Posts Tagged ‘review’

Frank Turner – Poetry of the Deed Review.

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At a recording pace of around one album per year since being signed as a solo artist, Frank Turner is definitely an artist for whom I have a fair amount of respect: his punk ethic has not been lost since his change of pace from Million Dead to his folk-rock efforts as Frank Turner. [...]

The Veils – Sun Gangs Review

Rating:
The Veils MySpace
Finn Andrews is a revelation: throughout the backcatalogue of The Veils’ material, he’s always managed to produce a variety in his vocals pretty much unmatched by their genre’s peers.  From warbles to cracking of the voice to animalistic screams, there’s always been that little spice in their music to make them instantly [...]

All The Pictures – I Have a Brother! Review.

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People just have to try to bend the barriers of genres of music, don’t they? It makes the job of any would-be music critic infinitely more difficult: you immediately can’t pigeonhole bands to be a complete snob or to express your indie cred anymore. Here, with All the Pictures, a new monster is born: [...]

Even Flowers Kill – Schrödinger’s Kitten Review

Even Flowers Kill’s MySpace
You have to love a band who can reference pop (or otherwise) culture, and do it well: Graf Orlock made their entire fame on it. Coventry’s Even Flowers Kill begin, on paper, in very good books with me: with an EP titled in reference to the enigmatic Schrödinger’s Cat and a Fight [...]

Circle Takes the Square – As the Roots Undo Review.

Website.
CTTS MySpace.
Download (Megaupload)
Rating:
A lone whisper leads into shamanic chanting in a  rhythm which is to a become a motif throughout the album: even from the fifty-five second long introduction track, it’s quite apparent that this is not to be ‘yet-another’ ‘hardcore’ album from a band of talentless hacks with more Boss DS-1s than sense. [...]

Jesu – Pale Sketches Review.

Jesu website
Jesu MySpace
Rating:
He’s a Brummie and has had such ridiculous labels as ‘avant-pop’ and ‘avant-garde doom’ used to describe his music of the vintage of this album, but one thing about Justin Broadrick which cannot be in any way derided is his musical diversity: to have gone from the doom/industrial metal of Birmingham’s Godflesh [...]

Los Campesinos! – We Are Beautiful, We are Doomed Review

Los Campesinos! MySpace
Caustic, hyperliterate, aggressive twee pop. Seriously, even the concept is wonderful: I doubt that there could be ill-executed record of this central ideal, but Los Campesinos! really have made extended metaphor in song their hallmark. Their second album of 2008 (God bless their punk-esque recording ethic) sees a happy return for their 7-piece [...]

Maybeshewill – Not for Want of Trying Review

This, kind reader, is beyond overdue: I have long been enamoured by the music of the Leicester-based Maybeshewill, and this album has been available for rather a long time now, and it’s gotten a lot of positive press from media outlets far greater in scope than this one. However, this time has done very little [...]

Stella Dawes – Contrasts Review

I hate how the more prevalent local scenes develop. You have one band which does something semi-original, and then you get the emulating hoards who will follow objectivelessly: they just want the benefit of the peer validation of being part of this sprawling ‘community’ of the bands of said scene. Innovation dies off and you [...]

James Summerfield – Count to Ten and Start Again Review

With the demise of Starve in Heaven, I felt that this deserved a repost.
James Summerfield’s MySpace
Birmingham seems to be at the forefront of a new wave of folk- and country-inspired music, with the likes of Sam Bentley, Friends of the Stars etc. coming to the favour of ourselves and other local media. And here, in [...]

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