Saturday, December 13, 2008

Sweeping The Nation Albums Of 2008: Number 18



Laura Marling, contrary to hints in much of her press, is not only good because she's eighteen years old, impressive though that is, and it's certainly not the early glib suggestions of another Lily/Kate/Amy/Adele. In fact, the reason why Alas I Cannot Swim overcomes folk scenester baiting is that it sounds so out of place with everything around it in the young British female singer-songwriter division. Take out the Rakes and Noah And The Whale associations and we might as well be covering a contemporary of Eliza Carthy or Kathryn Williams who's chosen not to draw on the traditional myth and legend material, such a richness and lightness of touch is exhibited both in Charlie Fink's production and her own grounded writing. Obviously Joni Mitchell and Carole King figure highly as they would do, but there's something that's uniquely of her own in this place and time.

Such is clear from the start, Ghosts a deceptively almost jaunty arrangement over which a clear voiced Marling suggests fragility inherent in the story of chancing across a man who "went crazy at 19, said he lost all his self-esteem" over "the ghost that broke my heart before I met you" before cautioning "do not fall to your knees each night/Like I believe in everlasting love". Marling isn't a cheery soul at heart on this evidence - "on your word I gave up my whole life for you" declares the otherwise upbeat Cross Your Fingers - but that it's a misleadingly allurring song followed by 76 second 'interlude' Crawled Out Of The Sea, starting acapella and ending in a sea shanty tango arrangement, demonstrates how well she's able to push her range. Elsewhere the likes of Failure, about a failing musician ("he lost poetic ethic and his songs, they were pathetic") and Old Stone betray a Will Oldham influence in their sparseness and directness, while the romantic confusion of My Manic And I, in which the subject "wants to die in a lake in Geneva...the beauty of his death will carry on" but gets dumped by the narrator, who explains "I find it dull when my heart meets my mind", suggests Kristen Hersh. Night Terror exhibits a certain kind of love paranoia, starting "I woke up and he was screaming, I left him dreaming" but promising "if they want you, well, then they're gonna have to fight me". Never mind the birth year, Marling's is a young body concealing an old, weathered brain and heart, and much as as long as nobody tries to exert more commercial pressures upon her where she goes from here will be fascinating she sounds fully developed already.

Ghosts


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Friday, December 12, 2008

Attention all shipping

If you run a UK music blog and have responded to our album of the year poll appeal, thank you. Your votes have been assiduously noted.

If you run a UK music blog and have not done so yet, chop chop, you've only got until New Year's Eve.

If you run a UK music blog and have no idea what the above sentences refer to, we're taking the yearly temperature of people like you. Get in touch with us for further details.

If you don't run a UK music blog, mind how you go.

Sweeping The Nation Albums Of 2008: Number 19



When we first came across Those Dancing Days round about last May they seemed a infectiously cheerful, catchy concoction even by Swedish indiepop standards. They're five girls from the amusingly named Nacka (a suburb of Stockholm), they set great store by vintage organ sounds, their drummer Cissi Efraimsson is a powerhouse and singer Linnea Jönsson has spectacular curly hair. The difference essentially was that first song we heard, Hitten, Swedish for "the hit" and sounding like one, a whole lot of charm, a whole lot of Northern Soul refracted hooks and a soulful Jönsson vocal of great charm and no small amount of loosely hidden melancholy and foreboding - "I wanna know what I'm thinking, what I'm feeling... I wanna know how I plan to make things easier for everyone but me".

Hitten is here as is their eponymous UK debut single (track 11 of 12, curiously), opening with Farfisa fanfares and thunderous drums before turning into a giddy manifesto based on "living for music, living in a dance". Run Run's joy of open air freedom claims "the city is further away and I love that I can't stay" bolstered by a particularly warmly soulful Jönsson vocal, chorus lyric "the sky's way bigger than I ever thought it could be" perfectly reflecting that sense of teenage falling out of the family nest. Duet Under Waters is about the most restrained thing here, driven almost entirely by handclaps, offbeat marching drum patterns and twinkling keys as Jönsson suggests "your eyes point at your transparent inside" before suggesting "follow me down under" in a chorus that resembles a Nuggets garage hook stripped to the bone. It's interesting how such language of growing pains are clarified in music so joyous and fizzy you wonder how badly mere mastertape is holding it back, largely this alt-Motown clip but borrowing tricks primarily from Blondie and 60s garage. Such is their awareness of pop's back catalogue that Shuffle is entirely comprised from song titles, which doesn't quite make for a solid story but is nonetheless a brave attempt to do something unusual. But this is an album made by a gang of young girls that reflects Kids' first line "could we still be kids, children, youth or old". Kenickie, a band you know we love, used to do this, wrapping self-doubt into their upbeat personalities and glam-pop confections so tightly only the careful noticed. In Our Space Hero Suits is both a tribute to the vitality of youthful exuberance and a note of caution about what else that youth and young womanhood emotionally involves.

Hitten


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Thursday, December 11, 2008

Speak of the devil

J.Warmsley's New Thing 2: Malcolm Middleton/Emma Pollock/Pic


DISCLAIMER: Jeremy Warmsley is not the devil.

Sweeping The Nation Albums Of 2008: Number 20



How We Became: Jeremy Warmsley's pop album. Or what passes in his mind for a crossover pop album, that is to say something on nodding distance with simpler structures and commercial potential but finding it really can't make the commitment. There's fewer overt electronics and less sprawling scope towards throwing everything at a wall and seeing what sticks bravado than on our third favourite album of 2006, The Art Of Fiction, but there's a new found self-assurance and playfulness while retaining the vulnerable literate philosophising of yore, less whimsy, more directness. Think where Patrick Wolf tried to take his self-contained world commercial on The Magic Position but without the self-created image to keep up to hold him back. Or ambition to sing with Charlotte Church.

The dichotomy between being on a label affiliated to a major and being one man and his vat of ideas is shown beautifully on opener Lose My Cool, on the face of it a deceptively simple songwriterly piece, a half-speed keyboard driven Shins-esque lament cut into which is a chorus that pretty much rocks out, but given extra edge by the switches between live and electronic drums and the electronic lurches for decoration. 15 Broken Swords has ba-bas where the big chorus should be and a hesitant stomp where the radio-friendly bits should have gone, the title track comes on like the Postal Service suffering a sudden attack of very British doubt and nostalgia, while Dancing With The Enemy is a piano, sax and drum machine cheerful pop song in which romance overcomes the complications of the Nazi occupation of Jersey. If He Breaks Your Heart sees Warmsley get into real emotional turmoil - "if he takes the piss, I will break his face... if he breaks your heart, will I stand a chance?" - as malfunctioning robots register their approval behind. Then again there's I Keep The City Burning, an emotionally charged piano ballad of the type he could do all the time if he wanted and earns him occasional Rufus Wainwright comparisons. They'll be sated by closer Craneflies, a grandstanding piano ballad first half followed by a spectacular piano run (by longtime associate Three Trapped Tigers' Tom Rogerson) and a galloping race to the finish. Warmsley's always been an accomplished offbeat pop writer, it's just now he's having a go at attempting to turn pop mores his way. They won't, but then reaching for something intangible and out of most British singer-songwriter's bounds is what he's so good at.

That, and knowing just who to thank in sleeve note acknowledgements.

Lose My Cool


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Picture post

The best YouTube clips found in the name of Weekender filler this year:

The way things used to be

Oh Boy! (one, two, three) was television's first showcase for rock'n'roll, set up by the celebrated impresario Jack Good. In this, the entire last show from May 1959, there's an opening of the excellently named TV Hop, then Lord Rockingham's XI, a song called Let's Rock While The Rockin's Good, Dickie Pride, the Vernons Girls, Marty Wilde and Cliff Richard early in his British Elvis phase.

"We have always thought that it might be a good question to put to Mr Kenneth Dodd and the members of the Beatles to what extent do they attribute their success to their hairstyles." Ken pretty much takes the lead from there, but even in the first flushes of Beatlemania they were still just another branch of light entertainment, as also shown by their guest slot in Morecambe & Wise's first successful series, ITV vehicle Two Of A Kind from the same year. John attempts to outflank Eric, fails.

