Song, by Toad

Archive for February, 2011

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Friday Has a Packed Schedule

So, after work tonight, what to do… there’s James Yorkston at Pilrig St. Paul’s, or the Panda Su EP launch at Sneaky Pete’s, or Ringo Deathstarr at Cabaret Voltaire.  Then tomorrow it’s either the Conquering Animal Sound album launch or Come on Gang’s final gig (and album launch), also at Pilrig St. Paul’s.  It’s almost like living in Glasgow or London.

I’m also – not that I mean to show my age – rather excited about the number of green shoots in the garden at the moment.  Our approach to gardening is more than a little haphazard, but in October we threw piles and piles of bulbs into the ground, and some of them might even bloom!  My mum and my Granddad on her side are very gardeny people, so you may be disgusted at my pipe and slippers domesticity, but I think they’d be proud, bless ‘em.

Oh, and I’m sorry this week’s five is a little late.  I was distracted by The Oatmeal for about three hours.  Damn you, internet! I’m not really sorry though, because The Oatmeal is fucking awesome.

Remember that the Friday Fives were designed as a de-lurking amnesty, so please do take this opportunity to come out of the closet and make up some silly nonsense on the internet.  It’s Friday afternoon, remember, so it’s not like you were planning on being productive for the rest of the day anyway.  And for those of you who care, Mrs. Toad and I will be recording our annual anti-Valentine’s shitcast this weekend.  Good, unromantic, sweary sweary fun!

1. Will you be observing Valentine’s Day this year?
2. First crush you can remember (this need not be either sensible or entirely true).
3. Favourite webcomic.
4. Work avoidance hangover tactic.
5. Inappropriate wedding song.

Five Valentine’s songs for you.  Well, sort of.

Richard Cheese – Rape Me

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The Wedding Present – Everyone Thinks He Looks Daft

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Cherry Poppin’ Daddies – When I Change Your Mind

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Tom Waits – Better off Without a Wife

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Oh alright, one proper romantic one, if you must.
Billy Bragg & Wilco – Hesitating Beauty

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Toad on Fresh Air – 10th February 2011

Yes indeed, I am back on Fresh Air tonight, once again sans Ruth, but she will be back next week apparently, which is good news.

For today, however, you are stuck with me sitting in a room by myself blethering away about nothing at all, which is pretty much par for the course, but I promise that as of next week that blethering will be interspersed with liberal helpings of Ruth telling me that my music taste is fucking shit.  We’re a cute little double act like that.

Live on air from 8pm UK time – listen live here.

As per usual I will be updating the playlist live below as we go along, so feel free to chip in in the comments and let me know how incredible (no really, incredible, no matter what you think) the playlist and chat just happen to be this week.  Anyone mentions the word shit and they’re getting punched.  Through the internet.  Punched through the internet.  Oh dear.

01. Li’l Daggers – King Corpze
02. Lift to Experience – To Guard and to Guide
03. Josh T. Pearson – Sorry for the Song
04. Bob Dylan – Girl From the North Country (Witmark Demos)
05. Edinburgh School for the Deaf – 11 Kinds of Loneliness
06. Ringo Deathstarr – Imagine Hearts
07. Earth Girl Helen Brown – I Wanna Do It
08. Rob St. John – Phantom Limb
09. Warm Ghost – Claws Overhead
10.  The Great Valley – Tall Smoke
11.  Eels on Heels – G
12. Range Rover – Mind
13. Taxrat – Burn Down Slow
14. Tom Waits – All the World is Green

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Esben & the Witch – Violet Cries

Hmm, I am really not so sure about this at all.  The band have been buzzy as hell for a while now, and I kind of assumed – partly for some obscure reason related to the name, I think – that they were going to be another tedious London nu-folk band, so I was really pleased the first time I actually listened to them properly and heard a wall of loud guitar noise.

I was expecting to really like this, on the back of that little epiphany, but in the end I really don’t.  If I were to use the description ‘vaguely like a somewhat more upbeat Portishead but with more shoegazey guitars’, it’s a description which could go either way.  As all such one-line descriptions necessarily are, it’s a little bit vague and flippant, but I can imagine music fitting that description being really, really good.

And occasionally, that’s just what it is.  The lead single Warpath is excellent, for example.  Album opener Argyria takes its time, but eventually explodes into life around the halfway mark; both loud and impressive.    This side of Esben & the Witch I really do like, and makes me wish I had been in Edinburgh when they played Sneaky’s last week.

The problem for me is that this represents only a relatively small part of what makes this band who they are, and I am not that keen on the other facets.  The one thing I disliked the most about Portishead was Beth Gibbons’ vocal, and this is the one aspect where these two bands bear the closest resemblance, and I like it no better with one than I did with the other.

