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Previous Journal Entries

"The cords of all link back...strandentwining cable...

"Hello...put me on to Edenville... aleph, alpha: nought, nought, one"

Entries from December 1, 2010 - December 31, 2010

Friday
Dec242010

Christmas records

And where are the recommendations for Christmas records, I hear you asking? This year's festive treat has to be Wooden Shjips' 12" (in appropriate green or red vinyl) of 'O Tannenbaum' and 'Auld Lang Syne' - so you can keep playing it through till January. Their usual chugging stoner groove - lovely stuff.

The traditional record in our house to accompany tree decoration, present wrapping, etc is a Ze Records compilation from 1982

which includes The Waitresses' wonderful "Christmas Wrapping" alongside the much more obscure, but equally wonderful, 'It's a Big Country' by Davitt Sigerson. Worth hunting down if you're not allergic to tear-jerkers...

And to listen to at dinner time, Carla Bley's Carla's Chrismas Carols - quirky jazz that won't frighten jazz-hating horses...

Have a good one.

Monday
Dec202010

Stephanie & Chuck

The excellent BTV session from Stephanie Finch and Chuck Prophet that I saw being recorded is now available here. Great stuff.

Thursday
Dec162010

2010: the compilation

Here's the track listing for my mix CD for the year. Rules: released in some format this year, not so bizarre as totally to disconcert the casual listener, editable down to fit in with twenty four others. Oh, and excellence of course...

1. Meditation Song #2 (Why Oh Why) - Cloud Control (Bliss Release)
2. Zorbing - Stornoway (Beachcomber's Windowsill)
3. Beautifully Broken - Jon Dee Graham & The Fighting Cocks (It's Not As Bad As It Looks)
4. United Provinces of India – Cornershop (The Battle Of New Orleans EP)
5. She Just Likes To Fight - Four Tet (There Is Love In You
6. Horchata - Vampire Weekend (Contra)
7. Bright Lit Blue Skies - Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti (Before Today)
8. The Sweet Part of the City - The Hold Steady (Heaven is Whenever)
9. Losing My Patients - Shit Robot (From The Cradle To The Rave)
10. Bad Luck Boy - Liz Green  (Crow Cries EP)
11. Sickie Boy - Robyn Hitchcock & The Venus 3 (Propellor Time)
12. Someone's Gonna Rescue You - Neil Young (Le Noise)
13. What's New? - Wyatt, Atzmon, Stephen (For The Ghosts Within)
14. Six Toes – Brasstronaut (Mt. Chimaera)
15. House of Cards - Robert Plant (Band of Joy)
16. The Visitor - Portico Quartet (Isla)
17. Sashimi – Tunng (...And Then We Saw Land)
18. Rambling Man - Laura Marling (I Speak Because I Can)
19. (Bit Part) - The Wooden Sky (If I Don't Come Home, You'll Know I'm Gone)
20. Heirloom - Sufjan Stevens (All Delighted People EP)
21. For Everyman [Live] - Jackson Browne & David Lindley (Love Is Strange)
22. New Year's Eve's The Loneliest Night Of The Year -Trembling Bells with Bonnie 'Prince' Billy (Single)
23. Returnal - Oneohtrix Point Never (Returnal)
24. Silence of a Moonlit Sky - Cocos Lovers (Johannes)
25. I've Seen It Go Away - Merle Haggard (I Am What I Am)

If you'd like a copy, and Santa doesn't bring you one, let me know...

Sunday
Dec122010

2010: the records of the year

I know these lists are arbitrary and subjective and annoying...but good fun to do and a good opportunity to remind yourself what you've been buying and listening to over the last twelve months.

