Monday 30 December 2013

A Year to Your Ear

OK, so I am back. And while I return from an extended break from writing about music, I have certainly continued to listen to way too much of it, so let's get right real, right now - lame movie device real. In the romantic comedy we just can't seem to live, the surest of surefire way to rekindle flickering love is to reenact the first meeting. So Full Kicks will now reintroduce itself the very way we did the first dance two years ago - with a year end post!

At least you know they love their label.
Some of my favourite artists added to stellar catalogues in 2013. Superchunk declared I Hate Music, which proved to be, while a slight tug on the reigns from 2010's perfectly named Majesty Shredding, an affecting, personal batch of songs that called for repeat visits. Album heart n' souler "Me & You & Jackie Mittoo" lets us in on why a band formed almost 25 years ago (and whose founding members include the cool parents of American indie rock) would claim to hate music. The song reminisces about a lost friend and lost youth in a brief (and fittingly rocking) way, while asking the same desperate, impossible question of music that we always ask of love: hey you - omnipotent and magical force that brought us together - if you cannot save us then what is the use? Music plays the role of a cruel angel, inextricably linked to people who we will never see again and people we will never be again. It's painful to face. The rest of the album scatters leaves of memories on a bedrock of trademark snarling guitars and balls out drumming from Jon Wurster. The music/love theme plays out for good on the best song in the set - the sad hook heavy "Low F" where singer Mac McCaughan asks for a little help picking himself up over a meandering guitar lead that gradually gets him to his feet. He finally musters the nerve to ask if "love" is "what will keep us upright?" I Hate Music sees a veteran band who have a history of seeking catharsis in its songs, bucking up and asking the right questions. Here on their 10th album, Superchunk is far past the point of dealing with the drama of youngish adulthood challenges like unrequited love and failed relationships in their music and rather now boldly face the death of someone very close with signature honesty and yeah, some great fucking songs! I'll drink to that, every damn time.


A true Scientist has glasses at the ready
It can be a challenge even for diehards (and bandmates) to keep up with Robert Pollard and Guided By Voices in a given twelve month period. Yes, there was a 2013 release from GBV and for the record, English Little League was a solid album and featured some great songs like "Flunky Minnows" and "Xeno Pariah" and the finest Tobin Sprout song in over a decade and a half called "Islands (She Talks In Rainbows)" - but what really stood out above the crowd and above expectations were Pollard's solo releases: July's Honey Locust Honky Tonk and December's Blazing Gentlemen.

Of the two, Honey Locust HonkTonk is the more consistent from a song writing perspective, but that is no slight on Blazing Gentlemen, as HLHT is Pollard's strongest start-to-finish set in years. The songs are fully realized which seems fully ridiculous as the man averages three or four albums a year. The standouts include the poppy "Who Buries The Undertaker?", the brilliant, sweeping drama of "Her Eyes Play Tricks On The Camera" and Pollard as roots-rock crooner "I Killed A Man Who Looks Like You".

Blazing Gentlemen is, by contrast, a rocker. Again with long-time collaborator/bench coach/multi-instrumented Todd Tobias at his side, Pollard eschews the mature, layered sound that worked so well just months before and cranks out some louder, hotter fare. And it fares so well! Especially sweet in the heat are the banging, classic rock steady "Return Of The Drums", the effervescent and micro-chorused "Tonight's The Rodeo" and my favourite one minute and 5 second experience of the year - "This Place Has Everything".


Diarrhea Planet I’m Rich Beyond Your Wildest Dreams
DP's expertly crafted sophomore LP is bookended with epic finales. Kickoff formation on “Lite Dream” is a series of heaves and slams that would cream the spandex of any legitimate arena metal encore crowd. The outro proves a fitting intro to a terrific rock n’ roll experience. By the time the smoking outro of 
Emmett’s Vision”  lifts, your ears will be grateful for the ringing. To be clear, this six-man tag team from Nashville with the sorta stupid name doesn’t just repeatedly hit you with finishing moves - there’s gold in them hills of shred. These guys are well-strung (four guitars!) and yes, their music often reaches gloriously for anthemic Andrew WK-style moments, but there is adept songwriting here as well.