At Christmas 1965, the year that saw Help!, Shea Stadium, Rubber Soul and Yesterday, the big ITV spectacular was The Music Of Lennon & McCartney (one, two, three, four, five, six, seven), an attempt to equate their escalating fame with musical cabaret. Here we find the pair introducing the George Martin Orchestra, Henry Mancini, Marianne Faithfull, Peter Sellers doing his Richard IIIrd She Loves You, Lulu, Cilla Black, Esther Phillips, Peter & Gordon, Billy J Kramer and the Dakotas, jazz organist Alan Haven, composer Fritz Spiegl and hordes of dancers.

What's on the other side? Ah, part two of the 1967 Top Of The Pops Christmas Special (one, two, three, four, five, six, seven). We join Jimmy Saville, Pete Murray and Alan Freeman start by recording a trail for what we're about to see, and what we then see is the Bee Gees, the Monkees in video form, the Rolling Stones with Brian Jones in a rakish hat, Long John Baldry, Dave Dee Dozy Beaky Mick and Tich, Lulu (the ace, Jimmy Page-featuring Love Loves To Love Love), Scott Mackenzie, the Supremes, Cliff Richard, Procul Harum, the famed All You Need Is Love film and Engelbert Humperdinck.

Forward just a few years, to 1985, and a cub punk reporter attempts to call out Black Flag's Henry Rollins and Greg Ginn with, shall we say, limited success.

And from Engelbert to Black Flag to Five Star. They opened the last Pebble Mill At One (3:14) by showing us round the building to the tune of Can't Wait Another Minute. And by round the building, we include corridors, offices, canteen, scene dock, switchboard and gallery. The glamour of BBC Birmingham.


The things they do for publicity

And believe us, they always have. The Ramones were meant to be advertising The House Of Guitars in Rochester, New York, but instead appeal for viewers to buy Leave Home and Rocket To Russia.

Surprise television appearances are something we've always loved, especially if they're on kids TV, and we don't just mean Eels dressing up for CD:UK. Nickelodeon's Yo Gabba Gabba! was created by Christian Jacobs of oddball faux-superhero ska-punks The Aquabats (Blink 182's Travis Barker was once a member) and as such has his connections - Biz Markie, Devo's Mark Mothersbaugh and John Reis (Rocket From The Crypt, Hot Snakes, Drive Like Jehu, The Night Marchers) appear in occasional slots and they get the odd band in. Jimmy Eat World, the Shins and Cornelius (Cornelius!) have fallen victim to Viacom, but still hanging around is the not at all cloying sight of the former Dear Eskiimo, the Ting Tings, covering Altered Images. The other end of the spectrum is doing a grown-up song to a school assembly, as Mike Scott of the Waterboys tried, doing The Whole Of The Moon in Ireland in 1987 while wearing a visor.

Then there's the international chat show circut. Joan Rivers briefly hosted a Late Show rival for Fox in the mid-80s, with sitcom actress Suzanne Somers sitting in one week. That was the week they booked Wire to play the uncomfortable The Drill. Listen for that studio sound distortion and watch for Somers' meeting of minds with Bruce Gilbert. McLusky on German daytime television where producers here would have Donny Osmond or Katherine Jenkins is an eyeopener. How much do you suppose Falco really wants his photo taking at the end?


You did just hear that correctly

That just said, Mark E Smith did once appear on Top Of The Pops, even if the Inspiral Carpets had to smuggle him on. (Horribly letterboxed, we know.) That sort of thing can really get you on the wrong side of Andi Peters.

Reginald Bosanquet was main ITN anchor between 1974 and 1976, famous for his slurred delivery and alleged drinking habit. His Wikipedia entry contains the line "He also reached the headlines for breaking into his ex-wife's flat, an offence which got him thrown off the judging panel for Dustman of the Year 1975." In 1980, he made this... would 'song' be too kind? It's called Dance With Me, it was voted 'top' of Kenny Everett's Bottom 30 and it makes you wonder if the Disco Demolition people at Comiskey Park had a point.

And what more is there to possibly add to a choir of seventy New York fifth graders reinterpreting Chas & Dave?

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Sweeping The Nation Albums Of 2008: Number 21



No question Department Of Eagles owe a debt to Grizzly Bear - Daniel Rossen is in both, after all, and their bassist/technical genius Chris Taylor produced In Ear Park - but the real surprise is how far Rossen and Fred Nicolaus have travelled from the more experimentally spliced earlier material. There's still something of the patchwork about it, but this time it's where the individual disciplines - freak folk, Mercury Rev electronic pastorialismm psych-pop - are folded into each other to create an emotional whole without becoming overbalanced.

If as well as Grizzly Bear you're reminded of certain other leading players in the New Weird Americana movement - Animal Collective in their less outre Sung Tongs moments, Akron/Family - in the way it playfully subverts the norms of US folk. The opening title track runs on hazy Spanish guitar that sounds like a gently flowing stream alongside which are sparse piano, progressive more apparent percussion and sumptuous vocals; Around The Bay is as if Panda Bear had to construct Person Pitch from Neil Young and Richard Thompson records. Clearly a lot of this material is very personal for Rossen, the album dedicated to his late father and containing meditations on existance, most directly on Classical Records, where Rossen's voice is front and centre amid hums, clanking percussion and prodded piano as he considers how to deal with loss. As such it often doesn't really need to be extended from basic acoustic structure, cases in point the ethereal piano loop and echoed vocals of Teenagers and the wispy, folky Phantom Other in particular, but bells and whistles are seemingly never added for the sake of it, whether it be big drums or background found sounds. The aforementioned Teenagers shimmers with an approximate West Coast sheen, while someone should alert Van Dyke Parks to Herring Bone. No One Does It Like You throws out a pop curveball in the shape of a rhythm track not too far from Amy Winehouse's Back To Black, if augmented by a wordless backing chorus and the lyric "I curse these legs I walked on". So layered you find something new to love on every listen, Rossen may not reach the heights of his other band - and early live recordings suggest their spring ETA next full-length will be something outstanding - but using the same tools he more than does the job.

No One Does It Like You (live)


The full list

Tuesday, December 09, 2008

Sweeping The Nation Albums Of 2008: Number 22



Someone, probably us, once said of Field Music that they sounded like every era of XTC being played at the same time, so many ideas did the Brewises and Andrew Moore utilise. When the band were put on hold last April it stood to reason that anything they did to follow their individual artistic visions would be worth following, and while David's School Of Language's Ship To Shore ended up flattering to deceive, Peter's take for The Week That Was was somewhat more high risk, an album inspired equally by Paul Auster's absurdist crime fiction, a week without broadcast technology to hand and 1980s recording technology. Many bad things came out of 2008's obsession with 1980s recording technology, but naturally an architect of precision such as Brewis would choose inventively - Peter Gabriel, Scary Monsters Bowie and Japan rather than, say, Fleetwood Mac. If idiots want to go "like Phil Collins drums!!!!11", let them. Phil Collins was, after all, a good enough drummer for Brian Eno, Robert Fripp and John Cale.

The result is a suite of eight songs, totalling 32 minutes, that would be called progressive if they were ever allowed to stretch out to their full length but instead get shoehorned into a very peculiar, dark and oddly structured (The Good Life is 45 seconds old when it finds itself in the midst of a vibraphone solo) form of pop that owes as much to Roxy Music and Eno's first four solo albums as those Linn drum believers, kind of a progressive step both on and back from the two proper Field Music albums. Learn To Learn starts with toppling drums and guitar stabs before blossoming into a slowly crystallising agitated treatise, It's All Gone Quiet breaks out the synths and electronic percussion to create a claustrophobic atmosphere a la David Sylvian and Ryuichi Sakamoto's work together, Yesterday's Paper tells a crime story of its own in microcosm across several subtly shifting sections without nearly going overboard, while The Airport Line is a delicate slice of travel-based wistfulness with a mood enhancing string section. Scratch The Surface's first person criminal taunting narrative closes much as the rest of the album has gone - elliptical, curious, reaching far and taking the right influences the right way where others are desperate to head in the opposite direction.

Learn To Learn


The full list

Monday, December 08, 2008

Sweeping The Nation Albums Of 2008: Number 23



It was beginning to look like The Walkmen would be lost to us on a critical level. After being catapulted into the limelight by the angular, angry Bows + Arrows and the remarkable propulsion of still decade standout single The Rat they chose the path of least irresistability, the far too held back A Hundred Miles Off followed by, oh joy, a track by track cover of Harry Nilsson's Pussy Cats. And then came the realisation that they were letting things slip and with You & Me they were back in the game, albeit a game they don't sound too chipper about playing. Hamilton Leithauser has found a midpoint between his Dylan voice and his roaring voice and the band have headed in the direction of the late night philosopher, drunk on their own depths and on, er, drink.

