Song, by Toad

Archive for September, 2010

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Eels – Tomorrow Morning

I think it is fair to say that at the moment Eels really, really need editing.  I was reading a piece in Word Magazine this month about how, for all the label system and extremely narrow number of media outlets stifled the ability of a lot of good music to reach the ears of the public (that was very much not the emphasis of the writer, he seemed to have less appreciation of the strong negative aspects of this bottleneck), at least there was a very effective filter between the infinite number of bands in the world and the finite amount of time people chose to commit to music appreciation.

Nowadays, he argued, we have to be the editors ourselves.  Bands record and release anything and everything for no other reason than that they can, and we have to take personal responsibility for picking through it and separating the fragments of wheat from the avalanche of chaff.

Now, given the number of fine blogs and podcasts I myself enjoy I find his argument more than a little shaky, but there is a core of sense to his central point: when everything was more expensive and more complicated to do, people had to be damn sure they knew what they were doing before they went to all the effort of doing it.  This pressed artists to be sure that every note of their work was essential, and it pressed labels and producers to be damn certain that the work they released was as packed to the brim with quality as it possibly could be – it generated the creative conflicts without which it is actually very difficult to produce good art.

As the ‘head of a label’ (yes, that sounds as ridiculous to me as it does to you, but I don’t know the right term for ‘a bloke sat in his spare bedroom with a photocopier and an internet connection’) I never interfere with the artistic choices made by the artists I work with.  I’ve suggested changes to a piece of work no more than three times since I started doing this, twice that suggestion has been acted upon and once it was ignored – the right call on all three occasions, I think.

So I don’t really know how I would go about saying to a band ‘no, I don’t think that song needs to be on the album’ or ‘nah, I think it needs less instrumentation’ or anything like that.  I take the stance that I am not a musician and therefore my capacity to contribute is probably pretty marginal.

Now, imagine you are dealing with someone like Mark Oliver Everett – E, of Eels.  He has written a large number of my favourite songs of all time, and a good few of my favourite albums, and I am not alone there – it’s not like he has any need to prove anything to anyone anymore, and certainly not like he needs to justify his artistic choices to some jumped-up lackey at whatever record label he may chose to work with.

Nevertheless, his last three albums – Hombre Lobo, End Times and this one – were conceived, I believe, as a Triptych.  This is the Return of the Jedi of the three – the triumph over adversity.  The concept is lovely.  Quite a few of the songs are absolutely gorgeous.  But I have a nagging feeling that the whole business really could have been trimmed – and I mean brutally trimmed – and achieved a lot more impact.

There are a lot of songs on these three albums which we have very definitely heard before from Eels.  On this album alone Spectacular Girl and I Like the Way This is Going are the slightest reworkings of songs from Blinking Lights, and tracks like The Look You Give That Guy on End Times seems to be communicating something E has said so many times before that I really do wonder if it needed a whole new song for such an incremental change in sentiment.

I don’t know how you tell someone who has obviously achieved so much and shown time and again that he is one of the best songwriters of his generation that he really needs to be more unforgiving when it comes to deciding what does and does not merit a full commercial release.  These three albums could really easily have been whittled down to three EPs, maybe even all on one CD, and maybe a bonus CD of sketches – the songs which didn’t make the cut recorded in a simple acoustic session perhaps – and you would have had an album of highly concentrated Eels brilliance, along with some enigmatic sketches of songs to give you a glimpse into the thought process which goes into producing an album.

As it is, this feels like a glass of orange cordial which has been diluted with far, far too much water.  To return to the original point made by Word, perhaps if it still cost a shitload of money to record and release an album, some record executive would have forced this glut of material through a very strict funnel and turned it all into one album.

Whilst this would have been a great benefit to this record, I am not prepared to be so fickle as to wish for a return to the days when the making of music was so out of reach of all but the chosen few.  Where I do agree with Word, however, is that now we can record and release everything and there is no reason not to, we need to become just a little bit more savvy about what is an album release and what is a curious extra for the uber-fan.

Eels – That’s Not Her Way

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Eels – The Man

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Enfant Bastard Covers Withered Hand

I actually meant to post this a couple of weeks ago, when we seemed to be having an ‘Edinburgh bands cover one another’s songs’ love-in here on Song, by Toad, but I somehow managed to get distracted (I know, I was amazed too).

