20 May 2022

Trentemøller "Memoria" (2022)

Memoria
release date: Feb. 11, 2022
format: digital (14 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [3,82]
producer: Anders Trentemøller
label: In My Room - nationality: Denmark


6th studio album from Anders Trentemøller follows 2½ years after the fine Obverse (Sep. 2019) and the album has been launched by a series of official videoes - firstly by "In the Gloaming" and later by "All Too Soon", "Dead or Alive", "No More Kissing in the Rain", and "Like a Daydream".
The album is highlighted via its melodic universe, although, the album is quite untraditional from the hands of Trentemøller as a predominantly vocal-founded album. Stylewise, it's more predictable situated in the outskirts of the 80s and 90s nostalgia linked with his very own electronic homeland. Memoria is the sound of shoegaze / dreampop à la Slowdive and Mazzy Star with drops of Robert Smith (The Cure) guitarwork as heard on the Disintegration-era mixed with Robin Guthrie (Cocteau Twins) reverb, and in this manner he sort of continues where Obverse ended, and simultaneously he applies something new. The big difference is that the 2019-release appeared more introspective and closed on progressive instrumental variations, whereas Memoria lurks on the verge of darkness - at times jumpping straight out into the daylight floating away on light tones of Robin Guthrie-inspired loops. And just that may be the newest 'trend' from Mr. Trentemøller - that instead of finding inspiration from the murky corners of the post-punk-era, he now adds a synthpop-soundscape from other areas and by doing so, he also creates a distinct cocktail of his own. On this, Trentemøller has made use of the two Danish guitarists Silas Tinglef and Lisbet Fritze, with the latter also featuring on vocal. The end product is a more coherent collection of compositions compared to what Trentemøller normally ends up with. It's a new touch with which he combines a pervasive flair for micro house and synthwave that ultimately displays his so far best studio album to date.
Highly recommended.
[ Gaffa.dk, musicOMH, PopMatters 4 / 5 stars ]

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 ]

03 May 2022

Prefab Sprout "Jordan: The Comeback" (1990)

Jordan: The Comeback

release date: Sep. 7, 1990
format: vinyl / cd
[album rate: 4 / 5]
producer: Thomas Dolby
label: Kitchenware / CBS - nationality: England, UK

Track highlights: 1. "Looking for Atlantis" (4 / 5) - 2. "Wild Horses" (4 / 5) - 3. "Machine Gun Ibiza" - 4. "We Let the Stars Go" - 5. "Carnival 2000" (4 / 5) - 6. "Jordan: The Comeback" (4 / 5) - 7. "Jesse James Symphony" (4 / 5) - 8. "Jesse James Bolero" - 10. "All the World Loves Lovers" - 12. "Ice Maiden" - 13. "Paris Smith" - 15. "One of the Broken" (4 / 5) - 18. "Scarlet Nights" - 19. "Doo-Wop in Harlem" (4 / 5) (live)

5th studio album by Northhern English band Prefab Sprout following Protest Songs (Jun. 1989). The band has had a changing line-up but the two McAloon brothers have been the only stable members. On this, the band consists of what was the most stable line-up over a period of 13 years from 1984-97: Paddy McAloon on vocals, guitars, keyboards, Martin McAloon on bass, Wendy Smith credited vocals, guitars, keyboards, and Neil Conti on drums and percussion. Although, the band is founded with two brothers, the undisputed leader is older brother, Paddy, who writes (near) all songs for the band - not only for this album but on all their studio releases from 1982 to present days).
Jordan: The Comeback is untraditionally long, in terms of total running time for a 2-sided longplayer exceeding more than 64 minutes. It peaked at number #7 on the albums chart in the UK (by the band only surpassed by the '88 album, From Langley Park to Memphis, reaching number #5). The track "Carnival 2000" had a lot of airplay on the national Danish radio station P3 that year, but other than that, the album contains so many great tracks that the whole album is the biggest hit of the release., which initially made me confusing it as a compilation. I owned a cd issue for years and only as of 2022 managed to get hold of a fine original vinyl issue.
Prefab Sprout initiated their career by playing guitar-founded jangle pop but this one (like the majority of their albums) is dominated by a sophisti-pop style that loans from other genres and styles, and the album simply stands as one the best pop /rock albums of the 1990s, in my opinion.
Highly recommended.
[ allmusic.com 4,5 / 5, SputnikMusic 5 / 5 stars ]

