Album Review: Steve Adey

steve-adey-the-tower-of-silence

Steve Adey -‘The Tower Of Silence’ (Grand Harmonium)

Following on from last year’s rather fine These Resurrections EP, Edinburgh-based Steve Adey delivers his sophomore album. Six years since his debut All Things Real, this beautiful collection of work has been worth the wait.

The outstanding cut from the EP ‘Just Wait Til I Get You Home’ reappears here, but there’s an entire album of beautiful songs, like his cover of Alasdair Roberts’ ‘Farewell Sorrow’ and ‘Laughing’ which hang together most perfectly. What Steve plugs into is a particuarly scottish sense of melancholia (see also: eagleowl, Mogwai and The Blue Nile, amongst others) that – to paraphrase Wilco -is trying to break your heart, and does it in the most beautiful way.

While some records can be overwhelmi

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ng and ultimately isolating in their melancholy (see the most recent album from Breathless) this is one that connects with the listener right from the off. Yes, you may want to cry on hearing this (and if it doesn’

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t have that effect, your humanity should surely be called into question), but you’ll find it a beautiful experience.

****1/2

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The Tower Of Silence is released on November 26 on Grand Harmonium.

NOTE: an interview with Steve Adey will appear on 17 Seconds very shortly.

Album Review: Breathless

breathless

Breathless -‘Green To Blue.’ (Tenor Vossa)

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t on 4AD, there is definitely something of the 4AD aesthetic about this album.

It’s a beautiful record, melancholic and awash with love and loss. The thing is, despite many plus points, overall this album (even split into two CDs) is a bit much too take in one sitting. It shimmers, it’s stylish-and yet it somehow feels more like an album to be admired than one I can really fall in love with, and bel

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ieve me I have tried.

There are some great tracks here – ‘Please Be Happy’ and ‘Rain Down Now’ – for example, but on far too many tracks I had to fight the urge to forward it on.

**1/2

Green To Blue is released on November 26 on Tenor Vossa.

Presenting…The Deadline Shakes

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There’s plenty of bands that mix indie and folk, but there’s something refreshing about the approach of Glasgow’s The Deadline Shakes to the way t

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They sound nothing like M*mf*rd *nd S*ns, but I hear hints of Belle and Sebas

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tian and The Beach Boys here. The band are Greg Dingwall (vocals and guitar), Iain McKinstry (guitar), Martin McLeod (bass) and Tom Booth (drums). Having released their de

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but single ‘Sweeten The Deal’ earlier this month, this very day (November 23, 2012, fact fans!) they have released a free single via bandcamp:

This was their debut single, ‘Sweeten The Deal’:

More news when I have it -for now, enjoy!

Frightened Rabbit are Dead Now

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Nah, not really, it’s the title of a track doing the rounds from their forthcoming fourth album Pedestrian Verse.

The tracklisting for the album, released on February 4 is:

Acts Of Man
Backyard Skulls
Holy
The Woodpile
Late March, Death March
December’s Traditions
Housing (in)
Dead Now
State Hospital
Nitrous Gas
Housing (out)
The Oil Slick

Their last release State Hospital EP was awesome…if you haven’t heard it yet, check it out below:

Album Review: Snide Rhythms

snide-rhythms

Snide Rhythms -‘Snide Rhythms’ (Bonjour Branch)

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ere for over a decade now, but it still makes me annoyed when people suggest that Edinburgh’s bands can’t match up to its’ neighbour Glasgow’s scene forty or so miles to the west. Yes, I could sit here and reel off a list of great acts that call Edinburgh home*, but tonight, Matthew, I’d like to focus on Snide Rhythms.

Led by singer Colvin Cruickshank, the Edinburgh trip have produced a debut that not only proves that Edinburgh is not just about folk music, but that maybe indie music does still have some ideas. Yes, the band know their way around their record collection -‘I Can’t Keep Up’ and the short but excellently titled ‘Yah vs. Schemie’ nod to The Fall, for example, but there are hints of both electro and even rockabilly here.

This is the sound of a band having fun and producing something fresh and exciting. A joy to the ears, a delight for the feet and a treat you can gorge yourself on.

****

Snide Rhythms is out now on Bonjour

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Branch

*if you insist: The Last Battle, Aberfeldy, Meursault, Randan Discotheque, Broken Records, Matt Norris and the Moon, Withered Hand, Wounded Knee, Jesus H. Foxx, ballboy, eagleowl, Bwani Junction, Clean George IV, Cancel The Astronauts, Spook School…

Interview: Cancel The Astronauts

cancel-the-astronauts

Back in September, Cancel The Astronauts released their very fine debut album Animal Love Match. We tried to set up an interview…and eventually, it happened!