When I've put end-of-year compilations together in the past I've tended to mix in some older tracks that I've been listening to a lot, but there's certainly no need for such ballast in 2010. Even the first official releases of some great older stuff - Dylan's Witmark Demos, Springsteen's The Promise, Johnny Cash's Ain't No Grave - haven't been able to get a look in. Twenty five different artists squeezed onto my compilation and, narrowing the field further, here's the top ten:

10. Isla - Portico Quartet. I hadn't heard them before seeing them support Anouar Brahem in the Brighton Festival and bought the CD at the concert: inventive and immersive jazz, horns twining round the distinctive tones of the hang drums.

9. Love is Strange - Jackson Browne and David Lindley. Gorgeous live versions of many of Jackson's greatest songs with his finest accompanist and a range of Spanish guests adding complementary textures.

8. Bliss Release - Cloud Control. An unexpected joy: a blast of fresh air from an Antipodean Airplane. Thanks for the introduction BTV!

7. If I Don't Come Home, You'll Know I'm Gone - Wooden Sky. A fine young Canadian band I first heard at last year's Edmonton Folk Festival. Great songs - and bonus points for releasing on vinyl with a lovely gatefold sleeve.

6. Band of Joy - Robert Plant. Beautifully sung, inventively arranged, impeccable and eclectic song choices. Great stuff from an iconic singer.

5. For the Ghosts Within - Wyatt, Atzmon, Stephen. Robert Wyatt is another musical hero who refuses to trade on past glories and is always looking for something different: a fascinating collaboration with sax and strings, ending with a glorious cover of 'What a Wonderful World'.

4. Le Noise - Neil Young. The third of a trio of old buffaloes still  thundering across the prairie and raising dust...

3. I Speak Because I Can - Laura Marling. Moving back to the young turks...she can certainly sing as well as speak, and writes beautifully. A remarkably mature second album. Try also to hear the Dharohar Project EP she and Mumford & Sons made with a group of Indian musicians.

2. It's Not As Bad As It Looks - Jon Dee Graham & The Fighting Cocks. Chiming guitar rock from Austin, Texas with lived-in vocals and great songs from a former member of Alejandro Escovedo's band. Makes me smile every time I hear it, which has to be worth something.

1. ...And Then We Saw Land - Tunng. The band who've given me the most listening pleasure this year - not only with this, their fourth and beefier-sounding album, but getting to know the first three and seeing them at the Hop Farm. A winning combination of melody, racket and off-the-wall eccentricity.

What do you think? How does your list compare?

Tuesday
Dec072010

2010: the gigs of the year

If you’re going to run a site like this, some sort of end of year round-up is pretty much mandatory. I’m going to hold off from finalising a recorded music top ten (and a 2010 mix CD) because I keep hearing new stuff – today’s tip, check out a great seasonal single from Trembling Bells and Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy called ‘New Year's Eve's the Loneliest Night of the Year’. 

 But I’m not currently due to go to any more gigs in 2010, so let’s start with…

…the five best concerts I have been to this year. 

Totting up, I’ve been to twenty in all - so a pretty good crop and some great nights amongst them. Of course this is bound to be an even more subjective and unmoderated exercise than writing about records: the target number is smaller; they just happen to be the ones I got to go to; what makes them great is a combination of music, performance, place, your feelings, etc; and you can’t play them again if you didn’t quite catch something first time round. So, with all that said, my top five countdown:

5. Bob Dylan, Tunng, Laura Marling et al – Hop Farm Festival, Kent, 3 July 

 I’m normally reluctant to go to big festivals, preferring to see performers up close where you can check up on the whites of their eyes and what they’re doing with the fingers. But sometimes you have to make exceptions, like Hard Rock Calling in Hyde Park last year for Bruce Springsteen and Neil Young, and Bob Dylan this year at the Hop Farm, with a fine supporting cast.

I hesitate to say much about watching Dylan live: most things you read are ludicrously black and white – either he’s a pitiful parody of his lost talent, stumbling unrecognisably through his back catalogue; or he can’t take a step wrong and those who don’t appreciate every fumble don’t deserve to follow the Zen master. For me, he’s the towering figure of popular music in the last fifty years: unapproachable as a songwriter and with few peers as an interpreter, able to sell a song that he likes (whether his or someone else’s) as effectively and distinctively as anyone.

