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but isn't it playing into the EEVIL trend of nautical imagery? is that at all acceptable?

Dare, Friday, 18 January 2002 01:00 (11 years ago) Permalink

it's nautical but nice.

ethan, Friday, 18 January 2002 01:00 (11 years ago) Permalink

You have violated the Pun Treaty of 1995, as instituted by the UN to save the world from rampant destruction, and under the terms of that treaty your computer is to be taken from you and your jaw wired shut.

Ned Raggett, Friday, 18 January 2002 01:00 (11 years ago) Permalink

3 years pass...

MV, Sunday, 20 February 2005 22:18 (8 years ago) Permalink

Remember Me was such an awesome song - I really can't work out why they haven't risen to prominence along the lines of, say, Franz Ferdinand. Seeing Franz Ferdinand on the NME awards last night was quite depressing - is Alex really supposed to be the hippest, most charismatic, intelligent frontman in British rock? He seems like a bit of a dullard to me.

chris sallis, Monday, 21 February 2005 14:07 (8 years ago) Permalink

i don't think the general public are ready for a band that has members that swing about on stage with a couple of stuffed owls under his arms.

having said that there are a couple of songs on the new album that could break them through.

jellybean (jellybean), Monday, 21 February 2005 14:22 (8 years ago) Permalink

If the general public can get into gay love songs a la "Michael" by a band named after an assasinated Audstrian archduke, why would they be put off by a few stuffed animals, provided the songs are good enough?

metalmickey, Monday, 21 February 2005 19:19 (8 years ago) Permalink

2 years pass...

New album out in about 10 days.

Popture, Wednesday, 2 January 2008 07:34 (5 years ago) Permalink

It's really good.

Davey D, Wednesday, 2 January 2008 07:52 (5 years ago) Permalink

I can't wait!!

King Boy Pato, Wednesday, 2 January 2008 12:39 (5 years ago) Permalink

“The aim of this record is to have Poles dancing with Slovaks, Romanians dancing with the Welsh, Arsene Wenger dancing with Alex Ferguson and everyone singing this song. We’re better together than we are apart – all together and nice and drunk. The East is maybe the future of all of us lot in the West, so long live the mighty power-chords of trans-national rock music.”

There is not nearly enough pretentious wankery in music these days. I love it.

King Boy Pato, Wednesday, 2 January 2008 12:41 (5 years ago) Permalink

But it has football references - wahey!

King Boy Pato, Wednesday, 2 January 2008 12:46 (5 years ago) Permalink

New album: great songs, hampered by poor use of "bookending tracks" concept.

Simon H., Wednesday, 2 January 2008 13:56 (5 years ago) Permalink

I'm not dancing with no Slovak.

edwardo, Wednesday, 2 January 2008 14:24 (5 years ago) Permalink

Not even if they Pole dance?

King Boy Pato, Wednesday, 2 January 2008 14:24 (5 years ago) Permalink

Kind of boring on the first two listens, I really liked the pristine melodic sound they went for with the last record but this one seems to have too much bluster and too little that's actually memorable.

Matt DC, Thursday, 3 January 2008 09:37 (5 years ago) Permalink

Enjoying this a lot off a distracted listen in the office.

Scik Mouthy, Monday, 14 January 2008 15:13 (5 years ago) Permalink

I dunno, I kind of agree with the Observer review from yesterday. All their reviews start off going 'Plants onstage! Songs about glaciers! They're so interesting!' but the music is so generic and uninspried.

Matt DC, Monday, 14 January 2008 15:22 (5 years ago) Permalink

Agreed. They have always promised more than they can deliver.

I asked Yan to explain his "The East is maybe the future of all of us lot in the West" quote (for it was he who said it), and this was his reply:

"Oh…! [guilty laughter] What would I mean… mm-hmm… I think it’s possibly that we’ve had quite a long run of new ideas and changing things dramatically. Maybe it’s time to swap over, and take ideas from the other end of the spectrum. Eastern Europe is a place that’s changing a lot, and modernising. Maybe they’ll do it in a slightly better way, if we pay attention. And then there’s the East of China or whatever, which is obviously economically the future of the world. Always East, yeah…"

mike t-diva, Monday, 14 January 2008 15:32 (5 years ago) Permalink

Have I mentioned that I used to know one of them when I/he lived in Reading? Look at me, I'm a regular Suzy!

