FEATURE: Paul McCartney at Eighty: One: No More Silly Love Songs – The Best of Paul McCartney

FEATURE:

 

 

Paul McCartney at Eighty

PHOTO CREDIT: Mary McCartney 

One: No More Silly Love Songs – The Best of Paul McCartney

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I have set myself a bit of a challenge…

 IN THIS PHOTO: Paul McCartney with The Beatles/PHOTO CREDIT: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

ahead of Paul McCartney’s eightieth birthday on 18th June. As he is the greatest songwriter in the world and one of the most important human beings who has ever lived, I am keen to do forty features in the run-up to that date. Among them, I will explore various albums, aspects of his career and sides of his personality. Apart from spotlighting albums, I will do rankings features and a string of interviews with various people who will discuss their love of Paul McCartney and what his music means to them. On 18th June itself, I will end with a feature about what McCartney means to me. A huge fan of The Beatles, Wings and his solo work, it is almost too hard to put into words what he means to me! To get the ball rolling, I am starting more general with an ultimate Paul McCartney playlist split into two halves – a selection of his best tracks, from The Beatles’ 1963 debut album, Please Please Me, to his latest solo album, McCartney III (2020). Before that, I want to draw in AllMusic’s detailed biography of a music pioneer and peerless genius:

Out of all the former Beatles, Paul McCartney by far had the most successful solo career, maintaining a constant presence in the British and American charts during the 1970s and '80s. In America alone, he had nine number one singles and seven number one albums during the first 12 years of his solo career, and in his native United Kingdom, his record was nearly as impressive. McCartney's hot streak began in 1970, when he became the first Beatle to leave the group. A little more than a year after the Beatles' breakup, McCartney formed Wings with his wife Linda and Moody Blues guitarist Denny Laine, and the group remained active for the next ten years, racking up a string of hit albums, singles, and tours in the meantime. Wings disbanded in 1980, but McCartney stayed near the top of the charts over the next five years, thanks in part to a couple big duets with Michael Jackson. McCartney revived his solo career in 1989 via Flowers in the Dirt and its accompanying international tour, setting a template he would follow into the new millennium, when he'd support his records by playing concerts around the world. Between these massive endeavors, McCartney pursued other projects, including classical compositions, an electronica outfit with Youth called the Fireman, and overseeing archival projects such as the Beatles' Anthology series. As the 21st century rolled on, McCartney continued to take risks, including recording an album of standards from the Great American Songbook and collaborating with rapper Kanye West, proving that there was no area of popular music he couldn't touch.

Like John Lennon and George Harrison, McCartney began exploring creative avenues outside the Beatles during the late '60s, but where his bandmates released their own experimental records, McCartney confined himself to writing and producing for other artists, with the exception of his 1966 soundtrack to The Family Way. Following his marriage to Linda Eastman on March 12, 1969, McCartney began working at his home studio on his first solo album. He released McCartney in April 1970, two weeks before the Beatles' Let It Be was scheduled to hit the stores. Prior to the album's release, he'd announced that the Beatles were breaking up, against the wishes of the other members. As a result, the tensions between him and the other three members, particularly Harrison and Lennon, increased and he earned the ill will of many critics. Nevertheless, McCartney became a hit, spending three weeks at the top of the American charts. Early in 1971, he returned with "Another Day," which became his first hit single as a solo artist. It was followed several months later by Ram, another homemade collection, this time featuring the contributions of his wife, Linda.

By the end of 1971, the McCartneys had formed Wings, which was intended to be a full-fledged recording and touring band. Former Moody Blues guitarist Denny Laine and drummer Denny Seiwell became the group's other members, and Wings released their first album, Wild Life, in December 1971. Wild Life was greeted with poor reviews and was a relative flop. McCartney and Wings, which now featured former Grease Band guitarist Henry McCullough, spent 1972 as a working band, releasing three singles -- the protest "Give Ireland Back to the Irish," the reggae-fied "Mary Had a Little Lamb," and the rocking "Hi Hi Hi." Red Rose Speedway followed in the spring of 1973, and while it received weak reviews, it became his second American number one album. Later in 1973, Wings embarked on their first British tour, at the conclusion of which McCullough and Seiwell left the band. Prior to their departure, McCartney's theme to the James Bond movie Live and Let Die became a Top Ten hit in the U.S. and U.K. That summer, the remaining Wings proceeded to record a new album in Nigeria. Released late in 1973, Band on the Run was simultaneously McCartney's best-reviewed album and his most successful, spending four weeks at the top of the U.S. charts and eventually going triple-platinum.

Following the success of Band on the Run, McCartney formed a new version of Wings with guitarist Jimmy McCulloch and drummer Geoff Britton. The new lineup was showcased on the 1974 British single "Junior's Farm" and the 1975 hit album Venus and Mars. At the Speed of Sound followed in 1976; it was the first Wings record to feature songwriting contributions by the other bandmembers. Nevertheless, the album became a monster success on the basis of two McCartney songs, "Silly Love Songs" and "Let 'Em In." Wings supported the album with their first international tour, which broke many attendance records and was captured on the live triple-album Wings Over America (1976). After the tour was completed, Wings rested a bit during 1977, as McCartney released an instrumental version of Ram under the name Thrillington, and produced Denny Laine's solo album Holly Days. Later that year, Wings released "Mull of Kintyre," which became the biggest-selling British single of all time, selling over two million copies. Wings followed "Mull of Kintyre" with London Town in 1978, which became another platinum record. After its release, McCulloch left the band to join the re-formed Small Faces, and Wings released Back to the Egg in 1979. Though the record went platinum, it failed to produce any big hits. Early in 1980, McCartney was arrested for marijuana possession at the beginning of a Japanese tour; he was imprisoned for ten days and then released, without any charges being pressed.

Wings effectively broke up in the wake of McCartney's Japanese bust, although its official dissolution was not announced until April 27, 1981, when Denny Laine left the band. Back in England, McCartney recorded McCartney II, which was a one-man band effort like his solo debut. Ironically, the hit single associated with the album was a live take of the song "Coming Up" that had been recorded in Glasgow with Wings in December 1979 and was intended to be the B-side of the 45, with the solo studio recording as the A-side. DJs preferred the live version, however, and it went on to hit number one. Later in 1980, McCartney entered the studio with Beatles producer George Martin to make Tug of War.

Released in the spring of 1982, Tug of War received the best reviews of any McCartney record since Band on the Run and spawned the number one single with "Ebony and Ivory," a duet with Stevie Wonder that became McCartney's biggest American hit. In 1983, McCartney sang on "The Girl Is Mine," the first single from Michael Jackson's blockbuster album Thriller. In return, Jackson duetted with McCartney on "Say Say Say," the first single from McCartney's 1983 album Pipes of Peace and the last number one single of his career. The relationship between Jackson and McCartney soured considerably when Jackson bought the publishing rights to the Beatles' songs out from underneath McCartney in 1985.

McCartney directed his first feature film in 1984 with Give My Regards to Broad Street. While the soundtrack, which featured new songs and re-recorded Beatles tunes, was a hit, generating the hit single "No More Lonely Nights," the film was a flop, earning terrible reviews. The following year, he had his last American Top Ten with the theme to the Chevy Chase/Dan Aykroyd comedy Spies Like Us. Press to Play (1986) received some strong reviews but was another flop. In 1988, he recorded a collection of rock & roll oldies called Choba B CCCP for release in the U.S.S.R.; it was given official release in the U.S. and U.K. in 1991. For 1989's Flowers in the Dirt, McCartney co-wrote several songs with Elvis Costello; the pair also wrote songs for Costello's Spike, including the hit "Veronica." Flowers in the Dirt received the strongest reviews of any McCartney release since Tug of War, and was supported by an extensive international tour, which was captured on the live double-album Tripping the Live Fantastic (1990). For the tour, McCartney hired guitarist Robbie McIntosh and bassist Hamish Stuart, who would form the core of his band through the remainder of the '90s.

Early in 1991, McCartney released another live album in the form of Unplugged, which was taken from his appearance on MTV's acoustic concert program of the same name; it was the first Unplugged album to be released. Later that year, he unveiled Liverpool Oratorio, his first classical work. Another pop album, Off the Ground, followed in 1993, but failed to generate any big hits, despite McCartney's successful supporting tour. Following the completion of the New World tour, he released another live album, Paul Is Live, in December 1993. In 1994, he released an ambient techno album under the pseudonym the Fireman. McCartney premiered his second classical piece, The Leaf, early in 1995 and then began hosting a Westwood One radio series called Oobu Joobu. But his primary activity in 1995, as well as 1996, was the Beatles' Anthology, which encompassed a lengthy video documentary of the band and the multi-volume release of Beatles outtakes and rarities. After Anthology was completed, he released Flaming Pie in summer 1997. A low-key, largely acoustic affair that had some of the same charm of his debut, Flaming Pie was given the strongest reviews McCartney had received in years and was a modest commercial success, debuting at number two on the U.S. and U.K. charts; it was his highest American chart placing since he left the Beatles. Flaming Pie certainly benefited from the success of Anthology, as did McCartney himself -- only a few months before the release of the album in 1997, he received a Knighthood.

On April 17, 1998, Linda McCartney died after a three-year struggle with breast cancer. A grieving Paul kept a low profile in the months to follow, but finally returned in fall 1999 with Run Devil Run, a collection that primarily included cover songs. The electronica-based Liverpool Sound Collage followed a year later, and the pop album Driving Rain -- a successor, of sorts, to Flaming Pie -- came a year after that. The live album Back in the U.S. appeared in America in 2002 with the slightly different international edition, Back in the World, following soon after.

McCartney's next studio project included sessions with super-producer Nigel Godrich, the results of which appeared on the mellow Chaos and Creation in the Back Yard, released in late 2005. The album reached the Top Ten in more than a dozen countries, including the U.S. and U.K. McCartney performed every instrument (not including the strings) on 2007's David Kahne-produced Memory Almost Full, a bold but whimsical collection of new songs, some of which had been recorded before the Chaos and Creation in the Back Yard sessions. It too reached the Top Ten across the world. A live CD/DVD set, Good Evening New York City, appeared in 2009. The following year, McCartney kicked off an extensive reissue campaign with a box set of Band on the Run, and he supported the reissue with an American tour in the summer of 2011.

Later in 2011, McCartney released his first ballet, Ocean's Kingdom, and less than a year later followed with another first -- his first collection of pre-WWII standards. The latter work, titled Kisses on the Bottom, topped the U.S. jazz charts and reached the Top Five in seven different countries. His busy year continued during the summer, when he ended the opening ceremony of London's 2012 Olympics with a set that included a customary extended version of "Hey Jude." A surprising cap to 2012 came that December when he appeared on-stage with the surviving ex-members of Nirvana as part of a benefit concert for victims of Hurricane Sandy.

The year 2013 brought recording sessions with four of McCartney's favorite producers: Paul Epworth, Ethan Johns, Giles Martin, and Mark Ronson. His initial intention had been to hold trial sessions with each producer, aiming to select one of them to oversee the whole of his next album. However, each of them had a hand in producing New, his first album of original material in six years, which appeared that October. New debuted in the Top Ten in more than a dozen countries and McCartney supported the album over the next two years with a series of international tours. In 2015, he continued his ongoing Paul McCartney Archive Collection with deluxe reissues of Tug of War and Pipes of Peace. The next summer, he released Pure McCartney, a personally curated overview of his solo career available in two separate incarnations: a double-disc set and a four-disc box. Flowers in the Dirt arrived in early 2017 as part of the singer's Archive Collection. In September 2018, he delivered the Greg Kurstin-produced Egypt Station, his 17th solo album; it was preceded by the singles "I Don't Know," "Come on to Me," and "Fuh You." Egypt Station became McCartney's first number one album in the U.S. since Tug of War; in the U.K. it debuted at three.

A couple of non-LP tracks from the Egypt Station sessions appeared in 2019, then McCartney released an Archive edition of Flaming Pie in July 2020. The bigger news for 2020 was the recording and release of McCartney III, an album McCartney wrote and recorded on his own during the global lockdown of 2020. McCartney III appeared on December 18, 2020, giving McCartney his first number one album in the U.K. since Flowers in the Dirt; it debuted at two in the U.S. and spawned a 2021 album of "reinterpretations, remixes, and covers" called McCartney III Imagined”.

Ahead of Paul McCartney’s eightieth birthday, there will be features and planned celebrations. I am excited to see how the world marks the eightieth of a master. I wanted to do my bit and string features together that covers so many sides of McCartney. Starting off with some biography and a couple of playlists, I hope that the song selection below satisfies your hunger. From his wonderful work with The Beatles to his amazing (and sometimes divisive) solo work, these are the ultimate cuts from…

A songwriter with no equals.

FEATURE: A Great Array of Stunning Talent… The Great Escape 2022 Playlist

FEATURE:

 

 

A Great Array of Stunning Talent…

The Great Escape 2022 Playlist

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IT is the time of the year…

 IN THIS PHOTO: Baby Queen

when festivals start to announce their line-ups. Luckily, it seems like many are in a confident position to go ahead this year. One of the most interesting festivals is The Great Escape. Based in Brighton, its biggest strength is the bill. So much great new and rising talent sit alongside one another across so many different styles and scenes. This year’s announcement and line-up is among the most exciting and golden yet:

The Great Escape 2022 line up is getting bigger and better, with 100 artists added to the bill. Featuring some of the most exciting names in the world of new music, we’ll be joined in Brighton this May by the likes of Yard Act, Lola Young, The Amazons, Crawlers, Rebecca Black and more!

From the UK live return of American queer hyperpop artist Rebecca Black, to rock riffs and licks from Reading’s The Amazons, The Great Escape 2022 line-up champions upcoming talent from a wide variety of genres. Artists announced include Gen Z grunge pop singer Baby Queen, observational and acerbic post punk from Leeds’ Yard Act, post-punk poet Sinead O’Brien, TikTok star-turned-solo musician Abby Roberts, Scottish singer-songwriter Dylan Fraser, rising star Lola Young, American singer-songwriter Indigo De Souza, Liverpool alt rockers Crawlers, Irish rapper Malaki, Belfast post-punk rockers Enola Gay, folk-rock singer-songwriter Madison Cunningham and many many more incredible artists.

The Great Escape will make it’s long awaited return on May 11th – 14th. With more than 250 acts still to be announced, there’s much more to come for The Great Escape 2022.

3 days festival tickets are available now. Secure your spot with us this May by snapping up your tickets here!

See the full list of new line up additions below:

ABBY ROBERTS / ALEX AMOR / AZURE RYDER / BABY QUEEN / BAD WAITRESS / BALIMAYA PROJECT / BALMING TIGER / BANKS ARCADE / BLAIR DAVIE / BLEACH LAB /  BONNIE KEMPLAY / BRYAN’S MUSIC TEARS / BUDJERAH / CAT BURNS / CHRISTIAN LEE HUSTON / COACH PARTY / COCO AND THE LOST / CRAWLERS / DAMOS ROOM / DEAD PONY / DOWNTOWN KAYOTO / DYLAN FRASER / ELI SMART / ENGLISH TEACHER / ENOLA GAY / FITZROY HOLT / FRANKIE BEETLESTONE / GEN & THE DEGENERATES / GRACE CUMMINGS / GROVE / HMD / HONEYGLAZE / ILLUMINATI HOTTIES / INDIGO DE SOUZA/ IRIS GOLD / JOE & THE SHITBOYS / JOY ANONYMOUS / KATHLEEN FRANCES / KATHRYN JOSEPH / KATY J PEASON / KIDDUS / KINGS ELLIOT / KYNSY / L’OBJECTIF / LITTLE QUIRKS / LOCK-IN / LOKOY / LUCY GOOCH / LUCY MCWILLIAMS / MADI SASKIA /MADISON CUNNINGHAM / MALAKI /  MARGO CILKER / MARIA BC / MARK CAKE / MATTIEL / MEGAN WYN / MEMES / MICKEY CASLLISTO / MURMAN TSULADZE / NEONE THE WONDERER / NUTRIBE / ORIONS BELTE / PANIC SHACK / PHOEBE GREEN / PIRI & TOMMY VILLIERS / PIXEY / PLUMM / PORCHES / PORCHLIGHT / PORTRON PORTRON LOPEZ / POUTYFACE / PRIMA QUEEN / QUINZEQUINZE / REBECCA BLACK / ROLLA / SAD BOYS CLUB / SHAKIRA ALLEYNE / SINEAD O’BRIEN / SOFT CULT / SOFY / SPRINTS / SWIM SCHOOL / TAAHLIAH / TAMZENE / TEAM PICTURE / THE AMAZONS / THE BOBBY TENDERLOIN UNIVERSE / THE BYKER GROVE FAN CLUB / THE GOA EXPRESS / THE LET GO / THE SHAKES / THE VANNS / TOMMY LEFROY / ULTRA Q / VLURE / YARD ACT

You can see the full line up for The Great Escape 2022 so far here

Also announced today is The Road To The Great Escape. Join us in Glasgow and Dublin for a series of live music showcases in the lead up to the return of TGE in Brighton this May. Find out more about The Road To The Great Escape here”.

Because the names were announced today, this playlist is a song from those on the bill. If you are able to go along, you will be treated to so much terrific music! Not only are there are a few more established acts; there are some artists coming through that many might not have seen live or know too much about. The Great Escape is one of the U.K.’s best and most varied festivals. On the line-up this year are some…

 IN THIS PHOTO: Cat Burns

MAJOR artists of the future.

FEATURE: Spotlight: Mia Rodriguez

FEATURE:

 

 

Spotlight

 Mia Rodriguez

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MY next Spotlight feature will include a band…

but, on this outing, I wanted to focus on another great Pop artists who is primed for great things through this year. Mia Rodriguez is a Sydney-born nineteen-year-old who started her career posting covers and other content on TikTok. She started releasing music in 2019. The past year or so has seen quite a few young and original Pop artists break through. I think that Rodriguez is among the most promising and interesting. At the moment Rodriguez has released a series of singles. I think that we will see at least one E.P. this year. I have seen Rodriguez mentioned as one of the names to look out for this year. If you have not discovered her music yet, then have a look and listen. She is an artist that we will hear a lot more from in the years to come. I want to source a few interviews with the wonderful Australian artist. In June, Rolling Stone Australia spoke with Mia Rodriguez about her path into music. It is interesting reading how social media platforms, TikTok especially, has been responsible for Rodriguez becoming better known and getting her music to a massive audience:

The 18 year old from Western Sydney was a star in her own right before landing a record deal that now sees her represented by City Pop Records in Australia, and Atlantic Records globally. To her fiercely engaged TikTok army that’s surpassed two million, the teenager was just ‘Mia’ when she made her debut a few years ago.

Jumping on board back when TikTok was the App Formerly Known As Musical.ly, Rodriguez became part of a new generation of content creators who were producing material for an audience who remained hungry. Moreover, they were constantly switched on. There’s no better way to build and curry favour with a fanbase than by being hyper accessible, and it was online on this platform that Rodriguez found her tribe.

It wasn’t a smooth journey, though. Like many young people growing up in an, let’s be honest, unforgiving digital age, Rodriguez experienced a severe level of bullying through her childhood and teen years. The years where we’re supposed to be experimenting, discovering our identities and flourishing were, for Rodriguez, spent being mercilessly mocked and denigrated, just because she was different – proudly so.

Propelling herself from YouTube to TikTok, the momentum for Rodriguez as a creator and musician picked up swiftly. From the beginning, Rodriguez has been driven by a desire to inspire others; to influence others who may feel like outsiders to embrace their uniqueness.

Her music, blending pop and electronic vibes together seamlessly, fits under the umbrella artists like Billie Eilish made a global sensation over. Rodriguez’s vocals, flitting between coquettish and powerfully dynamic, reflect the empowered youth of today. They’re ready to rail against convention, but relish their journey of self-discovery at the same time.

With over 11 million streams on her single ‘Psycho’ alone, Rodriguez is still gearing up: we’re only just witnessing her ascent. Recently, her successes were acknowledged and celebrated at the Rolling Stone Awards where she was named Best New Artist. As the accolades and achievements continue to come in, Rodriguez is still mildly bemused that all of this is happening to her.

She owes her career to social media and TikTok, this she can admit, but of course – you’ve got to have the personality and core talent to flip streaming and follower success into an actual sustainable career. Rodriguez has already proven she’s got what it takes to take this thing a long way.

“[When] I started putting covers out there, I was like, ‘This could get me somewhere because I really love to sing, and I’d really like to do that as my career’. I was so fortunate to have been found and then signed by City Pop Records, which is crazy. I did not expect it to happen that fast. And then I got signed to Atlantic Records, which is also really insane.”

“It’s been so much fun, I’ve had so many opportunities. I’d had the chance to move out…growing up, my family didn’t have much money at all, so moving out at 18 was super huge to me. Being able to support myself was also crazy, just off of expressing myself”.

One of the biggest Pop singles of last year came in the form of Billion Dollar Birch. With its evocative and striking music video, it is the most confident release so far from Mia Rodriguez. I am going to bring in other interviews around the release of that track. Women in Pop featured Rodriguez back in September. They asked about music during her childhood, in addition to her thoughts on gender inequality in the industry:

And what steps did you take to get to that break through moment - was a music career always on the cards for you or did it develop more spontaneously?

I actually worked my way up from starting on TikTok, when it was called Musical.ly at the time. It was way before the TikTok hype and I was bored… it was 2018 and the app was dead at the time so I made a couple videos hoping no one would see them ha ha. But my account pretty much exploded. I enjoyed singing too so I sung covers here and there, and boom! Record labels came swarming in, it all happened really fast and I’m still processing it.

What role did music play in your childhood, and who were your favourite artists growing up?

I absolutely loved to sing, and I’ve always had a thing for it. I was a very shy kid so I never sung in front of anyone. I would come home from school and sing karaoke before my mum got home from work! I was always peeping out the window. My favourite artists as a kid were actually stars from the Nickelodeon show Victorious, that’s where it all started for me!

The world is very slowly opening up again after the pandemic, from a creative point of view what are you looking forward to doing as we get more freedoms?

Oh my god, it makes me so excited knowing that I can finally live my life as an adult. I turned 18 and moved out into my own place during this whole pandemic, and I have never experienced the freedom of living! I’m honestly looking forward to do anything, even just seeing my friends. But especially international travel. I’m planning to go to LA soon.

The music industry has traditionally been a difficult space for women to exist in due to it being run by older, straight, white men for decades. What are your thoughts on gender equality and sexism in music?

Wow, honestly this question made me realise it was normal. I just thought I kept getting unlucky ha ha. Because of covid, I haven’t had the chance to talk to many artists at all. I’ve kinda just been rolling with everything. It is really challenging working and being surrounded with men in my field of work. I started my career in the music industry when I was a 17 year old girl, I grew up without much of a male figure in my life too. So it can be really scary. Especially because I feel misunderstood a lot of the time. I try to communicate more to women as much as possible!

What else is on the horizon for for Mia Rodriguez?

I have recently made an ultimate game plan with my team, and I’m going to release quite a lot of music very soon - with music videos - so I’m really excited for that!”.

There are a couple of other interviews that I am eager to share. In this interview, Rodriguez talks more about Billion Dollar Bitch, alongside why her discovery and success through TikTok was fortuitous and a blessing:  

Billion Dollar Bitch” comes after the TikTok trailblazer’s official signing with Atlantic Records and the success of her song “Psycho,” reaching over 9.7 million global streams. Recently named “Best New Artist” at the inaugural edition of The Sailor Jerry Rolling Stone Australia Awards, Mia Rodriguez creates quirky dark-pop that spans the divide between alternative indie and melodic mainstream styles. Inspired by a wide range of musical approaches, from K-pop to hip-hop, the 18-year-old Sydney-based singer-songwriter-musician began posting inventive videos on TikTok, quickly building a fervent fan following now exceeding two million.

Signed as the first artist to the new City Pop Records label (co-founded by legendary Australian concert promoter Michael Chugg and his business partner Andrew Stone), Rodriguez unveiled her captivating debut single, “Emotion,” in late 2019 alongside an official music video streaming now at YouTube HERE. “Psycho” followed and immediately catapulted Rodriguez to the forefront of Australia’s contemporary pop scene. A third single, “Beautiful & Bittersweet” – like both “Emotion” and “Psycho,” – dropped alongside an official video streaming now at Rodriguez’s popular YouTube channel HERE.

Among the many accolades accrued by Rodriguez in just one short year include being named by Australia’s national radio station as a “triple j Unearthed Feature Artist” as well as a prestigious “Unearthed Artist of the Year” nomination at the Australian Broadcasting Company’s annual J Awards. Rodriguez recently offered a spectacular rendition of Rex Orange County’s “Corduroy Dreams” as part of triple j’s famed “Like A Version” series, streaming HERE; the session also featured a unique live take on “Psycho,” streaming HERE.

o    You are rising in the industry as someone who blends between different genres, such as K-Pop, hip hop, pop and more things on the alternative: what are some influences and life experiences that inspired this sound?

I absolutely love anything that gives me goose bumps. Heavy sub bass, meaningful lyrics that hype me up, songs that just make you feel different. I really wanted to incorporate that into Billion Dollar Bitch, I wanted to share the adrenaline! The bass is absolutely booming in that song.

o    What got you started in the TikTok world? Tell us about the process behind your content and creation.

I downloaded it when it was called Musical.ly at the time, and the app was really dead. I downloaded it for fun and I didn’t think anyone was on it anymore. And then BAM, 100 followers a week turned into 100 thousand. I didn’t think I was that funny honestly, I was just really bored! But people liked it so I kept going. I’m just so glad I started at the beginning of the whole new TikTok wave. That was such a lucky mistake.

o    How has the pandemic affected your creative process as a musician?

Even though it ripped out my chances of performing live and touring, I’m actually pretty grateful for it. It gave me a chance to perform i front of cameras first, where I could just do over and over again until I got it right. It really helped my confidence for the days I actually do start performing live more.

o    You are about to release your latest single, “Billion Dollar Bitch.” Could you tell us a bit about the creative process behind it?

I wanted a song the gals and gays could dance to (and everyone else of course, I don’t judge). So I turned up the bass, called myself a Billion Dollar Bitch, and got my bad bitch Yung Baby Tate to rap on the track. The music video is also super weird, I can’t wait for people to see it. Surgeons pulling jewellery out of my stomach can get pretty wild.

o    How will this single influence the messages in your music in the future? When people listen to your music, what messages do you want to tell your audience, especially in this upcoming project?

I want to show people that you can achieve anything with confidence. I’ve heard so many people doubting themselves saying “I want to do acting, but I’m scared and I’m not good enough blah blah”. I pushed to get to where I am. I’ve went through bullying, rejection, being extremely shy, my parents separating, abusive relationships, living poor, dealing with panic disorder and undiagnosed ADHD my whole life until now. I want to let everyone know that life is short so act like a Billion Dollar bitch until you feel like one”.

PHOTO CREDIT: Billy Zammit

The final interview from last year that I want to source is from The Guardian. Even though Mia Rodriguez is an Australian artist, she has a definite fanbase in the U.K. I wanted to highlight this interview, as she discussed her pandemic routine, and how she feels about her generation being viewed lazy and Internet-obsessed:

Despite beckoning stardom, Rodriguez’s typical day now involves waking up at 2pm, responding to fans on social media, playing simulation games like The Sims or Stardew Valley, chatting with friends on Discord, and crashing at 4am. Occasionally she’ll work in the studio, or perform to a small Twitch audience, but essentially she’s wallowing in the same developmental ennui as young people everywhere.

“It’s like being a teenager in an adult’s body. The whole world has been put on pause and you’re kind of just wasting away your adolescence.”

People who experienced pre-pandemic adulthood have been longing for old joys like travel, nights out and surprise encounters. But Rodriguez and her peers have had a profoundly different experience – their entire adulthoods have been shadowed by pandemic restrictions, leaving them dreaming of lives unlived.

She feels her generation is unfairly accused of laziness: simultaneously chastised for a preoccupation with life online, while being told not to take that same technology for granted.

“We don’t really have a choice – we’ve grown up with social media,” she says. “I feel older people are just like: ‘they’re complaining, they have it all, they have all this technology to keep them company’… [but] we’re doing it constantly, every day, and we can’t escape.”

So music remains her outlet. Her new video for Billion Dollar Bitch (co-written with Mad at Disney singer Salem Ilese) continues her established persona – a kind of deranged innocence on a Halloween-high, gulping down bling in place of sweets. US rapper Yung Baby Tate drops bars, while Rodriguez sings playful, self-affirming lyrics over bass and skittering snares.

