Tag Archive: My Latest Novel


Ok, this is LAST year’s list posted properly in preparation for my 2010 list which will ultimately replace the page currently dedicated to this stream of consciousness babble.

I’ve looked back on some of the cliché-ridden writing and cringed a little, but I think this serves as a record of my first half-hearted attempt at blogging – I hope I’ve come on leaps and bounds since then!

So anyway…

Compilation of the year…

Various Artists – Dark Was the Night

All multi-artist compilations have a few dogs amongst their tracklisting and this is no exception. It’s particularly disappointing that heavy hitters like Arcade Fire and Cat Power aren’t pulling their weight with the latter offering a dreary version of ‘Amazing Grace’. That said, within these 31 tracks, there’s a near perfect 20 track album trying to get out. Particular highlights come from Yeasayer, Bon Iver and the magnificent sprawling epic ‘You Are the Blood’ by Sufjan Stevens. It’s all for charity too. So why haven’t you bought your copy yet?
Spotify: You Are the Blood by Sufjan Stevens

25. Flaming Lips – Embryonic

Wayne Coyne originally pitched this as a set of semi-improvised psychedelic freak-out jams rather than a collection of songs – and he’s not wrong. It’s a really challenging listen, a million miles away from ‘Race for the Prize’ or ‘Yoshimi…’. Persisting with it will reap rewards, however, particularly in the second half when they let their guard down, allowing such things as conventional song structures and discernible melodies into the mix. Also features Karen O on random animal noises…
Spotify – Silver Trembling Hands

24. Wye Oak – The Knot

December 1 was the first time I heard this and I was immediately taken with it. It put me in mind of 2007’s great lost album The Besnard Lakes Are the Dark Horse – slow burning riffs, delicate vocals… I must confess I know next to nothing about them but I want to hear more. I’m quite sure this would have been much higher in the list if I’d had more chances to listen to it.
Spotify: Take It In

23. Malcolm Middleton – Waxing Gibbous

Scotland’s favourite miserable ginger is back with his fifth album in six years and, if you believe the reports being bandied about, his last for some time. For all the bleakness of his lyrics, there’s always been a playful sense of humour about his material, and much of what’s here feels increasingly upbeat. If there’s a complaint to be made, it’s simply that with most of songs touching five minutes, some do outstay their welcome. But that’s that a minor gripe, and here’s hoping he’s back to make us think about topping ourselves in an amusing way soon.
Spotify – Kiss at the Station

22. The Twilight Sad – Forget the Night Ahead

While it doesn’t quite live up to the promise of their stunning debut, running out of steam a little towards the end, this is still a really good sophomore album. They’ve reigned in the tinnitus-inducing noise a little but the effects pedals still get quite a work-out. A brooding, piano-led ‘The Room’, however, is the stand-out track here.
Spotify – The Room

21. Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeroes – Up From Below

Take one struggling LA troubadour, add a pseudonym and assorted random musicians. Mix well. Pour in some sun-soaked Californian folk, topped up with the Beach Boys, Arthur Lee and Big Star. Add a dash of eastern mysticism and Mariachi brass. Serve up with a whiff of religious cult on the side. Enjoy.
Spotify – Desert Song

20. The Low Anthem – Oh My God, Charlie Darwin

This Rhode Island three-piece seem to have come from absolutely nowhere to land a nomination for the Uncut Award. They’ve been compared to Fleet Foxes and Bon Iver, and while fans of both will appreciate what’s going on here, The Low Anthem are less about the swirling funereal folk of those artists and more about driving country blues with more than a hint of backwoods menace.
Spotify – The Horizon is a Beltway

19. Brand New – Daisy

Not quite the promised complete change of direction, but this does at least move one of America’s best rock bands further and further away from their alleged (truthfully non-existent) emo roots. One or two weak moments but enough crunchy riffs, shouting and reflective moments to keep it well above average.
Spotify: You Stole

18. Dananananaykroyd – Hey Everyone

If by looking at the name you’re thinking slightly silly throwaway pop shenanigans you’d only have half the story. They’re a bunch of slightly unhinged Glaswegians, who while dressing in bright t-shirts and daft hats also possess riffs that Black Flag and Minor Threat would have been proud of. Play loud.
Spotify: Some Dresses

