Friday 26 July 2024

Versions Galore

Side 1 of a cover versions cassette compilation, recorded 26th November 1999.

Preparing for the end of the millennium party with a mixtape of songs transformed or tortured by (then) contemporary. Who would have thought a quarter of a century on, many of these artists would still be recording and touring?

I recorded a trio of CD-Rs titled Hokey Karaoke for my friend Stuart in 2008 and posted the first of these on here in 2022. Only two duplications with this track list, one of them being the closer to this side by My Bloody Valentine which,, coincidentally, opens up the companion collection.

Great to be reminded of these songs, especially that superb O.M.D. bassline, Republica's OTT take on Gary Numan and what an awesome live act Senser were.
 
1) Waiting For The Man (Single Version): O.M.D. vs. The Velvet Underground (1980)
2) Stepping Stone (Ghost Dance Mix By Terry Farley & Mr. Suggs): The Farm vs. The Monkees (1991)
3) (Don't Fear) The Reaper (Single Version): Apollo 440 vs. Blue Öyster Cult (1995)
4) Children Of The Revolution (7" Mix): Baby Ford vs. T. Rex (1989)
5) Looking Down The Barrel Of A Gun (Live @ Reading Festival): Senser vs. Beastie Boys (1993)
6) Hanging Around (Album Version By Tony Visconti): Hazel O'Connor vs. The Stranglers (1981)
7) Sexual Healing: Anita Lane ft. Mick Harvey & Barry Adamson vs. Marvin Gaye (1993)
8) Jacky (7" Version By Trevor Horn & Brian Malouf): Marc Almond vs. Jacques Brel / Scott Walker (1991)
9) Something's Gotten Hold Of My Heart: Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds vs. Gene Pitney (1986)
10) Are 'Friends' Electric?: Republica vs. Tubeway Army (1997)
11) We Have All The Time In The World: My Bloody Valentine vs. Louis Armstrong (1993)
 
Side One (47:20) (KF) (Mega)

You can find Hokey Karaoke (Volume One) here

Thursday 25 July 2024

Dusted Off And Remixed

Another delve into the vaults for a review of Remixed by Mari Boine, first published on 8th April 2006, with newly added video and Bandcamp links.
 
Taken from the latter's artist biog, Mari Boine Persen is a "singer, musician, songwriter and activist from Sápmi, Norway. Her music is infused with her Sami roots (joik), jazz, rock and electronic sounds. Mari has worked with artists like Jan Garbarek and Bugge Wesseltoft, and participated in the breathtaking video clip One World One Voice. Her solo album 'Gula Gula' was released (internationally) on Peter Gabriel’s RealWorld label in 1990."
 
This is what I had to say about Remixed eighteen years ago.
 
 
I confess to a habitual acceptance of remixes and a borderline obsessive desire to track down reworks by artists as much as a band's original material. The result is a vast collection of obscure remixes by the likes of Andrew Weatherall, Slam, Fluke and Orbital, which often make the proverbial silk purse from a sow's ear. 
 
However, it will also frequently lead me to discover more artists and remixers, or just simply appreciate the record in it's own right. Such is the case with Norwegian artist Mari Boine's Remixed. 

 
I picked up this promo CD for a couple of quid, simply because it featured Jah Wobble, Bill Laswell and Biosphere, and thought that any other listening pleasure would be a bonus. What can I say? Ten tracks and just over an hour later and I've been playing it frequently ever since. 
 
 
Chilluminati provide an atmospheric opener in Gula Gula, neatly leading into Jah Wobble's distinctive bass on Cuovgi Liekkas, which roughly translates as 'Radiant Warmth', appropriately enough. 
 
The tempo then picks up with Those Norwegians' funky take on Gulkan Du, before taking it back down for the spine-tingling Alddagasat Ipmilat by Biosphere. Regardless of my familiarity with the artists, each of the remixes complement each other and use Boine's vocals to great effect, wisely tending to leave them intact. 
 
