is the best example of this, but this year already many UK events have taken this as their lead, with the likes of Brighton's Great Escape, Liverpool's Sound City and the long established Camden Crawl booking a huge range of bands over a variety of venues.

With literally hundreds of music festivals competing for space and attention over the summer months, this seems to be a succesful model. This year larger events such as Sonisphere have been cancelled, whilst even legendary ones like Glastonbury have taken a year off.

One event that has moved from its normal slot in the festival calendar is London's Field Day; a one day outdoor event that has steadily been building an audience in Victoria Park in Tower Hamlets since 2007. This multi-stage music festival traditionally takes place in August, but this year it has been pushed forward to the first Saturday in June due to the huge presence of the Olympics taking over that area in August.

Field Day always boasts a cutting edge line-up of both established and breakthrough acts, and as it is all compressed into one day, you don't have to camp or bring anything with you. For me, it works brilliantly as a showcase; an excellent way to see quite a few new bands in one day as you can cover the ground between each stage in a few minutes.

The festival emerged from small grass roots venues and promoters working together and has grown into something much larger. In 2006, it began in the car park of the Griffin Pub in Old Street as the Return of the Rural and took the format of a village fete with live acoustic acts such as James Yorkston and Beth Orton, as well as Clinic and Four Tet. These acts were large enough to pull a decent crowd back then, and the promoters decided to do something bigger the following year they booked space in Victoria Park, joined forces with other promoters and announced the first Field Day, which sold out to 10,000 people in August 2007.

The festival has evolved and grown in size to 20,000 and has now played host to the likes of Florence and the Machine, Phoenix, Santigold, James Blake to name just a few.

Last year's festival was the largest yet and there were some issues with overcrowding. These have been addressed this year with a new layout to help the flow between stages, although the capacity remains the same.

The close proximity of the stages gives the organisers another headache, specifically how to reduce the bleed-through of sound between venues. Over the years they have taken various steps to address this and with some clever positioning of each PA plus a capacity crowd in each tent, the colouration is negligible.

There are around 60 acts on the bill, so I thought I would try and pick out some highlights. There are inevitable clashes of course, but I reckon on a carefully planned day you get to see around 8 or 9 acts. A clashfinder is essential but here are some suggestions.
Grimes – one of the breakthrough acts of 2012, Grimes is the alias of Claire Boucher, a young prolific talent from Canada, who manages to straddle the genres of dance music, lo-fi indie and witch house with ease
Peaking Lights – a husband and wife duo who make a lo-fi mix of dub, krautrock and psychedelic pop
R. Stevie Moore – a prolific but wilfully obscure DIY musician who has been making music since the mid-70s but is only just coming to a wider audience now thanks to the likes of Ariel Pink
The Men – high octane punk rock, noisy and brash, which sounds like it was recorded with all the needles on red
Summer Camp – duo Jeremy Walmsley and Elizabeth Sankey are building their indie-pop origins into something very special,as last year's Welcome to Condale album showed.
Fennesz – legendary Austrian guitarist now firmly established in the world of ambient electronica, he makes some lovely noises
Andrew Bird – an amazing talent who plays superb violin, writes great songs and does clever things with loops. He is also a fantastic whistler!
Tortoise – the guys who brought dub, jazz and krautrock to the world of American indie-rock in a rescheduled show from last year
Mazzy Star – newly reformed,this duo made three classic albums in the 1990s, featuring the distinctive voice of Hope Sandoval and the psychedelic fuzz guitar of David Roback.
Liars – one of the finest experimental rock groups of the last 10 years, showcasing their new album WIXIW.
Papa M - the alias of David Pajo, best known as guitarist of the post-rock group Slint
Django Django - last but not least, one of the bands of 2012, on a mid-afternoon slot so look sharp.

Just in case you missed the clashfinder, click here to get the official one.

The Field Day line-up was hard to pick ten or twelve acts from, so I've made a 25 track playlist on Spotify. Enjoy!

Five questions for Bill Drummond

Good old Bill Drummond. For his latest project the conceptual artist and author (and former KLF mainman) has decided to stop doing regular interviews and to answer just 200 more questions (50 people asking four each) between now and his death. Here's my five.

1. Are you really the man who burnt a million quid?
2. Really?
3. REALLY??
4. Will you come to my house and make soup?
5. Why not?

Monday, May 28, 2012

STREAM: new albums by Liars and Japandroids


Just to keep things ticking over whilst I finish up a couple of features for later in the week, Monday seems to be "new album stream day" and today sees two absolute stunners.
First of all, the sixth album from the consistently evolving Liars 'WIXIW' is streaming over at NPR.
Also, at the same site, Japandroids second full length 'Celebration Rock' is streaming ahead of its proper release next week.
Enjoy!

