How are we all holding up? The same. Let's get on with it. This week: BC Camplight releases his best album yet and sticks the landing on Shortly After Takeoff; Melbourne's RVG are finally back with their second album; Katie Harkin, who has spent the last decade playing in Sleater-Kinney, Wild Beasts and with Courtney Barnett, steps into the spotlight with her solo debut; Olympia Washington's Lake (who did the Adventure Time closing theme) are back with a new album; and a new comp sheds light on Perpignan, France's '90s garage rock scene.
If you need more new album reviews, head to Andrew's Notable Releases which includes X's first album with the original lineup in 35 years, and more. If you want more Basement-approved stuff, there are a lot of them in our 20 essential Merge Records releases that aren’t ‘Funeral’ or ‘In the Aeroplane Over the Sea’ feature, and Lloyd Cole was nice enough to tell us about what he's been listening to during COVID-19 lockdown. On that note, so has the BrooklynVegan staff (we've been doing weekly playlists), and there have been a lot of Basement-loved bands this week in our daily "Amazing Live Videos" posts (The Smiths, The Housemartins, Beta Band, The Wedding Present, more). That should hold you till next week.
Head below for this week's reviews...
BC Camplight - Shortly After Takeoff (Bella Union)
The ghosts of '70s singer-songwriters past (Nilsson in particular) and his late father haunt BC Camplight's confessional, self-effacingly funny fifth album. It's his best yet.
“This is an examination of madness and loss,” says Brian Christinzio, the "BC" behind BC Camplight. “I hope it starts a long overdue conversation.” Christinzio is a laugh-through-the-pain, crying-on-the-inside clown kind of guy and there's whole lot of both emotions on the fantastic Shortly After Takeoff, which is the third chapter in his "Manchester Trilogy" of albums he's made since leaving Philadelphia for the North of England. (The other two are 2015’s How to Die in the North and 2018’s Deportation Blues.) He's been through a lot across those three albums, including deportation, the death of his father and a constant struggle with mental illness. “It’s important to stress that this isn’t a redemption story,” he says. “I'm a guy who maybe lives a little hard and I’m in the thick of some heavy stuff. But as a result, I think I've made my best record.”
It's definitely BC Camplight's best record to date -- a wildly creative, thoughtful, and tuneful look in the mirror under the harshest light possible but one that's still able to celebrate the absurdity. While still, you know, working it all out. Musically, Shortly After Takeoff is a mix of '70s singer-songwriter styles by way of post-punk, mutant pop, and current musical trends. Dubstep "wub wub wub" bass, skronky guitars, and harp on the same album? It's no wilder than the mood swings in the lyrics that play out like hilarious diary entries from a particularly terrible year. For example, "Ghosthunting" opens with Christinzio performing a very dark stand-up routine before the song kicks in, detailing the days after his father's death. "At the funeral, my cousin, he asked me in small talk / 'Are you making the people dance?'" he sings in falsetto over chamber ensemble strings. "I said 'sure' and thought to myself / Who does he think I am Tame Impala?"
Actually, there might be a little Tame Impala in Shortly After Takeoff's grandiose title track, especially in the chorus where Brian's falsetto melts into a trippy orchestra of synthesizers and glammy guitars, but Kevin Parker would probably never write about totally coming unglued on a plane, full-on terror at 20,000 feet.
Elsewhere: “Back to Work” vacillates between a weird, heavy electronic chorus (there's that dubstep) and more folk-rock-y verses, while lyrically dealing with getting on with it in a Die Hard kind of way: “I’ve gotta block out most of the pain just / like John McClane does / I wanna look myself in the eye / be a normal guy / and say some clever shit whenever I’m about to die.” Says BC, “The verse seems to make sense, then out of nowhere, boom boom…just when you think you have it figured out… It’s the never-ending cycle of mental illness."
On that note, there's also "I Wanna Be in the Mafia," a Nilsson-esque, grandiose ballad about time spent at Philly's Belmont Psychiatric, dreaming of an easy way out ("I want to put a hit out on my brain") as a Ray Liotta mid-level made man, complete with a pinky ring and expensive sweatpants. There's also the Beach Boys-style car fantasy of "Born to Cruise" and the elegantly bummed-out "Arm Around Your Sadness." Shortly After Takeoff is a mere 34 minutes, but BC packs it with more memorable and moving moments than your average self-indulgent double album, and "heavy" has rarely felt this nimble.
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RVG - Feral (Fire)
More straight-from-the gut rock from Melbourne's RVG who continue to wear their Aussie alt-rock influences on their sleeves
It's been about three years since Melbourne, Australia's RVG -- led by Romy Vager, a real pistol of a frontwoman -- released their debut album and a lot has happened since, not even taking into account the spanner-in-the-works that have been the last few months. Recorded mostly live using legendary Melbourne venue The Tote as a studio, 2017's A Quality of Mercy was self released and, surprising just about everyone, really took off, selling out its initial vinyl run instantly. They then toured the world for the better part of two years in support. Finally here we are with the follow-up. Though given a more ferocious title than its predecessor, Feral is a slightly tamer, decidedly studio creation, trading off a little of the debut's energy for fidelity and finesse. Not a bad deal at all.
RVG found a perfect foil in producer Victor Van Vugt, who has worked with Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, The Go-Betweens Robert Forster, Luna and more, and who really knows how to capture live energy in a studio setting. You can't really "studio" the life out of an unstoppable force like Vager, anyway, and you can imagine her bouncing around the room while belting out the spirited vocal performances on "Prima Donna," "Alexandra," and the heartbroken "I Used to Love You." Vager continues to tightrope between self-deprecation, anger, wicked humor, and moments of genuine hope and triumph. In all cases she's giving it 100% and it's all there on tape. She is also still fond of sound effects: "IBM" from RVG's first album made good use of a dentist's drill; here, the witty "Christian Neurosurgeon" features a bone saw solo. RVG's influences remain the same the second go-round -- chiming '80s widescreen romantics like Echo & The Bunnymen and The Go-Betweens, wilder sounds like The Gun Club -- but there is more shimmer and jangle now. This style used to be the sound of alt-rock and college radio and, after having the life drained out of it by the late '90s, RVG remind you that guitars like this can still tantalize.