Tuesday 27 December 2011

My Favourite Albums of 2011 (Part 2)

OK, back to it. Those that missed the first half can check it out here. Now onto my top 5...


#5: "The Bomb Shelter Sessions" by Vintage Trouble



What a find these guys were! I first came across them on "Later... Live" when Hugh Laurie was performing (he even introduced them). They did a blistering rendition of "Blues Hand Me Down" which had me buzzing about them right away - such bombast, such energy. I kept my eyes and ears open eager to hear more.

I didn't have to wait long. While their album wasn't officially released in the UK 'til July, I found their album on Spotify literally the week after they were on Jools' show, and I was chuffed to hear the rest of the album was just as brilliant: straight up, good old fashioned Rhythm and Blues, and a breath of fresh air. Other highlights for me were "Nancy Lee" and "Total Strangers".

In a good year for soul music (Aloe Blacc and Raphael Saadiq made some great albums, and Michael Kiwanuka emerged as a promising talent for next year) these guys were the cream of the crop.




#4:"Anna Calvi"by Anna Calvi


Another of my favourite artists to emerge this year, this woman is pretty much the complete package. Her image is mesmerising: dressing virtually exclusively in red and black with vibrant red lipstick and guitar in hand, she turned a few heads on the red carpet at the Mercury's to say the least. I listened to her talk through her album track by track on 6Music, and her songwriting philosophy really struck a chord with me.

She spoke of her admiration for Bowie and in particular "Sound and Vision" where he doesn't include a vocal for a long period of time, making the audience anticipating his voice - a trick she'd use on the album by opening with the instrumental "Rider To The Sea".

Calvi also draws inspiration from classical music, and crafted the songs on the album so that the music matched the feelings and scenarios she describes in her lyrics: the build of adrenaline in "Desire", the escapism of "Suzanne & I", the haunting atmosphere of "Blackout".
This album was definitely a slow burner, but boy did it burn brightly once I "got it". I wish more people could make albums that create a sense of atmosphere like this one.






To steal Guy Garvey's go-to phrase he always uses on his radio show, "I love this next record! I love it I love it I love it!" The band had the unenviable task of writing a follow up to "The Seldom Seen Kid", their breakthrough success that made them a household name. But instead of over-reacting with some "look at what we can do" 180 turn that some bands can be guilty of (*cough* R.E.M. *cough*) the band stuck to their principles and to writing what they know.
Many in the band had moved back to the areas where they grew up, which had a major influence on this album. Title track of sorts "Lippy Kids" is the perfect example ("Nobody knew me at home anymore"), an ode to wasted youth and a call to arms for ne'er-do-well'ers to better themselves ("Do they know those days are golden? Build a rocket boys!").

The theme of self-reflection and returning to your roots runs throughout the album: "Neat Little Rows" was inspired by, of all things, Guy's education in a Catholic school ("don't point fingers, fingers are for pointing at the sky"), "Jesus Is A Rochdale Girl" is about living on his own for the first time when he decided to become a musician ("Nothing to be proud of, and nothing to regret. All of that to make as yet"), and "Open Arms" is all about home coming.
Strangely this seems counter-balanced by a theme of coping with grief: opener "The Birds", about a man reminiscing over an old flame, "The Night Will Always Win" (surprisingly my Mum's favourite track) and confessional "The River" being prime examples.
The most overriding feeling you get from the album though is a sense of gratitude, which is most blatant on final track "Dear Friends". An open thank you letter from the band, Garvey's earnest lyrics really shine here. Two lines really strike a chord with me on this song: "the truth never frays a good yarn" and "you are the stars I navigate home by", the latter in particular is such a touching way of looking at those that mean the most to you, I took it to mean "the thought of you brings me home".
This album is a triumph.


#2: "Wasting Light" by Foo Fighters


This album is an absolute BEAST (sorry Ksi). I often wondered if the Foos had another pure rock 'n' roll classic left in them after all their attempts at a more expansive sound on their previous two albums. Imagine my relief to hear the opener "Bridge Burning" for the first time: meaty, progressive riffs building up to Dave Grohl's rallying cry of "THESE ARE MY FAMOUS LAST WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOORDS!!!". I knew instantly this was the record the band have always had in them.
The driving force behind this album is great musicianship, top notch production and riffs, riffs, riffs, great big huge riffs. "White Limo"'s riff is so great I don't even care that Grohl's voice is unintelligible on the song.
Of course there are also trademark huge Foo Fighters chorus' littered everywhere: take the unorthodox "Rope", "Back & Forth", and "These Days". The latter I find very relatable, having been told "ah you'll be fine" on numerous occasion when things have gone wrong.
My favourite track is album closer "Walk", it has all the hallmarks of a classic Foos song. In keeping with the rest of the album the guitar riffs are great. The build is fantastic, and the chorus anthemic.
In my view, this album is the crown jewel of the Foos already incredible career, their best, most consistent album and an instant classic.



