Posts Mentioning RSS Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Marc A. Price 9:07 am on March 15, 2008 Permalink
    Tags: ,   

    Hanne Hukkelberg – Rykestrasse 68 

    Hanne Hukkelberg - Rykestrasse 68

    One of the blogs that I go to every once in a while is 3hive. This is an excellent site if you are looking for new music. This tireless team trawl t’Internet looking for freely available mp3s. This site and Last.FM I just could not live without. My most recent find on 3hive is Hanne Hukkelberg. She is a Norwegian singer-songwriter. That makes her sound a bit lame. Not at all. She is also a musical experimenter. She searches for new ways of expressing her art by using a bunch of weirdness and found sounds in her music. Which in my view is always good.

    On her previous album, which I have yet to hear, she employs bicycle spokes, dish brushes, wine glasses, and rain. Rykestraße 68 is the name of her new album. Well I say “new” it is apparently a couple of years old but has only just received a US release. In any event it is worth a listen. You need to be in a certain type of mood to listen to her. Rykestraße 68 is mostly a delightfully quiet and gentle record with some forays into pop quirks. It’s just lovely. Although you have to kind of readjust your listening gear to “get it”. By that I mean that it is not completely instant, the album requires some perseverance. But, if you stick with it you will be rewarded with a beautiful selection of (sometimes) experimental pop gems. Think Tori Amos mixed up with Björk.

    Moreover, there is a shockingly good cover of Pixies Hold My Bones, slowed down and barely recognisable until you reach the chorus. This track is worth the price of admission alone.

    Hanne HukkelbergCheater’s Armoury

    Hanne HukkelbergBreak My Body

    Technorati Tags: ,

     
  • Marc A. Price 9:07 am on March 14, 2008 Permalink
    Tags: ,   

    REM Supernatural Superserious Quite Good 

    REM - Accelerate

    REM are guests at this year’s SXSW festival in Austin Texas and played to a packed out but cold (by the looks of it) Stubbs BBQ. It appears that they went down really well. At least the reviews are quite good. If the new material that I have heard from their forthcoming record is anything to go by then they seem to have regained their mojo somewhat.

    If you head on over to REM HQ (link provided below) you will be able to hear the new single (Supernatural Superserious). It is old school REM, the track would sit really happily on Document or albums of that period. There are two other tracks that you can hear excerpt from; Until the Day is Done is more acoustic in a Green mould. Horse to Water is destined to be a live classic it bristles with energy and spark just like REM songs used to.

    For the first time in years I am looking forward to an REM album. Either I got old or they got good again. I hope for my sake that it is the latter.

    [R.E.M.HQ: ALBUMS]

    Technorati Tags: ,

     
  • Marc A. Price 9:08 am on March 13, 2008 Permalink
    Tags: , hulk   

    The Incredible Hulk Trailer Online 

    The trailer for The Incredible Hulk has been posted on the Internet. I have to say while it looks cool and I will almost certainly go to see it, I was a little concerned with the CGI. The Hulk looks a bit… well… shiny. See for yourself. It is below:

    Technorati Tags: ,

     
  • Marc A. Price 9:09 am on March 11, 2008 Permalink
    Tags: ,   

    Nine Inch Nails: Ghosts I-IV – PopMatters Music Review 

    Nine Ince Nails - Ghosts I-IV

    This morning PopMatters published my first review in over a year. I think it is a pretty OK review. It is very good to be working again. Like I said in my last post the process was harder than I thought that it would be but the results made it all worth it. There is an excerpt below and a link to the full article.

    Recorded over ten weeks in the autumn of 2007, Ghosts I-IV is a departure in many ways for Nine Inch Nails mainstay Trent Reznor. No song titles, no record label, no lyrics. Until April 8th 2008 there is not even a physical album. The concept of this release, if not the content, is an exhibition in minimalism. If it had been released under any moniker other than Nine Inch Nails, it might not have achieved the same amount of attention (the volume of downloads on the first weekend of release broke the band’s website). In many ways it challenges what we know about the band, as it liberates Reznor’s skill at musical composition from his often trite lyrics.

    [From Nine Inch Nails: Ghosts I-IV - PopMatters Music Review]

    Technorati Tags: ,

     
  • Marc A. Price 9:09 am on March 7, 2008 Permalink
    Tags:   

    Returning to the Fold 

    It has been a long time since I wrote a review for Pop Matters. Due to various personal reasons, much the same reasons that this site has been somewhat dormant, I have not been able to. However, I contacted my editor the other day to ask her if she would be interested in me coming in from the cold. She said yes. Not only that, but I have my first assignment. It is the new Nine Inch Nails album “Ghosts I-IV”.

    Nine Ince Nails - Ghosts I-IV

    You’ll have to wait until the review is published to find out what I thought of it, but the process of writing the review has been interesting. I thought that it would be dead easy, like falling off a bike or some other cliché. It seems not. I really had to get my head right back in the writing zone. The writing zone is a really weird state of mind where you say things about things that you would not say in real life. A bit like the dialogue in a Joss Whedon script; it is at all not the way people speak. at least no one I know.

    As a result the review has taken me longer than I thought. I started writing of these contrived sentences that contain too many descriptive words. They shall have to go. This review is going to take some hacking to get to the nugget that is at it’s centre.

    I also, stupidly, forgot about all of the research that I used to do. That information does not come from nowhere. It has to be crammed into my brain before the writing part can configure it into something resembling english. So note to self and anyone where cares to listen. When writing an album review:

    1. Research before you sit down to write (this includes listening to the record in question)
    2. Get rid of distractions
    3. Don’t get carried away with your own genius because other people will have to read and make sense of your magnum opus.

    The research that I did do lead me to the new album by Saul Williams which if you don’t have, go get it. For $5 you get a cracking record. Worth every currency converted euro cent.

    Technorati Tags:

     
c
compose new post
j
next post/next comment
k
previous post/previous comment
r
reply
e
edit
o
show/hide comments
t
go to top
l
go to login
h
show/hide help
esc
cancel