Category Archives: Music

June 14 Spotify Playlist

Que tal people of the internet? I’m pretty swell myself, helped enormously by all that NICE WEATHER we’ve been having. So much NICE WEATHER it almost makes you forget how completely MISERABLE the rest of the year can be. So let’s keep using CAPS FOR NO REASON and enjoy the blazingly sunny June Spotify Playlist I’ve thrown together for your earholes. Caution, apply suncream first, it’s a sunny one.

So much of that sunniness comes from Scotland’s ‘Prides’, not to be confused with Scotland’s Pride – which will probably be ABUNDANT once the Commonwealth Games get going. There’s also a great collab track with Frank Ocean, Mick Jones, Paul Simonon, and Diplo. And buried in there is a new Deadmau5 track, possibly sounding like a better version of Daft Punk than Daft Punk currently sound like. Quick, start WRITING IN CAPS AND NO-ONE WILL NOTICE I SAID THAT.

Honeyblood – Killer Bangs

Scotland, please don’t secede. We want to have the super-rad Honeyblood as one of our great new British bands. They are a two-piece hailing from Glasgow, with just the odd couple of singles here and there to date, but their newish track ‘Killer Bangs’ has sucked me in. The track features reverby / lo-fi vocals like early Surfer Blood, and a hooky guitar line that makes me think of Wolf Alice’s ‘Nosedive’. Stina Tweeddale (vocals, guitar), and Shona McVicar (vocals, drums) are the duo responsible for this funtime party of noise. The pair are currently on tour with the brilliant Courtney Barnett and are playing at the Dot to Dot festivals this summer, so be sure to check them out!

Zombie Basketball in North Korea (Or why music is so important to running fast)

zombieWell yes, this is primarily a music blog. But we’re allowed to cross genres from time to time. Donald Glover flipped from playing a goofy high-school dropout in Community to being, well, a bit of a goofy rapper . Dennis Rodman went from being a basketball player to fronting some kind of basketball-diplomacy weirdness in North Korea. The point is, change is good. And usually goofy.

As well as writing content on here, and writing for the wonderful Bearded Magazine and Music In Oxford, I’m one of those strange creatures who likes to fill their time by running. Once just a pastime of neanderthals escaping from bigger and scarier things, running is now something many of us actively choose to do. We could be sat on the couch, watching people on The Walking Dead run away from zombies, or playing computer games, running towards zombies. But that’s not enough for me. It’s a tortuously addictive habit to have, particularly when you start getting involved in organised races as you just want to run faster.

Music has always been a key part of the experience. It prevents me from hearing my own out-of-breath panting, and a track with a decent BPM (beats per minute) is like a giant fork poking you in the backside to go faster. But what has intrigued me as this hobby has grown into a full-blown addiction is the limited effect that perceived fitness actually has on your performance, and how much of an impact peripheral elements like a well-curated running playlist can make.

I ran my first half marathon in October 2011. My primary aim was to finish, and beyond that, to run under 2 hours would be a bonus. I ran 1:47:54, and was immensely proud. One year later (after having run a marathon during the intervening year) I ran two more half marathons on two consecutive weekends. I wouldn’t have said my fitness was overly better than the previous year. The only difference was that I knew what running 13.1 miles felt like, and knew how to deal with that. I was no longer running to finish, I was running for a quick time. I ran 15 minutes faster than the previous year, clocking 1 hour 32 minutes at both the Oxford and Birmingham half marathons.

The following year I had one goal – to run under 1 hour 30 minutes for a half marathon. It’s a number that means nothing to people who don’t run. But to people who run long distance, it’s such a huge milestone. Again, I don’t think I was any fitter than the previous year, but I had a few more of those peripheral tricks up my sleeve, to trick my body and mind into achieving this goal. October 2013. Oxford Half Marathon. Peeing down with rain. Twelve seconds. I finished twelve seconds under the 1 hour 30 mark in a torrential downpour. 1:29:48. It’s probably my proudest achievement to date.

