FEATURE: Snowflake: Why 2019 Is the Perfect Year for the Unique Brilliance of Kate Bush

FEATURE:

 

 

Snowflake

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IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush photoed by her brother John Carder Bush in 2011 

Why 2019 Is the Perfect Year for the Unique Brilliance of Kate Bush

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SNOWFLAKE is the opening track from...

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 ALL ALBUM COVERS: Getty Images

Kate Bush’s last album, 50 Words for Snow. I am not sure whether ‘last’ is the right word: ‘current’ or ‘latest’ might seem more appropriate and less final! Whatever terminology you want to dust into the conversation, it seems the song’s title is the most apt description of Kate Bush. They say every snowflake is unique – I am not sure whether that is a myth – but I was excited when 50 Words for Snow arrived back in 2011! Having released Director’s Cut – a series of reworkings of songs that appeared on The Sensual World (1989) and The Red Shoes (1993) – it was a shock to get a second Kate Bush album in a year! Gaps between releases have become a more regular part of Kate Bush’s work since 1982’s The Dreaming. She took three years to follow that album (Hounds of Love appeared in 1985) and there was another four years until The Sensual World. Then it was four years until The Red Shoes and there was that larger gap...twelve more years until Aerial arrived from the sky. There was pressure in Bush’s life right from the debut. After The Kick Inside’s success and unexpected beauty in 1978; EMI were keen for a quick follow-up. Given time constraints and a rushed feel; Lionheart was released in 1978 and did not fare that well. That need for greater care, personal control and time enforced increased gaps between albums.

It was not just about being able to make albums at her own pace. If there is a new album every year or two then the sound will be very similar and it would not allow great depth, exploration and originality. It was not a shock to see a four or five year gap between records given the pressure that was on Kate Bush’s shoulders and the fact she needed to make music in her own way. Many were not expecting her to be off the radar so long after 1993’s The Red Shoes but new family commitments, personal priorities and a new creative phase came to the fore. Aerial’s 2005 arrival was a shock but you could see the twelve-year wait was worth it. The textures and sheer effort in the music; the influence of her new son, Bertie, and a feeling of ease and personal happiness made the (double) album a huge success. If it were released in the 1990s or sooner than she’d hoped then that would have affected the purity and quality. Bush slaved hard and needed the material to ferment. She never felt the album would be released and had her fears – it must have been joyous seeing Aerial on the shelves! It was a relief to only wait another six years before we got some new material. Director’s Cut and 50 Words for Snow marked the most productive recording year of her life since 1978.

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I can understand why she wanted to re-record some of the tracks from The Sensual World and The Red Shoes and that creative and interpretative burst led to original thought and a fresh concept. As with every Kate Bush album; nobody could have predicted what it would be about and how it would make you feel. Ever since Hounds of Love, people have always wanted the next version of that. No matter what you produce after your masterpiece, everyone wants a similar version of what they love most – rather than a natural evolution and something out of that. Kate Bush created something very different to her 1985 benchmark with 50 Words for Snow. With featured vocalists such as Sir Elton John and the legendary Steve Gadd on percussive duties; it was another big leap and revelation from an artist in her fifties. We were never going to see the same songwriter we did in the 1970s and 1980s but I doubt many were expecting 50 Words for Snow. It is hard to put your finger on but maybe it is the change of sound – more Jazz influences than we have heard from her – or the length of track (only seven tracks overall but most of them are over eight minutes). There are a select few artists who subvert expectations and produce something totally fresh every single time – Kate Bush must be at the very top of that list.

When she was interviewing and promoting the album – she gave a smattering of interviews for Aerial but really went all-out for 50 Words for Snow – she talked about its themes and tones; explaining how it has been a creative period for her and the shock of putting two albums out in a year! Talk, in interviews, invariably turned to touring and whether Bush would embark on her second-ever tour (her first, The Tour of Life, started in 1979 and promoted the songs from The Kick Inside and Lionheart). Bush explained how she lived touring and its energy – noting how it was like a circus (in a good way) – but turned into a record artist and had been busy in the ensuing years. We did not have to wait too long until those tour-related prayers were heeded. Some thirty-five years after she began her last tour, Before the Dawn took to the Hammersmith Apollo stage. The 2014 tour was a huge hit and was a massive sell-out. Critics raved and many were noting it favourably to her first tour – in terms of the theatrics, scope and sheer ambition of the sets/concepts. The Guardian’s Alexis Petridis, in his review of 26th August, 2014, was filled with praise:

The staging might look excessive on paper, but onstage it works to astonishing effect, bolstering rather than overwhelming the emotional impact of the songs. The Ninth Wave is disturbing, funny and so immersive that the crowd temporarily forget to applaud everything Bush does. As each scene bleeds into another, they seem genuinely rapt: at the show's interval, people look a little stunned. A Sky of Honey is less obviously dramatic – nothing much happens over the course of its nine tracks – but the live performance underlines how beautiful the actual music is...

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IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in a promotional image that captures her at the Hammersmith Apollo for her Before the Dawn show/PHOTO CREDIT: Kate Bush/Getty Images 

Already widely acclaimed as the most influential and respected British female artist of the past 40 years, shrouded in the kind of endlessly intriguing mystique that is almost impossible to conjure in an internet age, Bush theoretically had a lot to lose by returning to the stage. Clearly, given how tightly she has controlled her own career since the early 80s, she would only have bothered because she felt she had something spectacular to offer. She was right: Before The Dawn is another remarkable achievement”.

After a long wait for new material after The Red Shoes, we had been treated to two original albums, a series of reworkings AND a new tour all within the space of nine years. That might sound like a long period of time but considering the quality put forward and the fact that at her commercial peak she was leaving three or four years between new albums means this new phase of her recording life was ripe, receptive and bountiful. Many were expecting a relatively quick response to 50 Words for Snow but there was no response. Although there has not been a studio album since 2011, the legendary songwriter has not been sitting idle! Her book of lyrics, How to Be Invisible, was released at the end of last year and Bush, in a great move, re-released and remastered her entire back catalogue.

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 IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush captured in 1985/PHOTO CREDIT: Guido Harari

One of my biggest frustrations was never being able to pick up a vinyl Kate Bush at any record shop! One might see albums like Aerial here and there but you try and get a copy of Hounds of Love or The Kick Inside! Casual and committed fans want all of her work in its vinyl glory and that, before last year, involved rather expensive trips to Amazon or eBay! The fact we can now get every one of her studio albums on vinyl for a fairly good rate. She released a series of remastered boxsets, each representing a different period of her life. There are four different boxsets and I guess each vinyl costs about twenty quid. It varies between boxsets but you get a good deal for your cash. Not only can you own all her albums – you can buy each record separately if you want; about fifteen or sixteen quid for single-album studio efforts – but there is a final instalment that collates some covers, rarities and unusual gems. If you want, you can buy your favourite Kate Bush album remastered and available in rare vinyl form. If you want to dive in then I would urge people to invest in the boxset editions. Buying each set would prove a triple-figure expense but – and I would if I had the money – one that is worth a rather painful monthly bank statement!

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 IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in a promotional shot for Director’s Cut/PHOTO CREDIT: John Carder Bush/Kate Bush

Like she did in 2011 – and in 1978 – Kate Bush brought out two projects in the same year! Although we were not treated to new material in 2018, it was more a year of retrospect, housekeeping and setting the record shape. We had not seen a book of lyrics from Bush until that point and, when you consider her lyrics are unique and very much her; having a book with a selection together was a long-overdue necessity. Getting all her albums re-released and having them available on vinyl was a vital move that meant people could increase their collection and new listeners could buy them – accompany them with the book of lyrics to boot! Cynics might have seen 2018 as a money-making bonanza for Bush and one where she could trade on her older material – the fact she had her own pop-up shop in London (raising money for the homeless charity, Crisis) meant, for the first time, there was this bespoke Bush shop where you could buy her new remasters and lyrics book and ensure profits from the sale went to a charity. It was a crazy and intense period for Bush (2018) and let’s consider the fact she only finished her tour in 2014. Getting all of that out in four years is an impressive feat! The most-recent audio interview we have from her is from 2016 – she spoke with BBC Radio 6’s Matt Everitt in 2016 to promote the release of Before the Dawn on C.D. and vinyl.

We are only just in 2019 now so one can forgive Bush the chance to work off some post-Christmas stress and spend some time getting her home in order! I know she will feel good having her back catalogue out and lyrics available in printed form. She silenced rumours about a tour and has been able to tick a lot off of the ‘rumours and to-do list’! Maybe we will get more live Kate Bush before retirement (if she ever does!) but I think the Hammersmith shows, in a way, were a swansong and a good way of bookmarking things. The only real question remains whether another studio album will come. She has released quite a fair deal since 2011’s 50 Words for Snow but I have heard interviews she did around that time where she says there are new ideas and concepts. It has nearly been eight years since that album and many will be hungry for another Kate Bush original. She took six years to follow up Aerial and one feels she will not want to let the clock tick into double-digits before another studio album. I think this year is a perfect one regarding new Kate Bush material. A lot has happened in the world since we saw a studio album from Kate Bush. There has been increased political turmoil and divisions in the U.K.

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 PHOTO CREDIT: John Carder Bush

We have seen reports come out suggesting vinyl has stalled in sales (sales stalled for the first time last year after enjoying record sales before) and C.D.s are on the way out. We see reports about streaming booms but a bit of turmoil regarding music business. I feel, despite the streaming boom, there is uncertainty regarding parity and whether these big streaming numbers equate to fair revenue. Record shops are threatened and more and more live venues have closed down. We will never live to see a day when all venues and shops will close but I feel electronic claws are exerting more power and voice by the year. The landscape has shifted a lot since 2011 and I feel there is this great need for some sort of order, recovery and discussion. I feel 2018’s vinyl freeze will end in 2019 and sales will pick back up. There has been some uplift and joy in music the past few years but I think there is still a trend towards the dour, depressed and overly-personal. Female artists are shouting loud but I still think there is an imbalance and sexism – despite the fact most of the best albums from last year were recorded by female artists. This might sound like I am building up to a superhero fanfare but we need Super Kate to swing back in and start to kick butt!

I feel we are less concerned about physical forms and albums as a whole; more drawn to something insular and less magical. Her music, to me, seems to be the antidote. Even when she is discussing a wintery scene or a personal theme; magic, beauty and incredible joy seems to be sprinkled on every page! Her arresting voice and incredible musicianship puts you in a better frame and the fact her remastered albums garnered such interest shows how much of an ‘albums artist’ she is! You feel guilty and short-changed hand-picking songs from a Kate Bush album: her records need to be experienced in their full state and, as such, I think a new album from her could help fight the case for vinyl and C.D.s. Not only can she spur a fresh interest in the album as an artform but, for those who prefer to select a few tracks here and there, having a fresh Kate Bush album on Spotify means one can select a few fresh tracks and combine them with material from all her other albums – create their own Kate Bush mix and a special playlist. Although she (and I) would prefer people bought the album and listened to it without skipping; any time someone bonds with her music is a special and unique occasion. Kate Bush turned sixty last year and I think there is a real clambering for the iconic artist to enter her sixth decade of recording with something that reflects the past few years.

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 PHOTO CREDIT: John Carder Bush

She has a grown-up son now and there have been no real seismic shifts in terms of the music landscape – no phenomenon like Britpop or Grunge that would mean a new Kate Bush album would stick out and be marginalised. Another sixty-year-old Pop icon, Madonna, will definitely release an album this year and it would be good to see Bush join her and bring out something new. One knows Bush works at her own rate and you can never predict what will come and when it will arrive. I am excited to see whether we will get a concept-type record or a new sonic shift (Kate Bush tackling Electro, perhaps?!). Knowing her work inside out; the compositions are likely to be fairly similar in tone to her previous couple of albums and not a return to her early style. I feel the fact she has remastered her albums and released a lyrics book means there is this phase complete and she is ready to enter the next one. I am not suggesting she will release an album this year but I think there is something in the water. It has been eight years since her last original and I can guarantee she has been working on songs since she completed work on 50 Words for Snow. Look at the ten albums (including Director’s Cut) she has released so far and one can see a trend emerge. The Kick Inside was released in February (1978) whereas Director’s Cut came out in May (2011). Aside from that, every single other album came out between September and November.

If we had to wait until September this year then that would be okay but I’d like to think Bush has a more The Kick Inside-like release plan. Of course, as soon as there is a new album out people will ask if there is another to come after that! I do get the sense Bush has been keen to tour, remaster her work and get the lyrics book out before thinking about something new. Now that this has been achieved, I wonder what we might get. There are more than just me yearning for a new Bush album and something that indicates where her creative mind is. It is clear the love of her work is fierce and people, of all ages, want to experience her unique genius. There have been some incredible albums unleashed to the world since 2011 but none that match Kate Bush in full flight. The fact we received treats last year means we should let that settle and be thankful but you know many are eager to experience something new. 50 Words for Snow is a fantastic album I keep listening to and am discovering nuance and revelation time and time again. Among the chill, snowmen and frozen tundra is this unique snowflake: the one and only Kate Bush. I am not sure how she will follow that 2011 work of brilliance but let’s hope this year sees her eleventh studio album arrive (tenth if you see Director’s Cut as re-workings rather than new songs). Although, as I said, where Kate Bush is concerned...

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  PHOTO CREDIT: John Carder Bush

YOU can never predict what she’ll do next.

FEATURE: NO CD: Have We Lost a Love of Physical Music?

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NO CD

IMAGE CREDIT: Dribble

Have We Lost a Love of Physical Music?

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THERE is something sad about the decline...

 PHOTO CREDIT: @crew/Unsplash

of physical music and how seldom we are actually buying albums anymore. I have mentioned the rise and continuation of vinyl: here is a form of music that is not as popular as it was decades ago but is not in any real danger of disappearing. I guess, given the fact vinyl is doing okay and more music shops are stocking them; can we really say we are unwilling to buy music?! Vinyl has been growing over the past twenty-five years and I think last year was the only one where sales stagnated. That is not much of a worry because there has not been a decline as such – maybe we have come to a point in time when the ease and low cost of streaming means buying records is a bit of an extravagance. I am one of those people who will always go out and buy records and C.D.s but fewer of us are. We are being told unemployment figures are low and we do not necessarily have less money in our pockets than we did years ago. I guess, with chains like HMV being threatened, we have less visibility on the high-street and there are fewer outlets one can buy physical music. Sites like Amazon are always around so I feel that excuse does not hold much water. The reason I bring this up is as a reaction to a report that says C.D. sales are dropping.

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 IMAGE CREDIT: Nick Veasey/Getty Images

The BBC have presented the facts and figures:

Sales of CDs plummeted by 23% last year, as consumers flocked to streaming services for their music.

Just 32 million CDs were sold in 2018 - almost 100 million fewer than in 2008; and a drop of 9.6 million year-on-year.

The growth of vinyl also began to plateau, with 4.2 million records sold, a rise of just 1.6%, said the BPI.

Shrinking shelf space in supermarkets contributed to the slowdown, but HMV's troubles suggest we are increasingly uninterested in owning our music.

The CDs that did sell in large quantities tended to appeal to older, non-traditional music buyers - with six of the year's top 10 albums either film soundtracks or Now compilations”.

It is interesting looking at these statistics. I do love the fact compilation albums are popular and the true way of listening to these is on C.D. I always gravitate towards the Now That’s What I Call Music! I have been buying that series since the 1990s and it is great to collect them and see how music has changed since the series started back in 1983. I can understand why older listeners would not want to abandon the C.D. and vinyl format. We have been raised on this form of listening and the sentimental and physical value cannot be replaced by streaming. I do feel a lot of younger, new listeners are instantly going online and prefer the more streamlined version of music.

 IN THIS IMAGE: Over seventy percent of those who own George Ezra’s new album either bought in on C.D. on vinyl (as opposed to streaming)/IMAGE CREDIT: Getty Images

I can understand why the physical side of music might appear a bit clunky and old-fashioned. Records are great and have that weight to them but they can take up a lot of space and time. Listening to vinyl is a time commitment and you cannot skip through tracks and listen on the go. The same is true of C.D.s. Now that portable players have been phased out and there is no real portable manner of experiencing these albums; many are constricted and either listen at home on a laptop or in the car. I do wonder whether C.D. sales would pick back up if we brought back into circulation C.D. players and ways to play away from a laptop – almost taking music back to the roots. I think we all so conditioned to use laptops and Smartphones now that the notion of detaching music from these devices seems foreign and counter-intuitive. The BBC article spoke to various figures about the slump of C.D. sales and what this meant. A segment caught my eye that we all need to remember:

Jon Tolley, who runs the independent record shop Banquet Records argues that streaming can co-exist with vinyl and CDs.

"I don't buy it that physical music is necessarily competing with streams. We all access music and film on the internet, and that's fine and healthy and valid, but you wouldn't look at the Mona Lisa on your phone and think it's the same thing as going to see it in a gallery."

"The reason vinyl sales are at a 25-year high is because people are rejecting this part of modern society where everything is immediate and nothing means anything"

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IN THIS PHOTO: Jack White/PHOTO CREDIT: Rosalind O’Connor  

Jack White recently gave an interview with Rolling Stone and said that the C.D. was on its way out. He feels the new dynamic will be streaming music on the move and listening to vinyl when at home. That sounds like a good balance and fair compromise but it does leave the C.D. out of the party. I think a couple of issues come up when we think of C.D.s. The fact there is a lot of plastic in the casing means it seems jarring at a time when we are opening our eyes to the amount of plastic waste. Companies are being told to reduce the amount of plastic they use – so how will music react? You can use cardboard instead but one wonders how rigid and durable this sort of packing is. Another drawback is the lack of players and devices specifically for C.D.s. It is a lot easier to stream music and listen on a laptop. If we can do that then why unpack a C.D. and pop it in a tray (on a laptop) and do it that way? A lot of laptops do not have a drive for C.D.s so it is getting harder and harder to actually play them. Whereas records are large and you seem to get a lot of bang for your buck; C.D.s are smaller and there is less visual pleasure. I think the biggest gulf we see is what sort of albums people are streaming compared to downloading.

 IN THIS IMAGE: The cover of Anne-Marie’s 2018 album, Speak Your Mind/IMAGE CREDIT: Getty Images

The BBC article shows how strong the streaming market is:

A total of 91 billion songs were played on Spotify, Apple Music and their competitors last year - the equivalent of 1,300 songs per person in the UK - and streaming now accounts for nearly two thirds (63.6%) of all music consumption in the UK.

The popularity of on-demand music was enough to compensate for the slump in CD sales and downloads; giving the industry its fourth consecutive year of growth.

A total of 142.9 million albums were either streamed, purchased or downloaded, with an estimated retail value of £1.33 billion, said trade body the BPI.

However, it was a poor year for new talent. Anne-Marie's Speak Your Mind was the year's biggest-selling debut album, shifting 160,000 copies - but no other debut sold more than 60,000, the threshold for a silver disc”.

If streaming is a bit more balanced regarding the old and new; most of the top-ten vinyl records bought last year were from older acts. Aside from Arctic Monkeys, George Ezra and The Greatest Showman’s soundtrack; the remainder of the top-ten were albums from older artists. It makes me wonder whether this is the type of people buying vinyl. Do younger listeners, in general, have the money or appreciation of vinyl? It may seems troubling for new artists when they realise the most popular vinyl are the older ones but streaming is booming and they need not worry.