“I wanted to feel like a Billion Dollar Bitch. I needed a song that can hype me and my fans up and just bring more confidence out into the world,” says Rodriguez. “I wanted to bring a really bad bitch energy to this shitty, sick world right now”.

An artist who is getting better and more memorable with every song she delivers, Mia Rodriguez is definitely someone to watch closely. I hope that she is able to perform internationally at some point this year. There will be questions as to whether we will get an E.P. soon. I suspect that she is quite keen to get one out there. With songs like Billion Dollar Bitch and Psycho out in the world, here is an artist who…

MEANS serious business.

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FEATURE: The Return of the Black Eyed Boy: Texas’ White on Blonde at Twenty-Five

FEATURE:

 

 

The Return of the Black Eyed Boy

Texas’ White on Blonde at Twenty-Five

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THIS will be a lot shorter…

than any other album anniversary feature, as there is not a great deal online regarding Texas’ fourth studio album, White on Blonde. The Glasgow band, I feel, reached a commercial and creative peak on White on Blonde. Released on 3rd February, 1997, it is hard to think that the album is twenty-five very soon! It was one of those albums I remember buying when I was a teenager. Led by the captivating and hugely powerful presence of Sharleen Spiteri, the band  (Ally McErlaine – guitar, Johnny McElhone – bass guitar, Eddie Campbell – keyboards, vocals, and Richard Hynd – drums) are so strong and connected throughout. Singles like Say What You Want and Black Eyed Boy are among the most notable and memorable of the 1990s. Though Texas’ fifth album, The Hush (1999), was another cracker, I think their finest work is White on Blonde. A chart success around the world, it would be interesting to find more interviews and archive reviews from 1997. I know that there was a lot of praise for White on Blonde at the time. On its twenty-fifth anniversary, I hope that the band are able to look back fondly on an incredible album. Prior to continuing on, this Wikipedia article gives us some idea of the success that was afforded to White on Blonde:

The album includes five UK Top Ten singles: "Say What You Want" (UK No. 3), "Halo" (UK No. 10), "Black Eyed Boy" (UK No. 5), "Put Your Arms Around Me" (UK No. 10) and "Insane" (UK No. 4), the latter released as a double A-sided single with "Say What You Want (All Day, Every Day)", a new version of the 1997 hit featuring additional rap vocals by the Wu-Tang Clan.

White on Blonde has been certified 6x Platinum in the UK, which indicates sales of over 1.8 million copies in that territory. The album was also a major success in various European countries, such as France where it peaked at #2 on the French Album Charts. The album was produced by the band themselves, along with Mike Hedges and former Eurythmics star Dave Stewart.

Honours

White on Blonde has received many honours since its release in 1997. It was voted the 86th greatest album of all time by Q magazine readers in 1998. The album is also ranked #34 in Q's "Best 50 Albums of Q's Lifetime," included in Q magazine's "90 Best Albums of the 1990s," and included in Q magazine's "50 Best Albums of 1997."

White on Blonde became the first Texas album to top the UK Album Charts and is one of only two Texas albums (along with The Greatest Hits) to be certified 6x Platinum in the United Kingdom.

In 2010, White on Blonde was nominated in the BRIT Awards Best Album in the past 25 years.

On the other hand, White on Blonde was voted the worst Scottish album ever in a 2007 online poll of music fans”.

Some say 1997 was the best year ever for British music. There is some truth in that. With classic albums from Blur (Blur) and Radiohead (OK Computer) coming later in the year, there was definitely some massive movement and wave of timeless albums. Not similar to Britpop at the time or the likes of Blur and Radiohead, Texas created their own sound and niche. White on Blonde is a definitely classic that is packed with tracks that will be played for years. Alongside the singles are terrific deep cuts such as White on Blonde (the album and its title cut are a nod to Bob Dylan’s Blonde on Blonde) and Ticket to Lie (I suspect, a nod to The Beatles’ Ticket to Ride). Prior to rounding off and saluting a brilliant album that saw Texas ascend to new heights of acclaim and success, this article from last year discussed Texas’ commercial comeback with White on Blonde:  

The 2017 release of Jump On Board, the ninth studio album by Texas, continued the long-running adventures of the Scottish pop-rock band. One of the most memorable occurred on February 15, 1997, when they went to the top of the UK album chart for the first time, with White On Blonde.

It had been a long road to the summit for the band fronted by Sharleen Spiteri, coming nearly eight years since their first album chart appearance in the UK with Southside, in 1989. It was also a dramatic comeback in commercial terms. That debut album, which reached No.3, contained the No.8 hit single “I Don’t Want A Lover,” but ten subsequent chart singles had all peaked below the Top 10, as did the albums Mothers Heaven and Ricks Road. So the stakes were high for White On Blonde, and Texas delivered – to the tune of six-times platinum.

The album got off to a hot start early in the new year of 1997 when “Say What You Want” became a No.3 smash, still the biggest of the band’s career. That created the momentum for the album to crash into the chart at No.1, where it spent a week, returning to the top for another week in August, by which time it had two more top ten hits on it, in “Halo” and “Black Eyed Boy.”

They were far from done even then, as the album was certified for UK shipments alone of 1.8 million copies (it was also platinum in France and Switzerland) and ended with an extraordinary tally of five Top 10 singles. “Put Your Arms Around Me” and “Insane” both made that grade, the latter accompanied by a remix of the initial hit, now renamed “Say What You Want (All Day Every Day).”

“It’s our time now,” Spiteri proudly told Q magazine in the summer of 1997. “When our first album, Southside came out, the record company said, ‘She’s the girl, let’s plaster her face everywhere.’ I wasn’t ready. Now it’s not their decision, and I am ready. We all knew we couldn’t just go to the studio and say ‘Here we go again.’ I never gave up, because I knew we could make a great record”.

One of those albums that everyone knows about and can connect with the songs, I am glad that Texas are still going. They have released great albums since 1997, though I think White on Blonde is their crowning achievement. The band are terrific throughout White on Blonde, though I keep coming back to Sharleen Spiteri and her stunning voice. One of the very best band leaders I have heard, I wanted to mark the upcoming anniversary of Texas’ wonderful fourth studio album. I listen to White on Blonde quite a bit, and it still sounds essential, fresh and highly nuanced…

AFTER twenty-five years.

FEATURE: Revisiting… Kinlaw – The Tipping Scale

FEATURE:

Revisiting…

Kinlaw – The Tipping Scale

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THIS feature…

is normally about albums from the last few years that are either underrated or have not been played a lot recently. For the next few parts, I am looking back at albums from last year that some missed out on and were not reviewed widely. Not on everyone’s radar was the debut album from Kinlaw. The Tipping Scale was released back in February. Available on vinyl, this is how Rough Trade describe an exceptional album from a very compelling artist:

Recommended If You Like: Choir Boy, Jenny Hval, Kate Bush, Boy Harsher, Caroline Polachek, Black Marble, Julia Holter, Grouper, Pop. The Tipping Scale is the definition of dark pop - it’s an epiphany in a public space and an unraveling on the dance floor. Kinlaw’s unstoppable singing will guide you through an introspective and very strange dance party, complete with synths, whispers, and high energy beats. A deafening debut, these are songs to move your body to.

Kinlaw is a smart, conceptual writer, one not afraid to explore deep emotions like loss, regret, and confusion. She explains that The Tipping Scale is an ideal metaphor for the record, the idea of an ever-present slipping in and out of change and acceptance. Kinlaw is a composer, choreographer, and artist focusing on empathic potential and agency developed by performance through audio, dance, and sculptural installation. Known for solo works and productions, she studies themes of power, memory, trauma, and connection. Her performances have been featured in institutions like MoMA and MoMA PS1”.

The Tipping Scale is an album that I only found a few weeks back. I have been listening to it since. I have been struck by the power of her voice, in addition to the incredible music videos. Prior to coming to a couple of reviews for The Tipping Scale, I want to bring in a review from November 2020. Them. introduced us to a the queer performance artist who was brewing and building this amazing album - one that a lot more people should be conscious of:

The North Carolina-born artist is upbeat, even, as she tells the story of how it happened: While having a “confident morning” over at her sister’s studio in Bushwick, she picked up a Roomba (one of those robot vacuums) the wrong way and dropped it on her foot. She pantomimes the whole incident with her slender fingers, which flit gracefully through the air throughout our entire conversation as an instinctual part of the way she communicates. “This is not a big deal, it will heal,” she tells them. “If I have the chance — while it’s healing and getting stronger — to work with what I have, I will do that, because that's what I've always done.”

Rising out of disaster and trauma also happens to be the focus of Kinlaw’s new music video for her single “Permissions,” taken from her forthcoming debut solo album The Tipping Scale, out January 22 via Bayonet. The visual, directed by close collaborator Kathleen Dycaico, sees Kinlaw emerging bloody and bruised from a devastating car crash. While she tries to regain composure, a few people descend upon the scene to dance and take pictures. One couple begins kissing right next to the wreckage, while a news anchor grabs Kinlaw to ask her what happened, although she’s visibly dazed.

What was the start of your artistic journey? Where were you physically? What inspired you?

I'm gonna bring it way back to seven years old. I had been singing privately, and I don't really think anyone from my family knew that I sang yet. My aunt brought me to sing for a musical, Charlie Brown. I think I was auditioning as Snoopy, because I was so small. I started singing, and I distinctly remember my aunt turned around and her eyes were all big. The pianist turned around and their eyes were big. I was just like, “Damn, they're really listening.” I talked earlier about communication and exchange, and songs being kind of like a bridge, that connection with others. So I'd say it started the first moment I saw someone pay attention.

How do you think your queer identity informs your work?

Well, it both builds my heart and breaks it every day. It does. What growing and maturing does for some of us is, we start to feel like there is no separation between queer identity and just identity. For me, when that bonds together, you get in a place where you can really honor yourself and your needs. I don't feel like I need to separate it.

What advice would you give to people who might want to use movement in order to cope with the stress of the world today?

First of all, I’m no doctor. Yeah, not a doctor yet. But we really can regulate our own physiology, by the way that we move. To move through this great time of despair and difficulty with COVID, with Trump, with the things that come to us in the daily... The way I see it, the best way that we can work through this and with it is through reactivation of our bodies. We do that by letting ourselves move around, vocalize, and speak. Empower yourself through movement and surround yourself with a community of people who believe in curiosity and who believe in empowering you”.

I am including quite a few words when it comes to Kinlaw and The Tipping Scale. It is a fantastic release that ranks alongside the most underrated of last year. Although not every review was glowing, there were a lot of positives from critics. This is an album that needs several listens so you can absorb it. Audiofemme gave their thoughts about The Tipping Scale in February:

As an artist whose primary medium is choreography, it comes as no surprise that Kinlaw’s process for writing this record was anything but orthodox, beginning with mere movement. “Years ago, working with a band, [songwriting] would start with someone having an idea and then suddenly there’d be a lot of sound, and quite a lot of noise, and then [we’d] kind of shape it down,” she explains. Their songwriting process as a solo artist happens nearly in reverse. “The entry point for a lot of these is really super quiet,” they explain. “I would start with a gesture, and let it build until a memory attached itself to it.” Different gestures intuit different sounds, associating smoother gestures with vowel sounds and those that were more “crinkled and quick” with consonants. “It’s all just a huge trip but it works for me,” she says. “It makes it so I don’t feel intimidated by the songwriting process. It makes it so that I feel like I’m making material that feels of the moment to me.”

The depth of The Tipping Scale is such that it’s difficult to articulate in words; Kinlaw refers to it as “an introspective and very strange dance party.” Wrapped in pop music that is both accessible but somehow wholly original, it combines lyrics deeply personal to Kinlaw with universal themes like loss, regret, identity, and more than anything else, change. The title itself is a metaphor for change, the idea of an ever-present slipping in and out of change, and the acceptance of it, what they describe as a constant “pull-tug” between past and present versions of ourselves. The songs are fluid, ripe with meaning never meant to sit stagnant, but rather to evolve with the listener and their environment.

For instance, Kinlaw says, “What I might have written ‘Blindspot’ about initially, is not always what it’s going to continue to be.” The video for this track was directed by her dear friend Kathleen Dycaico, who provided a mirror to reflect these ever-changing meanings. “I think working with Kathleen was a really really great thing for me, because I’m able to see that the relationships I have with other people so often parallel the ones I have with myself,” Kinlaw says. “And so even the difficulties or the grief, or the loss or the frustrations I have with things, relationships that have died, I can see them mirrored so clearly in so many things I experience on my own, with myself.”

Change is a strong theme on the album, but also configured heavily into how Kinlaw has released and promoted it; the events of the past year altered their intentions regarding The Tipping Scale. She began filming the visual component as an alternative to the live performance it was supposed to be, and the realization that a performance would not happen as soon as she had hoped. “People who were part of the developmental phases, I told them the album was a script. And that really for me, the reason I was doing it was so I could create a live show in accordance with the script,” she explains. “So for me to make a record was a really exciting thing because, like, how fabulous to have a new starting point to spend a lot of time and consideration on these songs and to allow them to have another phase, like when you do the performance.”

While I have no doubt that whatever live performance Kinlaw would have crafted (and will certainly craft, once we’re allowed live performance again) would have been powerful in its own right, I would argue that the transition to produced videos has opened up a previously unimaginable realm of possibilities for these songs. The medium provides her a vehicle to really delve into the meaning of change, the different characters she portrays and the different worlds she inhabits. Like Kinlaw says, “Music videos are great – you could do anything in three to four minutes. Whatever world you say, then that’s the way it’s gonna be.”

As a visual metaphor, hair factors strongly into these videos, changing from track to track and sometimes in the middle of the video. In “Permissions,” they crawl from a wrecked vehicle in a choppy red wig. In “Blindspot,” she and her childish counterpart begin with sleek ponytails before they take turns chopping at each other’s thick blonde braids, until Kinlaw emerges with her hair curled. In “Haircut,” her hair remains natural, but they articulate this sentiment in lyrics: “There’s a rule/That when you cut off your hair/You let the old things go.”

The strong imagery resonates with anyone who ever got a new haircut in the midst of a bad break-up, or hacked some ill-advised bangs with a pair of craft scissors on some uneventful childhood afternoon. “I think it brings to mind a lot of the symbolic ways that we try to cope as people, and it’s been interesting, since writing [‘Haircut’] and talking about it with some folks,” they say. “It’s been really interesting to see people be like, ‘Oh yeah, I totally get it,’ and they’ll tell me a story: ‘Oh I chopped off my hair that one time in like 2005, I was so upset’… I guess it’s just like identity, and an extension of, and memories. I’m also really quite stubborn with my hair, like I refuse to cut it for long stretches of time.” This last statement is thick with irony, given the artist’s dynamism and penchant for constant reinvention.

Reinvention can surely be at least partially attributed to Kinlaw’s commitment to a rigid therapy practice. I felt it reductive to ask an artist of Kinlaw’s caliber who her sonic influences were in the creation of The Tipping Scale, and I told her so when I asked, to which they unsurprisingly responded, “I can honestly say I don’t [have any].” Rather, warning that what she would say might be construed as “cheeseball,” she listed therapy as their greatest influence in the writing of this album, particularly EMDR therapy, which utilizes binaural sounds to create a pattern of eye movements and from that, spawn memories. “That, to me, is what spawns storytelling,” they say, “understanding firsthand what the crazy connection is between a body and your thoughts, and sound, and how sound influences your body.”

Pop music can be its own kind of therapy, a means of transporting oneself across energy levels and moods, something anyone who has ever turned on Top 40 radio to dance away the blues knows well. Describing pop music as a “raft boat,” Kinlaw explains, “I purposefully chose pop music because I wanted to feel like I could move, dance, party forward into the next chapter of my life. The juxtaposition of having these confessional songs paired with pop sounds was a really strange space that I wanted to learn more about.” But did the process of setting traumatic memories to music designed to lift the mood provide therapeutic relief for the artist? “I don’t know, but it’s like I wanted to float these songs on the lens of pop because I hope it will make me feel better,” they say. “Talk to me in a year and I’ll tell you if this worked out for me or not”.

The reviews that are out there for The Tipping Scale are appropriately long and deep. It shows that those who listened have really connected with the music! I think it is an album that deserves more airplay and focus this year. Pitchfork provided their impressions on Kinlaw’s impressive debut album:

A crucial bit of Sarah Kinlaw biography is that she’s a choreographer with an operatically trained voice. She’s become a fixture of the Brooklyn art scene; her best-known project to date is Authority Figure, an interactive dance-performance piece co-created with Monica Mirabile (of experimental dance duo FlucT with Sigrid Lauren), which cemented her as somewhat of a luminary in the milieu. Kinlaw exercised her vocals and songwriting in an art-pop band she had for many years called SOFTSPOT, with Bambara’s Blaze Bateh and Bryan Keller Jr. But when the small experimental tape label Soap Library released her 2017 debut EP as Kinlaw, a trigger for every body—which came with a lemon-jasmine aromatherapy sniffer—it was clear she was much more striking as a solo performer, her sound somewhere between Jenny Hval, FKA twigs, and Cate le Bon.

On Kinlaw’s debut album, The Tipping Scale, she’s incorporated all this experience. As any artist deeply in tune with their body, she’s clearly aware of the ways in which sound has a physical effect, as well as the many sounds our corporeal selves can produce. Kinlaw has a keen ear for texture, which grounds this record. And along with all the humming synths and stuttering beats, she stretches her vocals to great impact.

The way she refers to the creation of this record is almost philosophical: she speaks of vowels and consonants the same way she does melodies and key changes, and calls the making of The Tipping Scale a construction of gestures. She turned the writing of “Permissions” into a “game,” only allowing herself to work on it while she was physically moving: every lyric and melody written “on a bus, in the back of a car, on a plane...while walking or running.” In the song’s excellent video, directed by longtime collaborator and fellow dancer Kathleen Dycaico, she crawls from the wreck of an overturned car and bounds down the middle of the street, as though reclaiming her body, her story, her right to shift and change. This is what The Tipping Scale is about.

If The Tipping Scale is constructed of gestures, shaped and honed from spurts of sound, then it makes sense to think of it as choreography, architecture, and story, all at once. Each song feels like a room on wheels, especially “Haircut” and “Home,” the album’s softest moments, with twinkles, sighs, and echoes giving them a chamber-like quality. “Home is where we put things together,” sings Kinlaw on the latter. The concept of storytelling through the body is key. It is only through memory—intrinsically attached to bodily experience—that one can form a narrative of self. As she intones on “Oleander,” a feathery-crunchy choice cut, “This episode is a new memory collection/A tapestry/The lines weave in and through me/Remembering the time in my house.” She’s on par with Austra, a like-minded operatic synth whiz. It feels like the record’s core, especially when Kinlaw says: “I feel like I’ve got five bodies in mine.” That sense of self is in constant flux, and that’s a beautiful thing”.

A gem from 2021 that did not get as much spotlight and column inches as it deserved, I would encourage anyone to listen to the album – as it is such a moving experience. An artist who is going to put out a lot more music (I predict), I really love Kinlaw’s The Tipping Scale. It is an album that is…

UNDENIABLY incredible.

FEATURE: Will You Never Be Mine? Kate Bush and the Divide Between the U.K. and U.S. in Terms of Perception and Reputation

FEATURE:

 

 

Will You Never Be Mine?

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush performing Wow 

Kate Bush and the Divide Between the U.K. and U.S. in Terms of Perception and Reputation

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A subject I have covered a few times before…

 IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in a promo photo taken during a visit to Holland in spring 1978

is how Kate Bush is received in America compared to the rest of the world. A new podcast from National Review in America is, in their own words, a chance for U.S. audiences to reappraise Kate Bush. How much is known about her there in 2022? Whilst she has a lot of American fans, do artists there follow Bush and carry her D.N.A. like they do here? I do feel that, in terms of population size, far fewer Americans know about Bush’s work. She is almost a national treasure and institute here in Britain. Before exploring this point more, here is some detail about a podcast episode that was released earlier in the month:

Introducing the Band:

Your hosts Scot Bertram (@ScotBertram) and Jeff Blehar (@EsotericCD) are joined by Andrew Prokop. Andrew is Senior Politics Correspondent for Vox, and you can find his work here. Follow him on Twitter at @awprokop.

Andrew’s Music Pick: Kate Bush

Who? Unless you’re an art-rocker, Englishman, or Lisa Simpsonesque girl-poet-dreamer, the name “Kate Bush” quite likely means nothing to you. Bush is something close to a beloved institution in the United Kingdom, where she has grown up in public to become the nation’s officially designated Eccentric Bookish Aunt, but in the United States she is almost a pure cipher outside of music fanatics, a weird lady with a flute-like voice who occasionally shows up on ’80s-era Peter Gabriel singles.

Well get ready for a massive course-correction then, because this is an episode of Political Beats that has been brewing since the day the show began. And it doesn’t take a psychic to figure out which of your hosts has been quietly lying in wait, ready to explain the deeply committed art-rock genius of Kate Bush to you for four years now. Bush began her career as a downright creepily preternatural child prodigy (she was writing at age ten, recording by age 13, professionally recording at age 15, and released her debut LP at age 18), swiftly gathered up complete creative control into her hands, and went to work from 1980 onwards shaping a career that stands for so many things, but perhaps most of all for the miraculous idea that gallery/exhibition-level art and “pop music” can still coexist within the same skin without shedding representation altogether. Instrumentally, this is piano-based music, but the real instrument here is the Fairlight CMI, a synthesizer program set that allowed her to retreat into near-complete isolation and play every single note of any instrument herself; Bush, more than nearly any other rock or pop artist with mainstream success during the 1980s, is the sound of Virginia Woolf’s A Room Of One’s Own made good.

Ah, but it’s not just about art! It’s about love and beauty! Bush balanced all of her arty instincts with an achingly pure lyrical vision that magpied from every influence imaginable to take form in her own unique style: a literary fascination with artifice — with the self-construction that knowledge and imposture makes possible — combined with an elementally deeply fascination with men and the inscrutable mysteries of masculine anxieties, ambitions, and inchoate needs.

So here we go! It’s coming for us through the trees! Take your shoes off, throw them in the lake, click play, and before you’re 20 minutes in, hopefully you’ll be two steps on the water as well”.

I have written about America’s view of Kate Bush. I drew articles where it was noted that, as Tori Amos arrived in the 1990s and sounded a lot like Bush, the originator was not taken to heart. In 1978, when Wuthering Heights was released, it did nothing in America. There have only been a few albums and singles that have made any impact there. Hounds of Love (1985) as a commercial success, as was The Red Shoes (1993) and Aerial (2005). I don’t think America struggles to embrace anything quintessentially English or eccentric. They have adopted a lot of experimental music and Art-Rock that owes a debt to Kate Bush. Modern U.S. artists like St. Vincent definitely can be compared with Bush. Not only did I want to mention that recent podcast episode – as not many Kate Bush podcast episodes are out there -, but it does seem that there is this vacuum in the U.S. Although Bush did visit America at times through her career, she did not tour there or try to crack the country. I look on social media, and there is a lot of love from America. One of the biggest mysteries is why there is not more knowledge of Bush’s music across the American media and radio stations. The fact that National Review mention how Bush is seen as a bit of an oddity of side-act makes me think what can be done to correct that.

Podcasts are a positive and productive way to make sure that listeners know more about an artist who, in the U.K., is a massive success and is considered to be one of our best artists ever. I don’t think it is the case that, as Bush was born in the U.K., we understand her better than anyone else. America has always been a fan of British music, but there is something about Kate Bush that means she has taken longer to embed. If her ten studio albums were not huge chart successes or celebrated a tonne upon release, now is the time to think twice! Although one can hear some brand-new artists in America who are inspired by Kate Bush, there are far fewer than in the U.K. I think. I do wonder whether record shops stock her albums; whether stations play a lot of her music. One cannot imagine many deep cuts cropping up on American radio! Whilst I cannot really understand why there is not as great an understanding of Kate Bush in America as there should be, I feel the solution going forward is more exposure and re-investigation. We are long-overdue a documentary and I think, if produced by Netflix or Apple+, it would reach a lot of new fans and ears in America. There is a hangover from past years where people perceive Bush as odd; her music being strange and inaccessible. We are, perhaps, more cultured and less judgemental here. The truth is that Bush’s music is so varied, it is impossible to label it or define so easily. Nearly forty-five years since Kate Bush’s debut album came out, the U.S. does seem to be lagging behind a lot of the rest of the world when it comes to appreciation and mass digestion of all of her albums. I hope that, with people out there trying to change attitudes, we see the music and genius of Kate Bush earning…

A bigger profile in America.

FEATURE: The Act You've Known for All These Years… Fifty-Five Years Since the Recording of The Beatles’ Track, Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band

FEATURE:

 

 

The Act You've Known for All These Years…

IN THIS PHOTO: The Beatles in 1967/PHOTO CREDIT: David Magnus 

Fifty-Five Years Since the Recording of The Beatles’ Track, Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band

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MAYBE it is a strange anniversary to mark…

yet, on 1st February, 1967, The Beatles started recording the title track to their iconic album, Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. One of the most important and influential albums ever, the foundations of a track which kicked off the album should be celebrated. It is almost fifty-five years since The Beatles began work on what would ignite an album that, to this day, is seen as one of their very best. Maybe the ‘concept’ of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band is quite loose. It is, in effect, The Beatles being another band. We get the title track at the top and the reprise comes before the finale, A Day in the Life. Apart from that, there is not too much linked to the themes of a fictional band. I am not sure what the concept could have been. As the theme is a band rather than a subject or event, it is hard to write songs that would form a cohesive and clear concept. Rather, The Beatles introduced themselves (Billy Shears, who was played by Ringo, then sang lead on the second track, With a Little Help from My Friends) and then we got songs from a fictional band, rather than the Liverpool foursome we knew and loved. That’s how I see it. Even though the title track is only 2:02, it is an important song in their cannon. It opens up an album that contains some of The Beatles’ very best work. I have always loved Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, as it was released during the Summer of Love (May 1967), and there is this trippy, psychedelic sound and feel. The album cover is iconic, whilst this might be the last album before Abbey Road (1969) where the band sound harmonious for the most part.

I will give further thoughts in a second. Recorded over four separate days, Beatles Bible gives us some more information and insight into a song that starts one of the greatest albums that was ever released into the world:

Recorded: 1, 2 February; 3, 6 March 1967

Producer: George Martin

Engineer: Geoff Emerick

On The Beatles’ final US tour in 1966, Paul McCartney was struck by the inventiveness of the West Coast hippy groups, with names such as Quicksilver Messenger Service, Jefferson Airplane, and Big Brother and the Holding Company. In November that year, on a post-holiday flight from Nairobi to England, he came up with the idea of an alter-ego for the band, which would perform an entire album before an audience.

Sgt Pepper is Paul, after a trip to America and the whole West Coast, long-named group thing was coming in. You know, when people were no longer The Beatles or The Crickets – they were suddenly Fred and His Incredible Shrinking Grateful Airplanes, right? So I think he got influenced by that and came up with this idea for The Beatles. As I read the other day, he said in one of his ‘fanzine’ interviews that he was trying to put some distance between The Beatles and the public – and so there was this identity of Sgt Pepper. Intellectually, that’s the same thing he did by writing ‘He loves you’ instead of ‘I love you.’ That’s just his way of working. Sgt Pepper is called the first concept album, but it doesn’t go anywhere. All my contributions to the album have absolutely nothing to do with the idea of Sgt Pepper and his band; but it works ’cause we said it worked, and that’s how the album appeared. But it was not as put together as it sounds, except for Sgt Pepper introducing Billy Shears and the so-called reprise. Every other song could have been on any other album.

John Lennon

All We Are Saying, David Sheff

In the studio

The song ‘Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band’ was recorded over four days. On 1 February 1967 The Beatles taped nine takes of the rhythm track, though only the first and last of these were complete. They recorded drums, bass and two guitars – the latter played by Paul McCartney and George Harrison.

The next day McCartney recorded his lead vocals, and he, Harrison and John Lennon taped their harmonies. The song was then left for over a month, until the French horns were overdubbed on 3 March. McCartney also recorded a lead guitar solo, leaving the song almost complete.

On 6 March they added the sounds of the imaginary audience and the noise of an orchestra tuning up, a combination of crowd noise from a 1961 recording of the comedy show Beyond The Fringe and out-takes from the 10 February 1967 orchestral overdub session for ‘A Day In The Life’”.

