Saturday, February 12, 2005

First of all, I must issue an apology of sorts for the recent paucity of posting on this blog. But in staying away for a while, I have left plenty of catching up to do, both from the tail end of 2004, and from the start of 2005. I’m going to concentrate on the latter in this post, if only because this must be the most exciting start to a musical year that I can remember. It’s extremely rare for so many of the key releases of the year to have emerged before the end of January, and it’s been both time consuming and expensive trying to keep up with them all.



Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy and Matt Sweeney – Superwolf

There is the nagging sense that as Will Oldham has become increasingly prolific, his work has become less engaging. The peculiar and uncharacteristic self-consciousness behind his last couple of albums has blunted their impact. ‘Master and Everyone’ seemed like too deliberate an attempt to strip back the arrangements to their bare bones, and last year’s ‘Greatest Palace Music’, a collection of reinterpretations of some of his best songs with all manner of Nashville chintz superimposed, seemed confrontational, a slight swipe at those portions of his audience who would have him pigeonholed as some dark magus of Alt.Country. Both albums had their moments, but ‘Superwolf’, collaboration with ex-Chavez frontman and former Zwan contributor Matt Sweeney feels a good deal more organic and unforced.

This does seem to have been a collaboration in the purest sense, with Oldham ‘challenging’ Sweeney to compose some music to accompany his latest set of lyrics. The result is an album of spare elegance and brooding majesty. Other writers have pointed out that there’s nothing particularly novel here, and indeed Sweeney’s compositions provide a familiar and apposite context for Oldham’s characteristically unusual musings. Yet the differences, subtle though they are, are significant. Sweeney’s more elaborate, textured guitar playing makes the music more technically daring, and the fact that his intelligently picked figures and phrasings seem to make perfect sense makes this even more impressive. The thrill of the challenge seems to have produced the best results from both musicians, with Oldham’s bleak, mordant worldview seeming more elliptical and provocative than on recent releases.

Many of the songs are still characterised by Oldham’s distinctive use of bestial, primitive imagery, which somehow manages to be strangely affecting. Particularly successful is ‘Beast For Thee’, where Oldham’s haunting vocal line makes for an intriguing contrast with the counter melody of the guitar line. The symbolic pledge of the title is both disconcertingly bizarre and refreshingly direct. On ‘What Are You’, Oldham even offers a merciless bout of spanking, a classic example of where his black humour is delivered with what seems like a resolutely serious tone. The key track is the evocative ‘Blood Embrace’ with its memorable picked guitar line and what sound like samples from film dialogue, although I’m unable to identify them. It’s a lengthy, mysterious and brooding highlight.

Much of ‘Superwolf’ might seem a little homogenous to some ears, with its skeletal arrangements and hushed vocalising. Its few uncharacteristically explosive moments therefore come as blessings, even though it is slightly misleading to make one of them the opening track. ‘My Home Is The Sea’ is utterly brilliant, a compelling epic seemingly comprised of segments from two entirely different songs. Somehow they merge together if not quite seamlessly, then at least tastefully, and the full-blooded and expressive guitar work both creates and resolves an enticing tension. ‘Goat and Ram’ moves entirely unpredictably from a muted and whispered beginning to a massive barrage of distorted guitars and spectral harmonies bellowing the words ‘all hail!’. In another context, it might feel portentous or heavy handed, but it works well here for its sheer audacity.

Despite its consistency of pace and mood, ‘Superwolf’ sounds naturalistic, controlled and is richly poetic. Collaborating with Sweeney has broken Oldham’s creative deadlock, allowed him to find his own distinctive voice again and has resulted in his best album since ‘I See A Darkness’.

Athlete – Tourist

It seems churlish and cynical to include a review of this record purely as an excuse to have a rant, but I really can’t resist it. Amidst all the quality releases of the past couple of weeks, ‘Tourist’ stands out for its calculated, manipulative brand (and brand is definitely the right word) of earnest balladry, as well as simply for being utterly execrable. I appreciate that the sincere, overcooked ballad template is extremely popular at the moment (more power to the piano!), but what with this and the new Feeder album pushing the same blandly trite emoting, it seems we’re going to be force-fed this populist tripe for some time to come, especially as Parlophone are intent on releasing a mind-numbing five singles from this relentlessly dull collection.

I must confess I hadn’t realised that Athlete’s debut album had sold in excess of 300,000 copies in the UK, so perhaps their sudden leap into the super league isn’t quite as unexpected as I feel it should be. I hated that album, particularly for its irritating jauntiness and dependency on silly keyboard and synth effects that added nothing to the generally unremarkable songwriting. Compared to this, though, that album was brimming with innovation. ‘Tourist’ is a uniformly plodding, leaden affair that repeatedly strives for transcendence, but ends up crippled by its own lack of ideas or direction. It refuses to veer away from the limited palette established by Coldplay and Keane, and generally fails to throw up any rhythmic, harmonic or melodic invention. Songs like ‘Chances’, ‘Tourist’ and ‘Yesterday Threw Everything At Me’ begin with half-hearted attempts at creating a subtle mood, but eventually collapse under the weight of benign lyrical platitudes (of the ‘I don’t want anyone else but you’ variety) and aimless synth strings that are plastered over them. Most tracks suffer from exactly the same shortcomings as the interminable single ‘Wires’ in failing to ever really take flight. By way of contrast, ‘Half Light’ places more emphasis on the guitars, but they still strum and drong at the same dragging, insipid tempo.

I don’t want to be too callous – but this really does seem like a marketing exercise whereby the record company have thrown money at this band so that they record an album cynically aimed at the current mass market. It has so little individuality or quality of expression that, whilst it may sell bucket loads in the short term, in the long term, it will most likely prove valueless. I’ve already had the misfortune of seeing this band live twice in supporting slots. Mercifully, they seem to be well on their way to headlining enormodomes of their own now so I may well avoid them this year, although the chilling prospect of them headlining the summer festivals cannot be all that distant a prospect. First the return of the appalling Embrace, now this. Make it stop.



Shivaree – Who’s Got Trouble

Ah, much better. There’s more subtlety and invention in any thirty second sample of this album you could select than Athlete can muster across an entire 50 minutes. No doubt it is destined to suffer a similar fate in this country as Shivaree’s previous two albums, despite their debut having sold substantial amounts in other territories. This is beguiling, shimmering, haunting pop music at its very best. Those only familiar with the neutered faux-jazz of Norah Jones and Katie Melua could do worse than approach Ambrosia Parsley (or even her equally excellent contemporaries Erin McKeown and Jolie Holland) for a sultry lesson in how to incorporate jazz phrasing into a pop idiom. Really, I should be speaking in the plural here, as ‘Who’s Got Trouble’ covers so much ground across its eleven tracks that it’s simply impossible to categorise it. This is perhaps unsurprising, as their previous album ‘Rough Dreams’ adopted a similar tactic, but the sheer breadth of ideas and inspirations here is still breathtaking.

Parsley and her exquisite musicians are so confident in their handling of the material that they attempt styles that might come across as either po-faced or cheesy in less capable hands. On ‘Little Black Mess’ and the delightful ‘I Close My Eyes’, they revisit the classy bossa nova tinged feel of ‘Goodnight Moon’ (now easily recognisable as the closing music for the dreadful Kill Bill vol 2). ‘Someday’ has resonances of traditional New Orleans stomps. On ‘Lost In A Dream’, and the startling opener ‘New Casablanca’, they even craft a subtle form of low-key, smoky barroom jazz balladry. If this sounds dull, fear not, because Shivaree are masters of subtlety, texture and mood. The arrangements are intricate and fascinating, and the melodies both infectious and unpredictable. Where strings and horns are deployed, they add colour, texture and contrast to the sound, rather than aiming for the ‘soaring’ blandness that so many others currently seem to prefer. Whilst the individual parts are never overly complicated, the music seems perfectly pieced together so that nothing is superfluous or insignificant.

Whilst Parsley’s vocals were certainly seductive on the previous two Shivaree albums, she has made further improvements here. She sounds consummately elegant, mysterious and sublime, and her phrasing teases out the devastating impact from her deceptively simple words. When she sings: ‘The first cigarette, my first pill/The first cup of coffee and my first chill/You’ll never know my first kiss, somebody else will’, her precise phrasing and delivery imbue these lines with a palpable charge. On ‘Baby Girls’, she sounds like a less abrasive Lucinda Williams, actively contributing to the spooky mood of the song.

This is as considered and nuanced a record as I have heard in a long time, yet it is not academic. It is also a powerfully moving statement, and one that more than consolidates the achievements of their previous releases. It’s criminal that the British music press have given this band so little attention. It’s not being granted an official UK release until April – so at least they have some time to wake up.




Low – The Great Destroyer
Laurent Garnier – The Cloud Making Machine


I’ve banded these two albums together as both have been presented, perhaps a little simplistically, as major changes of direction for the artists concerned. Much has been made of how Low, who usually take their songs at a funeral pace and never really raise the volume above a whisper, have ‘gone heavy’ with this new album, their second for Rough Trade and recorded with uber-producer Dave Fridmann (who has been hard at work over the past few months with Mercury Rev, Flaming Lips and, more intriguingly, Sleater Kinney). Equally, reviews of Laurent Garnier’s first proper album for over five years have centred on his apparent abandonment of club-focused techno in favour of a more downtempo approach.

The Low album is not really that significant a change in direction at all. Some sources have suggested that songs here resemble early nineties goth rockers Curve. I really don’t see how anyone could have arrived at this impression. Actually, all the traditional elements that have made Low’s music so distinctive remain in place. Alan Sparhawk and Mimi Parker’s voices still intertwine in the most glorious and inseparable harmony. When Alan Sparhawk sings alone on ‘Death of A Salesman’, the result is an oddly empty affair, lacking force or emphasis. The approach to rhythm and melody is still avowedly minimal – notes and chords are allowed to linger for what often seems like ages, and Mimi Parker’s percussion retains its appropriately skeletal form.

What is different here is the context. The overall sound is more aggressive, and there is ample opportunity for Fridmann to work his magic with chiming guitar chords and his trademark reverb-assisted drum sound. The opening track (‘Monkey’), with its distorted chords and the elliptical couplet ‘Tonight you will be mine/Tonight the monkey dies’, suggests that the current political climate may have inspired Low to produce a record where anger and bile are frequently favoured over stately reflection. The result is an imposing and intense album that seethes with righteousness and engages more with the outside world. ‘On The Edge Of’ sounds huge, and effectively incorporates some Neil Young inspired fretwork into the wall of sound. There are even attempts at a more conventional pop sound – ‘Just Stand Back’ even recalls Big Star or Teenage Fanclub (another band steadfast in sticking to their trademark sound) and forthcoming single ‘California’ is probably their most immediate and accessible track to date.

That does not mean that poignancy or mystery have been completely excised. ‘Cue The Strings’ begins by doing exactly what it says on the tin, effectively a slightly inferior rewrite of the wonderful ‘Will The Night’ from the ‘Secret Name’ album (still, to these ears, one of the most beautiful songs of recent years). It unexpectedly evolves into something considerably more challenging. ‘When I Go Deaf’ is particularly haunting, and ‘Silver Rider’ retreads some of the more mysterious, elusive and eerie ground that they have covered before, albeit with sublime results in this case.

Dave Fridmann is the Phil Spector of contemporary alternative rock. Sometimes his distinctive production really lifts a record – as with The Flaming Lips’ ‘Soft Bulletin’, and sometimes it smothers material in swathes of unnecessary effects, particularly with recent albums from Mercury Rev. Here he has managed to integrate new elements into Low’s oeuvre without compromising their unique aesthetic. ‘The Great Destroyer’ is a convincing and well-executed meeting of minds that bodes considerably well for the forthcoming Sleater Kinney record.

Garnier’s new release is much less of a synthesis and by far the more radical volte-face of these two albums. ‘The Cloud Making Machine’ is by no means a failure, but I’m not yet convinced that it is worthy of some of the plaudits currently being heaped on it. It is a drifting, ethereal collection of mood pieces that frequently sounds impressive but, at least with the first few listens, doesn’t quite manage to sustain attention. One pointer as to where Garnier’s intentions may lie with this release can be spotted in the presence of electronic jazz keyboardist Bugge Wesseltoft, whose self-styled ‘new conception of jazz’ seems to inform a large portion of the material here. There is a lot of meandering, semi-improvised material here, much of it never quite creating the thrill of improvised jazz, or the hypnotic calm of the best electronica.

Having said that, the best bits of ‘The Cloud Making Machine’ work brilliantly. ‘9:01-9:06’ is stuttering and unpredictable, and sounds doubly surprising sequenced after the somewhat noodling introduction. ‘Babiturik Blues’ incorporates the blues and jazz influences into Garnier’s vision with some degree of clarity. ‘Jeux D’Enfants’ is intelligently textured, and benefits from some unusual sounds.

Elsewhere, however, Garnier falls flat on his face. The one moment where he attempts to craft something energetic and inspiring (‘I Wanna Be Waiting For My Plane’) turned out to be a horrible electronic Stooges parody with particularly dire lyrics. In fact, the lyrical and thematic concerns of this album seem a little impressionistic and under-developed. Given that Garnier’s real strength lies in the field of instrumental music, I can’t help feeling he should have stuck to this domain. There are, after all, still plenty of possibilities for him to explore, as the finest moments here attest.

Whilst it is an interesting departure for Garnier (and how easy it would have been to simply repeat the formula of ‘Unreasonable Behaviour’), there is nothing here as thrilling as ‘The Man With The Red Face’, with its genuine improvised rush, or ‘The Sound Of The Big Baboo’, with its relentless energy. It just seems to melt too comfortably into the background, too often failing to engage. It may well simply be something of a grower – if it worms it’s way into the higher echelons of my albums of the year list come December – you’ll know that I’ve changed my mind!

Bright Eyes – I’m Wide Awake It’s Morning/Digital Ash In A Digital Urn

So far, I’ve been somewhat agnostic about the talents of Nebraskan wunderkind Conor Oberst – not least because whenever someone is heralded as the ‘new Bob Dylan’, I’m always a little suspicious. My suspicions of Oberst’s earlier work proved to be well grounded, given his tendency to over-emote and, unsurprisingly, pen lyrics of a slightly earnest adolescent tone. ‘Lifted’, his previous record, although bloated and inconsistent, displayed definite signs of improvement, and these two simultaneous releases go some way towards fulfilling that promise. Oberst is beginning to explore different settings for his expressive, occasionally cloyingly nasal vocals, and is beginning to exercise admirable restraint over his less appealing mannerisms.

He has not opted for the double album – or the two separate albums packaged as one – no, these are two entirely separate releases for which you will have to pay full price twice. The former has been billed, accurately, as a melancholy, countrified collection that betrays some hint of Oberst’s recent role as a political campaigner (he joined Bruce Springsteen and REM on the Vote for Change tour, a line-up to die for, although clearly not good enough to oust a President). The latter has been described in some quarters, wildly inaccurately, as a flirtation with avant-garde electronica. Electronic, in part, it may be – but it’s not particularly avant-garde at all. It strikes me as a pop album, heavily influenced by the experiments with electronics in the eighties, and sometimes benefits greatly from adopting a more melodic approach.

