Song, by Toad

Posts tagged ryan adams

Matthew Young

Chicken (or Fish?)

Pictish Lady

Sorry this has been so late coming, but we have spent the day recording the sixth Toad Session with the Pictish Trail.  And now I am off to London to see some friends and speak to people about getting Meursault onto some bills down South.  We’re also going to be talking to Pure Groove and Rough Trade about stocking the record, which should hopefully go alright.

So yes, I’m going to be sitting on a train down to London as you read this, leafing through magazines and trying to find people who might be interested in reviewing future Toad releases.  There’s no rest for the wicked and I don’t even have time to write any more on this post either.  DC will be posting his show tomorrow in place of the Toadcast, and I will be back properly functioning on Monday or Tuesday with a bit of luck.  This week’s five and five songs have been chosen by Johnny Pictish, Fee, Gavin, myself and Dylan at the end of the Toad Session.  I am now going to get pissed and fuck off down South.  Have a good weekend Toadlings.

1. Who put the Ram in a a-ram-a-lam-a-ding-dong?
2. Ideal next Toad Session.
3. Whis is Irn-Bru orange?
4. Favourite daytime TV show for when you have a day off during the week.
5. Chicken or fish?

Grandaddy – Jeez Louise

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The Pictish Trail – I Don’t Know Where to Begin

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The Walkmen – The Rat

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Ryan Adams – To Be Young

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Mercury Rev – Opus 40

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Matthew Young

See You in a Bit

Twat Van

Well that’s Mrs. Toad and I off to End of the Road. We’ll be back on Monday evening to write the What’s On in Edinburgh post thingy. To go to the festival we’ve rented one of these vans – not the one in the picture, even older – so we will be travelling in the complete twat style but, well, whatever. I know that lots of trustifarian knob-jockeys buy these things but I’ve always kind of liked them and, well, Mrs. Toad isn’t really a girl for tents I’m afraid so the other option was a socking great Winnebago.

I’ve got three interviews set up for the festival, and there might possibly be another couple that happen as well, because a few bands that I know will be there. I am still a little unsure how much work I can really be arsed doing at these things, but I think three interviews should be manageable.

While I’m away I’ll be posting the record shop posts that people have written and sent in, I’ve a podcast pre-recorded for the weekend, and I think I’ll still put up the Five For Friday post because that was good fun last week.

This year’s festival isn’t so completely jam-packed with bands I am keen to see, actually. In fact I have never heard of half of them, so I think it will be nice to just kick back and enjoy making some new discoveries.

Cool bananas. Have fun and play nicely in my absence. I’ve got access to the press facilities – oooh, don’t I feel quite the big boy – so I’ll check in from time to time when I pop in to empty my memory cards and recharge batteries and stuff. And let’s hope the weather isn’t utter shite, like it has been at every other fucking festival this year (except Pickathon – ha ha, sucks to you, British music fans)!

Son Volt – Highways & Cigarettes (Acoustic)
Ryan Adams – Blue Sky Blues

Matthew Young

How Do You Actually Listen to Music?

Radio

Playlists are a big thing in digital music, but I am not sure how far I think their influence extends.  This is not least because playlists existed well before the mp3, in the form of mix tapes and their ilk.  Actually, I think the random function has had a bigger impact.

Basically, I have virtually no playlists.  My music collection is just too big to even begin, and now it seems too late.  Instead, I either listen to whole albums or, when feeling friskier, I stick the entire bloody thing on random.  Sites like Last FM and Pandora allow you to do something very similar – essentially we seem to be turning our music collections into our own radio stations.  In other words, as we have less pressure on physical space and almost unlimited opportunity to fill our boots with gigabytes of music files, we have expanded our definition of music that we actively want to own. Collections contain much more stuff we ‘like’, compared to the stuff we genuinely ‘love’.

It appears that collectors amass piles of music, and then purchase hard copies of the things they love the most.  For people not keen enough to make this distinction, I doubt they loved music oh so very much in the first place.  We are finding a significant disparity becoming evident between the value we place on different parts of our music collections.

Some we hoard and love – listening to it is something we do as an activity in itself, be it on vinyl or CD or even mp3 for some people.  You sit down and make time to listen to some particular record that you love.  The value of this music has not gone away, and I would be amazed to see any evidence of this sort of market suffering in the slightest on the back of the digital revolution.  Hard data to support this theory?  None of course, but it sounds sensible to me.  I would wager that even the people who are using the internets to obsessively track down obscure b-sides and live recordings would actually pay for these if there was any reasonable mechanism to actually do so.

