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Thursday 22 November 2012

Soundgarden - King Animal

God bless Eddie Vedder. Soundgarden’s reunion, a return of one of the Mount Rushmore carvings of grunge, is a cash-spinning, half-arsed return that should have remained firmly in the mid-nineties. Fresh from a triumphant headline slot at last year’s Download festival, Chris Cornell and co have released their first LP in sixteen years, an ageing rock-a-thon that pays more testament to Pearl Jam’s brilliance and durability more than Soundgarden’s own relevance.  Cornell’s voice has always been a diamond that deserves far more credit than he, or Soundgarden, are ever given, but ‘‘King Animal’’, the comeback album from the Seattle rockers, only serves to typify this unfulfilled promise. After the brilliance of his early Audioslave work, and a hastily swept away Timbaland produced R’n’B’ turn, you would’ve expected the Soundgarden frontman to come out blazing, rather than this under gunned, somewhat dull return.

Opening track Been Away Too Long is self-aware of its own importance, with an opening riff that is nowhere near as big or as long as it should be,  a representation of much of this disappointingly OK album that would have surely benefited from letting Cornell scream and bleed a little bit more. Kim Thayil’s guitar work does sound fresh on second song Non-State Actor, with its follow up By Crooked Steps providing a gritty sound that would’ve worked so much better had it not been overdubbed by Cornell’s echoed and overproduced crooning. Blood On The Valley Floor offers a brooding resistance cut short by Bones of Birds with Cornell admitting ‘time is my friend, till it ain’t’ a dark admission of what surely could’ve been given such a fantastic voice.

Taree and Attrition showcase what is a much funkier return, with the severely downtuned acoustic focused Black Saturday offering an experimental turn that would’ve benefited from remaining solely guitar based, something also true of Halfway There, a victim of poor track placement.
As Cornell admits in Been Away Too Long, ‘I never wanted to stay’ unfortunately it may have been better if Soundgarden didn’t return, a harsh reality of what could’ve been a revitalising return. Though ‘‘King Animal’’ is by no means a bad album, it feels somewhat stagnated and self-aware, with Cornell never really letting his own talents, or that of his band mates, verge into anything unprecedented or new. Eddie Vedder’s got a ukulele album you know…

Tuesday 9 October 2012

Green Day - UNO!


The return of Green Day has found them at something of a cross roads in their career. No longer the pop punk whirlwind of fresh air from the 90’s and early 2000’s but bona fide arena filling rock superstars. The all-conquering success of American Idiot in 2004 created something of a problem for Billy-Joe and co as to what direction they really wanted their group to head in. Thankfully, on Uno!, (the first of three LP’s planned in coming months) they have achieved something of a balance between past and present, though this is by no means their finest hour.

Opening track Nuclear Family starts promisingly but is something of a false start, lacking a truly massive chorus. This is something that is amended on second song Stay the Night and its follow up Carpe Diem as the album steps up a gear, with trademark chord heavy hooks and catchy melodies announcing that this record is unmistakably Green Day.

Let Yourself Go is perhaps the punkiest, and best, song on Uno!, charging through three minutes of energetic delirium complete with a screamed refrain that is the highlight of a superbly produced record. Unfortunately this is shadowed by the weakest song of the album, and perhaps Green Day’s career, Kill the DJ. Though the danceable riff should perhaps be celebrated for its experimentalism, it’s just a plodding, lazy mess of a tune.
Fell For You and Loss of Control are solid enough songs, however they don’t do anything special enough to save the middle of Uno! from feeling somewhat half-arsed and comfortable. Such filler suggests that Green Day may well have made a mistake releasing three albums in such a short space of time with Dos! and Tres! soon to be upon us in coming months.

One thing that is clear here however is that Green Day are oozing with a swagger and carefree attitude that was missing on 2009’s 21st Century Breakdown. Whilst this no doubt comes with the financial security and knowledge that this record and tour will of course sell, it’s refreshing that they clearly feel under no obligation to make American Idiot part II, exemplified by Troublemaker, as Billy-Joe snarls and coos his way through 2:45 of breeze pop heaven.

The classic Green Day power chords charge back in on Angel Blue (the most American Idiot esque- track), presenting a strong finish to the LP along with the delicate Sweet 16 and the Warning era pop punk perfect Rusty James, which in quoting St. Joe Strummer suggests that such a sound and heritage was very much on the bands minds during this recording. Comeback single and album closer Oh Love polarised opinion on release, but as an album closer it actually works quite well, feeling more like a bonus track or encored  curtain closer then part of this collection of songs.

Only time will tell as to whether Green Day would’ve been better suited to putting all their golden eggs into one basket, rather than such a trilogy and Uno! unfortunately suggests that this may well be the case. However, it does provide a solid return, encompassing what we love and loved about Green Day. It’s a pity that any experimentation falls somewhat flat, but hey, I’d much rather see a stadium filling band take a few risks (*cough* Mumford *cough*) rather than playing it safe. After all, as Billy Joe so eloquently put it, ‘‘he’s not Justin Fucking Bieber’’.


                                                                                                                                                                                7.5/10     

Thursday 14 June 2012

Live Review: The Gaslight Anthem - London, KOKO


Before I start I should probably mention that I’m a MASSIVE Gaslight Anthem fan, so the prospect of seeing them at one of London’s relatively smaller venues left me more excited than a 16 year old girl about to be spit-roasted by One Direction – with Harry going first. Thankfully my excitement was well-justified as The Gaslight Anthem fired through a memorable set, ranked by the band themselves as one of their favourite shows ever.

With their debut major label release Handwritten due out towards the end of July, tonight was a perfect way so bid farewell to some older songs, showcasing exactly why the New Jersey punk rockers broke out of the basement scene and gained such widespread acclaim and adoration. Kicking off with Great Expectations, the album opener from 2008’s classic 59 Sound LP, the group ensure that the bar is set high, so high in fact that only a band with as strong a catalogue as TGA would be able to maintain it. The 25 song set included tracks from all three Gaslight albums, Sink or Swim, 59 Sound and American Slang, as well as Senor and the Queen, 2008’s four track EP.

A seamlessly paced set highlights Gaslight’s ability to mix hard rocking anthems with slower melodies as song pairings Drive - Blue Jeans and White T-shirts and American Slang – Here’s Looking at you, Kid perfectly illustrate. Of course it wouldn’t be as Gaslight Anthem show without a few covers and surprises thrown in, tonight’s offerings see an impassioned cover of House of the Rising Sun as well as a superb run through of Brand New’s Jesus Christ, situated during a rousing Angry Johnny and the Radio. In addition the inclusion of I’da Called You Woody Joe, homage to Camden Town and its patron Saint Joe Strummer is a fiercely relevant tribute to tonight’s setting.

With Handwritten looming on the horizon, (TGA’s first release since signing to Mercury Records) much speculation questioned whether the show heralded a different Gaslight Anthem, and if so would they play any new material. Well, if tonight proved anything it’s that the band themselves have not altered – singer Brian Fallon emphasizing this point himself, adding ‘‘everything’s changed, but the band haven’t changed’’ before launching into a stirring performance of breakthrough single The 59 Sound. Fans are treated to two tracks from the new record, though neither are world premieres. Biloxi Parish is a blues infused stomp of a track, previewed and debuted last year which rises up to a characteristically massive chorus that typifies the band. 45, the lead single from Handwritten, is even bigger, an immediate fans favourite that provides one of many highlights, with each ‘Hey, turn the record over’ greeted by a flurry of fists.

The unofficial inclusion of Fallon’s Horrible Crowes collaborator and former Gaslight guitar tech Ian Perkins has added a new direction to both the band’s sound and stage performance. Although an unassuming figure himself, Perkins’ guitar duties not only give the band an even bigger live sound, but it also allows Brian Fallon to further assert himself as a frontman. Putting down the guitar for around five songs allows him to clap, stomp and scream his way around stage, culminating in a brave stage dive from one of Koko’s balcony’s. Acting almost as a metaphor for the direction Fallon wants to take his band, this Eddie Vedder tribute is a representation of not only the influences on the new album, but also how the band would like to model their impending success.  Fallon is clearly ready for The Gaslight Anthem to be huge, arena huge and if their already brilliant back catalogue wasn’t enough to seal the deal, Handwritten will be. Anyone still unconvinced only need listen to tonight’s triumphant closer of Baba O’Reilly – one of the biggest ever rock songs, sounding bigger than ever before.

I’ll see you on the flipside.       

Friday 18 May 2012

Top 5 Music Videos


In tribute to the late, great Adam Yauch I’ve decided to compile a quick top five of my favourite music videos of all time. There have obviously been hundreds of brilliant promos since video reared up, unwittingly and ultimately killing the radio stars of yesteryear, however this is a celebration of those that managed to perfectly capture a song visually.

Number 5: Beastie Boys – Sabotage



MCA may no longer be with us but thankfully The Beastie Boys humorous and energetic videos always will be. Sabotage is the best of the lot, building up the tension before launching into the fence kicking attack of the first verse. Fast, action packed and perfectly spoofed with fake moustaches it’s an LA cop chase that crams all the best bits of a film into an adrenaline fuelled three minutes of awesomeness.

Number 4: Eminem – Stan



Another white boy rapper famed for his outlawed comedy videos, Eminem went dark and disturbing with 2002’s Stan. Shot with low saturation and differentiation levels, it’s a rain drenched autobiographical tale of a crazed fan, driving himself and his pregnant girlfriend ultimately to death in his crazed pursuit of Eminem’s attention. Distressing and painful it explores the obsessive culture of fandom, so often trivialised, for its agonizing and often tragic nature.

Number 3: Social Distortion – Machine Gun Blues



A seven minute epic perfectly detailing the story told in the song. Set in 1930’s America, it’s wonderfully shot and stylish, just easing with cool. Mike Ness effortlessly pulls off the gun wielding anti-hero, keeping his tommy gun stored in his guitar case, leaving a trail of bodies in his wake. Retro, superbly directed and with an endless supply of ammo its pure punk rock heart and soul: Don Corleone with a Les Paul and what’s not to love about that.   

Number 2: Johnny Cash – Hurt



A video that will always hold poignancy and sentiment as it was filmed just seven months before Cash’s death, and three months before that of his wife June . The opening bars reflected through Christian imagery before revealing the essence of Cash’s cover of the Nine Inch Nails classic, an old man remembering through music. Shot at the House of Cash museum in Nashville, the derelict and diminishing building seemed a perfect metaphor for Cash’s own fading health. Frail, emotive and vulnerable it serves as an echo or epitaph to lost youth and memory.  Truly a goose bump inducing, room silencing masterpiece.     

Number 1: Replacements – Bastards of Young




If ever a music video captured what it’s like to be a teenager this is it, and it couldn’t be simpler. Shot in black and white, the picture slowly zooms out from a booming record player to reveal a bored teenager, sat on his bed, smoking and playing Tim. The climatic crescendo of the track itself is mirrored by the finale, where the punk lashes out, kicking his speakers over and leaving the room. A picture-perfect representation of anger, frustration and youth, it exemplifies the genre and captures feelings like no million dollar video ever could.

 You can keep Michael Jackson in space and Lady Gaga in prison; this is why music videos are awesome. 

Monday 2 April 2012

Live: Sharks @ Club Ifor Bach,Cardiff

Leamington Spa indie punks Sharks continue to showcase their unrelenting potential during their first headline tour in support of ‘No Gods’. The four piece, now complete with new bassist Carl Murrihy, have clearly made the most of years supporting acts such as Social Distortion and The Gaslight Anthem on both sides of the Atlantic, reaping the rewards of such hard work and practice.

Opening act Crossbreaker provide the night’s local interest, with the Welsh acts energetic brand of hardcore introducing some heavy and accomplished riffs to a somewhat disappointing turnout. If the screamo style of the lead singer did appear somewhat out of place given the acts following them, this could be an association of genre Sharks themselves promote throughout their career, given that they are signed to the mostly hardcore label Rise Records.

The main support act, Cornish folk punks Crowns are very much a perfect opening for any rock band. Lively, charismatic and bursting with massive choruses they offer a very welcome English alternative to a genre traditionally dominated by Irish bands such as Flogging Molly. This is something that has definitely been missing in recent English punk but, along with former tour mates The King Blues, may be starting to change. Highlights from their mandolin driven set include Little Eyes, Kissing Gates and Full Swing.

Sharks themselves begin at the very top of their game. A superb one-two of Till The Wonders Rise and breakthrough single Arcane Effigies would seem to be unleashing too much too soon for many young bands, however the quality of all the songs on No Gods, and indeed much of Sharks’ back catalogue, ensure that this is far from the case. Having seen Sharks twice previously, one notable improvement is the quality of singer James Mattock’s vocal work. Whilst he has always had a classic punk rock snarl he occasionally seemed to struggle with the impassioned high end notes that are so powerful on record.  Tonight however, he is near flawless, something that may well have come both through practise and the guidance of album producer Brian McTernan, as he also achieved similar success with Polar Bear Club frontman Jimmy Stadt.

Sharks also have in Andrew Bayliss, a very intricate and technically brilliant guitarist. Tonight much of his best work comes out in Able Moving Hearts and Luck, littering the verses with sophisticated hooks. The highlight of the night for me comes in the form of Sweet Harness. Brimming with emotion, melody and power, such is the quality of lyrical imagery it’s hard to believe that this song was written when the band were still teenagers.   
 Despite spending much of their time in America, Sharks remain all about the British attitude. The piercing bark that opens Trains is intense and clearly intended for bigger crowds than this, bursting with ambition and frustration, it serves as a perfect penultimate track, highlighting Sharks punk rock background and outlining a thirst for greater things.

Finishing the night with album closer No Gods will no doubt become commonplace in upcoming years, as its anthemic, almost hymn like feel and instrumental finish bring proceedings very much to a completed close. Playing less than an hour, Sharks demonstrate exactly what this tour is about. By leaving plenty of room for more, they are clearly destined for bigger venues and crowds, something the band themselves seem keen on, given the direction their sound is taking.     

Sharks set list:
Till The Wonders Rise
Arcane Effigies
Able Moving Hearts
It All Relates
Glove in Hand
On a Clear Day
Fallen On Deaf Ears
Capital Youth
Sweet Harness
Luck
Matthew’s Baby
Patient Spider
Trains
No Gods

Sunday 25 March 2012

Lucero - Women & Work

Tennessee country rockers Lucero return with their most experimental record yet, Women & Work, mixing their own brand of Southern soul with rock and roll hooks and a wide range of musical backing.  
  
Introducing Women & Work, Lucero kick start their first record on ATO with Downtown, a minute long opener outlining the albums intentions; ‘come on out tonight, I’ll be good tonight’, they certainly don’t disappoint. The first song proper is the extension of this brief, On My Way Downtown. Here we are immediately exposed to Lucero’s fuller sound. Complete with a delicious blues riff and an uplifting brass section, this big band style is combined with Ben Nichols’ familiar barstool lyrics and a massive chorus of ‘come on baby don’t you wanna go, come on baby please say so’.

The title track that follows features a similar blues, rock and roll energy, powered along again by horns and an underlying jazz piano section that feels synonymous with the honky tonk bar themes described. It May Be Too Late acts as a call and response to the opening song. A slow, closing time piano beginning is soon laced with the last dregs of whiskey sorrow of a night drinking alone. The tender, downhearted lyrics lead to an unbearably desperate crescendo, perfectly mirroring that frantic search for a partner as the bartender starts to wipe down.