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 IN THIS IMAGE: Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours was the third-biggest-selling vinyl of 2018/IMAGE CREDIT: Getty Image

I do not think physical sales will end anytime soon – even if vinyl sales have not risen in the last year – but it is concerning to see C.D.s tumbling in value. I, for one, love a C.D. and keep tonnes of them in my car. For me, they are a link to my childhood and I like the fact I am paying for music. How much of that cost goes to the artist is hard to say but I’d like to think it is more than if I streamed that album. It would be easy to discontinue C.D.s but there are many established artists who rely on the revenue; smaller labels and artists who need that merchandise pull and ensure their artists are visible. Streaming is great but it is easy to get buried and lost in the sea of digital options. The thrill of seeing your album on the shelves, in C.D. form, is huge and I would not like to see that go away. I do worry about the decline and think the lure of free music means people are not bothering to go out and buy albums. So many people say they do not pay to download music and that troubles me. The older generations and established listeners will always buy vinyl and C.D.s but, as their numbers dwindle and the dominance of streaming takes over...where does that leave us?

 PHOTO CREDIT: @florenciaviadana/Unsplash

We need to ensure music can be streamed online but the culture of buying albums and interacting with people needs to survive alongside it. This tricky relationship always makes the news and I do not want to live to see a day when all physical music has been replaced. I think vinyl is great but I love the portability of C.D.s and the fact I can easily play them in the car or on the laptop. It is vital we buy music and compensate artists but, with streaming allowing free passes it is making it harder to achieve a perfect state. Physical music is a way of seeing money go to the artist and I feel there should be a way of making everyone who uses sites like Spotify to pay a small fee each year. Maybe the slide is inevitable but I do not feel we will completely abandon the love of physical music. Whether it is the Now That’s What I Call Music! series or some older record, people somewhere will grab a C.D. or vinyl and prefer that method. Whatever way we look at the new figures; it signals a lacking affection for C.D.s and, for a brief spell at least, no addition love of vinyl. I do hope 2019 sees chains like HMV survive and vinyl sales pick up. Even if physical music is still alive and influential, it seems the days of people going out and buying C.D.s...

 PHOTO CREDIT: @usefulcollective/Unsplash

ARE numbered.

FEATURE: Going Deeper: Getting to Know Musicians Better in 2019

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Going Deeper

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PHOTO CREDIT: @othentikisra/Unsplash  

Getting to Know Musicians Better in 2019

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MODERN journalism is all about quick...

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 PHOTO CREDIT: @sammcghee/Unsplash

turnaround and smaller articles that are quite easy to read. We pitch articles and interviews that are digestible and do not really take up a lot of our times. There is a plethora of websites where you can find your musical fix and get all of the latest news. We do not need a lot of depth when it comes to news: just the essentials and make it as punchy as possible. A lot of album reviews tend to be fairly short and it can be difficult getting to grips based on the odd line here and there. I know there are music websites where contributors put the effort in and you do get a lot of depth but it is becoming rare as more and more music websites emerge. The consistent element I have discovered with music journalism is interviews that are pretty brief and sketchy. I am changing the way I interview and that I go after but, before now, my interviews have consisted quite a few questions that allow the musician(s) to go into detail and explore them from multiple angles. I have my standard questions and those easier ones but like to get to know the people behind the music. I have, until now, emailed interviews and it can even then be tricky discovering the real person. I did it that way for convenience and ease but it occurs to me there are not many people digging that deep and taking the time to explore musicians.

 IN THIS PHOTO: Ellie Goulding/PHOTO CREDIT: Vianney Le Caer/Invision/AP

Maybe modern journalism means we want that bitesize and brief interview where there are a few questions and we do not have to read for that long. I talked about this last year but I do wonder whether a new approach needs to be taken to interviewing. My anger, this time, has been fuelled by a rather brief interview that has been published in The Guardian with Ellie Goulding. She has been away from music for a while and, instead of a detailed and big interviewed; there are a few questions and it is not the most riveting piece you’ll read. I guess it is nice to see her back and you learn a few things from the interview – is it a missed opportunity? One of the reasons I decided to email interviews is because it gives artists more time to explore their answers and put some effort in. I am hoping to move to verbal interviews because I think there are so many sites out there that ask a few questions and that is it. Whether you are a brand-new artist or established musician then you have to ask whether interviews are pressing and long enough? I do not concede we are all looking for short and unchallenging when it comes to music journalism. Too often, you open a website or read a magazine and you get the same interviews with the same questions asked.

 PHOTO CREDIT: @neilgodding/Unsplash

There may be something out there but I wonder whether there is a YouTube channel or video series that sits down with artists and takes time to give them a problem good grilling. That might sound intense but I mean asking them about their musical past and current movements; go deep and get behind the real person. Maybe this applies to mainstream and established acts but I would love to see longer interviews that not only talk about current material and musical favourites but mix in that artist’s/band’s favourite sounds. I am excited to start a new project but I think, at the moment, there is a gap. Even new artists want to talk more and give the public a greater sense of who they are and where they came from. Journalism seems to be about providing these relatively short interviews that you can read without too much trouble and get a brief flavour of that person. Even when I hear musicians on the radio; there is always that ticking clock and it is always hard for D.J.s to squeeze too much in given the time constraints. I am looking around but not seeing too many options where we get to take away all the barriers and really get to know the artist. I am thinking about a podcast – whether it happens this year or not – where a musician/figure in the music industry is sat down and opened up.

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 PHOTO CREDIT: @jmvillejo/Unsplash

Current work would be dissected and discussed but it would go much further than that. By the end of the interview, I hope, you’d get to know so much you didn’t already know and a true impression of them. There is nothing wrong with short online interviews but I do often feel like there is a chance missed. For huge artists and those coming through; I think it would be good to see more interview series that take the time to probe and uncover. I am interested to learn what sounds musicians are influenced by and how their musical life started; if they have favourite records and what plans they have for the year ahead. I think we can go even further without testing patience and being too revealing. I am trying to rebel against rather brief journalism and pieces that are quite irreverent and do not really offer much new insight. Perhaps we have become use to a rather lazy style of journalism but I love interview series – usually involving filmmakers and actors – that take the time to get to know the subject. I think a new approach would make people more interested in music itself and mean we get to bond with that artist/band. As it is now, we flick through new releases and scroll through websites and do not really settle. Rather than go for the standard questions and these ‘tight’ articles; let’s sit down with the icons and best newcomers and really have a good chat. I think that could even translate into print and many would happily sit and read a more thorough interview if some great questions were asked. I think music journalists, in 2019, should resolve to take a different approach and sit back. It may like, on paper, musicians want a rather short and to-the-point interview but when you sit down with them and talk you’ll find they have an...

 PHOTO CREDIT: @skywarden/Unsplash

AWFUL lot more to say.

FEATURE: Christmas Come Late: Great Albums to Snap Up in January

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Christmas Come Late

PHOTO CREDIT: @sethdoylee/Unsplash 

Great Albums to Snap Up in January

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WE have only just ticked into 2019...

 PHOTO CREDIT: @jan_strecha/Unsplash

but it is not long until the first albums of the year arrive. A lot of the bigger releases will not come until later in the year but that is not to say January will be dry and uninteresting! In fact…there are some pretty good records due for release this month. I have selected eleven essential albums that you need to put into your January collection. Many of us would have received money and record gift cards for Christmas and will be wondering which new albums we need to get behind. Others will want a taste of 2019 and what its early runners are all about. In honour of that, take a look at the selection and I am sure you will find something in the pack that tickles your fancy. 2018 was a great year for music and we saw some really fantastic L.P.s come out. It might be a little premature to make predictions but I feel next year can be an even...

 PHOTO CREDIT: @priscilladupreez/Unsplash

MORE exceptional and bold one for music.

ALL ALBUM COVERS: Getty Images

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Jack & Jack A Good Friend Is Nice

Alice Merton Mint

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Maggie Rogers Heard It in a Past Life

Deerhunter Why Hasn’t Everything Already Disappeared?

Mike Posner A Real Good Kid

Sharon Van Etten Remind Me Tomorrow

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Bring Me the Horizon Amo

Rival Sons Feral Roots

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Blood Red Shoes Get Tragic

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Rudimental Toast to Our Differences

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RAT BOY INTERNATIONALLY UNKNOWN

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FEATURE: Music Sounds Better with You: Ones to Watch 2019: Part VI

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Music Sounds Better with You

IN THIS PHOTO: Self Esteem (Rebecca Lucy Taylor) 

Ones to Watch 2019: Part VI

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THIS might be the final recommendations rundown...

 IN THIS PHOTO: grandson

of the year – but there are some pretty good names on the list! I have been looking at the recommended music names from other areas of the music media and there seems to be some consensus. It has been a great year for music and I feel 2019 has a lot to offer. I am not sure what direction things will take regarding sounds and direction but I think we will see a lot of underground and near-the-mainstream acts get to the big leagues and exert some influence. Whatever happens; here is my last list of musicians you need to keep an eye out for and follow in 2019. Have a look and listen to these great artists and make sure you end the year with loads of...

 IN THIS PHOTO: Anna of the North

PROMISE and quality.

ALL PHOTOS/IMAGES (unless credited otherwise): Getty Images

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Iyamah

Ailbhe Reddy

Emmy the Great

Hey Charlie

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Natalie McCool

grandson

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Catherine McGrath

YONAKA

The Aces

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Cautious Clay

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Pale Waves

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Kelsey Lu

Nilüfer Yanya

Saweetie

Self Esteem

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Pillow Queens

Loski

Nina Nesbitt

FEATURE: Against Consensus: Underrated Albums That Outshine the Critical Favourite: Nirvana - Bleach

FEATURE:

 

 

Against Consensus: Underrated Albums That Outshine the Critical Favourite

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IMAGE CREDIT: Getty Images 

Nirvana - Bleach

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MAYBE it is outrageous to suggest classic albums...

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IMAGE CREDIT: Getty Images  

can be written off or are not as lofty as they appear. I am not suggesting that but feel there is this big critical weight that is paid to some albums. In the case of Nirvana, Nevermind is seen as their defining statement. That came out in 1991 and is considered one of the best albums of all time. Many people overlook Bleach and Nirvana’s start. The record came out in 1989 and is a very different beast to the polished and blockbuster Nevermind. It is amazing to think how the Washington-formed band changed between records. Nevermind is this titanic and all-conquering record that was not expected to be a success. Given the popularity of its lead single, Smells Like Teen Spirit, the album took off and became a smash. Look back to 1989 and a rather modest introduction. Although Bleach failed to chart upon its original release, it was received well by critics and announced the introduction of this unique and soon-to-be-world-dominating group. I think Bleach is a stronger record than Nevermind because it has that rawness and I love the ragged edges. Maybe the songs are not as polished and there are fewer huge smashes but it seems like a more thrilling and genuine record. I will come to look at highlights from the album but I listen to Bleach and it digs deeper and stays in my memory longer.

Their November 1988 debut single, Love Buzz, got people talking and, to many, it is the standout cut on Bleach. Nirvana rehearsed for two to three weeks in preparation for recording of Bleach and Sub Pop had only requested an E.P. (the band would release an E.P., Blew, between Bleach and Nevermind). The band headed to the studio with producer Jack Endino and it is Nirvana in the days before drummer Dave Grohl. On their debut, the band worked with Chad Channing (on the majority of songs) and Dale Crover (on Floyd the Barber, Paper Cuts and Downer). Many critics noted a slightly weaker percussion sound compared to subsequent albums from the band – the magic and meat of Dave Grohl was lacking. The album was recorded and laid down fairly quickly and inexpensively but there was to be a delay. Sub Pop head Bruce Pavitt wanted the album to be re-sequenced which caused a delay until the funds could be raised. I think, although Bleach is incredible, it is a little top-heavy so I wonder whether the original track sequence would have afforded a greater spread and balance. In any case; there was a feeling from Nirvana lead Kurt Cobain that the music conformed to the Grunge expectations at the time. Cobain felt Bleach was designed to fit into the Seattle sound and, as such, the lead felt quite angered at the time.

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 IN THIS PHOTO: Nirvana (Kurt Cobain, Krist Novoselic and Chad Channing) in 1989/PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images

He claims most of the lyrics were written the night before recording – many were penned whilst driving to the studio – and had no real meaning. So long as they were not sexist then it did not really matter. It was clear, when listening to the songs, that there was truth and biography. Songs like School are a commentary on the Grunge scene and labels like Sub Pop; About a Girl is a Beatles-inspired gem that shows the balance of moods and tones on the album. Bleach is not only a stunning debut album but something that does not get the attention and acclaim it warrants. It is that anger from Cobain that propels the album and, alongside Krist Novoselic’s chunky and malleable bass, there is a goofiness and playfulness that sits alongside the aggression. Mr. Moustache was about masculinity and being macho; directing itself to Nirvana’s male fans. Negative Creep is about Cobain himself whilst About a Girl showcases the songwriter’s talents as a Pop crafter. Cobain was keen to hide his love of Pop – and affection for bands such as R.E.M. – because he did not want to alienate their Grunge core. He knew the risk of putting a jangly Pop song on a Grunge album but he need not of worried: About a Girl is considered one of the very finest in the Nirvana cannon.

In his earliest interviews, Cobain explains that the lyrics are among the least important considerations for him. He said he goes through two or three subjects in a song and the title can mean absolutely nothing at all. Maybe a few tracks on Bleach do not hit the heights of Love Buzz and About a Girl but the band’s debut is overloaded with quality. It is a dirty and rawer record than Nevermind and, whilst it does not get the same focus and acclaim as the 1991 gem; I feel Bleach is a more interesting, rounded and rewarding album. I love Nevermind and have endless respect for it but feel it is too polished has that commercial edge. The band’s final album, In Utero (1993), would see them return to a grungier and dirtier sound. If Cobain was sceptical about Bleach’s brilliance and legacy; reviews for the album have shown plenty of love. Pitchfork, writing in 2009, reviewed the twentieth anniversary edition of Bleach:

But rather than unfairly compare it to the platinum sheen of sophomore release Nevermind, Bleach is best appreciated today as a snapshot of a specific time and place, of a Seattle scene bubbling up before it turned into a media adjective: In the Aero Zeppelin grind of "School" and the Mudhoney-quoting scum-bucket thrash of "Negative Creep", you have the perfect audio manifestation of the stark, exhilarating black-and-white Charles Peterson photos that captured late-80s Seattle like a series of strobe-light flickers (and which populate much of this reissue's 52-page photo booklet). Original producer Jack Endino's new remastering job gives Bleach a much-needed boost in fidelity, but there's an intrinsic, primordial murkiness to this album that can't be polished-- while Axl was welcoming the masses into the Sunset Strip jungle, Nirvana dragged the Sub Pop set into the bleak, chilly backwoods from which they came.

Though briskly paced, Bleach is a front-loaded record, the maniacal/melodic contrasts of its stellar first half-- anchored by the epochal anti-love song "About a Girl"-- ceding to the more period-typical grunge of its second”.

 

NME reviewed Bleach in 1989:

This is the biggest, baddest sound that Sub Pop have so far managed to unearth. So primitive that they manage to make label mates Mudhoney sound like Genesis, Nirvana turn up the volume and spit and claw their way to the top of the musical garbage heap.

Included here (natch!) is their brilliant single 'Love Buzz', shorn of its original Looney Toon opening but still a magnificent couple of minutes.

Equally glorious is 'Negative Creep', a leash strainer of a song that eventually gets loose and goes on the rampage like a rabid Rottweiler. Fab!

'Bleach' could be accused of being a record that is slightly top heavy with too much filler (the overlong 'Shifting' being a prime example), but give it enough spins and even the silt rises to the top. Nirvana are undoubtedly at their best when they're playing short and punchy songs as opposed to drawn out experiments with sound…But what the hell! For a first LP this sounds pretty damn good to me
”.

I don’t think there has been a debut album since with the same mixture of textures, moods and thrills. Most people who love Nirvana will edge to Nevermind and hold that dearest but I prefer Bleach. The grubbiness and anger is terrific but you do get melodic moments like About a Girl. The absence of Grohl does mean the percussion is not as pronounced and physical as it would be on Nevermind but that is a minor complaint.

 IN THIS PHOTO: Nirvana in 1989/PHOTO CREDIT: Michael Lavine

Almost thirty years after its release; Bleach remains, to some, a curiosity and promising start whereas others view it as a huge statement from a band who would soon take a gigantic step. I love their scrappy debut and even love ‘weaker’ songs such as Scoff and Swap Meet. Bleach is a record that will always be close to me and I feel many modern bands can take guidance and instruction from it. If you have not heard it then set some time aside and investigate the 1989 debut from the Grunge icons. Bleach is a wonderful album that is a lot stronger than many critics (and the band themselves) claim. It did not get the same big reviews as Nevermind but I feel reinvestigation is needed. As it turns thirty next year; let’s shine a new light on a brilliant debut from a sensational trio. Stocked with great songs and a restless energy throughout; I think a new generation needs to discover Bleach. I adore the album and think its real influence and impact is hard to describe. I will spin it now because, every time I play it, something new comes to light. A stunning record that holds up after all these years; the majestic and stunning Bleach deserves a bigger audience. Maybe Nevermind will always win out and get the biggest shout but I think there is an awful lot to be said for Nirvana’s...

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 IN THIS PHOTO: Nirvana in 1989/PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images

AWESOME debut.

FEATURE: Closing Time: Is It the End for HMV?

FEATURE:

 

 

Closing Time

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IN THIS PHOTO: HMV’s flagship store on London’s Oxford Street that closed in 2017/PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images 

Is It the End for HMV?

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IT doesn’t seem that long ago...

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IMAGE CREDIT: Getty Images 

we were faced with the sad prospect of HMV closing its stores. When I was growing up, there used to be quite a few different record store chains – Our Price was my favourite. The chain closed its doors in 2004 and another great retailer, Fopp, only has a few stores open now. At its peak, there were fifty in total and it seems the days of Fopp are numbered. Look around the high-street now and how many record stores are there?! Apart from independent record stores, we do not really have a lot of choice. It is unfortunate HMV is being threatened with possible extinction. It might not be as bad as all its stores closing but, as this article shows; there is a real danger for HMV and its employees:

HMV has collapsed into administration for the second time in six years, putting more than 2,200 jobs at risk.

The music and film retailer appointed administrators from KPMG after sales slumped over Christmas.

It said sales of DVDs across the whole market had plunged by 30% on last year and retailers of all types were facing “a tsunami of challenges”.

HMV confirmed on Friday that its 125 UK stores will remain open while talks with suppliers and potential buyers continue.

The 97-year-old retailer was rescued by Hilco, a restructuring company, when it previously entered administration in 2013...

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IN THIS PHOTO: World Music Record Department (date unknown) at HMV, Oxford Street (London)/PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images  

Paul McGowan, the executive chairman of HMV and Hilco, said the decline in the CD and DVD market had made the situation impossible.

During the key Christmas trading period, the market for DVDs fell by over 30% compared to the previous year, and while HMV performed considerably better than that, such a deterioration in a key sector of the market is unsustainable,” he said.

“HMV has clearly not been insulated from the general malaise of the UK high street and has suffered the same challenges with business rates and other government-centric policies, which have led to increased fixed costs in the business”.

