Happy October everybody! After the new release overload that was last week, this week is a little dry, at least for things I haven't already covered. But there's always something to write about. This week: Death Valley Girls' "space-gospel record"; the "confusing in a good way" debut from Working Men's Club; two Slowdive EPs from 1991 are getting vinyl reissues; three classic early-'80s New Order 12"s are back on wax; XTC's Drums and Wires gets a welcome vinyl reissue; and be sure to listen to Róisín Murphy's fantastic new album.
Need more new album reviews? Andrew looks at Jónsi's first solo album in nearly a decade, and more in Notable Releases. Need more Basement-approved stuff? Sloan have a new single; Goat Girl have announced their second album; and Deerhoof released an amazing covers medley of an album.
It's also Bandcamp Friday. Buy some stuff and support artists who can't tour.
ALBUM OF THE WEEK #1: Death Valley Girls - Under the Spell of Joy (Suicide Squeeze)
Light and dark collide on Death Valley Girls' new album that adds a 12-voice choir to their garage punk sound.
For five years, Death Valley Girls frontwoman Bonnie Bloomgarden wore the same t-shirt nearly every day, a shirt for the band Joy that had "Under the Spell of Joy" written on it. It's a phase she'd taken to heart and is now the title and unifying theme of her band's new album. “I read it as being about manifesting your biggest dreams and responding thoughtfully and mindfully to everything that comes in your path with joy and compassion first,” Bloomgarden says. “There is a lot to be really angry about in the world but joy is just as powerful if used correctly!”
Bloomgarden calls Under the Spell of Joy a "space-gospel record," and you get what she means pretty quickly. While musically Death Valley Girls are still working in the psych/garage/punk milieu, the arrangements are decidedly different than on their three previous albums. Organ and saxophone play a bigger role than ever before and, it's hard to miss the mass chorus -- a dozen voices -- that punctuate nearly every chorus. There's even a children's choir on a few songs. "We are learning that words with intention and energy hold so much power, especially when said or sung with a group," Bloomgarden says.
A children's choir is not something that makes me immediately press play (though who doesn't love Gerard McMann's "Cry Little Sister" from The Lost Boys soundtrack), but Death Valley Girls' conviction and good taste make this an appealing mix. The title track's looping refrain of "under the spell of joy / under the spell of love" works like a mantra set against a whirlwind of a glammy beat, bleating sax and a big Detroit punk style finish. As the song's frazzled electronics sputter out, that mantra continues on in your head. Or at least it does in mine.
More than anything, all those voices make these 11 songs sound gigantic, bolstered by a wave of positivity that's cut with the often skronky, loose arrangements. "Hold My Hand" and "It All Washes are VU-style stompers, "10 Day Miracle Challenge" snarls ferociously, "I'd Rather Be Dreaming" is an impassioned garage rock ballad (with a powerhouse vocal from Bonnie), and "Hypnagogia" and "The Universe" are out-there psych odysseys. It's all sewn together with those voices for a wall of sound worthy of The Crystals.
It's a surprising direction for a band whose name evokes cheapo exploitation thrillers, but Bloomgarden clearly means it. “The world is crazy right now and it feels like we should be doing more than just trying to perpetuate joy,” Bloomgarden says. “ I want people to sing to this record, make it their own, and focus on manifesting their dreams as much as they can!”
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ALBUM OF THE WEEK #2: Working Men's Club - Working Men's Club (Heavenly)
Miss LCD Soundsystem, The Fall, The Normal, Soft Cell and Tubeway Army? Working Men's Club kinda fill that void in their debut album.
"We just want to confuse the fuck out of people, in a good way," says Working Men's Club frontman Sydney Minsky-Sargeant. The group, who hail from Yorkshire, England, make dark, dance music -- inspired by a large swath of 1979-1983 post-punk that you might not think would work together. Like shiny leather dry ice synthpop? "A.A.A.A." (sung as "AHHAHHAHHAHH!!!") is like The Normal on steroids. "John Cooper Clarke" sadly does not feature the Mancunian punk poet icon, but does approximate the kind of funky krautrock jams you might associate with LCD Soundsystem. "White Rooms And People" is gleaming, sterile and very very catchy. "Valleys" is brilliant dancepop bristling with techno 303s. A lot of it vaguely sounds like The Fall, with a variety of second or third elements thrown in. (Example: "Be My Guest" is The Fall + Visage.) Minsky-Sargeant has a bone-dry, understated delivery that nonetheless oozes with attitude. The band get great sounds. Big, chunky drum machines. Wild, effects-heavy guitars. Flinty bass. Processed vocals. Working Men's Club is a bit of a blender, maybe a little confusing, but definitely good.
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Róisín Murphy - Róisín Machine (Skint)
Róisín Murphy has made her most crowd-pleasing solo album to date...while remaining an iconoclast.
Róisín Murphy's fantastic Róisín Machine was Album of the Week last week because I didn't realize they switched the release date, but it's out today and I didn't want you to forget. Here's bit of my review:
Róisín Machine is bold and brash, slinky and sexy, and a whole lot of fun, swathed in strings, funky Chic guitars, popping bass, cosmic synths and Murphy’s still powerful pipes. It’s got all four of Murphy’s excellent singles with Parrot from the last 12 months -- “Incapable,” “Narcissus,” “Something More,” and “Murphy’s Law” -- plus another six where those came from that are just as good.
Róisín Machine really is great and she deserves to be much, much better known in North America than she is. Give it a spin: