Posted in Listed

Favourite Albums of 2021

Blue Banisters (2LP)

5.  Lana Del Rey – Blue Banisters:  Lana Del Rey put her work foot down in 2021 and released two fine albums. Her second release, Blue Banisters, gets the slight nod for favourite of the year. What Lana does very well is create a vibe and feeling. Mixing new songs with older recordings, this was an album to sink into while drifting away.

Screen Violence (Vinyl)

4.  Chvrches – Screen Violence:  A few members of the Scottish band have relocated to LA but the band has continued through the travels. Lauren Mayberry’s voice adds a human element to their often dense, electronic sound. Robert Smith shows up on “How Not To Drown” and it’s a testament to the band that he adds to the track instead of overshadowing the younger Glaswegians.

Open Door Policy (Vinyl)

3.  The Hold Steady – Open Door Policy:  The Hold Steady’s first album with keyboardist Franz Nicolay was welcomed with open arms. The wordy wordplay of Craig Finn is punctuated with horns and flourishes that add an extra dose of excitement. It was an album to make some of us fall for the band all over again after not listening for a few years.

The Nearer the Fountain, More Pure the Stream Flows

2.  Damon Albarn – The Nearer The Fountain, More Pure The Stream Flows:  The blur and Gorillaz leader returns with his first solo album in seven years. The influence was Iceland but also his home in Devon and the lockdown. Paranoia and danger mixes with beauty and wonder on the minimal album that is not perfect but one that we returned to time and time again.

Blue Weekend [Softpack]

1.  Wolf Alice – Blue Weekend:  Right from first listen it was going to be hard to knock Wolf Alice off our list as the album of the year. The London band mixed many alternative rock styles from the last 30 years to create a memorable ride through their eclectic world. While, “Delicious Things” was the highlight, several other songs shone such as the blast of “Play The Greatest Hits” and the much softer “No Hard Feelings”. It all hangs together terrifically well as the band looks equally to the oil filled water in the gutter as they do the bright stadium lights.

Posted in Album Reviews

Oasis – Knebworth 1996 (2CD + DVD Edition) (2021)

Oasis - Knebworth 1996 [Blu-ray]

Music documentaries was a crowded marketplace in 2021.  The most anticipated being Peter Jackson’s magnificent reworking of The Beatles Let It Be documentary, Get Back.  The Velvet Underground and Sparks both had well received screen time.  Bill Simmons introduced his Music Box series with Woodstock ’99 that detailed the lack of peace and love that thousands of Nu Metal fans inflicted on the festival.

In November, an antidote to all the critics bemoaning the state of youth culture in the Woodstock doc came out as nostalgia hit the mid-90s with the 25 year anniversary of Oasis’ famous Knebworth gigs. In 1996, 250,000 fans gathered in a field to celebrate one of the peak happenings of the Britpop era. The first two discs on this edition captures the setlist in order, mixing in recordings on both nights. It’s an astonishing run through the hits, album tracks, and B-sides taken mostly from the first two Oasis albums.

Opener “Columbia” catches the band in full rock and roll psychedelia before a guitar scrawl announces the arrival of could have been single, “Acquiesce”. Noel Gallagher implores the crowd to jump as the band launches into the previous year’s number two single, “Roll With It”. An impassioned version of Definitely Maybe’s classic album track “Slide Away” sees Liam Gallagher add vulnerability while mixing a punk snarl with a rock n roll stance.

Having been released as singles within the year, “Wonderwall” and a harder rock version of “Don’t Look Back in Anger” are treated as pop songs vs the reverential treatment they would receive in later years. Sandwiched between the two tracks, is classic B-side “The Masterplan” with harmonica accompaniment that nearly eclipses its more famous ballad song mates. In a quirk of timing, the band debuts two new songs towards the end of the concert from the Be Here Now album that would be released a year later. John Squire adds a massive guitar solo to “Champagne Supernova” before the band closes with their cover of The Beatles’ “I Am The Walrus”. 

The Knebworth shows catch the band at their apex of the Mach II line-up with Guigsy on bass, Bonehead on guitar and Alan White on drums. As Noel later describes, Liam is at the peak of his powers in both voice and fashion. What the band delivers over and over again across the two discs is the sound of youth culture – being on the dole, drinking, listening to music, living your life, and living forever.  This line-up would carry on for one more album but it was never quite the same after Knebworth for both the band and its fans.

