Wednesday 11 December 2013

Welcome to Issue Five of Razzmatazz

MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ALL OUR READERS!!! THANKS FOR YOUR SUPPORT!
What were the best albums of 2013?
Josh's Top Five:
5) Snapshot by The Strypes

4) Walkin On A Pretty Daze by Kurt Vile
3) Elements of Light by Pantha Du Prince
2) Shangri La by Jack Bugg
1) Melt Yourself Down by Melt Yourself Down
Kitty's Top Five:
5)  Push The Sky Away by Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds
4) Red Hot & Fela by Various Artists
3) Random Access Memories by Daft Punk
2) Matangi by MIA
1) AM by Arctic Monkeys

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And finally... HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO... RICHARD PRYOR

The best stand up comedian of all time was born on the first of December 1940 and sadly died of the 10th of December 2005.
Merry Christmas!

Friday 1 November 2013

Welcome to Issue Four of Razzmatazz

Macca's Back
PAUL MCCARTNEY: 'NEW' (2013)

So Lord Sir Macca has returned with his 394th album, released just in time for sticking in the  Christmas stockings of bust baby-boomers, worn-out groovers, frail and weedy pot-heads and un-embarrassable dancing uncles. Why does he do it? Isn't he rich enough? Surely he doesn't need any more islands stacked sky-high with tenners? Does he get some kinky kick from the online insulters who, knowing nothing of him, point at his Herman Munster Frankenmullet and laugh? Why doesn't he retire and let the world of Pop be run by da kidz? For a legitimate reason for his reluctance to hang up his plectrum, let's turn to another mad-haired Scouser OAP who still rampages the stages of theatres. Ken Dodd, when asked about the thought of quitting by Bob Monkhouse ten years ago, replied that retirement was when you stopped doing the job you didn't like. And McCartney is no reluctant performer. It's not just some job of work for him; it's his compulsion, it's his permanent itch. What would he do otherwise? He knows no other way of passing the time.
  And it doesn't really matter whether the records are good or bad, whether they're inventive or dull, pleasant or painful, brilliant or plain. That's not for him to decide. He hasn't the time to discern the qualities. He is, to his detriment and benefit, a great believer in the random aspect process and the first thought/best thought policy, and will leave some lyrical gobbledegook in place, simply because it sounds good to him. 'C Moon' finds him trilling that "I'd never get to heaven if I fill my head with glue", and 'Monkberry Moon Delight' finds him screaming about sitting in the attic with a piano up his nose. Does this mean anything? Should it? It's a delight that McCartney eludes the didacticism and naked confessionalism of Lennon's solo output (God, all those bloody one-dimensional Yoko songs! It was like being cornered by a humourless pub bore droning on about his car or Sunderland's chances this season. Very early on in his solo career, Macca trod lightly on the same espouse-the-spouse path as Lennon - e.g. 'The Lovely Linda' - but realised very swiftly that this was a creative cul-de-sac, the wrong kind of self-indulgence). McCartney's songs are as empty or full as you wish them to be. When, on 'Band On The Run', he sings "The rain exploded with a mighty crash as we fell into the sun", are we supposed to take this literally or metaphorically? McCartney litters his songs with lyrical red herrings, blue meanings or bare-faced codswallop  - who is Billy Budapest and why has he got Macca's pyjamas? Is 'Ram On' cryptic autobiography (his showbiz soubriquet, pre-Beatlemania, being 'Paul Ramon')?
  This doesn't mean that McCartney is oblivious to his faults (the schmaltzy ballads, the cooing and the wooing, the sloppy pop, the gloomy strums - Macca Tack, for short): 'Silly Love Songs', beneath its gloss and sheen, is a knowing satirical self-poke ("You would have thought that the world had had enough of silly love songs […] but what's wrong with that, I'd like to know, because here I go - AGAIN! - 'I love you, I love you'…"). His art is inconsistent, uneven, wayward, unbalanced, frustrating - but then so is Life itself. What's the big deal? Which great artist has never painted a crappy picture? And which crappy artist has never painted a great one? It's the way the cookie crumbles, the sausage rolls, the angel delights and the strawberry fools.
  This is as good a place as any to lean over to Francois Truffaut who is saying this at some point in time and space:
  "[T]he practice of cinema has taught us a certain number of things:
- It demands as much effort to make a bad film as a good one;
- Our most sincere film can look like a practical joke;
- The one we do most casually may end up going around the world;
- An idiotic but energetic film can be better cinema than an intelligent but flabby film;
- The result is rarely proportionate to the effort put into it."
  Francois' findings are as valid to record-making as to film-making.
  What we have here on 'New' is a more sober-than-usual Macca. If you want examples of how mad he can be musically, seek out and enjoy his 'Electric Arguments' record made in 2008 with Youth (under the group name The Fireman); there are more ideas and tunacy in its 63 genre-mashing minutes than in forty years of Eno theorising. The contributions of Linda McCartney are much missed - her untutored vocals were a vital, essential ingredient; broken glass in the face cream. And Macca's employment of four of the hippest producers smacks of a desperation for cool credibility. It's too late in the day for him to try and re-invent himself, a la Bowie or Gaga. He doesn't  need to bother about his public image. Despite his continual proclamations of the 'normality' in his life ("Very twee/Very me" - his self-description in 2005's 'English Tea'), we all know he's completely mad and has been since 1964. He took advice from an owl on the matter of whether or not to marry Heather Mills.
   'New' has, as one would expect, a few trademark eccentric lyrical touches ("I need someone who's a sweet communicator I can give my alligator to") but, in the main, this is a solid textbook for the art of pop composition. It rocks, it rolls, he reveals as much as he hides. It's a great listen but, more than the songs themselves, is his continuing talent, his ability to produce something new in that ancient framework of verses, choruses and middle eights. Whereas most of his contemporaries, and the generations following after, find their creative fires burnt out and having to rely on repackaging their pasts in more elaborate and expensive boxes  or churning out their back catalogue onstage, Macca continues digging away, sometimes hitting common rock, sometimes coming up with diamonds. In his eighth decade, he is Pop's Picasso, still curious, still hungry, still moving.

