Album Review – Burnt Island

burnt-island-music-and-maths

Burnt Island -‘Music and Maths’ (Chaffinch)

At just under twenty-three minutes and six tracks, as to whether this an EP or a min

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i-album is perhaps up for debate, but I’d rather focus on the music. Quite rightly, this has been some excellent notices of late.

If you feel the need to lazily pigeonhole bands, then, yes, Burnt Island are very much at that point where scots folk meets indie. But over the course of these six songs, what

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hey do is manage to be so lovely -and as Song, By Toad has already pointed out -they have mastered the art of the tiny surprise. I’d picked up on this album a

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fter Avalanche Records were pushing it -in a nice way, and after other recommendations (including from members of

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the Last Battle), I knew i had to investigate. It didn’t pin me to the floor on first hearing, but i have been playing this a fair bit over the last few weeks, and every time I hear it, it works its’ charms a little further on me.

Not only do they have a knack for great songs and tunes, but the Glasgow-based five pice also have a knack for unusual but rather cool songs. The album is bookended by ‘A Supposedly Fun thing I’ll Never do Again’ and ‘Me And All Of My Friends Are Alright.’ Both excellen

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t tracks, but the the one that has won Burnt Island their place on my best of scottish play

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list on my iPod is the fantastic title track.

If you’re not turned on by music of the indie-folk variety…maybe this album won’t work

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for you. But if you still have a place in your cynical, twisted heart for sweet music, make iot for Burnt Island. I found room -can you?

****

Music and Maths is out now on Chaffinch Records

Burnt Island’s myspace (stream tracks here)

Buy it at Avalanche, from Chaffinch

Argh!

cat-yawning2

Too much to do, and nowhere near enough time to do it in.

There are two interviews to be written up for this blog -Kid Canaveral and Midas Fall, numerous reviews -including at least two releases on Song, By Toad, and as ever, an inbox full of acts waiting to be discovered that I haven’t

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properly attacked in months.

And to add to this, an excellent gig last night in Edinburgh, at Maggie’s Chambers, featuring the very fine Jesus H. Foxx and the amazing White Heath. Follow the links and check out their myspace pages, and go and see them live if you can.

Currently making a big impression on my iPod are new albums from Maxwell Panth

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er, Burnt Island, Woodenbox with a fistful of fivers, Swimmer One, Trips and Falls…I’m trying to get around to writing about them all.

Please bear with me.

And enjoy this track from HEALTH -liked their album last year, not sure if this is from a forthcoming EP or album or what, but I love it!

Health -‘USA Boys.’ mp3

EP review – eagleowl

intothefold-coverimage-hires

eagleowl -‘Into the Fold EP’ (Kilter)

oh, eagleowl, eagleowl, eagleowl.

…Where do I start?

I could speak with the envy, that this amazing band get this great coverage, worhsip and adulation, in Scotland and further afield. I could drop in -again – the fact that I used to work with vioinist Malcolm in Fopp six or seven years ago. Sulk that they’ve had a radio 1 session. But I’m genuinely pleased for them, and genuinely glad to see them doing well. Because they desreve every bit of praise that’s come their way and more.

Because – following on from their For The Thoughts You Never Had EP, and the ‘Sleep the Winter’ 7″, this third release from the Edinburgh band shows them continuing to grow and stretch their, er, well, wings (sorry). Over the course of the four songs, yet again Bart and the band break my heart. It’s simultaneously simple, yet heartbreaking, so straightforward and yet utterly complex. How do Bart, Clarissa, Malcolm (‘and more often than not’) Rob do it? the final, nearly ten minute track on the EP ‘the Conjunction’ is like being fed the whole of Low’s oeuvre in ten minutes, it’s so beautiful. Dammit, I’ve got a lump in my throat.

Every single one of these tracks is outstanding in its’ own right. eagleowl have upped their game, and if I run the risk of sounding sychophantic, so bloody well be it.

