33 1/3 Part 4

public-enemy-nation1

Public Enemy -‘It takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back.’ (Def Jam Recordings, 1988)

Boom! In your face.

Public Enemy’s sophomore album from 1988 more than developed the promise of their debut Yo! Bumrush The Show, it showed that they were major contenders, not just in hip-hop but in music generally. There’s more righteus anger here than in one hundred punk albums, and whilst you could party to this album, it was a wake-up call for many.

‘Too black! Too strong’ runs ‘Bring the Noise.’ ‘Radio stations…I question their blackness. They call themselves black – but let’s see if they’ll play this’ says Chuck D. They may not have been knocking on the door of the daytime playlist in the UK then (and this is twenty years ago, remember, much less variation in what was available), but they were breaking into the charts. Political, in your face music. Hip-Hop was here to stay, producing not just party jams, but music as political as punk, as the protest singers of the sixties. Public Enemy clearly felt like outsiders and they were not taking crap off anyone.

Politically of its’ time – Hip-Hop was described as being the black person’s CNN, pointing out that mainstream media in the US was not speaking to a united nation. It was twenty years since Martin Luther King had been assassinated, another twenty years until Barack Obama would be elected US President. Whatever had been achieved, there was a hell of a lot to do.

I was eleven when the album came out – and to my shame it was nearly ten years later when I properly started to listen to it. For me, this was the album that taught me how to listen to how an album was produced and put together. There is a very strong possibility that this could be the best-produced album ever, so kudos to Rick Rubin. This is an album that much can be learned to from listening on headphones. Not wasted on ghastly muso musings, but listening to intricacies on here, the beats, the samples, the tightest rhythm ever.

Singles that made an impact were ‘Bring the Noise’ (later re-recorded with thrash metal band Anthrax to stunning effect in 1991) and ‘Don’t Believe The Hype’ but for me the standout track is ‘She Watch Channel Zero?!’ one of the most intense things ever committed to vinyl.

Frequently appearing in ‘best of’ lists for the eighties and Hip-Hop, this is simply one of the best albums ever.

End of.

Public Enemy -‘Bring The Noise.’ mp3

Public Enemy -‘Don’t Believe The Hype.’ mp3

Public Enemy -‘She Watch Channel Zero?!.’ mp3

17 Seconds Blog – The 1,000th post

birthday-cake2

Yes indeed!

Technically, it is more than 1,000 posts, on the grounds that I have lost a few posts after clashes with the DMCA last year, but here it is, the 1,000th published post on the blog.

So, what’s happened since I started the blog back in July 2006? I’ve reveiwed lots of albums, and quite a few gigs, interviewed some great bands, and started a record label. It’s been hard work, I’ve been driven to distraction, but

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I feel that there are lots of people who enjoy the blog, as it generally gets over 1,000 hits a day (1400 seems

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to be the record).

I’ve also enjoyed writing about bands that have come and gone – the posts on the Shop Assistants and Motorcycle Boy, for example, seem to have struck a chord. Hopefully one

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day those records will be properly re-issued.

Thanks is due, first and foremost to the wonderful Sam, Mrs. 17 Seconds, for all her love and support, and patience. As well as to all the readers (w

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hether I know you or not) who have left feedback, artists who got in touch about stuff they are doing, fellow

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bloggers who supported me through thick and thin and linked to me, and anyone who sent me mp3s when I begged for them.

Many thanks to to everyone who has helped with the label – Mrs. 17 Seconds, my business partner Laurent, Scott for doing all the mailouts and support; my parents and brother; our five artists; Shona Donaldson, Bruce Finday, Julia Nicolle, for vital work and support; and the DJs who have supported us on the radio: Jim Gellatley, Tom Robinson, Iain Baker and especially Vic Galloway, and everyone who has come to the gigs, stocked our records, bought the music, written about us and supported us. Apologies to anyone who really should be on here that I have forgotten.

(And no thanks to the person who tried to use this against me. God is watching you.)

