Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts

Friday, 12 December 2014

Top 10 Albums of the Year

2014 has been a rich harvest for exciting music and in compiling this Top 10 there were several very decent albums that I had to ruthlessly shunt downwards.

The Tune-Yards album 'Nikki Nack' was characteristically and delightfully deranged; Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross released another captivating ambient soundtrack for 'Gone Girl'; Manic Street Preachers released 'Futurology', their most consistently strong effort in a number of years; Aphex Twin made a triumphant return after 14 years with 'Syro' (although I actually preferred the long-awaited 'Caustic Window LP'); The Brian Jonestown Massacre released another solid album 'Revelation'; Esben & the Witch's 'A New Nature' was a welcome return to their gothic form after their dreary second album; and Goat followed up their raucously brilliant debut 'World Music' with 'Commune'.

As my interest in guitar-rock bands has continued to atrophy over the last few years, there were 2 albums this year that really piqued my interest - The Amazing Snakeheads' 'Amphetamine Ballads' and Royal Blood's self-titled debut, both demonstrating that it is still possible to inject some supple aggression into the rigor mortis of contemporary rock music.


10.  Liars - 'Mess'


Right from its bizarre opening, being instructed to "pull my face off!", 'Mess' is another engaging and surprising album from Liars, a band who orchestrated an astonishing volte face with 'WIXIW' in 2012, shedding their proto-punk roots in favour of an experimental electronic sound more attuned to someone like LCD Soundsystem. This is one of those albums that rewards repeat listening, unveiling more subtleties and nuances over time.
Highlight: 'Mess on a Mission'


9.  Little Dragon - 'Nabuma Rubberband'


This fourth album from Swedish electronic act Little Dragon is beguiling and minimalist; an intriguing fusion of Portishead-style trip-hop with down-tempo drum-and-synth sounds clearly inspired by Massive Attack. Instead of leaning on these 1990s influences as a crutch, they only serve to enrich the album, envigorating it with a completely fresh appeal.
Highlight: 'Klapp Klapp'


8.  Damien Rice - 'My Favourite Faded Fantasy'


Damien Rice had, before the surprise October release of his third album, been for many a curiously frustrating enigma. After '9' in 2006 he seemed to have retreated to an almost hermetic hush, performing live infrequently and publicly proclaiming a new-found antipathy to the art of song-writing itself. The pleasure to be gained from 'My Favourite Faded Fantasy', and the fact that Rice's ability to craft haunting and plaintive odes to lost love and introspection remains undiminished, is substantial. Whilst overall there is nothing as timelessly classic as his debut 'O', the album contains several worthy gems that reinstate Rice as one of the most gifted singer-songwriters of his generation.
Highlight: 'I Don't Want To Change You'


7.  Mark McGuire - 'Along the Way'


Formerly of the band Emeralds, Mark McGuire's 'Along the Way' is a beautiful and enchanting collection of soundscapes that drift and float through the consciousness with metaphysical ease. Largely instrumental, the electronic-acoustic album takes influence from the ambient work of Brian Eno, Boards of Canada and Bonobo, with shimmering guitarwork reminiscent of U2's The Edge.
Highlight: 'For the Friendships (Along the Way)'


6.  Lana Del Rey - 'Ultraviolence'


As a mysterious, sensual and nihilistic siren, Lana Del Rey continues to inspire intrigue in me. With her follow-up to the magnificent 'Born to Die', 'Ultraviolence' treads a lot of the same aesthetic pathways but doesn't feel derivative for this, rather a well-accomplished companion piece. The songs are drenched in the kind of Los Angeles vainglorious debauchery of a Bret Easton Ellis novel, louche and alluring, with Del Rey's ethereal and seductive vocals scorched by bourbon, marijuana and lost summer nights.
Highlight: 'Brooklyn Baby'


5.  Robert Plant & the Sensational Space-Shifters - 'lullaby... and the Ceaseless Roar'


The 'Golden God' of rock n' roll, Robert Plant continues his solo expedition through musical hinterlands, a persistent and restless quest for fresh textures and tones that seems to infuse him with an almost ageless quality. Drawing from African worldbeat, American folk and blues, and European trip-hop, 'lullaby...' is a thoroughly enjoyable album, equally as vibrant and joyful as his previous album with the same gang of musicians 'Mighty Rearranger' in 2005. Whilst 'Rainbow' soars almost weightlessly, 'A Stolen Kiss' is a forlorn love song that displays Plant at his most vulnerable and revealing. With the media whipping up rumours of Led Zeppelin reformations almost by the week, it is hard to imagine Plant being tempted by such a regressive step again, given that the standard of his solo material remains as strong and as searching as this.
Highlight: 'Somebody There'


