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Keep It In The Family

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Recent young albums like Silver & Gold or Are You Passionate? have seemed aimless affairs, as if their author felt he ought to be saying something but wasn't sure what. In dramatic contrast, Greendale is (if we must use the term) a concept album, 10 interlinked songs depicting the lives of several generations of the Green family, who live in the fictional town of Greendale. Young played the album in its entirety at his recent UK shows, using just acoustic guitars and harmonica. On disc, he's joined by Crazy Horse minus second guitarist Frank Sampedro, and plays it virtually all electric, leading from the front with his own raw and rowdy guitar. The exception is the slow and acoustic "Bandit", Young de-tuning his bottom string so it rattles and buzzes against the fretboard. Luckily, Young's notion of a concept album differs from Emerson, Lake & Palmer's. Far from sounding overwrought or overblown, Greendale is loose and semi-improvised, the band falling in behind Young's simple chord progressions more through instinct than rehearsal. The narrative, with its tales of grandma and grandpa, Vietnam Vet turned painter Earl Green, good-neighbour-gone-bad Jed Green and eco-activist teenager Sun Green, is artless and unadorned, leaving plenty of spaces for the imagination to fill. "I just followed the story wherever it went," Young told me while he was in London recently. "I wasn't worried about it making sense or connecting. It was kinda like a bird flying around?wherever it lands it sees something, y'know, and that's the way I approached it." Young reckons the death of his father-in-law last year helped start his creative juices flowing, and we probably have George Bush and his war frenzy to thank for giving him a fresh bone to chew on. In some respects, Greendale is Neil coming full circle, still espousing the homespun values of albums like Hawks & Doves or Old Ways but recognising that these are now under threat from power-mad politicians and an intrusive media. As grandpa Green says in "Grandpa's Interview", as his house is surrounded by news crews, "It ain't an honour to be on TV and it ain't a duty, either," contrary to the way they think on Big Brother. Sun Green is like a version of the Neil Young of 30 years ago?headstrong, idealistic and determined to fight for her convictions. Musically, Greendale presents a quintessentially roughshod Young, frequently relying on that old Crazy Horse plod (as on "Falling From Above" or "Devil's Sidewalk"), raunching it up on the protest-flavoured "Sun Green" or rolling out a lazy R&B groove on "Double E". The final track, "Be The Rain", is a full-tilt anthem in which Neil and a massed chorus insist we have to "save mother earth" and "save the planet for another day". This broad-brush sloganeering is somewhat less convincing than "Bandit", with its quietly plaintive refrain of "someday you'll find everything you're looking for". But the good news is Young has found himself a different kind of voice and some fresh inspiration. My review copy didn't contain the DVD of Neil's matching Greendale home movie but, crude as it is, it makes a powerful companion piece to the album.

Recent young albums like Silver & Gold or Are You Passionate? have seemed aimless affairs, as if their author felt he ought to be saying something but wasn’t sure what. In dramatic contrast, Greendale is (if we must use the term) a concept album, 10 interlinked songs depicting the lives of several generations of the Green family, who live in the fictional town of Greendale.

Young played the album in its entirety at his recent UK shows, using just acoustic guitars and harmonica. On disc, he’s joined by Crazy Horse minus second guitarist Frank Sampedro, and plays it virtually all electric, leading from the front with his own raw and rowdy guitar. The exception is the slow and acoustic “Bandit”, Young de-tuning his bottom string so it rattles and buzzes against the fretboard.

Luckily, Young’s notion of a concept album differs from Emerson, Lake & Palmer’s. Far from sounding overwrought or overblown, Greendale is loose and semi-improvised, the band falling in behind Young’s simple chord progressions more through instinct than rehearsal. The narrative, with its tales of grandma and grandpa, Vietnam Vet turned painter Earl Green, good-neighbour-gone-bad Jed Green and eco-activist teenager Sun Green, is artless and unadorned, leaving plenty of spaces for the imagination to fill. “I just followed the story wherever it went,” Young told me while he was in London recently. “I wasn’t worried about it making sense or connecting. It was kinda like a bird flying around?wherever it lands it sees something, y’know, and that’s the way I approached it.”

