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Crazy Norse

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The pulling powers of this Magnet fellow?known back home in Bergen as Even Johansen?became evident during the last 18 months. His preceding EPs?Where Happiness Lives, Chasing Dreams and The Day We Left Town?left listeners scurrying for comparisons. Such names as Thom Yorke, the inevitable Jeff Buckley and Air meets Glen Campbell were polished and dropped. But the old sounds-like parlour game doesn't account for On Your Side's delights. Scandinavian by design, Magnet is not sidetracked into any post-new acoustic genre. He specialises in space- and light-filled atmospheres that seldom quit dangerous middle-of-the-road ground. And Johansen doesn't waver from his course. Ballads, lullabies and epiphanies are used with dynamic intelligence. The stately "Everything's Perfect" sets him up. Vocal strength lies buried among quivering trumpets. "Last Days Of Summer" increases the attack with a gentle touch. Vibraphonic chords and a careful use of echo maul you, drawing you to his method. It's like being pawed and jawed by a drowsy country-loving cougar. This sense of a velvet-clad mugging, strings courtesy of High Llama man Sean O'Hagan, continues whenever Magnet slips in his Moogs and Mellotrons. Celtic chanteuse Gemma Hayes adds counterpoint to a version of Bob Dylan's "Lay Lady Lay" that is more subtle than sexist, as if those Air-men had entered into a non-aggression pact with Scritti Politti and Pierre Henry. Elsewhere, shadows of The Beach Boys flit across "Overjoyed" and "Smile To The World", the deliciously understated finale offering wish fulfilment on an epic scale. Forget that "quiet is the new loud" mantra and concentrate on Magnet's less-is-more philosophy. He's on your side, but he's tapping you on the shoulder. It would be foolish, if not downright rude, to ignore the invitation.

The pulling powers of this Magnet fellow?known back home in Bergen as Even Johansen?became evident during the last 18 months. His preceding EPs?Where Happiness Lives, Chasing Dreams and The Day We Left Town?left listeners scurrying for comparisons. Such names as Thom Yorke, the inevitable Jeff Buckley and Air meets Glen Campbell were polished and dropped.

But the old sounds-like parlour game doesn’t account for On Your Side’s delights. Scandinavian by design, Magnet is not sidetracked into any post-new acoustic genre. He specialises in space- and light-filled atmospheres that seldom quit dangerous middle-of-the-road ground. And Johansen doesn’t waver from his course. Ballads, lullabies and epiphanies are used with dynamic intelligence.

The stately “Everything’s Perfect” sets him up. Vocal strength lies buried among quivering trumpets. “Last Days Of Summer” increases the attack with a gentle touch. Vibraphonic chords and a careful use of echo maul you, drawing you to his method. It’s like being pawed and jawed by a drowsy country-loving cougar.

This sense of a velvet-clad mugging, strings courtesy of High Llama man Sean O’Hagan, continues whenever Magnet slips in his Moogs and Mellotrons. Celtic chanteuse Gemma Hayes adds counterpoint to a version of Bob Dylan’s “Lay Lady Lay” that is more subtle than sexist, as if those Air-men had entered into a non-aggression pact with Scritti Politti and Pierre Henry. Elsewhere, shadows of The Beach Boys flit across “Overjoyed” and “Smile To The World”, the deliciously understated finale offering wish fulfilment on an epic scale.

Forget that “quiet is the new loud” mantra and concentrate on Magnet’s less-is-more philosophy. He’s on your side, but he’s tapping you on the shoulder. It would be foolish, if not downright rude, to ignore the invitation.

Califone – Deceleration Two

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Americana puritans beware. Those seduced by Califone's wonderful Quicksand/Cradlesnakes, released in May, may have trouble assimilating this collection of instrumental soundtrack pieces. In the absence of traditional song forms, the collective's creaky ambient and percussive tendencies dominate: lengthy improvisations like the three-part "Fireworks" take the atmospheres of old folk and blues, with few of the melodic signifiers, rather like fellow travellers The No-Neck Blues Band. Compelling stuff, nevertheless, and the courageous will be rewarded by some crepuscular funk towards the end of "Salome".