*****

The Into the Fold EP will be released on May 3 on CD and download.

eagleowl -‘Morpheus.’ mp3

eagleowl’s website/eagleowl’s myspace

Album Review – Midas Fall

midas-fall

Midas Fall -‘Eleven, Return and Revert.’ (Monotreme Records)

OK, so I’m hardly unbiased on this front, what with the blog, the label and the being based here ‘n’ all, but there is so much great music coming out of this wee country right now. When it comes to music, Scotland more than punches above its’ weight, and seems to be growing in confidence. Singing in own accents – acceptable (why did people sneer at the Proclaimers for it). Not moving to London to advance career – why did we have to wait for Franz Ferdinand to lead the way on this? Edinburgh – just as much to offer as Glasgow, cheers to broken Records for kicking people’s arses into gear. And being able to sound how you want – ah, that’s what I call independence!

And Midas Fall, based in Edinburgh and Glasgow are at the forefront of band shsowing how it can be done. Drawing on a range of influcences, they have songs to die for, and a

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re forging an identity that is uniquely and distinctly theirs. They supported Mono is Glasgow recently, which is one aspect of their sound, but interviewing guitarist Rowan and singer Liz recently for this blog (which will appear here very soon, I promise), they also cited artists as diverse as Oceansize, Radiohead and Tool as having influenced their sound.

The opening track on the album ‘Movie Screens’ sets the tone here. Haunting and beautiful, in my first feature on them on here I wrote ‘Normally words like melodic and haunting in press releases are bywords for bland, but in th

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is case, these adjectives are compliments.’ Liz’s vocals nod in the direction of almost namesake Liz Fraser and Bat For Lashes. I drove all the way to Glasgow to see the second half of their set one night, and it was certainly worth it!

I challenge you to listen to this album, and not fall for its’ charms. Your choice, my neck on the line – but ultimately, your loss if you don’t fall for Midas Fall. Oh, and in case you were wondering, there’s really nothing in the name at all, just they felt they couldn’t continue labouring under the moniker of merkin (beware if you google it). But there’s shure as heck something in these waters…

****

Eleven, Return and Revert is out on Monday on Monotreme Records.

Midas Fall -‘Movie Screens.’ mp3

Midas Fall’s myspace

Interview – Viv Albertine

viv_albertine_main

1979 and 2010 actually seem to have a fair bit in common, thirty or so years apart as they may be. A Labour government struggling to run the country -and as with then, the scary as hell prospect that there could be a Tory Government making it even worse, just around the corner. Yet despite that, healthy DIY music scenes, people taking the ethos of punk and making their own, far more exciting records, people publishing their own written work and setting up their own labels. Oh, and Viv Albertine being behind some of the most amazing recorded work of the year.

In 1979, that work was the seminal album Cut and one of the most wonderful cover versions ever, when the Slits totally transformed Marvin Gaye’s ‘I Heard It Through The Grapevine.’ In 2010, it’s her first recorded work in twenty-five years the wonderful ‘Flesh’ EP.

When I call her at her home on the south coast of England, she’s wonderfully warm, and it’s quite clear that I’m not the only man on earth rather in awe of her. I’m in the company of non other than one Thurston Moore, alternative rock icon, Sonic Youth guitarist -and most significantly for our story today, the man behind the Ecstatic Peace record label.

Viv met Thurston when she went to see Sonic Youth with none other than Gina from the Raincoats, the fabulous band who were the Slits’ contemporaries (and made one of 1979’s other phenomenal records with their self-titled debut.) As Viv puts it, she and Thurston ‘hit it off and hung out for the rest of the evening.’ She let him hear some of the songs that she’d been working on. ‘They weren’t ready [for releasing] I thought,’ she says, however ‘he liked them and thought they should be recorded as part of my musical progress.’

For now the EP is the only thing that’s available, but she says ‘I’ve got so many songs I’m desperate to record. Like with the Slits, I’m getting into my head how I want them to sound.’ She

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‘s playing live and adds that ‘when I play live, the people there are often moved. [The songs] resonate for people.’

This EP is nakedly personal. I have to confess that I find myself desperate to ask about some of the lyrics, yet they feel so nakedly personal that it feels rather like quizzing someone on something that you read when you stole their diary, slipped it back and are desperate to ask them. Yet despite this, I can play it on repeat for several listens, several months after it dropped on the doormat.

I also can’t resist myself from asking about the punk-era that the Slits came through. It’s clear that the Slits found the times they were living in difficult. More than thirty years later, even John Lydon (AKA Rotten) has said that he feels it’s been talked up into something it wasn’t. How does Viv feel about it all, looking back?

