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Tuesday, 10 April 2012

Dr Dexter and Mr Holland

Image copyright www.stickerchick.com 

The Offspring are one of those bands that, over the years, have juggernauted their way to a legendary status within the rock music community. Even today, when their immediate popularity has begun to wane with the decline in popularity of the pop-punk genre since the mid 2000s, their name alone gets them top (or near-top) billing at festivals worldwide, and they can still effortlessly sell out even the largest venues.
 

However, unlike bands that they shared the pop-punk limelight with such as Green Day, they haven't catapulted themselves to megastardom by fundamentally changing their sound. The way they got there was actually through a very cunning ploy that many don't realise.

The Offspring, are in fact, two bands. Of course, I don't mean literally. In fact, since their initial self-titled album release in 1989, the only band role to have seen different members is the drums, making them one of the most personnel consistent bands of the last 30 years.

What I actually mean is that they are a band that is very good at showing to similar, but distinctly different, sides to their musical ability.

Their first release, and its 1992 follow-up 'Ignition' met little commercial success, at least in their initial runs. Their debut album didn't even receive a CD release until 1995, after they stormed to mainstream success with 1994's 'Smash'.

If you listen to these, and other early recordings, you hear some excellent punk rock revival records, but neither of them possess a lot of mainstream appeal. With 'Smash', however, you can instantly hear the Offspring developing their sound to encompass a more mainstream-acceptable pop element to some of their songs, whilst maintaining their punk rock credentials.

Singles such as 'Come Out and Play' and 'Self Esteem' showcase a realisation by the band that in order to draw people in and warm them to the idea of listening to the band play the songs they want to play, perhaps they have to present a more acceptable face in the public eye.

In 1994, when 'Smash' was released, pure punk rock was still a few years away from being a truly socially acceptable genre of music, and bands like the Offspring, Green Day and Blink 182 (all of whose early albums had a solid punk ethic behind them) had to soften themselves up a bit in order to be accepted.

They key thing, however, was that the singles, which would receive much more widespread consumption through radio play than the album itself, were not necessarily representative of the content of the album. In the radio-friendly singles, a more upbeat, almost 'silly' tone (more on that later) was key, whereas many of the album tracks were serious punk rock songs that really showcased the songwriting talent that the band possessed.

The trend continues on 1996's 'Ixnay on the Hombre' with single releases like 'I Choose' and 'All I Want' masking what was in many respects a very serious and heartfelt record. However, without these singles to draw in the masses, it's unlikely that the album would have reached the audiences that it did.

The best examples of the band's recording style comes on their next two albums, 'Americana' and 'Conspiracy of One'. Anyone who turned on a radio or TV music station between 1997 and the present will almost inevitably have come across one or more of the singles from those albums. 'Pretty Fly (for a White Guy)', 'Why Don't You Get a Job?', 'The Kids Aren't Alright' and 'Original Prankster' were worldwide smash hits and truly cemented the band's status as one of the hottest properties of the late 90s and early 2000s. Sadly it has lead many to dismiss the band out of hand as 'silly' (as mentioned above) and thus irrelevant in general, but to dismiss the influence they have had over rock music in general would be foolish.

The tendency towards light-hearted humour in their singles obviously caused the band to be grouped together with other similar artists from the time. Bands like Blink 182, Green Day and Sum 41 were all famous for releasing similarly 'irreverent' music at this time. For example, Green Day's 'Basket Case', Sum 41's 'Fat Lip' and a good deal of Blink 182's 1999 album 'Enema of the State' are all prime examples of the popularity during this period (at least with teenage boys who enjoy fart jokes) of that kind of 'college punk'.

As I have mentioned, it is easy to dismiss bands like this, the Offspring included, as one dimensional, but the key thing to note about the list I just made, or at the very least the albums that they come from, is that they still stand up as records today over a decade later.

You only have to listen to songs like 'Not the One' (from 'Smash', 'Pay the Man' (from Americana) 'Amazed' and 'Change the World' (from 'Ixnay on the Hombre') to realise that this is a band with many layers too it, and that they and the records I have mentioned are certainly more than the sum of their singles.

That isn't to say, of course, that they aren't prone to the odd bout of silliness in the albums too; you only need to hear 'Intermission' once to testify to that. But, you definitely can't say that they haven't earned the right to be a bit daft every once in a while. Also, even when they do choose to do so, and especially on the singles, you can still hear the punk rock heart of the band shining through. It's always there, whether it's in a dose small enough to be widely acceptable, or more full on in a less well known track.

