Category: Reviews (Page 183 of 200)

WESTBAM Götterstrasse

German techno DJ legend WESTBAM celebrates 30 years in the music business with an intriguing mature collection of songs under the title of ‘Götterstrasse’.

Literally translated as ‘Gods Street’, the 14 tracks feature a varied and impressive cast of vocalists. These include THE PSYCHEDELIC FURS’ Richard Butler, NEW ORDER’s Bernard Sumner, Iggy Pop, Brian Molko of PLACEBO, ex-member of THE STRANGLERS’ Hugh Cornwell and even rappers such as Kanye West and Lil’ Wayne! ‘Götterstrasse’ sounds heavenly and while the theme of the album centres on the joy and euphoria of underground nightlife, it also reflects on the consequences of comedown.

Indeed, the album’s magnificent launch single ‘You Need The Drugs’ voiced brilliantly by Richard Butler is not actually celebration of illicit substance use. “There’s been practically no interview in the last 30 years in which I wasn’t asked about drugs” said WESTBAM, real name Maximilian Lenz. “So the song ‘You Need The Drugs’, sung by Richard Butler, vocalist of new wave band Psychedelic Furs, is the first explicit electronic appeal AGAINST the use of drugs, with a clear message: drugs are a bore! Drugs destroy relationships! Drugs are always counterproductive!”

‘Kick It Like A Sensei’ featuring Lil’ Wayne follows and the sparse soundtrack held together by symphonic bursts of synth strings and metronomic rhythms provides a dramatic listen. The New Orleans hip-hop star’s “Like a Sensei” mantra becomes quite hypnotic and draws the listener in. Meanwhile, Katt Rockell provides a raspy and soulful feminine edge to yet another metronomic percussive base on the superb ‘Rebel Heart’ which musically builds with tinkling sequences and further synth string stabs.

Whereas the diverse selection of vocalists make on paper an unlikely cohesive album, WESTBAM keeps the musical thread together with a consistent adventure in sound. Instrumentally the songs are the same, yet different and the singers have been given the freedom to shape the songs melodically to provide the necessary variation. Interestingly, dominant staccato bass pulsing is largely absent from proceedings as are banging beats; this in turn makes ‘Götterstrasse’ sound almost cocoon-like.

Iggy Pop’s baritone provides an album highlight with ‘Iron Music’, the tense militaristic framework being highly Teutonic as the former James Newell Osterberg recalls his own period in Cold War Berlin with echoes of ‘Aisha’ his 1999 collaboration with DEATH IN VEGAS.

It all sounds strangely like JOY DIVISION gone techno, so the track which pops up next is highly appropriate. ‘She Wants’ sees the return of Bernard Sumner on a new electronic dance composition and it’s great to hear him in fine voice again on something approaching the sound of synth centred NEW ORDER.

Meanwhile, more sombre synthetic strings decorate the beautiful ‘Götterstrasse No 1’ which sees Ina Humpe’s vocals sampled and scatted over a suitably abstract slice of dance art. Humpe’s other contribution ‘To The Middle of Nowhere’ provides a gently autotuned sheen to the pretty Eurocentric backing.

Unsettling Wagnerian overtones dominate ‘Sick’ with Brian Molko and ‘Radio Siberia’ with Kanye West. While Molko gives it some angsty Gothic gloom, West is more typically urban with the expected “MF” profanities throughout. After an impressive eight track run of consistent quality, it is from here that ‘Götterstrasse’ starts to flounder a little.

A change in the instrumental timbre comes with some bass guitar on ‘We Feel Love’ featuring Afrika Baby Bam but this, like ‘Radio Siberia’ suffers from comparison with the first half of the album. ‘Solid Sound’ featuring Southern Blues singer/ songwriter Andrew Tyler returns to the template set earlier on ‘Götterstrasse’ but by now the momentum is lost and in retrospect, the following downtempo ‘Where We’re From’ with Katt Rockell sounds really out of place. However, ‘Götterstrasse’ snaps back to the wondrous feel of its first half with an appearance by Hugh Cornwall on the penultimate offering ‘A Night to Remember’.

It’s the most frantic track of the collection but that’s not to say it doesn’t have a serene quality, the metallic textures are complimented by piano and soothing ARP Solina reminiscent of the close of ROXY MUSIC’s ‘If There Was Something’. The ambient instrumental ‘Reprise’ brings the set to its conclusion.