The DVD documentary of the weekend mixes in fans speaking of their experiences along with the concert performances.  The stories are interesting but may not hold up to repeated listening.  For many fans that were not there, it will be easy to see their own stories told on the screen.  One particular highlight being the lad that asks Liam for his tambourine half way through the show, then Liam finding him at the end to give it to him. 

While in the voiceovers, Noel is in full curmudgeon mode, that moment is a reminder of what the band meant to its fans and the love that poured back and forth. The young faces in the crowd singing every word back to the band with many dancing with abandon, looking more like a rave than a rock concert.  It’s a wonderful document that cements Knebworth 1996 back to a time that no longer exists.

9/10

Posted in Album Reviews

Damon Albarn – The Nearer the Fountain, More Pure the Stream Flows (2021)

The Nearer the Fountain, More Pure the Stream Flows

Damon Albarn’s first solo album in 7 years finds him in a somber mood.  Written during COVID lockdowns and inspired by both Iceland and his home in Devon, the black and white cover feels right for this album that captures both light and dark in the world.  Snow, rain, and especially the sea all play into the album’s themes.

“Darkness to Light” starts off with horns on a nice little tune about the dawn coming later in Iceland than elsewhere. Over an electronic beat, “The Cormorant” documents the bay that Damon regularly swims in, one that also offers a bit of danger depending on the current. “The Tower of Montevideo” takes its travels to South America and adds a bossa nova feel.

A propulsive, echoey beat in “Polaris” makes it a standout before the atmospheric album closer “Particles”.  Five singles have thus far been released from The Nearer the Fountain… including the excellent “Royal Morning Blue” that captures the wonder of the rain turning to snow.  “and nothing like this had ever happened… before” adds a wistful feel to the lyric.  With three instrumentals, Albarn’s latest can be a slow moving, dark affair but also adds sparkling beauty on several tracks.

7.5/10

Posted in Album Reviews

Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds – Back The Way We Came Vol. 1 (Deluxe Edition) (2021)

The first release as Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds came in 2011, two years after the break-up of Oasis. While it is a near impossible task to follow up the legendary band, the new Noel Gallagher solo act has released three albums that have all gone to #1 in the UK and he continues to be a large concert draw.  Chart wise, the singles have been less successful with the highest charting single for the middle Gallagher brother being the first one, “The Death of You and Me” that peaked at #15 in the UK. However, 10 years into his solo project and with a fairly extensive list of singles and EPs behind him, it was time for the Chief to release a double Best Of set plus a third disc of remixes/rarities.

His first two albums provide the bulk of disc one that starts with early highlight, “Everybody’s On The Run”.  The James Bond sounding theme is a mini epic with choir and strings. The David Essex influenced “Lock the Doors” reportedly took 23 years to finally complete. “AKA…What a Life” is a harder rocking single from the self-titled debut and later Johnny Marr adds guitars to the driving “Ballad of the Mighty I”. Both discs are close with new songs, the first of these “We’re On Our Way Now” is an adult oriented symphonic ballad.

Disc two opens with the throbbing electronic beat of “Black Star Dancing” but is bettered a few tracks later with 2020’s “Blue Moon Rising” that rides a more subtle groove but with lyrics no less ridiculous. “A Dream is All you Need to Get By” adds a 60s inflected dreamy quality.  “It’s a Beautiful World” is lifted by its celestial chorus and adds a French spoken section. Second new track, “Flying On the Water” is an upbeat guitar song that sounds refreshing after several electronic songs.

The double disc hits a high point early on disc two with “Holy Mountain”, the first single from 2017’s Who Built The Moon.  The glam rock stomper features Paul Weller on organ and is based around a tin whistle sample.  It’s impossible not to get caught up in the giddy excitement of the playground lyrics of “she fell right under my spell/she danced right into my hands”.  This may be the happiest Gallagher has sounded in years. The tracks that make up Back The Way We Came Vol 1 are all very slick but see Noel exploring his musical boundaries, as narrow as they may be, to make up a consistent batch of songs that have made his second act one well worth exploring.

The enjoyment of the third disc of rarities depends on your feelings on “Black Star Dancing” that appears three times in various remix forms. Several acoustic versions of songs appear that don’t sound like much of a departure from their originals.  Better is “International Magic (demo)” that could be a lost 90s Chemical Brothers’ track and several instrumental versions of songs including “It’s a Beautiful World”. Disc closer “Be Careful What You Wish For” adds a funky groove to what otherwise sounds like high level studio noodling.

Back the Way We Came Vol 1. – 8.5/10

Bonus Disc – 6/10