Tuesday, May 10, 2011
Song for Sunday
All India Radio – Rippled
Apologies for the late posting. I forgot on Sunday and by last night Blogger was broken. Anyway, this is well worth the wait. Enjoy!
Band/artist of the week: Bruce Springsteen
Song of the week: Bruce Springsteen – Dancing in the Dark
Sunday, May 1, 2011
Sunday, April 24, 2011
Song for Sunday
Amaya Laucirica – Sleeping in Your Shadow
Band/artist of the week: The National
Song of the week: Lowtide – Underneath Tonight
Sunday, April 17, 2011
Song for Sunday
Holly Throsby – What I Thought of You
Band/artist of the week: The National
Song of the week: Amadou & Mariam – M'bifé
Sunday, April 10, 2011
Sunday, April 3, 2011
Song for Sunday
Mogwai – How to Be a Werewolf (in Thirty Century Man)
Band/artist of the week: Mogwai
Song of the week: Mogwai – George Square Thatcher Death Party
Spot the theme anyone?
Romanno Bridge
Sometimes I am up for a bit of heavy-duty non-fiction, experimental novels or multi-layered literary fiction with fractured timelines. Sometimes though, all I am looking for is a cracking yarn.
Andrew Greig's Romanno Bridge certainly doesn't disappoint on that front. Reprising his characters from The Return of John MacNab a few years on he entangles them in a far more dangerous and brutal adventure. John MacNab had a very genteel sense of British fair-play compared with Romanno Bridge ...
Starting out with a suicide deep in Rothiemurchus Forest the plot plunges headlong into ancient secret societies and the search for the real(?) Stone of Destiny, racing all over Scotland with diversions to London, Canada and Norway.
Often with this type of story the reader has to allow the author a bit of leeway to get beyond some of the more far-fetched elements, but even so there can't be any holes in the plot or characters with defects or who aren't believable. Some of the characters do seem to turn-up in exactly the right place at the right time and I had heard comments from some who felt that Kirsty could only ever exist in a male novelist's head. There are elements of her that are almost too good to be true, but it was never a problem for me. I wanted to believe, so it all felt real.
Of course everything works out all right by the end and the good guys prevail. Even so he keeps you on your toes right up to the last pages and the ending avoids any whiff of sentimentality. It just feels right, and sometimes that is exactly what you need from a book.
Andrew Greig's Romanno Bridge certainly doesn't disappoint on that front. Reprising his characters from The Return of John MacNab a few years on he entangles them in a far more dangerous and brutal adventure. John MacNab had a very genteel sense of British fair-play compared with Romanno Bridge ...
Starting out with a suicide deep in Rothiemurchus Forest the plot plunges headlong into ancient secret societies and the search for the real(?) Stone of Destiny, racing all over Scotland with diversions to London, Canada and Norway.
Often with this type of story the reader has to allow the author a bit of leeway to get beyond some of the more far-fetched elements, but even so there can't be any holes in the plot or characters with defects or who aren't believable. Some of the characters do seem to turn-up in exactly the right place at the right time and I had heard comments from some who felt that Kirsty could only ever exist in a male novelist's head. There are elements of her that are almost too good to be true, but it was never a problem for me. I wanted to believe, so it all felt real.
Of course everything works out all right by the end and the good guys prevail. Even so he keeps you on your toes right up to the last pages and the ending avoids any whiff of sentimentality. It just feels right, and sometimes that is exactly what you need from a book.
Sunday, March 27, 2011
Sunday, March 20, 2011
Song for Sunday
The Triffids – Wide Open Road
Band/artist of the week: The National
Song of the week: On Volcano – Acceleration of Heartbeat
Sunday, March 13, 2011
Song for Sunday
Je ne suis pas très drogue – The Limiñanas
Band/artist of the week: The Rural Alberta Advantage
Song of the week: The Rural Alberta Advantage – Stamp
Sunday, March 6, 2011
Song for Sunday
The Rural Alberta Advantage – Stamp
New album (with this song on it) out this week!
