Monday, April 27, 2015

Sly & The Family Stone - "Stand!" (1969)

In 1969 they could make music. At least on the basis of Stand! which contains classics like the title track, I Want To Take You Higher, Sing A Simple Song, Everyday People and You Can Make It If You Try. A number of songs on one and the same album an artist could proudly present after a lifelong career.

This album was more difficult than you might expect to find. In Sweden I was looking a long time in various used record stores without success, it wasn't until last summer's relocation to Montreal I found it here instead. This was Sly & The Family Stone's fourth album and it's considered by many, including several of the band members, to be their career's peak. The band consisted at the time of the siblings Sylvester (Sly), Freddie and Rose Stone and a number of their friends. They are considered to be the first major American band with a mixed gender and ethnic setup.


It's really not much to argue about when it comes to the album, OK, the songs Don't Call Me Nigger, Whitey and Sex Machine are not really to my taste, a little bit too much of lengthy jams. But otherwise it's impossible to criticize the album. It's funky, souly, energetic and danceable. The melodies are really irresistible. Another groovy album for the musically and politically aware party. Music that in any case makes me happy and urges me to move my body (to my children's wild protests. Hey, I dance really cool!!!).

A few years later, the band released the album There's A Riot Goin' On, which is also really good. But in 1969 it started to go downhill on a personal level for many of the band members, especially Sly himself. Although the Stone siblings came from a church background, an intensive abuse of various drugs, mainly cocaine (and PCP, according to Wikipedia), started. Sly is said to have constantly carried around a violin case filled with drugs. This meant that the production rate was slowed down, the band missed gigs or interrupted them earlier than planned etc. Sly became increasingly difficult to deal with and he's had a rather troubled life until today. This also affected the relationships within the band in a negative way, and band members began after a while to be replaced.

But of this you notice nothing on Stand!. Definitely a recommendation. A classic.


Tracklist

Side A
1. Stand! 3:08
2. Do not Call Me Nigger, Whitey 5:58
3. Somebody's Watching You 3:20
4. Sing A Simple Song 3:56

Side B
1. Everyday People 2:21
2. Sex Machine 13:34
3. You Can Make It If You Try 3:37



Wednesday, April 22, 2015

Bakverk 80 (1979)

In his early teens, my brother was a punk rocker, and so a number of LPs with the Sex Pistols, The Clash, Crass and others found their way into our parental home. And Bakverk 80. An album where three different Swedish punk bands contribute - KSMB, Travolta Kids and Incest Brothers. Of these, the first mentioned band became the most famous, and their later album Rika Barn Leka Bäst many hold as one of the best Swedish albums ever made. But now it was 1979, and all three bands were at the beginnings of their careers. The label MNW recorded and released the album.

A few words on the title. Bakverk 80 means Pastry 80 or Cake 80. This is a play with the word Stålverk 80, which means Steelworks 80. This was a grand industrial project in northern Sweden that never became reality,

I will brag a little about my cousin Stefan, he was the lead singer and bassist of Incest Brothers, which means he is the family's celebrity. He then continued his musical career in the band Trekant and later Köttgrottorna, yes, the legendary Swedish punk band. That of course means that I can't be objective when I judge the contributions of Incest Brothers on the album, I can't do anything but to praise these songs. Blood is thicker than objective facts.


Personally, I have never been into punk rock, although as younger I enjoyed some of the Sex Pistols songs (I like The Clash, however, but have never felt that they belong to the punk genre). Therefore, Bakverk 80 isn't  really my bag. But it's an interesting historical document. They seem to be so angry. Angry at the system. Angry at the politicians. Angry at the average Joe. Angry at everything. It's fairly aggressive music, as punk rock usually is, I guess. It's also very politically aware. Although the punks distanced themselves from the Swedish progg (I think), which was a leftish political music genre in the 70s, very critical of the system, I see a lot of similarities. Both genres are extremly critical of the political system and the passivation of the population. There are also clear influences from the political left in the texts on Bakverk 80. So really, it's just the musical frame that's different. A bit simpler, more direct, more aggressive and shorter songs. But the message and the views are the same.


Incest Brothers' songs are the best. But someone else might think Travolta Kids' songs are the most interesting. That someone might notice a bit more melodic music, more interesting song ideas and a band that maybe was a little ahead of their companions in the art of songwriting. Perhaps he would like the song Titta På Den Här and even say it's the best song on the album? I don't agree of course. Incest Brothers rules.

Bakverk 80 is perhaps not an album I will play very often, I find punk rock too loud, too noisy and too angry. But the album is fun as a historical document. And since my cousin is involved, it will never leave my record collection.


