Saturday, December 05, 2009

Pet Sounds

The new Name The Pet single is a bouncy pop choon more viral than YouTube embeds, while the promo admirably promotes the healthy benefits of physical exercise, although the sheer cheerleader chic of it makes it slightly dubious safety for work.



December is usually tragic in terms of PV updates, but hawk-eyed followers can expect a humongous gig review compendium, a long linkdump and the usual end-of-year lists before 2010 hits!

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Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Pulling Power

The first time we played Bombay Bicycle Club's debut album 'I Had The Blues But I Shook Them Loose' our initial reaction was of minor deflation, but it's a record which has built and built in our hearts as something treasurable. Central to the record's attraction is the other-wordly charms of 'Magnet', a song you can really get attached to, which is due for release in single format next month.



The BBC boys are on tour to support the release, and we definitely recommend the live experience.

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Thursday, June 11, 2009

Have Faith

The Dot-to-Dot review is undeniably late, but will be imminent. In the meantime, Katie Stelmanis supplies Single Of The Week with 'Believe Me' (out to buy on June 22 but the mp3 can be downloaded from NME), coming on like an electropop Frida Hyvonen to credible effect.



Witches nice.

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Monday, May 25, 2009

Pleasing Friction

While Parallax View unscrambles its brains sufficiently to write up a review of Bristol Dot-to-Dot, please entertain yourselves by watching the promo for 'Young Adult Friction' the highlight of The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart's set at The Cooler.



Single Of The Week, and you'd be a numbskull to disagree...

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Monday, May 11, 2009

Next!

Here at Parallax View we're not totally convinced yet by the hype surrounding the new St Vincent album, but we are suitably impressed by the spookily brilliant video for 'Actor Out Of Work' to promote it as our Single Of The Week.



Job's a good'un.

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Monday, May 04, 2009

Distance Makes The Heart Grow Fonder

Missed the chance to see Polly Scattergood live a few weeks back due to an unfortunate set of circumstances (she's playing Bristol's Dot-to-Dot, though, so we should catch up with her then). 'Please Don't Touch' isn't our favourite cut from her really rather good debut album (that'd be a toss-up between Bunny Club and Nitrogen Pink), but it is perhaps the catchiest, and is thus a pretty astute choice for single, and gives this Bank Holiday week the bouncy kickstart it needs.

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Friday, March 20, 2009

Spring Time

Polly Harvey! Wet 'n' Wild! In a bouncy castle! Press play!

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Tuesday, March 03, 2009

If You Freeze Tomorrow, Come Back Lucky

With light snow forecast for the next 24 hours, the above lyrics are good enough excuse to make Ladytron's 'Tomorrow' Parallax View Single Of The Week. Not that we need an excuse, as the song is ace, the video is beautiful, and 'sides which, it's our website and we rule!



Some gig reviews and a match report imminent, 'til then, keep it PV!

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Saturday, February 07, 2009

High Quality

Hippychick fuckyou anthem to chugging quasi-Strokes chords? We're in!!! And while we're at it, can we ask that all promo videos from now on feature someone playing the piano with stiletto heels? We're referring of course to 'My High' from Jonna Lee, the lead single from her upcoming sophomore album, which has a tender acoustic cover of The Killers' 'Human' on the flip (note: the lyrics still make no sense whatever).



Parallax View Single Of The Week, unless our highs deceive us!

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Tuesday, February 03, 2009

Alarms And Surprises

Not one, but two Singles Of The Week to compensate for the paucity of PV content so far this year. The Boxer Rebellion have been a band I've happened across on record and live here and there, but recent single 'Evacuate' raises their game several levels, probably the best new rock song for racing the pulse since Kings Of Leon's 'Sex On Fire'. Their second album 'Union' can be downloaded via ITunes for £4.74 which represents excellent value-for-money during the economic downturn, offering as it does widescreen mainstream guitar choons with post-rock trimmings that complement but never obscure the melodic flow of the songs. Nothing on it however quite matches the adrenalised momentum of 'Evacuate'...



If you're looking for something less obvious and mainstream, Fever Ray the new solo project from Karin from The Knife offers considerably more slower-burning thrills if taster single 'If I Had A Heart' is an accurate reflection of the rest of the album. The intriguing video certainly adds to the overall unsettling vibe.



Finally, another budding offshoot worth keeping an eye on is Lovers Love Haters which has Deborah Cohen transplanting The Organ sound into her new project with impressive results (found via Totally Twitterpated).

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Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Further Explanation Unnecessary

From the ashes of Million Dead, Frank Turner has carved himself a cultish solo career that could break into the mainstream with the creditcrunch-crushing wisdom that lies within 'Reasons Not To Be An Idiot'. This idiot's guide to not being a dummy is sunny enough to light up the life of the SADdest person this winter, and thus perks up Parallax View with a well-deserved Single Of The Week.

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Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Pip Pop Don't Stop

Is the new release from Ladyhawke (aka Pip Brown) the third or fourth single to be taken from her self-titled debut? In all the excitement of 'My Delirium' we kind of forget ourselves, but recover our composure quick enough to declare it Parallax View Single Of The Week.

