Song, by Toad

Posts tagged sam amidon

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Friday Does Not Consider Your Behaviour Appropriate

HIYAAAAAAA!  I am a little bit wired this morning, can you tell?  After the onslaught of SXSW (which I will stop mentioning now, promise) I get back to the print press promo work for the King Post Kitsch album, a Josh T. Pearson session at Stereo in Glasgow this afternoon and the Husband, Miaoux Miaoux and Justin Grounds gig at Medina tomorrow.  You are all coming to that aren’t you?  ALL of you!

Oh, and the annual lifeboat collection day has been announced.  With a government seemingly intent on turning us into a third world nation (no social services, massive gap between rich and poor, what other conclusion can there be?) it feels more important than ever that we participate in things like this.  Voting seems to make no fucking difference whatsoever, so more day-to-day stuff looks like just about the only way you can really participate in democracy in this country at the moment.  Christ, I sound like a bitter old Socialist don’t I!

Anyway, on Saturday 30th April any and all volunteers should convene at our house in Stockbridge and we’ll send people out to shake a tin, while Mrs. Toad prepares a big old roast and then in the evening we can eat like pigs and get bladdered.  From experience, the most effective collectors have been anyone wielding a baby (Euan), pretty girls (better not name names here) and pushy bastards (thank you Mr. Sutherland), but we’ll pretty much take anyone, so please do let me know if you’d like to help.

So, as the sun shines on Edinburgh and I contemplate a cup of tea in the back garden, please remember that Friday is de-lurking day, and the perfect time to come out of the intershadows and say hello.  Fill in your five and then talk baws* with everyone else.  Productivity is most severely frowned upon around here, but most especially so on Friday.

1. Which festival are you most looking forward to this year?
2. Name a song for the first warm, sunny day of the year.
3. What do you tend to have with your cuppa?
4. How will you waste time, next time you have the opportunity?
5. How do you take your eggs?

This week’s five songs were all introduced to me by Campfires & Battlefields, with whom I ended up sharing far too few pints in Texas last week.

Bowerbirds – In Our Talons

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Musee Mechanique – Like Home

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Sam Amidon – Little Johnny Brown

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Bodies of Water – We Are Co-Existors

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Salt & Samovar – Swallowed a Pill

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*For non-Scots, baws = nuts, bollocks, rambutans, balls, testicles, etc etc etc.  As in ‘bawsack’ – excellent Scottish vulgarity!

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Song, by Toad Festive Fifty 2010: 11-30

Welcome to the second installment of the Song, by Toad Festive Fifty for 2010.  Yesterday I explained why I am going to have to exclude Song, by Toad Records music from my end of year lists from now on, and today I am going to explain (i.e. make feeble excuses for) some of the inconsistencies and idiosyncrasies you might perceive in this particular list.

There are certain albums, for example, which just don’t yield edited highlights all that easily.  There are no songs by Mount Erie or The Books, for example, because I found it next to impossible to disentangle individual songs from their records – this does not, of course, mean that I don’t love the albums.

In other cases, bands have been somewhat penalised by having too many good songs.  Micah P. Hinson, for example could have had loads of songs on here, because I bloody loved his album, but I tried to restrict the number of times any one band appeared on the list.  Basically, once a band had a song on here, the second one was treated a little more harshly, and third even more so.  It wasn’t systematically done by any means, but I just wanted to represent as broad a selection of bands as possible.

And finally, I suppose it kind of goes without saying, but don’t pay too much attention to the specific order of these songs.  Ask me on a different day and I would probably sort them differently.

11. Sam Amidon – Pretty Fair Damsel It’s rare that I hear pretty much anything played as a Toad Session and still end up preferring the full studio version, there’s just something so special about seeing your favourite songs played live in your own living room.  This, however, is just amazing.  As much as I love Sam’s voice, in this case I think the way the rich, beautiful backing just twinkles its way through the song is what really sets it apart.

12. Jason Lytle – Liquid Hyper Tweeker Energy Drinks If ever a song embodied its subject matter, then it’s this one, with a hyperactive electronic signature harrassing the song from start to finish.

