Monday, 2 January 2023

Goodbye 2022

2022 was certainly a year. A year of highs and lows; good bits and bad bits. All the clichés! Despite bouts of COVID, surgeries, hospital visits, health scares and plumbing emergencies, there were some wonderful moments. Our daughter Alyssa graduated Year 12 and Rhona successfully finished the first year of her Masters degree! Our boy Lachlan starting taking drum lessons for the first time as well, and as a result, his skills and techniques have greatly improved. He always had a natural talent for drumming, but it's been wonderful to see him open to idea of being taught different rhythms and styles. 

We took the plunge and bought him a full acoustic kit in April too. After years of playing on his electric Roland, he was very excited to move to a 'real' set of drums. I did get him to tote his electric kit down to Bar Orient a few times to play with me, which was really fun as well. We did look at doing a big debut style gig as Bolger Boys in July last year, but a few things happened to quash that temporarily. We'll endeavour to get him some more experience in 2023.

Team Bolgies managed to enjoy a few breaks throughout the year, including Kalbarri, Nannup, Poplars Farmstay in the Swan Valley, Witchcliffe and Denmark before Christmas to catch up with family. We also enjoyed a quick jaunt to the Perth Royal Show followed by watching the fireworks from a balcony in Claremont with Chelsea Pizza. We celebrated our 22nd wedding anniversary by all going out to dinner in Byford and marked everyone's birthdays as best we could. Our Christmas Day was a very comfortable thirty degrees, the coolest in over seven years, and our backyard dinner with the family went swimmingly! The kids' business, Lyssie's Lanyards, enjoyed a good bit of success and ended the year with us running two market stalls!

There were some big highlights in entertainment as well. After my foot surgery in August, I nabbed myself a copy of The Last of Us on the bedroom PS4, and am now up to my third play through! He he he...it might be a big favourite of mine. Hoping that the TV series airing this month is faithful! 



My Top 5 TV shows for 2022 were:
1. Better Call Saul (season 6)
2. Stranger Things (season 4)
3. House of the Dragon (season 1)
4. The Boys (season 3)
5. The Offer

There were other enjoyable shows that just didn't quite live up to their potential or fell flat in the last episode or two. Obi Wan Kenobi could have been something really special, but it was only okay. The second season of Upright was pretty good, but it felt like they tried to cram too much into it. The final episodes of The Resort, The White Lotus (season 1), The Patient were quite disappointing, despite some great performances and intriguing plotlines in all of them. They were just very unsatisfying, I guess. We just starting watching the new series of Willow, which is quite good so far. Here's hoping the momentum keeps on, um, momenting?

While I was laid up in bed after my foot surgery, I started watching Banshee, which I really enjoyed, particularly after loving Antony Starr's chilling portrayal as Homelander in The Boys. It was nice to be 'on his side' in a TV show. The fourth and final season was not as engaging as the first two, and as a result it took me longer to wade through it. On the whole, it was really pulpy, and very enjoyable if you like sex and violence in your viewing.


My Top 5 Movies of 2022:
1. The Adam Project
2. Neil Young: Harvest Time
3. See How They Run
4. The Stranger
5. Thirteen Lives

I didn't watch a huge amount of new movies this year, and these were the picks of the bunch. I found The Adam Project to be a very enjoyable adventure film that felt like the movies I watched as a pre-teen in the eighties. Not everyone agreed, but I don't care. While The Stranger wasn't quite what I was expecting, I did enjoy the performances of Sean Harris and Joel Edgerton. A tough watch, but quite engaging. I was hugely disappointed by the Bowie 'documentary' Moonage Daydream, which felt very indulgent and wanky to me. It could have been about a half hour shorter as well. Enjoyed the Neil Young doco on the making of the Harvest album much more. 


My Top 5 Albums of 2022:
1. For the Sake of Bethel Woods MIDLAKE
2. Resist MIDNIGHT OIL
3. Misadventures of Doomscroller DAWES
4. Listen to the Water LUKE STEELE
5. Revolver THE BEATLES (Super Deluxe 2022 edition)

Now, if there's one thing I'm going to endeavour to do more of in 2023 is to listen to new music. Or, at least, newer music. It's very easy to keep comfort listening, and push new albums or artists to the side. I'm even terrible with my favourite musicians! I bought Josh Pyke's To Find Happiness in June last year, and I still haven't given it a spin! I grabbed copies of Midnight Oil's Resist and Nick Cave & Warren Ellis' Carnage albums, as we were seeing both acts in concert, and they're both terrific! If I'd listened to Carnage when it came out I think I would have enjoyed their live show even more. Having said that, it was pretty damn great anyway. 