Americana puritans beware. Those seduced by Califone’s wonderful Quicksand/Cradlesnakes, released in May, may have trouble assimilating this collection of instrumental soundtrack pieces. In the absence of traditional song forms, the collective’s creaky ambient and percussive tendencies dominate: lengthy improvisations like the three-part “Fireworks” take the atmospheres of old folk and blues, with few of the melodic signifiers, rather like fellow travellers The No-Neck Blues Band. Compelling stuff, nevertheless, and the courageous will be rewarded by some crepuscular funk towards the end of “Salome”.

Canned Heat – Friends In The Can

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Invoking the legacy left by the Heat's deceased founder members Al Wilson and Bob Hite, this is the first album from the outfit reincarnated by survivors in 1999. Predictably enough, the album is a safety-first nostalgia exercise with help from past associates including Taj Mahal and the late John Lee Hooker. Stylistically it covers the blues waterfront, from Dallas Hodge's breezy "Bad Trouble" to the firecracker revival of "Let's Work Together". It is not an unqualified success?Greg Kage's insipid "That Fat Cat" pales against the seasoned favourites, and the single "Getaway" is an ill-advised excursion into radio rawk. All told, a good-natured but not particularly impressive salute to their past.

Invoking the legacy left by the Heat’s deceased founder members Al Wilson and Bob Hite, this is the first album from the outfit reincarnated by survivors in 1999. Predictably enough, the album is a safety-first nostalgia exercise with help from past associates including Taj Mahal and the late John Lee Hooker. Stylistically it covers the blues waterfront, from Dallas Hodge’s breezy “Bad Trouble” to the firecracker revival of “Let’s Work Together”. It is not an unqualified success?Greg Kage’s insipid “That Fat Cat” pales against the seasoned favourites, and the single “Getaway” is an ill-advised excursion into radio rawk. All told, a good-natured but not particularly impressive salute to their past.

Jim Moray – Sweet England

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Quite what makes a 21-year-old from Macclesfield reinvent a bunch of traditional English folk songs with beats is an interesting question. But Sweet England makes you very glad he did. Cleverly mixed by the Afro-Celts' Simon Emmerson, Moray's inventive rearrangement of such familiar ballads as "Early One Morning" and "The Raggle Taggle Gypsies" may just be the most significant new development in English folk music since Fairport Convention's Liege And Lief. There are some clumsy moments. But it's a bold signpost that moves far beyond the trad revivalism of the likes of Kate Rusby.

Quite what makes a 21-year-old from Macclesfield reinvent a bunch of traditional English folk songs with beats is an interesting question. But Sweet England makes you very glad he did. Cleverly mixed by the Afro-Celts’ Simon Emmerson, Moray’s inventive rearrangement of such familiar ballads as “Early One Morning” and “The Raggle Taggle Gypsies” may just be the most significant new development in English folk music since Fairport Convention’s Liege And Lief. There are some clumsy moments. But it’s a bold signpost that moves far beyond the trad revivalism of the likes of Kate Rusby.

Pat Metheny – One Quiet Night

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Jazz guitarist Metheny here puts aside his electric for an acoustic baritone guitar and a special tuning which he explores over a series of gentle ruminations recorded in a late night session alone in his home studio. Originally done for his own pleasure, these pieces certainly warrant release, and anyone who enjoys acoustic guitar excursions in reflective mood will be drawn to this album.

Jazz guitarist Metheny here puts aside his electric for an acoustic baritone guitar and a special tuning which he explores over a series of gentle ruminations recorded in a late night session alone in his home studio. Originally done for his own pleasure, these pieces certainly warrant release, and anyone who enjoys acoustic guitar excursions in reflective mood will be drawn to this album.

