Albums there are dates for
Stephen Malkmus and the Jicks - Wigout At Jagbags (6th January)
Broken Bells – After The Disco (13th January)
East India Youth - Total Strife Forever (13th January)
I Break Horses - Chiaroscuro (20th January)
Mogwai - Rave Tapes (20th January)
Warpaint - Warpaint (20th January)
The Hidden Cameras - Age (27th January)
Peggy Sue - Choir Of Echoes (27th January)
Maximo Park - Too Much Information (3rd February)
Cheatahs - Cheatahs (10th February)
Fanfarlo - Let's Go Extinct (10th February)
Let's Wrestle - Let's Wrestle (10th February)
Mowbird - Islander (10th February)
We Three And The Death Rattle - W.T.A.T.D.R (10th February)
Guided By Voices - Motivational Jumpsuit (17th February)
St Vincent - St Vincent (24th February)
The Voluntary Butler Scheme - A Million Ways To Make Gold (24th February)
Withered Hand - New Gods (24th February)
Blood Red Shoes - Blood Red Shoes (3rd March)
Stanley Brinks and The Wave Pictures - Gin (3rd March)
Elbow - All At Once (title TBC) (10th March)
Joan As Police Woman - The Classic (10th March)
Jimi Goodwin - Odludek (24th March)
Those that only STN cares about
Ace Bushy Striptease
The Acorn
Adebisi Shank
Allo Darlin' - We Come From The Same Place
Archie Bronson Outfit
Beth Jeans Houghton
Emmy The Great
Evans The Death
Fashoda Crisis
Fear Of Men
Her Name Is Calla - Navigator
Holy Fuck
Johnny Foreigner
Let's Buy Happiness
Maybeshewill
Napoleon IIIrd
Rose Elinor Dougall
Still Corners
Three Trapped Tigers
Tigercats
Others
Amber Coffman/Nat Baldwin (Dirty Projectors solo projects)
The Avalanches (yeah, right)
Bat For Lashes
Beck - Morning Phase (and possibly a second album)
Belle And Sebastian
Blonde Redhead
Caribou
Cat Power
Damon Albarn
Fleet Foxes
Gnarls Barkley
Grimes
Hamilton Leithauser (Walkmen frontman goes solo)
The Hold Steady
The Horrors
Interpol
Liars
Lykke Li
Manic Street Preachers - Futurology
Mew
Modest Mouse
The New Pornographers
Other Lives
Owen Pallett - In Conflict
The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart
Parquet Courts
Perfume Genius
Pulled Apart By Horses
The Rentals
School Of Language
Shearwater
Sisyphus (Sufjan Stevens, Son Lux and Serengeti)
Slow Club
Spoon
tUnE-YarDs
TV On The Radio
Wild Beasts
The Wrens (OK...)
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Monday, December 30, 2013
And as for the rest of the year...
To round off reminiscences of things just past, a sprint through another 75 tracks that we loved this year that didn't appear on one of our top 50 albums. All that are there of these, plus a track from each of that top 50 that are streaming on there, are in this Spotify playlist.
65daysofstatic - Unmake The Wild Light
A Little Orchestra feat. Model Village - Josefina
And So I Watch You From Afar - Big Thinks Do Remarkable
The Android Angel - Her Shoulders
Archie Bronson Outfit - I Was A Dead Duck
Beaty Heart - Lekka Freakout
Benin City - My Love
Blessa - Between Times
Boxed In - All Your Love Is Gone
British Sea Power - Machineries Of Joy
Calories - The Curse/Daylight
Camera Obscura - Troublemaker
Cate Le Bon feat. Perfume Genius - I Think I Knew
Cheatahs - Kenworth
Charlie Boyer & The Voyeurs - Things We Be
Daft Punk feat. Panda Bear - Doin' It Right
David Bowie - Where Are We Now?
Dent May - Let Them Talk
Drenge - Bloodsports
Elizabeth Morris - Optimism
Empty Pools - Televised
EXPENSIVE - Always Want Us To
Fanfarlo - A Distance
Farewell J.R - A Thought, A Mind
Fire Island Pines - 1915
The Flaming Lips - Look...The Sun Is Rising
Frankie & The Heartstrings - That Girl, That Scene
Fuck Buttons - Brainfreeze
Ghost Outfit - Killuhs
Girl One And The Grease Guns - (Here Come The) Catastrophe Machines
Girls Names - Hypnotic Regression
The Graphite Set - These Streets
Heavy Petting Zoo - Broken Bone
Her Parents - Lithuanian Mercedes
Hooded Fang - Ode To Subterrania
Hookworms - Radio Tokyo
I Am Kloot - Bullets
Ides - Crybaby
John Grant - Glacier
Jungle - The Heat
The Julie Ruin - Cookie Road
Lanterns On The Lake - Another Tale From Another English Town
Marika Hackman - Bath Is Black
Mary Epworth - September
Maximo Park - Brain Cells
Mowbird - Happy Active Horse Organ
The National - Don't Swallow The Cap
PINS - Lost Lost Lost
Pixies - Bagboy
Plastic Animals - Pizarnik
Post War Glamour Girls - Jazz Funerals
R.Seiliog - Ostisho
Rachel Zeffira - Here On In
Radstewart - Beer Swindlers
Rose Elinor Dougall - Strange Warnings
Seazoo - Dog Hotel
Shhh...Apes! - Painkiller
Slow Skies - Close
Spotlight Kid - Budge Up
Stagecoach - Threequel
Still Corners - All I Know
Swearin' - Dust In The Gold Sack
Telegram - Follow
Tessera Skies - Milieu
The Thermals - Born To Kill
These Monsters - When The Going Gets Weird
Thirty Pounds Of Bone - The Snow In Kiel
Trust Fund - The Coolest Guy
Vienna Ditto - Liar Liar
Wire - Doubles & Trebles
The Witch Hunt - Crawl
Without Feathers - Red Little Heart
The Wytches - Beehive Queen
Yeah Yeah Yeahs - Sacrilege
Youth Lagoon - Dropla
65daysofstatic - Unmake The Wild Light
A Little Orchestra feat. Model Village - Josefina
And So I Watch You From Afar - Big Thinks Do Remarkable
The Android Angel - Her Shoulders
Archie Bronson Outfit - I Was A Dead Duck
Beaty Heart - Lekka Freakout
Benin City - My Love
Blessa - Between Times
Boxed In - All Your Love Is Gone
British Sea Power - Machineries Of Joy
Calories - The Curse/Daylight
Camera Obscura - Troublemaker
Cate Le Bon feat. Perfume Genius - I Think I Knew
Cheatahs - Kenworth
Charlie Boyer & The Voyeurs - Things We Be
Daft Punk feat. Panda Bear - Doin' It Right
David Bowie - Where Are We Now?
Dent May - Let Them Talk
Drenge - Bloodsports
Elizabeth Morris - Optimism
Empty Pools - Televised
EXPENSIVE - Always Want Us To
Fanfarlo - A Distance
Farewell J.R - A Thought, A Mind
Fire Island Pines - 1915
The Flaming Lips - Look...The Sun Is Rising
Frankie & The Heartstrings - That Girl, That Scene
Fuck Buttons - Brainfreeze
Ghost Outfit - Killuhs
Girl One And The Grease Guns - (Here Come The) Catastrophe Machines
Girls Names - Hypnotic Regression
The Graphite Set - These Streets
Heavy Petting Zoo - Broken Bone
Her Parents - Lithuanian Mercedes
Hooded Fang - Ode To Subterrania
Hookworms - Radio Tokyo
I Am Kloot - Bullets
Ides - Crybaby
John Grant - Glacier
Jungle - The Heat
The Julie Ruin - Cookie Road
Lanterns On The Lake - Another Tale From Another English Town
Marika Hackman - Bath Is Black
Mary Epworth - September
Maximo Park - Brain Cells
Mowbird - Happy Active Horse Organ
The National - Don't Swallow The Cap
PINS - Lost Lost Lost
Pixies - Bagboy
Plastic Animals - Pizarnik
Post War Glamour Girls - Jazz Funerals
R.Seiliog - Ostisho
Rachel Zeffira - Here On In
Radstewart - Beer Swindlers
Rose Elinor Dougall - Strange Warnings
Seazoo - Dog Hotel
Shhh...Apes! - Painkiller
Slow Skies - Close
Spotlight Kid - Budge Up
Stagecoach - Threequel
Still Corners - All I Know
Swearin' - Dust In The Gold Sack
Telegram - Follow
Tessera Skies - Milieu
The Thermals - Born To Kill
These Monsters - When The Going Gets Weird
Thirty Pounds Of Bone - The Snow In Kiel
Trust Fund - The Coolest Guy
Vienna Ditto - Liar Liar
Wire - Doubles & Trebles
The Witch Hunt - Crawl
Without Feathers - Red Little Heart
The Wytches - Beehive Queen
Yeah Yeah Yeahs - Sacrilege
Youth Lagoon - Dropla
Friday, December 27, 2013
STN Top 50 Albums Of 2013: 1
1 Future Of The Left - How To Stop Your Brain In An Accident
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
They were always bound to make an STN album of the year one day, but in the rest of the land FOTL seem to have become so much more famous for Andy Falkous' extra-curricularisms - that piracy blog, that Pitchfork retort, his interviews and between-song comments generally - that it increasingly seemed their music is going unrewarded. Their fourth album appears to have noticed and summarily turned up the dials, ramped up the abrasion and transformed into a jackhammer. The usual motifs are all there - the scalpel-sharp gritted teeth humour, the collective musical drill to the senses - but with Jimmy Watkins now thoroughly inducted into the newly rejigged line-up - Julia Ruzicka's rolling basslines have found a way of ramping up the approaching menace even further - the acidic guitars are meatier and spikier than they have been for a while, rolling with the punches, coiling before unloading the tension with a post-hardcore zeal. If Falco's lyrics are still the real USP his vocals are becoming more adaptable to fit, channelling his demons into something that wouldn't qualify for restraint in most. And while most songs head direct for the cerebral cortex, the always present temptation/risk to extend beyond the self-imposed boundaries into whatever comes to hand is more prevalent without sacrificing the overall image. There's an eccentrically satirical four and a half minutes of barely hinged laser precision vituperation voiced in an approximation of RP. There's a sub-two minute Lightsabre Cocksucking Blues-like assault with a kazoo chorus. There's a couple of songs that are virtually slow-paced. There are, of course, lines that don't appear anywhere else in rock's lexicon, simultaneously funny (Falco cites Half Man Half Biscuit as a key influence) and brutal, sarcastic and relatable, as suits the target. As social satire bludgeons with post-Albini guitars set to maim they've always been out there on their own; now they've reset their goals, reset their targets and fired themselves into the sun.
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
They were always bound to make an STN album of the year one day, but in the rest of the land FOTL seem to have become so much more famous for Andy Falkous' extra-curricularisms - that piracy blog, that Pitchfork retort, his interviews and between-song comments generally - that it increasingly seemed their music is going unrewarded. Their fourth album appears to have noticed and summarily turned up the dials, ramped up the abrasion and transformed into a jackhammer. The usual motifs are all there - the scalpel-sharp gritted teeth humour, the collective musical drill to the senses - but with Jimmy Watkins now thoroughly inducted into the newly rejigged line-up - Julia Ruzicka's rolling basslines have found a way of ramping up the approaching menace even further - the acidic guitars are meatier and spikier than they have been for a while, rolling with the punches, coiling before unloading the tension with a post-hardcore zeal. If Falco's lyrics are still the real USP his vocals are becoming more adaptable to fit, channelling his demons into something that wouldn't qualify for restraint in most. And while most songs head direct for the cerebral cortex, the always present temptation/risk to extend beyond the self-imposed boundaries into whatever comes to hand is more prevalent without sacrificing the overall image. There's an eccentrically satirical four and a half minutes of barely hinged laser precision vituperation voiced in an approximation of RP. There's a sub-two minute Lightsabre Cocksucking Blues-like assault with a kazoo chorus. There's a couple of songs that are virtually slow-paced. There are, of course, lines that don't appear anywhere else in rock's lexicon, simultaneously funny (Falco cites Half Man Half Biscuit as a key influence) and brutal, sarcastic and relatable, as suits the target. As social satire bludgeons with post-Albini guitars set to maim they've always been out there on their own; now they've reset their goals, reset their targets and fired themselves into the sun.
Thursday, December 26, 2013
STN Top 50 Albums Of 2013: 2
2 Los Campesinos! - No Blues
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
The only way was up. Having put Hello Sadness' protracted breakup pains behind him - and how pointedly against that period the notably capitalised NO BLUES title seems - Gareth and the rest haven't yet put death and exes behind him/them, and with his hyperliterate self-examination existentialism it's increasingly a band in his image whatever's going on behind him, but this seems a trimmer album in more ways than a renumbering of personnel. The dynamic shifts have moved slightly sideways, prominent keyboards returning, wild riffs toned down in favour of charges and textures. The melodies are simultaneously more confident and less easy to grasp hold of, the choruses stand out more but are less willing to grab and throw the listener into the centre of the chanting circle (despite an actual cheerleading troupe's employment on Avocado, Baby) Similarly Gareth still yelps and pleads his words but having come through what might be the worst his surface confidence is restored for the first time since he was a post-grad ATP kid. The revenge fantasy imagery and football references aren't there for the sake of it but to link and express greater truths and feelings, still with tongue comfortably in cheek. If every LC! album is a new diary year this is the mid-20s post-breakdown point at which it's realised there's still plenty of time to grab hold of your destiny despite yourself. Moreover, this is the first time they've properly sustained a grower, new references, emotional shifts and ornate musical patterns and hooks emerging all the time, being about developing momentum rather than exuberance. Many still want them to be the band they were in 2008 but this is if not cutting off their earlier selves then putting in a dotted line that differentiates what now seem two clear eras. They're now wry dramatists who consider the many deaths while sounding like being alive.