an image I made for Lachlan to keep up-to-date with upcoming concerts

My Top 5 Live Concerts of 2022:
1. Nick Cave & Warren Ellis (Riverside Theatre, PCEC, 5th Dec)
2. Tame Impala (RAC Arena, 27th Oct)
3. The Church (Astor Theatre, 1st Sep)
4. Midnight Oil (RAC Arena, 25th Sep)
5. The OG Wiggles (RAC Arena, 9th Apr)

This is the first time since 2019 that I've been able to make such a list. Only managed one show in 2020 before the COVID lockdowns (Tool, RAC Arena, 14th Feb) and one festival in 2021 (By the C: Icehouse/Pete Murray/You Am I/Tex Perkins, City Beach, 27th Mar). These five shows were the only shows for 2022, and in an interesting twist, I went to all of them with Lachlan. Rhona and Alyssa came to The Wiggles and Midnight Oil, but it was big year for our burgeoning musician! He certainly came away from the concerts with a good appreciation of what goes into live performances. We got tickets for Tame Impala in early 2020! It was nearly three years by the time we saw them live, after numerous postponements due to COVID restrictions. Now 2023 is looking to give that total of five shows a serious run for its money. Our credit cards are paying the price of our future event attendance! He he he... 

I used that Instafest app to create the following graphic on NYE. It's only what I've listened to on the Spottersfy this year, not all the physical CDs and vinyl, of course. But, it was a nice snapshot of 2022. I'm not sure if it was 6 months, 4 weeks or all-time in the end, but I nabbed it! He he he... to mark the occasion, I also made suitable Spottersfy playlists for each day. I picked five songs each for the acts written in the smallest size font, then ten for the next biggest, and finally fifteen for the 'headline' artist. Very enjoyable experience in both the creation and the listening! I didn't think too much about what tunes to pick, just grabbed them. As I was listening to a lot of ONJ in preparation for the tribute night, she's a headline act, but I just went with ten tracks for her. 

DAY 1: 31st Dec (5hr 46min)  https://open.spotify.com/playlist/7i4wAFN5QqcMkjadj9t0N0?si=SQflYJbSTcKEPCROk0WVog

DAY 2: 1st Jan (5hr 53min) https://open.spotify.com/playlist/4eK7PfrHkZClgPRgWAwiZq?si=jwFm6mILT7KiDEXCV6KobA

DAY 3: 2nd Jan (5hr 2min)
https://open.spotify.com/playlist/7IWATF7oFrDY3s8R0AJcMy?si=r0aK1WuvTyeek-aZjF3ekg

Finally, I'm going to attempt to list all the books I read in 2022. We started up a regular reading time before the kids went to bed last year. We didn't do it every single night, but we did it a lot, and I managed to turn a few pages. Rhona has been working her way through the Harry Potter books, Alyssa has a box set of Disney Twisted Tales she's making good progress with, and Lachlan swapped between Diary of a Minecraft Zombie books and his new MAD magazines. Now, I think I managed to put away these titles:

Waging Heavy Peace by Neil Young (which I'm sure I started in 2021...)
Miles: The Autobiography of Miles Davis (I started this one YEARS ago!)
Unfaithful Music and Disappearing Ink by Elvis Costello
Inside Out: A Personal History of Pink Floyd by Nick Mason
Something Quite Peculiar by Steve Kilbey
Batman: Year One by Frank Miller & David Mazzucchelli with Richmond Lewis (re-read)
Up from Down Under: How Australian Music Changed the World
by Jeff Apter

Not a huge list, but a pretty big achievement for someone who recently struggled to read one (yes, one) book over a couple of years. Bit of a common theme there too, huh? He he he... I also have copies of The Storyteller by Dave Grohl and Face It by Debbie Harry ready to go once I have finished Roger Daltrey's Thanks a lot Mr Kibblewhite: My Story. I've also recently unearthed my edition of Footprints: The inside story of Australia's best-loved band Powderfinger by Dino Scatena which I've only read half of.  

I nabbed a copy of the first book in the Dune graphic novel series in late 2021, and scored the second volume in August. I have to wait until 2024 for the third one though! I must endeavour to finish my Dune blog and watches of various forms of film. And such. 

As I started studying a diploma of counselling late last year, I'll have to make sure I still read for pleasure on occasion. Not just study texts. Anyway, here's hoping 2023 is going to be a good one!

