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Posts tagged pete doherty

Matthew Young

Peter Doherty – Grace/Wastelands

Pete Doherty

When was the last time Pete Doherty was stumbling across the front page of the tabloids, jacked up to the tits on smack/horse tranquilizers/coco pops/whatever he gets his kicks from these days?  I ask, not because I particularly care, but because I’ve just realised that I don’t really remember seeing that much of him recently.  Kerry Katona and Amy Winehouse seem to be the self-destruction poster children du jour, and of course Jade Goody has kept everyone more than occupied enough for the last little while.  So I’ve not seen that much of Pete, I think, although I could be wrong.

The only reason I bring that up is because this album just does not have the disjointed chaos about it that you might expect from the kind of lifestyle for which he has recently been most famous.  It’s actually kind of mellow, relaxed and, crucially, really rather warm.  It’s a sad, regretful album in many ways, but there’s none of the wild-eyed undercurrent which has given his previous work both its best and its worst moments.  He sounds, and you may wish to re-read this sentence carefully just to be sure you got it right, but he sounds really rather together.  I’ve no idea if he is, but to listen to this album that is how he sounds.

I’m not sure where the warmth comes from; it could be the unhurried, comfortable vocal delivery.  It could equally be the more considered musical construction, which seems confident enough to trip from bare acoustic guitar laments to richer, lusher textures which bring some songs to the verge of the club croon.  Maybe the cathartic nature of the lyrical content has given him the confidence to tackle the music with a little more abandon.  Maybe it’s the steadying  presence of Blur’s Graham Coxon on guitar.  Maybe he genuinely is in a good place right now, in a personal sense, and this is just the kind of music he is capable of making.

Either way, this album sort of makes me sad.  It’s really good – not exceptional, but really good nevertheless.  I don’t know if I’m sad for the past, for what he’s had to do to himself to get here, or whether I’m sad for the future which could still so easily be his if this little island of calm proves to be temporary, because when he’s this together he’s clearly still got a lot to offer and it would be a shame if he were to rob himself of the chance to do so.  I, for one, hope he does not.

Peter Doherty – Last of the English Roses

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Peter Doherty – A Little Death Around the Eyes

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Matthew Young

Toadcast #60 – The Blandcast

Toadcast

This week I welcome you to the absolutely 100% guaranteed non-controversial podcast.  Nothing to see here. Move along.  Although, it might be slightly controversial, just possibly, around two thirds of the way through if you are excessively religious or perhaps if you have some objection to pointing and laughing as Jade Goody dies of cancer or Pete Doherty and Amy Winehouse slowly expire in the full and relentless gaze of the public eye.

Has anyone seen the film Deathwatch?  It’s set in Glasgow in the 1980s and almost entirely obscure, despite an amazing cast: Romy Schneider, Harvey Keitel and Max von Sydow.  What it amounts to is that a woman discovers that she is going to die, and then a TV company ask to buy the rights to film her last weeks.  It’s a bit over the top at times, but a pretty visionary movie nevertheless.  It’s always disconcerting where something like that makes a prediction which proves to be so uncannily true.  I think the scariest thing about 1984 is how utterly determined the species seems to be to make sure that it comes true.

If you can find a copy, I’d recommend that you watch it.  It’s pretty hard to track down though – we had to get ours from Amazon France for some bizarre reason, so good luck to you.

Toadcast #60 – The Blandcast

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1. Belle & Sebastian – Women’s Realm (04.41)
2. Clem Snide – Don’t Let the Sun Go Down on Your Grievience (09.00)
3. Pree – Light Falls (17.05)
4. Frivolous Laura – A Lullaby (20.22)
5. Clap Your Hands Say Yeah – Statues (27.27)
6. The Low Anthem – Oh My God Charlie Darwin (37.18)
7. Kill It Kid – Burst its Banks (41.31)
8. Pete Doherty – The Last of the English Roses (49.03)
9. R.E.M. – Perfect Circle (59.41)