25 May 2018

Editors "Violence" (2018)

Violence
release date: Mar. 9, 2018
format: cd
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,12]
producer: Leo Abrahams, Editors
label: Play It Again Sam - nationality: England, UK

Track highlights: 2. "Hallelujah (So Low)" - 3. "Violence" (live in studio) - 6. "Magazine" - 10. "The Pulse" (Bonus Track) (live)

6th studio album by Editors follows 2½ years after In Dream from 2015 and it features British electronic act Blanck Mass [aka Benjamin John Power]. The title is stylised 'VI OLENCE' with subtle reference to it being the band's sixth album.
Editors used to be one of my favourite post-punk revival bands, but they have always been in a position of potential great bands with the ability to fall flat. And here they very much reflect that position in not being able to choose a stylistic path of their own. They stubble along with post-punk energy, darkwave gloominess, alt-rock attitudes and with both feet planted in a synthpop arena playing with electronics. Despite som fine reviews, this album eludes me as one of the their least successful albums - not quite decided if this or In This Light... from 2009 is the band's real low point.
The title track and "Magazine" are a few tracks to drag in a positive direction - perhaps with the aid of Benjamin Power? - on an album that simply contains too many songs built on familiar compositions and without [enough] new ideas, but that's just an opinion here and now. The album may one day open up as a much better release but as for now, I'm not impressed.
Not really recommended.
[ allmusic.com 4 / 5 stars ]

21 May 2018

BEST OF 2017:
St. Vincent "Masseduction" (2017)

Masseduction
release date: Oct. 13, 2017
format: cd
[album rate: 4 / 5] [4,06]
producer: Jack Antonoff and St. Vincent
label: Loma Vista - nationality: USA

Track highlights: 1. "Hang on Me" - 2. "Pills" - 3. "Masseduction" - 5. "Los Ageless" (live) - 7. "Saviour" (live) - 8. "New York" - 9. "Fear the Future"
[ live solo and acoustic on KEXP ]

5th studio album by St. Vincent co-produced by John Congleton and with Lars Stalfors.
With this, Annie Clark establishes herself as a purer art pop artist than on her previous releases. The noise pop attitudes are more low-key - bits are found here and there but the dominating picture is one of restrained originality taking a move as to embrace both earlier fans of her experimental and progressive rock as well a more recent audience who found her St. Vincent album more digestible. It's her most dance-able release so far and several tracks are touching synthpop meets electropop glued together with a glam rock attitude. But as with her previous albums this is truly a conglomerate of styles.
The album harvested fine reviews and it has become her best selling album to date reaching number #10 on the Billboard 200 in the US and number #6 in the UK. It ended high up on many year-end lists including a first spot on lists by the New York Times and The Guardian.
Musically, she has moved into the spotlight and I think it shows very much in her professional attitude. Earlier she contained and reflected a vulnerability that has been disguised by now. Sometimes I cannot stop thinking of her as an American PJ Harvey. She has the same directness, sexual awareness and a link to a Patti Smith / Janis Joplin-strong-women-of-rock-personality. It's also clear that her new-found (glamorous) image is far from her earlier open-hearted appearance (just watch some of her live performances).
I find this her most cohesive album so far and it appears as a true conceptual album with "Pills" and "Los Ageless" as my immediate favourites but also the title track and "New York" are fine songs, and where her previous works nearly all contained hits and misses this one keeps a high quality throughout, and that's ultimately why it's such a fascinating ride.
In a year with few truly great releases, I find this the most gripping.
[ allmusic.com 4,5 / 5, The Guardian, NME, Rolling Stone 4 / 5 stars ]

2017 Favourite releases: 1. St. Vincent Masseduction - 2. Paul Weller A Kind of Revolution - 3. Love Shop Risiko

20 May 2018

The Divine Comedy "Absent Friends" (2004)

Absent Friends
release date: Mar. 29, 2004
format: cd
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,72]
producer: Nel Hannon
label: Parlophone Records - nationality: Northern Ireland, UK

