Between one thing and another I've not been posting as much as I'd like.
While I work on writing up something proper, here's a wee bit of filler.
Got myself down to The 13th Note last night for the Glasgow PodcART gig. The Seventeenth Century and French Wives were both on the bill, and both very good, as expected. I've gone from not having seen The Seventeenth Century in months to having seen them twice in a couple of weeks now. As if that's not enough, I'm off to see them again on Thursday when they play The Mill with the always excellent There Will Be Fireworks.
I didn't make it very far into the year before I broke my gig a week resolution, as last week was a failure. There were plenty gigs on too, I just never got to any of them. I'm pulling double duty this week and next though, so that evens up the missed week.
You wouldn't believe how much of a fight my computer puts up when I try to do, well, anything. I swear the thing has a vendetta against me. This has made listening to any music I've got recently quite a task, which goes some way to explaining the lack of reviews of late. Instead an inordinate amount of time has been spent getting shot to death by children on Modern Warfare 2 on Xbox Live. My life is so exciting! I might end up taking a crowbar to to the thing, but I'll find a way to write up some reviews over the next week or so, because I've been sent some excellent things recently.
So, what about you, been to any good gigs recently, got anything fun lined up? Any bands out there that I might not have heard worth checking out?
While I'm here, Mitchell Museum have put out an odd wee promo video, which you can watch below.
Friday 22 January 2010
Sunday 17 January 2010
Louise McVey & Cracks in the Concrete - EP Review
It's really about time to try catching up on reviews while there's not much new coming out, so here's one I've been trying to get round to for the best part of a month.
Considering that by now I put Louise McVey & Cracks in the Concrete in my Tips for 2010 it should come as very little surprise that I really enjoyed this EP, but before I'd heard it I'd been really looking forward to it, hoping and praying it wouldn't disappoint, that the one time I'd seen the band live hadn't just been a flash in the pan. In fact, so eager was I to get my hands on it that I signed up with Juno Download just because they had it earlier than anyone else.
Needless to say, my anticipation wasn't wasted, and my hopes not for nothing.
The four songs on the EP have a similar undercurrent of menace and impending doom, yet enough variety to keep things interesting and show there's more than one trick up the bands sleeve.
From the opening assault of Ode, all spikey guitars and piano, and a refrain that oddly puts me in mind of something from a DJ Shadow or UNKLE album more than anything, to the more gentle sounding Love Lost Tales, on to the unsettling ghost stories of Night, ending with the downbeat and most Twin Peaks of the selection Maud all four songs are driping with atmosphere, musical menace and storytelling lyrics.
Cracks in the Concrete perform a perfectly formed backdrop, while Louise McVey's ice cold vocals guide the listener through like a siren leading you on to the rocks. Excellent stuff, now to impatiently wait for a follow up album...
Cracks in the Concrete perform a perfectly formed backdrop, while Louise McVey's ice cold vocals guide the listener through like a siren leading you on to the rocks. Excellent stuff, now to impatiently wait for a follow up album...
Fans of the likes of The Birthday Party and The Bad Seeds, PJ Harvey, Angelo Badalamenti, and just anyone with a taste for something a little different could do a whole lot worse than seek this release out.
Louise McVey & Cracks in the Concrete's selft titled EP is out now on Optimo Music, available as a download from all the usual places. A 10" vinyl release will follow in late January.
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