Indietracks

The Pains of Being Pure at Heart to headline Indietracks!

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Well it was never going to be anyone else, was it?  If you’ve been following any of the vigorous debate over on Anorak about possible headliners and exactly what makes an “Indietracks band”, one name kept coming up again and again: The Pains of Being Pure at Heart.

Since the release of their first full-length album on a year ago the band have been absolutely everywhere.  Critical acclaim has poured in from just about every music publication in the world.  Even Pitchfork felt it appropriate to award it a “Best New Music” badge, which was the only time they did so in 2009 for a record that wasn’t turgid nonsense.  The band have gone on to play sell-out gigs all over the place, including a bunch of festivals, but I believe this will be their first headlining of one.

It’s the perfect place though.  The Pains of Being Pure at Heart manage to successfully bridge the gap between the C86 generation of indiepop and the bands of the present.  This is jangly, starry pop that’s going to sound lovely on a summer’s night surrounded by steam trains.

MP3 The Pains of Being Pure at Heart – Higher Than The Stars

Website / Myspace / Twitter

About Indietracks 2010

Indietracks takes place between 23-25 July at the Midland Railway Centre in Derbyshire.  The site is a working steam railway with festival attendees allowed on as many train rides as they can handle.  Some performances are even held in carriages.  Tickets cost £55 for the weekend until May 7 (£60 after that) and can be purchased here.  Previously announced bands include Ballboy, Shrag, Allo Darlin’, Standard Fare and White Town.

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First band announcements for Indietracks 2010

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Indietracks 2009

Now that London Popfest is out of the way, it’s time to turn our attention to this year’s Indietracks festival, which will take place 23-25 July at the lovely Midland Railway Centre in Derbyshire.  Last year we covered the event quite extensively, and this year will be no different.  Previews of the bands in the run up to the event, followed by reports and a shit ton of photos of the weekend itself.  I’m not exaggerating when I call Indietracks the highlight of my musical year.  Where else can you get a non-stop indiepop while surrounded by (and sometimes on!) steam trains?

Rather excitingly, the first band announcements are now out, giving us our first 24 bands that will be playing the festival:

  • Allo Darlin’
  • Ballboy
  • Be Like Pablo
  • Betty and The Werewolves
  • Boy Genius
  • The Cannanes
  • Cineplexx
  • Fanfarlo
  • The Felt Tips
  • Foxes!
  • The Give It Ups
  • The Just Joans
  • The Loves
  • MJ Hibbett & the Validators
  • Onward Chariots
  • Sarandon
  • Shrag
  • The Smittens
  • Standard Fare
  • Stars of Aviation
  • The Sunny Street
  • This Many Boyfriends
  • White Town
  • Winston Echo

Highlights for myself amongst that lot include Allo Darlin’, Ballboy and Standard Fare, but there’s a lot there already that I’m looking forward to.  A number that I’m not familiar with that I look forward to getting acquainted with too.  No word on any headliners just yet, but announcements seem to be coming thick and fast now, so hopefully we’ll have more soon.

Update: Of course, mere hours after I post this, 8 new additions have revealed: Internet Forever, Pale Sunday, Burning Hearts, The Hillfields, La La Love You, Stars in Coma, Springfactory, Urbantramper.

Indietracks Website / Blog / Twitter

Indietracks 2009: Sunday

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Sunday didn’t get off to the greatest of starts. Waking up rather early after a terrible night’s sleep at the Travel Inn, followed by Tesco breakfast (surprisingly edible), and then arriving on the site before anyone else at all wasn’t the best feeling in the world. Still, after not getting to any on the Saturday, I was determined to catch at least one on-train performance, namely that of The Manhattan Love Suicides. Now, apparently they’d broken up shortly before the festival, but having no idea, went and sat and waited for them in a train carriage for twenty minutes. When nothing had happened, we jumped off the train at Swanwick once more. Of course, this is apparently when some of the band got on the train and played some songs. Oh well, you can’t win them all.

Zipper

Or rather, you can. Because getting off the train then meant it was possible to pop into the train shed and catch Zipper’s set. Spanish indiepop doesn’t come much better than this, and their set was all the more joyful from just how happy the band seemed to be to be there. Between each song they didn’t seem to quite believe that they were playing in front of a large crowd at a railway yard in Derbyshire. Although I suppose in those terms not that many people would. Still, they were so good that I made sure to pick up a copy of their album which was a mere £5 on the merch stall.

