News
Reviews
Articles
Surveillance
Mo' Sebadoh
Bubble and Scrape is next up on the Sebadoh re-release schedule, with a full-length Don't Look Back performance coming to Koko on May.
9th Apr 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

Clinic
Do It
Domino
For some strange reason, whenever I listen to Clinic I get this twisted vision of the band as puppet masters and on the end of their strings dance the recently slaughtered bodies of the Beach Boys. Lifeless, yet eerily animated, these corpses play out Clinic's own brand of surf-punk with singer Ade Blackburn's pursed-lipped vocals crawling from the mouth of Brian Wilson like maggots from a Thunderbird. Anyway...on with the review.
Do It is Clinic's fifth album and sees the band inhabiting much the same universe that they've been sole occupiers of since they started. It's a warped technicolor celebration that can veer from dreamy pop to acid psychosis with very little advance warning. This bipolar tension is deliciously seductive and on Do It Clinic have never sounded so relaxed and so uptight.
Memories opens this record with a gentle harpsichord chime which clears the way for a stomping marching band of calamitous percussion and driving guitars. With unstoppable ferocity it tramples down the aural highstreet of your mind, stopping dead as Blackburn imparts his bittersweet wisdom, then marching on as the occupying forces take their positions. The guitar strings on Tomorrow nearly buckle under the weight of the empty twang while single The Witch continues the advancing assault with thunderous guitars and booming rhythm. Shopping Bag is the point where this army takes up position and the real battle begins. With ferocious drumming and wild clarinet squeals Blackburn's voice reaches fever pitch as it assumes a crazed, demonic tone. It marks the most feral point of this record and even though the downbeat tempo of Corpus Christi shows no signing of afflicting the same damage its seething tension and distant squeals spell danger.
The juxtaposition that inhabits Clinic's sound is what give them their edge. Stylistically Do It doesn't stray too far from the ground covered by 2006's Visitations but simply reinforces and subtly steps up the tension between paranoia and tranquil waters. Their music envelopes the listener in an almost drug induced haze where nothing is as it seems. Visions of mysterious fortune tellers' horses in High Coin or the booming fog horn on Mary And Eddie loom out of this haze like dark ships that threaten your every turn. Each song continues this maniacal descent into madness as they spin you round and round on their twisted broken-down fair ground ride until you emerge, exhausted, the other side to the sound of chiming church bells. There is a reason why Clinic inhabit their own universe, no one else dares.
9th Apr 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet
Read more 3 star reviewsW-hat?
oliver stone is rushing out W a george dubya bush biopic for the end of the year - josh brolin as bush, elizabeth banks as laura bush, ellen burstyn as barbara bush, james cromwell as bush senior, thandie newton as condoleeza rice and ioan gruffud as blair!
9th Apr 2008 - 1 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
Search

It's My Morning Jacket, Jim, but not as we know it...
now this is what the interweb is for: check this great breakdown at Rolling Stone from Jim James, where he runs through 5 tracks from My Morning Jacket's new album Evil Urges, including a hilarious explanation for Highly Suspicious, the least MMJ-style song they've done for ages. he's trying to sound like an angry British policeman apparently. chimp verdict coming sometime soon (...but hopefully it's another strong contender in our on-going album of the year stand-off: 1, 2, 3 - but hey, maybe we'll shock you all and not get into it...)
8th Apr 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