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
The only way was up. Having put Hello Sadness' protracted breakup pains behind him - and how pointedly against that period the notably capitalised NO BLUES title seems - Gareth and the rest haven't yet put death and exes behind him/them, and with his hyperliterate self-examination existentialism it's increasingly a band in his image whatever's going on behind him, but this seems a trimmer album in more ways than a renumbering of personnel. The dynamic shifts have moved slightly sideways, prominent keyboards returning, wild riffs toned down in favour of charges and textures. The melodies are simultaneously more confident and less easy to grasp hold of, the choruses stand out more but are less willing to grab and throw the listener into the centre of the chanting circle (despite an actual cheerleading troupe's employment on Avocado, Baby) Similarly Gareth still yelps and pleads his words but having come through what might be the worst his surface confidence is restored for the first time since he was a post-grad ATP kid. The revenge fantasy imagery and football references aren't there for the sake of it but to link and express greater truths and feelings, still with tongue comfortably in cheek. If every LC! album is a new diary year this is the mid-20s post-breakdown point at which it's realised there's still plenty of time to grab hold of your destiny despite yourself. Moreover, this is the first time they've properly sustained a grower, new references, emotional shifts and ornate musical patterns and hooks emerging all the time, being about developing momentum rather than exuberance. Many still want them to be the band they were in 2008 but this is if not cutting off their earlier selves then putting in a dotted line that differentiates what now seem two clear eras. They're now wry dramatists who consider the many deaths while sounding like being alive.
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
STN Top 50 Albums Of 2013: 4-3
4 Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds - Push The Sky Away
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
After the extended midlife freakout of Grinderman and Dig!!! Lazarus Dig!!!, Cave and his slowly reformatting Bad Seeds took time to look at where they personally are in relation to what they'd just done. What that means is their most subtle record in some time, with Mick Harvey long gone Warren Ellis' relationship with atmospherics and spaciousness takes more of the centre stage. Against the vaunting bleakness Cave for his own part has largely dialled back from fire eyed bellowing to a a considerate timbre as befits the elliptical, liturgially minded spectator, undercutting emotions and voyeuristic descriptions and ideas with the knowledge that this increasingly belongs to other people. And then he went and did this.
3 Bill Callahan - Dream River
[iTunes] [Amazon]
The best thing Callahan has released since he retired the Smog soubriquet, it's also the thing he's done under his own name that sounds most like Smog. That is to say, music that loops and circles around his ever more Scotch-warmed honeyed voice and its metaphor heavy, narrative suggestive story-songs rather than, as late, finds its groove and sticks there. Resonant allusions - flight, spring, wind and water - recur, guitar, flute and hand percussion are used to colour in the lyrical landscapes, a Lambchop-type country-soul feel is evoked and everything and everyone seems more content and meditative with and around their situation, observing nature take its course. For one he's enjoying living, even romance. If this is Callahan at his most content, he's somehow found a way not to let it dull down his style.
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
After the extended midlife freakout of Grinderman and Dig!!! Lazarus Dig!!!, Cave and his slowly reformatting Bad Seeds took time to look at where they personally are in relation to what they'd just done. What that means is their most subtle record in some time, with Mick Harvey long gone Warren Ellis' relationship with atmospherics and spaciousness takes more of the centre stage. Against the vaunting bleakness Cave for his own part has largely dialled back from fire eyed bellowing to a a considerate timbre as befits the elliptical, liturgially minded spectator, undercutting emotions and voyeuristic descriptions and ideas with the knowledge that this increasingly belongs to other people. And then he went and did this.
3 Bill Callahan - Dream River
[iTunes] [Amazon]
The best thing Callahan has released since he retired the Smog soubriquet, it's also the thing he's done under his own name that sounds most like Smog. That is to say, music that loops and circles around his ever more Scotch-warmed honeyed voice and its metaphor heavy, narrative suggestive story-songs rather than, as late, finds its groove and sticks there. Resonant allusions - flight, spring, wind and water - recur, guitar, flute and hand percussion are used to colour in the lyrical landscapes, a Lambchop-type country-soul feel is evoked and everything and everyone seems more content and meditative with and around their situation, observing nature take its course. For one he's enjoying living, even romance. If this is Callahan at his most content, he's somehow found a way not to let it dull down his style.
Monday, December 23, 2013
STN Top 50 Albums Of 2013: 6-5
6 Sky Larkin - Motto
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
If Sky Larkin, now three albums and three lineups down, have sometimes seemed a little like the band that got left behind, this is the album where they reared up and kicked out. Raised on nervous tension and nervous energy alike, the addition of a second guitar beefed up the punch and spiked tautness of their sound while bringing out the best of the pair that were there all along, Nestor Matthews kicking seven shades out of his kit while Katie Harkin's lyrics play with phonetic sounds and meanings while retaining a personal truth and standpoint at their core, unafraid to bring out the dark, sung like she still feels the emotional strain. They feel that much bigger for the experiences, charging for their lives.
5 Joanna Gruesome - Weird Sister
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
Every year this list includes an album like this perhaps surprisingly high up - a record that's not groundbreakingly original or interestingly developed but roars with the passion of youth, the "sort of band you'd want to be in" gambit. Weird Sister, a record that straps rocket boosters to fuzzbomb janglepop, is just such an album. It's because they've got the knack of building a dreamy lo-fi melody - and there are strong melodies, hooks, choruses, all that - and then letting a distorted, spiky riff slash it apart from the centre outwards while Alanna McArdle (un)comfortably handles both dispassionate sweetness and feral screaming. It's not big, though it can be clever, but right here and now it seems impossibly exciting.
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
If Sky Larkin, now three albums and three lineups down, have sometimes seemed a little like the band that got left behind, this is the album where they reared up and kicked out. Raised on nervous tension and nervous energy alike, the addition of a second guitar beefed up the punch and spiked tautness of their sound while bringing out the best of the pair that were there all along, Nestor Matthews kicking seven shades out of his kit while Katie Harkin's lyrics play with phonetic sounds and meanings while retaining a personal truth and standpoint at their core, unafraid to bring out the dark, sung like she still feels the emotional strain. They feel that much bigger for the experiences, charging for their lives.
5 Joanna Gruesome - Weird Sister
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
Every year this list includes an album like this perhaps surprisingly high up - a record that's not groundbreakingly original or interestingly developed but roars with the passion of youth, the "sort of band you'd want to be in" gambit. Weird Sister, a record that straps rocket boosters to fuzzbomb janglepop, is just such an album. It's because they've got the knack of building a dreamy lo-fi melody - and there are strong melodies, hooks, choruses, all that - and then letting a distorted, spiky riff slash it apart from the centre outwards while Alanna McArdle (un)comfortably handles both dispassionate sweetness and feral screaming. It's not big, though it can be clever, but right here and now it seems impossibly exciting.
Sunday, December 22, 2013
STN Top 50 Albums Of 2013: 8-7
8 Haiku Salut - Tricolore
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
"Baroque-Pop-Folktronic-Neo-Classical-Something-Or-Other", the Derbyshire multi-instrumentalist trio call this sound, which does this bit out of a job. You might also add a twisted about version of post-rock's use of slow build, repetition and instrumental flourishes, deployed here so seemingly clashing parts - a fingerpicked acoustic, an accordion, an 8-bit electronic sample - gradually coalesce into form fitted shape, complex layers developing layers ande depth that can be as much floating and euphoric as pinpricks in existing melodic structure. Often incapable of sitting still, the loops and flourishes serve to both develop its baroque nature and then pull it apart. It's an album that knows its touchstones, whether Yann Tiersen, Haruki Murakami or Wes Anderson, but really sounds like nobody else.
7 Vampire Weekend - Modern Vampires Of The City
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
The hi-life records may have been put away but Vampire Weekend's third album is just as studded with borrowed moves: R&B and gospel, pastoral synths and torch song languidness. This is their real world album, still any number of too-clever-by-half allusions but deployed not as self-aware signifiers but as collateral in the process of maturing. Death and its eventual inevitability without prior achievement is a semi-regular visitor. The studio becomes another instrument, as befits a band who now know how to use space and when to actually flood the aural spectrum, and if Rostam Batmanglij still too readily goes for the harpsichord setting it's less novelty, more scene-setting. This is VW's New York post-grad album, what happens when the socialites have to set up home for themselves.
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
"Baroque-Pop-Folktronic-Neo-Classical-Something-Or-Other", the Derbyshire multi-instrumentalist trio call this sound, which does this bit out of a job. You might also add a twisted about version of post-rock's use of slow build, repetition and instrumental flourishes, deployed here so seemingly clashing parts - a fingerpicked acoustic, an accordion, an 8-bit electronic sample - gradually coalesce into form fitted shape, complex layers developing layers ande depth that can be as much floating and euphoric as pinpricks in existing melodic structure. Often incapable of sitting still, the loops and flourishes serve to both develop its baroque nature and then pull it apart. It's an album that knows its touchstones, whether Yann Tiersen, Haruki Murakami or Wes Anderson, but really sounds like nobody else.
7 Vampire Weekend - Modern Vampires Of The City
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
The hi-life records may have been put away but Vampire Weekend's third album is just as studded with borrowed moves: R&B and gospel, pastoral synths and torch song languidness. This is their real world album, still any number of too-clever-by-half allusions but deployed not as self-aware signifiers but as collateral in the process of maturing. Death and its eventual inevitability without prior achievement is a semi-regular visitor. The studio becomes another instrument, as befits a band who now know how to use space and when to actually flood the aural spectrum, and if Rostam Batmanglij still too readily goes for the harpsichord setting it's less novelty, more scene-setting. This is VW's New York post-grad album, what happens when the socialites have to set up home for themselves.
Saturday, December 21, 2013
STN Top 50 Albums Of 2013: 10-9
10 Public Service Broadcasting - Inform - Educate - Entertain
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
From Steinski to the Books vocal sampling has been reworked and repurposed to greater ends, but it's surprising nobody really thought of taking it in PSB's chosen direction before. Even without the public information films, newsreel stock and documentary film voiceovers it'd be a fascinating expedition, based on post-rock's eddying drones and slow build surges while taking in charging kosmiche and Neu!-flavoured Krautrock, bubbling layers of synth and beats, Eno-esque repetition, hauntology's fear of the dark and the odd run of bluegrass banjo. If the underlying sentiments are unashamedly nostalgic, evoking the spirit of invention and the adventurers of the age, the outcome skews danceable rhythms into fluid shapes and is ultimately, mightily euphoric.
9 Jetplane Landing - Don't Try
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
In a year short on great post-hardcore records, some old stagers returned with a blitzkrieg. Picking up from the records before the last album Backlash Cop, itself now six years old, might seem a retrogressive move and Andrew Ferris' return to his native Derry may inform at least a couple of tracks but time isn't mellowing either the knife-fight power of the riffage that twists in on itself before racing towards the cliff or the speed, determination and linguistic athleticism of Ferris' delivery. There's a few pop melodies that don't seem commercial, huge crashing buzzsaw guitar hooks, chantalong bits and the angriest track is about lost Beat poet Gregory Corso. Standard JPL, then, but so much more than standardisation really.
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
From Steinski to the Books vocal sampling has been reworked and repurposed to greater ends, but it's surprising nobody really thought of taking it in PSB's chosen direction before. Even without the public information films, newsreel stock and documentary film voiceovers it'd be a fascinating expedition, based on post-rock's eddying drones and slow build surges while taking in charging kosmiche and Neu!-flavoured Krautrock, bubbling layers of synth and beats, Eno-esque repetition, hauntology's fear of the dark and the odd run of bluegrass banjo. If the underlying sentiments are unashamedly nostalgic, evoking the spirit of invention and the adventurers of the age, the outcome skews danceable rhythms into fluid shapes and is ultimately, mightily euphoric.
9 Jetplane Landing - Don't Try
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
In a year short on great post-hardcore records, some old stagers returned with a blitzkrieg. Picking up from the records before the last album Backlash Cop, itself now six years old, might seem a retrogressive move and Andrew Ferris' return to his native Derry may inform at least a couple of tracks but time isn't mellowing either the knife-fight power of the riffage that twists in on itself before racing towards the cliff or the speed, determination and linguistic athleticism of Ferris' delivery. There's a few pop melodies that don't seem commercial, huge crashing buzzsaw guitar hooks, chantalong bits and the angriest track is about lost Beat poet Gregory Corso. Standard JPL, then, but so much more than standardisation really.
