In Depth by Alex Denney
With his Songs For Christmas five-disc box set out now on Rough Trade, DiS catches up with Sufjan Stevens to natter 'bout his relationship with cars and Christianity, and why commercial festive songs are so much better than traditional carols»
Review
by Alex Denney
Scout Niblett's folksy numbers are largely tuneless and the grungey numbers are as shapeless as the heavy-knit sweaters the genre’s original proponents shared a sorry predilection for»
Review
by Alex Denney
'Rockferry' is a rigorous pastiche roughly equivalent to putting Amy Winehouse in My Fair Lady; refined, mannered, but just a teensy bit dull»
News
by Alex Denney
It’s gone eerily quiet in the singles chart this week; it is, we fear, the calm before the almighty shit-storm that is the rush for Christmas number one.»
Review
by Alex Denney
There will forever be a strain of English music that takes tea and biscuits before kicking down the doors of perception, and on this evidence Watford-based solo artist Young*Husband, aka Euan Hinshelwood, is a prime dunker.»
Review
by Alex Denney
Deerhoof is a wipe-clean board, a musical Etch-A-Sketch on which the San Fransiscan trio can conjure any number of wayward daubings, and as any child of artistic promise will eventually demonstrate, they’re getting better at camouflaging their trails.»
Review
by Alex Denney
Welding great slabs of end-of-level electro chic onto thwacking indie anthems, Midnight Juggernauts are the band primed to capitalise on Justice’s critical love-in with seductive chart action in 2008»
Review
by Alex Denney
Its minimal drum patterns and playful touches speak of a deceptive lightness of touch, but The Raveonettes are making plain they know what it is to have lusted and lost, and therein lies the key to the record»
Review
by Alex Denney
The song’s melodramatic delivery seems faintly ridiculous, as Breed wails portentously "what they don’t tell you is time passes!". Er no, Simon, that’s sort of a given.»
Review
by Alex Denney
A second, inwardly-fluttering release of corseted demons and sublimated desire from Harvey's bewitching White Chalk album, the sound of slippered feet across candlelit halls or the proverbial madwoman in the attic»
News
by Alex Denney
The album charts are about as bare as Harry Potter’s balls this week, save for a few nonentities milling about disinterestedly - seriously, who are these people?»
Review
by Alex Denney
Like The Buzzcocks running down the street with their pants round the ankles, ‘I Won’t Lie To You’ all but trips over itself to bowl the listener over in a frenzied rush of pop hooks.»
Review
by Alex Denney
The world’s a grey old place. Why else would God have made Damon Albarn so talented? Gorillaz gave him the impetus to start writing pop songs again, but D-Sides adds nothing to the Blur man's critical stock»
Review
by Alex Denney
Indie pop is usually premised on a certain cack-handedness in both concept and execution, intended endearingly but more often than not just plain irritating. Thankfully, Jim Noir is a cut above those paint flingers»
News
by Alex Denney
Indie noise-mongers ¡Forward, Russia! are to play a one-off London show next month, as they build up to the release of second album, Life Processes in 2008.»
Review
by Alex Denney
You don’t come to places like this unless you’re interested in magic. Perched atop desolate moors a gnat’s tup away from the wind-battered A66 linking the nation’s northernmost reaches, the Tan Hill Inn is England’s highest pub»
Review
by Alex Denney
Like the first rays of sun on ice after an arctic winter, Ólafur Arnalds' Eulogy For Evolution strikes a delicate balance between poignancy and lachrymose sentimentality»
News
by Alex Denney
This week's charts remind me of a cigarette butt dancing at the bottom of an escalator; I look upon it, and am filled with a sense of the futility of all existence, but, you know, it's poetic and that.»
Review
by Alex Denney
Clipd Beaks work minor miracles in that hazily outlined gulf between order and chaos; pale sun and dust clouds settling in open wounds, the old ways laid to waste»
In Depth by Alex Denney
DiS speaks to Baltimore based duo Beach House ahead of their forthcoming UK dates to discuss their debut album, Cocteau Twin comparisons and the hating of 'folktronica'»
Review
by Alex Denney
Once ex-Hefner man Hayman's ...The Secondary Modern’s country-tinged, shambling indie marches have you in their sly embrace, you won’t ever want to let go»
Review
by Alex Denney
Here, as they say, is a dilly of a pickle: London four-piece Scanners are featured on this fair website this week, in an interview contriving to whet your appetites for their brand of electro-pop-rocking shlock. And I don’t like their new single. I mean, really»
News
by Alex Denney
There comes a time in every man’s life when he tires of dissing shallow pop records and craves something of genuine substance. The album charts probably think they offer exactly that, but they don’t. That’s because the album charts are comprised largely of AOR toss.»
Review
by Alex Denney
A genetic three-way splice of the burlesque chic Christina Aguilera’s been peddling for the last 18 months to a worldwide chorus of ‘meh’s, Alison Goldfrapp’s vampish electro shtick and, quite literally, Feist’s ‘1,2,3,4’»
Review
by Alex Denney
On ‘Creator’, Brooklyn-based electro starlet Santogold makes her wordless entrance and it’s like having seagulls wheel and circle above only to swoop down to peck ferociously at your bleeding bonce»
Review
by Alex Denney
Another splendid gothic riff from the creaking top drawer of Glaswegian rockers Sons And Daughters, flashing across your vision like migraine blobs, bass notes yammering away at your brain with stalker insistency»
Review
by Alex Denney
The band's pictured digging the graves of assorted bands, but they should pause to consider if they’re digging their own»
Review
by Alex Denney
There are few gigs in this world that leave you feeling refreshed and altogether lighter of being, yet somehow also pondering the benefits a nice wine rack might bring to your happy home, but Rufus Wainwright is one of them»
Review
by Alex Denney
There’s an interesting drinking game you can play with the new Britney Spears album: take a swig of ale every time Britney does a sex noise, and you're on your back in no time at all»
Review
by Alex Denney
Apparently, David Shrigley doesn't consider his absurdist doodlings to be particularly funny. The ache in your sides might beg to differ, but you get his point»