Friday, January 22, 2016

PJ Harvey returns and 13 other songs you may have missed

A long-delayed return for a regular discopop feature, rounding up songs that have slipped under the radar in the last seven (or in this case 21) days.

Here we go, here we go, here we go now.

1) PJ Harvey - The Wheel
Four years after Let England Shake, PJ Harvey is still looking into the effects of war. This track was inspired by a visit to Kosovo, and references the thousands of children who disappeared during the conflict there. It opens with a squall of guitar and saxophone, but gives way to a lithe melody, underpinned by handclaps and a tribal drumbeat. Truly brilliant.




2) Grimes - Hate v Maim
Frankly, Grimes's squad looks a hell of a lot more intimidating than Taylor Swift's.




3) Spring King - Who Are You?
Manchester's Spring King were the first band to be played on Zane Lowe's Beats 1 show - and you can see why. This infectious, spritely indie-pop is the opening first track if you're making someone a mixtape this weekend.

Fun fact: The saxophone solo is played by the bassist's dad.




4) Laura Mvula - Overcome (ft Nile Rodgers)
Simply stunning. I can't recommend this highly enough.





5) Omarion - I Ain't Even Done (ft Ghostface Killah)
Silky rhymes and a laid-back flutestramental - this is a perfect throwback to the Wu Tang sound. Omarion calls it "high level vernacular" and "a generational victory". Well, quite.






6) Selena Gomez - Can't Keep My Hands To Myself
I mean I could but why would I want to?




7) Bryson Tiller - Don't
Kentucky-born Bryson Tiller recorded this bruising R&B jam in his living room, then watched it rack up 17 million Soundcloud plays in 10 months. Soon, Timbaland and Drake got on the phone and co-signed him to a record deal; and now the song is starting to get play on mainstream radio.

The lyrics see Bryson make an impassioned plea for a girl to leave an abusive relationship and settle down with him - but he rather undermines the gesture by singing about her "pussy" in the second verse.




8) Natalie Merchant - Tiny Desk Concert
A great big warm hug of a performance.





9) Låpsley - Love Is Blind
19-year-old Låpsley sounds older than her years on this mournful song "about someone being blind to the inevitability of a relationship ending". A gorgeous ballad, it showcases her husky contralto - and could easily be her breakout hit.




10) Rationale - Something For Nothing (Radio 1 Future Festival)
JUST LISTEN TO THAT VOICE.





11) Ekkah - Small Talk
I've been following Birmingham's Rebecca Wilson and Rebekah Pennington for a while now - and this vibrant synthpop banger is their first single after being signed to Sony / RCA. The video gives off a distinct Bananarama vibe - but the early, cool Bananarama, rather than the SAW-era cheese.





12) Ellie Goulding - Army
A touching ode to Ellie's best friend (and PA) Hannah. "The person who has seen me at my lowest and the first person I call in muffled sobs when something bad happens. We've been deliriously happy together, deliriously tired and deliriously sad together. I wanted to show our friendship for what it really is- honest, real, electric." Aw, bless.





13) The 1975 - The Sound
It's always a worry when a rock group "goes pop". Like dramatic actors trying their hand at comedy, they usually discover it's not as easy as it looks. (A case in point is Coldplay's new album - which is an excruciating exercise in forced jollity.) Luckily, The 1975 get it just right. The chunky 1990s piano sound and the ebullient arms-aloft chorus are designed to kick off at a hundred festivals this summer.




14) Adele - Carpool Karaoke
OK, you've probably seen this already - the YouTube count has reached 50 million in the space of a week - but it remains an absolute joy.



And that's your lot. Have a fantastic weekend!

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Friday, November 7, 2014

Songs you may have missed: Haiku edition

A round-up of songs that escaped the full glare of the Discopop Directory spotlight - but are still worthy of note.

For some reason, I decided to write Haikus about each of this week's entries. The results are poor, to say the least.


1) Royal Blood - Happy
When Pharrell hears this
He might well reconsider
His entire career




2) Selena Gomez - The Heart Wants What It Wants
The spoken intro's
Excruciating candour
Will make your skin crawl





3) Take That - These Days
Truncated trio
Should have called up Nile Rodgers
For this turgid song





4) LoneLady - Groove It Out
The next six minutes
Should be irresistible
In toe-tapping terms





5) Lorde - Yellow Flicker Beat (from The Hunger Games)
Armageddon still
Has the best theme song, but this
Is acceptable





6) Ekkah - Last Chance To Dance
Strap on your hotpants
And sashay to the dancefloor
Before it's too late




7) The Pierces - Devil Is A Lonely Night
Belinda Carlisle
It's almost like you never
Went away at all





8) Kendrick Lamar - I
Kendrick did a great
Freestyle over Shake It Off
But this isn't it




9) Ella Henderson - Yours
Ella, oh Ella
Wrote an ode to her fella
The song is stella(r)




10) McBusted - Air Guitar
Danny, Dougie, Tom
Harry, James and Matt. Looking
Quite old now, frankly





11) Jose Gonzalez - Every Age
Existential angst
Is one way to describe this
Although hard to spell




12) Ludacris - Good Lovin' (ft Miguel)
Butter smooth slow jam
Too good to spoil with bad jokes
Like all the above




Well, that was unedifying. At least the songs were good, eh?


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Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Ones to watch: Ekkah

If like me you've already worn a hole in your new Jessie Ware CD, then this should fill the gap until the next Amazon delivery.

Rebecca Wilson and Rebekah Pennington are two friends from Birmingham trading under the name Ekkah (you can see what they did etc, etc) whose exquisite debut single, Figure It Out, was featured on the blog back in May.

Their new single is called Last Chance To Dance, and it captures those euphoric-but-desperate last moments on the dancefloor before the doors open and the club vomits you into the yellow night to find a cab and a sorry bag of soggy chips.

As the Jessie Ware comparison would suggest, it's slinky, perfectly executed, low-key funk. Exactly the sort of thing I'd hoped the Mutya Keisha Siobhan reunion would produce before it collapsed like a souffle in a black hole.



PS: Ekkah are touring with Jess "her off the good Clean Bandit single" Glynne for the rest of this month, if you want to catch them in action.

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Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Ekkah thump*

The logical flipside to the deep house revival is a resurgence in girl-fronted R&B.  Back in the 1990s, the two went together like sweat and global hypercolor t-shirts.

So it's a happy coincidence that after writing about Juce earlier today that *ping* up popped a new band called EKKAH. Formed by Rebekah Pennington and Rebecca Wilson (hence the name), they’re a UK duo who describe their sound as "pop/girl funk with a big, polished sound".

"We've been friends for years," says Rebecca. "We bonded over rock ports in maths class and started playing some music together." Their first demo, 7AM, got a fair bit of attention earlier this year. Now, they’ve got a proper single together – and it's a sublime summer soul jam, called Figure It Out.

"We had some ideas for Figure It Out whilst travelling in a car together," Rebecca says, "so hopefully people will listen to it whilst heading off on a summer road trip!"

She's not wrong. This would be the perfect soundtrack for cruising down the Californian coast in an open-top Chevrolet (I assume – this being an scenario I've only experienced via years of listening to Bruce Springsteen). In fact, with its woozy synth strings and rubbery G-funk bassline, it could only sound more 1990s if Warren G** showed up for a guest rap.


* Apols.
** Warren G is now 43.

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