Dónde Está la Playa opens with a waltzing bassline and splashing drums as Leithauser declares for opening that "it's back to the battle today/But I wouldn't have it any other way", but by the time we get to On The Water the dank, mopey atmosphere has been set. "All the windows are glowing, the branches bending low" Leithauser observes over a blurry after dark tableau which eventually explodes into life with cymbal crashes and some mid-mix jaunty whistling. In The New Year is a song for the ex-lovers and also where they really hit the heights of their first two dolorous albums, Leithauser getting to really give his larynx a workout alongside the mournful fairground organ and scrap guitar, echoed in The Blue Route's hall of mirrors chiming and nostalgia for living a gainful life. The explosive waltz Seven Years Of Holidays (For Stretch) bemoans the travelling, both his own and that of others going away, and decides "these wild nights are no fun"; Red Moon has an audible hangover, as someone who's just taken on Harry Nilsson is wont to have, a slow, intimately shivery recollection of lost love over shimmering brass. The stately, introspective closer If Only It Were True cements the good if surprising news that the Walkmen have established their missteps, realigned accordingly, developed what they were good at and still pack a hefty emotional punch.

In The New Year (live)


The full list

Sunday, December 07, 2008

Sweeping The Nation Albums Of 2008: Number 24



Vampire Weekend are prime placed for the hipster backlash, but you and they probably knew that was coming. The deliberately Ivy League style, Columbia University background, appropriations of Afrobeat (side note: a Columbia University radio show is credited with heightening the US profile of African music - see Dirty Projectors and Yeasayer, also from New York)... it's not going to mean a hill of beans to your rock'n'roll kid. Thing is, they know this. Check their stagewear, the yacht they slouch around on in the Mansard Roof video, the invocation of a Mansarf Roof itself, the song apparently about a sodding Oxford comma... Hell, it's all in Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa, the song here most explicitly derived from west African style via middle class kid orthodoxy, Koenig weaving in alongside the Louis Vuitton namecheck to United Colours Of Benetton and how "this feels so unnatural, Peter Gabriel too" cutting cultural tourism allegations off at the pass by laying it on a plate for them.

So let's leave what it all means to Sasha Frere Jones and talk music instead. It's an intriguing mix of cheap sounding keyboards, economical martial drumming, clean Afro-guitar stabs and Ezra Koenig's way of dropping in offbeat references and lyrical structures, Oxford Comma prominently namechecking Dharamsala and crunk pioneer Lil Jon. A-Punk is taut Talking Heads with a Mellotron, M79 a Brooklyn Magazine meeting The Left Banke with added harpsichord (!) and jaunty strings apparently playing the Ski Sunday theme in double time, Campus a tale of uni grounds stalking that sounds like the Strokes with all the fuzz and attitude excavated until only the cadaver remains, transplanted into Walcott where as Koening suggests the titular subject "get out of Cape Cod tonight" amid sawing cellos Rostam Batmanglij apparently attempts to recreate that guitar sound on analogue synth while submerged underwater. And while One (Blake's Got A New Face) really chances it with Koenig taking on a Sting accent amid references to Darjeeling, 'occident', 'Spanish brownstone', 'cryptographs' and the concept of being "dowdy in sweatshirts - absolute horror!", it comes in a package that can never quite decide which instrument should be more minimally percussive and contains a call and response section. Strip away appropriations and it's a very odd album, and a very intriguing one.

Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa


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The only chart that counted: 1975

For yet another year, frustrated by the fact we already know what the Christmas number one for next year will be - not who or what yet, just its derivation - we dive headlong into a range of Christmas top forties of years gone by - three this year, all on the December Saturdays before Christmas - to sort wheat from chaff and just generally piss about. We put a lot of effort into these, we'll have you know.

40 Roxy Music - Both Ends Burning
Well, that's the risk you take for shagging around. (Is that strictly libellous?)

39 Billy Connolly - D.I.V.O.R.C.E.
Affectionate parody rather than pisstake of Tammy from just broken through into mass market ex-Humblebum. Working a quarantined dog into the equation is stretching the pale, though.


38 Stretch - Why Did You Do It
A poor man's Climax Blues Band.

37 The Carpenters - Santa Claus Is Comin' To Town
Odder festive things were just outside this list, with Freddie Starr covering White Christmas peaking at 41. Starr always fancied himself as a straight crooner, but we don't doubt there's bits of funny voice business in it too.

36 Frank Sinatra - I Believe I'm Gonna Love You

35 Crispy And Company - Get It Together
A disguised excursion into Eurodisco by French Afro-funksters and by all accounts much better than that sounds Lafayette Afro Rock Band. Obviously, this ended up being the only hit they had.

34 Wombles - Let's Womble To The Party Tonight
The 1974 Eurovision Song Contest interval act - hello, Sweden, you've just changed the course of pop music forever, now see what we do - don't stop to explain what 'womble' as a verb actually means. Chris Spedding on guitar, as part of a fantastically wide-raging CV that encompasses Roxy Music, John Cale, Brian Eno, Elton John, the Sex Pistols and Katie Melua. This followed, but wasn't on, Superwombling, which contains a track called The Myths And Legends Of King Merton Womble And His Journey To The Centre Of The Earth. Using a spinoff of a children's stop-motion animation series to take the piss out of Rick Wakeman can only be applauded.

33 Jim Capaldi - Love Hurts
An Everly Brothers cover by the drummer from Steve Winwood's band Traffic. Got to number four. It was 1975.

32 Elvis Presley - Green Green Grass Of Home
Actually Porter Wagoner, Jerry Lee Lewis had already recorded the country standard before Tom Jones convinced a generation that it was about Wales all along, and Johnny Cash did it at Folsom Prison. That bit about four grey walls, see. Murry The Hump's Green Green Grass Of Home, which is about something else, is better.

31 Jigsaw - Sky High
Put into Room 101 by Frank Skinner on the radio version.

30 Billy Howard - King Of The Cops
We've written before about the preponderance of variety comedy spoofs in the charts in this era, and here's a prime example - a man performing a rewritten King Of The Road in the voices of Kojak, Columbo, Ironside etc. File under You'd Never Get That Now.

29 Abba - Mamma Mia

28 John Lennon - Imagine
Stinks up 'all time greats' lists to this day, but first time around it peaked at number 6 and spent ten weeks in the top 40, not entering the pantheon until 1980 when producers needed stock footage and alighted on the video.

27 The Impressions - First Impressions
Slight misnomer, twelve years after their debut and with Curtis Mayfield having long jumped ship.

26 The Fatback Band - Do The Bus Stop
The great Being Spraypainted And Kicked At 2am craze of winter 1975 was on.

25 Slade - In For A Penny
Not, sadly, from Slade In Flame but the start of a concerted attempt to take on an American soul/pop sound. The US radio interviewers must have been fascinated by Noddy.

24 Rod Stewart - This Old Heart Of Mine

23 The Small Faces - Itchycoo Park
It'd got to number 9, in fact, although there's no explicit reason for it to be reissued in the first place, apart from that Steve Marriott's next band Humble Pie had just split up. Well, it was Christmas, he might have needed the money.

22 Mike Oldfield - In Dulce Jubilo/On Horseback
It's always clips of Wakeman and ELP that they show, but we suspect it was more the showy multi-instrumentalist neo-classicism - this was a reworking of the Good Christian Men Rejoice hymn - that drove McLaren and Scabies into action.

21 Ken Dodd - (Think Of Me) Wherever You Are
With his reputation as toothy marathon man of the stage cemented it's easy to forget Ken really fancied himself as a serious balladeer, and not strictly in the Des O'Connor all-round sense either. This was the last of *eighteen* top 40 singles.

20 Goodies - Make A Daft Noise For Christmas
The seventh biggest selling group in Britain that year. Eat that, Boosh.

19 Steeleye Span - All Around My Hat
When nu-folkies do acquiesce to acknowleding that they might have heard some English folk music between all the Bob, Joni and Carole - and no, Nick Drake doesn't count - it's always Fairport Convention and offshoots, John Martyn for the more adventurous. Steeleye Span sold more records but don't get the same treatment, which you can see - accents right from the centre of finger in ear fiddle-de-dee, traditional covers, novelty songs, Peter Sellers on the previous album, this produced by Mike Batt in the midst of Womblemania. And it's called All Around My Hat.