The notable exception is album closer, Ahccai by Phono*, which weaves a single note vocal into a pulsating beat that ensnares the listener. 
 
 
* If you're wondering why the description doesn't match the music via the Bandcamp link above, it's because I've belatedly discovered that the tracklisting on the promo CD I purchased was incorrect. 
 
Phono didn't remix Áhččai (track 10) but in fact Mun Da Han Lean Oaivamos (track 8), which samples Nelson Mandela.
 
Here's the version of Áhččai that I referred to, actually remixed by Future Prophecies aka Richard Thomas and Tony Anthun.
 
And to close my 2006 review:
 
I'm not sure that I'm curious enough to seek out Mari Boine's other releases, but Remixed will be troubling my CD player for some time.
 
 
Truer words rarely spoken. I still rate Remixed in 2024 but to date it remains the sole Mari Boine album in my collection.

Wednesday 24 July 2024

Lordy, Don't Leave Me All By Myself

In This World by Moby entered the UK Top 40 on 16th November 2002 at #35, spent another week at #60 then vanished from the countdown altogether. 
 
There's a sense of irony and inevitability, matching the song's lyrical and video's narrative theme. The latter depicts a group of aliens who set off from their home planet to make contact with the denizens of planet Earth. On arrival, they discover that they are miniscule compared to the animals and humans populating the planet and as a result are completely ignored. Eventually, they give up and return home. 
 
Moby's lyrics are so sparse that they arguably cannot be considered social commentary but there is something there to interpret about our individual search for meaning and relevance in our blip of existence on this crazy spinning rock.
A close family member is very ill right now and life is being measured in units of time, which is hard to process and it's bringing some of these thoughts and feelings to the fore. 
 
This song popped up on a random shuffle and the timing has gifted the song with a fresh meaning and relevance. Back in 2002, it was just another single from 18, the follow up to Moby's ridiculously successful album Play, which was marking a slow but steady decline in his chart fortunes. 
 
In This World was one of six singles lifted from 18, but the third and last to dent the UK Top 40. It's a good song but a little too reminiscent of the music from Play to have made much of an impression at the time.
 
What Moby has always been good at though is working with a range of female singers who lift what might otherwise be quite ordinary songs to a higher level. In This World is a good example, presented here in four versions, each with a different lead and imbuing the song with their own character and resonance.
 
The post leads off with the 2002 single version, as with the original album version, credited with the voice of Jennifer Price. However, the song itself samples Lord Don't Leave Me, a 1956 song by The Famous Davis Sisters - you can listen to the original here.
 
Performed live, In This World is stripped of much of the musical accompaniment from the studio version, which added momentum but inevitably dates the song. This happened very early on, as evidenced by this performance at Glastonbury in June 2003, just over a year after 18 had been released.
 
The singer with Mony's touring band from 2000 onwards was Diane Charlemagne, a consummate vocalist who sadly passed in 2015. Simple acoustic guitar, synth and violin throughout, but it's all about the voice. Wonderful.

Fast forward to March 2014 and a concert at The Fonda Theatre in Florida. The singer is Mindy Jones, who has frequently collaborated with Moby and here delivers a nuanced and measured performance. 
 
Last May, Moby released his 21st album, Resound NYC, revisiting songs from his back catalogue, orchestral arrangements with a range of guest vocalists. Surprisingly, the beats are back in this version which return some heft to the song, though somewhat at the expense of Marisha Wallace's otherwise sterling attempt. Not that I'd have been able to tell, but apparently that's Nicole Scherzinger providing harmony.

The Famous Davis Sisters' lead is unassailable, but for me it's the live version with Diane Charlemagne all the way.

Tuesday 23 July 2024

The Technicolour Explosion Of The Dancefloor

Are you ready Nic? Uh-huhJosefine? YeahSerra? OkayAlright Augustina, let's go!