‘It

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[the punk movement] was important to us at the time. We lived in London – and still there was nothing going on! It’s amazing how lacklustre things were.’ But when punk started ‘that small punk movement did attract like-minded people.’ Did it change things for people? ‘Everything was picked to pieces – it was like ground zero.’ And Viv found herself in with some of the people who changed the musical shape of Britain in the late seventies, in a way that despite challenges, still reverberates over thirty years later. Amongst those she knew were people like Sid Vicious and John Lydon -‘we were all mates or cohorts.’ The Slits’ original drummer Palmolive (born Paloma Romera) would go onto join the Raincoats, being replaced by one Peter Clarke, better known as Budgie, who drummed on Cut and then went onto join Souxsie and the Banshees and marry Siouxsie Sioux. He in turn was replaced by Bruce Smith, who also played with Bristol’s The Pop Group.

Not that this should give an impression of some kind of punk happy family. Because it’s clear that being in the Slits meant being under attack from a lot of sides. ‘People were so antagonistic,’ she recalls. ‘We were smuggled out of hotels. We were attacked physically.’ The clothes they wore -and this at a time when Vivienne Westwood was laying the ground for what would happen- seems to have shocked people to their very core. As Viv describes it ‘We dressed like something out of a porn mag and bovver boys.’ A tough time, then? ‘It was extremely tough for us. The only person who was kind and open to us was John Peel,’ she says referring to the legendary Radio 1 DJ. The Banshees may have been refusing to sign to anyone -or at least giving the impression that they were, but the Slits had recorded two sessions for Peel before they were signed by Island Records in 1979.

The album Cut still sounds ahead of its’ time even now. The cover with the three girls – Viv, singer Ari Up and bassist Tessa Pollitt covered in mud was not designed to titillate but unnerved many. The only question I ask her about the cover, I tell her, is whether she’s heard the rumour that the Rough Trade Record shop had a meeting about whether or not to stock the album because of the cover. [N.B. This is mentioned in the sleeve notes to the Rough Trade Shops Post Punk 01 compilation]. Viv laughs and says she hasn’t heard this rumour but it wouldn’t surprise her. Though the Slits were later signed to the Rough Trade label, then linked with the shop, Viv says that head honcho Geoff Travis ‘didn’t think we were PC enough! We weren’t considered feminists.’

As the seventies became the eighties, so the scenes shifted and times got tougher. ‘ Punk was so wonderful…and then the eighties happened.’ The Slits played a final gig at the Hammersmith Palais and split up in November 1981.

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Viv’s unquestionably influenced many people over the years -‘I’d be flattered if Madonna took influences from us’ – but it’s not all moved her. The 1990s saw the emergence of the Riot Girl movement, but ‘the riot girl movement didn’t grab me.’ She reflects that ‘After the Slits…after a year, I felt the whole music scene was dead. I started to make films and literally downed the guitar.’ She went to film school and proudly states on her website that ‘she didn’t drop out.’

Not involved in the recent Slits reformation for either the ‘Return Of the Killer Slits’ EP or the Trapped Animal album, Viv is still continuing to persue her own path. I hope there’ll be more albums. She’s playing live and tells me that she’s planning to come to Scotland towards the end of the year, and we round off our conversation by discussing venues in Scotland.

Check out the EP – there’s more ideas and better songs there than on some people’s entire careers. Viv Albertine continues to

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make her presence felt -and it’s great to have her back.

The Flesh EP is out now on Ecstatic Peace.

She will play the following shows:

30 Apr Scaledown, The King and Queen, London; 1 May The Old Blue Last, London; 8 May Un-Convention Factory Macclesfield; 9 May All Tomorrow’s Parties Minehead; 14 May 2010 The Miller, London; 15 May Resonance FM, London;
30 May Je Thames, London; 5 Jun Flat Lake Festival, County Monaghan; 31 Jul Ladyfest, Norwich; 6 Aug Rebellion festival, Blackpool.

Viv Albertine’s website/Viv Albertine myspace

Best dancefloor tracks ever?

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Will be DJing in public about four

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times over the coming weeks, and am trying to work out what I want to play.

