Sunday, 24 December 2023

Songs of the year, number 1: hemlocke springs ‘enknee1 (Official Lyric Video)’


If Florence + The Machine's 'Mermaids' reflects the voice of experience, Hemlocke Springs' 'enknee1' is very much the voice of innocence. Like 'Mermaids', it's a song that it's possible to take multiple feelings and meanings away from, and both are songs that get better with each listen.

The going... going... GONE! EP is my record of the year and 'enknee1' really is the sweet, dreamy heart of that EP. It's the combination of ease, charm and heartfelt emotion that makes it such a beautiful song. 

As I wrote in October when I was reviewing the EP, it would be easy to write the song off as a slice of charming childlike whimsy, but the initially disarming chorus increasingly drives the song, giving it a power beyond its initial beginnings. There's a real sense of the narrater feeling bewildered with the world, of not having got it figured out yet, and of wanting to look back to how she felt as a child. "Is there anyone? Anyone out there to love me? Anyone out there to care for?" she asks plaintively so that in the end it becomes a kind of hymn to the lonely, an anthem for the lost. 

Saturday, 23 December 2023

Songs of the year, number 2: Florence + The Machine - Mermaids (Official Lyric Video)


'Mermaids' was originally intended to be finished and recorded as part of the sessions for 2022's Dance Fever album. When Florence Welch broke her foot (again...) during the first of two London O2 Arena gigs back in November 2022, she was forced to postpone the rest of the UK tour until February, during which time she managed to not only finish and record 'Mermaids' with Glass Animals' Dave Bayley, but also perform 'My Love' on Strictly Come Dancing in December, albeit sitting down and wearing a floor length dress to presumably hide her poor foot. 

From such serendipity are legends made. When 'Mermaids' was released in early 2023 it was teasingly trailed via a series of Instagram videos, including one of Welch striding about a churchyard, singing "England is only ever grey or green, the girls glitter, striding glorious and coatless in the rain" and another featuring her in the bath with a mermaid tail and fangs, singing angelically "I thought that I was hungry for love. Maybe I was just hungry for blood."

The song, when it arrived, felt like a five minute synth opera made up of distinct acts and moods, taking us from Welch's eerily high opening vocals to her reminiscences of her teenage and twenties drinking days in London (she has said that lockdown was a particularly difficult time to stay sober) to feral mermaids "Climbing the slats of Brighton pier" and turning English maidens into bloodthirsty hedonistic sirens. It ends with carnage on the dance floor. It was at once typically Florence + The Machine, but also strangely outside of anything Welch and the band have ever done before. It's a song that needs revisiting and, even then, we'll probably never entirely figure it out. Which is probably as it should be. 


Friday, 22 December 2023

Songs of the year, number 3: Grace Savage | Lively Eyes | Official Music Video


Grace Savage's 'Lively Eyes' came about as a result of a request via Savage's Patreon account. It's a song that tells a true story of first love, lifelong friendship and loss, as explained in this review from Joyzine back in May. It's an incredibly touching and poignant slice of electro pop minimalism, with a soaring chorus that is very affecting. As a song it is timeless and should endure. 

Thursday, 21 December 2023

Songs of the year, number 4: The Last Dinner Party - Nothing Matters


The debut single from 2023's finest up and coming band, The Last Dinner Party, is a deliciously hedonistic slice of nihilistic baroque glam and classical tinged pop. There really is nothing like this band and even the title of their incoming debut album (Prelude To Ecstasy, which will be released in February) signals a certain amount of grandiosity that they have no doubt earned. All power to them.

Wednesday, 20 December 2023

Songs of the year, number 5: Noga Erez | Quiet - From the Film 'Heart of Stone’ | Official Video | Ne...


Written and recorded as part of the soundtrack to the Netflix spy thriller Heart of Stone, 'Quiet' sees Erez enter soundtrack territory, an area that her particular style of edgy electro pop doesn't seem an obvious fit for. The result is as unexpected as it is atmospheric: Think Wild West cowboy swagger meets James Bond atmospherics meets Erez's unique brand of assertive electro. It's as catchy as it is dramatic, as unyielding as it is atmospheric, as much of a headrush as it is a slice of glorious pop. 

Tuesday, 19 December 2023

Songs of the year, number 6: Gazel - Unknowable


The first release for London based, British born Turkish artist Gazel since 2019's audacious (and criminally under reviewed) debut album Gazel's Book Of Souls, 'Unknowable' marks a tentative return for an artist who should have been capitalising on the artistry of her debut as 2020 began but who was, instead, stuck at home like the rest of us.

Gazel Algan played all the instruments, did all the vocals, designed the artwork and produced 'Unknowable' and the result is a worthy successor to Book Of Souls. It is brooding and magnificent, atmospheric and all encompassing, epic and majestic. It is to be hoped that there will be more releases soon.

Monday, 18 December 2023

Songs of the year, number 7: Megan Black - Just For Fun


It was Ashley Stein who introduced me to the work of Megan Black. Black, along with Niamh Sunshine, was scheduled to perform at Edinburgh's Women In Music: It's Brutal Out Here event back in April, and Ashley spoke of her when I interviewed her and fellow organiser Gillian Morrison. "She's kind of what I imagine Janis Joplin would have been like to talk to, as a person?" she said, adding that Black was "an incredible artist."

I checked out Megan Black after I'd spoken to Ashley and Gillian, and found that Ashley had not in any way been exaggerating: Black is, indeed, up there with Joplin.

Initially a stand alone single released in November 2022, 'Just For Fun' was re-released in September as part of the flawless Full Circle (Part 1) EP.  It sits well alongside the other tracks on the EP, particularly assertive attention grabbing opening track 'MOTHER. SISTER. LOVER' and the magnificently titled 'Fuck You (You Stole My Youth)'. 'Just For Fun' starts as it means to go on with an impressive opening vocal and insistent guitars. It packs a lot of sound and fury, not to mention impressive vocal and guitar work, into just under three minutes and at the end you'll want to play it again. And again. And again. 


Sunday, 17 December 2023

Songs of the year, number 8: Overcoats - Never Let You Go (Official Music Video)


With their third album, Winner, Overcoats have strayed into what feels like Americana territory, there being a definite country twang to much of the album. 'Never Let You Go', with its crisp pop harmonies feels like an outlier, having more in common with 2020's The Fight than the loose chord sequences of Winner. It's a particularly irresistible ear worm, accompanied by a charming video, that revisits a number of Overcoats themes, including exasperating partners. Hanna and JJ are in fine voice and the songs recurring chorus ensures that it will be circling your head for weeks afterwards,  

Saturday, 16 December 2023

Songs of the year, number 9: Skating Polly - Send A Priest


A tour de force from Skating Polly's sixth album, Chaos County Line, 'Send A Priest' is a fast and furious thrashy slice of self loathing and rage with darkness in its heart. As ugly pop goes, this is perhaps as ugly as it gets, with Kelli Mayo snarling and growling over the frenetic guitar work about 'motherfuckers' and wanting to be the brick that goes through someones window screen. It's as absorbing as it is compelling. 

Friday, 15 December 2023

Songs of the year, number 10: Heartworms - Retributions Of An Awful Life (Official Music Video)


I really can't improve on the original post I did on this song back in June, so I am shamelessly re-posting it...

Heartworms Jojo Orme comes across very much as a young woman who doesn't take any shit. Witness the icy stare in the video to 'Retributions Of An Awful Life', the standout track on her debut EP A Comforting Notion. She also survived a Production and Performance course at South Gloucestershire and Stroud College, without being crushed by the naked hostility of her fellow students and has lived on her own since she was 16. When asked to describe her sound in an interview for Fred Perry she opted for "Gothic military fairy?" which feels like as good a summary as any.

'Retributions Of An Awful Life' combines these icy elements with crunchy goth infused industrial sounds, scratchy, choppy guitars and a terrible sense of foreboding. She's signed to Speedy Wunderground, has been playlisted on 6Music, and the future looks bright for such a dark artist. The album, whenever it happens, will be very keenly anticipated.

