Thursday, 31 December 2009

My Favourite Albums Of 2009

10. Ryan Bingham - Roadhouse Blues
Ryan Bingham sounds so much older than his 28 years. His voice has that raspiness and world weariness associated with the best blues and country singers. He also produces some of the best Americana music around today. Produced by The Black Crowes' Marc Ford, it's rootsy, honest and rocking and a definite step-up from his excellent debut Mescalito. Plus it's hard not to love an artist with song titles like Dylan's Hard Rain and Tell My Mother I Miss Her So. I find something new in this everytime I listen.

9. Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears -
Tell 'Em What Your Name Is!

Mixing the old school soul with garage rock, Black Joe Lewis' album has to be one of my big surprises of the year: I just could not stop playing it. Sure the songs were sexist and silly, filled with the sort of lyrics normally found on a hip hop record praising "big booty women" and complaining girlfriends, but it's done with such humour you instantly forgive it and the music has such raw passion, reminding you of the very best Stax bands and James Brown at his craziest, that there was more joy and pure rock n' roll in this little album than most rock records. Plus, unlike those, you'll want to dance to this one.

8. The Decemberists - The Hazards Of Love
It's true The Decemberists have always had a thing about concept albums but they haven't pulled one off as successfully, I think. In fact, although I've always liked The Decemberists, it wasn't until The Hazards Of Love that I was finally understood all the love people have for them. When I first got this album I just played it over and over. It's like a huge, operatic play based on strange myths and dark fairytales. Although I'd have a hard time telling the story to you, something about a woman and a shape-shifting forest dweller and an evil queen, it doesn't really matter because the music, which moves seamlessly from one song to the next, is magnificent: folk, pop and even heavy metal, it utilises them all. But best of all is guest singer Shara Worden from My Brightest Diamond as the evil forest queen, particularly on the song Repaid which has to be the most thrilling, amazing vocal I've heard all year.

7. Valley Lodge - Semester At Sea

Apparently Valley Lodge is the band of a New York comedian called Dave Hill, who I had never heard of until I accidentally discovered this album on Spotify. Although it turns out Hill is a very, very funny man, so I can understand why he keeps his successful career as a comedian as his main job, I have to admit I love the pure power pop joy of his musical side-project more (whose first album was unsurprisingly much loved in Japan - they love good power pop over there!). Think Cheap Trick meets The Raspberries and you get the idea: great rousing choruses backed with crunchy glam rock riffs. More old school than The New Pornographers, Valley Lodge are the best power pop band I've heard in ages.

6. St. Vincent - Actor

I have lots of female artists in my list this year for some reason but I think it really has been a great year for female musicians and every one is strikingly different. Not least Annie Clark aka St. Vincent, a brilliant guitarist with a gorgeous, pure, grand almost, voice and songs filled with strange sounds that go off into unexpected places, leaping from graceful pop to abrasive rock without a moment's notice. She manages to carry this trick over to her live shows with even greater success too. It's also a treat to hear an album that sounds pretty yet sinister and intelligent and doesn't forget to rock out on occasion too.

5. Bat For Lashes - Two Suns
So I'm sure this album is probably on lots of end of year lists but I have to follow the crowd with this one and include it because it really is a stunningly beautiful and ethereal record. Less folky and more beat-based than the first album it's filled with the best British eccentricity that made the likes of Bowie and Kate Bush (with whom she is often, justifiably, compared) so great, from alter-egos named Pearl to the whole thing being a concept album about "dual personalities" and other spiritual and metaphysical ponderings. But really it's the music that's a stand-out: graceful, sensual, sophisticated but still pure pop, albeit of the smarter variety, it's hard not to fall under Natasha Khan's spell.

4. Neko Case - Middle Cyclone
First of all, Neko on the cover kneeling on top of a cool 70s car brandishing a sword looking like a mighty flame-haired warrior princess? Easily the cover of the year, without a doubt and luckily the music was just as awesome. Middle Cyclone saw Neko embracing her more pop sensibilities (as seen with her fantastic first single from the album, People Got A Lot Of Nerve) and veering slightly away from the sultry, country noir of her previous two albums. But what it lacked in smokey atmosphere and strange, folk stories it made up with the pure quality of the songs and in some ways it seems to be Neko's most honest and auto-biographical album to date. I can't wait to see what she does next.

3. The F
laming Lips - Embryonic
Although The Flaming Lips have enjoyed their greatest successes, critically and commercially with their last three synth-filled albums, I have to admit what I yearned for was a return to the crazy weird guitar days of old and I got even more than that with Embryonic. More a child of their insanely brilliant experimental Zaireeka (an album you needed four CD players to listen to) than the offbeat grungy noise of their early 90s albums, this was happily on one CD this time but contained the same Krautrock-style grooves, psychedelic noises and spaced-out lyrics, and then some. Everything I love about The Flaming Lips in fact.

2. Alela Diane - To Be Still
I can imagine that those enamoured with the stark, spacey, sparse sound of Alela Diane's debut album, The Pirate's Gospel, may have been disappointed by her move to the fuller, more fleshed out music on her follow-up, To Be Still, but I absolutely fell head over heels for it. After touring for a couple of years behind her first album, To Be Still sees her vocals more assured and daring and the music moving to a more Laurel Canyon meets country feel, her guitar this time backed by drums, violin, banjo and cello. The gorgeous myth and nature-inspired lyrics are still present though making up a truly beautiful record that I never get tired of hearing.

