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Archive for April, 2008

Salteens
Hallowed Ways 5422 KB
Hallowed Ways (2008, single)

The last Salteens album was released way back in 2003, so you’d be forgiven if you thought the Vancouver indie pop combo was dead and buried, or at least missing in action. That’s not entirely false, either—the band admits they didn’t really record anything for four years. But since the beginning of the new year, a reformed Salteens have been trying a new release tactic: instead of a new album, they plan to release two-track EPs online every month. The best part of it all is that the tracks will only cost you an e-mail address (presumably so they can add you to a mailing list of some sort).

“Hallowed Ways” is a fine reintroduction to the world of the Salteens; though the band are unlikely to return to the super-upbeat days of 2000’s Short Term Memories, the hooks and the horns are still around and it’s just as sweet as ever. Considering Scott Walker and company just spent a couple of weeks polishing up some demos, the final product sounds pretty good.

So far, there are two EPs out on the Salteens site for January and February, though the fruits of March’s labour will apparently be late in coming, no thanks to a flooded studio. It’s almost time for the April EP to come out too, so hopefully this doesn’t represent a major bump in the release schedule.

Fancey
Carry Me 2736 KB
Fancey (2004)

AM radio. If you’re like me and whoever wrote up the bio for Todd Fancey’s lovely band, Fancey, the phrase AM radio conjures up a very particular kind of sound—the more upbeat precursor to adult contemporary, perhaps, or maybe just a fuzzy, pop-fueled feeling of generic warmth and good times. I always think of Maria Maldaur’s “Midnight at the Oasis,” probably because of all the Time-Life Music commercials I saw as a kid for AM Gold compilations featuring the song along with 36 more of your favourite AM hits from the 70s.

Of course, one term that probably won’t come to mind when you think of AM radio is “challenging.” It’s not exactly cutting-edge music, and it’s not going to earn you any cool points. But not every piece of music has to push the boundaries; there’s still plenty of room in the world for the unassuming radio-friendly tunes Fancey specializes in. Two albums in, it’s pretty clear that Todd Fancey and company have plenty such songs in them, and less than a year after Schmancey’s release, word is that the band’s prepping a third album for this summer.

So if you’re not afraid of a little soft rock schmaltz, but don’t want the full-on Christopher Cross treatment (or the burden of explaining your “Sailing” fetish to your friends), try putting on a Fancey album on your next lazy sunny afternoon.

Indelicates
Sixteen 4354 KB
American Demo (2008)

The Pipettes have just replaced two of its frontwomen recently. “We Are the Pipettes” is going to sound awfully different from here on out, as RiotBecki and Rose drop out of the picture and Ani and Anna drop in. No one’s sure how the band will sound now that none of the band’s original frontwomen remain, but with 20 songs apparently written, we’ll likely find out soon enough. But as fans pick triage the damage on message boards and blogs all over, it’s perhaps worth noting that this has happened to the Pipettes before.

Once upon a time it was RiotBecki, Rosay and Julia. Occasionally calling herself Julia Caesar, her real name is Julia Clark-Lowes. The Pipettes concept was actually part her idea, along with Cassettes member and assumed svengali Monster Bobby. Even so, Clark-Lowes apparently wasn’t long for the band, and decided to stick around only as long as it took to find a new third Pipette. Though the band has mentioned her name a couple of times in interviews and generally doesn’t play down her role, most fans probably won’t know about Clark-Lowes’ involvement. Which may be for the best, as her next music project is just now bearing fruit: she hooked up with Simon Clayton at a poetry slam and decided to form their own band after she’d finished with the Pipettes. She did retain one element from her former girl group, though: Clayton and Clark-Lowes immediately became Simon and Julia Indelicate, leaders of a rock band called the Indelicates.

If the songs off the band’s MySpace are any indication, the Indelicates mix equal parts guitar crunch and piano-pop sweetness to create what at least one review has called twee punk—which actually sounds about right, if you think of the band in the same vein as American projects like Bunnygrunt and Tullycraft. “Sixteen” in particular sounds a bit like Kate Bush fronting the New Pornographers. Clark-Lowes’ cheery, swooning vocals, perched atop a bright foundation of power pop, make for a winning combination. And in case you’d like some more name-checking, imagine Heavenly as fronted by a raspy-voiced bloke and you’ve got “Julia, We Don’t Live in the Sixties.” If this is the sort of thing we can expect from Pipettes alumna, then the future looks bright for Becki and Rose indeed.

Quickspace
They Shoot Horse Don't They 13713 KB
The Death of Quickspace (2000)

Quickspace’s third and (so far) final album, The Death of Quickspace, holds the dubious honour of being the only album a record store employee has ever tried to talk me out of purchasing. It wasn’t exactly strong—just a simple “You sure? Do you want to listen to it first?” To this day I’m not sure why she thought to question the album—did she just not like it? Did she somehow remember me, some podunk high school kid who’d wander in on the occasional Wednesday afternoon after school let out early? Did someone else return the album saying it was crap? Was it an especially difficult album to get into, or maybe something only for people who knew what they were getting into? Because I sure as hell didn’t—I bought the album largely on the strength of the Matador name and the one song I’d heard off the album, the very song I’m posting tonight.

