Tuesday 28 August 2012

VIDEO: EVERYTHING EVERYTHING - COUGH COUGH

Check out the video here

Here's the first offering from Everything Everything since 2010's Man Alive. It takes a few listens to fully dissect this mammoth but it is well worth the effort. Irresistable beats and trademark eccentric vocals mean that this track will stick in your head for the foreseeable. 


ALBUM: TWO DOOR CINEMA CLUB - BEACON


 On Friday, Two Door Cinema Club put up a stream of their eagerly awaited second album on Facebook for the ears of everyone who had not previously found their way to the leak which had surfaced at the beginning of August. After the success of their debut effort, this record represents a crucial moment in the band's development - would they push on and evolve their already successful sound or just make Tourist History 2.0?

Of course, the mantra "if it ain't broke, don't fix it" may well apply here, and opening track 'Next Year' is definitely a continuation of the sound that gained Two Door Cinema Club such a large and sprawling fanbase over the last few years, albeit with some pleasing electronic touches. 'Handshake' is Tourist History multiplied by 10, combining a signature bassline with a truly anthemic singalong chorus, a nailed-on future single. Here, though, is where the resemblances end.

The highlights of Beacon are the instances where the boys from Northern Ireland stretch out their limbs and feel for new territory. 'Sun' sees the band slow things down and grooving things up, even daring to throw in a smattering of trumpets. 'Someday', previewed in the album trailer, is an absolute juggernaut. Sure to become a fan favourite, it sounded flawless at the band's Reading set last weekend and can only get better as the band become more acquainted with it in a live setting. Elsewhere on the record, 'Pyramid' is by far the rockiest track on the album with its galloping drums and incessant driving guitars. 

If there is a weak link on Beacon then perhaps it is 'Sleep Alone', the first single taken from the album. At first it is hard to pin down why; it has all the ingredients for a classic Two Door Cinema Club track. Perhaps it is the song's positioning within the album; it is unfortunately sandwiched between 'Someday' and 'The World is Watching (with Valentina)', a gorgeous, gentle track layered with strings and electronics. As a result of this, a song that would have seemed strong at any other time comes across as extremely flat. 

Thankfully, this disappointment is short-lived. The latter half of the album hammers home the message that this is a more experienced, more mature Two Door that we are witnessing. 'Spring' is a real charmer of a track, carried along by sugar-sweet guitar and Alex Trimble's much more amorous tones. The title track is a magnificent closer, a carefully crafted piece which builds up texture upon texture and culminates in an explosion of expansive melodies. The triumphant tone which results is indicative of the confidence that radiates through the whole of Beacon. Here is a band that are not concerned about the tradition vs. progress argument; Two Door Cinema Club have at once honed their unique and successful formula and added to this formula, like a painter building up a masterpiece stroke by stroke. 

9/10

Buy Beacon here

Monday 20 August 2012

NEW MUSIC: MUSE - MADNESS

Check it out here

So the first official single from Muse's upcoming album The 2nd Law is finally here, after having been put back a week. And 'Madness' is, in a word, bonkers. It opens with slick, sticky synths and a vocal loop treated with the appropriate amount of auto-tuning for a 21st century pop track. It's the most minimal and straightforward track to come from the band in a long, long time, an effect compounded by Bellamy's simple lyrics about having a fight with Kate Hudson (as you do). By the time you are finally convinced that there really is such a thing as a minimal Muse song (although the Queen-esque vocal layering may have fooled you), the soundscapes return and a moving chorus kicks in. The skill of this song is in its ability to both make you laugh and become serious in the space of 4 minutes. The 2nd Law is released on 1st October. 

Muse

Wednesday 15 August 2012

NEW MUSIC: MUMFORD AND SONS - I WILL WAIT

Check it out here

'I Will Wait' seems an appropriate title for the first single from Mumford and Sons' new album Babel, as I have been waiting for what feels like forever to hear new material. The song sounds like it would fit right in on Sigh No More, but this familiarity is by no means a bad thing. By the end of the song I was singing along to the infectious chorus, playing air-banjo and stamping my foot like a good'un. Babel is released on 24th September, and you can preorder it from here.


Friday 10 August 2012

NEW MUSIC: MUSE - THE 2ND LAW: UNSUSTAINABLE

Yesterday (09/08/12) Muse announced a series of special preorders for their upcoming album The 2nd Law, which included a download of a video for 'The 2nd Law: Unsustainable' as a preorder perk. This is the song from which the music for the controversial album trailer was taken, and while the full song does not contain an awful lot more than the trailer already gave us, there is a stunning middle section in which the classical and "dupstep" elements are combined and accompanied by wails of despair from frontman Matt Bellamy. Reaction to this, as to all of Muse's work, appears to be mixed but overall the signs for The 2nd Law are very encouraging. New single 'Madness' is due to be released on August 20th.

Preorder The 2nd Law here