Archive for the ‘Music Reviews’ Category

December 23, 2011 0

My top 15 Albums of 2011 – and a free mix.

By in Music Reviews, Musical Murmurings, Random

Hallock HillThe Union / There He Unforeseen.

The record that caused a temporal melt down within as I suddenly realised that improvisation and experimentation can be executed beautifully on the guitar. No unnecessary pitch-shifting, arpgeggiatted synths cloying for attention – just one man, and an outlet. Tom’s music was undoubtedly responsible for me turning inwards and writing my own album in 2011 too. There He Unforeseen leant on The Union as a sullen twin, envious of its brother’s success. Not as accessible as The Union, but a fascinating listen to an artist’s evolution.

Elzhi – Elmatic.

Elzhi, hunched forward under the throne of Nas‘ iconic Illmatic took the New York MC’s record to new heights as he transferred the sounds and lyrics to Detroit. Using a live band to recreate the sampled sounds to create the Nas’ masterpiece, Elmatic is more than just a mixtape. Reimagining a work while being skilful and fluid enough to make it your own is a task that requires effort Herculean in nature. Released for free,  physical vinyl copies were strictly limited to 2,000 and should – no doubt – have flown the fuck out the shops.

Alva Noto – Univrs.

 The most insane electronic record I’ve heard in a while. Insane in a way that isn’t about noise, but structure, rhythm, gloss, sheen, pressure, industry. Thudding kick drums fall over eachother and the whole record sounds like a trip on a an interstellar steam train as taken in 3011. It may not be an accessible dance record, and I have no idea how to make it work in a mix. It all seems to be driven by maths, grime and sweat. A thrill from start to finish.

Andy Stott – Passed Me By / We Stay Together.

Great covers on this pair of EPs. The content is some kind of deconstructed techno-fuzz at the wrong tempo for it to be even considered techno. So what is it? It doesn’t really matter. It exists and it sounds like C3P0 throwing R2D2 against the concrete wall of my estate. What’s not to like?

Death Grips – Exmilitary.

I could almost understand if some reviewer somewhere didn’t include many of my favourite records in their ‘top’ list of 2011, but if they left this off, then they must be some kind of limp moron. Made freely available as a download, this rambunctious rap-punk mix of gluttony and polemic is an absolute must hear for anyone that likes hip-hop and its continued evolution. Basically, if you don’t like this record, you must be racist.

Nils Frahm – Felt.

It’s fair to say that I was thoroughly sickened by this latest release by Frahm. Like Peter Broderick, he is yet another youthful musician that just seems to ooze natural, innate talent.  Felt is so called because he had to dampen the strings of his piano so he didn’t disturb his neighbour – or so the story goes. Regardless, this makes for a fascinatingly intriguing listen – one that reminds me of the Goldberg Variations – not for its content, but for its intimacy. Yes. Intimacy. You don’t often get that from records these days.

Julianna Barwick – The Magic Place.

Breathy, female vocals usually send me running for the hills, but Julianna Barwick‘s gorgeous (yes, gorgeous) Magic Place is quite a different beast. Where is Barwick’s Magic Place? Well, “It was one tree that grew up, down and around. You had to crawl in and once you were inside, it was like there were different rooms, and you could actually lay in the branches. We named it ‘The Magic Place’ because it really was magical—especially for a kid…” Sounds righteous to me. In fact, the record is so bloody lovely, you could almost consider converting to some whacked out religion to ensure you got a daily dose of it.

Machine Head - Unto the Locust.

I admit that this record took me by surprise. I didn’t expect there to be a metal album in 2011 that could be quite as cohesive and consistent as this. Machine Head wear a love of …And Justice For All era Metallica on their blackened sleeves, yet the shredding wah solos and tumbling descending riffs brings A Vulgar Display of Power to mind. The band have come a long way from debut Burn My Eyes, and though traces of that record could still be heard in 2007′s The Blackening, Unto The Locust simply gallops along at a pace that far outstrips anything the band have ever done before. Superb.

Tape - Revelationes

Tape‘s latest is less experimental than their earlier offerings, it is a beautifully accessible album. OK, so the Swedish trio are unlikely to ever create something that will slide alongside releases such as Mogwai‘s currently lauded Hardcore will never die, but you will, but Tape’s music is so warm and homespun, it digs a very special home of its own. A place where others couldn’t tread without coming across as overwrought pirates partial to a bit of emotional blackmail. Y’know…a bit like Mogwai.

Raekwon - Shaolin vs Wu Tang

Maybe it’s just because it’s The Chef, but this – for me – was one of the shining hip-hop releases this year. Though  Danny Brown, Frank Ocean, Elzhi and Death Grips were all slinging decent albums for free across the ‘net, it’s only Shaolin vs Wu Tang that features great guest appearances from fellow Wu members, Method Man, Ghostface Killah and Inspectah Deck amongst other luminaries in the rap game like Nas and Busta Rhymes. Don’t compare it to Cuban Linx, just relish it for what it is. A banger.

