• Editors - In This Light And On This Evening

    Nov 28 2009, 19h38 por RobinJR

    EditorsIn This Light And On This Evening

    Dat ikzelf bijzonder gecharmeerd ben van de eerste twee albums van deze van oorsprong Birminghamse band zal weinig mensen ontgaan zijn. Inmiddels wonen twee van de vier Editors in New York en resideert zanger, en belangrijkste songschrijver, Tom Smith tegenwoordig in Londen. De stap van een grote stad naar een wereldstad is dan ook goed terug te horen op dit album, dat in alles donkerder, gelaagder en urgenter klinkt dan hun eerdere werk.

    Na geslaagde en, meestal, minder geslaagde uitstapjes van andere generatiegenoten besloten Editors voor hun derde ook maar eens de synthesizers onder het stof vandaan te halen. Waar dit meestal leidt tot een slechte gimmick, bijvoorbeeld Franz Ferdinand, voegen de synthesizers bij Editors ook daadwerkelijk wat aan het geluid toe. Was Editors op de eerste twee platen nog vooral een gitaarband, op In This Light And On This Evening is er meer ruimte voor het experiment en elektronica, iets dat die typische Editors sound alleen maar ten goede komt.

    Want datgene wat die sound voor het grootste deel bepaald, die geweldige stem van Tom Smith, lijkt juist door die synthesizers en de van gitaar gestripte composities alleen maar beter uit te komen. Luister maar eens naar opener In This Light And On This Evening en het ruim zes minuten durende Bricks And Mortar waarin zijn stem alle aandacht naar zich toe trekt. Derde nummer en single is het gejaagde Papillon, waarbij de wereld kennis maakte met de nieuwe koers van Editors. Daarna wordt er iets gas terug genomen met You Don’t Know Love, het op Joy Division leunende The Big Exit en The Boxer om af te sluiten met het ijzersterke Like Treasure en Walk The Fleet Road.

    Het enige minpunt van In This Light And On This Evening is het wat lullige voorlaatste nummer Eat Raw Meat = Blood Drool. Niet alleen is dit nummer wat curieus getiteld, Editors lijkt zichzelf hier ook wat voorbij te galopperen met hun nieuwe stijl en de herontdekking van de synth. Dit is echter een klein smetje op een verder formidabele plaat. Of het de beste is die deze Britten tot nu toe hebben uitgebracht is moeilijk te zeggen maar hij doet zeker niet onder voor The Back Room en An End Has A Start.
  • My Top 50 Albums of 2009

    Nov 28 2009, 0h44 por Acquiescence

    2009…most notable, musically, for giving me an album so perfect I am seriously considering calling it my favourite ever release, though I’m still undecided for now. Japanese music continues to enforce its way into my tastes, I’m starting to develop a hankering for it more than ever. I thought I’d rue the day I ever developed a liking for girlish J-pop but then I guess some miracles never cease to happen. So a good year for music overall then…still no 2005, but nothing ever will be. Just a footnote, any music video included is not a random choice, it’s there because I think it warrants attention, whether it’s due to artistic merit or the fact that it ties in well with the song’s themes and/or images that it creates. If it has hot Japanese chicks then that doesn’t hurt either.


    50. Keith - Vice And Virtue

    Vice & Virtue manages that rare feat, a sophomore effort that simultaneously comes across as a letdown AND a worthy successor. On the one hand it feels like a step back of sorts, a devolution into a more restricting schematic of psychedelic-lite funk. The reason their excellent debut Red Thread stood out back in 2006 was because its eclecticism knew no bounds, possessed of an ability to fuse impossibly broad influences into its 11 adventurous songs. That’s not to say the Manchester band have forgotten how to captivate, as there are numerous moments here that rank with the best 2009 has to offer. ‘Up In The Clouds’ in particular is striking, transforming from the crackling, visceral funk of the first two-thirds into some existential, Eastern-sounding weirdness that doesn't sound a million miles from Acid Mothers Temple. It’s riotous yet slightly chilling at once. And as an aside, bassist John Waddington is still producing some of the finest, most wholly defining basslines around. The man is a virtuoso.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Up In The Clouds’ ‘Lullaby’ ‘Lucid’


    Lullaby


    49. Dirty Projectors - Bitte Orca

    A venture in musical progression that cannot possibly be defined by genre alone, Bitte Orca’s profusion of unyielding spastic instrumentation mingled with outright pop accessibility means it’s avant-garde tendencies, though endlessly inventive, never keep the listener at arms length.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Stillness Is The Move’ ‘Useful Chamber’ ‘Two Doves’


    48. The Joy Formidable - A Balloon Called Moaning

    Exploring the space between twee and dream-pop, the loved-up Welsh trio exhume a great deal of panache as their coruscating waves of gleeful noise spin into whorls of vivid colouration and fuzzy delirium. A vivacious rush of an album.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - TocarThe Greatest Light Is The Greatest Shade ‘The Last Drop’ ‘Cradle’


    47. The Rest - Everyone All At Once

    A Canadian seven-piece collective that somewhat resemble an Arcade Fire closer to the folk spectrum, The Rest are every bit as large-scale but graceful. With irresistibly pretty mini-epics that scale a tableau of both the genteel and tumultuous, the songs take turns in unexpected directions but it’s all too artistically well crafted to become an aimless mess.

    8/10

    Standout TracksTocarWalk On Water (Auspicious Beginnings) ‘Modern Time Travel (Necessities)’ ‘Drinking Again’


    46. Dan Auerbach - Keep It Hid

    Dan Auerbach temporarily ditches his partner in crime Patrick Carney for a solo outing that, while not a huge departure from the stripped-back scuzzy blues he’s built a career on, slyly reveals with repeated listens a more explorative and personal outlet of expression than he’s delved in before. Auerbach sings and plays with all the soul he can summon, whether it be on the more subdued numbers like sweetly sung, hear-a-pin-drop lullaby ‘When The Night Comes’, or the swampy deep south-flavoured grooves, which sound so authentic they could have been plucked straight from 1950’s Mississippi. So much more than a stopgap for the next Black Keys album.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - When The Night Comes ‘Goin’ Home’ ‘The Prowl’


    45. hideka - hideka

    Bidding farewell to the hubbub of city life, Hideka took residency in the rural pastures of home-town Yamanashi for her solo project, building a private studio and partaking in most of the recording duties and instrument playing herself. As such, this debut mini-album feels like a manifestation of her own little world, a cultivation of floating candy-coloured shoegaze that enthrals with its sumptuous textures and a hushed intimacy that only such isolated conditions could fully capture. Blissful.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Brain to dream of’ ‘FOOL FOR LOVE’ ‘easy’


    44. White Lies - To Lose My Life

    White Lies own particular brand of depresso-pop owes a far more hefty debt to the Midge Ure-era of Ultravox as opposed to the usual Joy Division-influenced suspects they’ve been shoehorned in with instead, sharing as they do the same gift for soaring hooklines and theatrical pomp, but reigned in by a morbid streak encrusted within the songwriting and dour baritone of Harry McVeigh, that lends weight to their commercial slant. Charles Cave’s vivid reflections on mortality are painted with broad strokes, making them ripe for cynics to snort at churlishly, but for those with an ear for unshakeably confident, towering anthems, White Lies make for crucial listening.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - TocarDeath ‘E.S.T.’ ‘To Lose My Life’


    43. Maps - Turning The Mind

    Turning The Mind sees James Chapman forego the shoegaze flavourings of his Mercury-shortlisted debut We Can Create in favour of a full-on dance album; and it can’t help but feel like a regression of sorts. But if scrapping guitars entirely does him no favours, a new emphasis on dancefloor-orientated synths and throbbing techno beats doesn’t hurt either, and here Chapman’s affinity for surging swathes of unadulterated euphoria remains very much unscathed. Brownie points for the albums crowning moment ‘Valium In The Sunshine’, which sounds like a re-jigged level theme from the ancient (but still awesome) PSOne platformer Jumping Flash!

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - TocarValium In The Sunshine ‘Papercuts’ ‘Die Happy, Die Smiling’


    42. The Horrors - Primary Colours

    Swept on a wave of hype back in 2006 that couldn’t be sustained, The Horrors were (quite rightly) written off as style-over-substance chancers, more notorious for their Rocky Horror Picture Show haircuts and blissfully short gigs than anything else. So where did it all go right? Finding a new deal with indie label XL and garnering full artistic licence in the process certainly helped. They also struck gold by enlisting Portishead’s Geoff Barrow as producer, his wealth of experience in foreboding soundscapes no doubt set them on the right course in the studio. As a result The Horrors have transmogrified into something revelatory. Borrowing from the best but not burdened by influence, they fuse a hazy rush of neo-shoegaze, psychedelic drones and krautrock rhythms that conjoin into a magnificent noise. All in all, a reinvention that has paid dividends.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Mirror’s Image’ ‘I Only Think Of You’ ‘Sea Within A Sea’


    41. Howling Bells - Radio Wars

    It may not smoulder like the noirish mysticism of their masterful debut, but this long-awaited follow-up, with its newfound emphasis on massive pop-savvy hooks, ensures that the high standards set by the Aussie rockers are maintained. Thanks to both a willingness to branch out and enhance the pop with intricate smatterings of electronica and the irresistible lure of Juanita Stein’s seductive swoon, it’s this combined magnetism inherent throughout that means they never fail to cast a spell for the whole duration.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Let's Be Kids’ TocarCities Burning Down ‘Treasure Hunt’


    40. Animal Collective - Merriweather Post Pavilion

    Almost begrudgingly, it’s hard not to be of the opinion that the overwhelming hype is fairly justified this time around. Decidedly less pretentious and self-indulgent than Animal Collective’s previous installments, Merriweather Post Pavilion sets forth a delirious flood of multi-layered psychedelia that feels like being submerged in a pool of engulfing fluorescence, all the while (thankfully) keeping proceedings concise and melodious. Playfully avant-garde yet accessible enough so as not to detract from the lush textures that its sun-drenched tropicalia and Beach Boys harmonies give rise to, it’s a wonderful record that mercifully erases all memories of the dreadful ‘Peacebone’ and its ilk. Just about.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Bluish’ ‘My Girls’ ‘Brother Sport’


    39. Great Northern - Remind Me Where The Light Is

    A sucker punch of noir-indebted melody from Los Angeles’ Solon Bixler (that’s some name) and Rachel Stolte, here meshing a series of smoky, spooky histrionics with an ambitious slice of stirring arena rock to terrific effect. Stolte’s purring vocals carry a sultry allure to them and when gears are switched for the gospel-tinged stately ballad ‘Stop’, they prove they can be genuinely touching.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Stop’ TocarFingers ‘Warning’


    38. Hope and Social - Architect of this Church

    Essentially the line-up of Four Day Hombre minus a member, the remaining quartet start anew with a self-funded, self-made project that was written, recorded, mixed and mastered in the crypt of a West Yorkshire church. The endless hard work has paid off, from the mariachi festivities of ‘Living A Lie’ to epiphanic hymn ‘Looking For Answers,’ Architect Of This Church is a pleasure. A lesson in unconquerable self-belief and an open-souled meditation on hope, it’s resplendent in magnanimous vigour and features some of the most emotionally naked vocals of the year courtesy of Simon Wainwright. Strongly evoking Guy Garvey of Elbow, his voice howls and cracks with no heed of the strain it must cause, while his bandmates are as equally passionate.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Do What You Must’ ‘In Hope’ ‘Looking For Answers’


    37. Hurricane Bells - Tonight Is The Ghost

    About as far removed from his bands archetypal sound as possible, Steve Schiltz’s solo album trades the rip-roaring shoegaze epics of Longwave for country-streaked, lo-fi recordings filled with an evocation of withdrawn, sometimes cowering woe. Predictably it’s a more intimate affair, everything is toned-down and it suits Schiltz’s warm vibrato well, to the point where the-broken-down-and-impoverished melancholia found in ‘Freezing Rain’ and ‘The Cold Has Killed Us’ may well leave you a little misty-eyed.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Freezing Rain’ ‘This Year’ ‘The Cold Has Killed Us’


    This Year


    36. Manchester Orchestra - Mean Everything To Nothing

    Still hailing from Atlanta and still not approaching anything resembling an orchestra, Manchester Orchestra return, three years on from debut I'm Like a Virgin Losing a Child, as a more seismic entity. Brandishing grunge of a more rabble-rousing pummelling nature this time around, the band has in Andy Hull an enigmatic frontman, blessed with an exhaustible vocal range and afflicted with a heavy dose of Christian guilt (“I am the only son of a pastor I know/Who does the things I do”). It’s confessional stuff, unselfconsciously angst-ridden and, often enough, uproariously fun.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Shake It Out’ TocarI've Got Friends ‘My Friend Marcus’


    35. Odawas - The Blue Depths

    A dreamy collage of folkish tones and psychy arrangements, showered with analogue synthesizers, harmonica, organ and drum machines that weave in and out, all synchronized to perfection. Managing to sound both minimal and vast amid the cavernous production, The Blue Depths floats along unperturbed as the formless sequences elude any typical structure and drift wherever the wistful sounds may take them. Close your eyes and be transported.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Our Gentle Life Together’ ‘Secrets Of The Fall’


    34. Rin Toshite Shigure/凛として時雨 - [album artist凛として時雨]just A moment[/album]

    This batshit Japanese trio fire on all cylinders while never looking back, interjecting their post-hardcore stylings with a constantly shapeshifting palette of discordant sounds that are constantly at the mercy of fractured time signatures and ridiculously entangled structures. Coupled with the hysterical duelling vocals that can switch from a breathy whimper to full-on ear-splitting screamo, just A moment is masterfully executed stuff and a work of astounding exuberance that’s impossible to keep up with.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘a 7days wonder’ ‘Hysteric phase show’ ‘JPOP Xfile’


    33. Grizzly Bear - Veckatimest

    One of the most unanimously celebrated albums of 2009 and rightfully so, pinpointing why Veckatimest is such a captivating triumph isn’t easy to explain. Its autumnal jazz-folk nomenclature is careful and considered, imploring the listener to persevere with unobtrusive compositions that demand patience to feel out every subtle nuance and uncover fresh layers that were once secreted away. Eternally rewarding.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Two Weeks’ ‘Foreground’ ‘Ready, Able’


    Ready, Able


    32. Telekinesis - Telekinesis!

    Telekinesis is the alter-ego of 22 year old Seattleite Michael Benjamin Lerner, who gamely recorded each track of his debut in under 24 hours while playing every instrument required in the process; and he makes it sound all so easy. Through a panoply of sun-kissed vibes, infectious choruses and straightforward instrumentation, the 31 minutes of sharp, unalloyed joy Lerner has created place him in a camp somewhere between the college-rock ruckus of Weezer and the vulnerable mediation of Death Cab for Cutie (Chris Walla helped produce the record). In essence, the love felt for Telekinesis! is as instantaneous as the songs themselves.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - Tokyo ‘Foreign Room’ ‘Look At The East’


    31. Teruyuki Nobuchika - morceau

    Quaint folktronica that apparently the Japanese can do far better than anyone else, Nobuchika is a composer who mostly lends his skills for TV and film but this offering of warm textural ambience suggests he should release more albums. Through the blissed-out strands of studied electronica and easing classical instrumentation, he awakens feelings of peaceful reflection in music awash with diaphanous light and nostalgia, seemingly suspended in time as it quietly observes life go on around it.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - N/A


    30. The Hours - See the Light

    James Cameron, the director of such colossal blockbuster fare as Aliens, Terminator 2: Judgement Day and Titanic, once declared “Less isn’t more, more is more”, a motto very much adhered to on The Hours follow-up to poignant debut album Narcissus Road. Central duo Anthony Genn and Martin Slattery are evidently working on a bolder scale, having expanded the live band to a seven-piece and piling on the guitars and percussion in the process, the gut-level reflections on life and inspiring treatises now sounding tailor-made for stadium singalongs. Genn, who retains his hallmark of unflagging self-belief and righteous zeal, sings every word as if it’s gospel while Slattery’s magisterial piano work has become even more empowering. See The Light may not deviate much from the well-trodden formula of before, but for music that thrives on its own conviction such as this, it doesn’t have to.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - TocarSee The Light ‘Think Again’ ‘Never See You Again’


    29. Headlights - Wildlife

    Listening to Wildlife is like the aural equivalent of visiting a beach on a chilly day. Sure it’s a picturesque setting, free and unspoiled by the commotion of the populace, but gazing out to an infinite horizon with only the sound of gently lapping waves for company is going to lead to a pretty lonely experience. Headlights third album of indie-pop gems won’t set pulses racing, but that air of reserved sadness - joined by a lackadaisical pace and set to a backing of puppyishly sweet charms and hooks - makes for an outing that is sometimes grin-inducing, sometimes heart aching, but always gorgeous.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - TocarGet Going ‘I Don’t Mind At All’ ‘Dead Ends’


    28. Yeah Yeah Yeahs - It’s Blitz!

    Largely eschewing the animalistic art-punk they had become renowned for, the Manhattan-born trio swaps Nick Zinner’s all-conquering guitar for a slightly more sophisticated assembly of glitterball beats and space-age synths, designed for dancefloor-packing mayhem and no doubt delivering. It’s a dramatic shift that has alienated some fans but gained them a whole lot more, the rapturous new sound perfectly complimenting the wild abandon and glee Karen O sings with.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - TocarHysteric ‘Zero’ ‘Heads Will Roll’


    27. A Place to Bury Strangers - Exploding Head

    The debut saw a small army of tinnitus-inducing effect pedals take priority over the songwriting, but Exploding Head rectifies this disparity with a more balanced schematic, initialising a cleaner production job to combat the adrenaline-veined, obliterating industrial-rock that the New York trio specialize in. So while the brutal squalls of feedback and cyberpunk decadence still decimates all in its way, it’s never at the expense of the tunes this time. No further demonstration is needed than ‘Deadbeat’, its dalliance with surf-rock a snapshot of a band who can do ‘catchy’ – just as long as you don’t mind having your head caved in during the process.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Deadbeat’ ‘TocarLost Feeling ‘I Lived My Life To Stand In The Shadow Of Your Heart’


    26. St. Vincent - Actor

    Annie Clark’s sophomore album relies on a menagerie of conflicting sounds as she constructs glistening, Disney-esque vistas and then perforates them with detonations of crunchy guitar noise. It highlights a mind rich with ceaseless creativity and capable of pulling off an unpredictable smorgasbord of bedazzling baroque orchestrations.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks – ‘Just The Same But Brand New’ ‘Marrow’ ‘The Neighbours’


    25. sgt. - Capital of Gravity

    If Mono’s Hymn To The Immortal Wind (that other Japanese post-rock album of the year) specialized in scrupulously organized build-ups into walls of sound, then Capital Of Gravity is as diametrically opposed in its approach as possible. Straying from the post-rock archetype, sgt. opt for a more spontaneous aesthetic, concocting an extensive selection of sounds to revolve around the central core of the storming rhythm section, from vignettes of free-form jazz to plinky-plonky piano interludes to, most impressive of all, violinist Mikiko Narui, whose supercharged melodies are like a guiding light amidst the looping, anything-goes nature of the songs. Who’d have thought post-rock could be this exhilarating.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Tears of na-ga’ ‘Apollo Program’


    24. The Mummers - Tale to Tell

    Written and recorded in a tree-house(!), Tale To Tell is a magical amalgamation of Björk’s eccentric pop (to whom vocalist and ringleader Raissa Khan-Panni’s dainty tones bear more than a resemblance to) and Patrick Watson’s subversive excursions into the carnivalesque. From the cavalry of orchestral flourishes that ebb and flow throughout to drawing inspiration from Alice In Wonderland and Tim Burton films alike, Tale To Tell is an album suffused with enough grandiloquent, fairy-tale charm to create a daydream no one would want to wake up from. Plus any album that features a spoken word excerpt from John Carpenter’s Dark Star has to receive an automatic thumbs-up.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘March Of The Dawn’ ‘This Is Heaven (Glow)’ ‘Lorca And The Orange Tree’


    23. Mew - No More Stories...

    For all the pretentious idiosyncrasies present and correct on Mew’s fifth full-length album - the elongated album title, the first track played in reverse, the labyrinthine song-structures and abrupt time signatures that contain more twists and turns than a rollercoaster - the reason for the Danish outfits steadily-rising global fanbase is simple, they never let prog-leanings overshadow their lush pop sensibilities. More than ever, Mew are irrefutably accessible yet unique enough to render them incomparable to anyone else, piecing together songs that, though complex, are so universally beautiful that anyone can relate to them, no matter how far into an unorthodox realm they take it.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - Sometimes Life Isn’t Easy ‘Repeaterbeater’ ‘Silas The Magic Car’


    Repeaterbeater


    22. A Sunny Day in Glasgow - Ashes Grammar

    Weighing in at a daunting 22 tracks and running time of over 60 minutes, Ashes Grammar should be an exhausting listen, and make no mistake, it’s an album that requires a great deal of tolerance. Repeatedly shifting back and forth from meditative interludes to full-bodied arrangements imbued with ideas, none of it is particularly song-orientated and a surplus of sounds fighting for attention within the impossibly deep production can only exacerbate its woozy inclinations. But there’s much fun to be had in discovering and deciphering the sweet-souled shoegaze over the course of several listens, and when experienced as a whole, the seamless flow from track to track amplifies these perpetually mesmerizing explorations that ebb and flow in every direction.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - N/A


