Saturday 24 May 2008

I've moved!

If somehow you've ended up here, I am not continuing my blogging over at Wordpress. Its going to be updated a lot more regularlly than this ever was and the focus is more firmly on new music, so check it out...if you want.

http://misspeakmusic.wordpress.com/

Saturday 8 March 2008

Review: Hot Chip - Made in the Dark

The Good, The Bad and The Ugly


Repetition is at the heart of what Hot Chip do. So it’s not that surprising on an album that sees the London band attempting something a little more intelligent and personal that the less kinetic ballads that litter Made in the Dark fall someway short of the mark. The album opens, somewhat unwisely, with its three most direct and danceable tracks. Initial listens reward the listener with little beyond the first frantic ten minutes.

Subsequent listens reveal a couple more gems hidden amongst the clangers, Hold On and One Pure Thought are the albums ‘growers’, although once this is established it becomes painfully clear that all these songs share the same technique of repetition to get the listener engaged. The bands tentative efforts at slower, tender and more heartfelt songs are jarringly uncomfortable at times, Hot Chip’s attempts at displaying a variety of sounds and a emotional depth to their output doesn’t quite work here.

The weaker tracks such as In the Privacy of our Love and Whistle for Will are decidedly average in comparison to the all guns blazing, greatest hitsesque opening. Alexis Taylor himself would admit that his voice isn’t anything special, this is forgivable on the more upbeat tracks were his vocals in essence simply become another instrument thrown into the mix and looped repeating the same catchy pop hooks over and over and over.

However when his mild mannered voice is asked to carry the slower songs and infuse them with an emotion and sentiment to compensate for the lack of catchy hooks, his efforts are patchy at best. Some of the slower songs do succeed in lowering the tempo without spoiling the mood of the album, the title track and We’re Looking For A Love of Love both succeed in revealing the slower, more sensitive side to Hot Chip.

However, semi successful attempts at ballads is not the albums most glaring problem. There is an uglier side to Made in the Dark. The half baked ideas and seemingly unfinished songs. Wrestlers is the main culprit here, both musically and lyrically weak it is nearly completely without merit.

Bendable Posable also falters and seems like a B side rather than a justified album track choice, especially as it immediately follows up the thunderous opening of the album. Some of these tracks are seemingly just missing that extra hook which could make them come alive when heard live. Unfortunately these tracks as they are should have been snipped from the tracklist or thrown out as B sides if the band were that eager to share them with us, afterall, weighing in at just under a hour and 13 tracks it’s not as if this filler was needed to make up the numbers.


Made in the Dark is very much an album of two half’s. Or maybe three thirds. The good is definitely good, the bad extremely bad and the ugly downright grotesque.

7/10

Saturday 1 March 2008

Oh, Hi!

I have returned...

Been very busy with College work, or rather not doing College work, but let's not get into that.

Proper updates are incoming, I've got a couple of reviews on Hot Chip's Made in the Dark and Vampire Weekend's eponymous debut that should find their way onto this blog sooner or later.

For the time being I just thought I'd share a thought provoking article I found on Guardian Unlimited's blog page sort of 'area' that I found whilst looking for a review for The Kills latest album.

The couple of tracks I heard just now on Jools Holland sound quite sexy if I say so myself. I had a image of them being another bland 'rent-a-rockstar' type Indie bands that so many bands that have the prefix 'The' seem to be, but refreshingly they couldn't be further from that. A nice minimal guitar-vocals duo that's quite hard to describe in anyway so I'll just leave it to you to work out what I mean.

Anyway enough of going off on Gonzoesque tangents and back on message, I found this and found it quite interesting, especially in comparision to my (much) earlier 'Indie not all that Indie' post and a conversation I was having earlier today about the rise and inevitable fall of 'Indie' rock.

http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/music/2008/02/nme_awards_turning_rebellion_i.html


Turning up at the O2 arena in Greenwich last night was an exercise in quelling cynicism. In an effort to "extend the brand", legendary music magazine NME has moved its annual awards bash to the former Dome, hugely expanded it and appended a "big gig" for 17,000 paying fans to the end. The question was: could the distilled spirit of rock 'n' roll be found here, among the fake palm trees, myriad themed restaurants, ice skating rink, ancient egyptian treasures and punters queuing to see Rambo?

