Showing posts with label Scotland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scotland. Show all posts

24 March 2025

Mogwai "The Bad Fire" (2025)

The Bad Fire
release date: Jan 24, 2025
format: digital (10 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,68]
producer: John Congleton
label: Rock Action - nationality: Scotland, UK


11th studio album by Scottish band Mogwai following four years after As the Love Continues (Feb. 2021) sees a turn to hot producer name of John Congleton (Lana Del Rey, The Killers, Sharon Van Etten, Modest Mouse, St. Vincent,... to name a few) - a name that, imo, doesn't appear as a natural first choice, but hey, the band, or the managers may have thought they were in need of a distribution hack (?). Perhaps, Dave Fridmann didn't have the time? I think Fridmann have proved that he suits the band really really well, and he has always been a guarantee of a prominent production.
Compared to the excellent 2021 album, it's not a completely different release but it does feel like an inferior collection of compositions where the usual wide span has been narrowed in - confined - restricted, and the end result is of something where there's definitely steam but not enough coal to make the difference. The exceptions are "Hi Chaos", which sounds more like a left-over bonus track from the '21-album and "Fanzine Made of Flesh", which is the closest the band has been to switch to indie pop.
The Bad Fire is not a poor album and far from it, but after such a great achievement it does feel as inferior. What I miss here is a stronger direction - what is it really? It's obvious that the band has come a long way since Come on Die Young (1999) and that synths have by now become a more integral part of the band's primary instrumentation but where As the Love Continues showcased a fine mix that allowed for guitars to be fully heard side by side or together with huge electronic arrangements, this new outing sort of blends everything into one huge pot where new boundaries are no longer being pushed or new soil is investigated. To me, this is undoubtedly Mogwai, which means it can't be bad, and it never is. It's just that they sound like the music has been restricted from delivering as freely as it could.
Recommended.
[ allmusic.com, The Guardian, Mojo 4 / 5, Pitchfork 7,4 / 10, Rolling Stone, 👍PopMatters 3,5 / 5 stars ]

23 March 2024

The Jesus and Mary Chain "Just Like Honey" (1985) (single)

Just Like Honey
, 12'' single
release date: Oct. 1985
format: vinyl (NEG 17T)
[single rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,55]
producer: The Jesus and Mary Chain
label: Blanco y Negro - nationality: Scotland, UK

Tracklist: A) 1. "Just Like Honey" - 2. "Head" - - B) 1. "Cracked" - 2. "Just Like Honey (Demo - Oct 84)"

Single release by The Jesus and Mary Chain is the band's third and final single taken from its forthcoming debut album Psychocandy (Nov. 1985). The single follows You Trip Me Up (May 1985), which followed Never Understand (Feb. 1985). The A-side tracks also constitute the regular 7'' single issue, which was released in Sep. '85.

28 January 2022

Robin Guthrie "Springtime" (2022)

Springtime
, ep
release date: Jan. 4, 2022
format: digital (4x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,64]
producer: Robin Guthrie
label: Soleil Après Minuit - nationality: Skotland, UK


4-track ep by Scottish guitarist Robin Guthrie follows only one month after his ep Riviera, which in turn followed one month after Mockingbird Love (both limited to four tracks) is as usual released on his own label, and the music is also written, composed, arranged, performed, as well as produced by Guthrie himself. Since his days with dream pop trio Cocteau Twins back in the late nineties, Guthrie has looked down on popular music and turned to evocative instrumental and thoroughly atmospheric expressions with the guitar at the center of his compositions. Occasionally, he lets the guitar parody keyboards and synths, which he also uses, but it's mainly electric guitar connected to a series of effects and via computer programming that he paints his sound collages. If you have followed his solo releases for the past two decades - entire albums and many EPs, or you have come across some of his many collaborative projects, either as hired composer for film music - and often together with the now late American minimalist Harold Budd - you may have noted that Guthrie has settled into a rather simple ambient style that he hasn't shied away from. And that's why new releases may sound like recycling or new paraphrasings of already known sound loops. While part of Cocteau Twins, Guthrie was also responsible for drum programming, but the will to include drums could seem not wanted. On some compositions, e.g. "Kino's Chance" you'll notice sonically weak rhythm actions - perhaps best heard on "All for Nothing", but the soundscape is grandiose harmonic guitar structures that the whole ep exhibits. Admittedly, not a lot happens on Springtime, and yet it stands out as one of his better solo releases. The simplicity draws a clear line back to his first real collaborative work with Budd: Mysterious Skin: Music From the Film back in 2005 and up to his later collaborations with the classically trained American composer.
Although the music is ethereal and ambient moving on the verge to new age, it's the small simple melody lines that create the clear picture - something I haven't always been able to find in Guthrie's music. Together with Budd, Guthrie cultivated the minimalist expression building on Budd's open piano pedals and Guthrie's powerful guitar notes - and it was almost their only applied instrumentation, but on this, Guthrie works with rhythm-based music, even if the rhythm is toned down, because I feel his guitar comes more into its own right when he simultaneously lets rich bass lines accompany drum patterns. This way, it also becomes more varied. Occasionally, you could suspect Guthrie in making extensive use of old sound sequences recorded back in the '80s as he was left in solitude to compose pieces for Elizabeth Fraser's vocal and Simon Raymonde's bass notes, but this is ultimately irrelevant when the music here appears new, clean and complete. These are delicious, atmospheric sound collages that, like a quiet summer evening, appear as the ideal campfire that warms you deep inside, and which only utters that the album is only missing more and longer compositions; but it's only an ep, and unfortunately it's all over in just 15 minutes. Then if Springtime won't satisfy you, I can only recommend his latest full album Pearldiving (Nov. 2021), and his final album with Harold Budd: Another Flower from 2020.
Nice to know.