18 Sailor - Glass Of Champagne
Note to all bands for 2009: more nickelodeons.


17 10cc - Art For Art's Sake
Omnistylistic, buffing the happy lamp nominatured songcrafters supreme critique capitalism. Still sounds pertinent today etc.

16 David Essex - If I Could
"In 2004, Essex shouted "Are you waiting for a bus?" at a fan who stood up during a performance in Leeds. Essex was supported by local legends Wilson at the concert." It's no Gonna Make You A Star, that's all you need about the song.

15 Bay City Rollers - Money Honey
Where is she now? Probably editing the Times Literary Supplement.

14 Judge Dread - Christmas In Dreadland/Come Outside
It's the golden age of reggae, and its most successful chart star in Britain, more so than Marley, was an ex-debt heavy and pro wrestler from near Rochester who prided himself on making records that adapted nursery rhymes with single entrende sexual innuendo, routinely banned by the BBC, like an irie Andrew Dice Clay. And Andrew Dice Clay isn't that fondly recalled now either.

13 Andy Fairweather-Low - Wide Eyed And Legless
As with Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll, here's the pop oeuvre inventing a phrase soon to go international, through the former Amen Corner singer.

12 The Drifters - Can I Take You Home Little Girl
Insert reference to registers here.

11 Mud - Show Me You're A Woman
Something possibly demanded of Rob Davis at the time.

10 Chris Hill - Renta Santa
In 1956 Dickie Goodman released The Flying Saucer, a mock news report in which he would ask a series of questions and receive replies clipped from popular hits of the day. Nearly twenty years later an Ilford soul DJ borrowed the idea, including a verse entirely about Rod Stewart leaving Britain. As we say, this was a time for odd novelty hits.

9 David Bowie - Golden Years
War Pigs gets it the most, but nobody points out that the self-rhyme here - "I'll stick with you baby for a thousand years/Nothing's gonna touch you in these golden years" - is even worse.

8 The Stylistics - Na Na Is The Saddest Word
Only if you're a grown man pointing at a fire engine.

7 Hot Chocolate - You Sexy Thing
Hen parties! Run! Run far and fast!

6 Demis Roussos - Happy To Be On An Island In The Sun
Hefty lover's Europop before Europop became what it became, actually quoted on Renta Santa.

5 Chubby Checker - Let's Twist Again/The Twist
The Fat Boys, roused, make notes.

4 Dana - It's Gonna Be A Cold Cold Christmas
Charming.

3 Laurel And Hardy With The Avalon Boys Featuring Chill Wills - The Trail Of The Lonesome Pine
Again, the novelty hits were quite something. We have no idea why this was issued as a single - the film was released in 1937, both were long dead, there was no known campaign around the duo going on at the time. Chill Wills, by the way - and that was his real name - was a future Oscar nominated actor and member of the Avalon Boys vocal quartet, this billing being something of a Supremes Featuring Diana Ross.

2 Greg Lake - I Believe In Father Christmas
It's quite difficult to believe in Greg Lake sometimes, but there's a certain charm, despite its yes-I'm-in-ELP Prokofiev flourish, to this song that keeps it going through the years, co-written by Pete Sinfield, who went on to pen Bucks Fizz's The Land Of Make Believe, which he claimed it was an attack on Thatcher, and Celine Dion's Think Twice, which wasn't. This is actually about the commercialisation of Christmas. Still sounds pertinent today etc.

1 Queen - Bohemian Rhapsody
"Rowe, Flo, Crowe, Yeo, Lowe, Pyo, Defoe!"


Previous years covered: 1977, 1978, 1980, 1982, 1984, 1986, 1987, 1993, 1995, 1997, 2000, 2002

Saturday, December 06, 2008

Sweeping The Nation Albums Of 2008: Number 25



It's been quite a year for guitar-drum duos, from No Age to Slow Club to, ahem, the Ting Tings, but on their debut Blood Red Shoes often feel like something else entirely. Maybe it's because of the sound of Laura-Mary Carter's guitar, hugely revved up and spitting as viciously as her insolently acid tongue. Maybe it's the fact that the drummer tends to be fairly anodyne in such set-ups so Steven Ansell's whirlwind flurries were something else entirely. Or maybe that there is nothing else here - guitar lines to land a light aircraft on, hammering drums, two vocalists swapping lead/backup/harmony roles song by song, rough as you like. If anything, putting them in a studio defeats the purpose. (Especially if producer Mike Crossey is going to add distracting levels of echo to the vocals. Still, BRS continue to go out shred faces to this day while Crossey was deployed to work with Razorlight and Joe Lean & The Jing Jang Jong, so we know who the winners were there.)

So where does it fit in? Doesn't Matter Much hinges on a big old grungey riff, but they're not Nirvana/Sub Pop slackers. It's Getting Boring By The Sea is a feast of stop-start delay pedal and a whole load of hi-hat as if set square for the indie disco floor, but they aren't post-punkers. ADHD charges shoutily headlong at commitment's brick wall, but they aren't Huggy Bear turned up and halved. Actually, they're all of these things and more, often within the space of three and a half minutes. Try Harder punctuates wordless coos, handclaps and clanging Fugazi-ish guitar hits before Ansell howls at the moon. I Wish I Was Someone Better travels so fast and with so much jet propulsion that it'd leave Richard Noble and Thrust 2 feeling inadequate as Ansell's drumming hits warp speed as he pleads "what should I do when I'm the one to blame?" (He pulls this off with unerring accuracy live too. Faster and harder, if anything. He is not human, we're telling you.) Pissed off and taking it out on you, Blood Red Shoes are blood red raw, and that's all they or you need.

It's Getting Boring By The Sea (single version)


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The Yearly Sweep

44 Weekly Sweeps in 2008 - who appeared in them the most? Hardly a surprise, in fairness:

18= (12 mentions) Okkervil River, The Wave Pictures, Young Knives
13= (13) British Sea Power, Johnny Flynn, The School, The Walkmen, Wild Beasts
12 (14) Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds
9= (15) Dananananaykroyd, The Futureheads, Jeremy Warmsley
7= (16) Foals, Laura Marling
5= (17) Broken Records, Those Dancing Days
4 (19) Mystery Jets
3 (20) Noah And The Whale
2 (24) Los Campesinos!
1 (30) Johnny Foreigner

Friday, December 05, 2008

Sweeping The Nation Albums Of 2008: Number 26



The four part harmony that opens Fleet Foxes' debut album is straight out of Crosby Stills Nash & Young. So is the rest of Sun It Rises, really. Yet as the song progresses through cymbal splashes and a needling guitar line, you get the idea that as out of time in 2008 this may be, it's struck a pretty significant chord. Pristine clean on the surface but rusty and musty underneath, this kind of bucolic harmonic trad-American folk grows and grows and what could easily have been an exercise in purposefully looking back to no great development beyond Pitchfork and blogland pitches its flag right in the midst of a modern solemnity.

It's peculiarly American, this sort of vocal harmony driven arrangement, the hallmark and reflection of all sorts of vocal traditions from church and backwoods America refracted through CSNY and the Beach Boys, and when it works best - the echoey, haunting opening of White Winter Hymnal, for instance - it's nigh on unmissable. But again, if that were all it wouldn't stay for long. What works is how the band add flourishes and developments that elevate it to a certain level of dreaminess, not to mention a connection with the decade's previous US folk bearers, from Will Oldham out to Devendra Banhart, and on some of the more stripped back songs - Tiger Mountain Peasant Song, Oliver James - a storytelling pastorialism that recalls Fairport Convention. Or you could forget comparison and let the ethereality f something like Quiet Houses wash over you as guitars cascade around a tambourine rhythm, and throughout landscape and wildlife add a sense of wide open place to proceedings. Then there's the soaring wordless choruses of He Doesn't Know Why and Heard Them Stirring, the latter of which is decorated with plucked things that are stringed but aren't acoustic guitars. Its actual nearest comparison, it emerges to mind, is Dennis Wilson's finally reissued this year Pacific Ocean Blue, another album full of harmonies and timeless arrangements that referenced landscape proudly as its setting. If you prodded at it for too long it'd fall apart - Fleet Foxes have arrived fully formed and at one with their surroundings of all sorts.

