Posts tagged Math and Physics Club
New: Maths and Physics Club – Jimmy Had a Polaroid
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I was starting to get a bit worried about Math and Physics Club. After their debut album came out, everything seemed to go quiet, and combined with the fact the band hardly seem to play any shows, it looked like they could quickly disappear. Thankfully this isn’t the case though as the band have appeared with not just a new song, but a new album as well. Their 2007 self-titled album was one of my favourite’s of that yet, full of charmingly upbeat pop numbers, and Jimmy Has a Polaroid doesn’t look to change that formula too much. Sure, it’s a little more rocking and the vocals are more focused than before, but it’s undeniably shares the same pop sensibilities.
MP3 Math and Physics Club – Jimmy Had a Polaroid
Jimmy Had a Polaroid is taken from the band’s upcoming second album, the delightfully modest I Shouldn’t Look as Good as I Do. It’ll be released by those super people at Matinee Recordings in June.
Top 44 Songs of 2007: #26-18
1Yep, I may just get this done in time for the 2008 list.
26
Walker Kong – Andy Warhol & The Honey Bees

This is one of those songs that you listen to once, think it’s okay and then don’t really come back. Then you hear it again, wonder what it is and think it’s rather good. By the time you’ve heard it four or five times, it’s that catchy song that you already seem to know all of the words to.
25
Math & Physics Club – Baby I’m Yours

There’s nothing here that’s any different from their previous material, but what does it matter? When pop is this jangly, sweeping and melancholy all at once, I’m certainly not going to argue.
24
The Light Footwork – Rebellion Time

The Light Footwork came in at number two on this list last time, and while their position may be a bit lower this time around, they are still just as good as they always were. Releasing a split EP with Tereu, Tereu (which incidentally had the best artwork of the year), they unleashed three new songs upon us, the best of them being Rebellion Time. All of the Light Footwork hallmarks at here, from the Beulah-esque melodies to the back and forth male-female vocals. With a bit of luck, we’ll get a new full length from them in 2008.
23
The Thermals – Here’s Your Future

How did I go so long not knowing anything about The Thermals? Seemingly the only band genuinely pissed off at the state of the world, each album seems to get angrier than the last, with the latest almost a concept album about living under a fascistic Christian state. Which is obviously not based in reality at all. Anyways, combine the political comment with near perfect song constructions, and you’ve got one of the most exciting bands working today.
22
Friends of the Bride – Cut Down On My Friends

Partying like it’s 1959, Friends of the Bride’s music sounds like it could have come from the era of swing and big band music, but it somehow manages to remain fresh at the same time. Cut Down On My Friends is an obvious standout, a bitter tirade about needy friends accousing the singer of being anti-social, followed by a declaration that he’s going to have less to do with them by moving to the suburbs. This was the b-side to the band’s first single, so they are setting the bar pretty high, given this could have been a superb single in itself.
21
Tullycraft – The Punks Are Writing Love Songs

The Punks Are Writing Love Songs shows that little has changed in the Tullyland. A look at current music trends, jangly guitars and the obligatory ‘ooh-oohs’ are here. While it’s not quite the self aware anthems that Twee and Pop Songs were, it’s three minutes of joy that you’ll be hard pressed to find from other bands.
20
Jakobinarina – Sleeping in Seattle

An Icelandic rock band that references Paul Giamatti? Grounds for a top twenty placing right there.
19
Dan le Sac Vs Scroobius Pip – Thou Shalt Always Kill

Seemingly this years love it or hate it indie hit, as there seems to be no middle ground on this one at all. Personally I fall into the love it camp, and while I can see the formula becoming stale across several songs, Thou Shalt Always Kill hits all the right spots. A glorious manifesto for modern life that wants to right as many wrongs as possible in this country, no matter how big or small they may be. It’s ridiculously quotable too.
18
Assembly Now – It’s Magnetic