Friday, December 20, 2013
STN Top 50 Albums Of 2013: 12-11
12 Nadine Shah - Love Your Dum And Mad
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
Not to take away from Shah's own vision, but after Beth Jeans Houghton last year Ben Hillier seems to have sorted the art of producing singular female singer-songwriters who inhabit their own slow-burning headspace (both Geordies, too) Shah's soaringly emotive, velvety jazz-trained vocals bring a power to songs of darkness and betrayal that inhabit a place where escape is possible but lessons still have to be learned on what it is to fall out of love/favour/care. While never feelingl sorry for itself or coasting on wallowing, that atmosphere and the brooding backing with odd little touches heightens Shah's confessional, fearless feel.
11 Laura Marling - Once I Was An Eagle
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
The four-song suite that opens the album finds Marling in flux, attempting to resolve how emotional instability can ever triumph, finding strength in adversity. Her most unashamed Joni/Bob-like sounding record yet, it's an occasionally uncomfortably lengthy recce through the rubble of a past of personal relationships, trading what wasn't even before now a fulsome sound for a more directly close-miked confessional aura, an intensity bordering on deliberately trained catharsis that acknowledges naivety but in denial, trusting in love even when she knows she shouldn't, developing into vengeance before insecurity rears its head. In further understanding herself, Marling's command of her lyrically driven id is making her more and more accomplished.
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
Not to take away from Shah's own vision, but after Beth Jeans Houghton last year Ben Hillier seems to have sorted the art of producing singular female singer-songwriters who inhabit their own slow-burning headspace (both Geordies, too) Shah's soaringly emotive, velvety jazz-trained vocals bring a power to songs of darkness and betrayal that inhabit a place where escape is possible but lessons still have to be learned on what it is to fall out of love/favour/care. While never feelingl sorry for itself or coasting on wallowing, that atmosphere and the brooding backing with odd little touches heightens Shah's confessional, fearless feel.
11 Laura Marling - Once I Was An Eagle
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
The four-song suite that opens the album finds Marling in flux, attempting to resolve how emotional instability can ever triumph, finding strength in adversity. Her most unashamed Joni/Bob-like sounding record yet, it's an occasionally uncomfortably lengthy recce through the rubble of a past of personal relationships, trading what wasn't even before now a fulsome sound for a more directly close-miked confessional aura, an intensity bordering on deliberately trained catharsis that acknowledges naivety but in denial, trusting in love even when she knows she shouldn't, developing into vengeance before insecurity rears its head. In further understanding herself, Marling's command of her lyrically driven id is making her more and more accomplished.
Thursday, December 19, 2013
STN Top 50 Albums Of 2013: 14-13
14 Daughter - If You Leave
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
Cathartically heavy, gloomy atmospherically inclined female fronted bands seem two-a-penny these days; what Elena Tonra (and her two bandmates) have is a desperation and desolation really as two sides of the same coin. Tonra's adaptable vocals, leaning between angelically underplayed and stratospheric appealling to the fates and occasionally cracking under the strain, practically show off the emotional bruising. Beneath her guitars ripple across the icy atmosphere, the rushes of post-rock meeting shards of treated, broken riff before next time dropping into rhythmic folky fingerpicking. The listener might just feel emptied out themselves by the end, such is the detail implicit in the self-loathing that follows long dark nights of the romantic soul.
13 The Superman Revenge Squad Band - There Is Nothing More Frightening Than The Passage Of Time
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
Most don't realise it yet, but Ben Parker might be Britain's most acute sadsack of a lyricist. Delivery hanging on for dear life to the tune, Parker cuts a self-reflexive figure feeling lost amid the rush of modern life, hanging on to past pop culture, worked through metaphor and self-deprecation like life aids. Reworking some of his previous solo recordings and a few new songs with a full band, including his brother and Nosferatu D2 drumming octoped Adam, an oddly shaped broader palette that manages to be awkward and lush simultaneously brings out the longing and determination behind these extraordinarily rendered tales of bittersweet break-ups and personal disenfranchisement.
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
Cathartically heavy, gloomy atmospherically inclined female fronted bands seem two-a-penny these days; what Elena Tonra (and her two bandmates) have is a desperation and desolation really as two sides of the same coin. Tonra's adaptable vocals, leaning between angelically underplayed and stratospheric appealling to the fates and occasionally cracking under the strain, practically show off the emotional bruising. Beneath her guitars ripple across the icy atmosphere, the rushes of post-rock meeting shards of treated, broken riff before next time dropping into rhythmic folky fingerpicking. The listener might just feel emptied out themselves by the end, such is the detail implicit in the self-loathing that follows long dark nights of the romantic soul.
13 The Superman Revenge Squad Band - There Is Nothing More Frightening Than The Passage Of Time
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
Most don't realise it yet, but Ben Parker might be Britain's most acute sadsack of a lyricist. Delivery hanging on for dear life to the tune, Parker cuts a self-reflexive figure feeling lost amid the rush of modern life, hanging on to past pop culture, worked through metaphor and self-deprecation like life aids. Reworking some of his previous solo recordings and a few new songs with a full band, including his brother and Nosferatu D2 drumming octoped Adam, an oddly shaped broader palette that manages to be awkward and lush simultaneously brings out the longing and determination behind these extraordinarily rendered tales of bittersweet break-ups and personal disenfranchisement.
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
STN Top 50 Albums Of 2013: 17-15
17 Summer Camp - Summer Camp
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
Having put Condale-ish things aside, Elizabeth and Jeremy decided it was time to check where they were ultimately up to. Much as it's still centred on the Instagram synths and slightly askew melodic sense we're already used to, the sound branches out into well trodden paths - pulsing electro, retro disco, R&B and hip-hop production tricks, James Murphy half-inching - and seem more personal in their dealings with what love means and hope for something better while still sounding like this area the duo have already set up for themselves, one of easy warmth and Sankey's soaring vocals. It's an unashamed modern pop record, but not as straightforward as that.
16 Julia Holter - Loud City Song
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
The scale and opacity of a song-cycle for the novella/film Gigi - not that not knowing about it precludes liking the record - might overcome lesser talents, but by placing her ambitions high Holter lands in a place that's coated with visualisations of high society opulence being led astray, subsumed in so much slow motion orchestration and soluble electroncs it feels like it has its own gravitational field. Some songs are more pastoral mini-symphonies than songs in the pop music idiom, others cleave to nothing but their own jumpiness, an individualist (if post-Kate Bush via Talk Talk) take on widescreen dramatics within its own internal narrative.
15 Savages - Silence Yourself
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
See, everyone, this is *also* what post-punk was. The Siouxsie & The Banshees comparison could be easily thrown about, what with Jehnny Beth's stentorian presence over the kind of stereoscopic guitar sound that was John McGeogh's domain, but to transcend such influences requires a level of self-belief and tightness disguised as looseness to complement the dead-eye focus. They sound like a band rushing to keep up with each other, which is what all the best all-out post-punk bands did - if we're talking easy influences there's easily as much Wire and Peter Hook in there - mastering palpably taut tension and spectacular release. And then it ends with an uneasy jazz piece.
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
Having put Condale-ish things aside, Elizabeth and Jeremy decided it was time to check where they were ultimately up to. Much as it's still centred on the Instagram synths and slightly askew melodic sense we're already used to, the sound branches out into well trodden paths - pulsing electro, retro disco, R&B and hip-hop production tricks, James Murphy half-inching - and seem more personal in their dealings with what love means and hope for something better while still sounding like this area the duo have already set up for themselves, one of easy warmth and Sankey's soaring vocals. It's an unashamed modern pop record, but not as straightforward as that.
16 Julia Holter - Loud City Song
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
The scale and opacity of a song-cycle for the novella/film Gigi - not that not knowing about it precludes liking the record - might overcome lesser talents, but by placing her ambitions high Holter lands in a place that's coated with visualisations of high society opulence being led astray, subsumed in so much slow motion orchestration and soluble electroncs it feels like it has its own gravitational field. Some songs are more pastoral mini-symphonies than songs in the pop music idiom, others cleave to nothing but their own jumpiness, an individualist (if post-Kate Bush via Talk Talk) take on widescreen dramatics within its own internal narrative.
15 Savages - Silence Yourself
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
See, everyone, this is *also* what post-punk was. The Siouxsie & The Banshees comparison could be easily thrown about, what with Jehnny Beth's stentorian presence over the kind of stereoscopic guitar sound that was John McGeogh's domain, but to transcend such influences requires a level of self-belief and tightness disguised as looseness to complement the dead-eye focus. They sound like a band rushing to keep up with each other, which is what all the best all-out post-punk bands did - if we're talking easy influences there's easily as much Wire and Peter Hook in there - mastering palpably taut tension and spectacular release. And then it ends with an uneasy jazz piece.
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
STN Top 50 Albums Of 2013: 20-18
20 Low - The Invisible Way
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
Low haven't been slowcore as such for a while now, but their raw delicacy still requires taking the time and effort to lose yourself in. This tenth album, for its occasional nods at gospel and the Velvets, is still full of empty space and carefully arranged instrumentation around the room's edges but it's the most intricately layered and beauteous work they've produced for a good while. It invokes a stillness in time and the winds within its textures, while Alan and Mimi harmonise beautifully, making both their phrasing and the shades underneath mean that much more as they spin stories of personal heartbreak, redemption and a kind of eventual joyousness.
19 Islet - Released By The Movement
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
The perpetual motion machine that is live Islet hasn't always suited being placed in perpetuity onto tape, so this time they decided to record as-live in various bedrooms. As always there's something straining to escape between the arrythmic marches, synth drones and the vocal exchange of cryptic oaths, introducing discordant quasi-tropicalia overheatedness to blindingly technicolour psychedelia and letting them fight it out to the death. It's a complete single work, floating ambient mood passages between the popping motorik frenzies and invention of space-indie. Tripping over itself with ideas, woozy with both possibilities and a metaphorical version of the bends, it needs to lie down in a darkened room.
18 Kiran Leonard - Bowler Hat Soup
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
Clearly some kind of savant, the sixteen tracks on the then 17 year old uber-multi-instrumentalist's first properly released album hop joyfully between genres like a Todd Rundgren for the bedroom pop set. His type of troubled singer-songwriters are Harry Nilsson and Tom Waits rather than Barrett or Walker, but Van Dyke Parks is a more common through road of an influence for someone equally comfortable with music hall Kinksisms, baroquely orchestrated cracked balladry, fuzzy power-pop that falls into its own black hole and piano-led prog-pop ambitions, often employing the richest of developing croons, you feel post-folkish tags don't so much fail to constrain him as tell so little of the tale.
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
Low haven't been slowcore as such for a while now, but their raw delicacy still requires taking the time and effort to lose yourself in. This tenth album, for its occasional nods at gospel and the Velvets, is still full of empty space and carefully arranged instrumentation around the room's edges but it's the most intricately layered and beauteous work they've produced for a good while. It invokes a stillness in time and the winds within its textures, while Alan and Mimi harmonise beautifully, making both their phrasing and the shades underneath mean that much more as they spin stories of personal heartbreak, redemption and a kind of eventual joyousness.
19 Islet - Released By The Movement
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
The perpetual motion machine that is live Islet hasn't always suited being placed in perpetuity onto tape, so this time they decided to record as-live in various bedrooms. As always there's something straining to escape between the arrythmic marches, synth drones and the vocal exchange of cryptic oaths, introducing discordant quasi-tropicalia overheatedness to blindingly technicolour psychedelia and letting them fight it out to the death. It's a complete single work, floating ambient mood passages between the popping motorik frenzies and invention of space-indie. Tripping over itself with ideas, woozy with both possibilities and a metaphorical version of the bends, it needs to lie down in a darkened room.
18 Kiran Leonard - Bowler Hat Soup
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
Clearly some kind of savant, the sixteen tracks on the then 17 year old uber-multi-instrumentalist's first properly released album hop joyfully between genres like a Todd Rundgren for the bedroom pop set. His type of troubled singer-songwriters are Harry Nilsson and Tom Waits rather than Barrett or Walker, but Van Dyke Parks is a more common through road of an influence for someone equally comfortable with music hall Kinksisms, baroquely orchestrated cracked balladry, fuzzy power-pop that falls into its own black hole and piano-led prog-pop ambitions, often employing the richest of developing croons, you feel post-folkish tags don't so much fail to constrain him as tell so little of the tale.
Monday, December 16, 2013
STN Top 50 Albums Of 2013: 25-21
25 Widowspeak - Almanac
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
Having emerged as spaghetti western dreamers their second album headed further into the misty woods, forgoeing the twang in favour of wood crafted floating American gothic, finding a decaying heart in the pastoral, aided by Molly Hamilton's vocal similarities to the Hope Sandoval/Margo Timmins archetype. But that's not all, as inscrutable uncoling guitars of a Warpaint bent merge with charging rhythms and the odd heroic solo. It can handle a cinematic grandeur, but it can also sound like FM classic rock getting lost in the haunted forest well after dark. More relatable and romantic than before, the fog of emotions suits them well.
24 The River Cry - The River Cry
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
If she'll forgive me for opening like this, who knew the bassist out of JJ72 had this in her? Having retreated to the Irish coast, Hilary Woods took to the piano and in her own time crafted a record of haunting lushness, looking out to sea and seeing lands lost and hope where once there was actuality. The reverb laden minimal instrumentation gives an extra spacious feel to the desolation, a trembling filmic reach that evokes coastal place and autumnal time just as well as the similarly piano-led PJ Harvey's White Chalk, marinaded in long dried tears and the sweat cost chasing lost causes.