Track 5, Juniper, is driven by yet another bluesy guitar lick, a bravado fuelled dance number complete with horns, organ strains and a crooning Nichols at his very best. Though this track feels a somewhat unnatural successor to It May Be Too Late, this may simply be the result of searching for one story in the LP, rather than considering it a more sporadic compilation.        
Furthering this idea, Who You Waiting On tells the story of late night loneliness from the perspective of an unaccompanied woman, soon to be the interest of Nichols across the bar. The tracks steel guitars are soon overridden by a closing organ solo. Whilst previous tracks of despair have always featured a kind of hope in the night, track seven I Can’t Stand To You is pure despair. Described by Nichols as ‘the loneliest song on the record’ it is instantly darker, an eerie mix of wails and tense drumming creating a perfect storm of atmosphere.  In contrast, When I Was Young offers a reminiscent tone smothered around a steady beat, built up and centred on the lyric ‘I was fierce and wild in love, when I was young’. This particular track is perhaps the most similar to Lucero’s previous work, something which may well have been reflected thematically in sound, and is likely to fit seamlessly into their live show.

Sat rather confusingly far back into the album is the brilliantly crafted Sometimes. Featuring the LP’s most memorable riff, this slow, steam train classic is perfectly paced, building up and slacking to the anthemic post chorus ‘You and your brothers watch out for each other, always’, serving as a powerful love song to friends and family. The unfaltering grandeur continues with follow up Like Lightning, with rock and roll chords complimented by a heavily distorted bass line, crashing over a piano introduction. This is 1950’s rock at its best, with each lyrical gap feeling like it should be accompanied by an Elvis hip shimmy. Producer Ted Hutt continuing his near unmatchable ability to let vocalists go balls out crazy towards the end of the track, whilst making it all appear so controlled.

Perhaps like every Southern gent, the debauchery of such Saturday night fire is often accompanied by Sunday morning repentance in church. Therefore, as a perfect closer to such a rocking country record, final song Go Easy is given a gospel feel, its hymn like melody supplemented with a choir backed chorus.

That this doesn’t feel out of place on Women & Work is testament not only to the Deep South setting that Lucero have always nailed, but also to their new ability to expand and experiment. Nichols brings the album to a halt with an upsurge of voice cracking passion that is an ideal curtain closer to a country rock record that in acknowledging its roots and influences never cheapens or overplays them. A record that transcends its boundaries to feel at home whatever part of the world you’re listening to it in, whatever you’re drinking.

But, since you asked, mines a whiskey.                 

Wednesday 21 March 2012

Sharks - No Gods

For a young band to boldly title their debut LP No Gods it takes some bottle, not to mention the need for the tunes to back it up. Sharks clearly have both, with their Rise Records unveiling living up to all expectations.
Having formed in 2007, the quartet’s previous release The Joys of Living 2008-2010 catalogued the early work that has seen them gain fans and support slots with the likes of Social Distortion, Chuck Ragan and The Gaslight Anthem, before signing with Rise last year in a move with signalled the labels intention to add punkier acts to their roster.  

Opening track ‘Till The Wonders Rise’ is a magnificent curtain raiser, with a fuzzy introduction bringing in a pounding rhythm section and the first of many notable riffs. Full of energy, a massive chorus and an intricate guitar solo, it serves as a clear statement for the band, with singer James Mattock emphasising ‘We’re the overestimated underdogs’, a lyric that may well prove a classic motto for an increasing number of fans from both sides of the Atlantic.

Follow up track Arcane Effigies proved a deserved first single for the album, earning frequent Radio 1 airplay from the likes of Zane Lowe, Mike Davies and Daniel P. Carter. It’s brilliant slice of guitar pop-punk, highlighting why lyrically and sonically Sharks have been compared to The Clash. The line ‘hapless sick lay on door-steps of beauty, and the privileged are unhappy’ outlining the quality of lyrics present throughout, which is even more brilliant given the bands young age.

Able Moving Hearts provides an anthemic early candidate for No Gods’ second single, with its ambitious feel perfectly supplemented by Andrew Bayliss’ unique guitar work. The combination of tones and rhythm from Bayliss and Mattock perhaps most resembles that of The Gaslight Anthem and this great attribute of Sharks’ sound is a major highlight throughout the entire album.

On A Clear Day You Can See Yourself and Patient Spider brim with a slow confidence, that gives No Gods an upbeat, summertime feel that is sure to be a hit during this year’s festival season. Turn To You  offers an almost waltz like feel, showcasing the wide number of genres and styles present on the record, from the punk honesty and vigour  of Matthew’s Baby, to the rock n roll swagger of What Entails and the indie-tinged Luck.

Closer No Gods is one of the albums best tracks, serving as a seamless closer to a record without a single note of filler. Soaring and dipping from verse to chorus and back again, it closes perfectly with a raw, commanding and uplifting instrumental section outlining exactly what Sharks appear to be about.

The ability to experiment with differing sounds, whilst wearing their influences on their sleeve to create something entirely original is exactly what Sharks do best, something that has been sorely missing on the UK rock scene in recent years. With No Gods these four, clearly talented and motivated musicians, have combined exactly what has made British punk so great over the years, with real lyrical depth and flair. In doing so, they have set themselves up perfectly for a bright future.  ///              

9/10

Sunday 18 March 2012

Bruce Springsteen - Wrecking Ball

The Boss returns with his 17th studio album against a backdrop of unemployment, a global economic crisis and a disdain for the wealthy that created it – what could be better?

