Today’s Track: Kings Of Convenience – ‘Rocky Trail’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and its time to catch up with some of the music that we missed earlier in the year as we approach the start of a new one, because it’s always been my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! For the Norwegian indie folk duo of Erlend Øye and Eirik Glambek Bøe, you could say that it has been a ‘Rocky Trail’ on their return to making music. After a 12 year hiatus, in which the Bergen native pair saw some relationships continue to form and dissolve, felt record label pressure, and they confronted the onset of their 40’s, the Cornelius collaborators have returned with their first album to be released since 2009’s ‘Declaration Of Dependence’, a #10 hit in Italy. During their time, Kings Of Convenience were the inspiration for the Indian dream pop duo Parekh & Singh, they topped MTV’s European list of the best music videos in 2004 for ‘I’d Rather Dance With You’ and they performed at the Primavera Sound Festivals in both Barcelona and Porto. Øye is also known for a side project, The Whitest Boy Alive. ‘Peace Or Love’, their latest LP and fourth studio album release overall, features two collaborations with the Canadian global indie pop star Feist, and it reached #26 on the UK Albums Chart. Recorded across five years in five different cities, ‘Peace Or Love’ was a mellow take on Easy Listening Pop where Bøe and Øye leaned into the appeal of ease instead of confrontation after a difficult period of time away. After all, despite envy of Europeans easy leisure, it is distinctly an American trait to look for cracks in their mirage or facade – and that facade, if there was one, was very smooth here. They recently went on tour to support the record, including a double-header at London’s Royal Festival Hall in September, and a share of these dates have already come and gone. However, they are still scheduled to visit sites in Sweden, Belgium, Netherlands, Portugal, Germany, Switzerland and Luxembourg from March until June 2022 – if Covid restrictions allow for it. Let’s hear more about their ‘Rocky Trail’ below.

“Another classic Eirik composition that skillfully ignores the verse-chorus-chorus blueprint”, Bøe and Øye said about the structure of ‘Rocky Trail’ in April during a press statement for Paste Magazine, concluding, “It’s pop music, but not as we know it”, in their teaser. A welcome re-introduction to the group and what their sound achieves well, ‘Rocky Trail’ features a humble approach to production where the Kings’ simply harmonize about life’s grief and a failed relationship with a man featuring “a world on his shoulders that needed lifting” on top of a wholesome and jaunting acoustic guitar riff. The duo recite sequences like “Brave enough to go climbing up a wall so high that no sunlight is seen through winter” and “Brave enough to go travelling the world without money to eat or sleep for” to express a deep sense of freedom and contentment that create buoyant vocal hooks and laminate reality in a more optimistic light. There are some moments of a bleaker nature, with the opening refrain of “Let’s say you give me one more time, One last chance to speak again, Let’s start from what we left unsaid” highlighting a shade of relationship break-up glumness, for example. However, the tonal differences are sugarcoated by a warm violin string section that adds a slightly bitter ache to the forefront of the track. Their intertwining vocals are uplifting, giving the anecdotes of travelling penniless and surviving hungry a more inspirational feeling instead of a pessimistic outlook. However, the in-sync and timbre voices of Bøe and Øye remain a key fixture of their charm, while lyrics like “I should have carried you to the top of the rocky trail” have moments of reflective contemplation to them, later giving the lyrics of “How am I to know about your problems and your load/I am blind to what you show” some additional meaning in the realm of forgiveness. Overall, ‘Rocky Trail’ was a solid Folk track that doesn’t show any signs of being left on the cutting room floor for 12 years. Instead, it feels like a paled back ode to restoration from the duo and it seems like a warm welcome back from them. Delicacy and care are given to both of their vocal performances, a tactic that perfectly expresses an innocence and veteran experience simultaneously, attained through their pitches. A beautiful and simple return to form.

That’s all for Monday, and, with that conclusion, it’s time for me and the Kings Of Convenience to lead you on your way through the ‘Rocky Trail’ of mid-December living. I hope that all goes well for you today, and please feel free to join me again tomorrow to resume our ‘Countdown To Christmas’ with a fresh new Grunge spin on a popular Christmas carol that was performed by a female-led indie punk band from Auckland, New Zealand. Signed to Carpark Records in the US, they have toured throughout the UK and some European cities supporting Death Cab For Cutie in 2020.

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Way Back Wednesdays: Babylon Zoo – “Spaceman”

Good Morning to you! I’m Jacob Braybrooke, and if you’ve just read the title of today’s post, yes, we are indeed going there, for ‘Way Back Wednesdays’, as we revisit an oddball novelty which somehow stayed at the top of the UK Singles Chart for five weeks, because it fits my target to write up about a different piece of music every day! It’s not something that we tend to think very much about these days, but in 1995, having your single being prominently featured in an ad for Levi’s Jeans was almost a guaranteed number one hit for your name. This stroke of luck came for the Jas Mann-led Wolverhampton-based Alternative Rock band Babylon Zoo in those times, who flew straight to the top of the UK charts with ‘Spaceman’ in 1996. It was a massive hit, registering first-week sales of 383,000, thus becoming the best-selling UK single since The Beatles ‘Can’t Buy Me Love’ from 1964, and as of 2013, it still remains to be the 79th best-selling single in UK history. It was a rock solid debut by all accounts, but it gained controversial opinions following its release because the tune was, as they say, not “as seen on TV” – or heard in this case. That’s because all of the kids who rushed down to the shops in its opening weekend soon found that the Levi’s advert only used the beginning and the end of the single, and not the trawling Grunge section that largely makes up the track’s duration. Their debut album, ‘The Boy With The X-Ray Eyes’ performed reasonably well when bolstered up by the power of the enormously commercially successful single, but their later releases failed to leave much of a mark in Pop music culture and, these days, Jas Mann is looking unrecognizable as the co-founder of Virgin Produced India, a film production company. 25 years later, is ‘Spaceman’ a misunderstood masterpiece – or a victim of its own hype? Let’s find out.

Due to the disappointment that it gave a chunk of Babylon Zoo’s potential fans upon their arrival, it’s not too bizzare to consider that ‘Spaceman’ has seldom been played on the radio ever since, and it joins the ranks of Sam Sparro and The Ting Ting’s in being a one-hit wonder that you never seem to hear anymore. It has been fondly remembered by some, however, and a Channel 4 poll taken by viewers in 2006 actually ranked it as #31 in a list of the 50 best singles by one-hit wonders, and the contemporary critics of the time actually didn’t pan it as harshly as you might predict. As for its sound, the beginning is created by the iconic opening that matches a high-pitched vocal sample that squeals to the tune of a funky Trip-Hop rhythm and a rolling drum machine pattern. The Techno riffs take a turn towards the more serious, though, and Jas Mann flips the switch. It soon becomes a moody undercurrent of Gary Numan-influenced Art Rock and Icy synth melodies, with more futuristic imagery being created by the squelching vocal samples that hides in the fray after the first chorus. Lyrics like “There’s a fire between us, so where is your God?” and “Electronic information, tampers with your soul” create some more bizzare space-themed visuals, while the energetic and heavily synthesized opening is replaced by electric alternative guitars and heavily metallic, near robotic vocals from Jas Mann, before we get a lurching outro that calls back to the opening, as we heard at the end of the Levi Jeans advert. To be fair, the very unique intro is a melodic thing of beauty, and there’s a few punchy hooks in the middle section of the track. Otherwise, this mostly plays out like one of those guilty pleasure film franchises, like Resident Evil or Escape Room, where you know the films themselves are a bit on the rubbish side, but you like them anyways because they provide solid dumb fun. The lyrics are absolute nonsense, lets get that out of the way first, with Mann spitting buzzwords like “fascist folks” and “intergalactic Christ” with no particular flair or substance. The chorus, although catchy, also lacks any particularly tangible lines that truly stick out and make me want to remember the vocals for years to come. All of this said, however, I think there is something undeniably charming about the off-kilter mixture of Bowie mannerisms and echoes of Numan that, although fail to elevate the track past its novelty sell-by date, manage to keep proceedings going at a nice pace and provide some bright appeal. To be absolutely fair to Babylon Zoo, I never found myself to be especially bored by this, for what that’s worth. It feels futuristic, funny and even a bit seductive in the process, although the pacing is off-balance and the track barely holds itself together coherently with the vastly different elements in play. On the whole, it’s not a masterpiece, but I also felt that it wasn’t truly a colossal disappointment like the media might have you believe at the time. It’s an enjoyable, but middle ground, tune.

That brings us to the end of the page for another day! Thank you for joining me, and, this time, I’ve got a question for you: Did you buy Babylon Zoo’s ‘Spaceman’ in 1996 and where did you buy it? As for tomorrow, we’ll be taking a break away from the electronic-heavy music with something softer that comes from a Wigan-formed band who have earned national daytime airplay on Radio X in the UK. They are signed to Island Records, and they have been credited for helping to save Wigan’s football club.

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Scuzz Sundays: The Hives – “Tick Tick Boom”

Not based on the musical of the same name from Jonathan Larson. It’s Scuzz Sunday!

Good Morning to you! It’s Jacob Braybrooke here, and it’s time to revisit one of the Pop-Punk anthems of the past for ‘Scuzz Sunday’, not forgetting that it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! ‘Tick Tick Boom’ marks the, very explosive, second appearance on the site from The Hives. The sharp suited Swedish Garage Rock 5-piece revivalists from the mid-2000’s have built a reputation for themselves as one of the best live Rock acts, according to music critics, and they made a claim to that fame with the release of their 2005 live DVD, ‘Trussels In Brussels’. ‘Tick Tick Boom’ was the opening track and lead single for 2007’s ‘The Black And White Album’, and the track was voted in at #99 in the Triple J Hottest 100 of 2007. It also reached #41 on the UK Singles Chart, and has been used as the theme track for WWE’s ‘Survivor Series’ pay-per-view event in 2007. You may have also heard it from the movies ‘Jumper’ and ‘The Nut Job 2’, along with several video games including ‘LEGO Rock Band’ and ‘Dirt 4’. As a side note, my mother is celebrating her 48th birthday today, and she reads the blog every single day as well as liking the Facebook posts, so a very special shout-out goes to her today. If you wish to leave a comment to wish her a lovely day as well, I don’t mind one bit. But, for the moment being, let’s get back to the task at hand. Set your detonator to ‘Tick Tick Boom’ below.