23 Trips And Falls - The Inevitable Consequences Of Your Stupid Behavior
[iTunes] [Spotify] [direct]
The third UK-released album by the Montreal collective is just as jagged around the edges and tricky to pin down to simplistic terms as the first two, but there's been a paradigm shift from ornateness into the ramshackle. Songs turn from tentative to charging in a heartbeat, overlays folkified vocal stylings as likely with circling, itchy electrics as hushed acoustics, occasionally straining for the anthemic only to plunge an icy dagger through its own Psychedelic Furs in a blender ambitions. Amid all of this it still retains a heartfelt core, tying its jumping bean ambitions and its attendant noise and collapsing structures together with frayed heartstrings.
22 His Clancyness - Vicious
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
Having progressed through the ornate bite of A Classic Education and the drifting quasi-chillwave of his early solo material, Jonathan Clancy morphed into something akin to the psychedelia revival-of-sorts, still with hints of drifting, dreaming dreampop but rooted in something fuzzier and earthier, starting in lo-fi bedroom pop range but firing off in all directions, semi-acoustic fragility one minute, retro synth patterns the next, glossy technicolour or rough edged, making sure it always maintains a similar grounding wherever the quixotic arrangement impulses pull and push. Never taking the simple route, always questioning what and where its narrative point is, there's potential to grow within its questing confidence.
21 Spectral Park - Spectral Park
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
If this was the year neo-psychedelia started swallowing itself whole, at least it's given people like Luke Donovan full reign to try and reshape their peculiar overflow of ideas and crates of offbeat samples into pop songs. In his case the influence is in the mono joy of confusion stemming from the Zombies and early Pink Floyd, recorded in just short of full fidelity as hooks, scraps of melodies and bits of something intangible fall on top of each other to create actively teetering monuments of exotica-flavoured fantasias, bubblegum melodies for choruses attempting to sit atop a mania on the edge of motion sickness.
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
Having emerged as spaghetti western dreamers their second album headed further into the misty woods, forgoeing the twang in favour of wood crafted floating American gothic, finding a decaying heart in the pastoral, aided by Molly Hamilton's vocal similarities to the Hope Sandoval/Margo Timmins archetype. But that's not all, as inscrutable uncoling guitars of a Warpaint bent merge with charging rhythms and the odd heroic solo. It can handle a cinematic grandeur, but it can also sound like FM classic rock getting lost in the haunted forest well after dark. More relatable and romantic than before, the fog of emotions suits them well.
24 The River Cry - The River Cry
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
If she'll forgive me for opening like this, who knew the bassist out of JJ72 had this in her? Having retreated to the Irish coast, Hilary Woods took to the piano and in her own time crafted a record of haunting lushness, looking out to sea and seeing lands lost and hope where once there was actuality. The reverb laden minimal instrumentation gives an extra spacious feel to the desolation, a trembling filmic reach that evokes coastal place and autumnal time just as well as the similarly piano-led PJ Harvey's White Chalk, marinaded in long dried tears and the sweat cost chasing lost causes.
23 Trips And Falls - The Inevitable Consequences Of Your Stupid Behavior
[iTunes] [Spotify] [direct]
The third UK-released album by the Montreal collective is just as jagged around the edges and tricky to pin down to simplistic terms as the first two, but there's been a paradigm shift from ornateness into the ramshackle. Songs turn from tentative to charging in a heartbeat, overlays folkified vocal stylings as likely with circling, itchy electrics as hushed acoustics, occasionally straining for the anthemic only to plunge an icy dagger through its own Psychedelic Furs in a blender ambitions. Amid all of this it still retains a heartfelt core, tying its jumping bean ambitions and its attendant noise and collapsing structures together with frayed heartstrings.
22 His Clancyness - Vicious
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
Having progressed through the ornate bite of A Classic Education and the drifting quasi-chillwave of his early solo material, Jonathan Clancy morphed into something akin to the psychedelia revival-of-sorts, still with hints of drifting, dreaming dreampop but rooted in something fuzzier and earthier, starting in lo-fi bedroom pop range but firing off in all directions, semi-acoustic fragility one minute, retro synth patterns the next, glossy technicolour or rough edged, making sure it always maintains a similar grounding wherever the quixotic arrangement impulses pull and push. Never taking the simple route, always questioning what and where its narrative point is, there's potential to grow within its questing confidence.
21 Spectral Park - Spectral Park
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
If this was the year neo-psychedelia started swallowing itself whole, at least it's given people like Luke Donovan full reign to try and reshape their peculiar overflow of ideas and crates of offbeat samples into pop songs. In his case the influence is in the mono joy of confusion stemming from the Zombies and early Pink Floyd, recorded in just short of full fidelity as hooks, scraps of melodies and bits of something intangible fall on top of each other to create actively teetering monuments of exotica-flavoured fantasias, bubblegum melodies for choruses attempting to sit atop a mania on the edge of motion sickness.
Saturday, December 14, 2013
STN Top 50 Albums Of 2013: the bottom half
50 Buke & Gase - General Dome
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: General Dome
49 Alessi's Ark - The Still Life
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: The Rain
48 The Electric Soft Parade - Idiots
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: Brother, You Must Walk Your Path Alone
47 The Wave Pictures - City Forgiveness
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: Lisbon
46 Just Handshakes - Say It
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Bandcamp]
RIYL: London Bound
45 Woodpigeon - Thumbtacks And Glue
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: Red Rover, Red Rover
44 Georgia Ruth - Week Of Pines
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: Week Of Pines
43 Local Natives - Hummingbird
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: Heavy Feet
42 Totem Terrors - Repeat Play Torrent Rar
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Bandcamp]
RIYL: Weather Controller
41 Ice, Sea, Dead People - If It’s Broken, Break It More
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: You Could Be A Model
40 Andrew Paul Regan - Dinas Powys
[Bandcamp]
RIYL: Time Crisis, 1982
39 Laura J Martin - Dazzle Days
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: Red Flag
38 Mat Riviere - Not Even Doom Music
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Bandcamp]
RIYL: Wool
37 Euros Childs - Situation Comedy
[direct download] [Amazon]
RIYL: Tête à Tête
36 The Crimea - Square Moon
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: Last Plane Out Of Saigon
35 Cloud - Comfort Songs
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: Cars & It's Autumn
34 Ghostpoet - Some Say I So I Say Light
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: Them Waters
33 Shopping - Consumer Complaints
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: In Other Words
32 Mazzy Star - Seasons Of Your Day
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: In The Kingdom
31 Cloud Boat - Book Of Hours
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: Wanderlust
30 Everything Everything - Arc
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: Cough Cough
29 My Bloody Valentine - m b v
[direct purchase] [Amazon]
RIYL: In Another Way
28 Arcade Fire - Reflektor
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: Reflektor
27 Sweet Baboo - Ships
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: If I Died
26 Rick Redbeard - No Selfish Heart
[iTunes] [Amazon]
RIYL: Now We're Dancing
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: General Dome
49 Alessi's Ark - The Still Life
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: The Rain
48 The Electric Soft Parade - Idiots
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: Brother, You Must Walk Your Path Alone
47 The Wave Pictures - City Forgiveness
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: Lisbon
46 Just Handshakes - Say It
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Bandcamp]
RIYL: London Bound
45 Woodpigeon - Thumbtacks And Glue
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: Red Rover, Red Rover
44 Georgia Ruth - Week Of Pines
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: Week Of Pines
43 Local Natives - Hummingbird
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: Heavy Feet
42 Totem Terrors - Repeat Play Torrent Rar
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Bandcamp]
RIYL: Weather Controller
41 Ice, Sea, Dead People - If It’s Broken, Break It More
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: You Could Be A Model
40 Andrew Paul Regan - Dinas Powys
[Bandcamp]
RIYL: Time Crisis, 1982
39 Laura J Martin - Dazzle Days
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: Red Flag
38 Mat Riviere - Not Even Doom Music
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Bandcamp]
RIYL: Wool
37 Euros Childs - Situation Comedy
[direct download] [Amazon]
RIYL: Tête à Tête
36 The Crimea - Square Moon
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: Last Plane Out Of Saigon
35 Cloud - Comfort Songs
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: Cars & It's Autumn
34 Ghostpoet - Some Say I So I Say Light
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: Them Waters
33 Shopping - Consumer Complaints
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: In Other Words
32 Mazzy Star - Seasons Of Your Day
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: In The Kingdom
31 Cloud Boat - Book Of Hours
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: Wanderlust
30 Everything Everything - Arc
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: Cough Cough
29 My Bloody Valentine - m b v
[direct purchase] [Amazon]
RIYL: In Another Way
28 Arcade Fire - Reflektor
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: Reflektor
27 Sweet Baboo - Ships
[iTunes] [Spotify] [Amazon]
RIYL: If I Died
26 Rick Redbeard - No Selfish Heart
[iTunes] [Amazon]
RIYL: Now We're Dancing
Monday, December 09, 2013
Mowbird - Brompton/Happy Active Horse Organ
One track you'll have seen on our Tumblr (but therefore not on Hype Machine, which is why it's cravenly being reposted), one new out today, both from one of our favourite new British guitar bands of the very recent past's debut album Islander, out 10th February on Shape Records. Both constitute fuzzily frayed slacker garage, as much 13th Floor Elevators and Guided By Voices as Thee Oh Sees, an appeallingly spooked ramshackle charge.
Friday, December 06, 2013
Fourteen For '14: part two
Marika Hackman
There's been talk, with her Marlingish folk bent and fashion world credentials, that the 21 year old singer-songwriter could become something big, but we reckon she (and us) would be happier with the kind of music career trajectory her sometime producer Johnny Flynn has had, much admired by critics but too sharp and slippery for the post-Mumfords chart palette. In fact if she recalls anyone it's those troubled late 90s Cat Power albums, her self-taught guitar plucking adding a rickety terrain to lyrics that seem fogged and mildly cryptic even as the darkly desired emotion cuts to the bone.
Jungle
The duo behind Jungle have revealed little about themselves, going merely by the handles T and J. The temptation to call upon our usual rule of thumb - if you're being deliberately mysterious about a new musical project, we'll assume you're Chris de Burgh and move on - is great, but that's without hearing the music. They have the capacity to become London's own TV On The Radio in more than just a very Tunde Adebimpe-like falsetto, transmitting deep soul grooves and croons through a gauze of synth layers that are part chillgaze, part Ghostpoet/Invisible-like floorshaking heavy atmospherics.
We Three And The Death Rattle
Perhaps the most cumbersomely acronymed band of recent times, Leicester's WTATDR have been attracting attention for a while now but an album is ready to go come 10th February. In that time their Boss Hog/Gun Club dark blues vindictiveness has percolated and gone metallic (but not metal). Singer and occasional theremin...ist? Amy Cooper suggests an attitude you wouldn't want to get on the wrong side of, not least as most of the time it seems seconds away from ordering someone be taken out, dealing in a dysfunctional love life mirrored in the guitar-and-drums sludge hyperventilating behind her.
Telegram
If it carries on much longer there'll have to be a special section for hirsute psych-motorik bands produced by Dan Carey on iTunes. Telegram, though, might end up the pick of them, their noisily committed, hair-flinging live show complemented by the tripped out rush of urgent crafted noise that is debut single Follow, like they've just stepped out of a late 70s New York club, through a glam wardrobe and into the Rollercoaster tour, anthemic without all that now implies, energetically punchy and aiming stratospheric like a midpoint between early Roxy Music and Toy's record box.
Ralegh Long
As with some others in this selection we've had a decent length association with Ralegh - we premiered one of his videos last year - but he's never featured before in one of these lists and the spring should see the release of his debut album, featuring members of Toy, Hefner and A Little Orchestra. A proper reminder, then, of his sophisticated songsmithery, detailed as much in melody as lyric, the same sort of reconfigurating the DNA of jazz bar MOR-tainted classic pop moves into something less tangible that Robyn Hitchcock or Paddy McAloon once thrived upon.
Martha
Given you'd imagine every conceivable arrangement of three snappy chord power-pop had been long raked over, Martha have in their EP and single's worth of back catalogue somehow found a new punk-scented way of delivering an enthralling ride. It's not just the Durham outfit's way with earworm hooks that refreshingly lack in radio-ready obviousness or the rush of Buzzcocks harmonics that marks them out but their lightly worn lyrical intelligence, social, political and historical - this track below is a fictionalized account of the last days of poet Audre Lorde, and you can invade a stage to it.
Trust Fund
Trust Fund is Ellis Jones of Bristol, sometime confidante of Joanna Gruesome and so forth, whose Don't Let Them Begin EP wears its starkest lo-fi roots as a badge of honour and its heart squarely on its sleeve. Like Lou Barlow or Elliott Smith and through to Jeff Magnum, Ellis only seemingly wants to express the darkest parts of his psyche, developing an honesty about the path most taken that's as awkward as his playing, which could be close-miked confessional or grunge-inflected full band exorcism. You get the feeling he's an ace away from producing something fully realised as greatness.
