FEATURE: Paul McCartney at Eighty: Thirty-Five: When Paul Met Linda...

FEATURE:

 

 

Paul McCartney at Eighty

PHOTO CREDIT: John Pratt/Hulton Archive/Getty Images 

Thirty-Five: When Paul Met Linda…

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ON 15th May, 1967…

 IN THIS PHOTO: Linda takes pictures of Paul McCartney at the press launch for The Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band; held at Brian Epstein’s house at 24 Chapel Street, London, on 19th May, 1967

Paul McCartney met Linda Eastman. A historic and hugely important day in his life: meeting a woman that became his soulmate. Although the night they met was then met with a gap of absence soon after, one cannot underestimate the importance of that night in 1967. Ahead of the fifty-fifth anniversary of a meeting that would change the life of Paul McCartney – and would impact his songwriting -, I wanted to source a couple of articles that explore that meeting in London; they chart the course of events soon after. I wonder whether McCartney and Eastman knew they would end up together when they first saw one another! Ultimate Classic Rock wrote about the event on its fiftieth anniversary in 2017:

It was just another night out in London for Paul McCartney. After attending Brian Epstein’s dinner party to celebrate the completion of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, the Beatles' bassist hit the town with some buddies. McCartney headed to Soho’s Bag O’Nails club, where he was a regular with his own table. That night, May 15, 1967, Georgie Fame and the Blue Flames were playing.

A little before McCartney showed up, a young photographer by the name of Linda Eastman had been taken to the Bag O’Nails by some of her friends, members of British rockers the Animals. She had become acquainted with rock royalty, such as the Animals, through her work as a shutterbug. What could be loosely described as a career began when she shot the Rolling Stones, followed by her role as the unofficial photographer at New York’s Fillmore East. She would capture rock icons including Jimi Hendrix, the Who, Aretha Franklin, Janis Joplin and many others.

But in May 1967, Eastman was in the U.K. because of an assignment to shoot photos for a book titled Rock and Other Four-Letter Words. The American was also there to enjoy the height of swinging London, with its mind-bending substances and free love. As one of the London scene’s pillars, McCartney was enjoying himself too.

During Georgie Fame’s set that night, McCartney remembers that he caught Eastman’s eye. He’s said that he was attracted to her smile.

“The band had finished and [Linda and the Animals] got up to either leave or go for a drink or a pee or something, and she passed our table,” McCartney told Barry Miles in Paul McCartney: Many Years From Now. “I was near the edge and stood up just as she was passing, blocking her exit. And so I said, ‘Oh, sorry. Hi. How are you? How’re you doing?’ I introduced myself, and said, ‘We’re going on to another club after this, would you like to join us?’ That was my big pulling line! Well, I’d never used it before, of course, but it worked this time! It was a fairly slim chance but it worked.”

Down the road, after becoming a family man, McCartney would often make fun of his corniness when telling the story. Apparently being a Beatle in 1967 didn’t require one to be too slick with pickup lines. As McCartney said, his line worked and they moved on to the next location, the Speakeasy. Eastman remembered the night not just for meeting her future husband, but for hearing a certain song for the first time.

“I remember everybody at the table heard ‘A Whiter Shade of Pale’ that night for the first time and we all thought, ‘Who is that? Stevie Winwood?’ We all said Stevie,” she told Miles. “The minute that record came out, you just knew you loved it. That’s when we actually met.”

Years later, the McCartneys would consider Procol Harum’s “A Whiter Shade of Pale” to be their song, because of their musical memory. But the night didn’t end at the Speakeasy. McCartney, soon to be 25, welcomed Eastman, soon to turn 26, back to his place under the auspices of showing the photographer his original paintings by the surrealist Rene Magritte. The Beatle was impressed that Eastman was also a fan of the Belgian painter. Memories are hazy as to if the pair impressed each other in any other ways that evening.

McCartney and Eastman would meet again a few days later at Epstein’s house in London. Eastman sought to shoot photos of the Beatles for her book and the Beatles manager agreed for her to come to a press party for Sgt. Pepper on May 19. She took more than a few famous shots of the boys, but also had her photo taken – the first picture of the future Mr. and Mrs. McCartney”.

I can only imagine what the atmosphere was like in the Bag O’Nails club in May 1967! At that time, The Beatles had completed work on Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. That was released in June. A high and hugely important time for the band, there would have been so many eyes on McCartney. On an album where he took creative control and was debatably replacing John Lennon as the band’s leader, McCartney was probably looking to unwind and not be hassled after a busy day - though he was also looking for a bit of fun too. What he found on 15th May, 1967 was an event that would change the course of his life! To reiterate and expand on what has already been sourced, here is some more detail about the meeting between McCartney and Eastman – and how their first interaction was undeniably passionate and pure:

The night I met Linda I was in the Bag O’Nails watching Georgie Fame and the Blue Flames play a great set. Speedy was banging away. She was there with the Animals, who she knew from photographing them in New York. They were sitting a couple of alcoves down, near the stage. The band had finished and they got up to either leave or go for a drink or a pee or something, and she passed our table. I was near the edge and stood up just as she was passing, blocking her exit. And so I said, ‘Oh, sorry. Hi. How are you? How’re you doing?’ I introduced myself, and said, ‘We’re going on to another club after this, would you like to join us?’

That was my big pulling line! Well, I’d never used it before, of course, but it worked this time! It was a fairly slim chance but it worked. She said, ‘Yes, okay, we’ll go on. How shall we do it?’ I forget how we did it. ‘You come in our car’ or whatever, and we all went on, the people I was with and the Animals, we went on to the Speakeasy.

Paul McCartney – from “Paul McCartney: Many Years From Now”, Barry Miles

[…] When I came to London in 1967, The Beatles and Stevie Winwood were the two acts I was determined to photograph. Having already taken the first pictures of Traffic in Berkshire, that left only The Beatles.

I took my portfolio over to Brian Epstein’s office and left it with his assistant, Peter Brown. While I was waiting for his response I happened to meet Paul at a club called the Bag O’Nails in Kingly Street, London where I had gone with Eric Burdon and some other friends to see Georgie Fame and the Blue Flames.

Paul walked in after we had arrived and came and sat at the table right next to us. It was one of those “our eyes met” situations. As I was about to leave Paul came over and invited me to go with him to The Speakeasy which was not too far away in Margaret Street. That was where we all heard “Whiter Shade Of Pale” for the first time and fell in love with it; we all thought it must be Stevie Winwood, but it turned out to be Procol Harum. […]

Linda McCartney – from “Linda McCartney’s Sixties“, 1992

We flirted a bit, and then it was time for me to go back with them and Paul said, ‘Well, we’re going to another club. You want to come?’ I remember everybody at the table heard A Whiter Shade Of Pale that night for the first time and we all thought, Who is that? Stevie Winwood? We all said Stevie. The minute that record came out, you just knew you loved it. That’s when we actually met. Then we went back to his house. We were in the Mini with I think Lulu and Dudley Edwards, who painted Paul’s piano; Paul was giving him a lift home. I was impressed to see his Magrittes.

Linda McCartney – from “Paul McCartney: Many Years From Now”, Barry Miles”.

Fans of The Beatles and Paul McCartney will mark 15th May as a very special one. Fifty-five years ago, he would encounter a woman who would change his life! As part of a run of features ahead of his eightieth birthday next month, I just had to include something about a fateful and magical night in Soho in 1967. In a feature soon, I will mark fifty-five years of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. It still makes my spine tingle to imagine what it was like for people around Paul McCartney when he locked eyes with Linda Eastman: his Wings band member and...

THE love of his life.

FEATURE: Inspired By… Part Sixty-Three: Daft Punk

FEATURE:

 

 

Inspired By…

Part Sixty-Three: Daft Punk

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FOR this Inspired By…

it is to a duo who sadly called it quits fairly recently. The iconic and brilliant Daft Punk consist Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo. Considered to be one of the most influential Dance acts ever, it is time to bring them into this feature! Before getting to a playlist of songs from artists influenced by Daft Punk, here is some biography about the Paris-formed geniuses:

As they evolved from '90s French house pioneers to 2000s dance tastemakers to mainstream heroes in the 2010s, Daft Punk remained one of dance music's most iconic acts. With their early singles and 1997's instant-classic debut album Homework, Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo and Thomas Bangalter quickly won acclaim for their skill at blending their beloved Chicago house and Detroit techno with pop, funk, indie rock, and hip-hop into nostalgic yet futuristic forms. Not content to just widen electronic music's popularity, on 2001's Discovery they reinvented the then-unfashionable sounds of mid-'80s soft rock and R&B into stylish tracks that also had a childlike wonder. Despite their sizable popularity, Daft Punk were never afraid to challenge their listeners, which they did with 2005's cold and dystopic Human After All. Even when they polarized their audience, there was never any doubt that they staged groundbreaking concerts, and the tour captured on Alive 2007 helped pave the way for arena-sized EDM, particularly in the U.S. With 2013's Random Access Memories, the duo once again looked to the past to create the future, borrowing from prog, disco, and a laid-back West Coast vibe that bucked the predominant trends in electronic music but still resonated with a wide audience. Daft Punk's influence reached further into the mainstream through collaborations with Kanye West and the Weeknd, and the duo's music was sampled by artists ranging from Missy Elliott to the Fall. Though they reinvented themselves continually, wherever Daft Punk went, the rest of pop music followed.

After meeting in 1987 as students at Paris' Lycée Carnot secondary school, Bangalter and de Homem-Christo became friends and soon started making music together. In 1992, they formed the band Darlin'. Named after a Beach Boys song, the group featured Bangalter on bass, de Homem-Christo on guitar, and additional guitarist Laurent Brancowitz. Darlin's career was brief: The trio recorded a cover of their namesake song that appeared, along with an original song, on a various artists EP released by Stereolab's label Duophonic (the band also invited Darlin' to play some U.K. shows with them). Following a Melody Maker review that described Darlin's music as "a daft punky thrash," the band broke up. Bangalter and de Homem-Christo began experimenting with electronic music, taking their new project's name from that review and drawing inspiration from pioneers such as Todd Edwards, Juan Atkins, Kraftwerk, Frankie Knuckles, and many more.

By September 1993, Daft Punk had readied a demo tape, which they gave to Soma co-founder Stuart MacMillan at a rave at EuroDisney. The label released the duo's debut single, "The New Wave," in April 1994. Instantly hailed by the dance music press as the work of a new breed of house innovators, it was followed by May 1995's "Da Funk," the band's first true hit (the record sold 30,000 copies worldwide and saw thorough rinsings by everyone from Kris Needs to the Chemical Brothers). In 1996, the buzz around Daft Punk led them to sign with Virgin, and the label released the single "Da Funk"/"Musique" that year. Recorded and mixed at the duo's Paris studio Daft House, January 1997's debut album Homework -- named for Daft Punk's D.I.Y. aesthetic -- was a critical and commercial success. The album reached number three in France and stayed on the chart for over a year, while the singles "Da Funk," "Around the World," "Burnin'," and "Revolution 909" charted in France, the U.K., the U.S., and Australia. The duo supported the record with the Daftendirekt tour, while the Homework video collection D.A.F.T.: A Story about Dogs, Androids, Firemen and Tomatoes followed in 1999 and featured clips directed by Roman Coppola, Michel Gondry, and Spike Jonze.

To follow their breakthrough debut album, de Homem-Christo and Bangalter reached back to their childhoods in the '70s and '80s and sought to fuse technology with humanity. Once again recorded at Daft House, March 2001's Discovery incorporated disco and synth pop as well as house, garage, and R&B into a sleek, retro-futuristic sound that matched the robotic helmets and gloves the duo introduced with the release of the album. Featuring contributions from heroes such as Romanthony, Edwards, and DJ Sneak, Discovery was an even bigger hit than its predecessor. The album peaked at number two in France and the U.K., while the singles "One More Time," "Digital Love," "Harder, Faster, Better, Stronger," and "Face to Face" also charted in the U.K. and the U.S. That November saw the release of Alive 1997, an edit of the duo's Birmingham, England stop on the Daftendirekt tour. Daft Punk capped the Discovery era in 2003 with Interstella 5555: The 5tory of the 5ecret 5tar 5ystem, an animated film they produced with anime and manga creator Leiji Matsumoto that used the album as its soundtrack.

For Daft Punk's third album, the duo took a drastically different approach. Created in six weeks -- as opposed to the two years they spent making Discovery -- with a handful of gear that included an eight-track machine, March 2005's Human After All was a deliberately raw, stark set of songs inspired by George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four. Though its cold, repetitive feel drew polarized reactions, the album fared well commercially: Human After All reached number three in France, was a Top Ten hit in the U.K., and hit number one on the Billboard Top Dance/Electronic Albums chart in the U.S. The set was also nominated for Best Electronic/Dance Album at the 2006 Grammy Awards. Shortly after its release, Human After All [Remixes] collected reworkings by Soulwax, Digitalism, and Erol Alkan among others.

April 2006 saw the arrival of Musique, Vol. 1: 1993-2005, a compilation of the duo's best-known songs and remixes accompanied by the videos for Human After All's singles. That May, Daft Punk premiered their film Electroma at the Director's Fortnight at that year's Cannes Film Festival. An experimental sci-fi film about a pair of robots seeking to become human, it began as the video for Human After All's title track before expanding into a feature film (unlike Interstella 5555, the movie did not feature any of Daft Punk's music). Initially earning mixed reviews, over time Electroma won a cult audience. That year, the duo embarked on the Alive tour, which lasted through 2007 and featured some of Daft Punk's most ambitiously staged live sets. Appearing in November 2007, Alive 2007 documented the tour. Early in 2009, the album and its single "Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger" won Grammy Awards.

Daft Punk returned with new music in November 2010 in the form of the score to Joseph Kosinski's feature film Tron: Legacy. A collaboration with Joseph Trapanese, who arranged and orchestrated the pair's compositions, it featured an 85-piece orchestra as well as Daft Punk's signature electronics. Bangalter and de Homem-Christo also appeared in the film in a brief cameo. The soundtrack eventually reached number four on the Billboard 200 Albums chart in the U.S. and was nominated for a Best Score Soundtrack Album for Visual Media Grammy Award. Also in 2010, the duo were admitted into the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres, with de Homem-Christo and Bangalter each receiving the rank of Chevalier. The following year saw the April release of the remix album Tron: Legacy Reconfigured, while that September's compilation Soma Records: 20 Years featured the track "Drive," an early recording that was believed to be lost.

For their fourth album, Daft Punk once again took a different creative tack. Seeking a breezy feel informed by Fleetwood Mac, the Eagles, and Jean Michel Jarre, the duo emphasized live instrumentation and collaborated with artists including Nile Rodgers, Paul Williams, Giorgio Moroder, and Panda Bear. Pharrell Williams appeared on the single "Get Lucky," which preceded the release of the full-length Random Access Memories in May 2013. Recorded in California, New York City, and Paris and spanning disco, prog, and indie influences, the album became one of Daft Punk's biggest successes. It topped the charts in over 20 countries including the U.S., where it became the duo's first number one album and was eventually certified platinum. It also won Grammy Awards for Best Dance/Electronica Album, Album of the Year, and Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical. "Get Lucky" hit number one in over 30 countries and earned Grammys for Best Pop Duo/Group Performance and Record of the Year. That year, Daft Punk also co-produced Kanye West's critically acclaimed album Yeezus, and worked on tracks including the single "Black Skinhead." In 2014, the duo appeared on Pharrell's album G I R L and collaborated with Jay-Z on the song "Computerized." A 2015 documentary titled Daft Punk Unchained charted their history from the '90s into the 2010s, featuring interviews with Rodgers, Pharrell, and West, among others. In turn, the duo appeared in that year's Rodgers documentary Nile Rodgers: From Disco to Daft Punk.

During the latter half of the 2010s, Daft Punk remained active. They teamed up with the Weeknd's Abel Tesfaye on a pair of songs from his 2016 album Starboy, including the chart-topping title track. The following year, the duo performed with the Weeknd at the 59th Annual Grammy Awards; later in 2017, they co-wrote and produced Parcels' "Overnight." During this time, Daft Punk's members also worked on separate projects. Bangalter co-produced Arcade Fire's 2017 album Everything Now and contributed pieces to the soundtrack to Gaspar Noé's 2018 film Climax, while de Homem-Christo co-wrote and produced tracks for Charlotte Gainsbourg's 2017 album Rest and the Weeknd's 2018 EP My Dear Melancholy,. In 2019, Daft Punk were featured in the Philharmonie de Paris' exhibition Electro, which traced the history of electronic music and its influence on visual arts. In February 2021, the duo disbanded, spreading the news with a YouTube video that featured scenes from the end of Electroma”.

In order to show how far and wide the influence of Daft Punk has spread since their formation in 1993, the songs in the playlist at the bottom are from artists who are definitely inspired and moved by them. Even though they have split, their legacy will endure. A phenomenal duo who changed the world of music, we will never see anyone as…

MAGICAL as Daft Punk again.  

FEATURE: Better the Second Time Around? A Return to Kate Bush’s Director’s Cut

FEATURE:

 

 

Better the Second Time Around?

A Return to Kate Bush’s Director’s Cut

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ON 16th May…

 PHOTO CREDIT: John Carder Bush

Kate Bush’s ninth studio album, Director’s Cut, turns eleven. I wanted to return to this work, as it was her follow-up to 2005’s double album, Aerial. She released a second album late in 2011, 50 Words for Snow. As we look ahead to see if she will release another album, I am going to nod back to an incredible album. Something that she had never done before. Released on her Fish People label, it is made up of songs from her earlier albums, The Sensual World (1989) and The Red Shoes (1993), which have been remixed and restructured; three of which were re-recorded completely. Bush re-recorded all of the lead vocals and some of the backing vocals. The drum tracks were also re-recorded. Bush was not entirely happy with the sound and production of the songs she selected. Thinking of Director’s Cut as a new album, the songs blend seamlessly. It is not like she has shoved old tracks together to make them fit. She approached the project like a new album and, as such, there is this unity, flow and consistency where one can view the known tracks in a new light. I was eager to mark the eleventh anniversary of an album that, I think, is underrated. Some felt that Director’s Cut didn’t need to exist – in the sense the original tracks are better, and we can enjoy them on The Sensual World and The Red Shoes. Featuring musicians like her brother, Paddy, the late Gary Brooker of Procol Harum, and her other half, Dan McIntosh, Director’s Cut sounds incredible! An album well worth grabbing on vinyl, go and listen to the wonderful re-imagining of songs that you may have initially heard decades ago.

Although there was a bit of publicity, Bush provided many more interviews for 50 Words for Snow. Maybe, knowing that another album was coming, it meant that she wanted to pace herself. I guess there is not a lot to say about an album where we know about the songs. People have heard the originals, so she cannot discuss the origins and stuff like that. Instead, I want to mention a couple of reviews. First, Dig! revisited Director’s Cut last year. There are some segments from their piece that I wanted to drop in here:

I just kind of felt like there were songs on those two albums that were quite interesting but that they could really benefit from having new life breathed into them,” she told Dimitri Ehrlich for Interview magazine. “There was generally a bit of an edgy sound to it, which was mainly due to the digital equipment that we were using, which was state-of-the-art at the time – and I think everyone felt pressured to be working that way. But I still remain a huge fan of [analogue]. There were elements of the production that I felt were either a little bit dated or a bit cluttered. So, what I wanted to do was empty them out and let the songs breathe more.”

RICHLY REWARDING, EMOTIONALLY OVERWHELMING

Three of the songs (This Woman’s Work, Moments Of Pleasure, Rubberband Girl) were re-recorded completely for Director’s Cut, while the drums on all of the tracks were replaced by studio ace Steve Gadd (Aretha Franklin, Paul Simon, Frank Sinatra, Steely Dan). Danny Thompson was brought in on bass, and new backing vocals were provided by Mica Paris, Jacob Thorn and Kate’s son, Bertie McIntosh. Most importantly, Bush herself re-recorded her lead vocals for each of the song. Taken together, the overhauls give a new perspective on the material – the studio sheen associated with the late 80s and early 90s is stripped back, and the songs feel warmer and more welcoming. What’s more, they better suit Bush’s more mature, less dramatic vocals, bringing out new meaning in her lyrics.