13. David Tattersall – The Typewriter Ribbon David Tattersall is probably starting to get a bit sick of people going on about his lyrics, because it kind of implies that his actual songwriting isn’t good enough to merit mention on its own.  Once again though, one of the chief reasons I love this song is the fantastic lyrical content, but to labour that aspect would be to do all the others a massive disservice.  There is a lot of sax in this song, for example.  Yes, sax!  And you know what, it’s fucking cool too!

14. Hezekiah Jones – I Love My Family Here’s a free tip for anyone starting up a brand new label from scratch: have something as utterly beautiful as this on your first release and you will be well on your way.  Fucking gorgeous.

15. Kid Canaveral – Her Hair Hangs Down Ever since that video I suspect Kid Canaveral might be growing a little tired of people telling them how great this song is, especially for a band who play some of the most upbeat, infectious pop tunes you could hope to hear.  But if Broken Records have to put up with me constantly picking their sad songs, then this lot can bloody well take it too.

16. Male Bonding – Year’s Not Long This is nothing like as rough and ready as their earlier stuff, or so I am told, but there is a furious pace and a reckless rhythm to it which brings what is essentially no more than a first rate pop song to life with incredible vim and relish.  They just batter through this with such joyous disregard that you get the impression they might have their next album recorded by the end of the week if only we wouldn’t keep demanding they play the song they’d just finished over and over again.

17. Sweet Baboo – I’m a Dancer The contrast between the loveliness of the music and the darkness of the lyrics on this song is really quite disconcerting.  There’s also an odd mixture of self-loathing and leering arrogance about this as well, which just adds to that conflict, despite being a pretty sort of song your mum might well hum along with.

18. Perfume Genius – Mr. Petersen The possible undertones of sexual abuse – or at the very least, of the unspecifically sexually inappropriate – in this song give an almost unbearable emotional weight.  The whole album has that, actually, and this song might be one of the poppier ones, but still devastating if you actually think too much about it.

19. Sam Amidon – Way Go Lily The rolling, repeating lyrical refrain in this song give it an hypnotic quality, particularly the way the vocals cut through the swirling orchestration.  There’s barely any actual lyrical content to speak of, but the vocals are layered and interwoven like part of the orchestra.

20. Onions – I Want to be a Dancer Some of you might point out that this song was actually released in 2009, not 2010, and is therefore ineligible for this list.  I would point out to you that this is my fucking website and I will do what the fuck I like with it.  So by virtue of the ‘I will make exceptions as and when I fucking well please’ clause, this counts.  For a website most commonly described as supporting Scottish music, I think I’ve found out more about Manchester this year than anywhere else, including my first contact with this massive pop diamond by Onions.

21. David Tattersall – The Old Family Aside from writing truly incredible lyrics, David Tattersall plays a mean guitar.  If The Typewriter Ribbon was all about the lyrics and the sax, this is all about that guitar rhythm.  I am really itching for The Wave Pictures next album to go nuts with the guitar, because it’s really fucking awesome when they do that.

22. The National – Little Faith My reasons for picking this would be the same as almost any other song on this album: defiant warmth, and resolute gravitas.  Why do I like this one marginally better than the others?  Dunno, just do.

23. Warm Ghost – Claws Overhead I know this is pretty much this season’s must-have production technique, but here is a big, pounding anthem which has been buried under a blanket in the next room.  Or, to put it differently, it sounds like it was written for people on acid but recorded for people on heroin.

24. Glass Animals – Leaflings This song has been put together really carefully and, in my opinion, utterly brilliantly.  The bursts of muffled dancefloor beat which emerge at intervals from the muddy background is the only instance in recorded history of me even being able to tolerate that particular sound, never mind absolutely loving it.

25. Admiral Radley – I’m All Fucked on Beer This song needs no more explanation than the title.  It’s loud and rude and fucking brilliant. Punch the air, bang yer heids and open another can of Special.  And the wee two-second carnival interlude is pure genius.