Sunday, 13 November 2022

Album of the Week - Vol. 23

Priest=Aura THE CHURCH (1992)
Week: Sat 22nd to Fri 28th October 2022 
Format: vinyl, CD and Spotify
Producer: The Church and Gavin McKillop
Track listing:
1. Aura *
2. Ripple *
3. Paradox
4. Lustre
5. Swan Lake *
6. Feel
7. Mistress
8. Kings *
9. Dome
10. Witch Hunt
11. The Disillusionist *
12. Old Flame
13. Chaos
14. Film *
BONUS:
15. Nightmare (not on vinyl)
16. Fog (not on vinyl)
TOTAL RUNNING TIME: 1hr 12min

The Church's eight studio album is seen by many as the band's artistic highpoint, including frontman Steve Kilbey. I heard him on a radio interview years ago (possibly with Richard Fidler on the ABC?) refer to this record as their best album; and he calls it the group's 'undisputed masterpiece' in his autobiography, Something Quite Peculiar. The band underwent a 30th anniversary tour in 2011 dubbed "Future, Past, Perfect" which saw them play 2009's Untitled #23, 1988's Starfish and this album in their entireties. The latter being the 'perfect' component of the three album tour. 

Celebrating its 30th anniversary itself this year, Priest=Aura is quite a listen. While it's not a concept album per se, it has a cohesion that is lacking from their other long players, except for maybe Starfish. I've dabbled with The Church from time to time over the last few years, and I only own four of their albums, this being one of them. In fact, I have the 2011 remaster on CD and the coloured vinyl reissue. I've seen them live three times and each time they've had a different line-up. 

The first time was part of A Day on the Green show in December 2012 that also featured Models, Devo and Simple Minds. It was pretty damn great, and we have a CD of the Devo set! Very cool. Far out, that was nearly ten years ago! The band consisted of bassist/singer Kilbey, guitarists Peter Koppes and Marty Willson-Piper and drummer Tim Powles. They only performed a short eight-song set, including crowd pleasers Metropolis, Almost With You and Under the Milky Way, but interestingly, nothing from this album. 

Just under five years later, Rhona and I ventured douth to see them play at the Dunsborough Tavern in November 2017, touring their new album Man Woman Life Death Infinity. Again, nothing from this album was on the setlist. Willson-Piper abruptly left the band a couple of years earlier, and had been replaced by Ian Haug, who used to be in Powderfinger. Move forward another five years, and in October this year, our boy Lachlan and I caught them at the Astor Theatre in Mt Lawley. At this juncture, Koppes had left The Church for the second time, with Ash Naylor (Even, The Stems) taking his place. A third guitarist (and sometime keyboardist) Jeffrey Cain from Alabama, USA had also joined the line-up. In addition to that, a second drummer in the form of Nick Meredith was also thrown into the mix; and the band did sound immense on that night. 

This time around, they did play something from
 Priest=AuraKings. That was the only offering though, but it was pretty awesome, and really benefited from the extra drummer. Their rendition of You Took, from 1982's The Blurred Crusade was a big highlight for Lachlan and me, he not even having heard it before. But I digress!

Back to the album in question. I've been listening to it a bit this week after reading those very words Kilbey wrote in his book; which I bought a copy of at the Astor (signed by him too, no less). It's a great album, for sure, but I haven't really grasped what makes Kilbey so fond of it. One thing that makes Priest=Aura stand out from The Church's back catalog is the appearance of the wonderful Jay Dee Daugherty on the drums. His attack and style are so distinctive, that you can always pick a cut from this record. He came into the band's orbit after The Church's drummer of nearly ten years, Richard Ploog, became increasingly difficult to work with. His final album with the group, 1990's Gold Afternoon Fix, saw him play on only four tracks, while the rest of the songs utilised programming. 

Daugherty had previously been in the Patti Smith Group, and his presence on this record seems to lift the band out of their post-GAF doldrums. Very much a collaborative effort, each of the album's tracks are credited to Kilbey/Koppes/Willson-Piper/Daugherty, except for Mistress. All of the songs are simply titled as well, often using just one word. The opening track, Aura, sets the scene well. We are introduced to a fairly dreamy landscape, courtesy of some ethereal keyboards before Daugherty's snare cracks the band into life. Indeed, the interplay between guitarists Koppes and Willson-Piper as arguably never been better. Another reason for the album's distinctive sound is Kilbey's notion of using a 1960s Fender VI six-string bass guitar on every track.

That first track unsurprisingly includes the album's title in its lyrics, stemming from Kilbey misreading a Spanish translation of priest as 'aura' (and not 'cura') in a Spanish fan's English notes. The end section of song gives way to some great lyrical comparitives:

And life = time
And time = space
And space = sublime
And human = race
Oh and woman = man
And pot = pan
The fauna ought to equal the flora
But priest = aura

The next track, Ripple, is another highlight for me, with a great melodic refrain that will get stuck in your head, if you're not careful. Paradox is a meditation on Kilbey's slowly blooming heroin addiction, as he ways up the good and the bad. He would be a slave to the drug for over a decade, before starting the 21st century clean. 

