Category Archives: Album reviews

Bombay Bicycle Club – A Different Kind of Fix

So after last year’s critically acclaimed Flaws, a delicate, acoustic driven sophomore LP, Bombay Bicycle Club have returned with their third album, entitled A Different Kind Of Fix, and how right they are. Within 15 seconds of opening track ‘How Can You Swallow So Much Sleep’s’ looping guitar riff commencing, it sounds like the sound of their first album. But there is something new lying beneath the obvious indie-guitar driven sound this time around; it’s something that shows a band willing to take chances, to play around with their sound, and ultimately, a band getting it very right.

With Animal Collective collaborator Ben Allen having an input in this record, the swooning, fractured electro sound associated with Animal Collective seeps into several of the tracks. As mentioned earlier, the opening track has a very reminiscent Bombay Bicycle Club riff, but then we get jittered, jumpy vocals in places, with smooth harmonies sandwiched in there as well. First single ‘Shuffle’ plays a similar trick, but with a fantastically wonky piano track running as the main ingredient around which everything else is built. Lucy Rose lends her vocals alongside Jack Steadman’s on Shuffle, and it’s a trick that is repeated on other tracks. It works well due to her having the same timid sounding voice as Steadman, while also having this charming sweetness quality to it. Shuffle is pinned down as track six, and really feels like the lynchpin of the album. Everything that precedes it feels like it is brought together in that one track and everything that follows it takes that sound in other directions.

Another stand-out track is ‘Lights Out, Words Gone’ as Steadman and Rose’s vocals intertwine sweetly. ‘Beggars’ opens up coyly in a Flaws kind of way, before the pace picks up, with the bass and percussion being as creative and imaginative as we’ve come to expect from this band, providing a whole extra level of depth to their sound. ‘What You Want’ is energetic and beautiful, with perky runaway-train sounding guitar riffs slicing through the peak of the chorus, as Steadman sings: “You can rearrange me now,” just about summing up the ethos of the album.

It’s a triumphant success for a band that are merrily riding their bicycles through whichever genres they please, as they continue to grow, develop and firmly cement themselves as one of the best bands this fair country has to offer.

Copy Haho – Copy Haho

Well it certainly feels like a long time in coming, but Copy Haho has finally treated the universe to their debut, self titled album. After their 2009 EP, Bred For Skills and Magic, and a few singles in between, the record is being released on the band’s own label, Slow Learner.

Opening track ‘Factory Floor’ offers the perfect introduction to the self-deprecating, melodic, indie-rock flavoured sound that lies ahead. Lead singer Joe Hearty lays down a marker early on in chiming: “But I remain the same dumb artist, chasing sales.” Immediately the growth in their sound from that earlier EP is recognisable, with an extra depth both melodically and lyrically.

Track 3 ‘Wrong Direction’ showcases some meatier guitar riffs, with a fantastic current of energy running throughout. However, those dancing, arching guitar riffs that Copy Haho is so well known for are still in abundance. ‘Waiting For Something To Happen’ flings itself around excitedly as Hearty turns a neat phrase in smirking: “I’ve been so busy, waiting for something to happen.”

On ‘A Winter On The Run’ and ‘The Be Good’ we get a taste of the slower Copy Haho sound. It comes off feeling a little flat, as the band sound at their best when whizzing past at 140mph. ‘Demons and Gods’ opens up with one of the best riffs on the album, frantic and jagged, ably assisted by the crashing of drums. This is the kind of track that either makes you want to learn to play the guitar, or to smash one up in rock and roll style after pretending to play that delicious riff.

Rather than end on a slow song about death (When It Gets Dark), the album closes on the band at their peak, on the mesmerising ‘Accent Changed’. As Joe Hearty mentioned in his interview with CDX last month, the track was initially recorded as the opening to the record, with a fuzzy, echoey intro which still remains intact. Once through the cloud of haze, the drums crash, the guitars weave their magic, the bass fuzzes along underneath, keeping everything cogent. The last minute and a half is one of the few moments on the album where they allow themselves to get away from a particularly set structure as things get a little more free-form, and it’s blindingly brilliant.

It’s an album that is a lot more hit than miss, with some big memorable moments, sharp lyrics, and a lot of energy coursing throughout.

Bon Iver – Bon Iver

It feels like forever since For Emma, Forever Ago came flying out of the Wisconsin wilderness back in 2007 (and released in the U.K. in 2008), but Justin Vernon, the man behind Bon Iver, is back with that tricky sophomore album. And it most definitely is a tricky second album, after the first album placed 7th on the review-aggregator site Metacritic in 2008, and with a couple of collaborations with the world’s favourite nutcase Kanye West on his last album, My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy. With no-one expecting Vernon to re-hibernate and re-contract mononucleosis (as he did before the creation of For Emma, Forever Ago), Vernon has decided to create something bigger, bolder and more badass, yet still equally as beautiful.

Recorded in a remodelled veterinarian clinic in Wisconsin, Vernon enlisted the help of his brother in building the studio, and equally has turned to others to help make this record; namely a couple of saxophonists and a pedal-steel guitarist. That bigger and ambitious sound is slowly showcased during the opening track, ‘Perth’. It opens up with those reminiscent flickering chords and Vernon’s haunting falsetto vocals, before the last minute and a half breaks down with big crashing drums, and the saxophone merrily entwining itself between those fantastically hissy guitar chords.

‘Minnesota, WI’ opens up equally as timidly and shy, before building into something wondrous and powerful. A banjo twinkles, with a pretty funky R&B bass-line riding along underneath. Lyrically the record is a little less open than For Emma, and Vernon has said that this is a ‘sounds-first’ record, but he is still capable of turning out some beautifully poetic moments. ‘Towers’ sounds a little bluesier, as Vernon sings: “For the love comes the burning young, from the liver sweating through your tongue.”

As the record seeps into your brain, every track, every vocal and every sound is perfectly measured out. It’s nigh on impossible to find a flaw. First single ‘Calgary’ plays a neat little trick in threatening to get big and anthemic before ending in Ouroboros like fashion, turning that big sound in on itself.

As difficult as it is to pick out the highlight of the album, final track ‘Beth/Rest’ completely blows me away. It teeters on the edge of cheesiness, with big 80’s power ballad keys and a gently weeping guitar. Vernon flicks in between that high falsetto vocal and a more standard vocal sound, but you completely believe and feel the emotion on that song. As Vernon recently said in an interview with Pitchfork: “I cried while working on that song. I know what that means, where that comes from, and why you cry for music.” It’s so powerful, so moving, and the perfect end to a perfect album. Nobody really knew where this album would go, but it’s so wonderfully progressive, and I think is what people were really hoping for.

Psychedelic Horseshit – Laced

Psychedelic Horseshit are self proclaimed shit gazers. Before you start trying to think of your own jokes, and while I do my best do avoid any obvious scatological humour, allow me to set the record straight. Shitgaze is Psychedelic Horseshit’s own personal take on shoegaze. They create a vivid, entrancing form of lo-fi noise pop, and Lacedis their latest album.

At first, this album was a little tricky to penetrate, and to make much sense of. As with much of the current crop of noise-pop acts, the aim seems to be to hide the core of a track deep below as many confusing layers as possible, confusing the fuck out of squares who just don’t get it, man. But this album becomes morbidly engrossing the more you listen to it.

Laced opens up with ‘Puff,’ a metaphorical ticket office to make sure people haven’t wondered into listening to this album by mistake. It’s a precursor or what’s to come, with a minute of a half of a galloping beat, with twitchy bleeps incandescently weaving in and out at their own pleasure.

That galloping beat returns on the next track, ‘Time of Day’, where we get our first taste of lead singer Matt Whitehurst’s lyrics. With track names like Puff and Laced, it’s almost a given that he’d be sounding a little ‘cloudy’ himself. The lyrics are tough to figure out, both in terms of what he is saying, but also, what is he saying? Essentially, it doesn’t matter, it’s just another part of the fuzz of noise, and part of the bizarre world Psychedelic Horseshit inhabit. Matt can’t really sing either, but the joy in surrounding yourself in noise is that it can help you hide. A normal sense of structure is briefly tangible, with a casual sounding acoustic guitar just peeking out from underneath a looping set of slightly off-kilter, fluttering keys.

The title track ‘Laced’ follows the same pattern, although on this occasion we are treated to a fuzzed out ending as all the sounds melt into one. ‘Tropical Vision’ is where Matt Hamilton’s voice gets a little exposed. After 30 seconds of bird noises (or screams, it’s tough to tell), there’s just a vinyl-sounding crackle playing alongside his verses, as if to remind people of their lo-fi aesthetic. The chorus sounds wonderfully hazy and tropical however, like fuzzy steel drums re-imagined and shitgaze-ified.

As the album floats on, Whitehurst amusingly spends 7 and a half minutes explaining why he hates the beach, just after swooning about a tropical paradise in the previous track. The time is well spent though, as everything descends into an orgy of noise and sound, as you struggle to tell where different body parts of sounds come from.

The album ends with what feels like something of a concession; a much more accessible, harmonious, clearly structured slice of noise pop. ‘Making Out’ shows that Whitehurst and friends are capable of toning down the crazy, with a vocal that syncs with the other elements of the track. It’s fun, but it feels a little like cheating. After the insanity of what went before it, it’s like they are dropping you back off on your home planet, back to reality. However, as a sample from track 8, ‘Revolution Waters’ smirks, “What’s so wonderful about reality?”