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Monday, October 27, 2008

Twice Bitten

Fed up of Lykke Li yet? Nope, us neither, which is why we make the re-release of her debut single 'Little Bit' this week's Parallax View Single Of The Week. Turning coy courtship into scintillating sonic splendour, we love it loads.



Further Parallax View content due later in the week, honest guv.

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Saturday, October 18, 2008

Paris Is Yearning

Great songs about the French capital city are eifell-y rare but like Number 44 buses, when one comes along they tend to come in pairs (no anagram intended). So soon after Ladyhawke's fiery fave 'Paris Is Burning' this week's Single Of The Week from St. Albans' Friendly Fires is entitled simply 'Paris', a lush, plush promise of a tune that transcends the supposed limitations of their Klaxons-meet-The-Rapture template.

When we first encountered Friendly Fires live, it's fair to report we weren't entirely convinced, but having been lured to their debut self-titled album by the temptations of 'Jump In The Pool' we're coming round big time to their epic, seductive soundscapes, ably assisted on 'Paris' by the swooning harmonies of the girls of Au Revoir Simone (and you've gotta love the girls of Au Revoir Simone, right?).

Anyways, decided for yourselves by viewing the promo, which contains more morphing magnificence than a Tony Hart boxset. Not sure about the Nantes-y neckerchief, though.

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Thursday, October 09, 2008

Mega Tilly

How cool would it be for the mighty Moshi Moshi Records to score a really, really big hit single? That weird prospect has become a greater possibility than ever before with the news that Radio One have playlisted 'Beat Control' by Tilly and the Wall (out in stores this week, including on heavy 7" vinyl).

We'd kinda forgotten about TATW and their tap-dancing percussionist since seeing them in quick succession a few years back, but new album O is receiving the best reviews of their career, and Beat Control finds them sufficiently focused on the business of producing a Proper Pop Single to ease them into a position where mainstream recognition is a viable target.

The end result is so delirious with melody it could be Gloria Estefan and the Miami Sound Machine resurrecting a neglected Monkees classic, a veritable Wall of Sound that fully deserves the accolade of Parallax View Single Of The Week.

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Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Breaking Muse

For those of you wondering whatever happened to the Lykke Li lass, rest assured she's alive and kicking up a storm, earning herself in the meantime Parallax View Single Of The Week with her new single Breaking It Up (out in stores now). With many middle-aged middle-brow columnists who oughtta know better currently writing Madonna off as she turns 50, it's worth noting that there's something haunted, serious and driven undertowing even the most delirious of Lykke Li's tunes that recall the Queen of Pop in her early striving pomp.

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Thursday, August 07, 2008

It's A Fix

No doubt if we describe Essex boys Magistrates as the missing link between Keane and MGMT there will be many of you running to the hills (or at least pushing your back button). The rest of us, however, may decide that 'Make This Work' does the job nicely in terms of a sharp, smart piece of bespoke MOR. The Parallax View County Court Judgement is: Single Of The Week.


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Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Profile Song

Dublin's impressively bolshy Fight Like Apes take on the prettyboys again with 'Lend Me Your Face', purloining physiognomies in a two-minute riot of colourful, snarling strop-pop. The Parallax View Single Of The Week is out this week, but the face facts are that as there's only 500 copies of 7" yellow vinyl been pressed, the chances are if you get one and bust it up they won't replace it.

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Monday, July 21, 2008

Because We Say So

Parallax View first encountered Rosie And The Goldbug at this year's Dot-to-Dot festival in Bristol, and we were suitably impressed with their bouncy, colourful choonage to look out for future recordings. The wait is now over, with the release of their War Of The Roses ep, available with immediate effect from iTunes. The title track is a breezy delight, and like so many of this year's best songs is unashamedly pop in the way it alchemises sounds and sentiments into giddy thrills.

We're not sure where the Cornwall/London trio stand when it comes to the Lancashire/Yorkshire divide, so will avoid any white/red rose faux-pas by delivering a fresh, blooming Parallax View Single Of The Week to their doorstep as an alternative garland. You know it makes scents!

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Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Stripped Down Sound

Six weeks after we opined that 'I Like You So Much Better When You're Naked' would prove to be Ida Maria's breakthrough hit, the NME are agreeing with us and Radio 1 are playlisting it. And now you won't need x-ray vision to find out for yourself what the fuss is about as it gets physical release from Monday (21st).

Whether it's Ida's louche delivery, the catchiness of the chorus or the ever-so-slightly dirty good-time feel that drenches proceedings like a midnight sweat, it's not because we're down to the bare bones that 'ILYSMBWYN' gets this week's undressed-to-thrill Parallax View Single Of The Week.

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Monday, July 07, 2008

Tennessee Silly'uns

Everything we've ever heard before from The Hold Steady has left us feeling 'hmm...okay'. Until now, that is, with the release today of 'Sequestered in Memphis' (streamed in full on their MySpace page), which takes their Springsteen/Costello schtick and delivers it several levels up with a barnstorming chorus which we intend to roar loudly when we're drunk very often indeed.

More fist-pumping fun than a Nadal/Federer five-setter, then, but if you feel the need for intellectual justification for enjoying a choon, wordnerds can glory in the bands' purloining of 'sequestered' into the rock lexicon, stealing for themselves a Parallax View Single Of The Week, in the process.

