Posts Tagged ‘rock’

August 19, 2009 0

The Beatles and the great mono rip-off

By in Musical Murmurings

Walking past my local Oxfam store window this morning, I noticed a fine selection of Beatles albums on display. As McCartney once sang: “Buy, Buy, Says the Sign in the Shop Window, Why? Why? Says the Junk in the Yard.”

“The impending arrival of new remasters,” comes the answer. “No-one needs those old, hideous, hastily transferred CDs now! Here come the Beatles, 2009!”

Fine, I’m all set to splash the cash at some point, but I’ve been struggling to decide which set to buy. Here’s the youtube trail for the forthcoming stereo release which includes all the albums, liner notes, short videos and retails on Amazon for £169.98.

Albums included in the Stereo Set:

Please Please Me
With The Beatles
A Hard Day’s Night
Beatles For Sale
Help!
Rubber Soul
Revolver
Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (also includes 1987 notes, updated, and new intro by Paul McCartney)
Magical Mystery Tour
The Beatles
Yellow Submarine (also includes original US liner notes)
Abbey Road
Let It Be
Past Masters (contains new liner notes written by engineer Kevin Howlett)

Albums in the Mono Set:

Please Please Me
With The Beatles
A Hard Day’s Night
Beatles For Sale
Help! (CD also includes original 1965 stereo mix)
Rubber Soul (CD also include original 1965 stereo mix)
Revolver
Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band
Magical Mystery Tour
The Beatles
Mono Masters

But what about Let it Be and Abbey Road? Well, they were never mixed in mono, so you don’t get those. You also can’t buy the mono albums separately – they come as part of a box set, but you can buy the stereo albums individually so you can top up those missing albums. So, naturally, one would expect the mono collection to be cheaper than the all singing, all moptop shaking stereo set. And one would be completely wrong: the mono set costs £199.98 at Amazon.

And, hey, you may say “I’ve got the Capitol mono set, I don’t need this one,” and you’d be wrong again. The US mixes (Capitol) are different to the original UK masters.

So let’s see how the two versions are going to (approximately) compare:

The Word (Stereo)

The Word (Mono)

I personally prefer the thump and drive of the mono recordings and dislike the panned drums of the stereo versions, especially in headphones where the whole effect is enhanced. Of course, there will be benefits to some of the stereo reworkings, particularly when it comes to albums like Revolver and Sgt Pepper’s – it’s a shame they didn’t include any songs from those albums on the official trailer.

Here’s some PR that doesn’t seem to have been circulated enough – I got this from the Gearslutz Forum.

The re-mastering process commenced with an extensive period conducting tests before finally copying the analogue master tapes into the digital medium.

When this was completed, the transfer was achieved using a Pro Tools
workstation operating at 24 bit 192 kHz resolution via a Prism A-D
converter. Transferring was a lengthy procedure done a track at a time.
Although EMI tape does not suffer the oxide loss associated with some later
analogue tapes, there was nevertheless a slight build up of dust, which was
removed from the tape machine heads between each title.

From the onset, considerable thought was given to what audio restorative
processes were going to be allowed. It was agreed that electrical clicks,
microphone vocal pops, excessive sibilance and bad edits should be improved where possible, so long as it didn’t impact on the original integrity of the songs.

In addition, de-noising technology, which is often associated with
re-mastering, was to be used, but subtly and sparingly. Eventually, less
than five of the 525 minutes of Beatles music was subjected to this process.
Finally, as is common with today’s music, overall limiting – to increase the
volume level of the CD – has been used, but on the stereo versions only.
However, it was unanimously agreed that because of the importance of The
Beatles’ music, limiting would be used moderately, so as to retain the
original dynamics of the recordings.

When all of the albums had been transferred, each song was then listened to
several times to locate any of the agreed imperfections. These were then
addressed by Guy Massey, working with Audio Restoration engineer Simon
Gibson.

Mastering could now take place, once the earliest vinyl pressings, along
with the existing CDs, were loaded into Pro Tools, thus allowing comparisons
to be made with the original master tapes during the equalization process.
When an album had been completed, it was auditioned the next day in studio
three – a room familiar to the engineers, as all of the recent Beatles
mixing projects had taken place in there – and any further alteration of EQ
could be addressed back in the mastering room. Following the initial
satisfaction of Guy and Steve, Allan Rouse and Mike Heatley then checked
each new re-master in yet another location and offered any further
suggestions. This continued until all 13 albums were completed to the team’s
satisfaction.