#1: "Bon Iver" by Bon Iver


So here it is, my favourite album this year. I'm sure it's topped a lot of critics end of year lists too, so I'm probably going to look like a stereotypical indie kid by saying it's my favourite album, but the fact is it was hard to find anything else in 2011 that topped this.
I'm sure many of you have heard the story behind Justin Vernon's first record "For Emma, Forever Ago": I mean the guy has a huge break-up and retreats to the woods, becoming a recluse and records probably the best break-up record ever. I wish everyone was that productive when they're heartbroken. 
This is the follow up. It's notable that most of the song titles are names of places, indicating that Vernon is escaping the reclusion that drove his previous record.
"Bon Iver" also has a very contrasting sound to it's predecessor. "For Emma..." was a largely acoustic affair, the driving force of which was Vernon's unique voice. Whereas with this record, there's vastly more instrumentation, which takes up the heart of the record. Opener "Perth" is a perfect example: from the guitars in the opening to the horns and blistering drums that come alive as the song reaches it's climax. 
"Towers" is another good illustration of how escaping the cabin has helped rather than hindered the album. The electric guitar is most prominent in this song and gives it a lovely sound: it would have been acoustic on "For Emma...". This elevates an already catchy song (thanks to the "woah-oh-oh-oah"'s of the vocal) to a memorable one.
"Perth" then seamlessly morphs into "Minnesota, WI", which reveals the other part of this albums arsenal: synth. While it can be a touch overdone ("Beth/Rest" at times sounds like that part of 1984 nobody should really speak about ever again), for the most part it really adds to the feel of the record, and results in some unique sounds, like the banjo/korg mix in the aforementioned "Minnesota". "Calgary", for instance, is one song where the synths really are a central part to the build of the song, and helps it become a high point of the album.
The biggest highlight though is "Holocene". I defy you to fine a more tender, beautifully crafted song from this year, because I certainly can't: wonderfully simple guitar play and subtle drums, Vernon's voice at it's borderline unintelligible best and a chorus that helps highlight his oft-forgotten way with words ("and at once I was not magnificent... I could see for mile, miles, miles").
Hopefully this record gets talked about for years to come just like his debut, because it is magnificent.


And with that, I bid you adieu, and wish you all the best for 2012.

My Favourite Albums of 2011 (Part 1)

So with the year nearly over I figured it'd be an opportunity to talk about the albums I've enjoyed most this year. I'm listing my 10 favourite (note: favourite, I don't think these are necessarily the best 10 albums of the year, just the ones I've enjoyed the most) albums over two posts.

First though, some honourable mentions - either albums I liked but didn't listen to enough to get a judge of how much I liked them, or albums I know are great but didn't enjoy as much as the others:
"Let England Shake" by PJ Harvey (1st half great protest record, 2nd half stereotypical chin-stroking PJ record)
"Smother" by Wild Beasts (who'd have thought such exotic music could come from Kendal?)
"Ghosts on the Canvas" by Glen Campbell (I'm a sucker for a great voice in their twilight years).
"Good Things"  by Aloe Blacc (good year for soul music, this features probably the year's best single in "I Need A Dollar")

OK, now my 10 favourites




 
In stark contrast to their previous album (a very sombre break-up record), "Last Night On Earth" is packed full of optimistic, nostalgic sing-a-longs. Lead single "L.I.F.E.G.O.E.S.O.N." proved to be a big hit, and typified the style of the album. There's echoes of "Born To Run" era Springsteen here, and certainly I hear a lot of Bruce's voice in the narrative and vocal style that Charlie Fink uses on this album.That's a big reason why I enjoyed this album, but the sheer optimism of songs like "Tonight's The Kind Of Night" was also what grabbed me the most.







Arctic Monkeys really fell out of favour with me a few years ago when they released "Humbug". That album was just so dull, I felt they'd lost what made them unique recording in the U.S. with Josh Homme of all people, to try and become Queens of the Stone Age knock-offs. What were they thinking?