Tracklist

Side A

KSMB
1. Bohman 2:19
2. ABAB 2:02
3. Hårding 1:52
4. Militärlåten 1:14
5. Förortsbarn 2:07
6. Jag Vill Dö 2:13
7. MUF 1:58

Travolta Kids
8. Sune 2:37
9. Tryck På Knappen 1:36
10. Tunnbrödsrulle 2:07

Side B

Travolta Kids
1. Nick Carter 1:38
2. Bli Polis 1:47
3. Bill Å Bull 1:27
4. Titta På Den Här 1:53

Incest Brothers
5. Lördagspunk 1:22
6. Discofnask 2:53
7. Oskyldig 1:56
8. Pubertetsproblem 2:19
9. Svensson 1:54
10. Arbetslös 2:10



Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Talking Heads - "Little Creatures" (1985)

I've had this album since my early teens, so it has been there a long time. Talking Heads is one of the bands that I generally appreciate more as an adult than as a teenager. Usually it's the opposite, the music I listened to in my teens is more difficult to listen as an adult. Maybe I wasn't quite ready for Talking Heads and their not always uncomplicated creations as the younger version of myself.

However, to Little Creatures I relate in much of the same way now as I did 30 years ago. Maybe it's because the record is one of the more accessible the band created. Gone are the sound walls from Remain in Light, no dark neurosis à la Fear of Music. Little Creatures is more of a pop album, yes, almost a party album. Indeed, next time I have a party, I will play this record, it's going to work just fine. And people will dance.


The sound is a return to the more simple production from the band's early albums. Yes, some songs could find a spot at 77, their first album. It's airy - bass, drums and guitar are in the center with various additional instruments here and there. But these never dominate, and as mentioned, we are far from the sound of e.g. Remain in Light. But fear not, as usual it sounds very much Talking Heads even though the record is quite different than the previous ones. The big difference is that there is quite happy and accesible music at Little Creatures. Where are all neurotic vibes? And this even though David Byrne has more or less written all music single handed. Maybe he was unusually happy.

This does not make Little Creatures a bad record. It's a good album with some Talking Heads classics as icing on the cake, I of course think of the opening and closing tracks - And She Was and Road To Nowhere. And She Was is a real pop gem that makes me think of REM's song Stand, and Road To Nowhere is one of my favorite songs with Talking Heads. In between those we are treated to a mixed bag where my highlight is Walk It Down while Television Man could perhaps be a little shorter. We should be thankful that Talking Heads avoided being lured into the typical 80's production. The sound of Little Creatures is timeless and it could have been produced today. It's nice with an album from the 80's that sounds good.


This is the record with Talking Heads that has sold most, so apprently it was of the taste of quite a few (a couple of millions). I have understood, though, that some hard core fans regard this album as the beginning of the downfall for Talking Heads. I don't agree. Sure, to be Talking Heads it's an unusually happy and easygoing album, but it's still a lot more challenging than Like A Virgin, Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go or Take On Me that were also played in 1985. Little Creatures, qualitative new wave pop for the savvy music lover.

Tracklist

Side A
1. And She Was 3:36
2. Give Me Back My Name 3:20
3. Creatures Of Love 4:12
4. The Lady Don't Mind 4:03
5. Perfect World 4:26

Side B
1. Stay Up Late 3:51
2. Walk It Down 4:42
3. Television Man 6:10
4. Road To Nowhere 4:19



Monday, April 20, 2015

Pink Floyd - "The Wall" (1979)


When I listen to The Wall I understand why it has never been one of my favorite albums with Pink Floyd. It's a two-minded, almost schizophrenic, experience to take part of this creation. You've got these beautiful harmonies, but with an obsessive insistence a minor chord always finds its way into the song and darkens it. Take a song like Mother, The Thin Ice, or really any song on the album - a beautiful melody but with a text that is sad, depressive and often aggressive. The hit Another Brick in the Wall has a really catchy chorus, where the bass and the guitar create a really nice groove. But then there are those children's voices that sing about the school's oppression ...

So it continues the whole album through. Now, there are many fine records with lyrics that have sad themes, but what colors The Wall is Roger Waters often aggressive, accusatory and desperate voice. It's not subtle, sad songs, it's pitch-dark anguish.


It strikes me how different The Wall is compared to everything Pink Floyd had previously created, yet it sounds very much Pink Floyd. Contradictory, yes, but true. We are far from Dark Side Of The Moon or Wish You Were Here, I guess the closest in sound is Animals. But The Wall is more desperate, harder, darker, more bombastic and lack songs that are over 5 minutes long. If Animals is a bitter reflection on our society, The Wall is Waters' self-therapy.

However, one can hear traces of Pink Floyd's earlier works. Take the druggy introduction to Empty Spaces, which could have been on a record like Wish You Were Here or why not More. Or the song Is There Anybody Out There? which I never liked, but that is far beyond what we usually describe as music. And when I hear the extremely bombastic Bring The Boys Back Home I come to think of Atom Heart Mother, with its choirs and orchestral arrangements.