So, the stereo recordings are louder and less dynamic than the mono versions; no actual remixing took place (it was restoration); and a mastering / EQ process has been put in place. And this took a team four years to complete.

But, ultimately, this massive cash-in means that the original ethos of Apple created by John and Paul (so artists wouldn’t “have to go down on their knees in somebody’s office”) seems to have fallen very far from the tree.

*For another comparison of the mono and stereo versions, check out Jesus Diaz‘s piece on Gizmodo.

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August 12, 2009 0

P.O.S. – Why Go (Pearl Jam cover)

By in Musical Murmurings

Making no secret of the plain fact that I love P.O.S. and his Never Better album, this is him rinsing a Pearl Jam tune from Ten (still their best album, @MrLukowski).

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August 11, 2009 0

Electric Eel Shock – Out of Control

By in Musical Murmurings

My favourite Japanese heavy metal band are back! After gaining enough public support to win a deal with Sellaband, they’ve been back in Japan recording and just look at this fancy vid! Great solo, Aki – but what’s with the fangs, man?!

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August 10, 2009 0

Them Crooked Vultures – Paved Death (demo)

By in Musical Murmurings

There appears to be some dispute over whether this instrumental demo really is the Homme, Grohl, Jones supergroup but all the same, it’s a pretty good groove with some tight Zep-style playing*. EDIT – the video was removed by Josh Homme.

Here’s the 14s of genuine music they’ve generously released.

An album entitled ‘Never Deserved The Future’ is due in October. Should be alright.

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July 22, 2009 3

P.O.S – Never Better

By in Music Reviews

How do you solve a problem like downloading? Inspiring packaging. Simples. If that’s not enough, you could always ensure the content of your release is amongst the best released in 2009, irrespective of genre. That would certainly appear to be the approach of Minneapolis rapper and musician P.O.S (Stefon Alexander) on this, his third album for US Independent label Rhymesayers.

Let it Rattle showcases Alexander’s ability to use rhyme as a catalyst to accelerate a track to burning point whilst simultaneously utilising melody as a method to offset the inherent aggression. P.O.S effectively straddles genres; absorbing punk, rock, hip-hop, jazz – all spliced in with indie elements  regularly associated with bands like TV on the Radio.

Purexed, for example, is driven by the defiant, sounding like it could have been soundtracked by Art Blakey and David Sitek: “So fuck it, back to the wall, crush it, laugh at em all. Hush, Let em try to find the beauty in your face, Somethin’ more than a song, They hatin? Aw come on! Dust, let em try to find the beauty in the bassline”. It’s an intense piece and one that outclasses many songs of similar thought.

With Alexander’s capacity to channel the styles of more established MCs (Ice Cube on Goodbye, Eminem on Purexed and Aesop Rock on Get Smokes), fellow Doomtree crew member Lazerbeak is on hand to help with beat manipulation. This variety is effective, making this a mostly impersonal record that relys on a combination of story-telling techniques and streams of  frequently impregnable philosophical thought.

Out of Category is one of a handful of rap songs that deals with cultural conflict and in this case, the topic is autobiographical, targeting black kids and punk music. One of the few personal pieces on display here, it doesn’t fail its aim to attack and denigrate: “Brothers at school think he trynta, rewrite skin. Others are fools, never seen some shit like him…Aint nothin like a mohawk to show off your fuck off, an kick off the Reeboks for boots.”

Though punk echoes throughout Never Better, particularly on ‘Terrorish’ which features a chorus from None More Black’s Jason Shevchuk, the music is, mercifully, never of the NOFX / Fat Wreck Chords ilk, but bleeds from the exposed veins of classic bands like Fugazi (who are namechecked on the Kanye-like Savion Glover).

Closing with spiritual, DJ Krush styles on ‘The Brave And The Snake’, Never Better is a ferociously, musically-hip marriage of the political and celebratory. Intoxicating and adventurous, it is simply one of the best records released this year, hip-hop or otherwise.

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July 21, 2009 0

Bibio – interview

By in Interviews

Stephen Wilkinson (aka Bibio) is the latest signing to über-cool label, Warp Records. The 30-year-old Wolverhamptonite’s penchant for mixing up guitar-based, electric folk alongside digital bleeps and squeaks effectively lie together on the curiously titled, Ambivalence Avenue.

