Monday, 31 December 2012
My favourites of 2012
1. Mystery Jets- Radlands
Having improved, developed and progressed with every release since the 2006 debut 'Making Dens', I was highly anticipating a new Mystery Jets album. Their last two, 'Twenty One' and 'Serotonin' are outstanding from start to finish. The former is an effortlessly classy indie album charting the drama and emotion of being the age in the title. The latter is more matured and reflective. Both highly, highly recommended. Blaine Harrison, the singer/song writer, is an amazing talent. When details of 'Radlands' emerged I started to worry. I was prepared for a new album not to live up to the previous two, having loved them so much. But hearing the band was relocating to Texas to record, and then seeing the album cover featuring them in blue denim/cowboy boots etc and framed by the outline of the Lone Star State, I feared the worst. The album opens with the title track 'Radlands' and thankfully it's a case of evolution not revolution as there's far more that's familiar than different. Blaine Harrison's lyrics are always intelligent and engaging and perfectly suited to his voice which is a key part of the Mystery Jets unmistakable sound. By track two the relief flowed over me as it was clear they had done it again and delivered something special. The 'scope' of the album and the themes and subject of the songs is much wider, looking out at the world and a person's place in it rather than a focus on personal emotions and relationships. Lead single 'Someone Purer' is the best example of this-
'I was gripped with a bitter fear, worried
The one thing that I loved,
Back when I was just a kid,
Might now never be enough,
That the body I was in,
Might belong to someone else,
Someone kinder, someone surer,
Someone innocent, young and beautiful,
Someone purer'
I've thought before that Blaine's vocals are quite Ray-Davies-like at times (quite noticeable on 'You Had Me At Hello') so I was delighted to hear The Kinks name-checked on 'Greatest Hits', along with Bryan Ferry, Paul McCartney, ABC, Belle and Sebastian and more. Any fears that this very English indie band had gone native over in the US were utterly dispelled on this track that could have come from The Kinks themselves, full of 'sha-la-la's'. The fact is I could mention every single track on the album individually and rave about it but I'll round off with the undoubted stand-out, 'Lost In Austin'. Another track concerned with big thoughts about life-
'Is there a world more lonely than ours,
Out there beyond the stars?
Is there another me,
Looking back across the sea?
I wonder if he knows
I wonder if he cares
I wonder if he ever wonders
I wonder if he asks
Am I just a blind spot in his eye,
Am I just a reflection of the light?'
Relatively heavy for a Mystery Jets track, the chorus is yelled out over guitars and drums- 'Take me to the edge, I'm not scared. I want to feel the cold wind in my hair. And if we fall off, it doesn't matter, we'll do it all again'. Captures the essence of a man facing up to the vastness and uncertainty of the universe with defiant abandon. A fantastic album, for the 3rd time in a row.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XILvOrna0RA
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VV36ryOcAtA
2. Tame Impala- Lonerism
Fitting that this should be runner-up to Mystery Jets, I only played it thanks to a Tweet of theirs proclaiming Lonerism to be 'the great lost Beatles album we never knew was made'. I'd heard the name and seen them mentioned by the likes of Noel Gallagher before, but for some reason in my head had them confused with Tinie Tempah and Noel's word or not, that sort of music will never be my cup of tea. Upon discovering Tame Impala make 'psychedelic hypno-groove melodic rock music' (their description), I gave it a try. Can't give it much higher praise than to say I agree with the Beatles comparison. The vocals, the drums, the harmonies, the Strawberry Fields-distortion. Not much variety on the album, but when you sound like The Beatles, who'd want it?! Reminds me in places of The Vines and The Sleepy Jackson too, two more bands with a healthy love of the Fab Four- strangely enough all three of them are from Australia. Definitely some shared DNA there. Musically, not... literally. On 'Mind Mischief' in particular the singer manages to somehow sound like Lennon AND McCartney at the same time. Like 'Wings' fronted by John instead of Paul.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IF5E2X55_kg
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wycjnCCgUes
3. Devin- Romancing
