Category: MUSIC

  • Adam Beattie: The Road Not Taken, album review – ‘warmth and sincerity’

    Adam Beattie
    Adam Beattie. Photograph: Alan Schaller

    The Road Not Taken is the fourth studio album from Shoreditch-based Scotsman Adam Beattie whose eclectic take on contemporary folk has earned impressed nods from the barometer of great taste that is Mary Anne Hobbs, as well as considerable backing from BBC Radio Scotland DJs Roddy Hart and Bruce MacGregor.

    Beattie approaches his songs with real care and delicacy. The instrumentals on tracks as ‘The Family Tree’ and title track, ‘The Road Not Taken’, comprise a warmth and sincerity that rides on plucked strings and the frayed silkiness of Beattie’s vocals.

    Where The Road Not Taken really shines though is in its darkest moments. ‘I’m On Your Side’ introduces the delicious wickedness that lurks in the corners of this record through its fairground waltz of stammering guitars. Similarly, ‘You Only Kill The One You Love’ creeps along with an unnerving melancholy and far-off screeches of feedback, as Beattie sings: “Of all the girls I’ve ever met/ Not a single one remains…”

    Throughout the record Beattie remains inventive with his lyricism. For instance, ‘Catch The Biggest Fish And Let It Go’ is a love song revolving around a girl who “went to the pub in her dressing gown/ To steal me toilet roll”, a rewrite of ‘She’s Always A Woman’ told through the simple balladry of Leonard Cohen or the Walker Brothers, but touched by elements of Ian Campbell and Pete Seeger.

    Final track ‘Welcome Home’, written in collaboration with fellow Scot Mairearad Green, rocks the album to sleep. A wistful tune, cut through with Piotr Jordan’s melancholy strings marks a return to Beattie’s Celtic roots and evokes calm and comfort that comes with returning home.

    The Road Not Taken is an album saturated in melody and a remarkably deft example of where contemporary folk music resides in 2016. Whilst it doesn’t necessarily make any great leaps forward in regards to novelty, its mix of country, blues and conventional folk tropes form themselves neatly into a slice of the old country that offers welcome respite from the interminable bustle of the capital.

    The Road Not Taken
    Adam Beattie
    soundcloud.com/adambeattie

    Adam Beattie album cover

  • Field Day review: ‘a fitting end to a triumphant decade’

    Field Day review: ‘a fitting end to a triumphant decade’

    Soaked:
    Merry dance: two festivalgoers combat the rain. Photograph: Carolina Faruolo

    In the ten years since Field Day first pitched up in East London the festival has gone from strength to strength, growing in size and status, but never failing to live up to its reputation for fantastic line-ups.

    It’s a humid start to Saturday, but an afternoon downpour brings festival-goers running for cover in the Shacklewell Arms tent where Meilyr Jones is thrashing about in time with his baroque-pop stompers.

    When the rain clears it’s a slippery walk over to Skepta on the main stage, and judging by the state of a few of mucky bottoms the mud has already claimed its first victims.

    Aside from some initial technical issues, Skepta plays a blinder. From opener ‘Konnichiwa’, the mosh pit is heaving, singing every word in perfect synchronicity, and ‘Shutdown’ threatens crowd collapse.

    Main stage follow-ups Deerhunter seem in high spirits as they crack on with a varied setlist from records old and new, including ‘Dream Captain’ and ‘Snakeskin’.

    By tea time the Moth Club tent is bursting with bodies getting their early-evening boogie on to Ata Kak, and as twilight settles over Resident Advisor, Holly Herndon’s set is in full flow.

    With a moving dedication to Chelsea Manning, it’s a compulsive, moreish performance from Herndon, full of bass and hungering voices.

    James Blake’s headline slot manages to maintain the songwriter’s trademark intimacy – no mean feat given the size of the crowd that has gathered to watch him.

    It’s a quiet start with ‘Limit To Your Love’ and ‘Retrograde’ both making early appearances, but the tranquillity is soon overhauled by the arrival of Trim for an intense performance of ‘Confidence Boost’, before the set winds down into a rapturous ‘The Wilhelm Scream’.

    James Blake - Carolina Faruolo
    Headliner: James Blake. Photograph: Carolina Faruolo

    By Sunday afternoon, the park has been transformed into a mire. Where yesterday trainers and plimsolls were de rigeur, there’s been a clear shift into the Wellington boot camp.

    There’s much squelching afoot at a frenetic Parquet Courts show on the main stage where Andrew Savage’s staccato bark manages to shake some life into the rain-fuddled field, and over at the Shacklewell Arms, Cass McCombs’ stylistic shapeshifting manages to draw out some lunchtime sunshine.

    Fat White Family achieve an incendiary blowout, cleaving their way through ‘Whitest Boy On The Beach’ ‘Is It Raining In Your Mouth’ and ‘Touch The Leather’ like a pneumatic drill through concrete.

    A bellowing Lias Saoudi plays master of ceremonies over a flurry of dancing, shrieking and ripped t-shirts, in nothing but a pair of navy y-fronts.

    Brian Jonestown Massacre’s set turns similarly surreal when Newcombe’s desire to hear the crowd shout “Pigfucker” in unison brings out a rainbow across the stage.

    The Avalanches was a rather disappointing affair. What was billed as a show turns out to be a DJ set during which more than a few confused audience members can be heard asking when The Avalanches are supposed to be on. Air on the other hand are sublime.

    Godin and Dunckel are on fine form, playing an intoxicating mix of their essential tracks, with ‘Playground Love’ and an elaborate ‘La Femme D’Argent’ inciting a head-spinning euphoria that could turn bones to butter.

    Sunday night headliner PJ Harvey is every bit the spectacle, bedecked in black feathers and backed by a nine-man band.

    Harvey plays some truly transcendent renderings of ‘Down By The Water’ and ‘River Anacostia’ before bringing the weekend to a thundering close with a glorious encore of ‘A Perfect Day Elise’.

    It’s a fitting end to a triumphant decade for Field Day, and a great foot upon which to start the next ten years.

    PJ Harvey. Photograph: Carolina Faruolo
    PJ Harvey. Photograph: Carolina Faruolo
  • Field Day to return to Victoria Park this weekend

    PJ Harvey

    PJ Harvey. Photograph: Maria Mochnacz

    PJ Harvey’s only London appearance and a headline slot from electronic maestro James Blake await festivalgoers at Field Day. The festival returns to Victoria Park on 11 June for its tenth edition, a milestone that hasn’t escaped the organisers, who have brewed their own limited edition pale ale in celebration. Here, we take a look at five acts set to light up East London this month.

    PJ Harvey

    Fresh from releasing The Hope Six Demolition Project, PJ Harvey’s Field Day Sunday appearance is her only London show this summer. The enigmatic vocalist will be playing songs off the new album, (which was recorded in public as an art installation at Somerset House) as part of a career spanning set.

    Brainz 620

    The Avalanches

    The Avalanches

    Joining Polly Harvey on the Sunday line-up is Australian electronica outfit The Avalanches, in what will be the group’s first appearance in the UK since 2001. The three-piece found success in 2000 with Since I Left You, regarded as one of the best Australian albums of all time. Its protracted follow-up has been in the offing since 2005, but is rumoured to be close to completion.

    Gold Panda

    Gold Panda

    Gold Panda

    Essex boy and electronic producer Gold Panda is on the bill for Saturday and is currently enjoying the buzz around the release of new long-player Good Luck and Do Your Best. The album, inspired by the quality of light in Japan during spring and autumn, has received positive reviews from the likes of Pitchfork, who called it “refreshingly unfashionable” and “unlike any electronic music being made in 2016”.

    James Blake

    James Blake

    James Blake

    The London-based singer and songwriter first came to attention in 2010 with an R&B-infused dubstep cover of Feist’s ‘Limit to Your Love’. The subsequent album nearly won him the Mercury Prize, and the 2013 follow-up Overgrown achieved just that. This year, Blake has resurfaced with new album The Colour in Anything, so expect a set of new material and classics for his headline set on the Saturday night.

    Tourist

    Tourist

    Tourist

    East London-based Will Phillips a.k.a. Tourist has made a name for himself as a producer and remixer of some of the most anthemic electronic music around. He has worked on remixes for Chvrches and Sam Smith, as well as his own productions featuring the likes of Lianne La Havas and Years and Years. His sound is perfect for big spaces, so the scene is set for him at Victoria Park on Sunday.

