FEATURE: The Lockdown Playlist: Dolly Parton at Seventy-Five: Her Finest Cuts

FEATURE:

 

 

The Lockdown Playlist

PHOTO CREDIT: Irving Penn/Condé Nast 

Dolly Parton at Seventy-Five: Her Finest Cuts

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AS the legendary…

Dolly Parton is seventy-five on Tuesday (19th January), I wanted to salute one of the greatest artists and humans on the planet! Not only is Parton a terrific artist; she is a humanitarian and inspirational figure who launched Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library - since the mid-1980s, she has supported many charitable efforts, particularly in the area of literacy, primarily through her Dollywood Foundation. Dolly Parton's Imagination Library mails one book per month to each enrolled child from the time of their birth until they enter kindergarten. I can only touch the tip of the iceberg when it comes to her multiple sides and how she has enriched the world. I want to grab a large chunk from Wikipedia, as we get an understanding about her popularity and just what she has achieved:

Dolly Rebecca Parton (born January 19, 1946) is an American singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, actress, author, businesswoman, and humanitarian, known primarily for her work in country music. After achieving success as a songwriter for others, Parton made her album debut in 1967 with Hello, I'm Dolly, which led to success during the remainder of the 1960s (both as a solo artist and with a series of duet albums with Porter Wagoner), before her sales and chart peak came during the 1970s and continued into the 1980s. Parton's albums in the 1990s did not sell as well, but she achieved commercial success again in the new millennium and has released albums on various independent labels since 2000, including her own label, Dolly Records. She has sold more than 100 million records worldwide.

Parton's music includes Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA)-certified gold, platinum and multi-platinum awards. She has had 25 songs reach No. 1 on the Billboard country music charts, a record for a female artist (tied with Reba McEntire). She has 44 career Top 10 country albums, a record for any artist, and she has 110 career-charted singles over the past 40 years. She has garnered ten Grammy Awards and 50 nominations, including the Lifetime Achievement Award and a 2020 Grammy Award with for KING & COUNTRY for their collaboration on "God Only Knows"; 10 Country Music Association Awards, including Entertainer of the Year and is one of only seven female artists to win the Country Music Association's Entertainer of the Year Award; five Academy of Country Music Awards, also including a nod for Entertainer of the Year; four People's Choice Awards; and three American Music Awards.

In 1999, Parton was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. She has composed over 3,000 songs, including "I Will Always Love You" (a two-time U.S. country chart-topper, as well as an international pop hit for Whitney Houston), "Jolene", "Coat of Many Colors", and "9 to 5". She is also in a select group to have received at least one nomination from the Academy Awards, Grammy Awards, Tony Awards, and Emmy Awards. As an actress, she has starred in films such as 9 to 5 (1980) and The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas (1982), for which she earned Golden Globe nominations for Best Actress, as well as Rhinestone (1984), Steel Magnolias (1989), Straight Talk (1992) and Joyful Noise (2012)”.

To pay tribute to an incredible artist on her seventy-fifth birthday, I have put together a special Lockdown Playlist featuring some of Parton’s very best tracks through the year. I have compiled a Dolly Parton playlist before but, as this is a big birthday, I will expand it and bring in tracks I have not featured before (included are songs with Porter Wagoner). The world will come together to wish Parton a very happy seventy-fifth birthday in a couple of days. Let’s hope that she continues to share joy, inspiration and music…

FOR many more years to come!

FEATURE: The Sample Library: Clearing Up Copyright Laws and Providing a Database for Artists to Use

FEATURE:

 

 

The Sample Library

IN THIS PHOTO: Tracy Chapman (Nicki Minaj used a snippet of her 1988 song, Baby Can I Hold You, in her track, Sorry. Minaj has agreed to pay $450,000 due to unauthorised usage)

Clearing Up Copyright Laws and Providing a Database for Artists to Use

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I have written a few articles…

IN THIS PHOTO: Nicki Minaj

regarding samples in music, as it is one of my absolute favourite things. I feel the golden age of Hip-Hop (roughly between 1986-1991) was defined by samples. Artists of the time were delivering important songs and big messages but, augmenting their music and making it so much fuller and more variegated was where samples came in. Not only did one get to hear different voices and layers in a song, but listeners were being introduced to new artists they might not have come across otherwise. I have discovered so many older artists and songs from hearing tracks from De La Soul, Public Enemy and the Beastie Boys that used these incredible samples. It was problematic using samples in the 1980s and 1990s because of legal issues. Artists would do it anyway and, whilst some were sued and had to pay royalties, other albums are packed with samples – whether the artist got clearance or not. This piece is inspired by a recent piece of news where Nicki Minaj has to pay Tracy Chapman for unauthorised use of her music. This article from The Guardian explains what happened:

Nicki Minaj has agreed to pay $450,000 to Tracy Chapman over a copyright infringement dispute.

The rapper had been set for trial after the singer sued her for using a sample of 1988 song Baby Can I Hold You in her track Sorry, a collaboration with Nas which was never officially released but was played on New York radio station Hot 97. Court documents have now revealed that late last month, an out of court settlement was made instead.

Minaj and her reps had approached Chapman to use a sample for inclusion on the album Queen but their request was rejected. Chapman is reportedly on a “do not sample” list of artists who do not give the rights to use their work.

Chapman said in a statement. “I was asked in this situation numerous times for permission to use my song; in each instance, politely and in a timely manner, I unequivocally said no. Apparently Ms Minaj chose not to hear and used my composition despite my clear and express intentions”.

To be fair to Tracy Chapman, she had made it clear that her music was not allowed for sampling. In a wider sense, I think that it is difficult for artists to use other musicians’ songs because there is not clear guidance, or it is expensive to get clearance. I will not repeat what I have said before, but I feel music today could be enhanced and enriched if more samples were used. There are so many copyright laws and restrictions when it comes to sampling, so many are being put off of using them in albums. I think that there should be a library or resource where artists and songs can be listed and there is information as to whether they can be sampled and, if so, how much it costs to use that music. Alongside this, it would be good if there were contact details of the artist’s label or estate - so that they could be contacted easily.

 PHOTO CREDIT: @bill_oxford/Unsplash

There is a bit of sampling happening today, but it is a lot more modest and limited than decades past. I think that artists and estates need to be a bit more fair-minded when it comes to artists making approaches. Many refuse without consultation but, when big artists can earn a lot from streaming, there could be a deal struck where the other party gets a healthy share of a song’s profits – that is not so beneficial for smaller artists who cannot generate so much revenue. I do think that so much gold can be created by injecting samples of rare and well-known songs. It is difficult for ambitious artists now because of the fear of being charged a lot for a sample; others are not sure which artists and songs are available to sample so, circling back, there needs to be some form of database where there are lists artists can refer to. I understand that legal cases will arise when music is used without permissions, but there seems to be rigidity from many artists. Also, copyright laws and regulations do seem to be quite inflexible and strict - so let’s hope that this is revised in years to come. I really love sampling and albums that splice different songs together seamlessly. Music today is great, but I think it can be made even finer and more interesting if there was a way for artists to sample more easily without having to worry about spending a lot of money. Over the pas few years, there have been high-profile cases where artists have had to lose quite a lot of money because of sampling issues. It is such a shame to see and, if there were new laws drawn up and a way for them to use songs more fairly and freely, then it could have a massive impact…

 PHOTO CREDIT: @joseantoniogall/Unsplash

ON the musical landscape.

FEATURE: Spotlight: NewDad

FEATURE:

 

 

Spotlight

NewDad

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I have been meaning to…

include the brilliant Irish band, NewDad, on my site for a while. They are definitely one of 2021’s names to look out for. I am a fan of what they are doing…and I think they are making music that is so engaging and brilliant! I am going to bring in a few interviews to help give some background regarding NewDad but, when it comes to last year, they definitely caught the public attention and were pretty productive – despite a lack of gigs and opportunities to get their music out there like they’d hoped! NewDad are an Irish foursome comprising vocalist and rhythm guitarist Julie Dawson, bassist Áindle O’Beirn, lead guitarist Sean O’Dowd and drummer Fiachra Parslow. I think they have the potential to dominate this year. Songs like I Don’t Recgonise You are so dreamy and addictive. In terms of that more laidback vocal sound, I sort of think about, maybe, The Sundays, or a band like that. Really, one cannot compare NewDad with anyone else, yet I have always been fond of a smokier and more sensuous sound. Among the dreamy vocals is a definite sharpness and urgency that acts as a perfect balance. The first interview I want to bring in is from CLASH. They spoke with the band in November and they discussed, among other things, the fact lockdown means this rising force cannot get out to the people:

“It’s kind of hard to believe it’s all real, especially with how everything is right now where we can’t go out and play gigs. We’re in our own little bubble here and it just feels like a dream.” This is how lead singer and guitarist of NewDad, Julie Dawson, described her band’s sharp rise to acclaim following the release of their single ‘Blue’ earlier this year.

The four-piece, made up of Áindle O’Beirn (Bass), Sean O’Dowd (Guitar), Fiachra Parslow (Drums) and Julie, are currently living together under Tier 5 lockdown restrictions imposed across their entire home country, Ireland.

Having formed while still at school, and going on to play what the band describe as “many terrible, terrible gigs,” Fiachra explains that going through this process allowed the band to grow to where they are now. “That’s kind of why we took so long to release music,” Sean explains, “because we didn’t want to put anything out there and then be embarrassed. We really wanted to make sure we had a concrete sound down that, we thought, really expressed who we were.”

‘Good things come to those who wait…’ so the saying goes, and with NewDad it seems to have worked wonders. The band are also similarly patient when it comes to their collaborative creative process. “When we get stuck on songs, we leave them,” Fiachra mentions. “Then we can come back to them on shitty phone recordings like two months later and play them differently… that’s how some of our bad songs turned good”.

It is a shame for every new artist that was hoping to make 2021 a big one. Things will start to return to normal in time but, right now, so many are raring to go and cannot put their music into the world. I think that NewDad, despite restrictions, will achieve a lot.

I want to switch to an interview from DIY. NewDad talked about the music scene in their native Galway, and what they want to accomplish this year:

Who were some artists that inspired you when you were just starting out (and why)?

Big inspirations for us when we started out were The Cure and the Pixies. At the start we covered all of their songs and basically wrote worse versions of their greatest hits.

You’re from Galway! What do you think of the music scene there at the moment?

Tome. There’s a huge music scene in Galway. There’s always buskers to watch or gigs to go to in venues like the Roisin Dubh and some great bands like our friends Turnstiles.

Are there any other artists breaking through at the same time that you take inspiration from?

Just Mustard were a huge inspiration to us. It’s amazing to see a band from Ireland with such a unique sound and seeing them open for The Cure was inspiring, and a very good show.

Who would be your dream collaborator?

Charli XCX would be the dream to work with. She’s an inspiration and one of the hardest working and most business savvy people in the music industry today. And she makes banging tunes.

Musically or otherwise, what are you most looking forward to next year?

The warm embrace of another human being. We’re also really excited to be releasing our debut EP in early 2021 and hopefully getting to play our music live for all the lovely people that have supported us already”.

There are a couple of other interviews that I want to source from. When they spoke with NOT BAD, the band were asked about socially distanced gigs – something that might be possible relatively soon so that artists can at least play live:

I was at your seated and socially distant gig in the Roisin Dubh and I was surprised at how natural it felt. After a couple of songs I had honestly forgotten about the unusual circumstances. Did it feel natural for you and are you planning on more gigs this year?

Fiachra: Well at first it definitely was a bit weird seeing everyone sitting, especially since some of the new songs we played are a lot more upbeat and dancey than our usual songs. After a few songs though, like you said, it did feel more comfortable and we just got stuck into the tracks. It was nice as well to see that some people wanted to be up dancing and were stopping themselves.

Unlike most artists, you seem to have really kicked on since the start of lockdown. Do you have any advice for musicians trying to adapt to the current situation?

Sean: Yeah for sure, lockdown has been good to us in the sense it has given us the time to work on writing and getting our music to people. For other artists, I would say just keep working. Never give up. Times are bleak, and some people’s situations are worse than others, but don’t stop doing what you’re doing. Now is a great time to work on new music, connect with people in the industry, learn about marketing and gain new skills. It’ll all be worth it after because then you can come out with a bang!”.

I will wrap up soon but, as last year was a strange and stressful one for all artists, many will be looking ahead to the summer and hopes of improvement. I am not sure when NewDad can get back in action, but they did manage to accomplish a lot in 2020. When they spoke with The Rodeo, they reflected on a difficult-yet-successful year:

What was your highlight of 2020, musical or otherwise?

The whole year has been such a highlight for us with all the support we have received for all of our releases so far. We really weren’t expecting to reach so many people with our music, being such a new band, and we have been so overwhelmed with the love we have received. The biggest highlight for us this year was getting to play a live set for Steve Lamacq over in BBC Radio 6 and really for all the love and support he and the BBC have shown us.

You each put together Spotify playlists containing your individual influences, right? Whose playlist is the best, and how crucial is social media and streaming platforms in increasing that connection with your fans, allowing them to see what music you’ve been listening to instantly?

We all have very different Spotify playlists and we each think our own is best, but I suppose that’s just down to personal preference. Different people with completely different music tastes could visit our Spotify profile and find something they like in our playlists and that’s what we try to emulate in our music.

Things like Spotify, Instagram and Twitter are really important because not only can the fans see what we are listening to, but they can also get a good idea of our personalities and humour and we think that’s very important in creating a bond with our fans”.

Make sure you follow and support the amazing NewDad. They are certainly one of this year’s most-promising artists and, ahead of an E.P. arriving, check out the stunning music they released last year. I have high hopes for the Galway band – this is definitely reflected in the music media. As a lot of people have said: NewDad are so engaging and fascinating that they have the potential to be everybody’s…

FAVOURITE new band.

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Follow NewDad

FEATURE: The Lockdown Playlist: Some Incredible Double A-Sides

FEATURE:

 

 

The Lockdown Playlist

Some Incredible Double A-Sides

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I put together a playlist of double A-sides…

back in 2017, so I thought I would update it for 2021. It is debatable what constitutes a double A-side. Many people compile lists of double A-sides but, in actuality, a lot of the pairings are A and B-sides. I have included true double A-sides: where we have two songs promoted as the A-side rather than one A-side and a B-side. There are not that many genuine double A-sides, but I think it is a fascinating phenomenon. It is a pity that we don’t have them anymore, but I love the fact that artists would put out two strong tracks from an album as a single rather than do them as two separate singles. Perhaps it was a way of ensuring that the single was successful – in that they had that extra ammunition that they could fire out! From Queen, to The Beatles, through to Elvis Presley, this Lockdown Playlist collection is an assortment of some…

MIGHTY fine double A-sides.

FEATURE: A Buyer’s Guide: Part Thirty-Eight: The Who

FEATURE:

 

 

A Buyer’s Guide

Part Thirty-Eight: The Who

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FOR this part of A Buyer’s Guide…

 IN THIS PHOTO: Pete Townshend and Roger Daltrey

I have spent some time recommending the essential work of The Who. The band formed in London in 1964. Their classic line-up consisted of lead singer Roger Daltrey, guitarist and singer Pete Townshend, bass guitarist and singer John Entwistle, and drummer Keith Moon – only Daltrey and Townshend remain of the original band. The Who have sold over one-hundred-million records worldwide so, to honour that, I have selected the four must-own albums; the one that I think is underrated; their latest studio album – in addition to a book that is a good companion. If you need some guidance regarding the work of The Who, then this rundown should steer you…

 PHOTO CREDIT: Everett Collection

IN the right direction.

