Week 15- The Libertines- All Quiet on the Eastern Esplanade

In August 1997, a young teenager named Pete Doherty was interviewed on television outside His Master’s Voice, Oxford Street. He shared his thoughts on Oasis’s eagerly awaited third album, “Be Here Now,” and his opinion of the band. Pete later co-founded The Libertines (Originally The Strand) with his flatmate Carl Barât, although their names and band name were unknown. The band had a history of members leaving and returning before eventually signing with the infamous Rough Trade in 2001. Razorlight’s Johnny Borrell briefly served as a bassist for the band. The drummer, Paul Dufour, was sacked by their female manager, Banny Pootschi, for being ‘too old.’ An American-born Brit named Gary Powell was recruited to play on their debut album, “Up the Bracket,” released a year later.

The band was known for performing guerilla gigs, inviting fans to their flat to watch them perform, often causing trouble with the police. During this period, they experimented with various drugs, including cocaine, crack, heroin, and cannabis. Pete and Carl’s friendship was also unstable, swinging from best mates to enemies, reflected in their 2004 self-titled album, especially in their monumental anthem, ‘Can’t Stand Me Now,’ and ‘Don’t Look Back into the Sun.’ Unfortunately, the band split the same year due to infighting between Pete and Carl.

Pete later formed Babyshambles a year before The Libertines split, while Carl formed Dirty Pretty Things a year later. In March 2010, the band announced that they would reform and headline the Reading + Leeds festival in August, surprising fans as Pete and Carl had not spoken since the band split. The short reunion was a success, with thousands of fans flocking to the stage and several others watching on the BBC. The gigs are the main search results on YouTube for their live performances.

Carl stated in an interview two years later that he could see the band reforming again. Another two years passed when a cryptic picture of Hyde Park appeared on their Facebook page on April 20. The Barclaycard British Summer Time Festival then made an offer to Pete and Carl to perform on July 5 and close out Saturday. They accepted the offer, and a further surprise was in store when they announced they would perform three nights at Alexandra Palace in late September. I had the fortune of attending the final night with my friend Keano. Circa Waves supported them, and it was fantastic. We were absolutely fucked, but then so were Pete and Carl. I do not remember much of the gig, but we enjoyed ourselves. I have to watch videos of that night to remember just how good the performance was, and it is the band at their best. They were back, and you could feel the chemistry.

After those four successful gigs, Pete attended Hope Rehab Centre in Thailand. Once he completed his rehab, the band joined him in January 2015 to start writing the next album. The album was released later in the year and called “Anthems for Doomed Youth.” It topped the charts at No.3. The band has been together since, with Pete having a solo project from 2016 and Carl returning during hibernations to Dirty Pretty Things.

Now, regarding their newest album, it is unbelievable that it has been nine years since the band’s last release. They have been on the road regularly since their second reformation a decade ago. Their name, song titles, and albums all reference books. The new album, “All Quiet on the Eastern Esplanade,” is no different and has no interludes.

The album opener is ‘Run Run Run,’ which discusses escaping the past over quintessential indie from the early 2000s, most notably The Strokes. ‘Mustang’ has the bass and drum sound that the band was known for in the early 2000s.

Pete takes over from Carl on ‘Have a Friend,’ which has the same structure as a typical Libertines track but lacks the punch instrumentally. ‘Man with the Melody’ is one of the slower tracks on the album, and Pete and Carl talk about facing their demons on this piano ballad complete with strings.

‘Night of the Hunter’ adds the band’s love of books to the mix, something the band is known for with tracks like ‘What Katie Did.’ They have a knack for turning books they have read into their original songs with nods to the book. The record teaser ‘Shiver’ departs from their indie/rock roots. It is more theatric and sounds quite evil before it fades out.

‘Be Young’ is my favourite from the album, and there are no prizes for guessing why. This is the band with their wall of sound, the sounds we have known since “Up the Bracket.”

The closer is ‘Songs They Never Play on the Radio’. This song sounds similar to ‘Music When the Lights Out’. When the pair trade off vocals, the delivery mimics that song, and so does the instrumentation. It is a good way to end the album, as the tempo is brought down.

