Showing posts with label Spectrals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spectrals. Show all posts

23 December 2011

Sea Pinks // Dead Seas

While Veronica Falls, Girls Names and Spectrals all made the cut in our list of the top 50 albums of 2011, the Sea Pinks' 'Dead Seas' missed out.

Having relistened to the Belfast trio's second record almost exclusively today, we feel we may have made an error of judgement / lapse of concentration / temporary insanity, and would like to rectify this in a small way by highlighting its Black Lips on a coastal stroll-esque garage excellence here. Their kaleidoscopic visual treat for Fountain Tesserae is below, as well as the whole album to stream.





15 December 2011

50 Albums of 2011 // 40 - 31

The second installment. Not that it was planned that way, but this second set of ten also have some of our favourite videos of the year; from Dominant Legs' lesson in joy-seeking, through Metronomy's paper bird to Ganglians' psych-dystopia. Plus, we had to include two from Shabazz Palaces' awesomely titled/sounding record. Enjoy, with 30 to 21 to come tomorrow.

31. Dominant Legs - 'Invitation'



32. James Blake - 'James Blake'



33. Metronomy - 'The English Riviera'



34. Girls Names - 'Dead To Me'

Girls Names // Bury Me

35. Shabazz Palaces - 'Black Up'

Shabazz Palaces // Swerve... the reeping of all that is worthwhile (noir not withstanding)
Shabazz Palaces // An echo from the hosts that profess infinitum

36. Nicholas Jaar - 'Space Is Only Noise'

Nicholas Jaar // Too Many Kids Finding Rain in the Dust

37. Ganglians - 'Still Living'



38. Spectrals - 'Bad Penny'

Spectrals // Big Baby

39. Moon Duo - 'Mazes'



40. Veronica Falls - 'Veronica Falls'




14 November 2011

Spectrals // Bad Penny

Spectrals
Bad Penny
Released: 17th October
Wichita

Great name for an album that isn’t it? Whether it’s self referential relating to the well known phrase or saying ‘bad pennies always come back’ or ‘there’s two sides to every coin’, whether it’s satirical commentary on our current economic strife, or whether it’s a nod to Steve Albini and Big Black’s fiery Chicago punk track of the same name all adds a curiosity to the record, a trait all record names should have as far as we’re concerned. Knowing Louis Jones’ aka Spectrals’ previous output and propensity for melding sonic ingredients, all three are likely to have figured somewhere down the line.

As for the content, fewer questions are asked. Since the early and wholly justified buzz of 2009’s Leave Me Be and 2010’s ‘Extended Play’, backed up by multiple split 7”s, extensive touring and support slots, the influences of 60s pop, soul and doo wop, plus the occasional garage smack, have been worn firmly on the sleeve. A trait often criticised, but one which if done well and with ingenuity is to be admired. The high points on the record take these touchstones and buff them into something beautiful. Lead single Get a Grip’s driving pop provides a plucky undertone to Jones’ lovelorn, meanderings as he confides “I find it hard to get my head out of the right side of the bed”, while the jangling lilt of Jones’ guitar on Doing Time has a timelessness that may sound simple but is missed so often by others attempting a similar feat.

Spectrals - Get A Grip by Slumberland Records

Unfortunately, there are aspects of this debut that drift without making much impact, which is perhaps where the delving into multiple musical pots makes for an inevitably mixed whole. Where Spectrals’ live shows and Jones’ charisma conjure a fuzzy warmth and throwback atmosphere, at times the record is a tad mundane and predictable, making its low ebbs such as Many Happy Returns pass almost unnoticed compared to the earlier teenage crush and garage blast high of Big Baby. Confetti has the lyrical intricacy and pop playfulness of Alex Turner or Paul Weller over classic 60s beat pop, however its peak is followed by the easy listening snooze of Luck Is There to be Pushed, which is reminiscent of Simply Red and is rendered impotent alongside the far superior tracks Jones is clearly capable of. Two sides to the coin indeed, but on one there’s plenty to admire.

4 August 2011

Spectrals // Big Baby

In preparation for their presence at Field Day on Saturday, Spectrals have issued a taster of what to expect from their long awaited Witchita / Slumberland Records debut album Bad Penny.