1. Alessi's Ark - Notes From The Treehouse

This year has been all about Alessi's Ark for me. I first listened to her as 2009 broke, knowing absolutely nothing about this mysterious West London girl other than a reference to Rilo Kiley and Graham Nash (one of her favourite bands and her first album, respectively) and liking the sound of that combination discovered something completely unique and unlike those two artists. It's a folk record but a shimmering, magical one full of bedtime stories and wonderful little worlds to escape into with tales of magic weather, kite flying, birds and trips to the library. On one hand it was surprising to learn that she was a mere 18 years old because the music is so epic, beautiful and sophisticated, but on the other hand it's no surprise at all because it's also full of innocence and child-like charm. This is a lovely record, there's really no other word for it: Alessi is just lovely and she made the best, loveliest album of 2009 in my humble opinion.

Tuesday, 29 December 2009

Best & Worst Gigs Of 2009

I learned many lessons from all the concerts I attended this year, important things such as: Bob Dylan fans are grumpy, selfish and have short attention spans but Pearl Jam fans are kind, cool and generally awesome; The Troxy is the worst venue in London unless The Flaming Lips are throwing confetti around the place; Steve Martin is an amazing musician and even more surprising, still very funny; M. Ward really doesn't like cameras; Fleetwood Mac security for the front row is really strict at their shows but the guards can be worn down if you're persistent and appeal to their better nature; going to gigs really sucks when you are ill and, finally, Roger Daltrey of The Who is one of the nicest guys in the whole world. And with that, here are my favourite gigs of the past year. Click on the titles to bring you to my original review of each show.

The Best
1. The Mars Volta at the ICA

2. Neil Young at Hyde Park

3. Crosby, Stills & Nash at the Royal Albert Hall

4. Pearl Jam at Shepherd's Bush Empire

5. Faith No More at Brixton Academy

6. M. Ward at The Borderline

7. Steve Martin at the Royal Festival Hall

8. Fleetwood Mac at Wembley Arena

9. Wilco at The Forum

10. Neko Case at Bush Hall

The Worst
1. Monsters Of Folk at Troxy
2. Bob Dylan at the O2

Tuesday, 15 December 2009

The Mars Volta at The Forum


The Mars Volta
The Forum, 14 December 2009
You know how in the movies when someone goes to a rock concert they never queue up or stand there waiting for the opening act to finish, they just walk right in to a prime spot as the main act is playing? The only time that’s (almost) happened to me was last year in New York when I went to see the Drive-by Truckers. We walked up, bought our tickets and excitedly arrived in the venue as the Truckers were rocking the stage. It was a pretty magical moment.

Thursday, 10 December 2009

Alessi's Christmas Crackers at The Luminaire

Alessi's Ark
Treetop Flyers

Jake Bellows

The Luminaire, 10 December 2009

Alessi is easily my favourite discovery of the year. There’s something kind of magical and unique about the little world she creates through her songs and drawings. It’s no wonder then that a cool little scene seems to be building up around her, much like the Saddle Creek scene she aspired to when she began writing songs. Some of these fellow artists she gathered together for a special Christmas concert, a cool little mini festival of sorts featuring comedians, bands and Christmas tunes all tied together by Alessi’s sweetly endearing personality.

Friday, 20 November 2009

The Decemberists at The Coronet

 
The Decemberists
The Coronet, 19 December 2009

After the disappointment of the Monsters Of Folk show, with the awful venue, overbearing security and general unfriendliness towards the audience, I was feeling a bit disillusioned by the whole gig-going experience and was so reluctant to shuffle up and see the next show on my schedule, The Decemberists at yet another old cinema-turned-venue, I even missed the support act, Emmy The Great, a girl I would have actually really liked to have seen any other day (apparently, so I'm told, she had problems with the sound during her set, so it wasn't her best performance and I didn't miss much on this particular night).

Tuesday, 17 November 2009

Monsters Of Folk at Troxy

Photo from Gigwise
Monsters Of Folk
Troxy, 17 November 2009
The guys in Monsters Of Folk, particularly Bright Eyes' Conor Oberst, inspire an almost fanatical, blind devotion, maybe that's why I haven't heard a bad word said about their mammoth live show but for me I was a little underwhelmed by it all.

Friday, 13 November 2009

Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears at the Garage

Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears
The Garage, 13 November 2009
Anyone fed up with how smooth and sampled soul music has become will find Black Joe Lewis and his awesome band The Honeybears a welcome change. Harking back to the raw passion of the very best Stax bands, they're probably best described as James Brown meets garage rock, and it's impossible not to want to dance and to be totally rocked at the same time.

Tuesday, 10 November 2009

The Flaming Lips at Troxy

The Flaming Lips
Stardeath And White Dwarfs
Cymbals Eat
Guitars
Troxy, 10 November 2009
The morning after seeing The Flaming Lips at the Troxy I picked up my coat and a few handfuls of confetti floated to the floor. That stuff really does get everywhere. In fact after the show the floor of the Troxy (which I liked much more this time around) was completely obscured by the stuff, so much had fallen on us throughout the concert. It was like a carpet of party leftovers: piles of coloured confetti, burst balloons and streamers. But then each Flaming Lips show really is like a huge kids' party (but with way better music, oh and naked girl images on the screen). Even if you've been to their shows before, they are still the most unique concerts you'll ever go to and even the most miserable music fan can't fail to leave without a big grin on their face, it's that much fun.

