Album Review: Huw M

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Huw M -‘Gathering Dusk’ (Gwymon Records)

There’s no shortage of singer-songwriters in pretty much any part of the UK. And for all I know, there are people in Senegal, Argentina and Papua

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new Guinea bemoaning that there are so many people doing the same thing.

But there is something really rather pleasant about Gathering Dusk, Huw’s second album (I haven’t heard his first Os Mewn S_n – but I’ll give him the benefit of the doubt). Featuring rather nice instrumentation and carefully arranged songs sung in both English and Welsh, it’s gentle without being bland, soothing without being soporific.

I can’t speak Welsh any more than I can speal Arabic or Swahili, but the songs in Welsh sound lovely, whatever it is he is conveying.And there’s something affecting about the simplicity of songs like ‘The Perfect Silence’ which brings to mind fellow

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Welsh songsmiths like Euros Childs and Gruff Rhys.

This album may not break new ground or challenge anything, but it is certainly a very pleasant soundtrack to thirty-five minutes, like hot chocolate for the soul. Worth a listen.

***1/2

Gathering Dusk is released on Gwymon Records on July 30.

Interview: Artmagic

artmagic

There’s all sorts of things that bring bands together. Music is, presumably, a common one, probably the most likely of the lot. A love of drinking and illicit substances has brought bands together-and more often than not, torn them apart. The desire to be thought attractive for commitmentless sex. And quite possibly a combination of two or all three.

In the case of Artmagic, though, it was actually down to Dr. Who. ‘We met because one of my best mates is a massive Dr. Who fan,’ explains Sean McGhee, singer with Artmagic. It turned out he knew Richard’s brother, once we got togther…’ something clicked.

Richard, by the way is none other than Richard Oakes. Way, way back, in 1994, shortly before the release of Suede’s second album, Dog Man Star, guitarist Bernard Butler left the band. His replacement was none other than a young man named Richard Oakes, barely eighteen. As an eighteen-year old bedroom guitarist -one of many in my school and across, well the world- we were green with envy that this talented young man, the same age as us, had got to join Suede. They had, after all, just released what many still hold to be one of the best albums of that decade.

Over the course of the next nine years, Richard helped co-write numerous Suede songs across their next three albums, Coming Up, Head Music and A New Morning. Coming Up was Suede’s biggest selling album, reaching no.1 in the UK and spawning no less than five top ten singles. Head Music also reached no.1, but by the time of A New Morning, the sales were no longer as high as they had once been.

Then, at the end of 2003, Brett Anderson split the band up, announcing that he needed to do whatever it took to get his demon back. This, it transpired, meant getting together with none other than Bernard Butler to work as The Tears, though Suede reformed in 2010.

‘By the time Suede finished, I was pretty glad not to have to deal with about 90% of it [music business crap],’ says Richard. ‘I moved house -which took forever -and by this time thought Sean would have dropped off the map! We had one meeting -and we wrote two songs together. It was quite obvious, even on the first day we were writing we were onto something.’

When I speak to them, the album Become The One You Love has been finished. It was a relatively slow process, despite the chemistry between them. ‘It was only at the beginning of 2010 that we were able to sit down together,’ remembers Sean, though they first met in 2008. ‘At this point, it wasn’t a band it was ‘let write some songs.’ Sean had worked with a number of different artists

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, including Robyn, Imogen Heap, Alanis Morissette and Britney Spears.

But working together, it became clear that these were songs they needed to do themselves. ‘The songs are very personal,’ Richard says. ‘ When we’d written a handful of songs, it was clear we had to sing them ourselves.’

‘It was always going

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to be: let’s explore these themes -but accessible!’ chips in Sean.

Become The One You Love is, it should be noted, very different from any of Suede’s albums. the same can be said for the rather fine, four-track EP I Keep On Walking that they released last year. McGhee’s voice bears no relation to Brett Anderson’s, and it’s a different listening experience. This applies to both the songs and the music – in his initial email to me back in January, Oakes wrote: ‘We’ve been describing the album as spectral, often melancholy, adult pop. It’s a collision of influences – Talk Talk, Magazine, Caravan, Field Music, Gary Numan, Scritti Politti – but we’re looking forward, not backwards.’ And this also applies to how the album was made.

Describing the album as ‘very home made,’ Richard tells me that ‘it was all done at home, in a small back room in North London! That’s the way things are done now. The songwriting has evolved [just as] the industry has.’

‘Every record I’ve done has been done this way,’ Sean notes. ‘ The old thing of the big studio and the record company is kind of gone now.’ Of course, some things do have to follow a more traditional approach, such as for gigs. Live they expand to a five piece, and they tell me that they are looking to play live ‘whenever it’s appropriate!’

