I’ll try and update this at least monthly, but here’s the format: I’ll post three alternative/leftfield album recommendations, one past classic, one new release, and one forthcoming release to anticipate. Also included are further recommendations by different artists, should you like these choices, or need some kind of reference point.
Something Old: Guided By Voices: Alien Lanes
It’s hard to believe that something this lo-fi sounding could’ve been recorded in 1995, especially when it is so steeped in 60’s brit psych-pop and 70’s metal and FM rock influences. But Guided By Voices were famed for this sort of thing, and while the shabby home production lends this a certain charm, these songs could’ve been recorded in any form and would still sound great. At 28 songs and 41 minutes (many songs don’t even hit the minute mark) it’s not an album that allows you to get comfortable, but more songs just means more great pop hooks, and when they’re as strong as the ones on Game Of Pricks, Motor Away, My Son Cool, My Valuable Hunting Knife etc. etc. that can only be a good thing. Alien Lanes is an album that seems to hit upon a brilliant tune almost by accident, only to discard it and immediately find another equally brilliant one to replace it. If you dig this, be sure to check out its even more stunning predecessor, Bee Thousand.If you like this try: Times New Viking: Rip It Off (2008), Pavement: Slanted & Enchanted (1992)
Something New: Thee Silver Mount Zion Memorial Orchestra and Tra-La-La Band: 13 Blues For 13 Moons
Starting off as just the trio A Silver Mt Zion almost a decade ago, as the band has swelled in members and sound, its name has followed suit. Lead-member Efrim Menuck was the guitarist for the Canadian post-rock titans Godspeed You(!) Black Emperor(!), and his strained, off-key shrieks might make you wish he’d stuck to the instrumental rock of his old band. If you can overcome this barrier though, you’ll find that Efrim’s unabated vocal stylings are well suited to the apocalyptic drama offered here. 13 Blues is the band’s heaviest, most ferocious album to date, four quarter-hour songs that pound and grind away with visceral guitars and equally visceral cellos for the album’s first half, before moving into shuddering noise (Black Waters Blowed/Engine Broke Blues), and an unexpectedly uplifting finale with BlindBlindBlind. The songs have been honed over recent live performances, and as a result, the album is best enjoyed as a whole. The band are playing two consecutive nights in early April at the London Scala: I’ve got my ticket and if you like this album, I strongly advise you get one too.If you like this try: Godspeed You Black Emperor!: F♯A♯∞ (1997), Arcade Fire: Funeral (2005)
Something To Look Forward To: The Microphones: The Glow Part 2 Reissue
Okay, so this isn’t exactly a new release: The Glow Part 2 was originally released in 2001, but is being re-released in April with a bonus cd of extra material. This is something I would normally be cynical of, but The Glow Part 2 is one album deserved of more recognition. In short, a cult classic: a startling mixture of achingly pretty indie-folk, crushing distortion (just listen to Samurai Sword), a wide range of other instrumentation, and Phil Elverum’s plaintive vocals which at certain points can make the hairs on your neck stand on end. Sonically, there are very few albums that can match this, its incredibly bare production make it one of the most stunning headphone albums ever conceived, and the opening salvo of I Want The Wind To Blow, the title track and The Moon are nothing short of mind-blowing. If you’re unfamiliar with the Microphones, this is a great place to start, and probably their definitive release, and if you like this, the album’s narrative continues into the band’s final release Mount Eerie (also the name of Elverum’s subsequent project).If you like this try: Neutral Milk Hotel: In The Aeroplane Over The Sea (1998)
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