Finally, and one of the key things that separates the Offspring from the like of Green Day is that the band you hear on record today is still the band that broke through with 'Smash' in 1994. Obviously during a near 20 year period a band is going to develop its sound somewhat, but the core of the original Offspring releases is still there all these years later. They haven't felt the need to ditch the punk sound that so characterised their releases in the 90s and become a band they aren't.

The Offspring is the Offspring. Except when they're being the Offspring. If you see what I mean...

Tuesday, 20 March 2012

Bands that made me go 'Ooh' 2011 Part 2: Orianthi


Image copyright Polydor Records
A few weeks ago I wrote the first post in an occasional series about bands that took me by surprise in 2011. Other priorities have taken over since then, but it's time to return to the list. This particular artist actually ties in to another post I made a while back about women in rock music, and is one of the two who will feature in this series (see the forthcoming article about Tegan & Sara in the next few weeks.)

In comparison to ...And You Will Know Us By the Trail of Dead, featured at number 5 in this list, Orianthi has been around a relatively short amount of time, releasing her first album, 'Violet Journey', released in 2007.

I am unashamed to say that I discovered Orianthi through the Guitar Hero game series as her cover of the song 'Suffocated', by Sound the Alarm features in the game Guitar Hero: Warriors of Rock. The album that I have chosen for this post, 'Believe', features this song as well as, rather unusually given her Greek-Australian heritage, a cover of a former Danish Eurovision Song Contest entry, (it's not often you see Ronan Keating get a songwriting credit on a rock album...) amongst a number of songs written by Orianthi herself and others.

The covers are two of the songs that stick out the most, but not because they highlight a lack of quality in her songwriting ability, rather because they are much different in tone and style to the rest of the album.

You could be forgiven, when listening to 'Believe', the Danish cover after which the album is named, that it was simply going to be another soulless Kelly Clarkson-esque piece of girl-pop-rock dross, but it's really the only low point on an otherwise very well put together record.

The album wastes no time in getting going, starting with the fast paced, pop-punk single 'According to You' and following it up with 'Suffocated'. It continues to go from strength to strength after that, even if 'Suffocated' seems a little out of place in comparison to Orianthi's own songs.

The best of the album actually comes near the end, with 'Highly Strung', which is written and performed collaboratively with legendary guitarist. Steve Vai, famous for being one of the fastest shredders the world has ever seen. The track proves that the young Australian is more than a match for the veteran showcasing her incredible guitar talent. It certainly goes a long way to explaining why she was due to take up the mantle as Michael Jackson's lead guitarist on his ill-fated 'This Is It' tour.

This album really is one that breaks away from the hard-to-shake and unfortunately denigrated 'chick-rock' label that has the potential to blight the careers of so many talented artists. Another record of this quality will really cement her place at the top table of modern rock artists. More outstanding collaborations with rock legends certainly won't hurt her cause.

Friday, 24 February 2012

True Beginnings: 5 Bands and Artists With Surprising Origins

Moby, image copyright blahblahblahscience.com

Throughout the career of a musician he or she might play in any number of groups, and even venture out in to the world of solo projects. It's the nature of music; bands eventually reach a point where they feel they've done all they can together, or that they want to pursue other projects, or that they simply realise that after 15 years they hate each others guts. Similarly, lineups change and members leave during the lifespan of a band for any number of reasons. Taking Back Sunday, a favourite of mine, for example, has had 11 different members since they formed in 1999; that's nearly one member for every year they've existed. I'm not even going to get started on the Sugababes...

Many of these moves are well known. For instance, most people know that Dave Mustaine was rather unceremoniously booted out of Metallica and formed Megadeth as something of a 'fuck you.' Glenn Danzig left the Misfits and went on to form, amongst other groups, Danzig (no-one said originality was his strong suit.) Dave Grohl seems to be involved in 95% of all music that is put out at any given time. The list goes on.

There are, on the other hand, several less widely known occasions where famous bands or musicians have previously been involved in other, much smaller or projects, or ones that are so completely different that you would never think to link the two together. Herein lies a list of 5 such examples, that ye may revel in new knowledge, or you know, if you like one, go and check out the other or something.

The Facebook 'like' statistics at the end of each entry are offered for comparison purposes.

