EP Review: Modern Heat EP - MAM

Image source: DJ MagMiguel Campbell and Matt Hughes' new EP as MAM is as tight as a nut. Slick disco stabs, funky MJ style yelps and heavy baselines abound. Take Metro Area and give it a French Touch twist, serve in a long glass over ice.

What you have here is a four-track EP of funk and disco inspired house and, well, it's inspired. 'Modern Heat' is filtered heavy disco funk, whilst 'Crushed Ice' is sleazy eighties funk that channels pure Discovery-era Daft Punk.

The guitar work on the latter yearns for someone to dance with and whilst it may be a little slow for the main room this is perfect for the more discerning bars out there. As if to answer your prays 'Crushed Ice' also gets a remix that just gives it a bit more oomph. Perfect.

The final offering, 'Sunset Funk' is pretty much placed between the other two tracks, mixing the filtered disco of 'Crushed Ice' with the squelching synth funk work of 'Modern Heat'.

With no bells or whistles this EP pretty much just focuses on doing one thing well. And do just that it does.

BP x

Modern Heat EP is released on Fina on 19 February, available to pre-order from Amazon.co.uk on MP3 [affiliate link].

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Interview: BlackPlastic.co.uk chats to 6Music's Steve Lamacq

Steve Lamacq has presented shows on BBC's Radio 1, 2 and 6Music since 1992 and he is one of those DJs that is almost religious in his insistence in putting the music and his passion for discovering new sounds before everything else.

MP3 music portal eMusic is handing over the reigns to Lamacq for the week and it looks set to be an interesting one - you would certainly be hard pushed to find a music expert with a broader pallet to do it. Throughout the week Steve will be selecting his top picks from 2011, ones to watch for 2012 and his desert island discs.

eMusic gave bloggers the chance to ask Steve Lamacq some questions and since he has been involved in the music scene for so long I jumped at the opportunity to ask a few questions:

BP: One of the most discussed music reads in 2011 was Simon Reynold's Retromania, in which Reynolds seems to simultaneously celebrate and criticise our collective obsession with the past. One of the central tenants of the book is that the abundance of our modern world means we are less likely to ever have another new musical revolution. You obviously spend a lot of time championing new music - have you read Reynold's book and do you agree with his viewpoint?

I understand his viewpoint, absolutely. One of the first things Reynolds said that I thought was really interesting –it dates from some years ago, but it echoes all around me now – is that when you become a music journalist, it became harder and harder to fall in love with music. Because you get so much of it. I mean, when we were growing up, you probably bought one album a week or one per fortnight or something, and then you spend all your time being obsessed with the record: learning it, learning the lyrics and staring at the sleeve. That devotion to a record – it was already hard by the 90s, but it's really tricky now. I have to wonder myself whether we really listen to music now. Music has become almost like rolling news. Does it just sort of flash past us? 

It's much harder to pick out the trends. There are a lot of tastemakers, still, who look at strands of what's happening at the moment, but it's hard to make sense, overall, of where music is going. Will there ever be a cataclysmic musical revolution like punk rock or the two-tone movement in the UK, or even Brit-Pop? I think it'd be difficult. But I also think you can't rule it out, because if the musical way-lines meet, people will take notice. But it's gonna take something of real musical import.

Classically, music goes like the tide: In and out of the mainstream. I think a lot of where I suppose where we're going right now is that music has moved out to the periphery again. But when that tide comes back in, who knows? That may be the revolutionary musical moment we've yet to see.

BP: As a music blogger I'm frequently asked for advice on how to break your music - whether you should give it away, target bloggers, go on the road or do the old fashioned thing of sending music into a record label. What is your view? Is there a standard approach or does it depend on the artist and genre?

Yeah it does, I think. This is a place where major record labels go wrong, I think. They think, "Oh, if that works once, that's a blueprint; let's do it again." But every band is different. Even in the old days with Elastica, we did the opposite of everything everyone told us to do. Everyone said the 7-inch was dead, so we did a 7-inch single. These days, you should just think about that. If you think bands are making themselves too cheap by just giving stuff away, don't give stuff away. If you're a pop band that just wants the pop dollar, than go that route and do as much as you can to sell yourselves. If you're a group that wants people to come to you, be more mysterious.

Mainly, however you do it, it's all about timing, really. In the UK particularly. If you were a band starting now, you'd put your head above the parapet at just the right moment. If you do a gig in London the second week of January, when nothing was going on, people will see you who won't see you in March because everyone's playing. These days we know that even with all the A&RS and the blogs and the major-label scouts; if you're really good, you will get found. It's just what you do with it.