This is what 1:29:48 looks like. 50% zombie.

This is what 1:29:48 looks like. 50% zombie.

Well, how could I run 1:47 in 2011, and under 1:30 in 2013 with a similar level of fitness? This is a bit of a brash statement to make, but I think actual fitness contributes to 50% of your achieved time. Part of that 50% is knowing how to pace a run, and what your absolute limitations are. 10% comes from getting your food and drink intake before the race right. 10% comes from getting your food and drink right during the race. 20% can come from a perfect music playlist. And 10% from complete bloody-mindedness and grit. That October 2013 half marathon race had pace runners running certain times. I blitzed ahead of the 1 hour 30 minutes pace runner early on. I had a couple of bad miles at mile 7 and 8, and the pace runner came past me. I felt I had nothing left at that point, but the combination of food (an energy gel), music, and that 10% of “you’re not running away from me you 1 hour 30 minute sign-holding bastard” meant I managed to piggy-back the pace runner and cross the line just 12 seconds ahead of my goal.

To prove I’m not crazy, this scientist claims music helps runners perform 15% better with music. And this I found after coming up with my hilarious 20% theory.

I have a 10k race in a month’s time, and I’m starting to build a playlist. I’m actually getting into the science of stacking together a playlist based on BPM, trying to start off at a steady and metronomic 170 BPM and building towards a 190 BPM finale. Now I’ve made up this fantastical percentage of 20% that a playlist contributes to overall performance, it seems all the more important. There’s some free software floating about that will analyse your music library and tell you the BPM of your tracks. One track that’s been a part of my running playlists consistently over the years has been Gnarls Barkley’s ‘Smiley Faces’. The speed and pacing of it is just perfect – there’s no slowdown for a bridge, it’s relentless without being overpowering. And it’s just a damn good song. Which is what this whole site is all about, as opposed to zombies playing basketball in North Korea.

Below are a few more 170-190 BPM tracks for people to terrorise themselves with, if they so choose:

Cosmo Sheldrake – Solar / The Moss

Cosmo Sheldrake is some kind of cross between a futuristic wizard and a character you’d expect to see playing in a smoky old pub in The Lord of the Rings.

His debut single ‘The Moss’ for Transgressive has been floating around for a month or so now, topping the Hype Machine not so long ago, and it’s easy to see why. He sings of jabberwockies and grangle-wangles in his own intimitable future-folk style, with squelches of electronics tying the whole thing together.

Now we’ve been given the b-side to ‘The Moss’ single, and it’s equally as endearing and interesting. ‘Solar’ uses a verse from a William Blake poem called ‘I Rose Up At The Dawn Of Day’, and also features recordings of the sun, taped using a technique called ‘Stellar Seismology’. What’s most interesting for me here is the descennt into an instrumental electro jam for a good solid minute, showing that while lyrically Cosmo is able to paint some interesting pictures, he’s pretty capable of doing the same with his music. It makes the prospect of a Cosmo Sheldrake LP a very exciting thing.

Tokyo Police Club – Forcefield

forcefieldJust before turning the ripe old age of 25, I discovered a concept known as a mid-mid life crisis. Y’know, one of those made-up millennial generation fads, this one based on the idea that you don’t have to be 40 with a mortgage and kids to experience a mid-life crisis. I turned 25 and lo-and-behold, self-diagnosed myself as having a mid-mid life crisis. This generally involved being more of a shambles than usual, committing some minor criminal offenses, wanting to leave my job and start a record label, and making a spectacular mess of any potential relationship. With hindsight, and a year to look back at it, of course it wasn’t a crisis. I was still trying to adjust to the fact that I wasn’t a student anymore, as much as I might act like one.

Tokyo Police Club’s brand new record – Forcefield – got fired over to me in the early, bleak days of a British January, and it has brought all those memories flooding back. I guess it helps that the vocalist was also born in 1987 (and has the same name as me), so is also going through the whole ‘I’m not twenty anymore but definitely not thirty either’ feeling.