Young reckons the death of his father-in-law last year helped start his creative juices flowing, and we probably have George Bush and his war frenzy to thank for giving him a fresh bone to chew on. In some respects, Greendale is Neil coming full circle, still espousing the homespun values of albums like Hawks & Doves or Old Ways but recognising that these are now under threat from power-mad politicians and an intrusive media. As grandpa Green says in “Grandpa’s Interview”, as his house is surrounded by news crews, “It ain’t an honour to be on TV and it ain’t a duty, either,” contrary to the way they think on Big Brother. Sun Green is like a version of the Neil Young of 30 years ago?headstrong, idealistic and determined to fight for her convictions.

Musically, Greendale presents a quintessentially roughshod Young, frequently relying on that old Crazy Horse plod (as on “Falling From Above” or “Devil’s Sidewalk”), raunching it up on the protest-flavoured “Sun Green” or rolling out a lazy R&B groove on “Double E”. The final track, “Be The Rain”, is a full-tilt anthem in which Neil and a massed chorus insist we have to “save mother earth” and “save the planet for another day”. This broad-brush sloganeering is somewhat less convincing than “Bandit”, with its quietly plaintive refrain of “someday you’ll find everything you’re looking for”.

But the good news is Young has found himself a different kind of voice and some fresh inspiration. My review copy didn’t contain the DVD of Neil’s matching Greendale home movie but, crude as it is, it makes a powerful companion piece to the album.

The Robert Cray Band – Time Will Tell

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Book-ended by two songs?"Survivor" and "Time Makes Two"?which gingerly profess anti-war leanings, Cray's latest isn't quite the full-scale renewal that he's claimed. There are contributions from Sly Stone horn players Cynthia Robinson and Jerry Martini, dashes of Latin/Caribbean rhythms and a psychedelic sitar alongside his R&B staples. It all makes Time Will Tell an amiable enough showcase for his road band but, no matter how good the grooves, Cray's own compositions still struggle to be more than pallid genre exercises.

Book-ended by two songs?”Survivor” and “Time Makes Two”?which gingerly profess anti-war leanings, Cray’s latest isn’t quite the full-scale renewal that he’s claimed. There are contributions from Sly Stone horn players Cynthia Robinson and Jerry Martini, dashes of Latin/Caribbean rhythms and a psychedelic sitar alongside his R&B staples. It all makes Time Will Tell an amiable enough showcase for his road band but, no matter how good the grooves, Cray’s own compositions still struggle to be more than pallid genre exercises.

Basil Kirchin – Quantum

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Plucked from the apparently boundless archives of esoterica, Quantum is an unreleased "journey through sound in two parts" recorded in the early '70s by soundtrack composer and avant-jazzbo Kirchin. While not quite the consciousness-reshaping phantasmagoria promised by the sleevenotes, it's certainly absorbing?a soundspace where primitive industrialism, spliced-tape ambience, random babble, wandering improvisers like Evan Parker and field recordings of geese meet and merge. More curiously, it gets weirder with each listen, as the noises become fleetingly, if unreliably, recognisable: is that a dog duetting with the xylophone 15 minutes into "Part One", or a malfunctioning toilet? Devious stuff indeed.

Plucked from the apparently boundless archives of esoterica, Quantum is an unreleased “journey through sound in two parts” recorded in the early ’70s by soundtrack composer and avant-jazzbo Kirchin. While not quite the consciousness-reshaping phantasmagoria promised by the sleevenotes, it’s certainly absorbing?a soundspace where primitive industrialism, spliced-tape ambience, random babble, wandering improvisers like Evan Parker and field recordings of geese meet and merge. More curiously, it gets weirder with each listen, as the noises become fleetingly, if unreliably, recognisable: is that a dog duetting with the xylophone 15 minutes into “Part One”, or a malfunctioning toilet? Devious stuff indeed.

John Scofield Band – Up All Night

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Up All Night is a continuation of the direction set on Scofield's previous album,...

Up All Night is a continuation of the direction set on Scofield’s previous album,

Urban Dub

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Founded by Roop, who first emerged on the scene during the acid house years, the Urban Dub collective draw on a righteous and ragged mix of rave, techno, reggae and, distantly, jazz and the avant-garde via their classically-trained saxophonist Marjorie Paris. Explicitly anti-capitalist and arising from squat culture, this is not the dog-on-a-string's breakfast you might fear. Rather, it's a series of mighty, mighty detonations combining nuclear dub with a contagiously joyful inventiveness that blows back and forth through every track here. Utterly recommended?go to their website, www.urbandub.com, for more info.

