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Parralox: Underground

It’s taken me a few days to decide which Parralox song gets next dibs on this blog, because aside from the opening two tracks (Europa and the fairly predictable Black Jeans) they all have colossal post-worthy merits. Underground gets here now because it took a gamble and woke me up a couple of nights ago to sing to me (and as I’ve written before, I love this).

Underground highlights the value of John Von Ahlen’s minimal production – a cascade of interlocking rhythms and just enough synth to carry the main chords. This gives space for the squelchy bassline and Roxy’s vocals – dry, multi-tracked left and right, then delayed, tuned and generally messed about with. But my love of this track lies in the scratching, presented as both a rhythm and an anti-melody – it’s unwritten intention is to distract – only to become a centerpiece on the break, before disappearing back into the mix.

Parralox: Electricity – iTunes UK
Parralox: Electricity – Official Store
Parralox – Official Website
Parralox – MySpace

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The Future of Us

If you examine the best selling Computers on Amazon.com, you’ll probably find that on the first page, apart from frequent appearances of Apple’s MacBook, MacBook Pro and Mac Mini, the rest of the computers are all netbooks – low cost ultraportable computers. With the tremendous success of ASUS Eee PC series it seems that every computer manufacturer is now joining in the gold rush for this new market.

And it’s easy to see why it is a success:

  • People have a desire or need to do useful work whilst on the move, and despite the increased feasibility of telecommuting the demand for business travel still exists;
  • There’s a realisation that to do most work, the most powerful and capable computer isn’t required;
  • Netbooks can be cheap.

Yesterday Apple Inc. released its Q4 2008 financial results, showing that it sold 6.9 million iPhones in that quarter and in terms of revenue becoming the third largest mobile phone company in the world. Prior to my own experience with an iPhone I considered it to be a viable replacement for my laptop when out of the office for short periods of time. Now that I’ve owned one for nearly a year I’m more convinced of that. My friend Mark, who has an iPod touch, is similarly impressed, not just with the third party applications, but also with its overall usability.

When Apple announced its iPhone Software Development Kit I wondered what this meant to the world of computing, with a post provocatively titled iPhone SDK: Death of the Desktop. At that time I even considered an alternative: Death of the Laptop. That’s worth a mention because in recent years Apple’s best selling computers have all been laptops and Apple has a tendency to make its own products obsolete. Anyhow, stick that thought away for a little while and ponder on this: Daring Fireball analysed the Q4 results in greater depth and came up with this very appropriate question “how long until the iPhone is undeniably the primary product and platform made by Apple?”

Moreover, if the iPhone becomes its central product, what happens to the rest of the computing industry?

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Parralox: I Fell In Love With A Drum Machine

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Double yeah, right! Two things stand out, don’t they? I’m convinced that Parralox chose their name so that they could grab a .com domain. Problem is, whenever I type it, I’m always misspelling it. Then there’s the title of the song, which is just a little too much electrolove for a Monday. But, you’ve been there right? Was it a TR-909 or TR-808 or perhaps you’re old school CR-78 (my personal favourite) or Linn. None of this matters because Melbourne, Australia duo Parralox have produced the best electropop album you’ll hear this year. (Why? Because their verses are as good as their choruses.)

I Fell In Love With A Drum Machine is suitably decorated with snares, hi hats, booming drums and descending power toms, sometimes too many. That’s the point though, huh?. For proper Euro effect we also have whispered male vocals to offset Roxy’s soft-focus twilight yearnings and some tuned vocal cut-ups. And something that approximates a Hook-y riff-off.

Besides, how can you not love a band who make cover art for each of their songs? Or that they rate The Knife as one of their “sounds like”?

Much love to Jiingo for pointing me their way.

Parralox: Electricity – iTunes UK
Parralox: Electricity – Official Store
Parralox – Official Website
Parralox – MySpace

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Hannah Fury: Through the Gash

Number 2 of 2007 — Hannah Fury: Through the Gash

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We’ve been here before. Hannah Fury’s second album Through the Gash was released on 7 August 2007 to considerable but understated acclaim. And whilst it was a diversion from her debut, The Thing That Feels – more subtly than I originally thought – my feelings for it teetered on the brink of its event horizon before pulling me deeply into passionate tales of love, lust, loss, anger, deceit, revenge and, above all, mending. I was fortunate enough to receive the album a couple of weeks before its official release, and during that time and for some weeks after I fell further into each song.

The result of that almost endless descent was an overwhelming need to publish my thoughts on the album, perhaps before I had had time to fully appreciate it. I had to do this because my reviews of individual songs were becoming too naked. I was concerned that I’d either completely misunderstood the album, or discovered things that should have remained hidden. Musicians are often unaware of the purpose of lyrics or they relish the intentional ambiguity of songs. None of this mattered to me. I just felt I was getting too close.

So I backed off and my review became a mask for these issues. And now, when it is time to review the album in the context of last year’s music, I remain unable and unwilling to delve further into its psyche in order to persuade you of its greatness. Through the Gash is simply too extraordinary for me to write about anymore.

Through the Gash – My Original Review

Through the Gash – iTunes UK
Through the Gash – iTunes US
Through the Gash – CD Baby

Mellow Traumatic – Official Website
Antoinette’s Revenge – Official Store

Hannah Fury: MySpace

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The Rock Star Myth

Carrie Brownstein’s recent NPR post on The Death of the Rock Star made me wonder if we really need Rock Stars, or indeed if being a Rock Star is a facade deployed to obscure a general lack of talent. Just when I was pondering on this, Seth Godin wrote about the same subject, quoting a recent post by music analyst Bob Lefsetz which describes a Rock Star as “someone who incites controversy just by existing.” Then, “That’s what we lost in the dash for cash.” A point that Carrie mirrors as “the conflation of art and commerce” with musicians being the preachers for brands. I guess you can thank Moby for that progression.

In my naive teens and early twenties the view I got of my favourite musicians was that they were inextricably bonded to their music. Nothing else mattered. Interviews with them tended to be oriented around their music and their lives of endless touring, inexplicable and often hilarious mishaps, and the trauma of studio recordings. Back then, in the late 80s and early 90s, it was often the music magazines and their staff who were the true Rock Stars. We all had personal favourites – I adored almost everything that Chris Roberts wrote, because like me, he loved everything Blonde – and those who we abhorred. The Review was everything and you had to become familiar with various writing styles in order to gather the real opinion. The Truth.

This all led to the myth of the Rock Star and the sheer awe one felt when bumping into one at a club bar. (Lush members didn’t count.) Or in my case standing six feet away from Danielle Dax when she toured Inky Bloaters at ULU in 1987, thinking incorrectly that her earlier gig at the Manchester Boardwalk would have acclimatised me. But the reality was that many artists were scrabbling around to make a living either solely as a musician or trying to find time to fit music into their life. Read Dean Wareham’s Black Postcards: A Rock & Roll Romance if you don’t believe me.

It is however the music Industry that is responsible for turning musicians into heroes and as their influence erodes so the height of these pedestals diminishes. Through direct contact with fans (thanks to the internet) we now know more about our favourite musicians than we used to. Connections between musicians and fans are becoming closer, and also between fans, as Kristin Hersh acknowledges in The Guitar that Love Built, returning music to its original purpose – a mechanism for communicating, bonding and learning. The only difference between the musicians who have true longevity and talent and their fans is that they make music. And to me that makes them even more remarkable.

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My Brightest Diamond: Bring Me the Workhorse

Number 3 of 2007 — My Brightest Diamond: Bring Me the Workhorse

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Cloaked inside a moniker, or considering a musical adventure to be a project might seem a little excessive, but My Brightest Diamond does so because music is merely one part of the multifaceted nature of Shara Worden’s work. Its basis reaches back many generations, driven by years of musical discoveries, learning and the considerable influences of the communities that her family worked within as it tracked across America. To classify My Brightest Diamond as belonging to one or two genres is to do it a disservice, because it is more fundamental than this: It’s the product of history and of memories. Bring Me The Workhorse is My Brightest Diamond’s 2006 debut, released on Asthmatic Kitty records.

