Song, by Toad

Posts tagged emit bloch

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Song, by Toad – Festive Fifty 2011 31-50

Here’s the first installment of the Song, by Toad Festive Fifty for 2011 – a collection of the fifty songs I have been enjoying the most this year.  The fifty themselves and the precise order can hardly be described as definitive of course, because you know how fluid things like ‘favourite’ songs can be, but roughly speaking this is the stuff I have been enjoying the most in 2011.

Just as a note, in order to make it a broader representation of the bands I’ve liked the most, I have made it harder and harder for bands to have a song featured on the list the more they already had on it.  So a band’s second song got a relatively free pass, but their third would be nudged down a wee bit, to try and encourage variation and stuff like that.

31.Anna-Anna – Mirrors of America I’m aware there are very few women represented on this list, and a lot of those who are seem to share the ghostly, incredibly still delivery, albeit in a more folky setting, with Anna-Anna.

32.Sonny and the Sunsets – Home And Exile I could have half of this album on here, but this one always stood out, as a gem of retro, slightly woozy pop.

33.Quiet Americans – Summer House Straightforward lo-fi garage stuff this, but a hugely, hugely hummable tune.

34.TV Girl – Benny and the Jetts Simple and enjoyable summery pop, but another one so hugely infectious you simply can’t stop humming it.

35.Yoofs – Sidewalk I love the guitar effect, the riff, the energy, everything.  Keep an eye out for this lot on the brilliant Art is Hard Records in the new year.

36.Zed Penguin – This Town A bit of a departure for an Edinburgh band, this. I think my favourite part might be the gorgeously tremulous guitar sound Matthew gets from his hand-built amp.

37.David Thomas Broughton – River Lay On an album as good as Outbreeding it takes an awful lot to stand out, but this does.  For someone who can be a little obtuse, this is such a warm, welcoming record and this track epitomises it as well as most.

38.Evil Hand – Returned In Time These guys don’t exactly push themselves forward, and their releases can be a little erratic, but when they nail it their songs are as good as anyone in Scotland at the moment.

39.Powerdove – Sickly City Ghostly, slightly disorientating, and hypnotic.  This is possibly the finest song on an album which makes a gorgeous job of using minimal instrumentation and glacial pace to turn those three characteristics into a truly beautiful album.

40.Emit Bloch – Dorothy (New Version) Given how much I loved the gorgeous acoustic version of this song which I heard last year, it’s almost inconceivable that I should then also love a big glossy pop version too.  But I do.  Good songwriting, it seems, trumps even my lazy habits.

41.The Honey Pies – Hair of the Dog Boisterous and enormous fun, this album is a gleeful romp through rock ‘n’ roll cliches, but done with such verve that you can’t help but enjoy it.  This is a bit of a Clash throwback, the most raucous song on the album and probably my favourite.

42.The Low Anthem – Ghost Woman Blues After the genius of Boeing 737, The Low Anthem show they can have just as much impact at the opposite end of the spectrum with this gorgeous ballad.

43.Loch Awe – I Will Drift into 10,000 Streams For a band who do things I like and things I don’t, this demo came out of nowhere a few months ago, and I love it.  The slow drum beat, the really sparingly used electric guitar, the way the two voices work together… fine work!

44.The Blue Runes – Stream For me to get into a classic/psych rock EP made by a band from Puerto Rico wouldn’t have been a particularly great bet at the start of the year, but The Blue Runes released a brilliant EP, and this track is probably the biggest track on it.

45.Adam Stafford – Shot-down You Summer Wannabes A cracking song by a guy whose music I only got into embarrassingly late in the day, considering how long ago his debut solo album was released.  Nevertheless, a couple of storming live performances did the trick, and I am now entirely converted.

46.Horsecollar – Christopher A jaunty little piano line stands out immediately, but the rest of this song is bloody great too – a presumably unheard monologue delivered to a friend, and a stand out on a fine album.

47.Timber Timbre – Creep On Creepin’ On A gorgeous song on a gorgeous album.  This record is a little more approachable and a little less creepy than the last, and lush, lovely songs like this one are the reason.

48.Lady Lazarus – Nazarite Oath Ghostly, unsettling and lovely at the same time, this has a lot in common with the excellent Powerdove.

49.Silverbacks – Atta Boyz Simple this one: a cracking pop tune, good riff, and extremely hummable.

50.Pet – What You Building Another song which came as a bit of a surprise, given Edinburgh doesn’t generally do this kind of music all that well, but this is lovely.