Thursday, 14 December 2023

Songs of the year, number 11: Samantha Urbani - More Than a Feeling


A calling card following a lengthy absence from music, 'More Than A Feeling' was the first single to be released from Samantha Urbani's debut solo album, Showing Up, an often arch, highly atmospheric album that draws on early 80s electro pop. 

Of the singles to be released, 'More Than A Feeling', which tells of the moment when our heroine realises the on/off again relationship she's in really isn't going to work, and that an ending is now needed, is perhaps the most subtle. It floats in on a late night summer breeze, soaring on synth pop and catharsis, with great hooks, elegant vocals and bags of style and confidence and effortlessly works its way into your heart. Evocative of summer nights and bad decisions, its charm cannot be denied. 

Wednesday, 13 December 2023

Songs of the year, number 12: Lana Del Rey - A&W (Audio)


It takes a particular kind of artist to release, as the opening salvo to their new album, a track that is over 7 minutes long. And yet such is the faith in Lana Del Rey, and the level of respect she has gradually built up since 2010, that she gets away with it.

'A&W' is at once understated, meandering, ugly, and beautiful. It's a complex piece that really rewards repeated listens, much as its parent album Did You Know There's a Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd? also does. Del Rey is capable of obscure moments of beauty, gorgeously atmospheric anthems, and state of the nation addresses, and in 'A&W' it feels like she's trying to do all three at once. Somehow it works. 

Tuesday, 12 December 2023

Songs of the year, number 13: Sparks - The Girl Is Crying In Her Latte


The always reliably eccentric Sparks have triumphed once again with the release of this frenetic slice of deadpan electro strangeness. The video also features Cate Blanchett performing what could loosely be regarded as interpretive dance, adding another layer of surreal charm to what is already a perfectly organised package. A delight. 

Monday, 11 December 2023

Songs of the year, number 14: The Beths - I Told You That I Was Afraid (Acoustic)


The original version of 'I Told You That I Was Afraid' appeared on 2022's Expert in a dying field album, and this acoustic version of the song makes an appearance on the newly released deluxe edition of that album.

The acoustic version is even more disarmingly honest than the original, with vocalist Elizabeth Stokes confessing to being afraid of all sorts of things, including going to bed and not waking up the following morning. It's the soundtrack to all the things that keep you up at night worrying, but it's delivered in such a charming way that it never feels depressing, just endearingly self depreciating and incredibly honest. 

Sunday, 10 December 2023

Songs of the year, number 15: Daya - Juliene (Official Visualizer)


This ice cool slice of moody electro pop evokes early Air at their elegant and minimalist best. 'Juliene' is Daya's first entirely independent release. From her 2015 debut 'Hide Away' onwards, she appears to have very much been on the pop treadmill, with a run of hits, high profile support slots, award nominations and appearances at high profile events. Since about 2019 she has been less on the treadmill than off it and if 'Juliene' is the result then that can only be a good thing. 

Saturday, 9 December 2023

Songs of the year, number 16: Marina Sena - Tudo Pra Amar Você (Clipe Oficial)


Marina Sena's charming Brazilian pop ear worm made for perfect summer listening this year. The release of 'Tudo...' marked her signing to Sony Brazil, and this years album release, Vicio Inerente, does appear to have been the first time that her music has been marketed for an international audience. The press release for her London show back in May summed up her sound by saying that she flirts with "Samba, funk, carioca, trap, reggae and axé" while also remarking on her "commanding stage presence" and music that "oozes freedom and moves boldly in new directions." Fans of Kali Uchis and Rosalia may well be impressed. 

Friday, 8 December 2023

Songs of the year, number 17: Mandy, Indiana - Pinking Shears (Official Video)


Note: This video contains a warning of flashing images from the start. If you are unable to watch it, an audio only video is also available. 

Manchester's Mandy, Indiana released their debut album i've seen a way earlier this year, and a decidedly eccentric listen it was too.

It would be fair to say that single 'Pinking Shears', while not being massively representative of its parent album, also doesn't really sound like anything else either. You can hear echoes of post punk and 80s Factory records releases in there but, really, the best way to sum it up is to imagine a French Rip, Rig and Panic making a pilgrimage to Manchester and gorging themselves on early Factory releases. 

Utterly bonkers, strangely hypnotic, and weirdly memorable.

Thursday, 7 December 2023

Songs of the year, number 18: Picture Parlour - Norwegian Wood


It's a brave band that calls their debut single 'Norwegian Wood' but, if you've heard Picture Parlour or seen them live, you'll understand immediately that this is a band that is not lacking in swagger, and which oozes confidence. Which might seem odd given that 'Norwegian Wood', on a lyrical level at least, seems to be all about being plagued by doubt.

Singer Katherine Parlour's commanding and powerful vocals sit well alongside the big guitar sound and solid backbeat, and it's easy to see why 'Norwegian Wood' has proved to be such a powerful calling card for the band. They toured sold out venues with The Last Dinner Party back in October and it felt very much like a tour of equals: Both are bands quickly on the rise after all.

We will be hearing more from them, of that there is no doubt.

Wednesday, 6 December 2023

Songs of the year, number 19: I, Doris – HRT (Official Video)


London's premier 'middle aged' girl band have excelled themselves this year. Their most recent release - the ode to self love that is 'Do It Myself' - appropriated the Go-Go's 'We Got The Beat' and also included an elegant salute to the Divinyls classic 'I Touch Myself', but it was 'HRT' that did it for me this year.

It comes across like a lighter Poison Girls (think 'Real Woman' rather than 'Abort The System'), with the same kind of clever wordplay and sense of humour set to a rollicking tune. And it's probably done more for positive discussion of the menopause than a million so called 'menopause influencers' could ever achieve. 

Tuesday, 5 December 2023

Songs of the year, number 20: Jorja Smith - Little Things


Jorja Smith's 'Little Things' was a particularly stylish summer bop this year. It had everything from atmosphere, hedonism, carnival and hints of jazz tinged sophistication and it really reflects the extent to which Smith is not your average diva. Her music is built to last. 


Monday, 4 December 2023

Songs of the year, number 21: Olivia Rodrigo - vampire (Official Video)


Part epic, part psychodrama, part vampire gothic horror... The only word that can be found to sum up Olivia Rodrigo's first single of 2023 would be... Immense. 

Ostensibly a stream of conscious rant about a toxic relationship, the song mines the imagery of the vampire novel, meaning we have the joy of Rodrigo rhyming 'Blood sucker' with 'Fame fucker' plus enough musical high drama to conjure up memories of Meatloaf's Bat Out Of Hell

It's possibly one of the weirdest number one singles there's been this year, and is definitely one of those songs where you feel like you need to sit down for a bit afterwards and just, calm, down.

A tremendous tour de force.

Sunday, 3 December 2023

Songs of the year, number 22: Romy - Loveher (Official Video)


An understated slice of slinky EDM from one third of the XX, Romy's initial release from her debut solo album Mid Air is a love letter to the gay clubs she grew up in. You could imagine it playing on innumerable turntables in innumerable clubs over the summer, creating perfect moments all over the place.

The mood is initially pensive and stripped back, intimate and almost whispered. But it's one of those songs that builds as it goes along, increasing the intensity and sense of euphoria as it goes along. It's a song that will endure, and only improve with age. 


Saturday, 2 December 2023

Songs of the year, number 23: Monika Linkytė - Stay | Lithuania 🇱🇹 | Official Music Video | Eurovision...


This years Eurovision Song Contest was always going to be an interesting and unusual one, what with it being held in Liverpool instead of Ukraine. I confess that I haven't always engaged with the event in recent years as the nakedly political voting often got on my nerves, but I felt that this was a special event and as such found myself tuning in to Radio 2 while simultaneously following events on Twitter. A way of experiencing that I can recommend, despite Twitter now being in its Elon era.

Anyway, I also listened with Spotify open and was quickly adding songs that I liked on the night to listen back to later.

Streaming and the internet have had a massive impact on how it's possible to experience Eurovision, with the instant access to the various country's entries meaning that artists can now reach new audiences faster and more immediately than ever before.