Lyrically it’s a record full of anxieties, ideological escapism, and dealing with life’s little adventures. Of course, being Tokyo Police Club, it’s all wrapped up in perfect indie pop-rock noise. So often, on a first or second listen to a record, you’ll think it’s either a ‘lyrics-first’ album [Los Campesinos!, I’m looking at you], or a ‘music first’ album. Forcefield somehow manages to be both of those things at once, which is a rare quality.

Looking at the band’s back catalogue, they’ve never strayed over 4 minutes for a single track. This feels like a reflection of their ability to distill all of their ideas into easily digestible little nuggets, filled with more hooks than you can shake a stick at. So seeing that the opening track of Forcefield is over eight minutes long makes you afraid that they got really into The Mars Volta during that four year gap since Champ. But instead, we’re presented with an epic triptych that nimbly and cleverly journeys through the stages of a relationship. At the beginning, it’s just hope and excitement of getting together with someone, speaking in the future tense: “I want you wearing my t-shirt,” all with the puppy-like over-zealousness and energy reflected in the tempo. The middle section wakes up in a fuzzy, half-asleep state, as vocalist and bassist David Monk realizes the mistakes that he made. This then sends us tumbling into recriminations as he apologises for his behaviour and speaks of the relationship in the past tense, but in TPC’s typically hilarious and astute manner: “If I was I lighthouse, I would look all over the place / If I was an asshole, thank you for keeping a smile on your face.”

On a track like ‘Miserable’ we’re greeted with a positively sunny sounding opening as Monk wants to “move to the Bahamas with ya.” But as with ‘Argentina’, the track descends into introspection as he confronts the reasons behind this sentiment: “Act nice but my body’s falling apart / dress rich but my body is falling apart / keep going but my body is falling apart, I wanna travel to the future and get away.”

Sonically, the record is imaginative enough to give it staying power, with the odd curveball thrown in to make sure you’re still paying attention. ‘Toy Guns’ has a whirring bass line in the verses that drops frequently like some pesky six-year old kept on unplugging the bass amp. Either that, or the guitarist got the final call on the mix. ‘Tunnel Vision’ rattles thunderously with a bass-driven intro, and rolling drums in the final, emphatic chorus.

I would never refer to myself as being a writer, because firstly, no matter how David Duchovny makes it look in Californication, just saying this to someone will not make them sleep with you, and secondly: David Monk manages to put into words these bizarre thoughts that float around all of our heads so acutely, whereas I am the aforementioned shambles. Tack that onto the fact that this band know how to write a catchy beast of a song and they’re on to something special.

Todd Terje – Delorean Dynamite

Well I was all set to write about a new SBTRKT track called ‘Highs and Lows’ that I heard tonight while cycling through a river to get home. However, it appears not to exist on the INTERNET yet, which is weird. So instead, here’s something else I heard while wading through said river.

It’s called ‘Delorean Dynamite’ and by the one and only Norwegian not currently competing in Sochi at the Winter Olympics, Todd Terje. Dude looks like a disco prince. I don’t think I want to say that much about it really. It starts off a little coy and Tron-like, before opening up and finding some ridiculous funk about 3 minutes in. That’s when I start to lose my mind. And fall into a river/zebra crossing.

Foals play secret homecoming Oxford show – melt faces and break hearts

Welcome to the year of the horse.

Regular readers of my foolish dim-wittery will have been subjected to seeing me prattling on about the possibility of a secret Foals show in Oxford taking place this week. But while there was that hope, there was always the possibilty that this was all just a glorious figment of my imagination.

We’ve all watched Foals grow from awkward-angular Oxford trendsetters all those years ago with their debut album Antidotes to becoming a huge global name with their third LP, Holy Fire. With this massive status comes issues for those of us that wait endlessly to see them play again in Oxford. The biggest venue in Oxford barely holds 800 and Foals have been busy playing multiple shows at The Royal Albert Hall and (very soon) at Alexandra Palace. In my head I was dreaming of some kind of huge homecoming event in Headington’s South Park in the summer, akin to what Radiohead did ten years ago or so.