07 December 2021

Best of 2021:
Mogwai "As the Love Continues" (2021)

As the Love Continues
release date: Feb. 19, 2021
format: 2 lp vinyl (gatefold gold vinyl) / digital (11 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [4,14]
producer: Dave Fridmann
label: Rock Action - nationality: Skotland, UK


10th. studio album from Scottish Mogwai released 3½ years following Every Country's Sun (Sep. 2017), however that doesn't mean that the band has been on a hiatus. Primarily an instrumental ensemble, Mogwai has long been known for their soundtracks for both documentaries and feature films and we have also seen them issuing eps in between full length studio albums. Most recently, they made the music for the Italian tv-series "ZeroZeroZero", which was released via bandcamp in May '20, and before that they released two albums in 2018: in August the soundtrack Kin made for the American Sci-Fi-flic of the same name, and the following month they released the live-album 2018.
Mogwai sounds like no other band and it's an orchestra primarily engaged with instrumental music based on traditional rock-instrumentation centrered around guitar, bass, keyboards, and drums, and with that in mind it's really impressive what kind of new music they manage to create without making it a mere repetition of the last, or any former album. Over the years, and much in the same manner they build up their compositions, they have slowly incorporated synths as a colour to their basic sound, which undoubtedly makes you point to the notion of post-rock, although, the band allegedly never has given much for that term. It's also a narrow etiquette, when your aim is to describe the band's style.
The album has garnered positive feedback and several critics has now come to see the band's tenth studio album as one of its absolute most coherent and best. At the same time, it's Mogwai's first to reach the very top of the album chart list in Great Britain. Mogwai has nearly always made use of the method known from noise rock, which may be described as taking a stance in between the quiet and the explossive and that aspect also comes in use on several compositions here, although, their method is always kept original and fully shaped to the progressive expression of the individual song. Mogwai is renowned for their coherent albums and As the Love Continues could in some ways be compared to the structures of classical works without actually being neo-classical.
As the Love Continues invites its listeners on a musical time travel back to the noise rock of the 90s, to Mogwai's starting point but also mix newer influences from the alternative scene in the last three decades with bites from electronica. At times you're tempted to think bits and pieces are inspired by Smashing Pumpkins, other frgaments by James Blake but then you eventually only realise that it's all pure Mogwai. It's demanding music - and in that way it follows a pattern of theirs where the music requires an implicit listener. You're bound to let the music speak, to let it unfold, and first then, you're may find yourself in a position where you're ready to take it in, to float in its stream and to experience its multifaceted structure.
The best by Mogwai is also the album of the year, and it's highly recommended.
[ allmusic.com, musicOMH, Uncut 4,5, 👍PopMatters, Mojo 4 / 5, 👎Pitchfork 6,9 / 10 stars ]

2021 Favourite releases: 1. Mogwai As the Love Continues - 2. Thåström Dom som skiner - 3. Lisa Gerrard & Jules Maxwell Burn

25 March 2021

Robin Guthrie & Harold Budd "Another Flower" (2020)

