Father’s Day: bit harder to buy for than Mother’s Day, don’t you think? You can’t really say it with flowers, and tidying the house doesn’t always cut the mustard. Nope, more often than not it’s a trip to HMV to update pa’s record collection for the digital age, over 25 years after this thing called a compact disc first arrived on store shelves.
Only it doesn’t need to be so boring: dad’ll go on never playing Tusk y’know, you buying him the ‘expanded and remastered’ edition will barely register. He heard it at the time. If he wanted to play it again he’d go out and get a copy himself, be it double-disc slickness or (most probably) a CDR burn off the guy at work who geeks out over Record Collector every lunch hour. Why not get dad something new. Really new. Like this year new. Near enough.
Here’s a selection of pointers to help you on your way towards opening You Snr’s ears up to what’s been floating DiS’s boat of late.
Situation: Dad’s always harping on about how Music Died the day Buckingham and Nicks called their relationship quits, regarding Rumours an inferior follow-up to the self-titled of ’75.
Solution: Buy him All Hour Cymbals by Yeasayer (DiS review); it’s obscure enough to still tick his Indie Points boxes, which he clearly still holds so dear, yet possesses enough echoes of Fleetwood Mac at the peak of their weirdie-beardie-popster powers to keep his car journeys to and from the office entertaining. Plus it’s hugely unlikely anyone else at work will know who the New York four-piece are, save for that Record Collector boffin. The kids will either think of him as the coolest, or rip the piss even more than they do already.
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Situation: Dad’s of the opinion that The Boss holds all the cards so far as everyman-appreciated rock ‘n’ roll goes; play him in a bar or a ballroom, same effect. Badmouth ‘Born To Run’ and he might chin you. Yeah, you’re his little boy/girl. But that sock in the gob’s for disrespecting a titan of his time.
Solution: Buy him Boys And Girls In America by The Hold Steady (DiS review). It might’ve picked up the majority of its praise last year, the year of its release, but the LP’s a slow-burn affair that’s still selling at a trickle; plus, with the band due to feature at a number of summer festivals, their infectious live sets should see this leap a few albums chart positions. Get his this now, on the cheap, and he’ll be set for the band’s next album, Stay Positive, due out in July. Frontman Craig Finn is no Bruce – who is? – but the man does a fine impersonation.
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Situation: Every time dad picks you up from sixth form/your crappy holiday-time job, he’s whistling the saxophone parts from Haircut 100’s ‘Fantastic Day’ while wearing too-tight short-shorts like Weller in ‘Long Hot Summer’. Hair? Super-slicked back, of course.
Solution: Buy him Twenty One, the latest LP from Mystery Jets (DiS review). While the Eel Pie Islanders aren’t 100 per cent ‘80s, there’s enough retro high-jinkery on this album to guarantee pops his fair share of favourable flashbacks. He’s probably – possibly – heard at least one of the album’s two singles to date, ‘Young Love’ and ‘Two Doors Down’; that being the case, you’ve recognition on your side with this one. You might even get a cup of tea out of the deal. Just don’t stick around long enough to witness him dancing “like the old days” with mum, around the living room debris: barely-read broadsheet, empty coffee mugs, toffee wrappers…
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Situation: You’ve bought every Yes re-issue, every Pink Floyd special edition, the last King Crimson LP to actually be worth the material it’s made out of. You’re spent. Yet, still daddy’s prog appetite isn’t satisfied. Did this man never listen to John Peel?
Solution: Buy him In The Future, the latest (and much-acclaimed) album from Canadian proggy-types Black Mountain (DiS review). Hipster enough to ensure you don’t look like a berk in HMV when you’re picking it up (hell, take a copy for yourself, too), but rooted deeply in the sort of hazy headiness that dad’s so into, this combination of cools retro and contemporary delivers the sort of balanced listening experience both you and your old man can enjoy. Perhaps you’ll bond like never before? Perhaps you should just leave this for him, making your excuses for not delivering it in person.
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Situation: Graceland is the be all, the end all, the everything between, and Chevy Chase is a misunderstood comedy genius whose turn in Spies Like Us holds up to this day. Your dad, friend, is in need of more than an album for Father’s Day to set him straight.
Solution: Buy him – less Al, more Blake – Vampire Weekend’s debut of earlier this year, Vampire Weekend (DiS review). It’s close enough to Paul Simon to keep pops sweet, to not have him thinking you’re leading him down a wonderful garden path of sweet new discoveries, but So Hot Right Now enough to earn him kudos should a young traffic warden slap a ticket on his Focus and spy it through the windshield. Plus it’s got swear words in it – snigger snigger, et cetera. Sing-along, dad: who does give a fuck about an Oxford comma, indeed?!
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You get the idea. Dad likes Public Enemy, buy him Cadence Weapon. Yes? No? Mark Lanegan or the new Gutter Twins LP for aging fans of Johnny Cash? Jens Lekman for oldies into Scott Walker, or maybe simply The Last Shadow Puppets? Just not the Radiohead best-of, yeah? Thom’ll hate you for it. And you wouldn’t want that.
DiScuss: Your then-and-now Father’s Day parallel-o-buys, suggest them below, do.
Were's Wilco in this list?
???
Provide a neat parallel...
...and play the game properly.
bon iver for cat stevens
my morning jacket for neil young
easy
Half Man Half Biscuit for the grumpy old man in him.
I'm a dad & i'm buying myself CSI Ambleside for Fathers Day.
honestly i could never..
imagine my dad listening to any of those bands. i remember listening to beck of all people and he was all WHO IZZ DISS RUBBISH*
*danish accent btw
You know what?