Hannah Fury’s album Through The Gash taught me that it’s worth digging through an album again and again to obtain the most out of it. But there are problems if you apply this to memories. The more we analyse them, the more we will pay attention to the smallest things and the darker they will appear. The opening song of the album, Something Of An End astonishes with the line “it was beautiful and terrible.” This bookmarks where we are, and where we’re going to stay for the course of the album. But despite this marriage of indie-rock and exquisite string arrangements, Something Of An End still manages to groove obsessively before dropping into a sweet acoustic coda which best exposes Shara’s glorious note-perfect voice.

And it’s the flexibility and accuracy of her voice which enables such variation throughout each song, and the album. Golden Star starts off as a simple guitar and drum groove before careening upwards into an explosive climax. This system of dynamics is used frequently throughout the album and intentionally over-dramatises the minutia of the events documented. Gone Away waltzes around the locked groove of abandonment only to deliver “This is a ride going nowhere.. but somewhere that I despise” and later ”..to end up with a tearful.” Again referring to the epic uselessness of such retrospection.

Freak Out briefly shifts madly from these comforting arrangements, becoming atonal and off-centre, accompanied by panicky instrumentation and ghostly screams. Unfortunately it doesn’t seem to add to the value to the album.

There are however songs that recall the allegory of Joanna Newsom, although these are more obviously autobiographical than, say, Joanna’s Monkey & Bear. And it’s here where the best songs lie, reconstructing history and hiding it within hyperreal imagery. Sometimes, as with We Were Sparkling and its collection of music boxes and feedback, these microscopic recollections become overwhelmingly beautiful.

The string-laden Dragonfly, Magic Rabbit and The Robin’s Jar all tell their stories most effectively, The latter’s line “and mama made us bury it” is delivered with such childlike horror that the song’s eventual shift of subject is cataclysmic. Magic Rabbit’s distorted and grinding sub-thrash guitars melds genres together highlighting their unique qualities without cliché.

Still, for those wanting something more traditional we have The Good & The Bad Guy which is my favourite track on the album – more for its contrast with its predecessors than being a standout. Overtly moody, but burning with passion, this torchsong is devoid of guitars or bass, letting Shara’s voice sore with conflicting desire.

It’s therefore appropriate that the final song, Workhorse is delivered in similar terms, but this time with broken beats and very obvious anger and regret. The contemptuous line “Lost all your youth and all of your usefulness” is reworked continuously, but we never learn why or how. Unless, of course, you’ve listened to the previous ten songs. Because being able to write such beautiful music and deliver it in such a fine manner allows the pain of those memories to be exhumed, exposed and ultimately destroyed.

Bring Me the Workhorse – iTunes UK
Amazon UK
My Brightest Diamond – Official Website

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Amanda Palmer: Have to Drive

It would be too romantic to have used yesterday’s visit to see my father purely as an excuse to listen to Have to Drive on the way back, walking through the forgotten streets of our city’s outskirts, dampened by the drizzle and crushed by the heaviness of rain clouds.

Still, its last words – whispered commands which pull the rest of the song into focus – are such an exquisite lure that any reason will do. Indeed, “I’ll meet you in an hour, at the car” adds a third, almost unmentioned, dimension to a song which is already skewed by a lyrical pun (the use of “deer” instead of “dear”) and a choral break sung by the Via Interficere Choir of Nashville (another pun, latin lovers) targetting the encroachment of human civilisation on wildlife. To me, the song isn’t about that anyhow – it’s so much darker. I challenge you to gather up all the missing pieces and work out an alternative interpretation.

Musically, it’s a tremendous piece of work, building subtly from simple piano progressions. Strings and drums do most of the structural work, before Amanda’s voice almost overreaches itself and the entire song collapses in an emotional denouement.

Amanda Palmer: Who Killed Amanda Palmer – iTunes Special Edition
Amazon UK
Amanda Palmer – MySpace
Album Website

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