What a terrific album. Released in 1980, at the height of Northern Soul madness, this record draws on the Soul sensibility whilst also experimenting with Funk, Ska, and booming Pop music. It is truly a record of its time; a powerful statement by Kevin Rowland and his eight-strong army of "boys", whose intense, 3-D sound was a new wave of fresh air in a music chart dominated by Punk bands.
Sunday, 11 April 2010
Dexy's Midnight Runners Searching For The Young Soul Rebels - Listen To Those Horns!
What a terrific album. Released in 1980, at the height of Northern Soul madness, this record draws on the Soul sensibility whilst also experimenting with Funk, Ska, and booming Pop music. It is truly a record of its time; a powerful statement by Kevin Rowland and his eight-strong army of "boys", whose intense, 3-D sound was a new wave of fresh air in a music chart dominated by Punk bands.
Pentangle Basket Of Light, Jansch, Renbourn, and the Very Best Of British Folk
Cream Disraeli Gears and the Clapton Revolution
Live Music Night @ The Herald, Thursday 8th April 2010 - Little Wing/Emergency Blanket/The Arkanes
Wednesday, 7 April 2010
Sunday, 4 April 2010
Tim Buckley Greetings From L.A - Just In Case Anyone Was Wondering Where Jeff Got His Extraordinary Voice From. . . .
Eva Cassidy Songbird - A Posthumous Celebration Of A Wonderful Talent
The Velvet Underground and Nico (Self Titled), Andy Warhol, and Underground New York At Its Finest
Heroin, one of the most remarkably rough and ready, manic pieces of avante gard, underground music you are ever likely to hear, is a definite highlight of the record. So is the very 60's inspired There She Goes, which steals from Dylan in its jagged sincerity, but also nods to the classic R&B bands such as The Yardbirds and The Troggs. I'll Be Your Mirror, sang by the remarkable Nico, is a Mama's and the Papa's style ballad with a slightly more maudlin feel, The Black Angel's Death Song is a disturbing, frenetic experiment akin to something off Floyd's Piper At The Gates Of Dawn, and European Son a funky groove that takes the album into a spiralling new direction. Sunday Morning is an airy, spacious ballad with semi-sinister undertones - a fascinating track indeed. I'm Waiting For The Man, a rocky satire on prostitution, is delivered in typical, slightly tuneless, Lou Reed style - but for once it works! Femme Fatale is a glorious, bare recording with a somewhat tragic story; Nico's accent flows through the backbone of the song with such power, before the seriously hypnotic Venus In Furs marches through its mournful lament. Run Run Run is bluesy - a nod to The Doors in their Roadhouse glory, and All Tomorrow's Parties a feverish rumbling anchored by a repetitive piano hook. It is all rather bewitching to say the least.
Producer and musician extraordinaire Brian Eno very famously commented that despite very few people buying The Velvet Underground & Nico upon its release in 1967, those that did went on to form famous bands of their own. It really was that influential. Andy Warhol, who was credited with producing the album, and who also provided the mega-famous art work for the sleeve and paid for the studio time to record the album, has had obvious effects on The Velvets and that whole scene. It is a scene so unique - so one off - that this entire project will be forever shrouded in mystique and legend. The Velvet Underground & Nico is a piece of art in itself, not just a record. A remarkable, revolutionary piece of work that will penetrate the deepest annals of Rock history forever.
Gomez Bring It On - Local Lads With A Lot To Say
The strength of this brilliant debut can be measured by the fact that it won the 1998 Mercury Music Prize for Album Of The Year, beating off contenders such as Urban Hymns by The Verve (previously blogged) and Mezzanine by Massive Attack. Spin Magazine called it "a damn beautiful album, and it went Platinum in the U.K almost immediately. Gomez have been hailed as The Beatles' spiritual heirs, combining American Blues, Jazz, Grass-Roots, R&B and warm, harmonious melodies. I saw the boys back in 1999 at Liverpool's Royal Court Theatre, where, funnily enough, Gomez were supported by a little known band called Coldplay. It was a great gig that demonstrated the depth to this unique line-up of musicians.
The Doors (Self-Titled) and the 60's Psychedelic Dream Realised
Thursday, 1 April 2010
Meetings Between The Modfather and Me!
(Support: Ian Brown, Joe Strummer & The Mescaleros, Shed Seven)
4) Empress Ballroom, Blackpool - 2/12/2003
Another brilliant performance by Weller in a brilliant venue. The atmosphere was electric, and he played out of his skin with his classic solo line-up of Steve White, Steve Craddock, Damon Minchella and Chris Holland. A great night.
John Parish & PJ Harvey Dance Hall At Louse Point - A Stunning Collaboration
PJ Harvey is somewhat of an enigma; a musical recluse and cult star, she has moved in the shadows during a stunning near twenty year career that started in 1992 with her debut record Dry. Her achievements since have been on her terms, which is why she is quite rightly one of the most respected female artists around today. Dance Hall At Louse Point is a major achievement in my eyes - a dazzling record that explores the unlocked rooms in music that most artists dare not dream of entering. The eerie Girl opens the record, falling seamlessly into Rope Bridge Crossing - a fantastic and curious wronged love song - a songwriting trait in which Harvey has become exceedingly proficient. City Of No Sun is a frenetic and intimidating thrasher with idyllic, serene moments, cutting mysteriously into the charming, acoustic That Was My Veil - one of the album highlights.
Marvin Gaye What's Going On, Soul Survivor Despite Tragic Death
Paolo Nutini These Streets - Suprise Package!
Black Sabbath Paranoid, Ozzy's Demise, and Cult Status That May Fade Away
Let us all, for just ten minutes, try to forget what our old friend Ozzy Osborne has become. Let us try to forget that this Rock music pioneer and cult legend has reduced himself to a dithering, ridiculous cartoon character complaining about poodle-poo. Let us forget that this idiot of a man, who trusted his wife with his own dignity and self-respect, has ended up no better than Z-list reality TV stars such as Nasty Nick or Jade Goody. Let us forget that Ozzy has shit all over his own career so badly that records such as the one in question, Paranoid, is barely even associated with his past. What a terrible shame. I want to hark back to a time when Ozzy's band Black Sabbath were right out on the edge, writing and recording serious and revolutionary Rock music with depth and meaning. In order to do that you have to get your Living With The Osbornes DVD's series 1-5010 and place them firmly in the bin. Actually, fuck it, don't place them, launch them.