4.  Mica Levi - 'Under the Skin (OST)'



Jonathan Glazer's wonderful and disturbing film 'Under the Skin' was enforced beyond all measure by Mica Levi's utterly haunting score. With numerous refrains and repetitive passages, the overall effect is as otherworldly and inorganic as the film itself. String loops and deadened echo-beats amplify the overriding sense of unease and disorientation that permeates through the visuals, and succeeds in being one of the most fascinating soundtracks of recent years.
Highlight: 'Lipstick to Void'


3.  I Break Horses - 'Chiaroscuro'


Like a modern psychedelic mash of The Velvet Underground, the shoegaze of My Bloody Valentine and the bright indie-electro of M83, I Break Horses' 'Chiaroscuro' manages to exceed the expectations set by their debut 'Hearts' and stand out as being an atmospheric and hypnotic success.

Opening with the enchanting 'You Burn', the album undulates throughout with sumptuous rhythms and synth orchestrations. With only two albums behind them, I Break Horses are the band whose future I am perhaps most excited about.
Highlight: 'Weigh True Words'


2.  U2 - 'Songs of Innocence'


Perhaps the most controversial and talked-about album of the year (a remarkable achievement in itself for a band as established as U2), 'Songs of Innocence' is an album that richly rewards repeated listens, and for me stands up sturdily alongside their very finest work.  The album fails to accomplish the cohesiveness that made 'The Unforgettable Fire', 'The Joshua Tree' or 'Achtung Baby' such complete albums, the second half is noticeably more interesting and engaging than the more predictable first.

Having jettisoned their long-time production team of Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois, Brian 'Dangermouse' Burton provides the band with a fresh and energised sheen that gives the impression that this could almost be a new band's debut album. As a band now approaching 40 years together, with this their 13th studio album, U2 have long been left to roam in uncharted musical territory, loved and loathed in equal measure, yet continuing to defy the legions of critics, explore new territory and simply craft great songs. 
Highlight: 'Sleep Like a Baby Tonight'


1.  Swans - 'To Be Kind'

 
 
Originating back in the New York 'no wave' scene of the early 1980s, Swans (led by multi-instrumentalist Michael Gira) are a formidable and explosive experimental-rock outfit that I have had the pleasure of discovering over the last year. This double-album begins with the monumental 'Screen Shot', and a more devastating opening is scarcely imaginable; the intermeshing guitars and propulsive rhythm section building higher and higher until the volcanic eruption of noise.
 
The centre-piece, 'Bring the Sun/Toussaint L'Ouverture' is a colossal 34-minute epic of sense-shattering industrial noise alternating with spell-binding and soporific stretches of menacing ambience punctuated by Gira's snarling and brooding vocals. The overall impression is of a band operating at the very height of their powers, conjuring sounds that are as mind-crushing and intense as they are consistently surprising.  A masterpiece of an album.
Highlight: 'Screen Shot' 


Tuesday, 27 May 2014

The Year 1994 - The Twin Peaks of Nihilism


In terms of popular culture, 1994 was quite a remarkable one. It was the unofficial 'year zero' for Britpop, with the release of Oasis' 'Definitely Maybe' and Blur's 'Parklife', as well as genre-defining albums such as The Prodigy's 'Music for the Jilted Generation', and films such as 'Pulp Fiction' and 'The Shawshank Redemption'.



In amongst all this, it only recently occurred to me that 1994 also gave rise to two musical touchstones of creative nihilism from two disparate entities, that I believe have yet to be surpassed. Manic Street Preachers' 'The Holy Bible' and Nine Inch Nails' 'The Downward Spiral' are, two decades on, as dark and impenetrable as any albums ever made and marked a pivotal culmination point for both bands, linking the two together in a helix of hostility.

The concept of nihilism - essentially the 'negation of negation' - was first propagated in Turgenev's 'Fathers and Sons', although its sacred text is widely accredited as being Dostoyevsky's 'Notes from Underground', a book that would resonate like seismic tremors of self-hatred and anguish through the layers of cultural strata, from the philosophy of Nietzsche to the existentialism of Sartre, Martin Scorsese's 'Taxi Driver', Anthony Burgess' 'A Clockwork Orange', J.G. Ballard's 'Crash' and the music of the Sex Pistols.

Nihilism as a philosophic concept involves the rejection of all moral and virtuous concerns, judging them as futile and irrelevant in the face of the crushing absurdism and oppression that the world represents. The romantic notion that often attaches itself to such advocates lies in their elusiveness, their lack of adherence to the mundane fatuities of the everyday, and the sense that from Dostoyevsky's 'underground man' to Camus' 'l'etranger', by repudiating the moral rules that compel us to aspire to fulfilment in favour of self-destruction they have arrived at a semblance of true freedom.