In between the cacophonous finales, DP’s musicianship shines throughout I'm Rich Beyond Your Wildest Dreams: from the mini-juggernaut “Separations”, which somehow packs a chugging verse and bursting-at-the-seams chorus along with a tasteful dash of space-case noodlery all into 2 minutes and 17 seconds; to the glorious 'Bringin’ On The Heartbreak'-flavoured twin guitar soar-os of “Kids” ; to the expertly swirling, melodic Polvo-style interplay of “The Sound Of My Ceiling Fan” , these guys make a frequently beautiful racket that demands repeat listens. Full Kicks all around!

Other stuff I loved this year:
Audacity Butter Knife
Fullerton, California’s stellar garage brats had a difficult task in delivering a follow-up LP that could hang with their superb 2012 release, Mellow Gold. However, any doubts they could rise to the challenge are quickly erased 20 seconds into “Couldn’t Hold A Candle”, Butter Knife’s crack opener, as the snare drum rolls into a chugging verse and we are off to the races. And the fun never stops - the kids bring the insistent melodies and good natured snarl that marked its earlier material to burners like “Hole In The Sky” but also manage to competently expand their arsenal, throwing a pair of sweet change-ups to close. “Dancing Under Soft Light” is maybe their most confident song to date. It’s reminiscent of those buzzy glow, mid-tempo Replacements’ songs from the late 80s that could have been huge if they played ball. Album closer “Autumn” is an early Flaming Lips-flavoured piano warbler that finishes with a tasteful power pop outro. It provides a nudge toward what this fine band can grow to become and a nice surprise from a band that didn’t owe one. Full Kicks indeed - streak intact!

Pink Wine PinkWine 
Finally, a local band that lovingly marries the sound of the Sex Pistols and The Rubinoos! The debut LP from Pink Wine features 12 sick-catchy, snot rockets that punch in and out in less than 30 minutes. Singer Joel French shifts easily between playful – “I like pink wine/there’s just no denying/I like the taste/the way it always numbs my face”- and cutting “how could you be blue?/when being on your back is so fun for you?” And while French’s concerns swing between drinking in the park and dealing with rancid relationships, the band is killing it - the double-barbed hooks here are relentless and good fun.

Happy New Year,
STQ 


Wednesday 13 February 2013

Ask Not For Whom The Bell Bottoms Toll


Everyone has at least one favourite classic rock band. Some people even like The Doors. Though its hard to know exactly what qualifies as classic 21 years since Nevermind, let's be clear - end of 60s to late 70s is classic rock. And the vibe of this vintage has never really gone away. Sure in 1977, The Sex Pistols stuck a dagger in Emerson, Lake and Palmer (stay tuned), but that year was ripe for change - Zeppelin was burned out and struggling with family crises, the mid-70s Stones were hating each other, releasing lame solo albums and getting busted and The Who were two years since an album of I-drink-too-much-and-don’t-know-my-kids songs - the party was not exactly raging. As with all successful coups, the success or more accurately the impact of The Ramones, Pistols, Clash et al was in large part due to good timing. Punk rock/new wave flailed away at a lame beast and we are all enduringly thankful. But for all of the bluster and screech, that old time rock n' roll persevered. The Stones re-emerged in 1978 to reclaim their title of World's greatest with the killer Some Girls. Though the tragic losses of their irreplaceable drummers over the next couple of years pretty much vanquished The Who and Zeppelin, Queen and the emergence of AC/DC and Van Halen kept cocks rocking worldwide for years post-revolution rock. As it usually does, it makes more sense looking back. Punk rock grew from the same bastard roots as stadium rock: David Johansen was playing a drag queen Jerry Lee Jagger singing Bo Diddley songs. But it was a passionate fight at the time, ratcheted up by the evil presence of disco, of course...or was it? Did audiences really choose sides? 