Founded by Roop, who first emerged on the scene during the acid house years, the Urban Dub collective draw on a righteous and ragged mix of rave, techno, reggae and, distantly, jazz and the avant-garde via their classically-trained saxophonist Marjorie Paris. Explicitly anti-capitalist and arising from squat culture, this is not the dog-on-a-string’s breakfast you might fear. Rather, it’s a series of mighty, mighty detonations combining nuclear dub with a contagiously joyful inventiveness that blows back and forth through every track here. Utterly recommended?go to their website, www.urbandub.com, for more info.

Stan Ridgway – Black Diamond

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Similar to fellow LA singer-songwriter Warren Zevon in his penchant for shadowy narratives of espionage, foreign policy and unwise excess, Ridgway has if anything an even less prepossessing voice, and self-produces using tinny, cut-price synths. The sleazy Burroughsian rou...

Similar to fellow LA singer-songwriter Warren Zevon in his penchant for shadowy narratives of espionage, foreign policy and unwise excess, Ridgway has if anything an even less prepossessing voice, and self-produces using tinny, cut-price synths. The sleazy Burroughsian rou

Live And Let Live

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Forever changes is one of those 'classic' albums that should have dated but hasn't. Heavy-handedly paranoid, the product of a rock/soul miscegenation, quaintly baroque in its orch-pop/mariachi instrumentation, Love's third album might easily have gone the way of Days Of Future Passed or other prog/psych/folk abominations. That the album has endured is proof, to these ears, of pop's miraculous serendipity. Here was a motley crew of vaguely sinister Sunset Strip hippies that really did just happen to be in the right place at the right time. The right band, in other words, to document life at the cusp of the psychedelic south California adventure. Nothing Arthur Lee has done subsequently suggests he was born to do anything more than that. The obvious question about Forever Changes Live, recorded at London's Royal Festival Hall last January, is: why? What can this give us that the original doesn't? The only differences are negligibly negative: Lee's voice now has a burry edge that, on "A House Is Not A Motel" or "Bummer In The Summer", makes him sound like Paul Weller. Both "Alone Again Or" and "Old Man" seem to require the more dulcet tones of their author, the late Bryan Maclean. The other question is: now that 'classic'?and even never-released?albums by lost/damaged geniuses (Brian Wilson, Arthur Lee) are being given the full concert hall treatment, how many other cult opuses will be reconfigured for our edification? As fellow Uncut scribe Ian MacDonald writes in his new collection, The People's Music, nostalgia has become an industry. "The forward-looking fascination with things to come," he writes, "and its consequent wish to make music with the language of today but the sound of tomorrow, has dwindled away." Perhaps Forever doesn't Change after all.

Forever changes is one of those ‘classic’ albums that should have dated but hasn’t. Heavy-handedly paranoid, the product of a rock/soul miscegenation, quaintly baroque in its orch-pop/mariachi instrumentation, Love’s third album might easily have gone the way of Days Of Future Passed or other prog/psych/folk abominations.

That the album has endured is proof, to these ears, of pop’s miraculous serendipity. Here was a motley crew of vaguely sinister Sunset Strip hippies that really did just happen to be in the right place at the right time. The right band, in other words, to document life at the cusp of the psychedelic south California adventure. Nothing Arthur Lee has done subsequently suggests he was born to do anything more than that.

The obvious question about Forever Changes Live, recorded at London’s Royal Festival Hall last January, is: why? What can this give us that the original doesn’t? The only differences are negligibly negative: Lee’s voice now has a burry edge that, on “A House Is Not A Motel” or “Bummer In The Summer”, makes him sound like Paul Weller. Both “Alone Again Or” and “Old Man” seem to require the more dulcet tones of their author, the late Bryan Maclean.

The other question is: now that ‘classic’?and even never-released?albums by lost/damaged geniuses (Brian Wilson, Arthur Lee) are being given the full concert hall treatment, how many other cult opuses will be reconfigured for our edification? As fellow Uncut scribe Ian MacDonald writes in his new collection, The People’s Music, nostalgia has become an industry.

“The forward-looking fascination with things to come,” he writes, “and its consequent wish to make music with the language of today but the sound of tomorrow, has dwindled away.”

Perhaps Forever doesn’t Change after all.