Genuinely surprised/disappointed this hasn't had much exposure. Proves it's not what you know but who you know because all it should have taken is a bit of radio play or even to have a song on an advert (Willy Moon/iPod) and this could have been the soundtrack of the summer (had we had one...). Like The Hives this comes from the 'big dumb fun' school. A 50's throwback tearing through some good time rock 'n' roll via garage punk. All the necessary elements are present and correct without bringing anything new to the fore but you can't begrudge that when it's done so lovingly.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=obSyjnkcti8
4. Citizens! - Here We Are
A nice surprise, this year's 'Passion Pit'. Very 'off the radar' and checked out on the off-chance. Danceable indie electro-pop, synthised riffs and beats under a vocalist that is not a million miles away from Brandon Flowers. A modern take on 70's and 80's influences there are hints of Bowie, Bolan and OMD's Andy McCluskey on opening track 'True Romance'. 'Caroline' sounds like The Killers played at slightly too high speed, with the singers aforementioned vocals. 'Let's Go All The Way' is another very Killers song, actually bringing to mind 'All These Things That I've Done' in the chorus. Centrepiece of the album is 'I'm In Love With Your Girlfriend' which builds to an industrial glam-stomp that you can picture a Marc Bolan or Brian Molko, feather boa and all, belting out with all their androgynous might. I'm no dancer but this is not an album you listen to sitting still- every track is indie-disco gold and a remixers dream. From start to finish it plays like a night out on the town, down to the hazy, slower paced 'end of the night' closer 'Know Yourself'.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EySm81Q6qIU
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vzvbLmlzE1k
5. Alabama Shakes- Boys & Girls
Tipped these at the start of the year and was vindicated very early on with their first live show in the UK causing a stir not seen since The White Stripes debuted to a tiny crowd that had the record labels in a frenzy. Currently on a massive tour they've already progressed to larger venues and sold them out in minutes. Amazing that the singer Brittany Howard is just 22, possessing such a big soulful voice. 'You Ain't Alone' could be an Al Green song. The big soul ballads sit well alongside a couple of more straightforward blues-rock efforts. The musicianship is great but the big draw is the voice whether hitting the high notes or tearing through a gravelly lament such as on 'Heartbreaker'. Probably my highlight of the album, Howard doesn't hold back and gives it her all building to the howl of 'how was I supposed to know?'. God help the man that wronged her as I wouldn't want to be on the wrong side of a woman who can shout like that...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mEwM2iy_J8E
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0HxNtWEIKhQ
6. Muse- The 2nd Law
If you'd told anyone listening to 'Showbiz' (Muse's debut album), at it's 1999 release that it would come to be seen as some of their more restrained work I'm not sure what you'd make of that. Although the cover art is typically stellar it's their most grounded and Earth-bound lyrically, but still angsty, dramatic, histrionic with it. A massive album I loved at the time and still do now. And with every subsequent album their ambition, scale and success has only grown. Already by album two (Origin Of Symmetry) with the likes of 'Space Dementia', a 6-minute gothic/operatic/classical space epic, they were leaving the confines of other mere indie bands far behind. And 'Citizen Erased', a sprawling, discordant overblown 7-minutes of everything that makes Muse 'Muse'. 'Absolution', 'Black Holes And Revelations' and 'The Resistance' followed. Intergalactic wars, conspiracies, global catastrophies, usual run-of-the-mill sort of stuff really. Containing everything AND the kitchen sink. Long story short, I'm a fan. And although I could go on a lot more about the last three albums, I'll leave it there, and on to The 2nd Law; Opening with what must surely be their audition for a crack at a Bond theme (they HAVE to do one, please!), 'Supremacy'. 20 seconds in, the strings start up and I don't know how they didn't have to pay Monty Norman royalties. Military drums and a distinctly Shirley Bassey reminiscent vocal rolling along quite nicely, until Matt Bellamy launches his first falsetto to mark the half-way point of the track. Anyone not seeing silhouttes of naked, dancing ladies by the time he sings...;
'You don’t have long,
I am on to you.
The time, it has come to destroy...
