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Showing posts with label 5-Flying Nun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 5-Flying Nun. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 22, 2021

Superette - Tiger

Name: Superette
Album: Tiger
Year: 1996
Style: Brit-Pop, Shoegaze, Alternative
Similar Bands: Oasis, Love & Rockets, Sonic Youth, Flick, Pixies, Birdland, Mudhoney, Garbage
"One-Word" Review: Grimy Floor Rock with Dimension.
Based Out Of: Auckland, NZ
Label: Flying Nun
Cover, Liner Notes
Liner Notes, CD Back, CD

Supetette - Tiger (1996)
  1. Kiss Someone 3:11 (single)
  2. Touch Me 2:50 (Single)
  3. Ugly Things 3:56
  4. Saskatchewan 5:31
  5. Bye Bye 3:41
  6. Felo De Se 4:20
  7. Cannibal 2:58
  8. I Got Clean 3:26
  9. Taiwan 3:17
  10. Funny Weather 1:46
  11. Killer Clown 3:48 (single)
  12. Waves 3:22
Album Rating (1-10): 8.5

Members & Other Bands:
  • Greta Anderson - Drums, Vox (Jean-Paul Sartre Experience, Ben+Greta, Blue Marbles, The Pencils )
  • Dave Mulcahy - Guitar, Vox, Piano, Photos (Jean-Paul Sartre Experience, MEDal, Mulchzoid, Kimo, Sexy Animals, Snakedog, Spider, Eskimo)
  • Ben Howe - Bass, Vox, Guitar, Photos (Fang, Kimo,Ben+Greta, Blue Marbles, White Swan Black Swan, Smoothy, The Flinch, Every Person Must Unite)
  • Nick Roughan - Engineer, Producer
  • Rex Visible - Mastering
  • Becky Nunes - Band Portrait
Unknown-ness: Never heard of this band. Another unknown CD I picked up in a London Oxfam. Looks like they are a female drummer fronted band from New Zealand. I enjoy the jarring collection of styles on the cover with the dueling fonts of band name and album and a tiger in leaping action against a teal background. Seems like it will have a fun energy. The photos of the band in their recording/practice space gives the impression that they worked hard on the album, so I also assume it to be a high quality product.

Album Review: The music is heavy, fuzzy shoegazing brit pop, and vocal duties are shared, with the guys singing more than Greta. "Taiwan" has a definite Pixies feel. And "I Got Clean" oozes Sonic Youth. A couple of slower tracks also give them a depth as more than just a fuzzy alt band.

Seeing as I got this the same time I got the Stereobus album in a thrift store, it makes sense that they were donated together, as the previous owner must have been a fan of Jean-Paul Sartre Experience, since both bands formed after. They only had this album and an earlier EP (aside from numerous compilation appearances). They have gotten back together in the aughts to play again, and the album was reissued and expanded in 2018

Stand Out Track: Touch Me

Links:
Wiki

Tuesday, December 27, 2016

Straitjacket Fits - Hail

Name: Straitjacket Fits
Album: Hail
Year: 1988
Style: Alternative, Jangle Pop
Similar Bands:Mighty Lemon Drops, Dillon Fence, Trashcan Sinatras, Teenage Fanclub, Flowerhead, The Chills, The Clean, Superchunk, Game Theory,
One Word Review: Tedious Jangley Melodies
Based Out Of: Dunedin, New Zealand
Label: Flying Nun Records, Rough Trade
Tape, Cover
Tape

Hail (1988)
  1. Dialing A Prayer 3:53
  2. All That That Brings 4:17
  3. Hail 4:05
  4. Sparkle That Shines 3:57
  5. She Speeds 4:05/
  6. So Long, Marianne 3:59 (Leonard Cohen cover)
  7. Grate 3:18
  8. Fabulous Things 3:38
  9. Live in One Chord 3:10
  10. This Taste Delight 4:21
Album Rating (1-10): 6.0

Members & Other Bands:
Terry Moore - Producer, Engineer (The Chills)
David Wood - Bass (Swamp Thing, Teens, Your Demise, Julian Lennon, Working With Walt, The Cruxshadows)
John Collie - Drums, Percussion (Doublehappys, The Weeds)
Andrew Brough - Guitar, Keys (The Orange, Bike, Mink, Blue Meanies)
Shayne Carter - Guitar, Vox, Keys (Bored Games, Dimmer, Lame & Sorry, TheAdults, Doublehappys, Weeds, The Chills, Bic Runga, Tha Feelstyle, Die! Die! Die! Peter Jefferies, Alistar Galbraith)
Jan Hellreigel - Backing Vox (Working With Walt, Cassandras Ears, The Verlaines, Push Push, Mutton Birds,

Unknown-ness: I heard of this band back in the early 90's, but didn't really know what I was buying when I got this tape for 20 cents. To this day, I can't recall their sound. I want to say that this is Americana alt-folk, and from the cover art, I would assume they are like Let's Active. Or perhaps it will be fuzzy & buzzy with feedback and a general muddled, alternative, slacker, wall-of-sound production, like My Bloody Valentine or early Smashing Pumpkins.