25 April 2022

Lotte Kestner "Lost Songs" (2022)

Lost Songs
release date: Feb. 11, 2022
format: digital (13 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,70]
producer: Anna-Lynne Williams
label: self-released - nationality: USA

Track highlights: 1. "Open Ocean" (4 / 5) - 2. "Slip" - 3. "Weaving" - 5. "Colors That Did Not Exist" - 8. "You Must Have" - 12. "Fade Away" - 13. "Inside of Love"

Solo album by Lotte Kestner (aka Anna-Lynne Williams), former songwriter and vocalist in Seattle folk-quartet Trespassers William, a band which after years with an ever-changing line-up ended up as the duo-project by the only lasting members: Williams and composer / guitarist Matt Brown. After the split from Brown, Williams had a short stint and made two albums with Ormonde - another duo-project (this time with Robert Gomez) - she then concentrated on her already highly original solo career as Lotte Kestner (debuted with China Mountain in 2008).
Lost Songs appears to be her seventh, eigth or ninth solo album. It's not the easyist task to enlist her solo albums. Some releases are pure cover albums, some are alternate mixes, remixes, and with titles like Solo Versions (2017) and Other Versions (2018) it's rather hard to distinguish what's really new releases in a traditional sense. And Lost Songs follows this pattern by both being a studio album of 13 tracks but also a collection of songs composed over [what I read somewhere is] a ten year period. On previous releases Kestner has made it a bit of her thing to do cover versions, and on this you'll find two songs: "Everything I Wanted" by Billie Eilish and "Inside of Love" by Nada Surf.
Kestner's trademarks are slow to very slow folkish material held in lo-fi productions, typically arranged with Kestner's gentle vocal accompanied by the strumming of a guitar and at times with occasional accompanying piano, backing harmonies and soft percussion. Several passages brings to mind folk traditonalists as Joni Mitchell and / or Emmylou Harris, although Kestner's songs are not exemplified entirely by stunning vocal range or the strengths of vocal performances - instead it dwells on a narrow palette of grey colours and emmotional melancholic sensation. That may not sound impressing as such, but Kestner does what she does without much fuzz and still the end result is quality music.
I enjoy this quite a bit, only, at times I find somewhat narrow with little variation but it's all done with artistic conviction.
[ HeavyPop (German) 7 / 10 stars ]

18 April 2022

Eddie Vedder "Earthling" (2022)

Earthling
release date: Feb. 11, 2022
format: digital (13 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,58]
producer: Andrew Watt
label: Seattle Surf Co. / Republic Records - nationality: USA