Thursday 20 December 2007

Bloc Party @ Alexandra Palace 15/12/07


It’s nice to be pleasantly surprised. Whether receiving something out of the blue or enjoying a outing that you had previously been dreading. ‘Always expect the worst, and you’ll always be pleasantly surprised’ One saying goes. After feeling just a little under whelmed by
The Arcade Fire failing to fully live up to their huge live reputation, in the same venue as tonight’s gig, I did not have great expectations for the supposedly ‘shambolic’ Bloc Party.

I arrived late, nearly too late. But that’s another story. As I shuffled in
The Rakes were just finishing off what appeared to be a dull, lifeless performance. I wormed my way towards the front, passing all the early comers who had been placated by the performance of one of the Indie genre’s many anonymously named bands.

They payed their thanks and shuffled off - anticipation for the main event grew, the crowd were in good spirits, and entertained themselves with the dance hits booming out of the PA system that you suspect were chosen by Kele and the band to improve their image as not only ‘another indie guitar band’ but something more. A strategy evident already in the frantic, D&B inspired drumming of Matt tong and the release of the bands latest single, the dance-pop number ‘
Flux’. A lone glowstick waved in the darkness as testament to this attempt.

The music faded, the lights went down and Bloc Party took to the stage. Kele is very much the focus of this four piece, despite it being the angular guitar riffs of Russell Lissack and the aforementioned drumming of Matt tong that the crowd reacts to the most, and not his sometimes sappy lyrics. He remains one of modern music’s more identifiable front men, his sharp dress sense, knobbly hair and nasal, yelpy voice standing his out from the rest of the floppy haired pretenders to Bloc Party’s ‘Art Punk’ crown.

There was little acknowledgement of the crowd as the band settled into position on stage and got down to business and opened their set with one of the better efforts off the disappointing Weekend in the city ‘
Song for Clay

The rest of the gig is a bit of blur. As the crowd erupted in response there was very little time to ponder or cringe over the sometimes sloppy lyrics, or space to worry about what they would play next. The crowd bellowed every lyric and bounced to every thunderous guitar riff and drum beat. In larger venues such as this, you’re enjoyment is often as much down to how well the energy of the music is conducted through to the crowd, rather than any deeper aural appreciation of the bands song craft. And it is here where Bloc Party, or perhaps their fan base succeed. Their brand of snappy and infectious dance-rock works perfectly with the younger audience in attendance.

After the initial flurry of up tempo hit’s the crowd was afforded a much needed rest bite by one of the bands more sedate and ballady tracks; ‘
Waiting for the 7.18’ which was appreciated, perhaps more down to the chance to regain your breath than anything else, despite the songs up tempo second half, with expansive tremolo guitars it lacks the immediacy and rhythm that gained the band their fame and the kind of song the audience is evidently here for, as they remain relatively subdued for the remainder of the track.

Using this breather, I soaked in my surroundings. I had surged a few feet towards the stage and was now facing the stage dead centre a few rows from the front, An Ideal position to enjoy the rest of the show. As 7:18 dragged on to an end the frenzied torrent of flying arms, legs and fingers continued as the instantly recognisable riff of
Banquet fired up. As hit followed hit the crowd became more possessed, recent additions The Prayer and Uniform proving their worth and holding up well in comparison to ’older’ material in getting the desired response from the audience.

I had not experienced such a level of crazy europhoria for most of the year. Even the might of heavier rockers such as
Muse, The White Stripes and QOTSA rarely get the crowd going as hysterically as the relatively meek Bloc Party were here. Kele joked that he had “Nearly broken into a sweat” as he surveyed the sweaty sea of bodies amassed before him. Waves of people continually fell to the floor in comedy domino fashion and only then did the sensible British reserve return to allow the fallen comrades to return to their feet and continue jumping as before, undeterred.