They’re also surprisingly modest about their expectations for the record. Sean tells me: ‘We are aware that very few people of fifteen, sixteen could be into this reco

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rd…we’re not imagining an audience.’

But with a new Suede album on the h

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orizon, what does the future hold for Artmagic? It’s clear that the pair of them do not wish this to be simply a one off. Sean revelas that there will be another album and that the two of themhave ‘talked about ideas’ they have had for it, and Richard has been writing as well. But it’s different than being in Suede.

‘With Artmagic,’ Richard tells me, ‘there’s no rules.’ But what they have managed to do is to -quietly -ably prove themselves in their own right.

Become The One You Love is out now

Album Review: Piano Magic

piano-magic

Piano Magic -‘Life Has Not Finished With Me Yet’ (Second Language Music)

In an ideal world (hah!), I would be spending the first

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part of this review writing authoritatively about the Genesis thus far of Piano Magic. Th

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e reality is that whilst I have been aware of them for a number of years, this is the first time I’ve listened to an entire album of theirs. So I have no idea how this -their eleventh album-compares to thir fourth, how the changing lineup has affected the band’s soundchange, nor can I brag about rare stuff of theirs I own on vinyl.

Still wit

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h me? Piano Magic have produced an

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album that is quite an English sort of sadness (in contrast to the Scottish melancholia of Meursault, eagleowl, Mogwai and others that I have written about here before). It’s fitting that they have collaborated with m

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embers of Dead Can Dance -their music is perhaps the point where the slowcore of Low meets the instrumentation of Dead Can Dance (speaking of which, the first album from DCD has arrived at 17 Seconds HQ, it’s awesome, and I will be featuring he

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re soon. But more of that anon).

There’s a wry sort of humour to the title track -n

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ot a wallowing in misery-woe-is-me – but someone who has realised that there is no need to commit suicide. It’s delivered with a knowing wink. It’s a reflect

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ive album, but it’s certainly not an emotional drain (-think more Cocteau Twins or The Cure, rather than say Joy Division or Nico).

And it’s a real pleaure to listen to -I’ve played it several times this week already, and a

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m already wondering which friends I really should be pointing in the direction of it. Not bad for a band I was only vaguely aware of until a few days ago.

****

Life Has Not Finished With Me Yet is out now on Second Language M

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usic.

The continuing rise of Letters

lettersI have featured the rather fine Edinburgh noiseniks Letters on this blog before, both last year and earlier this year.

It’s privilege to be able to feature them again. Two important things you need to know:

Firstly, they released the awesome (****) Older Motion Pictures EP a couple of months ago, the follow-up to the brilliant ‘The Halfway House’ single. You can get it from all good digital distributors. Although some were ready to cry ‘foul!’ last year when people got very excited about Letters before they had even released a record or played much by way of gigs (I saw one of their earliest, supporting The Last Battle), tracks like ‘Torrent’ and ‘Older Motion Pictures’ show a band who are continuing to grow, to the point that they are firing on all cylinders.

Stream it below, and then go and buy it.

Not only that, but on August 14 they will play a late night slot at The Space in Edinburgh, as part of The Fringe. This will take place form Midnight. Nightowls and music lovers, get yourselves along.

Album Review: DZ Deathrays

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Check out my review over at God is in the TV

Does there have to be a reason?

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So, Frank Ocean has come out, rather publicly, over the last couple of weeks -and seems to be getting lots of positivity as a result.

He is, however, first and foremost a musician. And Channel Orange, his debut album is ace, and this is the outstanding cut from it: ‘Pyramids.’

Please take the time to listen to the ten minutes of this, it’s definitely w

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…and this a

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in’t bad either:

Album Review: The Very Best

the-very-best-mtmtmk

The Very Best -‘MTMTMK.’ (Moshi Moshi)

The signs before I got this album were very strong indeed. Not only were the two tracks that did the rounds first ‘Yoshua Alikuti’ and ‘Kondaine’ pretty bloody amazing, but the videos that accompanied them were amazing as well. Then the album

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turned up, and showed itself to be a worthy successor to their 2009 debut, The Warm Heart Of Africa.

Since the debut came out Etienne Trot has left the group, so they are now a duo, Malawian singer Esau Mwamwaya and London-based Swedish producer Johan Hugo. Yes, this album may seem a little

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dancier than their previous album, but it is my pleasure to be able to report that the album builds upon the foundations of the debut.

There’s an impressive cast list that includes not only Baaba Maal, K’naan and Amadou & Miriam, but also, erm, Bruno Mars on ‘We OK.’ This is an album for the heart, as much as the feet and the ears. I can’t dance for toffee, but this album makes me wish I could. It’s not a plundering of African sounds for Western audiences any more than their debut was, but it is a welcome dash of sunshine, especially when we’ve had so little of it in Scotland so far this summer.

