Wednesday, 26 September 2012
Album review: Sonnymoon
Sonnymoon 'Sonnymoon': Band Of The Week album review on PlanetNotion. Originally published here.
Sonnymoon is a crank concept album about existential energy: its rise and fall, and the unity to be found in opposition. The group – long-term project of Dane Orr and Anna Wise – declare on their website that their mission is to represent in musical arrangement the collision between Earth and waning utopic planet Sonnymoon, trying to “make sense of foreign concepts such as ignorance, mediocrity, and suburbia”. “Prepare for your world to change”, they proclaim.
Much of the colour and hue on this lavishly bigged-up album in fact derives from their remarkable blend of male and female energy: Orr’s pulsating production makes the perfect match to Wise’s cockamamie harmonies. It’s a kaleidoscopic album – at times delicate, at times impatient: an explosive experiment gone, well, almost perfectly. Drawing inspiration from Animal Collective, A Tribe…, and Bjork, the resulting long-player is chock-full with an impracticable mix of genres: psych, through hip hop, to pop. Jazz even sidles up at one point. The result is a veritable WTF combination.
Another model present is the Freudian “economy of energy”: the increases and declines in nervous energy that inevitably mark human existence and its works of art (please, please don’t let all this philosophizing put you off). Thus, the album swerves capriciously between hedonistic RnB and a rather more frazzled psychedelia. Take the two tunes which bookend the album (both highlights and pinnacles of energetic experimentation): ‘Wild Rumpus’ is a self-explanatory freak-out jam of bleepy soundscapes and nebulous yelps and shrieks; ‘Just Before Dawn’ is a two-part epic in which Wise’s coos are allied to echoed synth twinks, before the whole thing blurs into an orchestral finale draped in a woozy haze of mind-fucking electronics, harp and vocals. It’s over 8 minutes long.
One of my favourite albums of the year is awE naturalE by similarly confusing Seattle duo THEESatisfaction, and these are two records which actually share heaps in common: Lauryn Hill flavoured vocals, heck loads of loops and a FlyLo kind of glitch. On ‘Greatness’, all of the above are underpinned with an incessant dancefloor groove whilst Wise tackles the theme of the now non-existent utopia, intoning, “great isn’t perfect even though sometimes it seems that way,” in the perfectly cadenced chorus. Most striking is the malleability of her voice, employed with the innate diversity of a hundred different instruments.
Whilst they follow up the homemade hip hop feel with the blissed-out chants of ‘Watersboiled’, the undeniable album centrepiece is ‘Kali’, cymbals aflame, whose unexpected jazzy textures entwining delicate harmonies and reverberating double bass make for a pure delight. This song marks the mid-point of the record’s energetic flow, yet defiantly avoids lulling itself into a void of nothingness. Thankfully, of course, this doesn’t happen anywhere else either; Sonnymoon have successfully created a magnificent, magical and cohesive album steeped in pretension, marketing ploys and unorthodoxy. This certainly isn’t a record for the easily unnerved, but who’d have thought it was even workable?
Labels:
Bjork,
Notion,
Sonnymoon,
THEESatisfaction
Film reviews: JASON BECKER / GRANDMA LO-FI / CONFESSIONS OF A CHILD OF THE CENTURY
JASON BECKER: NOT DEAD YET. Originally published on Take One.
Lou Gehrig’s Disease knocks you down hard and fast, or at least it should do. With JASON BECKER: NOT DEAD YET, Jesse Vile’s debut direction gallantly attempts to lift the lid on the degenerative condition using the anomalous case of virtuosic Hair Metal axe-man Jason Becker – given three years to live in 1990, yet still going strong (if paralysed) twenty-two years later. As the director concedes beforehand, “a lot of people think this is a film about heavy metal, but it’s not”; it actually riffs on community, the appetite for life and Becker’s remarkable ebullience in the face of a terminal illness.
You’d be forgiven for assuming the film might oversentimentalise or sensationalise the situation: “Gosh, isn’t he an inspiration for us all?” etc. But at one point, Becker declares that he doesn’t want to go into anything deep or heart-warming; he doesn’t want to be a hero, maybe just “the gross Dad in Family Guy”. Ricocheting from original camerawork and interviews to TV footage, archival films and cartoon drawing, the film avoids overwhelming you with emotion. Yes, Vile confronts your typical existential ideas, but does so in an amusing fashion, not punchy or disorienting.
The opening scene shows home footage of a teen Becker jamming a hoedown ‘Mr Tambourine Man’. Locks of wavy black hair, fingers noodling away on a guitar, we’re swept through a youth of obstinate musical mania: Dylan, Clapton solos and a little later, Bach fugues. “He wanted everything to be perfect already”, says his mother, and there was no doubting he was a prodigy. Superstardom came fast: he soon joined Marty Friedman’s neoclassical metal outfit Cacophony, rush-released a solo album and subsequently bagged the most lucrative gig in rock, lead guitar in the David Lee Roth Band. But having recorded ‘A Little Ain’t Enough’, he was diagnosed, and his dreams of touring shattered.