Nearer to May, I will put out a feature or two regarding Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearst Club Band. I may put out a track ranking piece, as there are some definite highlights. I think that the title track is among the best five on the album. I like how Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band does not have a traditional chorus or familiar structure. It is an introduction and overview of what to expect going forward. One of the best tracks from The Beatles, I aim imagining them going into the studio on 1st February, 1967 and the seeds being planted. As the concept was McCartney’s – and he contributed most of the songs -, I can imagine that he was especially pleased and excited realising that The Beatles’ eighth studio album would be something very special indeed. Whilst many Beatles fans will argue albums such as Revolver and Abbey Road are more consistent and better, I do not think they are more era-defining and important as Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. The title track is the beginning of this imagine voyage through various scenes, moods, characters and sounds. It is hard to say how an album will sound and shape up when an artist starts work in the first days. I wonder whether The Beatles and George Martin, when they started recording the title track of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, quite knew…

WHAT was to come!

FEATURE: Stay Beautiful: Manic Street Preachers’ Generation Terrorists at Thirty

FEATURE:

 

 

Stay Beautiful

Manic Street Preachers’ Generation Terrorists at Thirty

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MAYBE not the huge success…

that Manic Street Preachers hoped their debut album, Generation Terrorists, would be, it did do well on the U.K. album chart. It has since been certified Gold. Released on 10th February, 1992, this was an ambitious and sprawling double album from the Welsh legends. Perhaps Motorcycle Emptiness overshadows the rest of the album and is the biggest track. Not that the other tracks suffer by comparison. Charged and full of life, there have been a lot of positive reviews for Generation Terrorists. Whilst some of the mixed reviews point to the overly-long running time and lack of tight editing, I really like the sheer determination and confidence showed prior to the release of Generation Terrorists. A hungry and hugely talented young band, James Dean Bradfield, Richey Edwards, Sean Moore and Nicky Wire, I like the fact they were spit down the middle regarding writing credits. The more musically-minded James Dean Bradfield (lead, rhythm and acoustic guitars) and Sean Moore (percussion and drums) wrote the music for Generation Terrorists, whereas the more lyrically-minded Richey Edwards and Nicky Wire penned the words. I can’t think of too many other bands who have operated in that way. In spite of a few too many tracks in the pack, Generation Terrorists does boast some of the Manic Street Preachers’ best songs. Slash 'n' Burn is a great opener, whilst Love’s Sweet Exile and Stay Beautiful are phenomenal. The band would gain almost universal approval for their third studio album, The Holy Bible, in 1994.

In 1992, there was this  curiosity as to who the band were and whether they would endure. I am going to come onto a review of the twentieth anniversary release of the Manics’ debut album. Before that. In 2019, Wales Arts Review highlighted Generation Terrorists as one of the great Welsh albums. It is clear that, in 1992 (and in the year before the album was released), there were no other bands quite like Manic Street Preachers:

In 1991, the notion of Cymru being in any way ‘cool’ seemed as likely as the Welsh rugby team ever achieving another Grand Slam; the denigration of the band’s hometown by Richey Edwards, the Manic Street Preachers’ part-time guitarist and full-time Minister of Information, being suitably emblematic of the nation’s fragmented declining self-image and its (then) lowly status within the wider United Kingdom. The flag-waving national pride demonstrated by the band in its later incarnation would have been anathema to the four wide-eyed media pariahs in stencilled nylon blouses and skin-tight white Levis who detonated like a car bomb onto the alternative/indie scene of that year.  James Brown, founding editor of Loaded, then of NME, and an early champion of the band was nevertheless convinced that the fact that they hailed from Wales incited them from the outset: “In the early 90s, the Welsh were well on their way to becoming the new Pakistanis or the new Irish. It was quite prevalent, I think it probably started with bashing Neil Kinnock, it’d become very common to just slag the Welsh off and I’m sure that probably built up their sense of alienation. They came from Blackwood, where’s Blackwood?”

To a tiny cabal of early acolytes who bought wholesale into the band’s erratic scattergun philosophy of glitter, spray-paint and Marxist polemic the irresistibly magnetic pull of the Manic Street Preachers was a dazzling shaft of light in the prevailing cultural fog of conformity and under-achievement.  Yet to many in the music press and in particular their older, more joyless, peers they were nothing more than a bunch of jumped-up mouthy kids, infamously “doing The Clash in a school play”, a fleeting industry in-joke and proof positive that the practically non-existent Welsh music scene was never going to get any bigger than The Darling Buds.  A convenient focus of universal derision at first, not least in their homeland where initially the ridicule was at its most acute – the band notably resisted playing any significant Welsh dates until a Cardiff University show on the ‘Generation Terrorist’ tour – by the end of 1991, despite (and possibly, because of) signing a lucrative multi-album deal with Sony, the Manic Street Preachers were, without doubt, the most hated band in Britain.

“The Manics talked lipstick and they talked Lenin, they talked Marilyn and they talked Marx, and they threw it all together and understood that rather than just droning on about the politics, it was the combination of the politics with the iconography that made it exciting.  They were full of hate and desire.”

When Generation Terrorists was released in early 1992 it confused and confounded, as the band had no doubt hoped that it would, but possibly not in the way that they’d initially intended.  The much-touted aim to sell 16 million copies of this, their debut album (a double album, no less) and then split up in a blaze of wanton self-destructive glory convinced no-one, least of all the band themselves, of the true nature of their master-plan of cultural entryism, yet to those who had only ever viewed the band as nihilistic punk rock outlaws the slick big-budget transformation of the intense syntax-mangling songs that had previously only been heard on the tinny in-house sound systems of the likes of the Bristol Fleece and Firkin seemed a world away from the breathless heart-bursting rage of their initial Heavenly singles. Though with hindsight, the band now regrets the thick layers of industrial major-label polish that was liberally applied to its raw material, it was very much in keeping with the colossal, unapologetic ambition they espoused as part of their calculated ‘year zero’ bedroom manifesto; itself a confrontational rejection of what they felt to be the meek and dreary aimlessness exemplified by much of the British indie scene.  The very fact that the embryonic Manics opted to align themselves with the iconic commercial enormity of Guns ’n’ Roses and Public Enemy rather than the anaemic crusty/baggy axis of 1991 was a knowingly confrontational act at the time; America, and black America in particular, being the longstanding nemeses of the UK’s white, provincial indie scene of that period.  The band’s other improbable goal, to get ‘Repeat’ and its recurring radio-unfriendly refrain of ‘Repeat after me! / Fuck queen and country!’ to the top of the charts stalled at number 26 though its ‘Stars and Stripes’ album remix by The Bomb Squad at least succeeded in making a tangible link between the band and the broader Public Enemy church that they so devoutly worshipped at.

Like many debut albums, its undoubted high-points (and in Little Baby Nothing and Stay Beautiful those highs are sporadically giddy) are inadvertently diluted by the band’s determination to fatten it up with pretty much everything they’d written up to that point, “to say everything we had to say”.  It’s one of the less obviously sloganeering inclusions that most plainly benefits from the major label ‘big bucks’ makeover though; one that showcased the real artistic potential of the band and which for many redefined the perception of the Manics as something other than a comedy Welsh punk band.  Motorcycle Emptiness, a game-changing studio construct fused from embryonic songs written on a bunk bed in the bedroom that James Dean Bradfield often shared with his cousin Sean Moore, was initially going to be held back for the band’s second album (proof, if proof were needed, that the ‘one album apocalypse’ was always a commercial non-starter) on the basis that it was thought to be ‘unrepresentative’ of the nascent Manics and a jarring quantum leap in their musical capabilities.  Its accessible commercial veneer led by a timelessly killer guitar hook masks a fatalistic treatise on alienation, resignation and despair that had not been so magnificently broached since the earliest days of The Smiths.  This populist Trojan horse was, for many, their initiation into the steadily growing cult of the band and coupled with a quote-laden gatefold sleeve that in its promotion of Larkin, Pollock and Henry Miller read like a suggested concise reader for the furiously intellectual insurrectionist–about-town, it laid the foundation for the true commercial success that would see the band lay waste to the mainstream less than five years later.  That they did so without the iconic Richey Edwards their precariously driven poster-boy, and alongside Nicky Wire, one half of the band’s compulsive kohl-smeared lyric factory, is an eternally tragic missed opportunity for the cultural insurgency of titanic proportions”.

I will end with a 2012 NME feature, where they name twenty great things about Generation Terrorists. Ambitious, angry and so rich, I think that Generation Terrorists has gained more acclaim and understanding since its release. Thirty years later, it is an album that is still being talked about. The BBC had this to say in their 2012 review:

Hailing from the former mining town of Blackwood, Manic Street Preachers were always outsiders, but they arrived fully formed in everything but their music. At least two of them, bassist Nicky Wire and lyricist/conscience Richey Edwards, were politically turbo-charged and they had a look which was part New York Dolls, part Cardiff city centre drag act, part The Clash.

The music was the dog being wagged by the tail and as some of the demos on this reissued, repackaged remembrance show, it was angry but literate situationist punk in search of a benevolent producer.

Those demos remind us that sometimes “more” can mean “less”, but the deluxe version DVD’s mix of videos, BBC performances and a 76-minute documentary is engrossing. Somehow – and the documentary confirms that nobody actually seems to know how – this splurge of a proposition found itself signed to an eight-album, major-label deal.

As we now know, Manic Street Preachers were not just for show. They recruited Steve Brown to produce, as much for his work with Wham! as on The Cult’s She Sells Sanctuary and in what still seems like breathtaking hubris, the upstarts demanded that Generation Terrorists be a 71-minute double album. Matching them in giddy recklessness, Columbia acceded.

All these years later, it’s a remarkable work albeit one that’s undeniably flawed and in need of an editor as much as a producer. But its anger (Nat West-Barclay-Midlands-Lloyds railed against bankers decades before fashion caught up), its self-belief (You Love Us, indeed) and its sense of impish fun (porn star Traci Lords co-sang Little Baby Nothing like a Shangri-La) make it an gloriously exhilarating listen two decades on.

And then there was the six minutes of perfection that was Motorcycle Emptiness. The first appearance of the seductive, compassionate, elegiac Manics which dominated their great albums, Everything Must Go and This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours, Motorcycle Emptiness tempered the swagger with rue, singer James Dean Bradfield crooned rather than shouted and his guitar solo was celestially heartbreaking.

Motorcycle Emptiness towers over Generation Terrorists, but without it, the album would still have triumphed”.

Before finishing things off, I want to source a few points NME made in 2012. They listed twenty reasons why Generation Terrorists is so good and fascinting:

It didn’t sell sixteen million copies. They didn’t split up. They only just killed Slowdive. ‘Generation Terrorists’ wasn’t the one-off cultural extinction event The Manics had hoped it’d be. No, it’s way more special than that. It’s ours.

‘Love’s Sweet Exile’ was originally ‘Faceless Sense Of Void’. ‘Motorcycle Emptiness’ was once ‘Go, Buzz Baby, Go’. The album itself was going to be called ‘Culture, Alienation, Boredom And Despair’. For fun, can someone re-name all of Adele’s songs on iTunes with old Manics working titles and watch popular culture explode?

Check out the ack-ack-ack hi-octane piston pummel driving ‘Love’s Sweet Exile’ out of the speakers, across the room and straight through the wall and tell me the little Welsh munchkin couldn’t out-drum Grohl.

A double-album debut released with the firm intent of selling sixteen million albums, killing Slowdive and then splitting up. That, Egyptian Hip-Hop, is how you do it”.

I wonder how the band members (James Dean Bradfield, Nicky Wire and Sean Moore) will mark thirty years of their debut. Whilst they all may cite other albums as being their favourite, there is no doubting the importance of 1992’s Generation Terrorists. It introduced us to a band who, to this day, are putting out music and wowing fans around the world. As Wikipedia explain regarding the album’s legacy:

NME listed Generation Terrorists as the 18th greatest debut album from the last 50 years, describing the record as "angry as it was bright, the Manics blowtorched their manifesto in pulverising punk guitar squeals.” In a 2012 "In Depth" feature, Dom Gourlay of Drowned in Sound declared Generation Terrorists to be the most important debut of the 1990s. In a February 2011 issue of Q it was voted by readers at #77 in "The 250 Best Album's of Q's Lifetime" featuring albums between 1986 and 2011. The same magazine gave the record the award for Classic album in the Q Awards in 2012”.

Definitely among the most important debut albums of the 1990s, I wanted to throw ahead to the thirtieth anniversary of an album that, after all of these years, still sounds so exciting and wonderful! In spite of some bloating and the odd track that could have been nixed, Generation Terrorists is an album that you…

JUST have to love.

FEATURE: A Guiding Light: Television’s Marquee Moon at Forty-Five

FEATURE:

 

 

A Guiding Light

 Television’s Marquee Moon at Forty-Five

___________

IT is difficult to know…

 IN THIS PHOTO: Television in 1977. Left to right: Billy Ficca, Richard Lloyd, Tom Verlaine and Fred Smith

where to start when it comes to Television’s remarkable and hugely influential debut album, Marquee Moon. Released only a few days after Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours, this extraordinary album came into the world on 8th February, 1977. Ahead of its forty-fifth anniversary, I wanted to bring in some reviews and features that tell the story of Marquee Moon and why it is such a special album. The New York band, led by the songwriting brilliance and musical virtuosity of Tom Verlaine, produced this masterpiece. One would think it would be easy for Television to get a record deal and get noticed. I guess, at a time when there were no bands that sounded like them, there was hesitation. Classic Album Sundays revisited Marquee Moon for a feature that explored the roots of one of the best albums ever:

The band and its members wove themselves into the fabric of downtown music. Brian Eno produced demos while the band were being courted by Island Records although this failed to result in a signing. Hell’s frantic stage antics began to seem increasingly out of sync with the other band member’s growing musical virtuosity and eventually the band refused to play his songs. This led Hell to leave and form The Heartbreakers featuring former New York Dolls Johnny Thunders and Jerry Nolan.

Hell was replaced by former Blondie bassist Fred Smith and Verlaine recalled, “At the first rehearsal me and Lloyd were looking at each other and thinking, ‘God this is a real relief’. It was like having a lightning rod you could spark around. Something was there that wasn’t there before. Fred could follow stuff. I remember starting up in the longer songs and being able to do stuff that wouldn’t throw everybody.”

Another early CB’s and Max’s stalwart was Patti Smith who had a soaring talent matched with a relentless drive that propelled her to be everywhere all at once. She performed for and wrote with playwright Sam Shepard, roomed with photographer Robert Mapplethorpe, recited her poetry with the St. Mark’s Poetry Project, wrote songs for Blue Oyster Cult and took a turn in rock journalism writing for Rolling Stone and Creem. Like Verlaine, she was inspired by the poetry of Arthur Rimbaud, and this passion helped unite them both romantically and professionally.

Smith championed Television as the real deal; authenticity in the face of a penchant of style over substance. After experiencing Television live at CBGB’s she wrote, “As the band played on you could hear the whack of pool cue hitting the balls, the saluki [Hilly’s dog] barking, bottles clinking, the sound of the scene emerging. Though no one knew it, the stars were aligning, the angels were calling.”

Smith’s championing of the group, her unique form of PR and her alliance with Verlaine helped grow Television’s fan base possibly more for which she may have been given credit. And of course Smith also enjoyed kudos and support flowing from the other direction. She formed her own group with Lenny Kaye and for her first album ‘Horses’ recorded ‘Break It Up’, a composition she penned with Verlaine.

The growing significance of the downtown music scene saw A&R scouts flocking to the Bowery and many of the acts such as The Patti Smith Group, The Ramones and Blondie were getting snapped up by the major record labels. But despite being courted by Island Records and being touted as the forefathers of the now critically hailed CB’s scene, Television were still waiting to get signed. Ramones manager and downtown kingpin Danny Fields lamented, “Why are the labels so slow in grabbing Television? Everybody raves about how great the Velvet Underground was, and here is another great New York band that musically picks up where the Velvet Underground left off.”

However, even groundbreaking alternative underground scenes have their own set of rules, and Television broke nearly all of them. Rather than wait for a record label, Television followed Smith’s lead in releasing an independent single on their friend Terry Ork’s label in the hopes of perking interest. But what they released did not translate into the type of pop-rock-punk single that was making noise at the time.

Instead, they released “Little Johnny Jewel”, a song in two parts that ran seven minutes and had more in common with free jazz. A decade earlier, Dylan’s “Like a Rolling Stone” reached number two in the charts despite clocking in at 6:13, three minutes over the standard pop single. Television would not enjoy the same success.

Finally, Television signed to Elektra Records and released their debut album ‘Marquee Moon’. By the time of the record’s release in 1977, punk rock had somewhat become a caricature of itself and thankfully Television did not follow suit. Onstage they had a similar snarl, but rather than performing theatrical stage antics in the manner of The Sex Pistols, Television preferred to remain cooly detached from their audience.

They also benefitted from years of developing their unique musical style through their live shows and the record revealed a confident artistic maturity not often found on debut records. Unlike many punk musicians, they were not embarrassed to play their instruments well, slipped in references to jazz, prog rock, and psychedelia with lengthy solos and elected a cleaner, more sophisticated sound. Inject this musical fusion with lyrics that revealed literary prowess and a love of poets Rimbaud and Paul Verlaine, and we may be able to understand why Television puzzled audiences.

The album was not a commercial success, selling only 80,000 copies in the USA. (That ‘only’ is put into context when we consider that 2013’s top selling vinyl album in the USA was Daft Punk’s ‘Random Access Memories’ with 49,000 sold. Oh how times have changed.) Alas they followed in the wake of some of the groups to which they paid homage, VU and Love, and other massive talents such as Nick Drake, in that their popularity and significance grew after they stopped recording. Like Arthur Russell, another cross-pollinating artist from that era’s lower Manhattan music scene, Television’s blended sonic styles drawing not only from rock but also funk and the minimalism of Steve Reich. This breakdown of musical boundaries has since become a defining characteristic of ‘Downtown Music”.

It is well worth getting Television's Marquee Moon - 33 1/3 book by Bryan Waterman. It provides great detail about a sensational album. Before coming to reviews, there is another in-depth article about Marquee Moon that caught my eye. Soundblab took us inside Television’s 1977 magnum opus for a feature in 2019. They provide a bit of an overview and review:  

Isn’t amazing how the birth of indie rock can be traced all the way back to 1977? The 70s were already the genesis (and to some, apex) of punk music and all of its subsequent offshoots. During the 70s there was no shortage of legendary acts churning out would-be classics at a rapid-fire rate: Iggy Pop delivered four LPs that would change the face of punk music, two with the Stooges, and two solo efforts; Joy Division would birth post-punk and goth rock with Unknown Pleasures, The Ramones were banging out repeated young anthems and lets not forget the Clash released their three most revered albums at the tail end of the decade. Yes, the 1970s were THAT great.

On the American side of things, the New York music scene was responsible for a lot of the sounds and feels we get from punk music today nationally. It’s where it all funneled through to determine success - pioneering clubs like CBGB housed future leaders of the genre, and while these acts didn’t extend much further sometimes, their place in history is cemented to this day with their short but bountiful discographies.

This isn’t a history lesson though. If you want to learn about punk, and post-punk, and proto-punk, and skate-punk, and horror punk - Google it. This is space is reserved specifically for the all-time classic Marquee Moon, but the short-lived NYC four-piece Television. Originally consisting of Tom Verlaine, Billy Ficca, and Richard Hell, and calling themselves The Neon Boys, Television set out to define what makes a legend. Hell would leave over disputes and whatnot, eventually forming The Heartbreakers, and then Richard Hell and the Voidoids. Before that, they’d bring in Richard Lloyd as a second guitarist, and to replace Hell they’d bring in Fred Smith for bass. In 1975, they achieved cult status in NYC which lead to the eventual recording of their most notable album Marquee Moon.

To review Marquee Moon, one has to consider just how daring it was in 1977. Punk was on the rise, and the scene was redefining youth culture. But Television weren’t “punks.” Television was just a group of musicians who didn’t adhere to labels, even when performing they made sure it was a group effort. The title track alone is evidence of this comradery, this homogenous idea of a band, as the rhythm and lead guitars weave into each other over the course of the 10-minute epic. It’s this approach that makes Television, most specifically on Marquee Moon that much of a revelation. Today’s music often highlights enigmatic frontman, lavishly pouring over their antics in positive and negative ways. It’s not the case with Television. Verlaine may be the lead vocalist, but everyone plays a part strongly on Marquee Moon.

What fascinates me the most about Marquee Moon is how fresh it still sounds in 2019. The boom of post-punk revival in the early 2000s brought us countless imitators, some good, some bad. But no one’s ever truly been able to mimic the grand explosiveness of Marquee Moon, not even Television themselves as their follow-up, 1978’s Adventure, is often forgotten about because of how much it lacks compared to their debut. At only 45 minutes, and 8 songs, Marquee Moon sets the bar for epic, without droning on as prog rock does. Instead, outside of the title track, tracks are kept to reasonable standards. This allows a more digestible listen for those uninitiated.

Obviously, the most commanding thing about Marquee Moon is its title track. Still a magnificent feat by today’s standards, the opus tackles so much in it’s near 11 minutes.

Recorded in one take, “Marquee Moon” transcends the typical paranoia of the 70s with a powerful intro, balanced perfectly by Verlaine’s vocals. Having rehearsed it and played it so often before recording, Television’s greatest moment feels so natural in the studio - something rarely replicated by modern bands. It’s equal parts jazz, post-punk, punk, and alt-rock, “Marquee Moon” defies the standards of what makes a great single. Released as the lead single, it’s hard to fathom any edited version of “Marquee Moon” being worthwhile. Its massive nature is booming, it towers over the rest of the album, and acts as that warm center of the album. It never overstays its welcome, even halfway through it still keeps your attention thanks to the innovative jamming from Verlaine and Lloyd.

Thankfully, the rest of Marquee Moon is no slouch either. Often overlooked because of how tremendous it’s centerpiece is, Marquee Moon’s other seven tracks range in playful proverbs like “See No Evil” to double entendres like “Friction.” But if listening to Marquee Moon for the first time is the approach, all of these songs fall to the wayside. There’s plenty to come back to on the album, the imagery that “Venus” conjures up is relatable to anyone aimlessly wandering the streets of their city with a tiny bit of angst hiding behind their eyes. The pensiveness of “Elevation,” the weariness of “Guiding Light,” all make Marquee Moon one of the quintessential albums of the 70s, if not all time. It’s a mass representation of identity in an ever-changing landscape. Those last 3-4 years of the decade saw so much transition, not just for the scene, but the country saw the reverberations of the Vietnam War shocked the nation. Jimmy Carter struggled as the 39th president of the country, due to some questionable pardonings he did early on, as well as the malaise of corrupt officials took hold.

So not only is Marquee Moon a landmark album for all of its associated genres, it’s a time capsule of life in the 1970s amidst turmoil and the evolving culture around them. Television was short-lived, breaking up after Adventure and laying low until the early 90s for a reunion album. Every member would find their place in other projects, but thanks to the internet, Television have resurfaced in the 21st century to play their iconic album in full at festivals and various venues on the Eastern United States. The feeling of hearing “Marquee Moon” performed live is something everyone should bear witness to. It’s life-altering and offers a comforting blanket to these relevant times. Television were never able to escape Marquee Moon, nor did they need to. It’s timeless, even in 2019, it still sounds crisp. The true definition of a classic”.

There is one more feature that I want to include. In 2019, Spectrum Culture proclaimed Marquee Moon the best guitar album ever. One cannot argue against what Nathan Stevens observes throughout:

Venus” provided the first detour into romanticism. In contrast to the youthful corruption of “See No Evil,” “Venus” matched Verlaine’s mumbled musings on apathy, giddiness and love. The emotive solo and cascading chorus lick made it a dead ringer for a proper power ballad. Second half duo “Guiding Light” and “Prove It” carried on those lush feelings, making the guitar interweave with piano until they couldn’t be separated. “Guiding Light” could have been Bob Seeger on amphetamines and “Prove It” unfurled from a jaunty surf-rock tune into an expansive, proto-Modest Mouse sprawl. Add the gothic closer “Torn Curtain” and Television were playing with all of the dark arts that would soon envelope Post-Punk. All of it narrated by these little silvery aliens, burbling in your ear.

“Friction,” meanwhile, could have just rode its prowling, bluey riff, but Verlaine let loose a colorful string of noir-ish melodies leading to his desperate plea of “gimme friction!” in his best Patti Smith. The threat of violence is incensed by the thrashing guitars, lurking behind Verlaine like mob goons. If Spider-Man had swung through this New York, he would have been swatted. It’s intoxicating danger, all tightrope licks and hinted bloodshed.

None of this is to dismiss Billy Ficca or Fred Smith. Ficca’s drumming was as impish as the guitars, a devilish mix of jittering disco flashes and heavy rock thwamp. And Smith seemed to be the only sane one in the studio. Between Verlaine’s yelps, the guitar maelstrom above and Ficca egging it all on, there’s a sense that without Smith’s impeccably in-pocket, rocksteady performance the whole thing would have collapsed under its own weight.

The shifting textures between exuberance and melodrama has a tome worth of music theory behind it. Verlaine was originally a saxophonist and it shows in (mostly) less nerdy ways, but he still had to notate a few of his solos. Lloyd also hefted more muscle unto the mix with clever overdubs. But getting too much into the weeds is useless for two reasons: it’s no fun, diminishing how the technical and emotive excellence is obvious without any music theory needed. And “Marquee Moon” was recorded in one take.

This sterling ascension, a true epic yet to be eclipsed in rock that unwound and exploded over 10 minutes, was done live. Sweet Strawberry-flavored Christ.

“Marquee Moon” is 10 percent of the time the greatest song ever recorded. It molded the guitars into voices, singing countermelodies and counterpoint to each other, rather than the usual layer of root to chord to solo. Lloyd and Verlaine traded rhythm, solos and melodic duties, the lead ping-ponging between guitars and channels. Verlaine’s iconic opening line, “I remembered how the darkness doubled/ Lightning struck itself,” was an accurate summation of the sound. It’s winding, yet precise. The ever-soaring chorus rising to glory out of the grime of the verse before lounging back into grit and asphalt. That’s before the nearly meandering solo takes every dynamic trick they’d pulled out into one gauntlet. It builds, and builds and builds from frayed ends until it reforms as Lloyd and Verlaine fuse again. Ending with a pastoral flickering of guitars and Verlaine staring up at the titular celestial body. And of course it had to be recorded in one take. The sparks of genius that had been showering that studio formed a bolt of brilliance that could only be contained in that one take.

The great guitar moments of the late 20th and early 21st centuries can all find some hint of residual DNA here. Johnny Greenwood’s flexible dread on “Paranoid Android,” St. Vincent’s serial-killer pop “Cruel” or Living Colour’s sensory destruction from “Cult of Personality” owe something to Marquee Moon. Hell, The Strokes’ entire guitar tone is right there in “Elevation.” But there’s a reason that the post-punk dejour of the modern age has stuck to the icepick stab of Gang of Four or Joy Division’s gloom. Television is just too damn hard to recreate. You don’t just need an understanding of Ornette Coleman that matches a devotion to “Cortez the Killer,” you’ve got to play it with a smile. And though Slint and Sonic Youth wouldn’t exist without this album, all of them could only grasp at fragments of the glorious whole.

Verlaine said he wanted the album to be made of “little moments of discovery.” And he succeeded, emphatically. Though it came at the end of a decade, Marquee Moon was an arrival, rather than a departure. It crafted new genres with one hand, created a generation of guitar nerds with the other. It’s an album of contradictions. Of Friction. No, the guitar wasn’t made for Television. They reinvented it”.

I wanted to look at and inside an album that has yet to be equalled or bettered in terms of its sound and influence. One of the defining releases of the Post-Punk era, there is no telling just how long Marquee Moon will resonate and inspire! It only takes a few seconds of See No Evil (the opening track) to understand that you are listening to…

A real classic.

FEATURE: Vinyl Corner: Scritti Politti - Cupid & Psyche 85

FEATURE:

 

 

Vinyl Corner

Scritti Politti - Cupid & Psyche 85

___________

FOR those who don’t know…

Scritti Politti are a legendary British band, originally formed in 1977 in Leeds, England, by Welsh singer-songwriter Green Gartside. He is the only constant member of the band. Their fifth studio album, White Bread Black Beer, came out in 2006. Most people would consider the group’s second album, Cupid & Psyche 85, to be their best. Released on 10th June, 1985, it features two of Scritti Politti’s best-known tracks: The Word Girl and Wood Beez (Pray Like Aretha Franklin). Soulful, sweet, spellbinding and catchy, Cupid & Psyche 85 is one of the albums from the 1980s that you could play to someone who has never heard it and they would like it. I think that Gartside’s songwriting transcends time and history. There is something wonderfully hypnotic about it and his singing. The band are incredible throughout Cupid & Psyche 85. It is an album that I would encourage people to go and get on vinyl. There are a couple of features that I want to highlight. They give some background to Cupid & Psyche 85, and what Scritti Politti accomplished on the follow-up to 1982’s Songs to Remember. Whilst researching for this feature, I have listened to the deeper cuts on Cupid & Psyche 85. There is not a weak moment on the album!

