30 December 2017

The Divine Comedy "A Secret History: The Best of The Divine Comedy" (1999)

A Secret History: The Best of The Divine Comedy (compilation)
release date: Aug. 30, 1999
format: digital
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,72]
producer: various
label: Setanta Records - nationality: Northern Ireland, UK

7th album release by The Divine Comedy is Neil Hannon's first best of album. The album contains 17 tracks and it's a fine collection of songs for anyone not familiar with The Divine Comedy. For someone who knows some of his albums, I suggest that you buy the original albums, as these songs come from albums with either conceptual tracks or various styles and subject matter.
[ allmusic.com 4 / 5 stars ]

28 December 2017

Søren Huss "Midtlivsvisen" (2017)

Midtlivsvisen [stylised 'MidtlivsVisen']
release date: Nov. 24, 2017
format: vinyl / cd
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,66]
producer: Mahler & Bir (aka Christoffer Møller & Lars Skærbæk)
label: Universal - nationality: Denmark

Track highlights: 1. "Et forbehold eller to" - 2. "Achilles" - 3. "Et helt almindeligt liv" (4 / 5) - 4. "Ingen appel" (4 / 5) - 7. "Opvasken" - 9. "Mig og mine tanker"

3rd solo album by Søren Huss follows five years after his acclaimed Oppefra & ned (Oct. 2012) and two years after the come-back album by Saybia, No Sound From the Outside. The front cover already suggests that this is something else from the hands of Søren Huss, who has become associated with melancholic and introspective morose narration, but on this he reveals himself with a large amount of irony in a study of self-criticism, which also signals a strong contrast to his first two solo albums and their black and white front covers.
MidtlivsVisen is a play of words with the established expression 'Midlivskrise' [Midlife-crisis] combined with 'vise' [ballad] - suggesting a collection of songs that all connect thematically with midlife status, stories of current life - at this mature point in life, AND with the implication that it contains some kind of crisis.
Stylistically, it really isn't a long stretch from his 2012 album, it just seems like a much willed effort to meet the content of the album with other expectations and to view the songs from a more positive and lighter perspective. I deeply admire and enjoy the solo works by Huss, who has already established himself as on of the most important national singer / songwriters of a generation who has the ability to embrace and bond with the great songwriters and poets of traditional Danish literature and who still produce highly relevant contemporary music. At times he reminds me of the late troubadour Povl Dissing, at other times he comes closer to C.V. Jørgensen, but mostly he just sounds like no one else moulding an image of a modernist without obvious limitations.
My initial thoughts of the album were less positive than they quickly grew to be. MidtlivsVisen is a beautiful collection of warm and, yet melancholic ballads, exposing Søren Huss as a formidable lyricist and with that underlines that he is a strong contender to the title as the most significant contemporary Danish songwriter.
Recommended.
[ Gaffa.dk hands it 4 / 6, Soundvenue 5 / 6 stars ]

25 December 2017

Kent "Jag är inte rädd för mörkret" (2012)

Jag är inte rädd för mörkret
release date: Apr. 25, 2012
format: cd
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,62]
producer: Kent, Stefan Boman
label: Sonet Records - nationality: Sweden

Track highlights: 1. "999" (4 /5) - 2. "Petroleum" - 4. "Jag ser dig" (4 / 5) (live) - 5. "Tänd på" - 6. "Beredd på allt" - 8. "Färger på natten" - 9. "Låt dom komma" - 10. "Hänsyn" (4,5 / 5)

10th studio album release by Kent who is back to a two year shift between albums. This is the first time I think the band hasn't been able to reinvent themselves with great success. Undoubtedly, the album is more than just fine. The single tracks are rather good song writing, and the whole thing is really well-produced and everything. Maybe I shouldn't pay too much attention to the expectation about new music and / or new stylistic progress. After all, many artists, Van Morrison, Bruce Springsteen, and new chamber pop / indie pop bands like The National and Tindersticks may face fine reviews when they release music that fans expect to be within certain boundaries. My own expectations to this album are just a bit unfulfilled 'cause Kent has proven to be a band that keeps searching new territories - they have accustomed their fans to exactly that, and then this time they sort of... stay on the track of En plats i solen, which, after all, is a warm and shiny spot... So why the sulky face? This is good! Though,... Yes yes, I know!
Highlights are "999", "Jag ser dig", both uptempo tracks that are meant to be played LOUD, and then the astonishing "Hänsyn", which is really up there among the very best of Kent ballads ever.

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22 December 2017

Pixies "Indie City" (2014)

digipack
Indie City
release date: Apr. 28, 2014
format: cd
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,26]
producer: Gil Norton
label: Pixiesmusic - nationality: USA

Track highlights: 1. "What Goes Boom" (live on Later) - 3. "Indie Cindy" - 7. "Blue Eyed Hexe" - 5. "Magdalena 318" - 9. "Another Toe in the Ocean" - 11. "Snakes"

5th studio album by Pixies is the band's first full-length release in 23 years [!] and has legendary Gil Norton as producer - as guarantee for coming close to the original sound. The album has been labelled a compilation because it consists of all 12 songs taken from three recent three EPs: EP1 (tracks #1, 3, 9, 10) released Sep. 2013, EP2 (tracks #2, 5, 7, 11) from Jan. 2014 and EP3 (tracks #4, 6, 8, 12) released Mar. 2014; however, it still IS the band's first full length studio release since Trompe le monde from 1991. The line-up has changed since then, as founding member, bassist Kim Deal, much to the band's regret, left the band before going to the studio to record these new songs. For a European tour the band found a substitute in Kim Shattuck, but only to be replaced two months later by Paz Lenchantin, also for live concerts only. As for the album, Simon 'Dingo' Archer (formerly The Fall) is credited as non-member bassist on all tracks.
The album was met by luke-warm reviews mostly pointing to the incoherence of the material, where some songs point to Black Francis' early solo works, and other compositions play with too many influences. Some also suggest that fans had awaited the return of Pixies for a long time, and as they finally release a full-length album, it's the songs they already know from the three EPs.
I too hear way too many stylistic traits, but on an overall basis, I also hear the unmistakable sound of Pixies, which is really nice. As was the case two decades ago, Francis is at the steering wheel, and together with Santiago and Lovering this new journey may just be a fine ride.
[ allmusic.com, The Guardian, Q, Spin, Rolling Stone 3 / 5, NME 3,5 / 5 stars ]

original cover

20 December 2017

Happy Mondays "Hallelujah" (1989) (ep)