It's a weird thing when you listen to Eurovision songs out of context. The best ones will still sound as great as they did on the night, even when removed from all the staged splendour, euphoria and glitter, and some songs that haven't done well at competition level have then gone on to be big chart hits after (this happened last year with Rose Linn's track 'SNAP', which came in the bottom five at the competition but was a massive hit afterwards thanks to TikTok).

In the case of Monika Linkyte's entry for Lithuania, 'Stay', it did do pretty well on the night, placing 11th, but it was clear, after a certain point, that it was never going to beat either the crowd favourite Finland (with the unforgettable 'Cha Cha Cha') or the eventual winner, Swedish superstar Loreen with 'Tattoo'. Both songs went on to hang around the UK Top 10 for (in the case of 'Cha Cha Cha') a few weeks afterwards or (in the case of 'Tattoo') months and months and months afterwards. 'Stay', meanwhile, charted at number 48 for one week after the contest, before disappearing from the Top 100 as quickly as it had arrived.

It's the kind of song that grows on you perhaps more slowly than, say, my favourite on the night - the bouncy pop of Blanka's 'Solo' for Poland. While Eurovision viewers and listeners are notoriously allergic to ballads, 'Stay' manages to straddle the gap between atmospheric ballad and surging anthem, without falling the wrong side of it. It may well endure beyond this year, but we'll have to see. 

Saturday, 25 November 2023

The Big End Of Year Roundup Post

 

Photo by engin akyurt on Unsplash

The clocks have gone back, the weather is terrible, and it barely seems worth opening the curtains...

Which means it must be time for The Big End of Year Roundup Post!

2023 has been a fairly apocalyptic year all round - very much the natural successor to 2022. But there have been some good moments alongside the bad, and there has been some great artistic content out there. Which I do intend to share with you now.

Gigs

I only attended two gigs this year but, my God, they were brilliant.

I had the long awaited pleasure of seeing Florence + The Machine at Manchester Arena in February, which was amazing. I had been down to review the original November 2022 Manchester date of the Dance Fever tour only Louder Than War didn't get press/photographer accreditation and then Florence Welch broke her foot and the date got moved to February so I didn't review it in the end. I think LTW probably concluded that it wasn't worth applying for accreditation again for February, which suited me because - in the end - there was so much going on at the gig, and in the section of the crowd where I was that it would have been incredibly hard for me to review in a sensible fashion that didn't involve loads of detail of what was going on in the crowd as well as onstage. I did put out some overexcited posts on Twitter afterwards but said posts were essentially about the off the scale energy of the gig and fevered/feral nature of the crowd, oh, and the bit where I ended up on the floor and had to be pulled up again by three people. On reflection, the falling over bit feels more like something that should have happened (and often did) at an Automatic gig at the Night & Day in 1997, possibly after dancing on the amps, rather than in the standing section of the Arena in 2023. Let's just say that the Dance Fever tour very much lived up to its name, and that - having been deprived on Florence + The Machine live since 2019 - the crowd were extremely up for it. NME (who presumably did get accreditation for the February Manchester date) described the show as "cathartic and euphoric", so it wasn't just me.

The second gig was October's double bill of two incredibly exciting up and coming bands at the Academy 2 in Manchester: The Last Dinner Party and Picture Parlour. I'd booked my ticket for this back in the summer (£15 for two bands? bargain these days...) after The Last Dinner Party's summer gig at the Deaf Institute sold out before I could book a ticket. The show at the Academy 2 sold out too, and I fully expect that the next round of shows (in bigger venues) will sell out as well: The Last Dinner Party are that kind of band, basically. 

I did review the Academy 2 show, which was just as electric - in its own way - as the Florence + The Machine show in February, and had a great time. 

12 Albums and EP's of the year

I've made the decision to start including EP's from this year because it feels like where an EP ends and an album begins is becoming increasingly blurred: there are some decidedly short albums and some rather long EP's being released. As such, it seems easier to consider them together.

12) Samantha Urbani, Showing Up

11) Kali Uchis, Red Moon In Venus

10) Sweeping Promises, Good Living Is Coming For You

9) Lana Del Rey, Did you know that there's a tunnel under Ocean Blvd?

8) Jorja Smith, falling or flying

7) Jayda G, Guy

6) Jess Williamson, Time Ain't Accidental

5) Indigo De Souza, All of This Will End

4) Overcoats, Winner

3) Mandy, Indiana, i've seen a way

2) Mary Lattimore, Goodbye, Hotel Arkada

1) Hemlocke Springs, Going... Going... GONE!

12 books I've read and loved this year

Ben MacIntyre, Colditz: prisoners of the castle

Helena Kelly, Jane Austen, the secret radical

Helena Merriman, Tunnel 29: love, espionage and betrayal: the true story of an extraordinary escape beneath the Berlin Wall

Daisy Buchanan, Careering

Gabrielle Zevin, Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow

Rahaf Mohammed, Rebel: my escape from Saudi Arabia to freedom

Kiran Millwood Hargrave, The dance tree

Celia Brayfield, Rebel Writers: the accidental feminists

Helen Lewsis, Difficult Women: a history of feminism in 11 fights

Caroline Young, Kitted Out: style and youth culture in the Second World War

Pauline Murray, Life's A Gamble: Penetration, the Invisible Girls and other stories

Ed Gillett, Party Lines: Dance Music and the Making of Modern Britain

Podcasts and radio from 2023

The year in radio started with the incredibly brave experiment that was Jake Yapp's Unwinding. I am, needless to say, still fervently hoping for a new run of the month long series for January 2024. In the meantime, here's a list of some choice moments.

Other radio highlights this year have included some really good Archive on Four episodes, including Archive on Four: Powell and Pressburger: Poetic Patriotism in which Carol Morley takes a detailed look at the career of film makers Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger, famous for WWII films such as A Matter Of Life And Death and - Post War - The Red Shoes and Black Narcissus. As the documentary reveals, their WWII work was not straightforward propaganda but something much more lyrical, complex and sophisticated. Which was not always appreciated by Britain's wartime leaders. You can watch a selection of Powell and Pressburger films through the BFI Player

File on Four also contributed the extremely timely (in retrospect) episode How The Yom Kippur War Changed Everything, For Everyone which was first broadcast on the 30th September. I suspect that the programme was originally commissioned to mark the fifty year anniversary of the Yom Kippur War, and also to tie in with the release of the film Golda, which I assume was also commissioned and released to mark the same anniversary. The programme went out about a week before the current war began.

The episode prior to that, a celebration of the annual Funny Women festival, was also extremely compelling. Albeit for very different reasons. 

At the podcast end of things, the BBC's deep dive into Mad Cow Disease (the oddly titled The Cows Are Mad) proved strangely riveting and had a weirdly addictive theme tune. On an entirely different note, I remain optimistic about the prospect of a new series of Victoriocity. I've also been pleased to see Page 94, The Private Eye podcast getting a new lease of life this year. 

Articles I've found interesting/enjoyable this year

'This is where I draw the line': when stan accounts turn against their idols (Alaina Demopoulos, The Guardian)

Influencer Parents and The Kids Who Had Their Childhood Made Into Content (Fortesa Latifi, TeenVogue)

How hip-hop came out (Gavin Haines, Positive News)

Glastonbury's all-male headliners reveal a UK music industry in crisis (Roisin O'Connor, The Independent)

'I Found Out About it from Ravers': The UK's Favourite New Afterparty Venue (Chiara Wilkinson, Vice)

Megan Bhari: Her illness fooled celebs. The truth may be even darker (Jamie Bartlett and Ruth Mayer, BBC)

The Invisible Work of Mothers in Music (Allison Hussey, Pitchfork)

Succession is filmed before a live studio audience... Why the best television drama ever ever ever (etc) is a sitcom (Joel Morris, I can't help thinking... [Substack])

Should Journalists Work For Free To Get Experience? (Karen Edwards, Journo Resources)

He's not the Messiah, he's a very naughty boy: Boris Johnson is not an electoral asset (Rob Ford, The Swingometer [Substack])

The social experiment: Our student life in the pandemic (Libby Elliott, Maisie Outhart and Ella Robinson, The Mill)

From prawn kidnappings to breast-milk raves: are festival crowds more unhinged than ever? (Henrietta Taylor, Time Out)

"We won't stop 'til we win" - UoM rent strike supported by over 10,000 students after occupation eviction (Eddie Toomer-McAlpine, The Meteor)

'Treat workers fairly and they'll return' (Nina Pullman, Wicked Leeks)

The Thick of It's Ian Martin on the trouble with Starmer (Ian Martin guest post for The Newsletter of (Not Quite) Everything [Substack])

Is Bandcamp as We Know It Over? (Philip Sherburne, Pitchfork)

What if we're thinking about productivity all wrong? (Jonn Elledge, The Newsletter of (Not Quite) Everything [Substack])

Songs of the year will begin on the 3rd December. The link to the Spotify playlist, which will be updated in real time, is here. Disclaimer: A lot of the songs this year are very sweary. I'm not doing content warnings on songs, but it does feel fair to mark what's obviously a trend.


