Flickr Photostream

Twitter Updates

    follow me on Twitter

    Saturday, December 22, 2007

    2007 Round up of Album of the Year lists

    Haven't had a chance to check them all out but from the British music mags, here's Q,MOJO, Uncut. Oh and also the Observer Music Mag.

    And from online sources, Pitchfork, stylus , and Nialler 9's.

    Sunday, December 9, 2007

    Radiohead Discbox

    Mojo have a review of the extra tracks here and the Observer have a band interview here.

    Wednesday, November 7, 2007

    The Top 50 Albums (I've heard) in 2007

    Dropping this before the deluge of Albums of the year lists starts. I always find a few gems i haven't heard of in other's people's lists - Band of Horses and Midlake spring to mind from last year. Neil Young and Caribou might have made this one had i got around to listening to them yet. So, in particular order..



    1. Arcade Fire, Neon Bible
    An indisputable classic. It is more commercial than their debut and perhaps has slightly less of Funeral’s frenetic sense of urgency but its also a deeply ambitious, exciting and accomplished record with a smorgasbord of all kinds of rock’n’roll ghosts and legends influencing the sound - from Orbison and Johnny Cash to Springsteen and U2.

    2. Feist, The Reminder

    Right up there with Joni Mitchell’s Blue as one of the best female singer songwriter albums ever; varied in style and consistent in quality. The voice, the songs, the arrangements. I’m blown away by how strong this is.

    3. Radiohead, In Rainbows

    Radiohead’s most focused record since Kid A and their most accessible since OK Computer. This is a fantastic piece of work with some of the finest moments of their career in Nude, Weird Fishes, and Reckoner. Its accurately been described as their most romantic album yet with the fairly heavy duty appearance of strings and harmonies and, by their standards, some occasionally soppy lyrics. Shock, horror!

    4. Patrick Watson, Closer to Paradise

    Patrick Watson’s voice is as good as Jeff Buckley or Anthony Hegarty's and Closer to Paradise is a supremely confident and complete work, chock full of great ideas. It sounds like Pink Floyd meets Rufus Wainwright meets Erik Satie meets Tom Waits meets late Beatles meets Animal Collective meets Coldplay. A woozy, psychedelic delight.

    5. The National, Boxer

    The National’s sound is essentially Tindersticks meets Interpol and that is as miserable as it sounds, but in a very enjoyable way. Boxer is an exercise in restraint - you can hear them holding off from the obvious big anthemic choruses and crescendos that could come out of these songs. The result is a subtle delight - an album of warm, doomed songs - and a classic grower. And what are the bets the Killers wish they’d written ‘Mistaken for Strangers’?

    6. Panda Bear, Person Pitch

    On this solo effort, Animal Collective's singer/drummer Noah Lennox adds a poppier and more melodic aesthetic to Animal Collective's avant garde, barmy Beach Boys on acid type sound to produce this absolutely gobsmacking, jawdropping wonder of an album. A little reminiscent of Manitoba/Caribou's work but better.

    7. LCD Soundsystem, Sound of Silver

    LCD Soundsystem finally find their heart and soul to become more than the irony laden clever, clever, New York scene band they once were - but dont' forget to produce a savage dance-rock cracker in the process. Put this on and try not to dance around your house like a deranged idiot. I can’t. A huge step forward.


    8. Spoon Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga

    Does any other rock band swagger and strut while making it sound quite as effortless as Spoon? I don’t think so. Singer Britt Daniel has one of finest rock singers drawls ever and the band are very tight. This, their best album, is pop genius. Why aren’t they huge? I don’t know.

    9. The Good, the Bad and the Queen, The Good, the Bad and the Queen

    Yet another masterstroke from Damon Albarn. Its a grower but probably the best evidence of Albarn's ability to mine sweet melodies. And what an atmosphere! Dubby, smoky, melancholic. He keeps surprising us with things we don't know we want to hear till we hear them.

    10. Rufus Wainwright, Release the Stars

    The pre-album buzz from Rufus had him talking about stripping down his sound and doing something more intimate, you know? Smaller. But Rufus can’t do small. So we got another HUGE, over the top sounding album from this preposterously over the top and gifted man. I’m not complaining.

    11. Pharoahe Monche, Desire

    Possibly the best rapper of all time, Monche's flow has to be heard to be believed. This is his first album in almost a decade. Enough said.

    12. Ryan Adams, Easy Tiger

    Finally a filler free effort from alt country’s 32 year old enfant terrible genius. The man has talent oozing out of his fingertips and now he’s got the quality control back on.

    13. Kings of Leon, Because of the Times

    Kings of Leon start trying to sound like U2 to sell more records and guess what? It works, both commercially and artistically, an excellent trad rock album and probably their best album yet.

    14. Iron & Wine, The Shepherd’s Dog

    A huge improvement on 'Our Endless Numbered Days', its pretty but somewhat anodyne predecessor. Iron & Wine were perhaps a little too laid back for their own good. There's a lot more going on here instrument wise, particularly on the percussion. Combined with Sam Beam’s soothing voice, its a really strong album.


    15. Arctic Monkeys, Favourite Worst Nightmare

    The Arctics faced the Supergrass dilemma for their second album - when you're initially famous for short sharp punk-pop songs how do you mature and develop? Favourite Worst Nightmare initially takes the Oasis route, i.e. just not developing - but there's quite enough on the second half of this in the likes of 'Do Me a Favour' and '505' to show they have the talent and imagination to be around for a long time.

    16. Black Milk, Popular Demand

    An irresistibly catchy, inventive album from this Detroit based hip-hop producer turned rapper. Fantastic beats all the way through and great samples. On 'Sound the Alarm' Black Milk says, 'this the one gonna make you go live in the club' - resistance is futile, believe me.


    17. Band of Horses, Cease to Begin

    They still sound an awful lot like My Morning Jacket and this isn’t as good as their criminally neglected debut, Everything All the Time. But its still urgent, heartfelt, great American rock music.


    18. Oh No, Dr No’s Oxperiment.

    Oh No outdoes his brother Madlib at the bollywood meets hip-hop game in this bangin collection of short instrumentals. A lot of fun

    19. Common, Finding Forever

    Kanye West produced most of this and for me its better than Kanye's own album. 'The Game' is the best hip hop track of the year, and the Nina Simone sampling cracker 'Misunderstood' isn’t far off either.

    20. Bjork, Volta

    A partial return to form from a musical treasure. Wanderlust and the Dull Flame of Desire are superb. When she's good she's very good.

    21. PJ Harvey, White Chalk

    White Chalk’s sparse piano textures can get a little monotone but there’s enough strong material on here from one of rock’s greats to give this the thumbs up.

    22. Wilco Sky Blue Sky

    Like many, I was slightly saddened to see Wilco produce such a conventional album after the relatively experimental likes of Yankee Hotel Foxtrot and A Ghost is Born. But you can’t argue with songs like ‘You Are My Face’.

    23. Talib Kweli, Ear Drum

    Some amazing stuff on here - Listen, Say Something, More or Less. Sadly its too long and should have been shortened down to an excellent 50 minutes or so but lets not nit pick, there's quite a lot of one of the best rappers in the business at his best here.

    24. Editors, An End Has a Start

    Formulaic British stadium rock - Joy Division meets U2 meets Coldplay but its really well done. 'Bones' in particular is superb.

    25. Kanye West, Graduation

    Wouldn’t it be great to report this unbearably arrogant big head had released a dud album? But darn him, this is actually a pretty fine piece of work.

    26. M.I.A., Kala

    M.I.A.'s mix of dance-hip-hop-bhangra-and many more genres is pretty darn original and that's what she gets most of her brownie points for. Like Kanye West, her album is ideal if you want something that makes you feel obnoxiously confident. Like Kanye, you'll probably feel like telling her to shut up after twenty minutes. But it'll be quite an enjoyable twenty minutes.

    27. Devendra Banhart, Smokey Rolls Down Thunder Canyon

    An enjoyably rambling, hazy shaggy dog story of an album from freak folks' king hippie.

    28. Animal Collective, Stawberry Jam

    Animal Collective are by turns mindblowing and - when they indulge in too much high pitched yelping - annoying - and there's no change here. Their musical imagination is amazing though.

    29. Robert Plant and Alison Krauss, Raising Sand

    The unexpected pairing of two of the finest voices in modern music. This is a lovely mix of country, blues, bluegrass, skiffle, and rock. And its always nice to hear Robert Plant singing softly.

    30. The Go Team! Proof of Youth

    The exact same musical overload formula as their last album - a hyper mix of TV themes, My Bloody Valentine-like guitar distortion, horns, rapping, and lots of shouting. A fine formula it is too. Still working.

    31. Bruce Springsteen, Magic

    Broooce finally delivers a shameless crowd-pleaser of an album. E Street Band? Check. Lots of big choruses? Check.

    32. Keren Ann, Keren Ann

    Great late night stuff. It reminds me of Cat Power and a little of the Cowboy Junkies in their Trinity Sessions era but with a little less country going on.


    33. Sigur Ros, Hvarf/Heim

    A stop-gap rehash album. This has only three unreleased songs with the remainder of the album taken up with new takes on old songs. Its still a new album by one of the best bands of this or any other time so its going in the top 50.


    34. El-P, I’ll Sleep When You’re Dead

    A dense, sprawling, dystopic monster of an album from one of hip-hops least commercial propositions. Compelling if uneasy listening.


    35. KT Tunstall, Drastic Fantastic

    She may well be utterly middle of the road but she’s got a great voice and some fine songs here.


    36. Cinematic Orchestra, Ma Fleur


    This melancholic, moody jazzy, string laden album has one of the finest songs of the year - ‘To Build a Home’ has a jaw dropping vocal from Patrick Watson. The rest is strong too if a little samey. Like Zero 7 but marginally cooler and quite a bit jazzier.


    37. Jose Gonzalez, In Our Nature

    More of the same from Jose - more flashbacks to hippie 60s/70s songwriters. Strong guitar picking, singing and songwriting.


    38. King Creosote, Bombshell

    Another fine album of Scottish folk rock from Kenny Anderson following last year’s rather lovely KC Rule Ok. The man has a beautiful voice and a fine line in witty, grounded lyrics.


    39. Aqualung, Memory Man

    More ‘sensitive’ bedwetters music! Matt Hales has a great ear for a good melody. If you like Coldplay, you should get this.

    40. Travis, The Boy With No Name

    Middle of the road indie-rock bedwetters music. I like Travis. Fran Healy's got a good voice. So, sue me!


    41. Jens Lekman, Night falls over Kortedala

    This is Disco-folk and its as funny peculiar, funny funny as that sounds. If you like Final Fantasy, Beirut, and Rufus Wainright you’ll like this guy.


    42. Amiina, Kurr

    Sigur Ros’ string section make an album. It sounds rather like their fellow Icelandic compatriots Mum, if they’d been forced to make an album stripped of all the electronics


    43. Tiniariwen: Water is Life

    Bluesy funky Tuareg vibes, they’re like an army of Ali Farka Toures.


    44. Beirut, The Flying Club Cup

    Reminds me a lot of Final Fantasy’s Owen Pallet who guest vocals on this. A good effort from the young fella. One for the future as Alex Ferguson might put it.

    45. Explosions in the Sky, All of a Sudden I Miss Everyone

    More post-rock from the Texan Mogwai. Glorious in places.


    46. White Stripes, Icky Thump

    Not their best, a bit patchy but better than Get Behind Me Satan.

    47. Justice, Cross

    A squelchy, rougher version of Daft Punk. To me not as good as the critics say it is but better than the Chemical Brothers new album.


    48. Josh Rouse, Country Mouse, City House

    More warm, laid back 70s sounding songs from the prolific Mr Rouse.


    49. Gruff Rhys, Candy Lion

    Gruff, the Super Furry Animals singer releases a solo album in the same year his band have an album out. Essentially its like getting a more intimate Super Furry's record. Its also a better album then the band produced themselves.


    50. Super Furry Animals, Hey Venus


    They've been round so long, we take them for granted but not many bands can make melodic songwriting sound as effortless as this.

    Tuesday, November 6, 2007

    PJ Harvey Ticketmaster Rip Off!

    Was on the verge of buying tickets for PJ Harvey when i realised the total price including ticketmaster's notorious 'handling' fee was over 70 euro!!! Somebody's being very very greedy.

    Monday, November 5, 2007

    Sigur Ros Heima

    On Friday, myself and Charis went to Heima in the Irish Film Institute equipped with a naggan of whiskey.

    Heima documents the return of Icelandic post-rock quartet Sigur Ros to their heima (yes, that's right, their home) to play a series of free, unannounced gigs around the country mainly in tiny village halls and windswept fields near fjords.

    I had a rather strong hunch that I would find the combination of whiskey, exquisitely shot Icelandic landscapes, and Sigur Ros’ epic, other worldly music preposterously pleasurable altogether, and bejaysus, i was bang on. Heima is a beautiful and humble celebration of Iceland’s people and landscape - an anti rockumentary if you will - an anti-Spinal Tap. Because the concerts were free, they attracted all sorts from kids to grannies and the cameras focus on the people at the concerts as much or more than the band. Smart move. No rock star megalomania on show here. The band also sneak in some protest against rapacious environment-wrecking industrialists but without labouring the point.

    I emerged from the cinema in a sort of blissed quietude and went in foolish search of a suitably quiet Dublin pub. So in short, I loved this, a magic film from a magic band. And the Icelandic tourist board must be very pleased too. Sadly it was only on in the IFI for a couple of days but the DVD is out now.

    Other rhapsodic reviews here

    The Times (UK)
    The Guardian
    Total Film

    Sunday, September 23, 2007

    That shockingly brilliant Patrick Watson gig

    So, I went to Patrick Watson at the Sugar club last night and it was one the most beautiful gigs I’ve ever been to. Josh who came with me can back me up on this one as he was also blown away.

    The band are from Quebec, fronted by Patrick Watson, who has an AMAZING voice – traces of Jeff Buckley, Anthony and the Johnsons, and a more soulful thing going on too – bits of Little Jimmy Scott in there.

    They were incredibly tight, all great musicians. They had lots of imaginative, creative stuff going on with percussion, effects pedals, sampling and improvising. The drummer in particular played a blinder.

    They play a kinda space rock/jazzy/cabaret/indie rock fusion thang. For soundalikes, they’re not easy to pigeonhole but you could say they sound like (deep breath) Pink Floyd meets Rufus Wainwright meets Erik Satie meets Tom Waits meets late Beatles meets Animal Collective meets Esbjorn Svensson Trio and, though they hate this comparison, Coldplay, on the more piano driven numbers.

    They come back to Dublin again on November 13 to play support to Cold War Kids (sorry but these guys are way too good to be playing support to Cold War Kids) in the Ambassador.

    So go see them live and buy their super Close to Paradise album now!

    P.S. In true music trainspotter style myself and Josh went up to Patrick at the end of the gig to generally gush and enthuse and ask him to sign our CDs and he was a real nice fella!

    Thursday, August 16, 2007

    Autumn/Winter Noteworthy Albums

    Manu Chao, La Radiolina, Sep 3
    Go Team! Sep 11
    Kanye West, Graduation Sep 11
    PJ Harvey, White Chalk Sep 24 UK Date
    Devendra Banhart, Smokey Rolls Down Thunder Canyon, Sep 25
    Jose Gonzalez, In Our Nature Sep 25
    Iron and Wine Sep 25
    Band of Horses Cease to Begin October 9
    Lupe Fiasco, The Cool, November 30

    Monday, June 11, 2007

    Music - What's left in 2007

    What's coming out this year music wise that i'm looking forward to? the list of definites first i.e. they're recorded, mixed, produced, and most of them have a release date.

    On the hip-hop front, Talbi Kweli's 'Eardrum' album is coming out in July and if there's a few more tracks as good as the ones i've already heard - 'Say Something' and 'Listen' - it could be a cracker. Kanye West's 'Graduation' comes out in the Autumn/Winter and Common's got one done and dusted. The Beastie Boys are back too but its an all instrumental album.

    On the indie boys with their guitars front there's Editors 'An End Has a Star' this month, their better American equivalent, Interpol with 'Our Love to Admire' in July. White Stripes with 'Icky Thump' this month too and Ash's 'Twilight of the Innocents' also in June. And Spoon's Ga Ga comes out sometime later this year.For electronica - there's Ulrich Schnauss's 'Goodbye' round about now.

    On the Alt country front Ryan Adams, there's 'Easy Tiger' this month.

    So that's


    Ryan Adams, Easy Tiger

    Beastie Boys, The Mix-Up

    Talib Kweli, Ear Drum

    Editors, An End Has a Star

    White Stripes, Icky Thump

    Spoon, Ga Ga

    Ash, Twilight of the Innocents

    Interpol, Our Love to Admire

    Common,

    Kanye West, Graduation

    Ulrich Schnauss


    And on the surely they must have finished that album by now front, there's

    Radiohead,
    Massive Attack
    Portishead

    Finally on the, isn't it about time they recorded something front?

    PJ Harvey, Doves, Gillian Welch

    Saturday, June 9, 2007

    Revisionist Albums of 2006 List

    Joanna Newsom, Ys
    Arctic Monkeys, Whatever they say I am, that’s what I’m not
    Band of Horses, Everything All of the Time
    Fionn Regan, The End of History
    Tapes’n’Tapes, The Loon
    Cat Power, The Greatest
    Amy Winehouse, Back to Black
    Thom Yorke, The Eraser
    Lupe Fiasco, Food & Liquor
    K’Naan, The Dusty Foot Philosopher
    King Creosote, KC Rule OK
    Damien Rice, 9
    Keane, Under the Iron Sea
    Midlake, The Trials of Van Occupanther
    Lily Allen, Alright Still
    The Flaming Lips, At War with the Mystics
    The Raconteurs, Broken Toy Soldiers
    David Kitt, Not Fade Away
    Snow Patrol, Eyes Open
    The Guillemots, Through the Windowpane
    Si Schroeder, Coping Mechanisms
    Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
    Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Show Your Bones
    Razorlight, Razorlight
    The Strokes, First Impressions of Earth
    Jose Gonzalez, Veneer
    Regina Spektor, Begin to Hope
    Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglova, The Swell Season
    Muse, Black Holes and Revelations
    Beck, The Information