Pitchfork TV online
Pitchfork TV is up and running - nice to see thom getting all eagles-like with his sing&drum skills.
8th Apr 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet
Space Chimps
It's not astro-chimps in washing machines, but..... www.spacechimps.com
8th Apr 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet
Lucas Storm
more trouble in Lucas land - now he's suing the dude who made the stormtrooper outfits
7th Apr 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet
The W Section
A recent trip to the mighty Amoeba Records highlighted a couple of useful facts.
Unfortunately there is less and less reason to go to an actual record shop these days. Where I would have once whiled away a solid day flipping through albums for imports, rarities or new releases ("a new My Morning Jacket album, I had no idea!"), the internet has pretty much rendered that lack of pre-information obsolete. Not much slips out these days without a mammoth, self perpetuating viral marketing campaign.
I stumbled across the other nugget completely by accident. If you have to arrange a rendezvous, the letter W is a good place to kill some time. Wedding Present, Ween, Weezer, Mike Watt, Wedding Present continued and so on. The Wedding Present have a new album, El Rey, out next month don't you know.
7th Apr 2008 - 1 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
Colin Meloy
Sings Live!
Kill Rock Stars
We all know that Denzel Washington never deserved an Academy Award for his role in Training Day, but was given it in light of the countless times he was overlooked for more worthy roles. Likewise in 2006, by some unforgivable act of neglect this revered website you look to for guidance failed to cover the release of The Decemberists major label debut The Crane Wife. After the roaring success of Picaresque, The Crane Wife was a significant rise in production and scale for this band and the result was stunning. I will not attempt to squeeze in a review here as the damage is done and it would be a case of too little too late. Instead I will adopt the Academy's logic and give this record a glowing review. The only difference being that Sings Live! doesn't suck like Training Day did and it is more than worthy of the praise it's about to get.
This album covers The Decemberists front man's 2006 solo tour and it features 13 Meloy originals, 2 of which are previously unreleased (although Meloy claims one of these is the worst song he's ever written.) Opening with Devil's Elbow, a song from his previous band Tarkio, this live set spans pretty much the full Descemberists back catalogue but sadly none from The Crane Wife. This show coincided with the 'tour-only' release of Colin Meloy Sings Shirley Collins, a six song EP paying homage to the British folksinger, one of which is featured here. This follows the previous covers EP Colin Meloy Sings Morrissey. This penchant for the cover version is expressed expertly in the form of a verse or two from songs by The Smiths, Fleetwood Mac, Pink Floyd and REM being sneaked on to the dying chords of many of the songs which really transforms this record from being simply a stripped down 'best of.'
It's no surprise that this particular songwriter should cover Morrissey, as since he first began he has shown a similar eye for the descriptive detail and the unique turn of phrase to express his wit and wisdom. His tales heave with historic passion, dripping with revenge and devotion and to hear them as distilled as this is a treat. The Picaresque songs like We Both Go Down Together and The Engine Driver are received with rapturous applause but some of the earlier material really shines like the sinister A Cautionary Song and the 12 minute marathon of California One/Youth And Beauty Brigade - both from Castaways and Cutouts. Closing with the rare and beautiful Bandit Queen from the Picaresqueties EP, this acoustic show is a unique opportunity to see the bare bones of this talent.
7th Apr 2008 - 1 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
Read more 4 star reviewsBehind The Scenes on Watchmen
Great little behind-the-scenes movie up at Superherohype illustrating some of the set-building that has gone on to create 1985 New York for Zack Snyder's upcoming Watchmen movie.
6th Apr 2008 - 1 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
Dan McCarthy
Dan McCarthy is an artist from Massachusetts who largly produces his own prints but has also provided artwork for Wilco and others.
As an up-and-coming artist he provides a monthly print subscription where he sends you his allocated print for a flat annual fee.
6th Apr 2008 - 1 comments - Add Comment - Tweet

