Showing posts with label rated 30/50. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rated 30/50. Show all posts

10 August 2025

Lorde "Virgin" (2025)

Virgin
release date: Jun. 27, 2025
format: digital (11 x File, MP3)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,02]
producer: Lorde & Jim E-Stack
label: Universal Music New Zealand - nationality: New Zealand

Track highlights: 1. "Hammer" - 2. "What Was That" - 4. "Man of the Year" - 6. "Current Affairs"

4th studio album by New Zealand pop artist Lorde, aka Ella Marija Lani Yelich-O'Connor. The album follows four years after the album Solar Power (Aug. 2024), which received positive reviews, some found it a shiny, yet formless affair, and others saw it as a potential masterpiece. In that regard, Lorde has devided fans and critics since her international debut with the album Pure Heoine (Sep. 2013), which attracted some attention, although, her follow-up Melodrama from 2017 is widely regarded as her actual breakthrough album, which both peaked on album lists world-wide and secured the artist various international music awards but also was such a massive success that Lorde vanished from the spotlight for a period of time. She has already experienced the kind of success many dream of but few ever experience and the short journey to the top in pop surely has its toll.
Personally, I'm not in the target group, and I have lukewarm feelings regarding the type of music she has produced, so far. Lorde is a name that is impossible to neglect and that's the only reason I listened to her albums. Again: I'm not part of the target group and I simply don't enjoy this album that much. To me, it's generic pop music, sounding like much else out there that I don't find any enjoyment in. It's definitely uptempo, it's lush, and it's primarily held in a positive vibe - there's just too many things about it, I don't like. The arrangements are too heavily crammed up - effects to fill in gaps to avoid boredom or blanks? Then: many tracks sound alike, and I guess that's a good parameter telling you, it's not your style like when I'm trying to understand a Wagner opera: I get bored and think it's touching on obnoxious.
Then why 3/ 5 instead of below 2,5, you may ask? Well, I acknowledge the inert qualities, I guess. It's not like I feel exposed to harmful matter and there's definitely good energy in the music, which I also find shaped for physical movement as I probably would even appreciate this at the local gym. Especially "Hammer" is a quite catchy electropop tune. Just as quite decent background muzak. And I'm not really on par with any of the critics, as they mostly praise this as her second best album. So, it should be good, only not for me, and if this is a genuine contender to her best ever, I kind of get the hint: I shouldn't look down this alley for hidden gems - possibly making this my only comment on the music by this contemporary giant pop star.
Not recommended.
[ allmusic.com 4,5 / 5, The Guardian, NME 4 / 5, Pitchfork 7,6 / 10 stars ]

21 August 2024

Last Dinosaurs "KYORYU" (2024)

KYORYU
release date: May 21, 2024
format: digital (13 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,12]
producer: Last Dinosaurs, Oscar Dawson & Scott Horscroft
label: Nettwerk - nationality: Australia


5th full-length studio or a compilation (?) album by Australian dream pop and indie pop quartet Last Dinosaurs following 1½ years after From Mexico with Love (Oct. 2022), which again followed Yumeno Garden (Oct. 2018). Since their 2022 album, the band released two EPs, RYU (Nov. 2023) and KYO (Apr. 2024), and the tracks from these two actually constitute KYORYU, basically reducing the album to a compilation, but then this has become a quite common promotion procedure - regardless, what you may think of it. But it means that the first five tracks are identical to KYU, and tracks #7-13 are all taken from RYO. The digital issue (from the band's bandcamp site) comes with one extra track (track #6), and the total running time clocks in at 49 minutes.
It's all fine melodic indie / dream pop focusing on harmony-driven arrangements. At times it's a bit too slick, a bit too sugary. For my taste. I find, there's a turn towards K-Pop music on this, but it's nevertheless nicely executed. I just don't suspect, it's an album I will return to that regularly. I simply miss more edge, and a bolder original sound.


2023 'RYU' ep

2024 'KYO' ep


16 March 2024

Chelsea Wolfe "She Reaches Out to She Reaches Out to She" (2024)

She Reaches Out to She Reaches Out to She
release date: Feb. 9, 2024
format: digital (10 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [2,95]
producer: Dave Sitek
label: Loma Vista - nationality: USA

Track highlights: 1. "Whispers in the Echo Chamber" - 3. "Everything Turns Blue" - 5. "The Liminal" - 6. "Eyes Like Nightshade" - 8. "Unseen World"