PHOTO CREDIT: John Carder Bush

The only song with “new” lyrics was Flower Of The Mountain (originally recorded as The Sensual World’s title track), which, in place of her original lyrics, now used an extract from James Joyce’s Ulysses – just as Bush has originally conceived the song. While the writer’s estate had blocked her from using his text back in 1989, come the recording of Director’s Cut, she was finally granted permission. Joyce’s words – drawn from the novel’s closing soliloquy by Molly Bloom – helped transform the track from a glossy, radio-friendly single into something more considered and languid. A similar effect was achieved on much of the rest of Director’s Cut, notably with a moving take on Moments Of Pleasure which, once an ecstatic celebration of friends and family who had passed away, had been transformed into a hushed elegy.

Meanwhile, Bush saved the most radical reinvention for one of her most-loved songs, This Woman’s Work. Recast as an ethereal ambient ballad, with Bush’s lower vocal range and thoughtful delivery lending it an air of tangible vulnerability, the re-recording also demonstrated Bush’s artistic confidence – at this point in her career, she was free to follow her muse without considering a song’s hit potential. The results led to some glorious music.

Released on 16 May 2011, Director’s Cut may at first have seemed like a curio, but a closer listen reveals a richly rewarding, often emotionally overwhelming set that emphasises how creative and headstrong Bush remained as a writer, musician and producer at the top of her game”.

I am going to conclude with a couple of positive reviews. Though there were one or two mixed reviews, the overall reception was positive. It was brave tackle some much-loved tracks and release an album of this nature. Giving fresh life and meaning to songs like Top of the City and Lily, Director’s Cut is an essential album – not only for Kate Bush fans, but for everyone. The Guardian had this to say about Bush’s 2011 release:

In the solitary phone interview she gave to promote her first album in six years, Kate Bush offered these TV appearances to explain why she was only giving a solitary phone interview to promote her first album in six years. Under the circumstances, she suggested, wouldn't you push off to the land of do-as-you-please as soon as possible? Nothing, it seems, inspires inscrutable behaviour quite like the bloke off That's Life! quizzing you about your pimples.

In 2011, with the whole nonpareil musical genius/dippy woman who says "wow" issue firmly sorted out in most people's minds, her behaviour seems to grow more inscrutable still. Her new album, which admittedly took only half as long to make as its predecessor, isn't actually a new album, despite Bush's insistence to the contrary: it consists entirely of new versions of songs from 1989's The Sensual World and 1993's The Red Shoes. In fairness, you can see why she's chosen to point them up. They tend to be overlooked in her oeuvre, more because they separate her twin masterpieces Hounds of Love and Aerial than because of their content, although The Red Shoes is perhaps more muddled than you might expect, given her legendary perfectionism. Nevertheless, the decision seems to have bamboozled even her diehard fans, whose trepidation was not much mollified by the single Deeper Understanding. Again, you can see why she wants to point it up: its lyric about abandoning social interaction in order to hunch over a computer seems very prescient in the age of Facebook and Twitter. But the new version's decision to overwhelm the haunting vocals of Trio Bulgarka with Kate Bush doing one of her patented Funny Voices through an Auto-Tune unit seems questionable at best.

In fact, it's the only moment when you can honestly say the rerecording pales next to the original. At worst, they sound as good as their predecessors, which leaves you wondering what the point is, even as you succumb to their manifold charms. It was obviously a bind that the Joyce estate refused permission to use Molly Bloom's concluding soliloquy from Ulysses as the lyrics to The Sensual World, but whether it's a vastly better song for finally having them in place of Bush's facsimile is rather a moot point. Song of Solomon, on which Bush finally abandoned her apparently bottomless store of metaphors for female sexuality in favour of a direct demand for a shag – "Don't want your bullshit," she cries, "I'll come in a hurricane for you" – is a fantastic song whether the rhythm track features pattering tom-toms or a lightly brushed snare. Occasionally, the changes genuinely add something, usually by taking things away. The force of The Red Shoes' depiction of Bush's troubled relationship with the creative impulse was always a little blunted by its presentation as a kind of perky Irish jig: with the Celtic pipes shifted to the background, it sounds sinister and more urgent. Moments of Pleasure's rumination on death is more introverted and affecting stripped of its dramatic orchestration, while This Woman's Work – the rerecording of which caused the most unease among fans – is amazing: emptier, darker and quieter than before, it's even more heart-rending. Given that the original was heart-rending enough to soundtrack a charity campaign against child abuse, that's no mean feat.

Is it worth spending six years making an emotionally wrenching song slightly more emotionally wrenching? Hmm. If Director's Cut really was a new album, if you were hearing these songs for the first time, then it probably would be considered among Kate Bush's masterpieces: certainly, the sheer quality of the songwriting makes every recent female artist who has been compared to her look pretty wan by comparison. But you're not, which means the Director's Cut ultimately amounts to faffing about, albeit faffing about of the most exquisite kind. Still, as anyone who's watched her putting up with Richard Stilgoe will tell you, Kate Bush has earned the right to do whatever she wants”.

The BBC were impressed and overwhelmed when they sat down with the wonderful Director’s Cut. It is an album that I keep listening to and get something different from every time I dive in:

“When Deeper Understanding emerged as the first evidence of Kate Bush’s new album of revisions, the instant reaction was surprise tinged with anger. How dare she play with our memories? How dare she use Auto-Tune on the chorus vocal? "Butchered" and "almost unforgivable" cried the fansites. But as Bon Iver and Sufjan Stevens have already shown, Auto-Tune – a pitch-shifting tool typically used to mask defects – can also be used for beauty. It’s not as if Bush’s own vocal was altered. Instead, it’s just the song’s computer voice, which now resembles 2001: A Space Odyssey’s HAL 9000 rather than a demo on a kid’s Casio. A bonus two-minute coda of Talk Talk-style folk-jazz floatiness extends the mood of blissful angst. Butchered? More like reborn.

The problem is less that Bush’s new album consists of old songs than the fact she’s only released one album of new ones in 18 years. She’s had the urge to tinker before, sprucing up Wuthering Heights for her 1986 greatest hits, The Whole Story. All the vocals and drums on Director’s Cut – totalling four tracks from 1989’s The Sensual World, seven from 1993’s The Red Shoes – are new; if such a term existed, you could say the overall execution has been to ‘de-80s-fy’ the originals. Gone are the gated drums, the keyboard presets, the Synclavier washes; in comes a softer, golden glow. Minus the choc-box orchestra (plus subtly altered lyrics), the rest of Moments of Pleasure emerges into the light, shaded by a solemn choir. Rubberband Girl, which in context sounds like a knees-up down her local boozer, comes over like the work of a totally different band (weirdly, that band is now The Rolling Stones).

The Sensual World’s title-track, now re-named Flower of the Mountain and borrowing Molly Bloom’s soliloquy from James Joyce’s novel Ulysses as Bush intended (she was originally denied permission), is another major alteration. Yet, musically, it’s rather more cosmetic. Just as Bush sounds in great voice – richer, bolder, brighter, wiser – so the re-cast Lily and The Red Shoes’ title-track follow suit, but they’re hardly re-inventions. As much as it’s fascinating to hear Bush the Elder look back at Bush the Younger, is the tinkering worth a full album? Yes, because it’s a sign Bush the Artist is still alive (she’s working on new songs too) and Director’s Cut (a less prosaic title would have been nice) is a gorgeous body of work. No, because it’s writer’s block by any other name. No, because it’s not radical enough a move. But if Deeper Understanding raised hackles, imagine if Kate had gone dubstep or collaborated with Odd Future. World wars have broken out over less”.

On 16th May, it will be eleven years since Bush put out Director’s Cut. Although one or two of the songs she reimagines do not exceed the originals (Deeper Understanding among them), I do love the fact that she revitalises a few tracks that might have been overlooked first time around. Few people would have imagined that Kate Bush would release another album…

ONLY six months later.

FEATURE: Second Spin: Queen – The Works

FEATURE:

 

 

Second Spin

Queen – The Works

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QUEEN are one of these bands…

who are well-known and popular, yet the reviews for their studio albums have been mixed. Apart from classics in their cannon – such as 1975’s A Night at the Opera -, there has been this division. Many U.S. critics have never for behind the band (Rolling Stone are top of the list!). One of their albums that I think is undervalued and should have scored better reviews is 1984’s The Works. I am going to bring together a couple of contrasting reviews for the album. One of Queen’s most varied and diverse albums, their eleventh was the band's first studio album to be released by Capitol Records in the United States. Following the synth-led Hot Space (1982), The Works has a harder Rock sound, yet it still include Mercury’s love of electronic and synth sounds. It was an album that showed and explored the band’s wide range of sounds and sonic loves. If John Deacon was leaning towards New York futuristic sound; Mercury wanted to keep some of Hot Space’s sounds, whilst Brian May and Roger Taylor were eager to return to the Rock sound of their earlier albums, The Works was a pleasing compromise. Recorded at the Record Plant Studios in Los Angeles and Musicland Studios in Munich from August 1983 to January 1984, the title is very fitting! It is appropriate that I mention Hot Space, as that album is forty on 21st May.

At nine tracks – none of which exceed six minutes -, The Works manages to be quite focused, yet the spread and variety of genres and sounds makes it feel expansive. I am not sure why there were negative and mixed reviews for the album! Roger Taylor’s Radio Ga Ga, Freddie Mercury’s It’s a Hard Life, and John Deacon’s I Want to Break Free are all classics! Throw in Brian May’s Hammer to Fall, and it shows that there are four extraordinary and different songwriters in the band. The Works was a case of it being all Freddie Mercury and Brian May! Reaching number two in the U.K. in 1984 and twenty-three in the U.S., The Works was a commercial success. 1986’s A Kind of Magic, again, is an album that is packed with great music but got mixed reaction. I am going to come to a couple of reviews now. I mentioned Rolling Stone earlier. Although not one of their more negative reviews for a Queen album, their take on The Works holds a lot of positives:

Radio Gaga,” the single that opens up the new Queen album, is another instant jewel in Queen’s Top Forty crown. It’s one more anthemic lament to that overfamiliar icon, sung and played with Queenly overkill in “Deutschland Uber Alles” style by a group that did its share to corrupt the airwaves in the Seventies. This slab of false pomp aside, the rest of The Works — surprise, surprise — ain’t half bad.

Disregarding a best-of, a soundtrack, one single made with David Bowie and the obligatory solo projects, this is the glitter-rock band’s first real album in some time. And rather than move in ever-widening spirals of bombast, they’ve trimmed a lot of the excess — mainly, the fat vibrato of Brian May’s multitracked guitars and Freddie Mercury’s overdubbed tabernacle choir of vocal effects. What’s left is a lean hard-rock sound, making The Works perhaps the first record to refute the maxim that the words Queen and listenable are, of necessity, mutually exclusive.

Granted, the messages have all been heard before and practically cancel each other out: love is all you need; let’s get physical; machines have feelings, too; be an individual, stand your ground. Instead, the revelations are in the music. For the carnivorous, rewards are to be found in the thundering Led Zeppelinisms of “Tear It Up” and “Hammer to Fall”; for the doubters, the surprises are in the comely melody and (relative) restraint of “Keep Passing the Open Windows” and the straight-up Fifties rocking of “Man on the Prowl.” And try this one our on the atheists: “Is This the World We Created…?” is an acoustic meditation on hunger and hate and generational responsibility, sung with conviction by Mercury.

This unanticipated humanitarianism is the perfect grace note to the preceding thrash-fest. The Works is a royal feast of hard rock without that awful metallic aftertaste; as such, it might turn out to be the Led Zeppelin II of the Eighties. Not so depressing a prospect at that”.

In their review, Redbrick explained why 1984’s The Works is one of Queen’s most realised and best work. In my opinion, it ranks alongside their classic albums from the 1970s:

I find it very difficult to pick just one essential album from Queen, but their eleventh album, The Works, is easily one of their most underrated albums. With the amount of huge hits and pure classics produced over their career, it’s hardly surprising that this album is anything less than brilliant. Yet, in my opinion, this is my favourite album created by Queen. Admittedly, Anyone who knows me, is aware that I have a deep love of Queen, so my view that they are one of the best rock bands to have existed comes as no surprise. However, The Works showcases their ability to bring out classic Rock sounds whilst also combining it with some other styles like funk, delivering some of the band’s biggest hits.

The aim of this album was to reignite Queen and lead them back to their rock roots after their previous album Hot Space flopped. The opening track ‘Radio Ga Ga’ showcased Queen’s return to their original sound. The lyricism of this song written by Roger Taylor is something to be in awe of. Making references to various events that happened on the radio like Winston Churchill’s 1940 “This was their finest hour” address and the hugely influential War of the Worlds broadcast, it is a crafted tribute to the radio formate as well as an iconic track. ‘Radio Ga Ga’ still remains one of Queen’s most listened to singles and was famously used in Queen’s Live Aid performance. Queen’s sound in this song is made monumental thanks Roger Taylor’s drumming to the Freddie Mercury’s vocals. What is clear from the start of this album is that Queen are a band that can never be replaced or replicated.

Queen are the classic household name of rock music with many children having grown up on a steady diet of their music. Especially since the release of the hugely successful rock-opera, ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ in 2018, our nostalgic love the band has seemingly been reignited. The Works has many tracks which have touched lives from ‘I Want To Break Free’, written by John Deacon, which has a power to it and can have many meanings to different people, and ‘Hammer to Fall’ which is infectiously catchy with Brian May’s guitar riffs and chorus. These two singles are a force to be reckoned with as they stand out as some of the most played songs by Queen and show why they are one of their era.

There is a mixing of rock and other influences like funk and more experimental sounds that Queen would pursue in the later album Innuendo in 1991, foreshadowed on The Works. ‘Is This the World We Created…?’ is an ode to the fear of the world that we all live in now, written after witnessing poverty abroad, this song still has a meaningful resonance with listeners today. This song thrives on the simplicity of Brian May’s acoustic guitar skills and touching lyrics arranged by Freddie Mercury. Their ability to deliver emotional moments as classic rock can be heard through this song and can similarly be seen in the album A Night at the Opera with ‘Love of My Life’.

Songs such as ‘Tear It Up’ and ‘I Go Crazy’ lean more towards the heavier rock that Queen were known for. These songs are a nod to their past and also have fantastic guitar solos and drumbeats from Roger Taylor. ‘Tear It Up’ has an ode back to ‘We Will Rock You’ from the album News of the World with the stomping drum beats and guitar riffs.

Queen’s The Works is one of the best albums from start to finish for me. From their endeavours to revive their old sound, to their simplicity, The Works captures some of the best of Queen’s artistry. It’s sound is one of the reasons why I love Queen. It is an essential album for its rich and full sound, the artistry that Queen are renowned for is present throughout this album in its spectrum of sounds. The Works is and always will be one of my favourite albums that I revisit all the time, however I’m feeling”.

An album that should be talked about more and seen as a terrific release, The Works is a creative peak for Queen. I know the band have always been divisive, yet one cannot deny there are some true gems in the running. Radio Ga Ga and I Want to Break Free are considered to be two of Queen’s crowning achievements. If you have not heard The Works or have given it short shrift, go and listen to it again and give it more time. It is an album that, because of its breadth and spread, will please the senses and can appeal to a wider audience. Rather than The Works being average or containing some weak tracks, it is truly…

ONE of Queen’s very best.  

FEATURE: Revisiting… Flo Milli - Ho, why is you here ?

FEATURE:

 

 

Revisiting…

Flo Milli - Ho, why is you here ?

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MIXTAPES and E.P.s tend not to get the same attention…

 PHOTO CREDIT: Munachi Osegbu for COMPLEX

as albums when it comes to reviews and sales. Although it got to seventy-eight in the Billboard  200 in the U.S., there were some great reviews for Flo Milli’s 2020 mixtape, Ho, why is you here ?. I previously featured the Alabama rapper last year for my Spotlight feature. An incredible artist (real name Tamia Carter), I think we might see an album or further mixtape at some point this year. Her incredible mixtape featured high on the best album of the year lists from various publications. COMPLEX, The New York Times, NPR, and Rolling Stone all put it in their top twenty of 2020. This is a mixtape that requires people to check back in and play it without interruption. A fantastic work of innovation, power and intent from one of the greatest young rappers in the world, I am going to get to a couple of positive reviews. Prior to that, COMPLEX spoke with Flo Milli in 2020, where they asked her about the reception and popularity of Ho, why is you here ?, and how she would describe her sound:

On July 24, Alabama's brightest new star dropped her debut project, Ho, Why Is You Here? She hoped all her hard work would pay off, but the response to the tape exceeded expectations. Hours after it hit streaming services, Flo Milli’s name was trending on Twitter, garnering overwhelmingly positive reactions from fans, as well as fellow artists like Kehlani, Janelle Monae, City Girls, and more. But Flo Milli tells Complex that she was most shaken by Missy Elliott's display of support.

"That gave me shivers," she recalls. "I think I was cooking when she did that. I had to do a double take."

Fans are raving over Flo Milli’s effortlessly fun and confident delivery on songs like "Weak," "May I," and "Send the Addy." The 20-year-old rapper, whose breakout song "Beef FloMix" went viral on TikTok, says she is guided by a philosophy to always do what she wants. Now she wants her listeners to feel the confidence to do the same. "I just like to make people feel confident and hot," she notes. "I want to raise their vibe. That's why I make fun music. So when people are sort of down, they could just listen to it and turn up."

The last few years have been pivotal for women in rap, as more acts have found commercial success and praise. In addition to bringing a "youthful" energy to the table, Flo Milli says she is representing for Black women of a darker complexion. And as her platform grows larger, she wants to inspire women to feel more confident in their own skin.

With the successful release of Ho, Why Is You Here? under her belt, Flo Milli is already focused on what's next. She is thinking about her follow-up project and eyeing potential collaborations from southern artists like DaBaby, Lil Baby, Mulatto, and Rico Nasty. Complex caught up with her to talk about Ho, Why Is You Here?, what "Flo Milli shit" really means, and her long term goals in rap. The interview, lightly edited for clarity, is below.

PHOTO CREDIT: Munachi Osegbu for COMPLEX 

How did it feel to wake up and see that you were trending because of Ho, Why Is You Here?

It felt so good. Honestly, it's starting to hit me now. I wanted to know how it really feels to actually be reaping the rewards for your hard work, because I've worked so hard on that mixtape. People don't even know what happened behind the scenes. But I really learned how it is to be a full-blown artist, and it's not easy. But that's what makes it beautiful, just being able to go through the good and the bad and then have the outcome be beautiful.

Who was the most surprising artist who reached out to you and reacted to your project?

Most definitely, Missy Elliot. That was crazy. I love her so much, and I’ve been listening to her since I was younger. That gave me shivers. I think I was cooking when she did that. I had to do a double take. I didn't believe it at first, but that one really made me and my mom proud.

How would you describe your sound for someone who isn’t familiar with Flo Milli?

I would describe my sound as sassy, fun, and kind of poppy, but it still has that way of trap rap to it. I would say playful nursery rhymes. I guess you would say trap music, but it's a mixture of a lot of different things. I just like to make people feel confident and hot. I want to raise their vibe. That's why I make fun music. So, when people are sort of down, they could just listen to it and turn up.

What was the writing and recording process like? 

It was hard. People have to realize artists have regular day-to-day lives. So, we go through things. We're not robots. We don't just get a free pass in life. But going through the things that I did go through, I learned a lot of lessons, and I would say that helped me expand my writing. So I would say it was extremely hard at times, and then sometimes it was really easy. It just depends on how much work you're willing to put in. And I guess it taught me that I don't give up, and I'm very strong and determined when I want something.

What's your favorite track on the project? 

I don't know. I'm kind of arguing with "Pussycat Doll" or "Send the Addy." "Send the Addy" is my vibe when I'm chilling or driving. I like "Send the Addy," but then I kept listening to "Pussycat Doll." It's kind of hard to choose, but I'm going to have to go with "Send The Addy."

People don't talk about Alabama's music culture enough. Can you describe what the Alabama sound is?

Well, to give you an idea, Doe B is from Alabama. And then Gucci Mane is from Alabama. And Rich Boy. So, if you really pay attention to the pattern, it used to be a very trappy sound. I would say the way Gucci raps, but kind of similar to Atlanta. Because you know, we're so close to Atlanta. But then you might find certain people who are extremely different. So, some people pick up sounds from other places. But I would say for the most part, it’s very Southern trappy. But I'm the first female coming out of Alabama. I kind of set the tone and I set the bar very high, because it's not any female rappers that ever came out of Alabama. So, maybe it's the wave that’s about to be starting”.

