Saturday, May 4, 2019

Albums Of The Decade - 95. PJ Harvey - Let England Shake

95. PJ HARVEY - LET ENGLAND SHAKE

As concepts album go - it doesn't get much better than this. Polly Jean Harvey has been on my hit radio since about 2000 when I got into her with Stories From The City, Stories From The Sea, but it was 2007's White Chalk that indeed made the #54 cut on last decade's century on this blog.  At times as sparse as White Chalk and at times as full-bodied as, say, Stories From the City, yet Let England Shake is still woven from its own historical cloth. Yarns spun from fractured voices, soldiers wounded - it's written in such a measured way, and still sounds hysterical and muddled.

Tonight I made a fish soup for the first time in a decade - and the winter vegetables, alongside leek and potatoes, coupled with the lemon drenched hake made for a tranquil backdrop for this ace piece of work. However, my mood isn't to pull aces out of my sleeve tonight, as I've just finished a very tough jog after a bout of flu this week. I'm not gonna head into Saturday night and make my system shake - but I'll be eternally grateful to Polly for giving me a much-needed break. Back once again. 

Tuesday, April 30, 2019

Albums Of The Decade - 96. The Walkmen - Lisbon

96. THE WALKMEN - LISBON
In the year of 2016, I took a trip to Lisbon a few days before Christmas, during a three month long sabbatical stint, between moving continents - Asia to Europe - a mammoth step. I fell in love there, made a great accomplice also, drank cask-loads of wine, spent time looking at the water and witnessed a pigeon fucking up eating my pizza; as a seagull deservedly took away the crust.

The Walkmen, just on the turn of the decade, managed to craft a 1950's style homage to this most luscious of cities using horns and mariachis, amongst other dis-harmonic strings. Hamilton Leithauser plays on the binary oppositions of feeling fractured and repaired at once - and that's been the story of the last 10 years for me, especially the former.

At the time of writing, I'm currently listening to Heaven - the 2012 follow-up to Lisbon and it's more of a full-bodied work, than the stripped down nature of this aforementioned modern classic. The Walkmen, prior to this in decades past I'd seen as a support band, and occasional headliner on the live circuit. But with this installation into Spaghetti Blogonese's  hallowed Top 100, they're officially seen as outright champions.

Albums of the decade - 97. Deerhunter - Why Hasn't Everything Already Disappeared?

97. DEERHUNTER - WHY HASN'T EVERYTHING ALREADY DISAPPEARED?

Deerhunter have had a special place in my heart after 2008's stunning Microcastle. For them to penetrate the top 100, especially in 2019, speaks wonders of the fact that this is a band that always comes through.

I saw them live last in 2008, in Brighton, and they blew the house down in terms of playing, performing and piling on the quality. I don't remember any specific song but I remember the angular quality of the riffs, the molten lead of Bradford Cox's vocals and crimson lights flooding the stage. 

They're my epitome of intelligent rock and roll. This latest album is not only gonna be one of the best records of 2019, but will also sit with me as one of the band's greatest tokens. "Futurism" especially captures the vitality of effortless groove. I ran up the hill today and had it in my head even before I hit the play button. I had it on on the bus yesterday - yes I used a double "on" - and it will keep playing and burning in my thoughts. Playing me in, in flames
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Monday, April 1, 2019

Albums of the decade - 98. Fennesz - Bécs

98. FENNESZ - BÉCS

Timing is everything and this nicely coincided with the release of the artists new LP Agora which came out last Friday. I write this in my kitchen now as noise and dissonance washes all over me. Black coffee is the fuel to pump in, after a brunch of shrimp and tomato sandwiches. The Dire Straits ran a lyric once that went "I run on heavy fuel" - that juxtaposed with Christian Fennesz's ambient washes - provide a sunny, non-jokey April 1st as Spring truly sets into life.

I first encountered Fennesz in 2004 at The Coronet in London, and he was on the same bill as Four Tet, Caribou, Animal Collective and Explosions In The Sky. Brilliantly - I've just clicked that event - and it transpires that it was on 30th April, so we must have been fresh as a whistle. The discordance of sound from Fennesz, in between post-rock, folktronica and electro-funk sets, brought the mood down to a suitable down. This man is the sound of poised.

His debut LP Endless Summer was a breath of fresh air and came in at #86 on my list of best albums of the 2000's. A few LP's in-between ,and this conceptual follow-up to that debut has never felt better timed. As the seasons blend into one, and a new page begins, the sound artist crafts another tapestry.
Static, submerged, complex, beautiful. Go get 'em kid.