This is Enfant Bastard’s chip tune version of Withered Hand’s rather brilliant For the Maudlin, and I honestly don’t know if I’d have recognised it if not for the title.  Once you realise what it is then it becomes massively obvious of course, but out of musical context it’s amazing how easy it is to miss even melodies you should know inside out.

Anyhow, this is from Enfant Bastard’s new record (on teeny-tiny CD) Master Dude which you can preview in its entirety and buy from here.  And the original version of the song can be heard below:

Withered Hand – For the Maudlin

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The Scottish Enlightenment – Little Sleep EP

Oh ambassador, with these EPs you are really teasing us… JUST RELEASE THE FUCKING ALBUM ALREADY!

I like EPs.  I don’t release many, because the bands I work with seem to be more into the idea of albums at the moment, but I like EPs.  They are leaner, less prone to that period at about song six or seven when you cease to pay attention and start doing something else, and it seems to be easier to keep them thematically quite close.  In short, I suppose, small is beautiful.

The Scottish Enlightenment have apparently released the superlative Pascal EP and this new one (title track aside) largely by using off-cuts from their forthcoming debut album and I will repeat what I said on my Pascal review: if these are the off-cuts, then this album might just be a bit fucking special.

I had a conversation in a pub about this EP before I ever heard it – one which suggested that it wasn’t quite up to the standards of Pascal.  I agree that by starting with Little Sleep and Get My Limousine it may not be as immediate, but they are both cracking songs once you get into them.  And by the time the beautifully simple piano riff of Drip Feed pierces the low key guitar fuzz I must say I am ready to embrace this with at least as much enthusiasm as its predecessor.

The issue with EPs, I suppose, is that with so few tracks they can be a little unforgiving.  When You Hate Me is a decent song, but it doesn’t grab me with the urgency of everything else around it. The Scottish Enlightenment take a bit of a risk in that they tread really quite familiar musical turf, so when they don’t quite crack a song it can quickly sound like so many things I’ve heard a thousand times before that I can find myself judging it a little harshly.

When an EP ends with something as lovely as St. Germain is Thick Tonight, however, all is quickly forgotten.  I am trying not to look forward to this album too much, because I don’t want to develop impossible expectations.  But I really am looking forward to it.

The Scottish Enlightenment – Little Sleep

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The Scottish Enlightenment – St Germain is Thick Tonight

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The Walkmen – Lisbon

This album takes a little while – well, two songs really – to get going, but once it does I am quickly back in that happy Walkmen land I love so much.

They have such a distinctive sound, the Walkmen, from Hamilton Leithauser’s wailed vocals, to that grumbly organ which underpins so many songs, to the rough rattle of the guitar, that I find myself in pretty happy territory from the first note, but then I am a big Walkmen fan.  In terms of songwriting though, I have to confess, I have taken a little while to settle into this record.

Juveniles and Angela Surf City just don’t really do it for me for whatever reason, so it is the lurching, off-kilter guitar rhythm of Follow the Leader which first made me really sit up and take notice.  It sounds for a second like the drummer and the guitarist are playing different songs, with the two elements only really unified by the vocals, when they finally arrive.

It’s a short song though, and once this awkward little pleasure stumbles off stage, the real substance of the album finally makes itself known.  The superbly simple, insistent rhythm of Blue as Your Blood tells you from the very start that the song has another gear to reach, but it is over halfway through the song when that release finally happens.

I was challenged recently by Rory from Broken Records on my enduring love for the Walkmen’s bursts of feral ferocity, most obvious on the stunning Bows + Arrows.  He reckons that it’s with You & Me that they really became one of the best bands around at the moment.  Whilst I agree that You & Me is indeed a fucking great record, there is still a little bit of me which secretly pines for them to go absolutely fucking mental once or twice in an album (Thinking of a Dream I Had – pleeeeeease!).

They seem to have forsaken that territory forever these days, however, but this is no great shame.  In place of that kind of full-frontal assault are songs whose euphoria builds slowly, from In the New Year on You & Me, to Blue as Your Blood and Stranded on Lisbon; the latter with horns so warm they’re almost Christmassy. Even the sudden choral vocals two-thirds of the way through All My Great Designs have a touch of Christmas about them actually, which is nice as the cold returns to the air at this time of year.

