Showing posts with label fleetwood mac. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fleetwood mac. Show all posts

Sunday, 15 December 2019

Log #168 - Rumours Going Down

Eddy Bamyasi

I came late to Rumours as explained here but its charms have grown on me, particularly on the more rock orientated numbers like the excellent The Chain which is so much more than that slightly annoying bass riff used for that very annoying car programme. It was a video I caught this week on youtube of a live performance of The Chain that encouraged me to give the album another spin.


Fleetwood Mac Rumours
Neil Young Hitchhiker
Foals What Went Down
Edgar Froese Epsilon In Malaysian Pale
John Martyn Solid Air
Neil Young Rust Never Sleeps

Hitchhiker was an album by Neil Young recorded in 1976. For some reason it was not released then...

- actually the reason I believe was the record company thought the solo acoustic songs should be recorded as a band.

- indeed some like Powderfinger were later re-recorded with a band and appeared on a subsequent album (Rust Never Sleeps and others).

Anyway Hitchhhiker, like Chrome Dreams and some others, became one of those legendary lost albums of Young's - until last year when the original was released.

It is indeed a shame this album did not see the light of day for so long as, despite it having an air of demo about it, it is actually one of Young's best. There are ten excellent songs, 9 on guitar, one on piano. Eight have appeared on other albums, usually in a differing version / two are previously unreleased. I do believe it may be Young's only entirely solo album??

[By the way any Neil Young fan should check out his Archives website - this is a subscriber service but there is always a free to stream featured album available].

Excellent stuff from the Foals on this, their fourth album. It is a pretty heavy album but still demonstrates their excellent musicianship.


'What Went Down' is unbelievably aggressive, a bold return so to speak, combining a fierce pulsating drumbeat with erratic overdriven guitars that lend a real intensity.

Sunday, 25 February 2018

Log #74 - Non Swimmer Saved Mid Lake By The Tender Coming

Eddy Bamyasi

This week's blog features three artists across the broad folk/rock spectrum. We have the first sighting of the accomplished acoustic guitar troubadour Laura Marling, sandwiched between the traditional yet original folk song of the Unthanks sisters and Midlake's easy going yet dark brand of Americana.

~

1. Laura Marling - Alas I Cannot Swim
2. The Unthanks - Here's The Tender Coming
3. Fleetwood Mac - Rumours
4. Midlake - The Courage of Others
5. The War on Drugs - Slave Ambient
6. Robert Plant - Band of Joy

~

With Thanks For The Unthanks

It is great to come across something very new and exceptional while researching and writing this blog. I was vaguely aware of The Unthanks via their stunning cover of Starless by King Crimson (both respectful of the original yet very different too). But hearing Here's The Tender Coming has taken my admiration to a whole new level.

It's this sort of music

The heavily accented folk singing took me a few plays to tune in to. On very first listen it sounds a bit twee and too much "finger in thy ear down the Irish pub" type stuff. But once I got it the power of the songs (mostly covers or trad. set to spare arrangements of strings, brass, and piano) quickly won me over.

Very strange to be reminded of King Crimson and Yes!

Strangely one of the bands they remind me of is actually Islands era King Crimson. Also equally strangely fellow proggers the Jon Anderson fronted Yes, and Efterklang and Philip Glass, plus more obviously a bit of early Fairport Convention too and the more edgy and discordant Incredible String Band. But overall it's the type of music that makes me think of pagan festivals and dancing around in animal masks in The Wicker Man.

.. and this sort of music

The title song refers to the name of the ship, "The Tender", coming to press gang men to sea:

Here's the tender coming, pressing all the men
Oh dear hinny, what shall we do then?
Here's the tender coming off at Shield's Bar
Here's the tender coming full of men of war

Hide thee canny hinny, hide thyself away
Hide thee till the frigate makes for Druridge Bay
If they take thee Geordie who's to win our bread?
Me and little Jackie better off be dead

One of the best albums I've heard so far this year. The Unthanks will be making an appearance in the Best New Discovery section of my Year End Review when it comes around.

First Nu Folk From Laura

Purely coincidentally, in this week of suffragettes and women's rights celebrations, the delectable Unthanks singing is flanked by two other (mostly) female voices. First we have Laura Marling with her 2008 debut album Alas I Cannot Swim (I was surprised to learn this was her debut thinking she had been around a lot longer than ten years). She is no doubt a special talent with a nice voice and an original guitar technique employing interesting tunings.

This album is pretty good. Essentially just guitar and voice but some tracks are fleshed out with string arrangements and several more upbeat numbers employ a full band with bass and drums like the jaunty Cross Your Fingers. Occasionally she goes off into one of those "sing really fast and fit as many words into a breath as possible" type moments most annoyingly advocated by vocal gymnasts like Joni Mitchell.

Intriguing artwork from Laura Marling's debut album

There is a bit of the pagan tradition too in this music and some Alice in Wonderland like line drawings in the artwork but the imagery evoked by the music is not so vivid as that of the Unthanks. I think it's called nu-folk. Marling can be forgiven the close association with the very mainstream Mumford and Sons who appear in part on this album, but as folk music goes I actually find the traditional old-folk of Here's The Tender Coming much more appealing.

I've Now Heard Rumours

On the other side at slot 3 we have the first appearance in a CD player of mine of Rumours - the first Fleetwood Mac album with lead vocalist Stevie Nicks of course. I actually wrote a few months ago about having never heard this album before. Well now I have and it is pretty good. Of course I recognise at least half the songs but there are surprises on here too. It represents a well trodden path of light AOR* (what an awful term that is) but is an excellent example of such.