The use of backing vocalists on ‘I’m Wide Awake…’ has proved to be an inspired move. Emmylou Harris might seem an obvious choice of guest singer – especially as she appears to be something of a backing singer for hire at the moment – but let’s not take her enormous talent for granted. It would not be overstating the case to proclaim her as the best harmony singer in the world – she is the only person to have successfully harmonised with Bob Dylan, and her recordings with Gram Parsons are rightly hailed as the finest examples of close harmony singing in the country genre. The impact of her presence here is enormous – her controlled and passionate reading of Oberst’s melodies blunts some of the harshness in his approach, and the choruses frequently sound sublime, particularly on ‘We Are Nowhere (And It’s Now)’ and the expansive rush of ‘Landlocked Blues’, which neatly combines Oberst’s personal and political fears. The guest appearance of My Morning Jacket’s Jim James on the opening ‘At The Bottom Of Everything’ also adds feeling and colour to the endearingly jaunty hoedown sound.

The musicianship here is superb – and whilst Oberst himself is a compelling presence – much of the credit must go to producer and multi-instrumentalist Mike Mogis, who has also contributed his alchemic talents to the wonderful new album from Rilo Kiley. The instrumentation is particularly dazzling on ‘Old Soul Song (For The New World Order’, which is eager to remind of the strong links between country and soul music.

It sounds brilliant, but much of this material suffers from the kind of banal grandstanding statements that occasionally make Oberst seem pretentious. He still displays a tendency towards oversinging, although he has started to tone down his mannerisms. The best moment here is the hit single ‘Lua’, which is as spare as a recording can be, and where Oberst starts to assume a genuine vulnerability rather than a cloying earnestness. Its simple tale of the fading of hedonism into reality in the morning light is honest and touching. ‘I’m Wide Awake..’ is not quite the new American masterpiece some have suggested it is – but it’s certainly an invigorating listen, and a major step on Conor Oberst’s long road to realising his considerable potential.

Whilst ‘I’m Wide Awake..’ is easily the more immediate and accessible of the two albums, I wonder if I might come to like ‘Digital Ash in a Digital Urn’ more. It suffers from a similar set of problems – the obsession with binary, digits, data and primitive technology is surely a bit obvious and calculated for a move towards embracing electronica. It works despite its faults, however, because rather than having made a ‘dance’ album, Oberst has achieved something trickier. There is a very successful integration of acoustic and electronic instrumentation here that allows harps and flutes to sit comfortably with drum machines and analogue synthesizers. Oberst also makes full use of live drums, occasionally manipulated, which adds strength and energy to the sound. He has also saved some of his best songs for this album. ‘Arc Of Time’ and ‘Take It Easy (Love Nothing)’ are almost infectious, and are two of the more instantly appealing songs here. Others take more time, and present more of a challenge, but ‘I Believe In Symmetry’ and ‘Down A Rabbit Hole’ are crafted with elegant precision, and sound full of confusion and chaos. It’s by no means as ‘out there’ as some would suggest – it’s a good pop album, impressively orchestrated and cleverly executed.

Magnolia Electric Co – Trials and Errors

This is a crushing disappointment. Over the last few albums recorded by Jason Molina under a variety of different monikers, I have become enticed by his slow-paced and hypnotic dirges, and particularly by the raw majesty of some of his full-band studio recordings. Confused though I am by his current name changes – a Songs:Ohia album called ‘The Magnolia Electric Co’ is followed by a new line-up of Songs:Ohia claiming the album title as their new band name, whilst Molina produces a remarkable solo album under the name of ‘The Pyramid Electric Co’. Are you still with me?

‘Trials and Errors’ is a live album that bears some similarity with Neko Case’s recent gem ‘The Tigers Have Spoken’ in that it features previously unreleased material. Two of the tracks here are destined to appear on Magnolia Electric Co’s forthcoming Steve Albini-produced studio set, while many of the others are available exclusively on this limited release. Unfortunately, whilst it offers long-term fans plenty of incentive to dish out the cash, it compares much less favourably with the Case album in terms of quality. Whereas ‘The Tigers Have Spoken’ was a charming and nuanced collection that documented Case’s current outlook, both in terms of traditional influences and her own original writing, ‘Trials and Errors’ merely details Molina’s Neil Young fixation at quite considerable length.

The pace and tone of this set is not just consistent, it is entirely homogenous. The drum sound is a horrible plodding rock thud that is rarely ever allowed to stray from the basic backbeat formula. Country rock drummers are often rudimentary, but most at least have some awareness of the need for dynamic variation and a sense of progression within each song. The guitars strum and duel relentlessly, and there are numerous solos, many of them gratuitous or unnecessary, failing to add any depth or resonance to the songs. This is a considerable shame, particularly considering that the new writing is crisp and powerfully emotive. The first couple of songs reveal the recurring theme of darkness, and ‘The Dark Don’t Hide It’ and ‘Don’t It Feel Like The Dark’ are classic Molina songs, characterised by a poetic ambiguity and haunting core, with some typically vulnerable Molina vocals adding extra depth. Musically, however, they seem heavy-handed and stilted, and it is this rather leaden sound that persists throughout the entire album.

Unsurprisingly, the problems are particularly acute on the renditions of more familiar material. On the ‘Magnolia Electric Co’ album, ‘Almost Was Good Enough’ was slow burning, but also brilliantly intense – here it just sounds tepid and flat. ‘Cross The Road’, from the outstanding ‘Didn’t It Rain’ album, was an elusive, fragile beauty, but now sounds lumbering and directionless. Virtually every song is taken at the same level and each utilise the same limited palette of ideas. I can’t decide whether it is the production values or the playing that is at fault – but I don’t come away from this album with a sense of Magnolia Electric Co as an exciting live act, and my sense of Jason Molina as an increasingly original and unusual songwriter can only be mildly dissipated by the realisation that he has failed to translate his vision to live performance.
There’s still a lot to get through, so expect more reviews to be posted in the next few days…

Friday, February 11, 2005

Elvis Costello and the Imposters – Hammersmith Apollo, London 10/2/05

I’ve already spent a great deal of space on this blog bemoaning lazy critical presumptions about Elvis Costello – that each album is either heralded as a ‘return to form’, or ‘further evidence of his decline and failure to recapture the spirit of This Year’s Model’ blah, blah, blah. On the Newsnight Review, Bonnie Greer and Germaine Greer, two critics admittedly not particularly well qualified to discuss songwriting, dismissed Costello’s latest album with the assertion that he had not developed as a writer and performer since the 1970s, and remained in the shadow of Bob Dylan. We all know that Dylan is the foremost inspiration for Costello’s writing, but this argument demonstrates such ignorance of Costello’s recent work that it can only be described as wrong. He has proved himself to be a master at assimilating a wide variety of influences, including classic soul, piano jazz, chamber pop, aggressive punkish rock and roll, country, folk music and classical composition, whilst retaining his own distinctive lyrical bent. Since the release of ‘When I Was Cruel’, it now appears that Costello has entered another prolific period, not just releasing three albums in quick fire succession, but also touring relentlessly across Europe and America in support of each. If anyone still considers Costello a spent force, or an ‘antique’ as he rather self-deprecatingly describes himself this evening, they could do worse than to attend one of his shows.

If you don’t feel you can rely on Costello for consistent musical quality, then you would at least have to concede that he is steadfastly dependable in terms of value for money. Tonight he gifted us with some 32 songs in 2 and a quarter hours, barely pausing for breath, yet hardly breaking into a sweat. He seemed at turns edgy, aggressive, tetchy, sympathetic, humorous and warm. It was tremendous fun for the audience, but I would not want to swap jobs with his guitar technician under any circumstances. For the numerous guitar changes, Costello remained at centre-stage, demanding that the poor man run to him as fast as humanly possible to switch his guitars. Frequently, Costello had launched the start of the next tune before he’d managed it. There were a couple of times when he was greeted only with a swift caution to hurry up. It was this impulsive energy that helped make tonight’s show so thrilling, with most of the material (even that dating from the seventies) sounding fresh and invigorated, save perhaps for the obligatory and slightly perfunctory blast through ‘Pump It Up’.

This show was precisely paced and balanced, veering from popular choices that would please the more casual of his admirers, to vastly more esoteric selections from his back catalogue. That he managed to do this whilst playing most of new LP ‘The Delivery Man’ was particularly impressive. This was not a promotional blast through the new material with a sprinkling of old favourites to keep the fans happy – instead, it demonstrated the consideration, commitment and energy of a seasoned performer. Tonight was not just a showcase for one of the giants of songwriting, it was also time to witness Costello as an impassioned and inspired bandleader, and a performer of wit and invention.

The Imposters make for a superb backing band, cooking up a storm of a groove on ‘Button My Lip’ and ‘Bedlam’, and sounding genuinely soulful on ‘Temptation’ and ‘Country Darkness’. They provide subtle ambience for ‘Almost Blue’ and an inspired reinvention of ‘When I Was Cruel’, stripped of the loops and electronic interventions that characterised the studio recording. They also demonstrate an instinctive awareness, similar to that of the E Street Band, that can only come with relentless performing as the same unit. Costello only has to raise his arm, and they immediately conclude the song. He gives a subtle signal, and the volume is dropped to a barely audible whisper. This tempestuous, unpredictable quality, bolstered by Pete Thomas’ inventive drumming and Steve Nieve’s extraordinary keyboard wizardry, makes the band as thrilling to watch as their leader.

The track selection touched on almost every facet of Costello’s chameleonic career. Particular highlights included the opening ‘Blue Chair’ and ‘Uncomplicated’ from 1986’s angry classic ‘Blood and Chocolate’, a rare airing for ‘Sulky Girl’ and the superb ‘Kinder Murder’ from Brutal Youth, faithful to the recorded templates, but still snarly and twisting. Contrast is provided by some intriguing band versions of tracks from his side-projects. ‘In The Darkest Place’ (from the Burt Bacharach collaboration ‘Painted From Memory’) and ‘You Turned To Me’ (from last year’s syrupy ‘North’, a collection of jazz piano ballads) sound elegant and emotive, and are heightened in power simply by virtue of being taken out of their respective contexts. It is on these tracks that his voice sounds most distinctive, his unusual vibrato rich in character and power. Occasionally elsewhere tonight there is evidence of some vocal frailty (just the occasional slip, crack or quashed note) that might betray the heavy demands of his touring schedule. Still, given that the likes of Liam Gallagher and Johnny Borrell have lost their voices and cancelled shows under stress from considerably lighter workloads, it would appear that Costello has preserved and developed his voice remarkably well over the years. Just compare him with the worn and frequently incomprehensible babblings of contemporary Bob Dylan. He has retained a mastery over diction and phrasing that Dylan has sadly lost.

He has also expanded his ability to engage with the audience in more recent years. The chanting on recent single ‘Monkey To Man’ provides the perfect opportunity for some call-and-response shenanigans. Rather less obviously, he collapses to his knees and inserts a strange rendition of ‘Suspicious Minds’ into ‘Alison’, and sits on the edge of the stage for a subtle and engaging reading of ‘Almost Blue’. His best trick is something he now seems to do at every gig, but to which he adds an exciting new dimension this evening. This is his tendency to sing at full projection, standing well away from the microphone. Impressively, his voice carries to the back of the venue. What might appear as a tiresome display of virtuosity works brilliantly because of the context. The effect heightens the torrid intensity of ‘I Want You’, and the palpable drama of ‘The Delivery Man’. It also adds a more playful dimension to ‘Hidden Charms’, for which he steps away from the microphone to vocalise into the well-aged pick-ups of his most recent guitar purchase, apparently for a mere $150.

As well as these inspired selections, he also provides plenty of instantly recognisable classics. ‘(I Don’t Want To Go To) Chelsea’ still sounds driving and energised, whilst ‘A Good Year For The Roses’ is splendidly elegiac. ‘Radio Radio’ and ‘Blame It On Cain’ sound spirited, and ‘Pump It Up’, whilst easily sounding the most dated choice in this set, pleases the crowd and finally tempts them into standing up. The new material was warmly received, and stood up well against this torrent of standards. Placed among a broad range of material, many of the tracks on ‘The Delivery Man’ felt like expertly crafted summaries of Costello’s thematic and musical concerns so far, particularly with the spirit of Dan Penn being invoked on the masterful ‘Country Darkness’ and the dramatic ‘Either Side Of The Same Town’. He manages to get away with performing the duets without the presence of Emmylou Harris (instead we get ‘Daveylou’ Farragher on harmony vocals, immensely able, but lacking the counterpoint of a female perspective). ‘Nothing Clings Like Ivy’ and ‘Heart Shaped Bruise’ are elegant dissections of relationships, powerfully communicated in live performance as well as on record.

There was no time wasting with the tiresome business of encores, although the band clearly could have milked the considerable applause for much longer had they felt the need. After introducing the band over the pounding backbeat of ‘Pump It Up’, he continued to rapidly plough through some more popular favourites, including the requested ‘Shipbuilding’ and Nick Lowe’s ‘(What’s So Funny About) Peace, Love and Understanding’. At last, this unusually reticent crowd began to acknowledge the depth and quality of the performance, and Costello brilliantly, if somewhat perversely, declined to sustain an enervated mood during what might have passed for encores. He followed upbeat numbers with ballads, leaving the audience perplexed as to whether they should remain standing or simply sit back down again. In recent years, his concerts have usually been brought to a brilliantly uncomfortable conclusion with ‘ I Want You’. This time he bravely follows it with ‘The Scarlet Tide’, originally composed for the Cold Mountain soundtrack (easily the best thing about that turgid and unconvincing movie), now also the closing track on ‘The Delivery Man’. I found it strangely moving this evening, an emotional conclusion to an outstanding performance of great range and depth.

I can’t resist a brief rant to conclude – the atmosphere was fairly stilted anyway as an all-seated theatre performance, but the empty seats around us didn’t help. John Kell (see www.kingofquiet.tk in the next few days – I have no doubt he’ll be able to deliver a more concise and informed review than this one) was left unable to get a seat in the stalls from any of the official outlets. This implies to me that these seats were bought out by touts or the regular ebay dwellers that then proved unable to sell them at inflated prices. This infuriates me greatly as Costello is an artist easily capable of selling out this size of venue, who, despite being promoted by the fundamentalists at Clear Channel, has managed to keep his ticket prices at an almost affordable level over the last few years.

Erin McKeown – Bar Academy, Islington 9/2/05

Whilst the Costello gig had been impressive particularly because of the compelling interaction between bandleader and band, this intimate show from the quite wonderful Erin McKeown was a peerless lesson in how to engage an audience as a solo performer. Having been struck by her rendition of ‘Strung-Lo’ on a Jools Holland show a couple of years ago, I was aware that she was a talented guitar player and distinctive singer, but I was still unprepared for just how charming and convincing a show this would be.