17. Noah and the Whale – The First Days of Spring

Need a bit more heartbreak in your life? Thought the last Elbow album was a bit ‘meh’? Well this is the album for you. The whole album documents singer Charlie Fink’s break-up with folky songstress Laura Marling and while it’s a bit gruelling in places, it’s never anything less than compelling, and thankfully a million miles away from ‘Five Years Time’. Incidentally Ms Marling is now going out with one of Mumford and Sons, so expect a tear-soaked emotional epic from them in 2010.
Spotify – Blue Skies

16. The Decemberists – The Hazards of Love

I found ‘The Crane Wife’ a bit too much like hard work in 2006 so when I read tales of a 17 track concept album, brimful of sea shanties and sonic exploration, I sighed and chucked this near the bottom of my ‘to buy’ list. Thankfully it found it’s way to me in the end and while all the above is true, ‘they’ forgot to mention the superb songs, thunderous riffing and driving percussion. Also Colin Meloy’s least annoying set of vocals in years.
Spotify: The Wanting Comes in Waves/Repaid

This year I haven’t even bothered with a few things that a few years back would have been high on my ‘to buy’ list. Undoubtedly a reflection on how my music tastes have changed, and dare I say, improved…

I didn’t even bother with…

Editors – Loved the first album. Follow-up put me to sleep. Couldn’t be arsed with this.

Idlewild – A band in terminal decline since  2002. Unsure why they’re still bothering.

La Roux – Catchy singles. Stupid hair.

Dot Allison – Two good albums at the start of the decade but the last one was a bit of a yawnfest. Reviews for this weren’t promising and she’s hanging round with that dirty junkie Doherty.

The Big Pink – Overhyped and overexposed. They’ve already sold their biggest song for a TV ad. Nein danke.

*****WARNING, WARNING ANTI-X FACTOR RANT IMMINENT*****

Any kind of music that you watch on telly on a Saturday night and vote for – Anyone who knows me will undoubtedly be aware that I wouldn’t piss on Simon Cowell if he was on fire – in fact I’ll probably have been the one to strike the match in the first place. But please, can we all just stop watching his formulaic, lowest common denominator, exploitative garbage and maybe show an interest in some musicians/singers with ACTUAL talent and charisma??? All we’re doing is LINING THE CUNT’S POCKETS!!!! Even by watching the show we’re justifying the existance of this wank. Are there really 19 million windaelickers in the UK??? Aaaaaargh!!!!

Anyway, where was I… 

15. Mumford and Sons – Sigh No More

I was a bit sceptical about this bunch when I started to read their press, but here they are. This album has more banjos than a wedding on Benbecula and is a folky joy from start to finish.
Spotify: Little Lion Man

14. The Horrors – Primary Colours

Yes, that’s right, THE HORRORS. The same talentless Shoreditch chancers who released an utterly dreadful debut album a few years back. This is a brilliant about turn though, and with Geoff Barrow (Portishead) behind the mixing desk, they’ve completely reinvented themselves and produced a glacial, claustrophobic drone of an album influenced by My Bloody Valentine, Suicide and Can.
Spotify – New Ice Age

13. Silversun Pickups – Swoon

Yes, yes, so they sound a bit like the Smashing Pumpkins, so what. This is an accomplished, mature set of songs that builds on the blueprint of 2006’s ‘Carnavas’. It’s not a massive leap in sound – fragile vocals and grungy riffs are still very much the forefront of their sound, but it’s not like that was a bad thing in the first place.
Spotify – There’s No Secrets This Year

12. The Phantom Band – Checkmate Savage

One of the best bands to come out of Scotland in the last few years, and given how packed a field that it is, that’s a brave statement. This is a schizophrenic blend of folky melodies, twitchy electronica and tuneful indie rock that demands repeated listening.
Spotify – Folk Song Oblivion OR Left Hand Wave – I just couldn’t decide!

11. My Latest Novel – Deaths and Entrances

It seems like their last ages since their last album ‘Wolves’ and while the lengthy gap has done little to help record sales, it does seem to have helped develop their sound. Accusations of a Caledonian Arcade Fire were always a little unfair, but here they sound a little like Death Cab for Cutie before they went mainstream, but always with a Scottish accent to the fore.
Spotify – The Greatest Shakedown

And to quickly return to the themes covered earlier (assuming you’re still reading and that I haven’t offended everyone)… I’ve been disappointed in the following:

I’ve been disappointed in…

Green Day – “I’ve got this great idea, guys! Let’s make a critically acclaimed and hugely successful political album, flog it like a dead horse then wait almost five years before releasing… exactly the same album!!! Brilliant!!!”