The Orphanage
(dir. Juan Antonio Bayona)
This is the directorial debut of Juan Antonio Bayona and together with screenwriter Sergio Sanchez they have produced a modern ghost story that uses time honored traditions of horror and suspense to create a truly chilling piece of work. It centres around a small family unit, Laura (Belen Rueda) her husband Carlos (Fernando Cayo) and their adopted nine-year-old son Simon (Roger Princep), who return to the barren, coastal orphanage where Laura spent some of her childhood in order to re-establish it as a home for handicapped children. Pretty soon she becomes aware of a new set of 'imaginary' friends that seem to join in with Simon's carefree games. Innocent treasure hunts soon lose their charm when the treasure becomes something you really care about.
The less you know about the plot of this film the more you'll enjoy and succumb to its intrigue. The Orphanage has been brought to the screen by executive producer Guillermo del Toro - who clearly shines as a major influence here. Like the dazzling Pan's Labyrinth it delves deep into the imaginary worlds of a child's imagination and the fear that can arise from an adults inability to follow. Like del Toro's own film The Devil's Backbone, The Orphanage recognises and exploits the basic fear we all have through the vulnerability of children.
In a genre populated by countless teen-slasher films this film's superior grasp of the things that make us all scared is stunning. Both aesthetically and stylistically this is a traditional horror film in the sense that it all takes place in an old house full of dark rooms and even darker secrets. The fear is delivered with restraint and tension recognising that there is nothing more scary than what we create in our own minds. But their is an inevitable contemporary unease that presides over this story. The constant stream of child abductions that populate our news broadcasts and the recent horrors that have been uncovered in the Haut de la Garenne children's home in Jersey all serve to enhance our dread at the events that unfold.
This film may be subtle in it's fear delivery approach but there were several moments where everyone in the cinema screamed uncontrollably. The film opens with the young Laura facing a tree saying "one, two , three: knock on the door," then turning around to see how close her friends have approached, so when, as an adult, she is forced to repeat the same game in a darkened room in order to tempt the child- ghosts out of their hiding places the fear was tangible and audible throughout the cinema. There is also a 'jaw-dropping' car accident and a sack-masked child to scare the living daylights out of you as well.
Ever since The Shining I have been intrigued by a film that claims to be truly frightening but have been disappointed on many occasions. It doesn't seem hard to push our fear buttons but so many film makers repeatedly get it wrong opting for gore and violence over suggestion and subtlety. Together with Alejandro Amenabar (The Others) this crop of directors have an intelligence and sensitivity which, when put withquality acting performances, create some truly terrifying cinema experiences.
4th Apr 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet
Read more 4.5 star reviewsMMJ cover
my morning jacket's new album evil urges will look like this. who's the dude in the way?
3rd Apr 2008 - 1 comments - Add Comment - Tweet

Speck Mountain
Summer Above
Peacefrog
Released way back in 2006, Summer Above - the debut album Chicago's Speck Mountain - is finally reaching our European ears and like a fine rain it has seeped into my life without me even realizing. Entirely self-produced this record is one of such profound yet subtle beauty that you'll have to be careful not to miss it. Its impact is slow-release and comes in the form of dreamy, psychedelic pop-rock, built on organ drones, shimmering guitars and singer Marie-Claire Balabanian's soft, sedated, honey-dipped vocals.
The title song chimes in with dirty, jangly guitars which lay down an almost 2 minute long soundscape for the first, sweet breath of Balabanian's voice. Close and intimate, nobody is in any hurry to prove themselves here and by the end of this opening track the spell is cast. Hey Moon is a stripped down slice of minimal expertise while Midnight Sun shines with melancholic warmth. Fjord Song sees Balabanian's vocals dripping in reverb and as a result vast caverns of sound emerge from this previously barren landscape like long forgotten monuments. This seems to clear the way for a new and fresher sound and Chlorine Fields is the mighty forerunner of this. At over 8 minutes long it holds you with baited breath in suspended animation before embarking on a tripped out instrumental marathon that sees swirling organ spiraling into an abyss of droning guitar and a thick fog of sound. And if the advancing rain of this record has been building to this point then album closer Blood Is Clean is the fresh result of a storm passing. Clean and crisp, it is the antidote to the previous song and with typical restraint it finishes this record off perfectly.
Speck Mountain have brought with them comparisons to such bands as The Velvet Underground and Mazzy Star, they could also inspire memories of more contemporary sounds like that of Yo La Tengo but ultimately their success is all their own. There is a confidence and humility here that slows the whole thing down to a gentle hum. They effortlessly create space then take their time to fill it. It's repetition and time that makes this sound bore its way into your soul, it swirls with glorious psychedelia but Balabanian's vocals have a focus and clarity that maintain a foreground presence and keeps things from descending into hazy, intoxicated obscurity. Like an exploding star the light of Speck Mountain has taken its time to reach us but now that it's here we can all bask in its warmth.
3rd Apr 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet
Read more 4 star reviews
Trailer Watch
Pineapple Express - new Judd Apatow stoner comedy; Ellen "Juno" Page in The Tracey Fragments and Smart People; Winona Ryder back on screen in Sex & Death 101; Ewan McGregor trying another American accent in Deception; Wong Kar Wai in the mood for My Blueberry Nights; more stoopid Will Ferrell v John C Reilly antics in Step Brothers; tough Arkansas brothers in Shotgun Stories - lots of new trailers to while away your morning today
3rd Apr 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

