Friday, 6 March 2009

War Child - Heroes


(4ortherecord.com, March 6, 2009)

Album review

Duffy's usually unfeasibly husky voice cracks cracks on Paul McCartney and Wings' 1973 classic, it all becomes clear - this is what War Child is great at.

Yeah, sure, there's all that helping out kids in war zones stuff - good work - but what we hear when the record goes on is the unmistakable sound of musical history being made.

One of the artists of the year covering a song written by one of the most successful British songwriters of all time = priceless.

Duffy isn't the only one to confound and astound here - other modern acts given their chance to shine are Elbow, with a pretty great version of U2's 'Running The Stand Still', TV On The Radio with a unique take on Bowie's 'Heroes' and Beck with his own inimitable stamp on Dylan's 'Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat'.

Oft-maligned The Kooks make a really great fist of The Kink's 'Victoria' - not Ray Davies' boys' greatest moment, but given a really nice treatment from the wonky-voweled Brighton beat combo.

Karen O shows how she is the great lost Ramone on the Yeah Yeah Yeahs' 'Sheena Is A Punk Rocker', offering the perfect balance of 'fuck you' cool and vocal histrionics.

Perhaps the greatest event on the record is Estelle's version of 'Superstition'. Her honey-smooth vocals bring the Stevie Wonder classic bang up to date with the merest hint of cheek, proving how soulful her voice can sound with the right material.

The icing on the cake has to be Peaches doing Iggy on 'Search And Destroy' - although it's tough to see how anyone could make Ignacious sound any dirtier, the Berlin-based bawd makes it her business to rip into it.

If you buy one album this week, wouldn't you prefer it to be packed with quality tracks brought to life by the very cream of the musical crop?

Go on. It's for charity.

Thursday, 5 March 2009

Julian Lloyd Webber’s In Harmony with the kids


(Muso's Guide, March 5, 2009)

Interview

Music is a relaxant and a treat - the right music can make you smile at the end of a tough week or even make you weep when you need to get it out. And, says classical solo cellist Julian Lloyd Webber, music is all it takes to drag society out of the grip of its vices - drugs, knife crime, gun crime, to name a few.

Julian is speaking to Muso’s Guide about the newest government-backed programme to help soothe societal ills. Called In Harmony, it is currently a £3 million experiment, but the professional musician and brother of Andrew Lloyd Webber is positively giddy about its possibilities.

“It’s a very exciting project as far as I’m concerned because it is not really a music education project, it’s a social project which is using music as a catalyst to bring about change in very poor communities.”

Julian insists that In Harmony is unique in this country, having been inspired by the successful El Sistema project in Venezuela. The Simon Bolivar Youth Orchestra, which exists thanks to that project, was phenomenally successful at Edinburgh Festival and the Proms, and Julian sees the installment of a similar project in the UK as a beacon of hope - and a harbinger of change.

“We have just over two years to prove and to show this, and that to me is the most important thing - that by April 2011, we can clearly demonstrate that communities have been helped hugely by this project. I want to see the project expanded and taken out into other places as well as being continued in the three areas where it started.”

The three areas are West Everton in Liverpool, Lambeth in London, and Norwich, and projects are well underway there, aiming to provide children with the tools to grow and learn, both socially and musically. Julian explains how the areas were chosen:“We interviewed eight submissions out of 100. They were very detailed submissions and all eight were excellent, but these three had something a little bit special. I’ve seen first hand the Lambeth one - I’ll be seeing the Liverpool and Norwich ones very soon - and it’s very impressive and very exciting, and just wonderful to see the children so involved and so happy playing.”

In 2003, Julian became involved in the Music In Education Consortium, and has since then been noted for his efforts to widen music education in the UK.

“It did start with myself, Evelyn Glennie [percussionist], Jimmy Galway [flautist] and Michael Kamen [composer], who unfortunately is no longer with us, going in to see Charles Clark and David Miliband at the time.”

Thanks to their efforts, the government injected £332 million of funding into an ailing UK music education, which is where the £3 million for In Harmony has been sourced.

“The government asked me to do In Harmony because I was particularly passionate about it and after the Venezualan orchestra came over. They asked me if I would lead it.”

Make no mistake, in spite of his busy schedule as a solo ‘cellist, Julian is hands-on with the In Harmony project. “Having chosen the projects, I could have taken more of a backseat than I do, because I’m very passionate about this project, and I want to make sure that it goes on. I want to give it every possibility that I can.”