Colonel Poo, Monday, 14 January 2008 15:36 (5 years ago) Permalink

Loved the early singles and the first album, got a bit bored with them at Truck in 2003 when their set went on a bit too long and everything seemed a bit too rehearsed. Listened to the second album once and didn't like it generic and uninspired otm. I want to hear the new one, but every review is still all Arcade Fire and Editors-referencing. Is it? I saw Open Season in Fopp for £3 recently and I stil couldn't be bothered with it. Maybe they're a band I should just abandon to 18months of my life that were pretty good but I'm not going back there.

Bocken Social Scene, Monday, 14 January 2008 15:36 (5 years ago) Permalink

My initial reaction to reading that (your comment; not seen Observer review) was an indignant "but they're NOT generic and uninspired!", but given five seconds of through I think, perhaps, that they are pretty generic, and that, actually, that's kind of what I like about them - they are an inky indie band with a few little character quirks (that could be seen as conceits) and nice little tunes about odd little things. The thing is that I think what they do, they do with real care and attention, and that's what appeals to me; sure, the 'bookend tracks' thing might be a bit gauche in 2007, but I also think it shows that they care about the idea of making 'an album' that you listen to in order, and stuff. I think sonically they're (while far from perfect) very good too, and a serious cut above most semi-mainstream 'indie' (where 00s indie is just 'guitar rock', obv.). I've only listened to this on my work comp so far, but looking at the recording and production credits I'm confident that it'll open up really nicely on the big rig or headphones at home, too.

But the key thing for me about them, and this might sound either mental or genius, is the tunes; without sounding like Geir, I think they've got amazing melodies - not in the way I think Beatles melodies are amazing, or Embrace melodies (love or hate them, I think Danny's an awesome melodicist even if he can't sing), but there's something really understated about a lot of their tunes, especially on the second album, that I adore. A Wooden Horse and The Lonely off the first album, too. Not just the melodies, but... I really like the sense of momentum and... narrative, almost, that their tunes have at their best. Just a really simple, little, nothingness song like Like A Honeycomb off the last album, I just find really heartwarming and beautiful. I listened to the last album a lot while walking coastal paths in Devon, and it was amazing.

Also, if they're generic, who else is in their genre? What genre are they generic of? Because there aren't many bands that I know of who are doing something all that similar; you can't lump them in with Kaiser Chiefs or The Killers or Hard-Fi, and they're nothing like Guillemots or Patrick Wolf either. Yeah, they're 'just' an indie band, but who else is, these days? They're not a date-rape stadium rock band in disguise, they're not AOR piano ballads with delusions...

Scik Mouthy, Monday, 14 January 2008 15:45 (5 years ago) Permalink

X-posts there - my response is to MatDC.

Scik Mouthy, Monday, 14 January 2008 15:46 (5 years ago) Permalink

I like all their work so far, looking forward to the new one. I agree with Sicky's summary - for me, they represent the best of indie rock.

One of the best things they ever did, though, was a collaboration with The Ecstasy of Saint Theresa on "A Lovely Day Tomorrow"/

Mr. Odd, Monday, 14 January 2008 21:23 (5 years ago) Permalink

i like this album quite a bit

fancy that

ciderpress, Tuesday, 15 January 2008 00:26 (5 years ago) Permalink

Also, if they're generic, who else is in their genre? What genre are they generic of?

It's the Big And Important, Standing On A Cliff Top Looking Windswept And Earnest genre: Bombasto-Indie!

