Wednesday, September 14, 2016

Songs you may have missed: Mini midweek edition

Here's a round-up of some of the better tracks you / I may have overlooked recently.

1) Beck - Wow
Sadly not a cover of the Kylie "classic", but very good nonetheless.




2) Years & Years - Meteorite
I'm including this single, taken from the Bridget Jones soundtrack, mainly (but not solely) because of Olly's quote on the press release:

"If there's anyone I'd like to be it's Bridget - a wanton sex goddess with a very bad man between her thighs."




3) LOOP - Losing My Mind
Very, very accessible pop from this London newcomer, who rather brilliantly stylises her name as "L∞P".






4) Tove Lo - Under The Influence (ft Wiz Khalifa)
The opening track from Tove Lo's second album, Lady Wood, is a textbook subtlebanger. Gone are Tove's sweeping dramatics, in comes a smooth and sleek house beat. Is this a good thing? I'll get back to you.




5) CAPPA - Next Ex
A song that wouldn't feel out of place on Carly Rae Jepsen's Emotions B Side album. Yes, it is that good.





6) Christine and the Queens - Sorry (Beyonce cover)
One of the absolute highlights of Radio 1's Live Lounge month.




7) Robyn - Dancing On My Own (Paul Andrews Streetlight Mix)
Calum Scott's miserable cover of Dancing On My Own is proof you can't destroy a good melody. But what if you took that melody and put it over the backing track to Journey's Don't Stop Believing? It would become invincible, that's what.

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Thursday, December 3, 2015

Twelve songs you may have missed

It's been a long time. I shouldn't have left you. Without a dope beat to step to.

So, yeah. With apologies (yet again) for an unplanned break in service, here are the songs I should have been writing about over the last seven days.


1) Robyn & La Bagatelle Magique - Love Is Free
Arriving a brisk five months after the single, the video for Love Is Free is actually worth the wait. It sees Robyn and Dominican rapper Maluca breaking the fourth wall in a video-about-a-video with some stunning, Technicolor set-ups. VG.



2) Fleur East - Sax
My eyes! My eyes!




3) Honne - Gone Are The Days
When the Sound of 2016 longlist came out on Monday, lots of people were surprised that London duo Honne hadn't made the cut. James Hatcher and Andy Clutterbuck (great name) met on the first day of university and have been making smooth, romantic electronic pop. Their new single comes from a 7-track EP that's due out in January.




4) Foxes - If You Leave Me Now
A bit of a tear-jerker this one - and undoubtedly the best vocal performance of Foxes' career so far.

She says: "This is a really personal song to me so I wanted the video to reflect that. I took a camera on the road with me for a couple of days, check it out."




5) Tinie Tempah - We Don't Play No Games
Interesting to hear Tinie going for a harder, bass-heavy track after the breezy summer anthem, Not Letting Go. This is the first track from his much-anticipated Uunk Food mixtape, which features cameos from Wretch 32, JME, J Hus and, essentially, everyone you've ever heard of in Grime.




6) A Tribe Called Quest - Can I Kick It (live on Fallon)
Back together to promote the newly-reissued People's Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm. This song never gets old.




7) The Staves - Make It Holy
Brrrrrrr....





8) The Palms - Push Off
Two of the members of Terraplane Sun are now performing as The Palms (I'm assuming this might mean something to somebody). Their debut single, Push Off, is a subtly groovy indie jangle that sounds like Jake Bugg and Foster The People slammed into each other.




9) Sofia de la Torres - Colorblind Cruisin'
Spanish songstress Sofia de la Torres has been on the verge of major success for a couple of years. Will this song be the one to push her over the top? Who knows - but it's a pop song so steamy it's de-crease your dungarees.





10) Selena Gomez - Hands To Myself
This is a weird video-advertorial, in which Selena and various Victoria's Secret models lip-sync to one of her songs. Everyone looks lovely, but the video is a bit of a dud. Still, nice song.




