Just the two new entries this week - both charity shop pick ups.
Good value for my £ was Iron and Wine's debut album. It's fairly predictable solo acoustic strumming with whispered voice stuff from Sam Beam. This was what attracted fans to him in the first place, and some were disappointed when he went a bit more electric around the time of Kiss Each Other Clean in 2011(which I loved), and then again when he went a bit more avant garde jazz (yes, really - I saw him at Black Deer Festival in 2018 and have no idea what he was playing).
As for the other new entry I wasted a £. Even the CD case is broken. I should have guessed. With a silly name like that, Bombay Bicycle Club were bound to be insipid middle of the road electro indie pop - file with Mercury Rev, Vampire Weekend, Arcade Fire and Florence and the Machine - in other words in the bin.
Thank goodness for the Unthanks. Lovely stuff. Their rendition of Magpie (as first heard on The Detectorists) is haunting although I was intrigued why it stopped at 7 when I think I saw 8 the other day. There are various versions of the rhyme, but it seems the most common in folklore is the 7 version:
The UnthanksMount The Air Felice Brothers Felice Brothers
FreeThe Free Story
TreesOn The Shore (bonus disc) Felice Brothers Undress
Lal and Mike Waterson Bright Phoebus
It's all about the folk this week with two significant new entries - one from modern day, one from days gone by.
Firstly The Unthanks make a welcome return with their Mount The Air album which won BBC Folk Album Of The Year in 2016.
I can barely get over how good this album is. It's beautiful chamber pieces are based around gentle piano supplemented by strings and horns. And then there are the sisters' voices too. Completely unique. Sounding both modern and ancient.
Bright Phoebus on the other hand sounds just ancient. It's a very unusual record which is much admired as an underground classic in folk (and wider rock and pop actually) circles. It is dark and haunting (save for a couple of more upbeat country rock numbers and the whimsical opening song Rubber Band).
The Comet Is ComingTrust in the Lifeforce of the Deep Mystery Nick Cave Skeleton Tree
Nick Cave Ghosteen
I've enjoyed all these albums this week. Johnny Flynn's debut A Larum is brilliant - great songs delivered with a great voice. What differentiates this from the middle of the road? - what's that band? - I can't even remember their name but you must know them - folk stomp stuff with waistcoats. Something brothers is it? I honestly can't remember their name but often think of them. Must have blanked it again. It will come to me.
It's hard to put your finger on it (or in your ear) but I think it is simply the songs and the voice. Flynn sounds authentic - he has a great range with just the right amount of gravel. He reminds me of Dave Swarbrick. Most the songs are great folk but this one really stands out as a rock song:
Coming as an after the event collection of extras (with Brian Eno) the HarmoniaTracks And Traces album is generally overlooked in preference for their two mainstream albums Music Von and Deluxe. It is indeed quite different but in its own right a classic ambient collection which I expanded upon in my Log #154.
Good honking enjoyment to be had from modern electronic jazz trio The Comet Is Coming. It's relatively exciting as jazz goes, I guess. I'm a bit indifferent to it so far, as I was to the similar sounding (as far as I know) Kamasi Washington. There's a rap number with Kate Tempest (an artist, or genre to be honest, I've not got into yet).
More absorption of the two Nick Cave albums. Both growers. Still prefer the Skeleton Tree, marginally more accessible.
If you are about to listen to On The Shore for the first time, then you are to be envied. In an era of mass communication and commercial misappropriation, there are few genuinely lost treasures to be discovered.
I couldn't agree more and my highlight this week has undoubtedly been the brilliant Trees album. This has become a bit of an underground classic over the years. I first heard it a few years ago and unaccountably only just got round to purchasing a copy. This issue comes with a bonus disc of demos and alternative versions but to be honest that is superfluous to the original (the differences are even spelt out in the sleeve notes which may be a sign one might not notice otherwise).
On The Shore sits with Fairport Convention's best Sandy Denny fronted folk rock albums (Unhalfbricking and Liege and Lief). Half the tracks are traditional reinterpretations, half originals. All are delivered with the emphasis on rock with searing electric guitar and crystal clear high vocals from ex-opera singer Celia Humphris. Apart from the guitar-centric Richard Thompson influenced Fairport Convention the other band they remind me of actually is Free: there's a track The Streets Of Derry that extends into a guitar solo over rising bass which sounds just like Free's classic Mr. Big. Then the centrepiece of the album, the 10 minute Sally Free And Easy is a response to Fairport Convention's groundbreaking A Sailor's Life. But what the album is most remembered for, like the Fairport's Liege And Lief, are the brave reinterpretations of traditional folk songs in a rock format as with Geordie below:
The haunting cover which matches the psych-folk music within was shot in the grounds of Inverforth House in Hampstead. The young girl photographed on the front swinging a bottle of water (which I thought was a skipping rope before looking closely) was a musician friend's daughter.