Other big highlights for me include the aforementioned Kings and the gentle Swan Lake, the latter detailing Kilbey's feelings about his soon-to-be-born twin girls. Another favourite for me is the eerie tale of The Disillusionist, which features an amazing octave hopping bassline and a baffling chorus:

They say that he's famous from the waist down
But the top half of his body is a corpse
His gold won't buy him sleep
His poverty runs so deep
In winter he cracks, in summer he warps

My biggest pet peeve with recorded music almost ruins this track, as it fades out while Kilbey is still singing!! I don't know if this was done to save on running time, or if the band came to a crashing heap towards the song's end, but it is a puzzling choice! Even more frustrating to me, is that the performance of The Disillusionist on the excellent A Psychedelic Symphony concert at the Sydney Opera House in 2011 keeps going past that fade-out point! In fact, the band (and orchestra) start to peter out until it's just Kilbey reciting the lyrics a cappela. So, that's a weird ending as well. Could they not decide on a way to finish the song?! Anyway, I still love the song, despite this. 

The best and worst of this album happen in the last two tracks. The sprawling Chaos nudges the ten minute mark in length, and has several false stops. Although the bass riff the song is built around is quite cool, it does get a little monotonous after a while. The battle between the guitarists for who can make the most noise gets very grating too. After the sonic assault of this track dies off, your ears get treated to the wonderful instrumental Film. A lovely ending to the record, this feels like music that would run as the credits of a noir thriller roll. No doubt, a big reason why the track is titled as such.

The two bonus tracks on the CD are okay, but they don't seem to fit nicely with the rest of the album, particularly Nightmare. It sounds like a good fit, but the lyrics are too playful or something. Just doesn't belong, although it's an interesting listen. 

Like I said at the start of this post, I don't think this is my favourite album by The Church, but it's pretty damn great. It has been very interesting to listen to it in different formats. Having headphones on and streaming it while walking is very enjoyable. I do love listening to an album on vinyl when you have to change sides so often (it's a two platter offering). The songs get a chance to breathe and sink in before you listen to the next section. I like that. It's also nice to do the opposite and have the CD assault you continuously. He he he... it's all good!

Saturday, 12 November 2022

Happy Birthday Neil!


Today is Neil Young's 77th birthday. I'm a bit of a fan. Safe to say. 
We've just bought tickets to see Harvest Time on 1st December too! So, any excuse to spin a few of his tunes will do! He he he...but we did bounce around a bit throughout the day.

All of these albums were played in full, on CD*.

1. NEIL YOUNG Neil Young (1969)
2. CAROLE KING Tapestry (1971)
3. FRANK ZAPPA & THE MOTHERS OF INVENTION Over-Nite Sensation (1973)
4. NEIL YOUNG & CRAZY HORSE Zuma (1975)
5. QUEEN News of the World (1977)
6. NEIL YOUNG & CRAZY HORSE Rust Never Sleeps (1979)
7. PHIL COLLINS Face Value (1981)
8. BOB DYLAN Infidels (1983)
9. KATE BUSH Hounds of Love (1985) *

* Hounds of Love was streamed via the Spottersfy, and was not quite wholly listened to. Two and a half tracks to go...Jig of Life indeed!

Now, the first solo Neil Young album seemed to be the obvious choice to kick off the day's music choices. It's not one that I listen to a lot, and I couldn't remember the last time I gave it a spin. Enjoyed it immensely. Patchy as heck in parts, but some wonderful songs. 

From there I grabbed Tapestry, because Rhones and I watched a couple of episodes of 1971: The Year That Music Changed Everything on the Apples last night. Carole King featured prominently in the first one, particularly the recording of the Tapestry album. Was a logical choice to follow on, as Rhones had expressed a desire to listen to it again. Such a great album.

It was time to step it up a notch, so I grabbed Over-Nite Sensation. A good dose of Zappa! Arguably, the pinnacle of Zappa's 1970s output. By this point, I had realised that I was moving ahead in two year intervals between releases. So, I decide to keep the trend going. I felt like going back to Neil Young, and I nearly chose Tonight's the Night, which was released in 1975, but recorded years earlier. So, I grabbed Zuma. The second album crediting his backing band Crazy Horse, this was the first record to feature Frank Sampedro. Although Crazy Horse contributed to the odd track in the early 1970s, they hadn't been co-credited since 1969's Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere. I remembered that a punter at a gig of mine got talking to me about Neil, and cited Zuma as their favourite album of his. Strange choice, I thought. But, there are some great tracks there!