    21. Blakroc - Blakroc

    Further proof, if needed, that The Black Keys can do no wrong and anything affiliated with them is awesome by default. Already riding the crest of his winning solo album this year, Dan Auerbach – reunited with the Key’s other half Patrick Carney - tries his hand at fusing rap and rock. Collaborating with a whole host of established MCs, a heady camaraderie is formed between band and guest rapper, both ably supporting each other from the sleazy sex-obsessed jam ‘Coochie’ to the gritty riffing and quickfire wordplay of ‘Done Did It’. But it’s Nicole Wray who shines most amongst the guest stars; the stripped-bare downcast soul she exudes on ‘Why Can’t I Forget Him’ warrants her own joint album with The Black Keys at some point in the future. A little more of Auerbach’s vocal work pushed to the fore wouldn’t have gone amiss, but with something this well accomplished and irrevocably cool, it’s easy to look past any deficiencies.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Why Can’t I Forget Him’ ‘Ain’t Nothing Like You (Hoochie Coo)’ ‘Done Did It’


    20. Broken Records - Until The Earth Begins To Part

    Every significant event needs a soundtrack, and when the apocalypse finally arrives then Scottish seven-piece Broken Records will be the ideal choice to send us all off in the chaos and calm that ensues, for debut Until The Earth Begins To Part is ‘big’ music in all sense of the word. As open-hearted emotions are let loose and flail in union with stirring swarms of cello, accordion and trumpet, singer Jamie Sutherland boasts an extravagant range that makes the orchestral playing of his bandmates seem positively meek by comparison. The no-holds-barred earnestness may have proved too much for critics, but anyone who appreciates a spell of melodrama that’s unhindered by cynicism will find this has a magic and ferocious passion unbefitting of a band so early in development.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - TocarA Good Reason 'Wolves' 'If Eilert Loevborg Wrote A Song, It Would Sound Like This'


    19. Mono - Hymn To The Immortal Wind

    With a cynical enough viewpoint, one could dismiss post-rock as an assimilation of restrictive genre definitions, serving under and adhering to a strict formula of ludicrously long song- lengths, prolonged build-ups and swelling crescendos. And in all admittance, Hymn To The Immortal Wind falls victim to this generalization, albeit without apology. For rather than carve a niche of their own and offer something new, Mono instead continue to build upon the foundations of post-rock and, on their fifth album, have excelled themselves, releasing their best material in an already illustrious canon of work. Never once is a word uttered, yet this is an album that runs the emotional gamut, the enveloping blizzard of guitars and utilization of a 28 piece orchestra heightening the drama, the compositions acting like a soundtrack to the most beautiful film you’ve never seen, yet can easily imagine. This is truly music to retreat into, to get lost in and find resolve in its infinite grace and lulling power.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Ashes In The Snow’ TocarEverlasting Light


    Follow The Map


    18. Manic Street Preachers - Journal For Plague Lovers

    Infamous for its usage of Richey Edwards final scribblings before his disappearance, the Manic’s ninth longplayer sees them abide by their old work ethic of sculpting the music around his lyrics. While reviving the last musings of a man on the brink of destruction may be a chilling prospect, James Dean Bradfield, Nicky Wire and Sean Moore take the words and bring them to life with gut-wrenching vivacity. Unearthing their past anger once more, the pulverizing jagged punk riffs, Wire and Moore’s gutsy playing and Bradfield’s raw half-singing-half-shouting vocals are back and intact, reinvigorating the band and giving them their best material since 1996’s Everything Must Go. It’s a poignant, fitting tribute to a tragic figure whom for fans has attained legendary status, but to the band is simply a dear friend sorely missed.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Marlon J.D.’ TocarJackie Collins Existential Question Time ‘All Is Vanity’


    17. Yomoya - Yoi Toy

    Championed by Shugo Tokumaru, the Tokyo-based foursome share his same knack for easy-going, lo-fi prog-pop - albeit wrapped around a more conventional format that relies on dotted bleepy keyboards and lazily strummed guitars. There’s something immensely likeable about it all and whether they’re working up a funk groove on ‘Fuan’ or maintaining a measured yet dynamic flow on the sprawling 12 minute ‘Ameagari Atosukosi’, the Saturday-morning-cartoon melodies come thick and fast, always accompanied by an approachable gaiety. Based on these efforts they should be afforded the same occidental recognition as their peer.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Film To Shutter’ ‘Chorus’ ‘Syuuhasuu’


    Film To Shutter


    16. Pentatonik - A Thousand Paper Cranes

    The third offering from Simeon Bowring is thematically based around the story of Sadako Sasaki, a 12 year old Japanese girl who died after suffering the effects of the H bomb. Believing that she would be cured of her cancer if she made a thousand paper cranes (the paper crane being a symbol of peace in Japan), Sasaki was unable to finish her undertaking, but left the words “I shall write peace upon your wings, and your heart and you shall fly around the world.” Listening through A Thousand Paper Cranes it’s difficult not to cast the mind back to this heartrending notion over and over as the music unravels. Wholly instrumental, there is nevertheless a strong emotional backbone to Bowring’s beguiling slate of analogue electronica interspersed with classical ideals. It’s a pictorial concoction that often echo’s the best parts of Susumu Yokota, Vangelis and Ryuichi Sakamoto in an arresting myriad of styles that make Pentatonik a breathtaking and unutterably stunning proposition.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘In Your Arms’ ‘Desert Fall’ ‘Aquamarine’


    15. Phoenix - Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix

    Phoenix continue their ascent toward pop supremacy with Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix, although why they’ve only now achieved the world-wide recognition that their last two superior albums (Alphabetical and It's Never Been Like That) should have given them is anybody’s guess. But never mind, because now everyone knows that summer starts with Phoenix and while this fourth outing hardly marks a significant departure from the sleek, retrofitted dance-pop they’ve mastered time and time before, they are still as unequivocally joyous as the day TocarToo Young first chimed out of radios all those years ago.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - Tocar1901 ‘Countdown’ ‘Lisztomania’


    14. Brand New - Daisy

    If The Devil And God Are Raging Inside Me was built on a set of brooding, slowly gestating passages, then Daisy sees the Long Island emo band mutate into a heavier, more direct beast. The restrained misery found in cutlets like ‘Bed’ and ‘You Stole’ may inject a sinister chill in all the right places, but the album really prides itself on its full-blown lacerating numbers - the ear-scouring screams and buzzsaw riffs found on songs such as ‘Vices’, ‘Gasoline’ and ‘In A Jar’ are laced with violent intent, yet are too outrageous not to be blisteringly fun – and it’s all loaded with such gravitas that's impossible to refute.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Gasoline’ TocarAt The Bottom ‘Vices’


    13. LoveLikeFire - Tear Ourselves Away

    The full-length debut of San Francisco based art-rockers LoveLikeFire gains immediate notoriety for the vocal chords of frontwoman Ann Yu, her diminutive frame belying a voice that is inescapable, unstoppable, yet tragically fragile when conveying the pent-up frustrations and repressed childhood recounted earnestly throughout. This powerful force collides with the bombastic coactions of her bandmates to make for an explosion of cataclysmic effect, songs like ‘From A Tower’ and ‘Good Judgement’ reaching skyscraping climaxes that ought to see them filling stadiums. But mostly Yu steals the show, and if LoveLikeFire can sustain this trajectory of excellence then she is surely set to steal the indie-queen crown from Karen O’s head.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘William’ TocarFrom A Tower ‘Good Judgement’


    William


    12. The Fatales - Great Surround

    Some of the most memorable albums are those that paint a multitude of resonant images in the mind of its listener. Just one listen to Great Surround and it becomes clear that NYC-unknowns The Fatales are able to achieve this feat in abundance. Their sound, though hardly a bastion of originality, is one difficult to pin down or compare to other artists. Here atmosphere and mood play the prominent factor in their rhetoric and rambling song structures flail amid a succession of grandiose string arrangements, glitchy electronics, austere piano notes and an imposing rhythm section. It’s this almost filmic intensity that grips on those precursory listens and ensnares the listener back time and time again afterwards; to revisit the places each song takes you. And although the twinkling, romanticised urban-waltz of ‘Stadtpark’ sticks in mind, the truly stellar moments surface when a sense of unease sets in; the ritualistic ‘Islands Of Fortune’ a case in point, a pitch black canvas of a song so shrouded in fearsome mystery it makes for an unprecedented highlight.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Islands Of Fortune’ ‘Stadtpark’ ‘Darkened Country’


    11. Kasabian - West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum

    While not their best record to date (although close), Kasabian’s third is the first to suggest a real longevity to their career. Shunning much of the yawnsome bravado of before, here they exhibit a robust parade of worldly influences that suggest principal songwriter Serge Pizzorno’s record collection consists of more than just Oasis’ latest hatch-job. So while the Madchester grooves still get a look-in on the likes of lead track ‘Underdog’, what else lies ahead can merely be guessed at. One moment dust-ravaged spaghetti-western soundtracks co-mingle with larksome disco beats and the next, Eastern-strings and gypsy violins give way to brisk forays of industrial-krautrock while the ‘60s garage dementia of ‘Fase Fuse’ careens with such berserker determination that it’s hard not to be convinced it’s the best thing the Leicester quartet have yet recorded. Arrogant swines they may be, but after taking such risks and throwing caution to the wind, one can’t help but feel they have every right to gob off.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Fast Fuse’ ‘Secret Alphabets’ ‘West Ryder/Silver Bullet’


    Fire


    10. Vib Gyor - We Are Not An Island

    Woeful band name, non-existent artwork, a laughable album title; it’s a miracle the music is even worth listening to. But it is, although to say so is perhaps the understatement of the year. Because for a debut, We Are Not An Island is a remarkable accomplishment that, despite excelling with its template of Cathedral-sized atmospherics and climactic surges, has quite tellingly had its every little detail agonized over and crafted to near-perfection. Sounding like a meeting of Coldplay and Radiohead whilst drifting on an iceberg, the Leeds/Barnsely quartet showcase a deft hand in hymn-like laments of ecclesiastical proportions, as glacial piano chords pine with sorrow and reverb-frosted guitar arpeggios haunt long after the music has given way to silence. Irrepressibly huge.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Take Cover’ ‘Fallen’ ‘Red Lights’ ‘Ultimatum’


    9. The Antlers - Hospice

    It’s hard to form the words necessary to describe just how much of a harrowing ordeal Hospice is from start to finish. A concept album, it documents the trials of a love-affair between a hospital worker and an abusive cancer patient, penned by singer/lynchpin Peter Silberman during a lengthy period of self-inflicted isolation from society. From this darkness has emerged some of the most astonishingly gorgeous music put to tape this year, juxtaposed by the deeply unsettling lyrical content and heart-wrenching vulnerability laid bare from beginning to end. The narrative depictions of a sterile hospital backdrop, scream-inducing nightmares that punctuate an already restless slumber and attempted suicide add credence to the story-telling and ring true as Silberman’s often-disarmingly naked falsetto chills to the bone. And as the musical palette shifts from walls of swallowing guitar blasts to muted, almost whispered segments of terse introspection, Hospice always makes for a difficult yet unforgettable experience.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Wake’ ‘Epilogue’ TocarBear


