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Peter Guy discovered music late. Since then he's been making up for it. With a collection to rival a small record shop and a gig diary fit for any addled groupie, music is is his religion. Sometimes he dreams of having Liam, Prince and Jimmy Page round for tea but most of the time he can be found writing and designing the Daily Post's sports pages. Getintothis is his guide to music, which he hopes you’ll contribute to.

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New Sounds (July 30)

Posted by Peter Guy on July 30, 2007 7:56 PM | 


Fujiya & Miyagi deliver one of the year's best, Mars Volta man disappears into the abyss, Happy Mondays revel in dirt and Prince spanks his funky monkey. Getintothis listens in...


Fujiya & Miyagi: Transparent Things - Album of the Week
Tirk
If Can's Future Days is the daddy of improvisational space-age Krautrock, then Transparent Things is its 21st Century younger cousin.
Coming on like a pair of Japanese superheroes, Brighton's Fujiya & Miyagi meld the seminal German pioneer's gift for fluid, organic instrumentation with tight, motorik rhythms atop of whispery, heavily enunciated vocal ticks.
Every inch of Transparent Things' 36 minutes exudes effortless, dynamism; from the Neu!-out groove of Ankle Injuries, to the Harmonia meets post-punkisms of Collarbone through to the kettle-drum assisted Tangerine Dream on uppers Conductor 71.
Elsewhere the robotic funk of Photocopier (with Miyagi, aka David Best chirruping 'You're off your bleedin' rocker') and the swampy melodica-driven Suckerpunch add swathes of meaty clout to the mix.
If James Murphy has raised the bar in terms of crossover electronica then Fujiya & Miyagi have drop kicked their way to the top of the tree with this most special of records.
9/10.
Can You Dig It?


Omar Rodriguez Lopez: Se Dice Bisonte No Bufalo
Gold Standard
In 2003 Mars Volta's De-Loused in the Comatorium set new standards in commercial alt-rock. Subsequently the Volta's songwriter's in chief Cedric Bixler (vocals, big hair) and Omar Rodriguez (guitars, production, bigger hair) have ploughed their jazz rock fusion furrow regardless of critical or mainstream appeal. SDBNB is the latter's third solo voyage into the land of noodle and rather sadly, and inevitably, while there's the usual spatterings of barnstorming riffs and bombastic time signatures, there's little here to shake the foundations that was evident in the Volta's debut or even follow-ups Frances the Mute or 2006's Amputechture, for all the components are if anything predictable - a quality which these very statements of artistic endeavour rally against.
That said 11-minute centre-piece Please Heat This Eventually carries enough fret-board ingenuity and moog navigation to get the average Mahavishnu Orchestra fan wetting the seat if his tight pantaloons.
Bixler adds his trademark strain to the title track (a spidery ballad akin to The Widow) and Rapid Fire Tollbooth (a Blaxploitation guitar feast of wah and fuzz), but unfortunately Omar's reliance on dusty atmospherics and studio found sounds hampers the pace resulting too often in a void desperate to be filled.
4.5/10.
Omar outthere...


Happy Mondays: Uncle Dysfunktional
Sequel/Sanctuary
Imagine Richard Dreyfuss Jaws-style gutting the swollen carcass of Shaun William Ryder. Along with every form of intoxicant known to man, there would surely be more filth than the entirety of Manchester's sewage system. And some 15 years since the debacle that was Yes Please! and countless side projects later Ryder and his beastly bunch return to reclaim their nasty crown. Every inch of Uncle... is dripping with back-alley grime; from the scuzzy production, expletive-ridden lyrics and as if to re-affirm their reputation the sex toy gremlin depicted on the cover. Quite simply Ryder makes Irvine Welsh novels read like Jack & Jill.
Musically all things Mondays are intact - loose, funky-gibbon rhythms (Jellybean), swaggering riffs (check Angels & Whores' jiggling, lascivious banjo), club stonk (Anti-Warhol on the Dancefloor) and slurring street poetry (Deviant) trades with sunshine gospel harmonies (Dr Dick).
Sure there's the usual colostomy bag of filler, but for the most part Uncle Dysfunktional is one big, oozing dirty monster.
6.5/10
Dirty hits