Sunday, 19 November 2023

3 Songs... about 23

It was only recently, while listening to Baby Queen's new-ish track '23' that I realised how many recent songs there are about the experience of being 23.

Overcoats appear to have begun this trend back in 2017 with their debut album Young, which featured the track '23', a poignant tale of early marriage, bucket lists gone sour and the rueing of wasted opportunities amidst the dawning knowledge that the marriage is failing. 



Leeds band Lucky Iris, meanwhile, released their own snapshot of early 20s life earlier this year, when they released their own song, also titled '23'. While it's not technically about hitting the age 23 so much as arriving at the year 2023, it taps into similar feelings about early twenties life. The track hasn't received as much attention as recent tracks 'Blowing Kisses', 'Maybe I'm too much' and its hyper pop re-work 'Maybe you are not enough', but it's still worth a listen. In comparison to the Overcoats track, in which our heroine has ticked off every one of her goals and has still failed to find happiness and satisfaction, Lucky Iris' Maeve instead finds herself musing that she always thought she'd have life figured out by the time she reached 2023: That she'd be "so old now" and have a decent job, a house, stuff... but it hasn't happened yet. The peculiar extended adolescence of the early twentysomething is what has happened instead and she's not sure how she feels about that. 

This state of peculiarly extended adolescence is not so much baffled about as celebrated by Baby Queen in her own recent track, also called '23', which is something of a hymn to hedonism. That mad spontaneous thing you were thinking of doing? That late night drinking spree on a weeknight? You might as well go off and do it, she says, lighten up - you're 23, this is what it's like, it's what expected of you. 


While each of the three tracks have been written by women in their twenties in a six year period, they all have very different perspectives on the early twenties life moment, and what they all suggest is a sense of a generation in flux. There's a real sense of insecurity and doubt that comes across, even in the Baby Queen song (although perhaps not as obviously as in earlier track 'We Can Be Anything') and perhaps it's no accident that these songs are coming out when they are. A few generations ago, it might have been 18 that was the pivotal moment. Now, it's 23. 

Tuesday, 14 November 2023

Louder Than Words 2023

INNSiDE

This years Louder Than Words festival comes - as usual - at a busy time of year, November being peak touring season for a lot of bands. I should have been reviewing a gig on the Thursday night prior to the festival, only an horrific RTA that closed a section of the A6 for 8 hours knocked it on the head for me, which is perhaps just as well given how tired I was by the end of Sunday...

I missed day one (Friday) because by the time I'd calculated that I could afford a weekend pass this year, they had all sold out. Rather than pay extra for three separate day passes, I paid for a Saturday pass and a Sunday pass, which worked out as being more or less the same amount of money as I'd been planning to spend on the weekend pass. I don't know if I'd have gone on Friday anyway (especially if I'd been out doing the gig on Thursday) as I wouldn't have been able to get the day off work.

I got up early on Saturday morning to attend Simon Morrisson's annual music journalism panel, which I always find very energising and inspiring. It tends to act as a soothing balm across the previous twelve months (or, given I last went to the full festival in 2019, four years...) of indifference and rejection. 

Simon was joined this year by a third year music journalism student from the BA Music Journalism course at the University of Chester, plus journalist Lisa Torem, Andrew from Silent Radio, and Simon's photographer Rachel. I found it particularly interesting this year because when they talked about the health of music journalism they felt it was in a good place at the moment, mainly because of the upsurge in small web based and print start ups, and a fanzine revival and re-emergence. I suspect that the fanzine revival is happening for similar reasons to the vinyl revival: People miss having something they can hold in their hands. Somebody asked a very perceptive question about how to deal with writers block or lack of confidence in writing. There was another good question about writing and mental health, which shone a light on the limits placed on journalism during lockdowns but also the freeing and helpful nature of writing during the same period: Training students in how to review a gig was hard when there were no new gigs on, but lockdown also gave people time and space to write about music, just not live music.

I left INNSiDE after the music journalism panel in order to head back home and do the remainder of the weekly food shop at the greengrocers. Which was one of those things that seemed like a good idea at the time, but which felt less great when I was striding back down Whitworth Street for the second time that day. I'd optimistically hoped to be able to get back in time for the Black Female Voices in Music panel at 2:15pm, but it didn't work out. I did get to sample my first ever Spanish Pink Kiwi Fruit, but I also missed the Moss Side legend that is Cleopatra Higgins, and the former does not adequately compensate for the latter.

I got back into Louder Than Words just as the Black Female Voices in Music panel were emerging from their meeting room. It looked like it had been very well attended and, judging from all the excited and animated faces, very well received by an almost entirely female crowd. There was one woman who a lot of people were speaking to after, and she was being very generous with her time, and very articulate and gracious with all of them. She had a very tangible aura of charisma about her and I suspected that this was Cleopatra Higgins. A quick google has confirmed that I was right. 

I got in relatively early for Paul Hanley's chat with John Robb about his new book, Sixteen Again: How Pete Shelley and Buzzcocks Changed Manchester Music, which is due to be published very soon by Route. I wanted to see this one because I can remember going to see his earlier Louder Than War appearance when his Fall book, The Big Midweek, was out, and finding him a particularly fine and funny raconteur in the dry Mancunian sense. He was on fine form on Saturday and the room was absolutely rammed. They talked about the Pistols and the Lesser Free Trade Hall gigs, Magazine, and other Buzzcocks related side topics and I was pleased that Hanley talked about Pete Shelley's sexuality, and his matter of fact what-you-see-is-what-you-get approach to it. They also talked about a question that seemed very pertinent, given the massive slew of punk books there are out there, namely: Why, when there are so many books about The Clash and the Sex Pistols, have there only been "Two and a half" books about Buzzcocks? The point was made that Buzzcocks perhaps were not a band given to self-mythologising, that they weren't steering the narrative as they went along (unlike some of their contemporaries...) and were actually quite self-depreciating, which I think is true. I think it's also part of why so many female punks were written out of musical and cultural history, although there's other reasons in both cases.

Ahead of my next event, I spent a sizeable chunk of time lurking in an alcove, essentially penned in by the long queue of people waiting to get into the Will Sergeant event next door in the big room. I think I spent about 50% of the time vaguely wondering who Will Sergeant was* and the other 50% with the Louder Than Words volunteers who were valiantly trying to keep the door in the alcove propped open so that it didn't lock them out by closing. We talked a lot about the value of a good, sturdy wooden doorstop.

The event I was waiting for was this years dance music panel, chaired by Simon Morrison. There was a difference this year though: The first half hour was a whistle stop tour of the history of nightclubs in the UK, courtesy of Simon and an historian from MMU, Dr Katie Milestone. They have collaborated on the book Transatlantic Drift: The Ebb and Flow of Global Dance Culture, which begins with WWII and goes up to the Millennium. There were also contributions from a very maverick former DJ turned artist, Trafford Lovething, who was wearing a magnificent hat and stripy jumper. Then there was Simon's photographer Rachel and Kirk Field, who was responsible for Side B of the event. 