And so it was that I found myself in a rampantly hot and sweaty Oxford Academy 2 room last night that barely holds 400 people, seeing a triumphant homecoming show, and realising this is what we all really wanted. Something intimate and connected, not something vast and expansive.

But let’s go back to the beginning. They finally announced the show on Friday, one day before the show itself, with tickets going on sale on the Saturday morning. 50% online, 50% from the box office on the Cowley Road at 10am. This was a genius way to make sure that the show was as much for Oxford folk as possible. Online seemed like too much of a gamble for me, so I was one of the hardy and hungover few who got to the box office at 7.45am. It was rough, and it wasn’t pretty, but it was something I had to do.

Bonus points if you can see my bald spot

Bonus points if you can see my bald spot

The queuing experience was actually a lot more fun than it had any right to be. It wasn’t raining! It was really well organised with all the senior box office staff coming in stupidly early on a Saturday morning. The security guard folk hadn’t actually been to sleep since working the previous night but were in remarkably good spirits, and brought round free tea and coffee to us idiots. Everyone involved had a real sense of how important this gig was, with the opportunity to welcome home our idols being a very rare and special thing.

Commenting to friends in the queue we called this our Harry Potter or iPhone 5 moment; that time where you want something so bad that you are prepared to queue up endlessly for it. Of course, there was to be no people driving past yelling spoilers like ‘Snape Kills Dumbledore!’, instead we half expected people to drive past yelling out the planned setlist as a spoiler. Perhaps not quite the same impact. ‘They’re playing Inhaler!? Noooooooo.’

We got our tickets but then had to wait for about 11 hours for the damn thing to happen. I ran off to Birmingham to watch the opening weekend of the Six Nations with friends and drink like I was a student again. So after England’s last-second defeat I was tired, emotional and a little bit drunk. I hot footed it back to Oxford just in time for the show.

And then I realise I’ve written 500+ words on queuing. I’m so British sometimes in hurts.

In all the chaos and excitement of the announcement of the show, I didn’t even realise that Foals had decided to play the upstairs Academy 2 room. Of course they could have sold out the downstairs room, they could have sold it out 10 times over. But climbing the stairs and realising we were going to be in this sweaty little box of a room where smaller bands usually play was just incredibly exciting.

We all sandwiched ourselves in and waited for this thing to happen. With only enough space for 1/16th of their usual lighting rig, it blared viciously away as they took to the stage and opened up with ‘Prelude’. The whole show was completely anarchic from start to finish. Seeing the band sharing this tiny stage together felt really special, as we’ve grown so used to seeing them dominate such huge stages.

You have to be a special kind of nutcase to get up at 7am on a Saturday to queue for tickets, and so equally the crowd was full of nutcases. But lets replace nutcase with ‘really committed fan’ and you can understand why the atmosphere was so incredible. We all moved as one. Everyone knew every word. Everyone jumped around like crazy. Everyone lost their shit for the breakdown in ‘After Glow’. Everyone lost all their shit for ‘Providence’. Everyone sat down for Spanish Sahara.

(Vines from @Transgressive)

And then we had Yannis taking frequent trips into the crowd. Jumping over the front and surfing while still playing his guitar. Running round to play from on top of the bar. During brief breathers we’d get a sense of how much they were enjoying playing a show in Oxford again. Yannis would say something like ‘We write all our songs here!’, or before going into the resident show-closer ‘Two Steps, Twice’, ‘Oxford, represent!’. But beyond us (and myself) just fawning over Yannis, it was so excellent to see all of the band playing up-close. Jack and Walter turning out their swampy, murky grooves on bass and drums was a particular highlight. It was appropriate too since the room turned into a swamp about halfway through track two. Who knew humans could produce so much sweat. Even my sweat was sweating.