The most striking reference point on DYLRM? is Arcade Fire, which is understandable given that the initial sessions took place over two or three months in Montreal, working with AF drummer Howard Bilerman (and Efrim Menuck from Godspeed You! Black Emperor). But we could also loosely lump them in with Doves, Editors, Electric Soft Parade, Brakes, Bloc Party, the rockier stuff from the last Athlete album, etc...

mike t-diva, Tuesday, 15 January 2008 10:22 (5 years ago) Permalink

See I don't get the "big and important" vibe off them AT ALL; maybe it's cos I liked the second album best, and that was "small and insignificant in the face of gazing at the sea from the clifftop" (literally how Im listened to it a lot).

Scik Mouthy, Tuesday, 15 January 2008 10:25 (5 years ago) Permalink

(I actually really like the second album for what its worth, its this one that I found dull)

Matt DC, Tuesday, 15 January 2008 10:38 (5 years ago) Permalink

I didn't get on with this one as well as I'd thought I would when I got home last night, actually - this may just be that I had a fucking mental busy weekend and was too tired to really take it in, however. The second one took ages to grow on me, apart from the two Sutton produced tracks.

I think a lot of the reaction to this record, all the "oh my gosh they're totally gonna get a top ten single off this" hype talk indie blog nonsense, is the fact that it's January and there's fuck-all else to get excited about. The single got to 31.

Scik Mouthy, Tuesday, 15 January 2008 10:45 (5 years ago) Permalink

Whereas I've suddenly started coming round to it! It's taken a good half a dozen plays, though.

mike t-diva, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 12:40 (5 years ago) Permalink

disclaimer: i love this band with an undying and unquestionable passion.

interesting that some people would regard them with a "big and important" viewpoint (which i assume is meant negatively). like nick i don't get this at all--in fact it's that they write songs about such inconsequentialities that gives a sense of huge scale; as weird as this sounds i think of the scale of BSPs songs as being a lateral "you can see for miles" landscape than a more upwards, spacelike/cosmic scale you'd more commonly get.

the songs are taking the mundane and making them sound fantastical; i.e. there's no pretension of "big and important"--the songs themselves are bigger than the band.

tissp, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 12:49 (5 years ago) Permalink

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/7209121.stm

StanM, Sunday, 27 January 2008 18:22 (5 years ago) Permalink

I was trying to figure out where I'd heard the name Phil Sumner before. Then I was "watching" (i.e. half asleep on the couch) Hetty Wainthropp Investigates on TV over Christmas and it turns out that he plays the cornet on the theme tune. So he should know better than to indulge in tired old stage diving antics!

Dingbod Kesterson, Monday, 28 January 2008 10:01 (5 years ago) Permalink

4 months pass...

The Great Skua, the instrumental track off the new album, REALLY REMINDS ME of something; it's almost identical at points but I can't quite place it. Any ideas?

Scik Mouthy, Thursday, 5 June 2008 08:25 (4 years ago) Permalink

PULP / roadkill

piscesx, Thursday, 5 June 2008 09:01 (4 years ago) Permalink

Yeah? Thats not setting alarm bells off. What album's it from? It's something in the guitar progression on The Great Skua, I think.

Scik Mouthy, Thursday, 5 June 2008 09:15 (4 years ago) Permalink

intro sounds for all the world like roadkill (last pulp album WE LOVE LIFE) but yeah also very generic-y sounding arcade fire type guitar sound. or something shoegazey.

piscesx, Thursday, 5 June 2008 09:17 (4 years ago) Permalink

Nothing that I can place, but can I just point out the similarity between "Atom" and Buzzcocks' "Everybody's Happy Nowadays"....

mike t-diva, Thursday, 5 June 2008 09:20 (4 years ago) Permalink

N.B. Weirdly considering my usual antipathy to This Kind Of Thing, DYLRM? has become my second favourite album of the year to date.

mike t-diva, Thursday, 5 June 2008 09:22 (4 years ago) Permalink

Yeah? I'm still not feeling it much, certainly not compared to the previous record, which I still love a lot.

Scik Mouthy, Thursday, 5 June 2008 09:24 (4 years ago) Permalink

I totally cained it for a few weeks in January but haven't listened much since. It is very good though, certainly better than Open Season for my money. Still tremendous live too.

