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Brakes and Veils
Chimp favourites Brakes are on a Uni tour in October:
Sep 25 London UCL Union
Oct 01 Hull Asylum, Hull University
Oct 02 Glasgow Oran Mor
Oct 03 Aberdeen Moshulu
Oct 04 Sheffield Fuzz Club, Sheffield University
Oct 06 Manchester Club Academy
Oct 07 Newcastle Northumbria University
Oct 09 Coventry Warwick University
Oct 13 Bath Bath Moles Student Night
www.myspace.com/brakesband
www.brakesbrakesbrakes.com
The Veils are also on tour with Ed Harcourt. BC's been sitting on their excellent album Nux Vomica for a while...
Oct 02 Liquid Rooms Edinburgh with Ed Harcourt
Oct 03 Oran Mor Glasgow with Ed Harcourt
Oct 04 Stage 2 Newcastle with Ed Harcourt
Oct 06 Academy 3 Manchester with Ed Harcourt
Oct 07 Fibbers York with Ed Harcourt
Oct 09 Brudenell Leeds with Ed Harcourt
Oct 10 Leadmill Sheffield with Ed Harcourt
Oct 11 Barfly Liverpool with Ed Harcourt
Oct 12 The Graduate Cambridge with Ed Harcourt
Oct 14 Arts Centre Norwich with Ed Harcourt
Oct 15 Rescue Rooms Nottingham with Ed Harcourt
Oct 16 Barfly Birmingham with Ed Harcourt
Oct 18 Point Cardiff with Ed Harcourt
Oct 19 Triinty Bristol with Ed Harcourt
Oct 20 Zodiac Oxford with Ed Harcourt
Oct 22 Digital Brighton with Ed Harcourt
Oct 23 Koko London with Ed Harcourt
www.theveils.com
www.myspace.com/theveils
13th Sep 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet

The Takeovers
Bad Football
Off Records
The second album from The Takeovers might suggest that they were the most successful of Robert Pollard's 2006 side-projects (see reviews: 1,2,3) ...but a quick look at the team sheet suggests that nothing has settled down, as there have been a few additions to the squad since then. As well as Turn To Red's Pollard, Slusarenko (GBV) and Dan Peters (Mudhoney), Bad Football enlists super-subs Stephen Malkmus (Pavement), Tad Doyle (Tad) and John Moen (The Decemberists) to pad out the squad.
Malkmus lends his eccentric stunt guitar to opener You're At It, which starts things off in the right direction, with it's lolloping guitars and pounding drums. The album cover is a great Pollard collage and there are plenty of classics song titles here (Father's Favorite Temperature, The Jester Of Helpmeat), although not necessarily corresponding to the best tracks (I Can See My Dog, My Will).
The focussing of Pollard's attention on The Takeovers might suggest a more purposeful record than Turn To Red, but other than the extended team sheet their is no evidence that any more effort went into either the writing or recording of the album. There are definitely a couple more developed songs here, but in typical post-GBV Pollard style it has the sound of a fun side-project, rather than the main event.
13th Sep 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet
Read more 2.5 star reviewsHeavy Facts
The BBC are now chipping in on the rumoured Led Zep re-union gig. Harvey Goldsmith is making an announcement today according to them.
****** update: it's happening - £125, Nov 26 at the O2. to get tickets you have to register at www.Ahmettribute.com and then there's going to be a ballot. two per household - get to work chimps!
12th Sep 2007 - 3 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
The Dark Knight
nice to see another trailer that doesn't give too much away

12th Sep 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet
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Mugison Goes Blind In Iceland
ah, i knew something was missing in chimp HQ - some new mugisongs. check this festival outing with his storming band: Go Blind, Mugiboogie, I Want You, and Murr Murr I didn't think that could get much better... really hanging out for the new album now
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11th Sep 2007 - 3 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
Touch and Go
Legendary Chicago label Touch and Go have a nice set of videos up from their 25th anniversary block party, including Big Black's reunion show.
11th Sep 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet

The Lookout
(dir. Scott Frank)
"Whoever has the money has the power..."
Low-key bank job with Joseph Gordon Levitt, Jeff Daniels and Isla Fisher. JGL follows up his star turn in Brick, as a once-promising high school jock who is now dealing with the aftermath of an accident, working as a bank janitor by night, re-learning basic life-skills by day. His short-term memory and sequencing skills are shot, which means he gets though life by writing everything down. Jeff Daniels is his blind room-mate, Isla Fisher an ex-classmate who comes into his life at the encouragement of Matthew Goode, a dodgy barfly with big plans.
It's less stylised than Brick, but similar in the way it reworks the conventions of noir thrillers to produce a satisfying, modern spin on the genre. It's a small farm town, with nothing going on, lots of dirty snow on the ground, everyone knows everyone etc. Writer/director Scott Frank (Get Shorty/ Out Of Sight/ Minority Report etc) builds the tension of out JGL's growing sense of frustration with his new lot in life - the high school star now washing floors, naively accepting a way out by Goode and his crew.
The notebook that he writes everything down in gives the film a touch of Memento's sensibility, as he moves from trying to piece together his life to piecing together the bank job that he's pushed into - but it's used in a less tricksy way here.
Believable performances all round, decent direction and convincing stakes: highly watchable.
11th Sep 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet
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blackle is the new google
is blackle really going to save kerbillions of watts of energy by using white-on-black searches? (as this points out ctrl+alt+apple+8 on a mac gets the same effect/is fun for a few minutes)
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11th Sep 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet

The Consequences Of Love
(dir. Paolo Sorrentino)
Stylish, witty and engrossing thriller set in a slow-moving Swiss hotel.
Star Toni Servillo is almost a parody of the existential Euro art-house character - all sharp Italian suits, polo necks and chain-smoking, refusing to talk to the staff, barely making conversation to the other guests, just about mustering the energy to solve a daily chess puzzle in the paper. We watch him floating through his slow-motion existence, hovering on the edges of life, observing the people around him with a detatched sneer; taking everything in, letting nothing out.
What makes this film so great is the way that you're drawn into the central question - who is he, and what's he doing? - with a confident, seductive pull. The classy use of camera tricks, flashes of "did I just see that?" moments that'll have you reaching for the rewind and impressive sound design make this a quality outing. As the joy is in the reveal, there's no need to say anything else here...
