Wireless Festival (Saturday), London Hyde Park

July 7, 2010 Gig, Reviews No Comments
James Murphy, LCD Soundsystem

James Murphy, LCD Soundsystem

July 3, 2010

Levels of apprehension aside, for being in a space with so very many other people, the line-up for today is patchy, sure, but better, home to some of the mega A-list; a seemingly once-in-a-lifetime appearance from Missy Elliott is placed midway down the bill in an absolutely puzzling move, with even ultra-celeb Snoop Dogg lower down than LCD Soundsystem. While ‘big’, two-nights-at-Brixton-Academy big doesn’t seem to run straight with the night before’s headliner P!nk, and the night after’s Jay-Z - let alone in terms of genre/audience-consistency running throughout each day’s programme. But this much is obvious, and it makes the events enfolding after the backdrop was laid down all too predictable. … Continue Reading

Janelle Monae, Hoxton Bar & Kitchen

July 4, 2010 Gig, Reviews No Comments
Janelle Monae - Hoxton Bar & Kitchen

Janelle Monae - Hoxton Bar & Kitchen

July 1, 2010

Beware: Janelle Monáe has her sights set far broader than the confines of Hoxton Bar & Kitchen.

Entering the stage to the left of two be-cloaked dancers wearing long, pointy-nosed masks recalling both Eyes Wide Shut and something more sinister, more shadowy and more Illuminati, anticipation is high and the temperature is higher on this hot summer night. And this era-less imagery in combination with Monáe’s taut, asexual monochrome dress is just one vehicle for expressing not only the characterisation at the heart of The ArchAndroid, but also her desire to be the next biggest and most undivisive star. … Continue Reading

tUnE-yArDs, London Scala

June 27, 2010 Gig, Reviews 1 Comment
tUnE-yArDs

tUnE-yArDs

June 23, 2010

Make no mistake: tUnE-yArDs‘ show displays the sort of oomph, pizazz and prowess to induce full-on obsession. And this higher-than-ceiling level of intense fangirling is not just emitting from me, on a whizzaround analysis of whoop-levels and dropped jaws. This hyperbole isn’t unexpected either, with Merrill Garbus performing like she’s got just five seconds to impress. From the moment she launches, she’s connecting and giving it everything with her phenomenal vocal range, blinding arrangements and an immense helping of charm presented near-aghast, with bulging eyes and direct calls to the crowd to interact. They’d do anything for her by the time the first song’s over…

From the beginning of the set to the grand finale of ‘Sunlight’, there’s never the sense of a momentum waiting to kick in, or the foreboding feeling that the next gear’s about to be reached; the entire show runs at optimum power. There is, however, a lurching feeling for each break and Mariah-high squee – just like Garbus‘ phenomenal show at Cargo earlier in the year, these frequent ‘moments’ are received with whoops, hip-shakes and wordless glances between audience members.

There’s the sense that we’re watching tUnE-yArDs as a ‘we’ rather a solitary ‘I’, in the presence of a performer with a blindingly unusual talent. The concept of layering one voice, tapping out African-influenced patterns on a single drum and picking out histrionics on the ukulele appears divisive at first, but Garbus breaks it down to make her mix look the norm. And the self-effacing yet super-confident nature of Garbus‘ show takes a hammer to the canon by showcasing the personality and drive at the heart of her vision.

There’s an incredible contrast between the complexity of this set’s genre-hopscotch, and the fresh and simple way it’s presented. Each slice of vocal is precisely slipped atop the previous, forming a tUnE-yArDs choir, and just how raw and exposed the processes are on stage  automatically breaks down the obscurity. The construction of songs from BiRd-BrAiNs and Garbus‘ frankly astonishing new material (‘Gangsta’ and ‘Business’ the highlights) is clean and simple, with her dense vocals propelling the songs to impossible levels of exciting. ‘Hatari‘ is played out with deliberately ugly facial expressions, mirroring the often uncomfortable, personal lyrics in tUnE-yArDs‘ music, and each move feels perfectly placed.