In my opinion, “All Quiet on the Eastern Esplanade” represents the band clean and sober. There is a more mature sound and less chaos than what you had on “Up the Bracket” and the self-titled record. “Anthems for Doomed Youth” was a bit calmer, but this one certainly has the lads discussing hard-hitting issues with less kick in the music. Hopefully, we will not have to wait another nine years for the next album.

I look forward to hearing how these new songs with a more mature approach go down on the tour, which is almost sold out.

Song recommendations: ‘Be Young’, ‘Song They Never Play on the Radio’, ‘Run Run Run’

8/10

Week 42: the 1975- Being Funny in a Foreign Language

Fuck’s sake. It has unfortunately come to this—another review on an overhyped band with the young crowd. I do not get the appeal of these little rich boys. They are simply awful. I’d rather listen to Tim Healy than his son.

For their fifth album (How the fuck did such a poor band make it to five?!), they employ the services of Jack Antonoff, who has worked with the likes of Taylor Swift on re-working her original records that were being held to ransom by Scooter Braun. You would think with; what he did with Taylor’s re-works, we would finally have a decent album by the 1975. Their leading single ‘Part of the Band’ showed promise (I think, I am going to be sick.)as it didn’t sound like their usual pop-rock dirge. I mean, the song has jazz influences over Matt’s conscious lyrics. Matt’s stream-of-conscious lyrics are probably the only thing going for them.

I find it insulting they dare acknowledge the likes of Crowded House, Michael McDonald, Paul McCartney or LCD Soundsystem. Their music is nowhere near any of their level. I zoned out on most of the record and went on my phone. A bloody awful album yet again. My instinct after listening to one of their songs on FIFA 14 was enough to tell me how crap they are. I stand by that, and I felt for all those at Reading and Leeds who had to endure them headlining when Zack was unfortunately injured while on tour with Rage Against the Machine. Hardly an apt replacement, is it?

Song recommendations: ‘Part of the Band’

1/10

Week 20: Florence and the Machine- Dance Fever

Florence and the Machine started as a duo in 2007, with Florence Welch on vocals and Isabella Summers on keyboards. They were initially called Florence Robot/Isa Machine before changing the name to Florence is a Machine before their first gig. Eventually, they settled on Florence and the Machine and turned it into a band rather than a duo. 

However, most mistaken the band as Florence’s solo project as the group bears her name. It would help if they said it sounds like a duo because Isabella is “the Machine”. I have heard many accounts where “the Machine” has been mistaken for Florence’s backing band. I first heard Florence and the Machine via a friend’s iTunes playlist in late 2008. I had never heard of the band, and he had ‘Rabbit Heart(Raise it up)’ on this playlist. I was instantly impressed with Florence’s vocal range on the track. Alas, I was disappointed with Florence’s live vocals when I saw them live at Glastonbury, iTunes, Oxygen, and Reading/Leeds that year. Don’t get me wrong, I still enjoyed the music, but those notes she hit on ‘Rabbit Heart(Raise it up)’ were far from what I heard on the studio version.

I don’t intend to make this a long review for their latest album, “Dance Fever”, because I am not sold on it. Plenty of the tracks have long intros or outros, making me think they plan on doing another short film as they did for their 2015 record “How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful”. I prefer that album to this. “Dance Fever” was made over the past two years during lockdown. From what I gathered, the record focuses on mental health, and Florence details it like talking to a therapist. This isn’t my reason for not liking it. The intros and outros were far too long.

The production is tame to what you have come to have known Florence and the Machine for. The production is split between Jack Antonoff and Dave Bayley. It is hard to write about one song because they seem to crash into each other. I enjoyed the bonus disc that featured four songs off the standard version acoustically and a track called ‘Search and Destroy’, which for me was the best track of the entire album, but it is a cover of the Stooges song.