Chris in Belfast, Thursday, 5 June 2008 11:02 (4 years ago) Permalink

11 months pass...

I am quite enjoying MAN OF ARAN!

Everybody Wants To Shag King Boy Pato (King Boy Pato), Wednesday, 20 May 2009 12:57 (4 years ago) Permalink

I heard The Great Skua in a trailer on Sky Sports last night. Epic. Haven't heard Man Of Aran - what's it like?

Chris in Belfast, Wednesday, 20 May 2009 13:17 (4 years ago) Permalink

5 months pass...

They have this annoying habit of releasing b-sides on vinyl-only. I had no idea they did an unironic cover of "I Am A Cider Drinker" and a nifty 10" for "No Lucifer". Their latest is a cover of The Cure's "A Forest" which is solid.

Gerald McBoing-Boing, Tuesday, 27 October 2009 12:59 (3 years ago) Permalink

11 months pass...

I heckled them in concert requesting "I Am A Cider Drinker" and they glared at me. Wankers.

Anyway, I am enjoying their new EP which apparently is their offcuts from the next album.

Ain't Gonna Play Sim City (King Boy Pato), Saturday, 9 October 2010 10:07 (2 years ago) Permalink

They glare at everyone. It's ace, especially "hidden" track 8, Returning.

Duran (Doran), Saturday, 9 October 2010 12:02 (2 years ago) Permalink

It's really different, isn't it? "Zeus" doesn't exactly feel cohesive but it's full of interesting aural excursions, not all of which work but all of which make you think, and are ultimately enjoyable. Frankly it reminded me alot of The Fall in terms of sheer experimentation and mixing brilliance with driving-off-the-cliff oddness.

Gerald McBoing-Boing, Sunday, 10 October 2010 02:48 (2 years ago) Permalink

It's what we call a "fun romp". Especially with a song like 'kW-h', which sounds atypical of them but is good!

Ain't Gonna Play Sim City (King Boy Pato), Sunday, 10 October 2010 10:59 (2 years ago) Permalink

They're at their best when they're pretending to be icelandicbandmum though, aren't they?

djh, Sunday, 10 October 2010 17:04 (2 years ago) Permalink

4 weeks pass...

Ok, "Zeus" just keeps getting better and better with each play. Any lucky soul already heard the forthcoming "Valhalla Dancehall"? I'd hate to think these are the more interesting bits that didn't fit, leaving us with a more cohesive, safe, ultimately uninteresting record.

Gerald McBoing-Boing, Sunday, 7 November 2010 03:28 (2 years ago) Permalink

Has Graham S produced again?

they all are afflicted with a sickness of existence (Scik Mouthy), Monday, 18 March 2013 21:31 (2 months ago) Permalink

They did it themselves with an engineer but they did a good job.

Doran, Monday, 18 March 2013 21:51 (2 months ago) Permalink

Cool, that's great to hear. At this point the third album is still my favourite.

Kitchen Person, Monday, 18 March 2013 21:54 (2 months ago) Permalink

KP, what's missing from "VH" in your opinion? As much as I like "Do You Like Rock Music" I find "VH" to be stronger and more interesting., ultimately lingering in my head longer. After the demo EPs from last year, I think we're in for another winner!

Have they ever played in the US?

Gerald McBoing-Boing, Monday, 18 March 2013 23:31 (2 months ago) Permalink

I realise it's a bit of an unpopular opinion to have the third album as a favourite. I listened to Vauxhall recently and a lot of it just passed me by. I think the album really gets good on Stunde Null and the next two songs after that are my favourite run on the album. Baby is totally forgettable and Living Is so Easy is probably my least favourite single they've put out, it's just a little too cheesy. Observe the Skies and Cleaning Out The Rooms are highlights but then again the last three tracks I find quite forgettable. It's not a bad album at all, it's a low seven while the first three are all high eights.

I didn't hear any the EPs so these will all be new songs to me, looking forward to it a lot now.

