Showing posts with label indie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label indie. Show all posts

14 May 2025

Bob Mould "Here We Go Crazy" (2025)

Here We Go Crazy
release date: Mar. 7, 2025
format: digital (11 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,56]
producer: Bob Mould
label: BMG - nationality: USA


14th studio album by grunge rock-forefather Bob Mould following 4½ years after Blue Hearts (Sep. 2020) is not surprisingly an album filled with much energy. The album is Mould's first on BMG after having released a long series of albums on Merge Records but with Mould himself in his usual roles as songwriter, composer, and producer, this new album shouldn't result in many raised eyebrows regarding style or themes. In the past, Mould has experimented with his soundscape and the use of instrumentation, however, since Silver Age from 2012, he has been quite consistently on an energetic alt. rock platform, boldly shaped via his preference for power pop and with hints to his more distant past in Sugar and Hüsker Dü in a more traditional guitar-rock setting. Comparing with his most recent album Blue Hearts, this is a wee bit harsher, slightly more direct, less politically oriented, and instead it's filled to the brim with sheer emotions. This both fits nicely with the applied amount of energy and a melodic drive, and then at times you could argue that it tends to touch on repetitiveness but we're talking about freak*** Bob Mould here!, and that guy should forever be granted every right and permission there is to go ahead and plug his electric guitar into his amplifier and have his fun at shouting and confronting whatever he feels like - be it the world, himself, his relationships, himself growing older, or the country's intolerable leader! Bob Mould is a sort of valve of modern times. Let the steam come out!
I have followed his work since the final two albums with Hüsker Dü, and he has always been an artist whose work I've shared a particular soft spot for, and most of the time he has been able to enrich my life, which is why I remain a stable fan. He's not an artist who invent music any longer but he's a guarantee of quality and a voice that speaks up for humanity as well as being someone who takes a stand against stupidity, which is another good reason to follow this great artist.
Here We Go Crazy is basically what we have come to expect from Mr. Mould, and once again it's relevant and recommended!
[ allmusic.com, Rolling Stone 4 / 5 stars]

21 May 2024

Sharon Van Etten "We've Been Going About This All Wrong" (2022)

We've Been Going About This All Wrong
release date: May 6, 2022
format: digital (14 x File, FLAC) (Deluxe Edition)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,66]
producer: Sharon Van Etten and Daniel Knowles
label: Jagjaguwar - nationality: USA

Track highlights: 1. "Darkness Fades" - 5. "Born" - 6. "Headspace" - 7. "Come Back" - 9. "Mistakes" - *12. "Porta" - *14. "When I Die"
*bonus track on Deluxe Edition

6th studio album by Sharon Van Etten follows more than 3 years after Remind Me Tomorrow (Jan. 2019). The album has been described by Etten as her 'pandemic record', and that becomes clearer upon listening to a more introvert and desolate collection of songs than what she normally puts out - and that even says quite a bit 'cause Van Etten is an artist who has released albums that reek inner perspective more than anything. In that regard, this new album is two-tongued exposing inner thoughts and sentiments but at the same dealing with a pandemic catastrophe as an outer dialogue. It's about climate, about making the wrong choices on behalf of humanity and life as such. The cover nicely depicts the danger with luring flames, threating homes and nature by eating up everything. The standard edition of the album comes with ten tracks running for a total of 39 minutes - the Deluxe Edition extends it to 55 minutes.
Much as usual, a new Van Etten album takes processing. At first it may sound familiar and alike her previous releases, as a mock up of sorts but given attention, it stands much on its own, with fragility as a common determinator of every song on yet another fine album.
Recommended.
[ Exclaim!, PopMatters 4 / 5, Pitchfork 7,8 / 10, 👉Rolling Stone 3,5 / 5, 👎The Guardian, NME 3 / 5 stars ]

19 April 2024

Gossip "Real Power" (2024)

Real Power
release date: Mar. 22, 2024
format: digital (11 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,68]
producer: Rick Rubin
label: Columbia - nationality: USA


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

12 February 2024

Protomartyr "Formal Growth in the Desert" (2023)

Formal Growth in the Desert
release date: Jun. 2, 2023
format: digital (12 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [3,86]
producer: Greg Ahee, Jake Aron
label: Domino - nationality: USA


6th studio album by post-punk revivalists Protomartyr following three years after the acclaimed Ultimate Success Today (Jul. 2020) is another high quality release from a band who understands to stay true to its origins while exploring new territory.
Musically, it's fierce alt. rock building on an American college rock-tradition where both Pixies and Modest Mouse play equal parts with more classic British punk rock and post-punk roots. And then still, Protomartyr sounds just like no one else. They play with a nuanced understanding of balancing quiet and loud and delicate with the brutal, and lead vocalist Joe Casey's political comments are mixed with surreal / cryptic messages that fronts Greg Ahee's white noisy guitar constructs in perfect balanced disorder.
Formal Growth in the Desert gives us Protomartyr as a highly vital American band with something to offer than just a fabrication of mainstream sound.
Highly recommended. [Get the album here].
[ 👍allmusic.com, Uncut, Slant 4 / 5, 👍SputnikMusic 4,1 / 5, TheLineOfBestFit 4,5 / 5, Pitchfork 7,6 / 10 stars ]

08 July 2023

Cat Power "Covers" (2022)

Covers
release date: Jan. 14, 2022
format: cd (BRC687, Japan)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,56]
producer: Chan Marshall
label: Domino / Beat - nationality:


11th studio album by Cat Power following nearly 3½ years after Wanderer (Oct. 2018) is Power's first with Domino after leaving Matador. Cat Power has previously made covers and made it one of her strongest assets. And as the title here suggests, this one appears as a sequel to her The Covers Record from 2000. This new selection more or less copies the idea of covering songs from a large variety of styles and periods. The diversity in the original material is extremely wide, as she covers songs of neo-soul (Frank Ocean), vocal jazz (Billie Holiday), country rock (Bob Seger), celtic rock (The Pogues), folk pop (Jackson Browne), and punk blues (Nick Cave), just to mention one half of the songs. It's an extreme span, although, yes, Cat Power ensures stylistic connection in these new arrangements. I'm just not entirely convinced about the idea to grab songs from any musical shelf to see if it will work. It's possible, yes, but is it that original? And then, she even challenges the idea of having a mutual foundation in the arrangements 'cause there is no common foundation there. "I Had a Dream Joe" comes so close to the original that it somehow sticks out, and several other songs do exactly that - so there goes coherency like it does on her 2000 album. In that regard it's somewhat like repeating what could have been an obvious mistake from her first covers album, although, this new collection betters the former. Chan Marshall is a gifted arranger, and she could possibly have done better when chosing original songs. What on the other hand work really well, is her intense emmotional contribution to well-known songs. She seems capable of covering whatever song and still make it hers. She's an absolute wonderful interpretor and performer - just love that vocal.
Recommendation: probably mostly for fans.
[ allmusic.com 3,5 / 5, Pitchfork 7,7 / 10, 👍The Guardian 3 / 5 stars ]

12 January 2023

Modest Mouse "The Golden Casket" (2021)

The Golden Casket
release date: Jun. 25, 2021
format: digital (12 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,64]
producer: Dave Sardy, Jacknife Lee
label: Epic Records - nationality: USA


7th studio album by Modest Mouse follows almost six full years after Strangers to Ourselves (Mar. 2015), and once again the line-up is an issue with Darrin Wiener having briefly been a band member but more seriously, Lisa Molinaro and Jim Fairchild both left the band shortly prior to the album release; and then 1½ years later, founding member Jeremiah Green died.
Stylistically, the album introduces a new sound thanks to the inclusion of electronic instrumentation and a neo-psychedelic tone. Drum machines, synths, and musical loops provides the album with a more modern expression, although, traditional rock instrumentation is still very much part of the band's sound - the focus has just changed making more room for electronics. Isaac Brock still fills out every song with his characteristic vocal, and as is mostly the case with this band the single tracks may point in various directions but the album still maintains a solid sensation of a coherent product.
Not a lot binds this together with Good News for People... from 2004, or any earlier albums for that matter, but it follows closely on the same path as the 2015 album. In that regard the band has always been evolving - constantly moving further down their own evolutionary road and it's not too difficult to follow the whole progression. Their biggest stylistic leap happened when they released their best-selling 2004 album and since then the road has been a bit more predictable, which by no means is the same as uninspiring 'cause Modest Mouse is still a most daring band who could easily have chosen to go with a broader fan base.
I generally enjoy this new album. It's really good, still growing on me - it hasn't reached 'exceptional' nor 'great' but it doesn't appear to have any fillers, so it's definitely worth knowing.
[ 👍Pitchfork 7,3 / 10, NME 5 / 5, Slant Magazine 4 / 5, 👎Rolling Stone 2,5 / 5 stars ]

03 January 2023

And Also the Trees "The Bone Carver" (2022)

The Bone Carver
release date: Sep. 9, 2022
format: digital (10 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,48]
producer: Matthew Devenish
label: AATT - nationality: England, UK


15th studio album by And Also the Trees following 6½ years after Born Into the Waves (Mar. 2016). The album doesn't actually mention producer credits but suffice to mention recording engineer Matthew Devenish, who have worked with the band as mixer and recording engineer since the making of Further From the Truth (2003). The band's bassist since (Listen For) The Rag and Bone Man (2007) Ian Jenkins has here been replaced by Grant Gordon.
Stylewise, this is yet another darkwave-founded release as the natural follow-up to the band's last two albums. It adds a few more fine tracks to a long list of compositions that are linked to an original gothic rock scene of the 80s without sounding as if recorded back then, but the band doesn't exactly hand us a bunch of challening new material, and in that way it has become increasingly more difficult to tell their recent albums from one another. In one way, it's a band that positively stays true to its original sound and then neither seems to be really interested in artistic progression. Another positive side to it, is the quality of the songs, as it appears without any fillers.
Still, The Bone Carver is a worthwhile listen.

05 October 2022

Mazzy Star "So Tonight That I Might See" (1993)

So Tonight That I Might See

release date: Oct. 5, 1993
format: cd / vinyl (2022 reissue)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [3,76]
producer: David Roback
label: Capitol Records - nationality: USA

Track highlights: 1. "Fade Into You" (4,5 / 5) (live on Later) - 2. "Bells Ring" (4 / 5) - 3. "Mary of Silence" - 7. "Unreflected" - 9. "Into Dust" - 10. "So Tonight That I Might See"

2nd studio album by Mazzy Star following nearly 3½ years after the debut She Hangs Brightly (1990). Since then, the band signed with Capitol after the Rough Trade division closed in the US, and it appears that although both Keith Mitchell and Will Cooper of Opal participate on the album, they are merely additional personnel, and Mazzy Star has become what it basically always was: the duo-project of composer, guitarist and pianist David Roback and songwriter, vocalist and guitarist Hope Sandoval.
At first, the album sounds much alike the predecessor, in tone and especially sound, as the style has become even darker and mesmerising with drone-like guitar-sequences with Sandoval's haunting vocal on top.
"Fade into You" became the band's first and only top-100 single in the US peaking at #44; however, the band may never have aimed at making hit songs and becoming mainstream artists, but the album is often found listed among the best Dream Pop albums ever made [Pitchfork's 30 best dream pop albums].
The album comes out as the aural version of a highly original dream landscape - both hauntingly beautiful and disturbing at the same time. Roback and Sandoval appear more laid back on this, although, some tracks are 'noise rock' influenced and the title track sounds unimaginable without thinking of "The End" by The Doors and (perhaps also) "Heroin" by Velvet Underground, but overall I find it bettering their debut. This is simply their best studio album.
Now, did anyone say Lana Del Rey? Well, I betcha she heard this one!
Highly recommendable.
[ allmusic.com, Uncut 4,5 / 5, NME, Sputnikmusic 4 / 5, Soundlab 5 / 5 stars ]