3rd solo album from Eddie Vedder released nearly 11 full years following Ukulele Songs (May 2011) and two years after Pearl Jam's latest Gigaton (Mar. 2020). Bearing the span of years in between solo-releases it may seem a little sought after to make comparisons, and you may better look at the latest works by Pearl Jam, or: just not compare at all! It's nevertheless interesting to focus on who, he has chosen to co-operate with, and here you find former Red Hot Chili Peppers guitarist Josh Klinghofer as co-composer on all 13 tracks - as many recall, he substituted John Frusciante in Red Hot Chili Peppers in 2009, only to be sacrifised (sat free) in 2020 when the very same Frusciante returned, thus participating on Unlimited Love (Apr. 2020). Apart from Klinghofer all tracks are credited Vedder and producer Andrew Watt (aka Andrew Wotman), who is also creditered as multi-instrumentalist - mostly on bass and guitar. Red Hot Chili Peppers' drummer Chad Smith is credited as co-composer on seven songs and he plays on nine. A small army of acclaimed artists partecipate on the individual tracks, e.g. Stevie Wonder on jews harp on "Try", Elton John as co-composer and vocalist on "Picture", where you allso find drummer Abe Laboriel Jr. (from Paul McCartney's touring band) and keyboardist Benmont Tench (from Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers) on Hammond organ, and on the Beatles-inspired "Mrs. Mills" we find... Ringo Starr on drums.
Once again, Vedder sings the way he does, and it's with a vocal with a clear structure and sound, which has its very own spot in the great American rock-history. On Earthling he delivers as vocalist on melodic tunes in the popular end of pop / rock - at least compared to his contributions with Pearl Jam, who embraces a harder and bolder alt. rock than found here. In that way, it's Vedder in a safe melodic rock-context for warranting an equilibrium of ballads and sheer amounts of juvenile smartness, as if to demonstrate there's still a spark in his musical foundation. The album conatins a few uptempo energetic tracks with a clear taste of Pearl Jam, you'll find melodic heartland rock and soft ballads, and in between it songs and pieces which is there to balance it all. Elton John immitates Elvis Costello on a decent track, although it's all heard before, and that's basically a notion you'll remind yourself of when Vedder builds as much as he does on his own back catalog with apparent inspiration from Springsteen, Tom Petty, The Beatles, U2 and from the great immitators: The Killers.
Overall, the album is quite nicely produced and sewn together, and it doesn't stir up any stylistic conventions. Vedder sings in a way that no panties are left dry, securing that all (real) men rock along. It may touch on predictable and not highly original, but on the other hand, when Pearl Jam are perfectly content in copying themselves over and over again, Vedder might as well just deliver as the lightning image of who he should be. I only miss, he had something to say but then again, I also find the pleasure in simply listening to his unique voice just the way it shines so bright. It's dad-rock and it's stadium-rock, and it's well-produced through and through as clever genuine craftsmanship.
[ allmusic.com 4,5 / 5, Rolling Stone 4 / 5, 👍Classic Rock 3,5 / 5, Pitchfork 6.7 / 10, NME 3 / 5 stars ]

15 April 2022

Love Shop "Levende mænd i døde forhold" (2021)

Levende mænd i døde forhold
release date: Oct. 1, 2021
format: vinyl (first edition incl. 7'' single) / cd
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,64]
producer: Mikkel Damgaard
label: A:larm / Universal - nationality: Denmark

Track highlights: 2. "The Troubles" - 3. "Kun længes skygger mod aftenens fald" - 6. "Ægte Nordic noir" - 10. "Exitstrategi" - - 7'' single, A 1) "Andy Warhol's piger"