A fun fact for you is that two different music videos for ‘Tick Tick Boom’ used to circulate Scuzz and Kerrang, including the museum-themed, surrealist take on the track that you have just seen above my text, however, there’s an alternative video which is a staged, choreographed live performance of the track from The Hives, part of which was displayed in a Nike/Finish Line commercial. As for the track itself, the popular quintet aim for the charts for a fun Pop-Punk tune built on frenetic guitar riffs and neat Drum riffs, with recognizable lyrics like “I was alright/You come taggin’ along” and “I was right all along” that don’t seem to make much of an impression in terms of having any significant meaning, but it sounds catchy and rhythmic. The chorus is notable for the sound effects of a literal bomb explosion, which was the call of the producer – Dennis Herring – to be included on the track, and so it’s obvious that he wanted to really go to town on the general namesake of the single nearer to the time that it was being written. The chorus adds punchy hooks like “I got my eye on the score/I’m gonna cut to the core” and “It’s too late/It’s too soon” that all have a fairly loud delivery, while the tight, breakneck Bass guitar chords and the light Sonic modifications of the vocals were based on the same formula that had carried them a fair distance towards commercial success in their career’s peak time. Although fairly unimpressive, this was a fine effort. The sound effects would probably come across as cheesy to some, and these lyrics said nothing to me, but I felt the speedy Garage-Rock beats, the subtle electronic blips and the enthusiastic vocal performance added up to a decent level of engagement with the sound, for me. I could definitely picture this one being some good fun on a packed festival floor, although it’s difficult to argue the core ingredients of the sound are very typical for The Hives and didn’t reinvent the wheel at all. Still, it’s a fun track that, in some ways, went down like a bomb going off.

If you’re still wondering whether The Hives have been a part of a feature on the blog before, then I ‘Hate To Say I Told You So’. Give that previous post a look-in here: https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2020/03/08/scuzz-sundays-the-hives-hate-to-say-i-told-you-so/

That brings us to the end of the road for today, and here’s to another year of happy existence for my mother. Thank you for your continued support in making it this far, and please feel free to join me again tomorrow for the start of another week of new music recommendations. Coming up tomorrow, we will be looking at a Parisian electronic dance music producer who has enlisted the help of Bakar, Mac DeMarco and Juan Wauters for his debut album, which is out now on Ed Banger Records and Because Music. He was one of four members from the Electronica group Club Cheval.

Today’s Track: Loose Articles – “Kick Like A Girl”

Some football-related one-liners are just too off-sided to score a goal. New post time!

Good Morning to you! It’s Jacob Braybrooke here, and it’s time for me to get typing up for your daily track on the blog, just like always, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! I’ve got music to share with you which is being pitched very much as an alternative anthem to a large football tournament that is taking over our television guides at the moment – Euro 2020. It comes from the Manchester melodic Post-Punk 4-piece Loose Articles, who I hadn’t heard of before. ‘Kick Like A Girl’ was released as a single on June 10th to coincide with the beginning of the football competition. The all-female group have drawn comparisons to Wire and The Slits, and they have made NME’s 100 list for 2021. Describing themselves as “feminime and threatening, working and class”, Loose Articles have previously recorded tracks tackling club culture and public transport, releasing the ‘Orchid Lounge’ EP in 2019 and the double single ‘Up The Disco/Buses’ earlier in the year. Their latest offering confronts social issues surrounding their beloved sport, as fans of non-league club FC United Of Manchester and players of the interest themselves, and misogyny on-and-off the pitch. Let’s give it a free kick below.

“It’s a misogynistic slur which is said in football to a male’s player who’s not performing as well”, Loose Articles’ vocalist Natalie Wardie spoke of the single’s title of ‘Kick Like A Girl’, adding, “It suggests that women can’t play football, but we’re reclaiming that slur and throwing it back in people’s faces. We want to take these stereotypes within football and turn them on their head”, to the press release for the track, which has been selected for decent airplay by Steve Lamacq on BBC Radio 6 Music and released by the local indie label Dipped In Gold. A strident alternative to New Order’s ‘World In Motion’ or The Lightning Seeds ‘Three Lions’, Loose Articles’ anthemic ‘Kick Like A Girl’ uses discord and repetition to strong effect, mimicking the middle finger to gender-dominated sports attitudes. The lyrics mix edgy comedy with bellowing Post-Punk liberation after a punchy Spoken Word intro, with Wardie urging listeners to “Down ya Stella, and cop off with a fella, it’s football” and making jabs at Gary Linneker advertising Walkers Crisps with a raw, bellowing force. The chorus, in particular, is a ‘slide tackle’ of the narrow-mindedness of some men towards women in the culture created by football, with sharp lyrics like “You kick like a girl/Down pints like a girl” that exploit laddishness, and urge female supporters to engage in more gender-inclusive conversations around the sport. Musically, we’ve got sarcastic vocal remarks blending with aggressive guitar work to ‘kick off’ the intended aims of welcoming all people to the tribal joys of what football has to offer. This is simply delivered in a spiked, easily consumable package of forceful riffs and a frantic time signature, with references ranging from Beckham’s Mohican to Duncan Ferguson. The ending scorecard is a fun, enjoyable jolt of mood. More songs should have this mood.