   There have been many pop star deaths this past year - some more expected than others - but the passing of Lord Sir Macca, he of the permanently aloft thumbs, would be probably the most painful for this writer to withstand. He has been making music for my entire life, he has effectively soundtracked it (without my knowing it), he has given me more joy (even the unintended hilarity of something ghastly like 'Wonderful Christmastime', or the devil's advocate argument of defending 'The Frog's Chorus' as a disguised anthem for the workers) than almost any other pop musician. He gives hope and inspiration in so many ways, and in these austere days, he is a treasure you'd be mad to lose. 
Review by Kitty Davies

NEWS
ASTRO QUITES UB40
"After a well-documented turbulent few years I feel that it is time to draw a line in the sand and move on. Since Ali and Micket departed, the band has been like a rudderless ship with no clear direction, no action plan. We've merely muddled our way through on a wing and a prayer. There has been a serious lack of communication between the band and management...
I know it may seem sudden to all who know me but my mind is made up and will not change. I think it's clear that I've had enough of being depressed, as I'm sure other members are, but the difference is I'm not prepared to continue to be miserable at home and work. So it's with a heavy heart I say goodbye. It was (mostly) fun while it lasted." - Astro

UB40 formed by brothers
Robin Campbell and Ali Campbell

HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO.... Scarlet Johansson whose special day is November the 22nd.

Johansson says: "It's a great thing to get older and learn I don't feel bound in any way to how many years I've lived. I identify just as much with my 86 year old Grandmother as I do with my sister."

Tuesday 1 October 2013

Welcome to Isuue Three of Razzmatazz

Wild About Harry?
HARRY NILSSON: 'FLASH HARRY' (Originally released in 1980; reissued by Varese Sarabande, 2013)

It's about time, isn't it? Time and distance provide perspective. And it's about time time was afforded to this strange misfit record. In the context of its debut release date - when Adam & The Ants, Siouxsie & The Banshees, Public Image Limited, Gang Of Four and The Jam were filling the music press weeklies (yes, Pop was weekly then), and rap was emerging with The Sugarhill Gang - 'Flash Harry' must have seemed like the fat boy at the schoolkids' party, the outsider who - whilst everyone else was snogging or dancing or getting drunk and having the greatest time because it was (most probably) the first time (and it's all about time, isn't it?) - stood in the darkest corner with a plate of Wotsits in one hand and a glass of warm Tizer (into which a passer-by has deposited a cigarette) in the other. Sidelined, ignored. Who needed a record of an ageing MOR singer with his all-star band and expensive studios and songs about - about - about nothing, really? In the eye of the glowing fireball of 1980 pop there was Talking Heads asking where we could find ourselves, Mark E. Smith of The Fall telling us how he wrote 'Elastic Man', Elvis Costello crying that the riot act be read, Chrissie Hynde of The Pretenders ordering us to leave her out of our private life drama, and Joy Division pleading for us not to walk away in silence. This was urgent, essential and vibrant stuff, compared to which Harry Nilsson's silly seemingly-insignificant songs about making lemonade or the rain falling are beyond light-headed. Empty-headed could be nearer the mark.

  Even if one were a fan of Nilsson, or even someone cognisant of his past track record - and if you don't know, then you are advised to seek out and enjoy the 'RCA Albums Collection (1967-1977)' box which was also released in 2013; seventeen discs of ten years' worth of mostly great music, retailing for a mere £40 (if that); come on, The Who are charging over £80 for their measly four disc 'Tommy' reissue. Hang on, where was I? Oh yes; if you knew Nilsson's other records - you would be scratching your napper, wondering what had happened to his talent for song craft. Nilsson's gifts were peculiar and particular; he was a master of melodic minimalism, forging songs from the simplest musical forms. 'One' barely deviates from a single note, 'Coconut' is played on a single chord. His bare-bones approach is there at its purest in the piano demos included on the RCA box; often, it seems as though he's singing different lyrics over the same riff. He treated songwriting as exercises in structure. The differences occurred in the arrangements, the instrumental colourings, the lyrical attitudes adopted. He was a chameleon but his most identifiable talent was in making the saddest 'happy' songs and the happiest 'sad' songs. He had no time for the intricate brow-furrowing virtuoso complexities of a Zappa or the stylistic adherence to a narrow soundscape like My Bloody Valentine. A child could play a Nilsson tune on a piano with one finger and pretty much capture its essence. But the question would be, "Would a child want to play any of the songs on 'Flash Harry'?" Because these numbers have none of the old lyrical hallmarks of Nilsson (he was a short story teller, a master of the vignette).
  A glance at the songwriting credits signals that, creatively, the well must have been running dry for Harry. Of the ten songs, two are written by Eric Idle, another two are cover versions, five are by Nilsson in collaboration (the one written with John Lennon, 'Old Dirt Road', first appeared six years earlier), leaving only one solo Nilsson composition. In 1977 he composed all ten songs on his final RCA album, the sublime masterpiece 'Knnillssonn'. What had he been doing for the intervening three years? What's he playing at? What he certainly was not playing was catch-up with modern Pop. Lindsay Buckingham was determined to make Fleetwood Mac more dynamic and edgy and experimental, and 1980 saw the double-album commercial suicide note 'Tusk' hit the record racks to the general bewilderment of Mac fans (who knew what they wanted - more of the same, thank you - and they didn't want that). Ray Davies finally dumped the rock operas and returned to short, snappy comic pop songs, albeit audibly neutered for the American radio stations. Even The Rolling Stones tried to 'punk up' their act, although, by the sound of efforts like 'Where The Boys Go', the only Punk record they had ever heard was Sham 69's 'Hurry Up, Harry'.