I think it is a good point to source a couple of reviews for the incredible Ho, why is you here ?. A sensational mixtape that should have charted higher and should be played more today, I hope people do revisit it. This is what AllMusic remarked in their review:

Alabama rapper Flo Milli broke through to mainstream success when her 2018 single "Beef Flomix" went viral. The song's mix of bouncy instrumental hooks and relentless, attitude-heavy lyrics put Flo Milli in the same camp as other brash, confident rap superstars like Cardi B, City Girls, and Megan Thee Stallion. The response was enough to give successive singles tens of millions of streams as well. Flo Milli's debut mixtape Ho, Why Is You Here? collects the best of her standout singles -- "Weak," "In the Party," "Like That Bitch," and the anthem that started it all, "Beef Flomix" -- as well as several previously unreleased tracks for a brief but powerful explosion of swagger and intensity. The singles already established as hits are unsurprisingly some of the best material on the project, with "Weak" standing out as one of the more inventive tunes. The song samples the SWV song of the same name as Flo Milli lists off all the men pursuing her romantically and shrugs them off with a smirk. The R&B-informed instrumental and front-and-center vocals are a nice detour from the rest of the mixtape's nonstop flexing over trappy pop beats, but it's just one of the many infectious moments that make Ho, Why Is You Here? so engaging and so fun”.

I want to end with Pitchfork’s opinions about the staggering and hugely impressive 2020 mixtape from Flo Milli. If you have not heard it, then you really need to seek it out now:

“Ho, why is you here ? hews closely to the formula that made Flo Milli a viral star. She likes snappy, bass-heavy beats that give her ample space to fire off reams of insults and flexes. “Beef FloMix,” which began as a freestyle snippet on Instagram and was later boosted into a TikTok hit through a dance challenge, is her standard mode. She tends to frame disses as me/you comparisons (“I do what I please and you do what I ask/He love my confidence and that’s what you lack”) that snowball into larger-than-life boasts. In the song’s single verse she shouts out tween group OMG Girlz, likens her cash-filled pockets to K. Michele’s ass, and claims she’s guarded like an Obama. It’s not surprising that her music lends itself to dances and videos; she’s a visual speaker.

Over and over, Flo Milli turns heads when she enters the room and mows down an inexhaustible horde of haters. She opens “In the Party” with a perfect line: “Dicks up when I step up in the party.” On “19,” her entrance lowers the self-esteem of those around her; elsewhere her shine leaves necks near-broken. All this attention breeds contempt, but Flo Milli will gladly be the villain. “Slap a bitch in her face if she askin’ for it,” she says on “Send the Addy.” “Like That Bitch” features a moment where she discovers and ends a tiff in the same breath. “Actin like we got beef/I didn’t know that you exist!” she yelps, elongating the vowel in “know.” The conflicts are all so definitively petty, which is what makes this record so fun.

Her constant barbs are bolstered by her subtly spry cadences. Her flows are conversational and loose despite being strictly metered. The record is largely devoid of melody, but Flo Milli doesn’t need to sing to emote. She has an intuitive sense of when to throttle flows for emphasis, as on “Pussycat Doll,” which is full of tiny pauses that set up her punchlines. “Make a nigga blow a check on me/Save his number under ‘We gon see,’” she jokes. Her performance on “Weak,” a J White Did It production, is fleet and buoyant, flipping SWV’s “Weak” on its head yet preserving the song’s warmth. “These niggas weak/They been texting me all week/Just let me be,” Flo Milli huffs with exasperation.

The production isn’t always as spirited as Flo Milli’s performances. “Scuse Me” is an outright dud; it sounds like a parody of a JetsonMade beat and Flo Milli’s hook is uncharacteristically strained. Otherwise, a current of self-discovery runs through the beats. “Like That Bitch” and “Not Friendly” embrace the minimalism of snap music, which has long been a testing ground for experimenting with flows without sacrificing bounce. (Incidentally, “Not Friendly” interpolates Soulja Boy’s “Gucci Bandana.”) And the bouncy bass and bright keys on “In The Party” and “Send the Addy” evoke the charm of bubblegum trap, which tapped into the joy of a subgenre often characterized by stress and struggle.

There’s certainly a disparity between Flo Mill the cocksure persona and Flo Milli the budding artist, but even when Flo Milli is spitballing ideas trying to see what sticks, she’s a force of nature. She once described her catchphrase “Flo Milli shit” as the mantra for “My alter ego, which is what I am most of the time,” and Ho, why is you here ? sells that odd dynamic. She’s still figuring out her music, but she knows exactly what she wants it to be”.

I am excited to see where Flo Milli’s career heads, as she is a sensational and hugely promising artist who is among a group of incredible women redefining and owning Rap and Hip-Hop. It is wonderful to see. Let’s hope that there is more investigation of her 2020 diamond, Ho, why is you here ?. If you are not aware of her or the mixtape, then you need to spend a few moments…

RECTIFYING this oversight.  

FEATURE: Inside Kate Bush’s The Dreaming at Forty: Track Ten: Get Out of My House

FEATURE:

 

 

Inside Kate Bush’s The Dreaming at Forty

Track Ten: Get Out of My House

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THE tenth and final…

part of this run where I look at the tracks on Kate Bush’s The Dreaming takes me to Get Out of My House. An epic finale from an album turning forty in September, it is one of her most layered, scary and physical tracks ever! There is a lot to unpack and unpick with regards the song. In terms of production and performance, this is Bush at her absolute best. As confident, compelling and stunning as anything on Hounds of Love’s The Ninth Wave (the conceptual suite from The Dreaming’s 1985 follow-up), this is a song that would have been a great single – and just imagine what she would have done with the video! Like every other song I have featured in this run, I will finish by discussing a few choice lyrics. First, as I have also been doing (and many thanks to their invaluable resources!), the Kate Bush Encyclopaedia provides interviews where Kate Bush reveals why the Stephen King novel, The Shining, was the inspiration for Get Out of My House:

“The Shining' is the only book I've read that has frightened me. While reading it I swamped around in its snowy imagery and avoided visiting certain floors of the big, cold hotel, empty for the winter. As in 'Alien', the central characters are isolated, miles (or light years) away from anyone or anything, but there is something in the place with them. They're not sure what, but it isn't very nice.

The setting for this song continues the theme - the house which is really a human being, has been shut up - locked and bolted, to stop any outside forces from entering. The person has been hurt and has decided to keep everybody out. They plant a 'concierge' at the front door to stop any determined callers from passing, but the thing has got into the house upstairs. It's descending in the lift, and now it approaches the door of the room that you're hiding in. You're cornered, there's no way out, so you turn into a bird and fly away, but the thing changes shape, too. You change, it changes; you can't escape, so you turn around and face it, scare it away. (Kate Bush Club newsletter, October 1982).

The song is called 'Get Out Of My House', and it's all about the human as a house. The idea is that as more experiences actually get to you, you start learning how to defend yourself from them. The human can be seen as a house where you start putting up shutters at the windows and locking the doors - not letting in certain things. I think a lot of people are like this - they don't hear what they don't want to hear, don't see what they don't want to see. It is like a house, where the windows are the eyes and the ears, and you don't let people in. That's sad because as they grow older people should open up more. But they do the opposite because, I suppose, they do get bruised and cluttered. Which brings me back to myself; yes, I have had to decide what I will let in and what I'll have to exclude. (Rosie Boycott, 'The Discreet Charm Of Kate Bush'. Company (UK), 1982)”.

I think that people would have been shocked hearing Get Out of My House back in 1982. Heavier and more intense than anything she had recorded to that point; it is a spectacular way to end The Dreaming! To put it anywhere else on the album would have been a mistake – given that it takes a bit out of you and is a hard act to follow! I said how a video of this would have been great. Featuring Bush as a spectral figure or someone possessed and scared in a house as the walls talk and ghosts swirl, she kind of nodded to some of those visual possibilities when she directed the video for her single, Experiment IV (that appeared on her 1986 greatest hits collection, The Whole Story).

 IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush attends a record signing at Virgin Megastore on Oxford Street in London on 14th September, 1982 for her album, The Dreaming

I am going to end by selecting a few verses and passages that I particularly love. On an album filled with choice and standout lines, Get Out of My House has more than its fair share! Filled with vibrantly frightening and anxious possibilities, the images Bush conveys suck you into the song. “No stranger's feet/Will enter me/(Get out of my house!)/I wash the panes/(Get out of my house!)/I clean the stains away/(Get out of my house!)” makes the mind race. It is the possessed house warding off any intruders and strangers! A maddened and delirious heroine – whether Bush imagines herself as Jack in The Shining or is casting herself in his role -, you get a bit of a glimpse into some of the stress and strain Bush was feeling when making the album: “This house is full of m-m-my mess/(Slamming)/This house is full of m-m-mistakes/(Slamming)/This house is full of m-m-madness/(Slamming)/This house is full of, full of, full of fight!/(Slam it)”.

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush at Abbey Road Studio 2 on 10th May, 1982/PHOTO CREDIT: Steve Rapport/Getty Images; Olja Merker

The final lines build up the tension and we descend further into this delirious and chaotic whirlwind that is raging through the house: “I will not let you in!/Don't you bring back the reveries/I turn into a bird/Carry further than the word is heard/"Woman let me in!/I turn into the wind/I blow you a cold kiss/Stronger than the song's hit"/I will not let you in/I face towards the wind/I change into the Mule/"I change into the Mule". With incredible support – including "Eeyore" from Paul Hardiman, and percussion from Preston Heyman -, Get Out of My House is an appropriately huge and memorable way to end one of Kate Bush’s greatest albums. Three years later, she would release her commercial and critical masterpiece, Hounds of Love. I wanted to isolated the ten tracks on The Dreaming, as they are all individual and have huge merit. An album that I still feel is not as regarded and explored as it should be, I will do more features on it between now and September. With songs like Get Out of My House, and an album as ambitious, strong and textured as The Dreaming, it was clear that Kate Bush, as a producer, artist, musician and songwriter was…

VERY much in charge.

FEATURE: Modern Heroines: Part Ninety: Kehlani

FEATURE:

 

 

Modern Heroines

Part Ninety: Kehlani

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AN artist who has…

 PHOTO CREDIT: Jonathan Weiner for NME

just released a triumphant and stunning third studio album, Kehlani is a phenomenal talent who, I feel, will go down as an icon. I will end with a playlist featuring many of their best songs. The Oakland-born artist  achieved initial fame as a member of the teen group Poplyfe in 2011. They released their mixtape, Cloud 19, in 2014. Kehlani released their debut studio album, SweetSexySavage, in 2017. They released their second studio album, It Was Good Until It Wasn't, in 2020. Their latest album, Blue Water Road, is one of the best of this year. It is a remarkable release from a sensational artist who, it seems, is in a much happier space. I want to bring in some segments from a recent deep NME interview, where we get to learn more about Kehlani and their thoughts about Blue Water Road:

Since the release of their last album, 2020’s ‘It Was Good Until It Wasn’t’, Kehlani has been through a big transformation. It’s not something you might necessarily notice just by looking at them, but speaking with them or listening to their new album ‘Blue Water Road’ reveals a person who seems much more at peace with life, and passionate to be in the thick of things.

From September 2020, the Oakland, California native (full name Kehlani Parrish) spent 12 months undertaking a “ceremony process” in their spiritual practice, which she (the artist’s preferred pronouns are she/they) declines to put a name on. As part of the year-long ritual cleanse, she embraced sobriety, only went out for work-related reasons, covered their hair and more. It altered their entire mental attitude.

 

“I [was] definitely stuck in this toxic, very dark, hypersexual pocket of songwriting, which was cool for the time that I was in,” Kehlani assesses. “That’s really where I was at, but I think my music is always going to be deeply affected by whatever mindset change I’m going through.”

n the past, Kehlani’s records have focused mostly on one subject: love. ‘Blue Water Road’ still centres around romance in places, but this time they’re opening themself up to other topics too. On the dappled funk glow of ‘Altar’, she shares a story about continuing your relationship with your loved ones even after they’ve left this mortal coil. It’s an idea that she’s been putting into practice of late and stems from their beliefs.

“My spiritual practice is heavily based on ancestor veneration,” she says, explaining that the word ‘ancestors’ doesn’t necessarily have to refer to people who died generations ago. “They might have passed recently or maybe they were friends, or just spirits around you that you didn’t even know at first. Maybe you never knew them as physical people.”

PHOTO CREDIT: Jonathan Weiner for NME 

Kehlani has been on a journey with the evolution of their identity and it wouldn’t be surprising if she wanted to shy away from self-assigning one particular label after the public reaction to past personal revelations. But rather than viewing the terms we use to describe ourselves as the issue, she says the problem is the pressure we put on ourselves and each other to have who we are figured out.

“It’s hard when people are asking you what you are and you fall into that pressure to share it,” she begins. “Then it’s confirmed and people are referring to you as one thing but you might feel a different way next week. But I’m glad that so many people do speak about these things and do come to terms with these identities so that we all can study each other and really help each other out.”

Since figuring out their sexual identity, the musician says she’s now “absolutely” at peace. “Not understanding my sexuality had created inner turmoil and a bad dynamic with my emotions,” she explains. “It’s like a war going on internally with yourself that sometimes you cannot place because you don’t have the verbiage or understanding yet”.

I am keen to get to a playlist, but I want to finish with a couple of reviews for Kehlani’s remarkable third studio album. It will be interesting to see where they go from here and what the next album will sound like. The New York Times wrote the following about Blue Water Road:

Blue Water Road” instead radiates delicate warmth. In a creamy, full-throated voice, Kehlani exudes a tenderness not felt since their 2017 studio album, “SweetSexySavage.” There’s still a reverence for the past: “Up at Night,” featuring Justin Bieber, interpolates Soul II Soul and Rose Windross’s 1989 track “Fairplay,” while “Wish I Never” warps the drums of Slick Rick’s classic “Children’s Story.” But there’s a fresh, imagistic aura to the production on “Blue Water Road,” rendered in part by the executive producer Andrew “Pop” Wansel. Nearly every song includes hushed acoustic guitar textures, or swelling string crescendos that revel in high drama. Echoes of wind, cresting waves and bird calls are sprinkled throughout, sketching an aural landscape that is plush and comforting, like the caress of a lover who’s been gone for too long.

This is the ideal backdrop for Kehlani’s diaristic, bleeding-heart lyricism. “Little Story” harnesses a novelistic metaphor to chronicle a romance that never fully bloomed: “I want you to pick up the pen/And write me into your story,” Kehlani sings. The lead single “Altar” is a gorgeous elegy for friends lost to addiction, and the ancestors who have offered Kehlani spiritual grounding. But rather than becoming immersed in sorrow, Kehlani salutes the dearly departed with a small act of service, and reminds us their memories will never really fade: “If I set a flame and I call your name/I’ll fix you a plate, we can go to dinner/We can share a meal your way/And I’ll play the songs that you used to play.

 But it’s Kehlani’s candid ruminations on queer desire and estrangement that resonate the deepest here. On the breathy slow burner “Get Me Started,” Kehlani and the R&B artist Syd lament a disconnection that threatens to end a relationship: “You need something else/Well, maybe she can do it better.” On the velvety serenade “Melt,” Kehlani cherishes the small, perfect joy of finding a home in a lover: “Wish I could build me a cute apartment/One bedroom right where your heart is.” It’s sensual but loving, capturing both the devoted affection and the erotic pleasure that make a partnership feel full.

Serenity, personal growth and felicity may not be seductive topics for a contemporary R&B record. But other artists might let these motifs land with mawkish sentimentality. For Kehlani, the path to healing isn’t a straightforward journey with a beginning, middle and end, where life can finally begin after reaching some abstract, enlightened state. “Blue Water Road” is a reminder that healing is open, unfinished and everlasting”.

I am going to end with a review from The Line of Best Fit. They provided one of the most positive and impassioned assessment of an album that has won universal acclaim:  

Beginning at "Little Story" – a vulnerable, acoustic guitar-led moment – the singer paints an intimate picture of an imperfect but loving relationship and of people “working on being softer” for each other. Kehlani sings “I want you to pick up the pen and write me into your story / You know I love a story, only when you’re the author”, a quiet but certain expression of the desire to build a life together. It’s a beautiful antidote to the more cynical love songs of late and a testament to the singer’s lucid storytelling, both through their lyrics and their voice.

Collaborations are peppered throughout the record, starting with "Any Given Sunday" with blxst. It’s a classic Kehlani track that makes you wish it was so much longer than the 2 minutes 45 seconds it plays for. "Up At Night" with Justin Bieber is the least inspiring offering, though the chorus is somewhat hypnotic. Thankfully, this is followed up with the sublime "Get Me Started", which features Syd of The Internet. The two singer’s vocals complement each other gorgeously and at times blend into one, giving the song a dreamlike quality that sits with you through the album’s interlude.

The production on the album is very lowkey, allowing for Kehlani’s extraordinary vocals and vivid lyricism to take centre stage. The exception to this is lead single "Altar", a gorgeous tribute to loved ones who have passed and their continued presence in the singer’s life. It is one of the most emotionally charged moments on the album, reflected by the swooping build and strong drum beats, but it is expressed with lightness too. It’s an emotional nuance that few artists know how to lean into, but, naturally, one that Kehlani embraces with ease.

Moving deftly from spiritually to sensuality, the following tracks – "Melt" and "Tangerine" – are vivid portraits of nights with a lover. In the former, the singer wonders where they end and the other woman begins and yet muses that “being this close isn’t close enough”. It’s dizzying with desire, Kehlani delivering a deliciously sinful vocal performance throughout. The latter likens the other woman to honey, a nod to their past hit, amongst other sweet things. It’s a song that drips and oozes sexuality as she sings of “starting a garden” and pollinating “my love with yours”, and once again proves Kehlani as a true artist of both words and voice.

Blue Water Road closes out with "Wondering/Wandering", a twirling, dreamy song with a strong beat to root the listener to the present moment. It sees the singer arrive at the blue water, their young daughter Adeya pointing it out in the final moments. But in true Kehlani style, even as we have reached the destination – a place of light, as they describe it – there are still questions, still wondering and wandering to be done”.

A hugely important artist who, in the next few years, will solidify their sound and embark on new avenues and possibilities, everyone needs to hear Kehlani and embrace their wonderful music. There is no doubt in my mind that we are witnessing the rise, blossoming and incredible path of…

A future icon of music.

FEATURE: Don't Go for Second Best, Baby… Madonna’s Express Yourself at Thirty-Three: Her Greatest Ever Single?

FEATURE:

 

 

Don't Go for Second Best, Baby…

Madonna’s Express Yourself at Thirty-Three: Her Greatest Ever Single?

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ANY Madonna fan…

will tell you how hard it is to rank her singles. Like some artists, I don’t think there is one song that definitively tops the list when it comes to deciding the best one. Maybe Vogue (featured on her 1990 greatest hits collection, The Immaculate Collection), and Ray of Light (from the 1998 album of the same name) comes close – they are both iconic in their own ways. My favourite song of hers is Take a Bow (from 1994’s Bedtime Stories). The one I first heard was Material Girl (from 1984’s Like a Virgin). Everyone has unique experiences with her music. As her 1989 single, Express Yourself, celebrates its anniversary on 9th May, I wanted to spend time with it. To many, this magnificent single is the very best thing that she did. The second single from the Like a Prayer album (1989), it went to number two in America. I always thought this song should be number one! Written with Stephen Bray, it is the second track on Like a Prayer (after the title track). An important song released in a year when there was no Pop artist bigger and more important than Madonna, I do feel that more people should examine and spotlight the importance of Express Yourself. An inspiring and timeless cut that has an equally iconic video – which I shall come to soon -, one gets a real blast of positivity from this single!

I was only six when the single came out (in fact, my birthday is 9th May!), so my early memories of Express Yourself are quite dim. During childhood, certainly, the song became more played and clearer in my mind. I think that the Like a Prayer album is one of her very best (second only to Ray of Light), and its array of themes and sounds is astonishing! A definite expansion and step up from 1986’s excellent True Blue, this was a confident, commanding and loved artist reaching new heights! As Express Yourself is about to turn thirty-three, I thought I would go a bit deeper I want to look at some of the lyrics, as they are quite standout and empowering. Before that, there are a couple of features that are worth mentioning. The first was written in 2019. It suggests that the incredible video for Express Yourself is as relevant now as it was in 1989:

In an almost forty-year career, 1989 remains one of Madonna’s most controversial.

Her 1986 album, True Blue, had been dedicated to and largely inspired by then-husband Sean Penn. But by 1989, the artist had filed for divorce from the actor, starred in more than one poorly-received film, and turned 30—the age at which her mother had died when she was a child. There was a lot going on, and so Madonna channelled the lot of it into Like a Prayer, an album that traded largely in familial trauma and Catholic guilt.