There's been talk, with her Marlingish folk bent and fashion world credentials, that the 21 year old singer-songwriter could become something big, but we reckon she (and us) would be happier with the kind of music career trajectory her sometime producer Johnny Flynn has had, much admired by critics but too sharp and slippery for the post-Mumfords chart palette. In fact if she recalls anyone it's those troubled late 90s Cat Power albums, her self-taught guitar plucking adding a rickety terrain to lyrics that seem fogged and mildly cryptic even as the darkly desired emotion cuts to the bone.
Jungle
The duo behind Jungle have revealed little about themselves, going merely by the handles T and J. The temptation to call upon our usual rule of thumb - if you're being deliberately mysterious about a new musical project, we'll assume you're Chris de Burgh and move on - is great, but that's without hearing the music. They have the capacity to become London's own TV On The Radio in more than just a very Tunde Adebimpe-like falsetto, transmitting deep soul grooves and croons through a gauze of synth layers that are part chillgaze, part Ghostpoet/Invisible-like floorshaking heavy atmospherics.
We Three And The Death Rattle
Perhaps the most cumbersomely acronymed band of recent times, Leicester's WTATDR have been attracting attention for a while now but an album is ready to go come 10th February. In that time their Boss Hog/Gun Club dark blues vindictiveness has percolated and gone metallic (but not metal). Singer and occasional theremin...ist? Amy Cooper suggests an attitude you wouldn't want to get on the wrong side of, not least as most of the time it seems seconds away from ordering someone be taken out, dealing in a dysfunctional love life mirrored in the guitar-and-drums sludge hyperventilating behind her.
Telegram
If it carries on much longer there'll have to be a special section for hirsute psych-motorik bands produced by Dan Carey on iTunes. Telegram, though, might end up the pick of them, their noisily committed, hair-flinging live show complemented by the tripped out rush of urgent crafted noise that is debut single Follow, like they've just stepped out of a late 70s New York club, through a glam wardrobe and into the Rollercoaster tour, anthemic without all that now implies, energetically punchy and aiming stratospheric like a midpoint between early Roxy Music and Toy's record box.
Ralegh Long
As with some others in this selection we've had a decent length association with Ralegh - we premiered one of his videos last year - but he's never featured before in one of these lists and the spring should see the release of his debut album, featuring members of Toy, Hefner and A Little Orchestra. A proper reminder, then, of his sophisticated songsmithery, detailed as much in melody as lyric, the same sort of reconfigurating the DNA of jazz bar MOR-tainted classic pop moves into something less tangible that Robyn Hitchcock or Paddy McAloon once thrived upon.
Martha
Given you'd imagine every conceivable arrangement of three snappy chord power-pop had been long raked over, Martha have in their EP and single's worth of back catalogue somehow found a new punk-scented way of delivering an enthralling ride. It's not just the Durham outfit's way with earworm hooks that refreshingly lack in radio-ready obviousness or the rush of Buzzcocks harmonics that marks them out but their lightly worn lyrical intelligence, social, political and historical - this track below is a fictionalized account of the last days of poet Audre Lorde, and you can invade a stage to it.
Trust Fund
Trust Fund is Ellis Jones of Bristol, sometime confidante of Joanna Gruesome and so forth, whose Don't Let Them Begin EP wears its starkest lo-fi roots as a badge of honour and its heart squarely on its sleeve. Like Lou Barlow or Elliott Smith and through to Jeff Magnum, Ellis only seemingly wants to express the darkest parts of his psyche, developing an honesty about the path most taken that's as awkward as his playing, which could be close-miked confessional or grunge-inflected full band exorcism. You get the feeling he's an ace away from producing something fully realised as greatness.
Thursday, December 05, 2013
Fourteen For '14: part one
The first of two runs through this year's tips list. The usual caveats - anyone who's had a full length album out or been featured on an STN year in preview list before is disqualified, and these are not our tips for big things but those who we think are likely to do really good things over the forthcoming twelve months. This is how last year's thirteen fared, including three bands that have subsequently split up; may god have mercy on this selection's souls.
Heavy Petting Zoo
The Swansea outfit have a clear live focal point of their in-house dancer Jon, whose freeform flailings may make him the 10s equivalent of Wojtek from the Blue Aeroplanes. Behind him, and very much up front on record, is an equally compelling presence, singer Amy Zachariah, whose lustily fulsome commanding complements a raggedly direct surf-inflected garage attack. Having stormed their set at Swn festival - Huw Stephens, Jen Long and NME's Laura Snapes among those spreading its word - they self-released a single in October and should hopefully play their first proper gigs outside Wales soon.
EXPENSIVE
Primarily known as half of back bedroom folk-popsters the Middle Ones, Grace Denton's latest incarnation (with Pete Shadbolt and Matthew Cheney) takes the electro-pop and R&B production tropes and squirrels them away in a dark corner. Their take on electronic melody seems hand crafted, densely layered with arrythmically subtle beats and not being averse to taking the rutted path less travelled, attempting to keep hold of its melodic agility while flowering from tense development into something air-filled and colourful, Denton's vocals equally capable of dreaminess and rawness alike.
Blessa
If you can tell a band by the company they keep, that Blessa's recent single Between Times was produced by MJ of Hookworms should give you a fair idea. Not that they share the shoegaze blur of many of the bands he associates with, the Sheffield quintet crafting a cleaner sound where reverberating guitars are present but only a subtle part of a sophisticated jigsaw pattern built around finding the space between such strident elements as searching basslines, insistent beats and Olivia Neller's skylarking vocals, pitched somewhere between Veronica Falls' scuzzy melodies and Howling Bells' lost highway intransigence.
Shhh...Apes!
They don't sound like that name suggests, nor like the previous Cardiff scene associations of frontman and creative fulcrum Mark Foley (of Manchasm fame). Their EP The Shape Of Apes To Come instead paints delicate landscapes of ambient folk and Americana-influenced subtleties that stretch out and evolve into shivering emotiveness, achieved through delicate multi-instrumental layering, outreaching vocal harmonies and ebbing electronics. Low fans will find much to admire in its cinematic qualities that lift, coast and find new depths to explore on every listen. And if that's just for the introductory six track EP they could be heading somewhere special.
Plastic Animals
Another Edinburgh band brought to our attention by the indefatigable Song, By Toad label, Plastic Animals describe themselves as "atmospheric punk sludge rock" which makes them sound like the Melvins, ie not like what they do sound like. What they've developed into over three EPs over the last two and a bit years is electronically embellished, carefully layered hypnagogic pop shape formers that's been bundled into a helicopter travelling across a misty landscape, Deerhunter-style dreampop with the tremelo arm taped down, melodically lucid in creating far seeing atmospherics out of chiming lo-fi hypnosis.
Beaty Heart
The Peckham trio have been around for a while - we first wrote about them in May 2011 - but their development into the level of confidence in pulling off their sort of deluxe arrangements has been notable, culminating around March when their Dave Eringa-overseen debut album Mixed Blessings is released. They may touch on the hi-life fad of a few years ago but their stock in trade is percussive, harmonic overlapping post-freak-folk of a Panda Bear stripe, yearning sounding vocals rubbing like sandpaper against hallucinatory warped psychedelia loaded high with arrythmic drumming of various indigenous types.
Fire Island Pines
You don't really get a lot of luxuriousness in modern indie-pop, whether that refers to the delicately literate jangle of a Felt or Animals That Swim or the crumbling Victorian halls melodramatic splendour in decay of Jack or Gallon Drunk. Cornwall sextet Fire Island Pines are the best candidates we've heard for a while, their swooningly languid melodies and detailed trumpet laced lushness almost betraying Anton Rothschild's less than confident, clouds in front of the warm sunshine sensitivity lurking behind such budget sophistication, if his half-murmured half-crooned delivery hasn't suggested such already. An impending album is promised.
Seven more tomorrow!
Heavy Petting Zoo
The Swansea outfit have a clear live focal point of their in-house dancer Jon, whose freeform flailings may make him the 10s equivalent of Wojtek from the Blue Aeroplanes. Behind him, and very much up front on record, is an equally compelling presence, singer Amy Zachariah, whose lustily fulsome commanding complements a raggedly direct surf-inflected garage attack. Having stormed their set at Swn festival - Huw Stephens, Jen Long and NME's Laura Snapes among those spreading its word - they self-released a single in October and should hopefully play their first proper gigs outside Wales soon.
EXPENSIVE
Primarily known as half of back bedroom folk-popsters the Middle Ones, Grace Denton's latest incarnation (with Pete Shadbolt and Matthew Cheney) takes the electro-pop and R&B production tropes and squirrels them away in a dark corner. Their take on electronic melody seems hand crafted, densely layered with arrythmically subtle beats and not being averse to taking the rutted path less travelled, attempting to keep hold of its melodic agility while flowering from tense development into something air-filled and colourful, Denton's vocals equally capable of dreaminess and rawness alike.
Secrets in the Moss from EXPENSIVE on Vimeo.
Blessa
If you can tell a band by the company they keep, that Blessa's recent single Between Times was produced by MJ of Hookworms should give you a fair idea. Not that they share the shoegaze blur of many of the bands he associates with, the Sheffield quintet crafting a cleaner sound where reverberating guitars are present but only a subtle part of a sophisticated jigsaw pattern built around finding the space between such strident elements as searching basslines, insistent beats and Olivia Neller's skylarking vocals, pitched somewhere between Veronica Falls' scuzzy melodies and Howling Bells' lost highway intransigence.
Shhh...Apes!
They don't sound like that name suggests, nor like the previous Cardiff scene associations of frontman and creative fulcrum Mark Foley (of Manchasm fame). Their EP The Shape Of Apes To Come instead paints delicate landscapes of ambient folk and Americana-influenced subtleties that stretch out and evolve into shivering emotiveness, achieved through delicate multi-instrumental layering, outreaching vocal harmonies and ebbing electronics. Low fans will find much to admire in its cinematic qualities that lift, coast and find new depths to explore on every listen. And if that's just for the introductory six track EP they could be heading somewhere special.
Plastic Animals
Another Edinburgh band brought to our attention by the indefatigable Song, By Toad label, Plastic Animals describe themselves as "atmospheric punk sludge rock" which makes them sound like the Melvins, ie not like what they do sound like. What they've developed into over three EPs over the last two and a bit years is electronically embellished, carefully layered hypnagogic pop shape formers that's been bundled into a helicopter travelling across a misty landscape, Deerhunter-style dreampop with the tremelo arm taped down, melodically lucid in creating far seeing atmospherics out of chiming lo-fi hypnosis.
Beaty Heart
The Peckham trio have been around for a while - we first wrote about them in May 2011 - but their development into the level of confidence in pulling off their sort of deluxe arrangements has been notable, culminating around March when their Dave Eringa-overseen debut album Mixed Blessings is released. They may touch on the hi-life fad of a few years ago but their stock in trade is percussive, harmonic overlapping post-freak-folk of a Panda Bear stripe, yearning sounding vocals rubbing like sandpaper against hallucinatory warped psychedelia loaded high with arrythmic drumming of various indigenous types.
Fire Island Pines
You don't really get a lot of luxuriousness in modern indie-pop, whether that refers to the delicately literate jangle of a Felt or Animals That Swim or the crumbling Victorian halls melodramatic splendour in decay of Jack or Gallon Drunk. Cornwall sextet Fire Island Pines are the best candidates we've heard for a while, their swooningly languid melodies and detailed trumpet laced lushness almost betraying Anton Rothschild's less than confident, clouds in front of the warm sunshine sensitivity lurking behind such budget sophistication, if his half-murmured half-crooned delivery hasn't suggested such already. An impending album is promised.
Seven more tomorrow!
Tuesday, December 03, 2013
Miss us?
What? Oh.
Anyway, that's quite long enough to have been away from this place, and so STN is back to full working order just in time for the end of year festivities to commence on Saturday with the start of the slow reveal, long after everyone else's quick reveals, of our 14 For '14, followed by the usual top 50 albums of the year.
Saturday, September 28, 2013
Should mention that songs and 'stuff' are continuing to appear on the STN Tumblr. Posted today, the public unveiling of our project to list every Melody Maker cover star from 1980 to its demise.
Also from the Haus Of STN, One Short is an attempt to list every record that stalled at 41 in the Top 40 era.
Friday, September 06, 2013
STN, at least this bit of it, is going on hiatus for a bit while we work out where all the readers went. Much, much new music and musings will of course be kept up on our Twitter feed.
Thursday, September 05, 2013
Future Of The Left - Bread, Cheese, Bow And Arrow
The other day we declared Jetplane Landing's Don't Try, out this week, might be the best rock album emerging from the British Isles this year so far. Those last two words were it turns out (if kind of expectedly so) advisably used. FOTL's fourth album How To Stop Your Brain In An Accident is out on 21st October and judging by the first offering it's setting out with its industrial sledgehammer to crack every single definition of the word 'nut'. As taut, staccato guitars get set to stun Andy Falkous is possessed, howling and hissing lturns of phrase twisted back around themselves and coming out the other end all obtuse, leading towards a thunderous, righteous ending. The usual, then, but somehow far more so.
