Music at Elsewhere
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Joanna Newsom, Ys (Drag City)
13 Jan 2007 | <1 min read
Arriving at the tail end of last year, this album was too late for it to be considered by reviewers and so has largely gone unacknowledged. But it has appeared on numerous international "best of 2006" lists. However be warned, this baroque folk is not an easy proposition: Newsom sometimes sings like Bjork channelling Shirley Temple, and with lavish string arrangements by Van Dyke... > Read more
Joanna Newsome: Monkey & Bear
The Who: Endless Wire (PolyGram)
6 Dec 2006 | 1 min read
Right from the opening bars here - a repeated keyboard figure like Baba O'Riley and a crashing power chord - Pete Townshend puts you on notice that the sonic power of The Who, now just him and Roger Daltrey as sole survivors of the original band, is undiminished by the years. Of course, that's the easy part and when Daltrey enters his voice lacks its former wallop. But that's an impression... > Read more
Chris Smither: Leave The Light On (Shock)
1 Dec 2006 | <1 min read
Smith is a grizzled-sounding roots-country singer whose spare songs glisten with his guitar playing, and whose baritone sounds whiskey-cured and filled with gravitas. He's no chicken (he's 62 and recorded his first album 33 years ago), but that only adds to his authentic, throaty country-blues which owes debts to Mississippi John Hurt, but also respects more recent songwriters. (He covers... > Read more
Chris Smither: Cold Trail Blues
Pete Molinari: Walking Off The Map (Shock/EMI)
30 Nov 2006 | <1 min read
Molinari is from Chatham in England, but he might have stepped out of an East Village folk club in 1962. Dylan is an influence (he covers Bob's old Tomorrow Is A Long Time, and there is another early Dylanesque title and antiwar song in The Ballad of Bob Montgomery). But his stripped bare style and memorable, emotional and unwavering voice sets him apart as very much his own man, even though... > Read more
Pete Molinari: Indescribably Blue
Little Axe: Stone Cold Ohio (Virgin) BEST OF ELSEWHERE 2006
30 Nov 2006 | <1 min read | 2
Little Axe is guitarist/singer Skip McDonald who first came to attention as a member of the Sugar Hill Gang, the house band for Sugar Hill Records which released such classic rap tracks as Grandmaster Flash's The Message. McDonald went to England and joined Adrian Sherwood's On-U Sound crew and was a member of the innovative Tackhead which threw blues, dub, reggae and hip-hop into the... > Read more
Little Axe: If I Had My Way
Smog: Rock Bottom Riser (EMI)
29 Nov 2006 | <1 min read
Smog is the astonishingly prolific Bill Callahan who has moved from a deliberately untutored style into what might be loosely considered alt.country. This four track EP (with Jim White, Joanna Newsom and others) is elegantly plain and unadorned, and sets you up for a new album early next year. If you haven't heard Smog you need to approach with caution: there are probably a couple of... > Read more
Smog: Rock Bottom Riser
Dudley Benson: The Orders, Medals and Decorations EP (GRR)
26 Nov 2006 | <1 min read
Trained as a chorister, Benson was awarded a choral scholarship and became head soloist at the Christchurch Cathedral Choir, then when he went to university he majored in composition. Hardly the standard route for most indie-pop artists. Among the six tracks here are two orchestral pieces, a remix of his terrific single It's Akaroa's Fault, and a remix of the earlier I Don't Mind. Benson... > Read more
Karen Dalton: In My Own Time (Light in the Attic/Global Routes)
26 Nov 2006 | 1 min read
Dalton, who died in 93, was one of the leading lights in the New York folk scene in the early 60s and was much admired by Bob Dylan. The track Katie's Been Gone on Dylan and the Band's Basement Tapes is allegedly about her, and Nick Cave's When I First Came To Town was inspired by her. Cave, neo-folkie Devendra Banhart, Fred Neil and many others have been fans of her aching, world weary... > Read more
Karen Dalton: In a Station
Nigel Gavin: Visitation (Thrum/Rhythmethod)
26 Nov 2006 | <1 min read
Guitarist Gavin is probably well known to more people than they realise: he has played with the Nairobi Trio, the Jews Brothers, created the guitar orchestra Gitbox Rebellion, and has been on albums by Wayne Gillespie, Ross Mullins and Whirimako Black. But it has always been his own albums -- limited edition and so under the radar for most people -- which have seen him at his most exploratory... > Read more
Nigel Gavin: The Land Beyond Goodbye
Pernice Brothers: Live a Little (EMI) BEST OF ELSEWHERE 2006
26 Nov 2006 | <1 min read
The vehicle for Joe Pernice, this band make slightly askew alt.pop and haven't been averse to pulling in orchestration when required. Where once Pernice made alt.country with his band the Scud Mountain Boys he now nods to Brian Wilson and classic pop of the mid 60s. In many ways it is unfashionable music because it isn't as alternative as some might like, but this album glows with... > Read more
