Saturday 29 June 2019

Catfish and the Bottlemen - "The Balance" (2019)

This record came out 2 months ago now and I keep putting off talking about it because it is simply so bland and predictable. As with so many bands over the past 15 years, Catfish put out an incredibly exciting and enjoyable debut in 2014's The Balcony, and then followed it up with a mostly mediocre The Ride in 2016, an album that had some stellar singles but most of the deep cuts sounded like bland Oasis demos which never left the studio for a reason. While there was always hope that the band could turn it around for their third release, I wasn't surprised it turned out like it did.

And there was hope for a while, the first two singles (also the first two tracks on the record) were legitimately enjoyable indie pop rock tunes. While nothing revolutionary, Longshot aims for an anthemic feel-good vibe and actually gets there, and also ditches the oasis cover band style of the last album. Fluctuate is easily the best the record has to offer, retaining much of the energy and angst that made the first album work so well. The way the guitar and bass play off each other during the verses is some legitimately creative songwriting. But then we get to third track and single, 2all. This is when I knew how this album was going to turn out. The instrumentation is bland and uninspired, and the lyrical content is just complete anthemic nothingness. Another (admittedly petty) gripe I have with this track is that title. It seems as if the band are more committed to their aesthetic of single word titles than actually making one that doesn't look incredibly dumb on its own.

The whole album feels like this to be honest, engineered to maintain the bands aesthetic and appeal to the fans. The same cover art style, the same "The ..." title, the same one word song titles, the same awkward cut-off at the end of the last song just because it happened by accident when they recorded Tyrants for the first album. It's even more awkward here than on The Ride, because the last song, Overlap, doesn't even sound like a big finale song. It just sounds like every over song on the album, just with the end missing...

All the songs follow the same structure, opening with the first verse at a certain tempo, with a big buildup into the chorus which is either faster or slower than the verse. Then repeat for the second verse and chorus, and then finally jump into a guitar solo or a bridge and then the big anthemic final chorus. The lyrical topics are also generally the same throughout the album (as they were the last time), generic relationship struggles that are just detailed enough to remain relatable, but not intense or introspective enough to feel like there's really any stakes.

I know I've really grilled this album, but it is well performed and well made, and does an energy to it that you can bop your head to in the backround. Individual guitar lines and some of Van McCann's vocals do grab me, but they're put into songs that overall sound all the same as each other, and all the same as what the band has done before. If you're a fan of what the band has done before and is not looking for any changes, then you'll probably really enjoy this record. However, for me, I would just rather listen to their first record, or something from the myriad of bands that have sounded like this over the past 15 years.

Top Tracks: Longshot, Fluctuate

4/10

Tuesday 25 June 2019

Portishead - "Dummy" (1994)

Portishead's debut album, Dummy, is the record which broke trip hop into the mainstream, winning the Mercury Prize in 1995. I've been really enjoying having it on when I've been working or just chilling out to in the evenings. The band incorporate elements of film noire aesthetics to the standard trip hop fusion of break beats, electronica and jazz to create a smokey and introspective atmosphere unique from many other trip hop acts of the time.

The incredibly low bass and roughly produced drum beats give off a slightly industrial vibe across the record, like some heavy machinery working quietly in the night. Ominous and spooky synths layer on top smothering the mix like a thick fog, with Beth Gibbons' vocals gliding on top with plenty of  breathing room. Her lyrics detail isolation, longing, desire and self reflection.

Despite maintaining a consistent aesthetic across the 11 tracks, each one has unique flourishes which maintains my engagement. Mysterons opens the album with some spooky synths which rise and fall, creating a kind of alien vibe. Sour Times has a low-fi beat with a smooth guitar and bass, while Gibbons' sings the hook "Nobody loves me, it's true, not like you". The film noire feel really comes across in this track, I just get the sense of some dark seedy club. Numb and Wandering Star have the hip hop style scratches which give the tracks a sense of 'bounce'. The beat doesn't come in right away in It's A Fire, leaving Gibbons' vocals alone with organ sounding synths. The chord progression they follow gives a quietly triumphant sound to the song. Roads benefits from an even slower pace than usual trip hop and a simpler mix, allowing Gibbons' incredibly sad vocals to shine through over the vibrato affected chords and guitar. A sax sample breaks out half way through Pedestal, and Strangers has a lot of funky guitar and horns in the mix. The closer, Glory Box is louder than the other tracks with this screeching guitar over the top of the groovy sample of Isaac Hayes' Ike's Rap II. The track even ends with a big drop and breakdown before fading out.

