Archive for the ‘England’ Category

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The Real Tuesday Weld- The London Book of the Dead

November 29, 2008

London Book of the Dead

The Real Tuesday Weld
The London Book of the Dead
August 28th, 2007
Six Degrees

London Book of the Dead is a noir dream. When met with heavy eyelids it imagines a world of midnight blacks and Jessica Rabbit reds. It emotes the warmth suffered under the lights of a burlesque stage, and the nostalgic chill of a near empty bar—dimly lit for the sake of confidentiality. A symbiosis of electronic accents and vinyl imperfections, this dose of art and sex isn’t so much conceptual as it is invocative, shuttling between clarinet swing and sampled sound bytes. I can’t help but imagine that Stephen Coates considers himself a fan of Matt Johnson’s eclectic style. Although this should come as no surprise; both men are clearly influenced by the myriad of soundscapes carved from the social soil of the early to mid twentieth century. It is a project that reaches back to an already immortal era to inflict the markings of post-modernity on what some would claim to be the golden age of music. It refuses the paradigmatic egocentricity of generational degeneracy. The jazz/rag era was not the end of history.

London Book of the Dead is medicated schizophrenia. Among the collage of gypsy strings, cabaret, and Brit pop, Coates sometimes sounds as if he is trapped in a Steamboat Willie world, contained by a two-dimensional, cartoonish fantasy. The record’s most manic moments can be uneven and discomfiting. But if the project is properly understood, it reveals a beautiful and sentimental creation that acknowledges the compromises we make against our own character and the distance we are from our idealized life. Self-inflicted wounds are often the rule rather than the exception. The music of London Book is dense and rich with acute attention to detail. The textural mapping of electronic beats over organic instruments is not necessarily the newest approach to music making, but Coates is effective nontheless. While every song on the record may not be appropriate for every mood, every song has its proper context; and in that context it succeeds, sometimes with stunning perfection— often a most gorgeous sedative.

-FF

6/9

http://www.myspace.com/therealtuesdayweld
http://www.tuesdayweld.com

Other Music
At The House Of The Clerkenwell Kid- 2001
I, Lucifer- 2002
Les Aperitifs et Les Digestifs- 2004
The Return of the Clerkenwell Kid- 2005
“Dreams That Money Can Buy”- 2006
At the End of the World- 2008

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British Sea Power- Open Season

October 23, 2007

british-sea-power-open-season.jpeg

British Sea Power
Open Season
April 4th 2005
Rough Trade Records

So this will be a rare one-paragraph review. I know that is short, but I have other things to do…like delete the album I am about to review from my media player. I was at Sound Fix Records buying my regular Tuesday’s dose of music when I came across Open Season by Brighton based British Sea Power. I was happy with the price and with the CMJ marathon impending, I added it to my stack. What a mistake. Nearly every song on Open Season seems contrived and is entirely too accessible. I have trouble understanding what aspect of the band has appealed to the hip masses across Britain and the States. Victorian Ice has some style. It is tinged with an American-Midwestern beat and reminds me of when I drank moonshine at dusk on my porch in the summer while the cicadas buzzed and the lightning bugs swarmed. For that I am thankful. It’s just that I had to wait through some of the most ill-conceived pop songs ever recorded before my nostalgia was triggered. As for the rest of the CD, just because someone shamelessly lifts the melody from the verse of Love Will Tear Us Apart and inserts it into synthed-over distortion it does not make them post-punk.

Okay, maybe another paragraph. I am a fan of layers, textures and orchestrations, but British Sea Power’s add-ons don’t mask the underlying problem. Scott Wilkinson‘s vocals are boring, lifeless, and uninspired. What’s worse is that the lyrics sound as if they were written by the Charmin Teddy Bear on a binge of ketamine and Pop-Rocks. Some of the more positive reviews circulating must be either well paid or part of an international conspiracy to leech trouble making youths of their sub-culturally subversive spirit. What ever the case it is clear that they did not deserve to headline the World’s Fair curated showcase for CMJ at the Bowery Ballroom. In all reality I am convinced that it’s a joke. I mean, I think that this whole bit is supposed to be ironic…a farce. Sure they sound like Journey, The Cure, Joy Division and Morrissey all rolled up into one…No, really…

3/9


Other Records
Remember Me EP- 2003
The Decline of British Sea Power- 2003
The Spirit of St. Louis EP- 2004
Krankenhaus EP- 2007

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Enough Idiots…

October 19, 2007

Okay reader…

I don’t owe Radiohead anything. However, I am compelled to respond to the ridiculous claims made by various media publications concerning the ethics of Radiohead’s digital release of In Rainbows. This article by USA Today suggests that Radiohead was dishonest in that they did not disclose that the current release was an MP3 of lower quality than the inevitable physical copy or the “standard MP3.” At only 160 kbps for God’s sake!