The Pernice Brothers: Grudge F*** (2006)
Gomez: Five Men in a Hut (EMI)
26 Nov 2006 | <1 min read
No one reviewed this double disc when it came out late last year which is not surprising: although this British band picked up the coveted Mercury Award for their 1998 debut Bring It On they seem to have been a critic's favourite since. No one else seems to care which is a shame, they are terrific -- if slight uncategorisable: alt.country, alt.rock, alt.pop? Just alt. This sprawling... > Read more
Gomez: 78 Stone Wobble
Dudley Benson: Steam Railways of Britain EP (Golden Retriever)
19 Nov 2006 | <1 min read
I'll tell you more about former Christchurch (now Auckland) singer-songwriter Benson soon, but it's enough for now that he was a real discovery for me when he opened for Casiotone For The Painfully Alone some months back. It was just him and a few cheap keyboards and tape machines (so he could sing counter melody with himself) and his songs were charming, sometimes a wee bit dark, often witty... > Read more
The Radio Dept: Pet Grief (Pop Frenzy/Rhythmethod)
19 Nov 2006 | <1 min read
From the same label as the wonderful Camera Obscura (see the archive) comes this easy-on-the-ear blend of electronica and pop located somewhere between early Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark and the Pet Shop Boys. But not really. There is a more dreamy quality to the slightly distant vocals, and despite the drifting melodies (think the Church gone electronic) there is an emotional despondency... > Read more
The Beatles: Love (EMI) BEST OF ELSEWHERE 2006
19 Nov 2006 | <1 min read
You've probably read about this one already (maybe even by me in the Herald where I wrote an extended review) so all it needs is for you to hear these musical collages pulled together by the former Beatles' producer George Martin and his son Giles. It is impressive listening and the assimilation of one musical idea into a completely different song makes for some real ear-swerves, especially... > Read more
The Beatles: Within You Without You/Tomorrow Never Knows
The Magic Numbers: Those The Brokes (EMI)
12 Nov 2006 | <1 min read
Regular readers of Elsewhere music pages will know my long and abiding love for pop music, and this band is one of my favourites for two reasons: their debut album sparkled with memorable pop melodies, and when they played at the Big Day Out they came on stage smiling and waving. They looked real happy to be there, and that attitude was infectious. This follow-up to that impressive,... > Read more
Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglova: The Swell Season (EMI)
12 Nov 2006 | <1 min read
As I've said previously, music arrives on this Elsewhere page by virtue of its own strength rather than as a hip new thing bannered by promotion and prior critical acclaim from overseas. This album is another of those. I had no idea who Hansard was (I've subsequently learned he's the singer with an Irish band called The Frames whom I've also never previously heard of) and all I know of Irglova... > Read more
BEST OF ELSEWHERE 2006 Bonnie Prince Billy: The Letting Go
29 Oct 2006 | <1 min read | 1
Will Oldham has appeared under so many noms-de-disque it can hardly be his audience's fault if it hasn't been able to keep up: he's been Palace, Palace Brothers, Palace Music, Bonny "Prince" Billy, Bonnie Billy, been a member of various bands, and sometimes even appeared under his own name. It would take a work of great insight and length to make clear distinctions between all... > Read more
Bonnie Prince Billy: Love Comes To Me
The Louvin Brothers: My Baby's Gone 1955-64 (Raven/EMI)
29 Oct 2006 | 1 min read
About 15 years ago (at least) I saw a short-lived Auckland band The Dribbling Darts of Love which was fronted by Matthew Bannister, formerly of Sneaky Feelings. I'd always liked Matthew's music and this outfit -- with his wife Alice on cello -- were excellent. He played one song that I asked him about afterwards and he said it was by the Louvin Brothers. I didn't think I'd heard of them, but... > Read more
BEST OF ELSEWHERE 2006: Micah P Hinson
29 Oct 2006 | 1 min read
Micah P Hinson and the Opera Circuit (Sketchbook/EMI) Hinson from Texas came to Auckland in August last year for a low-key show at the Wine Bar on K Rd, playing to a capacity audience of about . . . ahh, maybe 30 people. No matter, he was darkly engrossing and his spare songs of loss and pain wouldn't have sounded out of place if Kurt Cobain had sung them. (Not dissimilar drug problems for a... > Read more
Ray LaMontagne: Till The Sun Turns Black (Sony)
15 Oct 2006 | <1 min read
Singer/songwriter LaMontagne is a reclusive type whose previous album Trouble of two years ago was a critical favourite and even managed to sell around a quarter of a million copies. Not bad for an unknown whose music has a deeply personal and cathartic quality, and hardly sounds chipper or media friendly in his tight-lipped interviews. He says he envies musicians who are entertainers,... > Read more