Band/artist of the week: Mogwai
Song of the week: Mogwai – George Square Thatcher Death Party
Sunday, February 27, 2011
Song for Sunday
Gil Scott-Heron and Jamie xx – NY is Killing Me
Band/artist of the week: Mogwai
Song of the week: Mogwai – George Square Thatcher Death Party
Tuesday, February 22, 2011
Alex's Adventures in Numberland
Last time I looked Alex Bellos was The Guardian's correspondent in Brazil and his one published book was a wonderfully idiosyncratic and entertaining look at Brazilian football (or futebol as the Brazilians would say) which actually turned out to be a pretty good historical and sociological primer for the whole country. Read along with Peter Robb's A Death in Brazil there probably isn't much more that you need to know about this most intriguing (at least to me) country.
So, getting back to the point, I was mildly surprised to find out last year that he had written a book about mathematics called Alex's Adventures in Numberland. However, it turns out he has a degree in philosophy and mathematics (they didn't mention that in the blurb on the football book!) and a boundless enthusiasm for seeking out the quirky and fascinating amongst the numbers and equations.
Starting out with Munduruku people living deep in the Brazilian Amazon who still lead a hunter-gatherer existence and have no words for numbers greater than five. Mainly because, as Alex demonstrates, they don't have any need for them. And even these five numbers aren't a precise match for the quantities one to five translating more correctly into one, two, threeish, fourish and a handful. This leads into a fascinating discussion on how children learn to count and understand numbers. Studying young children and isolated indigenous peoples gives a fascinating insight into innate mathematical intuition compared against taught concepts. (The numerical equivalent of Steven Pinker's The Language Instinct.)
From there we move through number systems, numerology, Vedic mathematics, Pi, algebra, number games, the golden ratio, probability, statistics and on to infinity (the concept not the size of the book ...). He has a journalist's eye for an interesting story and the writing is always clear and intelligent, even when he gets into some fairly high level concepts. Pleasingly, the text is also accompanied by plenty of well-drawn diagrams, illustrations and photos which help with the explanations and let you see what mathematicians really look like. There are also plenty of equations, but what did you expect? It is about maths after all.
Along the way he tracks down some fascinating characters, some well known, most not. For example Wayne Gould, a retired judge from New Zealand who found a Sudoku book in a Tokyo bookshop and although he couldn't read any of the instructions he managed to work out how to solve the puzzle. He then spent six years writing a computer program to generate Sudokus and went on to sell the idea to newspapers in the USA and UK sparking a craze which now has over 100 million regular players. I had always presumed that Sudoku was an ancient Japanese puzzle which was just popularised recently in the West, but it turns out to have been invented by Maki Kaji, a Japanese puzzle-maker who refined a puzzle that he had seen in an American puzzle magazine which had in turn been created by Howard Garns, a retired architect from Indiana.
At 450 pages he covers a lot of ground, but it flys past and I was very sad to see it finish, although my head was hurting a bit by the end. By the last chapter we are up to non-Euclidean geometry, hyperbolic crochet, Georg Cantor's 'set theory' and the Hilbert Hotel. Luckily he also has an excellent blog where he updates some of the stories that appear in the book and any other interesting mathematics that he finds.
So, getting back to the point, I was mildly surprised to find out last year that he had written a book about mathematics called Alex's Adventures in Numberland. However, it turns out he has a degree in philosophy and mathematics (they didn't mention that in the blurb on the football book!) and a boundless enthusiasm for seeking out the quirky and fascinating amongst the numbers and equations.