The School

A trip back to the main stage for The School turned out to be a fine set. Although I like The School, it tends to be in a fairly casual sense. I only know a handful of songs, but by the end of their set, I was looking forward to their upcoming album as eagerly as anyone else in the crowd. Every song hit just the right note, the entire band sounding in sync, which is no mean feat given the number of members and variety of instruments on display. This was an assured performance for a band that is certainly going to go on to better things.

The Smittens

Back to the shed for The Smittens, another band that I don’t know as well as I should. Not that it mattered with their set though. So ingrained into the Indietracks tradition are the band that they could have recited a phone directory and still drawn everyone in. Thankfully they didn’t do that, but instead flew threw a set of pop gems, winning over everyone in the process. By the end of the set, a certain band may well have been declaring them to be “top of the pops”.

Now, something not entirely unexpected happened during The Smittens’ set. That something being that it started to rain. Showers had been predicted for the Sunday, so no one could really complain. Other than the fact that once it started about 3pm, it didn’t bloody stop. The rest of the festival was turned into an indoor event for those less hardy souls, or something unpleasantly muddy for those willing to brave it.

Lucky Soul

And brave it we did, for Lucky Soul were playing on the main stage. The last time I saw Lucky Soul was at a lovely gig at the Luminaire two and a half years ago, and boy have they come on as a band in that time. A hearty mix of old and new songs make up their set, which still pulls considerable numbers given the unpleasant conditions. A few years back I would have been worried that a band like Lucky Soul would quite a limited one-trick pony, but the band seem happy to evolve instead of limiting themselves to a purely 60s sound. As it sounds, their upcoming album could finally be the one that pushes them over the top.

Pocketbooks

A little bit later and it’s time for Pocketbooks, who are the band on the bill that most define the festival as a whole. They run through most of the songs from the recently released Flight Paths album, with Falling Leaves, Fleeting Moments and the superb Cross the Line being the obvious highlights. By the end of the set, every attendee of the festival seemed to be in the shed. A cynic could argue that this was related to the heavy rain outside. A more accurate version however would be that Pocketbooks are just that damn good.

After Pocketbooks came Disasteradio, who offered the first truly “what the fuck?” performance of the day. Bizarre electronic beats performed by a man seemingly having a seizure on stage, who then proceeds to try and eat his microphone. I’m sure there is an audience for this, but I suspect it wasn’t here. Following that was Help Stamp Out Loneliness, who were fine for what they were, but didn’t do very much for me.

Art Brut

Finally, it was time for the mighty Art Brut, a band whom I love dearly, but worried wouldn’t quite fit in with the Indietracks mentality. Things got off to a shaky start with Eddie Argos almost immediately using the t-word (a crime here one might suspect) and getting the Indietracks version of a bottling (sweets thrown at him) for his trouble. Of course, it didn’t take them long to win everyone round, particularly once Argos had the epiphany that he’s telling people to be less twee while playing from a setlist of songs about public transport, DC comics and chocolate milkshakes. Between this, and proclaiming that MJ Hibbett is “top of the pops”, there doesn’t seem to be anyone still holding out against them. A spirited version of Modern Art, adjusted to “DC comics make me want to rock out” follows a performance almost entirely from the audience, starting what may have been the first Indietracks mosh pit. Their set comes to a storming close with the band’s drummer spectacular falling off the stage by rocking just a bit too hard, to possibly the largest applause of the festival. Five minutes later, the band return for an encore, even if Argos had already put on his jacket to leave.

Which is where Indietracks 2009 comes to a close for me. I could have stayed for Teenage Fanclub, but I’ve never been much of a fan, and nothing was going to top the highs of the Art Brut set. It’s not one moment or performance that makes Indietracks so special though. It’s the atmosphere of the entire event. Of every festival or gig I’ve ever been to, this was by far the nicest. Everyone is generally lovely, the bands are happy to mingle and watch the other bands, and the whole DIY spirit of it all is impressive to behold. It’s hard to articulate that kind of appeal in a review such as this, and that is unfortunate, but Indietracks leave you with a feeling of pure joy. This may have been my first visit to the Midland Railway Centre, but it certainly won’t be my last.