The Zephyrs – A Year To The Day

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The Zephyrs' desolate sound describes their war-torn history. First Scottish label Southpaw folded the same week it released their last album. Then a literal-minded rock revival forced their soporific sea shanties off the radar. Now signed to Setanta, things are looking up for the Edinburgh-based quintet who, with this third album, have created an unhurried portrait of emotional disquiet. The outstanding "Go Slow" canters buoyantly home on a country guitar and organ loop while "One Year Many Mistakes" (with vocals by Arab Strap associate Adele Bethel) is so modestly evocative that the lyrics about stained coffee cups and seaside abodes almost seem overstated.

The Zephyrs’ desolate sound describes their war-torn history. First Scottish label Southpaw folded the same week it released their last album. Then a literal-minded rock revival forced their soporific sea shanties off the radar. Now signed to Setanta, things are looking up for the Edinburgh-based quintet who, with this third album, have created an unhurried portrait of emotional disquiet. The outstanding “Go Slow” canters buoyantly home on a country guitar and organ loop while “One Year Many Mistakes” (with vocals by Arab Strap associate Adele Bethel) is so modestly evocative that the lyrics about stained coffee cups and seaside abodes almost seem overstated.

I Monster – Neveroddoreven

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Comprising Dean Honer, half of the All Seeing I, and Jarrod Gosling, I Monster provide us with an intermittently inspired album of warped electro-MOR. The memorable creepiness of "Daydream In Blue" is reproduced on unsettling tracks like "Sunny Delights." "Hey Misses" suggests a pact between Tahiti 80 and My Computer, while ballads "Heaven" and "Who Is She?" conjure up the spectre of Joe Meek communicating by ouija board. If the air of camp ("Backseat Of My Car" is low-rent Miss Kittin, "Stobart's Blues" is bad Chemical Brothers) prevents this from being anything beyond Carry On Vulnerabilia, there's still-enough blood here to keep you interested.

Comprising Dean Honer, half of the All Seeing I, and Jarrod Gosling, I Monster provide us with an intermittently inspired album of warped electro-MOR. The memorable creepiness of “Daydream In Blue” is reproduced on unsettling tracks like “Sunny Delights.” “Hey Misses” suggests a pact between Tahiti 80 and My Computer, while ballads “Heaven” and “Who Is She?” conjure up the spectre of Joe Meek communicating by ouija board. If the air of camp (“Backseat Of My Car” is low-rent Miss Kittin, “Stobart’s Blues” is bad Chemical Brothers) prevents this from being anything beyond Carry On Vulnerabilia, there’s still-enough blood here to keep you interested.

The Broken Family Band – Cold Water Songs

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Following the promise of last year's mini LP The King Will Build A Disco, TBFB's nefariously enchanted pot of country, weird pop and deconstructed folk remains a heady brew. With the Folk Orchestra's Timothy Victor at the controls, and Samantha (Be Good Tanyas) Parton guesting on "Devil In The Details", this carries the same strain of bastardised rural tradition as labelmates Candidate, a sexual twistedness akin to Lyndon Morgans' Songdog ("Don't Leave That Woman Unattended"; "Hitting Women") and wordplay reminiscent of Stephen Malkmus. Daubs of pedal-steel and banjo add allure. File somewhere between Pavement and the prairie.

Following the promise of last year’s mini LP The King Will Build A Disco, TBFB’s nefariously enchanted pot of country, weird pop and deconstructed folk remains a heady brew. With the Folk Orchestra’s Timothy Victor at the controls, and Samantha (Be Good Tanyas) Parton guesting on “Devil In The Details”, this carries the same strain of bastardised rural tradition as labelmates Candidate, a sexual twistedness akin to Lyndon Morgans’ Songdog (“Don’t Leave That Woman Unattended”; “Hitting Women”) and wordplay reminiscent of Stephen Malkmus. Daubs of pedal-steel and banjo add allure. File somewhere between Pavement and the prairie.

Dan Hicks & His Hot Licks

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BEATIN' THE HEAT Rating Star

BEATIN’ THE HEAT Rating Star

Mink Lungs – I’ll Take It

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Arena Rock are currently reviving US indie with a slew of rainbow-hued rock groups, and the label's loopiest hopefuls are Mink Lungs. This experimental psych-pop quartet merge post-punk guitars with growled cartoon vocals on this, their second album. "Men In Belted Sweaters" is joyous punk frippery while "Sad Song Of Birds" moves into mock-mournful, country-inspired territory. The result is as eccentric as an Edward Lear illustration. But without the strong melodies or metaphysical beauty of The Flaming Lips, it borders on being novelty rock.