Wednesday, March 27, 2019

Albums of the decade - 99. James Yorkston - The Cellardyke Recording and Wassailing Society

99. JAMES YORKSTON -  THE CELLARDYKE RECORDING AND WASSAILING SOCIETY

Next on my pick list is this by James Yorkston from Scotland, who has been omnipresent and understated for the last 10 years around these parts - I've scrolled down and around on Spaghetti Blogonese and seen some sloppy late-night red wine posts, enthusing about his folkmanship and I can't guarantee that there won't not be a bit of nonsense repeated in the gloaming. 

Keeping it real for now though, after a chilled Sunday recuperating with some Adrian Younge, I sank into this full hour of lavish folk after coming back from the Vilnius International Film Festival, and felt a strong sense of teapots and folklore. As The Guardian said of this record in 2014 "James Yorkston fans get their money's worth: dense with dialogue and spanning 16 tracks, the folk songwriter's eighth album feels like an hour with old friends."

Yorkston's bassist Doogie Paul tragically died of cancer in 2012 and the song "Broken Wave (Blues for Doogie") is one of the most beautiful songs written this decade, maybe ever. I have to fill the right side of my blog up with hashtags in a minute, to try and get some more exposure and readers - but James Yorkston feels like the least worthy of hashtaggery in this 100. You know me though - I'll plough it through nevertheless

Sunday, March 24, 2019

Albums of the decade - 100. Adrian Younge - Something About April II

100. ADRIAN YOUNGE - SOMETHING ABOUT APRIL II

I originally thought that this was a soundtrack to a film, but instead was thankful to discover that the record was a sequel to the producers original debut in this series. The vibe here in this room, right now, is that I'm waiting on roast cauliflower, onions and garlic to come out of the oven. I also threw half a bag of peas into a carrot soup - but it's hardly as exploratory as what Younge was doing in 2016. I'm just going to go and stir the peas and then I'll write the second paragraph.

This list is intended as a diary through the last ten years, and where I'm at now. I'm not so bothered about rankings as I used to be - but still it's good to have some vertebrae, Whatever follows this album at #99 - it doesn't mean I like it more than #100 - Adrian Younge has driven my mood today and it's nice to pull this soulful treasure out of the crypts.

I think he did something else with Ghostface Killah a few years ago, so it may make sense to give that a listen, as when Tony is rapping over this wholesome kind of sampling, it sets the day alight. Without a rapper though, Younge still called in some cats like Bilal and Laetitia Sadler from Stereolab and while there are not vocals on every track - it adds some kind of glue.

One of my best friends has just MOVED the place I'm living, so after a Friday blowout - Saturday was actually a day of being in my own kind of crypt, despite spring starting afresh. After today's jog and the upcoming veg however - there couldn't be a better album to play to signal renewal, even if the second song on this is called "Winter Is Here". Oops.


Monday, December 17, 2018

Albums of 2016 - (1-26) - Backlog


ALBUMS OF 2016 (Clearing the backlog)



1. DAVID HOLMES – LATE NIGHT TALES (MIXTAPE)
My toppest DJ of all time put together his best ever collection with a haunting, holistic and hypnotising collection of songs, comprising folk, psychedelia and spoken word among others. It includes some heartbreaking moments of self-discovery along the way and a million and one fucking highlights.


2. TIM HECKER – LOVE STREAMS
Amazing fusion of electronic dissonance, woodwind and choral voice on what could be his best album to date. It is a beautiful abstract commentary on mentalist times of selfies and love lost. Had to say it.

3. JUNIOR BOYS – BIG BLACK COAT
Tip of the fucking iceberg on the criminally underrated fifth electronic LP for the Canadian duo. From front to back it works sublimely, coming in from the fringe, in out of the autumnal rain again.


4. BLOOD ORANGE – FREETOWN SOUND
The most unlikely re-branding of my fucking short life-span; former indie lightweight Lightspeed Champion came back and brought an absolutely soulfully championed delight of a delight.

5. RADIOHEAD – A MOON SHAPED POOL
If 2016 was the best year of the decade so far for music, then A Moon Shaped Pool was the best release by the band since Kid A. A stunningly beautiful album of masterclass and tapestry.

6. BON IVER – 22, A MILLION
The third album and Justin Vernon can do no wrong. When I played this, it had just hit October 2016 and I was in Chiang Mai, Thailand and the electronics of “and I'm standing at the station” was on the headphones. At times sounding like Bain from Batman, and others like the old beardo from the log cabin that we loved on For Emma, Forever Ago – this was a prime cut indeed Jack.

7. IMARHAN – IMARHAN
Wow! - Algerian desert rock group that has some blood and musical lineage to the Malian and Algerian purveyors Tinariwen, who are also highly drinkable. Feels like drinking water in the desert – musical equivalent.


8. DAVID BOWIE – BLACK STAR
An amazing concoction of foresight to rest your head and cosmic retrograde in an artists unparalleled vision of psychedelic loss, pining and so long Davey here forever.

