Archive for the ‘brit-pop’ Category

Kate Nash: Made of Bricks

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

Kate Nash: Made of Bricks album art

I’ll just start off by making a bold statement:

While not being the best of 2007, Kate Nash’s Made of Bricks is most assuredly my favourite and will be so for years to come.

There, I said it.

Take Lily Allen. Please. (Couldn’t resist). Seriously, take Lily Allen, take out some of the attitude and fill it with cute. Take Lily Allen, and add some hotness. Take Lily Allen and make her more awesome. Yes, *more* awesome. And that is Kate Nash.

The album is 12 tracks (well, 13, really, but it’s a SECRET) coming in at 56 minutes. So far so good.

Bricks, sadly starts off on an odd, and perhaps jarring, foot with Play, which is just lots of distorted drum machines and Nash “singing” “I like to play.” It’s not so much bad as, arguably, setting the tone of the album wrong. After that “tune,” however, the album just keeps climbing.

To be honest, with the exception of “Play,” I love the whole damned album. Foundations, Dickhead, Mariella, and Skeleton Song are super favourites in an album of favourites.

In the end: Did you like Lily Allen? You’ll love Kate Nash. Were you iffy on Lily Allen? You’ll love Kate Nash? Did you hate Lily Allen? You might like Kate Nash.

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Sia: Healing is Difficult

Wednesday, September 20th, 2006

After absorbing the beauty and splendor of Sia’s Colour the Small One, I had every intention of blowing through all of Zero 7 as well as this disc. I won’t lie: I failed miserably.

Thankfully, a co-worker had me put a mix together for her sister, and Fear off of this very album was on it. 8 months later, I finally got through the album. 7 times. And, while I feel Healing ebbs and flows, it is a solid album.

Before trying to make it in the Americas with Colour, Sia followed up her work with Zero 7 with a solo album, this very disc. While this disc would never have made it mainstream, and thus give Sia the attention she deserves, it is a great piece of musical and artistic work.

Somewhere between the heavy samples, some great bass lines, and studio instrumentation, she finds a home to nurture her voice and blow her listeners away. Hidden behind all of that are influences of blues, jazz, hip-hop, 90s R&B, lounge sound, and some good ol’ rock. Sia’s ranged voice allows the collision of these different elements to be both fun and amazing.

Lyrically, Fear is my hands-down favourite on the disc (and comes in second or third musically); Following it is Drink to Get Drunk which wins for title alone, but also for a solid beat and more great lyrics; I’m not Important to You has a 90s/ambient feel to it, and mixed with Sia’s airy vocals on the chorus, make this a must-listen; and Sober and Unkissed is a depressing title, sure, but the jumps between acoustic and electronic in the tune keep you interested.

In the End: This is a great album. Far less mainstream America than Colour the Small Ones, Healing is Difficult really shows Sia’s range and talents and should be immediately digested by anyone who knows this gal’s work.

On the Web: Besides The Hype Machines usual entries, I’ve also go her KCRW sessions for download, via gigasize.

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