  Thirty-three years on, 'Flash Harry' finally begins to make sense. This wasn't an attempt to recapture former glories, or to consolidate a new fan base by adopting a 'New Wave' attitude or sound. Instead, this was a strange new step into some hybrid form of ambient Pop. Listening to 'How Long Can Disco On?' where Harry sleepily croons over a loping white reggae skank - with the snare drum beats matched by blasts on a fire extinguisher (was this some oddball salute to his late hotel-and-drum-destroying pal Keith Moon?) - it's striking how little happens (lyrically, it's almost haiku), rhythmically or melodically, but how much it stays in the mind. Days later, you may find yourself semi-singing "D.J… he play… reggae". And this strange after-effect I find occurring with numbers that (in a sensible, proper world) don't add up. 'Best Move' and 'It's So Easy' are so inoffensive and light and pleasant and apparently forgettable, it's bizarre that they should make any impression. Why should they? They are not about anything, they have no immediate hook or arresting riff, so why should they take precedence in the jukebox of my mind over Truly Important New Songs by the likes of Savages, Lorde and Kurt Vile? Conversely, the one story song, 'I've Got It!', about having the horn for a prostitute (only to find that she is a he and he has the horn too), is lyrically complex and difficult to follow. This isn't helped by Harry sounding heavily refreshed. Notoriously, he decided in the mid-70s to make the recording sessions a party and had alcoholic bars installed in the studio, with the tab picked up by RCA. The recent documentary, 'Who Is Harry Nilsson (And Why Is Everybody Talking About Him)?', was ghost-narrated by Nilsson from a series of taped interviews and it's quite alarming, even in this jaded age, to hear how smashed and slurred his voice is. And a point to consider when thinking about Harry's music is the effects, side and full-on and after, the laughing juice had on his creative impulses and the results. The closer on 1976's '…That's The Way It Is' is a calypso-cum-collapso ditty called 'Zombie Jamboree' where Harry is barely coherent through an enthusiastic burst of turps-nudging. Stuffed shirts may bemoan the fall from grace, that the man who soared such heights with his performance of 'Without You' should now be publicly disgraced, caught burbling face-down in a puke-strewn gutter. Yes, well, that is a moot point, but my painter friend Donald made the astute and correct observation that 'Zombie Jamboree' sounds like a Joe Strummer-sung track from The Clash's 'Sandinista!'  
   For reasons that have never fully been explained - which is good, because it means that we have something to talk about - Nilsson never performed a live show (apart from the occasional guest appearance on someone else's stage), never toured, never asked people to pay for a ticket to see him. We can all theorise as to the whys and wherefores. Fear (in some form) has something to do with it. Purity is another (having attained the best performances and sound possible on record, why ruin it by playing cavernous, echoey halls with rotten acoustics, terrible lighting and so on?). Also at work here is the belief that Pop is a young person's game and, at 39 (when 'Flash Harry' popped out), he might have felt that it was time to withdraw out of the limelight with some semblance of dignity. In fact, this was his final release - his last years before his death in 1994 were devoted to failed stabs at film production, and a small business concerning audio cassette books (including Graham Chapman's 'A Liar's Autobiography') - but, even here, he sometimes, somehow, seems to be barely present. An alternative title for the album could have been a play on the hit Peter Sellers film at the time, 'Being There' - 'Almost There', perhaps, or 'Not Being Here'. He appears and then disappears in a 'Flash' from the material. He's not even on the opening song! It's almost as though Nilsson has wilfully undermined himself by handing his producer's reins over to Steve Cropper, used the songwriting skills of others (the most Nilssonesque song in terms of subject matter and melodic construct is his bouncy cover of 'Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life' from the Monty Python film 'Life Of Brian'). It's as though he's passing the baton on to others and, with a tip of the titfer, saying, "I'm off, chaps. Thanks for the ride."