McKeown is touring the UK with her friend, neighbour and fellow songwriter Kris Delmhorst, so it is worth spending a few brief words discussing her complementary and appealing support set. Her songs are arguably a little more generic than the jazz/country/musical melanges of Ms. McKeown, but no less touching or affecting. Her voice seemed mostly mellifluous and elegant, although she sometimes overdid the Emmylou Harris trick of slipping between vocal registers at the end of phrases. She clearly had some Bostonian followers in the audience this evening, and they enabled her to gain confidence, appearing playful and endearing on stage. It was particularly pleasing to see McKeown and Delmhorst sing and play together, in both headline and support slots, and this was a performance refreshingly free from ego. In fact, their voices intertwined with consummate ease.

McKeown’s headline set was something of a revelation for me. Stripped of the ornate arrangements that characterised the criminally overlooked ‘Grand’ album, the songs still sounded elaborate and lyrical (in all senses of the word). It’s a lazy and easy comment to make when reviewing solo gigs – but it really is one of the hardest challenges a performer can face to communicate with an audience when armed with just a microphone and guitar. McKeown clearly had such a mastery over her own spindly and twisty material that she made this look easy. She handled the difficult phrasing and unusual cadences with admirable clarity, and even premiered new material as if it were a well worn-in old pair of boots, particularly the marvellous ‘To The Stars’.

She is a literate, wordy songwriter, but also adept at handling everyday emotions and is highly sensitive to environment and surroundings. Most of her songs have a narrative quality to them, and her voice is one of wisdom and experience that belies her youth and verve. She managed to captivate my attention throughout the duration of this performance, engaging the audience in call-and-response chanting, even getting us to sing along on ‘Born To Hum’ whilst admirably maintaining her own concentration. In fact, concentration may be entirely the wrong word here, because throughout she seemed so relaxed and at ease as to be able to pick out intricate guitar lines whilst simultaneously controlling complex melodies.

Her guitar playing is her killer asset. She has mastered a wide variety of styles, from the bluesy twang of ‘Blackbirds’, to the elaborate pop chord progressions of ‘Slung Lo’ and ‘Cinematic’. She has the great skill of displaying dazzling musicianship without ever appearing blandly virtuosic or overly complex. She still has a commanding understanding of the value of an infectious melody or an identifiable theme.

Many of her songs have both – ‘A Better Wife’ is touching, and the wry gender subversion of ‘La Petite Mort’ made for the night’s most straightforwardly entertaining moment. ‘James!’, a song in which she dispenses relationship advice to a friend (although she confessed to initially encouraging him in his futile quest after the army boy next door), is particularly brilliant. Even without the horns, it is a distinctive song of considerable charm – and if anything, it’s delicate humour and honesty cut through more clearly in its acoustic rendition here.
Whilst she is an endearingly down-to-earth and modest performer, her considerable talent convinces throughout. Her new album promises to be every bit as distinctive and impressive as the previous two – hopefully she will return to the UK in support of it.

Tuesday, January 11, 2005

The First Reviews of 2005!

The new year is certainly beginning with a bang. Indeed, so many of the key releases of the year for me seem to be being released on January 24th that I may well be bankrupted before the year's even got into swing. Anyway, here are the first handful of albums that I've managed to hear...

Mercury Rev - The Secret Migration

The ethereal beauty of 'Deserter's Songs' allowed Mercury Rev belated but hard-earned critical garlands, but also ushered many writers into swathes of hyperbole that have yet to wear off. 'All Is Dream' was branded a continuation of the good work of 'Deserter's Songs', whereas actually it was stodgy, portentous and mostly quite dull. Arguably the best element of 'Deserter's Songs' (and indeed its equally excellent predecessor 'See You On The Other Side' was its consummate engagement with great American musical traditions, from Appalachian folk through to improvised jazz. For 'All Is Dream', the band seemed to have forgotten that this was their great strength, instead opting to create an alternative fairytale reality, with music overburdened with distorted guitars and big drums, the results being depressingly ordinary. There is, unsurprisingly, both good news and bad news with the highly anticipated 'The Secret Migration'.

The good news is that it is another sidestep in a slightly different direction. It is much more 'pop' than its predecessor, and doesn't neglect memorable melodies to quite the same extent (although they are arguably still in much shorter supply than I had hoped). It also has a luscious, richly cinematic quality that may endow it with some appeal. At its best, it is simple and effective, particularly on the loose-limbed and rhythmic 'Across Yer Ocean', a song which benefits from being uncharacteristically understated, and is bolstered by some irresistible twangy guitar lines in the tradition of Jimmy Webb songs. Equally endearing is the undeniably pretty 'My Love', which has a lovely Roger McGuinn-esque guitar solo and remains quietly mournful throughout. 'Secret for a Song' is the big opening statement, and the one moment where the great drive to achieve a 'big sound' actually results in something engaging. The short and sweet 'Moving On', with its Beach Boys-inspired harmonies is also an unexpected twist in proceedings.

The bad news is that much of 'The Secret Migration' is again incredibly mundane. The elaborate and dense arrangements of 'Deserter's Songs' remained sidelined in favour of great swathes of synth and keyboard orchestrations that fail to add very much beyond the merely impressionistic. They certainly don't have the verve or imagination of the synth stylings of the recent Destroyer album. That these bland sustained chords and studio effects are piled on to pretty much every song also makes for a irritatingly homogenous collection. Very few of the songs actually have either the energy or the emotional appeal to linger much in the mind. Lyrically, Jonathan Donohue remains committed to all things mythical and mystical, clearly striving to transcend ordinary reality, but frequently ending up sounding crass and unconvincing. When we get totally awful song titles like 'Black Forest (Lorelei)' and 'First Time Mother's Joy (Flying)', it's very hard to banish thoughts of 'Tales From Topographic Oceans' from the mind. There is a sense with recent Mercury Rev material that they have started to take themselves far too seriously, convinced that they are making hugely significant musical statements when they are in fact merely drifting without many useful ideas.

Unsurprisingly, 'The Secret Migration' has already been highly acclaimed by a British Music Press afraid to criticise a pantheon it helped to create. Mercury Rev seen to have inadvertently become one of the untouchable giants of modern rock music. Some seem enthralled by the band's romantic quality, but a much better example of shameless romanticism would be the outstanding debut from Canada's Arcade Fire (see my albums of 2004 list and previous review). 'The Secret Migration' has a handful of charming moments, which is better than a kick in the teeth, but mostly it fails to ignite.

Lou Barlow - Emoh

Well you either know Lou Barlow's songwriting intimately and love it with all your heart, or you don't. It seems unlikely that this first 'official' solo album from Barlow (at least it's the first released under his own name) will bring Barlow any wider recognition. For those that know, however, this may be what we've been waiting for for years. It's still faithfully lo-fi, mostly built over unfussy acoustic guitar strums, and occasionally bolstered by silly toy keyboards. What makes it stand out from other Barlow projects is its consistency of purpose and quality, as well as it's relative lack of arsing about. With Sebadoh, Barlow wrote some of the most elegantly moving, lovesick indie songs ever penned ('Soul and Fire', 'Rebound', 'Together Or Alone', 'Willing to Wait' and 'The Beauty Of the Ride' would easily all make it into my favourite songs of the nineties list), and with the Folk Implosion he crafted a number of excellent albums, most notably 'One Part Lullaby', a putative attempt to engage more with modern technology. 'Emoh' strips Barlow's songwriting back to its bare essentials, sometimes with melodies so simplistic, they sound like nursery rhymes.

There's an innocence and naivety here that manages to be touching rather than twee. It treads a fine line for sure, but it stays exactly on the right side of it because, as ever, Barlow's perenially adolescent takes on human relationships end up being surprisingly perceptive. There are plenty of platitudes, but Barlow sings them with such underplayed sincerity that it's hard not to feel a tug on the heartstrings. The two highlights are a pair of beautiful songs, as good as any he has ever written. 'Legendary' and 'Puzzle' are among his most perfectly concise, and deeply affecting compositions. On the latter, he seems genuinely bewildered, confessing, 'in between my shadow and your light, I did lose you', whilst on the former, he is simply devastated. Elsewhere, the arrangements are slightly more playful, such as on 'Caterpillar Girl', an obvious choice of single should Domino want to release one, or on 'Monkey Begun', which is almost upbeat. On 'Home', the rudimentary drum machine is reminiscent of Barlow/Davis incarnation of Folk Implosion. There's very little of the angsty, grumpy Lou that has blighted his chances of success in the past, and 'Emoh' does seem like a concerted attempt to produce a consistently powerful collection of deceptively simple songs. With me, Barlow is certainly preaching to the converted, but if you want a way in to understanding the Barlow mindset, this may be the best place to come.

Patrick Wolf - Wind In The Wires (Tomlab)

Patrick Wolf's elaborate vocalising is a million miles from Lou Barlow's soft and delicate delivery. In fact, I often wish Patrick would stop sounding so serious and earnest and give his often excellent songs a little more room to breathe. Advance reports have suggested that he has done exactly that with 'Wind In The Wires'. It sounded like he was going to take the best elements of 'Lycanthropy', an album which demonstrated tremendous potential, and build them into something spectacular, with wildly abstruse arrangements combining with more restrained, folk-tinged melodies.

Given that the bulk of 'Lycanthropy' was written when Patrick was very young (and clearly also quite impressionable), it's not surprising that some of it betrayed a rather adolescent world-view. It seemed to focus closely on Patrick's pubescent experiences and confusions. 'Wind In The Wires' is based on more of Patrick's youthful experiences, this time in the form of train journeys across the West country and glimpses of the Devon coastline. It is thematically much more coherent and mature than its predecessor, and its preoccupation with Hardy-esque stories, landscape and weather lend it a lingeringly evocative quality. It is bookended by two remarkable songs which are easily the best he has recorded so far. 'The Libertine' lives up to its name by sounding reckless, carefree and wild, melding folky violin with a relentless disco beat. The concluding 'Land's End' is a carefully constructed epic that veers from the wistful to the exhuberant, and it perfectly summarises this album's many moods and feelings. Much of this album concentrates on the idea of escape and the chorus of this song states 'I'm leaving London for Land's End/ With a green tent and a violin'. It perfectly captures the thrill of leaving the crowded city for a more personal, mysterious space. It is a great journey into the unknown.

In between the two, there is also much to be encouraged by. 'Teignmouth' is spectacularly beautiful, and one of Patrick's most complex and deftly handled arrangements. That it dates back to his teenage years clearly demonstrates his precocious talent and self-confidence. 'Ghost Song' sounds distant and shimmering, whilst 'This Weather' drifts mysteriously in and out of the ether. Elsewhere, however, it's arguable that Patrick concentrates on mood, sound and theme at the expense of melody. I love the way this album sounds - it's conflagration of quaint instrumentation and modern electronics, its careful engagement with both folk music and the torch song - it's just that I struggle to recall specifics. I can remember the spirit and feel of this album - I just couldn't really hum any tunes from it. Patrick's tendency to oversing also obscures melodic gifts that are undoubtedly present, but perhaps still need to be given room to develop. Plenty of people have been seriously comparing Patrick with the young Kate Bush, whose melodies were often complex, and could also prove strangely elusive. What feels frustrating now may well make perfect sense given several more listens. I certainly want it to - because 'Wind In The Wires' is an intelligent and touching paen to the naivety and thrill of escape.

Roots Manuva - Awfully Deep (Big Dada)

What a superb record this is - not just an early contender for the best British hip hop album of the year, but simply for the best hip hop album of 2005 full stop. Much of 'Awfully Deep' builds on the enticing, hypnotic groove of his classic 'Witness' single from a few years back, and the wordplay again demonstrates a fearsome intelligence. 'Awfully Deep' is one of the few hip hop albums I've heard that demonstrate a capacity for capturing melancholy feeling. From the lyrics here, it would appear that Roots Manuva has spent much of the last couple of years in a period of depressive self-analysis, and all the scrutinising has produced spectacular results. That it is as intriguing sonically as it is lyrically helps its cause considerably - with Roots clearly aiming at resisting pigeonholing and incorporating a massive range of influences, from dub producers such as Keith Hudson through roots reggae, electro, funk and soul. On 'Colossal Insight' he claims that he doesn't give a damn about UK rap - he's a UK rapper, but he doesn't want to be categorised. 'I got love for all them scenes but the pigeonholes weren't enough to hold me!' he states. On this evidence, this would prove to be an accurate self-assessment.

Roots Manuva clearly understands the classic strategy of coupling dense, dazzling wordplay with strikingly simple and infectious choruses. Where lesser talents would have relied on straightforward sampling for these choruses, often from classic soul records, Manuva sings them himself, with a shameless energy that lightens the psychological gravity considerably. The chorus of opener 'Mind 2 Motion' is hilarious, possibly the only rap track to betray the influence of children's comedy legends Trevor and Simon, with its exhortation to 'swing your pants!'. The title track also has a similarly irresistible chorus line. When set to pared down backing tracks with their squelchy electro lines and deep, bowel rumbling basslines, the raps prove to be completely compelling. The music often sounds influenced by the uncompromising firebrand spirit and energy of Jamaican dancehall music.

Whereas I often avoid rap music because I find it difficult to engage with or remember its lyrics, 'Awfully Deep' proves to be expressive and memorable. Roots himself describes his own 'venomous eloquence', his almost savage ability to nail a lyric in simple and concise verse. 'Colossal Insight' is a brilliant song about drinking, with Roots claiming 'I walk with disaster/prefer to be plastered' and confessing 'I should cut down this drinking/Too many late nights and wayward thinking'. On 'Thinking' he gets even more bogged down in existential angst, professing to be a 'lonely soldier' fighting his own battles unaided.

'Awfully Deep' manages to pull off the very impressive trick of juggling a diverse array of sounds and influences whilst maintaing an admirable clarity and coherence of purpose. It never sounds boring, just thrilling and exciting stuff from start to finish.
Vera Drake (Dir: Mike Leigh, 2003)

It’s only the first week of the new year and here already is the year’s first must-see movie (with the exception of Scorsese’s opulent, Oscar-baiting The Aviator, which slipped out at the end of last year, and which, despite being a Scorsese picture, may not actually be ‘must-see’ at all). Mike Leigh’s picture comes fresh from the festival circuit, where it has won a number of awards, including the Golden Lion for best picture and the Best Actress award for Imelda Staunton at last year’s Venice Film Festival. It also provided the gala opening for the London film festival last November. It will no doubt win many more accolades in the coming months.

Leigh’s eponymous central character is a compulsive ‘do-gooder’, a woman with a heart of gold who helps infirm neighbours, invites people round to feed them ‘a proper meal’ and makes endless cups of tea for those in need of comfort. In secret, she is also a backstreet abortionist, a grisly role for which she accepts no remuneration and sincerely believes she is acting out of the goodness of her heart, performing a social duty for the needy and underprivileged who have found themselves in trouble.

The first half of the film is captivating largely because of Leigh’s extraordinary recreation of early 1950s London life. Despite a meagre budget, and a lack of feasible locations, Leigh has crafted a convincing world – where the colours are appropriately drab and muted, but where there is also considerable warmth and human sympathy. Leigh is often dismissed for working largely with ‘caricatures’, or extreme types, which he creates at first through highly unique improvisatory techniques before presenting his actors with a script. Whilst Vera may well be seen as a class stereotype, working officially as a cleaner in wealthy homes whilst sympathising with the needy and happy with her own somewhat limited stock, there is also an element of truth and compassion in Imelda Staunton’s outstanding performance. She is highly supportive and encouraging towards her family, and carries herself with a quiet dignity.