The song that started it all:

The Cure -‘Seventeen Seconds.’ mp3

The most popular song to appear on the blog:

Manic Street Preachers -‘Umbrella (Rihanna cover).’ mp3

One of the bands, gone but not forgotten that I have championed:

Motorcycle Boy -‘Big Rock Candy Mountain.’ mp3

…and proof, if proof should be needed after all this time, that this blog is not just about white men with guitars:

Nina Simone -‘Feeling Good.’ mp3

Bless you all XX

Album Review – Lou Barlow

lou-barlow-goodnight-unknown

Lou Barlow -‘Goodnight Unknown.’ (Domino)

It’s been four years since Barlow’s last album, Emoh….well, sort of. In tha

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t time, he’s reunited with D

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inosaur Jr. to make two fine albums in the form of Beyond and Farm, as well as re-issuing three of Sebadoh’s albums. He’s clearly had fingers in several pies.

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So, of his own stuff, what gives? Well, Dinosaur

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Jr. are back on noisy turf (hooray!) and it seems that this is Barlow’s acoustic side coming through. Not that he hasn’t experimented with acoustic-sounding stuff before. It’s a grower of an album – my initial reaction was well, this is nice but nothing more. The free track made available for promotional purposes ‘Gravitate’ is good, but not the strongest track on the album, by a long shot.

But on listening to this album again, whilst it isn’t up there with Bakesale or the like, this is a really nice collection of songs. I have found myself warming up to it, the w

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n ‘Gravitate’ starts to prove itself beautiful. It showcases that Barlow is a very good singer-songwriter and also shows just how well his voice has matured.

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Closer ‘One Note Tone’ sums up the album well; a melodic, acoustic pop song that nonetheless has a great deal of the energy of prime Dinosaur Jr. because of his asscoiations with leftfield indie-rock it’s sometimes been easy to forget that Barlow can write honest, heartfelt pop songs (see also ‘Forever Instant’ recorded with the Sentridoh).

So…give this several listens. It may not win barlow many new fans, but it should be heard, and given the chance that it deserves.

***1/2

Lou Barlow’s official website/Sebadoh website/Lou Barlow myspace

33 1/3 Part 3

kelis-kaleidoscope

Kelis -‘Kaleidoscope’ (Virgin America, 2000)

When the reviews of the noughties (what the hell are we calling this decade anyway? Nearly bloody over and we still haven’t decided), hopefully much of the music that will be focused on as well as the ubiquitous guitar music will be American R’n’ B and Hip-Hop. Along with the UK takes on much of this, which have helped spawn, variously, grime and dubstep (and trip-hop in the previous decade), it has been a stunning time for much of this. And sure, there’s been a lot of guitar music, but if I’d been at Glastonbury in 2008, Jay-Z would definitely have been

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a higher priority than the flippin’ Kings Of Leon.

Amongst the most amazing records that Pharrell Williams and Chad Hugo, known as The Neptunes have produced is this: the debut album from Kelis. It was going to be this or Tasty, but I think the wake-up call this provided for me, as I failed to get truly into either UK garage or Nu-metal in 2000, wins it over. Early in 2000 the chorus of ‘I hate you so much right now’ from ‘Caught Out There’ ruled the airwaves. A punk as anything attitude, and suddenly r’n’b wasn’t about soppy ballads (never got it on with new jack swing), it was sassy, it was sexy,

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it was in your face and I love(d) it. I’m betting that Beyonce may well have learned a bit from Kelis.

The follow-up single ‘Good Stuff’ showed that as well as being a rapper she was also a singer – at a time when it seemed you were one or the other but not both. Album cuts like ‘Mafia’ and ‘Roller Rink’ showed very different sides. As indie seemed to be increasingly about very stodgy rock -hello Travis and Stereophonics -this was where it was at. Not on the album – but I almost wish it was- was Kelis’ collaboration with Wu-Tang Clan’s Ol’ Dirty Basta

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rd ‘Got Your Money.’ Here was a lass who mattered.

The follow-up album didn’t cut the mustard, but by the end of 2003 she was back with Tasty. Which she most definitely was, posing suggestively with a lollipop, and causing much water cooler discussion about what exactly ‘Milkshake’ was about…Hmm. At the time the album seemed to be overshadowed by both Destiny’s Child and Eminem, but I feel this has stood the test of time remarkably well.