    Field Day
    Victoria Park
    11–12 June
    fielddayfestivals.com

  • Field Day to return to Victoria Park this weekend

    Field Day to return to Victoria Park this weekend

    PJ Harvey
    PJ Harvey. Photograph: Maria Mochnacz

    PJ Harvey’s only London appearance and a headline slot from electronic maestro James Blake await festivalgoers at Field Day. The festival returns to Victoria Park on 11 June for its tenth edition, a milestone that hasn’t escaped the organisers, who have brewed their own limited edition pale ale in celebration. Here, we take a look at five acts set to light up East London this month.

    PJ Harvey

    Fresh from releasing The Hope Six Demolition Project, PJ Harvey’s Field Day Sunday appearance is her only London show this summer. The enigmatic vocalist will be playing songs off the new album, (which was recorded in public as an art installation at Somerset House) as part of a career spanning set.

    Brainz 620
    The Avalanches

    The Avalanches

    Joining Polly Harvey on the Sunday line-up is Australian electronica outfit The Avalanches, in what will be the group’s first appearance in the UK since 2001. The three-piece found success in 2000 with Since I Left You, regarded as one of the best Australian albums of all time. Its protracted follow-up has been in the offing since 2005, but is rumoured to be close to completion.

    Gold Panda
    Gold Panda

    Gold Panda

    Essex boy and electronic producer Gold Panda is on the bill for Saturday and is currently enjoying the buzz around the release of new long-player Good Luck and Do Your Best. The album, inspired by the quality of light in Japan during spring and autumn, has received positive reviews from the likes of Pitchfork, who called it “refreshingly unfashionable” and “unlike any electronic music being made in 2016”.

    James Blake
    James Blake

    James Blake

    The London-based singer and songwriter first came to attention in 2010 with an R&B-infused dubstep cover of Feist’s ‘Limit to Your Love’. The subsequent album nearly won him the Mercury Prize, and the 2013 follow-up Overgrown achieved just that. This year, Blake has resurfaced with new album The Colour in Anything, so expect a set of new material and classics for his headline set on the Saturday night.

    Tourist
    Tourist

    Tourist

    East London-based Will Phillips a.k.a. Tourist has made a name for himself as a producer and remixer of some of the most anthemic electronic music around. He has worked on remixes for Chvrches and Sam Smith, as well as his own productions featuring the likes of Lianne La Havas and Years and Years. His sound is perfect for big spaces, so the scene is set for him at Victoria Park on Sunday.

    Field Day
    Victoria Park
    11–12 June
    fielddayfestivals.com

  • Azealia Banks axed from Hackney music festival after racist rant at Zayn Malik

    Azealia Banks
    Azealia Banks. Photograph: Rick Bonetti via Flickr

    Azealia Banks has been dropped from headlining a Hackney music festival after the hip hop artist unleashed a racially abusive and homophobic twitter tirade.

    Banks was set to headline Rinse: Born & Bred festival in Haggerston Park on Sunday 5 June.

    But Rinse FM, the festival organisers, have dropped the US star after she posted offensive tweets targeted at One Direction’s Zayn Malik.

    In a statement, the festival organisers said: “We have decided to cancel Azealia Banks’ headline appearance … Rinse: Born & Bred Festival is a celebration of rave culture and has been created for everyone. We celebrate inclusivity and equality.”

    In a stream of derogatory tweets, Banks called Malik a “brown-faced refugee” and said his whole family would be “obliterated by the good old U.S of A.”.

    She added: “The UK really can’t rap though. UK RAP is just a disgrace to rap culture in general.”

    The row started when 24-year-old Banks claimed Malik had copied her work for his new video, Like I Would.

    Damn Zayn be mood boarding the fuck of out me 😳.. I’m not mad about this though. Zayn is a cutie pie

    A photo posted by Azealia Banks (@azealiabanks) on

    Banks added that she thought the singer was a “cutie pie”, but when Malik, a British singer with a Pakistani father and English-Irish mother, tweeted: “I see you reaching but I don’t care … My @’s too good for you,” Banks assumed it was aimed at her and unleashed a tirade of abuse, including the accusation that Malik was only in One Direction “to draw brown attention”.

