HPH September Spotify Playlist

There is a ridiculous amount of brilliant new releases floating about right now. And best of all, festival season is over! Bands are back on tour  in cities, instead of £200 muddly fields! Huzzah!

Here’s September’s Spotify playlist. It’s a doozy. Leading it off is the excellent Temples, soon to be playing at the sure-to-be-wonderful Gathering Festival, coming up in October in Oxford. And whaddaya know, so are Waxahatchee!

So on the topic of new releases (which we weren’t, really), The 1975, The Weeknd, King Krule and letlive. all have fairly new releases. Some of my own personal highlights from those records are here.

Released today is The Naked and Famous’ second LP, ‘In Rolling Waves’. I’ve given it a couple of listens already and I’m already a little amarous over it. It’s interesting that it’s been released on the same day as the 3rd MGMT record. Both bands had debut albums with a couple of big singles on. MGMT followed up by going completely off-piste, and doing their best to avoid accidently including anything remotely resembling a hook. Thankfully, The Naked and Famous have created something really compelling with this record. It doesn’t have the standout singles like before, but it feels like more of a complete record for it. It’s filled with subtle naunce, and some beefy breakdowns.

So basically I’m a fan. Have a listen to this and more in the playlist.

SZA – Time Travel Untrue

Everything’s a little blurry this morning. SZA is helping. We can clump it together with the ‘post- R’n’B’ movement if we have to, but it’s just plain good. I know nothing of the backstory right now and am a little too hungover to try, so let’s just talk about the sounds.

The first I heard of SZA was ‘Time Travel Undone’. The production is smart and savvy, but it’s the voice that gives the record its soul. It lends itself to the ethereal nature of the project so well. Marry that with a trippy ‘You’re not in Kansas anymore’ visual that filters through the video, and it’s all incredibly captivating.

Part of the post-R’n’B aesthetic is to show off your indie credentials, so I did chuckle when I heard an Empire of The Sun loop being used in another track, but it’s not a token measure. It works, again with some smooth beats and SZA’s voice reverberating over the top.

There’s also some Frank Ocean comparisons that could be made. ‘Crack Dreams’ draws a lazy likeness to Frank’s ‘Crack Rock’ in name only, but beyond that there’s a storytelling element to the lyrics that’s interesting. And again, it just sounds so good. Excited to hear more.

 

Scouting For Girls – “Greatest Hits”

Scouting For Girls, overpowering a dummy. A fitting metaphor.

Scouting For Girls, overpowering a dummy. A fitting metaphor.

Superman has kryptonite. The Human Torch has asbestos. Iron Man has too many women, probably. Of course, those who know me know I suffer from none of these afflictions. Mine is Scouting For Girls.

Imagine The Human Torch clambering around a particularly dusty old attic, filled with asbestos. Now, imagine a Scouting For Girls equivalent. You’ve guessed it. The five words I never wanted to hear. Scouting For Girls Greatest Hits. This is no misnomer. This really exists. And it got to number 8 in the UK Album Chart last week. God save us all.

In Year 7 of secondary school, our music class got split up into groups and had to write and perform a Christmas song. I still remember ours well. I had a farmer’s son in my group whose percussion efforts sounded akin to a tractor engine. I ended up performing crimes against xylophones, and we wrote a song that had nothing to do with Christmas. “Sweeties, lollies, cake and tea / sweeties are so good for me.” That was our chorus. First, not Christmassy in the slightest, and second, sweeties are so good for me? That just sounds like the ramblings of some very naive diabetics.

I can remember the melody in my head. Notice how the first sentence of the chorus differs to the second sentence of the chorus. Clever that, right? It’s no magnum opus, but sat alongside: “She’s so lovely / she’s so lovely / she’s so lovely / (keychange) she’s so lovely,” it makes a Christmas song not about Christmas sound like Beethoven’s fifth. Or how about “Elvis ain’t dead / Elvis ain’t dead / Elvis ain’t dead / Elvis ain’t dead.” Throw a little cowbell in there and you’ve got yourself a Scouting For Girls hit.

The Fly Magazine recently listed five things that are the same as a Scouting For Girls Greatest Hits album. Suggestions included A DVD entitled ‘The Best Of ITV1′s The Cube’ and someone giving you a list of the things you’ve bought in small branches of large UK supermarket chains on the way home from work over the past four years. This all sounds a little too nice, so I’ve endeavoured to write my own list.