Monday, 9 November 2009

Steve Martin at the Royal Festival Hall

Steve Martin and The Steep Canyon Rangers
Mary Black
Royal Festival Hall, 9 November 2009

On paper the idea of a Hollywood comedian indulging in a spot of serious banjo-playing sounds more curious than entertaining but in this case the comedian in question is an absolutely superb banjo player who has just released the best banjo album of the year, full of bluegrass tunes he wrote himself. Add to that the fact that he's been playing with the first-rate bluegrass band, North Carolina's The Steep Canyon Rangers (who have to be some of the finest musicians I've ever witnessed), then what you have is a pretty damn good show. And that's not even taking into account that on stage (between songs) Steve Martin is still one hell of a funny guy.

Friday, 6 November 2009

Fleetwood Mac at Wembley

Fleetwood Mac
Wembley Arena, 6 November 2009
For my third Fleetwood Mac concert in a week I was expecting more of the same, and while the set list didn't change, the final show of the European tour took me by surprise because it was really something magical.

Wednesday, 4 November 2009

Wilco at The Forum

Wilco
The Forum, 4 November 2009
A few years ago I saw Placebo play the Reading Festival where they had the misfortune of their bass amp breaking down mid set. It was a painfully boring set anyway, I had seen them years earlier where they seemed more in their element playing small venues, but on the huge stage they lacked the charisma to fill it and the situation was made even worse when their equipment failed. But rather than adapting and making the best out of a bad situation by maybe talking to the crowd while the problem was fixed, or singer Brian Molko performing something unplanned by himself, the band, without a word to the audience, walked off the stage and left the thousands in the packed audience just standing in the mud with no music or entertainment for 15 minutes, waiting for them to return. When they finally came back they resumed their set without a word and I completely lost any respect I had for them as a live band. A simple problem had left them flustered and unable to stray from what they had rehearsed and even communicate with the audience. But last night at the Forum, Wilco, and Jeff Tweedy in particular, proved what an incredible band they are by facing a similar situation and coming up triumphant.

Sunday, 1 November 2009

Two nights of Fleetwood Mac at Wembley

Photo by Suzy Vermoesen
Fleetwood Mac
Wembley Arena, 30 & 31 October 2009
When I was 14 my Dad took me to see Stevie Nicks as a birthday present. I was madly obsessed with her and Fleetwood Mac at the time and even though our seats were terrible, and by all accounts it was one of her least impressive tours voice- and energy-wise, it was a magical evening for me and started what would be a lifelong passion for music, concerts and, of course, anything Fleetwood Mac.

Tuesday, 27 October 2009

Portugal. The Man at Hoxton Bar & Grill

Portugal. The Man
Hoxton Bar & Grill, 27 October 2009

So tonight I decided on the man I want to marry: Portugal. The Man. Except it's not a man, it's a band (although we could adapt the vows to say "do you take this band?"). Sadly though, aside from legal concerns, it's a one-sided romance and my newfound unrequited love for them only occurred midway during their gig at the tiny Hoxton Bar & Grill (which lived up to the grill part of its name tonight, as it was horribly, swelteringly hot inside) as admittedly before tonight I only owned a couple of their albums and didn't even know what they looked like (I even had to look up the singer's name to write this). It was probably during the middle of one of my favourite tracks of theirs, Church Mouth, a mammoth rocking beast of a number, that midway broke down and went into a tender, whispery version of the Harry Nilsson song One (Is The Loneliest Number). Rocking but sensitive, and with a sense of humour too. Does it get any better?

Sunday, 25 October 2009

More barn!


A quote from Graham Nash from Jimmy McDonough's superb Neil Young biography Shakey: “I’m down at the ranch and Neil goes, ‘Hey Willy, wanna hear something?’ So we go down to the lake and row out to the middle in this rowboat and I think, ‘Jesus Christ, this guy’s been a fuckin’ mystery to me all my life - if he wants to talk to me privately, surely there’s more places to do it than in the middle of a fucking lake in a rowboat.’ What he’d done is he’d wired his house as the left speaker and his entire barn as the right speaker, and they played Harvest. And at the end of it Elliot Mazer comes down to the shore of the lake and goes, ‘Neil, how is it?’ Neil turns around and shouts, ‘More barn!’”

Saturday, 24 October 2009

Sonic Youth at The Forum


Sonic Youth
Hush Arbors
 
The Forum, 23 October 2009
Every time I've seen Sonic Youth (about four times in total) they've had a weird-ass support act, from Japanese noise bands to the free-form jazz band whose drummer attacked a heckling audience member. In contrast to these, Hush Arbors were pretty straight ahead and ordinary. I had seen them before doing an acoustic set supporting Vetiver earlier this year, and they were a pleasant listen, full of folky harmonies and sweet melodies. I did wonder how they would fit with Sonic Youth but it turns out that with their instruments plugged in they supplement the folky harmonies with fuzzed-up guitars and sounded more rocked up and interesting than I remembered them.

Thursday, 22 October 2009

The Felice Brothers at the Empire

The Felice Brothers
A.A. Bondy
Shepherd's Bush Empire, 22 October 2009
Well, I'm glad I got to see Mr Bondy perform in a small club last night because supporting his friends The Felice Brothers, like a lot of support acts, he had to contend with an audience more interested in chatting to each other and drinking beer. Still, he was an old pro, once again backed by just a bass and drums, he sweetly sang There's A Reason and turned up the amps for a rocking Killed Myself When I Was Young and finally borrowed The Felice Brothers' violin player for a rollicking When The Devil's Loose. Those chatting audience members don't know what a good thing they missed.

Wednesday, 21 October 2009

A.A. Bondy at The Social


A.A. Bondy
The Social, 21 October 2009
Just got back from seeing A.A. Bondy at the tiny club The Social (sorry for the rubbish photo btw!) and I thought I'd quickly write something about it since I'm seeing him again tomorrow with The Felice Brothers.

Thursday, 15 October 2009

Happy birthday Tusk!

Fleetwood Mac's legendary double album Tusk was first released on this day, October 15, back in 1979. Thirty years on it still sounds as good if not better and it's still my favourite ever album. At the time it was considered something of a flop (having only sold a few million compared with the massive selling Rumours, once the biggest selling album in the world) and Lindsey Buckingham's folly for daring to experiment with the band's signature sound. But in the years since it's become hugely influential (it was even covered in its entirety by cult band Camper Van Beethoven) and many now consider it to be their best album, me included. Over the years it's come to mean a lot to me and I love it all from Lindsey's weird and punky hillbilly stomps to Christine's soft, moody and sensual lullabies to Stevie Nicks' dreamy, spaced-out tales of lost love, I really do believe it to be a work of true genius and I wanted to recognise the day that Tusk was first unleashed onto the public. So Happy Birthday Tusk!

Wednesday, 14 October 2009

Saturday, 10 October 2009

The Pixies at Brixton Academy

 
The Pixies
Art Brut
Brixton Academy, 8 October 2009

I'm just a couple of years too young to have caught the Pixies live the first time around but I did manage to see them on their first reunion tour a few years back. Although they seemed to be on good form, played pretty much all my faves and seemed to be getting on well unfortunately it was at Alexandra Palace aka the worst venue in London.

Monday, 28 September 2009

Gig Memories: Elliott Smith at the Shepherd's Bush Empire in 1999

Elliott Smith
Shepherd's Bush Empire, 21 April 1999
Seeing Elliott Smith live back in 1999 has to be one of my most special concert-going memories. I saw him twice that year and both times were unique and beautiful but the headlining show at the Shepherd’s Bush Empire was, looking back, so filled with classic songs performed with such joy and heart, that it was pretty special.

Saturday, 26 September 2009

The Possum

I can't think of many rock legends that are as rock and roll as George Jones. Not that you'd know it on first listen to his music: a smooth, sensitive balladeer washed in the Nashville sound, singing songs about love gone wrong. But listen a little bit closer and you'll hear the heartbreak, the pure sadness in the voice, the I'm-trying-to-kill-my-sorrows-in-this-bottle-of-whiskey desperation, because nobody feels it like George Jones, or at least sounds like he feels it. If you can listen to He Stopped Loving Her Today, a song that appears to be about a jilted lover but slowly reveals itself as a song about death, and not be moved then Hank Williams said it best, you have a cold, cold heart. There's a reason Gram Parsons and Keith Richards worshipped Jones and Elliott Smith once described his idea of heaven as a place where "George Jones is played all the time".

Wednesday, 23 September 2009

Elvis Perkins at Scala

Elvis Perkins
Dawn Landes
Scala, 22 September 2009
Dawn Landes bounds onto the stage with a huge grin on her face. Wearing a high-neck Victorian blouse, orange 70s-style cords and a ponytail, she almost looks like a kids' TV presenter and is considerably cuter than photos I had seen of her. Running behind the keyboard and beginning a bouncy number called Young Girl, immediately it became apparent that this was going to be a performance filled with fun and it was a refreshing, happy change from all the maudlin female singer-songwriters that seem to be dominating the scene at the moment.

Friday, 18 September 2009

Alela Diane at Shepherd's Bush Empire

Alela Diane
The Leisure Society
Laura Gibson
Shepherd's Bush Empire, 17 September 2009
Last weekend it was the End Of The Road festival, a country-friendly event that meant plenty of cool Americana and folk acts were over in the UK at the same time and most used their time in the UK wisely by playing some shows over here once the festival has finished. This was great for those of us who didn't get to go the festival except it meant that on one day in particular, Thursday 17 Sept, there was a lot of acts with similar audiences all playing the same night. The big three for me were Alela Diane, who released one of my favourite albums this year, the always superb Richmond Fontaine who I had been eager to see again and my beloved Neko Case, who, if she had announced her show first, would have no doubt taken priority for me. If they had been playing different nights I would have gone to them all but alas a decision had to be made and since Alela's show had been announced first and I already had tickets she won out, and I have to say I'm pretty glad she did because the show was superb.

Saturday, 12 September 2009

The amazing Kate Wolf

After getting married and having two kids, Kate Wolf only decided to become a musician in her 30s when she realised that life as a housewife wasn't for her: she was far too talented and had too many songs to share with the world. In order to pursue this goal she worked as a disc jockey and organised music festivals.

Thursday, 3 September 2009

Magnolia Electric Co. at Bush Hall

Magnolia Electric Co.
The Bitter Tears
Bush Hall, 2 September 2009
I've seen some weird-ass support acts in my time but The Bitter Tears really take the crown. Their performance can be summed up by the response from a guy in the crowd when the singer pleadingly asked us, "What are you all feeling out there?" to which came the loud reply "FEAR!" Yep, The Bitter Tears were kinda scary, not in a Marilyn-Manson-I-love-the-Devil kind of way, but because they looked and sounded like they had just escaped from a lunatic asylum. I kid you not.