The album was released in 1979, the film had its premiere in 1982 where the music to some extent is different (different mixes, Bob Geldof sings on some songs, etc.). The story in brief is a rock star's growing isolation from the outside world and his mental collapse. My new hometown Montreal has a part in The Wall. It was at a concert in this city that Roger Waters spat a person in the audience in the face, an event that was almost traumatic for Waters and got him thinking on his and the band's increasing isolation from their fans.

Many argue that The Wall is a solo album by Roger Waters, which there is some truth in. Gilmour is co-author of only three songs, and keyboardist Richard Wright quit the group during the recording (but was hired as a musician during the tour).


The Wall is described as a rock opera. I choose to call it a musical, and just like that it belongs to the same genre as Sound Of Music and Jesus Christ Superstar. As a musical (or rock opera), it has a lot of theatrical elements that lower the experience for me. I don't know if it's music I listen to, or a play I experience. I find it hard to distinguish between the film and the album. Is the album a soundtrack to the film, or was the film created on the basis of the album? I'm really two-minded about this album.


Tracklist

Side A
1. In The Flesh?
2. The Thin Ice
3. Another Brick in the Wall Part 1
4. The Happiest Days Of Our Lives
5. Another Brick in the Wall Part 2
6. Mother

Side B
1. Goodbye Blue Sky
2. Empty Space
3. Young Lust
4. One Of My Turns
5. Don't Leave Me Now
6. Another Brick in the Wall Part 3
7. Goodbye World Cruel World

Side C
1. Hey You
2. Is There Anybody Out There?
3. Nobody Home
4. Vera
5. Bring The Boys Back Home
6. Comfortably Numb

Side D
1. The Show Must Go On
2. In The Flesh
3. Run Like Hell
4. Waiting For The Worms
5. Stop
6. The Trial
7. Outside The Wall



Wednesday, April 15, 2015

Kytäjä - "II" (2013)


My move to Montreal has meant that I've had to study French intensively during the spring, therefore the blog has been quite for a while. With the completion of the studies, life can now return to normal. To compensate for the absence, I'll today focus on a really groovy album from the Finnish deep and ancient forests.

I bought Kytäjä's album on chance, at some internet store's vinyl sale. The description of the music sounded cool, but the band I didn't know at all. It rested quite a long time in my shelf before I finally gave it a chance. I must honestly say that my expectations were not that high, music from Finland is not one of my areas of expertise, and I'm a bit suspicious of the Finnish people's gloomy mood.

But imagine my surprise when I listened to it. It's a really, really cool album, far from a depressive Finnish existence in a strange black and white movie. Definitions are difficult, and Kytäjäs music isn't easy to sort into any genre. A little bit of prog, some ambient, kind of a jazzy feeling (sometimes), some world music, it's relaxed, it's beautiful, it's interesting, it's instrumental (except for a song sung in Finnish) and it's damn good. Currently one of my favorite records. Somewhere on the net it's defined as eclectic prog. What do I know. The final song Horizon Painters is anyway a nice tribute to Brian Eno, the time before his journeys into ambient (think Here Come the Warm Jets). I think.


Kytäjä is / was a Finnish duo consisting of Jamo Alho and Janne Lastumäk, the band's name is the name of the village where they spent their teenage years. At the album, which is their second, they've got a bunch of fellow musicians. In addition to the traditional drums, guitar and bass you'll get flute and oboe, amongst other instruments. The record is really good throughout, the only weak track according to me, is the one with song, Song To The Sea. Perhaps it is my inexperience in hearing songs in Finnish that plays a part in this. Generally it is quite airy arrangement with much room left to move in, which is pleasant to the ears.

Anyway, Kytäjas second album can be warmly recommended to all. It gives life a pretty relaxed atmosphere, while at the same time inviting to focused listening thanks to its high quality and interesting arrangements.


Tracklist

Side A
1. Sailing Stones / Vaeltavat Kivet 2:34
2. Time and Tide Wait For No One / Päivi Kuluu, Varjo Venyy 4:02
3. 65 Knots / 65 Solmua 2:58
4. August Dove / Elokuun Kyyhkyset 3:36
5. Under The Sails / Purjeiden All 4:25
6. Sandy Island / Sandy Island 4:25

Side B
1. Fishermen / Kalastajat 3:39
2. Song To The Sea / Laulu Merelle 4:59
3. Indian Paths / Intiaanimatkat 4:42
4. Moon Shines, Dead Rides / Kuu Paistaa, Kuollut Ajaa 3:02
5. Horizon Painters / Taivaanrannan Maalarit 5:33