Saturday, May 26, 2012

A photo from Alexandra Palace

I took this pic last night at ATP's I'll Be Your Mirror event at Alexandra Palace. I've already posted it on my own Facebook and instagram, where it's getting lots of 'likes' so I thought I'd make it more public. It was taken in the Great Hall about 20 minutes before Melvins kicked off proceedings in there.

My full review of the event will be up on the 405 next week. Yesterday's highlights for me were Melvins and Wolves in the Throne Room, although Sleep and Slayer were both on amazing form. A straw poll of others suggests Sleep won the day.

Friday, May 25, 2012

LISTEN: The National have a new song on Game of Thrones soundtrack, and contribute to children's app

I will be covering this weekend's I'll Be Your Mirror in London for the 405, so there won't be many updates here. One thing I should post about is the latest activity from the National.
First of all they have contributed a new, very downbeat song called 'The Rains of Castlemere' to the soundtrack of season 2 of Game of Thrones. I'll be honest with you, I rarely watch TV and I have no idea what Game of Thrones actually is, but I have embedded the song below.



Whilst that song isn't very typical of the National's recorded output, they have also been working on something even more unusual. A children's iPad/ iPhone app called Dragon's Brush has been created by John Solimine of Spike Press, who has done a lot of artwork for the band in recent years. Now Aaron Dessner from the band has written the music for the story, which is narrated by Matt Berninger himself. Here's a short trailer for it. Matt Berninger reading a children's story; that seems pretty cool to me.

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

John Peel Archive: D (and some old stuff about Dick Dale and the Fall)

Well after a fairly healthy tally over the first three issues (A-C) I'm disappointed to report that I only have ONE record from the first hundred 'D's. It is the relatively recent Dick Dale album 'Calling Up Spirits' (1996). I was saying earlier on Twitter that Dick Dale deserved to be the featured artist this time as John Peel was at both Dick Dale gigs I went to. It was obvious that he would be at the second one, because it was part of a 'Peel Sessions Live' series at the Royal Festival Hall in 2000. Peel took great pleasure in announcing the three acts, Terry Edwards, Dick Dale and The Fall. I found my old review of it in my archives and I've included it below. More Peel stuff after the review...


THE FALL + DICK DALE
London Royal Festival Hall 22nd September 2000

Part of the Peel Sessions live series, this co-headliner saw two all-time Peel faves coupled together in an unusual setting to say the least.
After a schizophrenic opening set from Terry Edwards (lurching between pub rock and sublime laidback jazz), Dick Dale takes the stage to a glowing endorsement from Mr Peel himself. I had never seen Dick Dale before, but it's clear that he is a born showman keen on playing to the crowd. Although he worringly touches on material that shows his age (rnr standard 'Fever' is played free from irony for instance!) some of his material is stunningly good, the famous heavy gauge strings of the Beast (his nickname for his guitar) rattling and twanging through the likes of 'Take it or Leave it', a fine cover of Hendrix's 'Third Stone From the Sun' and the obligatory 'Miserlou'. Dick's crowdpleasing antics dominate the latter as it lurches into 'Smoke on the Water' (!) and he does a tour of the entire audience still playing his guitar. For this reason he gets a better reception than headliners The Fall who show their customary disregard for us punters.
Of course, Fall fans wouldn't have it any other way, and although a lot of the Dale fans leave, us Fall types are glued to the onstage mutterings of MES and co, especially puzzling tonight as they play loads from the forthcoming album ('The Unutterable'). 'Touch Sensitive' is the first obviously recognisable moment, and give the cue for a lot of people to turn the yawning gap between the front seats and the stage into a makeshift moshpit. 'F-Oldin Money' gets them going, as does a very welcome 'Hey Student'. The only other old songs I can remember are 'The Joke' and 'I'm Going to Spain', though the recentish 'Levitate' and 'Light User Syndrome' albums are touched on too. Not a bad show by recent standards, but still not even close to classic Fall. The encore of 'Dr Buck's Letter' (from the forthcoming album) shows that they can still cut it and stay ahead of younger pretenders. I just wish they could do it more often.

So what are all these Ds I don't have then? Well there are some I once had, but only in the sense that I taped them off friends. First, alphabetically, is dc Basehead 'Play With Toys' (1991). It's not on Spotify and I had a bit of an effort to find a decent track to embed. These guys were a laidback hip-hop band who somehow got connected with a lot of grungier acts like Helmet and Rollins Band. Not sure why

Secondly, and finally, there two albums by the Damned - 'The Black Album' and 'Strawberries' - that I was given as a cassette swap with an older guy at school. I think I was only about 12 and he was 14 or 15, but these albums stick in my memory, as back then it seemed I was listening to 'proper' albums that none of my friends had. I listened to 'the Black Album' this morning on Spotify. I could just about picture that old cassette.