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Tuesday, July 01, 2008

Ten KO

Some debut singles smack you in the face straight away with such a sure, sweet hit it becomes almost impossible to imagine the follow-up can offer anything but a reduced impact. Double A-side 'Bearfight/Y'all Come Back Now' from Toronto's Ten Kens is no such beast, however. It's the sort of debut that's so mysterious and enthralling in the way it alchemises different elements (wistful Americana, scuzzy garage-rock stylings, sludgy metal, spacey Besnard Lakes atmospherics) that it leaves you wanting to hear much more from them so that you can finally pin their sound and mojo down.

A debut album is due for September release, with a European tour to follow. Until then, it took Ten Kens to make 'Bearfight/Y'All Come Back Now' but just one Ken to make it Parallax View Single Of The Week.

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Monday, June 23, 2008

School's Clout

The School/Flicklisten/The Puncture Repair Kit, Swiss Concrete @ The Bullingdon Arms, Oxford, Thursday June 19 2008, 8.45pm.

The Bullingdon Arms is a short taxi ride away from Oxford's main rail station, a smallish pub with friendly, fetching bar staff and a big backroom area where the bands play. Ben and your long-distance lurker meet up with a couple of the SWSLer's charming co-workers, and get waylaid watching Germany beat Portugal in the Euro2008 Q-F so only catch the last few songs from The Puncture Repair Kit. Their boisterous, slightly ramshackle take on indie-pop reminds your comparison-crazed correspondent of The Strange Death Of Liberal England, but we hope the rest of the set was less impressive because a) we hate to have missed out on anything and b) we'd just lurve to be able to say The Puncture Repair Kit flat-tyred to deceive.

Flicklisten is a guy who comes from Ohio but has lived in Oxford for four years, a singer/guitarist occasionally accompanied by a young lady who plays a violin shaped like a pair of scissors (a cut above the usual instrument, natch). He has a good voice, knows how to get a meaningful, sombre strum from his guitar, and has a droll line in tinder-dry banter, but his songs, on first listen anyway, are more interesting than truly memorable.

This last charge is certainly something you could never level at our learned friends The School, who've happily mastered the knack of catchy tunes addressing bold sentiments, embellished with 60s girl-pop stylings yet undertowed by savvy indie knowingness. They seem to be a Rosie and at least one Ryan short of the line-up when we last saw them, but Liz is in good, giggly form, describing Oxford as very pretty once you've found it, a reference to the maybe-Multimap-induced mayhem of their journey into the city. Of tonight's set, the songs from last week's Single Of The Week 'Let It Slip' ep prominently feature, there's a mystery cover version that no one gets, and the small matter of a dedication to their 'longest-travelling fan - Ken!' for their closing number 'All I Wanna Do'.

Your marathon-man mitherer hides his blushes for just long enough to grab a few words with Liz at the end of the show, as the band pack away their equipment in readiness for a trip to Spain for a festival performance. She insists the recent departures were amicable and not the result of a Mark E Smith-like hire-em-fire-em ethos, and reveals a new band member is forthcoming who will cover both instruments. Talking of covered instruments, we don't have to get our twelve-inch ruler out as Liz very kindly autographs our copy of the 'Let It Slip' ep before we wave her off to Spain. But not before she reveals an addition to The School timetable: a debut album due early next year!

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Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Slip Hip Hooray!

Dead Kenny's family always wanted him to go to Oxford, but little did they suspect his first venture into the city wouldn't be to university but to go back to The School. The Cardiff popsters are playing at The Bullingdon Arms in two days time, to celebrate the release of their 'Let It Slip' ep this week on Elefant Records, of which we plan to pick up an autographed copy or we'll be waving our twelve-inch ruler around in disgust.

We've heard enough already to make it Parallax View Single Of The Week, however, the kicking intro, doo-wop backing vocals and handclaps making for a slick sonic delight not unlike Camera Obscura as produced by Phil Spector during one of his more coherent moments. Enjoy the video while you await the live review.

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Saturday, June 14, 2008

Ship Shapes And Bristol Fashion

Dot-to-Dot Festival, Various venues in Bristol, Saturday May 24 2008 and Sunday May 25 2008, 2.45pm-11pm.

This is your erudite explorer's first time at Dot-to-Dot, and on only our second expedition to Brizzle itself, and special thanks are due to new city resident Alison for providing the hospitality, company, laptop access and orienteering skills as we traversed the city in search of indie-rock thrills. Bristol seems almost unfairly blessed with unusual venues, with things kicking off on a moored-boat-cum-nightclub Thekla, and other sites including a converted church (Trinity) and prison (the appropriately named Fiddlers), all adding to the sense of adventure and discovery.

All aboard the good ship Thekla, our first band of the fest were Telepathe (pronounced by the band as telepathy as if spoken in a foreign accent) who featured (running theme alert!) an androgynous lead singer who looked for all the world like a cabin boy until she opened her pipes. Technical difficulties bedevilled the New Yorkers' set, which had something of a shambolic air (the sexy drummer abandoned her instrument for most of the set), but somehow through it all, by combination of sullen cool and some beautiful, fascinating songs, they seem to just about get through it all with their allure intact.