Scrappy guitar playing? Distortion all over the melodies? Deliberately fuzzy vocals about nothing? You will find none of these things in the music of Assembly Now. The guitars are clean and crisp, every nuance can be clearly heard, and the vocals are both clear and literate. Of course none of these things are new concepts, but they certainly seem to be things that are out of favour at the moment. This makes Assembly Now all the more refreshing.
New Math & Physics Club: ‘Baby I’m Yours’
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Man, these tweepop releases keep sneaking up on me out of nowhere. With Tullycraft releasing a new album with hardly any notice this week, it seems that fellow Seattle poppers Math & Physics Club have slyly snuck out a new EP. Entitled Baby I’m Yours, it’s four new songs (well, three new ones and a new version of an old one) marking their first new material since their debut album a year ago. Is there anything new here? Not at all, but when pop comes this jangly, this sweeping and this melancholy, I’m really not going to argue.
MP3 Math & Physics Club – Baby I’m Yours (expired)
The Baby I’m Yours EP was released last month via Matinee Recordings.
Some of the classics..
MP3 Math & Physics Club – Movie Ending Romance (expired)
MP3 Math & Physics Club – Darling, Please Come Home (expired)
Math & Physics Club: Website
Top 49 Songs of 2006: #49-40
0Here we are at my first end of year listings as a blogger. It’s all very exciting and all, and I’d like to think I’m doing things a little differently. There will be absolutely no album list anywhere on this blog. This is because I don’t tend to listen to albums anymore. Yes, I know this makes me some kind of charlatan, but I may as well be honest about it. I’m all about the quick burst of the song these days. As such, over the next five days, we’ll be running down my favourite 49 songs of 2006. Now, I know this list isn’t perfect. There’s probably a bunch of songs from 2005 in here too, but if I only discovered them for whatever reason in 2006, they made the list anyway. Seeing as this is a lot of songs to write about, I’m only going to cover some of them. On others I will just use the original comments I posted earlier on in the year. Not that it really matters, as it’s the mp3s that people want, not my rambling comments. Anyway, I now present Another Form of Relief’s first annual Top 49 Songs of the year:
#49
The Victorian English Gentleman’s Club
‘My Son Spells Backwards’
Download MP3 (expired)
“Cumbersome name aside, this three-piece from Cardiff are putting out hyperactive music that falls somewhere in between new wave, punk and electro pop. Their music jumps all over the place, and yet it’s still all alarmingly melodic and catchy, the kind of thing that wouldn’t be out of place on a number of Pixies albums. ‘My Son Spells Backwards’ is so catchy and cheerful you probably won’t catch on at first that it’s all about a special needs kid. Clocking in at under two minutes, it’s an incredibly efficient little ditty, not wasting even a second of the song. It jangles, it rocks, and it features that favourite of mine, duelling vocals. This was included as a b-side on their last single, given an indication of how solid their material already is if this can be spared as a secondary song.” – originally posted April 10.
#48
Odeon Beatclub
‘Take It Off’
Download MP3 (expired)
Odeon Beatclub are another band to come off of the production line for great music that is Glasgow. Having spent time supporting the likes of Snow Patrol and Babyshambles, they are building quite a cult following in their native land, and if there’s any justice in this world, that will spread south of the border too. There’s nothing all that new to be heard here, but for solid, catchy songs, you don’t need to look any further than ‘Take It Off’, their single from earlier this year.
#47
The Foundry Field Recordings
‘Buried Beneath The Winter Frames’
Download MP3 (expired)
Isn’t it perfect that in the same year as Grandaddy decide to call it a day, their natural successor seems to appear out of nowhere? Of course, that is a little unfair on The Foundry Field Recordings, but there is certainly a hell of a lot of Grandaddy in their sound. Their album was full of the kind of randomness that made that band a joy, and while ‘Buried Beneath The Winter Frames’ may tone down the eccentricities, it’s probably their most catchy and accessible song.
#46
Pants Yell!
‘Your Feelings Don’t Show’
Download MP3 (expired)
I used the term “dorky charm” when I first wrote about Pants Yell!, and that term seems to sum the band up far more concisely than anything I’d be able to write in this paragraph. A delightfully simple tale about running into an ex-girlfriend and then wondering in the back of your mind whether the meeting was an accident or not, but being far too spineless to actually ask if that was the case. Pants Yell! have an entirely catalogue of songs like this, and singling one out for this list was pretty hard, but ‘Your Feelings Don’t Show’ just about manages to edge the others out.
#45
Beeches
‘Sin Nombre’
Download MP3 (expired)
I discovered Beeches earlier on in the year when they sent me some of their music, but it only really clicked with me how great they are once I saw them live a little while later. These guys know how to put on a hell of a show, giving their songs even more life than they already have on the recorded versions. I even had the honour of having them play at Another Form of Relief’s first promoted gig in December, where they put on a fantastic set, even if not many people were there to watch. Like a lot of great songs, ‘Sin Nombre’ didn’t really grab me immediately, and it was only after several listens to their CD that it won me over. I still couldn’t really tell you what it’s about, but it certainly sounds good.
#44
Battle
‘Tendency’
Download MP3 (expired)
“We may as well get the lame comparisons out of the way now, so yes, Battle do sound rather like Bloc Party, particularly on ‘Tendency’. Please don’t let that put you off though, as it sounds like one of those rare good Bloc Party songs. The guitars jerk all over the place, the bass drives and the drumming keeps it all in line. All this while Jason Bavanandan belts out words in such a manner that it sounds like it could actually be physically painful for him to do so. This adds to the urgency of the song though. As for the song itself, it’s a suitably downbeat tale about how crappy life can be at times. “I know I dance like a drunken arse / Every weekend, it’s my only vice / Let me drink myself to death / To forget about the rent” asks Bavanandan, sounding as if it’s what he really wants to do. Ultimately though it’s a love story about loving a girl, but knowing that it’s probably not going to work out as it only really goes one way. I like the whole realist point of view this gives the song, rather than the usual optimism or complete pessimism that usually appears in songs of this nature.” – originally posted June 27.