Los Bitchos have delivered a second brace of singles to herald the arrival of album #2, Talkie Talkie, at the end of August.

Kiki, You Complete Me recreates Grand Theft Auto as an arcade game called Miami Drive, the song itself effortlessly soundtracking the breakneck race around the city.

1K! evokes the family holiday home movies of the 60s and 70s, although Los Bitchos clearly didn't film this in Weymouth or Tenby, my regular haunts as a kid. This one reminds me a little of Pista (Fresh Start), the first song I heard by the band, mixed up with some Spaghetti Western spices and simmered gently.

La Bomba is like a bath bomb dropped into hot water, an explosion of fizzing influences and inspiration. In just over two minutes, you get hints of Gimme! Gimme! Gimme! (A Man After Midnight) by ABBA, Ring My Bell by Anita Bell and Rasputin by Boney M. The video (and the cover of the single) throw in a nod to Bohemian Rhapsody by Queen but it's otherwise it's a smorgasbord of 80s stylistic nods throughout. 

Sticking with the 80s, sonically and visually, Don't Change is a bit of a red herring as Los Bitchos' sound has inevitably evolved since their debut album. It's so much bigger and bolder yet has lost none of the charm, energy and straight out fun of their previous recordings. The video for Don't Change matches the joie de vivre beat for beat, Serra's 'inflatable guitar solo' in the lapping surf is hilarious.

Los Bitchos played a brilliant set at Glastonbury last year. I can only find one song remaining online, but it's a doozy, the opening song of their first album, Let The Festivities Begin. titled The Link Is About To Die.

If you've got just over half an hour to spare, then I'd also recommend the set Los Bitchos performed for ARTE Concert last month, which includes performances of La Bomba and Don't Change, alongside the aforementioned Pista (Fresh Start) and The Link Is About To Die as well as the AA-side of last year's Pah! single - and a rare vocal outing - Tequila.

1:28 FFS 4:25 The Link Is About To Die 10:30 La Bomba 13:10 Lindsay Goes To Mykonos 16:31 Don't Change 20:25 Pista (Fresh Start) 24:05 Tripping At A Party 26:55 Let Me Cook You 30:40 Las Panteras 35:18 Tequilla

Los Bitchos are in the UK this weekend for the Deer Shed festival in Topcliffe, North Yorkshire and return for a full-on tour in October and November. Sadly, the latter dates coincide with a planned Clan K holiday so I won't get to experience Los Bitchos live this time around, but the album's on pre-order.

Monday 22 July 2024

There's Only One Way To Find Out...

Propaganda release their third album of all-new material in four decades in October. Founder members Michael Mertens and Ralf Dörper have teamed up with British singer/songwriter - and fellow Düsseldorf resident - Thunder Bae

The self-titled album contains eight songs, thirteen if you go for the limited double vinyl or CD editions. Purveyor Of Pleasure emerged as a lead single in May, with album opener They Call Me Nocebo following a few days ago.

More reminiscent of 1234, their 1990 album for Virgin, but with a harder sonic edge the songs are good...but are they great? 

If you're looking for something inspired more by the ZTT-era iteration of Propaganda, then Claudia Brücken and Susanne Freytag have you covered. They teamed up with original co-producer Stephen Lipson as xPropaganda to release The Heart Is Strange in 2022.

Not simply an attempt to recreate the past, there's an exciting dramatic tension to the music. And hearing Claudia and Susanne's voices together again? Wonderful.


But which is better?


Propaganda with Michael Mertens, Ralf Dörper and Thunder Bae?
Or xPropaganda featuring Claudia Brücken, Susanne Freytag and Stephen Lipson?




...or you can just buy either or both, as you please.

Sunday 21 July 2024

A Beautiful Number

I was thinking that this blog was long overdue more Julian Cope. A quick check also revealed that I posted a themed Cope selection on 21st July 2023, so the fates have spoken. 
 