    Two


    8. Red Light Company - Fine Fascination

    With more pop than a coke bottle factory, Anglo-Aussies Red Light Company make no secret of their aspiration to engage in stadia-destined singalongs for the masses. But like the best crowd-pleasing anthems, it’s the intimacy and minute details found in the lyrics that ground the songs into something tangible and prevents everything from becoming meaningless bluster. Touching on such cheery topics as childhood suicide, torn apart friendships and drug addiction (plus sex addiction for good measure), the splenetic vocals of Richard Frennaux sell the anguish convincingly, his voice a gestation of nervous quivering, so fraught it feels like it could cave-in on itself at any given moment. By contrast, the surrounding music is jubilant, pleasingly wrought and played with intent. Bassist Shawn Day provides judiciously implemented backing vocals in ‘Scheme Eugene’ and ‘Meccano’ that are like jolts of motivational electricity, whereas the polished production lends James Griffiths’ drums a seismic vibration felt with every beat. There aren’t many bands around today who can write a pop song so endearingly heartfelt yet big by design, and for those who can’t see past the unrepentant radio potential, it’s their loss.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - TocarArts & Crafts ‘With Lights Out’ ‘When Everyone Is Everybody Else’ ‘Meccano’


    7. The Sleepover Disaster - Hover

    If one band deserves to cast off the shackles of anonymity and revel in some ubiquitous adulation this year, then step forward The Sleepover Disaster. Having been pressing on for 10 years now, the L.A. trio show no signs of wear and Hover, their third LP, bursts with an indefatigable energy, a collection of 9 songs that despite harking so faithfully back to the shoegaze era (specifically the likes of Ride and Swervedriver) is nevertheless timeless music. Without undermining the more-than-capable support offered by bassist Eric Peters and drummer Vince Corsaro, The Sleepover Disaster’s strongest asset is singer/guitarist Luke Giffen. His expertise with six-strings, a whammy bar and a plethora of effect pedals yields electrifying results, unleashing an album steeped in thick slabs of cosmic-crushing, FX-laden guitar work but rarely trundling into distorted excess and never forgoing the essential core melodies. As such the guitars dominate the mood, often teetering back and forth between warm blankets of reverberant fuzz (‘Make You Sing’ ‘Friend’) and body-throttling, screeching-riffs (‘Funnel Cloud’ ‘Edward Said’), combining both for the show-stopping 8-minute closer ‘Songwriting For Dummies’, a song that perfectly encapsulates the dynamic range that should see this band continue for another 10 years.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Songwriting For Dummies’ TocarFriend ‘Funnel Cloud’ ‘Tremble’


    6. Asobi Seksu - Hush

    Ignored by many simply because it didn’t produce the same instant thrills as breakout album Citrus, the third offering from the Brooklyn duo is in actual fact the definitive slow-burner of the year, and with a little patience and dedication guarantees the listener will soon be reaping the many rewards that it indisputably has to offer. Shedding the shoegaze of yore and the maelstrom of noise that came with it, they prove to be as equally adept in crafting Cocteau Twins-drived, lustrous dream-pop. Meanwhile, Yuki Chikudate hasn’t lost the ability to send hearts aflutter, her forlorn sentiments and pure-as-snow vocal delivery still as achingly potent as before, perfectly suiting James Hanna’s distortion-bare, crystalline reverberations and the smothering of wintry, snow-freckled keyboards that are as pure as mountain air at midnight. Alas, by ditching the “nu-gaze” tag that ran parallel with their sudden rise through the ranks of indiedom, Asobi Seksu have lost some fans along the way. But Hush ably demonstrates how forward-thinking the band are and, while it was never going to surpass the expectations set by its predecessor, still shows that this isn’t a band that can be so easily pigeon-holed after all.

    8/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Transparence’ ‘Layers’ ‘Sing Tomorrow’s Praise’ ‘Blind Little Rain’


    Transparence


    5. Muse - The Resistance

    As absurdly great (and absurd) as 2006’s Black Holes and Revelations was, it was essentially the release that put an end to the meteoric trajectory that saw Muse’s star shine brighter and brighter with every passing album. Though you can hardly blame them - sculpting a work of career-peak precision such as Absolution would place anyone in a precarious position come time to record the follow-up - it ushered in the inevitable reminder that the English trio were only human after all. Thankfully, The Resistance sees Muse engage on a more consistent yet courageous level than Black Holes…, managing this time to serve up even more preposterous portions of action-packed space opera than they’re used too. Leaping from genre to genre to the point of sensory overload, they indulge in anti-capitalist glam-rock, magnetic Timbaland-styled R’n’B, delectable classical symphonies and more, pulling off almost every one and doing it with a requisite measure of knowing silliness to ensure the pitfalls of self-parody are sidestepped. In fact, amongst the ridiculous conspiracy theory concepts, overt vocal tributes to Queen and clarinet solo’s, one somewhat surprising strength of The Resistance is how laugh-out-loud funny it often is.

    Rejoice then, with Matt Bellamy and co on revamped form their evolutionary cycle begins again, and should history repeat keep repeating itself, the next album will see Muse attain perfection once more.

    9/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Unnatural Selection’ ‘Undisclosed Desires’ ‘Exogenesis: Symphony’


    4. chatmonchy/チャットモンチー - Kokuhaku

    All-girl trio Chatmonchy are a regular fixture in the Oricon charts of their native Japan and with good cause. If their commercialised-yet-soulful pop-rock is at all representative of the quality of material that tops the charts over there then I’m living in the wrong country. We get Girls Aloud and Tinchy Stryder...yay! Kokuhaku (translated as ‘Confession’) is an album full of sweet-sounding, guitar-driven anthems performed to an absolute tee, with such fierce radio potential for each and every song that you’d be forgiven for double checking that it’s not a best of album. The girlishly high-pitched voice of Eriko Hasimoto is a definite acquired taste, but grow accustomed to it and you’ll soon appreciate the fervent ardour with which she sings, belting out no end of beguiling choruses with the breathless insistence and over-excitable manner of a sugar-riddled kid, while the acute interplay between her and bandmates Akiko Fukuoka and Kumiko Takahashi mean they fully convince as a credible rock act. Overall you’ve got an album that could entertain a corpse, transcending the boundaries of language and culture with its unbridled joy and leaving you wishing you knew the language just so you could sing along.

    9/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Kaze Fukeba Koi’ ‘Yasahisa’ ‘LOVE is SOUP’ ‘Uma Kara Deta Sakana’


    Hira Hira Hiraku Himitsu no Tobira


    3. Doves - Kingdom Of Rust

    After a slip in their (admittedly high) standards with 2005’s grey-hued Some Cities, Jimi Goodwin and Williams brothers Jez and Andy retreated from the world to record their next album, which eventually took four years in the making. It was an unbearably long wait, but if Some Cities was a gloomy chronicling of the trio’s disillusioned return to Manchester after years of touring, then Kingdom Of Rust sees Doves rediscover what it was that made them such a prolific act for the past decade; an exceptional tact for eruptive anthemics of panoramic scope. Indeed, their fourth long-player manages to redress the balance that once saw Doves contrasting miserablist lyrical themes with celebratory music that unfolded with an unfaltering desire to brave new pastures. And just like The Last Broadcast, this is again a perfect collusion of the two. The dark, mournful murmurs of ‘Birds Flew Backwards’ and the title track could have easily slotted in Some Cities tracklisting, but here they walk hand in hand with more exotic tracks, like the urban beats manifested in ‘Jetstream’ or the doo-wop turned gospel turned rock jam jaunt of the marvellous ‘10:03’. Kingdom Of Rust marks Doves most diverse release yet and one that arrests the listeners attention from the start. If you don’t love it, it’s only because you haven’t heard it yet.

    9/10

    Standout Tracks - Tocar10:03 ‘The Outsiders’ ‘Kingdom Of Rust’ ‘Spellbound’


    Kingdom Of Rust


    2. The Boxer Rebellion - Union

    It’s been 4 years since the release of The Boxer Rebellion’s first album, the genre-defining opus Exits. A sonic banquet of boundless, stratospheric scale, it had a dexterity rarely seen in a band so young, pouring its dark heart of entrapment and alienation into songs that ranged from raucous industrial-rock to nocturnal ballads of shivering opulence, sung by the Tennessee born Nathan Nicholson with a voice that could oscillate from ravenous growl to dulcet croon at the drop of a hat. It was as close to perfect as a record could get.

    And thus, as is so often the case with the age-old second album dilemma, the future of a follow-up might as well have already been written; a diluted repeat of past glories that couldn’t possibly compete with the lofty heights reached by its predecessor. However, during the painstaking creation of their second album - which saw the band grapple with means of funding after being deprived of a label less than a fortnight after Exits’ release - it was looking increasingly likely that not only was a worthwhile successor on the horizon, but something that could topple that faultless debut.

    Which is what ultimately makes Union such a frustrating album; it’s a masterpiece, but a flawed one. Union seemed a shoo-in for 10/10 status, its flood of fresh demo’s and new songs performed live over the years - to appease a small but hardcore fanbase always hungry for more - dutifully delivered and then some. Although in rough stages of development at the time, these demo’s revealed that The Boxer Rebellion was still a burgeoning band rather than one at the end of its tether. Unfortunately, because of a series of small yet unavoidable blemishes that have hindered the overall product, Union will always be perceived as a (slight) disappointment.

    The main qualm relates to the generally lighter, more ‘widescreen’ sound utilized for this second release, which sees the gothic and macabre undertones that slithered throughout earlier material being deserted for something more wholesome. It’s no surprise that the band has recently been lumped in with unfavourable comparisons to more big-league acts, when in truth one listen to Exit’s post-hardcore roar-fest ‘Watermelon’ would soon dispel any notions of the bedwetting variety. The other misgivings lie in two of the actual songs included in the tracklisting. With regard to the vast catalogue of album-worthy b-sides and unreleased rarities that The Boxer Rebellion possess, the decision to include ‘These Walls Are Thin’ is an ill-judged one. The only b-side of theirs that deserves to remain a b-side and nothing more, what worked for Exits’ ‘World Without End’ certainly doesn’t have the same pay-off here. ‘These Walls Are Thin’ is painfully lightweight fare compared to its neighbouring songs, and why it was included in the final tracklisting over the likes of ‘The Rescue’, ‘Broken Glass’ or ‘Murder Ballad’ is baffling to say the least. The other song of issue is revenge fable ‘Semi-Automatic’. Of the plentiful demo’s that were previewed early on, the gritty power and bubbling rage that this song seethed made it an immediate standout. In its finalized form however, that power has been neutered into something more clinical and sleek, its guttural impact greatly diminished.

