Week 24: Wolf Alice- Blue Weekend

My introduction to Wolf Alice was either in 2013 or 2014 on Later…with Jools Holland, and their punk attitude with a hard rock sound caught my ear. My favourite track of theirs at the time was ‘Moaning Lisa Smile’ (It still is funnily enough. I love the energy oozing out of it.)I can’t recall if they played that one on Later or if I heard it live at a festival, which made me fall in love with that track. Then, in 2018, they released “Visions of a Life”, which featured such tracks as ‘Beautifully Unconventional'(My favourite off of that record) and ‘Don’t Delete the Kisses’. They would receive a Hyundai Mercury Prize nomination in a strong field that featured the likes of Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds 2017 and third album “Who Built the Moon?”. The judges who voted chose “Visions of a Life” as their Hyundai Mercury Prize winner in 2018.

Ellie sang beautifully that Sunday night as they performed ‘Don’t Delete the Kisses’. Could Wolf Alice follow up on their Hyundai Mercury Prize-winning album? Some have failed, like the Klaxons and Gomez. The band had their work cut out this time to meet expectations.

However, Wolf Alice accepted the challenge of bettering “Visions of a Life” by employing the services of Markus Dravs, the man responsible for helping Arcade Fire redevelop their sonic outputs as well as Florence and the Machine. Many called this a bold move by Wolf Alice and a surefire signal of their intent; it proved just how brave they were to take a risk on this album and take them another step closer to more accolades.

What is brilliant about this album, and with such a great producer as Markus Dravs on board, is that the album becomes eclectic. If you are trying to understand what that means (Of course, the connoisseurs can sit this part out.), the album in question doesn’t just stick to one or two particular genres but visits a multitude of genres. Some might argue that this is a dangerous precedent; for example, Paul Weller’s “Fat Pop Volume 1” was released last month. Some have criticised that record for being too schizophrenic with how it utilises several genres, but that makes a great album to me. Yes, of course, it is also lovely to listen to a record locked on one or two genres, but the beauty of an eclectic album is your ear doesn’t know what to expect next (Well, on the first listen, at least.),so I applaud Wolf Alice for going in this direction. In the next paragraph, I will describe the various bands/artists I heard within the record.

Funnily enough, I contacted Ellie Rowsell on Twitter as I got to the final track and gave her my thoughts on “Blue Weekend”. I told her I found it dreamy and could hear the XX, My Morning Jacket, Lana Del Rey, Amyl and the Sniffers, Keane and the Temper Trap. That’s how vast sonically the album is. You have tracks such as ‘Play the Greatest Hits’, full-on punk, and you can hear Amyl and the Sniffers there. I mean, literally. If someone listened to this on a blank CD or sent you an untitled file, you would think it was an Amyl and the Sniffers track. ‘How Can I Make it OK’ is a rock ballad, then ‘No Hard Feelings’ is out of the Keane catalogue with its melchanolic sound, lyrics, and keys that Tim Rice-Oxley is synonymous with. The opening track,’the Beach’, is very dreamy and something the XX would do. The track makes you visualise being on a beach as the waves crash gently upon the shore.

‘Delicious Things’ has to be one of the standout moments because it is autobiographical to Ellie Rowsell’s life. In this, she addresses suffering social anxiety and being homesick while in Los Angeles, sleeping with a shady character who only seems attracted to her because of her status as the bandleader and taking drugs when others around her in Tinseltown are. Ellie describes the LA experience to the last detail with utter accuracy.

‘Smile’ is just Ellie telling you what she thinks of your views if you don’t like hers, and she does as she pleases. ‘Play the Greatest Hits’ will sound great live, too, with its full-on punk energy. This one will be great for the tour whenever permitted to commence.

‘No Hard Feelings’ brings the energy levels down on this break-up song with Ellie’s soft vocals, which has an excellent reference to the late Amy Winehouse by including her song title within the lyrics.

‘the Last Man on Earth’ is where the production of Markus Dravs starts to pay off. The track builds slowly from what appears to be a piano ballad but then builds to a grander sound as it progresses. It’s another track that will sound great when the album is taken out on the road.