Then caught a couple of songs by serious young men The Detachments, which was enough to make you walk the plank, so headed off to rockpub The Fleece where Dublin's Fight Like Apes turned Bristol into the Wild West for half-an-hour, striding across the bar counter and wrestling each other in the moshpit during a cathartic and hugely enjoyable set, with former Parallax View Single Of The Week 'Jake Summers' the crazed centrepiece amongst their other harder, slightly grungier material. FLA also afforded us our first encounter with Bristol's most noteworthy superfan, a tall ginger bearded fellow called Geoff/Jeff whose propulsive stage-front duracell-dancing antics were a significant ongoing feature during festivities.

Downstairs at local roots venue The Louisiana, Sid Delicious were offering some skewed, off-beat thrills, while upstairs met back up with Alison to catch some of Eugene McGuinness' more traditional folk fayre, which should offer some appeal to fans of the Norwegian troubadour Sondre Lerche. Much more to our liking was Esser back over at Thekla, who looked tetchy and preoccupied during the soundcheck, but with his band got everybody dancing with jerky, infectious, and ever-so-slightly ridiculous pop music all set to create waves everywhere if there was any justice in this world.

We should have followed Geoff/Jeff's purposeful gait towards the Fiddlers, but instead got slightly lost and so despairingly missed Southampton's Thomas Tantrum performing former Parallax View Single Of The Week 'Shake It! Shake It!' (dispatching your most famous song early in the set seems to be another emerging trend) although what remained was nevertheless impressive, albeit more conventionally rockin' than their strop-pop SOTW. Top marks too to the very pretty lead singer for taking the time to publicly thank Geoff/Jeff for his sterling dancefloor exertions, and the dishing out of the free badges afterwards.

We elected to stay in Fiddlers to catch Micachu, who've been recording with Matthew Herbert and are starting to make a noise in London. They make heavy weather of the start of the set, the singer appearing to be in the 'attitude' stage of a day's drinking, and our attention wanders to the consideration of whether the drummer is a boy or girl (the former, if you're interested). Things do improve as the set goes on, and maybe in the studio with a disciplined producer their recorded output might be worth exploring.

Sunday morning was spent trawling MySpace to identify some bands worth catching, and the day eventually took us by surprise in terms of offering an even wider array of thrills, despite getting lost in one of Bristol's less salubrious spots in search of Trinity, where we saw a couple of uninspiring bands kick the day off amidst the anti-climax of Team Waterpolo pulling out. Much better was to follow, however, with Woodbridge's Cheeky Cheeky And The Nosebleeds proving a genuine revelation back at Fiddlers, despatching urgent (East-Angular?) guitar pop with energy, enthusiasm and that raw fearlessness you get from a band that's twigged they're on the cusp of something transformative. Daft name, then, but brilliant choons, particularly the marvellous anthem 'Slow Kids'.

This inspires your adrenaline-rushed arsehole to stuff in quick snatches of bands during an intense period of shuttling between venues and a strict three-songs-and-then-you're-gone policy which we only break for Red Light Company at Fleece, because they are excellent value, because 'With Lights Off' is a majestic classic, because the lead singer looks like an even skinnier Tom Petty, but also because by this stage we're knackered. Bonus points for the ecstatic group hug afterwards, too, which seemed genuine and this gang mentality will serve them well in the music industry travails that are sure to follow.

Around RLC we also found ourselves rattled by the rush of Pack AD's butch, bruising take on modern blues in Louisiana; impressed with the colossal high-energy post-rock guitar squalls of Leicester's Maybeshewill at Fleece; smiling like a silly-'un to the giddy 80's guilty pleasures of Cornwall's Rosie and the Goldbug at Thekla and left feeling slightly cold by moody Swedes Dag for Dag back again in Louisiana.

Things were then topped off in Thekla with The Mae Shi nearly stealing the whole weekend in a suitably scurvied piratical style, their jittery, attention-deficited noise-pop keeping everybody hugely entertained. We've heard of bands canvassing their fans before, but we've never seen it quite so literally demonstrated as when the band haul a sheet of tarpaulin over the moshpit and all dive inside under it, where they find themselves, amongst others, rubbing pneumatic shoulders with the omnipresent Geoff/Jeff. All in all, a wonderfully in-tents performance, then.

Cutting Pink With Knives have the opposite effect to The Mae Shi's inclusive gestures, in one of their last ever live performances, with frightened punters scampering away for safety as the lead singer took off his shirt and attempted to bully those at the bar into the moshpit. The music was slammin' and powerful in a kind of Beestung Lips-with-the-brakes-off intensity, and although we weren't really in the mood for it, it was kind of fascinating to watch as a piece of theatre, even though the search for anything remotely resembling a melody proved a fruitless task.

Then it was back to The Fleece for our last show of the festival: Metronomy, who seemed to be trying to be Klaxons so hard it hertz, wacky light circles emblazoned on their chests, and all. They were OK, to be fair, a reasonable soundtrack to the last few drinks of the weekend, but nothing to write home about in comparison to The Red Light Company, The Mae Shi, Fight Like Apes, Cheeky Cheeky And The Nosebleeds, Esser, Rosie and The Goldbug and Thomas Tantrum, who made up my magnificent seven from this delightfully dotty weekend.