7th studio album by Chelsea Wolfe following Birth of Violence (Sep. 2019) is her first album on Loma Vista and it also introduces a certain change in producer-collaboration as most of her former releases were mostle made with co-composer Ben Chisholm, who remains as one her stable collaborators (since 2012) together with drummer Jess Gowrie and mastering engineer Heba Kadry (both since 2017).
A new producer and a new label doesn't mean much new, though. And despite the fact that Wolfe has been influenced by various styles, this new collection of songs still stand with feets buried in a darkwave arena. That said, Wolfe has often sought to colour her songs from new perspectives - with twists of electronica, stronger influnced by / or with the absense of industrial rock, and in that sense her new album doesn't appear as something entirely different. Wolfe belongs to the dark - no doubt about that, and she usually makes her songs with Chisholm - here credited as co-composer, keyboardist and for drum programming. And especially the drum aspect is what basically makes this a different breed than her (brighter) 2019-album. Drums are up-front, energetic pulsating, and attract attention on an album that takes Wolfe back on an industrial, electronic path of dark colours.
The album has mostly been met by acclaim as an original output from an innovative artist, who never seem to walk on already known paths. To me, it doesn't quite invite me in, and I think my reluctant stance has to do with the incoherency I find on the album. It's both strongly electronic with synths and programming providing a new side-step to her darkwave tones, and at the same time it bonds with industrial rock - it wants to be 'hard', and then Wolfe has makes attempts pop-imagery, nicely placed hooks of sweetness, which makes it difficult to digest. It's like, she tries too hard to make her music grandiose and by that she unfortunately also loses contact with authenticity. Is it a spicy treat, or, just a light dessert? I dunno!! And the different flavours do not meet one another that well, I think. And ultimately, Wolfe has been better.
[ 😮allmusic.com 4,5 / 5, Exclaim! 4 / 5, Pitchfork 7,6 / 10, Uncut 3,5 / 5, 👉PopMatters 3 / 5 stars ]

09 July 2022

Red Hot Chili Peppers "Unlimited Love" (2022)

Unlimited Love
release date: Apr. 1, 2022
format: digital (17 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,16]
producer: Rick Rubin
label: Warner Bros. - nationality: USA

12th studio album by RHCP following nearly 6 full years after The Getaway (Jun. 2016). Aside from Rubin is back as producer, the biggest news is that this new album welcomes back John Frusciante, who then replaces Josh Klinghofer - the substitute for Frusciante for eleven years but also a guitarist who only contributed to the band's discography on the 2011 album I'm With You and on the 2016 album.
With Frusciante back, the band is reformed in its most potent line-up and Unlimited Love is just one of two full studio albums of the year - and with its 17 tracks and a total of 73 minutes running time, it's not even a short one!
Fans cheer and jump in joy - that's what they do, when their idols release new stuff, right! But it's been awhile since I saw myself as a "real" fan. I really enjoyed I'm With You, but since then, I found they mostly just seemed to lean back in the seats resting on their merits to live their own idolised rock star lives. Granted, it must be difficult to reinvent themselves, but with this it seems they just give it a go - perhaps thinking: "let's be loose, let's jam along and see where it takes us." And yes, a lot of people respond positively to this their certified most laidback album ever. Frusciante adds his neo-psychedelic electric vibes, Flea and Smith provide a punchy rhythm section as back bone, and Kiedis... well he mostly just babbles on, the way only he knows and the end result is solid RHCP. It's just without new strong songs - in fact there's hardly one great tune, but who give a shjite? It's RHCP, and they are entitled to release whatever they feel like. So that's it. Not an immediate favourite. Not in near future. In fact, not ever, but they play well together sounding like a RHCP copy band copying RHCP giving it as RHCP...
[ allmusic.com, Classic Rock 3,5 / 5, Pitchfork 5,4 / 10, Rolling Stone 4 / 5 stars ]

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 ]

22 November 2021

St. Vincent "Daddy's Home" (2021)

Daddy's Home
release date: May 14, 2021
format: digital (14 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,12]
producer: Annie Clark & Jack Antonoff
label: Loma Vista Recordings - nationality: USA


7th studio album by St. Vincent follows 2½ years after MassEducation (Oct. 2018), which didn't really offer brand new songs but merely contained acoustic interpretations of songs from Masseduction (Oct. 2017), which still counts as St. Vincent's most recent album, and this new one is like that made in collaboration with producer Jack Antonoff, who is also credited as co-composer on five cuts.
Stylistically, it's unsurprisingly a new mix that Annie Clark comes up with here, although as her recent releases it's music without her previously distinct guitar signature, which markedly characterised her first albums. Where Masseduction offered experimental synthpop, she has now dressed out in 70s nostalgia with equal parts of psychedelic pop and soft glam rock - or: soft psychedelic rock and glam pop. The songs are quiet ones in a laid-back style with focus on the narrative, and it sounds to me like Clark has plowed through everything with Bowie from Aladdin Sane (1973) to Young Americans (1975) and then with some inspiration from Pink Floyd she has set the stove on a low flame. And St. Vincent does share some traits with Bowie: she is always a distinct persona, based on her latest music, and you never know in which direction she moves from there, but you know it's top-dollar-styled like a new production by Andrew Lloyd Webber without ever revealing the actual living individual behind the mask. In the long run, St. Vincent may touch on enervating, and I'm no (longer) the great St. Vincent fan I used to be after her first three albums where she was Annie Clark - the fabulous musician and brilliant guitarist. Now the whole thing has really gone Big Business and she has to conquer every scene dressed up in a new skin suit matching a new ground tone and new musical ideas. It's completely deliciously produced and beautifully executed, but unfortunately also... touching on boring. It lacks edge and a will to mark itself as anything other than another one of today's greats with an album you'll see high up in the charts and which will be forgotten in a year. Don't forget to make great music!!
Not recommended.
[ allmusic.com, NME, Rolling Stone 4 / 5, 👍Pitchfork 6,7 / 10 stars ]

30 September 2021

Toyah "Desire" (1987)

Desire
release date: Jun. 1, 1987
format: digital (11 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [2,88]
producer: Mike Hedges
label: E.G. Records - nationality: England, UK

Track highlights: 1. "Echo Beach" - 2. "Moonlight Dancing" - 3. "Revive the World" - 8. "Deadly as a Woman" - 11. "Desire"

