Indie Basement (3/14): the week in classic indie, alternative & college rock

Somebody in that old play, you know the one, said beware the Ides of March, but I say don’t be scared, this is a pretty terrific week for new releases. I review five of them: Bambara get a synth overhaul on first album in six years; “A Girl Like You” singer Edwyn Collins‘ heartfelt 10th solo album; the 11th from indie greats Throwing Muses; Étienne de Crécy‘s latest collab-filled album featuring houseguests Damon Albarn, Kero Kero Bonito, and more; and the 20th anniversary edition of Of Montreal’s 2005 classic The Sunlandic Twins.
Over in Notable Releases, Andrew reviews a whole bunch more including the latest from Circuit des Yeux, Huremic (aka Parannoul), Clipping., Courting, Charley Crockett, and more.
If you need catching up on this week’s news, Everything But the Girl announced their first live shows in 25 years; Ty Segall announced a new album (keep an ear out for this one, it’s good); the Pavement movie will be in theaters in May; Spinal Tap II is coming in September; the 20th anniversary cut of BJM/Dandy Warhols doc DiG! is now streaming; and Geoff Barrow (Portishead, Beak>) has launched a film division of his Invada label and co-wrote/produced upcoming thriller GAME which is set during the ’90s rave scene and stars Sleaford Mods’ Jason Williamson.
Head below for this week’s reviews:
ALBUM OF THE WEEK #1: Bambara – Birthmarks (Wharf Cat / Bella Union)
Brooklyn post-punks get a sleek, synth makeover with help from Bark Psychosis’ Graham Sutton on their excellent fifth album
Since we last heard from cinematic Brooklyn post-punks Bambara (2022’s Love on My Mind mini-LP), they signed to Simon Raymonde’s Bella Union label in the UK and, most significantly, have undergone a noticeable sonic overhaul. The bones are still the same — smouldering, high-drama rock that owes a lot to Johnny Cash, Nick Cave and Ennio Morricone, with Blaze Bateh’s thunderous drumming powering things and brother Reid Bateh’s smokey swagger in the spotlight — but this time it’s delivered with sleek synthesizers and layers of atmospheric sound design. The album was produced by Graham Sutton of British post-rock greats Bark Psychosis and he feels like a fourth member of the band alongside founding bassist William Brookshire. Would they have put the ’80s-style orchestra hit samples on ripper “Letters to Sing Sing” without him? Maybe, but it feels new and exciting in this context, a fist pumping moment that is both a little humorous and exactly right. Then there’s “Face of Love,” the album’s best and most surprising song, that is part Cocteau Twins and part Massive Attack, with cascades of ethereal guitar wash, crashing slow funk drums, proggy keyboard arpeggiations, heavenly guest vocals from Madeline Johnston (Midwife) and Emma Acs (Crack Cloud), and Reid in growling sprechgesang mode that leans toward rapping. Despite those two band reference points in the last overlong sentence, “Face of Love” does not sound like “Teardrop,” but it is pure Bambara. Whoever is responsible for this sonic renovation, huzzah, because Birthmarks sounds like a million bucks in all the right ways and the band’s essential Bambara-ness never gets lost in the gloss. It’s a real tightrope act; in lesser hands this could be corny as hell in a Fields of the Nephilim kind of way, but the songs are great, the production is better and Reid sells the hell out of it. Bambara are still making desert highway night drive soundtracks, leaving fiery destruction and broken hearts in their wake, but they’re piloting a spaceship now.
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ALBUM OF THE WEEK #2: Edwyn Collins – Nation Shall Speak Unto Nation (AED)
Another terrific album from the former Orange Juice frontman and “A Girl Like You” singer
“Hard to let my old self go,” Edwyn Collins sings on “Knowledge,” the opening track on his 10th album, but if you ask me, he did it long ago. Having been battered by the music biz with his band Orange Juice and an unsuccessful early solo career in the ’80s, Collins peppered his ’90s solo albums with bitter sarcasm, cynicism and rapier wit. Even on his 1995 hit “A Girl Like You,” which is a perfect pop single, he threw in the line “Too many protest singers, not enough protest songs” into the otherwise lusty romantic number. But in the 20 years and five albums since the two major strokes that nearly killed him and left the right half of his body weakened, Collins has favored simple, direct lyrics that reflect hope and his appreciation of life. This all while still delivering the kind of tuneful melodies, jangly guitars, clever production and signature warbly singing style he was known for back when he was the “Sound of Young Scotland.” Nation Shall Speak Unto Nation, his 10th solo album, is a wonderful record, and benefits greatly from friends and ace Pretenders sidemen James Walbourne and Carwyn Ellis, not to mention his son William on bass. Edwyn is mostly in gentle mode here which suits his croon that can still charmingly swoop from falsetto to baritone within a phrase, as he moves between country/folk (“Knowledge,” “The Mountains Are My Home”) and his signature brand of wall-of-sound soul (“The Heart is a Foolish Little Thing,” “Strange Old World”). The best song on the album, the sweet “A Little Sign,” falls somewhere in-between and makes the most of its two-chord melody with excellent echo-chamber dub production. It’s subtle, it’s subdued, and it all shows that, at 66, he’s still got the touch.