Starting out with Munduruku people living deep in the Brazilian Amazon who still lead a hunter-gatherer existence and have no words for numbers greater than five. Mainly because, as Alex demonstrates, they don't have any need for them. And even these five numbers aren't a precise match for the quantities one to five translating more correctly into one, two, threeish, fourish and a handful. This leads into a fascinating discussion on how children learn to count and understand numbers. Studying young children and isolated indigenous peoples gives a fascinating insight into innate mathematical intuition compared against taught concepts. (The numerical equivalent of Steven Pinker's The Language Instinct.)
From there we move through number systems, numerology, Vedic mathematics, Pi, algebra, number games, the golden ratio, probability, statistics and on to infinity (the concept not the size of the book ...). He has a journalist's eye for an interesting story and the writing is always clear and intelligent, even when he gets into some fairly high level concepts. Pleasingly, the text is also accompanied by plenty of well-drawn diagrams, illustrations and photos which help with the explanations and let you see what mathematicians really look like. There are also plenty of equations, but what did you expect? It is about maths after all.
Along the way he tracks down some fascinating characters, some well known, most not. For example Wayne Gould, a retired judge from New Zealand who found a Sudoku book in a Tokyo bookshop and although he couldn't read any of the instructions he managed to work out how to solve the puzzle. He then spent six years writing a computer program to generate Sudokus and went on to sell the idea to newspapers in the USA and UK sparking a craze which now has over 100 million regular players. I had always presumed that Sudoku was an ancient Japanese puzzle which was just popularised recently in the West, but it turns out to have been invented by Maki Kaji, a Japanese puzzle-maker who refined a puzzle that he had seen in an American puzzle magazine which had in turn been created by Howard Garns, a retired architect from Indiana.
At 450 pages he covers a lot of ground, but it flys past and I was very sad to see it finish, although my head was hurting a bit by the end. By the last chapter we are up to non-Euclidean geometry, hyperbolic crochet, Georg Cantor's 'set theory' and the Hilbert Hotel. Luckily he also has an excellent blog where he updates some of the stories that appear in the book and any other interesting mathematics that he finds.
Sunday, February 20, 2011
Borders, REDGroup and Australian bookselling
In November 2009 I started a post entitled Is Borders evil? so as you may guess the news that they had placed themselves into voluntary administration on Thursday didn't cause too much heartache around here. As a chain-bookshop ex-employee I do feel sorry for the shopfloor staff who now face irate customers with impossible demands and the likely loss of their jobs.
I came to the conclusion that they probably weren't inherently evil as much as incompetently nefarious, so I never did publish the post, but charging well above RRP on about 90% of your stock did seem like a strange strategy for a bookshop looking for customer loyalty and longevity. The half-empty shelves, poor stock selection and lack of key backlist titles over the last few years also seemed to point to some problems with management and strategy.
Around this time the government was also looking into the parallel importation laws and book pricing in general, so there was plenty of media coverage about the disparity between book prices in Australia and those in the USA and UK, but bizarrely there was no coverage anywhere about one of the major book retailing chains over-pricing the vast majority of their stock.
It wasn't always like that, however, when Borders first opened in Carlton in early 2003 it was a well stocked and pleasant spot to browse. I still never bought much there, but occasionally one of their discounted bestsellers like William Gibson's Pattern Recognition or something more esoteric not stocked elsewhere would persuade me to get the credit card out.
Unfortunately in 2007 the Borders US group started getting into difficulties and the UK and Asia Pacific parts of the business were put up for sale. The Australia/NZ side was bought in June 2008 by the REDGroup who are in turn owned by Pacific Equity Partners (PEP), a private equity firm who clearly weren't buying because of a love of literature. The REDGroup already owned the Angus and Robertson chain in Australia and the Whitcoulls chain in New Zealand, so it was fairly obvious that PEP thought they could merge Borders into the existing business, streamline back office functions, maximise profit and sell it on as soon as they could get a good price. (The financial background is explained well in an article in yesterday's Sydney Morning Herald by Michael Evans.)