Your supremacy'
...has never seen a Bond film in their life. Track 2 is the lead single 'Madness'. And as is the trend, it's the most individual and unrepresentative song on the album. This won't be the first or last time Muse are compared to Queen, and this time they sound like a specific song- namely, 'I Want To Break Free'. Matt Bellamy's vocals are given prominence on a laid-back track, at risk of being understated before the Brian May-esque guitar(!). 'Panic Station' is more Queen, 'Another One Bites The Dust' by way of Prince and Michael Jackson's 'Thriller'. I found it drops off a bit after that and the remainder of the album is not as memorable and doesn't live up to their earlier work so much. The first 4 songs (up tp 'Survival') are good enough that I can see past it. So the album as a whole is slightly disappointing but there's enough to love about it to not judge it too harshly.
7. Metric- Synthetica
I've been 'aware' of Metric for a few years and liked the odd track but never really looked in to them in detail. If this 5th album is anything to go by, that's a mistake I need to rectify pretty soon-ish. The Canadian band are frequently described as indie/new-wave and Emily Haines' vocals have a cold, clinical detachment in keeping with the synthetic instrumentation. 'The Void' reminds me so much of something I can't quite put my finger on, might be something on Daft Punk's 'Discovery' album. Even if not there is something almost robotic about Haines- at times coquettish, kittenish like a sexy android. Looking forward to giving this some repeated plays, think it's a 'grower'.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f_tJzikK-_I
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yo-_d9w0V6M
8. Best Coast- The Only Place
The biggest difference between this and 2010's debut 'Crazy For You' can be summed up comparing track titles;
Crazy For You, Summer Mood, Happy, Each And Every Day, When I'm With You
vs
Why I Cry, How They Want Me To Be, Dreaming My Life Away, Do You Love Me Like You Used To, Let's Go Home.
The fuzzy lo-fi has been cleaned up a bit too for a more polished studio sound. Album one was full of carefree 'summer loving' anthems, sunshine and lazy longing. On the surface the second album at times sounds just as upbeat- jangly guitars and beach-y melodies- but it's far more introspective. A result of the success and resultant touring that's taken its toll on the band. The songs are much more personal. Homesick, full of self-doubt and just a general vibe of malaise. Just as lush sounding, hipster indie via 60's girl group pop but opposite in mood to the debut. Doesn't do the band any harm, played one after the other they sound like bookends, soundtracking a teenage summer romance.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uA3KhE0Tde8
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ia6mk3luuzU
9. No Doubt- Push And Shove
A welcome return for No Doubt. I had slight concerns for this album following Gwen Stefani's solo efforts between this and the last ND release, but thankfully there's not much evidence of any influence from them on the 11 tracks. It would surprise most people to know they've been around for 26 years now. Gwen Stefani's voice is as strong as ever, a distinctive and familiar instrument. A couple of almost dancehall/ska-hinting 'nightclub' style songs aside (Settle Down/Push And Shove) the rest is lush New-Wave pop. Maybe slightly too much production for me across the whole album, with a few too many whooshes and bleeps used, but it's far from the first time the likes of it has appeared on their stuff so it's not much of an issue. A decent amount of trombone and trumpet features too, which is always welcome. My highlight of the album is 'Sparkle', probably the song that would fit most comfortably alongside their older material. Dub-by, echo-y bass, ephemeral guitar, and a nice bit of old-fashioned ska trumpet. A simply written song, sung with feeling as ever by Stefani;
'Feelings change and people can get lost
But I still care about you so muchDo you remember how it was?'