In March of that year, she kicked off the album with its title track, a gospel-infused rock song that was accompanied by one of the most controversial videos in pop music history. It was protested by a number of religious and family groups, which led to Pepsi pulling a commercial that she was featured in. Her Blond Ambition World Tour would later be denounced by none other than the Pope himself, who called on the people of Italy to boycott the star. “Like a Prayer” wasn’t the first time that Madonna had scandalized the public; as The New York Times put it, she was already known to “[stir] up just enough controversy to advance her career without tipping the balance of public opinion against her.” Still, the drama demanded that everyone pay attention to whatever she had planned for the rest of the album.

The follow-up single to “Like a Prayer” was “Express Yourself,” a clubby empowerment anthem in which Madonna advised listeners not to “go for second best” in their relationships, to find a man who “[makes them] feel like a queen on a throne.” Fair enough for a summer pop song, but its visual accompaniment complicated the message somewhat.

David Fincher’s video for “Express Yourself” made its MTV debut 30 years ago today. It was only the first of Fincher’s Madonna videos (out of four in total) but would remain his most high-concept project for the star. It was the most expensive music video ever made at that point (and, in 2019, ranks only in third place, behind another Madonna video). As Raza Syed wrote for Vice, “Two notoriously exacting talents—the ingénue, the wunderkind—seized on each other’s velocity at precisely the right moment.”

Inspired by Fritz Lang’s 1927 film Metropolis, “Express Yourself” depicts Madonna as the wife of a factory overseer; a balding, stern-looking man who wears a suit and monocle. In a green evening gown, she and her pet cat gaze out of a penthouse and down at the sweaty, muscly men who work for her husband. The camera pays special attention to one of these workers (played by model Cameron Alborzian), careful to highlight that he’s the hotter of the video’s male leads. Two things then happen in tandem. One is that Madonna’s cat escapes the penthouse, eventually ending up in Alborzian’s care. The second is that she changes out of her evening wear and into a suit and monocle, à la her husband. She shows up on the factory floor in said outfit and performs the song’s now-famous choreography, which she’d more or less stick to for live performances from then on (including on the tour, where her iconic cone bra made its first appearance). In the context of the video, the dance summons Alborzian (still holding the cat) up the elevator and to her bedroom, where the two have sex. It ends with her husband noticing his employee’s absence, and, presumably, putting two and two together.

So, what did it all mean? Depends who you ask. For her part, Madonna told a BBC interviewer that “pussy rules the world” when asked about the video’s cat fixation. The sequence where she crawls on the floor and laps up milk out of a bowl—which Britney Spears would later nod to in “Slumber Party”—was one of its most discussed, as was the one where she’s quite literally chained to her bed. When an ABC anchor asked her to explain herself to the people “upset by that,” she was visibly annoyed: “There wasn’t a man that put that chain on me, I did it myself. […] I crawled under my own table, you know, there wasn’t a man standing there making me do it. I do everything by my own volition. I’m in charge, okay?”

IN THIS PHOTO: Madonna in New York in 1989/PHOTO CREDIT: Larry Busacca/WireImage 

Regardless of how one feels about the video’s specifics, most behind-the-scenes anecdotes back up Madonna’s claim that she ran much of the show. "I oversaw everything—the building of the sets, everyone's costumes, I had meetings with make-up and hair and the cinematographer, everybody,” she told author Mick St. Michael. She’d made memorable videos before, having already been one of MTV’s biggest stars for half a decade, but “Express Yourself” set a new bar for music artists who were equally serious about their videos. It wasn’t uncommon in the 1980s for performers like Michael Jackson and David Bowie to splurge on ones that they had major creative control over, but Madonna was really the first woman in pop to see herself as an auteur. The business and creative strategies that we now expect from artists like Beyoncé and Lady Gaga once had to be broken in by Madonna.

As with many Madonna videos, “Express Yourself” is iconic largely for its costumes. The “gender-bending” pantsuit that she chose for her big dance number was another hot topic upon the video’s release. Combined with the crotch-grabbing in the choreography, critics wondered whether she was arguing for “gender fluidity as a road to gender equality.” Her outfit is probably the video’s most visible legacy: Updated takes on it have appeared in everything from Lady Gaga’s “Alejandro” to Beyoncé’s “Haunted.” Christina Aguilera overtly referenced the look—monocle and all—in “Not Myself Tonight,” a Madonna tribute that references some of the most sexually explicit moments from the latter’s career. As Erica Russell wrote for MTV News, “[Madonna’s] music, imagery, and confrontational boldness may not seem so revolutionary today in the age of modern feminism, but that’s because she made it so”.

A remarkably fresh and compelling song that does not sound dated – even with the 1980s production -, Express Yourself is an anthem that was taken to heart by many. Wikipedia have an article that collates critical reception of the song. The line, “Don't go for second best, baby”, underlines the fact that Madonna’s single (which she co-produced with Stephen Bray, and has inspired the likes of Spice Girls, Lady Gaga and Christina Aguilera) is a feminist anthem:

Express Yourself" received mainly positive reviews from critics. J. Randy Taraborrelli, author of Madonna: An Intimate Biography called the song a "funky dance anthem" and reacted positively to its message of a "female call-to-arms in communication and self-respect." Stephen Holden of The New York Times observed that Madonna repudiated the philosophy of her previous single "Material Girl" (1985) in "Express Yourself", which he described as "a 30-year-old's view of life unshadowed by rebellion and lingering lapsed Catholic pain." In another article from the same newspaper, Carn James declared it as one of her most exuberant songs. Santiago Fouz-Hernández and Freya Jarman-Ivens, authors of Madonna's Drowned Worlds, complimented the lyrics of the song, and added that it apparently espouses "gender fluidity as a road to gender equality.” In his book Madonna As Postmodern Myth, journalist Georges Claude Guilbert described "Express Yourself" as a hymn to freedom, "an encouragement for all women and all oppressed minorities to resist, to express their ideas and their strength faced with tyranny."

IN THIS PHOTO: Lady Gaga (whose 2011 song, Born This Way (from the album of the same name), shares similarities with Madonna’s Express Yourself 

Biographer Mary Cross noted in her book Madonna: A Biography, how the song paved the way for its music video and became a testament to freedom. Authors Allen Metz and Carol Benson noted in their essays on Madonna, how she decimated "patriarchal, racist and capitalist constructions", by the way she pronounced the word "self" in "Express Yourself". They added that the opening line "Don't go for second best, baby" transformed the song into a postmodernist anthem. Scholar Sheila Whiteley noted in her book Women and Popular Music: Sexuality, Identity, and Subjectivity, that Madonna's acknowledgment of the pastiche and of being capable of imitating musical style was interesting to her, but given Madonna's ability to manipulate image, the musical exuberance of "Express Yourself" did not appear surprising. Mark Bego, author of Madonna: Blond Ambition declared that "the song that most reflected the Madonna everyone had come to know and be shocked by was 'Express Yourself'." O'Brien was impressed with the song, and gave a detailed review.

"Express Yourself" is a feminist call to arms, complete with muscular brass-playing and soulful voice. Here Madonna is the anti-materialism girl, exhorting her audience to respect themselves. That means having a man who loves your head and your heart. If he doesn't treat you right (and here's the revolutionary rhetoric) you're better off on your own. Like a female preacher, Madonna emphasizes each word of the chorus, invoking God and the power of orgasm. In parts Cosmo-woman, girl-talk, and swinging dance track, it presages the deliciously declarative stance of "Vogue" and shows Madonna moving from introspective to survivalist mode.

IN THIS PHOTO: Madonna in 1989 

Professor Maury Dean wrote in his book Rock 'n' Roll Gold Rush: A Singles Un-Cyclopedia, that the main appeal of "Express Yourself" lay in its teen appeal, although he understood that at its core, it was addressing a very important issue of female liberation. Kevin Phinney from Austin American-Statesman commented that with "Express Yourself", Madonna struck out her "Material Girl" persona, there by demonstrating once more that no image of hers is concrete. Based on the lyrics of the song, Ken Blakely of Philadelphia Daily News declared the song as a rare example of good taste and good advice from Like a Prayer. Andy Goldberg from The Jerusalem Post was impressed with Madonna's vocals on the song, complimenting the soul inlfluences. Rolling Stone's J. D. Considine called "Express Yourself" an unabashed groove tune and felt that it seemed "smart and sassy, right down to Madonna's soul-style testimony on the intro: 'Come on, girls, do you believe in love?" Don McCleese from Chicago Sun-Times declared the song as one of the highlights of the album, feeling that it would become anthemic. Sal Cinquemani from Slant Magazine while reviewing Like a Prayer, announced "Express Yourself" as the "most soulful performance" of Madonna's career. He added that the song "turned Madonna's 'Material Girl' image on its head, denouncing material things for a little r-e-s-p-e-c-t." Stephen Thomas Erlewine from Allmusic wrote that the song consisted of "deep funk" music”.

A song that will remain one of Madonna’s best-loved and most important songs because of its strong messages and incredible sound, she truly commits to every line and syllable! Perhaps retorting when it comes to her famous single, Material Girl – where it was more about wealth, excess and money -, Express Yourself is a more mature and wiser Madonna talking about real worth and personal value: “You don't need diamond rings or eighteen karat gold/Fancy cars that go very fast, you know they never last, no, no/What you need is a big strong hand/To lift you to your higher ground/Make you feel like a queen on a throne/Make him love you 'til you can't come down”. I do feel Like a Prayer was an album moved away from the themes and sound of her first few albums. Although songs like Cherish and Express Yourself have a bubblier, lighter and joyous sound, they are definitely deep and inspiring. Express Yourself is a very important song in Madonna’s catalogue. A song that eschews anything material and empty, it is no wonder Express Yourself made a huge impression and showed Madonna to be this artist with proper substance and power (though this was evident prior to Express Yourself): “Long stem roses are the way to your heart, but/He needs to start with your head/Satin sheets are very romantic/What happens when you're not in bed?/You deserve the best in life/So if the time isn't right, then move on/Second best is never enough/You'll do much better, baby, on your own”. On the thirty-third anniversary of Express Yourself, there will be a lot of new love and appreciation of one of Madonna’s…

DEFINING songs.  

FEATURE: Vinyl Corner: The Go-Betweens - 16 Lovers Lane

FEATURE:

 

 

Vinyl Corner

The Go-Betweens - 16 Lovers Lane

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FOR this next…

 IN THIS PHOTO: Lindy Morrison, Robert Forster, Grant McLennan, John Willsteed and Amanda Brown of The Go-Betweens/PHOTO CREDIT: EMI

Vinyl Corner, I am recommending an album that is fairly expensive on vinyl, though it is worth investment. 16 Lovers Lane is the sixth album by the Australian group, The Go-Betweens. It was released in 1988. Prior to the recording of the album, longtime bassist Robert Vickers left the band after the other group members decided to return to Australia after having spent several years in London. He was replaced by John Willsteed. I would urge people to seek out 16 Lovers Lane on vinyl. Prior to coming to a review of the album, there is a fascinating feature that provides some background and legacy about the phenomenal album:

CONTEXT

Having been based in London for the vast majority of their career, The Go-Betweens decided to re-locate to Sydney, necessitating a line-up change with original bassist Robert Vickers quitting the group and being replaced by John Willsteed. There was much greater and more significant disquiet within the camp, though, aside from surface-level personnel changes. Robert Forster and drummer Lindy Morrison had split up, with Morrison rapidly falling out of love with the band lifestyle. At the same time, though Forster’s songwriting colleague Grant McLennan was becoming romantically involved with violinist and multi-instrumentalist Amanda Brown. On top of that, Morrison butted heads with English producer Mark Wallis in the studio – perhaps understandably, as Wallis replaced her with a drum machine on half of the album’s ten tracks.

Despite the divisions within the camp on a personal level, in professional terms 16 Lovers Lane was a comparatively efficient and harmonious process. Both Forster and McLennan attributed this to the change of location and being back in their native Australia. “We’d spent five years in London – blackness, darkness, greyness and poverty – and suddenly for some reason we seemed to have more money in Sydney, and we all had places to live and being in a city where after five years we can go to the beach in ten minutes,” McLennan reflected in 1996. Forster agreed, saying it brought on “a burst of energy, a burst of songs”.

SUBSTANCE

The different dynamics affecting Forster and McLennan during the creative process makes 16 Lovers Lane a very schizophrenic album in terms of writing and tone, but surprisingly consistent and coherent its sound and execution – an example of how solid and durable the creative bonds within The Go-Betweens were, despite the emotional upheavals happening in their personal lives. Where previous Go-Betweens records sometimes felt like two solo records meshed together, because of their differing styles, 16 Lovers Lane is a two-headed hydra, with both McLennan and Forster borrowing elements of the other’s style and incorporating it into theirs. Furthermore, the occasionally angular production was now smoothed out with acoustic guitars and string arrangements, making it all primed for mainstream success, to potentially make them actually popular, rather than perennial critics’ favourites.

Therefore, it’s hard to distinguish who exactly has written what, particularly as all ten tracks are credited attributed to the pair of them. McLennan’s songs tend to be more unabashedly romantic, with greater melodicism and a wide-eyed delivery. The spry, furiously strummed opener ‘Love Goes On!’ with its cheery “ba-ba-ba” backing vocals, is a typical example, the energy counterpointed with a resigned, comparatively bleak lyric about the nature of love and relationships, or, more specifically, about waiting for them (“I know a thing about darkness / darkness ain’t my friend”). The passionate ‘Quiet Heart’ sees beautiful interplay between melody and harmony in its arrangement as, creating a gauzy atmosphere with yet more philosophical lyrics on commitment (“It doesn’t matter how far you’ve come / you’ve always got further to go”).

Where McLennan’s writing is raw, Robert Forster’s songs are more poised and painterly, rendered in greater detail. While his bandmate’s songs vibrate with the kind of woozy energy that comes from having fallen in love, Forster’s have a sighing, resigned quality to reflect his recent heartbreak and self-reflection. ‘Love Is A Sign’ is almost baroque in its construction, powered by mandolins and a string orchestra, and he also helms the shatteringly sad closer ‘Dive For Your Memory’. Best of all from Forster’s pen is ‘Clouds’, an absolute heartbreaker whose upbeat, gentle rhythm and brightly-lit guitar tones contrasting with great poignancy with his crestfallen vocals.

The best-known moment of 16 Lovers Lane strikes the listener as a melding of McLennan’s and Forster’s styles. ‘Streets Of Your Town’, receiving heavy radio play in the US and UK and still, somehow, not furnishing The Go-Betweens with an actual hit, is as good an indie-pop song as the the 1980s ever produced. Full of small-town drama, both fascinated and bored with the low-key life of suburbia, McLennan’s downcast, almost muttered observations are beautifully set off against Amanda Brown’s bright, cooing backing vocals.

LEGACY

The Go-Betweens split up shortly after the sessions for 16 Lovers Lane, dismayed and disheartened by the almost complete lack of public response to their magnum opus. Forster and McLennan reformed the band with a different line-up more than a decade later, releasing three more albums from 2000 to 2005 before parting ways once more. To this day, they remain one of the most scandalously overlooked bands of their era.

But, even if the royalty cheques don’t roll in for Robert Forster and Grant McLennan in the way they should, their legacy is still tangible. Everybody who’s since dealt in literate, emotional guitar-pop owes a debt to The Go-Betweens. From bands who emerged at the start of the Nineties, like Teenage Fanclub, later going into Belle & Sebastian’s ‘twee’ aesthetic, the chamber-pop of Alex Turner’s side-project The Last Shadow Puppets and the sonorous, ringing guitars that power Real Estate, 16 Lovers Lane continues to be a keystone.

Sensitive, poetic and written with the kind of wide-eyed generosity that doesn’t really exist in a post-sincerity music scene, 16 Lovers Lane is one of the great lost classics of popular music. Forster and McLennan wrote about love in a strikingly original way, and one that no other bands have really done since. Halfway between the giddy headspin of newfound love and the total, crushing dejection of heartbreak, it’s an album for all fans of indie music that deals with affairs of the heart”.

To round things off, I want to source a review for the stunning sixth studio album from The Go-Betweens. The band’s final album, Oceans Apart, was released in 2005. I think they are a band that everyone should familiarise themselves with and investigate. This is what AllMusic said about one of their very best albums:

 “Arguably Australia's greatest pop group ever, The Go-Betweens seemed to save the best for last when they split in 1989. (They reunited in 1999, and have issued two more studio recordings since that time). 16 Lovers Lane is simply breathtaking; it is a deeply moving, aurally sensual collection of songs about relationships and the broken side of love that never lapses into cheap sentimentality or cynicism. Songwriters Robert Forster and Grant McLennan had always been visionary when it came to charting personal and relational melancholy and heartbreak, but here, their resolve focused on charting the depths of the romantic's soul when it has been disillusioned or crestfallen, is simply and convincingly taut. While it's true that the group was going through its own version of a soap opera-styled romantic saga, that emotional quagmire seemingly fueled its energies and focus, resulting in an album so texturally rich, lyrically sharp, and musically honest, its effect is nothing less than searing on an any listener who doesn't have sawdust instead of blood in his or her veins.

Opening with McLennan's "Love Goes On," the stage is set for a kind of refined yet primal emotional transference that pop music is rarely capable of revealing. As he sings: "There are times when I want you/I want you so much I could bust/I know a thing about lovers/Lovers lie down in trust/The people next door they got problems/They got things they can't name/I know about things about lovers/ Lovers don't feel any shame/Late not night when the light's down low/The candle burns to the end/I know a thing about darkness/Darkness ain't my friend/Love goes on anyway," the doorway to the heart and its secrets opens. In the grain of his voice lie the flowers in the dustbin whose names are desperation and affirmation. With its hyperactive acoustic guitars, Amanda Brown's cooing string arrangements, and the deftly layered, subtly played brass instruments, the tune becomes a gauzy anthem; it celebrates the ravaged heart as a beacon of strained hope in the entryway to a hall of bewilderment. He follows it with "Quiet Heart," a song whose opening was admittedly influenced in structure by U2's "With Or Without You," but blows it away lyrically and with its subtly shifting melody and harmony between the guitars. Brown's multi-layered strings actually stride the backbeat's pulse. His protagonist speaks to an absent lover. His ache offers a view of his own weakness, desperation, and an all-consuming tenderness: "I tried to tell you/But I can only say when we're apart/How I miss your quiet, quiet heart."

Forster seems to underline McLennan' s raw emotionalism with his painterly, nearly baroque, "Love Is A Sign," where images from visual art, remembered scenarios, and real life brokenness intermingle effortlessly with the elegance of mandolins, a string orchestra, and a shimmering bassline. With "Streets Of Your Town," the Go-Betweens scored a minor hit in the U.K., and even got played on American radio for a moment, but despite the fact that it has the most memorable hook on a record filled with them, it merely underscores how constant the quality is on the record. Evidenced further by "The Devil's Eye," and the shattering closer "Dive For Your Memory," 16 Lovers Lane is melancholy and somber in theme, but gloriously and romantically presented. Despite the fact that band has but a cult following, even in the 21st century, the Go-Betweens have nonetheless given us a far more literate, magnificently written, performed, and produced slab of pop classicism, than Fleetwood Mac's wonderfully coked out, love as co-dependency fest, Rumours”.

If you can get the album on vinyl, I would suggest spending a bit extra than you might otherwise do. There is always the option to stream the album. With incredible musicianship from the band (Amanda Brown – violin, oboe, guitar, vocals, tambourine; Robert Forster – vocals, rhythm guitar, harmonica; Grant McLennan – vocals, lead guitar; Lindy Morrison – drums; John Willsteed – bass guitar, guitar, Hammond organ, piano), and some of The Go-Betweens’ best songs, it is an album that you need to have in your life! If the Australian band are new to you, then 16 Lovers Lane is a…

GREAT place to start.  