So addictive is this album that I’ve had it on repeated play on more than one occasion. Whatever the weather, get this on your stereo.

****1/2

MTMTMK is out now on Moshi Moshi

Welcome back to the Vinyl Villain

One of my all time favourite blogs is The Vinyl Vill

ain.

Written by JC aka the Vinyl Villain in Glasgow, it

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‘s been going nearly as long as 17 Seconds. He’s given lots of support to me as

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a blogger, and valuable coverage to the label.

He’s informed me about lots of stuff, old and new, and put me up and his plac

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e in Glasgow one night after a memorable Edwyn Collins gig at the ABC.

Amongst the stuff he has told me about are Father Sculptor, so this is a repeat post of something I wrote earlier thi

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s year, that I found out about because of JC:

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Scottish band Father Sculptor have just released their debut single this week as a free download.

Now, I say free download -which is lovely because it’s always nice to be able to get stuff for free. But the reality is that this two track single ‘Ember’/’Blue’ is so gorgeous and so utterly wonderful that I would have been prepared to pay money for it.

It’s thanks to JC over at The Vinyl Villain that I picked up on it. He says they remind him of Sire-era James (i.e. Stutter and Stripmining LPs) and also one of the great Scottish lost bands, Geneva. I couldn’t agree more – there is something wonderful and exciting about their melancholic, ethereal rock, that isn’t shoegazing (not that there’s anything wrong with that) that makes me want to play these two tracks again and again.

I can’t seem to find out much more about them other than that they hail from Glasgow. So for all I know they could be sixty-something convicts or

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a bunch of rich teenagers who have made this with Mummy and Daddy’s chequebook. It’s irrelevant, really. Take this at face value and take it to your hearts. They’re getting some great press across the blogs and it’s entirely deserved.*

These are two earlier tracks from their bandcamp page.

* I later received a very nice email from the band in which they stated: ‘For the record we are a happy medium between 60 something convicts & rich teenagers.’

Happy Birthday to…the blog!

Yup, it is six years since I made my first awkward forays into the world of blogging.

cake
Since then, there have been gig nights, the label and records downloads and CDs, DJing, interviews and lots of fun and stress as a result.

In the last year I’ve even been able to interview (amongst others) Mark Stewart of The Pop Group, Bwani Junction, The Raincoats, Dweezil Zappa and Roy Harper. Sure there’s a list as long as your arm of people I’d love to interview, but I think if someone had told me six years ago when I started all this that I’d get to do this, I wouldn’t have dared believe them.

and in that time, I’ve married the wonderful Mrs. 17 Seconds (we celebrated our fifth wedding anniversary yesterday) and welcomes our son Master 17 Seconds into the world too.

You may have noticed that there tends to be fewer mp3s than there used to be. Like many blogs, I have come increasingly under fire from sinitser organisations who do not reply to my emails (nevermind take notice of the disclaimers), and on many occasions had links removed that I actually have the music to under licence!

Anyway, thanks to those of you still reading -and it still gives me pleasure. Feedback is allways nice, btw, boys and girls 😉

Album Review: Owen McAulay

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Owen McAulay-‘Time.’ (sans-culottes)

There is a peculiarly Scottish melancholy that I have tuned into over the course of eleven years of living here. I hear it in the music of eagleowl, Meursault, Idlewild, Arab Strap (and their associated projects), and perhaps most of all, Mogwai. As an outsider who has come to call Scotland home, I wonder if it is to do with the wea

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ther as much as the way Calvinism slips into the water like a particularly vicious form of something (something that has nowt to do with religion, God or society and everything to do with the need to feel bad about yourself, I find myself thinking in my darker moments).

And I hear this melancholy in this solo work of Smackvan’s Owen McAulay. It is a thing of beauty, not a thing of wa

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llowing in it. A beautifully stripped down work, performed almost entirely by the man himself. It hangs together as a very coherent body of work (no mean feat considering it came together between 2005 and 2012). For much of the album I had a lump in my throat – so sad, yet so utterly compelling a piece of work.

And there’s lyrics that in the hands of so many would seem utterly trite, for example on ‘All Is Fine’ we hear:
‘My daughter has a child
I have a grandson and I’m happy
He looks at me and smiles’

In the context of this album, it offers a glimmer of home, of hope, and is genuinely warm, something few could actually pull off.

I can’t claim to know much of his work before, but on the strength of this amazing record I want to get my hands on everything he’s done.

A contender for album of the year, out of over 200 I have heard so far in 2012. Beg, steal or borrow a copy, but I really think you should buy it. And listen to it. Lots. Lots and lot

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s…

****1/2

Time is out now on sans-culottes

Stre

am at CD Baby.

You can buy it from there, and you should also check your local independent record store if you live in Scotland for it