Saturday, 27 March 2010

I'm almost anonymous and it's a dangerous road...

At the moment, days turn to nights turn to days turn to nights and my feet barely touch the floor. It's been a manic first few months of the year, some of it great, some of it distinctly average but all in all pretty cool. The problem is that I just seem not to have time to blog that often...which hopefully will change over the summer months.

So as a short, hello world, tonight's effort comes from only the second gig I've been to since the start of December and this one actually turns out to be a matter of co-incidence find.

Back in October last year I travelled to the Bedford in South London to see the Strange Folks boys play a set. Before they played, I was stunned into bewilderment by the beautiful Ragz Nordset, so when I found out Ragz was due down in London again I was rather happy. Except circumstances between the both of us meant that we were both ill over the two London dates, meaning it didn't in the end happen. That being said, one of the gigs Ragz was due to play had a publicised list of artists. Being nosey as I tend to be about these music related things, I searched against the artists and unearthed an absolute gem of a musician, truly a complete gem...in Patrick Plunkett.



A pretty unassuming and down to earth guy, Patrick originally hails from Dublin and has been chasing his musical dream in London for the past three years. His music evokes memories of all the great male singer/songwriters of the past 10 years, people like Damien Rice, Ray LaMontagne and some of the more mainstream successes like Paulo Nutini, Jason Mraz and Jack Johnson, only with a harder rock/americana edge. So having found him on myspace it was a true pleasure to see him play an acoustic set the other night at one of my favourite intimate venues in London, The Slaughtered Lamb.

Patrick's set covered a mix of tracks, some from his "New Beginnings", three track EP and a mix of tracks that will hopefully form part of a full blown album at some point in the not too distant future.

Here's a track that's not on the EP, called Come Home Tonight. It's a really great song and I cannot wait to hear what it sounds like with a full band behind it.



The EP has been on continual play on my iPod for three days...watch this space...this man is going places...FACT!!!!

Sunday, 21 February 2010

Ok, it's not ok to forget about stuff...

So it seems I haven't vanished off the face of the earth, I'm still very much alive and well despite various rumours circulating the media of alien abductions, kidnappings and sexual predators....ok I joke, it's just been a totally hectic month and I've been pretty in the clouds with my thoughts.

What's new? I went to see the brilliant David Ford and Low Anthem at the Shepherd's Bush Empire about 10 days ago which was awesome, a beautiful gig...which I stupidly forgot to take my camera too, so no videos....doh!

Someone else thankfully caught some of it, so here's someone elses video of David Ford. This is State of the Union which is a real performance of incredible musicianship - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dT5qWsG21F4 - take a look, you'll see what I mean!

Low Anthem were a total unknown quantity to me, but I was seriously impressed with them. In particular something which I would say was the most industriously brilliant and creative use of day to day technology to create the most mesmeric sound. The song in question is This God Damn House and the premise was that the crowd were asked to call the person sitting next to them, turn each phone so that the speaker of one was next to the microphone of the other and the reverb effect was....mesmeric. Sadly there's no video of Shepherd's Bush but there are other videos. This was in Dublin a few days earlier (stick with it all the way through) - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gSHVkaN5FLo and this was just a short clip I found from their Manchester gig which actually picks up the sound even better. It's totally mindblowing... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JfvCNpJDMfo

Ok so now you know I'm safe and still living just another tidbit of news...if you're wondering why I've gone quiet...well I'm in the throws of something pretty exciting right now which requires a lot of attention. Needless to say it won;t be long before it gets announced to the world...wahoo!

Anyways it's late in London...nearly 2am.

Night peoples xxx

Thursday, 21 January 2010

Are You Calling Me...

January's flying by isn't it? Whoosh what was that? That's another month gone, can I do it again? Err no!

Still every day brings more and more hope and this month, more great music. For the first time in months I feel I'm ready for an intake of new music. But of course being in that position has issues, my iPod is running low on space and there's only so much music that can be compressed down to 128/44. On Saturday I finally plucked up the courage to install the iPod Touch 3.0 O/S released last year which I rebelled against because I felt it would compromise what little space I had left on the little box of magic, after 30 minutes and several reboots it somehow cleared nearly 300mb leaving me ridiculously happy. So I went on an iTunes shopping spree to celebrate.

A few nights previously the fantastic Daniela Bove (who I met at a Strange Folks gig back in August last year) and a friend of mine posted up a video link on Facebook to a guy called Charlie Winston (the brother of musician Tom Baxter), I took a gamble (as I did with a certain Omer Leshem many months ago) and was totally blown away. It's a video of Charlie filmed by some random on a street in Paris at 5am singing the seriously haunting and beautiful Calling Me.



When it finished I went in search of more music and was a tad disappointed with a mix of songs on MySpace which whilst being clever felt a bit complicated and not really what I was hoping for. But still being curious I decided to push on a couple of nights later having decided to buy Calling Me if nothing else. So I had a look and listen on iTunes and found quite a few songs I really liked. So I downloaded a fair few songs and now I can't stop playing them...

So do yourself a favour, head over to the iTunes store, go check him out...you'll not be sorry :-)

Nite nite x

Saturday, 9 January 2010

2010....another vintage for music?

Hello and a seriously belated Happy New Year from a wintery swept, freezing, snow filled London, it's sure cold here and if there was any doubt that it was January, it's been dispelled the last week.

Still it's a new year and whilst it starts a cold one, it's a very promising one with so much cool stuff on the horizon so it's all good.

I'm back to a degree of form with a new musical recommendation to start the year off with. This is one of those odd finds that just happens to be a right place, right time thing. The other day I was checking out Joshua Radin's myspace page, mainly because he's currently recording his next studio album here in London and I wanted to see if he was playing any shows whilst he's over here. Turns out he's not which is a bit disappointing but in being a bit nosey and scrolling a touch too far down the page through the comments I found a guy promoting his new album....so I thought, what the heck have I got to lose?

As I discovered just a half hour later, I had gained...seriously gained! So to add to my plethora of unheard of unknown music which needs promoting...welcome Houston, Texas' very own Lee Alexander.



Lee's recent album Mayhaw Vaudeville (which is available as a free download through the insanely clever Noisetrade) is an 11 track collection of Folk, Rock, Country and Roots music of immense quality. The two things that struck me initially were the quality of songwriting and the outstandingly smooth and rich vocals. Interestingly Lee describes the album on his MySpace page as an experimental album, and I guess that accounts from the amazing variety in style of song, from the very country Okemah Moon through the mainstream Miles Between right through to the ridiculously beautiful Folk number Union Street (which I will hasten to add is one of the most beautiful songs I have heard in simply ages and has an amazing story which Lee has explained in a blog on his MySpace) and the equally beautiful Carol Ann (which is just too short at 2:20).

But like some of my favourite musicians, what impresses me the most about Lee (apart from the quality of the music) is the array of instruments Lee uses to create his music..."guitar, piano, violin, harmonica, mandolin, fife, & eaullian pipe." That I think you will agree is a seriously impressive list?!?

The album though is a absolute must have, yes there might be a couple of songs that don't quite do it for you, but that's the beauty of an experimental album. One thing's for certain, Lee Alexander will enrich your music collection, and all for either a financial donation or simply recommending 5 of your friends to download the album....and you know if you haven't got 5 friends who'd absolutely adore Lee's music, then you're either quite lonely or well...you just need to get some new friends :-)

This man is going places...mark my words!

Good start to the new year, from a chilly London...nite all xx

Thursday, 31 December 2009

Rounding out the year...

So I guess this is it, the final day of what has been a really good year.

Since November my blog posts have been sporadic and few and far between, each time me promising that I'm going to get back to sitting down and writing more regularly and each time me failing to deliver on it.

So let me explain publicly for the first time why I've been so quiet. There's 2 reasons really, the first being that my mind has simply been overloaded with amazing music this year that it could not cope with more being added in so hence there was not much to review and secondly and rather more importantly I've been working on a little side project. I can't yet say too much but what I will say is that next year I will be making my first foray into the music industry. The project has a tentative launch date in March 2010 and by this time next year it could be either a success or a dramatic failure but either way it will be a life enriching experience and one I'm pretty excited although cautiously optimistic about.

But before I close the year off I want to add some thank you's to some people whose music has dramatically enhanced my collection this year. So here goes:-

Kevin Montgomery
Ragz Nordset
Francesco Cinelli (Goodtimes Goodtimes)
Thomas J Speight
Paul Cook (...and the Chronicles)
Foy Vance

And an ultra special thanks to three musical acts who I truly believe are set for greatness next year (and who have provided me with the most amazing music, warmth and friendship)...

Greg Holden
Omer Leshem
Strange Folks / Roy Rieck and the Medley Band - Idan Rabinovici, Roy Rieck, Roy "Hamudi" Rabinovici, Emmanuel Slonim, Nadav Luzia, Daniel Shoham and Joseph E-Shine

I'd also like to thank each and every one of you who have stopped by and read my musings on music, those of you who have viewed my many videos on youtube, dropped me an email, followed me on twitter, etc.