“Blue Weekend” is a brilliant record with several genres packed into just over 40 minutes of listening. It’s the kind of album you won’t just listen to once or twice but the kind you will want to hear repeatedly. It may be a departure from previous material, but this is their best art to date. As the record ends on the dreamy ‘the Beach II’, your mind starts to wonder whether they will once again receive a Hyundai Mercury Prize nomination because this album is up there with “Visions of a Life”, if not even better. However, the record aims higher than just a Hyundai Mercury Prize. Look out for “Blue Weekend” at several highly regarded music award ceremonies within the following year.

Song recommendations: ‘Delicious Things’, ‘No Hard Feelings’, ‘Play the Greatest Hits’

8/10

Week 17: London Grammar- Californian Soil

As you can imagine, Hannah Reid is once again a critical group member, and I especially liked her vocal performance on ‘Intro’. Many told me before I got the chance to listen and review this album that it had a hint of Clannad about it. Considering Hannah’s Celtic roots, this didn’t surprise me, but I’m afraid I have to disagree with most of their assumptions about this record sounding like Clannad. Yes, ‘Intro’ does sound like a Clannad track used for a soundtrack or otherwise, but I didn’t see much else resembling Clannad’s inspiration. Another three to four songs, but that’s about it. 

It differs from the last album from 2017 because it flirts with experimentation more, adding more orchestral, Celtic, and cinematic sounds. There is a touch of ambience in the album, too. Now, remember I spoke about ‘Intro’ sounding like Clannad earlier? Here’s why. Although Hannah doesn’t sing, she still uses angelic vocalising with her voice while chiming bells, strings, vinyl crackles, and a haunting Celtic ambience dances with her vocalising. Its cinematic feel is glorious to listen to in surround sound and sends chills down your spine with its haunting. It would be ideal for a film based on Celtic folklore. Clannad may have heard this track and might be interested in working with Hannah.

Hannah’s vocals do not deviate much during the entire album. The record then goes from ‘Intro’ to the ‘Californian Soil’ title track. Many have drawn comparisons with Massive Attack on this. 

Still, as always going against the grain, I found some other artists I felt drew more comparison in Alanis Morrisette. Why? Because to me, the riff sounded more like her 90s hit ‘You Oughta Know’ not because of the aggressive vocals or subject matter, but just that. 

After that, a record is packed with Hannah’s trademark vocals, sometimes angelic vocals, synths that are so relaxing you fall into a trance, strings, Clannad-inspired melodies, and sometimes the guitar riff makes an appearance. 

Because of the calming and light instrumentation, you could also draw comparisons to My Morning Jacket. Like the American band, London Grammar has allowed you to sit back, stare at the ceiling, or close your eyes and dream of entering another realm.

Of course, aside from their generic sound, ‘All My Love’ is a cinematic ballad, and ‘Closer America’ is more melancholic than what they usually do. The latter is about chasing the American dream and crushing it with brutal honesty. 

However, I will close on the trackside of the review with ‘Missing’. When I heard this, I instantly thought of Zero 7’s ‘Destiny’ with its downtempo, which felt precisely like the 2001 track. Still, Hannah’s vocals mirrored Sophie Barker’s and Sia Furler’s (Yes, THAT Sia Furler. She came over to England in 1998 from Australia. In fact, it is worth listening to some of her earlier work like ‘Little Men’ and ‘Drink to Get Drunk’). Not only have you got a sense of Sophie and Sia in it, but I am going to say the great Sadé, too.

The lyrical content is centred mainly around Hannah’s fight with feminism and the sexism and misogyny she has encountered many times since joining the industry. It gives more energy and passion to the record because it lets her emotions shine through with conviction. 

The record is quite melancholic for the group, more mature than the previous records, with some tracks fit for a film soundtrack, inspired by Hannah’s Celtic roots and subject matters that need urgent addressing, like the sexism towards women that is still experienced by many within the industry to the present day. As for the Clannad connection? It was less heavily influenced than some people have made out. Like I said, three to four tracks at the maximum.

Song recommendations: ‘Intro’, ‘Californian Soil’, ‘Missing’

7/10