9. RUN THE JEWELS - RTJ3
This came out on Christmas Eve!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! The best musical Christmas present since Burial released the Rival Dealers EP in 2013 – it fittingly was the best hip-hop LP of the year.


10. JAMES BLAKE – THE COLOUR IN ANYTHING
The longest, perhaps greatest piece of work he has ever done – amassing seventeen tracks of electronic and experimental R&B that has to be heard to be seen to be felt to believed.

11. ANOHNI – HOPELESSNESS
Wouldn't have predicted that Antony from Antony & The Johnsons would come through to make an absolute belter of a protest album. This is so much of its time. It sums up the shite turmoil we're in perfectamundo with 21st century production more than I could ever have imagined.

12. VARIOUS – DAY OF THE DEAD – GRATEFUL DEAD
A three disc opus of Grateful Dead covers spanning three volumes and over five hours of pure Sunday folk and slumber , curated by Aaron and Bryce Dessner of The National – following 2009's excellent charitable Dark was the Night – the range of voices on here, from Phosphorescent to Perfume Genius to Tim Hecker to Orchestra Baobab is just incredible.


13. NICK CAVE & THE BAD SEEDS – SKELETON TREE
Offset by the death of his son - he had actually written a lot of this before the tragedy apparently – but I don't buy it – this album was so hard to listen to. And it is now – the densest, most syrupy album of the century. Listening to it now :(

14.COMMON – BLACK AMERICA AGAIN
Maybe I should try again and again to get into Kendrick, but it just ain't happening – you can't just force yourself to like something – I really am more fond of the old-school and Common Sense epitomises the need for an established voice, though it is still great that we have the upstart Lamar.

15. JAIMEO BROWN TRANSCENDENCE – WORK SONGS
Blues, soul, funk, rock 'n' roll distilled into stories of slaves and prisoners and workers. This is an absolutely phenomenal piece of artistry.

16. UNDERWORLD – BARBARA BARBARA, WE FACE A SHINING FUTURE
This is one of my besto friends favoritest ever bands. The spoken poetry of Karl Hyde over the pulsating electronica of seven gems from Bethlehem just rules better than any world, Frankenstein or purrs.

17. CAVERN OF ANTI-MATTER – VOID BEATS / INVOCATION TREX
Crunches, whirs, fizzes, cranks, shafts, tussles, shovels, pangs, bangs, crunches, slams, scrapes, clunks.
The onomatopoeic appeal of this electronic busyness should be played in its entirety at Prague's The Cross Club.

18. YORKSTON / THORNE / KHAN – EVERYTHING SACRED
Three divergent musicians with varying styles come together to make a sterling record that shuffles around musically without fidgeting or getting whimsical. It is such a nice piece that makes me feel I was being curtailed by forced collaborations before I restored my faith in them again.

19. A TRIBE CALLED QUEST – WE GOT IT FROM HERE... THANK YOU 4 YOUR SERVICE
You wouldn't have thought that at the end of a year devoid of good hip-hop, the old-school would come back and save it – ATCQ and Common Sense both dropped late 2016 albums – this one a sci-fi opus that did fantastic things for the genre, before an amazing force brought the fucking jams.


20. ADRIAN YOUNGE – SOMETHING ABOUT APRIL 2
Soul, hip-hop, noir, all of your musical grocery goods condensed into a soundtrack stye montage that recreates old soul classics. This truly was the first great long player of 2016 which was out in Jan.

21. LEONARD COHEN – YOU WANT IT DARKER
As with Bowie, what a final salutation before heading up to the clouds (if that's what happens) – this was a real crooning of an album. I love to play it around Christmas, booyah booyah. Shame he's gone, but he was 82 – good innings.

22. DEERHOOF - THE MAGIC
The sound of swirlguns melding everywhere, this is mental-riffic from a band who have cooked up a stew again on this, their thirteenth album proper.

23. ELUVIUM – FALSE READINGS
I just love this artist. He's had a bit of slander before for being a bit blow-in-the-wind. kind of new-age but the piano and drones are just out of this world again on album number eight.

24. MATMOS – ULTIMATE CARE ii
This was made with the sounds of a parts of a washing machine. I really wanna give it a ripe pun like “good clean fun” or “detergent of the year” but I'll get too washed.....er.....carried away. Experimental triumph.

25. RIVAL CONSOLES – NIGHT MELODY
Essentially a mini-album that splibbles loads of great electronica over scuttering beats. Man, the amount of times I have written the word “electronica” or “electronic” on this post is mental.

26. DIIV – IS THE IS ARE
Playing in Taipei live at the time of writing this. I wish I was there – their breezy indie makes me want my old life back there for a short run the down the streets, even in sub-tropical sweat.