Saturday, 29 August 2009

Gig Memories: The Afghan Whigs at Reading, 1994

On the weekend of the Reading Festival, here's an unreleased track by the still oh-so-awesome Afghan Whigs played at Reading in 1994. I was there in the crowd, it was a fantastic show. I met Greg Dulli that day, who was breathtakingly handsome back then, tanned and slim and oozing sex appeal. He told me his sister's name was also Sharon and gave me a kiss on the lips. Good times indeed.

Friday, 28 August 2009

Mark Lanegan and Soulsavers at The Garage

 
Mark Lanegan and Soulsavers
The Garage, 27 August 2009
For some reason I've seen Mark Lanegan live more than any other artist but then Lanegan has to have more bands and projects he's involved in than any other artist. Other than seeing him with his own band, I've seen him sing with the Screaming Trees, Queens Of The Stone Age, The Twilight Singers, The Gutter Twins and of course Isobel Campbell. But one of my most memorable Lanegan experiences was the first time I saw him with Soulsavers.

Wednesday, 26 August 2009

Wilco at Troxy

 
Wilco
Blitzen Trapper
Troxy, 25 August 2009

Last month a friend-of-a-friend scoffed when I said I loved Wilco and their new album, told me Wilco hadn't been interesting in years. I guess I'm now in the minority thinking Wilco are still cool. Popularity = uncool to many sadly. Of course this guy hadn't seen them live in years and, in my humble opinion, the last time I saw them two years ago they were probably the best Wilco shows I'd ever seen. Whether or not you think they've "matured" or turned all "dad rock", every time I catch them live it convinces me once again they are still an incredible band and without a doubt one of the best live acts out there. And that's why I was especially excited to see them again, my seventh time no less. Plus they had a particularly cool support act lined up: Blitzen Trapper.

Monday, 24 August 2009

Thursday, 20 August 2009

Pearl Jam at O2 Arena


Pearl Jam
Gomez
O2 Arena, 18 August 2009
Going to arena shows is such an odd experience, especially when the band is attempting to pretend it's not an arena show by having the floor completely standing. Although we arrived early and managed to get practically at the barrier at the front, you turn around and there's literally thousands of people behind you. I tend to go to small shows on the whole, so I'm not used to it. It's a little claustrophobic and slightly worrying when the band starts and the fanatical, Pearl Jam-adoring crowd goes nuts and suddenly you feel that thrust of the hundreds of people surrounding you. Of course it's exciting too, that so many people are feeling that same communal excitement and joy through the music of this simple rock band: the energy of 20,000 people is something to behold, I can't even imagine what it's like for the band on stage.

Wednesday, 12 August 2009

Pearl Jam at Shepherd's Bush Empire

Photo taken from The Evening Standard's photo gallery
Pearl Jam
Shepherd's Bush Empire, 11 August 2009
One of the first gigs I ever went to was Pearl Jam back in the early 90s, just before they broke big, at the tiny ULU venue. Maybe it was my youth and concert-going inexperience, but to this day that show still holds up as one of the best I've ever been to, with the band playing so passionately and full of excitement, Jeff Ament and other members of Pearl Jam jumping into the crowd and Eddie doing his now legendary climb around the venue and landing just over our heads. The gig even ended with members of the audience jumping on stage and grabbing instruments to play along with the band.

Saturday, 8 August 2009

Mariee Sioux and Alessi's Ark at Cafe OTO

Mariee Sioux
Alessi's Ark
Rick Tomlinson
Cafe OTO, 7 August 2009

I pretty much did a little leap of joy when I saw that not only was folk chanteuse Mariee Sioux making a rare appearance in London but that she was also being supported by none other than my beloved Alessi's Ark. What a bill (along with Rick Tomlinson, who I was unfamiliar with) and at Cafe OTO, a venue in the backstreets of Hackney that I can almost imagine Bob, Joan or Joni playing back in the day.

Monday, 20 July 2009

Dulli and Lanegan at the Royal Festival Hall


An Evening With Greg Dulli & Mark Lanegan
Jimmy Gnecco
Duke Garwood
Royal Festival Hall, 19 July 2009
"I've been found out," quips a particularly well-fed-looking Greg Dulli when amid the screams for Lanegan as they walk on stage, comes a lone "Duuuuuuulllliiiiii". Appropriate really given that this show, more than any others recently, saw The Twilight Singers frontman take back the spotlight from the domineering presence of Mark Lanegan, unafraid to overshadow his deep-voiced best pal.

Friday, 17 July 2009

Just a little piece of the sky

"It's like they found one of those van Gogh's at a garage sale. This woman bought it and she was using it to block out the sun in her kitchen. She was using it as a window shade, so it was getting all faded from the sun. And she cut it because it didn't fit the window. When they finally discovered she had a van Gogh as a window shade, they brought in all these experts from the museum and they were all filling in her living room and they said, "How can you cut off the top of this painting?" And she said, "It was just a little piece of the sky." Sometimes it's the value you attach to things."

Tom Waits interviewed by Beck

Wednesday, 15 July 2009

Alessi's Ark at Tamesis Dock

Picture by Bertrand taken from Alessi's MySpace page
Alessi's Ark
Left With Pictures

Tamesis Dock, 14 July 2009
Tamesis Dock has to be one of the most unique venues I've been to. It's essentially a little barge moored near Lambeth Bridge, with a bar upstairs, a small seating area downstairs and the bands set up in the middle, so it feels almost like watching music in your living room, albeit one that is bobbing gently up and down and has a cool view of the Thames and Big Ben out of the window.

