Song, by Toad

Posts tagged sl records

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Thomas Truax – Twelve Months/ Twelve Tracks

One of the very best things about the digital revolution is that the actual format of music has been very much freed by the perfunctory termination of the dominance of the CD.

I’ve long believed that one of the biggest reasons behind the rise of vinyl has been the fact that simply accumulating music no longer requires a physical medium for it to be stored upon, so if you are going to collect physical objects you are doing so for the specific pleasure of accumulating physical objects – for the enjoyment of the object itself.

This, generally, seems to have lead people to split into two camps: the accumulators of data for whom the physical object that was no more than a hindrance, and the physical collector.  The physical collector seems to have taken a look at themselves and decided that, no thank you, if I am going to bother gathering all this tat, then a CD in a shitey jewel case just isn’t enough, thank you.

I find myself thinking along similar lines when people decry the ‘death of the album’ – that it should be seen as a liberating force in music, not one to be mourned.  Generally, I think it’s a pile of shit, frankly.  I know not one music fan who would ever say anything so ridiculous as ‘that’s the concept of the album finished then, good riddance’, and every band we work with at Song, by Toad Records wants to work towards an album almost as soon as we suggest working together, so the format is hardly being abandoned.

Quite simply, many major label albums were two or three pop hits, fluffed out with forty minutes of filler, which deserve not to be bought anymore, and a great many customers were forced into buying albums they might not otherwise have bought because they were forced to by the narrow range of available formats. So to a degree, the rise of digital music has put enormous pressure on the concept of ‘filler’, because you simply can’t force people to buy it these days.  This, I must stress, is a good thing.

Despite my indignation at talk of the album as a format being over, I have to confess I always loved mini-albums and EPs.  They tend to be more focussed and more complete than a lot of albums, and a lot less likely to suffer from attention span failure two-thirds of the way through.  With the digital revolution I think one of the great benefits is that there really is no need to stick to the old formats, you can simply release as many songs as you think are finished and which go together, and I am surprised by how few bands have effectively embraced this fact so far.

So, I finally find myself getting to the point: Thomas Truax has a new project called Twelve Months/Twelve Tracks, which I think looks really promising.  The concept is pretty self-explanatory, and there have been a few similar ones recently where people have attempted to write and record songs in the space of a day, and they haven’t tended to be all that successful, in my view.

From what I have seen of such projects, they tend to be a little bit incoherent and the songs themselves inevitably end up suffering from being a bit slapped together, and perhaps not really all that selectively pruned. I am hoping that with a full month to work on each song, the quality control on this will be far superior, hopefully at last putting one of these projects, which I like in principle, properly on the musical map.

Truax is an innovator in the first place, as a glance around his website will show you, and he is intending to work the span of time into the songwriting, allowing himself to be influenced by the many facets of the changing seasons as the project progresses.  Below is his January song, and I really like it; I hope the rest are as good.

January Egg Race Dream by Thomas Truax

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Thoughts on the Coming Year

This is just a brief list of some stuff I’m looking forward to in the Edinburgh music scene over the coming year.  I don’t intend to be parochial about this, or too narrow, but I am not as close to the precise ins and outs of what’s happening in the rest of the country so there’s a limit to what I can meaningfully say about what’s going on there.  It’s not meant to be exhaustive either, just some thoughts pottering about at the front of my mind.

New Labels

Last year saw the first steps made by a couple of new labels in Edinburgh, Kilter and Mini50.  With Song, by Toad Records virtually at capacity in terms of labour and money, and 17 Seconds and SL Records also really busy, these two new labels should have a pretty free hand in terms of first dibs on emerging bands this year.

Kilter have already showed the quality of their work with the beatiful eagleowl single in December, so in that sense they’re a slight step ahead.  Mini50 have been negotiating with some of the newer bands to emerge in the last year or so though, and album releases by the likes of Mammoeth should give a really solid foundation to their launch.  Basically, this is great news for the city’s young bands.

Jeffrey Lewis – Don’t Let the Record Label Take you out to Lunch

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The New Generation of Bands

Whilst I’m talking about the newer bands to emerge last year, there is a definite gap forming in the local musical ecosystem.  The fact that Broken Records and now Meursault and Withered Hand have graduated to an audience both nationwide and beyond leaves an opportunity for one of the new generation to make a mark locally.

With a single and an EP already to their name, Jesus H. Foxx are slightly further ahead in their development, but with the very promising emergence of bands like the Pineapple Chunks, Conquering Animal Sound and the Last Battle there is the opportunity for a band from the new generation to progress to the stage where they will obviously and easily be able to fill small venues like Sneaky Pete’s and whatever the Roxy management turn the old Bowery space into.


David Bowie – All the Young Dudes

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The New Roxy

And while we’re on the subject of the Roxy, Rupert Thomson, former Skinny editor, has been appointed to run the entire building in the new year.  I have a lot of time for Rupert, so I am really hopeful that he can carry on the development of what is pretty clearly the best gig space for small bands and promoters in the city.  In the absence of Ruth and Jane the place will inevitably have a very different atmosphere, but it is still easily the best space of its type around, so I really hope the new team can continue to foster the underground scene in the capital with the same kind of devotion and sympathy which Ruth brought to the place.  And very nice that they now have a one o’clock license, which is very fortuitous timing indeed for the new venture.