It’s time to blow the final whistle for today! Thank you for joining me – and I’ll be back tomorrow to share some more brand new music with you. This time, it’s coming to you from a brand new, interesting indie Soul duo from Hackney releasing mellow singles on the Moshi Moshi Music label, and they’re the perfect duo to celebrate LGBT Pride month with. If you really liked what you just read, why not follow the blog to get notified when every new daily post is up and why not like the Facebook page here?: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Way Back Wednesdays: The Charlatans – “The Only One I Know”

Toast would say Tim bloody Burgess, oh wait. That’s Ray Purchess. Let’s go way back!

Good Morning to you – My name is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time for me to get typing up for your daily track on the blog, as per usual, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of new music every day! Perhaps somewhat overplayed at the time, The Charlatans ‘The Only One I Know’ is certainly one of the sounds of the past that has influenced those of the present. It reached #9 in the UK Singles Chart, and it made Tim Burgess and Buds some important figures of the Madchester/Baggy ‘Indie’ era. Burgess has been a hero to many with his listening parties on Twitter ever since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, and now that seems to be finally reaching a visible end, The Charlatans have announced a special 30th Anniversary Tour of the UK and Ireland for this December. Like many, the group are acknowledging that a year has been lost for them due to the pandemic, and they’ve amusingly crossed out the “30th” on the publicity poster and replaced it with a “31st” label. Titled the ‘A Head Full Of Ideas’ tour, an accompanying box-set will be made available, featuring five albums and an exclusive bonus single. Released from their 1990 debut album, ‘Some Friendly’, Tim Burgess wrote in his memoir ‘Telling Stories’ that ‘The Only One I Know’ sold over 250,000 copies. Let’s revisit the old single below.

One fun fact about ‘The Only One I Know’ is that it’s continued to be memorable, and so it was used for an advert campaign for Cadbury’s chocolate in 2010. Two years later, it was also used in the Marshall Lewy-directed indie film ‘California Solo’ starring Robert Carlyle. You may also be familiar with a Funk-styled cover version with vocals by Robbie Williams which appeared on Mark Ronson’s LP, ‘Version’, in 2007 – and so The Charlatans’ traditional set wind-downer is still never many miles away from mainstream media exposure. Built from some lyrics that were directly lifted from The Byrds’ 1967 track ‘Everybody’s Been Burned’ and a Hammand Organ Riff that is a nod to Deep Purple’s rendition of ‘Hush’ from 1968, ‘The Only One I Know’ is a surprisingly funky look at romantic interests in the music scene. The lyrics of “The only one I know/Never cries, never opens her eyes” and “The only one I know, Wide awake and then she’s away” seems to imply that a romantic interest is the only one that our narrator feels a logical intimacy with, although a direct meaning is never made abundantly clear. Lines like “Everybody’s been burned before” and “Everyone knows the pain” feel more conclusive, however, and so the vague sentiment of our vocalist expressing his feelings as a victim of unrequited love makes it relatable enough to us as listeners. The instrumentation is relatively upbeat, with a frequent set of funk-inficted guitar licks and a highly baggy groove giving it a lick of danceability. The memorable, off-kilter keys riffs gives it just enough of a Garage beat to make things appeal to DJ’s, and so the crossover appeal feels welcome. The vocals and general production sound a little unpolished, with a slight DIY aesthetic that reminds me of the 60’s counter cultural sound that The Cribs explored on their latest album. The brief interlude towards the end provides for a “Pure Pop Moment” and the more dance-oriented coat of paint to the overall package makes it stand out among the likes of Ocean Colour Scene or Ash nicely enough. The sound is admittedly a bit commercial, and it’s definitely something that my least favourite radio station, Radio X, might overplay to the death like they do with Oasis or The Killers (or Noel or Liam Gallagher after playing Oasis), but, that little pet hate of an observation aside, it’s not a knock on the credibility of The Charlatans on the whole. Overall, it’s still a pleasant, solid track that sounds fresh enough for it’s time, and it crosses over to casuals nicely.