White Winter Hymnal


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Thursday, December 04, 2008

Sweeping The Nation Albums Of 2008: Number 27



Note: Voices Of Animals And Men was by The Young Knives; Superabundance is by Young Knives, apparently because Henry Dartnall didn't want to be associated with the other 'The' bands (although it looks like they might have swapped back now). Indie rock band with straightforward post-punk riffs they may well be, but there's something very 'other' about Young Knives, not just the dress sense and stage banter fripperies but their awareness of music and of what this sort of thing should be doing. Superabundance isn't tremendously progressive from that debut, but it's founded on a refusal to grow old gracefully. No, not like Blink 182, like one of those classic British poets - and they're still very definitely and defiantly a British band - who becomes more splenetic as age increases.

Fit 4 U, fundamentally a straight up power trio opener with fine echoey guitar delay and a big riff chorus, opens with a dismissive "home is where the house is" and in a repeated bridge line asks "hey runner, what are you running from?", another example of the band's ability to make repetitive hook lines out of the unlikeliest concepts (see also Terra Firma's "fake rabbit, real snake" chorus) Counters sounds pissed off at the outset amid Jam-derived riffs, skittering hi-hats and dog barks before hitting "sitting in the front seat, turning on the motor/Sucking on the hosepipe, keep it turning over" as a chorus. Turn Tail's queasy string stabs give it a peculiar grace even as House Of Lords specifies that we're all going down with him ("we're all slaves on this ship, this ship's sinking/We will not reach the shore"). I Can Hardly See Them is a fuzzy psych out with tribal drumming, echoed to an extent in the disturbed low-key Mummy Light The Fire, while Rue The Days seems to be an attempt to channel the whole of Modern Life Is Rubbish into 3:46. Superabundance is no Modern Life Is Rubbish, but its heart is in a similar place and when the landfill indie smoke clears so could Young Knives' future.

Turn Tail


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Sweeping The Nation Albums Of 2008: Number 28



Foals come with too much baggage for most. So keen are the cognescenti to point out their distance from math-rock (all 4/4 beats, see) and their proximity to studied cool (haircuts, generally) that nobody stops to acknowledge what the hell this is that the Grimshawcore kids are actually listening to and how come it's so actually different from everything else in their hype sightlines. While you wonder what the original Dave Sitek mix sounded like - reverb friendly and filtered, at a guess - we can at least acknowledge that Antidotes is an album that takes the booth at the student disco and plays some modern classical instead.

If there's a basic format of their own conjured up here - high up the neck hi-life guitars, DFA punk-funk rhythms facilitated by Jack Bevan's athletic drumming, Yannis Phillipakis' attempts at mystical lyrics, the odd set of Antibalas horns - it's one that never remains static, keen to turn back on itself while still progressing as though it were that phone game Snake. Therein you'll hear techno structures, the guitar technical intricacies of Minus The Bear, post-punk revivalism, post-rock, Afrobeat and the propulsiveness of a Gang Gang Dance or !!! all scrunched up, scribbled on and reappropriated as direct dance-punk-pop. That's the key - Phillipakis and Bevan had already had a go at the longeurs in The Edmund Fitzgerald and carry ideas learnt there over into stretched out versions of something to get the smart indie kids to dance again. Specifics: the awkwardness of Olympics Airways, Balloons' thumping jerkiness, the parts where Two Steps Twice appears to be playing in four different temps simultaneously building up to its shoutalong run-in (using vocals as an extra instrument is something they're particularly good at, especially if you only have Phillipakis' uncultured yelp to go with), the ambient textures of Big Big Love (Fig. 2). If they can harness the intensity and mechanics that makes Antidotes such an oblique angle at which to take pop head on from, who knows where they could go in future.

Balloons


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Wednesday, December 03, 2008

Sweeping The Nation Albums Of 2008: Number 29



Restlesslist, an instrumental Brighton trio who've been round that ever incestuous scene (and a big hand for Tom White!), have the world of influence as their oyster, their Myspace list ranging from the big obvious names (Gorillaz, Joe Meek) to the crate digging (cLOUDDEAD, The Books) to the dubious (Babyshambles, Frank Sidebottom) to the schematic (horror movie soundtracks, calypso). What welding such disprite elements together - think Anticon for inspiration - has produced on The Rise And Fall Of The Curtain Club is one of those extended soundtracks to an imaginary film, tailor made for B-movies, cold war spy thrillers, spaghetti westerns, clown-based horror films... that sort of unsettlement. If Brighton's other sample-friendly band The Go! Team are soundtracking the high school hop Restlesslist are Stephen King's Carrie.

Single Butlin Breaks is like funfair music from a John Carpenter curated carnival, shimmering guitars and hip hop influenced drums lifted by doses of cornet (and a big hand for Phil Sumner!) pitched somewhere between Ennio Morricone and Harry Palmer. Winterr Part 1 starts off with handclaps, piano, more cornet and the idea that this time we're soundtracking the rollercoaster at said funfair, and suddenly heads deep underground, spacey synths like lost space transmissions fighting with creepy circular guitar figures eventually broken into by fuzzy power chords... and back to the handclaps and sweetness and light. There's a snatch of the clown theme in the outro. Winterr Part 2? Breakbeats under waves of swirling noises from the ghost of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop. It ends with a massive roll of drums and collapsing analogue synths. Of course. Hour Glass is like the whole mis en scene in five minutes, partly in waltz time and incorporating carnival bells and treated guitars, fuzzy samples of much the same, murky tones recalling Prefuse 73 and crazed demonic laughter. Alright, we give in. This could never be background music in the same way first glance contemporaries Lemon Jelly can be, and if you wanted to find close neighbours you'd be looking more towards Errors or a vocal-less The Chap. It's weird, inspired and downright uneasy listening.

Dirty Pint


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Sweeping The Nation Albums Of 2008: Number 30



For what unfortunately turned out to be their final act, the Long Blondes plotted a realignment of course that surprised many but really shouldn't have done. From their earliest singles they had something of the "fuck art, let's dance" about them, fading into a lo-fi disco ambience that wanted to spread its wings beyond student union indie night. Besides, better to have an ambition to be Blondie than an ambition to be Sleeper. (Does it help, by the way, that we never thought much of that first album? Probably.)

Yes, Century's Casio disco and Space Invaders effects retain that scent of the fabulously down at heel, despite cold war paranoia lyrical invocations, and they could still do the low-maintenance glamour, but there's a new poise about The Couples and Erin O'Connor (those references to Erin and Lily Cole going to age much?), songs about love studded by fear, jealousy and suspicion. The real sign is in the two songs in the middle where they completely throw out ideas of what the Long Blondes should by NME rights be. Round The Hairpin is a constant fuzz of background whining and feedback bed upon which lays an economic, intriguing drum loop and Kate Jackson turning down her all too often deployed bellow pitch to something just above stage whisper to lull the listener into a false sense of security given she's singing about car crashes. Then Too Clever By Half employs falsetto, a rhythm section in miniature and samples of a match being lit. It's over halfway until a guitar appears, which is more than in the drum machine and piano powered wistful Nostalgia ("I may never have a daughter cos I've far too much to tell her"). When bands make out that they've only just worked out how to translate the arrangements in their heads it usually means MOR. In "Couples"' case it meant gaining the chops and confidence to no longer be this week's indieboy glamourpusses but strike out for more.