They take their name from a Danish fairytale, by all accounts, and there are times when this music drifts from waves of guitar noise to what I guess I might rather awkwardly describe as Beowulf Prog.  A little like My Name is Calla, I find myself listening to a band who do a lot of things I really like, but who have a tendency towards the melodramatic which seems at times to take them into the realm of self-parody, and this element is the one I can’t really get my head around, and which prevents me from really enjoying this album.

Esben & the Witch – Argyria

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Esben & the Witch – Marine Fields Glow

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The Future of Music Television

This is not, of course, a decisive tract on the future of music television, as much as a continuation of this particular conversation started on radar.scotsman, with me taking the chance to add my tuppence-worth.

I’ve been thinking about this kind of thing for some time now, for a couple of reasons.  Partly because there really is just no music television to be had anywhere at the moment, partly because I am trying to figure out what we are doing with our own video stuff here at Song, by Toad and partly because of the fact that even though Mrs. Toad and I don’t have an actual telly in the house, we have iTunes and we have the internet, so we still manage to watch all the television we please.

As Nick points out in the Radar post, all we really have at the moment “aside from wall-to-wall videos of gyrating flesh and head-nodding geezers on 24-hour music channels – is the box-ticking predictability of Later… with Jools Holland, the odd brand marketing vehicle pretending to be an unsigned showcase and those genre nights on BBC4 which, though excellent, focus resolutely on the past.”

The brand vehicles masquerading as unsigned talent showcases irritate the living shit out of me actually.  They are nothing more than companies exploiting hopeful young musicians to do their advertising work for them, and I would personally recommend you steer well clear of the fucking things.  I think they’re exploitative, vacuous and of almost no use to your career in the long run.

I will say, however, that I think Jools Holland gets a bad rap, to be honest. Yes, he’s personally irritating, and yes, if you’re very into music it’s all pretty predictable stuff, but it’s not really aimed at readers of Drowned in Sound (never mind Radar or Toad) so I think it should get a bit more respect both for being pretty good for what it is, and for being the last bastion of music television left, of almost any sort.

In any case, the current state of music television is so bad that MTV have recently performed the ultimate feat of self-parody, in starting a new channel called MTV Music.  Yes, that’s right.  Music Television Music.

I was talking to a friend from the BBC about this recently, and the basic reason for the lack of decent music programming is extremely simple: music on television simply doesn’t pay.  It can’t keep the viewers to attract the advertisers, so it doesn’t exist.  Then when you think about how much talk there’s been in the music industry of late about splintered audiences disappearing up their own niches, you can imagine that doesn’t exactly make life easier. Personally, I think that traditional music shows on linear, programmed television are basically dead.

The only remaining solid audience for alternative music is on the internet, and the biggest identifiable clusters there (i.e. the biggest markets, and hence the most obvious targets for someone trying to resurrect the concept of music television) are places like Pitchfork or Drowned in Sound, but I still don’t think those audiences are big enough to justify pitching a relatively mainstream, prime time TV show at – at least, one which eschews the childish bollocks of E4 on Saturday or the point-and-laugh exploitation of idiots on the X-Factor.

What they might be worth testing with – and this is what I was discussing with my BBC friend – is something more internet-based, for the extremely simple reason that the costs are so much lower, the need to find a gigantic audience immediately just isn’t there.

Something Radar touched on, but didn’t really tackle, were the ways in which this is already beginning to happen; ways which I personally think are going to be the way music television will work in the future, and something we ourselves have been rather haphazardly taking aim at for a little while now.

At the moment, Song, by Toad offers a breadth of music video content, from the more mundane live video recordings, to the more interesting live webcasts of our house gigs, festival diaries, interviews with bands passing through Edinburgh and of course the ten minute Toad Session videos (rough TV shows, essentially) to go with the song videos and interviews which comprise the main sessions.

Now, cobble that together in the right way, and you effectively have a TV channel already.  Certainly the content is there or thereabouts, with the interviews, artist profiles and festival coverage.  It would be nice to get some more up to date news and some debate and stuff, but that is much more complicated to do, so we don’t try just yet.  But the way a great many people consume media these days, it seems there will soon be little difference in delivery between someone’s cute video of their cat dancing to Paul Simon, the Song, by Toad video content, the streaming media provided by more professional channels, and the kind of traditional TV programming which is already available through things like the iPlayer and iTunes.  Throw in the ability to neatly aggregate all the feeds you want, or people you want to follow, and you’re pretty much there.