#43
Nathan Asher & The Infantry
‘Turn Up The Faders’
Download MP3 (expired)
“‘Turn Up The Faders’ is hands down one of the best songs that I have heard this year. It also confirmed exactly what the comparisons had promised: somehow this young, unsigned band had a sound that evokes both Bright Eyes and Springsteen. Asher’s vocals are very similiar to Oberst’s, partly shaking yet also full of power. He drives through the song with such urgency that you’d think that lives depended on it. This is supported ably by some excellent instrumentation, including a fantastic piano breakdown toward the end of the song that could have come straight off of ‘Born To Run’.” – originally posted May 19.
#42
The Amateurs
‘Things You Only Know If You Don’t Drive’
Download MP3 (expired)
Delightful twee pop from Edinburgh that would be far too easy to compare to Belle & Sebastian. With male-female vocals and a truckload of cute little references, it’s just a joy to see British bands actually trying this kind of thing. The song itself is exactly what it says in the title: all about how buses come in groups and what shoes to wear in the rain. It runs out of steam a little bit before the end, but it’s still so wonderfully catchy that it’s impossible to ignore.
#41
The Young Knives
‘She’s Attracted To’
Download MP3 (expired)
The Young Knives seem to get a lot of flack, but I think they are one of the best of the current crop of “popular” British bands. Of course, me being the unaware person that I am was entirely oblivious to them until I was dragged to see them at a festival in August. They won me over very quickly though, putting on a great high energy performance, which included this song. It’s probably not their most developed song, but it’s the one that I enjoy the most. A simple tale about liking a girl but hating her parents, it’s just a hell of a lot of fun.
#40
Math & Physics Club
‘Darling, Please Come Home’
Download MP3 (expired)
“‘Darling, Please Come Home’ builds on the promise of last year’s two EPs, bringing us a simple tale of a lost love. Nothing here will sound all that different if you’re already familiar with twee pop, but the point here is that MAPC are as good as, if not better, than any other band working in the genre at the moment. It’s percussion is steady, the guitar work gentle and Charles’ vocal manages to somehow be incredibly restrained and while still emotive. If this is an indication of the rest of the album, we could be looking at one of the best of the year.” – originally posted October 5.
Feel free to join me again in the coming days as we’ll be counting down ten songs each day with the final nine being revealed on December 30.
New Math & Physics Club: ‘Darling, Please Come Home’
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So we’ve had something of a redesign of the site over the past few days. I did it kind of haphazardly, as in I worked on the site while it was live, so if you stopped by and things were broken and the such, I apologise profusely for that. Hopefully you like the new design. It’s not entirely complete yet, but I’m happier with it. It’s cleaner, which was the main thing I wanted to achieve, and it allows easy implementation of new features.
Onto the music, and today we have a treat from the good folks of Math & Physics Club. I wrote about them a few months and read talk of a debut full length album, but I hadn’t given them a great deal of thought of late. That was until this afternoon when the first song from that album suddenly appeared in my inbox. For those unfamiliar, MAPC (as they are known) are a twee indie pop band from Seattle who have seemingly listened to a lot of Belle & Sebastian. Which simplifies things I guess, but it covers the basics.
‘Darling, Please Come Home’ builds on the promise of last year’s two EPs, bringing us a simple tale of a lost love. Nothing here will sound all that different if you’re already familiar with twee pop, but the point here is that MAPC are as good as, if not better, than any other band working in the genre at the moment. It’s percussion is steady, the guitar work gentle and Charles’ vocal manages to somehow be incredibly restrained and while still emotive. If this is an indication of the rest of the album, we could be looking at one of the best of the year.
MP3 Math & Physics Club – Darling, Please Come Home (expired)
‘Darling, Please Come Home’ is taken from Math & Physics Club’s debut self-titled album, which will be released on Matinee Recordings on October 16. That’s a mere week and a half away kids! You can order it here for only $10! Be sure to pick up the first two EPs at only $4 each while you’re there too!
Math & Physics Club: Website
Math & Physics Club
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Math & Physics Club are a rare band in that they seem to have made their way into the industry in a backwards kind of way. Rather than playing shows, they recorded music in their basements and sent it to labels and radio stations. This somehow worked, and they already had quite a buzz surrounding them by the time they ever performed together in front of an audience. You could pass this off simply as luck, but it’s mostly down to the fact they are that damn good that their music was going to get attention, in whatever form they chose to deliver it.
The band didn’t have time to put together a full length album at the start, so instead released two four song EPs over the course of 2005, both garnering them much acclaim. The two songs included here are the title tracks from each EP, both being examples of that much overused phrase “perfect pop”. They are currently recording a full length album, which is due to arrive in “spring 2006″. So just about anytime now then.
MP3 Math and Physics Club – Movie Ending Romance
MP3 Math and Physics Club – Weekends Away
Regarding the butt ugly orange Amazon boxes..
These are out of my control I’m afraid, but just in case it’s not obvious, they aren’t supposed to be there. Amazon UK seems to be glitching in a big way and generating the awful orange boxes in place of product links a lot of the time at the moment. Hopefully it’ll be resolved soon, as they are annoying me just as much as they are you. Refreshing makes them go away sometimes if you want to give that a shot. I’m not going to include them on new posts until the problem is resolved (in fact, I’m thinking I might drop them altogether and just use Insound links). These are the days when I really wish I had something like Blogads instead of this crap.
(Edit: This is the 50th post! That went quickly!)
