Dalliance Review of 2011
Written By Michael Wood Monday, January 9th, 2012
Eight Albums
- I Am Very Far - Okkervil River
The best live band you will see doing Rock n' Roll shows have put out an album that shows the emotional range of one of their performances. Weaving between melancholia and pumped guitar stylings I Am Very Far is a band hitting the targets that it sets for itself, and very high targets those are. Lyrical, intelligent, excellent. - Welcome To Condale - Summer Camp
Out of the ethereal and onto record it has taken a long time for Summer Camp to emerge after some curious shows and a few hints towards obscurities. What emerges is an album recollecting a time not lived in a place that probably never existed but with a feel that is universal. Songs of heartache and loss are always played out well to a catchy beat. - (I Can't Get No) - Stevie Jackson
Or, if you will, the guy out of Belle & Sebastian doing his own thing and doing it so very well. The references are sixties pop of course but the immediacy of the guitar driven pop and the cute smartness of the lyrics are surprisingly effective. - Nursing Home - Let's Wrestle
It is thrashing guitars and sarcastic lyrics but that has never been something that upset me and Nursing Home manages not only to power through its running time in an indecent haste but also includes some laugh out loud funny moments. Superb. - Collapse Into Now - R.E.M.
Or if you will the end of an era. The last R.E.M. is another addition to the catalogue that adds breadth but lacks the depth of the earlier work of legend. Still a cracking listen and they will be missed. - Obscurities - Stephin Merritt
A collection of Merritt's offcuts from projects is always going to be a sketchy affair but the great stuff is really great stuff. - Passive Aggressive: Singles 2002-2010 - The Radio Dept.
A singles collection, so perhaps it should not count, but unseen by most this Swedish band have been making a cerebral music that aches with a heartbreak unspeakable. - An Argument with Myself EP - Jens Lekman
An EP is half an album so Lekman only gets half points for this brilliant collection of songs about friends dying, getting lost in Melbourne and looking for movie stars in Sweden.
Four Tracks
- Hanging From A Hit - Okkervil River
Will Sheff's lyrical masterpiece in two parts is a rock and roll's sexual predatory instinct hitting hard and cruel into a real life. Searing, dazzling, and darkly beautiful. - Walked Out On a Line - Okkervil River
A band so good they can leave this story of drug fuelled destruction on the shelf as Will Sheff and Co reference the sound of the Beach Boys while creating something utterly new. Key Lyric: In the storm's scream and swirl's/Where I spotted my girl/I was pinning her straight to my side. - Waiting for Kirsten - Jens Lekman
Lekman's true story of trying to meet Kirsten Dunst in Gothenberg uses the Swedish singer's favourite trick of lulling the listen in with a dry humour and twisting that humour into a thoughtful depression. Key Lyric: But the VIP lines are not to the clubs/But to healthcare, apartments and jobs./"Hey buddy can I borrow five grand?/'Cause my dad's in chemo/And they wanna take him off his plan." - In Dreams Part II - Let's Wrestle
Mayhem on a record. Key Lyric: In my dreams there were Pokemon beating me up/I punched Pidgeotto right in the face
Written By Michael Wood Monday, January 9th, 2012
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This post is about Jens Lekman, Let's Wrestle, Okkervil River, R.E.M., Stephin Merritt, Stevie Jackson, Summer Camp, The Radio Dept.
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