Monday, May 21, 2012

review: Sun Kil Moon 'Among The Leaves'


As most of you are aware, Sun Kil Moon is the band name used by Mark Kozelek, once of Red House Painters, and Among the Leaves is their 5th album release. It is an epic collection of 17 new songs, featuring mostly Kozelek with his nylon stringed guitar, although a couple of tracks do feature a full band.
Last summer I saw Kozelek play two solo shows at either end of the country, a week apart. One was at London's Field Day festival, one was in the Black Box in Belfast. He is known for his grumpy on -stage demeanour and it was obvious that he wasn't happy at either show. At Field Day he had a point – you could hardly hear him, but in Belfast he had the attention of a seated room and he played a very long set. I'm a long standing fan of his and I didn't recognise a lot of the songs, some of which were works in progress, but I knew that I wanted to hear those songs again. That night it seemed that Kozelek was deciding to write spontaneously and was documenting exactly what was happening to him in his job as a travelling songwriter. The results are here on 'Among the Leaves' and those gigs are documented here as one of the highlights – 'UK Blues'.
Maybe it's because I felt I was there as some of the songs took shape, but I can't recall the last time I enjoyed a set of new songs so much. This review is about a week late because I would rather sit and listen to the album than write about it. I'm only putting words on the screen so that I can persuade you to listen to it as well.
As I said, these are 17 new songs, no AC/DC or Modest Mouse reversions or cover songs in sight. Musically it fits very well with Kozelek's other releases, and fans of his voice and guitar playing will be very happy. It's a deeply personal album, taking minor details from the songwriter's life and making them into something larger and more significant. A word of caution though, if anyone is writing this off as one long moan, because Kozelek has managed to temper his depressive tales about getting older and the pains of touring and writing with a large dose of humour. One track, about an age-gap friendship, is entitled 'The Moderately Talented Yet Not So Attractive Middle Aged Man'.
It's hard to single out specific songs, because with every listen new delights emerge. 'Sunshine in Chicago' was written just before he went on stage in that city and combines memories of his long years as a travelling musician with stories he has heard about his father's upbringing. 'That Bird Has A Broken Wing' is about the tendency to lapse into casual encounters when you are out of your routine - “we're all half men, half alley cats.”
'Elaine' is a beautiful song about someone battling addiction, whilst 'Song for Richard Collopy' is a lovely homage to San Francisco's guitar repair man. 'King Fish' is the electric guitar tune, when they resemble a very fluid version of Crazy Horse as the guitars entwine, and 'Black Kite' is a beautiful closing song, with a beautiful acoustic guitar arrangement.
The collection is laced with regret, sadness and quite a bit of humour. I've already mentioned 'UK Blues', which is actually two separate songs about that period, and although it details the trials of that tour there are plenty of genuinely funny lines there.
'I Know It's Pathetic but that Was the Greatest Night of My Life' bares the detail of a long distance relationship formed whilst on tour, and 'Not Much Rhymes with Everything's Awesome at All Times' questions the credentials of a potential poet who is just too damn happy to be genuine.
Even way back with Red House Painters, Kozelek has a skill for dropping in little scenes that made perfect sense to the song. Here, that would-be artist or poet is sleeping alone with her laptop beside her, and he admits using up all his minutes in pursuit of the woman in 'Greatest Night'. The little details are set against something which could be life-changing.
Red House Painters struck a chord with me nearly 20 years ago, and I'm delighted to find that I'm feeling the same about Sun Kil Moon right now. I won't hear a finer album of this kind all year, I'm sure of that.

Friday, May 18, 2012

ATP I'll Be Your Mirror clashfinder


Well, usually I wait until someone else does a clashfinder for a festival and then share it, but this time around no-one has bothered so I've actually done my own. Happily there aren't very many clashes to get distressed about. If you are going to the festival feel free to share the clashfinder spreadsheet below, and don't be afraid to correct me if you spot an error.

I'll Be Your Mirror clashfinder

Thursday, May 17, 2012

live review: Sharon Van Etten, London Scala, 16th May 2012


Due to the remarkable reaction to her third album 'Tramp', Sharon Van Etten finds herself back in London again. A mere two months after she sold out Cargo,she has graduated to selling out the Scala, and it's no surprise that on her next visit she will probably fill Shepherd's Bush Empire.