   Such is the nature of Art, it's often the case that the less there is in the artwork (a Rothko painting, or a minimalist composition), the more one can see or hear in it. The reverse is certainly true with Bob Dylan who, even at this late stage in the game, confuses quantity for quality and will happily trot out 10 minute songs that have absolutely nothing worth hearing. And though 'Flash Harry' is neither the most representative or the best (whatever that means) Nilsson collection, it throws up - sorry to use that expression - a whole raft of questions about Pop music (its possibilities, its highways and byways, where it can go, where it mustn't, Pop as mode of personal expression, the depths and shallows). It is, in its own small, modest way, a brave work. It dares to be silly (when music became intensely serious) and to be bland (when Pop's very nature is to grab you violently and scream in your face). It may not be a great work of Art but it's a great work of Life. It's about -

  "Time, gentlemen, please!"    

And finally... HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO... John Lennon whose special day was October the 9th

Lennon says: "We live in a world where we have to hide to make love, while violence is practised in broad day light."

Sunday 1 September 2013

Welcome to Issue Two of Razzmatazz

Hello again,

Thanks for dropping by. Welcome to issue two.
The debut album by 15 year old John Lennon McCullagh features 12 brilliant songs. The album, produced by Alan McGee, was recorded in one day.  McCullagh is McGee's greatest discovery so far. Courtney Love's quote about McCullagh ("He does Dylan better than Dylan") is spot on. There may be similarities between the tune of McCullagh's Colour of The Sun and Dylan's duet with Bono Love Rescue Me but McCullagh's track has far more charm and he's also a better harmonica player. Full credit for McGee for managing to capture the feeling of classic 60s albums such as Blonde on Blonde and Freewheelin'.


Slipping Away features some lovely guitar playing and an astonishing vocal performance which made the hairs on the back of my neck stand up. In case you're wondering: John Lennon McCullagh is the name on his birth cerftificate. It's not a stage name. Let's give the last word to Alan McGee... "John Lennon McCullagh is influenced by Bob Dylan and Robert Johnson. I think it's great that the new young talent are coming through like Jake Bugg, The Strypes and John Lennon McCullagh. My friend John Robb thinks it's a teenage revolution - let's hope so."

We think the best new album this month is 6 Feet Beneath The Moon by King Krule (XL Records). Buy it in its double vinyl format. "It's a fucking masterpiece of craft and art" claims King Krule also known as Archy Marshall. Some songs on this debut are apparently five years old, written when Archy was just 14, others were written a few weeks back. Many critics have compared him to Billy Bragg and mentioned his strong London accent. I detect a bit of 80s Glasgow band Joseph K in the mix. Marshall says the name King Krule came to him after playing around with the title of the Elvis film King Creole. He says King Krule is about taking genres of music such as 50s Rock and Roll, Free Form Jazz, and punk and using them as meat. "My brain is a meat grinder. What comes out is King Krule"

And finally... HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO... Beyonce whose special day is the 5th of September
Beyonce says: "love doesn't hurt. Loving the wrong person does."



Tuesday 30 July 2013

Welcome to Issue One of Razzmatazz


Introduction to the debut issue of Razzmatazz by Josh Clinton.
Hi There, nice to be with you! Welcome one and all to the first ever Razzmatazz which this month features reviews of Elvis Costello & The Roots, Clare, Doug Murphy & Paul Hamilton, and Morrissey. Sandie Shaw once sang Long, long live love. Well I say: Long, long live Razzmatazz. Hope you all enjoy your stay here. Get in touch if there's a band or singer you'd like the Razzmatazz crew to review.
Morrissey's classic debut album VIVA HATE has been reissued with a new song (Treat Me Like A Human Being), previously unseen photos and sleeve notes by Chrissie Hynde. Below Simon Paterson gives his verdict:


"Let's pretend that this is exactly the album Morrissey originally wanted to release back in 1988. That way we can dispense with gripes about 'Late Night, Maudlin Street' being slightly edited, or 'The Ordinary Boys' being excised altogether and replaced with a rough, unfinished-seeming song ('Treat Me Like A Human Being'), and the removal of the musicians' credits, and the changes to the album title font (it's now in Old English typeface - suitably Morrisseyan; the fact that it's difficult to read may have tickled him as appropriate), and so on. And let's not waste this short, precious time by throwing lines from his 'Paint A Vulgar Picture' back at him. Let's not finger point. You can get all that stuff elsewhere. We will, unavoidably, have to mention The Smiths, just for contextualisation purposheshhhhh, but really, let's just address the record as a record. The meaning and the moaning.

