Archive for the ‘Music Reviews’ Category

August 21, 2010 View Comments

Wrong Tom – Duppy Writer

By Ash in Music Reviews

What do Katie Price, Hillary Clinton, and John F. Kennedy have in common? Well, they’ve all had books written by people other than themselves. Ghostwriting’s been going on for centuries. Even a musical legend like Mozart ghostwrote music for his rich patrons. That’s not to compare Wrongtom to Mozart, of course.

After reworking parts of Roots Manuva’s Slime and Reason some two years ago, Wrongtom has been brought in by Big Dada to expand on that disc and dip into Rodney Smith’s full discography. The album’s content is reflected by its wonderful artwork which is handcrafted by Tony McDermott: the designer behind many of the illustrations on London-based reggae label, Greensleeves.

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August 9, 2010 View Comments

Big Chill Twitter

By Ash in Music Reviews

Those of you hip enough to Twitter and foolish enough to follow me will already know I live tweeted The Big Chill Festival. However, you may have missed a random thought that makes me look stupider than this picture or just not read any of them at all.

So, you can now download all those 140 character thoughts in an easy to read document by clicking the link below.

Big Chill Twitter

Now, I’m off for a shower.

August 1, 2010 View Comments

Arandel – In D

By Ash in Music Reviews

Terry Riley’s In C (1964) is a curious piece of experimental noise consisting of 53 musical phrases that exist for no specific length of time as defined by its composer. It’s a pretty remarkable piece of noise that brings immediately to mind Steve Reich’s Music For 18 Musicians, but Riley’s piece is altogether more obtuse and rustic. Though Riley suggested the pieces be simultaneously and repetitively played by a minimum 35 musicians, it’s been performed by as many as 100. According to Wikipedia, this makes In C  ”a semi-aleatoric musical piece,” which basically means that it’s mostly without structure.

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July 21, 2010 View Comments

Oriol – Night And Day

By Ash in Music Reviews

Oreos. Tasty chocolate biscuit treats sandwiching vanilla cream. Delicious as a snack, but overwhelming when taken – like anything – in abundance. Oreos can be eaten in many ways – you may have seen the adverts demonstrating the versatility of the biscuit.

Oriol Singhji, however, is a London-based producer signed to Planet Mu. ‘Night And Day’ is his debut release and it tastes remarkably unlike an Oreo. I know because I tried sandwiching the two records together with a delicious homemade vanilla icing and suffered for it. The record should come with a warning.

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June 26, 2010 View Comments

Lorn – Nothing Else

By Ash in Music Reviews

Lorn – ‘Nothing Else’ Album Mix by BRAINFEEDER

Sometimes, an album doesn’t need a 500 word review.

(4/5)

June 20, 2010 View Comments

Konono No.1 – Assume Crash Position

By Ash in Music Reviews

As the World Cup shines its bright, burning light down on Africa, football frenzy grips the planet in a clutch of patriotism, casual racism and animated passion. It also means that suddenly, everything is themed ‘African’. Yes, with ‘African style’ barbeque packs on sale at butchers, Vuvuzelas widely available on the streets of South West London, and African music blaring out of Starbuck’s coffee shops across the land – all eyes are gazing upon this vast continent enveloped by a media frenzy that focuses on the struggle and plight of the sporting nations and people of South Africa.

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June 13, 2010 View Comments

Cappo – Genghis

By Ash in Music Reviews

In the mid ’90s, UK hip-hop rose to the top of the underground sound, tying in neatly with smoky trip-hop and dusty breakbeats. Messily parcelled, the sound was never in danger of breaking into the mainstream, but it did provide a path for traditional MCs – one that ran alongside the hyped-up nature of  Drum n’ Bass and Garage.  As those two genres gave way to Grime and Dubstep, the MCs’ style remained mostly unchanged, but it was that music that popped through the underground and was eagerly swept up by the mainstream. Traditional UK Hip-Hop, meanwhile, stayed underground.

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May 16, 2010 View Comments

Elephant9 – Walk The Nile

By Ash in Music Reviews

What’s up with Norway? After unleashing startling proggy albums from Motorpsycho and Jaga Jazzist earlier this year, they’ve hurled yet another stonking progressive jazz infusion out across the waters, this time from power trio Elephant9. Walk The Nile isn’t twisted anagrammatically around Johnny Cash’s shuffling ‘Walk The Line’; it appears to be a reference to Eastern modal constructs based around the phrygian scale. That doesn’t mean listeners should expect anything as Eastern as Omar Souleyman, or as Western as The Bangles’ ‘Walk Like An Egyptian’; no, Walk The Nile is a funky traverse across the progressive spectrum of jazz rock  - a territory explored by the likes of Keith Emerson and Weather Report in the ’70s.

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May 15, 2010 View Comments

The Alps – Le Voyage

By Ash in Music Reviews

There is something about a hand muting vibrating strings on an acoustic guitar that has left me unable to think of anything other than Extreme’s tawdry ’90s ballad ‘More Than Words’. So it is to my unmistakably mild discontent to hear The Alps’ latest album open with ‘Drop In’ which features that agonisingly percussive palm slap throughout their otherwise dreamy, arpeggiated landscape.

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May 15, 2010 View Comments

Eli “Paperboy” Reed – Come And Get It

By Ash in Music Reviews

Soul, gospel, rhythm and blues: all genres steeped in the spiritual struggle of ’60s America and all cannibalistically feasted upon for profit by artists like Joss Stone, Amy Winehouse, James Hunter and, of course, Eli “Paperboy” Reed.

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