Muse – Ok, we get it. YOU LIKE QUEEN! Now can you please extract your heads from up your own arseholes and get back to the killer riffs please!

Maps – I had high hopes for James Chapman’s second album after really enjoying We Can Create. But it was exceptionally dull. NEXT!!!!

Animal Collective – Don’t get me wrong I do like Merriweather Post Pavilion – but album of the year (according to Uncut, The Skinny and others)? Don’t think so. Don’t believe the hype.

Speech Debelle – Yet another undeserving Mercury winner. If this is the best of UK hip hop in 2009 then I’m quite happy to stick to my indie strummers, thanks.

I also wish I had more time to listen to…

Christ, where to start? Having acquired so many albums this year I haven’t been able to do many of them justice. Honourable mentions to Pelican, Monsters of Folk, Rain Machine, Wild Beasts, Yo La Tengo, the Mountain Goats, Richard Hawley, Russian Circles and lots more who all sound great but time was against me in giving them any more than a cursory listen.

Ah, now where was I…

10. Modest Mouse – No-one’s First and You’re Next

There aren’t many bands out their who could cobble together eight cast-offs from album sessions a few years ago and turn it into one of the year’s best records but Modest Mouse are clearly one of them. This is the perfect introduction to a great band combining the trippy, unhinged Mouse-sound of old with their recently discovered pop nous, with Isaac Brock’s hissed vocals bringing the whole thing together into a surprisingly coherent record.
Spotify – The Whale Song

9. The Joy Formidable – A Balloon Called Moaning

At eight tracks and barely half an hour long this is hardly an album at all, but what’s here is a joyous blend of pop hooks and thrashy, distorted guitars.
Spotify: The Last Drop

8. Manic Street Preachers – Journal for Plague Lovers

‘Send Away the Tigers’ was better than anything they’d done in years but still didn’t quite hit the heights of their pre-1996 work. This most certainly does. I won’t dwell on the fact that they’ve dug out Richey’s old lyrics or that this is a perceived sequel to the Holy Bible (a label that I don’t really think fits). Their political sensibilities never really left them despite peddling radio-friendly indie for a decade but now they’ve finally translated them into an seriously aggressive album, both lyrically and musically. While it’s not a sequel to the Holy Bible, it’s certainly the best thing they’ve done since then.
Spotify – She Bathed Herself in a Bath of Bleach.

7. And You Will Know Us By the Trail of the Dead – The Century of Self

They lost their way badly on 2007’s ‘So Divided’, so it’s great to see them back to their best with some serious thrash-rock going on here. There’s a strong whiff of prog rock about some of the arrangements but that wouldn’t stop the likes of ‘Isis Unveiled’ provoking some serious moshing.
Spotify – Isis Unveiled

6. Sonic Youth – The Eternal

Ok, so Sonic Youth don’t exactly do bad albums, but where exactly did this come from?? The Eternal is by far their most satisfying album since ’92 combining ear splitting feedback and melody to great effect.
Spotify: Anti-Orgasm

So who’s just missed out?

- HEALTH – Your Mum would have called this ‘just noise’. And she’d be right. But what glorious, glorious noise.
- Flight of the Conchords - Straight-faced Kiwi folktronica. Definitely no humour here.
- Bill Callahan – Uplifting melancholia. Lovely.
- St Vincent – Not quite as good as Annie Clark’s debut but a fine record nonetheless.
- Clues – Whackjob Canadian indie makes a successful return.
- Thee Oh Sees – Rattly, lo-fi LA Punk. Great stuff.
- Biffy Clyro – No wait, come back, they’re better than you think!
- PJ Harvey & John Parish – PJ back to her best. Nasty, tuneful and vulnerable all at the same time.
- The Gothenburg Address – Great record, but inclusion would have been shameless nepotism!
 
