5.Freedun – M.I.A.
M.I.A’s latest album ‘AIM’ –
thought to perhaps be her last – has been well-received by some, but
not by others.
‘Freedun’ works pretty well though. It has a smooth, relaxing sound, but still
has some heavy beats to keep it moving along. The chorus is sung by ZAYN who,
since I’m not much of a boy band or ‘The X-Factor’ fan, I’ve literally just learned
as I’m writing this that he used to be in One Direction. (I’ve also literally just
learned as I’m writing this that One Direction used to be on ‘The X-Factor’.) Given
the rest of the album and M.I.A.’s career in general it seems like there might
be some political themes on this track, but it’s actually more about her
bragging than anything else, particularly the second verse (e.g. ‘Dinosaurs
died out and I’m still strong’). Still, give me a nice tune and I don’t mind
you telling me how great you are.
4.Skeleton Tree: album – Nick
Cave
This is the album following the
death of Cave’s son Arthur, who
fell off a cliff after taking LSD last year. Not that this tragic event has
likely changed the album much: Nick Cave’s albums are well-known for being dark
affairs, and he has said that he
wrote most of the lyrics before Arthur’s death. Lines like ‘You fell from
the sky, crash landed in a field near the river Adur’ – the first line on the
album – and ‘I called out, I called out, right across the sea’ from the closing
title track are possibly coincidental in their imagery then. And like David
Bowie with ‘Blackstar’ Nick Cave’s work is too multi-faceted to be simply reduced
to alluding to death.
Reviewers have generally been
effusive in
their praise of the album so far, and it looks like it may be up there with
‘Blackstar’ (and Radiohead, always Radiohead) on critics’ end-of-year ‘best
of’ lists. It hasn’t quite taken a hold of me yet. My favourite song is
definitely ‘Distant Sky’, which is a duet with Danish soprano Else Torp. Otherwise it’s
just another solid Nick Cave album to me so far. Maybe its power will be
revealed with more time, or maybe Cave’s music has always been so powerful that
even the most personally harrowing of circumstances doesn’t do much to affect
it.
3.Sunlit Youth: album – Local Natives
Now this album has been a
pleasant find. Local Natives are an LA indie band who have now released three
albums, and their latest – ‘Sunlit Youth’ – doesn’t really have a bad track on
it. Yeasayer is the most obvious comparison to me, though opening track ‘Villainy’
reminds me, at least vocally, of the Blue Nile (as does the album cover). If
you don’t know what I’m talking about that in itself tells you what corner of
the music world Local Natives occupy – pop/rock that its fans will love but won’t
be troubling the top of the charts any time soon. Other tracks I like, making
it hard to pick just one here, are ‘Fountains of Youth’, ‘Coins’, and ‘Dark
Days’, with the Cardigans’ Nina Persson.
2.Power Over Men – Jamie T
The new single from South
London’s Jamie T wouldn’t be out of place playing in an Austin Powers movie,
making it perhaps one of the more conventional tracks from his excellent album
‘Trick’. But that also means that it is a lot of fun. The track seems to be simply
about one of those good-looking women that makes men weak at the knees, just
with Jamie T’s more complex vocabulary – the phrase ‘she was never academic’
could be a substitute for ‘dumb blonde’.
The story gets a little more
interesting when Jamie suggests that this woman’s power not only makes men
drool, but also makes them engage in a bit of under-handed competition to win
her affections: ‘She walked in, I could say she looked good, I could she’s just
a friend / But that would just be throwing you off the scent … She’s under my
skin’. Then Jamie introduces a ‘twist’, which seems to just be the standard
plot device that this femme fatale will never fall in love – ‘she can never
really kiss’ – although the cause for this, ‘there’s never remiss’, doesn’t
quite make sense to me. She never has a ‘lack
of attention’? Did he just use the word ‘remiss’ because it
sounded good? I’m a little confused.
Then if you watch the video
clip the phrase ‘power over men’ takes on a further meaning …
1.Shut Up And Kiss Me – Angel
Olsen
Forcefulness and submission – many relationships have both, and they both seem to be present in this strident track from US singer-songwriter Angel Olsen. In part her voice is desperate: ‘This heart still beats for you’ she implores her lover, ‘I’m not going anywhere’. In part she’s damn well up for a fight: ‘I ain’t giving up tonight … Tell me what you think / And don’t delay’. Both sides collide in the chorus, in Olsen yelling ‘Shut up kiss me hold me tight!’ which she delivers in a way that you can’t tell who is grabbing who. She actually sounds to me a little like the singer from 1980s’ US band The Motels (Martha Davis) in this song.
Forcefulness and submission – many relationships have both, and they both seem to be present in this strident track from US singer-songwriter Angel Olsen. In part her voice is desperate: ‘This heart still beats for you’ she implores her lover, ‘I’m not going anywhere’. In part she’s damn well up for a fight: ‘I ain’t giving up tonight … Tell me what you think / And don’t delay’. Both sides collide in the chorus, in Olsen yelling ‘Shut up kiss me hold me tight!’ which she delivers in a way that you can’t tell who is grabbing who. She actually sounds to me a little like the singer from 1980s’ US band The Motels (Martha Davis) in this song.
The title of Olsen’s new
album is ‘MY WOMAN’, in capitals. Is that meant to contain forcefulness and
submission also? (I’m your woman, but I’m also MY WOMAN.) Anyway in a month
filled with notable new releases (Cave, M.I.A., Wilco, Teenage Fanclub,
Bastille, Okkervil River) Olsen’s and Jamie T’s albums are the two that sit
highest on my ‘buy list’.
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