Century (single edit)


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Tuesday, December 02, 2008

Sweeping The Nation Albums Of 2008: Numbers 40-31


40 Clinic - Do It!
Clinic are, if they'll forgive us for this, the Status Quo of garage-stomp-psych-Kraut-dub-folk-soundtrack-experimental-whatever the hell it is they do. You know what every album sounds like by now - some of it will be fuzzy and punky, some stompy and weirdy, some spooky and melodica-y. There'll be odd instruments, vintage organ whirrs, distortion, muffled lead vocals, doo wop backing vocals and some combination of surgical masks, Beefeater outfits, Hawaiian shirts and smocks will be worn. Sometimes it works well, sometimes it doesn't quite hang together or stay consistently odd. In among the stutters, drones and motorik rhythms this time around are some intriguing Clinic-y twists on an ever expanding influences bank. In other hands Tomorrow would be dusty blues, Free Not Free a Joe Meek waltz, Corpus Christi low key tropicalia, Emotions a 50s ballad, Mary And Eddie positively Wicker Man soundtrack pastoral before the acid rock invades. Nobody else even tries to do what they do, and that's the highest compliment you can give them. Back around in two years for more? Good.
VIDEO: Tomorrow


39 Wire - Object 47
If only everyone could pull off an album like this thirty years on from their debut. Onto their eleventh studio album (and forty-seventh release in total, hence the title) Wire survived the loss of intransigent guitarist Bruce Gilbert and emerged with their most straight-up poppy album yet. Poppy on their own terms, obviously - the Pigeon Detectives would die if they ever attempted to replicate the snappy (in both senses) fizz of opener One Of Us, and that's the most accessible song here. In place of last album Send's noisy longeurs comes Circumspect's prowling riffs, the disturbingly distorted circular Mekon Headman, the seemingly machine tooled rhythmic pulse of Hard Currency and closer All Fours, which in its ire and gradually submersive of all else electronic undertow seems constructed of elements that could have equally come from last year's Read And Burn 03 EP or Chairs Missing, all for the most part topped by the familiarly questing, accusatory vocals of Colin Newman. There's even a callback to the celebrated nonsense-but-not-nonsense lyrics of Kidney Bingos in Patient Flees. Maybe the prosaic naming of the album was a signal that by Wire's expansive terms this is almost back to basics, a straight up new wave album in the way British new wave used to be, cast in its hair trigger guitar pop frame but always searching for ways to better itself and undermine expectations and ideas of what punk and post-punk should sound like vanilla. Nothing here merely chugs, let's put it like that.
VIDEO: One Of Us


38 Ballboy - I Worked On The Ships
Gordon McIntyre's boundless lyrical gifts remain appreciated by a stout but select few, fewer now John Peel's not around to book umpteen sessions for them. Able to pick detailed stories full of heart and intricately described feelings from the smallest of sinewy storylines, a peculiarly Scottish form of lyrical melancholy which always sees the blue skies following the darkest greys. A fitting analogy here - I Worked On The Ships feels colder somehow, a new permanent keyboard player allied to more cello and less indie rockouts giving it a crisp autumnal air, slower, more folky perhaps. Life, meanwhile, is busy finding new ways to wound McIntyre's fragile mental state, whether through love (The Guide To The Shortwave Radio, decorated with birdsong and moving at stately pace through loss and memories), fear of the future (A Relatively Famous Victory) or the wiles of international espionage (Cicily). Just before cataloguing a litany of splits and deceits Disney's Ice Parade, meanwhile, opens with unforgettable stanzas - "You left your notes on lesbian sex on the fishtank in the hall/It took me all afternoon To read them all/I learned more in that day than I’ve ever learned before/I don't think you and I should go clubbing any more". Godzilla vs The Island of Manhattan (With You And I Somewhere In Between) mediatates on destruction and evokes 9/11 but then finds the line "on this broken up island there are only our hearts beating". Songs For Kylie pivots on the image of a cracked cassette tape demo, its contents it's suggested informed by heartbreak, uncared for on a landfill site. Don't let Ballboy suffer the same ultimate fate.
VIDEO: Songs For Kylie (live)


37 Noah & The Whale - Peaceful, The World Lays Me Down
Five Years Time is a mighty red herring. The jaunty whistling, the faux-naive chorus, the bit about the zoo, the video's Wes Anderson references... all gave critics the chance to throw the 'twee' grenade at them. But such Juno-manque is not the key to Noah And The Whale as much as that lyric towards the end - "in five years time I might not know you... you might just prove me wrong". Charlie Fink is fond of namechecking Will Oldham and Jeffrey Lewis, and while they don't approach the former's gravitas (although Do What You Do gives it a good go) or the latter's comic savvy you can see a kind of connection to their almost existential ponderings on homespun heartbreak. Someone else has made a comparison with Stephin Merritt, the old style indie that's sweetness and light in presentation but with an uncertain undertow, which is fair enough. It's something in Fink's deep and almost meaningful, lived-in vocal, certainly, and the careful arrangements that suggest Jocasta and the spare Second Lover would fit Bright Eyes were it not for the very British brittleness. In our world Rocks And Daggers should have been the sleeper hit, built on countrified acoustic guitars, rattling drums and mournful violin, while the end of the album brings it down carefully with the slow burn considerate fragility of Mary and Hold My Hand As I’m Lowered. So yeah, they had their Commercial Indie summer hit and got on commercial radio playlists, but they're just too good for all that now implies.
VIDEO: Shape Of My Heart


36 Portishead – Third
Trip hop gets a press unbecoming of what it actually was. If you put Tricky or Massive Attack's Mezzanine on in the background of your dinner party you'd soon find yourself short of societal invitations. Dummy was a disturbing listen too, with its scratchy samples and Beth Gibbons' spooked out voice, and eleven years after its carbon copy follow-up Portishead returned with an album that you couldn't put on at any sort of food-based gathering for fear of making patrons wonder what exactly they're eating. Third moves their world on from psychic dancehalls to chambers of horror, imbued with ominous, gothic detail, invoking John Carpenter scores, the early drone electronic experiments of Silver Apples and Suicide and in particular an earlier Bristol sound, The Pop Group's urgent industrial dub space funk. In among the pulsing, clanging and fuzzy guitar lines comes a scorched earth policy to their original spy thriller soundtrack ethos. Hunter and The Rip both resemble Gibbons' Rustin Man side project diverted into the BBC Radiophonic Workshop, Magic Doors builds itself on the off-beat to completely throw the linear listening experience off course before the free jazz horn interlude. Machine Gun sounds like a ghostly wail over looped, digitised industrial jackhammers, and that was deemed commercial enough for the first single. Even the supposed light relief halfway through, the little girl lost sea shanty built on ukelele and Inkspots-esque backing Deep Water, sounds threatening. It may not be the repeated listen winner from out of the blue that Dummy was, but as statements of intents go it takes some beating.
VIDEO: Machine Gun


35 Bon Iver - For Emma, Forever Ago
The story of For Emma, Forever Ago's creation has been so told and retold it threatens to overcome the actual specifics of what it sounds like. Nevertheless, it doesn't take a great leap to spot that it was created in cold, perhaps not really splendid isolation. It feels like a ghost at the table, songs that have a presence but exist only in the chill of the winter night. On top of that, if Justin Vernon sounded like Dan Michaelson from Absentee... well, it'd be very funny, but nobody would give it a second listen. That he possesses a keening, hypnotically soulful falsetto, multi-tracked for extra emphasis, that sounds like the one Tunde Adebimpe used to occasionally unleash (think Young Liars) gives the album its emotional power and pull. The guitar playing often seems to follow suit, a brittle scrub of squeaking strings just minimal enough. That level of intimacy is what attracted a lot of people to him, but those who've seen his semi-euphoric fleshed out live performances in the months since know that it's about the songs therein, Skinny Love and The Wolves (Act I And II) premedicated on a desolate howl of heartbreak and muted recrimination. Right near the end, with the aid of some additional instruments conventionally added later, Vernon seems to reach a sort of equanimity with the creeping Creature Fear and the eventual emerging into the light of Re: Stacks and its declaration that "your love will be safe with me" (reviews of Vernon's previous band DeYarmond Edison describe them as a droney Son Volt, which makes sense here). Vernon's rise may have been aided by the backstory, but the backstory makes the record.
VIDEO: The Wolves (Act I & II)


34 The Fall - Imperial Wax Solvent
What was it Peel said? The Fall are always different but always the same? That's as maybe, but there's always an acknowledgement with them that certain albums act as markers in Mark E Smith's long, strange trip, especially since he's become some sort of anti-national treasure. For a while new albums were always "their best since Extricate"; the last two or three have been updated to "their best since The Real New Fall LP". It's too early to say whether the next decade will start with many best Fall albums since Imperial Wax Solvent, but the 27th studio album and first with the 59th lineup - always mark out the figures when approaching the Fall - finds our man and his men and woman in particularly fine fettle. It opens with Alton Towers, a queasy Swordfishtrombones-esque lurching state of the nation address in which a magnificently phlegmatic sounding Smith sounds off about "the spawn of J Loaded Brown and L Laverne". Can Can Summer starts like a rattling synth-aided anthem, stops, starts with a blues solo added, pauses for Smith to inform us "my boss, he has the imagination of a gnat", stops again and starts some techno beats and Smith growling for a little bit, this apparently constituting a middle eight. 50 Year Old Man is an eleven minute garage motorik driving epic in three sections wherein Smith informs us that he has a three foot long hard-on and that "Steve Albini is in collusion with Virgin Trains against me". Then, a banjo solo. Then, a glam stomp. Then, Nuggets. It might be the most remarkable thing anyone has committed to tape in 2008, and is testament to Smith's ongoing all-out cockeyed madness/genius.
VIDEO: Latch Key Kid (live)