Stevie Nicks with Mick Fleetwood           

The Courage To Go It Alone

Keeping up the standard (and character) of this most enjoyable week we have another excellent album from a band I've not heard before. Fronted not by a female voice, but the very gentle tones of Tim Smith, Midlake are an americana/folk rock band from Texas.

The vibe on The Courage of Others is again on the pagan side starting with the hooded figures on the cover (as was also the case on the striking cover of their debut album The Trials of Van Occupanther).


The music gently rocks along and the sound is excellent. They so remind me of another band or artist generally and through particularly tracks. I just can't quite nail who I'm thinking of. I've considered Fairport Convention, The Flaming Lips, Fleet Foxes, Wilco, Iron and Wine, and Bear's Den. Bring Down sounds just like a track off of Radiohead's OK Computer and Fortune is very Simon and Garfunkel. Or perhaps overall they remind me of John Grant which wouldn't be too surprising as they played on Grant's debut solo album The Queen of Denmark.

It's those laid back breathy harmonised vocals most of all - the vocalist does seem to give a band most of it's character and on listening to some of their other music including a KEXP session I figured they weren't sounding quite as good as on The Courage of Others. Further investigation revealed that lead vocalist and songwriter Tim Smith had left and under slightly mysterious circumstances. Apparently a follow up to The Courage of Others had been recorded over a couple of years and was almost ready for release but did not come up to Smith's painstaking standards (he was only happy with one song). Smith decided to leave to pursue his own path and the remaining band scrapped the complete recording and rewrote and reproduced a completely new album in only six months.

Musically we didn't see things the same way... you can hear from their new album our tastes and sensibilities are quite different and always have been.

The new album became Antiphon and with guitarist Eric Pulido taking on lead vocals Midlake had become yet another band (after Genesis and Can who I have discussed recently) choosing not to replace their main vocalist:

Antiphon is the most honest representation of the band as a whole, as opposed to one person's vision that we were trying to facilitate.

You can sense some frustration and resentment in Pulido's words.

Antiphon - Midlake's third

What of Tim Smith's new project? Well not much so far. It seems something is restricting his output and it isn't clear whether this is perfectionism, personal issues, or plain old writer's block. The website for his new project Harp leaves this message -

I'll give another update when there's something more to say, but if you don't hear from me for a long time that only means I'm still at it. Thanks for understanding. Peace and Love, Tim

For me this fuels the mystery further and I'll certainly be intrigued with whatever he comes out with. It's displaying all the hallmarks of being a masterpiece!

"I've never been one to rush the process of making music."The enigmatic Tim Smith in his home studio.

Now imagine my surprise when clicking the facebook link on the Harpband website I am taken to a post showing Tim Smith in a Brighton pub last April! He was over here recording some music with a local band Hollow Hand who I've not heard of but will certainly be checking out. The intrigue deepens.

Charity Corner

I do love discovering new music and to think this rich seam of sonic gold from Midlake was mined from a punt on a £1.49 charity bin album. By the way to continue my log of the most common charity bin albums it is only fair to add these two perennial repeat offenders:




* Adult or Album Orientated Rock

Thursday, 16 February 2017

40 Years Old and I've Never Heard Rumours

Eddy Bamyasi

Everyone has heard Rumours haven't they?

I saw something last night I'd never seen before - the film Titanic. I enjoyed it. It was one of those films I sort of felt like I had seen before but I actually hadn't, only the famous snippets. The same probably goes for films like Sound of Music and The Matrix. 


Surely everyone has seen these three films? 

I remember my Dad used to watch a film on TV and at the end declare "I think I've seen that before." I could never understand how it was possible to forget if you had seen a film before, especially during watching it a second time. But now I realise! Films like the three above are so ubiquitous in our consciousness that you feel like you've seen them even if you haven't. 

Then I got one of those random facebook invites to an event celebrating 40 years of the album "Rumours" which was released on 4th February 1977. Of course its one of those albums that many households have at least one of, if not two copies (as both partners had one when they got together). I realised I not only didn't have a single copy, I hadn't even heard it in its entirety. But I feel like I have due to the famous samples one hears quite often (like The Chain and Go Your Own Way) - even if people were unaware of the artist they would probably be familiar with these tracks. I don't actually feel the need to hear it any time soon but am prepared to be pleasantly surprised when I finally do. Like Titanic was though, it's not on my immediate radar as I feel it will always be there, I already have a strong flavour of it,  and I've got plenty of time to hear it in the future.

What other very famous albums are out there that I've never actually heard? Or what would be on the list of those standard albums that every household has? Please leave any suggestions in the comments below. I am of course speaking from the perspective of someone who grew up with albums in the 70s and 80s and the fame of an album like Rumours will mean a lot less to the younger generation and such a list's relevance will fade as my generation ages.

A typical middle England record collection? I actually only have 4 of these.

There used to be bbc radio programme on hosted by Marcus Brigstocke called I've Never Seen Star Wars where they get celebs to do or try (usually common or famous) things they've never experienced before and mark them out of 10. This usually includes a famous album or book but I remember they found it hard to do this for guest Suggs from Madness as he was so incredibly well read they couldn't find anything he hadn't read already!

By the way I'd give Titanic a pleasantly surprising 8 out of 10.


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