11) Dave Grohl vs Animal - Drum Battle
YES! YES! YES!



12) Jones - Hoops
Fans of Jessie Ware: Here is your new favourite artist.

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Friday, June 19, 2015

Robyn is back, and back on form*

Bloody hell, it's good to have Robyn back. And after last year's cold and austere collaboration with Royksopp her new material is warm, celebratory and primed for the dance floor.

Described as "a love letter to early 90s house music", Love Is Free is the first single from her new project Robyn & La Bagatelle Magique, comprised of her touring bandmate Markus Jägerstedt and the late dance producer Christian Falk.

Funky and fresh, the track draws on the Swedish star's love of hip-hop as much as her pop inclinations. "I'mma give it to you baby / I'mma give it like a mother / Safe like a rubber," she drawls in that tiny helium voice of hers. "We're all over this city / Sometimes in the nitty / Sometimes in the gritty."

In a parallel universe where Betty Boo is the world's biggest pop star, this is her triumphant new single.

Robyn & La Bagatelle Magique - Love Is Free

There's an interview with Robyn and Markus over on FACT magazine if you want to know more about their new mini-album.

*Not that she ever really went off the boil, but you know what I mean.

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Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Robyn and Royksopp are floating in space

Monument is the 10-minute opening track on Robyn & Royksopp's mini-album Do It Again; an eerie, atmospheric (if somewhat ponderous) groove that slowly gives way to a muted saxophone solo.

It now comes with an equally spooky video, where the dance gurus wake up suspended on a floating disc in outer space. Some awful fate seems to have befallen them all (not least in the haircut department) as Robyn mutters to herself silently between the lyrics - an apparent sign of a disturbed mind.

Or maybe she's just a big fan of Michael Wilson in the Police Academy films. You decide.

Robyn & Royksopp - Monument


Michael Wilson - Police Academy 2

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Tuesday, July 22, 2014

Robyn and Royksopp do it again

I haven't been the biggest cheerleader for Robyn and Royksopp's joint EP / Tour thingy, as it all feels undercooked - like the two artists are retreating to safe ground after careers built on breaking the rules.

Still, you can't deny that the video for Do It Again (a number 75 hit back in May) is a complete corker. A story of forbidden love under a repressive regime (you can tell it's repressive, because everything's black and white) it's a stunning, cinematic interpretation of the song.

"I'm pleased that, for me, the video stirs up a feeling of chaos which is what we talked about quite a bit when we wrote the song," says Robyn. "Life takes you to a critical point and even though it might not make you happy, when it's over, you want to go back."

Robyn and Royksopp - Do It Again

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Monday, May 19, 2014

Banks' new single - Drowning

I've been mithering over what to post to the blog all day.

:: Michael Jackson's Billboard awards hologram? Nah, it gave me the creeps - falling right into the "uncanny valley".

:: Robyn and Royksopp's new video? Nope. Too headachy.

:: Jay-Z and Beyonce's tour trailer? Maybe. It's got Sean Penn and Rashida Jones in it, and you get to hear Beyonce cover Justify My Love - but it's so po-faced and self-important that I began to go a little Solange.

So it was a great relief when star-in-waiting Banks popped up 10 minutes ago with a menacing new track called Drowning. Premiered on Zane Lowe's Radio 1 show, it'll suck the breath out of your universe like a collapsing star.

If you've been following Banks, you'll know what to expect: Sultry, stuttering R&B sculpted from the shards of her shattered heart: "From the girl who made you soup and tied your shoes when you were hurting - you were not deserving," she quivers.

Have a listen below.



After the premiere, Lowe asked Banks it was painful to bare her soul like this: "It's a good pain," she replied. "I let it out because I need to. It doesn't feel painful but it's necessary."

Drowning is a mesmerising trailer for her album Goddess, which is out on 8 September.

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Monday, April 28, 2014

Again and again and again

Royksopp and Robyn have commissioned a lyric video for their not-at-all-bad and definitely-forthcoming new single Do It Again.

