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Hercules & Love Affair: The Death Of American Dance

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Andy Butler
Hercules & Love Affair
Words with Andy Butler…

The DNA of Western dance music is splashed around the mucky loins of America’s most deprived inner-city areas.

Disco exploded in the interloper lofts of New York in the 1970s. A decade later, the south Chicago warehouse scene applied a more synthetic, more psychedelic approach to match disco’s escapist template for a boisterous gay crowd searching for liberation. House music was born. Around the same time Detroit, drenched in a love of funk, started to emanate the motoric structures that would become techno.

However, despite such a crucial fathering of a global dance scene, America has always been massively distanced from the European musical riot that these scenes fuelled. As house and techno smashed into Belgian beat, dub, industrial, Italo and new wave, it detonated the ecstasy-drenched explosion and musical ground zero we know as acid house.

Andy Butler, lynchpin of NYC crew Hercules & Love Affair, has spent his entire adult life acting as a guardian of authentic American dance music. Clash caught up with the producer ahead of his latest album, ‘The Feast Of The Broken Heart’ (review), to capture his views on where American dance was up to. The results were eye watering.

“When you listen to the lyrics of a disco song, you hear someone looking beyond people’s skin tone, looking past people’s sexual orientation,” he begins. “We’re all one. This unity and acceptance created an energy in the room; everybody was there for that reason and that wasn’t happening outside during the waking light.”

Butler’s new album on Moshi Moshi presents a raw, more direct homage to the underground records of Chicago in the 1980s and 1990s. It is a shift away from his usual love of disco, but a move influenced by him living in Europe over the last year.

It was on this side of the Atlantic that he discovered that the Austrian producers Ha-Ze Factory shared the same love of these amazing records. Yet while they were loved in Europe, they were barely acknowledged in the US when Butler was growing up in Denver in the 1990s.  

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HERCULES & LOVE AFFAIR

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We wanted to know how Butler, an openly gay disco lover and long-established advocate of acid house, felt about America’s nationwide adoption of EDM? His answer buries the future of the nation’s club music six feet under.

“Yeah, well here is my response to EDM: I have a problem with every aspect of it. I have a problem with the very term. But I know what Americans like and call dance music or EDM is a series of cheap tricks that are extremely software-heavy. It doesn’t have any focus or concern for any basic concepts like melody or strong, interesting harmonic progressions. There are not any interesting vocal performances, and it displays a lack of any substantial lyrical content. It’s absolutely reductive!”

When we discuss how the modern American dance music is completely removed from its queer, black roots, Butler cites a recent Twitter conversation as the death knell of its future. He references a public show of complete ignorance played out on Twitter between Dave Rene (A&R at Interscope Dance) and Tim Smith (Skrillex manager) comforting each other when neither knew who Frankie Knuckles was upon his death.

“When I saw those tweets, I was like, ‘Wow! You have no sense of the history of what you do!’” cries Butler. “I couldn’t believe it. They have absolutely no respect, no concept of anything.” Both men recently featured in a US-focused list of important individuals in dance music. The embarrassing Tweets have since been deleted.

“I hate to talk about American consumers being so dumb,” concludes Butler, “but if you put out some freaked-out, hyper-agro rapper over the top of angry music, all of a sudden Americans will buy it. There’s not room for subtlety, there’s no room for nuances, there’s no room for traditional components of good music, soulful music. You know, none of the warmth or emotion that Chicago house and Detroit techno had. It has no redeeming features. So, there’s my rant!”

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Playlist: Andy Butler’s key American dance tracks

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Words: Matthew Bennett
Photos: Benjamin Alexander Huseby

Hercules & Love Affair’s ‘The Feast Of The Broken Heart’ is out now and reviewed here. Find the group online here

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7 Of The Best: Albums From The Over 40s

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Tom Waits
Tom Waits - Bone Machine
Scott Walker - The Drift
David Bowie - Outside
Portishead - Third
PJ Harvey - Let England Shake
They Might Be Giants - Join Us
Swans - The Great Annihilator
Old(er) dogs, (still) new tricks…

Clash hates to break it to you, but everything’s getting older. Your face, your hands, and your big, beautiful face: as you read this, you’re aging. Quick, do something more constructive! Nah, just kidding. Read this, since you’re here already.

Can an aging artist maintain not only a penchant for experimentation as they reach the later stages of their catalogue – or does the well of inspiration dry once the greys have well and truly taken root? Obviously, the answer is: yes, of course older artists can realise brilliant work. You’ve just got to know where to look, and listen…

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Tom Waits (born 1949) – ‘Bone Machine’ (released 1992)

Tom Waits embraced the persona of a beatnik throughout his early career and depicted the alcohol woes and strange characters met when living that life. Critic Roger Ebert once said few people read Charles Bukowski after the age of 30, and I think similar rules apply to reading beat writers – it's a phase most settle down out of, whereas the lives of most of the beats were ended by the ‘free’ lifestyle they embraced. Waits seemed on the self-destructive path of a romantic drunk (the worst combination), yet in 1992 he stopped drinking and ‘Bone Machine’ suggests music itself might just have been his new muse. The album finds him effortlessly fusing genres, instrumentation and vocal styles. It’s true that he’d done those things before successfully – yet he never sounded quite this intense.

‘I Don’t Wanna Grow Up’ is a perfect track in illuminating that while Waits might get older in years, he’ll never sound tired – with its fuzzed-out guitar and nursery rhyme-like melody, it’s a slap in the face to aging. Many artists ‘grow out of’ making primal music, but Waits proves you can be an older guy but still slam on the distortion pedal and scream over a two-minute song.  

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Scott Walker (born 1943) – ‘The Drift’ (released 2006)

With age comes musical as well as personal conservatism for many – but Scott Walker proves that the stereotypical arc of a musician is there to be defied, and he’s pushed musical boundaries with each release since 1995’s ‘Tilt’.

‘The Drift’ is a continuation of ‘Tilt’’s unsettling dissonance – and album highlight ‘The Escape’, with its duck-like vocal crescendo, shows there doesn’t have to be a cap on experimenting with the possibilities of the human voice.

The success of the album lies in the fact that despite its lack of conventional structures its highlights are created by use of simple dynamics – loud and quiet, dark and bright, harsh and pleasant sounds. Although I enjoy Walker’s avant-garde pieces, it’s also true that without the biographical information behind them and their reputation I’m not sure I’d be as inclined to sit through some of the more minimal, drawn-out sections on show here.

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David Bowie (born 1947) ‘Outside’ (released 1995)

David Bowie’s music is so monolithic it often seems to exist outside of the period it was released in, and ‘Outside’ is hard to place considering it came out around the same time as Britpop, and just after grunge. As usual, Bowie works in his own time frame.

While the clear influence of industrial music might make Bowie seem like more of a follower than he was in his youth, he can't help but make it his own. ‘Hallo Spaceboy’ is a fine example of Bowie’s originality as his haunted vocals and dreamy lyrics, alongside stomping intense rhythms, represent a contrast to the usual atmospheric gloom of industrial music.

David Bowie was 48 when he released this album, a feat in itself considering how forward thinking it sounds. It is his best album? It’s definitely up there, and its reputation grows as Bowie’s work continues to be listened to and reappraised. I doubt we’ll ever see the day that ‘Outside’ is put above ‘Ziggy Stardust’ or ‘Hunky Dory’ by the majority of critics or fans – but for originality and creativity, it earns its place as one of his most essential works.

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Portishead – ‘Third’ (released 2008)

One point of note about Portishead's ‘Third’ is how divergent the ages of the members were on this record: in 2008, Geoff Barrow was 36, Beth Gibbons was 43 and Adrian Utley was 51.

The danger of your favourite band getting older is that they’ll start to repeat themselves or become too settled into the identity of what they’ve been. It’s important for artists to continue the journey of musical discovery – and Portishead’s implementation of real band instrumentation while maintaining their characteristic atmospheric sound feels natural here, even after an 11-year break between studio LPs

There’s real despair on the track ‘Threads’ and the line “I’m always so unsure” is one that could just as easily come from a 14-year-old’s book of poetry as the mouth of a 43-year-old (which is not to diminish it). Emotional honesty is rarely so prominently displayed.

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PJ Harvey (born 1969) – ‘Let England Shake’ (released 2011)

PJ Harvey’s trajectory is common enough – intense early albums followed by a slow maturity encompassing a wider variety of instrumentation, more emotive singing and less angst-ridden lyrics. If you enjoyed the intensity of ‘Rid Of Me’ it can be hard to take the mellow, peaceful-voiced Harvey. ‘Let England Shake’ eases the loss of cathartic screaming in her music as it retains the passionate energy of her earlier works without the use of distortion and primal vocal performances.

The album’s success lies in Harvey’s decision to build songs around the topic of her homeland to reveal a frustration of what it’s become, alongside a yearning for an England that once was – and still can be, at its best.  

‘Let England Shake’ is one of the best examples of an older artist progressing from the intense feel of their earlier music without replacing it with common themes – in other words, a slew of earnest love songs – or more M.O.R. musical choices.

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They Might Be Giants – ‘Join Us’ (released 2011)

The best thing about the first two TMBG albums was they seemed to exist in a bubble outside of reality and – with cow samples and single-minute songs – they implemented avant-garde touches within music that was the opposite of the self-consciously ‘art’ art world.  

Yet as TMBG’s John Linnell (born 1959) and John Flansburgh (1960) got older, both their songwriting chops and willingness to create original music diminished – culminating in them at one point seeming doomed to make children's music forever.

Luckily, recent years have seen TMBG return to a level of pop perfection with some of those experimental (and bizarre) touches that made their early releases so great. The most original point on ‘Join Us’ is the tightness of the vocal interplay – in particular during ‘Spoiler Alert’ and ‘Protagonist’ where the two Johns sing different melodies in unison, yet arrange the song in such a way that they harmonise.

It’s a treat to hear two lead singers at the top of their games melodically, in a time where studio effects are diminishing the importance of distinctive vocal performances.

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Swans – ‘The Great Annihilator’ (released 1995)

Anyone who has read self-help book Think And Grow Rich will see music as a counter-example to the claim that generally people are more successful between the ages of 40-60. The argument levelled is that youths are overly distracted by their sexual energy and only with age are they able to subdue it and focus that same energy towards more productive pursuits.

While a huge percentage of music denies the theory – especially the punk rock and hip-hop genres – the Swans discography might just support it. 

Even today, Michael Gira’s (born 1954) Swans are producing music with intensity that’s ageless. Gira’s world-weariness is an essential presence in the band’s music – his references to sliding sanity and desperate, groan-like vocal performance suggest he’s been through more than a few dark nights of the soul.

Throughout this album, Gira is the Dionysian conductor to a chorus of twisted bacchanal followers – and his music gives a voice to the darker sides of humanity with Freudian psychodrama (‘Mother/Father’), alcoholism (‘Alcohol The Seed’), and the concerns of the body (‘Where Does A Body End?’).

Of all the artists on my list, this is the only I can think of that released their most critically acclaimed albums (‘The Great Annihilator’, ‘Soundtracks For The Blind’, ‘The Seer’ and most recently ‘To Be Kind’) with members over the age of 40.

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Words: William Bradbury

Related: more 7 Of The Best features

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Almost Is Never Enough: Ariana Grande Interviewed

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Ariana Grande for Clash issue 96 by Jones Crow
Ariana Grande for Clash issue 96 by Jones Crow
Ariana Grande for Clash issue 96 by Jones Crow
Ariana Grande for Clash issue 96 by Jones Crow
Ariana Grande for Clash issue 96 by Jones Crow
Determination of the American Dream…

Growing up in the public eye has brought mixed fortunes to the cast of young Americans staking their claim for the heady promises of showbiz. Their ascent, so exposed and driven, can either lead to new and challenging opportunities, or the crash-and-burn consequences of adolescent instinct, depending on their determination and objectives. As Britney reached for the shaver, for example, Justin was calculating a more judicious career move.

Twenty-year-old Ariana Grande is propelled by the most genuine of motivations: authenticity. Remaining true to herself, and preserving a belief in the virtues of her art, has expedited her rise from kids TV star to credible pop chanteuse. Instead of rebelling against the clean image she’d portrayed as Cat Valentine in Nickelodeon’s Victorious and offshoot Sam & Cat, Ariana chose naked ambition over naked portraits.

“Music is the most important thing in the world for me,” she tells Clash. “So, I feel like I’m provocative when I need to be, and I love feeling sexy and I love stepping up and being fun and everything. But for me, the main focus is the music, and I am glad that that comes across.”

Her focus was undeterred by the 18-hour days and grueling schedules endured while juggling TV commitments with recording sessions, clashing during the making of last year’s debut album, ‘Yours Truly’. The commitment paid off as the album smashed in at the top of the US chart in September, and broke top 10s across the globe, while her subtle maturation was evident in the astute pairings within – namely Mac Miller’s roguish rap on bouncy breakout single ‘The Way’, and Big Sean’s self-assured swagger on ‘Right There’.

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Ariana Grande, ‘The Way’ feat. Mac Miller

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Ariana’s honeyed vocals – lazily but justifiably compared to Mariah Carey’s – are confident yet sweet, suggestive but not offensive. It’s little wonder she’s an icon to millions of young girls.

“I don’t wake up in the morning and say, ‘Hey, what can I do to shock people today?’” she says, hinting at her more controversial peers. “I just think like, ‘Okay, let’s go make music’. I mean, I like the idea of separating myself from my younger image in a gradual, authentic way – I don’t really feel comfortable doing something out of control to convey my maturity, because it doesn’t feel genuine to me. So I will convey sexiness and maturity in ways that I’m comfortable with, but that’s not my priority when it comes to the music. It just speaks for itself. Like, it’s so different already that people are getting the point. So I would rather just focus on the music.”

In a country that thrives on reinvention and triumph, Grande is assertively leading pop’s new guard, and achieving her own American Dream is credited to a work ethic she inherited from her mother – the CEO of a military communications manufacturer. “I love working,” she explains. “It makes me happy. When I have too much time off it makes me feel very weird. So I get that from my mom.”

Considering her inalienable rights, Ariana’s pursuit of happiness is currently being concentrated on inner peace over material wealth. “I’m very happy with the work part of my life,” she begins proudly, “and as far as the personal part of my life, I’m constantly working on achieving my spiritual happiness and fulfillment in my heart. I go to the Kabbalah Center all the time, and I meditate, and I’m always talking to my friends about life and sitting outside until late at night and we’re always helping each other out.

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A lot of people just want to be famous – I never wanted that. I just wanted to make music…

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“There’s a personal part of it all that people don’t really think about, but it’s a lot of pressure and you have to make sure that you have all the right people around you to keep going, and make sure you’re at your strongest and ready to keep going. I’m definitely very lucky with my friends and my family.”

‘Yours Truly’ was over two years in the making – its protraction attributed to Ariana’s dissatisfaction with the direction and its digressing relevance to her amassing years; turning 18, she started over again, redoing tracks until she was completely satisfied with her new course. In contrast, her second album was effortlessly conceived, and comes just under a year after her debut, slated as it is for release later in 2014.

“I found my niche with the first album,” she reasons, “and then with this second one, I just started trying all new things and taking risks while still trying to remain as authentic in myself as I probably could. And it all sort of fell into place very quickly.”