That’s all for another week! – Time is flying past and I hope that it stops doing so because I’ve got important deadlines for my Masters degree to complete, you know. However, join me back here in roughly 24 hours time for some more brand new music, this time coming from an emerging indie Dream Rock trio from the sleepy town of Fleet, Hampshire. Signed to Fiction Records, the group were childhood friends who met at college in nearby Farnborough, bonding due to their love of 90’s Trip-Hop. They’ve made the ‘Hype List’ of Dork for 2021. If you really liked what you just read, why not follow the blog to get notified when every new daily post is up and why not like the Facebook page here?: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Today’s Track: Viagra Boys – “Girls and Boys”

A billboard said Niagra Falls is the tallest waterfall – Falls advertising. New post time!

Good Morning to you! Jacob Braybrooke here, and I’m kicking off the new week with another daily entry on the blog, as always, because it’s my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! ‘Girls & Boys’ is a Swedish cocktail of riotous Post-Punk and harsh Prog-Jazz from the ludicrously witty band Viagra Boys, who formed in Stockholm in 2015, as a collective of members originally from other local bands including Neu-Ronz, Les Big Byrd, Pig Eyes, Nine and Nitad from the local-ish music scene. They released their debut album, ‘Street Worms’ to decent reviews and cult success in 2018, with praise being directed towards the use of black comedy and satire within their lyrics. This long-player earned them IMPALA’s “Album Of The Year Award” in 2019. Fast forward to 2021, and the second full-length effort, ‘Welfare Jazz’, has arrived via their own label, YEAR0001. Lately, the band have also confirmed that a third album is on the way, telling us that it was largely self-produced and that it has already been recorded, according to the bassist Henrik ‘Benke’ Höckert. You can watch a live ‘Shrimp Session’ Viagra Boys recorded for the track, ‘Girls & Boys’, for free on their YouTube channel, but, for now, let’s take a listen to the studio version below.

‘Girls & Boys’ was co-produced by Matt Sweeney (Run The Jewels, Cat Power) and Justin & Jeremiah Raisen (Kim Gordon, Sky Ferreira), with additional work from past collaborators Pelle Gunnerfeldt & Daniel “Fagge” Fagerström (The Knife, The Hives), and you can also catch another track which sees Viagra Boys enlist the aid of Amy Taylor from Amyl & The Sniffers on their new record, entitled ‘In Spite Of Ourselves’, a cover version of the track of the same title by late-great John Prine released in 1999. ‘Girls & Boys’, however, is not a cover version of Blur’s classic, but a surreal and silly, Saxophone-smattered tour of outdated gender roles. It’s also ludicrously silly too, with a call-and-response format that sees a distorted voice sing “Drugs” and “Girls” as vocalist Sebastien Murphy pairs them up with one-liners like “The only way I can boogie down” and “They always wanna tie me down”. “Shrimps” is my favourite, and I believe this is an in-joke the band have with their fans, although I’m not familiar enough with the band to really say. I think the lack of context gives it a lick of abstract art themes, and makes these crazy hooks sound all the more random. The Brass instrumentation is abrasive and incendiary, as the clashing Post-Rock guitar riffs create a strange Disco beat of-sorts. The lyrics are all about partying at their most basic, with Murphy wailing about inability to socially connect, while the strength of the distorted guitar melodies and the overly aggressive qualities of the Jazz elements hint towards something that feels more psychotic and briefly unsettling. Whether this absurdist Noise-Punk disco roller is satirical or silliness is left quite ambiguous, but it certainly isn’t a particularly feel-good single by traditional means, despite the oddly danceable melodicism of the pace. Pure unadulterated mayhem. Chaotically sublime.

That’s all for now – I think we’re all going to need a little breather after that one. Join me again tomorrow, however, as we diversify things up with an in-depth look at a, perhaps less frantic, tune from a Trinidad-born composer and Steel Pan player who has been a founding member of Twentieth Century Steel Band, and has collaborated on projects with Blur and Morcheeba. His latest album has recently been released by Moshi Moshi Records. If you really liked what you just read, why not follow the blog to get notified when every new daily post is up and why not like the Facebook page here?: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Way Back Wednesdays: New Order – “Fine Time/Don’t Do It”

Just over 20 years later – Is there still ‘Truth Faith’ in this track to soar? New post time!

Good Morning to you! My name is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time again for me to get typing up for your daily track on the blog, because it is always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of new music every day! It’s Way Back Wednesday – where we revisit one of the important sounds of the past that has influenced the exciting, fresh sounds of the present. New Order are cool – and it’s about ‘Fine Time’ that we featured some of their material on the blog. Although this track probably isn’t given the same mainstream airplay as ‘True Faith’, ‘Blue Monday’ or ‘World In Motion’, it still reached #11 in the UK Singles Chart. Although I probably wouldn’t consider New Order to be one of my top favourite artists upon my initial instincts – I have consistently enjoyed the music that Bernard Summer and his co-horts have put out over the years, and since a bulkload of that music was from before my time, I think that has something to say about their funky musicianship and crossover appeal. ‘Fine Time’ was officially released in 1988 as the A-side of a 12″ Vinyl release, which included the B-side of ‘Don’t Do It’. Written and recorded partially while the band were on tour in Ibiza, the lyrics were modeled after a witty incident where drummer Stephen Morris’s car was towed, and he had nearly forgotten to pay the fine for the penalty. It was another modest hit for the band in the UK, but it also found success within the Top 10 chart in Finland, Ireland and New Zealand, along with finding commercial success in the US, where it landed a spot on three of Billboard’s genre charts. The track was later included as a single from the band’s fifth studio album, ‘Technique’, a year later. Let’s cast our minds back with the official music video below.