2nd solo album by Toyah following two years after Minx (Jul. 1985) and now with new wave and post-punk producer Mike Hedges. The album consists of songs by Wilcox and former members of the band Toyah - two songs co-composed by Simon Darlow, one with Adrian Lee and one with long-time associate Joel Bogen. Apart from these, Toyah wrote two songs with Nick Graham, one with Bruce Wooley, and the title track with husband Robert Fripp. The album also features two covers: track #1 originally a 1980 song by Martha and the Muffins, and track #6 originally a '77 single by Donna Summer.
Desire appears as an attempt to regain some of the aura but also the sound from the heydays with the band Toyah instead of being a natural follow-up to the poppier Minx. In that way the new album sounds more as something stemming from the early 80s with a stronger new wave appeal. "Echo Beach" preceded the album as a minor single hit reaching number #54 on the singles chart. The second single was "Moonlight Dancing", which doesn't reflect any chart entries, and despite I find it the best song here, it might have fitted better on the band's 1982 album The Changeling - and fact is, the song was co-written by two other band members and also contains the lyrics from the song "Dawn Chorus" from that very album.
The album didn't perform too well and basically didn't enter the albums chart, and it mostly sounds as a bit of a dated release when thinking 1987, and Toyah issues this album that sounds more like 1983-ish. Some of the songs are filled with keyboards and a drum sound that makes me think 'early Nena' or 'Toyah 1980s', and I wonder if some of the tracks are outtakes or alternative versions of older songs, because that's mostly what the sound yells. A few songs take up a tone from Love Is the Law (1983) or Minx but the overall sensation goes back to another time - also underlined in the lyrics. It's the pale imitation of a well-documented period and therefore not recommended.

16 July 2021

Kele "The Waves Pt. 1" (2021)

The Waves Pt. 1
release date: May 28, 2021
format: digital
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,18]
producer: Kele Okereke
label: Kola Records / !K7 - nationality: England, UK


5th studio album by Kele (aka Kele Okereke, whose full name is Kelechukwu Rowland Okereke) following 2042 (Nov. 2019). Unlike most of his releases, Kele himself is credited as producer on this, as was also the case on his second album out Trick (Oct. 2014).
Unsurprisingly, the album comes with COVID-19 as a theme and as a starting point for the creation of an album, which offers 13 cuts and a total playing length of just under 50 minutes. Nor is it any surprise that Kele presents us with new styles and a mix of all possible inspirations. It's a near natural habit of his that the basic tone of any new album is from a new perspective - much in the same manner as we've come to understand the soundscape in Bloc Party. On this new release, there is less, or practically no room for alt. dance, funk, or disco. Instead, the album is somewhat subdued without approaching a bare folk rock and singer / songwriter orientation, as the one he cultivated on Fatherland (Oct. 2017). It's a type of quiet indie pop and alt. folk with the narrative at the center of the compositions. Where 2042 presented us with a series of tales about future English society, The Waves Pt. 1 are stories about Kele's present time. It's about being a parent, living in a relationship, and it's about small and big changes affecting us all.
Nationally, the album has been met by a somewhat lukewarm reception, but that's not something new for Kele personally, nor for his experiences concerning album releases with Bloc Party.
It's not exactly an album of a lot of ear bangers or melodic hooks, and it's generally a more quiet and introspective Kele as opposed to what you might have expected. It may appear as a demanding album, where the listener must take an active part in an attempt to create his/her own understanding. My first impression had me think of it as an off the target album, but it's not necessarily all bad because it makes demands on the listener. As the title indicates, one could expect The Waves Pt. 2.
Not recommended.
[ The Guardian 2 / 5, NME, Mojo 3 / 5, Clash, Narc Magazine 4 / 5 stars ]

15 April 2021

Band of Horses "Mirage Rock" (2012)

Mirage Rock
release date: Sep. 18, 2012
format: digital (11 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,12]
producer: Glyn Johns
label: Columbia - nationality: USA


4th studio album by Band of Horses follows 2½ years after Infinite Arms and it introduces Glyn Johns as producer. For once, the line-up remains unchanged from the previous album.
Initially, the album was met by quite positive reviews with critics stating that the band continues to deliver a remarkable strain of folk rock, but after some time the overall reception seemed to be less overwhelming with fans seing this a step down. The band gained some succes with the promotion single "Knock Knock" but both that and the two following singles (tracks 3 and 9) failed in the charts and the album didn't perform like the predecessor.
In my mind, the band performs fine, Bridwell sings with enthusiasm, and overall the album appears as nice and warm, but it also has a tone of something anonymous. The biggest lack is its coherency with some tracks appearing as mere fillers. A few tracks are truly fine and stand out as solid workmanship, but compared to the first two albums, this is goes down as a pale immitation.
[ allmusic.com, Rolling Stone 3,5 / 5, Q Magazine 3 / 5, Pitchfork 4,0 / 10, Spin 2 / 5 stars ]

25 February 2021

Cat Power "The Covers Record" (2000)

The Covers Record
release date: Mar. 21, 2000
format: digital (12 x File, MP3)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,18]
producer: non-produced
label: Matador - nationality: USA


5th studio album by Cat Power (aka Chan Marshall [pronounced 'shawn], aka Charlyn Marie Marshall) following 1½ years after the album Moon Pix (1998), which is cited by many as her first significant studio album.
The Covers Records is, to no surprise, a collection of covers by many diverse artists. You'll find tracks by famous artists such as the Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, and the Velvet Underground, tracks made famous by Nina Simone and Mae West, and there are tracks by (to most) more unknown names such as Phil Phillips, Papa Charlie Jackson, and Michael Hurley. There's also room for a reinterpretation of Cat Power's own track "In This Hole", previously released on What Would the Community Think, Power's third album and Marshall's first on Matador released in '96 while Power was still associated with the name of Chan Marshall's band, although in practice she had already gone solo here.
The album is entirely acoustic and stripped down to a minimal of instrumentation and most probably also recorded on a single recording track with only Chan Marshall singing and playing guitar. On some tracks, it's her piano that is only accompaniment, and only on "Salty Dog" the participation of guitarist Matt Sweeney is heard. Typically, for Cat Power, no producer is indicated on the album, and in this case it's probably only sound engineers who have set up microphones and then started and finished the recording.
It's restrained to lo-fi regardless the original arrangements and therefore most tracks fall quite far from their original expression. It's Chan Marshall solo, and it's heartfelt, but maybe also a bit one-sided - at least for my liking. The album garnered some good reviews, but it's not among my favourites. Admittedly, Marshall has an insistent melodic vocal and sings with great emotion, making all the songs her own. For me, the problem is that the tracks slide (too much) into each other and end up sounding one-stringed, and she's just not an instrumentalist virtouso or (for that matter) a singer with a big register. If you're not familiar with Cat Power, I will recommend listening to her predecessor, Moon Pix or the successor You Are Free (2003), which may be regarded as her commercial breakthrough.
[ allmusic.com, NME, Spin 3,5 / 5, The Guardian 4 / 5, 👍Rolling Stone 3 / 5 stars ]

01 February 2021

Toyah "The Changeling" (1982)

The Changeling
release date: Jun. 30, 1982
format: digital (1999 reissue)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,12]
producer: Steve Lillywhite
label: Connoisseur Collection - nationality: England, UK

Track highlights: 1. "Creepy Room" - 2. "Street Creature" (tv performance) - 5. "Angel and Me" - 7. "Life in the Trees" - 8. "Dawn Chorus" - 10. "Brave New World"

4th studio album by Toyah following the band's most successful album Anthem (May 1981) and now together with one of rock music's new star producers, Steve Lillywhite, who had only just worked with XTC, Peter Gabriel, Thompson Twins, and U2. Originally released on Safari Records, the album contains ten songs nearly all written and composed by Toyah Wilcox and Joel Bogen - with one track co-written with bassist Phil Spalding. The '99 Enhanced CD edition contains an additional six tracks. As an almost entirely natural development, the band's line-up has changed once more in two positions: keyboardist Adrian Lee and drummer Nigel Glockler, who both only appeared on the '81 album are here replaced by Andy Clark and Simon Phillips, respectively.
Stylistically, it's as if the band is trying hard to stay on the same musical path with its own mix of orchestrated new wave and art pop combo, which at the same time appears to lend from 1970s symphonic rock and progressive rock with a more contemporary uptempo smartness. With this, Toyah produced another top-10 album and the band's second-highest charting album, peaking at No. #6 on the national albums chart, and the only single from the album, "Brave New World" peaked at No. #21.
Although the artistic distance from the band's most recent album is quite small, The Changeling still sounds more like a collection of outtakes from the stronger album, and at the same time you may assume that the success of the '81 release also has had something to do with the good sales figures with which the album was met here, because The Changeling as such, didn't produce any notable hits. Both lyrics and music deal with the mysterious and a fantasy world, which is suggested by the front cover. On the songs, Wilcox narrates about "Gladiators", "War", "Warriors", "Breaking free", "New destinations", " Mysterious world", etc. - something that she should cling to on the successor - and she hangs on to topics related to the future and science - and not really about alienation (as contemporaries like Siouxsie & the Banshees or Nina Hagen), but more like a kind of welcoming towards the new and unknown, and in that way you could point out that in relation to the trends, Toyah went her own way.
The band tries hard to produce a worthy sequel to their fine Anthem but ultimately fails to repeat the success - perhaps because the attempt appears too obvious. The formula and the style are more or less from the same area but the songs are not, and it's reasonable to ask if this album really deserves a reissue edition with six bonus tracks.
Not recommended.

15 December 2020

The Streets "None of Us Are Getting Out of This Life Alive" (2020)

None of Us Are Getting Out of This Life Alive
(mixtape)
release date: July 10, 2020
format: digital (12 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,18]
producer: Mike Skinner
label: Island Records - nationality: England, UK

Track highlights: 1. "Call My Phone Thinking I'm Doing Nothing Better (ft. Tame Impala)" - 2. "None of Us Are Getting Out of This Life Alive (ft. Idles)" - 3. "I Wish You Loved You as Much as You Love Him (ft. Greentea Peng & Donae'o)" - 5. "I Know Something You Did (ft. Jesse James Solomon & Eliza)" - 8. "The Poison I Take Hoping You Will Suffer (ft. Oscar #Worldpeace)" - 10. "Falling Down (ft. Hak Baker)"