For 1977, it seemed like a good time to pick a Queen album, which would be News of the World, naturally. This record was on my mind because I'd recently seen an album poll online that ranked Queen II as their best work. Another strange choice, I thought. But, it had been ranked by subscribers to the website, so a public, not critical selection. Anyway, it's not one of my favourites. Not even in my Top 5, so I had News of the World and The Game fresh in my head. Decision made!

I felt like some more Neil next, so following the rule of two, I selected Rust Never Sleeps. Such a great album. Almost every track is a classic. Dig it. So, then onto 1981, and with it Phil Collins! No brainer, innit? Face Value is fantastic from start to finish. 

For 1983, I picked Dylan's Infidels album. It's not one that I've actually listened to in full, but I knew a handful of tracks; namely Jokerman, Sweetheart Like You and License to Kill. I've recently become quite fond of the closing track Don't Fall Apart on Me Tonight, albeit the second version from the Springtime In New York 1980-1985 bootleg collection. I much prefer that take, but the one on Infidels is alright. It is amazing how the production has dated the material, but a very listenable effort from Zimmy.

Thought it was a good year for Kate Bush in 1985, so I landed on Hounds of Love. I don't own a physical copy of this unfortunately, so it was the Spottersfy to the rescue! Didn't quite get the whole album in, but a damn good chunk of it. Those first five songs are soooo good. What an amazing start to the record. The second half doesn't grab me as much, but still worth listening to.

So, there you go. If I had gotten to 1987 I think I would have grabbed INXS' wonderful Kick album. Or maybe Diesel & Dust by Midnight Oil. I had already decided that 1989 would be Neil Young's excellent, and eclectic, Freedom record. Might have to pick this thread up again sometime...

Saturday, 5 November 2022

A Day of Music

Today has been a great day for music, delivered through different formats. It is Saturday, 5th November in the year 2022. Nothing specifically special about that date. Wikipedia tells me that it's the 309th day of the Gregorian calendar, and that 2022 has but 56 days left. I'm inclined to believe it. Oh yeah, and it's Guy Fawkes Day, innit? Or Bonfire Night or whatever you want to call it. Not of particular significance to this little black duck. The fact that it is also the birthday of Radiohead's Jonny Greenwood is of more importance. He's 51, if you're curious. It's also Gram Parsons birthday, who would have turned 76 had he not passed away the age of 26. 

But I digress!

I started the day off for us by spinning Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds' wonderful Push the Sky Away album on vinyl. While our record player is in need of serious updating, parts of it sounded really good. Other bits sounded a little distorted, much to my chagrin. So, I decided to ditch the vinyl for the next listen. 

My phone let me know earlier that morning that Neil Young had just dropped an unreleased studio outtake from 1972's Harvest album, which was recorded with a group of musicians he dubbed The Stray Gators. There's a 50th anniversary reissue of the album coming out very soon, you see. The song Journey Through the Past has popped up on numerous live albums and releases, but this was an unheard version. So, I streamed it via the NYA (Neil Young Archives) app and looked for a CD to put on. Really nice version, by the way.

I landed on the wonderful Fleet Foxes box set First Collection 2006-2009. Only got a physical copy of this a few weeks ago, as it's readily available on the Spottersfy. It was released to mark the 10th anniversary of the release of their debut album Fleet Foxes in 2008. Included in the box set, is the album itself, the Sun Giant EP (released a few months before the album in 2008), The Fleet Foxes EP (self-released in 2006) and a disc of B-sides and rareties. I'd not heard the first EP before, and it's quite different from their subsequent offerings. It's only Robin Pecknold, the singer and songwriter behind the band, and a fellow called Garrett Croxon on the drums. Robin plays/sings every part except the drums. For the sake of continuity, I listened to the three official releases in their chronological, and then finished off with the B-sides disc. Seemed like the way to go. It was very enjoyable, let me tell you.

The next listen saw me open up the Spottersfy and select the newly released Super Deluxe 2022 Remaster of The Beatles album Revolver. I've not really gone in for any of the Super Deluxe releases that have come out in the last few years, but Revolver is my favourite Beatles LP, so I felt like it was worth a delve. The actual remastered album sounded great, but I have trouble hearing major differences in remastering. I had to play the 1987 CDs back-to-back with the 2009 reissues to notice the changes. Certainly an improvement, but I don't think I'm the audiophile that other Beatles fans are. My first real dive into the Beatles was via a cassette box set of all the albums when I was 12. I guess those analogue recordings are my touchstone. 