Lastly to play us out (I've always wanted to say that)...here's some recommendations of people I'm monitoring closely with an eye to early 2010 purchases...

Daniel Kamas
City and Colour
Jon T
Matt Saxton
Luka Bloom
Massy Ferguson

Happy New Year, here's hoping 2010 is an amazing year for us all xxx

Sunday, 13 December 2009

Is it safe to come out from behind the sofa yet?

That's the question kids up and down the country, if not across the world used to ask, and probably still do when sci-fi institution Doctor Who graced/graces the TV screens. But in my case, the TV nasty in question is the UKs very own "musical talent contest" the X Factor which I believe has finally finished tonight.

So I guess in that short statement you know where I stand on Simon Cowell's circus. Is it really music, well I guess 12+ million people in the UK would say it is, and then many millions more would tell you it isn't, I guess it depends on your perspective. For me it's not music, it's not about anything but gross profiteering and the production of more facsimile tribute act popstars to flood an already crowded musical world. What it creates is another layer of "noise" (not in the musical sense) that just further surpresses talent that is trying to get itself heard through the conventional methods of hard work and genuine talent.

Let's be realistic, as a contest it takes people with no better than half-decent singing voices and average talent and transforms them in a matter of months from being a total nothing to a chart sensation and that's good for them, I think we'd all love to go from a zero to hero in a short space of time for doing something where we receive acclaim from the masses whilst earning a stack of money but what is the end musical product?

I guess it depends what your musical taste is, but for me, good/great musicians need to be able to answer 2 of 3 questions with an affirmative answer to classify as having proper talent. Those questions are...can you sing well and with passion, can you play an instrument, are you able to write your own lyrics and music? See there's plenty of people out there who can answer yes to all three of those questions, let alone two of them but most on talent shows will struggle to answer yes to one of them and here's the thing about TV talent shows. Even if you as artist can answer yes to those questions, the likelihood is that your musical choices have already been decided for you and they're purely commercially driven decisions, it's profits over music all the way.

I guess that's probably the reason why you never seen singer/songwriters or proper bands on shows like the X Factor, it's a mix between genuine talent not necessarily being mainstream enough, the artists refusing to sell out their talent for money and from the likes of Mr Cowell's perspective the commercial risk of someone being allowed to release their own music without littering it with covers and fluffy meaningless songs.

The problem I guess I have with music TV talent shows though is the real potential damage that they're likely to have on the music industry in the longer term. First of all, kids now are growing up thinking that unless they get on TV they don't have talent, second that they'll see this as an accepted musical medium and if they want to create music think it more important to fit the mould rather than explore their own musical paths and finally they're growing up with the vision that the music industry is easy to crack and is simply a vehicle to making huge amounts of money....the bottom line is, it's not.

X Factor has a place...just not in my house or on my iPod...that's all I'm saying.

Nite all xxx

Thursday, 10 December 2009

CDs versus Digital Downloads...

Where on earth do the days go? I keep promising to get back to blogging regularly then I blink and 10 days go by and I realise I haven't blogged.

Tonight rather than reviewing music I wanted to be a bit discussive and ponder a few thoughts, perhaps even get your synapses going. One of the debates I'm constantly having is CDs or Digital Downloads. Now before I start, I think I'll clarify where I stand on it...I'm a CD freak, I'll always choose a CD over a DD. I'm a bit of a traditionalist in the sense that I like something physical to hold when I'm playing music. I like the physical nature of being able to flick through the booklet reading the lyrics as opposed to searching for them online.

But that's not to say I don't adore my iPod, I really do, in fact I actually classify the iPod as the greatest thing I have ever purchased...by some considerable distance.

So here's the thing, I'm not anti-digital download. In fact I'm really pro legal downloads, I have hundreds of them. Had it not been for the internet revolution and the technological advancement of the music industry, local and regional talent would have remained just that.

Nowadays, an artist has the ability to build a global fanbase (of any size) through the internet alone. How many artists have we all discovered through myspace, imeem, youtube, facebook, itunes, spotify, and dare I say it in the formative years of the internet, the likes of napster, limewire and torrent sites (not that I'm condoning music piracy)?

But the internet has undoubtedly had the most dramatic effect on the proliferation of music distribution in a way that I doubt anything has since the invention of the transistor radio in the 1950s. Before the transistor radio, only the well-off were able to afford big bulky valve radios. In fact so expensive were they that people bought kits and built their own.