BP: On a related retro tip - if you could re-experience one musical event, be it a gig, a radio session or just listening to a favourite album for the first time all over again what would it be?

Teenage Fanclub did two gigs in London. It was the first two gigs in London I think they'd ever done. Somebody had told me about this band from Scotland, and that I should check them out. So Friday night, I went to go see them at this place called The Falcon in Camden. They got in their van at Glasgow at 7'o'clock in the morning to drive down to London. They started drinking about ten. They got to the gig, they carried on drinking. They got onstage, and they were so drunk that after three songs, they started the next and it went wrong. They said, "sorry about that" and started it again – went wrong. Said  "sorry about that." It went wrong again, and Norman Blake said "Look: Does anyone want us to have another go at this song, or should we just move on to the next one?" And got the crowd to vote. It was one of the most shambolic but endearing gigs I think I've ever seen from a band I love. I fell in love them virtually immediately.

But the next night they played another gig at a place called the White Horse in Hampstead. This was a tiny little basement in a pub in North London. I had to stand on a chair at the back because there's no way of seeing them onstage. And in a crowd of a bout eighteen people, Teenage Fanclub played one of my favorite gigs of all time. They were just pristine the next night. And it was all the stuff from Catholic Education. They did "Everything Closed," which almost went on for nine minutes. It was almost a religious experience. And if I could relive that again, that's the place I'd go back to.

Thanks to Steve for taking the time to answer my questions and to eMusic for setting it up - you can read the full interview on the eMusic site. You can also check out Steve Lamacq's takeover of the eMusic homepage for some top music recommendations and you can read about his Desert-Island Discs here.

BP x

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Video: Falling - Seasfire

Apparently Seasfire have been compared to the Weeknd. Based on the track 'Falling' I can sort of see why, although they feel like a very different beast - much more subtle and without the same overt lewdness to the lyrics. This also feels much more like an evolution of dubstep (specifically a continuation of the James Blake take on it) than R&B.

Anyway - it's a lovely little track with lots of atmosphere and some lovely crunchy synth overlays. Check it out. You can hear more over at Seasfire's Soundcloud page.

BP x

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Single Review: Game Over - Pool

Pool's 'Game Over' is a tribute to video games. You don't get enough of those in music in my opinion - who needs love when you've got a 20-hour-a-week Skyrim habit? Of course there could e some sort of clever analogue to love or getting drunk or something going on here but I'm going to plump for the assumption that this Hamburg three-piece just really dig their Donkey Kong.

It's a pretty awesomely catchy-pop record with a lovely bounce to the bass line and a slightly scratchy guitar rhythm. It also sounds quite a bit like Alphabetical-era Phoenix which basically means rather good.

'Don't Say My Name' is similar in style, if ever so slightly less infectious. The rhythm here is tight and fast, the overall feel being a great mixture of a live sound combined with a strong production.

The single also comes with two remixes, one of each track. Solomun takes the vocals from 'Game Over' and puts it on the top of a funky, loose proto-house bass line - either element is fine on it's own but the vocal and the melody just don't really gel for me. Stimming's remix of 'Don't Say My Name' is much better, reigning the track back into a disco-influenced dub that leaves behind almost all of the vocal.

Worth a listen. We like bookish indie euro kids.

Check out a previews of all four tracks below (the order is the original of 'Don't Say My Name', the Stimming mix, the original or 'Game Over' and then the Solomun mix):

BP x

Game Over is out on 2DIY4 on 30 January, you can order it now on Amazon.co.uk on MP3 [afffiliate link].

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EP Review / Download: Sweat Mode - Ghost Mutt

The world seems to have gone a bit R&B crazy recently, with indie kids swooning over the Weeknd's rich, slow and dark production style and warts and all lyrical style. I've never been much of a fan of the genre aside from the odd track with particularly robotic production (Aaliyah's 'Try Again', Brandy's 'What About Us?’) but something is definitely happening. Kanye's My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy totally changed my perception of what he was capable of as an artist, the confessional lyrics laced with self-loathing made the album an uncomfortable one to listen to. It's a style Drake seems to have been running with - his last album Take Care is full of moody, slow tracks and his staggering hashtag-styled continuous rap bursts.

Ghost Mutt may not be caught up in the same rat hole of self-doubt as all of the above but Sweat Mode nevertheless points a way forward for R&B. This is a very brief EP at just 12 minutes but it features four short jams that play up the best thing about modern R&B: there's no need to hurry. These songs may be short but they aren't fast - you've just got four sensual workouts that meld vocal snatches with echoing bass and space. It's feels like a natural meeting point between electro, dub-step and R&B and I can't help but feel impressed.

