SiteMeter

Showing posts with label the xx. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the xx. Show all posts

08 September 2010

The xx Wins Mercury Prize


Back in July, we gave you a run-down of the nominees for The Mercury Prize, the accolade given out each year for best album of the year in the UK and Ireland. Yesterday, The xx was pronounced the winner by UK/Eire musicians and industry people for their self-titled debut, edging out such worthy competition as Mumford & Sons, Villagers and Laura Marling.

The xx joins an impressive list of previous winners of The Mercury Prize:
1992 - Primal Scream, Screamadelica
1993 - Suede, Suede
1994 - M People, Elegant Slumming
1995 - Portishead, Dummy
1996 - Pulp, Different Class
1997 - Roni Size/Reprazent, New Forms
1998 - Gomez, Bring It On
1999 - Talvin Singh, Ok
2000 - Badly Drawn Boy, The Hour of Bewilderbeast
2001 - PJ Harvey, Stories From The City, Stories From The Sea
2002 - Ms. Dynamite, A Little Deeper
2003 - Dizzee Rascal, Boy in da Corner
2004 - Franz Ferdinand, Franz Ferdinand
2005 - Antony and the Johnsons, I Am A Bird Now
2006 - Arctic Monkeys, Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not
2007 - Klaxons, Myths of the Near Future
2009 - Speech Debelle, Speech Therapy
2010 - The xx, xx

26 July 2010

Mercury Prize Nominees Announced


The 2010 Mercury Music Prize nominations were released last week. The annual award goes to the best album of the year in the UK and Ireland. Chosen by a selected panel of musicians, music executives, journalists and other figures in the music industry in the UK and Ireland, presentation of the award usually take place in September.

Here's a look at the nominees and what some of the critics had to say about their work:

Biffy Clyro: Only Revolutions
"All these moments are the jigsaw pieces that finally do complete the puzzle for Biffy, as it were, but it’s as a whole that Only Revolutions springs the band instantly level with the greatest rock acts in the world. The only thing that can stop them being recognised as such is the 2010 trend of UK guitar music being treated with contempt by the electro-pop-fixated mainstream. But don’t call them a band out of time – they’re the very sound of loud now, and finally it’s time for the last few stragglers to get in the saddle." - NME (9 November 2009)

Corinne Bailey Rae: The Sea
"The singer-songwriter reaches into the depth of her grief and delivers a moving, if not seminal, album." - L.A. Times (22 January 2010)

Dizzie Rascal: Tongue 'N Cheek
"Understandably, his fourth album is a kind of victory lap, a 45-minute revel in the fact that no one wants to hit him with a concrete post any more. It's Never Mind the Bollards." - The Guardian (18 September 2009)

Kit Downes Trio: Golden
"A hugely promising record that reveals fresh angles with each listening." - The Jazz Mann (8 December 2009)

Foals: Total Life Forever
"Total Life Forever is a massive leap forward for the band. The music writhes with a renewed ambition, capable of moving from near ambient strains of electronica to propulsive African funk in a drum break. Shifting from their 2D debut album, Total Life Forever is a three-dimensional triumph." - Clash Music (10 May 2010)

I Am Kloot: Sky At Night
"I Am Kloot continue to trace their version of that voyage, recording its moments of beautiful regret and uplifting melancholy in tuneful tales that want to hang around for endless retelling, beguiling their listeners into believing they have the time for just one more." - Pop Matters (20 July 2010)

Laura Marling: I Speak Because I Can
" . . . I Speak Because I Can is an album of elegance and brilliance. Marling has developed from her debut, and her voice has grown both physically and lyrically. The songs are bathed in the folk traditions of England, and as such end up sounding timeless by proxy. Through Marling's unique touch they avoid sounding derivative, or tired. Side stories and back stories are just diversions from the real tale here – the age old bildungsroman of the artist turning into the master of their craft." - Drowned In Sound (16 March 2010)