I'm not alone in thinking that 'Tramp' is one of the records of the year so far, and I would've forgiven her for just running through it tonight. She begins with faithful versions of 'All I Can' and 'Warsaw', which suggest that might be the case, but she is quick to revisit her earlier albums as well.
She seems shy and a little bit over-awed by the size of the crowd tonight, and she copes with her nerves by rambling quite a lot between songs. This is actually way more endearing than you might think. After 'Peace Signs' she makes jokes about the title sounding like “pissing” or “pizza”, and this seems to ease the on-stage nerves, as they launch into 'Save Yourself' which is more smooth country-rock than the edgy drones that dominate 'Tramp'

'Kevin's' is the first really amazing moment – such a bleakly beautiful song and her voice is as clear as a bell. This leads into some clever looping of her voice with her backing vocalist and on-stage sparring partner Heather Woods Broderick before they go into 'Don't Do It'.
It seems even sceptics in the audience are won over by this stage and some banter with the crowd reveals that Sharon is a big fan of 'the Office' and “Dawn Tinsley, receptionist!”
This lightens the mood before an intense 'Give Out', which for me is one of the most songs about a relationship I've heard in a long time. (I went on about it here, if you are interested!)

The droning beginning of 'Ask' turns into another great vocal performance, and then the band leave her alone as she plays 'Tornado' from her debut album with just her and her guitar.
More audience interaction leads to an unrequited request for 'My Sharona' and a false start for 'Leonard' which makes us all laugh. Again, that is a marked contrast to the song, which is another one of her extraordinary moments, Sharon and Heather's voices entwine beautifully on that brave refrain, “ I am bad at loving you.” To find that sentiment in a song still floors me, even after several months of hearing it.

'Serpents' is the big rocky tune and very much a crowd pleaser, and she reveals that she wrote it “in a basement after listening to too much PJ Harvey".
'I'm Wrong' and 'Joke or a Lie' end the set in unconventional fashion, heavily based on ambient drone, and the latter in particular is perhaps the most impressive sound the band make all night.

Of course they do return for an encore. They play 'One Day', another country-rocker,and I find myself thinking how good this would sound with J Mascis noodling along with it – surely a possibility given J's admiration for Sharon's songs. On the subject of admirers, she finishes the night with the beautiful 'Love More', which I believe Bon Iver have been known to cover.
Sharon van Etten won a few people over tonight. She can come back and play in London town any time she likes.

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

The John Peel Archive: C

This is the third instalment of 26, so obviously we are looking at the first 100 albums beginning with C. I had to go through this list for quite a while before I got to an album I actually had, but due to a late run of John Cale and Calexico I ended up having quite a few of these.

I have Cabaret Voltaire 'Micro-phonies', Cable 'Downlift the Uptrodden', Cactus World News 'Urban Beaches', Calexico's 'Feast of Wire' and 'Black Light', and the following John Cale albums - 'Fear', 'Paris 1919', 'The Academy in Peril' and 'Music for a New Society'. That makes nine, which is my largest tally so far, although I only have two of the Cs on vinyl (Paris 1919 and Urban Beaches, and who knows where the latter has gotten to!).

So what surprises are in store this time? Well, early in the alphabetical list is C.A. Quintet's 'Trip Thru Hell' which is a fairly lost psychedelic wig-out from 1968, and as it was a limited pressing of 500, originals are worth over £500, although @Country_Steve has pointed out that Peel's is the Psycho reissue. There is more information and a streaming track over here and on Julian Cope's Head Heritage here







As well as rarities, this collection is good at filling in missing gaps in my collection, and helping my ailing memory in the process.
Following on from Babes in Toyland's dominance in the 'B' selection, we have something similar from Calamity Jane. Both of those bands were way better than Hole, you know. Happily Calamity Jane's album 'Martha Jane Cannary' has been reissued and is available to stream from Spotify, so here's another tune I can remember taping off the Peel show, 'Miss Hell'


Another one that languishes somewhere in a big box of cassettes is a track by the very first listing here, 'Witch' by C, which is actually the copyright symbol and not the letter C, rendering it rather unsearchable in internet terms. The track I taped and listened to a lot was 'Dream 1', and I'm delighted to report that Everett True has found it for his review of the Cs on the Quietus. Here it is.