13th studio album by Love Shop following 2½ years after the album Brænder boksen med smukke ting (Mar. 2019), and the album (as well as band) is primarily the product by songwriter and vocalist Jens Unmack and keyboardist and musical composer, arranger, and producer Mikkel Damgaard, who has been an official member since 2011, although, he's taken part in the project since 1999.
The title of this new album translates to "Men Alive in Dead Relations", and death does play an everpresent part in this band. Firstly, it was a figurative presence when the band's main composer, guitarist, arranger, and producer Hilmer Hassig decided to leave the trio back in late 2003. It was a devastating decision that resulted in a practical disbandment - they couldn't possibly continue, and the disbandment was a reality. Together, they planned a farewell tour, still executed in late 2003. Hassig then settled as studio technician, arranger, instrumentalist, and producer, while Both Unmack and keyboardist / backing vocalist Henrik Hall initiated independent solo careers; however, after Hassig became the victim of a drive-by incident resulting in his sudden death in late 2008, Hall and Unmack initially reunited as Love Shop to honour their friend for several memorial concerts in 2009. The positive experience of playing together again led them to revive the band, and to write and compose new material, which saw the light of day with Frelsens hær ['Salvation Army'] (Nov. 2010). Death's ugly face appeared again when Hall died Jan. 2011 - following years battling with cancer, and then as opposed to ending their common revitalised life-project, Unmack instead decided to continue Love Shop, although, he is the only remaining member of the original line-up. The following album Skandinavisk lyst ['Scandinavian Lust'] (Oct. 2012) both honours Hassig and Hall and simultaneosly lights a torch of life in what appears as the strong will to carry on. In spite, and not to succumb.
Levende mænd i døde forhold is then of course with reference to those who are here. In the band Love Shop, it's Unmack and Damgaard, and perhaps it's not to be taken too literal, but the title suggests that despite seeming alive, you can may still live your life with a presence / an implication of something that appears dead. This could be an ever-present sensation of people playing a major part in your life - it could also be taken more literal, suggesting your personal relations appearing dead.
Nevertheless, Unmack and Damgaard have proven to have much to offer. Their songs are not surprisingly often dealing with existentialism, and Unmack is forever bound to a Scandic melancholy. He would probably refer to it as "Nordic noir" - something in the DNA of people of the North, which may be found in the works by Hammershøi, Krøyer, Grieg, Sibelius, Munch, Bergman, Von Trier, Björk, Brun, Kent...
The album seems like the second chapter to the 2019 album, not as a copy, but more as the very essence of a sound that has become grounded in the name of Love Shop on its now most recent three albums, starting with Risiko from 2017. I find that the new album is very much in the spirit of the former two - not that it's a lesser work of art, it just feels more like a condensation, an album that doesn't show us something new, but more as new angles on the same view, which can both contain surprises as well as recognition of what we already know.
Not their best, but still far from their lesser works, and definitely worth the price. And then, I absolutely just love the inclusion of a 7'' inch bonus single stressing that vinyl format is very much alive.
[ Gaffa.dk 5 / 6, Politiken, Berlingske 4 / 6 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 ]

12 March 2022

Jon Hopkins "Music for Psychedelic Therapy" (2021)


Music for Psychedelic Therapy
release date: Nov. 12, 2021
format: digital (9 x File, FLAC) (WIG458D)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [3,86]
producer: Jon Hopkins
label: Domino - nationality: England, UK

Tracklist: 1. "Welcome" (feat. 7RAYS) - 2. "Tayos Caves, Ecuador i" - 3. "Tayos Caves, Ecuador ii" - 4. "Tayos Caves, Ecuador iii" - 5. "Love Flows Over Us in Prismatic Waves" - 6. "Deep in the Glowing Heart" - 7. "Ascending, Dawn Sky" (feat. 7RAYS) - 8. "Arriving" (feat. 7RAYS) - 9. "Sit Around the Fire" (feat. Ram Dass & East Forest)

6th studio album by Jon Hopkins following 3½ years after Singularity (May 2018). The album contains nine tracks with a total running time exceeding 63 minutes, and it contains collaborations with 7RAYS, East Forest, and it builds on teachings (and the voice of) the late Ram Dass. Bearing in mind that East Forest is the alias for American electronic ambient artist Trevor Oswalt, who experiments with music for 'inner voyages', and that the late Ram Dass (aka Richard Alpert) was an American spiritual teacher and yoga guru, you may get the picture of this album, which also happens to come out after a pandemic and extensive lockdowns.
Where his 2013 breakthrough album showed everyone he was a master of progressive dance-oriented break grooves, his 2018 album proved to be a trip into deep space, this new one is again something entirely different. It's still an electronic release, but other than being instrumentally founded it's another kind of journey we're invited on. Singularity had some ambient feel to it, and that trend goes more full blown with this- and when comparing to his 2013 album, it mostly leaves you with the impression of being made by a different artist. The title Music for Psychedelic Therapy literally says everything you need to know. The music here is meant for what it proclaims. Hopkins has taken his fascination for transcendal meditation and mindfulness into his work in a new way, and the album comes out as an instrument, or a manifestation for inner journeys.
I normally don't fancy ambient or trance that much, and that's to put it nicely, but this deserves anyone's attention. It's hard to pin out highlights as the whole album is like one organism. I can only imagine how powerful it would be submerged into this while meditating. I think, I need to give it a try. The album may be his closest to some of the ideas behind Eno's music, but this is just so much better.
Highly recommended.
[ allmusic.com 3,5 / 5, Pitchfork 7,4 / 10, Mojo, 👍PopMatters 4 / 5, Clash, Exclaim! 4,5 / 5, 👎The Guardian 3 / 5 stars ]