  1. Frank Turner used to be in hardcore punk band Million Dead.

Since 2005 when Million Dead split, the cult of Frank Turner has grown immensely. Whether you personally like his Billy Bragg-esque punk-folk style or not, it's hard to bring to mind another musician that has worked as hard to get to where he is today. Few deserve success more than Turner.

Right at the beginning, when he would play a gig literally anywhere for £50, a place to sleep and the train fare or a lift, he even played in the kitchen of fellow Bobbins author Ian's halls of residence.

As a fan of Million Dead I followed him with interest in the early days, and attended a number of his early shows, where he played to venues of maybe 200 people. In August last year at Reading Festival I watched him play on the main stage to a crowd that numbered in the tens of thousands. In between he's played over a thousand solo shows and released four studio albums and three Eps. Rags to riches doesn't even begin to cover it.

What few people know about this rising star of rock music is that he got his start singing for a band named Million Dead. The Dead released two albums in their lamentably short lifespan, 2003's debut 'A Song to Ruin' and the follow up 'Harmony No Harmony' were both excellent contributions to what was a growing hardcore and post hardcore scene in Britain and the time.

They toured with the likes of Funeral for a Friend and Eighties Matchbox B-Line Disaster and got limited exposure on music channels and mainstream radio and in the year that they split played the Radio 1 Lockup tent at Reading Festival, but their untimely split due to 'irreconcilable differences' led to Frank Turner branching out on his own.

These days he says little about his time in Million Dead, and when he had accrued enough original material he stopped playing acoustic versions of their songs at concerts. It seems to be a past he would rather ignore, which is a shame because if half his fans knew of his origins, there'd be a hell of a lot of people in for a treat.

Likes

Million Dead: 3,318
Frank Turner: 128,657 (and one Facebook Group called 'Frank Turner is God')

  1. Mike Patton of Faith No More was in an experimental metal band called Mr Bungle

This one is hardly a surprise, really. Mike Patton has hi fingers in almost as many pies (take that how you will, he is the Latin Love God after all) as Dave Grohl does when it comes to music. The man has done pretty much everything that can be done in the industry. He has been in rock bands, performed with rap and beat box acts, worked with Bjork and even voiced some of the special infected from the Valve zombie shoot-em-up Left 4 Dead.

Even within that career, however, Mr Bungle has to be amongst the strangest things he has done. We're talking strange enough to make the likes of Rammstein, Turbonegro and the Flaming Lips look positively normal. I really can't offer any words that would adequately describe the sheer epic lunacy that pervades their music.

One second they're playing a perfectly passable ska tune and it turns in to a heavy metal opus for no reason that is unfathomable to anyone but themselves. Somehow they managed to make it work and the band ran for five years from 1995-2000. I really would recommend checking it out, it's quite an enjoyable, if odd, experience. I guarantee you will have heard nothing like it before.

Likes

Mr Bungle: 50,425
Mike Patton: 550,100
Faith No More: 815,290

  1. Two members of the original lineup of the Foo Fighters were pioneers of the emo genre.

In 1994, after the death of Kurt Cobain and the resultant disbanding of Nirvana, the remaining members probably should have done the decent thing and faded in to obscurity, leaving the legacy of what is one of the most influential rock bands of all time to sit as an example to future generations of just how to get it right. One of them, bassist Krist Novoselic was kind enough to do that, but the drummer had other ideas. They always do, don't they?

Joking aside, I am actually a big fan of the Foo Fighters, and it is obvious that when they formed everyone was going to jump on the fact that the lineup contained two ex-members of one of the biggest bands to ever grace the earth (Grohl was joined by Nirvana touring guitarist Pat Smear.) Of course there had to be other members of the group, so Grohl brought in bassist Nate Mendel and drummer William Goldsmith of recently defunct emo legends Sunny Day Real Estate.

After a bust-up about drum tracks on what is the Foo Fighters most famous release, 'The Colour and the Shape' Goldsmith left the band, but Mendel continues on with them to this day.

Regarding Sunny Day Real Estate, they recently reformed. If you want to hear what real, authentic, original emo music sounds like check out their magnum opus 'Diary'. You may well be surprised to find that it's a lot different than the image of emo that is portrayed by the industry today. Oh, and try and ignore the fact that Mendel is an AIDS denier as well, because that just kind of sullies the whole thing.