Megafaun - Megafaun.

Beautiful work by this American trio that represents amarked advancement on their previous records. Filled with gorgeous, dropping harmonies and classically inspired progressions that brings The Band to mind, Megafaun are unafraid to wander into awkward instrumental experimentation, and that is one of the many reasons why they fit within the context of a progressive music that doesn’t simply dwell on a nostalgic reaffirmation and glorification of the past.

Deaf Center - Owl Splinters.

Deaf Center‘s ominous and curiously titled Owl Splinters  is just one of many interesting records released on the brilliant Type records this year. So why this record? Well, it’s dark, bowed strings, and dissonant pianos create an intensely broody atmosphere full of discomfort. A crushing record.

Drake - Take Care

When I first heard Drizzy, I wondered why I was listening to an American Craig David look and sound-a-like. But then, digging deeper and I found that Drizzy is capable of delivering far more than that Southampton garage chap. Take Care is emotionally and lyrically rich, with truly subtly nuanced chord progressions. Very clever and thoroughly enjoyable stuff that reveals something true about the artist himself. A rare thing.

Pinch & Shackleton - S/T

I don’t really understand where UK bass music is any more. The entire genre  seems so fractious, that I have a hard enough time keeping up with sub genres, remixes, mixes, producers etc. Nevertheless, this is one record that really stood out amongst all the moody 140bpm shuffling. It’s an album that seems to have a lot in common with the old style of drum n’ bass than any other artist is currently capable of generating, and that includes artists focusing solely on generating drum n’ bass.

A Winged Victory For The Sullen - S/T

Moody, droning pianos eloquently put together without the malice that Tim Hecker somehow manages to muster up. In contrast to Deaf Center and Nils Frahm there is little commonality. A Winged Victory For The Sullen are perhaps more likely to be aligned with the output of the orchestral, cinematic leanings of Max Richter, specifically in reference to Richter’s album, The Blue Notebooks.

And here’s a downloadable vinyl mix of some records I bought between 2010 and 2011.

A vinyl only mix of tunes selected and cut by me at the end of 2011.

Tracklist:

Yu Aku, Kunihiko Suzuki – Zange No Neuchi Mo Nai
Mono/Poly – Needs Deodorant
PJ Harvey – The Last Living Rose
Donato Dozzy – Untitled (track 3)
Ezekiel Honig – Between Bridges
Pye Corner Audio – November Sequence
Mount Kimbie – Before I Move Off
Andy Stott – We Stay Together (part one)
Ricardo Donoso – Baiting Disappointment
Googoosh – Talagh
Elzhi – The Genesis
Mos Dub – Ms. Vampire Booty
Belbury Poly and Moon Wiring Club – Portals and Parallels
Lorn – Automaton
Public Enemy – Sophisticated Bitch
Wildstyle – Gangbusters
Wagon Christ – Intro Funktion
Roots Manuva meets Wrong Tom – Worl’ A Mine
Ernest Ranglin – Ranglin Doddlin’
Dr. Octagon – 3000
Teebs – While You Dooo
John Baker – Omo Ad
Kuedo – Onset (Escapism)
Pinch and Shackleton – Torn & Submerged
Rustie – Hover Traps

http://www.mediafire.com/?x1i4cld9yz7zf1z

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

June 13, 2011 0

Paul McCartney – McCartney I / McCartney II.

By in Music Reviews

“I was going through a hard period, I exhibited all the classic symptoms of the unemployed, the redundant man. First you don’t shave, and it’s not to grow a groovy beard, it’s because you cannot be fucking bothered. Anger, deep deep anger sets in, with everything, with yourself number one and with everything in the world number two. And justifiably so because I was being screwed by my mates.”

Paul McCartney, Many Years From Now – Barry Miles (1997).

It’s rare to hear a man commonly associated with peace and love speak out so bitterly, but these are the feelings of resentment and rejection as experienced by Paul McCartney in 1970.

Read the rest of this entry »

May 17, 2011 0

Hallock Hill – The Union.

By in Music Reviews

According to the Hundred Acre Recordings website, Hallock Hill is the “nom de plume of Tom Lecky: an homage to the rural country where he was born in upstate New York. Tom is now a 20 year resident of New York City and its environs.” Whereas groups like Public Enemy and Love incorporated sounds from the thump and blur of the city into their music, Lecky has made the conscious decision to focus on the relative peace of the countryside. Fans of Richard Skelton may immediately be drawn to a principle that could potentially involve found sound, but shouldn’t expect to be swathed in similarity. For starters, Lecky’s primary instrument is the guitar, and there hasn’t exactly been a barrel of riveting solo guitar albums released of late. If you’re thinking this album might be something coursing through the cocaine stained vein of late 80s fretboard destroyers like Joe Satriani, Steve Vai and Yngwie Malmsteem, then picture a deconstructed, introspective and experimental Al Di Meola instead; but only for the subtle Mediterranean modes and scales that Lecky occasionally riffs on.