Another Flower
release date: Dec. 4, 2020
format: digital (9 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,56]
producer: Robin Guthrie
label: Soleil Après Minuit - nationality: Skotland, UK / USA


Final collaborative project between Scottish dream pop master Robin Guthrie and American composer and minimalist Harold Budd. The album is not a bunch of brand new compositions but actually a collection of more than seven years old recordings, which now see the light of day. Possibly, they were intended as another joint work between the now 58-year-old Guthrie and 84-year-old Budd, but it now appears as their last joint work, as Budd was hit by COVID-19 before the album came out and eventually died from complications related to the decease on Dec. 8, 2020 - only 14 days before the album release. As noted in the accompanying liner notes, the album is "Written and performed by Robin Guthrie & Harold Budd during a rainy Summer in Brittany, 2013". It isn't directly mentioned that the album was recorded over a single day or over a matter of sessions, but most often they basically worked in the moment with the recorder running, and while the music was created and performed from start to finish. Perhaps this music wouldn't have been released had Budd not passed away so abruptly 'cause fact is: these compositions are seven-year-old recordings with which Guthrie now choose to pay tribute to his long-time musical playmate. And Harold Budd may not have heard the album in its entirety and with the tracks precisely ordered as they appear here - but Budd heard it all, because he was there himself.
As usual, it's the gentle atmospheric sounds that dominate Guthrie and Budd's music. Since these compositions they have released more than a handful of joint albums, either as musical scores for feature films or as their own releases. They are both listed here as performers and composers of all music, and as usual only Guthrie is credited as album producer. It's another chapter in a common ethereal ambient style that clearly touches on new age and doesn't walk on entirely new paths. The elder Budd is a classically-schooled pianist and composer, and he has early admitted to an improvisational and minimalist expression, which has proven to go quite well with Guthrie's preference for an airy guitar sound. Their final recordings together in terms of chronology was their collaborative works resulting in the 2014 soundtrack White Bird in a Blizzard for the film of the same name directed by Japanese-American Gregg Araki, who had also made "Mysterious Skin" in 2005, for which Guthrie and Budd introduced their collaborative work. In addition to these soundtracks, together they composed and made After the Night Falls and Before the Day Breaks released simultaneously in 2007 as two individual releases, and later they released Bordeaux in 2011. That same year, they also released Winter Garden as a joint project with Italian musician Eraldo Bernocchi.
Another Flower is, as the title suggests, another distinctive work from Guthrie and Budd - another flower. Perhaps, this was a metaphor Budd used about their compositions or works - we don't know for sure. Guthrie came up with the title after Budd's death - it could also be a reference to Budd himself, as a flower that was here, it was seen, admired, and is now gone. Musically speaking, it's not the large and complex compositional structures that characterise their compositions, but it's music created in a shared moment and in a warm, friendly common expression. You could object that they cling on to the same colours, the same airy timbres, which in way they do, but these are tones that contain something valuable by being created as common breaths expressed in music, and which show themselves as a unique and living organism.
Although new age as such is not really a favourite genre of mine, the album here expresses something quite unique. It's the evidence of both musicians' fondness for the instantaneous - the moment of creation, and they both allow / invite one another to contribute without one or the other dominate the soundscape, or you end up sensing one over the other, and that's a great strength and quality to be able to strike a common note when improvising. When one leads, the other follows suit, and they set out in a common unknown direction with equal vigor to a common end.
Another Flower may not be a work that indicates new paths or inspires new styles, but the music clearly has its merits, and occasionally I feel the music strikes an expression that reminds me of other big names of ethereal music, such as Palle Mikkelborg or Ryuichi Sakamoto, but always without giving impression of plagiarism. When I shut my eyes, I can easily conjure up internal images of underwater footage from Luc Besson's "Le Grand Bleu", which had music by Éric Serra. It's done sincerely and beautifully, and it's perhaps Guthrie and Budd's greatest swan song. At least I haven't heard them perform better than on this album.
Recommended.