FEATURE: Spotlight: Bob Vylan

FEATURE:

 

 

Spotlight

Bob Vylan

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A tremendous duo…

 IN THIS PHOTO: Bob Vylan at the BandLab NME Awards 2022/PHOTO CREDIT: Zoe McConnell

who have just released one of this year’s best and most important albums, Bob Vylan Presents: The Price of Life, Bob Vylan should be on everyone’s radar. A London duo who I am very excited about, they have been around for a little while, though they are starting to get a lot of credit and buzz right now. I wanted to feature them today. I am going to end with a review for their new album. Before that, there are a few interviews I am including. It gives us a greater impression of Bob Vylan and who they are about. Kerrang! spoke with the duo back in December:

 “If the true purpose of political music is to say things that comfortable people don’t want to hear – and to a large degree, it certainly is – Bob Vylan are hitting the mark every time. The highest compliment that can be paid to the group’s music is that it possesses the power to put at least some of its listeners ill at ease. 'Neighbours called me n*****, told me to go back to my own country,' they sing on We Live Here. 'White folks love quoting Martin Luther [King]… but don’t forget, white folks still killed him,' are just two of the lines from the recently released Pretty Songs. For generations of listeners too young to remember punk rock in its original form – Johnny Rotten announcing 'I am an antichrist', a band called Millions Of Dead Cops – Bob Vylan are here to revivify, and to relitigate, the movement’s mission statement of shock and awe.

PHOTO CREDIT: Esmé Surfleet

“It’s that thing of not caring [about what people think], to a degree,” says the drummer. “The ends justify the means. Whoever feels insulted about what we’ve said, well it’s got to be done because we’ve got to have [them] understand this thing we’re saying that they might not want us to say.”

rom top to bottom, Bob Vylan appear to be examining everything, flipping it upside down, and turning it around in a search for hidden dangers. In a fleeting but resonantly evocative moment on Take That, from The Price Of Life, they speak of a society that is 'killing off kids with two pound chicken and chips'. Knowing of what he writes, the singer goes onto say that he was 'raised off that but I gave it back – why? – because the body gets sick of that shit, get rid of that shit, wreaks havoc on the heart and liver, and we can’t fight if we’re fighting our ticker'. Once upon a time punk rock was often associated with songs such as Chinese Rocks, Dee Dee Ramone’s (predictably thrilling) paean to dangerously potent heroin. Now, without missing a beat or losing an edge, a young band from London has found the vocabulary required to sing about the virtues of eating a healthy diet. Beat that for progress.

It’s as if the pair have studied a map marked with things that might slow them down, or trip them up, or cause them harm; and, learning from the costly mistakes of others, have used it to plot a safer course to wherever it is they’d like to go. (“Maybe we’ll open up a soup kitchen or something,” says the singer. “Who knows what we might end up doing.”) Whether at home and out on the road – a working environment in which intoxicants are easier to come by than food, healthy or otherwise – the pair abstain from drugs and alcohol. Four decades after Ian MacKaye, from Minor Threat and then Fugazi, sang about being straight-edge – a valiant attempt at providing an alternative commentary to punk’s innumerable songs and stories of routine ruination - here, as elsewhere, Bob Vylan remain wide awake to a perilous past and their own future.

PHOTO CREDIT: Esmé Surfleet 

“Having so much life outside of this, and understanding that people are tripping over this stuff all the time, drugs and drink is what knocks people over so much,” says the drummer. “It’s an obstacle people don’t overcome, so why not just not have it there? And also, you’re saving money, it’s better for you, [and] you remember your fucking choices. It’s a no-brainer after that. Why would you do that? Every time you make those kind of decisions [to abstain], it’s one less thing that can become a disruptive force in a band. Especially in this scene. I’ve seen too many people just get way too caught up in doing too much of this stuff. I’ve seen people struggle to try and recover. It seems that, for what it is, it’s just not worth it.”

It’s not worth it because, more than merely earning their burgeoning success, Bob Vylan have built the very infrastructure upon which it grows. Everything here is on their terms. Given this, it stands to reason that, should they come, they will also own their failures, too. As if with this in mind, onstage at Wembley Arena, the singer trips himself up only once. After inviting the crowd to complete the punk aphorism “the only good pig…”, a lone voice from the crowd shouts, “is a dead pig”. Hearing this, the frontman amplifies the words for the benefit of the people at the back. “I’m not saying it,” he says, “I’m just repeating it.” Really, though, if you’re planning to go this far out on a limb, if you’re determined the push this hard against the boundaries, you should at least own it”.

NME have been championing Bob Vylan for a while now and spoke with them recently about their new album and rise. Their latest album is the most personal and urgent they have put out:

Let’s get this on record,” starts Bobby Vylan with a sense of urgency. “In 2020, there was a year of protests around police abuse, racism and inequality. We, Bob Vylan, released an album [‘We Live Here’] that dealt with that political and social climate. That’s a finger on the pulse.”

Two years later, the grime-punk duo are back with ‘Bob Vylan Presents: The Price Of Life’, a concept album about money, tackling the economy’s impact on your family, your community and you as an individual. “Look at the news. This is the most important and relevant record to be released this year,” Bobby continues, joking that it must look like they are pulling the strings as a cost of living crisis grips the UK. His bandmate Bobbie Vylan adds that “people need this album”.

Continuing their mission, ‘The Price Of Life’ is the spiritual successor to ‘We Live Here’, a record once deemed “too extreme” for release, but there’s more to Bob Vylan’s second album than repeated fury.

“It’s a lot more fun, for a start,” explains Bobby. Tracks like ‘Turn Off The Radio’ and ‘Bait The Bear’ knowingly hit back at their critics while the record expands the duo’s punk/grime sound to include ’90s hip-hop, grunge, dance and reggae. “It wears its influences on its sleeve.”

According to Bobby, ‘We Live Here’ was a “very heavy album, full of personal stories. I was working out a lot of things and the subjects I was speaking about obviously weren’t the easiest to relive.” It meant the record needed to have an urgency and intensity. “After such a serious album, though, it was important to show other sides to the band because we are more than that,” explains Bobbie, neither one of them wanting to be boxed in as just the grime/punk duo constantly screaming about social issues.

That’s not to say ‘The Price Of Life’ is any less vulnerable or hard-hitting. Sure, there are bolshie calls to “eat the rich”, “wage war against the state” and pull down statues of Churchill, but ‘Wicked & Bad’ draws carefully constructed lines between the political landscape of the country, and how it affects people on the ground. Elsewhere ‘Big Man’ is a “very personal song that talks about this pursuit of money through means that aren’t necessarily productive. I’m talking to my younger self on that track,” says Bobby. “But I hope people who are in a similar position know that that doesn’t have to be your whole life.

“These are all true stories,” he continues before describing the process of writing these songs as “therapy through art. I feel very emotional when I listen back to this record because it’s been rough and it just seems to be getting rougher. With this album, we just wanted to detail that”.

In March, Alternative Press spoke with Bob Vylan. Although their sound is individual and their own, it was interesting discovering some of their influences - and how they have developed and built their sound over time:

How did you end up with the sound you have now?

I think it just came from blending those two things. Growing up and listening to a lot of rap music and a lot of grime music but also listening to rock music and indie music. Once I learned to play the guitar, I knew I wanted to use the guitar to make music, but I didn’t want it to be so straightforward, like this is a rock band or a punk band or an indie band. I wanted to put all my influences together and make something that I felt was missing in my music catalog.

I was and continue to make music for myself, and as a band, that’s what we do. We just make the music that we want to listen to, and that we want to hear and that we don’t feel is being made. It came quite naturally, just wanting to use the guitar, but also not being a virtuoso at the guitar. I can play punk chords, and I can then put that together with a producer’s background that I have and make beats over the top of it.

What were some of those influences that you wanted to pull from or combine?

Definitely things from grime music. Some of the production techniques that they use and even when it comes to the tempo, the BPM of 140, which is a standard grime tempo. The lyrical aspect of that music as well, I still think, is way more complicated than a lot of rock and punk music. I think the cadence, the flow, the wordplay is a lot more interesting. So I knew that I wanted to take the lyrical aspect of that because, to me, what always drew me into that genre of music was the lyrics and what they were talking about and how they were doing it.

The social commentary, the political aspect of punk music, especially because I think that’s lacking from so much contemporary music, but also, I think it’s lacking in punk music… I think just seeing that die and become more mainstream was like, “Where is this music going?” I wanted to take that anger from that music and the political direction of that and blend those things together.

I don’t see [current punk music] as being very challenging to listen to. I almost feel like punk music should make you feel somewhat uncomfortable because the topics that are being discussed in a lot of it. They’re serious issues. But it just seems like they’re being discussed, if at all, in a very happy-go-lucky way. I just didn’t want to do that. So we wanted to make it as confrontational as possible, as confrontational as it was when it first started.

Your music touches on so many important issues. For you, has music been a helpful way to learn?

For me, listening to other people’s music is the way that I’ve been introduced to so many different ways of thinking — some ways that I agree with and some ways that I don’t agree with — and I’m sure our music does a similar thing for other people. But in terms of creating the music, we find inspiration, and the topics or the themes, through lived experience. There’s so many things that have happened in our lives that we could talk about on these records. Some of them, we do. Some of them, we haven’t even really scratched the surface on. But the message is in the music because it’s something that we already live by”.

Before getting to a review and rounding off, there is another interview that I want to source. Upset featured one of the country’s most important and inspiring acts last month. It is clear that Bob Vylan Presents: The Price of Life is a revelation and an album that everyone needs to hear:

'The Price Of Life' picks up where 2020's 'We Live Here' left off. Driven by the duo's experiences of racism, that record felt like an awakening and 'The Price Of Life' doubles down on this, exploring everything from weaponising health to waging war on the working class. It's an album they couldn't have made a couple of years ago, yet it's the one they've been working towards. Just like Public Enemy couldn't have made 'Fear Of A Black Planet' without first making 'It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back', Bob Vylan needed 'We Live Here' to fully realise 'The Price Of Life'.

"I think it's more empowering. There was a lot of stuff that I was working out personally on 'We Live Here'. There was a lot of frustration and anger from across my lifetime that I was getting out in a very incendiary way," reflects Bobby, who takes his time to carefully curate his answers, like a philosopher pondering his next thesis.

"'We Live Here' was our way of establishing the issues. People have been talking about them for years, but it allowed us to establish ourselves as a band. The personal experiences that we put into 'We Live Here' have helped people get to know who we are, where we come from, why our worldview is what it is, how it is what it is, and why we are the way we are. And then this album lets us show a fuller, rounded view of our personality. We're able to have a little more fun with it because we don't have to be so serious with everything."

'The Price Of Life' peels back the curtain on Britain to show the country's true colours. Whether waging war on former leaders like Churchill and Thatcher, deconstructing the upper class's ideologies, or exploring socio-economic problems, they leave no stone unturned. They've worked up an interconnected multiverse, too. Like a conceptual social commentary, a single line in one song leads to the next one building an entire track around it. Take 'Health Is Wealth', which connects every concept the album captures in two and a half minutes and wraps it up with satirical wit

Whatever your world opinion, Bob Vylan know there's a long way to go, but it won't stop them - they'll keep fighting, one song at a time.

"We don't kid ourselves; it's crazy for us to expect things to all be done. Especially over the last few years where people have got ahead of themselves, they think everything's changed because we put the black square up and had a march, so everything's fine now," asserts Bobbie. "But this is generational; if it's been that long and things aren't fixed, the last two years aren't going to fix anything. We're under no illusion of how big a job it is to resolve a lot of these issues”.

To finish, it is worth dropping in a review of Bob Vylan’s new album. It has accrued a host of positive reviews and love from the press. NME gave their take on an album that, once heard, definitely remains with you and makes you think:

The brooding, electro thrash of ‘Bait The Bear’ is a swaggering clap-back at all the hate Bob Vylan have faced for getting political, before they double down (“Wage war against the state / It’s a fascist regime”) while the rave-ready ‘Take That’ is a deliberately antagonistic anthem designed to make the “gammons feel sick now”.

There are no answers on ‘The Price Of Life’, just a passionate call for change and a desire to break the long-standing cycle of abuse. Yes, sometimes the references are a little dated (Churchill, Thatcher and Elvis all get a kicking) and the band aren’t exactly subtle – but they never claimed to be, either.

Elsewhere ‘Big Man’ and ‘Wicked And Bad’ might sound like your typical abrasive punk tracks on the surface, but underneath they tell true, vulnerable stories of trauma, survival and life or death decisions that people face everyday. The acoustic guitar-led ‘He Sold Guns’ takes it one step further, with the band taking influence from Pixies, Jamie T and The Verve to create something dangerously close to a ballad.

In every way, ‘Bob Vylan Presents: The Price Of Life’ is a far more eclectic record than anything the duo have released before. Their alt-rock tracks about inequality will speak to a wider audience but the band never soften their edges or pull their punches in a bid for accessibility. At times, it is extreme – just like the world we’re living in right now”.

Go and follow Bob Vylan and check out their music. A duo who will keep putting out such essential and thought-provoking music, they are among my favourite new/rising acts (even if they have been out there for a bit). With an acclaimed album under their belt this year, they will be hitting the road and bringing their amazing music to the people. If you do not know about Bob Vylan, then make their part of…

YOUR music rotation.

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Follow Bob Vylan

FEATURE: Spotlight: Cassyette

FEATURE:

 

 

Spotlight

Cassyette

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HERE is an inspiring, compelling and…

incredibly talented artist who I think is going to be a future icon. The magnificent Cassy Brooking is known professionally as Cassyette. Born in Chelmsford, Essex, her debut single, Jean, was released in September 2019. As she is about to play Brighton’s The Great Escape and there is momentum behind her and buzz around her, I wanted to highlight one of our most fascinating and strongest young artists. I will come to a recent interview that Cassyette had with NME. Before that, there are a couple of older interviews that are worth sourcing. Upset chatted with the Essex-born artist in June last year:

Cassyette has been busy redefining herself. Dripping in 90s goth aesthetic - blonde mullet and all - she's rapidly gaining attention via where else but TikTok. After putting her impressively powerful, gale-force howls on the likes of Olivia Rodrigo's super-smash hit 'Drivers License' and Billie Eilish's 'Bad Guy', she's here to beat some life into that old dog, rock 'n' roll.

Her music, engrained within the realms of empowerment - or more precisely, using it to kick a few teeth in - is also centred around personal tragedy. After losing her dad at the beginning of last year, the pressure release value holding all that raw emotion in needed turning.

Naturally, Cassyette blew the whole thing clean off. And appearing through the dissipating steam was a cataclysmic merging of rock with her teen years of genre exploration of pop, techno and everything in between.

"I got a lot angrier," she reckons on her move into this raucously alternative-centred world. "Obviously, after something like that happening - and then living through lockdown and being so isolated…a lot of stuff happened in my personal life [too]. The music is a reflection of that. I stopped giving a fuck about everything!" she cackles.

"It didn't just come out of nowhere - I was a bit of a shithead as a kid. I've done a lot of stuff that my mum's had to get me through. Bless her, she's a saint!"

Raised on a diet of classic staples - yer Motley Crüe's, Guns N' Roses, Sex Pistols etc. - it's no wonder the roads finally merged to this point. On a deeper level, though, the adoration for her beloved genre is all born from finding rock to be "the most emotive style of music."

"It's the darkest, most aggressive, and emotional," she continues. "I mean, that's my personal opinion, but I think you really feel something with it; even if you hate it, it makes you feel something."

Remembering the feeling washing over her for the first time coming when hearing 'Playing God', from Paramore's third album, 'Brand New Eyes': "I remember seeing Hayley Williams and thinking she's such a bad bitch!" She says, still smiling with awe. "The way that she speaks, and her lyrics are incredible."

"I also loved Katy Perry 'I Kissed A Girl', that was probably the first time I was like, oh my god, I can be okay with my sexuality," Cassyette recalls. "I'd never heard anything other than like Tatu 'All The Things She Said', I'd never heard another woman in pop music speaking about another woman like that. It was a massive moment for me…" Another raucously loud laugh surfaces. "I went to an all-girls Catholic school, so you can imagine!"

If ever there were a reason to grab your chain wallet, spike your hair, and kick a door in, then Cassyette has found it. The carefree nurturing of herself has been just as important to learn as it was discovering that raw, untethered howl of hers.

Still, with her debut album to come, after she's sifted through "about two years worth of music," the promise to keep on rattling cages and dismantling centuries-old systems remains front and centre. Keeping an ever keen eye on everything as she plots out her moves - everything from merch designs to video shoots, including for her current single 'Prison Purse' - it's all in the name of exorcising those demons, and making them work for her.

"For me, even if it's a really fucking sad song, I'll still enjoy writing it because you're still getting something off your chest," Cassyette explains”.

I have only been following the music of Cassyette for a few months, but I honestly believe she will be a massive artist. There are a lot of interesting artists that are making great music, in addition to utilising platforms like TikTok to bring their music and talent to a wider audience. That is definitely the case with Cassyette. I think a debut album – whenever that is due – will get her on the worldwide map and lead to international gigs. The amazing UNDERGROUND spotlighted and chatted with Cassyette last year:

After your dad passed away in early 2020, how did this affect your tonal shift into darker music with heavier topics? Are these topics that you would not have covered otherwise?

Totally, like I’m very conversational with my music so everything’s exposed, like I just don’t really hold anything back from it and everything is really relative, all the songs I write are completely relative to what’s going on in my life, either past or present. That was obviously a huge thing that happened, so it completely changed what I was writing about. Still though, the only song I’ve written really that’s partially about my dad is ‘Petrichor’ so far. I haven’t really written much about him because I haven’t even found the words to do that. I think it’s going to take me a long time to be able to write about that experience and him. It’s literally changed the tone because after you lose someone, I feel like you just always have a heavy heart so [you’ve got to] live with it. So, it’s definitely changed the emotion through the music.

I noticed when listening to ‘Petrichor’ there was themes about your dad, and you became a god mother too, can you describe the juxtaposition between the light and the dark that you wrote about on the song?

Just that my best friend whose daughter I became a god mother of, she was just there for me throughout the whole thing, and she has always been such a rock to me. You go through this part of you when you are grieving where you are bargaining with yourself, and humans are so good at adapting to different emotional situations and you have to bargain with yourself to get to a place where you can grow and be happy because being sad all the time is really bad for you! (laughs) I feel like I am trailing off a bit on this question…. It’s hard to explain but I think that what I am trying to say is it was a beautiful thing having my goddaughter being born after I had just lost my dad and it’s just a nice reminder to have perspective on things and to remember to just look forward because you can’t control certain things.

As someone with anxiety and ADHD, has this been something that has been a hurdle within starting your music career?

(Laughs)… It’s a hurdle in life! It just affects me in life, but I am making a special effort to try and do things that work for me, I can’t sit there and write an essay. My attention span is really bad, I forget things, I try and write things down all the time to try and remind me. I guess one of those things, it’s difficult because I’ve learnt so much about myself and about ADHD and the condition – and for me the worst thing is I have big crashes. So, if I am overstimulated for too long, I will just completely crash and I think it’s called an autistic meltdown, and it is literally what it says on the tin, it is a meltdown. So that I find really hard, and that’s probably something as things have gotten busier for me. And I am trying to do a million things at once all the time, that is quite hard because I can crash, I’m lucky I’ve got a good team around me, so that everyone helps.

PHOTO CREDIT: Jessie Rose

Does that change the way you go into a studio, some artists can go in and write song after song, when you go into the studio is it something that you have to break from?

No. I will sit in a studio longer than anyone (laughs) it is crazy because that is the only time where I am hyper-focused. For me writing a song is a formulaic process as well as a cathartic process. The two producers that I have been working with for years now [are amazing], Tylr has ADHD as well, he is more high functioning than me, and Olly is amazing at overseeing the room, so he will navigate how we do a session. It’s not something we talk about, it just happens naturally, so we just have this process where I am able to hyper-focus for hours and feel comfortable doing this. I do sometimes have a nap (laughs) because if you’re using your brain that intensely for that amount of time obviously then that’s when the meltdowns occur – so that is something I need occasionally.

When approaching the creation of music, you said you wanted to “rip up the rulebook” when it came to making music, how challenging do you feel it is being individualistic in a time where it feels like modern music cannot be completely original?

I think that’s a really special thing and I don’t think that that’s necessarily true because I think that since forever the way that you get new ideas is from old ideas, and you take parts of many different things that you like.  And just because it seems like there’s so many genres out there already and there can’t possibly be any new genres – that’s bullshit! Taking from ideas and building new things out of old ideas, that is making something new, and trust me watch it, new fashion will come out of that, and I think it’s just about people being ballsy enough to take it to the next level, whatever that is. And people have just been playing it safe for so long. I look at the rock scene that is happening in America they’re just fucking ripping off blink 182 – what’s that about! Come on, it’s silly! But you look at what’s happening in the UK and it’s totally different, look at bands like Bring Me the Horizon, they are literally like the front line of it right now and I don’t know if you saw their show the other day, but it was incredible and it just shows how Oli Sykes has ripped up the rulebook too. He’s literally crossing over so many genres but still remaining metal as fuck, and he is just taking metal into the future”.