Tracklist: 1. "Absent Friends" (studio session) - 2. "Sticks and Stones" (4 / 5) - 3. "Leaving Today" (4 / 5) - 4. "Come Home Billy Bird" - 5. "My Imaginary Friend" (3,5 / 5) - 6. "The Wreck of the Beautiful" - 7. "Our Mutual Friend" (4 / 5) - 8. "The Happy Goth" (live) - 9. "Freedom Road" - 10. "Laika's Theme" - 11. "Charmed Life" (live)

8th studio album by The Divine Comedy is Hannon's second on Parlophone, and now he has put himself in the producer seat.
After a short detour into art pop this marks a return to his heydays of A Short Album About Love (1997). Vanished is the experimental and darker style as heard on Regeneration (2001), and instead full focus on chamber pop orchestrated with horns and violins, and a bunch of great songs.
[ allmusic.com 4,5 / 5 stars ]

Kent "Då som nu för alltid" (2016)

Då som nu för alltid
release date: May 20, 2016
format: cd
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,68]
producer: Kent
label: RCA Records / Sony Music - nationality: Sweden

Track highlights: 1. "Andromeda" (4 / 5) - 2. "Tennsoldater" - 3. "Vi är för alltid" 4/ 5) - 4. "Den vänstra stranden" - 5. "Nattpojken & dagflickan" (feat. Anna Ternheim) (4 / 5) - 6. "Vi är inte längre där" - 7. "Förlåtelsen" - 11. "Den sista sången"

12th and final studio album by Kent. Yes... alas, this is the final studio album by the best band in Scandinavia for more than two decades. The album was already proclaimed the final long before the release, as they had made the deal to do only one more and also found they might as well announce it in due time. The year is coming to an end, and I believe they just decided to continue playing the year out on their farewell tour. As it says in their promotion video [at 02:24]: "16 Maj 1990 – 17 Dec. 2016"... it comes to an end on the last day of the tour on the 17th.
Then, what is it like the last album? And no, it doesn't stir up things in the last minute. It's... going out with grandiosity. How could it be any different from this band of (almost) self-proclaimed pretentiousness?! Kent has always been a band who did it their very own way - stood in the spotlight but never did what the fans nor the critics wanted. They did it for themselves, and if people liked it, then fine! And they never paid much attention to what was hip - in what directions others went nor how the international trends were, and that's just one of the reasons so many pay respect to this band.
Då som nu för alltid ['Then as now forever'] sounds like Kent and no one else. It's not far from the last three albums except from being more melancholic and slightly slower than perhaps ever before. They have turned down a bit on the synthpop part and reclaimed a more pop / rock sound from earlier days without exactly repeating themselves.
The album is not their best - neither their worst. It's more than just a decent exit. Initially, I found it among their least inspiring albums, but as always with Kent, they have made an album that keeps growing until you let it in, and all of a sudden you find yourself highlighting most of the tracks to your own surprise. And the end song "Den sista sången" ['The Last Song'] is just spot on in the spirit of this great band. It's over the top pretentious, but still just in that Kent-dignified way that only makes it more than Okay. And yes, they mean it - it's the end of the line.
As much as I enjoy another chapter with Kent, it's unfortunately the last - the very last, and that's the sad news. All good things come to an end. As it reads on Discogs: "With eleven #1 albums, five #1 singles, 23 Swedish Grammy Awards, and over 3 million record sales, Kent is considered the most popular rock / pop group within Sweden and throughout Scandinavia."
Like it reads on the inlay: "Tack & Förlåt!"
Recommendable.
[ Gaffa.dk 5 / 6, Gaffa.no, Gaffa.se, Expressen 4 / 6, Rockbladet 4,5 / 5 stars ]


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19 May 2018

Mogwai "Zidane: A 21st Century Portrait" (OST) (2006)

Zidane: A 21st Century Portrait
(OST) (soundtrack)
release date: Oct. 30, 2006
format: digital (11 x File, MP3)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,08]
producer: Tony Doogan
label: [PIAS] Recordings / Rock Action - nationality: Scotland, UK

Track highlights: 10. "Black Spider 2"