I do hope someone comes in and saves HMV because it would be a shame to see the sole surviving music titan disappear. I think the main problem with HMV is its reliance of HMV. I have been to a few different stores and they are getting a lot better regarding music and stocking a great range of vinyl. There was a time, fairly recently, where there was not a lot of vinyl and it was hard to get a good selection. HMV realised that music needs to be at the heart of the business but, when one walks into an HMV store, the DVDs are taking up too much room! How many of us watch DVDs a lot now?! I still have a collection but more and more of us are watching services like Netflix and Amazon.

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 IMAGE CREDIT: Getty Images

I think a lot of stores like HMV are in danger because they are relying on formats and technologies that are starting to disappear from the landscape. You can say there are not many record stores around because we are streaming more and listening to vinyl – the role of C.D.s is diminishing and we are turning to platforms like Spotify more. There is definitely a role for physical music and I think HMV needs to return to music and keep DVDs to a minimum. I like the fact one has a DVD choice when you walk into a store but it is taking too much room up and there needs to be a switch. I also think there is a pricing issue. Think about the sales this time of year and you can pick up some cheap C.D.s and DVDs. It is easy to get a bundle of older and new releases which probably doesn’t help the profit margin. The reason many of us go to HMV – for the vinyl – has not been touched with the same generous pricing. Very few records are priced reasonably so fanatics and casual listeners can happily afford them. One can say websites and online markets are no better and vinyl is expensive no matter what. Not only do chains like HMV need to keep their selection of records rich and varied; the prices need to be lower so they can compete with online giants.

 PHOTO CREDIT: @rawpixel/Unsplash

Is it just a simple case of reshift and a new focus?! I think there are deeper problems but HMV needs a big administrator/company who can think about the market and how survival can be assured. I think there is an appetite for record shops on the high-street but more and more are either going online or to independent shops. I would hate to see HMV die because it is the final giant that stands against the online onslaught. Perhaps it is a sad and inevitable sign of the modern market and the dwindling high-street. I feel vinyl should be up front and a pricing review should happen. The reason we go to record shops is for the vinyl and I feel HMV needs to realise that. Having more affordable records would tempt people in but I feel C.D.s still need to be part of the mix. Maybe you cannot get rid of DVDs entirely but they need to play a minor part of the brand. As it stands now, HMV seems more about films and T.V. than it does music. It is hard to say exactly why the chain is threatened again but, as the above article continues; the problem extends to the rest of the high-street:

Meanwhile, big high-street names including Primark, John Lewis and Superdry sounded the alarm on trading conditions in the run-up to Christmas, and more retailers are expected to follow.

A report by KPMG and Ipsos Retail Think Tank warned there will be “more casualties to come” on the high street, as the battle to win customers and stay afloat will intensify in 2019...

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PHOTO CREDIT: @alexandre_godreau/Unsplash 

Richard Lim, the chief executive of Retail Economics, said HMV was the “first victim” of poor Christmas trading, as the industry faces a major shift in consumer behaviour, fiercer competition and spiralling operating costs.

Alex Neill from the consumer group Which? advised anyone with HMV vouchers to spend them as soon as possible”.

I do worry about the high-street in general and how many other chains are endangered. If HMV does close then one has to ask whether music on the high-street will disappear altogether. Aside from some independent record shops; where does one go to get music on the high-street?! I feel, whatever HMV does, it is going to be bested by the wider choice and lower prices one can find on the Internet. I would hate to see HMV end as it has been around since 1921 – His Master’s Voice, to give it its full name – and it has provided lots of great memories and times. I have bought a lot of my favourite music from HMV and would not have got into the industry were it not for chains like this. To let it end and go into administration would be a travesty but, if it does survive a second time, then measures need to come in that ensure survival and growth. Every case of a high-street retailer closing down is tragic but, if we let HMV slip away, it is a loss that will be...

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IN THIS PHOTO: HMV 363, Oxford Street (London) - Interior of store late-1960s or early-1970s/PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images  

HARD to take.

FEATURE: The Other Side of the Record: Cutting Back and Moving Forward in 2019

FEATURE:

 

 

The Other Side of the Record

PHOTO CREDIT: @mikeferreira/Unsplash

Cutting Back and Moving Forward in 2019

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THIS year has been a tale of two halves...

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PHOTO CREDIT: @lensinkmitchel/Unsplash 

in terms of fortune and comfort. I have never been really happy at all – I never am and is not the fault of this year particularly – but I look back and there has not been a lot of satisfaction and remembrance. People ask me who my favourite interviews and artists have been and which we need to look out for in 2019. I think and think…and nothing really comes to mind. It is not the fault of artists but I have taken a lot of requests and, against the stress and busy nature of modern life, not a lot has stuck in. A lot of interviews have been a frustrating process and, even as people are pitching now; I am not being blown away and nothing is standing out. I can match a new request with several from earlier and others that are pretty much identical. Few artists can manage a few decent images and so many avoid Twitter because they feel it is not as god a marketing tool as hoped – forgetting that it is a worldwide platform and most of use it to promote our work. There have been some great reviews and interviews but the percentage has been lower than it would have been if I worked for a bigger publication of upped my game. I am sure there is a list I could make of artists to watch next year – I have a feature running with recommendations – but I cannot name too many off the top that I am going to listen to in 2019...

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 PHOTO CREDIT: @intelligenciya/Unsplash

The modern industry is packed with artists and it is this wave of sounds that can be daunting. I have agreed to features just to get something online and accepted interview requests and regretted it. It may sound all-doom but there have been some rewarding and exciting interviews/reviews that have been humbling and satisfying. It would be foolhardy to do interviews and reviews if they made me angry but the impression I get of this year is a lot of grammar and spelling correction; chasing artists for answers and getting annoyed by the quality of the images I am sent. The songs I am sent make some sort of impact first off but so much drifts on by – it is too close to everything else and there are very few innovators out there. I long to hear something that blows the senses and matches the best of the past; gets me invested and stay in the brain – that has not happened this year. A lot of artists are writing negative songs and many in a major key - and it gets to the point where you listen to the music you know and love. I can be assured of happiness and great revelation when I return to the best of the past: very seldom have I smiled or been put in a better frame with stuff sent my way. It has been great helping the artist and putting stuff on the page that looks great. I pride myself on great visuals and I am very pleased with how my blog looks and the reception it is getting.

 PHOTO CREDIT: @patrickian4/Unsplash

That is the big problem. So many people say it is great and I am a great writer – I cannot agree with everything – and the visual aspect is key. The depth of interviews is one of the reasons why I do things like I do. I send interview questions because it is more convenient for artists and managers and people can take their time. That works well for the most part but there is still too many chasing, sloppy answers – even those whose first language is English are not expending enough effort – and it sort of reveals how much the written word has slipped from our culture. The alternative to this sense of fatigue is being more selective and doing traditional interviews. I will select a few choice subjects for the next few months and am accepting no more than one a day – much stricter regarding quality and originality of sound. Maybe that will lead to very little going online but it seems to work for me. I have always been more interested in the nature of spoken interviews and they are less work for me. The drawback with this new approach is the fact I will be going after artists and no longer accepting requests. I do not want to sit in a pub or some dingy room and record an interview with a band/artist I am not hot about. I have been doing this blog for over seven years and seeing peers – less experienced and able – getting great interviews with IDLES, Self Esteem and other great new acts.

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 IN THIS PHOTO: IDLES/PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images/Exposed Magazine

My ambition – apart from being on BBC Radio 6 Music – is to have my own podcast that interviews big names. I will pitch the idea at the weekend but it has stoked an ambition and will see me on the level that I am keen to be on. The same goes for reviews - and I will phase them out and only pen reviews of tracks that I am genuinely seeking out and vibing to. It has been great experiencing some fantastic new acts but I have been doing things to make others happy and promote them and it seems like I have not moved on in years. Many writers can come along and produce what I do very easily and music discovery and promotion needs to be important to both parties and not those who come to me. I will still do features – as they are the parts of my blog I love the most – but will get rid of requests in 2019. I will approach acts for interviews and reviews but want to focus more on getting ahead and being where I should be: knocking on the doors of the BBC and the biggest publications in music! It is not worth doing something if it makes you unhappy and stressed and that is why I am only going after bigger acts and those that can create me big and new traffic – I might take a very small number of rising acts that take my fancy but not often.

 PHOTO CREDIT: @tomasturing/Unsplash

Another event that has led me to re-evaluate and focus on myself is the move to London and how things are going. I move out a few months back and have applied for endless jobs; doing everything to find anything and it has been a draining process. I have had a few interviews that went well but I have not been told why I did not go further or get the job. That is as frustrating as hearing back so little after making such an effort. The savings are going down and it is scary to think, having come to London with a lot, I am having to dip into money reserved for me and furthering my career. There has been so little to smile about in terms of the personal side up here – no jobs; living in an area I do not like but can just about afford – it is compounded by vocal and throat issues that are almost scarier than anything. It is probably nothing too bad but a constant hoarse/sore throat is bugging me (accompanied by lurgies today…) and there is that fear there could be personal damage or no real cure. I have fed up and down more than optimistic since arriving and the only way to improve things and focus is to make changes. I am dedicating more time to job hunting and will be only accepting a few new requests from January (not sure what date).

 PHOTO CREDIT: @gritte/Unsplash

The rest of what goes onto my site will be artists I am drawn to and, at some stage, audio interviews and a podcast that has a professional feel and is recorded with bigger acts in a studio/radio studio – a slick and polished production that can get people hooked and make a name for itself. There have been some good moments and discoveries but I feel like squandering the true potential I have and what level I should be after seven years! If you’re not taking risks and where you were years ago then you get nowhere and will be overtaken by those who do not deserve to get their sooner. Making sure I dedicate more time to work and, when I get something, prioritising what I write about and what type of artist I have on the blog is vital. Happiness will not be easy or even possible but feeling far less depressed and angry about stuff is achievable – it is making changes that are scary but needed that get those results. It has been good doing things how I do for so long but, as I say, I look back and wonder whether I have done a good job. I am hungry to do a proper podcast and do these one-hour, big interviews with figures from music and the media. That is the goal and, alongside features (and occasional interviews) and select reviews; I will be hunting for work and less of a slave to the laptop! I am not one for resolutions and making promises that will be broken. For any journalist who wants to take a step up and closer to where they need to be has to sacrifice, think about their ow happiness and use their passion to...

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  PHOTO CREDIT: @helloimnik/Unsplash

MAKE that break.

FEATURE: Evolution Within the Resolution: 2018: A New Dawn of the Music Video?

FEATURE:

 

 

Evolution Within the Resolution

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IN THIS PHOTO: Childish Gambino (Donald Glover)/PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images 

2018: A New Dawn of the Music Video?

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I cannot remember when we lost that love of the music video...

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PHOTO CREDIT: @jmuniz/Unsplash 

and that medium became less relevant. Maybe it tied into the advent and bloom of sites like YouTube in the middle of the last decade. MTV stopped being a big platform for big artists by the start of the 2000s and its impact now is practically nil. I remember growing up looking at artists like Michael Jackson rule MTV and produce these lavish and hugely ambitious videos. Rather than, like today, artists making videos to accompany songs – lacking imagination and much drama -; the videos acted as a filmic accompaniment and you had these magnificent spectacles. There were some dodgy videos, for sure, but most of the very best of all time arrived before the turn of the century. We have had some great videos since 2000 but it seems like the music video as a whole is less important. This seems strange as platforms like YouTube are vital and the biggest artists can get millions of hits within hours of releasing their latest video. One wonders whether this sense of popularity is because of the visual quality and substance of the video or just what we do now: click without thinking and judging a video on the popularity of the star rather than the weight of the piece itself. The last few years has been a little unspectacular for videos but, in a lot of ways, there has been a revival in 2018. That is not to say this year has ranked alongside the very best in terms of videos: we have not seen a new dawn and revolution regarding the music video.

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 IN THIS PHOTO: Mitski (left) on the set of her video, Nobody/PHOTO CREDIT: Mitski

There are fewer legendary and established video directors and, at a time when new artists have less money and are taking a D.I.Y. approach; so many videos are being shot inexpensively and, as such, the ambition and scope is not that large. I love artists who can film a video for very little money and make it work but, in terms of the mainstream artists, there is more money to play with. That can be a curse in itself because people often waste tonnes on flashy visuals and casts without thinking about imagination and potency. It is hard to ignore the very best videos from this year. 2018 has produced at least one genius video: This Is America from Childish Gambino. When it arrived earlier in the year, I was struck by its graphic content, its nuance and how you had to watch it again and again – it is seen as one of the best videos of the century and one that can rank alongside the very best. It is as much about modern-day America as anything; harsher and more brutal than any news report and a stunning visual feat! It is the finest video of this year and proof that directors of today can make something long-lasting and iconic without having to rely on technology, parody and spoofing. I am excited to see what sort of videos arrive in 2019 and whether we will get anything quite as stunning.

 PHOTO CREDIT: @landall/Unsplash

From big Pop artists like Ariana Grande to lesser-known acts; there have been some wonderful and arresting videos from 2018. I think there has been a revival and more artists/directors are adding deep stories, substance and something memorable to videos. Over the past few years, I have seen a break away (to an extent) from the visual masterpieces, the envelope-pushing promotional and videos that can stand proudly for many years. That is not to say artists didn’t care but it has been a while since I’ve been drawn to music videos. 2018 has brought some hope and variety to the table – even though it has not quite been a revival and sense of revolution. Maybe it is impossible to return to the heady days of the 1980s and 1990s and, given the fact videos can be filmed and produced by any artist; maybe it is harder to make those iconic videos and stand aside. What I have noticed about 2018’s best is the real sense of bravery, relevance and intelligence. We have still seen some aimless and pointless videos but much more quality has come through this year – a stronger year than 2017, for sure. Everyone will have their own favourite videos from this year but I have compiled a rundown of eighteen videos that strike the senses and stand in the mind. Maybe you will disagree with the selection but many critics have shared my view (I provide a snippet from various websites describing the videos). Have a look at the highlighted eighteen and dive into the best videos...

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IN THIS PHOTO: Ariana Grande captured by British Vogue/PHOTO CREDIT: Craig McDean 

2018 had to offer.

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Childish Gambino - This Is America

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Release Date: 5th May, 2018

YouTube Views (to date): 451,572,983

Director: Hiro Murai

Vibe:

Look, Childish Gambino does a lot of insane dancing in what appears to be a one-shot onion of a video. As you peel back the layers, you get a beautifully dark portrait of the ultra violence and rage running through America, and, most importantly, residing in the minds of black Americans trying to survive this insanity. That Gambino can take these strands and weave them into a cohesive narrative over song, dance and video underscores that he is today’s foremost creative voice for our people” – COMPLEX

Janelle Monáe - Make Me Feel

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Release Date: 22nd February, 2018  

YouTube Views (to date): 19,629,613

Director: Alan Ferguson

Vibe:

When this video hit in February, Janelle Monáe hadn’t formally come out as pansexual yet. But she was dropping big hints about her queerness with the colorful, campy-as-hell clip, in which she attends a party of David Bowie look-alikes while oozing the confidence of Prince. Then there’s the part where she literally runs back and forth between Tessa Thompson and a male actor, as if she can’t decide which one to dance with. It’s not a problem, though: She ends up partying with both – Michelle Kim- Pitchfork  

The Carters - APES**T

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Release Date: 16th June, 2018

YouTube Views (to date): 144,829,680

Director: Ricky Saiz

Vibe:

In the video for Beyoncé and Jay-Z‘s “Apeshit,” the first visual from the pair’s surprise joint album Everything Is Love, the two stars romp through the Louvre in Paris, seizing center stage in a high-culture palace that – like most Western art museums – historically made little room for non-white artists.

Some of their mission involves the strategic highlighting of non-white images already in the Louvre. Beyoncé and Jay-Z rap in front of an Egyptian sphinx, and in galleries filled mostly with neo-classical French paintings – white artists, white subjects – the camera singles out black faces. (The video is directed by Ricky Saiz, who also helmed the “Yonce” video from Beyoncé’s eponymous 2013 album.) Viewers catch brief glimpses of a pair of black figures in Paolo Veronese’s painting “The Wedding at Cana,” where Jesus turned water into wine, as well as a quick look at Marie-Guillemine Benoist’s “Portrait d’une Négresse,” a depiction of a black woman staring guilelessly back at the viewer” – Rolling Stone

Ariana Grande - thank u, next

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Release Date: 30th November, 2018

YouTube Views (to date): 207,759,269

Director: Hannah Lux Davis

Vibe:

It's rare that a music video — or any piece of art, for that matter — can live up to the hype that Grande's "Thank U, Next" video inspired. But it didn't disappoint.

Grande had teased the video with photos on social media, allowing her fans to know in advance that she would be paying tribute to four iconic female-focused movies: "Mean Girls," "Legally Blonde, "13 Going on 30," and "Bring It On” – INSIDER

The 1975 - TOOTIMETOOTIMETOOTIME        

Release Date: 29th August, 2018  

YouTube Views (to date): 12,672,880

Directors: Adam Powell and Matty Healy

Vibe:

More often than not, music videos featuring fans come off as pop propaganda, with the diehards’ awkward glee tapped as a cutesy marketing ploy to sell an artist as approachable. But the 1975’s clip for “TOOTIMETOOTIMETOOTIME” avoids any inklings of opportunistic performativity. Though frontman Matty Healy flits in and out of the frame, flossing and fooling around, the video focuses on a diverse array of fans who boogie in front of brightly colored backdrops, like a Neil Winokur portrait. While most smile eagerly and pantomime the lyrics, others mug solemnly. Together, the motley crew bob their heads in unison, announcing themselves as the future – Quinn Moreland- Pitchfork 

Dua Lipa - IDGAF

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Release Date: 12th January, 2018 

YouTube Views (to date): 443,860,998

Director: Henry Scholfield

Vibe:

This video is about your stronger and weaker side fighting with each other only to realize that self love is what will help you overcome any negativity that comes your way," Lipa said, as reported by NME.

