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Stereo Jealousy’s Top 10 Live Performances of 2008

January 18th, 2009

Whew. Never thought I was going to get my next installment out. These are my ten favourite live shows, gigs, concerts, whatever you want to call them. I haven’t included festival performances, and only listed the support bands where they added to the evening. Honourable mentions to Calexico, Get Well Soon and Ladytron – all wicked but just outside the top 10. Enjoy. Photo credits where due – otherwise the pics are mine!

radiohead
10.  Radiohead – Victoria Park
25 / 06 / 08
Radiohead were excellent  – a storming setlist,  perhaps in response to the maligned set from the previous evening. A glorious afternoon, strong support from Bat For Lashes, and the best outside sound setup I’ve ever heard. The atmosphere was great too, obviously different (and inferior) to the atmosphere at my previous ‘head gig – but more than made up for with 25 songs that ticked all my boxes. It’s the bleepy stuff that gets me going and when I got Idioteque and Everything In Its Right Place together I was sated.

Photo: Hidden_Shine

Pick of the set: All I Need

jamc
9. Jesus & Mary Chain / British Sea Power / Black Box Recorder – Forum
27 / 10 / 08
I hadn’t even come to see Jesus & Mary Chain – I’d come for the live return of Luke Haine’s damaged pop act, Black Box Recorder. This was a tribute evening for the deceased Earl Brutus singer Nick Sanderson, also drummer in J&MC and train driver – hence the giant spangly British Rail symbol on the backdrop. Sure enough Black Box Recorder did not disappoint, with Sarah Nixey in divine vocal form. British Sea Power were excellent too, enjoyed despite being smacked in the face by a flying toy polar bear… And so Jesus & Mary Chain, nothing expected, everything delivered. As they trounced through their set I became aware of just how many of their songs I knew, and just how many bands I love have borrowed their sound from this group. An excellent tribute, and a wonderful ensemble gig.

Photo: Laura Musselman

Pick of the set: Just Like Honey

Cornershop
8. Cornershop / John & Jehn – Amersham Arms
04 / 07 / 08
It isn’t long before Cornershop make their way onto the cramped stage. Launching straight into Sleep On The Left Side, it becomes obvious that this South London pub is about to be treated to the very best that the band can offer. They follow the opening salvo with the bouncy Lesssons Learnt From Rocky I to Rocky III, one of the most bewilderingly unappreciated singles of the early 2000s. The set continues at that pace, drawing faux-Bollywood moves from the front row, and head-nodding from the less dance-inclined. [Full review]

Pick of the set: 6am Jullandar Shere

mogwai
7. Mogwai / Fuck Buttons / Errors – Hammersmith Apollo
24  /10 / 08

A superb line-up and some very last minute tickets made this an exciting night, somewhat tempered by my friend finding out merely hours before he’d lost his job. Still – no thinking space was given here, a gig of such sheer volume that any errant thought is merely pounded into nothing. I was disappointed not to see more of Errors, but Fuck Buttons were one of the supports of the year – intense, cyclical and at times truly chaotic. Mogwai didn’t disappoint either – it was my first ‘gwai gig, and they selected a brilliant setlist. Somewhat strangely it was the quietest bits that were the most special – thousands of people entranced into a state of revered silence, enveloping the entire auditorium. Respect.

Pick of the set: Like Herod

mercuryrev
6. Mercury Rev – Shepherd’s Bush Empire
13 / 11 / 08

Jonathan Donahue looked drunk and wielded a bottle of wine as he spiralled backwards towards the glowing backdrop. Grasshopper was bent double over to his left, fully devoted to extending the jam that had flown out of the back end of People Are So Unpredictable. Mercury Rev are firing on all cylinders, freewheeling through the loose tracks that made up Snowflake Midnight. It’s as if these songs suit them better than the tight, overwrought songs from The Secret Migration – there’s a sense of fun and adventure cascading from the stage. Donahue doesn’t know where to look, and splits his gaze between the middle distance and the back of the stage – a classic and mesmerizing performance. To cap it all of they wheeled out The Dark Is Rising,Goddess On A Hiway and Senses On Fire in the encore – what a trio to end with!