    Responding to the festival’s decision, Banks tweeted: “To all of my Darling UK fans who bought tickets to see me at the Rinse FM show. My sincerest apologies!!!!!

    “But you know Mama Puma always goes in for the Kill. And NEVER backs down.”

  • Feral – Ulli Mattsson review: ‘urging new water through old riverbeds’

    Feral – Ulli Mattsson review: ‘urging new water through old riverbeds’

    Ulli Mattsson. Photograph: Adam Weymouth
    Ulli Mattsson. Photograph: Adam Weymouth

    For Ulli Mattsson the water has always been synonymous with home. Growing up by a river on the border of Swedish Lapland, she has lived for the past six years aboard a former peat-transporter on the River Lea. This century-old barge has doubled as both abode and arena, acting as the stage from which she recently launched debut album Feral and its accompanying tour over the course of three intimate nightly shows down in Hackney Wick.

    Feral’s invocation of the waterways acts as an antidote to homesickness that delves deep into the tradition of Scandinavian folk music. Beginning with ‘Blue Whales’, an elegiac waltz of blunted guitar cut through by pining strings, it is a song saturated with a yearning for landscapes of her past, for blue whales and other organisms not usually found in the depths of the Lea.

    ‘Mother’, the record’s lead single, similarly follows this notion of loss and yearning but with more dynamism in the music. The guitar is upbeat despite the bleakness of the narrative, and this renewed vigour propels the album forward.

    Lyrically, the album seems to take its inspirations from folk oral traditions. Mattsson’s vocals, though minimal in range, materialise with a raw tenacity that conjures fragments of her homeland into a collage of aquatic ecology, oceanic mythology, and her own existence.

    It is an album of stories that find their sources in both the individual and communal tales of sea-faring creatures, from the account of the lonesome ‘Riverwoman’, to references to Queequeg and the Sirens found in ‘Winter’s Waiting’.

    Ulli Mattsson's Feral. Photograph: Adam Weymouth
    Ulli Mattsson’s Feral. Photograph: Adam Weymouth

    Whilst the first half of the record pays due reverence to traditional instrumentation, the song ‘Magpie’ ushers in a change of scenery. The sudden deluge of electronic instruments that appear in the middle-eight presents an interesting contrast to Mattsson’s personal take on the old ‘One For Sorrow’ nursery rhyme. It brings out a clear sense of divergence from what has come before, thrusting the record into new waters.

    Subsequently, tracks such as ‘Wandering Lights’ and ‘Last Song’ offer some of the most surprising and interesting musical moments on the album in a honeyed cohesion between deep, ritualistic percussion, and the flash and twinkle of modern programming.

    It is through this mixture of old and new, here and there, that Mattsson uses Feral to draw original noises from traditional sounds, urging new water through old riverbeds.

    ullimattsson.com

  • Review: The Fish Police, Café Oto

    Review: The Fish Police, Café Oto

    Dean Rodney, the charismatic singer of The Fish Police. Photograph: The Fish Police
    Dean Rodney, the charismatic singer of The Fish Police. Photograph: The Fish Police

    ‘It’s gonna be a big one,” warns Dean Rodney, lead singer of the Fish Police – and although size is always relative, he isn’t wrong.

    Within minutes of taking my seat at Café Oto, the five-piece launches into a song that has the venue on its feet. ‘Coco Butter’ nods to the quirky alternative hip-hop of De La Soul with its blaring 80s funk keyboards, but as a paean to the pale-yellow, edible vegetable fat extracted from the cocoa bean, this is music that inhabits its own unique world.

    “Just a little cream, raise your hands up to the skies, it will moisturise,” Rodney implores. Won over, the crowd obeys. Before I know it the chairs are folded away – I’m in danger of becoming an island in a sea of revellers.

    There’s no raised stage so audience and band blur into one as the dirty fuzz bass and spoken-word intro to ‘Black Scissors’ kicks in, calling to mind the silliest (and most fun) excesses of George Clinton.

    The Fish Police play catchy and uplifting pop songs informed by singer Dean Rodney and guitarist Matt Howe’s autism. The band is part of a nascent music scene, where learning-disabled acts share bills and audiences with those unaffected, that includes Ravioli Me Away, a post-pop-punk trio with a penchant for costume who are the evening’s excellent support act.

