Public Service Broadcasting are a London based duo who have trawled
the BBC archives to dub old public messages over their enthralling and
evocative electro music. This, ladies and gentleman, is no flash in the pan gimmick.
What we have is one of the finest albums of 2013 that you should all go and buy
immediately.
If there was to be a blueprint for an album opener,
Inform-Educate-Entertain would surely tick all the boxes. It is a rasping
soaring piece of majesty worthy of Orbital at their finest. One of the
broadcast splices states ‘a bright new era is dawning’ and when listening to
this song, it certainly feels as though it might be. Despite being released
before Royal Mail was decided to be sold off, it utilises excerpts in tandem
with some great guitar licks which relay the fury many of us feel about yet
another decision made in the name of greed.
This sense of loss is beautifully encapsulated by the track ‘Night
Mail’. The old clips inevitably create a wave of nostalgia but it is the lush
pianos and protracted synths that conjure the sense of something fading away
never to return. And for what? To bump up the deficit reduction statistics so Messrs
Cameron and Osborne can revel in yet more unfounded glory. If there was a song
to sum the coalition’s lack of compassion and shortsightedness, this is most
certainly it.
‘Spitfire’ will lead fans of Lemon Jelly to recall the ‘Shouty
Track’ and ‘Staunton Lick’ on hearing this. However, like all quality music,
they have borrowed from the past and added their own ambition to the mix. The
combination of modern day Radiohead guitars with British Sea Power’s pop
sensibilities gives this track an edge which their contemporaries simply do not
have.
For all the brilliance of ‘Inform-Educate-Entertain’, it is
occasionally guilty of filler. This is not because of a lack of imagination,
more of a lack of originality in the execution. ‘Signal 30’ is a highly
enjoyable track but if truth be told, it is something the Go! Team did with
more flair. ‘The Now Generation’ meanwhile, feels like watered down version of
Primal Scream’s ‘Swastika Eyes’. it is a real pity, an injection of something
here could have made this song as strong as others on the album.
Perhaps the most interesting track on the album though is the stripped
back ‘ROYGBIV’. Proclaiming ‘there is colour in the reach of everyone’, it is
by far the most uplifting and optimistic track of the album. More importantly
is hints that the duo could have a hit single hidden in their locker. This is
not it, by any means, but the use of the banjo is incredibly infectious for the
first two minutes and. the second half of the song has a brilliant funk riff
reminiscent of A Certain Ratio. It also has the Beeb extract ‘I believe in this
world to come / I think it’s going to be a pretty good one.’ A simple message
but one this country is in dire need of as the Coalition’s divide and rule
tactics run amok.
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