Mixtape album by The Streets, aka Mike Skinner, following nine years after Computers and Blues (Feb. 2011), and then also following the 2017 rebirth of his most distinct music project, which saw him on a world tour performing the best of The Streets after years away from the brightest spotlight. The album is not described as a new studio album but merely a mixtape - perhaps to avoid too strong expectations and then again: every song on the album has been made with a featuring artist, which in a way, and only on a surface, makes the songs highly individual, though they all have Skinner's characteristic beats putting them quite close to one another.
First impression was that of a bland experience, which had me thinking of his 2011 mixtape Cyberspace and Reds, but then after some time, I think this is bettering that, although, it's clearly not one of his best albums with a bunch of great tunes sticking out. The biggest issue here is a clear connection to his earlier rhymes and beats, where you end up thinking 'Ah, that's close to the rhyming on...', or beats reminding you of former songs - bits and pieces, here and there, making it a bit of a strange listen. Best thing about it is that Skinner is back making music as The Streets, and hopefully he will soon be releasing an actual follow-up to his 2011 studio album.
[ allmusic.com, Exclaim! 3,5 / 5, 👍Clash 3 / 5, Pitchfork 5,5 / 10, Soundvenue 2 / 6 stars ]

20 November 2020

Band of Horses "Infinite Arms" (2010)

Infinite Arms
release date: May 18, 2010
format: cd
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,18]
producer: Band of Horses; Phil Ek (add. pro.)
label: Brown Records / Sony Music / Columbia - nationality: USA


3rd studio album by Band of Horses following 2½ years after Cease to Begin (Oct. 2007) presents a completely new line-up where only founding member, lead vocalist and primary composer Ben Bridwell and (new) drummer Creighton Barrett re-appear on this. Keyboardist Ryan Monroe appeared on the former as additional musician and became a permanent member after the 2007 album, which had been completed as a trio together with guitarist Rob Hampton, who then left the band before commencing the recording sessions for this one. Hampton was replaced by new members guitarist Tyler Ramsey and bassist Bill Reynolds completing the new formation as a quintet.
Infinite Arms doesn't land far from the previous albums with its predominantly folk rock-foundation. What distinguishes this from the former releases is an addition and strings and brass arrangements, which I don't think improves the whole picture. Some songs could have fitted nicely on the 2007 album without straying far from that - mostly the above highlighted tracks, but what I feel lacks here is outstanding compositions, or: original new material. Bridwell mostly sings like the "old" Bridwell, but at times he sounds like a tired circus artists going through motions he has learned to repeat. The album was generally met by positive reviews, most of which points to a certain americana-feel to the new album. Something I find difficult to hear. In general, the album is positioned as the band's best performing album in the US by reaching number #7 on the Billboard 200.
To me, Infinte Arms simply sounds like a lesser release - compared to their first two it could be an album of leftovers. Bridwell is less poignant, the compositions are well-played but do not contribute with much new, and the overall impression is easily forgettable.
Not recommended.
[ allmusic.com, Uncut, Q 4 / 5, Rolling Stone 3,5 / 5, Slant 3 / 5, Pitchfork 5,3 / 10 stars ]

16 November 2020

The Killers "Imploding the Mirage" (2020)

Imploding the Mirage
release date: Aug. 21, 2020
format: cd
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,08]
producer: Jonathan Rado, Shawn Everett
label: Island Records - nationality: USA

Track highlights: 1. "My Own Soul’s Warning" - 2. "Blowback" - 3. "Dying Breed" - 4. "Caution" - 5. "Lightning Fields" (feat. K.d. Lang)

6th studio album by from The Killers released three years after Wonderful Wonderful (2017) and now with a somewhat lesser-known duo in the producer role. Rado and Everett are also credited as co-composers on several tracks on an album, which is the first after being momentarily reduced to a trio as guitarist Dave Keuning went on an indefinite hiatus after the 2017 album. In his place, the band's bassist Mark Stoermer handles guitar on several tracks and otherwise multi-instrumentalist Rado is credited as guitarist, bassist, keyboardist, cellist, etc.
When The Killers deliberately have chosen quite different producers, it's of course because they want a direction for the music, and with the younger guitarist from Foxygen as co-composer and multi-instrumentalist, it adds a natural turn towards a more indie rock-oriented universe - and thus also a step away from a stadium rock image that The Killers have quite rightly been attributed. There's definitely less Springsteen heartland rock on Imploding the Mirage but it's an album that doesn't quite operate in the same direction. Sometimes it's electronically driven pure synthpop sounding more like Brandon Flowers solo, while at other times it's more unpolished indie pop - though 'unpolished' is a label that pretty much never fits The Killers - and at other times attempts to produce Springsteen-rockers, whicj supposedly should be an extremely popular choice sneak in... And no, 'coherent' is not exactly a term that pops to mind.
As usual, the album performed above its capacity. Reviewers are again divided, but the sales figures don't lie, and as the sixth consecutive album, The Killers' have launched a new studio album, which goes to number #1 on the UK albums chart. Nationally, it lands a nice eighth place on the Billboard 200, while like its predecessor it also tops the list in Australia. It seems as if The Killers have long ago been satisfied running in circles, making new tracks that sound extremely familiar and then simply add a little spice here and there, e.g. outsourcing their sound image to skilled sound designers, and then something 'new' has been wrapped up.
I'm really far from impressed. The album is a long way from the their first albums but it's still better than the rather thin Wonderful Wonderful, so perhaps there's still hope for a decent album from The Killers.
Not recommended.
[ 👎allmusic.com 4,5 / 5, Pitchfork 7,4 / 10, 👉The Guardian 3 / 5, Gaffa.dk 3 / 6 stars ]