Anyway, I enjoyed the listen, and got through all the different takes and versions. Some of those tracks popped up on 1996's Anthology 2 compilation, so it wasn't all new to me. When I got to the mono/stereo editions of the album I stopped. It was cool that the alternate versions and stuff kicked off in reverse order. After Tomorrow Never Knows finished on the 2022 remaster, an early take of it signaled the beginning of the bonus material. Then it went to the different takes of Got To Get You Into My Life. It was pretty cool, reliving the album backwards with the alternate recordings. But then you got the Love You Too takes, before launching into the Paperback Writer and Rain ones. The mono and stereo mixes of Revolver included in the package feature those two tracks on the album. Nice idea. Those songs were recorded in the same sessions, but were released as a single in May 1966, three months before Revolver. I might possibly go back to those mixes. But then again, I might not. 

For a slightly mellower listen, I then grabbed The Flying Burrito Brothers excellent The Gilded Palace of Sin album, going back to the CD player. I only got into this one after reviewing it for the AFYCCIM blog I was a part of for a coupla years. Not expecting to like it much at all, I actually became quite enamoured with it. One of the big moments for me was hearing their version of Aretha's Do Right Man Do Right Woman. It was nice way to remember Gram Parsons' birthday. His impact on alt-country rock cannot be overstated. 

As it was Jonny's birthday, it seemed fitting to spin a Radiohead album next, and bizarrely, I chose Kid A. This was the album where it seemed Jonny had put down his guitar, he he he. Anyway, it was a nice revisit. I also played some random tracks on the way home from my gig, namely There There, Airbag and No Surprises.

So, yeah, nothing earth-shattering, but I felt like documenting. 

Monday, 15 August 2022

2002

This time twenty years ago it was 2002. I was twenty-six and Rhona and I had been married for about 18 months, with our 5 year anniversary fast approaching. We were renting in Beckenham, and the kids were yet to come along. We did, howevere, have Dylan, our faithful 35kg+ Rotty x Staffy. I had made the decision to leave Murphy’s Lore that year and played my last gig with them in July. (I would, however, rejoin in 2005 before leaving again in 2014.) The main reason for leaving the band at that time was to try and prepare for having a family; the old ‘get a haircut and get a real job’ thang. I had an enrolled in a TAFE course, aiming to earn a diploma in IT. Rhona was working at call centre in Centrelink. I was attending TAFE, as well as playing solo and WGJS gigs. 

Seems like another lifetime ago. I guess it kinda is. Things were a bit different personally, but also just in the way the world is operating. Social media was not the behemoth it is now. I think ICQ was about as social as it got. Maybe chat rooms were around then too? Twitter and Facebook were still about six or seven years away. Maybe MySpace launched a coupla years later?

Anyway, I got to thinking of how when I was growing up in Perth and Albany in the 1980s, I was listening to a lot of sixties music, particularly The Beatles. There were a few popular hits on the charts that were sixties covers too, like Kylie's The Loco-motion and Twist & Shout by The Beatles became popular again due its inclusion in Ferris Bueller's Day Off.

So, I wanted to think about what was popular in music and movies twenty years ago. Is it enjoying a resurgence? Maybe it's a bit too early to get nostalgic at the 2000s, but I'm going to look at releases of 2002. 
No One Knows by Queens of the Stone Age would go on to top Triple J's Hottest 100 in January 2003, but I remained blissfully unaware of it until I heard that countdown. How out of touch was I? The No.1 song, and I had no idea what it was. I love the track now, of course. Heck, who doesn't? Got a gnarly red vinyl edish of it too. So, bear in mind that everything in these lists are twenty years old now!


MY TOP 10 ALBUMS of 2002:
1. Sea Change BECK
2. Yoshimi vs the Pink Robots THE FLAMING LIPS
3. Audioslave AUDIOSLAVE
4. A Rush of Blood to the Head COLDPLAY
5. Heathen DAVID BOWIE
6. Diorama SILVERCHAIR
7. Torch the Moon THE WHITLAMS
8. The Rising BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN
9. One By One FOO FIGHTERS
10. Tenacious D TENACIOUS D


MY TOP 10 MOVIES of 2002:
1. The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
2. Gangs of New York
3. Minority Report
4. Road to Perdition
5. The Pianist
6. City of God
7. Equilibrium
8. The Bourne Identity
9. Insomnia
10. Signs (hey, I liked it!)