Spurred into action, a man with the improbable name of Kacper came round and took some photos of them. Kacper sent the photos to a different man with the equally improbably name Graham Smith, who typed out the song's lyrics on his laptop and animated them by navigating the buttons and menus on Adobe After Effects. Once the video was finished, he delivered it via a download link to the label, who held a meeting about it in a big glass room, then passed it on to Royksopp and Robyn to "sign off". Once everyone was happy, they bunged it onto YouTube, along with this explanatory note:

"We're just about to shoot a full video for "Do It Again". Awaiting it's completion, the most impatient souls out there can spend the meantime losing themselves in this mesmerizing black&white hypno-bonanza - and even sing along should they so desire... B+B*"

AND NOW HERE IT IS ON YOUR COMPUTERS.

Modern life, eh?

Royksopp and Robyn - Do It Again

* B+B are Royksopp's Svein Berge and Torbjørn Brundtland, fact fans

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Monday, April 14, 2014

Exciting news from Robyn (and Royksopp)

Hooray! There is a new mini-album on the way from Robyn and Röyksopp. The cover art, which is hovering above this paragraph, bills the performers as Röyksopp and Robyn, but I think we all know the correct order - both alphabetically and in terms of importance.

The two have collaborated before - most memorably on None Of Dem (slow-burning, introspective) and The Girl and The Robot (Madonna fed through a Commodore 64) - but this is something altogether more meaty.

"In the beginning we just knew we wanted to do something together, and then it started to feel more like a band thing than songs for a Röyksopp or Robyn album, so we're releasing this music together as a band, you could say," said Robyn.

"This five track mini-album is the accumulation and embodiment of the synergy between Robyn and ourselves," added Röyksopp, in an attempt to drain any potential excitement from the announcement.

Monument is the first track we're getting to hear - via a 1'30" preview on YouTube. It sounds promising.

Robyn and Röyksopp - Monument (preview)

Fans of longsongs (I'm looking at you Justin Timberlake) will be pleased to hear that the full version of Monument is just three seconds shy of 10 minutes. The full EP tracklisting looks like this:
Monument - 9:57
Sayit - 6:25
Do It Again - 5:06
Every Little Thing - 4:02
Inside The Idle Hour Club - 9:53

You can pre-order it now, with delivery on 26 May. But the first single, Do It Again, is only two weeks away.

"Hoo", as I said, "Ray".

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Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Kings Of Leon cover Robyn

There's no way I was letting this one pass without comment. Kings Of Leon, sodden with reverb, vamping through Robyn's Dancing On My own as though it was the last song of the last night on earth and they were downing shots in a spit-and-sawdust saloon on the precipice of eternity.

It is literally quite good.

Kings Of Leon - Dancing On My Own (Live Lounge cover)

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Wednesday, November 7, 2012

A very impressive set of remixes

The RAC, like their rescue service namesake, are experts at tinkering under the bonnet. Except they do repair work on songs, not cars. In the past, they've jacked up Radiohead, given Ellie Goulding an oil change and polished Dragonette's hub caps.

With more than 150 mixes to their name, the band (actually an international co-op of producers called the Remix Artist Collective) have a surprisingly consistent hit rate.

They avoid the Tony Lamezma / Freemasons tactic of slapping a honking great club beat on top of a vocal and ramping up the BPMs (not that there's anything wrong with that, of course). Their mixes are more sympathetic to the source material - with new arrangements and funky drum loops gently herding the music in the general direction of the dancefloor.

If you haven't come across them before, help is at hand, as they've collected 19 of their best mixes onto a new album - which you can stream below.



HOWEVER - there more than are a few criminal ommissions from that tracklist. I suggest you grab the following tracks (some are available for free on SoundCloud, others require a visit to your local download store) and tack them on to the end.

1) Robyn - Cobrastyle
Amazing.




2) Kings Of Leon - Use Somebody
Surprisingly good.