The opening eight bar beat of first track We Take Care of Our Own suggests that Springsteen has learnt a tick or two from the young, punk upstarts he has recently been championing. 15 seconds in however, that unmistakable New Jersey sound chimes in. The initial verse may well have sounded at home on Springsteen’s last two LP’s, however it’s when the chorus kicks in that we realise the Boss of old has returned. Raging ‘We take care of our own’ Springsteen offers a derisive quote that Republicans and other no brain patriots may well misconstrue. That Springsteen has felt cause to take such a risk for the first time since 1984’s Born in the USA was so horrifically misinterpreted highlights just how important Springsteen believes his message to be.

Second track Easy Money offers a Southern country flavour that immediately implies that Wrecking Ball will be a true Americana record. Shackled and Drawn offers a similar vibe but with a railroad blues undercurrent with Springsteen asking ‘What’s a poor boy to so in a world gone wrong?’ maintaining that unrivalled essence of storytelling that proves despite his millions, The Boss is still very much the working class man.
The albums train track pace is slowed down by the piano driven Jack of All Trades, which reaches a soft crescendo of trumpets, classical guitars and an electric solo from Tom Morello. Even this soft timbre cannot mask Springsteen’s anger however, proclaiming ‘If I had me a gun, I’d find the bastards and shoot them on sight’.  Death to My Hometown has a Celtic, rockabilly mix, perfectly complimenting a stomping electric clap running throughout.

Title track Wrecking Ball may have been written and first performed ahead of the destruction of the New York Giants stadium in New Jersey back in 2009, but it fits perfectly both as an anthemic title and thumping kick-starter to the second half of the LP. The most autobiographical and hopeful song on the album, it opens with the triumphant stanza ‘I was raised out of steel here in the swamps of Jersey, some misty years ago, through the mud and the beer, the blood and the cheers I’ve seen champions come and go’. This only serves to cement Bruce’s place as New Jersey’s spokesman and hero. The crash of cymbals accompanying every chant of ‘bring on your wrecking ball’ is an adrenaline fuelled fist pumper, bringing in an equally energetic brass section, the eloquent contrast between verse and chorus perfectly orchestrated by Soozie Tyrell’s violin. Springsteen remains, however, the focal point. Repeating ‘hard times come and hard times go’ providing the sense of fight that is perhaps the most important message of all.

Acoustic driven You’ve Got It is the ideal track to follow such an anthem, providing the soulful, foot tapping, shoulder swagger that has always come so east to Springsteen. Rocky Ground is a gospel tinged singalong, broken up by a rap section from the superbly talented Michelle Moore. That this feels an almost natural progression, if a surprising one, emphasises just how much of a genre spanning album Wrecking Ball is.
Land of Hope and Dreams was first performed back in 1999 but features on Wrecking Ball for good reason. The last track recorded with E-Street saxophone icon Clarence Clemons, who passed last year and is lovingly remembered as ‘Too big to fucking die’ by Springsteen in the album notes, this is a perfect farewell, with the Big Man’s powerful solo offering both fond memories and an optimistic future. 

Such an outpouring of emotion, so passionately maintained for a soul draining and refilling seven minutes is always difficult to follow and this is perhaps the unavoidable downfall of next two tracks We Are Alive and Swallowed Up (In the Belly of the Whale). We Are Alive is a rock n roll, banjo supplemented country and western song that also can’t quite match the fire of the first half of the album, despite its warmth and positivity. Penultimate track Swallowed Up (In the Belly of the Whale) serves as a slow burning melancholy lullaby ‘I dreamed I awoke, as if buried in my grave’.

The slight lull of intensity provided by Swallowed Up may well have been deliberately placed by Springsteen, as it sets up the perfect anti-dote in the shape of album closer American Land. Outlining all the promised glory and riches of the American Dream, Wrecking Ball’s final bow is a glorious Irish folk classic. Detailing the hope of migrants to America, Springsteen adopts an Irish snarl amidst a river dance of strings, drums, lutes, pots, pans and anything else lying around chez Springsteen.       

With Wrecking Ball Springsteen has created a genuine blue collar, genre spanning masterpiece. It serves as a darker, angrier (re)definition of all that makes Bruce Springsteen great, a story told with unequalled style and musicianship underlining The Boss’ relevance and importance. 

Thursday 1 March 2012

Hot Water Music detail new release

Influential hardcore legends Hot Water Music have announced the details of their next record, to be entitled Exister. Chuck Ragan and co. will release the full length LP and their first with Rise Records on May 15th.

Exister will be the bands first record since 2004's The New What Next, following on from last years 7" The Fire, The Steel, The Tread/Adds Up to Nothing. 

The Florida four-piece have also revealed the tracklisting for Exister, whilst a US tour is expected to be announced in the coming weeks.



  1. Mainline
  2. Boy, You're Gonna Hurt Someone
  3. State of Grace
  4. Drown In It
  5. Drag My Body
  6. Safety
  7. Exister
  8. Wrong Way
  9. Take No Prisoners
  10. Pledge Wore Thin
  11. No End Left In Sight
  12. The Traps
  13. Paid In Full


 

Friday 24 February 2012

Review: Leonard Cohen - 'Old Ideas'

‘Old Ideas’ sees 77 year old Canadian singer and poet Leonard Cohen return for his twelfth studio album and his first since 2004’s ‘Dear Heather’.

The albums opener ‘Going Home’ begins with an almost childlike rhythm, however, the instant Cohen’s distinctive voice whispers in, the feeling is more like a child’s funeral. Sorrowful, mourning and soothing, this spoken word track appears autobiographical, with Cohen stating ‘I love to speak with Leonard, he’s a sportsman and a shepherd, He’s a lazy bastard, living in a suit’. Next track ‘Amen’ descends through as an eight minute psychedelic, pitch black prayer, in which Cohen manages to exude remorse, passion and finality without ever breaking into a sweat. The female backing that has accompanied much of Cohen’s later work, in addition to the Godfather esque trumpet solo seem to raise Cohen’s voice into an almost statesmen like form, hinting at his womanizing past. Far from attempting to shy-away from his advancing years, Cohen embraces them, his voice croaks, breaks and fades with all the signs of a life well lived, each line uttered as if it could be his last.

Album highlight ‘Show Me the Place’ certainly sounds like a swansong, with its melodic piano and violin combination giving a climatic and cinematic feel. ‘Darkness’ has a driving jazzy backdrop, sounding smoky and sexy, whilst ‘Anyhow’ emanates backstreet poetry during its cries for forgiveness. ‘Come Healing’ bursts with light and is a timeless love-song, typically tinged with Cohen’s now trademark gospel sound and lyrical style.

 The introduction of slide and blues guitars is a welcome introduction to ‘Banjo’, the most off the cuff track on the LP (‘There’s something that I’m watching, means a lot to me, It’s a broken banjo bopping, on the dark infested sea’), whilst album closer ‘Different Sides’ feels an appropriate ending and returning loop to the beginning of the record, Cohen ending with ‘You want to change the way to make love, I wanna leave it alone’. This is a relevant final ending to ‘Old Ideas’ highlighting Cohen’s own message both through the album’s title and many of its themes.  These are ‘Old Ideas’ and the theme and style of the LP is nothing new for Cohen, but this is something to be embraced and celebrated, whilst we still can.
          
8/10

Review: The Menzingers - On the Impossible Past

The Menzingers open their account with Epitaph Records with the anthemic, hard-hitting and God damn brilliant On the Impossible Past.
Opening track ‘Good Things’ is a short, sharp introduction, bursting to life and setting an almost impossibly high tempo with the lyrics ‘I’ve been having a horrible time, pulling myself together’ rising and crashing through this avalanche of a record.
There’s no let up on next song ‘Burn After Writing’ which announces the first instantly memorable riff of the LP, as well as the first narratively brilliant and complex lyrics that ring like a classic novel being torn apart and thrown into the wind.

The next two tracks are the songs released by the Pennsylvanian four-piece prior to the LP’s release, ‘The Obituaries’ and ‘Gates’. It’s with these two tracks that the albums storyline and landscape really come into life. The Obituaries introduces the American backdrop that plays setting to many of the themes, but possess a monster of a sing-along chorus ‘I will fuck this up, I fucking know it’, that is so simple and so true in explaining the everyday anxieties and reservations we feel. It hits the nail right on the fucking head, without sugar-coating the splinters that come flying off. Meanwhile the strength of ‘Gates’ lies in its good old fashioned American storytelling ‘It’s not hard to fall for a waitress, when you both smoke, smoke the same cigarettes’ coupled with staggered power chords that build into yet another massive chorus, making you recollect anytime you’ve humiliated yourself for love, and yet making you determined to do it all over again in order to remember that ‘happiness is just a moment’.

The beginning of ‘Ava House’ shows that The Menzingers have lost none of the innovative song patterns and structures that littered previous album ‘Chamberlain Waits’. ‘I’m pretty sure this corner of the world is the loneliest corner of the world’ evokes the lyrical styling’s of The Hold Steady but the gruff crescendo of screams that finish this particular verse show that The Menzingers combine this lyrical intricacy with a heavy punk-rock attitude. Lower key ‘Sculptors and Vandals’ feels perfectly placed on the track listing, whilst ‘Mexican Guitars’ brings sunny Route 66 road-trips flooding through this late winter record and will undoubtedly sound just as great come July. ‘On the Impossible Past’ serves as an excellent bridge between the first and second halves of the record before ‘Nice Things’ revamps the pulse, screaming ‘Do ya wanna feel safe’, acting as an almost rhetorical question to remind you all that’s great about punk-rock. ‘Casey’ sounds like another ready-made single which seems a continuation of the plot that began with ‘Gates’, and is a fantastic example of the story-telling that makes this record such an enthralling listen.

Such is the energy and pacing of ‘On the Impossible Past’ that even at 13 tracks, listening to it seems to make time fly-by, whilst there is not a single note or line of filler whatsoever.  Come final track ‘Freedom Bridge’ the plot is wonderfully concluded and summarized, giving you the feeling of finishing a classic American novel, before immediately wanting to flip over and start all over again. They didn’t fuck this up, I fucking know it. Awesome.           


9/10

Thursday 9 February 2012

February and March 2012 - What to look out for

February


The Menzingers – On the Impossible Past
The third studio album from American punk band The Menzingers is released later this month through Epitaph on February 20th. Two singles have been made available by the band so far, the anthemic  The Obituaries and the addictive Gates. Both singles are sharp, catchy punk songs that suggest that The Menzingers have honed their creative, but often chaotic style into a more simple and yet no less exciting format. Lyrically these tracks are as image laden as before, but the ease with which the band now unleashes massive sing-along choruses suggests that On The Impossible Past will be a very electrifying and powerful record.
Though a UK tour is most likely to occur in a support slot only, the band has announced a one-off headline show at the Fighting Cocks in Kingston.