Song recommendations: ‘Search and Destroy’, ‘Cassandra’, ‘Free’




6/10

Week 6: Bastille- Give Me the Future

This is a band I heard initially without even knowing who they were. I only knew once I saw them appear on Later…withJools Holland back in 2013 (I think.). Before then, I didn’t know much about them, and the songs I had heard without knowing who they were neither excited nor annoyed me. I remember Noel Gallagher said, “If Bastille had been around in the 90s, they would have been finished.”…now, I like Noel Gallagher, as regular readers know, but although it probably would have been true with the music around back then, I quite like Bastille. My opinion of Dan Smith and company changed after seeing them at Glastonbury, reading about them, and watching a few concerts on YouTube. Dan knows how to work with the audience, and they put on a great show. ‘Pompeii’ used to drive me around the bend, but that grew on me. I am often caught whistling or singing the chorus when I hear it.

“Give Me the Future” is their latest and fourth album, which has already amassed five singles. That is just below half of the record itself. Once again, Bastille plays it safe (Sort of.)with their usual songs, but there are some elements of new creativity. For example, the opening track ‘Distorted Light Beam’ takes some influences from the defunct French Houseoutfit Daft Punk, which is quite apt due to the band’s name. 

According to reports, Dan Smith began embarking on this album before the pandemic started and flirted with the idea of combining Bastille’s sound with elements of futuristic sounds. At the same time, you could argue that it takes something from the 80s. However, due to what has happened since 2020 or late 2019, Dan’s idea of this record has seen fact and fiction become convoluted, to say the least. Everything we believed to be fiction through music might be a reality now. At the moment, no one within any industry knows what is inevitable. We have seen the world shut down during these testing times despite it still spinning. Immense industries have seen companies and businesses suffer or fall, and music artists like Bastille suffered heavily because they could no longer go on tour worldwide. Some music artists signed just before the pandemic or after suffered even more. So, at the moment, it is no surprise a fair chunk of people look at the future with caution in mind. In “Give Me the Future”, Bastille takes all of that away and looks to embrace whatever happens in the future.

As usual, the band set the stall out with their dancefloor fillers to give the listener a chance to escape from what was happening and lose themselves as they mentally picture themselves enjoying life in the club again. We are gradually getting back tothose days and nights, but listening to music that propels us back to those feelings is excellent. Bastille have always beenknown for their hard-hitting subjects shrouded in upbeat instrumentation, and they have done just that yet again. The lyrics are pretty dark, but the instrumentation diverts your attention. For example, in the Daft Punk-Esque opener ‘Distorted Light Beam,’ Dan says, ‘It isn’t enough, if this is real life, I’ll stick to dreaming, come see what I see.’ That is powerful. No one can deny that that lyric reverberates the current feelings the majority of us have. I’d rather escape from the trappings of reality and stay in a dream just for my sanity. My standout has to be ‘Promises’, which is Spoken Word performed by Riz Ahmed over strings and other instrumentation. Why ‘Promises’? I am a spoken word artist, so for that reason alone. I love to hear what poets have to say. Of course, I like other tracks on the album, like ‘No Bad Days’, the title track, and ‘Future Holds’. The latter features Bim, who you will be familiar with if you attend Bastille concerts. Her rich vocals complement Dan’s on the uplifting closer with a message of hope about who cares about the future as long as we all have someone to love and care for us.


The album is also structured cleverly. The listener goes on an adventure where they will be lost but find themselves again. Now, this could be explained by Dan’s love of cinema. He wants the songs to be a cinematic experience rather than music-related. I only know a few bands or artists that use the method. Most tell a story, but not in this manner. I can only think of Clannad or London Grammar in recent times. “Give Me the Future” wasn’t made to pick out tracks and listen randomly, but to listen from start to finish due to the cinematic nature. 


Yes, you can listen to any tracks you like. I mean, that’s your choice, but it takes away the premise of the record. Is it their best? Well, it’s up there. Although, it is bloody short for a Long Play. The longest is the title track at 3:39. One thing I will say is, going back to “is it their best?” is that it is incredibly creative, and they have moved with that but have still kept that distinct sound we associate with the band. So, they have yet to complete 360 and lose their identity.