For a while, The Death of Quickspace sat unloved and unlistened on my shelf. It seemed maybe that record store girl was right—it was too abrasive, too long, too whatever. But like many albums I’ve been able to reassess with the passage of time, Quickspace’s final album is now a favourite of mine for many of the same reasons I wrote it off before. The key to unlocking the album, actually, turned out to be “A Rose,” track six of nine but essentially serving the purpose of the penultimate song (closer “4″ is basically 30 seconds of purposeful guitar noise). “A Rose” used to pass in one ear and out the other, the layers of noise on top managing to blot out what is actually a gorgeous song. But one day it all clicked—I can even remember the sunny-afternoon car ride when it happened—and now the song serves as prime evidence for my case that the best Quickspace songs are space rock played in a lush meadow.

The Death of Quickspace’s biggest asset over previous albums is the proper recording quality—no longer does it sound like the album’s being played on a low-bitrate internet stream. And though it only has nine tracks, two of which sound like different versions of other songs and one of which isn’t even a song, the album covers a wide variety of moods and volume levels in a much more concise package than the 70-minute Precious Falling. The Death of Quickspace was a breakthrough for the band in more ways than one—in addition to the cleaned-up sound and the continuing refinement of the Quickspace formula, the album was also the first to get a reasonably wide American release via Matador. But for whatever reason, the band failed to capitalize on the momentum, instead deciding to disappear altogether after they finished touring the release. Since then the Quickspace name and Tom Cullinan have popped up here and there, but no one’s really sure if the band is dead, on hiatus, in limbo, or somewhere in between.

Quickspace
Quickspace Happy Song #2
Precious Falling (1998)

Quickspace was/is a UK band born out of the ashes of Th’ Faith Healers, a Krautrock/drone-ish kind of indie pop group whose biggest claim to fame was supporting the Breeders and briefly sharing a label and a drummer with Stereolab. While most of the group went their separate ways into civilian life, Tom Cullinan had different ideas. After a fast but interrupted start out of the gates as Quickspace Supersport, Cullinan dropped half his band members and half the band’s name to become simply Quickspace.

1996 through 1998 represents the band’s most active period by far, with two albums and a couple of EPs ensuring that there was always a new Quickspace release every couple of months or so. Maintaining many of the drone-like qualities of Cullinan’s previous band while bolting on more free-ranging melodies, Quickspace’s best songs create an almost pastoral kind of noise—like space rock played in a sunny meadow lined with wildflowers and tall grass. Precious Falling, the band’s second album, covered a lot of bases, but all somehow manage to embody different variations of that same basic feeling. “Quickspace Happy Song #2″ is a lot noisier, while “Take Away” is more obviously bucolic and carefree, and “Obvious” exposes the band’s quieter side.

The major letdown is the sound, which like other similar records of the era (Prolapse’s The Italian Flag comes to mind, though it’s not nearly as bad) feels rather flat and lo-fi in a way that, for some reason, sounds even worse than the actual lo-fi movement in the American indie scene of the mid-90s. Luckily, Quickspace’s next album solved that problem quite nicely.

Long Blondes
Here Comes the Serious Bit
Couples (2008)

I’ve not bought it yet, but soon it will be mine: the new Long Blondes album. Here’s a lovely shouty track from Couples. If you’re like me, buying this album is pretty much a no-brainer, but if not, perhaps this song will convince you.

That’s all! A more considered response to follow in the near future.

Versus
Glitter of Love
Secret Swingers (1996)

Today I relived past glories—most of them other people’s, but a few of them mine. Pitchfork.tv started up this week, and the inaugural offerings range from “obvious attempt at positioning the new site” (Tim Harrington from Les Savy Fav interviewing prospective VJs) to “interesting if I cared about the band” (Man Man blowing up a trash can while recording their new album) to “amazing thing I wouldn’t have thought would be so great.” That last one is the Pixies reunion tour documentary, loudQUIETloud (online for one week only starting today), and it’s what made up most of my nostalgic musical roadtrip today. The Pixies have never been anywhere close to my favourite band, but seeing the forty-something members attempt to regroup and go back on tour after their long hiatus was really interesting, even to someone who has pitifully few Pixies albums and doesn’t really know very much about the band itself.

