5.Lady’s In Trouble With The
Law – LA Priest
Late of the
Pier was one of the better short-lived bands of the late 2000s, with great
tracks like ‘The Bears Are Coming’ and ‘Random Firl’. Singer Sam Dust has now
gone on to release music under the name LA Priest. Apparently he has been
working with New Zealand singer Connar Mockasin, and man, does it sound like
it! ‘Lady’s In Trouble With The Law’ has exactly the same ‘70s lounge room feel
that we’ve come to expect from Mockasin’s own work. (By the way, I think I saw
Connar Mockasin standing nearby in front of me at the Laneway Festival after he
performed this year. He’s astoundingly short if it was him; his lady friend
seemed a good few inches taller.)
4.Dreams – Beck
After
dissing Beck following his Grammy win for ‘Morning Phase’, Kanye West reportedly admitted that
he had heard the album and quite liked it. Maybe that’s because it reminded him of his friend
Bon Iver. Anyway, ‘Dreams’ has a beat that is more like what I expect Kanye
would be used to, harking back a little to Beck’s ‘Midnite Vultures’ era, but
with a bit of the picked-acoustic, bird-at-the-window ‘Morning Phase’ feel as
well. Sexxlaws is back, baby!
3.Waves – Miguel
I’m not a
big R&B fan at all, but I do like Miguel’s latest album. It’s a bit of a cliché
to think of R&B artists as sitting in the back of a car, sunroof open, beach
in the background. ‘Waves’ however is like the perfect soundtrack to that type
of image. The chorus ‘I wanna ride that wave’ seems like all that every LA tune
has ever wanted to say; Miguel though somehow delivers the line with more cool
and depth than your standard ‘at da club’ vocalist.
2.Silk – Wolf Alice
1.Bros – Wolf Alice
The recent NME review of Wolf Alice’s album called it ‘the debut of the decade
so far’. Since I can’t recall a better one I agree. Wolf Alice are like a My
Bloody Valentine if the latter hadn’t hidden their tunes behind a wall of
distorted guitar.
There are
plenty of tracks that are of the same high quality as ‘Silk’, but I wanted to
highlight that one because it’s the one – apart from the one below – that has
stayed in my head, and is a definite change of pace from the rest of the album.
Whereas most of Wolf Alice’s tracks settle into a (compelling) groove, the
vocals on ‘Silk’ change up every few lines, with some bits – e.g. ‘At least you’re
not boring’ – still feeling like a mild surprise even when you’ve heard the
song a few times through. It’s a good sign the band know how to craft a track, and
not just play downstrokes repeatedly until four or five minutes are up.
NME, in its current Wolf Alice frenzy, termed the album’s second track
‘Bros’ a Proper Festival Anthem,
after it got a good reception at Glastonbury. While I haven’t experienced it
myself I imagine that standing in a grassy field high on your favourite happy
drugs does feel a bit like this track. The lyrics also make you want to drape
your arm over your friend’s shoulder: ‘Oh, I’m so lucky, you are my best
friend/Oh, there’s no one, there’s no one who knows me like you do’. It makes
one long to be twenty-two with long hair again. (Note: my hair at twenty-two
was not that long.) But even at thirty-five I am more excited about Wolf
Alice’s music than any other band this year, despite my initial antipathy
towards them. (Wolf Alice - ?! Sounds
like a hippy-dippy millennial band … ) Highly recommended.
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