This album is incredibly low key, but that's the point. It has a great late-night atmosphere to wind down and chill out to. It easily works in the background, however has a lot of subtleties which provide an engaging experience when you pay attention to it. The film noire vibe really comes across in the music, giving it a dark and moody edge that some might not like, but I think really adds to the engagement I have with the record.

Top Tracks: Mysterions, Sour Times, Strangers, It Could Be Sweet, It's A Fire, Numb, Roads, Pedestal, Glory Box

9/10

Thursday 20 June 2019

Joy Division - "Unknown Pleasures" (1979)

I intended this blog to be more about new music I am discovering, but here's another anniversary so I've been tempted to talk about this amazing record. Unknown Pleasures turned 40 over the weekend and is widely considered to be one of the most influential records of the post-punk scene in the late 70s / early 80s.

The band and producer, Martin Hannett, crafted a truly unique sound on this record. It is characterised by this very intense but spacious atmosphere, giving you this feeling of being smothered and suffocated. The incredibly sharp production on the drums and percussion makes them stab right through the oppressive atmosphere, creating a sense of uncomfort and urgency which drives the album along. Ian Curtis' dark and intense lyrics layer on top of this, detailing disconnect, loss of control, and the creeping feeling of impending doom. I find this album to be Curtis' vocal peak; there's a sense of angst and passion to his approach here which shifted to complete depression and desolation by the time of Closer.

Disorder opens the record with a driving bass and chiming guitar, with Curtis' vocals fast and very rhythmic vocals meshing in. This turns into more of a chant in the back end of the track as these spacey, sci-fi noises are introduced into the mix. Following this is the much Slower and more tense The Day of the Lords. The production on the guitar here is incredible. It sounds like its almost about to explode into complete noise but then retains it's restraint and winds down, over and over throughout the whole song. This creates a knife-edge tension that isn't released at all in the song, leaving it feeling strange and unresolved. Insight is backed by these very alien beeps and bops, reminding me of another isolating, atmospheric masterpiece turning 40 this year, Ridley Scott's Alien. The drums on She's Lost Control pierce right through the mix, keeping the song tense and uncomfortable. More beeps enter this song on the drum hits and gradually increase in volume until the end where they completely overpower the song and remind me of the beeps of a cardiogram you might find in a hospital. This give the song a very sinister feeling, as if the titular character has lost control to the point that they're in mortal danger. Shadowplay has an incredibly simplistic and catchy guitar solo. The driving bass riff propels the song forward. It's dark and sinister, detailing dark city streets and assassins. The album's tension comes to head in Interzone, where the guitar is finally allowed to go as wild as possible, sounding brutal after so much absence. With all the tension gone, the closer I Remember Nothing sounds like a glimpse of their much more gothic sound on Closer.

It honestly astounds me that nothing really sounded like this before, because you can trace elements of so many band's sounds back to this album. It is also really interesting to me that this sound is almost entirely down to Hannett and Curtis, with the rest of the band (particularly Peter Hook) not really understanding its appeal and initially not even really liking it. Honestly this album is fantastic and also really benefits from decent speakers/headphones. My laptop speaker really doesn't do justice to the atmosphere and space the album creates and it sounds so much better when I'm playing it through my speaker.

Top Tracks: Disorder, Day of  the Lords, Candidate, Insight, New Dawn Fades, She's Lost Control, Shadowplay, Wilderness, Interzone, I Remember Nothing

10/10

Thursday 13 June 2019

Biffy Clyro - "Balance, Not Symmetry" (2019)

While touring their 7th album, Ellipsis, Biffy Clyro mentioned they were working on a soundtrack album. And then we heard nothing until the day before it dropped with the release of the title track and the announcement it was coming the following day. This 17 track album is the soundtrack to a film of the same name, apparently an imagining of Romeo and Juliet but from Juliet's perspective. The band have definitely used this slight change in format to explore some of their weirder tendencies which have been largely smoothed off in recent years as the band have become more popular.