    But, believe it or not, these criticisms are borderline nitpicking, the ramblings of an obsessive fan. Cast aside these damning indictments and it doesn’t take long to realise that Union is still leagues ahead of any competition out there, riven with jaw-dropping highlights performed by four expert craftsmen who play with every fibre in their being. Todd Howe’s guitar acrobatics are still in full-flight, the man proving a remarkable talent on virtually every track. On the country-infused ‘Soviets’, his space-rock guitar-chimes subtly bleed in midway through, morphing it from a front-porch strum into an elevation to the stars, all in the space of four minutes. On the aeronautical ‘Flashing Red Light Means Go’, Piers Hewitt’s tribal drum loops are paired with tremolo-soaked guitars, reaching a pinnacle of purifying windswept beauty by the climax. And even as lesser bands make a big commotion about “going electronic”, The Boxer Rebellion slip in a brief excursion of the knob-twiddling kind with ‘The Gospel Of Goro Adachi’, complete with a ghostly semblance of music-box keyboards and multi-tracked murmurs that puts to shame anything found on Editors lacklustre third album. Elsewhere, from the testosterone-drenched ‘Forces’ to the oceanic ‘Misplaced’, there are emotive, celestial crescendos here that other indie contemporaries cannot touch upon.

    When it comes down to it, Union is a labour of love, an album that exists today because of a band who recognised their own significant worth enough to keep going. Having endured all manner of hardships The Boxer Rebellion’s tenacity has finally paid off, the success of Union’s digital release in the iTunes charts led them to becoming the first unsigned band to break the Billboard Top 100 Albums Chart, chronicling a moment of triumph over adversity. It reinforces the life-affirming qualities of their music, and for a band that has always been naked in its sincerity, it’s a joy to behold.

    9/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Move On’ ‘Misplaced’ ‘Soviets’ ‘Flashing Red Light Means Go’ ‘The Gospel Of Goro Adachi’


    Broken Glass (Bonus Track)


    1. Leaves - We Are Shadows

    Music, at its heart, is an escape, an art form capable of transporting the listener to any desired place through sound alone. Sure, cultural relevance is all well and good, the socio-political commentary that fuels hip hop or the aggressive protestations at punk rock’s core undeniably serve their purpose and no doubt, music is a multifaceted medium. But honestly, how often do we want to be reminded of life’s grim realities, especially amid the doom and gloom of these current recession-wracked times. With the release of their third album, Leaves understand this better than anyone.

    The Icelandic quartet, comprising of Arnar Guðjónsson (vocals, piano, guitar), Hallur Hallsson (bass), Nói Steinn Einarsson (drums) and Andri Asgrimsson (keyboards) were dealt a serious blow back in 2005, having been dropped by Island Records soon after the release of second long-player The Angela Test. With no desire of being remembered as major-label also-rans, the band took the DIY approach to making music, setting up their own studio and undertaking production duties. Needless to say, the decision was a wise one, the absence of label interference has allowed them to hone their skill and blossom as a band, masterminding an album that eclipses not just their more-than-formidable back catalogue but practically any other release this century.

    It’s worth nothing that, despite hailing from Reykjavik, Leaves hold an unusual British influence that has seen them garner eye-rolling comparisons to Coldplay since their origin. While there is no denying the resemblance Guðjónsson possesses to Martin’s distinctive warble, their musical aesthetic owes far more to the cinematic, genre-hopping soundscapes of Manc melancholists Doves. And much like that band’s seminal breakthrough album The Last Broadcast, what Leaves have conceived with their third effort is a masterclass in escapism. Finding resonance and emotion in the elemental - each track is its own separate environment, its own force and aura. And for 56 minutes of nigh-on aural perfection, We Are Shadows is fearless in its pursuit of the grandest sound.

    And grand it begins as atmospheric opener ‘The Harbor’ announces Leaves’ return with a rising torrent of noise that succumbs to blaring horns and pounding Phil Spector drums. In the tradition of all Leaves albums it is a mournful beginning, Guðjónsson crooning wearily amid a musical milieu of rain-lashed, grimy desolation, the spindly harpsichord lurking in the background contributing to the bleak mood. There is more than a hint of resentment, perhaps disillusionment aimed at an industry that has left the Icelandic collective to fend for themselves, but the undulating power brimming within ensures the mood is more propulsive than oppressive.

    By almost stark contrast ‘Aeronaut’, as its title would imply, soars with an easy buoyancy. With a prelude of swelling violins and the opening couplet of ”Through cirrus clouds, a whispering sound/I keep on climbing without looking down”, the song’s intentions are made immediately clear as it swiftly becomes an embracing singalong of genuine uplift, reaching a simple yet rousing chorus that is classic Leaves. It’s blindingly obvious, and a little hackneyed maybe, that the metaphorical pilot of the title is an expression of forward direction, freedom, pressing onwards in spite of oncoming turmoil. But through a superbly realised composition such as this, it’s hard not to be swept off one’s feet.

    ‘Planets’ is most note-worthy for the lingering organ heard at the start which bears a baffling similarity to some of the pieces heard on 植松伸夫/Nobuo Uematsu’s seminal Final Fantasy VII soundtrack. Trivial comparison aside, it swells graciously from understated ethereality into a doom-laden bombast but suffers somewhat from being wedged in-between two of the best songs on the album.

    Which brings us to ‘All The Streets Are Gold’, the most commercially viable track and, had We Are Shadows been a major-label release, a guaranteed lead-single. Right from the tumbling drum rolls it launches into a shimmering, upbeat pop-assault, decorated in luminous colours and veering from verse to chorus in quick succession. At least until the halfway mark, when the song’s structure is subverted and the tone takes a turn for the bittersweet, previously suppressed layers of melancholy now accentuated through a host of weeping keyboard effects and guitars, Guðjónsson crying out as if he’s in the throes of death. Based solely on the first half, ‘All The Streets Are Gold’ serves as a hugely adept pop song. Paired with the second, it’s something quietly devastating.

    An excursion from the melodrama, ‘Dragonflies’ falls under the guise of standard orchestral fare, all billowing strings and the sporadic rumble of an orchestral bass drum. That is before a light caressing of harp, stabbings of techno and a dance-like drum beat are gradually integrated into the mix, eventually culminating in a vivacious, disco-esque shuffle, topped off with an extended guitar wig-out for good measure. The perplexing nature of the song is also its ultimate triumph, a fusion of unlikely instruments shouldn’t mesh together so fluently. How Leaves pull it off is a head-scratcher, but they do, with effortless style and ingenuity.

    Making its first appearance on the bands myspace page in 2005, ‘Kingdom Come’ sounds just as vital now as it did back then, showcasing Leaves at their heaviest with a no-nonsense slice of space-rock. Amongst the onslaught of galloping drums and star-gazing guitar riffs, Asgrimsson’s synths run amok, gathering a sci-fi flair whilst Hallsson’s earth-shaking bass manages to tie the mayhem together. But it’s the various assortment of production flourishes, ranging from the marching footsteps during the bridge that sound like an approaching army to the otherworldly vocal effects towards the songs conclusion, that give ‘Kingdom Come’ real textural depth. As the song escalates to a juddering climax of erratic Muse-esque proportions, it’s hard not to imagine it as the soundtrack to space exploration.

    The next track, and undoubtedly the centrepiece of We Are Shadows, is a 6 minute instrumental that signals Leaves’ most daring, ambitious work yet. If ‘Jetstream’, the opening track from Doves’ Kingdom Of Rust, is indeed an “imaginary song to the end of Blade Runner” (as described by frontman Jimi Goodwin) then the Vangelis influenced ‘Motion’ could soundtrack it’s opening shot, that wondrous first unveiling of a huge dystopia stretching as far as the eye can see. Encircled around an echoing guitar line, ‘Motion’ constantly adds and peels off layers, meticulously applying all manner of electronic touches to create an immersive, cinematic vision. It’s here where (presumably) Asgrimsson’s skills really come to the fore, utilizing his keyboard wizardry to capture the palpable pulse of a neon-stained megapolis, conjuring a myriad of visuals through waves of futuristic synthesizers and enveloping distortion, up until the very last solitary sound, the dying heartbeat of a city. And then the journey is over.

    Swapping dystopia for utopia, the appropriately titled ‘The Painting’ is a thing of irrepressible beauty. A pastoral symphony, it comes replete with all the technicolour sweep and bluster of an MGM musical and features Guðjónsson’s most impressive vocal performance yet, his unstoppable octave-surfing enforced by an aural splendour of angelic harmonies and swirling strings. As birds chirp happily in the background it fades out with a serene coda of country-tinged acoustic guitar plucking, an idyllic finish to a song utterly at peace with itself.

    ‘Raven’ follows the same starward trajectory as ‘Kingdom Come’, but rather than tearing through space at hyperspeed it invokes images of entering a newly discovered planet, nose-diving through its atmosphere in a blaze of awesome fire. Put frankly, ‘Raven’ is a gargantuan song, even by Leaves’ standards. Always verging on the pompous, it rides the crest of its astronomical central riff, by aid of tolling church bells and whiplash drums, to an inevitable chorus of insurmountable proportions. The seemingly nonsensical lyrics (“The sun still shines but there’s a shadow/We hide beneath the ocean waves/The old black raven is here to steal our souls/Close your eyes when it goes by”) only contribute to its fantastical grandeur.

    The title track presents a moment of quiet introspection, a stripped-back ballad revolving around a softly-sung vocal and simple piano motif that coalesce to form an almost classical sensibility. Guðjónsson’s voice has never sounded so pure and tender, a warm amber glow warding off the harsh, wintry ambience that surrounds it. And however brief ‘We Are Shadows’ may seem, as the last of the piano notes drift away it’s haunting beauty resonates long after.

    As the album draws to a close We Are Shadows signs off with a sky-rocketing prog-rock opera that incorporates elements of krautrock and psychedelia to craft one last bout of intergalactic discovery. ‘With Drums We March The Streets’ is, aptly, a drum-led track that provides Einarsson with his finest moment, channelling the Secret Machines skin-beater Josh Garza for unyielding battering-ram immensity, his domineering drums a fixation throughout. His bandmates pursue him with slowly-but-surely escalating walls of astral wonderment, backed by Guðjónsson’s declaration of “With drums we march the streets/ Can you hear us?”, in turn broadcasting Leaves’ staying power, a refusal to be ground down by whatever opposing forces dare stand in their way. By the climax, he offers the victorious parting message of “I am part of you/As you are part of me” amidst a supernova of glorious noise that’s like a shot of adrenaline straight to the heart, a fist-pumping assertion of unity between band and listener, squeezing every last drop of emotion out of its euphoria. It’s a fitting, and more than worthy, denouement to an album unashamedly huge in its scope.

    We Are Shadows doesn’t just serve as a mere progression onwards from two already excellent albums. It is Leaves’ magnum opus, achieved by a broadened sonic canvas and resolute willingness to further push their own musical boundaries. They’ve never sounded more confident, leaving the competition trailing in their wake. In fact, We Are Shadows’ only handicap is its self-released status, something that may well deny Leaves reaching even a modicum of the widespread acclaim a record of this magnitude so amply deserves. Don’t let that be the case.

    10/10

    Standout Tracks - ‘Motion’ ‘All The Streets Are Gold’ ‘Aeronaut’ ‘With Drums We March The Streets’ ‘Kingdom Come’ ‘The Painting’
  • z przypadku - Editors w Stodole

    Nov 26 2009, 22h44 por lucek_lucek

  • Beats sleep

    Nov 26 2009, 0h20 por arrianette

    1. What's your favorite song by 15?
    Jenny Lewis - You are what you love

    2. How did you get into 20?
    Conor Oberst - first there was Bright Eyes. Everything he made followed.

    3. Who is your favorite member in 1?
    Bright Eyes - I'd have to go with Conor Oberst xD (he has no competition as my fav artist. ever.)

