Monday, January 16, 2012

Welcome Back... Siobhan Donaghy


She was the first member to jump out of the Sugababes car before it crashed, and with a reformation of the original line-up recently confirmed, it's time to welcome Siobhan Donaghy back to the room. 

In 2001 record label London dropped the 'Babes but signed Shiv, and she debuted with the rock-influenced Revolution In Me two years later. First single Overrated, a dig at the original 3-piece's first hit Overload, made the top 20, then further singles bombed. 


She returned in 2007 with a new Parlophone contract under her arm and an experimental flair up her sleeve, standing out amongst Take That's comeback and Rihanna's meteorological reign, and it's her second album, Ghosts, that earns her such a warm welcome back. 

Don’t Give It Up, the lead single, opens the set with a galloping electronic riff that plummets into a swooning chorus, setting the scene for a Cocteau Twins-styled comeback.


The grand ballad So You Say followed, replete with firework sounds and hypnotic harmonies, a sister track perhaps to Patrick Wolf's Bluebells or Frou Frou's Hear Me Out. 


Even Ghost's more straight-forward tracks have a kookier edge, such as the Jem-like breeze of Sometimes, with its non-lyrical chorus made up entirely of whoops and shrieks, and would have made an excellent 3rd cut. 


Admittedly, there are a few throwaway tracks. There's A Place sounds like a One Touch demo whilst the strut and funk of 12-Bar Acid Blues (god only knows what that title means), doesn't quite lift the rhyme-by-numbers number off the ground. 


The more peculiar moments make up for the less inspiring ones - Goldfish, (with hints of Kate Bush and  Felt Mountain era Goldfrapp) highlights Siobhan's vocal power, as the album's producer James Sanger wraps her voice in a celestial breakdown and an almost trance-inducing climax.  


Other songs are more low-key, yet still come with intriguing whispers and sweeping refrains aplenty. Styfling, a track that was left off the album, was later released as a remix by Square 1. Ignore the version with the rap segments and go for this:


The album closer is the title piece, and as a song in reverse, bonkers lines like ‘fuel full fat her glass of milk’ are transformed into a spooky chant, giving Roma Ryan's Loxian language tracks on  Enya's  Amarantine album a run for their money.


Overall, despite being unsuccessful (it peaked at #92), the album is a healthy mix of radio friends and complex tunes. Whether or not the Sugababes 1.0 reunion will showcase Ms Donaghy's esoteric leanings remains to be seen. Until then, this is the go-to album for anyone who thinks that Nicola Roberts was the first girlbander to do Odd 'n' Peculiar solo. 

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Goldfrapp | The Singles


It's surprising to note that after 10 years spent in Goldfrapp's shadow, Ladytron (arguably the edgier of the two electropop bands), were the first to release a decade-spanning retrospective. Sure enough, the West Country 2-piece are for once following the lead of their Liverpool-based counterparts, with hits package The Singles, a singles collection that curiously doesn't feature all of their singles. Behold! The official tracklist:

01 | Ooh La La
02 | Number 1
03 | Strict Machine
04 | Lovely Head
05 | Utopia (Genetically Enriched)
06 | A&E
07 | Happiness (Single Version)
08 | Train
09 | Ride A White Horse (Single Version)
10 | Rocket
11 | Believer
12 | Black Cherry
13 | Yellow Halo
14 | Melancholy Sky

Note the peculiar layout - the album immediately cashes in its chips with the openers being the band's  two  biggest hits (#4 and #9 UK respectively), whilst everything else seemingly trails in its wake. For a band that has taken in such a diverse array of sounds - from the Björk-esque tones of Felt Mountain through to the ABBA-like kitsch of Head First - this set just doesn't give their music justice. 

Throwing in dreamier moments such as A&E and the remix version of Utopia in amongst the stomp and circumstance of Strict Machine and Ride A White Horse makes for a jarring, nonsensical mix. A chronological order or at the very least a trip through each mood in turn would have definitely hit the spot. Besides, the cover is a blatant rehash of the Supernature artwork:


And where, oh WHERE are Caravan Girl, Twist and Fly Me Away? Sure, they're not the duo's most memorable cuts, but they were all top 75 hits. With just 14 tracks on offer, there was plenty of room for those and even massive flops like Alive and Pilots. Instead we get the dreary new track Yellow Halo...


...and the marginally less dreary Melancholy Sky.


The collection, out on 6th Feb, marks the end of vocalist Alison Eponymous and instrumentalist Will Gregory's deal with Mute, and with this in mind The Singles feels like less of a golden era reminiscence and more like an assortment of hits thrown together to honour a contract. Boos all round!  

Friday, January 13, 2012

First Aid Kit | Emmylou

Channelling the tight-knit harmonies of The Pierces and the wistfulness of a more mature Taylor Swift, up-and-coming folk sister act First Aid Kit are, shockingly, not from the American West but from Sweden. However, the video for their new single Emmylou (yes, Harris) does in fact hail from the deserts of California; a clip that ties in nicely with the country stylings of the track.


Johanna and Karla Söderberg (had I mentioned their names earlier the Scandi link would have been less scandalous) follow Katy Perry's lead with a reference to June and Johnny Cash, music's golden oldies du jour. Unlike The One That Got Away, the duo manage to balance out the twee with enough quirk to work - think Amy MacDonald's This Is Your Life crossed with yet another one of Bat For Lashes's dreams. As they trailer their second album The Lion's Roar, the two-piece asks: "just sing, little darling, sing with me". It shouldn't be long before the likes of Radio 2 will be taking them up on their offer.