Posted in Album Reviews

The Gorillaz – The Mountain (2026)

The newest album from cartoon band, The Gorillaz, is marked with grief, spirit, and remembrance. Both Damon Albarn and Jamie Hewlett lost close family members as they embarked to India to start working on The Mountain. The album has an international flair with Arabic singing on a couple of songs including “The Shadowy Light” and the peppy single, “The Manifesto” that is partly sung in Spanish, rapping courtesy of Trueno and Proof.

The album starts with the serene sounds of the title track, with its Indian influenced extended intro with spoken lyrics about the mountain and serenity standing out. The Indian sound later appears on “The Empty Dream Machine” where Albarn sings that “I thought I’d got my life straight”.  “The Hardest Things” is a shorter song on the emotions of trying to say goodbye, the theme carries over into “Orange County” with a few great verses by poet Kara Jackson.

Politics and religion clash a few times. Russell Mael from Sparks appears on “The Happy Dictator” about a trip Albarn took to Turkmenistan with his daughter where the leader of the country keeps bad news from the people in order to keep them happy. The welcome guitar sounds of Johnny Marr appear on a few tracks including the spacey “Plastic Guru” about a religious fraud who is focused on celebrity.

The voices of those who have left us are weaved throughout the album including Mark E. Smith, the rapping of Trugoy the Dove, Dennis Hopper, and the beloved Tony Allen amongst others. The album ends with two quieter, dreamy tracks concluding with God’s perspective on the sad state of humanity. “I gave you white sails to reach the sun/I gave you atoms, you built a bomb”. The Mountain is a fine album to escape into for an hour.

8/10

Posted in Album Reviews

Kate Bush – Never For Ever (1980)

Never For Ever was Kate Bush’s first album to go to #1 in the UK and amazingly, the first British female to accomplish this feat. Producing the 1980 album herself with audio engineer Jon Kelly, the album also saw her first use of the Fair Light digital synthesizer helping create atmospheric songs like “Delius (Song Of Summer)”. Never far away though are traditional instruments, the mandolin plucking on the old folk tale sound of single “Army Dreamers” and the Japanese Koto on “All We Ever Look For”. Both played by multi-instrumentalist brother Paddy.

Never For Ever is awash in intricate storytelling. “The Wedding List” tells of a bride taking revenge for the murder of her groom on their wedding night and first single “Breathing” takes the angle of a fetus, safe from harm in the womb during a nuclear fallout. One of Bush’s most popular songs is the lead track on the album. “Babooshka” is about a wife who tests her husband’s loyalty by writing to him under a pen name. Heady stuff for a 21 year old at the time. That she was able to infiltrate the mainstream with these types of songs is a staggering achievement of both sound and voice.

8/10

Posted in Album Reviews

Van Halen – Fair Warning (1981)

Nearly 45 years ago Diamond Dave and the Van Halen gang teamed up once again with producer Ted Templeman to record their fourth album, Fair Warning. You can practically smell the cheap apartments/rooms/cars this record banged out of all those years ago.  “Mean Street” is a tough as nails song about the down and out streets on the wrong side of town, Eddie Van Halen puts out staggering riffs over top.  More melodic, “Hear About It Later” sees David Lee Roth put in a really good bridge verse and Alex Van Halen powers through the outro.

Not to be outdone, Michael Anthony’s bass is the highlight of fan favourite “Unchained” about a “Blue eyed murder in a size five dress”. The only single released in North America was the upbeat rocker “So This Is Love?” before the short album finishes with the menacing synth tones of “Sunday Afternoon In the Park” that fades into “One Foot Out The Door”. Without any massive singles, the solid Fair Warning still went top 5 in the US and eventually hit double platinum.

7.5/10

Posted in Album Reviews

ABC – The Lexicon Of Love (1982)

The debut album from Sheffield band, ABC is a landmark 80s recording.  Produced by Trevor Horn with several arrangements done by the uber talented Anne Dudley, The Lexicon of Love fuses the disco/R+B sound of Chic, post punk influences, and emotional lyrics. First track, “Show Me”, shows specifically what the band excelled at – the blue eyed crooning of Martin Fry, solid bass grooves, horns, and glittery keyboards. “Poison Arrow” takes the formula straight into the UK top 10, a lounge version later appears on reissues of the album.

First single, “Tears Are Not Enough” can’t wait to get started and comes with horn stabs and a rougher vocal sound. Orchestral strings add to the drama of “Valentine’s Day” along with bright keyboards as Fry sings, “If you gave me a pound for all the moments I missed/And I got dancing lessons for all the lips I shoulda kissed/I’d be a millionaire, I’d be Fred Astaire”. “Date Stamp” adds female vocals to the mix as a contrast to the other tracks.

On an album filled with hooks, two songs really standout. “The Look Of Love (Part 1)” pulls back the reigns on the music early to let the vocals shine through on the album’s highest charting single. The song would appear on countless 80s compilation and introduce the band to North American audiences. ABC further show their classic songwriting abilities with the surging orchestration of “All Of My Heart”. A beautiful and heartbreaking song, a pain in the heart as Fry sings, “I hope and I pray that maybe someday/You’ll walk in the room with my heart”. The music takes over in the outro.

In the years that followed, The Lexicon Of Love grew to be one of the most acclaimed albums of the synth-pop era and regularly places on charts of the best albums of the decade. Listening nearly 45 year later, it’s the songwriting that truly stands out as many of these songs could have been hits in other eras.  Through several line-up changes over the years, it’s The Lexicon of Love that has endured through packages/repackages, and rightfully so, a true gem of an album.

10/10

Posted in Paper Chase

Robert Hilburn – The Life

For his biography on Paul Simon titled, The Life, Robert Hilburn is given extensive access to the musician’s friends and family.  Simon was interviewed for 100 hours to gain insight into his music and life.  The book focuses mainly on the music instead of the relationships and tabloid coverage which is mostly good for music fans though would have been interesting to read more about his years with Carrie Fisher. The stories from his childhood and coming up through the recording industry are fascinating. His relationship with Art Garfunkel is told throughout the book, as their relationship ebbs and flows with several reunion concerts.

Paul Simon as a man comes off as complex and the book stays mostly on his good side. Stories of his generosity abound with him giving songwriting credits to other musicians and paying above scale when he feels it is right.  The controversies surrounding the recording of Graceland are just as complex as Simon brushes off the criticism of recording in and touring various African countries. As a man, Simon is also portrayed with single minded ambition, coming off as harsh and aloof at times.

Hilburn writes about the massive successes but also touches on the failures – namely the One Trick Pony movie and The Capeman Broadway play that lasted only a few weeks. The last several chapters aren’t as interesting as they touch on Simon’s last few albums and print the lyrics of several songs. For fans of Paul Simon, and singer-songwriters in general, that want a deep dive into the music, The Life is a recommended read.

8/10