But like all new technology, when the transistor radio finally made it to market, the cost was astronomical but within a few years as the components became mass produced and the cost of the raw materials dropped, the price began to drop and the market exploded and before long everyone had access to this musical vehicle...sounds familiar?

The transistor radio brought music from across a country into living rooms and bedrooms of houses but also gave music its first real portability. I guess it would be fair to say that the transistor radio was one of, if not the main vehicle behind the explosion of music that came in the late 50's and then into the 60's and beyond. It allowed youngsters to listen to the music they liked instead of what their parents listened to....and so a new generation of free-thinking expressive music lovers were born.


The same scenario to lesser extents applies to the cassette tape, the CD and the ill-fated minidisc. But all these things helped shape the music we have today and kept pushing the boundaries of music distribution and portability. And so you'd think that digital music, digital downloads could only be a further advancement and undoubtedly it has been and a very positive one certainly in terms of convenience but there are some perhaps unexplored and real downsides to it.

Let's suppose for a moment that we live in a Utopian musical society where everyone buys music and there's no such thing as piracy...every other rule applies however and society is otherwise unchanged. We still live in a world of convenience where we have to have everything now be it clothes, electronics, food or music, we consume it and then move on to the next item quickly forgetting our last purchase.

I'm as guilty as the next of finding new and exciting music, playing it to death until I find something else I really like and then moving on sometimes not revisiting that music I loved for some considerable time; and therein lies the first problem! Digital music is easily losable, you can store it away or maybe even more stupidly delete it and forget it ever existed, with an LP, cassette, CD you just couldn't do that, unless you put it up in the loft/attic/basement and even then you had to make that conscious decision to move it to a place of reasonable inaccessibility. So the digital age is making music too disposable and that actually risks today's generation not being able to pass anything musically on to the future in the way that the 60's passed on The Beatles, Elvis, Roy Orbison, The Beach Boys, Bob Dylan...in fact now I come to think of it, that list is endless. We simply won't hand down our ipods to future generations in the way physical music has been so today's amazing music will be lost forever in 30 years time...how sad is that?

What about artwork? Most will tell you they don't care about the jewel cases or the booklets. Some will even give you the spuriously weak answer of trying to be environmentally conscious. The truth is that a digital download is cheaper and immediately available and that governs the purchasing decision. But digital music pretty much alleviates the necessity for a creative to sit there, concept and design artwork. Let's not forget that what many now regard as a non-essential gave rise to true works of modern popular art such as The Beatles iconic Abbey Road cover. With digital music, record labels, music producers and artists can simply produce a 500 x 500 pixel image and that will suffice for an album. So where will these future classic and iconic works of art come from, it won't be music, that's for sure.


Finally there's one thing to consider about digital music. As I stated much earlier it has allowed musicians to build a truly global fanbase and it has allowed unsigned talented musicians to put music out into the world on mass distribution without the cost of producing thousands of CDs to send round the world (which is a frightfully expensive thing to do if you have no assurance of actually selling them), but there's a serious possibility that pretty soon record labels will go down the route of solely producing digital music in a bid to ramp up their falling profits (courtesy of music piracy) at the expense of the musician.

But ask enough musicians and they'll tell you that they prefer CDs, after all, they sit down to write songs, play music, go into a studio to record, edit and mix and then there's no actual final physical product, so some question rightly or wrongly what they're actually producing. I guess it must be quite disheartening to do all of that work to see nothing at the end of it apart from a link on various web sites. On top of that, the lack of physicality means that artists have nothing tangible to sell or even sign at gigs. How many people will actually go home after a gig and still have that impulsive attitude to go and buy music, very few I'd guess so in a way the net result of digital music is that it may actually damage the incremental income an artist gets from a gig which could be the difference between success or failure for even the most talented of musician.

So yes, digital music is brilliant, it's opened up music from across the globe to everyone and I have made countless discoveries because of it, but if the world continues to moves too far towards it, we risk losing so much more than just a piece of slightly bendy plastic, and I think that's really quite sad.

I'll leave you with one final thought, recently an album in Ireland got to number 1 in the album charts having only sold 400 CDs in its first week, but something like 15,000 digital downloads.

Maybe I'm old fashioned or a romantic but now hopefully you see why I'm so passionate about CDs and I hope that all record labels make a solemn commitment to their artists to keep putting music on CDs, the world needs it, our music legacy demands it, don't you think so?

Goodnight all xxx