It's great in 2008, yeah: DiS's Certifiable Successes picks
- Artists:
- The Dillinger Escape Plan »
- The Kills »
- Black Mountain »
- Hot Chip »
- Panic At The Disco »
- Foals »
- Adele »
- Santogold »
Elementary: these acts, says DiS, will be big news in 2008. Some will top charts; others will experience the times of their lives like never before. All will win over new friends, shake and fake it with the smuggest critics around, and almost certainly receive one or two spiteful backlashes. It’s the nature of the beast, sadly. ‘Til the doubters swarm, rubbing eager palms above poison pens, let’s embrace the new, the not so, and the familiar friends, and wish them the success we’re anticipating.
Previous: Early Doors, Next-Steppers
Words: Sean Adams, Alex Denney, Mike Diver, Gareth Dobson
The Dillinger Escape Plan
If there’s a band that understands the pains and positives of evolution, it’s The Dillinger Escape Plan. Now in their second decade of existence with more than a dozen former members and collaborators left at the wayside in the search for crushing perfectionism, it may be time for DEP to emerge to take it all. Their march to glory following the release of their latest (third) full-length, Ire Works (review) was briefly halted by a freakish foot injury to guitarist and founding stalwart Ben Weinman. It shouldn’t spoil the band’s momentum, though, as Ire Works is their best record to date, blending their usual thrillingly alien creations with tracks like ‘Black Bubblegum’ and ‘Milk Lizard’, which are both direct enough to ensnare new, soon-to-be-ardent fans. With UK tour dates freshly rescheduled for next month (February ’08 – details here), you can go down and see what the clamour for this generation’s most promising obtuse yet brilliantly heavy jazz-tinged hardcore punk metal is all about. GD
DiS feature
MySpace
Black Mountain
Vancouver collective Black Mountain have been rattling their slo-mo rhythms around psych-rock-loving craniums since the release of their self-titled debut album in 2005, but 2008 is the year where their audience will expand to never-before-experienced levels on the back of their already superbly acclaimed second album proper, In The Future (released January 21 via Jagjaguwar). With echoes of Zeppelin, Sabbath, Hendrix and Floyd informing their material – immediacy is paramount for crossover, and the Stephen McBean-fronted outfit have reined in their wandering tendencies to potent effect on In The Future, a brilliant 18-minute sprawl by the name of ‘Bright Lights’ aside – and support slots with Coldplay (!) under their belts, as well as a track on the soundtrack of Spider Man 3, these unlikely stars are set to shine brighter than ever over the next year. Catch them live in the UK in May, and look for a review of In The Future in the next few days on DiS. MD
MySpace
Adele
Whilst many – i.e. practically every publication in the UK – are quick to sheepishly call this young lady the brightest hope of the year, they really neglect having any real personal investment in that pronouncement or any real depth in sticking their neck out for what they’re tipping (these are, of course, the same people who didn’t see Kate Nash or the Darkness coming). They come across a bit like all those people who believed the Earth was flat. I say this because the album, 19, wasn’t available for anyone to hear when the bulk of these lists were formulated. So yeah, that Winehouse lady sold a lot of records and this doesn’t sound too dissimilar but whatever, who cares. This isn’t just the new suchandsuch; this is something else. Adele certainly does have a rich set of pipes on her and a way with sentimentality and soul that, combined, brought this indie kid to a tear-filled stand-still at both The Great Escape (review) and Glastonbury last year. Not saying these people shouldn’t tip her, just that whilst many may think she’s just a flash in the buzz pan, her stripped-down shows and the album are wowsome encapsulations of genuine talent and worthy of being mentioned in the same breathe as Erykah Badu, Feist, Jill Scott and, given time, many of them from the black ‘n’ white age. Whether she’ll blow up worldwide or just sell as much a Dido’s debut or just be this year’s seemingly short-lived spark like Mika and The View were, last year, remains to be seen, but one thing is for sure: if you drop your indier-than-thou shield there’s a genuinely talented young girl here with a sensational voice and songs to give faith in life and restore a love of music for a lost mainstream. SA
MySpace
Photo: Kate Merrick
Foals