Kelis -‘Good Stuff.’ mp3

Kelis -‘Caught Out There.’ mp3

Kelis -‘Mafia.’ mp3

33 1/3 Part 2

nma

New Model Army -‘Thunder and Consolation.’ (EMI, 1989)

No matter how many times, I hear this album, I never get tired of it. (Just as well, one one occasion driving to a gig, James at the Birmingham NEC in 1998, my taped copy of this album got stuck in the tape player and it was all we had to listen to. Its’ quality meant that did not matter).

New Model Army have attracted some derision over the years, which largely seems down to the fact that some of their followers may have worn clogs. But Justin Sullivan is a fantatsic songwriter, musician and lyricist, and over their thirty year career this is the album that showcases his talents best. They may not have troubled the singles chart in recent years, but they still have a huge follwoing in both the UK and further afield.

I remember seeing New Model Army mentioned in Smash Hits, of all places, about 1989, round about the time that this album came out. However, whilst I became gradually more and more aware of them, it was several years before I taped a copy off a friend and about 1998 before I bought it. By that stage, I had fallen in love with the album, hook, line and sinker.

New Model Army came out of the punk/post-punk scene and based in Bradford as they were – and are – there was a definite sense of being outside the pravailing trends as perpetuated by a media in the UK that remains strongly London-centric. The song ‘Green and Grey’ which is almost heartbreaking in its’ sadness, imagines a letter to a friend who has left these valleys of ‘Green and Grey’. At first, Sullivan’s lyrics explain that the town is still as it was: ‘The pubs are still full on Friday nights

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/and things get started still.’ Yet there’s a (rather understandable) bitterness directed at the ‘friend’ who has gone to ‘the land of gold and posion/that which beckons to us all.’ It’s not named and shamed as London, but given that the streets of London were legendarily paved with gold (does this steam for the story of Dick Whittington or is this even older?) There are various versions of the song in existence, but the album version has the gorgeous, full introduction.

Ed Alleyne-Johnson’s violin playing adds much to the album – perhaps nowhere more so than on ‘Vagabonds.’ It amused me in later years when I would lend the album to friends who would say ‘It’s quite like the Levellers, isn’t it?’ The plight of new age travellers was being focused on more and more in culture – just as well as they were being demonised spectacularly by the gutter press in the UK, and this was not long after the infamous ‘Battle of the Beanfield’ which had taken place in 1985, itself immortalised by the Levellers. This album predates the Levellers, and whilst I still play early Levellers albums with a feeling of nostalgia, this album has aged well.

When I interviewed Justin Sullivan last month,* I asked him if he thought the world had got any better or worse. He didn’t think it had – though the pre-internet ‘225’ sums up a warning of what would come over the following generation. Its’ damning couplet is ‘Well this golden age of communication means everybody talks at the same time/and liberty just means there’s freedom to exploit any weakness that you can find.’ Then again, the so

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ng starts off with ‘She stares at the screen, with its’ little words of green.’ In hose days computer screens really did tend to be black and green…

1989 was a strong year for albums – De La Soul’s Three Feet High and Rising, Madonna’s Like A Prayer,Disintegration by the Cure and the ubiquitous Pixies’ Doolittle and the eponymous Stone Roses debut, to cherrypick five others. This holds its’ own -perhaps as an album out of time, and yet very much in tune with the world around it. There have been strong New Model Army albums subsequently – Purity, Strange Brotherhood and this year’s Today Is A Good Day, but this remains my favourite of all.

*will finish writing this up soon, promise!

33 1/3: Part 1

So…the greatest album of the nineties?

Well, duh, obviously Nevermind, no?

No.

IMHO, the greatest album of the nineties is Dog Man Star by Suede.

suede-dog-man-star
…and here’s why.

Between 1992 to early 1994, Suede were actually quite cool and fashionable. Nirvana had shown that ‘indie/alternative’ could get on daytime radio, which was beginning to change. And the artists previously the domain of early evening shows on Radio 1 were starting

to make the daytime playlists. Suede were an intoxicating mixture of glam, the gothic and implied sexuality -Brett Anderson’s quote that ‘I’m a bisexual who’s never had a homosexual experience’ was quoted even more than the couplet from one of their b-sides (a b-side, for christ’s sake!) ‘My Insatiable One’ -‘On the escalators/you shit paracetomal.’