15 July 2022

Big Thief "Dragon New Warm Mountain I Believe in You" (2022)

Dragon New Warm Mountain I Believe in You
release date: Feb. 11, 2022
format: vinyl 2lp (gatefold) / digital (20 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [4,06]
producer: James Krivchenia
label: 4AD Records - nationality: USA


5th studio album by US folk rock quartet Big Thief is the follow-up to the 2019-album Two Hands, the band's second on 4AD. So far, the band is the same solid ensemble, who have played together under the moniker since 2015 without major changes in a line-up, who all frequented Boston Berklee College of Music, although, they first materialsed as Big Thief following their final exams. Only the function as the band's drummer has changed hands over the years - on the debut Masterpiece (2016) the drummer was Jason Burger, on on that the band's future drummer James Krivchenia is credited as sound technician and 'additional producer', and apart from handling drums on this new one he is also credited as producer. The band consists of vocalist, guitarist, and primary songwriter Adrianne Lenker, guitarist and vocalist Buck Meek, bassist and keyboardist Max Oleartchik, and drummer James Krivchenia. Since the 2019-album, Lenker has released the fine acoustic double album Songs and Instrumentals, also via 4AD. Lenker is furthermore credited the cover art, she's sound engineer, and together with Krivchenia, she's credited mixing of the album.
Stylewise, their music is often labeled indie rock, and indie seems like a fair desciption but it's obviously more folk rock-founded with elements from alt. country and a new folk-tradition, which seems like a common ground for Fleet Foxes, Band of Horses, Grand Archives etc., who all have listened to Joni Mitchell, Neil Young, Nick Drake and the likes without necessarily thinking 'Dylan', as many earlier folk-artists found their inspiration in. Perhaps, Johnny Cash is more likely as another source of inspiration. Lenker writes and sings in a highly original style about obscure characters and peculiar observations. At times she share vocal clour with both Martha Wainwright and Lucinda Williams while her narratives often point to similarities with Mark Kozelek's wondrous daily routines. Musically, Big Thief may also have listened to both Kozelek, Sun Kil Moon and Grant-Lee Phillips. In that respect the band is clearly founded in an American music tradition with input from folk, country and a modern singer / songwriter context. Now and then, the band adjoins other stylistic domains without deviating from their personal expression, but here and there you may come to think Pixies, Modest Mouse or The National as other sources of inspiration.
Dragon New Warm Mountain I Believe in You consists of 20 tracks with a total running time just over 80 minutes - yet it comes as a regular cd-version and as a double vinyl, as well as in digital format via the band's bandcamp-profile.
The album offers original and varied music, and it's such a skilfully crafted and seamless release that it's almost bound to end up in my top-3 list for the year. It's a remarkable effort and the band's finest, and it's highly recommended.
[ allmusic.com, Rolling Stone 3,5 / 5, 👍NME, Mojo 4 / 5, Pitchfork, Needledrop 9.0 / 10, Uncut 4,5 / 5 stars ]

2022 Favourite releases: 1. Hurray for the Riff Raff Life on Earth - 2. Big Thief Dragon New Warm Mountain I Believe in You - 3. Band of Horses Things Are Great

12 May 2022

Bloc Party "Alpha Games" (2022)

Alpha Games
release date: Apr. 21, 2022
format: digital (12 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,68]
producer: Nick Launay, Adam Greenspan
label: Infectious Music - nationality: England, UK