    4. Whats your favorite lyric bit by 29?
    Garbage tough one. first thing that came to mind was 'I am milk, I am red hot ketchup'

    5. Have you ever seen 22 live?
    Now It's Overhead no :(

    6. What's your favorite album from 10?
    Incubus Morning view :)

    7. Do you own any merchandise from 3?
    Conor Oberst and the Mystic Valley Band does a cd count? :D

    8. What is a good memory you have of 7?
    Rilo Kiley rides home

    9. Is there a member of the same age as you in 2?
    The National I doubt it

    10. When did you first get into 8?
    Anouk I think I was around 13yrs old.

    11. Who likes 4 along with you?
    Brand New my bf, but only a few songs :(

    12. Which song did you first hear from 16?
    Ike Yoshihiro hard to say. whatever played first in ergo proxy.

    13. What song made you fall in love with 5?
    Maria Taylor clean getaway

    14. Which song do you not like by 18?
    A Perfect Circle the whole emotive album >.<

    15. Why do you like 14's songs?
    Damien Rice he makes the word horny sound romantic. wonderful lyrics.

    16. Where did you first hear 6?
    Dir en grey somewhere on the internet xD i have no clue.

    17. How long was 19 a singer before you liked them?
    Azure Ray 6 years?

    1[8. Does 13 have a song that gives you a bad memory?
    Placebo nope. music doesn't do that to me.

    19. When did you get into 17?
    The Dresden Dolls two years ago? one and a half?

    20. How long have you been into 9?
    Cursive ~5 yrs

    21. If 11 had a concert 300 miles away, would you drive there to see them?
    Death Cab for Cutie i don't know how much 300 miles is and i don't drive. so no.

    22. How many CDs do you own of 12?
    Coheed and Cambria if digital doesn't count then 0

    23. Does 21 have a song that makes you cry?
    スガシカオ (Suga Shikao) well... maybe... kiseki

    24. Does 27 have a song that makes you happy?
    Yoshihisa Hirano and Hideki Taniuchi oh no.

    25. Does 23 have a song that makes you smile?
    Kevin Devine i'd say so, even if it's not 'oh this is nice' kind of smile

    26. What's the last song you've listened to from 28?
    Editors i think You don't know love

    27. Is there a song by 32 that you've listened to more than 30 times?
    Alkaline Trio no

    28. What is a song from 50 that you've only listened to once?
    Hladno Pivo Probably.

    29. Is there a song you are sick of hearing by 24?
    abingdon boys school nooooooooo

    30. What song got you into 40?
    David Sylvian For the love of life <3

    31. What is your favorite single by 25?
    blink-182 if i knew their singles maybe i could answer

    32. If 49 hated you, what would you do?
    UVERworld play d.techno life for them xD

    33. What would you say if 42 or one of the members from 42 asked you out?
    Six Pack say no ._.

    34. Would you care if 41 had a boyfriend/girlfriend?
    Portishead no.

    35. Who has the best voice in 46?
    T.M.Revolution o lol. i'd have to go with Takanori xD
    Howling Bells um... the singer?

    36. Do you think 26 is/are good looking?
    Dashboard Confessional not really.

    37. How many times have you listened to your favorite song by 36?
    Taking Back Sunday countless times back in high school. cute without the e

    38. How many CDs do you own of 30?
    Monsters of Folk one. in digital form >.<

    39. Is there a song from 38 that makes you mad?
    L'Arc~en~Ciel nope

    40. Which member from 31 do you want to see go solo? If 31 is only one artist, what would you do if they joined a group?
    the pillows noone ;_;

    41. What does your favorite song from 48 remind you of?
    清春 (Kiyoharu) chibis, blood loss and bishies, blond bishies xD

    42. Did you hate 43 at first?
    Nightmare no
    M. Ward no

    43. Does your best friend also listen to 33?
    Tokyo Police Club nope

    44. Do you think your parents would like 37?
    BUCK-TICK no

    45. Does 47 have a song that makes you want to dance?
    T.M.Revolution hell yes :D
    Howling Bells more like sway then dance

    46. Have you ever seen 34 in person?
    Takanashi Yasuharu i wish.

    47. Do you like 44's name?
    Nightmare naitomea? could be worst xD
    M. Ward fancy

    48. Is there someone in 45 that you want to go out with?
    The Good Life not really. Tim Kasher is love, but no.

    49. Do you know anyone that hates 35?
    Desaparecidos there not well known enough to be hated

    50. Have you ever danced to a song from 35?
    Desaparecidos kind of xD home... alone...
  • "The Twilight Saga. New Moon". The Review.

    Nov 25 2009, 19h10 por lady_sati

    When Forever Ends...
    ...what do you live for?


    „Based on the worldwide phenomenon”.It is hard not to agree with the statement shown in one of tv spots for 'New Moon'. I have never get any trouble with getting tickets – not for Lord of the Rings, not with Harry Potter movies or The Matrix sequels. But this time, I was attempting to make a reservation 2 days before the movie and I couldn't get any tickets, in any of the cinemas. Everything was sold out. Not just here – all over the world people went to see the movie, daughters and mothers are asking Taylor Lautner and Robert Pattison to sign their panties and there even was a riot in Brazil, where 2000 girls fought with security and tried to get to the room to meet (let's just presume that...) cast members. I have never seen a craze like this. Why is it all happening?

    80% of the audience are girls. Because it is so easy for us to relate to Bella.
    She is a typical teenage girl. She has goofy friends. She wears stripped shirts. She has divorced parents. And oh yes, she is in love. So much in love. What makes the story a tad different – her love is vampire. And her best friend is werewolf.

    The vampire/werewolf element of the story could easily be erased. „The Twilight Saga” is typical story of love and the hardships of it. The author of the series, which became a bible to many people is using the vampire element to actually sneak her own beliefs – for me the books are disgusting propaganda for celibacy, marriage, having kids...the only thing to which I object being celibacy, but I don't appreciate the fact the series is brainwashing girls all over the world. However the series is entertaining, even if written in terrible language and it makes a perfect material for the movie.

    I have read „Twilight”, „New Moon” and „Eclipse” a little over 6 months ago, when I found out Michael Sheen is going to be in the movie. I have yet to read the final book. I saw „Twilight” when it came out and whilst I loved the chemistry between main actors, the casting, the music and some of the scenes, the CGI and the quality of the film were very poor, ridiculous even. „New Moon” is so much better, that it actually feels like a separate movie. It isn't that it reached higher level than „Twilight”, it's like „Twilight” is a cartoon and „New Moon” is an actual movie.

    „Twilight” was about Bella and Edward falling in love and „New Moon” is about them handling that fact, in a different ways. Edward leaves, convinced he is protecting Bella, but being a guy he doesn't tell her that. Bella is devastated and she finds comfort in Jacob, who she soon finds out is a werewolf.

    Now I have to say Kirsten Stewart surprised me. I was not very impressed with her acting skills but her depiction of Bella's state after Edward leaves is a spot on. The series of scenes where Bella cries, stares at nowhere and shouts from agony is excruciating. The break up scene is really devastating – thanks to wonderful cinematography and Alexadnre Desplat's music and some really good acting from both Pattison and Stewart the emotional charge of the scene is amazing. Bella is becoming more and more interesting – she goes through real emotional journey in this film, one that so many girls can and will relate to.

    In the book Bella finds out that every time she does something risky she can hear Edward. The director made a good choice, even if only for satisfying Pattison's fangirls, to actually show Edward in those moments. Very good decision – whilst the ghastly visions of him are well done, there is one scene that is just so beautiful I cannot believe it doesn't get more praise – Bella jumps off the cliff and falls into the water, when the current takes her in deep - Edward appears next to her. Some say it's cheesy, as a helpless romantic I say it's beautiful.


    In the first movie we only got few scenes with Jacob and here he is present for the most part – Lautner, barely 17 years old is very convincing and him and Stewart generate a lot of chemistry. He captured his character well – he is both gentle and frustrated and the viewer sympathizes with him. It is hard not to feel sorry for him by the end of the movie. The couple is so good in few scenes that it actually makes the audience wonder if Bella should end up with Edward, but by the time he will walk into the sunlight in Volterra, we will know for sure. I was a bit shocked that near the end they included a tiny showdown between two leading men – I don't remember one being in the book. Bella says to Jacob “Jake I love you, don't make me choose. Because I will choose him. It has always been him”. I loved those lines. I felt that they should be later on in the series, tough.

    The movie is very accurate to the book therefore two villains of last movie return – Laurent and Victoria. Whilst Laurent is only present in one scene, it is impressive one – it is the first time we see werewolves – I was astonished how good the CGI was. I suspect 50 million $ spent on the movie went straight to that. The wolves look so real, their movement is not fake at all. The scene with Victoria is the second best sequence in the movie – with Thom Yorke's “Hearing Damage” in the background the pack of werewolves is chasing tiny, redheaded Victoria through the woods, whilst Bella is preparing for her cliff jump. What a scene, I haven't seen something that powerful and gripping in a very long time, I was surprised to see scene that good in a teenage melodrama that makes girls all over the world squeak.

    Speaking about Victoria, I have to bash the producers again for replacing the actress for “Eclipse”. Rachelle Lefevre, who plays the character beautifully was fired and Bryce Dallas Howard was cast. It is insane given that Victoria only appears in “Eclipse” few times – Bryce is good playing blind girls and Christian Bale's wives (who wouldn't be – if I were to play character like that I'd won a freaking Oscar) but I can't see other reason for hiring her then to gain sympathy of her father Ron Howard. Maybe they need more money, who knows. But I hope Howard won't lay a hand on the next movie - whenever I see Russel Crowe painting umbrellas in the sky from stars for Jennifer Connelly I want to vomit with blood.

    The Cullen family returns – the casting is terrific – in the first movie I had a big problem only with Rosalie, supposedly the most beautiful woman Bella has ever seen, Nikki Reed who plays Rosalie is pretty but in the first movie she looked terrible. In this one she looks so much better and finally feels like Rosalie. I was shocked how much Jasper's appearance changed. We get to see a conversation between Carlisle and Bella, known from the book and Emmet finally has some lines. And my favorite – Alice. Ashley Greene is so good – she is charismatic and very memorable. But I guess it's not hard when you play everyone's favorite.

    The movie has many parallels with “Romeo and Juliet”, part of which Edward quotes in one of the first scenes of the film (gasps expressing eternal love for Pattison all over the audience) – I know cinematic potential instantly when I'm reading the book and “New Moon” features the most impressive scene in the whole series, scene so good even if the writing is terrible the scene itself is perfect. Nothing could screw this up. The scene so good it is worth to see the movie even for it. I'm talking of course about Bella running towards Edward in Volterra.