A soundtrack by Scottish post rock band Mogwai - the band's first commisioned work for a film with the subtitle "An Original Soundtrack by Mogwai" to Douglas Gordon & Philippe Parreno's documentary "Zidane: A 21st Century Portrait" from 2006.
The album consists of 10-12 compositions depending on perspective as the album enlists 10 tracks; however, after a more than 3 minute silent part, the album continues with 1 or 2 unlisted [hidden] tracks - perhaps just one with a break into a second part; or they're both extentions to the final listed track "Black Spider 2". Anyway, tracks #1 through #10 are all held between 2:30 and 6:50 minutes, which in the case of Mogwai is a rather narrow time span, whereas the first unlisted track runs for 17:46 minutes (or with the final bit for more than 23 minutes) making the total running time of the album no less than almost 71 minutes long.
Stylewise, the album is the band's so far most quiet release - one could tend to call it an ambient work with dominating piano and dreamy and ambient guitar noise. As is with all soundtrack albums, it's a natural biased work as you only have the music, the sound that is supposed to enlarge the experience of watching the actual film, but since the album has been released as a stand-alone work-of-art, it should somehow be able to work on its own premisses.
Imho, this is not where you would wish to start listening to this band, and frankly, I think of it as one their least impressive works.
bandcamp ]
[ allmusic.com 3,5 / 5, Q Magazine, The Mix Tapes 2 / 5, Pitchfork 6,4 / 10 stars]

PowerSolo "The Real Sound" (2014)

The Real Sound
release date: May 19, 2014
format: cd (FROG 100-2)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,28]
producer: PowerSolo, Jesper Reginal, The Great Nalna (aka Ulrik Petersen)
label: Crunchy Frog - nationality: Denmark

Track highlights: 1. "Boom Babba Do Ba Dabba" - 2. "Sasquatch" - 3. "Two Headed Woman" - 6. "Jurassic Sex Party" - 9. "Salty Lick" (other remix) - 10. "Milk That Thang"

6th studio album by PowerSolo, again produced and also on additional instrumentation with the Petersen brothers, they have made an interesting but slightly conventional PowerSolo release putting this alongside, or at best close to, the 2004 album It's Raceday... and Your pussy is GUT!!! Like that, this starts out very promising and with several fine compositions but there are too many fillers thrown in to complete a full album.

18 May 2018

Black Grape "Stupid Stupid Stupid" (1997)

Stupid Stupid Stupid
release date: Nov. 10, 1997
format: cd
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,42]
producer: Danny Saber
label: Radioactive Records - nationality: England, UK


2nd studio album by Black Grape following two years after the fine debut It's Great When You're Straight...Yeah is like that released on Radioactive. Since the debut, the line-up has changed with founding member Bez leaving due to dissatisfaction with his paid royalties, and then the band has been expanded to a septet. The band's rapper Paul "Kermit" Leveridge was hospitalised with blood poisoning during a tour and was replaced by Carl "Psycho" McCarthy, who ended up being a stable member after the tour and Kermit was back. Also live guitarist and keyboardist Martin Slattery [would later join Joe Strummer & The Mescaleros] became a stable member before begining the recordings for the album. And Danny Saber, who had played a major part in making the debut is also new band member. In '96 Black Grape and Joe Strummer stood behind the football support song "England's Irie" and Saber was producer on the joint project. The majority of the songs here are credited Shaun Ryder, Danny Saber and "Manmade" - a joint moniker for Kermit and Psycho. The album contains a cover of the '72 Frederick Knight 'soul' song "I've Been Lonely for so Long" (by Posie Knight and Jerry Weaver), here just titled "Lonely".
Stylewise, it's a rougher and more rock-oriented album than the predominantly electronic and alt. dance, which shaped the debut, but there's still room for funk and soul as well as the usual sampling bits and parts. The album was preceded by the single release of track #1 peaking at number #24 followed by the European only release of "Dadi Waz a Badi" and lastly "Marbles" was selected as the third single.
Stupid Stupid Stupid was met by mixed reviews. Stephen Erlewine of allmusic.com says: "...it plays like 'It's Great', part two, only without its predecessor's infectious beats, mammoth hooks, and surreal humor". I don't fully agree on the "without" 'cause the album is not without good beats, hooks and humour but there's simply less of it. And yes, it is like a part two, which in many ways tries too hard to follow-up on the success.
The succeeding tour didn't last long and ended up being cancelled as Shaun Ryder in Dec. '97 allegedly after a fight of band members simply dismissed the whole band resulting in massive cancellations of already scheduled shows, and Ryder also sacked the band manager, which in the end meant that Ryder via rule of court ended up in receivership for the next 12 years. The end of Black Grape was stressed in the Summer of '98 when Ryder stated he should no longer be recording under that name [only he would much later, though].
Not great and not entirely bad either. Worth a spin or more but not up there with the debut.
[ allmusic.com, NME, Spin 3 / 5, Pitchfork 3,5 / 5 stars ]