11th Sep 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet
Read more 4 star reviewsxmass sightings
xmas stuff sighted in selfridges, sainsbury's and tesco's.
it's september.
10th Sep 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet
Animal Collective
Strawberry Jam
Domino
Listening to Animal Collective records is akin to listening to the sounds inside the brain of a child genius who’s hopped up on a cocktail of Ritalin and Prozac and suffering all the known side effects of hyperactive paranoid neurosis. In a good way.
Weaved waves of hypnotic beats are mixed with samples and guitar loops to produce a sometimes awkward, but always interesting experimental sound. All this complimented by the brilliantly bonkers vocals of Avery Tare (supported by some beach boys-like harmonies). One moment singing melodically, then howling like a mad banshee - the innocence, intensity and soreness in the voice, while sounding like nothing else I’ve heard, fits the feel of the songs perfectly.
Listening to Animal Collective can sometimes be a bit challenging. The album opens with some awkward beats and crackles and beeps, but don’t be put off as everything comes together to produce a right rollicking song about monsters – Peacebone. The stand out tracks on Strawberry Jam are Reverend Green and Fireworks. The former, it’s speculated, is about the things you see living in NYC and contains, I think, one of the best/funniest lines on the album: “Bulimic vegetarian wins weight contest”. The latter, I’m certain, is my current favourite song.
New York based Animal Collective - made up of Avey Tare, Panda Bear, Deakin and Geologist - all do their own stuff and all seem pretty prolific and I think this is their 8th long player together. (Panda Bear released a brilliant solo album earlier this year – Person Pitch – which is well worth a listen). Pound for pound, I’m not yet sure if Strawberry Jam is as good as their 2005 album Feels, but this is still a contender for album of the year if you ask me.
Listening to it I have to wonder how the bejesus they come up with such abstract ideas for their tunes. However, if they’re gonna keep on serving up delicious treats such as Strawberry Jam then I hope they keep taking the tablets.
10th Sep 2007 - 2 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
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Broken Social Scene
Scala, London
Lynchpin of Canada's sprawling Broken Social Scene, described as indie's wu tang clan, Kevin Drew is a man who evidently has an aversion to pressure. In many ways this mindset has been the essence of the groups burgeoning reputation; but also perhaps provides an explanation as to why BSS have, thus far, failed to progress from a committed cult following and into the mainstream. The reluctance of Drew and co-founder Brendan Canning to seek the limelight is at the root of the collective's organic and diverse sound that invites contribution from a variety of Scene associates and members. BSS are a democracy of stars not a dictatorship or an autocracy. Shorn of the girls (Feist, Emily Haines and Amy Millan) and the brass 'blasters', tonight was very much the Drew show and initially suspicions were that he might not be able to step up to the plate.
Arriving on stage with one hand in his pocket and the other gripping a beer Drew made a little speech which reeked of 'getting excuses in early'. "Stop apologising" he was told by a particularly vocal heckler when observing that 'life is full of pressure. You get out of bed you feel pressure. You cook a meal you feel pressure. There's pressure to get the girl. There's pressure at work. So how about tonight we play free of pressure". Politely requesting the crowd's indulgence he explained the point of tonight's gig was to showcase and trial songs from the forthcoming album 'Broken Social Scene present's Kevin Drew's... Spirit if'. It wasn't the most auspicious start; akin to turning up to see your favourite footy team only to find out that some of the star names had been left on the bench and the rest would actually be playing rugby.
For a man with such a passionate fan base Drew's insecurity was surprising and as it turns out completely unfounded. As promised we were served up songs penned by Drew but interupted by seven of the Scene's stalwarts. Eschewing some of their tendencies towards ambience, balladry or electronica; opener 'Lucky Ones', with three guitars variously take the lead, was a statement of intent. Tonight was about rock. Continuing the earlier theme 'Farewell to the Pressure Kids' cranked up the volume before synth was finally allowed to rear it's head on 'Safety Grip'. Reviving previous obsessions with songs from love's outsiders the gig really kicked in with 'Too Beautiful to Fuck'; a tale of listening to people through hotel walls. Singalong for the fans came in the form of 'Backed Out on the Cocks' which the crowd enthusiastically embraced. Good as his word Drew continued to deliver more new tunes all of which showed potential. Much as it would be marvelous if it were otherwise it just can't be denied that nothing hits the spot in the same way as songs that have already been taken to the heart. After an hour or so the crowd were becoming slightly restless.
Buoyed by the mainly positive reception given to the new material the pressure now seemed to be off so that Drew and the boys began to relax. Rewarding the followers for their patience they stomped through 'Super-Connected'; just one of the winners the crowd had come in hope of hearing. Now on a roll 'Major Label Debut' was rattled through giving a delicate tune a new bouncy feel. Such was the reaction of the congregation to hearing the sermon that they'd yearned for from the cult leader there was still a nagging feeling that this was what the Broken Social scene can really deliver. There was a prevailing sense that tonight's show could have been something really special. Closing the set Drew was reconciled with his most fervent heckler inviting him onto the stage to waltz through the closing of 'Lover's Spit' a song so lush it could have filled the Royal Albert Hall several times over let alone a sweaty Scala. Revitalised by the crowd's enthusiasm for old favourites and now well and truly warmed up the Scene didn't want to vacate the stage but had to confess they had nothing more rehearsed. A quick conference was held to find out who knew how to play what while Brendan Canning stepped forward to point out; 'we're not going to cure any diseases tonight but we'll try to play you a song'. And what a song it was with 'Cause=Time' elevated to a tour de force.
All bode's well for the 'Spirit If' project and in fairness the Scala performance was a success but ultimately the sense was that this was a taster of what could have been. My own regret at illness forcing me to miss out on a performance last year of the whole BSS ensemble was only deepened. To slightly miss-paraphrase Smokey Robinson, sometimes a taste of honey can be worse than none at all.
10th Sep 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet
Read more 3.5 star reviewsThe Kingdom Of The Crystal Skull
IndianaJones.com has had a re-vamp ....in time for next year's Indiana Jones And The Kingdom Of The Crystal Skull.
10th Sep 2007 - 2 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
I Am Iron Man!
Even though I've never read the comic, Iron Man seems like my kind of super-hero - witty, clever and semi-plausible. The official trailer is finally online and it looks great. Ozzy's vocal's don't do any harm either...