Side B was a truncated version of the live show he's doing to promote his memoir, Rave New World: Confessions of a Raving Reporter, about his own involvement with acid house and rave culture, though it does include other stuff too. He first got involved with acid house and illegal raves via helping out with a friend's mobile bar business while sofa surfing in the mid 80s. They ended up taking a booking for an illegal rave, and the rest is history. The show included a great interactive missing words round, using the Have I Got News For You format, but with outrageous lies from some of The Sun's most breathless acid house moral panic reporting. There was also a very on the nose, very funny, and bloody catchy song called "Sardines in Pasha" about going to Ibiza and finding it's not all it's cracked up to be now it's become a brand rather than an idyll.

The final event of the night was the one that swung it for me when deciding to book tickets this year: Pauline Murray in conversation with Russ Bestley about her memoir Life's A Gamble.

I have a lot of time for Pauline Murray, and not just because she is one of the interviewees for my women and punk book. I always knew when I interviewed her that her story was both largely untold and also, vitally, needed to be told. And I'm very pleased that she's written it herself. 

She was immaculately dressed, as always, in black and shocking pink and while I could tell that she was very nervous, I think she became less nervous as she went along, and she and Russ were able to cover the span and themes of the book. I queued up with the people wanting their books signed at the end so that I could tell her how much I'd enjoyed reading it.

Afterwards it was time to head for home and I had to navigate the Saturday night bacchanalia's outside the Ritz and Gorilla and assorted bars and clubs further down Whitworth Street. The 192 was quiet, despite it being rammed, and seemed to be mainly full of twentysomethings heading for home. Later I became aware of someone playing some ululating diva on what sounded like a loop. Which wasn't unpleasant, but did feel a bit surreal. 

Current bedtime reading

While I was outside the launderette with my headphones in on Sunday morning, waiting for my wash to finish, I heard what sounded like a siren going off and saw a man pushing a double buggy hove into view. The siren sound was coming from a baby in one side of the buggy, and the other side of the buggy was occupied by a toddler with its hands clamped firmly over its ears, wearing an expression that could only be described as resignation on its face. 

As usual, I got caught up in the Remembrance Day ceremony at the war memorial on the way home, but I don't think it would have made much difference if I hadn't stopped for it. I knew I was going to be late for the John Robb event, The Art of Darkness, because I only left the flat (post launderette and war memorial) just under half an hour before it was due to start. Still, it seemed worth trying to get in for at least some of it. 

I made it to INNSiDE in time to catch about half of John Robb's talk, and what I heard sounded interesting. I came in (to a very full room - I had to stand in the corner at the back) to him talking about the long influence of The Doors on what would become the goth bands. It hadn't occurred to me that 'The End' being used at the end of Apocalypse Now would be so crucial, what with it being released in 1979 and everything.

Unfortunately for me, I came into the event more or less straight from the rain outside, stopping only to get my wristband for the day and to have a chat with the LTW volunteer about Penetration. This meant I walked into what turned out to be a very warm as well as very full room, meaning I spent the remainder of the talk sweltering like an arctic explorer in a sauna as whenever I tried to take my waterproof off it sounded like I was shaking out a tarpaulin. I managed to get my arms out during the talk, then used the brief lull in-between the end of the talk and the first question of the Q&A to pull off my waterproof at speed, then get my coat, scarf and cardigan off, by which point I was absolutely dripping. And not from the rain.

I also made the mistake of particpating in the Q&A by asking if John Robb was aware of there being a Yorkshire version of 'Bela Lugosi's Dead'** or was it an urban myth? Which I think slightly poleaxed him. At the end, a couple came over to me as I was trying to pack my waterproof away and told me that, while they weren't aware of the Yorkshire version, Bill Bailey has covered the song, and I have decided that I must hear this. We talked a bit about humour in the goth scene after that, and then I elected to go and have a look at the chapter list in the John Robb goth book to see who/what was in it. I essentially gave in at this point when it came to Not Buying Any Books This Weekend, and purchased it, setting in progress a train of events that would see me return home with a big bag of five books. 

After getting John Robb to sign it, I went back to the Sonicbond Publishing stall and purchased a track by track guide to Laura Nyro, as I could do with an album by album breakdown of her work, plus they're actively seeking new writers to write books for the series. I don't know if it would work for me as a style of writing, but it might be worth exploring.

I elected to skip the 2pm/2:15pm events as I wasn't 100% sure which one I wanted to go to, plus I was hungry and wanted to get some food. It was still leathering it down outside so I went to the bar downstairs at INNSiDE and ordered a mozzarella, heritage tomato and basil pesto pannini with chips and a bottle of water. While I was waiting, I had a look at my books and tried not to think about how I was going to get them down Whitworth Street and Fairfield Street and onto the 192 and home without a bag.

Booksbooksbooksbooks...

I was a bit carb coma'd after that, so I took my time going back upstairs as the next lot of events weren't until 4pm. I spent my time milling about the book stalls, waiting for the bloke on the Blackwell's store to come back (he was on his own and was perfectly entitled to take a break and go and see some of the events, and it's not even like I was in a rush) so I could buy Brave New Rave and the Scottish post punk book. I also got talking to the people who run Route publishing, and we talked about punk and punk books a lot, also women and punk books. They encouraged me to pitch my punk women book to them in the moment, but I think I did it really badly. Route were actually one of the publishers I wanted to pitch it to when I first started looking at publishers, only I wasn't sure in the end if they'd be interested as it looked as though they were more focused on memoir rather than what, I suppose, would be considered extended music journalism or cultural criticism.

Not too long after that it was time for So It Started There, which was Nick Banks from Pulp in conversation with Gareth Bird. This was a very fun event as both men turned out to be natural raconteurs, at ease with themselves and each other. There was, of course, discussion of the infamous Brit Awards/Michael Jackson incident, including the previously unknown role of David Bowie in getting Jarvis off the hook with the police.

I was sat next to two really nice women for this one who, while appalled that I didn't know who Will Sergeant was, were friendly. They asked me who else I'd seen as they'd been hoping to get tickets for the Will Sergeant event but had been disappointed and were going to try for Glen Matlock later on the off chance that tickets would still be available. 

They were two of a number of people over the weekend that I had conversations with about Penetration, as a number of people came up to me on Saturday and Sunday after hearing me ask Pauline Murray a question about Penetration's use of E.M Forster's The Machine Stops at the beginning of 2015's Resolution album, and about dystopian themes in their work more generally: I wasn't trying to be be clever in asking it, I just remembered that we had talked about it when I interviewed her in early 2016 and we'd had a really nice, interesting conversation about it. I thought she might enjoy talking about it again, which she did, and people seemed to have picked up on it, causing me to get noticed and for people to start conversations with me as a result. Which was nice.

I also had a really great conversation with someone about goth as well, just prior to this event.

The final event of the night, by which time I was definitely flagging, was Glen Matlock, talking to John Robb about his book Triggers. He'd originally been down to do Saturday night, but had a gig in Sicely, so they moved it to Sunday and he flew back especially to do Louder Than Words. 

Triggers is themed around pivotal songs in his life, as he did his first memoir - I Was A Teenage Sex Pistol - 25 years ago. He and John Robb talked about formative songs, including by the Kinks, Alex Harvey, Ian Dury, and Abba ('SOS' helped to inspire a riff in a Sex Pistols song, I think it was 'Pretty Vacant') and Matlock talked about what those songs had meant to him at particular times. I think the whole talk gave a good overview of his musical trajectory, from the Pistols to the Rich Kids and beyond. He still does his own stuff, but he's in demand as a bassist and sometimes guitarist, often at short notice. 

Because he was slightly late (by about 10 minutes - which isn't at all bad, all things considered) he was pre-ceded by a 15 year old neo soul singer, Lily Blossom, who performed at one of the smaller events on Saturday and was so good they decided to offer her the chance to perform to a larger audience, ie a room full of people waiting for Glen Matlock. She performed a piano led track that may have been one of her own or just a song I didn't know, and a cover of the Amy Winehouse version of 'Valerie'. I liked the first song better of the two, as I think she got to show off her voice more with it, but she did a good job. As Jill Adam said, it's not everyone who can say that they opened for the Sex Pistols. Or a Sex Pistol as it was in this case.