26. Sweet Baboo – Y’r Lungs In a similar vein to I’m a Dancer, this song isn’t as sweet on the inside as it is on the outside.  But in this case the lyrics are at least sufficiently cryptic that the beautifully wistful sense of sadness which pervades the music is the impression which dominates the song.

27. Broken Records – Modern Worksong I said in my review that there was a palpable sense of well-disciplined purpose to this album, and nowhere is this more evident than in this song.  Forced forwards by that skittering beat, this track has such drive it’s fantastic.

28. Silver Columns – A Warm Welcome Like Kid Canaveral and Broken Records before them, Silver Columns are learning the immensely irritating lesson that no matter how upbeat and exciting your album, I will absolutely, definitely, always pick the one downbeat number as my favourite song on it.  Sorry lads, it’s not you, it’s me.

29. The Scottish Enlightenment – All Homemade Things The Scottish Enlightenment have been relentlessly productive this year, perhaps making up for all the lost time since their last single.  The only danger with their album being so well-received is that it seems to make people forget how good their two 2010 EPs were.  This is such a simple, simple song too, but that one riff and the customarily unhurried pace are judged just about perfectly.

30. Perfume Genius – Learning A bit like with The National, choosing songs from Learning to include on this list was a little bit arbitrary, as there’s barely a weak song on the album.

Click here to download all these songs in one zip file.

1-10 | 11-30 | 31-50

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Song, by Toad Favourite Albums of 2010: 1-5

1. Micah P. HinsonMicah P. Hinson & the Pioneer Saboteurs

There’s not much which really distinguishes this records from the two preceding, but when I sat down to give it some consideration, I came up with one simple reason: emotional range.  Micah P. Hinson goes from the sentimental to the heartbreaking to the furious to the playful and back at the drop of a hat, whereas Perfume Genius and The National pretty much find their level and stay there.  Having interviewed the man, he is someone I am not at all surprised to see has the ability to sustain that burning desire to make music which deserts so many musicians as they reach a level of personal comfort after a few well-received albums.

Micah P. Hinson – The Striking Before the Storm

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2. Perfume GeniusLearning

This album is in some ways a one-trick pony, but I find it completely captivating nevertheless.  The lyrics are personal and poignant, something the drowsy, woozy production only serves to emphasise.  It’s the kind of album I tend to stick on and listen to in its entirety as well – in fact I don’t think I’ve ever done anything else.  I struggle to really articulate what it is I like about this album, for some reason, and I can easily imagine people not liking it, but it’s just one of those which grabbed me from the very start for some reason and in the six or seven months since I first heard it rarely has a week gone by when I haven’t played it at least once.

Perfume Genius – Write to Your Brother

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3. The NationalHigh Violet

I am, as you probably know by now, something of a contrarian.  The fact that this fucking album is in every bloody end of year list imaginable means it irks the living shit out of me to put it on this one as well.  Honestly, though, there is no escaping the fact that after a very, very slow start indeed I have completely fallen for this album.  What turned the slow build of an album I was initially indifferent to into a complete about-face was probably seeing the band at Glastonbury.  They mixed the new songs in with the old, and despite a fairly low-key performance, it was still obvious that I had come to love pretty much everything on High Violet.   I now have it on two slabs of gorgeous purple vinyl (alright, alright ‘violet’ vinyl) and even my bloody mum loves it.  Alright you National bastards, you win.

The National – Anyone’s Ghost

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4. Broken RecordsLet Me Come Home

I knew virtually every song on Broken Records’ first album, and that robbed me of a little bit of excitement on hearing it, but this one was (almost) all new, which was brilliant.  In terms of the music itself, this record harnesses Broken Records’ instincts to wind themselves into a frenzy and gives it a real sense of purpose. It’s also very much a whole album, with fantastic dynamics from start to finish.  In fact, there have been a lot of these this year, which somewhat contradicts the popular assertion that digital music has killed the album.  Maybe for people who were never that fussed about albums in the first place it has, but not for most of the rest of us.

Broken Records – Dia dos Namorados!