Tom Waits – New Coat of Paint (Live)

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Descent of the Digital Press Locusts

Last year saw the formation of so many new blogs in Scotland it made my head spin.  In fact it actually made me feel like an established veteran.  With respected indie publications like Bearded and Plan B swinging the axe on their print editions and also retreating to the web, we are getting closer to the American press model every day.

In the States there are basically no music magazines left, so labels and bands take blogs way, way more seriously, because we are pretty much the only people left who are addressing their audience.  In the UK there are still some excellent music magazines – Clash, Word, The Stool Pigeon and so on – but glossies like the NME, Q and Uncut are really becoming embarrassingly bad.  Personally I would be surprised if the year passed without a high profile music press casualty, which means that the playing field is unusually open for blogs and other digital publications.  And with the death of music television beyond the insultingly stupid X-Factor and its diseased ilk, pretty much the only music television which exists in the UK is now online.

This general trend could lead to a fairly considerable shift in how online publications are treated over the next year or so and, instead of being considered amateur or grassroots or DIY, we could end up being as close to mainstream as it actually gets in the indie world.


The Clash – Career Opportunities

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That Extra Step

Glasvegas were probably the last really big band to come out of Scotland, in terms of sheer audience size.  Frightened Rabbit, depending on their next album, could follow in their footsteps over the next twelve months.  Do any of the Edinburgh bands, I find myself wondering, have it in them to follow in their footsteps?  Are we likely to ever see the likes of Withered Hand, Meursault or Broken Records get anywhere near a late evening slot on the main stage at a major festival anytime soon?  It would be nice to think so, wouldn’t it.


Aileen Loy & Blue Valentines – Big in Japan

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Live in Edinburgh This Week – 25th January 2009

Pilrig Park

Christ, it’s going to be like Fred Karno’s bloody Circus in Edinburgh this week (did your Grandma use that phrase all the time too?)  Particulary towards the tail end of the week there are all sorts of good gigs, of which I will be attending… precisely none, unfortunately.  We’re away in London this weekend, and I am in Glasgow on both Wednesday and Thursday nights, would you believe.  Incredibly frustrating.

We are nearly finished work on the Samamidon Toad Session, and a bloody good thing too, because Johnny Lynch, aka the Pictish Trail, will be coming into Toad Hall on Friday to record the next one.  The plan is to get these two recorded and posted by the Fence Collective‘s Homegame festival, which is now on the weekend of the 17th, 18th and 19th of April because we should end up generating a hell of a lot of work there, between interviews, live reviews and stuff like that, so it will be important to have the decks clear by the time that comes around.

Wednesday 28th January 2009: Come On Gang, Jesus H. Foxx & Chutes at Cabaret Voltaire.

The first gig of the year from my pals at Fresh Air, Edinburgh’s student radio station.  It’s happy, spiky indie pop all the way, so if you fancy a bit of a dance and a chance to hear the SXSW-bound Come On Gang then swing by Cabaret Voltaire on Wednesday.
Come On Gang – Spinning Room

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Thursday 29th January 2009: Meursault, Y’all is Fantasy Island & Mitchell Museum play Limbo at the Voodoo Rooms.

What a bloody lineup – two of Edinburgh’s finest accompanied by a band who have been going for about a year and whom I have rather shamefully yet to see.  And I can’t go.  Fucking ARSE!  Between the exuberance of Mitchell Museum, the racket of YiFI and the passionate howl of Meursault this should be a really top evening.
Y’all is Fantasy Island – With Handclaps

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Thursday 29th January 2009: SL Records night at Cabaret Voltaire, with Withered Hand, Paul Vickers & the Leg & Lords of Bastard.

SL Records are going to have the very enviable pleasure indeed of releasing a Withered Hand album some time in 2009, the swine.  They’ve been around for a while though, with Paul Vickers & the Leg one of their stalwarts.  Looks like a good night.
Paul Vickers & the Leg – Umbrella Propella

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Thursday 29th January 2009: Popolo play Sick Note at Cabaret Voltaire.

Ever since their appearance on the early Ten Tracks compilations I have been curious so see these lads.  It appears to be entirely intrumental, relying on thumping electronics to create an edgy dancefloor atmosphere.  Fascinating.
Popolo – Or Optimism

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Sunday 1st February 2009: Ex Lion Tamer, Milophobia & Vessel at Cabaret Voltaire.

Another blog in Edinburgh hatches a record label, this on run by my good friend Ed from 17 Seconds – yes the same chap who spent the tail of last year fending off an angry swarm of DMCA complaints after his enthusiastic help in getting Glasvegas a major record deal.  Well, his own label treads rather different territory, with first signings Aberfeldy indulging in the sweetest of pop, and second signing Ex Lion Tamer inhabiting a slightly more 80s electro-disco territory.
Ex Lion Tamer – Life Support Machine

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