03 March 2022

Brimheim "Can’t Hate Myself Into a Different Shape" (2022)

Can’t Hate Myself Into a Different Shape
[debut]
release date: Jan. 28, 2022
format: digital (11 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [3,78]
producer: Søren Buhl Lassen [?]
label: self-released - nationality: Faroe Islands, Denmark


Studio album debut from Danish-Faroese Brimheim, aka Helena Heinesen Rebensdorff released with aid from WAS Entertainment and via her bandcamp.com profile. The total of 11 tracks have a running time around 37 mins and they're all credited Helena Rebensdorff and Søren Buhl Lassen (drummer of Blaue Blume) - previously he collaborated with danish artist Benjamin Hav - but there's little information about the production of the album regarding featuring instrumentalists as well as technical staff.
Musically, it's indie pop with traces of singer / songwriter or folk pop with hints from introspective threads to Phoebe Bridgers, who has herself listened to Kate Bush and uptempo-songs filled with an audacious mindset and presumed inspiration in Alanis Morissette and PJ Harvey without ever sounding like a copy. It's quite impressively arranged and produced, and it reeks the kind of coherency as something you would expect from an artist later on in his / her career. There's a certain maturity to the music and lyrics indicating that Brimheim herself has turned 30, is a mother who has already enough life experience to as foothold, and in that way is far from a mere whiz-kid. Mind you, Brimheim has already released the 5-track ep Myself Misspelled in 2020 and the single Call It What You Want in '21, which had some airplay in on the national DR P3, however, it's not a major back catalogue, calling for the title as 'Best promising Danish Act of the Decade', or the like - something Danmarks Radio in the local echo chamber with some success have applied to their very own radio host Drew Sycamore, although, she's nowhere near the talent and originality of Brimheim. The narratives on Can’t Hate Myself Into a Different Shape mainly touch on the subjects of identity and prejudice, and from what I've managed to read about some of her experiences in that regard, it appears that Rebensdorff has something to draw on, and she does that with great skills while abstaining from sentimentallity and by avoiding to take position as a victim.
Previously, both Oh Land, Rebekkamaria, and Medina have all sought for an international pop-sound in the neighborhood of a mix á la Alanis Morissette and the more introspective á la someone like Sharon Van Etten without copying Lykke Li, Anna Ternheim, or Ane Brun. Helena Rebensdorff succeeds on her own terms, and it remains a mystery, touching on ridiculous, that a major label haven't been able to notice the obvious potential and thrown in the right amounts of money, a promotion campaign, and a solid marketing strategy to secure Brimheim and this very album. Hopefully, it's just no longer necessary if the talent is sufficient support, people's eyes and ears will probably create an interest in Brimheim, who then will take care of the rest herself.
Can't Hate Myself Into a Different Shape is up for grabs as Danish release of the year and can only be recommended
[ Gaffa.dk, Soundvenue 5 / 6 stars ]
#YearBestDanishAlbum

18 February 2022

Lisa Gerrard & Jules Maxwell "Burn" (2021)

Burn
release date: May 7, 2021
format: digital (7 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [4,04]
producer: James Chapman
label: Atlantic Curve - nationality: Australia / Northern Ireland, UK