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The Four Essential Albums

 

The Who Sell Out

Release Date: 15th December, 1967

Label: Track

Producers: Kit Lambert/Chris Stamp

Standout Tracks: Armenia City in the Sky/Mary Anne with the Shaky Hand/Tattoo

Buy: https://www.discogs.com/sell/list?master_id=68445&ev=mb

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/2nbxElNcpz1C8LudsOW3ZH?si=4r7pPuOOTomD33MczpR59A

Review:

Pete Townshend originally planned The Who Sell Out as a concept album of sorts that would simultaneously mock and pay tribute to pirate radio stations, complete with fake jingles and commercials linking the tracks. For reasons that remain somewhat ill defined, the concept wasn't quite driven to completion, breaking down around the middle of side two (on the original vinyl configuration). Nonetheless, on strictly musical merits, it's a terrific set of songs that ultimately stands as one of the group's greatest achievements. "I Can See for Miles" (a Top Ten hit) is the Who at their most thunderous; tinges of psychedelia add a rush to "Armenia City in the Sky" and "Relax"; "I Can't Reach You" finds Townshend beginning to stretch himself into quasi-spiritual territory; and "Tattoo" and the acoustic "Sunrise" show introspective, vulnerable sides to the singer/songwriter that had previously been hidden. "Rael" was another mini-opera, with musical motifs that reappeared in Tommy. The album is as perfect a balance between melodic mod pop and powerful instrumentation as the Who (or any other group) would achieve; psychedelic pop was never as jubilant, not to say funny (the fake commercials and jingles interspersed between the songs are a hoot). [Subsequent reissues added over half a dozen interesting outtakes from the time of the sessions, as well as unused commercials, the B-side "Someone's Coming," and an alternate version of "Mary Anne with the Shaky Hand."]” – AllMusic

Choice Cut: I Can See for Miles

Tommy

Release Date: 23rd May, 1969

Label: Decca

Producer: Kit Lambert

Standout Tracks: Overture/The Acid Queen/Smash the Mirror

Buy: https://www.discogs.com/sell/list?master_id=68455&ev=mb

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/2srjzxgFaYLNh8UlJPAJ8b?si=KZFzyTQYTPCnKeofzoDDRw

Review:

“There’s a lot of heavy lifting for Roger Daltrey as a vocalist here, singing mainly as The Mother, but also The Hawker and, later, Adult Tommy. Townshend and Daltrey duet on “Go to the Mirror!”, Daltrey alternately lamenting and hopeful as the heartsick Mother while Townsend, as Tommy, pleads the immortal words: “See me, feel me, touch me, heal me.” But her frustration grows across “Tommy Can You Hear Me?” until Townshend is just a fading repetition of his name, and then Keith Moon’s drums and John Entwistle’s rock-heavy bass slam us into “Smash the Mirror”, each laying out the summering drama in under two minutes.

The immortal “Pinball Wizard” is, of course, the song that everyone knows, a power-pop song of the highest order. But it’s not the only song structured as such; “Sally Simpson” lays out a story narrative of one of Tommy’s biggest fans against high-wire guitars that spell both delight and danger for the titular heroine. My dad always pointed out this song for its use of the word “rostrum,” a word he doesn’t believe has ever been used in another pop song. It really does have something for everyone!

It’s also easy to forget about Tommy. There’s really only one major hit, and a lot of the songs are short and tied to a narrative. It’s not an album you can listen to in bits and pieces, and as our listening habits get increasingly fractured, we forget that albums were once meant to be played in full and with rapt attention paid to every note. I fell victim to this as well. If I listened to Tommy a handful of times in my 20s, I’d be surprised.

But one afternoon this spring, as I was organizing my vinyl, I found the copy I bought more than a decade ago with the promise that one day I would have a system to play it on. So I did. And from the first glorious note of the overture to the final fading strains of Daltrey’s voice, I remembered every line, every precise chord, now richer and deeper on a vinyl pressing older than I am. Because that’s what it means to be immortal. Tommy gets inside you in a way that so many other albums can’t. The imagery of a blind boy racking up points at the pinball table, of a fallen savior and his false followers, of a woman driven to madness by a need for her son’s show of love. Whether we’ve seen it on stage or on film or not at all, these are all images we can conjure in our heads as the music swells.

You don’t need a candle burning to enjoy Tommy. But it never hurts to take a peek into your future” – Consequence of Sound

Choice Cut: Pinball Wizard

Who’s Next

Release Date: 14th August, 1971

Labels: Track/Decca

Producers: The Who/Glyn Johns/Chris Stamp/Kit Lambert/Pete Kameron

Standout Tracks: Love Ain't for Keeping/The Song Is Over/Won't Get Fooled Again

Buy: https://www.discogs.com/sell/list?master_id=68469&ev=mb

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/5MqyhhHbT13zsloD3uHhlQ?si=uqY6L1KaQNGV6wZF_xGzoQ

Review:

The Who’s fifth album is one of those carved-in-stone landmarks that the rock canon doesn’t allow you to bad-mouth. It was pretty rad for its day. Here’s the twist: it still sounds ablaze. As C.S.I. fans will vouch, there’s not much that isn’t thrilling about Won’t Get Fooled Again and Baba O’Riley, which howl and kick like they were born yesterday.

Like many near-masterpieces, it wasn’t meant to turn out like it did. Pete Townshend had one of his ‘futuristic rock opera’ ideas, and recordings began on a work called Lifehouse. It wouldn’t gel, so The Who made the most of the random songs that did. Upon release in 1971 it blew away critics and fans alike, bar a few Who diehards who thought larking around with things called synthesizers and modified keyboards was, like, selling out.  Glyn Johns had replaced Kit Lambert as producer. Still, the sleeve wasn’t exactly bland, picturing the foursome pissing on a slagheap. (Other contenders for the cover had included a group of obese naked women and a shot of Keith Moon in black lingerie. Be grateful for small mercies.)

Baba O’Riley makes a spectacular opener, its hypnotic drone disrupted by power chords that are parachuted in off the backs of meteorites. Dave Arbus’ subtle then frantic viola solo raises it another gear. There has rarely been a more durably evocative refrain than “teenage wasteland”. As ever, Daltrey’s ragged voice brings humanity to Townshend’s over-thinking. Moon is typically hyperactive: any drummer playing like this today would be ordered to rein it in. Bargain floats on the tension between acoustic guitar and the brave new synth. Like most of the album, it’s melodramatic without – as with later Who – fattening into pomposity. The Song is Over oozes poignancy and Getting in Tune and Going Mobile are simply great songs. Behind Blue Eyes is a soul-searching ballad which bursts into belligerence, reflective then urgent.

The climactic (and how) Won’t Get Fooled Again stretches itself and chews its restraints until it becomes much more than a riff and a scream. It’s on fire. In “meet the new boss, same as the old boss” it nailed the bleeding heart of protest-pop. Who’s Next is The Who’s best” – BBC

Choice Cut: Baba O’Riley

Quadrophenia

Release Date: 26th October, 1973

Labels: Track/MCA 

Producers: Kit Lambert/Chris Stamp/Pete Kameron

Standout Tracks: The Real Me/The Punk and the Godfather/Drowned

Buy: https://www.discogs.com/sell/list?master_id=68475&ev=mb

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/3JV6BIIXo3mj6GLIGH9p8a?si=VPZZ4d3ESkCeusXRBpbY7Q

Review:

Pete Townshend revisited the rock opera concept with another double-album opus, this time built around the story of a young mod's struggle to come of age in the mid-'60s. If anything, this was a more ambitious project than Tommy, given added weight by the fact that the Who weren't devising some fantasy but were re-examining the roots of their own birth in mod culture. In the end, there may have been too much weight, as Townshend tried to combine the story of a mixed-up mod named Jimmy with the examination of a four-way split personality (hence the title Quadrophenia), in turn meant to reflect the four conflicting personas at work within the Who itself. The concept might have ultimately been too obscure and confusing for a mass audience. But there's plenty of great music anyway, especially on "The Real Me," "The Punk Meets the Godfather," "I'm One," "Bell Boy," and "Love, Reign o'er Me." Some of Townshend's most direct, heartfelt writing is contained here, and production-wise it's a tour de force, with some of the most imaginative use of synthesizers on a rock record. Various members of the band griped endlessly about flaws in the mix, but really these will bug very few listeners, who in general will find this to be one of the Who's most powerful statements” – AllMusic

Choice Cut: Love, Reign O'er Me

The Underrated Gem

 

The Who by Numbers

Release Date: 3rd October, 1975

Labels: Polydor/MCA

Producer: Glyn Johns

Standout Tracks: Slip Kid/Dreaming from the Waist/Blue Red and Grey

Buy: https://www.discogs.com/sell/list?master_id=68458&ev=mb

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/6IxRCbXtyK6MlHlofsnhlm?si=6Kzkbg74QfW2B4STWdciXA

Review:

As angry as it is desperate, the album moves from song to song on pure bitterness, disillusionment and hopelessness. Not only the aging rock star of “Success Story,” “They Are All in Love,” “Dreaming from the Waist” and “However Much I Booze” is frustrated. Even “Slip Kid,” the latest in the line of Townshend’s quintessential teenagers, finds that the only answer is: “There’s no easy way to be free.” Which wasn’t even the question.

For the rock & roll star protagonist, “The truth lies in my frustration.” In song after song, he’s confused, “dreaming of the day I can control myself,” unable to figure out what it’s all worth, much less what it means.

In “How Many Friends,” he despairs of anyone telling him the truth — maybe he really is over the hill — but, in “However Much I Booze,” he realizes that even those who try don’t have a chance. “Dish me out another tailor-made compliment/Tell me about some detriment I can’t forget.” The shreds of utopian optimism in Tommy, the exhilarating moments of discovery in Quadrophenia are gone now: “Take 276. You know, this used to be fun.” Always before, the Who have been able to ride out of these situations on power and bravado — now, they wonder if they still have enough of either.

“Where do you fit in a magazine/Where the past is a hero and the present a queen?/Just tell me right now, where do you fit in/With mud in your eye and a passion for gin?” I don’t know what magazine Townshend might have had in mind when he wrote those words — he makes a cute little raspberry where the title ought to go — but they might give pause to every reader and writer in the rock & roll part of this one, not to mention to every subject of it. As ex-Beatles solo albums rush forward in feeble proliferation, as the Rolling Stones stagger into their second decade with songs drawn almost exclusively from their first, as the Who stumble onward, another of Townshend’s thoughts in that interview quoted above sounds truer than ever: “It’s like that line in ‘The Punk Meets the Godfather’. . . ‘you paid me to do the dancing.’ The kids pay us for a good time, yet nowadays people don’t really want to get involved. Audiences are very much like the kids in Tommy’s Holiday Camp, they want something without working for it” – Rolling Stone

Choice Cut: Squeeze Box

The Latest Album

Who

Release Date: 6th December, 2019

Labels: Polydor/Interscope 

Producers: Pete Townshend/Dave Sardy with Bob Pridden and Dave Eringa/Roger Daltrey (vocals only)

Standout Tracks: Ball and Chain/Hero Ground Zero/Break the News

Buy: https://www.discogs.com/sell/list?master_id=1647310&ev=mb

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/2WuaYvGgx9MS1Vj37aBiyU?si=hW_NwRfGROe8zERdowvY2Q

Review:

If not everything here works – there’s nothing wrong with the political sentiment of Ball and Chain, it just feels a little lumbering and clumsy – there’s something exciting about hearing Townshend vacillating between declaring himself spent and readying himself for another charge. Inspired by the Grenfell disaster, Street Song carries a distinct hint of Won’t Get Fooled Again’s furious snarl; Beads on One String rather sweetly sticks fast to a hippy-ish notion of universal brotherhood and the potential for world peace. Moreover, the changing mood fits Daltrey’s vocals perfectly: gruffer and more weathered than it once was, his voice imbues the lyrics with a sense of hard-won experience, alternately weary and fraught.

Nor is Who afraid of assaulting its audience’s preconceptions. You get the feeling Townshend knows precisely who’s going to buy a new Who album in 2019, largely because he frequently seems to be having a high old time doing precisely the opposite of what they might expect. There are bursts of Auto-Tuned vocals. The sonic nods to “classic” Who sit alongside tracks that do things the “classic” Who would never have countenanced. I’ll Be Back is a lovely, Townshend-sung, harmonica-decorated bit of acoustic MOR that ruminates on dignity and reincarnation, while the folky stomp of Break the News, written by Townshend’s brother Simon, hymns the pleasures of old age, among them “watching movies in our dressing gowns”, which frankly seems like straight-up trolling of the kind of person who feels obliged to bring up My Generation’s thoughts about the relative merits of dying and ageing, whenever the Who’s name is mentioned.

Of course, half of the Who did get old, which means there’s a strong chance this might be their last album. If it is, then they’re going out the way they came in: as cussed and awkward and troubled as ever” – The Guardian

Choice Cut: All This Music Must Fade

The Who Book

The Who: The Official History

Authors: Ben Marshall/Pete Townshend/Roger Daltrey  

Publication Date: 8th October, 2015

Publisher: Virgin Books

Order: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Who-Official-History-Ben-Marshall/dp/0753556480

FEATURE: In Order of Greatness: Kate Bush’s Studio Albums Ranked

FEATURE:

 

 

In Order of Greatness

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in 1979/PHOTO CREDIT: Gered Mankowitz 

Kate Bush’s Studio Albums Ranked

___________

BECAUSE a new book…

Kate Bush On Track: Every Album, Every Song (On Track) by Bill Thomas is out at the end of the month and it takes us through Kate Bush’s catalogue, I wanted to do a few features around that theme. I have not ordered and ranked her albums before – many others have. Everyone has their own opinions as to which Bush albums should be in the top five and, whilst I have done similar features before, I have not investigated her ten studio albums and decided which is the finest – and the ones that are great but not as strong as her classic albums. For each album, I have provided a link where you can buy it, the tracks that are highlights, where one can stream the album - in addition to each album’s standout track. Here are Bush’s albums ranked and, in reading it, see if you agree with…

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in a promotional image for 2011’s Director’s Cut/PHOTO CREDIT: John Carder Bush

MY decisions.

 _____________

Ten: Director’s Cut

Why Number-Ten?

Whilst it is great that Kate Bush revisited songs from 1989’s The Sensual World and 1993’s The Red Shoes for this 2011 release, few of the reworkings hold the same magic and power as the originals. I like the album a lot, although I think it is an inessential addition to her catalogue – probably one for diehards rather than casual fans. That said, there are some new versions of older songs that are stronger than the previous versions (including Top of the City from The Red Shoes).

Release Date: 16th May, 2011

Labels: Fish People/EMI

Producer: Kate Bush

Buy: https://www.roughtrade.com/gb/kate-bush/director-s-cut-23cb82bf-539f-4cfd-a97b-a846f8e0dbdf

Standout Tracks: This Woman’s Work/Moments of Pleasure/Top of the City

Review:

During her early career, Kate Bush released albums regularly despite her reputation as a perfectionist in the studio. Her first five were released within seven years. After The Hounds of Love in 1985, however, the breaks between got longer: The Sensual World appeared in 1989 and The Red Shoes in 1993. Then, nothing before Aerial, a double album issued in 2005. It's taken six more years to get The Director's Cut, an album whose material isn't new, though its presentation is. Four of this set's 11 tracks first appeared on The Sensual World, while the other seven come from The Red Shoes. Bush's reasons for re-recording these songs is a mystery. She does have her own world-class recording studio, and given the sounds here, she's kept up with technology. Some of these songs are merely tweaked, and pleasantly so, while others are radically altered. The two most glaring examples are "Flower of the Mountain" (previously known as "The Sensual World") and "This Woman's Work." The former intended to use Molly Bloom's soliloquy from James Joyce's novel Ulysses as its lyric; Bush was refused permission by his estate. That decision was eventually reversed; hence she re-recorded the originally intended lyrics. And while the arrangement is similar, there are added layers of synth and percussion. Her voice is absent the wails and hiccupy gasps of her youthful incarnation. These have been replaced by somewhat huskier, even more luxuriant and elegant tones. On the latter song, the arrangement of a full band and Michael Nyman's strings are replaced by a sparse, reverbed electric piano which pans between speakers. This skeletal arrangement frames Bush's more prominent vocal which has grown into these lyrics and inhabits them in full: their regrets, disappointments, and heartbreaks with real acceptance. She lets that voice rip on "Lilly," supported by a tougher, punchier bassline, skittering guitar efx, and a hypnotic drum loop. Bush's son Bertie makes an appearance as the voice of the computer (with Auto-Tune) on "Deeper Understanding." On "RubberBand Girl," Bush pays homage to the Rolling Stones' opening riff from "Street Fighting Man" in all its garagey glory (which one suspects was always there and has now been uncovered). The experience of The Director's Cut, encountering all this familiar material in its new dressing, is more than occasionally unsettling, but simultaneously, it is deeply engaging and satisfying” – AllMusic

Key Cut: Flower of the Mountain

Nine: The Red Shoes

Why Number-Nine?