The post-war generation breathed a heavy sigh of new life into the concept of nihilism, as societal conventions slowly crumbled away into the birth of rock 'n' roll and James Dean's 'rebel' which encapsulated the era of the 'teenager' for which nihilism appeared custom made. The nihilistic phase is a legitimate rite of passage and those who haven't undergone it, I don't believe ever really were teenagers, just ready-made adults heated through by the microwaves of puberty as opposed to undergoing a tortuous and thorough hormonal thawing out.

Both 'The Downward Spiral' and 'The Holy Bible' pulsate with subversive and disturbing themes of alienation, anger and a seething malaise that screams of hopelessness and animosity.

'TDS' stands as a loose narrative of one man's solipsistic disintegration, inspired by Pink Floyd's concept album 'The Wall'. 'THB' explores subjects of exploitation, cultural decay, the horrors of addiction and genocide, and right-wing totalitarianism. Both albums are abrasive, represent a considerable challenge to first-time listeners, but also yield an astonishing depth and thematic strength that merits revisiting.

It is important to contextualise the respective abysses being explored by examining the separate paths that lead there.


Trent Reznor's Nine Inch Nails exploded onto the American scene with 1989's 'Pretty Hate Machine'; an album that perfectly amalgamated subversive industrial music by artists such as Throbbing Gristle, Skinny Puppy and Einsturzende Neubauten, with the new-wave electronica of Gary Numan and Depeche Mode. Modern industrial music was thus born. Mired in subsequent record label disputes, and extensive touring it would be five years before 'TDS', with only the release of an excellent but all-too-brief 'Broken' EP interrupting the productive hiatus.


Manic Street Preachers, a band of four outsiders from the Welsh mining town of Blackwood, had burst onto the music scene with their bombastic 1991 debut 'Generation Terrorists', a compound of 80's 'hair metal' bravado such as Guns n' Roses, and the self-aware rock intellect of The Clash. With songs like 'Motorcycle Emptiness' and 'You Love Us', the Manics encapsulated an ethos of 'culture, alienation, boredom and despair', with a mission statement being to sell millions of records before spontaneously combusting into the dust of rock legend.

Courting controversy by dressing as terrorists, wrapped in leopard-skin furs and lipstick, the band quickly attracted a cult following, largely attributed to the enigmatic Richey Edwards, the band's chief lyricist and sometime rhythm guitarist. Indeed, with the hindsight of Edwards' mysterious disappearance and assumed death, its hard not to consider him a latter-day Syd Barratt, albeit singing songs about anorexia rather than mice called Gerald.

Similarly to Nine Inch Nails, the Manics' difficult sophomore album 'Gold Against the Soul' was given a lukewarm reception, fuelling a broiling sense of tour-weary depression going into the creation of 'THB'.

Both bands approached their third albums with considerable notoriety flying albatross-like within close proximity. Nine Inch Nails had provoked outrage with the 1992 release of the ‘Happiness in Slavery’ video featuring reportedly genuine footage of sado-masochistic torture. This, alongside the news that Reznor had chosen as a recording base for ‘TDS’ (apparently in ignorance), the Hollywood Hills house in which Roman Polanski’s wife Sharon Tate and friends were brutally murdered by members of the ‘Manson Family’ in 1969.

Meanwhile, the Manics’ disturbingly self-destructive aura had been sealed in blood by perhaps the most exquisite nihilistic statement since Van Goph cut off his own ear. Talking to journalists after a particularly gruelling gig, Richey Edwards proceeded to carve the epigraph ‘4 REAL’ into his forearm in response to the artistic credibility of the band being called into question.


‘TDS’ opens with the jackhammer onslaught of ‘Mr Self Destruct’, setting the sonic benchmark for all that follows. ‘Piggy’ is a bare-bones piece of industrial grime, in which Reznor repeats “nothing can stop me now", before collapsing in on itself with a cavalcade of drums. Both ‘March of the Pigs’ and ‘Heresy’ are bone-crushingly intense, before the dirty sleaze of ‘Closer’, perhaps one of the most orgiastic songs ever released by a white rock act. Synths, fuzzy guitar lines and conflicting drum beats build up in the climax like the throes of sexual fervour.

‘Closer’ is the crucial lynchpin around which the album is structured, offering as it does some semblance of relief - in contrast to the subject matter, musically it is album’s ‘poppiest’ track – before being plunged back into the discordant maelstrom of ‘Ruiner’.