It had stopped raining by the time I left, and I got a bus quite quickly. The journey was uneventful save for some loud periodic bursts of what might have been desi trap from the back seats, which in turn may have been a desperate attempt to drown out an excruciatingly boring mobile phone conversation that was going on in the seat in front of mine about computer game specs. 

My last thoughts as I switched off the light on Sunday were "Oh God I have to invigilate the third GCSE Maths paper in the morning" followed by "It could be worse - at least I'm not the one taking it."

* I now realise that he was in Echo & The Bunnymen, and that my ignorance in this area (I also didn't appreciate until the bloke from OMD was at Louder Than Words a few years ago just how big that band had actually been..) basically means I have an early 80s Liverpool bands blind spot which I could probably do with sorting out. 

** Sample lyrics: The flat cap's on, the whippet's fed.

Saturday, 11 November 2023

3 Songs... that are recent, interesting, cover versions

Amanda Palmer released her cover of Sinead O'Connor's  'The Last Day of Our Acquaintance' a week or two after O'Connor's death. The original version of the song featured on the album I do not want what I haven't got, and has also been covered by Michael Stipe.

Palmer's version is at once a salute to O'Connor, and the power of her songwriting, and very much her own version. Like O'Connor, Palmer is no stranger to rage, and to articulating rage, but it's interesting to compare how that rage is expressed in her version compared to this live version of O'Connor's. 

The song is a breakup tale, but it's not about the actual breakup itself so much as the paperwork that comes with it, and the sense that the love doesn't die in the bedroom so much as in "somebodies office" much later on. 

Both versions are absolutely shattering, and well worth a listen. 

'Zombie', an anti-war song originally alluding to The Troubles in Ireland is perhaps one of The Cranberries more obscure hits, but recent events have seen it re-enter the lower end of the UK singles chart, where it may well stay for some time. The most well known of The Cranberries hits is the more wide eyed 'Dreams', which has been covered a number of times, including by Japanese Breakfast and, most recently, Norwegian/Irish artist Yune Pinku.

Pinku's 'Dreams (Rework)' is a delightfully idiosyncratic take on the original, replacing the guitars with a slightly glitchy, fragile electro soundscape typical of Pinku's work. She really makes the song her own, her own Irish tones at once echoing and departing from those of Delores O'Riordan on the original song. 


Desire's cover of Frankie Goes To Hollywood's sumptuous Trevor Horn produced epic synth power ballad 'The Power Of Love' is at once equally atmospheric and, somehow, much more glacial and sadder in tone than the original. 

This might be because the Canadian band were commissioned to cover the song for the soundtrack to the Fien Troch film Holly, which is due for release on the 22nd November. The soundtrack doesn't include any other pop music, or music with a vocal, and 'The Power Of Love' will play out over the credits. 




Sunday, 5 November 2023

3 songs... signalling incoming new albums

 


The Last Dinner Party have not long finished their sold out headline tour with labelmates Picture Parlour. I was lucky enough to attend and review the Manchester gig, and as such can attest to what an electrifying live presence they are. Latest single 'My Lady of Mercy' was released about a week before the Manchester show, and - as with previous singles 'Nothing Matters' and 'Sinner' - it shows the eclectic influences and styles that the band are drawing on. It's very different to their two previous singles, and yet it doesn't sound out of place when placed next to them somehow. Their debut album, Prelude to Ecstasy, will be released in February 2024.



Sleater-Kinney will release their 11th album Little Rope on January 19th. Calling card 'Hell' is a searing and powerful whiplash of a song, with a video starring Miranda July that screams of claustrophobia, self loathing and the hangover of the plague years. It's a strong indicator of what is to come I think. The video is directed by Ashley Connor.


Allie X has released a self directed video to coincide with the release of 'Black Eye', her first material in nearly four years. As with the criminally underrated Cape God album of 2020, she's tapping into a darker sound than has been the case previously. There will be more soon apparently... 



Friday, 27 October 2023

Hemlocke Springs - Going... Going... GONE! EP (Or: Possibly the best thing released in the whole of music in 2023)


It is with one eye on my inevitable End of Year lists that I feel compelled to introduce you to Hemlocke Springs.

Maybe you're already familiar with her work.

I think I discovered her a couple of weeks ago via a review in Pitchfork for her debut EP Going... Going... GONE! but I could be mistaken. The EP has been out since late September so, in some ways, I'm a little behind the pack on this one. Especially given that I don't do TikTok, where the song 'girlfriend' has helped to bring her to a lot of peoples attention.

'girlfriend' is included here, and it's easy to see why it would have gained her so much love, but it's not the only good song on here. As was very much the case with Allie X's perfect EP of crystalline synth pop anthems, Super Sunset, so it is with Going... Going... GONE! All 21 minutes and 38 seconds of it. Every single song is an absolute pop classic. She could have put any of them out into the wild as a calling card and they would all, undoubtably, have done the job.

Part of the charm of Hemlocke Springs is the seemingly simple and effortless (but not really) synths, keyboards and electro beats set against introspective, sometimes mildly obscure, lyrics delivered via a vocal that sounds at once unworldly and astute. It's a bit like listening to diary entries from your 20s if they'd been set to a surging, upbeat and sparkling electro pop soundtrack. 

The EP opens with 'gimme all ur love', a gentle entry point that feels a bit like a dreamier slice of  mid period Santigold. It contrasts well with second track 'girlfriend', which hits the listener up straight away; "You said 'I want to be your girlfriend' ; it wasn't really in my plans." As the opening lyric suggests, there's both sweetness and snarl in this surging, euphoric slice of electro pop with bite. You can practically feel the kids jumping up and down to it in countless parties around the world.

The surging synth pop continues with 'heavun', a highly atmospheric slice of muscular 80s flavoured pop with a great middle break. For a few delicious seconds it sounds as though it's about to morph into Donna Summer's 'I Feel Love' before it switches effortlessly back to frantic electro pop, and there's a sophistication and effortless here that is achingly cool and makes you want to listen to it again and again.

Middle track 'enknee1' is the heart of the EP, and the sweetest, dreamiest track of the 7. Initially it would be easy to write it off as a slice of charming childlike whimsy, but the initially disarming chorus increasingly drives the song, giving it a power beyond its initial beginnings. There's a real sense of our narrater being bewildered with the world, of not having got it figured out yet, and of wanting to look back to how she felt as a child. "Is there anyone? Anyone out there to love me? Anyone out there to care for?" she asks plaintively so that in the end it becomes a kind of hymn to the lonely, an anthem for the lost.

In marked contrast to the plaintive and anthemic 'enknee1' is the jagged swagger of 'pos', which stands for 'piece of shit', and which comes across like ESG at their sparse but funky best, with the occasional hint of Prince and exceptional use of the cowbell. It's self loathing and self doubt that you can dance to and the song becomes more layered and less sparse as it continues, coming to a thrilling and chugging conclusion.

'the train to nowhere' meanwhile sounds like a more nihilistic Le Tigre but becomes more melodic and shimmering as she hits the chorus("Where do you go?" "Wouldn't you like to know"). For a while the abrasiveness in the vocal disappears, only to return in the next verse. The exit moments, which include a distinctively quirky keyboard riff married to a sample of a siren on the road, round it off nicely. 

We exit the world of Hemlocke Springs with title track 'going... going... GONE!' After all the surging electro pop it seems only right to end on something slower, quieter and more contemplative. A slow bop if you will, with interesting textures, especially in the drums and with some nice whispered and echoing vocals. 

I cannot stress enough what an incredibly accomplished, fresh and sophisticated debut this EP is, and how much you must go off and listen to it and buy it.