Sunday, September 01, 2013
The Ten: Totem Terrors' favourite songs
The Cardiff-via-Brighton duo Totem Terrors have long been STN favourites for their skewed art-rock wiriness, best exemplified so far on this year's Repeat Play Torrent Rar album.
As the first of a few people we're going to put this to, we asked Max and Rosie for their favourite/most influential songs, the pair of them taking five each:
Max
OMD - Electricity
I love this partially for Andy McCluskey's bass dance in the video. Perfect melancholy synth pop, impossible to resist groove.
Public Image Ltd - Poptones
Moebius meditation, the high point of the best album of it's day. Tonally extreme, sexually repetitive, numb ending.
Wire - The 15th
Masters of economy and the monotone melody. Music as art, art as a pop song.
Talking Heads - Warning Sign
Lyrical expansive, musically intelligent. Everything exact, nothing wasted.
Elvis Presley - Love Me Tender
My childhood hero, and first favourite song.
Rosie
The Wedding Present - Carolyn
The reason I wanted to play drums and therefore joined this band.
The Raincoats - No Side To Fall In
Girls being brilliant.
Tom Waits - Innocent When You Dream
No explanation needed.
Beat Happening - What's Important
My 16-year-old-self reason for wanting to make songs.
Belle & Sebastian - My Wandering Days Are Over
Perennial inspiration.
As the first of a few people we're going to put this to, we asked Max and Rosie for their favourite/most influential songs, the pair of them taking five each:
Max
OMD - Electricity
I love this partially for Andy McCluskey's bass dance in the video. Perfect melancholy synth pop, impossible to resist groove.
Public Image Ltd - Poptones
Moebius meditation, the high point of the best album of it's day. Tonally extreme, sexually repetitive, numb ending.
Wire - The 15th
Masters of economy and the monotone melody. Music as art, art as a pop song.
Talking Heads - Warning Sign
Lyrical expansive, musically intelligent. Everything exact, nothing wasted.
Elvis Presley - Love Me Tender
My childhood hero, and first favourite song.
Rosie
The Wedding Present - Carolyn
The reason I wanted to play drums and therefore joined this band.
The Raincoats - No Side To Fall In
Girls being brilliant.
Tom Waits - Innocent When You Dream
No explanation needed.
Beat Happening - What's Important
My 16-year-old-self reason for wanting to make songs.
Belle & Sebastian - My Wandering Days Are Over
Perennial inspiration.
Thursday, August 29, 2013
Elizabeth Morris - Optimism
Morris, pied piper figure of the current indiepop scene, is imminently moving to Italy. This doesn't mean Allo Darlin' are splitting, at least not imminently - in fact they've recently been recording their third album for release early next year, which from live outings sounds like the next step onwards, and have a handful of dates over the next couple of months. In the meantime Morris had written some more personal, piano-based songs while at home in Australia and wanting to get them down before leaving London recorded them (and a Wave Pictures cover) just two days ago chiefly on Darren Hayman's famous ship's piano for a four-track EP Optimism only available through Bandcamp. Spare, bruised and teetering on the precipice of emotional surety it's pretty clear these would never be full band songs but they bolster Morris' way with lyrical imagery and understanding what love is all about.
Sunday, August 25, 2013
The Superman Revenge Squad Band - A Funny Thing You Said
Longtime readers, if there are any left, will recall our coming over all unnecessary a few years ago about the lyrical greatness of Ben Parker through his two self-distributed albums and one EP as Superman Revenge Squad, a stream of consciousness set of abstractive self-lacerating observations and broadcasts from the slough of despond. After a few years away from that name ploughing a couple of other furrows he's formed a band, which while wrecking the minimal directness of those records does bring quite the colour palette with sax, cello and accordion worked in. Notably the band also includes Adam, Ben's brother and oppo in the still magnificent Nosferatu D2, and that almost relentless dynamism is as much the key as Ben's thoughts on the passage of time. The soon-come album There Is Nothing More Frightening Than The Passing Of Time is out 16th September in limited numbers and preorderable from the mighty Audio Antihero.
Friday, August 16, 2013
Let's Buy Happiness - Run
It's been a noticeably long time - fourteen months, in fact - since we last heard from the shimmering Geordie lovelies. Turns out, thankfully, that the most recent part of that time has been spent recording an album, titled Chants For Friends and out... soon. They've got a tour in October, of which more shortly, so maybe around then. Don't be fooled by the gentle acoustic lilt of the first half of its first taste, as once Sarah Hall's emotive voice starts echoing in and expressing self-doubt it looks set to lift off sooner rather than later, which it does with some trusty tremelo via a meander downstream. Less beauteous than it's letting on.
October dates:
4th & 5th Newcastle Cluny 2
6th Leeds Brudenell
7th London Hoxton Bar & Kitchen
8th Bath Moles
11th Banbury Also Known As (that's what it's called, apparently)
12th Sheffield Bowery
15th Manchester Night & Day
16th Sunderland Pop Recs
18th Aberdeen Tunnels
20th Glasgow Broadcast
21st Inverness Hootananny
23rd Edinburgh Sneaky Pete's
October dates:
4th & 5th Newcastle Cluny 2
6th Leeds Brudenell
7th London Hoxton Bar & Kitchen
8th Bath Moles
11th Banbury Also Known As (that's what it's called, apparently)
12th Sheffield Bowery
15th Manchester Night & Day
16th Sunderland Pop Recs
18th Aberdeen Tunnels
20th Glasgow Broadcast
21st Inverness Hootananny
23rd Edinburgh Sneaky Pete's
Thursday, August 15, 2013
Joanna Gruesome - Sugarcrush
It's looking like a very decent end of year for albums, and one real dark horse is emerging in the form of Joanna Gruesome's Weird Sister, out 9th September on home of the hits Fortuna Pop! We've already heard Secret Surprise; a steroid-enabled reworking of a song originally found on their 2011 self-released EP begins deep in dissonace country, cuts away to sweet vocal melodies while never quite letting go of the frantic rhythmic pace and post-Sonic Youth scrap metal yard blasts of proto-noise guitar, then slides into a coda two and a half minutes or so in that's frankly a right no-wave commotion. An aural cleanser and a statement of serrated intent alright.
Saturday, August 10, 2013
The Ten: great performances from The Tube
All new features that aren't just tracks die an almost immediate death on STN but let's press on with them regardless. Simple enough, The Ten, we'd like to think reflecting the post-Buzzfeed clamour for lists (though not the post-Buzzfeed clamour for facile gifs, those can fuck right off) - irregular collections of ten things, whether it be a guest list or a load of links, like this first one, putting together ten YouTube clips from the most beloved part of Channel 4's 1980s cultural hand.
The Jam - A Town Called Malice, appearing on the first show on one of their last live appearances
Frankie Goes To Hollywood - Relax, the performance with which they get discovered, followed by a somewhat overdressed and outnumbered Jools gaining exact knowledge on their style
The Smiths - Hand In Glove
The Proclaimers - Throw The R Away. It's not in this clip but Paula Yates famously introduced it as "something really weird", though by the looks of her she can talk
The Art Of Noise - Close To The Edit in literal clown outfits with a mass of Fairlights, synths, samplers and a mixing console, Paul Morley adding comments as is his wont. It should however be noted the setup hadn't extended as far as replacing the audience with dummies.
Trouble Funk - Still Smokin' Tyne-side
Dexys Midnight Runners - There There My Dear, the infamous nine minute reworking with a talky bit in the middle and Kevin doing press-ups
The Redskins - Hold On/Keep On Keepin' On with a not totally successful interjection from a striking miner
The Fall - Smile/2x4 chosen and introduced by John Peel
Grandmaster Flash - The Message, performing some of the worst breakdancing ever committed to tape. That's not a real policeman at the end.
The Jam - A Town Called Malice, appearing on the first show on one of their last live appearances
Frankie Goes To Hollywood - Relax, the performance with which they get discovered, followed by a somewhat overdressed and outnumbered Jools gaining exact knowledge on their style
The Smiths - Hand In Glove
The Proclaimers - Throw The R Away. It's not in this clip but Paula Yates famously introduced it as "something really weird", though by the looks of her she can talk
The Art Of Noise - Close To The Edit in literal clown outfits with a mass of Fairlights, synths, samplers and a mixing console, Paul Morley adding comments as is his wont. It should however be noted the setup hadn't extended as far as replacing the audience with dummies.
Trouble Funk - Still Smokin' Tyne-side
Dexys Midnight Runners - There There My Dear, the infamous nine minute reworking with a talky bit in the middle and Kevin doing press-ups
The Redskins - Hold On/Keep On Keepin' On with a not totally successful interjection from a striking miner
The Fall - Smile/2x4 chosen and introduced by John Peel
Grandmaster Flash - The Message, performing some of the worst breakdancing ever committed to tape. That's not a real policeman at the end.
Friday, August 02, 2013
And the rest: His Clancyness/Islet/Mammoth Penguins
His Clancyness - Zenith Diamond
Just four and a half years or thereabouts since we first wrote about Jonathan Clancy's solo project he announces an album, Vicious out 7th October. Actually, maybe because it's now officially a trio, it sounds more in the A Classic Education wheelhouse than the drifting lilt of old, a chugging riff and driving motorik-ish rhythm pulling along an occasionally unwilling vocal, darker, psych-ier and punchier than what we'd heard before; that its producer Chris Koltay has worked with Bradford Cox and Liars makes perfect sense.
Islet - Tripping Through The Blue Room (Part II)
You imagine that when it came to recording Released By The Movement, out 14th October, producer Stephen 'Sweet Baboo' Black didn't so much do the intricate instrumentation setting up as scatter a few live mikes, press record and hope for the best. Sounding like it's been partially recorded through a wall, dark ambient washes, distantly obscured psychedelic sounds, tribal rhythms and no legible words at all, suggesting alongside first taster Triangulation Station that this may be an even more elusive record than Illuminated People.
Mammoth Penguins - Propped Up By Affection
Not a name you'll be familiar with but a voice you might, that being of Emma Kupa, most recently one third of Without Feathers but more notably late of Standard Fare and now of, well, a scrappy indie-rock trio, more raw and cocksure but with the questioning heart intact. Just a set of demos for the time being but they sound confident and ready for battle.
Just four and a half years or thereabouts since we first wrote about Jonathan Clancy's solo project he announces an album, Vicious out 7th October. Actually, maybe because it's now officially a trio, it sounds more in the A Classic Education wheelhouse than the drifting lilt of old, a chugging riff and driving motorik-ish rhythm pulling along an occasionally unwilling vocal, darker, psych-ier and punchier than what we'd heard before; that its producer Chris Koltay has worked with Bradford Cox and Liars makes perfect sense.
Islet - Tripping Through The Blue Room (Part II)
You imagine that when it came to recording Released By The Movement, out 14th October, producer Stephen 'Sweet Baboo' Black didn't so much do the intricate instrumentation setting up as scatter a few live mikes, press record and hope for the best. Sounding like it's been partially recorded through a wall, dark ambient washes, distantly obscured psychedelic sounds, tribal rhythms and no legible words at all, suggesting alongside first taster Triangulation Station that this may be an even more elusive record than Illuminated People.
Mammoth Penguins - Propped Up By Affection
Not a name you'll be familiar with but a voice you might, that being of Emma Kupa, most recently one third of Without Feathers but more notably late of Standard Fare and now of, well, a scrappy indie-rock trio, more raw and cocksure but with the questioning heart intact. Just a set of demos for the time being but they sound confident and ready for battle.
Rose Elinor Dougall - Strange Warnings
After a stint as part of the Mark Ronson charabanc and having watched her brother become the famous one with Toy it does seem a while since Dougall has been around but this first taste of a second album we know nothing else about yet is a fine step onwards from Without Why, warmly floaty psych-pop that runs on intricate understatement, laced with aereated synths on nodding terms with Stereolab before nearly disappearing down a technicolour plughole. Rose plays the Shacklewell Arms, London on August 14th.
Sky Larkin - Loom
We've been anticipating a third album for a while now and now we have confirmation - Motto (we've already heard the title track), 16th September, produced as usual by John Goodmanson and preceded by a week by this single, perhaps more immediate than usual but very definitely that quiet explosion of lyrical intrigue - it's about "presence after loss", says Katie - and dynamic wired hooks we've come to expect.
September tour dates? September tour dates, all except Sunderland and Glasgow with the promising much Radstewart supporting:
17th London Lexington
18th Leicester Firebug
19th Sheffield Harley
20th Sunderland Pop Recs Ltd (Frankie & The Heartstrings' gaff, that)
21st Glasgow Nice'n'Sleazy
23rd Leeds Brudenell
24th Southampton Joiners
25th Nottingham Bodega
26th Cardiff 10 Feet Tall
28th Aldershot West End Centre
30th Manchester Deaf Institute
September tour dates? September tour dates, all except Sunderland and Glasgow with the promising much Radstewart supporting:
17th London Lexington
18th Leicester Firebug
19th Sheffield Harley
20th Sunderland Pop Recs Ltd (Frankie & The Heartstrings' gaff, that)
21st Glasgow Nice'n'Sleazy
23rd Leeds Brudenell
24th Southampton Joiners
25th Nottingham Bodega
26th Cardiff 10 Feet Tall
28th Aldershot West End Centre
30th Manchester Deaf Institute
Wednesday, July 24, 2013
Jetplane Landing - Walls Of Derry
Just when you thought it was safe to go to Derry and openly question general levels of rock commitment, JPL are back and sounding huge with fourth album Don't Try on September 2nd. We've heard the full thing and can report that rather than expand on the funk-laden left turn of the last time we saw them six years ago on Backlash Cop (STN's number nine album of the year, mind) it sounds like 2002 returning, more specifically the Million Dead/Reuben/Hundred Reasons landscape the Els Quatre Gats EP's full frontal post-hardcore assault was launched into - rarely a proper let-up, slamming boxcutter knife-edge melodies into big fuzzy riffs and Andrew Ferris' overwordy howling against the massed ranks. The pits will be unstoppable.