10. Bat For Lashes- The Haunted Man
Natasha Khan's third album and probably her strongest, overall. A perfect set of songs to listen to as Autumn draws in. Kate Bush (Hounds Of Love/The Red Shoes) style dark, dramatic pop. Horns, strings, pianos, and strong, clear vocals that seem more to the fore than in her earlier work.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KhNHKg2WcMc
11. Japandroids- Celebration Rock
Initially only gave this a go for the band name / album title and I'm really glad I did. Really strong drumming throughout, which I always appreciate. Sounds a bit like 'We Are Scientists' or the livlier bits of Jimmy Eat World's 'Bleed American'. Not so much noise-pop as noise-rock, haze and distortion is present but not overwhelming. It tears along at a decent pace, only really slowing down at all on the closing song where the more shoe-gazey elements come to the fore. Any one of the tracks on it could be found on the soundtrack of an American teen college movie.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4m6Ptx4CV6k
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AzQs550NLcc
12. Crocodiles- Endless Flowers
Like crossing The Strokes with 80's shoe-gaze MBV / JAMC etc. Julian Casablancas-like vocals over a fuzzy, hazy noise. Occasionally Shangri-La's handbells chime in, or big thumping drums adding to the cacophony of distortion. The more introverted 'little brother' to the Japandroids album.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZGT5FuM8A1c
And 'cos this has been a fruitful year for quality music, here's a list of individual tracks mostly from albums not in my best of the year but should still be heard (some are EP tracks / standalone releases);
Bloc Party- Kettling / Jack White- Love Interruption / Arctic Monkeys- R U Mine? / Kate Nash- Fri-end / Tennis- Robin / Summercamp- Outside / Santogold- Disparate Youth / The Maccabees- Pelican / FOE- The Black Lodge / The XX- Angels / Guards- Crystal Truth / Grimes- Oblivion / Miles Kane- First Of My Kind / Charlotte Gainsbourg- Got To Let Go / Richard Hawley- She Brings the Sunlight
Jonny Pierce- I Didn't Realise
The Drums have been good to me. I fell hard for them with the release of the 'Summertime' EP which I had in my basket from US Amazon before my first play of 'Let's Go Surfing' had even finished, in October 2009. In 2010, the debut full-length self-titled album followed. And beyond my wildest dreams, the second album 'Portamento' followed in September 2011. In the gap between playing 'The Drums' to death and 'Portamento's release, I sought out anything I could that Jonny Pierce had had a hand in.
Founding members of The Drums, Jonny Pierce and Jacob Graham, started out as 'Goat Explosion' (with a name like that, how could success not have followed...[!]). Thankfully preserved on Youtube, their electro-pop bears Pierce's unmistakeable vocal and familiar Morrissey-esque, angular, stylings (Goat Explosion- I'm Always Alone). With the likes of 'Why Don't You Say' further compounding the Morrissey links with lyrics worthy of Moz himself-
'Why don't you say to me
that you love me?
Why don't you say to me
that you care?
Why don't you say to me
that you need me more than anything ?
Do you believe me, oh, can you see me?
They used to tell me, if I just wait and see
Something good will come back to me
Oh, there's no more waiting, so they just might be wrong'
that you love me?
Why don't you say to me
that you care?
Why don't you say to me
that you need me more than anything ?
Do you believe me, oh, can you see me?
They used to tell me, if I just wait and see
Something good will come back to me
Oh, there's no more waiting, so they just might be wrong'
Already in thrall to Jonny Pierce through 'The Drums', every 'Goat Explosion' song only served to convince me that he was the real, genuine article- a bona fide pop genius. 'Elkland' followed, and released the album 'Golden'. While it didn't work out for the band, apparently a case of 'too much, too soon' with a contract signed and the involvement of a label-
"Well, Elkland was kind of a big disaster from the very beginning. I'd written a bunch of songs that I really loved and had these demos. I was pretty young when we got signed and that whole thing came out of nowhere. One minute I was living in upstate New York recording songs and six months later I had a major record deal, and it kind of forced me to move to New York City. And I said yes to a bunch of things that I didn't really understand. I let a lot of things fall out of my hands and into the hands of people I didn't really know or trust. When you don't really have a foundation it's very easy for things to fall apart, and it did just that". (Jonny Pierce, Death and Taxes)
As before it's a very synth-y affair, but inevitably with more of a commercially viable pop-sensibility. Elkland- I Need You Tonight ('D.I.S.C.O, that's where I want to go'!). Very 80's, British pop/new-wave sounding, traditionally structured- verse/chorus/verse. As mentioned before, I loved The Drums for what they were but to discover this cache of equally outstanding songs was a revelation, especially given the surprising and unexpected difference in style. There's still an element of it in The Drums, but to so overtly be channelling the likes of The Smiths, Joy Division, Orange Juice, etc, I couldn't have invented a band better suited to me.
By the time The Drums materialised, the synths had been muted for a more 'indie band' sound, other influences had emerged- '50s and '60s American girlgroup pop, namely The Shangri-La's. The lyrical template was the same. Honest, heartfelt, yearning songs ranging from sweetly love-lorn to downright mopey, but set to bouncy, upbeat melodies. The perfect vehicle for Jonny Pierce to display his best indie-disco, Ian Curtis dancing and take centre stage- 'Forever And Ever Amen', 'Me and The Moon'.