I am going to round up with a that interview from NME this month. It is clear that, in Cassyette, we have an artist with the talent, passion and popularity to be remembered decades from now:

She wants her take on rock music to be progressive and forward-thinking, “but you need people to be able to relate. It’s so important to me that every song is about something real, that people can connect with.” Cassyette is offering that with their string of eclectic, hard-hitting singles, her TikTok covers of pop and rock classics (over 20 million likes and counting) and her Discord community. 

With a new project close to being wrapped up (“bigger than an EP, smaller than an album”), and a string of huge shows locked in for this summer, NME spoke to Cassyette about finding their sound, wanting to empower others through her music, and how TikTok encouraged her to be unapologetically herself.

Do you feel like you’ve found your voice as an artist now?

“It took me a long time to get to this point, but yes, I know what Cassyette is now. I want to push rock music into the future. I had to write a lot of songs to find the exact spot where it feels right for me, though; I’m such an old school rock fan, but I love futuristic, modern music as well. I do think it’s important that, in order to discover yourself, you need to try lots of different things. I’m always extreme with it as well; if I want to do something, I’ll fully do it. I never do anything half-arsed.”

 You grew up listening to bands like Green DayParamore, and Bring Me The Horizon. Who’s inspiring you now?

“I like people that stick solidly to their identity. Artists that don’t look around at what other people are doing. I’m inspired by 100 Gecs, they’re fucking sick and doing really innovative stuff, and so are Sad Night DynamiteSlipknot are a big deal to me, plus Evanescence and The Prodigy – artists that have created their own space. I’m always trying to do that. It’s never about recreating [music], though. I believe you truly have to be yourself to make the best music you possibly can.”

There’s so much raw emotion in your songs. Are you surprised by the reaction to your music?

“Massively. My music is such a personal expression that anytime someone says they connect to it, it blows my mind. That’s why I put songs out though, so people feel connected to something. If you’re going through grief or depression, it’s so easy to feel like you’re on your own. I know that feeling all too well and it fucking sucks. I hope my music helps people feel like they’re not alone, because that’s what I get from other people’s music and it’s amazing when it happens. The reaction just makes me want to share more of myself.”

You’re part of a new wave of guitar heroes like WargasmYungblud and Nova Twins who make music that’s vulnerable but has a real anger to it. Is that a reaction to the world we’re living in right now?

“Definitely. I’m a passionate person and a massive empath. It feels like the world is on fucking fire at the moment. It’s not the easiest time for people to be alive. So many people are going through hardship right now, it’s unavoidable. You look at what’s happening in Ukraine and it’s fucking heartbreaking. It definitely does inspire angrier, harder music.”

Do you want to show that heavy music can be made by anyone, regardless of gender?

“I am a massive feminist and I’m also queer, so I want to be a voice for people like me or others who aren’t used to seeing themselves in these spaces. I don’t think we’ve passed the need for more representation because people are still dickheads online who will go out of their way to be horrible. Unfortunately, I don’t think that will ever go away, but I believe it’s important to be empowering and show people that these things are accessible for everybody.

What are your ambitions for the future?

“I’m still an independent artist and when things are moving as fast as they have been, you feel like you could drop the ball at any moment. It could go anywhere though. I just don’t want to stop and I want to keep having fun with music. What’s the point of doing something if you’re not enjoying it?”.

If you have not followed Cassyette yet, then make sure that you do that now. With such an amazing and potent sound that is impossible to ignore, I am excited to see what else is planned for this year. After some gigs, I guess there will be eyes on her concerning an album or E.P.  So early in her career, Cassyette has proved that she is…

SUCH a terrific artist.

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Follow Cassyette

FEATURE: Kate Bush’s The Dreaming at Forty: Track Nine: Houdini

FEATURE:

 

 

Kate Bush’s The Dreaming at Forty

Track Nine: Houdini

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I almost at the end…

 PHOTO CREDIT: John Carder Bush

of a run of Kate Bush features where I look at each of the ten tracks from her 1982 album, The Dreaming. The penultimate track is also my favourite of hers: the bewitching and beautiful Houdini. One reason why I love the song is because is ticks all the boxes when it comes to Kate Bush. Her vocal performance is sublime! From a gorgeous and soft sound one moment to a guttural the next. The composition is also fantastic. I especially love the strings used on the song (written and arranged by Dave Lawson and Andrew Powell). With brilliant production from Bush and some wonderful musical elements – a heavy percussive beat and some excellent bass -, it is a supreme song. Before the epic closer that is Get Out of My House, Houdini offers some of Bush’s best lyrics. The Dreaming is filled with wonderful lines but, in terms of visuals and image possibilities, there are no other tracks on the album as vivid and thrilling as Houdini I don’t think. The song appeared as the B-side of the single, Night of the Swallow. That single was released in Ireland only. On an album of absolute pearls, it is my favourite song and a standout. Before delving into the lyrics a bit more, the Kate Bush Encyclopaedia collects interviews where Bush talked about the story of Houdini:

The side most people know of Houdini is that of the escapologist, but he spent many years of his life exposing mediums and seances as frauds. His mother had died, and in trying to make contact through such spiritual people, he realized how much pain was being inflicted on people already in sorrow, people who would part with money just for the chance of a few words from a past loved one. I feel he must have believed in the possibility of contact after death, and perhaps in his own way, by weeding out the frauds, he hoped to find just one that could not be proven to be a fake. He and his wife made a decision that if one of them should die and try to make contact, the other would know it was truly them through a code that only the two of them knew.

His wife would often help him with his escapes. Before he was bound up and sealed away inside a tank or some dark box, she would give him a parting kiss, and as their lips met, she would pass him the key which he would later use to unlock the padlocks that chained him. After he died, Mrs. Houdini did visit many mediums, and tried to make contact for years, with no luck - until one day a medium called Mr. Ford informed her that Houdini had come through. She visited him and he told her that he had a message for her from Houdini, and he spoke the only words that meant for her the proof of her husband's presence. She was so convinced that she released an official statement to the fact that he had made contact with her through the medium, Ford.

It is such a beautiful and strange story that I thought I had very little to do, other than tell it like it was. But in fact it proved to be the most difficult lyric of all the songs and the most emotionally demanding. I was so aware of trying to do justice to the beauty of the subject, and trying to understand what it must have been like to have been in love with such an extraordinary man, and to have been loved by him. I worked for two or three nights just to find one line that was right. There were so many alternatives, but only a few were right for the song. Gradually it grew and began to piece together, and I found myself wrapped up in the feelings of the song - almost pining for Houdini. Singing the lead vocal was a matter of conjuring up that feeling again and as the clock whirrs and the song flashes back in time to when she watched him through the glass, he's on the other side under water, and she hangs on to his every breath. We both wait. (Kate Bush Club newsletter, October 1982)

During his incredible lifetime Houdini took it upon himself to expose the whole spiritualist thing - you know, seances and mediums. And he found a lot them to be phoney, but before he died Houdini and his wife worked out a code, so that if he came back after his death his wife would know it was him by the code. So after his death his wife made several attempts to contact her dead husband, and on one occasion he did come through to her. I thought that was so beautiful - the idea that this man who had spent his life escaping from chains and ropes had actually managed to contact his wife. The image was so beautiful that I just had to write a song about it. ('The Dreaming'. Poppix (UK), Summer 1982)”.

Houdini is a remarkable song that once more shows the range of sounds and ideas Bush had for The Dreaming. Her talent as a producer is evident when it comes to the sound and ambition behind songs like this. I want to end by quoting a few lyrics. Given its story and how evocative Houdini is, it is no surprise there are some standout verses. The sexiness, love, trust and sense of drama and tension that you get from these lines is evident: “With a kiss/I'd pass the key/And feel your tongue/Teasing and receiving./With your spit/Still on my lip/You hit the water”. I love the way Bush delivers the lines and creates this scenery and set-up. You imagine you are there as part of a crowd watching Houdini about to do a trick and trying to escape! Like so many tracks on The Dreaming, Houdini went through various forms and takes. I particularly like the isolated vocal for this song that is available online. I would have loved to have seen a video for Houdini, as I can imagine Bush being phenomenal. Del Palmer would have played Houdini (her long-time friend and band member, he also engineered several of her albums; he appears as Houdini on the cover for The Dreaming). The best lyrics, to me, come close to the end: “Through the glass/I'd watch you breathe/("Not even eternity--")/Bound and drowned/And paler than you've ever been/("--will hold Houdini!")/With your life/The only thing in my mind--/We pull you from the water!”. I have one more track to go in my track-by-track of The Dreaming, ahead of its fortieth anniversary in September. Go and listen to the album and revel in songs like Houdini. It is a magnificent, and almost-sultry song that draws you in and casts its spell. It is another incredible cut from…

THE amazing Kate Bush.

FEATURE: Paul McCartney at Eighty: Thirty-Four: Deep McCartney

FEATURE:

 

 

Paul McCartney at Eighty

PHOTO CREDIT: Linda McCartney

Thirty-Four: Deep McCartney

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FOR this feature about Paul McCartney…

 PHOTO CREDIT: Mary McCartney

ahead of his eightieth birthday in June, I am going to concentrate on his deeper cuts (some of the Wings inclusions were co-written by Linda McCartney). Covering his work with The Beatles, Wings and solo, these are the songs that were not singles and are worth another spin. Some of the songs are better-known, whereas others are a little more obscure. Not that every Paul McCartney song is great; there are a load that people do not hear too much or are not given too much light because they are not singles or among his ‘best’. Such a varied, deep and original songwriter, there is so much range and quality. Even his lesser songs are amazing and have memorable moments. The playlist below is a selection of deeper McCartney: those tracks that are not as famous as his big songs but have their merits. I wonder how many albums more Paul McCartney will release as, with everything he does release, there are some stunners and gems. Here is a collection of some terrific…

 PHOTO CREDIT: Mary McCartney

MACCA deeper cuts.  

FEATURE: Second Spin: Jorja Smith - Be Right Back (E.P.)

FEATURE:

 

 

Second Spin

Jorja Smith - Be Right Back (E.P.)

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AN artists I have loved…

and been a big fan of her since her debut album, 2018’s Lost & Found, Jorja Smith is one of our finest artists. The Walsall-born artist put out the E.P./mini-album, Be Right Back, last year. Rather than it being a bridge, transition or music gap like some have said, it is a wonderful work that didn’t quite get the amount of buzz and attention as it should. I usually feature older work and concentrate on albums. I wanted to make an exception for Smith’s incredible E.P. from last year. I want to bring in a couple of reviews. One is a little more mixed, whereas the other is positive. There is a quick interview that I am going to bring in first. ELLE spoke with Jorja Smith last year and, among other things, wondered why we need to hear Be Right Back:

Be Right Back is a must-listen because...

I hope it gives people a moment to escape to a safe place. I wrote these songs over the last two years because I needed to clear my head and feel better about certain situations. You’re never alone and music is so wonderful at letting people feel like they aren’t. This project is like a waiting room to my second album, I haven’t written it yet but I miss my fans and performing so I just wanted to give them something whilst I work on this next chapter. I’m 23 now, and my debut album featured songs I wrote around the ages of 16-18. I’ve matured and I’m evolving constantly and with this project I think you will hear the change.

What I’ve been listening to recently...

I mostly listen to music while I’m driving at the start of my day; when the sun is coming up and the roads aren’t too busy. I’ve been listening to Bellah's 'Evil Eye' COLORS performance a lot, it's incredible. She starts the song saying, ‘Say a prayer for me, I’m surrounded by some people that need prayer mommy’. Every line is just too honest. Then also the flows on Amaarae's 'Sad Gurlz Luv Money ft. Moily' are so hard and I’ve had Estelle ‘Wait A Minute’ and ‘Break My Heart’ on repeat too.

I will come to an interview from a few years go, as there are some interesting questions and answers that caught my eye. Before that, I shall come to reviews for Be Right Back. This is what NME noted when they sat down with the 2021 E.P./mini-album:

In the past year, two-time Brit Award-winner and Midlands representative Jorja Smith has been flying under the radar. She featured on the Tiktok hit ‘Peng Black Girls’ by rising star Enny, put out the dancehall-infused ‘Come Over’ with Jamaican superstar Popcaan and dropped her own songs – the sticky ‘Addicted’ and the plaintive ‘Gone’ – yet has herself been staying out of the limelight. But it’s all for good reason: the 23-year-old is releasing her next album very soon. To tide us over until that day comes, she has given us ‘Be Right Back’, a so-called sonic ‘waiting room’ for all her fans to jam out in.

The eight-track record opens with ‘Addicted’, an opportunity for the Walsall R&B star to show off her sugary vocals. The first big comeback song after acclaimed 2018 debut album ‘Lost & Found’ sets clashing live sounds against ethereal ambience. And Jorja’s just getting you pumped for what seems like an earnest follow-up.

‘Be Right Back’ also sees the 23-year-old dabble in the afroswing sound that defined her first British top 10 hit, 2019’s ‘Be Honest’. She and the self-proclaimed ‘Queen of The South’ Shaybo explores the luxurious lifestyle an artist, which still doesn’t fix the feeling of being used. Here we see a different side of Shaybo – who is known for her aggressive, cocksure rhymes and delivery – as she slows it down with an emotionally intelligent breakdown of the juxtaposition between fame and happiness: “Even with drip, I feel drained / It’s getting long just like braids”.

‘Weekend’ showcases the operatic side of Smith, who goes up into her higher register on the chorus, singing: “I stand out there where it always came alive / Wasting pennies in the night”. Hitting these hit notes, she evokes the alternative stylings of Willow, moving away from her traditional soulful and garage sounds. This minimalist, streak is exciting and refreshing – especially in an R&B world that seems to be rushing back to more traditional and ‘00s-referencing sounds.

As Jorja Smith takes her time to release a second album that lives up to the hype, the steadily sombre ‘Be Right Back’ is a perfect prelude to her next chapter. Experimenting with different vocal registers and taking advantage of how harmoniously her voice goes with live instruments, she’s shared a collection that should leave you itching for her next step. If these are loosies, it’s proof of how top-notch her craft is”.

In a slightly more positive assessment, CLASH held praise and respect for an artist who is going to be an icon. A terrific R&B artist whose yet-to-be-announced second album will be hugely anticipated, Be Right Back signals that we may not have to wait too long until we get that album:

Jorja Smith nailed down her velvet-tinged neo-soul persona on debut album ‘Lost & Found’, a wildly successful record that thrives on intimacy and nuanced, with its subdued tone reliant on her sublime vocal control. There’s a fair argument, however, that this isn’t Jorja in her full 360 – often her most thrilling music comes in a more up tempo sphere, placing her voice against club tropes. With that in mind, Jorja’s ongoing post-album song cycle has brought some of her most thrilling music – the spicy Popcaan collaboration ‘Come Over’, the powerful ‘By Any Means’, or her Ezra Collective enabled take on the Blue Note classic ‘Rose Rouge’.

‘Be Right Back’ – a project, not an album – builds on this energy, expanding on the luxurious modern soul of her hugely successful debut while adding a few nods to the underground in there, too. It’s a thrilling listen – upping the pulse while refusing to sacrifice her innate sense of control, it arguably contains of her best music to date.

‘Addicted’ is a sensational opener, Jorja’s vocal laden down with regret on top of those endlessly undulating drums. ‘Gone’ taps back in her UK roots for the production, with 2-step spectres interwoven around her half-spoken lyric. ‘Time’ – one word titles are a hallmark of her newfound directness, it seems – is a downbeat piece of acoustic reflection, while ‘Burn’ is carried along by those jazz impulses, a kind of London-centric Soulquarian vibe.

Largely shorn of guests, ‘Be Right Back’ does make room for Shaybo on summer-ready bouncer ‘Bussdown’; a truly addictive piece of songwriting, it’s almost tailor made for those festival sets – should they get the go ahead from authorities, of course.

Closing with Jorja’s wonderfully organic paean to freedom, ‘Weekend’ finds her vocal pirouetting into the upper register before surging down to those crisp, carefully articulates expressions of empowerment. It’s a tour de force in her abilities, but it works mainly due to its emotional pull, a heart-heavy heft that aspects of her debut lacked.

A project of persona evolution, ‘Be Right Back’ finds Jorja Smith in motion – she’s opening out her sound, and finessing her approach. The results are immaculate – and she’s only just getting started”.

As mentioned, there is another interview that is worth drawing in. SSENSE spotlighted the remarkable Jorja Smith a few years back. It is great reading interviews with her, as she is very straight and honest with her answers. Whereas some artists are reserved or put on a façade with interviews, Smith is always herself:

How has your life changed?

Lack of privacy. Everyone wants to know what you’re doing. Everyone already knows what you’re doing. Everyone has an opinion on what you’re doing. Did you see the photo I posted in the red dress and everyone commented that I look pregnant? I get it, I don’t have the flattest tummy. What I don’t understand is why people would choose to spend three minutes of their day making someone else feel like shit. I try not to pay too much attention to it because you can get really sad and it’s not real, none of it is real.

When was the last time you were scared?

I’m not really scared of anything. I’m quite confident. If anything I scare myself, like I’ll have a headache and then I’ll worry something really serious is wrong with me—I’m the worst. So is my boyfriend. We’re the worst. Imagine. It’s awful because I’ll be like, “Stop telling me there’s something wrong with you.” Then I’ll be like “I’m going to the doctor’s because I think there’s something wrong with my head.”

PHOTO CREDIT: Sylvia Austin 

What would be your perfect day?

The perfect day would start with me waking up and understanding that Joel might sleep in. I’m horrible, usually if I’m awake that means he has to be awake. I’ll make myself a cup of tea, let him sleep and not freak out and think he’s dead—that’s happened before. Once he’s up, we’ll make some music together and then go for a long walk. I like walking, if it’s the perfect day then nobody will stop us for a photo because he always has to take it and I feel bad. I’m really conscious of time, so I would try my best to be patient and go with the flow, but I would know exactly what time we’d be going for food. I’d get dressed up and we’d go out for lots of food, with all the courses and more. I love sushi and he likes lobster. Then we’d go for a night walk and run around central London. That’s what we do sometimes, or he runs off”.

I am not sure what this year holds for Jorja Smith. I suspect that we will get an album from her soon enough but, as she put out Be Right Back fairly recently, there is this new music out there that we can enjoy. I don’t feel the release got as much love and airplay as it could have done. I normally do concentrate on albums of the past for this feature, but I wanted to separate this from my Revisiting… feature (where I look back at albums of the last five years that is worth another listen), as Be Right Back is genuinely underrated and should be played more. With such a terrific voice and an incredible songwriting talent, Jorja Smith is…

A stunning artist.

FEATURE: Inspired By… Part Sixty-Two: Curtis Mayfield

FEATURE:

 

 

Inspired By…

Part Sixty-Two: Curtis Mayfield

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A true music legend and titan…

for this part of Inspired By…, I am looking at the influence of the one and only Curtis Mayfield. Although he died in 1999, his influence still remains. In June, he would have turned eighty. A remarkably inspiring artist musicians behind Soul and politically conscious African-American music, I will end with a playlist of songs from artists influenced by Mayfield. Before that, AllMusic provide a biography of the icon:

Perhaps because he didn't cross over to the pop audience as heavily as Motown's stars, it may be that the scope of Curtis Mayfield's talents and contributions have yet to be fully recognized. Judged merely by his records alone, the man's legacy is enormous. As the leader of the Impressions, he recorded some of the finest soul vocal group music of the 1960s. As a solo artist in the 1970s, he helped pioneer funk and helped introduce hard-hitting urban commentary into soul music. "Gypsy Woman," "It's All Right," "People Get Ready," "Freddie's Dead," and "Super Fly" are merely the most famous of his many hit records.

But Curtis Mayfield wasn't just a singer. He wrote most of his material at a time when that was not the norm for soul performers. He was among the first -- if not the very first -- to speak openly about African-American pride and community struggle in his compositions. As a songwriter and a producer, he was a key architect of Chicago soul, penning material and working on sessions by notable Windy City soulsters like Gene Chandler, Jerry Butler, Major Lance, and Billy Butler. In this sense, he can be compared to Smokey Robinson, who also managed to find time to write and produce many classics for other soul stars. Mayfield was also an excellent guitarist, and his rolling, Latin-influenced lines were highlights of the Impressions' recordings in the '60s. During the next decade, he would toughen up his guitar work and production, incorporating some of the best features of psychedelic rock and funk.