"We wanted to embody the sense of empowerment in the track, whilst going beyond the literal breakup context," director Henry Scholfield added. "We had in mind a visual of the internal struggle, showing the two sides of Dua's emotive state, like an argument with someone you love. The strong Dua at first berating then eventually persuading her weaker alter ego that they both don't give a f---” – INSIDER

Mitski - Nobody

Release Date: 26th June, 2018 

YouTube Views (to date): 2,509,097

Director: Christopher Good

Vibe:

It was actually hard to get this one little shot where the magnifying glass goes directly in front of my eye, because in one swift motion I had to raise the magnifying glass at exactly the right angle where the camera catches my blurry eye right behind it. We did a lot of the shots in this video over and over, it had to be precise. And I loved every minute of it- The Cut

Christine and the Queens - Doesn't Matter

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Release Date: 5th July, 2018 

YouTube Views (to date): 873,381

Director: Colin Solal Cardo

Vibe:

"Doesn't Matter" is a truly beautiful example of Christine and the Queens' talents and allure. The minimalistic clip sees the multi-hyphenate artist writhe, bounce, embrace androgyny, explore the gender binary, and showcase her effortless stage presence in a parking lot- INSIDER  

Superorganism - Everybody Wants to Be Famous

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Release Date: 3rd January, 2018

YouTube Views (to date): 12,722

Director: Robert Strange

Vibe:

Yes, a second Superorganism video. They're that good. First off: Very serious trigger warning for people with photosensitive epilepsy. The flashing visuals are obviously not what makes this video great, though if early trends are any indication, it seems like music videos in 2018 probably should have more photosensitive epilepsy trigger warnings. Superorganism's video for "Everybody Wants to Be Famous" treats viewers to a harrowing visual cacophony on the way to a total sellout, with ads for a seafruit-flavored soda taking over a streaming site that disconcertingly looks a lot like YouTube, which is where most people will watch the video. Kids, take note: the brands will come for your personal brand if you get famous- Thrillist

Drake - Nice for What

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Release Date: 6th April, 2018 

YouTube Views (to date): 283,657,765

Director: Karena Evans

Vibe:

In perhaps his wisest move of the year, Drake entrusted several of his music videos to 22-year-old director Karena Evans. With “Nice for What,” Evans turns the camera’s gaze onto a bevy of powerful women celebrating their worth, including ballerina Misty Copeland en pointe in a nightclub and The Florida Project’s Bria Vinaite zipping around in a bumper car. Her shots of these women simply doing their thing add a degree of sincerity to Drake’s female empowerment bop – Quinn Moreland- Pitchfork

Confidence Man - Don’t You Know I’m in a Band

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Release Date: 10th April, 2018 

YouTube Views (to date): 208,610

Directors: Schall & Schnabel/Julian Lucas

Vibe:

Dance music should be fun, and Aussie group Confidence Man knows that better than anyone, channeling the spirit of the B-52s into 21st-century personal brand culture. It's an upbeat ride through magazine culture and megalomaniacal entitlement fame produces, and above all, Confidence Man goes full throttle into their music while avoiding the trap of self-seriousness- Thrillist

Halsey - Without Me

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Release Date: 29th October, 2018 

YouTube Views (to date): 52,877,072

Director: Colin Tilley

Vibe:

Without Me" is essentially a near-direct response to the tabloid coverage of Halsey's split from rapper G-Eazy. By the time the song had been released, the couple had reunited, but the video was released after their second (and presumably final) breakup.

Many fans immediately jumped on the similarities between G-Eazy and the male love interest in the video, but the narrative runs much deeper. "Without Me" is a masterful illustration of an addictive, toxic love, and it sees Halsey come out on top- INSIDER

Kali Uchis (ft. Tyler, the Creator and Bootsy Collins) - After the Storm

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Release Date: 25th January, 2018 

YouTube Views (to date): 37,265,538

Director: Nadia Lee Cohen

Vibe:

Directed by surrealist, Americana-inspired photographer Nadia Lee Cohen, this video gives us an outlandish take on 1950s conformity. Though it finds Kali Uchis casually going about her routine as a dutiful homemaker, the details of her domesticity quickly morph from idyllic to kooky: the animated, Bootsy Collins-themed processed foods, her blow dryer-lined vanity mirror, the Tyler, the Creator plant that pops out of her perfectly manicured lawn. It’s the picket-fence dream, with a psychedelic bent –Braudie Blais-Billie- Pitchfork  

Tierra Whack - Whack World

Release Date: 30th May, 2018 

YouTube Views (to date): 2,485,174

Directors: Thibaut Duverneix/Mathieu Leger

Vibe:

Tierra Whack's weirdo aesthetic landed her a highly coveted spot on Thrillist's "Best Music Videos of 2017" list, which hopefully gave her the encouragement she needed to continue her music career instead of taking a soul-sucking gig dictated entirely by opaque algorithmic demands, or, like, a stockroom worker. Instead, she's making videos that involve incredibly elaborate nail art and a hoodie mask that will make you question the nature of your reality. Just enjoy the Whackness- Thrillist

Taylor Swift - Delicate

Release Date: 29th October, 2018 

YouTube Views (to date): 314,262,461

Director: Joseph Kahn

Vibe:

Taylor Swift has come to be known for making videos that are as detailed and intricate as her lauded lyricism, and "Delicate" is no different.

The video is delightful simply by virtue of watching Swift shed her typically poised exterior in favor of bizarre dance moves and unselfconscious facial expressions — although it has received backlash for similarities to a 2016 Kenzo ad- INSIDER

John Mayer - New Light

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Release Date: 24th May, 2018

YouTube Views (to date): 27,281,242

Director: Fatal Farm

Vibe:

Unexpectedly quirky, this Mayer bop may just be the meme-worthiest music video of 2018. Rumor has it that Mayer had this made by a local Los Angeles videographer who specializes in bat mitzvah videos. Who can help but watch in rapt wonder as three Mayers gaze pensively into the distance, high above fluffy clouds at sunset? Whether superimposed into a convertible,  dancing with zebras or standing in front of the Eiffel tower, this cheeky vid is a feat of green-screen engineering” – Variety

St. Vincent - Fast Slow Disco

Release Date: 20th June, 2018 

YouTube Views (to date): 943,681

Director: Zev Deans

Vibe:

So many of Annie Clark’s recent music videos saw her occupying the frame by herself, suggesting solitude. It happened in “Los Ageless”; it happened in “New York.” By contrast, the clip that accompanies the clubby rework of her Masseduction track “Slow Disco” is nothing but bodies. Clark is drenched in sweat, beaming on a dancefloor that's stuffed shoulder-to-shoulder with bearded hunks—a scene that the singer called a “gay disco dream.” The elated mass of sweat, hair, leather, and flesh ultimately underscores Clark’s final words: “Don’t it beat a slow dance to death?” And yeah, this looks like more fun than that – Evan Minsker”- Pitchfork

Belle Game - Low

PHOTO CREDIT: Shimon

Release Date: 30th January, 2018

YouTube Views (to date): 12,722

Director: Kevan Funk

Vibe:

You haven't lived until you've seen a factory worker slice excess silicone off a freshly made dildo. According to the artist, "'Low' is about the empty feeling I had when continually fucking people," and it's not easy to watch this video all the way through and feel better about the future, considering the increasing importance industrialized cultures place on the primacy of sensual experience and the substitution of human contact with digital interfaces. Let's just say they're making some pretty lifelike mannequins these days, and we're all going to have to get used to the emptiness of being treated like machines- Thrillist

FEATURE: A Voodoo Chant Before a Strange Magic: D’Angelo and The Vanguard’s Black Messiah at Four

FEATURE:

 

 

A Voodoo Chant Before a Strange Magic

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IMAGE CREDIT: Getty Images 

D’Angelo and The Vanguard’s Black Messiah at Four

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THERE are artists who leave long gaps between albums...

IMAGE CREDIT: Getty Images  

and the suspense and intrigue builds! It took The Avalanches sixteen years to follow their 2000 debut, Since I Left You; Kate Bush left it twelve years before Aerial came along in 2005 and it has taken some artists even longer than that to give us new material – consider Parliament and The Stooges! D’Angelo’s debut album, Brown Sugar, and it was a big hit with the critics – as were his subsequent two albums. Some highlighted simplicity in the lyrics but a richness in the music and that very special and smooth voice. Perhaps many were not expecting such a gap between releases but it took five years for D’Angelo to follow up such a big record. Voodoo will be familiar to many and is an album that translates marvellously. You do not need to be steeped in Hip-Hop and R&B knowledge to understand the record; you do not need to know about D’Angelo to understand what is happening and where he is coming from. One of the reasons there was a five-year gap between records was extensive touring of Brown Sugar (two years) and a writer’s block that followed. The birth of his first child coupled with some collaborations and recordings – including a duet with Lauryn Hill on her sole solo album – kept the flame alive and provided inspiration. Voodoo received huge acclaim and is seen as one of the finest albums of the last decade. There is emphasis on groove over melody but it is a daring and hugely significant accomplishment.

 IMAGE CREDIT: Getty Images 

Pitchfork, in a retrospective review, assessed Voodoo in these terms:

There's a big difference between a prodigious, smooth-skinned 26-year-old playing retro-styled music and a 38-year-old doing the same thing. The backwards-looking pose can calcify; by the time Prince was 38, he was well into his symbol phase. That said, D'Angelo is the quintessential old soul. And there's hope in the comebacks of fellow 90s refugees Maxwell and Badu, who both released some of their best work after long layoffs over the last few years. But D'Angelo's inactivity has only helped to inflate Voodoo's myth, though it doesn't need much help. It's frustrating to think about how someone so enamored with the past, who knew his heroes' failures so well, could be doomed to repeat them. It's almost as if he studied them too much, and the same spiritual power that fueled his greatest moment couldn't help but bring him down. Like that's how he thought it was supposed to go. In an interview between ?uestlove and D around the release of Voodoo, the drummer confronted the singer about his idols: "They all have one thing in common, they were all vanguards, but 98% of them crashed and burned." To which D'Angelo responded: "I think about that all the time”.

Again, after a big and lauded record, many assumed D’Angelo would produce something fairly quick; not leaving the same gap as he did between Brown Sugar and Voodoo.

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PHOTO CREDIT: Press/Getty Images

D’Angelo suffered performance issues whilst promoting Voodoo in 2000. He grew uncomfortable with the pressure and the impression that he was this sex symbol. He soon retreated from the public gaze and suffered personal tragedy (a close friend of his committed suicide). His alcoholism had worsened – one can forgive him for this – his girlfriend left him and his personal life was unravelling. There was funding for a solo album and Virgin cut off the funds by 2004. There was huge demand for fresh D’Angelo material but, given the pressures and expectations as a live performer and events in his personal life; it was not going to be possible for D’Angelo to record a new album. In the ensuring three years there were collaborations with Hip-Hop artists and peers but nothing full-length and especially striking. By 2009, D’Angelo’s then-new manager Lindsay Guion revealed plans for a new album and collaborations with artists such as Kanye West. It was not until 2010 when a new song, 1000 Deaths, came to light. It seemed the tortured and troubled star was back in good health and definitely on the road to recovery. The release of that track seemed like a brief blip – the song was removed online because of copyright issues – and many wondered whether it was a hoax and whether an album would follow. 2011 saw more news come regarding a record and its status.

Every D’Angelo album is a classic and one that is laboured over so one could not have expected a quick release. 2011 was an announcement and status to say a record was coming but it would take another three years until Black Messiah reached the public. In fact, as early as 2011 (December) we were being told the album was virtually done and there was a lot of excitement. There was, as I say, not a quick release or a lot of news between 2011 and 2014 but D’Angelo did make a return to the stage in 2012. I recall buying Black Messiah on 15th December, 2014 and being fairly new to D’Angelo. I had heard some of his tracks from Voodoo – including Playa Playa and The Joint – but was not completely familiar. I think Black Messiah has influenced many Hip-Hop and Jazz-inspired albums since (including Kendrick Lamar’s To Pimp a Butterfly in 2015) and huge albums like Beyoncé’s Lemonade (2016). Every Hip-Hop/R&B album, to an extent, is compelled by social injustices and an authentic voice. Look at the most potent and enduring Hip-Hop records and, at their heart, is an anger and observation regarding the experiences of black Americans. Black Messiah boosts plenty of luscious testimonies and passionate calls but there is the political and social outrage. It is clear Black Messiah is about the struggle of D’Angelo and his recovery but it is about the wider world: the experience of his peers; crimes and outrages in America and a sense of alienation.

One can forgive him the fourteen-year pause between records given the textures and layers that run throughout Black Messiah. With The Vanguard – like D’Angelo’s equivalent of Prince’s The Revolution -; fans and critics alike were blown away by the sheer detail and brilliance of the artist’s third album. D’Angelo mixed R&B, Soul and Hip-Hop together with Jazz and myriad sounds. The compositions are incredibly vibrant, fascinating and skilled and you can tell how hard D’Angelo and his band worked in the studio. With D’Angelo helming production – Alan Leeds and Kevin Liles are executive producers –; Black Messiah is a deeply personal album but one that reflects what is happening in the world and is incredible accessible. Whether you are more attracted to arresting songs like 1000 Deaths and The Door or something more caramel such as Really Love and Back to the Future (Part I); there is so much activity, life and variation. Upon its release, there were comparisons made between Black Messiah and Sly and the Family Stone’s classic, There’s a Riot Goin’ On. That comparison was made because of the cross-pollination of genres and the heavily multitracked vocals. Critical reaction, as I said, was intense and positive. In fact, I had not heard of any album quite like Black Messiah. Few albums since then have received quite the same sort of incredible reaction and celebration.

AllMusic gave their view on Black Messiah:

On the surface, "Sugah Daddy" seems like an unassuming exercise in fusing black music innovations that span decades, and then, through close listening, the content of D'Angelo's impish gibberish becomes clear. At the other end, there's "Another Life," a wailing, tugging ballad for the ages that sounds like a lost Chicago-Philly hybrid, sitar and all, with a mix that emphasizes the drums. Black Messiah clashes with mainstream R&B trends as much as Voodoo did in 2000. Unsurprisingly, the artist's label picked this album's tamest, most traditional segment -- the acoustic ballad "Really Love" -- as the first song serviced to commercial radio. It's the one closest to "Untitled (How Does It Feel)," the Voodoo cut that, due to its revealing video, made D'Angelo feel as if his image was getting across more than his music. In the following song, the strutting "Back to the Future (Part I)," D'Angelo gets wistful about a lost love and directly references that chapter: "So if you're wondering about the shape I'm in/I hope it ain't my abdomen that you're referring to." The mere existence of his third album evinces that, creatively, he's doing all right. That the album reaffirms the weakest-link status of his singular debut is something else”.

Pitchfork shared these views and provided their own spin:

“Black Messiah is a study in controlled chaos. The nightmarish chorus of "1000 Deaths" arrives late and fierce, as though the band unfurled its crunchy, lumbering vamp just long enough to violently snatch it out from under us. "The Charade"'s Minneapolis sound funk rock follows, every bit as bright as the previous track was menacing until you zero in on the threadbare heart-sickness of D and P-Funk affiliate Kendra Foster’s lyrics. Black Messiah pulls together disparate threads few predecessors have had the smarts or audacity to unite. One song might channel Funkadelic, another, the Revolution, but the shiftless mad doctor experimentation and the mannered messiness at the root of it all is unmistakably the Vanguard. Black Messiah is a dictionary of soul, but D'Angelo is the rare classicist able to filter the attributes of the greats in the canon into a sound distinctly his own. It’s at once familiar and oddly unprecedented, a peculiar trick to pull on an album recorded over the span of a decade”.

 

Many other reviews echo these sentiments and it is amazing to think, when you truly listen to the album, how it came to be. Given the past troubles for D’Angelo, many felt there would not be another album. Not only did he manage to release a record but many consider it to be his very best. Every song has its place and is an incredible achievement. The Guardian, in this article, broke the album down song-by-song and got to the roots. My three favourite tracks from the album were assessed:

Sugah Daddy

This has a playful feel and, again, a tampered-with tempo. The production so far and arrangements create a sound that is stoned, loping and molasses-thick, while lyrical torpedoes are delivered via torpid funk. It is – to quote Chris Rock talking about his new movie Top Five – “really black, the way George Clinton’s really black, like the Ohio Players – Fire, Sweet Sticky Thing – is just some black shit. That shit is black. Like a white man has nothing to do with this shit.” Rock is one of several celebrities who have been waiting for this release for a long time, ever since D’Angelo – and his fellow “nu soul” artistes Maxwell, Lauryn Hill, Erykah Badu, Jill Scott and India.Arie – largely failed to deliver on their early promise.

Back to the Future (Part 1)

This is another crisply executed slice of smooth falsetto funk, reminiscent of Sly’s If You Want Me to Stay. “I just wanna go back, baby – back to the way it was,” sings D’Angelo, his voice not treated here. He could be talking about funk music, or about the days when he began music-making, before he became objectified like so many female performers before him. He seems to allude to this here: “Wonderin’ about the shape I’m in – hope it ain’t my abdomen”...

Really Love

This is the first apparent love song on the album from the tormented soul man and preacher’s son who used to dream of that other trouble man, Marvin. As with much of Gaye’s work, Really Love is torn between sex and the sacred. It starts with strings, a female Spanish voice and Spanish guitar, both to caressing effect. The tempo picks up, and there are more handclaps. This one is more crisply produced, not so dense, a cleaner affair: upmarket boudoir funk. “When you call my name,” sighs D’Angelo. This is what R&B was like before the Weeknd”.

It has yet to be seen whether D’Angelo is going to release another album. He has performed as recently as 2016 so there is no suggestion Black Messiah marks the end for him. One hopes there is not such a gap before we see his next album – even if we had to wait another five years, many would be feeling itchy. He is in a more stable state and there are not the same troubles in front as him he saw after Voodoo. Many would have felt such a gap between albums would weaken his skillset or see a lack of focus. If anything, Black Messiah is his sharpest, most brilliant and daring work that will stand the test of time. I am excited to see where he heads next. Just over four years after Black Messiah’s release; I look at the album and amazed by its nuance and sense of legacy. It is as relevant now as it was in 2014 and I can hear the influence in modern R&B and Hip-Hop. If you have not heard the album then I recommend you check out it out. Even if you are not aware of D’Angelo and his work, that does not matter. Black Messiah is a masterful work and one that seems to grow in strength and relevance...

PHOTO CREDIT: Albert Watson  

LIKE few other records.

FEATURE: Breakthrough Album of 2018: Mitski – Be the Cowboy

FEATURE:

 

 

Breakthrough Album of 2018

IMAGE CREDIT: Getty Images 

Mitski – Be the Cowboy

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ALTHOUGH the votes have been cast for this year’s...

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IN THIS PHOTO: Mitski/PHOTO CREDIT: Ebru Yildiz  

best albums; there are those that deserve special attention and focus. My favourite album of 2018 is IDLES’ Joy as an Act of Resistance - and I am not going to back down on that. It is filled with so much life, energy and wonderful moments. It is an important album that seems to document a particular feeling that is happening in music – big issues need discussing and music needs to start addressing taboo subjects. IDLES’ sophomore album has managed to tackle big topics and some meaty subjects but done so in a very intelligent and balanced way. You are never overwhelmed or bogged down by anger; the music is never light and too ineffectual. Many critics share the viewpoint: Joy as an Act of Resistance has been lauded and topped many of this year’s ‘best of’ lists. I have looked at the underrated albums of this year and those that disappointed. There is one artist who has been getting exceptional reviews this year but not talked about as widely as some of the big names. Mitski is an artist I have been aware of and when her fifth studio album, Be the Cowboy, was released in August; I knew it would be a great one. Every one of her albums has been an amazing revelation and turned heads but I think Be the Cowboy is the declaration (that she) is as potent and fantastic as any artist in the world right now.

Her previous album, Puberty 2 – not a film I ever want to see! –gained huge reviews and many noticed the evolution. Mitski had stepped to a new level and, whilst talking of racial identity and personal struggle, she had managed to make an album that was both personal to her but could be understood by everyone. The musicianship and skill throughout the album is immense and that momentum has carried through to Be the Cowboy. 2016’s Puberty 2 was considered one of the year’s best and, rightly, Be the Cowboy is making the same lists this year. It, to me, is the biggest breakthrough album as it takes an already exceptional artist on a roll and sees her hit a peak. This latest album is the sound of Mitski combining all her previous sounds and ideas into one explosive, varied and staggering album. Produced by longtime collaborator Patrick Hyland; Be the Cowboy sees Mitski widen her musical horizons and bring more to the mix. We get horns, synthesizers and other elements alongside her signature sound from the guitar. Mitski stated, whilst promoting the album and announcing it, that she was inspired by a vision of a singer (maybe herself) alone on stage; spotlight trained right at them in an otherwise dark room. If her previous couple of albums were recorded whilst busy and not completely focused – maybe less personal and expressive as she’d hoped-; Be the Cowboy is a return to the true sound of Mitski.