21 October 2020

Electric Light Orchestra "Out of the Blue" (1977)

Out of the Blue
release date: Oct. 1977
format: digital
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,06]
producer: Jeff Lynne
label: Jet Records - nationality: England, UK

Track highlights: 1. "Turn to Stone" - 3. "Sweet Talkin' Woman" - 13. "Mr. Blue Sky"

7th studio album by Electric Light Orchestra following one year after the breakthrough album A New World Record and like that produced by primary songwriter and leader of the band, lead vocalist Jeff Lynne. The band has gone through various line-ups but maintained a quite numerous members list, and here they count seven (three of which exclusively play violin and cello). The band has evolved from playing primarily experimental progressive rock with bonds to symphonic rock and hard rock and through a stage with baroque pop to eventually play progressive pop with bold use of elements from funk and disco - and needless say: with a much more evident mainstream appeal.
I recall this very album from when it wasn't all brand new and they still hadn't released the successor Discovery (May 1979). In Feb. 1979 (at age 13) I happened to be in London with our class, and several mates from class both purchased the predecessor together with this one that I only knew little about. I recall from some teen club evenings at the local church (!) they played this quite a bit. From our journey to London, I remember buying albums with The Police (Outlandos d'amour and Regatta de blanc), Pink Floyd (The Wall) and Dire Straits (the debut) and a few others that I have now forgotten about - alongside a handful of releases for my older brother (I brought a handwritten list of titles to purchase for him). Unfortunately, I didn't yet know anything to the existence of punk rock or new wave at this point - that only came to my attention upon my return later that year, so I was more into music that I already knew of, and especially heavily inspired by my brother's music taste (except The Police, which he didn't play). But what I soon learned was that I didn't like Electric Light Orchestra - not one bit! In fact, I loathed the disco and progressive pop harmonies that my class mates soon praised as the new big thing alongside music by Patrick Hernandez, Kelly Marie, and / or Bee Gees.
The album is included in "1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die" as the only by ELO, as they were commonly known. Out of the Blue is the band's second consecutive Platinum-selling studio release, which eventually was surpassed in sales numbers by Discovery and Time (1981). The only reason I have put it here is that I wanted to revisit an album I really never understood. And still don't, it turns out! From the aforementioned book: "Released at the height of disco, Out Of The Blue was seen by some as a futuristic fish out of water." As much as I relate to that picture, it's probably not in the most positive of ways. To me, this is awkwardly over-arranged. Waaaay too much funk and disco, and not just that but with so many synths and strings that it should belong in space. And it makes me think of a musical wedding cake: Mostly impressive and nice to look at, but who really wants to consume that?! In my ears it doesn't fall far from the ABBA and Olivia Newton John melody structures that I disliked then as I still do to some minor degree nowadays. I have definitely grown much milder when it comes to polished pop of the 80s and 70s, and I do understand the qualities of a lot of music that I didn't like at a younger age, but ELO from '76 and onwards still doesn't do much for me. "Mr. Blue Sky" was a hit but would never have seen the light of day without The Beatles and The Moody Blues. "Turn to Stone" was another major hit back then - at least in Europe - but to me that was, and still is, a pastiche - a conglomerate of songs by artists suchs as Giorgio Moroder, Hot Chocolate, Earth, Wind & Fire merged with some Stevie Wonder-arrangements and equal parts of 10cc smoothness - all artists I'd rather listen to than this fine musical mish-mash that remains far from distinctive original.
Out of the Blue is still a cornerstone in the discography of Electric Light Orchestra no matter what I think of it, but I'm not in a position where I feel that I should actually recommend it. If asked back then, I would most likely have handed it 1 or max 2 stars - basically, suggesting it was crap, so in that respect I have come (much) closer in accepting it as genuine acceptable music. It's still over-produced, over-arranged and it didn't do much good for music, imho. But hey, wasn't I into punk?! And punk rock was in many ways a response to exactly this kind of music, and I still do understand the reaction and need to change music as it was back in the mid-70s.
[ allmusic.com 3,5 / 5, Rolling Stone, The Guardian 3 / 5 stars ]


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

27 July 2020

Pearl Jam "Gigaton" (2020)

Gigaton

release date: Mar. 27, 2020
format: cd
[album rate: 3 / 5] [2,98]
producer: Josh Evans
label: Monkeywrench Records - nationality: USA

Track highlights: 1. "Who Ever Said" - 3. "Dance of the Clairvoyants" - 4. "Quick Escape" - 8. "Take the Long Way"

