19 April 2024

Gossip "Real Power" (2024)

Real Power
release date: Mar. 22, 2024
format: digital (11 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,62]
producer: Rick Rubin
label: Columbia - nationality: USA


6th studio album by Gossip following 12 years after A Joyful Noise (May 2012), which up until this year has been regarded as the band's final album after which front figure Beth Ditto pursued a solo career and concentrated on her own clothing line. Ditto released her solo debut Fake Sugar in 2017 and in 2019 the band reformed to perform a ten year anniversary concert of Music for Men (2009) but it was still under the charge of Ditto with no announcements of an official reformation. In 2023 Ditto got together with Nathan Howdeshell to write material for Ditto's second solo album and when facing producer Rubin who took part in the band's 2009 album, Ditto and Howdeshell apparently saw it as a natural opportunity to include Hannah Blilie, thus basically making it a Gossip album instead.
The trio is back, which is a wonderful thing, as they have been missed. Rubin secures a tight path on well-known soil, and Real Power comes out as something closer to the 2009 album than what was regarded their final breath in 2012. That said, time has passed, and obviously the three are somewhere else than more than a decade ago, and the album simply betters Ditto's fine solo from 2017, which in a way positioned itself in the outskirts of A Joyjul of Noise without really delivering a substantial stylistic footprint. All tracks here are credited Ditto and multi-instrumentalist Howdeshell and in that regard it's naturally something entirely different than Ditto solo working with other composers, and how could a legendary trio of this caliber come out with something new without people would compare it with their previous works?! It's a statement to call it a Gossip album, as opposed to Ditto's second solo, and it's still great news. Musically, it's original - of course, and with the band history and all in mind, I do think it's a fine accomplishment without it being absolutely great. And then: lesser will do. I think, they succeed in reproducing some of the band's original energy - the genuine garage-sound, and mixed up with a poppier mood they come up with a modernised version of Gossip. Officially, Ditto and Howdeshell are the providers of this new material but I wonder why they don't acknowledge that without Blilie they wouldn't be Gossip - it's a pity but not seldom seen practise to leave out the drummer in credits, but I just wonder how music is composed without a drummer adding his/her personal touch to the songs...
The album may not come with absolute stunning singles but the energy, the crafty output - and that voice on top of these simple, yet powerful arrangements!! And then there's still a certain quality lurking there all over, which lifts it above normality - 'cause what is that exactly?! Ditto belongs in front of Howdeshell and Blilie, and that constellation is all we need. It's like a living torch for humanity. Stay together, you three (PLZ), and the next album will be magic!
[ 👍allmusic.com 3,5 / 5, Pitchfork 7,1 / 10, NME, DIY 4 / 5, 👎The Guardian 3 / 5 stars ]

06 April 2024

Adrianne Lenker "Bright Future" (2024)

Bright Future
release date: Mar. 22, 2024
format: vinyl / digital (12 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [3,92]
producer: Philip Weinrobe
label: 4AD - nationality: USA

Track highlights: 1. "Real House" (4 / 5) - 2. "Sadness as a Gift" (live from Greenwich Village with Nick Hakim) - 4. "No Machine" - 5. "Free Treasure" (live on The Tonight Show)- 6. "Vampire Empire" - 8. "Candleflame" - 9. "Already Lost" - 10. "Cell Phone Says" - 11. "Donut Seam" - 12. "Ruined" (live from Greenwich Village with Nick Hakim)

Studio album by Adrianne Lenker in between albums with Big Thief, and most recently the band released the acclaimed Dragon New Warm Mountain I Believe in You (Feb. 2022). Lenker's most recent solo album was Songs & Instrumentals (Oct. 2020), and this new collection is more like her other solo efforts, more naked, more clean folk and singer / songwriter-oriented. That said, Bright Future contains other performers than Lenker's vocal on top of a lonesome strumming guitar as was the case on her quiet 2020 album. It's still not in the same fully-bodied arrangements as you'll find on albums by Big Thief - only "Vampire Empire" sounds like a song written with the band in mind as the instrumentation appear to be similar with violin, piano, percussion, banjo, guitar, and harmony vocals, but generally, the songs here are played in a much more subtle fashion, as only to turn focus on Lenker's narratives.
Bright Future is so far easily this year's best album and highly recommended.
[ Mojo 4 / 5, Pitchfork 8,4 / 10, Exclaim! 9 / 10 stars ]