Staind – 14 Shades Of Grey

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Boston-based miserabilists Staind have made a career out of providing a musical outlet for angry white males and social misfits. But for music fans outside this demographic their habit of picking at emotional scars smacks of self-indulgence. On their follow-up to 2001's Breaking The Cycle, Staind offer little relief from neo-grunge's vapid whining and automated guitar angst. The upbeat "Yesterday" could secure them a hit while "Zoe Jane", a tribute to singer Aaron Lewis' daughter, manages to stay the right side of mawkish. Still, with 14 tracks lasting over four minutes each, at times this album seems interminable.

Boston-based miserabilists Staind have made a career out of providing a musical outlet for angry white males and social misfits. But for music fans outside this demographic their habit of picking at emotional scars smacks of self-indulgence. On their follow-up to 2001’s Breaking The Cycle, Staind offer little relief from neo-grunge’s vapid whining and automated guitar angst. The upbeat “Yesterday” could secure them a hit while “Zoe Jane”, a tribute to singer Aaron Lewis’ daughter, manages to stay the right side of mawkish. Still, with 14 tracks lasting over four minutes each, at times this album seems interminable.

Mariza – Fado Curvo

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Every so often a voice emerges from the world music scene with an indefinable ability to cross over to a wider audience. Bebel Gilberto was the most recent example, and Portugal's Mariza is set to follow her. Singing the mournful, blues-like music of her country (called fado), she combines a spectacularly expressive voice with stunning looks and a charismatic presence that lies somewhere between Grace Jones and Maria Callas. Her music is deeply rooted in tradition and yet somehow it also sounds totally modern. If the last world music album you bought was Buena Vista, make this the next.

Every so often a voice emerges from the world music scene with an indefinable ability to cross over to a wider audience. Bebel Gilberto was the most recent example, and Portugal’s Mariza is set to follow her. Singing the mournful, blues-like music of her country (called fado), she combines a spectacularly expressive voice with stunning looks and a charismatic presence that lies somewhere between Grace Jones and Maria Callas. Her music is deeply rooted in tradition and yet somehow it also sounds totally modern. If the last world music album you bought was Buena Vista, make this the next.

Whalerider – 4AD

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Lisa Gerrard, spiritually intense wailer and ex-Dead Can Dance member is, we'll wager, no close relation to Steven Gerrard, the Liverpool midfielder. But you never know. She's gone all Maori on us here for a New Zealand indie film, and aren't they the fellas who do those scary war-dance routines before playing thug-ball, or rugby, or whatever it's called? Lisa, after working on Gladiator, Ali and others, is now a big Hollywood soundtracks player, which is comically absurd but blissfully reassuring. "Very low, very dark Maori shell flutes" have been used here, and "traditional female Maori vocals". Just this once, I'll admit to cluelessness concerning the genre.

Lisa Gerrard, spiritually intense wailer and ex-Dead Can Dance member is, we’ll wager, no close relation to Steven Gerrard, the Liverpool midfielder. But you never know. She’s gone all Maori on us here for a New Zealand indie film, and aren’t they the fellas who do those scary war-dance routines before playing thug-ball, or rugby, or whatever it’s called? Lisa, after working on Gladiator, Ali and others, is now a big Hollywood soundtracks player, which is comically absurd but blissfully reassuring. “Very low, very dark Maori shell flutes” have been used here, and “traditional female Maori vocals”. Just this once, I’ll admit to cluelessness concerning the genre.

Australian Rules – Mute

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More wonder and thunder from down under. Mick Harvey's extensive track record (Bad Seeds, PJ Harvey, Crime & The City Solution) more than qualifies him to score a coming-of-age issue movie set in "a small coastal town in Australia". Interestingly, the debuting director, Paul Goldman, shot the videos for Boys Next Door's "Shiver" and The Birthday Party's "Nick The Stripper", so he and Harvey have been communing aesthetically for a while. Harvey's been getting award nominations already for this, and it seems there's little he can't turn his hand to these days. The sooner he dumps that one-trick Cave charlatan the better. This is a grower, a heat haze.