Monday, May 14, 2012

festival preview: I'll Be Your Mirror, curated by Mogwai and ATP


With less than two weeks to go to ATP's I'll Be Your Mirror at Alexandra Palace in London I thought I would do a bit of homework on the line-up. The organisers have had a bit of a nightmare with this one, as the original Sunday headliners Guided By Voices pulled out shortly after the festival was announced, and band-of-the-moment Death Grips have recently cancelled all of the upcoming dates due to recording commitments. Those disappointments aside, the festival still has a tremendous amount to offer. It's a novelty for me to have an ATP that I don't have to stay at, so I'm not sure how that will change things, but I know there is still plenty to see here.
For this round-up, I plundered our archives for some old interviews with some of the bands, all from our fanzine days, mostly dating between from 1996-1998.

Chavez
Mogwai
Archers of Loaf
The Make-Up


As well as the return of those older bands, there is plenty of new music on the bill. I've made my own Spotify playlist, which is pretty heavy for the first section, but once you get past Harvey Milk you can start to relax. I suspect the same might be true of the weekend itself....



I'll Be Your Mirror, London runs from May 25th-27th at Alexandra Palace in north London. All other info can be found on their official site

Sunday, May 13, 2012

archive interview: Archers of Loaf


This interview with Archers of Loaf drummer Mark Price dates from Autumn 1997, and was published in Weedbus fanzine #13, March 1998


The first line up of the Archers of Loaf was hatched at the University of North Carolina, and more or less grew out of that college scene. Do you think your music has changed a lot since then?

“I would like to think so. I'm a lot happier with the stuff we are doing now, but I don't know if that's because it's different from the other stuff or if I feel it really is better. I think it would have been a lot less exciting for us if all the records had sounded the same. I'm glad that we're able to keep doing different stuff, but it stills sounds like us, if you know what I mean.”

So are there any good bands around that part of the world now?

“There's a band called Coal from Chapel Hill that's really very good. There was another band called Capsize 7 that have recently broken up, I liked them a lot. Most of the stuff we listen to when we're travelling like we are now, is generally stuff that sounds nothing like us, it's good to give your ears a break and listen to softer mellower stuff. I'm a huge Magnetic Fields fan, but that has nothing to do with us really!”

When you first emerged people compared you to fellow Americans like Pavement and Superchunk. Now you seem to be getting frequent comparisons to Brit-punk like Wire, Gang of Four, XTC, etc. What do you make of that?

“I think those recent comparisons are a little more accurate in that I think you could compare Pavement to those bands also. We get asked about that fairly often and Eric made a good point – it's not that we sound like Pavement, it's more a case of them having the same influences as us. We're about the same age, so we've grown up with the same music, and listened to the same bands – Wire, the Replacements, whoever, and I think you would find that our record collections would overlap.



Your name seems to have been punned a lot in various other press coverage you've had. Is this a problem?

“Well I suppose we could be difficult to promote. We're not camera darlings so that doesn't work, I've only seen two bits of press from Britain and they were both pretty comical, one was entitled “Baguette a Life!” As bread puns go that's pretty sharp, definitely one to file away. AS for the name of the band – well, just think about some of your favourite bands and tell me how many of them have sensible names. The name has stuck and we don't find it particularly silly, it just takes a bit of getting used to!”

After four well received albums, why did you decide to bring out a live mini-album at this stage?

“It was something we had wanted to do for quite a while anyway. We felt it was so hard to produce on record the atmosphere you have at a live show. I don't know if that's a different reason from most people, but we wanted something out there so people could hear what the show sounded like and realise that when we record we try to make it as close to what it is like live, in that there aren't any overdubs put on the record which we couldn't reproduce live. Not that gimmicky stuff and effects are bad, it's just that we record the records live. Basically we just wanted to do it just for us, if no-one buys the damn thing that's OK! I've got a copy and I can play it to my kids when I have some”

Time wise it has come out quite quickly after the 'All The Nation's Airports' studio album, and there are even a couple of tracks remixed from that release. Why did this happen?

“We had always been against the idea of remixes from the start, we just didn't like the idea of someone going into it without us being involved. Brian Paulson, who produced the original tracks, changed out attitude to a degree, and he's had guys remix his stuff all the time. It's not as much that they're saying it was done wrong, but a lot of times they can pull out different things in a song that maybe we can't. We thought, well, it's not going to go on the record, there's no harm in hearing what someone else can do with it, and if Brian isn't insulted by it then why should we be.”

People tend to see you as a noisy pop band with weird bits added. Have you ever been tempted to move towards the mainstream?

“I don't think anyone has tried to do that really. The reason the band continues is that we like what we play. If we want to have any kind of stamina as far as a rock n roll career is concerned then we need to make ourselves happy first. It sounds selfish but it's the only way to look at it when it's what your life is. I think we've always been a pop band – we write pop songs, and maybe there are a lot of pop songs that are considered 'mainstream'. Hopefully we still write songs that make people tap their feet or hum along to.