The album is preceded by killer lead single ‘Problem’, which evokes classic ’90s R&B with its jubilant vocal peaks and jazzy sax loop, and feature’s Big Sean’s breathy chorus and Iggy Azalea spitting on fiery form. As we speak, Ariana is still practically breathless from her show-stealing performance of the track with Azalea at the previous night’s Billboard Music Awards – the dynamic duo, along with the UK’s own Charli XCX, who guested on Iggy’s ‘Fancy’, exemplified the tenacious product of the girl power generation.

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Ariana Grande, ‘Problem’ feat. Iggy Azalea

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“That was one of the most fun parts of the performance last night,” Ariana gushes, “to be on stage with so many young ambitious artists who are just getting started really, and I think they’re so fantastic. I love their attitude.”

Again, the disparity of Ariana’s charm and Iggy’s front proved a victory, and shrewdly widened each of their appeals to an international TV audience. “I feel like if you try new things and you experiment and are constantly putting out music and you just do what feels good as long as it feels authentic,” she says, using that word again, “then all those things you can feel and you can reach as many people as you want.”

Post-show praise and celebrations were curtailed, however, as Ariana literally stepped off-stage in Vegas to be whisked to the airport, flew back to LA, caught her own performance on TV at home with her family, then edited her new video with the director and friends in her bedroom until 5am.

“That’s the part of the American Dream that I think some people who really want to be recognised don’t realise,” she sighs, “how much work goes along with it. Because a lot of people just want to be famous – I never wanted that; I just wanted to make music, so I feel like it’s got to come from the right place.”

It’s an attitude that’s clearly working. Throw in a management team shared with Justin Bieber, the credible acclaim already garnered, 15 million Twitter followers, and a Little Black Book of supportive famous friends, and all the ingredients of a megastar fall into place.

Yet, even the prospect of platinum sales proves trivial to the immaterial girl: “I don’t think that success brings happiness,” she concludes, thoughtfully. “I think that achieving happiness is a success, like whatever that means to you. I don’t think that selling a lot of records makes you happy – I think that will make you temporarily happy and you’ll feel great and you’ll be like, ‘Hey, I just did this great song and sold a bunch of records!’

“I think that the idea of the American Dream, of success bringing happiness, is very superficial. I think that happiness comes from a different place. I feel like people have more to offer than just being really successful. The American Dream is a very wide, vast, weird topic for me, because it’s all very confusing and conflicting in my mind, but I do feel like everybody needs to keep trying, you know what I mean? I think that people need to try as hard as they can to achieve their happiness and their success, and I hope that they go hand-in-hand.”

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Ariana Grande, ‘Right There’ feat. Big Sean

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Words: Simon Harper
Photography: Jones Crow

‘Problem’ is out now in the US and is released in the UK in July. Find Ariana Grande online here.  

This interview is taken from the new, American Dream-themed issue of Clash magazine. Buy a copy here

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What Drives The American Dream?

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USA USA USA USA
Unpicking the world’s most famous national ethos…

Issue 96 of Clash magazine is focused on the highs and lows, the splendour and tragedy of the American Dream. Introducing the theme, in print, is this essay by our own Joe Zadeh

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The American Dream is an academic scrapheap of interpretation, and you could say there is a different version of it for every American citizen ever to exist.

As immigrants flooded America during the rapid economic growth of The Gilded Age for the prospect of higher working-class wages, the few that truly succeeded – like the Scottish steel industry innovator Andrew Carnegie – were celebrated as prototype characters of the American Dream. That Dream was about rags to riches: that anyone could become someone in the Land of Liberty. All you had to do was work within the system. Yet, as America rose – after the Roaring Twenties, two World Wars and a Great Depression – into the post-war mood of the 1950s, the Dream started to morph.

“Let ’em see you, son!” advised Milton Berle to a young Elvis Presley before he came to perform on his 1956 television show. The truck-driver-turned-musician – a genuine rags to riches – usually performed with guitar in hand, but he took the advice and began ‘Hound Dog’ with his hands free.

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Elvis on The Milton Berle Show, 1956

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Halfway through the song, as his band suddenly switched to half-speed, Elvis began to grapple rather sensually with the extendable mic stand, move his hips ecstatically, and unleash a hypnotic pelvic swing that joyously sodomised the imaginations of America. Elvis was like Andrew Carnegie: he was an icon – and it is the icons that drive the Dream. They dangle the carrot of happiness from the end of a stick named ‘Pursuit’. Elvis proved the Dream is alive, that the system works. And he wasn’t the only one.

While TV shows fought over The King’s counter-culture craziness, a bigger screen was portraying the Dream through the Promethean machismo of John Wayne. Wayne’s role in American society was epitomised by General Douglas MacArthur, telling Wayne: “You represent the American servicemen better than the American servicemen themselves.”

Then there was Marilyn Monroe: widely associated with sexual appeal, femme fatale roles and the chauvinistic adoration of the troops, her foster-home-to-film-noir story inspired millions too, and a nude appearance in Playboy broke traditional conceptions of female behaviour for American society.

Mickey Mouse was teaching kids how to be “clean living, fun loving, bashful around girls, polite and clever” little American boys, and Barbie – despite her anorexic and materialistic controversy – was actually intended as an aspirational female character. After all, despite Ken’s confusingly camp attempts to bomb the scene with his flocked hair and bold beachwear, Barbie lived a relatively independent existence, free of that era’s biggest gender stereotypes: children and housewife duties. Even after Wedding Barbie walked up the aisle, the cars, houses, camper vans and garages that appeared were specifically stated as hers, not Ken’s, and not Barbie and Ken’s.

Through these mediums of film, radio, television, advertising and print, the American Dream would change depending on the images its dreamers were fed. The Dream became financial security and a Brady Bunch family life, with white picket fences, warm apple pie, a Chevy on the drive and a dog called Rex. Nevada spawned a nightmarish glitter gulch in Las Vegas, where the ‘rags to riches’ archetype was reduced to a moneymaking scheme that swaps hard work for instant chance.

In California, the Dream favoured those 15 minutes of fame. They remembered the Gold Rush of the 19th century, and they knew how quickly things could turn. If only that was their white ivory cocktail dress flailing in the subway breeze as it blew from the sidewalk grate: “It sorta cools the ankles, doesn’t it?” If only that was them riding horseback to rescue Debbie from the Comanche Indians. After all, “Down on the West Coast,” explains our issue 96 cover star Lana Del Rey in the lyrics of her recent single, “I get this feeling like it could all happen.”

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“It sorta cools the ankles, doesn’t it?” (The Seven Year Itch, 1955)

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As the years rolled by, the wheels started to fall off the Dream’s systemic and idealistic prairie schooner. First, its leading lady died, analysed perfectly in the words of biographer Graham McCann: “The legend of Marilyn Monroe leads one into the bourgeois truisms of Western culture: that fame does not bring happiness; that sexuality is destructive; that Hollywood destroys its own children.”

A year later, in 1963, Martin Luther King tugged on the very fabric of the Dream by pointing out that the American Civil Rights Movement relied on it changing. He had a dream, and it didn’t look like Gregory Peck holding an Academy Award. In the ’70s, films like The Godfather and Taxi Driver twisted things by glorifying anti-heroes, and shedding light on the reality of criminals forced to bend the rules to achieve their Dream. Like George Foreman on that dark 1974 morning in Kinshasa, the Dream was on the ropes and Vietnam, Watergate, the Arab oil embargo, a rise in crime, and the righteous roar of minorities who wanted their voices heard landed heavy blows. Suddenly, America didn’t seem so Cherry Cola. The Dream was losing its fizz.

Years have passed since then, and all the names paved into the sidewalks of Hollywood Boulevard will tell you that the Dream found a way to survive. But what about right now, in 2014, with America showing ever-increasing evidence of declining social mobility and structural inequality? Where “the rich get richer” has become a slogan of daily rhetoric. In this America, does the Dream still exist? And if so, who is driving it?

“The idea that anyone can, through hard work and talent, rise in the world is so deeply rooted in US culture that it will probably never go away,” Andrew Hoberek tells Clash. “It’s central to the nation’s very idea of itself.” Hoberek is an Associate Professor of English at the University of Missouri-Columbia, where he has garnered notable attention for teaching a class that explores how the rise of Kanye West and Jay Z to both celebrity and corporate power alters what we understand as the American Dream.

Kanye’s relationship with The Dream is a turbulent one, and since ‘The College Dropout’ he has been highlighting the farce of how “The prettiest people do the ugliest things / For the road to riches and diamond rings”. But in 2013, the video for ‘Bound 2’ found Kanye at his most vitriolic towards the Dream.

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Kanye West, ‘Bound 2’

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In American culture, the open road traditionally represents freedom, escape, friendship and romance; four things the Dream never originally intended for young black males. Satirising that traditional scene, Kanye proudly cruises down this road, under the flight of a bald eagle, on – of course – a Harley Davidson motorcycle. He embraces his wife Kim Kardashian (West), a third-generation Armenian-American who’s far from the image cast by Marilyn Monroe.

In fact, some of Kardashian’s ancestors died in the Armenian genocide of 1915, an event that American presidents including Obama have ignored to commemorate in loyalty to US allies and perpetrators Turkey (then the Ottoman Empire) despite the pleas of voting American-Armenians for their President to recognise the atrocity. Needless to say, Obama does not approve of the couple, dismissing Kanye publicly as a “jackass”. Hoberek thinks it goes slightly further:

“I think we have to look elsewhere for the core of Obama’s longstanding critique of Kanye, part of which I think lies in Kanye’s willingness to keep protesting aspects of the system – not always, it’s true, in a coherent way –  despite having achieved so many measures of mainstream success.”

The popularity of hip-hop culture in America positions rap at the forefront of influence. The emergence of Kanye West and Jay Z places them not only as hip-hop tastemakers, but also as icons with the ability to affect other areas of art and everyday living. They are today’s Dream weavers.

“Jay Z, Beyoncé, and (the couple’s daughter) Blue Ivy are the unofficial royal family of the United States,” explains Hoberek, “universally beloved because they offer evidence that the American Dream is still alive, and that it’s been extended to people who were previously barred from such outsized success. There’s nothing wrong with this sentiment per se, although the celebration of individuals covers over structural inequalities that are in fact becoming more and more fixed.”

That said, the typically white upper-middle class setting of Cadillac’s latest television advert suggests that in some areas of America, hip-hop has no hold on the Dream. The narrator – played by Boomtown and Band Of Brothers actor Neal McDonough – asks himself why everyday Americans work so hard when other countries are taking August off?

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Cadillac wants you to buy their cars

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“Because we’re crazy, driven, hardworking believers, that’s why! Those other countries think we’re nuts. Whatever! Were the Wright brothers insane? Bill Gates? Les Paul?” And, before the advert gets just a little too white to even stare at directly: “Muhammad Ali?” It’s interesting to note that Cadillac’s owners General Motors – the second biggest car manufacturer in the world – are clearly still utilising the traditional Dream on a level that they feel still communicates with everyday car-owning Americans. After all, “You work hard, you create your own luck, and you just gotta believe that anything is possible!”

So, is the American Dream still alive? In a word, yes. But in more ways than you could ever imagine, and throughout issue 96 of Clash, pieces on music, film, and fashion explore the various shades of red, white and blue that colour this everlasting fantasy.

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Words: Joe Zadeh

Full references – not to mention all of those articles – can be found in issue 96 of Clash magazine. Buy a copy here

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Manic Street Preachers: The Complete Guide

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Manic Street Preachers
Generation Terrorists
Gold Against The Soul
The Holy Bible
Everything Must Go
This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours
Know Your Enemy
Lifeblood
Send Away The Tigers
Journal For Plague Lovers
Postcards From A Young Man
Rewind The Film
Futurology
Ahead of ‘Futurology’, get to know the catalogue...

Twenty-six years on from their debut single, 19 since the disappearance of Richey Edwards, 12 years on from their first retrospective and only 10 months on from their more acoustic, introverted 11th album, Wales’ finest, Manic Street Preachers, are set to return with one of the best records of their career.

Ahead of the band’s ‘Futurology’ and its triumphant riffery, Clash thought it would be a good time to take a tour through the Manics’ past. From the pomp and arrogance of their early years, through the mid-1990s success during difficult times, up to their latest incarnation, there’s plenty to get to know.

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‘Generation Terrorists’ (1992)

Declaring they would deliver a double album, sell millions and then split up, the band’s debut was a victim of both variable material and early-1990s production. That’s not to say that key singles ‘You Love Us’, ‘Little Baby Nothing’ and ‘Stay Beautiful’ don’t still sound glorious, but there is plenty of lovably dated material here which will baffle those not indulging in a nostalgia trip. The sizeable discrepancy in quality between some of these songs is never more evident than when confronted with the near-perfect ‘Motorcycle Emptiness’. Despite there being much, much better to come, ‘Generation Terrorists’ remains a remarkable document of ambition, arrogance, bombast and sheer bloody-mindedness.

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‘Gold Against The Soul’ (1993)

Big, bold and bedecked in leather, the precision rock of the band’s second outing delivered several wonderful singles and some unapologetically simplistic cock-rock. The shimmering melancholy of ‘La Tristesse Durera (Scream To A Sigh)’ and ‘From Despair To Where’ contrast curiously with the execrably titled ‘Drug Drug Druggy’ and the rather too polished ‘Nostalgic Pushead’. It’s hard to imagine it ever being anyone’s favourite record, but ‘Gold Against The Soul’ neatly highlights the band’s capacity for glorious melody amongst some endearingly shameless rock clichés.

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‘The Holy Bible’ (1994)

Emerging into the warm glow of nascent Britpop and accompanied by a memorable Top Of The Pops performance featuring fire and a balaclava, the Manics could not have been more out of step with the times if they’d tried. And you suspect they had. A quite remarkable record, ‘The Holy Bible’ is lyrically and musically dense, forever associated with the subsequent disappearance of the man responsible for 70% of its lyrics. Anorexia, suicide and the Holocaust are amongst the subject matter covered, coupled with the ferocious delivery by lead guitarist and vocalist James Dean Bradfield. The songs were difficult to craft, to perform and, in some cases, to hear, but any uncertainty about how to evolve the sound was put into brutal perspective by what happened next.

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‘Everything Must Go’ (1996)

Amidst the grief for a missing friend, co-lyricist and occasional guitarist Richey Edwards having disappeared in February 1995, the band found themselves unsure of the future. The catalyst for their second phase was ‘A Design For Life’, the demo prompting the trio to persevere and leading to the most beautifully crafted album of their career. Sympathetically guided by Mike Hedges and with an empathetic but not overbearing application of strings, ‘Everything Must Go’ managed to combine the more accessible sound of their early years with the vivid imagery of their previous album. Somehow lumped into the latter stages of Britpop at the time, this record remains one of the decade’s finest releases and is an essential listen.

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‘This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours’ (1998)

Preceded by a chart-topping single about the Spanish Civil War, ‘If You Tolerate This Your Children Will Be Next’, the band’s fifth album was a glacial distillation of the anthemic rock that had served them so well two years previous. Misfiring album closer and Hillsborough referencing ‘S.Y.M.M.’ was a rare error, brushing up against eternal favourites ‘You Stole The Sun From My Heart’ and ‘Tsunami’ and the delicate shimmer of ‘Black Dog On My Shoulder’, which more than make up for it. Although a little close to AOR with the preference for mid-paced melancholia, the Manics were now making grown up, actually rather beautiful music. Which, of course, couldn’t last.

