Category Archives: Music

Gathering Festival 2013 – Speculation

Last year saw a new festival come to Oxford. An October date and an indoor roster of venues spread across one day; a stellar line-up including the likes of Bastille, Lewis Watson, Jake Bugg, Liars, Lucy Rose, and a whole lot more, including some great local acts. So that was Gathering Festival 2012.

Unfortunately I couldn’t make it last year, but I’m pretty keen for this year. At the moment, no acts have been announced, but an announcement is due to come in 2 days time. However, using my incredible investigative journalist skills (and spotting it on a certain band’s website), I know one act who will be playing at Gathering Festival this year – Local Natives.

That’s enough for me to know I’m going, even before anything else gets announced. But either way, there’ll be an update to come once we get a few more names. In the meantime, have a listen below to one of the many standout tracks from Local Natives sophomore LP from last year, Hummingbird.

Disclosure // Eliza Doolittle – ‘You & Me’ (Toro Y Moi remix) + Cheeserolling

Here’s a  typically Toro Y Moi  remix of the Disclosure // Eliza Doolittle track, ‘You & Me’. But the greatest thing about this is that I was reading a Buzzfeed article about cheeserolling (as you do) and stumbled across this gif, while listening to the track (hint, the dude in yellow is reeeeeally good at chasing cheese down a big hill) It’s a little insane and hypnotic. Have a go/watch below.

 

 

Dirty Projectors – The Socialites (AlunaGeorge remix)

The utterly tragic news that AlunaGeorge has moved their album release date back a couple of weeks to mid July was tempered with the release of a remix of a Dirty Projectors track, ‘The Socialites’. It works as something like the opposite of a good day to bury bad news. This remix makes us forget all about everything.

It’s quite a fun listen. First, it’s full of those unusual sounds that George Reid is becoming famed for, sprinkled over the original track. Then the original track drops out, save for some vocal scraps twisted to become something completely unrecognisable, and we’re left with pure, vivid bass music. It’s a bit of a surprise to hear it coming from George Francis, but it’s also quite refreshing. Enjoy.

Daft Punk – Random Access Memories

Random_Access_MemoriesDaft Punk’s fourth studio LP, Random Access Memories, seems to have evoked a level of fanaticism and nostalgia in a way that has come as a surprise. Their last release was the Tron Soundtrack, which was solid enough, and before that their third LP, Human After All, felt like a bit of a miss.

So what’s changed? There are a few factors that we could try to tie it to. Firstly, the damn secrecy of the pair naturally creates an air of mysticism and intrigue. Second, the list-as-long-as-your-arm of collaborators. And not just any collaborators, but people who are the best at what they do. Nile Rogers and those disco guitar riffs. Pharrell, as a producer, is still one of the best. Chilly Gonzalez has a way of arranging and connecting music that’s too clever for my brain to process. And Panda Bear of Animal Collective – the man responsible for My Girls will always deserve our attention.

Finally, coming back to that sense of nostalgia. Daft Punk’s first LP, Homework, has a special place in so many people’s hearts and minds. I’m currently reading Mike Skinner’s (of The Streets) book where he fawns over the record. It’s a brilliant record, mostly because of its underlying simplicity that is executed so well. On so many of the tracks, there’s one simple riff, one simple hook, and somehow they use it, twist it, and wrap an entire track around it.

But for me, my introduction to Daft Punk came from their second EP, Discovery. It’s a warmer and more accessible listen than Homework, but just as full of the clever hooks that latch onto your cerebral cortex, with more of a storytelling aspect to the record.

The sense of nostalgia has been key in the anticipation of the new record, as word came out that we should expect evolution, not revolution. The first cut we got was ‘Get Lucky’, a disco soaked beast that has at its core a Nile Rogers riff that you feel you could listen to on loop forever.

The most surprising thing about Random Access Memories as a whole is that ‘Get Lucky’ is the sunniest track. Another Pharrell/Nile Rogers track ‘Lose Yourself To Dance’ uses the same tricks as Get Lucky – with Daft Punk vocoded vocals in tow, but it feels a little tinged with sadness, despite its happy message. It repeats the Homework trick of having that one hook – the Nile Rogers riff – and wrapping all these other sounds around it to create something that is constantly morphing and changing into something else.