By September 1994, things were starting to change for Suede, and not necessarily for the best. I was in my final year of school, and start

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that life in a small town would not have to plague me forever. Suede’s second album was anticipated – but the Britpop scene that they were part of, whether they wanted to be or not, was starting to overtake them. Blur had released Parklife a few months previously, Oasis’ Definitely Maybe was bringing laddishness back into fashion (unfortunately) and looking effete was not so cool any more. And Pulp’s Jarvis Cocker was also proving that he could write a dark, deeply sexual lyric.

Had Dog Man Star come out in the eighties, it would probably have been described as goth. And there’s a certain amount of the gothic about the album. With its’ tales of life in suburbia, getting wrecked to ease the pain, dying young and staying pretty…this was the mood of the album. Hints of drug use crept into the album, and then into the interviews. Was ‘Heroine’ just a clever pun…or something more? What about ‘Daddy’s Speeding?’ but ‘new generation’ the final single release from the album was optimistic, and anthemic. I’d picked up the 12″

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single on a trip to London, and brought it back, like a talisman.

Dog Man Star is an album out of time and all the better for it. It’s the album that ensured Suede always meant more to than Oasis ever, ever could. It’s orchestral – not because it aspired to be like the Beatles, but because it aspired to lift us out of the towns that dragged us down, and the Smiths were never, ever coming back. It was the soundtrack of outsiders who longed to escape. In my penultimate term at school my friend Duncan and I go

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t tickets to see them in Leicester – and we were not disappointed. It was a cold night (oddly fitting, given the mood of the album) , and even with Bernard Butler

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having departed, Richard Oakes’ enthusiasm made up for it.

I was never going to fit in a small town. Why would I want to? There wasn’t a way out…but a way forward. Suede might be falling from grace – but the rugger buggers and townies would soon be left behind. There was…hope.

Suede -‘Heroine.’ mp3

Suede -‘The 2 Of Us.’ mp3

Suede -‘Still Life.’ mp3

Album Review – Cold Cave

cold-cave-love-comes-close

Cold Cave – ‘Love Comes Close.’ (Mata

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dor)

Given my effusive praise for much of what has come out on the Matador label, there may be regular readers who feel that forty minutes of bodily functions released on a CD bearing the Matador label would earn a four and a half star review on this blog. This review isn’t designed to completely scorch this…but may do slightly.

Having enjoyed the early mp3s I had heard a couple of months ago, I was really looking forward to this. This thirty minute, nine track album feels somewhat uneven. [Apparently digital copies have three extra tracks; these are not included on the copies sent out for review].Whilst there is some fine electro-pop here -an

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in 2009 – there is some dross which lets it down. The title track feels like a bad re-write of New Order’s ‘Your Silent Face.’ ‘The Laurels Of Erotomania’ on the other hand evokes prime period electronic Depeche Mode with its’ catchy one line synth sounds. ‘Heaven Was Full’ sounds like the Sisters Of Mercy jamming with Yazoo.

There’s a lot of promoise here – but I feel that there’s more to be developed. I like much of this album, but despite repeated plays, I have yet to fall in love with it. I will be interested to see what their second album is like.

***
Love Comes Close will be released on Matador on October 2.

Cold Cave’s myspace

Cold Cave -‘Laurels Of Erotomania.’ mp3

Cold Cav

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e -‘Life Magazine.’ mp3

Introducing…White Denim

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Right…I cannot claim to be first off the mark with this one – indeed I’m something of a Johnny come lately. However, checking through my emails today has paid off.

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sed their debut album Workout Holiday it was described by Uncut magazine as being ‘a party record for thinking people.’ This seems like a pretty accurate description to me. The band are: James Petralli on vocals and guitar; Joshua Block on drums and Steve Terebecki on vocals and bass. The band hail from Austin, Texas and what I love here is the inventiveness of what almost be described as avant rock –

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where the intelligence of Shellac meets the party spirit of Mudhoney and the rip it up and start again adventure of Times New Viking. The band’s sophomore album is called Fits. This is already out in the UK on Fulltime Hobby and will be out in the US later this month on Downtown.