3) Yeah Yeah Yeahs - Zero
Retro.




4) Lana Del Rey - Blue Jeans
This one is actually on the album but it's missing from the streaming version for "legal reasons". And it's worth the price of admission alone.



The album is called RAC Chapter One and you can order it on iTunes by pressing this bit of text in blue.

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Thursday, July 28, 2011

Covered up: Billie Jean & Coldplay

Just a quick post today with a couple of superlative cover versions I've stumbled across this this week.

First up, Aloe Blacc, who might not be the one-hit wonder I'd assumed. His string quartet rendition of Billie Jean is oh so classy, if a little down in the dumps.

Aloe Blacc - Billie Jean


Next, we have pop newcomer Neon Hitch. She's a British singer/rapper, formerly signed to Mike Skinner's label and, unvbelievably, Neon Hitch is her actual name. She's been popping up as a background vocalist on songs by Ke$ha and 3OH!3, and this cover of Wiz Khalifa's On My Level is an attention-grabbing calling card for her forthcoming solo material.

Neon Hitch - On My Level


Finally, and on the most shaky ground, is Robyn - who has unforgiveably chosen to cover Coldplay's Every Teradrop Is A Precious Resource So Please Save Them In A Jar And End The Minor Drought In East Anglia.

The Swedish starlet improves on the original, by virtue of a trickling synth line that builds to an arms aloft robo-tronic climax. Robyn also has the decency to mumble the year's most awful lyric: "I'd rather be a comma than a full stop" (if we're expressing punctuation preferences, I'd rather have a colon than a semi-colon).

Here it is, in all its Live Lounge glory.

Robyn - Every Teardrop Is A Waterfall (Live Lounge)

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Thursday, July 14, 2011

Teddybears' triptych

You may remember me giving a huge double thumbs up to Cho Cha , a duet between Cee-Lo Green and The B52s, masterminded by Robyn's songwriting team The Teddybears (here's the link). The song has now been given the video treatment - and what was a lighthearted ode to Cee-Lo's pet cat has suddenly become a macabre stalker's fantasy.

The video "stars" Jeff Turner, a 53-year-old Californian man with asperger's syndrome, who has been served multiple restraining orders for pestering 80s pop princess Tiffany with a samurai sword and breaking into the home of TV star Alyssa Milano.

Turner, who made a cult film about his obsession with Tiffany, is a good sport, playing up to his jolly-but-creepy image -- but you have to wonder what his victims would make of all this?

Teddybears ft Cee-Lo Green and The B52s - Cho Cha

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Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Cee-Lo and The B52's and a song about a cat

You've seen that headline. What more reason do you need to hit "play"?

Teddybears - Cho Cha feat. Cee-Lo Green & The B-52's

The track was masterminded by Swedish collective Teddybears, who started off as a grindcore act in 1991 and slowly mellowed into a sinister, ursine version of DeadMau5, parading around in bear helmets with flashing, angry eyes and razor sharp fangs.

Behind one of those masks, however, is Klas Åhlund - the pop genius who co-writes all of Robyn's best tracks (Hang With Me, Konichiwa Bitches, Indestructible) and has a credit on Britney's Piece Of Me.

The Cee-Lo track, Cho Cha*, isn't as good as any of those (and the B52's are woefully underused) but it's a nice entry into the Gnarls Barkley book of foreboding minor key pop.

There is more of this sort of thing on their official website.

* I am aware that this may be slang for an entirely different type of pussy cat to the one alluded to in the song words.

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Friday, June 3, 2011

Robyn returns!

It's six months since the last instalment of the Body Talk series, so you could be forgiven for thinking Robyn has taken a well-earned rest. Not so - she's been off in the US promoting the heck out of her uniquely miserable brand of europop, thanks in no small part to the patronage of Katy Perry, who hand-picked her as a support act and shoved her into this week's Entertainment Weekly.