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5. Sam AmidonI See the Sign

I still feel this album tails off a little, and I still can’t stand that bloody R Kelly cover, but neither of those gripes stop this being a fucking amazing record.  The lush orchestration is never intrusive, and complements the more traditional elements with rare beauty.  Sam’s voice is truly an amazing thing, which gives him something of a head start, but almost every element of this record is lush and captivating.  Every time I hear Sam Amidon’s music I find it baffling that I actually had to listen to his previous album for about six months before I realised that I loved it. It really, really should have been obvious.

Sam Amidon – How Come That Blood

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Live in Edinburgh This Week – 17th May 2010

I’m afraid the gig listings this week are going to be little more than a great steaming post of Toadspam.  We’ve a lot on at the moment, and I’d hate to think you’d let other people’s wonderful creative efforts distract you from the fact that the most important thing you can do this week is give a needy, gin-soaked virtual amphibian a bit of validation.

So as such please bear in mind that it is most definitely NOT the This is Music fourth birthday celebrations this Friday, and Meursault are certainly NOT going to go down to Sneaky Pete’s to rock the shit out of the place, oh no no, nothing of the sort.

Anyhow, the Loch Lomond Night Bats launch tour kicks off tomorrow, in the Slaughtered Lamb in London, then trundles through Glasgow on Wednesday (the first ever Glasgow Toad Night, as per the above poster), then Aberdeen on Thursday, Berwick on Friday, Leith on Saturday and back down to London to play The Black Heart in Camden on Sunday night.  Because I am driving around with them, posting might be somewhat disrupted this week, but I will try and make sure I get a couple of reviews written up this afternoon so that they are available to post over the course of the week.  Otherwise you are in the hands of Dylan, rather famously referred to as Baldrick in the comments for the last podcast, much to his distinct lack of amusement and my descent into the giggles.

Anyhow, at the Roxy Art House there will be some poetry and music from the Wintergreens on Wednesday, and then some sprightly indie-pop from Come On Gang on Friday, but there’s not an awful lot else that I can find in Edinburgh which looks like my kind of thing, honestly.  Social Services look kind of interesting, although I know nothing about them at all, and they’re on at Sneaky Pete’s on Thursday 20th.  And that seems to be it, although it’s far from unusual that I miss at least one good gig from these listings every week of course.

Wednesday 19th May 2010: Meursault, Loch Lomond & Jonnie Common play the Song, by Toad Records Showcase at Mono, Glasgow.

It’s been a while since I’ve been through to a gig in Glasgow, and I am really looking forward to this one – Mono is a lovely venue by all accounts.  I was toying with the idea of trying to get more Glasgow bands on the bill, and then it struck me how silly it would be to to go to all the trouble of putting on a gig in Glasgow, only to put bands on the bill they can see every other week anyway.  I reckon we should start doing a few of these showcases actually – help small Glasgow labels to put them on here, and then encourage Edinburgh ones to do things through there.  If that worked out we could even extend it to places like Aberdeen or Manchester or stuff like that, but I’m probably getting a bit ahead of myself here…

Loch Lomond – Tic

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Friday 21st May 2010: Meursault & Islet play This is Music at Sneaky Pete’s.

Yes, yes, yes, I will be in Berwick and unable to attend this one, very funny.  I reckon the idea of the Meursault playing a full band set live in a little club like Sneaky’s should be bloody brilliant, to be honest with you. It is hopefully going to be very, very loud.  Due to excessive workloads I haven’t had the chance to actually go to a bloody good late night piss up for a while, and this is the one I would pick if I could.

Meursault – Red Candle Bulb

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Saturday 22nd May 2010: Sam Amidon, Loch Lomond & Leif Vollebekk at the Queen Charlotte Rooms in Leith.

The return of the Bowery, with early evening crafts, some poetry reading, and music this should be a lovely night.  The Queen Charlotte Rooms (the pink building just next to The Compass in Leith) is a building caught in a bloody timewarp, but that makes it an absolutely incredible place.  It looks for all the world like somewhere my grandma would have gone for one of her industrial-strength rum and cokes to meet her friends from the British Legion.  The music will be folky goodness from Sam Amidon, Loch Lomond, Leif Vollebekk all kicked off by a solo acoustic performance by Neil from Meursault.