Spectrum Culture wrote about Cupid & Psyche 85 in 2014. They discussed Green Gartside’s instantly recognisable soulful voice, recording some of the album in the U.S., and why its lack of a top-forty place on the U.S. album chart was no bad thing:

One of the brightest synth-pop confections of the ’80s deconstructs the very pop constructs it celebrates. Its layered dance music productions marry the sacred and the profane, its love songs aware that love songs are illusions, and pop music propaganda. But its auteur’s personal and political message is couched in the most glorious pop music.

In 1984, Green Gartside (credited on Cupid & Psyche 85 as simply Green) told the London music rag Smash Hits that, “if you’d played me ‘Wood Beez’ six years ago, I think I’d have spat at it or something.” “Wood Beez (Pray Like Aretha Franklin)” is one of the album’s most dense accomplishments, it’s music bombastic and light, vulgar and soaring, mechanical and human. The dedication to Aretha Franklin speaks to Green’s conflicted emotions about pop music, and to the conflicted emotions in pop music. “It’s the whole question of what pop is,” he told the New Musical Express. “Its relationship to language, power and politics. It’s also a question of music’s transgression and abuse of some of the rules of language. Aretha was singing what are arguably inane pop songs and had left her gospel roots. But she sang them with a fervor, a passion, though I hate to use that word because it’s been hideously tarred in recent usage. To a committed materialist whose interest had come round to language again—perhaps because of a bankruptcy in Marxism to deal with ideology or any artistic community—hearing her was as near to a hymn or a prayer as I could get. Obviously I couldn’t make that point in a three minute pop song.”

But he did. Green’s swooning blue-eyed soul works against the mechanical drum beats and real drum beats. “Wood Beez” has some appropriately wooden beats, but the vocals and synth melodies soar, the bright rhythm guitar line propelling the track through its hit-single contradictions.

Green formed Scritti Politti in 1977, naming the band after a collection of Marxist writings by Antonio Gramsci. You wouldn’t know from their early tracks for Rough Trade that he’d be the genius behind such enduring ear candy. But he always had pipes, and philosophy. Their first album, Songs to Remember, featured an homage to “Jacques Derrida” alongside smart love songs like “The Sweetest Girl.” But Gartside had musical ambitions that he couldn’t fulfill at Rough Trade. While making Songs to Remember he met David Gamson, who with Material drummer Fred Maher released a shimmering synth-pop cover of the Archies’ bubblegum classic “Sugar Sugar.” Gamson and Maher joined pop forces with Green, and the pieces fell into place.

The band recorded three singles in New York with legendary producer Arif Mardin, who had produced sides for Aretha Franklin. These sessions resulted in three of the album’s strongest singles: “Absolute, “Wood Beez” and “Hypnotize.” The album sequencing brings Green’s vision into an album that wasn’t just catchy and danceable but logical. Cupid & Psyche 85 begins with “The Word Girl,” its reggae beat suggesting the high of romance, its rising synth washes suggesting the search for love and almost biblical meaning evident in lyrics like, “How her flesh and blood became the word.”

“The Word Girl” was the album’s biggest UK hit, but this is a love song about the lies that love songs tell (“A name the girl outgrew/ The girl was never real).” Flesh and blood leads off the album, but the record ends with the girl who made you forget to believe in heaven in “Hypnotize.” The final words sum up the record and the quintessential pop sentiment: “It’s so hard to tell you that I love you.” Cupid & Psyche 85 has some of the most gorgeous pop melodies of the ’80s in “Absolute” and “Wood Beez,” but Green’s Romeo finally finds them inadequate to express his love.

But this is where Green was wrong. “Perfect Way,” the biggest US single from Scritti Politti’s second album Cupid & Psyche 85, plays on the most basic of love song tropes: “I’ve got a perfect way to make a certain a maybe/I’ve got a perfect way to make the girls go crazy.” But the Welshman’s inventive and catchy wordplay is more personal and challenging than it first appears. The concerns that Green brought to Cupid & Psyche 85 may have gone over the heads of its Top 40 audience. But it succeeds through one of the great means of communication: music, accessible enough to sing along to, dynamic enough for the dance floor. If Green’s lyrics express frustration with pop music, the ambitious production values of this classic album show that he knows of no better way to communicate after all”.

I like Wales Art Review’s assessment from 2019. They note that, whilst there are musical touches and hallmarks of the 1980s (not all of them good!), the lyrics from Gartside transcends the album beyond anything commercial and cliched:

How very 1980s. And the sound of the album is no less redolent of the period. Let the listener beware: there are keyboard bends and there is heavily processed rock guitar, and in one place there may even be a steel drum sample. But the glory of the record is its musical and rhythmic sophistication; not every LP released in 1985 sounded as exciting as this. Green and his collaborators likened the process of assembling the tracks to the workings of a Swiss watch. Individual parts of only two or three notes accent and punctuate the vocals, instruments leap from one speaker to the other, and hidden melodies are revealed only on repeated playbacks. It’s clearly the result of hours spent at the mixing desk but the hard work is made to sound effortless.

And then there are the words. In 1984 Green had told the NME that he was ‘steeped in language’ and the evidence of this is scattered across the album’s lyrics. There are references to love letters left incomplete, margins of error, pages torn out of rule books, and (on ‘Lover to Fall’) ‘a new hermeneutic’. Even the copyright for the album is credited to a company called Jouissance Ltd. Green was happy to expound on all this in interviews at the time of the record’s release. This is how he explained the origins of album opener ‘The Word Girl’ to Sounds:

I was taking stock of all the lyrics of the songs for the new album and, lo and behold, in every song there was – this girl, or that girl. It seemed a good idea to show awareness of the device being used, to take it out of neutral and show it didn’t connote or denote certain things. It was important to admit a consciousness of the materiality of referring to ‘girls’ in songs.

It’s fair to say that you didn’t get this kind of thing from Billy Idol. The sheer weight of references and allusions on the album should suffocate it, but Green had by this time found a surprisingly light touch with a lyric, and coupled with the inventiveness of the music, ensures that it’s anything but a deadly listen. It doesn’t matter if you don’t know that in the song ‘Small Talk’ the line ‘If a thing’s worth doing / It’s worth doing badly’ is his attempt, as he told another interviewer, to summarise an idea of the philosopher A N Whitehead. And most people who bought the album wouldn’t have had a clue that the photo on the back cover is inspired by Marcel Duchamp’s unused image for the cover of Vogue depicting a piece of meat wrapped in cloth. What counted were the songs, and there was plenty of evidence that people understood those well enough as the album reached number 5 in the UK. In the chorus of ‘Perfect Way’, the band’s biggest hit in America, Green sings that he’s found ‘a perfect way / To make the girls go crazy’. If you want proof of that, just go online and witness the screams that greet his appearance on Mike Read’s Pop Quiz.

Sadly, the sheen would eventually wear off Scritti Politti’s pop crown. The next album, 1988’s Provision, has many of the sonic devices and lyrical complexity of its predecessor, but little of its beauty, with the exception of the exquisite ‘Oh Patti (Don’t Feel Sorry for Loverboy)’ and an accompanying trumpet solo from Miles Davis. The album had taken a long time to make and Green sounds tentative on much of the record, his voice mixed curiously low in places as if even he doesn’t completely believe in it. Of course, we know now that the attention that came with the popularity of Cupid and Psyche had not brought Green much pleasure, and he had not been able to maintain the ironical distance from the corporate side of the music industry that he had envisaged. At the time of the release of 2006’s White Bread Black Beer, he said of the earlier period that success had felt as bad as failure. After Provision, he again fled to Wales and it would be another eleven years before the release of the eclectic Anomie and Bonhomie.

Cupid and Psyche ‘85 remains a hugely satisfying listen, and one which possesses magic that has outlived the particular time and place in which it was made. I bought the album when it first came out – my copy of the LP still bears the £5.99 price sticker from Andy’s Records in Norwich – and though I was a gauche, suburban 15-year old, even I could tell that its production values represented some new high-water mark and that the lyrics were a playful, brainy delight. I still smile at the line ‘There’s nothing I wouldn’t do / Including doing nothing’ in ‘Wood Beez’, but if there’s a French poststructuralist lurking behind it, I couldn’t tell you who it was”.

A wonderful album that is so full of rich and quotable language and imagery. Such a gorgeous sound and some of the finest music of the 1980s. Cupid & Psyche 85 is an album that should be in everyone’s vinyl collection. Failing that, definitely spend some time now listening to it. A wonderful L.P. that immerses you from start to finish, Cupid & Psyche 85 contains…

NO wasted moments.

FEATURE: Warm Weather in the Forecast: Ten of the Best: Early Mercury Prize 2022 Predictions

FEATURE:

 

 

Warm Weather in the Forecast

IN THIS PHOTO: Little Simz 

Ten of the Best: Early Mercury Prize 2022 Predictions

___________

LAST September…

 IN THIS PHOTO: Self Esteem (Rebecca Lucy Taylor)/PHOTO CREDIT: Olivia Richardson

Arlo Parks won the Mercury Prize for her debut album, Collapsed in Sunbeams. It was a toned-down ceremony, as the pandemic meant things could not proceed as normal. Even though there is a long way to go until this year’s ceremony, there is every hope that things will return to how they were in 2019. I think that, as we are more than halfway between the last Mercury Prize ceremony and this year’s, I wanted to forecast ten albums that I feel will be in the shortlist when the announcements are made. If you are not familiar with the Mercury Prize, here are some rules and dates from last year:

Saturday 18 July 2020 and Friday 16 July 2021 inclusive (although entries must be received by 12 May 2021). Entries received after 12 May 2021 will not be considered for the 2021 Mercury Prize

Artists must be of British or Irish nationality. Artists are considered to be of British or Irish nationality if (i) they hold a passport for either the United Kingdom or Ireland and/or were born in the United Kingdom or Ireland (“British” or “Irish” respectively) or (ii) they have been permanently resident in the United Kingdom or Ireland for more than 5 years”.

Although a lot of great albums from British and Irish artists will arrive between now and July, quite a few awesome ones have already come out. I reckon that the ten albums (one is a mixtape, but I think that it is eligible) below are primed to be in the running for the Mercury Prize 2022. We have the BRIT Awards coming soon, though I think the Mercury Prize is more varied and important. In recent years – and most years – the award has been given to a London-based artist. Will that change this year? We will have to wait and see! This year is going to some other shortlist inclusions come to the fore (including Wet Leg’s eponymous debut album and Charli XCX’s Crash). The second half of last year presented us with plenty of wonderful albums that, in my view, are likely to be among the shortlisted…

 IN THIS PHOTO: Sam Fender

FOR this year’s Mercury Prize.

________________

Self EsteemPrioritise Pleasure

Release Date: 22nd October, 2021

Label: Universal

Producer: Johan Karlberg

Standout Tracks: Prioritise Pleasure/Moody/Just Kids

Buy: https://www.musicglue.com/self-esteem/?utm_source=Website&utm_campaign=SelfEsteemPrioritisePleasure20210705&utm_medium=referral&utm_content=&utm_umguk=www.selfesteem.love%2F

Review:

On her 2019 solo debut ‘Compliments Please’, Rebecca Lucy Taylor set out the stall for her project Self Esteem as an assertive but nuanced pop star. It’s with ‘Prioritise Pleasure’ that she’s upped the ante considerably. A powerful and potent look at - quite simply - the experience of being a woman in the present day, this is an album that encapsulates the fear, anger, dread and exhaustion that has become so commonplace in so many female lives. And yet, it’s a record that still offers comfort and levity; there’s a wittiness and dark humour that traverses the likes of ‘Moody’ - its opening line being the iconic “Sexting you at the mental health talk seems counter-productive” - and ‘Fucking Wizardry’, all the while remaining honest and raw, but free of judgement. When the record’s opener ‘I’m Fine’ closes with a voice note of a woman in her early twenties explaining that - if approached by a group of men - her friends’ reaction is to begin barking like a dog - because “there is nothing that terrifies a man more than a woman who appears completely deranged” - Rebecca’s response is to begin howling herself.

It’s also an album that sees Rebecca continually pushing herself to explore new sonic avenues; eclectic instrumentation and bold sonics are the backbone of the record, with tracks switching from spoken-word manifestos (‘I Do This All The Time’) through to more traditional R&B pop formats (‘Still Reigning’) via gigantic gospel-backed offerings (‘Prioritise Pleasure’), and back again. Most importantly, though, this is a record that doesn’t compromise. An uncomfortable and unnerving listen at times - as any album dealing in this level of openness arguably should be - it’s also an absolutely necessary one. Through her own personal stories - and those of others - ‘Prioritise Pleasure’ manages to challenge accepted norms and help to exorcise long-buried demons; it’s powerful to the last drop” – DIY

Key Cut: I Do This All the Time

Little SimzSometimes I Might Be Introvert

Release Date: 3rd September, 2021

Labels: Age 101/AWAL

Producers: Inflo/Jakwob/Miles James

Standout Tracks: Woman (featuring Cleo Sol)/Protect My Energy/Point and Kill (featuring Obongjayar)

Buy: https://store.littlesimz.com/?ffm=FFM_902095af2ef34bcc0152372db822135e

Review:

An uncompromising artist with a broad sense of scope, Little Simz came into her own on 2019's Grey Area; her Mercury Prize-nominated third album was a universally praised gem that seated her among Britain's top rappers. Arriving two years later, her follow-up is, if anything, more ambitious, with a personal nature that helps it connect squarely. While a range of subjects are explored within, Sometimes I MIght Be Introvert is, above all, a reckoning of Simz' public and personal selves, especially in relation to her recent success. Born Simbiatu Abisola Abiola Ajikawo, the album's title is a nod to both her identity and an acronym of her nickname "Simbi." A sprawling 65-minute opus that somehow never wears out its welcome, Introvert doubles down on Simz' preference for organic production, utilizing analog drums, bass, and guitar over which sweeping orchestral and choral arrangements expand and contract. Opening track "Introvert" acts as a sort of symphonic overture, introducing both Simz' internal struggles ("one day I'm wordless, next day I'm a wordsmith, close to success, but to happiness, I'm the furthest") and the album's cinematic richness. The journey that follows winds and weaves through past and present, examining the trauma of an absent father on the dazzling "I Love You, I Hate You" or radiating bravado on the compact "Speed" and the nimble "Standing Ovation." A bevy of interesting guests appear throughout, including dulcet-voiced Nigerian singer Obongjayar on the Afrobeat-inspired "Point and Kill" and British actress Emma Corrin (The Crown), whose theatrical diction on the album's various interludes serves as a sort of tonal counterpoint to Simz' earthy flow. Working with longtime producer Inflo, the two present a formidable pair, with innate chemistry and a tightly focused collaborative energy. As on Grey Area, there are no dry spells or dips in quality, just a master class in modern songwriting with heaps of poise and a beating, soulful heart” – AllMusic

Key Cut: I Love You, I Hate You

Adele30

Release Date: 19th November, 2021

Labels: Columbia/Melted Stone

Producers: Tobias Jesso Jr./Ludwig Göransson/Inflo/Greg Kurstin/Max Martin/Shellback

Standout Tracks: Cry Your Heart Out/Oh My God/Woman like Me

Buy: https://store.hmv.com/store/music/vinyl/30-limited-edition-clear-vinyl

Review:

Because of the events in her personal life, 30 was initially pegged as a divorce album. But Adele goes far beyond wallowing in heartache, instead showing the entire spectrum of feelings that come with having one's life completely altered. Appropriately, it also periodically switches up her sound, and often to surprising effect. Her voice, able to wring an entire diary's worth of highs and lows from a single syllable, remains the focal point, but it's framed in new ways. Adele's endlessly lip-syncable music might be made for the more theatrical moments posted to TikTok, which caught fire and became a fresh vehicle for pop stardom in the interregnum between 25 and 30. As it turns out, though, her singing works well inside the stripped-down sonics of bedroom pop, which soundtracks so many of that video-sharing app's brief clips.

Take "All Night Parking," which arrives at 30's midpoint. Structured around a sample of "No More Shadows," a fluttering composition by the late jazz pianist Erroll Garner, it's an open-hearted love song dedicated to someone who's chipped away at Adele's post-breakup armor. Her voice lilts as she enthuses over the blush of first love, a girl-group chorus finishing her thoughts as they tumble from her. These refrains pop up all over 30, sometimes soothing, sometimes sassing; it's worth noting that most of the songs featuring them have vocals credited entirely to Adele, adding to the home-recording vibe.

There's also "My Little Love," a stretched-out R&B track that portrays the constant-learner status attendant to being a first-time parent. It has a windswept feel, with arpeggiated pianos and a gently rolling bassline accompanying her musings on motherhood; it also incorporates voice memos of Adele alone and with Angelo, with Adele telling her child at one point, "I feel like I don't really know what I'm doing" and, later, breaking down the anxiety she's felt since her divorce. It's a heavy, intense song that shows how even "happier" types of love can walk hand in hand with deep pain.

30 does have quite a few grand pop moments, too. "Easy on Me," the album's lead single, is a barn burner flaunting Adele's pipes; "Can I Get It," which pivots on a sneaky whistled hook, struts confidently as she looks for new romance, its carefreeness giving more juice to her longing for true connection; and "Hold On" combines gospel splendor with majestic strings as it provides a supportive shoulder for anyone plagued by self-doubt. The latter is one of three 30 tracks produced by Inflo, of the British funk collective Sault, and his dual embrace of retro aesthetics and of-the-moment reflections gives 30 an added charge.

"Complacency is the worst trait to have," Adele warns over the gathering-cloud guitar loop of "Woman Like Me." On that steely-eyed track, she's addressing a lover who isn't giving her the right amount of attention, standing up for herself as an object of desire and a woman worthy of devotion. But that mantra could also double as a mission statement for 30, a surprisingly personal album that showcases how Adele has matured, both as an artist and as a person, since the middle of the last decade. She could have built on her blockbuster success in a cynical way, copy-and-pasting "Rolling in the Deep" and "Hello." Instead, she lets her emotions guide her, with triumphant results. Grade: A-“ – Entertainment Weekly

Key Cut: Easy on Me

Joy CrookesSkin

Release Date: 15th October, 2021

Labels: Sony/Insanity/Speakerbox

Producers: Barney Lister/Blue May/Eg White/Jonny Lattimer/Joy Crookes/Sam Beste/Tev'n

Standout Tracks: Poison/Feet Don't Fail Me Now/Skin

Buy: https://www.roughtrade.com/gb/joy-crookes/skin

Review:

Joy Crookes radiates a self-confidence that defines herself in terms of who she isn’t. Transcending labels with her blend of neo-soul and R&B, she takes all the hooks, choruses, and high value associated with pop and packages them into something wiser. After all, calls to soul, jazz, and Motown are considered the province of generations past, right? Wrong. Spiced up with modern production and relatable reference points, 22-year-old Crookes is the real thing.

In the past two years alone, she has been nominated for the BRITs Rising Star Award, was due to support Harry Styles pre-pandemic, and has sold out her headline shows across the UK and Europe. She imbues her music with a genuine soulfulness, all the while touching on vulnerable topics including mental health, generational trauma, politics, and sex.

Honouring her Bangladeshi-Irish heritage, ‘Skin’ places this pertinence front and centre. The title track’s lyrics are evident: "Don’t you know the skin that you’re given was made to be lived in? You’ve got a life. You’ve got a life worth living". Crookes dispenses wider encouragement and, despite the pain, remains optimistically intimate with her featherlight tones as orchestral soul-jazz weaves around her. Later in the album, her skin becomes the subject of a political narrative in ‘Power’, where she makes an ode to the female figures in her life while exploring the misuse of authority in the current social climate.

The misty-eyed haze lifts on songs like ‘Kingdom’ and ‘Wild Jasmine’ which are filled with guitar riffs and experimental sonics. Crookes twists through narratives of both new beginnings and old flames, finding value in tumultuous times. Inviting listeners to daydream, ‘19th Floor’ laments on belonging. With a string arrangement that wouldn’t feel out of place on the discography of Portishead, Crookes vocal comparably reaches untold altitudes. Across ‘Skin’, the 13 smooth jams showcase Joy Crookes not only as a vocalist or candid writer but as the new face of British soul. While many artists chase nostalgia, Crookes offers a different way forward by disregarding the traditional boundaries of classicism” – CLASH

Key Cut: When You Were Mine

IDLESCRAWLER

Release Date: 12th November, 2021

Label: Partisan

Producers: Kenny Beats/Mark Bowen

Standout Tracks: Car Crash/Stockholm Syndrome/Meds

Buy: https://roughtrade.com/gb/idles/crawler/lp-plus-2?channable=409d926964003332313637349b&gclid=CjwKCAiA866PBhAYEiwANkIneN0_xU4z67ABZHwvxLm7yoh8cEyvAjcTpGeF1T55xsYD3LaHa0tMuxoCU0kQAvD_BwE

Review:

CRAWLER certainly offers that needed change, even from its first moments. Fans have come to expect tremendous gut-punches from IDLES openers, but “MTT 420 RR” abandons the band’s roaring rock machine for a textured, quietly buzzing introduction. It’s dark and dense, dissecting a car crash in gruesome detail. The same motif reappears for “Car Crash,” this time framed amidst an abrasive industrial maelstrom and rapped verses, courtesy of Talbot.

CRAWLER is IDLES at their most bracing and destructive, set directly against their most intimate and adventurous material. Fans may recall when Talbot sang “Look Ma, I’m a soul singer!” on “The Lover.” Well, the record’s emotional cornerstone, “The Beachland Ballroom” makes good on that promise; Talbot takes on a hoarse, crooning howl while the band backs him up with their best Motown impression. Meanwhile, “Progress” is an otherworldly electronic dreamscape, one that transitions with a final click into the 30-second grindcore frenzy of “Wizz.” Of course, there are also the requisite amped-up highlights like “The Wheel” or “Crawl!,” as well as the unhinged dance-punk grooves of “The New Sensation,” all of which will fit well in the band’s blistering live sets.

Though there are no outright anthems on the level of “Danny Nedelko” or “Model Village,” the band’s more experimental bent also finds them looking inward more than they have since Brutalism. As much as CRAWLER is another step in the band’s evolution, it is equally an exploration of the dark corners of addiction and trauma. The record is largely devoid of IDLES’ signature political “sloganeering” and blaring affirmations. Hints of the band’s humor bleed through the lyrics, but they’re largely tinged with the edge of bitter self-analysis, as on “Crawl!” (“God damn I’m feeling good, said the liar to the congregation").

Yet, after all the record’s drug-addled nights, bloody car crashes, and searing self-hatred, the band once again ends the proceedings with a moment of hard-won hope. As Talbot explains, “Before his assassination, Trotsky knew that Stalin's men were coming over to kill him. He knew he was going to die. What did he do? After watching his wife out in the garden, he wrote in his diary, ‘in spite of it all, life is beautiful.’” Talbot closes the record on those same words. Once again, the band finds healing and beauty in their own chaotic vortex, and once again they invite everyone listening to do the same, joining them on their most exploratory and cathartic ride yet” – The Line of Best Fit

Key Cut: The Beachland Ballroom

CHVRCHES - Screen Violence

Release Date: 27th August, 2021

Labels: EMI/Glassnote

Producers: CHVRCHES

Standout Tracks: How Not to Drown (with Robert Smith)/Good Girls/Lullabies

Buy: https://chvrch.es/

Review:

The best dance music is the kind that simultaneously gets you moving and breaks your heart. Some of the greatest club songs have infectious beats, innovative production, but more importantly, meaningful lyrics, and passionate performances. There’s nothing greater than a heartbreaking dance ballad, where the euphoric crescendo feels earned. The first track from Chvrches‘ fourth studio release, Screen Violence, the beautiful “Asking for a Friend”, starts with soft, ethereal synths, rising slowly like a beguiling sunrise, before Lauren Mayberry’s tart, soulful voice clears through the sound with moving words. “I don’t want to say that I’m afraid to die / I’m no good at goodbyes.”

As the achingly gorgeous song continues, the sentiment is heartbreaking. Yet, the shiny, glossy pop keeps the song moving and grooving, marrying the Stranger Things-esque atmosphere with the blissful feeling of a prime on-the-floor banger. Creating warm, emotional synthpop is Chvrches’ forte, and their latest album, Screen Violence, is the kind of bruised pop record that can only be made after a year in which loss defined so much pop art.

Screen Violence delivers for fans of soulful synthpop because it’s the kind of collection that feels emphatic and sympathetic. So much of synthpop can feel cold and distant, but Chvrches’ patented sound reaches for the heart: pulsing, thumping beats, swirling synths, bracing lyrics, and emotional vocals. Though so much of Screen Violence sounds synthetic, there’s a strong emotional core due to the performances and lovely lyrics. The synthesizers work to support the songs. It’s a gentle use of fuzzy, brushed synths that move away from the sharp, glassy sounds often associated with this kind of return to the New Romantic sound.

Although the 1980s impact Screen Violence, this record is not some dusty look back but a forward-thinking album that uses some important musical tropes of the decade to create vibrant and fresh music. Much of that vitality is due to the record’s address of the culture, particularly sexual and gender mores and roles. On the plaintive first single, “He Said She Said”, Mayberry sings of the complicated and contradictory standards on which women are judged. The lyrics are equal parts frustration and resentment, as she slams a lover who is gaslighting, the poignancy underscored by the repeated mantra, “I feel like I’m losing my mind.”

Despite the prettiness of Mayberry’s voice, the spirited spark is glorious to hear on “Good Girls”, which rips apart societal, gendered expectations of “nice” girls by acknowledging sharper and sourer feelings and thoughts. Something is bracing and affirming of a defiant Mayberry insisting that “I won’t apologize again/and/I had never had a taste for liars.” The song’s righteous rebuke of hypocrisy is another moment when Chvrches find that fantastic meeting point in dance-pop when brainy, intellectual lyrics intersect with catchy beats.

Because so much of Screen Violence looks to the New Romantics, it seems fitting that Cure frontman Robert Smith joins Chvrches on the urgent single “How Not to Drown”. The song benefits from darker production than the other songs on the album; the music is slightly harder, the synthesizers somewhat more industrial, the beats hit tougher. There’s a beautiful, baroque feel to the expansive chorus, and Smith’s tight howl adds an invaluable drama to the epic song.

What makes Screen Violence such a successful album is that the songs reach for honesty and candor whilst simultaneously working overtime to get people moving. So much dance music chooses the hooks and beats over the heart, but Chvrches makes some of the most expressive pop music for the dance clubs. There are some gorgeous highlights on this album; there’s no filler, an impressive feat for a record with ten tracks. But the best is the touching final track, “Better If You Don’t”, in which the lyrics explore the despair of lost love, as Mayberry faces challenges such feeling “never as alone as I am back home” and admitting that “no one broke my heart quite like that man.” It’s a powerful capper to a record that embraces all of the sticky, torchy emotions of being human” – PopMatters

Key Cut: He Said She Said

Sam Fender - Seventeen Going Under

Release Date: 8th October, 2021

Label: Polydor

Producer: Bramwell Bronte

Standout Tracks: Get You Down/Long Way Off/Spit of You

Buy: https://shop.samfender.com/*/*/Seventeen-Going-Under-DIY-Black-Vinyl-Signed/745F0000000

Review:

In a recent NME cover story, Fender said that this reflective period was influenced by the pandemic and his own experience shielding due to a previous serious illness: “It was such a stagnant time that I had to go inwards and find something, because I was so uninspired by the lifetime we’re living in,” he said. It forced him to reconsider why certain formative “stories keep appearing” and the humbling process of growing up. Young men think they know the world, but they rarely take time to get to know themselves.

You can pinpoint the stories that have shaped Fender the most, particularly the father and son dynamic on ‘Spit Of You’, where he ruminates on the passing of his grandmother and his father’s reaction to that seismic loss. He recognises both their flaws (“smashing cups off the floor / And kicking walls through / That’s me and you”) and compassion: “you kissed her forehead”, he remembers, knowing that “one day that’ll be your forehead I’m kissing / And I’ll still look exactly like you”. Finding common ground to communicate doesn’t come easy to sons with fraught relationships, though. “I can talk to anyone / I can’t talk to you”, Fender sighs in the chorus, no resolution in sight.