Collaborative project between Australian Lisa Gerrard and Northern Irishman Jules Maxwell, with the latter acting as live keyboardist on several occasions in Gerrard and Brendan Perry's duo project Dead Can Dance after their reformation in 2012. The album has a duration of only 35 minutes and consists of seven compositions with running lengths from four to six minutes. Gerrard alone is credited five tracks, while two tracks (#2 and #3) are composed by Gerrard and Maxwell in collaboration.
Musically, it's neo-classical with influence from darkwave, world music, and with hints from electronica, just as it has been the case with other works by Gerrard, e.g. The Silver Tree (2006) and which has charachterised releases by Dead Can Dance. Burn is, however, something else. The rhythm sections are shaped solely by programming or by bass and synth-bass with Gerrard singing on all tracks in an unknown or indistinct language - her very own metaphysical language, where her voice only functions on an instrumental level. That said, it's quite a sonorous, distinctive, and powerful instrument Gerrard possesses. She blends her alto voice beautifully in and out of progressive rhythmic loops and occasionally swings her vocal up into higher spheres clothed in mysticism of the East and sometimes with a well-developed technique taken from the scene of opera. Multi-instrumentalist Jules Maxwell adds rhythm, electronics, synth-bass, and grandiosity in appropriate measure and otherwise lets the music unfold in beautiful harmony with Gerrard as guiding instrumentalist.
It's original, beautiful, unpretentious, and yet wide-ranging. Since the early eighties, Gerrard has been responsible for strong original releases with Dead Can Dance - together with Hans Zimmer, she created the musical counterpart to the cinematic side of "Gladiator" (2000), and she has generally become an acclaimed soundtrack composer for a long series of films starting with soundtracks under the name Dead Can Dance back in '89 for the film "El niño de la luna" (aka "Moon Child" - not released as a soundtrack until 2019). They gained more recognition with their music for Ron Fricke's remarkable "Baraka" (1992), after which they released several soundtracks. As soloist, Gerrard first collaborated with Pieter Bourke on the music for "The Insider" by Michael Mann in 1999, and most recently in 2017 she and Peter Orr stood behind the soundtrack to "2:22" by Paul Currie. Gerrard has been nominated for dozens of international awards and she has received around 10 major awards for her work as a composer.
Burn is a certified gem of an album that should find wider recognition. Highly recommended!
[ Gaffa.dk 5 / 6 stars ]

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

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 ]

06 February 2022

Marianne Faithfull "Broken English" (1979)

Broken English
release date: Nov. 2, 1979
format: cd (1994 cd reissue)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [3,88]
producer: Mark Miller Mundy
label: Isand Records - nationality: England, UK

Track highlights: 1. "Broken English" (4 / 5) - 2. "Witches' Song" - 3. "Brain Drain" - 4. "Guilt" - 5. "The Ballad of Lucy Jordan" (4 / 5) - 7. "Working Class Hero" (4 / 5) - 8. "Why D'ya Do It" (4 / 5)

