Monday 26 February 2018

Glöde

Glöde

Ø
Membran Entertainment Group



Simon Glöde has crafted a captivating debut album simply called Ø, which means Danish for Island.  From the shortest track Jeg Vil Elske (I will Love, 1.44) to the longest track Exhale (7.10) for the last track, I was spellbound by the vocals and acoustics that made me want to listen intensely to the lyrics, reminding me of Al Stewart, America, Richard Hawley, Damien Rice and Alex Turner and this calibre is uncommon.  The songs themselves tell vivid stories and many are about the sea which is heavily influenced by his upbringing on Danish shore lands and more recently a sojourn in Hamburg.   It was easy to picture an ocean while listening to this music and so I was surprised that some natural sounds of the sea were not included on at least three tracks. It’s probable Mr Glöde was quite content with the depth already offered by this gently uplifting, recline and unwind album.

NE


Barb Wire Dolls

Barb Wire Dolls

Rub My Mind
Motörhead Music

Cretan female-fronted, self-styled, punk band, Barb Wire Dolls, flew to L.A at the invitation of Rodney Bingenheimer, who is credited for breaking The Ramones, The Clash, Sex Pistols and Blondie in the USA.  Motörhead’s Lemmy signed them to their label after seeing them perform at the Whisky A-Go-Go, during one of several residencies there.  I was disappointed therefore to find this album was too far removed from punk and closer to the pop of Blondie and Texas at times, especially in track two If I Fall, that interestingly has a similar howling at almost the same second minute that Roxy Music’s famous Let’s Stick Together includes. Desert Song, Gold and Fade Away are slower and have more complex arrangements and allow Queen Isis, the lead vocalist, the room to express her vocals to better effect and the guitars are much more authentic. If this band want to conquer the world, they need to either inject more venom into their sound, like they do in track ten, Contract, akin to say Penetration’s Coming Up for Air, or play to their current strengths which for me were the slower songs and arrangements which by definition, may not be punk.  They have more talent than they think and they should rely on their own instincts to guide them.


NE

Todd Anthony Joos & The Revelators

Todd Anthony Joos & The Revelators

The Burden
Cellar Records

The Burden is one of the very best Classic Rock albums in Christendom.  Try to combine for a moment, the guitars of Boston, the vocals of Journey or Kansas, the hooks of Bon Jovi and the easy listening style of The Doobie Brothers and this will get you close to the sound of Todd Anthony Joos & The Revelators.  The reality is even better.  Solid guitar playing, Hammond, acoustic prowess and the best vocals in this genre that I’ve heard in years, made me want to dash out for some denim flares such is the wonderful time and place the band’s music took me to.  The songs are credible, convincing and Christian in flavour but it didn’t stop me singing aloud ..”it ain’t over till it’s over, …devil get behind me….ashes to ashes, dust to dust..”, with the car windows down and loving every minute of this exceptional album.  It’s their fifth release in ten years and the experience gained by Joos, working as an engineer and producer for many leading bands shows in the deft production.


NE

Friday 23 February 2018

Some Weird Sin – On Tour with Iggy Pop


Some Weird Sin – On Tour with Iggy Pop

Alvin Gibbs
Extradition Publishing

This book has made me want to explore the iconic albums The Idiot, Lust for Life, Kill City, Blah-Blah-Blah, New Values, Instinct and Post Pop Depression and the back catalogue of the author’s band.
In this way, the book must be deemed a success.  I knew nothing about James Newell Osterberg Jr and the author Alvin Gibbs entertains and informs the reader of what it’s really like to be part of a successful touring band with the magical moment of earning next to nothing one moment to $1500 a week plus $30 daily expenses the next.  The author is the ex-UK Subs bass player and the book details his eight-month long tenure of Iggy’s World Tour 1988. I approached the book with caution.  I’d bought Real Wild Child and liked the Passenger immensely and that’s as far as my knowledge went. I’m far better informed now.  I was sceptical of an involved musician writing the story and I was sceptical after research revealed the author had written two previous books on Iggy Pop.  My fears disappeared when the author spectacularly sets out in his introduction the reasons for his update which I will leave to the reader to discover on their own.  Some Weird Sin could refer to the more salacious episodes on tour but in fact relates to the first song Mr Gibbs had to practice for his new position.  He writes well and is often humorous and I recommend it as a fine read for any music lover or even as a general reader as towns and cities, band politics and the psyche and personality of both Iggy Pop and Mr Gibbs are described as well as the gigs.  Despite the poor quality of the photographs that look as if they have been lifted from a fanzine, they do add a reality rather than the gloss that a perfectly shot image may suggest and they were in keeping with the time of punk.