As part of that push, she's released a video for Call Your Girlfriend, probably the most radio-friendly track on Body Talk Pt. 3. Cunningly, the clip features our Swedish pop heroine dancing on her own (ta-da!) in a deserted school disco. Anyone who's witnessed Robyn's particular brand of choreography on stage will know they're in for a treat before they even click on that play button.

Best bit: Looking like the Honey Monster at 2'37"

Robyn - Call Your Girlfriend

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Friday, January 28, 2011

Robyn in "makes terrible song" shocker

It's been, what, five weeks since we last had some new material from Robyn so this new song, which hit the internet on Wednesday, is massivley overdue. STOP SLACKING, CARLSSON, WE HAVE A POP DEFICIT.

Bad Gal is a collaboration with Diplo-affiliated dance act Savage Skulls & Douster. It sounds like Flight Of The Conchords doing Reel 2 Reel. And not in a good way.

Savage Skulls & Douster ft Robyn - Bad Gal

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Thursday, January 6, 2011

Top 10 albums of 2010

A little belated, but here they are. Enjoy!


1) Lissie - Catching A Tiger

In a year of grandiose 'masterpieces', this unassuming little record quietly became my go-to album. Illinois hippy-chick Lissie Maurus inhabits her material completely. Her ad-libs are so perfectly delivered that they become inseparable from the body of the songs. And what great songs: Torn from the Californian country-rock handbook, drawing on the best of The Byrds and Fleetwood Mac, and moulded for the 21st Century by Kings Of Leon producer Jacquire King. Stand-out tracks When I'm Alone and In Sleep could never claim to be original, but they were drenched in melody and so alive they had a pulse. A stunning debut.


2) Robyn - Body Talk

Six months, three albums, one Grammy nomination, dozens of five star reviews and only one bad song. It was the project that had everything except an audience. Still, those who sought out Robyn Carlsson's Swedish pop odyssey fell utterly in love with it. And who could blame them?


3) Scissor Sisters - Night Work

A glance through the tracklisting tells you what to expect from Scissor Sisters' third album: Sex And Violence, Skin Tight, Harder You Get. Back on filthy form after the vaudeville tripe of Ta-Dah!, Night Work is an album of sleek, hard, sexy disco. A celebration of the freaks who come out to play after dark, it allowed Jake Shears the chance to roleplay dozens of seedy characters, the timbre and cadence of his voice changing on every track like a method actor. Perfectly sequenced and eminently danceworthy, it also contained - on Whole New Way - the year's least subtle metaphor for anal sex. So that was nice.


4) Arcade Fire - The Suburbs

Like Scissor Sisters, Arcade Fire escaped the drab surroundings of their upbringing through music. But while the New Yorkers ran off to an "opiate utopia", the Canucks prodded and poked at their past, trying to make sense of it all. The Suburbs is about the geography of suburbia, and the impermanence of modern life. "All of the houses they built in the Seventies finally fall... It meant nothing at all," pines Win Butler on the title track.

The Suburbs is also the record where Arcade Fire discovered the spaces between the notes, the claustrophobic bombast of their first two records giving way to something more expansive and thoughtful. Having all that space to think gave the lyrics greater impact, too.

The top of most critics' end-of-year lists, it would have done the same here if it was just 10 minutes shorter.


5) Marina And The Diamonds - The Family Jewels

Its a tricky thing to be a pop singer with artistic aspirations. Too much of the throaty yelping and people steer clear of you like the shouty racist lady at the back of the bus. Too little, and people dismiss you as a disposable pop confection. Marina never quite got the balance right, veering wildly between bonkers balladry (I Am Not A Robot) and balls-out chartbusters (Oh No!). It didn't help that her lyrics often read like they'd been lifted straight out of "Opinions For Teenage Girls - For Dummies". Regardless, those who persevered - and thank goodness there were thousands of us - were rewarded with an album rich in melodic invention, musical dexterity and surprising vulnerability. The Family Jewels, indeed.