Random Access Memories starts with another Nile Rogers collab, ‘Give Life Back To Music’, before dropping into a real downbeat moment, ‘The Game of Love’. It’s one of the few tracks where there are no collaborators listed, but Daft Punk seem to channel the spirit of their collaborators into it. Again, it’s another melancholy moment, but there’s such a distinctive groove to it. The bass line drives the track throughout as it bubbles slyly beneath the vocals.

‘Giorgio by Morodor’ pulls a trick that Daft Punk rarely break out. Opening with a spoken word narrative by Giorgio Morodor on how he chose to become a musician, it slowly builds, layer upon layer, to a frenetic finale. ‘Instant Crush’ featuring Julian Casablancas has hints of The Strokes during the verses with a typically New-York circa 2006 guitar sound. But once the chorus hits, again, it’s that bass line that lifts it to Daft Punk’s stratospheric level of ridiculous excellence.

The journey up to track 8 – ‘Get Lucky’ – feels like a walk down a well-defined path. Everything is there as we expect it to be, gravel, choruses, signposts, bridges. After ‘Get Lucky’, we  stumble off the path and fall into a ravine. A really fun, ridiculous, unexplored ravine. ‘Motherhood’ is full of bizarre crackles and noises, twinned with occasional orchestral arrangements.

Ending on the monumentally euphoric ‘Contact’ featuring DJ Falcon, it can only be described as the soundtrack to Daft Punk taking off in their spaceship from planet Earth and returning to their home planet (France). After a record of generally mellow disco-grooves, it feels like a bit of a disingenuous move to leave on such a frisson of excitement. But what the hell, they are Daft Punk, why should they care?

So it’s not quite the summer-jam album that many will have hoped for after hearing ‘Get Lucky’. But this is no bad thing. They weren’t going to make One More Time one more time. Perhaps it’s a record to put on just as the sun is setting, while the rain continues to pound your most enthusiastic of BBQ efforts. It’s that kinda vibe. It’s evolution, not revolution.

Ms Mr – Hurricane (CHVRCHES Remix)

By the magic of the internet, this post will hit the internet at, say, 1pm tomorrow. It’s more fitting than if I post it right now, on a rainy Thursday evening. This track that I’m about to ramble on about is full of all kinds of 80s sunshine. Granted, tomorrow we won’t be sunny, this is Spartaaaa England. And it won’t be the 80s, this isn’t New Zealand (sorry New Zealand, but you know it’s true).

Anyway, here comes a Chvrches remix of a track by Ms Mr, whose debut album ‘Secondhand Rapture’ is out next Monday and is currently streaming on The Guardian site. 

But I adore this remix. The original track leads off the album, and is a little more dark and echoey. But Chvrches have gone and shot some kind of electro-sun-synth gun at it, turning it into something really quite brilliant. The chorus power-keys conjures an image of some 80s/Breakfast Club film resolution soundtrack for me. Who knows. And that long electro beat that flips about at the start of most of the 4/4’s. Tchhhhhh. Anyway, it’s nice to see Chvrches put this kind of spin on a record, as it widens the expanse for what their debut LP could sound like.

Happy Friday!

#Beautiful – Mariah Carey & Miguel

Well, I didn’t see this day coming. Mariah Carey, on my blog. Bit weird really. But it’s valid. I haven’t had my password stolen by a 35 year old housewife from Milwaukee (I’ve just decided that’s her target demographic. Very specific).

Anyway, the real reason that she’s here is that Miguel is here. Oh Miguel. His 2nd album from last year, Kaleidoscope Dreams, still gets an unyielding amount of plays from me. It’s been a little bit of a slow-burner in terms of success too, so it’s always nice to see an artist come through the other end and get the respect that they deserve.

Since then, Miguel has turned up to a do a few guest spots here and there. He’s on J. Cole’s track Power Trip which is pretty damn swell, and now this track with Mariah has emerged.