Just when 2012 was looking to remain distinctly Pierce-less, a Tweet on November 28th drew attention-
@JonnyPierce: a new chapter begins tomorrow...
Lo and behold, the next day he announces a solo album for 2013 and debuts the track 'I Didn't Realise'.
"Some might say it’s strange for a man to bare his soul the way I do on
this album, but I wanted to do something that exposed
me for who I am even more so than anything I have done with The Drums… I
wanted to be as self-indulgent as possible with this album. This is pop
done the way I think it should be done".
A return to the sparse, twitchy, bleeping electronica of Goat Explosion, reverb, and a typical lyrical theme of rejection, regret, lamentation... The black and white video adding to the washed-out vibe of the music, elements dreamily floating in and out.
'Just when I thought I knew what was going on... you cut my heart out'
'What do you do, when everything is not enough?'
'Forgive me... for the faith I had in us'.
Probably in its short existence still manages to be my most played track of 2012.
As before it's a very synth-y affair, but inevitably with more of a commercially viable pop-sensibility. Elkland- I Need You Tonight ('D.I.S.C.O, that's where I want to go'!). Very 80's, British pop/new-wave sounding, traditionally structured- verse/chorus/verse. As mentioned before, I loved The Drums for what they were but to discover this cache of equally outstanding songs was a revelation, especially given the surprising and unexpected difference in style. There's still an element of it in The Drums, but to so overtly be channelling the likes of The Smiths, Joy Division, Orange Juice, etc, I couldn't have invented a band better suited to me.
By the time The Drums materialised, the synths had been muted for a more 'indie band' sound, other influences had emerged- '50s and '60s American girlgroup pop, namely The Shangri-La's. The lyrical template was the same. Honest, heartfelt, yearning songs ranging from sweetly love-lorn to downright mopey, but set to bouncy, upbeat melodies. The perfect vehicle for Jonny Pierce to display his best indie-disco, Ian Curtis dancing and take centre stage- 'Forever And Ever Amen', 'Me and The Moon'.
Just when 2012 was looking to remain distinctly Pierce-less, a Tweet on November 28th drew attention-
@JonnyPierce: a new chapter begins tomorrow...
Lo and behold, the next day he announces a solo album for 2013 and debuts the track 'I Didn't Realise'.
A return to the sparse, twitchy, bleeping electronica of Goat Explosion, reverb, and a typical lyrical theme of rejection, regret, lamentation... The black and white video adding to the washed-out vibe of the music, elements dreamily floating in and out.
'Just when I thought I knew what was going on... you cut my heart out'
'What do you do, when everything is not enough?'
'Forgive me... for the faith I had in us'.
Probably in its short existence still manages to be my most played track of 2012.
Sunday, 30 December 2012
The Willowz / Guards
I was intending this entry to be a straightforward 'looking forward to in 2013' piece,
starting with 'Guards'- whose 'In Guards We Trust' album is due on
February 5th. But Richie Follin's old band 'The Willowz' are deserving
of more attention than a throwaway line in the introduction. I only
heard of The Willowz through Follin's sister Madeline, of Cults- whose
self-titled debut was one of my favourite albums of LAST year. Having
'follin' head-over-heels with Madeline thanks to performances like this;
Cults- Oh My God (live), the discovery of a second Follin-led band was welcome for two reasons. First, their music was described as 'garage rock', incorporating influences from punk, soul and blues from the '60's, '70's, and '80's. Second, should I ever meet Ms Follin, my knowledge of her brother's band would surely be the perfect cover with which to infiltrate her confidence and gain her trust before taking her away to start our new life together on the Isle Of Wight.
So, The Willowz. Not world-beaters, by any stretch of the imagination but making a decent enough racket for me and each album improves on the last. There's a pretty prolific back-catalogue to negotiate, and while all songs are up to a decent standard there are several stand-outs, and enough variety to display their talents. Reading around, the vocals come in for criticism in some quarters and while some songs, like 'All I Need' could perhaps be even better with a stronger voice behind them, it's perfect for the nasal, punky sneer of 'Get Down'. For the most part, Richie Follin comes across like a sort of Jack White Junior ('Unveil'), and the blues-rock-country sound is not a million miles away from The Raconteurs. Whereas Kings Of Leon for example have ended up playing arenas and stadiums, Willowz are the type of band much more suited to (and I'd expect more comfortable) playing to crowds counted by the dozen, thrashing out their bluesy-rock fare in dingy, sweaty 'dive bar' venues. Their five albums are;
The Willowz (2004), Something
The Willowz Are Coming (2005), Meet Your Demise, I Wonder
Talk In Circles (2005), Toy
Chautauqua (2007), Take A Look Around
Everyone (2009) Everyone
and worth checking out for an unpretentious mix of thrashy guitars, howling vocals, riffs and a garage-rock sound.
Back to 'Guards'. A free EP (available here) recorded in 2010 is like the bridge between Willowz and Cults. The highlight of which is 'Crystal Truth'. Replacing the riffs with a more 'indie' sound, the dreamy fuzz and echo of Cults underpinned by the alternative 60's influence of the organ. In the time since the EP's recording, Guards have emerged as a far more polished, finished article. Tracks like 'Coming True' will undoubtably lead to more attention. 'Silver Lining' is a breezy gem of a pop song- 'I want to live forever in a boat out on the sea'. Floating about on Youtube are some Guards tracks not on the tracklisting for the album, 'I See It Coming' almost Arcade Fire/Funeral-esque. Appetite well and truly whetted by the EP and the likes of 'Don't Wake The Dead', 'In Guards We Trust' is definitely one of my most anticipated debuts of 2013.
Saturday, 1 December 2012
Mystery Jets- Royal Festival Hall 29/11/2012
Closing their extensive, globe-spanning tour of 'Radlands', Mystery Jets chose the prestigious but surprising venue of the Southbank's Royal Festival Hall for the grand finale- all seater, and not particularly known for hosting concerts of this type. As the show drew closer, the band were billing it as the 'chance to see a Jets show quite unlike anything before'. I was slightly concerned, as not having seen Mystery Jets before and being very keen to, I thought I'd be perfectly content to see the same show everybody else had got. My fear that we'd be getting pared down/alternative/acoustic versions of songs was thankfully wide of the mark as we were treated to a bumper 19 track set, and special guests on several of the songs. The band made reference to being nervous about the gig beforehand and initially the all-seated hall made for an odd atmosphere. Beckoned to stand by guitarist William during the second song, any doubts held by band or audience were quickly erased. I have never been at a gig and enjoyed being part of such a fervently adoring crowd. It made for a communal, celebratory atmosphere. Standing in row B to the right of stage it could be seen on the faces of William, and Blaine at the keyboard that they knew they had us at 'Hello London'.
Radland's first single 'Someone Purer' was a perfect opener. The Americana guitar-picked intro, accompanied only by Blaine Harrison's vocal, before the driving drum beat kicks in and propels the song to the first explosion of guitars and the statement-of-intent lyrics, commanding 'deliver me from sin, and give me rock and roll'. It's a rousing start and followed by a joyous 'Serotonin', during which the entire capacity is bought to their feet with an encouraging smile and gesture from William Rees. It's a nice moment as up to then there'd been a general air of 'not knowing how to behave' in the slightly formal surroundings. Permission given though, nobody sat down again for the rest of the night.
Things were taken up a notch with 'Flash A Hungry Smile' the most singalong 'let's spend the night together' song this side of... 'Let's Spend The Night Together'. The drums seeming to me to have a bit of extra punch, and a little flourish in the guitars but the best was yet to come- seamlessly interrupting the end of the song by launching in to 'Jet' by Paul McCartney and Wings. Anyone who knows me will have some idea of the size of the grin this caused to be stuck on my face for the following three minutes. Really cannot emphasise enough how much I was enjoying being in that room at that point in time.
Flash A Hungry Smile / Jet;
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_eSqkfkBcow (Liverpool, 14/11/2012)
Next up was the Kink-y 'Greatest Hits', which I'm tempted to describe as a crowd-pleaser but with this band, and this crowd, weren't they all? The 'sha la la's' enthusiastically belted out and clapped along with. The first of the evening's special guests were introduced after that, the Marfa Lights Gospel Choir filing on to give backing to a run of four 'Radlands' songs. Can't say I really thought they were necessary (or noticeable) on 'You Had Me At Hello' or 'The Ballad Of Emmerson Lonestar' but were good on 'The Hale Bop' and 'Sister Everett'. I love 'Radlands' as an album, my favourite of the year quite comfortably and the way these songs were received it was clear I'm not alone. Maybe it was fitting to have a gospel choir as with this audience, they were preaching to the converted. The campfire-tale of 'You Had Me At Hello' was listened to with a hushed awe, the country-and-western disco of 'The Hale Bop' danced along to. A second guest appeared for 'Sister Everett', Johnny Lloyd from Tribes. He stayed for 'Veiled In Grey', the first song of the night from 2008's 'Twenty One'. Mystery Jets are a static band on stage, they let the songs speak for themselves and this track shows their abilities perfectly. Gorgeous, warm guitars building to a big wall of sound finish. I've used the words 'joyous' and 'communal' already and I have to mention again just what a good crowd it was. Smiles all round on people's faces. It really did feel like a special occasion as opposed to just another night of the tour. Title track 'Radlands' and 'Take Me Where The Roses Grow' followed and were performed equally as perfect as all that had gone before.
If Mystery Jets had a signature tune it would be 'Young Love', which picked up a lot of radio play and featured Laura Marling who went on to Mercury Music Prize and Brit Award recognition. She's not introduced prior to the song, instead walking on and taking to the microphone just in time to do her bit. A knowing bit of stage-craft as people are kept guessing as to whether she'll be there or not. To be honest, she didn't seem too in to it, standing with a look of disinterest but maybe that's just her way... She stays for 'Flakes', a beautiful song and an amazing moment as we sing along, arms aloft, swaying in time. A highlight amongst highlights as Blaine sings it with such emotion.
Flakes (with lyrics) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XcCkbIeXQho
We arrive at the close of the show with the last two tracks of Radlands. (The only one not to be played from the album, for no discernible reason to me is, 'The Nothing'). 'Lost In Austin' is 6 minutes of majesty. At the risk of overstating it slightly, hearing it live is absolutely transcendent. Utter perfection. Musically, lyrically, emotionally. Huge, huge song. When they finish, they inform us that the next song will be the last one. I can't help but shout out 'play that one again, then!'. They in fact end with Luminesence, bringing us down to Earth with the downbeat, yearning, lost-love lament.
'You still swim around the canals in my head like cocaine
And yes it feels good, but not half as it would had you stayed
The older I get, a step closer to forgetting your name
But I won't,
No I won't'
Walking off to rapturous adulation, it's a couple of minutes before they return for the encore. Another two 'oldies' from 2008's incredible 'Twenty One', 'Half In Love With Elizabeth' and the eagerly awaited 'Two Doors Down'. The final, final song was a surprise choice but no less welcome for it. 'Alice Springs' from Serotonin. Thumping drums, yet another outstanding vocal and an extended guitar thrashing finish bring the night to an end.
'I'd stand in the line of fire for you,
I'd bend over backwards for you
I'd do anything that you want me to do
'Cause i dont have nothing if i dont have you, my love'
I'd do anything that you want me to do
'Cause i dont have nothing if i dont have you, my love'
Completely over-joyed, usually leave a gig saying 'I wish they'd played such-and-such' or 'could have done without hearing that one' but really could not have asked for more. 10/10.
Setlist (via Setlist FM- http://www.setlist.fm/setlist/mystery-jets/2012/royal-festival-hall-london-england-7bda3ed4.html);
-
-
-
-
Jet (Paul McCartney & Wings cover)
-
-
The Hale Bop (With The Marfa Lights Gospel Choir)
-
You Had Me At Hello (With Choir)
-
The Ballad of Emmerson Lonestar (With Choir)
-
Sister Everett (With Choir and Johnny Lloyd of Tribes)
-
Veiled in Grey (With Johnny Lloyd of Tribes)
-
-
Take Me Where The Roses Grow (With Sophie-Rose Harper of The Night)
-
Young Love (With Laura Marling)
-
Flakes (With Laura Marling)
-
-
- Encore:
-
-
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)