Straight away you could see the change in the shops: backlist wasn't replaced, shelves got empty, prices went up across the board and non-book products became more and more prominent. I am probably not the average book-buyer, but it wasn't long before I stopped buying anything from them and quickly realised that it wasn't even worth going in to the stores as it would just annoy me.
Not as annoyed, however, as I was when it was revealed soon after the announcement that Border's chairman Steven Cain had written to the government blaming them for the chain's failure because of the overseas internet shopping GST loophole and parallel importation laws. Sure, internet booksellers will have taken a some of Borders market, but the parallel importation laws have very little to do with the problems the REDGroup encountered. For their management to try to shift the blame from their failings to others over two issues which they were well aware of and should have had strategies for dealing with is pathetic in the extreme. It is also telling that Dymocks and other, smaller independent chains, like the ever excellent Readings, can survive in the current climate when they are dealing with exactly the same issues, albeit far more successfully.
Most of the articles about the collapse have made much of the impact of overseas online booksellers like Amazon and Book Depository (some even going so far as to predict that this is the beginning of the end for all shops!) who are undoubtably grabbing a bigger and bigger share of the market in Australia and many have pointed out that the widespread take-up of ebooks will squeeze the bricks-and-mortar bookshops further. Personally, I think that big and bland chains will struggle as more of their custom goes online, but am optimistic that smaller and more customer-focused shops should still be able to thrive. Their role will change slightly as all the bestsellers go digital, but provided they focus on the things that on-line and ebooks can't provide like author events, discussion groups and great customer service then I think they will be all right. Of course they may need a bit of help from the publishers in all of this, but that is another story which can wait for now.
There is bound to plenty more coverage over the coming weeks and the whole industry will be watching intently to see what happens. In the meantime, if you want to know more here are some of the best sources and stories:
John Birmingham – Borders' demise: why the book chains are doomed
Bookseller + Publisher blog – Things we keep repeating
Bookseller + Publisher blog – Round-up of stories on REDGroup entering voluntary administration
And my favourite, Ross Honeywill – How Mark Rubbo killed Borders books
I came to the conclusion that they probably weren't inherently evil as much as incompetently nefarious, so I never did publish the post, but charging well above RRP on about 90% of your stock did seem like a strange strategy for a bookshop looking for customer loyalty and longevity. The half-empty shelves, poor stock selection and lack of key backlist titles over the last few years also seemed to point to some problems with management and strategy.
Around this time the government was also looking into the parallel importation laws and book pricing in general, so there was plenty of media coverage about the disparity between book prices in Australia and those in the USA and UK, but bizarrely there was no coverage anywhere about one of the major book retailing chains over-pricing the vast majority of their stock.
It wasn't always like that, however, when Borders first opened in Carlton in early 2003 it was a well stocked and pleasant spot to browse. I still never bought much there, but occasionally one of their discounted bestsellers like William Gibson's Pattern Recognition or something more esoteric not stocked elsewhere would persuade me to get the credit card out.
Unfortunately in 2007 the Borders US group started getting into difficulties and the UK and Asia Pacific parts of the business were put up for sale. The Australia/NZ side was bought in June 2008 by the REDGroup who are in turn owned by Pacific Equity Partners (PEP), a private equity firm who clearly weren't buying because of a love of literature. The REDGroup already owned the Angus and Robertson chain in Australia and the Whitcoulls chain in New Zealand, so it was fairly obvious that PEP thought they could merge Borders into the existing business, streamline back office functions, maximise profit and sell it on as soon as they could get a good price. (The financial background is explained well in an article in yesterday's Sydney Morning Herald by Michael Evans.)
Straight away you could see the change in the shops: backlist wasn't replaced, shelves got empty, prices went up across the board and non-book products became more and more prominent. I am probably not the average book-buyer, but it wasn't long before I stopped buying anything from them and quickly realised that it wasn't even worth going in to the stores as it would just annoy me.