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 PHOTO CREDIT: Savanna Ruedy

Her fifth studio album is her most striking and instant because of its new horizons and the fact it sounds completely free. Many artists who achieve a run of great albums make mistakes and push their music too far in the wrong direction. Instead of keeping the body of the vehicle the same and tuning the engine; they completely re-spray it and make unwelcomed modifications. Mitski knows how strong her music is but has spent time tuning, fettling and making sure everything purrs. I shall drop the car analogy but Mitski did not need to start from scratch or make any radical alterations. What Be the Cowboy does is continue where Puberty 2 left off and adds in some fresh elements. The fact so many more outlets and critics are raving about this record – compared to some of her others – means she has hit her peak...that is not to say she has peaked for good. I feel future albums will, yet again, add new aspects to the pot and see her evolve. If the music on Be a Cowboy sounds confident and completely assured; the same cannot be said of its author. In interviews; Mitski has questioned her success and how long people will like her. When speaking with The Guardian earlier this year, she discussed her fear of things changing:

When you’re happy for too long,” she explains, sitting in her label’s east London office, “you’re kind of waiting for something bad to happen. People decided they wanted to hate Anne Hathaway after she was so popular. For no reason. That’s a cycle that repeats itself everywhere.” As a pre-emptive strike, she decided to treat her new album, Be the Cowboy, which has received rapturous reviews from critics, as an act of self-sabotage. Whenever she veered too close to the sound that gained her praise in the past, she stuck a foot out and tripped herself up. “I fucked with the form, almost in ways that make me uncomfortable,” she says. “It’s almost like: ‘Well, before this goes to shit and you stop liking me, I’m going to do something that I know you won’t like, so that I’m the one who’s rejecting you’”...

Many people, young women in particular, will relate to this. Despite her self-defensive inclination towards burning bridges, Mitski’s ability and desire to write songs that people connect with has won out. “Everyone has a different reason for making music, mine is I want to feel connected to other people,” she says. She is Japanese American, and has spoken of feeling out of place in both cultures. “I’ve always grown up feeling lonely or other, but through my music, I can be like: ‘Look, we’re the same, we’ve felt the same thing, so we’re not so different. I belong here.’ It’s almost like a hungry monster that’s just a constant need to feel connection”.

Having red interviews around the album’s release; I started to get an insight into Mitski and the themes that compelled Be the Cowboy. She comes across as a very modest but complicated artist who is as keen to reflect fears and insecurities we all face – as opposed concentrating too much on the self and personal relationship struggles. When speaking with FADER; she was asked about themes of fame and loneliness:

One of the album’s themes seems to be this idea that even with fame, there's still a lingering fear that it's not enough — that we need something more.

I'm less talking about fame in the crude sense, and more [about how] I'm someone who goes on stage and becomes a symbol. People project onto me. Internally, [I’m trying] to understand that dynamic. I think that's something that everyone thinks about. Even in day-to-day conversation, we're projecting onto each other. And [there's] a weird dissatisfaction either way: you want people to project onto you and see you as something bigger than you are, but when people actually do that, it's not what you want. You want people to know you for who you are, but when they actually know you for who you are, you're like, "No, I want you to think I'm great."

Another big theme seems to be loneliness. How does that relate to the other stuff we’ve been talking about?

There's the loneliness of being a symbol and a projection, but I think that loneliness [says a lot about] being a woman, or being an other — some kind of identity that has a lot of symbols attached to it. And there's also just touring. Touring is a very ... it isolates. The longer musicians tour, the more isolated they become from the rest of society, because the way you live is so incredibly different. And no one can really relate to your experiences, so you can't talk to anybody about it and you go deeper and deeper inside
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Listening to Mitski speaking about her music and reading interviews gives you a window into this very special artist. There is this disarming modesty and sense that things will all go wrong. Maybe she feels acclaim will wane and the fame will start to fade. Judging by the universal acclaim Be the Cowboy has accursed; there is this hunger for music from her. We have these artists who consistently produce wonderful albums and it takes a very long time for cracks to appear – Mitski is one of those artists. Consequence of Sound gave their views regarding her fifth studio album:

 “She adds depth with crashing brush strokes of electric guitar, but a bouncing synth riff, like a slinky on a staircase, adds a knowing grin to the musings. Similarly, while admitting a willingness to let love do its worst, she initiates a pulsing, clanging beat over which she offers the playfully doomed and seductive invitation to “Toss your dirty shoes in my washing machine heart/ Baby bang it up inside.”

On a songwriting level, Mitski — already established as a top-tier songwriter — has outdone herself on Be the Cowboy. The album is full of constructions that are simple, bold, sharp, and generous. She wastes not a single second, every moment is intentional, every instrument employed for a purpose”.

 PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images

The Guardian gave their thoughts and impressions:

 “Be the Cowboy is 14 songs long, only three of which exceed two-and-a-half minutes. This odd but effective structure lets Mitski investigate new styles, commit just long enough for them to stick, then quit before anything becomes a genre exercise. She trades most of the rock heft of her 2016 album Puberty 2 for exhilaratingly manic disco (Nobody), girl-group hypnosis (Come Into the Water) and gothic surrealism (A Horse Named Cold Air) among some straighter, strummier numbers.

Mitski’s songwriting trademarks are strong enough to transcend the stylistic revamp – arrangements that are rich without being precious (Pink in the Night), plus her terrifically mordant worldview. “Nobody butters me up like you,” she sings on twisted country song Lonesome Love. “And nobody fucks me like me.” It is hard to sing at a remove and maintain emotional directness – Mitski is famously private – but like St Vincent or even David Lynch, she specialises in the bait-and-switch of delight and obfuscation”.

There have been albums I have loved more this year but, in my view, there have been none as revelatory, transformative and evolved. By that, I mean no other artist has taken a bigger step and released an album that burns quite as bright. Be the Cowboy has these bold, fulsome and colourful arrangements but the subject matter is not sacrificed. One needs to listen to the album in full and make their own mind up but I have been blown away. Who knows what Mitski’s sixth album will contain and how far she can truly go. Given what we have discovered on Be the Cowboy, I feel the Japanese-American musician can ride, reign and gallop...

FOR many years to come.

FEATURE: Keeping It Pure: Should Radio Turn Into a Medium for Actors, Comedians and Non-Musical Personalities?

FEATURE:

 

 

Keeping It Pure

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PHOTO CREDIT: @nofilter_noglory/Unsplash 

Should Radio Turn Into a Medium for Actors, Comedians and Non-Musical Personalities?

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MAYBE it is me being an elitist or a case of sour grapes...

 IN THIS PHOTO: Peaky Blinders actor Cillian Murphy is presenting a show of his favourite songs on BBC Radio 6 Music today/PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images

but I am hearing a lot of non-D.J. personalities coming onto the radio. It has been happening for many years but now, more and more, there are programmes dedicated to actors, comedians and celebrities. It is great these types of celebrities can be part of shows and be interviewed for radio but I wonder whether too many are being given their own shows. From Peter Crouch making it onto Radio X to Cillian Murphy, Russell Crowe; Martin Freeman and Diane Morgan getting their own slots of BBC Radio 6 Music; I wonder what value is being brought in. Maybe it is the cache these personalities have but I have never been interested in what an actor has to say about music. Maybe there are one or two in the world whose opinions I would like to see stretch to a show but there are so many one-offs and series where famous figures get to ‘entertain’ the public with their music choices. I love BBC Radio 6 Music immensely but I can think of few less interesting and relatable shows on radio than Russell Crowe growling about his favourite songs or Martin Freedom chatting about Jazz. It is not like we have endless musicians acting so I wonder why we need hear so many actors/comedians/etc. being given their own show and telling the world about their music. Perhaps the only exceptions where I want to hear famous people have their own radio stations is the biggest and most famous around.

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 IN THIS PHOTO: Actor Miranda Richardson (one of the few non-musical celebrities I would like to see present her own radio show)/PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images

I am actually a fan of Miranda Richardson and feel she has cool music taste but I would not go as far to hear a show where she runs down her tastes and passions. Stations like BBC Radio 6 Music have a show dedicated to those in the acting community and the link between acting and music. I think it is a good series and it is kept aside from the other shows on the station. Having guest presenters and other shows where we see celebrities taking the spotlight puts me off. This might sound like a personal gripe but how many of us look at an actor or comedian do their thing and are itching for them to explain what music is important to them?! It is this odd association and one that is entering the radio waves more. It is not only one-off shows where we see needless celebrity and fame being allowed even more exposure than normal. Big broadcasters such as BBC Radio 2 have celebrities and T.V. personalities and regular D.J.s and, before they got the gig, they had no real experience or music qualifications. Look at radio stations where the D.J.s are comedians and are brought in because they are entertaining and funny. There is a world of wonderful D.J.s, journalists and musicians out there who struggle to get their voice heard and, annoyingly, they are being overtaken by those whose musical credentials are almost zero.

 PHOTO CREDIT: @jonathanvez/Unsplash

I have nothing against people like Martin Freeman and Cillian Murphy as people and I know they love their music. The same goes for D.J.s who have come from a field outside of music and are getting big gigs without much passage and experience. If they are interesting and popular then not many can argue against their booking. The thing is there are people like me who have been working for years and know full well a better, richer and more varied show can be put together – compared to the actors who are booked to do shows on the basis of their fame and rather uninteresting bond to music. I have listened to so many shows where non-music-related personalities talk about music and play their favourite songs and it is never as interesting as when you get musicians and D.J.s doing the same. I watch T.V. shows and films to watch that person do what they are trained to do and rarely am I wondering what their favourite music is. Music and television/film have a natural link but it is the directors and producers who get to choose the music. I have seen directors talk about music on the radio and I guess that makes sense to a degree. If they are responsible for soundtracks and scores then it is reasonable they get to talk about it.

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 IN THIS PHOTO: Actor Martin Freeman has presented a couple of radio programmes this year (including one about Jazz)/PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images

They can do that through an interview or part of a special series; it is these one-off shows that annoy me and actors being promoted to full-time D.J.s. So many journalists and D.J.s are starting out or having to go through every rung on the ladder to even get half a chance. Many do not make it and get where they want and it is harder and harder to get exposure. There are countless musicians I would like to see talk about their music tastes and upbringing but so many stations are recruiting actors, comedians and celebrities to do the D.J. thing. Even If they sound natural and engaging on the microphone then what makes them more qualified than someone who has been in industry for years?! It comes down to cache and, to me, an unfair advantage that is taking spotlight from those who have worked hard. It would take me ages to name all the musicians I’d rather hear have their own show and there are newcomers and rising names in the media who are passionate and would do a great show. Maybe there needs to be some sort of celebrity or reputation before someone is approached but so many bookings are done because the name is well-known and popular – rather than their musical association and knowledge of the industry. One of my biggest dreams is to have a regular show or one-off that allows me to talk about the best classic and new music and explore other angles – doing regular slots and a documentary-style approach to things.

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 PHOTO CREDIT: @peterlewicki/Unsplash

It will take a while to get to that stage but the fast-tracking of famous actors and personalities does make me angry. I guess radio, as with T.V., needs to be a broad church and not be rigid but it is hearing all these celebrities getting regular slots and these shows that irks. Everyone who is passionate about music wants a D.J. to talk about the music and know their beans; to be able to capture the heart but have that deep and authentic knowledge of the records. So often, one tunes into a station and there is a reality T.V. personality, comic or actor who is spending more time talking about themselves or trying to be ‘funny’ – rather than getting out the music and actual doing what they should be. Maybe there have been exceptions but I have never heard any celebrity/non-D.J. do a show or present a one-off programme and be captivated by it. I listen to radio because I know the men and women on there have worked their way through the ranks and been in the industry for years. They are where they should be and are not using the platform for vanity of exposure. Across every big station seems to be someone who is there from another field – either acting or comedy – and what qualifies them to be on radio?! I understand people can change fields and move between industries but so many of these examples relate to one-offs...giving them their own show as they move between projects.

 PHOTO CREDIT: @joaosilas/Unsplash

I am aware actors, celebrities and the like can have great taste in music and it can be interesting hearing what they say. My objection comes with this ability they have to get cherry gigs on big stations without having worked in music before. Why should a big actor get a show easier than someone who has been toiling in music for years and could do a better job?! It comes down to that fame and lure and, in most cases, is rather misjudged. If we are to except actors crossing into radio then at least make the booking interesting! If we are going to have a comedian or reality T.V. star becoming a D.J. then make sure they can talk about music with authority and understanding. I get tired of famous people being made D.J.s where they have little love of music and are there to further their career. The rather stilted and pointless cross-pollination attempts where actors talk about their musical tastes baffle me. It all comes down to that issue of why we truly care about their tastes and what relevance it has to us? I watch T.V. and films to see actors act: I listen to radio to hear D.J.s do what they do best. I do not need or want to see the worlds collide and have these rather pointless shows – the sentiment is shared by many others. It means people like me, who have dedicated years to promoting music, have to watch as these famous names get a platform without giving anything to the music industry themselves. There entire radio shows, such as Desert Islands Discs, I am happy to hear celebrities discuss music but I do not really want to hear them presenting shows on my favourite station or being regular bookings. I think there is an important connection between music and other forms of art (especially film) and I hope that bond continues for decades. Radio is a fantastic forum and I think we should be scouting for the finest D.J.s coming through and those who are best suited for future roles. When it comes to actors, comedians and the likes getting shows and talking about their ‘musical journey’ then I would rather this be left to the imagination. There are so many more deserving people who would kill for the chance and I think, for that reason alone, we need to keep...

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IN THIS PHOTO: T.V. personality Rylan Clarke-Neal will launch his BBC Radio 2 afternoon show from next year/PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images 

RADIO pure.

FEATURE: Into the Grooves: Madonna’s Celebration at Nine: The Career-Spanning Masterpiece That Is Impossible to Ignore

FEATURE:

 

 

Into the Grooves

IMAGE CREDIT: Getty Images 

Madonna’s Celebration at Nine: The Career-Spanning Masterpiece That Is Impossible to Ignore

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I have already said goodbye to Kate Bush pieces in 2018...

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 IN THIS PHOTO: Madonna in a promotional shot for her 2015 album, Rebel Heart (the tour of the album)/PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images

and will pick things back up next year. I wrote a lot about her because, not only did she turn sixty, but there was a lot of activity going on. There was no new material but we got her albums remastered and reintroduced and a book of her lyrics. I think there will be more next year from Bush (I hope so!) and the same can be said of Madonna. She also turned sixty this year and many of her albums came to mind. Every anniversary that marks another year of one of her masterworks makes me dig into the original work and why it struck such a chord. It may sound like a flimsy excuse to mark Madonna but the vinyl release of her greatest hits collection, Celebration (hard to get on vinyl (at a reasonable price) at the moment so the streaming version is easier), came out nine years ago in the U.S. – nine years ago yesterday, in fact! I think, without releasing any material, it has been a big year for Madonna and a chance to celebration her life. Many artists are fearful of getting older and celebrating certain birthdays but Madonna took to sixty with aplomb! I have looked at some of her albums, such as Erotica and Bedtime Stories, this year and investigated the ins and outs. I am not sure why but it seems like, the more time passes, the more interesting these albums become. Many feel The Immaculate Collection is the defining greatest hits collection but I feel Celebration is a wider and more appealing selection.

It does not take much for me to celebrate and mark a Madonna release but there are so few modern artists who can project the same sort of intrigue and consistency today. I wonder how often we put greatest hits collections on and buy them on vinyl. To me, the true way of listening to music in on vinyl and I think a greatest hits collection is a great way of discovering a new artist. Every Pop innovator has their own greatest hits collection but, as it is Christmas, many might be looking for an introduction to Madonna and her incredible body of work. I would advise you to pick up Celebration – the non-U.S. version or the U.S. version – and diving into an awesome back catalogue. I love how accessible and wonderful Madonna sounds in 1983 (on her debut) and the fact she is delivering the goods on her modern albums. To say goodbye to Madonna for 2018, and provide additional guidance for those who want some essential Madonna vinyl; here are five crucial albums that you should snap up alongside Celebration. The greatest hits collection is a must-own and shows how the Queen of Pop has matured and changed through the years. It is hard distilling Madonna’s brilliance into five albums but I think these records should be part of everyone’s collection. Grab your copy of Celebration and, to go with it, get your hands on these classic Madonna records!

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IN THIS IMAGE: The back cover of Madonna’s 2005 album, Confessions on a Dance Floor/IMAGE CREDIT: Getty Images

ALL ALBUM COVERS: Getty Images

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Madonna (1983)

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Release Date: 27th July, 1983

Labels: Sire/Warner Bros.

Review:

This is music where all of the elements may not particularly impressive on their own -- the arrangement, synth, and drum programming are fairly rudimentary; Madonna's singing isn't particularly strong; the songs, while hooky and memorable, couldn't necessarily hold up on their own without the production -- but taken together, it's utterly irresistible. And that's the hallmark of dance-pop: every element blends together into an intoxicating sound, where the hooks and rhythms are so hooky, the shallowness is something to celebrate. And there are some great songs here, whether it's the effervescent "Lucky Star," "Borderline," and "Holiday" or the darker, carnal urgency of "Burning Up" and "Physical Attraction." And if Madonna would later sing better, she illustrates here that a good voice is secondary to dance-pop. What's really necessary is personality, since that sells a song where there are no instruments that sound real. Here, Madonna is on fire, and that's the reason why it launched her career, launched dance-pop, and remains a terrific, nearly timeless, listen” – AllMusic

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/5lrlWKjNY0eTDXp9Bd3LpW?si=MiIAnoblTxy9flrAO1qXrQ

Vinyl: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Madonna-VINYL/dp/B007BWUIHA/ref=sr_1_15?s=music&ie=UTF8&qid=1545560568&sr=1-15&keywords=madonna+vinyl

Standout Tracks: Lucky Star/Burning Up/Holiday

Key Cut: Borderline

Like a Prayer (1989)

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Release Date: 21st March, 1989

Label: Sire

Review:

The emotions on Like a Prayer aren’t all fraught. “Cherish” is a feather-light declaration of devotion that calls back to Cali-pop outfit the Association while updating Madonna’s earlier exercise in retroism “True Blue”; “Dear Jessie” engages in the reaching toward sounding “Beatles-esque” that was in vogue at the time, pairing fussy strings and tick-tock percussion with images of pink elephants and flying leprechauns. “Love Song,” meanwhile, is a synth-funk chiffon co-written by none other than Prince, one of Madonna’s few pop equals at the time. The two of them feel locked in an erotically charged session of truth or dare, each challenging the other to stretch their voices higher while the drum machines churn. Prince also played, initially uncredited, on “Like a Prayer,” the sauntering pop-funk track “Keep It Together,” and the album-closing “Act of Contrition,” a two-minute maelstrom that combines Prince’s guitar heroics, backward-masked bits from the title track, heavy beats, and its title inspiration, the Catholic prayer of… confession” – Pitchfork

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/48AGkmM7iO4jrELRnNZGPV?si=3YJEH3x9RfGbnlW5QE0aFA

Vinyl: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Like-Prayer-VINYL-Madonna/dp/B007BWUJ60/ref=sr_1_14?s=music&ie=UTF8&qid=1545560568&sr=1-14&keywords=madonna+vinyl

Standout Tracks: Express Yourself/Cherish/Oh Father

Key Cut: Like a Prayer

Bedtime Stories (1994)

Release Date: 25th October, 1994

Labels: Sire/Maverick

Review:

To increase the threat, Madonna’s lyrics mingle sex and romance in more personal ways than ever. Previously, she wrote largely in characters and slogans; now she writes, more complexly, from the heart. In several songs she exposes an emotional perversity with the clarity she once had reserved for her sexual kinks. In ”Forbidden Love” she dismisses any relationship untouched by taboo, in ”Love Tried to Welcome Me” she fetishizes rejection, and in ”Sanctuary” she aligns love and death in a way her shrink may want to seriously examine.