We've been waiting for Bad Penny to drop for a long time and Big Baby, showcasing Spectrals' 60s influences and expertly wry lyricism, is a step closer towards what could be our favourite record of the year.


via RCRDLBL

24 July 2011

Field Day 2011 // Preview mixtape

With less than a week to go until Field Day 2011, and what may be the best Field Day of its young life, I cannot stop gaping at the line-up in awestruck paralysis. Some of the best UK artists are on show in the form of Anna Calvi, James Blake, SBTRKT, Anika and Spectrals, while there's a healthy sprinkling of trans-Atlantic big hitters Twin Shadow, Glasser and Ariel Pink's Haunted Grafitti as well as our European cousins Junip, who I for one don't listen to enough.

Below is a mini-playlist to whet your appetite, led out by the boy-girl harmonies, pounding drums and driving 60s garage guitars of Veronica Falls' new track, plus a few choice extras from Gruff Rhys, Jamie xx, Anika and Junip. We also have a fleshed out Spotify playlist you can grab here.

Field Day 2011 mixtape by No Action
Jamie xx - Far Nearer (limited vinyl & download out now - http://farnearer.com) by Numbers
Anika - Terry by stonesthrow



1 June 2011

Mazes // Demo


Mazes have come up with an intriguing new demo via their ever interesting site cum feed of cool songs, vids and pics. More of an Americana vibe than A Thousand Heys, with a hint of 60s surf pop a la Spectrals in there.

Check out the track over at the band's site now for an idea of what their second album may sound like.

1 April 2011

Local favourites // Fanzine

Fanzine have not been gigging long, but what they have done has been of the highest calibre of bill. London shows with Spectrals, Cymbals Eat Guitars and French Kissing have helped draw a deserved amount of attention to a band with a discerning collective ear for a melody.

While heavily influenced by late 80s / early 90s American indie, there's a gleaming poppiness to the vocals on early track Susan, which draws on Pacific coast surf and, somehow, Pink Floyd, while Run is akin to a sprawling, Smashing Pumpkins re-edit of Graham Coxon. With the band currently recording new material, there should be much, much more to enjoy from Fanzine this year.

Run by Fanzine

24 August 2010

Harlem :: Spectrals // Hoxton Bar & Kitchen


Harlem and Spectrals, two bands that have been immovable on the No Action playlist for months now, on the same bill? You read our mind Hoxton Bar & Kitchen.

Before the fun starts, however, The Lucid Dream made the long trip from Carlisle trudged through the sort of psychedelia that thankfully is not present in recent 90s revivalism. And on this basis it's not likely to be.

Spectrals' set, despite the impassive looks etched across his and his band's faces induced by the sweltering heat, is immaculate from the start. Harnessing the combined charms of Mersey-beat and baroque pop, Spectrals comes over like The Last Shadow Puppets with a lo-fi ethic. The delicate Birthday Kiss gets the room swaying before superb early single Leave Me Be adds some Californian surf to the mix. Throwing in a Milkshakes cover for some teeth-grindingly ragged garage-blues only makes us love him more, while a forthcoming Reading/Leeds slot and supports for Les Savy Fav, Wavves and Here We Go Magic look set to place Spectrals firmly on the radar.

What better way to back up Spectrals than with some balls-out Texan garage? While their tour manager lines up the drinks (whiskys, lagers, strictly no waters) for them to knock down, the band instruct the crowd to "dance around like retards" and crash through Beautiful and Very Smart before Friendly Ghost's opening refrain "I live in a graveyard!" stuns the room into life. The sound is much heavier than comes across on Hippies, particularly prior to the vocalist/drummer switch, with Faces causing the queued up couples front of stage no end of trouble from the burgeoning mosh pit behind. Post switch, South of France and recent single Gay Human Bones get the best reception. While there's no end of garage bands about, Harlem's melodic riffs and boozy drawl set them apart. Check them out below.

30 July 2010

1234 Shoreditch Festival // Clockwatch


12.45: It’s been a busy Saturday already. Having traversed the streets, tubes and bus routes of East London’s boroughs, and not before a visit to the friendliest croissant seller in all the land, I’d made it to the unfortunately named property agency Myspace to sign up for another year of rental extortion via an admin fee of 50 quid. Plus VAT. Suitably embittered with what the city takes, I trudged towards Shoreditch Park for what it had to offer.

Shoreditch’s is at the highly urban end of the urban park scale: open rectangle of grass, 1970-styled sports centre and an over-sized rock on a plinth are its key features. Nonetheless, it’s a pretty neat setting for a city festival. Let’s hope the bands can make the grade.