Leigh also develops a believable euphemistic language when constructing dramatic situations. Vera does not perform abortions, she ‘helps girls out’. The amiable, slightly simple Reg proposes to Vera’s daughter Ethel in an endearingly clumsy manner, at first asking her if she has ‘thought about moving out’. In fact, there is a surprising abundance of charm and humour in the first half of the film, which neatly counterbalances the inevitable grimness elsewhere, without really ever becoming uncomfortable. The scenes of the operations themselves, which Vera performs with a Higinson syringe, soapy water and disinfectant, whilst not graphically depicting the procedure, are edgy and unpleasant, and a couple of these procedures are savagely juxtaposed with Drake family members enjoying a picture show. It’s a neat trick, which Leigh pulls off with an admirable deftness of touch and control.

It is only when one of Vera’s patients becomes seriously ill and nearly dies that her crimes are brought to light and she becomes exposed. At the ‘operation’, the young girl’s mother recognises Vera from a launderette where they both used to work before the war. In a subtly devastating few seconds, her anonymity is lost and she becomes perilously vulnerable. Never one to miss the opportunity for a dramatic coup, Leigh times her arrest to coincide with a family party, where the engagement of Ethel and Reg, and the pregnancy (oh, the irony) of Stan’s sister-in-law are being celebrated.

It is here that Imelda Staunton crafts her extraordinary transformation from pillar of the community to humiliated, devastated wreck. Much has already been made of her brilliant performance, but what seems most significant to me is that she is allowed to further flourish through intelligent, sensitive direction. Much like Ken Loach, Leigh is often criticised for being too concerned with drama and script, and less concerned with the actual technicalities of film-making. Here, with considerable aplomb, he demonstrates these critical barbs to be entirely inaccurate. When the police first arrive for Vera, the camera moves from a short distance into extreme close-up, capturing Staunton’s face as it first quivers and then collapses, losing its essence and vitality in what seems like an agonisingly long take. Another staggering moment, which I feel certain will linger in my memory for some time, is when, after completing her statement for the police, Vera finally confesses to her husband Stan. Here, Dick Pope’s camera frames the two characters in exquisite close-up, as Vera whispers the terrible news into his ear, unable to repeat her confession aloud. Leigh also skilfully resists the temptation to turn the final reel of the film into a perfunctory courtroom drama, through elaborate editing that transmits the magnitude of Vera’s trial and sentence without dwelling too long on technicalities.

Given that Leigh obviously intends our sympathies to lie with Vera, some have criticised this film for taking a morally ambivalent stance on abortion. I would certainly agree that the film maintains an admirable detachment on issues of personal morality (and, perhaps strangely, religion is hardly even touched upon), but it does not seem to me to be a defence of backstreet abortions. The abortion scenes themselves are fraught with tension, and, frequently, with despair, as Vera is often confronted with the fact that her actions have not magically washed away her clients’ problems as she clearly would like. What Leigh seems to be arguing (although this film is by no means intended as polemic) is that there was an underlying hypocrisy in 1950s Britain, whereby the wealthy could afford to pay for quietly sanctioned abortions in comfortable environments, whereas the working classes were left to fend for themselves, at the mercy of others and, indeed, of perilously dangerous practices. Leigh provides class contrast by following a sub-story involving the daughter of one of the wealthy women for whom Vera provides a cleaning service (her official, gainful employment), who is raped by a potential boyfriend and forced to recourse to a private termination. Leigh also portrays Stan’s brother Frank’s quiet frustration with his socially ambitious wife Joyce, who appears to hanker for a washing machine more than she wants her unborn child. Perhaps unusually for Leigh, these points are left implied rather than imposed, which perhaps leads to these various plot strands remaining unsatisfactorily unresolved.

Someone emerging from the cinema in front of me also clearly felt the film to be an unfair treatment of the 1950s, claiming ‘it was only the fifties, but from that you’d have thought it was the dark ages!’. This viewer clearly missed some of the more challenging and intriguing ambiguities within the film. Not all are immediately condemnatory of Vera – her son Sid claims that her actions are wrong, and that he may be unable to forgive her, but when he claims she has let the family down, Stan immediately and firmly disputes this. The reaction of the Drake family is as significant as Vera’s private devastation. In the earlier part of the film, Leigh constructs a convincing and richly detailed portrait of family life, for it to be profoundly challenged by the shocking revelations. Not only this, but the police investigation is conducted with a surprising sensitivity, They seem aware both of Vera’s humiliation and her kindness, yet they are bound by law to perform their duty. These are complex and sympathetic performances in roles that a lesser director may have made thankless.

Vera Drake is an intense, deeply moving and carefully crafted film of immense power, but it is perhaps not my favourite of Mike Leigh’s pictures. It shares some of the shocking revelations as his earlier masterpiece ‘Secrets and Lies’, but that film arguably adopted a less scholarly approach. It also lacks the mysterious allure of a film such as ‘Naked’. It is also slightly undermined by its persistent use of choral music, which, to me at least, felt slightly crass. What is Leigh trying to say with the use of this soundtrack? Is Vera supposed to be a saint or martyr, or is Leigh trying to confront fundamental positions on abortion and the sanctity of life? I suspect that Leigh has little interest in either of these notions, and that the music is simply inappropriate. Other than these small reservations though, ‘Vera Drake’ shows Leigh to be as uncompromising and confrontational as ever, and still eliciting sublime performances, both from the overwhelmingly compelling Staunton, and her talented supporting cast.

Friday, January 07, 2005

Rants 2004

Well you’ve heard what I liked in 2004, so I thought it might be fun to begin 2005 on a resoundingly negative note by having a pop at some easy targets. They are not in any ranked order or anything like that.

1) Gwen Stefani

I really feel that I should like Gwen Stefani – she looks great, and has hooked up with some of top producers to craft what should be a quirky solo album, far removed from mainstream conventions. Unfortunately, the first single ‘What You Waiting For’ firmly put me off even approaching said album. This single was frankly risible – the most horribly narcissistic, self-indulgent and infuriating lyric of the year. In a song of precious little substance, Stefani bleats about the terrible moral dilemma that is whether or not she should record a solo album. ‘Look at your watch now! You’re still a superhot female! You’ve got your million dollar contract! And they’re all waiting for your hot tracks!’ she shrieks. Get on with it then, woman – do you expect me to have any sympathy with your rather cushy position in life?

2) Tony Blair/ David Blunkett/ID Cards

I’ve combined these three for fear of repeating myself, such is my frustration with the current government. The satisfaction I felt at David Blunkett’s tragic resignation was only tempered by the fact that Blair remains in office, seemingly in a very strong position regarding the upcoming General Election. Blunkett of course should have resigned for his inability to respect the basic rule of law and the fundamental freedoms of his citizens (right to a fair trial by jury? Oh, we can scrap that as long as we nail a ‘potential terrorist’ or two). Most maddening of all was his continued insistence on the ID card scheme, persistently stressing the significance of the card itself, when anyone who knew anything about the technology involved realised pretty quickly that this amounted to the creation of a national surveillance network on all British citizens, whilst the technology may not be able to work in the way that Blunkett has suggested. Of course, we all have to pay for it ourselves. What happens if we suffer a major terrorist attack in the ten or so years it’s going to take to get this system working? Let’s invest in more intelligent, focussed security now that resists the urge to scaremonger. Blunkett should have resigned for ignoring the basic values of decency and instead helping to promote an increasingly intolerant and uncivilised society. What he did resign for – whilst worthy of considerable censure, was nothing compared to all this. It was certainly nothing compared with misleading parliament into sending troops into an illegal war on the basis of a false prospectus. Mr. Blair’s position should no longer be tenable.

3) Joss Stone

Why does everyone seem to have fallen head over heels for Joss Stone? A youthful pretty face she may be – but she is not the ‘authentic’ real deal soul sensation that the media seem to think she is. She is the sound of classic black music neatly repackaged into a white format for those listeners for whom the real thing is still not quite palatable. She overcooks every single line she sings – trying so intently to ape the vocal mannerisms of southern soul.

4) Jamie Cullum

One of the highlights of my New Year’s Eve this year was, on my tired and drunken return to my local underground station, seeing a man walk past a poster of Jamie Cullum and simply sticking his middle finger up at it. He expressed so eloquently what we all feel, without even resorting to language.

5) The Olympic Bid

We’re not ready for it. In fact, I don’t even want it, so it can go away. I’d rather see a London Grand Prix frankly, and even that probably isn’t feasible. Talking of which…

6) Bernie Ecclestone

Simply for being a money-grabbing bastard and putting his own personal wealth (and that of his trustees) well ahead of the future and energy of motorsport, to the great detriment of TV audiences, fans and even, arguably, competitors themselves. The sport relied on Bernie for a long time, and (credit where credit is due) he did transform the sport from a cult into a global phenomenon. But how much money does one man really need?

7) Arsenal FC

Can they not just stop – and take their Emirates Stadium somewhere else?

8) Motorists

They moan about petrol price rises, they moan about the eminently sensible London congestion charge, they moan about eminently sensible Controlled Parking Zones, and they have the audacity to moan about speed cameras. Which other group expects so much for so little? Which other group expects to behave dangerously, break the law and get away with it?

9) Cyclists

They need to be more aware of motorists like me :-) And some knowledge of the rules of the road would no doubt help too. Get some lights!

10) Busted

Busted began as an idea of absolute genius from the marketing end of the music industry. A proper boy band that play their instruments and look cool! Their early pop singles were harmless, fluffy fun – not music that I would ever buy, but they had an infectious charm and boundless energy. On attempting to crack America this year, they suddenly wanted people to take them seriously. They became a sub-Blink 182 punk band, with brattish, obnoxious and misogynistic lyrics with scant regard for their audience. That they remained so popular beggared belief. The existential dilemma of Charlie Simpson at least kept me entertained – to follow those die-hard Tory principles, stick with Busted and make a few more quick bucks, or concentrate on his ‘other’ band, Fightstar, who he hopes will be blessed with indie credibility? Watch this space in 2005….

11) McFly

I don’t really hate McFly of course (as witnessed by my audacious inclusion of ‘That Girl’ in my singles of the year list). They look good, their music is tremendous fun and they seem to have a genuine passion and understanding for pop music. They also understand exactly what they are – describing themselves not as a boy band or a serious rock band, but as a ‘band that plays pop’. They seem reasonable people, if a little stupid (maybe it’s unfair of me to expect them to engage in any way with politics or culture). It’s just that there’s something extremely nauseating about a band of under 18s being propelled to Arena filling success after just one single. Their first gig was supporting Busted for heaven’s sake! I don’t doubt that they are dedicated and hardworking – they’ve been on every pop TV show every week for basically the entire year, but I’d still like to ban them from releasing another record until they’ve played the toilet circuit of Great Britain.

12) Wine Bars and Bars that Want to be Clubs

I can’t hear anyone! It’s shit house music again! An old English teacher of mine once described the traditional Public House as ‘Britain’s last remaining great institution’. Amen to that!

13) Keane

I spotted Keane singer Tom Chaplin at a Rufus Wainwright gig towards the end of the year, and have since heard him express his admiration for the singer-songwriter. If only he possessed one ounce of Wainwright’s passion or control himself! Keane simply seem to make the ultimate wallpaper music. It’s almost offensively bland, and melodic only on the most basic level, topped off with some cynical emoting in Chaplin’s vocals. They seem like honest, decent chaps – but that doesn’t excuse them their music, nor does it justify all those critics and consumers who seem to have lost all sense entirely by making them into million sellers!

14) The Streets

A poetic genius? A man who ‘speaks for the nation’? Well, to paraphrase a greatly superior poet, recent efforts from The Streets say nothing to me about my life. It’s just either plain boring, or bafflingly infuriating, and to my mind, Mike Skinner’s attempt to adopt an everyman vernacular just comes across as embarrassing rhyming dictionary nonsense.

15) BBC TV News

Why do the presenters have to stand up all the time? Do they not realise that it looks uncomfortable and amateurish? Worse than that is the endless graphics and visual explanations. Only the new look BBC News could trivialise the devastating Tsunami by using a computer generated screen to explain what an earthquake is. I don’t need a fucking geography lesson! I just need events reported with precision, balance and some incisive commentary. These are the things at which the BBC remains excellent, despite the findings of Hutton.


16) Razorlight

The most cloyingly derivative band in the history of the world. Do we really need a new rock n’roll saviour who has merely spent far too many hours trying to ape Tom Verlaine’s vocal style. Do we need yet more wiry punk pop that fails to bring music forward beyond 1978. Do we need another arrogant fool so convinced of his own genius? Look closely and you will find that the answer to all of these questions is a resounding ‘no’.

17) Choice

Clearly the buzzword of 2004, it would appear that all three political parties became a little too convinced that offering us more ‘choice’ was best for us. It may surprise New Labour to learn that, if I fall seriously ill, I don’t want to choose which hospital I go to, I just want to feel comfortable that my nearest hospital is good enough to help me. Similarly, if I had children, I would much prefer that my local school was adequate for their needs, rather than selecting a school that was further away. The same philosophy underpins the hideously misguided creation of a ‘marketplace’ in Higher Education, where it would appear the result may well actually be less choice, as many will no longer be able to attend, and many of the crucial academic courses offered by the top universities will be forced to close due to their inability to compete. Still, with the ethos of the private sector being imposed upon our public services even further this year, it would seem that neither politicians nor executives really care that much for blanket improvement. That might mean spending some cash.

18) Woolworths Christmas ads

‘Woolworths – let’s have some fun!’ bellows a very masculine female voice. I tell you what, let’s not.

19) Religious Fundamentalists and Evangelicals
Well, you could make a case for this every year, but in this era not just of militant Islam, but also of intolerant evangelical Christianity propelling a dangerously incompetent US president into the highest seat of power for four more years, 2004 does seem to have been as influenced by the forces of religion as any other year. I don’t see religious faith as a bad thing by any means – but it is problematic if it remains static, completely removed from cultural and historical developments. It is also horrible if used as a tool for self-righteous, uncompromising discrimination. Witness the ludicrous furore over homosexuality in the Church of England – who cares what a bishop gets up to between the sheets?
A Quick Plug

Readers of In League With Paton may wish to know that my band, Unit, have a few gigs lined up. Sadly we're only gigging in London at the moment - but some gigs in other UK towns might be possible later in the year if we're lucky.

Sunday January 16th - The Windmill, Brixton, onstage 9pm
Tuesday January 18th - The Rhythm Factory, Aldgate
Sunday February 6th - Dublin Castle, Camden Town

Entry should be less than a fiver for all gigs.

Coming tomorrow: Some resoundingly cynical and twisted rants about the worst aspects of 2004 (and there are plenty of targets) and the very first reviews of 2005!

Monday, January 03, 2005

Fun for 2005!

Here are some albums expected in 2005 that I am looking forward to immensely…

Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy and Matt Sweeney – Superwolf: This collaboration between Will Oldham and the former Chavez and Zwan member should be an absolute gem.

