Tuesday, 31 October 2023

October Round-Up


This month, The Rolling Stones have released their latest 'best since Some Girls' album. Except it is different this time, because with Jagger and Richards getting close to the age of a resilient Galápagos tortoise and with the final song being a cover of Muddy Waters' "Rolling Stone Blues", Hackney Diamonds must really be their last LP. Much has been made of the awful cover as well as Andrew Watt's crass production (this Quietus article is masterful), but listen to the actual songs. Even the much-maligned "Angry" single has a decent vocal hookline. Elsewhere, the Charles Watts featuring "Mess It Up" and the obligatory Keith Richards ballad ("Tell Me Straight") are the highlights. Not their best since Some Girls, obviously, but fuck the naysayers - this is a good album.

Another unexpected comeback album was released by Crime & The City Solution. The Killer has come ten years after the excellent American Twilight. It is not nearly as good, sadly, as the songwriting feels a little forced and disjointed. Still, there is always something intriguing about the edges of their dark, uncomfortable post-rock. As for The Menzingers, I am now convinced they will never be able to approach the songwriting peak that was On The Impossible Past (2012). Some Of It Was True is fine, I guess, but this is The Menzingers by numbers, and only "There's No Place In This World For Me" has any spark to it. 

October has seen the release of two songs called "Run Run Run". One was The Feelies' cover of the Lou Reed song and appeared on the album Some Kinda Love featuring live performances of The Velvet Underground classics. It is a delightful little exercise, and The Feelies do it with effortless energy. The other "Run Run Run" (God, is there a more abused song title in rock'n'roll?) came by way of The Libertines who are releasing their new album in March next year. I would not go as far as to say that Carl Barât has lost it (still, when was the last time he came up with an inspired tune?), but this first single has the driest chorus ever heard on a Libertines release. 

Occasionally I find the critical reverence for Sufjan Stevens a little grating, but Javelin is very lovely indeed. Monotonous, samey, a little predictable - but has the inherent charm that breaks the defences. "Will Anybody Ever Love Me?" is a strikingly beautiful ballad with a chord progression that is extremely recognisable yet still irresistible. However, a much more special album for me was Mary Lattimore's Goodbye, Hotel Arkada which revealed a new layer with each listen. The inventive minimalism of these soundscapes feels endlessly intriguing. 

Ttrruuces caught my attention in Berlin last month with their tunes and their on-stage confidence - but how do they fare in studio? Well, they are good, and Jjuuiices is a decent follow-up to their 2020 debut, but while it is diverse and catchy and brilliantly irreverent, the album is seriously lacking in signature songs like "The Disco", "Bad Kids" and "Sensations of Cool".

Finally, the biggest news of October came from Charles Bissell. Apparently, The Wrens are dead and the man's new project is called Car Colors. The new album is going to be released next year (inevitable now), and the first single is coming out on the 17th of November. Buckle up, the twenty year wait is almost over...