I was listening to the Vampire Weekend album last week, and thought, "this is the kind of acceptable but indie music that middle-aged fathers would like".
I shan't be getting my dad any of this stuff, probably more likely some golf related paraphenalia or some Jack Daniels.
lol
love the picture of big daddy on the article lol
I much prefer buying him a decent bottle of red
that I drink at a later date.
The idea could work for CDs though...
This reads dangerously close to one-a my stupid threads of old
I love it, obv. :)
Dad wears plaid shirts and cowboy hats on weekends although the closest horse is at Santa Anita racetrack. And you're gonna scream if ya gotta listen to CSN&Y one more time.
Answer: Fleet Foxes - Ragged Wood.
Dad is the only person in America who gets Abba. He has a Dancing Queen poster hanging in the garage. Your friends think yer Dad is gay.
Answer: The Most Serene Republic - Population.
Your dad is gay. While he and his new life partner are waiting for the marriage laws to change, they're listening to Enya. You think "tolerance" is so much easier in theory than it is in practice.
Answer: Efterklang - Parades.
:( nobody likes to play these games
But thank god the music forum is a safe haven for a Pinkerton discussion...because the 8000 Pinkerton threads before it didn't quite cut it. Meh.
i bought my dad
Curses - Future Of The Left for this fathers day :D
My dad is bigger than your dad, he's got eight cars and a house in Ireland
Sing it
and I'm going straight to hell
I tried to make a similar post in another thread and got the words wrong.
if i knew where my dad was...
i'd send him some Anthrax. The acute disease, not the band. Respiratory infection/collapse, y'know, that kinda thing.
worryingly i saw an advert for a fathers day dad-rock CD
that had Oasis and Primal Scream on it. It said 'does dad never shut up about Oasis at Knebworth?'. I think it means i'm officially old.
I dont think my dad would like any of these
simply because on sunday he moved all the speakers into the garden and played most of the Led Zep albums to the entire street.
^ That is awesome!
Not really playing the game but I have bought these for my Dad and he digs em:
Television - Marquee moon
Midlake - The trials of Van Occupanther
FLEET FOXES
Would go down a treat for the musical father.
Although not for my dad. He'd be happy with an Elaine Paige album!! :s
for the gentleman who likes...
fleetwood mac- Midlake- Trails of Van occupanther
Cat Stevens- Herman Dune
Brian Eno - Efterklanng
Captain Beefheart- Tom Waits
James Brown and Wigan casno- Sharon Jones and The Dap Kings
if he thinks paul simon and peter gabriel invented world music: Lagos Jump 70, African Screaming contest compilations or the best of mahaltinin and the mahotella queens
For the man who likes a bit of power pop in his life (and is partial to a redhead)-Challengers, The New Pornographers
My dad listens to Battles, Om and Sleep
But always tries to point out bits they stole from Gentle Giant/King Crimson/Amon Duul.
Dear DrownedinSound
I love you; great article
I'm a 40 Something Dad
and at the moment I like to nod my greying head to Health, Sleepytime Gorilla Museum & Battles. Mind you I still dig (is that the correct term?) Gentle Giant & King Crimson and will always rate Cardiacs as the best band that ever existed.
Look forward. Go back. Find the best music to be had in whatever era. That rules out Oasis at Knebworth of course.
dad i told you not to post on here!
i think i'm going to get my dad the vampire weekend
he once asked me about "those vampire-y fellows", which counts as interest enough, right? right.
If any of my kids bought me a Vampire Weekend or Hold Steady CD,
I'd beat them to death with it.
For the discerning Laura Nyro fan -
Joan As Police Woman - worked a treat! In fact, he stole my copy. D'oh!
Good article
I decided a few weeks ago I was gonna get my dad the new Fleet Foxes record, but they keep pushing the release date back so he might have to settle for the EP.
I did pretty well for my dad's birthday in april
He's really into Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds so got him Dig Lazarus Dig. Plus he was grumbling on about how singer songwriters were all pretty average these days so I trumped him with Jacob Golden and Stephanie Dosen's albums. A resounding success!
FREE ROUGH TRADE ALBUM!
Give the old man a free (album) 1 month membership to Rough Trade's Album Club...
just write in his card:
1) Go to www.albumclub.com/offers
2) Type in DAD as the code
3) Enter your details
That's it. He'll get next month's delivery for free!
As a member, last month he would have received the Fleet Foxes album (weeks before public release + exclusive bonus CD); month before Bon Iver album (weeks ahead of public release + invite to gig at RT East); month before The Shortwave Set (many weeks before public release + exclusive Van Dyke Parks bonus CD)...
Can't go wrong!
Thank you.
Actually
The correct link is:
http://www.thealbumclub.com/offers
Just thought I'd stick that in there.
I got my Dad a Nine Inch Nails DVD
i've tried
oh, I've tried. Mine is a Pink Floyd Dad. I've made him compilations that I thought would be suitable - he didn't listen to them.
So I got him a book about cycle paths in Yorkshire. Much better.
for
my dad : a 50 year old who spent his youth too high listening to John Martyn and Nick Drake - Bon Iver. But he's already got that so I'll get him a Toblerone, the legendary triangular Swiss chocolate with honey and almond nougat. x
my dad
pretty much listens to the beach boys and nothing else. got him person pitch by panda bear and he loved it :) making progress!
Dad Like Bob Dylan
So i bought:
AA Bondy - American Hearts on import / Fat Possum
Brilliant
What if your old man
listens to Tavares in the car?
screw you
i'm buying my dad the foals' album.
I got 'Petitioning the Empty Sky'
for Fathers' Day last year. I may have dropped a few hints.