Mayfield began his career as an associate of Jerry Butler, with whom he formed the Impressions in the late '50s. After the Impressions had a big hit in 1958 with "For Your Precious Love," Butler, who had sung lead on the record, split to start a solo career. Mayfield, while keeping the Impressions together, continued to write for and tour with Butler before the Impressions got their first Top 20 hit in 1961, "Gypsy Woman."

Mayfield was heavily steeped in gospel music before he entered the pop arena, and gospel, as well as doo wop, influences would figure prominently in most of his '60s work. Mayfield wasn't a staunch traditionalist, however. He and the Impressions may have often worked the call-and-response gospel style, but his songs (romantic and otherwise) were often veiled or unveiled messages of Black pride, reflecting the increased confidence and self-determination of the African-American community. Musically he was an innovator as well, using arrangements that employed the punchy, blaring horns and Latin-influenced rhythms that came to be trademark flourishes of Chicago soul. As the staff producer for the OKeh label, Mayfield was also instrumental in lending his talents to the work of other Chi-town soul singers who went on to national success. With Mayfield singing lead and playing guitar, the Impressions had 14 Top 40 hits in the 1960s (five made the Top 20 in 1964 alone), and released some above-average albums during that period as well.

Given Mayfield's prodigious talents, it was perhaps inevitable that he would eventually leave the Impressions to begin a solo career, as he did in 1970. His first few singles boasted a harder, more funk-driven sound; singles like "(Don't Worry) If There's a Hell Below, We're All Gonna Go" found him confronting ghetto life with a realism that had rarely been heard on record. He really didn't hit his artistic or commercial stride as a solo artist, though, until Super Fly, his soundtrack to a 1972 blaxploitation film. Drug deals, ghetto shootings, the death of young Black men before their time: all were described in penetrating detail. Yet Mayfield's irrepressible falsetto vocals, uplifting melodies, and fabulous funk pop arrangements gave the oft-moralizing material a graceful strength that few others could have achieved. For all the glory of his past work, Superfly stands as his crowning achievement, not to mention a much-needed counterpoint to the sensationalistic portrayals of the film itself.

At this point Mayfield, along with Stevie Wonder and Marvin Gaye, was the foremost exponent of a new level of compelling auteurism in soul. His failure to maintain the standards of Super Fly qualifies as one of the great disappointments in the history of Black popular music. Perhaps he'd simply reached his peak after a long climb, but the rest of his '70s work didn't match the musical brilliance and lyrical subtleties of Super Fly, although he had a few large R&B hits in a much more conventional vein, such as "Kung Fu," "So in Love," and "Only You Babe."

Mayfield had a couple of hits in the early '80s, but the decade generally found his commercial fortunes in a steady downward spiral, despite some intermittent albums. On August 14, 1990, he became paralyzed from the neck down when a lighting rig fell on top of him at a concert in Brooklyn, NY. In the mid-'90s, a couple of tribute albums consisting of Mayfield covers appeared, with contributions by such superstars as Eric Clapton, Bruce Springsteen, and Gladys Knight. Though no substitute for the man himself, these tributes served as an indication of the enormous regard in which Mayfield was still held by his peers. He died December 26, 1999 at the age of 57”.

To salute and pay tribute to a truly great artist and political voice, I am finishing with a varied and quality-stacked playlist with songs from artists who have been influenced by Curtis Mayfield. Truly, he was one of the greatest and most powerful artists…

WHO ever lived.

FEATURE: A Magical Kick… The Thrill of Discovering Kate Bush’s Music

FEATURE:

 

 

A Magical Kick…

The Thrill of Discovering Kate Bush’s Music

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I have been thinking about…

how Kate Bush is still being discovered by people. Whilst not as ubiquitous and well-known as some of the biggest artists ever, she is pretty famous. Not just confined to younger listener, I know of adults who were not aware of her music and have latched onto it. I don’t think it is the case that it is only new artists we discover when we become older. There are established artists who will have evaded us that come onto the radar. When it comes to Kate Bush, she was one of the first artists I found. I think I was about three or four when I saw a copy of the VHS greatest hits collection, The Whole Story. That came out in 1986; I may have seen it the following year. Compared to, say, The Beatles or another artist I found very young, there was this different thrill and sensation with Bush. I am taking things back to 1978 for this feature. I am currently writing about her 1982 album, The Dreaming, and will get back to that soon. Today, I wanted to spend a bit more time with her debut album, The Kick Inside. In fact, this is a more general appreciation of her. The first song I heard was Wuthering Heights. Her debut single, the unusualness and ghostly nature of the song meant that it hit me very hard as a child.

Not conventional or like anything else, it was a real pivotal moment! All my love and admiration for Kate Bush’s career can be traced back to that moment when I saw the video for Wuthering Heights. It would be a little while longer until I delved deeper into her catalogue. I am trying to think why Bush had a much bigger effect on me than other artists. Sure, the immense beauty of her and her music was alluring and striking. I think it is the flow and gymnastics of her voice; the beautiful composition and beguiling video for Wuthering Heights. After that, I heard The Kick Inside and found more of the same gorgeous and stunning music. Whilst the other twelve tracks on The Kick Inside do not have the same vocal styles and sounds as Wuthering Heights, it was definitely so unusual to me that it really lingered. Bush’s other albums have a similar impact. I am thinking about people who are finding Kate Bush now and what draws them in. With so much music out there, Kate Bush still stands out and sounds like nobody else. Everyone has a different reason for loving Kate Bush the first time they hear her, but there is this common response of real delight, surprise and excitement. An artist that has this depth, nuance and beauty that is almost impossible to define and explain, I can remember what I was feeling when I heard her music the first time back in around 1987. You get this sort of tingling and shiver that runs through you. Whereas other artists I heard around the time were great and I liked, Kate Bush’s songs (and especially Wuthering Heights) really compelled me to follow her closely.

In the summer, it will be forty-five years since she went into the studio to start recording the remaining songs for The Kick Inside (The Saxophone Song and The Man with the Child in His Eyes was recorded in 1975). As someone who writes a lot of features about Kate Bush, I think I have helped a few people find her music and connect more widely with it. More than that, so many people have found or reconnected with songs that they overlooked or have not heard for a while. As it has been a few years since I started writing about Bush, I wanted to think back to those early experiences and the sense of revelation. It stays with me still. I know there are very young people around the world not yet conscious of Bush’s music. I have said how I worry whether it is easy now to find her. I discovered her music through a physical format. That was cemented by radio. Now, are people handing down vinyl and is the discovery process the same in families as it was in decades past? However children and new listeners are finding Kate Bush, I know that the feeling they receive and how it makes them feel is similar to how I and people my age did years ago. It is the inexplicable and divine brilliance of Kate Bush that is unlike anything else! One of the most important moments in my music-discovering life, it came to mind recently, and I felt I had to write about it. It also makes me look to the future; not only in terms of how far her music will spread and the artists coming through who are influenced by her, but for Kate Bush herself. There are no definite plans for any albums, but I do hope that this is not it. As I say many times, one can never predict her or say what she will do next! If you know someone who has not heard Kate Bush before – whether they are a child or have somehow avoided her -, then spend some time introduction them to her wonder. There is no doubt that it…

WILL change their lives.

FEATURE: Spotlight: Bow Anderson

FEATURE:

 

 

Spotlight

Bow Anderson

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A fantastic and prolific young artist…

who is a rising star, Bow Anderson is someone making big moves and is going to be an enormous name soon enough. She came onto a lot of people’s radars during the start of the pandemic and lockdown. I am going to bring in a few interviews with the Scottish-born artist. She has put out some great singles this year already. There was a lot of attention around her 2021 E.P., New Wave. I will come to that. Prior to this, in 2020, DORK spoke with her. It turns out that a childhood accident has a big impact on her life and outlook:

Bow Anderson wasn’t always destined to be a pop star. When she was 13, it appeared that her life was set to go down an altogether different path as she did competitive trampolining and was really rather good at it. In fact, she was a part of Team GB and was flying high and setting her sights for sporting success. Sadly though, a freak accident resulted in a longterm injury that forced her to give up the sporting path and look to change course. What once seemed like a disaster instead turned into a golden opportunity for Bow to blossom into a performer and realise those hidden talents into something glorious.

“It’s made me a much stronger person,” explains Bow of the adversity that started her journey to soon to be mega pop star. “I was 13 when I injured myself. I couldn’t walk, I had to do physio. I couldn’t hang out with my friends. It was a very rough and dark time. It made me grow up really fast. It kind of put life into perspective and showed me how short life is, and you have to go for what you want and be ambitious. I think everything happens for a reason and I wouldn’t be where I am today if that hadn’t happened.”

That ambition has been the driving force that saw Bow move down from her home in Edinburgh to London when she was 19. “I came to London and didn’t know anyone, but I never got homesick as I knew that was what I wanted to do,” she says.

The realisation that what she really wanted to do was sing and make music came while she was recuperating from her trampolining injury and was unable to dance at her performance school. “They encouraged me to try to sing,” she said of her teachers. “I enjoyed it, but I never thought I was good enough,” confesses Bow. “Over time I got really into it though. I saw the film Dreamgirls, and that was my first introduction to a lot of Motown and soul music, and I fell in love with it. I went back and listened to classics like Etta James, Al Green and Otis Redding. I fell in love with music that comes from the heart. Music that’s believable and real. I worked hard and got to the point where I was like, yeah, I am good enough why not try to make this a career.”

The self-belief that she discovered in those early days as a singer comes out in the series of singles she’s released this year that highlight her vibrant pop twist on classic sounds. “‘Sweater’ is the first song I wrote that was Bow Anderson,” she explains. “The first song that was the blueprint, where everything made sense. ‘Sweater’ was trying to create that soul sound but make it more up to date and do something fresh that hasn’t been done. I love Amy Winehouse, and I love all the classics like Donny Hathaway and Aretha Franklin, but that’s been done, so it was about trying to put that into something fresh.”

“It’s about a break-up and not being able to get over someone,” she continues. “The idea that your friends try and pick you up and make you feel better, but at the end of the day, it’s not enough, and you just feel lonely. It’s really relatable. That’s why everyone writes about love and heartbreak”.

Apologies if I mess with the chronology a bit! At the start of last year, The Au Review.com chatted with the remarkable Anderson. Even in her early career and with a couple of releases under her belt, she was a hugely intriguing and amazing artist who was courting attention:

Bow Anderson is the next biggest thing to come out of Scotland – you could say she’s the New Wave. At twenty three, she’s already familiar with hard work and setbacks, after her semi-professional trampolining career crumbled from a leg injury.

It was through rehab that she found her passion (and talent) in music, singing with her father late at night while he comforted her. Since her recovery, she’s gained fans such as Sir Elton John and Cyndi Lauper for her 60s soul influenced pop, and inked a global record deal with EMI.

Her first release, “Sweater”, saw her team up with Jamie Scott (Ed Sheeran, Major Lazer) and Jonny Coffer (the man behind Beyonce’s “Freedom”), now boasts 3.85M streams on Spotify. This partnership produced Bow’s debut EP New Wave, a six-track collection that we sat down to discuss while Bow was stuck in London’s interminable lockdown.

Bow Anderson, where are you right now?

I am in London, currently. I was in Scotland like a month ago for Christmas time, and then I came back.

How long have you been living in London for?

Oh, I sound like an old lady. I’m like, “Oh, way back in my day.” Five and a half years now. Been here awhile, moved down when I was, I’d just turned 19, so it’s been a while. I’d love to come to Australia. I’ve never been. So I’d really like to come out when things get back to normal.

Yeah, I would recommend it! Now, congrats on your new EP, New Wave. I wanted to ask you about the producers you worked with on this one, because you worked with an insane crew. Was this all across Zoom during lockdown? Or was this a pre lockdown thing?

So New Wave was actually written before lockdown. I’ve actually had a lot of my songs for quite a while. I feel like songs always exist for a while before they actually get out in the world. The main guys that I work with are Jonny Coffer and Jamie Scott.

And, Jonny came in with an idea that he originally had written with a guy called Corey Sanders, and Emily Burns. And he kind of brought this production idea in, and we were like, “Oh, this is sick.” And we were all, “Right, let’s write it. Let’s see what happens.”

I love working with those guys. Everything just always falls into place and everyone’s on the same page and everyone gets each other and yeah, I think I’ve definitely found some good eggs to write with. So yeah, “New Wave” was written before lockdown and there was some adjustments to it. We would always come back to it and adjust things and change bits. And then we’d forget about it… Not forget about it, but we’d work on other stuff. And then we’d come back and we were always going to finish it, because it was a great song, but yeah.

“New Wave” is your title track of your EP. Why did you feel like that track was encompassing of the body of work enough to name it after it?

I think “New Wave”, because it came out in January, it’s a new year. It was quite relevant. Not that we brought it out for that purpose. But, I think the songs that I had released, so I’d released “Sweater” and “Heavy”, which are heartbreak songs. And they are about being in not a great place and trying to find yourself and pick yourself back up. And then “Island” is you’re kind of re-finding yourself and trying to find that power in you and that kind of confidence. Then “New Wave” just sums it all up because it’s like: “I’m good. I’m on a new wave. I know what I deserve. I know that I’m amazing and I’m still on that journey of trying to learn to love myself,” and all that kind of thing. But I think “New Wave” just sums up that story of like, “Yes, there are bad times and things can be rough, but you will find yourself and when bad things happen, it always gets better”.

There are a couple of other interviews that I want to bring in. The Perfect Tempo chatted with Bow Anderson in 2020. I wanted to highlight an earlier interview, as it shows that she was forging these incredible songs and growing as an artist:

We’re speaking ahead of the launch of her third single ‘Island’ which came out last summer. A track I’d describe as a fantastic, empowering late summer anthem. I asked Anderson how the inspiration for the track came about. “The idea behind Island is that it’s that point, for me anyway in a relationship when you break up with someone and you feel absolutely miserable, and you feel very lonely but then you get to this stage where you’re like ‘I feel good and I deserve better than that!’ you feel on top of the worlds and it’s about having that power and strength in yourself to not let someone bring you down, for me that was from a romantic relationship but for the listener that could be someone’s friend that’s not being nice or someone negative in your life, a bully… It’s a pick me up song, to let people know that you’re strong and amazing.” Those values blend over into the video itself, a stylistic and fun beachside scene recently shot in Margate “It was so fun to film, it’s about being confident, knowing your worth, having fun and letting go. We’ve got synchronized swimmers, I’m buried in the sand and there’s just a fun but strong sass to it all.”

I point out to Anderson whether it’s ‘Heavy’, ‘Sweater’ or ‘Island’ there is a distinct personal theme through her music and lyrics and there’s a significant difference between singing a song and writing one, I enquired whether she found it hard or perhaps cathartic to tell her story through song, bringing back those difficult memories. “Yeah, do you know what, song writing is like my therapy because I’m not very good at showing my emotions through like talking about things, I’m still working on that but music and song writing is a way for me to put down how I’m feeling and by putting it out into the world it’s kind of a way to lift the weight off my shoulders, also I feel it helps other people listening as well, makes them feel less lonely.”

Anderson’s passion for music shines bright during our conversation. It’s that drive and ambition that took her from Edinburgh to London for university in the first place “I think I just was so determined to do music because it was what I was good at” Anderson tells me. A lot of students starting their first terms at university right now will be reassured that despite her self-belief and confidence Anderson can more than relate to those first week nerves “you’ve got to be ambitious and ballsy and just be confident that you’re good enough to be heard kind of thing. So yeah, I think I’ve always known I was coming to London. I was a bit nervous, like when my mum and dad left I was like, all right, like, I don’t know anyone, I’m living with two randoms, Uni doesn’t start for another two weeks, and I was a bit like, What do I do? But I’ve had a ball like, Oh, like I love London. There’s just like, so much going on. I’ve met amazing people, I’m so glad to have done that”.

To end, 1883 Magazine interviewed Bow Anderson. This year is going to be an important one in terms of getting her name out there. Gigs and new songs means she will get a much larger follower. Her new tracks are her strongest yet:

Fast-rising artist Bow Anderson is making an impact.

The Scottish singer-songwriter is undoubtedly making a name for herself thanks to her repertoire of honest and relatable tunes. Inspired by the likes of pop, R&B and soul, the Edinburgh-born musician has already gained fans in Elton John and Cyndi Lauper, won ‘Best Pop Act’ at the Scottish Music Awards, and gone viral on TikTok. So, we really meant it when we say that Bow Anderson is making an impact. The songstress’s latest slice of pop goodness is offered up in the form of the vibrant and fun single, 20s, a track all about the pressures one can face throughout their early adult years.

In discussion with 1883 Magazine, Bow Anderson discusses the viral track, 20s, her biggest ‘I can’t believe this is happening’ moment so far, and the albums that have inspired her artistry.

Hi Bow, thanks for chatting with 1883 Magazine. Let’s talk about your latest single 20s. You mentioned on social media that you never actually intended to put the track out as your next single. Why was this and what inspired your change of heart?

I wrote 20s more as a way of venting my own feelings of the stresses and pressure in my own personal life. I put a lot of demos on TikTok to see what people think and 20s seemed to really resonate with people! So I felt it was only right to release it.

For anyone who doesn’t know, in your early teen years you were originally on track to represent GB for trampolining in the olympics but had an accident. Can you tell us how this led you to getting into music instead?

When I was injured I couldn’t train. I went to a performance school for dancing, acting and singing (I went mainly for the dancing as that was my passion growing up) but because I couldn’t dance they encouraged me to sing. That was my healing and my therapy. I fell in love with music and writing songs and it ended up being my main focus.

There has been a lot of great milestones in your music career so far, you’ve found fans in Elton John and Cyndi Lauper, played a run of sold-out headline shows, picked up a ‘new artist’ award at the Scottish Music Awards, and the demo for ’20s’ went viral on TikTok.  What would you say has been the biggest ‘I can’t believe this is happening’ moment for yourself so far?

Probably recognition from Sir Elton John. He’s someone I really look up to. He’s an incredible songwriter and all round legend. This industry isn’t all plain sailing and can be really challenging at times but when you over come these hurdles it really does make it worth while. I’m so grateful for the opportunities I have had!

Touring with both Mimi Webb and Ella Eyre last year must have been such an interesting experience…

It was incredible! I had soo much fun! Both Ella and Mimi are so so lovely and supportive. And masters at what they do! Their energy on stage is just amazing and really inspiring. Doing these shows made me excited for when I do my own tours!

When people think of big contemporary artists from Scotland, a lot of people may think of Lewis Capaldi, Nina Nesbitt or a band like Biffy Clyro. Are there any smaller Scottish acts that you are really into that you would like to recommend to our readers?

There’s an artist who supported me on my shows called Tamzene. Her voice is stunning and so pure. You should definitely check her out!

Soul, Motown, and pop are three genres that have really influenced your sound since the start. Are there any particular records that have had a major influence on your artistry/life in general? If so, which albums and why have they had such an impact?

I’d say the main artists and albums that have influenced me are Lauryn Hill, Bruno Mars 24k magic, Beyoncé lemonade, Aretha Franklin, Kanye, Kendrick Lamar, Chance the Rapper, Jackson 5, Amy Winehouse. These artists are a mix of bold emotional honest lyrics, with fresh production. They inspire me because they aren’t afraid to do what they want and love. And make it their own”.

I am excited to see where Bow Anderson heads and how far her career will go. A bright and constantly evolving artist who is crafting her own sound and standing out from the crowd, she is someone to watch very closely. I am a recently new convert, but Anderson is someone who instantly gets inside the head. If you have not heard her music, then make sure that…

YOU do now.

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Follow Bow Anderson

FEATURE: Loving Arms: Celebrating a Masterful Songwriter: Paul Heaton at Sixty

FEATURE:

 

 

Loving Arms

PHOTO CREDIT: Shirlaine Forrest

Celebrating a Masterful Songwriter: Paul Heaton at Sixty

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ONE of the greatest songwriters ever…

 IN THIS PHOTO: Paul Heaton with The Beautiful South

the mighty Paul Heaton turns sixty on 9th May. From his work with The Housemartins, The Beautiful South, solo and with Jacqui Abbott, he is a masterful and compelling songwriter. His wit, observations and consistency are amazing. I am going to celebrate his upcoming sixtieth birthday with a playlist of some of his best tracks through the years. AllMusic provide a biography about one of the very best songwriters and artists:

The mellifluous voice of Paul Heaton has often masked the jagged satirical content of his lyrics. Stamping all of his projects with not only wry wit but a flair for infectious melodies, Heaton was known as leader of popular but short-lived U.K. college rock group the Housemartins in the mid-'80s before forming the Beautiful South in 1988. Contrasting Heaton's lyrics with a sophisticated, jazzy pop sound, that band released ten albums between the late '80s and the mid-2000s, reaching number one with their 1990 single "A Little Time" and the U.K. Top 15 with every single album. After they disbanded in 2007, Heaton focused on his solo career, issuing three records on his own before partnering with onetime Beautiful South vocalist Jacqui Abbott for 2014's What Have We Become? With nods to Motown soul and early rock & roll, the collaboration was a hit, and they went all the way to number one in the U.K. with their fourth LP, 2020's Manchester Calling.