Stream it above - it is definitely worth checking out and available as a pay what you want download from Donky Pitch (in other words free if you are tight).

BP x

Single Review / Stream: Orion remixes - Sons & Daughters

I was a big fan of Sons & Daughters' Mirror! Mirror! album that came out last year and the band have just followed it up with their second batch of remixes, this time focused on 'Orion' (Optimo and Andy Blake have already had a go at 'Silver Spell').

Have a listen in the player above. The Wrong Island mix is pretty decent, spacey and a bit spooky with a massive synth build whilst the Umberto mix is unfortunately pretty forgettable. It's the Emporer Machine mix you should really check out though. Emporer Machine is actually Andy Meecham, one half of the under-rated Chicken Lips, and this mix really takes the original to another level - it retains the same aggresiveness but cuts it through with bubbling electronic bass. It's pretty special and frankly a lesson in good remixing, probably adding as much detail and effort as the original recording.

BP x

The Orion Remixes package is released on Domino on 20 February, you can pre-order is on 12" from Amazon.co.uk here [affiliate link].

Album Review: Room(s) - Machinedrum

Inevitably the end of year lists always uncover a few gems you'd some how missed and for 2011 it would appear that for me that gem was Machinedrum's Room(s). I'd not even heard of Machinedrum, or Travis Stewart to give him his proper name, before about a month ago but it would appear he is rather prolific. He has actually appeared twice on a number of 'best of 2011' lists as his other album release of the the year, as one half of Sepalcure, has also got a lot of love (I'm yet to get to it).

On first listen Room(s) reminded me of the spooky urban decay of Burial meets the experimental electronics of Gold Panda but after a few more listens and a bit more time it's clear there is much more going on here. To me Burial's music always felt a bit too much like a one trick pony - the chilling vocal samples and skittering garage beats were a great depiction of the darker side of urban sprawl but they feel very one-dimensional, oddly detracted from the alternative that is the abundance of human life and the warmth of the city.

Room(s) feels like a full representation of city life. It has moments of isolation, contemplation and melancholy but also takes in parties and people and life. 'She Died There' is dark and brooding but 'Come1' starts pure Chicago house, laced with soulful keys and 'Funky Drummer' vocal snatches, before disintegrating like a move to the exit via the cloakroom - the music becoming fainter and gentler. This is an album of genres being smashed together and manipulated to make something new, yet everything feels right. It's one album, every track here sounds like Machinedrum and yet they take in house, soul, electro, techno, dubstep...

Some albums sound like their time whilst some sound like the future. Somehow Room(s) feels like both - it's unmistakably now, but it also feels like a way forward.

BP x

Room(s) is out now, available from Amazon.co.uk on CD, LP and MP3 [affiliate links].

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My Hero: DLR

Check out the Guardian's awesome classic interview with Van Halen's David Lee Roth, author of possibly the most insightful auto-biography I've ever read. Sample excerpt from the Guardian piece:

Van Halen won their first record contract in 1977, at a concert in Anaheim Stadium, when four hirsute figures – one with Roth’s flowing blonde mane – floated gently into the stadium by parachute. Van Halen were hiding in a van, dressed in parachute suits, and took the stage moments later. As a professional gambit, it set a certain tone which they have followed assiduously ever since. The stipulation in their performance contract that the promoter remove all brown Smarties in the bowl in their dressing-room (to ensure he has read the contract properly); Roth’s two black-belt midget bodyguards – such things, he suggests, are imperative for “overall ambience”.

Frankly if you aren't viewing your life as a circus show you probably aren't any good at being a rock star.

BP x

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Comment: Feeling Fresh

I've been wanting to have a site refresh and redesign for a while now and was feeling inspired last night and this morning (to the point I couldn't sleep) and the result is what you see before you now. The old design had become very tired in my eyes, probably due to me looking at it for about four years or something, and was largely tied to a template so I've thrown it out and started again.

It's a new year and so what better a time to make a fresh start. I've focused on reducing the dark heavy feeling of the site to make something that is much lighter and hopefully more enjoyable to read. The move away from a graphical masthead also means it's easier to tweak styles without it becoming a massive ordeal.

You may also notice the pink has gone - there is still some in the customised Soundcloud and YouTube embeds that have been posted in the past but the site's colours moving forwards will be mainly focused on whites and greys with the blue highlight used in the masthead.

I welcome comments - tell me if you like it, hate it or notice anything that you think could be improved.

Thanks for reading the blog over the years and here's to the future!

BP x

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