Brainlove Records – Fear Of A Wack Planet

October 22, 2009 Album, Reviews No Comments
Brainlove Records - Fear Of A Wack Planet

Brainlove Records - Fear Of A Wack Planet

Founded in 2003, London-based Brainlove Records prides itself on its stated aim of being an “umbrella organisation and community for the creators and listeners of genre-bending, left-of-centre music”. Fear Of A Wack Planet is a follow-up of sorts to their well-received 2008 compilation Two Thousand And Ace, and fortunately their ability with a pun is no indication of the quality of music on offer. Put simply, this is one of the most eclectic and consistently surprising label compilations you can imagine: Brainlove Records doesn’t hold a loyalty to any particular genre, with the 27-song set encompassing everything from chiptune to post-rock to twee-folk.

Opening with Mat Riviere’s ‘FYH’, a tune that resembles Why? with its gothic atmosphere and stark vocal delivery, it’s an attention-grabber from the start. Stairs To Korea‘s ‘Boy Bear It In Mind’ packs a wealth of joyous Belle & Sebastian-style hooks and neat, clever lyrics into its three minutes; Internet Forever’s ‘Break Bones’ is a fuzzy DIY twee-pop treat; while Penny Broadhurst & The Maffickers‘ ‘Comenzo’ is a C86 shamble that hinges on the catchy refrain “Our love started with a mixtape”. But while there’s plenty to appeal to fans of all things fey and jangly, such moments rub shoulders with some genuine curveballs, such as the beguiling 8-bit beats of Pagan Wanderer Lu‘s ‘Nintendo Folk’ or the child-let-loose-in-a-toy-store stylings of Kid Carpet (‘Go Get Yourself a Hammer’). … Continue Reading

Stagecoach – We Got Tazers EP

October 1, 2009 Reviews, Single 1 Comment
Stagecoach - We Got Tazers EP

Stagecoach - We Got Tazers EP

In an interview with The 405 recently,  Stagecoach claimed that “We wanted to make Country music but then things evolved around the time we rediscovered our tape collections from 1993. The songs are about the usual stuff, hot dogs, girls, cars.” Bearing that in mind, the music on their new EP We Got Tazers doesn’t hold much surprises: this is breezy, unpretentious power-pop, delivered with no little enthusiasm or panache.

The title track is a jaunty affair distinguished by chiming guitars and a nagging chorus hook (“Who needs guns when/We got tazers/Knocking down the doors and smashing the windows of our neighbours”), while ‘Hotdoggin’ is a rousing alt-country workout with echoes of Primal Scream’s Give Out But Don’t Give Up/’Country Girl’ phases or Wilco’s breezier, less abrasive moments. Both are enjoyable and charming in their own way, but there’s a lack of invention or individualism that’s even more apparent on the unremarkable brace of ‘Break’ and ‘Ice Age’.  ‘Good Luck With Your 45′, meanwhile, goes for the anthemic jugular with chunky power-chords and a grandstanding chorus tailored for mass festival singalongs. It’s more than a little cheesy, and may cause flashbacks for anyone who lived through the Britpop wars. … Continue Reading

CODES – Trees Dream In Algebra

September 24, 2009 Album, Reviews 4 Comments
CODES - Trees Dream In Algebra

CODES - Trees Dream In Algebra

Trees Dream In Algebra is the debut album from Dublin-based four-piece CODES, but listening to it, you’d be forgiven for thinking otherwise. From the tight musicianship and accomplished songwriting to the polished production and right down to the painstaking artwork, it’s difficult to imagine a band arriving more fully-realised. Not that they’ve materialised out of the blue: there’s been a buzz building around this act on the Irish music scene for quite a while – it helps that their ambitious, grandiose but unmistakeably pop sound stands in stark contast to the variations on indie-rawk/garage trash that domestic bands tend to favour – but even their most vocal supporters will probably be surprised at the quality of this record.

It’s an album in the truest sense; sequenced for maximum effect, peaking and swelling dramatically, and featuring recurring themes of snow and winter. Hell, such is the courage of its convictions that they’ve even done a Foals on it and left out one of their most popular songs, the Irish-charting single ‘Edith’. Opening track ‘Malfunctions’ sets the scene expertly with pulse-quickening, hyperactive electronics before segueing into ‘This Is Goodbye’, a track that showcases much of what is great about the band: an infectious cental hook, vocals that swoop and soar in all the right places and a chorus that sounds more gloriously show-stopping every time you hear it. It makes for a superb calling card, but there’s barely time to breathe before an insistent drumbeat and swirling, reverbed guitars announce ‘Guided By Ghosts’, where delightful harmonies jostle for attention with an instrumental backdrop that never stays in one place for too long. … Continue Reading

The Cribs – Ignore The Ignorant

September 23, 2009 Album, Reviews 2 Comments
The Cribs - Ignore The Ignorant

The Cribs - Ignore The Ignorant

The Cribs‘ 2007 album Men’s Needs, Women’s Needs, Whatever was one of the best straight-up guitar records released that year: it saw the hitherto defiantly lo-fi Wakefield trio smoothing out their sound (with the help of producer Alex Kapranos) without losing any of their vital edge. Combined with their grass-roots attitude to live gigs and their entertaining media soundbites (around the time of the Live 8 concerts, frontman Ryan Jarman announced that ”the mainstream attitude of most indie bands” was a bigger threat to the planet than global warming), it set The Cribs up as the anti-Razorlight or the anti-Killers; a beacon of indie integrity in the face of arena-rock pandering; the sort of guitar band you’d be tippexing onto your pencil case if you were still in school.

