Saturday 16 July 2005

Real sound of Scouse


(Morning Star, Saturday 16 July 2005)

ALBUM: The Stands - Horse Fabulous
(Echo)

FROM Scouse dream-pop via Chicago blues, The Stands' Howie Payne is guilty of wearing his influences on his sleeve.

The band's debut All Years Leaving was a shining light, sadly lost in the "shroom wave" of 2004, so this eclectic record is here to make reparations.

Produced by Tom Rothrock - famous for his work with Beck and the Foos, among others - this record has added a soulful maturity to the tunes that Howie's own production on the first album seemed to lack.

Being overlooked in favour of fellow Liverpool bands The Zutons and The Coral - in a strangely limitless "scene" that the music press was all too ready to fling together - seems to have made The Stands all the better.

Gentle album opener Turn The World Around eases the listener into a warm, welcoming realm of dreams and childhood aspirations. .

I Will Journey Home soars with haunting harmonies and When The Night Falls In is tender and sweet. The highlight has to be first single Do It Like You Like, which does sound slightly like it's found its way onto the wrong album. It rocks a glam stomp and takes a risk - but it pays off and makes The Stands sound stronger.

Horse Fabulous is the latest in the tradition of great pop records but the Liverpool "scene" is not what defines it as such - The Stands are.

Wednesday 13 July 2005

Cup of delight


(Morning Star, Wednesday 13 July 2005)

FESTIVAL: T in the Park
Kinross

KIRSTIE MAY has no complaints about an enthralling festival that is blessed with sunshine - except for the odd spot of arrogance.

ANOTHER year, another scorching hot cup of T in Kinross. In stark contrast to the south's rain-sodden Glastonbury, the sun shone down on 70,000 punters in rural Scotland, as the great and the good of modern music gathered to impress.

As was clear at King Tut's Tent, Suzanne Vega has more talent evident in one song than many of this weekend's acts have in their entire back catalogue.

Vega's sincerity and intelligence shines through to the delight of her crowd. High points are Luca, her understated tale of domestic violence and classic closer Tom's Diner, after which the audience leaves forever changed.

'Razorlight are a major draw but singer Johnny Borrell is the very lowest form of rocker.'

The Main Stage will have seen some overblown rock cocks-of-the-walk in its time and here's another - Chris Cornell, former Soundgarden frontman and now the voice of sludgy rockers Audioslave, previously known as those guys from Rage Against The Machine.

In a set that is largely devoid of sentiment and smarts, the band, at least, pay respects to former glories, Cornell rolling the refrain from Black Hole Sun around briefly and closing with RATM's Killing in the Name Of.

A change of crowd, greets Britpop's renaissance men Embrace. Starting with the recent Ashes and pulling in the Chris Martin-penned Gravity and oldie Come Back to What You Know, the Macnamara brothers' live set seems characterised by a slight smugness - perhaps as a "fuck you" to the wise-arse record company exec who dumped them from their label three years ago.

And smug they have every right to be, whereas their Main Stage successors The Killers exude self-satisfaction for no discernible reason.

The songs that Brandon Flowers's crew bring with them from Vegas are accomplished, starting out with tale of murderous youth Jenny Was A Friend Of Mine and ending on anthemic All These Things I've Done.

But their attitude - "we're the all-conquering Yanks" - is less than deserved, given their relative newcomer status. Time and that difficult second album will tell if the Hot Fuss is all hot air.

Over on the NME Stage, Mike Skinner's Streets give the chavs something to talk about. But the feeling that we're left with is that it's the last day of summer term and the unhinged PE teacher is covering the final lesson of the day.

Brendan Benson, however, lights up the X Tent. Now better known for his own work than his collaborations with Jack White, the singer/guitarist kept the crowd warmed up, despite a mid-set lights out.

Main Stage headliners the Foo Fighters own T in The Park Saturday from the second that they come on to In Your Honour. A refreshing mix of all-out rocking and laid-back cheeriness gives Dave Grohl the edge and leaves enough room for drummer Taylor Hawkins to front on Cold Day In The Sun. They round off with a triumphant Breakout.

That Nine Black Alps are allowed to bring their nihilistic Nirvana cast-offs to T on Sunday can only mean one thing - quality control on the Radio One/NME is at a low. Luckily, Eagles of Death Metal are at hand to administer the sweet rock and Josh Homme makes a winning bid for frontman of the weekend with his colourful banter.

Razorlight on the Main Stage are a major draw indeed. But singer Johnny Borrell is the very lowest form of rocker, believing that, by sheer dint of his being onstage, he has the right to spout all the crass old rock 'n' roll cliches. Grow up, Johnny.

'The Tears have all the charm of their former incarnations and none of the pomposity.'

Cliches abound, too, with the arrival of Snoop Dogg but they are more of the bling 'n' bitches variety. His run-through of Pharrell Williams and Justin Timberlake collaborations just shows how little he offers in the way of original craft. But the pantomime onstage is worth the earache, with an entourage comprising burly security men and short-skirted honeys.