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‘Know Your Enemy’ (2001)

As something of a reaction to the success and celebrity they had achieved in the latter part of the 1990s, the band opted for a slightly shapeless, enjoyably eccentric collage of styles. Early R.E.M. rubbed up against shimmering Beach Boys, The Jesus And Mary Chain nestled next to a little Joy Division. It shouldn’t really work and, ultimately, it doesn’t. However, it is a fascinating failure and the fact that it doesn’t quite hang together doesn’t mean that it doesn’t possess a number of notable tunes. ‘The Year Of Purification’ and ‘His Last Painting’ are lost gems.

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‘Lifeblood’ (2004)

Renounced by the band shortly after they’d finished promoting it, but far better than they seem to realise, ‘Lifeblood’ was the true marker of a commercial decline started by those baffled by its schizophrenic predecessor. This is a record with an electronic core, very smooth edges and a heavy debt to the wonders of New Order. ‘I Live To Fall Asleep’, ‘Glasnost’ and ‘Cardiff Afterlife’ are all gorgeous, stately pop songs, with Bradfield in particularly fine voice. Unfortunately, the production didn’t quite translate to the stage, sales weren’t forthcoming and their seventh was quickly and quietly consigned to history.

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‘Send Away The Tigers’ (2007)

While stowing away their previous release, the band dug out an old logo and decided to return to what they knew best. Despite possessing a truly great single in ‘Your Love Alone Is Not Enough’, the album as a whole feels like a curiously flimsy imitation of themselves, mostly indebted to a sound pitched somewhere between ‘Gold Against The Soul’ and ‘Everything Must Go’. It got plenty of tired ‘return to form’ plaudits upon release, largely because the huge riffs had returned, but its staying power is minimal and, if you are going to skip anything from their catalogue, make it this one.

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‘Journal For Plague Lovers’ (2009)

Conceived as a substantial musical tribute to Edwards, using lyrics he had left behind, a return to the more angular, ferocious sound of ‘The Holy Bible’ seemed only fitting. ‘Jackie Collins Existential Question Time’ with its chorus of “Oh mummy, what’s a Sex Pistol?” was an obvious highlight, but the closing melancholy of ‘William’s Last Words’ is imbued with a subtext that makes it quite shattering. The band’s best record in over a decade, and one of the finest of their career, it is a complex, challenging and even unsettling listen, partly emphasised by the stark artwork by Jenny Saville.

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‘Postcards From A Young Man’ (2010)

Talked up as one last shot at “mass communication”, this is an unashamedly pop record and its chutzpah is staggering. Gospel choirs, soaring strings and choruses you could use as landmarks in a blizzard make for a joyous listen. Wilfully commercial, it was the band having a final crack at the sound with which they had become eternally, inextricably linked. As a victory lap, it’s a fine achievement and while its initial lustre has faded a little, the majesty of the title track and the Ian McCulloch-featuring single ‘Some Kind Of Nothingness’ remain obvious. With the statement made, the line was drawn and a new direction was sought.

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‘Rewind The Film’ (2013)

The subsequent incarnation found the band in far more introspective mode. The electric guitar was banished, with any such material put to one side for use on their next outing, while Cate Le Bon and Richard Hawley leant their stirring vocals to ‘4 Lonely Roads’ and the album’s title track respectively. These two significant departures for the band suited them rather well and it seemed that any raging against the dying of the light would be done with a wistful grace. ‘(I Miss The) Tokyo Skyline’ is a particularly curious beast, sparse and subtle, showing their grasp of atmospherics is an equal to their mastery of big riffs, while ‘As Holy As The Soil’ focuses on treasured memories of a lost friend over a piano driven backdrop and with vocals by bassist and lyricist Nicky Wire. As endearingly graceful as this 11th outing was, the talk of a mysterious Krautrock-inspired sibling kept everybody on their toes.

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‘Futurology’ (2014)

Recorded alongside ‘Rewind The Film’, but scythed off to form another record owing to such a vastly different feel, these 13 songs are full of emotion, energy and, most importantly, new ideas. Electronic influences seem to fit naturally, nothing seems contrived and even a less than subtle nod to the balls-out rock bluster of ‘Generation Terrorists’ on ‘Sex, Power, Love And Money’ is rendered meticulously. ‘Europa Geht Durch Mich’ is a tremendous stomp, with guest vocals from German actor Nina Hoss and more than a little cowbell, while ‘Between The Clock And The Bed’ is as slinky as an ’80s pop classic, bedecked with vocals by Green Gartside. For all the talk of having one last stab at the big time four years previous, with ‘Futurology’ the Manics have proved once again that their music really can be as good as their bluster.

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Words: Gareth James

‘Futurology’ is released on July 7th, and will be reviewed online soon. Clash will also have a new interview with the Manics up on these here pages really soon. Find the band online here

Related: more Complete Guide features

Related: 7 Of The Best: Manic Street Preachers

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Next Wave #588: Deep Creep

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Deep Creep (from the band's Facebook)
Sinister boogie-down rock from cult musicians…

The Seattle sun is shining down on Brian Yeager. Sitting in his garden and coolly wearing a Pharrell-ish hat, he lights a cigarette and begins to talk. The doors to his house are open, and occasionally the sounds of Fleetwood Mac’s ‘Rumours’ spill out. Between cigarettes, he spurs on conversational asides about matters as disparate as record collecting, industrial gods Godflesh and the “beauty” of Aberdeen. He laughs and asks questions. He’s in good spirits.

Guitarist for punk band The Cute Lepers and a familiar face in the Seattle music scene, Yeager is now the co-founder of the recently formed Deep Creep. His partner in crime is bassist Derek Fudesco – most recently of Justin Vernon-approved folk-rockers The Cave Singers, but also a familiar face from cult act Murder City Devils and Pretty Girls Make Graves.

Familiar with each other’s music as fellow Seattleites, the pair also worked together at famed record store Easy Street, where they crafted plans to work with one another. “We always wanted to play music together,” Yeager says. “He was busy with The Cave Singers and I was busy with other stuff, so in between those times, that’s when we’d start writing. It was a slow start.”

Easy Street helped to fill out the line-up, with Yeager and Fudesco’s co-worker Jeff Alvarez flung, unheard, into drummer duties.

“I had never even heard Jeff play drums,” Yeager shrugs, “I sensed that he was good, for sure.” Vocals were an “obvious choice” according to the guitarist, with Fudesco’s Pretty Girls Make Graves bandmate Andrea Zollo brought into the fold. This marks Zollo’s first full-time vocal duties since her time in the much-loved PGMG, something that Yeager admits to being pleased as punch about.

Without playing down the ample contributions of her bandmates, it’s Zollo’s inclusion that will draw in many prospective fans. Does Yeager feel any pressure to live up to any expectations this sets? “Pressure? No. We’re having a good time.”

And Deep Creep does sound like four friends having a good time, albeit with a tinge of unease. On a set of demos uploaded to SoundCloud in April, Zollo is in fine mettle, developing her impassioned-yet-understated vocals with new affectations: slurry storytelling, bubble-gum nonsense and occasional slips into Lux Interior-esque menace. The songs are equal amounts fun and demented, with a sinister edge bubbling beneath the surface.

On ‘Move A Little’, Zollo instructs the crowd to party over a boogie-woogie beat, building up flirty images until Alvarez abruptly hits the brakes; ‘The Ghoul’ has an organ-led refrain about “walking the streets at night” and finds honour in packs of alley cats. There’s a glint shining off the edges of these songs, but you can’t make out if it’s from a smile or a switchblade.

“It’s playful, it’s fun,” admits Yeager of this dichotomy, “[but] we like to keep a little anxiety in the music.” The four-piece plans to delve deeper into their sound with a soul-influenced EP (potentially on “big hole 45”, nerdy record collector style”) produced by old PGMG collaborator Colin Stewart, and hone their attack on dates supporting their buddies in the Murder City Devils. The wheels are moving – and fast – but after so long waiting to work with Fudesco, Yeager isn’t waiting up for anyone.

“It feels really good, I’m really excited about it – the songs are fun to play. Derek and I were really adamant at the very beginning: if we don’t want to play these songs then why would anybody want to listen to them? We play them over and over again, and these songs always feel good to play, then we feel good about it. We want them to dance, we want them to move a little!”

He finishes his cigarette and luxuriates a little longer in the Seattle sunshine.

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WHERE: Seattle

WHAT: Slightly sinister boogie-down rock from cult US indie alumni

GET 3 SONGS:‘Move A Little’, ‘The Ghoul’, ‘Bees In The Basement’

FACT: If you’re looking to visit the branch of Easy Street responsible for three-quarters of Deep Creep’s line-up, think again: “They closed the one we were working on and turned it into a bank,” Yeager admits, smiling ruefully. “Sad day.”

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Deep Creep online

Words: Daniel Montesinos-Donaghy (Twitter)

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American Nightmares: On The Blood Brothers' Return

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The Blood Brothers
Cult Seattle punks are back. Go see them…

Every summer festival schedule serves as a comeback season, of sorts. Earlier this year, Slowdive reformed. People were into that. Plenty of festival-goers will be into that when the band plays Latitude, at the Pitchfork Festival in Chicago, Way Out West in Sweden (which, whoop, this sucker will be at). I was into that – ‘Souvlaki’ is a classic. It was a Big Deal. But it was confirmation of a quite different reunion, announced in May, which got me properly pants-wettingly psyched. That of The Blood Brothers. Oh holy Jesus shitthebed, yes.

Y’see, people go through changes, and music connections flit from reverence to irrelevance. Different times in a person’s life come with singular soundtracks, and for a period it was this five-piece from Seattle – roaring, screaming, banshee-punk freaks who generated maximum thrills from creep-out riffs and cunningly shrouded pop hooks as big as a Michael Bay post-production budget – who accompanied me on the rollercoaster of my 20s. A ride that, quite honestly, was pretty tame compared to most: a move to London, relatively solid employment, getting some cats, a wonderful wedding (still the best one I’ve been to, if I’m allowed to be so bold). Hell, I needed the turbulence from somewhere.

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‘Ambulance vs Ambulance’, from ‘…Burn, Piano Island, Burn’

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Four albums in particular provided these flashes of cantankerous malevolence, albeit of a kind tempered by studied craft and a tremendous work ethic. All came with The Blood Brothers’ name branded on their sleeves: ‘March On Electric Children’ (2002), ‘…Burn, Piano Island, Burn’ (2003), ‘Crimes’ (2004) and ‘Young Machetes’ (2006). There was a fifth set too, a debut 21-minute firecracker titled ‘This Adultery Is Ripe’, but I never got into it so deeply. I met the makers of these albums several times – here’s a (Drowned In Sound) ReDiScover piece on the band from 2006 which refers to said interviews. They were great guys in a great band, and I didn’t want them to stop being great.

Of course, they did. The split came in 2007, after 10 years as a band – “If something is no longer bringing you joy, it’s time to make a change,” said co-vocalist Jordan Blilie in a 2008 interview with his hometown’s The Stranger. Heartbroken, a little. But, as is so often the case with these creative-difference disbandments, an overdue epilogue has offered cause for celebration. The Blood Brothers have shows booked for 2014, starting in late August.

At the moment, there’s just three confirmed on their website, all in the US. I’m far from alone in hoping, wishing, praying that they decide to bring their compulsive, convulsive live cacophony to the UK, though. I wasn’t the only one who sighed deeply, trying to find substance to replace what was lost, stolen, when the band broke up. We are many. At least, that’s what I remember from the shows, back when, though honestly, there was a lot of sweat in my eyes.

There was ULU, in London, summer of 2007. The night ended with a fire alarm sounding not only time at the bar, time to go the hell home, but also the end of The Blood Brothers as we knew them. The band was supporting ‘Young Machetes’, their highest-charting album stateside (it’d gone top 100, no mean feat for a band of such polarising appeal and mainstream-swerving menace), which’d been produced (brilliantly) by Fugazi’s Guy Picciotto. Pitchfork was indifferent, 6.2 in place of a deserved-more score, but elsewhere people went nuts for it. Five Ks in Kerrang!, a 9/10 from me. Live, its songs sounded incredible. So much so that nobody knew, at ULU, that they were witnessing the end unravel.

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‘Set Fire To The Face On Fire’, from ‘Young Machetes’ (live on The Henry Rollins Show)

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The album came out in the UK on Wichita Recordings, home to acts including The Cribs, Bloc Party, Bright Eyes and Simian Mobile Disco. Label co-founder Mark Bowen was at ULU: “I had no idea, that night, that the band would soon call it quits. I was gutted that was my final show with them.”

Bowen wasn’t quite a long-term fan of the band, but was well aware of the buzz surrounding them by the time he caught them in the flesh at 2005’s Coachella. “I’d loved ‘Crimes’,” he says, “and heard a lot about their amazing live show, but I didn’t see them until Coachella. They absolutely blew my mind. This incredible, theatrical, almost prog-rock band… they were my favourite discovery of the weekend.”

When the opportunity to release ‘Young Machetes’ arose, Bowen snapped at the chance eagerly. “Cue a summer of our world screaming, ‘Fire! Fire! Fire!’,” he recalls, referencing the album’s opening track ‘Set Fire To The Face On Fire’. Another big fan on British shores is/was the writer and journalist Stevie Chick, who I almost certainly bumped into at a Blood Brothers show or two.

“I got on board with ‘March On Electric Children’,” Chick tells me, “and loved its crazy, helter-skelter assault – the guitars thin and veiny like claws, the rhythms shifting with every bar or turning tempo on a dime, and those voices, Jordan and Johnny (Whitney), two flavours of indignant sneer that sat so well together. Johnny had a little more swagger going on, while Jordan’s scream was just a tad more blood-curdling.

“I dug the chaos of it all, the proggy punk-rock mess of it all, the rutty riffs they'd plough into. I particularly loved the final song, ‘American Vultures’, that piano like some vaudevillian barroom touch, making the satire within their snarl explicit. It announced ambition beyond the moshpit, a sense of sophistication, a breadth of vision.”

Couldn’t have put it better myself (pro-tip: when you need great music summarised in a paragraph, ask a great writer to help you out). It was the band’s next album though, ‘…Burn, Piano Island, Burn’, that really impressed. It broke beyond the strictly rock press: Pitchfork slapped a 9.1 on it, Stylus a perfect score, and DiS opened its own 9/10 review with: “(This album) deserves to be flushed into every corner of our nation’s pop sensibility. Now.” It marked the moment where the assault met accessibility with a quite unexpected potency.

“It’s their masterpiece, in my opinion,” says Chick. “Not that their songwriting tailed off on the following albums, not that they got stagnant – indeed, they veered far off ‘…Piano Island’’s blueprint in the albums that followed, often delivering abundant rewards in the process. But (producer) Ross Robinson – with this album, along with At The Drive-In’s ‘Relationship Of Command’ – entirely redeems his involvement with the grim and stupid spectre of nu metal, which The Blood Brothers stood in righteous relief against.

