Oxes cover of Wild Thing. Who needs more than guitar, vocals and drums. I am standing near the PA, vibrating gently.
The Budos Band: bastard offspring of The Horny Horns and Metallica. Like ‘em!
ATP Nightmare Before Christmas: Les Savy Fav/Battles/Caribou
Bodes well - Marnie Stern (2nd band on) tearing the roof off…
Elbow: build a rocket boys!
As I’ve probably mentioned before, Elbow’s previous album was a firm favourite, and a deserved Mercury Prize winner. Garvey and co. really know how to write a tune, and Seldom Seen Kid was a masterpiece of simple, direct and heart-rending tunes, so I was keen to hear where they’d go next: a retread of the commercial and critical success, or something else entirely?
Adele: 21
Adele’s 21 is definitely the commercial hit of the shortlist. 17 weeks at number 1 thanks largely, it would seem, to a performance of Someone Like You at the Brits. So does the album merit this huge success?
PJ Harvey: Let England Shake
I’ve heard PJ Harvey talking in interviews about how this is a set of folk songs. Well, not sure about that Peej, but it is a fine, evocative album, dealing with the horrors of war in an honest and often outspoken manner. It’s being hailed as her masterpiece, which I can kind of see, but then I’m a long-time admirer of her music, so it’s a bit difficult for me to get perspective.
Gwilym Simcock: Good Days at Schloss Elmau
…aka “the jazz one”. It starts at a cracking pace with some lovely rhythmic and free (tonally) piano work. It’s another mood-evoking album which moves from joyous celebrations to thoughtful ramblings to wistful, erm, whistlings. I’ve no idea, really.
Anna Calvi: Anna Calvi
I already own, know and love this album. It’s a really great combination of intimate, whispered moments and (ahem) “rocking wig-outs”. Obvious touch points are PJ Harvey, Chrissie Hynde, Patti Smith, the angular cool of Walkmen or Interpol, but this does not come across as derivative (although The Devil has definite echoes of Ms Harvey’s song of the same name). This is a hugely self-assured, strong and vibrant collection of alternative pop songs.
King Creosote & Jon Hopkins: Diamond Mine
Every Mercury shortlist has its “the folky one”, and Diamond Mine is this shortlist’s. Reductionist genre-tarring over, this is a lovely set of songs. Very pastoral, with the album being kicked off with a field recording of what sounds like a small Scottish cafe.
James Blake: James Blake
This album announces its intent fairly clearly in the opening moments: you will be seduced, then confused, then alienated, then hugged by the womb-like production. Wonky is the word. It’s incredible that this album represents the far end of the dubstep spectrum from Katy B and Tinie Tempah.