Arena Rock are currently reviving US indie with a slew of rainbow-hued rock groups, and the label’s loopiest hopefuls are Mink Lungs. This experimental psych-pop quartet merge post-punk guitars with growled cartoon vocals on this, their second album. “Men In Belted Sweaters” is joyous punk frippery while “Sad Song Of Birds” moves into mock-mournful, country-inspired territory. The result is as eccentric as an Edward Lear illustration.

But without the strong melodies or metaphysical beauty of The Flaming Lips, it borders on being novelty rock.

The Darkness – Permission To Land

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They may hail from Lowestoft, but The Darkness are Britain's most triumphantly OTT rock band. The four-piece?who have in Justin Hawkins a falsetto-favouring frontman of awesome capability?tap into a genre so time-honoured it's positively Pleistocene and, although their debut is an unashamed composite of AC/DC, Van Halen, Bon Jovi, Thin Lizzy, Kiss and Cheap Trick, it's no less effective for that. The Darkness are genuinely in thrall to the power of stadium rock in all its bombastic, unreconstructed glory, and that they recreate it without recourse to irony is a testament to their talent. Silly? Quite possibly, but staggeringly skillful, and a strangely touching expression of unbridled joy.

They may hail from Lowestoft, but The Darkness are Britain’s most triumphantly OTT rock band. The four-piece?who have in Justin Hawkins a falsetto-favouring frontman of awesome capability?tap into a genre so time-honoured it’s positively Pleistocene and, although their debut is an unashamed composite of AC/DC, Van Halen, Bon Jovi, Thin Lizzy, Kiss and Cheap Trick, it’s no less effective for that. The Darkness are genuinely in thrall to the power of stadium rock in all its bombastic, unreconstructed glory, and that they recreate it without recourse to irony is a testament to their talent. Silly? Quite possibly, but staggeringly skillful, and a strangely touching expression of unbridled joy.

Ocean Colour Scene – North Atlantic Drift

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Ocean Colour Scene are inextricably linked to a mid-'90s era which now seems hideously pass...

Ocean Colour Scene are inextricably linked to a mid-’90s era which now seems hideously pass

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In the current garage-rock feeding frenzy, The Star Spangles, though no doubt signed as Strokes knock-offs, have honestly raucous intent. Co-produced by Daniel Ray (The Ramones) and fitting in a Wayne Kramer/Johnny Thunders cover, they have natural, swinging guitar punch, sometimes forced down such tight sonic channels that they roar. But with strictly 1978 sleeve and clothes, and no new ideas, they just don't matter like their models did.

In the current garage-rock feeding frenzy, The Star Spangles, though no doubt signed as Strokes knock-offs, have honestly raucous intent. Co-produced by Daniel Ray (The Ramones) and fitting in a Wayne Kramer/Johnny Thunders cover, they have natural, swinging guitar punch, sometimes forced down such tight sonic channels that they roar. But with strictly 1978 sleeve and clothes, and no new ideas, they just don’t matter like their models did.

Broadcast – Haha Sound

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Initially introduced to the world via Stereolab's Duophonic label, Broadcast have perhaps benefited from their relative cultural isolation (they're based in Birmingham) to cultivate a brand of avant-indietronica that is truly unique. Broadcast deploy an arsenal of electronic devices both antique and modern to complement and scar Trish Keenan's often unnervingly childlike vocals. In a world supersaturated with electronica, Broadcast are nonetheless bold, rare and crucial.

Initially introduced to the world via Stereolab’s Duophonic label, Broadcast have perhaps benefited from their relative cultural isolation (they’re based in Birmingham) to cultivate a brand of avant-indietronica that is truly unique. Broadcast deploy an arsenal of electronic devices both antique and modern to complement and scar Trish Keenan’s often unnervingly childlike vocals. In a world supersaturated with electronica, Broadcast are nonetheless bold, rare and crucial.

Gang Starr – The Ownerz

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On their seventh album, DJ Premier and rapper Guru have the amoral, musically simplistic idols of hip hop in their sights. The self-explanatory "Put Up Or Shut Up" delivers a killer blow; elsewhere literate, dizzying verbal sucker punches leave their opponents reeling. Best of all are Premier's inventive backing tracks, hotwired with weird strings, unexpected piano and horn riffs, allowing Guru's superior patter to rain down righteously. All told, a class act still in their prime.