The other sort of music is the ersatz radio we have all started accumulating.  Gigabytes of data of music we really quite like, but love?  Probably not.  Even as I consider buying my first record player in fifteen years do I worry about trying to replicate my entire mp3 collection on vinyl?  Of course not – I’ll start with Tom Waits and Nick Cave and work my way out from there.  We accumulate the other stuff precisely because we can.  It genuinely does have less value to us.  We play it while we’re drinking with friends or doing the washing up, which is just one of the reasons people feel so guilt-free in pilfering it.

Imagine, if you disagree, which you might well of course, the impact on you if you were to lose this music.  I would replace Nick Cave, Bob Dylan and Tom Waits without hesitation.  I have to have access to that music.  U2?  Well perhaps not.  Boy probably, but that might be about it, although I genuinely like hearing lots of their other stuff when it comes on.

Artists perhaps have to start accepting that a lot of the music they will sell in future, or give away, has scant value to the person consuming it.  This isn’t a bad thing.  Commercial radio is so mind-numbingly worthless at the moment that people are using this as a replacement.  Fire on the whole bloody collection on ‘random’ and music I love and plenty that I like, but would never describe myself as loving, fills the air.  This latter kind of music has a value to me, but it is not huge.  A speculative digital download of a new album actually should be offered up for no more than a couple of quid because that is about what it is worth to the purchaser.

I would even speculate, perhaps a little tenuously, that the random function has actually created markets for music where none existed before.  I emphatically would not put on or buy many Elvis Costello albums, but many of them contain songs I really enjoy when they randomly appear in the middle of an afternoon’s play on random.

As long as there is something of real value – artwork, personal communication, in-depth informations, videos, extras, bonuses and god knows what else – for the real enthusiasts and your real fans to buy should they decide that they love you, then you are faithfully representing the actual value of your work.  Downloaded files are like blog hits – there may be hundreds of them, but that doesn’t mean you have any more than a handful of dedicated fans.

All this came about because this week’s Contrast Podcast is titled ‘Random’.  You are supposed to post the first song your randomiser plays you, and it got me to thinking, which is where this post came from.

A snapshot from the Song, by Toad music collection radio station this afternoon?  Well the thing was in bloody good form actually, although only one song by a small group you may not have heard of.  Call myself a fan of obscure indie?  I should be ashamed!

Ryan Adams – New York, New York
The Wedding Present – Dare
Half Man Half Biscuit – I Hate Nerys Hughes (Yes!  Get in, randomiser!)
Down the Tiny Steps – Dinosaur Bones
Supergrass – Sometimes I Make You Sad

Matthew Young

Ryan Adams – Easy Tiger

Easy Tiger

I’ve heard this album slated for crap artwork – which I would describe as too modest to actually be crap, it’s just.. there, really – and lauded as musical genius and just about every imaginable opinion in between. I’ve there’s an imaginable opinion on this record, someone seems to hold it, no matter how preposterous. The reason I find this especially baffling is because I actually find this just about the least extreme album that Ryan Adams has produced to date.

The album artwork is surprisingly representative of the actual music itself – it’s alright, it’s got good aspects but basically it’s just there. Adams released three absolutely brilliant albums in 2005 – Cold Roses, 29 and Jacksonville City Nights – and then went rather silent afterwards. It’s almost as if he lit the touch-paper early in that year, and exploded through almost the entire alt-country genre with ferocious energy, spilling out songs, ideas and new musical identities at a frightening pace. Then, having burnt himself out he seems to have collapsed in an exhausted heap, spent a year recovering and now written an album that is almost like a digestion of his furious output from that crazy year. You can, in fact, hear elements of all three preceding albums quite clearly in Easy Tiger.

Unfortunately, without the benefit of his creative frenzy, the result is somewhat stodgy. Some artists seem to be better when they just cut loose and spill out a stream of creativity, while others are better with a bit of time to work on things and sharpen their ideas. Adams appears, on this evidence anyway, to be very much the former. There are a couple of very good songs, indeed the album starts very well, but overall if you want to hear Ryan sing this sort of stuff I’d go and buy Cold Roses or Jacksonville City Nights instead.

Ryan Adams – Goodnight Rose
Ryan Adams – Two

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