Thursday, 18 March 2010

Me garage music vlog down below. first 2 review things for www.sicmagazine.net
Various Artists – Southwest Of Never
A download compilation of artists going to SXSW (the lucky, lucky bastards!) but it’s not all self promotion – this is a charity album with proceeds to The Institute Of Cancer Research. So it’s a “good cause”, it’s cheap (a fiver). It’s also a VFM compilation with some “names”. It quicks off with sicmag favourites Boxer Rebellion and continues with advert friendly & upwardly mobile Broadcast 2000 (an acoustic Pep Talk, which as I’ve only seen them acoustically is fine by me. Aside – if you’re at Camden Crawl they play daytime at The Spreadeagle which is where I saw them last, as does the excellent Matthew Kilford). Kill It Kid are a classy affair – and all over the place like a mad woman’s shit – taking in Mumford faux folk and crashing Classic Rock. A bit like Masters Of Reality. French Horn Rebellion are my top 80s revivalists at the moment and the Champ Remix of Beaches & Friends brings smooth Soul Pop to the mix.

Equally good for me is hearing the acts I haven’t heard of. Leggins are pretty much straight rock in the Lost Prophets mould (with a slight Indie twist), Olof Arnalds is of the plinky uke type, sounding like something that might be on Topic label field recording of traditional Japanese music (though I’m guessing Scandinavian – yes, Googling shows her to be Icelandic).

Strait Laces “Where The Wolf Rome” (presumably a Romulus & Remus gag rather than a sic) is a neo prog high point (just steering short of Emo). My fingers are crossed that Tiger! Shit! Tiger! Tiger! will be as good as their name but not quite. Still, Crime Wave is as much fun as the Sam Raimi film it gets its name from. I’m still not sure if Black Keys by The Minutes shouldn’t be The Minutes by Black Keys such are it’s Classic Rock chops (and truncated riff from Floyd’s Money). Fast Song by The Watermarks is appropriately careering and sounds like where White Rose Movement might have arrived if the ditched the Electro. Proper. Bridges & Powerlines provide a sweet brand of Pop like The Research.

I’ve missed a few – this is 15 tracks long. For my money a bit too musically proficient in places but that equally makes it more a “solid” set. As before I don’t give a rating for charity releases but hopefully the above persuades you this is good buy even without the glow of doing a bit of good that comes with it. I certainly think it would appeal to a lot of sic readers. http://neverenoughnotes.co.uk/wordpress/2010/02/07/southwest-of-never-never-enough-records-sxsw-inspired-charity-release-07-0210/
Paul Hawkins & Thee Awkward Silences
“Apologies To The Enlightment” Released 19/04/10

For the last few years Paul Hawkins has been honing his outsider version of Pub/Art Rock and with this album the elements gel and he takes his place on the throne as King Of Fools. If you’re of a certain age some old art rock will come to mind along the way as you journey over the two discs. Ian Dury has been mentioned (agreed, if we’re talking Kilburn & The High Roads) and I’d ad a bit of Deafschool and Doctors Of Madness. I notice from the promo sheet he has supported Wreckless Eric which makes absolute sense. But really it’s all part of a dark but accessible stream of Psyche from Rocky Eriksson to Earl Brutus. There’s a certain suburban weirdo literary bent to it, Ray Davies meeting David Lynch could be responsible for I’m In Love With A Hospital Receptionist for example.

It is split into two halves, disc one being “The Day The Music Stopped”. The portentous brooding opening The Beasts In The Upstairs Room (the start of which reminds me of Motley Crue’s Shout At The Devil for a few seconds!) sounds like a great way to start a live set too. A chugging – yes – beast bathed in Hawkwind’s Space attack with a nod to Bowie’s Heroes, it spits out an unpleasant tale of dysfunction that ends on a ventilator. The anthemic The Day The Music Stopped is more gentle, with it’s twangy guitar and amusing “This is the epilogue” chant.

Being an old Rocker I fall more naturally for the “heavier” riff stuff, Monkey Serum follows in the footsteps of Medicinal Compound and Love Potion No.9 – this time the juice is anti-Darwin stuff that may come from the syringe of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. The final track on this half, I’ve Had My Fun, is a starkly nostalgic banger built up from a start like John Barry’s Theme From the Persuaders to a dirge recording the despair of the slip into the ordinary life. The lyric proclaiming the protagonist will “raise kids to be Realists… not have their dreams shattered like what happened to me”. This track builds to near frenzy (with power house drums) as the replaying of the protagonists perceived failure leads him to derangement.

Preceding Fun is the affecting Seven Inches Tall, which lapses from the character driven pieces to what seems a genuine sense of inadequacy played out over piano not a million miles from Madness.

Album part two – “You’re Never Gonna Leave Behind The Freakshow” starts with
The Yellow Castle On The Hill a track that I can believe is largely based on a factual encounter (or “almost” encounter) spun out by imagination - the classic unrequited love, though taken to epic proportions as insanity intervenes.

Some chutzpah was required to produce what is to be the next single “Every Word I Say To You Today Will Be A Lie” – to say it sounds like Ian Dury & The Blockheads would be an understatement. To be fair band and label are holding their hands up. And let’s face it no one has really taken that template and it’s probably a long enough wait. Who cares if it works – and it does.

In all honesty the last quarter isn’t as immediately pleasing but this could be fatigue from Hawkin’s voice. It might not appeal to the wider public – a sort of Anthony Worrell Thompson drone. But if you take to “non singers” that’s fine, I love Alice Cooper, Mark E Smith and John Lydon. It does wear in one sitting, though, over this double album. As you may imagine though the reviewer doesn’t have the time needed to let tracks grow on him (and from this section I like hypnotic The Lowest Low and the re-appearance of “this is the epilogue” on the final, string covered, The Epilogue).

8/10

1 comment:

CE54R said...

Hey, thanks a lot for your great review on the Southwest Of Never compilation from me and the rest of The Watermarks! Perhaps you don't know this, but you can actually download all our music for free at our site, which is www.thewatermarks.net.

Cheers!

Cesar