6th studio album from Bloc Party comes more than six years after Hymns (Jan. 2016) and is made with Launay and Greenspan - a somewhat remarkable producer duo. In the early 80s Nick Launay was already a producer for Virgin Prunes, Killing Joke, Gang of Four and Australian bands like Birthday Party, Midnight Oil, and The Church. He later produced for INXS and The Armoury Show, and in the 90s and into the new Millennium he produced for David Byrne and Nick Cave. In comparison, Greenspan appears a somewhat more unknown producer who has worked as sound engineer for Arcade Fire (on The Suburbs) and he has produced for indie rock bands such as Maxïmo Park and The Veils. Together, they have worked on the critically acclaimed Push the Sky Away (2013) by Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, where Launay is credited as co-producer and Greenspan was responsible for mixing the album, but they have since then functioned as a producer-duo on several releases.
Alpha Games shows once again that Bloc Party is not an easy act to bring to a halt, even though several times over the years there have been rumors that the group faced a final career break. In the past it has led to changes in the group's line-up, which has supported the rumours, but at the same time there always seems to have been a stable core of songwriter and lead vocalist Kele and the band's musical focal point in guitarist Russell Lissack. The album Hymns was made as a duo-project after being abandoned by first the group's longtime drummer Matt Tong and later, shortly before recording the album, bassist Gordon Moakes. Kele and Lissack carried out studio recordings with studio musicians and subsequently succeeded firstly by filling the vacant seat as drummer with a quite young Louise Bartle and then also the role of bassist thanks to American musician Justin Harris, who featured on Hymns as studio musician, and now, six years down a new path, it is still this constellation that makes up Bloc Party.
Musically speaking, the group has moved in many directions since the starting point as an energetic post-punk revival act, and for fans and critics the band has behaved like a fish in water - a band you could never really know for sure where to place, or where they where they were going - which may have been one of the reasons for lukewarm reviews from confused reviewers, but releases in various styles may also have confused fans. On the other hand, you may argue that very much like front figure Kele, who has himself released albums characterized by quite different styles, such as electronic dance-pop and then even singer / songwriter folk, Bloc Party has insisted on making exactly the music they themselves felt was just right at a certain point. When they thundered out on the scene as one of the hottest names alongside American band Interpol, the easiest thing would have been to continue in the same groove, but no, they immediately plunged into another direction, and from that into another, etc., all while their stylistic dribbles hitched many off - and perhaps in the process itself both lost a drummer and a bassist.
Alpha Games offers a revisit of Bloc Party classic in the sense that the post-punk revival element is back, but not in a pure rock-universe, but in a more nuanced picture with elements drawn from a bunch of other styles. You'll find alt. dance and indie rock in a mix with the addition of a fingertip of electronic without losing the sensation of a complete expression. There is recycling and inspiration from their own previous releases, but it all still sounds like a brand new album that stands on its own feet. In many ways it sounds like an album they could have released in the wake of the great Intimacy (2008), but it doesn't just work that way and without Four (2012) and Hymns, Alpha Games would never have resulted in the album we now face. Justin Harris and Louise Bartle have played that many times together with Kele and Lissack over the past years that they now contribute to a new chapter in the band's long history, which nevertheless 'only' counts six studio albums.
Alpha Games is already an album that (once again) divides the waters. Some critics (Pitchfork) call it a mixed pleasure and cling a bit too much to Kele's lyrical universe, while others (Clash and PopMatters) praise the album's musical qualities. To my ears, the album mostly gives good reason to wish for more releases in the future, knowing that with Bloc Party no one can really tell what will happen. But until then, enjoy this energetic outing, which is even something as conservative as the album original fans could wish for.
An exciting and recommended effort.
[ 👍allmusic.com 3,5 / 5, Clash, PopMatters 4 / 5, 👎Pitchfork 5,2 / 10 stars ]

11 April 2022

Best of 2022:
Hurray for the Riff Raff "Life on Earth" (2022)

Life on Earth
release date: Feb. 18, 2022
format: vinyl (gatefold) / digital (11 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [4,14]
producer: Brad Cook
label: Nonesuch - nationality: USA

Track highlights: A) 1. "Wolves" - 2. "Pierced Arrows" - 3. "Pointed at the Sun" (4 / 5) - 4. "Rhododendron" - 5. "Jupiter's Dance" - - B) 1. "Nightqueen" - 2. "Precious Cargo" - 3. "Rosemary Tears" - 4. "Saga"

8th studio album from New Orleans project band Hurra for the Riff Raff is the band's first on Nonesuch. From its origins as a multi-piece orchestra, the band has become synonymous with songwriter, composer, lead singer and guitarist Alynda Mariposa Segarra (aka Alynda 'Lee' Segarra) with roots in Puerto Rico and raised in the Bronx, New York. The band's name loosely translates to "Hurrah for the Pack" meaning 'the underprivileged' (the homeless, the unemployed, immigrants) which relates to Segarra's own life lived on the American highways and as a blind passenger on freight trains, which was the preferred mode of transportation, after they [Alynda identifies as non-binary] ran away from their foster parents (their uncle and aunt) in the Bronx and headed for New Orleans. From here, Segarra ended up as a street musician and for a time they played banjo and washboard in the street band Dead Man Street Orchestra from 2007 to 2010, and with the band Hurray for the Riff Raff they made two self-released albums in 2008 and 2010, and they feature on Six Feet Down (2010) with the band Tuba Skinny, which was an offshoot of the Dead Man Orchestra. In 2011, Segarra released the album Hurray for the Riff Raff on the Loose label in 2011, whereas the 2012 follow-up Look Out Mama (also on Loose) is released as a band release. With 2013's My Dearest Darkest Neighbor, the band appears once again seemingly reduced to a solo project, (self-released and credited to Segarra's own label 'Mod Mobilian Records' and This Is American Music), which feature recordings from a 2013 UK tour. The most recent two albums Small Town Heroes (2014) and The Navigator from 2017 again seem like pure solo releases. The former is, however, recorded with several old acquaintances such as drummer and violinist Yosi Pearlstein, guitarist Sam Doores, and bassist Dan Cutler, who have all appeared on previous albums and they also played with the band on live tours but are not regular instrumentalists on all tracks and the cast credits reflect more that it's Segarra together with a wide variety of others. The album The Navigator is, like all previous studio albums, solely written and composed by Segarra, and here all other participating musicians are completely new names.
Life on Earth is undoubtedly Segarra's most beautifully produced album, although the predecessor also offered more tracks and reflected a more committed technical preparation than the more lo-fi arranged predecessors, which on the one hand are more closely connected to life as a street musician and on the other hand are not made to satisfy radio stations and the music industry as such. With Life on Earth, Segarra takes the full step as a significant contemporary artist with well-formed arrangements and a strong commitment to express their mind. It is a hybrid form of modern singer / songwriter which both echoes 70's folk rock as well as contain hints of punk rock's directness and social / political engagement (The Clash), and at the same time they make use of elements from classic rock and modern indie pop in a balanced form of their own. Some might point to similar traits from PJ Harvey, early St. Vincent, or other strong personalities in music, but it is most of all a highly original blend - and perhaps this type of comparison automatically happens when a single artist narrates with both sophisticated sting and sincerity, because Alynda Segarra's expression comes from a strong personality, and from someone who with their own distinctive melancholy and at the same time a devilish energy, which saturates a number of beautiful, relevant and original compositions.
The album has already garnered good reviews, and Hurray for the Riff Raff has entered the charts with the album and has appeared in major national TV shows.
In my opinion, Life on Earth is no less than album of the year, and naturally a highly recommended album.

