Showing posts with label album reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label album reviews. Show all posts

Tuesday, 2 February 2010

Short Cuts! New Releases 1/2/2010

*** Digestible run-downs of this week’s new releases, including track recommendations from THE POPSCENER***
From the sublime to the ridiculous this week...

Soft Pack - The Soft Pack
Cheering me up from the get-go isn’t a bad route to currying favour, so the fact that The Soft Pack bursts into life with a throwaway guitar chord and a relentless hi-hat hardly hinders its prospects for a positive review. Whilst nothing else quite touches opener ‘C’mon’ for pitch-perfect honing of Replacement-esque recklessness, plenty (‘Answer To Yourself’, ‘Move Along’) come close, as a breakneck half hour of breathless bliss surfs its way to crest of 2010’s garage-rock wave. Released in June and it would’ve been the sound of the Summer – a joyfully lively, well-crafted and coherent effort.
Choice Cuts: ‘C’mon’, ‘Answer To Yourself’, ‘Move Along’, ‘More or Less’
8.5/10

Los Campesinos - Romance Is Boring
The Cardiff band have always been a favourite with the fanzines, but their third coming seems to have provoked a muted response this time round; a raised eyebrow replacing wide-eyed enthusiasm. If I were a betting man, I’d suggest this was because they’re still trading in the same currency that won their debut a coterie of admires – Romance is Boring duly offers up the usual painful mix of shy, rambling emo platitudes and a propensity for being extroverted about their social and emotional impotence, backed with familiarly punky indie-pop. Again, the hits typically revolve around  the more breathless beats (‘There Are Listed Buildings’), while the misses (‘Straight in at 101’) afford singer Gareth the kind of excruciating airspace that his grating vocals certainly don’t deserve. Par for the course, then.
Choice Cuts: ‘There Are Listed Buildings’, ‘Romance Is Boring’
5.5/10
Hot Rats – Turn Ons
Taking some time out from their day jobs in Supergrass, Turn Ons sees Gaz Coombes and Danny Goffney tackling a series of new wave, post-punk and rock classics likely to appear on any self-respecting indie band’s influences list. The predictability of the track listing is largely mirrored by the finished article – that is, it sounds like Supergrass and the songs largely speak for themselves. Even so, super-charged versions of Roxy Music’s ‘Love Is A Drug’ and Gang of Four’s ‘Damaged Goods’ sound great, as does the hammed up glam version of the Kinks’ ‘Big Sky’. Meanwhile, the whispy, atmospheric take on ‘Up the Junction’ is crap, whilst the majority are as agreeably irrelevant as the concept itself.
Choice Cuts: ‘Love Is A Drug, Big Sky
6/10
Ocean Colour Scene - Saturday
Having owned the obligatory copy and cheerfully appreciated the four good songs of ‘Moseley Shoals’, I was under the impression that these Britpop behemoths had long since met their demise, but apparently this is their 7th record since their 1996 breakthrough. Apparently the sound hasn’t changed much, meaning there’s more sub-Who melodies, sub-Weller vocals, and the odd Beatles off-cut (‘What’s Mine is Yours’) thrown in. In actuality, some of it isn’t half bad – the bar room stomp of ‘Mrs Maylie’ in particular is worth a listen – but there’s no ‘Day We Caught the Train’ to ease the sense that it’s all painfully inconsequential. ‘100 Floors of Perception’ maybe, but evidently not a single one that deals in brutal honesty.
Choice Cuts: ‘What's Mine Is Yours’, ‘Mrs Maylie’
5.5/10
Midlake - The Courage Of Others
After four full spins – including one where I sat, listened, researched the lyrics and read about the band’s background – I still can’t formulate any opinion on The Courage of Others beyond that in which my bile runneth over. Perhaps I’m cold and dead inside; perhaps this is unrepentantly boring, nondescript shit that’s too tedious even to classify as indulgent, despite wearing an air of misplaced self-importance. This one doesn’t even qualify as the Fleetwood Cack of their last effort – worse, this time it’s the Eagles if Don Henley had sung in a yawning monotone and never written a pop song. By the time the mildly energised folky psychedelia  of ‘The Horn’ arrives, you won’t be sure if it’s genuinely listenable or someone has applied some polish to the turd. Just awful.
Choice Cuts: ‘The Horn’
2/10
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Monday, 11 January 2010

Short Cuts! New Releases 11/01/10

*** Brief run-down of this week’s new releases, including track recommendations from THE POPSCENER***

Vampire Weekend – Contra

It’s hardly gone unnoticed that these self proclaimed “Upper West Side Sowetos” are Paul Simon fans – that original vinyl copy of Graceland must now have worn to the flat – but frankly I’m bored of hearing it, and quite why the critics continue to treat the slightest hint of cod-reggae with a pious fanfare befitting of the second coming is beyond me. Nonetheless, irritating dance voice on ‘California English’ aside, this IS simply Vampire Weekend mark II, albeit slightly more subdued. Unsurprisingly, the afrobeat rhythms (‘Run’, amongst others) and white-boy calypso (‘White Sky’) fall flatter second time round. Flatter doesn’t necessarily mean failure, and there’s still enough sublime melody (‘Horchata’, ‘Giving Up the Gun’) here to keep me interested, but Vampires be warned: the critical bonhomie won’t last a third outing of this ilk. 

Choice Cuts: ‘Horchata’, ‘White Sky’, ‘Giving Up the Gun’

6.5/10

Adam Green – Minor Love

The former Mouldy Peach returns with another collection of weirdy Americana-tinged indie which remains more Beck than the Eels (less melody, more scratchiness), but is less arch and more bored than his flaxen-haired contemporary. And so, the blocked-nose delivery provides a certain sardonic romance to two-minute vignettes such as ‘You Blacken My Stay’. Meanwhile, Minor Love is still pleasingly committed anti-folk in terms of lyrical miserablism  (“she punched me in the face like a goblin” is a personal favourite), and tracks such as the spitting lo-fi junk of ‘Oh Shucks’ also show a willingness to change the sonic scenery – and avoid falling asleep at the musical wheel.

Choice Cuts: ‘Goblin’, ‘Buddy Bradley’, ‘You Blacken My Stay’

7.5/10

OK Go - Of the Blue Colour of the Sky

Clearly realising they can’t dine out on “you-tube sensation” (shudder) ‘Here It Goes Again’ forever, and perhaps keen to show they’re not just treadmill-worryers in Weezer-wear, Ok Go finally return with their first record since 2005. After the first half hour you’ll wish they had stayed away, but just when I thought this was going to be a fuzz-bassed, poorly worded, sub-Prince floater, the band almost redeem themselves with a run of good songs late in the day. The off-kilter, cross-eyed pop of ‘Before the Earth Was Round’ is so well crafted I’ll forgive the irksome Kraftwerk vocals, dainty acoustic ballad ‘Last Leaf’ is sweetly realised, and the meditative swoon of ‘While You Were Asleep’ gains them half a point, given the week, for sounding like Vampire Weekend with Africa subtracted. Naturally, closer ‘In the Glass’ is crap, but you can’t have it all. Keep an eye out for a snappy video or two.  

Choice Cuts: ‘Before the Earth Was Round’, ‘While You Were Asleep’

5.5/10

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