“Robinson's work here is excellent. He fashioned a focus to their attack which, in tandem with their maturing songwriting, took all that wild flailing on ‘…Electric Children’ and made sense of it all. The twists, tempo-changes and turns from punk terror to acidic pop were all intact, but the songs of ‘…Burn, Piano Island, Burn’ arranged their tense-ups and breakdowns and disorientating skronks with a masterful ear, while Robinson gave new muscle to the sinewy guitars, a tungsten growl to the bass, and gave their neck-snap explosions the dynamism they deserved.”

Nutshell: it was really good. And, in many respects, they got better. ‘Crimes’ is a set I undersold on initial impressions – I recall reviewing it to the level of 7/10 for Rock Sound, before rising that mark to a 9 when revisiting the record for DiS. More melodic than what preceded it, albeit without compromising the band’s inherent energies, ‘Crimes’ could be seen as an attempt at achieving a breakthrough proper. It emerged with the weight of V2 behind it, produced by John Goodmanson, and featured lyrical content critiquing America’s Bush administration. What wasn’t to like?

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‘Love Rhymes With Hideous Car Wreck’, from ‘Crimes’

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There’s no doubt in my mind, though, that ‘Young Machetes’ was the realisation of all of this band’s potential, a distillation of their strengths expunging most suggestions of weakness. Punkish post-hardcore had become a divinely twisted pop, entirely on The Blood Brothers’ terms. They’d shape-shifted time and again – but as soon as something like crystallisation was approaching, they shattered. Returning to Blilie’s conversation with The Stranger, he said: “I couldn’t imagine trying to work on another record with that band… People grow into different individuals and have different ideas of what they want to be doing with music.”

And so, members set about exploring new directions. (Deep breath, people…) Blilie has featured as frontman of Past Lives – a band also including Blood Brothers bassist Morgan Henderson and drummer Mark Gajadhar, alongside former BBs guitarist Devin Welch – while Whitney and guitarist Cody Votolato formed the Matador-signed Jaguar Love with Pretty Girls Make Graves musician Jason Clark. Henderson now plays in Fleet Foxes and The Cave Singers, and Whitney and Gajadhar have a project called Neon Blonde, exploring more beats-based material. Votolato and Blilie were part of Head Wound City’s line-up – a noisy collective also including Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ Nick Zinner and Justin Pearson of The Locust. Votolato and Gajadhar played on ‘Birth, School, Work, Death’, the 2011 debut album by Texan (rock-)rapper Hyro Da Hero.

Yeah, they got around a bit, basically. Being busy has rarely seemed a problem for members of The Blood Brothers. So why come back in 2014?

Noisey caught up with Blilie after the band’s comeback. He tells the site that it was F*ck Yeah Fest that played the most significant part – and it’s that Los Angeles festival that The Blood Brothers will play on Sunday, August 24th. “Seeing The Locust last year at FYF made me feel 17 again,” says the singer, who also stands in for Mick Jagger (!) in a Seattle Stones ‘tribute’ act (seriously). “I know people are cynical, and everyone is reaching reunion fatigue. But if any show validated reunions, it’s Pulp. They walked that fine line of being tongue in cheek, and not taking it too seriously, but still respecting people’s expectations.”

“One show at a time,” are Blilie’s words. Just three at the moment. Maybe more to come. Of course, some in the UK would be amazing. Please? Surely there are enough people here, willing to pay good money to see these now-30-something dudes absolutely kill it one more time. Bowen isn’t taking the chance: “It makes sense that it should be my favourite festival, FYF, that has brought them back together, and I’m going to be front-row, late August, when their madness returns.”

For Chick, and myself, it’s more likely that we’re going to have to rely on a domestic announcement to get our fill. And it’s unlikely their appeal will have waned any amongst our fellow fans. “They were a massive breath of fresh air for me, at the time,” remembers Chick, “their dervish fury powered by lyrics that painted modern society with a severe, judgemental and nightmarish eye, like some Hieronymus Bosch landscape of exploitation, selfishness, greed and murder that didn't revel in the luridness, but railed against it, screaming amid the ashes instead of dancing among them.”

He concludes: “In the face of an imperfect world, The Blood Brothers’ righteous desperation was electrifying.” So let us keep whatever we can crossed that their march carries across the Atlantic, and we can all burn together in the company of such combustive entertainment.

Please?

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‘Lazer Life’, ‘from ‘Young Machetes’

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The Blood Brothers online

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Clash DJ Mix - Moleskin

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Moleskin
"Chicago, Baltimore, London, Durban, New York, the internet..."

In the space of only a handful of releases, Goon Club Allstars has established itself as one of the country's most on-point labels.

2013 saw production duo Mssingno deliver a rightly celebrated EP, which acted as a blueprint of sorts for the label itself: piecing together elements of grime, Jersey house and more, it de-constructed these elements and shaped them into something startlingly fresh.

Introduced to the Goon Club stable via a sought after 12 inch last year, Moleskin seems to capture the imprint's ethos. A new, self-titled, EP drops on June 23rd and it comes packed with a fluorescent energy.

With the likes of Evian Christ, Bok Bok, Blackdown, Logos and more already showing support, Moleskin has rapidly emerges as a talent to watch. Thankfully, Clash have been able to get in there first, inviting the producer to craft a special mix for our weekly series.

Moleskin describes his mix thus: "House music. Some tracks from friends. Some olds tracks. Some new tracks. Some unreleased tracks. Some vinyl rips. Some 128kbps tracks accrued from temperamental MP3 download sites in hard to find corners of the internet. Chicago, Baltimore, London, Durban, New York, the internet."

Listen to it now... Grab it HERE.
Right click, 'Save As...'

Tracklisting:
DJ Freeze - Spanish Lesson
Jammin' The House Gerald - Black Woman (Club)
Dennis Ferrer - P 2 DA J
DJ Freeze - Man Down Under
DJ Technics - Computer Madness
Mr Mageeka - Different Lekstrix
Jam City - Arpjam
Neheun - Intriga
Helix - Linn Jam (with synth)
Neana - Bowkat (8 Bar Mix)
Bad Mojo - Tidal waves (Moleskin's Wave Machine Mix)
DJ Firmeza - Dedicado Ao Projecto Princip
Circle Children - Zulu
DJ Lag - Ghost On The Loose
Dem Tinz feat. GoVernor - Al Qaeda

Photo Credit: Oscar Yoosefinejad

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The Prodigy's Liam Howlett On Music For The Jilted Generation

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Music For The Jilted Generation
The Prodigy
Liam Howlett
20th anniversary Spotlight special...

F*ck them, and their law, indeed. What was then could be no more. Stasis meant death, and after riding rave into the mainstream, going top-five with debut 1991 single ‘Charly’, The Prodigy knew it. Change was needed. Quickly. Time to tear up the rulebooks.

“We were in America, supporting (debut album of 1992) ‘Experience’, and we found ourselves at a bit of a crossroads,” remembers the band’s key creative core, songwriter Liam Howlett. “It was a really important time for us. To be honest, I’d reached the point where I wasn’t feeling rave anymore. We thought about whether or not to break the band up – we wondered if ‘Experience’ was all that we could do.

“I remember hearing Rage Against The Machine while in America, and feeling that, suddenly, music was opening up that little bit wider for me. It came down to me to push the music, once we’d got home. As soon as we did get back, I think the first thing I wrote was ‘Voodoo People’, or ‘Their Law’.

“I was feeling free – free of the rave BPMs, and feeling slightly rebellious against it. Rave had turned into something that we didn’t like. I remember standing on stage in Scotland, at a rave, and it just felt silly. I was like: ‘What the f*ck am I doing here? I’m not into this. It’s now so far from what it was.’ That made me want to do something different.”

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‘Their Law’ (live in 2010)

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And so the foundations for ‘Music For The Jilted Generation’ were laid. Alongside MC Maxim Reality, dancer-turned-vocalist Keith Flint and then-member Leeroy Thornhill, Howlett was about to realise not only the greatest record of his band’s continuing catalogue, but perhaps the most important dance album of the 1990s. ‘Music For The Jilted Generation’ came out through XL Recordings in early July 1994, and raced to the number one spot on the UK chart. The Essex-based act had come of age and no mistake – and what’s more, they’d created something unexpectedly timeless in the process.

“‘…Jilted’ is the fans’ favourite, I think,” says Howlett, speaking to Clash from his studio, where work is underway on what will be The Prodigy’s sixth album proper, a follow-up to 2009’s generally well-received ‘Invaders Must Die’ (review). “It’s certainly the one that English fans like the most. People here always talk about our early stuff – and it all leads on, everything leads on. It influenced people, just as we were influenced by Shut Up And Dance, people like that, early on in the London breakbeat scene. But you’ve got to remember, ‘…Jilted’ didn’t just come out of nowhere.”

It certainly didn’t. Prior to the album’s release, The Prodigy’s new direction, a measured step away from straightforward rave dynamics, was showcased across a series of tracks and singles. ‘One Love’ was first out, in September of 1993, just a few months after the final ‘Experience’ single, ‘Wind It Up (Rewound)’, had arrived in stores. ‘One Love’ began as a white label, with Howlett keen to test his audience: with The Prodigy’s name, and reputation, removed from the equation, could this music find its mark?

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‘One Love’

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“I think it went to number one in the Mixmag white labels chart or whatever,” remembers the producer. “We had some fun with that. It proved that we weren’t all about the name, and any backlash against us was people being f*cking snobs.” Those who’d decided that The Prodigy was not for them were put in the minority when ‘One Love’ was followed by ‘No Good (Start The Dance)’, which went top-five in May 1994. Bearing breakbeat hallmarks amid its bouncy jungle rhythms, the track served as a valuable bridge between then and now.

Says Howlett: “It felt like we were carrying our old fans through to the next phase. We didn’t just drop ‘…Jilted’ and they didn’t know what the f*ck was going on – there was definitely that link through, with ‘No Good’. And then every tune we released was hitting back at aspects of the dance scene. ‘No Good’ was kind of my shot at the shit Euro stuff that was around at that time – it was my way of saying, ‘This is how we do it.’”

‘Music For The Jilted Generation’ opens, after a cinematic intro, with ‘Break & Enter’, all thundering bass and shattering percussion, set against suitably hyperactive melodies. But it was what came next that properly shook The Prodigy’s trademark sound up. ‘Their Law’, recorded with Pop Will Eat Itself, was something else, something new.

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‘No Good (Start The Dance)’

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Knowing that Howlett had been inspired by rock sounds from the States, one can today connect those dots and come up with why ‘Their Law’ grinds like it does. Here’s a dance band, with massive great guitar riffs all over their track. Here’s a studio project, whose only live presence (previously) was in the rave scene, getting grimy and taking things back to the clubs. And by doing so, it opened the door for other dance acts to ‘go live’ in some style – this is, no doubt, the beginning of stadium dance, of acts like The Prodigy not just playing famous mainstream festivals, but headlining them.

“I hate that idea of us becoming this big dance band,” says Howlett, “but you’re right. ‘…Jilted’ took us to Glastonbury – we played the NME stage on that record.” This summer, The Prodigy top the bill at several festivals across the world, including the rock-dominated Sonisphere in the UK (“we fit more comfortably within a mixed bill”), Bilbao BBK Live in Spain, and Sziget in Hungary. “Today, that’s what we’re about, these big shows.”

Back to 1994. The next single from ‘Music For The Jilted Generation’ – which rightly earned itself a Mercury Prize nomination, losing out to M People’s ‘Elegant Slumming’ (still, even now, what?) – was ‘Voodoo People’, another of the songs Howlett set about writing first. It blends a jungle vibe with a sampled riff from Nirvana’s ‘Very Ape’, again exhibiting the band’s increased rock influence.

The single is notable for altering the history of another great British dance act, The Chemical Brothers. Their B-side-featured remix was submitted under the duo’s original Dust Brothers moniker, but when ‘Voodoo People’ got its US release through Mute, the stateside Dust Brothers, producers behind classics like Beastie Boys’ ‘Paul’s Boutique’, decided they weren’t having that. So, their name was changed, and those block-rockin’ beats would always come with a chemical taste, rather than any dusty residue. And then came ‘Poison’, a song the band still wheels out for its live shows 20 years on from its writing.

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‘Poison’

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‘Poison’ brings Maxim to the fore. “Jungle was happening,” recalls Howlett, “so we put out ‘Poison’, which was really different. It really slowed things down. We were really happy with it – it stuck out as something we’d really never done before. I remember there being all this shit in the dance world at the time, all this stuff from Europe. Euro techno, or whatever you want to call it. I don’t recall specific records, but there seemed to be this rise. So we rebelled against that to try to set ourselves apart. It was, like, the rave scene had gone, so we wanted to prove to people that we were our own thing.”

Part of redeveloping The Prodigy’s identity meant the foursome going on tour – properly on tour, like a proper band would. “We went back into the clubs,” says Howlett. “I remember the gigs going from small ones to much bigger venues. When we started, we were playing these big rave parties to like 20,000 people. But just before ‘…Jilted’ we went back to playing universities and colleges. We got on that circuit to try to break it like a band. So we didn’t have the parties anymore – we basically started again. And that was part of the process of ‘…Jilted’ building so strongly.

“DJs were beginning to play our music alongside the rock stuff of the time, and we got a big student following from plugging around universities and colleges. It all seemed to gel together. It was a very transitional period for us.”

‘Music For The Jilted Generation’ began as ‘Experience’ hadn’t – as an album from the outset, rather then simply a collection of tracks. “It almost fell into a bit of a concept album,” Howlett tells us, “though I’m glad I didn’t go too far down that road with it.” He played around with the set’s sequencing, shuffling his pack before eventually having his hand forced by the limitations of the CD format. “It’s a really f*cking long record, but even as it is, it’s after a couple of edits, to fit onto a CD. I listened to Zane Lowe play the whole album on Radio 1 a few years back, as part of his Masterpieces series, and it just went on forever. I was driving from Essex to London, and I couldn’t believe it. Every track is like six minutes. I can’t write tracks that last six minutes anymore!”

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‘Voodoo People’ (live in 2008)

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With 20 years of hindsight in hand – “I didn’t know it was 20 years until you just said it… frightening” – Howlett can reflect on the album with a rather more objective perspective than he could at the time of its release. “I feel pretty good about it. It doesn’t feel too dated. It feels good, y’know? The first album feels of its time, and locked into the rave era. I think ‘…Jilted’ reached that bit further.

“It all seems to gel together pretty well. I think ‘One Love’, we could have binned that. We released that track because there was a backlash, as there always is, where people were saying that we’d sold out, or whatever. Of course, then there was this whole ‘fight the party’ thing, which we got roped into, this fight the party bill (The Criminal Justice and Public Order Act of 1994). It’s funny, because the inside cover art, that was just a coincidence. Nobody knows that. But people read into it that it was connected to that protest, that was going on. But it’s not connected at all. It was just what we wanted on the cover.

“So, I would have shortened it, given the chance. I might still do an edit, but who cares? I listened back to it, and that’s the only thing – it’s too long! (It’s 78 minutes, so yeah, maybe.) But I guess that stems from the rave thing – I let bars go on for too long, when they could have been edited. But the cover is alright, the sleeve is alright. People don’t give a f*ck about covers anymore, but in those days… To be honest, ‘…Jilted’ isn’t one of my favourite sleeves, but people seem to like it. Everything you see is the effort of the band to get things right.”

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‘Break And Enter’ (live at Glastonbury Festival, 1995)

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As striking as the ‘Music For The Jilted Generation’’s art and design is, alongside its musical contents, the iconic aesthetic of The Prodigy would be confirmed two years after the album’s release, when March 1996’s ‘Firestarter’ took Keith, and the band he was now ostensibly fronting, into a whole new stratosphere of public recognition. The group’s first number-one single, its success was driven by a most striking video.

“We’ve always hated doing music videos,” says Howlett. “What it is, I guess we’re all in control of the music, but when you’re doing a video, you’re not. Back in those days they cost a lot more than they do now; whereas today you can do good things for a lot less money. You can make a great video today for f*ck all. Back then, there were tens of thousands of pounds being thrown around, and then you’d see the video and I’d turn around and go, ‘Nah, bin it.’ They’d remind me how I pay half of it, but it had to be right.

“We binned the original ‘Firestarter’ video, and that’s why what came out was black and white. There were a few others, too. That video’s success is all Keith’s fault – he bought that (stars and stripes) jumper. The original video is out there somewhere. XL has probably got it somewhere.”

In a vault, perhaps, beside the too-long mixes of ‘…Jilted Generation’ and who knows what else. The Prodigy have been around long enough to have generated a catalogue that reaches deep and wide, extending tendrils into all manner of stylistic crannies and, usually, pulling out solid-gold tracks to call their own. And while Howlett’s been at this since 1990, his enthusiasm for the music business – or, at least, for the creative side of it – hasn’t dimmed in the slightest.

“It is still exciting. The business has changed, true. People just need to dig a bit deeper, is all.”

Through the soot and the dirt, the mud and the blood. All the way to 1994, and work your way back up.

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Words: Mike Diver

Find The Prodigy online here

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Culture Clash: George Ezra

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George Ezra shot by Pip
Rising young Brit endorses children-spinning apes…

Someone, anyone, please, tell me what George Ezra likes when it comes to tellybox pictures, flappy-page stories and electronic sports… Oh, Culture Clash? Hiya! You’re looking splendid today…

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George Ezra, ‘Budapest’

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Book…
It’s a short story by Ernest Hemingway called The Old Man And The Sea. It’s a really comforting story. The majority of the book takes place on a tiny boat and documents the relationship between the old man of the title and one particular fish that he spends a long old time trying to catch. I don’t know if I’m selling it, but it really is great.

Movie…
I was recently recommended a film called The Fall. I think I need to watch it once more to really get into it, but it was extremely captivating. Like a Wes Anderson film, but on a whole new level. The colours and images were a highlight. Brilliant costumes, too.

Gadget…
On tour, it’s surprising how many venues don’t have kettles. So unfortunately I can’t give a very interesting answer as in all honesty the gadget I use most is the lime green kettle I bought to take around with me. It took a beating recently too, so the poor thing is held together with duct tape. Is a kettle a gadget? (We’ll certainly allow it. No man should be without tea.)

Album…
St Vincent’s album, ‘St Vincent’ (review), has really dragged me in. I can’t put my finger on what it is, which is always a good thing. Maybe it’s how uncomfortable some of the sounds she uses are. It’s a very deliberately industrial sounding record, I think, and I love it.

Video game…
I’ve never cared much for games, but I guess I used to love Theme Park World. That was f*cking great! In fact, just thinking about it I might have to drag out my old PS2 and get on it. I remember one ride was a fat gorilla, and kids would sit in the bananas he was holding and he’d go mental and spin them round. Cracking.

TV series…
I’m sure there’s no need to bring this to anybody’s attention, as I came to the party late and it seemed everybody but me was already deeply involved. But Game Of Thrones had me addicted. I’ve deliberately held off from season four, so that I have something to dig into on the next run of tour dates. I think if I were in a house I’d like to be a Stark. Young George Stark, I’d be the local storyteller/ale connoisseur. 

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George Ezra’s new single ‘Budapest’ is out now, and his debut album ‘Wanted On Voyage’ is released through Columbia on June 30th. Find the Young George Stark online here

Photos: Pip / Robert Blackham

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In Conversation: Annie Mac

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Annie Mac
Discussing her Superstar DJs show, and more…

It’s simple, really: there’s not enough music on British TV. I don’t mean on the ads. Ads are full of music. Shazam them and win a prize! Or something. I mean shows dedicated to music – the performing of, and the investigation of how it came to be. True, there is an argument that, What With The Internet, there isn’t the need for such telly. But even from an online editor’s perspective: balls to that. I want more music on my television, thanks.

And, lo! Here some comes. Starting June 25th/26th (it airs at midnight) on Channel 4, Superstar DJs finds Radio 1 presenter and celebrated DJ in her own right Annie Mac getting deep under the skin of five high-profile players in the dance world: TiëstoDisclosureSeth TroxlerDiplo and Fatboy Slim, with a sixth episode focusing in on DJ culture.

Naturally, I got on the phone to Annie to see what this was all about…

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Annie Mac DJing live on Channel 4, New Year’s Eve 2012

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So, music on TV. Good stuff, we need more of that.
(Laughs). Yes! I’m really full of excited nerves, waiting to reveal this series to the world.

It’s called Superstar DJs. What, to you, makes someone a superstar DJ? Is it an innate skill for the mix, or can someone with a strong personality stand out beside quieter but more talented DJs?
I think that, like with anything, if you want to get really, really good at this, you have to practise, all the time. It doesn’t matter if you’re big on the underground or popular with the mainstream, if you’re going to make it then you need to have a relentless schedule. These people never stop. You look at some of these DJs, those on the show, and the amount of gigs that they have in a year. They might be playing on 340 nights of the year. It’s like, how? How do you do that? So these people dedicate their lives to it.

I think, in the last few years, social networking has helped increase a lot of DJ profiles. Their personality can come through that way. And personality is vital. A lot of DJs out there would admit that their personality is why they’re so successful. In the series, we speak to Jamie Jones, and he talks to us about Seth Troxler. He’s genuinely one of those people who’s so charismatic – and he’d admit that’s a factor in why he’s come so far. Jamie Jones is seen as a likeable, fun person – and if you present that personality to promoters, they’re going to want you back.

And production, too, is important. It’s massive. It’s been fascinating to watch how DJs have turned into producers, and producers into DJs. Disclosure were famous before they even knew how to DJ. They told us that they showed up to their first DJ gig without a clue how to beatmatch. They didn’t know what to do – and yet they were making their own, really good music. But what’s more important, these days? I think there is a case that you can do one without the other.

You’ve spoken out before about discrimination against female DJs, particularly in 2011 after DJ Mag’s top 100 list was an all-male affair. So why am I looking at a series that doesn’t feature a spotlight episode on a female DJ?
I mean, I was thinking long and hard about who to include. And if I could have included a woman, I would have. But I think that being tokenistic about it is actually detrimental to the series – I’d much rather be honest about it. And the fact of the matter is that there are very few women operating at this level, who I could have done an episode on.

We did narrow it down to two female DJs that we could have covered, but it didn’t work out. So we have made a point to get lots of women talking, and we’ve got people like NERVO and Magda involved throughout the series. Also, from my perspective, I wanted to make it clear that I am a DJ, too, not just a presenter. I’m a peer of these people, so right at the end of the series you get to see me in that role, as a DJ. I do want to make it quite clearly known that it’s normal for a girl to be a DJ.

And there are so many more girls coming through now, as DJs. And I think a reason for that is that there are more role models for them. Girls are seeing other girls on line-ups, and thinking that they can do that, too. Maya Jane Coles has already broken into the top tier, and is doing really well – she’s playing festivals all over the world. As I mentioned, NERVO are doing really well – they’re songwriters and producers as well as DJs, and they will reach the top level. So those two acts are at very different ends of the musical spectrum, but they’re both doing really well.

Being a DJ who gets that thrill of curating an experience for an audience, how much of a kick is it to still be on air at Radio 1, broadcasting your tastes, and great new music, to millions?
I’m still thrilled by it, 100%. That’s what it’s all about to me, and how it all began for me. Hopefully it’s what I’ll be doing when I’m 65 – although I don’t suppose I’ll be going out to DJ by then. The power of radio is this most powerful, magical thing – you can’t beat it. To be able to do what I do on a Friday, it’s just… I’m under no pretences: I wouldn’t be able to have the DJ career that I do without Radio 1 giving me this position, this platform, to play my favourite music to people all over the world. It’s crazy. Like, if you think about it a lot, it blows your mind. I try to get on with it, otherwise I’d get nervous.

We’ve just had Radio 1 in the press, with a lot of criticism directed at how social channels and web stats inform its daytime playlist. Now, this doesn’t affect your show at all, but do you think that some of the stick the station received was unfair? After all, it’s meant to play popular music.
I know that the playlisting process has been in the press, I saw that. But I saw, too, that George (Ergatoudis, Radio 1 head of music) presented a retort to the original article. And in that he really hammers home the importance of Radio 1’s specialist shows. I totally agree with him. It’s vital that Radio 1 has this specialist output. It’s the one thing that makes us stand out, that makes us shine above all the other stations in this country. From 7pm onwards, any day of the week, it’s the most incredible, unpredictable music on air. It’s bonkers, sometimes, brought to you by this motley crew of experts. It’s through that attitude that I fell in love with Radio 1, through John Peel and Mary Anne Hobbs. It’s one of the most special things about Radio 1.

How do feel Mary Anne’s settled at 6 Music? I do enjoy her of a weekend morning. She’s a calming presence when the kids are going nuts.
Yes! I love it. Her show is like a hug. I’m up early with my kid, so I always tune in. I love her selection, its breadth and versatility. I find myself scribbling tracks down on pieces of paper as I’m listening.  

Just recently I spoke to Liam Howlett about ‘Music For The Jilted Generation’ turning 20. I think back then a ‘proper’ dance album was something of an anomaly, although it grew throughout the 1990s. Today, with acts like Disclosure putting out their celebrated ‘Settle’ (review), do you feel there’s complete acceptance of dance artists making coherently structured album statements?
I think there was a golden era in the 1990s. Having Leftfield’s ‘Leftism’, Massive Attack’s ‘Protection’ and Portishead’s ‘Dummy’ all come out quite close to each other, that felt life changing. I think in the early ’00s that changed – there didn’t seem to be so many ‘artist’ albums. Dubstep got big but didn’t produce many albums. But it’s great now that Disclosure are seeing so much success. They’re musicians, first and foremost, and we see that in the show – they came to dance music after learning to play instruments and being in previous bands. It’s very important, for electronic music, that their album has done so well. It’s set a bit of a precedent for people coming after them, whose own albums might not have been taken so seriously if it wasn’t for Disclosure. They show that you can make a decent electronic album, for sure.

You mentioned nerves earlier. Do you still feel them, playing live? Can it take you a few tracks to settle into a set?
Definitely. It depends on the gig, and how big it is, and if it’s being live-streamed – which is becoming more of a thing. That’s a whole new thing. I get quite nervous with those gigs. I’m not like these bigger-name DJs who DJ every night of the week, because I have commitments – I have a career in broadcasting, and a family. So I DJ less, but those that I do play can be quite high profile. Which means I can get nervous. It can take me 10 or 15 minutes before I think: ‘I’ve got this.’

You’ve got your little boy. Has he already taken a shine to any music that you play at home?
Well, he’s not had a choice, as our house has music on all the time. He’s been exposed to some really good music. Even when he was born, that was to the sounds of Chilly Gonzales’ ‘Solo Piano’ album, which really helped me through my labour. He’s not shown a preference to any one kind of music, or genre, or artist, but he’s really into dancing. Which is quite a joy.

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Words: Mike Diver

Superstar DJs begins on Channel 4 on June 25th. Or June 26th. Whatever your listings reckons. Find out more about the show here, and catch up with Annie Mac online here.

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New Territories Of Sound: Jacques Greene Interviewed

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Jacques Greene
Jacques Greene
LuckyMe producer in conversation...

Following the migration pattern of the wave of Europeans who saw promise in the land of opportunity in the late-19th century, Jacques Greene has recently upped sticks to New York. The city that spawned a plethora of dance genres seems a solid choice for the Montreal native, whose love of electronica bloomed during an internship at the Ninja Tune office in Canada.

“They paid me in records, so I ended up with all these weird IDM releases,” the DJ and producer begins. “I’ve had a very voracious musical appetite my whole life – I became a musical sponge pretty early on. My friends and I really, really liked the ‘Willennium’ and ‘Big Willie Style’ Will Smith albums in elementary school.

“Then my mom and dad were big Talking Heads fans, and my mom’s favourite act when I was a kid was Beck, so ‘Odelay’ was a big thing for me. To this day I can trace back a lot of my music listening to a combination of Talking Heads, Beck and Will Smith.”

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I’m not comfortable performing live with a laptop. It just looks like I’m in a café, doing my taxes or something…

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Having waved goodbye to his childhood city in favour of Manhattan, he’s not quite fully set-up in the concrete jungle yet; something Clash notices when dialing him up for our chat. 818 – his temporary area code – pertains to LA’s San Fernando Valley: notorious as the hub of the adult film industry. “People always ask me if I work in porn!” he laughs. “I think I need to embrace it. It’s my thing.”

Greene’s name has become synonymous with cashmere-soft R&B re-rubs, particularly of Ciara – which has had fans fantasising about him producing straight for the ‘Body Party’ superstar. So has anything come of this?

“I don’t wanna be that one dude outside Steven Spielberg’s office sending him the script to E.T. 2 every week!” he laughs in response. “I encountered some people who knew her people and asked them to play her the bootleg, in the hope that her response is not to sue me into submission…

 “I actually offered on Twitter to be [Ciara and Future]’s wedding DJ. The offer is still there, y’know… I’m willing to take a pay cut.”

But a handful of releases on LuckyMe, Night Slugs and his own Vase imprint have seen Jacques holding up dance templates and smashing them to smithereens in favour of something more amorphous. Most recently his ‘Phantom Vibrate EP’ summons a neon robe-wearing gospel choir while tying in techno and garage loops to create a fetishised notion of the club.

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'Night Tracking', from 'Phantom Vibrate'

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A former art director, Jacques admits to being a “control freak” when it comes to all the visual elements of what he (loathingly) refers to as his ‘brand’. Fashion designer Rick Owens, whom Greene cites as a main inspiration, has spoken about the creative desire to customise everything in one’s surroundings, and in a similar way the producer finds himself “laying out type for a tour poster at five in the morning, when I should probably just be hiring a designer”.

This meticulousness creeps into his live set-up, too. “Is there such thing as club fright instead of stage fright?” he wonders aloud. Unlike a growing number of his comrades, the producer opts for hardware over the cold touch of a trackpad.

“I’m not comfortable performing with a laptop. Maybe over time I’ll change my mind, but it just looks like I’m in a café, on stage. Doing my taxes or something. Or playing that game with the guy that you have to make jog, I dunno.”