18 May 2020

The Fratellis "In Your Own Sweet Time" (2018)

In Your Own Sweet Time
release date: Mar. 16, 2018
format: vinyl (LTD. orange vinyl) / digital (11 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [3,90]
producer: Tony Hoffer
label: Cooking Vinyl - nationality: Scotland, UK

Track highlights: 1. "Stand Up Tragedy" (4 / 5) (Jon Fratelli solo acoustic) - 2. "Starcrossed Losers" - 6. "I've Been Blind" - 7. "Laughing Gas" (Jon Fratelli solo acoustic)

5th studio album by Scottish trio The Fratellis following the 2015 album Eyes Wide, Tongue Tied with music exclusively composed by vocalist and guitarist Jon Fratelli (aka John Paul Lawler) who is also credited as keyboardist.
Where the 2015 album revealed a more laid-back and less garage rock-styled collection of songs, this new album brings back the prolific energy of the debut, which may coincide with the fact that they have brought back the producer of their debut album, Tony Hoffer, who also produced their 2015 album.
I easily find it the band's second-best album, much alongside We Need Medicine from 2013, but this has more of the original simplicity that characterised the band's first studio album, and then there's a stronger glam rock sensation that makes you understand the importance of one Marc Bolan.
[ 👎allmusic.com 3 / 5, 👍PopMatters, Spill Magazine 3,5 / 5, Express 4 / 5 stars ]

2018 Favourite releases: 1. Jon Hopkins Singularity - 2. The Fratellis In Your Own Sweet Time - 3. Robyn Honey

05 September 2019

Mogwai "Every Country’s Sun" (2017)

Every Country’s Sun
release date: Sep. 1, 2017
format: digital (11 x File, FLAC - TRR291CD)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,58]
producer: Dave Fridmann
label: Temporary Residence Limited - nationality: Scotland, UK


9th studio album by Mogwai following 3½ years after Rave Tapes (Jan. 2014) and 1½ years after the soundtrack album Atomic (Apr. 2016). It's Mogwai's first studio album since the departure of founding member John Cummings, and it's made with producer Dave Fridmann who also produced the band's third album Rock Action (2001), and with that in mind it may signal an attempt to bring back some of the magic from their past. It's 11 new compositions ranging from 4 to 7 minutes with a total running time just under an hour.
And what is back is the dynamics of slow / fast and soft / hard, only not in mere old-time guitar-dominant fashion but in concordance with their musical growth through ambient and electronic stages.
The album was not an immediate favourite, but I have come to see it as a much more complex work, which combines and evolves - and ultimately: points to a new phase of glorious music. The album was well-received in the UK securing the band another top-10 entry with the band's so far highest charting album at number #6 on the albums chart list.
Recommended.
[ 👉allmusic.com 3,5 / 5, 👍Pitchfork 7,6 / 10, The Guardian, Mojo 4 / 5 stars ]

12 May 2019

Edwyn Collins "Badbea" (2019)

Badbea
release date: Mar. 29, 2019
format: digital (12 x File, MP3)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,54]
producer: Edwyn Collins, Sean Read
label: Analogue Enhanced Digital - nationality: Scotland, UK

Track highlights: 1. "It's All About You" - 3. "I Guess We Were Young" - 5. "Outside" - 6. "Glasgow to London" - 10. "I'm OK Jack" - 12. "Badbea"

9th studio solo album by Edwyn Collins released by Collins' co-founded micro label AED is his first album out in six years - following Understated from 2013. Stylistically, it's a blend of the many styles Collins has been involved with in his long musical career. It contains elements of pop soul, sophisti-pop, indie pop and singer / songwriter, but it's first and foremost a quite coherent output. There's the ever-present echo of an ancient proto-punk energy, which makes me think of The Stooges and Patti Smith. It's psychedelic rock bits and pieces, art punk twists with screaming horns and also a very present subtle caring in ballad-like and honest-to-the-bone songs of present days - delicately woven songs with acoustic guitars and his charismatic crooning. On top of that there's also left room for electronic traits scattered around to widen the stylistic expression rather than the attempt to take control of songs. And quite surprisingly, it doesn't feel much like the usage of too many styles. And I think, primarily thanks to the production sound and Collins' dark vocal, which cleverly binds it all together.
The front cover depicts Collins in a confronting fragile portrait hinting to his physical conditions after multiple cerebral hemorrhages that struck him around 2005.
This is a warm grower and a recommendable listen. It's so great to see and hear Collins back!!
[ allmusic.com 4,5 / 5 stars ]

05 May 2019

Mogwai "Atomic" (OST) (2016)

Atomic (soundtrack)
release date: Apr. 1, 2016
format: digital (10 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,27]
producer: Tony Doogan
label: Rock Action Records - nationality: Scotland, UK

Track highlights: 1. "Ether" - 2. "SCRAM" - 4. "U-235" - 8. "Are You a Dancer?"