Pick of the set: Dream Of A Young Girl As A Flower

mbv
5. My Bloody Valentine – Roundhouse
20 / 06 / 08

The air of expectancy in the Roundhouse is palpable. This is after all, My Bloody Valentine’s first tour in so many years. Their first ‘proper’ gig this is, following the phony war of the previous week’s two ICA warm-up shows. There’s a generation gap in the audience, those old enough to remember the last time and those not. I’m firmly in the latter camp. There’s free earplugs on the door. [Full Review]

Pick of the set: Soon

en
4. Einsturzende Neubauten / White – Forum
22 / 05 / 08

I’m a recent convert to Blixa Bargeld’s industrial gang, and thankfully I got an early opportunity to see them in probably their best format – live. The show was visually and sonically intriguing, I find my eyes raking the stage to see where and how the bizarre metallic, percussive noises are coming from – be it a rotating set of radiator fans, a trough full of spanners or large metal sheets. The night began pretty badly with some loon playing terrible noise covers of Right Said Fred but the second act, Beijing’s White, were a revelation. From unassuming beginnings the tracks built to serene crescendos, a stunning performance in sound manipulation and electronics. EN were never going to be outdone though, and thanks in no small part to London’s tube we were treated to an improv exercise demonstrating the level of musical brilliance coursing through this outfit.

Photo: Valeri Berdini

Pick of the set: Let’s Do It A Dada

m83
3. M83 – St Giles-in-the-Fields
12 / 12 / 08

It is dark inside St Giles, an eighteenth century church deep in the West End, and Anthony Gonzalez has just walked unannounced between the pews. He steps alongside his transparent box of tricks as analogue hiss seeps from the speakers. Slowly Gonzalez builds and tweaks the waves, heading towards a gentle pulsating crescendo. It’s an unassuming yet fixating live introduction, and begins a gig that I have awaited with absurd levels of excitement. [Full Review]

Photo: Matt Biddulph

Pick of the set: Skin Of The Night

portishead
2. Portishead – Hammersmith Apollo
10 / 04 / 08

No-one ever dared to think that it would be this good – comebacks rarely are. Would it be silly and short-sighted to put Portishead’s 2008 reappearance on a similar to Elvis’ rebirth in ‘68? Not for me. Third was a radical departure from Portishead’s previous sound, thrilling and brilliant. The dark melody and stark percussive nature of the record was flawlessly transferred to the live stage, with Gibbon’s vocals floating over the top. Most of the old material was present, with textbook renderings of Roads, Wandering Star, Glory Box and Numb going down a storm. Machine Gun however strikes the hardest – the incessant mechanical beat, thinly veiled threat of the vocal and piercing keys making a chilling and utterly effective live weapon. How long do we have to wait for the next installment? Who knows – but being at this gig was worth the decade wait.

Pick of the set: Machine Gun

bjork
1. Bjö
rk  – Hammersmith Apollo
17 / 04 / 08

I have a list of people I need to see before I die. Since the age of about 15, Björk has topped this list. With such high expectations, and after having waited this long, the night had the potential to be mind-blowing or gut-wrenchingly disappointing. Roughly five seconds into Earth Intruders I know this is going to satisfy every last bone in my body. She’s smaller than I imagined – but the voice, the strongest (and most divisive) of her generation, is truly epic. From the lowest whisper to full-blast wail, the range and volume is incredible. As if the voice wasn’t enough there is a technicolour carnival raging behind it, a proper show. The sensation is of an artist giving everything, and the adulation swelling from the crowd is deafening. Nearly every track sends shivers down my spine, even the relative weak tracks from Volta and Medulla are re-thought live and made essential. The high point comes with the one-two step of Hyper-Ballad and Pluto that close the main set, racing past in a blur of confetti and green lasers.  Undoubtedly the absolute high point of my live musical experience so far.

Pick of the set: Hyper-Ballad

Stereo Jealousy’s Top 40 Tracks of 2008, 40-31

December 31st, 2008

I’ve waited right until the end of the year to unleash my lists – and they’ll be coming over the next few days.

  • Top 40 tracks
  • Top 40 albums
  • Top 10 live shows
  • Best Artwork
  • Biggest letdowns

To kick off, here’s the first installment of the tracks countdown.

40: The Ting Tings – Shut Up And Let Me Go
Columbia

I’m starting my 2008 countdown with a confession; I was wrong. Wrong to blast this Salford duo as force-fed music industry pap. I’ll still count my bile as valid againts the horrendous That’s Not My Name, but this and stablemate Great DJ are perfect pop songs.

MP3
Video

39: Foals – The Race For Radio Supremacy
Transgressive

Foals entered 2008 as media darlings, yet some of the hype faltered in the news that Antidotes would not include Hummer or Mathletics. Yet the record was still intriguing, and probably benefited from the lack of big-single syndrome. This is the pick of the LP for me.