The first thing to dislike instantly is the hashtag before the track name. This is not a cool thing to do. As soon as Will.I.Am did this, it instantly became a terrible thing to do. I mean, it would be a horrible thing to do anyway, but he’s like the Catholic Church of the music business. He really can’t do anything right in most people’s eyes, and with good reason.

So I should probably talk about the track itself at some point. First up, we barely even hear Mariah until 1:30. Bonus. Incredible. Keeping her insane-o warbling vocals off that much of a track is surely something worth knighting Miguel for. I don’t care if he’s American, let’s make him an honourary Brit.

So I’m pretty happy that 0:00-1:30 is basically a new Miguel track – it’s a pretty straight-forward hook, with an ambling guitar fuzz winding its way low in the mix. And then Mariah comes in, and, for the most part, keeps that bombastic bonkers stuff on the sideline (apart from one minor slip), but, it’s actually quite a fun moment. Then Mariah and Miguel sing together, and the thing just works. It’s not going to change the world, it’s not going to save the planet from a meteor, but, it’s really, quite, ok. There you go Mariah, have that one for your scrapbook.

 

Moose Blood – Moving Home EP

bnDeja Entendu by Brand New is likely the defining record of my short 25 years on this planet. That or Infinity Land by Biffy Clyro. Or maybe Spoon’s Girls Can Tell, and of course Ted Leo and The Pharmacist’s Shake The Sheets. But before I wander off into naming my favourite 100 records of all time (something I absolutely want to do now), I want to return to Deja Entendu. Both musically and lyrically, it was unlike anything I had come into contact with before. Melodic hooks, fiercely personal lyrics, it was full of ups and downs. I formed such a connection with it, and it’s a record I come back to so often. It feels so complete, without a wasted moment.  Not for a second would I ever categorise myself as being anything remotely emo, but that was the brush that Deja Entendu was often broadly painted with. Either way, I just love that record.

The odd thing is, I never really branched out from that record and that band into listening to their peers and contemporaries. There’s no simple reason, and no logical explanation – but looking at the similar artists on Spotify for Brand New – Taking Back Sunday, Dashboard Confessional, Finch, Thrice – I couldn’t name any of their tracks. OK, Manchester Orchestra are the exception to that rule, and of course I’m a huge fanboy of every other record that Brand New have made, both before and after Deja Entendu.

mbSo I’m excited to have stumbled across Canterbury’s own Moose Blood, and their debut EP, Moving Back Home (Fist In The Air / Day By Day Records). It certainly channels that Brand New spirit, but there’s way more to them than just that.First up, they know that lyrics are just one part of the jigsaw, shown by an instrumental track called ‘My Own Boat’ that opens the EP. This, along with the fact they like to eschew traditional songs structures here and there by reaching a chorus and stripping out vocals again, like on ‘Carbis Bay’. And on ‘Drive’, we don’t even get a chorus as the track just cruises along for just over two minutes.

Thematically the EP covers interesting and varied ground: love (plenty), god (a Brand New favourite), coffee, Dashboard Confessional (one of those peers I haven’t given a chance), and cultural influences, such as High Fidelity and Bukowski (my favourite author by a country mile right now). They also play the trick that Brand New would often reserve for the odd chorus here and there – that of two vocals harmonising, with one tracking along a fair bit higher, but Moose Blood do this almost all the time.

And then besides all the deeper meaning that we could spend forever analysing, they just sound good. Nothing overly complex or unique, but guitars, bass and drums working together like they should. The final track ‘Bukowski’ is probably my favourite as the drums snap and bite during the verse to spike the guitars lying over the top.

It’s an arresting debut record that I’ve been playing over and over for a while now, and it makes me excited to hear more. If not only for the reason that a Google search will turn up more results for the band instead of images of moose carcasses.  Have a listen to Bukowski below, and you can buy the EP for £1.99 on their Bandcamp page.

Horses Playing Harps – March 2013 Playlist

The usual collection of claptrap nonsense that I’ve been enjoying listening to in the last month or so has been thrown together haphazardly in a Spotify playlist for your pleasure. I’m particularly proud of my segue from the timidness of Daughter trailing into the ferociousness of Bring Me The Horizon.