7th studio album by Marianne Faithfull following the release of Faithless (1978) was the first album by Faithfull that I have a recollection of listening to. Speaking of the actual number of studio albums, is a bit of a detective work, and even then it comes down to a discussion of what qualifies as 'real' studio albums. The thing is, early on, Faithfull released different albums for the European and for the North American markets, respectivily, and if only looking at her European albums, you could argue one or two are not traditional studio albums but rather alternative releases, or say 'near' compilations..., and there's another story of Rich Kids Blues from '85, which was actually recorded in '71 and rightfully precedes this one but it was shelved for 14 years, and... there you have it! It's up for someone else, to determine, I guess. Broken English is, however, most commonly identified as her seventh, and the predecessor Faithless is both regarded as her sixth studio album, although, it's basically and also what could be described as an alternate version of her fifth album Dreamin' My Dreams (1976).
Broken English came out when punk rock roared and Faithfull was one of punks' idols stemming from another era where most artists didn't find peers amongst the young and angry generation. In that regard, she stood alongside Nico, Lou Reed, Neil Young, and Iggy Pop - survivors of the needle. There's a distinct new wave- or art punk-ish seasoning to this very album, and then it's also a huge melting pot of styles. Perhaps, it's all about a naked anger and an honest attempt of unglorification. The album is like many of Faithfull's a mix of writers and composers and a ceratin amount of covers, and regardless the origin, Faithfull knows how to make songs her own. This also goes for Shel Silverstein's "The Ballad of Lucy Jordan" and Lennon's "Working Class Hero".
The album is Faithfull's only to be included in "1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die". To me, it's not her absolute best but it's close enough and a certified highly recommended listen.
[ allmusic.com 4,5 / 5, Pitchfork 8,7 / 10, The Guardian 5 / 5, Q Magazine, 👉Record Collector, Rolling Stone 4 / 5 stars ]

28 January 2022

Robin Guthrie "Springtime" (2022)

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


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

18 January 2022

Best of 2005:
Ali Farka Touré & Toumani Diabaté "In the Heart of the Moon" (2005)

2021 vinyl reissue
In the Heart of the Moon
[debut]
release date: Sep. 13, 2005
format: cd / 2lp vinyl (2021 reissue)
[album rate: 5 / 5] [4,88]
producer: Nick Gold
label: World Circuit - nationality: Mali

Tracklist: 1. "Debe" (5 / 5) (live in Brussels) - 2. "Kala" (4 / 5) - 3. "Mamadou Boutiquier" (5 / 5) - 4. "Monsieur le Maire de Niafunké" (4 / 5) - 5. "Kaira" (4 / 5) - 6. "Simbo" - 7. "Ai Ga Bani" - 8. "Soumbou Ya Ya" - 9. "Naweye Toro" - 10. "Kadi Kadi" - 11. "Gomni" (4 / 5) - 12. "Hawa Dolo"

G R E A T! That's what this is. It's the collaboration debut by Ali Farka Touré and Toumani Diabaté, two Malian musicians. The music is delicate, surreal and haunting. What rhythm, and what wonderful dreamy tunes these guys produce! Splendid music - and highly addictive. Play it when you drive to or from work, or just anywhere, when you read, or when you make love - just play it, and listen. It's extremely soothing for body and mind. I give it my warmest recommendations, and… I only need more of that kind! On this, Touré plays guitar and Diabeté plays the 21-stringed African kora, which is responsible for the spiderweb-like strings on this amazing release. The album received world-wide recognition and led to a World Live Tour with the two playing in Europe and USA.
Touré had been politically engaged and became mayor of the local town of Nianfunké in 2004, and although there are 25 years between these two musicians and they do sound as if having played together for years, when in fact the album was recorded without initial rehearsals and without Touré and Diabeté had played together for more than 3 hours in total over a span of 15 years.
Diabaté was 40 and Touré 65 years of age when this album was released, and most sadly, Touré died Mar. 2006 as a 66-year-old, only just experiencing the international acclaim this album was attributed. The album is the first in a series of three albums commonly known as the "Hotel Mandé Sessions" - the second would be Tourés last solo album Savane (released posthumously, Jul. 17, 2006) and Diabeté's Boulevard de l'Independence (credited Toumani Diabaté's Symmetric Orchestra was released Jul. 25, 2006).