“My car had been towed away and I had to remind myself to go and pay the fine”, Summer said to his press team on the track back in the day, “I just wrote ‘Fine Time’ on this piece of paper, to remind myself to go get it and, I thought that’s a good title” was the statement that he used to explain how, at times, the human eye is the most responsible component for creativity. The critics were also big fans of the single, with Aaron Febre of Niner Times writing that it’s off-kilter sound had “refurbished the band and gave them a fresh start, and Ned Raggett of AllMusic writing that it “not only had paid attention to the acid-house/Ibiza explosion but used it for its own ends, capturing the frenetic energy that the musical eruption on British shores had unleashed with strength and style” in his review. It certainly has a vibrancy and a sense of experimentation which gives it a distinctive edge, especially for a group who were off the back of their commercial peak at the time, with the low-pitched voice samples and the hyper-energetic synthesizer sequences going for an outgoing vibe. The keyboard sections also feel wonky and not conventionally structured, with an overall Disco influence that feels subverted by the explorations of Neo-Psychedelia. The vocals contemplate the moral universe of the dancefloor, and by extension, party life. Lyrics like “You’re much too young, to be a part of me” and “You’ve got class, but most of all, You’ve got love technique” feel enigmatic, but witty due to their drunk-sounding effects. We get to a bridge were “The past doesn’t matter” is repeated by a robotic sound effect that evokes the Industrial Motorik of Kraftwerk or Visage, but the instrumentation feels less flat and the lyrics feel more daft. Overall, it is a likeable anthem because it sounds like something I would feature on my “That Was A Hit” segment of my radio show, in the sense that it feels like a hit that was unusual for being that. This clearly breaks away from the typical Pop format with the seemingly unrelated vocal hooks and the musical non-sequiturs making for a strange mixture. It felt like a bold creative direction for the group to take, however, because they were determined to re-invent with the use of a crazy, silly ode to the Ibiza Club and Acid House dance music explosion and, for all of these risks, it succeeds in paying them off.

Well, it really has been a pleasure to stop and muse as always… but it’s about “fine time” that I got on with a few other jobs on today’s list now. I’ll be ready to go back at it again tomorrow, however, with an in-depth look at a collaborative single that seems to have gone down as a hit for the BBC Radio 6Music listener’s group on Facebook, coming from a lesser-known US indie Post-Rock band from Illinois who based their debut album on the frontman’s early experience of living among a Cult. If you really liked what you just read, why not follow the blog to get notified when every new daily post is up and why not like the Facebook page here?: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Scuzz Sundays: SPAN – “Found”

Two albums – but they sold 55 million units during their life SPAN. It’s Scuzz Sunday!

Good Morning to you – I’m Jacob Braybrooke and this is “Scuzz Sunday”, our special weekly feature on the blog where we take a leisurely stroll down the memory lane of the ancient Emo-Rock and Pop-Punk releases, taken from between the time of the late-1990’s and the mid-2000’s, to see if these old dogs can still do any tricks – and that’s because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! Formed out of the ashes of prior bands, Squid and Explicit Lyrics, Span was a short-lived 4-piece band fronted by Norweigan singer Jarle Bernhoft. You’d be forgiven for not remembering their second album, “Vs. Time”, but their debut LP, “Mass Distraction”, was a sizable commercial hit. At the end of the day, Span still managed to sell over 55 million units of their records worldwide, and they spent a brief period touring in the US after selling out a headline tour in the UK and Norway. They also got to work with big-time producer, Gil Norton (The Pixies, Echo & The Bunnymen, Terrorvision) on “Mass Distraction”, which reached the Top 5 of the Norwegian charts in it’s heyday. So, what went wrong? Well, issues with their label (Island Records) led to US record deals with Geffen Records and Interscope Records falling through, and their debut LP saw an underwhelming delayed release in that market when much of their hype died down. It led to the follow-up only releasing in Norway, and although it did pretty well there, the band decided to call it quits after failing to recoup their costs and momentum in 2005, and the band posted a note on their website to announce this. Let’s relive those days with the single “Found” below.