Monday, 13 July 2009

The Mars Volta at Somerset House


The Mars Volta
Somerset House, 13 July 2009
A month after their incredible gig at the tiny ICA the Volta were back in town, this time taking part in Somerset House's annual series of open air summer concerts and once again they just about blew me away.

Friday, 10 July 2009

St. Vincent at the ICA

Photo from St. Vincent's MySpace
St. Vincent
Blue Roses
ICA, 8 July 2009
Recently just about every new British female singer-songwriter that comes along sounds like they grew up listening to Kate Bush. It's a weird phenomenon considering that most of these young women are in their early 20s and Ms Bush hasn't exactly had the largest output over the last 20 years. But maybe these things need time to gestate and it's certainly a worthy testament to Kate's unique talent that her influence is finally so easy to see and that the acts she has inspired all happen to be excellent - think Bat For Lashes, Florence + The Machine, Marina & The Diamonds. The latest you can add to that list is Laura Groves aka Blue Roses, a cute-as-a-button Shipley singer whose self-titled debut is full of haunting acoustic laments that equally recall the stark beauty of Joni Mitchell's early albums, the more ethereal side of Stevie Nicks and, of course, the eerie yearnings of Kate Bush.

Wednesday, 8 July 2009

Gig memories: Here's to The Losers


I went to see St Vincent again tonight (I'll post about that later) and while joking that Annie Clark might dedicate a song to me (perhaps Actor Out Of Work?) I was reminded that I did once have a song dedicated to me at a gig years ago, something I had completely and utterly forgotten.

Thursday, 2 July 2009

Crosby, Stills & Nash at the Royal Albert Hall

 
Crosby, Stills & Nash
Royal Albert Hall, 1 July 2009
It would be a tough act to follow Mr Young after his jaw-dropping show on the weekend but if anyone was going to give it a try then I suppose his old bandmates Crosby, Stills & Nash were as good a bet as any.

Sunday, 28 June 2009

Neil Young at Hyde Park


Hard Rock Calling 2009:
Neil Young

Fleet Foxes
Seasick Steve
Ben Harper & Relentless 7
The Pretenders
Hyde Park, 27 June 2009
So the promise of seeing Neil Young live for the ninth time brought me out for (sadly) my one and only festival-style experience this summer. But it was a great day that seemed to encompass the best and worst of the British weather, starting out sunny and uncomfortably hot and halfway through dark clouds suddenly gathering over the crowds in Hyde park and drenching us all in rain.

Tuesday, 23 June 2009

I miss the Nymphs

The Nymphs at the Marquee show I never saw
Back, when I was still at school, I discovered this really cool band called The Nymphs led by the fiesty Inger Lorre. Most people only knew them because of an incident following Guns N Roses stealing their producer, Bill Price, in the middle of making their first album. Left hanging and unable to complete their debut for months and months, it led to singer Lorre infamous retaliation: urinating on the desk of Geffen A&R man Tom Zutatut's desk!

Monday, 22 June 2009

The Mars Volta at the ICA

 
The Mars Volta
ICA, 18 June 2009

The first time I saw The Mars Volta was as a fairly slim (compared to now) five-piece back in 2002, supporting Les Savy Fav. I was one of the few in the crowd specifically there for them, but despite the lack of a big crowd they were electrifying, combining all the energy of the At The Drive-In days with a new musical confidence (plus at the time they had a kick-ass female bassist - always a bonus). By the time I saw them again headlining their own show the following year they had attracted an army of dedicated fans since the release of their debut album De-Loused In The Comatorium, changed personnel, become even more assured and turned into this jazz-inspired, jam-friendly rock monster. It was a pretty epic transformation and, maybe because my fragile little mind couldn't take it, hearing my favourite songs from the album turned into sometimes pretty unrecognisable 30-minute jams was a bit much for me at the time.

Sunday, 14 June 2009

Faith No More at Brixton Academy

 
Faith No More
Brixton Academy, 10 June 2009
Back when I was 15 my favourite band in the world was Faith No More. I had The Real Thing on cassette and, in my room covered with FNM posters, I played that thing to death. Even when I decided I wanted to play bass, I saved up and bought one that looked like Billy Gould's. The first time I saw them live was actually supporting Guns N' Roses at Wembley Stadium, which was a weird show to say the least (Soundgarden were also on the bill and Brian May was Axl's surprise guest) but it was only a few months later that I finally got to see them headlining their own gig, at the infamous Brixton Academy where they recorded their sole live album and accompanying video (which I, of course, had watched a hundred times). L7 supported and it was awesome. Sadly I got into trouble with my parents, who didn't know I was sneaking out to Brixton for a gig with my friends, when I got home. My trouble-making older brother had gleefully told on me while I was out.

Wednesday, 10 June 2009

Dinosaur Jr at The Forum

 
Dinosaur Jr
Clinic
The Forum, 9 June 2009

Despite being late and missing the first act (Hush Arbors, a pleasant if unremarkable folky group I had already seen supporting Vetiver earlier this year) and arriving mid-way through Clinic's post rock friendly instrumental set, the venue wasn't that full most likely due to the tube strike, which saw people bail on the chance of seeing one of the few bands who always sound great at The Forum (which usually is notorious for being one of the worst sounding venues in London).

Sunday, 31 May 2009

Cat Stevens/Yusuf at Shepherd's Bush Empire

 
Cat Stevens/Yusuf Islam
Baaba Maal
Shepherd's Bush Empire, 28 May 2009
Finally my belated Cat Stevens concert blog entry. Needless to say it was a fantastic show filled with such a happy, warm atmosphere thrilled at Cat Stevens return. Corny but true.