The kids who In Harmony aims to help are from disadvantaged neighbourhoods, aged between four and nine years old. Julian says that the best bit for him has been watching the children at work.

“It’s wonderful to see their enthusiasm and excitement when they’re given an instrument. It’s quite possible they’ve never been given something in their lives, and suddenly they’re given something that’s theirs and they’re given free tuition and it really makes a difference in their whole way of thinking.”

As a man who has made his living in classical music, Julian is irritated by the impression that children can get about it from the media.

“What’s so great about getting these children so young is that they haven’t yet been told by adults that classical music isn’t ‘cool’, and they come to it with no preconceptions, and they really enjoy it. Where this ‘uncool’ business comes I don’t really know. It certainly doesn’t come from the music itself.”

The expansion of their chosen art form into more populist circles is one interest that the Lloyd Webber brothers share, with Julian’s older sibling Andrew making his mark on varied reality talent shows such as How Do You Solve A Problem Like Maria? and Any Dream Will Do on BBC1. What does Julian make of the criticism that has been levelled at Andrew for these manoeuveres?

“When Andrew started doing the first one, …Maria, he got quite a lot of criticism from people saying “This isn’t the way to cast a West End show”. On the other hand, look what it’s done for the West End! And Connie Fisher who won it, is brilliant, so it actually helped somebody launch a career and filled the theatre as a result. The winners of these programmes have been really talented, and it would be lovely to be able to do the same with classical music.”

For Julian Lloyd Webber, music is more than a mere entertainment - it signifies the possibility and promise which lies open to everyone. All you have to do is pick up an instrument and start playing.

Amazing Baby - Bayonets


(Muso's Guide, March 5, 2009)

Single review

The musical cascade that is ‘Bayonets’ explodes from the speakers like an Amazing Baby RPG, with a split second of electronic bleeps and then suddenly a bequest of deliciously knowing vocals.

The swooping strings which season this delicious single from the oh-so-now Brooklyn combo are just part of the reason why ‘Bayonets’ rocks - a mouthwatering cross between ABC and ELO, with a whole lot of T.Rex thrown in.

The glam pounding of the single keeps on through string-soaked choruses and pared down verses, a tale of the beautiful and the damned, out with their “guns and bayonets tonight”.

The guitars strut into the chorus as the vocal demurs, “Oh baby, I’ve heard it all”. Of course you have - it’s glam rock with a modern twist, and there’s only so many times to tale of the dirty, pretty things can be retold. Except it’s not been told in this glorious a technicolour for many moons.

The lavish strings and opulent production only add to the musical depth here, and for a world apparently starved of riches and buckling under the weight of recession, there flows a rich vein of musical blood indeed.

Cruising to a finish with a repeated refrain - “The kids are alright,” it softly intones - ‘Bayonets’ is a short sharp shock to the brain. The final line “I want you to remember me” is all at once disarming and knowing, because how would anyone forget?

Amazing Baby are growing up into something very special indeed.

Two Door Cinema Club - Something Good Can Work


(For The Record, March 5, 2009)

Single review

A filmic band with a love of the chiming indie guitar, Two Door Cinema Club are a real treat.

The Northern Irish trio have been trailing up and down the UK with their own brand of punky pop and if 'Something Good Can Work' is anything to go by, they've only just begun bewitching music fans.

Starting off like so many rays of musical sunshine, the magic of 'Something Good Can Work' is really on show when vocalist/guitarist Alex's sweetly accented voice chimes in with a clarity and youthfulness which perfectly matches the clean guitar.

The positivity of the lyric is just right for these gloomy days - "Let's make this happen now/We've got to show the world that something good can work/And it can work for you" - and the light-hearted optimism really carries the listener along with a buoyancy and a giddiness which is all too rare in modern pop.

The uncomplicated melody strides by, and with about a minute to go, a vocal breakdown breeds a real party atmosphere, complete with the whoops of backroom boys and making it a real feelgood hit of the summer.

From the uptempo rhythm to the guileless lyric, 'Something Good Can Work' really stands out as a terrific, uncomplicated indie record.

If you like a lot of jangle in your indie, join this 'Club.

Reverend Peyton's Big Damn Band - Mama's Fried Potatoes/Can't Pay The Bill


(For The Record, March 5, 2009)

Single review

Genuine man of religion the Reverend Peyton's Big Damn Band kicks off 'Mama's Fried Potatoes' with a straightforward enough sentiment - "I wanna thank you all for the food you made us/But it don't hold a candle to mama's fried potatoes".

Then, like the house band in Deliverance, there follows a pounding old rendering of some good-natured, down-home, country-tinged blues.