Magnolia Electric Co. – Trials and Errors: This is a live recording featuring previously released material alongside new songs. There will also be a new Steve Albini-produced studio set later in the year.

Shivaree – Who’s Got Trouble?: The third album from the tragically underrated Shivaree looks set to slip out with no fanfare whatsoever in mid-January. Not even the patronage of Quentin Tarantino seems to have helped the publicity machine.

Rufus Wainwright – Want Two: This should finally be released in the UK in March. There are lavish extras with the US edition, including a full concert DVD. Will the record company pull out the stops for the UK fans who have been waiting months for this?

Lou Barlow – Emoh – The first Lou Barlow album released without an alias, this promises to be a collection of sweet, sad pop songs with minimal self-indulgence.

Laurent Garnier – The Cloud Making Machine: The techno legend has taken five years to record the follow-up to ‘Unreasonable Behaviour’. It had better be good!

Doves – Some Cities: The word, once again, will no doubt be ‘epic’.

Patrick Wolf – Wind In The Wires: Will this suffer second album syndrome, or will it take the best bits from ‘Lycanthropy’ to new heights?

Broken Social Scene – Windsurfing Nation: One of the big ones. A top 10 contender if it fulfils the promise of ‘You Forgot It In People’.

Kate Bush! No title yet – but 12 years after ‘The Red Shoes’, Kate Bush will return with a new album in 2005. There is really no predicting what this will sound like, although I’m confident that, like everything else she has recorded, it will be completely divorced from all current fads and trends.

AC/DC – Strap It On: Well, if this doesn’t sound exactly the same as the last one, I’ll eat my hat. If there’s another world tour – I’ll be there!

Depeche Mode – No title or song details as yet, but news has been posted on their website stating that they are recording a new album. So much for splitting up then! There had supposedly been a big dispute in the Mode camp about songwriting – will this be resolved in Dave Gahan’s favour or will all the songs still be Martin Gore compositions?

Bruce Springsteen – He’s been at work in Brendan O’Brien’s studio sporadically over the past four or five months. No clues as to whether it’s a solo record or another E Street Band affair though, or indeed whether it will actually see light of day in 2005.

Bob Dylan – The second volume of his autobiography is rumoured to coincide with his first studio album since 2001’s ‘Love and Theft’, although with all the writing and the incessant touring, it’s hard to see how he’s managed to record anything.

Hot Chip – Working on new material already to keep the momentum going.

Low – The Great Destroyer: Coming in January so not long to wait – supposedly heavier and more melodic than the usual slowcore stuff.

Mercury Rev – The Secret Migration: Can Mercury Rev stall the decline following the stodgy and disappointing ‘All Is Dream’?

Teenage Fanclub – The TFC camp have been relatively quiet on this of late. They recorded the songs last spring and summer with John McEntire from Tortoise producing, and it initially looked like the new album would emerge in the Autumn. Needless to say, it didn’t appear – and it doesn’t even seem to be clear now which record label, if any, plans to put this record out. This band are too good to be left floundering yet again by a cynical record industry that neglects its greatest songwriters. It’s also been two years since the greatest hits collection now, and five years since ‘Howdy!’. The cognoscenti have been waiting patiently, but we’re starting to get a little frustrated now!

Television – Have recorded a brand new album!

Elbow – Station Approach: I’m not sure that title is final but I’ve seen it on a number of different sources. Promises to be another step forward from a band moving towards greatness.

Boards of Canada – They are notoriously elusive, so there’s not much info on this one, but it’s certainly about time they followed up Geogaddi.

Scott Walker – Now signed to 4AD. Will it be as challenging as ‘Tilt’?

Pat Metheney – The Way Up: Breaks with Metheney’s established formula by virtue of being one extended composition. Promises to be fascinating.

Esbjorn Svensson Trio – Viaticum: New album from Europe’s premier jazz group.

Flaming Lips – At War With The Mystics: Promises less bleeps and trickery, more emphasis on melody. Yay!

Daft Punk – Human After All: Great title – but can their kitsch disco revivalism stand up to a third album?

Cannibal Ox – Despite announcing their own split on stage in London a couple of years ago, the astounding rap duo appear to have been working on new material. If El-P is back in the production seat, it’s a guaranteed must-have album.

The Magic Numbers – There’s a big buzz building around this band. I saw them live at The Birthday Party club with Hot Chip a few months ago and they sounded gorgeously melodic.

Roots Manuva – Awfully Deep: Quite simply, the most significant figure in UK hip-hop right now. I’ve heard this and it’s thrilling.

British Sea Power – I really hope this exciting band realise their potential on this second album.

The Tears – The reunion of Brett Anderson and Bernard Butler could be brilliant, or it could be painfully embarrassing. I’m hoping that Butler has reinvigorated Anderson’s inspiration, which has been sorely lacking over the past couple of Suede albums.

Mu – More Japanese beats and screeching. This should be great – especially if the wonderful ‘Paris Hilton’ is on it.

M83 – Before The Dawn Heels Us – More My Bloody Valentine-inspired electronica. One of the key releases of the first half of the year for me.

Grandaddy – but they have to veer away from the chugachugachuga sound this time!

Jamie Lidell – Warp signing, maverick electronic genius and occasional vocalist for Matthew Herbert plans his second solo LP.

M. Ward – Transistor Radio: Another collection from this outstanding American songsmith.

Prefuse 73 – Surrounded By Silence: We can usually rely on Mike Herren to deliver the goods, and this should be one of Warp’s key releases for 2005. Expect more stuttering beats and plenty of guest rappers.

Solomon Burke – Make Do With What You’ve Got: Not sure what to make of this. Following up his brilliant Joe Henry produced mainstream comeback from a couple of years ago, Solomon Burke has gone into the studio with Don Was. I don’t think anyone, least of all Burke himself, was really expecting another album so soon, and Was’ involvement could be a blessing or a curse. Was made a muddy job of Dylan’s already underwhelming ‘Under The Red Sky’ in 1990 (probably the last time he produced a major legend), but has produced engaging and infectious pop music of his own for Was (Not Was). Will it mean a more ‘modern’ sound? Who has written the material?

Al Green – Everything’s OK: Another Willie Mitchell produced set to follow the surprisingly good ‘I Can’t Stop’. Expect more classic soul nostalgia.

Bright Eyes – Digital Ash In A Digital Urn and I’m Wide Awake It’s Morning: Two new albums from the billboard chart topping and Vote for Change star Conor Oberst. He started to veer away from grandiose oversinging and heavy emoting on ‘Lifted…’ – let’s hope he continues to follow this trajectory.

Erin McKeown – Expected to return with new material in the summer!

Sleater Kinney – Working on new album with Mercury Rev, Flaming Lips, Mogwai and Delgados producer Dave Fridmann!

Chemical Brothers – Push the Button: Apparently the best thing they’ve done in ages. To be honest, that wouldn’t be hard, would it?

REM? – There were plenty of songs left over from the ‘Around The Sun’ sessions (all the upbeat ones for a start) – will they be released?
Bjork – There are rumours of another new album to quickly follow Medulla
The In League With Paton Singles Of The Year 2004

The single format may well be dying – but, not usually being that regular a single purchaser, I actually picked up more singles this year than in the past couple of years. Here are some of my favourites….

1) TV On The Radio – New Health Rock EP

A bit of a bonus for fans of this band’s audacious polyglot sound – two tracks not included on the debut album, plus the jazz-inflected madness of ‘The Wrong Way’, one of the album’s real highlights. On the title track, they further their pursuit of excellence with vigour, with inventive production and inspired vocal arrangements.

2) Fiery Furnaces – Single Again

Not on the ‘Blueberry Boat’ album – and, indeed, it’s hard to see how a song this structurally simple could have found a place on that maverick work. Simple this song may be – but it’s still a delight – tinged with irony and malice, and utterly infectious.

3) Franz Ferdinand – Take Me Out

Derivative maybe – but sprightly, hook-laden and irresistible as well. Looking arty and smart, Franz Ferdinand were a breath of fresh air at the start of 2004, even if they ended it being a bit too ubiquitous for their own good. It’s hard to see where they can take this sound now – especially when this seems to be the perfect three minute encapsulation of their ethos.

4) Morrissey – First Of The Gang To Die

Irish Blood, English Heart may have been the bold returning statement – but this was marginally the better song, romanticising criminality as only Morrissey can, with some crunchy guitar riffing and a stadium-filling singalong chorus. Fantastic.

5) The Libertines – Can’t Stand Me Now

Don’t believe the hype – except that it’s all laid out in this wonderful single – the fraught tension between Pete Doherty and Carl Barat is played out here with disarming honesty (or, if you’re more cynical, is perfectly mythologised for a big audience), but also with a deftly humorous touch. The duelling guitars, still seemingly as much influenced by Chuck Berry as The Jam sound fantastic, and the rhythm section lends this a relentless driving pulse.

6) J Kwon – Tipsy

What a track! Made of not much more than a drum beat and some squelchy synth beats – over which J Kwon delivers silly rhymes about a club party. That such bare simplicity works is inspiring (it’s so easy to make a record these days), and this was the party tune of the year.



7) Destiny’s Child – Lose My Breath

Many people were left disappointed by the Destiny’s Fulfilled album, with its soppy ballad template – but clearly Destiny’s Child have never been an album band. This ranks with their best singles, with its military march drum beat and razor sharp keyboard stabs sounding brilliantly futuristic. It’s also superbly dirty, which is a bonus.

8) Scout Niblett – Uptown Top Ranking

A brilliant reworking of a classic reggae party anthem, morphing into something more mournful and lingering. Scout Niblett’s voice is alternately delicate and harsh, and the stripped back sound lends this recording a distinctive intimacy.

9) Kelis ft. Andre 3000 – Millionaire

A superb piece of electronic music that can’t really be categorised within the current R&B/hip hop conventions.

10) Hot Chip – Down With Prince EP

Proving that they have numerous tricks up their sleeve, Hot Chip released a whole EP characterised by their inventive take on lo-fi DIY recording and self-mocking humour. The title track bemoaned the constant namedropping of Prince from ignorant celebs, whilst The Ass Attack gave plenty of detail on one of Joe Goddard’s biggest passions (eating), with some outrageous rhyming to boot.

11) Outkast – Ghettomusick/Prototype

They continued to milk the Speakerboxx/Love Below goldmine for the entire year, and who could complain when double A sides as brilliant as this were the result? One side was the most audacious track on the whole double set, cluttered, frantic and somehow making weird sense. The other was a slow burning futurist love ballad from Andre 3000.

12) Brooks – Do The Math

Brillaint hi-NRG disco house, with some silky smooth vocals adding to the seductive pulse of its chorus.

13) Modest Mouse – Float On

In it’s own way as groovy as Franz Ferdinand, if perhaps slightly more abstruse, this was one of the surprise quirky hits of the year. With major label force behind them, it looked briefly like Modest Mouse were going to become massive in 2004. That wasn’t quite to be – but this was still their biggest hit by some distance, and in its punchy, crisp definition, deservedly so.



14) Aberfeldy – Heliopolis By Night

Indie-tastic! This brilliant tune relating a classic story of alien abduction was one of the most immediate and charming singles of 2004. Extremely catchy, and with girl backing vocals to die for.

15) Britney Spears – Toxic

The first of the ‘really, I’m not joking’ choices. In which Britney’s producers finally create a mechanical backing that suits her deconstructed, quasi-constipated vocal style and in the process – they create a genuinely intelligent, masterfully constructed slice of pop perfection. Sexy, edgy and impossible to ignore.

16) Hot Chip – Hittin’ Skittles/Back To The Future

Luddites meet The Ballad of Dorothy Parker in a scorching limited edition A-side from the bedroom funkers.

17) Morrissey – Irish Blood, English Heart

We couldn’t have hoped for a better comeback record – literate (except for the slight confusion of historical detail in the final verse), punchy, provocative and serious. One example of where the heightened production sense improved an already superb song.

18) Jamelia – See It In A Boy’s Eyes

Even with Coldplay on hiatus, Chris Martin still proved to be omnipresent in 2004. He penned the excruciatingly awful ‘Gravity’ for Embrace, and somehow managed to also compose this wonderful slice of pure pop heaven. With an electronic production sheen replacing the stolid, perfunctory performances of Coldplay or Embrace’s terminally turgid rhythm sections, Martin’s songwriting was at last brought to life. Add to this a sultry and nicely underplayed performance from Jamelia herself and you have one of the year’s very best pop songs.

19) Jay Z – 99 Problems

It sounded terrifying and apocalyptic and featured one of Jay Z’s most fearsomely eloquent rants.

20) Kelis – Milkshake

Infuriating, but utterly brilliant – this was almost taking the minimalist aesthetic of R&B to ridiculous extremes – but it worked, revitalising a career that looked dead in the water after the appalling sales figures of her last album.

21) Nick Cave and The Bad Seeds – There She Goes My Beautiful World/ Breathless

Of all the superb double A sided singles of the year, this may have made for the most effective contrast. The full-on gospel rush of ‘There She Goes..’, with its deliciously witty lyrics, coupled neatly with the unrestrained romanticism of ‘Breathless’.

22) Kevin Mark Trail – Perspective

Could we now have a distinctively British take on R&B. As much influenced by classic Jamaican roots music as The Neptunes, former singer with The Streets Kevin Trail produced a fresh and distinctive debut that felt celebratory and expressive. There’s the bonus of a faithful Hot Chip remix as well.


23) REM – Leaving New York

What a shame that after so much promise on last year’s awesome tour, ‘Around The Sun’ turned out to be such a turgid album. At least it included a handful of gems, even though they were all taken at a snail’s pace. When I first heard this – I was not expecting it to be the best track on the album – but it is, and it’s also a considerable grower, taking time to weave its mournful, enticing magic. Buck’s arpeggiated guitar-work remains as potent as ever, above which Stipe conjures one of his more straightforward and affecting lyrics.

24) Prince – Cinnamon Girl

Prince’s first fully-fledged pop single for years, and it seems quite wrong that it didn’t even trouble the top 40. This took in the war on terror, amongst other contemporary issues, but threaded it through a nostalgic eighties production with a brilliant chorus.

25) Beastie Boys – Ch-Check It Out

Marvellous! A surefire hit with some of their silliest rhymes in ages – and the interplay between the three remains as quickfire and thrilling as ever.

26) McFly – That Girl

The ‘no, I’m really not joking’ choice number two. It seemed totally unfair that McFly were routinely dismissed as a mini-Busted. Sure, they were manufactured by the same management company and co-wrote their songs together, but the McFly sound seemed more in tune with the rich history of popular music (taking in rock n’ roll, early Beatles, surf guitar and a sanitised sprinkling of punk) and also a good deal more fun. Whilst Busted started to take themselves far too seriously, and began to sound brattish, obnoxious and even slightly misogynistic, McFly sounded naïve and effervescent, and had boundless energy. This was the best of their four singles – expertly produced and crafted by whoever does all the behind the scenes work, and with some wonderfully cheesy backing vocals. The youthful zest of the central narrative – boy sees unattainable girl, gets unattainable girl and loses her again, was a shameless reiteration of the great theme of throwaway pop.

27) Animal Collective – Who Could Win A Rabbit?