People are upset because Radiohead not only gets the money from the sales of the CD and Discbox, but they also get payed for their online release. Hmmm…I am not quite sure where the dilemma is on this one. I am an avid CD shopper. When I tell people this they say, “Wow…You still have CDs,” and I mean a lot of people say this to me. The people who want to have the music now can. The people who want to wait can, or they can pay nothing now and still get the CD (legally or illegally). Look in your collection and be honest. How many burned discs do you have? How long have you gone without paying for music? People seem to have forgotten that music producers owe us nothing, and we owe them nothing.

Fred Mills of HARP online makes the astute point, “Radiohead guitarist Jonny Greenwood essentially stated the other day that it was never Radiohead’s intention to initiate some revolutionary new model of music distribution (labels have been selling downloads for some time, duh) or even to give away its music as part of some elaborate marketing scheme, but simply to prevent it from leaking out to the public prior to the official release of the physical discbox.”

These news articles and blogs have created a false problem. It was well known that a CD was to be released after the download date and that it was of inferior quality.

This quote from American Madness is a lie:

“Next up, the January release: How do you release an album online, let people pay what they want for it and then a few days later mention that you will be selling the official album in January? Radiohead is in for a double payday with this. As I said, shady.”

If people would have been paying attention they might not be so upset.

Consider the following articles:

Pitchfork: “Readiohead Album Coming Out as Regular CD Too” 10/01/07
Pitchfork: “Radiohead’s In Rainbows Primers on XFM Radio” 10/09/07

Yeah the title “Readiohead Album Coming Out as Regular CD Too” is slightly ambiguous. If you prefer not to view the links provided, I’ll directly cite them as well:

“Okay people! Take a couple deep breaths, count to 10, switch the caps lock off, clean up the triple espresso you just spit all over the computer screen, and check this: that new Radiohead album, In Rainbows? The one that the world knew practically zilch about 24 hours ago? The one that drops digitally (DRM-free, no less!) in nine days, for a price of your own choosing? The one that’s also coming out in a deluxe “discbox” in December? Well, it’s also coming out in good, old fashioned CD format early next year.”

And that was written October 1st, 2007!

Also consider the fact that Mr. Edge’s controversial comments about the intent of the download were made the week prior to the release of In Rainbows. He said, “If we didn’t believe that when people hear the music they will want to buy the CD, then we wouldn’t do what we are doing.” This is troubling for bloggers who claim they were duped into buying a free record, only to hear that a CD was on the way after the fact. Radiohead knew their record would be leaked, burned, and distributed by November, so they stayed ahead of the game.

If you truly believe this was a scheme set to maximize profits, you are missing the point. Anyone who complains that Radiohead is getting a “double payday” has bought into a fictitious controversy.

Good luck with that people.
I’ll be listening to Reckoner.

-Frederick Foxtrott

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Radiohead- In Rainbows

October 16, 2007

In Rainbows

Radiohead
In Rainbows
October 10th 2007
Unsigned

And so begins my obligatory review of Radiohead’s self-released seventh studio album In Rainbows. In a marketing move unparalleled in recent memory, Radiohead surprised the music world with their short notice release. First came the THE MOST GIGANTIC LYING HOAX OF ALL TIME (in reference to the title of their 2004 DVD The Most Gigantic Lying Mouth of All Time), then came the light hearted apology from someone in the Radiohead camp (see comment below LP7 article), and then came the digital release of In Rainbows for a price to be determined by the purchaser, buyers throwing as much or as little money at the record as they please. The series of events unfolds daily.

I of course bought the disc-box to be released on or around December 3rd for $81.50 because I am a gimmick sucker who needs the liner notes, artwork, and vinyl records. Damn the greenback’s worthlessness! All of a sudden Radiohead was on every music blog known to man, woman, and child. Even the ultra hip blogs, too cool to blog on Radiohead, blogged about how they weren’t blogging about Radiohead. I on the other hand am compelled to add to the chorus of accolades you have no doubt already read. I will say it from the git’go, In Rainbows is an incredible album.

