Review
by Gareth Dobson
You have to hand it to Stephen Malkmus, he's never had any truck with popular
opinion or indeed, any form of suggested 'direction'.
Which can sometimes lead to faintly unsettling results, and perhaps none
so often as on this, his second solo album. Teaming up with his new 3-piece
band, Th»
Review
by Gareth Dobson
This is how we like it. A nice brick of misanthropy wrapped up in the sheen of
a giant, stadium-rocking pop song.
Listen intently beyond OK GO's buzzsaw guitars and squealing organs
and you'll find a singer - Semiotics major Damian Kulash - spitting
out lines of wonderfully vitriolic abuse: »
Review
by Gareth Dobson
Close your eyes, and you could almost be there… the West Coast melodies, lush
harmonies, beautiful sounds… Santa Cruz it seems, really isn't that far.
That however, was the last single from The Thrills. You get the feeling
from 'One Horse Town' that at one point, life seemed very far away. »
Review
by Gareth Dobson
Art or artifice? It's a particularly choice chunk of mud slung the way of East
London shab-rockers The Libertines, but strangely no-one's even seeing
if the same stuff will stick to Sunderland hopefuls The Futureheads.
Somewhat of a misleading moniker that, as the band are buried knee-deep in »
Review
by Gareth Dobson
(Midday, somewhere in Islington)
Roddy Woomble sits up in bed, dazed and disorientated. The mental fog
from the all-night peppermint tea bender he was on last night has yet to lift.
Stumbling across the flat to make a rejuvenating cuppa, Woomble treads on a
copy of REM's Green album, »
Review
by Gareth Dobson
Simple, rustic and bewitching; The Be Good Tanyas weave earthy acoustic charm into a song which is so featherlite, you fear it might be blown away with the tumbleweed in the breeze.
Guitars and banjos gently rattle away accompanied by the sweetest of voices in what amounts to a fine example of porch proppi»
Review
by Gareth Dobson
If the music world, and indeed the world, is doomed to repeat itself, then it
appears that we have returned to the hard-rocking stage in the evolution of music
where the 'supergroup' has taken eminence.
I mean, Zwan, Audioslave and now, Loose Fur. Well maybe
the last one is pushing it a»
Review
by Gareth Dobson
Possibly, this is a work of genius. Initially, it appears that every element of every single great windswept, towering guitar band of the eighties has been masterfully condensed into an hour of New York-made musical cool.
But that’s not good enough is it? No. It most certainly is not. You see, there is absolutely»
Review
by Gareth Dobson
Having spent the last 5 years in hardcore dues-ville, Pilot To Gunner find themselves in the enviable position of being in the right time (2003; where the shadow of Fugazi looms large) at the right place (NYC; where a musician takes a dump and someone is willing to promote the turd). The only problem is, »
Review
by Gareth Dobson
What came first; the live date or the single?
Coinciding with their appearance at the King's Cross Scala, Radio 4
have re-sent previously-released-as-a-7" single 'Eyes Wide Open'
back into battle wielding a spiky DFA production.
And, its well; punky and funky. And it has a »
Review
by Gareth Dobson
Despite their leapfrogging to a new label and a roping in of their more messy
elements - a fine tuning if you will - The Delgados have essentially remained
the same over the last decade.
The key notions of the band are still there; hate, heart and the human condition.
This single, perhaps one of the»
News
by Gareth Dobson
Six of Britain's most fearsome young sonic sorcerers have come together to create the noisenik trashfest that is the Fierce Panda Squirrel
EP.
And, in a demonstration of true squirrellove, they are all jumping in a van
to tour the width and breadth of country in order to share their rage. Sort
»
Review
by Gareth Dobson
Whilst the cool hatted tripes of NYC are currently moving from New Wave to Duran
Duran synth slop in the list of cool retro scenes to focus their Greenwich Village
fanzines on, some residents of Manhattan are a bit more firmly stationed.
Grand Mal, for example, appear to have found their niche; their gro»
Review
by Gareth Dobson
What on earth has happened here? I mean musically, there are probably a few more surprising things
in this world, but not many.
Nada Surf, the grumpy old geek-angst rockers have returned to the fray
with an absolute pop gem of a single.
'Hi-Speed Soul' (not to be confused with Superg»
Review
by Gareth Dobson
There can be few better people to spend a night alone with than Richard Hawley.