10th Sep 2007 - 2 comments - Add Comment - Tweet

Okkervil River
The Stage Names
Jagjaguwar
As the first beats of The Stage Names creeps into audible view any fan of this band will undoubtedly realise that times have changed since the fantastic Black Sheep Boy, Okkervile River's 2005 desperate triumph. With The Stage Names, front man Will Sheff has again managed a triumph but its of a wholly different nature. I guess you could call it a triumphant triumph which I would have thought was the best type. Black Sheep Boy had the power to almost drown you in melancholy as Sheff's tales of woe and despair were delivered with treacle like denseness over all encompassing soundscapes. Though he has by no means cheered up he is aiming his desperation to the heavens and the result is epic.
Sheff writes like a novelist and composes songs full of mysterious characters and plays out his worldly misgivings through each of their sad, broken-down lives. While Black Sheep Boy conjured up images of a time long past The Stage Names is very much rooted in the present. Here we see Sheffs characters as musicians, fans or failing victims of the show-biz mangle. All this is told with Sheff's unique lyrical ambiguity as he manages to swamp you with bookish poetry while always slipping a wink here and there to warn you not to take it all too seriously.
The first three tracks set the tempo high as the dirty riffs of Our Life Is Not A Movie Or Maybe count you in, Unless It Kicks is an endlessly climbing rock powerhouse of a track while A Hand To Take Hold Of The Scene has a swaggeringly jovial jaunt as satisfying as a Love Cats-era Cure and as it descends into blasts of trumpet and backing 'doo doo doo's' we could be listening to Spoon. (Yes, it's that good.) But as thrilling as this opening run of songs is we know it can't continue and it just wouldn't be the same without Sheff providing us with ample opportunity to give in willingly to his unavoidable wave of blissful melancholia. Savannah Smiles is an achingly delicate tale of regret and lost moments while Girl In Port is Sheff at his storytelling best.
But if for some unimaginable reason, like you're mental, all this hasn't managed to convince you by the time you get to the penultimate John Allyn Smith Sails then you're given one last chance to reach out and grab this sorry talent by the scruff of its dirty neck. This is Sheff's tribute to the late John Berryman and it's his finest moments to date. Sheff adopts the first person as he chronicles the poets suicide but as a final twist of the grimmest humor he turns the song into a masterful rendition of the Beach Boys Sloop John B. As he launches himself to his death 'with a book in each hand,' the sorry admission, "this is the worst trip I've ever been on," rings out with laughable desperation and this songwriters genius is immortalised for ever.
7th Sep 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet
Read more 4 star reviewsSiouxsie Sioux
Mantaray
Universal
From her early days as a groupie for the Sex Pistols - and the catalyst for the Bill Grundy TV meltdown - Siouxsie Sioux (and the Banshees or course) went on to become one of the most influential bands of the punk/post-punk era - cited as a major influence on bands from The Cure (Robert Smith played guitar with the Banshees for a bit) right up to LCD Soundsystem, who covered Slowdive in 2006.
Siouxsie herself went on to have success with The Creatures and in various other guises, and while this first solo album is being billed as a comeback, a quick look through the files suggests it's just getting a bigger marketing push than some of the other late-period entries.
After a fairly average start things pick up with Here Comes That Day, but with the 'spooky' atmosphere of Loveless or the 'moody' delivery of If It Doesn't Kill You, the song writing offers very little of note - with Siouxsie's strong voice seeming dated and more suited to the stage, projecting literal narrative lyrics up to the seats at the back.
Drone Zone is one of the most aptly titled songs I have heard in a while, and no, the title's not ironic. They Follow You provides a brief glimmer of light, with a nice extended instrumental intro although that is quickly overshadowed by the album's low point - Heaven and Alchemy. The title says it all.
While some of the songs on the album sound updated in some ways, they sound incredibly out of touch and tired in others - making this an unfortunately forgettable album.
7th Sep 2007 - 3 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
Read more 2 star reviewsThe BBC's Multi Format iPlayer
The iPlayer should be available on platforms other than Windows "as soon as possible".
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7th Sep 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet
Now The Mail are releasing films!
not content with being giving away Prince's new album, now the Mail are giving away a new film. well, it does star Vinnie Jones as a journalist on the trail of an unpublished Dickens manuscript, so maybe they have to. coming to a screen very near you, 16 sep. still pretty odd though
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6th Sep 2007 - 1 comments - Add Comment - Tweet

MiniMe
Exhibition looking at the birth of kids' fashion in the boutique era, opens 14-29 September 2007.
Pollock's Toy Museum, 1 Scala Street, London, W1T 2HL
Nearest tube: Goodge Street
Tel: 020 7636 3452
Museum Entrance Fee: Adults £3.00 Child £1.50 (free under 3) Students £2.00
Opening Times: Monday-Saturday 10.00-17.00
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minime
never mind the pollock's
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6th Sep 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet
Beastie Boys
Brixton Academy, London
It's only until you see these guys live that you realise just how special they are. They've been around so long it's easy to forget or take for granted the reasons for being a fan. But last night it all came flooding back. There really is no one quite like them. As they waltzed effortlessly through a never ending back catalogue from punk gems like Heart Attack Man, Hip Hop classics like Shake Your Rump and their new instrumental jams you can't help to marvel at how they move from one genre to another maintaining full control and sincerity. They do it all and do it all better than most. Sporting cheap suits and shades and with the exception of a rather elderly looking MCA who stared longingly at his guitar during the hip hop numbers these guys never stopped moving and would run rings around most young bands now. Highlights were opener Time For Livin', So What'cha Want and the ferocious closer Sabotage featuring dare-devil stunts by Money Mark. Truly awesome.
BC - 4 Stars
Both they, and we are now a little older. The granddaddies of hip-hop/rock/punk/lounge moved casually through the eras and the styles. Not many acts could pull this off so casually and convincingly. Mix-Master Mike kept the classics interesting with his old-skool beats and occasional lyrical input. Highlights: Brass Monkey, Shake Your Rump, and the mosh-pitt crowd coming out of retirement for finale Sabotage. I also felt that having heard the tracks live the latest offering The Mix Up is deserving of more attention.