Hallelujah, ep
release date: Dec. 1989
format: cd
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,62]
producer: Martin Hannett
label: Factory Records - nationality: England, UK


Ep release of the non-album track "Hallelujah" by Happy Mondays. Originally it was released exclusively for the UK market in Nov. '89 in two versions: a 4-track 12'' ep titled Madchester Rave On, and as a 2-track 7'' single titled Hallelujah. In December it was re-released in this expanded 7-track edition consisting of other remixes spliced with the Madchester Rave On ep now targeted for the European continental and US markets. Martin Hannett is producer of the original recordings but four of the tracks are made as additional production remixes. Paul Oakenfold is credited as remix producer on tracks #5, #6, #7 - track #5 together with Andy Wetherall and track #6 with Terry Farley - Steve Lillywhite is remix producer of track #1.
This is a nice collection of extended mixes and various remixes, and it serves as a fine document of the general appeal of Happy Mondays on the club arena back in the day. It also features some of Paul Oakenfold's early remixes for the band, which paved way for his role on the 1990-album, which may be seen as the band's pinnacle.

13 December 2017

The Durutti Column "Sunlight to Blue... Blue to Blackness" (2008)

Sunlight to Blue... Blue to Blackness
release date: Jun. 23, 2008
format: digital
[album rate: 3,5 / 5]

Track highlights: 1. "Glimpse" - 3. "Messages" - 4. "Ged" - 5. "Ananda" (feat. Poppy Morgan) - 6. "Never Known Version" - 8. "Head Glue" (feat. Poppy Morgan) (4 / 5) - 10. "Cup a Soup Romance" - 11. "Grief"

18th studio album by The Durutti Column issued on Kooky Records produced by ? [Vini Reilly?]. Feb. 2008 he had released a live album, Live in Bruxelles 13.8.1981, and still of 2008 he released the soundtrack album Treatise on the Steppenwolf (OST) both issued on LTM Recordings. This is like Tempus fugit (2004) a collection of quietness and soulful ballads with Reilly primarily picking his guitar strings, acoustically or electrified, but often with little additional instrumentation. The album is dedicated to Reilly's girlfriend Poppy Morgan (aka Poppy Roberts). It's quiet, nice and very fine.
allmusic.com 3,5 / 5 stars ]

10 December 2017

Robin Guthrie "Carousel" (2009)

Carousel
release date: Sep. 4, 2009
format: cd
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,12]
producer: Robin Guthrie
label: Darla Records - nationality: Scotland, UK


3rd full-length solo album by Robin Guthrie following nearly 3½ years after Continental (May 2006). Three years between albums may seem like a long time but Guthrie has released several other albums in between his solo albums. In 2007 he released two albums After the Night Falls and Before the Day Breaks as collaboration works with American composer Harold Budd - both released June 11, 2007, and in 2008 he released the soundtrack album 3:19 - Bande originale du film with Guthrie's music for the 2008 feature film "3:19 Nada es casualidad" by Mexican director Dany Saadia. Also, earlier this year (May 2009), he released the collaboration album Mirrorball with British new wave and synthpop artist John Foxx (also former vocalist of Ultravox).
Carousel pretty much takes off from where his collaboration work with Harold Budd had left him: in spacious spheres of bright blue light - well-pictured in the cover art (although, that may probably be an underwater shot). It's first and foremost an ambient release without a distinct rhythm section, and Guthrie makes use of guitar-layered effects. Only on track #9 "Waiting by the Carousel", whcih probably gave name to the album title, you hear drum programming and something that brings dynamics into the picture. I'm not all that fond of this particular album, as I generally don't have a sweet tooth for new age music. It simply reeks a meditative state that only sends you to bed and echoes anything but great originality. Guthrie is still a great guitarist, but only seldom utilise this gifts to produce strong compositions.
Not recommended.
[ 👍Pitchfork 6.5 / 10, Record Collector 3 / 5 stars ]

08 December 2017

The Refo:mation "Pharmakoi / Distance-Crunching Honchos..." (1997)

Pharmakoi / Distance-Crunching Honchos...
[debut]
release date: 1997
format: digital
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,58]
producer: The Refo:mation
label: Phantom Records - nationality: Australia

Track highlights: 2. "Don't Move" - 5. "All See It Now" - 10. "Get Over It" - 11. "Take Your Place" - 14. "Stop"

1st and only album by The Refo:mation, whose full title is Pharmakoi / Distance-Crunching Honchos With Echo Units may almost be considered a studio album by The Church, but there is a particular reason why the album isn't credited the better known band. After the critically acclaimed but financially disastrous Magician Among the Spirits (Aug. 1996) both Steve Kilbey and Marty Willson-Piper were preoccupied by their own solo careers as well as collaborative projects, and they remained physically separated as both Kilbey, Peter Koppes, and Tim Powles were in Australia, while Willson-Piper was living in Sweden busy saving recordings for the fifth album by All About Eve, which in '97 was released under the title of Seeing Stars, but he was also writing songs for several artists in '96 and therefore couldn't find time for Australia nor The Church, so Kilbey, Koppes, and Powles decided to release these new tracks under the project name The Refo:mation.
Stylistically, the band has moved more into an electrified rock universe, as a counterpart to the more experimental '96 album. Powles' technical skills as a sound engineer and mixer may be heard in the production, which gives contributes with a more dynamic expression. The album points in many directions, but there is still a balance, and although the album doesn't fall directly into the back catalog of The Church, there is no doubt that the group has found new paths with this album, which later will be heard on the albums Hologram of Baal (1998) and After Everything Now This (2002) by The Church.

