Thursday 19 March 2009

10 Albums From 1989 That Are Better Than The Stone Roses

This week saw people get their knickers in a twist about a Stone Roses reunion. Again. Now don't get me wrong, I think The Stone Rosess is a really good album, but it certainly has its fair share of filler - and don't forget Elephant Stone wasn't even on the original album. FAIL.
So time for a bit of perspective. Here's a list of albums that also came out in 1989 and are better than the Roses' debut. It also inadvertently helps to illustrate some of the gaping holes in the Spotify catalogue - only five of these full albums are on there. Pah!
So in no particular order...

Lou Reed New York - no one was expecting Lou Reed to come back with an album this good, abunch of sketches about the city and various NY characters. Romeo Had Juliette, Dirty Blvd, Busload Of Faith - the Lou Reed album I still play most.

Ministry The Mind Is A Terrible Thing To Taste - in 1989 I thought Al Jourgensen was a genius - he'd worked or went on to work with Jello Biafra and Ian MacKaye, Skinny Puppy, Cabaret Voltaire and Revolting Cocks amongst others. Who knew it'd all go downhill after one more album. This still sounds pretty intense.

De La Soul 3 Feet High And Rising - 1988-1990 was when skinny white boys like me* 'got' hip-hop, pretty much thanks to this album and...

Beastie Boys Pauls Boutique - At the time, the overlooked follow up to 'Licensed To Ill'. Now acknowledged as the classic it is.

Nirvana Bleach - this debut is rough and ready but that's its charm. The riff from School, Swap Meet, Been A Son, About A Girl. Fuckin' A. At the time I thought this was a better album than...

Pixies Doolittle - with hindsight, a better album than Bleach. Is it a better album than Surfer Rosa? I think so. It's definitely better than The Stone Roses. Even the sleeve's better.

Rapeman Two Nuns And A Pack Mule - Get past the controversial name and it's an awesome album. Also features one of the best cover versions EVER in Just Got Paid (ZZ Top). I wish Albini had done another album more like this rather than the first Shellac album.

Pop will Eat Itself This is the day..The hour..This is. - scrappy grebo band embrace sampling culture to great success. Wake Up...Time To Die, Can U Dig It, Wise Up Suckers!', Def Con One. All brilliant.

The Cure Disintegration Their last great album. Lovesong, Fascination Street, Pictures Of You, need I say more? Even casual fans should own this one.

Fugazi 13 Songs - OK, this one is a bit of cheat as it's a compilation of their first two vinyl EPs, but if you only own one record on this list, I'd suggest it should be this. Still sounds like the most exciting thing ever committed to tape.

That's the definitive list as of this morning. Have I missed anything off?

*yeah, I was skinny in 1989
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Monday 16 March 2009

Yeah Yeah Yeahs ‘It’s Blitz’

Yeah Yeah Yeahs burst into my consciousness when the fractured energy of Bang first filled the Xfm airwaves eight years ago. An iconic lead singer with an electrifying presence, a drummer and guitarist who clearly understood that art rock dynamics and sonic experimentation weren’t the enemy of catchy songs, this was a band that couldn’t fail to excite. Their full length debut Fever To Tell certainly delivered on all the promise.

However, 2006’s Show Your Bones met with a cool response from some quarters, Pitchfork saying it “sounds guarded, with very little danger and too few moments of real urgency” and The Guardian claiming “the band are still struggling to raise their game beyond White Stripes-goth-lite”. If casual fans struggled with the direction of that album, it’ll be interesting to see what they make of It’s Blitz!.

Early reports revealed that production was going to be shared between long time knob twiddler David Sitek and the man who helmed 2007’s Is Is EP, Nick Launay. Given the band’s acknowledgement that Launay’s work with Public Image Limited was why they wanted to work with him in the first place, along with Nick Zinner’s recently declared love for vintage synths, it was clear that the album was going to take at least some of its cues from the early 80s. Sure, first tune out of the traps Zero certainly hit everyone in the chest, driven along by squelching synth/heavily effected rumbling guitar line, its dynamic structure and feel coming across like the mutant dancefloor cousin of Muse’s Map Of The Problematique, but once you get past that first song those influences come thick and fast.

Heads Will Roll shamelessly ‘borrows’ from PiL’s This Is Not A Love Song; Skeleton Me is the missing track from OMD’s Architecture And Morality (it even has a faux martial /highland pipers bit like in Maid Of Orleans); while the scratchy guitars and syncopated bassline of Dragon Queen funks along nicely. All of a sudden Zero starts to look like the band throwing everyone a bit of a curveball.

Elsewhere, the spirit of Fever To Tell can be felt on Dull Life and Shame And Fortune, the former the only track on the album that comes close to matching the tempo of Zero, the latter featuring some serious fuzz and a yelping vocals. Those looking for this album’s Maps or Cheating Hearts should check out Runaway. With a simple piano intro, some great power ballad drumming, ebowed guitar, tortured strings and synths that could have been lifted straight off Duran Duran’s first album (check out To The Shore), it features one of Karen O’s most melancholy lyrics “I was feeling sad / can’t help looking back / want you to stay / want you to be my prize”. Easily their best chance for a massive hit single.

When the band announced the title of the album some hoped this was going to be their hardest record yet, few would have imagined it likely they might be referencing the club that birthed the new romantic movement. While I’d still like to hear an album that is 10 different versions of Machine, to these ears Its Blitz! is the sound of the band appropriating the best bits of a much maligned era and effortlessly creating something that sounds new and vital. No mean trick, but it’ll be interesting to see if everyone else is convinced.
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