    The things look like that – Edward thinks Bella is dead. In the book we don't get to read about his reaction – in the movie they show us Edward crushing the phone with his bare hand. Alice sees his suicide in her vision and she takes Bella to Volterra in order to stop him.
    "These violent delights have violent ends
    And in their triumph die, like fire and powder,
    Which, as they kiss, consume.

    Romeo and Juliet, Act II, Scene VI

    I had the vision of the scene in my head and I have to say, they still managed to surprise me. The cinematography, editing, music (Alexandre Desplat “To Volterra” - I was a bit disappointed something stronger wasn't played in the background, I always thought “The Leavers Dance” by The Veils would be a perfect choice) are great, but whoever thought of dressing the crowd in hooded red coats is a genius. Bella is coming to the town of monsters to rescue Edward, after all. The pace in the scene is amazing, the moment when Bella stops Edward and covers him from the sunlight is the most powerful moment in the movie. I was amazed, and the audience was too, although I suspect due to Robert Pattison's taking his shirt off in extreme slow motion.

    Let me stop at Volterra. It is the city where the most powerful vampire clan lives – the Volturi. The casting here is terrific, except maybe Jamie Campbell Bower (you all remember him from singing “Johanna” in high-pitched voice in “Sweeney Todd”). But who cares if Michael Sheen is there.
    When I was reading “New Moon” and I got to the scene with Aro, the character Sheen is playing I was petrified. I figured even someone that brilliant won't do anything with material that pathetic. But Sheen is most likely God, 'cause he not only delivered – whilst “New Moon” is getting terrible reviews (frankly I think the critics are hating the movie in advance, after seeing the first part), Sheen is getting praise for his work. I encountered very amusing part about it in one of the reviews:
    Late in the film, a real actor, Michael Sheen (Frost/Nixon), shows up as the mind-reading Aro, of the Italian Volturi vampires, and sparks things up. You can almost hear the young cast thinking, "Is that acting? It looks hard." So Sheen is quickly ushered out, and New Moon begins swanning toward certain box-office glory
    Actually, Aro has more scenes than in the book. But for Sheen to actually make this character interesting...wow. He is so menacing, so fascinating – so peaceful and so over the top. I tought Sheen will cross Antonio Banderas's work in “Interview with a Vampire” with his own in “Underworld” series, but he surprised me. He's done something completely unique.
    Another suprise is Dakota Fanning, who when she was younger was the most recognizable child actress in the world, she was always so sweet and kind. So I didn't believe she can play menacing character, icy Jane who can cause terrible pain with her mind. She was great in that part and I cannot wait to see her again in “Eclipse”.

    The whole Volturi sequence is great – it didn't look all that good in trailers due to excessive use of slow motion, but when I was watching the scene it stroke me how hard it must have been to make – the CGI for instance, when the Volturi attack Edward and slam his head against the stairs, and they fall into pieces. Obiously Pattison's head was nowhere near the ground and it looks incredibly realistic due to some fine work done by visual effects guys. The only goof in the scene, and let me tell you it a goof of massive proportions, is when Aro looks into Alice's mind to see the vision of Bella being a vampire. This time Pattison runs in slow motion and it was so cheesy and terrible that I literally hid my face in my hands. But the rest of the scene with the screams of tourists being slaughtered by Volturi is good, altough it could have been longer and more accurate to the book. The scenes in Volterra are the best ones in the movie, whilst I won't agree that the scenes with Jacob and warewolves are boring I will say that the ones with vampires are about 100 times more interesting.

    As for the acting and the lack of balance between actors - everyone is good, nobody is pathetic and that is a huge improvement from the first movie. However there is a scene, where right after Bella's birthday she asks Edward to kiss her and Pattison had such an expression on his face that I was sure, 100% sure he will puke on her any second now.

    Back to the visual side of the movie – wow. Some of the set pieces are extraordinary – the first scene, the meadow scenes, previously mentioned run toward clock tower, Victoria chasing Bella underwater...combined with Desplat's amazing score this all creates very delicate atmosphere, which is perfect for the movie. The first movie didn't had any theme or method in visuals and sound – they just put there what they could find, granted the soundtrack was still good. This one is well-tought and it engages viewer, the pace is fine, there is plenty of action and romance in it.

    The music is awesome – we have soundtrack with almost all the most popular bands right now – Muse(urgh...), Editors, Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, previously mentioned Thom Yorke (by the way all people bitching about the fact he's song is used here on the shoutbox should go back and see how shamefully “15 step” was used I the first one) and Death Cab for Cutie, who recorderd the song that promotes the film “Meet Me On the Equinox - stunning piece, as good as Paramore's Decode from the first movie. The music is very important part of the movie for me, in every case. The soundtrack is really good, but with so many suggestions coming from fans all over the world I feel like they could have made choices that would make the film even better. Many people, who apparantly think that TocarCloser is about vampires, wanted the song to be used in the movie. The movie is good. But not that good.

    “Eclipse” premieres on 30th June next year and I should probably make reservations around Easter, because with each day the series is making new fans. Is it awards worthy? No. Is it a masterpiece? No. Is it entertaining? Yes. Is it romantic? Yes. Some people will find the dialogue tacky and some of the scenes ridiculous. But the fact is that the movie and the books have both fantasy stuff for boys and romance for girls and I can bet that 50 years from now, even if the books are terrible people will read them and even if the movies may seem silly they will watch them. And as a romantic I rate the film
    8/10
  • Editors - In This Light And On This Evening

    Nov 25 2009, 6h52 por johnlrobbie6

    Editors - In This Light And On This Evening
    www.pianofire.wordpress.com

    I first heard Editors back in 2005 on a compilation CD that a friend of mine had put together, among Graham Coxan, Subaudible Hum, and others. The Back Room was a sparkling diamond shining among other diamonds that just didn’t get as much sun light. This was a time where virtually no one in Australia had heard of Editors. Not until An End Has A Start was released that people told me I should “check out this awesome band, Editors!!”. Well we’re now up to record three, and once again Editors have changed their sound from what first dominated The Back Room with guitars, then An End Has A Start featured more drums and arena rock sounds. It’s now come to my favorite sound. Mass multi-tracking, huge, unnecessary over-production, and synths.

    Like Keane’s “Spiralling” & Bloc Party’s “One More Chance” (though Bloc Party have always sort of been there), Editors are hopping on the electro dance band wagon, packing heavy but simple drums & pumping bass. What Editors fans are going to notice is the ‘out with the old & in with the new’ replacement for what would have been their signature lead guitar riffs, now synths, though the lead guitar does pop in & out. A bold move considering Editors were best known for their trusty lead guitar, that unfortunately should have stuck to. Tom Smith still suffers from lyrical writers block, with the exception of “Papillon”’s “If there really was a God here he’d have raised a hand by now”.

    What the hell is a “sleep twitch”? If you know, then you’ll understand how this album kicks like one more than what I’m imagining. Smith, a man of few words on The Back Room suddenly has heaps of things to say. What made The Back Room so great was its lack of lyrics, and short tracks that were over before you had a chance to appreciate them, so you played again. In This Light features more play-time per track, maybe due to Smith’s want to have more of a say. This lyrical ability (or lack there of) failed An End Has A Start as well. “Damn this place makes a boy out of me, The rain meets my face…” and Smith’s imagery on “Eat Raw Meat = Blood Drool”, “Chewing with an open mouth, Raw meat, Your blood drool attracts the flies”, or “The Treasure”’s “You are what you eat, You’ll become digested“.

    For a band who ranks number 2 on the UK charts, experimenting is likely to be expected. And why not if you’ve already achieved all you had hoped by the second record. Smith decides on a creative piece about God (the idea that God has fucked with him somewhere down the line) wrapped around dark imagery, and drum machine accompanied by synths. And like that eary, nauseating noise you hear “The Big Exit” (the sound, not the album), the album seems more like a prototype, produced on Vista with all the annoying automatic updates and security warnings that you wish would just fuck off. But like that, the poorer parts of the album that you wish would just fuck off, just keep coming.
  • Last.fm Birthday

    Nov 24 2009, 3h20 por paul-sp

    Last.fm Birthday

    24681 plays since 24 Nov 2008

    123 Loved Tracks ♥
    4,513 Posts
    6 Playlists
    99 shouts

    6 Groups
    34 Friends:
    rsalvagni shimoonu0622 RodrigoRooox
    Ugalabugala Johnkarlsson FruitfulTree
    Amenophisquinto axeshi boy_in_the_well
    diasbneto dundaschiroprac ei8htbitboy
    epi_gee gaaaaaame iheartziyi
    lecoke Megakraak musiclikeabomb
    Nhepras O15 paulinochacon
    pixelemoi Ram0n- ranfco
    risovicnico robolover scottycool
    Siiri_Ilana10 tonschachter TotallyForget
    umbigocometa vercetty vgsjunior
    Zeritas

    paul-sp’s Library
    295 Artists in total

    TOP ARTISTS

    1. The Killers (599 plays)
    2. Kasabian (345 plays)
    3. Maxïmo Park (340 plays)
    4. Kaiser Chiefs (323 plays)
    5. Keane (312 plays)
    6. Muse (307 plays)
    7. Vive la Fête (294 plays)
    8. Moptop (291 plays)
    9. Idlewild (289 plays)
    10. Snow Patrol (289 plays)
    11. Thirteen Senses (283 plays)
    12. Ladytron (274 plays)
    13. The Hives (273 plays)
    14. Franz Ferdinand (268 plays)
    15. The Zutons (267 plays)
    16. Manic Street Preachers (264 plays)
    17. Kings of Leon (258 plays)
    18. Guillemots (258 plays)

    Last.FM Milestones1st track: (25 Nov 2008)
    Basshunter - Boten Anna (Radio Edit)
    1000th track: (13 Feb 2009)
    Keane - Better Than This
    2000th track: (04 Mar 2009)
    Kasabian - TocarEmpire (Single Edit)
    3000th track: (20 Mar 2009)
    Delays - We Together Make A City (Love Made Visible) (Torchteam Remix)
    4000th track: (06 Apr 2009)
    Hope of the States - Industry
    5000th track: (29 Apr 2009)
    The Killers - TocarSmile Like You Mean It
    6000th track: (14 May 2009)
    The Bravery - TocarBelieve
    7000th track: (26 May 2009)
    Kings of Leon - Genius
    8000th track: (08 Jun 2009)
    Gentle Touch - The View
    9000th track: (19 Jun 2009)
    Ladytron - TocarI'm Not Scared
    10000th track: (01 Jul 2009)
    LCD Soundsystem - TocarAll My Friends
    11000th track: (10 Jul 2009)
    Editors - TocarLights
    12000th track: (18 Jul 2009)
    Unarmed Enemies - missing out
    13000th track: (29 Jul 2009)
    Franz Ferdinand - TocarTell Her Tonight
    14000th track: (07 Aug 2009)
    Klaxons - Golden Skans
    15000th track: (16 Aug 2009)
    Turin Brakes - TocarPanic Attack
    16000th track: (26 Aug 2009)
    We The Living - TocarAtlantic
    17000th track: (05 Sep 2009)
    Vive la Fête - TocarNuit blanche
    18000th track: (14 Sep 2009)
    Scissor Sisters - TocarTake Your Mama
    19000th track: (25 Sep 2009)
    The Upper Room - Combination
    20000th track: (04 Oct 2009)
    The Hives - TocarYou Got It All... Wrong
    21000th track: (14 Oct 2009)
    Sugarplum Fairy - TocarShe
    22000th track: (26 Oct 2009)
    Keane - Playing Along
    23000th track: (05 Nov 2009)
    The Orange Lights - TocarLittle Me Little You
    24000th track: (17 Nov 2009)
    Matchbox Twenty - TocarReal World
    Generated on 24 Nov 2009
    Get yours here
  • on this evening with editors - 23.11.09 - stodola

    Nov 24 2009, 0h09 por mihavv

    Pon 23 XI – Editors, The Maccabees, Wintersleep

    Editors
    Wintersleep

    Po lekkiej wtopie w Jarocinie i po tym jak ogłoszono, że supportem będą kanadyjscy postperldżemrokowcy z nieskrywaną radością i podnieceniem oczekiwałem dzisiejszego dnia. Na bramce dodatkowo czekała niespodzianka - wejściówka do 'loży vipów'. Fajnie, wreszcie balkon zwiedze...
    Merch był solidnie przeciętny, koszuliny nudne i bez wyrazu, szalik jakiśtaki na siłę, żałuje tylko nie bycia przy kasie, bo trzy płytongi ws aż prosiły się o zakup, ehh.