Original soundtrack by Mogwai to the documentary "Atomic, Living in Dread and Promise" (Aug. 2015), a film about nuclear history by Mark Cousins. The album sees Mogwai exploring a style with strong bonds to 1970s krautrock and electronic music by Kraftwerk and Godspeed You! Black Emperor (e.g. "Lift Yr. Skinny Fists Like Antennas to Heaven!" from 2000), and by doing so, the album doesn't follow the path of the bands most recent releases.
The album is the band's first in a new line-up (the first in 16 years) after founding member John Cummings left the quintet in 2015 to pursue a solo career, so here the band has been reduced to a quartet of Stuart Braithwaite, Dominic Aitchison, Martin Bulloch and Barry Burns. It's 48 minutes of primarily progressive ambient music with a commemorating touch of the aforementioned German styles blended with ambient post-rock.
Atomic is not really great but nor is it of irrelevance. It's thematically narrow and stringent music, which possibly serves its purpose, but as a standalone release it lacks diversity as well as polarity; however, imho, it outshines most of their previous soundtrack albums.
Later this year (Oct. 2016) Mogwai also contributed with four compositions for the soundtrack to the documentary "Before the Flood" by Fisher Stevens.
bandcamp ]
[ 👉Pitchfork 7,1 / 10, 👍Drowned in Sound 3,5 / 5, The Guardian 3 / 5 stars ]

23 March 2019

Robin Guthrie & Mark Gardener "Universal Road" (2015)

Universal Road
release date: Mar. 23, 2015
format: digital (10 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,04]
producer: Robin Guthrie & Mark Gardener
label: Soleil Après Minuit - nationality: UK

Track highlights: 1. "Universal Road" - 2. "Dice" - 7. "Sometime" - 10. "Blind"

Collaboration album by Robin Guthrie and Mark Gardener produced by the duo and released on Guthrie's label. Guthrie's most recent release was yet another collaboration work, the 2014 soundtrack album White Bird in a Blizzard, made with longtime collaborator Harold Budd for a movie by Gregg Araki, who also directed the film for which Guthrie and Budd made their collaboration debut Mysterious Skin: Music from the Film (2005). Guthrie's most recent solo album is Fortune from 2012.
Together with Gardener the two artists share a common background in "classic" 1990's dream pop. Guthrie was one of the founders of the Scottish trio, The Cocteau Twins, who released eight full-length studio albums from 1982 to 1995, and Gardener is lead vocalist and guitarist in the English shoegazing quartet, Ride, who debuted with the acclaimed Nowhere back in 1990 - a band who originally released four studio albums from 1990 to their split in 1996. However, the band reformed in 2014 and they have released a fifth studio album in 2017 and have a sixth album have been announced for release later in 2019.
Musically, the album comes closest to the music by Ride as it's dream pop with Gardener's typical melancholic vocals and a strumming guitar sound, which doesn't really rhyme too strongly with Guthrie's discography. Guthrie's ethereal swirling and echo-fused guitar appears here and there as background fill but it doesn't really put a solid fingerprint on an album where Gardener seems to "steal the show".
It's all very nice and well-composed but it also sounds very much like music made at least two decades earlier. Sometimes you find Guthrie starting a song quite nicely after which Gardener's vocal and britpop harmonies turns it into something else. And it's not so much that Gardener destroys Guthrie's intro, but more that their mutual efforts backfires into something less original. I'm not impressed and feel they could have utilised their individual strengths better - instead it sounds like bits and pieces from their earlier works smashed together without obvious attempts in making new music.
A bit of a disappointment.

19 March 2019

Mogwai "Rave Tapes" (2014)

Rave Tapes
release date: Jan. 21, 2014
format: digital (10 x File, MP3)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,12]
producer: Paul Savage
label: Rock Action Records - nationality: Scotland, UK