“It’s not got anything to do with ambivalence in particular, really, ” he says somewhat non-committally. “It was triggered off by a weird daydream I had on a coach going down to check out some universities in London. We were travelling down a road similar to that on the front cover [of Ambivalence Avenue] with white hotels and trees lining the streets – stuff like that. Obviously, I was approaching a time when I was moving away from home, going to university and though it wasn’t confusion as such…it wasn’t really that in itself that was so important. That was the trigger; and the sensation that accompanied it is what I can’t put my finger on.”

On the first of numerous occurrences during the interview, Wilkinson refers to  emotion, and how he uses music as a platform to transmit it to the listener. Outlining the construction of track ‘London Planes‘ (which features on earlier album ‘Fi’ released on Mush), which sees arpeggiated guitars harmoniously entwined, he says, “It had this kind of spirit or vibe that was very particular to the blissful side of London as opposed to the city side. And then a couple of years ago, I was writing a guitar riff and it brought back the same, weird emotions that I get that…like flickering shadows casting through trees in London avenues.” And this “Idyllic, London avenue” is represented on Ambivalence Avenue‘s artwork with a character one assumes to be Wilkinson out and about recording ‘found sounds’ for his recordings to thrive on.

Ultimately, though, what Wilkinson wants is for the listener to imbibe a “Summery, nostalgic vibe,” from the track. “Hopefully the lyrics are building blocks to someone else’s imagination – that’s really what I prefer to do. Whereas lyrics put words in people’s heads, instrumental music might more likely paint pictures in people’s heads.”

Strangely enough, title track, ‘Ambivalence Avenue’ put me in mind of an American children’s television programme, one captured by an innocent, retro-styled recording exuding an ineffable charm.

“I think that, not just with that track, but also with the track ‘Lover’s Carvings’ as well, there’s an intention to get a bit of ‘Sesame Street’ in there: where kids play out on basketball courts in this idyllic, blissful Bronx! It was also really influenced by [Brazilian pop artist] Marcos Valle. The album that really influenced me is Previsão do Tempo’“.

Moving on to talk about specific influences, I asked Wilkinson about the legendary ’70s trio, America, and did they have any significance on the development of Bibio?

“I’ve got a couple of America LPs that I’ve picked up from charity shops and they’re the kind of band I wouldn’t rave on about, but there’s maybe something within their sound that I’m trying to capture. Sometimes, influences aren’t necessarily stuff you listen to; it could be stuff heard as a kid, on films, or on radio – but it’s not necessarily at the forefront of your attention. With someone like Marcos Valle, that was something I was obsessing about”.

On listening to Valle’s recordings, it becomes clear that Wilkinson is not so much trying to recreate styles, but sounds. So who else makes his hit-list?

“Around that time, I was really getting into J-Dilla, MF Doom, Madlib and you can probably hear that in a couple of tracks. ‘Fire Ant’ is very much an ode to Dilla. The chopped-up vocals that you can hear on that track, that really stems from being a Daft Punk fan.” The mention of the French duo sends Wilkinson into hyperdrive as he begins enthusing at great length about their album Homework. “I got it on cassette from the library about a year after it was released and their track ‘High Fidelity’ has got all these chopped-up vocals that don’t make sense. That just blew me away. A lot of the time, people just presume I listen to lots of hip-hop and stuff like that but really, Daft Punk have been in my musical history along with a lot of other mid to late ’90s French House stuff. There’s something in that music that’s got a tinge of melancholy, but also an uplifting feeling.”

That sentiment itself seems to sum up a lot of what Bibio is about, but how does he feel being included amongst Warp’s output which famously features artists like Aphex Twin, Flying Lotus and Two Lone Swordsmen? “It’s a dream come true,” he admits. “I’ve always been a huge fan of the label and I think that I’d have to admit to being influenced by Warp artists than any other label.”

It isn’t just music that spins a heady web over Wilkinson, he also gets his kicks from nature, “It would seem odd to me if anyone didn’t have an interest in nature, because you are nature; you are a part of it.  I get a lot of elevation from going somewhere natural, like going camping, going out somewhere wild, climbing mountains. I think my favourite places in the world are river and valleys – places like that which are mossy and green – places that are really psychedelic.”

Drawn in comparison to Wilkinson’s experience of clubbing, roaming England’s green and pleasant land would seem to be his preferred option: “I’m not much of a clubber,” he confesses “I don’t dig everyone gurning and the hot, sweaty, dark environment and spending 30 minutes queuing up to get a can of Red Stripe. I don’t really go to concerts much either…I’m more of a hi-fi person.”