Also included is a little trail of music that leads into new releases I’m excited for the world, and myself to hear. I’ve already heard the Peace album and think it’ll be a sticky in the brain-er, if that’s such a thing. Plus an EP from Axes is forthcoming, and a new Cold War Kids long length! Woop!

Dude York – And Andrew Too

A new find for me, for you, and for your friends too. Dude York make scraggly, fuzzy rock n’ roll that just sounds so good. ‘And Andrew Too’ is a track that sounds like it’s been filtered through a thick woolen pair of socks, but instead of filtering the sound, in this weird universe I inhabit, it makes it sound thick and fluffy.

So what’s fuzzy about it? Nye on everything. Jerky vocals, wiry guitars, we barely even get percussion but for the shake of a well-timed tambourine and a drum beat low in the mix. But I love it. And the video for this track has been up since last summer, and only has 750 views. What is wrong with you internet???!!! ‘And Andrew Too’ comes from their ‘Escape From Dude York’ EP, and is well worth a listen. Have a listen to ‘And Andrew Too’ below.

Gunning For Tamar – Interview

rrGunning For Tamar are out on tour! Right now! (Dates below). Before heading out, I caught up with Joe and D’Arcy from the band on a grey old night in Oxford.

Dave: Twenty twelve was a good year for Gunning For Tamar, what was the best thing that happened?

Joe: Europe was cool, and the last tour that we did was some of the best shows that we’ve played, and 2000 Trees. It was the first tour that we did where I saw people singing the words of the songs. It’s just little things like that, to get that response. At one show we were opening and asked if the crowd were looking forward to seeing the other bands, but these six or seven guys in the front row screamed “No! We’ve come to see you!” And they were shouting for an encore. And of course we couldn’t because we were opening! But you can’t underestimate how it adds to the drive when other people believe in what you do.

D’Arcy: One show we played in Belgium, it was the most boisterous show we’ve ever done, and then to play at 2000 Trees on a stage that is bigger than my house….

Joe: Yeah, 2000 Trees was the first time stage people were there to help carry our stuff, and we just very politely said “Oh yeah, no, don’t worry about it.”

D’Arcy: And I felt really guilty as well, because a really pretty French girl started carrying my equipment and I just started thinking “Oh no, don’t do that! I’ll do that!”

Joe: So I guess making a bit of a dent was the highlight. I want us to be a massive band. Not like Red Hot Chili Peppers, who make an album, and people buy it because they like the songs, but nothing else. I want it to matter to people. The bands that I like, their fans, the bands mean so, so much to them.

I guess plans for 2013 are building that audience and connection. You’ve got a new EP on the way, Camera Lucida due out on Alcopop! Records on April 1st. Where did that name come from?

Joe: A book that Dan (guitarist/keys) was reading inspired a lot of the songs and lyrics. It’s partly based on the concept where you look at a picture, and you relate a memory to it, but that’s based on what you see in the picture, and not necessarily a real memory.

D’Arcy: In the book it goes so vivid that it says you remember smells, and actual senses, and you actually create this image in your head from the picture. It has a real focus on the relationship between the conscious and sub conscious.

Joe: There’s one song which came from when I was having these obscene night terrors for six months. They were uncontrollable and horrific, and it was certain things that were happening during the day that was creating these things within my subconscious. I’d sit up in bed and start saying things at night, and my girlfriend wrote down what I was saying to show me in the morning, and we ended up using the lyrics in song, just batshit crazy things I was saying.

D’Arcy: I should probably tell you that I break into your house when you sleep and whisper terrible things into your ears.

What’s the story behind the Camera Lucida album artwork? As a band you’ve got form after the Deaf Cow Motel EP and ‘Dark Sky Tourism’ single artwork for some unusual imagery.

Joe: It’s a fine line from keeping it interesting and abstract, and being pretentious. Even song titles or lyrics, it’s not done to be pretentious, it’s because we think it’s interesting. There’s nothing pretentious about our band at all, we’re not trying to be above people’s heads.

D’Arcy: We work with a lot of really artistic people as well. We give them the songs and say right, what do you get from this? We don’t tell them what to do at all.