In fact, she’s on far surer ground thrashing through such neurotic (if not uncommon) views of relationships than she is trashing the media. In striking back at her critics, Madonna simply sounds self-righteous and smug. ”I didn’t know I couldn’t talk about sex,” she sneers in ”Human Nature.” ”Did I say something true?” Yes. But tooting your own horn about it just sounds petty. For Madonna, luckily, revenge needn’t lie in such squabbles. She wins through the catchy bass hooks and clear persona of the music.

Longtime Madonna fans may still pine for the ecstatic buoyancy of her early hits. And even open-minded listeners may find that the new tracks work less as individual songs than as a sustained mood suite for the boudoir. But seven albums into her career, there’s no denying that Madonna keeps moving forward and crossing barriers — this time, helping another kind of black music further penetrate into the mainstream. Apparently, pop’s most shameless exhibitionist still has something to reveal” – Entertainment Weekly

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/1saoZHjleM0tAQQoCvpMrB?si=DPPbB8cjTU6DH2pSTlnjqQ

Vinyl: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Bedtime-Stories-Madonna/dp/B000002MUW/ref=sr_1_1?s=music&ie=UTF8&qid=1545560892&sr=1-1&keywords=madonna+bedtime+stories

Standout Tracks: Secret/Human Nature/Bedtime Story

Key Cut: Take a Bow

Ray of Light (1998)

Release Date: 22nd February, 1998

Label: Maverick

Review:

Returning to pop after a four-year hiatus, Madonna enlisted respected techno producer William Orbit as her collaborator for Ray of Light, a self-conscious effort to stay abreast of contemporary trends. Unlike other veteran artists who attempted to come to terms with electronica, Madonna was always a dance artist, so it's no real shock to hear her sing over breakbeats, pulsating electronics, and blunted trip-hop beats. Still, it's mildly surprising that it works as well as it does, largely due to Madonna and Orbit's subtle attack. They've reined in the beats, tamed electronica's eccentricities, and retained her flair for pop melodies, creating the first mainstream pop album that successfully embraces techno. Sonically, it's the most adventurous record she has made, but it's far from inaccessible, since the textures are alluring and the songs have a strong melodic foundation, whether it's the swirling title track, the meditative opener, "Substitute for Love," or the ballad "Frozen." For all of its attributes, there's a certain distance to Ray of Light, born of the carefully constructed productions and Madonna's newly mannered, technically precise singing. It all results in her most mature and restrained album, which is an easy achievement to admire, yet not necessarily an easy one to love” – AllMusic

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/6cuNyrSmRjBeekioLdLkvI?si=XcVXnRooTl2P7LjtERy60w

Vinyl: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Ray-Light-U-S-Version-Madonna/dp/B000002NJS/ref=sr_1_1?s=music&ie=UTF8&qid=1545561137&sr=1-1&keywords=madonna+ray+of+light

Standout Tracks: Ray of Light/Nothing Really Matters/The Power of Good-Bye

Key Cut: Frozen

Confessions on a Dance Floor (2005)

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Release Date: 9th November, 2005

Label: Warner Bros.

Review:

If Price can't stop Madonna writing songs that tell you fame isn't all it's cracked up to be in a way that suggests she thinks she's the first person to work this out, he can summon up more than enough sonic trickery to distract you. There are hulking basslines, fizzing synthesisers, rolling tablas on Push and an unlikely combination of frantic double-bass riffing, Goldfrapp-ish glam stomp and acoustic guitar filigree on the closing Like It or Not, a collaboration with Swedish pop songwriters Bloodshy and Avant. Isaac falls flat, its lyrics about Kabbalah teacher Isaac Freidin married to global-village trance makes you think of Australian backpackers dancing badly at beach parties in Goa - but elsewhere, the songwriting sparkles. The choruses of Get Together and Sorry are triumphant. I Love New York may be the most agreeably ridiculous thing Madonna has ever released: timpani, a riff stolen from the Stooges' I Wanna Be Your Dog and a Lou Reed deadpan.

It may be a return to core values, but there's still a bravery about Confessions on a Dancefloor. It revels in the delights of wilfully plastic dance pop in an era when lesser dance-pop artists - from Rachel Stevens to Price's protege Juliet - are having a desperately thin time of it. It homages the DJ mix album, a format long devalued by computer-generated cash-in compilations. It flies in fashion's face with a swaggering hint of only-I-can-do-this: "If you don't like my attitude," she suggests on I Love New York, "then you can eff-off." Dancing queens of every variety should be delighted” – The Guardian

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/1hg0pQJLE9dzfT1kgZtDPr?si=ONbcB0reQXC0mzGk6q9GcQV

Vinyl: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Confessions-Dancefloor-VINYL-Madonna/dp/B000BRBGO6/ref=sr_1_1?s=music&ie=UTF8&qid=1545561357&sr=1-1&keywords=madonna+confessions+on+a+dancefloor

Standout Tracks: Sorry/I Love New York/Push

Key Cut: Hung Up

FEATURE: Vive la Résistance! Album of the Year: IDLES – Joy as an Act of Resistance

FEATURE:

 

 

Vive la Résistance!

IMAGE CREDIT: Getty Images 

Album of the Year: IDLES – Joy as an Act of Resistance

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THIS opinion has been echoed by many others...

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 IN THIS PHOTO: IDLES/PHOTO CREDIT: Ebru Yildiz

and, in the course of deciding on the best albums of 2018, this record has been at the top of my mind. I guess, like many, I was only made aware of IDLES after their debut was released last year. Brutalism seemed to come out of nowhere and signalled this brave band who was taking no prisoners. I had detected a revival and fronting of Post-Punk and a heavier sound but have not really been embraced fully in Britain. Other bands like Slaves were coming through and it would be a few months before Shame joined the one-word band party. I have seen more bands come into the mix since then but IDLES, to me, are at the summit. Brutalism scored big reviews and many wondered why it missed out on a Mercury Prize in 2017. The album was eligible for nomination – not this year as many people wrongly felt – and it would be an absolutely miscarriage of musical justice were 2018’s defining album, Joy as an Act of Resistance, miss out on a nod. I think the boys should already be ordering the top hats, suits and canes so they can casually swan into the ceremony, say how much they love the other nominees – to get their hopes up – and act all shocked when they get the award. I do not think there has been a stronger British album in years and would be flabbergasted if one equalled IDLES’ sophomore L.P. by the time the Mercury shindig rolls around!

 IMAGE CREDIT: Getty Images

Many knew the band would produce an epic and biblical album after their lauded debut. The press were right behind them and there was there was this genuine excitement. The band are already talking about the third album and, given the touring they have completed and where they have been, I am surprised they even have time to go to the toilet! The buzz has been immense and they have pummelled the globe with their extraordinary live set. Led by the charming and hirsute Joe Talbot; the band are this incredibly connected and innovative band who are unbeatable as a unit. Each player is unique and can improve any other band: together, they have this majestic connection, chemistry and brotherly kinship that feed into the music. I am not sure many, the band included, knew how strong Joy as an Act of Resistance would be. Released on 31st August; IDLES had time to absorb all the splits, stresses and strains that defined the year before. Brexit was, believe it or not, in the mess it is now back then but the band was feeding from the anxieties and uncertainties many felt. We are all in a very scary and pitiful situation and it seems this floating island of ours is getting further from the rest of the world by the day. IDLES talked about important subjects such as the nature of masculinity and manhood on their debut. On its follow up, they seemed to reach new peaks and crystallise their thesis.

Once was the time – and it still happens to a degree – where male bands talked brashly about sex, being a bloke and ‘manning-up’. That notion that men should not disclose their feelings and remain aloof has been a common thread in music for decades. Other bands are talking about toxic masculinity but none have done so as effectively and loudly as IDLES. The boys have thrown away the men-in-bans-who-play-loud rulebook that has been stained, tattered and abused for years. They have come in, proved they can pen this immediate and energised songs but not compromise in terms of intellect and emotional maturity. Maybe that is the reason I prefer Post-Punk to the original movement. Newer artists are not nearly as brash, sexist and emotionally closed-off as their forefathers. I love groups like the Sex Pistols and The Clash but they did not often talk about opening up and talking about your feelings. To them, and their peers, that notion seemed counter-intuitive and not suitable for a movement that spat, smoked and shagged its way into the heart. Another reason why I feel IDLES’ Joy as an Act of Resistance is this year’s king record is the sheer range of subjects. They can talk about masculinity on Never Fight a Man with a Perm but stand up for immigrants and this country’s rich tapestry on Danny Nedelko.

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 IN THIS PHOTO: IDLES captured for The Line of Best Fit/PHOTO CREDIT: Mike Massaro

In the course of two tracks they manage to open your mind and eyes; shout against the push of anti-immigration and those who feel men should be men – meaning they need to keep things bottled in and not be too emotive. Samaritans is an intense and deeply striking look at male suicide – one of the biggest killers in young men – and, again, this is the sound of a band more akin to a political party. I have jokingly suggested IDLES should run the country and one feels having Joe Talbot as the Prime Minster and his brothers in the Cabinet would lead to a richer and much more stable country. The man should seriously consider a role in the Government but, in many ways, Joy as an Act of Resistance is the revolution, rebellion and rouse that has awakened the music scene. Other charged and socially-aware albums from Anna Calvi, Shame; Christine and the Queens and SOPHIE have helped make 2018 one of the best years for music in a long time. The 1975 have also made a late charge for ‘album of the year’ with A Brief Inquiry into Online Relationships and, again, social subjects and political touches have made their music so bold, exciting and relevant. So much of what has come before has been the traditional mainstream fare: songs about love, the usual balls and not really reflecting what is happening in the wider world.

IDLES are at the forefront of this new scene that takes responsibility and holds others to account. One might think their second album is a judgmental and needlessly angry affair. Rather than scorn and smash against people with no constructive side and humour; IDLES infused Joy as an Act of Resistance with plenty of laugh-out-loud moments and wonderful asides. They are, as this Guardian review states, a band who can mix the absurd, emotional and humorous and create this strange and wonderful effect:

But he can also be laugh-out-loud funny. “You look like a walking thyroid / You’re not a man you’re a gland,” he sings at the small-town bully in Never Fight a Man With a Perm: “a Topshop tyrant / Even your haircut’s violent.” Conversely, June addresses the death of Talbot’s daughter at birth, with a version of the poignant, six-word poem often attributed to Ernest Hemingway: “Baby’s shoes. For sale. Never worn.” The band tackle everything from I’m Scum’s Fall rockabilly to soul classic Cry to Me, previously recorded by Solomon Burke and the Rolling Stones. Idles won’t be for everybody: this isn’t good-time, aspirational, radio-friendly pop. But for anyone in need of music that articulates their concerns or helps them to work through their troubles – or anyone who simply appreciates blistering, intelligent punk – they might just be Britain’s most necessary band”.

There is a lot of emotion and charged sentiments at play on IDLES’ masterpiece. As AllMusic stated in their review of Joy as an Act of Resistance; the band manage to make the heavy and intense sound accessible, digestible and instructive:

It runs the risk of being overwhelming, if not for the sense of elation that Talbot brings to the table, masterfully exemplified by his staunch defense of immigration on "Danny Nedelko," which is both a personal case for a good friend -- the lead vocalist of Heavy Lungs -- and a series of more relatable characters that immigration has brought to the U.K. Most importantly, the track swells to such manic levels of celebratory joy that it inescapably sweeps everything along with it. Conversely, the linchpin of the album, "June," features heartbreaking lyrics and is easily the most personal song for Talbot; it entails the tragic loss of his baby daughter, an honest and brave move, especially considering how recently that unfortunate event took place.

In a move almost possible to predict, Idles have also included a full-blown cover with their own rendition of Solomon Burke's "Cry to Me," which works more than it really should, both thematically and in this new crunchier form. Overall, Joy as an Act of Resistance manages to plumb new depths for Idles -- that they've achieved another record in such a short space of time is admirable, let alone one that shines head and shoulders over the majority of their peers -- and it certainly upholds their status as one of the U.K.'s most exciting new acts”.

Reviews like this have flooded in over the past few months but I know the band do not take them lightly! They have been touring like nutters but Talbot and the gang have taken to social media to show their appreciation and affection for the fans and journalists who have helped make their latest album this sensation. The credit should be given to the band that have made an album with such urgency have this complexity. Unlike so much Punk and Post-Punk music; this is not about creating flammable and enflamed music that is designed merely to get people chanting and moshing. So many bands exert little wit, thought and maturity when it comes to making an album, in their mind, primed for the legions of fans and masses. Listen to opener Colossus and how it has these layers and nuances. Danny Nedelko is crammed with witty lyrics and unusual lyrics that paint pictures whereas Samaritans provokes tears with its directness and emotional weight. Guitar lines are often bursting with colour, flavour and invention. So few bands have the same ability to cram so much into a song and still have it sound effortless and easy to understand. Each of the twelve album tracks are bursting with life and it is hard to decide upon a defining anthem. From the snarling and brilliant closer, Rottweiler, to the peerless I’m Scum; each song has its own skin and each thrills the bones!  Love how some songs can completely change directions and do not conform to cliché and rigid structure.

 PHOTO CREDIT: Lindsay Melbourne for DIY

IDLES are a band who play by their own rules and do not blindly follow the pack. This, coupled with the need to speak more freely and purely than any politician out there has led to this amazing album, Joy as an Act of Resistance. I know for a fact the L.P. will be nominated for awards and win most of the silverware. 2018 has been especially strong regarding themes and the importance of the lyrics but IDLES, to me, have reached higher and lingered in the mind longer. I know the guys will have some time to recharge over Christmas and one wonders how they can follow an album like Joy as an Act of Resistance?! We said that after 2017’s Brutalism and, in a short time, the band answered those queries with an album even stronger and more complex. I know a third album will document the same sort of themes as Joy as an Act of Resistance but expect new elements to come into the mix. Given the amount of touring IDLES have done; that additional strength and honing will go into the studio and they will be an even stronger unit than they were this time last year! The band, Talbot especially, have provided incredible interviews this year and spoken more articulately and beautifully than any other artist.

I will wrap things up but this interview with The Line of Best Fit from a few months back seems to define the passion Talbot has; how he sees many of the song as reflections of himself and the need to better himself:

 “...As are all my songs, right?,” he snaps back. “'I'm Scum' is about me! It's because these come from a point in my life where I have had to reflect on myself to improve. I had to get the horrible little corners of my psyche out, and these were not from a time I was proud of – I'm not really proud of anything – but it was a crappy time in my life. I behaved abysmally, and I brought that with me when I came to Bristol. I was a real cunt at times.”

Awakening that kind of reaction is a tall order, but every tiny detail in the album has been crafted to a defined set of goals – a benefit of working to a brief – with an enormous amount of subversion in place to force people to think in new ways. Politics, masculinity, and violence are all turned topsy-turvy for effect, but even the vehicle of punk is subverted – it's traditionally an angry, viscious, masculine artform, but IDLES make it anything but.

“It's all mindful and picked out,” explains Talbot. “Subversion is a perfect word. For instance, the context of 'punk' and all that crap that goes with it – it's a very machismo-driven sphere. Rock 'n' roll is machismo... it's a bunch of codpieces and bullshit ideologies driven by bloated egos and cocaine. We get called a punk band all the time; this album is an awareness of that”.

It has been a hectic, successful and revelatory two years for IDLES and the sheer pace, pressure and pride put their way could see them fold. They are beloved and growing bigger with each record. I hope they afford themselves some time to detox from the rush and sweat of the stage; enjoy a brief break and then think about 2019. The guys have loved the fans’ love and touring all around the world. They must be knackered and I do hope they have adequate space to reflect and ponder. What they have given the world with Joy as an Act of Resistance is a modern-day sermon and mandate that takes tricky subjects and lesser-discussed areas – suicide and immigration, for example – and opens them up for conversation. Not only have the band created these fine and memorable songs but their lyrics have provoked discussion, helped people and made many, myself included, less afraid to speak and be emotional. That is a very special and rare gift and one IDLES should be proud of! Who knows how many lives they have enriched, saved and changed because of their music. I am not saying every album should have the power to do that but if you create a record that potent and universal then how can one not get excited?! This has been the year of IDLES and, to me, there is no other album that can topple Joy as an Act of Resistance. I would love to catch up with the guys next year and see what they are planning next but, given how frantic their year has been, I hope they have a mini-break where they can open presents, relax with family and do some chilling. It was in no doubt after the first listen but, eleven weeks after its release, I am beyond-certain that 2018’s strongest album is the incredible, rich and immaculate...

 PHOTO CREDIT: Pooneh Ghana for DIY

JOY as an Act of Resistance!

FEATURE: The December Playlist: Vol. 4: Is It the Sort of Sunday Driving The Beatles Talked About in Day Tripper?!

FEATURE:

 

The December Playlist

IN THIS PHOTO: The Raconteurs 

Vol. 4: Is It the Sort of Sunday Driving The Beatles Talked About in Day Tripper?!

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IT is mostly about the smaller releases…

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as the bigger artists are hibernating or have released their material earlier in the year. It will be exciting to see what comes along next year and which singles make a big impact at the start of January. It has been a busy and great one for music and, before we wind down and look to 2019, there are more songs coming through. Aside from the smaller releases, there are some big cuts from Dido, Sir Paul McCartney and The Raconteurs! There is no denying the quality and variation there and it is good we have some of the big artists making statements around this time of year. Ensure you have a look at the new singles out and I know there is enough in there to keep you busy! I am not sure whether there will be another playlist before next year as I cannot imagine many songs coming out between then and now – you never know! In honour of what might be the final assortment of new songs until 2019; enjoy what is on offer now and, whilst there are not many Christmas songs in the pack, there are songs in here that will…

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IN THIS PHOTO: Sir Paul McCartney

WARM the heart.

