Showing posts with label Catfish and the Bottlemen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Catfish and the Bottlemen. Show all posts

Sunday, May 05, 2019

Royal Headache, Foals, Catfish and the Bottlemen and the music in my head for March and April.


As winter yielded to spring, two household arrivals notched up my enthusiasm. Of course it hasn't hurt that climatic conditions are genuinely springlike, given our experience in 2018 of winter and summer being separated by a mere week of temperate weather.

First a kitten named Luna came into our household via the good offices of Dr. David Rowland. She's still a couple months shy of one year old, and if her perpetual motion could be tethered to a turbine, we'd have no need for Duke Energy.


Our eccentric elderly cats both died last year, and Mila the recovering feral feline is reclusive and laid back. Consequently to enter a room these days and find Luna hanging from the chandelier has been a delightful change of pace.

Second, a wonderful album called High, which to my chagrin was released all the way back in 2015. Naturally the band Royal Headache already has disbanded (in 2018), but knowing this sad fact has not affected my enjoyment of the album.



I became aware of Royal Headache at Pints&union one morning when an earworm occurred during Calvin daily playlist. He identified the band and noted the particular song as being atypical of the album as a whole.



Calvin was right; the remainder of the album is very different -- and now that I've heard all the tunes, the quasi-ballad can be judged as an inspired bit of contrast.

This is not a didactic or complicated band. A lot of Royal Headache’s songs are about elusive objects of desire (High) or trying to find some form of escape in a world that seems to forbid it (Electric Shock). They aren’t as light on their feet as they were on their 2011 debut – there are times on High when the ensemble slows its pace, as on the ballad Wouldn’t You Know – but these departures from punk orthodoxy allow Shogun’s vocals to insinuate much more than the band’s earlier lovelorn outsider anthems. Royal Headache isn’t a punk band any more, but that’s OK. They’re more.

Some day I'll finally understand why certain types of songs always capture my attention. The key, the tempo, the mood; I can't explain it, but "Wouldn't You Know" has it. I regret the band's untimely passing and look forward to what I hope is the inevitable reunion.

Meanwhile, it came as a complete shock to me when I realized there had been only three CD purchases in March and April.



Catfish and the Bottlemen's third album is called The Balance. The formula has not varied, and this meets with my approval.

Everything Not Saved Will Be Lost (Part 1) is the most recent release from Foals, another British band that probably won't include Louisville when (or if) they tour America.



I'll readily concede that the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame selections for 2019 were pleasing to me, including personal favorites like Def Leppard, Roxy Music and Radiohead. In recent years the RRHoF finally is catching up to my standards.





As discussed previously, I'm continuing to loosen the reins and allowing myself to enjoy the archives rather than constantly obsess over finding new music. There isn't as much new music to my tastes as before, and I'm content to wait for the pendulum to swing back -- or not.

I can't point to specific highlights, just a well-rounded listening regimen -- rock and pop, jazz and classical.

Bryce Harper? Please. What instrument does HE play? We've got Teddy Abrams for another five years.



Late notice: Louisville Orchestra at the Ogle on Saturday with "An Evening in Italy."

Tuesday, June 07, 2016

In the throes of my malcontentment, these are the five albums I'm enjoying the most.



Yak: Alas Salvation.



Twin Peaks: Down in Heaven.



Lust for Youth: Compassion.



Parquet Courts: Human Performance.


Catfish and the Bottlemen: The Ride.

Five albums, and a song from each. That's right; new releases, in album format BECAUSE I'M OLD. I can only hope the artists get a few bucks for the trouble. A boy can dream, even in New Gahania.

Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Roger’s Year in Music 2015 (Part 10): But first, some 2014 leftovers.

When we pause to consider the type of rock/pop music Roger (that's me) tends to like, the year 2014 must be acclaimed as one of the finest musical times ever.

It was so very wonderful that five of my favorite albums of 2015 were released in 2014. I just didn’t get to them until this year. They'll go first, and then nine more installments will tell the story of 2015's tunes.

The usual disclaimers apply: I'm old, and I like what I like. There's no lofty detachment here, just the music that wormed its way into my head.



Kasabian … 48:13
The album simply did not resonate until I watched the band’s headlining performance at Glastonbury (2014) on YouTube, and then suddenly everything clicked. I spent the month of January 2015 listening to this.



Simple Minds … Big Music
My favorite album of 2014 was Futurology by Manic Street Preachers, who openly (and often) used its positive reception to acknowledge the band’s debt to Simple Minds, and so finally it dawned on me to listen to the latter’s album from the same year. The older you get, the more you appreciate late career arcs.

Now, if I only had a career.



Future Islands … Singles
Synth rock? What is becoming of me?

“We hear most of Singles, a record full of synthetic bittersweetness and yearning, delivered by a frontman who goes in for Cossack head-banging, Italianate hand-gestures and belly-flops on to the stage.” (The Guardian)



Catfish & the Bottlemen … The Balcony
I like the guitars, the hooks, the spirit and the overall vibe. I dislike the patina of misogyny that surfaces here and there, even if we chalk it up to youth; they look like they’re 16. But I'll keep listening.



The Struts … Everybody Wants
Def Leppard’s Joe Elliott told an interviewer this band struck him as “Slade meets Queen,” and he is exactly right.

What is Slade? Rather like the UK’s answer to Grand Funk, beloved by fans and slagged by critics.

What is Queen? Get out of here.

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Roger’s Year in Music 2015 (Part 10): But first, some 2014 leftovers.