13.00: Typically, the VIP/press queue is the longest and slowest. As kids argue the toss about their guest list spots and competition winners are adorned with their prize, entry, I patiently wait, with only the mildest huffing, tutting and foot-shuffling.

13.15: Still waiting. I can hear South London’s La Shark from over the barriers as they clatter through 1958’s deliciously off-kilter beats and Bones’ Rocky Horror love story. For such an entertaining band, it’s a surprise that they’re so low on the bill. A pity I can’t see them, but they sound great. The anticipation is a killer!

13.25: I’m in and head straight to the Rough Trade tent for what’s left of La Shark’s set. Prowling the stage in white boiler suits, tropical shirts and a film of sweat, bearing the marks of a typically energetic show, it’s 30 seconds before the band thank the crowd and are off backstage. I’m left to imagine what might have been, sup my opening Kopparberg and ponder the inevitable schedule clashes.

14.00: Circulating the site took just five minutes – you don’t get that at Glastonbury do you? Stalls offering spray-paint-your-own canvas bags and I ♥ Hackney mugs are by-passed in favour of Action Beat making a massive noise on the main stage. With three drummers (apparently they’ve maxed at four in the past), three guitarists and two bassists, it’s perhaps unsurprising that the set is riff heavy. Without a vocalist though the product is loud but unfocused, songs blurring into each other and delivered with the most homoerotic fret-wanking since Lynyrd Skynyrd.

14.20: Spectrals? That’s not Spectrals. It seems the Rough Trade tent has been shuffled and instead I’m faced with Invasion, a sort of metal Noisettes. I leave.


15.00: After an ask around it seems Spectrals have dropped off the bill entirely which is pretty gutting. Making up manfully for their absence though are Mazes, who recently appeared alongside co-lo-fi luminaries Not Cool and La La Vasquez, as well as Spectrals, on a Paradise Vendors 12” compilation.

Despite a slight interruption which causes them to declare “my guitar’s fucked… and the stage man’s just chillin’”, the duo fly through a great set indebted to the C86 generation and 90s American indie. Where many of the recent spate of reverb layered guitar acts fail, Mazes’ ear for a classic melody is sound, as shown in the feverish receptions to the summery Cenataph and set closer Go-Betweens, with our protagonist sounding like a perky young Tim Burgess having been heavily exposed to Television Personalities and Pixies records. Early contender for band of the day right here.

16.15: Having failed to get near the tiny Artrocker tent for Maria and the Mirrors, I settle for a pint and a seat while idly watching punk icons Vic Godard and the Subway Sect. I notice John and Kevin from Male Bonding are wandering about, which begs the question, why did no-one book them to play? Having shared vinyl space with Dum Dum Girls and Mazes and hailing from Dalston they seemed a perfect fit for 1234.

My attention turns to young goth post-punkers S.C.U.M who, despite the fact lead singer looks like a pre-pubescent Nick Cave, are much more impressive live than expected. The sound is brooding and unnerving, with their connection to The Horrors evident in more than just blood; their experimental sound carrying purpose and intent and making for a genuinely engrossing set.


17.05: After a hard earned organic burger topped with a cheese slice, it’s back to the main stage for what I hope will be the performance of the day. I Will Be is one of my top records of the year so far and when Dum Dum Girls come on dressed all in black in rockabilly chic as the crowd grows, my anticipation is peaking.

Unfortunately the first couple of songs are tainted by high-pitched feedback screaming from the speakers and the lead vocals so low in the mix they’re smothered by the backing harmonies. The girls’ calculated ennui doesn’t help lift the show, but thankfully the issues get resolved and the set grows in stature and impact. The punk strut of Bhang Bhang Burnout blasts through the heavy shroud of reverb, while Jail La La gets the gathering swaying if not dancing. Not the set I’d hoped for and, as the girls depart, the general consensus seems to be one of, well, ennui.


18.10: Having queued for my blue VIP wrist band I figured I may as well see what it got me. It turns out it got me entrance to a fenced off area to the left of the main stage, where one was offered the chance to purchase equally expensive booze as the average punter. There is also a mini-stage where Babeshadow are due on live at half 6 among a series of DJs. Unfortunately, Peter Hook performing Unknown Pleasures front to back just gets the nod.

