Singles of the week!

July 22, 2010 Reviews, Single 15 Comments
Dirty Projectors - Stillness Is The Move

Dirty Projectors - Stillness Is The Move

Dirty Projectors, “Stillness Is the Move”

It’s a sign of the times (mid-July, I mean, not 2010) that the hippest names around are on their third single of the year, making it fairly redundant to review them. Kode 9… These New Puritans… and so on. Dirty Projectors combine melismatic warbling, sparse but tonally rich instrumentation, gibberish lyrics that make the criticism levelled at Vampire Weekend seem rabid (Dave Longstreth’s words may sound like an Ivy Leaguer’s marginalia, but it’s still just marginalia). All things forgiven, this was the best R&B single of 2009, and it’s good enough to be the best of 2010. … Continue Reading

These Are Powers – Candyman

March 5, 2010 Album, Reviews 3 Comments
These Are Powers - Candyman

These Are Powers - Candyman

Having been the bearer of ill tidings – that LiarsSisterworld isn’t the spectacular return to form we’ve long hoped for – it’s gratifying to know that there is a sisterworld out there, in which the long-departed rhythm section continue to excite, titillate and horrify. These Are Powers may not fill the Liars-shaped hole, exactly, but they aim to fill other ones you didn’t know you had. (Apologies for any lewdness… the press release has just informed me that the artwork is based on a fetishistic practice known as “sploshing”.) … Continue Reading

Liars – Sisterworld

February 17, 2010 Album, Reviews No Comments
Liars - Sisterworld

Liars - Sisterworld

Best Liars moments: crawling down the cavern of bass that is ‘This Dust Makes Mud’ (the 30 minute closer to Liars’ debut), while shrooming. Being front-row on the “They were wrong…” tour, Angus yelling lyrics at everyone from inside a hood, clasping the microphone in monster gloves, and when he gets to me, I yell the next line back – he looks surprised (the album’s not yet out), but he’s approving. Getting free tickets (from Rough Trade) to the UK debut of Drum’s not Dead, on my birthday, paired with a screening of a 9/11 conspiracy theory movie; meeting Aaron and Julian halfway through and babbling at them until they give me badges. … Continue Reading

Lost albums of the 2000s: Slint, Early Day Miners, Shearwater, cLOUDDEAD and more

December 11, 2009 Columns 1 Comment
Jandek - Manhattan Tuesday: Afternoon of Insensitivity

Jandek - Manhattan Tuesday: Afternoon of Insensitivity

As the sharks circle, it becomes apparent we’re going to need a bigger caveat for what constitutes a Great Lost Album… The 2000s was the decade when every serious music fan went online, and the idea of “Lost Music” changed radically – there’s always a troll out there ready to denounce you as a shameless bandwagon-jumper for buying Jandek CDs from Amazon (“…compact discs! I bought the first LP when Sterling was recording as The Units, back in 1978!”). Speaking of Jandek (famously touted by ubergeek Kurt Cobain, along with The Raincoats and Daniel Johnston), it’s likely he came out of hiding and played his first live set of groaning, crashing freeform noise rock, precisely because of his Internet fanbase. So, maybe Glasgow Sunday (2004) is the first great “found album”? His metaphysical quest narrative, Manhattan Tuesday: Afternoon of Insensitivity (2007), replete with classical piano and minimal drones is also kinda stunning, establishing him as the one of the greatest improvisers around. … Continue Reading

The Alexandria Quartet – The Alexandria Quartet

July 22, 2009 Album, Reviews No Comments
The Alexandria Quartet

The Alexandria Quartet

Intriguingly-named, after the masterpiece by Britain’s-answer-to-Proust (that’s Lawrence Durrell, BTW), Norway’s Alexandria Quartet may not be as stately, literary, or narrative-focused as you’d hope, but with their squalling guitars and mellifluous strings behind hammered piano-keys, they leave similar fare by British acts in the dust.

… Continue Reading

Patrick Wolf – The Bachelor

May 17, 2009 Album, Reviews No Comments
Patrick Wolf - The Bachelor

Patrick Wolf - The Bachelor

Did anyone else widen their eyes in glee when Patrick Wolf said he’d been miserable after the experience of touring The Magic Position (2006)? Yes, he’s got his pain back… so much so that he’s virtually re-made Wind in the Wires (2004) track for track.