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1-10 | 11-30 | 31-50

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Toad and Ruth on Fresh Air – 3rd March 2011

Ruth and I are back on Fresh Air Radio once more this evening, live from 8pm for an hour and a half.

Ruth now has her own blog as well, so for those of you who tire of my wittering and crave a little bit more eclecticism in your world, then go and have a gander at Find Me in the Archives.

This week I have some songs from my Manchester post this week, and will be scarpering immediately afterwards to try and catch what I can of the FOUND album launch at the Voodoo Rooms.  Factorycraft is out on Chemikal Underground right about now.

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

As per usual, the playlist will be updated live below as we go along, and the comments will be open for your heckling and chattering and general talking of pish.  So feel free to chip in.

1. Devotchka – All the Sand in All the Sea
2. Golden Ghost – Plain Sight
3. Emit Bloch – Dorothy (a bit of the old version)
4. Emit Bloch – Dorothy (and the whole new versions)
5. Thao & Mirah – Eleven (feat. Tuneyards)
6. Powerdove – Sickly City
7. Moldy Peaches – Anyone Else But You
8. Roger Manning – Pearly Blues
9. Girls – The Oh-so-protective One
10. Brown Brogues – I Just Don’t Know
11. The Louche FC – Back Bedroom Casualty
12. Dum Dum Girls – He Gets Me High
13. Psychedelic Horseshit – Unseen Voids
14. Active Child – When Your Love is Safe
15. The Red River – Apple Valley
16. Husband – Feelings

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Emit Bloch – Dorothy

This is the video for a new version of Dorothy by Emit Bloch, a song which first made an appearance on these pages on this podcast back in April last year.

Bloch’s album Dictaphones Vol. 1 was, if I remember, actually recorded as a series of demos.  The plan, a little like with Springsteen’s Nebraska, was to re-record these songs at a later date and to release that recording as a proper album, but the demos simply ended up being so good they demanded a release of their own.

1st reaction to hearing this version: ‘dear sweet lord what the blazing fuck is going on here?’

2nd reaction to hearing this version: ‘well bugger me, that’s pretty good, isn’t it.’

It’s extremely, extremely rare that anyone can take the rough version of a song I love, re-record a comparatively lush pop version of the exact same song and still not have me absolutely hate it.  But umm… well this is pretty bloody good isn’t it.  Due to the One Little Indian Records site being down I don’t know if this is from that re-recorded album which Dictaphones Vol.1 was supposed to be the skeleton material for, but I hope so.  And it might well make for a damn fine listen if it is.

Just for the sake of comparison though, here’s the version from Dictaphones. I assume you can understand my surprise:

Emit Bloch – Dorothy (the version from Dictaphones Vol.1)

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MySpace | More mp3s | Buy Dictaphones Vol.1 direct from One Little Indian

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Toadcast #121 – The Votecast

I will be in Macclesfield at Unconvention, pretending to know what the fuck I am talking about when it comes to new music business models when you come to listen to this.

I do get a shiny new pair of Converse, courtesy of the sponsors, which is cool.  But above all, me, the chance to talk shit… well, it’s just a match made in heaven isn’t it.

My Granddad lives in Manchester too, which is rather convenient, so on Sunday I will go round to his house and say hello.  Who knows, it might even shunt me slowly out of the Bad Son status I have been occupying for all these years.

This playlist is largely composed of new stuff which has appeared in my inbox recently, and a couple of bizarre wild cards – two covers,

Toadcast #121 – The Votecast

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01. Yusuf Azak – Turn on the Long Wire (06.23)
02. Micah P. Hinson – 2s and 3s (12.50)
03. Nina Nastasia – Cry, Cry, Baby (17.58)
04. Emit Bloch – Milkshake vs. Passenger (Kelis & Iggy Pop) (23.50)
05. Run on Sentence – Out in the Woods (30.16)
06. eagleowl – Morpheus (33.43)
07. David Tattersall – The Old Family (39.15)
08. Los Hombres – Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) (41.36)
09. Male Bonding – Year’s Not Long (46.12)
10. Willie Nelson – Smells Like Teen Spirit (49.22)
11. Super Adventure Club – Pick Up Sticks (57.03)

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Emit Bloch – Dictaphones Vol.1

Hmm, fun fun, I am enjoying this.  It’s massively obvious to say that Emit Bloch sounds for all the world like he is channelling the spirit of Woody Guthrie, with his guitar sound swinging from a harsh battering to a gentle strum, and his lyrics veering wildly from tender to aggressive to witty to borderline nonsense.
His voice wobbles and wavers, rises to an occasional nasal squawk, and then drops to a low, comforting tone.  This latter incarnation has the kind of sincerity to it that you could almost imagine it is the voice he might use to apologise to his loved ones for driving them nuts after a day spent railing against the absurdities of the world around him.