Prince: Planet Earth
NPG Records/3121
It's almost inevitable that furore proceeding Prince's revolutionary idea to toss out his 46th record (24th official studio release) with the Sunday Mail will somewhat overshadow Planet Earth's musical content.
But any notion that this 'freebie' is a reflection of poor quality deposited within is rendered obsolete after one quick spin where his Royal Badness displays his trademark effortless fusion of pop, rock, jazz and soul.
Three killer cuts find the diminutive genius at the top of is game; Guitar is a one lick ode to his one true love, Somewhere Here On Earth is a Parade-era piano-led pearler while Chelsea Rogers is a brassy, sassy swinger guaranteed to be shaking the O2 to it's foundations during Prince's 21 night residency. Sure, this aint Sign O' The Times, but if you were ever in doubt Prince still reigns supreme as the King of Pop.
6.5/10.
Guitar Love

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Comments (18)

Herman Platz wrote...

Transparent Things is indeed a fine record. A nice cold stew of japan and krautisms with bashful and unashamedly english vocals.

Your album cover pictures have drawn my attention this week. Two excellent ones and two diabolical ones - can you guess which are which?

Posted by: Herman Platz  | August 2, 2007 9:50 AM

Pete wrote...

By a strange twist of fate, I'm writing a piece on cover art...

I'm presuming you're fawning over Prince and Happy Mondays... Personally I'm only really keen on Omar's shame the contents are all over the shop.

Posted by: Pete  | August 2, 2007 11:55 AM

Herman Platz wrote...

you're right Fujiya & Miyagi's cover isn't particularly great - but it would have spoilt my comment.

I hope Perry Farrell and his garish Satellite party will be making an appearance in the new piece!

Posted by: Herman Platz  | August 2, 2007 3:35 PM

Herman Platz wrote...

you're right Fujiya & Miyagi's cover isn't particularly great - but it would have spoilt my comment.

I hope Perry Farrell and his garish Satellite party will be making an appearance in the new piece!

Posted by: Herman Platz  | August 2, 2007 3:41 PM

Gareth Dorrian wrote...

Pete, you've been on the glue. Prince now, good?
Funk elevator music.

Posted by: Gareth Dorrian  | August 2, 2007 9:29 PM

Pete wrote...

No, just Tippex.
Have you heard the record? You've clearly not heard it enough, if so.

Posted by: Pete  | August 2, 2007 9:34 PM

ProgDave wrote...

Hmm..thought I'd throw a few new neams I've discovered this week, but first I might add my own comments on Pete's little round-up. Must say I'm quite interested in these Fujiya and Miyagi cats - and I must give the big up to the Omar LP which, although it is correct that it doesnt really add owt' new to the volta stew (much as their 1st LP was a sono-clastic epiphany of the highest theta in a rock order - can they really get away with a 4TH LP of the same??) - I did find the Omar LP an enjoyable listen and as the psychical-phunk of the volta becomes increasingly apprent - so does this solo LP have some great stonking soul-psyche vibes in parts.

But two new names to mention this week are first

Charalambides - Glowing Raw - this band offer a beautiful mix of alpine rock ala mid-period Popul Vuh ((the Heart of Glass score and Last Days Last Nights in particular) and echoplex space-folk ala AR Machines' wondrous and mighty ECHO (yes indeedy Pete - get into these mate!) if you aint already!

next up the sonorous and spectral meanderings of

ASH CASTLES ON THE GHOST COAST - like a spectral Godspeed scoring a particularly eldrtich MR James tale - in fact they have been termed "eldritch folk" in some corners - and surely the best new band name I've heared in a long while - post-rock just keeps on mixing and modifying into new unexpecetd modalities - and these Galveston cats do it best. why not REMAKE/REMODEL with them!

Posted by: ProgDave  | August 2, 2007 9:53 PM

Pete wrote...