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Throwing Muses – Moonlight Concessions (Fire Records)
Cello and Kristin Hersh’s signature melodies and vocals highlight the 11th album from these long-running indie greats
Kristin Hersh has led Throwing Muses since 1983 when she and stepsister Tanya Donelly formed the band while still in high school. They’ve changed dramatically since then; Donelly left to form Belly after 1991’s The Real Ramona, and with that Hersh reconfigured the band into a more acoustic project while keeping drummer David Narcizo and adding new bassist Bernard Georges. That lineup continues today, and even though their sharp angles have been traded for folkier arrangements, the through-line remains Hersh’s unique off-kilter melodies, and lyrics/vocals which often feel like she’s channeling spirits from the beyond, even when subject matter is very personal. Moonlight Concessions is the 11th Throwing Muses album and Hersh wrote many of the songs in South coastal environments before recording in the band’s home base of Rhode Island. “In New Orleans the stars look greenish-blue, as it’s below sea level and swamp-lit. But on Moonlight Beach, they glow icy white. All these songs were written in these two glowy places, which helped our sonic technique find itself.” That sonic technique includes bluesy progressions and prominent cello by Pete Harvey which, along with Hersh’s unmistakable slightly sinister delivery, gives songs with sunny titles like “Summer of Love” and “South Coast” an eerie nocturnal vibe. Moonlight Concessions is Throwing Muses through and through, beach music but for an eclipse.
Moonlight Concessions by Throwing Muses
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Étienne de Crécy – Warm Up (PIXADELIC)
The French Touch vet taps Damon Albarn, Kero Kero Bonito and Alexis Taylor for a different kind of house music
Part of the original ’90s French Touch scene that also gave us Daft Punk, Cassius, and Sébastien Tellier, Étienne de Crécy is a house music master who has given us such suave dancefloor classics as “You,” “Prix Choc,” and “Am I Wrong.” He is also a master collaborator, having made records with Jarvis Cocker, Baxter Dury, Air, and many many more. For his latest album, Warm Up, he’s put his contact list to work with one of the most impressive guest-lists of his career, including Damon Albarn, Hot Chip‘s Alexis Taylor, Kero Kero Bonito, Caroline Rose, and current UK indie stars Sports, plus a name I haven’t heard in a while, Olivia Merilahti of ’00s-era finnish duo The Dø. He created all the backing tracks first, and then gave them to his vocalists, encouraging them to take the songs to new places. Warm Up‘s a little different than his other records, as the songs were designed not for the club but as something a little more chill you could listen to during the day at home. Étienne’s fingerprints are still all over this but songs like “World Away” (ft Alexis Taylor), “Small Screen” (ft Kero Kero Bonito), and “Karma” (ft Olivia Merilahti) let you dance while doing the dishes without things ever getting too crazy. Warm Up is just different kind of house music.
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INDIE BASEMENT CLASSIC: Of Montreal – The Sunlandic Twins (Polyvinyl, 2005)
20th anniversary edition of Kevin Barnes’ mid-’00s classic offers up tons of bonus material but the original album remans the star
Kevin Barnes spent the lion’s share of the first decade with his band of Montreal in some sort of heightened baroque fantasy land filled with elves and fairies and other flights of fancy while orbiting an outer moon of the Elephant 6 solar system. The talent was overflowing but also unfocused and a little too much, like a unicorn vomiting rainbows 24/7. It was when collaborator Bryan Poole left the group after 1998’s The Gay Parade that Barnes took the reins fully and began reshaping of Montreal into more of a lo-fi glam new wave band and after a couple records on Kindercore, he signed to Polyvinyl and released Satanic Panic in the Attic in 2004 that, while still musically scatterbrained, had a number of undeniable pop songs which caused a lot of folks to stop and pay attention. It was the next album, though, where Barnes crystalized of Montreal’s style, which was still prone to tongue twister absurdist titles (“Wraith Pinned to the Mist and Other Games”) but wrapped it all in tight, synthy, funky power-pop hooks, as if Big Star were covering The Human League. (Time in Norway amongst the country’s indiepop scene was also an influence.) Lyrically, Barnes was a little more down to earth too, with relatable choruses like “I never stopped wondering if you still think of us” and “Let’s pretend we don’t exist” that were easy to sing along to while you were dancing. The Sunlandic Twins is hit after hit, and the production is distinctive yet somehow evergreen. Many think the album that followed, 2006’s ambitious and great Hissing Fauna, Are You The Destroyer, is of Montreal’s masterpiece, but this is the one I go back to most often.
The Sunlandic Twins‘ 20th anniversary is April 12 but the deluxe edition is out today and the vinyl has been remastered at Abbey Road studios, pressed on double 45RPM ruby red vinyl for maximum fidelity and comes in a lovely gatefold sleeve. (Pick it up in the BV shop.) It comes with so many digital bonus tracks (40 to be specific) it’ll make your head spin, including b-sides, rarities and a full live album. Barnes was on fire around this era so there are lots of gems but nothing outshines the album’s original 13 songs.
The Sunlandic Twins (20th Anniversary Edition) by of Montreal
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