05 December 2017

Kings of Leon "WALLS" (2016)

WALLS
release date: Oct. 14, 2016
format: digital
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,18]
producer: Markus Dravs
label: RCA Records - nationality: USA

Track highlights: 1. "Waste a Moment" - 4. "Find Me" (4 / 5) - 6. "Muchacho"

7th studio album by Kings of Leon following three years after Mechanical Bull (Sep. 2013) has been recorded with something as rare to this band as a new man in the producer seat. All of their previous six studio albums have been made with Angelo Petraglia exclusively or as co-producer.
Just as the band's style has evolved over the years, so has the band's soundscape, yet there have been fundamental characteristics to the band's music. One could then imagine slight changes to WALLS [written in caps as it stands for 'We Are Like Love Songs' as written in the inlay] to show the current direction / progress they find themselves in, but the album doesn't contribute with anything new, and pop / rock is still the first thing that pops to mind when faced with their version of alt. rock. Kings of Leon is (like, e.g. U2) quite a solid unit, still of the same three Followill brothers and their (Followill) cousin on guitar.
With Markus Dravs as producer, you would at least imagine that the band had some kind of desire to add new dimensions to their music or perhaps even change direction from their usual sound matrix. Some argue [downright] that WALLS should be seen as the band's change of direction with clear ties to their original style and that the compositions haven't been carved in the usual dense Kings of Leon-construct. That's just by no means what I'm hearing here. To my ears, this is the continued journey down the very same path - the same group of people dedicated in bridging the gap between American and British alt. rock and pop / rock, which you will hear tried out by bands like Snow Patrol, Keane, Travis, Foo Fighters, and the three who are musically closest to Kings of Leon: U2, Coldplay, and The Killers. From this four-leaf clover of bands with two stemming from each side of the Atlantic, I actually prefer listening to Kings of Leon. U2 has its very own weighty and significant spot in music history, which none of the others come close to.
WALLS was generally met by positive reviews, and the band secured its first and so far only number #1 on the US Billboard 200 - the position was short-lived, however, and in total sales figures the album has actually been the band's least selling album in the US where Only by the Night (2008) is the Kings of Leon album topping the sales figures - both nationally, in the UK, as well as worldwide.
"Waste a Moment" is a song, which begins as a clone of U2 and The Killers, but it's still fine. The critically acclaimed "Around the World" sounds like R.E.M. [in their later days] mixed with Talking Heads - and a bit too much of the latter. "Find Me" is again a song inspired by U2 in a mix with Keane, Snow Patrol and The Killers - but done quite convincingly, and it's the album's best track despite the obvious references. "Over" is more like The Killers and Snow Patrol on the same stage - and the result is not impressive. "Muchacho" is an almost Tindersticks or Editors-like song - not entirely bad and quite nicely done. "Conversation Piece" is... yeah, what do I know?! Beach Boys meets Carpenters, Fleetwood Mac and U2 [!]... - in any case, it's a curious scenario, but not really unique or with anything new on the horizon. "Eyes on You" is U2, Coldplay and The Killers jumping around the stage and getting everyone jumping up and down [big surprise!! Not really!]. And that's... it! Even the good songs here sound like some other band or just like something else, but after all, the album also contains musically fine compositions, although, the worst thing at this point in the band's career is the absence of originality. The music is nicely packaged - better than a Coldplay package or some of the others mentioned these days for that matter. "Stadium Arcadium" could have been an appropriate title for the album - as this collection of tracks will surely do well on big arenas and at huge festivals where people have had their share to drink - only, that title has been used.
I'm not quite sure, which of the band's most recent two albums I prefer - I do know, however, that neither of them is among the best by Kings of Leon.
Not recommended.
[ allmusic.com, NME 4 / 5, Rolling Stone, Q Magazine, 👍The Guardian 3 / 5 stars ]

03 December 2017

Kele Okereke "Fatherland" (2017)

Fatherland
release date: Oct. 6, 2017
format: digital
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,18]
producer: Justin Harris
label: BMG - nationality: England, UK


3rd solo studio album by Kele Okereke following Trick from 2014. Since then, and together with Bloc Party they released Hymns in 2016.
Fatherland is the first time Kele releases music using some of his surname, and it's also a markedly different album from his previous releases. Before Kele released any music as a solo artist, Bloc Party had flirted with the dance genre, but Kele went much further into that scene on his two previous solo albums and on several EPs, but Fatherland contains exclusively folk-inspired, singer / songwriter, and vocal jazz, and arranged with acoustic guitar, piano, and wind instruments.
Generally, the album received positive reviews, however, without leading to great sales numbers. Perhaps his previous release with its relatively low placement at No. #99 on the albums chart prompted a change in style?. His debut had fared better reaching a position as No. #20. Who knows, in any case this is a completely different release, where Kele does his best as a genuine folk singer. If you are able to forget his earlier uptempo and danceable melodies, Fatherland has its own qualities without sounding particularly original for that matter, and this latter sensation is probably my biggest complaint about the album.
Not really great and not all bad either.
[ allmusic.com, Clash, Drowned in Sound 3,5 / 5, The Guardian 3 / 5 stars ]

Neil Young "The Monsanto Years" (2015)

The Monsanto Years
release date: Jun. 29, 2015
format: cd
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,18]
producer: Neil Young & John Hanlon
label: Reprise Records - nationality: Canada

Track highlights: 1. "A New Day for Love" - 3. "People Want to Hear About Love" (live) - 6. "Workin' Man" (live) - 8. "Monsanto Years" (live)


36th studio album by Neil Young released as 'Neil Young + The Promise of the Real' is something as antique as a protest album. The band 'Lukas & Promise of the Real' is made up of frontman Lukas Autry Nelson (son of Willie Nelson) on guitar & backing vocals, Corey McCormick on bass, Tato Melgar on percussion & backing vocals and with Anthony Logerfo on drums. Furthermore the band feature Lukas' brother Micah Nelson on electric guitar, electric charango and on backing vocals.
Stylistically, it's nothing new as they play country rock and folk rock. Some of the songs a more hard rock-shaped and mostly just sound like Young with Crazy Horse. Apparently, Young's long-time friendship with the Nelson family bound them stronger together after the 2014 Farm Aid project and paved the way for a collaboration album.
The protest thing here is against the American agricultural corporation Monsanto, which has found itself involved in many controversies - on the American continent, in Asia and in Europe most of which apparently dealing with the company's role in the handling of chemical waste and pesticides, and its production of GMO-related (Gene-Modified) crops and seeds as well as PCB-material. All of which sounds pretty nasty.
Anyway, the album turns out a bit like Neil Young has landed his freight ship on a subject that has caught his attention. He is a farmer - or: he is running a farm and has been preoccupied with ecological farming and ideas of 'green' products throughout the years. He has also been working on making car engines run on various types of energy, and in my mind, he sort of does whatever he wants. Lately, he has been highly productive musically - putting lots of energy into releasing new material, as if he ponders on when to leave the planet, and whenever something crosses his path, he puts "the plane down" and deals with it before taking off to another project that make him turn his head. This is a bit like that. Having been involved in Farm Aid, he perhaps felt like he needed to pay tribute to that idea by releasing a studio album in that "ballgame". And here it is!
The album mostly gained positive reviews, although, I don't find it that good and feel much like Jon Dolan of Rolling Stone. The great songs are absent and at best some compositions sound much like Neil with Crazy Horse, but others just sound like old-school protest songs without much else to offer than some lines about what Monsanto did wrong, which make me think more of Neil's old collaborative project-band CSNY - as they didn't always find the common ground. Having said that, Neil is Neil Young, and he can do whatever he wants in this world, and this is a project that he engages in and that ain't bad.
[ allmusic.com 3,5 / 5, The Guardian 5 / 5, Rolling Stone 3 / 5 stars ]