Number 1: Finding spit in your food.

Number 2: Finding spit in your food.

Number 3: Finding spit in your fo…..

Sorry, I accidently just channelled the spirit of Scouting For Girls in my writing for a moment there. Maybe the world doesn’t need another list, as much as it doesn’t need another Scouting For Girls record. To cap it all off, ‘The Lads’ are on tour in autumn, cowbell and all. Fancy going to see them? It’ll set you back £22.50. They must get through an awful lot of cowbells at that price. Or perhaps they need that money to pay for counselling. Forget that. I need counselling.

Who we really should be blaming is the A&R person who first ‘spotted them’. They probably thought, “oh this is catchy”. No, it’s not catchy. Crap is still crap, even if you’ve been eating copious amounts of edible glitter. It’s the repetition that makes their music get wedged into people’s brain. So we can’t blame the A&R person, and we can’t blame you, humble listening public. Instead, we can only do one thing. Blame Scouting for Girls. The weird thing is, after writing all this, maybe they are the smart ones. They’ve unlocked the secret behind how to get a song stuck in your head. Repetition. Repetition. Repetition. And cowbell.

B.I.M.A. – Bon Iver Mashup Album

B.I.M.A. It can only mean one thing. British Interactive Media Association? Nope. British Iranian Medical Association? Guess again. But of course, it’s the Bon Iver Mashup Album that we’ve all been waiting for! Right? Guys? Right?

Props where it’s due, they’ve done a decent job with it. A rag-tag, motley crue (who knows) of producers by the names of SpareElbowSkinToToM, Fissunix & Colatron have matched up some interesting tracks, both old and new, with Bon Iver’s second self-titled LP from 2011. Are you ready for a few names? Ok, Lana Del Ray mashed with ‘Beth/Rest’? Well that just seems too easy. How about Men at Work and ‘Towers’? Yeah, now I’ve got your attention! There’s also a little INXS, some Flo + The Mac, Cake, Sia, Icona Pop, and plenty more. And you guys, it’s free! I mean, all music is free these days, but still. This is a legal free!

Here are my two reasons for liking this project. Number 1. There is not even a whiff of a bass wobble anywhere here. Slapping some dubstep over Bon Iver’s insanely perfect record would be tatamount to taking a whizz on the Mona Lisa. Not recommended, and it’ll make a whole lot of French people very angry.

Number 2. Track 3 is a mash-up of Kimbra’s excellent ‘Settle Down’, and ‘Perth’. The first 30 seconds / minute, I’m not entirely sure it works. The bars just about match up, but it feels like it doesn’t quite sit as well as I’d want it to. I very much bow down at the alter of Girl Talk (as we all do) when it comes to mashups, and you never find flaws with his work. Either he can pick what works together at 30 paces, or he doesn’t rest until everything is perfect. Either way, this mashup by Fissunix doesn’t quite hit the spot straight away.

But then those ‘Perth’ drums come flooding in, like a torrent of logic washing over my tiny brain. Suddenly it works, wonderfully. So wade through that opening gambit and you’ll be in for something spectacular.

Have a watch below of the trailer for the project, then wander over to the website itself to get your free download: http://www.b-i-m-a.net/

Classixx – Hanging Gardens

So as has become the habit for me recently, I’m a little late to something brilliant. But it’s fashionably late, a well-timed lateness. For those overseas readers, the UK has been hit by a sweltering heatwave, and just in the nick of time, I’ve found my summer album. We all have them. Last year was probably Passion Pit, and the balaeric beast of a summer album from Delorean the year before. Well this year, it’s Classixx.

classixThe L.A. production duo only released their debut LP Hanging Gardens at the end of May. But everything about it screams summer. From the 80s Olympic- pastiche album art, to the warming house-funk vibe of the record itself.

The standout single ‘Holding On’ recalls the likes of !!!, Daft Punk in their Discovery era, and a little of Roger Sanchez. So share in my summer (minus some inevitable sunburn) and make this your summer album.