11th studio album by Pearl Jam is the band's first album in seven years and its first with producer Josh Evans, who is credited as studio guitar crew on Lightning Bolt (2013).
Pearl Jam seems long ago to have come to terms with the fact that they don't need to evolve and make music that satisfy themselves but have settled with spitting out albums that fans will like - be it a never-ending list of live albums, 'best of', 'most of' and albums that look back at various earlier steps in their long career. And no, you do not have to evolve. There's no artistic law to abide, but I guess, if you just try to take your art somewhere else than where you've already been, it may appear as you do it for art's sake and not just for the sake of your wallet. This is Pearl Jam playing some Pearl Jam-songs, and that's Okay.
Admittedly, I've never been a huge fan of this 'great' American orchestra. To me, they've always existed there somewhere in between [terrible] Guns N' Roses, the many American heart rock outings, who seek to balance pop with rock by yelling out loudly and making a big stir, and due parts of influence from European and Australian heavy [metal] rock artists, whom I never payed much attention to. In that perspective I've always admired Vedder's vocal but at the same time felt disillusioned by too many album fillers. So, without containing new classic songs and without being anything near great, Gigaton falls in the anonymous better half of the band's eleven studio albums as it's nevertheless something as rare as a coherent Pearl Jam studio album, only without great compositions. But if you just luv the sound of Pearl Jam, this is probably going to be a fine investment 'cause it doesn't even try to go anywhere else than down the familiar freeway they have run down many times before.
Not recommended.

21 July 2020

Jesu & Sun Kil Moon "Jesu / Sun Kil Moon" (2016)

Jesu / Sun Kil Moon
release date: Jan. 21, 2016
format: digital (10 x File, MP3)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,06]
producer: Mark Kozelek & Justin Broadrick
label: Caldo Verde Records - nationality: USA / England, UK


Collaborative project between British musician Justin Broadrick under his stage name, Jesu, and American artist Mark Kozelek under his stage name, Sun Kil Moon. The album is like Kozelek's collaboration Perils From the Sea (2013) with electronic musician Jimmy LaValle released on Kozelek's label Caldo Verde. Jesu emerged in 2003 as a trio after the break-up (2002) of the British industrial and metal band, Godflesh, but from day one it was Broadrick's idea and from 2007 Jesu has been a one-man project. Similarly, Sun Kil Moon was originally a band formed from the remnants of the Red House Painters (disbanded in 2001), which after a few years became Mark Kozelek's solo project. Kozelek and Broadrick have already been close acquaintances for several years, beginning when Kozelek reportedly contacted Broadrick back in 2007 about releasing music with Jesu on Kozelek's label Caldo Verde, which lead to the release of the Opiate Sun (2009) ep, which is also the first release from Jesu as a solo project, and later also the full-length album Ascension (2011). Kozelek also named his 2013 covers album Like Rats after the Godflesh song of the same name (the track is featured as the second cut on the album).
Stylistically, it's quite an original mix of shoegaze, noise rock and alt. folk, which is in no way surprising when you consider Broadrick and Kozelek's musical career. These are mainly compositions with lyrics and music by Kozelek and Broadrick, and with individual guest appearances from various vocalists, which include Will Oldham (better known as Bonnie 'Prince' Billy, featured on "Fragile"), Rachel Ann Goswell of shoegaze band Slowdive ("Father's Day", "Exodus" and "Beautiful You"), and Isaac Brock of Modest Mouse ("Beautiful You").
Apart from a single track where he also plays acoustic guitar, Kozelek is solely credited as vocalist, while Broadrick is featured as multi-instrumentalist. And it is also the latter's characteristic wall of sound, which forms the background for the music on Jesu / Sun Kil Moon, while Kozelek, with his characteristic vocals in the foreground, creates a form of traditional musical structure and acts as a counterpoint to the electric discharges, even if he occasionally indulges inspired by the wall of noise and almost manically spits out the words. However, it is Kozelek's stories that carry the tracks forward, while Broadrick's soundscape in a way represents the noise that Kozelek talks about.
It's Kozelek's more self-experienced short stories that press forward. The form is diary-like notes, or fan letter readings like on track #3, about what he does, who he runs into, and what they said and did in momentary glimpses that fill out the lyrics. In this way, Kozelek demonstrates the path he is on as a songwriter in terms of the narrative. To the astonishment and irritation of some - and to the delight of others - because it is indisputable that Mark Kozelek is a storyteller with something on his mind, even when he tells about apparently insignificant incidents.
All in all, it's an exciting constellation, albeit also a demanding album that doesn't reach the same artistic heights as Kozelek's collaboration with Jimmy LaValle.
[ allmusic.com, Drowned in Sound 3,5 / 5, Uncut 4 / 5 stars ]

19 July 2020

Lingua Ignota "Caligula" (2019)

Caligula
release date: Jul. 19, 2019
format: digital (11 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,12]
producer: Kristin Hayter
label: Profound Lore - nationality: USA