As you might have guessed from the comparison in the first paragraph, this is a very anachronistic album.  Early Dylan, Guthrie, Phil Ochs; this is a very familiar sound for those of us raised in certain households but for all he deserves few marks for originality, he does pull off his own version of this particular sound with some style, stuffing this album with charm and charisma.  He reminds me a little of the excellent Adam Balbo in that respect.

There’s also an element of challenge to the warmth with which he writes and performs his music.  Something about the attitude of the delivery is just a little belligerent, not in an aggressive way, quite the opposite, more in the sense that you can feel a slight undercurrent of something darker and perhaps less friendly than the surface of the album might suggest.  After a couple of whiskies I could easily imagine Bloch becoming quite morose or bitter, although this recording has those tendencies well under control, and if anything is more sassy than anything else.

Most reviews have made a fair deal of the fact that this record is actually a series of demos recorded on the dictaphone which gave the album its title, the studio versions not living up to the appeal of these ropey modern-day field recordings.  Given the touchstones for the actual style of the music mentioned above I think all that needs to be said is that if you put this album in that company, then the style fits perfectly and that is all that needs to be said.  It is human, approachable and warm.

I am still as much of a whore for sad music as I always was of course, so it will probably surprise no-one to hear that Dorothy is my favourite song on this album.  I played it on the podcast a while back, and it says something for the quality of his songwriting that I found myself humming a fragment of that song a few days ago, unable to remember what song it was, wondering which of the revered masters I mentioned above had written it.

Emit Bloch – Dorothy

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Emit Bloch – Married Creature

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Emit Bloch – Bottom-Class Middle-Feeding Top Hat Duet

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MySpace | More mp3s | Buy direct from One Little Indian

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Emit Bloch – The Light vs Waterfalls vs Taxi Driver

I know I don’t often post other people’s videos, but I thought this one was interesting, and would give you something to do inbetween boring meetings and internet skiving while you wait for lunch.

Firstly, I like Emit Bloch.  I am in the process of reviewing his album, and popped a song on a recent podcast, so you’ll be hearing more of Mr. Bloch around here shortly.

Secondly, this video was described to me thus, when it was sent through: “Emit Bloch’s cosmic bluegrass Mash Up of Hank William’s ‘I Saw The Light’, TLC’s ‘Waterfalls’ with sound and ambient footage from the movie ‘Taxi Driver’ by Martin Scorsese.” Now, you know I don’t like covers much, and I have absolutely no interest in mashups, but the idea of a cover mashup interests me.  It strikes me as being much closer to the process of re-imagining the raw materials of creativity, and I like the idea.  Making it relative to a specific film as well gives the whole piece of work another cultural reference point which further adds to the mix and in general, this seems like the kind of thing the internet and accessible digital technology were made for.

Then again, maybe I’m making up a bunch of fancy-sounding shit to excuse the fact that I just happen to like this tune, despite it contradicting loads of things I’ve said in the past.  Hypocrite? Me?

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Toadcast #116 – The Dead Calmcast

It’s been a very, very long time since we had a nice simple podcast of me just chattering about music without extraneous distractions of various drunken people babbling to one another over the top of it.

Last week was Ruth, Michael and Dylan, the week before that was Vic and Peej, then me and Mrs. Toad and then there was the one from Homegame, which was nuts, so this one is just calm and sensible and plain vanilla and basically just me playing some songs, wondering how to pronounce names like Borcherdt, and talking pish like usual.

Next week will be the Mumford & Sons Toad Session, which is nice.

Toadcast #116 – The Dead Calmcast

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01. The Van Allen Belt – The Way You Look (02:14)
02. Songdog – Gene Autry’s Ghost (08.50)
03. Over the Wall – Settle Down (16.56)
04. Deathpodal – Squirrel and the Fox (20.55)
05. Brian Borcherdt – While I was Asleep (28.27)
06. Emit Bloch – Dorothy (34.34)
07. David Thomas Broughton – Perfect Louse (40.49)
08. Mat Riviere – FYH (43.09)
09. Member of the Wedding – New Century (51.37)
10. The Sequins – Offside & Beautiful (57.09)

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