Thursday, 22 November 2012

Coves - Cast A Shadow EP




Wondering what to get your music loving mate for Christmas? well look no further than Coves' debut EP 'Cast No Shadow'. Here is our track by track review.

1. Cast No Shadow – A fantastic blend of rock psyche and pop music opens this EP and sets the standard very high. The looping beats/keyboards coupled with the Pond-esque guitars lend the song a mature depth in the same mould as the early Belle & Sebastian albums and the Reverend & The Maker’s single ‘Silence Is Talking’.


2. No Ladder – This is the stand out track of the EP. It is a joyous psychedelic march through a Ennio Morricone’s vision of the wild west. Anyone who enjoyed Oasis’ ‘To Be Where There’s Life’ is going to immediately fall in love with this tune.


3. Run With Me – It seems almost everyone has had a favourite band from Brooklyn these days and Coves have lended their influences to theirs here with joyous nod to Here We Go Magic on 'How Do We Know' and Grizzly Bear's on 'Yet Again'.

4. Fall Out Of Love – This is the weakest of the four tracks but do not dismiss it lightly. It has some genuine moments of Mary Chain and pre-signed Glasvegas genius embedded. It feels a little confused when the Mary Chain fuzz crosses with electronica of Animal Collective but with the right producer honing Coves’ talent TT feels the two will merge push music forwards once more.

Monday, 19 November 2012

Dingus Khan – Support Mistley Swans

Mistley on the map thanks to rock band's debut album

Vitriolic, passionate and aggressive: this is what all debuts should sound like right? The combination of ‘My Body’ and ‘Mad As Hell’ is the most exciting opening to a British band’s album for many a year. It is a full on noise assault, caused by their 8 members, 3 of which are drummers and 3 others are bassists. However, they have this amazing knack to maintain catchy melodies and leave us wondering are we witnessing the birth of another Blur-esque band. Dingus Khan are far more untamed compared to Blur so it’s probably safe to say ‘Tender’ and ‘Universal’ are off the menu, but heavier modern day versions of ‘For Tomorrow’ and ‘Song 2’ are all in the realms of possibility.

 As major labels retreat further into conservative signings, a doff of the cap is in order to Fierce Panda. ‘Bag For Life’ is the kind of exciting and bedraggled genius the charts has been missing since the Libertines ‘Up The Bracket’. If someone ever asks you to describe how you felt at a Crowns or Pulled Apart By Horses gig then just play them this song. It gets across the drunken, penned in sweaty nature of those bands perfectly.

‘Knifey Spoony’ sums this album up with its compelling mix of raucous guitars and undeniable melodies. At the point when you think you can’t take any more of their 3 drummers smashing the skins to within an inch of their lives, their riffs will reel you in and the vocals will send you off into a state of bliss (albeit a slightly aggressive one).

 Album closer ‘Ambulance’ has the kind of vocal brilliance we came to expect from Frank Black with The Pixies and has the youthful naivety of Frank Turner that we, at TT adore so much. However, what we really like about ‘Ambulance’ is something very tenuous indeed, its track placing. After the pasting Dingus Khan deliver to your senses in the previous 9 songs, medical attention will be required.

Then there is fierce uncontrollable beast ‘How Do You Like Me Now’. This is so intense that there are rumours (which we’re starting) that riot police sing this each other every morning as their national anthem. When Pulled Apart By Horses managed this level of viciousness with V.E.N.O.M in 2011, TT could envisage nothing as visceral emerging from the UK rock scene for a while but here we are, staring in awe once more.


 Many argue that rock music has ceased to reinvent the wheel of late and they’d be within their rights to continue this argument when listening to ‘Support Mistley Swans’. Nevertheless, they cannot say it has not been reinvigorated by this release. The energy and passion on this debut can only be the start of great things.

Tuesday, 6 November 2012

Bo Ningen - Line The Wall



Bo Ningen are a Japanese four piece based In London who have been championed by Marc Riley on BBC6 – a public service for which Marc should receive a knighthood, in TT’s humble opinion. They released their self-titled debut album in 2010 and have returned in 2012 to produce what is easily one of the year’s finest albums ‘Line The Wall’.

They open their 2nd helping with rock n roll so desperate and so uncontrollable it won’t just escape into the ether it will lend you a magic carpet to transport you there. The drums on opener ‘Soko’ are pure punk rock to begin with, before cascading into a rock-cum-disco extravaganza not seen since The Music’s self-titled debut. Accompanying these exhilarating beats are the My Bloody Valentine on coke guitar parts which make this a truly barnstorming opener.

Hypnotic vocals and guitar licks are key to this album’s success. Bo Ningem have an ability to create a feeling of tension so daunting it is as though a decade of celibacy has been installed. Henkan and Daikaisei Part 1 are prime examples of this in subtle yet spectacular ways. Henkan utilises mesmerising vocals to lure you in before unleashing a ferocious frenzy of guitars reminiscent of Primal Scream’s paranoia classic ‘XTRMNTR’ album. Then there is the guitar solo. DAMN! It goes one way, then the other, twisting the listener inside out. It’s the kind of genius which we pray John Squire can produce on the Roses’ comeback album next year. Meanwhile Daikaisei Part 1 hooks you in with a nod to T-Rex’s ‘Get It On’ before evolving into a synth laden Pink Floyd epic to take you into a state of euphoria.

‘Shin Ichi’ is another track which resembles Primal Scream’s ‘XTRMNTR’ era. Couple this with a Yeah Yeah Yeahs ‘Date With Night’ sounding riff and Bo Ningen have conjured yet more magic. Only one word can aptly describe this tune: filth. It reeks of sex dugs and degradation without a hangover or the accompanying regrets in sight.

Rock pyschadelia has made welcome return in 2012 from various factions. Tame Imapla made it great and complex with ‘Lonerism’, Weller made it poptastic on ‘Sonik Kicks’ this year and Richard Hawley made it harrowing on his bereavement based album ‘Standing On The Sky’s Edge’. However, Daikessi Part 2 is rock psyche at its most potent. It sounds death defying and carefree like all good rock music should and puts the great James Dean imagery and symbolism back into rock music. It doesn’t feel like a career with regular 1-2-1 meetings with your supervisor, a feeling we are often left with by Coldplay and The Killers. In a week where Led Zeppelin have dominated the music press for the release of ‘Celebration Day’ people should take heed of this ‘Whole Lotta Love’ inspired tune and recognise the future is still unwritten.

You may have noticed we haven’t commented on the lyrics in this review. This is a deliberately lazy ploy by TT. The feeling Bo Ningen gave us was so pure and primal on first listen and after 10 or 12 plays it was still having the same effect. It took us to levels of hysteria that had us all frantically re-writing our favourite albums of the year and decade alike. Due the powerful way in which the album moved us, we felt it best to leave their lyrics in the realm of the unknown to add to the mystique their music has built up. We do not implore anyone to do the same but we do urge you all to purchase this glorious demonstration of acid rock ‘n’ roll.