Another striking observation is the guises Merrill Garbus conquers. She plays the sultry soul singer on ‘Real Live Flesh’, the hip-hop guest vocalist on ‘Gangsta’, the torch singer on ‘Fiya‘, the Alp-dwelling yodeler on ‘Hatari‘, even slipping into a punk frontwoman persona on ‘Do You Wanna Live?’. It’s more than just vocal stylism, adding a degree of acting and conversely childlike role-play, pinpointed by repeated sounds and call-and-response vocals.

The fun is replicated by the band she’s got with her tonight (as a one-off), comprising two almost-choreographed drummers, a guitarist and her regular touring bassist – they come in for occasional songs to add power and provide a human spotlight for tUnE-yArdS. Even as a heftier line-up, the additional members thankfully never overpower the main act, but they certainly do test the limits of the venue’s sound technicians.

Sitting somewhere over tUnE-yArDs‘ live show is an intense sense of relief, one where I realise I’ve found my new favourite. Each of her enormous strengths are so concentrated and visible, so when the songs are delivered, it’s a touching experience to gaze around the room at an audience wrapped up in the warm blanket of Merrill Garbus‘ vision. The excitement never dips, making the second album my most anticipated release in the limitless future. And watching this crowd move between rapture, open-mouthed wonderment and sheer, unfettered delight at not just the familiar songs but the new, suggests I’m far from alone in that thought.

The Drums/Summer Camp, London Relentless Garage

June 8, 2010 Gig, Reviews 1 Comment
The Drums

The Drums

June 7, 2010

There’s a marked contrast between the simplicity of pop put out there by  Summer Camp and The Drums. The Drums’ music – save being heard in isolation, for ‘I Feel Stupid’ is a great big chunk of fun-pop – is ungraciously distilled if you’re vaguely familiar with the 1960s, Sarah Records, C86, Labrador Records, Joy Division, New Order, The Cure, Beach Boys or The Smiths. Their main trick is in producing a stream of concussed-simple lyrics encouraging dumb dancing as reflex. Summer Camp, on the other hand, offer pure pop key changes, beautiful nostalgia, two entirely distinctive vocals and intricately put-together songs so adorable they feel like they’re soundtracked the ’80s I imagine my older (, dafter) incarnation to have lived. … Continue Reading

Our Lost Infantry – The Arsonist/Scissorfight

June 7, 2010 Reviews, Single No Comments
Our Lost Infantry - The Arsonist/Scissorfight

Our Lost Infantry - The Arsonist/Scissorfight

A bias is one thing, and a love is another; I chose the brilliant Our Lost Infantry to open our show in January at The Lexington in London, based – primarily – on a few scratchy recordings.

It turns out that they put on an incredible show, piling in their energies and excitement into a blinding set. And then it turned out that WET Records – the label of John Earls, former main man at Teletext’s Planet Sound, where I used to write once upon a time – had decided to put out OLI’s double A-side. … Continue Reading

Pavement ATP, Minehead Butlins: in words

May 27, 2010 Gig, Reviews 2 Comments
Wax Fang at Pavement ATP - photo by Laura Scott

Wax Fang at Pavement ATP - photo by Laura Scott

May 14-16, 2010

Why ATP is awesome

So to All Tomorrow’s Parties, the discernibly indie cousin of Booze Britain. Welcome. A welcome to endless silliness, chalet parties into the dawn and fairground rides with strangers. A festival with a bonus prize of beds, showers, and power naps (recalled in hindsight) on the barriers of ear-piercingly loud Times New Viking sets. Of lots and lots of fun, and week-long hangovers and eyesight-deterioration after it’s all over. Of really long reviews… … Continue Reading

Everything Everything, London Koko

May 13, 2010 Gig, Reviews No Comments
Everything Everything - image by Jonathan Fisher

Everything Everything - photo by Jonathan Fisher

May 10, 2010

It’s with some intrepidation that I head through Koko’s doors, for I’ve not only fallen harder still for Everything Everything, but I’m tinged with doubt and fear following their disappointing turn back in November at the ICA. Thankfully, I’ve not added a hyperlink to my own review of that very show because on this showing tonight, the words just make the both of us look weak. We need not make reference to the near-immediate past.

The four-piece’s awkward beats and crazily intricate arrangements are perfectly pitched behind lead singer Jonathan Everything’s dizzying falsetto tonight, Koko surprisingly rising to the clarity test. That they make the whole mix sound this simultaneously dippy as crystal-clear is insane, as the unpredictability of ‘Suffragette Suffragette’ bears not only surprise after surprise, but a race through a mind at breakneck speed.  … Continue Reading

Our Lost Infantry announce tour

May 10, 2010 News No Comments
Our Lost Infantry tour poster

Our Lost Infantry tour poster

MG faves Our Lost Infantry have announced details of an upcoming tour. The tour celebrates the release of their double a-side ‘The Arsonist/Scissorfight’, on WET Records (WET002), which is out on June 7. Pre-orders are available now from WET Records and Rough Trade.

They’re hitting the roads in between these lovely places, their diaries would suggest:

25 May – Cellar Bar at South Hill Park, Bracknell.

27 May – Native Tongue, Epsom.

28 May – Chichester Inn, Chichester. £3.
With Visual Assembly.

30 May – Hobgoblin, Staines. £3.
With Cats and Cats and Cats and The Siegfried Sassoon.

1 June – Wilmington Arms, London. £7.
With The Neat and The Incredible Flight Of Birdman (http://www.wegottickets.com/event/77678)

2 June – Mother’s Ruin, Bristol.
With Iveree.

3 June – Backroom at the Marquee, Norwich.
With Olympians.

5 June – West End Centre, Aldershot. £6.
With Spring Offensive and Quays (https://kiosk.iristickets.co.uk/k?WestEnd&OLI )

Pocketbooks, Cola Jet Set, Foxes! and The Cavalcade play London’s Pic ‘n’ Mixx

May 8, 2010 News No Comments
Pic 'n' Mixx - May 29 at the Buffalo Bar

Pic 'n' Mixx - May 29 at the Buffalo Bar

In a two-part news special coming from hubs directly related to moi, I am pleased to confirm – and remind you? – that indiepop and mix CD spectacular Pic ‘n’ Mixx is returning to London’s Buffalo Bar on May 29 with a stonking line-up of Pocketbooks, Cola Jet Set, Foxes! and The Cavalcade.

Here is where you subscribe (buy tickets), for a grand total of just £6: http://www.wegottickets.com/event/75482 … Continue Reading

Offshoot One Bird Records adds Treasure to London MillionYoung date

May 8, 2010 News No Comments
Treasure, a.k.a. Hari Ashurst

Treasure, a.k.a. Hari Ashurst

Following the exciting announcement a while back that One Bird Records, an offshoot of MINE (yes, all mine – hello), had announced its first gig, it is now time to reveal a change to the bill.

Before you read on – and you trust me by now, right? – please book yourself a ticket: http://www.wegottickets.com/event/77883 – it’s for July 7 at London’s favourite pub, The Stag’s Head. It’s even got a house cat!

It’s already Pitchfork-adored and glo-fi thing of beaut’ MillionYoung‘s first ever London show, and it’s now Stereogum-treasured Treasure’s second official London show to boot, too. Fresh. … Continue Reading

A word from the sponsors… kind of

Follow us on Twitter…

Become a fan on Facebook…

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

Proud members of…

Handpicked Media

Cookie Disclaimer

We take advertising which may well contain cookies (and not the edible kind). Please read our Cookie Dislcaimer.

A word from our sponsors

Join the conversation...

  • Jyde: Cheers Howard, Swiss-German not being a language I have any...
  • Michael Sumsion: Enticing showcase for this year's Field Day...
  • Tom Fake: Hero! Cheers Kenny...
  • Kenny McMurtrie: Sorted :)...
  • Tom Fake: I can't believe I made this error, of course The Daily Mail ...
  • kalieriemer: Very excited about this release. Heard his unreleased "Speci...
  • Rachel: What a legend! I just watched this overview of his whole new...
  • Matt Jones: Not enough, my friend, not enough....
  • Tom Fake: Oh Matt, what have you exposed me to?!...
  • Matt Jones: That IS Sacrilege! CONSPIRACY MUCH? http://youtubedoubler.c...

We are listening

What we're listening to as the fancy takes us ...