Showing posts with label Kasabian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kasabian. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 1

For The Record: June

. Wednesday, July 1
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June has seen two of the years most hotly tipped new artists release their debut albums alongside a return to form for Regina Spektor, a giddy romp from The Answering Machine, middling efforts from Gossip and Kasabian and a wildy experimental and intrguing record from White Denim. Winner by a country mile however is Future Of The Left, a record so raw and viscious it sounds like a pack of dogs chasing Derek Vinyard into a wood chopper.

Little Boots- Hands
Kasabian- West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum
Gossip- Music For Men
La Roux- La Roux
Future Of The Left- 'Travels With Myself And Another' (Album of the month)
White Denim- 'Fits'
Regina Spektor- 'Far'
The Answering Machine- 'Another City, Another Sorry'

Download these.

Little Boots- 'Stuck On Repeat'
Ksabian- 'Underdog'
Gossip- 'Heavy Cross'
La Roux- 'Fascination'
Future Of The Left- 'Arm Eritrea'
White Denim- 'Regina Holding Hands'
Regina Spektor- 'The Calculation'
The Answering Machine- 'Lightbulbs'

To see the whole of this year 'For the Record' see the sidebar to the left of the screen.

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Monday, June 8

Kasabian- West Rider Pauper Lunatic Asylum

. Monday, June 8
2 comments

Edited version @Gigwise

Kasabian are a weird band when you think about it. Both hugely successful and widely derided they are a byword for lairy louts and boys from provincial towns squeezing themselves into tight jeans and growing their hair long. Topman Indie: The Soundtrack. However there is a school of thought, an unmentioned idea, that Kasabian are more than just the link between Happy Mondays and The Enemy and that they are in fact a wildly experimental and psychedelic outfit subverting a generation from behind their Stag weekend anthems. Now as they release their third album it’s time for them to play their hand and come out from behind those doors as the real Kasabian.

The initial signs are good; the record is called ‘West Rider Pauper Lunatic Asylum’ for a start, which to quote fellow risk taker Dizzee Rascal is more than a bit ‘bonkers’. Contrast it with ‘Music For The People’ or The View’s clanging ‘Which Bitch’ and already you’re dealing with a different beast. Daubed in Napoleonic finery the band stand proud on the cover- arrogant some would say and that perceived arrogance is certainly an albatross around Kasabian’s neck (summed up on the painful single ‘Empire’ from their second album) . The public face of the band is singer Tom Meighan and guitarist/ songwriter Serge Pizzorno (nobody really knows the other two’s name do they? £5 to anyone who can name them without using Wikipedia.) Their series of brags and boasts down the years have done nothing for the bands reputation- if anything they’ve perpetuated a myth. Too much time hanging out with Noel Gallagher can have a strange affect on a man and the empty bravado is certainly a bad habit picked up from the Mancunian gobshite. However Oasis’s patronage has allowed Kasabian to grow into the band they are today. Supporting the band across the world has seen Kasabian’s songs grow to fit arenas (Much the same way Kings Of Leon evolved by opening for Pearl Jam and Bob Dylan). However that is the Kasabian we think we know, the strutting and cock-sure sing song merchants. What ‘West Riding Pauper Asylum’ does is develop their more experimental side- bringing it up alongside their brash exterior.

Now nobody is stating that Kasabian have become the new Animal Collective or Deerhunter. However it raises an interesting question. Namely, is it more commendable to experiment within the realms of a side project heavy group of musicians where change and evolution are the norm? Or to do it on an album released months before you play second to Bruce Springsteen on the Pyramid Stage at Glastonbury and when successful bands (Kaiser Chiefs, Franz Ferdinand) are struggling to shift third album units? Either way it is a brave move for Kasabian to record tracks like electronic and Krauty instrumental ‘Swarfiga’ or the Ennio Morricone influenced ‘West Rider Silver Bullet’ on a record being pumped out at your local HMV. It’s not all strange and new though- the bangers are still there for the inevitable crowd surge. Anyone with a TV will already know ‘Underdog’ (currently used on an Adidas commercial) and will instantly recognise it’s distorted riffs rubbing up against big beats courtesy of Gorrilaz producer Dan The Automator. Elsewhere there is the adrenalized ‘Fast Fuse’ and the groove-laden ‘Take Aim’, two of the bands danciest moments to date. Fans will also be acquainted with hit single ‘Fire’ and the irresistible ‘Vlad The Impaler’ which sees Pizzorno join the fray with his hooky refrain “Get loose, get loose.” One day Kasabian will release an excellent singles collection and this third album will provide ample fodder for those compiling it.