Worries over the band’s tightness faded away as they continued to storm through a seemingly never ending set, which thankfully leaned towards the band’s more prompt numbers. Kele by now seemed relaxed and chatted jovially with the crowd between number’s making the venue seem more intimate than the sometimes cold Alexandra Palace really is.

Despite clearly being the centrepiece of the band, he is by no means a magnetic front man , his voice whilst instantly recognisable in it’s yelpy quality is not breathtakingly spectacular. Kele succeeds as a the centre of attention in his relative normalness. There is no glass shattering screams, peculiar uniform or hip shaking moves. He stands, plugging away at his guitar providing the anthemic vocals for the crowd to join in with.

The carefree feeling of a band enjoying themselves at the end of a busy year touring Is evident in their donning of tragically unfashionable Santa Claus hats towards the end of the set. This attitude is perfectly mirrored in the audience, who are desperate to have a good time. Perhaps there was a time where they were rubbish as a live band, but tonight they most definitely were not.

As the night comes to a close they only stumble once more in their song choice. Choosing the painfully dreary
Sunday, which becomes even more of a wasted song when it becomes apparently they won’t play the turbo-charged Luno. In an audience as up for it as this one it seemed the obvious choice in retrospect. However complaints such as this are small and only reveal themselves when I dig deep for one to make.

I could go on about the venue, its mind boggling tokens system, excessive queues for coats and it’s relative isolation from any form of public transport but this is a music review and I’m sure’s there’s plenty of bad words out there if you want to find them.

The night arguably peaks with
Helicopter which prompts several crowd surfers as the end draws close. The reflective Pioneers acts as the perfect come down for earlier highs, the spent crowd muster one last applause but do not rally too hard for another encore, they are satisfied. As the lights return and blind the audience briefly there is definitely no nagging feeling of disappointment lying under the contentment that often plagues gig’s you’ve hyped up. Instead an exhausted satisfaction is etched on the sweaty and dazzled faces of the audience as they staggered out of Alexandra Palace into the chilly Winter night.

A fitting end to a quality year of live music. Here’s to a better 2008!


Setlist for Bloc Party @ Alexandra Palace - December 15th 2007
Song For Clay
Positive Tension
Hunting For Witches
Waiting For The 7.18

Banquet

This Modern Love

The Prayer
Two More Years
Little Thoughts
Uniform
So Here We Are
Like Eating Glass
Flux Sunday
She’s Hearing Voices
Helicopter
The Pioneers

Friday 19 October 2007

Hip Hop is dying.....An update

The future of UK Hip'Hop? (Sounds familiar)


Well, I guess I was wrong.

Kanye West defeated 50 cent in their chart battle of epic proportions and single handedly saved Hip Hop. Or at least that’s how I remember it, my memory is foggy.

Of course, Curtis Jackson already has another album on the way. ‘Before I Self Destruct’ due March 2008, which coincidently has a collaboration with Kanye West originally intended to go on Curtis, according to a interview on American TV. You would be forgiven to think that this whole thing just might have been manufactured to increase record sales and that despite their fierce media battle, Kanye and Curtis get on perfectly fine.

Of course that’s just a scandalous accusation and completely untrue, its merely coincidental that both albums became the first two albums to sell over 600,000 units in the US each in the same week since 1991’s Guns’n’Roses Use your Illusion I and II.

In my previous post I stressed the importance for Hip Hop to ‘innovate itself once again’ to reclaim its fair share of the mainstream. As modest as I am, I realise the influence my prophetic words must have on the music industry but I was shocked over the speed in which artists would heed them. Lately I’ve been monitoring Lethal Bizzle, who seems to have followed my master plan word for word.