For all there is still a roughness around how their instruments are recorded, the actual feel of the songs is a lot mellower these days, and that easy atmosphere makes this feel like quite an easy album to come to terms with, but actually I am not sure that it is.  I took it so easy it kind of washed over me the first few times I heard it, and actually despite being less confrontational than I am used to, I still think it’s a record you have to take your time with. Woe is Me and Angela Surf City still seem to me a little like songs which haven’t quite located their own meanings yet – there’s just a little sparkle missing from them in my opinion – but in general this album is yet another corker from a truly excellent band.

The Walkmen – Stranded

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The Walkmen – While I Shovel the Snow

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Live in Edinburgh This Week – 20th September 2010

It’s a busy week this week, and actually I am quite happy with this fact.  Sometimes busy weeks of gigs feel like a forest of looming obligations, but I don’t think there’s anything I feel any real guilty pressure to attend this time around, so this week may for once be assigned to fun and fun alone.

Having delivered a shitty Summer, Edinburgh is doing its usual trick of starting Autumn brilliantly.  It is cold now, but the sun has been dazzling, leaving me wondering why I didn’t spend more time in the garden this Summer.  The answer, of course, is because it was constantly pishing rain.

I am actually going to miss anything, however interesting, taking place at the end of the week because I am off to Eigg (an island, for you non-Scots) for the Fence Collective’s rather brilliant-sounding Away Game.  I won’t tease you too much about that though, as tickets have long since sold out.

Wednesday 22nd September 2010: Diane Cluck, Wig Smith and Rob St. John at the Wee Red Bar.

I am as keen to hear Rob St. John’s new stuff as I am to hear Diane Cluck for the first time, I have to confess.  Either way though, it’s a win-win situation for me.  I just have to be careful not to let the Wee Red Bar’s primary school time constraints catch me by surprise as I have done in the past.

Diane Cluck – Ink & Needles

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Thursday 23rd September 2010: Darren Hayman, Gordon McIntyre (fae Ballboy) & Withered Hand (solo) at the Wee Red Bar.

Wave Pictures and Herman Dune pal Darren Hayman is touring, I think, in support of his latest album with the Secondary Modern, Essex.  Both Gordon and Dan are friendly, charismatic performers and this comes across particularly strongly in a solo acoustic setting, so I would imagine this will be one of the most ‘lovely cup of tea’ gigs you’ll see in a while.

Ballboy – Sex is Boring

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Friday 24th September 2010: The Scottish Enlightenment, Dan Lyth & Moon Junk at Sneaky Pete’s.

The Scottish Enlightenment are launching their new EP this evening (title track below, for all you naughty downloaders of pirate material from the internet – shame on you!), all of which is a painstakingly crafted strategic buildup to their album release later in the year, and subsequent unstoppable ascent to world domination.  This is not as accessible as their previous Pascal EP, at least not immediately anyway, but after a few more listens I think it might be every bit as good.

The Scottish Enlightenment – Little Sleep

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Saturday 25th September 2010: White Heath, Sebastian Dangerfield, Zoobizaretta and Loch Awe at Sneaky Pete’s.

I think this is actually Zoobizaretta’s album launch, but I don’t really know them at all and so, no disrespect intended, I kinda think of this as the first chance to catch Loch Awe.  Yep, their first ever gig.  Now, they sent me through their debut EP (which you can download from their Bandcamp link above) and although I am not sure if it’s quite ready for wider consumption yet (most of the Edinburgh bands I love were going for a good few years before I bumped into them and fell in love with their stuff, so this is a pretty normal thing, I think), there are still some great moments on it.  Darling, Your Lover in particular is one of those songs which brought me back in from the next room to listen to.  I am not sure what it is about it, but it’s a song I definitely find compelling for some reason, and that’s the magic ingredient I suppose.

Loch Awe – Darling, Your Lover

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Tapeheads & Meursault, Avalanche & Tours

Well I know I normally let Dylan sort out the Sunday Supplements, and I cheated last week by writing one myself, but I am going to have to do it again, sorry.

The reason is simply that there is a lot of label news happening at the moment, and I really don’t want to overwhelm the blog with label chat if I can avoid it.  I am sure lots of you come here for reasons other than me trying to sell you things to pay for that yacht in the Caribbean we record labels generally aim for.

So, the news this week, in bullet point form for the lazy, is this:
1. Inspector Tapehead to play in-store at Avalanche Records on Thursday 30th September.
2. Meursault UK and European tour booked for October/November, with showcase gig at the Caves on the 25th.
3. The Stormy Seas added to the bill for the Inspector Tapehead album launch on the 30th.