ALL PHOTOS/IMAGES (unless credited otherwise): Getty Images/Artists

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The RaconteursSunday Driver

Paul McCartney Who Cares

Ally BrookeThe Truth Is in There

Cigarettes After SexNeon Moon

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DidoFriends

Jay SeanNeed to Know

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Florida Georgia LinePeople Are Different

Nipsey HusslePerfect Timing

Kevin GatesDiscussion

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Meek MillTrauma

Kelsy KarterCatch Me If You Can 

Phoebe Bridgers Killer

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Picture ThisOne Drink

5 Seconds of Summer Lie to Me

Sam SmithFire on Fire

6LACK Been a While

IN THIS PHOTO: Gia Genevieve & The Raconteurs (The Saboteurs)/PHOTO CREDIT: Julian Pinder

The Saboteurs Now That You’re Gone

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Goody GraceRest Your Eyes

Loren Gray Queen

Alex Aiono As You Need

BB NobreOportuindad

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Mighty OaksLike an Eagle

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Sophie RoseBest Friend

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Alanna MattyLoved You First

PHOTO CREDIT: @nathangroff

Yung PinchCloud 9

Sofie de la Torre - Voicebreaks

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Alice GlassI Trusted You

Maya Jane ColesWaves & Whirlwinds

Robbie RiveraTribal Man

Vindit Sayeh

Richard AshcroftRare Vibration

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Rusko Mr. Policeman

Delta SleepDream Thang

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Rudimental (ft. Maverick Saba & YEBBA) They Don’t Care About Us

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Petrie Too Damn Busy

FEATURE: Sisters in Arms: An All-Female, Winter-Ready Playlist (Vol. III)

FEATURE:

 

 

Sisters in Arms

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IN THIS PHOTO: Jackie Venson/PHOTO CREDIT: Daniel Cavazos

An All-Female, Winter-Ready Playlist (Vol. III)

__________

BEFORE I look ahead to next year and what is happening...

 IN THIS PHOTO: FiFi Rong/PHOTO CREDIT: @stefanoboski⠀⠀

I am still fascinated by the music of 2018 and the artists making a big impression. I feel the best albums of this year have been made by women and they have added so much to the musical landscape. To honour them and the music the underground is putting through; I have collated another winter-ready playlist that unites some of the very best female artists emerging (there are a couple of older tunes in the mix). It is a stocked and impressive playlist that demonstrates great variety and potency – and the contrasting moods and shades of winter.  Have a look through these songs and I know there is enough in there that will be able to warm you and bring plenty of cheer...

  IN THIS PHOTO: Hailee Steinfeld

BEFORE Christmas comes.  

ALL PHOTOS (unless stated otherwise): Getty Images/Artists

____________

Raindear - World Below

 Jackie VensonA Million Moments

UPSAHLThe Other Team            

Emma Sameth (ft. Jeremy Zucker, WOLFE)Spin with You

ZuzuDistant Christmas

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Kill JDead Weight Soldier

Hailee Steinfeld - Back to Life (from Bumblebee)

PHOTO CREDIT: Zuzia Zawada

IshaniStormy Emotions

Alice GlassI Trusted You

PHOTO CREDIT: Jessica Chanen

JoyeurDaisies

PHOTO CREDIT: Hob Junker

DOTT Floating Arrows

PHOTO CREDIT: Filmawi

SIPPRELLJourney

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Y.A.S100 YEARS

Carla J Easton (ft. Michael Pedersen)Song

Sarah & JuliaHooked on the Hype

Emma CharlesComfort in the Chaos

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Phé - Feel You

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Elles BaileyMedicine Man

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Rina Sawayama - Flicker

Emily HackettYours

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Daisy GrayRumours 

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Lex PanterraLies

Loren GrayQueen

Sofi de la TorreVoicebreaks

beabadoobeeEighteen

FiFi Rong (ft. LO) Foreign

Kirsty Merryn (ft. Steve Knightley) - Forfarshire

FEATURE: Snap, Crackle and (Some Great) Pop: The Best Pop, Alternative-Pop and R&B Albums of 2018

FEATURE:

 

 

Snap, Crackle and (Some Great) Pop

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PHOTO CREDIT: @jsharp9066  

The Best Pop, Alternative-Pop and R&B Albums of 2018

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THIS will be the last of my genre-specific pieces...

 IN THIS PHOTO: Robyn/PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images

but there will be other rundowns that celebrate the best of 2018. I am not done shining a light on the good and exceptional from this year but, when it comes to genres; let’s end with the very best Pop, Alternative-Pop and R&B albums from 2018. It has been a busy year and one stuffed with adventure, innovation and delight! I have combined some truly great and popular albums that have stuck in the critical mindset and impressed listeners. Here is a selection of brilliant records that, once more, prove what a great year...

 IN THIS PHOTO: The 1975/PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images

WE have had for music.  

ALL ALBUM COVERS: Getty Images

________________

Let’s Eat GrandmaI’m All Ears

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Date of Release: 29th June, 2018

Label: Transgressive Records

Producers: David Wrench/SOPHIE/Faris Badwan

Review:

I’m All Ears (otherwise produced by David Wrench) translates LEG’s weirdness into proper pop: amid interludes of purring cats and trilling ringtones, their songs are mini odysseys that intertwine rave-y euphoria and menace. With its battering chorus, Falling Into Me is as galvanising as its determined lyrics. They do softness, too: It’s Not Just Me, the other Sophie and Badwan track, is dreamy and unsettling, while the rainfall on Ava makes the piano ballad even more wrenching.

LEG’s lyrics, far from their debut’s fairytale nonsense, have become uncanny and piercing, which is enhanced by their muscular vocal melodrama. There’s a brilliant line on Snakes and Ladders that confronts gender’s power imbalance and the false salve of consumerism: “How do you feel so respected, majestic? ’Cause I’m objecting to things I go off and buy into, selecting the pails I’ll be pouring your tears into.” Cool and Collected perfectly distills the desperation of social awkwardness: “I still blur in the haze that you cut straight through.” While missed connections litter the album – missed calls, disembodied names on screens – I’m All Ears is about abandoning fear and leaping boldly towards desire. It is remarkable” – The Guardian

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/5Bnhkya5cGltQFTrnC0grx?si=OIbRaj1YSluXKwJvhaXjpA

Standout Tracks: Falling Into Me/The Cat’s Pyjamas/Ava

Finest Cut: Hot Pink

Kimbra - Primal Heart

Date of Release: 20th April, 2018

Label: Warner Bros.

Producers: Various

Review:

Still, Primal Heart takes listeners on a smoother journey than The Golden Echo's wild ride, and if some of these tracks are a little more straightforward, they're also great showcases for Kimbra's soul-baring. Her writing feels more personal than ever as she tackles getting older, wiser, and stronger on songs that range from "Lightyears"' soaring exuberance to the defiance of "Everybody Knows." The album's ballads are some of Kimbra's most compelling yet, whether it's "Version of Me"'s torchy drama or the late-night searching of "Real Life," which features some of the most evocative processed vocals since Imogen Heap's "Hide and Seek." A consistently winning album, Primal Heart finds Kimbra hitting the sweet spot between imagination and accessibility -- if her nods to the mainstream get more ears pointed her way, so much the better” – AllMusic

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/4pj0BkJ7u39i009oqe8V79?si=7P8dozXGTP-RP-N9PuekgQ

Standout Tracks: Top of the World/Like They Do on TV/Version of Me

Finest Cut: Everybody Knows                              

Camila CabelloCamila

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Date of Release: 12th January, 2018

Labels: Epic/Syco

Producers: Various

Review:

Perhaps emboldened by Havana’s vast success, Cabello has developed a habit of carrying on as if her debut album is a starkly uncompromising personal statement, free from the kind of pressures that were brought to bear on Fifth Harmony’s output. That lays it on a bit thick. Cabello gets a writing credit on every song – a rare occurrence with her old outfit – but Camila is clearly a pop album made in the traditional way, by committee, with one gimlet eye always fixed on commerce. The supporting cast features everyone from Ed Sheeran collaborator Amy Wadge to Ryan Tedder, and there’s something very telling about the ruthlessness with which a succession of songs that failed to shift sufficient units as singles were expunged from the final tracklisting.

It doesn’t matter. Camila is one of those moments where the committee approach strikes gold: smart enough to avoid smoothing out the quirks and slavishly chasing trends, it’s a product of the pop factory that doesn’t sound run-of-the-mill” – The Guardian

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/2vD3zSQr8hNlg0obNel4TE?si=r6GCZBdWQmWRfyf0C29tCg

Standout Tracks: Never Be the Same/Consequences/In the Dark

Finest Cut: Havana

Kylie MinogueGolden

Date of Release: 6th April, 2018

Labels: BMG/Liberator

Producers: Various

Review:

Radio On is a ballad about coping with heartache by listening to the radio, while the album’s final track – Music’s Too Sad Without You, a duet with Jack Savoretti– also touches on the importance of music as a place marker in life. Both tracks are downbeat and show a rare weakness, as her voice lacks the depth to carry them off with any great impact. Sad Kylie is much more effective when she’s dusting herself down and dancing her cares away.

Just in case you weren’t sure who you were listening to, Raining Glitter is not only in the running for the campest song title of all time award, but also a career defining key change – it’s THE sound of Kylie. But on the whole her vocals are relaxed and she sounds at ease, at home. This is pop for the whole family. She’s done a Take That; created a grown-up, Radio 2-playlist, guitar-driven, dance-flecked album with a warm glow.

Golden stands alongside her classic records; in a world of disposable music, Kylie’s return is welcome and shows how slick, smart pop music should be done” – musicOMH

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/5vroCXY4FWNiIAovi5KsQB?si=M0RcihLiRVGCvDMQgTVcVA

Standout Tracks: Stop Me from Falling/Radio On/Every Little Part of Me

Finest Cut: Dancing                  

Tove StyrkeSway

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Date of Release: 4th May, 2018

Label: RCA

Producers: John Alexis/Joe Janiak/Elof Loelv/Gustaf Nyström

Review:

Equally at home on a made-for-radio chorus (dancehall infused ‘Say My Name’) as on the vocoder manipulated vocals of ‘I Lied’, you’re left with no doubt that Styrke’s is an force to be reckoned with. And then there’s ‘Mistakes’, the glorious musical equivalent of getting butterflies in your stomach. Shimmering, percussive production is punctuated by Styrke’s robotic vocals boldly declaring its mischievous chorus: “You make me wanna make mistakes.” It’s pure pop perfection.

Clocking in at just 26 minutes, ‘Sway’ is a succinct but comprehensive statement from Styrke – one that demands attention and declares her as a musical tour-de-force. The release of this album comes in between a string of dates with industry darling Lorde and this month’s shows with pop behemoth Katy Perry. Although Styrke is supporting them now, ‘Sway’ proves it won’t be long until she’s standing shoulder to shoulder with them” – NME

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/3fSRbKgYW6kcR1ZFMaaNV4?si=_7ht9UyUR0S1xIeqArLUMw

Standout Tracks: Sway/Mistakes/Vibe 

Finest Cut: Say My Name                                              

The Lemon TwigsGo to School

Date of Release: 24th August, 2018

Label: 4AD

Review:

Like all the best concept albums, however, we leave Shane in a good place, alone but at peace, accepting that love within oneself is more important than love from others. There are questions – why did the most popular girl in school sleep with a chimpanzee? How did Shane not realise he wasn’t human? Just how does he like his breakfast bananas prepared? – but overall, Go To School is a blast, a joyous, ridiculous journey that treads a perfect line between silly, funny and heart-breaking.

After closer “If You Give Enough”, one gets the impression that, ultimately, the D’Addarios do care about their poor protagonist, this pure chimp corrupted by human civilisation. What’s more amazing, as the spotlight fades out on Shane, alone in his tree like some anthropoid Buddha, is the fact that now we do, too” – Uncut

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/5c42OLUNIZldeqhSSOER8d?si=ufCRg5YxT7OWRJbCCFvMow

Standout Tracks: Never in My Arms, Always in My Heart/The Bully/Go to School

Finest Cut: The Fire                                                                           

Years & YearsPalo Santo

Date of Release: 6th July, 2018

Label: Polydor

Producers: Various

Review:

However, what ‘Palo Santo’ has that ‘Communion’ lacked is an inventive ballad. ‘Hypnotised’, a delicate and unworldly highlight, and ‘Lucky Escape’, a palpable moment of agony and anguish, are elevated because of their intricate production (they also boast the best vocal performances from Alexander’s career).

The title track, though, is where Olly’s sermon is delivered. Here melancholia and desire battle with volatility, a hazardous tug-of-war where sexual fulfilment conflicts with loneliness and morality. The base piano is joined by skittish beats and lashings of falsetto, giving the song sweaty urgency.

In a thrilling conclusion, ‘Up In Flames’ sees Olly in unmarked territory as he grieves his relationship with his estranged father over Greg Kurstin’s ominous production and pacey beats. It’s a candid end to an overwhelmingly intimate record that makes you wonder just what Years & Years could be capable of next” – DIY

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/2CccDD18ZzCqRXkiMrhfoW?si=HfzVaQyAQQK7ctUg3wh-gA

Standout Tracks: All for You/Preacher/Palo Santo

Finest Cut: Sanctify                                                                          

Tracey ThornRecord

Date of Release: 2nd March, 2018

Label: Merge Records

Producer: Ewan Pearson

Review:

Such intuitive common sense is writ large throughout Record, which mixes tight-fitting production (by longtime collaborator Ewan Pearson) with superlative signature vocals and guest appearances by Corinne Bailey Rae, Warpaint rhythm section musicians Stella Mozgawa (drums) and Jenny Lee Lindberg (bass), and UK singer/songwriter Shura.

One-word titles imply focus rather than lack of thought, and from opening electro-pop tune Queen (“Here I go again, down that road again”) to closing Kraftwerk-referencing Dancefloor (“Where did we begin, back in the days we lived inside each other’s skin”) via the punkish Babies (“Every morning of the month you push a little tablet through the foil/ cleverest of all inventions, better than a condom or a coil/ ’cos I didn’t want my babies until I wanted babies”), and self-referencing Air (“Too tall, all wrong, deep voice, headstrong”), Thorn digs deep yet carefully, avoiding traps rather than setting them. With such insight and pop nous, Record comes across as the very, very best of Tracy Thorn: a charming, challenging mix of reflection and reaction with added beats” – The Irish Times

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/4rb4OC3d46iZld05PU927t?si=Q870bNLKRuW5f9FY_hWzew

Standout Tracks: Queen/Babies/Dancefloor 

Finest Cut: Sister        

Ariana Grande - Sweetener

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Date of Release: 17th August, 2018

Label: Republic

Producers: Various

Review:

Songs are arranged as call and response, with Grande taking both parts, multi-tracked voices flowing in gossamer light harmonies. A short interlude, named in honour of her comedian fiancé Pete Davidson, is utterly gorgeous, a sweet nothing dissolving into blissful oohs. On closing track Get Well Soon she sounds like a one-woman doo-wop combo.

With such stellar writer-producers at the controls, the quality of the songs is high, although there are moments when they might be trying too hard to demonstrate that the teen queen is all grown up now.

Dropping an f-bomb into Better Off seems gratuitous among the gentle hugging and kissing. Abrasive guest rappers Nicki Minaj and Missy Elliott sound like they dialled in clichéd verses for a pay cheque. But as modern, branded, blockbuster pop albums go, Sweetener is a delightful confection” – The Telegraph

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/3tx8gQqWbGwqIGZHqDNrGe?si=4cB7VMyET7KMeiSNsjXYww

Standout Tracks: God Is a Woman/sweetener/no tears left to cry

Finest Cut: the light is coming

RobynHoney

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Date of Release: 26th October, 2018

Labels: Konichwa/Interscope

Producers: Joseph Mount/Mr. Tophat/Adam Bainbridge/Robyn/Klas Åhlund

Review:

She delivers her own style of sexual healing on the masterful title track, describing it as something nourishing beyond mere pleasure. "Baby Forgive Me" is both soft and daring; though she risks it all by asking to be taken back, she asks so sweetly that it's almost impossible to say no. Perhaps as a tribute to her connection with FalkRobyn made Honey with other close friends. Along with Klas Åhlund, her collaborator since the Robyn days, the album features lush, expressionistic tracks produced by KindnessAdam Bainbridge ("Send to Robin Immediately") and Mr. Tophat ("Beach 2K20"). However, her main creative partner is Metronomy's Joseph Mount, who contributed to over half the album and brings a crisp synth-pop edge to "Ever Again," which finds a stronger, wiser Robyn promising herself to never be this devastated again. The eight years between Body Talk and this album would be a lifetime for almost any artist, and several lifetimes for a female pop star, whose career longevity isn't usually measured in decades. However, Robyn continues to make the trends instead of following them, and with Honey, she enters her forties with some of her most emotionally satisfying and musically innovative music” – AllMusic

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/0CQ68SLY0B5e6L1rn8jfkc?si=huVfcJ-MTty6Q9qptmp4pQ

Standout Tracks: Baby Forgive Me/Honey/Between the Lines

Finest Cut: Missing U

The 1975 - A Brief Inquiry Into Online Relationships            

Date of Release: 30th November, 2018

Labels: Dirty Hit/Polydor

Producers: George Daniel/Matthew Healy

Review:

Perhaps the biggest surprise comes in the form of ‘Mine’, a Cole Porter-influenced jazz number that evokes golden era Hollywood, Disney soundtracks and finger-clicking crooners while reflecting wryly on modern life (“I fight crime online sometimes / I write rhymes I hide behind,”), a jarring dissonance that feels like hearing a song you’ve known your whole life for the very first time.

‘Mine’ is a breathtaking piece of work, and one of many here that proves that The 1975’s core songwriting team of Matty Healy and George Daniel are not just the most accomplished and creative duo working in pop right now but the closest thing we have to a present-day Lennon and McCartney, a pair whose golden touch makes them near-enough unassailable. Clever and profound, funny and light, serious and heartbreaking, painfully modern and classic-sounding all at the same time, ‘A Brief Inquiry Into Online Relationships’ is a game-changing album, one that challenges The 1975’s peers – if, indeed, there are any – to raise their game” – NME

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/6PWXKiakqhI17mTYM4y6oY?si=aUXC_HQSTpWNIX59rySZaw

Standout Tracks: TOOTIMETOOTIMETOOTIME/Love It If We Made It/Mine 

Finest Cut: Sincerity Is Scary

Rita OraPhoenix 

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Date of Release: 23rd November, 2018

Label: Atlantic UK

Producers: Various

Review:

Between these already established tracks, the newer material slots in well. “Let You Love Me” is frank and affecting in its exploration of emotional barriers – “I wish that I could let you love me/ Say what’s the matter with me?” – but you don’t need to engage in its emotional crisis to appreciate this mid-tempo bop. “New Look” is catchy too, despite a beat that sounds like it’s being played on a radio with intermittent signal.

There are a few low points: “Keep Talking”, even with left-field pop connoisseur Julia Michaels on board, is frustratingly plodding, while “Summer Love” builds threateningly towards a clumsy drop. For the most part, though, Phoenix is worth the wait – whether you were doing so with indifference or bated breath” – The Independent

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/6Vn8F3hERVHYYz5RfKmsAN?si=0zFrZY67QiSLbQ3DlfgASQ

Standout Tracks: New Look/Your Song/First Time High

Finest Cut: Let Me Love You

Mariah CareyCaution 

Date of Release: 16th November, 2018

Label: Epic

Producers: Various

Review:

With production from Blood Orange on Giving Me Life, it is hardly surprising that this is the defining and most eclectic moment on the album. With echoes of The Roof and The Beautiful Ones from the iconic Butterfly album, the chorus is an immediate classic and the breakdown towards the end of the song is a stunning showcase of that vocal range against a backdrop of electric guitars.