Arcane Roots – Blood and Chemistry

arcaneSo I often have a rule when it comes to writing. It’s often quite a hard and fast operation. More often than not, you’re trying to squeeze something out for a deadline, to unleash it before a release date to maximize potential views. More often that not, you do get to sit with a record for a decent amount of time before you write about it, but sometimes you get given a pretty high-profile album, and no time at all to dive into its depths, to figure out why everything exists in the way it does, then write flourescently and transcendently about it.

This is why this blog comes in handy. Sure, I still get sent stuff, but I’m usually a little more lackadaisical when it comes to reviewing. And it provides an outlet for things that I haven’t been sent, more importantly. My own finds, my own discoveries. And I get a chance to have a decent amount of time with a record, so can properly nail up my thoughts on something. All this ramble is leading to one thing. Arcane Roots.

Their debut album, Blood and Chemistry, came out around a month ago or so, the date isn’t important here. I got out onto the record due to my twitter feed lighting up over the release, the joy of following a vast number of very connected indie labels and bands who are often more that happy to scratch each other’s backs, in the pursuit and cause of great music.

So, Arcane Roots. Where do they fit in. Well, I got to come to their record as a clean listener. I’d never heard anything else they’d made. More fool me, but it’s refreshing to be able to approach a long length in that way. The record completely blew me away. It’s equal parts ferocious and melodic. It’s an hour long without a dull moment in sight.

Every track seems to go through some kind of sea-change where it’ll start off a little bit softly-softly-catch-monkey, before turning into something epic and widescreen by the end. The band are a three-piece, bass, drums and guitar. I was tempted to throw in ‘only’ a three-piece, but the noise they are capable of making is completely incredible.

For me, on the first listen, and still to this day, ‘Triptych’ is an incredible track. It encapsulates the band so well. It opens with a frantic and mathy guitar riff flying around, while hanging the drums and bass on any square peg it can find. Guitarist and lead vocalist Andrew Groves voice is a really phenomenal weapon for the band to have in their arsenal; it’s powerful, with incredible melodic properties, and the ability to showcase some precocious fury at times. ‘Triptych’ drops into a pretty hardcore breakdown, before emerging back above ground.

There are slower moments on the record, and they serve the entire record beautifully by acting as a counterbalance to the volume of noise provided elsewhere. It shows Arcane Roots are capable of operating successfully at different speeds, and doing it well.

So this record has been with me for a month or two now, and it still provides a fresh and captivating listen. Listening to a track like ‘Resolve’ sounds almost operatic and grand in scale, but the guitar sounds so clean and full, it’s a blizzard of noise.

I had the chance to approach this record as a first-time listener, and so rather than talk for another 1,000 words diving into every element of the record, I would advise you to do the same. You can listen to the album below on Spotify, and if you really like it, or trust my judgement that much, go out and buy it, or catch them on tour.

Update: Wrote this post a week or so ago. Since then, it’s been announced that Arcane Roots are supporting Muse on some dates of their European tour. This is freaking insane news! Go check that out on tour.

Delta Sleep – Management

Hey kids. I’m eating 5 day old pizza. It feels like a bit of a risk. You know what else has 5 of something? Not the new Delta Sleep EP, ‘Management’. It has six things. Sorry, six tracks. And isn’t quite as much of a risk (tenuous intro factor =5/10).

A relatively new signing for Big Scary Monsters, Delta Sleep fit snugly into the label’s stable. The EP features the mathyness of Axes with the frazzled gnarlyness of Gnarwolves. ’16:40′ is a free-to-download track which leads off the EP, and plays a coy little game of spindly guitars in the verse, then unleashing a ferocious beast of a chorus. ‘Jesus Bill!’ plays a similar trick to great effect. There’s a timid little bridge to the chorus that tickles along as either Glen or Devin (the internet won’t tell me who sings) “I’ll get by and I’ll be fine” before everything goes up to 11 (not days old pizza) for the chorus. This makes it sound like it’s a simple quiet/loud/quiet game that they play , but beyond Jesus Bill!, Delta Sleep show off that this formula is not indicative of what they can produce.  There’s some nice flourishes with a loopy riff in ‘So Say We All’, and ‘Camp Adventures’ is a straight-up slow burner, despite me hiding behind the couch in expectation of a monstrous eruption coming unexpectedly at any point.

Have a listen on their Bandcamp, and if you like it, give em’ some money. It’ll agree with you a lot more than 5 day old pizza.

 

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.