However it is not all good news. Amongst the impressive melodies and neat touches of flair is a band pushing themselves too far at times and hitting the inevitable hurdles. ‘Thick Of Thieves’ has one of the most ham-fisted structures heard in years and despite Meighan’s abundant confidence and charisma he still fails to carry it off. You certainly won’t make it through without lamenting the laziness of a song boasting the line “Hey ho, away we go” and a chorus consisting purely of “La, la, la’s”. It sounds somewhere between a spoof and a child’s humming’s. The Gallagher influence raises its mono-browed head again on ‘Ladies and Gentlemen, particularly on the line “wakey wakey rise and shine” with the last word inevitably elongated ‘Rock ‘n’ Roll Star’ style. Finally a word for Serge Pizzorno re: vocals- you can’t really cut it and surrounding yourself by gospel choirs (‘Happiness) really isn’t going to do anything to stop people calling you a dodgy Primal Scream tribute act.

In the family of lad-rock where Oasis are the Daddy (wise but putting on an unsightly middle aged spread), Paul Weller the cool Grandpa and The Enemy the angry little kid spilling bitter on his new Gio Goi t-shirt Kasabian are sort of the cool cousin who visits at Christmas. They’ve got a wider collection of records and have taken more drugs and that shows but they’re still loyal to their roots and family and that is ultimately their defining characteristic. Give ‘West Rider...’ a chance- it’s not as snarling as their debut and not as pompous as their second. Throwing intrigue and light invention in amongst the stadium choruses make it possibly their most accomplished work to date.

7/10

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Thursday, May 28

Kasbian: Misunderstood? Or as bad as the rest?

. Thursday, May 28
1 comments

Kasabian. What a band, seriously- I think they're brilliant. They're a band who have released two hugely successful albums and established themselves as one of the country's premiere live acts (second to Bruce Springsteen at this years Glastonbury at The Boss's request) yet the four piece from Leicester are regularly derided and dismissed alongside the lad-rock wannabees like The Courteeners and The Enemy. Perhaps it's Tom Meighan's big mouth (too many examples to list, how about comparing Madonna to his old male gym teacher?) or Serge Pizzorno's football skills but the creative and inventive side of Kasabian's music seems to get lost in the tidal wave of tossed lager and column inches that seem to surround them.

I mean, look at that picture above. Contrast it with the grey and predictable promo shoots The Enemy partake in and the differences between the bands become strikingly obvious. Kasabian's music has always had an experimental edge to it too. This isn't going to become an indulgent think piece about how Kasabian are the new Animal Collective, they're not. However listen to 'Stuntman' from the bands second album 'Empire' or 'U Boat' on their self-titled debut and you hear a band indebted to the likes of LCD Soundsystem and Neu! (the band featured on a tribute album to the German pioneers recently) not a band trudging out the same old material time after time. As for their new material, well it might just be their most adventurous to date. Their new album (due June 8th) has the bonkers title 'West Rider Pauper Lunatic Asylum' and songs such as 'Fire' and 'Underdog' certainly help the record live up to the ostentatious title.

It's a shame then that the band will spend much of the Summer touring with Oasis, a partnership which will only compound preconceptions. Maybe one day people will look back and realise that Kasabian are the cream at the top of a piss weak crop of bands they are aligned with, bands who want to write about 'What's really going on'. Kasabian make 'music for the people' but they've got the ambition and scope to look beyond the immediate four walls and go through the looking glass. That's what makes them interesting and deserving of more attention and less lazy dismissal.

So who are the bands you feel deserve a more varied audience? Or the ones who have been adopted by an unlikely group of fans? How about Annie who has been making the chart dominating music of Lady GaGa and Little Boots for years to no avail? Or Gossip, an underground punk band adopted by middle England as their 21st century disco queens? Personally I've always found the dismissal of The Kills as style over substance infuriating as their albums are always the right mix of retro and futuristic excellence. On a more extreme level of acts getting strange audiences did anyone ever see Regina Spektor or Feist turn up on ITV's divorcees club Loose Women? Very odd.


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Tuesday, March 31

Kasabian- Vlad The Impaler

. Tuesday, March 31
1 comments

I've always had a soft spot for Kasabian. They are lumped in with truly awful bands like The Enemy etc and have been adopted by the stereotypical lad rock crowd but they have always seemed to me to be a band with a curious sense of the absurd and ridiculous. For example this new track they are releasing as a free download is called 'Vlad The Impaler' and is the first song from their third album 'West Riding Pauper Lunatic Asylum'. Not exactly 'We'll Live and Die In These Towns' I think you'll agree.

The track itself is pretty interesting. I can hear about 4 stolen melodies that will come to me eventually but Kasabian strut about with such assurance you kinda forgive them any unoriginality. The video is a similarly bizarre affair, directed by Richard Ayoade and starring long time Kasabian co-hort Noel Fielding. Watch the video and download the track below.


Kasabian- Vlad The Impaler MP3




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