Overall, ‘Götterstrasse’ is a fascinating listen, full of character if just a bit too long. A fabulous 9-10 track album nests within its steadfast beats, melancholic strings and vast array of singers. The deluxe 2CD edition incidentally features the dub mixes where the comparative simplicity of the backing tracks is highlighted. It has to be said that while the album’s rhythms are repetitive, they are unobtrusive and compliment the various stages carrying the lead characters.

Haunting, lively and enigmatic, some of the best electronic music of 2013 can be found on ‘Götterstrasse’.


With thanks to Mark Reeder

‘Götterstrasse’ is released by Vertigo / Universal Germany as a CD, deluxe 2CD and download

http://www.westbam.de/dt/en/

http://www.facebook.com/westbam


Text by Chi Ming Lai
6th May 2013

LITTLE BOOTS Nocturnes

What Goes Up Has To Go Down…

LITTLE BOOTS won the BBC Sound Of 2009, was dubbed the next big thing and even the future of music!

Equipped with her Yamaha Tenorion, MicroKorg and Poly6, the Blackpool songstress Victoria Hesketh certainly made the right noises with her Moroder-esque calling card ‘Stuck On Repeat’ produced by HOT CHIP’s Joe Goddard, the thumping Gary Numan meets TIMBERLAND stutter of ‘Meddle’ and her subsequent collaborations with both Mr. Numan himself and THE HUMAN LEAGUE’s Phil Oakey.

Her time in DEAD DISCO had also proved she was certainly capable of something that was still pop but a bit edgier. However, within these synthesized aspirations was pressure from her label 679 / Atlantic to turn her into the next Kylie Minogue… productions by Greg Kurstin, Biff Stannard and the ubiquitous RedOne were evidence of that. Despite great songs on her debut ‘Hands’ such as ‘Earthquake’, ‘Symmetry’, ‘Ghost’, ‘Tune Into My Heart’, ‘Mathematics’ and ‘Remedy’, there was a major watering down of her synth girl concept and things were not helped when LA ROUX came along and stole her thunder with No1s and Grammy Awards.

There was room for a new female synthpop star but the public decided it was to be Elly Jackson. No matter the marmite nature of Jackson’s falsetto from the ghetto, LA ROUX’s eponymous debut was conceived as an album and mixed by producer/collaborator Ben Langmaid with laptops in mind to suit the modern listening habits of a young audience. ‘Hands’ tried to cover too many bases despite Victoria Hesketh’s obvious talent and ruined by a label who were confused as to how best to market her. ‘New In Town’ in particular was a poor choice for the launch single when there were so many good songs available.

Fast forward to 2013 and lessons have been learnt on both sides. 679/Atlantic allowed LITTLE BOOTS’ label mate MARINA & THE DIAMONDS to have more artistic control and the end result was a distinct identity for 2010 debut album ‘The Family Jewels’, while her pop concept follow-up ‘Electra Heart’ reached No1 in the UK. Meanwhile, Hesketh has parted ways with 679/Atlantic and certainly their failing to exploit the potential of LITTLE BOOTS will forever stand as a missed opportunity. Now solely independent via her On Repeat imprint, it is within this context that Miss Hesketh finally releases her second album ‘Nocturnes’.

Four years is a long time in music and during that time, acts such as CHVRCHES have moved the goalposts as far as traditional synthpop is concerned while EDM has cracked America. The lure of clubland and nightlife (hence the album’s title) appears to be where Miss Hesketh’s head is at right now.

She said to This Is Fake DIY about her new material: “It’s less 80s synth pop influenced, it’s quite an upbeat album, which I think has stemmed from the fact I have been DJing a lot, and listening to a lot of dance music”. However, the previews have not been promising. Comeback single ‘Shake’ released in late 2011 was an enjoyable if rather pedestrian house excursion while ‘Every Time I Say A Payer’ lacked memorable hooks. Another taster ‘Headphones’ did not improve the situation and has now been left off the new album altogether.

So what is ‘Nocturnes’ like and will it win back the audience lost in the post-BBC Sound Of 2009 backlash that ensued? While album opener ‘Motorway’ attaches some dreamy soundscapes that recall dance anthem ‘Let Me Be Your Fantasy’, it is missing that killer topline. If you are going to make dance records, you’ve got to stun the brain and hit the feet… but this doesn’t do that. In fact, it is a bit of a nocturnal wash.

Now, if LITTLE BOOTS was being accused of being too much like Pop Kylie on ‘Hands’, then ‘Confusion’ is more Deconstruction-era Dance Kylie. Like with ‘Shake’ and ‘Motorway’, it’s all pleasant enough but lacks impact. ‘Broken Record’ is better and starts with neo-SASH! bassline pulsing while the bridge is quite wonderful; however it feels incomplete. Meanwhile, ‘Beat Beat’ gets the full funky mirrorball treatment and does Disco Kylie. There’s nothing wrong with imitating the Aussie pixie but none of these tracks are ‘Spinning Around’ or ‘Can’t Get You Out Of My Head’.