CJ - 4 Stars
21 years since they first hit Brixton Academy, Raising Hell with Run DMC and getting the Sun readers all worked up about the possibility of their VW logos being liberated, the Beastie Boys (II Men) are back. New songs from this year's instrumental jam fest The Mix-Up work much better in the wider context of the BBCatalogue, breaking things up rather than sounding like they're just arsing around in the studio for a bit. Thought the sound was a bit woolly at times, with MCA's bass so distorted that it was on the verge of being some generic low rumble, rather than the kick-ass riff machine it should be, and Ad Rock's guitar a little lost too - Mike D's drums cut through with some pretty crisp beats though, holding down the fort, with Mix Master Mike's turtabletricknologismery pretty entertaining. Stand out tracks for me were Gratitude, Shake Your Rump(ah!), So What'cha Want, 3 MCs and Sabotage - think that's still in at least one version of my all-time top ten. Also amusing to see that Money Mark still jumps up and down on his keyboard exactly the same way he did last time I saw them back in 95 (Hong Kong Stadium, with Foo Fighters and Sonic Youth on the bill - that's a proper support act).
C71 - 3.5 Stars
I must admit I was slightly skeptical about this show. After easily being my favourite live band for many years, 1999's upgrade to Wembley Arena was very dissapointing - although to be fair it was the crowd that sucked not the band (too many fair weather Hello Nasty fans sitting not singing).
All that was quickly brushed aside here, as I couldn't have wished for a better start than Time For Livin' (although technically you could say Biz vs The Nuge was the real opener). Their was never a sign of age kicking in, other than their choice of suits. Mike D's reflections of playing Brixton in '86 ("Google that y'all") brought it all home - this is a band that has always moved forwards and kept things going in their own unique style.
Mix Master Mike has turned out to be the best signing the group ever made, and his constantly surprising beats and pieces constantly kept things fressssh. As a pure hip-hop band they have to be up at the top of the pile with their mic passing styles (So Watcha Want, Ch-Check It Out), but add a punk band (Heart Attack Man, Egg Raid On Mojo), a rock band (Sabotage, Gratitude) and some lounge jazz (Electric Worm, Live At P.J.'s) to the mix and this band is unsurpassable. Brilliant.
CSF - 4 Stars
Set List:
Mix Master Mike Intro
Time For Livin'
Gratitude
Off The Grid
Root Down
Super Disco Breakin'
Sure Shot
Shake Your Rump
Live At PJ's
Remote Control
Electric Worm
Lighten Up
Tough Guy
Brass Monkey
Pass The Mic
Flute Loop
Skills To PayThe Bills
Time To Get Ill
Son Of Neckbone
The Gala Event
Egg Raid On Mojo
Sabrosa
Alright Hear This
Ch-check It Out
Body Movin'
3 MC's
So What'cha want
Intergalactic
Heartattack man
Sabotag
6th Sep 2007 - 2 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
Read more 4 star reviews
Sixtoo
Jackals And Vipers In Envy Of Man
Ninja Tune
Robert Squire aka Sixtoo is a man of many talents indeed and trying to pin him down to any one area is proving rather tough. He emerged from the mid 90's underground hip hop scene as an MC to be reckoned with. Sharing the stage with such visionaries as Buck 65 and Sage Francis he soon became synonymous with the Anticon/Mush collective. His 2002 release Duration saw Squire put down the mic and concentrate on the production side of Sixtoo. This has been going from strength to strength culminating in his 2003 Ninja Tune debut Chewing On Glass & Other Miracle Cures, a compelling album dripping with atmosphere. This years Jackals And Vipers builds on this formula but is an altogether darker affair.
Constructed using meticulously stitched together recordings of various live sets then taken into the studio and rendered down to their basic elements this record works as a wonderfully rich film-noir soundtrack played out in 13 movements. Each track is named Jackals & Vipers In Envy Of Man Parts 1-13 and they are designed to be listened to as a continuous whole.
Things start off pretty dark with a brief intro leading us into the drum heavy Part 2. Creeping along to pounding beats and sinister synths this awesome opener sets the tone of paranoia and pretty much keeps it up until the final movement. Though very much rooted in hip hop Squires touch is often light and it's in these moments that we see him as a master of his craft. Each sound, whether booming or whispering, is bathed in detail. Each beat comes with added effect and the samples are expertly disguised creating an impressive air of mystery that is essential to the whole. This multi layering and constant reworking can produce insanely claustrophobic compositions but can also lean back allowing strings or a delicate piano chord to evoke grand, spatial landscapes.
As the final movement draws to a close you are left with as many questions as answers but all good art should leave the viewer or listener in this way. Jackals And Vipers opens its arms and welcomes you into its hidden world of paranoia and intrigue but once you leave you'll be none the wiser as to how it was all done. It gives of itself only as much as it needs to and the rest is up to you but seeing as over generosity is often the downfall of instrumental albums such as this Sixtoo manages once again to avoid that pitfall and produce a caged piece of hip hop brilliance.
6th Sep 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet
Read more 3.5 star reviewsZep Back?!
according to the NME, Led Zep might reform for a one-off tribute to Atlantic Records boss Ahmet Ertegun - Jason Bonham on drums
*****
update: missed this in the telegraph - looks like it's the O2
6th Sep 2007 - 2 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
New Pods
I'm off to the cinema with BC to belatedly catch The Bourne Ultimatum, but Big Steve is announcing new iPods and more right now.
So far, new Nano - $199 for 8GB. Shipping today.
iPod "Classic" - up to 160GB at $349.
iPhone price cut from $599 to $399.
UPDATE:
iPod Shuffle
iPod Nano
iPod Classic
iPod Touch
5th Sep 2007 - 1 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
Galactic Nuisance
More You Tube crap. Please stop sending me these links.... I'm too busy.
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5th Sep 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet

Tape It!
another part of the ongoing dead format data storage problem solved: a USB cassette "deck"
5th Sep 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet
Stuck in the Midlake with you
never really had Midlake down as Radiohead fans, but apparently they are. Good interview over at the Onion's AV Club
5th Sep 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet

Prince
3121 - The O2
Another week, another legend at the O2.
Prince is one of those artists who's wandered so far from the stuff that got you into him in the first place, that you forget just quite how good you once thought he was. Yes, Guitar, the single off his new (Daily Mail giveaway) album is alright, but you'd be hard-pressed to come up with a solid hit from the last few.
Live though, he's a different proposition. He's sold out 21 nights at the O2 (aka the Dome), which is pretty phenomenal in itself. But that would mean 420,000 disappointed Prince fans if he wasn't still so utterly on top of his game.