8th studio album by Mogwai following only a little more than a week after the ep release of Music Industry 3. Fitness Industry 1. (Jan. 12, 2014) and 1 year after the soundtrack album Les Revenants, and more directly, following 3 full years after their most recent studio album: Hardcore Will Never Die, But You Will (Feb. 2011). Although, almost released together with an ep, this full-length doesn't share much of the style from that. Three tracks (#3, #9, #10) share titles with tracks from the ep, but here they have been re-arranged and are not easily identifiable with the versions on the ep. This brand new album comes with ten new tracks and a total running time around 49 minutes that altogether reflects more confined and shorter compositions than what they used to throw in. Here, the tracks run from 2:35 to 6:25 minutes as the longest, but the relative narrow time span of tracks is not the most striking trait about this - instead the music has grown into more electronically-founded with what you may label as synthwave with less focus on their noise rock background centrered on guitar sound. In that respect, Rave Tapes sound more contemporary with its stronger electronic sound, although, the title doesn't give what it may suggest - but that's Mogwai, right! meaning: things don't necessarily mean what they suggest. "Rave" is diffinitely not to be taken literally. They incorporate electronics to a larger extent, but the irony is that it doesn't exactly blow off the roof of anything. I find that no specific tracks demand one's attention, which makes the album a bit of a bland experience, and in general, I wish the band would be more explicit - as they are on the fine Music Industry.. ep. Rave Tapes doesn't sound as a band wanting to demonstrate how far they have come but more like another score to a film, and the album is just not one of their most challenging works. Despite my feelings, this became Mogwai's first album to ever peak as high as number #10 on the UK albums chart list. Previously, Hardcore Will Never Die... had reached number #25 and Rock Action number #23.
Not recommended.
[ allmusic.com, Rolling Stone 3,5 / 5, 👍Pitchfork 6 / 10 stars ]

06 February 2019

Mogwai "Music Industry 3. Fitness Industry 1" (2014) (ep)

Music Industry 3. Fitness Industry 1.
, ep
release date: Jan. 12, 2014
format: digital (6 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [3,82]
producer: Paul Savage
label: Rock Action Records - nationality: Scotland, UK


Ep by Mogwai following one year after the soundtrack album Les Revenants (for a French TV-series) and preceeding the album Rave Tapes (Jan. 2014). According to the band's bandcamp profile and to Discogs the album was issued in download formats one week before the release of the band's eighth full-length studio album, although, you may also find it to be filed as issued in Nov./Dec. 2014 in cd, vinyl and other digital formats. Now, ep releases by Mogwai always offer something else - it's never just some tracks from recent album releases with the addition of one or two other tracks or an extended version like many other artist usually do. Mogwai always want any release to be unique in its own right, which is rare these days. Anyway, the album is also something special because it's the band's final studio release featuring original member John Cummings, who decided it was now time to go on his own in pursuit of a solo career. With a running time just above 31 minutes, this ep contains six tracks of which three were recorded during the Rave Tapes sessions but without any of them were included on the album, and the remaining three are remixes of tracks taken from the album but featuring other artists, and both the excluded "normal" Mogwai compositions and the new remixes are quite interesting, especially "Teenage Exorcists" - possibly excluded from the album for being too indie rock-oriented touching much on darkwave (with hints of Bloc Party) but mainly for falling a bit far from the tracks that were selected for the softer album release, and also the brilliantly titled "HMP Shaun Ryder" - is it "His Majesty's Prison...", "Help Me Please...", "Hit My Phone...", "Home-Made Pizza..", "Hold My Potatoes", "Hug Me Please", or something else, they refer to?!, which again is the whole point of the pun! And the song itself is great but again focuses more on complexity and uptempo beats, whereas the album is more laid-back, but the Blanck Mass (originally just titled "Remurdered" on Rave Tapes) and the Nils Frahm remixes are simply worth the lot!
And as usual, it's bound nicely together despite pointing in various directions.
This is simply a great Mogwai ep!
bandcamp ]

26 January 2019

Robin Guthrie & Harold Budd "White Bird in a Blizzard" (OST) (2014)

White Bird in a Blizzard
 (soundtrack)
release date: Sep. 23, 2014
format: cd
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,52]
producer: Robin Guthrie
label: Lakeshore Records - nationality: Scotland, UK / USA

Track highlights: 1. "Visions of Eve" - 2. "Brock's Theme" - 4. "Curious" - 5. "Forever Changed" - 11. "I'm Here, Kat, I'm Here" - 12. "White Bird"