Sam Amidon – Wild Bill Jones

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Toad on Fresh Air – 10th May 2010

I managed to miss last week’s Fresh Air show because… well I somehow failed to realise that the bloody station was back on the air, which is spectacularly dumb. This week I present Toad and Ruth’s Toad and Ruth Show With Toad and a Little Bit Less Ruth Than Usual, or indeed any Ruth at all because the lovely herself can’t make it tonight, so you will be treated to the wonderful pleasure of listening to me burble on to myself about tunes and stuff and stuff and some tunes and then probably some more stuff just to cap it off.

Live on Air 8.30pm-10pm – Listen live here.

01. Langhorne Slim – I Love You, But Goodbye
02. Saint Etienne – Nothing Can Stop Us Now
03. The Left Banke – Evening Gown
04. Bettye Swann – Don’t Look Back
05. Lee Dorsey – My Old Car
06. The Scottish Enlightenment – All Homemade Things
07. Super Adventure Club – Hip Hop Hot Pot Pot Noodle
08. Sam Amidon – Fiddle Mayhem (Toad Session)
09. The Shaggs – What Are Parents
10. Nico Muhly – The Only Tune
11. Phil & the Osophers – Uses of a Man
12. David Tattersall – The Old Family
13. Grandaddy – Fuck the Valley Fudge
14. Elvis Perkins in Dearland – I Heard Your Voice in Dresden
15. Songdog – Obediah’s Waltz

Next week we have the splendid Loch Lomond live in session, and to tide you over until then the videos from Mammoeth’s session on the show are below the jump.  The tracklisting for tonight’s show will appear below live as we go along, and feel free to heckle in the comments.

Read the rest of this entry »

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Sit Still and Shut Up

This is the new Great Lake Swimmers video, called Stealing Tomorrow, from their live session recorded in the Royal Canadian Legion Hall.  I have always liked Great Lake Swimmers in a tepid sort of way.  They can be beautiful, but there are times when I have found them a little boring, I have to confess.

I learned an important lesson about that, though, from Sam Amidon a couple of years ago.  When Campfires & Battlefields (long-time Toad reader and contributor) first introduced me to All Is Well I liked it, but I never fell in love with it anything like I did when he played to a spellbound Bowery crowd in 2008.  There was something about the silence in between the notes, of which he plays very few, listening to them gently die into silence and the emphasis on the rather brutal lyrics, which absolutely knocked me sideways.  I rarely listen to music in such intense isolation.

Ever since then I have to remind myself how little genuine attention I give to music.  I listen at work whilst doing my job, whilst walking through town, whilst deciding whether or not to write about it, and on the bus to work in the morning.  Little of that is ever done with absolute full attention, devoid of any distractions.  In fact, that’s why I like vinyl.  I don’t care too much about the crakles or that kind of stuff, and I am not an audiophile in particular, but I love that it is very hard to do other things whilst listening to records on vinyl.  You almost have to pay attention.

A friend of mine here at work saw the Great Lake Swimmers in Glasgow a while ago and said that they were stunning.  Watching that gorgeous video I find myself reminded a little of the Sam Amidon gig, and what Andy told me about Great Lake Swimmers.  It’s so slow and lovely that I feel I might be missing the point of the band if I don’t go and sit down and listen to them with the shutters closed and nothing around me.  I’ve listened to all of our releases like this – just sitting in the middle of the floor, facing the speakers, and soaking it in.

Neither you nor I will have time to do this very often, to sit and just soak music in like this, but every now and then a band comes along who remind me how satisfying and important a thing this is to do.  I am going to go and see the Great Lake Swimmers live before I say anything else uncharitable about them.  Their new album is on eMusic here, if you’d like to give it a try.

