Brion Starr - A Night to Remember (Taxi Gauche)
A student of '70s glam and mutant pop, Brion Starr enlists Bowie/Sparks producer Tony Visconti for his new album
When Brion Starr is searching for a sound he goes straight to the source. He recorded his 2019 album, Global Identity , at KONK, the London recording studio started by The Kinks. For his new album, A Night to Remember , he went to Château d’Hérouville, the legendary French studio whose credits include Bowie's Low , T-Rex's The Slider , Elton John's Goodbye Yellow Brick Road , and Chris Bell's I Am the Cosmos . And he got Bowie collaborator Tony Visconti to produce it.
While you might expect, given the people and places involved, not to mention Brion's very Thin White Duke press pics, for this album to be a total Bowie homage. It's not. There's definitely some of that glammy, dark vibe but there's a lot more going on here. Starr is clearly a fan of the sounds of the late '70s and early '80s and, more than anything else, Brian Eno feels like the biggest influence here, be it records like Here Come the Warm Jets and Before and After Science , or his collaborations with Talking Heads, Bowie and Devo. He never lets his heroes get in the way of his own vision, however, and A Night to Remember works all on its own.
The album is a loose concept album about "one evening in an internationalist future city" and the inhabitants who tend to only come out at night. Songs glow like neon in the rain, shot on Kodachrome, with stately piano, rubbery basslines and everything else run through a variety of synthesizers and effects, from the guitars to the vocals and the drums. (Visconti's knowledge of the Eventide 949 harmonizer, famously used on Low , has obviously been put to use here.) It is elegant but alien, classic but futuristic. Unmoored from time. The songs are great, too, even when tipping an obvious hat to "Fame" ("Blackout") or "Crosseyed and Painless" ("Private Eye"). More often than not, though, Starr is absorbing it all and radiating it back out on his own wavelength. See: the graceful "21st Century Ltd (for Alice)," the sweeping, groovy "Nocturne," and the slow strut of "Same Flame (Stay With Me)." Where will he go next?
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Fine Place - This New Heaven (Upset the Rhythm)
Haunted synthpop for an abandoned city via Frankie Rose and Running's Matthew Hord
Sometime soon we are going to run out of albums that were created during, and out of, pandemic lockdown, but we're not there yet. Fine Place , the duo of Frankie Rose and Matthew Hord (Running, Pop. 1280), would probably not exist without it. "The sound we were going for was an attempt to capture the dystopian feel of New York during a period of desertion by the wealthy," they say of their debut album. "It was produced in a time-frame saturated in both uncertainty and serenity, and the soundscapes we created felt fitting and almost organic as a response to our surroundings." This New Heaven bears Frankie's distinctive, gothy, melodic stamp -- recalling her 2010 debut more than anything else -- but Hord takes the songs into haunted synthpop territory. It's a perfect soundtrack for biking deserted Manhattan streets, wondering if things will ever be the same.
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Mandy, Indiana - ...EP (Fire Talk)
Manchester trio's debut EP is a unique mix of industrial, techno and ye-ye
Manchester-based trio Mandy, Indiana -- who until recently went by the name Gary, Indiana -- have a brutalist sound that is modern but hearkens back to the original post-punk era. (I don't' know why they changed their name but it's better, and doesn't make me think of The Music Man .) Their songs are danceable but also a real kick in the eye and, in a real commitment to aesthetics, they record in abandoned warehouses and other actual industrial spaces. Another Manchester band, Factory Floor, come to mind, but MI are less overtly electronic, with more of an emphasis on vocals. Those come via Valentine Caulfield who delivers her lyrics in her native French with a dry, icy tone that intensifies the group's stark sound, while also making things more approachable. There's no better example of what they do than on "Bottle Episode," the opening track on their debut EP. Caulfield chants over cavernous, rat-a-tat drumming before the song shifts gears and heads out onto frozen synthy tundra, only to slam back into those snares and toms. That smashes straight into "Nike of Samothrace" (they have good song titles!) which is like being dropped into rave in a metal shop where Bridgette Bardot is the DJ. "Alien 3," though, is the EP's biggest banger, a sleek techno number that's been dragged through a junkyard in January. If you need a little less jagged edge in the monitors, there are rad remixed by Daniel Avery and Club Eat that take "Alien 3" and "Nike of Samothrace," respectively, more directly to the dancefloor, but Mandy, Indiana sound best with the welding mask on.
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Papercuts - Baxter's Bliss EP (Psychic Friends)
Jason Quever is back with this digital only EP featuring originals and covers of Galaxie 500 and Leonard Cohen
It's been three years since Papercuts ' excellent 2018 album Parallel Universe Blues and Jason Quever is now back with this lovely stopgap, digital-only EP. The three originals are all warmly glum -- Quever's production and arrangements always sound lost in the fog of his San Francisco home -- with drony organ laying down an extra layer of cloud cover. The EP also features two covers: a terrific take on Galaxie 500's "When Will You Come Home" that is noticeably different than the original but still sounding like it could've been produced by G500 collaborator Kramer (Quever in fact produced Dean Wareham's new LP); and a stately version of protest standard "The Partisan" done in the style of Leonard Cohen's version on 1969's Songs from a Room . Baxter's Bliss is a true appetizer, and hopefully we won't have to wait too long for the next proper Papercuts album.
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