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Pearls Amongst Swine

Cat Power, Carling Academy 2, Birmingham, Tuesday June 10 2008, 9pm.
Laura Marling/The Melodica, The Melody And Me, St.Paul's Church, Birmingham, Thursday June 12 2008, 8pm.

This week sees the release in solo format of two of our favourite songs from albums we haven't talked about much thus far on Parallax View, so in a frothing fit of indecision we've made them joint Singles Of The Week. First up, 'My Sunken Treasure' is the hidden pop gemstone buried deep within The Duke Spirit's surprisingly robust second album 'Neptune', lilting melody and interesting bittersweet sentiments intertwining to fetching effect. Laura Marling's 'Cross Your Fingers' is perhaps the choice cut from her really rather good indeed debut album 'Alas, I Cannot Swim', it being unusual for a folk song to have so many multiple hooks, and Laura's frisky vocal rendering of slightly macabre lyrics adding to the intriguing and strangely seductive appeal.

Perversely, 'Cross Your Fingers' was one of the least inspiring tracks at her gig in St. Paul's Church on Thursday, the drums overpowering some of the subtleties that really makes the song work. Overall, however, it was a triumphant performance in a stunning setting - it was your sacrilegious scribe's first gig in a church (as evidenced by our run-in with a pew door hinge) and it was only a few goblets of communal wine short of a complete success. Laura was in personable, chatty form, sometimes playing with a band, sometimes without, a spine-tingling introduction of 'Ghosts' and, ironically(?), 'You're No God' amongst the standouts. A few words, too, for support act Melodica, Melody And Me, who compensated for their drummer being AWOL celebrating his birthday with some good-spirited shanty-like choons, generously laced with delicious harmonies, their appeal lying somewhere between the likes of The Coral and the Isobel Campbell/Mark Lanegan albums.

Two days earlier, we finally got round to seeing Cat Power at the Academy 2, after a few false starts in recent years with cancellations and whatnot. Having missed the support artistes Appaloosa, and not having had chance to purchase the new album 'Jukebox' from which most of the set was taken, don't really feel best qualified for a detailed review of the event, so would prefer to refer you here instead. To begin with, the concert felt a little bland, a little bit 'Later...', a little bit Glee Club for my liking, but slowly and surely some variety and balls kicked in, and we haven't seen a singer work so hard to emote and engage for a good long while as Chan Marshall did that night, her soulful, devastatingly husky vox in pristine form throughout a longer-than-the-norm performance duration. For someone with such a past reputation for behaviour inconsistency that makes Pete Doherty look like a choirboy to deliver Springsteen-levels of workrate and stamina was a revelation to behold.

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Saturday, June 07, 2008

Ida Awe

Ida Maria/Dan Whitehouse, Glee Club, Birmingham, Tuesday May 27 2008, 8.30pm.

There's an urban legend that if you wander the streets of Birmingham for long enough you will invariably chance upon an encounter with the Prykemeister. On the way to Birmingham's Glee Club tonight, our peripheral vision reveals everyone's favourite AI boffin rushing towards your confused correspondent with a bunch of flowers. Fortunately for all concerned, Prykemeister isn't acting on any kind of backcrack-fuelled impulse, and is in fact on his way to present said petals and stems to his girlfriend Huma.

Don't have time to go into detail with him about what he might have done wrong to require flowers (oh come on, they're always a guilt-edged gift, aren't they?) as need to get into Glee before their curfew. Support again tonight comes from Wolverhampton troubadour-type Dan Whitehouse, although unlike his turn before Lykke Li, this time he's unaccompanied by pianist June Mori. Whether it's this, or the fact that, unusually for Glee, it's a standing gig, Dan is strangely subdued between the first few numbers, despite confidently starting the set with his best song 'Somewhere I Don't Want To Go'. Halfway through the set, however, he becomes less preoccupied and refinds his mojo, getting, by the end of the performance, the best crowd reception we've heard for him yet, and plenty of interest at the merch stand after the show, where he's selling sampler CDs ahead of an upcoming album release.

Swedish-based Norwegian Ida Maria acts pretty much the rock star from the outset, wearing a top hat, leather micro-jacket and lairy expression as she wraps her distinctively rasping larynx over a collection of songs that include her three singles to date plus other tasters from her upcoming album (due to ship late June). The standing-only format suits Ida well, because the music is essentially bluesy rock designed to get people moving and having a good time. Few blues-rock outfits have tunes as consistently good as these, however, and the presence and voice of Ida Maria helps the material transcend its' roots in the same way Rod Stewart elevated The Faces four decades ago.

The singles stand out, if on terms of familiarity alone, with the singer giving her all on the desperate denouement to former Parallax View Single Of The Week 'Stella', the feelgood folk fuzz of 'Queen Of The World' ratcheted up a few notches live, and the most punk-rock number 'Oh My God' seeing Ida dive in amongst the moshers for some sweaty catharsis. Of the other songs '(I Like You Better When You're) Naked' may yet be her breakthough hit, given its' catchy refrain complete with saucy sentiment seems destined to be chanted at student discos from here until at least Xmas.