With leanings towards the natural, Wilkinson eschews computer plug-ins in favour of his guitar commenting that “You can sit on the garden with that, it’s quick and accessible”. Most sounds on the album come from outside the computer due to Wilkinson’s continual search to escape the digital, sequenced and rigid. “While I use the computer to record, it’s like an advanced recorder where I can capture things, move them around and edit them. I’m not really a computer-based musician as such.

My music doesn’t have that clean, in-the-box sound: it sounds a bit softer and a bit rounder, production-wise because I use microphones. I’ve got these old tape-recorders that I use to degrade stuff – that’s how I get that sound.”

Unlike contemporaries like Autechre who work solely in-the-box, I was keen to understand how Bibio will be presented live – purely because the music is a mix of a traditional band setup alongside the electronic.

“That’s a good question and it’s one of the problems of electronic music: it’s created with machines as opposed to live manipulation of an instrument. My music is somewhere in-between because some of the tracks aren’t electronic at all, they’re effectively a band recording but with one member. So a future plan is to try and get a band together to make some of my songs happen in the live situation. The important part is to get them sounding right because I spend so much of my time making my music sound a particular way with lots of studio trickery, it’s not often possible to do that live.”

Because of this obstacle, it’s clear that Bibio will not be performing tracks live any time soon. But without live shows, how do you promote a record?

“The live show isn’t going to happen soon as I’ve got a lot to work on, especially if I’m to get a band together: it’s not something you can put together in a week. So for the moment, I’m going to be doing DJ sets just to get out there and get used to it all. I’ve been really enjoying putting this DJ set together – I’m playing a lot of exclusive tracks so it’s not just a case of playing tracks that people have heard. I’m not a DJ, I’m a musician!” he says somewhat cheekily, before going on to explain that he’s already working on his next album.

“I just write music constantly so when it comes to album time, I’ve got lots of tracks to choose from. I don’t sit down and write and album, I just sit down and write tracks. Usually it ends up at 50 tracks by the time I’ve cut it down.” This would explain why Wilkinson doesn’t have the time to learn flamenco guitar or to learn how to be a ‘proper DJ’ using turntables instead of a laptop. And as the nature-loving, analogue-friendly musician points out: “Being on Warp has become a full-time job in itself…”

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July 13, 2009 3

Cornbury Festival 2009

By in Musical Murmurings

Never in a few millennia did I ever suspect I’d find myself watching Scouting for girls in the pissing rain singing along to their dross lyrics and yet this weekend, that is precisely what I did. Why? Because I was drunk, wet and caught in a moment. Don’t think for a minute that I didn’t know what I was doing; I knew alright. I was indulging in pissed japery. SFG were so dreadfully awful that they actually rhymed “She’s so lov-er-ly” with “In Corn-berry”. Don’t even get me started on their paean to Michaela Strachan featuring the epic line: “It ain’t gonna haaaappen, for me and the Straaaaachan”. Oh please, have you been watching re-runs of Wacaday?

Regardless, this was my first Cornbury Festival – a family affair orchestrated by Hugh Philimore. My band (Warning! Heat Ray!) were fortunate enough to be offered a slot by Hugh, yet when the lineup was announced, it’s fair to say that a few quizzical looks were thrown around the rehearsal room. Why would anyone who likes The Sugababes have even the slightest interest in us?

Whatever the reasons, after a three-hour drive inadvertently exploring the wild partylands of ‘Finstock’ and ‘Woodstock’ where bricks are the most charming things on display, we finally drove our little Punto on-site around 6pm on Friday night. My first impression of the Cornbury campsite was that I’d wandered into an affluent 18-year-old’s birthday party. Compared to other festival campsites like the raucous teen ruckus that constitutes Reading, or the sheer random oddities of Glastonbury, camping at Cornbury was rather like camping amongst a group of yogic hamsters and their offspring.

Set on the stunning grounds of Charlbury House and with only 8,000 people in attendance, I don’t recall recoiling in horror after opening a toilet door, arguing with tall people, trudging through mud, waiting for a shower or a beer or falling violently ill after eating an £8 burger and chips. Fact is, the food was amazing (the tea and toasties especially), the bar was reasonably priced serving a reasonable variety of beers, people were polite (!) and though it rained on Saturday, there was never enough people to churn the ground to mud.

OK, so the variety of music on offer wasn’t to my taste. I can’t expect every festival to check my Last FM account (that I don’t use) and book Jimi Hendrix, The Beatles and Public Enemy. Though I hardly saw any bands, I was with a group of friends, frequently drunk and in a field. The Damned were excellent, and Captain Sensible even blasted through a punk version of ‘Happy Talk’ that sent us wild in the rain causing my aquaphobic friend to drop his brolly in favour of pogoing.