I read the book in three longish sessions and it was an engaging read and I particularly relished the opportunity to hear about the relationship between Mr Pop and Mr Bowie.  It’s a concise two hundred-and-eight-page turner about life on tour that I want to pass around, such is the quality of the style and the abundant content that the author shares about one of the industry’s greats.

Thursday 22 February 2018

Steve Martin & The Steep Canyon Rangers


Steve Martin & The Steep Canyon Rangers

The Long-Awaited Album
Rounder Records

Yes, it's that Steve Martin, the comedian, linking up with the accomplished Steep Canyon Rangers  for   a third album.  Playwright, pianist, banjo player and collector, art collector and juggler, he's no one-trick pony.  Taught by a future member of The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, he's played the banjo since a child, ostensibly to fill time during his comedy routines.  This doesn't explain why he adopted the difficult 'clawhammer' style of playing favoured by the many Africans who brought their instruments with them from Africa to America.  It allows for more intricate melodies and five no. 1 albums in the Bluegrass Charts (2009-15), one solo, two with the Steep Canyon Rangers and two with Edie Brickell (married to Paul Simon) testify to the quality of musicianship on offer.  For this album, the band together display joyous clean speed in banjo and fiddle, especially for the tracks, Santa Fe, Office Supplies,  Angelina the Barista and Promontory Point.  I didn't like the capers of Caroline, Strange Christmas or Night in the Lab,  that may have been better left for the tour.  Fortunately the slower tracks balance the album well.  All Night Long, Bad Night, the simple but exquisite, Always Will, and the storytelling of Girl from the River Run were all strong tracks, that together with the faster tracks, took me by surprise when I discovered I had given nine tracks out of the fourteen, full marks for the challenging and distinctive material.

NE


Currents


Currents

The Place I Feel Safest

SharpTone Records

Growing up with my two brothers one of us would ask “Who wants a fight?”.
The sofa was eased back and to protect our pocket money, breakables were safely stashed behind it.  The Place I Feel Safest by Currents would have been the perfect accompaniment to the flailing limbs and the punishment we exchanged.  Coming from Connecticut, above New York, with a new vocalist in Brian Wille, and a new label in SharpTone, Currents have released an exciting dynamic djent album full of brutal riffs, aggressive vocals, perfectly weighted bass and the drums of founding member Jeff Brown.  Extreme metal may be polarising but this band impressed me with the technical brilliance of their onslaught on the ears.  Screaming vocals dominate each track for a journey through the soul of the vocalist.  Interest is maintained by the balancing of the gloomy songs with the buoyant guitars of Ryan Castaldi and Chris Wiseman.  What I liked about this band is they know how to build drama through the clever use of either melody, exquisite clean vocals or harmonies that demonstrate they possess a complexity with hints of a broader appeal than this heavy genre is sometimes criticised for.


NE

Wednesday 21 February 2018

Bruce Cockburn


Bruce Cockburn
Bone on Bone
True North Records

“No one would have believed..” (Wells – War of the Worlds) that a songwriter could encounter writer’s block after thirty-plus albums. There was reason enough.  Canadian singer songwriter and acoustic guitarist Bruce Cockburn had spent three years expending his energies on his 2014 memoir Rumours of Glory. It was the power of poetry of the Canadian Al Purdy ( I will check out) that was the inspiration to get things moving again.  Bone on Bone not only includes the six minute tribute 3 Al Purdys, but also ten other compositions that are the antithesis of our social media obsessed culture. My notes read substance, substance, substance!  Incorporating folk and jazz, my favourite track was the beautiful acoustics of track three Forty Years In The Wilderness about pushing yourself, moving forward and following your calling which we can all easily relate to.  I enjoyed the sublime arrangements more than the vocals which felt dense, almost claustrophobic at times, no more than album opener,  States I’m in, about illusion and self-delusion.  Stab at Matter mercifully is more upbeat but the overall tone of the recording hints at an unease about something with an uncertain outcome and made it a less likeable album for me.  I preferred the livelier tenth track Jesus Train that not only was more joyous but I thought showcased his vocal range more strongly.  I also liked the seven minute JJ Cale-like shuffle of False River about an environmental warning about a trans-mountain pipeline. This is a praiseworthy but unsettling album that rises above the ordinary throughout.