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In-Cistern-ed Rhythm

We've been mentioning it in despatches for a while, so with its physical release in stores now, it seems only fair to bestow the near-mythological Parallax View Single Of The Week status upon 'I'm Good I'm Gone' by Lykke Li. We could bore you with a long post about production techniques or a state-of-the-pop-nation address, but instead we'll just say we like this song because it makes us happy, so maybe there's a chance it'll make you happy too. To help you decide, here's a YouTube vid of La Lykke and chums belting it out in a toilet, complete with spoons and a rad reindeer jumper, and ending with a flush flourish.



And remember, pop pickers, don't forget to wash your hands!

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Tuesday, June 03, 2008

Santi Establishment

Santogold, Bar Academy, Birmingham, Monday May 26 2008, 9pm.

Missed the boat in Bristol when couldn't get into the good ship Thekla to see Santogold at the prior weekend's Dot To Dot, although we did have the pleasure of Santi and her dancers brushing straight across your queuing quizling to get on board. So we're fortunate that just two days later we get to see the girls put on a show in the cosy confines of Bar Academy.

A standard support act is eschewed in favour of a DJ who plays an eclectic mix of dance, pop and indie, which, we suppose, is as good as any entree in terms of getting the palate ready for the live showcasing of the Santogold album, for which the DJ remains on stage behind Santi and her two dancers.

The resulting show has been described elsewhere as glorified karaoke, but your hypnotised hack maintains the sight of an energetic, passionate crowd-pleaser like Santi flanked by two dancers who alternate robotically between standing stock-still and some sizzling dance shapes provides more of an arresting visual spectacle than many a so-called great live act in the indie pantheon.

Santi makes no pretence that tonight's performance is anything other than a small-scale celebration of her debut album before she returns with a full band later in the summer. Her stated objective is getting the Second City's early adopters and prime schmoozers shaking their rump to a set heavy in the dancier numbers like 'CREATOR'; 'Unstoppable' and, of course, former Parallax View Single Of The Week 'L.E.S. Artistes' at the expense of poppier highlights like 'Lights Out' and 'I'm A Lady'. The mission is easily accomplished.

Modest in size and set-up as the gig might be, the mutual goodwill between the artist and crowd, helped by the energy of the performance (Santi's alive eyes and sense of fun owes as much to the likes of Tina Turner and Neneh Cherry than the much-quoted M.I.A.) and the genuine quality of the material makes for a memorable show that leaves no-one going home short-changed.

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Monday, June 02, 2008

Gotta Be Startin' Somethin'

The Ting Tings/Modernaire, Irish Centre, Birmingham, Tuesday May 20 2008, 8pm.

This is your curious correspondent's first venture into the Irish Centre, and our findings are mostly favourable. It's just about the only large gig venue in Brum where you can buy draught bitter (and a choice between two or three at that) and the bar staff seem reasonable in number and interested in disposition, another welcome change. There's also the novelty of a carpeted floor, but on the downside the bar side of the auditorium finds the view restricted by the speakers on the right side of the stage, meaning we only get to see two-thirds of support act Modernaire, whose lively and noisy brand of electro-rock seems short of memorable melody until set closer 'Bloodshed In The Woodshed'.

Since booking our ticket for this gig, The Ting Tings have only gorn and re-released 2007 Parallax View Single Of The Week 'That's Not My Name' and gone to Numero One in the real life pop charts, meaning a sell-out (officially, anyway...) gig and a triumphant mood in the air. Wasn't sure how their perky pop would fare in the live area but The Ting Tings soon reveal themselves to be natural performers, confidently getting in their stride with 'We Walk', giving 'Great DJ' an early spin and taking a gamble on 'Fruit Machine' giving them three hits in a row. The only halting moments are provided by ballad 'Traffic Light' which seems a bit pedestrian in comparison to the propulsive pop of the rest of the show.

Singer Katie White makes light of the full house and semi-restricted view by prancing for much of the time on the raised end of the stage where everyone has a decent view (why don't more pop stars take the trouble to do this most obvious of moves?). This allows everyone to share in the triumph of Numero Uno 'That's Not My Name', a strop-pop sensation with more hooks than a Peter Pan convention and one of the most completely satisfying tunes of the decade with its steady build of feelgood tropes spiralling into the giddiest of climaxes. Almost impossible to top, although a belting rendition of album title track 'We Started Nothing' has a damn good try, leaving the crowd to head home with a more pleasing than usual ringing in the ears.

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Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Nice But Dim?

Apologies for the sparsity of updates for the last week or so, although the good news is that this has principally been due to a lot of gigging activity, so you can expect some reviews over the next few days of some of today's hottest up 'n' comin' pop sensations, as well as an overview of last weekend's Dot To Dot Festival in Bristol.

To keep you going 'til then, one of the best bands at Dot to Dot were London's Red Light Company whose debut ep 'With Lights Out' is out on limited CD and 7" as of this week. The title track isn't as gloomy as it sounds, despite being about a childhood friend of the singer who committed suicide, and is in fact a stirring, soaring guitar-pop gem of the highest order, one of our very favourite songs of this increasingly good year, and easily qualifying as Parallax View Single Of The Week. They may be called Red Light Company, but there's no stopping 'em now...