Album Review: Straitjacket Fits were a very popular band in their home country of New Zealand (Dunedin). Exporting their music and tour seemed like it would help them take off internationally, but they never gained the popularity in the US at least. Typical of the alternative era, if only a few years early, they combine psych dream pop with fuzzy, organic over-production, reminding me a little of early Superchunk. The two battling creative forces of Carter (brash, hard) & Brough (similar to Ian Broudie/Lightning Seeds) brought balance to this record, but was too much for Brough who bowed out after they were done touring for their second album. Carter kept the band going a couple more albums, and a move to California, but were done by 1994. Like most bands, they have done a few reunions (but all without Brough) and were inducted in the NZ music hall of fame, with "She Speeds" being rated the #9 NZ song of all time. Wood passed in 2010, and Brough passed in 2020
“Dialing A Prayer” starts with an urgent guitar and swaying bass line. The swaying nature takes over, and the boozy, wobbling melody takes the lead. Nasally, raucous vocals are added with a juvenile confidence. The song feels like a waltz, ready to topple over at any moment. The small hook in the title phrase chorus is catchy, but it is buried beneath a lot of fuzzy production
“All That That Brings” starts out simply with some jangly guitars and a soaring John Easdale-like vocal. The song feels kind of the same as the opening track, but it feels like it is trying to get somewhere that it can never reach, or chooses not to reach. It just meanders in jangly territory with half melodies and sleepy production.
“Hail” follows a dark jangly loop at the beginning. The vocals are layered in harmony, but the melodies are tedious and don’t really build anywhere. They just kind of exist in a free flowing format without a roadmap to guide the song.
“Sparkle That Shines” has a head nodding tempo built on shuffling chords and percussion. The vocals tap into a little psych-brit-pop sensibility. Still, the song is very jangly, and feels like it is overdubbed with a hundred layers of instruments.
“She Speeds” was a single, and ranked #9 in one poll of the top 100 NZ songs. The jangly guitar is shrouded in fuzz, as a delicate melody is introduced. Vocals slowly glide over the growing song, with an echo that is again, slightly psychedelic. After the first chorus, the song feels like it is going to go into a new direction, but it quickly dies down, preferring the initial verse. But there are lasts of vocal sections, playing intermittently with quiet, melancholy whiny vocal sections. There is a small section of the chorus that is catchy, but there is too much distraction to maintain quality interest.

“So Long, Marianne” is a Leonard Cohen cover. It begins with a layered acoustic guitar and side to side sway of a light, care free nature. The backing vocals are female, by a guest musician, and there is a certain Christmas-y vibe to the choral production.
“Grate” begins with a buzzy guitar alarm sound, and a deep, dark bass line. The whispy vocals add the slightest of change to the song, which might as well be an grueling, driving instrumental with vocals added as a second thought.
“Fabulous Things” has a meandering guitar over a new age/renaissance style guitar, and a minstrel percussive tempo. The vocals are sullen and reserved. But again, the song is pretty one dimentional. It doesn’t change or offer alternate atmosphere than a slow, down trodden stotyline with hints of bright strings in the background.
“Live in One Chord” is all fuzz and chaos in the beginning. What sounds like a drum machine propels the song into a driving, buzzing glam pop song. The song winds down slowly after a wall of buzzing sound carries the song to the end.
“This Taste Delight” is a quiet song at the beginning with mosquito buzzing effects and a tedious melody that is not that fun to follow. Acoustic guitars set the pace over haunting moans and creeking effects in the background. It grows, and the sections seem to come together following a steady tempo but still doing their own thing. The instruments stop, allowing the vocals to act out the remaining few notes of the album.