Not as annoyed, however, as I was when it was revealed soon after the announcement that Border's chairman Steven Cain had written to the government blaming them for the chain's failure because of the overseas internet shopping GST loophole and parallel importation laws. Sure, internet booksellers will have taken a some of Borders market, but the parallel importation laws have very little to do with the problems the REDGroup encountered. For their management to try to shift the blame from their failings to others over two issues which they were well aware of and should have had strategies for dealing with is pathetic in the extreme. It is also telling that Dymocks and other, smaller independent chains, like the ever excellent Readings, can survive in the current climate when they are dealing with exactly the same issues, albeit far more successfully.
Most of the articles about the collapse have made much of the impact of overseas online booksellers like Amazon and Book Depository (some even going so far as to predict that this is the beginning of the end for all shops!) who are undoubtably grabbing a bigger and bigger share of the market in Australia and many have pointed out that the widespread take-up of ebooks will squeeze the bricks-and-mortar bookshops further. Personally, I think that big and bland chains will struggle as more of their custom goes online, but am optimistic that smaller and more customer-focused shops should still be able to thrive. Their role will change slightly as all the bestsellers go digital, but provided they focus on the things that on-line and ebooks can't provide like author events, discussion groups and great customer service then I think they will be all right. Of course they may need a bit of help from the publishers in all of this, but that is another story which can wait for now.
There is bound to plenty more coverage over the coming weeks and the whole industry will be watching intently to see what happens. In the meantime, if you want to know more here are some of the best sources and stories:
John Birmingham – Borders' demise: why the book chains are doomed
Bookseller + Publisher blog – Things we keep repeating
Bookseller + Publisher blog – Round-up of stories on REDGroup entering voluntary administration
And my favourite, Ross Honeywill – How Mark Rubbo killed Borders books
Song for Sunday
The Delgados – No Danger
I can't help but feel vaguely cheated that I haven't seen this before. It isn't surprising that it didn't make it onto CD:UK, but surely there must have been other music shows on UK TV that would have shown something of such total and utter genius? I can highly recommend American Trilogy as well, which seems to feature the Banana Splits on a day trip to Manchester Velodrome.
Band/artist of the week: Mogwai
Song of the week: Mogwai – George Square Thatcher Death Party
Sunday, February 13, 2011
Song for Sunday
Young Galaxy – We Have Everything
Band/artist of the week: The National
Song of the week: On Volcano – Acceleration of Heartbeat
Sunday, February 6, 2011
Song for Sunday
Mogwai – Rano Pano
Fantastic! I hope you are all getting excited about the new album Hardcore Will Never Die, But You Will out a week on Monday. The perfect Valentine gift for the significant other in your life. Trust me ...
Band/artist of the week: Mogwai
Song of the week: On Volcano – Acceleration of Heartbeat
(Song of the week is also completely brilliant and you can download a copy completely free from here.)
Monday, January 31, 2011
Books of 2010
Complete list is in the sidebar way down somewhere on the right. 39 was quite a long way short of my stated goal of one a week. I started well, but quickly tailed off with a too-late surge in the last three months, as you can see from the chart below. This year I am going to aim for 52 again, but suspect that anticipated lack of sleep from late May onwards may make it hard to achieve again.
More worrying, however, as the following graph clearly illustrates is the gap between books read and books acquired. Luckily most of my 2010 Christmas books actually arrived in January, otherwise the gap would have been even more alarming.Top ten is below, with statistics underneath. Apparent again is a heavy bias towards fiction, male authors and books published in the last three years.
