Music at Elsewhere
These pages - sometimes with sample tracks and videos posted - introduce and review music which may otherwise go unheard and unnoticed. Subscribers to Elsewhere (free, here) receive a weekly e-newsletter with updates on what's new at the ever-expanding site. Elsewhere: an equal opportunity enjoyer. So enjoy.
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RECOMMENDED RECORD: Search for Yeti: Dark So Soon (digital outlets/vinyl)
20 Jan 2025 | 2 min read
From time to time Elsewhere will single out a recent release we recommend on vinyl, like this one by a three-piece from Wellington/Te Whanganui a Tara which comes in a gatefold sleeve with lyrics and extensive liner notes (including the names of scores of people who joined their PledgeMe fundraising effort) and on coloured vinyl. Check out Elsewhere's other Recommended Record... > Read more
What You Mean to Me
Corrella: Skeletons (digital outlets)
20 Jan 2025 | <1 min read
The Blue Eyed Māori hitmakers return with an album which ticks the boxes between reggae and soul but neatly weaves through social observation and jazzy horns (the smart Power), politics plus yacht rock (the less than subtle Cookie), reggae on the march (War with “I shouldn't want to fight no more, but in the end, it's always been this way”) and moments of quiet reflection... > Read more
War
Peter Perrett: The Cleansing (digital outlets)
18 Jan 2025 | 1 min read
Peter Perrett's post-punk band The Only Ones had no greater champion in this country than the late Dr Rock, Barry Jenkin. But then again, after a conversion worthy of St Paul, he fell hard for the new sounds like Teenage Kicks by the Undertones and most things by the Buzzcocks. But he did always seem quite smitten by Another Girl Another Planet. Opening with a surging energy,... > Read more
Fountain of You
Mokotron: Waerea (digital outlets/vinyl)
23 Dec 2024 | 1 min read
Many decades ago the great Irish singer-songwriter Christy Moore – no stranger to the bottle – said something like this about the Pogues: “Great, just what the world needs, another bunch of drunk Irishmen”. As someone who'd seen how the world responded -- embracing the image of the chaotically boozy band -- you can understand his frustration. But Moore admired... > Read more
Reo Totahi
Michael Kiwanuka: Small Changes
20 Dec 2024 | <1 min read
In one of those blink-and-miss it cameos, British soul singer Kiwanukahad momentary cameo in the Danny Boyle-Richard Curtis 2019 film Yesterday. Not that he needed the publicity, it arrived the same year his self-titled third album picked up the Mercury Prize. London-born to Ugandan immigrants, he had worked in studio sessions, released a couple of EPs, then came out the gates fast and... > Read more
Follow Your Dreams
Wendyhouse: Puddlekopf (digital outlets)
9 Dec 2024 | 1 min read
More than 25 years ago I heard an album by the slightly challenging but enjoyable avant-garde/literary-cum-music group Wendyhouse out of Wellington which used samples, spoken word and noise. I sent off my $15 and joined their fan club and received some little handmade magazines and such. It was kinda fun. But I lost touch with them until Bryce Galloway (who may be Mr Pudding) got in... > Read more
Meltflakes Pop
Various Artists: Reaction: The Label 1979-1989 (Frenzy Music)
9 Dec 2024 | 2 min read
Alongside the on-going celebration of Flying Nun (through new albums and vinyl reissues), Rob Mayes making more and more albums on his Failsafe label available and Peter McLennan's excellent book on the Deepgrooves label (although the music remains frustratingly unavailable), there are whole areas of New Zealand music being brought back to attention, notably through the independent labels which... > Read more
Forever Tuesday Morning, by the Mockers
The Coward Brothers: The Coward Brothers (digital outlets)
9 Dec 2024 | 1 min read
There a lot of great stories in rock: the rise of the Rutles from obscurity under the watchful eye of their manager Leggy Mountbatten; the British band that moved through any number of names (the Originals, the New Originals and so on) until they found fame as Spinal Tap . . . Then there was the bluegrass band Hayseed Dixie who were inspired by AC/DC albums found in a stranger's car when he... > Read more
Always
Beth Hart: You Still Got Me (digital outlets)
2 Dec 2024 | 1 min read
When the big voiced blues-rock belter Beth Hart came to this country in 2000 on a promotional tour, we pushed her LA Song to the top of our charts, her first number one anywhere. To be honest I don't remember the song that much but I certainly remember her. As I said in my interview at the time, “On what felt like one of Auckland's most humid days of the year, Los Angeles-based... > Read more
Wonderful World
Kim Deal: Nobody Loves You More (digital outlets)
2 Dec 2024 | 1 min read
Many years ago the British music writer Pete Frame would produce meticulously researched Rock Family Trees tracing the various comings and goings in scenes and bands, creating vast branches for groups like Fleetwood Mac. If he ever did the influential Pixies branches would include the career of bassist Kim Deal who later founded the Breeders (with Tanya Donnelly of Throwing Muses), then... > Read more