MY TOP 5 SONGS of 2002:
1. Cochise AUDIOSLAVE
2. The Golden Age BECK
3. Without Me EMINEM
4. Keep Fishin' WEEZER
5. Comfort Me PACIFIER/SHIHAD


MY TOP 5 TV SHOWS of 2002:
1. 24 (season two)
2. The Sopranos (season 4)
3. Black Books (season 2)
4. The West Wing (season 4)
5. Kath & Kim (season 1) 


Sunday, 7 August 2022

Sunday Morning Albums

My buddy Kieran and I were waxing lyrical on the wonder of the Sunday morning album recently. He offered up the notion that that particular time of the week was optimal for enjoying good albums. But, what makes an album good for Sunday morning? 

I suppose it has to have several things going for it. Firstly, it has to be something that everyone present will enjoy, or at the very least, tolerate. If the music is familiar and well-loved it adds a cosy comfort to the morning atmosphere, but that's not necessary essential. It can be a gamble to try a maiden listen on a Sunday morning and a wobbly aural start to the day can be difficult to shift, if the mood isn't right. 

Ultimately, you want the musical equivalent of a loving hug. Or a welcoming sunrise. Something that seems to promise that today will be a good day. For a lot of people, Sunday morning is a special time, and to have a soundtrack worthy of inhabiting the family's ears is just good sense. It's a time to recharge and reflect on the week that was, while pondering the incoming one.

We always have a big breakfast on Sunday, or as we call it 'Special Breakfast'. Usually that means French toast and hashbrowns for the kids, bacon and eggs for me and Rhones. I tend to add in mushrooms and grilled tomato as well. It's one of the only times we all sit around the dining table together, and we always endeavour to keep it sacred. 

So, for the hour or so I spend in the kitchen preparing Special Breakfast, it's good to have some choice tunes going. I'll ruminate on this subject a bit more in the future, methinks, but for now, I will simply offer up some of my favourite albums to play on a Sunday morning.

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Bryter Layter NICK DRAKE (1971)
A lovely, mellow record to throw on the turntable. It even has an instrumental track called Sunday that finishes it off. Drake's voice is quite soft-spoken, which results in a vocal delivery that doesn't intrude. It sits nicely in the background, but you can also sing along when you want to. Big hallmark of a Sunday morning album right there, I reckon. 

Tapestry CAROLE KING (1971)
Another good quality for a Sunday morning album to have is a solid tracklisting. This record is a prime example of the classic adage 'all killer, no filler'. Even when it starts off with the slightly funky I Feel The Earth Move, it's not intrusive. It's a hearty welcome to the morning in the guise of a piano riff. The ballads are certainly more enjoyable on a lazy Sunday, but the upbeat numbers don't make you feel like you should be getting up to clean house or anything.

Fleet Foxes FLEET FOXES (2008)
These guys are getting played quite a bit in our house at the moment. While our son Lachlan and I battle for sonic supremacy, there are a number of bands we both like to play. This is one of them, and this album is wonderful for a Sunday morning. Reverb-drenched vocals and folky music production together with hooks and lovely lyrics. When White Winter Hymnal kicks off, you can't help but hum or sing along. Their second album Helplessness Blues is also a corker. 

Spring and Fall PAUL KELLY (2012)
A fairly mellow affair, this album could also pass for a late night record. Following the loose concept of the start and end of a romantic relationship (the spring and fall, as it were), this has some of Kelly's best work on it. The promise of New Found Year, as the couple celebrate their love together sits well with the jaunty For The Ages. As the tide turns and the themes get darker, the musical production doesn't; it remains light and acoustic. None Of Your Business Now does have a menacing feel, but it doesn't grab you by the throat or anything. The album's closer, Little Aches and Pains, is one of my favourite PK songs ever. 


Feels Like Home NORAH JONES (2004) 
Norah's follow-up to Come Away With Me 
is a more enjoyable affair, in my humble opinion. There's a relaxed feeling that permeates the whole record, and it seems as though you're just listening to musicians jamming. Everything sounds effortless and easy, much like a Sunday morning should be. Her cover of Tom Waits' Long Way Home is a big highlight, as is What Am I To You?, which features Levon Helm on drums and Garth Hudson on keys.

Apple Venus XTC (1999)
XTC's thirteen studio album, is also their second last effort, sadly. From the opening string plucks of River of Orchids to the haunting final notes of The Last Balloon, this is hugely enjoyable power pop that never outstays its welcome. Again, the upbeat numbers here are never overpowering, and there's an optimism throughout most of the playlist. Your Dictionary being one of the obvious exceptions, but I'd Like That and Easter Theatre are wonderful doses of sunny pop.