Defeatism rears its head often in Fender’s writing – he knows what he’s doing is deviant or flawed – but to point them out is not a display of machismo and cockiness, instead highlighting his own remorse. On ‘Mantra’ he flags that he’s “trying to be better but I fall at every hurdle” and is unable to shake the pressures of social media; there’s a knowingness in ‘Last To Make It Home’ also: “I am a soundboard to some / With myself I am not so forgiving”. A ray of hope occasionally breaks through, as on The Boss-aping album closer ‘Dying Light’, but it does so with a certain dimness: “I must admit I’m out of bright ideas to keep the hell at bay”

The world-weariness comes with slightly less conviction on the politically-motivated ‘Aye’ and ‘Long Way Off’, falling into the trap of “pointing at stuff angrily”, as he described some of his debut album to NME. But it doesn’t have to be all doom and gloom; two of the finest, funniest songs from this purple patch, ‘Howdon Aldi Death Queue’ and ‘The Kitchen’, exist solely as B-sides. It’s a testament to the conviction of this project that he can leave these songs out.

The musical reference points are similar to his those of debut – The War On Drugs, the aforementioned Bruce Springsteen – but the connection with producer and confidant Bramwell Bronte grows only stronger throughout this album. There are shades of Echo and The Bunnymen on the string-laden ‘The Leveller’, and The National on the stuttering drumbeat of ‘Paradigms’; his voice has the space to soar on these darker, grandiose compositions. This appears to be a musical friendship that could run and run for years.

If ‘Hypersonic Missiles’ was the sound of a young boy kicking out at the world, ‘Seventeen Going Under’ sees Fender realise that it can kick back a lot harder, and he counts every blow and bruise. But he seems to have found that time passes and that most wounds – even the deepest – will eventually heal, if he can allow them to” – NME

Key Cut: Seventeen Going Under

TirzahColourgrade

Release Date: 1st October, 2021

Label: Domino

Producer: Mica Levi

Standout Tracks: Colourgrade/Hive Mind (featuring Coby Sey)/Sink In

Buy: https://store.hmv.com/store/music/vinyl/colourgrade?gclid=CjwKCAiA866PBhAYEiwANkIneHTBNG2mAeNpfKTUmS0X7vbzz1PAUXW9yR5c_K9hTHOn1JUJLx1xHRoC718QAvD_BwE&gclsrc=aw.ds

Review:

Though Tirzah continues to work closely with Mica and Sey (who sang on Devotion’s title track), her approach to song-making has changed drastically. Devotion was compiled from 10 years’ worth of material, with the intention of allowing each song to stand alone. Here, she aimed to leave things unpolished: “The roughness, the accurate recording, the time it takes to get places, it’s a bit of a statement on how things feel live,” she’s said. In this way, Colourgrade has a certain organismal quality: the mid-sentence throat clearing on “Beating,” or the sirening synths that illuminate Tirzah and Sey on “Hive Mind.” Bookended by a pair of tracks emulating conception and death, the album’s sequencing is reminiscent of life itself. The titular opener is Tirzah at her most unfamiliar: abstract lyricism, Auto-Tuned vocals, and uncanny, bird-like synth whistles signal a new beginning. On the other hand, saccharine closer “Hips” zaps all over the place, like a sudden rush to settle all your accounts: “Cold grips my mind/Cold hits my chest.”

But Tirzah leaves the middle tracks tantalizingly open-ended, as rootless as driftwood. She meditates on the existential, everyday life of a parent, bringing us into her new and ever-changing world. On “Recipe,” granular synths drenched in reverb seep through her voice, as if to wash away her anxieties. Or take “Crepuscular Rays,” a long, meandering song in the album’s second half that, according to Tirzah, is foundational to its structure. Moving through droning vocal manipulations and skeletal instrumentation, it unites the unearthly production with the fleshiness of the vocals. In nature, crepuscular rays are the angled beams of sunlight that appear near dusk or dawn. It’s no coincidence that Tirzah named one of Colourgrade’s defining tracks after a phenomenon of change.

We tend to measure life by the dots on the timeline, but Colourgrade studies all the distance in between, absorbing each moment and making space for it to settle. The songs move between rumination and enchantment, simulating the multiplicities of being alive. And while it’s a feat to watch these experimental songs come together, Tirzah isn’t trying to be anything beyond her music; the wonder is in the process. While she remains a very private individual, her music is generous even through its haziness. As Colourgrade highlights, love, family, intimacy are central to her everyday. Luckily, she allows us to partake in these familial affairs, and the outcome is spellbinding” – Pitchfork

Key Cut: Send Me

Yard Act - The Overload

Release Date: 21st January, 2022

Label: Island Records

Standout Tracks: The Overload/Dead Horse/The Incident

Buy: https://www.roughtrade.com/gb/yard-act/the-overload

Review:

For all the expectation that surrounds The Overload, it’s sometimes clear that it’s the work of a band that’s barely been together two years. Yard Act are sporadically consumed by their own influences, particularly on Rich which, with its hypnotic two-note bassline, percussive clatter and distinctly Mark E Smith-ish vocal intonation – “skilled lay-BUUH in the private sec-TUUH” – sounds so much like the Fall circa Perverted By Language you start wondering if it’s actually a knowing double bluff, a wry comment on the media’s eagerness to bring up the Fall whenever a band with a vocalist who speaks rather than sings appears.

At other points, however, the sense of a band not yet fully developed feels oddly exciting. The Overload is a starting point for a number of routes, rather than a perfectly formed end in itself. Certainly, there are flashes of a smartness and depth to Smith’s writing that go beyond scabrous one-liners. Tall Poppies retells the saga of a provincial David Watts figure – confident, handsome, a skilled footballer – who decides to stay put in his home town, become an estate agent and settle down. Initially, it sounds perilously close to sneering at “little world” ambitions, as though there’s something unconscionable about wanting to own your own home and have kids. But the music slows, then collapses entirely, and Smith flips the script, in a way that recalls Arctic Monkeys’ A Certain Romance. The protagonist dies young, of cancer, and the narrator attends his funeral. “He wasn’t perfect but he was my friend / He wasn’t perfect but he was one of us,” offers Smith, before noting that the friend wouldn’t have liked the inscription on a commemorative bench, “because he wasn’t too bothered about long songs with loads of words”: Tall Poppies lasts nearly seven minutes and its lyrics cover two sides of A4 paper. It isn’t the most complicated message – we’re all different, we can all theoretically get along – but it feels genuinely affecting and powerful in the context of an album so obsessed with divisions and spitting bile at the other side.

It’s a theme picked up – albeit with the winning caveat “it’s hippy bullshit, but it’s true” – on the closing 100% Endurance, both the album’s best moment and its most atypical. Decorated with gentle electric piano, it’s a song that seems to have its musical roots less in the post-punk era than an aspect of Pulp’s oeuvre, long buried in the popular imagination beneath the radio-friendly anthemics of Common People and Do You Remember the First Time?: the lengthy, conversational storytelling of Inside Susan and David’s Last Summer. Its narrator is hungover after a night digesting the news that sentient life had been discovered on other planets: rather than teaching humanity anything about the universe or the meaning of life, “not one of them had any clue what they’re doing here either”. This development doesn’t bring about an existential crisis, but a glorious, warm crescendo about the power of the human spirit: “Grab anybody that needs to hear it … scream in their face: / death is coming for us but not today … all that you ever needed to exist has always been within you.” It’s a sharp U-turn from the preceding track’s suggestion that everything is “so bleak that giving your two pence on anything isn’t worth a fucking thing”: a sudden, infectious blast of optimism, from a band who currently have a lot to be optimistic about” – The Guardian

Key Cut: Rich

PinkPantheress to hell with it (Mixtape)

Release Date: 15th October, 2021

Label: Elektra/Parlophone

Producers: PinkPantheress/Oscar Scheller/Izco/Jkarri/Mura Masa/Zach Nahome/Dill Aitchison/Kairos/ Laferme/Adam F

Standout Tracks: Pain/Just for Me/Reason

Buy: https://shop.pantheress.pink/uk/to-hell-with-it.html

Review:

All aboard the hype train; Pinkpantheress is driving, and she knows exactly what direction she wants to go in.

Every now and then, there's an artist that comes along that gets all the music editors excited. They'll be young, smart, their music will cover a variety of bases, and they may well be at the forefront of a new internet or social media trend.

There's no doubting Pinkpantheress ticks all of these boxes. Born in 2001, the London based artist has come to prominence over the last 10 months, utilising TikTok to astounding effect; from dropping clips of tracks into the void in December until "someone notices", to her song being sampled by a track hitting number four in the UK charts in July, her career so far has been as shortly effective and smartly curated as her songs. All whilst still studying film, and managing to maintain a degree of anonymity; her debut mixtape 'To hell with it', released on a major label, comes with a lot of external pressure and expectation - both from an industry of suits eager to hold on the coattails of the next youth phenomenon, but more importantly, of a young, savvy and diverse fanbase.

There is a simple reason why her music has captured the attention so quickly; it is very, very good. It also just happens to be music that absolutely captures much about current youth culture; her sound genre hops, picking pieces from UK garage, K-Pop, 2-step, and emo. Her use of samples is both sweetly nostalgic and knowingly urbane; from Sweet Female Attitude's UK garage classic 'Flowers' in Pain, through the 'Hybrid Theory' era Linkin Park on 'Last Valentines', to Pain's sample of the 90s drum and bass classic 'Circles' (which in itself sampled its hook from 70's jazz-funk classic 'Westchester Lady'), there's a complete lack of pretension here, mirroring a generation of music fans no longer divided by the tribal fan culture of the past. Pinkpantheress is younger than half of the samples here - she doesn't care if you were a mosher or a raver, she just knows if the music makes you feel good, then that's all you need.

But this mixtape is much more than just an astute collection of samples; her voice is a key ingredient here. Much like the UK garage vocalists of yore, her tone is sweet and clear, but with a conscious detachment, owing a debt to the likes of PC Music's Hannah Diamond and QT. Her melodies are catchy, simple, and effectual; while she might mine her Spotify library for musical ideas, there's no doubt she's capable of littering her songs with memorable hooks. The production too is fantastic; clean and uncluttered, it allows the multicolour palate of influences to shine through. And while the overall effect is both at once evocative and euphoric, it's also a much calmer and more sober experience than ketamine daze of vaporwave, or the MDMA whirl of PC Music.

It's exciting to hear an artist so assured at such an early stage of her career. Yet to play live, she's letting this project do the talking on its own terms. She's acknowledged that she's an internet kid, and this is truly an internet album - full of self-aware wistfulness and post-ironic references, it avoids the pitfalls of many other flash-in-the pan internet culture records by also being genuine; genuinely nostalgic, genuinely sweet, genuinely interesting, and genuinely great” – CLASH

Key Cut: Passion

FEATURE: Alright on the Night… My BRIT Awards Predictions

FEATURE:

 

 

Alright on the Night…

IN THIS PHOTO: Dua Lipa is nominated for the Best Pop/R&B Act 

My BRIT Awards Predictions

___________

ON 8th February…

this year’s BRIT Awards will take place. Able to house a big audience and have artists playing, it will almost like being back to normal for the decades-running ceremony. This year has seen some changes this year, including the removal of gender-specific categories. Instead, there is an Artist of the Year prize. I think this year also marks forty-five years of the BRIT Awards. You can learn more about the history of one of the most prestigious and watched annual award shows. Before coming to the award categories and my predicted winners in each, here is some news regarding some performances that have been announced:

The BRIT Awards with Mastercard today announce the first wave of performers for this year’s BRIT Awards ceremony, taking place Tuesday 8th February, live from The O2 arena, broadcast exclusively on ITV and ITV Hub, and streamed for non-UK viewers via The BRITs’ YouTube channel.

Performing to millions of fans and viewers will be Dave, Doja Cat, Ed Sheeran, Holly Humberstone, Liam Gallagher and Little Simz, in what is set to be another monumental show to celebrate the best of British and international music.

With Omicron continuing to present many challenges in terms of planning, organisers are working around the clock to pull together the best possible show and The BRITs will continue to lead the way in terms of putting on a live music event safely as the UK navigates the ongoing effects of the Covid-19 pandemic. Artists, Nominees and all guests will be asked to show a negative LFT test on arrival to the venue, and fans will this year be offered to purchase stall seats on the arena floor, where nominated artists will also take their seat in an exclusive area. The BRITs are this year working with Blue Light Tickets where the emergency services are invited to enter a ballot to come to the show, following the gifting of tickets to NHS front-line workers in 2021.

Audience members will not be socially distanced but will be asked to wear their masks when not eating or drinking, or in their seats. They will be required to follow existing Government guidance when travelling to the venue and adhere to rules set out by the event organisers.

Audience tickets are now on sale to the public via the AXS website HERE.

The livestream, which will be hosted exclusively on YouTube for the 9th year in a row, will give non-UK viewers a front row seat to all the performances as they happen, as well as giving them access to the red carpet and backstage, with hosts to be announced soon.

About the Performers…

Nominated for Artist of the Year, Mastercard Album of the Year, Song of the Year and Hip Hop/Grime/Rap Act, Dave returns to the BRITs following his win at the 2020 show for Mastercard Album of the Year (for his debut no1 album ‘Psychodrama’) and a spell-binding performance of ‘Black’. The multi-talented rapper, performer, songwriter, producer and actor released his second album We’re All Alone In This Together last year to universal critical acclaim, becoming the biggest selling week 1 in 2 years (Oct 2019-Oct 2021), sitting at the #1 spot for 2 weeks and becoming the biggest seller of Q3.  Dave recently surpassed 1 Million album sales worldwide and 3 Billion streams.

Making her first UK performance and BRITS debut will be Global Superstar Doja Cat in celebration of her two BRIT nominations. Doja Cat is the best-selling female R&B and hip-hop star of last year having garnered accolades and award nominations across the board including three Top Ten singles.

Another world-dominating British act with four nominations this year, Ed Sheeran will be performing at the ceremony, following another record-breaking year on the UK and international charts. His fifth studio album, = , was released last year along with chart topping singles ‘Bad Habits’, ‘Shivers’ and ‘Merry Christmas’, the Christmas collaboration with Elton John. Ed’s fourth BRITs performance will be followed by a UK & Ireland stadium tour in the Spring/Summer, including five nights at London’s Wembley Stadium.

BRITs 2022 Rising Star winner Holly Humberstone will premiere her music to her biggest audience yet, having won the prestigious prize late last year and following in the footsteps of Griff and Celeste who performed on the BRITs after winning the Rising Star award previously. Beating off competition from Bree Runway and Lola Young, over the past year the alt-pop star has garnered over 200M global streams to date as well as being shortlisted for BBC Sound of 2021 and the Ivor Novello Rising Star award.

Following his emotional performance at the 2018 BRITs, Rock’n’Roll royalty Liam Gallagher will be back for what is bound to be another memorable moment, ahead of his third studio album release coming late Spring and two huge Knebworth headline shows in June. His first two solo albums both went to No. 1 in the UK upon release.

London based Simbiatu Ajikawo, aka Little Simz had already been slowly and steadily building a reputation as one of the best and brightest talents of her generation until last year’s Sometimes I Might Be Introvert came along and changed the game completely. Hailed as an instant classic, it rocketed Simz from cult hero to international superstar overnight, landing at No. 4 in the UK Official Albums Chart, earning her four BRIT nominations, with nods for Artist of the Year, Mastercard Album of the Year, Hip Hop/Grime/Rap Act and Best New Artist, and making her the first female to sell out three headline shows at the legendary Brixton Academy. 

Little Simz: “Thank you BRITs. It's an honour to be nominated for 4 BRIT Awards and I can’t wait to be performing on the night too. I'm so happy and grateful the music has connected and resonated. Congratulations to everyone nominated. Simz x”

Nominations for this year’s BRIT Awards were unveiled before Christmas, with the above names joined by artists including Coldplay, Billie Eilish, Olivia Rodrigo, Central Cee and Little Mix who will battle it out for a prestigious BRIT. The 2022 BRIT Awards will be hosted by Mo Gilligan, with Clara Amfo and Maya Jama set to present The BRIT Awards Red Carpet show on ITV2.

Mastercard return as headline partner for the 24th year having supported The BRITs for over two decades, bringing cardholders closer to music through a range of Priceless BRITs experiences. This year, Mastercard will continue to sponsor the much sought after Mastercard Album award, as well as Song of the Year with Mastercard for the second time and is proud to carry on connecting people to priceless possibilities. 

YouTube Shorts is the Official Digital Music Partner and will bring fans closer to the BRITs than ever before. As the home of the official livestream on YouTube, audiences around the world will be able to watch the whole journey of the BRITs unfold, from the nominations, through the run-up, to the awards themselves and the performances on demand afterwards. In an exciting first, fans will also be able to watch exclusive behind-the-scenes footage on the night on YouTube Shorts, a new short-form video experience right on YouTube, as well as listening to their favourite artists' playlists on YouTube Music. YouTube Shorts sponsors the 2022 Artist of the Year award.

The BRIT Awards 2022 with Mastercard take place Tuesday 8th February at The O2 arena, exclusively broadcast on ITV and ITV Hub and hosted by Mo Gilligan
”.

Ahead of the ceremony early next month, below are the categories that will be contested. I have listed all the artists and runners in each; predicting my winner at the end. I am not sure how accurate my forecast is - though I am confident that many are right. Whilst there is some great international talent nominated, there is also a showcasing of some…

BRILLIANT British talent.

__________________

Mastercard Album of the year

Adele30

Dave - We're All Alone In This Together

Ed Sheeran - =

Little Simz - Sometimes I Might Be Introvert

Sam Fender - Seventeen Going Under

Who Is Likely to Win: Ed Sheeran - =

Who I Think Should Win: Little Simz - Sometimes I Might Be Introvert

Artist of the Year

 

Adele

Dave

Ed Sheeran

Little Simz

Sam Fender

Who Is Likely to Win: Ed Sheeran

 

Who I Think Should Win: Little Simz

 

International Group of the Year

 ABBA

BTS

Måneskin

Silk Sonic

The War on Drugs

Who Is Likely to Win: BTS

 

Who I Think Should Win: ABBA 

International Artist of the Year

 Billie Eilish

Doja Cat

Lil Nas X

Olivia Rodrigo

Taylor Swift

Who Is Likely to Win: Taylor Swift

 

Who I Think Should Win: Billie Eilish

 Best New Artist

Central Cee

Griff

Joy Crookes

Little Simz

Self Esteem

 Who Is Likely to Win: Self Esteem

 

Who I Think Should Win: Self Esteem

 Song of the Year

A1 & J1 - Latest Trends

Adele - Easy on Me

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

Becky Hill & David Guetta Remember

Central Cee - Obsessed with You

Dave ft Stormzy Clash

Ed Sheeran - Bad Habits

Elton John & Dua Lipa - Cold Heart (Pnau Mix)

Glass Animals - Heat Waves

Joel Corry, RAYE, David GuettaBED

KSI Holiday

Nathan Evans, 220Kid, Billen Ted Wellerman

Riton x Nightcrawlers Ft Mufasa & Hypeman - Friday (Dopamine Re-Edit)

Tion Wayne & Russ MillionsBody

Tom Grennan - Little Bit of Love

Who Is Likely to Win: Adele - Easy on Me

 

Who I Think Should Win: Adele - Easy on Me

 International Song of the Year

ATB, Topic, A7S - Your Love (9PM)

Billie Eilish - Happier Than Ever

Ckay - love nwantiti (ah ah ah)

Doja Cat ft SZA - Kiss Me More

Drake ft Lil Baby - Girls Want Girls

Galantis, David Guetta, Little Mix - Heartbreak Anthem

Jonasu - Black Magic

Kid Laroi & Justin BieberSTAY

Lil Nas X - MONTERO (Call Me By Your Name)

Lil Tijay & 6LACK - Calling My Phone

Maneskin - I Wanna Be Your Slave

Olivia Rodrigo - good 4 u

Polo G Rapstar

Tiesto - The Business

The Weeknd - Save Your Tears

Who Is Likely to Win: Olivia Rodrigo - good 4 u

 

Who I Think Should Win: Olivia Rodrigo - good 4 u

Best Group

Coldplay

D-Block Europe

Little Mix

London Grammar

Wolf Alice

Who Is Likely to Win: Little Mix

 

Who I Think Should Win: Wolf Alice

 Best Pop/R&B Act

Adele

Dua Lipa

Ed Sheeran

Griff

Joy Crookes

Who Is Likely to Win: Dua Lipa

 

Who I Think Should Win: Griff

 Best Rock/Alternative Act

Coldplay

Glass Animals

Sam Fender

Tom Grennan

Wolf Alice

Who Is Likely to Win: Sam Fender

 

Who I Think Should Win: Sam Fender

 Best Dance Act

 Becky Hill

Calvin Harris

Fred Again..

Joel Corry

RAYE

Who Is Likely to Win: Becky Hill

 

Who I Think Should Win: RAYE

 Best Hip Hop/Rap/Grime Act

AJ Tracey

Central Cee

Dave

Ghetts

Little Simz

Who Is Likely to Win: Dave

 

Who I Think Should Win: Little Simz

FEATURE: Bye Bye Baby: From Like a Prayer to Erotica: Looking at One of Madonna’s Biggest Reinventions

FEATURE:

 

 

Bye Bye Baby

IN THIS PHOTO: Madonna in 1990/PHOTO CREDIT: Patrick Demarchelier 

From Like a Prayer to Erotica: Looking at Madonna’s Biggest Reinventions

___________

ONE of the biggest album anniversaries…

 IN THIS PHOTO: Madonna in 1992 for the Deeper and Deeper video

this year occurs on 20th October. This will mark thirty years of Madonna’s fifth studio album, Erotica. The album was released simultaneously with her first book publication Sex: a coffee table book containing explicit photographs featuring the singer, and marked her first release under Maverick, her own multimedia entertainment company. I wonder whether there will be a thirtieth anniversary release of that album. The photo I have included at the top of this feature was taken in 1990. I think that year marked a real transition for Madonna. 1989’s Like a Prayer saw her grow in confidence and talent as an artist. Whereas 1986’s True Blue was a reinvention and slightly more mature and bolder album compared to 1984’s Like a Virgin, she took another big step three years after True Blue. In terms of her lyrics and music videos, everything got bigger and deeper! More introspective than anything she had released to that point, Like a Prayer spawned six incredible singles – including Cherish and Like a Prayer – and saw Madonna named as the artist of the decade by many publications. There was this huge commercial and critical backing behind her. I am going to come to details and writing about Erotica soon. Close to the anniversary, I am going to go into more depth about the album. It was maligned by a lot of people in 1992, and it remains one of Madonna’s albums that remains underrated. Seen as a bit hit-less and too explicit by some, it definitely departed from her earlier sound. To me, it was an always-inventive artist trying something new and pushing boundaries.

Erotica is an album that lives up to its name. A Pop superstar that wanted to express herself and be true, there was a lot of pushback from those who felt she had gone too far or was being provocative. One cannot blame Madonna for having the desire to do what she did. In 1990 alone, she embarked on the smash that was The Blond Ambition World Tour. The fifty-seven-date world tour supported Like a Prayer, and the soundtrack album to the 1990 film Dick Tracy, I'm Breathless. Eight years after her debut single, Madonna had risen from this curious young artist to a global superstar who was ruling the music world. In her early-thirties when the tour started, obviously Madonna was going to be change things up. If her first few albums had a sweetness and sense of naivety here and there, Like a Prayer and The Blond Ambition World Tour confirmed that she was this bold and accomplished woman who was pushing Pop to new heights. A huge tour that took in cabaret, theatre and different elements to create this extravaganza! Obviously, by the end of 1990, Sire and Warner Bros. knew that a first greatest hits collection was overdue. Having achieved so much and scored so many big hits to that point, The Immaculate Collection was a massive release. It remains one of the most famous and loved greatest hits collections ever.

 IN THIS PHOTO: Madonna in 1990

Throw in the huge success Vogue had in 1990 and the rising profile Madonna had an actor to that point, she was entering the decade as this polymath and pioneer whose music was so much different to everything out there. Whereas a lot of her contemporaries were producing sugary and unsophisticated Pop that was throwaway, Madonna was growing as an artist. Producing and writing alongside Patrick Leonard and Stephen Bray on Like a Prayer, she was also this burgeoning and hugely talented songwriter and producer who was commanding so much respect. Despite her success and the fact she was influencing so many around her, Madonna had to face a lot of judgment, misogyny and sexism. From the media and magazines slating her to some of her male peers being sexist and degrading, it seemed that there were a lot of people who were waiting for Madonna to fail! To this day, Madonna gets a lot of negativity and cruelty aimed her way. At the peak of her success, that sense of fame and hype meant there was a lot of vitriol and puritanism alongside the kudos. Although there were some boundary-pushing elements to The Blond Ambitions World Tour in terms of sex and the explicit, there was nothing any more rawer than what a lot of Rock acts and her male peers were doing!

In years since, many female Pop artists produced quite raunchy tours. To be fair, The Blond Ambition World Tour is this theatrical experience that was meant to be fit for an artist who was seen as a true queen and icon. I love the series of photos Patrick Demarchelier took of Madonna in 1990. The fact Madonna resembles Marilyn Monroe in some of the shoots is fascinating. Whether she saw herself as a doomed icon or this Hollywood sex symbol, I am not sure. Even though Madonna had the fame of Monroe and was equally glamorous and loved, there was this fear that Madonna might succumb to the pressures of fame or go off the rails. There is something of the Hollywood siren and this very powerful figure about Madonna in 1990. After a multi-million-dollar tour and a greatest hits album, it seemed that she was untouchable! If Like a Prayer ruffled a few feathers (the title track’s video courted controversy because of an interracial kiss and burning crucifixes; some feeling Madonna should be a better role model), Erotica would do more than that! It fascinates me what Madonna did in 1991. After such a busy past couple of years, Madonna started creating something that would divide people. Recorded between October 1991 and June 1992 at Soundworks Studio, Mastermix, there was a notable shift. Able to exert more creative and promotional control as her Maverick enterprise and label was launched, she collaborated with Shep Pettibone (who co-wrote Vogue).

During the recording session of Erotica, Madonna and Pettibone wrote This Used to Be My Playground, the soundtrack single of the 1992 film, A League of Their Own. The non-album single from The Immaculate Collection, Justify My Love, would nod to the sound and look of Erotica. From the cropped hair and leather jacket look of Papa Don’t Preach (from True Blue) to the long brown hair and religious artefacts and jewellery of Like a Prayer’s title track, this was a marked leap. Both of those songs are gritty and sexy. Justify My Love is sweaty, sensual and challenging. It was almost a shot to those who doubted her or criticised her for being too sexual. To me, it was this peerless Pop superstar unleashed and her most erotica. Written by Lenny Kravitz and Ingrid Chavez, Justify My Love is a terrific song that got to number one in the U.S. If some quarters were raising eyebrows and thought Madonna was taking things too far, the public definitely had an appetite for her music and videos! As I said, I will discuss Erotica solely in a series of features this summer. Its arrival – alongside the Sex book - stunned the world. Even though there was some finger-wagging and criticism levied at Madonna, there was also praise. Many noted how the more cold and detached sound worked. Other commended the amount of single-worthy tracks Erotica boasted. Others were impressed with this reinvention and the new persona, Mistress Dita. Charles Aaron of Spin observed the album was a brave comment on the tragic detachment of sex under AIDS.

With songs like Rain, Erotica, Bye Bye Baby and Bad Girl all successful and showing different sides to Madonna, Erotica is an album that deserves reinspection. Madonna, ironically, seemed untouchable as an artist through an album that is as physical and sensual as anything she had ever released! At the forefront of the sexual revolution, it is a funny, varied and hugely inspired album that is not seen as one of her very best albums – though it definitely should be. A blueprint for future artists like Beyoncé, Britney Spears, Christina Aguilera, Pink, Lady Gaga, and Nicki Minaj, Erotica is fascinating and seminal. It was a case of Erotica and the Sex book arriving at the same time that did provoke some judgment. Maybe an overload. The next album, 1994’s Bedtime Stories, almost seems like the opposite. The title alone is almost child-like or apologetic. Even though the album itself is not toned-down or tame at all, it was a lot less sexual than Erotica. By 1998’s Ray of Light, Madonna had embraced spiritualism and a new direction once more. I find Erotica to be an album that set a blueprint and precedence. Maybe Pop as we know now would not exist. Certainly, it had a profound impact on Pop of the late-1990s and early-2000s. Before rounding off, this Wikipedia article reveals the influence and reputation of 1992’s Erotica:

The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame considered Erotica one of the most revolutionary albums of all time, declaring that "...few women artists, before or since Erotica, have been so outspoken about their fantasies and desires. Madonna made it clear that shame and sexuality are mutually exclusive... In the end, Erotica embraced and espoused pleasure, and kept Madonna at the forefront of pop's sexual revolution." Slant Magazine listed Erotica at number 24 on "The 100 Best Albums of the 1990s", calling it a "dark masterpiece". Miles Raymer of Entertainment Weekly said that "in retrospect it's her strongest album — produced at the peak of her power and provocativeness... and helped elevate her from mere pop star to an era-defining icon.” Bianca Gracie from Fuse TV channel called Erotica "the album that changed the pop music world forever... one of the most controversial and genre-defining albums in pop history."