Whilst The Red Shoes is considered to be Bush’s weakest efforts, I don’t agree! I think it is not as consistent and accomplished as many of her other albums, though there are some great cuts to be found – including the elastic single, Rubberband Girl, and the gorgeous Moments of Pleasure. I think the second half of the album suffers from a lack of standout tracks, whilst the production sound is quite edgy (something Bush rectified with Director’s Cut).

Release Date: 1st November, 1993

Label: EMI

Producer: Kate Bush

Buy: https://www.roughtrade.com/gb/kate-bush/the-red-shoes-16411857-1cc8-46c6-ac8a-f23d830d313e

Standout Tracks: And So Is Love/Moments of Pleasure/Lily

Review:

But sometimes, the obviousness of these songs and sentiments can feel too familiar. Bush stacks up plainspoken laments of heartbreak on “And So Is Love,” backed by a ponderous instrumental that only adds to the staleness; the presence of Eric Clapton—one of a number of big-name guitarists who guest on the album—and his scrunch-faced blues licks does not help. Closer “You’re the One” is a better breakup song, though similarly and uncharacteristically rote. It’s fun to hear the fanciful teller of tales attempt kiss-off lines like “I’m going to stay with my friend/Mmm, yes, he’s very good-looking,” but the song’s near-six-minute runtime, superfluous implementation of the Bulgarian vocal group Trio Bulgarka (who were used to much better effect on her previous album, 1989’s The Sensual World), and unnecessary guitar riffage, this time from Jeff Beck, turn it into a tepid slog.

There’s a grab-bag quality to the album, one that runs contrary to the more conceptual flourishes that show up on some of Bush’s most beloved work, like 1985’s Hounds of Love. This looser, more scattershot method doesn’t totally suit her. She admits as much on the record’s opening track, “Rubberband Girl,” a brash trifle where she longs to be as flexible as a tree, to be able to bounce around and bounce back. And the album’s strangest track, “Big Stripey Lie,” is an angsty, tuneless wreck that sounds like Bush trying—and failing—to take on the industrial and grunge sounds of the early ’90s. The song marked the first time Bush ever played guitar on an album; tellingly, to this day, it’s also the last time she ever played guitar on an album. Elsewhere, there are African rhythms, Celtic stomps, and even some bulbous funk. Before the album’s release, Bush said that The Red Shoes’ more freewheeling approach was meant to coincide with a subsequent live tour, which would have been her first since 1979. The shows never happened” – Pitchfork

Key Cut: Rubberband Girl

Eight: The Sensual World

Why Number-Eight?

Many might buckle at the low placing of one of Kate Bush’s most-loved albums! This is personal opinion but, whilst I really love The Sensual World, it is not an album that has captured me as much as others. There are a couple of tracks on the album that I am not completely invested in, but there is also some of Bush’s greatest work to be discovered on The Sensual World. From the title track, to the prescient and physic Deeper Understand (a song about the grip of technology was released on a 1989 album!), to the stunning This Woman’s Work, it is a remarkable album!

Release Date: 17th October, 1989

Label: EMI

Producer: Kate Bush

Buy: https://www.roughtrade.com/gb/kate-bush/the-sensual-world-e4747d6f-f1a1-4c91-bc7d-c5562cef6288

Standout Tracks: The Sensual World/Love and Anger/Deeper Understanding

Review:

There’s no Hounds-style grand narrative thread on The Sensual World. Bush likened it to a volume of short stories, with its subjects frequently wrestling with who they were, who they are, and who they want to be. She was able to pour some of her own frustrations into these knotty tussles: She found it more difficult than ever to write songs, couldn’t work out what she wanted them to say, and hit roadblock after roadblock. The 12 months she spent pestering Joyce’s grandson were surpassed by the maddening two years she spent on “Love and Anger,” which, fittingly, finds her tormented by an old trauma she can’t bring herself to talk about. But by the end, she banishes the evil spirits by leading her band in something that sounds like a raucous exorcism, chanting, “Don’t ever think you can’t change the past and the future” over squalling guitars.

Even its most surreal songs are rooted in self-examination. “Heads We’re Dancing” seems like a dark joke—a young girl is charmed on to the dancefloor by a man she later learns is Adolf Hitler—but poses a troubling question: What does it say about you, if you couldn’t see through the devil’s disguise? Its discordant, skronky rhythms make it feel like a formal ball taking place in a fever dream, and Bush’s voice grows increasingly panicky as she realizes how badly she’s been duped. As far-fetched as its premise was, its inspiration lay close to home: A family friend had told Bush how shaken they’d been after they’d taken a shine to a dashing stranger at a dinner party, only to find out they’d been chatting to Robert Oppenheimer” – Pitchfork

Key Cut: This Woman’s Work

Seven: 50 Words for Snow

Why Number-Seven?

Again, this is a hugely-loved album that I have placed lower than others which have not received the same regard. 50 Words for Snow is Bush’s moist-recent album – and it turns ten later this year. Featuring some great collaborations with the likes of Elton John and Stephen Fry, some of her most beautiful and immersive vocals to date, and some career-best songs (Misty is an epic that I keep listening to), it shows that Bush is always evolving and producing amazing music! There are no weak tracks on 50 Words for Snow - but I think there is more urgency and variation on other albums that means I have placed 50 Words for Snow at seven.

Release Date: 21st November, 2011

Label: Fish People

Producer: Kate Bush

Buy: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Words-Snow-2018-Remaster-VINYL/dp/B07HQ9TBYL/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=50+words+for+snow+vinyl&qid=1610368403&quartzVehicle=5-96&replacementKeywords=words+for+snow+vinyl&sr=8-1

Standout Tracks: Snowflake/Wild Man/50 Words for Snow

Review:

“…Equally, Fairweather Low is not the first person called upon to pretend to be someone else on a Bush album, although she usually takes that upon herself, doing impersonations to prove the point: Elvis on Aerial's King of the Mountain, a gorblimey bank robber on There Goes a Tenner. Finally, in song at least, Bush has always displayed a remarkably omnivorous sexual appetite: long before the Yeti and old Snow Balls showed up, her lustful gaze had variously fixed on Adolf Hitler, a baby and Harry Houdini.

No, the really peculiar thing is that 50 Words for Snow is the second album in little over six months from a woman who took six years to make its predecessor and 12 to make the one before that. If it's perhaps stretching it to say you can tell it's been made quickly – no one is ever going to call an album that features Lake Tahoe's operatic duet between a tenor and a counter-tenor a rough-and-ready lo-fi experience – it certainly feels more intuitive than, say, Aerial, on which a lot of time and effort had clearly been expended in the pursuit of effortlessness. For all the subtle beauty of the orchestrations, there's an organic, live feel, the sense of musicians huddled together in a room, not something that's happened on a Bush album before.

That aside, 50 Words for Snow is extraordinary business as usual for Bush, meaning it's packed with the kind of ideas you can't imagine anyone else in rock having. Taking notions that look entirely daft on paper and rendering them into astonishing music is very much Bush's signature move. There's something utterly inscrutable and unknowable about how she does it that has nothing to do with her famous aversion to publicity. Better not to worry, to just listen to an album that, like the weather it celebrates, gets under your skin and into your bones” – The Guardian

Key Cut: Misty

Six: Lionheart

Why Number-Six?

Often put in the bottom-two Kate Bush albums (alongside The Red Shoes), I think Lionheart is a solid and remarkable follow-up to her debut, The Kick Inside. Releasing her second album in 1978 was a hard task and, as such, Bush only wrote three new songs - Symphony in Blue, Fullhouse, and Coffee Homeground. Despite the fact Lionheart is less consistent than The Kick Inside, there are some amazing songs that need to be cherished. From the sumptuous Symphony in Blue, to the amazing Wow, through to the underrated Don't Push Your Foot on the Heartbrake, and Kashka from Baghdad, it is an incredible album! More ambitious and varied than The Kick Inside, I think that Lionheart deserves a retrospective and new acclaim. It is a great album I would advise everyone to check out.

Release Date: 12th November, 1978

Label: EMI

Producer: Andrew Powell (assisted by Kate Bush)

Buy: https://www.roughtrade.com/gb/kate-bush/lionheart-60077c9a-5fb5-4714-821a-280d80024a96/lp

Standout Tracks: Wow/In the Warm Room/Kashka from Baghdad

Review:

One of the funny things about The Before Time when you had to buy music to listen to it is that ropey critical reputations could really put you off ever listing to certain records, even by artists you loved. It took me years to get around to Lionheart. And you know, sure, it’s the weakest Kate Bush record but that doesn’t make it bad. If anything the fact it’s routinely dismissed as a rushed follow up to The Kick Inside means it doesn’t have the pressure to compete with the stronger later records. The luminous ‘Wow’ is obviously the best and most memorable song, but seriously, check out those elaborately layered vocals on opener ‘Symphony in Blue’. The songwriting is a bit hazy compared to the laser-definition of later albums, but musically and texturally it’s a really beautiful record - the only Kate Bush album that is content to be pretty and not ask you to commit to it, and there’s something to be said for that, I think. (7)” – Drowned in Sound

Key Cut: Symphony in Blue

Five: Aerial

Why Number-Five?

This was Kate Bush big return after twelve years away. Coming back in 2005 with a superb double album, the influence of motherhood (she gave birth to her son, Bertie, in 1998) and the home is clear. From the more conventional collection of songs on the first album to the conceptual suite, A Sky of Honey, on the second, it is a masterful work from one of the greatest songwriters ever! Apparently, Bush’s favourite album to record, Aerial is a staggering work that grows stronger the more you listen to it. I would definitely recommend people buy the album on vinyl.

Release Date: 7th November, 2005

Labels: EMI/Columbia (U.S.)

Producer: Kate Bush

Buy: https://www.roughtrade.com/gb/kate-bush/aerial-90730658-35e2-49ab-93d8-9c3e7897c0f4

Standout Tracks: King of the Mountain/How to Be Invisible/Nocturn

Review:

“As might be expected of an album which breaks a 12-year silence during which she began to raise a family, there's a core of contented domesticity to Kate Bush's Aerial. It's not just a case of parental bliss - although her affection for "lovely, lovely Bertie" spills over from the courtly song specifically about him, to wash all over the second of this double-album's discs, a song-cycle about creation, art, the natural world and the cycling passage of time.

It's there too in the childhood reminiscence of "A Coral Room", the almost autistic satisfaction of the obsessive-compulsive mathematician fascinated by "Pi" (which affords the opportunity to hear Bush slowly sing vast chunks of the number in question, several dozen digits long - which rather puts singing the telephone directory into the shade), and particularly "Mrs Bartolozzi", a wife, or maybe widow, seeking solace for her absent mate in the dance of their clothes in the washing machine. "I watched them going round and round/ My blouse wrapping itself round your trousers," she observes, slipping into the infantile - "Slooshy sloshy, slooshy sloshy, get that dirty shirty clean" - and alighting periodically upon the zen stillness of the murmured chorus, "washing machine".

The second disc takes us through a relaxing day's stroll in the sunshine, from the sequenced birdsong of the "Prelude", through a pavement artist's attempt to "find the song of the oil and the brush" through serendipity and skill ("That bit there, it was an accident/ But he's so pleased/ It's the best mistake he could make/ And it's my favourite piece"), through the gentle flamenco chamber-jazz "Sunset" and the Laura Veirs-style epiphanic night-time swim in "Nocturn", to her dawn duet with the waking birds that concludes the album with mesmeric waves of synthesiser perked up by brisk banjo runs.

There's a hypnotic undertow running throughout the album, from the gentle reggae lilt of the single "King of the Mountain" and the organ pulses of "Pi" to the minimalist waves of piano and synth in "Prologue". Though oddly, for all its consistency of mood and tone, Aerial is possibly Bush's most musically diverse album, with individual tracks involving, alongside the usual rock-band line-up, such curiosities as bowed viol and spinet, jazz bass, castanets, rhythmic cooing pigeons, and her bizarre attempt to achieve communion with the natural world by aping the dawn chorus. Despite the muttered commentary of Rolf Harris as The Painter, it's a marvellous, complex work which restores Kate Bush to the artistic stature she last possessed around the time of Hounds of Love” – The Independent

Key Cut: Mrs. Bartolozzi

Four: Never for Ever

Why Number-Four?

I think Never for Ever is Bush’s most-underrated, perhaps, and one that is considered to be a promising stepping stone to what was to come. After a hectic 1978 and 1979 which included two studio albums and the immense show, The Tour of Life, I am surprised that there is so much new life, inspiration and energy in the album! Experimenting more with sound and theme – Bush discovered the Fairlight CMI late into the recording of Never for Ever -, there is not a wasted moment on the album. Masterpieces like Babooshka, Army Dreamers, and Breathing are joined with gems like Delius (Song of Summer), The Wedding List, and The Infant Kiss. Bush co-produced the album with Jon Kelly…and I think that degree of control worked in her favour. Never for Ever is, without doubt, one of Kate Bush’s finest albums.

Release Date: 8th September, 1980

Label: EMI

Producers: Jon Kelly/Kate Bush

Buy: https://www.roughtrade.com/gb/kate-bush/never-for-ever-0e80c456-fc19-41c7-85b8-6574e9091658

Standout Tracks: All We Ever Look For/The Wedding List/Breathing

Review:

“You listen to all of these records in sequence and good as The Kick Inside is, it’s just very apparent that the songwriting has gone up a gear with Never Forever. Strident, diverse, and intense Never Forever is the last Bush album with batshit mental prog art, the last album with an outside producer (though she co-produced with Jon Kelly), and the last record before she started using her beloved Fairlight synthesiser/sampler. It was also her third album in three years, that preempted the first meaningful gap in her career - you could point at the ways in which it predicts The Dreaming and call it a transitional album, but the truth is Never for Ever feels like the [apotheosis] of Leotard-era Kate Bush. The songs are just dazzlingly strong and distinctive. There are singles: ‘Babooska’ is a lot of fun, and the closing one-two of the eerie ‘Army Dreamers’ and the apocalyptic ‘Breathing’ is remarkable. But there’s a hell of a lot of little-remembered gold amongst the album tracks: the breakneck ‘Violin’ and tongue-in-cheek murder ballad ‘The Wedding List’ are really extraordinarily good pieces of songwriting. (8)” – Drowned in Sound

Key Cut: Babooshka

Three: Hounds of Love

Why Number-Three?

Most people would place Hounds of Love in the number-one spot. It is her most acclaimed album and, when many people think of Bush at her peak, they go to Hounds of Love. Certainty, the concept/suite The Ninth Wave, is possibly the most amazing and moving thing she has ever written. With huge singles like Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God), Cloudbusting, and Hounds of Love making the album’s first half pretty amazing, there is nothing to fault about Hounds of Love. I adore the album beyond words but, with such a strong top-two, Hounds of Love gets the bronze medal!