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Loch Lomond – Night Bats EP (mini) Tour

The hardest thing about working with a band from Foreign Parts is that there is a bit of a limit to what you can do for them from far away, especially when you’re our size.  Generally, all the things I can do to help a band out around here – Toad Sessions, tell my friends about them, try and get them written about on blogs or on the radio or on live bills and so on – are much harder if no-one gets the chance to see them and have my general pestering backed up by other people.

Loch Lomond have their second Song, by Toad Records release coming up in May, when their gorgeous Night Bats EP comes out over here.  We’ve already had a rather positive review from SoundsXP, and their split 12″ with the Builders & the Butchers was also very well received, I reckon this EP will hopefully go down very well indeed.

Anyhow, to help us promote the release, the band have made the incredible commitment of travelling over to Scotland to play some gigs and do some sessions in support of the EP.  I really appreciate this, as it is far from a significant expense.

So they are playing four dates, one of which gives us the chance to come through to Glasgow for our first label showcase, so it’s all pretty exciting.  Please come along and support these guys if you can – it’s no small thing they’re doing, coming over here to entertain you ungrateful fuckers, you know.

Wednesday 19th May: Song, by Toad Records Label Showcase at Mono, Glasgow.
With Meursault, Loch Lomond and Jonnie Common – £5 on the door.

Thursday 20th May: The Tunnels, Aberdeen.
With Tim and Sam’s Tim and Sam Band.

Friday 21st May: The Barrels Alehouse, Berwick.
With Tim and Sam’s Tim and Sam Band.

Saturday 22nd May: Toad and Ruth’s Toad and Ruth Show at The Queen Charlotte Rooms, Leith.
With Sam Amidon & Meursault (solo acoustic).

Loch Lomond – Wax & Wire

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Sam Amidon – I See the Sign

I keep thinking that this album has way more elaborate and way more dominant orchestration than the gorgeous All Is Well, but when I listen to both side by side, I don’t actually think I’m right.  Songs like Saro and a few others on All Is Well actually have tremendously rich instrumental backing, but the album as a whole still gives the impression of being really bare and stripped down.

Then again, maybe that’s just how I think about it because the first time I really fell in love with those songs was when Sam played the Bowery back in December 2008 and January 2009 (video from his January show here).  He did so with no more than his own voice, and either a guitar or a banjo (and the occasional spot of aerobics) to accompany him.  It remains one of the best and most utterly spellbinding things I have ever seen, so maybe I overlay the impression of that evening with my impression of All Is Well, and thus think of it as more minimal than it actually is.

I See the Sign has nothing of that minimalism, that’s for sure; even its quietest songs have all sorts going on.  Bedroom Community is a unique record label, that’s for sure, having collected an eclectic constellation of musicians into its orbit, from classical composer Nico Muhly, electronic composer Valgeir Sigurðsson and then to Sam himself.  They all collaborate on one another’s work, and I recently attended an amazing showcase of the kind of forward-thinking stuff they generate, when all three performed at the Roundhouse in London.

That was an amazing experience, but it was largely based around Nico Muhly.  In this case, the focus is Sam Amidon, so does it all translate?  My answer would be ‘largely’, I think.  A lot of this is frankly stunning, and the eddying arrangements serve only to give Sam’s voice even more of that macabre folk tale quality than it already has.

I still love the absolutely bare, acoustic songs more than anything though, so I find it a bit of shame that there are none to be found here.  Still, given Sam records old folk songs, if he didn’t push his interpretations and his arrangements he would basically be in danger of lapsing into karaoke, so I still think he’s right to make sure he keeps developing.

Funnily enough, for someone usually so determined to strip songs back, my favourite ones here are actually the ones with the most going on.  It’s actually the tail end of this record where I think the whole things starts to get a little bogged down.  The orchestration actually takes more of a back seat, without vanishing entirely, so it ends up being neither here nor there.  Songs like How Come That Blood, You Beter Mind and Pretty Fair Damsel are given surreal, vivid life by their arrangements.  By contrast, on later tracks, such as Kedron and Rain and Snow the extra instrumentation doesn’t really add much, and I find myself wondering why it’s there.