J. Randy Taraborrelli documented at the time of Erotica's release, "much of society seemed to reexamining its sexuality. Gay rights issues were at the forefront of social discussions globally, as was an ever-increasing awareness of AIDS." Barry Walters from Rolling Stone noted that the album's greatest contribution is "[its] embrace of the other, which in this case means queerness, blackness, third-wave feminism, exhibitionism and kink. Madonna took what was marginalized at the worst of the AIDS epidemic, placed it in an emancipated context, and shoved it into the mainstream for all to see and hear." Brian McNair, the author of Striptease Culture: Sex, Media and the Democratization of Desire, stated that upon the album's release "academic books began to appear about the 'Madonna phenomenon', while pro- and anti-porn feminists made of her a symbol of all that was good or bad (depending on their viewpoint) about contemporary sexual culture." Daryl Deino from The Inquisitr dubbed the album as "a groundbreaking moment for feminism."

Erotica remains the most rampantly misrepresented Madonna album with the biggest backlash of her career. Taraborrelli commented that it is unfortunate that Erotica has to be historically linked to other less memorable ventures in Madonna's career at this time. However, he quipped that the album should be considered on its own merits, not only as one linked to the other two adult-oriented projects, because it has true value.

When asked to name her biggest professional disappointment, Madonna answered, "The fact that my Erotica album was overlooked because of the whole thing with the Sex book. It just got lost in all that. I think there's some brilliant songs on it and people didn't give it a chance." Brian McNair observed that Madonna took a financial risk with the album and it was not until Ray of Light (1998) that her record sales recovered to pre-Erotica levels. He further asserted that "what she lost in royalty payments, however, Madonna more than made up for in iconic status and cultural influence”.

That period between 1989 and 1992 is fascinating! I often chart the years and albums in terms of Madonna’s fashion and looks. Like a Prayer was playful in parts and edgier in others. Madonna definitely transitioning and blossoming in terms of her sound and look. The 1990 photo I have at the top of this feature is her almost as an iconic film star and idol. Someone beginning this real peak and explosion. The Blond Ambition World Tour took that to new levels. By 1992’s Erotica, a very different Madonna had arrived. It was a remarkable few years! I love the fact that she was always changing and was growing stronger as a performer and writer. I will explore Erotica more in the months to come, but I wanted to start that thread with a general look at how her career transformed and changed in the years before. It was most definitely an incredible…

PERIOD in music history.

FEATURE: How They Underestimated Her! Was the Music World Ready for Kate Bush’s The Kick Inside in 1978?

FEATURE:

 

 

How They Underestimated Her!

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in 1978/PHOTO CREDIT: Gered Mankowitz

Was the Music World Ready for Kate Bush’s The Kick Inside in 1978?

___________

I have touched on this before…

when it comes to thinking about Kate Bush’s The Kick Inside. Having watched the three-part documentary, The Beatles: Get Back, it makes me wonder what it would be like if there was that sort of intimate and revelatory footage of Kate Bush recording an album. Many fans would have their own opinion as to which album/period would be best served in a similar way. Many would say Bush recording Hounds of Love (1985) would provide the biggest thrills and pleasure. I actually think the excitement and intrigue of her debut album would be best. I feel there is misconception from some that her 1978 debut is this young and naïve artist taking tiny steps and feeling her way into music. Released on 17th February, this was the arrival of an artist who was not only fully-formed and realised. The complexity of some of the vocal arrangements, the depth and accomplished lyrics were definitely ahead of their time. Whilst she was a teenager when The Kick Inside was released, the songs suggested an artist who was far older and had been in the industry a lot longer. There was this sense of sneering from some critics. Other slagged off the high-pitched and gymnastic vocals. Others were condescending when it came to Bush writing about sex and love in a somewhat literary, classic and, at times, a bit embarrassing, way. For anyone who wants to know about The Kick Inside and its making, I would recommend this book from last year.

Ahead of its forty-fourth anniversary next month, I wanted to explore and dissect The Kick Inside through a variety of features. Whilst albums like Hounds of Love gained a lot of praise (in the U.K. rather than the U.S.), The Kick Inside is an album that has not won over everyone. I keep looking back at the reviews and press in 1978. Although there was a lot of love for Bush and her originality, there was a section that was more hostile, dubious and patronising. Writing her off as being eccentric, slight or a novelty. As I have said before, songs like Wuthering Heights gave a false impression of who Bush was as an artist. Many simply defined her based on that track. I wonder how many reviewers in 1978 really took time to take apart The Kick Inside, study the lyrics, and appreciate the vocal layers and the incredible musicianship? As a middle-class artist from a slightly well-off background, was Bush troubled enough? Was her music invalid unless she was struggling or from a less-well-of background? The Kick Inside is not an album from someone trying to make a lot of money or waste their time. It is a stunning and startling album that is as raw, fascinating and beautiful as anything released in 1978. This interesting article from 2018 argues how Bush was underestimated from the start:

 “Growing up in Bexleyheath, Kent, in the southeast of England, Bush began writing songs when she was 11 years old, the most prodigious talent in an intensely musical family. Her mother specialized in traditional Irish dance, and her brothers were active in the Kent folk scene; in fact, brother Paddy plays mandolin on The Kick Inside. Her family produced a tape of 50 demos of her original songs and shopped it around to record labels, with very little luck. Eventually the tapes—which have since been widely bootlegged—found their way to David Gilmour, guitarist for Pink Floyd, who helped secured a contract with EMI. The label placed the teenager on retainer until they felt she was old enough to release an album and handle her success.

Perhaps they underestimated her. Bush emerges as a headstrong and even visionary artist almost from the start, with very rigid ideas of how she wants to present herself and her music. EMI originally wanted to release “James and the Cold Gun,” a rock-inflected tune that suggests a more aggro Carole King, as the first single previewing The Kick Inside. Bush not only objected but managed to convince them to release “Wuthering Heights” instead. It was a risk: The song is based on Emily Brontë’s 1847 novel, sung from the point of view of a ghost haunting the moors and pining for living lover. It was hardly a formula for chart success, especially when Bush postponed the single by a month when she was unhappy with the artwork EMI provided. When it was finally released in January 1978, Bush was vindicated. By February “Wuthering Heights” was the number one song in England, and she made history by becoming the first woman to top the UK charts with a self-penned song.

Released in March 1978, The Kick Inside reveals a young artist positioning herself strategically between the ancient and the modern, between folklore and pop music. Sounding very much of its moment, it is nevertheless an album populated by ghosts and spirits. Not goth but certainly gothic, it is an album of hauntings. Some are literal: That’s Catherine Earnshaw’s spirit tapping at the window in “Wuthering Heights.” Other are figurative: The spellbinding music she describes in “The Saxophone Song” seems to have supernatural origins and powers, and the mysterious lover in “The Man with the Child in His Eyes” only appears “when I turn off the light.” Remarkably these ghosts are not diminished by the modern sound of The Kick Inside. Rather, they thrive in that friction between the old and the new”.

Not only was there some criticism and narrow-mindedness towards Bush in 1978. All these years later, there are a lot of people who consider The Kick Inside to be a minor album. Bush as this artist still trying to find her feet. I want to end with an article from Stereogum. They marked The Kick Inside’s fortieth anniversary in 2018 by talking about why Hounds of Love gained Bush the recognition and appreciated she deserved all along. They also state that, whilst underestimated and under-appreciated, albums like The Kick Inside have inspired so many other artists:

Of course, first we need to address what will make most people either adore or despise TKI: That Voice. As the album begins, a wailing, impossibly-high-pitched voice grabs (or repels) the listener as it sings that opening line “mooooooviiiiiing straaaangeeeer.” Deborah Withers, author of Adventures In Kate Bush And Theory, wrote that the pitch of her voice is “an assault on the normal parameters of vocal modulation.” I feel it is no coincidence that, within a music criticism field dominated by straight white men, her most acclaimed album is 1985’s Hounds Of Love, on which her voice deepened enough for them to be able to handle it. Dismissive and condescending quotes from male critics about Bush’s early work, both from the ‘70s and now, are too numerous to collect here, but Suede frontman Brett Anderson’s assertion in the BBC’s The Kate Bush Story that in her early work she was “finding her way … she hadn’t quite found herself and all that early stuff of her dancing around in leotards is a little bit am-dram” (is he forgetting how he dressed in the early ‘90s?) and that Hounds Of Love is “the zenith” of her artistry, typifies the traditional critical approach to Bush’s work.

 Kate Bush wasn’t fumbling or “finding her voice” — TKI establishes her voice as not just a voice but also as an instrument. Throughout her entire career Bush almost never used backup singers, and instead created her own backing vocals herself by singing in different pitches, in discordant and revelatory ways. This is displayed to great effect on almost every TKI song: turn the volume way up and marvel in how the backing vocals on each song swoop upwards and swoon downwards to create a landscape seemingly independent from the main vocals, especially in “L’Amour Looks Something Like You,” “Moving,” and “Kite.” Bush uses her four-octave range as an instrument most famously and strikingly in “Wuthering Heights,” in which she sings in an almost dog-whistle-like pitch to embody the character of Catherine Earnshaw’s ghost in Emily Brontë’s novel. For most musicians, the voice is what they use to express words; for Bush, it is a remarkable tool that helps contribute to unique soundscapes.

TKI is also revolutionary because it establishes Bush’s narrative style as fluid and multiple; her songs are short stories each written from a different narrator’s perspective rather than from her own point of view. This writing style stands in stark contrast to the traditionally personal style of music focusing on love and heartbreak that continues to dominate the charts. “I often find myself inspired by unusual, distorted, weird subjects, as opposed to things that are straightforward. It’s a reflection of me, my liking for weirdness,” she said in 1980. Unlike the majority of pop/rock artists, The “I” in Bush’s music is rarely Bush. Her songs are not confessional, but are rather short stories told from the points of views of a diverse range of narrators. From Bush’s songs, we can know about themes that interest her, but Kate Bush herself rarely speaks in her work; her narrators, who occupy multiple genders, races, and historical times, do instead. This is a deeply radical break from traditional “confessional “ songwriting, especially for women up to that point. Consider that the most acclaimed female musician of the time, and probably of all time, Joni Mitchell, is most-lauded for her confessional album, Blue.

Perhaps most importantly, beginning with The Kick Inside she has inspired a wide array of artists to “let the weirdness in.” Lady Gaga covered Bush’s duet with Peter Gabriel, “Don’t Give Up,” because she wanted to “make something that young people would hear and learn something about Kate Bush”, and her theatricality has its roots in Bush’s so-bizarre-they’re-brilliant live performances. Björk frequently cites Bush as a pivotal influence on her musical “form”, saying “I remember being underneath my duvet at the age of 12, fantasising about Kate Bush,” and even sent Bush of a demo of herself covering Bush’s “Moving” in 1989. Lorde played “Running Up That Hill” before the shows on her Melodrama tour, and Bat For Lashes’ Natasha Khan said of Bush, “As an artist myself, [she’s] helped me to not be frightened to put my vulnerability as a woman [in my work] and in that, be powerful.” Bush’s influence is also felt in hip-hop, especially due to her early use of sampling, best seen in her sampling of the Gregorian chanting from Werner Herzog’s film Nosfertu The Vampyre in Hounds Of Love’sHello Earth.” One of her biggest champions is OutKast’s Big Boi, who has repeatedly called her “my favorite artist of all time,” and Tricky from Massive Attack said of Bush’s song “Breathing,” which features the line “breathing my mother in,”: “I’m a kid from a council flat, I’m a mixed-raced guy…totally different life to Kate Bush, but that lyric, ‘breathing my mother in,’ my whole career’s based on that.” Even Chris Martin “admitted” that Coldplay’s “Speed Of Sound” “was developed after the band had listened to Kate Bush”.

Forty-four years later, and I have to ask whether perception has shifted that much. The Kick Inside has definitely improved in terms of critical respect, although there are plenty of people who overlook it and see it as this album with a few promising songs – and the rest of it is quite forgettable. As a singer, writer and complete artists, Bush’s magnificent 1978 debut was like nothing else. Those who gave it short shrift did not appreciate or understand a complex and original artist who was offering the world something fresh and different. Not just white male critics, there were more than a few who were unkind towards Kate Bush. All these years later, I maintain The Kick Inside is a misunderstood masterpiece that will only be fully understood and loved years from now. It’s forty-fourth anniversary is on 17th February. I hope that, on that day, there are plenty of writers and fans who show The Kick Inside

A lot of love.

FEATURE: Inspired By… Part Forty-Six: Janet Jackson

FEATURE:

 

 

Inspired By…

Part Forty-Six: Janet Jackson

___________

THERE is a sense of synchronicity to this…

as there is a new two-part documentary, JANET, that is being shown on 28th and 29th of this month. It is Janet Jackson in her own words, but it will also feature some of those she has worked with. One of the greatest and most inspiring artists ever, I am going to get to some biography in a minute. Prior to that, here is some more information about the much-discussed and hotly-anticipated JANET:

 “Janet Jackson is ready to speak her truth.

The iconic performer released the first teaser trailer for her upcoming two-part documentary, JANET, which is set to air simultaneously on Lifetime and A&E in January 2022. The new clip features a number of high-profile cameos from former collaborators and fellow creatives within Jackson's close-knit circle, including Paula Abdul, Missy Elliott, and Mariah Carey reminiscing on Jackson's impact as an artist and one of the most influential women in music history.

The upcoming documentary will also feature behind-the-scenes footage of Jackson in recent years as she looks back at her defining career moments and family upbringing. According to People, the documentary was more than "five years in the making" and began filming around the time of the death of the singer's father, Joe Jackson, in 2018. Janet will reportedly speak out on some of her most defining personal and professional moments, including her controversial 2004 Super Bowl performance with Justin Timberlake, her brother Michael Jackson's death, and becoming a mother.

"This is my story, told by me. Not through someone else's eyes," the "Miss You Much" singer says over nostalgic clips of her performing throughout the '80s and '90s, as well as growing up alongside her famous brothers as part of the Jackson 5. "This is the truth. Take it or leave it. Love it or hate it. This is me."

Here's everything we know about this highly-anticipated documentary special.

The documentary airs on January 28 and 29.

Lifetime dropped the first full trailer for the two-part documentary this weekend, seen above, along with its premiere date, which honors the 40th anniversary of her debut album. The 3-minute clip gives an overview of Jackson's life and defining career moments, with the singer narrating her own life story, saying that the doc is, "It's just something that needs to be done."

The clip also reveals several more cameos from members of Jackson's family and inner circle, including her mother Katherine, her siblings Rebbie and Tito, her ex-husband James DeBarge, and her past boyfriends Q-Tip and Jermaine Dupri. Several of her celeb peers and admirers will also feature, including Ciara, Janelle Monae, Teyana Taylor, Regina King, Samuel L. Jackson, and Whoopi Goldberg.

The full trailer shows Jackson addressing the Super Bowl controversy.

One tense moment of the trailer shows Jackson directly addressing her controversial halftime performance with Justin Timberlake, and her subsequent banning from that year's Grammy Awards. "They build you up and then once you get there, they're so quick to tear you down," the "Control" singer narrates.

After showing a newspaper headline reading, "Jackson Banned From Grammys after Super Bowl Stunt," a clip shows a member of Jackson's team telling her that Timberlake reached out, suggesting that he invited her to join his 2018 Super Bowl performance. Jackson's reaction to the news is unreadable, so we'll have to tune in to the doc to see the full story.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano”.

This year also sees a big anniversary for two of her albums. The Janet Jackson album is forty on 21st September. One of her most celebrated albums, The Velvet Rope, is twenty-five on 7th October. Her most recent studio album, Unbreakable, came out in 2015. Let’s hope we get some more music from Jackson soon enough! Before ending with a playlist that collates artists who have been influence by her, here is some biography from AllMusic:

Janet Jackson didn't merely emerge from the shadows of her famous brothers to become a superstar in her own right. Starting with her breakout 1986 album Control, she became one of the biggest pop stars of the '80s. Through the early 2000s, she was able to maintain her stature with impeccable quality control and stylistic evolution. Her singles, expertly crafted with indelible pop hooks and state-of-the-art production, consistently set or kept up with trends in contemporary R&B, demonstrated by an exceptional run of Top 20 R&B singles that spans over 30 years. From platinum album to platinum album, Jackson's image smoothly shifted as it projected power and independence. In turn, she inspired the likes of TLC, Aaliyah, Beyoncé, Britney Spears, and Rihanna, all of whom learned a few things from her recordings, videos, and performances.

Janet Damita Jo Jackson was born May 16, 1966, in Gary, Indiana. She was the youngest of nine children in the Jackson family, and her older brothers had already begun performing together as the Jackson 5 by the time she was born. Bitten by the performing bug, she first appeared on-stage with the Jackson 5 at age seven, and began a sitcom acting career at the age of ten in 1977, when producer Norman Lear selected her to join the cast of Good Times. She remained there until 1979, and subsequently appeared on Diff'rent Strokes and A New Kind of Family. In 1982, pushed by her father into trying a singing career, Jackson released her self-titled first album on A&M. "Young Love," written and produced by René & Angela and Rufus' Bobby Watson, reached number six on Billboard's R&B chart, but the album didn't cross into the pop market. She was cast in the musical series Fame in 1983. The following year, she issued her second album, Dream Street, which didn't sell as well as its predecessor. Upon turning 18, Jackson rebelled against her parents' close supervision and eloped with a member of another musical family, singer James DeBarge. However, the relationship quickly hit the rocks and Jackson moved back into her parents' home and had the marriage annulled.

Jackson took some time to rethink her musical career, and her father hired her a new manager, John McClain, who isolated his young charge to train her as a dancer (and make her lose weight). McClain hooked Jackson up with producers/writers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, whom she'd seen perform as members of the Minneapolis funk outfit the Time. Jackson collaborated with Jam and Lewis on most of the tracks for her next album, Control, which presented her as a confident and tough-minded artist (with a soft side and a sense of humor) taking charge of her life for the first time. In support of Jackson's new persona, Jam and Lewis crafted a set of polished, computerized backing tracks with slamming beats that owed more to hard, hip-hop-tinged funk and urban R&B than Janet's older brother Michael's music. Control became an out-of-the-box hit, and eventually spun off six singles, the first five of which -- "What Have You Done for Me Lately," the catch phrase-inspiring "Nasty," the number one "When I Think of You," the title track, and the ballad "Let's Wait Awhile" -- hit the Top Five on the Billboard Hot 100. Jackson was hailed as a role model and Control eventually sold over five million copies, establishing her as a pop star. It also made Jam and Lewis, whose considerable accomplishments were previously limited to the R&B world, a monstrously in-demand pop production team.

For the hotly anticipated follow-up, McClain wanted to push Jackson toward more overtly sexual territory, to which she objected strenuously. Instead, she began collaborating with Jam and Lewis on more socially conscious material, which formed the backbone of 1989's Rhythm Nation 1814 (the "1814" purportedly stood for either the letters "R" and "N" or the year "The Star-Spangled Banner" was written). Actually, save for the title track, most of the album's singles were bright and romantically themed. Four of them -- "Miss You Much," "Escapade," "Black Cat," and "Love Will Never Do (Without You)" -- hit number one, and three more -- "Rhythm Nation," "Alright," and "Come Back to Me" -- reached the Top Five, making Jackson the first artist ever to produce seven Top Five hits off one album (something not even her brother Michael had accomplished). Aside from a greater use of samples, Rhythm Nation's sound largely resembled that of Control, but was just as well-crafted, and listeners embraced it enthusiastically, buying over five million copies in the U.S. alone. Jackson undertook her first real tour (she'd appeared at high schools around the country in 1982) in support of the album and it was predictably a smashing success. In 1991, Jackson capitalized by jumping from A&M to Virgin for a reported $32 million, and also secretly married choreographer and longtime boyfriend René Elizondo.

Once on Virgin, Jackson set about revamping her sound and image. Her 1992 duet with Luther Vandross from the Mo' Money soundtrack, "The Best Things in Life Are Free," was another major R&B hit and reached the pop Top Ten. The following year, she also resumed her acting career, co-starring in acclaimed director (and former junior high classmate) John Singleton's Poetic Justice, along with rapper Tupac Shakur. Neither really hinted at the seductive, fully adult persona she unveiled with 1993's janet., her Virgin debut. Jackson trumpeted her new image with a striking Rolling Stone cover photo -- an uncropped version of the cover of janet. -- in which her topless form was covered by a pair of hands belonging to Elizondo. Musically, Jam and Lewis set aside the synthesized funk of their first two albums with Jackson in favor of warm, inviting, gently undulating grooves. Jackson took credit for all the lyrics. The album's lead single, the slinky "That's the Way Love Goes," became Jackson's biggest hit ever, spending eight weeks at number one. It was followed by a predictably long parade of Top Ten hits -- "If," the number one ballad "Again," "Because of You," "Any Time, Any Place," and "You Want This." janet.'s debut showing at number one made it her third straight chart-topping album, and it went on to sell nearly seven million copies in the U.S.

In 1995, Janet and Michael teamed up for the single "Scream," which was supported by an elaborate, award-winning, space-age video that, upon completion, ranked as the most expensive music video ever made. The single debuted at number five on the Hot 100. In 1996, A&M issued a retrospective of her years at the label, Design of a Decade 1986-1996; it featured the Virgin hit "That's the Way Love Goes" and a few new tracks, one of which, "Runaway," became a Top Five hit. Jackson also signed a new contract with Virgin for a reported $80 million. Yet while working on her next album, Jackson reportedly suffered an emotional breakdown, or at least a severe bout with depression. She later raised eyebrows when she talked in interviews about the cleansing value of coffee enemas as part of her treatment. Her next album, The Velvet Rope, appeared in 1997 and was touted as her most personal and intimate work to date. The Velvet Rope sought to combine the sensuality of janet. with the more socially conscious parts of Rhythm Nation, mixing songs about issues like domestic abuse, AIDS, and homophobia with her most sexually explicit songs ever. Critical opinion on the album was divided; some applauded her ambition, while others found the record too bloated. The lead American single "Together Again," an elegy for AIDS victims, was a number one hit. Also popular on the radio was "Got 'Til It's Gone," which featured rapper Q-Tip and a sample of Joni Mitchell over a reggae beat. "I Get Lonely," featuring Blackstreet, was another big hit, but on the whole, The Velvet Rope didn't prove to be the blockbuster singles bonanza that its predecessors were, which was probably why its sales stalled at around three million copies.

Jackson toured the world again, and stayed on the charts in 1999 with the Top Five Busta Rhymes duet "What's It Gonna Be?!"; her appearance in the video remade her as a glitzy, artificially costumed, single-name diva. In 2000, she appeared in the Eddie Murphy comedy Nutty Professor II: The Klumps, and her soundtrack contribution, "Doesn't Really Matter," became a number one single. Unfortunately, Jackson's marriage to Elizondo had become strained and the couple divorced in 2000, sparking a court battle over her musical income. Jackson returned with a new album, All for You, in 2001, which largely continued the sensual tone of janet. and The Velvet Rope. It debuted at number one, selling over 600,000 copies in its first week alone. The title track was issued as the album's first single and quickly topped the charts, followed by another sizable hit in "Someone to Call My Lover."

While Jackson spent much of 2001 and 2002 on the road supporting All for You, she also found time for some guest appearances, most notably with Beenie Man on his Tropical Storm LP and Justin Timberlake on Justified. By 2003 she was back in the studio, working once again with Jam and Lewis on tracks for a new album. Additional producers included Dallas Austin and Kanye West. The following year began with an Internet leak of the upbeat Austin production "Just a Little While." The singer's camp rolled with the punches, offering the track to radio as an authorized digital download, but the buzz this business caused was minuscule in comparison to the nightmare union of free exposure and bad publicity that Jackson's next adventure caused. Appearing during the halftime show of Super Bowl XXXVIII, Jackson performed "All for You" and "Rhythm Nation" before bringing out surprise guest Timberlake for a duet on his hit "Rock Your Body." But the real surprise came at song's end, when a gesture from Timberlake caused Jackson's costume to tear, exposing her right, pierced breast on live television to hundreds of millions of viewers.

The incident caused furious backpedaling and apologizing from Timberlake, Jackson, the NFL, CBS, and MTV, which swore no previous knowledge of the so-called "wardrobe malfunction," and led to speculation over how Damita Jo -- Jackson's upcoming album and her first in three years -- would be received. But while the controversy gave Jackson both grief and a bit of free advertising, it was also the impetus for a national debate on public indecency. A federal commission was set up to investigate prurience, the FCC enacted tougher crackdowns on TV and radio programs broadcasting questionable content, and suddenly everyone from pundits to politicians to the man in the street had an opinion about it. Later that March, the singer quietly started making the talk show rounds. She was still apologizing for the incident -- while Timberlake escaped unscathed -- but she was also promoting Damita Jo, which Virgin issued at the end of the month. Largely considered a disappointment, the album nonetheless sold over two million copies worldwide and earned three Grammy nominations. 20 Y.O. followed two years later, and though it was reviewed more favorably than Damita Jo, it was off the Billboard 200 album chart after 15 weeks. Jermaine Dupri, Jackson's love interest and the executive producer of the album, was so upset over Virgin's lack of support that he left his post as president of Virgin's urban division. Dupri moved to Island, and so did Jackson. In 2008, Jackson released her tenth studio album, Discipline, which became her sixth release to top the Billboard 200, despite another tumultuous artist-label relationship.

Although Jackson didn't release another album for seven years, the longest gap in her discography was filled with professional activity and major life changes. During the filming of Why Did I Get Married Too?, she learned of her brother Michael's death. Soon after, she and Dupri split, and she toured in support of Number Ones, a double-disc anthology promoted with the number one club hit "Make Me." She took the lead role in the big-screen adaptation of For Colored Girls, published a book, and remained deeply connected to various causes as a philanthropist. In 2015, she returned on her own Rhythm Nation label with "No Sleeep," a slow-jam Jam and Lewis collaboration that hit the R&B Top 20. It primed her audience for a tour, as well as her 11th studio album, Unbreakable -- another number one hit. Plans for the tour were postponed so Jackson could focus on family; she wouldn't return to the road until 2017.

In 2018, she issued the Top 40 hit single "Made for Now," featuring Daddy Yankee”.

To tie in with the JANET documentary, I wanted to put out an Inspired By… containing songs from artists who have been influenced by Janet Jackson in some way. She is an icon and peerless artists who has released some of the finest albums ever. As you can tell from the playlist below, Jackson’s mesmeric influence and legacy has hit…

SO many artists.

FEATURE: Spotlight: Violet Skies

FEATURE:

 

 

Spotlight

Violet Skies

___________

AN artist I have featured before…

I wanted to spotlight Violet Skies. At the moment, there are not that many recent (in the last couple of years) interviews with her. The Welsh musician is turning thirty on Valentine’s Day. Rather than depress her – thirty is baby age! -, I wanted to show how much she has achieved with her music so far! I think that Violet Skies (real name Hannah Berney) is going to be developing as an artist and will be around for so many years. I have been listening to Violet Skies’ music for years. Whilst some might say she is an established musician who is not rising, the point of this feature is to spotlight someone who deserves to be better know; an artist that is not yet in the mainstream, but will be one day. An artist of the highest calibre, she put out the single, The Internet, a couple of weeks back. I really love the video for that song. I interviewed Violet Skies for my blog back in 2017. I will crib from a couple of interviews from the past couple of years, and source one that is a bit older. Before coming to some interviews, it is worth bringing in a bit of background regarding a mesmeric and hugely talented artist:

You’ll be familiar with Violet Skies without realising it.  Having spent the last few years writing for other artists around the world, as well as founding sheWrites, a global series of female-only writing camps, Violet Skies is setting up her stall alongside her artist peers; a Welsh singer-songwriter with ambition as big as her voice.

Growing up in a village in Wales, UK, she’s a self-confessed nerd, perfectionist and has known since the age of 4 that music was her future. Violet Skies, (adopting her grandmother’s name) writes “pop with teeth” and co-produces all her music; a combination of searingly emotional vocals, uncomfortably honest lyrics about her relationships, and infectious melodies.

The resulting output walks a fine line between making you cry about an ex you thought you were over – and laugh about the one you’re glad got away.