After kindly showing us the UK Rock n Roll Hall of Fame round-up of his career (Prince - he's great! Who knew?!), Sunday's show launched straight into Musicology, which turned into a long funk jam, introducing Maceo Parker (JBs saxman) and the rest of the band. Weirdly, they then gave us versions of INXS's What You Need and Wild Cherry's Play That Funky Music (White Boy) (maybe some ironic comment on the crowd members he'd already encouraged to dance up on stage?), and The JBs' Pass The Peas, before hitting the back catalogue. "I've got so many hits, you can't handle them all" he kept reminding us, although he did find time to also cover Come Together, and Gnarls Barkley's Crazy...
The old cliche about him channeling James Brown and Jimi Hendrix is pretty much true - his moves are amazing, solos soaring, and he's got that conducting the band thing at the drop of a funky hat down. Pretty essential outing from a real master overall - could have done with 1999 and Let's Go Crazy, but maybe they the two we couldn't handle.
Setlist:
Musicology
Prince + The Band
What You Need (INXS)
Play That Funky Music (Wild Cherry)
Pass The Peas (The JBs)
Cream
U Got the Look
Shhh
Piano set
Diamonds and Pearls (1 verse 1 chorus)
A 1000 Hugs and Kisses
Little Red Corvette
Raspberry Beret (1 verse 1 chorus)
Sometimes It Snows In April
Full Band
7
Come Together (The Beatles)
Black Sweat
Kiss
Purple Rain
Encore
I Feel 4 U
Controversy inc Housequake chant
Encore
Crazy (Gnarls Barkley)
Nothing Compares 2 U
Encore - Prince solo synth set
Sign O The Times
Pop Life
DMSR
Erotic City (sample)
I Wanna Be Your Lover
When Doves Cry
Alphabet St
5th Sep 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet
Read more 4 star reviewsFlight of the Living Dead
Love the title and the concept, but the execution makes Snakes On A Plane seem like a cinematic masterpiece....
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4th Sep 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet

Tube Sock
apparently this works quite well: Tube Sock converts YouTube videos into iPod/Mac/PSP etc friendly versions, so you can save all those clips of people falling over on the loo forever. could be quite useful for some of those music clips that appear and disappear etc
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4th Sep 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet
Darth Smartass
Not much happening today it seems. Beastie Boys are in Brixton tonight, but until then let Darth Smartass keep you amused. Although it's not a patch on old favourite Troops.
4th Sep 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet

Lightning Dust
Lightning Dust
Jagjaguwar
Who would have thought that the strange and beguiling space-rock monster of Black Mountain would bear so much fruit since its magnificent debut in 2005. This awesome beast has spewed from its depths many fascinating side projects and this most recent one is no exception. Formed by Amber Webber and Joshua Wells this debut album is the total opposite to the mothership's blend of psychedelic rock and penetrating guitars and yet touches the same grand heights. Webber's haunting vocals form the backbone of the sound and the result is a compelling collection of songs that have the quiet power to make you shiver with icy discomfort as in the hollow Take Me Back. Webber's vocal depth was only hinted at on the Black Mountain debut but its power is fully realised here. She sings with such ease and yet commands an epic respect. Her voice can seem up-close and intimate as in the beautiful Castles And Caves and yet conjure up visions of sprawling, desolate landscapes seen on one of the albums highlights Heaven.
Lightning Dust sees Webber emerge from the other side of the dominating rock of Black Mountain with proof that the time spent in its all-encompassing shadow only strengthened her talents and in many respects informed her own work. One of the interesting things about this record is its ability to suggest the same vastness and space as Black Mountain but with a much lighter touch. It's a delicate thing that evokes grandeur by offering emptiness and is another tick in the box of this Vancouver collective and its fantastic record label Jagjaguar.
3rd Sep 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet
Read more 3 star reviewsHeli-History
It always sees to me that helicopters have changed very little in my lifetime. You still see the standard-issue Bell 206 Jetranger that would drop off misc bad guys in the A-Team, and the high-tech look of Blue Thunder or Airwolf is still pretty up to date.
C-Net has a photo gallery round-up of A Century Of Helicopters.
3rd Sep 2007 - 3 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
Jeffrey Lewis
12 Crass Songs
It’s been a good week for record label PR and a bad one for Chimp research, following from Muxloe’s Young Marble Giants admission, I had penned the following review based upon the first few listens of Jeffrey Lewis’ 12 Crass Songs:
Jeffrey Lewis began life as a beatnik, or at least his parents were, a lifestyle choice that deemed comic books and blues records more suitable entertainment than that old Hippy’s foe: Television. Lewis took that early absence in his life personally it seems, as TV is one of several targets in the sights of his nasally-voiced shotgun on new album 12 Crass Songs.
Before becoming a musician and a member of New York’s anti-folk movement (the power and anger of punk via acoustic guitar) Lewis drew (aha) on his upbringing to become an underground comic book artist. The sparse/direct style of comic books runs through 12 Crass Songs; it’s a wall-to-wall bunch of blunt, angry self-effacement - delivered like a crude black and white sketch through minimal music and Lewis’ talking/singing.
12 Crass Songs doesn’t let up. Nothing is spared as various tones of grey are added to the bleak portrait of the western world today. The human race is the first in the firing line on End Result “I’m part of the race that kills for possessions, part of the race that’s wiping itself out” On I Ain’t Thick, Lewis has his daggers drawn for that old villain 'The Man' who uses TV/Sarah Jessica Parker, consumerism and even history books, to keep the masses downtrodden, but Lewis ain’t having that y’all.
Systematic Death plays out like a comic book story, etching a sketch of Mr and Mrs Average America doomed to a life of misery, oppression and downright idiocy under the SYSTEM SYSTEM SYSTEM!
If he’s pissed at Sarah Jessica Parker, then imagine the ire Lewis reserves for Bush (I bet even Sarah Jessica Parker is pissed at him) and Mr. President’s policies, particularly his idea of defence, come under the penlike scalpel of Lewis. Even punk itself isn’t safe. Punk is Dead laments that the movement that once inspired Lewis and his contempories sold itself out “Punk is Dead. Punk is Dead. Just another cheap product for the consumer’s head”.