Continuing on, ‘Crescendo’ is much more mid-tempo and shows hints of the inventiveness that Miss Hesketh is capable of with some great percolating and spacey electronic sounds. It highlights what is actually missing from ‘Nocturnes’; that avant textural weirdness that made ‘Stuck On Repeat’, ‘Meddle’ and ‘Symmetry’ so special. There’s also too much of that dated Italo House piano stabbing. As the album progresses, ‘Strangers’ is almost barely noticeable while ‘All For You’, although a move away from the out-and-out dance template of ‘Nocturnes’, is quite forgettable.

But the saving grace comes last with the glorious ‘Satellites’. With tightly sequenced bass, crashing effects, siren-like synths and a catchy chorus, it is bleepingly euphoric and miles ahead of anything else on the album. And with lyrics such as “What goes up has to go down… I’m falling down to earth”, it could be seen as autobiographical. ‘Satellites’ is great, so why isn’t the rest of ‘Nocturnes’?

There are flashes of brilliance but this is not a patch on ‘Hands’ or even what exists of CHVRCHES’ small but impressive catalogue. While the future may not see LITTLE BOOTS being able to carry the momentum of being a popstar in her own right, a possible career as a songwriter for hire in the vein of Cathy Dennis, Alison Clarkson or Linda Perry beckons it would seem.

ALTERED IMAGES’ Clare Grogan remarked to Word Magazine back in 2006 about the reaction to their second LP ‘Pinky Blue’: “…the people who loved you weren’t just disappointed in your next album, they were heartbroken”. It feels like that with ‘Nocturnes’ and it’s a shame because there is so much about LITTLE BOOTS that could have been 🙁


‘Nocturnes’ is released on 6th May 2013 via On Repeat Records

LITTLE BOOTS plays the following UK live dates: London Rough Trade East (10th May), Manchester Gorilla (14th May), London Bethnal Green Working Men’s Club (15th May)

http://www.littlebootsmusic.co.uk

http://www.facebook.com/littleboots


Text by Chi Ming Lai
2nd May 2013, updated 9th November 2013

ALISON MOYET the minutes

Up until 2008, for many fans of electronic music, Alison Moyet had completely disappeared off of the radar. But it was the re-connecting with Vince Clarke and accompanying tour of YAZOO material that helped vividly remind how an act had helped shaped the future of female-fronted synthetic music.

The tour, with it’s stripped back to (electronic) basics of Clarke’s laptop and controller keyboards could be seen to have re-energised Moyet’s interest in synthesizer-based production. The artist herself though has denied this, saying that it was a desire to work with “a more unpredictable palette” rather than the more “generic” approach of traditional production values.

With this, her eighth album, there is a real sense of creative freedom and from recent interviews with Moyet, a feeling that she was tired of succumbing to record company pressure to fit a demographic/stereotype that was no longer comfortable to her.

‘the minutes’ is a collaboration with Guy Sigsworth, a producer/musician with an enviable production and songwriting CV including Robyn, Seal, Bjork and Madonna. The album itself, however, isn’t a full-on return to the totally electronic pastures of YAZOO – there are guitar textures and more traditional sounds at work here (Sigsworth also worked extensively with Alanis Morissette), but the framework/backbone of the tracks is resolutely electronic.

Followers of Moyet will already have an idea of what to expect as two tracks from the album were previewed prior to its release, the first ‘Changeling’ as a free download and then the lead-off single ‘When I Was Your Girl’. The former gives a feel for the style and atmosphere of the album – ‘Changeling’ being a very twitchy, yet dynamic production, from a guitar-led intro moving into dubstep-influenced drum/synth programming, yet ‘When I Was Your Girl’ showcases a much more conventional pop-rock sound, which in the context of the album makes it stick out slightly from the rest of its companion songs.

However, both tracks are shot through with the kind of dark, nostalgic lyrics we have come to expect from Moyet and the yearning vocal on the latter could quite easily be seen as an older sister to ‘Nobody’s Diary’, whilst ‘Changeling’ mourns both a loss of innocence and expresses dissatisfaction with modern life and it’s multitude of pressures.

What initially strikes about the album is that as well as crafting a credible musical landscape with a pop sensibility, Sigsworth has coaxed an incredible dynamic range out of Moyet from the soft, ambient vocal textures on the opener ‘Horizon Flame’ to the more strident/familiar stylings of ‘When I Was Your Girl’. With ‘Apple Kisses’ there is a fantastic mix of jazz-inflected vocals and octaved electronics, the track is also not ashamed to showcase and celebrate its’ melodies with a climatic musical outro.