Prior to flipping to interviews from 2020, I want to go back to 2016. At this point, Violet Skies was a relatively new act. When she spoke with What Olivia Did back in 2016, she was about to head off to SXSX in the U.S. This was a year when a lot of people were discovering Violet Skies for the first time. The South Wales-born musician was asked about some of her musical inspirations:

So, have you always had an interest in music? Did you grow up in a musical household- what was your earliest musical memory?

I couldn’t not like music because my parents played more music than anything else. We never had a quiet house, and music was often at the centre of our experiences. They first took us to Glastonbury when we were about 10. One of my earliest musical memories though, is singing in a school play as Puss in Boots. Rock and roll!

You’re about to release your second E.P, following the release of your amazing track One Day, Thee Autumns- and of course your Dragons E.P- how does it feel the second time around?

Equally as scary as the first time, like letting a little baby out into the wild! I’m just happy to be sharing music again and finding out what people feel when they hear the music.

Where do you seek inspiration for song writing? Is everything based on experience, or is there a particular place or time you like to get writing?

I write lyrics a lot when I’m travelling or in the shower, and mostly they’re about one particular person and sometimes my other personal experiences, as well as sometimes other people’s stories. Writing’s a bit like a muscle though, so the more you do it the more you’re able to write at any place or time.

PHOTO CREDIT: What Olivia Did 

Musically, who or what inspires you? Are there any other artists you look up to, or admire?

Here’s a mini playlist that should give you an idea…

Joni Mitchell – A Case of You

Stevie Wonder – All In Love is Fair

Spice Girls – Every Damn Song

Alison Krauss – Baby Now That I’ve Found You

Kwabs (prod by Sohn) – Last Stand

James Blake – Retrograde

Massive Attack – Teardrop

Kevin Garrett – Refuse

Nao – Bad Blood

Rae Morris – Don’t Go

Lana Del Ray – Born to Die

Ben Khan – Eden

Jack Garrett – I Couldn’t Want You Anyway

Billy Joel – Lullabye (Goodnight My Angel)

Paul Simon – Homeless

Last year you were so busy with festivals and gigs (which is hugely exciting)- which was your favourite, and which the most nerve wracking?

Ooh my fave was probably the headline london show I just did in December, I didn’t expect anyone to turn up so it was a big surprise walking out and being genuinely shocked that people were all there filling the venue – we had a really fun show.

You’ve also got an amazing look, style and incredible stage presence- what inspires your outfits on stage and your personal style? I wish I could pull off the bleached look so well!

Aha thanks! No-one’s said that before! My style comes from growing up with my Mam to be honest – she has a jewellery and shoe wardrobe (the dream) and just always wears what she wants. I gradually found my own style which came from needing something simple to wear, so I’m not stressing before I go on stage. Essentially clean long lines, various black textures and maybe some white if I feel like it.

Do you have any tips for young girls trying to make it into the music industry? What has been the most valuable piece of advice you’ve ever been given?

Someone well-known and very lovely told me that she didn’t have the best voice and she knew it (I disagree), but she worked so much harder than her peers that eventually it had to happen. I always think if you’re not doing it – someone else will. Also – girls – play instruments and produce, and learn to engineer your own sessions. Life will be infinitely more creative! Also – take advice but don’t ever let anyone tell you what’s right for you – it’s easier to live with your own decisions than someone else’s”.

I want to come more up to date. I am not sure whether there is an album planned for Violet Skies. She has put together so many great singles and E.P.s through the years (2020’s E.P., Lonely, in my view, was her best work to that point). I do think that 2022 is a breakthrough year where she will collaborate with mainstream artists; her music will get to a much larger audience. In this interview from 2020, Violet Skies was asked about her unique moniker; in addition to writing for big artists:

Firstly, for those who are new to you, how would you describe the music you typically create?

Honest — always — perhaps a little too honest. I’m drawn to ballads and story telling, and often my songs are sad. But no apologies there, I like sad songs.

This is probably something that you’re very frequently asked, but how did you come to choose the stage name Violet Skies?

Haha always. Violet is my great grandmother’s name. And Skies was my Mam’s idea, I think? It just felt like me.

You’ve written a lot of music for other artists like Mabel and have co-written with big singer-songwriters like Finneas, but when did you first start writing music?

When I was 13 or so, and then really understood songs and finished them when I was about 16/17.

Where do you get your inspiration from when writing new music? Do you have a process or is it just a sort of natural flow of things?

My process is always different (always!!) but I will more often than not, start with chords and melodies often follow. I tend to have an idea or concept in mind when I start singing and that guides the mood. When I write for artists though, I let them lead or prompt them, it’s their vision and I’m there to facilitate that”.

In the coming weeks, I am highlighting artists who I feel will make their presence truly dwelt this year. Violet Skies is someone who I have a lot of respect for. A tremendous artist with so much ahead of her. Before the pandemic started, Violet Skies relocated to L.A. (I think for a brief spell, rather than a permanent move). LDN brought up her amazing project, sheWrites:

How are you finding LA compared to Wales?

LA is a lot less green, a lot busier, but still full of lovely people (despite the stereotype of Hollywood).

For those that aren’t familiar to your music, please could you introduce yourself and the kind of music you make.

All the things you wished you could have said to an ex, or even current lover, with a lot of
piano.

Who did you grow up listening to? And your inspirations now?

Joni Mitchell, Sting, Stevie Wonder, Etta James, Carol King. Now I listen to everything, pretty recently obsessed with Kevin Garrett, MUNA, Orla Gartland and Phoebe Bridgers.

Is there anyone you would like to work with?

Joni Mitchell. Julia Michaels. David Gray. Rihanna. I’ve got very mixed tastes.

You co-founded sheWrites, an amazing series of female-only writing camps – tell us about that.

Thank you! I co-founded it with Charlie McClean and we run camps/curated sessions all over the world with the intention of giving the best of the best space to make friends, make all-female-created songs and make an impact on the charts and the award shows. We’re out here trying to change the industry and we’re not quiet about it.

Do you have any tips for songwriters?

Write every day. Be disciplined about setting aside time to write. Play music to your friends and watch them whilst they’re listening. Learn to produce.

How do you go about writing a song? Do you have a specific setup? Do you do lyrics first, then melody, etc.?

It changes every single day. I don’t often write alone so I’m usually in other people’s studios working. I like to start with chords and have a rough idea of where the concept is heading, but often I’ve walked into the room and sung something acapella and started like that. It’s not the same for me any single time!”.

Go and follow Violet Skies on social media. I would urge you to check out all of her songs. For this feature, I am dropping in her more recent tracks. Always improving as an artist, I wanted to salute someone who is going to be a major artist very soon. She has put so much work in since 2015/2016 - and, in those years, established a dedicated and passionate fanbase. If you have not discovered the joys of Violet Skies’ music, then go and check her out…

RIGHT now.

_____________

Follow Violet Skies

FEATURE: A Buyer’s Guide: Part Eighty-Nine: Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark (OMD)

FEATURE:

 

 

A Buyer’s Guide

Part Eighty-Nine: Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark (OMD)

___________

FOR this outing…

of my A Buyer’s Guide feature, I am looking at the essential work of the legendary Merseyside band, Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark (OMD). I have been a fan of their since childhood - so it is good to get to highlight their albums that you need to get. The band consists of co-founders Andy McCluskey (vocals, bass guitar) and Paul Humphreys (keyboards, vocals), along with Martin Cooper (various instruments) and Stuart Kershaw (drums); McCluskey has been the only constant member. Before getting to the albums of Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark (I shall refer to them as such going forward) that are worth buying, here is some biography from AllMusic:

Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark are one of the earliest, most commercially successful, and enduring synth pop groups. Inspired most by the advancements of Kraftwerk and striving at one point "to be ABBA and Stockhausen," they've continually drawn from early electronic music as they've alternately disregarded, mutated, or embraced the conventions of the three-minute pop song. Outside their native England, OMD are known primarily for "Maid of Orleans" and the Pretty in Pink soundtrack smash "If You Leave," yet they scored 18 additional charting U.K. singles in the '80s alone. These hits supported inventive albums such as Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark (1980), Architecture & Morality (1981), and commercial suicide-turned-cult classic Dazzle Ships (1983). After roughly a decade of silence, OMD returned in the mid-2000s to add to their legacy as much as tend to it. Their lengthy second life has been highlighted by a sixth U.K. Top Ten album, The Punishment of Luxury (2017), and a box set, Souvenir (2019), coinciding with their 40th anniversary.

Acquaintances since they were students at primary school on the Wirral peninsula, Andy McCluskey and Paul Humphreys -- the core members of Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark -- played separately and together in a few short-lived bands starting in the mid-'70s. In 1977, they formed the ID, a group that gigged in North West England and contributed a song to Street to Street: A Liverpool Album (a compilation most notable for an early Echo & the Bunnymen appearance). By the time the LP was racked, the ID were no more and McCluskey had joined and left Dalek I Love You. Moreover, McCluskey (primarily bass and vocals) and Humphreys (primarily synthesizers) had experimented as a duo and were well underway as Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark, effectively named as such to further distinguish their endeavor from punk. Not only had the two musicians played their first official gigs -- starting at Eric's in their home base of Liverpool and the Factory club in Manchester, supporting Joy Division and Cabaret Voltaire at the latter -- but they had also made their recorded debut with a demo of "Electricity" backed with the Martin Hannett-produced "Almost," issued by Factory.

Later in 1979, OMD signed with nascent Virgin subsidiary Dindisc and re-released their 7" debut with a Hannett-produced version of the A-side. The full-length Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark, recorded by the duo with manager Paul Collister (credited as Chester Valentino), followed in early 1980. It featured new mixes of "Electricity" and "Almost," which were spun off as a third iteration of the first single, and was promoted with two more singles, including the Mike Howlett-produced re-recording of the album track "Messages," which became a number 13 U.K. hit (and in the U.S. registered on Billboard's club chart). These progressions guided Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark to number 27 on the corresponding U.K. album chart. Howlett continued to work with McCluskey and Humphreys for OMD's second full-length, Organisation, released later in 1980. Only "Enola Gay" was issued as a single, but that became the duo's first in a streak of Top Ten hits. The parent release followed suit at number six. By then, OMD's live and studio lineup was augmented with drummer Malcolm Holmes (formerly of the ID) and keyboardist/saxophonist Martin Cooper.

Still on the rise in late 1981, OMD released Architecture & Morality, a Top Five U.K. LP and the source of three equally high-charting singles, all ballads: "Souvenir" (led by Humphreys), "Joan of Arc," and "Maid of Orleans." The last of this sequence proved to be the group's biggest international hit, topping the official German and Dutch pop charts and reaching the Top Ten in other territories. (Architecture & Morality was the first proper album licensed in the States by Epic, which also compiled highlights from the first two albums and released them as O.M.D.). McCluskey and Humphreys responded to their greatest commercial success yet with a loosely conceptual effort that shot to number five in the U.K. upon release but soon capsized. Although it incorporated a couple of remixed B-sides and an ID-era composition, Dazzle Ships, co-produced by Rhett Davies and released on Dindisc parent Virgin, was a sharp departure, integrating musique concrète, snippets of Czechoslovakian radio broadcasts, songs about robotics and optical instrumentation, and the descriptively titled charting singles "Genetic Engineering" and "Telegraph."

Although Dazzle Ships was later embraced as a misunderstood and inspired work, a creative high point, OMD took the puzzlement to heart and simplified their lyrics and song structures. For the rest of the decade, they courted pop listeners with their most straightforward recordings. Within a three-year span, 1984-1986, they released Junk Culture, Crush, and The Pacific Age, a comparatively conservative trilogy yielding the number five U.K. hit "Locomotion" and a handful of other singles that fared well. Among their Anglophilic Midwestern fans during this phase was John Hughes, who sought them to contribute a song for the 1986 teen romantic comedy Pretty in Pink. OMD submitted "Goddess of Love," but the original ending of Hughes' screenplay was not well-received by a test audience, prompting Hughes to change the ending and ask the pressed OMD for another song. Overnight, OMD came up with "If You Leave," a number four hit in the States that made a gold seller out of the soundtrack (coincidentally featuring their fellow Liverpudlians Echo & the Bunnymen). The single went down similarly elsewhere and didn't go over quite as well in the U.K., where it peaked at number 48. OMD finished off the decade with The Best of OMD, promoted with the new single "Dreaming," a Top 20 hit in the U.S.

A series of departures left McCluskey as the lone original member of OMD in the '90s. During the decade, with varying support, he put together Sugar Tax, Liberator, and Universal, issued from 1991 through 1996 on Virgin. (In the U.S., the first two were also Virgin products; the latter was available only as an import.) Nine primarily commercial dance-pop singles from these albums, including the Top Tens "Sailing on the Seven Seas" and "Pandora's Box," and the McCluskey/Humphreys-written "Everyday," charted in the U.K. McCluskey also co-wrote and sang two songs on Esperanto, a project from Kraftwerk's Karl Bartos (under the name Elektric Music). Meanwhile, Humphreys and fellow ex-OMD members Malcolm Holmes and Martin Cooper recorded as the Listening Pool. OMD became inactive toward the decade's end as McCluskey ventured into artist development and songwriting for other acts. McCluskey and '90s OMD associate Stuart Kershaw founded and co-wrote material for the pop trio Atomic Kitten. Their biggest hit with the group was the 2001 U.K. chart-topper "Whole Again," also nominated for an Ivor Novello Award. Humphreys and Claudia Brücken (Propaganda, Act) released an LP a few years later as Onetwo.

McCluskey and Humphreys reunited in 2005 when they were approached to perform on the German television program Die Ultimative Chartshow. It developed into a full reactivation of OMD with Holmes and Cooper. A tour for which they played the entirety of their third album -- documented in 2008 with Architecture & Morality & More, recorded at London's Hammersmith Apollo -- led to new, independently released material starting in 2010 with History of Modern. After a live package from the subsequent tour was offered in 2011, the quartet continued studio work with English Electric, issued in 2013, just before they performed at Coachella. Months later, Holmes left the band after he collapsed during a Toronto gig played in extreme heat; Stuart Kershaw consequently took over on drums. Dazzle Ships: Live at the Museum of Liverpool followed in 2015. The Punishment of Luxury, OMD's third post-millennial studio album, arrived two years later and became their sixth Top Ten U.K. LP (their first since Sugar Tax). OMD celebrated their 40th anniversary in 2019 with continued touring and an elaborate box set, Souvenir, covering their whole career”.

A decades-spanning group who have released more than a few classic albums, I am deciding which four are the essential buys, one that is underrated and well worth a listen. I am also including their latest studio album (I could not find a book about Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark). If you are new to the wonders of Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark or are a big fan, here is my view on their albums that you…

NEED to buy.

______________

The Four Essential Albums

 

Organisation

Release Date: 24th October, 1980

Label: Dindisc

Producers: OMD/Mike Howlett

Standout Tracks: Statues/The More I See You/Promise

Buy: https://www.discogs.com/sell/list?master_id=30515&ev=mb

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/3bouQtY9H1DP39yxqHuFf8?si=0EP7EuAwR3a2yj5FlrsIFg

Review:

If OMD's debut album showed the band could succeed just as well on full-length efforts as singles, Organisation upped the ante even further, situating the band in the enviable position of at once being creative innovators and radio-friendly pop giants. That was shown as much by the astounding lead track and sole single from the album, "Enola Gay." Not merely a great showcase for new member Holmes, whose live-wire drumming took the core electronic beat as a launching point and easily outdid it, "Enola Gay" is a flat-out pop classic -- clever, heartfelt, thrilling, and confident, not to mention catchy and arranged brilliantly. The outrageous use of the atomic bomb scenario -- especially striking given the era's nuclear war fears -- informs the seemingly giddy song with a cut-to-the-quick fear and melancholy, and the result is captivating. Far from being a one-hit wonder, though, Organisation is packed with a number of gems, showing the band's reach and ability continuing to increase. Holmes slots into the band's efforts perfectly, steering away from straightforward time structures while never losing the core dance drive, able to play both powerfully and subtly. McCluskey's singing, his own brand of sweetly wounded soul for a different age and approach, is simply wonderful -- the clattering industrial paranoia of "The Misunderstanding" results in wrenching wails, a moody cover of "The More I See You" results in a deeper-voiced passion. Everything from the winsome claustrophobia of "VCL XI" and the gentle, cool flow on "Statues" to the quirky boulevardier swing of "Motion and Heart" has a part to play. Meanwhile, album closer "Stanlow," inspired by the power plant where McCluskey's father worked, concluded things on a haunting note, murky mechanical beats and a slow, mournful melody leading the beautiful way” – AllMusic

Choice Cut: Enola Gay

Architecture & Morality

Release Date: 8th November, 1981

Label: Dinidisc

Producers: Richard Manwaring/OMD/Mike Howlett

Standout Tracks: She's Leaving/Joan of Arc/Joan of Arc (Maid of Orleans)

Buy: https://www.discogs.com/sell/list?master_id=30428&ev=mb

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/6bR98XzGnklTORDvZ7Oc2i?si=fk85ZctkRiCWrqRj6uG6ag

Review:

When the scared-to-its-wits opener draws to close, the album shifts to a completely new mood - the fresh, cooling pop charm of ‘She’s Leaving’ and then to the #3 hit 'Souvenir'. The latter is an exquisitely gorgeous classic, with gentle vocals, a feather-soft synth riff and hushed hints of the Mellotron choral sounds that permeate throughout the record. The group used a Mellotron heavily throughout recording, and it crops up in the background of most tracks. After taking in the nine tracks on offer, one can only reach the unreserved conclusion that it proved to be a strike of genius, as the refreshing, icy choral tones help tie everything together, and when combined with infectious synth lines, and OMD’s artistic vision, it all comes together to create a beautiful, consistent atmosphere, that leaves most tracks feeling pleasingly connected and close, despite their diversity. This concept is best witnessed on numbers like the anthemic ‘Joan of Arc’. Opening to a gentle, fluctuating choral hum, before washes of invigorating synth flood the track with an overriding anthemic feel (especially when married to the infectious vocal hook “without me”); the track builds on its simple opening with strong vocals and a subtle, rising melody that gets fuller and more glorious as it reaches the end of its three and a half minute, pop setting.

Truth be told, the album is, track-for-track, one of the strongest and most accomplished efforts the synthpop genre has ever produced. To be honest, the ‘synthpop’ tagline sells the album short, somewhat, as it suggests ‘Architecture & Morality’ is a collection of bouncy, electro-pop nonsense when it is, in fact, far from that assumption. Not to say that OMD don’t do electro-pop supremely well; just listen to ‘Georgia’ - at little over 3 minutes and featuring perhaps the most unashamedly, upbeat synth beats ever witnessed; it almost unnoticeably showcases the bands ingenuity with a bouncy, insanely catchy tune, that serves as a mask for the subtle, building background melody which comes to the forefront in the last 20 seconds of the track - all wobbly, unnerving synths and voices pushed so far back in the mix, they become inaudible, ending on, what is for 80% of its runtime an extremely jovial affair, on an odd, gloomy low - something which repeated listens helps articulate with close listening to the building background melody and ambiguous lyrics.

But what makes the album really special is the fact that it feels more important than the said ‘synthpop’ constraints would have you believe. Its aged extremely well, and the power of hits like ‘Joan of Arc’ still ring true. It’s far too considered and beautifully executed to be brushed off as an unnecessary product of electro-pop cluttered 80s Britain - it’s too clever, subtle and, more than anything else, gorgeous, to be ignored. A cohesive album that is extremely consistent in not only its tone, but also its quality; ‘Architecture & Morality’ is one of the great gems that many may have overlooked or missed - and that is simply a crime. If you’re unsure about the pretentiously named Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark, or whether this record is worth the time; one can only plead to you as a fan of great music to another, to give it a chance - and if you’re a fan of electro-pop at any level, you may find that that chance may be one of the most satisfying you ever took” – Sputnikmusic

Choice Cut: Souvenir

Junk Culture

Release Date: 30th April, 1984

Label: Virgin

Producers: Brian Tench/OMD

Standout Tracks: Tesla Girls/Never Turn Away/Talking Loud and Clear

Buy: https://www.discogs.com/sell/list?master_id=30481&ev=mb

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/5Ulj58jjnrswKgnn2seFRn?si=-Qwt1zKYRu-z8T3jvZWPDQ

Review:

Smarting from Dazzle Ships' commercial failure, the band had a bit of a rethink when it came to their fifth album -- happily, the end result showed that the group was still firing on all fours. While very much a pop-oriented album and a clear retreat from the exploratory reaches of previous work, Junk Culture was no sacrifice of ideals in pursuit of cash. In comparison to the group's late-'80s work, when it seemed commercial success was all that mattered, Junk Culture exhibits all the best qualities of OMD at their most accessible -- instantly memorable melodies and McCluskey's distinct singing voice, clever but emotional lyrics, and fine playing all around. A string of winning singles didn't hurt, to be sure; indeed, opening number "Tesla Girls" is easily the group's high point when it comes to sheer sprightly pop, as perfect a tribute to obvious OMD inspirational source Sparks as any -- witty lines about science and romance wedded to a great melody (prefaced by a brilliant, hyperactive intro). "Locomotion" takes a slightly slower but equally entertaining turn, sneaking in a bit of steel drum to the appropriately chugging rhythm and letting the guest horn section take a prominent role, its sunny blasts offsetting the deceptively downcast lines McCluskey sings. Meanwhile, "Talking Loud and Clear" ends the record on a reflective note -- Cooper's intra-verse sax lines and mock harp snaking through the quiet groove of the song. As for the remainder of the album, if there are hints here and there of the less-successful late-'80s period, at other points the more adventurous side of the band steps up. The instrumental title track smoothly blends reggae rhythms with the haunting mock choirs familiar from earlier efforts, while the elegiac, Humphreys-sung "Never Turn Away" and McCluskey's "Hard Day" both make for lower-key highlights” – AllMusic

Choice Cut: Locomotion

History of Modern

Release Date: 20th September, 2010

Label: 100%/Bright Antenna

Producers: OMD

Standout Tracks: If You Want It/History of Modern (Part II)/Sister Maries Says

Buy: https://www.discogs.com/sell/list?master_id=275514&ev=mb

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/3lIoxoHDQxgpxQj1h1TPMd?si=fGhCNZ1sSqyfHGelDbW6cA

Review:

Revisionists have got to grips with Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark (let’s use OMD) recently, boiling them down to their more experimental passages on 1983’s serious electronic classic Dazzle Ships, glossing over later Brat Pack anthems ‘If You Leave’, ‘(Forever) Live And Die’ and the successful early-90s full-pop comeback ‘Sailing On The Seven Seas’. Fat, singalong hits don’t fit with a narrative that rates OMD a profound influence on hip 21st century acts like LCD Soundsystem and The xx. And let’s not deny this footprint: OMD’s formative singles Messages, Electricity, Enola Gay and Souvenir – a roll-call of evergreen synth riffs – are a bedrock of modern 80s revivalism. It’s just that while they were toiling for the advancement of earnest electronica, they were also firing out whopping great mainstream chart bullets.

Their first album in 14 years, ‘History Of Modern’, from its austere title to its Peter Saville-designed cover, wants us to believe it’s an industrial monolith made by grey-shirted scholars with unfussy haircuts, but it’s as soaked in big late-80s chords as it is bound by strict electronic principles. Still, there’s nothing unwieldy about this combination; the fit is as smooth as OMD’s original progression. If you keep in mind they were always most at ease at the poppier end of the spectrum, there’s nothing to disappoint here.

Indeed, there’s oodles to delight. Andy McCluskey and Paul Humphreys still have a peerless knack for catchy music box synth signatures, poking familiar refrains onto ‘History Of Modern (Part I)’, ‘Green’ and opener ‘New Babies: New Toys’ – the last one cantering in behind some surprise guitar distortion that threatens that austere monolith after all. And they can still nail the sort of melody that occasionally escapes their natural successors. This skill’s a blessing and a curse – all good when they’re summoning the spirit of Malcolm McLaren’s ‘Madam Butterfly’ on the bewitching ‘Sometimes’ or coaxing a gloomy prettiness out of ‘Bondage Of Fate’; not so fab on the empowerment bluster of ‘If You Want It’ when they’re reminding you of McCluskey’s penance as Atomic Kitten Svengali” – DIY

Choice Cut: History of Modern (Part I)

The Underrated Gem

 

Sugar Tax

Release Date: 7th May, 1991

Label: Virgin

Producers: Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark/Howard Gray/Andy Richards

Standout Tracks: Pandora's Box/Then You Turn Away/Call My Name

Buy: https://www.discogs.com/sell/list?master_id=30573&ev=mb

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/1J8e1dLKVmZbsyxpGa9lGg?si=zA6jF6J-SmG4DCDzTeU7bg

Review:

With the split between McCluskey and the rest of the band resolved by the former's decision to carry on with the band's name on his own, the question before Sugar Tax's appearance was whether the change would spark a new era of success for someone who clearly could balance artistic and commercial impulses in a winning fashion. The answer, based on the album -- not entirely. The era of Architecture and Morality wouldn't be revisited anyway, for better or for worse, but instead of delightful confections with subtle heft like "Enola Gay" and "Tesla Girls," on Sugar Tax McCluskey is comfortably settled into a less-spectacular range of songs that only occasionally connect. Like fellow refugees from the early '80s such as Billy Mackenzie and Marc Almond, McCluskey found himself bedeviled in the early '90s with an artistic block that resulted in his fine singing style surrounded by pedestrian arrangements and indifferent songs. There was one definite redeeming number at the start: "Sailing on the Seven Seas," with glam-styled beats underpinning a giddy, playful romp that showed McCluskey still hadn't lost his touch entirely, and which became OMD's biggest single at home since "Souvenir." Beyond that, though, the album can best be described as pleasant instead of memorable, an exploration by McCluskey into calmer waters recorded entirely by himself outside of some guitar from Stuart Boyle. Without his longtime bandmates to help him, the results lack an essential spark (Holmes' drumming creativity being especially missed). In a tip of the hat to a clear source of inspiration, Sugar Tax includes a pleasant cover of Kraftwerk's "Neon Lights," with guest vocals by Christine Mellor, while "Apollo XI" uses Dazzle Ships-styled sample collages made up of moon-landing broadcasts, though the song itself isn't much. Even at its most active -- "Call My Name" and "Pandora's Box" -- Sugar Tax is for the most part just there” – AllMusic

Choice Cut: Sailing on the Seven Seas

The Latest Album

 

The Punishment of Luxury

Release Date: 1st September, 2017

Label: White Noise

Producers: OMD

Standout Tracks: Isotype/What Have We Done/One More Time

Buy: https://www.discogs.com/sell/list?master_id=1230249&ev=mb

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/2zAlIeSfwipohgoINJruZx?si=YLZOejBQR2q-hHVlMAAfnA

Review:

The Punishment Of Luxury follows in the sonic footsteps of 2013's English Electric, in that it’s a gentle upgrade of that sculpted-from-marble early ’80s sound. Songs with more vigorous tempos—the quasi-industrial title track, robot-Jazzercise surge “Art Eats Art,” the Kraftwerkian “Isotype”—are crisp and focused, while dreamier moments such as “One More Time” employ lullaby-like synth latticework. Throughout, the record traces and mirrors OMD’s influence across the decades, at times recalling Yaz’s percolating new wave (“What Have We Done”) and Hot Chip’s playful synth-pop (“Robot Man”).

Lyrically, The Punishment Of Luxury is distinguished by its thoughtful examinations of power dynamics. Several songs chronicle breakups with humans (“What Have We Done”) and technology (“Robot Man”), while others concern the myriad ways by which humans are controlled, whether by each other or the things they create: On the droning “La Mitrailleuse,” the song’s lone repeated lyric (“Bend your body to the will of the machine”) gives way to the sound of gunfire and bombs, while the title track takes a self-satisfied look at greedy leaders getting their comeuppance.

It’s also preoccupied with the complicated relationship humans have with progress. “Isotype” concerns the changing ways people share words, art, and creativity today, lamenting that ephemerality rules, while “Precision & Decay” comments concisely but effectively on the impact of traditional manufacturing decline, using Dearborn, Michigan’s Ford Rouge Factory as an example. As a digitized female voice illustrates the sobering aftermath of the plant’s demise (“The highway of prosperity / To collapse and dismay”), the song shifts to a TV-newscaster-like figure who intones, “There is no such thing as labor-saving machinery.”