Likes

Sunny Day Real Estate: 39,675
Foo Fighters: 6,985,931

  1. Oscar nominated singer-songwriter Elliott Smith started his career in a post-grunge band.

The tragic story of Elliott Smith is probably, alongside that of Jeff Buckley, one of the most well known tales of wasted talent in the history of modern rock music. A huge talent that nearly went to waste when he fell in to a habit of drink and drugs whilst trying to overcome the crippling depression that had plagued him his entire life.

Fortunately for the world of music, he managed to get over this addiction, but it wasn't long before Smith died in tragic circumstances. The exact events of his death have never been explained, but that day music lost one of its most prodigious young talents.

As mentioned above, he was nominated for the Oscar for Best Original Song in 1998, for the song 'Miss Misery', which appeared on the Good Will Hunting soundtrack. There's a good chance that had he not been up against the Celine Dion juggernaut that was 'My Heart Will Go On', that he would have walked away with the prize that day.

His final, and probably most famous album, 'From a Basement on a Hill', which was released posthumously, received universal acclaim. It exemplified the indie rock style that he was acclaimed for, but was in quite a contrast to his very early work with the post-grunge band Heatmiser.

Heatmiser, who were formed in Portland, Oregon, released three studio albums, all of which exhibit a heavy influence taken from the world famous grunge scene in nearby Seattle, which by this point had reached its peak.

Heatmiser didn't rest on these influences, however, and developed their own sound throughout their career, moving further away from the grunge sound with each album, whilst still maintaining enough of it to be recognisable.

Smith publicly denounced the band's work as “loud” after his solo career had taken off, and was reportedly very unhappy with his output during the life of the group. Personally I think this is a touch unfair, with some truly excellent songs across their whole discography.

Likes

Heatmiser: 5,010
Elliott Smith/Elliot Smith (combined): 334,784

  1. Moby was part of the original hardcore punk movement.

This one has been saved for last, because it has to be one of the most extreme changes in genre ever. It makes the tale of Sonny Moore leaving his job as singer of the post-hardcore band From First to Last to become global dubstep sensation Skrillex look like a positively normal occurrence in comparison. Can you imagine there being a revelation that prior to his life as a house DJ, Fat Boy Slim had taken time out of his busy schedule to help establish death metal as a breakaway force? It's on that level.

Moby rose to fame steadily during the 1990s, but the rocket really took off with 1999's 'Play'. For those readers who feel that they may have missed Moby's work, it is unlikely. 'Play' was the first album ever to have every single song licensed for an advertisement. You've almost certainly heard at least one of his songs somewhere.

In many ways, the early 2000s belonged to Moby. 'Play' and its follow up, '18' were multi-million sellers. He was probably the best selling electronic artist of this time, and can't have been far off the top in every genre. His use of guitars and his talents as a multi-instrumentalist gave him a lot of cross-genre appeal. His very public spat with controversial rapper Eminem even propelled him to the headlines of newspapers worldwide.

What not many people know is that he got his humble beginnings as part of one of the most controversial musical movements of all time: hardcore punk.

Hardcore punk is notorious for bands like Black Flag, who flat out encouraged their fans to kick the living shit out of each other (and often the band) during their shows. Can you imagine mild-mannered Moby being a part of such a movement? It's difficult to picture, but certainly true. Moby and his band the Vatican Commandos were a little late to the party, only forming in 1982, several years after hardcore had really taken shape, and disbanding near the end of the first wave in 1985. He even featured in the documentary 'American Hardcore', which focused on the development of the scene around the United States in the late 70s and early 80s, alongside the likes of punk luminary Henry Rollins.

Likes

Vatican Commandos: 251
Moby: 1,393,066

So there you have it, five groups and artists that have each changed the face of music in their own way, that have surprising origins. Just goes to show that you never really can judge a book by it's cover, eh?

Monday, 30 January 2012

When It's Time To Party We Will Make a Contextually Appropriate Playlist

Image copyright www.markstivers.com


Today's post is by guest contributor Tom. Enjoy!


Over the last few years, my party playlist has been the soundtrack to every party I've hosted and to every party where the host's asked if anybody has an iPod handy. It's about 4 hours of music that's been carefully honed so you can easily just dump it on the speakers on shuffle and ignore it. Inevitably somebody will eventually get drunk and switch it to their own music or search through for an Akon track you don't have, but the longer the playlist can last before that happens, the better I've done.
I'm not gonna pretend like I'm the king of music and that my word is final, but I want to share a few of the lessons I've learned while making this playlist.