So here’s the final countdown:

5. Mew – No More Stories Are Told Today, I’m Sorry They Washed Away, No More Stories the… aw fuck it!!!!

Ridiculously pretentious album titles aside, the four year gap seems to have done everybody’s favourite Danish angel-voiced indie proggers (No? Just mine?) the world of good as they’re back with probably their best album yet. ‘Repeaterbeater’ is the poppiest thing they’ve done, but the rest of the album builds nicely on the epic nature of previous work. If there was any justice they would be huge.
Spotify – Introducing Palace Players

4. The xx – xx

I’m always a little suspicious of hoodie-clad London teenagers making music, never less than when they’re in NME’s Radar section. Such prejudices were swept aside the first time I heard this magnificently understated record. They look like they should be peddling sub-Libertines waffle but instead have crafted a beautiful album full of lilting boy/girl vocals, sparse instrumentation and genuine sense of foreboding about the whole thing.
Spotify – Crystalised

3. Bat for Lashes – Two Suns

Natasha Khan is without question the best female singer/songwriter in Britain. Sorry Flossy fans, but Ms Welch pales in comparison to the second Bat for Lashes album which matches its outstanding predecessor right up to the last song for sheer twinkling quality.
Spotify – Siren Song

2. Fever Ray – Fever Ray

If you’ve heard of The Knife you’ll know who Karin Dreijer Andersson is and what her voice sounds like – and you’ll obviously love it. If you haven’t, then it’s only a matter of time. This is 10 tracks of her sweetly sinister Scandinavian tones cooing over dark, minimalist electronica that makes the Knife look like Fatboy Slim. A wonderful album.
Spotify – When I Grow Up
 
1. Grizzly Bear – Veckatimest

This is a simply beautiful album – melodic, haunting and layered in swathes of guitar noise, They’ve only really come to my attention in the last year but I fell in love with this album after a single spin and can’t see that I’ll ever get bored with it.
Spotify – While You Wait for the Others

There can’t be too many cities in the UK that would lend themselves as well to a multi-venue one day festival as Glasgow, and for the second time in the space of a few months, some of the city’s finest music venues have been commandeered by such an event.

The Stag and Dagger has much more of an international feel than Hinterland which was almost entirely populated by local bands with a few larger acts thrown in.

Typically though, some of the stronger acts featured hail from these shores and after perusing the bill I felt kicking the festival off with an early evening set in Sleazy’s by Edinburgh’s North Atlantic Oscillation was the way to go. Their album was an entertaining, if occasionally awkward listen, and live they’re largely the same – quality tunes such as Cell Count but, leaving aside a few sound difficulties, the layers of electronics don’t always work.

Next it was a brisk walk to the ABC where The Antlers were just kicking off. Last year’s Hospice was a slow-burning revelation and live they’re terrific. Pete Silberman can clearly carry a tune and emotive songs like Sylvia and Two work splendidly here. These days few bands are able to provoke me into buying their t-shirt, but luckily for my bank balance they’d nothing in Medium. Possibly the band of the day.

After a few songs from Wild Beasts (not bad) it was downstairs to catch The Unwinding Hours who have produced one of the albums of the year so far. Its sound pretty much goes where I thought a fourth Aereogramme (RIP) record would have gone (increasingly melodic, downbeat and less heavy) but I always thought Craig B and Iain Cook’s previous outfit were at their best when they rocked out and that’s certainly the case here – Knut and Peaceful Liquid Shell stand out from their calmer moments. The band are in good fettle though and remarking on the day’s blazing hot sunshine Craig cracks “I’m ginger – I’m not going out in that!”

The Unwinding Hours, ABC2

I realise this picture of the Unwinding Hours is quite shit but it's better than everything I took on the night. I have a shit camera, ok??

The packed bill and nature of these events is such that you can’t get to see everyone you want and for me, sets by quality US acts Titus Andronicus and A Place to Bury Strangers have to be bypassed and some of Glasgow’s blogging/tweeting alumni are unable to tempt me to see Sleigh Bells. I opt instead for My Latest Novel in Stereo – a brisk walk away. I needn’t have hurried too much – it’s a sparse crowd and sound problems, which visibly frustrate and embarass the band, delay their start for 20 minutes which is a real shame. What I hear is superb though. I’ve seen them live loads of times, but not in a few years and the songs from last year’s excellent Deaths and Entrances are raucous and driving compared to quieter older material. When it becomes clear that they’re going to play beyond their allotted finish time I’m torn between seeing the set out and jumping in a taxi to the tiny Captain’s Rest to make sure I was there for the start of Blood Red Shoes.