After the headline act finish, and the ‘Disco-Shed’ soon after that the arena is pretty much dead, which means that the campsite bar becomes host to party people in search of of live music (mostly sing-a-long cover versions, thankfully) and DJ-led noise which runs till 3am, and because I’m such a glutton, I’m going to mention that there was still much tasty food available on-site.

Overall, an unexpectedly excellent weekend away: “I’m a Cornbury connnnvert, And I can’t write mooooore words”.

 *Thanks to Hugh Philimore, all our friends who came along and didn’t sleep, Bren from ‘this reality podcast’, all the restaurants (especially the tea and toast van), the staff at the Riverside Stage, The Elrics for entertaining our drummer, that bloke what sold me that helmet and my bandmates for holding it together for a fun 40 minutes. See you next year. x

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July 7, 2009 0

Back from the dead

By in Musical Murmurings

 

This is the title track of the new Spinal Tap album available for free download. Dare I say it? It’s not very good. Especially compared to ‘Saucy Jack’. Disappointing.

Back from the dead – Spinal Tap

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June 22, 2009 0

Martin Carr – Ye Gods (and little fishes)

By in Music Reviews

According to first track of this debut album under real name Martin Carr, Martin was born in the ‘Dead of Winter’. This birth was probably  accompanied by a band with country leanings intent on recapturing the spirit of ’90s hit-makers The Boo Radleys (of which Martin was the lead songwriter). Though filled with vocal harmonies sweeter than a Krispy Kreme,  the pumping crescendo topped off with horns and juxtaposed by discordant electric guitars is an attractive beginning and one that should sustain through much of the record with Martin’s determined pop balladeering setting the pace throughout; but this is not always the case.

Possibly recorded on a limited budget, the production can waver from heady to clumsy. Vocal harmonies are layered thick and exact on ‘Goldrush ’49′ climaxing with dense distorted guitars and a memorable chorus, yet on subsequent ‘Orpheus Lament’ the strong vocal lines are allowed to quiver distracting from their ultimate target. Employing a reverb effect similar to one that John Lennon would have used, ‘Running’ also manages to squeeze in a Kinks styled chromatic run-down with ghoulish feedback howls adding texture to the song.

It is at moments like this when Martin is at his best – fiddling around in the background, noodling – playing. ‘Tired and broke and black and blue’ is a great example of this: driven by an arpeggiated acoustic guitar, its instrumental outro includes an especially well-placed seventh chord giving the song a necessary blues tinge while sliding and bent notes float in stereo space during the verse.

Ultimately this boisterous album is not so mottled by mediocrity as it is elevated by a musing individual attempting to return  to a popular music mountain he has already conquered. Look out for the forthcoming release of electronic side project The Black Serpent Choir.

Ye Gods (and little fishes) is out on July 13th (Sonny Boy Records)

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June 21, 2009 0

Chickenfoot

By in Music Reviews

I’ll admit to being thrilled when I heard that Joe Satriani, Sammy Hagar, Michael Anthony and Chad Smith were getting together to make an album. That’s a heap of quality right there: Van Halen, Red Hot Chili Peppers and one of the best guitarists in the world (who just so happens to have recently filed for copyright infringement on Coldplay).

Ultimately Chickenfoot could easily follow on from Van Halen’s final album fronted by Hagar (Balance) though it is chock full of Satriani’s thick guitar sound and stylised riffing. Playing and production throughout is tight, mixed to perfection by Mike Fraser who recorded and mixed AC/DC‘s latest offering, Black Ice.

Though the album begins with the progressive ‘Avenida Revolution’, it doesn’t take long before the straight up rock n’ roll swing that the individual band members are amply known for begins to take hold and ‘Soap on a Rope’ even contains the harmonic squeals trademarked by Edward Van Halen all tethered by Satriani’s solid sense of boogie.

An album that is bred from a love of ’80s rock and roll, Chickenfoot is sadly hindered by Hagar’s refusal to wander far from his comfort zone, rendering most lyrical content asinine. The band are best summed up by his own lyric on ‘My Kinda Girl’: “Out of touch in a modern world, but she’s my kind of girl”.

If you had any love for the early ’90s hard rock scene that was quashed by Nirvana et al, Chickenfoot are ready to requite that lost love.

Chickenfoot is released on June 5th (earMUSIC)

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