RULE NUMBER ONE: BE / INOFFENSIVE / BE BE / INOFFENSIVE.
At most parties, around 80% of the people there don't give a shit about what's playing so long as they don't find it obnoxious to listen to. They won't touch the music until they hear something that pisses them off, so your number one job is to avoid pissing them off. Don't put on any heavy metal, because most people don't like heavy metal. If you put on rap music, it has to be rap music you can dance to. Skee Lo – I Wish is in, Kanye West – POWER is out. I had to cut off most of the outro to Cornelius – Count Five or Six because while it's a perfect party song the ending is so annoying and so long that everybody complains.

RULE NUMBER TWO: IT'S NOT YOUR PARTY PLAYLIST AND YOU CAN'T CRY IF YOU WANT TO
You have no idea how much I want to put Mindless Self Indulgence – Clarissa on the playlist, but I have to resist. The playlist isn't for me. It's for every party ever. It's for the art students and the gay dudes and the surf club and the nerds everybody in between. Nobody else likes Mindless Self Indulgence, so I have to leave it out.* You have to sacrifice some of your personal sacred cows if you want your playlist to be accessible to most people.

RULE NUMBER THREE: THERE AIN'T NO PARTY LIKE A SHIT CLUB PARTY**
Putting in songs that only have appeal for nostalgic/drunken singalong reasons is dangerous. People love to goof off and sing along to Mr Brightside or Don't Stop Believing or whatever, but only when they're drunk. If you overload your playlist with nostalgia-fueled songs that don't really hold up, people will lose interest. Same goes for ironic songs. Asher Roth – I Love College is fucking hilarious but it's only going to go over well in specific situations. Obviously you can put in Blur – Song 2 or Gary Numan – Cars, because those songs are still awesome. Just be smart about it.

RULE NUMBER FOUR: YOU! ME! DANCING!
Most of the playlist should be songs that not many people know but that anybody can idly dance along to. This is crucial for three reasons. 1: Songs that everybody knows are boring. The real reason for this playlist is to show off how cool and sexy you are with your taste in little-known bands. 2: Nobody really dances at parties, but the music may as well be white noise if it isn't making people involuntarily move to the beat. 3: If somebody has heard of the obscure song you've put into the playlist, they'll get excited and start a conversation with you about it. It's almost impossible to talk to people about music if you don't have a jump off point, and “OH SHIT! THIS BAND! OH SHIT!” is the perfect jump off point.

RULE NUMBER FIVE: EVERYTHING SUCKS (WHEN YOU PUT TOO MUCH OF IT INTO THE PARTY PLAYLIST)
Try not to have more than one song by any given band. Everybody can handle one Daft Punk song, but people that aren't fans will get annoyed if they have to listen to three or four. Same goes for extremely similar bands. Just because Queens of the Stone Age and Them Crooked Vultures are technically different bands doesn't mean that people won't hear Josh Homme's voice twice in a row and get mad at you.

RULE NUMBER SIX: YOU SAY PARTY! WE SAY (KEEP YOURSELF MENTALLY DETATCHED FROM THE STATUS OF THE MUSIC OR YOU'LL) DIE!
Of all the rules, this is the one I'm the worst at. When you put on the music, you have to let go. The music will always be in control of the person who's the most stubborn (unless I'm hosting the party because I can put the music on my laptop and turn off the internet), so if you don't want to spend the whole party stood by the speaker jack, scowling at people who get their phones out, you have to let it be. Somebody will put on their favourite song with complete disregard for how it fits into the party atmosphere and you have to smile and ignore it. Don't be that person. If you can help it.

RULE NUMBER SEVEN: HEY HEY HEY HEY / PARTY PLAYLIST EVERY DAY
You can never stop adjusting the party playlist. The party playlist is organic. The party playlist is constantly in flux. While writing this, I removed Yuck – Operation and added Yuck – Get Away (what was I thinking?!). The public opinion of an artist can shift suddenly and violently (See: Lana Del Ray), so if you want to be ready to start a musical party at any given moment, you have to be on top of that shit. Put any song that sounds like it might be good at a party into the playlist and then see how you feel about it in a few days. Once you've got a good few hours of solid stuff, you can start chopping and changing without too much sacrifice.
CONGRATULATIONS
If you did it right, you're now equipped with a valuable tool to get you through any party or party-like situation. All you need to do now is live every moment as if it's party playlist time. Godspeed.