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Monday, May 19, 2008

Parallax View Poster Always Tings Twice

Yes, don't call us Stace-eeeeeeee, but you can call us Nostredamus, as The Ting Tings have claimed the Number One slot for 'That's Not My Name' just over one year on from being made Parallax View Single Of The Week! Your tipsy tipster will be on hand to help the Mancunian pop duo celebrate at their Birmingham Irish Centre gig tomorrow night, to be sure.

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Wednesday, May 07, 2008

Parallax Jukebox

20 tunes to celebrate the fact the sun's not just got its' hat on, but is wearing it at a rather jaunty angle. Number One on the jukebox is released as a single this week, and therefore can be considered Parallax View Single Of The Week, with the artist(e) no doubt celebrating this honour when touring at the end of the month!

1. L.E.S. Artistes - Santogold
2. I'm Good I'm Gone - Lykke Li
3. Homecoming - The Teenagers
4. Black And Gold - Sam Sparro
5. Sirens - The Whip
6. Century - The Long Blondes
7. I Lust U - Neon Neon
8. Alice Practice - Crystal Castles
9. My Sunken Treasure - The Duke Spirit
10. Black Cat - Ladytron
11. Cross My Fingers - Laura Marling
12. Midnight Man - Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds
13. Cerrone Cologne Houdini - Goldfrapp
14. You're On My Fighting Side - Lacrosse
15. Paper Planes (MIA cover) - Panda Riot
16. Don't Look Down - Flaxenby
17. Profile - StRANGEtIME
18. Sweet Dreams Sweet Cheeks - Los Campesinos!
19. Clash - Victoria and Jacob
20. I Can't Do Anything - Strawberry Fair

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Monday, April 28, 2008

Esser, I Can Boogie

Guess that the solo work from that drummer from Ladyfuzz wasn't high on the list of projects for 2008 that were getting people excited at the beginning of the year. But Ben Esser may well prove the pundits wrong if debut single 'I Love You' is anything to go on, featuring disarming sentiments of unspoken amour set to a jerky tune with echoes of the long lost Tom Vek. Eschewing the post-Arcade Fire pretension of multiple genre flux (popular melodramatic song, indeed) Esser classifies his music as pop/pop/pop and it's this single-minded pursuit of the catchy tune that should stand his career in good stead, as well as earning 'I Love You' Parallax View Single Of The Week.

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Thursday, April 24, 2008

Quality In Spectres

New Ladytron material gives us goosebumps at the best of times, so finding that the opening single from new album Velocifero is called Ghosts and can be downloaded right now via the Perpetua inspiration that is Fluxblog has us more than pleasantly spooked. The Liverpool-based foursome, Britain's Best Pop Band Ever? (TM), have had something like three songs make 41 in the charts, so will this spine-tingler have the phantom power to finally break them in to the Top 40?

Not being Nostredamus, we're not sure. But what we do know is that the gorgeous Ghosts has possessed us to enough to earn Parallax View Single Of The Week a good while ahead of its retail release.

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Monday, April 14, 2008

Wanna Takes All

Regular readers will have twigged by now that Parallax View is mad fool for The School, so no alarms or surprises to see their debut release 'All I Wanna Do'/'Valentine' (out on Elefant Records from today) made Single Of The Week. Produced by Ian Catt (most readily associated with Saint Etienne) and described by one of their MySpace fans as sounding 'like Kirsty MacColl's ghost meets Camera Obscura' it's a sweet but vaguely sinister ditty of devotion that recalls 60s girlgroups, Caledonian Indie and a keyboard refrain that threatens to echo the Eastenders theme tune. In short, it's bloody marvellous.

Runner-up goes to It Hugs Back for their single 'Other Cars Go', released on Too Pure Records on light-blue 7". Not sure whether it's meant as a lyrical rejoinder to The Arcade Fire's 'No Cars Go' but can tell you that sonically it resembles a melodic slant on Neil Young-influenced slackers Dinosaur Jr and Swervedriver, a mesmerising post-rock road anthem which builds and swirls to a stunning climax. Worth exploring.

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Saturday, March 29, 2008

Pringle Serving

Arriving hand-packaged and wrapped in a pink bow, there's little impoverished about the presentation or content of George Pringle's 'Poor EP, poor ep without a name'. It's the way ep's should be, in that each of the four tracks seems like your favourite at the time of listening. 'SW10' is an elegant, sophisticated spoken-word calling card; 'Carte Postale' is shorter, sharper, sexier; 'I'm Very Scared, Buster. Yes, At Last' introduces some disco beats to the mix and the first teasing glimpse of singing, while closer 'We Could Have Been Heroes' initially seems more ordinary before launching orbitwards with a fully-song chorus of 'My Bloody Valentine! My Bloody Valentine!'.

So from the impressive boutique trimmings to the posh-totty-talks-over-electro-beats schtick that recalls at times Saint-Etienne and Lori & The Chameleons amongst others, gorgeous George Pringle announces herself a fresh, vibrant, intelligent new voice on the contemporary music scene. Which is plenty good enough reason to make it Single Of The Week in our Parallax View.

Related link: George Pringle on Blogspot.