Sunday, 24 May 2009

Tori Amos interview

Late last year I got the chance to interview flame-haired, piano-playing, rock goddess Tori Amos about her, then, new DVD/CD Live At Montreux. Meeting her I was astonished at just how petite and beautiful she is in the flesh, almost like a porcelain doll. Of course it didn't hurt she had just finished a photo shoot in the next room (which the new album promos appear to be from funnily enough) but her hair was perfect and startlingly red and her skin immaculate. But more than that I was pleasantly surprised at just how down to earth, unkooky and smart she was. Seeing as she has just released her new album Abnormally Attracted To Sin, I thought I'd post the transcript in full as she says some pretty interesting things about the ideas behind the new record as well as her thoughts on the music industry today, going independent, working with Robert Plant and of course her DVD releases.

I know a lot of fans are excited about this release because it’s a tour that hasn’t been documented on DVD before. Did you know the footage existed? How did it all come about? 
Well how this all transpired is that I ran into Claude Nobs when I did Montreux last and he said to me “are you aware that I have your first ever performance probably in the world for Little Earthquakes?” and I said, no I didn’t know that. And I didn’t look at it at the time, but he said, “would you be open, if I sent it to you, would you be open to looking at it and looking at the one after?” And I have to tell you, he’s somebody who documents, he’s been documenting artists for many, many years and he showed me a long time ago a documentation of Aretha Franklin playing the piano in the 60s. So he keeps everything and he said Montreux has a tradition of having new artists come and they don’t even realise that they’re being filmed. Because the cameras are just on all the time, they film everything so you’re not as conscious of it as, say, a TV show that you’re doing. So I didn’t even remember that this existed. The cameras are set, they feel like they’re locked off, they’re on all sides of you. So when you walk on, especially as a new artist, you’re not aware, it’s not as if people are running around with cameras, so I didn’t remember there being any cameras, so I didn’t know it existed. That’s why when he sent it to me I was surprised that we even had it on record.

Saturday, 16 May 2009

Ben Kweller at Koko

 
Ben Kweller
Koko, 15 May 2009

I have to admit I was pretty ill attending this gig: thinking I have never missed a show due to illness, like a trooper I turned up, albeit rather late, and caught the end of Ben's excellent set (the following week though, as for a while I got even sicker, I did indeed miss my first ever gig, A.C. Newman at Luminaire, which I'm really sad about).

Wednesday, 13 May 2009

Two nights of Olson & Louris at the Jazz Cafe

Mark Olson & Gary Louris
Jazz Cafe, 11 & 12 May 2009
I was never lucky enough to see The Jayhawks back in Hollywood Town Hall/Tomorrow The Green Grass days, after discovering them in the mid 90s the first chance I got to see them live Mark Olson was long gone and Gary Louris was very much the frontman. Don't get me wrong, post-Olson the band took on a new life and were still great but I can't deny I missed that particular magic that happened when Olson's rootsy country vocals mixed with Louris' smoother, rock voice and those amazing harmonies were born. So of course I was particularly thrilled when the pair joined forces for the first time in 13 years for the album Ready For The Flood and, in support of that album, finally I got to hear them sing together live for the first time at the Union Chapel, one of the best venues in London for acoustic shows.

Monday, 11 May 2009

Quincy does not like punk rock


Quincy was always good, I will not even argue about it, but I saw the best ever episode of the great early 80s show last night: the crime-investigating coroner was looking into a murder that happened during a bout of slamdancing at a punk rock show.

Sunday, 10 May 2009

Hawksley Workman at the Luminaire

Hawksley Workman
The Luminaire, 9 May 2009
I always love seeing Hawksley Workman live. The Canadian singer/songwriter is just one of those natural entertainers who seems so at home on stage that he could pull up a chair and stay there all night. Theatrical and grinning, with a soaring voice and surprisingly adept guitar skills, he playfully reinvents songs and even sometimes dramatically interrupts them to tell some far-out story, Hawksley-style.

Thursday, 7 May 2009

Tift Merritt at the Jazz Cafe

Tift Merritt
Jazz Cafe, 7 May 2009

Out of the new wave of alternative country girl singers that have arrived over the past decade (Neko, Kathleen Edwards, Allison Moorer), I always considered Tift Merritt to be hugely likeable and talented but the lesser of the four. Her albums, to me, recall Ryan Adams during his most pop country moments, warm and breezy like a summer day but without the edge that have helped the others make the transition to something a little more special. That said I was curious to see what she had to offer live and I was pleasantly surprised.

Monday, 27 April 2009

Bob Dylan at the O2 Arena and the Roundhouse


Bob Dylan And His Band
O2 Arena, 25 April 2009
Roundhouse, 26 April 2009
Years ago, in the mid 90s, I saw Bob Dylan for the first time playing Hyde Park. Backed with a ramshackle group of musicians (mostly dressed in blue I remember) including Rolling Stone Ronnie Wood, it was a decidedly disappointing experience despite a set list that included Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues, Positively Fourth Street, Highway 61 Revisited and Don't Think Twice It's Alright, due to a rather unenthusiastic performance by the man himself, where his voice turned almost to caricature. Although I love his music I thought it was probably best to leave his live shows for the hardcore devotees in the future.