More wonder and thunder from down under. Mick Harvey’s extensive track record (Bad Seeds, PJ Harvey, Crime & The City Solution) more than qualifies him to score a coming-of-age issue movie set in “a small coastal town in Australia”. Interestingly, the debuting director, Paul Goldman, shot the videos for Boys Next Door’s “Shiver” and The Birthday Party’s “Nick The Stripper”, so he and Harvey have been communing aesthetically for a while. Harvey’s been getting award nominations already for this, and it seems there’s little he can’t turn his hand to these days. The sooner he dumps that one-trick Cave charlatan the better. This is a grower, a heat haze.

Various Artists – Flowers In The Wildwood: Women In Eearly Country Music 1923-39

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Way before Emmylou Harris or even Patsy Cline, women were singing country songs to make your heart crack. Among these 25 examples from pre-WW2, only the Carter Family and Patsy Montana will be familiar to most. But just as thrilling are the Coon Creek Girls, a kind of 1930s version of the Be Good Tanyas, and Gertrude Gossett, who sounds like an early Gillian Welch. Every track is a discovery, and you wonder how the Louisiana Lou, The Girls Of The Golden West and Moonshine Kate ever lapsed into obscurity. Sleevenotes are courtesy of The Handsome Family's Rennie Sparks.

Way before Emmylou Harris or even Patsy Cline, women were singing country songs to make your heart crack. Among these 25 examples from pre-WW2, only the Carter Family and Patsy Montana will be familiar to most. But just as thrilling are the Coon Creek Girls, a kind of 1930s version of the Be Good Tanyas, and Gertrude Gossett, who sounds like an early Gillian Welch. Every track is a discovery, and you wonder how the Louisiana Lou, The Girls Of The Golden West and Moonshine Kate ever lapsed into obscurity. Sleevenotes are courtesy of The Handsome Family’s Rennie Sparks.

The Last Great Wilderness – Geographic

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The Pastels always seem to find their wheelbarrow positively overflowing with acclaim, though some of us have struggled for over a decade to remember what they actually sound like. Here they wibble along, inoffensively enough, through a 25-minute accompaniment to the recent Brit road movie directed by David Mackenzie. It climaxes, if that's not too bold a word (it is), with a Jarvis Cocker collaboration, "I Picked A Flower", a parody of a pop hit which demonstrates that Cocker used up all his parody power a while ago. A limp cover of Sly Stone's "Everybody Is A Star" is physically embarrassing. For diehards only.

The Pastels always seem to find their wheelbarrow positively overflowing with acclaim, though some of us have struggled for over a decade to remember what they actually sound like. Here they wibble along, inoffensively enough, through a 25-minute accompaniment to the recent Brit road movie directed by David Mackenzie. It climaxes, if that’s not too bold a word (it is), with a Jarvis Cocker collaboration, “I Picked A Flower”, a parody of a pop hit which demonstrates that Cocker used up all his parody power a while ago. A limp cover of Sly Stone’s “Everybody Is A Star” is physically embarrassing. For diehards only.

Reckless Kelly – Under The Table & Above The Sun

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Country-rock was superseded as a description long ago by new, alt. and insurgent country, not to mention the catch-all 'Americana'. But the old '70s terminology should surely be revived to describe Austin five-piece Reckless Kelly, who sound more like Pure Prairie League than Uncle Tupelo. Led by the brothers Willy and Cody Braun, the band's third album stomps rowdily on tracks like "Let's Just Fall" and "Nobody's Girl". They get more reflective on "Desolation Angels" and "Everybody", but are soon rocking again on "Mersey Beat", a tribute to George Harrison and surely the first song ever recorded in Nashville to mention cricket.

Country-rock was superseded as a description long ago by new, alt. and insurgent country, not to mention the catch-all ‘Americana’. But the old ’70s terminology should surely be revived to describe Austin five-piece Reckless Kelly, who sound more like Pure Prairie League than Uncle Tupelo. Led by the brothers Willy and Cody Braun, the band’s third album stomps rowdily on tracks like “Let’s Just Fall” and “Nobody’s Girl”. They get more reflective on “Desolation Angels” and “Everybody”, but are soon rocking again on “Mersey Beat”, a tribute to George Harrison and surely the first song ever recorded in Nashville to mention cricket.