The opening noise we hear is of the pause button of a reel-to-reel tape recorder being released and a guitarist already in squall mode. That detail, plus the white reggae bass riff and the heavily-gated snare drum, sets 'Alsatian Cousin' (and the rest of the album) in its mid-80s framework. Its production values are deeply dated but the self-eating envy is timeless. Morrissey is consumed by the jealousy of the jilted, demands that he be told whether the one he loves loves someone else. He admits that he already knows full well - he has the gen (the brilliantly saucy detail of 'on a groundsheet, under canvas, with your tent flap OPEN WIDE!'), but he wants to suffer. 'Alsatian Cousin' is a bold and brash opener, with no discernible song structure (like most post-1976 white music there is no musical bridge), Morrissey rolling his Rs with ham actor gusto, and the song collapses in an unreconciled mess (much like love itself when it disappears). The same situation is addressed later in 'I Don't Mind If You Forget Me' - scholastic references link both songs - but in a more stoic, less vengeful manner. It's a buoyant, chirpy tune, a kind of laughing back the tears coping mechanism, but it has a lyric that has always irritated me: "Rejection is one thing, but rejection from a fool is cruel". That doesn't make sense. To be rejected by 'a fool' is surely preferable to rejection from a lover, close friend, parents or hero figure. "Rejection from a fool is bearable" would have been a better line, don't you think? What? You reject my suggestion? Well, you're a fool and your rejection is bearable.

'Little Man, What Now?' takes its title from a Hans Fallada novel but Rev. Morrissey takes his reading from a 1969 copy of the 'TV Times' or 'Look-In'. Like 'Alsatian Cousin', it's an atmospheric if tuneless cameo, with Morrissey keeping a steely grip on the slippery edges of remembrance. Has he ever revealed the identity of the 18 year old star? Does it matter? What is of importance here is the commitment to hold close and dear the stuff that magic springs from. Morrissey is that rare bird who seeks to fly to where the spirit might live (in 'Hairdresser On Fire', recorded during the "Viva Hate" sessions, he pleads to his affection-object, "Can you squeeze me into an empty page of your diary and supernaturally change me?"). He knows that materialism, with its in-built obsolescence, will never satisfy - and maybe that is why he has radically transformed (disfigured, some might argue) his back catalogue, leaving his fans "truly, truly disappointed". Morrissey sings plaintively and compassionately, not so much for the mysterious figure but for his fast-receding past, his only security.

'Everyday [sic] Is Like Sunday' is a masterpiece of album programming. This is the reward for surviving the opening two challenging songs of which die-easy Smiths fans would not have been too enamoured. (And this is one of the great aspects about "Viva Hate". From this distance in time, it's hard to recall that The Smiths were in a creative cul-de-sac and Morrissey was in danger of becoming lazy and self-parodic after only four years. Producer and co-writer Stephen Street managed to keep one of Morrissey's feet in a comfy slipper and the other in a hiking boot.) 'Everyday [sic] Is Like Sunday' is a culmination of Morrissey's gifts. Hairpiece 100's Nick Heyward, when interviewed about the craft of songwriting, singled out 'She's Leaving Home' by The Beatles, acclaiming the use of the verb "clutching". I similarly applaud '… Sunday' for its opening line, one of the great British lines in Pop, "Trudging slowly over wet sand". He then miraculously caps that scene-setter with a genius piece of Hancockian tragicomedy - "Back to the bench where your clothes were stolen." Street's grand, proud orchestration, cheerily teetering on the precipice of Last Night Of The Promposity, supports every acute lyric detail ("Etch a postcard" - an excellent observation; that's what you do because your pen has leaked). It is here where Morrissey puts his ambivalence to its limits - does one succumb to the drudgery of it all, or does one relish and exult in the broken-kitchen-sink comedy? Like the Jewish joke - "The food in this restaurant is terrible!", "Yes, and such small portions!" - Morrissey, in his travels and travails, has had a dreadful time and will be going back for some more as soon as possible.