… Continue Reading

1(b): Meaningless as aesthetic judgment

April 22, 2009 Columns No Comments

The debate about ‘the meaningless and the meaningful’ has a political and an economic slant. Consider hiphop: the great (racist) accusation is invariably that it ‘just isn’t music’.

James Brown

James Brown

You don’t often hear anyone calling hiphop ‘meaningless’, which is a neat rhetorical trick – steering the debate away from the pivotal function: to demonstrate ‘lyrical skills’ even in the absence of a band, musicianship, or originality. Hiphop is profoundly democratic in its most basic (and affordable) formula: not even two turntables and a microphone, but one. Effectively, Hiphop is supremely meaningful in its central gesture: to assert the validity and audibility of its underprivileged, under-represented voices, which is why the main line of attack for critics must be on the musical front, where old soul records are recycled. (Arguably, there are complex semiotics here, too: using the records themselves suggests a knowledge of cultural history, unlike white musicians passing off black music as their own.)

Public Enemy

Public Enemy

Music aside, to be meaningful is threatening: Public Enemy‘s snapshots of black history made them targets for FBI phonetaps, although NWA‘s exhortations to comparatively random violence (albeit in response to police brutality) made them inadvertent agents of normativity. Admittedly, Hiphop shades into meaningless (or inaudibility) when it adds to the chorus of black and white voices normalising consumer-capitalism. In the 1960s, black-owned record labels were at the vanguard of black businesses (see Peter Doggett, There’s a Riot Going On), but the current commodity fetishism of mainstream hiphop is a massive debasement of the (already problematic) ‘Big Payback’ demanded by James Brown, referencing Martin Luther King. Is it subversive to make ‘art’ that’s so openly about making money? Or is it defeatist?

WEB DuBois

WEB DuBois

Still, there’s an underlying urge toward significance (or ‘being taken seriously as public speakers rather than entertainers’) that can be traced back to figures like Booker T. Washington, WEB DuBois, and MLK. White mainstream pop music has no qualms about meaninglessness in lyrics… although try telling that (as an adult or parent) to a teen or pre-teen who then complains “you just don’t understand”. I’d argue that the inanities of manufactured pop music are strangely comforting to parents who actually shell out for the stuff – contra David Cameron and others, there aren’t really all that many exhortations to flaunt your teen sexuality, spend lots of money, let alone challenge the values of your parents: just irritate them, which you’re bound to do anyway. (The day after writing that, I dug up a quote from Mick Jagger – in Doggett, 2008 – claiming that rock’n'roll was never about protest, just winding up your parents, and even that’s pointless when they listen to the same music as you; it’s possible, of course, that he wasn’t being cynical, but despairing of the failure of the counter-culture.) … Continue Reading

1(a): The meaningful and the meaningless

April 14, 2009 Columns 2 Comments

For about as long as I’ve been writing about music, I’ve argued that there are so many literate, intelligent, profound lyricists out there – should you care to look – that no-one who truly loves music need ever waste their time listening to the trite, empty sentiments of lazy lyricists who happen to knock out good tunes, or be paired with a decent guitarist, say. … Continue Reading

Search the site

Custom Search

You might be interested in…

Proud members of…

Handpicked Media

Follow us on Twitter…

Become a fan on Facebook…

A word from our sponsors

NEWSLETTER

We won't spam you, we'll send you a cheerful little newsletter every month with competitions, choice cuts and maybe the odd bit of gossip.

A word from the sponsors… kind of

Join the conversation...

  • Tomolongo: Great gig RUINED by terrible sound. The first song sounded l...
  • Yetunde: I LOVED this show, this review is a really good description....
  • Nicksaloman: cheers Kenny, Nick ...
  • Joe: Tesfaye had a shit time at one party and now writes every so...
  • Marbled: Looks like an album I need to check out soon as.  Well writ...
  • orange marking paint: This is informative post.  Serious are seeking volunteers to...
  • Kate Mayor: I need to buy a copy of this CD, please can you help me with...
  • : Approval...
  • Purplestar: Shady shady shame shame what earbleeding drival...
  • : Approval...

You might like these…

Promotional article: The Stones as you’ve never seen them before

From the beaches of Newport in Australia, there’s a new type of crooning cool that’s bound to grace the airwaves this season. Read more