This has already been a single:

White Denim -‘

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I Start to Run.’ mp3

White Denim -‘I Start To Run.’

White Denim -‘Mirrored and Reverse.’ mp3

From last year’s Workout Holiday:

White Denim -‘Shake Shake Shake.’


White Denim website/White Denim Myspace

More legal mp3s here

White Denim website/White Denim myspace/White Denim on Last

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FM

33 1/3 – a new series startng on 17 Seconds

OK…the idea is outrageously simple, and nicked off JC over at the Vinyl Villain.

As JC approached 45, he did the countdown to his birthday doing 45 7″s (or 45s as the Americans call them). As I approach my 33rd birthday o

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n November 15 (sarcy comments not needed) I am going to do 33 LPs that have shaped me. It would have helped if one of the cats hadn’t jumped on the USB turntable last night, but these things happen.

This will start tomorrow -so why not a bit of a mini-album (seeing as it’s technically 33 1/3 rpm!)

sons-and-daughters-love-the-cup
Sons and Daughters -‘Love The Cup (Domino, 2004)

During the weekend just gone, I was privileged to be at Gargleblast Studios in Hamilton. 17 Seconds’ act Escape Act were over recording material for their second album which will hopefully be released by us in 2010. The studio is owned by Andy Miller, who produced Mogwai’s Young Team amongst others (and it was the original Chem 19). When he told me that the first Sons & Daughters record, Love The Cup was recorded there I commented : ‘I love that record. It’s perfection. It’s the best thing they’ve ever done.’

Mr. Miller chuckled. ‘Yeah, I think they’re kinda fed up of people sa

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ying that!’

But I stand by that comment. Over the course of just seven songs, Sons & Daughters unleash a stream of brilliance over the course of twenty five minutes. It’s an infectious, fiery mix of country and indie and just as incendiary live on stage as on record. I first saw Sons & Daughters live on a bill in York in 2003; headlined by Franz Ferdinand and also featuring Dogs Die In Hot Cars. I’ve seen them several times since, quite often on bills with other acts. It’s appropriate that one of the songs was entitled ‘Johnny Cash’ – the godfather of country casts his spell over the album. The interplay between vocalists Adele Bethel and Scott Paterson is mesmerising – you can feel almost voyeuristic just listening. And this album is addictive; like a vampire lover (though less harmful), once bitten, forever smitten.

And they have their own part to play in much of my own life over the last five years. The day this album was released in August 2004, they played an instore at Fopp, Edinburgh. I was DJing, for the first time in eight years. Scott in particular was very pleasant (especially after I leaned him my guitar strap!), and remembered me when I met him backstage a few months later at the Liquid Rooms in Edinburgh (the band were supporting the Fire Engines, and opening act were A

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berfeldy). The DJing led to me starting to do my own occasional night in Edinburgh, originally called Fuck Art, Let’s Dance – and finally – 17 Seconds. Which led to the blog, and the record label…

Sons and Daughters -‘Johnny Cash.’ mp3

Where can we buy the X-Lion Tamer EP?

lion-head

A few emails about where to acquire 17SEC6A f

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rom…

You can buy it in person or mail order from Rough Trade in London.

They have this to say about it :”x-lion tamer gives his electronic pop a weird, wonky and rather wonderful twist on each of the four nuggets on this ep. the picks are ‘neon hearts’ whic

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h sounds like a glorious mix of schneider tm and the silicon teens and the cover of galaxie 500’s ‘tugboat’ which turns the delicate original into a minimal electro pop number.”

It’s also available at Avalanche in Edinburgh – see here -and is also in stock at Fopp in Edinburgh on Rose St. As Fopp is now part of HMV try this link.

This was featured on Vic Galloway’s most rece

nt podcast 9click on the link to download it!); as well as being played on Vic’s BBC Radio Scotland show last Monday an

d Friday and on Wednesday night’s late night radio 1 show. Cheers for your support Vic!

X-Lion Tamer’s myspace