'Bengali In Platforms' is supposedly racist but I don't see that. The line "Life is hard enough when you belong here" is contentious, yes, but - like "Rejection from a fool is cruel" mentioned earlier - I think it's just poorly expressed. What has been overlooked is the comic image he planted in the song's title: The protagonist is both out of step with fashion and clumsy and ill-fitting in society. It's deeply hypocritical of music journalists to accuse Morrissey of racism whilst their earphones are blasting anti-Semitic or misogynistic rap into their thin heads. And, no, I'm not upset about Morrissey's recent statement to the effect that he would vote for UKIP. He's from a long line of Right-of-centre Mancunians - Ian Curtis voted Conservative in 1979 and is therefore solely responsible 
for 11 years of Thatcherism; Anthony Burgess, John Cooper Clarke, Shaun Ryder and Mark E. Smith are non-Socialists - so his political leanings are of no surprise or concern. '… Platforms' is a pretty tune with an acid message beguilingly sung. And if it's discomforting to some sensitivities, it shouldn't cause sleepless nights. It's a truth-ache, that's all.



The strength and resilience of "Viva Hate" is in Morrissey constantly pushing his talents to the limits, seeking new ways to say the same things, or finding fertility in well-tilled fields. And, in the narrow scope of British indie pop, he is willing to experiment and be daring. 'Late Night, Maudlin Street' is overlong, and lyrically somewhat pointless, but what holds the interest is its very rambling nature and the point that it doesn't really have a point. It's a mind unravelling before your very ears but, typical of this coy boy, there is no full disclosure. As he crooned in 'Shoplifters Of The World', "My only weakness is - well, never mind". What is revealed is his terror of age (and, by logical process, and quoting Larkin, "then the only end of age"). On the final track, 'Margaret On The Guillotine', he requests that Thatcher die because "people like you make me feel so old inside". Morrissey's tragedy is he never felt young and all his life is a wistful longing to be elsewhere and somebody else. It's his pain that has provided us with so much pleasure. Forgive him his trespasses, even though he forgives no-one else theirs. He is not a perfect human being and "Viva Hate" is not a perfect album ('Treat Me Like A Human Being' is forgettable; I was forgetting it as I was listening to it) but that's not important. What's important is whether I would be sadder without either in my life and the answer is "Yes". Warts and all, I need him around to make pronouncements that have me chewing my fists and I need 'Suedehead' to restore my faith in the transportive power of Pop."
Album of the Month: Walk Us Uptown Elvis Costello & The Roots. (Blue Note).
Costello has never been a musical snob. The man has recorded Country songs, Punk songs, produced Ska albums, recorded duets with crooner Tony Bennett and made records with string quartets. Costello has also never made a secret of his love of soul music. One of his best selling singles in the U.K was his take on the Sam and Dave classic I Can't Stand Up For Falling Down. In more recent years he has collaborated with legends such as Solomon Burke and Allen Toussaint. Although it's probably fair to describe Chewing Gum (from his late 80s album Spike) as being "bottom lip biting, white man funk" but this album is something else.
His collaborators The Roots haven't put a foot wrong in twenty years and every record they've released is worth buying. To many The Roots are best known for being the tight little house band on Jimmy Fallon's chat show. After performing an excellent version of Black & White World with Costello on Fallon's show, Roots main man Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson and Mr Costello originally thought they'd put out an e.p for Record of The Day. However, the fine ideas and brilliant mistakes just flowed and flowed.
If you're a fan of Costello classics of yesteryear such as Watching The DetectivesPills and Soap, and Invasion Hit Parade - you are in for a treat. A few of his tracks have been re-worked, re-imagined or just played about with in a very happening way. The recent Metalica/Lou Reed collaboration was an idea that should have been left on the drawing board but this is something good.This collection of songs isn't Costello  trying to be a Hip Hop artist and it isn't The Roots trying to sound like angry young New Wavers - it's something entirely new and exciting. Co-producer  Steven Mandel is a vital ingredient as are The Brent Fischer Orchestra who appear on five tracks. This album is a killer and sounds better on each listen.


