With Just A Hint Of Mayhem

Music reviews, gig reviews, fun trivia and extra added random stuff!

‘Bang Bang Rock and Roll’ (Reissue) – Art Brut April 15, 2020

Filed under: Review — justwilliam1959 @ 4:13 pm
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This album, originally released in 2005, is described as a seminal record and it certainly lives up to its reputation. Art Brut are a Berlin-based English and German indie band with a strong following among the Indie faithful and beyond. The big brash opener “Formed A Band” is a firm fan favourite and sets out the stall in unambiguous style. The whole album gives off a definite feel of late 70s early 80s folks such as the Members but does so in a wholly original way.

Each track features the droll and biting vocals of Eddie Argos over some excellent driving indie guitar rock from the rest of the band. “My Little Brother” brings to the fore that punky late 70s feel. The effect of repeating the title of many of the songs helps to create strong statement pieces and is a key strength of the album. “Good Weekend” is equipped with a great riff and has a hint of the Buzzcocks about it which of course is no bad thing.

“Moving To LA” is a little different with a slower lighter feel and “Bad Weekend” opens with a complicated but catchy riff that will be stuck in your head for some time to come. This reissue comes complete with a shedload of unreleased material so you definitely get value for your money. This is one of those albums which inspires awkward indie disco dancing and long may it continue to do so.

Written by Paul Bamlett.

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‘Seaside Donkeys’ – PERCY April 14, 2020

Filed under: Review — justwilliam1959 @ 7:57 pm
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West Yorkshire Super Heroes Percy are back with a new album next month, the much anticipated follow up to 2018’s ‘Sleeper’s Wake’. I loved that last album, how does ‘Seaside Donkeys’ shape up to it? Well pretty well actually. The album kicks off with what may be a statement of intent, “Back In The Swing”. It has a sixties garage rock feel to it but with more classic post-punk vocals. I can also feel the presence of the ghost of the Velvet Underground too. Next up is “Rubbernecking In The UK” whose organ-like keyboard intro and refrain comes across like a demented Inspiral Carpets with whiney John Lydonesque vocal. A very, very British song that is as good recorded as it is in the live setting. There is an underlying menace to “Carpe Diem” which appears to be a satirical look at the worst of consumerism and living off of credit cards. My current favourite song on the album, perhaps driven by having seen it performed live a few times is “Will Of The People” which I believe is a future single. The rhythm section of Andy Wiles on bass and Jason Wilson on drums are on overdrive while giving the track a pulsing beat. It has the perfect cynical punk takedown of Brexit, is it still relevant? Of course, it bloody is and it is also a song that had he still been alive Mark E Smith would have cut his hand off to have written!

The soft almost US East Coast rock acoustic feel to “The People Who Drank Themselves To Death” makes you think of the Eagles but with Television’s Tom Verlaine playing the guitar and producing. “Love Song” is and as the sixth track, of ten, may be the one that opens side two of the vinyl copy. It was bundled with the first single released earlier this month. It has another John Lydon PiL vibe with elements of Rock Druid Julian Cope in Colin Howard’s vocals. This will drive the moshpit mental! I can hear Dr. Feelgood, Ian Dury and Magazine in “A Little Trouble In Big Lils” the song almost oozes the smell of stale beer and fags underpinned by keyboards from Paula Duck worthy of Dave Greenfield at the peak of his Stranglers career. Colin even gets a semi yodel in toward the end. You don’t hear that sort of thing very often these days. Jason brings his full Keith Moon to the drum stool on “Rictus Grin” as he seems to follow the fuzzy warped guitar of Colin Howard. This tune will be a wonderful drunken singalong at future Percy gigs.