Sci-Fi London Film Festival
couple of interesting films in this year's Sci-Fi London festival: Dante 01 - the solo debut from Marc Caro (City Of Lost Children/ Delicatessen); La Antena featuring "an evil media mogul, Mr TV"; indie sci-fi 11 Minutes Ago (which was shot in a day); and Chemical Wedding - written by Iron Maiden's Bruce Dickinson!
2nd Apr 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

Clown Travel Agency
There's something going on over at Clown Travel Agency and then Acme Security Systems, which seems likely to involve that prankster The Joker. I'm too busy to see it through, but will check back later to see the results....
2nd Apr 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet
Type 1 Impossibilities
According to the The Physics Of the Impossible alien contact, teleportation and invisibility cloaks are just around the corner. Human-cow hybrid embyos already here. (the moo-mans?) Time travel still a way off though
2nd Apr 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet
Miracle Favourites
Miracle Fortress are back in town for a few shows:
Wed 02 Apr - London, Scala w/Patrick Watson
Thu 03 Apr - Brighton, The Janbury Club w/Patrick Watson
Fri 04 Apr - London, Luminaire
Check them out if you can. If not, just check out these two awesome videos.
1st Apr 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

The Cinematic Orchestra
Live At The Royal Albert Hall
Ninja Tune
For those who are yet to see The Cinematic Orchestra live then let this wet your appetite for what is truly a unique musical experience. Without belittling Jason Swinscoe's scintillating recordings this group were born to play live. This is where they truly live up to their name and what better place to convey this than in the Royal Albert Hall. On November 2nd 2007 Swinscoe brought with him an enhanced line up which featured the 24 piece Heritage Orchestra to this historic venue and dazzled an audience of more than 4000 people.
This recording aims to convey this extraordinary live event and really the only fault worth mentioning is that a recording can't possibly do justice to this night and though many of the original vocalists are not present this CD is a close second best.
Opening with Every Day's stand out song All That You Give, this night was all about using the original songs as platforms from which to launch the musical potential that lies within this group. Like any jazz ensemble the musicians here use the original structure of each song as a base to return to after their sonic journeys into the rafters of this great venue. Flite rolls along on the trademark drumbeat while guitar and organ dance playfully around it and great swathes of strings lift and lift. Last spring saw the release of Ma Fleur which featured the achingly beautiful song To Build A Home. Changing up on the vocalist here this live version has little of the magnitude of the original and is one of the few instances where the recording triumphs over the live. However this is all soon forgotten when we enter the opening phase of the epic and now classic Ode To The Big Sea. At over 14 minutes long we revisit in striking glory the jazz routs of this band. Though dazzling in their own right the last few albums have taken Swinscoe's outfit away from the free jazz sound and it really is special to see them return in such style. Skipping along to rain-drop-like piano we build to a frantic drum solo that just about marks the mid way point. A clarinet heralds the change up and with the hall silent the experimentation really begins. Accompanied by electronic bleeps this pair really use the space provided and receive rousing applause from the crowd for their courage when the drums finally rejoin them.
The whole night is concluded with Time And Space featuring Lou Rhodes of Lamb. A sedate yet beautiful end to a very special evening. After experiencing this live show you'd want a recording such as this to keep the memory alive.
1st Apr 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet
Read more 3 star reviewsRadio Edit
Radiohead are jumping on the NIN remixing bandwagon and offering 'stems' (i.e. bass track, the guitar track etc) of their new single Nude. The catch is, this time you have to pay. For each one.
Once you've got all five you can get a free Garage Band file and start remixing ....or just use your program of choice, as all tracks are DRM free files. Upload your finished mix and listen to others at www.radioheadremix.com
1st Apr 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet
Monster Sale
Monster sale on over at Play if you can be bothered to a) trawl b) are still buying DVDs.
1st Apr 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet
1988
Sky's recent HD revival of 80's 'classic' Cocktail has confirmed a couple of long-term suspicions:
- Yes, it is a hollow, ruthless example of 80's yuppyism gone mad, which would play in a nice Grindhouse double bill with the more worthy Wall Street.
- Some years are better that others - in all aspects. I've suspected for a while that 1988 is pretty low in the pile ....with Die Hard, Roger Rabbit, Midnight Run and Big being a few of the scant box office releases of note. Baron Munchausen, Arthur 2 or Coming To America might be more suitable films to sum up the year.
Musically the story isn't much different. Bon Jovi follwed up Slippery When Wet with New Jersey, Crosby Stills, Nash & Young briefly re-formed and Dylan released Down In The Groove (???!!). Daydream Nation was released, but Hip Hop was the big winner, with It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back, Straight Outta Compton and By All Means Necessary hitting the shelves.
Rattle and Hum sums the year up perfectly. It's not rubbish, but it's not Joshua Tree, which came out in the far superior 1987, which also brought us The Untouchables, Full Metal Jacket, Good Morning Vietnam, Lethal Weapon, Robocop - not to mention The Lost Boys, Dogs In Space (one of my favourites) and of course, Wall Street.
1989's a favourite too ....might research that one next.
31st Mar 2008 - 4 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
The News
The BBC's Web 2.0 overhaul is continuing nicely. The BBC News site has had an update, into an altogether less 1998 format.
31st Mar 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