Another frontman preoccupied with the female of the species is Queens of the Stone Age's Josh Homme, back for more on the Main Stage and displaying all the hallmarks of the cocky rock star - including weaving Here Comes the Sun into an otherwise characteristically menacing No One Knows.

If Homme is a great rock frontman, then surely the greatest of all indie frontmen is Echo and the Bunnymen's Ian McCulloch, his staggering outsider chic hardly diminished by the passing of time.

The humour and class that the Scouser brings to King Tut's is invaluable. From the career-defining Killing Moon - to late 1990s rebirth Nothing Lasts Forever, which neatly segues into Walk On The Wild Side for an amusing and oddly touching aside, Echo deliver a set that thrills and chills in equal measure.

Interpol, New York's own Echo for the 2000s, are a pleasant if derivative follow-up, while Hayseed Dixie wow an overspilling crowd at the new-for-2005 Futures Stage with their trademark banjo AC/DC music. Their Highway To Hell is a perverse treat and the Duelling Banjos finale is an inspired choice, not least because the sound of the mimics resounds round the site for the remainder of the day.

While the Main Stage hosts Green Day and old timers The Prodigy haul their tired act over the Radio One/NME Stage, the X Tent sees magic unfolding. The Tears have risen phoenix-like from Suede's ashes and, like Doctor Who, they've got all of the charm and guile of their former incarnations - but none of the pomposity.

Weaving a spell over the small but riveted crowd, the all-new Brett 'n' Bernard show is a fitting end to one of the most enthralling T in the Parks to date.

Saturday 9 July 2005

Loving what you've paid up for

(Morning Star, Saturday 09 July 2005)

LIVE: Dundee Blues Bonanza, various venues, Dundee

THE best thing about free music festivals is that, no matter how bad the performers are, a punter will never go home feeling cheated - and if they're good, no-one would have minded paying anyway.

So paying up must have been far from the minds of hundreds of music fans on the way home from Hyde Park last Saturday after seeing Madonna and Robbie Williams haul their tired carcasses across the stage at Live 8. A few hundred miles north, the cause wasn't as worthy but the entertainment was a vast improvement.

At the eleventh Dundee Blues Bonanza, over 130 bands played in 32 venues across the city. If you could crowbar yourself into any one of those venues, there was a treat in store.

Well, not just any venue. First up, in the Nether Inn was Little Miss Debby, Glasgow's answer to, um, Lulu. She offered a frankly terrifying take on a handful of soul standards - including The Spencer Davis Group's Gimme Some Lovin' - and a raucous vocal that was more given to rock than blues.

The Globe played host to the Dukes of Hazard, a band that is devoted to Snow Patrol and Pearl Jam in equal measure but who are none the worse for it.

Followers the Blue Devils were the first whiff all day of actual blues, complete with mouth organ, while a delighted crowd at the Doghouse enjoyed Gary Miller's rockabilly old school.

Bar Rio played host to the gem of the weekend, Mojo Rising. The name is a mistake but the female vocals are a Mary Chapin Carpenter-tinged dream. Popl Nero wound up the evening with Bottleneckers, a group of young whippersnappers clearly committed to bluesing up Dundee. Definitely worth anyone's hard-earned cash.

Best say never


(Morning Star, Saturday 09 July 2005)

ALBUM: Backstreet Boys - Never Gone
(Jive)

AND so it is, with an album title that sounds more like a threat than a promise, that the good work of the last almost five years has instantaneously been undone.

Backstreet's back and little more than a limp-wristed cash-in for the world's formerly biggest boy band it is too.

Hit singles here are thin on the ground, a shame indeed after such pan-global chart toppers as I Want It That Way.

Age has made the boys into apparently lumpen men - and men who are intent on weighing down the chart with more mid-tempo dirges like first single Incomplete.

Never Gone? With records like this, never say never.

Unwise return

(Morning Star, Saturday 09 July 2005)

Omarion - O

(Sony)

ONLY in today's stack 'em high, sell 'em cheap cluttered world of urban music can an artist be said to be launching a "comeback" at the tender age of 20.

But Omarion has "mercifully" returned and this album is a long-awaited treat for fans of his feted but now defunct band of teen idols, B2K.

If they passed you by, don't worry - Omarion's rather helpfully stuck to their well-worn template of chart R&B. It's all cheesily insipid beats and inappropriately steamy odes to lust, as typified by debut single O.

Well-worn, but, nonetheless irrelevant. It'll be flying off the shelves in HMV but don't you make the mistake of picking up a copy.

Saturday 2 July 2005

Devil's music


(Morning Star, Saturday 02 July 2005)

ALBUM: The White Stripes - Get Behind Me Satan
(XL)

EVERYONE'S sick and tired of the sister-brother-husband-wife conundrum.

Now's the time for the music to speak for itself.

This, Jack and Meg White's fifth album, is a testament to the wonder of their magical, harmonious world.

With influences from Led Zepplin to bluegrass, there's not much that daunts the duo, which is as it should be.

My Doorbell (When You Gonna Ring It) is a bold highlight and also of note is the plaintive Forever For Her (Is Over For Me) and paean to fan worship and Rita Hayworth, Take Take Take.

Satan's definitely got the best tunes.