Talking of drunken singalongs next song to arrive is effectively the title track “Seaside Donkey”. It has an even more acoustic feel than “The People Who Drank Themselves To Death”. The song features a laconic elegiac violin motif which gives it the feel of being a drinking song, although perhaps a rather maudlin drinking shanty. Album closer “A Better Life” has a loose early Pulp feel to its sound and is somewhat uplifting in a strange way.  Percy are most definitely back with a bang. ‘Sleeper’s Wake’ was good but ‘Seaside Donkey’ is a whole new level. Punk, post-punk, US Garage, UK pub rock is all rolled into those menacing, satirical, maniacal, dark and twisted tales of life that Percy fans have come to know and love! If you miss out on this album then you really are a seaside donkey! NEWS FLASH: You can buy the vinyl album now! Click here to place your order!

 

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“Killjoy” – Hunter-Gatherer April 13, 2020

Filed under: Review — justwilliam1959 @ 8:33 am
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Hunter-Gatherer is a classy rock outfit from Pickering, North Yorkshire. They have just released a new single “Killjoy” with a great video to accompany it. If you like your rock music a little grungey, a little alternative and with an emotional depth you will bloody love this tune. Sam Womack’s mighty riffs and almost yearning vocals are prominent but underpinned by a finely tuned Maserati of a rhythm section with Kristian Ward’s sonic boom bass playing and Bron Bury smacking his drums until they are in need of life support! The video is cleverly put together too with a story based around coming to a Hunter-Gatherer gig. The gig shots make me realise how much I miss live shows during this COVID-19 lockdown! I am looking forward to actually seeing these lads playing live on the other side of this.

I also have to apologise to Hunter-Gatherer for not getting my arse in gear last year to review their rather excellent previous single “Run My Mind” but you can find it below. It is another 110% banger!

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“I Know You Know I’m Perfect” / Move, Motherf*cker” – MEGA EMOTION / LADY DI (ex-Bearsuit)

Filed under: Review — justwilliam1959 @ 7:11 am
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“I Know You Know I’m Perfect” is a synth-pop style song from the Norwich based duo Mega Emotion. There are hints of the Human League and other similar bands running through this track. A pleasant, melodic piece it is the polar opposite of “Move Motherf*cker” which is the other track here. This release is based around the idea of 2 bands as one with the same musicians in both. Lisa Horton, Jan Robertson, and Iain Ross are the instrument swapping players.

The skill demonstrated here is that both bands (Mega Emotion and Lady Di) produce such radically differing styles. “Move Motherf*cker” is a driving piece of punk meets the Pixies which sits in stark contrast to the synth track. All band members were originally part of Norwich Indie outfit Bearsuit. The question is which genre they will opt to focus on or will they stick with this novel speciality of split styles. Whatever the result, it will be fascinating to watch as they are equally good at both.

Written by Paul Bamlett

https://megaemotion.bandcamp.com/

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‘GOLDY’ – The By Gods

Filed under: Review — justwilliam1959 @ 6:53 am
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While not exactly a new concept, songwriting as a form of catharsis or therapy has created some incredible rock and pop music over the years. From the angry rhetoric of Bob Dylan’s ‘Masters of War’ to David Berman’s final project Purple Mountains, a deep dive into the crippling and “treatment-resistant” depression which eventually drove him to suicide last August, the most emotionally raw music is always the most compelling.

The quality that music written by a soul in the middle of an emotional drama has in droves, which is incredibly hard to pin down, is probably authenticity. I’ve heard discussions where people wonder why Kurt Cobain and Nirvana are still popular with young people so long after Cobain’s death. The answer is nearly always authenticity.

The By Gods singer and principal songwriter, George Pauley, was unlucky enough to have been at the Las Vegas Route 91 Harvest Festival in 2017 which was the scene of a tragic terror attack, the deadliest mass shooting in American history. 59 people died, including shooter Stephen Paddock, on that horrific day and 869 were injured. Pauley, working as a videographer at the festival, took shelter beneath a table and was lucky enough to survive physically unhurt.