As an added bonus, here's a photo of the Arch Drude stripped to his banana yellow keks on stage at the first Phoenix Festival in Stratford-Upon-Avon on 16th July 1993. I was there and no matter what consciousness-altering substances the audience may have consumed, Julian Cope out-psyched us all.
 
Today's dozen songs span releases from 1984 to 2024, from second solo album Fried to the most recent Cope's Notes collection of outtakes and lost versions, this time focusing on 1992's magnum opus Jehovahkill.

Amazingly, given the number of JC compilations I've posted already, I think I've managed to avoid using any songs (or versions, at least) that have featured on a previous Dubhed selection. Check for yourself, as I've reactivated links to all fifteen of them below. 
 
Is there really such a thing as too much Julian Cope?!
 
1) Paleface (1992)
2) All The Blowing-Themselves-Up Motherfuckers (Will Realise The Minute They Die That They Were Suckers) (2008)
3) Senile Get (1995)
4) Odin In Lindisfarne (2023)
5) Pristeen (Album Version) (1991)
6) Preaching Revolution (Album Version) (2009)
7) Poet Is Priest, A Number Of Numbers (1995)
8) Vive Le Suicide (2012)
9) Pulsar (Janice Long Session) (1984)
10) Desi (1989)
11) Stop Harping On About The Way Life Used To Be (2018)
12) Me Singing (Album Version) (1984)

1984: Fried: 12
1989: China Doll EP: 10
1991: Peggy Suicide: 5
1992: Fear Loves This Place EP: 1
1993: Floored Genius 2: Best Of The BBC Sessions 1983-1991: 9
1995: 20 Mothers: 3
2008: Black Sheep: 2
2009: The Unruly Imagination: 6 
2012: Psychedelic Revolution: 8
2018: Skellington 3: The All-New 21st Century Adventures Of Skellington: 11
2023: Robin Hood: 4
2024: Cope's Notes #6: Jehovahkill: 7

A Beautiful Number (47:28) (KF) (Mega)

A Cope cornucopia, for your listening pleasure...
 
And Suddenly! The Teardrop Explodes: 16th June 2024 / 1st July 2023
Born To Entertain: Live 1987-2020: 25th May 2021
Drawn And Quartered: 21st August 2022 
Drude, Where's My Car?: 21st July 2023
Everything Blows Me Away: 28th July 2021 
If You Can Call That Progress, Then We're Riding Different Bikes: 21st November 2021
Living One Hell Of A Heaven: 19th September 2021
Riding Through The Glen: 28th July 2023
Strangely Committed: 1st April 2023
The Hooded Antiquarian: 22nd November 2023
Upwards @ 65 Degrees: 21st October 2022
Urban Head Musics: 7th July 2021 / 15th February 2022
You Think It's Cool: 13th August 2021
21 Revolutions Per Minute: 21st October 2023

Saturday 20 July 2024

Bon Chic, Bon Genre

Last Friday (12th), Clan K experienced Nile Rodgers & Chic in the beautiful setting of Westonbirt Arboretum in Gloucestershire. It was our second consecutive annual trip to see a concert. And given that the first was a majestic set from Madness, the bar was high. But this is Nile Rodgers we're talking about here, it couldn't be anything less than brilliant, could it? Well...yes and no.

First support slot was filled by (it says here) "one of the UK’s most intriguing viral pop acts in the last 2 years". Now if that didn't immediately identify London 5-piece Deco then, like me, you are considerably out of touch. 

Here they are, posing for a pic with the Westonbirt crowd as a backdrop. The photo provides another useful reference point. See that white tent peak on the right, in the far distance? That's the (hideously overpriced) merch tent and that's roughly where Clan K were, with recycling bins behind us and rosé quaffing picknickers all around.

So, what were Deco like? No idea, we missed them completely. It's an occupational hazard with a Clan K venture, in any configuration. My desire to see every moment and every act on the line up is tempered by the reality of "getting ready", which invariably means that we'll invariably miss the opening act. 
 