[ Pitchfork 8,3 / 10, The Guardian 4 / 5 stars]

2022 Favourite releases: 1. Hurray for the Riff Raff Life on Earth - 2. Big Thief Dragon New Warm Mountain I Believe in You - 3. Band of Horses Things Are Great

25 March 2022

Johnny Marr "Fever Dreams Pts 1 - 4" (2022)

Fever Dreams Pts 1 - 4
release date: Feb. 25, 2022
format: digital (16 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,16]
producer: Johnny Marr & James Doviak
label: BMG - nationality: England, UK


4th solo studio album from former guitarist in The Smiths, Johnny Marr, follows a little more than 3½ years after the album Call the Comet (June 2018). It's made in a collaboration with producer James Doviak, who has featured on Marr's last three albums and is co-producer on all Marr's four solos. Marr and Doviak both featured on the album All for a Reason by the band Haven in 2004 and the two have since worked closely together.
Marr is clearly inspired by the harmony-driven Pop productions of the 1960s - with a preference for Phil Spector's sound universe - and he has released music in a mix combining traits from pop / rock and jangle pop. These signature styles are also some of the most obvious ingredients you meet on this one. The album has already been met by positive reviews, especially from the British Isles, though I'm not entirely convinced. By all means, it's nicely sounding, and it's altogether a well-made production, but it's not exactly highly original, and it's a little hard to point to Marr's distinctiveness on an album that most of all sounds like something his former songwriter colleague Morrissey could have made. It may be a little more uptempo and rock-shaped than what Morrissey usually fabricates, but the vocals, arrangements and even the rhymes sound a lot like from the aforementioned neighbourhood. Admittedly, Marr has not always represented the best vocal performances, but here he succeeds stronger than usual. What you don't get is a personal expression, which could provide us with more than a mix of something that has been made - many times before.
Not really recommended.
[ allmusic.com, The Guardian, Mojo, NME, Clash Music 4 / 5, UnderTheRadar 6.5 / 10 stars ]

10 February 2022

Wolf Alice "Blue Weekend" (2021)

Blue Weekend
release date: Jun. 4, 2021
format: digital (11 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,32]
producer: Markus Dravs
label: Dirty Hit - nationality: England, UK


3rd studio album by London-based indie rock quartet Wolf Alice follows almost four full years after the duo's Visions of a Life (Sep. 2017) and is made with super hot producer Markus Dravs, who has made his name as producer from his work with Björk, Coldplay, Arcade Fire, and Kings of Leon, to mention a few.
Musically, the band moves naturally with Dravs at the mixing desk towards a more commercial expression with a sense for dynamics and the grandiose. Dravs has a fine touch in maintaining a quirky distinctiveness and mixing it perfectly with equal parts harmony and a rocking energetic expression.
In this way, Blue Weekend appears as a well-welded piece of galvanised titanium in a pile of aluminum blocks. It's almost too perfect - and that's probably what I generally find least appealing about Dravs' productions: it's bound to be oh-so-bee.a-utiful! Beautiful arrangements, swirling guitars and a dose of quirky indie rock, but all the while held tightly to a strong chain so that everyone a able to admire the ascending airship illuminated by a setting sun. It's always dramatic and pumped-up pompous.
The album has garnered great and highly enthusiastic reviews, and it's perhaps also the band's finest release. To my ears, it reminds me of a new The Killers album that would much rather be Kings of Leon. That said, it's not particularly original, and one may wonder where the motivation lies. Then of course, it's not all music that has to push new boundaries, and Blue Weekend is by all means beautiful and almost perfect - I'm just not impressed and just feel that I've heard it all before. Lead vocalist Ellie Rowsell sings mighty fine as a British version of Lana del Rey, and if you think that's cool, so be it.
The album is by no means a poor one. I just don't find it great. It kind of lands in the big mainstream pile with so many others who want to make it big. Sometimes Wolf Alice sounds like Lana del Rey, sometimes they sound like Arcade Fire, other times they remind me of The Killers, who (again) so badly want to be Kings of Leon. Perhaps you just have to be grateful that they don't aspire to be Drake or Phoebe Bridgers, or well, Bridgers is actually also there alongside St. Vincent. But, Alice Wolf, you can only be yourselves! And this is precisely the album's greatest weakness: that it falls between so many chairs with obvious ingredients from all sorts of others that it lacks the essence of originality.
It's an album you can put on repeat without tiring of it, because it sounds like a playlist where you have no idea when it actually starts all over, but also without ever feeling overly excited. Maybe you just want to put something else on. And although the British press almost unanimously thinks this is a masterpiece - it's definitely solid craftsmanship and definitely beautifully produced - but it is! But a masterpiece it is not!
Without comparison, moreover, I rate the album Pastel by young Australian band Fritz, also from 2021, better because, despite other limitations, it lands a much stronger independent expression.
[ allmusic.com, Mojo 4 / 5, The Guardian, NME 5 / 5, 👍Pitchfork 7.2 / 10 stars ]

22 December 2021

Mellemblond "En jordisk chance" (2021)

En jordisk chance
release date: Nov. 19, 2021
format: digital (11 x Files, FLAC)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [3,84]
producer: Mads Brinch, Adrian Aurelius, Jakob Høyer
label: Møs Møs - nationality: Denmark