    Listening to the Fish Police takes you away from the drudgery of the real world into a joyful realm inhabited by cartoons.

    Through the course of the night we hear about a Japanese girl who is “always reading and falling asleep in the classroom” and Monica 300, whose defining feature is her blue hair.

    Watching the band is pure escapism from everyday drudgery, with Rodney’s deadpan delivery balanced by soulful backing vocals and some very capable musicianship from bassist Charles Stuart and drummer Andrew McClean (both of whom have played in Grace Jones’s backing band, no less).

    The biggest crowd pleaser of the night is ‘Chicken Nuggets for Me’, in which Rodney whips the crowd into a frenzy promising “I’m gonna tell you how I like my chicken” before doing just that in the chorus (no spoilers).

    Jumping up and down about chicken nuggets is an oddly liberating experience, and one that – like the rest of this band’s extraordinary output – comes highly recommended.

    The Fish Police played at Café Oto
    on 15 March
    thefishpolice.com

  • Vinyl fantasy – The Record Deck casts anchor on the banks of the Lea

    Vinyl fantasy – The Record Deck casts anchor on the banks of the Lea

    The Record Deck moored in its usual location. Photograph: Luke Guilford
    The Record Deck moored in its usual location. Photograph: Luke Guilford

    The banks of the River Lea used to be a place where recovering vinyl junkies could feel safe from relapse, but that is no longer the case.

    For taking a stroll down the canal towpath on any sunny weekend, you may well come across Luke Guilford and his floating record shop, The Record Deck.

    The former librarian uses his barge as a de facto stock room, keeping everything from ‘the classics’ to jazz, blues and reggae – which can sometimes prove problematic for some.

    “People like stumbling upon it, but some get a bit upset they found it because they were trying to not buy any records,” says Guilford.

    “But I’ve found that record addicts will always find them wherever they are. I am one myself.”

    Thumbing through the racks of reasonably priced records (usually priced between £5 and £10) stored underneath his bed and around his boat, he takes out a sample of his stock.

    The Black Keys, Tom Waits and David Bowie sit neatly beside Django Reindhart, The Incredible String Band and an African jazz compilation.

    Given the diverse nature of his clientele, trying to organise the front of the shop, which he hangs from the side of the boat, has become something of an art form.

    “One day I decided to put a load of really trendy records out, then the first things I sold were The Shadows and Dire Straits. You can’t predict who is going to come along,” he says.

    Guilford started the shop as an exit strategy from the rat race. With the pressures of his 9 to 5 job growing, he decided to put his life-long love of vinyl and his modest dwelling together to join the growing ranks of Hackney’s riverboat traders.

    Currently moored alongside Springfield Park, The Record Deck can count a floating bookshop, a bar and even a hairdresser’s amongst its neighbours.

    The Record Deck is based in Hackney on most weekends, but using the grass bank as his shop floor means opening hours are rather dependent on the weather.

    However, Guildford keeps a box of records in the basement of Pages of Hackney on Lower Clapton Road for rainy days, and informs his Twitter followers of his location.

    One of the advantages of the transient nature of the shop premises is that Guilford has become a regular feature at canal festivals around the country. This year he will be floating downstream to Field Day in Victoria Park and the Angel Canal festival in Islington.

    Having lived on a barge for 16 years, Guilford’s love for life on the water has extinguished any desire to expand his enterprise or turn to the murky waters of online selling.

    “A lot of people sell on the internet but to me that just sounds really boring,” he says. “But I don’t have any major plans for expansion apart from buying a load of nice records and passing them on to people.”

    Follow @therecorddeckuk to keep updated on the shop’s location.

  • Florence and the Machine live review – ‘exuberance and theatricality’

    Florence and the Machine live review – ‘exuberance and theatricality’

    Florence and the Machine live in Hackney. Photograph: Dan Dennison
    Florence and the Machine live in Hackney. Photograph: Dan Dennison

    It’s been a long time since Florence Welch played a venue this small, the singer being more at home in leviathan arenas and on festival main stages than the relative compactness of St John at Hackney. The show comes as part of War Child UK’s Passport to the Brits, a series of concerts that has brought big names to small settings. Tickets were made available via donation and subsequent prize draw. A stirring introduction from War Child CEO Rob Williams expounds upon just what these donations can do for the most vulnerable victims of conflict.