Saturday, May 12, 2012

The John Peel Archive: B

It took me a while to get around to this week's instalment, which consists of the first 100 alphabetical 'B's. It's fairly slim pickings in terms of what I have from this lot. In fact it's a 3-3 tie between Babes in Toyland (I have 'Spanking Machine', 'To Mother' and 'Fontanelle' on vinyl) and Baby Bird (I have 'Fatherhood' on vinyl and 'Ugly Beautiful' and 'Happiest Man Alive' on cd).
I have none of the others!
So I scrolled through them and with the help of Spotify I listened to quite a few more...

One that rung a bit of a bell was Babyland's 'You Suck Crap' album, which is from 1992 and firmly in the vein of industrial noisemakers Revolting Cocks, Ministry, Consolidated, etc. I think this music has dated quite badly but their tune 'Mask' brought back memories of early 90s Peel shows. I definitely had this taped off the radio, the One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest samples at the end are what I remember most. Now you can hear it yourselves via Spotify



I had almost forgotten Bad Dream Fancy Dress, but their album 'Choirboys Gas' is included here. Again this sounds a bit dated, and it belongs firmly to the early '90s fanzine scene. Shades of Helen Love and c86, this pre-dates the likes of bis by a couple of years. This is one of the tracks I can recall hearing around then.



Another curio is the Bad Livers album 'Horses in the Mines'. I think this lot are still going, playing their punky style of bluegrass. I can't pick out a familiar track from this one but here is 'Shot at a Bird, Hit Me a Stump'.



Of the ones I know,the pick of the bunch for me would be Babes in Toyland 'Spanking machine' which brings back a lot of memories, most specifically of the time they played Richardson's Social Club in Belfast on a summer night in 1991 or 1992 with a band called Therapy? in support. What a show.



Wednesday, May 09, 2012

live review: Trembling Bells with Bonnie Prince Billy, Union Chapel,6th May 2012


On the back of their recent collaborative album The Marble Downs, Trembling Bells and Bonnie Prince Billy have embarked on this short tour. A lot of the dates concentrated on venues in the South West of the country due to a tie in with May Day celebrations and the Routes South West organisation. Tonight though, it concluded in Union Chapel, a church in Islington which was recently chosen as Time Out's favourite London venue. Sadly I have no photos to record this, but the old church looked stunning as we entered just before dusk, and the natural light was still streaming through the stained glass windows. The show was sold out, but it was the eve of the May Day bank holiday and it was quiet outside.

In terms of the entertainment on offer, we were eased in gently with Harry and Katy from the vocal-only group Muldoon's Picnic, who tonight were joined for most of their set by Alex and Lavinia from Trembling Bells, and in a very brief unannounced cameo, Will Oldham himself. They sang traditional songs from all around the country - they mentioned Yorkshire, Oxford and Glasgow, and managed to work in some original material as well. The voices sounded lovely in this famous old church.

As Trembling Bells are playing with their usual line-up, Will Oldham initially assumes the role of a guest vocalist. Without an instrument, his unique stage moves are something to behold. I often forget that he is a trained actor, and tonight he has dressed down so that the only theatrical flourish to contrast with his simple grey/blue tshirt and trousers combination is that he is wearing black nail polish.

They began with their eerie atmospheric version of Robin Gibb's 'Lord Bless All', and given the setting it is a perfect choice, with evocative lines like "and when you sleep, London streets are silent".
They play the first song they released together 'New Years Eve's The Loneliest Night of the Year' before they get to tackle the Marble Downs material.
'I Made a Date (with an Open Vein)' brilliantly blends the strengths of both acts together, and now Will's voice starts to come to the fore.
The Bonnie Prince Billy song 'So Everyone' follows this and is an early crowd pleaser and a surprise for those who thought tonight may have just been a run through of the Marble Downs material.
Later in the set Will revisits the Palace Songs era for 'All Gone, All Gone' which is also notable for being the first time he picks up his guitar.
The talents of Trembling Bells aren't overlooked though, and Lavinia's musical arrangement of the Dorothy Parker poem 'Excursions into Assonance' is really lovely. It is very subtle, with simple keyboards and her and Will's voices working together beautifully for the first few minutes, before the band build on it.
Overall, the acoustics in here favoured the quieter moments as some of the noisier parts got lost, although happily I was on the right side so Mike's guitar actually came across well. Louder songs like 'Everytime I close my eyes' and 'Ain't Nothing Wrong With a little Longing' were impressive but made we want to see them somewhere smaller.