Check out Rolling Stone magazine's critics top choices for "Album of The Year" in 1977:
  • Never Mind The Bollocks - Sex Pistols
  • Hotel California - Eagles
  • Rumours - Fleetwood Mac
  • My Aim Is True - Elvis Costello
  • Hard Again - Muddy Waters
  • Sadly, since this shirt, fashion
    rarely strikes a chord with me 
  • JT - James Taylor
Some monster titles there, or what? Johnny Rotten vs Stevie Nicks. And what did RS readers choose for Top Album? You guessed it - FLEETWOOD MAC! Ugh. Now, as I learned from stealing rock mags from the library in Grade 6, Creem Magazine had eclipsed RS as a cutting edge tastemaker as punk rock, new wave and later hair metal hit. I remember first educating myself about Van Halen and Iggy Pop in the pages of Boy Howdy. So, let's check out Creem's "cool" reader list for this huge year in rock n' roll history when the kids broke bad:

CREEM MAGAZINE 1977 READER POLL RESULTS

Top Albums
1. Fleetwood Mac- Rumours
2. Rolling Stones- Love You Live
3. Ted Nugent- Cat Scratch Fever
4. Kiss- Love Gun
5. Yes- Going For The One
6. Kiss- Alive II
7. Heart- Little Queen
8. Foghat- Live
9. Emerson, Lake & Palmer- Works, Vol. 1
10. Foreigner

HA HA HA! I won't name all of the others on the list but I will add that the utterly-forgotten Styx and the reprehensible Steve Miller made the fans' top 20. Yup, still dazed and still confused in 1977 (for reals, two fucking Kiss albums?!).

Go ahead, try to hate Foxygen
All this is to say that classic rock has survived. And that it must survive because we hear it now with an educated (perhaps the loosest interpretation of education, but bear with me) ear; keenly aware
of not just punk rock and disco but also of the new waves, hip hop, dance, (gulp) electronica, rap metal, (chest ... seizes ...) The Spin Doctors, etc and suddenly the Allmans and Doobies sound pretty fucking alright.
Like James Bond movies and the missionary position, we keep coming back to classic rock seeking comfort in its familiarity and its predictable joys. Sam France and Jonathan Rado are Foxygen. They are 22 year olds. They aren't really old enough to be that familiar with anything. But by now, you likely have read about Foxygen's  We Are The 21st Century Ambassadors of Peace and Magic, as music writers have gone into giddy seizures trying to document the references, influencers and cut & paste jobs in this young duo's latest work. Let me get a little bit of that out of the way and just say its got the big guns - Beatles in the majestic, trumpeting opener "In The Darkness", right down to the Sgt Peppers' drum sound and "ahh-ahhhs"So cocky and so loveable. The stunning "No Destruction" sounds like Lou Reed fronting the Stones. And from there, amazingly, there is no let-up. This album's stoned grooves are loose but never lazy with the melodies. The hooks are relentless. There are no psych freak outs nor any droning noise filler shit to clutter things. These guys are like The Brian Jonestown Massacre with talent and songs. "San Francisco" is the highest highlight here. It's a nimbly executed and nakedly pretty Bell and Sebastian-style lament that will be difficult for any band to top this year. France's vocal performance is impeccable, the phrasing delicate and textured. Elsewhere, France sounds a lot like Jagger - especially on the Prince-infused "Oh Yeah" and the pulsating rave-up of a title track. The arrangements and instrumentation prove as dexterous throughout the 9 songs. The fact that Foxygen is a two-man act allows them the versatility to so winningly shapeshift from Sly and the Family Stone to The Sonics, sometimes within the same song. 

Countless bands have sucked on the sixties and seventies, but Foxygen's exceptional exhalation is free love rock n' roll - funk, garage rock, soul, psychedelics - all delivered with an earnest, un-ironic joy. I'll drink to that. Every damn time.