I opted for the latter, ducking out during Learning Lego, but again I didn’t need to rush - Blood Red Shoes were almost half an hour late. I could have just about squeezed into the sweaty cesspit if I was a bit tardy, even though it was pretty rammed. Once they’re on I can’t even see Laura-Mary and my view of Steven is reduced to a whirr of drumsticks through a pile of bodies.

I can at least hear them crashing through highlights from both their snarling albums. Light It Up provokes a big singalong and I Wish I Was Someone Better is a tour de force in ferocious drumming. They’re great, but I duck out a little early – I’m tired, dripping in sweat and have a long drive home ahead of me. All in all, a good day, and I’m already thinking how a similar affair could work in Edinburgh.

I quick word for Bridezilla who I saw briefly in Sleazy’s pre-North Atlantic Oscillation before I sign off. Your songs are definitely good enough to transcend that awful name, but girls, drop the saxophone. Sax has no place in quality rock music, it just makes me think of that sweaty bloke on stage in The Lost Boys. Glad I caught you, though.

The Winter of Mixed Drinks

The path to fame and fortune is littered with the corpses of promising Scottish indie bands.

My Latest Novel left it too long between two – admittedly excellent – albums and the momentum they built up evaporated quicker than you could say ‘Caledonian Arcade Fire’.

Aberfeldy shed members at an alarming rate and the follow-up to 2004′s folk-pop classic Young Forever was something of a dud.

De Rosa called it a day before last year’s Prevention even had a time to register on the public’s radar, never mind nestle at the top of our ‘best of’ lists.

And Broken Records appear to have faltered after releasing a so-so debut album.

So what now for Frightened Rabbit, Selkirk’s finest and creators of my hands down favourite album of 2008, The Midnight Organ Fight?

With contemporaries the Phantom Band, Errors and the Twilight Sad probably a bit too left field to truly cross over, Scott Hutchison and co now seem to be Scotland’s great white hope.

Pre-release chatter for third album, The Winter of Mixed Drinks, was of a bigger sound, songs for stadiums and comparisons to Sn*w P*tr*l and C*ldpl*y.

So should we be worried?

Should we fuck. The Winter of Mixed Drinks is an absolute treasure.

Sure, these songs are better produced, but Frightened Rabbit have maintained a genuine sense of intimacy about the whole thing. The Midnight Organ Fight wasn’t without its singalong choruses either, it’s just that here, they really soar.

And Gary Lightbody and Chris Martin shouldn’t lose any sleep just yet. The comparisons are ill-founded, but I can imagine that playing venues the size of the Queen’s Hall (I had the pleasure of attending last summer’s landmark gig) will become the norm for Frightened Rabbit, as opposed to pokey, glorified pubs.

So, what’s on offer here? Why should you go out and buy The Winter of Mixed Drinks?

Each of its 10 ‘proper’ songs are blssed with beautiful melodies. Scott’s vocals are heartfelt and swoonsome. If, after 2 mins 45 seconds of the Loneliness and the Scream, you are not covered in goosebumps, you really ought to check your pulse.

Frightened Rabbit, BA Club, Fort William, Nov 27, 2009

Frightened Rabbit storm Fort William

Swim Until You Can’t See Land was a slowburning teaser but I can now acknowledge that it’s chorus is truly wonderful. And it’s not the only tune here with an aqueous theme. After Floating in the Forth saw Scott deciding against a watery grave at the end of Midnight Organ Fight, The Wrestle and FootShooter also evoke strong thoughts of large bodies of water.

Epic centrepiece Skip the Youth builds ominously before crashing to earth and then crackling into life once more with multi-layered melodies. By the time it climaxes, it has become a pounding, rhythmic beast of a song – and possible the best thing they’ve ever done.

Musically, there’s not a massive progression, but something has certainly been added to give them that bigger sound I’ve mentioned. Perhaps it is just better production, maybe it’s down to them now being a five-piece. But the guitars now chime louder, arrangements are tighter and the percussion veers from the delicate to the thunderous.

Anyone who’s been following my tweets over the last nine months will know that I’ve been droning on about Frightened Rabbit for ages. But now there’s no excuse not to be listening.

 

 

 

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