Release Date: 16th September, 1985

Label: EMI

Producer: Kate Bush

Buy: https://www.roughtrade.com/gb/kate-bush/hounds-of-love-d3743f1e-51e3-4337-b759-f47b26c0a247

Standout Tracks: Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God)/Cloudbusting/Watching You Without Me

Review:

“Kate Bush's strongest album to date also marked her breakthrough into the American charts, and yielded a set of dazzling videos as well as an enviable body of hits, spearheaded by "Running Up That Hill," her biggest single since "Wuthering Heights." Strangely enough, Hounds of Love was no less complicated in its structure, imagery, and extra-musical references (even lifting a line of dialogue from Jacques Tourneur's Curse of the Demon for the intro of the title song) than The Dreaming, which had been roundly criticized for being too ambitious and complex. But Hounds of Love was more carefully crafted as a pop record, and it abounded in memorable melodies and arrangements, the latter reflecting idioms ranging from orchestrated progressive pop to high-wattage traditional folk; and at the center of it all was Bush in the best album-length vocal performance of her career, extending her range and also drawing expressiveness from deep inside of herself, so much so that one almost feels as though he's eavesdropping at moments during "Running Up That Hill." Hounds of Love is actually a two-part album (the two sides of the original LP release being the now-lost natural dividing line), consisting of the suites "Hounds of Love" and "The Ninth Wave." The former is steeped in lyrical and sonic sensuality that tends to wash over the listener, while the latter is about the experiences of birth and rebirth. If this sounds like heady stuff, it could be, but Bush never lets the material get too far from its pop trappings and purpose. In some respects, this was also Bush's first fully realized album, done completely on her own terms, made entirely at her own 48-track home studio, to her schedule and preferences, and delivered whole to EMI as a finished work; that history is important, helping to explain the sheer presence of the album's most striking element -- the spirit of experimentation at every turn, in the little details of the sound. That vastly divergent grasp, from the minutiae of each song to the broad sweeping arc of the two suites, all heavily ornamented with layered instrumentation, makes this record wonderfully overpowering as a piece of pop music. Indeed, this reviewer hadn't had so much fun and such a challenge listening to a new album from the U.K. since Abbey Road, and it's pretty plain that Bush listened to (and learned from) a lot of the Beatles' output in her youth” - AllMusic

Key Cut: The Big Sky

Two: The Dreaming

Why Number-Two?

I would edge The Dreaming above Hounds of Love as I love the fact that this was a big leap and switch from 1980’s Never for Ever. Although I have, until recently, preferred the warmth of Hounds of Love, I have been struck by the bold innovation and incredible intensity of some of The Dreaming’s tracks, balanced against sheer beauty and emotion. Although Bush pushed herself incredibly hard on the album and EMI were not pleased with a relatively poor commercial performance and the time it took to complete, I think The Dreaming is an album that has grown stronger and stronger through time. There is so much variety and impact to be felt on the album. Even though singles like The Dreaming, and There Goes a Tenner did not chart high, non-singles like Leave It Open, Suspended in Gaffa (it was released in continental Europe and Australia but not the U.K.), and Houdini display the full richness and potency of The Dreaming. EMI also were not sure Bush should produce solo again after The Dreaming but, with Hounds of Love, she very much showed why they were wrong!

Release Date: 13th September, 1982

Label: EMI

Producer: Kate Bush

Buy: https://www.roughtrade.com/gb/kate-bush/the-dreaming-03e10ee0-e2d3-4b54-948e-0afcb7e7c290

Standout Tracks: Sat in Your Lap/Leave It Open/Get Out of My House

Review:

“On this album Kate’s voices are more manifold than ever before or since. Perhaps this is one of the reasons people find this album hard to penetrate. ‘The Dreaming’ includes most of Kate’s best acting on record. Within each song Kate uses several multi-layered vocal techniques (the voice truly as instrument), sometimes heavily electronically treated, to express different emotional or narrative perspectives, which permit little access to who Kate Bush actually is and create a moment-form effect that’s positively schizophrenic: ‘That girl in the mirror / Between you and me / She don’t stand a chance of / Getting anywhere at all.’

'This house is full of, full of, full of, full of fight'

‘The Dreaming’ is the sound of Kate striking out. Fighting for her own artistic integrity in a sea of pop banalities. The opening track ‘Sat In Your Lap’ steps into the ring with flailing rhythm section punches, establishing Kate’s intention with its Faustian pact lyricism, and uncompromisingly strange instrumentation. She is greedy to push boundaries and gain enlightenment and knowledge by stepping over a threshold of normality into an unfamiliar landscape. Kate uses Fairlight sampling, sound effects galore, spoken voices, traditional and ethnic musics, backwards masking, unusual time-signatures and changes, and all manner of unlikely instrumentation. The more conventional instrumentation is often processed massively. Just when the listener thinks they are in more familiar Bush territory they can be left hanging in mid air (the choirboy sections of ‘All The Love’, the chamber orchestrated bridge in ‘Houdini’) or suddenly swept up by an Irish jig (Night Of The Swallow). If there is one over-riding lyrical impression it is of entrapment, incarceration, restriction and the accompanying yearning to escape and taste independence and freedom. The album cover and its allusion to the song ‘Houdini’ make this explicit. This is the source of the fight and passion in the album, culminating in the final song ‘Get Out Of My House’ which has to be one of the most passionate and intense songs in Bush’s catalogue. This is the sonic approximation of a furious psychic battle, with allusions to sorcery and exorcism. It sounds like she is destroying her voice as she sings most of the lyrics with a barking and spitting delivery, and repeatedly screams the title, then she leads a chorus of braying donkey impersonations by way of a closing gesture. This album may make some listeners laugh as they take its ambition as a gall to their sensibilities, but all great art polarises opinion anyway. And Kate Bush really meant it. Really” – Head Heritage

Key Cut: Houdini

One: The Kick Inside

Why Number-One?

The Kick Inside has always been my favourite album (from any artist). It remains massively underrated. Whilst many suggest Bush improved and hit her peak later in her career, I think she was exceptional and realised right from the start! Although Wuthering Heights is an obvious highlight, the whole album is a masterclass and deeply engaging work that is amazingly assured and original from a teenage talent who released in her debut in 1978 – in a year where The Kick Inside sounded like nothing else around! Everyone will have their views regarding Kate Bush’s best album but, to me, The Kick Inside is her finest work.

Release Date: 17th February, 1978

Label: EMI

Producer: Andrew Powell

Buy: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Kick-Inside-2018-Remaster-VINYL/dp/B07HPZWG1R/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=kate+bush+the+kick+inside&qid=1610374968&sr=8-1

Standout Tracks: Moving/The Man with the Child in His Eyes/Them Heavy People

Review:

“And if there is trepidation in the arrangement of “The Man With the Child in His Eyes,” it reflects other people’s anxieties about its depicted relationship with an older man: Will he take advantage, let her down? This is the other teenage recording, her voice a little higher, less powerfully exuberant, but disarmingly confident. Her serene, steady note in the chorus—“Oooooh, he’s here again”—lays waste to the faithless. And whether he is real, and whether he loves her, is immaterial: “I just took a trip on my love for him,” she sings, empowered, again, by her desire. There’s not a fearful note on The Kick Inside, and yet there is still room for childish wonder: Just because Bush appeared emotionally and musically sophisticated beyond her years didn’t mean denying them.

“Kite” unravels like a children’s story: First she wants to fly up high, away from cruel period pains (“Beelzebub is aching in my belly-o”) and teenage self-consciousness (“all these mirror windows”) but no sooner is she up than she wants to return to real life. It is a wacky hormone bomb of a song, prancing along on toybox cod reggae and the enervating rat-a-tat-tat energy that sustained parodies of Bush’s uninhibited style; still, more fool anyone who sneers instead of reveling in the pure, piercing sensation of her crowing “dia-ia-ia-ia-ia-ia-ia-mond!” as if giving every facet its own gleaming syllable.

“Strange Phenomena” is equally awed, Bush celebrating the menstrual cycle as a secret lunar power and wondering what other powers might arrive if we were only attuned to them. She lurches from faux-operatic vocal to reedy shriek, marches confidently in tandem with the strident chorus and unleashes a big, spooky “Woo!,” exactly as silly as a 19-year-old should be. As is “Oh to Be in Love,” a baroque, glittering harpsichord romp about a romance that brightens the colors and defeats time.

She only fails to make a virtue of her naivety on “Room for the Life,” where she scolds a weeping woman for thinking any man would care about her tears. The sweet calypso reverie is elegant, and good relief from the brawnier, propulsive arrangements that stood staunchly alongside Steely Dan. But Bush shifts inconsistently between reminding the woman that she can have babies and insisting, more effectively, that changing one’s life is up to you alone. The latter is clearly where her own sensibilities lie: “Them Heavy People,” another ode to her teachers, has a Woolf-like interiority (“I must work on my mind”) and a distinctly un-Woolf-like exuberance, capering along like a pink elephant on parade. “You don’t need no crystal ball,” she concludes, “Don’t fall for a magic wand/We humans got it all/We perform the miracles.”

The Kick Inside was Bush’s first, the sound of a young woman getting what she wants. Despite her links to the 1970s’ ancien régime, she recognized the potential to pounce on synapses shocked into action by punk, and eschewed its nihilism to begin building something longer lasting. It is ornate music made in austere times, but unlike the pop sybarites to follow in the next decade, flaunting their wealth while Britain crumbled, Bush spun hers not from material trappings but the infinitely renewable resources of intellect and instinct: Her joyous debut measures the fullness of a woman’s life by what’s in her head” – Pitchfork

Key Cut: Wuthering Heights

FEATURE: Modern Heroines: Part Twenty-Seven: Waxahatchee

FEATURE:

 

 

Modern Heroines

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PHOTO CREDIT: Daniel Dorsa for RollingStone.com 

Part Twenty-Seven: Waxahatchee

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IN this edition of Modern Heroines…

 PHOTO CREDIT: Adela Loconte/REX/Shutterstock

I want to discuss one of my favourite artists around, Waxahatchee. Even though Katie Crutchfield is backed by a band (and Waxahatchee is sort of a band name), she leads the project and is the figurehead. On 2020’s stunning Saint Cloud (which I shall talk about soon), she was supported by Brad Cook – bass, acoustic guitar, piano, keyboards, synthesizer, Bobby Colombo – electric guitar, acoustic guitar, keyboards, Bill Lennox – electric guitar, acoustic guitar, keyboards, percussion, vocals, Nick Kinsey - drums, percussion in addition to Josh Kaufman – electric guitar, piano, organ, percussion. I love Crutchfield’s music, and I think she is one of the most incredible performers and songwriters in the world. I am going to end with a playlist combining songs from all of her five studio albums but, as Saint Cloud is her most-recent album, I am going to focus on that. It was one of last year’s finest albums. I think it is the strongest album that Waxahatchee has produced – that is saying something, as the back catalogue is pretty impressive! I am keen to bring in some interviews but, first, a couple of reviews for Saint Cloud. When they investigated the album, this is what AllMusic wrote:

Following the defiant alt-rock of her John Agnello-produced fourth album, Out in the Storm, Katie Crutchfield makes another adjustment to the course of her one-time bedroom project Waxahatchee with the warmer, more contemplative Saint Cloud. Shedding distortion in favor of a more easygoing, country-rock sensibility, the album's backing band is perhaps the best indicator of its sound; joining her throughout are Bonny Doon's Bill Lennox and Bobby Colombo, Bonny Light Horseman's Josh Kaufman, and Elvis Perkins in Dearland's Nick Kinsey. Saint Cloud's cover art underscores the approach with a photo of Crutchfield striking a pose on a pickup truck.

Per press surrounding the album, the songs were written after and largely inspired by the songwriter's decision to get sober. A native of Alabama, her relaxed vocal twang is most pronounced on tracks including the slow, lilting "Ruby Falls" and the jauntier "Can't Do Much." Elsewhere, "Lilacs" straddles urgency and relaxed composure with ambling guitar jangle and lyrics about letting go of bad behavior patterns. Hints of Dylan can be detected throughout the album but are more prominent on "Hell" and, to a lesser degree, the chorus of "War," an uptempo entry that assures "I'm in a war with myself/It's got nothing to do with you." While alternating between regretful slower tracks, midtempo drawls, and livelier, foot-tapping fare, the album never moves off dirt roads and adjacent orchards, and proves to be her most carefree-sounding effort to date. That's despite doggedly self-examining lyrics that keep Saint Cloud squarely in the realm of prior releases from an artist who continues to ward off complacency”.

It is striking that Saint Cloud was inspired by Crutchfield’s struggles with alcoholism - which came to a fore during the promotional tour for Waxahatchee's Out in the Storm (2017). Saint Cloud can be a sobering listen but, more than anything, it is a beautiful record that is very heartfelt and personal. If you have not heard the album then go and check it out today, as you do not really need to know about Waxahatchee’s recording and personal history to appreciate it.

The second (and final) review I want to source from is from Pitchfork. They were full of love and praise for Saint Cloud:

Because Saint Cloud is so fresh and budding on the outside, Crutchfield can hide her anger and fear inside it. This new contrast gives great dimension to her storytelling, allowing all the sourness and rot at the fringes of her songs to come and go at will. “War” takes on a rambling ’60s Dylan feel, that lets her talk about how she’s prone to “come in hot” and “fill up the room,” but she’s quick to add—as we all do in heated moments—that it has “nothing to do with you.” The trauma buried at the heart of “Arkadelphia” is so palpable that the slow-burn tempo makes it glow white. She sings softly, “If we make pleasant conversation/I hope you can’t see what’s burning in me.” Crutchfield is still the patron saint of emotional chaos, but her songs suggest that she’s becoming more of a protector, a homebody, looking to take everything out of storage and either throw it away or keep it safe in a home.

The climax of the record, “Ruby Falls,” is where all of the ambition and aesthetics come together. As she walks down 7th Street in Manhattan, Crutchfield’s wisdom collects into buckets: “Real love don’t follow a straight line/It breaks your neck, it builds you a delicate shrine,” and, “You might mourn all that you wasted/That’s just part of the haul.” Her pen moves ornately across the page, the aperture of her songwriting flies open. The unsparing indie style of Chan Marshall or Liz Phair remains, but Saint Cloud is something far bigger. It isn’t just talking to Lucinda Williams’ 1998 album Car Wheels on a Gravel Road, it pulls up right beside it, a vivid modern classic of folk and Americana. It’s a record that suggests maybe if you slow down, life slows down with you, and everything is in bloom”.

I am not going to go back to the debut Waxahatchee album, American Weekend, of 2012, but I have assembled some key cuts in the playlist at the very end. I want to bring in an interview with The Guardian first. They provided us some background about Katie Crutchfield and collaboration with her sister, Alison:

Crutchfield is the product of a fairly conventional white, southern, middle-class upbringing. When we pass the Alabama theatre, she notes that the historic movie palace once hosted a production of the Nutcracker in which she, her twin Allison and their younger sister tap-danced. The classic rock and country in the Crutchfield household fitted the atmosphere of an industrial city in the American deep south that had absorbed generations of formerly rural people and spilled into tree-lined suburbs. Crutchfield has fond recollections of the family going to see Shania Twain dazzle an arena.

As teenagers, Katie and Allison shared the urge to rebel. They quit tap-dancing, swore off country music and used file-sharing to enable their developing tastes for grunge, the British invasion, indie, punk and riot grrrl. They made music in the basement, Katie as singer-guitarist and Allison on drums. Katie wryly admits she was “struggling with my country music past. I was like, ‘That’s my parents’ music. I don’t care. I like Bikini Kill.’”