Read the rest of this entry »

May 12, 2011 0

[Listen] New Harmony – Gyratory System (edits).

By in Music Reviews

New Harmony – Edits by Gyratory System

March 31, 2011 0

Tape – Revelations.

By in Music Reviews

This piece of vinyl’s been sat around my flat for some time now: shrink-wrapped and waiting for my needle to fall into its groove. And I’m pleased I finally found the time to spend with this uplifting, guitar-oriented piece of joy. In parts, the record sounds a little like Bibio, but without the heavy use of electronica. Unlike Bibio, there’s no apparent, conscious focus on the vintage, but the band come through riding on similar waves of ethereal wash. If I was prone to hyperbole (and I sometimes am), I’d say Revelations was a drop dead gorgeous record filled with some of the politest instrumentals you could wish to meet on a Saturday night. If this record was a girl, you’d want to hold her hand, buy her cake, and pray she never left your sight.

That’s not to say this is a record that is full of blithe charm set to sweep you off your feet. There’s just enough implied malice tattooed beneath the skin to prevent Revelations from becoming a sensual exercise in schmaltz. This isn’t the soundtrack to a modern day Woody Allen film. Elements of Daphne Oram style electronics are splashed across its lilting, psych-inspired canvas which serve to make it a far more loved-up and intelligently designed experience compared to anything Allen’s put out in decades.

But let’s get one thing straight: Revelations is not an album filled with wild, earth shattering muscular contractions of noise (à la Mogwai). Rather, the album is a well-mannered concoction of beauty and civility underpinned by restrained menace. The fact that it is borne from Sweden is perhaps telling.

February 21, 2011 0

Queens Of The Stone Age

By in Music Reviews

Resurrection is both a mystifying and illogical practise, capable of evading all logic of human understanding. The art of letting go comes buried deep amongst raw grief and sadness. Yet we have a choice to celebrate the dead by continuing to live. But under what circumstance can we exonerate those that dare to exhume dead, forgotten, and decaying bodies?

Within a musical context, the current trend of remastering and re-releasing classic material continues unabated. The process is ultimately a licence to print money poorly concealed as a pure, altruistic dedication to the fans. Or the record is now just being released the way the band would have wanted to hear it, but the technology at the time of recording was lacking. Or the technology now is so vastly improved that it brings out the subtlety of the original tapes so a new generation can appreciate it. Etc.

So, what is the accepted length of time before someone can claim a record is a classic? The vast majority of people would perhaps say a record can be labelled ‘classic’ on first listening. Remember how long it took the NME to deem The Arctic Monkeys’ debut Whatever people say I am, that’s what I’m not’  a classic? It became almost immediately worthy of inclusion in the top 10 of their 100 Best British Albums List. So why did this young, ‘classic’ British group look to California’s Joshua Homme to produce their last record, Humbug?

Read the rest of this entry »

December 5, 2010 0

The 30 Best Albums of 2010 – Part III

By in Music Reviews

Here we are, at the year end. It’s been a long journey – over 300 days in fact. Here’s my final selection of thirty albums that are among the best of 2010. More drone heavy than the previous 20, there’s plenty here that you should be allowing yourself to drown amongst.

I’ve included a Spotify list at the end, but it’s not like I could find all these records on the streaming service, so you’ll just have to take a risk on some of them…

Read the rest of this entry »

November 22, 2010 0

The 30 Best Albums of 2010 – Part II

By in Music Reviews

So, another 10 of my favourites from this year. Why not put them on your Christmas list, and hand it out to friends, family and lovers? Tis the season to be jolly, receive, eat, argue and be jolly again. Apparently. So the season might as well have a decent soundtrack.

Read the rest of this entry »

November 16, 2010 4

The 30 Best Albums of 2010 – Part I

By in Music Reviews

Messageboards are about to get flamed with heady dispute by communities over a general lack of taste displayed by the unpaid writers that staff and propagate music blogs and websites. Well, though I’ve not heard every album released this year, I’ve heard a lot. My shortlist went from 50 to 40 to 33 (yeah, that was weird), before I finally settled on 30 and one honourable mention.

I was never going to attempt to put these in numberical order as they all have their place in their own genre, and they’re all brilliant. So, starting with the first 10 (I’ll release 10 a week), here we go:

Read the rest of this entry »

October 17, 2010 0

Stig Of The Dump – Mood Swings

By in Music Reviews

“I hated being an outsider as a little kid, but now as an adult I hate nothing more than fitting in,” comes the rap on ‘Hater’, thus concisely summing up the fundamental sentiment that drives the conviction of Stevie Dickhead’s Stig Of The Dump. Part self, part alter ego, Stig comes filled with negative self-esteem issues, and a host of wry responses. Fuelled by hate, drugs and cheap alcohol, he’s like a British Eminem with less muscle tone, and an internal affiliation with Islamic MC, Brother Ali, but without the religion.
Read the rest of this entry »