Regrettably, I think the story of SPAN is a simple one and one that history repeats – it’s simply one of those bands who you cling to in your adolescence, but nobody really knew of them (Hands up those of you who remember “She Might” by Noise Next Door) or had really heard of their break-up (BoyKillBoy, anyone?) and that just closed the lid of can of worms. It’s an amicable situation for the quartet, though, with the band stating they “no longer share a common dream and ambition” and they had “decided to end this while we are still the best of friends” in 2005, and the members have all embarked on decent solo careers in the years since, with Joff Nilsen developing a TV career and Jarle Bernhoft has released numerous solo albums, so none of them were scarred much by the folding of the project. Span obviously had a vibrant Pop sensibility, as you probably noticed when you heard “Found” just a minute ago. The opening of the track reminded me of Foo Fighters, while the deadpan and more psych-driven harmonics of the distorted guitars made me think of Queens Of The Stone Age, and the rapid time signatures made me think of Maximo Park. It was a very contemporary sound at the time, and, for me, it feels like a mis-mash of a few of the era’s most popular groups. The lyrics are steadfast and the words are very hook-led, with an explosive refrain of “Vital information that can not be found” breaking into a Rage Against The Machine-ish guitar riffs that chugs along like a steam engine train on a collision course to Snowdon. The verses are more slower, and veer into basic Hard Rock territory. The verses of “My legs are sleeping, My body is weeping” and “A human disorder/A life on the border, a lack of a plan” are pretty unremarkable, but the themes of mental health are present, and this shows a decent attempt at handling wider issues with a focus on the internal male. The rest of the instrumentation is not minimal, with a duelling vocal from Bernhoft and Nilsen being attacked by a distorted drum part and the similarly trucking bass guitar riff. It feels like something I’d expect to hear on Radio X in the UK, with a very produced sound that just about qualifies as “Indie”. While the overall results are a bit forgettable, it’s an entertaining slice of Emo-centric Rock, with melodic hooks and instrumentation that sounds focused, never quite meandering to the wayside or getting too repetitive. You’d be forgiven for not remembering it, but I think there was talent that was never quite given the right opportunity to flourish here, and I think that a longer run, or a more supported one, for the band, could have encouraged more boldness to succeed.

Thank you for reading my post on the blog today! I’ve got more in store for you tomorrow, and if you’re a fan of your adventurous Alternative Folk, then I’ve hopefully got what should be a treat for you – with brand new music from a Michigan-originated group who have recently been teasing a new follow-up since their last album, released three years ago, with a collection of live-streamed shows entitled “Alive From Whispering Pines”. Best known for their 2015 hit, “The Night We Met”, which has been streamed over 680 million times after being heavily featured in the controversial Netflix drama series, “13 Reasons Why”. If you really liked what you just read, why not follow the blog to get notified when every new daily post is up and why not like the Facebook page here?: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Today’s Track: Yung – “Such A Man”

The Danish Post-Punk quartet that are back to make a man out of you! New post time.

A good afternoon to you! I am Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s finally time – yet again – for me to get typing up for your daily track on the blog, because it is always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! One of the year’s early album releases that seems to have been slept on was “Ongoing Dispute” by Yung, a 4-piece Danish Post-Punk Revival group who have been away for five years. Their debut album, “A Youthful Dream” was released in 2015, and the group were simply not proud of that release when it was all said and done, and so they decided to go back to the drawing board for the follow-up LP, which saw the light of day last month on Fat Possum Records, and PNKSLM Recordings internationally. Led by 21-year-old Mikkel Holm Silkjaer, Yung were formed in Aarhus following his decade-long experience in local Post-Rock groups like Cola Freaks and Urban Achievers. He’s also ran the Shordwood and 100 Records labels. Check out the single “Such A Man” below.

“Such A Man” was inspired by “A recent personal experience” for Silkjaer, which “sparked a train of reflection on manhood”, for the lead vocalist, who noted in the single’s press notes “Growing up, masculinity was portrayed to me as something very one-sided. The experience referenced in the lyrics helped me realise a pattern in coping with loss and pain in the archetypal man. I think from a subconscious point of view, I needed to address that in order to fully re-evaluate my childhood image of manliness”, speaking on the ways that it fueled the writing process of the track. Instead of going for a quiet and pastoral observation of masculinity, this is a track with a high-speed momentum, and it has it’s feet firmly on the ground of 80’s indie releases. Weirdly, the psyched-up guitars and the straight-ahead Pop influence reminds me of The Cure. The direction is pretty informed sonically, with vocals like “His face is scarred by shame” and “He forgot his keys in the morning/And all the doors in that city are locked” feeling vague and open to a little interpretation. Meanwhile, the drums keeps the time signature rolling along pretty quickly, with a Cymbal crash following the Jangle-driven chorus that feels intentionally out of place, and allows for a breather after the Power-Pop driven hooks of the chorus, where Silkjaer chants: “Self-inflicted wound/Oh, you’re such a Man” over the top of a piercing bass guitar riff and an atmospheric lead guitar chime that adds an electronic stab of production. Lines like “He brings to mind the second amendment” feel intriguing due to the lack of an obvious context being implied, but the chorus is more power-driven and fast-paced, creating a hook that feels pretty catchy, and fit for a decent chant along at a live gig, in the process. This one gets a thumbs up from me, and that’s because it manages to provide more questions than answers for me, and it makes me want to find out where the band are going with the 80’s-influenced sound, with a somewhat mundane observation on living as a bloke in 2020 that is given a punchy uplift by the electric guitar work and the emphasis on the Power-Pop chorus. It also feels a little rare for a band to discuss the themes of manhood in the current day, so it captures my attention. A solid, full-throttle ride into the roots of Post-Punk.