Now, what we are doing, of course, is basically just the work of one person with some very basic equipment, limited time, and what what little help he can get as and when he can get it, which brings me back to the BBC: why start with a television programme, when you can start on the internet?  As Nick quite rightly pointed out on Radar, the BBC are already halfway there, with their excellent online festival coverage, so why not go the whole hog and expand it.  Why not pilot an attempt to return to the field of music television on iPlayer, where things can be done cheaply, and the risk is incredibly low.

Hell, if you want to start really slowly, just video the sessions people are already recording for 6Music and the BBC Introducing shows, edit them together like we do the Toad Sessions, and post those on the website related to that show – or better yet, somewhere more centralised. The beauty of the internet is that you can experiment in relative obscurity before you really start to publicise it.  This point was well made by skinnygirlwho in the comments on that Radar piece, and is worth expanding upon: no-one knows what kind of music show would work at the moment, in terms of length, breadth, style, format or anything, so it would need to be able to shift quite quickly if something clearly was or wasn’t working.

All in all, it seems too easy when put like this, if you ask me.  A little cash, an established, relevant brand (i.e. NOT Red Bull or Miller, thanks), the room to experiment and Bob’s yer uncle.  But there are some obvious drawbacks of course.

Firstly, within the Beeb at least, there are numerous internal obstacles to overcome.  The company is just too big, and that sort of thing rarely ever makes for nimble innovation – mind you they did invent the iPlayer, so they’re hardly incapable. It may not need to be the BBC, but I can’t see an independent production company doing something like this speculatively, so it would have to be driven by a relatively prominent media channel, I think.

Secondly, of course, is that age-old enemy of innovation: the intellectual property gold rush.  Getting rights holders to agree to anything this new and unknown would be a nightmare – possibly the biggest obstacle of all, in my view.  They would probably be so scared of someone else’s success that their financial demands would be prohibitively high.  Most music license-holders are still scarred by what iTunes did for Apple, for example. Napster pointed the way to the market, the music companies dithered and bickered, and Apple cleaned up – that could have been us, dammit!

So I am not saying there aren’t obstacles to be overcome, but I do strongly believe that people looking to resurrect music television should not just be looking to copy the best bits of old programmes, although that’s a good start.  What they should really be doing is looking at what television is starting to become, and starting to think about the opportunities that might give them to sidestep the pitfalls which killed off traditional music programmes.

Scissor Sisters – Tits on the Radio

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Jack Hayter – Sucky Tart

I’m not sure being known as ‘one of the other chaps from Hefner’ isn’t a bit annoying, but if you don’t know who Jack Hayter is yet, then I guess it serves as well as any other description.

This EP opens with a song it took me a while to recognise as a first rate pop classic.  What threw me, I think, but I’m not sure, is that it just sounds so very English. I may be based in Scotland but I myself am actually as close to being English as any other nationality, so that doesn’t make a lot of sense, but recently I have been noticing that there’s something distinctive in the delivery of songs from all the way down South which it takes me a little while to get my head around.  I know it’s dumb, but it’s there all the same.

Once that odd quirk of my brain was overcome, Cutty Sark gradually dawned on me as a brilliant, brilliant tune.  The process was a bit embarrassing actually: I’d find myself humming it to myself again and again, and after a week or two of this, I suddenly realised that this must mean I really like the song.  But of course!

A Simple Song lives up to its name: it is surprisingly sentimental and shorn of the usual coy indie artfulness.  If I am being honest though, both this song and Doll’s House lack a bit of sparkle.  They are good enough songs, but they seem to cause the EP to stall a little in the middle.

The closer, though, is another cracker.  Jacquie I Won’t Mind is a long, slow track, with sweet violin and strange noises accentuating both the weariness and discomfort of the song.  So I’d suggest it was perhaps a little patchy, but there is some really good stuff on Sucky Tart.

Jack Hayter – I Stole the Cutty Sark

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Virgin of the Birds – Fugitive Works

Jon Rooney from Virgin of the Birds (and Abandoned Love Records) goes about his business pretty damn discreetly, from the distinctly laissez-faire tone of his publicity emails, to the gently confident nature of his music.

This, as will be immediately obvious from the very first note, is not the sort of music to get a stupid haircut and demand attention for its greatness.  It reminds me of the Scottish Enlightenment in some ways; particularly in the slow-burning, lush confidence with which it so unhurriedly goes about its business.

Jon now has four of these beautiful little EPs available for free download from the Abandoned Love website, and they really do need to become a collectors’ boxset, if you ask me.  His lyrics are not just clever, but composed with that combination of intelligence and carelessness which makes it not only incredibly satisfying to listen to, but also makes it all seem so easy.