EDIT Jan. 2022:
I only just received a vinyl copy of the album. Alas, the album wasn't released on vinyl until 2012. The vendor sold it filed as a 2012 issue, but it turns out, it's a 2021 re-issue. Anyway, the album is for me a cornerstone in 'world music' and simply is one of those must-have releases I wish more people knew of.
[ allmusic.com 4 / 5 stars ]

2005 Favourite releases: 1. Ali Farka Touré & Toumani Diabeté In the Heart of the Moon - 2. Sigur Rós Takk... - 3. Kent Du & jag döden


original CD front


14 January 2022

Faye Webster "Atlanta Millionaires Club" (2019)

Atlanta Millionaires Club
release date: May 24, 2019
format: digital (10 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,70]
producer: Faye Webster, Matt Martin, Drew Vandenberg
label: Secretly Canadian - nationality: USA

Track highlights: 1. "Room Temperature" - 2. "Right Side of My Neck" - 3. "Hurts Me Too" - 5. "Jonny" - 7. "Come to Atlanta" - 9. "Flowers"

3rd studio album by Faye Webster, her first with Secretly Canadian. After a self-released debut of Run & Tell (Oct. 2013) she released Faye Webster (May 2017) on Awful Records.
Atlanta Millionaires Club is a unique mix of indie folk, country and hip hop, which in the hands of Webster sounds just like the normal blend of styles. The country element secures a laid-back tone in the arrangements, and Webster narrates maturely about everyday life and relationships much contrary to being merely 21 years of age. Her vocal is distinct, light and fragile, making me think of a wind sweeping soothening through an open window on a lazy afternoon when temperature is too high for outdoor activities.
The album is my first listen to Webster's sound, but definitely not the last.
Recommended.
[ allmusic.com, Uncut 3,5 / 5, Pitchfork 7,8 / 10, Rolling Stone, NME, Mojo 4 / 5 stars ]

02 January 2022

Toumani Diabaté

~ ~ ~
Toumani Diabaté: (born Aug. 10, 1965, Bamako, Mali); aka: Toumani Diabate, Toumani Diabate's Symmetric Orchestra. Diabeté is a Malian kora player. In addition to performing the traditional folk music of Mali, he has also been involved in cross-cultural collaborations with flamenco, blues, jazz, and other international styles. In a collaboration work with Ali Farka Touré the two made a world-wide appraised album In the Heart of the Moon (2005) with Malian mandé folk music.
~ ~ ~

Ali Farka Touré

~ ~ ~
Ali Farka Touré: Touré is a multi-instrumentalist but is mainly known for playing the guitar. Ali Farka Touré died in 2006 (from bone cancer) but has released a number of acclaimed albums (including Talking Timbuktu, 1994, as a collaboration with Ry Cooder), and he became known as Africa's blues man or John Lee Hooker of Africa, anyway, a man of the blues. In a collaboration work with Toumani Diabaté, the two made a world-wide appraised album In the Heart of the Moon (2005) with Malian mandé folk music. Interesting music from Mali seems like an endless pot. I'm not saying it's the only interesting country in Africa but it's really amazing how much music has come from Mali, and these two are the exquisite artists of Malian mandé music.
~ ~ ~

23 December 2021

The The "The Comeback Special (Live at the Royal Albert Hall)" (2021)

The Comeback Special (Live at the Royal Albert Hall)
release date: Oct. 29, 2021
format: 2 cd
[album rate: 4 / 5] [4,02]
producer: Matt Johnson
label: Cinéola / Ear Music - nationality: England, UK

Live album by The The celebrating the return to live performances after a 17 years hiatus. The album is recorded live at The Royal Albert Hall, London, Jun. 5, 2018. The The consists here of Matt Johnson on vocals and guitars, Barrie Cadogan on lead guitar and backing vocals, James Eller on bass and backing vocals, DC Collard on keyboards and backing vocals, and with Earl Harvin on drums.
Long story short: Johnson basically left the limelight of the music business as a result of losing his brother Eugene in 1999, and the loss of brother Andrew (aka illustrator Andy Dog) in 2016 made him decide to return as a performer.
The album is packed with great renditions of his back catalogue - it's amazing how strong these songs are performed. Now, everyone holds their breath and hope Johnson will take up his career releasing brand new material as The The.
Great comeback - highly recommended!
[ Mojo, Uncut, Record Collector 4 / 5 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 ]