*I snuck in Jaguar Love – Cherry Soda which is usually extremely unpopular. That's because if the one other person I know who loves that song is there we'll have so much fun that nobody dares touch that dial.
**Some of this one is related to the fact I've got my playlist set up to go on shuffle, you might be safer with nostalgic songs towards the end of your playlist if you've got something carefully crafted with an order and stuff.

Tom is a regular contributor to Oh No Video Games and can be found on Twitter.

Tuesday, 24 January 2012

EP Review: Fine Young Firecrackers - From the Ground Up

It's not often these days that I sit down and listen to a new band for the first time and simply devour an entire record by them. Sure, I quite regularly come across a band that has been kicking around for a few years (or decades) and listen to a seminal album that blows me away, but I just haven't found myself that wowed by 'new music' in the last few years. Many are the times that I have lamented to others that music these days just doesn't appeal to me as it did even a few years ago.

Take 2003 and 2004 for example. In those years alone, five albums were released that I would struggle to justify leaving out of my top ten favourite albums of all time. For the record, in case anyone cares, they are 'Deja Entendu' by Brand New, 'Where You Want To Be' by Taking Back Sunday, 'Futures' by Jimmy Eat World, 'Three Cheers For Sweet Revenge' by My Chemical Romance and 'Watch Out!' by Alexisonfire.

In the case of all of these records, bar Taking Back Sunday's, they were the first full albums I had heard by the bands after they had made the breakthrough. Each one in turn knocked me clean out of my socks, just for me to put them back on again and dust myself off in time to get knocked right back out of them again. It was almost unfair.

Now, I'm not trying to pull a grandad and say music was simply better in my day, rather that some of the styles of music I am inclined to listen to on a regular basis have evolved in a direction that doesn't appeal to me as much as the form it was in from about 2001-2006 (and if you can't work out what one of my favoured genres is from the list above, then I recommend a trip to Wikipedia and YouTube, post haste!) But that's the way music works, it constantly evolves in to new styles and trends and no-one is guaranteed to like the new direction it is taking, even if you liked where it was before.

In a way I'm quite grateful for this. Whereas before I was tied to listening to only a couple of genres on a regular basis, interspersed with the odd album or song from other styles, now that I can no longer rely on this narrow field for my kicks, I have had to expand my listening to include a much wider variety of music, and it's thanks to this that I feel more able to offer opinions about music on a blog like this.

However, this post isn't about why I became a blogger. For the first time in a long while, the other day I was introduced to a new band that I knew I was going to love within 30 seconds of the start of the first song I heard. The band in question is Fine Young Firecrackers, to whom I was introduced by an old work colleague. I was directed to a link where I could download a four track EP, 'From the Ground Up', which I instantly fell in love with.

A five-piece pop-punk act from Liverpool, Fine Young Firecrackers are full of the sort of youthful energy that has been sorely lacking from the genre since the likes of Blink 182, Green Day, the Offspring and Sum 41 grew up as bands and ditched the light-hearted and vivacious sound that characterised their earlier work.

With this EP, Fine Young Firecrackers' sound will inevitably be likened to the earlier works of bands like Fall Out Boy and fellow British pop-punkers You Me At Six, particularly with the last track of the EP, 'Landslide'. However, the songs offer so much more than this comparison suggests.

Blending at times a forceful drive to the guitars that is reminiscent of the more visceral aspects of Brand New's 2001 debut album 'Your Favorite Weapon', or the melodic hardcore of the Movielife's 2003 swansong '40 Hour Train Back to Penn', whom the band themselves site as an influence, with a similarly characteristic flowing vocal style as Dallas Green of City and Colour (and formerly Alexisonfire, RIP), all of the songs have a lot more bite to them than many of the bands that are currently putting out similar material.

'Landslide' in particular is a delight. After three minutes of fast-paced punk rock it isn't afraid to hit you hard and out of the blue with a cheeky, measured breakdown right at the end, and that itself characterises why this band is surely destined for greater things. They simply aren't afraid to occasionally ditch the traditional pop-punk methodology and hit you with something new and unexpected, which is very refreshing indeed.

Keep your eyes on these ones. I have a feeling that if they can keep on top of their obvious potential and use it to develop their sound for a full length release, you might be hearing a lot more from the Fine Young Firecrackers.

'From the Ground Up' is available as a free digital download here.