17 May 2018

The National "Trouble Will Find Me" (2013)

Trouble Will Find Me
release date: May 17, 2013
format: cd (CAD3315CD)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,72]
producer: Aaron & Bryce Dessner; Marcus Paquin (assoc. pro.)
label: 4AD Records - nationality: USA

Track highlights: 1. "I Should Live in Salt" (4 / 5) (live) - 2. "Demons" - 3. "Don't Swallow the Cap" - 5. "Sea of Love" - 7. "This Is the Last Time" - 8. "Graceless" - 10. "I Need My Girl" (4,5 / 5) (live) - 12. "Pink Rabbits"

6th studio album by The National released three years after the fine High Violet now with the brothers Dessner in charge of production flanked by Marcus Paquin. The band follows an interval of a three-year period in between studio albums it appears, which may seem like a releatively long time but is perfectly acceptable when they come up with material like this.
The album is like a visit from an old friend. It's the collection of nice, energetic and heartfelt compositions, and it's a familiar blend of their pleasant well-known indie pop / chamber pop-style in the segment of alt. rock, and as always with the dark laid-back narrating voice of Matt Berninger, who (still) reminds me somewhat of Stuart Staples of Tindersticks. He has also been compared with Nick Cave, which I don't quite understand aside from somewhat similar narratives.
Yes, this is another fine album by The National, although, it may not be quite as high flying as High Violet (2010), imho, their so far best album, but it's definitely a recommendable release, as well as a contender to their second best album overall.
[ allmusic.com, Spin 3,5 / 5, Rolling Stone, NME 4 / 5, The Guardian 5 / 5 stars ]

16 May 2018

Lisa Ekdahl "När alla vägar leder hem" (2017)

När alla vägar leder hem
release date: Feb. 17, 2017
format: cd
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,68]
producer: Mathias Blomdahl & Lisa Ekdahl
label: Sony Music - nationality: Sweden

Track highlights: 1. "När alla vägar leder hem" - 4. "Famna jorden" - 6. "Välkommen morgon" - 7. "Jorden runt solen" - 9. "Lite svikt i steget" - 10. "Amelia" - 12. "Om bare du" - 15. "Sol vind & vatten"

9th studio album (11th counting her two collaboration albums with Peter Nordahl Trio) by Lisa Ekdahl shows her in a more polished, mainstream pop with full orchestrated arrangements. It's still with some jazz pop sensation, yet the overall style is somewhere in-between a singer / songwriter universe of folk pop and parts of sheer pop.
Tracks #1-9 are labelled "När alla vägar leder hem" - implying these songs are her new album compositions, and tracks #10-16 are labelled "Tolkningar 'Så mycket bättre' " - all cover-versions as the subtitle suggests. On vinyl, the album is released as a double with the last seven tracks as the second record.
It's far from bad, and finally show us Ekdahl back with Swedish lyrics in the way she initially started out, and which has been put aside for some time. Some reviewers have observed that the album marks return to her original roots, and I do concede to that, although the main difference is that this one also contains broader arrangements; however, it's really nice to hear her back in her native tongue again continuing the Swedish singer / songwriter folk pop tradition.
Imho, the album is her third best overall.
[ Gaffa.dk 5 / 6 stars ]

14 May 2018

Zucchero "Zucchero & Co." (2004)

Zucchero & Co.
release date: May 14, 2004
format: digital
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,58]
producer: Luciano Luisi & Zucchero
label: Polydor - nationality: Italy