Modern Times BOB DYLAN (2006)
Dylan's last album of his critically acclaimed 'Late Trilogy' (along with the excellent Time Out of Mind and Love & Theft), is immensely enjoyable and perfect for a Sunday morning. Although the opening riffs of Thunder on the Mountain threaten to derail the desired free-and-easy atmosphere, the song settles into a steady toe-tapping groove. Even the guitar solos don't grate against you. Rollin' and Tumblin' could also blow the doors off in the hands of another interpreter, but Dylan keeps a lid on his band nicely. Ballads like Workingman's Blues No.2 and Spirit on the Water rank amongst Dylan's best tracks and they certainly help to welcome a new day.

Silver & Gold NEIL YOUNG (2000)
Utilising the mellow acoustic feel of the Harvest, Comes a Time and Harvest Moon albums, this absolute pearler is a joy from start to finish. Songs of love, nostalgia and gentle yearnings. The title track holds strong significance between Rhona and I as well, citing it as one of (if not, THE) 'our songs'. I rank Distant Camera and Razor Love pretty highly as well. Hearing Neil remin
isce about his old band on Buffalo Springfield Again is something special too. 

Thursday, 4 November 2021

The Man Who Sold the World

Bowie's follow-up to 1969's Space Oddity album celebrates its 51st birthday today, although it wasn't officially released in the UK until April 1971. The cover art for both releases was quite different as well, but now the shot of Bowie in his splendid flowing dress is the go-to image for this record. It is very different in feel and production compared to its predecessor, and has hints of sludge rock among the loose instrumentation. Produced by Tony Visconti, who also contributes bass and recorder, The Man Who Sold the World marks the first appearances of guitarist Mick Ronson and drummer Mick "Woody" Woodmansey on a Bowie album. Both musicians would go on to be in The Spiders From Mars in the years to come. 

Often overlooked, and featuring many deep-cuts from Bowie's considerable canon, this record is an interesting listen. The aforementioned sludge rock has moments of sounding like an early incarnation of Black Sabbath. Throbbing bass lines abound, there's plenty of distorted guitars and Bowie is shrieking like he never really did again. I guess he was still finding his voice, but you can hear the seeds of his famous inflections in a far few phrases.

The title track is the album's most well-known song, which got another burst of popularity after Nirvana's version was released on their 1994 Unplugged album. It's one of the more mellower moments on offer here, and one of the most tuneful. The haunting guiro and understated vocal transcend the song, and the eerie sound of the song moving from speaker to speaker at its conclusion is very effective. One could feel that Bowie's alien fascination started here, or possibly his explorations of sanity.

Opening with the eight minute long The Width of a Circle, you can feel from the very first note of Ronson's feedback that this is not the Bowie of 1969. The noise gives way to a descending riff that is the backbone of the track and the band kick in. Bowie's vocal is a little mumbly and piercing at the same time, not content to be in the background of the noise. At around the five minute mark the song changes direction and feel, and even has a whiff of early glam rock about it. Even shades of Status Quo can be heard. Not an unpleasant listen, but certainly a meandering one with Ronson given plenty of opportunity to wail. 

Some songs arrive with bombast and purpose, and then don't really deliver. The biggest culprits of this are album closer The Supermen, Saviour Machine and She Shook Me Cold. The latter in particular kicks off with Sabbath-esque stabs and then flounders around in between those rockier bits. 

There are some gems here though, not just the the title track. All the Madmen has a great intro with Visconti's recorders adding another dimension to the narrative of the sanest people living in asylums while the insane ones run riot. Ronson's riffing is awesome, and the unusual last vocal phrase 'zane zane zane, ouvre le chein' would be revisited again on the track Buddha of Suburbia in 1993. I quite like that one. Black Country Rock is also a nice bit of folk rock, which great bass and guitar riffs. Wouldn't be out of place coming out of Jimi Hendrix. Bowie even adds a couple of interesting vocal techniques at the end of the song, including a weird vibrato and a Dylanesque delivery. Running Gun Blues is drawn from a similar folk rock well, and it goes okay. Some nice overdubbed vocals towards its end.

The eerie After All is another album highlight. It feels like something that was very influential on gothic bands in the eighties, drawing on the slightly creepy songs from Bowie's childhood. Oh, and references of Aleister Crowley and Nietzsche. The repeated 'oh, by jingo' vocal lines are overdubbed with menacing harmonies that sound quite otherworldly. This same technique would turn up again on Hunky Dory's The Bewlay Brothers, and some of the songs on Pinups

While not a shining jewel in Bowie's crown of albums, it certainly sparkles on occasion. After just listening to it again, I offer up 2.5/5.

NEXT UP: Space Oddity - 14th Nov