Monday, December 18, 2000

Albums of the Year:

1. PRIMAL SCREAM -- XTRMNTR. Consider this: "Shoot Speed/Kill Light" has perhaps the greatest pedigree of any song ever. The title is a copoff of the Velvets "White Light/White Heat", the song is the lovechild of WL/WH and Joy Division's "Incubation" (right down to the guitar solo by Bernard Sumner), and it's produced by Kevin Shields. What more could you POSSIBLY want in a song?

2. FLUXION -- VIBRANT FORMS II. It's "Adventures Beyond the Ultraworld" for the new breed of minimalists. Warm and hypnotizing throughout, with impossibly dense atmospherics beautifying the mix, this 130 minute opus is easily the most captivating techno released this year.

3. GODSPEED YOU BLACK EMPEROR! -- LEVEZ VOS SKINNY FISTS COMME ANTENNAS TO HEAVEN. Godspeed managed to lighten up a bit on the urban decay theme but still produced their most dramatic statement yet. Over four long, ultimately uplifting sides/symphonies, violins and white noise have never sounded so perfect together.

4. YO LA TENGO -- AND THEN NOTHING TURNED ITSELF INSIDE OUT. The greatest Velvet Underground record never made. Slow burning, creepy, heartfelt letters of love. Fifteen years and counting, YLT just get better and better.

5. V/A -- SEVERAL BANDS GALORE (The sounds of the bands of the MBV mailing list). This year's Verve release. Some of this album is merely OK-good. Much of it is spellbindingly essential. Eighteen bands find eighteen ways to show how much My Bloody Valentine have influenced them. Risk taking and new sounds abound. Someone sign these bands *now*.

6. GAS -- POP. One of the 45691 records that Wolfgang Voigt released this year, but "Pop" displayed an ambient, peaceful side that he rarely shows. Less lo-fi than previous Gas albums, but more melodic (hence, the tongue-in-cheek title). This is the fourth Gas release, and all four of them absolutely rule.

7. V/A -- CLICKS AND CUTS. Minimalism formed from, well, exactly what the title says. The disks could be labeled "conventional" and "abstract" but those are relative terms, because nothing here is the least bit conventional. "Clicks and Cuts" is rapidly becoming an adjective, a la "Basic Channel" and "Detroit".

8. SPEEDY J -- A SHOCKING HOBBY. Jochem Paap took his previous industrial/funk ideas, added some big, dirty beats and voila -- a little brother for last year's "Wireless" (by Luke Slater) was born. This is what big beat should have sounded like had it been worthy of any of the praise it was given.

9. THIRD EYE FOUNDATION -- LITTLE LOST SOUL. Matt Elliot dumped scraping and screaming for whispering and wandering. The anti-"Sound of Violence", if you will. Impossibly lonely and sad, this was the most aptly titled album of the year.

10. SOUND TRACK -- THE COOLER. After re-listening to every Basic Channel and Maurizio release, Savvas Ysatis decided he could do them one better by adding a smoother, house-y feel to those techno blueprints. An album which somehow manages to be stark and fun all at the same time.

Wednesday, December 13, 2000

I was reading a review of "Creation Records International Guardians of Rock and Roll 1983-1999" in Uncut magazine, and the review mentioned MBV's "You Made Me Realise" and "Soon" being on the compo. I couldn't believe it -- had I majorly screwed up and prepared an unwarranted spot in hell for Creation (DEC 1 comment above?)? Well, no. I don't know what they're selling in the UK, it wouldn't surprise me if the tracklisting is different but the version they're selling here has NO MBV tracks. Thus, that spot in the deepest depths of hell remains reserved, I just don't know who it's for. Whoever was in charge of the tracklisting, you suck. You suck worse than a farsighted eight dollar whore with two missing front teeth.