Maybe I just don’t like the later songs as much.  Relief (a cover of a song by the rather rapey R. Kelly) is amusing in a live setting, but I would personally not have put it on an album, and there are just two or three songs around this point which I think are a little sluggish, honestly.

I’m only nit-picking about this kind of thing because Sam Amidon is a fucking amazing artist as far as I am concerned and, consequently, when he sits down to play I pretty much expect perfection.  I do accept that this may not be entirely reasonable, of course, I just can’t stop myself doing it.

And let’s be fair, before you get the wrong impression, I think the first two thirds of this album are absolutely stunning.  I fucking love it, and pretty much all of it.  The more prominent role played by Muhly’s part in the record works fantastically – it’s within a whisker of being overdone, but always stays the right side of the line.  Sam’s voice is as gorgeous as ever, and the odd plucking of How Come That Blood melds perfectly into the beautiful Way Go Lily and then the trilling, jumpy You Better Mind.

That kind of variation of tempo is probably all that the end of the record is missing, but it doesn’t matter.  The first twenty-five minutes of this album are absolutely beautiful, and if I think some of the rest of it doesn’t quite click for me, then who cares.  That’s the point of pushing your music into new places, and I always respect people more for doing that.


Sam Amidon – How Come That Blood

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Sam Amidon – Pretty Fair Damsel

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Sam Amidon – Pretty Fair Damsel (from his January 2009 Toad Session)

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Website | More mp3s | Buy from Amazon

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Toadcast #115 – The Messcast

The Toadcasts stumble from one clusterfuck to the next, each one more incoherent than the last.  This, I think it’s fair to say, makes the Homegame one look good by comparison.  Not that the songs aren’t good, just that the instances of people talking over one another and two conversations going on at once and so on and so forth are notably worse on this.

However, the music is excellent, and surprisingly up to the minute by my standards.  We even managed to sneak the new National song in there, which they only released on Thursday – how’s that for happening and newsworthy and so on and so forth.

We have some new Sam Amidon as well, a track by Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti which dropped through my letterbox while I was away in Austin, and some splendid stuff by Harlem and Clogs.  If only it wasn’t for the pish chat, this would be a great podcast, actually.

Toadcast #115 – The Messcast

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1. Trevor Moss & Hannah Lou – Ruth Drink My Whisky (05.12)
2. The National – Blood Buzz Ohio (13.40)
3. Loch Lomond – Spine (MMIX) (25.50)
4. Sam Amidon – Way Go Lily (29.43)
5. Harlem – Friendly Ghost (34.49)
6. Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti – Round and Round (44.02)
7. Ghostkeeper – By Morning (49.10)
8. Love is All – Bigger Bolder (53.57)
9. Grand Champeen – Broken Records (62.16)
10. Clogs – Last Song (68.24)

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Nico Muhly & Sam Amidon – Roundhouse Theatre, London, Sunday 24th January 2010

It’s been a little quiet recently because, as I explained on the Monday post, I have been down in London for the last few days. Whilst there I took my parents to see Nico Muhly at the Roundhouse. Nico Muhly is apparently something of a bright young thing as far as the world of classical music is concerned, and of course with my rather less than encyclopaedic knowledge of that particular field of music, I am no position to argue. He was certainly a charming compere for the evening, and came across as a genuinely warm and witty guy. What drew me along to this, however, was not Mr. Muhly himself but Sam Amidon, who was also on the bill.

Essentially, there were six parts to the evening’s performance. Before the interval Muhly performed a Philip Glass piece on the piano, which was absolutely gorgeous, then the Britten Symphonia played a piece by Muhly himself, and then Muhly conducted Britten Symphonia in accompanying Sam Amidon singing three American folk songs. After the break there was something else by Muhly, followed by a twenty minute piece which butchered American folk classic The Only Tune, chopping it up with not just classical parts but also samples and electronic noise performed by Valgeir Sigurðsson (the head of Amidon and Muhly’s record label, Bedroom Community). Finally, Muhly conducted Britten Symphonia playing a Steve Reich piece called City Life. Read the rest of this entry »

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