Electric Six – Fire

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This album from Detroit electro-garage band, Electric Six, invites the listener to consider two obvious reference points. One being Dynasty, the abysmal 1979 disco album by stadium rock clowns Kiss, the other being the inside cover of Daft Punk's 1997 debut Homework (a collage of grubby teen paraphernalia?comics, rock stickers, Chic seven inches). Electric Six nail a kitschy hybrid of '70s rock and disco?AC/DC & The Sunshine Band, if you will?but repeated plays reveal little charm and less real humour. There are a couple of admittedly killer riffs, but the stench of music industry in-joke is overwhelming. It's all too easy to imagine Electric Six ending up in a novelty niche/rut similar to that of Fun Lovin' Criminals?unable to get arrested in their homeland, destined to play end-of-term balls until their career sputters out.

This album from Detroit electro-garage band, Electric Six, invites the listener to consider two obvious reference points. One being Dynasty, the abysmal 1979 disco album by stadium rock clowns Kiss, the other being the inside cover of Daft Punk’s 1997 debut Homework (a collage of grubby teen paraphernalia?comics, rock stickers, Chic seven inches). Electric Six nail a kitschy hybrid of ’70s rock and disco?AC/DC & The Sunshine Band, if you will?but repeated plays reveal little charm and less real humour. There are a couple of admittedly killer riffs, but the stench of music industry in-joke is overwhelming. It’s all too easy to imagine Electric Six ending up in a novelty niche/rut similar to that of Fun Lovin’ Criminals?unable to get arrested in their homeland, destined to play end-of-term balls until their career sputters out.

Steve Coleman And Five Elements – On The Rising Of The 64 Paths

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Last year's intense and compelling live double album, Resistance Is Futile, was one of the jazz releases of 2002. This follow-up employs most of the same musicians plus flautist/vocalist Malik Mezzadri. A predominantly introspective record which emphasises its lack of a chordal instrument with unusually sparse textures, On The Rising Of The 64 Paths further pursues Coleman's fascination with ancient Chinese divination. Subtle and elusive, this album only slowly reveals its inspiration. Best to try the aforementioned Resistance Is Futile first.

Last year’s intense and compelling live double album, Resistance Is Futile, was one of the jazz releases of 2002. This follow-up employs most of the same musicians plus flautist/vocalist Malik Mezzadri. A predominantly introspective record which emphasises its lack of a chordal instrument with unusually sparse textures, On The Rising Of The 64 Paths further pursues Coleman’s fascination with ancient Chinese divination. Subtle and elusive, this album only slowly reveals its inspiration.

Best to try the aforementioned Resistance Is Futile first.

The Vanity Set – Little Stabs Of Happiness

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Although long-serving Bad Seed Jim Sclavunos sounds uncannily like St Nick himself on opener "The Big Bang", The Vanity Set are a very different kettle of fish to that being boiled up on the Seeds' recent Nocturama. There's doom and melodrama right enough, but would Mr Cave ever allow glam guitar solos, hysterical theremin surges, circus techno and?gadzooks!?a Bee Gees cover ("I Started A Joke")? Track five, "Imp OfThe Perverse", nicely sums this up. File under Goth Comedy.

Although long-serving Bad Seed Jim Sclavunos sounds uncannily like St Nick himself on opener “The Big Bang”, The Vanity Set are a very different kettle of fish to that being boiled up on the Seeds’ recent Nocturama. There’s doom and melodrama right enough, but would Mr Cave ever allow glam guitar solos, hysterical theremin surges, circus techno and?gadzooks!?a Bee Gees cover (“I Started A Joke”)? Track five, “Imp OfThe Perverse”, nicely sums this up. File under Goth Comedy.

Tes – X2

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Brooklyn rapper/producer Tes' whiny delivery may be an acquired taste, but once in, the listener is richly rewarded with 12 tracks of sharply intelligent and highly addictive hip hop. "New New York" is notable for being a post-9/11 address that avoids mawkishness, while "Fooltime" tackles the more mundane subject of shitty day jobs ("Fooltime, but I can't break free/Time spent racing rats running laps of luxury"). Tes drops in his samples with a spare, dub-like delicacy, leaving wide open spaces through which to access his lyrical meditations on the urban treadmill.

