Saturday, 31 August 2013

Top Tunes: August


Panic! At The Disco - This Is Gospel 

Fall Out Boy - My Songs Know... 

Fall Out Boy - Sugar We're Goin' Down 

Green Day - Boulevard Of Broken Dreams

Imagine Dragons - Radioactive

Twin Atlantic - Make A Beast Of Myself

Bastille - Laura Palmer

New Found Glory - Head On Collision

YOUTUBE PLAYLIST

Thursday, 29 August 2013

Take Me Back: Reading Festival (Part One)



Leaving Reading Festival last year was a real low point for myself and Meg. We had embraced the mud, the toilets, the overall grossness of festival camping and were not quite ready to let it go for another year. Alas, the rules meant we had to leave and spend the next year counting down the days until we could return. The line-up didn't even bother us - it could have been the worst line-up ever and we'd still go. Half way through the year though, Fall Out Boy came back from the murky hell of hiatus and like I had been joking about for quite sometime announced they were playing Reading Festival.

Our countdown was with a new sense of complete and utter fangirl level excitedness.


As per usual I left everything until last minute which meant a mad dash to find my clothes and haphazardly shoving them in my bag. Climbing into a car that was bigger than I expected but still too small, we were off up the giant hill out of my village trying to convince Elly that Reading's not really THAT bad. Then we hit the motorway. And the car just couldn't take it. There was little to no acceleration. Trundling along until we could turn off and head back the other way we lost an hour of travel time heading back to Elly's house to steal her dad's Galaxy. A mob attack from her two adorable Labradors and eventually we were away - again, and this time with enough room to spread out.
At around 8 that night we parked the car and loaded up with our stuff to trek and find a place to camp. Having had a good spot last year just 5 minutes walk from the arena, we couldn't help but be a little annoyed at Elly and Lauren's lack of stamina and ending up just under the bridge - which for anyone who has been before you know is miles away from the arena. Sigh. Coming a day early meant there was only us and two other groups of people in our field which seemed bizarre but it didn't stop us from getting reasonably drunk and putting sugar on our chips instead of salt.

The next day plan was to do the 'short walk' to Tesco to stock up on food and good ol' vodka so leaving Lauren behind we set off on Thursday morning to discover it was not a short walk. Reading Festival website tells lies. It took us an hour to walk there in the blazing heat with green car park campers going towards Reading and early birds like us trying to walk away from it to get to Tesco. It was a beautiful moment when we could see the front doors and we took to the shelves like we had been starved for months not a mere 15 hours. Exhausted we stopped at the cafe and I wolfed down chips, beans and a mango Costa iced drink before beginning the dreaded walk back. With bags that weighed about the same as us it took 2 and half hours to get back and I popped a vein in my finger thus resulting in a dead finger (it's still dead fyi).





We arrived back in more pain than I think ever before and spent the rest of the day lying around half dead from the pain, half dead from the level of alcohol consumption that followed the trip from hell. It was to our amusement every time we heard other people say things like 'we're just gonna pop to Tesco.' No, sir. I don't think you are.

Sunday, 4 August 2013

Album Review: Young///Savage + Astronomical Split


Just over a month ago Young///Savage and Astronomical released their six track split EP. Post-punk Texans Young///Savage start off the party with "The City That Sleeps" which opens with marching band-esque drumming and high key guitaring. The tune immediately sinks it's teeth in then speeds up, making way for throaty vocals and audible desperation befitting the lyrics. The 1.30 mark unleashes an instrumental breakdown with epic stumbling guitars running wild and ending the song on a last tortured slur, leaving the music to stutter out.
From the first lull of the gentle guitar on "Gulf Of Mexico" I knew this was the goosebump track and more than likely to be my favourite of Young//Savage's three. There's no sugar coating anything; "I pop pills to make life easier to deal with, and I pay bills to ensure i've got a home to sleep in," is sung in ominous tones. The versatility is stunning, going from a grungy rawness to something more... I want to say accessible, almost. Intricate guitars knot together and work with and against the drums and bass each allowing the other to take the stage when needed and never over stepping the vocals. It truly is a hauntingly beautiful addition to their repertoire.
Their final track "Oh, I Don't Care"  reverts back to the hectic mish-mash - in a good way - of clashing instrumentals and rough yells. Again, the lyrics are brutally honest and relatable, scratching at the very hopelessness we bury deep in our brains.

The first of Astronomical's tracks "A New Mold" opens with jollier guitaring than that of Young//Savage. A slight pause and they come together full band with drawn out - not whiny - vocals. The music is light and by the second half you'll find yourself humming along.
For the first time on the EP a song begins acapella on "Burning Bridges" before that infectious music bounces in. The song questions something everyone has at some point in their lives; "another friend i've lost. Is it me? My personality?" and if you haven't asked yourself this yet, you just wait - and keep this song in mind for when it does happen as you'll be wanting to hit the replay button over and over, especially as it's partnered with a pleasing mix of gritty edged and clean vocals. The long sessions of soft swirly Transit like music help too.
The final, final track "Better Man" is Astronomical's goosebump song. The opener guitar note that fazes itself in gradually gaining volume is lush enough on it's own - i'm actually convinced the first 20 seconds is one of the nicest sounding pieces of music i've heard - and then combined with equally momentous lyrics, that vocal delivery and harmonies the song is nothing but divine.

The two bands have clearly thought long and well over their contributions and made an EP that has stood out for me. Out of all the new music i've heard this year this has definitely been one of my favourite EP's - and i've heard a lot. Where Young///Savage's lyrics were hopeless "i'll just sit here in my underwear watching re-runs on my flat screen television," Astronomical seem let out their anger but attach a hopeful note "you'll never change so i'll just let go and cast new mold. Refill this hole, make some new goals." Pessimist Vs Optimist. It actually makes for perfect pissed off music - you can mope to the first half of the EP then try and move on from whatever/whoever. Despite these differences, however, the two go together perfectly so get on with it and do yourself a favour and download the split ASAP!

Friday, 2 August 2013

Bands I NEED To See Live (Part Two)



Throughout his career in the music industry Arthur Walwin  has achieved a lot. However, fronting bands and producing music for others was not enough for him as he began dabbling in a solo project. With songs like stories and a tone so beautiful I am eager to catch this guy dazzling people's socks off in a live setting. 


BROADWAY CALLS

Four or five years ago I had tickets to see these guys live in Bristol on what I believe was their first trip to the UK. It also happened to fall on the week we got a whole lot of snow, closing the M5, trapping us in our house and leaving my brother stuck at a service station waiting for police to bring him home. Go England. Every tour they've done since then has either avoided the middle of nowhere South West or clashed with gigs i've already got tickets for. But, one day, one freaking day I will see these punk gods fill a room and blast their way through a set of some of my favourite songs - and maybe if i'm really really lucky one of my favourite acoustic songs ever "Save Our Ship" - one day. 




YELLOWCARD

They've been around for quite a while now and yet I still haven't seen them play their unique blend of pop-punk with violin breakdowns. Most famous for the classic "Ocean Avenue" they have an extensive back catalogue with a pop-punk song for everyone and every occasion.