Mumford & Sons: Sigh No More
"Ever since our trip to Ireland . . . last summer, TNOP has been dropping Mumford & Sons' name to all that would listen. While driving endless kilometers around the Emerald Isle, the band's new single "Little Lion Man" seemed to be eponymous on BBC Radio 1; but it was exciting every time the DJ spun the record. The debut album, Sigh No More, hit the UK charts in September 2009 and landed #1 in Eire and #7 UK [and] the US racks this past spring. Despite landing - and nailing - performance spots on both the David Letterman and Craig Ferguson shows, the CD has struggled to take hold in the States. But TNOP likes to think of it as a slow build, and once again we take the opportunity to recommend these unique London four-part harmony folk rockers to new ears." - The Night Owl Presents . . . (21 June 2010)

Paul Weller: Wake Up The Nation
"Weller's new album's relentless vigour is exhausting but he strikes gold all over again. Rating: * * * * *" - Telegraph (16 April 2010)

Villagers: Becoming A Jackal
"Despite the huge weight of expectation, Conor O'Brien delivers possibly the finest Irish record you'll hear this year in the shape of Becoming A Jackal. Free from the constraints of the 'too many cooks' nature of The Immediate, O'Brien is allowed to soar. In his own words: 'When I grew bolder/out onto the streets I flew/released from your shackles/I danced with the jackals/and learned a new way to move.' And what an accomplished way that is." - CLUAS (13 May 2010)

Wild Beasts: Two Dancers
". . . with every aspect of the record exceeding expectations, Two Dancers makes a strong case to be named album of the year. Yet if this release has taught us anything, it is to not assume what is and isn't possible in music. Ignore speculation, and simply make time to bask in the seemingly endless supply of luxurious delights contained within this stunning achievement." - music OMH (3 August 2009)

The xx: xx
"Mostly recorded at night (and sounding like it), xx combines its economy and discipline with all-out sultriness. The songs are unapologetically sexually fixated without being confrontational or hysterical. The male-female vocals are plain, quiet, and technically barely adequate, perfect for grounding the potentially lurid lines. The result is sexy like early Portishead and thoughtful like Young Marble Giants—a perfectly formed debut with a genuinely new sound way beyond the sum of identifiable forebears." - The A.V. Club (5 January 2010)

15 December 2009

News From The Fun House


The class of 2010 for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame has been announced. New inductees include The Stooges (that's Iggy Pop reading the - finally! - good news, above), Genesis, The Hollies, Jimmy Cliff and ABBA. But where are Darlene Love and Laura Nyro?


Mojo reports that Sly Stone has signed a new record deal. We'll believe it when we hear it. In the meantime, there are previews up on the web about a new documentary on the enigmatic artist that is set to premiere in 2010.


Best reviewed album of the decade? Best reviewed pop act? Metacritic lets you in on the answers.

TNOP is looking forward to the US release of Mumford & Sons' debut record, Sigh No More, in February. The Times of London provides a profile of the English band strongly influenced by Americana. Catch them on their current tour in the States or sample their single "Little Lion Man."


Can't say we go digging around in the News of the World too often, but their recent talk with Kinks-man Ray Davies proved fruitful: he's trying to gently coax brother Dave into the music arena again and is also working in the studio with Bruce Springsteen. And word is Julian Temple is directing a film of the brothers' rise to fame in the 1960s.


The xx performs a short set in The Current Studios of Minnesota Public Radio.


Issue 65 of The Fader is now available via free download. Special guest editors: Animal Collective.


We wrote in these pages previously about The History Channel special The People Speak. It premiered the other night and TNOP highly recommends a view. One of the highlights was Bob Dylan (acoustic guitar), Ry Cooder (electric guitar) and Van Dyke Parks (piano) performing Woody Guthrie's "Do Re Mi." TwentyFourBit gives us a look and listen.


That's it from the news desk for now. Go celebrate their induction by enjoying Iggy & The Stooges' "Search & Destroy" at MAXIMUM VOLUME. The video is from a 2008 performance in Montreal, and man, they still bring it, especially the late guitarist Ron Asheton.