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Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Lager Lager Touting

The likes of Adele and Duffy have splendid enough voices, but the really distinctive and iconic vox to emerge so far this year has to belong to Ida Maria. We tipped her as one to watch at the turn of the year and the hard evidence arrives in the form of Stella, out in the shops this week on various formats. The song is a bewitching blend of blues and folk in its own right, but what elevates it into the extraordinary is the rasping, soulful gravitas of Ida Maria's astonishing vocals.

It's not hard to see a time when braying trendies will holler for their favourite brand of reassuringly expensive lager to the tune of this, but until then we add to the chorus of approval and make Stella Parallax View Single Of The Week.

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Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Relative Success

When Glasgow's Sons And Daughters first came onto the scene, they jangled their Johnny Cash with an austere brundlefly amalgam of The B52s, Franz Ferdinand and some obscure skiffle combo from the 60s. So whatever we were expecting from the Domino Records' quartet's next phase it certainly wasn't the exhilirating glam stomp of 'Darling' which can perhaps best be described as sounding like The Pipettes trying on Mud's 'Tiger Feet' for size.

Parallax View can exclusively reveal that nice surprises are a good thing, and thus duly pronounce 'Darling' (out in stores now or available to stream via their MySpace page) the inaugural Parallax View Single Of The Week for 2008.

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Wednesday, November 07, 2007

Hissy Hit

It's been a while since we've introduced a new band to you here at Parallax View so please step forward Thomas Tantrum, all the way from Goattee Beach (?!) with the superior strop-pop that is forthcoming single 'Shake It! Shake It!' (released via Marquis Cha Cha on November 26).

With lyrics that appear to be some kind of dippy deconstruction of nightclub smalltalk half-sung half-spoken by vocalist Mega, it's another love-it-or-loathe-it proposition suitably impossible to ignore we make it Parallax View Single Of The Week. Whether you've got good hair or not.

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Tuesday, July 24, 2007

So Sorry For Breaking Your Ding-A-Ling-A-Ling

Currently putting the grrrr into Gorillaz, Dublin's Fight Like Apes are the bonkers brainchild of two people called McKay and Pockets, but we won't hold that against 'em when they're putting out blistering cock-breaking punk-pop like 'Jake Summers' (available to stream from their MySpace page right now).

It's the sound of Blondie being put into the washing machine with Yeah Yeah Yeahs while Bis and Daisy Chainsaw fight over the controls and send them through as many spin cycles and speed levels as possible until the resulting material unspools onto the floor as a magnificent piece of bespoke DIY genius.

Apparently, Jake Summers is a leather-jacketed character from some American teensoap, but this may just be a smokescreen for a bitchfest about a bland, superficial playa who's like 'KFC without the taste' and 'smells of ham and tastes like bile'. Jake's progress may be halted but this could just be the beginning for Fight Like Apes who hopefully will be sorting out the chimps from the chumps for many a great choon to come.

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Sunday, July 22, 2007

There's No I In Tweesome

With their gently punning moniker and 'tongue-in-cheek power pop' tunage you could easily see Stone, Staffs. boy girl duo Tesco Chainstore Mascara making the Peel playlist. But with Peel sadly long gone, it's up to websites like this to point them in your direction. Their debut single 'Writer's Block' is set for release on August 17, when it's sure to clear the shelves faster than a b0mb scare. And no doubt prompt some copycat doppelgangers - The Waitroses? Sainsbury's Etienne? The Gym Morrisons even?

Elsewhere, Liz from love-em-or-loathe-em Cardiff cult band The Loves, not content with one magnificent side-project (The School, who have just signed to Elefant records, home to Camera Obscura, never forget) has popped up with another - The Jerks whose 'Happiest To Be With You' is available to download on their MySpace page which we suggest you do because it's fantastic. The Jerks' first live appearance is set to be at the Indietracks festival in Derbyshire at the end of this month.

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Monday, May 28, 2007

Split Single

So you've read all the live reviews and you now want to find out for yourself what the kerfuffle is going on regarding StrangeTime? Well, you happen to be in luck, as you can now download their debut single Personality Disorder from most reputable download sources (we found wippit good) for a mere 79p, chuck in another twenty pee and you get the well fit 'Biting My Tongue' b-side to boot.

'Personality Disorder' is more corrosive than a fishtank-full of acid reflux, a hulking rock beast with disturbing lyrics, primal riffing and vocalist/guitarist Kate Finch in full goth-madchen flow on the huge and frightening chorus. Parallax View Single Of The Week then, and we urge you to make a mental note to download 'Personality Disorder' and be the first on your block to covet Best Midlands' best-kept secret NOW.

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Friday, May 11, 2007

The Shape Of Tings To Come

Of course, once we're into May everybody gets scrambling in an undignified pursuit of the year's upcoming Defining Summer Hit. Last year we correctly identified 'Young Folks' by Peter Bjorn and John several weeks before its release and emerging ubiquity. This year, The Ting Tings step early to the plate with 'That's Not My Name' looking set to rule the airwaves and lubricate the tills of capitalism for many months ahead. And to think they only started gigging this month. Bless.

Next year we'll be tipping great things for a band that most likely won't have been born yet. But until then, 'That's Not My Name' gets the nod for Parallax View Single Of The Week.

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