MP3
Buy Antidotes

38: LCD Soundsystem – Big Ideas
DFA

After a blistering 2007 where James Murphy and co strode above end-of-year lists like a colossus, Big Ideas was a rare 2008 outing for LCD. The knowledge of pop-hook craft remained, and this cut from the soundtrack to 21 is no mere offcut from Sound Of Silver.

MP3
Buy Big Ideas

37: Madonna – 4 Minutes
Warner

A huge success from the otherwise disappointing Hard Candy LP. Surely it would be difficult to fail with a superstar team of Madge, Timberlake & Timbaland? One of the pop records of 2008.

MP3
Video
Buy 4 Minutes

36: The B-52s – Eyes Wide Open
Astralwerks

I don’t want to clash, I don’t want to rehash the past” Kate sings, and it is no rehash – I never dared to think that the B-52s would sound this good, this up to date, yet so utterly them in 2008. A totally unexpected pleasure.

MP3
Buy Funplex

35: Mogwai – Batcat
Wall of Sound

There’s no following of the post-rock quiet-loud-quiet formula here, Batcat belts out of the speakers obliterating everything in it’s path. A highlight of their excellent 2008 live shows, where it sounded even louder and even more vital.

MP3
Video
Buy Batcat

34: The Kills – U.R.A. Fever
Domino

Scuzzy, short and superb. The Kills finally got some mainstream exposure for this record – and that was before Jamie Hince’s massively publicized on-off thing with super-stick Kate Moss.

MP3
Video
Buy U.R.A. Fever

33: Duffy – Rockferry
Polydor

Originally released at the back end of 2007, well before her media star began its rise, Rockferry is a rare treat, a blue-eyed soul classic and free of the Winehouse-isms that afflict the rest of her debut LP.

MP3
Video
Buy Rockferry

32: Errors – Cutlery Drawer
Rock Action

Signed to Mogwai’s Rock Action, Glaswegians Errors outshone their illustrious stablemates in 2008. Cutlery Drawer is slightly atypical of their output, featuring a stark spoken word vocal by Londoner George Pringle. Wonderful.

MP3
Buy It’s Not Something But It Is Like Whatever

31: Emiliana Torrini – Gun
Rough Trade

How had I never caught Ms Torrini before? It was only an Amazon recommendation that belatedly turned me on to Me And Armini. Housed within was this staggering track – dark, taut and twisted with a breathy vocal to die for.

MP3
Buy Me And Armini

London Live: 8 – 14 December

December 8th, 2008

Gig of the Week: Twisted Christmas – Barbican

As Christmas hurriedly approaches, the larger venues around London have been largely booked up by comedians and tribute shows. Fortunately the smaller venues keep the variety levels high, and this week is no exception. Pick of the bunch is the second in the Barbican’s series Only Connect, the first of which was the Drifting and Tilting concerts featuring the music of Scott Walker. The theme this time round is the underbelly of our traditional festive practices, with the artists performing their own versions of classic and modern Christmas tunes. With artists like Jarvis Cocker, Patrick Wolf and Kathryn Williams involved the event surely has to be interesting to say the least…

Tickets are still available from the Barbican’s website, from £13 to £22.

Jarvis Cocker – Baby’s Coming Back To Me

Patrick Wolf – Stars

Kathryn Williams – Flicker

Don’t forget to vote in our Best of 2008 section

Photos: Patrick Wolf: sugicy; Jarvis Cocker: Lizzka

Read on for the rest of Stereo Jealousy’s recommended London gigs this week…

Read more…

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London Live: 20-27 October

October 19th, 2008

Gig Of The Week: Mogwai, Fuck Buttons & Errors

A stellar post-rock lineup this Friday at Hammersmith’s venerable Apollo. Though The Hawk Is Howling is a little hard work Mogwai still have a live reputation that is untarnished. If they needed any encouragement to be on top form, there’s the potential for an upstaging from both bands. Bristol’s Fuck Buttons have produced a fantastic record in Street Horrrsing, and are a live draw on their own. Mogwai’s Glaswegian labelmates Errors complete the bill, and with tracks like Salut! France and National Prism look set to win some new friends. Obviously this is largely sold out, but I think there are a few seats left…

Gigantic / Stargreen

Mogwai – Hunted By A Freak (Live)
Fuck Buttons – Ribs Out
Errors – Cutlery Drawer

The gig that Hunted By A Freak is from can be found in full, and in great quality, here.