Sorry about that, Deco, I'm sure you were fantastic, so here's recent single I Love That Song, with it's League Of Gentlemen-channeling video, to compensate.

Luckily for Clan K, there were two support acts that evening, and we arrived on-site just in time to catch the start of Sophie Ellis-Bextor's set. Sophie comes across as a sweet, lovely human being on TV and is always entertaining but I will confess that, apart from the song that she did with Spiller and uber-hit Murder On The Dancefloor, I'd struggle to name any other song that she's released. 

But that's okay! Perhaps Sophie had anticipated that I wouldn't be alone in this regard and this 8-song, 45-minute "Kitchen Disco" set largely consisted of other people's songs, plus the aforementioned two greatest hits.
 
I'm not going to lie and say that Sophie offered definitive versions of ABBA's Gimme! Gimme! Gimme! (A Man After Midnight) or Like A Prayer by Madonna, but she was lots of fun, self-deprecating and humorous and, most importantly, got the crowd going. Well, the thousands near the front at least. Back near the bins, several parties seemed more interested in inane chatter than enjoying the music, the swine!
 
Browsing my collection, I have only one Sophie solo song, a so-so cover of Duel by Propaganda, and a fair bit by her old band theaudience. I do have the CD single of Groovejet but I'm going to forego that and, in a nod to Strangeways' excellent guest series at The Vinyl Villain recently, here's Cinerama with their epic version of the song, recorded for a John Peel session in November 2003.

After a week of lousy wet weather, fortune smiled on us this Friday, with clear skies and pleasant temperatures as the sun began to descend. Everything was running as smooth as clockwork, with the main attraction due on at 9.00pm, so it was something of a surprise when Niles quietly appeared on stage (and on screen) early, the rest of the band joining him one by one. And then, in another unexpected turn, a belated, booming PA announcement of Nile Rodgers & Chic's arrival, reminiscent of a wrestling match. I was half-expecting the announcer to introduce "special guest star, Giant Haystacks"...!

Chic in 2024 are a 9-strong, super-slick machine, Nile with Jerry Barnes (bass), Russell Graham (keyboards), Richard Hilton (keyboards), Ken Gioffre (saxophone), Steve Jankowski (trumpet) and Ralph Rolle (drums). Vocals were mostly provided by Kimberly Davis and Audrey Martells, respectively left and right of Nile in the above picture, although I think pretty much all of the male musicians got to sing lead during the 25-song set.

Twenty-five songs, you say? Did Chic have that many hits? Well, no. As Nile explains during one of his (many, many) monologues throughout the night, Chic were not really that successful back in the day, on either side of the pond. Despite a slew of now-classic singles between 1977 and 1979, only 5 cracked the Top 10 in the UK and only one album, 1979's second C'est Chic, got into the Top 20 peaking at #2. 

Therefore, despite the band performing on stage, the emphasis here is on Nile's incredible career as a writer and producer, with less than a third of the set comprising Chic songs. So, there's an impressive run of hits by Diana Ross, Sister Sledge, Madonna, Beyoncé, Daft Punk, Duran Duran, Sheila & B. Devotion and David Bowie. Pretty much every one with a Sky Arts-style introduction. All fascinating stuff and, let's face it, at this point in his life, Nile can do what the bloody hell he wants on stage. But it does make for a rather disjointed experience, musically-speaking. 
 
And no-one really needs to hear the guys murdering the classics, vocally at least. The only time it's a bit more bearable is when drummer Ralph Rolle gets into a "funkosity" riff which at least involves some audience participation.

I may be alone in having a mixed reaction to the female singers too. Kimberly Davis leaned more heavily towards the kind of shouty vocal gymnastics that generall leave me cold but was much better when giving a more restrained and nuanced performance. Audrey Martells was the better performer of the two on the night for me and definitely had the best hair.
 