It’s pleasant to listen to an album that gives you hope about the future rather than being bogged down and depressed by the shit we are surrounded by. The record is uplifting and sends you off into a dream. 

The attitude adopted by Bastille is one of “Fuck it. Let’s have fun while the world is falling apart”.




Song recommendations: ‘Promises’, ‘Give Me the Future’, ‘Distorted Light Beam’




8/10

Week 15: the Snuts- W.L.

This band from Scotland (West Lothian, to be precise)was first brought to my attention by several of my followers talking about them, but only since 2017, even though the band formed two years before that. The more I kept hearing about them and seeing them appear in regular new talent polls on Twitter, the more I got curious. I eventually gave them a listen and was highly impressed with their rock sound. 

Social media can be a potent tool in the music world these days. The Snuts were getting talked about ages before this debut album was in the offing. They were getting a reputation for their gigs and the demos they released. Bizarrely, thanks to that reputation, they were already playing out at significant festivals like TRNSMT, Reading and Leeds, and SXSW. They have also supported the Libertines, among others. Last year, they released their EP “the Matador”, which gained them a top 20 spot in the album charts—already encouraging signs from the Lads from Whitburn to fare well when the record finally did drop.

The producer used on “W.L.” has a good reputation working with the likes of the legendary Beck and the French band Phoenix( Do you remember ‘1901’? Well, you should because it was played to death at every student union bar or Indie night). 

Tony Hoffer travelled to the Firepit in London to work with the band and refurbished their back catalogue to give those songs a more professional finish. There’s no disputing they were not good before, but they could turn those songs into something else with Tony on board. Jack Cochrane’s vocals are wonderfully showcased over the acoustic ‘Top Deck’, which opens the album. The band’s versatility is displayed as we go from indie to blues to hip-hop. Not forgetting rock n roll and punk.

‘No Place I’d Rather Go’ is a track with a swift change in direction from an acoustic ballad; it then turns into an uptempo track that sounds like the Beatles if they had the chance to use modern equipment. Because it was my introduction to the band, my personal favourite is ‘All Your Friends’. I love the punk attitude and Jack’s venomous vocals, which sound like Alex Turner and John Power combined. Indeed, the track itself is something Arctic Monkeys and Cast would do. It’s also magnificent when performed live.

I was very impressed with Tony’s reworking of ‘Glasgow’; it sounds a lot beefier than the original while not overpowering Jack’s emotional vocals. Tony still respects the original by not going overboard on the production. Boardwalk’ was another highlight for me on the record because I loved the songwriting with the melody flourishing into all-out rock. Of course, the album’s standard edition closes with their now-iconic encore closer, ‘Sing for Your Supper’. Again, I love the energy in this song, and I always have, but maybe because I’ve heard it countless times, I have become immune to it and don’t get all that excited when I listen to it now. However, I like a good story in my songs, and this one is no exception.

Not only is this album full of several genres inspired by who the band members listen to, but it’s like an audio version of an autobiography depicting life growing up as working-class kids in West Lothian(Forgive me, my Scottish friends, but I don’t know whether West Lothian is working class. I have read bits and pieces, but it’s all somewhat blurred)and having hopes and dreams of making it big with their music. It’s a fucking brilliant debut album, and with their arsenal of songs already in their possession, the second record will hopefully live up to expectations.

 It is great to see that all this stuff about guitar music is dead(Including you, Mr Weller)is a load of bollocks. The Snuts have proved that it still kicks like a drum and that the working-class lads and ladettes can still find their way through. Indeed, I can give you many examples of that. Fontaines DC, the Lathums, Riviera, Citylightz, the Crooks, Tom Smith, and Rianne Downey. I predict they will do an Oasis and have as much success with their second album. Trust me, the working class is fighting back, not just through grime or drill, as Weller said. Kids with guitars, indie rock, and punk persuasion are banging the doors down.

Song recommendations: “All Your Friends”, “Boardwalk”, “Glasgow”

9/10