It can be hard trying to work out what will work a crowd and resisting the temptaion to make sarky comments to various responses to people who grumble that you aren’t playing what you want to hear.

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Or bringing in a track you have played a million times before at the wrong speed (I did that with ‘Bl

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ue Monday a few years back. Ah well).

Still, as one of the best tracks of the last ten years, I am almost guaranteed to give a play over the next few weeks…

LCD Soundsystem -‘Losing My Edge.’ mp3

Mind you, I was pleasa

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ntly surprised with how well this went down one time…

Birthday Party -‘Release Th

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e Bats.’ mp3

…and I wonder just how well these would go down on a Saturday night…or not…

Huggy Bear -‘Herjazz.’ mp3

Voodoo Queens -‘Supermodel Superficial.’ mp3

Oh, and of course I use vinyl…the idea of using iPods to DJ with just seems too naff…

Record store day

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I’d be exaggerating if I said that Cockburn Street and its’ record shops were the reason I moved to Edinburgh. Rather like my claim that belle & Sebastian made me want to move to Scotland – but both played their part. And I have certainly spent a fair amount of time in Avalanche Records on Cockburn Street. I was offered shifts in there – but I’d just started teacher training at that point, so I wound up working at Fopp -again -just down the street, then.

Record shops have suffered over the last ten years. Downloading of both the legal and illegal variety, rising rents, the advent of Amazon…it’s estimated that there are now about 300 record shops in the UK. Names like Our Price, Tower and Virgin are part of history just as so many independent record shops are. Fopp very nearly died a death -but is now part of the HMV family, along with (to the best of my knowledge) Waterstone’s.

Call me old fashioned, idealistic -many have – but a) I still like to hold a physical release (preferably on vinyl) over having something downloaded (though the idea of free mp3s with vinyl increasingly practised is an excellent thing); and b) I’d rather
buy it in an independent shop. When I set up the label (17 Seconds Records, in case this is the very first time you have found yourself here), it was great to see the releases listed on iTunes et al. But to walk up Cockburn St and see the Aberfeldy and Dirty Cuts 7″s in the windows of both Underground Solush’n and Avalanche made me feel like I’d achieved something. Going to London and getting it in Rough Trade felt amazing. As was getting releases in Mono in Glasgow and speaking to the godfather of the Scottish indie scene, Stephen McRobbie, also frontman of the Pastels. Was it a cure for A.I.D.S, an end to World Poverty or finding a way to save the world? No of course it wasn’t, but it was a dream come true for me.

Avalanche is still going -and giving a lot of support to Scottish acts and labels, under Kevin Buckle who’s run the shops for twenty years, yet even they are having to work out how they will survive in the future.

So please read Kevin Buckle’s post on the Radar Music Blog
.

And in honour of Avalanche, music made by those who’ve worked in the shop or had

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links with it over the years. Saturday is Record Store

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Day. Use them -or you’ll lose them.

Jesse Garon and the Desperadoes -‘Grand Hotel.’ mp3 (Andrew Tully and Margerita)

Shop Assistants -‘Big ‘E’ Power.’ mp3 (released on the Avalanche label, this track also featured Margerita)

X-Lion Tamer -‘Starsign (Teenage Fanclub cover).’ mp3(Tony Taylor worked at Avalanche while I worked at Fopp a couple of doors away. He became the second act to sign to us. This cover has never been commercially released. Enjoy).

Anyone else…

frightened-rabbit

…exhausted by the Election yet?

And the Guardian’s right

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(as usual), the front covers of the manifestoes of the two main politi

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cal parties do look quite comical side by side…

Still, this should keep your spirit

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s up!

Redskins -‘Keep On Keeping On.’ mp3

And if you’re e

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ligible to vote, make sure you register.

17 Seconds Records’ update: Factory Kids, Tigerfest – and me!

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First things first,

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the Factory Kids release their second EP for us today, cuningly titled ‘

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the One EP.’ (17SEC18)

It’s available on download only – and we’d like to give this track away as a free taster:

Factory Kids -‘Holiday Crease.’ mp3

Meanwhile, there is an exce

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llent night coming up at PinUps in Glasgow at the end of April featuring Lloyd from Peenko, The Pop Cop…and me, DJing!

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And not forgetting this Saturday…

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Hmm, I’d better get some sleep in.