Soundtrack by Robin Guthrie & Harold Budd for the film of the same name directed by Gregg Araki, who also directed the 2005 film "Mysterious Skin" for which Guthrie and Budd also provided the musical score, which was their first actual exclusive collaboration, released as Mysterious Skin: Music From the Film. Almost two decades earlier, however, they had made their first album together: The Moon and the Melodies (1986) as a collaboration with Elizabeth Fraser and Simon Raymonde - Guthrie's other two partners from The Cocteau Twins.
White Bird in a Blizzard would turn out to be their last recordings together. December 2020 saw the release of the album Another Flower, but the tracks here, like the tracks for White Bird in a Blizzard, were already recorded in 2013. Perhaps the compositions for both albums stem from the same recording session? It consolidates unmistakably the same moods and soundscape, although the soundtrack overall contains more varied music, which is largely due to the fact that the individual tracks are not, like the 2020 album, attributed both artists - only tracks #4 and #8 are credited both, and exactly those two could easily have be included on Another Flower without changing the overall expression. The soundtrack consists of twelve compositions with a total playing time of 41 minutes. Guthrie is credited tracks #1, #2, #5, #7, #11, and #12, while Budd is exclusive composer of tracks #3, #6, #9, and #10. Quite naturally, you'll notice a distinct dream pop style to Guthrie's tracks, with Budd's compositions being far more minimalistic. However, there are no explicit signs indicating that they do not contribute to each other's compositions, but you may note how Budd's instrumentals are without string instrumentation, and in isolation these stand a bit on their own. Compared to their first film score collaboration, the album here stands stronger because it's more varied without being disjointed. Personally, I prefer Guthrie's compositions but the collaboration with Budd is certainly not without quality, even if Budd's own piano and keyboard variations are a little too new age-styled to my liking. Together, they certainly make relevant music, and I feel as this album surpasses their previous collaborations.
Recommended.

26 November 2018

Robin Guthrie "Fortune" (2012)

Fortune
release date: Nov. 26, 2012
format: digital (10 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,56]
producer: Robin Guthrie
label: Soleil Après Minuit - nationality: Scotland, UK

Track highlights: 1. "Cadence" - 2. "Circus Circus" - 3. "Ladybird" - 4. "Tigermilk" - 7. "Forever Never"

5th solo album by Robin Guthrie follows 1½ years after Emeralds (May 2011) and is possibly the first to only be issued on Guthrie's own label Soleil Après Minuit, although most of his solo material and collaboration albums also have been released in some secondary format on the label.
Fortune doesn't stir anyone's image of Robin Guthrie. In fact it sound very much like the "B-side" to Emeralds with an ethereal and ambient style built around Guthrie's slow-burning guitar harmonies with as much echo and delay effects you can get.
The album has been issued via Darla Records for vinyl issues, but it seems he's no longer being promoted, which explains why it's difficult to find any official reviews. Quite naturally, Guthrie doesn't sell in large numbers - I think his income may depend on projects: film scores, producer or mixing credits, and that his new releases to a large extent are financed via his technical status. And that again may explain why his music sound so much alike. For Guthrie, it's no more a desire to create new styles, better selling albums, but much more the result of his love for a specific kind of sound. He doesn't care if critics, distributors or radio stations find his music dull or off the target. Still, when you're familiar with his collaboration works with Harold Budd, his solo albums Carousel (2009) and Emeralds (2011), then you may begin to wish as I do: what if Robin Guthrie had someone else produce his album - his next solo release? Wouldn't that be something! He has developed a sound that is almost touching on sterile, where every effect-pedal needs a fixed position, so that the guitar swirls in the exact same way it did one or maybe even two decades ago. Yes, he is a sound engineer and a sound wizard, but how I wish he could learn some new tricks.
That said, Fortune is warm honey for your ears. So find yourself a moment of peace. Turn up the volume and put on Fortune. Sit down in your favourite chair. Close your eyes. Wait. Wait. Wait. Listen!
Recommended.

09 November 2018

Mogwai "Les Revenants" (OST) (2013)

Les Revenants
 (soundtrack)
release date: Feb. 25, 2013
format: digital (14 x File, MP3)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [2,98]
producer: Mogwai
label: Rock Action Records - nationality: Scotland, UK

Track highlights: 1. "Hungry Face" - 5. "This Messiah Needs Watching" - 7. "Special N" - 13. "What Are They Doing in Heaven Today?" - 14. "Wizard Motor (4 / 5)

Soundtrack album by Mogwai made for the first season of the French TV series of the same name ('The Returned' in English) by Fabrice Gobert. The album contains 14 tracks including a cover originally composed by Washington Phillips and written by Charles Albert Tindley.
Like the ep, this full-length soundtrack doesn't quite live up to the band's normal studio albums.
bandcamp ]
[ allmusic.com 4,5 / 5, The Guardian 4 / 5, Pitchfork 7,6 / 10 stars ]

30 October 2018

Mogwai "Les Revenants EP" (2012) (ep)