And then, things took a surprising turn. Fresh from a short dalliance with Modest Mouse, ex-Smiths guitarist and living legend Johnny Marr heard the furious ‘Hey Scenesters!’ on his radio, and after a meeting with bassist/singer Gary Jarman, asked to join the band for some dates. The initial novelty of seeing this grizzled veteran jamming with three irreverent upstarts was nothing compared to the news that he was to become a full-time member of the band, initiated into the gang as it were. … Continue Reading

Sunset Rubdown, Dublin Crawdaddy

September 14, 2009 Gig, Reviews No Comments
Sunset Rubdown

Sunset Rubdown

September 12th 2009

”Good evening, we’re Sunset Rubdown. There’s no other bands tonight, so we’re going to do a long set.” Not long enough, as it turns out – such is the quality of the Montreal five-piece’s set. Sometime ‘side-project’ of Wolf Parade’s Spencer Krug, there’s every indication that the group are on the verge of a breakthrough that would see them dwarf their parent band; in many critics’ eyes, they already have, with this year’s superb Dragonslayer a worthy follow-up to 2007′s acclaimed, ambitious Random Spirit Lover.

… Continue Reading

Sonic Youth – The Eternal

May 31, 2009 Album, Reviews No Comments
Sonic Youth

Sonic Youth

When it was announced that Sonic Youth, having honoured their contract with Geffen Records, had signed with much-admired independent label Matador, many of us came to the same conclusion: after the concise, streamlined accessibility of 2006’s Rather Ripped, it was time for the Youth to renew their love affair with the underground and pursue the avant-garde aesthetic that first inspired them.

… Continue Reading

Our Brother The Native – Sacred Psalms

May 28, 2009 Album, Reviews No Comments
Our Brother The Native

Our Brother The Native

Materialism? Secularism? Western consumerist culture? So overrated.

… Continue Reading

Deerhunter, Dublin Andrew’s Lane Theatre

May 26, 2009 Gig, Reviews No Comments
Deerhunter

Deerhunter

May 22nd, 2009

… Continue Reading

Speck Mountain – Some Sweet Relief

May 13, 2009 Album, Reviews No Comments
Speck Mountain

Speck Mountain

Chicago-based trio Speck Mountain first came to attention with their 2007 debut Summer Above, and Some Sweet Relief mostly sticks to the same formula they first made their name with. All measured tempos, tasteful minimalism, slow-burning arrangements and narcotic, reverbed vocals, it’s a sound that recalls Fleetwood Mac’s ‘Albatross’ or Mazzy Star; an intriguing mixture of evocative Americana and airy dream-pop.

… Continue Reading

The Maccabees – Wall Of Arms

The Maccabees - Wall Of Arms

The Maccabees - Wall Of Arms

The Maccabees’ debut album Colour It In, released in 2007, featured some sterling tunes but was perhaps a bit too derivative for its own good: drawing on influences like XTC and Gang of Four, the Brighton-based  five-piece were late contributors to the then-fading post-punk revival that had been instigated by bands like Franz Ferdinand, The Futureheads, Dogs Die In Hot Cars and Bloc Party. Still, there was plenty of potential evident in their jerky, energetic compositions and singer Orlando Weeks’ trembling  vocals had a distinctive charm of their own.

The release of ‘No Kind Words’ a few weeks back indicated a change of direction: the vocals sounded meaner, the guitars more menacing, the atmosphere more charged and tense, while the similarly dark lyrics alluded to infidelity (“Dear friend of mine is testing his body/Tempting disaster/Testing water with another’s daughter”). It seemed that slightly twee ditties about toothpaste kisses were firmly a thing of the past.

Wall Of Arms’ opening track, ‘Love You Better’ doesn’t dispel the notion, but it’s not quite in the same vein as ‘No Kind Words’ (included here) either: it’s an earnest, impassioned, ‘big’ sounding composition; steadily and deliberately paced, its echoing guitars and reverbed vocals build a sense of anticipation as the song swells into a brass-propelled crescendo. It also proves to be more representative of the album as a whole. On paper, that sounds like the kind of thing that’s going to have many people running back to their Animal Collective records: the world certainly doesn’t lack for fervent, well-meaning guitar bands at this point in time, and being subjected to ‘soul-stirring’ music from the likes of Editors, Snow Patrol or Razorlight over the last few years is enough to make Metal Machine Music sound like a merciful alternative. Nevertheless, the Maccabees bring a pleasing lightness of touch to the formula, avoiding the overblown pompousness that sunk An End Has a Start or the insufferable mawkishness that did for Snow Patrol’s last two records.

Many reviewers have already made copious references to Arcade Fire, and it’s not hard to see why: Weeks’ tremulous, impassioned warbling is highly reminiscent of Win Butler’s style, and the wordless choral vocals on songs like ‘Dinosaurs’ and the title track have the stamp of Funeral all over them. It’s probably no coincidence that the album is produced by Markus Dravs, who also worked on Neon Bible: the intro to ‘Young Lions’, indeed, is a dead ringer for that album’s title track.

Musically, however, it’s less complex and ambitious than all the Arcade Fire comparisons might suggest. ‘One Hand Holding’ is driven along by a limber bassline and a guitar riff almost as catchy as the “Why would you kill it before it dies?” chorus, the exuberant ‘Can You Give It’ will probably prove a live favourite with its bouncy rhythm and handclap-friendly outro, while ‘Wall of Arms’ has enough off-kilter charm about it to overcome its painfully obvious influences.

Overall, it’s enjoyable stuff, if hardly in danger of pushing any envelopes. It might be a stretch to call it essential, but we’d be quite happy to hear this blaring out of car windows come the hot summer days.

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