Stay tuned for a full Rain Dog review when the album is released...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P1aWag0Nl9E


March

Sharks

2012 looks set to be the year of the Sharks. With debut single Arcane Effigies currently receiving frequent play on Radio 1, the band are currently on tour with Social D and Frank Turner in the States. A full headlining tour begins on March 25th in support of their first major LP with Rise Records No Gods, set for UK release a week before the tour. Make sure you catch the Lemington Spa four piece whilst you can, with their brand of DIY Punk drawing not over exaggerated comparisons to The Clash, and big names such as Mike Ness, Chuck Ragan and Brian Fallon amongst an ever increasing fan base.  

Tuesday 31 January 2012

ALBUMS OF 2011

10. Dan Andriano In the Emergency Room – Hurricane Season

Hurricane Season saw Alkaline Trio bassist and co-vocalist Dan Andriano embark on his first solo album. Hurricane Season is much softer than the Trio, however, the mood of the album does feel consistent with Andriano’s own penned Trio tracks such as Love Love Kiss Kiss and Crawl. Despite these clearly being Andriano themed songs, lyrically this is a much lighter and more descriptive offering, with gloomy undertones being somewhat brightened by lines like ‘I’m like a wine glass sitting on a wedding dress, I am ready and willing to make a mess’ from the title track. Although Andriano made his name as a bass player, much of Hurricane Season’s highlights come from his clearly talented guitar playing. Let Me In and On Monday feature memorable and embracing riffs that perfectly underpin the soft, undercooked vocals.

9. Twin Atlantic – Free

The first full length LP from Glaswegian alt-rockers Twin Atlantic attracted much attention, with frequent radio airings and prestigious touring slots creating a busy 2011 for the quartet.  Free saw the band justifiably make the big breakthrough that they have threatened since their formation and two mini-albums. Featuring 13 ambitious and majestic songs the band has achieved an established sound no doubt honed by producer Gil Norton (Foo Fighters, Pixies).
The highlight is undoubtedly the epic single Edit Me which soars and crashes into a massive chorus of real power and vigour. This big-verse, even bigger chorus format suits singer Sam McTrusty, who retains much of his regional accent despite the more mainstream sound.  Tracks Free, Time to Stand Up and Make a Beast of Myself emphasize the bands unreserved desire to be successful however, Free shows a band breaking into the mainstream by doing what they love and losing none of their principles.

8. Rival Schools – Pedals

The eagerly awaited follow up to 2001’s United by Fate, Pedals marked the return of post hard-core super group Rival Schools. Whilst Pedals doesn’t quite match up to the brilliance of their influential debut, it only serves to emphasize the frustration as to why Schools have taken so long to return. Opening track Wring It Out is catchy and full of superb hooks, whilst the gigantic chorus serves as a triumphant announcement of Rival Schools’ return.  Eyes Wide Open and Choose Your Own Adventure are in a similar mould, whilst 69 Guns and Small Doses showcase the understated brilliance of singer Walter Schreifels.
Here’s hoping they don’t take another ten years to release a third… 

7. Blink 182 – Neighbourhoods

Blink’s first record since 2003’s self-titled success and the first since their reunion in 2009 could perhaps have been considered a last gasp attempt. The impact of various side projects before and during their split opened the question as to whether these contradictions in styles spelt the end for Blink 182 almost twenty years after they formed. Whilst Neighbourhoods does appear more Angels and Airwaves than +44 this is in no means a bad thing.
For their sixth LP Blink offer a mature mix of pop-punk, with Delonge’s love of big, aircraft hanger power chords driving the record forward, whilst Travis Barker’s drumming is as tight and inventive as ever.  Neighbourhoods offers something that showcases all of Blink’s many qualities, with tracks such as Ghost on the Dancefloor and Up All Night emphasising the bands advanced sound, whilst the Mark Hoppus led Hearts All Gone is a fast paced anthem, reminiscent of their early work.
The differences and growing pains that may have caused Blink 182’s hiatus actually ends up creating a fresh, new direction for the group, highlighting that even as they approach middle age they’re still as relevant as ever.
If you’d rather hear 40 year old balding, overweight men singing about farts and fucking then go ahead, Bowling For Soup are still touring…  

6. Chuck Ragan – Covering Ground

Chuck Ragan, front man of Florida punk band Hot Water Music, released his third, folk influenced solo album in September.
Ragan’s love of low-key, whole hearted folk may seem a million miles away from the gruff hard-core sound of HWM, however Ragan approaches Covering Ground with the same power and intensity that gave his band so much acclaim.
Ragan’s gravelly voice powers through Covering Ground, giving the LP a breathless force as he paints a picture of a traveller’s lifestyle. Backed brilliantly throughout by fiddler Jon Gaunt and Joe Ginsberg (Bayside) on the double bass, tracks such as Nomad by Fate and You Get What You Give provide a strength and passion severely lacking in modern folk, whilst Ragan also remains true to the genre.
The album features a range of duets and appearances from artists such as Audrey Mae, Frank Turner and Brian Fallon, who assists Ragan in the LP’s highlight Meet You in the Middle.