Probably the least commercial single in this list – this crazy slice of modern psychedelia threw in a whole range of ideas. It sounded ragged in the best possible way, with a confidence and audacity that belied the pop sensibilities underneath.

28) Mark Lanegan Band – Hit The City

Lanegan joins forces with PJ Harvey to craft a gritty, gutsy piece of overdriven blues-rock.

29) PJ Harvey – Shame

Stripped bare, but benefiting from one of Harvey’s subtle and impressive vocal delivery, this was a sensuous, minimal treat.

30) Charlotte Hatherley – Kim Wilde
I was guesting on a radio show in the week that this was released. First everyone looked at it and said – ‘Kim Wilde? She’s come back – but I thought she was a gardener now’. Are we getting too old? It wasn’t in fact a Kim Wilde record, nor did it really seem to have all that much to do with her – but it was a pleasant surprise. A solo record from Charlotte from Ash with infinitely more poise and ambition than her band have displayed over their last few albums, which have veered towards generic. By contrast, this is a stuttering stop-start, structurally baffling sugar rush of a single.

Wednesday, December 29, 2004


The In League With Paton Albums of the Year 2004


Wot, no Streets? No Keane? No Razor-shite? Whilst this may have been a successful year for British pop music commercially, it was pretty depressing artistically. It troubles me a little that my top albums mostly seem to be American or Canadian. Here are my favourites from an excellent year at the margins. Inevitably, outside the top 30 or so, the order becomes pretty arbitrary.


80) Br. Danielson – Brother Is To Son

A solo venture from the leader of the extraordinary Danielson Familie collective, ‘Brother Is To Son’ is a bizarre journey through skewed folk, high pitched vocals, committed Christianity and other such unfashionable themes. It’s a quirky, peculiar and oddly endearing record.

79) Cass McCombs – A

With the support of Will Oldham, McCombs’ droll, droney songwriting received justified attention at the start of the year, before being slightly overlooked by the year’s end. This is an occasionally bitter, blackly comic (‘I Went To The Hospital’, ‘Aids in Africa’) collection, basically recorded with some appealing reverb-heavy guitar tones. McCombs’ voice is a little shaky and vulnerable, but powerful when necessary.

78) Electrelane – The Power Out

Perhaps this wasn’t a significant step forward for the Brighton band in terms of style and sound, but it did demonstrate an increased grasp of melody, and saw the band translate their ideas with greater confidence. They are now working successfully within their obvious musical limitations (although Verity Susman’s mumbling, slightly tuneless voice still sometimes grates). With some pretty moments combining effectively with more punchy, aggressive songwriting, ‘The Power Out’ was another step for Electrelane towards realising their considerable potential.

77) Devendra Banhart – Rejoicing in the Hands of the Golden Empress


More skewed folk, this time from the distinctive wandering gypsy. It sounded slightly mannered at times, and my critique from earlier in the year gives some indication of why I felt this album had been slightly overrated. There’s certainly no need for the proclamations of Banhart as a true original and revolutionary spirit. Still, the songwriting is excellent, and the sound appropriately intimate.

76) Lambchop – Aw C’Mon/No You C’Mon

Not as consistently strong as ‘Nixon’ or ‘Is A Woman’, and sometimes tending towards a middle of the road blandness, these two albums were difficult to get through, but contained some lovely tender moments. There’s still more wit and wisdom in Kurt Wagner’s oblique lyrics for an entire lifetime, even if this time around he insisted on obscuring them with deliberately hushed vocals and vocal contortions.

75) John Legend – Get Lifted

This is a remarkably refreshing album. Whilst Kanye West’s production gives this a modern, hip-hop sheen (and one that sounds considerably more interesting than West's own music), John Legend’s vocals are deeply routed in the classic gospel-soul tradition. This veered away from generic beats and vocals R&B production in favour of a more seductive sound, with elaborate vocal harmonies and classy arrangements combining studio production techniques with more traditional instrumentation.

74) Badly Drawn Boy – One Plus One Is One

Harshly criticised in some quarters, perhaps by virtue of being easily his most whimsical collection to date. Whilst some of the lyrics felt either a bit twee or a bit forced, musically this was delectable, with intelligent deployment of flute and strings. There are times when you feel Damon Gough could sound a little more enervated (the live rendition of ‘Four Leaf Closer’ is so much more rousing than the more muted and plodding take included here), but there’s no denying his feeling for the music.

73) Beastie Boys – To The 5 Boroughs

Not perhaps the best Beasties album – it’s a little patchy in places, but there was something rather endearing and refreshing about this steadfast return to the old skool. It’s their first self-produced album, and whilst on first listen it may seem to lack the cutting-edge techniques of Mario Caldato or The Dust Brothers, its stark, minimalist backdrop reaps rewards after repeated plays. Most impressively, it is a defiant, moving tribute to that great and suffering American city, iced with deftly humorous wordplay.

72) Ramon Valle Trio – No Escape

This is an exceptionally good Latin jazz album – simultaneously energising both the trio format and the frequently tired and clichéd Latin genre. Valle’s piano playing can be crisp and precise, but can also be more abstract and elusive. There is a great depth and variety of feeling on display here, and the band react to each other intelligently.

71) Air – Talkie Walkie

Relaxed almost to the point of not being there, this felt like a deliberate retreat from the more excessive, deeply humorous side of Air revealed on the sadly underrated ’10,000 Hz Legend’ album. This was perhaps an attempt to remake ‘Moon Safari’, although it was at its best when it drifted into slightly more dynamic territory. It’s undeniably very pleasant – and Air simply do this kind of music with more wit and intelligence than anyone else.

70) Modest Mouse – Good News For People Who Love Bad News

An unlikely but pleasing commercial success, this featured one of the best pop singles of the year in the form of ‘Float On’. The rest of the album was similarly angular and quirky, but with a great sense of unity and vision and some wonderful yelping vocals.

69) Sun Kil Moon – Ghosts of the Great Highway


Mark Kozelek does it yet again. His last record was a collection of acoustic AC/DC covers, which was a rare covers album with a genuine vision. His latest work is strongly influenced by Neil Young and crazy horse, with lengthy expressive guitar solos and pounding backbeats. The songs are as ruminative and absorbing as ever, and ‘Ghosts of the Great Highway’ has a Springsteen-esque vision of a tragic but compassionate America.

68) Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy – Sings Greatest Palace Music

Well this certainly confounded a lot of people. It’s easy to see why as Will Oldham’s reputation now rests firmly on a journalistic preconception of him as the prince of alt. Country darkness. This was always likely to prove an unwarranted assumption – especially given Oldham’s knowledge of music history and his passion for confusing even his most ardent admirers. So, with the assistance of producer Mark Nevers, he revisited his back catalogue and added all manner of Nashville chintz – steel guitars, slide guitars, brass and strings. Some of the songs work spectacularly well – the dark, almost blasphemous ‘Riding’ assumes a gospel fervour, and many of the shuffly rhythms provide effectively dusty backing.

67) AC Newman – The Slow Wonder

A pop delight from the chief New Pornographers songwriter – full of catchy hooks and neatly executed guitar lines. It’s a crisp, engaging collection, not a million miles from Guided By Voices, but with considerably less intellectual perversity.

66) Andrew Bird – Weather Systems

Technically perhaps one from last year, but as it only received a proper UK release in February, it would seem criminal not to include it. This is a marvellously arranged album, written and recorded quickly and featuring Bird’s warm and effusive vocal traits, and unusual violin playing.

65) Sonic Youth – Nurse

Well, if you’re a fan, you probably know exactly what this sounds like before you’ve heard it. Luckily, it sounds great, with plenty of inventive guitar duelling, and like ‘Murray Street’ and ‘A Thousand Leaves’ before it, favouring memorable and daring composition over abstract or impressionistic sound collage.

64) Abram Wilson – Jazz Warrior

The Dune jazz label is going from strength to strength at the moment, delivering some of the finest and most inventive British jazz in years. Last year’s debut from Soweto Kinch has now established itself as a key benchmark, and it is to these heights that Abram Wilson’s collection aspires. Arguably, it doesn’t quite achieve this, simply because the music doesn’t perhaps swing with quite the fiery intensity of Kinch’s best work. It is, however, extraordinarily fresh, with an understanding of hip-hop, soul and pop as well as the occasionally narrow minded jazz scene. These genres collide with peculiar subtlessness, dignity and effectiveness on this gem of an album.

63) Squarepusher – Ultravisitor


Despite all the emphasis on jazz improv and musical experimentation, Tom Jenkins’ new album was actually a great deal more cohesive than expected. ‘Go Plastic’ and ‘Do You Know Squarepusher?’, intermittently brilliant though they were, felt like ready made homes for a couple of outstanding singles and nothing else. ‘Ultravisitor’, however has a coherence and questing enthusiasm rare in most dance releases.

62) Khonnor – Handwriting

A debut album of considerable promise, and one of the most convincing and palatable melding of electronics with traditional songwriting forms of recent years. Khonnor is only 17, and already blessed with a considerable talent for crafting unique sounds. Added to this is a gift for subtle, implied melody, and the results are entrancing.


61) The Bad Plus – Give

Almost too cool for school, The Bad Plus proved to be the jazz piano trio it was OK for indie and rock fans to like. They even supported The Pixies for a few dates on their North American tour – a pairing that must have been quite fascinating. They combine quirky pop cover versions (excellent versions of tunes by Black Sabbath and Aphex Twin are included here) with some restlessly shifting compositions of their own. If they are sometimes guilty of overplaying, they are at their best when they effortlessly hit a groove that is deeply indebted to acoustic jazz traditions, but incorporates the drive of the rock music they clearly appreciate. Great cover art too.

60) Magnetic Fields – I

Another concept following the considerable riches of ‘69 Love Songs’, this new project from Stevin Merritt saw him writing a collection of love songs all beginning with ‘I’ and all heavy with his trademark irony. The first half of the album is outstanding, and contains some of Merritt’s best songs – where the wry humour is only undercut by the nagging sense that these songs are simultaneously genuinely affecting. It descends into rather naff lounge bar parody towards the end – which is a shame, because had it been a short mini album, ‘I’ may well have been the best pop release of the year.

59) Brooks – Red Tape

Released on Matthew Herbert’s label, this excellent album simply gets better with every listen, its driving rhythms and catchy extrapolation of disco forms providing one of the most interesting club albums of the year. This album contained a diverse array of weird and intriguing sounds, as well as some cleverly textured production work. An extraordinary take on PJ Harvey’s ‘Man Size’ may well be the cover version of the year.

58) Franz Ferdinand – Franz Ferdinand

Impossible to resist (or indeed to avoid), this was the classic indie dancefloor collection of 2004. It was witty, intelligent, defiantly arty and it’s unarguably refreshing that a band of this nature can sell over a million records. No doubt it has left them wondering where to go next and we will have to hope that they don’t rest on their laurels when they are clearly capable of a better album next time. All the key influences are in place – Talking Heads, Gang Of Four et al but what really sticks in the mind is the quality of the writing - which is outstanding.

57) Clouddead – Ten

It seems bizarre that this will stand as Clouddead’s only proper album (their debut release was a compilation of their first few singles), and as their various splinter projects assume importance of their own, its worth remembering that it’s as a collective that they were most effective. The dense stream of consciousness wordplay has proved influential as well as striking, and the cinematic quality of the music adds to the strangely intoxicating atmosphere. This is hip-hop far removed from current trends or naïve boasting. It’s original and exciting stuff.

56) The Libertines – The Libertines

Their continuing soap opera consumed more column inches than any other band this year, and with appearances on Newsnight and stories in the national press, The Libertines appear to have become as much an outlet for cultural voyeurs as they are a great pop band. Much as I hate to admit it, they are a great pop band. There’s something uniquely exciting and refreshing about the sparring between Pete Doherty and Carl Barat, adding both a dangerous intensity and an endearing playfulness to their distinctively British pop songwriting. Plus the ragged guitar duelling sounds great, and the rhythm section is appropriately relentless.

55) Laura Veirs – Carbon Glacier


This is delightfully atmospheric and, given its title, appropriately icy. Veirs’ voice eschews technical quality in favour of a striking and slightly harsh delivery, and when this is set against her plucked acoustic guitars and shimmering electric effects, the results are remarkably hypnotic. The writing is elegiac, reflective and literate too.

54) Alice Coltrane – Translinear Light

Whilst it doesn’t offer any major surprises, ‘Translinear Light’ is still a deeply spiritual and moving collection, including both some fiery free playing and some deeply calming gospel-inspired work. At the very least, it’s great to have as significant and talented a musician and composer as Coltrane back in the public domain, hopefully finally stepping out of her late husband’s critical shadow and earning her dues as an innovator in her own right.

53) Califone – Heron King Blues

This is far more weird and warped a take on the blues than the bludgeoning clang of The White Stripes, and ‘Heron King Blues’ is among the most challenging albums of the year. It occupies its own dreamlike state and, particularly in the earlier tracks, with their gamelan-esque percussion sounds, is deeply compelling.

52) The Broken Family Band – Jesus Songs


A mini album to quench our thirst while we wait for the imminent ‘Welcome Home, Loser’ album, ‘Jesus Songs’ was far more than just an adequate stop-gap. It was a brief but consistently thrilling collection of pop songs dispensing razor sharp wit and considerable wisdom in equal measure. Steve Adams’ claim that BFB are as much a punk band as a country band is now beginning to make more sense, as the band’s vision crystallises further with each successive release. They are fast becoming a national treasure, at least for those in the know.

51) The Shins – Chutes Too Narrow

This collection of pure pop gems is effortlessly thrilling. The twisting and shifting melodies feel both comfortingly familiar but also slightly quirky and endearing. Only the rather verbose lyrics slightly over-egg the pudding, but with tunes this good and with a crisp and enervating production, they can be forgiven.

50) The Earlies – These Were The Earlies

One of the very best debuts of the year, this transatlantic group conjured magic with their extravagant arrangements and diverse array of sounds and influences. This is almost overburdened with ideas and it’s remarkable that it ends up sounding fresh and invigorating rather than contrived and confused.

49) Aberfeldy – Young Forever

Even if I had wanted to, I couldn’t escape this band this year, as they seemed to be the support act for almost every gig I went to! There was something charming and deeply unfashionable about their twee indie quest to move beyond merely unrequited love, and the combination of Riley Brigg’s whimsical lyrics and vulnerable vocal with the chirpy female backing vocals made for a winning combination. This may have been a big year for acoustic guitar-based music, but with broken old keyboards and even (oh yes!) glockenspiels added to the mix, Aberfeldy stood out from the crowd.

48) Micah P Hinson – The Gospel Of Progress

With The Earlies as his backing band, vagrant troubadour Hinson crafted a more expansive sound than many of his folk songwriter contemporaries. That the songs sounded lovelorn, emotive, even occasionally aggressive added to this album’s considerable power.

47) Sam Phillips – A Boot And A Shoe

Not the Sun records founder, but rather Mrs. T-Bone Burnett, with a stylish and classy album demonstrating considerable talent. The production is understated but also nuanced, giving full focus to her rich and elegantly expressive vocals. This sounds like a late evening record – something to enjoy on a veranda somewhere in the American backwoods.