Top 10
1 Let the Great World Spin – Colum McCann
2 Waterlog – Roger Deakin
3 The Magnetic North – Sarah Wheeler
4 A Lie About My Father – John Burnside
5 Started Early, Took My Dog – Kate Atkinson
6 Zeitoun – Dave Eggers
7 Zero History – William Gibson
8 The Stars in the Bright Sky – Alan Warner
9 The Broken Shore – Peter Temple
10 Men in Space – Tom McCarthy
Statistics
Fiction: 29 titles
Non-fiction: 10 titles
Number of authors: 39
Male authors: 32
Female authors: 7
Books published in 2010: 11
Books published in 2009: 13
Books published in 2008: 6
Books published in 2007: 4
Books published in 2006: 3
Books published in 2005: 1
Books published 2000-04: 1
Books published 1990-99: 0
Books published 1980-89: 0
Books published before 1980: 0
Sunday, January 30, 2011
Song for Sunday
House of Love – Shine On
Band/artist of the week: British Sea Power
Song of the week: The Rural Alberta Advantage – Don't Haunt this Place
Sunday, January 23, 2011
Song for Sunday
Best Coast – Boyfriend
Band/artist of the week: British Sea Power
Song of the week: British Sea Power – Living is so Easy
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Song for Sunday
Broadcast – Winter Now
Very sad to hear about the death of Trish Keenan from pneumonia. Broadcast were always one of those bands that I felt I should like more than I actually did. Their left-field, wilfully experimental side always seemed to pound the tuneful, bewitching pop side into submission. But there were always enough moments when the two sides combined into something magical to make me give them another chance whenever a new record came out.
There is a lovely remembrance here, along with some more clips of their finer moments.
Band/artist of the week: The National
Song of the week: British Sea Power – Living is so Easy
Song of the week: British Sea Power – Living is so Easy
Thursday, January 13, 2011
2010 music by numbers
Probably of interest to absolutely no-one but me, but according to last.fm these are the top 50 bands/artists and tracks I listened to last year. I can't remember exactly, but I think my total plays stood at around 60,000 at the beginning of last year. As 2011 started it was sitting at 92,378, which would mean about 30,000 tracks for the year or roughly 500 a week.
You can see the up-to-date charts here, if you are so inclined, and feel free to paste your own lists into the comments or even better befriend me on last.fm so I can have a look myself!
Artists/bandsYou can see the up-to-date charts here, if you are so inclined, and feel free to paste your own lists into the comments or even better befriend me on last.fm so I can have a look myself!
1 The National (1,581)
2 Bruce Springsteen (718)
3 Mogwai (711)
4 Frightened Rabbit (630)
5 Saint Etienne (547)
6 Idlewild (506)
7 Sigur Rós (503)
8 Malcolm Middleton (485)
9 Arcade Fire (483)
10 Radiohead (482)
11 R.E.M. (446)
12 Tindersticks (416)
13 Efterklang (404)
14 We Were Promised Jetpacks (360)
15 U2 (347)
16 Girls (342)
17 Venice is Sinking (339)
18 Manic Street Preachers (310)
19 Belle and Sebastian (307)
20 Rose Elinor Dougall (298)
21 Hello Saferide (297)
22 The Very Best (295)
23 The xx (288)
24 Low (276)
25 British Sea Power (275)
26 Tanya Donelly (272)
27 Burial (270)
28 Moby (264)
28 Lucinda Williams (264)
30 The Rural Alberta Advantage (259)
31 Runrig (245)
32 Billy Bragg (237)
33 Big Country (235)
34 Phantogram (230)
35 Suede (226)
36 Bob Mould (225)
36 Marillion (225)
38 Art of Fighting (224)
39 Placebo (219)
40 Amadou & Mariam (218)
41 Portishead (213)
42 David Bowie (206)
43 For a Minor Reflection (203)
