Friday, September 30, 2022

Covers # 200 Jeffrey Lewis

 


Jeffrey does Stereolab.

It Starts With a Birthstone - Albums for September

 

It Starts With a Birthstone - Songs For September

 

Albums of the Year # 86 A.R.Wilson - Old Gold

 


 


Something I might have missed, if a Pitchfork review hadn't piqued my interest. Australian A.R. Wilson goes back in time to the Victoria Gold Rushes of the 1850's on latest album Old Gold.


It's an entirely instrumental record. A series of evocative tunes that take you back to the campfire. Winding banjos, crickets chirping. Yesteryear.


Anyone who's ever enjoyed an Alaisdair Roberts or C.W. Stoneking record, or strangely the music on an Oliver Postgate TV programme from the Seventies, (particularly Bagpuss), might find something to enjoy here. It twangs.  Casts something of a spell if listened to in the early or twighlight hours.


The Mojo Collection - The Ultimate Music Companion # 111 Nilsson - Aerial Ballet

 





Best Ever Albums - Top 1,000 Albums # 507 Red Hot Chili Peppers - Stadium Arcadium

 





Song of the Day # 3,166 Almond Joy

 


Thursday, September 29, 2022

Albums of the Year # 87 Built to Spill - When The Wind Forgets Your Name

 


 

I love it when wizened veteran, stalwart bands like Built To Spill return to the fray. It's a reminder of what this all about. Not necessarily about the fame or glory, though I guess that's part of it too, but most of all about people who started all this a while back, but still want to continue to tell their story.

This lot formed in Boise, Idaho in 1992 and are still trudging down the road. They're mostly Doug Martsch these days. Their line up has varied consistently over the years and now he changes the people he plays with for every record to keep things fresh.

When The Wind Forgets Your Name, their ninth album, out on Sub Pop records, is one consistently mighyt record. A product of small town America. A place where the geeks congregate in the record shop for a chat about Beat Happening, then proceed to the comic shop, with a possible stop over at the Dungeons & Dragons store.

This is as good a description as I can give the record. It's about obsessions you pick up in childhood which last a lifetime. It's full of beautifully crafted Pop / Rock songs with guitar solos that sound vaguely medieval and sung by Martsch in that dweebie, indie style favoured by the likes of Wayne Coyne, Jad Fair and Dean Wareham that tell you immediately where you are, what this is, and also instantly re-assures you, if you are a constituent of this stuff that you will enjoy this, so you can sit back and enjoy the ride.

20th Century Boy: Notebooks of the Seventies: Duncan Hannah # 19 Siouxsie & the Banshees

 


The book winds down in slightly muted fashion. Msic gets slightly more ragged with No Wave with Lydia Lunch, James Chance and the arrival of the British bands. Duncan and his partner gets invited back to Siouxsie and his partners hotel room but turns down the offer. The book ends with Lennon being shot and Duncan's first show and sale. Altogether a remarkable document of remarkable times. Highly recommended indeed.



The Mojo Collection - The Ultimate Music Companion # 110 Blue Cheer - Outsideinside

 





Best Ever Albums - Top 1,000 Albums # 508 D'Angelo & The Vanguard - Black Messiah

 





Song(s) of the Day # 3,165 Tamino

 


Emotive stuff. Somewhere between Radiohead and Rufus Wainwright from Belgian, Tamino, Becomes slightly samey after a while but has its moments.


 

Wednesday, September 28, 2022

Albums of the Year # 88 Tess Parks - And Those Who Were Seen Dancing

 


 

Tess Parks has been around for a while and she's always had Alan McGee's firm seal of approval right from the off. No wonder really. New album And Those Who Were Seen Dancing will immediately remind you of things that might you remind you of him.

The Sixties firstly. Tess comes across as a slightly underfed IT girl. A groovy chick, Penelope Tree, Twiggy. Jean Shrimpton. That type. Wearing a cool monochromatic outfit in a cool London night club and about to be photographed by David Bailey. You catch my drift?

Then Creation Records. First track Wow sounds pretty much like the Primal's Loaded with Hope Sandoval droning over it. This is a pretty identikit record really, but those who dig its reference points will surely dig this too. Excuse my 'Hippy' speak.

I certainly dig its reference points. For those who like to pretend they're back in the Nineties, pretending they were back in the Sixties. A record that certainly does what it says on the tin.

Perhaps I'm being slightly flippant and unkind. It's a high listenable album that I'll put on my list of 2022 favourites. In the lower reaches perhaps but I can certainly endorse it.