This track leads into one of the most overtly synthetic tracks on the album: ‘Right As Rain’ with its house 4-4 kick/stabs and fidgety elastic bassline. There are almost echoes of EVERYTHING BUT THE GIRL here with the opening vibe of the track, but again the musical palette is rich with plenty of twists and turns to prevent the track turning into generic dance-floor fodder. ‘Love Reign Supreme’ gently dips its toes into Drum n Bass territory but on Moyet’s terms… with a dynamic ebbing and flowing feel, light, compressed verse drums giving way to a full-on contemporary-sounding chorus.

‘All Signs of Life’ takes things one step further, after a gentle, floating introduction, the song kicks into life with an overall sound that wouldn’t be out of place on either a NETSKY or a LONDON ELEKTRICITY song with anthemic stabbing synths, half-time drums and (finally) 175 bpm outro kick/snare interplay. ‘Filigree’ is probably the most YAZOO-sounding of all of the tracks on show here, a slow-paced but lush song with beautiful, warm monophonic analogue synths.

Orchestral string flourishes take the track to another level as Moyet’s wordplay paints a strange, otherworldly picture with the “I fell into a cinema” line… one wonders how the fans of Moyet’s more traditional work will accept this album as it’s light years away from the point she got to with 2007’s ‘The Turn’, yet the feeling is that most will embrace it as a tremendous return to form and applaud her decision to follow this sound and direction.

With ‘the minutes’ and the partnership with Guy Sigsworth, Moyet has seemingly found her muse in the way that electro-pioneer John Foxx did with Benge – cultivating an album which doesn’t feel forced or panders to any particular musical movement, yet still sounds modern. In summary the album is a triumph, making it must have come with risks, yet they are ones which many fans would have wished Moyet had taken earlier, the opening lyric “Suddenly the landscape has changed…” an entirely appropriate way to kickstart the rebirth of one of this country’s finest female artists.


Special thanks to Duncan Clark and Rhianon Davies at 9PR

‘the minutes’ is released as a CD and download by Cooking Vinyl on 6th May 2013

Alison Moyet’s UK and Irish 2013 tour includes:

Cork Opera House (30th September), Belfast Waterfront Hall (1st October), Dublin Olympia Theatre (2nd October), Glasgow Royal Concert Hall (4th October), Edinburgh Usher Hall (5th October), Gateshead The Sage (6th October), Sheffield City Hall (8th October), Rhyl Pavilion Theatre (9th October), Coventry Warwick Arts Centre (10th October), Northampton Derngate Theatre (12 October), Ipswich Regents Theatre (13th October), London Royal Festival Hall (15 October), Cambridge Corn Exchange (16th October), Folkestone Leas Cliff Hall (17th October), Bristol Colston Hall (19th October), Cardiff St. David’s Hall (20th October), Brighton The Dome (21st October), York Barbican Theatre (23rd October), Salford The Lowry (24th October), Liverpool Philharmonic Hall (25th October), Nottingham Royal Centre (27th October), Birmingham Symphony Hall (28th October), Southend Cliffs Pavilion (29th October), Bournemouth Pavilion Theatre (31st October)

http://www.alisonmoyet.com

http://www.facebook.com/AlisonMoyet

https://twitter.com/alisonmoyetnews


Text by Paul Boddy
30th April 2013

MISS KITTIN Calling From The Stars

For her third solo album, the one-time Queen of Electroclash MISS KITTIN has ambitiously issued a new double opus entitled ‘Calling From The Stars’.

Grenoble born Caroline Hervé first found fame in the electronic revival of the early 21st Century, working with THE HACKER, FELIX DA HOUSECAT and GOLDEN BOY although she did not actually release a solo record until 2004’s ‘I Com’. Her most recent album ‘Two’ was in 2009 and her second collaboration with THE HACKER. But for ‘Calling From The Stars’, she has recorded alone within the cocoon of a closed mezzanine in her flat. She said: “I think I wanted to write very simply this time… I’m not writing with so many metaphors any more – it’s actually very hard just to write simple things. I just wanted to write very good, strong melodies.”

The collection begins well with the compelling minimal synthesized templates of ‘Flash Forward’ and ‘Come Into My House’, both percussively vibrant with pulsing bass and danceable rhythms. ‘Come Into My House’ has the particular bonus of what sounds like an electronic cat being sucked though a vacuum cleaner! New single ‘Bassline’ though is a little steadier while the ‘Calling From The Stars’ titled track is spaced out with primitive string machine washes, MISS KITTIN nonchalantly and charmingly deadpan.