He swoons over some recent acquisitions of hardware. “I got this Swedish sampler/sequencer box called the Elektron Octatrack and it’s so cool because for the first time I can actually play a full vocal on my set. So I can perform the How To Dress Well song (‘On Your Side’) and perform the a cappella, and then build the beat around it and stuff. It’s actually really changed the game for me.”

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For the launch of ‘Phantom Vibrate’ (stream two tracks above), Greene’s done a trio of headline shows, starting with Output in Brooklyn, the Espace Réunion in Montreal and St. John church in Hackney (“Al Gore’s gonna be real mad at me for that one!”). But his relocation to the Big Apple has piled on the pressure.

“It’s always stressful for me to play in the city I live in. I used to be so shook of playing in Montreal just because you have so many friends in the audience, like maybe my mom’s gonna come…? I just wanna play to a room of strangers! And now that I’m in New York, I’m shook.”

He’s got a performance plan B, though. “My friend who does my visuals was thinking he could project a brick wall and I could just come out in a terrible leather jacket and go, ‘Hey everybody, how’s it going? I’ve got cool airport stories! Like, what’s up with Düsseldorf airport anyways?’ Punchlines are the new drops, I think. Maybe my next EP is a comedy album. About flight delays.”

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Words: Felicity Martin

The 'Phantom Vibrate EP' is out now on LuckyMe. Find Jacques Greene online here.

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Straight Outta Maplewood: Clash Meets SZA

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SZA from Clash issue 96
SZA from Clash issue 96
SZA from Clash issue 96
SZA from Clash issue 96
From the suburbs to the streets…

“I used to be a heavy dreamer, and I used to be open to the possibility of everything. I would make these long lists all the way up until I was like 17, of things that I needed to do to be awesome. Stuff like, be cooler, be on time, be prettier; just super general things that are now in hindsight extra crazy. It was weird, but I felt like if I followed my own random steps then I will be catapulted into American Dream superstardom.”

So recalls Solana Rowe, better known as SZA, sat in her Bronx apartment. She’s been cringing her way through watching a video interview that was recorded a few days ago. “It’s f*cking terrifying for me,” she half-laughs, “I hate video interviews.”

Despite having gone from the suburbs of Maplewood, New Jersey to the roster of one of hip-hop’s fastest rising and most exciting labels Top Dawg Entertainment (AKA TDE, home to Kendrick LamarScHoolboy Q, Ab-Soul and Jay Rock), SZA no longer believes in the daydreaming of her younger years and describes herself as a natural pessimist.

“I feel like daydreaming warps your brain. Or even celebrating, or getting excited about things. It makes you feel like your chickens have come home to roost before they’re actually ready. Every time I get excited about something it just implodes, and then it’s ruined and I hate it all over again.”

“I’m Muslim and I’m black. So the American Dream isn’t something that was ever possible for me,” she explains of her pessimism and low self-esteem. “Especially as a kid. You’re black, you don’t grow up being like, ‘Yeah, everything is possible.’ Your parents try to tell you that everything is possible, or they try to ensure you that no one will judge you. But sometimes it’s institutionalised or it’s not even your fault, you just can’t beat certain cases. You just have a pre-disposed off-view of the world.

“And on top of that, being Muslim, that just alienates you from the last part of the world you had. It’s weird. And I think at some point you just have to decide who you’re gonna be, and how you’re gonna get there, and then no one is going to stop you. And that’s what I did.”

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'Babylon', from 'Z'

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Rowe lived a heavily guarded childhood due in part to her father, who is an orthodox Sunni Muslim, but doesn’t seem to hold any kind of resentment. As a child she was sheltered from popular music, only listening to her father’s jazz records, and she wore a hijab well into her teens.

“My mom is super conscious and she’s on every committee and she’s a chairwoman in the town and all that stuff. And my dad, he’s always doing some sort of scholarly lecture somewhere, but we’re super chill. In a block radius we don’t even wear shoes. If we’re going further than a block we probably put on shoes.”

Post-9/11 she started having trouble due to her religion, with kids calling her ‘terrorist’ at school and often following her home to heckle her. “That shit was terrible,” she remembers. “That brought my whole family out of their character. My dad was calling little girls ‘bitches’. He didn’t know what to do. What do you do in that situation? When you just want to protect your kids and you want people to treat them well. It was super hard for me.”

At the age of 16 when, in the eyes of her faith, she became a woman and had the right to make her own decisions, she opted out of wearing her hijab. And while she stayed close to her parents, she rebelled against her sheltered upbringing.

For a period Rowe worked as a bartender in a strip club. She fell in love with the culture for the money and rebellion. Since the amount of cash being thrown was too much for the strippers to pick up, even as a bartender it was well paid. Her favourite character in the strip club scene is the owner, who she believes has found the American Dream.

“I think of him in a sense it’s like, ‘I have tonnes of women at my feet, and they want to work for me and do what I want.’ And as a man who is chauvinistic, he has achieved the American Dream. But his vision is so small he doesn’t even know that that has nothing to do with the American Dream.”

SZA would throw a spanner in the works of the smooth-sailing Dream that the owner had in place. Clearly a standout from the stereotypical strip club scene, her motives would leave the owner confused.

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Chris Martin is literally the nicest person I’ve ever met. Literally, the sweetest warmest person I’ve ever, ever met...

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“I think that when people don’t understand you it’s super easy for them to make a mistake and abuse you in some way. And I think strip club culture, and my boss at that time, all he knows is to abuse women. Then there are certain women that have been conditioned in life to accept that. And in a way I feel like I’ve even been conditioned to accept that because it’s what I understood as power, so I kind of just let that happen.”

Musically she also began to explore sounds beyond the carefully curated playlist that she was exposed to at home. Her first window into the wider world of popular music came about when she discovered a broken iPod in a portable toilet while she was at gymnastics camp. She was unable to charge it and the screen was broken, so she couldn’t make out a lot of the artists’ names.

“That iPod, until it ran out, was the best thing that ever happened to me,” she says with sincerity that suggests she isn’t exaggerating. “It was so random how I stumbled across all of that different music on one iPod with no ability to be able to know who it was or really get into it. Until it died, that’s all I had.”

She later began to discover some more controversial hip-hop records through her older sister, who put her onto the unlikely combination of Cash Money, crunk and Wu-Tang Clan

“It was weird, it sounded so provocative and exciting,” she recalls of first hearing it. “At first it was like, ‘What is this nonsense, this trash?’ But then it drew me in, it was crazy.” At the time her sister would set music as the answer machine on her phone. “I would hear all this crazy crunk music playing on her answer machine whenever I called, and I bought this Lil Jon CD, just to find that song I heard playing on there. I was so obsessed with my sister – I wanted to be just like her in every way possible – so learning the lyrics to the music that she listened to was like the Holy Grail.”

When she first met Kendrick Lamar, it was as an impostor, posing as an interviewer for TheSource. “My homeboy in college wrote for it, he left the building and somehow couldn’t get back in so he needed me to do the interview,” she explains.

“I talked over Kendrick the whole time, it was horrible. It was embarrassing for sure. I didn’t know how to interview anyone, I was just like, ‘Ahh, how excited are you about your crazy life?’ But I was a fan by the same token, so it was pretty funny.” While Kendrick claims to remember the interview, SZA doesn’t believe him. “Every time I remind him he’s like, ‘Yup’, which means I know he knows nothing.”

Her official introduction to TDE was through streetwear brand 10.Deep, where she was then working. “My boyfriend at the time was creative director there, so I was doing a bunch of stuff, just designing and a whole bunch of random stuff, bringing people clothes and linking up different artists. I just brought TDE clothes the day after their show. I never intended to become one of those artists.”

A friend of hers who accompanied her played the label’s president, Punch, some music SZA had recorded with her brother. Later that year when SZA attended South By Southwest and had nowhere to stay, she hung out with TDE after their show at The Illmore and they let her stay at their house, furthering her relationship with the label.

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'Ice Moon', from 'S'

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When it was announced last August that she had officially signed to TDE, they also took on another new act, Chattanooga rapper Isaiah Rashad. The pair has formed a tight bond, currently working on a collaborative album together.

“I think he’s just not as guarded,” she explains of her relationship with him. “He talks to me about everything, he comforts me and he shows his insecurities. When people are guarded, then I stop talking. But he’s always been an open book to me, which makes me just want to be family with somebody.”

She also attributes the fact that the pair went through the same experience when signing to the label. “We both had no expectations, we were both just regular people snatched from our regular lives and put into this situation. So we were both just definitely in the same moment.”

After signing with TDE and dropping a couple of online singles, ‘Teen Spirit’ and ‘Julia’, she released ‘Z’, the second in a series of EPs that will spell out her name. It furthers her unique brand of R&B music, which takes as much, if not more, influence from electronic and alternative music as it does traditional R&B. Her most recent fans include some of her idols, including Chris Martin, Gwyneth Paltrow and Little Dragon’s Yukimi Nagano. She even got the opportunity to support Coldplay at New York’s Beacon Theatre.

“That was f*cking crazy,” she says, clearly still excited, contrary to what she told us earlier. “I think Chris Martin is literally the nicest person I’ve ever met. Literally, the sweetest warmest person I’ve ever, ever met. Apparently Gwyneth Paltrow was like randomly talking about me – just like regular human beings – and she told Chris about me and how she thought I was awesome.”

Although didn’t meet Paltrow, Martin did call her prior to the show. “‘SZA, I think you’re wonderful, can you come to the studio?’” she recalls, putting on a Dick Van Dyke-style cockney accent. “When people say you shouldn’t meet your heroes, I know where that can come from, but it couldn’t have been about Chris.”

She also supported another of her favourite bands, Little Dragon, recently, following a tweet from Yukimi Nagano. “I couldn’t believe it, it was so nuts. I showed the tweet to my manager and everyone before I even responded, because I didn’t know if it was real or what!”

“I definitely haven’t achieved the American Dream yet,” she affirms, despite her impressive array of accolades. While she clearly hasn’t come close to the peak of her career at this stage, what she has achieved so far certainly isn’t a bad start for the small-town, black, Muslim girl who stopped allowing herself to dream.

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Words: Grant Brydon
Photography: Will Robson Scott (online)

Find SZA online here. ‘Z’ is out now on Top Dawg.

This feature appears in issue 96 of Clash magazine. Buy a copy here.

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The Clash Film Column: Piss Wizard Potter

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Harry Potter
Potter pissed
The Art Of The Steal
Camille Claudel 1915
Hannah Arterton
Paddington
And The Art Of The Steal…

Oh, like you’ve never shown up to work still a little bit bladdered…

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That was the week in which...

Daniel Radcliffe admitting to being drunk on the set of Harry Potter

It’s hardly the most raucous of headlines – indeed it amounts to little more than “teenager got smashed”, which is an event approximately as surprising as day following night. But Daniel Radcliffe would sometimes arrive to film Harry Potter while still sauced from the evening before.

It’s an entirely natural reaction if you spent your teen years starring in one of the biggest franchises in film history. Even more so if you can’t leave home without being recognised and have enough wealth not to be reduced to scrabbling around for dropped coppers to finance a four-pack of Zywiec.

Everything is pretty rosy in teetotaler Radcliffe’s world now: his reinvention from Potter has moved smoothly with the strength of his performance in Kill Your Darlings and the huge success of The Woman In Black, and two further films, What If and Horns, will be released before the year is out.

While it’s understandable that some will find interest in this (non) story, it demonstrates the ever-blurrier line of creativity-meets-celebrity. Such mundanity rarely adds to our understanding of an actor or a musician’s work: it generally just adds to the noise of nothingness that creates fame for fame’s sake. As Iron Maiden’s Bruce Dickinson has been quoted: “Fame is the excrement of creativity, it’s the shit that comes out the back end, it’s a by-product of it. People think it’s the excrement that you should be eating. It’s not. It’s the creativity and the audience and being there in the moment”

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The Big Film: The Art Of The Steal

The phrase “heist movie” is rarely used without the word “derivative”. Featuring the usual clichés in a broadly interchangeable plot, The Art Of The Steal really can’t claim to have transcended such a trend.

Our lead throughout these time-honoured shenanigans is Kurt Russell as Crunch Calhoun (yes, really): a stunt-man-cum-pro-heister (yes, really) who ended up in a Polish slammer after being sold-out by his brother Nicky (Matt Dillon). Nicky wants to make amends by getting the old team together for one last job by lifting an ancient manuscript which will make everyone enough cash to retire from. You know the drill. Forgeries. Stealth. Deadlines. Deception. Vagina-inspired art.

The two leads feel like they’ve been dropped in directly from higher-profile films: Russell is virtually indistinguishable from his role in Death Proof, right down to his silly character name, while Dillon again carries the knowing, dry-humoured double-crossin’ that served him so well in There’s Something About Mary. And, just to underline the film’s desired credentials, Terence Stamp excels as the (you’ve got it) reformed thief out to catch the gang red-handed.

The Art Of The Steal doesn’t stand up to any rigorous analysis; it’s simply too generic to spark any serious reinvention of a dog-tired genre. Surprisingly, however, its approximation of Guy Ritchie directing Ocean’s Fourteen is fun and engaging enough to work as a solid single-serving of entertainment, even if it’s one that you’ll struggle to remember mere moments after the end credits roll.

The Art Of The Steal, trailer

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Also Out: Camille Claudel 1915

There’s the sense throughout Bruno Dumont’s follow-up to Hors Satan that this is a very timely film, dealing as it does with ideas around what to do with women of strength, talent and intellect, how they should be controlled and informed (by men) of how to feel and behave, through the true, historic story of the artist Camille Claudel.

Juliette Binoche is Camille, giving an extraordinary performance despite minimal dialogue and traditional action. The film focuses on her detainment in a mental asylum by her family following a long period of grief following the death of her father, as well as the breakdown of her relationship with famous sculptor Auguste Rodin – who she is convinced stole her work and ideas.

The first hour is beautifully meditative and the lines between her sanity and other’s perceptions of it are delicately blurred. After an hour, as the film physically leaves the confines of the asylum and her beloved brother Paul enters, the film falls away and becomes more clinical, more expositional and much less interesting. The introduction of historical fact and a greater male perspective makes the film less clear in its intention. When we are allowed to simply feel the immensity of Claudel’s loneliness, it’s quite remarkable. Words: Neil Fox

Camille Claudel 1915, trailer

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New Talent: Hannah Arterton

Who? Not content with merely producing Bond girl and all-round star Gemma, the Arterton family have created another acting talent with her younger sister, Hannah.

What’s she been in? Her highest profile role so far came as Korinna in the BBC’s series Atlantis. Director Stephen Poliakoff gave Gemma her first break with another BBC series, Capturing Mary, and did likewise with Hannah when she was cast in his play My City.

What’s coming up? Hannah has a contrasting pair of films coming within the next week. In Hide And Seek, she plays one of four young people who escape London to live a polyamorous life in the countryside, and she also had a key role in Walking On Sunshine– a musical packed with ’80s hits which appears to be the type of movie that you love or loath. Hide And Seek premieres at the Edinburgh Film Festival tonight and plays again on Sunday, and will debut in London at the East End Film Festival on Tuesday. Walking On Sunshine is out next Friday.