Sea Wolf
Get to the River Before It Runs Too Low
Dangerbird
This is the debut EP from LA based singer/songwriter Alex Church, produced by Phil Ek (Built To Spill, The Shins). Recorded partly in the studio and partly in Church's living room, this collection of 5 songs captures the warmth of a homemade recording but can swell with beautiful confidence when mixed with complex orchestration. Church's vocals have an intimate feel that recalls vintage Fence releases but though many of the songs have a melancholic theme of loss the overall feeling is one of affection and honesty. Musically there is a rich blend of delicate guitars and washes of cello that create a satisfying mix of foggy folk with uplifting pop melodies. The result is simple and effective, captivating and entirely genuine and really whets the appetite for the full length album Leaves In The River.
29th Mar 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet
Read more 3 star reviewsDon't Stop Me Now
Following on from their genius Gorilla advert, the Cadbury's team are back with more high jinks. Airing from tonight, this might not hit the spot in such an unexpected way, but it combines some of my all-time favourite vehicles with a timely take on Terminal 5's current upheaval...
Higher-def version here.
29th Mar 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

X Files 2: Pimp My X
anyone else think Xzibit's in the new X Files movie because he's got an X in his name?
Links
Tags
29th Mar 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet
Previously....
Guy Who Says 'Previously On Heroes ' Wishes He Was Guy Who Says 'Previously On Lost'...
29th Mar 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet
Express Delivery
Adobe have finally chipped in on the escalating battle to edit your photos online. Photoshop Express is a free online editing tool that offer some of the offline powerhouse program's features ....but don't expect to instantly know what you're doing. It's simple but effective.
As well as editing, it offers 2GB of online storage and a gallery facility - which suggests they could be looking to rival sites like Flickr as well.
28th Mar 2008 - 2 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
Song Of The Day: Volume V
after getting this year's snowteam nodding along like Wayne & Garth, I think Black Mountain's Stormy High has found its way onto this volume
28th Mar 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet
The A-Team
Looks like The A-Team might be getting the big-screen makeover, with Boyz N The Hood director John Singleton behind the camera. Woody Harrelson is currently rumoured to be playing Howlin' Mad Murdock, with Ice Cube as B.A. Baracus. This time they're Iraq war vets on the run for a crime they didn't commit etc...
27th Mar 2008 - 3 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
Guns 'n Pepper
Dr Pepper have stepped in to solve the delay in releasing Axl's long-lost masterpiece, Chinese Democracy - they'll give everyone in America* a can of Dr Pepper if GNR release it before the end of 2008
*(excluding Slash and Buckethead)
27th Mar 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

Sleevage
Album cover blog Sleevage has some pretty interesting articles covering all sorts of stuff - from the method behind the Editors recent cover, way back to the controversy surrounding Appetite for Destruction's unruly artwork, which was updated in order to get the band on MTV.
27th Mar 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet
