Yannis on his way to Kebab Kid

Yannis on his way to Kebab Kid

The show felt so monumentally special and I felt so privileged to be a part of it. But now I’m spending a Sunday trying to figure out how to carry on with my life. I’m lucky enough to go to so many gigs because people are kind/stupid enough to ask me to write nonsense about it. But this was just a moment of pure unadulterated excellence, and something that only comes along once in an era.

So who’s next?

Cloud Nothings are back!

One of my absolute favourite bands from recent times – Cloud Nothings – have returned from the relative wilderness of selfishly ‘recording music’ and ‘making a new album’. What bastards. But my incadescent and entirely pretend anger is abated by the news that they have shared a new track with the world! I’d like to think it was the reason Soundcloud went down for a little while yesterday.

Well, they’re making all the right noises of a band that aren’t happy with churning out more of the same. They’ve shed a member, but are still makiing gloriously lo-fi rock and roll, with a pretty instantly-hooky chorus to reel us in here. ‘I’m Not A Part Of Me’ is the first taste of their forthcoming 3rd LP, ‘Here and Nowhere Else’, due at the end of March on Wichita in the UK. Safe to say, I am monstrously excited.

Foals to play super-secret show in Oxford on February 1st?

Twitter really is the best.

I’ve bought my tickets to go see Foals play in Birmingham, as sadly they haven’t played a local show in Oxford for a while. But no fuss, I’m still getting to see Foals live, so that’s great, right?

A new tour shirt image was posted to the @foals twitter account this afternoon showing all tour dates from December 2012 up until the end of their March 2014 dates, and the eagle eyed amongst us spotted an Oxford date listed on the 1st of February – despite there being NO EVIDENCE of this show anywhere on the whole damn internet. Then the post was swiftly deleted.

So what does this mean? Secret show? A little warm-up show to burn off those christmas calories in front of some Blessing Force crew chums? Or can us normal folk sneak in? Who knows.

Anyway, here’s the image below that I managed to snaffle, as the post didn’t stick around for too long!

foals

HPH Top 11 Albums of 2013

End of year list time. Granted, it’s now 2014, but I like to give the previous year time to Settle, to let the Arc of the year finish. I mean, for Yeezus’ sake, this year wasn’t anything like (The) 1975? Well, the idea of trying to shove album names into this intro died a death as soon as Lorde made my list.

After much thought and deliberation, I decided I couldn’t make a top 10 album list. I had narrowed it down to 11, and couldn’t kill another one off. There were plenty more albums I was tempted to include, but generally it was because of one or two standout tracks on the record. Instead, I wanted to reflect the complete nature and structure of an album.

Of course, taste is completely subjective, and several of these records ran parallel to events in my own year, helped but not necessarily indebted to their position in this ranking. For example, I listened to the Lorde album endlessly as I went to and from Istanbul in November, and the Disclosure album soundtracked my trip in the summer to Canada. But these two records in themselves are faultless and flawless things.

What I find really interesting with the list that I’ve ended up with is how many are debut albums. It’s why I’m so passionate about this music hunting thing, and why I adore the irreverence of predictions for the year ahead. I mean, who knew of Lorde 12 months ago?

So my list shows the Lorde album as number one. It’s a record that I’m still yet to get tired of. There’s such simplicity to the record, never going too far beyond vocals, percussion and synths or guitar. But every track has such intricate depth and beauty. Lyrically it’s smart and acerbic, no more so than on the album closer, ‘World Alone’ where our internet-fatigued generation is pulled into focus with lines like: “Maybe the internet raised us, or maybe people are jerks.” In a year with so much media content generated as a result of popstars and artists behaving like idiots, the opening and closing lyric of the album crystallises the irrelevance of it all. “Don’t you think it’s boring how people talk // Let ‘em talk.”

Top 11
Lorde – Lorde
Disclosure – Settle
The 1975 – The 1975
Paramore – Paramore
Arcane Roots – Blood & Chemistry
Foals – Holy Fire
Everything Everything – Arc
Danny Brown – Old
Local Natives – Hummingbird
Kanye West – Yeezus
Peace – In Love