I wasn't very interested in this album initially because of it, and to be honest when I first heard lead single "Don't Sit Down 'Cause I've Moved Your Chair" (not knowing it was the monkeys at first) I thought "Christ, Metallica have gone soft these days haven't they?". But the album started to get good press, so when their label Domino uploaded the album to their Soundcloud page I gave it a listen and was very impressed. To my surprise I found an album full of great, lively, jangly guitar riffs and some nice basslines that were lively, colourful and (more importantly) incredibly catchy. "The Hellcat Spangled Shalalala" and "She's Thunderstorms" are great examples of which.

Alex Turner's lyrics are also great, if you can accept the band no-longer write songs about some wanker who lives down 't road that talks bollocks in 't pub etc. Having said that some lines are still very idiosyncratically British ("You're rarer than a can of Dandelion & Burdoch"). I mean it's hardly the highs of "Whatever People Say I Am...", but there's plenty of unique witticisms here that raised a smile, some of my favourites being "That's not a skirt girl, that's a saw-off shotgun" ("Suck It And See") and "She looks as if she's blowing a kiss at me, and suddenly the sky is a scissor" ("That's Where You're Wrong").
Not the genre, generation defining classic of their debut, but a return to form nonetheless.




#8: "Collapse Into Now" by R.E.M.


I should have seen it coming that this would be their last record: their reluctance to tour it, the sleeve with Michael Stipe waving goodbye, hell the entirety of "All The Best". The hints were there in plain sight.
Still, this was a nice goodbye. It saw the band attempt to mix the sharp, concise nature of previous effort "Accelerate" with the resonance and tenderness of "Automatic For The People".
Most of the highlights are when the band attempt the latter - "Me, Marlon Brando, Marlon Brando And I" is very sweet and minimalist, "Uberlin" has echoes of "Drive" with it's acoustic guitar hooks and Stipe's vocal, while "It Happened Today" features perhaps the highlight of the whole album with it's closing, lyricless singalong that's as joyous as anything the band have ever done. That's not to say the band fail when attempting the former though, "Alligator_Aviator_Autopilot_Antimatter" is catchy and addictive with a great riff, while the Byrds-esque "That Someone Is You" is delightful.
I mentioned in earlier posts how I felt the band were justified to walk away on their own terms, and I still feel the same. This album was a good point to call it quits, and a very good high note to finish things on.




This album came from nowhere for me really. I'd never really payed much attention to Metronomy before and just saw them as the band that did sub-standard remixes of indie hits. But the combination of their Mercury nomination and a fair bit of airplay on 6Music perked my ears up and brought me to give this a listen. What a great listen it is too!

This album feels wonderfully retro, yet somehow still very progressive and fresh - you know you're onto something special when you get that feeling. There's no better example of this than "The Look" - it's opening synths sound like Daft Punk playing about on Blackpool promenade by the sea, with the closing minute and a half being a wonderful freak-out that either makes you feel like you're floating in space somewhere or listening to some 80's TV show's theme tune while on some form of hallucinogens.

The other highlight for me is "Everything Goes My Way" which on the other end of the scale is a nice, simple, catchy singalong. This was a very happy find for me.




Another great album from the first lady of the folk revival. Marling seemed to really find her voice on last years effort "I Speak Because I Can", and this album finds her continuing to grow and once again show maturity and deftness of song-writing beyond her years. I wish she'd lose that American-tinge to her voice at times, but that doesn't stop me enjoying great songs like "The Muse".
What's most enjoyable about this album, though, are the songs where Marling cuts loose a bit more. The more sprawling efforts like "Sophia", "The Beast" and "All My Rage" are songs I never would have imagined her capable of writing when she first came on the scene, all quaint, disciplined and defeatist. It's really a joy to hear her try things that one wouldn't have thought here style as such.




Well, that wraps up this half of the blog. I'll be back with my five favourites before the year is out.

Wednesday 21 December 2011

IT'S BOSS TIME!

Long time no blog. Good reason though, been kept very busy with research, reports and outreach work - the joys of being a masters student!
Still, it's nearly Christmas so I'll finally have a proper break from work.