‘THB’ opens with ‘Yes’, a song about sexual exploitation and the boundless limits of consumerism, that lays the textural framework for the rest of the album. Richey Edwards’ lyrics are so dense and sesquipedalian, with multiple references often jostling for dominance in each line that singer James Dean Bradfield frequently has a tortuous job vocalising them within the melodic confines of each song. The aesthetic of the music brings to mind Brutalist architecture with its jagged edges and uncompromising rigidity; the guitar riffs are often jarring and dissonant, the rhythm section taut and muscular.

The dominating track on ‘THB’ is ‘Faster’, an adrenalized thrombosis that the Manics have never surpassed; the lyrics invoking the intelligentsia of Plath, Pinter, and Mailer, whilst declaring ‘I know I believe in nothing but it is my nothing’.

‘Archives of Pain’ builds around a menacing bass line and concerns the morbid cult of fascination around notorious figures, name-checking Hindley and Brady, Le Pen and Nilsen, and written from the perspective of a right-wing extremist advocating capital punishment and retributive judgement - ‘give them what they deserve’. On ‘4st 7lb’, Edwards’ lyrics describe the torment of his psychosomatic battle with anorexia, epitomised by the exemplary line ‘I wanna walk in the snow, and not leave a footprint’.


The quality of the production throughout both albums is such that twenty years on they sound as innovative and contemporary as anything released in the interim years. On ‘TDS’, Reznor mines genuinely unnerving aural territory to create wholly original sounds – the screaming loops on ‘The Becoming’ invoking the arrival of the apocalypse itself; the susurration of insects; the ear-splitting drum blasts of ‘Eraser’, and so on. The zenith of epic industrial metal could be said to be ‘Reptile’, with sounds so inorganic and devastating that they invoke the image of a colossal factory system in the process of disintegration.

Similarly, ‘THB’ is suffused with audio samples from J.G. Ballard, Hubert Selby Jr., a mother of one of the Yorkshire Ripper’s victims, and Orwell’s ‘1984’, that shuffle in and out of the songs lending thematic dynamism.

The penultimate track ‘The Intense Humming of Evil’ incorporates audio recording of the Nuremberg Trials with the mechanical puffing and panting of some kind of dehumanised production assembly line. It is as cold and oppressive as the album gets, and to me always sounds like a band almost cogently aware of their impending demise as a creative unit. Closing the album with the quite inconsequential ‘PCP’ has always felt like a misstep to me, as though self-consciously the band felt it necessary to make a small retreat from the necrotic and suffocating chill that had infused the album’s bones.

Despite the equal measures aggression and despair that course through the veins of both albums, there are equally moments of genuine beauty and respite. ‘A Warm Place’ on ‘TDS’ blooms into colour like a palliative, providing a temporary yet comforting numbness, with ethereal textures that wouldn’t be out of place on a Brian Eno album. It is one of the finest pieces of music Reznor has produced and without it as an interlude, ‘TDS’ would be a far less effective piece of work.

Of course, there is little that hasn’t been written already about ‘Hurt’, an anthem for the disenchanted, appropriated in the cultural consciousness by Johnny Cash, that still lays a finger on every raw nerve of emotional potency and is a breathtakingly poignant close to a ferocious monsoon of an album.

‘This is Yesterday’ from ‘THB’ is, similarly, a melancholic break in the dark clouds with shimmering guitar and yearning vocals that invoke ‘the only way to gain approval is by exploiting the very thing that cheapens me’.

The parallels between the two albums is also worth noting in the context of the subsequent impact on the bands’ respective trajectories. Following ‘TDS’, Reznor became further ensconced in addiction and depression that prevented the release of another album until 1999’s sprawling ‘The Fragile’. After heavy touring in the wake of ‘THB’, Richey Edwards disappeared, leaving his car parked on the Severn Bridge (a notorious suicide spot), securing his place in rock mythology as the mystery surrounding his whereabouts continues to inspire conjecture.


Despite the rest of the band continuing as a 3-piece, progressing on to have huge success with anthemic, mainstream albums 'Everything Must Go' and 'This is my truth, tell me yours', I have long thought that the legacy of the Manic Street Preachers would have been best left at 'THB'. To my mind, they should have continued under a different name as the members of Joy Division did subsequent to Ian Curtis' death, becoming New Order.

Twenty years on, the Manics' have maintained a prolific output of new material with varying degrees of artistic success. Whilst 2004's 'Lifeblood' was widely panned, I appreciate it inasmuch as it demonstrates a band dabbling in alternative directions. Whereas, 2009's 'Journal for Plague Lovers', which was warmly received, strikes me as a band desperately reaching back and trying to recapture the black magic conjured up on 'THB'.