Small steps suit Foals. Since rising from The Edmund Fitzgerald’s carcass in 2005, the Oxford quintet have taken time to find their feet and, away from the delicate arthropod intricacies that initially marked them out as ‘Hummer’ scuttled chaotically under Yannis Philippakis’ paranoid bawl, the five rapscallions’ skewed sound now resembles a muscular beast, all brawn and brass. With TV On The Radio’s Dave Sitek in the production chair and Brooklyn-based afrobeat collective Antibalas contributing timely blasts of skronk to the band’s much-anticipated debut album Antidotes (which follows a series of singles and a live EP in 2007), it’s difficult to envisage the nation’s listeners en masse not falling for the five’s immediate charms over the next twelve months; tipsters elsewhere, new to the band though they are when compared to DiS’s since-inception relationship with Foals, are nevertheless accurate with their predictions of Bigger Things for the band in 2008. Years in the offing, as indebted to Philip Glass as Don Caballero, Foals remain the most exciting domestic act of this year’s turn-of-year picks with a genuine opportunity to break the idle-minded mainstream. So dance, buffoons, to these anti-pop bastards’ beat. SS
DiS feature (new one forthcoming)
MySpace
Santogold
A cunning conundrum is Santogold. Seemingly coming out of nowhere, her debut double-A side single release brought about broadsheet features and an appearance on a much-discussed ‘cool list’. You could understand the fuss: from that release, ‘L.E.S. Artists’ sounded like Karen O making eyes at The Police in the very best way. But then again the flip track, ‘Creator’, brought about terse comparisons with her Brooklyn neighbour and friend M.I.A. Not surprising given that it was a song borne of working with Switch – an M.I.A. collaborator himself. Add in IM’ing sessions with the likes of Diplo and it’s not hard to realise that Santogold was born cool. It’s this steady, indefatigable sense of imbued success that dictates the self-fulfilling prophecy that 2008 will be her year. As sure as a long-held prophesy. Truth is, though, it’s taken a lot of work to make things so easy. On at least her second round of record deals and notably coy about her age, Santogold is a sure thing a long time in the making. You suspect that the true achievement will be to dodge the inevitable sniping and the bullets that will come her way amongst heavy exposure and heady record sales. GD
DiScover feature
MySpace
Panic! At The Disco
Why ‘tip’ a band with a platinum-selling album in pretty much every country in the world, who can roll their burlesque circus into London and play four instantly sold-out nights at Brixton Academy and who have nearly 14 million MySpace friends? Why bother? Well, with only a debut album under their studded belts we’re pretty safe in suggesting they’re going to release one of the biggest albums of 2008 - especially if it turns out to be as good as anticipated - when it’s released in March. What we know of the new stuff: there was rumoured to be a prog album, which the label asked them to scrap, and at Reading last year they previewed a couple of songs which were rather a departure and sounded not unlike Ben Folds Five – they’ve even been regularly throwing in a cover of The Band. DiS predicts that they’ll walk out of recording strings ‘n’ piano stuffs at Abbey Road this week and have one of the most talked-about albums of the year in their hands, which could find itself wrapped around the hearts of discerning Shins fans as easily as your silly fringed young siblings. Failing that, your Foo Fighters-loving ‘cool’ dad type might just have a new favourite band and you can all take the piss out of this in January 2009. SA
MySpace
The Kills
With a blues-rock record and a post-Bowie Velvet Underground scuzzy disco album to their name already, The Kills return this year as a cult band set for bigger things. Before Jamie started humping Kate Moss the band already had one of the most anticipated returns ahead of them, especially with The White Stripes not around to steal their thunder. The first single ‘U.R.A. Fever’ hints at a less lo-fi approach this time around, and the songs previewed live have had an intense psychedelic air to them. With the paparazzi swarming this record is bound to get a lot more mainstream attention, but DiS hopes people can see through the fuss and discover one of the most effortlessly cool, yet inventive and thrilling, bands in the world. SA
New album news
MySpace
Hot Chip
When DiS chin-wagged with Hot Chip’s Alexis Taylor some months ago he spoke about the band getting better at integrating their floor-bound and melancholic sides, and it turns out he wasn’t fibbing. Following a limited release for the deranged ‘Shake A Fist’ back in October, the band will announce their return proper with ’Ready For The Floor’. A triumph on the band’s own glitch-ridden terms, it’s the song which has erroneously been referred to as ‘not good enough for Kylie’ and will soon be correctly referred to as ‘better than anything Kylie’s done in ages’ and one of 2008’s singles of the year. Its parent album, Made In The Dark, sounds great on the first few listens and could be the one to catapult the group into the kind of major league recognition they’ve always threatened. AD
DiS feature
MySpace
Can’t be bothered clicking elsewhere? Here are our other picks for the forthcoming year… check ‘em:
Early Doors
Fanfarlo
Abe Vigoda
Telepathe
Banjo or Freakout
Atlas Sound
Beestung Lips
Broken Records
Johnny Foreigner
Eugene McGuinness
Wild Beasts
Next-Steppers
The Twilight Sad
These New Puritans
Laura Marling
Glass Candy
Errors
No Age
Yeasayer
Los Campesinos!