In a scene teeming with boys who preferred hardcore, she stood out singing Velvet Underground covers at all-ages club Cave 9, in the twins’ first band, the Ackleys. “How did I end up like that?” she marvels as she drives. “It wasn’t really set up for me to do that. A lot of this stuff is even more meaningful to me now, because there were a lot of things that feel a little happenstance.”

Eventually, she and Allison left Birmingham in search of a new scene, trying New York before settling in a house full of musicians, including other members of Allison’s band Swearin’, in Philadelphia. Katie’s solo project took shape when she went to write at the family’s rustic retreat in Alabama. She borrowed the name of nearby Waxahatchee Creek and collected her songs on 2012’s American Weekend, an album spiky and revealing in spirit but lo-fi in execution. It landed her at the vanguard of an acclaimed new wave of singer-songwriters bringing hushed intensity and emotional specificity to indie rock: Julien Baker, Mitski, Torres, Soccer Mommy and more.

On subsequent Waxahatchee releases, she added sinew to her sound, always with musical contributions from Allison. She continued writing with a nerviness that felt uncomfortably unfiltered. (“And I will visualise a tragedy / And blame you for it.”) She noticed how it was sometimes interpreted like a literal transcription of a diary as opposed to consciously hiselled expression. “For so long, my music was always described as confessional,” she says. “That felt really gendered to me. I always felt that implies that there is no thought or art. Everything I ever write is thought through and laboured over”.

I am a fan of all the five Waxahatchee albums, but there was a notable shift between Out of the Storm in 2017 and Saint Cloud. The second interview I want to introduce is from PASTE, where we find out about the input of producer Brad Cook on Saint Cloud, in addition to discovering this is the first album where Crutchfield was working without her sister:  

For this album, Crutchfield brought on producer Brad Cook, who also worked on her Great Thunder EP. They make for a fruitful pair. “He feels like my family now,” Crutchfield says. “Producers, a lot of the time, really want to put their creative stamp on things. That is an important part of that job—being able to do that and knowing when to do that. But Brad really isn’t that way. He paid very close attention to what I was doing, what was organically happening with the songs, and then was making the band do the same. Like ‘Let’s watch Katie, let’s see what’s happening with this song organically, and let’s build around that rather than chopping things up,’ which is something that’s happened to me in the past.”

However, Crutchfield’s actual familial music connection—Allison, who has contributed to Waxahatchee albums in the past and also records as a solo artist and with her band Swearin’—wasn’t really involved in the process this time around.

“This is my first record that I don’t have my training wheels,” Crutchfield says. “I’m kind of out there riding alone, and it was positive for me to be able to do that. And obviously she’s my best friend and always will be. But we grow and evolve constantly, and our involvement with each other’s music goes through waves.”

Some Saint Cloud songs, like the vivid “Fire,” took shape on the road (during a sunset ride over the Mississippi River bridge between Memphis and Arkansas’ West Memphis, “on fire in the light of day,” to be exact), while others came together with a little inspiration from rootsy Michigan group Bonny Doon, who played as Waxahatchee’s backing band on her last tour. She says some lyrics were more laborious to come by, but her “process is more or less the same even though it’s evolved ever so slightly.” Half the time, these songs sound like very personal prayers, while the other half, they’re more like perky poems meant to be heard by the masses. “Lilacs” likens human processes to the growth and death of budding flowers. “Arkadelphia,” in a rhythm that recalls the peak ’90s radio country that Crutchfield’s parents played for her growing up in Alabama, traces a backroads journey, Car Wheels on a Gravel Road-style, that ends with her watching a toddler run around the yard. “Ruby Falls” points out that “real love doesn’t follow a straight line.” The heart of it all is so undeniably country—while still a Katie Crutchfield original”.

I do think that Waxahatchee’s Katie Crutchfield is a modern icon and one of those songwriters who will inspire generations to come. She is an incredible artist and, hitting a new peak on Saint Cloud, it makes me wonder where she might head next. I want to finish with an interview from Vogue. We find out how Crutchfield was dealing with COVID-19 (the interview is from March 2020) – we also get insight into the influences behind Saint Cloud:

My first reaction was grief,” says Katie Crutchfield, 31, the Alabama-born indie artist who records under the name Waxahatchee, and whose new album, the gloriously languid and sunlit homage to classic Americana titled Saint Cloud (Merge) has the dubious honor of coming out today, at a moment of national fear, isolation, and crisis. The realization, Crutchfield says, hit about two weeks ago—that COVID-19 would prevent her and her band from touring to support Saint Cloud, touring being the way independent artists like Crutchfield connect meaningfully with their fans (and earn most of their living).

“I felt that grief for about 24 hours, and then very quickly I just sort of accepted that this is going to change things—not just for me, but for every single person,” Crutchfield says. “Then I had a big feeling of gratitude. People need music now more than ever, and as far as music in the Waxahatchee canon goes, Saint Cloud is my most hopeful album. It’s the most warm and hopeful music I’ve ever made.”

I’m struck by your vocals on Saint Cloud. You’ve never sung with quite so much range.

Thank you! The sound of Saint Cloud sort of followed my voice. And I think with every album I get more vocally confident. A lot of my favorite singers are women, and their voices always sound better in their 30s and 40s. I was listening to a lot of Fiona Apple and a lot of SZA—Ctrl was one of my favorite albums that has come out in a long time. I was singing along to that record just trying to follow her, and I realized that my voice could move in ways I don’t really let it very often.

Tell me how you came to the classic Americana sounds that are all over Saint Cloud. I know Lucinda Williams is a touchstone for you…

I’ve loved Lucinda Williams forever, across many years. And there are Lucinda moments on other records, but I have this memory of when Out in the Storm was about to be announced, starting to make a turn toward Americana and more roots-y music, getting into classic country and stuff like that, which put me in a weird head space when I went out to tour. There’s so much rock on Out in the Storm and quietly I was longing to make a change.

“That message right now is important—that we all have to jump in to the unknown and find some kind of lightness in that.”

 Your lyrics suggest you’re in a more peaceful place than on your earlier records. I’m thinking of the lines on “Fire” about being “wiser and slow and attuned” and learning “to see with a partial view.” You’re 31 now. Do you feel wiser?

I think so, through sobriety—those lyrics are about that. Accepting that there is a power greater than myself, and that I can’t control everything and I can’t see everything in the universe and you just have to submit to it all. To me, that message right now is important—that we all have to jump in to the unknown and find some kind of lightness in that”.

I shall finish it there but, in a busy and packed year for music, one of 2020’s best came in the form of Waxahatchee’s Saint Cloud. It is a remarkable album and, looking ahead, I wonder where Crutchfield will take her music. Check out her incredible albums and immerse yourself in one of the greatest artists we have in the world right now. Let’s hope that she gets to tour this year and there is an opportunity to bring some Saint Cloud songs to the people – I am sure she is keen to go! I shall leave it there but, for this part of Modern Heroines, I was very excited to feature Waxahatchee. If you have not discovered Katie Crutchfield’s incredible music, then do so, as she is a…

TRULY tremendous artist.

FEATURE: Too Good to Be Forgotten: Songs That Are Much More Than a Guilty Pleasure: Wham! - Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go

FEATURE:

 

 

Too Good to Be Forgotten: Songs That Are Much More Than a Guilty Pleasure

Wham! - Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go

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THIS song is one of those happier…

childhood memories where I was discovering all sorts of interesting music. I have seen the Wham! song, Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go feature on lists of guilty pleasure songs. I suppose some consider Wham! to be a bit cheesy and very commercial in terms of their sound. I don’t like some of George Michael and Andrew Ridgeley’s songs, but I think that Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go is an underrated one. Wham! would create better with tracks like I’m Your Man, Club Tropicana, and Last Christmas; Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go is infectious fun and should not been seen as a guilty pleasure! Instead, I feel that it is a good song to give you energy and a smile! Released as a single on 14th May, 1984, Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go it was written and produced by George Michael. The song went to number-one in the U.S. and U.K. and, to this day, I think that it can get people dancing and singing along. Perhaps it is a generational thing whether you bond with the song. I think I was in middle school when I first heard the track. I was hooked and infused by the infectiousness of the song! The music video, which I was also fond of, features Michael and Ridgely wearing oversized message T-shirts (‘CHOOSE LIFE’). I want to bring in the Wikipedia article that mentions the inspiration behind the song:

Michael's inspiration for the song was a scribbled note that his bandmate Andrew Ridgeley had left for his parents, intended to read "wake me up before you go" but with "up" accidentally written twice, so Ridgeley wrote "go" twice on purpose.

In 1984, George Michael had this to say on the development of the song:

I just wanted to make a really energetic pop record that had all the best elements of Fifties and Sixties records, combined with our attitude and our approach, which is obviously more uptempo and a lot younger than some of those records. It's one of those tracks that gets rid of a lot of your own personal influences; it reminds me of so many different records that I couldn't actually nail them down. I'd done a demo at home that just had a bass line and a vocal on it. Usually, I write the record in my head; I know what all the parts are going to be and I sing them to all our musicians. And it was great. ... We actually did it as a rehearsal. We used a LinnDrum because the drummer was late, and it was such a good track that we kept it”.

Not only is Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go underrated and seen as a guilty pleasure, but the album it came from, Make It Big, is not considered one of the better albums from the ‘80s. Released on 5th November, 1984, Make It Big also includes Freedom, and Careless Whisper. George Michael showed what a brilliant songwriter he was through the album – to be able to write Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go, and Careless Whisper (a co-write with Ridgeley) for the same album shows incredible range and talent!

 IN THIS PHOTO: Wham! in 1984 for Tiger Beat Magazine

Not to go on a tangent, but I want to bring in AllMusic’s review for Make It Big:

The title was a promise to themselves, Wham!'s assurance that they would make it big after struggling out of the gates the first time out. They succeeded on a grander scale than they ever could have imagined, conquering the world and elsewhere with this effervescent set of giddy new wave pop-soul, thereby making George Michael a superstar and consigning Andrew Ridgeley to the confines of Trivial Pursuit. It was so big and the singles were so strong that it's easy to overlook its patchwork qualities. It's no longer than eight tracks, short even for the pre-CD era, and while the four singles are strong, the rest is filler, including an Isley Brothers cover. Thankfully, it's the kind of filler that's so tied to its time that it's fascinating in its stilted post-disco dance-pop rhythms and Thatcher/Reagan materialism -- an era that encouraged songs called "Credit Card Baby." If this dichotomy between the A-sides and B-sides is far too great to make this essential, the way Faith later would be, those A-sides range from good to terrific. "Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go" is absolute silliness whose very stupidity is its strength, and if "Everything She Wants" is merely agreeable bubblegum, "Freedom" is astounding, a sparkling Motown rip-off rippling with spirit and a timeless melody later ripped off by Noel Gallagher. Then, there's the concluding "Careless Whisper," a soulful slow one where Michael regrets a one-night stand over a richly seductive background and a yearning saxophone. It was an instant classic, and it was the first indication of George Michael's strengths as a pop craftsman -- which means it points the way to Faith, not the halfhearted Edge of Heaven”.

I think that Wham! as a duo should be reassessed and enjoyed more. Last Christmas finally reached number-one last year, but I think that they penned more treasures and treats. Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go is one of their most-streamed songs on Spotify; a blast of the 1980s that has actually dated well and stands up to repeated listens! There is a teenage quality to the lyrics in terms of what Michael is expressing. I think that is a real strength of the song. My favourite part is the chorus, which I think is one of the catchiest and most effusive of the 1980s. I can see why some younger listeners may find Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go cheesy, but stick with the song and it will definitely get under the skin! We sadly lost George Michael in 2016, though it is clear that his genius remains. I think that he hit higher peaks as a solo artist but, as part of Wham!, he was responsible for some truly terrific songs! Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go is a proper jam and, in these dark and stressful times, embracing songs like this can do some good. It is far stronger than many people give it credit for - it is definitely not a song one needs to feel guilty about loving! Get up, get ready and turn Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go before you…

HIT that high!

FEATURE: Leave the Needle Down: Appreciating the Album in Its Entirety

FEATURE:

 

 

Leave the Needle Down

PHOTO CREDIT: @kobuagency/Unsplash 

Appreciating the Album in Its Entirety

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THIS sort of ties into…

 PHOTO CREDIT: @koalamoose/Unsplash

my recent love of vinyl and how sales are increasing. One might think that, as many record shops have been closed or offering online deliveries, fewer people would be buying albums on vinyl. Instead, there has been this boom in sales and a real appetite for vinyl! 2020 was a very successful year for the format. This article from The Independent looked back on a huge year for vinyl:

Sales of vinyl and cassettes surged once again in 2020, as music fans spent much of lockdown discovering new favourites to add to their collections.

The BPI, the organisation that represents the UK’s recorded music industry, reports Official Charts Company data showing that fans bought nearly 5 million vinyl LPs in 2020, marking a 21st century record and the highest total since the early Nineties.

Cassette sales are set to double by the end of the year, their highest level since 2003, as artists offer their music in a greater range of formats.

Both classic and contemporary artists enjoyed bigger record and tape sales, from Fleetwood Mac and AC/DC to Dua Lipa and Lady Gaga.

While streaming still accounts for four fifths of music consumption, fans appear to be increasingly looking for other ways to enjoy their favourite music.

Vinyl albums now account for almost one in five of all albums purchased in the UK, with sales generating twice as much revenue for the industry as music video streaming platforms such as YouTube”.

 IN THIS PHOTO: Lady Gaga/PHOTO CREDIT: Adriana M. Barraza/WENN.com/AAP

I think that, as many people are turning to vinyl and there are problems with streaming and how sites pay artists, more and more people are embracing albums in its entirety. I think that, in lockdown and whilst we are waiting for life to return to normal, people are exploring albums in more depth. Not to say that people will draw away from streaming and only listen to individual songs from albums…but I think that many music lovers are setting time aside and delving into albums more than usual. This brings me to an article from The Guardian, where they discussed deluxe albums and allowing ourselves more time to digest music; artists releasing several versions of the same album:

A good record deserves breathing room, something that artists, like the rest of us, have had their fair share of recently. After Covid put the kibosh on planned tours from the Weeknd, Lady Gaga and the Killers, they will (hopefully!) be taking their 2020 albums on the road this coming year instead. At best, these shows could feel like a victory lap for albums that had, through necessity, time to breathe in a fast-paced streaming world. It has created an inadvertent yet welcome return to the elongated album era of the 90s and 00s.

An increase in time to refine and rethink was all over pop last year, most prosaically with the uptick in deluxe album editions, a 2020 trend as omnipresent as smugly homemade sourdough on Instagram. Jhené Aiko released and rereleased her Grammy-nominated Chilombo in the span of a few months, while the young R&B veteran JoJo’s May-released album had three versions by the end of the summer”.

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 PHOTO CREDIT: @rocinante_11/Unsplash

Last year was a tremendous one for music, so I do hope that we get deluxe versions and re-releases of some of the best from 2020. I think there is something about vinyl that demands your focus and dedication. It is hard to breeze through tracks and only listen to fragments of others. Some might say that people buying vinyl do so because they want something physical and it is not necessarily anything to do with listening to an album in full. I feel that we will see more and more people turn to vinyl, not only for the physical pleasure and bonding with music in a more real way; I feel people will attach more significance in the album as a long-playing form, rather than hand-picking tracks and succumbing to the worst habits of those who stream music. I am finding myself listening to albums for a longer time, rather than choosing to hear the odd song. Maybe I will revert when things are a lot better, but, as I say, music is providing many people with comfort and company at a hard time. I think the album as a concept and a thing to be cherished has become less relevant today than decades ago and, whilst we will not see a revival of times past, it is encouraging that vinyl sales are going up and it seems like lockdown means people are immersing themselves more committedly in music. Let’s hope that this continues strong…

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 PHOTO CREDIT: @priscilladupreez/Unsplash

THROUGHOUT 2021.