By contrast, Trent Reznor's output post-millennium has been much increased and consistently worthwhile, constantly seeking to remain at the vanguard of the contemporary music scene. 2007's 'Year Zero' was an astonishing exercise in electronic (and marketing) experimentation; the instrumental double-album 'Ghosts' was similarly captivating, rich and diverse in scale; whilst his Oscar-winning soundtrack for 'The Social Network' was propulsive and engrossing.

Twenty years on, what is incontrovertible is that these two albums represent a very high watermark in the marriage between music and nihilism; which, as the waters have receded have left very few comparable peaks in their wake.

Wednesday, 24 October 2012

Led Zeppelin - 'Celebration Day'

I had a rather strange and disorientating experience recently whilst viewing Led Zeppelin’s ‘Celebration Day’ film of their 2007 reunion gig, at my local Brixton cinema.  Stunning though the spectacle and performance was, it felt profoundly surreal to be seated in the dark comfort of a cinema, gazing raptly at a rock & roll concert blaring from the big screen. 

Somehow it feels fairly perverse, to watch such a visceral live experience – which is what, in essence, the best music concerts are – in such sedate and refined conditions.  If there is any synergy between the customary rock concert abandon – cheering, fist pumping, singing along – and the cinema-house, it strikes me as being both uneasy and far from naturalistic. 

The best rock concerts I’ve attended are the nearest to a spiritual experience as I’m likely to encounter; they are euphoric, rapturous and the perfect vent for a collective out-pouring of joy and emotion, the thrill of people celebrating that rarest of things - mass consensus in an appreciation of those performing.  Cinematic experiences on the other hand, by the very nature of the film medium, are not at home to similar levels of abandonment.  Films may excite, scare, amuse or even move us to tears, but they exist as representations of events carefully designed to inspire particular emotional responses from their audience.  It is the physicality and spontaneity of live music events and the very proximity to the architects of the entertainment (in the same way as theatre), that demands a different level of engagement and often provokes a different level of reaction.  The more I thought about these strange juxtaposing strands being reluctantly entwined, the more even innocent foot-tapping and head-nodding felt faintly ridiculous. 

That was until I noticed something about the filmed audience in attendance at the O2 Arena that skewed my perception.  For the most part the audience were a gleaming constellation of handheld recording devices, each one capturing that precise moment in time as their own unique and personal concert film.  As the opening notes of ‘Stairway to Heaven’ chimed out, so the crowd illumined like the nightly sprawl of a major city.  As Jimmy Page posed with his trademark violin bow during ‘Dazed and Confused’, the allure of this ‘photo opportunity’ was lost on no one, as each clamoured, sprouting a forest of arms, to gain an unobstructed shot.  Indeed I half expected the cinema attendees to whip out their own devices such was the occasionally photogenic splendour of the big screen representation.

This, of course, is the usual run of things for mostly every concert I have attended in person.  It is a very real curse of the technological times, and one I have been as guilty of propagating on occasion.  In Manchester seeing Roger Waters, I was asked to edge to one side in my tiered seat as I was obscuring the carefully-poised camera of a man behind.  Seeing U2 in New York, I noticed one or two people in my vicinity actually watching the concert whilst filming through their mini-screens, hypnotically drawn to the far-more cogent spectacle they were personally capturing.

In actuality then, my cinema viewing of Led Zeppelin’s historic gig, was the perfect arena in which to gain an accurate – or perhaps hyper-real – interpretation of the audience experience.  Instead of the pristine professionalism of the film, the intricacy of the edit, and the slick direction; a better and truer transmutation of the night would have been to produce a spliced-together amalgamation of the audience footage wrenched from the cavernous vaults of YouTube.  A grainy, wobbly, occasionally-obscured hodgepodge of angles and views that might have served as a closer rendering of what it meant to have been part of that legendary night’s audience.

Tuesday, 15 November 2011

20 of my favourite musical artists

In no particular order

1. Aphex Twin
2. The Beatles
3. Led Zeppelin
4. U2
5. Pink Floyd
6. Nine Inch Nails
7. The Fall
8. Oasis (circa 1994-97)
9. Can
10. Joy Division
11. Jeff Buckley
12. Manic Street Preachers (circa 1991-95 - Richey Edwards years)
13. Brian Eno
14. Radiohead
15. The Smiths
16. Jon Hopkins
17. David Bowie
18. Gyorgy Ligeti
19. Kraftwerk
20. The Brian Jonestown Massacre