6) Vampire Weekend - Contra

Less direct than their debut, Vampire Weekend's sophomore album nonetheless had more heart. At least, I think it did. It's hard to be sure what Ezra Koenig is on about half the time ("fake Philly cheesecake but you use real toothpaste" - eh?). Still, the melodies, the trickling guitar riffs and - above all - the frenetic, polyrhythmic drumming are like nothing else. When they inevitably grow up and turn into Sting, let's remember them like this.


7) Sarah Blasko - As Day Follows Night

My heart, already a bit gooey from listening to Australian singer Sarah Blasko's third album, completely melted when I met her in May. Charming but fragile, awkward but funny - she's everything you'd expect from listening to this most intimate of heartbreak records. Captured in a secluded studio in the heart of the Swedish winter, it's an all-too-real exploration of the end of a love affair. What makes it poignant is that the break-up came in Blasko's mid-30s, raising the spectre of spinsterhood. What stops it being utterly depressing is the nimble arrangements, the delicate beauty of her voice and, ultimately, an all-pervasive sense of hope.


8) Tinie Tempah - Disc-Overy

Tinie Tempah delivered an entire Top 10 of best lyrics this year, from "I got so many clothes I keeps 'em in my aunt's house", through to "would you risk it for a chocolate biscuit?" Musically, he was no slacker, either. His morphing breakbeats lifted grime out of the loop-it-and-leave-it quagmire, as frequently as his lyrics showed up the dumb avarice of his contemporaries (Taio Cruz marked a new low for the genre this year when he sang: "I'm wearing all my favourite brands, brands, brands, brands, brands"). Stuffed full of ideas, Tinie's album equalled, but sadly never bettered, the promise of it's singles. Oh, and it earned an extra demerit for that AWFUL title.


9) John Legend & The Roots - Wake Up!

Inspired by Barack Obama's "yes, we can" campaign, and revisiting the classic ghetto protest songs of the 1970s, this was the best band of their generation, allied to the smoothest singer of his, making a rallying call to socially-concious America. Mmm-hmm. Whatever. Simply the best covers album of the year.


10) Kid Sister - Ultraviolet

Putting the fun back in funky and the rap back in... er, "not crap", Chicago's Kid Sister delivered a spritely party album for her long-gestating debut. It didn't set the world on fire, but it did heat up my living room by a couple of degrees. Inspired by electro, handbag house, rave and "boxes of doughnuts", it left me with a big, daft grin all over my face every time I heard it. OK, it probably doesn't deserve to be considered a classic, but it was either this or Kanye banging on about intense personal issues and and his penis. I rest my case.

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Monday, January 3, 2011

Top 10 singles of 2010

Happy New Year!! As the rest of the world looks forwards to 12 months of peace, prosperity and guilt-free, random sex (subs - please check), I thought I'd cast my eye back over the music of 2010.

As usual, the Discopop Directory top 10 is compiled from obsessively compiled iTunes play counts, weighted for release date using MATHS, so that I can't cheat and suddenly pretend to have been listening to The Foals all year long. Because I wasn't.


1) Robyn - Hang With Me

Hang With Me doesn't throw out pop's rule book or mess with your expectations, it is just a simple, brilliant piece of writing. Initially, it sounds a little sparse - unfinished, even - but that just gives Robyn's wounded vocals the space to breathe and flourish. It's a clever tease that keeps you coming back for more - much like the man who's the subject of the song. He's getting the old "let's just be friends" speech from Robyn, until she coyly lets slip "I know what's on your mind, and there'll be time for that, too." I believe this is called "treat 'em mean and keep 'em keen".


2) Cee-Lo - F**k You

All the cussing and blinding may have grabbed your attention, but it was the melody that made you stick around. A frisky facsimilie of the Motown sound, with a voice as pure and expressive as Marvin Gaye. Listen to the way Cee-Lo cracks in the middle 8, as if he's about to burst into big baby tears. Now that's how you sell a song.