FEATURE: Music Technology Breakthroughs: Part Five: The Vocoder

FEATURE:

 

 

Music Technology Breakthroughs

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 Part Five: The Vocoder

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IN today’s music scene…

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there is something ubiquitous about the vocoder. It is almost an elemental part of the landscape; no less for many modern Pop artists. Some say that the vocoder is a piece of technology that is overused and false. Artists can use it to alter their voices and disguise a pretty ropey singing performance! It is unfair to say the vocoder has just been used by Pop artists to manipulate their voices and hide a definite weakness. Across multiple genres, it has played a huge part. Whether it is as a sort of sound effect or used to produce a vocal that you cannot get from a human being, the vocoder was a massive turning point – it has been used by so many musicians through the years. In this fascinating article, we learn more about the background to the vocoder and how it came into popular music:

The vocoder didn’t actually start life as a musical instrument. Instead, in the 1920s, Homer Dudley at Bell Labs created a device whose function was to make it easier to transmit telephone conversations over long distances by reducing bandwidth. The design of the vocoder broke speech (as an input signal) down into multiple bands, retaining only those necessary for speech intelligibility. This lower-frequency transmission allowed telephone conversations to remain audible, while requiring significantly less copper wire than a full-frequency equivalent, thus increasing bandwidth.

This technology was quickly pounced upon by the military, and an enhanced version of it was used to scramble transatlantic conversations between Churchill and Roosevelt during the second world war.

Fundamentally, successful use of a vocoder requires a blending of two sources, the first of which is usually a human voice, which is called the Modulator. It provides an input signal which is broken down into a number of bands (as per Bell Labs’ original design) using filters running in series. There’s also the Carrier, the synthesizer component of the vocoder, which substitutes a traditional Oscillator stage by using a frequency analysis of the Modulator as an audio trigger. In other words, singing into a microphone and then playing keys on the vocoder will trigger the pitches played, producing a multi-voiced, harmonized, and otherworldly performance interpretation of the words and notes you sing”.

In the early 1970s, Moog developed a vocoder with Walter (later Wendy) Carlos for the soundtrack to A Clockwork Orange, while the late 1970s and early 1980s represented the vocoder’s heyday, with artists such as ELO (“Mr. Blue Sky,” 1977) and Kraftwerk (“The Robots,” 1978) popularizing its sound”.

It’s the desire to produce unnatural sounds that has led successive generations of musicians to the vocoder, but it’s by no means the only technology that has proved popular in this regard. For instance, think about pure synthetic voices that use no audio input signal but generate words artificially instead. Computer voices like this allowed Stephen Hawking to disseminate some of the most important scientific ideas of the last 50 years.

I will finish up soon, but I want to end with a snippet from a featured from Roland. They discuss the history of the Roland vocoder and look at the difference between the vocoder and something called a talkbox – a piece of kit that has been used in many well-known songs:

In a musical context, Radiohead’s “Fitter, Happier” from the iconic 1997 album OK Computer provides a detached lead vocal computer voice, perfect for the automaton nature of the song. On a more upbeat note, consider Bruno Mars’ smash hit single “24k Magic” which starts with Mr. Talkbox using, as you might expect, a Talkbox, to produce a multi-harmony soul introduction.  And, of course, the hyper-tuned effect heard on pop records since Cher’s “Believe” pioneered the effect nearly 20 years ago, has drifted in and out of fashion ever since”.

Roland’s first vocoder was the VP-330. It was used by many artists, perhaps most notably by Vangelis for the Blade Runner soundtrack, and is known as one of the most popular vocoders ever made.

It was a 10-band vocoder, which is limited by today’s standards, but gives it a classic sound. The vocoder sound was enhanced by an Ensemble effect. It also had Strings and Human Voice (Choir) sounds, that could be either blended with the vocoder or used on their own.

The sound of this classic vocoder is now available in Boutique format in the VP-03

A talkbox has a similar sound to a vocoder, but the effect is achieved in a different manner. Sound is sent into one end of a tube. The other end is placed in the musician’s mouth. The harmonics of the sound coming out of the tube are shaped and filtered by the musician’s mouth.

This technique was used by many musicians, including Peter Frampton, Bon Jovi and Pink Floyd. A similar sounding effect is included in the VO-1 Vocoder pedal. An example is shown in the first clip of the video below.

I think the vocoder has got a bad rap from some because it has been used in songs to add something to a bad vocal and, after Cher released Believe, I think we saw it come into music more – there was a time where the vocoder was very overused. If you think about the impact it has had on music and the songs where a vocoder features, it is quite amazing! Whatever you think about the technology and its usage in music, one cannot help deny the fact that it is…

=

QUITE a game-changer.

FEATURE: Holidays in the Sun: Danny Boyle’s Upcoming Sex Pistols Drama, and the Ongoing Intrigue and Passion for Music Biopics

FEATURE:

 

 

Holidays in the Sun

Danny Boyle’s Upcoming Sex Pistols Drama, and the Ongoing Intrigue and Passion for Music Biopics

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THIS year is going to be a…

 IN THIS PHOTO: The Sex Pistols in 1977 (from left: Sid Vicious, Paul Cook, Johnny Rotten and Steve Jones)/PHOTO CREDIT: Virginia Turbett/Redferns

very difficult one for the film and television industry. With social distancing around the world, there are limitations with what shows and films can accomplish. I will talk about music biopics and whether we may see some this year. Even though the Sex Pistols released only one studio album – 1977’s Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols -, their legacy and reputation is huge! Not only did that album impact the youth and fans of the Sex Pistols when it was released but, since 1977, Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols has been cited by musicians and it is seen as an all-time classic. As The Guardian reported, a multi-part drama about the iconic Punk band is coming soon:

Danny Boyle is to direct a six-part television drama about the Sex Pistols – to be titled Pistol – based on guitarist Steve Jones’s 2016 memoir, Lonely Boy. In a statement, Boyle described the Sex Pistols’ emergence in the mid-70s as the moment that British society and culture changed for ever.

“Imagine breaking into the world of The Crown and Downton Abbey with your mates and screaming your songs and your fury at all they represent,” said Boyle. “It is the detonation point for British street culture where ordinary young people had the stage and vented their fury and their fashion, and everyone had to watch and listen and everyone feared them or followed them.”

Frank Cottrell Boyce is writing the series alongside Craig Pearce (Strictly Ballroom). Among its young cast will be Game of Thrones’ Maisie Williams as punk icon Jordan and Toby Wallace, recently seen in Australian film Babyteeth, as Steve Jones. John Lydon is to be portrayed by emerging star Anson Boon.

Pistol will appear on American network FX, which has a partnership for scripted comedy with the BBC. Production is due to start on 7 March.

Director Penelope Spheeris was, at one time, in talks with Lydon about a biopic, but said in 2015 that it was unlikely to happen. “I just don’t know if he’s got the mindset to do it,” she told Pitchfork. “I love him, and I think he changed the world, especially the world of music, but he was suffering from the same thing I was – you get to a certain age and you go, ‘What is my identity?’ What’s Johnny Rotten’s identity? The birth of punk, the Sex Pistols. You want to get it right, and I think John is afraid to get it right”.

It will be fascinating to see the drama and discover how the Sex Pistols transformed and impacted British culture when they broke through. I am a fan of the band, but I would not consider myself a huge fan or devotee. Maybe that is because I only really know about the music rather than the history and a glimpse into the Sex Pistols’ world.

I feel music documentaries, dramas and biopics are a great way of shining a light on artists and providing a fuller picture. I hope we see more music dramas and biopics through 2021. I am not sure how far along the planned Madonna biopic is – which she will direct; Diablo Cody is co-writing – and whether she has someone in mind to play her. There are rumours and suggestions who could play her – including British actor Florence Pugh -, and it will be great to see the biopic come to life on the screen. I think there is a growing appetite for music biopics after fairly recent box office smashes like Bohemian Rhapsody (the Queen biopic). I have written features before where I have imagined which biopics could happen but do not already exist – I think something relating to Stevie Wonder and his career would be fascinating! In addition to a great drama about the Sex Pistols, the recent release of the David Bowie biopic, Stardust, divided people. As it is five years since Bowie died, it would be nice to see a Bowie biopic authorised by his family and estate – one of Stardust’s issues is it features no Bowie music and it is a little pale. As Entertainment Weekly have laid out, we are getting biopics about Elvis Presley, Bob Dylan, Aretha Franklin, Marianne Faithfull, Michael Jackson, Amy Winehouse, Bob Marley and Lemmy fairly soon.

 IN THIS PHOTO: Amy Winehouse/PHOTO CREDIT: Ross Gilmore/Redferns

That is an interesting range of artists and, as you want a  blend of accuracy, honesty and uplift from biopics, it will be interesting to see what approach is taken when it comes to portraying Michael Jackson and Amy Winehouse on the screen. I am exciting to see what comes out this year and whether the planned biopics are a success, or they fail to strike the right note. I guess many might be held until 2022 but, if studios can find a way to shoot safely, we may get quite a few later in the year. I am pumped to see what comes from the Sex Pistols drama, Pistol, and what sort of reaction it garners. Telling the story of one of Britain’s greatest-ever bands is a hard task but, with Frank Cottrell Boyce among the writers, we will get something fascinating and tremendous! There will be a lot of humour and controversy; it will be illuminating to see the world portrayed at a time when a band like the Sex Pistols exploded and captured the attention of millions. Let’s hope that the pandemic and this year does not quash any ambitions regarding music biopics and dramas, and that we can get to see films in some form. I think things will be improved by the summer, so I can imagine there will be a rush in terms of release around that time. I am looking forward to Pistol and, following that, there are scores of other great music biopics slated that will be…

IN THIS PHOTO: Madonna during the Blond Ambition World Tour in 1990/PHOTO CREDIT: Michael Linssen/Redferns

REALLY interesting to see.

FEATURE: (Part of) The Whole Story: My Five Favourite Kate Bush Videos From 1978-1986

FEATURE:

 

 

(Part of) The Whole Story

My Five Favourite Kate Bush Videos From 1978-1986

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THIS may seem quite a niche piece…

 PHOTO CREDT: Gered Mankowitz

but, as her first greatest hits package, The Whole Story, is thirty-five later in the year, I am sprinkling in various features related to that. As the first Kate Bush video I saw was for Wuthering Heights, I sort of became struck and hooked! My family has The Whole Story on VHS. That video was included on it. There were thirteen videos on the collection, cribbed from The Kick Inside of 1978 (her debut album), through to Hounds of Love in 1985. There was a special track included just for The Whole Story (album and video), Experiment IV, that was a treat for fans (it was released as a single in 1986 to promote The Whole Story)! The running order for the 1986 VHS/album is as follows: Wuthering Heights (VHS/VCD/Laserdisc editions use the original 1978 recording)/Cloudbusting/The Man with the Child in His Eyes/Breathing/Wow (VHS/VCD/Laserdisc editions feature a new alternate video produced especially for this compilation)/Hounds of Love/Running Up That Hill/Army Dreamers/Sat in Your Lap/Experiment IV/The Dreaming/Babooshka/The Big Sky (only included on VHS/VCD/Laserdisc editions). Even though The Whole Story is not thirty-five until November, I am thinking about Kate Bush’s videos and how incredible they are! In a future piece, I will concentrate on the years 1989-2011 - but I think Bush’s peak in terms of videos was between 1978 and 1985/1986. Maybe different Kate Bush fans will have their own favourites from The Whole Story but, here, are the five videos which I feel…

 PHOTO CREDIT: John Carder Bush

ARE the most powerful and memorable.

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Wuthering Heights

Included on the Album: The Kick Inside (1978)

Single Release Date: 20th January, 1978

Chart Position (U.K.): 1

Video Director (U.K. Version): Keef (Keith MacMillan)

YouTube Views (as of 16th January, 2021): 23,492,076

Why It’s So Good: Two version of the video were shot: Kate Bush in a white dress for the U.K. For the U.S., she wore a red dress. I think Wuthering Heights’ definitive video is Bush in a white dress. The performance is quite simple yet electrifying. Bush is wide-eyed and wild through the song. With incredible choreography from Robin Kovac, the routine for Wuthering Heights is iconic. Every year, there is a The Most Wuthering Heights Day Ever, where fans from around the world dress as Kate Bush from the video – though they usually don the red dress. Watching the video for Wuthering Heights was my first exposure to her music and, as such, it has a very special place in my heart!

Breathing

Included on the Album: Never for Ever (1980)

Single Release Date: 14th April, 1980

Chart Position (U.K.): 16

Video Director: Keef

YouTube Views (as of 16th January, 2021): 2,606,566

Why It’s So Good: Perhaps Bush’s most ambitious and striking video to that point, the first half of the video sees her in a plastic bubble. The concept of the song revolved around a foetus that was experiencing the effects of nuclear war from the protective womb of the mother. In the video, Bush plays that role (sort of)…and there is a genuine sense of fear in her eyes. There are a few occasions where a video for a Kate Bush song matches the track itself – Breathing is one such example! It remains striking and utterly engrossing over forty years after its release. This was Bush, with director Keef, embracing something more cinematic in her videos. The end – where Bush and some extras walk out of a river slowly – burrows in the memory the minute you see it…

Running Up That Hill

Included on the Album: Hounds of Love (1985)

Single Release Date: 5th August, 1985

Chart Position (U.K.): 3

Video Director: David Garfath

YouTube Views (as of 16th January, 2021): 42,596,496

Why It’s So Good: With a hugely memorable and often-played video featuring Bush performing an interpretive dance with Michael Hervieu, Running Up That Hill’s visuals perfectly match the message of the song: Bush wanting to do a deal with God so that men and women can swap places and better understand one another. The video was directed by David Garfath, while the dance routines were choreographed by Diane Grey. Many fans would put Running Up That Hill in their top-five Kate Bush videos. Bush wanted the dancing in Running Up That Hill to be more of a classical performance. I first saw the video when I was a child and I keep going back to it time and time again.

Army Dreamers

Included on the Album: Never for Ever (1980)

Single Release Date: 22nd September, 1980

Chart Position (U.K.): 16

Video Director: Keef

YouTube Views (as of 16th January, 2021): 5,466,710

Why It’s So Good:

Like Breathing, Bush was becoming more visually-orientated (rather than dance) with her videos by the time of Never for Ever. Army Dreamers is one of my favourites because it is another very powerful and haunting one. This Wikipedia article provides more details:

The music video opens on a closeup of Kate Bush, dressed in dark green camouflage, holding a child. She blinks in synchronisation with the song's sampled gun cocks. The camera pulls out and shows that Bush has a white-haired child on her lap. The child walks off and returns in military combat uniform, and during the first pre-chorus, as Bush responds to her bandmates' comments, the child grows up into a 20-year-old. Bush and several soldiers (two of whom, Bush included, have "KT8" or "KTB" stencilled on the butt of their rifles: "KTB" was a monogram used by Bush early in her career) make their way through woodland, amid explosions. As the song progresses, Bush reaches out for the child soldier, but he disappears. Finally, Bush is blown up.

Bush has stated that this video is one of the few examples of her work that completely satisfies her:

For me that's the closest that I've got to a little bit of film. And it was very pleasing for me to watch the ideas I'd thought of actually working beautifully. Watching it on the screen. It really was a treat, that one. I think that's the first time ever with anything I've done I can actually sit back and say "I liked that". That's the only thing. Everything else I can sit there going "Oh look at that, that's out of place". So I'm very pleased with that one, artistically”.

Sat in Your Lap

Included on the Album: The Dreaming (1982)

Single Release Date: 21st June, 1981 (U.K.)

