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Sunday 20 May 2018

#694: Frank Turner - Be More Kind


It seems that Frank Turner has been on an upward trajectory since 2015’s Positive Songs for Negative People, both emotionally and professionally. Be More Kind picks up where that record left off, and finds Turner at his most empathetic, and most accessible.

#693: Peace - Kindness is the New Rock and Roll


When Kindness Is The New Rock and Roll opens with recent single “Power”, three minutes of undeniably quintessential Peace, it’s easy to assume that it will set the tone for what’s to follow instantly. And though ideas of upbeat positivity are something that recur throughout, such assumptions are only partially right.


#692: Gaz Coombes - World's Strongest Man



With 2015’s Matador, Gaz Coombes elevated himself from Supergrass frontman-turned-solo-artist into a Mercury Prize-nominated musician that could be taken on his own (substantial) merit. Its follow up, World’s Strongest Man, sees Coombes propel himself further, allowing the more experimental side hinted at on the aforementioned to really come to the fore.

#691: Marine - Fable Electric


On the one hand Fable Electric, the debut album from London quartet Marine, is a bold and brash that’s as uncompromising as it is confident. On the other however, it’s ethereal and otherworldly; its nuanced matched only by its inherently enigmatic nature. The result is an album as beguiling as it bombastic.

#690: Cloud - Plays With Fire


There’s something both sad and reassuring about the sheer number of albums released recently that are hinged on the agonies and anxieties of the twenty-something. Reassuring in their messages of solidarity, and in the idea that such feelings are seemingly ubiquitous, yet sad in the sense that such anxieties are as far-reaching as they are, and in the fact there’s little really that can be done to address them.

#689: Fickle Friends - You Are Someone Else


Arriving on a wave of icy synths and hyperbole, ‘You Are Someone Else’ is the highly anticipated debut from Fickle Friends and finds the Brighton-based quintet awash in button-bright textures and unashamedly pop production. But while the sugar-sweet indie-pop might well be moreish in smaller servings, the 16 tracks on offer here feel overindulgent, especially on consecutive listens.

#688: The Wonder Years - Sister Cities

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Whenever anyone mentions The Wonder Years, I’m instantly taken back to being at uni, where Get Stoked On It was often the soundtrack to the rare handful of warm days Leeds gets each year. I never dug much further than that however, so it came as something as a surprise to find that not only is Sister Cities the band’s sixth album, but The Wonder Years clearly aren’t the same band that soundtracked fleeting summers several years ago.

#687: Hop Along - Bark Your Head Off, Dog


With 2015’s Painted Shut, Philadelphia's Hop Along somewhat fittingly made the jump from irresistibly scrappy indie-pop project to a fully realised band. On their third album, Bark Your Head Off, Dog, they take it a step further.

#686: Black Foxxes - ReiĆ°i


Inspired following frontman Mark Holley’s extended trip to Iceland in between records, ReiĆ°i is the second record from Exeter’s Black Foxxes. Much like the geography of the country from which it takes its influence, it’s equally as imposing as it is staggeringly beautiful.


#685: Moose Blood - I Don't Know If I Can Do This Anymore


Since their inception back in 2012, Canterbury’s Moose Blood have been fusing together the lovelorn sounds of Midwest emo with a distinctly British brand of power-pop, and have been turning heads and breaking hearts ever since.

#684: Teen Creeps - Birthmarks


Teen Creeps’ aesthetic is one that feels nostalgic, certainly, but succeeds not just in dusting off any pre-assumed cobwebs but incinerating them completely; its angst and anger tangible in the pained delivery of Bert Vliegen, its heartbreak evident in his heart-on-sleeve lyricism.


#683: We Are Scientists - Megaplex


18 years and six albums in, it makes sense that We Are Scientists should know exactly what they want to sound like. Where previously the band claim to have used their records “to educate, to enlighten, to awaken people to the depth and complexity of moral concerns”, ‘Megaplex’ eschews the soapbox in favour of ten tracks of button-bright indie-pop.

#682: Table Scraps - Autonomy


Coming across as the bastard offspring of Big Black and Alice Cooper, Birmingham’s Table Scraps are scuzzy, uncompromising, and more than a little tongue in cheek. As such, second album, ‘Autonomy’, harbours many of those same traits, and though its clattering garage rock may feel familiar for those who spent any time with the band’s debut, it does just enough to distance itself from its predecessor.