And yet…I can’t pretend, as some do, that he’s as good now as he ever was. He’s found an effective and viable way of writing and performing as an older man (he’ll be seventy next May – just wait for the media blitz) which is no faint praise. But I’d have bitten your hand off if you’d offered to swap my Hop Farm ticket for a time machine trip to see him with the Hawks in 1966, or the Rolling Thunder Revue in 1975, or the glorious gospel shows in 1980 (bizarrely still awaiting the Genuine Bootleg Series treatment from Sony), or [insert your own favourite period here]. I first saw him at Wembley in 1987 when he was hauling himself out of his most dodgy period artistically. (But that was still a period in which he’d managed to come up with ‘Brownsville Girl’ and ‘Blind Willie McTell’, neither of which he played – OF COURSE…) He’s never perfect, never boring, always comes up with something you weren’t expecting. So I’ll keep going to see him whenever I get the opportunity.

A great supporting bill sealed the deal. Laura Marling’s was my favourite performance on the main stage. But best of all was getting up close to the wonderful Tunng on the second stage: a quirky blend of folk and electronics with some great tunes and a real energy about them. 

4. Robert Plant & the Band of Joy – Roundhouse, London, 29 October

I’ve already posted about this Electric Proms concert here. It was beautifully done – by another old rocker who has found his own way of aging credibly and interestingly, in his case by keeping his ears open and being ready to go where they take him…

3. Liz Green, Two Wings, Eaten by Children, et al – On Margate Sounds, Tom Thumb Theatre, 29 August

Another one that I’ve already written about here. This gets its place on musical merit – really great stuff from the three mentioned above in particular – as well as family connections, an incomparable venue and general good fun.

2. Time Jumpers – Station Inn, Nashville, 31 May

You might have expected my first trip to Tennessee to produce some fine musical memories. This was the bonus, not planned in advance. And what a bonus…

The Station Inn is a windowless shack with a basic stage and long, communal tables. You can’t book; they sell beer, pizza and popcorn, and that’s about it. The Time Jumpers have a long-standing Monday night residency and are something of a local legend. They play Western Swing – a sort of cross between country and big band jazz – and include a lot of very experienced and very able Nashville session-men. They were a ten-piece on the night we saw them (three – count ‘em – fiddles, accordion, pedal steel, two guitars, bass, drums and vocal), but brought also up a very young guest fiddler, Eli Bishop. (His Myspace page here has a video clip with the Time Jumpers.)

It’s not my favourite style of music, but the skill, warmth and generosity of their playing – and the sheer Nashville-ness of the occasion – were impossible to resist.

1. Neil Young and Bert Jansch – Ryman Auditorium, Nashville, 1 June

So, on to the main event. I’ve written about Neil Young’s performance in reviewing his Le Noise album. It was a shame that Neil and Bert didn’t do anything together, but otherwise, no disappointments for me in the evening. 

Seeing Pinky and Perky at the Ryman would be good enough – the wooden pews and fine acoustics of the former home of the Grand Old Opry make a wonderfully intimate and generally resonant setting to see anyone. Add in one of the finest guitarists and singers in the British folk tradition for an opener and a solo Neil. Irresistible.

Bert was surprisingly nervous – and the Ryman crowd annoyingly talkative – but he won through with a fine set, including my all-time favourite of his, ‘Blackwaterside’.

So that’s my top five – and I’m reminded what a great year of music it’s been when I see what didn’t quite make the cut, including Stornoway, Jackson Browne & David Lindley, Alejandro Escovedo, spine-tingling singing from mezzo soprano Chloe Maloney, and a superb Brian Eno-curated Brighton Festival, where, as well as the man himself, I saw fine stuff from The Necks, the Philip Glass Ensemble, Portico Quartet and Anouar Brahem.