This week’s RW/FF round-up features the new album from Wilko Johnson And Roger Daltrey as well as brilliant music from Gulp, The Moons, Plaid, Spectres, Broken Records and Elbow. All that plus a night with Temples, Royal Blood and Interpol on the NME Awards Tour 2014. Since I’ve been too busy to get the first part of my 1996 memories ready for this week, there’s a playlist tribute to Kurt Cobain to mark exactly 20 years since the grunge legend’s death.
It’s fair to say that the music world owes a lot to Wilko Johnson. His unique and exciting style of guitar playing has inspired many ever since he first stepped on to a stage, and without the renowned Dr Feelgood, punk rock wouldn’t have happened and neither would everything after it. In early 2013, Wilko was diagnosed with terminal pancreas cancer, and given ten months to live. The guitar icon says a euphoria overcame him after hearing the news. He embarked on a farewell tour, but as the months passed, found he had no reason to slow down. “I did think this year would be a tapering-down, but the plan is to just keep going until it hits me. I was supposed to have been dead in October… I just don’t know how long I’m going to live.”
Johnson and Who legend Roger Daltrey discussed working together several years ago, and eventually got together to record in November last year. Taking not so much a walk but a buoyant lap of honour down memory lane, the fantastic ‘Going Back Home’ serves up 12 brusque rhythm and blues selections from Johnson’s back catalogue. While Daltrey’s vocals are powerful and spot on, it’s Johnson who steals the show as he genuinely gets stuck into each riff like it’s the last he’ll ever play, a man giving it his all while he’s still on this planet to dish it out. Nostalgic, but never sad or dejected, ‘Going Back Home’ turns out to be a fun, invigorating testimonial. Cheers, Wilko. Read my full 8/10 review HERE.
The annual NME Awards Tour arrived in Bristol last week (26 March 2014) to bring the audience at the Academy another four acts of the moment. This year the night kicked off with a set from indie types Circa Waves, who I missed due to being held up by diversions on the way to Bristol. Luckily I didn’t miss the impressively powerful duo Royal Blood, who seem to make one hell of a sound for an act consisting of just two people. If you didn’t have a good view of the stage, you could be forgiven for thinking that this was a five piece band. Singer and bassist Mike Kerr dishes out meaty riffs while Ben Thatcher provides strength and fat rhythms from behind the drumkit. With a sound laying somewhere between Queens Of The Stone Age, Rage Against The Machine and The Black Keys, they provide British rock with a much needed new ray of hope.
It gives band of the moment Temples a challenging task to match such brutal power afterwards, and the drop in volume hardly does them any favours. But you have to bear in mind that they operate differently to the previous act, and exist in another musical world altogether. Played live their songs become something quite different to what we’ve heard on their stunning debut LP ‘Sun Structures’, certainly more intricate and tackled with precision and feeling rather than blasted out at deafening volumes. As a result of following Royal Blood’s thunder, the opening ‘Colours To Life’ sounds more like a cry from the darkness rather than an explosion of light. However, it’s just a warm up to ease the crowd into this short set of marvellous modern psychedelica, with the driving cosmic missile ‘Sun Structures’ amping things up and providing the best song of the whole night.
The Kettering based four piece’s performance is impressively tight considering they’ve been around for such a relatively short period of time. However, their debut is definitely an album where the studio is used as an instrument, and the absence of that booming drum sound and layers of melody causes ‘Keep In The Dark’ to lack the bite of the superb recorded version. Luckily, ‘Mesmerise’ hits the mark brilliantly and the enticing haze of ‘Move With The Season’ drifts through the venue like a gently intoxicating cloud of smoke as the band are covered in projections of moving dots of light.
Returning to live action after being on hiatus since 2011, Interpol seem to have turned this annual tour into more of a showcase for their return, since the venue appears to be packed with people that are primarily here to see them. And most of them can’t have been disappointed with their set composed mostly of well loved tracks from their first few albums. Performance wise they’ve lost none of their taut post-punk operatic moodiness, and the dark deadpan delivery is still very much intact. Initially the new songs don’t seem to have much weight, but it’s hard to tell how good they are until they become more familiar over time. Their audience seem to revel in each number, and warmly welcome the band back from their extended break with rapturous applause and cheers.
But for this reporter, it was the magnificent Temples and the startlingly powerful Royal Blood who owned the night. Sometimes the new breed ARE capable of outdoing the veterans. This has been one such occasion. Read my full gig review, and see some photos from the gig HERE.
Had a nice couple of days in Weston-Super-Mare by the sea earlier this week. While I was there, I found a very cool little record shop called Revolver, which I spent a considerable amount of time investigating. A great shop selling an impressive range of vinyl at brilliant prices, as well as a few new releases and second hand CDs, Revolver will be profiled on the RW/FF website next week at some point.
Here’s another one that’s been a out for quite a while and has only just caught my attention. Well, I couldn’t feature it without knowing that it was good could I? This excellent track from Spectres was released in January on the Too Pure Singles Club as a limited edition 7″ single. The Bristol-based psych rockers are currently in the studio working on their debut full-length long-player, until then you can check out their already-impressive cannon of tunes by visiting the links below the video. On the superb A-side ‘The Sky Of All Places’, hazy, washed-out vocals penetrate through a sheet of noisy guitars and driving rhythms as weird melodies shine over a space rock drone before exploding into the stratosphere towards the end. Keep an eye out for them.
So to mark twenty years since Cobain’s death and to reflect on his contribution towards musical history, HERE are ten of my personal favourite Nirvana moments. A Spotify playlist featuring these tracks is also available below.
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