33 Eugene McGuinness – Eugene McGuinness
Three tracks into McGuinness' full length debut those of us enamoured with last year's The Early Learnings Of... mini-album debut might be wondering where all that collection's dynamic versatility has got to. Sure, there's some neat touches, but it's still sounding very much like post-Arctics rattling rock'n'roll with a late 1950s bent, lively and not without charm (and featuring the lyric "we said farewell and we synchronised our watches/Arranged for the meeting of our crotches") but not the sort of record we thought would follow that lo-fi melange. Then, the turning point. Moscow State Circus kicks off with the fate tempting "did you drop a clanger?", lurches into a whimsical electrical storm of a strum that owes equal amounts to Meat Is Murder and Talking Heads '77 before disappearing into a psychedelic "rabbit hole". From then on it blossoms excellently, finding a connective thread through so many different styles and subtle arrangements without guessing what sticks to the wall, full of gritted teeth peaks and exquisite tempo troughs - Nightshift's frantic modern rockabilly that owes something to the Count Five's Psychotic Reaction, Those Old Black And White Movies Were True angelically led Fifties vocal group with cinematic strings, the slowly building Beach Boys undertow on Crown The Clown and the stately closer God In Space, arranged like a Mama Cass ballad, recorded as if this were Abbey Road in 1965, elegantly slipping into alcohol-sodden late night introspection. His Liverpool base may have meant the legacy of Merseybeat creeping in, but McGuinness has the wherewithal to see where he can extend it to. Can't wait to see what comes next.
VIDEO: Moscow State Circus


32 Thomas Tantrum - Thomas Tantrum
Like everyone, on first listen we thought Thomas Tantrum's first widely distributed single Shake It! Shake It! was the second coming of Life Without Buildings - frictionless rhythmic backing, chiming circular guitars and a girly sounding frontwoman hiccoughing her way through repeated and discombobulated phrases. Their album proved that while that long admired band's influence is still pernicious, unlike most it needn't be coralled into brow-furrowed post- punk, although that genre has its echoes here, but the sort of bubblegum pre-corporate indie-pop that LWB launched themselves into. Thomas Tantrum have hooks, but they almost don't know what to do with them so turn them all up to day-glo eleven. At the same time, while they have plenty of energy they know how to contain it so the songs don't just spill out all over the place but remain as compact odd pop songs. Megan Thomas - high pitched, excitable, curiously West Country voweled for a Southampton-based singer - has a way with an idiosyncratic vocal melody and disjointed lyrical style that will rub many up the wrong way, but if you're not deliberately trying to that represents half the fun. Digging reveals Thomas and guitarist Dave Miatt were originally a folky acoustic duo, which comes out in echoes in the likes of the slower, chiming Trust Rhymes With Crust and Swan Lake's constantly shifting attention span and Tchaikovsky-cribbing bridge, but they've grown (regressed?) into Rage Against The Tantrum's dancehall days percussive assault and Why The English Are Rubbish's overdriven chorus and occasionally Home Alone-cribbing chiding, culminating in the marvellous "I'm inclined to think that it's all about you". It may not be great art, but often the thrill of the pop whirlwind is what you want.
VIDEO: Work It


31 The Mountain Goats - Heretic Pride
As with Craig Finn, but on a different scale, you get the impression John Darnielle could write the great American novel if he wanted to, or at least Joan Didion's version of such, but would rather settle for drawing his varied characters in short story form of lyrics instead. All Mountain Goats songs demand careful listening for the detail and plots and subplots, and now he's got the autobiography (the last three albums, by and large) and borderline misanthropy ("I hope you die, I hope we all die") out of his system he's growing an interest in developing the plot points as well as the overall narrative (see also his recent Master Of Reality book for the 33 1/3 series, biography as novella about a mental health patient). The arrangements are fleshed out, the tape quality almost hi-fi, but that wordy core still remains master. But god, the man's got a way with a lyric - the title track offers a subject who "waited so long, and now I taste jasmine on my tongue" in the last seconds before death by baying trench building mob, while elsewhere he tackles the death of Prince Far I, a mythical Chinese sub-aquatic monster and a spell in Brooklyn that bred HP Lovecraft's xenophobic tendencies, all in that expressively nasal voice. The characters form cults, huddle together for companionship or practise hating everyone else. They get their comeuppance, or their due, or their paranoia magnified. Through it all something stands steadfast and proud of what they're doing. Whatever, they're recognisably human, and such is the mastery Darnielle has of this form by now. It's not where we'd start with his work, in truth, but it's a prominent string in his bow.
VIDEO: Sax Rohmer #1

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(The more alert among you may have just had a preview of an unfinished write-up of a later entry, to which we can only say "oops")

Monday, December 01, 2008

Sweeping The Nation Albums Of 2008: Numbers 50-41


50 Sons And Daughters - This Gift
Does pop suit the grimy dominatrix of Scotpop sound of Sons & Daughters? Bernard Butler evidently thought so, and while a switch into musical sweetness and light - the lyrics are as chiding as ever - doesn't bring entirely comfortable results with it, you still wouldn't trust Adele Bethel with anything of value. It's pop of a sort that would only have troubled the charts in about 1983, of course, but the connections with classic girl-fronted pop go further than just wrapping Bethel and Scott Patterson's wired rockabilly riffs in cleaner, for the most part less frenzied textures and bigger choruses - Darling's Motown construction, The Nest's big drums, Iodine virtually the La's - without sounding like straight up pastiche. You've never been able to call them playful with a straight face before. All the same, final track Goodbye Service reminds you of the elephant in the room, its MC5 roar reinforcing the impression that Love The Cup's claustrophobic dankness suited them best.
VIDEO: Darling


49 The Futureheads – This Is Not The World
Bit self-defeating to spend most of a write-up explaining why an album is in our top fifty of the year by criticising it, we know, but after their famously acrimonious departure from 679 something seemed to elude the Futureheads in terms of the stop-start nature and tricksy harmonies of their first two albums, substituting an all encompassing full speed ahead that what it lost them in dynamism it kept up in energetic head rushes and classy writing to musical order. The callbacks to Fugazi as much as Gang Of Four remain to keep the side up, though, and they still have an ear for an infectious melody. The Beginning Of The Twist is a barrelling call to arms, Broke Up The Time takes News And Tributes' Cope and drags it through a hedge several times, while Sale Of The Century is built on metallic morse code riffs and a chorus that borders on swamp rock. It's just next time something less conservative will be required if they're to hang onto the residual love.
VIDEO: The Beginning Of The Twist


48 The Bookhouse Boys - The Bookhouse Boys
A nine member band, including a two singers, two drummers and two man horn section, should make an expansive noise, but it's what you parlay it into that counts. In the Bookhouse Boys' case it's the David Lynch soundscapes suggested by their Twin Peaks-derived name, plus the soundtrack work of Morricone and Badalamenti and those influential Tarantino soundtracks. Lest this sound like too much an exercise in filmic sweep, it boils down to surf guitars, mariachi horns, wild-eyed belief and a disquieting undertow. They can do Lee Hazlewood/Richard Hawley after hours balladry too. The latter is aided by singer Paul van Oestren, who can switch at will between gravelly crooner and Nick Cave crazed preacher of rock'n'roll. Keeping just far enough away from pastiche, this is a set of songs that wring the emotions and play the widescreen field.
VIDEO: I Can't Help Myself


47 XX Teens – Welcome To Goon Island
Ah, the art school tradition. Actually long gestating and oft rhythm section changing London scene pranksters XX Teens aren't from art school, but the wealth of ideas and deployment over a small area of sound - Fall-ish, jagged, a bit post-post-punk - sometimes overcome them, not helped by production values that make the real brass and percussion that replace the singles' samples and keyboard effects sound less real than the digitised versions. The guitars are for the most part spirited scrappy garage rock but with electronic dressing, deep subsonic basslines take the long way round to underpinning everything and Rich Cash still slurs and barks with half-inched Mark E Smith tics. Songs disappear in directions that initially sound wrong but eventually coalesce somewhere else entirely. Brian Haw takes up the last two minutes with a political lecture. It sounds like Pop Will Eat Itself if they'd emerged fifteen years later and eased up on the sampling. Art-punk-funk - not dead after all.
VIDEO: Darlin' (single version)