6th studio album from Mellemblond released a single year following Solregn. The tracks have alledgedly been composed at the same time as Solregn, but then issued the following year. After all, it's quite a different collection of songs we encounter here. Kristoffer Munck Mortensen - aka Mellemblond - has many faces to showcase, and as he released Solregn it was undoubtedly also his idea to present various songs with a common expression. That album was predominantly acustic with an almost minimalist expression, which was a new side to his talent, and as a contrast, this new collection draws more on some of the qualities you will find on his two albums: Fra et sted (2015) and Guldlokzonen (2018) although, they weren't exactly similar but in terms of arrangements and instrumentation are close. He now mix styles, he previously has exelled with. It's soft melancholic compositions, more raw uptempo rockers, and you'll also find a rather new adventurousness with polished chamber pop. At the same time, it's a style testifying to early 70s, a stream of consciousness wound up on swamp rock-inspiration mixed with folk and modern indie pop in a perfect original tone.
The front cover fits nicely to the content: Munck Mortensen is stationary positioned in bare feet holding his electric guitar in something ressembling a firewood shed. It's directly relatable, signalling a connection to a simple life. Mortensen narrates sincerely and straight-forwardly, and on En jordisk chance the fine lyrics are accompanied by an appropriate amount of electricity and noise without making it wild or pompous.
Kristoffer Munck Mortensen is a rare modern original. He sings and plays distinctively without sounding like foreign examples, and when doing so, he only seems to follow a fundamental desire to communicate. Had he been born in the US or in Britain, he would have outshined John Mayer and Ed Sheeran, but luckily, he wasn't - then we do have someone, they cannot touch.
At this advanced stage of the year, En jordisk chance enlists as Danish Album of the Year and simultaneously, it also arrives as one of the best albums of 2021.
Highly recommended.
[ Gaffa.dk 4 / 6, Jyllands-Posten 5 / 6 stars ]

12 October 2021

Shaun Ryder "Visits From Future Technology" (2021)

Visits From Future Technology
release date: Aug. 20, 2021
format: digital (11 x File, MP3)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [3,78]
producer: Sunny Levine
label: SWRX Recordings - nationality: England, UK


2nd solo album from Shaun Ryder follows a full eighteen years [18!!] after the solo debut Amateur Night in the Big Top (2003) and has been released on Ryder's own label SWRX Recordings. In a certain way, this could probably count as his actual debut, but that's not how music rights work [see comments for the 2003 album]. It is no state secret that Shaun Ryder's life as a musician and as a private person has involved various types of stimulants [!], and the media image of Ryder is first and foremost that of a skilled songwriter - and an addict. First he fronted the Madchester band Happy Mondays, which saw its heydays in the years from 1988 to '93. He then became lead vocalist of Black Grape from 1993 to '98. And in the period after that, he has managed to restart and disband Happy Mondays and Black Grape in almost countless new formations - possibly mostly because he wanted to be able to tour or play individual concerts, and thereby keep the income alive, but this hasn't led to much new music. Most recently, he released Pop Voodoo (2017) under the name of Black Grape, which probably could have just as well been under the name of Happy Mondays, which on the other hand most recently released its Uncle Dysfunktional in 2007. However, he has explained that when he made new music on his own, it would be released as Happy Mondays, whereas with Black Grape, it would always be co-composed with Kermit (aka Paul Leveridge). And although Ryder hasn't been involved in releasing much new music in this Millennium, he has never really been away from the media spotlight in his home country. He has published books, participated in reality shows ('Gogglebox' and 'I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here!'), and he has been guest musician on a large number of other artists' releases. With Visits From Future Technology, Ryder has managed to collect a number of older and more or less unfinished tracks he had lying around, and with the help of producer Levine, it has become a new album under his own name. Under the name SWR [Shaun William Ryder], "Close the Dam" was already released in 2015 as a single, but is on here anyway. It's not surprisingly music that bears the stamp of the Madchester style that he himself helped establish. It's a danceable mix of alt. dance, indie rock, and electronic music with a good portion of sampling effectively thrown in here and there. The album comes with eleven tracks and a total playing time of just over 40 minutes.
Visits From Future Technology has come out to mostly positive reviews, and it's actually quite a performance he delivers here. It's basically surprisingly good craftsmanship. There are clear reminders of both Happy Mondays and Black Grape, but who really cares as long as it swings?! And it surely does exactly just that! Ryder occasionally mumbles, but charmingly as an old boxer, and without sounding like Shane MacGowan of The Pogues, and then he delivers some of his funniest lyrics - he's sharp and direct and bloody charming. And then he sounds like he's over years with self-abuse, which mostly secures better end results. The album is largely without fillers and represents a quite original combo that manages to raise the level from Pop Voodoo considerably and Ryder has made one of his best albums, ever!
A mighty fine and recommended album!
[ 👍Mojo, TheArtsDesk.com, XSnoize 4 / 5, LouderThanWar 4,5 / 5 stars ]

22 July 2021

Julian Cope "Interpreter" (1996)

Interpreter
release date: Oct. 14, 1996
format: digital
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,68]
producer: Julian Cope
label: Echo - nationality: England, UK

Track highlights: 1. "I Come from Another Planet, Baby" (4 / 5) - 2. "I've Got My TV & My Pills" - 3. "Planetary Sit-In" - 5. "Cheap New-Age Fix" - 7. "Arthur Drugstore" - 9. "Re-Directed Male" - 12. "Dust"