While watching the documentary and seeing the huge crowds at every show, and the teenaged kids giddy over meeting Kim Deal, and all the people who felt the band could do no wrong even as the band itself was wondering if they’d end up looking like fools, I reflected on why the Pixies didn’t seem to matter to me as much as it does to other people. I’ve had conversations with people where they’re shocked, shocked to find that there are people who could possibly not like the Pixies. “Everyone likes at least one song,” one of my friends told me, and it’s kinda true: people who know the Pixies generally like at least one of their songs. But that’s not the same as the undying devotion, the gratitude on display when the Pixies came back from the dead and blessed sold-out crowds with their mere presence. I don’t have that for the Pixies or for a lot of other bands that are often considered seminal or influential. I’ve always wondered why this is—is everything I listen to just weird, or mediocre, or is there something else to it?

One of the concerts I regret missing the most was a Sleater-Kinney concert some time in the late 90s. I would eventually see them three or four times, but it’s not Sleater-Kinney I feel bad about missing, but another band that opened for them: Versus. It turns out that the Sleater-Kinney show was the closest I ever came to seeing the long-running New York City indie rock band, who broke up shortly after touring 2000’s Hurrah. Versus will never have anywhere near the same clout or critical acclaim as the Pixies; besides the very small core group who still remembers albums like Secret Swingers and songs like “Fredrick’s of Hollywood,” no one seems particularly interested in Versus, except maybe as “that band before +/-” and even that’s stretching it.

But evidence of a Versus resurgence matters to me far more than the Pixies reunion ever did. On most objective metrics, Versus doesn’t even compare, but from a personal standpoint Versus wins hands down. It wasn’t the Pixies I would listen to constantly on the subway to and from high school. It wasn’t the Pixies that provided the soundtrack to my first year of college. It wasn’t Doolittle that I’d put on the radio late on a school night, or Surfer Rosa that I lent to my then-girlfriend; it was Secret Swingers. Incidentally, my friends laughed at me for giving my significant other that album because the first song was called “Lose that Dress.” I didn’t mean for it to be a come-on…

None of the above is any knock against the Pixies, of course. But the albums that have stuck with me over the years were the ones I made an acutely personal connection with, ones that ended up becoming markers for past lives. I remember running a bunch of errands on a Sunday afternoon the fall I went away to university, Hurrah blasting away in my headphones. I realized that for the first time ever, I was pretty much doing stuff on my own—no parents to have to ask for a drive, no curfew I had to meet, no house I had to be in that night besides my own dorm room. Nothing the Pixies have ever put out can possibly compete with that sort of personal attachment.

Seeing and hearing the footage from the shows Versus played late last year was a revelation. The band sounded just as good as they did eight years ago; the songs sounded just as vital, as if they hadn’t been sitting in a dusty box in the attic for a decade. It’s probably a sign that I’m getting old that I should hope for a full-blown Versus reunion, but at least I’m not the only one—people keep asking about Pavement reunions that probably won’t happen for a while, and Polvo’s getting back together for All Tomorrow’s Parties, and wait, isn’t there a Portishead album coming out in a few weeks? Maybe it’s time for my micro-generation to accept our fates and give in fully to nostalgia. If it means I get to listen to new Versus material, I’m willing to file my “too old to be cool” papers.

P.S. Two live versions and a whole bunch more available at the Versus MySpace. And seriously, watch that Pixies documentary, even if you’re not a fan.

Lullatone
Bedroom Bossa Band
Plays Pajama Pop Pour Vous (2006)

For a very long time, Mates of State served as my highwater mark for tweeness. The first album, My Solo Project, captured the duo at the height of their overwhelming cuteness—Kori Gardner and Jason Hammel shout out lyrics like giddy teenagers atop enthusiastically played organs and drums. The album is bookended by Gardner’s sister singing into a tape recorder when she was a kid. Oh, and did I neglect to mention the duo got married the year after My Solo Project came out? And have since left their mark as indie pop’s most adorable couple ever?

Well, at least they used to be, for now I have found an even more adorable couple: Lullatone. The more subdued, half-Japanese contemporary of Mates of State wins top billing in the cuteness sweepstakes for a number of reasons. First: Jason Hammel gave up medical school to keep touring and playing music with Gardner, which is pretty cute. But Lullatone members Shawn James Seymour and Yoshimi Tomida faced a transpacific divide: they both went to university in Kentucky, but Tomida was an exchange student and had to return to Japan when she graduated. So Seymour said fine, I’m coming with you. That’s even cuter.

Second, Lullatone’s sound—or lack of sound, in a sense—developed because Seymour used to compose music at night, and didn’t want to wake his significant other. Also adorable. Third, the music itself consists largely of toy instruments, found sounds (”The Bathroom Beat,” off their latest album of the same name, uses various bathtub noises for percussion) and Tomida’s gentle, hushed vocals—a classic tweepop recipe if I ever heard one, though not in the same exuberant fashion as Mates of State.

Finally, if you’re still not convinced, here is the promo video they put together for their Australian tour. Yes, Seymour and Tomida even put together the stop-motion.
And the US tour last year:

Dear lord, the cuteness. It’s enough to make you utterly sick to your stomach. I won’t even mention their flickrstream or blog because honestly, I don’t think humans are capable of taking in so much cuteness at once.