Heading back into rawer techno, ‘Life Is My Teacher’ captures some hypnotic rhythmical atmospheres. Vocalising in English and Japanese, ‘Maneki Neko’ is trademark Kittin, its chorus not wholly unlike ‘Rippin Kittin’, her cult club smash with GOLDEN BOY in 2002. Much more mechanical though is ‘Tears Like Kisses’ but something completely unexpected is her cover of REM’s ‘Everybody Hurts’.

Musically, it sounds like an outtake from ERASURE’s ‘Other People’s Songs’ collection and is at odds with the remainder of ‘Calling From The Stars’. This effectively begins the more sedate half of the album although much of the material is actually far too lively and percussive to be considered ambient. But it’s not particularly dancey either!

‘Only You’ presents a drifting electronic soundscape with Ms Hervé scatting the song’s title in a DOT ALLISON stylee. On the following track ‘Cosmic Love Radiation’, the sequencer pattern drives the track along quite obtrusively while again, the title is again repeated vocally… it’s as if she has forgotten to write any words!

Of course, KRAFTWERK have made a career out of this trick, but those used to MISS KITTIN’s witty lyrical observations on tracks such as ‘You & Us’, ‘1982’ or ‘Frank Sinatra’ may be disappointed with this approach. ‘Ballad Of The 23rd Century’ is a potential science fiction series theme and quite pretty in places but as this second part of the album progresses, there are fewer vocals and more lengthy bursts of experimentation; ‘Sunset Mission’ for example does turn into a bit of a laser gunfight while ‘I Don’t Know How To Move’ collages piano, voice samples and reverbed snaps with a repeated squelch mantra over its seven and a half minutes.

But like with that other double album out at the moment, THE KNIFE’s ‘Shaking The Habitual’, ‘Calling From The Stars’ is a very challenging listen to attempt in its entirety on one sitting. MISS KITTIN’s offering is perhaps more immediate at the beginning but ventures into more abstract territories that may reap rewards on return visits. It is certainly a brave project and for that, MISS KITTIN should be commended.


‘Calling From The Stars’ is by released wSphere Records

MISS KITTIN’s 2013 European Tour includes:

Barcelona Razzmatazz (30th April), London XOYO (1st May), Brussels Les Nuits Botanique @ L’Orangerie (3rd May), Berlin Berghain (8th May), Paris Le Trianon (17th May)

https://misskittin.com/

https://www.facebook.com/misskittin


Text by Chi Ming Lai
26th April 2013

HANNAH PEEL Harbour

Following touring with JOHN FOXX & THE MATHS, Hannah Peel has finally produced what many of her new found admirers hoped she would do… she has recorded a beautiful synth friendly song.

While not quite KRAFTWERK, the song entitled ‘Harbour’ features electronic sweeps and synthesized percussion alongside assorted guitar textures, piano and harp. The dreamy soundscapes combined with Miss Peel’s sweet voice make it sounds a bit like LITTLE BOOTS doing a lush ballad.

Whatever, the end result is gorgeously enjoyable. Accompanied by a suitably nautical themed video filmed on location on Canvey Island and directed by The Mitcham Submarine, ‘Harbour comes from her brand new EP ‘Nailhouse’, named so after the Chinese neologism for homes belonging to people who refuse to make room for development and are thus referred to as “stubborn nails”.

Hannah Peel has been a busy lady with the Orkney Isles inspired project THE MAGNETIC NORTH and also contributed to the new JOHN FOXX & THE MATHS album ‘Evidence’. As well as recording the follow-up to her debut album ‘The Broken Wave’, she will soon be rejoining the JOHN FOXX & THE MATHS’ live band for their tour of the UK supporting OMD.

The tour reconnects her with the electronic pioneers from The Wirral; she covered ‘Electricity’ for her debut EP ‘Rebox’ while her composition ‘Organ Song’ was sampled for the OMD track ‘Bondage Of Fate’ on the 2010 OMD album ‘History Of Modern’.


The ‘Nailhouse’ EP is available on limited edition white vinyl and as a download via the usual digital retailers

Hannah Peel plays with JOHN FOXX & THE MATHS for a headline show at Brighton Concorde 2 on 7th June 2013 supported by VILE ELECTRODES

http://www.hannahpeel.com

http://www.facebook.com/hanpeel

http://blog.johnfoxxandthemaths.com/


Text by Chi Ming Lai
25th April 2013

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