Some Bits of News

There’s not been a Big Famous Album reviewed on this site in bloody ages. Partly I’ve become so focussed on what’s going on locally that I have somewhat taken my eye off the ball with regards to bigger releases, even just those which are big relative to the small world of indie music. And partly there have been very few which have tickled my fancy in the slightest for quite a while.
There are some bits and pieces coming along though which suggest that this might change in the immediate future. And about time too, all this navel-gazing is no good for anyone. Look outwards, I say, cast off the Tunnel Vision of the Toad and embrace the wider world. Alright, sorry, but sometimes I get so deeply into my own stuff I do kind of forget that from time to time. So what do we have?
The Twilight Sad: I have a naughty copy of this, to which I am not going to confess, and have only listened to it a few times through. It’s out on the 5th October though and is currently sounding rather promising. I wouldn’t say I was all that into it just yet, but then I only really embraced their last album a song or two at a time, so I am prepared to take it slowly with this one.
The Avett Brothers: Their sound hasn’t changed much, but then it never did, really. Out on the 29th September, the title track from I and Love and You has been slipped out in to the world for us to enjoy and it is full of the exact same understated warmth which I love about this band. I know I am morally obliged to hate them because they are on Columbia these days but if the whole record sounds like this then I may find my indie snobbery very difficult to maintain.
The Avett Brothers – I and Love and You
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The Mountain Goats: Alright, I’ll say it: I thought Sunset Tree was their best album abd I have yet to hear anything by this band that I like anything like as much, despite their considerable back catalogue. Heretic Pride was okay, and the new song Genesis 3:23 is also… okay. Not at all bad by any means, but I would not describe it as any better than pleasant. This one’s also out on the 5th October.
The Mountain Goats – Genesis 3:23
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Yo La Tengo: Popular Songs is out on Monday, which somewhat makes up for the fact that they seem to have been a little less generous with preview mp3s than everyone else. But then, with a cast-iron reputation like theirs, why would they need to? This sounds a lot like “…I Will Beat Your Ass” and I would say that I am enjoying it, but am yet to be blown away. There are a few more moody, quiet numbers on this record as well, perhaps a little more in line with the likes of Summer Sun and the like than the previous record was.
Flashy Python: This is a solo project by a certain hand-clapping, yeah-saying gentleman by the name of Alec Ounsworth. He, like Julian Plenti before him, is rather keen to keep his solo project free from associations with his band stuff, and has put the whole album up for preview here. It’s less driven than early CYHSY stuff, and generally a bit more weird, but it sounds pretty interesting to me.
Flashy Python – Skin & Bones
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Micah P. Hinson: This just dropped into my inbox this morning, and I know nothing about it bar two things: firstly, that Micah P. Hinson is fucking amazing; and secondly that the artwork, pictured above, is bloody lovely.
Langhorne Slim: His new album Be Set Free isn’t being released until 26th October, but the new song sounds brilliant. It’s called I Love You, but Goodbye and is a little plusher and more elaborate than his earlier recordings, but unusually, I rather like this. The piano is especially gorgeous – a times eleborate, at times rich and sonorous and at times deft and twinkly. This augurs very well indeed – I am excited.
Langhorne Slim – I Love You, But Goodbye
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It’s about time the big(ger) boys fought back a little, frankly, but it looks like there could be some very promising recordings from some relatively high-profile artists coming our way this Autumn.