Kimberly and Audrey dominated the screens to each side of the stage, which was pretty much our only view of what was happening on stage. As the real star of the show, Nile seemed to have relatively little screen time, so we could hear but not really see his consummate guitar playing. Quite bizarre, on reflection.
 
Had we got deeper into the crowd, I think our experience would have been different, as it felt like many of the people around us didn't really have a clue who Nile Rodgers was. Given the sheer number of songs that Niles was cramming in, there was an inevitable over reliance on medleys in the first half. 
 
It did mean that it took me a while to warm up, but despite my misgivings the songs are so infectious that it's impossible not to Dance, Dance, Dance (Yowsah, Yowsah, Yowsah) and I was soon giving it my all.

Roughly ninety minutes later, Good Times morphed into Sugarhill Gang's Rappers Delight and then the concert just kind of stopped. Music piped through the PA as Nile announced that the song was Chic's new single with Purple Disco Machine. And then, he and the band left the stage. 
 
Many of the audience had already been packing up their food and booze, folding their chairs and blankets and hot footing it back to their cars to be 'first' in the queue to exit. Clan K hung on, in the hope of an encore that wasn't to come, then returned to our own vehicle. Our relatively late arrival meant that we were parked quite near the exit, so the price of missing Deco to get out and homeward bound fairly painlessly was worth paying, to be honest.

So, a weird night, all told. You can't deny the brilliance of the music and although it would never have happened, I would have been very happy with an all-Chic set. As it was, the night was a good education if you have no idea who Nile Rodgers is but not quite the unforgettable experience that I was hoping for.

As I can't possibly hope to recreate the set without inflicting a 5-hour Dubhed selection on you, I've instead gone for a 45-minute compilation of Chic classics and deep cuts, spanning 1977 to 1982.  
 
Will You Cry (When You Hear This Selection)? I hope not!
 
1) Good Times (Acappella) (1979)
2) Happy Man (1978)
3) My Forbidden Lover (Album Version) (1979)
4) Would You Be My Baby (1981)
5) Good Times (Edit) (1979)
6) Telling Lies (1981)
7) I Want Your Love (Edit) (1978)
8) Can't Stand To Love You (1979)
9) Soup For One (Single Version) (1982)
10) Dance, Dance, Dance (Yowsah, Yowsah, Yowsah) (Edit) (1977)
11) (Funny) Bone (1978)
12) Flash Back (1981)
13) Will You Cry (When You Hear This Song) (1979)
 
1977: Dance, Dance, Dance (Yowsah, Yowsah, Yowsah) EP: 10
1978: C'est Chic: 2, 11
1978: I Want Your Love EP: 7
1979: Good Times EP: 5
1979: Risqué: 3, 8, 13
1981: Take It Off: 4, 6, 12
1982: Soup For One EP: 9
1998: Classic Beats Volume 02: 1 

Bon Chic, Bon Genre (44:00) (KF) (Mega)
 
The artwork for today's selection is a collage of photos I took on the night, mostly Chic but squint and you'll spot Sophie in there somewhere.
 
The photo of Deco was posted by the band on their Twitter account.
 
The photos of Sophie Ellis-Bextor and Chic were taken by Nige Brown and published by the Stroud Times on 17th July. You can see more of Nige's work here.

Friday 19 July 2024

Whang Numbers

Six numbers by Nancy Whang, who I was delighted to see on stage with LCD Soundsystem at Glastonbury...well, courtesy of BBC iPlayer, if not in person.

So, what better excuse to revisit some of Nancy's extra curricular activity? I tried to select songs where she either assumes lead vocals or is up front in the mix. Trying then to find videos where Nancy makes an appearance was even tougher, so I pretty much copped out by the end. Sadly, her guest spot on IDLES' 2023 single Dancer doesn't make the cut on both counts.