The uncomplicated lyric is brought with gusto by the vocalist Reverend, as he grinds his gravel voice over the top of some nifty slide guitar and washboard, courtesy of his wife, Washboard Breezy.

A band with a backstory to rival Kyser Soze, there's quite a following for the Rev, his wife and his brother Jayme on drums in their native States. 'Mama's Fried Potatoes/Can't Pay The Bill' is the debut single in the UK, and brings the very essence of the band alive for a nation who have about as much experience of this side of America as Paris Hilton.

'Can't Pay The Bill' is a stringpicking affair with stomping percussion. The washboard makes its presence known, and the whole ethos of the song is very much in keeping with the money problems which seem to be knocking on everyone's door these days, making the Reverend a very shrewd recording artiste indeed.

With the current vogue for stripped-back blues as offered by Seasick Steve, there's a bright shiny future indeed for Reverend Peyton's Big Damn Band. Quite a blessing.

Tuesday, 3 March 2009

Official Secrets Act - Understanding Electricity


(Muso's Guide, March 3, 2009)

Album review

Erudite, intelligent British bands with a nice line in self-effacement who know their way round lovelorn poetry. They’re a dying breed, and it’s a real shame, but rejoice, friend, because Official Secrets Act are here to swell their dwindling ranks.

Hailing from London village via Leeds university, OSA are a snazzy four-piece who know what a hefty debt their style of music owes to the 1980s.

Decked out in button-down Oxford shirts and waistcoats with side-parted mops atop their heads, their passing sartorial resemblance to Blaine and Stef from Pretty In Pink is not the only John Hughes invocation on display here.

Understanding Electricity is a record packed with songs which would gladly soundtrack any one of the swathe of ‘Bratpack’ flicks the erstwhile director ejaculated oh-so-many years ago.

From opener ‘Mainstream’, it’s an enjoyable daytrip through the musical merry-go-round of a really quite delightful bunch of chaps. “Faith, take me away/as far as you possibly can,” goes the lyric, vocalist Thomas Burke leaning on a little bit of Bolan meets Moyet, with a great selection of electronic bleeping in the backing. “John, you’re a hero/you’re a thief… Friday night is the only thing left to rely on,” speaks the voice of youth.

‘So Tomorrow’ canters along, instrumentally bound tightly by drummer Alexander MacKenzie’s stick work, while ‘The Girl From The BBC’ channels the sort of unrequited love that Jake Shillingworth made My Life Story’s stock in trade, darkly harmonious and Smithsian in its self-doubt, “I like her/She likes me,” the lyric offers simply.

On ‘Little Birds’, a tempo change offers a more introspective, melodic and stripped down sound. Burke is more Alex Kapranos on ‘Eleanor Get Your Boots On’, intoning the woeful, “You cry for the night to arrive and you cry for the morning“, before the pace picks up and a whole new song squeezes its way out of the speakers.

As far as album highlights, there are many, but for special note, check out ‘Hold The Line’, a radio-friendly piece of indie delight, all the pop punch of a breakthrough single. A complex guitar melody in no way detracts from a great lyric worthy of Hefner for its referential cultural comment and skewed love story element - “I like to watch her do these things/I like to watch her as she sings/ And as the world collapses around our ears/I play guitar to Tears For Fears“. It’s all you can do not to imagine John Cusack’s kooky high school loner leaping about his room with thoughts of the unattainable Ione Skye.

If you like the sound of yesterday, when we were all outsiders at the average American high school and wondered how Molly Ringwald managed to dress so well for so little, Official Secrets Act are a revelation.

VV Brown: a bit of a rant


(Muso's Guide, March 2, 2009)

Interview

“What a lot of people don’t realise sometimes is that sometimes people are on the grind for years and years and years and people get different opportunities at different times…”

What a lot of people don’t realise is that VV Brown is off on a bit of a rant. This one is about being compared to other female vocalists, but who can blame the 24-year-old for wanting to secure her place in this hazy crazy world of music?

Read just one column about the sassy 1950s-inspired singer-songwriter and a mention of Amy, Duffy, Adele et al is de rigeur, darling (even here!) but in truth, there is so much more to this swell-singin’, rule-breakin’, trend-settin’, flat-toppin’ songstress.

VV wasn’t always this doyenne of Brit cool. A few years before she became a must-watch for 2009 (© All newspapers), she had a very different musical career ahead of her. Signing to a major label at 19, VV went to LA to work with big producers and even sang backing vocals for the Pussycat Dolls’ debut album. But somewhere along the way, VV realised that something was missing.

“I think sometimes when you’re young, you get swept away with the lights and the glitz and the big recording studios and the LA sort of lifestyle. You lose yourself, and I think when you’ve got very strong influenial people around you, you trust their instincts when really as an artist you should speak up and trust the instincts of yourself.”

Luckily, VV’s own instincts kicked in, and that chapter of her life quickly ended. Stoney broke, she arrived back in the UK and started again, but this time she made her mark her way. Firstly by writing for other artists - hey, when the names include sassy pop princesses Sugababes, it’s not to be sneezed at - and then by writing for herself, from her own heart.

The single ‘Crying Blood’ is a fast-paced, bouncy pop record, with shades of ‘Monster Mash’ and a stylish 1950s heart. It’s great, in other words, and all about a nasty break-up with a nasty guy.

“The whole ‘Crying Blood’ situation came from such an honest place where I think the first time round it was quite synthetic. With my music now, it was a very indie-esque process of doing all these shitty gigs and evolving rather than just signing a big record deal and writing massive songs with a big producer.”

Anyone who doubts VV should turn their callous ear to ‘Leave’, a slice of raw, emotive pop with her own unique stamp right there in the middle of it. Ahead of the debut record, this veritable wunderkind is nothing but gracious in the praise which has been lavished upon her.

“I’ve been in this industry for a very long time, and there’s nothing more powerful than the music, so I just want to make a good record and see what happens - and whether I sell a million records and fulfill the prophecies of what everyone’s saying or sell two records, I know that I’m happy and I’ve made something that I can be proud of.”

Make no mistake, though - VV hasn’t left pride in her work to chance. She had quite a handle on the debut record, as she is only too happy to admit.

“I did 70% of the production on the album and I was petrified to give the other 30% over to these two lovely gentlemen. They’re so lovely, but I was so petrified to give over the work I had done! I wanted to have complete creative control, and Island Records are a fantastic label, they gave me that artistic control. I think it’s important.”

As for the future, VV is clear on one thing - inspiration for her sound can come from anywhere.

“It would be very arrogant of me to think that I had reached a peak. I’m a huge fan of many different kinds of music and this is just the beginning, this is an introduction to me. I think on the next album maybe I’d like to fuse different styles - there’ll always be a 1950s element, but maybe 1950s and African world music or something. I’m always evolving and always learning and trying to improve myself. I think that’s the beauty of art. As long as your experiences are changing, your music will evolve and change alongside it.”

For a girl with already quite a story behind her, VV seems determined to edit her own page in rock history. And it’s got success written all over it.

Sunday, 1 March 2009

Shrag - Shrag

(AU magazine, March 2009)

Album review

Where It's At Is Where You Are

The music world is perma-braced for the next big thing. Holler! Younger than your kid sister and twice as stroppy, Shrag are IT, holding back no capital letters. From the Art Brut-style opening chords of 'Pregnancy Scene', these five young pups exhibit a grasp of the snappy lyric, the infectious hook and the melodic bridge that leaves bigger bands reeling from the pungency of youth. From tales of teens in the family way to inept sexual encounters - 'Talk To The Left' - delivered by Helen King, an erudite vocalist with all the lusty nonchalance of Lush's Miki Berenyi, this is a roll call of adolescent dramas, but executed with a lightness of touch and deftness of wit that seem unlikely from a band twice their age.

Shirley Lee - Shirley Lee

(AU magazine, March 2009)

Album review

Missing Page

Wearing the comfortably shabby singer/songwriter hat, Shirley Lee comes fresh from the underrated indie band Spearmint. With their last record released in 2006, Lee has taken his time putting together his own selection here, and it's just lovely. With songs about Brighton Beach and the Lemonheads, Lee is wilfully fey, but it suits him. the romance which courses through tracks like "Spiralina Girl", and the whole album is really a doctrine on love and life without it. Solo work suits you, Mr. Lee.

Tipsy - Buzzz

(AU magazine, March 2009)

Album review
Ipecac Recordings

It's been a while since the Summer of Love hit San Francisco. Back in '67, peace and love ruled and laidback, strung out, freakazoids made music for turning on, tuning in and dropping out to. Not much has changed for San Fran duo Tipsy, an, ahem, 'lounge collage' duo who make funk in the form of percussively dense, melodiously quirky instrumentals. Buzzz is Tipsy's fourth album, and packed full of soundtrack fodder - from indie movies to Tom & Jerry. What a Buzzz.