In the wrong hands, this kind of thing could come across as heavy-handed or detached, but The Punishment Of Luxury exudes warmth and empathy throughout. It shines through most on the glittering “Ghost Star,” a tender song about longing for a healing love, and hoping that one day, “when all the wild horses have been tamed / You will welcome me to bed.” OMD has always balanced its love of technology with unabashed sentimentality, and here it allows that vulnerability to become even more prominent, mitigating cynicism and crafting a vision of the future that’s clear-eyed, yet hopeful” – The A.V. Club

Choice Cut: The Punishment of Luxury

FEATURE: Groovelines: Björk – Big Time Sensuality

FEATURE:

 

 

Groovelines

Björk – Big Time Sensuality

___________

THIS features allows me the chance…

 IN THIS PHOTO: Björk in Los Angeles in 1993/PHOTO CREDIT: Joseph Cultice

to go deep with a great track. Today, I wanted to dive into Björk’s Big Time Sensuality. A highlight from her 1993 debut (except for her actual 1977 debut, Björk) album, Debut, it was released as a single on 22nd November, 1993. Written and co-produced with Nellee Hooper, I think that Big Time Sensuality is one of Björk’s greatest tracks. Even though some feel that 1995 was a big improvement on Debut, I feel the 1993 introduction is a magnificent album where Björk’s voice and talent expands, flies and swoops. The songwriting and production is magnificent throughout the album. Placed halfway down Debut between a cover version of Like Someone in Love and the underrated One Day, Big Time Sensuality is one of the most joyous and energised tracks on Debut (sitting alongside Human Behaviour and Violently Happy in terms of the energy levels and pace). There are a few features I want to bring together, to give us a greater impression of a classic Björk track. One of the defining songs of the 1990s, I was looking for an interview Björk was involved with in 1993. This interview that i-D revisited in 2018 (from their original of 1993) is one of Björk discussing Debut and her music. I thought that it was useful sourcing some passages from the interview:

Björk’s singing really doesn’t need any fancy qualifiers. God knows that music journalists are, even as you read this, probably scouring their already battered Thesaurus for suitably multisyllabic synonyms for the word ‘ethereal’. And while on the subject of journalistic prose, can somebody write an article about Björk without using the word ‘elfin’?

“I think it’s funny and actually I couldn’t be more pleased with the situation,” says Björk. “When I was growing up, I always had this feeling that I had been dropped in from somewhere else. That was how I was treated at school in Iceland where the kids used to call me ‘China girl’ and everybody thought I was unusual because I was Chinese. It gave me room to do my own thing. In school, I was mostly on my own, playing happily in my private world making things, composing little songs. If I can get the space I need to do my own thing by being called an alien, an elf, a China girl, or whatever, then that’s great! I think I’ve only realized in the past few years what a comfortable situation that is.”

Using dance music as the framework for her songs is a definite departure from the guitar-based pop that Björk has been identified with to date. This belies the fact that she has been a dance fan since the early days of acid house. From 1988 onwards, Björk could usually be found in various London clubs whenever her band schedule permitted. What seems an abrupt change of heart is in fact a long process of musical evolution that has finally reached fruition today. “Dance music is the music that I’ve mostly been listening to in the past few years,” she confirms. “It’s the only pop music that is truly modern. To be honest, house is the only music where anything creative is happening today.”

IN THIS PHOTO: For the Big Time Sensuality video, Stéphane Sednaoui filmed Björk on the truck for an entire day on 26th October, 1993 and drove throughout New York City.

Discussing Björk’s eclectic taste in music gives way to a deeply-felt criticism of the rock tradition: “I could never stand guitar rock. That’s the funny thing. My father was a hippy who just listened to Jimi Hendrix and Eric Clapton and I grew up listening to that music. When I was seven, I was convinced that this music was ancient history, that I would do something new,” she says. “I think that as soon as any form becomes traditional, like the guitar, bass and drums, then people start to behave traditionally. It’s really difficult to get a band to stay on the edge using the typical bass, guitar and drums set-up because it tends to lapse into a predictable form. My ideal band would be an open-minded group that won’t let anything get in the way of creating something new. They could use saxophones, teaspoons, drum machines or anything to communicate a whole concept whether it be a house track, experimental music, pop, or just a nursery rhyme.”

In fact, Björk’s disillusionment with the state of contemporary music was one of the prime motivations for her Debut. “This record is really about being tired of going into the world’s largest record store in the hopes of finding something fabulous, and walking out with, fucking yet another Miles Davis record because there’s nothing happening that’s challenging.”

So you felt that you had to make that music yourself? “Largely, yes. That was my impulse.” It turns out Björk is a pop star on a personal crusade. “I think pop music has betrayed us,” she states. “Everybody in the world needs pop music, just like they need politics, their pay, and oxygen to breathe. The problem is that too many people dismiss pop as crap because nobody has had the courage to make pop that’s relevant to the modern world. Pop music has become so stagnant. This is really a paradox because it should change and evolve everyday. I don’t think anybody has made a decent pop album in years”.

Not only is Björk’s music remarkable, unique and so transfixing. She also makes sure that her videos are as inventive, cinematic and memorable as they can be. The video for Big Time Sensuality is such an example. The black-and-white video directed by Stéphane Sednaoui is one of Björk’s greatest. Vanity Fair looked at the video in 2015. They provided some great photos from the shoot of Big Time Sensuality:

Projected on the main lobby wall of Björk’s mid-career retrospective at MoMA is Stéphane Sednaoui’s “Big Time Sensuality” music video from 1993. Björk dances on an empty bed of a truck, driving through New York City. She shakes, shimmies, and scrunches her face to the music. “I love the Björk I filmed and photographed, I enjoy capturing who she is as an individual, I find her more captivating unprotected than when she is hidden under a shelter of beautiful layers”, says Sednaoui. The release of “Big Time Sensuality” propelled Björk's popularity in the States to new heights. Sednaoui shares his photographs and memories from that animated day of filming.

Sednaoui on the work he did with Björk: “She is constantly questioning herself and turned toward the future, it allows to potentially translate past projects into present pieces.”

“I was in a taxi stuck in traffic midtown, playing the song, and it was a perfect match. I added the idea of the flat-bed truck because I lived on 331 Lafayette and watched from my windows the flat-bed trucks crossing Manhattan on Houston Street,” explains Sednaoui, on how he came up with the concept.

Björk and Sednaoui blasted the song on speakers while driving around N.Y.C.; some New Yorkers responded by dancing in the streets.

Sednaoui had some of the young East Village crowd from that time—Kenny Hash, Walt Cassidy, Carlos Taylor, the Green Twins, Frederic Gaston—perform one by one on the truck, but decided to cut it from the video because Björk’s solo performance exceeded his expectations. “We had so much footage that Craig Wood (the editor) and I ended up making three different versions just with her,” says Sednaoui”.

PHOTO CREDIT: Stéphane Sednaoui

One can hear the chemistry between Björk and Nellee Hooper. They are definitely on the same wavelength right throughout Debut. Big Time Sensuality is a magnificent song that bursts with life! Mixing House and Pop, it is both euphoric and soulful at the same time. Big Time Sensuality was one of the last songs to be written for Debut. The song was originally planned to be the first single, but it got delayed by the release of Human Behaviour. Also, it was then intended to be the third single, but, again, it got delayed by the success and positivity that Play Dead received. Big Time Sensuality was released as the fourth single in November 1993. I am going to end with a Wikipedia article that collates the reception Big Time Sensuality received:

The song was deemed as a highlight of Debut and was praised by critics. Reviewing the album, Heather Phares of AllMusic, noted that "Björk's playful energy ignites the dance-pop-like "Big Time Sensuality" and turns the genre on its head with "There's More to Life Than This." Recorded live at the Milk Bar Toilets, it captures the dancefloor's sweaty, claustrophobic groove, but her impish voice gives it an almost alien feel". The website cites the track as an All Media Network-pick, and in a track review, Stacia Proefrock defined it as an "aggressive, screechy dance number" that "While not scraping the top of the charts[...] was part of an album unusual enough to stand out among its fellow pop releases as a quirky and complex experiment that worked most of the time".

PHOTO CREDIT: Stéphane Sednaoui

Larry Flick from Billboard wrote, "Wiggly bass and heavy beat come to the fore here, unfortunately competing with Björk's voice for lead billing, when her vocal really should be allowed to steal the show." Sean McCarthy of the Daily Vault defined the track as "insanely addictive". John Hamilton from Idolator wrote that "this dancefloor monster resembles the soulful American house sounds of Crystal Waters and Ultra Nate in its original album mix, but for the single, it was revamped into a storming trance jam by remix duo Fluke." Martin Aston from Music Week gave it four out of five, stating that it "sees the ubiquitous star this time going for the big dancefloor smash", adding that "she can do no wrong right now." Tim Jeffery from the magazine's RM Dance Update noted, "That soaring voice starts the track over swirling synths before a deep and rumbling bassline powers in and the rest is history repeated as Bjork heads for another smash." Simon Reynolds of The New York Times stated that "the sultry Big Time Sensuality has her vaulting from chesty growls to hyperventilating harmonies so piercing she sounds as if she’s inhaled helium". Johnny Dee from NME commented, "More fun, madness and surprise follows", noting "the pulsating grind" of the song. Vox journalist Lucy O'Brien called it "saucy".

"Big Time Sensuality" was nominated in the Best Song category at the 1994 MTV Europe Music Awards, losing to "7 Seconds" by Youssou N'Dour and Neneh Cherry”.

A truly phenomenal song, Big Time Sensuality has not aged at all. Although one does not really hear songs like this made anymore, the production and always-original sound of Björk means that it will not sound dated; it will never be forgotten. In the song, Björk talks about having courage but needing to find more. There is fear alongside positivity. She sings about living life to the full. Big Time Sensuality is an inspiring, affirmative and emotional song that provokes so many different reactions. It is one of dozens of classic and hugely impressive tracks…

FROM the Icelandic pioneer and genius.

FEATURE: In Her Own Words: Kate Bush’s Remarkable Debut Album, The Kick Inside, at Forty-Four

FEATURE:

 

In Her Own Words

Kate Bush’s Remarkable Debut Album, The Kick Inside, at Forty-Four

___________

MANY is the time…

 PHOTO CREDIT: Gered Mankowitz

I have said that Kate Bush’s 1978 debut album, The Kick Inside, is my all-time favourite. Apologies if I repeat myself! As it is forty-four on 17th February, I wanted to put out a few features around the album. Through the years, I have explored Bush’s debut from multiple angles. Today, I am going to look at some of the quotes and interviews around The Kick Inside. Today, I am not sure how much Bush remembers from recording her debut in 1977. She will remember the excitement but, when it comes to details and the specifics, maybe those recollections are somewhat murkier. I know that she sort of reappraised the album at various stages. When it was completed and she was promoting it, there would have been this pride and satisfaction. Soon after, her opinion shifted. I feel there is this sort of lingering dissatisfaction regarding the fact she did not have more of a say in the production and overall sound. Perhaps, were she to do it all over, there would be different decisions made. One can definitely not fault the album as a whole. In terms of the lyrics and the sort of things Bush was writing about…this was a fearless and remarkably frank album that explored sex, philosophy, birth, death and so many other subjects that many of her peers were not covering. Bush herself would say that The Kick Inside was not as experimental as subsequent albums.

When starting out, the natural instinct is not going to be the same as it when you are more established. As an artist, I think she needed to make an album that was true to her, but one that was also quite accessible. If she had turned up in 1978 with an album like The Dreaming (released in 1982), then she may not have gained a lot of approval. As it was, The Kick Inside reached number three in the U.K. The incredible debut single, Wuthering Heights, was a number one. Years later, we are still discussing The Kick Inside and how important it is. In previous features, I have selected reviews that outline its many strengths. In terms of Bush’s remarkable vocals and how she layers characters and these different voices, The Kick Inside is a staggering album. I am relying on the Kate Bush Encyclopaedia when it comes to Bush’s feedback and opinions about The Kick Inside. Rather than there being negative interview quotes where she distanced herself from the album and that time, there is a lot of positivity about the musicians she worked with. In terms of credit and what makes The Kick Inside so special, people do not talk about the input of musicians like Ian Bairnson, Duncan Mackay, David Paton, Stuart Elliott and Morris Pert:

Hello everyone. This is Kate Bush and I'm here with my new album The Kick Inside and I hope you enjoy it. The album is something that has not just suddenly happened. It's been years of work because since I was a kid, I've always been writing songs and it was really just collecting together all the best songs that I had and putting them on the album, really years of preparation and inspiration that got it together. As a girl, really, I've always been into words as a form of communication. And even at school I was really into poetry and English and it just seemed to turn into music with the lyrics, that you can make poetry go with music so well. That it can actually become something more than just words; it can become something special. (Self Portrait, 1978)

There are thirteen tracks on this album. When we were getting it together, one of the most important things that was on all our mind was, that because there were so many, we wanted to try and get as much variation as we could. To a certain extent, the actual songs allowed this because of the tempo changes, but there were certain songs that had to have a funky rhythm and there were others that had to be very subtle. I was very greatly helped by my producer and arranger Andrew Powell, who really is quite incredible at tuning in to my songs. We made sure that there was one of the tracks, just me and the piano, to, again, give the variation. We've got a rock 'n' roll number in there, which again was important. And all the others there are just really the moods of the songs set with instruments, which for me is the most important thing, because you can so often get a beautiful song, but the arrangements can completely spoil it - they have to really work together. (Self Portrait, 1978)

I think it went a bit over the top [In being orientally influenced], actually. We had the kite, and as there is a song on the album by that name, and as the kite is traditionally Oriental, we painted the dragon on. But I think the lettering was just a bit too much. On the whole I was surprised at the amount of control I actually had with the album production. Though I didn't choose the musicians. I thought they were terrific.

I was lucky to be able to express myself as much as I did, especially with this being a debut album. Andrew was really into working together, rather than pushing everyone around. I basically chose which tracks went on, put harmonies where I wanted them...

I was there throughout the entire mix. I feel that's very important. Ideally, I would like to learn enough of the technical side of things to be able to produce my own stuff eventually. (The Blossoming Ms. Bush, 1978)

As far as I know, it was mainly Andrew Powell who chose the musicians, he'd worked with them before and they were all sort of tied in with Alan Parsons. There was Stuart Elliot on drums, Ian Bairnson on guitar, David Paton on bass, and Duncan Mackay on electric keyboards. And, on that first album, I had no say, so I was very lucky really to be given such good musicians to start with. And they were lovely, 'cause they were all very concerned about what I thought of the treatment of each of the songs. And if I was unhappy with anything, they were more than willing to re-do their parts. So they were very concerned about what I thought, which was very nice. And they were really nice guys, eager to know what the songs were about and all that sort of thing. I don't honestly see how anyone can play with feeling unless you know what the song is about. You know, you might be feeling this really positive vibe, yet the song might be something weird and heavy and sad. So I think that's always been very important for me, to sit down and tell the musicians what the song is about. (Musician, 1985)”.

In the coming months, I want to spend some time exploring The Kick Inside. I have been meaning to put together a podcast that looks at its creation and legacy. Although there have been a lot of positive reviews about The Kick Inside, it is an album that is not as lauded and celebrated as some of her others. Although Kate Bush herself (as you can see above) has some good memories of recording her debut album, she rarely talked about The Kick Inside as being one of her favourites. One of my greatest hopes it that, in a future interview, Kate Bush is asked about her debut album. I looked at interviews she conducted in 2011 to promote 50 Words for Snow. She said that, in some ways, she returned to her debut album in terms of her way of working. The simplicity and, essentially, her working through songs on the piano over and over. A mix of pride and some dissatisfaction, what would Bush make of The Kick Inside in 2022? She has always said how she never listens back to her music - though I would be interested to learn what Bush recalls and how she remembers that fascinating time when she recorded and released an album that introduced the world to one of the best-loved artists ever. Ahead of The Kick Inside’s forty-fourth anniversary, I wanted to bring in a few of Kate Bush’s archived words. Still underrated and, to a degree, misunderstood, The Kick Inside is a phenomenal album that is far stronger and more impressive…

THAN many give it credit for.

FEATURE: Spotlight: Blu DeTiger

FEATURE:

 

 

Spotlight

 Blu DeTiger

___________

I have been trying to cover and spotlight…

as many artists as possible recently that are going to make big waves in 2022. One such artist is Blu DeTiger. The New York-born artist is someone that everyone should know more about. An incredible musician, songwriter and D.J., she released the E.P., How Did We Get Here?, last year. I am going to come to a review of that E.P. soon. Before that, there are interviews out there that provide more story and background regarding the incredible Blu DeTiger. Some might know her best as a TikTok sensation. Others might be more acquainted with her early career, whereas some are coming to Blu DeTiger fresh. This interview from DORK gives us some biography about the hotly-tipped star:

Blu DeTiger is living a life as wild as her name suggests. She’s blowing up on TikTok with her epic bass videos that see her freestyle over pop classics from ‘Baby One More Time’ to ‘Get Lucky’, which are weaved between original compositions and snippets of idealistic New York City landscapes. Her cover of Ginuwine’s ‘Pony’ is also a must-see. Though amassing a following in the millions across the digital sphere, labelling her simply as a TikTok star would be reductive, as she’s been flourishing long before the app ever came into existence, and is now gearing up to release her debut EP.

The EP was crafted in lockdown, which Blu has been spending in her hometown of NYC, where she still resides. “The city is super inspiring. It’s based on hustle and bustle, and everyone’s working all the time, and everything’s moving. You can do a million things in a day, every single day. I think it’s where my drive comes from, being a New Yorker.”

The New York state of mind is instilled into Blu’s existence. Ever since she was a child, she would seize every opportunity she was given, with palpable enthusiasm that she still has to this day, bolstered by a creative upbringing.

“They’re not musical; it’s really funny,” she says of her parents. “But they’re both super artsy and creative. My dad is a painter and a sculptor; he does a lot of different forms of visual art. They were very much adamant about following your passion and living your dream and doing what you want to do. I think that was always instilled in my two brothers and me at an early age, which I’m super grateful for. My older brother started playing drums when he was ten, and I was seven at the time. [It was the] classic sibling thing. I wanted to play an instrument, and I chose bass because I thought it was unique and different. I just fell in love with it. I took lessons and did different music programmes and just practised. There was never a point where I wanted to quit.”

Despite not being legally old enough, Blu’s career in music started to gain traction when she started DJing in clubs around NYC at just seventeen”.

“I love TikTok. I’m obsessed with it. My screentime is ridiculous. It’s so embarrassing,” she laughs.

“There are so many creative people on there. These kids who are just so interesting, and have such good ideas. There are some really good musicians on there too. I think it’s motivating and inspiring. I’ve gotten better at my instrument from making these videos too. I think when I started doing all the TikTok videos, that helped me think differently about the bass, and how it can be more of a melodic instrument. A lot of the time I’ll bring it to the forefront of the song, and I’m putting my own spin on these classic pop songs. That’s been helpful when I even write my own stuff.”

TikTok is one of the fastest-growing apps in the world, but there’s still a hefty amount of stigma surrounding the outlet and whether it should be viewed as a credible platform. It’s a trial Blu has had to tackle as a musician.

“I’m always thinking about this because, for me, there is that stigma,” Blu admits. “I’m so happy that I have a platform there and that I’ve been able to make fans, but I think what people don’t realise a lot of the time is that I’ve been doing music forever. I was DJing since I was seventeen, and playing bass since I was seven. I think it just connected on TikTok. I just found a niche that was able to accelerate.”

Speaking more about her sonic influences, Blu cites a string of 70s funk greats alongside 80s new wave legends. “Chic and Nile Rodgers… I wanted to learn every bassline. When I was getting into slap bass, I learned a lot of Larry Graham, Sly and The Family Stone. I was obsessed with Blondie. I’m still obsessed with Blondie. Tom Tom Club, The Talking Heads… All of this late 70s, early 80s funk disco. Zapp and Cameo. Acts that are so ingrained in my head. Grooviness, funk and disco elements are always going to be present in my music”.

If you have not heard her How Did We Get Here? E.P., I would urge everyone to do that. Prior to you listening to that, there are other interviews that caught my eye. The Line of Best Fit spoke with Blu DeTiger around the release of her debut E.P. Apart from them asking about the importance of the bass, she also discussed the impact of the pandemic:

BEST FIT: This must be a crazy week for you with the release of your first EP! What have you been up to?

BLU DETIGER: I'm just about to start writing more music, so that's kind of the next wave. I'm gonna just get back into the studio in the next few months, but just release week; all the promo, all of that stuff, celebrating. That's kind of been what's up the past few weeks.

Can you tell me about some of your pre-pandemic touring?

I was touring with a lot of other artists just as a bass player. Like work-for-hire for a bunch of artists, which is really good. I got a lot of experience there; a lot of touring experience. I was scheduled to do all of that stuff for pretty much this whole year. I had my whole 2020 calendar booked up with tours and shows and festivals for other artists, so it was kind of crazy when everything got canceled.

Were you on the road when you realised the extent of the pandemic?

I was doing the Caroline Polochek tour. I was actually in London with her when everything shut down. And then I was about to do this tour with Fletcher, who is a pop artist, and that also got totally cancelled. I was supposed to do two tours with her – I was supposed to do a European tour, and then we were supposed to do an arena tour. That was really sad...

You wrote this whole EP in quarantine, and it was inspired by narratives and things that happened before. How did COVID affect the process and speed of making that EP?

COVID obviously changed everyone's lives, [it was] insane and flipped it upside down. I think, musically and creatively, it's hard to not write about it, you know what I mean? Like, it's hard to not write about quarantine because it's such an extreme switch up of lifestyle. So I think when it came to songwriting, and when I was sitting down to write songs during the whole period, it was pretty obvious to use those feelings to write the songs. A lot of that stemmed from what I was feeling then. That's kind of the common theme throughout the whole EP.

Were there any particular feelings or events in your life that served as a common thread throughout the record or gave you a starting point?

Definitely nightlife – not in the weird way. I don't even party or anything, but I think just experiencing that in New York. I think New York, more like a New York culture and young people in New York, and that sort of scene, like downtown definitely sparked a lot of stuff. Even “Vintage”; describing those characters in “Vintage” is very based on people I’d see and come across in New York. Then the song “disco banger but you're crying in the bathroom” was missing the dance floor or a club. Just New York and nostalgia for pre-pandemic times is kind of the common theme.

How would you sell someone on the bass and the importance of the bass?

I would say that it holds down any song in any band or group setting. It's the groove of the song which is the most important – it's what makes people move. I think what I love is you feel the low frequencies in your chest and your heart and your soul. You can connect with it on a deeper level. Also, it is a really versatile instrument, and you can hold down the group, but you can also offer a lot of melodic elements. It can be the melody, it can be the rhythm, It can be the harmony. So that's what I would say. And it's just cool. Like, it just looks sick.

With your debut EP out, what’s next for you?

I'm just gonna start writing new stuff. The next few months, I’m just gonna be writing more, doing sessions and planning out the next phase, like the Blu 2.0 phase of music and then probably start rehearsing for the shows that will happen later on. So it's kind of a mix of both of those”.

The last interview I want to bring in is from Women in Pop. In addition to pick up on and highlighting individual tracks from her E.P., they also asked Blu DeTiger about her earliest club D.J. days – where, it turns out, she was underage at the time:

And your latest single ‘Vintage’ which is just so much fun and energy. There's ‘70s style references, ‘80s hooks and early 2000s karaoke references. There's a whole wine cellar of vintage going on there. What is it about those eras that you adore, that you gravitate to so much?

Yeah, part of that song came from me just such a vintage girl. I listen to old music, so does everyone in some capacity, but i think more so when I was growing up. When i was in middle school I was always listening to older stuff and when I was in high school i was listening to disco and my friends were like ‘what?’ We didn't have the same musical taste and background, because I was getting into bass and stuff. I always thought of myself as an old soul compared to my friends. That is part of where the song came from. I take a lot of influence from the past, genre wise, as well. All the funky stuff that are in this track are direct references to that era. We have the ‘80s synth sounds in that song as well. It’s recycling of the past and making it feel fresh at the same time. That's what i was aiming for with this song especially since it was called ‘Vintage’ I definitely wanted to reference some of those tropes in different genres of music but also just keep it really fresh and fun and in the 2020/2021 age as well.

One key track that stands out for me is ‘Figure It Out’ because you've got that boot stomping bass thumping mantra and then it's punctuated by your surprisingly electric soprano vocals, which is beautiful. Do you think that does come from your DJ-ing days where you're like ‘oh we can mix this track with this’, or is that just naturally what you gravitate towards?

I never really thought about it like that but it might just be from me having a knowledge of mixed genres and stuff. When I’m making stuff I just go almost by vibe and just what makes me feel good and what i think would be cool. Most of the time that's just mixing a bunch of stuff. It's all music so whatever feels good feels good, you know?

Your EP How Did We Get Here? is a seven track collection of anthems that put you in control of your narrative and challenges gender stereotypes within music and news culture. Where do you feel that those stereotypes lies?

Ohhh, interesting. First off, there aren't that many female instrumentalists. There are way more now, but when i was growing up it was kind of hard to find. So me being a bass player and putting the bassline at the forefront of most of my songs is maybe against what a traditional female pop star would do. First and foremost I think that is the biggest thing.

 When you started clubbing and DJ-ing you were actually underage. Obviously there’s a lot of guts that comes with that, you've clearly got confidence oozing out of you. But did you ever find a time, particularly when it came to writing your own music and getting it out there, that you felt like you either had to quieten down or shout louder in order to be heard because you were both a woman and a young woman at that?

I think more so when I was growing up and playing and going to like rehearsals. I did a bunch of jazz programs when I was younger and jazz camp and bass camp. I did all that nerdy stuff and all of those things are primarily guys in there. So i think when i was doing those, when i walked into the room, I just immediately stood out because I was a girl and having that extra layer of it made me practice way harder so I could be the best I could be in the room and not just be ‘good for a girl’. That was really prevalent when I was coming up as a bass player. It really motivated me to really practice so that people couldn't just say I was ‘good for a girl’. In terms of my music too when I’m writing and stuff, I don't know if this is a musician thing but there's always times when you'll be in a room with someone else, like a male producer, and they'll try to input their ideas more so and be ‘this is what we're going to do’ and you have to just make sure that you steer the ship and that you're able to dictate what you want to do. That also motivated me to get into producing so that when I can be in the room I can eloquently say how I wanted something to sound and know the right terms so that I could show that I know what's up, you know?”.

There was a lot of justified excitement and praise around How Did We Get Here? It was definitely one of last year’s finest debut E.P.s. It makes me wonder whether another might follow this year. Among those keen to have their say was The Line of Best Fit. This is what they noted in their review:

Sonically, DeTiger dips in and out of lo-fi pop, rife with vivid funk explosions, and bass-heavy interludes. How Did We Get Here? is a quirky EP, and a fittingly sweet introduction to the world of New York's new bass aficionado. Whilst opener, the viral hit “Figure It Out”, is arguably where DeTiger found her fame, it’s throughout the rest of the EP where she truly shines.

The alt-disco instrumental “disco banger but you’re crying in the bathroom” is an effortlessly upbeat ode shadow of a disco track. It’s a rejuvenation of the genre for the modern age; groovy, catchy and sprinkled with just the right amount of gen Z angst.

“Night Shade” is another stand out moment. Here her luminous vocals dance over a slinky bassline, sprinkled with some glittering funk guitar - there’s something about this track that’s just so cool. Whether this be the fluid lyricism or the frankly fantastic adlibs, it’s a tune embossed with an elegant groove.

However, not every track lands as well as these. The viral opener, although catchy, just feels too laidback for an otherwise bouncing EP. The bassline lacks lucidity, and the hook just misses its target. Similar critiques can be said about “Cotton Candy Lemonade”. Although dulcet breaks are often welcomed on full-length albums, something feels off about having an otherwise carefree EP stop so suddenly in its tracks to welcome in a more sombre tone.

Throughout the rest of the EP, we’re served infectious visions of the perfect boy (“Vintage”), frisson-inducing rhythms and radiant backing vocals (“Toast with the Butter”) and some devilishly fun auras of an outdoor disco (“Kinda Miss You”). No matter the strain of pop, DeTiger asserts herself wholeheartedly within the body of the music.

Although How Did We Get Here? sometimes loses itself in its attempt at deeper moments, it makes up for it with the youthful exuberance in the rest of the tracks. Perfectly mixing feelings of sweetness, coolness and glitter, Blu DeTiger has begun to master her craft, while welcoming in a (not too) distant summer”.

A brilliant and multifaceted talent, Blu DeTiger is an artist who is going to have many more years in the music industry. She is already being hailed as one of this year’s names to watch. After a 2021 that saw the release of her debut E.P., she will want to gig as much as possible and, I guess, work on new material. It is exciting to see where she might head next. If you have not followed Blu DeTiger yet, then acquaint yourself with…

A phenomenal musician.

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