On their seventh album, DJ Premier and rapper Guru have the amoral, musically simplistic idols of hip hop in their sights. The self-explanatory “Put Up Or Shut Up” delivers a killer blow; elsewhere literate, dizzying verbal sucker punches leave their opponents reeling. Best of all are Premier’s inventive backing tracks, hotwired with weird strings, unexpected piano and horn riffs, allowing Guru’s superior patter to rain down righteously. All told, a class act still in their prime.

Longview – Mercury

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With their hearts exhibited loftily on their sleeves, no one could accuse Longview of being dead inside. Yet underpinning the vulnerable, Red House Painters-inspired veneer of songs like fine single "Further" is an enduring worldliness that recalls U2 or Elbow. While cascading guitar chords and plaintive strings soar skywards, the lyrics repeatedly posit the idea that love is akin to collapse. This simple conceit is used to devastating effect on the drowsy, love-drunk ballad "Falling For You". Frontman Rob McVey unravels a tumbling vocal style which apprehends the giddy uncertainty of romance in its infancy. Soft-coloured but deeply stirring music.

With their hearts exhibited loftily on their sleeves, no one could accuse Longview of being dead inside. Yet underpinning the vulnerable, Red House Painters-inspired veneer of songs like fine single “Further” is an enduring worldliness that recalls U2 or Elbow. While cascading guitar chords and plaintive strings soar skywards, the lyrics repeatedly posit the idea that love is akin to collapse. This simple conceit is used to devastating effect on the drowsy, love-drunk ballad “Falling For You”. Frontman Rob McVey unravels a tumbling vocal style which apprehends the giddy uncertainty of romance in its infancy. Soft-coloured but deeply stirring music.

Pete Yorn – Day I Forgot

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Glossy, glamorous Pete Yorn and his model good looks tested the bottled waters of the Hollywood star circuit with his debut disc Music For The Morning After, accompanied by a celebrity-fuelled fan club. His powered-up pop-rock style fits his image, and he name-drops so many famous folks he's obviously banking on his connections. Songs like "Crystal Village" and "Committed" are literate, polished efforts, but Luddites who prefer a bit of hard graft might smell a marketing rat.

Glossy, glamorous Pete Yorn and his model good looks tested the bottled waters of the Hollywood star circuit with his debut disc Music For The Morning After, accompanied by a celebrity-fuelled fan club. His powered-up pop-rock style fits his image, and he name-drops so many famous folks he’s obviously banking on his connections. Songs like “Crystal Village” and “Committed” are literate, polished efforts, but Luddites who prefer a bit of hard graft might smell a marketing rat.

Street Smarts

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Dizzee Rascal is the best rapper this country's ever produced, period. His words are as sharp as prime Tricky, his delivery sharper; he's got bags more personality than anybody in the British rap scene. These local comparisons add up to faint praise, though, so how about this: 18-year-old, East London-bred Dizzee Rascal is as good as any MC currently active on Earth. Every UK garage MC brags about how his style's unique, and virtually every MC does it using the same flow and timbre. But Dizzee really does sound "identical to none", from his blurting, jagged phrasing to his frayed, edge-of-losing-it grain (like he's on the brink of lashing out, or sobbing, or both simultaneously). Better still, he's got something to say as well as a unique way of saying it. Too much, maybe: listening to his torrential wordflow, you feel like his head's surely set to EXPLODE. When he spits that he's "vexed at humanity/Vexed at the earth", you can hear the ingrown cyst-like rage of a generation for whom social-political deadlock is just "standard business", kids who've never seen in their own lifetime so much as a glint that change is possible. Boy In Da Corner is bookended by "Sittin' Here" and "Do It", two songs that open up whole new emotional terrain for garage rap (and that sound bizarrely like Japan circa "Ghosts"/Sylvian-Sakamoto). Dizzee is voicing the fragility and doubt underneath the thug's invincibility complex, the tenderness behind the you-can't-touch-me/you-can't-stop-me armour. "Sittin' Here" features Dizzee as the painfully acute observer: "I watch every detail/I watch so hard I'm scared my eyes might fail." Those eyes have seen too much in too few years: on "Do It" Dizzee mourns how "everyone's growing up too fast" and confesses "sometimes I wake up/Wishing I could sleep forever." This ain't exactly So Solid Crew, then. Oh, Dizzee's got few peers when it comes to boasts and threats, slaying rivals who wanna test him with a murderous exuberance: "Flushing MCs down the loo/If you don't believe me bring your posse and your crew." But it's not the gun talk that's the draw, it's the vulnerability that peeks out, exposing the hard'n' heartless posture of every mannish boy as desperate sham. Gotta mention the music, which is self-produced (Dizzee's like Dre'n' Eminem in one body) and stunning. This is a totally post-garage sound that draws on beat-science from ragga, electro, gangsta and gabba. (And, on the uproarious "Jus' A Rascal", opera and Sepultura-style thrash-metal!) The result is as angular and futuristic as any German weirdtronica, as shake-your-ass "dutty" as Southern bounce, as aggressive as punk. On which subject, it turns out that Dizzee's a Nirvana fan?especially the ultra-gnarly In Utero. It may only have creased the outer edge of the UK Top 30 but his savage war-of-the-sexes single "I Luv U" is a "Smells Like Teen Spirit" for the new millennium. In summation: Boy In Da Corner is a front-runner for this year's Mercury (yeah, right?big deal). Mike Skinner should be shitting his pants. So should everyone else. Because next to Dizzee Rascal everybody looks pale, uninteresting, and irrelevant.