The music has a similar laid-back air to it, as if he could write and arrange these songs all day long, all the while playing a game of cards and mixing a fine gin and tonic.  Once, Before Annette has the lush strings, again wonderfully subtly done, while We Broke Blue Laws shuffles along with nothing much more than a bit of organ and a shaky egg.  Love Among the Cannibals ended up being the song I chose to share though, and I have no real reason for it, honestly – they’re all great.

“You held your sword like a dancer, and you fought like the girl I love.” Virgin of the Birds, eh?  Fucking awesome.

Virgin of the Birds – Love Among the Cannibals

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The Veils – Troubles of the Brain

Ever since my friend Strath introduced me to The Runaway Found, and in particular the incredible songs The Wild Son and The Tide That Left and Never Came Back, I have loved The Veils.

Nux Vomica was my favourite album of 2006, as you would be able to see if the internet hadn’t eaten some of my early posts a while back, but I never could quite get into 2009′s follow up Sun Gangs for some reason.  These things happen, I guess, and I take this kind of thing far less seriously now that I am involved in making music than I used to when I was a fan, when I tended to treat it as a tragic sign that a band had gone irredeemably bad.

Fortunately I’m a little less excitable these days, and I am delighted to say that the Veils have returned with a new EP which is bloody excellent.  It has been released on their own label in a much more low-key fashion than previous stuff, and seems to have snuck out under a lot of radars.

The first song, Bloom, perhaps sits where it is to just give us an immediate reminder that the band are still here, thank you very much – it has the most purpose, and the most direct pace of any of the songs on here, whilst also being the most direct link to the band’s past.  Don’t Let the Same Bee Sting You Twice perhaps highlights one of the trickier features of this EP, however: it seems to have a slightly scattered character, and is a little difficult to get a handle on.

There are great songs on here, the first two are cracking in particular, and the slow, introspective final couple are also brilliant.  Even the songs I don’t like as much, such as The Stars Came Out Once the Lights Went Out, have excellent elements – in this case I am not so keen on the delivery of the verse but the actual music, particularly the guitar inbetween verses, is excellent.

The thing is, I still have difficulty assembling the constituent parts into an integrated whole, in my head.  Some tracks are a departure for the band, while others could come from previous albums, so there’s a little of The Veils’ past and a little of their future here, and I am not always sure what I am listening to.  Nevertheless a lot of the songs are absolutely top notch, showing that the band are once again in the rudest of health.

The Veils – Bloom

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Live in Edinburgh This Week – 7th February 2011

This is one of those weeks where there could be two of you and you’d still probably not quite manage to get to all the decent gigs in the city this week.  Personally I am going to try and keep it a bit calm, but I have my doubts as to whether or not I am likely to succeed.  Mrs. Toad, no doubt, will be wildly impressed.

I had fun down in London last week, incidentally.  As I mentioned, I did a quick interview with Tom Robinson for BBC 6Music while I was there and, in typical fashion, talked for about twenty minutes, forcing them into copious editing to get things down to the requisite couple of minutes of actual airtime.  You can listen to the whole thing here if you like – it’ll be up for the next week or so I think, and my bit starts just over half an hour in.

Monday 7th February 2011: The Joy Formidable at the Electric Circus.

I’ll be absolutely honest, I don’t know too much about these guys, apart from the fact that they were really quite buzzy a year or so ago, and have a new album coming out, so I am rather interested to hear what it’s all about.

The Joy Formidable – The Magnifying Glass

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Wednesday 9th February 2011: 6 Day Riot, The Pineapple Chunks & White Heath play Limbo at the Voodoo Rooms.

Limbo really are back with a bang in 2011.  Having gone incredibly quiet last year, I wasn’t sure if we were going to see them back again, but with something like six or seven shows booked for the first couple of months of the year already it seems I couldn’t have been more wrong.  It’ll be nice to see the Chunks back in action again as well.

The Pineapple Chunks – Look Back in Horror

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Thursday 10th February 2011: Dylan Uncovered at the Voodoo Rooms.

In association with Let’s Get Lyrical, this is a night of Dylan appreciation (and covers) starring Yusuf Azak, Esperi, The Sundancer, Shock and Awe, Norman Lamont, Hookers for Jesus, Edinburgh School for the Deaf, Issac Brutal and the Trailer Trash Express, and Tribute to Venus Carmichael.

Friday 11th February 2011: James Yorkston & Marry Waterson and Oliver Knight at Pilrig St. Paul’s.

Another Let’s Get Lyrical show, this one looks gorgeous, and I think is part of James Yorkston’s tour to promote the recent publishing of his tour diaries.