44 Glasvegas (198)
45 Little Birdy (196)
46 The Cure (195)
47 Interpol (193)
48 Black Box Recorder (188)
49 Camera Obscura (186)
50 Gersey (182)
Tracks
1 The National – Bloodbuzz Ohio (131)2 Ben Sollee & Daniel Martin Moore – Something, Somewhere, Sometime (89)
3 Venice is Sinking – Compass (80)
4 The National – Afraid of Everyone (79)
5 Rose Elinor Dougall – Find Me Out (78)
6 We Were Promised Jetpacks – Conductor (72)
7 Girls – Morning Light (71)
8 Hello Saferide – Anna (70)
9 The Soft Pack – C'mon (69)
10 Phosphorescent – The Mermaid Parade (68)
10 Efterklang – Alike (68)
12 Sambassadeur – Stranded (64)
13 Venice is Sinking – Falls City (63)
14 Basia Bulat – Go On (60)
14 The Concretes – Good Evening (60)
16 The Rural Alberta Advantage – Don't Haunt This Place (58)
17 Amadou & Mariam – Sénégal fast food (56)
18 Black Box Recorder – Seasons in the Sun (53)
18 Roky Erickson w/ Okkervil River – Goodbye Sweet Dreams (53)
20 Land of Talk – Some Are Lakes (Radio Mix) (52)
20 Casiokids – Grønt lys i alle ledd (52)
20 The Very Best – You Got The Love (Florence - The XX Remix) (52)
23 Phantogram – When I'm Small (51)
24 Laura Marling – Alpha Shallows (50)
24 Land of Talk – May You Never (50)
26 Tracey Thorn – Why Does The Wind? (Radio Edit) (49)
27 Taken by Trees – Anna (48)
27 Apollo Ghosts – Library Card Amulet (48)
27 The New Pornographers – Your Hands (Together) (48)
30 Love Is All – Repetition (47)
30 Clogs – Last Song (47)
32 Fulton Lights – Healing Waters (46)
32 The National – Anyone's Ghost (46)
34 The National – England (45)
35 Wild Beasts – This Is Our Lot (43)
35 Rose Elinor Dougall – Carry On (43)
37 Yeah Yeah Yeahs – Hysteric (42)
37 Wye Oak – I Hope You Die (42)
37 Unknown Mortal Orchestra – FFunny Ffrends (42)
40 The National – Slow Show (41)
40 Frightened Rabbit – Fast Blood (41)
40 The National – Little Faith (41)
43 The National – Conversation 16 (40)
44 The xx – Crystalised (39)
45 Frightened Rabbit – Head Rolls Off (38)
45 The Dø – At Last (38)
45 We Were Promised Jetpacks – Keeping Warm (38)
45 For a Minor Reflection – Dansi Dans (38)
45 The National – Terrible Love (38)
50 We Were Promised Jetpacks – Quiet Little Voices (37)
Sunday, January 9, 2011
Song for Sunday
Tame Impala – Lucidity
Band/artist of the week: Malcolm Middleton
Song of the week: The Breeders – Buffy Main Title Theme
Saturday, January 8, 2011
The Mermaid Parade (2010 as a mix-tape)
Hopefully copies should be arriving around now, so it must be time for the track listing of 2010s best-of CD. Seemed to be a fairly easy selection to make this year, although I did start out with a list of about 40 tracks. Not quite as many completely new bands as last year, but still a majority were unheard before the start of the year.
The National – Bloodbuzz Ohio
Rose Elinor Dougall – Carry On
Metric – Sick Muse
Bettie Serveert – The Pharmacy
The Concretes – Good Evening
British Sea Power – Living Is So Easy
Three Mile Pilot – Still Alive
The Rural Alberta Advantage – Don't Haunt This Place
Ben Sollee & Daniel Martin Moore – Something, Somewhere, Sometime
The Soft Pack – C'mon
Kathleen Edwards – In State
Blitzen Trapper – Heaven and Earth
Stornoway – I Saw You Blink
Laura Marling – Rambling Man
Phosphorescent – The Mermaid Parade
Sambassadeur – Stranded
Darkstar – Deadness
For a Minor Reflection – Fjara
Let me know in the comments what your favourites are, which ones you can't stand and anything else that you think should have been on the list. If you would like a copy all you need to do is ask nicely ...
Sunday, January 2, 2011
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