September dates:
2nd Sheffield Corporation
3rd Glasgow Stereo
4th Manchester Soup Kitchen
5th Nottingham Bodega
6th London Lexington
7th Cardiff Clwb Ifor Bach
11th Dublin Workman’s Club
13th Derry Glassworks
14th Belfast Limelight 2
September dates:
2nd Sheffield Corporation
3rd Glasgow Stereo
4th Manchester Soup Kitchen
5th Nottingham Bodega
6th London Lexington
7th Cardiff Clwb Ifor Bach
11th Dublin Workman’s Club
13th Derry Glassworks
14th Belfast Limelight 2
Friday, July 19, 2013
The Magic Theatre - I Got The Answer
Quirky indie found a good few discerning homes around the tail end of the 90s, few more live contenders than Ooberman's take on whimsically personalised melodicism. That band's joint voices Dan Popplewell and Sophia Churney now trade in baroque folk with a curiosity-fuelled twist, and from a debut album due in the autumn is this sweetly lovely positivist countrified lilt that suits this weather pretty well, if occasionally interrupted by the South American percussive jam next door.
Tuesday, July 16, 2013
The many faces of Alanna McArdle: Joanna Gruesome/Ides
Joanna Gruesome are a band we've written about on here before, Cardiff-based youthful noiseniks who turn from languishing shoegaze to raging post-hardcore on the spin of a dime. That excitable explosiveness has been synthesised into a hopefully cohesive whole by Hookworms' MJ as producer, given the title Weird Sister and set for September 16th UK release via the Fortuna Pop!/Slumberland axis of ace noise-pop. Going on the stumbling, spinning like a top wild-eyed post-riot grrrl/Sonic Youth determination of Secret Surprise they're on their way.
And when she's not doing that singer Alanna McArdle has her own outlet Ides, a home for her minimalist guitar and haunted/bruised vocal telling of despair and feeling lost inside herself. Prisms is coming out as part of Art Is Hard's Postcard Club, which as the name suggests is a limited edition run of specially designed postcodes with unique download code.
Ides plays Brighton Hope on 9th August, Bournemouth 60 Million Postcards on 10th and a house show in Bristol on the 12th, all with King Of Cats. Both entities play together in London twice in the month, on the 6th at Buffalo Bar with that man King Of Cats and the mighty Gindrinker, and on 31st at the Victoria, Dalston for Art Is Hard's third birthday, also shared with Best Friends, The Black Tambourines, Gorgeous Bully, Playlounge, Nai Harvest, Birdskulls and RadStewart (yes, Joanna Gruesome and Radstewart are playing the same bill, leave it now). After that, they will progress to overcome their foes and conquer the world. Possibly.
And when she's not doing that singer Alanna McArdle has her own outlet Ides, a home for her minimalist guitar and haunted/bruised vocal telling of despair and feeling lost inside herself. Prisms is coming out as part of Art Is Hard's Postcard Club, which as the name suggests is a limited edition run of specially designed postcodes with unique download code.
Ides plays Brighton Hope on 9th August, Bournemouth 60 Million Postcards on 10th and a house show in Bristol on the 12th, all with King Of Cats. Both entities play together in London twice in the month, on the 6th at Buffalo Bar with that man King Of Cats and the mighty Gindrinker, and on 31st at the Victoria, Dalston for Art Is Hard's third birthday, also shared with Best Friends, The Black Tambourines, Gorgeous Bully, Playlounge, Nai Harvest, Birdskulls and RadStewart (yes, Joanna Gruesome and Radstewart are playing the same bill, leave it now). After that, they will progress to overcome their foes and conquer the world. Possibly.
Thursday, June 20, 2013
Adam Stafford - Please
Texturally rugged with a soft shelled beating heart front and centre, Imaginary Walls Collapse (out 15th July) is Glasgow's Stafford's first release for Song, By Toad. Something of Low about this in the precisely chiming and reverberating (but not reverbed) guitar and emotionally bare falsetto, but with hints of classic soul production in its rhythmic pulse and the sort of direct appeal chorus that reaches down and tingles the spine.
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Cloud - Mother Sea
The first signing to Audio Antihero in ages, Cloud is a LA-via-NY single man (we think) who going on the first taste of debut album Comfort Songs makes the kind of home-reared unsteadily towering solo constructions and swirling sonics we tend to go for, layering an increasingly dense fog of heatwarped psychedelia - could the pulsing rhythm make the title a reference to Can's Mother Sky at all? Just asking - onto unsteady melodies and a decent amount of self-doubt before heading deep into a freak-folk coda. There might just be something very interesting and wide-ranging going on here. Download it for free below, why not.
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
Summer Of Blood - Let's Get Lost
Reenie and Dafydd's first properly downloadable (for free) offering throbs with mystique like OMD lost in the haunted woods, swapping spooked chants amid downtuned single note synths and pulses that occasionally turn shortwave radio-like.
Thursday, June 06, 2013
A quick catchup
We've been posting a lot of recent new stuff over on our underfollowed* Tumblr. As you're too lazy to read that, here's some of our favourite recent offerings:
- Introducing Telegram: they've played three gigs, already done a Marc Riley session, have been taken under the wing of the Horrors/Toy/Charlie Boyer axis and sound pretty good for it
- Martha - Sycamore
- Pins - Stay True
- Stairs To Korea - The Afternoons
- The Wytches - Beehive Queen
- Trophy Wife - Glue
- Codex Leicester - The Open Arms Of Las Vegas
- Lanterns On The Lake - Another Tale From Another English Town
- Kiran Leonard - Dear Lincoln
- Benin City - Faithless
- Hooded Fang - Ode To Subterrania
* Not quite as underfollowed, however, as our other two ongoing projects, The Shine Years recapping the Britpop compilations track for track and Bottom Of The Top 40, a kind of anti-Popular.
- Introducing Telegram: they've played three gigs, already done a Marc Riley session, have been taken under the wing of the Horrors/Toy/Charlie Boyer axis and sound pretty good for it
- Martha - Sycamore
- Pins - Stay True
- Stairs To Korea - The Afternoons
- The Wytches - Beehive Queen
- Trophy Wife - Glue
- Codex Leicester - The Open Arms Of Las Vegas
- Lanterns On The Lake - Another Tale From Another English Town
- Kiran Leonard - Dear Lincoln
- Benin City - Faithless
- Hooded Fang - Ode To Subterrania
* Not quite as underfollowed, however, as our other two ongoing projects, The Shine Years recapping the Britpop compilations track for track and Bottom Of The Top 40, a kind of anti-Popular.
Sunday, May 26, 2013
Ghost Outfit - Killuhs
"A British No Age" is far too reductive and pat a phrase but it's what initially comes to mind listening to the controlled noise and post-shoegaze fury of similarly two-piece Mancunians Ghost Outfit, who release debut album I Want You To Destroy Me on June 24th. Swathed in tension with distortion pedal abuse helping the monolithic guitar noise move like an iceberg, where even the breakdown sounds like a migraine, Jacq Hardman's vocals sound like the last appeal of a desperate man.
Friday, May 24, 2013
Nadine Shah - To Be A Young Man
You've got to have confidence in your abilities if you're calling your debut album Love Your Dum And Mad, but what we've heard of Shah so far suggests she has ability far outstripping doubts. The advance single from the album, out a fortnight in advance on 8th July, may sound like it takes her further down the PJ Harvey circa 1995 path but the pained redemption tale against the gothic melodrama is purely artist's own.
Sunday, May 19, 2013
Weekends away: spring bank holiday weekend
Weekends away: spring bank holiday weekend
The weekly-unless-there's-nothing-decent-happening clashguide to ensure you don't miss the good stuff at next weekend's worthwhile festivals:
Dot To Dot
Fred Perry sponsorship is all around. For some reason the usual Bank Holiday Monday Manchester date has been moved back to Friday which doesn't seem entirely in keeping with the alldayer flavour, but there you go. The headliners and big stage lineups are uniquely underwhelming this year and there aren't any of the usual surprising US visitors - trust us, we've seen Liars, Trail Of Dead and Beach House at D2D in the past - so these are a little more sparse than usual.
FRIDAY 24th - Manchester
15:45 Butcher The Bar (Deaf Institute)
16:05 Heart-Ships (Sound Control Loft)
17:30 Golden Fable (Attic)
18:00 Bipolar Sunshine (Gorilla)
20:30 Nadine Shah (SSR)
21:30 Blackeye (Attic)
21:45 Wolf Alice (Deaf Institute)
23:00 London Grammar (Gorilla)
23:30 Story Books (Joshua Brooks)
00:15 Bo Ningen (Zoo)
01:00 Pins (Sound Control Loft)
SATURDAY 25th - Bristol
13:30 The Lonely Tourist (Fleece)
17:30 Golden Fable (Louisiana)
18:15 London Grammar (Academy 1)
18:30 Pins (Thekla Top Deck)
19:30 Hawk Eyes (Thekla Top Deck)
20:00 Only Real (Thekla)
20:30 Bipolar Sunshine (Louisiana)
21:00 The Ramona Flowers (Exchange Basement)
21:30 Story Books (Birdcage)
22:15 Hysterical Injury (Stag & Hounds)
22:30 Wolf Alice (Louisiana)
23:00 Bo Ningen (Thekla)
SUNDAY 26th - Nottingham
14:00 Bitter Strings (Rock City Main)
14:30 Pins (Rescue Rooms)
16:00 Golden Fable (Red Room)
17:00 Hawk Eyes (Red Room)
18:00 We Three And The Death Rattle (Corner)
19:45 Gallery 47 (Rescue Rooms Bar)
20:00 Blackeye (Red Room)
20:30 Dancing Years (Stealth)
21:30 Bipolar Sunshine (Stealth)
23:15 Chapel Club (Rock City Basement)
23:30 Bo Ningen (Rescue Rooms)
Handmade Festival
Full disclosure, we're involved with the organisation of this festival, which really means sending out a lot of emails every couple of weeks and receiving two back, so you'll excuse the push, but if we weren't involved this new Leicester city festival using often unusual spaces - there's a pop-up cinema in a 15th century guildhall, for one thing - would be very much worth a look. Tickets only £25 for the three days too, an extra tenner if you want to see a Robin Ince-helmed afterparty on the Monday.
FRIDAY
Rolo Tomassi, Maybeshewill, Codex Leicester (People's Photographic Gallery)
Arcane Roots (Firebug)
SATURDAY
Johnny Foreigner, My First Tooth (Firebug)
Sam Duckworth, Grace Petrie (Cookie Jar)
We Were Promised Jetpacks (People's Photographic Gallery)
Her Name Is Calla, Peter Wyeth, Katie Malco (Bishop Street Methodist Church)
SUNDAY
Dutch Uncles, Tall Ships, Sky Larkin, Dark Dark Horse, Silent Devices (Firebug)
The Twilight Sad, We Three And The Death Rattle (Guildhall)
TE Morris (Leicester Castle)
Field Day
Ah, Field Day at Victoria Park. Intended as the hippest of village fetes, usually a throwback to one of those early 70s rock festivals where nobody could hear or eat anything other than mud, except without the natural ditches to relieve themselves into. Enter at your own risk.
12:55 Charlie Boyer & The Voyeurs (Laneway)
13:00 Gabriel Bruce (Eat Your Own Ears)
14:05 James Yorkston (Village Mentality)
14:30 Amateur Best (Red Bull Music Academy)
15:00 Dark Dark Dark (Shacklewell Arms)
16:10 Savages (Laneway)
16:40 Francois & The Atlas Mountains (Shacklewell Arms)
17:55 King Krule (Village Mentality)
18:15 Everything Everything (Eat Your Own Ears)
18:20 Connan Mockasin (Shacklewell Arms)
19:10 Wild Nothing (Shacklewell Arms)
19:30 Bat For Lashes (Eat Your Own Ears) OR Daughter (Laneway)
20:00 Toy (Shacklewell Arms)
20:20 Do Make Say Think (Village Mentality)
20:40 Four Tet (Eat Your Own Ears)
21:50 Animal Collective (Eat Your Own Ears)
Now We Are Weekender
We've been involved in promoting this too insomuch as we picked up about fifty abandoned flyers after they came to our alldayer in March. Based at The Public in West Bromwich and £23 for the two days there's actually two stages but nobody really seems to overlap so we can recommend a few names without fear of awkward clashes.