3rd studio album by Lingua Ignota follows two years after her self-released international breakthrough All Bitches Die. The album is released on Profound Lore and features Kristin Hayter as songwriter, composer, instrumentalist, singer, photographer, and as producer, just as was the case on her two previous albums.
With this, Hayter refers to the dark time as partner in a long-lasting violent relationship, which she uses here to direct the general focus on. Central to the tracks are motifs such as (violent) revenge in the form of satanic brutal forces. Or perhaps rather: the prince of darkness himself as the righteous (?) avenger of violence against women. The brutality is drawn out through all eleven tracks, which have a total running time of 66 minutes, but in a refined way, where Hayter performs in slow ceremonial lamentation as well as extreme experimental noise-metal - and with throat singing, where her screams take on the form of apocalyptic dimensions.
The album garnered good reviews and ended up on several lists including the year's best albums, and Hayter herself has been highlighted as one of today's most remarkable musicians.
It's difficult to point to outstanding or especially distinguished tracks on Caligula because the compositions offer such unique melodic structures that it makes just as much sense to compare them with parts of classical works. Hayter mixes styles and genres like a painter mixes colors. There is classical or neoclassical music, folk - as in traditional folk music - you'll find metal - as in industrial metal and there is experimental noise metal and more nuanced darkwave. The album is her most complex work to date, which is not only either gentle or brutal. In places it's calm, quiet, soothing and elaborated. And it contains beautiful passages, yet it's mostly black on black. It's music formulated in capital letters BLACK. And, like her two previous albums, it's still quite fascinating. Even for someone who doesn't care much for death metal or related styles like black metal. I don't care about Slipknot, Korn, Metallica, Iron Maiden, etc., but Hayter is as attractive as car headlights to a deer: Scary, fascinating, and something that you deep down just know you should stay far far away from, yet you're gravitated towards it. I'm not a fan, but I can easily sense quality underneath a disturbing surface.
[ Footnote: and yes, Hayter actually has "Caligula" tattooed across her chest ]
Recommended? For a listen or two: Definitely! For multiple full spins: No way!
[ 👎Gaffa.dk 6 / 6, PopMatters 4,5 / 5, Soundvenue 5 / 6, Pitchfork, The Guardian 4 / 5, 👍Blabbermouth 3,5 / 5 stars ]

10 April 2020

Lingua Ignota "All Bitches Die" (2017)

original cover
All Bitches Die
release date: Jun 7, 2017
format: digital (4 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [2,98]
producer: Kristin Hayter
label: selvudgivet - nationality: USA


2nd studio album by American Lingua Ignota [meaning 'unknown language'], as the moniker of Kristin Hayter. She debuted on bandcamp with the album Let the Evil of His Own Lips Cover Him in Feb. 2017 and only five months later she's then ready with this album, which was also released via her bandcamp-profile, but this time to overwhelming international interest. She soon became associated with the record label Profound Lore, who re-issued this one with a new cover in 2018. The album consists of only four compositions of varying length from 5½ to 15 minutes and with a total running time of just over 42 minutes.
Musically speaking, it's based on a mixture of dark - or rather: absolute black noise metal with elements from classical music and a clear inspiration from industrial rock. Hayter's own life story as a victim in a long violent relationship lays a great foundation for her musical and lyrical universe. She is a classically trained musician and is credited the entire performance alone as songwriter, composer, sound engineer, producer, photographer, instrumentalist, and vocalist. Her expression balances on the extremely brutal, and she experiments with the use of pure noise, just as the use of her vocal reflects a similar approach. She possesses an excellent singing voice, which can be soft, finely tuned and sometimes terrifyingly distorted as bestial death screams and disturbing throat singing.
There is no doubt that Hayter is an original. The queen of darkness, Diamanda Galás, is closest as an inspiration and related artist, but Hayter is not only concerned with performance and singing, as a primary instrument. The compositions have both qualities from ambient and classical compositions, which make it both neoclassical works and experimental noise rock.
All Bitches Die is a fierce acquaintance. You probably have to have a certain fondness for Galás or black metal to find this beautiful. To my ears it's more fascinating than ordinary black metal, death metal, or related styles, but it's also too extreme a musical expression for me to just think it's really cool.
Disturbing. Fascinating. And at the same time, too much brutality.
[ SputnikMusic 4 / 5 stars ]

2018 reissue on Profound Lore


24 January 2020

Kraftwerk "Ralf und Florian" (1973)

Ralf und Florian
release date: Oct. 1973
format: digital (1994 unofficial reissue)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,15]
producer: Ralf Hütter, Florian Schneider
label: Germanofon - nationality: Germany


3rd studio album by Kraftwerk originally released on Philips and here in an unofficial version from Czech Germanofon released approximately 1½ years after Kraftwerk 2 (1972), and as on that, the band / music project here, as the title indicates, only consists of the two founders: Ralf Hütter and Florian Schneider. Both are jointly credited a long range of instruments - and as something new: now also on vocals, which is, however, quite minimalistic with vocals as backing choir and a kind of secondary instrument - also without recognisable lyrics. Konrad 'Conny' Plank is not co-producer on the album, as he was credited on the first two albums, instead he is here credited as sound engineer. And just like the two previous albums, Ralf und Florian was reissued on Philips and Vertigo through the 70s, but releases after 1979 are all unofficial issues, and Kraftwerk has basically written off the albums from before Autobahn (1974).
The album is the first to be listed as having been recorded at the band's Klingklang studio in Düsseldorf, and it clearly bears the stamp of being somewhat more well-produced and reworked. Stylistically, Kraftwerk has moved towards the mastery of greater spaciousness and a more condensed simplicity, again taking a move further away from the rhythmic krautrock, although you'll find reminiscences of more traditional instrumentation with guitar and rhythm instruments such as bass and drums on some compositions. With the exception of the final track, 'songs' have generally become shorter and the music has been shaped as electronic ambient and less chaotic. The album has been hailed as essential for the ambient genre, and when listening to "Tanzmusik" it's hard not to think of more contemporary acts such as The Orb, Boards of Canada, Sigur Rós and Danish band Efterklang - to name just a few.
After the release, the band made several live performances, including on German TV, where Wolfgang Flür often participated on drums (see live version of "Tanzmusik") - from Autobahn and afterwards he was credited as permanent member of the band's new line-up.
[ 👍allmusic.com 3,5 / 5 stars ]