10th studio album by Zucchero following 2½ years after Shake (May 2001) is simply released under his shortened moniker 'Zucchero'. In terms of new material, this is not a traditional album of brand new compositions and on the other hand it's no real compilation either. It's the revisit to Zucchero's back catalog featuring guest artists and with new musical arrangements, and NOT produced by Corrado Rustici, which already makes it a different release. Rustici is credited as producer on two tracks, Mousse T., Simon Climie and Toby Baker all on one track respectively. The album contains 18 tracks and 18 "guest stars" all of which perform "duets" (Miles Davis is the only guest artist as instrumental artist). In track order, the featuring guests are: Miles Davis, Sting, Vanessa Carlton, Mousse T., Macy Gray, Maná, John Lee Hooker, Sheryl Crow, Dolores O'Riordan, Eric Clapton, Tom Jones, B.B. King, Ronan Keating, Cheb Mami, Solomon Burke, Paul Young, Brian May, and Luciano Pavarotti & Andrea Bocelli.
The album is pretty good, even if you happen to know the original tracks because these are new interpretations, except "Senza una donna" (feat. Paul Young), which is as good as it comes in the old familiar version.
Zucchero & Co. does not stir up Zucchero's image but basically, once again, show the international star he has grown into. Over the past decade and more, he has performed with established artists all over the world and he has become Italy's biggest national and international rock star, so in that respect the album only documents his star quality. And in his discography the album marks a fine contribution as a new musical perspective without introducing a stylistic revolution.
All in all a fine album.

12 May 2018

Martha Wainwright "I Know You're Married but I've Got Feelings Too" (2008)

I Know You're Married but I've Got Feelings Too
release date: May 12, 2008
format: cd
[album rate: 4 / 5] [3,82]
producer: Brad Albetta; Martin Terefe
label: Cooperative Music - nationality: Canada

Track highlights: 1. "Bleeding All Over You" (4 / 5) - 2. "You Cheated Me" (4,5 / 5) - 4. "Comin' Tonight" (4 / 5) (live) - 6. "Hearts Club Band" (live) - 9. "The George Song" - 11. "Jimi" (live)

2nd studio album by Martha Wainwright follows three years after her self-titled full-length debut from 2005. The album is mainly produced by her husband Brad Albetta, who is behind six of the album's thirteen tracks - he and Martha married in 2007. Martin Terefe has produced four tracks, and in addition Tore Johansson has produced two, and Kate McGarrigle is the producer a single track. Jeff Trott is co-producer on one, and the duo Ger McDonnell and Mike Hedges are also credited as co-producers on one track.
The music is folk and singer / songwriter, but the album here is cut significantly more like a contemporary folk pop album with stress on pop. The compositions are written by Wainwright, and a single track "Jimi" is taken from the '99 ep Martha Wainwright, but here in a rearranged version. Where the debut was stylistically in keeping with an American folk tradition, this one shows a new side to Martha Wainwright stepping more in the direction of brother Rufus Wainswright's more contemporary folk pop and chamber pop releases with distance to father, Loudon Wainwright III and mother Kate McGarrigle's tradition of more simple and guitar-based folk.
The album was my first encounter with Martha's music, and I first adored the fine and much played "You Cheated Me" on the radio without having in any way cultivated other tracks from the album. When I finally listened to the whole album, it was a rather positive experience, and my first thoughts were that it was a good album with several fine tracks. At first it was the first two tracks that stood out the strongest, but gradually I listened more attentively to other tracks, and then it was one of those rare occasions when it dawns on you that you have come across a jewel. And yes, she could be inspired by a certain Polly Jean Harvey, and I had the same experience when I discovered her album Stories From the City, Stories From the Sea (2000). Likewise, this is one of those albums that just seems to grow as you listen to it. It's a bit magical when you listen to these kinds of releases that come so rare. You stumble upon one or two tracks and after a while it's as if other tracks rise up, as if with a raised finger saying : "Hey there, I'm also here, Okay!", and finally, you end up loving the whole package.
The album garnered positive reviews and became Martha Wainwright's commercial breakthrough with a top-10 position at No. #6 on the Canadian Albums Chart, and it generally performed well in several other countries worldwide. Having released two more studio albums through 2018, this one remains her best-selling album.
However, my enthusiasm for the album cooled a little over time. I still consider it better than good, but after a while it sort of lost my interest - as less impressive. Perhaps there is too much of the same going on here - musically and lyrically. In a way, it's a bit the same way I've experienced albums by brother Rufus. When you haven't lsitened to any of them, it's easy to be impressed by that brilliant control over your own voice register they both possess and after some time you (perhaps) discover how little progression the musical universe offers. Make no mistake, I still like both of their music, and especially this very album! I just ended up where it has to be taken in smaller doses. It's still a highly recommendable album. And if you haven't been there: do yourself a favour and check this one out!
[ allmusic.com, Rolling Stone, The Observer, The Guardian 4 / 5 stars ]