Chart Position (U.K.): 11

Video Director: Brian Wiseman

YouTube Views (as of 16th January, 2021): 1,663,046

Why It’s So Good: Maybe this is not in a lot of people’s top-five Kate Bush videos but, preceding The Dreaming came an incredible single in the form of Sat in Your Lap. I like the video as it is one of Bush’s most physical and characterful. There are a number of standout scenes, but I especially love the moment at 0:39 where Bush and a couple of extras dressed in white robes and dunces’ caps rollercoast towards the camera. I would offer honourable video mentions to The Big Sky (taken from Hounds of Love, this is a video Bush directed herself), and Babooshka (taken from Never for Ever, it is one of Bush’s sexiest and boldest videos to that point).

FEATURE: The Lockdown Playlist: The Best of 1983

FEATURE:

 

 

The Lockdown Playlist

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IN THIS PHOTO: Culture Club in Washington D.C. in August 1983 (clockwise from top left: Boy George, Roy Hay, Mikey Craig and Jon Moss)/PHOTO CREDIT: Michael Putland/Getty Images 

The Best of 1983

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THIS is a bit of a self-indulgent Lockdown Playlist…

as I have been thinking about my childhood tastes and the music I listened to. In doing so, I have been looking back to the year I was born: 1983. It was an interesting year in terms of Pop and what was bouncing around the charts. I wanted to combine the best and most interesting songs from that year. Although the 1980s boasted finer years than 1983, I obviously have a soft spot for the year that I was born. If you are fairly new to that time period and wanted an impression of the type of music that was popular then then have a listen to this Lockdown Playlist, and I am sure that it will provide you with plenty…

 IN THIS PHOTO: David Bowie in 1983

TO enjoy and savour.

FEATURE: The January Playlist: Vol. 3: Chemtrails in the Sky

FEATURE:

 

 

The January Playlist

Vol. 3: Chemtrails in the Sky

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THIS is a busy playlist…

IN THIS PHOTO: Sleaford Mods

this week, where we have a load of great songs across multiple genres. In terms of big-hitters, there is music from Lana Del Rey, Sleaford Mods (ft. Amy Taylor), Foo Fighters, Ghetts (ft. Stormzy), Ashnikko (ft. Kelis), Maxïmo Park, Pale Waves, Baby Queen, John Grant, Ariana Grande (ft. Doja Cat and Megan Thee Stallion), Tom Jones, and Julien Baker. There are some terrific cuts from Gia Margaret, Mogwai, Field Music, shame, Selena Gomez, Kara Marni, and Middle Kids! It is a really interesting week for music so, if you need to get your weekend off to a good start, then I think I have the tunes for you! Have a listen to some fascinating cuts that are sure to give you the motivation and energy…

 IN THIS PHOTO: Pale Waves

YOU need.

ALL PHOTOS/IMAGES (unless credited otherwise): Artists

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Lana Del Rey Chemtrails Over the Country Club

Sleaford Mods (ft. Amy Taylor)Nudge It

Foo Fighters Waiting on a War

Ghetts (ft. Stormzy) - Skengman

Ashnikko (ft. Kelis) - Deal With It

Black Country, New Road Track X

Anne-Marie, KSI, Digital Farm Animals - Don’t Play

Pale Waves Easy

Maxïmo Park All of Me

Baby Queen - Raw Thoughts

PHOTO CREDIT: Eric Ryan Anderson for The New York Times

Julien Baker - Hardline

Gia Margaret Solid Heart

Field Music Orion from the Street

Mogwai - Ritchie Sacramento

shameBorn in London

Selena Gomez - De Una Vez

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PHOTO CREDIT: Robin Marchant/Getty Images

Ariana Grande (ft. Doja Cat and Megan Thee Stallion) - 34+35 (Remix)

John Grant - The Only Baby

Tom Jones - Talking Reality Television Blues

Angie Rose - Unstoppable (Do It Again)

Kara Marni - Trippin

Middle Kids Questions

Fickle Friends IRL

Kings Elliot Dancing Alone

Fia Moon Falling for You

Carly Wilford, Mr. V Generation X

Emma McGrath Paradise

PHOTO CREDIT: Ryan MacPhail

William Doyle - And Everything Changed (But I Feel Alright)

GIRLI Passive Aggressive

PHOTO CREDIT: @__ellt

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Alex Amor Love Language

Jess Bays Love We Had

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Orla Gartland - More Like You

You Me at Six - Glasgow

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PHOTO CREDIT: Zômpà & Zítü

Frànçois & The Atlas Mountains - Holly Golightly

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Noga Erez - End of the Road

dodie - Hate Myself

Blanck Mass Starstuff

Zoe Wees Girls Like Us

Emotional Oranges (ft. Chiiild)Bonafide

Wild Pink - Oversharers Anonymous

Pearl CharlesOnly for Tonight

PHOTO CREDIT: Polygon1993

La Femme - Foutre le bordel

Miss Grit - Impostor

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Issey Cross - Who

Deap Vally (ft. jennylee)  - Look Away

FEATURE: Second Spin: London Grammar - Truth Is a Beautiful Thing

FEATURE:

 

 

Second Spin

London Grammar - Truth Is a Beautiful Thing

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I have always been a fan…

of London Grammar (Hannah Reid, Dan Rothman and Dominic 'Dot' Major), and I think the combination of the evocative and inventive compositions matched to Hannah Reid’s stunning vocals and honest lyrics make them one of the best groups around. I loved 2013’s If You Wait and, to many, that is their definitive moment. Songs like Wasting My Young Years, and Strong are remarkable tracks, and the entire debut album is wonderful. It was four years until we got their second album, Truth Is a Beautiful Thing. Released on 9th June, 2017 by the trio's imprint, Metal & Dust and Ministry of Sound, it came as a relief that the trio were continuing. I think there was a lot of fatigues and stress from the touring of their debut album, so there needed to be a period of returning to normal life. I will bring in an interview from NME, as the band were promoting Truth Is a Beautiful Thing. They were asked about the demands and rush after their debut album:

“We definitely came back and lost our minds a bit,” nods London Grammar guitarist Dan Rothman, looking back at their return to ‘normal life’ after the whirlwind success of their debut and relentless tour schedule. “I think that’s natural. Most people in their mid-20’s have an existential crisis – or a quarter life crisis.”

Singer Hannah Reid chuckles: “That’s what people said about our first record, so we’re still in it!”.

Their debut ‘If You Wait’ drew universal critical acclaim, with their slick but loaded trip-pop taking them from being three Notts Uni student mates jamming in each others’ bedrooms, to ending their tour with two sold out nights at Brixton Academy and accepting an Ivor Novello Award from Jimmy Page.

Then, they disappeared”.

There were rumours that the band had broken up or that they were taking an extended break. I can appreciate that they needed some space to create but, after such a great debut album, one can understand that people would have expected a second album within a year or two. It seemed like the time gap was a good move:

No they hadn’t split, nor were they hibernating. Their years in the wilderness saw London Grammar return to what made them want to be a band together in the first place: friendship, songwriting and living life as normal human beings. As you can tell from the two taster singles of ‘Rooting For You’ and ‘Big Picture’, the result of this and years at the drawing board is a ‘dreamlike, widescreen cinematic’ album – packed with ‘more variety’, a fuller spectrum of colour, and above all ‘more life’.

“The first album was a lot more about relationships, but then the second one is too – but in a different way,” reveals Hannah. “It’s probably about the relationship you have with yourself, rather than one specific other person. The relationship that us three had on the road, and there’s a lot about the meaning of life in general, which is SO lame, but that is what we talk about!”

So after time away on their own terms, London Grammar 2.0 is an entirely different beast – fully confident in its own skin and highly-evolved beyond any misconceptions or weak comparisons you may have once had about them.

“Oh, [back then] it was just The xx thing,” shrugs Dan. “I think that is going to be even less so now. It sounds like a completely different realm. No disrespect to them, because I think they’re amazing. It is the fact that there’s three of us as two girls and a boy – but it’s just lazy.”

Dot diplomatically interjects: “I do think that’s totally natural. The attention span that people have, and that’s not negative because I have it as well, but you look at something and you want a point of reference to mean if it’s going to be worth even five seconds of your time. Having some kind of comparison is inevitable. The xx are amazing, of course.”

So misconceptions aside, what can fans expect from London Grammar in 2017?

“They expect an emotional connection, above all else,” Hannah replies. “That is the most important thing”.

I really like Truth Is a Beautiful Thing, even though it did not score the same sort of reviews and praise as If You Wait. I am writing this now as the group’s third album, Californian Soil, arrives on 9th April (pushed back from 12th February). In some ways it seems like a return to the form of their debut but, in another, it is them moving forward and exploring new ground. One of the criticisms for Truth Is a Beautiful Thing is that it lacked variety and was not a sufficient move from their debut.

There were some good reviews for Truth Is a Beautiful Thing, though some critics were more mixed. This is what AllMusic observed in their review:

Four years after their debut, English trio London Grammar returned with their sophomore set, Truth Is a Beautiful Thing, featuring production by Jon Hopkins (Imogen Heap, Coldplay), Paul Epworth (Florence + the Machine, Adele), and Greg Kurstin (Adele, Sia). Once again, vocalist Hannah Reid takes center stage with her powerful, angelic instrument, which can stir the soul at the smokiest depths before jolting everything to the heavens in a fashion much like Florence Welch or Annie Lennox. Dan Rothman and Dominic Major provide lush accompaniment to Reid's voice, creating a gorgeous cinematic landscape that ranges from dreamlike wisps to fully enveloping grandeur. The first half of the album takes time to pick up, as Reid slowly eases listeners into "Wild Eyed," an expansive moment that recalls 2013's "Hey Now." The thumping heartbeat of "Oh Woman, Oh Man" gives the band equal time to shine. Other highlights include the throbbing "Non Believer," the uplifting Florence-esque "Bones of Ribbon," and the sweeping "Leave the War with Me." These tracks provide a much-needed jolt of energy to balance the album's other quieter moments, which tend to lull the listener into a dreamlike haze. While it's an overall relaxing experience, Truth Is a Beautiful Thing is never boring; it's a comforting and often heartbreaking listen that really gets under the skin, especially with Reid's emotive delivery”.

Truth Is a Beautiful Thing is a rich and rewarding listen. I think the songs are more varied than on their debut – despite what some say – in terms of lyrics…and Reid’s voice seems stronger and more astonishing – if that was even possible! I want to source from CLASH, who had a lot of positive things to say:

London Grammar’s second album ‘Truth Is A Beautiful Thing’ mirrors the blueprint of the band’s 2013 debut ‘If You Wait’, marrying understated electronics and synths to transcendent melodies and vocals. Singer Hannah Reid’s voice remains the centrepiece, flowing like liquid gold through the intricate soundscapes, shaped by a fragile loveliness, and underscored by a Tolkien-esque otherworldliness.

Her voice leads and dictates proceedings but never feels overbearing, with the band deftly balancing the interchange between Reid’s vocals and the twinkling keys and subtle instrumentation that envelop it, notably on lead single ‘Rooting For You’, and on the elegant title cut.

Thematically, the LP is set against the backdrop of youth’s eternal quest for love, and the pitfalls we must navigate along its treacherous pathway. Heartache, angst and endless introspection bleed into all eleven tracks: “I’m no better than those I judge,” implores Reid on ‘Hell To The Liars’. And elsewhere on ‘Who am I’ there’s obvious self-denial when she bemoans “Who am I to want you now you are leaving?”

The main criticism you can level at the LP is that it lacks variety – that it doesn’t stray far enough from the space that the band so ably carved for themselves on their debut. Ultimately, though, this is a beautiful album that’s as absorbing as it is emotionally affecting”.

If you overlooked Truth Is a Beautiful Thing or felt that it lacked the impact of If You Wait, take a listen to it again and check out gorgeous singles like Oh Woman Oh Man, and Big Picture, in addition to deeper cuts like Hell to the Liars, and Who Am I (that are stirring and hugely memorable). Ahead of London Grammar releasing their third album, I wanted to throw some love on their second. I don’t think it has received the praise and deep dive that it deserves. Maybe it is not quite as mighty as their debut but, to me, Truth Is a Beautiful Thing is stronger in many different ways. I am looking forward to Californian Soil arriving and, in preparation, I am listening again to the fantastic Truth Is a Beautiful Thing. It is a solid and really interesting album that should be seen…

IN a new light.

FEATURE: The Lockdown Playlist: The Best of Stock Aitken Waterman

FEATURE:

 

 

The Lockdown Playlist

IN THIS PHOTO: Kylie Minogue, circa 1990 (Stock Aitken Waterman wrote hits for her in the 1980s and 1990s)

The Best of Stock Aitken Waterman

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FOR this Lockdown Playlist….

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 IN THIS PHOTO: Mike Stock, Matt Aitken, and Pete Waterman/PHOTO CREDIT: Rex

I am concentrating on the songwriting partnership of Stock Aitken Waterman. Consisting of Mike Stock, Matt Aitken, and Pete Waterman, the trio had huge success from the mid-1980s through the early-1990s. They are considered to be one of the most successful songwriting and producing partnerships of all-time, scoring more than one-hundred U.K. top-forty hits and selling forty-million records. Because of that, I have put together some of their best hits - either ones they have written or produced. I remember listening to a lot of Stock Aitken Waterman in the late-1980s and 1990s, and I was always hooked by their knack of writing these simple and catchy Pop songs (for a wider look at their work, I would recommend buying the album, Stock Aitken Waterman Gold). You will find many of these in a playlist that honours producers and songwriters who had their…

FAIR share of big hits!

FEATURE: The Lockdown Playlist: The Best of Susanna Hoffs

FEATURE:

 

 

The Lockdown Playlist

The Best of Susanna Hoffs

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I am a big fan of Susanna Hoffs

 IN THIS PHOTO: Susanna Hoffs with The Bangles

so, as her birthday is on Sunday (17th January), I wanted to put together an assortment of her songs – either where she is taking a lead/backing vocal or is credited as a songwriter. Susanna Hoffs is best known as a co-founder of The Bangles. She founded The Bangles (originally called The Bangs) in 1981 with Debbi and Vicki Peterson. They released their first full length album, All Over the Place, in 1984. Hoffs started a solo career after The Bangles split in 1989. Her first solo album, When You're a Boy, arrived in 1991. She later formed the faux-British 1960s band, Ming Tea, alongside Mike Myers and Matthew Sweet (who she recorded several covers albums with). To honour an incredible musician and songwriter, this Lockdown Playlist is dedicated to the amazing Susanna Hoffs. There are quite a few songs in the playlist that you will recognise, but I hope that everyone discovers…

SOME new gems.

FEATURE: Spotlight: The Goa Express

FEATURE:

 

 

Spotlight

The Goa Express

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THERE is not a lot of music out there…

from The Goa Express yet - so I will be mostly including photos of the band. That is not a bad thing, as they are fairly new off of the blocks, but they are already establishing themselves as a major act to watch. NME recently named them among their one-hundred acts to watch this year – other sites are similarly tipping them for success. Apologies to go back and forth regarding interview chronology, but I want to bring one in from CLASH from last year, where they highlighted a band on a roll:

Emigrating from nearby Burnley to Manchester, The Goa Express are on a hot streak of momentum. Already having played iconic venues around the country such as Band on the Wall, Brudenell Social Club and Hebden Bridge’s Trades Club. Their single ‘The Day’ rises above the standardised indie parapet. “I like the smell of weed but I don’t like the smell of smoke,” singer James declares. A song that encourages defiance, telling you to seize each moment whilst not letting others interfere.

Angular rhythms, a drum track that races alongside, and a layer of synth sandwiched in the middle - it’s a lot to take during a run time of just over two minutes. They were even given a hand by Fat White Family’s Nathan Saoudi, which serves as an exciting endorsement of this band’s potential”.