Brooklyn rapper/producer Tes’ whiny delivery may be an acquired taste, but once in, the listener is richly rewarded with 12 tracks of sharply intelligent and highly addictive hip hop. “New New York” is notable for being a post-9/11 address that avoids mawkishness, while “Fooltime” tackles the more mundane subject of shitty day jobs (“Fooltime, but I can’t break free/Time spent racing rats running laps of luxury”). Tes drops in his samples with a spare, dub-like delicacy, leaving wide open spaces through which to access his lyrical meditations on the urban treadmill.

Roxy Music – Live

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Brian Eno's sniffy dismissal of his former colleagues' decision to regroup for this 2001 tour was soon retracted. No wonder?from the adrenalised rampage of the opening "Re-make/Re-model" to the dazed wonder of the final "For Your Pleasure", this two-CD features Roxy sounding as good if not better than ever. Eno or no Eno. The song choices are faultless, Ferry shimmers like a wounded apparition on "Every Dream Home", and elsewhere he's a riot of swooning romance and slick-backed menace. They still capture the giddy thrall of future pop perfection like no other outfit before or since. The strangely unadvertised original drummer, Paul Thompson, remains the devastating powerhouse helping them reach places beyond other bands' comprehension. Unfeasibly brilliant, dare they now chance a full-scale new album reunion? It would need to be very good not to sour these memories.

Brian Eno’s sniffy dismissal of his former colleagues’ decision to regroup for this 2001 tour was soon retracted. No wonder?from the adrenalised rampage of the opening “Re-make/Re-model” to the dazed wonder of the final “For Your Pleasure”, this two-CD features Roxy sounding as good if not better than ever. Eno or no Eno. The song choices are faultless, Ferry shimmers like a wounded apparition on “Every Dream Home”, and elsewhere he’s a riot of swooning romance and slick-backed menace.

They still capture the giddy thrall of future pop perfection like no other outfit before or since. The strangely unadvertised original drummer, Paul Thompson, remains the devastating powerhouse helping them reach places beyond other bands’ comprehension.

Unfeasibly brilliant, dare they now chance a full-scale new album reunion? It would need to be very good not to sour these memories.

Easy Star All-Stars – Dub Side Of The Moon

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If you've ever, via hallucinogens, expanded your mind to Dark Side Of The Moon, all you need to do is change your drug of choice and Dub Side... might easily sound like the best thing you've heard, if you inhale deeply enough. Even without a spliff, it still sounds pretty fine as a bunch of rastas take a voluptuous dubbed-up trip around the Floyd's psychedelic masterpiece. Highlights include Ranking Joe's toast on "Money" and Kirsty Rock's bonged-out yodelling on "The Great Gig In The Sky". It fits so perfectly you wonder why it took 30 years for someone to think of it.

If you’ve ever, via hallucinogens, expanded your mind to Dark Side Of The Moon, all you need to do is change your drug of choice and Dub Side… might easily sound like the best thing you’ve heard, if you inhale deeply enough. Even without a spliff, it still sounds pretty fine as a bunch of rastas take a voluptuous dubbed-up trip around the Floyd’s psychedelic masterpiece. Highlights include Ranking Joe’s toast on “Money” and Kirsty Rock’s bonged-out yodelling on “The Great Gig In The Sky”. It fits so perfectly you wonder why it took 30 years for someone to think of it.

Animal Collective – Here Comes The Indian

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Raised around Baltimore but currently based in the artistic hotbed of Brooklyn, NY, the Animal Collective comprises a bunch of musical iconoclasts long on avant-garde conceptual theory and short on patience for pop tropes. To call them avant-rock would be too limiting; though there are elements of electronica, psychedelic freakout and DIY post-punk madness in their sound, Here Comes The Indian is no spot-the-influence parlour game. If anything, the Collective's gloriously skewed perspective and kitchen-sink production make them spiritual kin to The Residents, whose absurdist humour the AC also shares, with members sporting names like Panda Bear and Geologist.

