Showing posts with label Laura Marling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Laura Marling. Show all posts

Wednesday, 29 December 2010

Albums of the Year 2010: 5-1






















You've seen the albums that nearly made it, and the ones we couldn't stand; now it's time to reveal the Popscener's records of the year 2010. It's the final countdown...

5. These New Puritans - Hidden (Angular/Domino)
Proof that innovation is alive and well outside the claustrophobia and one-upmanship of London’s inner city scenes, Southend-on-Sea’s genre-hopping connoisseurs created a tour de force of art-rock experimentation. The unsettling murmur of children’s choirs met shuddering bangra-beats, meticulous woodwind and brass arrangements (provided by a Czech orchestra) and Richard Garrett’s 19th century poetry, while the eccentric time signatures framed a sound at once menacing and oddly moving. Hearing is believing.



4. Mark Ronson and The Business International – Record Collection (Columbia)
Beyond the bleach blonde pompadour and colourless panel-show appearances, 2010 saw Mark Ronson drop the faux-soul whimsy of his previous musical excursions for a more cutting edge contemporary up-date on '80s synth-pop and electro. The results could have been inconsequential – Ronson’s limp attempts at singing on ‘Record Collection’ are testament to that – but a superb revolving-door supporting cast, including Q-Tip, Kyle Falconer and Rose Elinor Dougall, brought to life a series of brilliantly crafted pop songs. Bringing Boy George (‘Someone to Love Me’) and D’Angelo (‘Glass Mountain Trust’) back to commercial coalface added tenderness and explosive vocal virtuosity to the inescapable hooks.



3. Kanye West – My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy (Roc-A-Fella/Def Jam)
A recording budget of over $3million used to fund sessions with a vast myriad of co-producers and supporting artists – including Jay-Z, Pusha T, Chris Rock, Bon Iver and John Legend – at what amounted to a gated ‘Rap Camp’ ad-hoc community in Hawaii seemed a unsurprising move for the most egomaniacal rapper on the planet. However, what followed was no bling ‘n’ bitches celebration of life in a tropical paradise. Instead, 'Yeezy' carved up critical preconceptions with an album of open-hearted vulnerability, the puffed-chest moments always splintered with an underlying quiver of inadequacy and aching discontent with the rap-star caricature. Beauty prevailed in spades on this undoubted magnum opus.



2. Everything Everything - Man Alive (Geffen)
To describe Everything Everything as a rare beacon of success in 2010 for the kind of angular ‘indie’ long the preserve of many of England’s finest bands would be doing them a disservice. Despite similarities with the naughties’ scatterbrained post-punk resurgence (best realised by The Futureheads and their contemporaries), Everything Everything offered a great leap forward. The  familiar jerky hooks and hyper-melodic art-pop choruses were embellished with rhythmic math-rock precision and spiralling guitar trills. Meanwhile, the dexterous falsetto yelp of frontman Jonathan Higgs was ideally suited to an engaging, articulate examination of the vacuous quick-fix realities of popular culture.



1. Laura Marling - I Speak Because I Can (Virgin)
Folk revivalist Laura Marling’s precocious maturity has been heavily documented, but this should neither boost nor detract from assessments of the 20-year-old’s stunning sophomore record, which stands apart as a majestic landmark in her remarkable development. I Speak Because I Can eschewed the casual immediacy of her debut for something more intricate and captivating. Lyrically, Marling excelled, taking on the role of brow-beaten but stoic daughter (‘Hope in the Air’), girlfriend (‘I Speak Because I Can’) and lover (‘What He Wrote’) in a series of stinging mini-dramas which asserted themselves like epic short-stories amidst a serenely elegiac masterwork. On ‘Goodbye England’, the album’s desperate emotional fulcrum, she countered former lover Charlie Fink’s despondent assessment of their disintegrating relationship (from 2009’s The First Days of Spring) in a breathtaking crescendo. ‘I tried to be the girl who likes to be used / I’m too good for that / there’s a mind under this hat’ she spat – as moving a trichotomy of feeling between rage, sorrow and dignity as was heard the year over.