They also touched on some uptempo country music and Will even breaks out a kazoo before launching into a faithful cover of Merle Haggard's 'Tonight the Bottle let me Down'. Inevitably this leads into their witty duet 'I Can Tell You're Leaving' which name checks Haggard. It's one of the many stand-outs from the album and may well be the best bickering-couple song since 'Fairytale of New York'.
The main set ends on a reflective note with a lovely version of 'Love is a Velvet Noose'.
When they reassemble for the encore just Will and Lavinia come out and she takes the lead vocal on the bawdy 'My Husband's Got No Courage in Him', then the band creep back on and launch into a stunning version of 'Riding' from the early Palace Brothers days.
They leave us with a lovely version of BPB's recent single 'There is No God' which rounded off the 90 minute show in fine style.

Their voices sounded superb in here, however some of the appeal of Trembling Bells is that they are a loud and intense live act, and tonight some of that went swimming up into the heights of the chapel. This show was great, and their joint efforts should really yield more material, or at least a live album, but next time I'd like to see them in somewhere with a bit of a lower ceiling. That's a minor gripe, because tonight we got to witness something special.

Monday, May 07, 2012

stream new music: Beach House, Best Coast, Exitmusic, Animal Collective

Hey America, it's a Bank Holiday in the UK and it seems that your NPR and their fab 'First Listen' page have picked the ideal time to unleash lots of new music streams on us. The only bad thing about this is that today really should be all about the My Bloody Valentine re-issues, but there will be more about that when I get my hands on the actual physical CDs. I've heard bits of the promos and the Guardian stream of Loveless but it is difficult to tell what's different when the re-masters have been data compressed. I think it's fiar to say that any differences will be filed under 'subtle'. Anyway, on to the new streams...

Beach House's 'Bloom' is one of the most anticipated albums of the year and is now available to stream via this link. I'll be honest, I've actually had promo mp3s of this for a month and it amazes me that it isn't actually 'out' yet, it seems so familiar to me. It's a pretty thing and I think their songwriting has progressed, even if their sound is stubbornly similar to all their other records.

NPR have also posted streams for the second Best Coast album, 'The Only Place', and Exitmusic's debut album Passage neither of which I have had time to hear yet. Exitmusic are supporting Sharon Van Etten next week in London by the way.

Finally for now, Animal Collective have decided to surprise us with a new single - 'Honeycomb/ Gotham'. In contrast to their recent 'Transverse Temporal Gyrus' experimental 10" release, this will be released as a 7* single and appropriately shows a more 'pop' side to their music. On first listen it appears less electronic than their last album and has some pretty interesting percussion on it as well. Listen for yourself via the embedded player below, or at www.myanimalhome.net.

Saturday, May 05, 2012

RIP Adam Yauch



Although you may only have a connection with someone purely because you like their music, it will always hit you a bit when they die. I wasn't the world's biggest fan of the Beastie Boys, but I still liked them, and the death of Adam Yauch, aka MCA, at the early age of 47, is particularly saddening.
Since the news of his death appeared on Friday night, my twitter timeline and personal facebook page have been full of tributes and memories of him. The piece by Sasha Frere-Jones in the New Yorker is particularly touching, and it manages to paint a vivid picture of the guy as well as underline his cultural legacy.

When the Beastie Boys first emerged as an international act with their hit single 'Fight for the Right to Party' I was at school, and the hype surrounding them made them seem like the Sex Pistols a decade earlier. The Sun newspaper predictably hated them and tried to put the fear into the country's Volkswagen owners, suggesting these three bad boys from NYC were making kids steal VW badges. Crucially, the Beastie Boys were cool at my school not just because they sung about teen angst but because they were fans of hardcore punk and metal. So, while their 'white hip-hop' was essentially something very new and edgy, it managed to strike a chord with fans of bands like Anthrax and the Dead Kennedys whilst denting the upper reaches of the chart.

The critics seemed to take their music more seriously when they released 'Paul's Boutique', which showed off their more eclectic tastes and opened a lot of punk kids' ears to soul and funk. This was one of those benchmark albums, an obvious influence on the music of the Avalanches, Beck and DJ Shadow to name but three, and I genuinely believe it helped widen the tastes of my generation. Another side to the band that has been overlooked in some tributes was the publication of their own magazine Grand Royal which also helped point their fans towards great music. It only ran for six issues but the one I had, issue 2 (pictured here), featured remarkable interviews with Lee Perry AND Ted Nugent! It was the coolest magazine.