Emotionally, however, Pauley was scarred by guilt, shock, and depression. The band cancelled their upcoming European tour and Pauley wrote around 35 songs in a short space of time as a way of dealing with what he felt in the aftermath of such an event. With the help of producer Alex Newport, who has worked with artists like At The Drive-In and Bloc Party, the band pared down this pile of songs into the 11 which now make up GOLDY.

 

GOLDY is a strong collection of heartfelt, warm songs with a sinister, Post-punk edge and classic ‘90’s-esque production values. The songs are very concise. None of them break the 4-minute mark and many of them are below 3 minutes. The guitars straddle the line between clean and dirty beautifully, the bass is thick and strong. The drums are clear, powerful and precise. Pauley’s voice is somewhere between some of the cleaner sounding Grunge vocalists with some strong similarities with Andrew Savage of Parquet Courts, for a more contemporary comparison. Some of the songs include piano and cello which makes a nice contrast with the grungy guitars.

GOLDY kicks off with strong album opener “Black Wave”, a screech of feedback, some drum clicks and some heavy riffing in the style of My Bloody Valentine’s classic album opener, “Only Shallow”. Complete with the heavy whammy bar effect Kevin Shields made famous in the early ’90s. Following this is the chugging power-chords, radio-friendly melodies and thumping rhythm section of “Try So Hard”, an upbeat, punky rocker with an air of recent Parquet Courts about it. Blurry is a slow, grungy power-chord chugger in the vein of Dinosaur Jr’s “Sludgefeast” but with guitar tones more reminiscent of British bands like Therapy? or The Wildhearts.

Some of the more balladlike songs like “PTO”, “Song 01”, “Long Way To Go” and elegiac closer “Penhead” seem to edge into territory usually inhabited by bands like Snow Patrol or Athlete, but they still seem to maintain a Post-Punk edge and authenticity in stark contrast to that particular Indie subgenre. This is almost certainly due to Newport’s production. He’s no stranger to hard-edged Post-Punk.

All the way through, The By Gods positively drip with the aforementioned authenticity in a way that their earlier material doesn’t seem to. It’s hard to attribute that to anything other than the horrific events which lead up to the album’s creation.

Written by Tom Ray

GOLDY is out now. Available to buy from the bands Bandcamp page as well as all of the usual digital distributors like Spotify, Apple Music etc. 

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Bob Dylan Finally Gets A Number One Single On A US Billboard Chart! April 9, 2020

Filed under: News — justwilliam1959 @ 2:59 pm
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Bob Dylan has just had his first-ever Billboard number-one single of any kind with his recent surprise release “Murder Most Foul”. He is currently at the top of the Rock Digital Song Sales chart. Hard to believe that it has taken 55 years for it to happen. His first appearance on the Billboard chart was in 1965 with “Subterranean Homesick Blues”. “Like A Rolling Stone” and “Rainy Day Women ♯12 & 35” made it to number 2 in 1965 and 1966 respectively. The former did reach the top of the Cashbox chart in 1965, but that chart was never as popular, important or influential as Billboard. It is the first Bob Dylan single to reach the top 100 of any Billboard chart since 1993. Congratulations Robert Zimmerman.

Click here to read our earlier review of “Murder Most Foul” written by Tom Ray.

Dylan celebrates with a cup of tea 😉

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Butterfly Candy – 22 Oceans

Filed under: Review — justwilliam1959 @ 2:11 pm
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“Butterfly Candy” is the newest release on the innovative new label 72rpm Records and on this evidence they know quality when they hear it. Mike Guy is the creative brain behind this wonderful slice of ambient atmospherics, using the name 22 Oceans. The initial synth rhythm gives way to ethereal distant vocals which creates an added layer. The almost imperceptible drum rhythm drives the track gently along. Although the Eno influence is clear here, Mike’s earlier influences such as OMD and Blancmange have a spectral presence. My Eno reference would be the Apollo Soundtracks recently refurbished by Brian and Roger Eno but I do not want to give the impression that Mike Guy is copying in any way. This track has a life and feel all of its own. Its a calming and elegiac piece and I hope that we can hear more of the same very soon from this artist and label.