Don't forget to check out the rest of the albums of the year and the songs of the year for 2010.

Thursday, 3 June 2010

Listen Up! No. 9: Laura Marling - Made By Maid

(Nu-) Folk doesn't always mean ukelele's, banjos and a horribly misjudged faux-authenticity - Marling once again proves herself head and shoulders above her contemporaries (and lovers).



Sunday, 23 May 2010

Short Cuts! April New Releases Round-up

April's album releases, including The Futureheads, Laura Marling, MGMT, Black Francis and loads more...

5/4
Laura Marling – I Speak Because I Can
Indisputably the most vital and most talented amongst her ‘nu-folk’ (yeesh) contemporaries, Marling’s tender years continue not to be a hindrance, either with her husk-augmented register or her intricate grasp of how to weave commercial and credible into hit after hit. That said, the age does betray her sometimes unfathomable life lessons, not to mention neutering their authenticity. Meanwhile, though she’s better at Joni Mitchell (‘Made by Maid’) than she is at Stevie Nicks (Devil’s Spoke), she’s most accomplished at being Laura Marling (‘Darkness Descends’). A triumph.
Choice Cuts: ‘Made By Maid’, ‘Darkness Descends’, ‘Goodbye England’
9/10
Black Francis – NonStopErotik
Get past the recurring mental image of the portly Francis manoeuvring himself around the 24-hour vice den which apparently constitutes his life in NonStopErotik, and you’re left with a startling return to Pixies-esque ingĂ©nue. In short: seamless key changes, twisted chords and backhanded melodies, all drenched in a knowing sense of noir – Noir Francis, that is.
Choice Cuts: 'Cinema Star', 'Corinna'
8/10
Ted Leo – Brutalist Bricks
After the outright disappointment of 2007’s sprawling misfire Living With The Living, sprightly 30-something social-idealist punk Ted Leo goes back to basics on his Matador debut. Save for hip-shaking soul-rocker ‘One Polaroid a Day’, the tracks here are short, sharp and direct, bustling past in a head-rush of instantly claimable hooks and intricate guitar stabs. As usual, the political moments (‘The Stick’, ‘ Ativan Eyes’), whilst brimming with passion and conscience, are only ever a fist-pump away from a toe-curling lyric; as usual, the personal as political cuts (‘Bottled Up Inwith  Cork’, ‘Even Heroes Have to Die’) jumpstart head and heart with cracked-macho displays of vulnerability.
Choice Cuts: ‘Bottled Up In Cork’, ‘Gimme The Wire’, ‘Even Heroes Have to Die’
8/10
Dr Dog – Shame, Shame
Presumably as bored as we were with the agricultural approach to psyche-outs championed hitherto, Fido and chums return with their tails wagging and a pop-sheened charm offensive. Just a pity it’s taken until now to get them house-trained.
Choice Cuts – 'Shadow People'
7/10
Harper Simon – Harper Simon
Daddy, daddy cool – and at 37 Harper finally realises it. The only thing that’s missing is Art.
Choice Cuts: 'Wishes and Stars', 'Ha Ha'
6.5/10

12/4
MGMT – Congratulations
There’s a lot of Love in this room – Arthur Lee looms largest over this startling re-imagination. For synths, read: guitars; for ecstacy, read: LSD. For electro-pop throwaway, read: surf-psychedelia tour de force.
Choice Cuts: ‘Song for Dan Treacy’, ‘Flash Delirium’, ‘It’s Working’.
9/10
Plan B – The Defamation of Strickland Banks
Invoking the spirit of the Winehouse Summer (2007),
Plan B heads East not North, hooks up with a Charles and Eddie cover band instead of Mark Ronson, and produces a pleasingly complete soul-pop smash – notwithstanding the reliably superfluous ‘concept’. Note to all the ‘sell-out’ catcallers: alternating between Jamie T and Dizzy Rascal rapping never counted as ‘grit’ in the first place.
Choice Cuts: ‘Love Goes Down’, ‘Stay Too Long’
7.5/10
Darwin Deez – Darwin Deez
Inwhich the moustachioed New Yorker demonstrates he’s fairly good at tackling the Strokes with added noise (‘Lights On’), the Strokes with a serious pop kick (‘Radar Detector’) and the Strokes minus the Ramones (all the others). What he doesn’t establish is if he’s likely to widen his record collection before the next one drops. Still, those sold on a hook certainly won’t begrudge the price of admission.
Choice Cuts: ‘Lights On’, ‘DNA’
7/10