Their musical output is well documented and I have little to add except my own memories of my three live encounters with the band. First of all, Reading Festival 1992. They played a lively set on the action packed Sunday,
the day after Public Enemy had headlined with an amazing set and a few hours after a huge storm had caused a mud-bath and the abandonment of the second stage! They played mid-afternoon, after Pavement but before Teenage Fanclub, Mudhoney, Nick Cave and Nirvana and it all went by so fast. I remember finding the whole set on youtube a while back so feel free to have a search and sample it for yourself.
The second encounter was in Belfast in March 1995 in a soul-less hangar behind the King's Hall. Supported by Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, the Beasties brought the place to life and it didn't even matter that the acoustics meant it sounded the same if you faced the stage or the back wall!
Third, and perhaps the most memorable, was their Saturday night headline slot at Reading '98 when they played ABOVE the Prodigy, who MCA famously scolded for playing 'Smack My Bitch Up'. Sets by Lee Scratch Perry and Money Mark earlier in the day meant that it was very much a Beasties gig and they had requested the Prodigy omit that track. Apart from that little aside, the set was a mix of old favourites and the 'Hello Nasty' album. It turned out to be the most fun festival headline show I think I've seen.

Although it had been well publicised that Adam was ill for a long time, it's still hard to believe that all we have of the Beastie Boys now are memories.

Friday, May 04, 2012

WATCH: Public Service Broadcasting, 'Spitfire'

I haven't written about them for a few weeks, but last night I heard Public Service Broadcasting's new tune 'Spitfire' on Gideon Coe's BBC 6music programme and realised that I hadn't mentioned it here yet. 'Spitfire' is the lead track from their new EP, 'The War Room', a collaboration with the BFI. It will be released on May 28 2012 on Test Card Recordings, digitally and on heavyweight 12" vinyl. The video was put together by Owain Rich, who has worked with them on some of their previous videos and features footage from 'The First of the Few', starring David Niven, courtesy of the BFI's National Archive.

'Spitfire' has been nominated for this week's 6music rebel playlist, and you can vote for it here.

For more info about the band's activities, visit http://publicservicebroadcasting.net

Wednesday, May 02, 2012

Festival playlist: 10 Camden Crawl picks

London's now legendary Camden Crawl is back again this weekend (4th-6th May) and I guess you could say that it is the first festival of the season. The event's own website is pretty fancy and doesn't really need much added to it, and I reckon most of you know enough about Death In Vegas, the Cribs and the Futureheads by now as well. So, by means of a brief preview I thought I would concentrate on the bands in the small print on the poster and pick 10 tracks for a Spotify playlist. Enjoy - and do try and catch these ten if you are lucky enough to be in Camden this weekend and haven't got too many stressful clashes on your clashfinder!



Tuesday, May 01, 2012

The John Peel Archive: day one

I have had plenty of hits to the site today, largely due to the amount of material about John Peel that I have written over the years. As soon as I checked my phone at 6.30am this morning there were messages about the launch of the John Peel Archive and it has dominated my social media feeds all day.
You probably all know the background by now, but if you don't, please watch the intro to the archive site and read this piece by Alexis Petridis in the Guardian.

I had quite a long shift today and I thought I might browse some of the archive in my break. I was down to work in the BBC's recently renamed John Peel Wing and ironically I could not get the archives to display properly in my browser! I had to wait until I got back to have a look at them. They have chosen to release the archive lists in alphabetical order, and today saw the first 100 A's online. Whilst a lot of them can be played via streaming services, not all of them can, and I was particularly excited to see Acid Mothers Today double album 'Freak Out' in there with full artwork photos, only to find that the audio is unavailable. Having said that, John's typewritten cards are included with each album and that is a very lovely touch.

As you may expect, there is loads to explore and there is very little overlap with my own collection. I have the A.C. Acoustics EP and LP, both A.R. Kane LPs and one of the Action Swingers albums. The wonderful thing about having this archive made public is that, many years after he has gone, John Peel is helping us discover 'new' or unheard music. I am currently listening to an album called 'Alien Registration' by A.M.P. Studio from this archive, which I have never heard of and I'm quite enjoying (it's pretty ambient by the way).

On a personal note, the most exciting bit of this was finding a long lost track by A.C. Marias called 'One of Our Girls Has Gone Missing' which I once taped off the radio onto a cassette that is long gone. The peel archive now links to the whole album on Spotify, and I've embedded the song below.



Finally, the very best thing is that these archives are going to be released gradually, with a chunk appearing EACH WEEK until October. If you squint you can see that Boo Radleys 'Every Heaven' is sitting on the B shelves, which just makes me wonder what other delights are coming up. This is going to be fun.

Visit the archive here and you can browse some Peel sessions, selected radio shows and videos, as well as the album racks.