The album closes with the slow burning and vintage Mariah ballad Portrait. We find her at her most ethereal and reflective, and the narrative focuses on the relationship Carey has with herself. The glorious vocals towards the end are truly magnificent and the track is a fitting and definitive end to such a cathartic and phenomenal album.

The message from Carey here is clear. You can come into her life, but make it count and do not throw caution to the wind. This is why her lambs are never silent in their perpetual adoration. Sublime” – musicOMH

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/64zK6tmksJw9gNZR0L4DVx?si=7UIZVnS0R9iJasjOiC0Z7w

Standout Tracks: Caution/8th Grade/Portrait

Finest Cut: With You

FEATURE: Music Sounds Better with You: Ones to Watch 2019: Part V

FEATURE:

 

 

Music Sounds Better with You

IN THIS PHOTO: Indoor Pets/PHOTO CREDIT: Felicity Davies

Ones to Watch 2019: Part V

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IT is coming close to the end of the year...

 IN THIS PHOTO: Tom Tripp

so you might be hunting about for artists worth exploring in 2019. It can be tricky predicting who will be around for a while and those artists who are not quite there yet. The ‘ones to watch’ lists will start to come out soon and we will have a better impression of the artists worth some time and focus. I have been keeping an eye and, whilst there might be one or two instalments left; here is the fifth part of my recommendations for next year. I am especially excited by the female artists coming through and think they will have a big say. Have a flick through these suggested names and keep an eye out...

 IN THIS PHOTO: Glowie

FOR other future recommendations too.

ALL PHOTOS/IMAGES (unless credited otherwise): Getty Images

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Alba Plano

Nakhane

Indoor Pets

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She Makes War

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Glowie

Aaron Taos

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Tom Tripp

Dan Owen

HEGAZY

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Big Wild

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Amber Olivier

Madonnatron

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Muncie Girls

Mae Muller

Sons of an Illustrious Father

Mediaeval Baebes

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RAYE

Izzy Bizu

 

GAZELLE

Eva Lazarus

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Thyla

PHOTO CREDIT: @readdork/@bufola                                                                     

Follow: https://www.facebook.com/thylamusic/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/thylamusic

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/2ySHS7UojGu20XfUPaBlyu?si=aotvcLW9TbiTwJ2bogLz9g

Maggie Szabo

SUGARTHIEF

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Liv Dawson

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Scott Quinn

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Little Simz

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Adamn Killa

ADI

Self Esteem

FEATURE: Dreams, Machines and Wonderful Scenes: The Best Electronic Albums of 2018

FEATURE:

 

 

Dreams, Machines and Wonderful Scenes

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PHOTO CREDIT: @thomashabr/Unsplash 

The Best Electronic Albums of 2018

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AFTER this piece, I am going to do one or two...

 IN THIS PHOTO: Jon Hopkins/PHOTO CREDIT: Pitch Perfect PR/Getty Images

more lists that collate together the best albums from particular genres. Today, I am looking at Electronic albums of 2018 and the ones that thrilled the critics. Electronic music has changed radically through the decades and it is always great charting its changes and evolutions. 2018 has been a big one and produced some truly stunning albums. Here are the essential Electronic albums that you need in your life and prove what a...

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 IN THIS PHOTO: Helena Hauff/PHOTO CREDIT: Julian Bajsel, courtesy of Panorama

SUPERB genre it is.  

ALL ALBUM COVERS: Getty Images

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Jon HopkinsSingularity

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Date of Release: 4th May, 2018

Label: Domino

Producer: John Hopkins

Review:

Details are where this album is most rewarding: every moment is deeply considered. Hopkins intended for it to be heard in one go, and there’s every reason for listeners to set aside an hour and let themselves be carried off into his mesmerising world. ‘Feel First Life’ comes close to a religious experience by harnessing the transcendent power of sacred choral music (Hopkins trained at the Royal College of Music as a teen). Then there’s the warm come-down of piano tracks such as ‘Echo Dissolve’ and ‘Recovery’, which he recorded on two separate pianos – a grand and an upright – and cut together to combine their timbres. The former, something like Nils Frahm’s ‘Felt’, is so intimate that you can almost hear the keys brushing against one another as they’re pressed.

Perhaps the clearest example of Hopkins’ painstaking hypnotic mastery is ‘Luminous Beings’, a 12-minute, glitchy warp-field: first he envelops the listener in a muted, arrhythmic clattering, then, like some beneficent Willy Wonka, sets them adrift in a cloud of bubbling synths, and draws them momentarily above cloud level on a pillow of keening strings before letting them loose again. Like the rest of the album, it’s magic, and when closer ‘Recovery’ ends – on the same note upon which the album started – you’ll want to start the trip all over again” – NME

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/1nvzBC1M3dlCMIxfUCBhlO?si=EIBvE3M-RsWObq35CjpK-A

Standout Tracks: Singularity/Everything Connected/Luminous Beings

Finest Cut: Emerald Rush                                                               

Aphex TwinCollapse EP

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Date of Release: 14th September, 2018

Label: Warp

Producer: Richard D. James

Review:

The elastic percussion rolls and stutters, recalling the fluid beat structures of Second Woman, before reaching sonic overload. Yet after all of that, it doesn't end up sinking the rhythm or melody, which continue on their merry way. "1st 44" features shredded, scratched-up samples of old-school jungle over scrambled electro beats, referencing the past without sounding like a retro throwback. "MT1 t29r2" includes harp-like tones which recall Aphex's classic 1993 single "On," but this track is more fractured and hyperkinetic than angelic. Concluding track "pthex" (inexplicably left off the EP's vinyl issue) is another exhilarating blend of atmospheric pads and adrenalin-rush beats and glitches which threaten to overpower everything, but the track maintains it composure. Somewhat ironically titled, Collapse ends up being one of Aphex's stronger post-2000 releases” – AllMusic

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/3SbGxJVC8fHv41RFKCGIl3?si=8DSGQhufQbCjID16S9ab1A

Standout Tracks: 1st 44/MT1 t29r2/pthex

Finest Cut: T69 Collapse                                                                  

SOPHIEOIL OF EVERY PEARL’S UN-INSIDES

Date of Release: 15th June, 2018

Labels: MSMSMSM/Future Classic/Transgressive

Producer: SOPHIE

Review:

Her other mode of expression is the one she deployed on early tracks such as Hard: mechanistic dance tracks as sexual, tough and water-resistant as the prostate massagers she once sold as merch. But where once those tracks were tinny, here they have become steroidally imposing, gilded with distortion and industrial heft. Based around catchy chants, perfect for skipping rope games conducted by dominatrices, PonyboyFaceshopping and the Aladdin-quoting Whole New World/Pretend World are dazzlingly brash and butch. Pretending is less successful – a stately bit of Tim Hecker-ish ambient, where her very particular sonics get lost in reverb – but it leads into the album’s biggest pop moment, Immaterial, where all the latent J-pop vibes get brought to the fore in a high-speed pachinko cacophony.

Despite software advances, so many electronic producers are content to lapse into nostalgia or a safe, compromised emotional range; Sophie has crafted a genuinely original sound and uses it to visit extremes of terror, sadness and pleasure” – The Guardian

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/6ukR0pBrFXIXdQgLWAhK7J?si=BzRwVC44TAa1nal5SQgQ3A

Standout Tracks: Ponyboy/Faceshopping/Not Okay

Finest Cut: It’s Okay to Cry                                                            

Oneohtrix Point NeverAge Of

Date of Release: 1st June, 2018

Label: Warp

Producers: Daniel Lopatin/James Blake

Review:

Lopatin, AKA Oneohtrix Point Never, has become increasingly collaborative in recent years, producing for David Byrne, writing for singers FKA Twigs and Anohni, and composing an eerie soundtrack for the Safdie brothers’ 2017 film Good Time. As such, Age Of is a collective effort, employing Anohni’s choral vocals on the distortion-heavy Same, noise artist Prurient’s screams on Warning and James Blake’s keyboards on the pixelated melodies of Still Stuff That Doesn’t Happen.

Lopatin entices the listener through sweeping orchestrations, such as those of the title track and Manifold, and then abruptly manufactures discordance. Expectations are subverted, as when the opulence of the harpsichord is manipulated beyond recognition or a piercing shout infiltrates a rhythm. Since every composition holds this tension within its structure, it feels like an aesthetic choice rather than a gimmick. The more time you spend with Age Of, the more Lopatin’s instrumentations reveal depth” – The Observer

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/05A41BF3z2E5F0tnTyWRNh?si=QhzT_YocTc-GCmOpB2Sm9g

Standout Tracks: Babylon/The Station/RayCats

Finest Cut: Black Snow                                                                    

GaikaBASIC VOLUME

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Date of Release: 27th July, 2018

Label: Warp

Review:

Unsurprisingly, the album is a melting pot of musical references. “Black Empire” has echoes of dancehall whereas the title track offers a distorted vision of R’n’B, steeped in reverb. On the pulsating “Hackers & Jackers”, on the other hand, a heavy beat forms its back drop while choral chanting fleshes out “Seven Churches For St Jude”. If this sounds chaotic, it isn’t. Basic Volume is one of the most cohesive and meticulously thought-through albums of the year.

Throughout the record, GAIKA’s vocals enter under various guises of distortion. The result could at times seem stark, but instead produces an entirely unique industrial soundscape. You wouldn’t be wrong to detect a dystopian slant both lyrically and musically overall. But it is not a dystopia of GAIKA’s own creation; rather Basic Volume serves as a mirror to the one we have already created. Gaika is not just the artist we want, but the artist society desperately needs” – The Line of Best Fit

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/6Cn4sBJRdjOhl5201IwAIF?si=CR-smUR7SHWjo-srBrGzeg

Standout Tracks: Seven Churches for St Jude/36 Oaths/Yard

Finest Cut: Born Thieves                                                                 

ObjektCocoon Crush

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Date of Release: 9th November, 2018

Label: PAN

Review:

Track five, “Deadlock,” is the album’s heaviest cut, but it’s also the slowest: a bare-knuckled hip-hop instrumental that sounds like classic Def Jux rendered in retina-burning high definition. Even on “Runaway,” the album’s only true club cut, he refuses to play it straight. In the middle, he removes the beat for nearly a minute, layering tentative piano chords and gurgling synths over the sounds of a children’s playground. When the beat finally returns, it’s stronger, as if recharged by a meditative walk around the block. It’s like a diagram of the creative process itself.

The closer, “Lost and Found (Found Mix),” is a rework of the intro, but it’s no mere coda. A more customary producer would have floated an ambient intro and then wrapped up with the dancefloor version, but Hertz takes the opposite approach: The closing is a seven-minute deconstruction of the opener that jettisons almost all trace of conventional beats. It’s no coincidence that the version subtitled “Found Mix” is the one that ventures furthest from the familiar: To find the essence of Objekt, Hertz has ventured well past techno’s borderlands. Four years later, Flatland still sounds ahead of its time, but Cocoon Crush is leagues beyond it. It shows a total disregard for club music’s strictures, concerned primarily not with floor-filling, but world-building” – Pitchfork

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/2mMr1UCtck27p1xPJzqrLL?si=IfrwSEMQRwCnnW_KD7hlXg

Standout Tracks: Nervous Silk/Runaway/Secret Snake

Finest Cut: Deadlock                                                                        

Marie DavidsonWorking Class Woman

Date of Release: 5th October, 2018

Label: Ninja Tune

Producer: Marie Davidson

Review:

Throughout, Davidson refuses to be pigeonholed into any one corner of the club – with each track, she flexes her songwriting muscles in fascinating ways. The dreamy ‘Lara’ is a mind-melting composition, while the twinkling final track ‘La chambre intérieure’ acts as a remarkably human closer: “I feel empty in the summer breeze / In the mountain facing me“. ‘So Right’ is a bouncy club bop where the poppier edges rear their head, but it’s the pulsating beats of ‘Workaholic Paranoid Bitch’ and ‘Burn Me’ that will drill down into your brain longest.

Davidson’s ‘Working Class Woman’ is smart, intriguing and deserves to be heralded as one of the year’s most inventive releases – Lord knows she’s worked hard enough for it” – NME

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/5AG8Dvo3N4y9ZlCjU06yXh?si=SkCG5LwfSranvl1H18E3og

Standout Tracks: Work It/Lara/Burn Me

Finest Cut: Your Biggest Fan                                                         

GwennoLe Kov

Date of Release: 2nd March, 2018

Label: Heavenly Records

Producer: Rhys Edwards

Review:

There wasn't a song on Y Dydd Olaf as catchy and simple as the bouncy duet with Gruff Rhys, "Daromres Y'n Howl," or one as epic and deep as "Den Heb Taves." They layer guitars, synthesizers, piano, and drums in a very psychedelic manner throughout, keeping things murky and warm like a humid summer night. Gwenno adds her vocals on top of the mix in a number of ways, intoning breathily ("Hy a Skoellyas Lyf a Dhagrow"), cooing sweetly ("Jynn-Amontya"), billowing in wispy clouds of harmony and reverb ("Aremorika"), and sometimes adding some bite ("Eus Keus?") or melancholy yearning ("Koweth Ker") to the proceedings. While the diverse musical settings she and Edwards cook up for each song are impressive, Gwenno's vocals are a dream throughout. It's clear that she feels strongly about the words she is singing, and she inhabits every song fully. The music, words, and voice come together on Le Kov like fragments of the past put back together and made into a satisfying new whole that works as a lovely tribute to Cornish culture, while also solidifying Gwenno's place as an important artist” – AllMusic

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/1jEsE25YERUfbs5ZFsPqlf?si=vgHxdxv5S4ep_BZnJlKnYg

Standout Tracks: Herdhya/Den Heb Taves/Hunros

Finest Cut: Tir Ha Mor                                                                     

SmerzHave Fun

Date of Release: 6th March, 2018

Label: XL

Review:

On “Oh my my,” Stoltenberg punctuates every few lines with a sardonic reading of the title phrase, muttering about “basic bitch problems” over a shuddering, vacuum-like effect. You’re left wondering exactly what constitute “basic bitch problems” in the Smerz extended universe: is switching from dairy to almond milk making them feel bloated, or are they being sucked into a cold, blank void? The contrast is profound enough to make you giggle, especially since it’s obvious Smerz are in on the joke” – Pitchfork  

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/1ua8lJy0UubynYUU8AEf8q?si=QRW4JVAmRYCDBTujekdq9w

Standout Tracks: Worth It/Oh my my/Fitness

Finest Cut: No harm                                                                         

Leon VynehallNothing Is Still

Date of Release: 15th June, 2018

Label: Nina Tune

Review:

Leon Vynehall’s evolution as a producer has been fascinating. ‘Nothing Is Still’ retains the sultry atmosphere and warm synths of his previous work; but departs from Chicago house nostalgia for a melting pot of jazz fusion, ambient sound collage and trip-hop.

The outstanding distinction is a preference for atmosphere over song structure. On ‘Ice Cream’, ‘It Breaks’ and ‘Birds On The Tarmac’, synths and loops hover dreamily over field recordings of nature and everyday life. In sound, it is far closer to Basinski or Tim Hecker than Pepe Bradock.

Louder moments, however, are thrilling. ‘Envelopes’ is a particular highlight, with shades of Portishead in its slow, accented beat and dramatic strings. House appears in flashes, on ‘English Oak’ and ‘Drinking It In Again’, but the mixes are fuller and more psychedelic.

Many may still see Vynehall as a specialist in euphoric house, but this album has a richness and depth that transcends the dancefloor” – CLASH

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/6WeIO0CpDMiMXTglv0KuLr?si=Wis0XVAsSwOsCBAUm6fjag

Standout Tracks: Julia (Footnote IV)/Envelopes (Chapter VI)/Ice Cream (Chapter VIII)

Finest Cut: Movements (Chapter III)                                         

VesselQueen of Golden Dogs

Date of Release: 9th November, 2018

Label: Tri Angle

Review:

There’s clearly a lot of erudition behind this project – although how Gainsborough’s slightly obscure name-dropping enriches the listening experience is hard to gauge. What anybody can quickly glean is that this is an album intent on sustaining a constant state of flux. Sometimes the change is gradual – Arcanum (For Christalla) opens with a tune played on what sounds like a lute that begins leisurely and ends up frighteningly frantic. Elsewhere, it’s more stark, as when Argo’s spritely strings are greeted by disorientingly syncopated percussion. But for an album that veers between the hallmarks of happy hardcore and ghostly choral incantations, Queen of Golden Dogs makes a surprisingly satisfying whole. That’s largely thanks to Gainsborough’s efforts to maintain the balance between entertainingly jarring and modernity-evoking erraticism and a gratifying sense of beauty and peace that feels age-old” – The Guardian

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/4wVHohBynJ5eFHw6Cc1WzD?si=MSFVurrNTy-QfsqyEJ3afA

Standout Tracks: Good Animal (For Hannah)/Glory Glory (For Tippi)/Sand Tar Man Star (For Aurellia)

Finest Cut: Argo (For Maggie)                                                     

Helena HauffQualm

Date of Release: 3rd August, 2018

Label: Ninja Tune

Review:

‘Qualms’, and its sister production ‘No Qualms’, on the other hand, use this slow progression to their advantage, maintaining a romantic melody that lends itself beautifully to the initial beatless piece and to its bouncy electro evolution. ‘No Qualms’, in many ways, is a therapeutic hike through an otherwise distorted dreamscape.

In ‘Panegyric’ we see a complete meandering from the raw aesthetic of the record. Helena’s post punk influences shine through on a track that sounds like it has come from the past, all be it with a distinctive futuristic edge.

We reach the climax of the record with another moody statement in the form of ‘It Was All Fields Around Here When I Was A Kid’. I’m unsure if the title of track is a direct inspiration, but given its wording you can almost see a time-lapse unfolding before you as concrete emerges from what once lay bare.

With ‘Qualm’, Helena Hauff has created the record we both wanted and needed. It’s a statement of romantic infatuation amongst an otherwise hash, twisted and raw landscape. A glance into the past and a look to the future. There is nothing apologetic about this record, and that’s what makes it so great” – CLASH

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/2hYmcjIinZoVCog5sP4k0H?si=xtg6aslfTdCVkNx6XLzkIw

Standout Tracks: Barrow Boot Boys/Fag Butts in the Fire Bucket/No Qualms

Finest Cut: Qualm                                                                             

An Alternative Christmas: Some Untraditional and Rarer Christmas Songs

FEATURE:

 

 

An Alternative Christmas

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IN THIS PHOTO: Katy Perry/PHOTO CREDIT: Nadia Lee Cohen

Some Untraditional and Rarer Christmas Songs

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MOST of us are familiar with the ‘classic’ Christmas tracks...

 PHOTO CREDIT: @jeztimms/Unsplash

and we are hearing a lot of Mariah Carey, Wham! and Slade right now. I love the golden oldies and always-reliable Christmas tracks and, whilst The Pogues and Kirsty MacColl’s Fairytale of New York takes some beating; we have all heard it over and over and pretty much know it word for word! Maybe it is that routine and reliability that we like but, if you look a bit harder, you will find these alternative Christmas songs that are interesting and fresh. You may be familiar with some but I think there are a lot that do not get an airing. To give you a more rounded look at the Christmas songs out there, I have compiled a selection of new and older Christmas tracks that often play second fiddle to the big guns. Have a listen to an alternative take on Christmas and I know there are plenty in there that will...

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 PHOTO CREDIT: @freestocks/Unsplash

CHARM and entice.