Joe: The artwork for the new EP came from when I was drunk and at a party, and a girl showed me this picture.

D’Arcy: That story starts off so bad.

Joe: She showed me this picture of her from when she was younger that looked really odd and creepy, and I said yeah, that’s really unbelievable, and I said to her, that could be our next EP artwork. I asked her if we could use it and she’s been really kind and said yes. And it really ties in with the whole Camera Lucida thing, because it has got a really eerie feel to it, and you can create your own ideas of what’s going on.

After the incredible Lewes Herriot designed poster that came with the ‘Dark Sky Tourism’ single, are there any plans to do anything similar with the new EP?

Joe: I think we’re going to be really boring and release it on a CD.

D’Arcy: Perhaps we’re being a bit more grown up.

Joe: We had fun releasing the watch (for the Time Trophies EP), and we had fun releasing the poster, but you have to be careful that you don’t fall into releasing things in funny formats as a gimmick. I’m not saying it has, but I think it can take away from what you’re trying to push. If you make it so fucking crazy, people are going to think, this is zany, and think more about that side of it. We all think that these songs we’ve written are the best we’ve ever made, and we want that to be the gimmick.

Do you think that added value with releases is important for the indie music industry? As obviously, you’d love to get the band to a point where you could make a living out of it.

Joe: You release music on a watch, because you think it’s really cool. And that’s what Alcopop! Records and Big Scary Monsters are so good at doing, they are so interesting with what they do with their releases, but they have to be. They do have the freedom to do that, because they are indie labels.

D’Arcy: I don’t poo-poo it at all, I think we’ve just hit that point where we’ve worked really hard over our EP, and we want the attention to be on that.

What are your thoughts around a possible Gunning For Tamar album?

Joe: It’s nice to develop over an EP, or two, or three. There are very few lucky bands that come into being, and know what their sound is straight away. It has taken us time to develop into something that we want to push on with now.

It’s nice hearing you say that these songs you’ve written are the best you’ve done, and it shows the value in waiting.

Joe: Impatience is probably the biggest curse of bands. The primary concern has to be, “I have to love this song.” Whether you get a major label deal out of it is irrelevant. You have to be able to look back at it in X amount of years, and be able to say that I’ve loved every song I’ve written.

D’Arcy: You have to be proud of your own work. We write the music that we write because we love it, and if anyone else likes it, that’s a bonus on top. The new stuff, we’re so proud of it, as rubbish as that sounds, and as non-indie as that sounds.

Joe: There’s no overruling. There’s no dictator in our band. If we’re working on something, and someone says they’re not feeling it, we’ll put it to the side. It might not be the straightest route to being the biggest band in the world…

Is that the goal?

Joe: Of course! Every band… unless you’re well punk, which…. we’re not. You start a band because you want as many people to enjoy it. The moment you start worrying about not being picked up or whatever, you lose focus of why you’re doing it.

D’Arcy: You start a band to play that piece of work that you are so proud of to people. If they like it, that’s a bonus.

Joe: It’s kind of more fun when they don’t like it. It makes shows more fun if you play to crowds who don’t like you. But sometimes you win people over.

UK tour starting on 16th March – EP ‘Camera Lucida’ out on April 1st on Alcopop! Records.

Catch them live:

MARCH
16 – OXFORD Academy
18 – MANCHESTER The Castle
19 – LINCOLN SCY
20 – LEEDS Nation of Shopkeepers
21 – YORK Stereo
22 – NEWCASTLE Head of Steam
23 – LIVERPOOL The Shipping Forecast
25 – LEICESTER The Cookie Jar
26 – LONDON Power Lunches
27 – BIRMINGHAM The Flapper
28 – DERBY Ryans Bar
29 – BRISTOL The Exchange
30 – NOTTINGHAM JT Soar

APRIL
01 – SOUTHAMPTON Avondales
02 – BRIGHTON The Green Door Store
03 – CARDIFF Clwb Ifor Bach
04 – KINGSTON New Slang
05 – PORTSMOUTH Edge of The Wedge
11 – BATH Moles