12th studio album (some file it as his 13th and probably include his collaboration album Rite) by Julian Cope is like its predecessor 20 Mothers (Aug. 1995) released on Echo, as his final on another company after which he should only release his music via his own labels. Alledgedly, Cope had rejected to perform in the US, which made Echo cancel their work with Cope. The incident was perhaps the last straw, which made Cope turn his back on the established music industry and from hereon take full control of everything he would do. The album follows more or less the same musical paths as his '95 album, albeit as a stylistically narrower release, where the compositions are Cope's own neo-psychedelic mix of glam rock, beat, folk rock, space rock, and pop. Thematically, it varies between the cosmic, about space travel, and the more down-to-earth stories, but especially strong political positions are noteworthy, which take their starting point from Cope's commitment as an environmental campaigner. There has also been room for his 'Neolithic hobby', although it's only reflected in a poster and the album front cover.
Musically, this appears quite complex with a certain grandiosity, but still with a strict simplicity in the harmonies, as an echo of 70's nostalgia.
The album was not commercially successful, briefly peaking at number #39 on the UK albums chart, and with two singles - tracks #1 and #3 both peaking at number #34 on the singles chart.
Personally, I think there's too much room for distorted guitars, heavy rock attitude, orchestral arrangements, and a repetition of naïve choruses, but still: it's probably part of his fascination of space rock. On the whole, there is a lot of recycling without much originality and at times I find myself wondering if he had either Lou Reed, David Bowie, Tom Verlaine, Scott Walker, or Neil Young on his mind when he wrote and recorded individual tracks. However, it's not only in the somewhat more distant music history that he finds his inspiration. At times he takes completely different paths when incorporating new styles with electronic or a synth-pop touch - and wherever he moves, Cope's strength is to write songs and to speak his mind, even if the messages occasionally drown a little in pompous and odd mixtures of styles. And you really have to give it to him: despite pulling all kinds of stuff from his musical shelves, there's still a remnant of presence and strong universal musical skill at stake - a Copesque charm and completeness, which manages to elevate the album to anything but copycat and mediocrity.
The album was Cope's final on Echo and all of his subsequent music has been self-released either through his own label Head Heritage or through his internet site, carrying the same name, and where he has commented on this and that up until Mar. 2014 when he made his final post. However, he has kept releasing and issuing new albums via Head Heritage since.
Recommended.
[ allmusic.com 4 / 5 stars ]

08 July 2021

Julian Cope "20 Mothers" (1995)

20 Mothers
release date: Aug. 28, 1995
format: cd (ECHCD 5)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,58]
producer: Julian Cope
label: Echo - nationality: England, UK

Track highlights: 1. "Wheelbarrow Man" (live) - 2. "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud" - 3. "Try Try Try" (Top of the Pops performance) - 4. "Stone Circles 'n' You" - 10. "Adam & Eve Hit the Road" - 15. "Senile Get" - 16. "The Lonely Guy"

11th studio album by Julian Cope is like the one year old predecessor Autogeddon released on the Chrysalis-owned sublabel Echo. With the album, Cope returns to his 'habit' of releasing extensive albums - 20 Mothers is nearly 72 minutes long and is divided into four 'phases', as was also the case with Peggy Suicide (Apr. 1991). His new album is similar to his most recent concept albums without it' being absolutely obvious where the focus lies, because it's more of a unifying album for all of Cope's thematic interests: climate and environment, the condition of our planet, consumerism, cars, religion, prehistoric cultures, and then as a more recent theme of his: stories from one's own lived life about family relationships. In the same way that themes are diverse, the music aspect is even more varied than on most of his other albums. Yes, there is the usual neo-psychedelia and space-rock, and then you'll also find indie rock, funk, and tracks with a clear folk touch, but also elements taken from Europop, synth-pop and rock & roll - in other words, the range is w--i---d----e, and the seemingly conceptual title, supported by the cover featuring family members - wife Dorian and friends, all of whom are actually mothers (as mentioned in the inlay) - then the album basically covers everything, and in that way it comes across as a bit of an all sorts mix - on all levels.
20 Mothers is by no means a bad album, the best side to it being Cope's stories, but at the same time it's somewhat incoherent and occasionally odd to listen to in its entirety.
[ allmusic.com 4,5 / 5 stars ]

 
back cover: 
Julian with his
two daughters

inside:
Julian with family and friends
(wife Dorian on Julian's right)

19 December 2020

Bob Mould "Blue Hearts" (2020)

Blue Hearts
release date: Sep. 25, 2020
format: digital (14 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [3,88]
producer: Bob Mould
label: Merge Records - nationality: USA


13th studio album by Bob Mould as usual released on Merge follows 1½ years after Sunshine Rock (2019), and it's as usual with Mould as producer and songwriter and composer on all tracks.
It may not be the strongest progression that we are witnessing here - in fact, it's as if in his older days Mould seems to have sought back towards the starting point of his musical career in the harder-hitting punk rock. Where Sunshine Rock was more upbeat, Blue Hearts is its unpolished counterpart. It's a mixture of energetic and raw guitar-driven melodies with an angry and wronged older man, and on the other hand the few more harmony-driven and melodious compositions. Taken together, you are easily led to believe that you are back in the late eighties and are about to listen to music that was to shape the foundation for the grunge rock wave of the early 90s, but this is Bob Mold in 2020. And strangely it's not the experience of old music sounding as something he has already made several times before. It's a collection of solid rockers exuding sheer energy fronted by an artist who appears as someone with a desire to play, and you may think it's a lie when this guy three decades ago explained his withdrawal from music because of acquired tinnitus as he nearly hasn't been this loud before. Bob Mould has always been a kind of valve for the political climate and the living condition of Americans, and you could say he has rarely faced so much to open up about. He comments on the infected political climate, on our collective global climate as well as the handling of a worldwide pandemic. And by that, it's like gasoline on Mould's eternal fount of inner lyrics just waiting to be ignited. As good as anyone, he can compose a 2-3 minute hard-hitting song with three verses, a bridge, and a rich chorus - 'Bang-bang-bang! On to the next one!!'. In fact, three tracks are under two minutes long, and at the other end, only one track plays for more than three minutes, and the entire album of fourteen tracks is over in under 36 minutes.
Never has he released a solo album that bears so many similarities to the music he helped create in Hüsker Dü, and the album emerges as a beautiful essence and a bit of a late journeyman work of art showing us what Bob Mould is capable of as a songwriter: that commenting with a rare directness and precision on social conditions that affect most people - and done with finesse, with and without noise! Some might argue that the album comes 30 years late, but the messages are contemporary and the music is just universal.
Blue Hearts is quite simply one of Bob Mould's very best solo albums and therefore highly recommended.
[ allmusic.com 4,5 / 5, 👍Rolling Stone, Clash 4 / 5 stars ]