Not in a night-of-hot-passion sense (although I have no reason to think that he
would not be a generous and tender lover), but in the sense of beautiful nocturnal
solitude. With a voice evocative of Roy Orbison and Ia»
Review
by Gareth Dobson
"Look around/do you need a friend?/they're getting hard to find these
days": Pretty much the first decipherable words to leave singer Robin
Bennett's mouth. And you begin to worry.
Is this it? A final, bitter repost to the music industry, an ashen faced "thanks
very much" »
Review
by Gareth Dobson
The Tenderfoot are a band which have that most appealing of qualities;
elusiveness. Not literally; if you looked, you'd probably find them crouching
quietly in a Brighton pub, mulling over who borrowed their Arab Strap
live album. No, I'm talking musically.
I mean, are they a post-roc»
Review
by Gareth Dobson
Many a soul could be seen skulking around London in the latter half of this week.
Invariably it was because they didn't have a ticket to see the Flaming Lips'
psychedelic extravaganza on their two-night sojourn to Kentish Town. But for others
it was no matter, because for them, there was only one place whe»
Review
by Gareth Dobson
The first solo offering from Erlend Oye, one half of Norwegian folksters
Kings Of Convenience throws up many troubling questions.
Namely, is this not actually a KoC track in all but name? And more pertinently,
what quite is the purpose of this exercise? Its certainly not to bring new, »
Review
by Gareth Dobson
Rarely can an American figurehead be so untouchable or the offer of intimacy be
so cold and un-inclusive.
Will Oldham, AKA Bonnie 'Prince' Billy (among other names) has
long been established as an icon of modern rural American music - alt country
to tar a man with a brush - but it's never be»
Review
by Gareth Dobson
Coming to prominence of late thanks to a high-profile working relationship
with Ryan Adams, Jesse Malin has actually had a chequered ten-year
history in NY hardcore bands DGeneration and Heart Attack.
This however is about as far away as you can get whilst still thumping a g»
Review
by Gareth Dobson
This is the eighth studio album by Pram, the long serving, multi-disciplined electronicists from Brum.
Eight albums? it's enough to send you spiralling into a cold, feverish sweat. I mean, what after eight albums could they possibly offer that was not revealed in the previous seven? Surprisingly, i»
Review
by Gareth Dobson
Musically speaking, this band suffers from a severe case of Elephantiasis; everything that hangs off them appears to be these huge, grossly deformed monstrosities that bear little resemblance to their intended form.
The single appears to be a reflection on the passing their erstwhile drummer, Jon Lee, and »
News
by Gareth Dobson
Forty-something SoCal rock legends, the Red Hot Chilli Peppers are to release a new single, ‘Can’t Stop’ next month.
The track, the third to be taken from their ‘By The Way’ album, will be released on February 3rd, a month before the band hit the UK for a short tour.
The activity caps a four-y»
Review
by Gareth Dobson
More solipsistic musings from the bestraggled one in which Damon Gough expounds the theory that you should “judge the miracle by feel, not size”.
And, despite not being quite as good a tune as previous single ‘You Were Right’, it is a small wonder in its own right.
Built around riffs r»
Review
by Gareth Dobson
Rereleased in 2003, but first seen halfway through 1995, ’Wowee Zowee’ is still one of the most confounding pieces of artillery in Pavement’s canon.
Having said that, ‘confounding’ is a by-word for Pavement’s career. Or perhaps career isn’t the word. The band’s ascension through the musical ranks a»
Review
by Gareth Dobson
It must be hard being Dave Grohl, you have to wrestle with the tag of being
the 'nicest guy in rock' (tm) whilst still producing songs that will sate your
ravenous rock fanbase. Sometimes, it just doesn't quite work out.
'Times Like These' is probably the safest song on the far-better-than-the-la»
Review
by Gareth Dobson
If I were to be caustic and crude, I would tell Richard Ashcroft to take
his big strings and go hang himself with them. Not for our good you see, but for
his.
The man's still got a reputation to uphold y'know, and it doesn't matter how
many mid-paced cautious ballads he churns out from now until inf»
Review
by Gareth Dobson
Can you imagine what its like inside the world of Mr Scruff?
Multicoloured bongs, wacky headgear and a giant, and hugely impressive record
collection. Because you see, if you look past the 'amusing' presentation of
both the man and his records, you will find a damn fine musician making simila»
Review
by Gareth Dobson
He may not be making the same Daily Mail headline splashes as two years ago, but
Slim Shady is still so far ahead of the competition, its almost laughable.
Coming on like a 21st Century Rocky theme, 'Lose Yourself' sees
Marshall Mathers in typically dextrous lyrical flow. Theoretically t»