28 November 2017

The Killers "Direct Hits (2003-2013)" (2013)

Direct Hits (2003-2013) (compilation)
release date: Nov. 12, 2013
format: cd
[album rate: 4 / 5]

Tracklist: 1. "Mr. Brightside" - 2. "Somebody Told Me" - 3. "Smile Like You Mean It" - 4. "All These Things That I've Done" - 5. "When You Were Young" - 6. "Read My Mind" - 7. "For Reasons Unknown" - 8. "Human" - 9. "Spaceman" - 10. "A Dustland Fairytale" - 11. "Runaways" - 12. "Miss Atomic Bomb" - 13. "The Way It Was" - 14. "Shot at the Night" - 15. "Just Another Girl"

5th album release by The Killers is their first best of compilation album. The band has enough material to choose from, and several great tracks have been omitted, which seems strange when there's room for two new songs on this best of collection. "Jenny Was a Friend of Mine" and "Bones" are just a few great ones missing, however, it's still a fine collection with tracks from all of their so far four studio albums and recommendable for anyone without all their albums.
[ allmusic.com 4 / 5 stars ]

U2 "Songs of Innocence" (2014)

Songs of Innocence
release date: Sep. 9, 2014
format: digital (11 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,12]
producer: Danger Mouse with others
label: Universal-Island Records - nationality: Ireland

Track highlights: 1. "The Miracle (Of Joey Ramone)" - 2. "Every Breaking Wave" - 5. "Iris (Hold Me Close)" - 7. "Raised by Wolves" - 11. "The Troubles" (feat. Lykke Li)

13th studio album by U2 follows 5½ years after No Line on the Horizon (Mar. 2009) sees a change in producer-credits. Preceeding the album, U2 released the (non-album) single "Invisible" (Feb 2014) produced by American artist Danger Mouse (aka Brian Joseph Burton), who was initially hired as producer on this, and they actually already had recorded the new album back in 2010. Danger Mouse is credited as co-producer on the majority of the tracks (7 out of 11, and is only producer on two), but he mostly shares the credit with others, as the band alledgedly wasn't satisfied with the recordings, and subsequently presented the recordings to various others to add details to the outcome, which explains the relative long time span between their 2009 album and this one. The finished album sees British producer Paul Epworth as co-producer on 4 tracks and additional producer on one, American musician Ryan Tedder as co-producer on 4 tracks, sound engineer Declan Gaffney is credited as co-producer on 3 tracks and as additional producer on two, and Flood (aka Mark Ellis) is co-producer on one song. To some controversy U2 sold the album to Apple, who made it 'free' with the launch of a new iPhöne model or a Watch, as well as for all (paying) customers on its iTunes platform.
Musically, the album appears as a 'return to rock' - although, the band has done this on multiple occasions since their first 'return' with All That You Can't Leave Behind (Oct. 2000) - something they sought to establish with the succeeding two, or three including this.
U2 sounds exactly like you would expect them to. Sometimes they tend to sound like other bands aiming to follow a bit too closely in their footsteps, or, they sound like a band without much new under the horizon, except from procaliming "Heey, stadium lovers, we're still here!!". Yes, admittedly, this is a new collection of songs, but beware, 'cause you already know what you get. I guess, they have reached the point most other artists have to deal with at some (late) stage in a long career, asking themselves: 'Are we still relevant?' And questioning if it's Okay just to stick to some kind of reproduction.
This new album is practically like watching a train fixated at a station. You may ask yourself: is this about to leave, any soon now? Has it just arrived?, or: Is this its final stop?! It's like time itself has stopped 'cause nothing really seems to be in a process - this is but a nicely produced distilation.
Not recommended.
[ allmusic.com, 👍The Guardian 3 / 5, 👉Pitchfork 4,6 / 10, 🤡Rolling Stone 5 / 5 stars ]

Bryan Ferry "Avonmore" (2014)

Avonmore
release date: Nov. 17, 2014
format: digital
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,58]
producer: Bryan Ferry, Rhett Davies, Johnson Somerset, Todd Terje
label: BMG - nationality: England, UK

Track highlights: 1. "Loop De Li" - 2. "Midnight Train" - 3. "Soldier of Fortune" (4 / 5) - 4. "Driving Me Wild" - 5. "A Special Kind of Guy" (4 / 5) - 7. "Lost" - 10. "Johnny and Mary" (live)

14th solo studio album by Bryan Ferry following his 2012 album The Jazz Age. Now, who would have thought this possible? 69 year-old Ferry has come up with an album that resembles his best solo works of the late 70s and mid-80s, and his most recent album from 2012 was basically 'only' a collection of re-recordings - and before that, he launched Olympia in 2010, which was only a shadow of his heydays with Roxy Music.
From my perspective, his last good album was Dylannesque (2007) and his last really fine solo was As Time Goes By from 1999. This is like Roxy Music revisited but not just old classics disguised as new material. It's vibrant and solid sophisti-pop from one of the genre's best voices, and he does more than just Okay. Most tracks are from his own hand but track #3 Soldier of Fortune is co-written with Johnny Marr of The Smiths, and the end-track Johnny and Mary is Robert Palmer's fine classic, which Ferry handles in his own and personal way without losing touch with the original.
[ allmusic.com, The Guardian 4 / 5, Rolling Stone 3,5 / 5 stars ]

26 November 2017

The Durutti Column "Idiot Savants" (2007)

Idiot Savants
release date: Jul. 16, 2007
format: digital
[album rate: 3 / 5]