A member of the ‘Grime’ wave here in the UK which has been, apart from himself, Kano and Dizzie Rascal, largely unsuccessful due in large to its resemblance in subject matter to US Gangsta rap which, as tends to be the case in most aspects of life, is something that the Americans just do better and bigger. The lacklustre and frankly embarrassing MOBO awards this year only reinforces the current lameness of the UK Hip’ Hop scene, regardless of whatever you call it.

However Bizzle is networking, reaching out to the incumbent indie scene, going on NME ’Rock and Roll’ tours and getting press inches as a result for the Grime scene some accuse him of abandoning. Probably the same traditionalists deriding Kanye West for using Daft Punk samples in his songs and collaborating with Chris Martin.

The same music elitists who would rather their favourite sub genre stay overlooked. It’s necessary to mix a few pop sensibilities into your music if you want to breakthrough to the mainstream, which is something that is true whether you are a new Grime artist or a Death Metal band, before you reel away from your screens and imagine your favourite band attempting a Britney Spears cover, im thinking more Nirvana’s Nevermind than Ms Spears Baby one more time. Radio 1 doesn’t want to hear it if it aint catchy.

It’s a fact which he’s more than aware of himself, as he talked to the Guardian’s Lindesay Irvine.

"It's true that the grime scene can come across as too intimidating. I'm trying to move away from that: it's OK for five minutes but it doesn't take you very far." That variety of bruising two-step battling, he adds, "is like the early days, the nicking-cars stage of the game. Then you realise that there's more than that. Me, and Dizzee Rascal too, realised we want to get beyond that."

Maybe using the analogy of ‘nicking-cars’ for describing Grime is an iffy one, but he is more than aware that he acts as a ambassador for the Grime scene, maybe UK Hip’ Hop as a whole. And as Kanye West has dethroned 50 cent as the ‘king’ of International Hip Hop by attracting a whole new audience to the genre by sampling Daft Punk. It’s just as necessary that Dizzie Rascal collaborates with the Arctic Monkeys and Lethal Bizzle tours with The Gallows.

Saturday 8 September 2007

Hip Hop is dying

The future of Hip' Hop?


All eyes, for the moment at least, are on Hip’ Hop. Next week will see the release of the Third albums of arguably the genre’s two biggest stars, Kanye West’s Graduation and 50 Cent’s Curtis

Its an important date for the music industry too as this blog from a Chicago Tribune Blog points out.. http://leisureblogs.chicagotribune.com/turn_it_up/2007/09/showdown-betwee.html


Two of the biggest-selling artists of the last four years go head-to-head Tuesday in the record stores with new albums: Kanye West’s “Graduation” (Good/Roc-A-Fella) and 50 Cent’s “Curtis” (Aftermath/Interscope).
It’s a big day not just for West and 50, but for the ailing music industry. With sales down 30 percent this year, the major labels who have dominated music for the last half-century are in need of a blockbuster album (seven or eight of them, actually) as the holiday buying season looms into view. Hip-hop in particular is tanking. In the ‘90s the genre led the surge in CD sales. Now it’s in the doldrums, with only three of the top-20 best-selling titles of 2007.

Hip’ Hop may not quite be ‘dead’ as the album title of Nas’s latest effort suggests, but its definitely in decline.

Why is this the case?

Well, my generation at least and seemingly the market as a whole has been turning enmass away from Hip Hop towards the skyrocketing genre’s of rock, whether that be emo, indie or even the classic variety.

Quite a range of tastes and preferences, which mainstream Hip Hop, just doesn’t have. Its dominated still by gangster rap and chauvinistic men boasting about their strength, magnetism and how many times they’ve been shot. Its not exactly appealing to the music fan who wants a bit more substance from their music.

Cue a great exodus of teenagers, including me, who were of the age were you truly become critical of the music you listen to, rather than merely accepting it. As a result a whole generation of 14 and 15 year olds switched allegiances away from the Hip’ Hop and embraced Rock which had arguably suffered its own crisis in the late 90’s where in the temporary gulf in the absence of Britpop, it was perhaps justifiably seen as the genre for miserable Goths, if you told someone you listened to rock. Jokes about Korn and Slipknot would invariably follow.

