The latest releases reviewed
CUT COPY
In Ghost Colours
Modular
****
Cut Copy's 2004 debut,
Bright Like Neon Love, showcased a band rather boringly in
thrall to French house.
In Ghost Colours, by happy contrast, is nothing short of a
masterclass in how to combine regulation dancefloor templates with
indie ensemble spontaneity. Producer Tim Goldsworthy has clearly
been worth his weight in, well, gold. Not alone has he emboldened
the Australian trio to experiment with My Bloody Valentine-style
randomness, thus taking them beyond the overly clinical ethos of
their earlier work, he has also persuaded frontman Dan Whitford to
go easy on the cheesy vox effects. Standout track
Unforgettable Seasonis the most enchanting song this
reviewer has heard since The Immediate's
Let This Light Fill Your Eyes. Think an amalgam of New
Order, ABC and Daft Punk, with Bob Geldof's French cousin on vocals
and Kevin Shields on production. Yum.
www.cutcopy.net
DARAGH Ó DÚBHÁIN
Download tracks:
Unforgettable Season, Lights & Music
DEUS
Vantage Point
V2
**
Before the Dewaele brothers shook things up, Deus were
easily the most interesting Belgian musical export. The follow up
to 2005's erratic
Pocket Revolution, Vantage Pointis an even more obvious
attempt at crowd-pleasing rock than its predecessor. Time has not
been kind to Tom Barman's creative instincts. The vulnerable
quirkiness that set his lyrics apart has been replaced with a
contrived, grating machismo. Over-produced and under-written, the
likes of
When She Comes Downand
The Architectare crying out for a definable melody. Guest
appearances from Elbow's Guy Garvey and The Knife's Karin Dreijer
Anderson fail to lift the album above mediocrity. With Barman and
Klaas Janzoons the sole remaining original members and without
Craig Ward's subtle touches or Stef Kamil Carlens manic influence,
Deus have become the antithesis of everything their 1990's art-rock
selves stood for.
www.deus.be
BRIAN KEANE
Download Tracks:
Slow, Smokers Reflect
THE JIMMY CAKE
Spectre and Crown
Pilatus Records
****
A piano chimes like a clock before a soundtrack
typical of Nick Cave's westerns strikes up. Thus, The Jimmy Cake
introduce their unforgettable third album. Line-up re-jigs and a
half-decade hiatus have led to an extraordinary blossoming. Nine
members plus a string quartet and brass section equals an
orchestral ambush of multiple genres. Each track is built up
steadily with gradients of sound to produce atmosphere in spades.
What comes off most is the sheer elasticity of the group as
musicians. There are intricate crests and troughs, instruments
added and subtracted and the odd trademark crescendo.
The Day The Arms Came Out of the Wallcelebrates its
post-rockism and the repetitive piano of
Haunted Candleis worthy of Steve Reich. Clarinets, pianos
and strings billow out over 54 sublime minutes of what is their
best work yet.
www.thejimmycake.org
SINÉAD GLEESON
Download Tracks:
Jetta's Place, The Art of Wrecking, Red Tony
THE DODOS
Visiter
French Kiss
****
It's all about the strum, and when DoDos guitarist Meirc Long
goes hell-for-leather with his acoustic plucking, you really have
to check that you've strapped yourself in. Long and percussionist
Logan Kroeber are The DoDos, a San Francisco duo whose second album
is an extravagant riot of kick-out-the-jams punky blues. Sure, they
try out plenty of other styles for size - they take a liking to a
gospel flourish here or set their hats at a countryish route there
- but, like many inventive American musical explorers of late, they
always come throbbing and thundering back to the blues. What's
noticeable, too, is how their song-writing is already so coherent
and rounded.
Foolsand
Jodiare ear-grabbing tunes whose melodies artfully flaunt
their pop credentials. Yet the duo also have an experimental streak
- tracks such as
The Seasonand
Godshow that the DoDos can also go deep and wide with the
best of them.
www.thedodosmusic.net
JIM CARROLL
Download tracks:
Fools, The Season
JOE CHESTER
The Tiny Pieces Left Behind
UPR
***
If there's a man who's been around the musical block,
it's Joe Chester. Between Sunbear, Sound of Bells and
Tenspeedracer, he has worked both sides of the recording desk. His
2005 debut was a quiet, acoustic affair, but here he has opted to
fill those previously unplugged spaces, using broader strokes.
Quite often, it works, as with the jangly harmonies of
Something Is Better (Than Nothing At All)or the
sub-Elliott Smith riffs and vocals of
The Right Place. The double-tracked vocal of
To Hold Onto Melting Loveonly reinforces the bittersweet
message, and a handful of talented contributors (Ann Scott, Gemma
Hayes) wander in and out adding flourishes.
The Tiny Pieces Left Behindcan feel like an uneven
journey, thanks to a tendency towards pedestrian guitars, but fans
will be delighted.
www.myspace.com/joechester
SINÉAD GLEESON
Download Tracks:
The Right Place, To Hold Onto Melting Love
BON IVER
For Emma, Forever Ago
Jagjaguwr
****
Here's proof that all songwriters could benefit from
spending a few winter months in a remote cabin in the wilds of
Wisconsin. That's where Justin Vernon found himself after his
previous band called it a day, and where he found the inspiration
for this set of eerie, elegant and enigmatic songs. But those
blurry, broken-hearted, scarred songs are only half the story -
there's also Vernon's haunting, distinctive voice to take into
account. His voice emphasises and underlines the emotions, sweeping
in waves of intrigue on
The Wolvesor shuttling you towards the more sinister side
of ambience on
Creature Fear. The songs themselves are masterly puzzles,
crafted by Vernon to mirror just what was going through his mind
during those cabin-bound months. You're unlikely to hear finer
examples of introspective splendour for some time to come.
www.myspace.com/boniver
JIM CARROLL
Download tracks:
The Wolves, Creature Fear
REBECCA COLLINS
Chameleon Blues
Mutineer
***
As befits the native of a seaside resort town, Rebecca
Collins knows all about songs that stretch away towards the distant
horizon. Helped by an excellent band (including Justin Carroll,
Kate Ellis and Sean Carpio), the Tramore-born singer has produced a
debut album that waltzes around moods, shades and shadows.
Throughout this thoroughly likeable affair, the assembled musicians
polish a series of dark, intricate and occasionally idiosyncratic
songs into smart and approachable tunes. The problem, though, is
that the songs are too often similar in tone and pitch to each
other. There's an over-dependance on Collins's voice to carry the
day, rather than letting some off-kilter arrangements or melodies
state their case. (Listen to the title track for an example of how
this is done). A more daring hand on the tiller might well have
steered these songs into stranger waters.
www.rebeccacollins.net
JIM CARROLL
Download tracks:
Chameleon Blues, Ghost Inside