I would disagree however, what is punk other than getting a personal message out there by the most direct means possible (or is that DHL? (Corporate Fascists)). It’s easy to roll the eyes at another New York artist bitching about conspiracies and the like, but that’s exactly the fuel that feeds 12 Crass Songs. The world in 2007 is a mixed-up place of complacency and terror, artists that stick their head out, stare you in the eyes and point that out should be saluted. However, it surely wouldn’t detract from the message to add a splash of colour now and again, if only musically….
Then, like a tardy Colombo, I discovered that I had overlooked a vital piece of evidence; 12 Crass Songs is exactly that; 12 cover versions from late 70s/Early 80s English Anarchists Crass. It’s depressing to think that 30 year old messages of protest and opposition still ring true and clear today, and strangely all of my thoughts were still valid - even though I refuse to believe that Sarah Jessica Parker was a key instrument in Thatcher’s oppression of Britain’s working classes.
3rd Sep 2007 - 1 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
Read more 2.5 star reviewsHis name is Prince...
...and he still is pretty funky. yup, we're all about the Do2me at the moment...
2nd Sep 2007 - 1 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
Earth Plus
The latest edition of Google Earth contains a few new tricks. Choose: View > Switch to Sky and the program flips into an astronomical display of the sky above your current location, complete with star map. Might be helpful when making the calculations for the jump to lightspeed.
Then, hit ALT + APPLE + A on a Mac or CTRL + ALT + A on a PC and you'll enter Flight Simulator mode, letting you fly around / crash mindlessly into anywhere on Earth. There's a list of controls available at the Google Earth website.

2nd Sep 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet
On The Air Tonight
We're not pimping ourselves out to the advertisers quite yet, but check out this new chimp-friendly spot, which will be going out on TV tonight in the UK (during the ads of the Big Brother final if you can bear to watch). It's by the creative director guy who was behind that other 'modern classic' ad with the Sony balls.
31st Aug 2007 - 1 comments - Add Comment - Tweet

Superbad
(dir. Greg Motolla)
Another effortlessly funny comedy from the Jew-Tang Clan. Knocked-Up star Seth Rogan started writing this w partner Evan Goldberg when they were 14 apparently - and it feels like they managed to nail that weird teen moment when boys are only really emotionally involved with other boys, but putting all their efforts into scoring chicks.
Taking the one-night template laid down by Dazed And Confused etc, we follow Michael Cera (George Michael Jr in Arrested Development) and Jonah Hill as they try and buy some booze so they can impress some girls and get into a party. Along the way their even geekier buddy Christopher Mintz-Plasse reinvents himself as 25 year old Hawaiian organ donor, "McLovin" with the help of a fake ID and two doofus cops (Seth Rogan and Bill Hader) who let him roll with them after he's involved in a liquor store hold-up.
Pretty much wins you over from the opening credits. The 70s flavoured funk-rock soundtrack lifts it from the now into a generic US high school experience - only the phones and lack of net jokes really anchor it to 2007. What makes this and Knocked-Up work is that it's taking the gross-out template, but keeping it all in the realms of possibility (just), letting the humour come from the awkward tensions of growing up rather than constructing some outlandish string of coincidences and wacky scenes to ramp up the laughs.
31st Aug 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet
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Young Marble Giants
Colossal Youth
Domino
Tasked with reviewing Young Marble Giants I approached the commission in just the same way as has served me well so far in my short chimpomatic career. For the uninitiated it should be explained that as well as being provided with the album the record company's PR people often forward info and biogs of the band to provide reviewers with the bigger picture. Personally, I only check the PR once I've listened to the album a few times preferring to approach it with fresh ears and guard against believing any hype. Such a tactic seems to have paid off thus far. After drawing my own conclusions I'll check for any extra detail that might explain any mysteries or ambiguities in the music and I might do some internet research checking for some kind of back-story which might put the the whole project in context. Usually it is a process that confirms initial impressions. Not in the case of Young Marble Giants.
Until I read up on Young Marble Giants I was set to say something along these lines......I've listened to Colossal Youth several times now and though its generally been an enjoyable listen I can't really see the point of them . There are a few stand out tracks such as 'Constantly Changing' and 'Music for Evenings' which with their controlled choppy riffs, aloof vocals and edgy bass showcase the groups understated and spare sound. But I'd now find it difficult to hum a single tune or recall any words. The general feel of Colossal Youth is of an early morning deserted town centre in the twilight period when revellers have headed home and the milk float and postman are yet to start their rounds. Its all a fairly solid package but nothing outstanding. It's moody but nothing on say Tricky. Its atmospheric but not in the league of Portishead. Dark but not as haunted as Joy Division. You want minimal stick with Kraftwerk. You want drum beats programmed through a synth then check out Boards of Canada. If you're after a female voice with some attitude then don't give up on PJ Harvey....you want a drone then look up Tram..... you want to be soothed go back to old school Mazzy Star or even Drugstore....you get the picture. It's hard to see how Young Marble Giants fit in and what their purpose is. I'd give it a 2 and half.
Having read up on them I now feel that I would have done Young Marble Giants a serious dis-service. It turns out this isn't new but a release of the only full length album the Welsh outfit released, all packaged in conjunction with an EP, a couple of singles and out-takes as bonus tracks. Not only that but it was all released over a quarter of a century ago. Though never popular in the mainstream these guys were a seminal act credited with influencing a generation of musicians and at the time possessed a small but dedicated and fanatical cult following. It all makes sense now. In this context Young Marble Giants are something of a revelation producing sounds so at odds to their punk contemporaries and providing a blue print for all the acts already name checked here. At the time it must have seemed that they were from another aural world and should be saluted for being so visionary. I stand by my assertion that they pale in comparison to those who have succeeded them but deserve their reputation and if you're looking for the roots of some of your lo-fi heroes then Young Marble Giants are well worth checking out.
31st Aug 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet
Read more 4 star reviewsIs There A Ghost?
Band of Horses have Is There A Ghost? - the opening track from their new album Cease To Begin - available for download on their Myspace page. Nice.

30th Aug 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet
Song Of The Day: Volume IV
More like Song Of The (Last Sun)day, as the lesser known She Was Hot by The Rolling Stones has been stuck in my head since last Sunday's gig. In the typical Stones style it seem like nothing special - your average riff etc - but it has their magic touch, plus a great key-changing chorus that's the catchy bit. Nice video by Julien Temple too.