Les Revenants EP
, ep
release date: Dec. 17, 2012
format: digital (4 x File, MP3 - ROCKACT73D)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,36]
producer: Mogwai
label: Rock Action Records - nationality: Scotland, UK

Track highlights: 1. "Wizard Motor" (4 / 5)

4 track ep release by Mogwai preceeding the release of the soundtrack album Les Revenants (Feb. 2013). Three of the compositions are also found on the full soundtrack album, although only the first track, "Wizard Motor" is kept (almost entirely) in this version, whereas the two other tracks (tracks #3 and #4) offer quite different arrangements, and the short track #2 doesn't figure on the soundtrack.
Just as with the full album, it's difficult to embrace these compositions as anything else than a music score, but "Wizard Motor" sticks out as a fabulous track that doesn't sound like anything else and simply makes it worth to know this ep.

13 September 2018

Mogwai "Hardcore Will Never Die, But You Will" (2011)

Hardcore Will Never Die, But You Will
release date: Feb. 2, 2011
format: 2 cd (Japan issue)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,48]
producer: Paul Savage & Mogwai
label: Rock Action / Hostess Entertainment Unlimited - nationality: Scotland, UK

*bonus track on Japanese issue

7th studio album succeeding a nearly fixed 2½ years period in between albums following The Hawk Is Howling (Sep. 2008), preceeding Rave Tapes (2014), and following their first live album Special Moves (released Aug. 2010). This Japanese issue comes with three bonus tracks - two added to the standard album making it a 10 tracks album of 62 minutes (9 minutes longer than the standard version) and with one extra track on a bonus disc containing a 23 minutes composition.
Compared to the 2008 album this seems like a general improvement. The music may reflect a more dominant quietness than usually with Mogwai, although, it doesn't come through as an ambient soundtrack album - there's just more space on the individual compositions and then it doesn't sound as if they build on any particular period of theirs. In that respect it sounds more like a fresh start combining piano parts with dominance of guitars, and then there's just less room for the ordinary slow / fast, soft / hard-opposites. Instead, the songs come out as more progressive structures, which could be interpreted as a sign of maturity, but which ultimately only proves that Mogwai are still capable of looking forward and evolve.
[ allmusic.com, NME, Drowned in Sound 4 / 5, Rolling Stone 3,5 / 5, 👍Pitchfork 6,6 / 10, PopMatters 3 / 5 stars ]

30 July 2018

Mogwai "The Hawk Is Howling" (2008)

The Hawk Is Howling
release date: Sep. 2008
format: digital (10 x File, MP3)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,22]
producer: Andy Miller
label: Wall Of Sound / [PIAS] Entertainment Group - nationality: Scotland, UK


6th studio album by Mogwai following 2½ years after Mr. Beast (Mar. 2006) and 2 years after the two soundtrack albums Zidane: A 21st Century Portrait - a documentary for which Mogwai exclusively made the music score - and The Fountain - a fictional film by Darren Aronofsky with musical score composed by Clint Mansell and music written in collaboration with Mansell, Mogwai, and The Kronos Quartet.
The Hawk Is Howling comes with 10 brand new compositions and a total of 63 minutes of playing time that doesn't add much new to the band's discography - neither in terms of stylistic improvements, nor in adding great compositions to the band's vast tracklist. The track Batcat was chosen for ep release in a slightly alternate version together with two other compositions (released Sep. 2008) including one song with lyrics by Roky Erickson. It's as if they try to relaunch themselves by looking slightly too much in the rearview mirror. There are certainly elements from their first albums out with soft / hard, or slow / fast contrapositioning together with piano / electronic parts, and at the same time a few new albeit out-of context of the full experience we hear temptations of more traditionally 4-4 metric composed songs and something that could be inspired by say Sigur Rós, but everything just sounds too familiar. Perhaps they have been inspired or provoked by their experiences in making two soundtrack albums 'cause they throw in long bits of ambient-like harmonies, and also turn to noise rock metal but don't really succeed well in establishing a coherent whole - perhaps for the first time they really lack consistency. That said, the album still contains some really fine music and Mogwai never sound like anyone else.
Not recommended.
bandcamp ]
[ allmusic.com, The Guardian 4 / 5, PopMatters 3,5 / 5, 👍Q Magazine 3 / 5, Pitchfork 4,5 / 10 stars ]

19 May 2018

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

Zidane: A 21st Century Portrait
 (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]

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 ]