Raised around Baltimore but currently based in the artistic hotbed of Brooklyn, NY, the Animal Collective comprises a bunch of musical iconoclasts long on avant-garde conceptual theory and short on patience for pop tropes. To call them avant-rock would be too limiting; though there are elements of electronica, psychedelic freakout and DIY post-punk madness in their sound, Here Comes The Indian is no spot-the-influence parlour game. If anything, the Collective’s gloriously skewed perspective and kitchen-sink production make them spiritual kin to The Residents, whose absurdist humour the AC also shares, with members sporting names like Panda Bear and Geologist.

Clowntime Is Over

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Shaun Ryder's weird artistic odyssey now appears to be forming some kind of pattern. Each new venture hits the ground running and burning with revolutionary intent, delivering words and music of mangled-up, category-defying magnificence (Happy Mondays' Bummed and Pills'n'Thrills And Bellyaches, Black Grape's It's Great When You're Straight... Yeah). Then the class-As begin to take their toll and words/music get sloppily, grossly self-indulgent and pitifully self-parodic (the Mondays' Yes Please, the Grape's Stupid Stupid Stupid). After which, Ryder downs tools and pretty much disappears from public gaze to concentrate on adding yet more lurid chapters to the ongoing soap opera that is his life. Imagine Corrie directed by Quentin Tarantino and Vincent Gallo, with hair-raising plot twists involving drugs, guns, divorce, overdoses, rehab, car crashes, meetings with aliens, bankruptcy, psychic breakdowns, more drugs... That's Ryder's life. Then, just when his bonkers lifestyle threatens to eclipse all memories of his deranged musical legacy, back he bounces and, once more, all bets are on. So it goes with his latest project, which sees him holed up for two years in Australia, fomenting mischief in a shed belonging to Perth-based producer Pete Carroll. Ryder and Carroll are joined by a trio of musicians (as well as, on several tracks, Stephen Mallinder of Cabaret Voltaire) including the excellently-named Lucky Oceans, whom older readers will recall from '70s country boys Asleep At The Wheel. If there's any 10-gallon influence on these eight tracks, Ryder's band are keeping it well camouflaged. As you might expect, though, just about every other genre and sub-genre is included in the general mash-up. At a time when much scholarly ink is being spilled over the brainwave of "soundclash", in where two songs from different musical genres are spliced together to make a single atom, it's worth remembering that Happy Mondays used to sound like six different bands playing six different songs at once. It might have been put together in a shed, but so dark and seedy and drug-addled does it sound that Amateur Night In The Big Top might as well have been cooked up in a Moss Side crack den. Reports of Ryder adopting a pipe-and-slippers lifestyle in Oz have been exaggerated, at least on the evidence of this latest stream of derailed consciousness. Opener "The Story" has Ryder gibbering about a Persian-necking weekend to the accompaniment of a pounding rhythm that drills into your skull like a dose of ketamine. At which point you might as well fasten those seat-belts for this trip to the hinterland beyond the reaches of sanity. Which is what this is right up to the finishing line, although closer "In 1987" finds Ryder in rare reflective mood, longing for the lost pre-Madchester Eden when "the MDMA was pure". Between these startling bookends, he sounds like a man living beyond the edge of himself, trapped but strangely liberated by the realisation there is nothing left for him to lose. Ryder's barking raps tell of futures narrowing, of inner cities overrun by headless zombies, of short-cut escapes (drugs, cheap sex, fast entertainment) leading to dark cul-de-sacs rank with the stench of death and decay. As on the nightmarish, spaced-out dub of "Monster", or the funked-off paranoia of "Long Legs (Parts 1,2,3)" where Ryder sounds like a man grabbing onto the jump-leads of anxiety because there's nothing left to hold. It's terrifying, exhilarating stuff. "Where do you think you're going with that big red fucking nose," he wonders on "Clowns", a rare moment of levity. And this in a song all about the pathological fear of being beaten to death by circus turns. And there you have it. Another wildly implausible Shaun Ryder comeback. Just when we needed one. All things considered, you wouldn't want to be inside his head. But there's times when you need him inside yours. Fear for his sanity and his general wellbeing, by all means. But embrace his demented soul vision. Because it speaks some uncomfortable truth which, in its own fucked-up way, reasons the way ahead. See Shaun Ryder Q&A, page 74