15 Step makes the perfect transition from Hail to the Thief, incorporating a hyper dense drum intro and Yorke’s gospelesque croon. One might assume that this bridge would continue into some extension of their sixth album, but In Rainbows is not contained within such a linear trajectory. Bodysnatchers reminds us that Radiohead hasn’t lost their pre-post-postmodern charm as recorded on Pablo Honey and The Bends and then perfected on OK Computer. As a delicate and contemplative Rhythm and Blues track, Nude delivers as good as any Radiohead song has ever delivered. The song is so sensitive you can hear the guitar pick click down the chord like a washboard. This song is easily among Radiohead’s best. All I Need is a heavy, erotic, almost oppressively desirous expression. Lines like, “I’m an animal, trapped in your hot car,” spoken with resigned conviction, induce the sense of weighty heat. In some ways In Rainbows is Radiohead’s most sexual album, if not because of the lyrics then because of the soft tension and resignation emphasizing vulnerability.

How do we even begin to deconstruct Faust Arp? Faust sold his soul and Arp co-founded the Dada art movement in Europe after the First World War. Dada was a self proclaimed anti-art movement. With Radiohead’s distaste for the music industry’s standard operating procedures, perhaps the title has to do with contractual relationships with commercial entities. It was only after Radiohead came out the other end of that meat grinder that they had the clout, the authority, and cultural standing to depart from the commercial structure and operate as its antithesis with 1.2 million records sold on their own on the album’s first day. While pinning meaning to a Radiohead song is rarely productive, this song is themed with voyeurism, with being watched, with performance, with expectation, and the relationship between the audience and the artist. Faust Arp is a short and gorgeous tune laced with a poetic string arrangement and provocative lyrics.

Reckoner is the crescendo of In Rainbows. Thom Yorke’s vocal melody and solemn vibrato tear away at the heart. The urban-trap beat contrasts with the violins and the phantom vocals layered throughout this perfectly crafted song. If you listen closely at the end of the track you can even hear the song transform into an up-tempo jingle. Reckoner reminds us why Radiohead is so good. They are prolific in both their creativity and their ability to construct new spaces in which to explore the human condition and the range of our collective experience. Yes, they are that good.

And on and on and on again. So much can be said for this record. In Rainbows balances the complex and the simple challenging the listener as it awes them. The closing track Videotape is a rather straightforward dirge lamenting loss and recognizing regret, wanting moments of our past back. Not to correct them or improve them, but to live them again, keeping everything exactly the same. As the song concludes, drums build into a slow polyrhythmic snare roll, as if to count down the seconds remaining in our lives. In Rainbows is not a retreat from their more eccentric work, rather it is a reaffirmation of their exemption from a linear trajectory. I cannot wait until the disc-box gives me 8 more.

9/9

http://www.inrainbows.com
http://www.radiohead.com/deadairspace

Other Albums
Pablo Honey- 1993
The Bends- 1995
Ok Computer- 1997
Kid A- 2000
Amnesiac- 2001
Hail to the Thief- 2003

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The Tuss- Rushup Edge

October 2, 2007

rushup-edge-album.jpg

The Tuss
Rushup Edge
June 25th 2007
Rephlex Records

The Tuss- Confederation Trough EP Review

Every shop I have toured that actually stocks this disc does so in the Aphex Twin section. So in some ways I feel validated about what I believe to have been a rather obvious assertion that The Tuss is Richard D James, although there are certainly differences between Rushup Edge and previous releases. Particularly, Rushup Edge seems more suited for the mainstream dance floor. Rushup I Bank 12 best exemplifies this with urban beats programmed through an analog keyboard. The snare snap and handclaps from Sythacon 9 are very reminiscent of the talent show finale as performed by the Revenge of the Nerds crew.

As the album begins, there is a definite attempt to mask some of the more blatant Aphex attributes. However, as it progresses Richard D James betrays himself- signature Aphex Twin modulations become more explicit. Death Fuck borrows heavily from or was conceived in the same creative moment as Bucephalus Bouncing Ball from the Come to Daddy EP. The album itself leads the listener back to Aphex Twin. So with the mystery discarded, The Tuss can be reviewed in context.

As a whole Rushup Edge has a gritty-retro aesthetic. Rather than a modern speculation about what futuristic music might be, Rushup Edge sounds like a replication of what movie scorers from the mid-eighties might have thought music of the future would sound like. I am shuttled back to Double Dragon or Jean-Claude’s Double Impact. But I am done so with the master sequencing of Richard D James. His ability to program chaotic chains of snaps and pauses, drill beats and ethereal synth melodies, is unmatched and unique. It is Richard D James’ individuality that makes even his rare missteps enjoyable, absorbable, and listenable.