Not heard either of those Dave, will defo seek & destroy.

On the Omar front, I just feel that road is well troden now, and it's defo time they raised the bar.
Like I say, there's certainly a couple of jewels there, but it's lost in amongst the haze of nothingness - ala Leeds festival! Ya dig!?

Posted by: Pete  | August 2, 2007 10:07 PM

ProgDave wrote...

heheh.. I dig. but I loikes a good haze of nothingness every once in a while!!

Posted by: ProgDave  | August 3, 2007 8:54 PM

Ghost wrote...

That Fujiya recrd is one fo the best

Posted by: Ghost  | August 9, 2007 7:35 PM

phil wright wrote...

9/10 for fujiya & miyagi are you mad?!

At least one mark deducted for lyrics like these:

"Toe bone connected to the ankle bone
ankle bone connected to the shin bone
shin bone connected to the knee bone
knee bone connected to the thigh bone
thigh bone connected to the hip bone
hip bone connected to the back bone
back bone connected to the collarbone
collarbone connected to the neck bone"

The vocals are very very weak and the music very unispiring. Comparing them to neu! was a bit of an insult really!

Oh, and i haven't even talked about the (non existant) production

This is more like 2nd rate porno music imho.

Posted by: phil wright  | August 10, 2007 10:04 AM

Pete wrote...

Phil - nice one, long time no see!

I think the lyrics are sung with tongue firmly in cheek. Regarding the music - I honestly rate it as one of the year's best. Absolutely ace record that gets better with every listen. Defo challenge LCD's crown come end of year.

Posted by: Pete  | August 10, 2007 10:12 AM

phil wright wrote...

Theres no proof to suggest that dave!

Infact, from looking at the lyrics to the other 9 or so songs it more suggests that what i quoted above is almost as good as it gets!

Maybe it's more a case of you wishing it was meant that way?

Either way, shit lyrics or not. Delivering them by whispering really doesn't do it for me.

Regarding year's best album. LCD's is definately a grower but not outstanding in my opinion.

So far for me it'd be between

Of montreal - Hissing Fauna, are you the destroyer? (Slightly camp but probably deserves it just for 'The past is a grotesque animal' is epic! 11mins of hypnotic angry ramblings!)

Menomena - friend and foe (drums at the front of the mix = nice change. Great alt. tunes.)

Amon tobin - Foley Room (Sometimes amon's metallic sound can get a tad annoying, but this is fantastic musique concrete)


Biggest disappointments?

Arcade fire. Too much time thinking about using organs the size of your local parish church rather than concentrating on the tunes. Mind you, the re-recording of no cars go was a treat.

Interpol. Definately one of the most musically limited bands around. Turn on the bright lights was their peak and not a taster i fear.

Posted by: phil wright  | August 13, 2007 2:24 AM

Barry Wheels wrote...

fujiya & miyagi is certainly nice kraut-funk ear candy, beautifully played, but it sounds best when it's apeing the past, all the modern touches are empty and irritating (in their trying humourous detachment the vocals/lyrics are reminicent of hot chip) and wear it down after numerous listens. although i'm not a major fan of james murphy's recent stuff, he does at least have something to say.

Posted by: Barry Wheels  | August 16, 2007 10:41 AM

Pete wrote...

Barry: Couldn't disagree more to be honest, they're refreshingly now while lending aspects of the past and the lyrics are far more subtle than Murphy's - being oblique and not necessarily wearing your heart on your sleeve can be a winning combination too.

Posted by: Pete  | August 16, 2007 6:01 PM

Barry Wheels wrote...

I were just waiting to get my wrists slapped by the big cheese!

Posted by: Barry Wheels  | August 17, 2007 9:38 AM

Fuvvv wrote...

Good read, much improved on alot of this garbage on the Net.
Nice one.

Posted by: Fuvvv  | September 19, 2007 9:15 PM

Hodgy wrote...

Good site! I'll stay reading!

Posted by: Hodgy  | November 10, 2007 3:28 PM

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