08 May 2018

Robin Guthrie "Emeralds" (2011)

Emeralds
release date: May 12, 2011
format: cd
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,48]
producer: Robin Guthrie
label: Rocket Girl - nationality: Scotland, UK

Track highlights: 1. "Digging for Gold" - 2. "Radiola" - 3. "Wishing" - 8. "Emeralds"

4th solo album by Robin Guthrie follows "only" 1½ years since the album Carousel (Sep. 2009), which may be a relatively normal period between albums but in the case of Guthrie, who normally has spent years in between solo albums and instead released collaboration albums and worked as producer or featuring artist this is a considerably short amount of time. And it's not that he hasn't issued other material, as he of Feb. 2011 released the collaboration album Bordeaux together with Harold Budd. Well, that album is bettering their previous efforts, although, it's still held in minimalist ambient form but they somehow managed to focus on dynamics within the narrow boundaries of their sound, and this could also easily be said about Emeralds. Guthrie doesn't surprise you with alt. rock nor with swirling distorted guitars as heard in the heydays of the Cocteau Twins. He appears to have found his stand in the corner with delay pedals, echo and chorus effects, and with sparse additional drum programming, just to add some details or diversity. And by doing so, he seems to understand the limitations his approach with ethereal and ambient new age-like style puts on his music. On his earliest albums, and his collaboration works with Harold Budd, there was this "body of sound", which had a start and an end, but where you hardly noticed where one track began and another started - it was like one piece of prolonged slow-motion jump on the moon. Now that has shifted with new angles to the jump. The single tracks stand out, although, it's still all very ethereal and almost done without other instrumentation than earlier, I pressume. But there's an overall sensation of single compositions, which I consider a quality of sorts, and perhaps it's something Guthrie has become more aware of - to make subtle changes in tempo or colour. I like to think so. At least I find his recent music and that of Emeralds to be more intriguing. As said, it's still ambient - it's even touching on new age ground, which from my general perspective isn't something you should aim for, but in this case, it works quite all right.
[ PopMatters 3 / 5 stars ]

07 May 2018

Björk "Volta" (2007)

Volta
release date: May 7, 2007
format: cd
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,04]
producer: Björk
label: One Little Indian - nationality: Iceland

Track highlights: 1. "Earth Intruders" (feat. Konono Nº1) - 2. "Wanderlust" - 3. "The Dull Flame of Desire" - 4. "Innocence" - 11. "I See Who You Are"

6th studio album by Björk is a primarily self-produced album with various others producing and co-producing single tracks. Here, it's Timbaland and Danja (tracks #1 and ¤4 - with Timbaland also co-pro. track #8), Mark Bell (track #9) and Damian Taylor (track #6).
Volta signals a return to a more melodic mainstream pop universe with more traditional electronic instrumentation and with compositions based on drum and bass in a dance pop sphere. It feature several guest musicians including Congolese music project Konono Nº1 and Toumani Diabaté, Antony Hegarty (Antony & The Johnsons) feature on two tracks, Min Xiao-Fen (also on two tracks), Mark Bell, and Sjón.
"Earth Intruders" is the only great track on an album, which is a bit of... everything and nothing, really. Generally, I find the somewhat disappointing predecessor Medúlla (2004) slightly more interesting, although that fails on other parameters. Volta is certainly more pop-minded - at least more danceable, but it's basically also easier forgettable.
This is not one of her better album - in fact it's her so far least favourable.
Not recommended.
[ allmusic.com, The Guardian, NME 4 / 5, Rolling Stone 3,5 / 5 ]