Track highlights: 1. "Better Must Come" - 2. "Interleukin 2 (For Anthony)" (4 / 5) - 3. "Please Let Me Sleep" - 4. "2 Times Nice" - 8. "That Blows My Name Away (For Rachel)"

17th studio album by The Durutti Column issued on Fullfill / Artful Records and produced by Keir Stewart (track 3 produced by Tim Thomas). Before this, The DC released the album Sporadic Three (April 2007, Kooky Records). On this release, Reilly again plays with sampling and electronic but without adding new dimensions or contributing with much else than what at times sounds like versions or improvs of older material, although I really like "Interleukin 2 (For Anthony)".
[ allmusic.com 3 / 5 stars ]

23 November 2017

De efterladte "Adjø tristesse" (2016)

Adjø tristesse
release date: Sep. 12, 2016
format: cd (8melo 015)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,64]
producer: Boi Holm
label: Melodika - nationality: Denmark

Track highlights: 1. "Drømte jeg gik og blev ved med at gå" - 2. "Jeg falder" - 4. "Bravo november" - 5. "Alt forsvinder og vender hjem" - 8. "Surfin' Sjælland" - 9. "Glæden ved at være undervejs" (live) - 11. "Hver dag er et comeback" (live)

3rd studio album by De efterladte released three years after the fine Alvorsord og etagevask is produced by Boi Holm, who also worked as co-producer and additional instrumentalist on the 2013 album - here, he's both credited for (additional) instruments and as composer of two tracks (tracks #2 and #7). Musically, the album initiates by following the message of the title, which could be translated to "Goodbye sorrow". It opens up with much more energy and uptempo compositions than usually heard from a band who has been dominated by a melancholy and not seldom a bitter tone by lyricist and vocalist Peter H. Olesen. The message is accentuated in the cover design. The inlay is a folded poster that when unfolded is the instruction to 'how to fold a basic dart paper plane'... By that, it already attempts to be the exact opposite of what could be taken as a pretentious album.
The album contains the usual inclusion of a spoken-word composition, here: "Vi er tidsrejsende" and an entirely instrumental - "Surfin' Sjælland" - credited primary musical composer Michael Lund, who has a nice 'flanger' / delay quality feedback to his Fender[?] always rhyming with americana.
Adjø tristesse is yet another fine and sincere album by Peter Olesen and Michael Lund, who seems to have found the balance between the ever-present melancholic gloominess of songwriter Olesen's lyrics and (almost) equal parts of liveliness, but also by adding more tempo to a few songs without losing the sense of coherency as a sharpening to the whole picture.
I really enjoy this for now and keep returning to it, and I may just raise my rating in a near future 'cause the album is quite intense and multi-faceted.
[ Gaffa.dk 5 / 6, Berlingske 4 / 6 stars ]

22 November 2017

Tom Waits "Orphans: Brawlers, Bawlers, & Bastards" (2006)

Orphans: Brawlers, Bawlers, & Bastards
(compilation)
release date: Nov. 20, 2006
format: cd (3-disc box set)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5]
producer: Kathleen Brennan, Tom Waits
label: ANTI- - nationality: USA

A compilation album, and there's some when a man has made music very consistently for four decades. This is not the usual Best of kind of release. First thing that differs is that it's a box set of 3 discs. Well, that should maybe do it in comprising his long career but that's not really the way it has been compiled. Apparently, Waits had wanted a release with some of the songs that had been left out of albums throughout the years and he intended to make a slow ballad-like disc of all his softer songs and a raw and ferocious disc with his energetic complementary side, but then Brennan came up with the idea of three discs 'cause they also needed room for the ones that didn't fit either of the two labels. So the songs are intentionally placed according to style and temper, so that the first disc of "Brawlers" are tracks that rock. They are his blues rock and most poignant rock tunes. The second disc of "Bawlers" is a collection of singer / songwriter ballads and vocal jazz songs, as many of his albums contain these two complementary tempers, and the last disc of "Bastards" is reserved for his experimental cabaret and art rock... or you could say the ones that don't fit in - the most... 'crazy' stuff, perhaps. In this way it's a fine box set, and it's a rare compilation that makes it all a whole, although the individual songs have been written in different periods of time, so according to your mood and / or interest, one may select a specific musical style.

Clif Richard "The Day I Met Marie" (1967) (single)

The Day I Met Marie
, 7'' single
release date: Aug. 1967
format: vinyl (DB 8245)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [2,82]
producer: Norrie Paramor
label: Columbia - nationality: England, UK


Single hit song by Cliff Richard. The A-side track is credited Hank Marvin of The Shadows, and the B-side is a song by Joan Kingsbury and Lor Crane.
This issue comes from my parents' record collection, and I recall playing this at age 6-10 years old, although this was never one of my preferred singles. The single comes with many different front covers. This particular issue is a Danish print.



~ ~ ~
This post is part of MyMusicJourney, which enlists key releases that have shaped my musical taste when growing up and until age 14. Most of these releases come from my parents' and / or my older brother's collection.

19 November 2017

Sort Sol "Stor langsom stjerne" (2017)

Stor langsom stjerne
release date: May 19, 2017
format: vinyl 2 lp (gatefold) / digital
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,62]
producer: Randall Dunn
label: Columbia Records - nationality: Denmark

Track highlights: 1. "The Weightless" - 2. "...Like a Trance Like..." (4 / 5) - 3. "Nocturnal Creature" (feat. Emily Cripe) - 5. "Stor, langsom stjerne" - 7. "Life Took You for a Freq." (feat. Chelsea Wolfe) - 8. "K-141 Kursk"