Read on for the best of the week’s gigs around the capital…

Read more…

Selected Releases: Monday 2 June

June 4th, 2008

Ladytron
Velocifero
.
Buy
MP3: Deep Blue

Get Well Soon
Rest Now Weary Head
You Will Get Well Soon
Buy
MP3: Born Slippy NUXX

Errors
It’s Not Something But
It Is Like Whatever
Buy
MP3: National Prism

Rather obviously, album of the week this time around is Ladytron’s fourth LP, Velocifero. Following up on 2005’s album of the year Witching Hour was always going to be a thankless task, but the quartet have given it a great stab, and there are sections of the record that rival the very best of their work. Quite how well it stands up against the best of the year so far (Portishead, The Black Angels, Elbow) is another matter, but quite simply it blows everything else away this week. Runner-up is German artist Konstantin Gropper with his Get Well Soon project. This is maudlin pop, akin to Radiohead’s more balladic moments, shot through with Germanic sheen. The track featured here is what drew my attention to the album, a twisted and sombre re-rub of Underworld’s classic Born Slippy NUXX. The whole album is streaming on his Myspace, check it out. Also featuring on the top rung this week are Rock Action’s Glaswegian noisemakers Errors, with their debut It’s Not Something But It Is Like Whatever. Adding electronic swipes to label-boss’ Mogwai’s template this is accomplished electro post-rock, worthy of Mogwai themselves.

The Zutons
You Can Do Anything
.
Buy
MP3: Dirty Rat

Johnny Foreigner
Waited Up Till
It Was Light
Buy
MP3: Our Bipolar Friends

The Notwist
The Devil, You And Me
.
Buy
MP3: Gloomy Planets

Onto a poppier bent, and we have records from Liverpool’s The Zutons and Birmingham’s Johnny Foreigner. The Zutons certainly have a high workrate, this is their third LP in four years, their name kept in the limelight by a well placed Ronson/Winehouse cover of the otherwise dreadful Valerie. On first listens there isn’t much to even rival that on You Can Do Anything, nowhere near repeating the stomping thrills of Pressure Point or You Will, You Won’t from their debut. Brum’s JoFo have just released their debut, and despite getting decent reviews in most musical press, it just doesn’t do it for me. I saw them live too, and wasn’t impressed. Artsy-indie by rote. Different again are genre-hopping Germans The Notwist, formed way back in 1989. The Devil, You And Me is their sixth LP, one that took almost six years to bring to fruition. Continuing their trend towards electronic-inflected stuff, this effort is pretty tasty. 

Keyboard Choir
Mizen Head To
Gascanane Sound
Buy
MP3: Bugs

Shearwater
Rook
.
Buy
MP3: South Col

Look See Proof
Between Here And There
.
Buy
MP3: Obstruction

Sneaking into my attentions through a wonderfully titled album, Brainlove Record’s Keyboard Choir float their debut this week, initially digital only. A hybrid of found sound and electronics, they create intense soundscapes, interspersed with snatches of speech. There’s a couple of tracks available for download from their Myspace, however support the band and label if you like it: we need more like Brainlove! Okkervil River offshoot Shearwater release their fifth record this week, Rook containing some strong tracks, but overall the feel is a little been there, done that. The same feeling invades a lot of Look See Proof’s debut, Between Here And There. However, the difference here is that the songs just vibrate with energy. Enough, in fact to carry this album into distinctly enjoyable territory. 

Ravens & Chimes
Reichenback Falls
Buy
MP3: January

Paul Weller
22 Dreams
Buy
MP3: 22 Dreams

Alphabeat
This Is Alphabeat
Buy
MP3: Fascination

Propping up the release schedule this week are big hitters from artists at very different stages of their careers. Paul Weller releases his latest effort with 22 Dreams, a surprisingly varied effort for an artist renowned for his traditional approach. If you fancy something with a bit shorter career span then latch onto Alphabeat’s album. This is pretty shocking ‘adult-pop’ ie, something shite that middle aged hags can dance around to at the local disco in some shockingly awful place like Stoke. Avoid. Finally there are NYC band Ravens & Chimes, whose Reichenback Falls is nice enough, just not spectacular.
Last week’s top 3 as voted by you were:
1. Spiritualized – Songs in A&E
=2. The Wedding Present – El Rey
=2. The Futureheads – This Is Not The World
Vote for this week’s best release over in the left sidebar.