Indietracks 2009: Saturday

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Indietracks 2009

(Apologies for the lateness of these reviews. I came back from Indietracks and quickly came down with something I immediately feared to be swine flu. Thankfully, I was quickly reassured that it was merely twee flu and that it was perfectly normal. What a relief.)

Indietracks isn’t the first festival I’ve gone to this year, nor will it be the last. It’s hard to see how it will be anything other than the most enjoyable event of the year though. Launched in 2007, Indietracks is the ultimate in niche festivals. A tiny capacity, a very precise view of the kind of bands it puts on, with all of this set in a small rail yard. It’s a wonderful feeling (and an unheard one at a festival) that you can walk between any of the stages within a couple of minutes. Most importantly of all, it’s by far the nicest festival that you’ll ever visit.

Indietracks 2009

Arriving at Butterley station on Saturday morning, things didn’t seem so perfect. Bands are starting to play, yet to access the site you have to wait a little while for a steam train to come along and take you there. It’s not a huge inconvenience, and one that was rectified on each return trip to the site by driving around back lanes and being able to park right by the main stage. Seeing as there was nobody on immediately that I was excited about upon reaching the site, there was time to pop round to Brittan Pit Farm. The llamas there have become the stuff of Indietracks legend, and it was mildly disappointing to not see them spit on anyone while visiting. No problem though, as the farm as a whole proved to be a lot of fun, with it’s dalmatian ponies, goats and birds regularly providing a welcome diversion from the festival excitement.

The Frank & Walters ended up being the first band caught in the afternoon, who I wasn’t familiar with beforehand. Typically, just as I arrived to watch their set, they suffered a power cut, which ended up with them having a kickabout on stage (almost bringing it down in the process) to fill the time. They were back on track again within a few minutes, and they turn out to be a pretty enjoyable way to get started. At times they come across a little rocky and perhaps out of place at such an event (at one point asking “is this a trainspotters festival?”), but they seem to go down quite well with everyone.

Butcher Boy

Wandering over to the train shed, which acts as the main indoor stage, it’s time for Butcher Boy, a Glasgow band I’ve liked for a while now. This was the first time seeing them live, and they managed to greatly impress. Their songs lose none of the zeal of their recordings. Sounding perfectly arranged, in a few minutes they managed to prove that not all indiepop has to sound ramshackle. Unfortunately, I have to confess that I didn’t pay attention to a part of their set as I’d spotted the mighty merch stall for the first time. A vigorous browsing session later and I’d left with albums by Cats on Fire and Zipper, a label sampler, a Ballboy shirt and some Fortuna Pop badges. I could have spent a hell of a lot more there, so let’s be thankful that there wasn’t a cash machine on site.

Cats on Fire

Some general wandering of the site followed, which saw a bit of Speedmarket Avenue’s set (fine, but not really my cup of tea) and The Lovely Eggs setting up on the church stage. Annoyingly, the setting up was about all I did see, the heat/crowd in the church quickly becoming too much. Apparently their set was incredibly good too. Back to the train shed again, and it’s time for Cats on Fire, a wonderful band from Finland, who manage to bring on the dancing for the first time of the weekend. Their set was rather heavy on their latest album, which I hadn’t heard much of beforehand, but the almighty singalong and general happiness that radiated through the set meant that I had a copy by the time I left the festival. Alas, I missed the later part of their set as it was time to wander over to the main stage for Camera Obscura.

Camera Obscura

I was a little anxious about seeing Camera Obscura as while I’m a big fan of their music, they don’t seem to have the greatest live reputation. Fears are rapidly quelled though with a stunning set that healthily mixes in new album material with a number of the old classics. The band themselves may look utterly miserable on stage (I’m sure they aren’t really), but the beautifully arranged sound played out with a backdrop of the sun setting behind the stage makes for one of the performances of the festival.

Emmy the Great

Back to the train shed once again where Emmy the Great should be playing, but there’s actually no sign of her. Nothing has been set up on stage, everyone looks a bit confused and I even overhear someone discussing how she hasn’t turned up yet. Eventually her band hurry onto the stage about 45 minutes after the scheduled stage time, and within minutes the set is under way. Apologies are made about being stuck in traffic on the M1 in between songs, but it’s seemingly ruined any flow the set may have had. She lurches from song to song without a setlist, constantly checking how long she’s been playing for before finishing up barely past the thirty minute mark. Still, the storming version of Where Is My Mind? means that most complaints are quickly overlooked. As a whole, the songs individually are fine, but as a set, it left a lot to be desired.