1. Instore! Yep, the Tapeheads are currently touring the UK in the Toad Van (the shit one which works, not the cool one which doesn’t), but in advance of their album launch show on Thursday 30th September they are playing an in-store gig at Avalanche Records on Cockburn Street.  This will start at around half five when the store closes, I guess, and I will bring a case of beer as an additional inducement.

2. Tour! Having had a hectic festival season, Meursault have been taking a bit of a breather for the last month or so.  And they’ll need it because their October/November schedule is going to be hellishly busy, with a UK and European tour booked in back to back. The whole thing is kicking off with a headline show at the Caves in Edinburgh on the 25th October, supported by Port Royal and Enfant Bastard – tickets here.

25 Oct 2010 – The Caves, Edinburgh
26 Oct 2010 – Head of Steam, Newcastle
27 Oct 2010 – The Harley, Sheffield
28 Oct 2010 – Royal Park Cellars, Leeds
30 Oct 2010 – The Luminaire, London
31 Oct 2010 – The Playhouse Bar [free entry show], Norwich
2 Nov 2010 – Star & Garter, Manchester
3 Nov 2010 – Stereo, York
4 Nov 2010 – Dexters, Dundee
5 Nov 2010 – Beach Ballroom, Aberdeen
6 Nov 2010 – Stereo, Glasgow

19 Nov 2010 – Oh Galery, Caen, FRANCE
20 Nov 2010 – International, Paris, FRANCE
21 Nov 2010 – Planet Claire Session, Paris, FRANCE
22 Nov 2010 – Dwaze Zaken, Amsterdam, NETHERLANDS
23 Nov 2010 – Piala Libri, Brussels, BELGIUM
24 Nov 2010 – Musikbunker, Aachen, GERMANY
25 Nov 2010 – Schlachthof w/ Telekinesis [tbc], Wiesbaden, GERMANY
26 Nov 2010 – Spart 4, Saarbrucken, GERMANY
27 Nov 2010 – Cave du Bleu Lezard, Lausanne, SWITZERLAND
28 Nov 2010 – Le Lounge, Marseille, FRANCE
30 Nov 2010 – Stadtgarten, Erfurt, GERMANY
1 Dec 2010 – Morph Club, Bamberg, GERMANY
2 Dec 2010 – Feinkostlampe, Hannover, GERMANY
3 Dec 2010 – Gaengeviertel, Hamburg, GERMANY
4 Dec 2010 – Schlachthof, Aurich, GERMANY
5 Dec 2010 – [venue tba], Groningen, NETHERLANDS

3. Stormies! At the time I did the first posters for the Inspector Tapehead album launch we only had Humble Soul heroes The Miserable Rich and the Tapeheads themselves confirmed to play the show, but the Stormy Seas have since been confirmed as the final piece of the jigsaw.  The gig is taking place at the Edinburgh School of Art’s Wee Red Bar on Thursday 30th September, and tickets can be purchased here.

This is a co-promotion with my friends Tallah and Jim from This is Music, and Ali and Elaine from A&E Promotions.  The technical term for several promoters working together is is, I believe, a Clusterfuck, and the new flyer can be seen below:

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Toadcast #140 – The Romecast

Despite the title (and the first song) there is very little ranting about the fucking Pope on this podcast, I promise.  He may be a vicious, decaying old scorpion in charge of one of the most corrupt and evil institutions on Earth, but after a little bit of gentle joshing at the beginning I promise I do let it drop and carry on with the music.

We have a fair bit of new stuff this week, such as Belle & Sebastian, Broken Records, Li’l Daggers and various other bits, and then a brief detour into Mrs. Toad and my drunken late night vinyl escapades last night.

Enjoy!

Direct Download: Toadcast #140 – The Romecast

01. Tom Lehrer – The Vatican Rag (00.17)
02. Li’l Daggers – King Corpse (06.26)
03. Bastardgeist – Flee to the Hills (11.26)
04. Belle and Sebastian – Write About Love (20.23)
05. Broken Records – Ailene (23.10)
06. The Walkmen – Blue as Your Blood (31.31)
07. Common Grackle – At the Grindcore Show (36.07)
08. The Meteors – Out of Time (40.42)
09. The Housemartins – Five Get Over Excited (43.46)
10. The Delfields – Claire (50.03)

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Tim Minchin is a Genius

I don’t think any more need be said. More of Tim’s general splendidness to be found here.

