Archive for February, 2011

Five years time..

2

So a few days ago, completely without fanfare, this blog had it’s fifth birthday.

It was all the way back in February 2006 that I first decided to put out a music blog.  Back then, it seemed to be the thing that everyone was doing.  My own motivation was rather more personal: I’d recently gone through a break-up and wanted something to throw myself into.  It rapidly became more than that though.  It grew to a fair size, was assimilated somewhat into the ecosystem of music blogs and gained a bit of a recognition of press via places like The Guardian and even the BBC.

That blog is not the same blog as it is today.  The numbers pretty much fell off of a cliff when I stopped posting less than legal songs, relying only on what was legally distributed.  Which I expected, but what I didn’t expect is that they would never recover.  Numbers stagnated, and due to a number of reasons through 2007/2008, my interest waned somewhat, leading to a more sporadic posting pattern than the original near daily updates.

Somewhere in the middle of this, I found myself becoming more and more at home within the indiepop scene, and this started making up the majority of what I wrote about, and still remains that way today.  Now I don’t know how familiar you are with this scene, but it’s not exactly large.  Indiepop drove the numbers even lower, but honestly, by this stage I was perfectly fine with that.  I was writing about music that genuinely excited me, and if it’s only to a small audience, that’s absolutely fine.  That’s the nature of the scene, and being part of it at all is a lovely thing.

It’s kind of funny looking back on some of those earliest artists that I wrote about.  Some of them have gone on to great success.  The Los Campesinos! demo we all raved about set the tone for three stunning albums and their growth as a remarkable live band.  Johnny Foreigner went from recordings that sounded like they were put together in a dustbin and being first on at the Dublin Castle to being hands down one of the best British bands around.  Kate Nash was someone I wrote about a lot in the past, and though she went from superb songwriter to mainstream hit factory, it was still nice to see.  More recently championed bands like Allo Darlin’ and The Pains of Being Pure at Heart have gone from strength to strength.

On the other hand, a lot of those early bands have sadly fallen by the wayside too.  The Young Republic, the first band I ever covered, recently announced that they were no longer functioning as an active band.  Hartley Goldstein, the second artist covered, never released anything further and walked away from music altogether.  One of my absolute favourites, 4 or 5 Magicians, recently called it a day after doing their thing for five years without ever obtaining the success that they deserved.

I’m not sure what the future holds for Another Form of Relief.  I still like doing this, but it’s no longer the full-on venture that it once was.  I’ll always be writing about bits and pieces that I like, but I don’t feel obliged to follow a schedule, or find the “next big thing” anymore.  My interests within music have evolved over the years too.  The more I find myself involved in the indiepop scene, the more I want to explore new ventures like putting out records and putting on gigs, particularly on a local level.  How feasible these things are, I don’t know, but it’s something I’m keen to discover.  There’s also something a little archaic about a blog these days too.  So much of what I would have spun into full posts (odd Youtube finds, announcements of new singles etc.) is now just thrown out on the AFoR Twitter, so you’d do just as well following there as following here.  Still, there are some interesting things coming up (I want to explore those 2006 bands and what happened to them in more detail) as well as some new stuff I want to push upon you, so I do hope you’ll keep reading, whatever the next five years might bring..

mylittlepony – Stories About Love

1

Norway’s mylittlepony used to be known as , but I guess that was a little too close to the bone for the Hasbro copyright police.  The band recently released their second album, and from the bits of it that I’ve been able to hear, it’s got some great little songs on it.  One of them is Stories About Love, which the band have made the lovely video above for.  I’m constantly fascinated by things like this, as the video is seemingly shot entirely in one take, jumping from each part of the band as they have their little moment before flying back round again.  I know this kind of thing has been done to far greater extremes (hell, entire films have been shot this way), but it’s always interesting to me.

Making Marks, the second album from mylittlepony, was released in January in Norway via Spoon Train.  And I have absolutely no idea how to buy it.

Myspace / Twitter / Facebook / Lastfm

The Jonbarr Hinge

0

I don’t usually have a great deal of interest in side projects of bands or artists that I love.  I’m usually disappointed by them, most likely through unfairly comparing them to the original act.  So these days I tend to just avoid most as it seems to be an infinitely safer option.  That said, there are certain people that I will follow into whatever project they choose to throw their weight behind.  Ben Parker is one of those people.

Long time readers of the blog should already be familiar with Parker (and if not, I may as well just walk away right now) through both his project and the sadly defunct band.  Both of those are absolute favourites of mine by this point, so I’m inclined to put my trust into whatever he gets up to.  His new band is a three-piece, which mixes things up from the one-man SRS and the two-man ND2.  One can only assume that years from now he’ll be leading his own New Pornographers-esque supergroup.

are still finding their feet, and this does come across in their recordings.  They are messy and a bit all over the place, with the sound being rather murky at times.  Parker’s vocals are closer to that of his former band, and you won’t be even slightly surprised to learn that these aren’t the happiest of songs.  My first point of comparison, if not musically, are the original Johnny Foreigner that drew me to them years ago.  The sound isn’t quite there, but the potential certainly comes shining through, and with a little more time, will be very exciting indeed.

MP3 The Jonbarr Hinge – Why Do We Pretend?

Myspace / Facebook / Lastfm

Hold Your Horse Is – Forgive and Forget

0

Fuck twee, let’s rock.  Obviously I’m only kidding, but the mood of the moment requires things that are heavy, fast, and very, very loud.  So it’s great to get some new material from , a band name that I still can’t decide is good or bad eighteen months on from first hearing them.  Forgive and Forget is, whisper it, a little cleaner than some of their previous work, and possibly even a little more mainstream, but it’s no less enjoyable for it.

Bonus points for the video too, which features cameos from seemingly every band or artist from southern England in it, from Stagecoach to Frank Turner.

The band will soon to be getting to work on their first proper album.  Their previous release, the Rammin’ It Home EP is out now on Big Scary Monsters.  The band finish a tour of the UK today, proving just how timely I am in putting these pieces together.

MP3 Hold Your Horse Is – Forgive and Forget

Website / Myspace / Facebook / Twitter

Jack Hayter – Sucky Tart

0

Well this is an odd one.  was in the past a member of the legendary Hefner, meaning you might be expecting something at least somewhat in that vain from his solo work.  But Hefner this certainly isn’t.  Sucky Tart is, at it’s heart, a brooding folk record, made unique by it’s theatrical flourishes.  It’s an odd combination, and one that doesn’t necessarily work on every song, but when it does, it’s spectacular.  I Stole the Cutty Sark is wonderful, with an increasingly odd around of noises punctuating Jack’s terribly world-weary voice perfectly.

Sucky Tart is out now on the simply marvellous Audio Antihero.  You can get the CD for £3.99 or mp3s for a really quite silly £1.79 from Bandcamp.  You can stream the whole thing below.

MP3 Jack Hayter – I Stole the Cutty Sark

Website / Myspace / Twitter

Go to Top