About Me

MA student, interested in politics, gender, media and that sort of thing. Likes rubbish music. Watches a lot of telly.

Tuesday 30 April 2013

Scouse by Scouse West...

After a week of Labour Society socials gone awry (and by awry I mean finding ourselves in Asda after Heebies shut buying more vodka 'just in case'), unplanned trips to Manchester to see The Babes resulting in TOO many Zombies and a fucking Domino's Hot Dog Crust (YES!) and trying in vain to find myself a part time job in this beautiful, irritating city, I've got like, fifteen minutes of my life to post something on this blog.

So folks, Sound City this weekend. I saw someone refer to it as 'Scouse by Scouse West' on Facebook this morning which I thought was EXCELLENT and seems to be spreading like wildfire, much to Leah's distaste, but whatever, that's coming up this weekend and I have to say, I haven't been this excited in a long time. There's something about metropolitan festivals that makes them stand out from rainy, fieldy, tenty, welly-y summers; whether it's the roof over your head, the mixture of venues, or the visible buzz of the city as music-lovers race from venue to venue, it's kind of amazing that a city can come almost to a pause for a weekend and devote it's central bars, basements and bistros to live music. And, given its previous status of Capital of Culture and its rich history of musical talent, where better to experience this first hand than Liverpool? This will be my first Sound City and thanks to my lovely friend Leah I get to attend as a SPECIAL PERSON. No kidding, we're so VIP that we got invited to some Korean pop event that's going on with free Korean food and spirits or something. We're not going cause it can only end badly, and by badly I mean it can only end in karaoke.

Anyway, these are some of the artists I'm most looking forward to seeing at Sound City 2013:

FUTURE OF THE LEFT

A noisy, angry and sarcastic bunch from South Wales formed from the remnants of Mclusky, Future of the Left took the festival circuit by storm in 2012, touring their latest album 'The Plot Against Common Sense' with standout performances at Leeds and Reading plus an impromptu gig at Beacons Festival. Mixing scathing lyrics commenting on everything from the Olympics to crap movie sequels with piercing yet contagious riffs, the Cardiff 4-piece are set to blow up Sound City's pop up 'Screenadelica' with material from their latest album along with fan favourites such as 'Arming Eritrea' and 'Manchasm', interspersed with frontman Andrew Falkous' sarcastic crowd-baiting. For those who like it loud and fans of Les Savy Fav, Fucked Up and of course Mclusky, Future of the Left are not to be missed.  Catch Future of the Left at 1:45am on the Friday at Screenadelica.

MOUNT KIMBIE

Mount Kimbie's ambient 'post-dubstep' has been the talk of the town since before the release of their 2010 debut, mixing beautiful ambient sounds with beats that'll catch the ear of even those reluctant to stray away from guitar bands this weekend. The London duo will be showcasing their finest, and maybe even some material from their forthcoming second album 'Cold Spring Fault Less Youth', at The Garage at 1:30am on the Saturday. This promises to be a unique and electrifying show with a complex set up but a blissed out atmosphere, which will round off Saturday night's proceedings in not just style, but substance.

COFFEE AND CAKES FOR FUNERALS

Far from the twee-meets-nu-grave vibe the name suggests, Coffee and Cakes for Funerals are actually a Liverpool based R&B act blending smooth, jazzy sounds with velvety vocals reminiscent of Justin Timberlake taking some downtime. Performing at The Garage at 7pm on Thursday, Coffee and Cakes for Funerals look promising to be the perfect soundtrack for a few relaxing drinks in preparation for the night ahead, setting festival-goers up with a perfect mix of pop, soul and R&B in their home town of Liverpool.

TEMPLES

Taking influences from 60s psychedelia and jangly guitar-pop, Temples seem at home in the Beatles' home city of Liverpool. Drums, flutes and haunting vocals combine on single 'Prisms' to create a kaleidoscopic sound, harking back to the days of peace and love, and their live show seems set to provide a dreamy, hazy backdrop to some serious after-hours cocktail action. Playing the beautiful Leaf Cafe on the famous Bold Street on Friday night at 1am, Temples will be the perfect way to wind down with a bevvy after a night of dancing, drinking and debauchery.



Spotify playlist can be found here, thanks for reading!

xxx

Sunday 23 December 2012

Albums of the Year 2012

Every December, I have this really long and boring internal argument about the best albums released the previous year. This time, I actually have a blog so now I have somewhere to write it all down where nobody's going to read it anyway. Here goes.

10. Metz - Metz
  9. Grizzly Bear - Shields
  8. Jessie Ware - Devotion
  7. Fiona Apple - The Idler Wheel...
  6. Tame Impala - Lonerism


5. Friends - Manifest!
I kind of want to put this at number one simply for the fact that it's got a FUCKING MAGIC EYE FOR THE COVER ART. You know, the things that look 3D when you cross your eyes. It's actually amazing. But I digress. Manifest! is summer in twelve tracks, singer Samantha Urbani's laid-back vocal style oozes the kind of casual cool we all wish we could achieve, while a vast array of musical styles blend into a perfect pop album. 'Sorry' features Carribean-inspired steel drum sounds, while lead single 'I'm His Girl' is bass-heavy and minimal while Urbani puts the world to rights lyrically. A solid set of 12 sassy, summery, pop gems. Let's be Friends.


4. Lana Del Rey - Born To Die (Paradise Edition)
Lana Del Rey is essentially just another pop Barbie. She's not a person, but a product marketed at teenage girls who wish they could be anybody but themselves. However, beneath the exterior lies Lizzy Grant, whose music evokes nostalgia for some kind of lost Americana where the men are tough and the streets tougher. Although much of the album's lyrical narrative is far fetched, Del Rey's soft voice and quivering vocal evokes an honesty and naivety that, as a teenage girl, it's hard not to connect with. 'This Is What Makes Us Girls' and 'Video Games' are perhaps the best examples of this, where Del Rey seems small and vulnerable even behind the hard plastic exterior. The Paradise Edition has to top the original, however, if simply for the stunning cover of 'Blue Velvet', synonymous with the David Lynch film of the same name. In fact, the album itself is reminiscent of Lynch's favourite small-town-with-a-seedy-underbelly theme, where high school girls are hookers and stay out drinking with the police til 7am in their underwear. And somehow, Del Rey makes it all sound so beautiful.




3. Future of the Left - the plot against common sense
Future of the Left's latest offering continues in much the same vein as their previous work - littered with pop-culture references and cutting satire whilst straddling the fence between melody and noise. But this time, the fuzz and noise is as tight and deliberate as the musicianship itself, the comedy in the lyrics is more obvious ('Girls Aloud were the new Nirvana, then any old shit was the new Nirvana' springs to mind) but instead of creating a parody of themselves, Future of the Left have merely made themselves more accessible to anyone who will listen. Their last-minute set at Beacons Festival secured this, as the band who was due to play pulled out and were replaced by the Cardiff 4-piece who began their set with a half-full tent of soggy, maudlin-drunk punters. Twenty minutes and at least three Mclusky covers later, the tent was full, pints were flying and for the first time that rainy weekend, it felt that the crowd really cared about something. Although not quite the next 'Do Dallas', 'the plot against common sense' really deserves recognition for one of the most innovative yet accessible of 2012.


2. Rufus Wainwright - Out of the Game
For me, one of the most important aspects of an album is coherence. A collection of twelve or thirteen fantastic but vastly different songs does not necessarily make a great album (Belle & Sebastian's 'Dear Catastrophe Waitress' springs instantly to mind) but here, Rufus Wainwright proves that coherence does not necessarily mean a common sound or theme - each song sounds like an entirely different genre, from Broadway-esque, dramatic and sweeping 'Montauk' to the indie-disco gem 'Perfect Man'. But in the case of 'Out of the Game', the stark contrasts have almost the opposite effect, tying together each track with a sense of the unexpected and absurd, and proving that Wainwright is most definitely still in the game.



1. Japandroids - Celebration Rock
An aptly named collection of soaring highs, this is the album so many had waited for for so long - nothing 'experimental' or pretentious here, just pure and unadulterated joy. Two people with a real lust for life coming together to create music for music's sake. Somewhere between Blink-182 and The Hold Steady lies a band who can write about youth with an exuberant passion without sounding like the soundtrack from a 90's gross-out comedy, or nostalgic middle-aged parents reliving 'the good old days'. Tracks 'Younger Us' and 'The Nights of Wine & Roses' showcase Japandroids' ability to take sentimental and nostalgic feeling and bring it straight into the present tense, the here and now. This immediacy translates perfectly live, with Celebration Rock anthems and their singalong choruses becoming instant crowd-pleasers. With a near-perfect mix of emotional depth and rock & roll energy, 'Celebration Rock' is truly an album to be celebrated.

You can argue with me on Twitter at @harriethey and listen to all the albums HERE. Enjoy!