Monthly Archives: July 2011

Aside

Swiftumz – It’s Beautiful

This is short but kind of cool and hypnotic. It has a trippy, dreamlike charm that I have found irresistible for the past few days.

Kings of convenience – Misread


It was another day of torrential, almost biblical rain today in London. This is a very sootheing song and that isn’t the worst kind of song to listen to on such a day.

Kings of convenience are from Norway. Scandanavia really seems to punch above it’s weight musically. Certainly in music that speaks to me anyway.

This track is taken from the wonderfully titled Riot on an empty street, which also features a couple of collaborations with Canadian artist Leslie Feist of Broken Social Scene fame.

/RjK

Aside

Prefab Sprout – Cars and girls

This is classic 80’s and one that I have wanted to post for a while. It is a bit cheesy but I find it irresistible. Hiding beneath that cheesy, breezy chorus are actually some very clever lyrics.

Some things hurt more, much more than cars and girls…

Aside

Joni Mitchell – The last time I saw Richard

There is something relentlessly gray about London in the rain.

This is taken from Blue, an album that I found to be captivating the first time I heard it and is typical of the album – full of clever and poignant lyrics delivered with a startling purity. It is a tale of heartbreak and love lost. Seldom have I heard those raw emotions captured in such a real and vivid way.

Aside

The Contours – Just a little misunderstanding

Was out on the tiles last night painting the town red with my brother. I woke up this morning feeling surprisingly fresh and with this stuck in my head. It’s a classic soul stomper and it’s been too long since I posted one of those.

Aside

Mr Fingers – Can you feel it?

I listened to an interview with DJ Frankie Knuckles recently. He talked about the origins of House music in Chicago in the late 70’s and early 80’s. Apparently the genre was named for the Warehouse club that he was DJing in at the time. Quite a claim to fame!

This is one of the early house tunes that came out of Chicago during this period. I think it’s great. The sample, which appears to be some kind of corrupted version of Martin Luther King, gives the song an imploring urgency that I think is great. I can barely imagine the sheer volume of shapes that must have been thrown to this song over the years.

You may be black, you may be white, you may be Jew or Gentile. It don’t make a difference in OUR house…

Aside

Unknown Mortal Orchestra – Ffunny Frends

Short post today – it’s been a long week. Interesting band name. I know little about them other than this guardian article. New Zealand by way of Portland apparently.

Anyway, I like this laid back number and have been listening to a lot of it this week.

Aside

Daft Punk – Around the world

Given that it is Bastille Day today I thought I would post something gallic. To be honest I am surprised I haven’t posted these guys already.

They were the soundtrack to the year I spent in California culminating in seeing them play live at the greek theater in Berkeley. It was one of the most fun evenings I have ever spent.

I was torn whether to post this or High Life, but in the I went for this beacuse of the video. It is one of my favourite of all time, if not my favourite. Very high praise indeed. It is crazy but somehow I can’t take my eyes off it.

Around the world, around the would, around the world…

13th July

Washed Out – Feel it all around

Was surfing around Youtube aimlessly and stumbled upon this a couple of days ago. It was the right song at the right time. It is breezy and hypnotic, a breath of fresh summer air. There is quite a fitting video here too.

Aside

Stiff little fingers – Alternative Ulster

This seems like the right track to post today. It is sort of strange to be in London, where it is just a regular day with no one batting an eyelid. No parades, lambeg drums or bowler hats. I am not sure I miss it too much.

This is one of the few punk songs that ever spoke to me. It has a killer opening few bars. While times have changes significantly since it was released in 1979 the song’s message still rings true today.