Thursday, 23 April 2009

St. Vincent at Hoxton Bar & Grill

St Vincent
Hoxton Bar & Grill, 21 April 2009
After the well-rehearsed bands of my previous two gigs, it was a surprise to see Annie Clark (aka St. Vincent) take to the stage alone, particularly since she honed her craft as part of the elaborate bands of Sufjan Stevens and The Polyphonic Spree, and given the intricate, big sound of her two solo albums. But then, despite being a favourite of many music blogs, St Vincent is still pretty much still a cool little secret and even now is playing a venue that's essentially a hidden room at the back of a trendy bar. But it turns out Ms Clark is well able to command the small stage on her own, looping her guitar and using some samples and vocal effects but essentially filling the room with her pitch perfect voice and superb guitar playing. It's actually refreshing to see a girl who is so adepth on guitar in fact, playing intricate parts while singing, occasionally breaking out into a solo or a loud guitar riff: she may be strikingly lovely but the very friendly Annie Clark is not just a pretty face, she's also immensely talented it seems.

Tuesday, 21 April 2009

PJ Harvey and John Parish at the Empire

PJ Harvey & John Parish
Howe Gelb
Shepherd's Bush Empire, 20 April 2009
The second of my awesome girl-singer trilogy of nights came from a woman who I believe is one of the most important artists Britain has produced in the last 20 years: Polly Jean Harvey. I've actually seen her play several times before, the first time on her To Bring You My Love tour, where she was glammed up in red satin and high heels, then in support of her most successful album, Stories From The City, Stories From The Sea, which saw her return a little to the Polly of old, sometimes playing guitar and dressed down, and finally in 2007 at a unique show at the Royal Festival Hall where she performed alone switching from guitar to piano dressed in a flowing Victorian-style gown. Each show was memermising and utterly different, so I knew I was in for a treat when she announced shows with collaborator John Parish for the second album they've made together, A Woman A Man Walked By.

Saturday, 18 April 2009

Bat For Lashes at the Shepherd's Bush Empire

Bat For Lashes
School Of Seven Bells
Shepherd's Bush Empire, 17 April 2009
I've always loved my female singer-songwriters, especially those who are skilled musicians and not just great voices, and oddly enough three of the best around today happened to play London within days of each other. The first in my awesome lady trilogy (which sounds like the English title of a series of Korean action flicks) was the ethereal and beautiful (and as it happens) Stevie Nicks-inspired Natasha Khan, aka Bat For Lashes, at the first of two sold-out nights at the Empire in Shepherd's Bush.

Wednesday, 15 April 2009

Jackson and Warren in 76


I was looking on YouTube for some vintage footage of Jackson Browne (inspired by the concert the other night) and found this awesome Warren Zevon performance of Mohammed's Radio in 1976 with Jackson playing guitar and singing back-up. Apparently Jackson performed Warren's classic song Lawyers, Guns & Money on the first date of his current tour this year (but hasn't played it since, damn him!). I would have so loved to have seen that.

Monday, 13 April 2009

Jackson Browne at the Royal Albert Hall

Jackson Browne
Royal Albert Hall, 12 April 2009

I have to admit I was in two minds about going to see Jackson Browne live: I only have a few of his albums, which I do really like, but he's never been one of my favourites. But ever since I read Hotel California by Barney Hoskyns last year I've been enamoured with the whole Laurel Canyon scene and the fact the man worked and was friends with Warren Zevon and dated both Joni Mitchell and Nico had to count for something, right? So when a decent seat popped up on the Royal Albert Hall's site close to the date I snapped it up and hoped for the best.

Saturday, 11 April 2009

The forgotten power-pop goodness of Jale

Jale were a poppy, post-grunge indie rock band from Halifax, Nova Scotia who I once saw open for L7. I remember them best for the fact that after the show I met bassist Laura Stein in the crowd and she, along with a nice, bubbly lady whose name I've forgotten but who worked for Sub Pop, got us into L7's aftershow party.

Monday, 6 April 2009

Elvis Perkins at the ICA

Elvis Perkins In Dearland
ICA, 6 April 2009
It's been almost two years since I last saw Elvis Perkins In Dearland. Last time they were winding down the tour in support of Elvis' incredibly moving debut album Ash Wednesday. Live he had taken the downbeat songs and with his talented band, added a more joyous, celebratory feel to his music. His new album carries on that feeling, so it's no surprise to see a fiddle, double bass, trombones and other fun instruments litter the stage but it is a surprise to see Elvis himself (his real name: dad Anthony Perkins - that's right the Psycho actor - named him after his rock n' roll hero).

Tuesday, 31 March 2009

Alela Diane at St Giles Church

Alela Diane
William Elliott Whitmore
St Giles In The Fields, 30 March 2009
After a lot of confusion about just what church we were going to (there are a lot of St Giles churches in London it seems and Ticketmaster had sent out an oh-so-helpful email directing everyone to wrong one!) I made it to St Giles In The Fields, which is the church just off Tin Pan Alley, in time to secure a place in the front pew. Good thing too because, unlike the Union Chapel, which seems tailor made for music as well as services, the stage is very low and I'm sure I would have had difficulty seeing otherwise.

Thursday, 12 March 2009

Omar Rodriguez Lopez at Dingwalls

Omar Rodriguez-Lopez Group 
Zechs Marquise 
Camden Dingwalls, 11 March 2009
Before this show I had seen Omar Rodriguez-Lopez live in three other bands - At The Drive-In, De Facto and The Mars Volta (three times) - but I've never seen him as the star of the show and without right hand man Cedric Bixler-Zavala stealing a lot of the attention. Could he pull it off?