8th studio album by Sort Sol released 16 years after the band's last studio album Snakecharmer from 2001 - an album that had come to represent the end of the band.
The vinyl edition contains a bonus track ("Forever Present" on the D-side played at 45rpm). Founding member, as well as one of the band's essential songwriters, Knud Odde left the band in the aftermath of the last studio album, which left the band to a trio for another three years during which they managed to release a soundtrack to the movie "Baby" (2003). Guitarist Lars Top-Galia then left the band in 2004; however, both vocalist Steen Jørgensen and drummer Tomas Ortved determinately refrained from putting an end to the band and they managed to shelve it for the following years, and then in 2010 Top-Galia returned and the trio began performing for live concerts and they have stayed together since then. Rumours about a forthcoming new studio album began circulating after the new reformation, but then as most people had written that idea off this album was released.
Naturally, the musical output has changed, but perhaps to a degree where old fans will find it hard to associate this newfound style with that of Sort Sol. Apparently, the band had followed the incident of the Russian submarine K-141 Kursk and its tragic end with all 118 crew members being killing, as the band was finishing the album Snakecharmer. Jørgensen and Top-Galia had both wanted to compose a song based on the last notes by the submarine's captain, Dmitri Kolesnikov, but they never found the surplus artistic energy at a time when the band members had seen its own end approaching. The composition "K-141 Kursk" lasts 10:29 mins and is an orchestrated ambient hymn and it appears as the central composition of the album.
The album consists of 8 tracks and has a running time exceeding 51 mins. with the end-track lasting more than 10 mins. All songs except two are credited Jørgensen and Top-Galia. "Nocturnal Creature" has lyrics by Emily Cripe, who also sings on the track and "Life Took You for a Freq." has lyrics and vocals by Chelsea Wolfe. The album is credited Jørgensen, Top-Galia and Ortved as only band members but it's recorded and produced using a bunch of additional musicians where producer Randall Dunn plays synths and electronics on all tracks, and Timm Mason handles keyboards, synths and programming on five compositions, and both seems vital to the end-product.
Stylistically, this is an electronic ambient, synthpop, and art rock album, which doesn't sound like any other album by Sort Sol. You may recognise Top-Galia's distorted guitar-picking, but other than that, you will probably only associate this with Sort Sol by the characteristic dark vocal of Steen Jørgensen.
The single "...Like a Trance Like..." was released a month prior to the album release, and it became a bit of a national radio hit. The album was met by positive reviews and the band was nominated "Best Release" at the 2017 Grammy Awards, where the band was handed an "Honorary Prize".
The album is a big positive surprise, which I find quite fine and easily bettering most of the band's earlier releases and basically placing it close to top 3 of all their studio albums.
[ Gaffa.dk 5 / 6, Undertoner, Soundvenue 6 / 6 stars ]

[ collectors' item 'near mint' - from ~ €45,- ]


all albums rated >

18 November 2017

Rikki Price "You're for Real" (1962) (single)

You're for Real, 7'' single
release date: 1962
format: vinyl (267 200)
[single rate: 2,5 / 5] [2,56]
producer: ?
label: Fontana - nationality: England, UK


Single release by Rikki Price with the title track being England's contribution to the 1962 Eurovision Song Contest.
This copy of the single is a Danish issue, perhaps released at some point after the original release, as it says 'Recording first published 1962" on labels. The single was part of my parents' record collection and not one I found of great interest - although, I recall finding the B-side bettering the title track.


~ ~ ~
This post is part of MyMusicJourney, which enlists key releases that have shaped my musical taste when growing up and until age 14. Most of these releases come from my parents' and / or my older brother's collection.

17 November 2017

Anna Ternheim "Leaving on a Mayday" (2008)

Leaving on a Mayday
udgivet: Nov. 12, 2008
format: digital (US)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,12]
producer: Björn Yttling
label: Verve Forecast - nationality: Sweden


3rd studio album by Anna Ternheim released two years after the slightly disappointing Separation Road (Sep. 2006) is originally released on Universal Music - the release here on Verve is a US edition with a single bonus track (track #7) and a total running time at 44 minutes.
Stylistically, Ternheim's releases are found in the softer end of the art pop register, but on this she has moved further into a territory where she distances herself from what could rightly be labeled singer / songwriter. By doing so, she is now closer to artists such as Lykke Li, Emilíana Torrini, Anna Persson, and Danish Oh Land without artistically showcasing something entirely original. However, it's her music in particular that has improved significantly since Separation Road. The musical arrangements and Ytling's production add a grandiose quality and ethereal sensation to her songs and clearly elevates the album above the ordinary. Ternheim's vocal, on the other hand, is not a sparkling instrument that presents us with great qualities, and she still has a distinct Swedish-English intonation, which doesn't exactly improve things, and then the lyrics are occasionally characterised by bilingual banalities like "I'm losing you - what can I do?" ["Losing You"]. One may only wonder why Ternheim, as so many other Scandinavian artists, insists on singing in English when the language doesn't flow naturally? Overall, progress can be traced on an album that simply lacks catchy ear hooks. Without signs of remorse, Ternheim continues to release music and she also has stable support in the Scandinavian market, but it seems a bit like she's come to an artistic dead end, where many other talents shine brighter in the genre - Ternheim has, however, proven that she possesses a talent and has the skills in place, so perhaps she will hit it better next time.
Above average but no favourite.
[ allmusic.com 3,5 / 5, Gaffa.dk 4 / 6, UnderTheRadar 2,5 / 5 stars ]

15 November 2017

Alanis Morissette "Havoc and Bright Lights" (2012)

Havoc and Bright Lights
release date: Aug. 28, 2012
format: cd
[album rate: 3,5 / 5]

Tracklist: 1. "Guardian" (3,5 / 5) - 2. "Woman Down" (3,5 / 5) - 3. "'Til You" (3 / 5) - 4. "Celebrity" (3 / 5) - 5. "Empathy" (3,5 / 5) - 6. "Lens" (3,5 / 5) - 7. "Spiral" (4 / 5) - 8. "Numb" - 9. "Havoc" (3 / 5) - 10. "Win and Win" (3,5 / 5) - 11. "Receive" - 12. "Edge of Evolution"

8th studio album release by Alanis Morissette. The album received mixed reviews but I think, it's better than most of what else is released in the genre of singer / songwriter, pop / rock. Alanis has a saying with her lyrics - her subjects may be heard of before but she's an intelligent songwriter, and her music is never boring or dull. The style is as usual a product of a genuine will to be sincere and personal, and the music is often voluminous, spacious anchored around her strong singing voice. Sometimes her music tends to be too heavy orchestrated for my liking, e.g. on "Receive", but overall, this is far from a lesser release.

