Showing posts with label David Kitt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Kitt. Show all posts

Saturday, 29 March 2025

Previous Stuff

In June 2023, I posted the second disc of three CD-Rs of ripped albums gifted by my friend John in early 2010. Appropriately titled Stuff, the bundle contained a fair bit of stuff - artists and albums - that I wasn't familiar with.

Today's belated return visit focuses on disc !, and again I've collated a 9-track selection, sequenced in the order that the albums were presented on the CD-R.  Seven of the songs date from 2009, one from 2008 and one from 2010, which must have been freshly released when I received John's gift.

Editors appear here twice, not because I thought they're way better than anything else here, although In This Light And On This Evening is a very good album. The second track is the opener of a bonus mini-album, Cuttings II, which was included in the CD-R bundle of bootlegs.

John had previously shared music by David Kitt, which I like most of the time, depending on my mood/frame of the mind at the time. I love the instrumentation and structure but find - perhaps unfairly - that Kitt's voice can sound annoyingly indifferent at times. I like this song very much, though.

Both Editors and Doves were bands I was familiar with, yet hadn't heard any of their albums in full. I'd really liked the slew of remixes that accompanied the latter's Kingdom Of Rust and the album itself didn't disappoint either.

Likewise, Fever Ray. An astonishing solo debut from Karin Dreijer, and the beginning of an enduring fascination with their work. The same can be said for Laura Marling's debut, another artist that made an immediate impact and has grown with each album.

The Filthy Dukes album was a revelation. Based on a few tracks and remixes, I'd fully expected a collection of four-to-the-floor club bangers. Nonsense In The Dark proved to be much more complex and genre-challenging. Poison The Ivy, for example, features frYars aka Benjamin Garrett and sounds like a cover of a lost Joy Division song.

Although The Trials Of Van Occupanther will probably remain my favourite Midlake album, they proved with 2010 follow up The Courage Of Others that the parting of ways with Tim Smith wasn't the end of the road. 

Of course, around the same time Midlake also provided the musical bedrock for an artist who had been in a band and gone solo. So, 2010 saw the release of The Courage Of Others as well as Queen Of Denmark by John Grant. Whatever happened to him?!

Like the Filthy Dukes pastiche of Joy Division, The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart's self-titled first album sounded like it could have been released on Sarah Records back in the 1980s. However, this music was purely 21st Century NYC, not Eighties Bristol.

Come Saturday seemed like an obvious pick, knowing that I was going to post the selection today, though it's also a fair representation of the album as a whole.

When I posted disc 2 back in 2023, I doctored a negative image of John's self-produced sleeve for the headline photo. This time, I've taken it outside for a very welcome dose of springtime sunshine. 

I've just noticed that disc 3 includes a Christmas-themed album amongst the picks. I may not leave it until December - or another two years - before presenting the third and final part of this collection!
 
1) Learning How To Say Goodbye: David Kitt (2009)
2) Compulsion (Album Version): Doves (2009)
3) Papillon (Album Version): Editors (2009)
4) This House Is Full Of Noise: Editors (2009)
5) When I Grow Up (Album Version): Fever Ray (2009)
6) Poison The Ivy: Filthy Dukes ft. frYars (2009)
7) My Manic And I: Laura Marling (2008)
8) Bring Down: Midlake ft. Stephanie Dosen (2010)
9) Come Saturday: The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart (2009)
 
2008: Alas I Cannot Swim: 7
2009: Fever Ray: 5
2009: In This Light And On This Evening: 3
2009: In This Light And On This Evening / Cuttings II (limited edition 2x CD): 4
2009: Kingdom Of Rust: 2
2009: Nonsense In The Dark: 6
2009: The Nightsaver: 1
2009: The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart: 9
2010: The Courage Of Others: 8
 
Stuff (Disc 1) (40:40) (KF) (Mega)
Stuff (Disc 2) can be found here

Wednesday, 8 February 2023

David

'Nuff said.
 
1) Holy Thursday: David Axelrod (1968)
2) Diamonds Are Forever (Orchapella) (Cover of Shirley Bassey): David McAlmont / David Arnold (1997)
3) Rock On (Mojo Filter Gold Plated Edit By Ben Zaven Crane): David Essex (2019)
4) Rolling Downhill Backwards: David Nakedsson (2020)
5) Heart Of Gold: David Johansen (1981)
6) Hey Don't You Cry: Stuart A. Staples & David Boulter (2006)
7) Fill Your Heart: David Bowie (1971)
8) I Heard Wonders (Andrew Weatherall Instrumental Mix): David Holmes (2008)
9) The Way it Is: David McClymont (2022)
10) Magnolia (Cover of J.J. Cale): David Kitt (2004)

David (41:00) (Box) (Mega)

Thursday, 27 January 2022

Lay Lady Lay (Ten Times)

In a second nod to Bob Dylan this week, following Desolation Row's inclusion in Sunday's selection, recently the shuffle option on my iPhone has been relentless in offering up Lay Lady Lady, in various incarnations. 
 
To be honest, I had no idea I had so many versions of the song but why be selfish? Here's ten of them, stitched together in one 40-odd minute sequence for your aural pleasure or sonic torture, depending on your opinion of the song to begin with.

The selection starts off with Magnet (aka Norwegian singer-songwriter Even Johansen and not to be confused with this Magnet) joined by Irish singer-songwriter Gemma Hayes on a lush, orchestral version. 
 
Along the way, you get Byrdsian gospel, Ministry's grubby come hither, a soulful take from The Isley Brothers, Melanie's rousing folk and headphone indie from David Kitt, The Flaming Lips and The Dandy Warhols. Oh, and Duran Duran's offering from their frequently teeth-grinding mid-90s tribute album.

The only way to finish of course is with Bob Dylan's original from 1969's Nashville Skyline, a #5 hit in the UK and #7 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the USA.

1) Lay Lady Lay (Album Version): Magnet ft. Gemma Hayes (2004)
2) Lay Lady Lay: The Byrds (1969)
3) Lay Lady Lay: David Kitt (2007)
4) Lay Lady Lay (Album Version): Ministry (1996)
5) Lay Lady Lay: Duran Duran (1995)
6) Lay Lady Lay (Album Edit): The Isley Brothers (1971)
7) Lay Lady Lay: The Flaming Lips (2021)
8) Lay Lady Lay: Melanie (1972)
9) Lay Lady Lay: The Dandy Warhols (2008)
10) Lay Lady Lay: Bob Dylan (1969)

1969: Lay Lady Lay (7"): 2 
1969: Nashville Skyline: 10
1972: Garden In The City: 8
1976: The Best... Isley Brothers: 6
1995: Thank You: 5
1996: Filth Pig: 4
2004: On Your Side: 1
2007: Misfits Vol. 1: 3
2008: ...Earth To The Dandy Warhols... (Japan bonus tracks edition): 9
2021: Dylan Revisited (Uncut magazine promo CD): 7

Lay Lady Lay (Ten Times) (43:31) (GD) (M)
 
...and if you're a glutton for punishment, I did the same thing with Dylan's Sad Eyed Lady Of The Lowlands last summer.