17 Seconds: Please introduce yourselves

Matthew Riley: We are Cancel the Astronauts, an indie-pop band from Edinburgh who are slowly trying to become a bit less pop and a bit more indie. Individually are names are, in order of handsomeness, Matthew Riley (MR). There are four other members of the band, who in the interests of accuracy I will call Kieran McCaffrey (KM), Michael Craig, Neil Davidson and Chris Kay. They play the instruments that I don’t play, which is mostly most of them and sometimes all of them: guitar, synth, bass and drums.

KM: Hello.

17 Seconds: How did the band come together?

MR: Kieran, Michael and me went to school together and moved up to Edinburgh at the same time for university. We all lived together in second year and we started making music together. Me and Kieran had been writing songs together for various ‘bands’, none of which ever did any gigs. ‘Rehearsals’ for these ‘bands’ often involved ordering Chinese from Hurlford’s finest takeaway (5-star?) and watching films. It was only really after we moved up to Edinburgh that we started to take it in any way seriously.

KM: It was the Peking Star, was the Hurlford takeaway. The Five Star is in nearby overspill town, Kilmarnock. It’s quite an arrogant name for a takeaway though, isn’t it? Five Star. I’ll decide! It was pretty good.

17 Seconds: Who are your influences?

MR: 90’s Britpop.

KM: 00’s Scotpop.

17 Seconds: What’s the strangest thing that’s ever happened to you at a gig?

MR: Getting paid is quite unusual.

KM: As a veteran of over twelve gigs by now, I can’t think of a single thing. That’s depressing. I fell over on stage one time, but

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that was more embarrassing than strange. I’m blanking here. Move on!

17 Seconds: Do you read your press? If not, why?

MR: Yes, when we get any. I’m an extremely vain and self-centred person and I love to know what people think about us, good or bad. Unfortunately most people don’t seem to think about us at all, but when they do the press has pretty much always been good. It’s encouraging when people don’t think you’re completely shit.

KM: We’re cursed by our easily searchable name — nobody wants to actually cancel the proper astronauts, and nor should they. But if opinion ever started to sway that way, we’d know about it first. We do all our (cough) PR ourselves though, so most of our press comes from people we’ve personally sent promo cds to or have been emailing or otherwise dancing in front of. This mean we get to be vain and sad and read everything anyone’s ever written about us and pretend we’re just being diligent PR bods.

17 Seconds: Do you think the word ‘indie’ still means something in 2012? If so, what?

MR: Somewhere in the mid-to-late 00’s it came to mean guitar music played by five guys in skinny haircuts,

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but I suppose it’s actual meaning has been massively diluted since the 80’s, when independent bands and record companies began to make successful, commercial music without major label support. I would say we’re indie because we’re 5 guys who make guitar music (although we don’t have skinny haircuts) and because the music we make is completely independent- it’s recorded, produced, released, promoted and paid for by us and us alone. We don’t even have a little micro-label to help us. We’re actually the most independent band I know of! I’m not particularly proud of this fact- I’d be happy to sign to Parlophone for a million bucks. I think then that ‘indie’ has more relevance now than it has for many, many years, although it’s definitely more accurate now as a philosophy or a circumstance than as an indicator of musical style.

KM: You could argue that our methods are more DIY than indie, but we describe ourselves as ‘indie-pop’ rather than ‘DIY-pop’ because DIY seems to speak to an aesthetic we’re not a part of (or are we, nowadays? And etc…). I suppose indie works as a sorta useful but ultimately reductive nod towards what we sound like. Genre labels are confusing. I don’t use them on my computer.

17 Seconds : Who would you most like to cover one of your songs, and which one?

MR: I would like The Smiths to reform and cover ‘I Hate You All And I Wish You Were Dead.’

KM: We got an email once from a teenager asking for the lyrics to Fanclub because his school band wanted to cover it. I don’t think it ever came to anything, but I would have liked to have heard that. Inspiring the next generation and all that.

17 Seconds: What are your favourite albums?

MR: Prepare yourself for some VERY boring choices: Automatic For The People by REM, Definitely Maybe by Oasis, A Rush Of Blood To The Head by Coldplay, Strangeways Here We Come by The Smiths, and Different Class by Pulp. I’m falling asleep just writing them down.

KM: Boring! Mine are In Rainbows by Radiohead, Rounds by Four Tet, The Midnight Organ Fight by Frightened Rabbit, St. Thomas by The Scottish Enlightenment, and High Violet by The National.

17 Seconds: If you could work with one other musical act, alive or dead, who would it be?

MR: I’d dig a very big hole in a very hot country with Cheryl Tweedy, and I’d let her do most of the work.

KM: I think she goes by Cheryl Cole, and I have to question your motivations. I’m going to plump for noted recording artist Scarlett Johansson.

17 Seconds: What are your plans for the next year?

MR: I’m going to release 4 solo albums (you heard it here first) and Cancel the Astronauts are going to write the greatest album the world has ever heard. One so good it will make your ears bleed piss and push A Rush Of Blood To The Head by Coldplay out of your Top 5 list.