Nothing else happened for Trees after their only two albums - this from 1971 and the debut, The Garden Of Jane Delaney (1970). The original members are still around I believe, which makes it odd they've never had a reunion - I'm sure a tour of On The Shore supplemented with the debut album and a few more covers and traditionals would be very popular but I guess they're all doing other things and perhaps don't want to spoil the mystery. Bizarrely Celia Humphris' voice can now be heard on the pre-recorded London Underground announcements.
It's not hard to remember why Rush were so exciting to a teenage boy - the music is so fast and tight, it's heavy yet progressive, with grand concepts, titles like By-Tor And The Snow Dog *, fabulous album covers, and a lead singer with the ultimate scream of the day. It was the thinking man's (or boy's) heavy metal.
Fly By Night was the band's second album, and the first with the late Neil Peart on drums.
* This track, although a modest 8 minutes in prog terms, has the following parts to give it its full title!:
By-Tor & the Snow Dog I. "At the Tobes of Hades" II. "Across the Styx" III. "Of the Battle" i. "Challenge and Defiance" ii. "7/4 War Furor" iii. "Aftermath" iv. "Hymn of Triumph" IV. "Epilogue" Note part III (roman numerals of course) was sub divided into a further 4 parts. Such prog ostentations would only gather pace with Rush on subsequent albums throughout the 70s until, like a lot of rock and prog bands, they scaled down their sound and scope in the 80s with albums like Permanent Waves and Moving Pictures which have generally stood the test of time relatively better. So what does one think 40 years later? Well, the musicianship is astounding, still. The pace is frenetic, not only on the rock numbers as you'd expect, which take up the whole of the first side, apart from a brief gentle passage around the "Aftermath" (I'm guessing) section of said By-Tor... but also on the acoustic based numbers that start Side Two. But then there is something very different - penultimate track Rivendell is a lovely unexpected piece (save for the Lord Of The Rings lyrics that is, which was of course all the rage at the time). Backed by classical guitar and flute/recorder good old screamer Geddy even sings in a normal register and sounds lovely: You feel there’s something calling you You’re wanting to return To where the misty mountains rise And friendly fires burn A place you can escape the world Where the dark lord cannot go Peace of mind and sanctuary By loudwater’s flow Rivendell then segues into the monster In The End guitar riff, one of Rush's greatest rock masterpieces (this one for me echoed the brilliant Working Man from their debut album - all the best rock albums from the 70s had to end with a monumental extended rifftastic rocker didn't they?). And that's it. 8 tracks, barely 35 minutes and it's all done and dusted, in the can. Who needs these hour plus albums of 15 tracks these days?
Johnny FlynnALarum Van Morrison Hard Nose The Highway
Pink FloydMeddle
RushFly By Night Nick Cave Skeleton Tree
Nick Cave Ghosteen
And now Nick Cave. The tragic circumstances surrounding his last two records are well documented. But apparently the majority of the first of these, Skeleton Tree (2016), was actually written before the death of his son in 2015, and the trajectory of the music through this album, to the new one Ghosteen, does seem to follow a logical path which began on the preceding Push The Sky Away. It was on that 2013 album Nick Cave (and Warren Ellis) started experimenting with unusual song forms and new instrumentation. Skeleton Tree continues this drift towards electronics, ambience, spoken word and choirs. Ghosteen takes it further: the tracks are even less song based, characterised more by sounds, space, stillness and poetry.
And everything is distant as the stars, and I am here and you are where you are.
Fireflies
I heard Ghosteen first and it was pretty much what I expected. It's relentlessly down and a hard listen. It's an atmosphere piece - one that may begin to make sense after half a dozen plays, preferably at 3am with wine. There are long chords and drones, distorted synthesizers, single line piano lines, and wailing backing vocals. It feels a bit like David Bowie's Black Star, but slowed down, like a 33 1/3 rpm played at 16. The album comes on two CDs, the second containing a couple of tracks over 12 minutes long. Having said that some tracks seem to have unexpectedly early fade outs. I've played it three or four times and must say it does improve with familiarity (there's a lot more here than first meets the ear but I couldn't help thinking I'd stick to Gas or Eno if I wanted to hear this sort of music). With trepidation I moved to Skeleton Tree which I imagined might be even rawer, but actually was pleasantly surprised. It is more song based and I think I like it better than Ghosteen, and certainly better than I was expecting. It is easier to get into on the first few listens. Neither are as good as Push The Sky Away in my opinion, but in the circumstances, and in the face of the universal acclaim bestowed upon both Ghosteen and Skeleton Tree it is difficult to be objective and just assess the albums on their musical merits. I have no idea whether I will revisit these albums as masterpieces in the years to come or they will just burn bright for the briefest of moments... like fireflies. I'm actually looking forward to finding out. At the opposite end of the depression scale comes the brilliant Johnny Flynn. Like many fans (and I'm certain he's sick of hearing this) I came to him through the brilliant theme tune to the brilliant Detectorists TV series. I wanted to find him at his most raw and solo, and haven't quite achieved this aim just yet with A Larum but nevertheless it's a brilliant rootsy folk record. Flynn has an amazingly strong and authentic voice for one so young. A brilliant new find to start 2020.