46) The Fiery Furnaces – Blueberry Boat

One of those records you either fell in love with, or hated with a passion, ‘Blueberry Boat’ was overlong, self-indulgent and overwhelming, but only in the best possible way. ‘Blueberry Boat’ was an extraordinary suite of audacious songwriting, most of which eschewed any attempt to impose structure or order. Instead, each song worked as a mini kitchen sink epic, many telling elaborate and highly entertaining fairytales along the way. Musically, it veered from Brill building pop to classic rock influences betraying their love for The Who. As entertaining as it was epic, ‘Blueberry Boat’ had massive reserves of chutzpah and intelligence.

45) Destroyer – Your Blues

This project from erstwhile New Pornographer Dan Bejar was a far cry from that band’s crunchy power pop. Incorporating elements of folk song, sea shanties and sci-fi synth strings, ‘Your Blues’ had a distinct and unfashionable sound all of its own. With a clutch of slightly odd but totally enchanting songs at its core, ‘Your Blues’ was one of 2004’s more mysterious offerings.

44) Apostle of Hustle – Folkloric Feel

This album from Andrew Whiting, guitarist in Toronto’s amorphous collective Broken Social Scene, shared that band’s reluctance to pin down to one distinct sound, instead veering through Cuban folk music, Slint-esque post rock, and radical guitar textures. With the help of various other members of Broken Social Scene and the unmistakable studio work of producer Dave Neufeld, ‘Folkloric Feel’ made for an impressive and engaging listen.

43) Prince – Musicology

Prince’s best and most accessible album in years featured some audacious and quality pop songwriting, as well as his grooviest performances in some years. He seems to be completely ageless, having as much energy now as he had in his youth, even though some of the aggressive sexuality has inevitably been tempted by his newfound role as a Jehovah’s witness. A chart-worthy collection retro-nostalgia and sugar-coated funk, ‘Musicology’ may not be his most original or audacious collection, but it sounded like Prince was ready to engage with his audience again.

42) David Byrne – Grown Backwards

It seems to have been criminally overlooked as ‘just another David Byrne album’ but, if anything, ‘Grown Backwards’ combined Byrne’s disparate interests with greater cohesion than his previous works. It also presented an intriguing outlook, with ironic and perceptive commentary on the new American imperialism. This was an album acutely engaged with the contemporary world, but also inclined to revisit older forms, such as the surprisingly successful rendition of two arias (where Byrne’s voice melds deliciously with that of Rufus Wainwright). The arrangements were characteristically ornate, the mood largely hushed and restrained. Delicate, mature and delightful.

41) Jolie Holland – Escondida

‘Escondida’ was another diamond in a year that has simply been wonderful for distinctive female voices. Holland has tints of jazz phrasing, and the music is a much more mellifluous, artistic and atmospheric melding of country and jazz than that of the anaemic Norah Jones. If only that many people had bought this lush record, with its moments of keening romanticism and dignified wisdom, the charts would be a less anodyne, much more thrilling domain.

40) Leonard Cohen – Dear Heather

Some people have argued that ‘Dear Heather’ represented a move towards simplicity and directness, a bit like Dylan’s rejection of dense poetry on ‘Nashville Skyline’ and ‘New Morning’. The lyrics are certainly mercilessly concise but, to my mind, ‘Dear Heather’ is one of Leonard Cohen’s more impenetrable albums. It is often playful, but the hints of finality and mortality are never far away and it is this that makes it an ultimately moving creation. Musically, he remains tied to the basic (and frequently cheesy) synth arrangements of Leanne Ungar and Sharon Robinson, and he relies even more heavily on cooing female harmonies this time around, his own voice decaying to a soft and resigned whisper. At its best, ‘Dear Heather’ is staggeringly beautiful, and ‘Nightingale’, ‘The Faith’ and the mournful setting of Byron’s ‘Go No More-A-Roving’ are among his best ever recordings.


39) Loretta Lynn - Van Lear Rose

'Van Lear Rose' saw Loretta Lynn return with her first entirely self-penned collection, whilst the production duties carried out by Jack White leant this album an indie credibility not usually associated with Nashville country legends. Mercifully, it was also a cracking record. Much as I like to hate the hype machine that surrounds the White Stripes, Jack White clearly has a thorough feel for the music, and the raw, classic sound that he creates gives ample space for the songs to breathe. Lynn's voice is remarkably rich for someone seventy years old, and her songwriting is frequently marvellous, full of semi-autobiographical narrative and moments of stark, imposing honesty. If it sometimes falls into slightly hokey country conventions, this can be forgiven as the moments when Lynn and band rock out are full of tension and danger.

38) Neko Case – The Tigers Have Spoken

This bafflingly underrated live album struck me as one of the most charming releases of the year, with a full bodied sound that rode on the crest of a wave of glamorous musical history. Case’s voice sounded thrillingly alive, and the band could be both contemplative and invigorated where necessary. Its selection of cover versions showed that the art of interpretation remains healthy in modern country music, and the originals were no less impressive or engaging. A real treat.

37) Steve Earle – The Revolution Starts Now

I dearly wish I could say that this had been the key record of the American election campaign, but sadly its righteous and polemical fury failed to ignite the American electorate. These songs are not aiming for subtlety – some of them are cannonballs to the very heart of the American problem. They are also deeply patriotic and proud – proving that the two need not be mutually exclusive, and swiftly undermining Bush’s McCarthyite dichotomising rhetoric. ‘TRSN’ is a savage but dignified and intelligent swipe at the dominant global superpower.

36) The Hidden Cameras – Mississauga Goddamn

Another collection of extremely infectious pop songs concealing some wonderfully subversive lyrics, the self-professed ‘gay folk church’ band stepped up a gear here. The best moments are the most reflective, with Joel Gibb elucidating adolescence superbly and, one would assume, accurately on ‘Music Is My Boyfriend’, and bemoaning the small-mindedness of his hometown in the wonderful title track (which was sterling despite its resemblance to Atomic Kitten’s ‘Whole Again’).

35) Morrissey – You Are The Quarry

Morrissey’s ‘comeback’ is probably the most flawed album in my top 30, but somehow this only adds to its appeal. There is a real sense of grandiloquence to ‘You Are The Quarry’, as its production alternates between crisp and lavish. It contains some of Morrissey’s most biting lyrical content, as well as some more predictable rants about judges and record company bosses. His voice is also noticeably improved, eschewing some of its more uncomfortable and unorthodox quirks in favour of a rich, authoritative croon. He remains a peerless personality – and, finally, ‘You Are The Quarry’ has seen him elevated from cult hero to enormodome-filling megastar.

34) DJ/Rupture – Special Gunpowder

‘Special Gunpowder’ feels like a truly global record, incorporating dancehall reggae, South American rhythms, western funk and traditional African sounds. It’s a brilliant concoction – full of energy and invention, and many of the tracks here are command the listener’s attention as well as dominating the dancefloor.

33) Interpol – Antics

Whilst this perhaps suffers a little from over familiarity following the all-conquering ‘Turn On The Bright Lights’, it is an effective extension of that record’s powerful formula. If anything, it’s more accessible, placing more emphasis on vocal phrasing, melody and rhythmic drive, where its predecessor preferred to emphasise atmosphere and texture. For some this might be a compromise, but there’s more than enough dark gothic fantasy for most ears, and it makes for a more immediate, crisper listen than its acclaimed predecessor.

32) Panda Bear – Young Prayer

This arguably works more as a modern composition than a conventional pop album, and it remains one of the most strangely beguiling releases of the year. There are no discernible lyrics, but plenty of feeling is conveyed through the delicately strummed, arrhythmic guitar patterns and the mumbled vocal noises. It moves into more ritualistic territory with handclap patterns and repeated piano chords, creating a powerful and affecting contrast. What could be very po-faced indeed ends up a touching elegy for Panda Bear’s recently departed father.

31) Feist – Let It Die

Like the debut album of her band (Broken Social Scene), Leslie Feist’s album is a compelling mesh of diverse styles and sounds. Unlike the band, however, this is a lot less indie and a great deal more pop, encompassing a cinematic swirl and sublime melodic touch to go with the elements of folk, chanson, disco and philly soul that can be found elsewhere. Feist’s voice has some of the jazz tilt of Jolie Holland or Erin McKeown, and her own songs are elemental and deceptively sweet. The best moments here are the interpretations though – including a more elaborate and delightfully touching rendition of Ron Sexsmith’s ‘Secret Heart’ and a shamelessly groovy take on The Bee Gees composition ‘Inside and Out’. The combination of Feist’s expressive vocals with the production trickery and sense of fun of Chilly Gonzales makes for a magical combination.

30) American Music Club – Love Songs For Patriots

Whilst the Pixies reunion may have garnered rather more in the way of column inches, the return of American Music Club actually produced some fruitful new material. In fact, that’s an understatement, as ‘Love Songs For Patriots’ is certainly their least impenetrable and possibly their very best album to date. Mark Eitzel’s trademark miserabilism is still intact, but it is complemented both by a powerful state of the union address and a hopeful look to the future and faith in the redemptive power of love. There’s plenty of wit and wisdom here, and the whole album sounds fantastic, with some dynamic group playing and inventive studio work.

29) Sufjan Stevens – Seven Swans

Stevens’ first UK release was less ornate than his ‘Michigan’ project, with a more consistent stripped back sound with lyrics rich in fearful Christian imagery with a veangeful God and the consistent presence of temptation. All these songs made a great deal more sense in the context of Stevens’ live show, where his laid back, self-effacing narrative linked them more closely with the Michigan project and added a more personal dimension to this collection, where many of the songs seem to be gleefully extemporised from small personal experiences. There’s still plenty of softly delivered melodic grace, and nifty banjo plucking – and it’s clear that Stevens is a major songwriting talent.

28) The Memory Band – The Memory Band


This unclassifiable record draws deep into the well of English folk traditions, whilst also demonstrating a talent for electronic production and a clear knowledge and understanding of other forms – including jazz. It’s more than just another ‘folktronica’ or ‘pastoral electronica’ record though – it has a great ear for unusual combinations of ideas, and also maintains a sprightly charm throughout.

27) MF Doom – Mmm…Food

Amazingly, this was one of three MF Doom releases in 2004 (one of the other two is significantly higher up this list). It doesn’t seem that he was spreading himself too thinly though, as this solo project is almost as striking as his collaborative work. He uses samples to build a compelling character portrait of his alter ego, where he inhabits a comic book world of heroes and villains. His raps are full of wit and brio, and the atmospheric sound is as engaging as the relentless wordplay.

26) Hot Chip – Coming On Strong

Hot Chip’s lo-fi bedroom electronica has been described in some quarters as ‘gameboy soul’. Whilst this was clearly meant as a compliment, it’s also slightly misleading, as there is much more to Hot Chip than mere bleeping and crooning. Their philosophy often involves throwing everything but the kitchen sink into each track, and whilst the tone of their home recordings is more muted than their more energetic live performances, the singular results they manage to draw from diverse influences is refreshingly inventive. Alexis Taylor has an adept way with lilting, affecting melodies that make for a neat contrast with Joe Goddard’s hip-hop inspired beats and effects. There’s also a distinctive sense of humour at work here, one that shows a healthy sense of fun and self-mockery. They are intelligent enough to pre-empt any white-boy funk jibes with the wit and effrontery of tracks like ‘Playboy’ and ‘Keep Fallin’. They are prolific writers too (some of their best tracks were left off this collection), so I doubt we will have to wait long for an even better album.

25) Colin Towns Mask Orchestra – Orpheus Suite

Colin Towns is an admirable big band composer in the Duke Ellington mould, and ‘The Orpheus Suite’, composed for the Royal National Ballet, may be his most spectacular work yet. There are elements of Bernstein and West Side Story in this climactic and hectic work, but there are also moments of considerable lyrical beauty. It’s all about arrangement rather than improvisation – but Towns is such a brilliant arranger that he manages to make much of this sound spontaneous and divinely inspired.

24) Tom Waits – Real Gone

‘Real Gone’ has continued to grow on me following Tom Waits’ extraordinary return to live performance in London. It’s a gnarly, grizzly record, full of minimalist, primal blues and rootsy balladeering. There’s no piano to soften the harshness this time, and it possibly seems foreboding due to its excessive 70+ minutes of running time. Nevertheless, there’s some impressive work here, not least in Waits’ still shocking ability to transform the entire tone and timbre of his voice to suit his musical environment. It’s also great to here him reunited with Marc Ribot, a dazzlingly brilliant guitarist who remains as sensitive as he is explosive.

23) Polar Bear – Dim Lit

Utilising roughly the same band as the Acoustic Ladyland project (replacing pianist Tom Cawley with saxophonist Mark Lockheart), Polar Bear provided space for the audacious compositions of drummer Seb Rochford. With no real harmonic foundation (the band lack a pianist or guitarist), it’s intriguing to hear how successfully the band works here, with some wonderfully inventive work from Rochford and bass player Tom Herbert combining with the instinctively tight saxophone duelling of Lockheart and Pete Wareham. Wareham mostly restrains his Coltrane-esque tendencies here, making the short bursts of free playing all the more striking. Instead, this is more focussed on rhythm and harmony, with some careful deployment of drum programming and electronic influences to pepper the sound. It’s a distinctive, highly engaging treatment of the traditional jazz quartet, rich in both ideas and feeling.

22) Dani Siciliano – Likes

Whilst it would be wrong to classify Dani Siciliano as a jazz singer, she carries with her some of the elegance of expression and inventiveness of phrasing of a Billie Holliday or an Ella Fitzgerald. When coupled with the innovative sample-based production of her husband and partner-in-sound Matthew Herbert, the results are superb. Some have dismissed this as a Matthew Herbert album in all but name, but this would not only undermine Siciliano’s classy vocal skills, as evidenced in a superb reinterpretation of Nirvana’s ‘Come As You Are’, but also her songwriting. Most of these songs were demoed by Siciliano alone, before being furnished at Herbert’s studio. His production techniques certainly predominate the album, but there is clearly enough substance in these elegant and seductive songs to begin with. The combination of the two is ceaselessly inventive, and rewarding, from the luscious and lengthy ‘Same’ to the stark and minimalist ‘Walk The Line’.

21) Elvis Costello and the Imposters – The Delivery Man

Although Costello arguably relented slightly on the concept (the final version of ‘The Delivery Man’ was more like a conventional collection of songs than a song cycle), ‘The Delivery Man’ was still a powerful and characteristically tempestuous document. Many of the songs had a savage bite to them, and even the apparently sweet ballads carried Costello’s distinctive breed of poisoned malice. His voice sounded rougher than on the treacly ‘North’, and, as ever, he seemed to inhabit his material with a convincing commitment.

20) Joanna Newsom – The Milk Eyed Mendor

Definitely the kookiest album of the year by a country mile, but one that leaves a lasting impression, and becomes more palatable with each listen. Newson’s voice is initially grating – a crushing and uncompromising squawk. Yet it also allows for considerable depth of expression and conveys the delicate idealism and fanciful innocence of her lyrics with admirable clarity. Even more striking is her harp playing. Not only is it great to hear such a rarely deployed instrument in the context of pop songwriting, it’s even better to hear it played so deftly, with a staggering variety of techniques and approaches.