Stand Out Track: Sparkle That Shines

Links:
NZ Herald
Interview on Youtube
Audio Culture NZ
Flying Out
top 100 NZ songs

Friday, January 21, 2011

(the) D4 - 6Twenty

Name: (the) D4
Album: 6Twenty
Year: 2003
Style: Garage Rock
Similar Bands: Datsuns, Hives, MC5, Mooney Suzuki,
"One-Word" Review: coked-up-gritty-classic-rock
Based Out Of: Aukland New Zealand
Label: Hollywood Records, Flying Nun Records
6Twenty - Cover, Back, CD, Tray
6Twenty - Inside, Back Cover

6Twenty (2003)
  1. Rock N' Roll Motherfucker 2:00
  2. Get Loose 1:56
  3. Party 2:39
  4. Come On! 2:23
  5. Invader Ace 2:46
  6. Exit to the City 3:40
  7. Heartbreaker 4:28
  8. Running On Empty 3:12
  9. Ladies Man 3:47
  10. Pirate Love 3:39
  11. Little Baby 3:08
  12. Rebekah 3:37
  13. Mysterex 3:56
  14. Outta Blues 2:28
Album Rating (1-10): 8.0

Members & Other Bands:
Bob Frisbee - Producer, Engineer, Mixing,
Andrew Buckton - Engineer
Malcom Welsford - Recording
Rich Mixture - Produced, Drums (The Rock n Roll Machine)
Cameron Rowe - Keyboard
Glenn Elliot - Photos
Eri Tanabe - Photos
Dion Palmer - Vox (True Lovers, A Place To Bury Strangers)
Jimmy Christmas - Guitar (Lugar Boa)
Vaughan Williams - Bass (Shocking Pinks)
Daniel Pooley - Drums

Unknownness: I never heard of these guys. This was a CD as part of the package from the same friend. Although I’m not a fan of the band name, and less a fan of using the same number+ written out number style for the album title, the cover looks like it has a lo-fi energy that is purposely applies. The guitar-as-a-gun imagery shows that they are a power guitar band. The song titles look like they are going to be high intensity. The only question is it going to be frat boy party rock or energetic, good time youths.

Album Review: “Rock N' Roll Motherfucker” is all that garage band rock is. It possesses loud, manic guitars riffing the same three (or so chords) and fuzzy lo-fi vocals “singing” at a nervous, neurotic pace. It is the perfect attach of self advertising its love for rock and roll while being rock and roll.
“Get Loose” has the same formula, except it has a repetitive chorus that pops. It feels more structured than the opening track, better suited for radio
“Party” begins with all drums: a rolling onslaught of rumbling percussion. The chorus is made up of the title, just chanted over a few times to the rhythm. It feels like a mutated, steroid infused Beatles song, where instead of innocent love, the topic is, well, a coked-up party. By the end of the song, the repetitious chorus becomes grating.
“Come On!” starts with steady drum hits, and evolves into a moderately fast pace song that is more Rolling Stones than Beatles. It has a very brit-pop guitar lick underneath the gritty façade.
“Invader Ace” has a Led Zeppelin hook in the beginning that is mixed with a song structure that is a lot like Motorhead’s “Stroker Ace.”
“Exit to the City” is a little more stripped down and structured party rocker. It’s not as manic as the rest of the record so far, but it is long way from a ballad, and still maintains the all night booze and broads party vibe.
“Heartbreaker” is a sleazy, well sung story lined transitional song. The guitars chug along as the song builds slowly. There is anger in the music, and the lyrics reflect a bad breakup. From the title too, this song paints the picture of a scorn, potentially vindictive author.

“Running On Empty” is a fun song, structured again like a 60’s British garage rock band, complete with the obvious car metaphor. The lead guitar is fun and very catchy, while the rest of the song just drives on.
“Ladies Man” sounds like its going to go right into “Flagpoll Sitta.” Then it gets into a slinky rhythm that is paralleled by guitar, drums, bass and keyboard. There is a Firewater song that sounds like this song too. It is a variation of the Sesame Street Theme and Green Day’s “Hitching a Ride.”
“Pirate Love” is all percussion at the get-go, then a positive sounding fuzzed out electric guitar follows up and the Brit Glam Pop sound takes hold. The song speeds up for the last minute as the instrumental break takes off. The song switches gears and finishes out the song with chanting the song title on repeat.
“Little Baby” has a rollercoaster melody: three chords up scale and then three more down scale through out the entire song. The instruments shift down in prominence for a section that features spoken/sung vocals that reminds me of the Realistics.
“Rebekah” continues with the same three chord melody structure as the last song, and it only feels like a variation of the last song. Like they couldn’t decide which way to use the melody, so they used it twice. This is the love song, done garage band style with volume and positive electric vibes.
“Mysterex” is a little more punk with its one------one-two drum beat and down-scale scrolling guitar. It feels like the Buzzcocks meet the Ramones. It is a very fun melody to follow, and is even punctuated with a Ramones “Oh Yeah.” It is just a little long for a true punk song. It has all the sections and musical nuances, it just uses them too many times. But the important thing is that it never ruins the style by throwing an unneeded section in the structure that would throw off the pace or change the mood.
“Outta Blues” is a quick rock song with simple structure and brings us back to the true sound of the band: Fast pace, simple chord changes, fuzzy production, and sung/chanted lyrics.

Stand Out Track: Mysterex

Links: