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Showing posts from 2015

Mark Ronson - Uptown Special

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There was a brief time - around two weeks or so - back in 2013 when Get Lucky received its first play on radio and was uploaded to YouTube, where there was the (now laughable) concern that maybe this excellent comeback wouldn't be quite so warmly received by the single-buying public. There are hundreds of examples of falling addictively in love with a pop song that didn't quite turn out to be universally shared - I still get sleepless nights over the lack of chart success for Tegan and Sara's Closer - but, thankfully, Uptown Funk was not one of them. OK: it's now tipped over to the other side of the scale (like Get Lucky ) and getting the eyeroll treatment that comes with every above-average anthem, but we'll always have that brief period between "Fleur East covers the song on the X Factor" and " Uptown Funk spends its third week at number one". Because it did come as a bit of a surprise: Record Collection, Ronson's third album, didn&#

Purity Ring - Another Eternity

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Purity Ring are probably second only to CHVRCHES in that list of bands that literally everyone I talk about music with - from the puritanical Smiths-fan best friend over short bursts of Facebook messages (evening, Admiral) to the swathes and swathes of monsters and beyhives and whatevers I encounter online - is super enthusiastic about. I mean sure, both acts have a super-cute voice accompanying each and every track, but that's probably where the similarities end. The Canadian pair dazzled everyone in 2012 with Shrines , even managing to chart respectably on the Billboard 200 in the process. However, if you head over to any discussion page about the band (let's use this example) you'll find a mass of complaints that what made Shrines unique has since been reduced into a poppier format, as though accessible music is the devil and forever trying to make something unlike anyone else in the world is a fruitful endeavour. I'm reminded of last year's hilarious

Charli XCX - Sucker

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There was a brief period when the music video for Break the Rules emerged that I entered a fit of token hipster eye-rolling. Here was an excellent talisman of pop music reducing herself to the most banal of teenage, rebellious Americana and at the height of her crossover from indie darling to certified, chart-dominating success story. I understand how awful it always sounds. I'm not quite so bitter as some (seriously, what a fucking douchey closing paragraph), though, and if I'm going to go forward with any gripes about this album it's the fear that its ridiculous pushbacks and rescheduled release dates might dent its chances of coming anywhere near the top of our charts. Atlantic's potential failure to strike whilst the iron is hot may of course be endemic to the many , many stars that I tend to take to my heart, and it shouldn't by any means change the fact that Charli XCX is enjoying a fantastic lifestyle right now, but I don't know. Sometimes the wor

Björk - Vulnicura

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I don't know, maybe all of the best albums made are now going to be dropped, unannounced (or rushed by leaks) on iTunes some day. Maybe year-long promotional campaigns seem silly in retrospect. Don't they, though? Who has the attention span nowadays to wait 5 months for an album from Charli XCX, let alone when it's been sprung across the Atlantic those same five months ago? We'll come to that gripe in my next review (which, coincidentally, shall hopefully not be five months down the line. I really shall try this year to review at least one album a week). So: Björk. I assume we are all familiar. We're nine albums in now so that makes her a bit of an institution, although one would suppose that many have made a marked impact with many fewer. When it comes to analysing the works of Björk, however, it soon emerges that few - if any - actually rival her when it comes to a collective, frightening, beguiling, challenging, revolutionary musical output. Overanalysis ten