14 November 2017

C.V. Jørgensen "I det muntre hjørne" (1990)

I det muntre hjørne
release date: 1990
format: vinyl (gatefold) / digital
[album rate: 4 / 5] [4,18]
producer: C.V. Jørgensen
label: Epic Records - nationality: Denmark


10th studio album by C.V. Jørgensen following two years after Indian Summer (Aug. '88) is like that produced by C.V. Jørgensen himself. And just as was generally the case with the predecessor, the lyrics and music here are credited Jørgensen himself, with the exception of "Træt som en junkie", which was composed together with Lars Hybel. The album offers nine tracks and has a total running length of just over 40 minutes. Among the participating musicians are a number of old acquaintances including Lars Hybel on guitar, banjo and bass, Jacob Andersen on percussion, and with Gert Smedegård on drums. The album shows a reunion with Aske Jacoby, who also took part on four tracks on Vennerne & vejen (1985) and who has been a stable member of C.V.'s touring backing band. Here, Jacoby is featured on on all tracks and he is credited guitar, mandolin, and keyboard - normally, instruments Jørgensen's long-time fellow musician, Nils Henriksen, previously handled, as he did on Indian Summer.
As the title and certainly also the cover indicate, C.V. here is in a more positive mood than previously heard, and it's an atmosphere he brings to the musical expression. Incidentally, the title is taken from the song "Pligterne kalder". Musically, he continues some of the positive tones you'll find on the predecessor, and the style is warm and laid back. It's a turn back to the folk rock that initially inspired him, but which he has never really made as stylishly as he does here. There is a clear inspiration from his old role model Dylan, as well as both Neil Young and Joni Mitchell. On his earlier albums, the inspiration was clear, both musically and lyrically, while this is almost like a tribute to a musical style, as the music is quite original and the lyrics are also Jørgensen's own shape, which has gained a clearer layer of humour and a positive tone. The album may easily be seen as Jørgensen's own comment to national music critics who have long labeled C.V.'s albums as sarcastic sulkiness, just as he has long fought against a media image as a left-wing social critic, although he has never professed to a political position and instead deliberatedly have pointed to the corrupting power. On most of these new songs, he continues his new narrative 'I' form, which he initiated on Indian Summer. He says, among other things, that he is ...'so tired of being a communist' with a barely concealed salute to the critics' predicate, and on the album's end track "Tak for sangen" he thanks his sources of inspiration and his musical acquaintances. After poor sales figures with the album Indian Summer, the band Sort Sol's cover of the title track, released as a single in late '91, helped to bring new focus to this very album, and C.V. here sends a direct greeting to the band with the line: "...tak til Sort Sol for den lyse nat" [...'thanks to Sort Sol for the bright night'] - in other words: With their tribute, Sort Sol helped pointing out the qualities of the album.
I det muntre hjørne found positive reception, and the album was nominated Danish Album of the Year at the 1991 Danish Music Awards, it won as Danish Rock Release of the Year, and C.V. was handed the award for Danish Songwriter of the Year.
In sales numbers, the album is one of Jørgensen's biggest successes, although, critics were divided. Some hailed C.V.'s new positive style and the musical turn, while others found it too light, without his trademark of social awareness and without his sharp wit with which his name was bound.
In Jørgensen's discography, the album is one of my absolute favourites and the it's the only C.V. album I so far have purchased on vinyl.
Front cover and artwork are (as usual) credited Annemarie Albrectsen.
Highly recommended.

13 November 2017

Queen Elizabeth "Queen Elizabeth" (1994)

Queen Elizabeth
[debut]
release date: Nov. 1994
format: cd
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,28]
producer: Julian Cope
label: Echo - nationality: England, UK

Track highlights: 1. "Superstar" - 2. "Avebury: The Arranged Marriage of Heaven and Earth"

Studio album debut from duo Queen Elizabeth consisting of Julian Cope and multi-instrumentalist Thighpaulsandra (aka Tim Lewis) - the latter features on Cope's most recent Autogeddon (Aug. '94). The album (only) consists of two compositions running just under 35 and just over 31 minutes, respectively.
The music is characterised by experimentation and is mainly kept in a simple electronic universe, where synths, mellotron, and programming are main components, and although traditional instruments such as guitar, bass, piano, and drums are part of the compositions, the final product is a work of electronic model completely without any apparent influence from styles that one might be inclined to associate with Cope, such as funk, space rock, or neo-psychedelia. As the experimental collaboration album Rite - made by Cope and the long-time musical associate Donald Ross Skinner (who, by the way, also features here) from '93 - it's easy to think of Queen Elizabeth as music made for a film, but where Rite was influenced by many well-known styles and genres from the past three decades, the album here appears far more minimalistic, more stylish experimental - without being downright masterful for that matter.

10 November 2017

The Stone Roses "Fools Gold 9.53" (1989), single

Fools Gold 9.53 (cd single)
release date: Nov. 1989
format: digital (1992 reissue)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,48]
producer: John Leckie
label: Silvertone - nationality: England, UK

Tracklist: 1. "Fools Gold 9.53" - 2. "What the World Is Waiting For" - 3. "Fools Gold 4.15"

Single release by The Stone Roses originally released in a 7'' vinyl version Fools Gold 4.15 and a 12'' titled Fools Gold 9.53, identical to the cd reissue. The 7'' had what is here track #3 as the first track - and in either case the lead single was partly titled with the running time in the name.
The single was released 8 months after the debut album, and it's without tracks from the album.
With a running time at almost 10 minutes, the title track is an unusual lengthy composition, but given the baggy / madchester style it's just a more dance-oriented / -friendly song that follows close to the style laid out on the debut album. The shorter version is the better.
The front cover artwork is a painting by guitarist and musical composer John Squire titled "Double Dorsal Dopplegänger".

09 November 2017

Steve & Russell P. Kilbey "Gilt Trip" (1997)

Gilt Trip
[debut]
release date: May 9, 1997
format: digital (2005 reissue)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,18]
producer: Russell P. Kilbey
label: Karmic Hit - nationality: Australia

Track highlights: 1. "Gilt Trip" - 2. "The Onset" - 3. "Tragic Mandarin Love Story" - 4. "Eyes Smeared With the Ointment of Love" - 9. "Happy Endings"

1st studio album collaboration by brothers Steve & Russell P. Kilbey, originally released on Vicious Sloth Collectables, in 2005 reissued on Kilbey's own label Karmic Hit. The album consists exclusively of instrumental compositions composed by the brothers - composed together or alone. The two Kilbeys play all instruments, except on "Tragic Mandarin Love Story", which is the only uptempo composition to feature both violinist Linda Neil and drummer Tim Powles (of The Church).
Musically, it is a type of 'soundtrack' to a non-existent film. It's ambient and atmospheric with an almost organic tone, and some tracks are progressive minimalism, and in some ways the album ties to Steve Kilbey's second solo album Earthed (1987), which also reflects some of the same soundtrack quality.
The two brothers subsequently issued several releases and later founded the project Gilt Trip, but here they have released their first collaboration under their own names, which has its qualities.