Written by Paul Bamlett.

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“Raving And Drooling” – Sheratons

Filed under: Review — justwilliam1959 @ 6:14 am
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The Sheratons, one of Leeds most vibrant bands, have unleashed a new single, their third, on the world. It is an absolute banger that combines elements of the best of classic rock and a punky attitude. It is also something that will get everyone on the floor at Indie clubs and student discos. (Do they still have the latter or am I showing my age?) It was produced by Sugar House productions of Viola Beach and Glass Caves fame. You can sense the anger in Kane’s vocal delivery in this anti-drug treatise. This is underpinned by some spectacular hard rock riffing and screaming guitar from Finley. All of this is underpinned by a rhythm section that is comparable to Entwistle and Moon when the Who were at their peak with Alex on pounding bass and Emma smacking her drums to within an inch of their life. Music is a great positive in these strange days and this song will definitely brighten your day, I bloody love this song and this band. The Sheratons are getting plenty of radio airplay right now and in my humble opinion, they are destined for much bigger things!

The Sheratons, doing a Jackson Pollock. Presumably just after painting the cover for the single!

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“Masquerade” EP – Mother April 8, 2020

Filed under: Review — justwilliam1959 @ 4:44 pm
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Mother are a magnificent new band from Oxford. They have a new EP out called “Masquerade” and it is one of the best I heard in a long time. Fronted by vocalist Ignatius J Harris this band really pack some punch. Their first EP was produced by Mark Gardiner from the legendary Ride and this one is produced by Chris Barker of Willie J Healey and Premium Leisure and great production it is too!

We start with “Strangers”, which has a strong melancholic tincture of  Arctic Monkeys about it but that is not at all a bad thing. This track, in common with everything here, has a big helping of swagger.

Next up we have “Pretty Face”. This has a real bite and snarl about it. Fully equipped with a staggeringly good riff and excellent vocals this is a superb track. The rhythm section underpins this brilliantly and lends a real menace to this track, ending with a hint of Pistols style sneer.

“White Lies” summons up the Arctic’s comparisons again but as with every track, Mother add this to their own style and make it totally their own.

The alt-rock sound that opens the title track is a real breath of fresh air and “Masquerade” features beautifully impassioned vocals. A dark and cynical feel to this one which fades away to an echoey conclusion.

“LA” is a truly punchy song carried along on a bed of pulsing bass and drums.

“School Days” features some great guitar work and lovely keyboards. There’s a touch of an Iggy style croon here and this track really drips with sass and style.

Mother have completely and utterly got that “thing” that you find so rarely. You can see them getting that all-important break very soon. They are the tightest band I have heard in a long time from a rhythmic point of view. They have had praise and more importantly play from the legend that is Tom Robinson and have gigged with local (and national) hero Gaz Coombes so they definitely have the stuff to go all the way and stay there. Mother are not only one to watch, but they are also compulsory listening!

Written by Paul Bamlett

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“Stardust” – The Galaxy Electric

Filed under: Review — justwilliam1959 @ 6:59 am
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The Galaxy Electric is a duo from New York specialising in electronic psychedelic pop. This track, “Stardust” is a masterful statement of intent. To start with, I had no real point of reference for this but it certainly grabbed my attention. In places, it sounded like Joni Mitchell doubletracked over a spacey soundtrack. The harmonies are truly beautiful and the jazz flecked vocal style lends this particular space journey a whole other ambience.

In its way this single is almost wantonly uncommercial and yet that is what gives it a very special feel and appeal. It is original. The central section of the song floats off into an entirely different universe before we come back to the theme of the song. I have to say I am inspired to explore the strange new world of Galaxy Electric‘s music. They are definitely going boldly and I for one am happy to follow!

Written by Paul Bamlett.

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