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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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Nationwide Mercury Music Prize: Our Pick

Posted by Peter Guy on July 22, 2008 6:52 PM | 


Another year, another fairly respectable, if predictable Mercury Prize list...

You really have to wonder what is the Mercury's aim now. Every year the same formulaic results come to the fore and this year is no different.
Sure, every one on the list is worthy of a mention - not least the awesome Burial, aka The Banksy of dubstep (my tip to win, unless the judges decide he's ineligible given his/her unwillingness to reveal their identity).
However, if the Mercury's intention is to raise the profile of new British talent then they're surely wide of the mark.
Why nominate Radiohead (again), Elbow and indeed raggedy Robert Plant and his Yank muse Alison Krauss? None need the cash - nor the exposure with each selling by the bucket load.
The same can be said for Adele, what with her pre-release Brit in the bag and multi-platinum 19 cranked out in every high street store/coffee house/student union, you have to wonder what the judges think the Cockney wide gal would gain from a further accolade. Probably a quick route into obscurity come album number two.
Then there's the token jazz and folk acts - this year filled by Portico Quartet and Rachel Unthank & The Winterset respectively. These acts may invite further investigation where it not for the fact that each and every year a complete unknown bags these two slots whereby even the most hardened music fan dismisses them almost without a second thought.
Neon Neon, meanwhile, is an odd choice given that it is a collaborative project by Cincinnati producer Boom Bip and Super Furries frontman Gruff Rhys. Sure, it is a killer record, but barely scrapes into the Brit category - much like last year's Mark Ronson inclusion. Why not go the whole hog and nominate Vampire Weekend because lots of people think they're from Oxford?
Perhaps the most curious inclusion this year is Estelle who has been almost ignored here save for her smash and grab American Boy which only received recognition thanks to the cameo by Kanye. How odd would it be for this R&B whopper to scoop the prize?
Surely, if the judges had their ears correctly aligned they'd have much rather reached for MIA's incredible Kala - a far superior record than Arular which was nominated back in 2005.
Anyhoo, like all things music - the list is completely subjective - so here's Getintothis' selection. Add your own. If you can be arsed. Like.

1. Frightened Rabbit: The Midnight Organ Fight
Review

2. Fujiya & Miyagi: Transparent Things
Review.

3. Laura Marling: Alas I Cannot Swim
Review.

4. Mystery Jets: 21
Review.

5. Fuck Buttons: Street Horrrsing
Review.

6. Oceansize: Frames
Review.

7. MIA: Kala
Review.

8. I Was A Cub Scout: I Want You To Know That There Is Always Hope
Review.

9. Portishead: Third
Review

10. Foals: Antidotes
Review.

11. Chrome Hoof: Chrome Hoof
Review

12. 65daysofstatic: The Destruction of Small Ideas
Review

Nationwide Mercury Music Prize 2008 Official List:
Adele: 19 (8/1, review)
British Sea Power: Do You Like Rock Music? (8/1, review)
Burial: Untrue (6/1, review)
Elbow: The Seldom Seen Kid (6/1, review)
Estelle, Shine (8/1)
The Last Shadow Puppets: The Age of the Understatement (5/1)
Laura Marling: Alas I Cannot Swim (8/1)
Neon Neon: Stainless Style (10/1)
Portico Quartet: Knee Deep in the North Sea (10/1)
Radiohead: In Rainbows (5/1, review)
Rachel Unthank & The Winterset: The Bairns (10/1)
Robert Plant & Alison Krauss: Raising Sand (6/1)

Odds given by William Hill.

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Comments (8)

Rosie wrote...

No mention of Coldplay I see Pete? Portico Quartet are ace, do you have the album?! Can I play with it?! x

Posted by: Rosie  | July 23, 2008 1:24 AM

William wrote...

wow... what a load of shite. mind you. i can't actually think of any British acts i'd rather see in the shortlist other than Portishead. slim pickings this year, i feel.

i'd quite like Neon Neon to win it, if only because a significant proportion of Gruff's previous material has pleased me to some extent. mind you, on that kind of logic I should be hoping Radiohead will win, but they've not made a decent record in over ten years now.

Posted by: William  | July 23, 2008 2:14 AM

TwoL'sOneCock wrote...

Gotta say Pete, you've pulled a great list out of your beany scouse arse there, but I absolutely 100% disagree with you about Elbow. Granted they've sold a fair amount of albums, but they're hardly Coldplay in terms of blanket coverage selling flaccid fluff to folk who buy one album a year alongside their peppers, bread, milk and TV Hits in Tescos.

No. The Seldom Seen Kid is a modern masterpiece, musically and lyrically, and I will gladly pop round the gaff of anyone who disagrees to force it into their numb, emotion-free existence.

For what it's worth here's my own hastily compiled and ultimately worthless list of 12.

1. Elbow 'The Seldom Seen Kid'
2. MIA 'Kala'
3. Laura Marling 'Alas I Cannot Swim'
4. Pete & The Pirates 'Little Death'
5. Quiet Village 'Silent Movie'
6. Late of the Pier 'Fantasy Black Channel' (too late officially?)
7. Portishead 'Third'
8. Metronomy 'Nights Out' (too late officially?)
9. Burial 'Untrue'
10. Future of the Left 'Curses' (too late last year)
11. Wild Beasts 'Limbo Panto'
12. Frightened Rabbit 'Midnight Organ Fight'

But now I'm going to spend the rest of the day sporadically going "JESUS, I can't believe I didn't include that"

Posted by: TwoL'sOneCock  | July 23, 2008 9:27 AM

Librarian wrote...

Elbow are just Coldplay for people who think they're too good for Coldplay; and if that's emotion, you can keep it.

Posted by: Librarian  | July 23, 2008 3:20 PM

Pete wrote...

TwoL'sOneCock: I'm with you on the Elbow front - tis a belter dig me review kidda: http://www.peterguy.merseyblogs.co.uk/2008/04/new_soundbites_april_815.html

Album of the Week an' everytin innit.

Oh, and you can't go cheating and putting exempt ones in either - must try harder!

Posted by: Pete  | July 23, 2008 4:22 PM

Towen wrote...

may i just say how much i hate the last shadow puppets?

rubbish band name, painfully corny album title, watered down Divine Comedy type songs.

to sum up - shite.

Posted by: Towen  | July 23, 2008 5:44 PM

Stanley Truck wrote...

where are your token jazz and folk entries pete?

shame portico quartet and rachel unthank will be dismissed as tokens by most (including the judges), as they're both brilliant and inspired entries, trumping most of the list into a stinky oblivion.

agree burial will win. for sure.

Posted by: Stanley Truck  | July 25, 2008 2:00 PM

Matt wrote...

Burial to win. He's ace. Though it'd be a bit of an anti-climax considering he's never ever going to show up to it, but it's a deserving album.

Posted by: Matt  | July 25, 2008 7:33 PM

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