Friendly Fires
- Spotifriday #38 - This Week on DiS as a playlist
- The Dillinger Escape Plan - Option Paralysis
- In Photos: Download Festival 2008
- In Photos: Download Festival 2008
- Dillinger Escape Plan, Nile added to Quart festival bill
- Math-Rock Family Tree: exploring the roots of Foals
- The Dillinger Escape Plan at Astoria 2 formerly Mean Fiddler, London, Sat 23 Feb
- The Dillinger Escape Plan at Astoria 2 formerly Mean Fiddler, London, Sat 23 Feb
How anyone can call them anti-pop is genuinely absurd.
What there doing is very clearly, and quite straight-forwardly, pop music.
There's nowt wrong with that, and much good about it, but I feel people keep trying to convince themselves and other people that there's something unusual and alternative about Foals and there just isn't.
I wonder how many reviews and/or news pieces about The Kills this year
WON'T mention Kate Moss. I know DiS has only done it a couple of times now, but they should lead the way in making it stop from now on
At last!!!
some anticipation for P!ATD
How are they gonna handle now that FOB have stolen all their ideas???
WENTZ CIVIL WARR!!!!!!!!!111118
some
people tend to forget what pop music actually is. Pop music is George Michael, Michael Jackson, Kylie Minogue etc.
Pop music is not Foals.
pop is
a tune that melts the hearts of metallers and grandmas alike. No one can deny good pop; it is better than all of us.
A million voices
drowned by the din.
PPS:
DEP FTW.
no late of the pier
mentioned anywhere???
yeh
never fear we fricken love them tho and await hearing the album to see if they've come up trumps. there's a lot we couldn't include as if we threw in everything we'd lose focus.
why the pressing need to equate people like adele to
amazing black female singers like Miss Scott or Badu? Inevitably Adele will be showered with praise even though winehouse is the ruler of non-black female soul artists.
for anyone who's interested...
...the new Black Mountain album is streaming at last.fm
http://www.last.fm/music/Black+Mountain/In+The+Future
oops
http://www.last.fm/music/Black+Mountain/In+The+Future
i'm not very technophilic
why does it keep doing that?
http://www.last.fm/music/Black+Mountain/In+The+Future
changing the subject, the Hot Chip album should be a masterpiece, if that 12" with the Todd Rundgren sample is any guide...
???
wtf are "blasts of skronk"?
It amuses me that every time a DiS writer mentions Foals
the words "back lash" prop up in the same post or article. Some people just don't like their music, get over it.
YEAH!
They arent very good!
foals
i tried but i really dont like them.
they sound like battles but without balls. having said that i have to admit that even if they are a rip off of some great bands (supersystem? battles? q and not u?) they have their own style. so i kinda respect them. but yeah in the end they are just an nme band. i would not mention philip glass talking about foals...
^this
I really don't get Foals.
this may be unfair...
...but when i saw Foals at SXSW last year my first impressions were: "Hmmm, it's the happy shopper Battles"
but that might be just be cos no one can hold a candle to Stanier and co, in my opinion
still, respect for referencing Freaks & Geeks ((cf Mathletics)
FOB > P!ATD
Fo sho
I had similar feelings towards them
although I think they have improved live and I am relatively interested in hearing what they come up with album-wise.
I've been a fan of The Twilight Sad, Broken Records and Johnny Foreigner for a little while now so is good to see a continuing support for them. Thanks to these lists I'm glad to have been introduced to Fanfarlo and Glass Candy who both sound a lot of fun. Abe Vigoda and Santogold were worth checking out too. pretty good job all round.
Adele.
Why? Her songs sound terrible.
what does success mean ?
really.
hot chip
As much as I like the new album, I can't help but think that there aren't any real standout tracks on the album as good as say, No Fit State or Over And Over...
I hope it does very well though!
Dillinger- I recall Reading :(
I can't get into Dillinger Escape Plan- I'm still remembering their poo throwing incident at Reading a few years back <shudder>

Spotifriday #39 - This Week on DiS as a playlist
2008 to date: our favourites on their favourites
In Photos: Lovebox Festival @ Victoria Park, London
The Dillinger Escape Plan
The Kills
Black Mountain
Hot Chip
Panic At The Disco
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