A nightmarish scenario, then, but our protagonist had no intention of giving up. Unable to move and speak, he continues to live with an effervescent determination, and the film examines this workaholic dimension intimately. First there was ‘Perspective’ – an album made in the early 90s using Becker’s eye and chin movements – and now there’s an “eye sign language” developed by his father. He still writes music, it’s just someone else has to write it down. Aside from his unflinching humour, the film’s most touching aspect is perhaps the collective of helpers (ex-lovers, friends and family) who surround him. Together they’ve created an uplifting and closely-stitched documentary, bolstered with an extraordinary spirit.
GRANDMA LO-FI: THE BASEMENT TAPES OF SIGRIDUR NIELSDOTTIR. Originally published here.
Shot over a period of seven years on bleary Super8 film, GRANDMA LO-FI: THE BASEMENT TAPES OF SIGRIDUR NIELSDOTTIR gives an amusing insight into the working mind and thought processes of a septuagenarian garage rockstar.
With a creative mindset redolent of R Stevie Moore in the States, Níelsdóttir was an oddball icon, treasured on the Icelandic underground scene for her preposterously fruitful output (59 albums and 687 songs in 7 years), charming persona and undying imagination. Compiled by a trio of directors, this quaint film accurately captures the hearty, satisfied enigma.
71 may seem like an odd age to kick-start your musical career, but as Níelsdóttir leads us down through her unpretentious Reykjavik basement in knitted cardigan and yellow bonnet, it’s obvious she couldn’t give a toss. She did what she enjoyed, and that was that. Music became her companion, and production a liberating exercise. Concocting a peculiar, often extemporaneous potpourri of CASIO twinks, nonsensical lyrics and atypical instrumentation, it quickly becomes clear she wasn’t exactly a musical genius, but it’s her tireless spirit which really stands out. And her humour, too – the complex symbolism behind her musical contraptions, for instance: crumpled tin foil for camp-fire, and cream whipper for helicopter. Releasing songs, she claimed, was just like sending your children out into the world.
In spite of its 65-minute run-time, the three film-makers still manage to (briefly) trace the doyen’s life-story, using guest appearances from a coterie of young musicians such as Hildur Guðnadóttir and members of Múm. They say there was a sixty year gap since her last music practice, playing piano at age 11, but her passion for it had obviously lingered. And as we speedily drift from her life in Denmark during the Nazi occupation to her eight years spent in Brazil, it quickly becomes clear that family and fauna are the themes closest to her heart. In fact, it seems that when she’s not making music, she’s croaking, neighing or purring.
Perhaps the most remarkable asset of the direction is its elegant use of stop-motion animation. Níelsdóttir had become obsessed with collage-making and drawing in the couple of years prior to her death, and this artwork of hers has been superbly incorporated. With added colour and wit, this leaves GRANDMA LO-FI as a fitting and watchable tribute to a woman who was in perfect harmony with an unnecessarily pernickety world.
CONFESSIONS OF A CHILD OF THE CENTURY. Originally published here.
In CONFESSIONS OF A CHILD OF THE CENTURY, time-honoured badboy and reputable polemicist Peter Doherty takes on the role of Octave, a 19th century version of his faltering and outré self. As Sylvie Verheyde’s period drama unfolds, one sees this hedonistic libertine “stricken by the disease of the century”, his heart set on decadence, enduring fleeting love and despair, and garbling his way through oft-unintelligible voiceovers. Veering from baleful outpours to winsome enthusiasm, there’s room for pleasing pretention, but in truth, he delivers a performance at points mushy and groggy, like some sort of second-rate bratwurst.
This adaptation of de Musset’s romantic novel makes for an adaptation of two halfs: passionate, then passionless. The opening five minutes yield an elongated kiss scene, broken up by shots of his wife Elise (Lily Cole) playing footsy with another man, the ensuing duel and their arguments about fidelity. We’re gripped as he despairs like one of the many victims of Zola’s Nana: “to lose her was to destroy all”; how can he love another woman? There is also something enjoyable about the acts of pre-revolution philosophising and moralising on the odious bourgeoisie, and the debauched scenes of dining, vomming and volupté which follow. But suddenly, his father dies, and “the greatest libertine in all of Paris” decides to change his ways. He ponders society and solitude, good and evil, and past and present.
So far so good, and it’s only when he bumps into the decade-older Brigitte (Charlotte Gainsbourg) that the film slowly begins to deteriorate. Gainsbourg is an incredible actress, we know this much, and Doherty isn’t bad himself, but there’s a distinct lack of chemistry and, in its place, an overwhelming abundance of acting-school amateurism as they fall in love very, very slowly. They do elope in the end, but by this time, the narrative too has become weedy, claustrophobic and – in all honesty – rather mind-numbing. There’s a glimmer of hope in the role reversal which sees Brigitte become the one sans but, but the denouement is predictably gloomy; the repeated “I’m leaving you”s are entirely superfluous. There’s the odd effective scene – Doherty breaking a pillow, Doherty hallucinating sex with other women and Doherty faking his own suicide – but these only add to the shame that this film has ended up so middlebrow after what seemed like such a promising premise.
Wednesday, 12 September 2012
Interviews: Syron / Niki & The Dove
My chats with two of the best pop acts on Planet Earth right now: one with Syron (MASSIVE bass-pop crossover potential - think Katy B with extra sass), and another with acclaimed Swedes Niki & the Dove.
Also, look out for my double page spread on Tall Ships in October's DIY Mag, and an on-line Q&A with the heroic Menomena very soon. Both have lush new LPs.
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