19/4
Caribou – Swim
Plastic-electronic hermit Dan Snaith might be more comfortable at a house party than filling dancefloors, but here he proves he’s just one killer pop loop away from a Billboard breakthrough. Whilst he searches for the right note, the rest of us can enjoy the fact Snaith’s abundance of grey matter hasn’t yet obscured the life (and love) in the wires.
Choice Cuts: ‘Kaili’, ‘Odessa’
7.5/10
Ash – A-Z Volume 1
MOR of the same from the eternally youthful Downpatrick tykes... who are actually old enough to know better these days. Still, as one might expect from what is essentially a singles compilation (comprising the first half of their admirable but inconsequential a-z singles experiment), most of the tracks herein pull you in hook, line and sinker, more than making up for the occasional stinker. Bravo.
Choice Cuts: ‘Joy Kicks Darkness’, ‘Command’, ‘Song of Your Desire’
7.5/10
Kate Nash – My Best Friend is You
Lily Allen sings Billy Bragg – this time with more guitars, and less show-tunes. Lacks ‘Foundations’ but the first and second floors have had significant renovation. That said, entertain the full spoken word rant of ‘Mansion House’ at your own peril, and cringe at the gratuitous swearing and “cocaine” plugs.
Choice Cuts: ‘Do Wah Do’, ‘Paris’
6/10

26/4
The Futureheads The Chaos
I’ve always had a sneaky suspicion that The Futureheads were a power-pop band – the chunky palm-mutes, the quad-tracked harmonies – hiding under a post-punk veneer, and their fourth long player proves it. Here, they tone down the sparser guitar exchanges and 90 degree angles and instead puff their chests out as they strut through their best choruses (‘Heartbeat Song’, ‘I Can Do That’) since ‘Skip to the End’. As usual, they’re sincere enough to carry it off, even if the tricks are cheap.

Choice Cuts
: ‘I Can Do That’, ‘The Chaos’, ‘Dart At The Map’

8/10
Harlem – Hippies
Sticks closely to the garage-rock mantra – “it plays therefore it is” – then adds chorus after chorus, and lyrics about ghosts and people on fire.
Choice Cuts: ‘Number One’, ‘Tila and I’, ‘Poolside’
7/10
Gogol Bordello – Trans-Continental
With some 7 nationalities amongst their 9 full time members, Eugene Hutz’ gypsy-punk jivesters are unlikely to be booked to play a BNP function in the near future – nor, on this evidence, are they likely to disuade Nick Griffin that gypsies should be neither seen or heard. Whilst slow-burning twisted folkies like ‘When Universes Collide’ are pretty enough, the band (and Hutz’ vocal) works best when the eclectic musicianship is twinned with the jolting stop/starts and “hoi hoi hois”, a match-up only infrequently realised here. Time to move to pastures new?
Choice Cuts: ‘Immigraniada’, ‘Sun Is On My Side’
5/10
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Tuesday, 23 March 2010

Hot 5 at 5 - Spotify Playlist

Spotify Playlist featuring 5 highly recommended tracks that have been tickling THE POPSCENER's eardrums today.

Hot 5 at 5 (24/3)

Laura Marling - Maid by Maid
Well-made

Amorphous Androgynous - High and Dry
Lofty

Atlas Sound - Walkabout
Skips along

Gregory Isaacs - Night Nurse
The only remedy

Kings of Leon - Knocked Up
Signs of life

Hot 5 at 5 (24/3)

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