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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, 2013 - December 31, 2013

Saturday
Dec212013

2013: the compilation

The Eden On The Line electoral college has finally sent its voters home and locked the doors behind them. The annual ritual has drawn to a close with the production of a mixtape featuring 25 of my favourite tracks released in the last twelve months.

This year's line-up looks like this:

  1. Calico County - Steve Earle & The Dukes (& Duchesses)
  2. KV Crimes - Kurt Vile
  3. Da Bourgeoisie - Prince
  4. Ohm - Yo La Tengo
  5. New American Standard - Wussy
  6. Gator's Gym Girl - Braden Gates
  7. Criminology - Tom Russell & The Norwegian Wind Ensemble
  8. The Blues Dharma - Harry Manx
  9. Over - Gum
  10. Burnin' Sun - Jaron Freeman-Fox & The Opposite Of Everything
  11. The Enemy - Roy Harper
  12. Valentine's Day - David Bowie
  13. Goner - Golden Gunn
  14. Where Can I Go? - Laura Marling
  15. Everything Is Not Enough - Del Barber
  16. The Betsey Trotwood - The Coal Porters
  17. Great Lakes - John Smith
  18. Lurker - Steve Gunn
  19. Handyman Blues - Billy Bragg
  20. Why You So Sad - Ahab
  21. I've Got A Name For The Newborn Child - Hiss Golden Messenger
  22. Little Rose - The Black Twig Pickers
  23. Weed And Wine - Promised Land Sound
  24. Embers - Tunng
  25. The Sing - Bill Callahan 

And it sounds rather good...

 

Friday
Dec202013

Gum in late bid for 2013 glory

Just as the lists have been written and the year's best-of compilation is in preparation, Gum's latest 7" ('Sinking' b/w 'Over') thuds onto the doormat, a mere two and a half months after its advertised release date...

It's lush and lovely and layered; a good step forward, ahead of the album the band are now recording. 'Over' makes an intriguing break into Cocteau Twins territory and I am sure there are further developments to come.

Give the single a try on Bandcamp here and see if you're swept away too.

Thursday
Dec192013

Great video, good cause

Another unbiased Eden On The Line recommendation for this festive offering from the creative genius behind Secret Sessions.

Not quite a music video, but it is a video with music in it, so fully within our terms of reference here...

Wednesday
Dec182013

2013: the gigs of the year

Another tremendous year for live music. I was lucky enough to get to about 25 different gigs, as well as two festivals in Canada and the Great Escape here in Brighton. I held off finalising this list until I'd caught Kurt Vile last night, to round off the year.

As usual, it's difficult to weigh big concerts by established greats with an audience in thousands against some young whippersnapper - like Braden Gates here - playing to tens of people in a bar.

But I'll try – and here we go:

5. Roy Harper - Royal Festival Hall, London, 22 October

Reviewed here. 38 years since I last saw him and both the voice and the songwriting skills are remarkably intact. The best bits were magical. Power and sweetness and (generally achieved) ambition, with some trademark off-the-wall moments.

4. Leonard Cohen - Brighton Centre, 28 August

Reviewed here. Leonard's late, late, Indian summer is simply phenomenal: a wonderful band, beautiful singing, the two-way flow of love and respect between the singer and his audience. The irony is that, while he might not have been born with the gift of a golden voice, he has certainly acquired one, as well as creating one of the all-time great songbooks for it to roam through.

3. Neil Young & Crazy Horse - O2, London, 17 June

Reviewed here. Lovely to see him back with the Horse - and to get up close to do so. The staging was inventive and the sound superb. Living and audible proof that there need be nothing even faintly ridiculous in sexagenarians rocking out with electric guitars. Which has to be a good thing to know...

2. Van Morrison - Europa Hotel, Belfast, 16 March

Reviewed here. Van at close quarters in his home town, and happy to be there. He sang beautifully, his band were excellent: a very special gig.

1. Braden Gates - Miners Union Hall, Canmore, 3 August

Why's he number one, then? A 21 year old who's just released his first album beating some of the very best writers and performers ever?

You can see my reaction at the time here. It was one of those experiences which get better and more memorable on reflection. The key difference is that I knew what Roy, Len, Neil and Van were capable of before I went to see them; I was word perfect on quite a few of the songs they played. They deserve to be on this list because they more than lived up to my expectations.

But with Braden, I had no expectations. I'd never heard of him. We'd escaped from the (dry) main festival site in Canmore to have a drink at an ad hoc bar without much thought as to whether the music we'd hear there would be any good. Which meant that it was a wonderful and truly memorable experience to be smacked round the ears by a naturally confident performer who plays fine fiddle and decent guitar, writes well and covers with taste and verve.

Who knows where his career will go? He's got the talent to do very well and it's going to be fascinating to watch what happens, having chanced upon this view at the ground floor.

For the second year running, Bruce Springsteen misses out despite playing one of his usual phenomenal sets: Wembley is just too big and they hadn't sorted out the sound properly.

Just bubbling under my top five are a sizeable list including Lisa Hannigan, Del Barber, Billy Bragg, Michael Chapman, Dave Alvin, Hiss Golden Messenger, Tom Russell and Yo La Tengo. Beat that if you can, 2014...

Wednesday
Dec182013

Kurt Vile

Just back from seeing Kurt Vile at the Concorde on Brighton's seafront.

A good show. He did his thing very well - without persuading me of anything new.

Nice guitar textures, with crunch and chime. Interesting chord progressions and some good picking. A lack of really killer songs. Far too much echo on the attractively mannered vocals, making much indecipherable. (He'd ambled on clutching a bottle of Jägermeister, but didn't obviously make use of it, so I don't think that was the issue.)

He was able to carry off a solo three song sequence with aplomb, before the the Violators came back on for a finale that has left my ears ringing.

So, no cigar - and, actually, not that close, given the strength of this year's competition. The gigs of the year announcement - which I know you've been aching for - will follow in the morning.