The increasingly rotund Hooky, on vocals and occasionally bass slung improbably low as ever, seems to be genuinely enjoying himself, with an arm aloft and the occasional ad-libbed howl defying his stereotype of grumpy old Manc. The visceral edge and visual impact are of course gone, but the riffs remain the same and the post-punk karaoke gets the crowd really going for the first time all day. Closing with Love Will Tear Us Apart sends the masses out on a high, as the undying quality of the songs sees Hooky beyond pub singer and remaining a legend.


19.05: Up to this point, the content has pretty much been solely lo-fi garage and slightly gloomy punk, leaving me a touch subdued and in need of a pick-me-up. Cue We Have Band. With Dede dressed head to toe in silver playsuit, the tone is set. From the first beats of Piano the whole Rough Trade tent is dancing, leaving the trio in humble awe at the reception. The common theme of the day’s bands is slightly uptight and self aware, the antithesis of Dede’s prowling, bouncing and pouting performance, while Darren’s legs never stop as he controls the beat. You Came Out sets them dancing, while Oh! is the clear highlight, inducing total crowd participation where elsewhere (other than for Hooky) there’d been none. With no time for live favourites Honeytrap or Divisive, after gushing thanks the band leave the stage with the tent baying for more, and the band of the day award firmly bagged.

20.30: Halfway through the Vivian Girls set I realise just what a fantastic band they are. I also realise that pissed Spaniards doing keepy-uppy with a plastic ball at a Vivian Girls gig is fucking irritating. Nevertheless, the second set of Girls I’ve seen today far outdid the first, even throwing in some “we love London” chat for good, crowd pleasing measure.

21.15: Having caught the remainder of Bobby Gillespie’s ‘supergroup’ The Silver Machine offering some pretty average covers and completing the noticeably backward looking feel to the main stage at what is ostensibly a new band festival, I squeeze past the ridiculously tall frame and many angled face of Faris Rotter into a sweaty post-Rolo Tomassi Artrocker tent ready to close my festival with Veronica Falls and Bo Ningen.

I’d loved the Falls at CAMP Basement recently, but persistent sound issues mean the set tonight never quite gets going. Despite this their surf pop, particularly on the superb Found Love in a Graveyard and an ace version of Stephen, keeps the ball rolling nicely for Bo Ningen.

Each dressed in 70’s rock staples of skinny flairs and straight black hair down to their waists, the Japanese foursome take to the stage and immediately hurl themselves into unhinged psychedelic rock of the Deepest Purple, writhing on the stage and making a noise that’s as confusing as it is captivating. I’m not sure if it’s good or not, and at points it sounds as if they’ve never played at all, let alone together. Then, out of the blue, it all makes sense and a song emerges from nowhere. Unlike any band I’ve seen today there’s an un-tempered emotion and freedom in the noise that is both unnerving and thrilling. It’s in complete debt to the past but beyond comparison, and I guess there’s no better tribute to what 1234 aim to achieve than this.

Photos: Tom Jagger (www.tomjagger.co.uk)
Check out The Fugutive Motel for more.

25 June 2010

Local favourites // Colours


London four-some Colours produce songs draped with claustrophobic reverb yet filled with vibrant melody, making for a thrilling sonic experience. While their song-naming can only be described as satisfactory (Lost Youth, The Lost Hour, Losers), there's much to love in their powerful three minute thrash.

Having recently released their debut 7" on Sleep All Day Records, the band are playing a series of London dates (including a support slot with No Action favourites Spectrals at Cargo) before the July 27th release of a split EP on Marshall Teller Records alongside Not Cool, Cheatahs and Dignan Porch.

17 May 2010

Stag & Dagger // London


The impossible dilemma of any city festival, particularly one that lasts but a day, is reaching that point of acceptance. The understanding that no matter what you do or how fast you think you can walk, you're resigned to the fact that you just can't see it all and, if you try, you'll spend more time outside venues than in.

London's leg of Stag & Dagger on Friday 21st, with its 21 Shoreditch venues, promises just such warring frustrations and pleasures. While on the one hand Wild Palms and We Have Band will be pleasuring the attendees at Hoxton Bar & Kitchen, those very people may only speculate on Django Django's genre shuffling at Queen of Hoxton or Spectrals' enchanting lo-fi loveliness at Jaguar Shoes.

Much to ponder. Here's a Spectrals related tempter to enjoy in the meantime.