(later) I've come to the bottom of this, with help from news archives in nme.com (your web site rules, even if it does take forever to download). Alan McGee chose his favourite Creation tracks for the compilation. He chose THREE MBV tracks, "You Made Me Realise", "Soon" and "Sometimes". He chose only ONE Oasis track but three MBV tracks! These tracks did not appear on the compilation because they could not be cleared in time for the album's release. He even said (credit to nme) "(MBV) are a pivotal part of the Creation history, every bit as important as Oasis. They may not have sold as many records, but they have had an immense influence on so many bands. (The compilation) won't be complete without them". Also "I selected the three MBV tracks as I think they are probably my favourite Creation band ever". OK, so let's get this straight. MBV: notorious perfectionists/lazyitis sufferers, spent gargantuan amounts of Creation's money, leading to the main cause of McGee's near-breakdown, financial ruin and subsequent loss of indie status due to the partnership with corporate behemoth Sony. Oasis: notorious party animals/writers of mediocre Beatles homages, made back all the money that MBV lost a hundred fold, leading to McGee's considerable wealth. Which band would YOU favour? Sure, the fact he's financially secure means that he can be more objective and bear no grudges, but still, I gained a lot of respect for Alan McGee after reading those comments.

So whose fault is it for not clearing the tracks in time?

Someone collect my entries from today and December 1st and put them in the Oxford English Dictionary under "irony", because this is irony defined.

In part, at least, it's Kevin Shields' fault.

McGee claims that Kevin and Sony couldn't agree on compilation rights/royalties/what-have-you. Thus, Sony pulled the tracks.

Thursday, December 07, 2000

Re: NME's top 20 Influential Musicians. The actual issue arrived this week, but when I read about it on the net a couple of weeks back, well, I was ranting and raving. Bowie as #1, that's a good choice. Radiohead as #2 is just sick. Radiohead more influential than Kraftwerk? Kraftwerk invented just about everything, whereas Radiohead invented an effective method of shoving their collective heads up their asses and recording the air rush of their own farts streaming through their empty heads. I knew that there was NOTHING that the magazine could say to convince me to budge one bit. So I bought the mag, and it goes something like "Just about every band in Britain are making music under the influence of Radiohead, they made stadium rock cool, etc.". First of all, if there's ANY prevailing trend in British rock right now, it's the popularity of bands writing simple, catchy, guitar pop, and THAT trend was popularized by Oasis (who were not in the top 20). Once Oasis became massive after the public chose their three chord jingles over Blur's more compositionally involved approach, it marked an end for cleverness and wit in mid-90's mainstream British rock. Second, stadium rock was cool long before Radiohead did it -- there was a REASON that they were constantly compared to U2 around the time of "The Bends". Third, countless "leftfield" British guitar bands of the last ten years were heavily influenced (to the point of outright COPYING in many cases) by My Bloody Valentine, The Stone Roses or the Smiths. All of them have been more influential than Radiohead, but the first two didn't even make the top 20!!

Monday, December 04, 2000

Random Monday thoughts: Spin magazine picked "Your Hard Drive" as the Album of the Year, dear god, I wish I thought of that, that's pure genius. They're right, of course, because the way that free downloadable music proliferated itself will come to be synonymous with the year 2000 -- far more so than any one music release. In a way it's a shame, because I think this has been one of the top two or three years for new releases in the last 20 years or so. That will likely be forgotten in the wake of the flowering of the Napster generation. I am swaying myself toward the opinion that the first 20 minutes of the Godspeed You Black Emperor! album is the best 20 minutes of music released this year. As for how the *entire* 85-minute opus compares the endless multitude of other outstanding *whole* albums of 2000, I am still undecided.

Friday, December 01, 2000

Creation Records has released a best-of-their-label double CD anthology. The lineup of Creation bands on the compo is truly stellar, but that's not what I'm writing about. I'm writing about the COMPLETELY INEXCUSABLE OMISSION OF MY BLOODY VALENTINE FROM THE COMPILATION. All MBV did was make the best records Creation ever released. OK, that's my opinion, but more objectively there's no arguing that MBV were a crucial part of Creation's history. And it's not like they got embarrassed about anyone and anything associated with early 90's shoegazing because Ride and Slowdive and Adorable, yes, that's right, ADORABLE, a band that did have many fine songs, but were unquestionably the Northside of shoegazing, a band whose name went from being the next big thing to being a "Be Here Now"-type embarrassment at the mere mention of their name, are right there in all their splendor. And it's not like they hold grudges against the bands that have since left the label, because SFA and Oasis are also featured. No, this is a motion by people within Creation to pretend that MBV never existed. They may be just a teensy weensy bit sore at MBV for nearly bankrupting the company by spending a quarter million pounds recording "Loveless" (had this happened, CD2 of the compo would not exist, yeah, I could see people getting upset at one band cutting the label's lifetime in half). Personal feelings aside, MUSICALLY, it's one of the stupidest omissions in the history of compilation albums.