Born in Bromborough in Merseyside, England in 1962, Paul David Heaton was raised in Sheffield from age four until the family moved to Surrey when he was in his early teens. It was there that he and his older brother Adrian formed their first band, Tools Down. At the time, he was still splitting his time between music and football, which he went on to play outside of school at the amateur level.

By his early twenties, he was based in Hull, where he formed the Housemartins with guitarist Stan Cullimore, bass player Ted Key, and drummer Chris Lang in 1984. A demo got them a record deal with Go! Discs. They released their first song, "Flag Day," in 1985 before Norman Cook (later known as Fatboy Slim) replaced Key on bass, and Hugh Whitaker of the Gargoyles briefly filled in for Lang until Dave Hemingway took over on drums. In 1986, the group made it to number three on the U.K. singles chart with their third single, "Happy Hour." Issued that October, their album London 0 Hull 4 also reached number three and hit the Top Ten in Norway and Sweden. Like contemporaries the Smiths, the Housemartins were college radio stars in the U.S., where their jangly riffs and brainy, humorous songs landed in the bottom half of the Billboard 200 with help from MTV airplay. The band's second album, 1987's The People Who Grinned Themselves to Death also reached the U.K. Top Ten and the lower tier of U.S. album chart.

After the Housemartins disbanded in 1988, Heaton and Hemingway formed the Beautiful South. The Beautiful South expanded Heaton's musical canvas, exploring jazz and even country influences with former Anthill Runaways vocalist Briana Corrigan, bassist Sean Welch, drummer David Stead (formerly a Housemartins roadie), and guitarist David Rotheray, who became Heaton's new songwriting collaborator. While many critics and student-run radio stations in the U.S. continued to laud Heaton's talent, the Beautiful South became far more successful in England. In the summer of 1989, they released their first single, "Song for Whoever," on the Housemartins' old record label, Go! "Song for Whoever" climbed to number two, while its follow-up, "You Keep It All In," peaked at number eight in September 1989. A month later, the group's debut, Welcome to the Beautiful South, was released and went to number two, eventually going platinum. The band's only number one single, "A Little Time," helped 1990's Choke replicate both sales feats, and their third LP, 0898, reached the Top Five behind three Top 30 singles. Following the release of 0898, Corrigan left the group and was replaced with Jacqui Abbott, who made her first appearance on the band's fourth straight Top Ten album, 1994's Miaow. It was followed at the end of the year by the greatest-hits collection Carry on Up the Charts, which entered the charts at number one. It stayed there for several months, going platinum many times over and, in the process, becoming one of the most popular albums in British history. The album wasn't released in America until late 1995, after it broke several U.K. records.

Two multi-platinum number one albums followed in the form of 1996's Blue Is the Colour and 1998's Quench before 2000's Painting It Red peaked at number two. Heaton issued a solo album under the alias Biscuit Boy (aka Crackerman) in 2001 that barely cracked the Top 100 before rejoining his band for 2003's Gaze. It didn't fare as well by their standards, though it still reached the U.K. Top 15. After a move to Sony, 2004's Golddiggas, Headnodders & Pholk Songs hit number 11 with a set consisting mostly of covers. The Beautiful South's final album, Superbi, arrived in 2006, and while it reached number six on the album chart, it was their first to not be represented in the Top 40 of the singles chart.

The group called it quits in 2007, having sold more than 15 million records worldwide, and Heaton shifted his focus to his solo career. He released 2008's The Cross Eyed Rambler under his own name. Two years later, Heaton returned with Acid Country, which he helped to promote with a bicycle-led U.K. pub tour. The year 2012 saw the release of Presents the 8th, a stage play that boasted a single conceptual song told in eight chapters, dealing with the seven deadly sins, and featuring guest vocalists. In 2014, he released What Have We Become?, a collaborative album recorded with the Beautiful South's Jacqui Abbott. After the warm reception of that effort, which catapulted to number three on the U.K. albums chart, the duo regrouped for 2015's Wisdom, Laughter and Lines. The success of their renewed partnership was also reflected in an extensive and well-received set of live dates, culminating in a sold-out homecoming gig to a crowd of 20,000 in Hull in 2017. That same year, Heaton and Abbott released their third record as a duo, Crooked Calypso, which was produced by longtime collaborator John Williams (Cocteau Twins, Alison Moyet). The year 2018 brought the career-spanning The Last King of Pop, a 23-track collection representing both of Heaton's beloved bands, solo material, and his partnership with Abbott. It peaked at number ten on the album chart. The pair returned with the Williams-produced Manchester Calling in March 2020. Conceived as a double album in the fashion of the Clash's London Calling, the slightly abbreviated 16-track set topped the album chart in the U.K.”.

To show what a remarkable and unique songwriter is, the playlist below is a raft of wonderful songs from the magnificent Paul Heaton (in terms of lyrics; the music is often a co-write). He remains underrated when we consider the great songwriters. A lyricist who has been responsible for so many classic and timeless songs, let’s hope that he and Jacqui Abbott continue to record together for a long time. Before the rest of the media and music world reacts to Paul Heaton’s sixtieth birthday, I wanted to show my appreciation of…

A legendary songwriter.

I think it's sad how we forget to tell people we love that we do love them. Often we think about these things when it's too late or when an extreme situation forces us to show those little things we're normally too shy or too lazy to reveal. One of the ideas for the song sparked when I came home from the studio late one night. I was using an answering machine to take the day's messages and it had been going wrong a lot, gradually growing worse with time. It would speed people's voices up beyond recognition, and I just used to hope they would ring back again one day at normal speed.

This particular night, I started to play back the tape, and the machine had neatly edited half a dozen messages together to leave "Goodbye", "See you!", "Cheers", "See you soon" .. It was a strange thing to sit and listen to your friends ringing up apparently just to say goodbye. I had several cassettes of peoples' messages all ending with authentic farewells, and by copying them onto 1/4'' tape and re-arranging the order, we managed to synchronize the 'callers' with the last verse of the song.

There are still quite a few of my friends who have not heard the album or who have not recognised themselves and are still wondering how they managed to appear in the album credits when they didn't even set foot into the studio. (Kate Bush Club newsletter, October 1982)”.

One of Kate Bush’s albums that has gained a lot of respect but still is not as devoured and dissected as the much-discussed and adored Hounds of Love (1985), her fourth studio album is ripe and overflowing with genius. All the Love, like all the songs on The Dreaming, contains some truly beautiful lyrics! Featuring Richard Thornton as a choirboy, there is an etherealness and sense of the heavenly with All the Love. Definitely some skin to the spiritual. I love the real sense of meaning and power in Bush’s vocals. She embodies the song and makes every word stick! There are a few sections of the track that are even more powerful because of the lyrics. The first few lines, in fact, are up there with the best Bush has ever written: “The first time I died/Was in the arms of good friends of mine/They kiss me with tears/They hadn't been near me for years”. Whether there is a nod to her professional development and people thinking she was odd/too experimental, or whether there is a feeling of wanting to be alone and not have to rely on other people, these lines always get to me: “The next time I dedicate/My life's work to the friends I make/I give them what they want to hear/They think I'm up to something weird/And up rears the head of fear in me/So now when they ring/I get my machine to let them in/ "We needed you/To love me too/We wait for your move". All the Love is a spectacular song, and, to me, it is perfectly placed before the final two tracks – the stunning Houdini and the epic finale, Get Out of My House. Another blissful showcase of Kate Bush’s incredible production talents and her peerless songwriting, All the Love is one of my favourite songs from her. It is one that needs to be heard by more people and played on the radio more than it is (which is practically never!). I hold all the love…

FOR this sublime song.

FEATURE: Spotlight: Suki Waterhouse

FEATURE:

 

 

Spotlight

PHOTO CREDIT: Suki Waterhouse

Suki Waterhouse

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THERE are a couple of interviews…

that I want to bring in, as I am spotlighting the amazing Suki Waterhouse. Before that, and as her album comes out on Friday, let’s get to that first. The London-born artist, actor and model is releasing her debut for Sub Pop, I Can’t Let Go. It is a gorgeous album that is already trending and earning success, even before it has been physically released! This is what Rough Trade write about Waterhouse’s upcoming album:

Nowadays, voice memos, videos, and pictures chronicle our lives in real-time. We trace where we’ve been and reveal where we’re going. However, Suki Waterhouse catalogs the most intimate, formative, and significant moments of her life through songs. You might recognize her name or her work as singer, songwriter, actress but you’ll really get to know the multi-faceted artist through her music. Memories of unrequited love, fits of longing, instances of anxiety, and unfiltered snapshots interlock like puzzle pieces into a mosaic of well-worn country, ‘90s-style alternative, and unassuming pop. She writes the kind of tunes meant to be grafted onto dusty old vinyl from your favorite vintage record store, yet perfect for a sun-soaked festival stage. Her first album for Sub Pop, I Can’t Let Go, is a testament to her powers as a singer and songwriter.

In Suki’s words: “The album is called I Can’t Let Go because for years it felt like I was wearing heavy moments on my sleeve and it just didn’t make sense to do so anymore. There’s so much that I’ve never spoken about. Writing music has always been where it felt safe to do so. Every song for the record was a necessity. In many ways, I’ve been observing my life as an outsider, even when I’ve been on the inside. It’s like I was a visitor watching things happen.”

Growing up in London, Suki gravitated towards music’s magnetic pull. She listened to the likes of Alanis Morissette and Fiona Apple, and Oasis held a special place in her heart. She initially teased out this facet of her creativity with a series of singles, generating nearly 20 million total streams independently. Nylon hailed her debut track, “Brutally,” as “what a Lana Del Rey deep cut mixed with Joni Mitchell’s ‘Both Sides, Now’ would sound like.” In addition to raves from Garage, Vice and Lemonade Magazine, DUJOR put it best: “Suki Waterhouse’s music has swagger.” Suki is constantly consuming artists of all stripes, and, in the lead-up to making I Can’t Let Go, she was particularly drawn to the work of Sharon Van Etten, Valerie June, Garbage, Frazey Ford, Lou Doillon, and Lucinda Williams. After falling in love with Hiss Golden Messenger’s Terms of Surrender, she reached out to its producer Brad Cook (Bon Iver, War On Drugs, Snail Mail, Waxahatchee) to help define the sound of I Can’t Let Go. On I Can’t Let Go, Suki not only catalogs her life up to this point, but she also fulfills a lifelong ambition.

“When I’ve been stuck or feel out of touch with a sense of inner meaning and outer purpose, I’ve found both through searching my memories and finding those events buried in the shadowy areas of the psyche where they were ignored,” she says. “So many times of change in my life have required return visits—especially at the transitions through to the next stages. The album is an exploration of those moments when there is nothing left to lose. What is left and can’t be thrown away is the self”.

Make sure that you go and order this remarkable L.P. It is going to be one of the most impressive and lauded debuts of this year. I am going to source a couple of recent interviews from the remarkable Suki Waterhouse. With a successful acting career, I think that Waterhouse brings her skills, talent and experience into her music. Not to say that her songs are cinematic and dramatic. I feel her songs are more nuanced and stronger because she has disciplines other artists do not. I am looking forward to reading reviews for I Can’t Let Go this week. An artist I would really love to interview one day, The Guardian spoke with Waterhouse recently. It is interesting reading how I Can’t Let Go came together:

This is not a golden era for women writing love songs about men. With the exception of Lana Del Rey, the last decade of female-fronted pop has been defined by revenge anthems and breakup bangers, with “dump him” a common refrain. But Suki Waterhouse isn’t sold.

“I find the whole ‘dump him’ thing very toxic,” she whispers into her oat milk latte in a quiet nook of Notting Hill’s Electric cinema in west London. “I get it, but it’s important not to underestimate how incredible it is to be with somebody. And also how yummy and wonderful masculinity can be when it’s the good kind, when it’s warm and protecting … ” She pauses, smiling knowingly. “Anyway, let’s not go on that tangent!”

It is hard not to feel that this latest addition to her pop-cultural portfolio is a little … low stakes? “I’m really aware that it’s like: ‘Oh, you’ve done modelling, you’ve done acting, and now you’re gonna give me this album.’ I’m really wary of people just being like: ‘Fuck off!’” she admits. “I totally get it.”

Rather than manifesting a sudden burst of confidence, I Can’t Let Go came together like a photo album: snapshots of different times, places and people. The breathy acoustic track Slip was written during a trip to Montreal, where she went to work with a chef-cum-musician on the recommendation of someone she met on a night out; the reverb-heavy ballad My Mind was written during the pandemic in her west London flat, where building work meant the windows were blacked out for months; Melrose Meltdown was inspired not by the trip she took with a friend to Bhutan (“We were drinking too much and feeling a bit shit”), but by a text she read on the plane home. “She was showing me some messages and I was moved by her alcoholic ex-boyfriend, who’s really quite a good poet in a way.”

The album has a rose-tinted energy, with restrained backdrops that marry 60s girl-group sentiments with dreamy modern pop and lyrics that would be at home on early 2010s Tumblr – there’s plenty of “crying on your milk-white sheets” and getting “faded into oblivion”. It’s very two drinks into an evening, when emotions are generous and arise as if out of nowhere.

“I definitely approached it thinking quite cinematically,” she says, citing Thelma & Louise and Fruits of My Labor by the country singer Lucinda Williams as inspirations for her goal of making something that “sounds good in the middle of the desert”. Fittingly for the subject matter, the space they were meant to record in fell through and they ended up in a wedding hall, with Cook and members of Bon Iver bringing Waterhouse’s demos to life in a bridesmaids’ room crowded with makeup lights and “Live, Laugh, Love” cushions”.

Just before wrapping up, I want to bring in The Line of Best Fit’s feature. They are tipping Suki Waterhouse for big success; a name that everyone needs to know about. A huge talent who is a sensational artist, they tell us more about how Waterhouse came to prominence:

After being plucked from obscurity as a teenager from a London clothes shop, at a whiplash-inducing speed, Waterhouse became synonymous with the last decade of British fashion – the epoch of the ‘it’ girl – where she, alongside the likes of Cara Delavigne and Alexa Chung, crafted narratives of cool. She became a poster girl for the likes of Burberry and Tommy Hilfiger, gracing global covers of Vogue and just about every glossy surface in between. The camera has proven to be her greatest ally: her film debut in 2012 felt like a natural pivot, having since appeared in the likes of Love Rosie (2014) and Assassination Nation (2018), with an upcoming role in the Amazon Studios adaptation of Taylor Jenkins Reid’s bestselling novel, Daisy Jones and The Six.

But this is not a bolt from the blue, not the product of careful strategy calculated at a boardroom table. Her love affair with music predates anything else. I Can’t Let Go came from a youth spent caught between airport terminals, rare moments of suspension where she could breathe, for a moment, amidst the chaos.

IN THIS PHOTO: Parri Thomas for The Line of Best Fit 

Waterhouse is 30-year-old now, with as many notebooks for as the years she has lived, their pages heavy with the details of experience. She has been penning lyrics in departure lounges since the age of 17, when the first, tentative foundations of I Can’t Let Go were laid. “My favourite thing is to be in an airport with a gross orange juice, staring at everybody in this weird, in-between space, dreaming of what it’s going to be like when I get there and thinking of everything I’ve left behind,” she tells me after the shoot has wrapped, pulling on a hoodie and swapping her boots for trainers, deconstructing the image as quickly as she created it. “I had a bad habit of just blowing my life up right before I had to get on a plane, quickly leaving people behind.”

I Can’t Let Go began as one of the few aspects of her life that was truly her own. Waterhouse has often been forced to shrink into the shadow of the man she loves; her own accomplishments were treated as merely incidental among the surgical dissections of her personal life in the press, particularly surrounding her high-profile relationship with Bradley Cooper, and her current partner, Robert Pattinson. It’s a reality which had been echoed in the Gossip Girl reboot, when a character said: “When are you going to get it? As far as the press is concerned, he’s R-Patz and you’re Suki nobody.”

IN THIS PHOTO: Parri Thomas for The Line of Best Fit 

So true to life are Waterhouse’s lyrics that each of the ten songs of I Can’t Let Go are perfect crystallisations of the moments they’re drawn from, like bubbles of air from a different era preserved in ice. She says, “Everything was moving so fast throughout my twenties that the songs I wrote had to be about the something – or the somebody – that imprinted that time. When I listen to it, I know exactly where I was, how I fell in love, and how I tried to fill a lot of those voids. I can connect all of that through my songs: how I destructed, or came together, at different points. They serve as memory cornerstones for times that would maybe otherwise be quite blurry.”

It would be easy to assume that Waterhouse’s lyrics are the product of rose-tinted fantasy and poetic embellishment in the vein of Lana Del Rey, but she insists, “The details are always way crazier than I would say.” One of her first songs, unattached to a project and released only to build her confidence as an artist, was “Valentine”. Crafted in the image of her idol Aimee Mann with its ethereal, feather-light acoustics, almost every aspect of the lyrics, as well as its artwork, carried reverberations of reality. “’Valentine’ was made from a Valentine’s Day poem that I’d been sent, and was sending back,” she explains. “The artwork was the card that it was sent on to the hotel. I was taking it one song at a time, so it was incredibly detailed. The lyrics have fantasy vibes, but it was actually what was happening.” On the track, she sings: “If only you could be here sometimes / Then I could control my symptoms / You could drive from Malibu out to LAX / Take me out for dinner, put me straight back on the jet.”

IN THIS PHOTO: Parri Thomas for The Line of Best Fit 

Every musical and artistic choice of I Can’t Let Go serves an emotion. In the music she loves, she says, “I always want to feel heartbroken for someone I’ve never met.” Waterhouse finds this quality mirrored in scorched, summer doldrums of Lucinda Williams’ “Fruit of My Labour”, and Mazzy Star’s otherworldly “Fade Into You”. But she also finds it in the poetry of Ariana Reines; Duncan Hannah’s tales of the near-mythic summer of love in 20th Century Boys, and Natasha Stagg’s novel Surveys, about a relationship straining under the glare of fame and social media. “I’ve written so many songs that I love but don’t make it to their final formation, after chipping away, chipping away, chipping away,” she tells me. “But the ones that really excite you stick around like an old friend, and you keep giving energy to them.”

Though people may expect Waterhouse’s grip on the past to loosen through making the record, the true realisation she has had is better than that: there is no shame in old wounds. “I think it can be kind of alienating, in some ways, when you appear as though you’ve moved on from something when you’re still working through it. Even if a long time has passed and your perceptions have widened, there’s still not a completely closed door. There was a frustration and restlessness with myself for not being able to truly let go of things that had shaped me. It was all about healing myself and moving out of a place that I’d been stuck in for a long time,” she tells me. “I’m excited for the part where it feels like I won’t own it anymore”.

I will leave things there. I am a big fan of Suki Waterhouse, and I can see from her social media how excited she is about I Can’t Let Go coming out on Friday – and how excited her fans are in turn! Released a few days before my birthday, I am going to check the album out and get myself an early gift! Suki Waterhouse is a wonderful artist. She is so compelling to hear and read in interviews. I will try and catch her live if she plays London soon. Where does she go from here? I think she is based most of the time in Los Angeles, so getting back to the U.K. might not be that easy. We will get more albums from Waterhouse; her acting career will continue to grow, and I am sure there will be other irons in the fire. One can tell that music is a true love. Rather than her being a model and actor ‘giving music a go’, Suki Waterhouse seems to have come to one of her biggest passions late. I actually think that she has the maturity of hindsight now to be able to release an album that is mature and richer than what she might have released in her twenties. Even though her earliest music came out back in 2016/2017, I feel what she is releasing now is her strongest work yet. I cannot wait to see where she heads next. The amazing, inspiring, intoxicating and gigantically talented Suki Waterhouse is…

A jewel in our musical crown.

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Follow Suki Waterhouse