Thursday 17 May 2007

The Chap- 'The Horse'



There’s a universe where The Chap are on the cover of every magazine. Unfortunately, it's not this one.


Although both of their LPs are well worth investigating, it’s their debut album, ‘The Horse’, which pips it by a nose for me. The sheer weight of ideas bursting from the speakers is overwhelming: the driving, crushed beat in ‘Courage + Modesty’, how the detuned noise-house scree of ‘Effort plus Guns’ manages to invoke Boards of Canada, The Beatles AND Sonic Youth simultaneously, the joyous French pop of ‘Dror Frangi’….the list goes on.

The Chap’s brilliance is not, despite first appearances, the studied, synthetic brilliance of an LCD Soundsystem- this isn’t years of techniques diligently learned, honed, refined and reproduced. Instead, The Chap do for glitchy electronics, krautrock and British psychedelia what The Pixies did for surf music and spaghetti western soundtracks- digest, warp and melt their influences so that although, yes, this is clearly a band with catholic musical tastes, what emerges is completely instinctive, completely their own thing.

OK, there are a few barriers to world-wide acceptance- from a distance their name, and their love of knowing, geeky lyrics about sampler file formats and the vagaries of the London music scene give them the undeserved air of a North London insider’s joke band, more style than substance. But to tag them like that is to do them a grave disservice- although it’s tempting to say that they’re not quite as clever as they think they are, look closer and they’re actually a lot cleverer than you think they think they are.

Stick that in your grammar checker and smoke it.

There are several songs off the album here.

Thursday 10 May 2007

Wheat- 'Medeiros'


‘Hey Kid/It’s summer again/Grow your hair and let your muscles show through’.

Maybe it’s just me, but there’s a certain subset of American indie-rock which just perfectly matches late summer evenings, tired but happy, watching smoke from the campfire drifting up to join the few clouds in an otherwise perfectly clear sky. Both gently euphoric and wistful, there’s a cryptic wisdom in this music that I don’t think I’ll ever tire of. Pavement’s ‘Range Life’ and a lot of Grandaddy’s early output is the sort of thing I’m talking about- spontaneous yet timeless, music that sounds like a perfect accident.

‘Medeiros’, Wheat’s debut album, stands proudly among its better-known brothers in this respect and is every bit their equal. From the dusty scatters and hums of the introductory ‘Preprise’, through an all-too-brief 8 songs, until the final notes of the electric piano of the ‘Reprise’ fade into static, for all it seems like the components of the songs have been scattered without care, there’s not a single note or word out of place. The way that ‘Karmic Episodes’ builds into a gentle hysteria, static and feedback gradually clouding the song, the unsteady push and pull of the guitar in ‘Soft Polluted Blacks’ against a wall of white noise, or the way the subject of ‘Girl Singer’ ‘keep(s) it really raw/like a boy’, every song ,without exception, is enthralling.

The record sits in the great tradition of American songwriting: each song is a vignette of a small-town America forever preserved in an endless moment. There are echoes of Tom Petty in the chug of ‘Death Car’, of Neil Young in the knowingly throwaway lines scattered throughout: ‘You’re making passes like some football star/I’m turning over like a racecar’. The album at times verges on sentimentality- no, scratch that, it’s an unashamedly sentimental album, but one which cannily folds in a good dollop of experimental attitude to counterbalance what might otherwise be a little *too* sweet.

And more importantly than that, each and every song is just a great great song.

And here is one of them: Karmic Episodes

Wednesday 9 May 2007

Alasdair Roberts- 'The Crook Of My Arm'


It’s fitting to start this blog with a record that pretty much embodies everything I want to write about- a record of limpid beauty which has somehow managed to fall between the two stools it should occupy like thrones, leaving Roberts a virtual unknown in both the indie-rock and folk communities.

‘The Crook of My Arm’, in my opinion his best record, is a collection of traditional ballads, mainly dealing with the theme of love: gained, lost and spurned, and performed by Roberts alone, accompanied only by his acoustic guitar.

If you’re like me your patience for a lot of performers of traditional song is limited- because of the distance in time and lifestyle between the subject matter and the performance it can easily lapse into twee medieval syrup. To be any more than museum pieces the songs need interpreting in such a way as to drive straight to the universal human heart of the material- and to this end Roberts' understated, pure delivery couldn't be more effective.

Of course, if you're the kind of person who thinks realness means the singer has to have 'been there and done that' you're looking in the wrong place. Roberts isn't a 17th-century shepherdess, or indeed any of the other characters who inhabit this album- but then Johnny Cash never shot a man in Reno.

But of course that's not the point- the point is that when you hear a song like 'Lowlands', you hear real love, and real loss, channeled over the centuries, through the speakers, into your heart.