Album Review -Delorean

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Delorean -‘Subiza’ (True Panther Sounds/Matador)

Oh. WOW.

This is one of the most amazing records I have heard so far this year. From the second this album opens with ‘Stay Close’ to when it finishes with ‘It’s All Ours’ you know that you are listening to something very special indeed. Over the course of forty-two excellent minutes, Delorean have made this an album that will make you reconsider your best of year so far lists if you are a total music geek, and prick up your ears even if you are one of those people who only buys a handful of albums each year.

Hperbole? Let’s just say that a few songs in, I found myself wanting to listen to the album all over again -and I did, though I waited until it had finished before I listened to it pretty much right away. The press release for the Spanish band’s third album talks about looking at thirty years of dance music with fresh eyes. I could add – or listening to it with fresh ears. Becauseso much of what makes great dance music is here: it’s music to lose yourself in and find yourself. Pure balaeric bliss, Ibizan ecstasy… Music to dance to and drift away to, often at the same time. Classic aspects of dance vocals, beats, rhythms -and a reappearance of that gorgoeus Italo-house piano that sounds as fresh and exciting as it did when you heard it on ‘Ride On time’ -which is over twenty years ago now. I’ve never been on a trip to spend a summer holiday clubbing on an Mediterranean island (the nearest I got was spending a week chilling out in the Sinai), but this album makes me feel like I would want to feel and not how I expect the reality would be.

I listened to this album stone cold sober -and yet it sounds positively euphoric. It is genuinely so uplifting and life-affirming that it should be prescribed instead of anti-depressants. A very special album indeed, and -most sincerely folks- the best album of this year so far.

*****

Subiza is out now on True Panther Sounds/Matador.

Delorean -‘Stay Close.’ mp3

Jesus H. Foxx – taster for forthcoming album revealed

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I know, I know…other blogs have already covered this, but as usual I’m wading through so much stuff.

Anyway, Jesus H. Foxx are working towards completing their first album, which should be out in October, on Song, By Toad Records. I’ve seen Jesus H. Foxx live no less than three times over the last six months, sharing the stage with the likes of Broken Records, We Were Promised Jetpacks, Withered Hand and White Heath. They totally rule. And this new song shows them developing even further. You should have already bought the ‘Tightt Ideas’ (sic) single and the Matter EP -and if you haven’t; what the bloody hell is wrong with you?

This is shaping up to be another excellent album from Song, By Toad Records. Bring it on…

Jesus H. Foxx -‘J & J.’ mp3

Jesus H. Foxx’s myspace

Mitchell Museum – the big time approaches

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Having previously excited my interest quite considerably with last year’s ‘In the Bloodwind’ single and the ‘We lost first prize’ EP, Mitchell Museum are preparing to release their first album on July 12, entitled The Peters Port Memorial Service.

First up is the release of an excellent single entitled ‘Warning Bells,’ which was released yesterday. The band have had remixes done for this by the likes of We Were Promised Jetpacks, amongst five others and you can download all six remixes for free from their bandcamp page here. And you can even download the We Lost First Prize EP for free there, too.

And here’s the video…

Go and buy the single, and support a very deserving act.

Album Review – The Drums

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The Drums -‘The Drums (Moshi Moshi/Island-Universal)

If music can be considered to be more-ish, then that’s what this debut album from The Drums is.

Having given us a handful of singles and an EP, many of which appear here. And whatever the indie-hipsters may say or not say, I think this album may well end up soundtracking my summer and quite a few other people’s. Much like the debut album releases earlier this year from the Dum Dum girls and the Soft Pack, this is an album by a North American band who may not win many points for originality, but win more than enough points by producing an album that’s fresh, fun and so goddamn tuneful. In the Drums’ world, the spirit of The Cure’s The Head On The Door, New Order’s Lowlife and the seminal c86 tape aren’t copied but proudly worn.

‘Let’s Go Surfing’ enters the lexicon of great pop songs featuring Whistling (see also ‘I Love Your Smile’ and ‘Young Folks.’ From start ‘Best Friend’ to close ‘The Future’ this is the sound of four young guys having fun, listening to their favourite tunes, and sounding like they’ve made an album for the sheer joy of it (this may be very clever production but I’ll give them the benefit of the doubt). The nineties revival may be around the corner revisiting Alice in Chains and Stone Temple Pilots, but I’ll hold this album to my heart and up like a shield.

Brilliant stuff, folks, this is an album to enjoy from start to finish and not just cherry-picked on the iPod.

****

The Drums is out now on Moshi Moshi.

Get free and legal music by the Drums here

Album Review – Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti

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Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti -‘Before Today.’ (4AD)

Last year, an article in The Wire magazine examined the concept of Hypnagogic pop. This has grown out of the US underground and is where 80’s AOR (think Hall & Oates, Michael McDonald, (both whom whom have cropped up in The Wire’s Invisible Jukebox feature) or Don Henley) meets a post-noise, shoegazing/dreampop aesthetic. Being DIY, the gloss of the 80s production is chipped, but the scene/movement/journalsits trying to come up with something on a wet afternoon has thrown up some excellent work from the likes of The Emeralds, Neon Indian and Ariel Pink.