Crystal Breath
Norman McLaren: Rythmetic; The Compositions of Norman McLaren (digital outlets)
29 Nov 2024 | <1 min read
A few weeks ago we wrote about the late Scottish-born Canadian animator and film maker Norman McLaren and our distant relationship with him. We took the opportunity to do because of the Synchromy single/animated footage which appeared. It was one of those innovative pieces where McLaren drew the sounds on card and filmed them as . . . Better you just check it out here. What we... > Read more
Dots
A NOT RECOMMENDED RECORD: The Beatles: Live in Stockholm 1964
28 Nov 2024 | 1 min read
From time to time we have a Recommended Record, an album which you deserve to have on vinyl because it plays better that way, has an especially interesting cover (gatefold sleeve, lyrics, credits etc) and it just feels right on record. This album of the Beatles live in Stockholm comes in an excellent cover but . . . We knew what we were getting in to because we read the back cover (see... > Read more
RECOMMENDED REISSUE: Ray Charles: Crying Time (digital outlets)
25 Nov 2024 | <1 min read
There are any number of great Ray Charles albums (notably the two volumes of Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music) and numerous compilations, but this seminal album from 1966 has just been remastered and reissued so we bring it to attention. It included the slightly notorious (and hit) Let's Go Get Stoned but it is the Buck Owens title track with strings which is the real key.... > Read more
Crying Time
Arthur Ahbez: Arthur Ahbez and the Flaming Ahbez (digital outlets)
23 Nov 2024 | 1 min read
We have it on sort-of reliable authority that Arthur Ahbez is this local artist's real name, not a homage to the fascinating proto-hippie Eden Ahbez who wrote, among other things, the jazz standard Nature Boy. If Eden was proto-, Arthur sounds more post- because this album roams freely through psychedelic pop, country, folk-rock and more. It's quite a trip and if the destination is... > Read more
A Simple Medication
Adam Hattaway and the Haunters: High Horse (digital outlets)
22 Nov 2024 | 1 min read
No one could accuse Ōtautahi Christchurch's Adam Hattaway of coasting. Since his 2018 debut album All Dat Love with the Haunters, they've released five albums of Hattaway originals and co-writes, 2021's Rooster a double. They've ranged from swaggering Stones-like rock'n'roll and dancefloor disco-rock to power-pop and alt.country. The compilation Anthology... > Read more
Mercy for the Weak
RECOMMENDED RECORD: Dwight Yoakam: Brighter Days (Via Records/digital outlets)
18 Nov 2024 | 2 min read | 1
From time to time Elsewhere will single out a recent release we recommend on vinyl, like this double album in a gatefold sleeve with lyrics and track credits and in a classy cover. Check out Elsewhere's other Recommended Record picks . . . . In the rush to embrace new alt.country or young mainstream artists it's easy to overlook the career of someone like the... > Read more
If Only
Fazerdaze: Soft Power (digital outlets)
18 Nov 2024 | 1 min read
One of the most deceptively clever and memorable local pop songs of recent years was the Lucky Girl single by Amelia Murray (aka Fazerdaze). It had a gleaming and upbeat sound but a close listen revealed layers of uncertainty within it. It was on her excellent 2017 debut album Morningside where the classy, mostly upbeat guitar-driven pop belied a downward arc of insecurity in a... > Read more
Cherry Pie
Tessa De Lyon: Tessa's Album (digital outlets)
15 Nov 2024 | <1 min read
We encountered Tessa De Lyon under her given name Tessa Dillion as the singer and songwriter for the excellent Mystery Waitress. Their recent album Bright Black Night is wonderful and we concluded, “Bright Black Night – the title encapsulating the dichotomies in Dillon's astute, refined lyrics – is a rare one. It rocks as much as it penetrates”. De Lyon is the name... > Read more
Rain Swim
Blair Parkes: Blue Cloud (digital outlets)
11 Nov 2024 | 1 min read
Multi-instrumentalist/producer Blair Parkes has appeared a number of times at Elsewhere under his own name and as part of Running Club. He's not easy to pigeon-hole because he has effortlessly shifted ground from dense alt.rock to motorik pop and sometimes an amalgam of those + noise. This time out with longtime collaborator Miss Mercury (vocals) and bassist Marcus Thomas he announces... > Read more
Umlaut
Goodwill: Kind Hands (digital outlets)
11 Nov 2024 | <1 min read
By happy coincidence Goodwill -- Ōtautahi's Will McGillivray formerly of alt.rockers Nomad , not to be confused with the electronica artist The Nomad -- produced and mixed Mousey's impressive third album Mothers which we also review this week. And here he steps out with a debut album of lo-fi alt.folk pop which spotlights an aching and sometimes anguished vocal delivery atop... > Read more