They say:“Casting directors looking for a new Marie Antoinette, start here.” Herald Scotland

She says:“Whenever each of us get a really exciting script, we call each other up and discuss how exciting the script is, in the same way I do with a lot of my other friends who are actors... When this film came along, I knew that it was the right part for me and this was the time I’d been waiting for.”Cineworld

Walking On Sunshine, trailer

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Shorts

Colin Firth has pulled out of Paddington. Apparently sickened by the thought of eating marmalade sandwiches throughout the entire shoot... Wait, that’s not right. Firth dropped out because his voice doesn’t fit Lima’s most famous bear. Why would a Peruvian bear speak with a posh English accent?

The World Cup means that most film companies are scheduling their better prospects for a less risky time, hence two weeks of mostly low-profile releases. Last weekend’s UK box office takings reflect this. 22 Jump Street (review) is an overhead kick above the competition. Oculus, Belle and Devil’s Knot all land places in the first XI, leaving T.S. Spivet, Of Horses And Men and others to stew on the subs’ bench.

Talking of the World Cup, while Roy’s boys were doing their usual almost-but-not-quite routine on the pitch, the knuckle-headed element of their support were sadly less than welcoming to Riz Ahmed. That’ll be the Riz Ahmed who was born, raised and educated in England. The Riz Ahmed who is based in England. The Riz Ahmed whose best acting work (Four Lions, Shifty, Ill Manors, Dead Set) examines the harsh realities and utter absurdities of urban English life. The Riz Ahmed who releases music on an English label. The Riz Ahmed who should be perfectly free to support England without abuse.

 

 

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Words: Ben Hopkins, except where indicated

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Their Library: How To Dress Well

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How To Dress Well
Discussing “intra-mundane transcendence”, as you do…

Their Library is pretty simple. We speak to artists we like about the books they like. Here, it’s the turn of How To Dress Well, aka Tom Krell, whose new album ‘What Is This Heart?’ is released on June 23rd. Below, check out the video to ‘Face Again’, taken from said LP.

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How To Dress Well, ‘Face Again’

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What is your favourite book and why?
Right now, my favourite book is Friend Of My Youth by Alice Munro. Beautiful and emotional stories by Munro, about pitiful and pitiable characters. She’s an absolute master of the short story, of compression– like, one eight-word sentence about some tiny little detail about some woman from somewhere in Saskatchewan, deciding whether or not to cheat on her husband, will contain not only everything you need to know to completely understand her character, but will also teach you profound things about our common humanity. I love Alice Munro!

What other authors do you like? 
I love George Saunders right now too – I learn a lot from him about why it’s important to be cynical of the present and where in the fabric of our world to look to locate antidotes to contemporary cynicism. And I really like Emma Donoghue – her (2010 novel) Room killed me and I can't wait to read her new one.

What draws you to certain books?
I'm drawn to books that track the way the very, very personal and little details of a life, and contain a moment of common humanity. I’m interested in literature and movies and TV shows that look into life to find a moment of transcendence in the mundane. This moment can teach us who we want to be and what we ought to care about, who we don’t want to be, and can help train us in that unique and essential human act: sympathy. Intra-mundane transcendence is basically all I care about.

Have you ever discovered a real lost classic? What is it and why?
Oh, The Drop Edge Of Yonder by Rudy Wurlitzer. It’s an insane and amazing mythological origin story about America – every American should read it to understand why our country is so weird. 

Do your literary influences have a direct impact on your songwriting?
Ya, massive. Like, my new album ‘What Is This Heart?’ was influenced so much by Alice Munro – and, as I mentioned, Saunders, but also the Dardenne brothers – maybe even more than any musical influence. Because I write my lyrics through a free-associate, freestyle process, the words I read and the images I see exert a huge influence on my work.

What are you reading at the moment?
Capital In The Twenty First Century by Thomas Piketty.

What is the first book you remember reading as a child?
Mrs. Frisby And The Rats Of NIMH– it blew my mind.

Did you make good use of your library card when you were younger?
Not really. I basically didn’t read until I was older, even though there were always books in the house I grew up in.

Have you ever found a book that you simply couldn’t finish?
I’ve been trying to finish (Cormac McCarthy’s) Blood Meridian for a while, but every 10 pages or so I get so brutally depressed I have to stop for three weeks or so. It’s so anti-human and I’m really allergic to that...

Do you read book reviews?
Ya, I love the NYRB. A good book review is a really great thing to read. 

Would you ever re­read the same book?
I want to say yes, but I'm not sure I've ever done it....

Have you ever identified with a character in a book?
I over-identify with every character.

Do you read one book at a time or more than one?
More than one, typically.

Is there an author or poet you would like to collaborate with?
Fernando Pessoa

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Photo: Zackery Michael

‘What Is This Heart?’ is released on June 23rd through Weird World/Domino. Find How To Dress Well online here

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In The Works: Rita Ora

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Rita Ora in the studio by Ash Kingston
Rita Ora in the studio by Ash Kingston
Behind the scenes of her second album…

In the two years since her debut album, ‘Ora’, first dropped like a (blonde) bombshell, Kosovo-born Rita Ora has blossomed from one of the UK’s most intriguing pop hopefuls into a global star, her defiant energy driving her up charts and catwalks everywhere. But crucially for her, the prospect of a second album offers the chance to truly represent her current life.

“The first album, I recorded it two years before it actually got released,” Rita tells Clash. “So, as you can imagine, those songs for me were two-years-old. So, for me now, this is actually happening right now, at this moment.”

“‘I Will Never Let You Down’ was literally made a couple of months ago!” she exclaims, referencing her latest single, produced by then-boyfriend Calvin Harris.

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Rita Ora, ‘I Will Never Let You Down’

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Seizing the immediacy of her own hurtling zeitgeist promises a natural immersion of the artist in the music, and therefore a deeply personal involvement. “I think the more honesty the better for me now,” she says of her songwriting. “There’s definitely more of me in there, and it has a lot of character.”

The aforementioned ‘I Will Never Let You Down’ hints at the forthcoming album’s intimate insights. She sings of reassurance and enduring support over Harris’ buoyant choruses, giving a real sense of positivity and empowerment, evoking Whitney Houston at her uplifting best. “She was the queen of having love songs you can let go to,” Rita explains.

Production duties are shared across the album, where her beau rubs shoulders with Diplo, Thiago, Stargate and Switch. As each brought their own distinctive style and methods to the table, Rita found herself gladly stepping out of her comfort zone accordingly; “I think that’s what makes a producer really good,” she suggests, “when they adapt you.”

The greatest praise, however, is reserved for her new BFF (and, judging by her Instagram, she’s got many!), Prince, whose collaboration will remain tightly under wraps until later this year.

“It was really uplifting and inspirational,” she beams. “He’s one of the only real legends we’ve got left, so I was really honoured to be a part of this.”

Reflecting on her whirlwind schedule, the constant efforts she endures, and the opportunities she’s been fortunate to experience, Rita signs off with an appreciation of the memories she’s creating, and the purpose of her perseverance.

“I can get old and say I watched Prince play his instruments – and my grandkids will probably be like, ‘Who?’ It’s a legacy that you can never forget.”

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Words: Simon Harper
Photography: Ash Kingston

Rita Ora’s second album, which she claims is titled “after a love goddess”, will be released late in 2014. Meantime, find the singer online here.

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7 Of The Best: Gerry Goffin Songs

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Gerry Goffin
Gone, never going to be forgotten…

The role of songwriters in pop music today can be seen as a nefarious job; backroom technologists, groomed by major labels, meticulously manufacturing polished turds to a formula prescribed to an accepting and indifferent audience. These anonymous producers are scorned by “real” artists, those claiming a superior legitimacy because they write their own material.

Certainly the case is strong against the offensive product spewed forth by those hired for reality TV stars’ winning singles, boyband B-sides and the like, but those who transgress the vapid output of such faceless factory-line robots become the in-demand hit-makers of the most progressive and immortal chartbusters.

Thus, for every Chris Martin there is a Max Martin, the man responsible for Katy Perry’s ‘Roar’, Britney’s ‘…Baby One More Time’ and Taylor Swift’s ‘I Knew You Were Trouble’. Rihanna, meanwhile, relies heavily on Norwegian duo Stargate for her hits – the pair’s power and dominance in the pop field leading to their own label, co-run with Jay Z.

It’s a fine line between art and science, but the conflict is an old one. After the initial explosion of rock and roll in the ’50s, a perceptive and unscrupulous music industry sought to capitalise on the teenage pop market by pushing cute, clean-cut white alternatives to the young American public. With Chuck Berry in jail and Little Richard resigning himself to Jesus, there was a gap in the market. Enter the inhabitants of The Brill Building.

Music publishing had long been a source of revenue for aspiring composers and musicians, and New York was a hub for creative inspiration. The Brill Building, situated at 1619 Broadway, at its peak housed 165 music businesses, each offering essential resources to musicians.

From writers and publishers to recording labels and promoters, it was a one-stop-shop for tomorrow’s stars to make themselves known. Like Motown later, it was a pop production line catering to specific tastes, where smart lyrics married infectious melodies. The songs were crafted by a host of young writers and musicians, including Burt Bacharach and Hal David, Sonny Bono, Neil Diamond, Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller, and Phil Spector. Their output from here, too bountiful to detail, reads like a roll call of classics: ‘Stand By Me’, ‘Leader Of The Pack’, ‘Spanish Harlem’, ‘Love Potion Number Nine’…

Gerry Goffin, who died this week aged 75, was a supreme songwriter that tirelessly grafted under the same roof amid such exalted competition and consistently delivered the goods.

Writing alongside his wife Carole King, whom he married in 1959, the pair thrived throughout the ’60s – the radically innovative decade where striving for authenticity seriously endangered the role of songwriters – crafting incredible songs, and demonstrated their unique talents and the range of their music by the variety of artists who interpreted them. Brian Wilson called Goffin a “big influence”, while The Monkees’ Micky Dolenz acknowledged: “His words expressed what so many people were feeling but didn’t know how to say.”

In tribute to Gerry, we have chosen 7 Of The Best Goffin/King collaborations (Gerry continued to work with other writers after their divorce in 1968, but we’re going to focus on his earliest treasures). It’s impossible to choose favourites from this prolific team – for this exercise we’ve had to excuse ‘Take Good Care Of My Baby’, ‘Chains’, ‘Up On The Roof’, ‘I’m Into Something Good’ and ‘Oh No Not My Baby’ among many others – but the seven shortlisted perfectly exemplify the breadth with which their gift grew, and the diverse results it produced.

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The Shirelles – ‘Will You Love Me Tomorrow’ (1961)

Still simply wonderful after all these years, this plaintive plea for respect the morning after the night before was Goffin and King’s first success, commissioned for The Shirelles as a follow-up to ‘Tonight’s The Night’. Surprisingly, it was Gerry who wrote the distinctly feminine lyrics, whose innocuous sexual undertones originally distressed US radio stations.

Apparently the original score was for a slower, more romantic rendition, but the young Shirelles convinced Goffin and King to take it more up-tempo – calling it “too country and western” for their tastes. Their intuition proved correct and the song reached number one, making The Shirelles the first black all-girl group to do so.

Carole King revisited her breakthrough hit for her iconic 1971 solo album ‘Tapestry’, and has been recorded by artists such as Cher, Bryan Ferry, Lykke Li and Amy Winehouse, who couldn’t fail to replicate its innate charm.

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Little Eva – ‘The Loco-Motion’ (1962)

Unlike the Twist and the Mashed Potato before it, the Loco-motion was not originally a dance craze – the others popularised by young African-Americans then adopted by teenagers nationally. The ploy of using a song to capitalise on a dance has unfortunately endured longer than the fads themselves, as Psy artlessly demonstrated in 2012, but in actual fact Goffin and King composed the song before accompanying moves were devised.

Little Eva was Eva Boyd, a babysitter for the couple whose voice impressed them enough to ask her to demo the song. Perfectly capturing the vibrancy and energy of the song, her vocals became the final cut, and the single was a million seller, topping the US charts in 1962.

Eva’s subsequent recordings fared less well – the hits drying up two years later – and she retired from music in 1971, later resurfacing in the wake of Kylie Minogue’s successful cover in 1988. Sadly, she personifies the curse of singers who don’t write their own material; with no royalties from her biggest hit and no guaranteed income, she died in relative obscurity in 2003.

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The Chiffons – ‘One Fine Day’ (1963)

Demoed with vocals from Little Eva, ‘One Fine Day’ – a song about the hope of reversing unrequited love – was eventually passed onto New York black girl-group The Chiffons by way of their producers, The Tokens, four white doo-wop singers, who modified and updated the demo to better suit The Chiffons’ sound.

The quartet found fame with ‘He’s So Fine’ (later reworked by George Harrison for his ‘My Sweet Lord’), a number one hit and the title of their first album. ‘One Fine Day’ repeated that feat on their second, but thereafter the group struggled to subsist, and by the ’70s were working full-time jobs and performing as The Chiffons on weekends.

After the death and retirement of three-quarters of the group, one original member, Judy Craig, continues the legacy of The Chiffons.

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Dusty Springfield – ‘Goin’ Back’ (1966)

By the mid-’60s, the notion of indistinctive singers dependent on songwriters was becoming obsolete. However, the emergence of more astute artists, blessed with the talent and looks of their reliant counterparts but with an appetite for authenticity and the determination to be respected among their peers, ensured there were still voices available to deliver Goffin and King’s songs, even if that meant their writing had to adapt to fit the times. 

Dusty Springfield was a white English singer besotted with black American music. Her love for Motown in particular led her to pursue more soul-infused material, in spite of the industry’s desire for her to remain a pop artist. Her voice was both belting and blissful; she could do raw soul, but when she really emoted – like on this song of the lost innocence of youth – the fragility of her own tragic circumstances (coping with her sexual identity) truly become apparent.

The 1969 album ‘Dusty In Memphis’, produced by Atlantic’s Jerry Wexler and recorded with Aretha Franklin’s band, remains the pinnacle of Dusty’s blue-eyed soul pursuit, and features four further Goffin/King cuts.

Dusty’s career persisted through the commercial and personal ups and downs of the ’70s, ’80s and ’90s, until she succumbed to cancer in 1999. 

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Aretha Franklin – ‘(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman’ (1967)

When the Queen of Soul exclaimed she was made to feel “like a natural woman” in 1967, its meaning was not lost on a generation of young African-Americans who had embraced the principles of black power, which celebrated their heritage with noticeable pride in the face of prejudice. ‘Black is beautiful’ was the maxim, and as social consciences grew at the same rate as afros, the desire to feel natural was a sign of dignity and self-worth.

Instigated from an idea by Jerry Wexler, the lyrics came directly from Goffin. Their proclamation of assurance, trust and love makes it a classic anthem of romance, and has been covered by Mary J. Blige, Céline Dion, Whitney Houston and, incredulously, Rod Stewart. Carole King’s own interpretation also featured on ‘Tapestry’.

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The Monkees – ‘Porpoise Song’ (1968)

Famously manufactured specifically for a TV show, The Monkees were inspired by the playfulness and rounded appeal of The Beatles, but, unlike the fab four, were not trusted to write their own material, despite the (admittedly minor, initially) musical talents they had. Therefore reliant on The Brill Building and their like, the frustrated Monkees were veterans of Goffin and King’s endowments.