KM: Somewhere in the guts of my guitar a loose connection is playing occasional havoc at pivotal times. I should probably fix it.

Animal Love Match is out now on Riley Records

Album Review: Stumbleine

stumbleine-album

Stumbleine -‘Spiderwebbed’ (Monotreme)

This is the debut album from Bristol producer Stumbleine, who also records as one third of dubsteppers Swarms. There’s a glorious mixture of dubstep, hypnagogic

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cteau Twins, Burial and Neon Indian is pretty accurate.

Having been enjoying this album since it arrived, I’ve been pretty impressed by the different strands I hear within. Sure, it’s chillout -yet there’s also hints of shoegazing, a melancholia that’s worthy of the cream of the scottish indie scene…and yet it is also a very warm album, making succumbing to its charms pretty easy.

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Amongst the tracks to do the rounds from this album ahead of release are the rather fine cover of Mazzy Star’s ‘Fade Into You’ (which is a fine reworking of the original) and the single ‘The Beat My Heart Skips.’ A perfect soundtrack to these sad autumn evenings…

****

Spiderwebbed is released on Monotreme on November 19.

Stream the entire album:

Album Review: The Jam (re-issue)

the-jam-the-gift

The Jam -‘The Gift’ (Polydor/Universal)

There’s an alternate, inferior parallel universe to this one, where The Jam split up after a disappointing reaction to their second album, This Is The Modern World. I say inferior, because the The Jam produced a heck of a lot of great music in their time together as a band. However -they truly came into their own with the release of 1978’s All Mod Cons (a pun on ‘mod’? Well, what do you think?).

They were an excellent singles band (my personal favourite being the non-album cut ‘Strange Town’ from 1979), and produced some excellent albums. In 1982 they bowed out at the end

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of the year on a high, integrity intact and leaving their audience wa

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nting more (there’s quite a few bands who should bear this in mind). Whilst the three members -drummer Rick Buckler, bassist Bruce Foxton and singer/guitarist Paul Weller (you may have heard of him) worked in combinations over the years, they have never reformed, and only The Smiths are more tightly debated in terms of reformation.

As I said, 1982 was the year they bowed out on a high. This was their final studio album, and despite the considerable number of UK no.1 singles they notched up, their only no.1 album. It’s long been my favourite Jam album. The single ‘Town Called Malice’/’Precious’ became a massive hit, and showcases Weller’s growing interest in soul and funk (though this can be traced back far earlier on in the Jam’s career). But -as well

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as the Dutch only single ‘Just Who Is The 5 o’clock Hero? (which charted in the UK on import) -there’s a number of excellent album cuts.

Album opener ‘Happy Together’ nods to the post-punk sound that the band had explored on the previous year’s ‘Funeral Pyre’ and ‘Carnation’ (later

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covered by Steve Cradock and Liam Gallagher) is in some ways like ‘English Rose part 2.’ But the second track ‘Ghosts’ remains o

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ne of the finest songs The Jam ever recorded (and no, nothing to do with the Japan track either).

With additional discs on various editions given over to various extras, including demos and a gig from Wembley Arena in December 1982, this a comprehensive overview of The Jam’s final year together. Not least because it also sees the addition of yet more non-album singles in ‘The Bitterest Pill I Ever Had To Swallow.’

The finest Jam album, and comprehensive reissue.

****1/2

The Gift is re-issued by Polydor/Universal on November 19.

Album Review: Golden Void

golden-void-artwork

Golden Void -‘Golden Void’ (Thrill Jockey)

OK, first things first. San Francisco quartet Golden Void aren’

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iginal or groundbreaking band you’ve ever heard in your life (unless you really don’t listen to much rock music). But that’s to miss the point, pretty much. They don’t come on like a retro-act, but instead a band who know their influences (prime period Zeppelin, Sabbath and Stooges) and and having a whole heap of fun.

And unless you’re a po-faced idiot, so will you. Sure, it would be easier to put this in the ‘stoner rock’ category- but it’s

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focused enough that it never strays into self-indulgence, in the way that less bands might do so.

Single ‘The Curve’ may be the strongest track here, but this is a fun way to spend 36 minutes.

***1/2

Golden Void is out now on Thrill Jockey.

The return of Yo La Tengo

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Yo La Tengo have announced that they will release their thirteenth studio album, Fade, on January 14. The first track to do the rounds is the gorgeous clsoing track ‘Before We Run’

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which you can watch below:

The full tracklisting is as follows:

1. Ohm
2. Is That Enough
3. Well You Better
4. Paddle Forward
5. Stupid Things
6. I’ll Be Around
7. Cornelia and Jane
8. Two Trains
9. The Point of It
10. Before We Run

They will also be playing a handful of dates in the British Isles as part of a European tour:

March 20 2013 London – Barbican
March 21 – UK, Manchester – The Ritz
March 22 – UK, Glasgow – O2 ABC
March 23 – Ireland, Dublin – Vicar Street