The book pile has been replenished


 

Thursday, 6 July 2023

Charly Bliss - You Don't Even Know Me Anymore


Sometimes, when you're really, really unhappy you just have to burn everything down and start all over again. As Charly Bliss' singer Eva Hendricks puts it in the press release accompanying this song: 

“I moved to Australia and felt a million miles away from who I had been in New York. Like I had been reborn happy, carefree, and slightly less pale,” explains Eva Hendricks. “I was convinced that I had totally bypassed the ‘wherever you go, there you are’ thing. Lexapro also helped. I think this song is a farewell to how sad and tortured I felt during the Young Enough album cycle. It's like the ‘fuck it!’ that you earn after burning your entire life down and starting over. Sam sent me the track and it felt exactly as joyous and silly and giddy as I felt inside. It came together quickly and set the tone for a new CB era.”

Wednesday, 5 July 2023

Lydia Loveless - Toothache (Official Music Video)


The fantastically named Lydia Loveless comes across like Neko Case covering a Go-Go's song on this fast paced alt country track. In classic country style, it's a song about heartbreak, but rather than making use of the more standard motifs (The dog's dead, the bottle is half empty, she's gone...) 'Toothache' is operating within more complex, foul mouthed, self lacerating and self recriminating parameters. The incoming heartbreak is associated with the more prosaic headache, and toothache, which are also incoming. 

Tuesday, 4 July 2023

Romy - Loveher (Official Video)


Taken from the forthcoming album Mid Air, which is due out on the 8th September, 'Loveher' is an initially sparse slice of crystalline electro that builds and builds into a stylish slice of feverish piano driven pure dance. In contrast to yesterdays track, which was the sound of someone falling out of love, this is very much the blissed out opposite: It's the kind of song that could easily soundtrack the start of innumerable love affairs and relationships on various sweaty but glittering dance floors this summer.

Monday, 3 July 2023

Samantha Urbani - More Than a Feeling


Samantha Urbani may be better known for her membership of the Brooklyn outfit Friends but she has toyed with a solo career previously, with single releases in 2017 and 2019. New single 'More Than a Feeling' evokes that kind of giddy desperation and exasperation combined with heightened emotions and sensitivity that comes with unrequited love, with the video depicting a tense and restless Urbani on a night out, waiting for someone to arrive who never does.

It's a slick, effortlessly cool, very 2023 kind of track that oozes glamour, has a veneer of icy 80s synth pop and which, ultimately, deserves to be the soundtrack to everyone's summer.

Sunday, 2 July 2023

Gazel - Unknowable


Gazel's debut album, Gazel's Book Of Souls, was released in late 2019. It came second only to the debut Self Esteem album in my Albums of the year list for 2019 and it was cruelly passed over for the Mercury Music prize shortlist in 2020. I mean, it's very possible that - being such a small release - neither artist nor label could afford the entry fee for the Mercury but, still, it was cruelly unacknowledged in it's brilliance, audacity, ambition of scale and sheer talent.

It's been a long wait for new material but, at last, Gazel has emerged from what she describes as a "Lengthy hibernation" and there is to be a new EP, Dark Earth, from which 'Unknowable' is the first track to be released. 'Unknowable' is based on "the folk song Nem Kaldi, a Turkish lament" and Gazel "played/programmed and recorded all the instruments on it"

You get the impression that the pandemic has been hard for her but, following a gig in Hackney on the 22nd June, she is definitely back.

Saturday, 1 July 2023

I, Doris – HRT (Official Video)


'HRT' marks a welcome return for the Dorises, with a tune that slaps (as the young people say) and which feels very much in the vein of a more jaunty, tongue in cheek Poison Girls track (think 'Real Woman'. Seriously. Hunt for the video on YouTube.) As with the Poison Girls, there's a serious message here but it's one that's being delivered deftly with humour and the resulting song - and video - will do you much more good than a sackful of whispered adverts about anti-aging creams or books by celebrities who think they're the first people to have a menopause. Check it out.

Friday, 30 June 2023

Skating Polly - Send A Priest


Clearly the most intense of Skating Polly's recent output, 'Send A Priest' is unyielding and unforgiving. The press release describes it as "brutal". A self lacerating 'who's using who?' tale with guitars that slash like knives, drums that pound unrelentingly and Kelli Mayo's most ferocious snarl.

Their new album, Chaos County Line, was released on the 23rd of June. 

Thursday, 29 June 2023

Current Affairs - 'No Fuss' (Official Video)


While they sounds like a fist fight between Girls At Our Best! and the Mo-dettes as orchestrated by the Avengers with X watching on, Current Affairs are in fact based in modern day Glasgow and Berlin (no, I don't know how that works with band practice either...). This comes as no surprise given that fair Scottish city's impeccable history of scuffed punk and post punk bands.

The bands debut LP, Off The Tongue, is due out on the 14th July and a full UK tour follows the same month. The bands early singles promise good things and, if nothing else, they sound like they'll be great fun live. 

Wednesday, 28 June 2023

“hinako omori - “in full bloom" (live piano version)"


This gorgeous piece from Hinako Omori is her first new release since last years critically acclaimed album a journey... The live piano version of 'in full bloom' feels sparse and intimate, fragile and complex. It suggests a continuation and expansion of the composition approach deployed on a journey... If this is a sign of what is to come, it bodes well.

Tuesday, 27 June 2023

Mandy, Indiana - Pinking Shears (Official Video)


Warning: This video contains flashing images

Manchester's most talked of, Mandy, Indiana released their debut album, I've Seen A Way, back in May. Their eclectic brand of sound seems to have captivated critics equally as much as they have struggled to label it and it really seems best to recommend that listeners just find it and dive in. 

Single 'Pinking Shears' sounds vaguely as though it was recorded in 1982 by the French equivalent of Rip, Rig and Panic had they returned from a sojourn to Manchester. It is startling, unyielding, heavily percussive, weirdly atmospheric and echoey and... oddly memorable. Perhaps the oddest ear worm you will encounter this year.

Monday, 26 June 2023

My Ugly Clementine - Playground (Offical Video)


With a slick grunge sound that harks back to bands like Veruca Salt and the Breeders, My Ugly Clementine seem to have arrived fully formed. Exuding cool, sass and attitude the band are a Viennese super group made up of Sophie Lindinger, Mira Lu Kovacs and Nastasja Ronck who are due to release their second album, The Good Life, on the 11th August.

The confident swagger of 'Playground' underscores a quietly expressed takedown of gender roles and stereotypes that is delivered with a kind of effortless confidence. Their variety of sunny grunge rock will play well this summer.

Sunday, 18 June 2023

The Regrettes - Dancing On My Own (Official Music Video)


Earlier this year, The Regrettes released their (very fun) version of Robyn's iconic 2010 hit 'Dancing On My Own'. It went down well and, in recognition of the popularity of the cover version, the band launched a call for fan generated content of people dancing to 'Dancing On My Own'. They were "overwhelmed" with clips and tried to use as many as possible when collating and creating the video for the song.

"Dancing On My Own? More like dancing with all our fans!!" they concluded as they revealed the finished video, which is an absolute joy to watch.

Friday, 16 June 2023

Album review: Press Club - Endless Motion


It feels like there has been a slew of extremely strong female-fronted punk bands coming out of Australia and New Zealand over the past five years. The obvious example would be the formidable Amyl and the Sniffers, but also worth a mention are the seemingly-short-lived Miss June, Dave Grohl and Kim Gordon's favourite band of 2021, Kills Birds, and Press Club who, with three albums under their belt now, are clearly here for the long haul.

Press Club are Iain Macrae on bass, Frank Lees on drums, Greg Rietwyk on guitars and Natalie Foster on vocals. They hail from Brunswick and, as their biography on Discogs has it:

"Their roots lay in a city in a state of flux, experiencing decay, demolition and development on a mass scale. Press Club is the musical embodiment of the attitude of a generation experiencing impermanence in every way."

2022's Endless Motion album follows on from the much loved 2018 debut Late Teens and it's equally frenetic 2019 follow up, Wasted Energy. The band toured the UK in November 2022, and word of their incendiary live show seems to have added to the buzz around them. As they told NME last year, they were forced by Covid to put aside their usual fast approach to songwriting, hence the delay in the arrival of this album.