5. Tom Waits – Bad As Me

One of the last great releases of the year, Bad As Me is the 17th studio album by American icon Tom Waits. 62 year old Waits offers up a blue-grass, foot-stomping account of his travelling life as an artist throughout the decades. Despite this lengthy career Waits’ voice has never sounded so good. Frantic, dark, soulful and as whiskey smoked as ever, Waits shows no sign of slowing down now he’s entered his 60’s. On opening track Chicago we get a clear indication of this with Waits howling ‘I’m a boy’ at the end of the song.
The albums stand-out tracks are the singles Satisfied, a Keith Richards riff led thumper of a track, the title track Bad As Me and the military march and bark of Hell Broke Luce.
Waits’ lyrics are as imaginative and colourful as ever whilst the mournful tracks Last Leaf and Face to the Highway showcase the softer, bluesy side of Waits’ versatile vocals.


4.  Polar Bear Club – Clash Battle Guilt Pride

American hard-core group Polar Bear Club lived up to all their early promise on the third full length Clash Battle Guilt Pride. The band appears ambitious, with opening track Pawner declaring ‘I gotta take my grab at something great’ – something the band have achieved with this record. Singer Jimmy Stadt retains his gruff voice, which perfectly matches the heavy riffs and beats throughout the album, although Clash Battle is a much more melodic and attractive record then their previous work.  Tracks Screams in Caves and My Best Days show that the band now have a confidence in their sound, appearing unafraid of embracing big sing-a-long choruses that may well introduce Polar Bear Club to a wider audience. Based on this record, future success appears inevitable – and richly deserved

3. Dave Hause – Resolutions

Fans of Dave Hause’s full time band The Loved Ones or indeed anyone who saw him steal the show at 2011’s Revival Tour (no mean feat. considering Chuck Ragan, Dan Andriano and Brian Fallon were also there) will tell you exactly how great and underrated the Philadelphia front man is. On Resolutions, Hause offers his first solo LP and unquestionably shines.
Resolutions features songs that Hause originally wrote for The Loved Ones, however the differences between these tracks and The Loved Ones brand of punk make the decision to publish alone a correct one.  Acoustic driven tracks such as Pray for Tuscon and Years from Now are the more traditional, singer-song writer type tracks; however Resolutions is much more than simply this. C’mon Kid and Rankers & Rotters are ready made anthems that deserve a massive stage, whilst Prague and Time Will Tell showcase Hause’s equally powerful vocals and lyrics.

Regardless of whether Hause remains solo, or returns to The Loved Ones, Resolutions is an album of real class and accomplishment and I can’t wait to hear what he does next.

2. The Horrible Crowes – Elsie

The Horrible Crowes features Gaslight Anthem frontman Brian Fallon and English friend and guitar tech Ian Perkins.  On Elsie Fallon looks to delve into influences such as Tom Waits, The Afghan Whigs and Nick Cave, which perhaps differ from TGA’s blue collar Rock and Roll. On Elsie the duo achieves just that. A perfectly timed album of just under 45minutes of soulful, brooding reflections on love lost and the pain and anguish felt.
Despite Fallon’s distinctive vocals, this clearly isn’t just a solo project passed off as a band. Perkins creates a dark and mournful atmosphere through the use of innovative bass lines (Sugar) and intricate guitar-work (Cherry Blossoms) which perfectly complements the rock chords used by Fallon. Fallon’s lyrics are intimate and gritty, truly catching the feelings of unrequited love and unfinished business. This is most evident on Ladykiller (‘I can smell him on your skin; I bet I’d taste him in your blood’) and the final track on the album I Believe Jesus Brought Us Together, a track that offers hope after 11 songs of torture.

The main highlight of Elsie remains Fallon’s vocals however. The crescendos at the end of Crush and Go Tell Everybody are powerful, raw and balls out brilliant, evoking Waits at even his most raucous and wild.   
With this stomping, passionate and tender debut The Horrible Crowes have provided both a modern and classic LP, paying homage to and revitalising styles that have been criminally neglected by many new artists. Whilst I hope that this doesn’t spell the end of Gaslight Anthem, I certainly hope it isn’t The Horrible Crowes’ only album.

1. Social Distortion – Hard Times and Nursery Rhymes

California punk stalwarts Social Distortion take the top spot in our albums of 2011, despite being one of the first records released last year. Though formed over 30 years ago, this is only Social D’s seventh studio album, with founder and iconic front man Mike Ness the only surviving member. Hard Times and Nursery Rhymes sees Ness fully immerse the band with the Bluegrass, rock’n’roll sound that has always been present even in their punkier beginnings.  California (Hustle and Flow) and Gimme the Sweet and Lowdown take clear influence from the very origins of Rock’n’Roll in the 1950’s whilst low-tempo numbers Bakersfield and Writings on the Wall are stripped down to the very essence of blues, with Ness’ gravely snarl sounding better than ever before.

Social D still flaunt their punk rock attitude with tracks Road Zombie and Machine Gun Blues, but the addition of female backing singers give the group a much more complete and classic sound. Ness’s battles with drug and alcohol addiction feature heavily in the album, although this is an upbeat record, suggesting the worst is well and truly behind him, with closing track Still Alive cementing Ness’ place as the great survivor.
The fact that Mike Ness and Social Distortion are still alive is something that we should all be thankful for.  In Hard Times and Nursery Rhymes Social D have perhaps produced the most honest and truly Rock’n’Roll record of the last ten years.      


Other special mentions should go to Title Fight’s Shed, Frank Turner’s England Keep My Bones, Bon Iver, The Foo Fighters and Against Me!