3) Lissie - When I'm Alone

Lissie is on the opposite side of the relationship tracks to Robyn, being strung along by a fickle lover who never quite keeps his promises. In the verses, she's an innocent child, leaping to answer the phone "like a kid who just got out of school" and "throwing a tantrum" when Darcy (I imagine all pop songs to be about characters from Pride and Prejudice) is not on the other end of the line. Once she's got him in her grasp, though, Lissie grows right up. The choruses are so hot and steamy you could cook vegetables with them. An overlooked classic.


4) Kelis - A Capella

The metaphor may have been totally confused (you can't sing a symphony) but the song was a scorcher. Kelis was eulogising about her baby boy, Knight, and how his arrival changed her outlook on life. Neatly, the bassline mirrored the lyrics, sticking to one pounding note throughout the verses, then modulating in the chorus as the harmonies blossomed around it. This nimble compositional dexterity was not as important, however, as the fact you could dance to the Moroder-esque groove until your shoes caught fire. The track was subsequently banned in the clog-wearing regions of Holland.


5) Mark Ronson - Bang Bang Bang

A song of two distinct parts. On the one hand, we have Q-Tip rapping about how he is successful and therefore better than you. On the other, you have MNDR playing cowboys and indians: "Bang, bang you're dead! Here's your silhouette!" I think it is somehow supposed to be about toppling capitalism.


6) Lady Gaga feat Beyoncé - Telephone

It's interesting - I think Lady Gaga is a pop genius but both this year and last, she hasn't figured as highly in my Top 10 lists as I'd have expected. Maybe that's because she's so all-pervasive I don't actually need to listen to her music in my own time. Anyway, this song is about telephones and how annoying they are when you're trying to dance. The video, which you may have seen, was about killing people with maple syrup. Artists, eh?


7) Marina and the Diamonds - Shampain

A lot of people found Marina annoying, didn't they? I can see why: Morbid self-obsession, rampant egomania, hiccuping instead of singing - not exactly traits to endear you to the mainstream. But stuff the mainstream, Marina is brilliant and this song is the proof. Equal parts Abba and Girls Aloud, it's a hymn to drinking away the pain. And the shift to minor key in the last chorus gets me every time.


8) Janelle Monae - Tightrope

The video for Tightrope is set in a world where dancing has been outlawed "for its tendency to lead to illegal magical practices" (??) Janelle is in an asylum for the criminally choreographed, where lawbreakers are forced to strut their sentences. It's the sort of place you'd expect to find Lionel Blair, but he is sadly absent. Nonetheless, Tightrope proves to be so infectious that the entire prison breaks into a rhumba riot. But why did they allow speakers into the prison in the first place? People will have to be held accountable.


9) Ciara - Ride

Utter filth from beginning to end. I love it.


10) Ellie Goulding - Starry Eyed

I've said several times that Ellie has a knack for capturing universal feelings in neat, succinct couplets. This song, about the euphoria of falling in love for the first time, is no exception: "Next thing, we're touching. You look at me, it's like you hit me with lightning." Who hasn't experienced that? It's beautifully evocative without overstating its case. A number one back in January, Starry Eyed probably wouldn't have made this list without the beatific Russ Chimes remix, which adds a chunky 1990s house piano riff and a huge, whooshing crescendo. Excellent work all round.

Honorable mentions: Tinie Tempah - Pass Out / Vampire Weekend - Cousins / Kanye West - Power / Biffy Clyro - Many Of Horror / Stornoway - Zorbing / Marina and the Diamonds - Hollywood / Arcade Fire - We Used To Wait / Magnetic Man - I Need Air / Robyn - Dancing On My Own / New Young Pony Club - Chaos / Bruno Mars - Just The Way You Are / Goldfrapp - Alive / Yeasayer - Ambling Alp / Katy B - Katy On A Mission / Big Boi - Shutterbugg / Josephine - A Freak A / Gorillaz - Doncamatic / Lykke Li - Get Some

So that's it for this year... I've put together a Spotify playlist of all the above songs at the end of this link. I'll try to do the albums - which promise to be a little less popomatic - before the end of the week.