Having produced a number of his own records on lo(wer-than-thou-)fi equipment, by his standards this release on long-established independent 4AD marks a coming of age for Ariel Pink. It is, howevere, absolutely flaming fantastic. Despite a bizarre press release that talked of vomiting on marble floors and a promo shot of humans snogging animals that I’d rather live without, quite frankly, this twelve track album is a fantastic listen from start to finish. The Americans coined the term ‘dream-op’ to describe what us Brits described as shoegazing, and it’s particularly accurate on a record like this.

Over the course of forty-five minutes this reveals itself as a record filled with gorgeous pop songs, lo-fi not in the sense of’ deliberately recorded to sound as unpolished a s possible’ but as if remembered ‘as a dream -or a dream of a dream.’ (With apologies to C.S. Lewis). This is an album to lose yourself in and find yourself, and if it sounds painfully seventies to talk of something being a headphone album, there is so much to appreciate and wonder at here, that several listens in, I’ve fallen in love with part of it, and wonder what else I have to discover within.

It’s ironic to think that just over ten years ago we thought there would be nothig to excavate from the eighties, or that it would all be conducted in a painful stream of ‘This is what you listened to because we say so.’ This is no eighties revivalism, but rather an excavation and development as important as the likes of DJ Shadow’s entroducing was to 1996.

****

Before Today is out now on 4AD.

17 Seconds Records update

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Busy times at 17 Seconds Records, with plenty of live dates and releases coming your way very soon.

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Chris Bradley released his second solo album At The Outpost in March, becoming the first full album release on 17 Seconds Records. Chris is playing at the Leith Festival tomorrow (June 13), as well as at the Outsider festival on June 19, Jock Stock on June 26 and the Wickerman Festival on July 24, having already appeared appeared at Knockengorroch.

The Last Battle will release their debut single ‘Ruins’ on July 5 on download and CD-R. They will be having a launch night at the Wee Red Bar in Edinburgh (at the Art College) with support from Neil Pennycook of Meursault who will be doing a solo set and Neil Common. Oh, and me DJing. The album Heart Of the Land, Soul Of the Sea will be released at the end of September, the album launch will take place at Edinburgh’s Roxy Art House on September 18, as well as playing the Woodworks festival in England. It’s all jolly exciting!!

This is the artwork for the single. It’s great (and I can say that, ‘cos I had nowt to do with it)!

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The Last Battle -‘Black Waterfall.’ mp3

Georgia on his mind

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From English road songs, to the US of A.

Ameirca has so many songs about various places there. I’m not sure how Sufjan Stevens campaign to do an album for each of the states is going (Has he got beyond doing Illinois and Michigan?), but there’s Michelle Shocked’s ‘Anchorage’; the Beach Boys’ ‘California Girls’; ‘New York New York’ by Ryan Adams. In contrast, not really sure what the UK has outside of songs about London. ‘The Lincolnshire poacher’ anyone?

Just me, then.

‘Eton Rifles’ by the Jam? Stretching it -but it rules.

Anyway, Ray Charles’ ‘Georgia On My Mind’ is an absolute classic -and another ace song doing the rounds of the blogs at the moment is ‘Georgia’ by Cee-Lo Green. Of course you recognise the voice -he sang on the Gnarls Barkley record, duh! And ‘Crazy’ was so obviously one of the songs of the last decade.

Anyway…I think this is ace:

Cee-Lo -‘Georgia.’ mp3

A fine song for the road

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…why is it there aren’t many British road songs?

Or is it simply that because of the size of the Countries that make up the UK, there isn’t much uncharted territory?

Either way, Richard Thompson aimed for this to be an English road song, and researched it, and still has the requisite amount of love, tragedy and adventure. He is an utter legend, and if you haven’t heard this song before, you are in for a treat…

The title of the song refers to a very rare English motorbike, or so I’m told.

Richard Thomspon -‘1952 Vincent Black Lightning.’ mp3

A rather ace football song

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There’s lots of ace things about living in Scotland, not least the music scene.

In fact, one of the only rubbish things is the way people are so dismissive of the England football team. It’s as bad as the way the English are so rude about the Germans, especially seeing as if England didn’t qualify and Scotland did, the vast majority of English football fans would be routing for Scotland.

Still, we didn’t qualify for this world cup, the English did – and here’s a link to a rather excellent football song, and no sign of Baddiel or Skinner either…

Whoever this is, it’s rather good…

However, don’t miss the opportunity to giggle at the worst sort of fottball fan -and thanks to Ken Hare for this link

An excellent site…and some more of what’s coming up here

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Midas Fall…one of several interviewees who should be appearing here soon. Honest!

As well as writing 17 Seconds (which will celebrate its’ fourth anniversary next month) I also contribute to an online Scots magazine called Is this Music?

I started to contribute not long after I started the blog, and whilst some of my reviews and interviews appear in both places there are those that don’t. So do check it out. It’s overseen by one Stuart McHugh, who has also been involved in running Tigerfest in Scotland since 2004, as well as being behind podcasts and gig promotion. Do check it out, and if you want to read more of my writing on there, you can.

There are, as ever, plenty of albums I want to write about, interviews that need to be written up (Midas Fall is written up, eagleowl, Sparrow and the workshop and Kid Canaveral still to be done!) and new bands that I want to cover. there is only one of me, a day job and other commitments so…please bear with me!

Keep it tuned -for now check out Silver Columns who are a collaboration between Adem and Johnny of the Pictish Trail. I first heard them on Vic Galloway a few weeks back; they have just released a great album combining their talents called Yes and Dance, which sounds great.

Silver Columns -‘Heart Murmurs.’ mp3