Kitchen Person, Monday, 18 March 2013 23:45 (2 months ago) Permalink

So this is lovely, really musical and tuneful, none of the occasional shouting for attention they can be guilty of, feels like it will really unfurl over the weeks and months like Open Season did.

they all are afflicted with a sickness of existence (Scik Mouthy), Monday, 1 April 2013 20:59 (1 month ago) Permalink

awesome, i am excited to get this

Roberto Spiralli, Monday, 1 April 2013 21:11 (1 month ago) Permalink

Not really feeling this from a couple of plays (I'd happily just hear BSP play variations on Man of Aran, mind.) Hoping it will grow on me.

The sleeve seems oddly "could be any ol' indie band", too.

djh, Wednesday, 3 April 2013 19:31 (1 month ago) Permalink

Yeah the same for me. It's a nice album but the magic that made those first three albums so great just isn't there for me this time.

Kitchen Person, Wednesday, 3 April 2013 21:10 (1 month ago) Permalink

Quite liking this surprisingly. Had rather given up on them but at this moment am finding the new pensive BSP a better proposition than the flag waving incarnation.

fun loving and xtremely tolrant (Billy Dods), Wednesday, 3 April 2013 21:27 (1 month ago) Permalink

I want to do a POX, I think.

they all are afflicted with a sickness of existence (Scik Mouthy), Thursday, 4 April 2013 07:05 (1 month ago) Permalink

North Hanging Rock
Cleaning Out The Rooms
Zeus
Oh Larssen B
The Lonely
Atom
No Lucifer
Fear Of Drowning
Machineries Of Joy
When A Warm Wind Blows Through The Grass

Honourable mentions to Bear, We Are Sound, Remember Me, Like A Honeycomb...

they all are afflicted with a sickness of existence (Scik Mouthy), Thursday, 4 April 2013 07:10 (1 month ago) Permalink

Tried to do it in order but apart from the top two there's not much in it.

No Lucifer
Victorian Ice
Like A Honeycomb
Carrion
Atom
Please Stand Up
Fear of Drowning
It Ended on an Oily Stage
No Need to Cry
The Lonely

The albums

Do You Like Rock Music?
Decline of
Open Season
Machineries Of Joy
Vauxhall

Kitchen Person, Thursday, 4 April 2013 07:35 (1 month ago) Permalink

Albums would be...

Open Season
Zeus
Machineries
Vauxhall
Decline
Rock Music

they all are afflicted with a sickness of existence (Scik Mouthy), Thursday, 4 April 2013 08:00 (1 month ago) Permalink

I know Zeus is 'only' an EP, but it's 43 minutes long and it's brilliant.

they all are afflicted with a sickness of existence (Scik Mouthy), Thursday, 4 April 2013 08:00 (1 month ago) Permalink

It definitely earns points for Cleaning and Bear. Love the use of the latter in "From the Sea to the Land Beyond".

djh, Thursday, 4 April 2013 17:08 (1 month ago) Permalink

I know Zeus is 'only' an EP, but it's 43 minutes long and it's brilliant.

Precisely, and it's that sense of adventure found on it that seems missing from "Machineries Of Joy". I've given the latter a couple of listens and there's about 4 tracks that grab me and the others - not so much. At least yet, I'll give it a chance to grow on me. I'm going to spin the demo EPs again, too, and see how they compare. For what it's worth, the bonus 5 track EP that came with my order has a brilliant how-could-they-leave-this-off track "Facts Not Right".

Gerald McBoing-Boing, Friday, 5 April 2013 03:08 (1 month ago) Permalink

i like this a TON. they have probably gone in the exactly direction i wanted, although i couldn't claim to have known that was what i wanted until i heard it. more judicious use of volume and noise, less conscious of fostering the 'big venue' sound that i think hurt val dancehall and rock music somewhat. and they seem to have embraced the mid-tempo-y songs that have become a strength of theirs.

Roberto Spiralli, Thursday, 11 April 2013 01:47 (1 month ago) Permalink


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