This longer songwriting approach hasn't impacted the rawness of their music, which has always been at the more melodic end of punk in any case, but it has perhaps made them a bit more reflective while at the same time making them tighter than ever.

There are frenetic punk pogo anthems here, notably 'Glasgow', 'Endless Motion' and the fantastic 'Less These Days', but there's also more thoughtful and/or sprawl-y, stream of consciousness fare such as 'Untitled Wildlife' and 'Cancelled'. 

The album begins with the breezy and euphoric guitar driven 'Eugene', which contrasts strongly with the eviscerating rant of 'Coward Street', the latter inspired by a trolling Porter received after a high profile solo TV appearance. 'Untitled Wildlife', meanwhile, has an upbeat and bouncy tune that belies the highly political lyrics as Porter sings of the wildfires of 2020 and the woeful government response to them. "We're feeling hopeless, we're feeling sad" she sings in the bridge into the chorus, adding "This sunburnt country's getting burnt to the ground". They may not have intended to write an anthem here, but they have done so all the same. 

Both 'Endless Motion' and 'Cancelled' strongly reflect the sound of a band in lockdown, and the despairing howl at the end of 'Endless Motion' is very telling. 'Cancelled', meanwhile, strikes a more experimental note with the gentle tick, tick, tick used at the start and within the song perhaps reflecting time going to waste. Lyrically, it's very stream of conscious in nature, showcasing Porter's approach to writing in lockdown, where she felt stifled by the lack of stimulus and turned to journalling. At times the guitars nod to Sonic Youth at their most expansive, at other times, they go full on hardcore. 

Striking a different tone altogether is 'Lifelines', which fades in with menacing drums and dark foreboding bass. Porter's vocals are drawn out snarls here, suggestive of Stooges era Iggy Pop and John Lydon in the early days of PIL. The guitars lift the song out of the darkness briefly, but it seems hellbent on returning there, with lines like "I'll never make it on my own, a new obsession every week, I'll never make it on my own, nothing sticks to me." 

The tight-as-fuck 'Afraid of Everything' comes with bouncy clipped guitars and energetic drums, complemented by the initially muttered vocals. It's less demonstrative than some of the other tracks and feels more like an angsty indie punk pop anthem than a hardcore punk feast. Then, the chorus kicks in and they really let rip. Insanely catchy and highly pogo-able to, this is a song about depression and self loathing that seems to share lyrical territory to Arlo Parks' 'Black Dog' only voiced from a different perspective, that is, from within a relationship, not a friendship.

Heavy guitar riffs form the basis for 'I Can Change', coupled with melodic vocals. Of all the songs on the album, this is the most obviously rock with a capital R, and there's some lovely melodic guitar work in the middle before the drums begin to build and it kicks up a gear again. 

Closing track 'Less These Days' fades in like a new dawn before seeming to stutter to a stop before re-starting, ferocious and faster than ever. While this is another of the shouty pogo punk songs that the band do so well it's also highly melodic, highly catchy, and is one of the strongest tracks on what's clearly a very high quality album. 

Endless Motion is a tour de force from a band who can always be relied upon to deliver, and who should be around for some time.


Thursday, 15 June 2023

Florence + The Machine - Dog Days Are Over (Official Lyric Video)


Fresh off the back of its inclusion in Guardians Of The Galaxy Vol 3 this year, 'Dog Days Are Over' has returned to the UK charts, fifteen years after its initial release. 

Originally released in 2008, the second single by Florence + The Machine and the most famous of the Welch/Summers compositions to date, peaked at 21 in the charts. Following on from the phenomenal resurgence in interest in Kate Bush's 'Running Up That Hill' last year after its inclusion in Stranger Things, there is a yearning desire amongst the Florence + The Machine fanbase for 'Dog Days Are Over' to also climb to number 1 this time around. 

This new found interest in 'Dog Days Are Over' reflects the enduring appeal of a song that, on one level, feels deceptively simple while, on another, also feels extremely heartfelt. Like many of the songs on Lungs, there is that sense of it being a song whose underlying emotion is almost too big for it. There's the by now immortal opening moments provided by Tom Moth's harp, the handclaps (which have always been a bit of a Florence + The Machine staple), the soaring vocals in the middle... and an unmistakable sense of an artist finding their sound for the first time. It is still, fifteen years on, an intoxicating listen. 

Wednesday, 14 June 2023

Rosa Linn - Snap - (Official Video)


Rosa Linn's 'Snap' was Armenia's Eurovision entry in 2022, where it came 20th, losing out to the unstoppable force that was Ukraine's Kalush Orchestra.

What's interesting though is what happened next.

While 'Snap' wasn't a winner at Eurovision, it was a hit with the public. It went viral on TikTok and sold well around the world, including across a number of European countries. It reached number 8 in the charts in Germany and number 21 in the UK.

Listening to it now, over a year after Linn performed it at Eurovision, it's easy to see why it would do well commercially but not do well at Eurovision: It's a great song, but it's too subtle for Eurovision. It's catchy but it's not showy enough to entrance on the Eurovision stage. 

Linn's songwriting is reminiscent of Good Advice era Basia Bulat. It's disarming and seemingly effortless, classic sounding but innovative and observant. 'Snap' has strong hooks and a great chorus. It will live in your head for days, and it will have earned its place there.

Tuesday, 13 June 2023

Daði Freyr - Whole Again | Liverpool Songbook | Grand Final | Eurovision...


This years Eurovision Song Contest was something of a special one. Partly because the UK hasn't hosted the festival since 1998, but mainly because we were hosting it because Ukraine (last years winners) were unable to. 

Interval programming can be on the variable side for Eurovision, and it's fair to say that this years interval wouldn't have been to everyone's taste... It it did kind of work, even if the songs selected were a somewhat random selection of 'classic' Liverpool cuts. Set that aside and the central idea of inviting previous Eurovision contestants to perform classic songs from Liverpool artists was basically sound, on paper at least.

There was what felt like a rather tepid 'Imagine', there was an exuberant Israeli take on Dead Or Alive's 'Spin Me Round' courtesy of 2018 contest winner, Netta, and... there was Daði Freyr, who represented Iceland in 2021, performing what can only be described as a highly inventive synth pop take on Atomic Kitten's smouldering ballad 'Whole Again'.

Setting aside the switch from female to male vocal, it was the change in tempo that really made the cover go off with a bang. The original version of 'Whole Again' was, if anything, underplayed both tempo and vocal wise. Freyr's decision to up the tempo from lacklustre to manic electro pop, coupled with a much more powerful, and sonorous, vocal gives the song an edge it never previously had. 

The crowd in the arena were clearly delighted. You can hear them singing along. And, yes, he has released it as a single.

Monday, 12 June 2023

Jorja Smith - Little Things


A fun party song from Walsall queen Jorja Smith, who always delivers. The songs video tells the story of the song, with a boy and a girl attending a party, eyes meeting across a crowded room... and so on. This tale of giddying attraction is wrapped up in a highly energetic dance track that has carnival echoes and strong dance floor potential. A perfect summer anthem.

Sunday, 11 June 2023

The Drums - "Plastic Envelope" / "Protect Him Always"


I haven't been into The Drums previously, but I was struck by the poignant beauty of 'Plastic Envelope' (a song about having your trust violated and feeling you might never trust anyone again) and the sheer devastating power of 'Protect Him Always' (about Jonny Pierce's desire to protect his younger self). They are simple songs, but incredibly vulnerable in nature, and extremely powerful as a result. 

Saturday, 10 June 2023

Grace Savage | Lively Eyes | Official Music Video


Sometimes you hear a song on the radio and try to track it down online, only to discover that you can't hear it yet because it's not released for another eight weeks.

So it was with Grace Savage's beguiling slice of electro minimalism,  'Lively Eyes', which I randomly encountered back in March, but which wasn't released until early May.

I had heard Savage's work before, but I hadn't really felt compelled to explore her work until hearing the hauntingly sad, soaringly beautiful 'Lively Eyes'. But I definitely will be doing now.