The Wise Up Ghost-website is up: http://www.elviscostello.com/micro/wise-up-ghost/



Kitty Davies' review of  Games by Claire and Fishes by Doug Murphy & Paul Hamilton.
Claire 'Games' (https://itunes.apple.com/gb/album/games-ep/id660705276) / Doug Murphy & Paul Hamilton 'Fishes'  (http://bisonics.bandcamp.com/track/fishes)
These two songs are diametrically opposing bookends to that immortal yet temporal thing called 'love'. Claire revels and glories in it - the newness and freshness, the love of being loved, the loveliness of loving. 'Games' is a summer(y evocation) of love. 'Fishes', by contrast, is the voice of a son burnt by love and now wandering and wondering in a dead wintry landscape.
  Musically, 'Games' and 'Fishes' are poles apart - Claire's sound is synthesised, mechanical, predictable, familiar (redolent of young love in bloom - the synthesis of minds, the mechanical nature of sex, the predictability of rituals of love, the ache to become familiar, getting to know all about you); Murphy & Hamilton's sound abruptly changes from the opening gambit of squelchy late-70s new wave (sarcastically satirical about the whole notion of putting down confessions in a Light Entertainment node; each line of the first verse is punctuated by onomatopoeic guitar effects, underlining and undermining the blows dealt by the bullying nature of Life) to a long, low-key vaguely menacing jazz riff that rises and falls like cold waves. Whereas Claire deploy repetition - the electronic, steady drumbeats, the one-line celestial melodic hook, the single note keyboard rhythm - to celebrate the oneness of true love, Murphy & Hamilton go to the other extreme by utilising repetition to signify the solitude and loneliness of a loveless state. Claire's tune is all-embracing, it's a dance tune (and who dances alone?). Murphy & Hamilton's is oppressive, it's a contemplative song (and who contemplates with another?).
  Lyrically, 'Games' is static; love is here and here it will remain. There are no shadows, not even in the brightly-sung refrain, 'It's all right / It's all right / As long as I can be with you'. It's a clear expression of wishing. 'Fishes', for all its six minutes, has no chorus and its lyric, like fish, moves constantly - from the outer reaches of the universe down, down, down to planet Earth and right down into a specific scene (I won't spoil it; the 'fun', such as it is, is following the narrative though to its tragically hilarious/uproariously sad end).

  Vocally, too, Claire and M & H are incompatible. Hers is a voice of the now-times; she has the patented ululation, the sensual longing, she is in tune and in time, she dips and soars, she is perfectly pleasing. And this is all right. Because love is all right. M & H, however, is the voice of the out-of-tune-with-the-times and out-of-time-with-the-tune. Stripped of the power of love, he moans, drones, screams and shouts. It sounds wrong. Because being out of love is wrong. But it's not wrong. This is pure naked emotion, an exorcism. It's a truth-ache in a pop world where so much else is a true-fake. 'Games' is a song of innocence - adorable, shimmering, shiny, shallow innocence - and 'Fishes' is a song of (hateful, fearsome, dark, deep) experience. Both are brilliant in their own worlds but don't ever expect them to get together over a couple of drinks.

And Finally HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO... President  Barack Obama whose special day is on the 4th of August
Obama says: "I don't oppose all wars. What I am opposed to is dumb war. What I am opposed to is rash war."