24 November 2020

Protomartyr "Ultimate Success Today" (2020)

Ultimate Success Today
release date: Jul. 17, 2020
format: digital (10 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,55]
producer: Protomartyr, David Tolomei
label: Domino - nationality: USA

5th album by Protomartyr follows nearly three years after Relatives in Descent (Sep. 2017), and it sort of arrives as a gritty exploration of existential dread. The album continues straight out of the tone of the predecessor showcasing that raw, driving energy that has become the band's hallmark.
Musically, the album features the band’s signature blend of jangly guitars, punchy rhythms, and hints of noise rock. While the album has standout tracks that showcase the band’s growth and depth, some songs can feel meandering, perhaps lacking the punch that defines their best work. Nonetheless, the reflective nature of tracks like "The Aphorist" adds a layer of introspection that complements the album's overall narrative.
Ultimate Success Today is a fine entry in Protomartyr's discography. It captures the spirit of its time with sharp lyrics and a robust sound, even if it occasionally falters in pacing. For fans of post-punk and those seeking a reflection on contemporary anxieties, this album is worth a listen, and even though, I don't find it among their absolute best, it definitely has its moments - much in the same way their other albums have turned out as rough and dirty, and filled with light beams in the darkest of nights, as something sinister overthrown with elements of beauty.

19 August 2020

Band of Horses "Everything All the Time" (2006)

Everything All the Time
 [debut]
release date: Mar. 21, 2006
format: cd ( SPCD 690)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [4,06]
producer: Phil Ek
label: Sub Pop Records - nationality: USA

Track highlights: 1. "The First Song" (4,5 / 5) - 2. "Wicked Gil" - 3. "Our Swords" - 4. "The Funeral" (4 / 5) - 6. "The Great Salt Lake" (4,5 / 5) (live on Letterman) - 7. "Weed Party" (acoustic live) - 10. "St. Augustine"

Studio album debut by Seattle-based indie folk quintet Band of Horses. The band was originally formed as a trio consisting of lead vocalist & guitarist Ben [Benjamin] Bridwell, bassist Chris Early and drummer Tim Meinig. Later it was expanded to a quartet with vocalist & guitarist Mat Brooke, who had been band leader in Carissa's Wierd, where Bridwell had stepped in at a later stage as substitution of a missing drummer and later as bassist, but in this project, Bridwell appears as the band's unofficial leader. Before joining Carissa's Wierd, Bridwell worked on his record label-project Brown Records and without much training he jumped in as the band's drummer on the band's second album You Should Be at Home Here from 2001. He then became stable drummer in the band and also appears on its acclaimed final studio album Songs About Leaving (2002), after which he changed to bass, guitar and backing vocals for the final live album I Before E from 2004.
All songs here are credited the band, but all lyrics (except two songs by Brooke) are written by Bridwell. The album is, however, the only by the band in this line-up, which also includes Carissa Wierd's final drummer Sera Cahoone, who appears on three tracks but basically just for the album recordings. Shortly after finishing these recordings, both Early and Meinig left the band and for the promotion tour the group reformed in a new line-up with the inclusion of three new members: guitarist & keyboardist Joe Arnone, guitarist & bassist Rob Hampton, and drummer Creighton Barrett but already as of Jul. 2006, also Mat Brooke left the band after which he became co-founder of the Seattle-project Grand Archives.
On this the band's first full-length album, the playlist is made up of several reworks of compositions that had previously been issued on the Band of Horses ep (also titled Tour EP) released, a self-released issue from 2005 sold at concerts, which consisted of three demo takes and three live recordings. Five of those songs appear here in (new) studio versions. The three demo tracks all apear here in re-arranged versions with new titles - "Savannah Part One" is here shortened to "Part One", "The Snow Fall" is here titled "The First Song", and "For Wicked Gil" is here titled "Wicked Gil". Two of the three live recordings appear here in studio versions - "The Great Salt Lake", which has kept its title intact, and "Billion Day Funeral", which here is simply titled "Funeral".
Stylewise, Band of Horses play an uptempo, simple yet modernised folk rock and indie rock with an obvious love for harmony-driven Neil Young classics, but without the sligtest sensation of plagiarism. They have, however, been associated with acts like R.E.M., Slowdive, The Shins and others, as well as been accused of not being original enough. Fact is, you don't have to be an original to make great music. All great stars have copied and "stolen" inspiration from others, and that's what Band of Horses do so well on Everything All the Time. The single songs all sound highly original in their own rights and the whole album showcases a long list of stylistic variations but the magic enters as it all combined becomes one whole that only soothes: Band of Horses. There's no copy, only the original.
Highly recommended.
[ allmusic.com 3,5 / 5, Blender, Drowned in Sound, Uncut 4 / 5, Pitchfork 8.8 / 10 stars ]