SATURDAY
15:40 MJ Hibbett and the Validators
17:00 August Actually
17:40 Eat Y'Self Pretty
18:20 Cosines
19:40 Victoria & Jacob
21:00 Ace Bushy Striptease
22:20 Allo Darlin'
23:00 Kid Canaveral
SUNDAY
14:00 MJ Hibbett & Steve present Total Hero Team
19:40 Shana Tova
22:20 Darren Hayman
23:00 Johnny Foreigner
Dot To Dot
Fred Perry sponsorship is all around. For some reason the usual Bank Holiday Monday Manchester date has been moved back to Friday which doesn't seem entirely in keeping with the alldayer flavour, but there you go. The headliners and big stage lineups are uniquely underwhelming this year and there aren't any of the usual surprising US visitors - trust us, we've seen Liars, Trail Of Dead and Beach House at D2D in the past - so these are a little more sparse than usual.
FRIDAY 24th - Manchester
15:45 Butcher The Bar (Deaf Institute)
16:05 Heart-Ships (Sound Control Loft)
17:30 Golden Fable (Attic)
18:00 Bipolar Sunshine (Gorilla)
20:30 Nadine Shah (SSR)
21:30 Blackeye (Attic)
21:45 Wolf Alice (Deaf Institute)
23:00 London Grammar (Gorilla)
23:30 Story Books (Joshua Brooks)
00:15 Bo Ningen (Zoo)
01:00 Pins (Sound Control Loft)
SATURDAY 25th - Bristol
13:30 The Lonely Tourist (Fleece)
17:30 Golden Fable (Louisiana)
18:15 London Grammar (Academy 1)
18:30 Pins (Thekla Top Deck)
19:30 Hawk Eyes (Thekla Top Deck)
20:00 Only Real (Thekla)
20:30 Bipolar Sunshine (Louisiana)
21:00 The Ramona Flowers (Exchange Basement)
21:30 Story Books (Birdcage)
22:15 Hysterical Injury (Stag & Hounds)
22:30 Wolf Alice (Louisiana)
23:00 Bo Ningen (Thekla)
SUNDAY 26th - Nottingham
14:00 Bitter Strings (Rock City Main)
14:30 Pins (Rescue Rooms)
16:00 Golden Fable (Red Room)
17:00 Hawk Eyes (Red Room)
18:00 We Three And The Death Rattle (Corner)
19:45 Gallery 47 (Rescue Rooms Bar)
20:00 Blackeye (Red Room)
20:30 Dancing Years (Stealth)
21:30 Bipolar Sunshine (Stealth)
23:15 Chapel Club (Rock City Basement)
23:30 Bo Ningen (Rescue Rooms)
Handmade Festival
Full disclosure, we're involved with the organisation of this festival, which really means sending out a lot of emails every couple of weeks and receiving two back, so you'll excuse the push, but if we weren't involved this new Leicester city festival using often unusual spaces - there's a pop-up cinema in a 15th century guildhall, for one thing - would be very much worth a look. Tickets only £25 for the three days too, an extra tenner if you want to see a Robin Ince-helmed afterparty on the Monday.
FRIDAY
Rolo Tomassi, Maybeshewill, Codex Leicester (People's Photographic Gallery)
Arcane Roots (Firebug)
SATURDAY
Johnny Foreigner, My First Tooth (Firebug)
Sam Duckworth, Grace Petrie (Cookie Jar)
We Were Promised Jetpacks (People's Photographic Gallery)
Her Name Is Calla, Peter Wyeth, Katie Malco (Bishop Street Methodist Church)
SUNDAY
Dutch Uncles, Tall Ships, Sky Larkin, Dark Dark Horse, Silent Devices (Firebug)
The Twilight Sad, We Three And The Death Rattle (Guildhall)
TE Morris (Leicester Castle)
Field Day
Ah, Field Day at Victoria Park. Intended as the hippest of village fetes, usually a throwback to one of those early 70s rock festivals where nobody could hear or eat anything other than mud, except without the natural ditches to relieve themselves into. Enter at your own risk.
12:55 Charlie Boyer & The Voyeurs (Laneway)
13:00 Gabriel Bruce (Eat Your Own Ears)
14:05 James Yorkston (Village Mentality)
14:30 Amateur Best (Red Bull Music Academy)
15:00 Dark Dark Dark (Shacklewell Arms)
16:10 Savages (Laneway)
16:40 Francois & The Atlas Mountains (Shacklewell Arms)
17:55 King Krule (Village Mentality)
18:15 Everything Everything (Eat Your Own Ears)
18:20 Connan Mockasin (Shacklewell Arms)
19:10 Wild Nothing (Shacklewell Arms)
19:30 Bat For Lashes (Eat Your Own Ears) OR Daughter (Laneway)
20:00 Toy (Shacklewell Arms)
20:20 Do Make Say Think (Village Mentality)
20:40 Four Tet (Eat Your Own Ears)
21:50 Animal Collective (Eat Your Own Ears)
Now We Are Weekender
We've been involved in promoting this too insomuch as we picked up about fifty abandoned flyers after they came to our alldayer in March. Based at The Public in West Bromwich and £23 for the two days there's actually two stages but nobody really seems to overlap so we can recommend a few names without fear of awkward clashes.
SATURDAY
15:40 MJ Hibbett and the Validators
17:00 August Actually
17:40 Eat Y'Self Pretty
18:20 Cosines
19:40 Victoria & Jacob
21:00 Ace Bushy Striptease
22:20 Allo Darlin'
23:00 Kid Canaveral
SUNDAY
14:00 MJ Hibbett & Steve present Total Hero Team
19:40 Shana Tova
22:20 Darren Hayman
23:00 Johnny Foreigner
Sunday, May 12, 2013
Weekends away: The Great Escape
Brighton's annual takeover by marauding hordes of attention grabbing big names, showcasing Norwegians playing four or five times, major label hopes, mathrock challengers and suchlike. Pretty much everything bar a few standalone gigs is sold out, but just in case you're there next weekend allow us to mark your cards. As usual some of the early selections are made on blurb alone because we aren't mad, and though we've limited it to one slot per artist some of them are playing several times over so watch out.
THURSDAY 16th
12.40 Made In Japan (The Haunt)
13.30 Oyama (Above Audio)
14.30 Honeyblood (Dome Studio)
15.30 Young*Husband (Prince Albert)
18.30 Whirr (Concorde 2)
19.15 Eaux (Digital)
19.30 Girls Names (Coalition)
19.45 Fist City (The Hope)
20.00 Of Rust & Bone (Metro Hub stage)
20.30 Cloud Boat (Brighthelm Centre)
21:00 Fear of Men (Latest Music Bar)
21.15 Pinkunoizu (Prince Albert)
21.45 Everything Everything (Dome Concert Hall)
22.00 Beach Fossils (Green Door Store)
22.15 Balthazar (Prince Albert)
22.30 Lord Huron (dome studio)
23.15 Melody's Echo Chamber (Corn Exchange)
23.30 Phosphorescent (dome studio)
00.00 On An On (Coalition)
00.30 Husky Rescue (Brighthelm Centre)
FRIDAY 17th
12.15 Lawrence Arabia (The Haunt)
12.45 Kid Karate (Audio)
13.45 AA Wallace (Blind Tiger)
14.00 Jacco Gardner (Komedia Studio Bar)
14:15 Katie Malco (Pavilion Tavern)
14.30 Amateur Best (Fitzherberts)
15.00 Skip&Die (Komedia Studio Bar)
15.30 Alarm Bells (dome studio)
16.00 Luke Sital-Singh (Fiddlers Elbow)
17:15 Bear Cavalry (Pavilion Tavern)
18.45 Shuyler Jansen (Unitarian Church)
19.15 Golden Fable (Sticky Mikes Frog Bar)
19.30 Marika Hackman (Unitarian Church)
19.45 Velociraptor (The Haunt)
20.00 Nadine Shah (St Bartholomew's Church)
20:15 My First Tooth (Pavilion Tavern)
20.30 Caitlin Park (Queens Hotel)
20.45 Marques Toliver (St Bartholomew's Church)
21.15 Spectres (Above Audio)
21.30 Charlie Boyer & The Voyeurs (dome studio)
21:45 Stagecoach (Pavilion Tavern)
22.00 Towns (Above Audio)
22.15 Drenge (The Hope)
23:15 Tellison (Pavilion Tavern)
22.30 Fear Of Men (The Basement)
23.30 Royal Canoe (Sticky Mikes Frog Bar)
23.45 The Adelines (Blind Tiger)
00:20 Fight Like Apes (Pavilion Tavern)
01:25 Johnny Foreigner (Pavilion Tavern)
03:15 Her Parents (Pavilion Tavern)
SATURDAY 18th
12.30 Sisters (The Hope)
13.15 Fenster (Komedia Studio Bar)
13.30 Mary Epworth (Komedia)
14.30 WALL (Komedia)
15.30 Za! (Prince Albert)
16:35 Son of Dave (St Ann’s Well Gardens)
16:45 Olympians (Pav Tav)
18:15 Hold Your Horse Is (Pav Tav)
18.30 Parlour (Audio)
19.00 Eliza and The Bear (St Mary's Church)
19.45 The Penelopes (Queens Hotel)
20.00 Cheatahs (Coalition)
20.30 The Physics House Band (Concorde 2)
20.45 Eagulls (Coalition)
21.15 Tall Ships (Concorde 2)
21.30 The Veils (St Mary's Church)
21:50 Grace Petrie (Mrs Fitzherberts)
22.00 Parquet Courts (The Haunt) OR Sweet Baboo (Green Door Store)
22:10 The Bobby McGees (Mrs Fitzherberts)
22.15 Big Deal (Blind Tiger)
23:15 We Are the Physics (Pav Tav)
23.30 Woods (dome studio)
THURSDAY 16th
12.40 Made In Japan (The Haunt)
13.30 Oyama (Above Audio)
14.30 Honeyblood (Dome Studio)
15.30 Young*Husband (Prince Albert)
18.30 Whirr (Concorde 2)
19.15 Eaux (Digital)
19.30 Girls Names (Coalition)
19.45 Fist City (The Hope)
20.00 Of Rust & Bone (Metro Hub stage)
20.30 Cloud Boat (Brighthelm Centre)
21:00 Fear of Men (Latest Music Bar)
21.15 Pinkunoizu (Prince Albert)
21.45 Everything Everything (Dome Concert Hall)
22.00 Beach Fossils (Green Door Store)
22.15 Balthazar (Prince Albert)
22.30 Lord Huron (dome studio)
23.15 Melody's Echo Chamber (Corn Exchange)
23.30 Phosphorescent (dome studio)
00.00 On An On (Coalition)
00.30 Husky Rescue (Brighthelm Centre)
FRIDAY 17th
12.15 Lawrence Arabia (The Haunt)
12.45 Kid Karate (Audio)
13.45 AA Wallace (Blind Tiger)
14.00 Jacco Gardner (Komedia Studio Bar)
14:15 Katie Malco (Pavilion Tavern)
14.30 Amateur Best (Fitzherberts)
15.00 Skip&Die (Komedia Studio Bar)
15.30 Alarm Bells (dome studio)
16.00 Luke Sital-Singh (Fiddlers Elbow)
17:15 Bear Cavalry (Pavilion Tavern)
18.45 Shuyler Jansen (Unitarian Church)
19.15 Golden Fable (Sticky Mikes Frog Bar)
19.30 Marika Hackman (Unitarian Church)
19.45 Velociraptor (The Haunt)
20.00 Nadine Shah (St Bartholomew's Church)
20:15 My First Tooth (Pavilion Tavern)
20.30 Caitlin Park (Queens Hotel)
20.45 Marques Toliver (St Bartholomew's Church)
21.15 Spectres (Above Audio)
21.30 Charlie Boyer & The Voyeurs (dome studio)
21:45 Stagecoach (Pavilion Tavern)
22.00 Towns (Above Audio)
22.15 Drenge (The Hope)
23:15 Tellison (Pavilion Tavern)
22.30 Fear Of Men (The Basement)
23.30 Royal Canoe (Sticky Mikes Frog Bar)
23.45 The Adelines (Blind Tiger)
00:20 Fight Like Apes (Pavilion Tavern)
01:25 Johnny Foreigner (Pavilion Tavern)
03:15 Her Parents (Pavilion Tavern)
SATURDAY 18th
12.30 Sisters (The Hope)
13.15 Fenster (Komedia Studio Bar)
13.30 Mary Epworth (Komedia)
14.30 WALL (Komedia)
15.30 Za! (Prince Albert)
16:35 Son of Dave (St Ann’s Well Gardens)
16:45 Olympians (Pav Tav)
18:15 Hold Your Horse Is (Pav Tav)
18.30 Parlour (Audio)
19.00 Eliza and The Bear (St Mary's Church)
19.45 The Penelopes (Queens Hotel)
20.00 Cheatahs (Coalition)
20.30 The Physics House Band (Concorde 2)
20.45 Eagulls (Coalition)
21.15 Tall Ships (Concorde 2)
21.30 The Veils (St Mary's Church)
21:50 Grace Petrie (Mrs Fitzherberts)
22.00 Parquet Courts (The Haunt) OR Sweet Baboo (Green Door Store)
22:10 The Bobby McGees (Mrs Fitzherberts)
22.15 Big Deal (Blind Tiger)
23:15 We Are the Physics (Pav Tav)
23.30 Woods (dome studio)
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