Sunday, 22 January 2012

The Never-Ending Nostalgia Trip

At the Drive-In's 2000 album,
'Relationship of Command'
Coachella has a lot to answer for, and we should probably be grateful for that. Well, most of us at any rate. This year's line-up announcement brought us the news that two of the finest alternative bands that the 1990s produced were dusting off their back-catalogues after the best part of a decade away and were reforming for the festival and beyond. At The Drive-In and Refused, kindly take a bow.

I didn't get a ticket. I'm deeply upset at this, as the rest of the lineup is just stellar, unlikely to be matched by anyone else this year. But this comes as no surprise to me, I haven't actually been to a festival since Coachella in 2007, spurred on by the comeback of Rage Against the Machine. The festival has made a name for itself with similar stunt-booking throughout the years, coaxing bands out of self-imposed "hiatuses" to come and play for the adoring masses under the beautiful Californian sky (see Pixies and RATM).

On the one hand, this is brilliant for fans like me. People who were late to the party, too young, or simply unaware of the brilliance of bands such as ATD-I to venture to a gig in their heyday. The opportunity to hear songs such as Pattern Against User, Pickpocket and the like live for myself is an utterly tantalising prospect. To the cynics and the jaded fans who were there before, it's potentially nothing more than a nostalgic cash-in, sullying the "legacy" that they had left behind. A legacy that is in the very DNA of every post-hardcore band that seemed to follow.

So the question is, why now? 2000's Relationship of Command was the band's breakthrough album, but ultimately led to the "indefinite" hiatus that has now come to an end. From their ashes came Sparta and the more-renowned The Mars Volta, perhaps best conveying where the band's priorities lay. I'm a novice when it comes to Sparta, but I did enjoy the first two Volta albums. Alas, every subsequent track I've heard since is the literal embodiment of guitar masturbation, with little to enjoy or even love unless you're on copious amounts of hallucinogenics. Which is probably the point.

In that case, I'm relieved that ATD-I are back. The news brought an endless stream of quoted lyrics and puns on my respective social media feeds, vocalising the sheer delight many of my peers felt. The most interesting response I heard was that it was a sign that modern-day bands have "failed", that we need bands like Refused and ATD-I to stoke the embers and restore some passion, vigour and violenc e to a music scene that holds Ed Sheeran aloft as some sort of hero. I'm inclined to agree, we might need them now more than ever.

If it is a cynical cash-grab, we'll know soon enough. But I just hope that the fire has returned, that they still have something to say and that any new material captures that sheer anger, energy and passion that made us fall in love with them in the first place. And make the lyrics as nonsensical as you need them to be, we'll be screaming along to every word.

Friday, 20 January 2012

We Used To Talk About Girls Who Played Guitars

Hayley Williams of Paramore performing.
Image copyright www.noisetrend.com

I would like to start this post off with a disclaimer. I don't listen to music made by girls. Now, before people start wildly accusing me of sexism, I would like to clarify this disclaimer somewhat.

My reasons for this are not because women are inherently inferior and are lacking the gift of musical ability that is so virulently apparent in men. It's not even because I think music made by women is bad, at least not any more. It certainly isn't because I am sexist, at least not consciously. In fact it is simply because the female led music I was exposed to when I first started to develop my music taste was, to put it bluntly, shit.

By the time I reached 14 or 15, the age where I started to make rational decisions about music (as my dad gleefully regales everyone in reach, I was a huge Spice Girls fanboy until I was 11) music television channels were in the ascendency and I got in to a lot of my early favourite bands through the likes of Kerrang and MTV2.

Back in my day (when all this were fields) the sort of female artists and women-led bands that were appearing on these kinds of TV stations were the likes of Avril Lavigne and Evanescence, both of whom, at best fall in to the same category as a lot of the generic tripe that Kerrang was pumping out around that time (Stain'd anyone?), and in the case of Avril Lavigne that is being VERY generous. The best that they could dredge out of the archives was 'Celebrity Skin' by professional-crack-addict-fronted grunge monkeys Hole. 

Furthermore I just didn't understand bands like Garbage, and I simply wasn't keen on the likes of Sleeper and Elastica, just as I was never really a big fan of most other Britpop artists. Literally the only song by a band whose singer was a woman that I saw on the likes of Kerrang and can remember thinking was even remotely passable whilst I was still in school was 'Take It Off' by the Donnas, and it's hardly Bohemian Rhapsody.