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Wednesday, December 1, 2010

A quick chat with Robyn!


It can't have escaped your attention that I'm quite a big fan of Robyn's Body Talk project. Well, the third part is out this week and I beseech you to buy it.

If you're not convinced... well, what's wrong with you? But here's a rather fantastic A-Trak remix of the single, Indestructible, to whet your appetite.

Indestructible (A-Trak radio edit) by robyn


I managed to catch up with Robyn last week as part of my "proper job" at the BBC. As I'm out of the country, I can't be certain when the interview goes live, but I'll put up a link once I get back. In the meantime, here's an excerpt of our chat that was cut from the final piece.

On the new tracks, you seem more upbeat than the heartbroken Robyn of Body Talk pts 1&2. What inspired that?

I think this last part of the project became very straightforward. It’s the big pop finale. Time Machine is pop pop pop! It’s like an exercise in how far you can go in that world.

I wanted not to play it safe and go back into the credible world with this last part. I wanted to take it all the way and tie it all together with real pop songs.

Lyrically, you have two personas – the melancholy, unlucky in love teenager, versus this kick-ass woman with towering confidence. Is that split personality present in real life, too?

Maybe. Life is dynamic and complicated – so it can be hard for me to look at myself and tell you who I am. I’m a lot of things, and I try to use that in my music.

Have you managed to avoid leaks by releasing material as soon as its ready?

No, the first album leaked, and the second album leaked, and then the last album leaked! But we’ve managed to close the gap between the leak and the release with the second two albums. It usually happens when we start sending out albums to journalists.

It wasn’t me, I promise!

No, we know who it is because they’re watermarked. You can usually trace the source. But I think it’s got to the point now where journalists don’t really care. And I understand... When it’s that close to a release, I don’t know if it makes that big of a difference.

But if you don’t sell any records, then you don't make any money, and the record companies collapse and suddenly the journalists have no artists to speak to. So they’re essentially making themselves redundant.

You’re right – but I guess when it’s closer to the release, it becomes harder to say how much of an effect it has on sales. And I think the music industry feels more alive nowadays because of blogs and websites like Pitchfork than through the old-school media and MTV.

How important has the visual side of this project been?

It’s been really important. The way the albums were recorded was more natural – and that simple way of looking at things influenced the visuals, as well. Number one, there’s less money to be spent on videos and record covers, so you have to be creative with that. But it’s also about doing something that felt real, and organic and not too complicated.

Are you saying the songs were also less produced than perhaps they were in the past?

I guess you could say that. I don’t know if it’s less complicated – because the way of getting to a simple solution can sometimes be quite difficult, or take a lot of effort. But the music is stripped down. It’s deliberately produced in a simple way – and that’s something we started on the last record [Robyn]. Sparse production, focusing on the melody of the song.

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Friday, November 19, 2010

Make your own Robyn

This is pretty breathtaking - Lucy McRae, who designed the eyecatching Post-It cover art for Robyn's Body Talk Pt. 3, has posted a "making of" on her blog.

That record sleeve may look like a clever post-production effect to you, but it's actually a "seven layer paper pixel textile" suspended from an array of coathangers.

Lucy also created the crazy liquid dress contraption featured in Robyn's Indestructible video. It features "1.2 kilometers of transparent plumbing tubing... knitted with fishing wire to skin Robyn's body". I don't know about you, but I'm going home to make my own version out of straws, hairpins, food dye and Lucozade. This video makes it look easy.

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Thursday, November 18, 2010

Robyn covers Prince

This will presumably make the global pop blog fraternity explode in ribbons of ecstasy but Robyn's cover of Prince's When Doves Cry just doesn't work for me. If anything, it proves why the Minneapolis musician was right to strip out the song's bass line in the first place. Oh well.

Robyn - When Doves Cry

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