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Friday Just Loves Emails

I feel like one of those email boasters this week.  You know the sort of unspeakable cunt who constantly goes about telling you how many emails they get and how marvellously important they must therefore be and blah blah blah blah blah…?  Well, that’s me.

Not entirely, I hope, but close.  I made a concerted effort while we were away to keep my inbox as pruned as possible, by deleting anything with the word remix in it, and all those stupid invitations to parties in New York and London people seem to send.  ‘What, really?  Yes, I’d love to come, will you book the flights or would you rather reimburse me when I get there?’  Fuck off.

Anyhow, the issue with my inbox is not so much the quantity – it’s not that crazy, if I’m being honest – it’s actually a slightly different problem: that of time.  See, it’s not enough just to rattle through all the emails, read ‘em, reply to those which need replies and so on.  Most of the emails I get are musical, so I actually have to sit down, clear my head a bit and listen to the songs which are sent through and make a reasonable enough decision about whether or not I actually like the stuff in question.  So even clearing ten or twenty emails can take absolutely ages, because I want to be certain I’m giving bands a fair crack.

So, as you can probably tell, there will be no five tunes this week, just five pictures from my iPhone Hipstamatic frenzy from our week in China.  As I confessed in my previous China post, I got a little overly carried away with that particular app, to the point that Mrs. Toad would roll her eyes at me and make that face every time I broke out the iPhone to take picture.

The picture at the top, incidentally, is of a place called Moon Hill, which we climbed, right to the very top of that doughnutty bit at the very top.  Given that we both suffer quite badly from vertigo and blubber that was something of an achievement, I think, although I have never, ever in my life been so sweaty as I was by the time we got to the top.  I could actually wring out my t-shirt and get a fucking glass of water.

So, erm, yes the whole gallery can be seen here, for those of you who are interested.  We did take some proper pictures too, but they need a bit of pruning and editing so they won’t be ready for a while.  Once more, I owe a massive thank you to Dylan for both tending the site in my absence and for stepping in at the last minute to drive Meursault to End of the Road, and to Martin and Bart for contributing posts in my absence.  I think it’s important to keep the blog pottering along, whether or not I’m around, so their help is much appreciated.

Oh, and of course, I need five questions, don’t I, to encourage you to delurk and waste your Friday talk garbage on the internet with my good self and anyone else who happens to be passing.  I am addressing promo copies this afternoon, so my concentration span will almost certainly be pitiful and I will almost certainly be desperately grateful for even the flimsiest excuse to procrastinate.

1. Instead of that cadaverous old goblin who scuttled his way around Edinburgh yesterday, who would actually head your church?
2. Office boast which makes you most want to punch someone.
3. How has a travelling companion most irritated you in the past?
4. As my brother and I used to say: ‘Ah, photographs.  So much better than actual memories.’  Upon which side of this fence do you sit?
5. Worst thing about returning from holiday.

Oh balls to it, alright then, six pictures.  But that’s yer lot, dammit.

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Sparrow & the Workshop – Just What I Needed (Cars Cover)

Everyone knows that I acknowledge my often-stated dislike of cover songs to be the purest hypocrisy by now, don’t they?  Because after Dylan posted (and I enjoyed) the two Withered Hand covers from the End of the Road Festival the other day, I now have another one to share with you.

Why did I like the Withered Hand covers?  Not sure, probably because I know the songs and the bands in question so well that it only seems natural they should play one another’s stuff – it is folk music and doesn’t seem like a cover.  Why do I like this one?  Well, two reasons, I think:

Firstly, I don’t know the original at all.  Never heard of it, never listened to The Cars (although didn’t they do that ‘Who’s Going to Drive You Home?’ song?), so I have no idea of how this song ‘should’ sound, and no first version to pollute my expectations.

Secondly, I really can’t get enough of Jill and Gregor’s voices singing together. And I have just heard Jill singing on the next Broken Records album too, and am most excited.

In terms of actual news, Nick from the band made this rather odd looking video.  It was all shot in someone’s back garden, which I suppose is no surprise from watching it.  And not that I wish to play this down at all, but the far more exciting news which came with this email was the fact that the band are currently writing songs for their next album.  Which is very jolly news in-fucking-deed.  Stick that in your Pope and smoke it.

Sparrow & the Workshop – Just What I Needed (The Cars)

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