Adolescent me took one look at what was on offer and said “Is that the best you've got?” Of course, in hindsight, I was wrong, but at the time it was all I had. This was in the heady days when, as a young boy living in, essentially, the middle of nowhere in North Wales, my internet access was limited to dialup access and a Napster account. I remember being in awe of a friend who had 24 hours of mp3s on his PC.

As such, my only real option for new music was to buy it. Heady days indeed, but as a teenager without a job I could only afford to buy music I liked, or at least music that was similar to what I liked. Unfortunately, when I was 14 I fell in to the pitfall of grouping things in to genres, and thusly placed all female rockers and rock groups in to the same boat. The boat for music that is enjoyed by girls (that are smelly and probably have some form of lurgy).

The strangest thing is that there are a number of artists who are considered legends that at this time I wouldn't have hesitated to listen to. Nina Simone, for example, used to be (and still is) a big favourite of mine. I could happily stick on a Blondie album and go about my business, but for some reason because they were legends they transcended my image I had of women in rock at the time. It was like the rules I had for them didn't apply to everyone else.

This was equally true of other genres of course; I didn't like Fat Boy Slim or Eminem for example, so I didn't go out and buy any house or hip-hop albums either. Also, until recently I had mostly dismissed classic rock as being a genre that merited no investigation whatsoever, despite a predilection for the odd Led Zeppelin album. But none of that makes the generalisation that all female rock bands are rubbish any more right or justified. Sadly, for whatever reason, this is a stereotype that I haven't managed to shake out of my brain, at least up until quite recently.

Even today, if you look at the 300 or so artists in my iTunes library that have more than one song in their list, only 14 of them are exclusively female or have a female vocalist in a prominent role alongside a male singer. And one of them is the Black Eyed Peas, who shouldn't be counted on any list ever. That's just 4.66% of my entire music catalogue. 14 year old me would probably have worn a smug grin when hearing that statistic, but honestly, 26 year old me is just ashamed.

There have been times, in the years since when I have listened to female artists, whether because I wanted to or because I was offered no choice, and they have largely failed to change my mind. Particular examples I can remember were KT Tunstall, whom I found no better than OK, and Regina Spektor, whom I completely failed to get, and still do to this day. Of course, some artists slipped through the net and got a fair hearing like Azure Ray and Straylight Run, but I always considered them exceptions to the rule, and it was usually on the basis that they were connected in some way to another band I liked. Despite the likes of the legends I mentioned earlier, even seminal artists like Fleetwood Mac have only really recently become staples of my listening habits.

Sadly the stereotype was so firmly in place that it never once occurred to me that maybe I didn't like Tunstall and Spektor not because they were female artists but because they weren't playing the kind of music I enjoy. Subconscious sexism for the lose.

I am glad to say that, thanks to friends introducing me to new artists, and a general desire to listen to new music, my eyes, or should I say ears have been opened over the last year and this will be reflected in a couple of upcoming articles on this very blog. One even pointed out a few bands I didn't realise had prominently contributing women, such as Sonic Youth. I am, however, concerned that the image of female musicians that is being peddled by the music industry hasn't really changed that much since I was younger.

The likes of Katy Perry and Kelly Clarkson are at best being portrayed as lightweight bubbly sex symbols who rely on others to write their songs for them. The industry needs more stronger women like Rihanna and Lady Gaga to come to the forefront and change the image of female pop musicians, but in such a male dominate industry, it wouldn't surprise me if they don't, unless it becomes obvious there's a massive profit in it.

Sadly, the state of rock music isn't much better. The only band with a female vocalist that is in the mainstream rock scene today that is reaching a worldwide audience that comes immediately to mind is Paramore. While they of course are far from the first to break through, and are considerably better than a lot of what I was exposed to when I was first listening to proper music, they are one of the biggest bands to come around since the internet became a real driving force in music distribution and as such carry a large weight of responsibility on their shoulders to really change the image of women in rock for the better.

They won't be able to do it alone however. I'm hoping that the Paramore juggernaut, coupled with the rise to popularity of groups like the Naked and Famous and Warpaint, both of whom were high up the bill at last year's Reading and Leeds festivals; Flyleaf, who are making a big splash just below the surface as a screamo band to watch; and the likes of more established artists such as Tegan & Sara helps to serve as the first broadside shot at the institutional sexism that runs through the music industry.

Here's hoping, because people deserve to realise straight away that a lot of ladies are making a lot of good music out there, not twelve years too late. I'm glad I escaped the perceived image I had, and I know that others will be too. Girls are still smelly, though.