Rock has since smashed into the mainstream and managed to diversify itself, the NME lead revolution of fresh garage rock bands such as the Strokes and The White Stripes replaced the since Dormant Blur and Oasis and Pop Punk bands such as Blink 182 and Sum 41 offered a more cheerful alternative to Korn and Slipknot, unfortunately these two strands of Rock would later create two of the most despicable social scenes ever created in history, ‘Indie’ and ‘Emo’ but that is the price you have to pay for mainstream success.

Hip Hop will need to innovate itself once again and provide, like Rock has , greater variety, more originality and greater creativity to pull itself out of its rut, mainstream hip hop is and has been for quite some time, dominated by this ultra masculine and often homophobic figures which as gun crime spirals in the UK appears less and less attractive.

Hip Hop’s great hope lies In artists like the outspoken Kanye West, the self proclaimed nerd, who is more than happy to throw in political and social commentaries into his lyrics rather than talking about shooting cops and has denounced homophobia and chauvinism in Hip Hop in the past.

Or the outstanding Outkast, Imparticular the unpredictable Andre 3000, who is more than happy like, Kanye West to borrow from other genre’s, throwing in a guitar lick here and there and lending drums that sound more like drum and bass than a traditional hip hop loop. Rock music has always been ’borrowing’ from traditionally black genre’s, Rock juggernauts Led Zeppelin and Rolling Stones have made their fame and fortune on blues rock originated from the deep south of America.

It’s time for Hip’ Hop to lend back some ideas to level the playing field and claw back some fans. Next weeks chart battle is not as simple as a fight between two stars of the genre, as Blur vs. Oasis was in the 90’s, its far more important than that. It is a battle between the new wave of Hip’ Hop and the old, the future and the past. Kanye may not win the popular vote, but it is his brand of Hip Hop that offers the genre’s greatest potential growth for the genre.

Wednesday 5 September 2007

Klaxons in Mercury win shocker!!!

'Nu-Rave pioneers'


Arguably, the best album on this years Mercury music prize was never going to win. The artists in question won it last year. Having the honour of being the awards ceremony that praises itself on rewarding artistic merit over commercial success, the odds for the world touring, platinum selling Arctic Monkeys far removed from the edgy newcomers of last year, being the first act to win the award twice in a row were low.

The bookmakers odds reflected it, with relative unknown Bat for Lashes AKA Natasha Khan and the troubled Amy Winehouse leading the pack both with similarly fine albums. Surely they would take home the prestigious prize.

Of course not, ever controversial often for the sake of it, they chose the plucky, arguably less talented, outsiders as they done many times before (M people anyone?) It was the Klaxons, who had not been on anyone’s lips as a possible winner who pulled through, with their annoying brand of ’New Rave’, sorry ’Nu Rave’ (ugh) that stole the prize. Acting like drunken schoolboy tossers on stage, declaring how brilliant they were and how hard they had worked to get here, displaying the kind of shoddy mic work that has had them branded as an awful live act.

To add insult to injury the band went on to blow their trumpet perhaps a little too hard, proclaiming the win as a victory for ‘forward thinking music’ and casually dismissing Winehouse’s Back to Black as ’A retro record’ then modestly adding “We have made the most forward thinking record since I don’t know how long” More than happily adopting the underserved crown of musical innovators with little modesty. Quite a contradiction to the humility and maturity shown by last years winners the far more talented Arctic Monkeys “Someone call Richard Hawley he’s just been robbed!” Adopting an arrogance beyond their talents only made the Klaxons made themselves look even bigger wankers.

But hey, it’s the Mercury’s I’ll be sitting in my living room this time next year eagerly watching if Radiohead’s 7th LP can trump Pink Floyd’s critically acclaimed comeback album…maybe

We wouldn’t have it any other way would we? At least it wasn’t The View.