Oddly enough, it is with The Tuss that he credits not himself, but a group of people for the sounds engineered. Make no mistake, the official line for The Tuss does not suggest that James is the primary music maker and that the rest of the crew play an auxiliary role. Brian and Karen Tregaskin are the official beat layers. They are the success story of Rephlex records. They are a hoax.

If you enjoyed Come to Daddy and Drukqs, then Rushup Edge will be a welcome addition to your menagerie. Fracturing credit for this high energy effort does not diminish its individuality or tear asunder its uniqueness. Simply put, Richard D James has made an artful, quirky, and well timed record that constructs a distinct environment for the listener. The Tuss comes to market with accessibility and originality.

The dubious nature of the as of yet unseen band, begs the question of why this role playing was done in the first place? I was, and to an extent still am, excited about the buzz surrounding the identity of The Tuss, but with other internet hoaxes designed to increase interest in music of other bands popping up, I feel a little bored. All the same, I am bugging to get the Confederation Trough EP.

I think it is interesting that the last two Aphex Twin records were released as Analord and Chosen Lords and that Aphex’s next release would be under the pseudonym The Tuss, which produced an album called Rushup Edge, named after a ridge in the Derbyshire Peak district in England. The highest point of Rushup Edge is Lord’s Seat.

rushup-edge-peak.jpg

7/9

http://www.myspace.com/thetussofficial
http://www.myspace.com/thetussmusic

Also From The Tuss
Confederation Trough EP

Other Records as Other People
Aphex Twin
Selected Ambient Works 85-92 (1992)
Selected Ambient Works Volume II (1994)
I Care Because You Do (1995)
Richard D. James (1996)
Come to Daddy (1997)
Windowlicker (1999)
Drukqs (2001)
Analord 10 (2005)
Chosen Lords (2006)

As AFX
Analogue Bubblebath (1991)
Analogue Bubblebath 2 (1991)
Analogue Bubblebath 3 (1993)
Analogue Bubblebath 4 (1994)
Hangable Auto Bulb (1995)
Analogue Bubblebath 3.1 (1997)

As Polygon Window
Surfing on Sine Waves (1993)

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The Tuss- For Real Aphex Twin?

August 24, 2007

tuss.jpg

The Tuss- Rushup Edge Album Review
The Tuss- Confederation Trough EP Review
Frederick Foxtrott Battles The Tuss Cult

The Tuss
2007
Rephlex

Are bloggers across the country on to something? Somewhat of a mystery has developed concerning the true identity of the Acid Techno group The Tuss. On MySpace there are two different music profiles both of which contain music that could be said to be Richard D James, the reclusive genius behind Aphex Twin and many other pseudonyms. The question being, are The Tuss, Brian Tregaskin, and Karen Tregaskin simply more pseudonyms to list after Aphex Twin. Some might think that RDJ has returned from the dead after a retreat from the public sphere. His Drukqs album recieved mixed reviews some pop-critics saying it was convoluted and flat.

“Much of “Drukqs” sounds like two different albums competing and thus canceling each other out…. An ambitious but ultimately failed experiment.”- Billboard

“The resulting cavalcade of “decent bits” seldom leaves an imprint in your memory, let alone your heart.” -Spin

“Represents a giant leap backwards.”- Mojo

“His most irrelevant album to date: a double CD, thirty-track compendium of indecipherable song titles, gratuitously weird sounds and occasional wisps of ersatz classical piano that are aimlessly pretty.”- Rolling Stone

Is The Tuss RDJ’s attempt to answer whether, after Drukqs, the public will judge him on the content of his work rather than the expectation of his name? To be fair on Brian Tregaskin’s MySpace page he lists, first even, Richard D James as a band member among others (Richard D James, Robbie Martin, Mike Podolak, Brian Tregaskin, Reid William Dunn, Karen Tregaskin).

Certainly, however, there are those who simply say that The Tuss is a new brother-sister act out of Cornwall England, and that RDJ’s only association is that he owns the record label Rephlex. TheTuss’ online offerings are great and I can’t wait to own the record, never mind who is behind it. But I am intrigued as I am sure others are. It is just too Aphex not to be Aphex. I greatly encourage feedback, thoughts, comments, insights, and more information on this topic. While it really isn’t all that important, it is kinda cool to think about. Is there a mad genius holed-up in England somewhere releasing music under other peoples names?

Again, please comment on this article.

http://www.myspace.com/thetussofficial
http://www.myspace.com/thetussmusic
The Tuss- Rushup Edge Album Review
The Tuss- Confederation Trough EP Review

Related Sounds
Aphex Twin
AFX
Etc…etc…etc

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