Even though the band have not put out a massive amount of music, they have been performing together for a long time now. I found an interesting interview from Louder Than War from 2018, where we learn more about various aspects of the band and how, with them being unsigned, their progress was pretty impressive:  

Fashion and image aside, Goa Express have recently recorded their debut EP, at Leeds’ iconic and renowned studio, The Nave. Having taken three years to get to point of recording their debut EP, it has been a journey to say the least. From Bryne’s (ex-keys) garage to Naham coming to turns with fret’s, as Joey reminisces; ‘Me and Clarkey (James) did a bit of guitar, Sam did a bit of drums and we thought why don’t we start a band? Naham didn’t even know what a fret was. Then we met Bryne, he was like ‘yeah I play this and that’, so we went to his garage.’ James adds, ‘First gig we played we played was in that garage’. Laughter follows the recollection of the memory, as Joey finishes the tale; ‘50 people crammed into Brynes garage, and his mum was like ‘you’ve gotta calm it down they’ve got babies next door and that’, and Bryne was like ‘we’ve got two more songs mum’ and his dad comes down, pissed as fuck like ‘your gunna have to calm it down’, and everyone’s going ‘one more song’.

It hasn’t all been plain sailing; heavy weekends result in heavy comedowns. James brings up a lack-of-serotonin-induced Weatherspoons scrap, as the second round of convo-pong unfolds, Joey opens; ‘After Beatherder, Naham had been doing bare dids all weekend’, before James adds, ‘Me and Joey came back from Benicasim so we were all on horrendous comedowns and it full on kicked off’. Above the laughter, Joey further adds ‘Naham was shaking going ‘come on then’, before James re-enacts, ‘I’m going ‘come on Naham just fucking smack me around the head’. As funny as the tale is to tell, at the time it was dangerously close to the end of Goa Express. Definitely one to tell the kids.

Besides the fun and games of band life which has been enjoyed in these three years, lack of financing has held the band back, as James provides; ‘There’s no financial income apart from what we make ourselves.  No one else funds us, apart from our manager.’ Goa’s only encounter with label backing came with Wrong Way Records, which ended abruptly after a wishy-washy attempted release of their debut single, ‘Kiss Me’ with B-side ‘GOA’. The encounter was but a learning curve; onwards and upwards is the only way Goa know, as Naham comments; We’re always writing tunes and everything. Like you record something that doesn’t get released for five months and by then you’re like ‘ah we can do a lot something better now’. Getting drummers to shut the fuck in an interview is hard. But if you can get one to talk some next level inspirational quote in interviews, you’re probably on the correct career path;

As an unsigned band, Goa’s progress thus far is impressive. Getting regular, and well attended, support slots at Hebden Bridge’s Trades Club, Goa have played iconic venues of Manchester and Leeds, including Brudenell Social Club, Gulliver’s and Deaf Institute. With this, Goa have also performed with some of the UK’s most well-respected band’s, including Cabbage, Yak and The Orielles, as James states; ‘It’s always good when you know the band beforehand, then you can just party with them before and afterwards.’ Enjoying such support slots is one thing, but there is a strange mix of reassurance and frustration on behalf of the band, as Joey elaborates; ‘It’s a bit of both really. When you see local bands doing really well, it’s like ‘we just want that push with us’. We’ve worked really hard since we started, we see a lot of bands around us getting that push. We just need that bit of exposure, that push which gets us more gigs, more listens and that’s all we want”.

I will bring in a couple of other interviews before wrapping things up. Back in October, Under the Radar spoke with The Goa Express and asked about what they want to achieve in the future and how they have developed through the years:

You were scheduled to play numerous festivals throughout the summer as well as go on tour. Does it feel as if the momentum has stalled because of COVID-19?

Joe Clarke: It’s a weird situation but then on the bright side, every other band is also facing the same kind of issues. We have lost momentum through not being able to play live but I think we’ll get it back when the time’s right and hopefully people will still be up for it same as they were before the pandemic. If not more so because there’s been such a long hiatus. We’re pleased in many ways that we didn’t have an album ready for this period because then we could have seen serious momentum dwindle away.

The Goa Express have progressed and developed at their own pace over the past four years, nurtured in some ways by your association to the psych rock scene. Do you think that’s played an important part in the band’s growth?

James Clarke: The people within that scene are so loyal as well. People that originally came to see us as fans who we now regard as some of our best friends. Some of them were coming to our gigs from day one and they’re still coming now. It did feel as if we were being boxed in a bit when people started labelling us as a psych band. But then without people on that scene giving us the opportunity to play and building our fanbase we probably wouldn’t be where we are today so we’re eternally grateful for that.

Have your plans changed as the year’s progressed in terms of recording and releasing an album as you’ve written more songs?

James Clarke: We’ve actually been in a mate of ours’ studio in Burnley doing about an album’s worth of demos. All recorded live and mixed in the same day. We were fairly ruthless. Then we went in the same studio for another session the week after. We recorded about 12 songs, 10 of which we’re happy with. Just recorded as rough demos which we worked on that day. So that’s part of our planning towards an album and which songs might work well together. In terms of singles, there’s definitely going to be more coming soon. We’re just trying to work out strategically what the best move is. When the singles come out, which songs they should be, then after that we’ll focus on putting together an album.

Apart from one member leaving in the early days The Goa Express has operated with the same line up from the outset.

James Clarke: We’ve all been best mates for years. The only reason our old keyboard player Bryn left the band was because he decided to stay in Burnley when everyone was moving to Manchester for Uni. So, Joe came in on keys. But we’re still very close friends with Bryn. This line up is permanent now. No one will ever come into it and no one will ever leave. If they do, the band won’t be here anymore. The Goa Express is just us five.

Joe Clarke: We’ve all agreed that should anyone leave then that’s it. We wouldn’t want to do it with any other people. The main thing about our band is we’re all best mates, me and James too even though we’re brothers.

Moving onto a post-COVID world within the music industry—whenever that may be. Do you think there will be many significant changes going forwards?

James Clarke: I don’t think we’ll be playing any proper gigs before the end of this year. We’ve got to be proactive about the way we think about these things but I guess we don’t spend that much time thinking about it. I think the industry will be massively affected, and I’m not sure how long it will be before everything starts up again or even goes back to normal. The more time you spend thinking about that the worse it makes you feel. I’d love to say we’ll be playing in two- or three-months’ time but you just don’t know. So, I guess we’re just using this time to carry on writing and perfecting all the things we needed to sort out before the pandemic”.

I have been a bit misleading when I said that The Goa Express have not released much material. They put out material years ago but they have taken that offline, leaving them with two singles whilst under Rough Trade management. I am not sure whether the older stuff will come back or, as they are progressing, they feel the songs they have put out recently are more fitting. In this NME interview, we learn about the songs that are available online, in addition to how the music has come together:

‘The Day’ echoes the simplicity of The Ramones’ short and snappy hits. It’s less blowing up Rock ‘n’ Roll High School, and more pissing off university with excruciatingly loud parties, but the act of defiance still holds true. It’s all about having a laugh. “The security guard in my university halls absolutely despised me and got me in so much shit I got fined £400-odd and had to do community service,” he explains of the backstory, adding it was always bassist Naham Muzaffar by his side. “We were a bit chaotic back then but if you’re able to make a song out of it and it does quite well, who’s the one laughing?”

Only able to afford a couple of days of recording, they sought the help of Fat White Family’s Nathan Saoudi at his Sheffield ChampZone studio, across the road from the infamous City Sauna brothel. “There was a mutual understanding between us. We weren’t being ripped off for something that we had to be over the top with,” Clarke says. “It helped that we weren’t tied down by making everything perfect. It was spontaneous, off-the-cuff and we could do whatever we wanted.”

For ‘Be My Friend’, they returned to Sheffield but to instead work with Ross Orton (Arctic Monkeys, Amyl and The Sniffers) just metres away from where they’d been with Saoudi. When asked about working with Orton, it’s a barrage of flattery. From similar Northern working-class backgrounds, the days spent together were full of getting to know one another. “He knows what he’s doing,” Clarke puts simply. “We had free reign to get fucked up and didn’t need to fret over the very details of things.”

Released nearly a year after ‘The Day’, new song ‘Be My Friend’ track follows in the odes to life in Manchester. A dismissal of hyperconnectivity, it’s a “fuck you” to feeling the need to know everyone’s business all the time. “I never really feel the need to go and join other people’s social groups. I’ve got everything I need right here,” he says of his close-knit group. “I see a lot of falsity in friendships. You’re not friends because you follow them on social media. People need to be more comfortable within themselves and not being friends with everyone.”

It may seem all mad parties and winging it, but that’s far from the truth. Having taken all of their older material offline, leaving them with just their two singles released while under Rough Trade Management (Shame, Black Midi), it looks like a plan of sorts is forming but even they don’t seem too sure. All they can promise are “some very chaotic and fun nights ahead”. All aboard The Goa Express, it’s going to be a messy ride”.

Go and follow The Goa Express if you have not done so already, as I think we will get some new material from them this year. When artists can go back to touring, I know there will be a lot of demand for their music. They have been compared to bands like the Ramones, but I think they have their own style and sound. With many tipping them for success, I will be interested to see just how far The Goa Express…

CAN go.

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Follow The Goa Express

FEATURE: Second Spin: Sophie Ellis-Bextor – Read My Lips

FEATURE:

 

 

Second Spin

Sophie Ellis-Bextor – Read My Lips

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THE year 2001…

 IN THIS PHOTO: Sophie Ellis-Bextor in 2018/PHOTO CREDIT: Simon Flamigni/Getty Images

was one where Pop and Dance music was still really strong. With terrific albums from Destiny’s Child, Gorillaz, and Basement Jaxx out that year, there was plenty of energy and dancefloor motivation. I am a fan of what Sophie Ellis-Bextor does and, if you need some motivation, then check out her Kitchen Discos. Her most-recent album, Familia, arrived in 2016 and it received some of the best reviews of her career. I am not sure whether there is a new studio album coming soon but, as she is bringing out her Songs from the Kitchen Disco album soon, I think there is that impetus and energy for new music. As 2020 saw quite a few Disco-infused albums, I would not be surprised to see Ellis-Bextor following the likes of Kylie Minogue and Dua Lipa in creating her own Disco smash! Although there is a lot of love out there for her, I think Ellis-Bextor’s albums have divided critics. Her 2001 debut, Read My Lips, is one such album. After the disbandment of the Britpop group Theaudience (in which she served as vocalist), she was signed to Polydor. Read My Lips combines 1980s Electronica and 1970s Disco. Maybe one of Read My Lips’ problems is that it is fairly top-heavy. Opening with the single, Take My Home (it is a cover of the Cher song with lyrics rewritten by Ellis-Bextor), we get this cool and slinky moment that perfectly introduces the album.

Take Me Home was a chart success, and I really like Ellis-Bextor’s vocal on it. Some have said that her voice contains little pizzaz and personality but, in actuality, one gets plenty of emotions and there is a lot to love. Move This Mountain, and Take Me Home are singles that also performed really well; they are great songs that can get you moving. Sophie Ellis-Bextor co-wrote every song on Read My Lips, and I feel that is important when it comes to conviction and her connecting with the words she is singing. Maybe there are few moments on Read My Lips that match her 2000 collaboration with Spiller, Groovejet (If This Ain’t Love), but there is a lot to like on the album – that track was included on the 2002 reissues of Read My Lips. I think a lot of critics dismissed the album too quickly and missed out on some clear highlights. Music Gets the Best of Me, and The Universe Is You are bangers (I am quoting and following the 2002 reissue of Read My Lips). The original U.K. version of 2001 contains ten tracks, and it features the fantastic Leave the Others Alone, and Believe - though I would recommend people check out the 2002 reissue. I shall try not to switch back between 2001 and 2002, but the original release is packed with life and quality!

Maybe the final track or two are not as strong as the first three or four cuts, but Read My Lips is a great listen that will bring you plenty of oomph and energy! Even with the reissue out, there has not been much appraisal. I recall hearing Read My Lips when it came out in 2001, and I found plenty to enjoy. There have been a few positive reviews, but many have been mixed. This is what entertainment.ie observed in their review:

Sophie Ellis-Bextor is currently being heavily promoted as Genuinely Posh Spice, a haughty English rose with an impeccably indie pedigree (she used to sing with theaudience) who now wants to be a proper pop star. Unfortunately, while she certainly looks the part, the material on her debut solo album only rarely does justice to her distinctive upper-crust voice. A mixture of 70s disco pop and moody 80s electronica, Read My Lips is certainly a polished package but most of the songs sound laboured and plod where they should swing. For now the verdict on Sophie Elllis-Bextor must be that the substance is still some way off the image”.

I would encourage critics and listeners to re-spin and spend some time with Read My Lips. The album reached number-two in the U.K., and it has since been certified double-platinum by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI). I think a few of the reviews were rather cold and cruel, so I reckon that now is a good time to check back on an album that turns twenty this year.

I will bring in a review that offers more positives. This is what Blue Coupe wrote in 2002:

Read My Lips is worth a second run just to hear the splendid electric guitar and superb vocals of "Murder On The Dance Floor." Easily one of the best tracks, this catchy hymn, featuring Guy Pratt on guitar, is a charming piece that hooks you in, and halfway through you'll be reaching for the repeat button before it ends. "Murder" is so spellbinding, it will have you murmuring: "DJ, gonna burn this goddamn house right down," next time you're strolling into a masquerade ball.

If you are a sucker for well-produced soft tunes, "Is It Any Wonder," is astounding. Luxuriate in the lucidity of Ellis Bextor's quaint voice by turning this one up when cruising along the coastline in your convertible. (And if you have neither convertible nor coastline, it can help you pretend.) The mellow beat and soft melody makes this poignant ballad a delight to listen to. This song, about the joy of finding a soul mate, is rumored to have Moby involved in its production. In fact, Ellis Bextor has been working with Moby on five other songs that were left off this album due to time constraints.

In brief, Sophie Ellis Bextor's Read My Lips is stylish pop that has a delightfully wayward appeal. It lands somewhere between Pet Shop Boys' synth-pop faculty and Blondie's Parallel Lines album. Giving Read My Lips a comparison to the timeless Parallel Lines is an overly bold statement, because Read My Lips is no classic, but it's important to mention because of Ellis Bextor's comparable vocal style and composition.

 Fans of "GrooveJet" should not expect much from this album, but it does deliver a dynamic electro disco sound that is sometimes analogous to her breakthrough-hit single.

There is pop music, and then there is "good" pop music. While Read My Lips is not brilliant, its urbane charm and infectious rhythms make this "good" pop music”.

If you get some time today, check out Sophie Ellis-Bextor’s impressive debut. Maybe she has released more rounded and consistent albums, but there are at least four or five huge songs on the album alongside a few other tracks which are really good. Read My Lips has plenty of cool and coo. There are these songs which put you in a better mood and provoke a lot of movement. I will be interested to see if Ellis-Bextor releases an album this year and does something akin to her what we heard in 2020 from the Disco queens. I am not sure whether she performs songs from Read My Lips when she tours and holds the songs in great affection. I have a lot of time for the album. It is one that got overlooked by some when it came out. I feel the 2002 reissue is a bit stronger but, looking at the 2001 original release, and it holds enough gold and interest to keep you listening. If you have not heard Read My Lips for a while or do not listen to Sophie Ellis-Bextor a lot, then I would adviser you spend a moment with a decent album and discover some of its fine moments. For those who have dismissed Read My Lips before, I would advise you…

GIVE it another try.

FEATURE: The Lockdown Playlist: Songs from Great Albums Turning Forty This Year

FEATURE:

 

 

The Lockdown Playlist

Songs from Great Albums Turning Forty This Year

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EVEN if 1981

is a little less packed with classic albums compared with 1971, 1991, 2001, and 2011, I think there were some really good albums released that year that are celebrating forty years in 2021. I think the 1980s sort of really got hot by the middle of the decade - but there were some treasures to be discovered early on. If you are a little unfamiliar with the sort of albums that were popular in 1981, then I think that this Lockdown Playlist will help out. There are some excellent cuts to be found so, without further ado…

GO and check them out.