James Yorkston – Steady as She Goes

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Friday 11th February 2011: Panda Su EP launch, with I Build Collapsible Mountains & Finn LeMarinel at Sneaky Pete’s.

The first of two consecutive This is Music nights at Sneaky’s, this is something of a Glasgow Allstars of Gentle Acoustic Pop kind of a lineup.

Saturday 12th February 2011: Conquering Animal Sound album launch with Miaoux Miaoux & Esperi at Sneaky Pete’s.

Conquering Animal Sound’s debut album Kammerspiel is out now, and they are touring the UK in support of it, with this being the Edinburgh leg.

Conquering Animal Sound – Bear (Lamplighter Remix)

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Saturday 12th February 2011: Come on Gang‘s farewell show with Over the Wall & Cancel the Astronauts at Pilrig St. Paul’s.

We music fans can be an ungrateful shower at times, and Come on Gang have just about had enough of us.  They are calling it a day, but going out with something of a bang – having a big old farewell bash at Pilrig St. Paul’s which is doubling as an album release show for their debut album.  Sort of an epitaph, I suppose.

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Toadcast #160 – The Crapcast

The Crapcast is so named because I am in one of the dingiest hotel rooms I have ever been in.  In isn’t even entertainingly bad, which would be something, just like being dressed in clothes from Marks and Spencer and being trapped inside a grey cardboard box listening to Keane’s greatest hits.

Anyhow, the shower was really good, and I can forgive almost any other atrocity in a hotel room, as long as the shower is hot and the pressure is good.

Anyhow, I am abandoning the Hotel of Beige for a friend’s house tonight, and then tootling back up to Edinburgh tomorrow evening to see my nice lady again.  It makes a bit of change for me to be away on business instead of her, so I can go back and gloat about being a mover and a shaker… until she puts me firmly back in my place my reminding me that when she goes away it is to China and New York and Australia, not just a long weekend in London.

And yes, I do refer to a bit of ‘verbal writing’ in this.  Don’t judge me too harshly.  I was wrecked.

Direct download: Toadcast #160 – The Crapcast

01. Billy Bragg – The Saturday Boy (00.56)
02. Pet Ghost Project – Glitch Shake (10.09)
03. We Are Losers – Cheerleaders (18.27)
04. Yuck – Rubber (21.15)
05. King James – A Big Black Dog (30.41)
06. Eef Barzelay – Ballad of Bitter Honey (37.13)
07. Elbow – Station Approach (41.04)
08. David Dondero – Don’t Cry No Tears (47.37)
09. The Veils – Bloom (52.00)
10. Micachu & the Shapes – Everything (58.19)

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Friday is Avin a Larf

Well I am down in Lahndan at the moment, hence the picture of jellied eels.  I am the sort of undignified trougher who will eat more or less anything but not, it seems, jellied fucking eels.  Dreadful things.

When I was living down in London between 2002 and 2005 I actually lived on a boat (£12,ooo instead of, say, £300,000 for a shitey one bedroom flat thirty miles out of the city centre).  I was moored down at Nine Elms Pier, but went up to Brentford to get the thing gutted and the hull repaired, so I could start rebuilding it.  Here is a picture of me working very hard – don’t I look industrious.

Whilst going out to the yard to work on the boat I would pass what I suppose was an old-fashioned London shellfish stand, and I would try cockle, mussels and all sorts, and pretty much enjoyed them all.  The one which I couldn’t stomach, though, was jellied eels.  As I’ve said, I will eat more or less anything, but the cold, nasty, gelatinous nature of this particular delicacy stumped me.  It was utterly flavourless and completely digusting; one of the few foodstuffs which has ever defeated me.

I hope you all enjoyed the Let’s Get Lyrical post from yesterday.  Having decided not to write an essay so as not to be rude to my parents, it ended up taking me far, far too long to write, but hopefully it’s worked out nicely enough in the end.

And once again here we are, at that time of the week: the slow waste of Friday afternoon talking bollocks on the internet.  Wheesh.  So give us five quick and silly answers to five stupid questions first, and then prattle away all you like.

1. A fantastic song lyric.
2. Food you absolutely cannot stomach.
3. Music from this year you’d be most likely to play to your parents.
4. Last long train journey you took (‘long’ is flexible here, Britain is a pretty small island).
5. Last time you were on a boat.

This week’s five songs are taken from the albums I was listening to on the train on the way down to London (proper reviews coming soon).

Black Tambourine – Black Car

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White Wishes – Happy and Afraid

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Monster Island – Looking for a Leader

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Psychedelic Horseshit – Unseen Voids

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Esben & the Witch – Marching Song

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