Shaun Ryder’s weird artistic odyssey now appears to be forming some kind of pattern. Each new venture hits the ground running and burning with revolutionary intent, delivering words and music of mangled-up, category-defying magnificence (Happy Mondays’ Bummed and Pills’n’Thrills And Bellyaches, Black Grape’s It’s Great When You’re Straight… Yeah). Then the class-As begin to take their toll and words/music get sloppily, grossly self-indulgent and pitifully self-parodic (the Mondays’ Yes Please, the Grape’s Stupid Stupid Stupid). After which, Ryder downs tools and pretty much disappears from public gaze to concentrate on adding yet more lurid chapters to the ongoing soap opera that is his life.

Imagine Corrie directed by Quentin Tarantino and Vincent Gallo, with hair-raising plot twists involving drugs, guns, divorce, overdoses, rehab, car crashes, meetings with aliens, bankruptcy, psychic breakdowns, more drugs… That’s Ryder’s life. Then, just when his bonkers lifestyle threatens to eclipse all memories of his deranged musical legacy, back he bounces and, once more, all bets are on.

So it goes with his latest project, which sees him holed up for two years in Australia, fomenting mischief in a shed belonging to Perth-based producer Pete Carroll. Ryder and Carroll are joined by a trio of musicians (as well as, on several tracks, Stephen Mallinder of Cabaret Voltaire) including the excellently-named Lucky Oceans, whom older readers will recall from ’70s country boys Asleep At The Wheel.

If there’s any 10-gallon influence on these eight tracks, Ryder’s band are keeping it well camouflaged. As you might expect, though, just about every other genre and sub-genre is included in the general mash-up. At a time when much scholarly ink is being spilled over the brainwave of “soundclash”, in where two songs from different musical genres are spliced together to make a single atom, it’s worth remembering that Happy Mondays used to sound like six different bands playing six different songs at once.

It might have been put together in a shed, but so dark and seedy and drug-addled does it sound that Amateur Night In The Big Top might as well have been cooked up in a Moss Side crack den. Reports of Ryder adopting a pipe-and-slippers lifestyle in Oz have been exaggerated, at least on the evidence of this latest stream of derailed consciousness.

Opener “The Story” has Ryder gibbering about a Persian-necking weekend to the accompaniment of a pounding rhythm that drills into your skull like a dose of ketamine. At which point you might as well fasten those seat-belts for this trip to the hinterland beyond the reaches of sanity. Which is what this is right up to the finishing line, although closer “In 1987” finds Ryder in rare reflective mood, longing for the lost pre-Madchester Eden when “the MDMA was pure”. Between these startling bookends, he sounds like a man living beyond the edge of himself, trapped but strangely liberated by the realisation there is nothing left for him to lose.

Ryder’s barking raps tell of futures narrowing, of inner cities overrun by headless zombies, of short-cut escapes (drugs, cheap sex, fast entertainment) leading to dark cul-de-sacs rank with the stench of death and decay. As on the nightmarish, spaced-out dub of “Monster”, or the funked-off paranoia of “Long Legs (Parts 1,2,3)” where Ryder sounds like a man grabbing onto the jump-leads of anxiety because there’s nothing left to hold. It’s terrifying, exhilarating stuff. “Where do you think you’re going with that big red fucking nose,” he wonders on “Clowns”, a rare moment of levity. And this in a song all about the pathological fear of being beaten to death by circus turns.

And there you have it. Another wildly implausible Shaun Ryder comeback. Just when we needed one. All things considered, you wouldn’t want to be inside his head. But there’s times when you need him inside yours.

Fear for his sanity and his general wellbeing, by all means. But embrace his demented soul vision. Because it speaks some uncomfortable truth which, in its own fucked-up way, reasons the way ahead.

See Shaun Ryder Q&A, page 74