46 Death Cab For Cutie - Narrow Stairs
Post-OC, post-Postal Service, post-attaining collegiate dreamboat status, Ben Gibbard had to grow and change Death Cab's college rock as emotional wringer status. While never a Colin Meloy bookish type, Gibbard has always had the knack of putting together a storyline to fire the emotions and set the scene, and here it's concerned with the process of maturing, getting away from nameless grinds and assorted existentialism. While the experimental urges barked up in preview are evolution rather than revolution, there's something at work that suggests the band are aware of their place in the alternative world and want to push at the forces of complacency, less inviting (especially the eight minute single I Will Possess Your Heart) but delving deeper to deploy its delights. Lyrically it's little more happy go lucky than usual - darker overall, if anything - but the possibilities the band have tapped ensure they retain an almost unique intrigue in their specialised field.
VIDEO: I Will Possess Your Heart


45 No Age - Nouns
The tremendously monickered for LA musicians Randy Randall and Dean Spunt hail from the collective based around The Smell venue, a hotbed of inventive talent where eclecticism and doing it yourselves is a basic byword. No Age's contribution is to mine a seam that lies between psychedelic melody stretching, shoegazey guitar noise and hardcore punk of a semi-melodic Husker Du/Mission Of Burma stripe. The nearest glib comparison we can come up with is if Kevin Shields took his idea of sonic envelope reworking to Husker Du just as they were changing from trebly speedpunks to fuzzy songcraft - there's definite melodies, messy but riff driven, buried among the attack. It takes its time to get going and at the moment feels like the prelude to a truly great next album, but you'll hear far worse in its name, and it's another step up for the American underground's ever developing world of sonic adventure.
VIDEO: Eraser


44 Dawn Landes - Fireproof
It's a shame that the Kentucky born, NYC based Landes is largely known if at all for her YouTubed cover of Young Folks, as on this second album, the first to get proper distribution, she comes across as someone with her own varied ideas on what makes a folky singer-songwriter, ending up in territory somewhere near a backwoods Feist. Instrumentation is pared down and used sparingly while Landes' smoky Cat Power-esque vocals are pushed forward, possibly not for the better on the idiot savant Lollipop but the better when expressing a knowingly gauche train of thought about big city life, companionship or the benefits of going your own way, comfortably working in influences from country and bluegrass and even making late night listening out of Tom Petty's I Won't Back Down. Her day job as a recording engineer certainly helps with the clarity of this playful yet solemnic album. If Chan Marshall had gone to Tennessee rather than Alabama to overcome her demons she'd sound like this.
VIDEO: Bodyguard


43 Mary Hampton - My Mother's Children
Someone recently used the Guardian music blog to decry this year's trend for British singers taking prime influence from American folk while ignoring Britain's own folkie communities. Well, there's plenty of the former coming up, so let's use this space to laud Brighton's Mary Hampton, who follows that Anne Briggs/Sandy Denny tradition into very dark spaces. Her voice, keening and intimate straight from the English folk revival, is the perfect setting for these songs that feel very cold to the touch, mostly just Hampton and pared down fingerpicked acoustic guitar, and not even the latter on the handclap driven Ballad Of The Talking Dog, uniquely heartbreaking for its subject matter. "You are loved because you are young" declares the first song, but a lot of the subject matter could come from nightmarish, desolate, in fact pretty much gothic (not goth) fairytales of flora and fauna. Although Hampton was initially bred by Brighton/Stroud's excellent alt-folk label Drift, this album's home Navigator Records' co-owner Tom Rose previously discovered Joan As Police Woman, and as with JAPW's first album Hampton uses clear influences as fabric from which to construct her own airy world, a spectral, mythical world of Grimm Tales storytelling.
VIDEO: Concerning A Frozen Sparrow (live)


42 The Hold Steady – Stay Positive
There's no particular reason why Stay Positive was the album where things finally slotted into place with us regarding the Hold Steady, apart from the creeping sense we're inexorably approaching the age of Craig Finn's characters. Ageing man props up bar, remembers picking up girl who may well be high, and crazy times together therein, things probably end awkwardly, band plays like alternate dimension where Paul Westerberg is like Springsteen. Just when you think Finn has fallen victim to the many and varied hailing him as some new poet ("our psalms are sing along songs", and furthermore "the sing-along songs will be our scriptures", which if they're psalms doesn't really need saying) the driving anthems turn into Damascene moments driven by ageing, increased recovery time and the new position as watchman as the kids go the same way and the girls get increasingly rejected by all the one night stands. This is what happens when you decide you don't actually have a proper Great American Novel in you, just some vignettes to relate in four minutes' worth of paragraphs.
VIDEO: Stay Positive (on Conan O'Brien)


41 Kat Flint - Dirty Birds
That Edinburgh's Flint has a mild vocal similarity to another Scottish female singer-songwriter, KT Tunstall, might suggest one path, but there's little here for daytime Radio 2 audiences to cling onto. Not only does Flint and her producer have interesting ideas on arrangement (the inlay credits her with kazoos, cardboard boxes, "tambourines in pillow cases", old suitcases, sticky tape and scissors, the latter two forming the rhythm track of Go Faster Stripes), but her lyrics and low pitched, warm vocal style lay out a open hearted, introspective but thoughtful mindset set against her folky strumming. It's the sort of album that takes you along with it using charm as a Trojan horse before losing the listener in the well sketched out snapshots and melting preconceptions the better to construct and get across her hopes and fears for relatives (Christopher, You're A Solider Now), love (Anticlimax), lust (Saddest Blue Dress) and life's vagaries (Fearsome Crowd) before the free and joyful title track closer. Dirty Birds was funded by fan contributions; imagine what she could do with proper backing.
VIDEO: Go Faster Stripes

Sweeping The Nation Albums Of 2008

50 Sons And Daughters - This Gift
49 The Futureheads – This Is Not The World
48 The Bookhouse Boys - The Bookhouse Boys
47 XX Teens – Welcome To Goon Island
46 Death Cab For Cutie - Narrow Stairs
45 No Age - Nouns
44 Dawn Landes - Fireproof
43 Mary Hampton - My Mother's Children
42 The Hold Steady – Stay Positive
41 Kat Flint - Dirty Birds
40 Clinic - Do It!
39 Wire - Object 47
38 Ballboy - I Worked On The Ships
37 Noah And The Whale - Peaceful, The World Lays Me Down
36 Portishead - Third
35 Bon Iver - For Emma, Forever Ago
34 The Fall - Imperial Wax Solvent
33 Eugene McGuinness - Eugene McGuinness
32 Thomas Tantrum - Thomas Tantrum
31 The Mountain Goats - Heretic Pride
30 The Long Blondes - "Couples"
29 Restlesslist - The Rise And Fall Of The Curtain Club
28 Foals - Antidotes
27 Young Knives - Superabundance
26 Fleet Foxes - Fleet Foxes
25 Blood Red Shoes - Box Of Secrets
24 Vampire Weekend - Vampire Weekend
23 The Walkmen - You & Me
22 The Week That Was - The Week That Was
21 Department Of Eagles - In Ear Park
20 Jeremy Warmsley - How We Became
19 Those Dancing Days - In Our Space Hero Suits
18 Laura Marling - Alas I Cannot Swim
17 The Chap - Mega Breakfast
16 Meursault - Pissing On Bonfires/Kissing With Tongues
15 Shearwater - Rook
14 Mystery Jets - Twenty One
13 Johnny Flynn - A Larum
12 British Sea Power - Do You Like Rock Music?
11 The Indelicates - American Demo
10 The Wave Pictures - Instant Coffee Baby
9 The Acorn - Crooked Legs
8 Why? - Alopecia
7 Okkervil River - The Stand Ins
6 Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds - Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!!
5 Wild Beasts - Limbo, Panto
4 Elbow - The Seldom Seen Kid
3 Johnny Foreigner - Waited Up Til It Was Light
2 Los Campesinos! - Hold On Now, Youngster...
1 TV On The Radio - Dear Science