So, apart from being hard at work with maths, what's been new with me? Well I've been snapping up tickets to see two of my favourite artists ever (or in my Dad's words "more American crap") next summer - Pearl Jam and Bruce Springsteen - much to my wallet's chagrin I'm sure.
I'll get to Pearl Jam later, mostly because I'm still miffed that standing tickets sold out in the presales. They've apparently put another date on, but that's no consolation seeing as I've already bought my seated ticket. To think this was the same band that actually made a stand against Ticketmaster's monopoly in the mid 90s.

Anyway, Bruce. So I'm a very late-comer to his music. I first got into him last November, when he released "The Promise", a huge collection of material recorded in the late 70s during the "Darkness on the Edge of Town" sessions that didn't make the cut. I was mesmerised by this album as soon as I heard it and couldn't fathom how he had the discipline to not use the material on the Darkness on the Edge of Town album. There was such a range of material on there. But then I saw the documentary on the making of the album and understood the vision he wanted for the album. Plus it reminds me of Christmas, because of the production on songs like "Someday (We'll Be Together)" and "The Little Things (My Baby Does)", and also because of an excellent little gig he did in a New Jersey carousel to promote the album that featured a great cover of "Blue Christmas".



Consequently this got me into "Darkness on the Edge of Town" which could possibly be considered one of the greatest albums of all time. Released in 1978, it was arguably his most career defining record, coming off the breakthrough success he had with "Born To Run", it not only proved that Bruce wasn't just a "flash in the pan", it also showed he had the song-writing steel to transcend mainstream success and write a genre defining record that would last the test of time.



Gone (for the most part) was the sprawling, free form style of "Born To Run" and in it's place was a disciplined, uncompromising power. While "Born To Run" was about escapism and the follies of youth ("We gotta get out while we're young"), "Darkness" was about standing your ground to face what life throws at you and giving everything you have in return ("Tonight I'll be on that hill, 'cause I can't stop. I'll be on that hill with everything I got."). Or as Springsteen himself put it "Tough music for folks in tough circumstances".

In Lehmann's terms then, it's an album about growing up and facing your responsibilities, and having come across it at a time when I felt like I had a lot of growing up to do, it's an album that's very dear to my heart.

This was a very unconventional rock album: while there are some great guitar riffs such as those on "Adam Raised a Cain" and "Candy's Room", the majority of the record is driven my Roy Bittan's piano, Danny Federici's organ and of course the saxophone of Clarence Clemons (see "Badlands", "The Promised Land" and "Prove It All Night").



The undoubted highlight though is "Racing in the Street". Bruce had already established himself as a songwriter with a unique knack for narrative with songs like "Mary Queen of Arkansas", "Incident on 57th Street" and "Thunder Road", but "Racing in the Street" is, for me, Springsteen's masterpiece.
There were many versions of this song floating around when Bruce was making "Darkness", and he faced a dilemma over which version to include (an excellent alternative version is on "The Promise"). That was until producer Jon Landau chimed in with "I like the one with the girl", to which guitarist (and Bruce's best friend) Stevie Van Zandt agreed "Yeah, I like the one with the girl too." So that was what he went with. It was a decision that paid off, and the best song he's ever written. The final verse in particular, is a complete triumph of narrative and emotion:

"I met her on the strip three years ago,
In a Camaro with this dude from L.A.
I blew that Camaro off my back and drove that little girl away.
But now there's wrinkles around my baby's eyes,
And she cries herself to sleep at night.
When I come home the house is dark,
She sighs "Baby, did you make it all right?"
She sits on the porch of her daddy's house,
But all her pretty dreams are torn.
She stares off alone into the night,
With the eyes of one who hates for just being born.
For all the shut down strangers and hot rod angels
Rumbling through this promised land.
Tonight my baby and me we're gonna ride to the sea,
And wash these sins off our hands

Tonight tonight the highway's bright
Out of our way mister you best keep.
'Cause summer's here and the time is right
For goin' racin' in the street
."






I've got all my limbs crossed he plays that song in Manchester, I know he doesn't play it too often.
I'll also be interested to see how the band cope without Clarence, who in another matter close to my heart sadly passed away earlier this year from a severe stroke. It's no coincidence that Bruce is leaning on the Big man's back on that iconic sleeve of "Born To Run": Clarence's sax was such an integral part of the E Street Band, and made Bruce's music stand out in the crowd.




I'm still incredibly excited though. Bruce's music's been such a huge part of my life this past year I just couldn't turn down the chance to see him live.

Anyway, I'm sure I'll ramble again soon!