The album opens with the title track, where Simon Neil screams the opening line then settles into an off-kilter rhythm against this angular drum pattern. It has a typical anthemic Biffy chorus then dives right back into the weirdness for the second verse. The second and third track are softer emotional tracks that you would find in any film score and don't do much for me, but following that is Sunrise. This track opens with about 30 seconds of intense thrashing on not just the bands typical instruments but also there's some piano in there as well. All this noise forms into this monstrous Rage Against The Machine style riff. The stomping verses of this track build into another anthemic chorus, with the captivating lyrics of "I didn't wanna break but I broke" and "I didn't try and speak but I Spoke". After this comes Pink, the first of three short, wholly instrumental mood pieces. The first five tracks are a microcosm of the variety on this album, with the band exploring entirely new sounds and ideas.

Gates Of Heaven has a chiming piano as the lead instrument and a guitar as only an accompanying instrument. The track shows a level of restraint from the band, it doesn't go overboard. Fever Dream is a reverb heavy electronic track which has vast soups of atmosphere. Skittering synths lace Neil's voice, singing "Where the fuck is God?". The reverb and echo effects slowly builds at the back end of the track, turning the fever dream into what sounds like some kind of nightmare. As a pinnacle of the throw everything at the wall and see what sticks weirdness, Tunnels And Trees samples a floor board creaking as a part of the percussion. The band really are just doing whatever they feel like on this record.

This vast variety of sounds and the fact that it is a soundtrack album (which doesn't lend itself to a traditional studio album structure), does mean it doesn't flow as well as other Biffy records. There are a handful of tracks I don't care for and while the instrumental tracks are likely necessary as an accompaniment to the movie, they do kind of pad out the album a bit. Overall, there are some absolute bangers on here, but its lengthy 17 track long runtime makes them easy to miss.

Top Tracks: Balance, Not Symmetry, Sunrise, Gates Of Heaven, Fever Dream, Plead, Touch, Jasabiab, Following Master

7/10

Saturday 8 June 2019

Tame Impala - "Lonerism" (2012)

Tame Impala is one of those critically acclaimed artists that I have never really listened to before, and with a new album on the horizon I thought I'd better check them out. Listening to both this and Currents, it was Lonerism which I gravitated to more. It's (slightly) less produced, more spacious sound reminded me more of the little I know of 60's psychedelia (basically studio years Beatles and early Pink Floyd, and that I don't know as well as I'd like).

Across these detailed but spacious tracks, different melodies and moments pop into the forefront and then fade back into the distance, leaving room for another idea to take its place. Kevin Parker's vocals sometimes glide above the tracks, and then without notice plunge deep into the mix buried in effects. I don't know if it is intentional, but his voice is incredibly reminiscent of the likes of John Lennon and Syd Barrett in places, which adds to the throwback aesthetic. The lyrics give off the general vibe of longing and loss, however they're never really the draw of this kind of music, and are here to serve the atmosphere rather than to be read into too deeply.

Be Above It sounds raw and primal with its repeated chanting, and all the opening of Music To Walk Home By for some reason gives me the feeling of diving headfirst into a swimming pool. The bridge on Why Won't They Talk To Me? also always grabs my attention as the track strips back leaving this groovy drum pattern and some very 60's sounding synths. Feels Like We Only Go Backwards catchy as anything despite all the psychedelia and lo-fi buzz on Keep On Lying's synths and guitars slowly mesh together, raising the intensity of the track over time. Elephant stands out from the rest of the tracklist as despite its psychedelic flourishes, it's very much a bluesy stoner-rock song at it's core with its chunky riff and thunderous drums. Unfortunately the last couple of tracks don't really stand out and just fade into the background, which is disappointing considering most of the tracks have something which grabs me and draws me in.

Psychedelia isn't for everyone, but if it is something you can dig, this is a great album to stick on in the background when doing something or just chilling out. The bright, summery atmosphere is perfect for this time of year (when the weather is nice, which isn't always the case).

Top Tracks: Be Above It, Endors Toi, Music To Walk Home By, Why Won't They Talk To Me?, Feels Like We Only Go Backwards, Keep On Lying, Elephant

8/10