Archive for the ‘Glasvegas’ Category

Week In Review September 15-21


Hey another week has passed and I’m kind of busy so I’m rushing the week in review.

Here are this week’s posts:
Jess wrote a tribute to Pink Floyd’s Rick Wright.

Nancy did one mother fucking long post. Covering some key concerts happening this fall in the T-dot.

Kojo spread the word on Amanda Davids a Canadian soul artist.

Christian reviewed the not-yet released on this part of the world, Glasvegas’ self-titled disc.

I also sucked up the courage to listen to MGMT’s Oracular Spectacular.

The National’s Virginia EP is solid. At least I thought the Pitchfork review was not cool.

Joe reviewed Ray Garrison’s EP.

Adam reviewed Toronto ska/reggar band Rebel Emergency‘s EP.

I just found out about Siberian’s break up last week and wrote on my sadness.

I shared my input on the critically acclaimed You & Me by The Walkmen.

We Landed On The Moon are an upcoming band with a frontwoman who sounds a great deal like Jenny Lewis.

Ghalib covered rica-review/”>The Wiper’s Youth of America. Ghalib also proves that he likes to go out a ton with another concert review.

News around the blogosphere:
Pitchfork dropped a 1.6 on The Airborne Toxic Event. The band apparently didn’t like that. One thing for sure though, it caused a lot of discussion between bloggers… because TATE’s open letter was sent through their PR firm (Big Hassle) in an effort to make the review a publicity stunt (it worked). I didn’t care before, I don’t care now.

I guess I’m done…




Glasvegas – Review


Glasvegas   Review

Despite not being released in Canada for a while, there’s a big hoo-ha going on over on the other side of the Atlantic about Glasvegas and their new debut album. The hype around this band has been bellowing out from the UK for over a year now and it’s been so loud, it can probably be heard in some distant and newly formed country beyond the reaches of whatever media group (closely tied to a record company) that happens to championing them. It’s an old story. The hyperbole has been heard before and bands have come and gone, but can Glasvegas live up to the succession of sundry superlatives or suffocate in a snowballing stockpile of senseless salutations?
As is customary in these situations, most bands can’t measure up to the ridiculous amount of ballyhoo spewed out by those who want your money and the Glasvegas album doesn’t herald rock’s second coming or even the arrival of a band that might blow all the others away. What this eponymous record does unveil is a fully formed unit making all the right moves and impressing all right people, for all the right reasons. In some respects, Glasvegas are about pressing the correct archetypal buttons for those listeners who know their rock history and want a quintessential vintage rock band, one that wears black, is influenced by 60s girl groups and dresses their music up in a wall of Spectorish harmonics. So far so Jesus and Mary Chain, but where Glasvegas distinguish themselves and show potential beyond the regular rock baggage, is in the quality of James Allan’s song writing. He may sing in a thick Scottish brogue, use phrases that many may have to look up in Urban Dictionary.com and sometimes let his lyrics degenerate into nonsensical non-sequiturs, but when the content penetrates beyond the band’s influences and their form, Glasvegas show promise that almost justifies the purple prose.
It’s songs like “It’s My Own Cheating Heart That Makes Me Cry”, “Geraldine”, “Daddy’s Gone”, “Stabbed” and “Flowers and Football Tops” that make half the album a bona-fide classic. The remaining five songs are hardly stinkers, but in comparison to the calibre of the ones written about social workers, absent fathers, adolescent murder, getting ahead of yourself and getting stabbed, the other half of album feels like prosaic filler material. Also, when eagerly anticipated albums equal fancy producers (Rich Costey) and a big record company (Columbia) the sonic rough edges, which seem so powerful on the early recordings (check out The Home Tapes) sometimes ebb away to be replaced by re-recorded and re-balanced, standardized big-time studio productions. In the case of the songs of Glasvegas, the album versions lack the immediacy and charm of their raw and undiluted early presentations and highlight what can sometimes be lost in the unfettered rise towards stardom, buoyed on a glut of extraneous publicity.

Glasvegas – Daddys Gone
Glasvegas – Its My Own Cheating Heart That Makes Me Cry