19) TV On The Radio – Desperate Youths, Bloodthirsty Babes

Could this wonderful record be the start of a doo-wop revival? Part of me hopes so, especially as one of the most impressive tracks here is entirely accapella. Elsewhere, there is some skronky saxophone, heavy layers of distored guitar and stuttering drum maching patterns to add to the freakish mix. Most bands who through so many ideas at the wall would end up sounding confused, but TV On The Radio combine their disparate influences into a coherent sound which has a warped logic of its own. Deliciously inventive, challenging and enjoyable, this album triumphed despite its somewhat clunky title.

18) Acoustic Ladyland – Camouflage

In a brilliant year for British jazz, the Acoustic Ladyland provided one of the most energetic and inspired collections of the year. The tracks here all take their inspiration from Hendrix, but using a small band acoustic jazz set up. The collective playing veers from the fiery to the reflective, and the band is also capable of setting up the tightest of grooves, testament to their enduring love of Hendrix’s bluesy rock music. There’s no sense of pointless nostalgia here – nor any of the rock bluster that undermines many of Hendrix’s legion of imitators. ‘Camouflage’ is one of the more forward thinking jazz albums of the year, pushing the quartet format into new and exciting directions.

17) Iron and Wine – Our Endless Numbered Days

This soft, deeply hushed collection had a rustic feel that made it sound as old as the hills. The songwriting also benefited from an allusive poetry that gave the songs a certain timelessness as well. The muted tones of Sam Beam’s vocals betrayed the influence of the late Elliott Smith, but the southern gothic imagery was entirely Beam’s own, and seemed highly appropriate from a man who otherwise makes his living as a photographer. ‘Our Endless Numbered Days’ was a richly rewarding analysis of death and decay which sounded like the lost soundtrack to a William Faulkner novel - unsettling, evocative and strangely moving.

16) Fennesz – Venice

Continuing his journey away from uncompromising glitchcore towards something much warmer and more ingratiating, Christian Fennesz followed up the marvellous ‘Endless Summer’ with another sublime and rapturous statement, somehow managing to humanise the often rather academic pursuit of laptop improvisation. The result was a densely layered, swirling sound that was as moving as it was powerfully hypnotic. Fennesz’s subtle methods of implying melody within his heavily textured sounds continue to mark him out as a crucial figure in electronic music.

15) Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti – The Doldrums/Vital Pink


Easily the least technically adept album that I’ve enjoyed in 2004, ‘The Doldrums’ is all over the place – with out-of-tune vocals, clashing harmonies and all manner of unusual sound effects gaining more prominence than conventional instrumentation. Nevertheless, it all works surprisingly well, and is characterised by an ambitious and sensuous sensurround pop sensibility. It’s an original and endearing collection, where the finished result is much more than the sum of its rather cranky parts.

14) Arthur Russell – Calling Out Of Context

In which legendary producer Arthur Russell does a Tupac Shakur and releases a new collection long after his premature death. Remarkably, his sound has dated well, and has been well worth revisiting in 2004. His vocals here sound distant and unfamiliar, lingering on meandering, uncertain melodies whilst the music is both elegantly floating and incessantly rhythmic. The sound also has some of the aquatic quality of Miles Davis’ electric/fusion period.

13) Elliott Smith – From The Basement On A Hill


In light of his tragic suicide, this is a deeply moving collection – but it’s not simply a miserabilist document. It’s also perceptive, incisive and emotionally overwhelming – the brilliant final statement of a genuinely gifted songwriter. There’s a lingering sense here that Elliott was still only just beginning to explore new forms and ideas, and ‘From A Basement…’ is easily the most diverse collection in the Elliott Smith canon. It’s probably not as audacious as the album he wanted to release, but it is even more impressive than I had expected it to be.

12) Adem – Homesongs

Fridge bassist Adem Ilhan produced the surprise gem of the year with an album of stark and intimate folk songs that effortlessly welded the traditional and the strikingly modern. Some of these songs sounded so forthright and personal that it was almost voyeuristic to listen to them, whilst elsewhere the predominating mood was shamelessly sentimental. Adem’s vocals sounded rough at the edges, but ultimately warm and convincing, and the music featured all manner of unusual instruments to create a somewhat alien timbre.

11) Mark Lanegan Band – Bubblegum

Anyone expecting a heavy rock set from Lanegan following his recent moonlighting with Queens of The Stone Age may well be confounded by this set, which seems to owe a heavy debt to classic blues artists such as Howlin’ Wolf and Muddy Waters, as well as the dark cabaret of Tom Waits. It’s an impressive set, muddy in the best possible way, and captivating from start to finish. Lanegan’s bourbon soaked voice has never sounded more grimly compelling, and the songs rank among his most concise and consistent. Most impressive is the way he gets elaborate results from rudimentary structures and approaches.

10) Bjork – Medulla

I moaned a bit that this wasn’t as good as ‘Vespertine’ but, then again, what is? ‘Medulla’ was still technically audacious and powerful stuff, even if it lacked some of the fearlessly intimate emotion of its predecessor. It wasn’t quite the all-vocal album it promised to be, but ‘Medulla’ still found Bjork expanding her vocal range and using voices in a range of percussive, harmonic and melodic settings. Her songs remain wildly unpredictable, with her melodies employing uncompromising intervals that are always made to sound just right. The collaborative approach also reaped rewards – Mike Patton’s contributions are effective, and the combination of the voices of Bjork and Robert Wyatt is unsurprisingly beautiful. ‘Medulla’ arguably served as an extension of the choral philosophy that underpinned ‘Verspertine’ – although the end result was something different. ‘Medulla’ is more intoxicating than emotive, and just like any Bjork album, it remains impossible to ignore.

9) Nick Cave and The Bad Seeds – Abattoir Blues/The Lyre Of Orpheus

In a year of excess, Nick Cave produced the most consistently engaging double album. That it came after two albums of occasionally brilliant but more often either unconvincing or muted material made it all the more surprising and satisfying. If the two were made to compete against each other, ‘Abattoir Blues’ would probably have the edge. It favours Cave’s more unrestrained material and, even though the departure of Blixa Bargeld might have left a substantial hole, The Bad Seeds sound as explosive and degenerate as ever. The addition of the London Community Gospel Choir is also far from trite, giving the material a genuinely soulful edge. Cave also seems to have rediscovered his sense of humour and, where his lyrics have tended towards pomposity or self-parody of late, most of the words here seem both intelligent and intentionally hilarious. Some of the more reflective moments on ‘The Lyre Of Orpheus’ also have a spiritual quality which is engaging and stirring – and this is easily Cave’s best set of material since ‘The Boatman’s Call’.

8) Brian Wilson – Smile

I know I’ve made myself vulnerable to cries from purists for not making this the album of the year. Yet, let’s be honest – ‘Smile’ should have been the best album of 1967, and not the best album of 2004. Even in it’s near-seamlessly merged, supposedly final state, it feels more like an artefact than something truly new, and I would be bowing to established critical norms if I said this was the best album of the year. Nevertheless, it does stand up remarkably well, and it’s easy to see just how influential much of this music has been in the intervening period. If its surrealist, playful mood sometimes seems silly, at its best, ‘Smile’ is as powerfully moving a demonstration of Wilson’s fragile mindset as anything currently available, particularly in its preoccupation with the primacy of childhood. Re-recordings of ‘Good Vibrations’, ‘Surf’s Up’ , ‘Cabinessence’ et al seem superfluous at best (Wilson’s band remain slavishly faithful to the original arrangements), but the utter joy here is hearing this music together as a complete vision, and for this reason it is admirable that Wilson didn’t just attempt a savage editing job with the existing bootleg material.

7) Madvillain – Madvillainy


Whilst the world fawned over Kanye West’s rather uninspired sped-up soul samples, those in the know went straight for this magnificent collaboration between MF Doom (the masked, ‘many-fingered villain’ and one of the most irresistible characters in hip-hop) and producer extraordinaire Madlib. With its mercilessly concise tracks and razor-sharp wit and invention, this was a rare hip-hop album entirely devoid of filler. It’s old film and cartoon samples also gave it a vibrant, cinematic edge that distanced it from tired rap clichés.

6) Jason Molina – The Pyramid Electric Co.

Following two brilliant albums with Songs:Ohia last year, Jason Molina eschewed the band set-up altogether for this intimate collection. ‘The Pyramid Electric Co.’ is anything but polite, however, and many of these selections are every bit as intense and confrontational as the Neil Young inspired blues of the complementary ‘Magnolia Electric Co.’ album. The songs are unbelievably raw, and delivered with a gutsy passion and commitment that takes Molina further away from his initial debt to mentor Will Oldham. The only problem was just how hard to find this record was, released only on limited edition vinyl. It therefore seems like a lost treasure, ignored by consumers and critics alike. For those that missed out, Molina will be back with his band (now confusingly dubbed ‘The Magnolia Electric Co.’ after the album) with both a live album and a new Steve Albini-produced studio set in 2005.

5) Animal Collective – Sung Tongs

‘Sung Tongs’ could perhaps best be described as an endearing mess. It’s certainly ragged and jam-packed with so many ideas that it seems permanently on the brink of collapse. Yet it is also the most cohesive and impressive statement yet from Avey Tare and Panda Bear, erring towards their more controlled, melodic side rather than the slightly frustrating feedback constructions of their first two albums. ‘Sung Tongs’ incorporates the harmonic joy of Brian Wilson, the pastoral psychedelia of Syd Barrett and even some of the off-kilter rhythmic stutters of Timbaland or The Neptunes. Overall, it’s an engrossing, if sometimes confusing, distillation of chaotic impulses.

4) El-P – High Water

‘High Water’ has managed to attain the lofty position of being both my favourite jazz and my favourite hip-hop album of the year. From that, you’ll probably have guessed that it’s a tidy combination of the two genres (some snobs might claim that they are mutually exclusive – but they could do worse than give this powerful, atmospheric record a listen). It’s El-P’s combination to the ongoing Blue Series Continuum project, and it features contributions from well-known avant-garde jazzers Matthew Shipp and William Parker. What could have been somewhat extreme actually turns out to be surprisingly accessible, albeit dense and unpredictable. It works because the compositions and beats are structured intelligently, allowing the musicians plenty of free space to contribute their own ideas. It therefore seems like a true meeting of minds, rather than an imposition of one sound over another. The mood is heavy and foreboding throughout, echoing El-P’s work with Cannibal Ox on ‘The Cold Vein’ (an album which truly defines the word ‘urban’ with all its gritty, dank paranoia). ‘High Water’ is simmering with threatening tension and makes for an enveloping, claustrophobic listen.

3) Sufjan Stevens – Greetings From Michigan – The Great Lake State

I’ve debated at length whether or not this record is eligible for this year’s list, especially as I included it amongst the ones that got away for 2003. Given that this list also includes The Shins (released Stateside in 2003) and also that last year’s winner, Broken Social Scene’s ‘You Forgot It In People’ was released in some territories in 2002, it would seem churlish and unfair to leave this wonderful gem by the wayside simply because it was first released last year (it was given a UK release with two bonus tracks this year). Apparently, the first in a long term step to produce an album for all the US states (I’m not going to bet on Stevens managing to complete this), ‘Michigan’ was an honest and powerful document of Stevens’ home state, including some affecting social commentary along the way. Stevens plays a whole range of instruments, including whistles, reed and wind instruments alongside his trusty banjo and guitar and his voice is a delicate rustle and whisper, although capable of assuming a more powerful mode where necessary. Like Badly Drawn Boy or Elliott Smith, he is capable of adorning his charming melodies with unusually lavish and ornate arrangements, which add to his individual appeal as something of a maverick songwriter, although its clear from his stripped-down live shows that these songs are more than strong enough to survive without the orchestrations.

2) The Arcade Fire – Funeral

I can assure you that I don’t usually hear voices in my head – but all the way through compiling this list, I have felt an urging to put this album at the very top of the list. I have only restrained myself on the basis that it’s one of my most recent acquisitions and I’m still finding it hard to remove it from my CD player. It’s a brilliant album, with an unfashionable romanticism and affecting analysis of grief and departure. It also seems to neatly capture the youthful fantasy of escape, not just in its fascinating lyrical narrative, but also in the widescreen rapture of the music. ‘Funeral’ has such a range of influences that it ends up sounding fresh and invigorating, coupling a relentless rhythmic drive with melodic extravagance. Awesome packaging as well, which is a bonus in the download age. It’s going to get a full UK release on Rough Trade in February, and I can only hope it follows The Libertines and Franz Ferdinand in becoming an unqualified success.

1) Wilco – A Ghost Is Born

Bafflingly released to somewhat mixed reviews on both sides of the Atlantic, to my mind, ‘A Ghost Is Born’ is Wilco’s best record to date and therefore something very special indeed. Either denounced as more ‘conventional’ that its predecessor ‘Yankee Hotel Foxtrot’ (hardly an experimental record, beyond its occasional use of radio static and feedback), or condemned for its more audience-baiting tactics, ‘A Ghost Is Born’ seemed unfortunately snared in a false dichotomy. The joy of Wilco lies not in their tendency to pioneer, or in their faithful devotion to classic songwriting formulae, but rather in their seamless and elegant combination of the two. ‘A Ghost Is Born’ is the most fruitful step on this journey so far, incorporating vivid, squawking guitar solos that lack indulgence because they appear seemingly out of nowhere, explosions of pent-up energy and frustration. There is also plenty of subtle guitar picking and ghostly piano chords to counterbalance this – and the result is a work that seems unified and coherent. It’s also their most poetic album to date, weaving a tapestry of richly evocative imagery that adds to the hypnotic quality of the music. Whether it be the explosive dynamics of the Neu-esque ‘Spiders’, the delicately moving ‘Hummingbird’ or the mysterious, quietly menacing ‘Hell Is Chrome’, this is the most compelling album of 2004.

Honourable Mentions

…or albums that may have made this list had I managed to actually managed to hear them in their entirety…

The Crimea – Tragedy Rocks
Frankie Machine
Adrian Roye – Welcome To One Man Town – excluded on the basis that I contribute to it – but it’s a brilliant record in spite of this! Check out http://www.adrianroye.com/ for more information!
The Unicorns – Who Will Cut Our Hair When We’re Gone?
Ella Guru – The First Album
Solex – The Laughing Stock of Indie Rock – definitely best title of the year!
Beans – Shock City Maverick
Tomasz Stanko Quartet – Suspended Night
Polly Paulusma – Scissors In My Pocket
Blonde Redhead – Misery Is A Butterfly
Guided By Voices – Half Smiles Of The Decomposed
Mike Ladd – Nostalgialator
Vijay Iher and Mike Ladd – In What Language?
PJ Harvey – Uh Huh Her
Blood Brothers – Crimes
Tim Garland – Change Of Season
Tim Berne’s Big Satan – Souls Saved Here
Charlotte Hatherley - Grey Will Fade

Log back on to In League With Paton over the next couple of weeks for lists of the best singles and films of 2004! Also, some brand new reviews for 2005 are in the pipeline – including the new albums by Mercury Rev, Lou Barlow, Bloc Party and Patrick Wolf!