This is about where Saturday at Indietracks ends up for me. On the way out, I caught a few minutes of La Casa Azul, who was putting on an electro-pop set both mystifying and brilliant on the main stage. Would have stayed longer if not for the desperate need for food and some sleep.

Indietracks 2009 in photos

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Well, that was just about the most perfect weekend ever.

A proper review (you know, with words and stuff) will be following tomorrow, but here are 134 pictures from the joy that was Indietracks 2009.

As usual, you can click through to Flickr for the full size versions.

Rose Elinor Dougall starts, stops and synchronises in black and white

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I’ve written previously about how I’m not entirely convinced by Rose Elinor Dougall’s solo material away from The Pipettes. My reservations are somewhat relieved at this point, if only because of Start/Stop/Synchro and how much better it seems to become with each repeated listen. I have no idea whether future songs will be able to live up to this, but I’m a little more optimistic about it at this point.

I usually avoid posts that only contain video too, but I really like this one. The stark black and white photography is a thing of beauty and seems to fit the mood of the song perfectly. It all feels a little art school film project at times, which I suppose fits the desired purpose of being the exact opposite of a Pipettes video.

Start/Stop/Synchro is out now on 7″ and download via Elefant Records. The label is jointly organising the Indietracks Festival next month, where Dougall will be playing on the opening night.

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The Lovely Eggs like birds; other animals too

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It’s been a while since we covered any of the bands that will be playing at this year’s Indietracks, and so today we have The Lovely Eggs. They were one of the bands on the lineup that I wasn’t familiar with, but diving in I knew very quickly that my ears are going to get along with them very well.

The Lovely Eggs consist of a boy and a girl, and they manage to make a hell of a lot of noise for only two people. The guitars are almost lost in a sea of distortion, a xylophone seems to make the odd appearance and the drums hold it all together. All of this is backdrop for the vocals of Holly Ross, who seems to have found the magical spot on the “sweet-but-not-too-sweet” scale.

I haven’t heard very many of their songs yet, but I’m looking forward to exploring them if they are half as good as I Like Birds... The only problem this presents is that it’s yet another band added to my list of Indietracks “must sees”. So much awesomeness, so little time.

The Lovely Eggs’ split EP with The Sexual Hot Bitches is out now on the consistently brilliant Filthy Little Angels.

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Zipper lament former friends; board trains in Derbyshire with lots of other bands

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Zipper

In July I will be attending Indietracks for the first time. Starting off as a one-off gig at the West Midland Railway, it’s now grown into a full three-day festival of indiepop goodness. A bunch of Another Form of Relief endorsed bands will be playing, including Pocketbooks, Butcher Boy, Emmy the Great, Camera Obscura, The Smittens and Lucky Soul. Given that the full lineup isn’t even announced yet, it’s going to be one hell of a weekend.

There are also a bunch of bands on the bill that I haven’t heard of previously, and so between now and then, I’m going to be exploring some of them. This serves a dual purpose: to give me more bands to see at the festival while also finding new things to right about. Starting today with Zipper, who seem to make short, sharp little pop songs covered in distortion. Most of their Myspace page is in Spanish meaning I can’t really tell you a great deal about of them. I can see that they have released material on both Cloudberry Records and WeePOP! though, which is a very good indicator of quality.

Unfortunately I don’t speak Spanish. As such, I have no idea how accurate this information is. However, the band seemingly have an album out right now on Embajada De Liliput. Now there’s a mouthful.

Website / Myspace

Pocketbooks – Don’t Stop

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Pocketbooks

Concluding our run of indie pop (for this week at least), we have new material from London’s Pocketbooks. I’ve been listening to them for the best part of two years now, and it’s amazing how much they have developed as a band. The early songs, while very good in their own right, were far more simplistic and lo-fi to what we’re dealing with now. As such, we’re now at a point where Don’t Stop comes complete with layered vocals, time changes, as well as the obligatory delightful melodies. If they keep growing at this rate, in another couple of years they will be the best indie pop band in the world.

Pocketbooks: Website / Myspace

The new EP from Pocketbooks, entitled Waking Up, can be purchased from Make and Mend Records for only £2.50. Pocketbooks, alongside recently featured bands The Kabeedies and The Smittens, will be playing at the Indietracks festival in July.

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