Some good new music at last
At the grand old age of 35, a person can feel impossibly out of touch with the music scene today. I should know. Having grown up browsing (and buying) records and CDs, I often feel sad that I can no longer bandy names of exciting new bands about with confidence, often having no idea at all what they sound like, just an inkling of what the music press had to say.
It's not that I don't try (The Thrills, The Concretes, Radio Dept, The Killers, Keane), but these days, I find new music doesn't connect immediately with me like a Kate Bush or EBTG CD might. Perhaps it's a lack of familiarity, or it could just be the generation gap. K.L. and I were just saying the other day that every decade that we can remember spawned distinct new genres of music (punk, New Wave, House etc), but not this decade. I'm tempted to agree that other than throwing up the exquisite Belle & Sebastian, the defining characteristic of the 2000s seems to have just simply been Retro - mixing up past trends in new ways (even B&S is said to be retro Nick Drake). Some people even say that this decade has just been about rock bands discovering that you can put a dance beat to guitars. But that could just be the grumpy, stubborn old man in me talking.
Anyway, to the topic of this post - new music that I bought recently that genuinely excited me, even if it excited me because it was cleverly retro haha.
First, The Arcade Fire, whose second album "Neon Bible" sported a cover I was immediately intrigued by. And after reading a few reviews (thank you atarashi), I grew even more curious about this Canadian band that has been described as "Baroque rock". Yes, it was extremely "multi-layered" as many trendy ensembles these days are, and yes they play intelligent classical instruments like the cello, the harp and the accordian. But oh the sound! At some points it was XTC in dub, then it was a little Elvis and a little Johnny Cash. Other times it sounded just like 4AD alt-country band Tarnation, and even a little like U2 - or rather what U2 might have sounded like if only they would stop churning out safe US adult contemporary rock. Very intriguing indeed.
Then, LCD Soundsystem's new album "Sound of Silver", which currently has the highest score on the excellent review site Metacritic (89 from 22 reviews!). I had heard about it from M., who told me he didn't like it because it was too "aggro". My goodness, it's a little bit Bowie, a little bit Nitzer Ebb and a little bit Talking Heads. It's The Cure set to hand-clappy disco, then it suddenly turns into early New Order meets early OMD. Astonishing! "Watch The Tapes" is Adam Ant stripped down, and the title track is Heaven 17 from their "Penthouse and Pavement" era. I had to play tracks like "North American Scum" and "Someone Great" over again just to confirm I was hearing what I was hearing.
Suitably humbled, my conclusion is that the 2000s still rock after all.
It's not that I don't try (The Thrills, The Concretes, Radio Dept, The Killers, Keane), but these days, I find new music doesn't connect immediately with me like a Kate Bush or EBTG CD might. Perhaps it's a lack of familiarity, or it could just be the generation gap. K.L. and I were just saying the other day that every decade that we can remember spawned distinct new genres of music (punk, New Wave, House etc), but not this decade. I'm tempted to agree that other than throwing up the exquisite Belle & Sebastian, the defining characteristic of the 2000s seems to have just simply been Retro - mixing up past trends in new ways (even B&S is said to be retro Nick Drake). Some people even say that this decade has just been about rock bands discovering that you can put a dance beat to guitars. But that could just be the grumpy, stubborn old man in me talking.
Anyway, to the topic of this post - new music that I bought recently that genuinely excited me, even if it excited me because it was cleverly retro haha.
First, The Arcade Fire, whose second album "Neon Bible" sported a cover I was immediately intrigued by. And after reading a few reviews (thank you atarashi), I grew even more curious about this Canadian band that has been described as "Baroque rock". Yes, it was extremely "multi-layered" as many trendy ensembles these days are, and yes they play intelligent classical instruments like the cello, the harp and the accordian. But oh the sound! At some points it was XTC in dub, then it was a little Elvis and a little Johnny Cash. Other times it sounded just like 4AD alt-country band Tarnation, and even a little like U2 - or rather what U2 might have sounded like if only they would stop churning out safe US adult contemporary rock. Very intriguing indeed.
Then, LCD Soundsystem's new album "Sound of Silver", which currently has the highest score on the excellent review site Metacritic (89 from 22 reviews!). I had heard about it from M., who told me he didn't like it because it was too "aggro". My goodness, it's a little bit Bowie, a little bit Nitzer Ebb and a little bit Talking Heads. It's The Cure set to hand-clappy disco, then it suddenly turns into early New Order meets early OMD. Astonishing! "Watch The Tapes" is Adam Ant stripped down, and the title track is Heaven 17 from their "Penthouse and Pavement" era. I had to play tracks like "North American Scum" and "Someone Great" over again just to confirm I was hearing what I was hearing.
Suitably humbled, my conclusion is that the 2000s still rock after all.