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30th Aug 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet
iTunes TV Shows
TV Shows are finally available on the UK iTunes store... although it seems to be mostly Disney/ABC stuff at the moment. Episodes are £1.89 each, meaning the full season of something like Ugly Betty would set you back £43.47, as opposed to £29.98 for the DVD on Amazon ....although the RRP for that is £39.99.
29th Aug 2007 - 1 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
Street Cycle
Being a reluctant refuse maker / hoarder I always find it hard to chuck stuff into the landfill. Having just moved into a new HQ I found myself with masses of surplus stuff this weekend, so decided to try and give at all away in a fire-sale style. Like throwing a sheep carcase into a river full of pirahna, the citizens of New Cross did not disappoint me.
The lucky pizza junk-mail delivery guy made out like a bandit, calling in an airlift to help him make off with a Sony TV, glass stand and a couple of accessories. Sorry to those people down the straight that didn't get their junk mail drop - he just couldn't leave the stuff unattended.
Some guy called Mike, Neil or Clive was overheard arguing with his wife about why he needed the wooden trimmed vintage 70's Sony cassette player, but luckily Mike/Clive/Neil won.
The cream on the cake was a guy who just couldn't leave a three shelf IKEA Billy bookcase without a home. He tried to carry it about five metres, before literally wheeling it end-over-end up the hill. I imagine it was sanded down to naked chipboard by the time he made it home.
As pictured, the posters have been behind the wardrobe for literally about 7 years. I took them down to the local recycling station, so that every punter heading down the road could marvel at them. The Return of the Jedi poster (1983 'coming soon' vintage - mountboard backing) went in no time, but unfortunately the Bill Viola exhibition (1993 - way before he was cool) and the Hal Hartley's Amateur poster didn't do so well, taking a karate kick to the midrift by dawn.
28th Aug 2007 - 1 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
Speed HDRacer
Sounds like the Wachiowski's are going for some HDR-style jiggery pokery for their new version of Speed Racer if Susan Sarandon's to be believed - everything in focus all the time apparently.
28th Aug 2007 - 2 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
Weightless, very Lightsaber
As part of the 30th Anniversary celebrtaions for Star Wars (along with new versions of the films no doubt) NASA will be launching Luke Skywalker's lightsaber into space on the space shuttle Discovery in October.
28th Aug 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet
Group Hug
It seems that Luke Wilson may be in need of a group hug. Where are the rest of the frat pack when you need them? Seriously though, let's hope this story has been incorrectly reported.
28th Aug 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet
Aesop Rock
None Shall Pass
Def Jux
It's not often that I can start a review of a record by an underground hip hop artist and thank one of the biggest corporate giants of our time for providing us with the only taste of this guy since 2003 - but if it wasn't for Nike commissioning Aesop Rock for its inspired series of jogging tracks our hungry ears would have had very little to feast upon since the triumphant Bazooka Tooth. And Nike's interest is the result of a steady rise in the shares of this Long Island born MC/producer since his first album for Def Jux Labor Days, what some regard as his finest stroke. So None Shall Pass, his fifth proper full length has been long in the making and much anticipated by any hip hop head with a brain.
Aesop Rock is a rare commodity indeed these days, an artist who is truly pushing the envelope and who, if you're into him, has never put a foot wrong and is pretty much guaranteed not to. Some criticised the Nike piece, but for the purpose it was made to serve it did the job and though it was stripped of the free flowing lyrics I can imagine it would be good to jog to if I could ever get out of this chair. So with None Shall Pass we get our guy back where we want him and with production duties shared between Aesop himself, Blockhead and El-P the result is little short of dazzling.
Things have changed since his last record and though this is still unmistakably Def Jux much of the production has been simplified and the claustrophobic machine-beats are played down in favor of more linear, live sounding instrumentation. This leaves space for Aesop's fables, and though this has always been his strength they seem to rise to the top here and it's damn near impossible to keep up. There's no dick-swinging bravado with this guy, just complex stories bursting with mind boggling imagery and all told with lyrical dexterity that defies belief.
With the title track Aesop provides us with one of the easiest entry points to his sound in a long time (Nike discounted) It's built around a pretty straightforward beat and melodic loop and with Aesop's lyrics it rolls along relentlessly. As is often the case your ears try desperately to keep up with this lyrical pace as juicy nuggets of the English language are dropped teasingly close to our understanding but as soon as we've stopped to gather them up Aesop's way ahead. I mean when the opening lyric is "Flash that buttery gold, jittery zeitgeist wither by the watering hole, what a patrol, what are we to heart huckabee art fuckery suddenly?" How are we expected not to feast on this. Unlike militant label mates El-P or Cannibal Ox, Aesop Rock often appears to take a different route but on closer inspection lyrics like "sign of the swine in the swarm when a king is a whore who comply and conform, miles outside of the eye of the storm" he shows a clear opinion of the current state of our world.
Bring Back Pluto encompasses this albums best assets. It has a plodding and delicate bongo beat that is still bass heavy enough to comfortably float the words to the surface. As does the awesome Fumes. The pace here is recreational compared to this guys previous work but as always vast swathes of texture are lurking in the background and at the half way point these textures cleverly manage to flip the beat around to a momentary quickening of speed without you even noticing.
But as much as I enjoy and appreciate this sunday stroll pace it sure is good to get moments like Citronella where the Jux machine starts grinding out stomping, gut-wrenching bass and wooly, static-frothed beats. This is brought to a climax on Gun For The Whole Family. Any album on this label wouldn't be complete without the whole Jux family getting involved and with previous songs featuring the familiar sounds of Cage and Mr. Lif it's here that label boss El-P weighs in and interestingly it's the erratic apocalyptic beat that suits El-P's frenzied style more than Aesop Rock's and it's really the bosses moment and not Aesop's.
The last track Coffee is a real departure for Aesop Rock. The beat is backed by distant vocal harmonies but then as if out of nowhere we get singing, yes, singing, and it's not just any singing, it's John Darnielle from The Mountain Goats. It would be hard to predict such a partnership but since moving to San Francisco these two artists have been collaborating and this is the first glimpse of the fruits - and it's fantastic. It also shows the kind of creative mind we are dealing with here. None Shall Pass is a hip hop record and never claims to be otherwise. It's full of deep beats, cuts and scratches and everything you'd want from a hip hop record but oh so much more. If you can decipher it you'll see a whole host of source points that go way beyond this genre. It's like reading a Kerouac novel at double speed, actually it's like reading a vast collection of short stories with no punctuation. It's a turbulent sea of words that stretches on for miles and you know that if you dive in you'll get embroiled in a whole torrent of forked-tongued, whiplash trouble but you do it all the same. After all these opportunities don't come around all that often so you'd be a fool not to.