NE

Kenny Wayne Shepherd Band


Kenny Wayne Shepherd Band

Lay It On Down
Provogue

Lay It On Down is the eighth album by the Kenny Wayne Shepherd Band, six of which hit No. 1 in the US Blues Chart ( from 1995-onwards).  He is a fiercely ambitious artist, even after awards and platinum album sales- “We’re still breaking new ground”, the modern bluesman maintains.  This ambition is exemplified by the insistence on writing the greatest songs of his career for this album, many of which were written in Nashville and the storytelling does indeed strike the listener.  Shepherd himself insists that each song takes you on a different journey. Diamonds & Gold, Nothing but The Night, Lay it All Down, Hard Lesson Learned and the personal Louisiana Rain would all make strong singles in an expanding repertoire and could win the band a deservedly wider audience.
Interwoven with blues numbers for his long-standing fans, this album is going to be huge.  It’s the quality of the songcraft that elevates this good album to a great one.  The title track Lay it On Down is a melodic song about the beauty you see in someone that they can’t see themselves and crucially letting them know.
The sheer satisfaction of listening to this album is astonishing.  It makes you play it again to catch all the textures on offer.  It would be an absolute certainty to pack for any road trip – I mused absent-mindedly, whilst playing the CD merely on my commute to work.


NE

Cellar Darling


Cellar Darling
This Is The Sound
Nuclear Blast

Swiss outfit Cellar Darling, formed only last summer after musical differences in the folk metallers band Eluveite, create a multifaceted alternative pathway using the reinvention of folk tales for the modern age as their inspiration.  The band is driven by the intelligent and powerful drumming of Merlin Sutter, leaving space for his fellow musicians , Ivo Henzi  (guitars/bass)  and Anna Murphy (vocals/ hurdy gurdy/flute/ keyboards),  to fashion their new musical direction with confidence and panache.
Heavy riffs, an extensive vocal range from sheer power to the ethereal, and compelling percussion, produce an engaging and refreshing encounter. The hurdy gurdy (a stringed instrument that looks as terrifying as a crossbow), gives the sound a timeless feel with its drone-like quality.  It became popular in the Renaissance period, which means “rebirth” in French.  It’s a very apt description for this experienced trio for their debut album “This Is The Sound”.


NE

Tuesday 20 February 2018

Earl Grey


Earl Grey

The Times You Cross my Mind

Midsummer Records


Mönchengladbach early twentysomethings Earl Grey are definitely worthy of your ears for this, their third EP The Times You Cross My Mind.  Formed only a couple of years ago they combine punk vocals (in English) with a maturity of melody or aggression on a whim.  Over thirteen minutes and five tracks, they display the confidence and swagger gained from their extensive touring schedules.  From the first bars of 1.37 minute opener Nothing (that is anything but!), to the closing melodic fadeout of the last track Hollow, I enjoyed the energy and musical flair of each post-hardcore track. The strong production of their sound makes you sit up and listen.  Catch them early in their career as they are destined for stardom.

NE



Wintersun - Metal Review


Wintersun

The Forest Seasons

Nuclear Blast Records


My spirit and soul soared at the intensity of the listening experience of the third studio album from Wintersun, a Finnish metal band that is fronted by Jari Mäenpää (vocals, studio guitars, and programming) with Kai Hahto providing an impressive energy on drums especially with his pummelling blast beats.  The whole band was involved in the production of this breath-taking release.  It is the elaborate delivery of the imaginative ideas on this project over four tracks (54 minutes running time) that holds your complete attention. Like Vivaldi’s Four Seasons, each track gives a musical expression to a season but the difference here is this is a year seen through a mythical forest and the album demands a listen in its entirety to fully appreciate the genius of  this masterpiece.  Black metal and clean vocals - especially on the last track Loneliness (Winter), intricate mixes, recurring themes, choral and orchestral arrangements  are spliced with the ferocious guitars of Teemu Mäntysaari and new addition  Asim Searah.  The peerless time-signature and tempo changes that feel so much more natural than many other bands help to make this recording one of my top ten albums of all time.  It’s hard to find fault with a release that Mr Mäenpää  calls his first perfect album he’s ever done.  The Forest Seasons could become a present-day classic.

NE

The Municipal Tip

  Following the signs for Bowels of Humanity, we descend the corkscrew of apocalypse into the cradle of filth. We are beckoned forward by a ...