    Z balkonu wszystko ładnie widać i tak inaczej niż normalnie będąc sprowadzonym do parteru. Początkowo miałem zostać tam tylko na ws i tym zespole na m. Ale patrząc na to w jakim tempie się dół zapełniał i fakt, że niedawno wstałem po choróbsku. Zostałem już do końca. A atrakcji parę było. Najpierw przyszedł Gary, usiadł sobie wygodnie w foteliku. Po chwili gdy drygałem się w rytmy serwowane przez ws weszli Tom z Russelem i jakby nigdy nic stanęli sobie obok i oparli o barierkę.
    W tym czasie pięknie grali już kanadyjczycy, na których koncert wyczekiwałem nie mniej co editorsów. Tyle lat słuchania, a nigdy nie było okazji obadać ich z bliska.
    Zaczęli od Archeologów, potem był kolejny utwór na A z ostatniej płyty - Astronauta. Weighty Ghost rozbujał mnie doszczętnie. Zagrali jedną nowinkę pt Czarna kamera i zakończyli wydłużonym w nieskończoność i rozimprowizowanym Nerves Normal, Breath Normal, chciałem, żeby grali tak do rana. Budowania nastroju mogliby się od nich uczyć wszelkiej maści podrzędni postrokowcy. Widać, że mało kto ich słyszał, raczej drętwo było i oschle. Zresztą taka ich rola.

    Po nich wyszedł zespół na M, stodoła oszalała, a ja sobie klapnąłem. Nie ruszają mnie ani ani. Zabawnie byli tylko ubrani od teesa ac piorun dc, po jakaś szmatkę, w której John Rambo trenował do walki z Apollem. Ludzie się pobujali, a oni zeszli koło 21. W trakcie znowu zjawili się na balkonie Tom z Russelem, który cykał fotki i Wintersleepy.

    Po niespełna półh dwóch panów stanęło z dwóch stron płachty i na znak ściągnęli ja, a nam ukazała się siatka z diodami/lampkami. I wyszli oni. Dym lekko sączył się z dmuchaw i delikatnie ściekał ze sceny na pierwsze rzędy. Tom zasiadł za pianinem i poleciał wstęp do tytułowego kawałka z najnowszej płyty. Ciarry. Jak zwykle wił się jak tylko mógł, uskuteczniając swoje dzikie wygibańce-tańce. Tylko Urbanowicz jakiś taki niemrawy był i troche odizolowany od reszty murem z klawiszami. Dym się rozrzedził a w tle pokazywały się znane z okładki esy-floresy. Drugi poleciał dla odmiany tytułowy kawałek z poprzedniej płyty. A dalej to już przeczytacie jutro na setlist.fm.

    Zagrali cała nową, średnią płytę, trochę rozsianą po setliście. Na plus wypadło Like A Treasure, ERM=BD, tradycyjnie Bricks and Mortars i (o zgrozo :)) Papillon. Nabiera on koncertowo tego czegoś, czym jest ograniczony na płycie i wreszcie może wybrzmieć w pełni okazale. Reszta była taka jakaś miałka. Do tego zaserwowali hiciory jak zwykle. Okraszone wspaniale TocarAll Sparks i TocarBlood, które to nie wchodzą w tej trasie za często oraz Escape the Nest. Wszystkie kawałki z dwóch poprzednich kawałków wyszły wyśmienicie. One mają to coś zawsze. A punkt kulimnacyjny w postaci dźwiękowego i wizualnego killera - Smokers Outside the Hospital Doors niszczy obiekty wokół :)

    Cały koncert praktycznie bez przestojów, poza TocarWalk The Fleet Road na bisie, wszystko było rozskakane i roztańczone. Mocnym punktem była zwłaszcza końcówka głownego setu z 'old songiem' TocarYou Are Fading i Szczurami (wysyczane ratssssssss) na czele.

    Pod koniec w tany ruszył wreszcie i Urbanowicz, a z Toma spływały hektolitry potu.
    Marszowym Fingers in Factories zakończyli ten niezwykle udany wieczór. Wreszcie w pełnej krasie mogłem podziwiać ich fachurę. Stodoła była pełna.

    i see you next time :))
  • Seen live

    Nov 23 2009, 16h31 por mooiboyfres

  • 50 Songs (wk 47-22.11.2009)

    Nov 23 2009, 12h31 por verdena



    LW TW WI Artist - Title [Chart History]
    =======
    02 01 05 Florence and The Machine - You've Got The Love [2-2-2-2-1]
    04 02 02 Norah Jones - TocarChasing Pirates [4-2]
    01 03 03 Pearl Jam - Just Breathe [11-1-3]
    06 04 06 Dashboard Confessional - TocarBelle Of The Boulevard [23-20-15-12-6-4]
    50 05 02 Lady GaGa - TocarBad Romance [50-5]
    32 06 04 Rihanna - TocarRussian Roulette [39-37-32-6]
    03 07 04 Skunk Anansie - Squander [1-1-3-7]
    35 08 04 Chris Brown - I Can Transform Ya (Featuring Lil' Wayne & Swizz Beatz) [50-40-35-8]
    08 09 06 Snow Patrol - TocarJust Say Yes [24-18-12-8-8-9]
    09 10 02 Michael Jackson - TocarThis Is It [9-10]
    ======
    05 11 07 Miike Snow - TocarBlack & Blue [47-7-5-3-3-5-11]
    10 12 06 Beyoncé - TocarBroken-Hearted Girl [9-6-5-5-10-12]
    14 13 02 Lily Allen - TocarFuck You [14-13]
    15 14 03 Robbie Williams - TocarYou Know Me [16-15-14]
    07 15 09 The Twilight Sad - Seven Years Of Letters [46-20-14-14-10-8-4-7-15]
    17 16 02 Adam Lambert - TocarTime For Miracles [17-16]
    12 17 06 Foo Fighters - TocarWheels [16-14-9-9-12-17]
    13 18 08 Athlete - Black Swan Song [1-1-3-4-7-7-13-18]
    11 19 12 Leona Lewis - TocarHappy [3-4-6-8-9-11-1-1-4-6-11-19]
    24 20 06 Death Cab for Cutie - Meet Me On the Equinox [48-40-30-29-24-20]
    =======
    16 21 07 Nneka - TocarHeartbeat [3-2-3-6-10-16-21]
    20 22 06 Kasabian - TocarUnderdog [46-38-25-22-20-22]
    22 23 09 Newton Faulkner - If This Is It [17-14-10-10-9-13-15-22-23]
    18 24 08 Placebo - TocarAshtray Heart [21-9-8-8-10-13-18-24]
    23 25 08 Pearl Jam - The Fixer [49-42-33-25-21-19-23-25]
    19 26 07 Arctic Monkeys - Cornerstone [21-17-15-16-18-26]
    21 27 11 David Gray - TocarFugitive [29-20-11-4-4-4-7-11-14-21-27]
    28 28 05 Paolo Nutini - Pencil full of lead [32-29-27-28-28]
    45 29 02 Stereophonics - Innocent [45-29]
    26 30 10 Whitney Houston - TocarMillion Dollar Bill [49-40-37-34-37-36-26-23-26-30]
    =======
    30 31 05 Calvin Harris - Flashback [41-38-32-30-31]
    34 32 06 Alicia Keys - TocarDoesn't Mean Anything [49-49-45-36-34-32]
    46 33 02 The Swell Season - TocarLow Rising [46-33]
    25 34 12 Skunk Anansie - Because Of You [50-3-3-2-2-2-5-11-14-17-25-34]
    29 35 18 Kelly Clarkson - TocarAlready Gone [1-1-1-1-1-4-2-2-1-1-6-8-15-16-20-25-29-35]
    27 36 12 Robbie Williams - TocarBodies [22-21-19-16-15-18-19-17-18-21-27-36]
    31 37 13 Florence and The Machine - Drumming Song [10-10-8-7-6-3-5-6-13-19-24-31-37]
    33 38 13 Miley Cyrus - TocarThe Climb [7-11-10-11-13-18-23-12-12-17-20-33-38]
    42 39 02 Lifehouse - TocarHalfway Gone [42-39]
    39 40 13 The Temper Trap - TocarSweet Disposition [29-15-13-10-7-5-6-11-19-22-26-39-40]
    =======
    41 41 18 The Twilight Sad - I Became A Prostitute [33-29-24-20-18-18-18-20-26-31-34-36-38-42-44-41-41-41]
    36 42 16 Erik Hassle - Don't Bring Flowers [6-4-3-5-7-9-9-10-13-16-21-23-28-31-36-42]
    37 43 16 Kasabian - TocarWhere Did All the Love Go? [33-18-12-8-1-1-2-3-7-7-13-21-23-28-37-43]
    40 44 11 Paloma Faith - TocarNew York [47-44-38-35-32-32-31-33-33-40-44]
    38 45 14 The Gossip - TocarLove Long Distance [4-2-5-7-8-9-11-15-18-22-24-30-38-45]
    ne 46 01 Mika - TocarRain [46]
    47 47 07 P!nk - I Don't Believe You [39-44-44-46-45-47-47]
    44 48 09 Editors - TocarPapillon [50-43-38-40-39-36-35-44-48]
    ne 49 01 Iglu & Hartly - Dedication [49]
    49 50 15 Lily Allen - Tocar22 [46-8-6-6-5-5-5-12-17-25-29-35-44-49-50]
    =======


    out this week...
    Bat for Lashes - TocarSleep Alone [13-12-10-12-20-24-27-34-43]
    Muse - Uprising [46-43-42-40-32-28-23-22-26-28-32-39-48]