By 1968, the group were rebelling – they wanted creative control and independence – in an effort to be taken more seriously. Indebted to star in a feature film after the cancellation of their TV series, the resulting movie, Head, was a psychedelic conceptual – and highly uncommercial – reaction to their previously immaculate image.

Commissioned by the film’s producer, Bob Rafelson, Goffin and King submitted ‘Porpoise Song’ to the soundtrack. In the scene where it plays, the group has symbolically jumped off a bridge while escaping from the maddening frenzy of a pursuing crowd. Indeed, Goffin’s lyrics are a plea for freedom, evading a life of lies.

The following year, as tensions within the band mounted, The Monkees began to splinter, eventually splitting in April 1970. ‘Porpoise Song’ was recently covered by Django Django on their ‘Late Night Tales’ compilation.

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The Byrds – ‘Wasn’t Born To Follow’ (1968)

Though The Byrds made a habit of adapting Bob Dylan songs into their trademark jingle-jangle folk-rock sound, they had within their ranks the solid songwriting talents of Roger McGuinn, David Crosby and, especially, Gene Clark, and were innovative musicians that adventured through blues, jazz, ragas and space-rock in their lengthy career.

Resorting to The Brill Building was never really necessary. In 1967, however, Crosby was fired – incidentally, one cause of friction within the group was his disapproval of their covering ‘Goin’ Back’ – and Gene Clark, who’d quit in 1966, returned in 1968 with significantly less contributions. Against all odds, The Byrds’ 1968 album ‘The Notorious Byrd Brothers’ proved to be their most progressive, as contemporary ’60s themes (drugs, peace, freedom, etc) were explored through diverse genres, including country-rock, which would be pursued more fully on subsequent album, ‘Sweetheart Of The Rodeo’, with the arrival of new recruit Gram Parsons.

That the acid-tinged ‘Wasn’t Born To Follow’ fits alongside these philosophical and sociological hippie dreams is testament to Goffin and King’s abiding relevance and the expressive qualities they effortlessly exuded. Its message of denying conventions was used to great effect the following year in Easy Rider, poignantly aligning the straight world of The Brill Building with the ’60s counterculture, and drawing a template for all future subversive pop collaborations.

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Gerry Goffin, 1939-2014

Words: Simon Harper

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Premiere: Stream Brontide's New Album, 'Artery'

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Brontide
Brontide - 'Artery'
Instrumentalists return with a cracking second LP…

Nobody’s ever said, and meant, that lyrics are overrated. Mainly because language is brilliant – an ever-evolving rainbow of lexical opportunity that enables us to distil complex processes into but a few syllables. And the whole a picture’s worth a thousand words thing? Bullshit. You can’t convey the nutritional information of a Kit-Kat with a photo of some roller-skating pandas. 

But there are bands that manage to successfully carry emotion, message and meaning in music shorn of discernable lyricism. Indeed, one could say there are plenty. Brontide, a British trio comprised of Tim Hancock, William Bowerman and Nathan Fairweather, are amongst the best out there right now. Previously a pretty raucous proposition, for album two, ‘Artery’, they’ve cooled the fires a little to allow for a greater emphasis on bracing melody and an almost verse-chorus-verse accessibility to music that, bearing in mind its instrumental nature, perhaps shouldn’t be so instant to click with.

It takes just the one listen to ‘Artery’ to appreciate how sublimely structured these songs are, though, how they cut through the typical noise of post-rock practitioners by streamlining the peaks and troughs synonymous with such fare into a cleaner, more concise package. Eight songs, each an essential part of a considered whole, this is an album that nips and tucks itself into a refined end product that can’t fail to connect with ears open enough to allow it space to impress.

Electronics play a greater role here than on the band’s 2011 debut, ‘Sans Souci’ (reviewed on the BBC) – they’re crystal on the closing moments of ‘Kith And Kin’, more embedded within the bass-and-drums-and-guitar formulas elsewhere. When the adrenalin rushes, songs like ‘Bare My Bones’ are the result: a hyper-frenetic riff workout that’s somewhere in the region of Russian Circles.

Those same shades of metal are apparent in ‘Knives’ too, albeit complemented by a real swagger in the guitar work – it’s surprisingly easy to draw a parallel between it and something Arctic Monkeys might’ve dreamed up during their own desert sessions. Then there’s the sweetly arresting ‘Still Life’, on which Owls-ian guitars are stripped of amplification, the affect like Oscar-winning composer Gustavo Santaolalla gone post-hardcore.

It’s good, is what we’re saying. And we’re premiering the whole album here, so check it out…

‘Artery’ is released through Pink Mist on June 30th. Find the band online here and see them live as follows:

June
26th– Oslo, London

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The Subways' Billy Lunn Reviews The Singles

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The Subways
From Damon Albarn to Drive-By Truckers…

You know The Subways. ‘Rock & Roll Queen’, ‘Oh Yeah’, ‘Alright’ – the Hertfordshire band, it’s had its share of hits since breaking through in 2005 with a corker of a debut LP, ‘Young For Eternity’.

Now, the trio is a little older, a little wiser, but still releasing what can only be described as winners. Out this week is ‘My Heart Is Pumping To A Brand New Beat’ (video just down there), which precedes the release of a fourth studio LP, currently being worked on in Brussels. The single’s release is well timed, as it’s now 10 years since The Subways made their Glastonbury Festival debut, at the time with an average age of just 17. They play there again this coming weekend, so go see them, yeah?

The band’s frontman Billy Lunn (pictured above, right) has kindly agreed to review a bunch of other songs also out this week. Thanks, Billy!

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Damon Albarn – ‘Mr Tembo’

“There is clearly a joyful sense of abandon in ‘Mr Tembo’, Damon Albarn’s song about an elephant he met on a visit to a zoo in Tanzania. In keeping with the gospel music that Mr Tembo was surrounded by during his early years, Albarn brought in The Leytonstone City Mission Choir, who round off the feel of the track with a bright fog of happy. It is just so bloody lovely!”

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TOY – ‘As We Turn’

“As the track lulls us into its initial phrase, it would be easy to simply say that these guys are doing what The Horrors have forcibly been doing bit by bit since their critically lauded second album. TOY manage to pull off the psychedelic feel with a much greater sense of ease, however, as they shift gears simply by taking elements away, allowing the languid, reverb-soaked vocals to wash to the fore. It also helps that TOY don’t feel obliged to smash the audience in the face with a barrage of backing tracks and triggers like their contemporaries do. And good on them for that.”

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Foster The People – ‘Best Friend’

“As soon as this song kicked in I knew it was going to be a killer. I’ve never been 100% bowled over by Foster The People, though it’s clear that Mark Foster (not my childhood hero and Olympic competitor swimmer, Mark Foster) can write and hold a tune with swagger – and I think he’s totally nailed it on ‘Best Friend’. I can see this being a melody I’ll whistle all summer, and as Foster hits that spine-tingling minor third at the end of the chorus, I’ll be reminded exactly why! And they’re not afraid to let it jam either – nice.”

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Beyoncé – ‘Pretty Hurts’

“If Beyoncé was really, genuinely interested in challenging the idea of how women are portrayed in the music industry and in popular media, with all the unfair expectations of beauty, body image, thigh-gaps and Venus-like perfection (which then drip-feeds into the masses of the dissatisfied), she would make a somewhat more convincing case if she were not consistently a crucial cog in the system itself. Looking down all the other Beyoncé videos on YouTube, one bears witness to endless reels of skimpy dresses, slim legs and flat tummies – and I haven’t even mentioned the photoshopped-to-buggery Vogue cover shoots. This is the epitome of hypocrisy and narcissism. Oh, and in the video for ‘Pretty Hurts’, Beyoncé still looks the image of perfection. Oh…the song itself? Yeah. It’s boring. NEXT!”

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Drive-By Truckers – ‘Made Up English Oceans’

“This is a lovely little shuffle in a bittersweet minor key, and you can plainly hear how frontman Mike Cooley’s poetry, clearly written before the music, has been cutely jammed into the song. This was the first of the tracks I was given to review in this column that I felt needed another listen, just so I could try and grab onto it again – and again it escaped me. That’s not a bad thing at all. This song makes me want to get in my car, wind the windows down and go for a long drive. Lovely.”

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Prides – ‘Messiah’

“Strap on your shellsuit (stay away from open fires), because we’re totally in a late-1980s romantic comedy starring Andrew McCarthy. I really like the melodies on display here, but it’s not really something I’ll be playing on the tour bus. Good luck to them, though!”

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The Subways (online here) do a lot of touring later this year, hitting the road on October 1st (Colchester Arts Centre) and not stopping until November 1st (Norwich Owl Sanctuary). Between these points they call at Cardiff, Belfast, Newcastle, Derby, Portsmouth, Preston, York, Coventry… all over the place, really. Find full dates here.

Related: more Singles Round Ups

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Premiere: Remember Remember - Forgetting The Present

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'Forgetting The Present' artwork
Remember Remember
Listen to their new album in its entirety...

In the beginning, Remember Remember was essentially just one musician and his loop pedal.

Glasgow based artist Graeme Ronald sculpted vast, swirling loop abstractions, pieces which seemed to have sparkling, magical qualities.

Growing into a full scale band, Remember Remember delivered their self-titled album through Mogwai's Rock Action imprint back in 2008.

Follow up effort 'The Quickening' continued the band's evolution, with Remember Remember seeming to find renewed muscle, an increased sense of depth.

Live shows demonstrated this increasing maturing, while remix project 'The Mixening' - see what they did there? - was an unexpected joy.

Retreating to their base, Remember Remember began sketching out a potential new album last year. Out next Monday (June 30th) 'Forgetting The Present' is a bewitching return, one which finds the group continuing to playfully toy with standard songwriting tropes.

Nothing is as it seems, with the band layering shoegaze effects over loops which recall the blissful escapism of Chicago house. A genuinely beautiful record, Clash is pleased to be able to stream 'Forgetting The Present' before anyone else - alongside an indepth track by track guide from Graeme Ronald.

Dive in below.

1. Blabbermouth
There's some serious algorithmic juju going on in this tune that would probably be very boring to read about in detail. Suffice to say it's going to be very difficult for us to recreate this live. We wanted to lull people into the record with the familiar, Steve Reich-esque soundscape that makes up the opening section, and then suddenly surprise people with a heavier second half. The working title for this tune was 'Steve Sabbath' if that goes any way to explaining our intention.

2. La Mayo
I've always wanted to write a melancholy party tune…something like 'Into the Groove' by Madonna where the lyrics suggest carefree abandon and dancing, but there's an inherent sadness in the music. When I first demo-ed this tune I'd been listening to Grimes a lot and there does in fact exist a rough version of this tune which features me singing gibberish in a pained falsetto. Thankfully the listening public has been spared my Grimes impression and James's sax takes on the rejected vocal lines.

I wanted to try and marry the equal levels of euphoria arrived at via the best house music and free guitar noise jams. Hence once the ostensibly disco track was finished, Joseph and I went in and overlaid a few layers of Sonic Youth / My Bloody Valentine style guitar noise over the top.

3. Magnets
In 2013 the band was asked to perform as part of the Glasgow Film Festival, wherein we were commissioned to compose a live score to a film of our choosing. Ultimately, we were refused permission to use the film so it is probably safest that I don't name it here. Although it will never see the light of day as an alternate soundtrack, the process did result in a 30 minute, three song monolith of music that eventually became the basis of this entire record.

For a good year our live show consisted of us performing the three tunes as an uninterrupted trilogy, however when it came to sequence the album we felt the three pieces would work better separated, almost as supporting structures around the album as a whole. 'Magnets' was the finale of the live trilogy, and is the first to appear on the record. Writing these songs specifically for a live environment meant that they had to be considerably more stripped down than our earlier work, which relied a lot on layering and overdubs. I would argue that this song best captures the tension and energy of our live performances, embellished by its own scarcity.

4. The Old Ways
This song has existed in various forms and under various names as far back as when the first Remember Remember album was recorded in 2008. James, Joan (Sweeney, our former violinist) and I jammed it a few times back then. There is also a string quartet version of it from around the time of 'The Quickening' (second album) too that was recorded but never released. If I’m being honest I think there are traces and ghosts of this tune in a few other songs we have recorded over the years.

I think that songs have a life of their own, and recording them captures them at different points in that life. Again, this was recorded mostly live, and was a joy to record. Tony Doogan (producer) got quite involved in the process, making subtle suggestions with each take, until it felt just right. I really wanted to have a bouzouki or a mandolin on this but, owning neither, I tried to get my ukulele to do its best possible impression.

5. Pterodactyl
This tune really came from nowhere. A key aspect to the process we undertook when making this record was the fact that Tony encouraged us to take the sessions home to edit and add parts ourselves. Andy, Tommy and I recorded the basic track of piano, drums and bass synth. In honesty I think the three of us thought the tune was, although nice, perhaps a bit throwaway. The process of taking the song home, though, allowed everyone to interpret the tune differently and take it into an unexpected direction.

Joseph and I are huge fans of Tortoise so we set about transporting the tune to Chicago, meanwhile James heard the track a little differently, and treated it as though it were a jazz standard, garnishing it with cascading electric piano arpeggios. The icing on the cake was when Joanne revealed that she knew of a place near the studio where we could hire an old vibraphone, with which she doubled up her glock parts, giving the perfect old jazz record feel. When sequencing the album I came to everyone in the band with a speech prepared explaining why this weird little oddball tune should make it onto the record and it turned out there was no need, we were all already in agreement.

6. Why You Got A Blue Face?
This is the second of the songs that make up the album's hidden trilogy. Musically, it's a continuation of the Middle Eastern and North African themes that we explored a little on The Quickening. Although for all my pretentious that this was a tune in the vein of Alice Coltrane or Mulatu Astatké, the band and Tony knew all along that at its heart this is a big rock song. I had to get James to play the melodica part on this as I nearly passed out after the second or third take. It should perhaps be noted here that this album marks the occasion where the smokers in Remember Remember mostly switched to electronic cigarettes…

7. Purple Phase
…speaking of which, converts to cyber smoking should recognise the sound from which the vapours of this song emerge. We've been playing this live for a couple of years now. A lot of our music can be quite heavy and emotional so it's a fun release to indulge in something light and danceable. Jamaican dancehall rhythms feel genetically engineered to make you move so I've always wanted to incorporate them into a song. We are some of the whitest people you could ever meet, though, so the tropical party is inevitably tempered by some Glaswegian melancholy. My ukulele gets its second outing of the album here.

8. Frozen Frenzy
Our last album ended on a high note, and although we had recorded some more driving, upbeat tunes for this record, we felt that the ending of this record should be more elegiac. The opening piece of the trilogy becomes the final part of the album. Unlike 'Magnets', however, we realised that a straight live recording of this tune wouldn't be the right approach. We get a lot of power and dynamics out of this song live due to the volume that we can play it at.

On record however, we decided to make this song the ultimate late night headphones experience. Using some of the same digital juju employed in 'Blabbermouth' we embellished the live take in microscopic detail, attempting to bring the album full circle.

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Remember Remember are set to release new album 'Forgetting The Present' on June 30th.

Catch the band at the following shows:

27 Liverpool The Kazimier Garden (free entry)
28 London The Lexington
29 Nottingham The Chameleon Arts Cafe

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