08 November 2017

LCD Soundsystem "London Sessions" (2010) (live)

London Sessions (live)
release date: Nov. 8, 2010
format: cd (2011)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,64]
producer: James Murphy; DFA
label: DFA Records - nationality: USA

Track highlights: 1. "Us v Them" - 2. "All I Want" - 4. "Get Innocuous!" - 5. "Daft Punk Is Playing at My House" - 6. "All My Friends" - 8. "I Can Change" - 9. "Yr City Is a Sucker"
[ full album ]

Live-in-the-studio album of recordings at The Pool recording studio of Miloco Studios in London, England, Tuesday Jun. 29, 2010. The album was released as a downloadable album only Nov. 8, 2010 and on cd Jan. 24, 2011. On this occasion the band consists of James Murphy on vocals and percussion, Nancy Whang on keyboards and vocals, Pat Mahoney on drums and vocals, Tyler Pope on bass, percussion and vocals, Gavin Russom on synth, keyboards, percussion and vocals, David Scott Stone on guitar, percussion, synth and vocals and with Matt Thornley on guitar, percussion and vocals.
The collection of songs here are taken from all three previous studio albums, which makes it a good compilation as it comes with two tracks from the debut, three from Sound of Silver and four from This Is Happening. I actually find that the tracks (#2, #3, #7 and #8) from the most recent studio album all sound better in this more vibrant and dance-punk production, and on top of that, they also make the compositions from the various albums feel like one whole.
All in all this is truly one of the band's best albums.
Prior to the album release James Murphy had started rumours about the band's near end, and on Feb. 8, 2011, on the band's website, LCD Soundsystem proclaimed that they would play their last concert in April.
[ allmusic.com 4 / 5 stars ]

06 November 2017

Mogwai "EP+6" (2000)

EP+6
 (compilation)
release date: Aug. 2000 / Oct. 1, 2001 (first UK issue)
format: digital (10 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5]
producer: various
label: Chemikal Underground - nationality: Scotland, UK


Compilation album by Mogwai essentially compiling three eps into one longplayer with EP being their most recent release from Oct. '99. It consists of ten tracks with a total running time at 72 minutes. The first three compositions are from 4 Satin (1997), tracks #4 to #6 from No Education = No Future (Fuck the Curfew) E.P (1998), and the last four are from EP (1999) - thus the title: EP+6 comes with four tracks plus six other tracks... The album was originally intended for the Japanese market only (released on Toy's Factory, August 2000) but was soon made in various digital issues for the European market primarily because the original three eps only had been pressed in limited numbers. Some European cd-issues are enhanced issues containing an extended version of "Stanley Kubrick", the music video, whereas the first Japanese edition has reversed track order (from newest to oldest) and some Japanese issues also came with the music video for "Xmas Steps".
Again, Mogwai has produced a fine album, although, all tracks have already been released in ep-versions, and it's difficult to pin out the best tracks, however, none of them appear on the band's normal full-length albums making this another fine album to know of. Also because the last four tracks here bond nicely to the most recent an otherwise different album Rock Action (Apr. 2001).
Recommended.

EDIT Nov. 2021: The album has been re-issued in a remastered 3 lp vinyl version (for the first time) with the new title "e.p. x 3", but with the same tracklist and with new front cover (still photo by Neale Smith of the same water tower). The album is also made available as download release via the band's bandcamp profile.

The Stone Roses "The Stone Roses" (1989)

The Stone Roses [debut]
release date: Mar. 13, 1989
format: vinyl (ORE LP 502) / cd
[album rate: 4 / 5] [3,96]
producer: John Leckie
label: Silvertone Records - nationality: England, UK

Track highlights: 1. "I Wanna Be Adored" (4 / 5) - 2. "She Bangs the Drums" (4 / 5) (live) - 3. "Waterfall" (studio live 2013) - 5. "Bye Bye Badman" - 7. "(Song for My) Sugar Spun Sister" (live) - 8. "Made of Stone" - 11. "I Am the Resurrection"

Studio album debut by Manchester band The Stone Roses consisting of vocalist Ian Brown, guitarist John Squire, Mani [aka Gary Mounfield] on bass and Reni [aka Alan John Wren] on drums, backing vocals and piano. All 11 songs are credited Ian Brown and John Squire. Stylewise, the album was released as indie pop and jangle pop, which had its roots in the Manchester scene with close bonds to The Smiths, but time has first and foremost put it in the category of baggy / Madchester and neo-psychedelia including bands like Inspiral Carpets and Happy Mondays all of which with connection to the (New Order) nightclub The Haçienda music scene, but also with a distinct relation to other bands like The Sundays (jangle pop / dreampop) and Australian band The Church (jangle pop / neo-psychedelia).
I bought the album upon its release after having heard the single hit "She Bangs the Drums" on the look-out for the "new big thing" after the demise of The Smiths. It was quite all right and pretty good, but it wasn't great, imho. What I became more hooked on was the music by Kitchens of Distinction, also releasing their debut album in '89, music by Bob Mould and Pixies with more power-fuzed compositions. However, time has been quite gentle with this album, I think. Actually, I consider it a whole lot better today than I did back then. I would play the first half of the album finding that part above average, but as a whole, I thought of it as too unfocused and without sufficient variation. I also found it somewhat difficult to label 'cause was it close to The Smiths and jangle pop, or was it more in line with noise pop or dream pop bands like The Sundays?
What is particular good is not just the variation of mood and energy, there's also a fine incorporation of classic pop pointing back to The Byrds and a baroque pop period, which basically had its comeback with britpop - Oasis and Blur, years later - and there's the whole neo-psychedelic part linking the band with the 60s and a long line of bands dealing with that style throughout the 70s and into the 80s where it fuses with other styles and genres. The Church, XTC and Love and Rockets all incorporated neo-psychedelia but none of these bands were dance-oriented like The Stone Roses and the baggy / Madchester scene of late 80s Manchester.
The album is enlisted in "1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die".
The front cover is a Jackson Pollock-inspired painting "Bye Bye Badman" by John Squire.
[ allmusic.com, Q Magazine, Uncut 5 / 5, Rolling Stone 4 / 5 stars ]

[ collectors' item, 1989 repress 'near mint' - from ~ €60,- ]