Dizzee Rascal is the best rapper this country’s ever produced, period. His words are as sharp as prime Tricky, his delivery sharper; he’s got bags more personality than anybody in the British rap scene. These local comparisons add up to faint praise, though, so how about this: 18-year-old, East London-bred Dizzee Rascal is as good as any MC currently active on Earth.

Every UK garage MC brags about how his style’s unique, and virtually every MC does it using the same flow and timbre. But Dizzee really does sound “identical to none”, from his blurting, jagged phrasing to his frayed, edge-of-losing-it grain (like he’s on the brink of lashing out, or sobbing, or both simultaneously). Better still, he’s got something to say as well as a unique way of saying it. Too much, maybe: listening to his torrential wordflow, you feel like his head’s surely set to EXPLODE. When he spits that he’s “vexed at humanity/Vexed at the earth”, you can hear the ingrown cyst-like rage of a generation for whom social-political deadlock is just “standard business”, kids who’ve never seen in their own lifetime so much as a glint that change is possible.

Boy In Da Corner is bookended by “Sittin’ Here” and “Do It”, two songs that open up whole new emotional terrain for garage rap (and that sound bizarrely like Japan circa “Ghosts”/Sylvian-Sakamoto). Dizzee is voicing the fragility and doubt underneath the thug’s invincibility complex, the tenderness behind the you-can’t-touch-me/you-can’t-stop-me armour. “Sittin’ Here” features Dizzee as the painfully acute observer: “I watch every detail/I watch so hard I’m scared my eyes might fail.” Those eyes have seen too much in too few years: on “Do It” Dizzee mourns how “everyone’s growing up too fast” and confesses “sometimes I wake up/Wishing I could sleep forever.”

This ain’t exactly So Solid Crew, then. Oh, Dizzee’s got few peers when it comes to boasts and threats, slaying rivals who wanna test him with a murderous exuberance: “Flushing MCs down the loo/If you don’t believe me bring your posse and your crew.” But it’s not the gun talk that’s the draw, it’s the vulnerability that peeks out, exposing the hard’n’ heartless posture of every mannish boy as desperate sham.

Gotta mention the music, which is self-produced (Dizzee’s like Dre’n’ Eminem in one body) and stunning. This is a totally post-garage sound that draws on beat-science from ragga, electro, gangsta and gabba. (And, on the uproarious “Jus’ A Rascal”, opera and Sepultura-style thrash-metal!) The result is as angular and futuristic as any German weirdtronica, as shake-your-ass “dutty” as Southern bounce, as aggressive as punk.

On which subject, it turns out that Dizzee’s a Nirvana fan?especially the ultra-gnarly In Utero. It may only have creased the outer edge of the UK Top 30 but his savage war-of-the-sexes single “I Luv U” is a “Smells Like Teen Spirit” for the new millennium.

In summation: Boy In Da Corner is a front-runner for this year’s Mercury (yeah, right?big deal). Mike Skinner should be shitting his pants. So should everyone else. Because next to Dizzee Rascal everybody looks pale, uninteresting, and irrelevant.