However, plenty to enjoy along the way, closing with a sampler from a 2014 EP of Nancy covering some Casablanca Records catalogue classics which may have you reaching for your credit card.

And not to ignore LCD Soundsystem completely, here's a timely reminder of one of James, Nancy and the crew's finest moments.

Happy House: The Juan MacLean (2008)
All You're Waiting For: Classixx ft. Nancy Whang (2013)
Do That Dance: Shit Robot ft. Nancy Whang (2014)
E Talking (Nite Version - Felix Da Housecat Edit): Soulwax ft. Nancy Whang (2005)
Sharevari: Aidan Noell ft. Nancy Whang (2022)
I Was Made For Loving You (Extended Version) (Cover of Kiss): Nancy Whang & Drop Out Orchestra (2014)
 
 
 
 
 

Thursday 18 July 2024

If You Want My Future, Forget My Past

I've just caught up with Orbital's set at Glastonbury, including a majestic performance of Spicy featuring the legendary Mel C and one of the highlights of my (limited) TV viewing experience so far. You wouldn't believe the trio on stage had a combined age of 166, would you?
 
My house mate Jason was obsessed with Emma (Baby Spice) at the height of Spice Girls mania. We lost contact many years ago, but a quick glance online indicates that his plan to one day become Mr. Bunton never bore fruit. 
 
Visiting my friends Vicky and Simon was always a delightful and unpredictable experience. They lived in a brilliant three-storey house with a topsy-turvey layout with a stairs leading to an upstairs lounge. It was no surprise one evening to find the stairwell had been adorned with tiny plinths all the way up to showcase each of the five Spice Girls
12” dolls. They loved them all (dolls and humans) but Geri (Ginger Spice) was their favourite. 
 
Neither for me though: Mel B (Scary) and Mel C (Sporty) were the most interesting personalities, who looked like they were having the most fun and gave the least of a damn about conventions and rules. 
 
I won't pretend that I've followed either's musical ventures post-Spice Girls, though Mel(anie) C's guest spot on When You're Gone in 1998 made a Bryan Adams record bearable. Jez featured the song in his excellent Friday Music Club mix over at A History Of Dubious Taste a couple of weeks ago, stating that "I’m not going to apologise for Track 11. It’s a bloody great pop record. Fact." He's spot on, of course.
 
Likewise, no apologies for posting the Spice Girls' finest moment and the inspiration for Orbital's track. One of the best music videos and debut singles ever...even if I'm still not quite sure what the "Posh" one actually did... Both Mels steal the show, obviously.

Paul, Phil, Mel C, great work!

Wednesday 17 July 2024

Music Instigates Transcendence

Alan Sparhawk dropped a new single and video on Tuesday, the abrasive and unsettling Can U Hear.

It's two hundred and nine seconds of skittering beats, relentless synthetic bass and pitch-shifting vocals that sound like the bastard child of Believe by Cher. All inspired by kit that Alan's kids used to play around with in the studio with their friends. 

There will be a lot of discourse and commentary about Alan's motivation and inspiration for this - and forthcoming album White Roses, My God. The loss of Alan's wife Mimi Parker in 2022 was inevitably a crushing, life-changing moment and brought about an unwanted, seismic change, not least closing the door on Low, the band they had co-founded (with John Nichols) three decades previously.

But that would completely ignore Alan's questing spirit, hunger for new sonic experiences and, to slightly paraphrase one of his own comments in the promo, "tapping into a part of me that I’ve come to trust, so I [keep] recording."
 
Can U Hear sounds like nothing Alan has recorded before, yet simultaneously an "of course" moment that sounds exactly like what his next venture should be.

 
White Roses, My God is out on 27th September, with a tour to transform the music further in a live setting. 
 
Alan is in the UK for two consecutive concerts in Leeds and Cardiff, the latter on Tuesday 5th November. The following day will mark three years since Mimi's passing. I hope the love and empathy of the audience will provide a healing balm for Alan's unimaginable loss.