    Given the exuberance and theatricality that have become the calling cards of Florence and The Machine live shows, it is difficult to imagine how the band would approach playing in a fairly Spartan interior. However, The Machine has all but powered-down in favour of an acoustic line-up of piano, harp, trumpet and minimal percussion. Yet Welch’s vocals on the opening few numbers (‘Cosmic Love’, ‘St Jude’ and ‘Drumming Song’, all played sans drums) already threaten to rattle the stained-glass windowpanes. Following a galloping performance of ‘Queen of Peace’, Welch confesses she’s more nervous of small shows because she “used to be a lot drunker” when she originally played them. A voice in the crowd immediately offers to get her a shot.

    A winsome cover of Fleetwood Mac’s ‘Silver Springs’ comes as a delightful surprise, and one that superfan Welch seems to be enjoying even more than the crowd. Equally surprising is a rendition of Calvin Harris collaboration ‘Sweet Nothing’, pushed a world away from the kitschy pop-house of the original and made into some real Nicks-worthy balladry.

    Welch opts to go out on a high, with ‘Shake It Out’ and ‘Dog Days Are Over’ rousing the rabble into a swarming mass of rapturous singalongs and rhythmic clapping. It is one thing for a musician to sell-out a 20,000-capacity arena, but quite another to make the jump back to snugger surroundings without sacrificing the galvanising energy of the large-scale extravaganza.  Even the most recalcitrant detractors of Welch’s music would find it a challenge to call this performance anything but impressive.

    Florence and the Machine played at St John at Hackney Church on 26 February.

  • In Stormy Nights, Dream Maps, review: ‘an ambitious first record’

    Dominic Simpson
    Enigmatic sounds: Dream Maps is Dominic Simpson

    Despite many a shoegaze hallmark, Dream Maps is a far cry from any My Bloody Valentine impersonators you may have heard recently.

    The solo project of local musician Dominic Simpson, Dream Maps’ debut album, In Stormy Nights, is based around samples from the enigmatic radio station UVB-76, often referred to as ‘The Buzzer’. Since 1982 the station has broadcast a perpetually recurring buzz tone, occasionally intruded upon by ambiguous Russian voice transmissions.

    This is a dynamic that features heavily throughout, from the Russophone syllables spoken in the opening moments, to the tinnitus-inducing crackle and hum of final track ‘100 Bars In C Minor/UVB-76’.

    The ponderous ‘London’s Burning’ leaves drone and vocal barely distinguishable. It’s certainly the most mainstream track on the album, almost reminiscent of an Anton Newcombe original.

    The ‘In Stormy Nights’ triptych captures a cross-section of keening feedback, hissing vocals and subaquatic echoes, piano fragments and sepulchral chanting, bridging the gap between spaced-out guitar rock and experimental electronics.

    The record takes an abstract interlude on ‘Train Tracks’ and ‘To The Birds’, whose sparse, drone-heavy melees are overlaid with snatches of instrumental and found sounds, moments of which call to mind something of Fripp & Eno.

    Whilst the transition from ‘To The Birds’ into ‘Gakken Analogue Book’ is a sharp and not immediately pleasing contrast – from ambient drone back into tripped-out shoegaze – the displeasure is short-lived as the latter proves to be one of the album’s most insatiable tracks. With an instrumental constructed over an acid-house beat, Simpson’s vocals emerge from between the presets, delivering the lyrics with a lingering snarl.

    At 14 and a half minutes long, ‘Static On The Wire’ is more a suite than a song, swelling from intricate guitar lines into a cavalcade of modulated noise that drifts in and out of focus, enveloping and isolating like an outtake from Tim Hecker’s Norberg.

    With a sound that sits at the Y-junction between shoegaze, ambient and industrial, In Stormy Nights is an ambitious first record. Through 12 dense, challenging but undeniably affecting tracks, Simpson has built a paean to UVB-76’s cryptic radio broadcasts.

    Mirroring the experience of capturing an alien voice through the buzz, the erratic transmission of Simpson’s vocals materialises unexpectedly from droning interludes, giving them a rather discombobulating characteristic of being anticipated yet never fully expected, like a figure appearing through fog.

    Listen to Dream Maps at dreammaps1.bandcamp.com/releases