20th Century Boy: Notebooks of the Seventies: Duncan Hannah # 18 The Clash

 


Duncan rips through the rest of the Seventies. Watches on as the spectre that is Sid Vicious hits New York. 




The Mojo Collection - The Ultimate Music Companion # 109 The Band - Music From Big Pink

 





Best Ever Albums - Top 1,000 Albums # 509 Roxy Music - Avalon

 





Song of the Day # 3,164 Homeboy Sandman

 


Tuesday, September 27, 2022

Albums of the Year # 89 Weird Nightmare - Weird Nightmare

 


 

Side project for METZ leader Alex Edkins, it seems de rigeur for everyone in leftfield bands to have a couple of these going these days. Weird Nightmare's debut is a true blast of fresh air.

Though I like METZ, thery're a bit relentless for me. This is much more to my taste. Sheets of guitar layer sweet pop pills the way JAMC, Nirvana, Husker Du and Mission of Burma used to do it  back in the day.

There's plenty to enjoy here and plenty of reminders of Pop's more outre guitar past,.stand out track Luistania takes remarkable liberties with The Who's The Kids are Alright,but I'm not complaining.

Edkins has enough nous and love for what he's doing to vary the volume and intensity of attack, and turn down the speed and give things the light and shade you'd expect from an outstanding album. That's just what this is. I was really thrilled. 

20th Century Boy: Notebooks of the Seventies: Duncan Hannah # 17 Blondie

 


Filming and publicity for Unmade Beds. Godard likes it. Duncan has no idea why.




The Mojo Collection - The Ultimate Music Companion # 108 The Millennium - Begin

 





Best Ever Albums - Top 1,000 Albums # 510 Beyonce - Lemonade

 





Song(s) of the Day # 3,163 Peter Matthew Bauer

 


Half an hour in the company of former Walkmen bassist and organist Peter Matthew Bauer's latest record Flowers. Time well spent. An utterly charming record. 


It has plenty of those jarring and haunting spaces that made Walkmen such a special band. Too late to shoehorn into my favourite records of the year but much recommended anyhow..


Monday, September 26, 2022

Albums of the Year # 90 TRAAMS - personal best

  

Chichester's finest, TRAAMS, return with their third album, Personal Best,  their first for seven years. Hardly new territory, this is music rooted mostly in the misty Post Punk and vaguely Gothy Eighties. I was reminded early of Killing Joke, Sisters of Mercy and Loop.

This is ominous, vaguely industrial music. Not exactly overflowing with humour, more intent on dark atmosphere. This isn't really the kind of sound I'm hunting down in my fifties, but as someone who spent plenty of time listening to Cure, Simple Minds and Joy Division albums in my teens while reading European novels, I was more than happy to spend forty five minutes with it.


Featuring plenty of guest vocal appearances. Joe Casey of Promartyr appears at one point. This is essentially a rather gloomy record. But it's highly accomplished and by the time penultimate track, the magnificent Hallie came into view, I was persuaded that this would be getting further play from me.

20th Century Boy: Notebooks of the Seventies: Duncan Hannah # 16 The Heartbreakers

 


Dunc hangs with Corso, Malanga and makes an art film with Amos Poe. The violent edge of Manhattan is always evident particularly in an incident where he gets chased across town by a jealous Queen.



The Mojo Collection - The Ultimate Music Companion # 107 JK. & Co. - Suddenly One Summer

 





Best Ever Albums - Top 1,000 Albums # 509 Depeche Mode - Music For The Masses





Song(s) of the Day # 3,162 Baseball Gregg

 

An Italo-American Indie duo who sung in those cute, homely voices tat make me think of Dean Wareham and Juno, mom and cookies.

Their album is full of warming, empathetic moments. Not perhaps one to fill your horizon but could carve out a happy hour in your day.

Sunday, September 25, 2022

Covers # 199 Courtney Barnett

 


From a cover /tribute record coming to Sleater Kinneys 1997 record Dig Me Out, due mid-October.

Things Found on My Local's Jukebox # 536 Bobby Ramone


This really is The Ramones and really is Bob Marley, Should supply some moments of levity at The Telegraph.




 

Albums of the Year # 91 Faye - You're Better

 

I was hooked by this, a few tracks in. You're Better, the debut album from Charlotte, North Carolina band Faye, cherry picks the best of female fronted American independent bands of the last thirty five years and come up with a proper peach pure and simple.

I was reminded of early Throwing Muses, Sleater Kinney and  Riot Girl in general. Clever, inventive rhythms, insidious melodies that make you want to play the record again to discover just how insidious they are.


I got impatient with the ads on Spotify during this one. Always a good sign. This has gone straight on my albums of the year playlist. I suspect it will feature rather high. That countdown will actually commence in a few short weeks.

Faye come from a place that you'll be familiar with if you like the stuff I've listen above. But they rake it to a place you'll be more than happy with. This is just an absolutely terrific record.

20th Century Boy: Notebooks of the Seventies: Duncan Hannah # 15 Talking Heads

 

Duncan hangs out with Hockney, who gives him advice, kindly, about his own art. Then with Warhol, who he takes to see the 'new' band, Talking Heads at CBGB's which hooks them up. 



The Mojo Collection - The Ultimate Music Companion # 106 Dr. John - The Night Tripper

 




Best Ever Albums - Top 1,000 Albums # 510 NWA - Straight Outta Compton

 





Song(s) of the Day # 3,161 Nikki Lane

 


Nice, crunchy guitar music on the road laid down by Liz Phair laid down some time back. From her latest album Denim & Diamonds.




Saturday, September 24, 2022

Pharoah Sanders 1940 -2022

 


Albums of the Year - # 92 Anand Wilder - I Don't Know My Words

 

It's fairly commonplace to recognise band or artists reference points relatively quickly these days.  A guitar band that has listened a lot to Pavement. Another that is in thrall to bands in the C-86 movement. He singer or songwriter who clearly venerates Nilsson.

Anand Wilder is not quite one of those. He owes a debt vocally to Marc Bolan's tender quiver. He has something of Donavan's hippy lovechild about him. I was sometimes reminded of Elliott Smith or Fairport Convention.

All of these inspirations make Wilder's latest album I Don't Know My Words, altogether the kind of thing Wes Anderton might listen to when he gets home. There's definitely a whimsy to all of this. A preciousness. But also poetic, rich and florid quality to Wilder's songwriting and delivery that's really quite rare nowadays.

Wilder has a rich track record. He was lead singer for Yeasayer, who were active for more than a decade before going their separate ways in 2019. I don't know their records but was aware their reputation was considerable and I Don't Know My Words, his first record since then,  will definitely inspire me to investigate further.

It's a beguiling and intriguing record. Definitely owing a debt to the late Sixties and the artists I've mentioned but with plenty of bohemian and poetic fire of its own, in its own loins. Highly recommended.

20th Century Boy: Notebooks of the Seventies: Duncan Hannah # 14 Bryan Ferry

 


A slightly bleaker passage. Duncan eking away at his youth and aware of it. Making his journey as an artist and still in the midst of the Manhattan whirlwind.




The Mojo Collection - The Ultimate Music Companion # 105 The Beach Boys - Friends

 





Best Ever Albums - Top 1,000 Albums # 511 Genesis - A Trick of the Tail

 





Song(s) of the Day # 3,160 The Chesterfields

 


In the quite music wonderful film High Fidelity, which nails so much of the obsessive and generally male disposition of lifelong obsessives, the pitiless Rock jester in the film,  Jack Black character comes in to hear his colleagues, Rock romantic John Cusack and Rock Dweeb, Todd Luiso enjoying the new Belle & Sebastian record. Naturally he doesn't put up with this state of affairs for long blasting out Walking On Sunshine.

This might be me in an alternative life and this morning I'd be enjoying The Chesterfield's New Modern Homes. It's a truly wonderful record. The Chesterfields first came together in 1984 and came to greater prominence by 1986 as part of the same year's C-86 movement. They inhabited a particular wing of it, the melodic old school side of that scene, notably by the likes of The Loft, The June Brides and The Wedding Present. They perhaps didn't get the attention they deserved first time round.

I hope they get a bit of notice with this one, because it's a wonderful one altogether. Lively, tuneful songs with fabulous lyrics, hit singles in an alternative universe, which values The Velvet Underground and The Smiths more highly than X-Factor. It's an album just made for people who went to All Tomorrow's Parties and listen to 6 Music evening sessions from Mark Riley and Gideon Coe.



The Chesterfields rock in that cool, slightly straitlaced Indie manner. They pick up the baton from the lighter end of The Velvets, the second MC-5 record and early Television and transcribe it to Yeovil where they hail from. They released three albums first time round, all worth hearing and this is a glorious comeback.

Friday, September 23, 2022

Songs About People # 1,357 Margaret Calvert

 


A wonderful song from the quite wonderful new Chesterfields album, which I'll review in full tomorrow. About Margaret Calvert the typographer and graphic designer who produced many of Britain's street signs.



Things Found on My Local's Jukebox # 535 Blue Oyster Cult

 


Patti guests with BOC. She was dating Allen Lanier at the time.




Albums of the Year - # 93 Dendrons - 5-3-8

 

 


A band that sounds like some kind of dream union between Pylon, Gang of Four, Mission of Burma Talking Heads and Wire is always likely to get a favourable review on here. Although clearly not as good as any of these, Chicago band Dendrons latest 5-3-8 should interest anyone who loves any of those Post Punk titans.


Dendrons have clearly listened to all five. That's no crime of course. In fact all these bands seem to me to be bands you should listen to really. There's the musical record shop haunting elitist in me, but I've got so much from listening to them.



Dendroms it seems too. 5-6-8 is one you could certainly call Art Rock. Although its mode of attack is immediately apparent, it's all so jagged, urgent  and angular,, a music that never stands still for a moment, constantly forgnig forwards, certainly never dull.


Dendrons remain melodic never really tipping over the slope into noise and discord. 5-3-8's eleven tracks maintain shape and order. It's no mold breaker, its influences remain in your view throughout your listen, but they're chanelled extremely effectively to ensure a highly enjoyable listen.

20th Century Boy: Notebooks of the Seventies: Duncan Hannah # 13 John Cale

 

The blissful, non-stop hedonism continues. Hanging with 'the cool four hundred' at CBGB's. Duncan adding Hockney, Amanda Lear and almost France Bacon to his 'been there, done that' list. His incredible good looks no doubt helps enormously.


The Mojo Collection - The Ultimate Music Companion # 104 Small Faces - Ogden's Nut Gone Flake

 





Best Ever Albums - Top 1,000 Albums # 512 Captain Beefheart & His Magic Band - Safe As Milk

 





Song(s) of the Day # 3,159 Sinaive

 

French quartet Siniave  achieve the Indie brittle sensitivity to perfectlion on second EP Super 45 T.. So weak, in the way that John Cale described Jonathan Richman, that they seem they might be about to snap.

There are four songs here, all splendidly reminiscent of the golden, classic Rock & Roll lineage, whether it be Suicide or The Pastels, or Gainsbourg and Bardot, they make a very good argument for French being every much as evocative language for this stuff as English is. Perhaps even better..

The kind of record it would be an absolute joy to discover when you were Sixteen. Sounds pretty great at fifty six.



Thursday, September 22, 2022

Albums of the Year - # 94 Peaness - Full of Worry

 

 

Among the big Indie hitters that landed albums yesterday, and there were a lot of really big hitters, including Arcade Fire, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Warpaint, that were on first listen slightly underwhelming to my ears, this one was slightly overlooked generally.

I'm talking about World Full of Worry the debut album from Chester female Indie trio Peaness. They're the kind of outfit that 6 Music evening DJ Marc Riley adores and his recommendation is generally enough for me. 

The record is fresh as you'd expect. Melodic and vaguely leftfield, with little ambition above delighting crowds naturally drawn to this kind of lightweight froth. Think Girl Ray. Think The Orielles.

Think back further to the likes of Dolly Mixtures, The Raincoats, Girls at Our Best. British independent music has quite noble traditions. Peaness will not change your world but they might make you smile and certainly seeing them live.


20th Century Boy: Notebooks of the Seventies: Duncan Hannah # 12 Robert Wyatt

 


Duncan gets an audition to play drums with Television when Verlaine decided he's not happy with Ficca. He doesn't get the gig.




The Mojo Collection - The Ultimate Music Companion # 103 Os Mutantes - Os Mutantes

 





Best Ever Albums - Top 1,000 Albums # 511 R.E.M. - Reckoning

 







Song of the Day # 3,158 Mimi Roman


Old school Country gal with a new compilation out.

 

Wednesday, September 21, 2022

Songs Heard on the Radio # 426 Wild Billy Childish & CTMF

 


Always great to hear Billy Childish's trademark estuary and rapier Punk attack.




Things Found on My Local's Jukebox # 535 Hall & Oates

 


Underrated pair whi churned out a string of great songs and big hits during the years when the American singles charts were generally quite bleak.




Albums of the Year - # 95 Saba - Few Good Things

 



There's not much Rap or Hip Hop on my rundown of favourite albums this year. That was probably always the case.It was never top of my musical tree to be honest. Probably from Three Feet High & Rising to Illmatic was my peak listening phase for that kind of thing. So 1989 to 1994 then. And they, along with People's Investigative Travels and  Fear of a Black Planet will always remain among  my favourite records of all.


This isn't bad at all though. Saba's Few Good Things. Saba hails from Chicago and by the sound of this he's been around the block and learned a few things. He uses the 'n' word  a fair bit which always makes a wizened old liberal like me tut a bit. But this is socially aware and the beats are good.


Saba's three albums in now but frankly he sounds a lot more lived in and sage-like than that. He's got an old Afro American gent on the cover of the record surveying the flowers of his neighborhood on the cover after all. Not some young hoods throwing shapes and and showing off their firepower after all.


Few Good Things is a cool record which flows. The NME says'it's an album on a divine level' and I know where they're coming from.

20th Century Boy: Notebooks of the Seventies: Duncan Hannah # 11 Patti Smith

 


        Duncan goes for slicked back look. Turns twenty two. Continues to live the dream in NYC.





The Mojo Collection - The Ultimate Music Companion # 102 III Wind - Flashes

 





Best Ever Albums - Top 1,000 Albums # 512 Lou Reed - Berlin

 





Song(s) of the Day # 3,157 CMAT

 


Those young people. They are good for some things. I'm grateful to my friend Molly, who's one of those, who put me onto this, a couple of days ago. 

'This' is CMAT, another young woman. One from Dublin called Ciara Mary Alice Thompson which she's shortened conveniently. Her debut album, 'If My Wife New I'd Be Dead.' which I unaccountably missed when first released in the Spring.

The title takes liberties with spelling. The record meanwhile takes liberties with Country & Western, but you'll forgive it when you hear it. It's the best Country & Western meets Pop music record I've heard in some time, but then, you don't really hear so many of those.

Ciara says that she wants to make music that sounds like 'The Nolans, making that record with Glen Campbell which would go on to be covered by Paris Hilton.' 


A laudable ambition and 'If My Wife...' makes an excellent stab at it. It has a beautiful, self-defacing wit and melodic charm that made me very happy. It's like Wet Leg with a better sense of humour and much better songs.

Occasionally it runs the risk of getting slightly samey, but generally it's a definite thumbs up from me. I've also seen that she's playing a small venue in my hometown next April. The same place where I saw wonderful gigs with Courtney Barnett and Aldous Harding in previous years. Will try to get tickets today. Thanks Molly!




Tuesday, September 20, 2022

The Orchids - Dreaming Kind

 

The return of The Orchids is one of the more surprising musical moments of 2022. Formed in Penilee, Glasgow in 1985, their music is incredibly rooted in a time and place, though I'm constantly amazed by just how many people are still in thrall to that sound and how many young bands around who have no other motivation but to ape and recreate it, down to the last, tiny detail.

The Orchids time was the late Eighties and their place Sarah Records. They were one of Sarah's flag-bearing bands and their sound,  the sound of guitars jangling and seventeen year old hearts, falling in love and inevitably being broken.

Dreaming Kind evidences no musical development or growth of any kind from the band. Any such shift would be unnecessary and actually slightly rude. Bands like The Orchids aren't supposed to grow. Or change for that matter.

Thankfully they don't do either. Like The Bluebells, they're still Young at Heart. It's still 1987. It might as well be 1963 frankly. This is hardly a million miles from Summer Holiday after all. Nice boys with cool quiffs, white shirts and pressed jeans, singing clean cut songs that mums and dads wouldn't mind their kids listening to for a moment.

Albums of the Year - # 96 Thee Sacred Souls - Thee Sacred Souls

 


Debut album from San Diego trio in a style that has become a sub genre all of its own in recent years and Quentin Tarantino could genuinely have a claim to setting the groundwork for in the soundtracks of Pulp Fiction and Jackie Brown. That neo Soul sound of the early Seventies, Delfonics, Stylistics and Chilites.

Thee Sacred Souls capture the sweetness of this sound to perfection. This is not a record that springs any surprises. If it did it would break the rules of this whole style of music and subsequently wouldn't work and the spell it is casting would be broken. This is utterly formuaic to the nth degreed but fans of this mood are not going to complain about for a moment.

The production values and pacing, the harmonising is pitched to perfection.Someting that sounds just effortless though you know very well how much work is required to achieve it. It's one to sit back in your seat and let wash all of you. If this is the kind of thing you go for, frankly you couldn't wish for any better. Masterful frankly.