28th Aug 2007 - 2 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
Read more 4.5 star reviewsThe Rolling Stones
A Bigger Bang, O2
There's always that risk when you get to cross off your heroes from the all-time must-see list. Neil Young, Jane's Addiction, Dylan and Van have all delivered for me - only Lou Reed's grumpiness has really let me down. So it's kind of surreal to finally be able to check the Stones off, esp catching the final show of their two year Bigger Bang tour ??which is rumoured to be their last tour ever. Even Bill Wyman showed up (in the audience).
It's clear from the start that Mick wrote the book on being a rock frontman - he jogs around the stage, shouts out to all the different bits of the stadium, gets everyone singing (like they're not going to), tells the odd joke, strips off various layers as the gig goes along etc etc.
Keith's playing is still pretty awesome; the way he strokes chords out of his battered telecaster is one of those archetypal rock poses. No illegal smoking this time round, but everything else was what you wanted - his solo singing spot w Ron was one of the highlights, (although though you think they got the "you play guitar/I'll sing" division sorted out from the start when Mick starts playing guitar for a bit).
Ron looks like he's covering for the bits when Keith steps back for a little wander around; he also holds down some of the classic riffs as well.
As ever, Charlie's drumming holds it all together - one of those musicians who's so tight he never really looks like he's even playing.
What really impressed was how loose they still keep it - if you think about the machine behind a two year tour, it's cool to see them smiling at each other, mucking about, occasionally looking like they're going to bump into each other etc. Obviously, there's a lot of choreography, with mini-breaks built into the set to give them all a rest at different times without having to all go off stage; but that also gives the gig as a whole a natural pace and balance - they go from the bare bones version - the four Stones plus Bernard Fowler on bass - to adding backing singers, a brass section, keyboards, percussion, another guitar player (not quite sure they really need him).
The best section is probably when they step onto a section in the middle of the stage which lifts up (as they're playing) and zooms them forwards into the crowd. They drop the cameras and the giant screen footage and it's just the four (plus two) of them rocking out.
The O2 (that's "the Dome" to you and me) is a surprisingly good venue (in stadium terms) - decent rake so you can see over the people in front, sound loud enough to feel like it's a big event without it being deafening - and also, (for the crowd safety and facilities minded of you) pretty well organised - North Greenwich tube right there, didn't feel like the insane crush you get in some older giant venues around London getting in or out. Overpriced burgers, hotdogs and beers all present as you'd expect, but not crazy $; a kind of Vegas/Starbucks vibe going on around the other bits you walk through to get there.
personally, would have loved to hear Gimme Shelter, No Expectations or Midnight Rambler, but it's hard to argue with a mostly killer 19-song set that included Miss You, Tumbling Dice and Can't You Hear Me Knocking alongside the obligatory hits like Satisfaction and Start Me Up.
Set List
Start Me Up
You Got Me Rocking
Rough Justice (yup, it's a "new one")
Ain't Too Proud to Beg
She Was Hot (from 1983's Undercover)
You Can't Always Get What You Want
Can't You Hear Me Knocking
I Go Crazy (James Brown cover)
Tumbling Dice
Solo Keef n Ron moment:
You Got the Silver
Wanna Hold You
Ooh They're Coming Into The Crowd:
Miss You
It's Only Rock And Roll
Satisfaction
Honky Tonk Woman
Now They're Back On The Main Stage Again:
Sympathy for the Devil
Paint It Black
Jumpin' Jack Flash
Encore:
Brown Sugar
28th Aug 2007 - 6 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
Read more 4 star reviews
Sounds Of Science
Yo La Tengo are playing a live soundtrack to the silent underwater films of Jean Painleve at the Royal Festival Hall - it's "a twilight realm of vampire bats, seahorses, octopi, and liquid crystals" apparently
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28th Aug 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet

Devendra Banhart
Smokey Rolls Down Thunder Mountain
XL
More freak-folk from the leader of the freak-pack. SRDTM delivers on the idea of Devendra Banhart, moving effortlessly from 70s stoner jams, to warm folky riffs, nods to Tropicalia and cheeky numbers answering that old Zappa question: does humour belong in music?
Recorded in Topanga Canyon, the 70s enclave in the LA hills where Neil Young, Joni Mitchell, Stephen Stills etc all decamped to play guitar in each other's back yards. That laidback spirit fills this album; a retro exercise perhaps, but the songs are strong enough to make it feel relevant in 2007. It's got that feeling of a band hanging out, living and breathing the songs, and seeing where they can take them.
The immediate winner is Seahorse, a three-part epic that rolls from an acoustic opening to take in touches of The Doors, Dave Brubeck, The Stranglers' Golden Brown, Wild Wood-era Paul Weller etc, all with his Marc Bolan-ish vibrato over the top; feels like a lost classic that's going to storm live. Kind of fitting that it's about reincarnation with so many references tucked in.
Tonada Yanomaminista is a triumphant, summery singalong, almost breathless at 2:53; Bad Girl is as mellow as Fleetwood Mac's Albatross; Seaside a moving piano ode to er, the seaside; Latin flavours come out on Samba Vexillographica, Carmencita and Rosa; Shabop Shalom and So Long Old Bean fun songs that break up the fragile romance of My Dearest Friend and I Remember.
One of 2007's strongest albums so far.
Like his alternative list of album titles:
Milk the Wind
Shes a Hot Dog
Mountaneous Confunktion
Greatest Hits
Hubba Hubba Planet
Electric Pizza Cops
Foreskin Sword (what it is & how to use it)
Mama, Mujhe Mall se Jeans Lenee Hai
Porkin' the Broken Knee (Electroxtensial Chop!)
Who is Kadamon?
The Burnt Frizbee
Abhor the Coagulator (1964 version)
Koala Mans Return to Pineapple Temple
ihop ihop
Bacchanalian Beat Box
Thrice the Phat Magus
Gaga Blood & the Balls of .......
Rich Gals Shampoo n' Conditioner Blues
Talkin Weleda Haushka Bronners Blues
Military Massengill
Cyber Christ and the Gnostic Titi-Slap Part Deux
You Who are Familiar with Grandma's Hyacinth
26th Aug 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet
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