That’s enough of me rambling on for another day! I’ll be back for more discussion tomorrow, however, as we take a deep dive into one of the year’s most highly anticipated new album releases so far tomorrow for our “New Album Release Fridays” pick. Known for their lengthy guitar-based sequences found within their production, this Glasweigan Post-Rock band have recorded seven John Peel sessions in the past, and the 4-piece are set to drop their latest long-player effort on the same release date of their debut single, “Tuner/Lower”, from 25 years ago, tomorrow. If you really liked what you just read, why not follow the blog to get notified when every new daily post is up and why not like the Facebook page here?: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Scuzz Sundays: HIM – “Buried Alive By Love”

It’s the day of St. Valentine, and for raising awareness of singledom. It’s Scuzz Sunday!

Happy Valentine’s Day – even if I don’t celebrate it. The truth hurts – but my truth is that it’s my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! It’s time for a new entry in our Scuzz Sundays series – where we revisit a classic from the Emo-Rock and Pop-Punk era’s of the late-90’s through to the mid-00’s, to see if there’s still quality to be found within them in the new age. This week’s pick is loosely based around today’s minor holiday, even though I would moan and complain that I’m a firm believer that, if you love someone, you should do things to show that EVERYDAY, and not just a one-off Sunday in February. Load of nonsense. Anyway, now I digress. HIM were a very successful Nu-Metal band in the 90’s who originated from Finland. “Love Metal” was probably their best-known record, but “Razorblade Romance” achieved platinum album sales, and “Deep Shadows and Brilliant Heights” reached the top ten of the album charts in several countries too, with each of the recordings getting strong sales and decent reviews particularly in European territories. They had a few ups-and-down’s in the way of reunions and lineup changes, but they officially remained active until 2017 in some capacity, where they finished off their farewell tour with a final set on New Year’s Day at the Helldone festival. Even now, the group remains to be one of the most commercially successful Finnish metal bands of all time, and they have also won eight Emma Awards. “Buried Alive By Love” was the second single from their fourth LP, “Love Metal”, and it reached #30 in the UK Singles Chart in 2003. Let’s fully cremate our fears with the track below.

Interestingly enough – the character who you see in the old-fashioned music video was played by actress and singer Juliette Lewis, who was one of Hollywood’s “It” girls in the 90’s, and Lewis played the role of Mrs. Audrey Griswald in National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation in 1989. If that wasn’t enough, the video was also directed by Bam Margera of Jacksass fame, who also produced the official videos for another single, “The Sacrament”, from the same album. The pacing is fast and the guitar melodies are sharp from the very offset, with a hazy line of synth beats drowning out the distorted guitars when the opening verse comes in. Vocalist Ville Vallo sings about love being a source of rescue for a dark path that our narrator is treading down, as he recites the likes of “To cry is to know that you’re alive, But my river of tears has run dry” and “The kiss of vanity blessed me with a spiritual murder, And fed the gods of war insatiable” over the top of crisp drum beats and the strongly hook-based bridges of the track. The chorus has a sweeping and choral quality, with Vallo singing lines like “A cold heart is a dead heart, and it feels like I’ve been buried alive by love” and “If I wake before I die, rescue me with your smile” above the seemingly endless riffing of the bass guitar chords and the reliance on the drums to complement Vallo’s cinematic, wide-eyed vocals. The samples and the synths are a second thought, and the sudden changes in mood sell a very anthemic style. There’s a lot of production value here, and it’s clear that quite a sum of cash was raked in to make this project. That said, the songwriting is fine – if not defying many tropes or conventions of the genre – since there’s still smooth transitions between each section, and the large pop hooks of the chorus are left to have a nice impact. Though it does sound pretty commercial, the vocal performance is decent and I can picture the track being used in a geeky action video game-like flick such as Scott Pilgrim vs. The World. Overall, it’s not unentertaining or unenjoyable, although it’s not the most organic sounding track that you’d probably hear all week. It is decent, however, with good effort put into the production of the track and a solid vocal performance from Vallo to complement the fast instrumentation. Quite generic, but there’s enough talent to make it worthwhile.

That’s all for now – I hope you have an enjoyable Sunday in whichever way that you choose to spend it. We’ll be kicking off a new week’s worth of posts on the blog tomorrow – starting off with an in-depth look at a Canadian R&B project who shares his name with a type of environmentally friendly bread – albeit a different spelling – and was shortlisted for the Polaris Music Prize in 2013 for their debut album released via Innovative Leisure. If you really liked what you just read, why not follow the blog to get notified when every new daily post is up and why not like the Facebook page here?: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/