News: PocketTVshow

PocketTV
Grab your own badge!

Just a quick note to say that BlackPlastic has been checking out a new short-form music TV show SonyEricsson are hostingover at YouTube. It's early days and the show covers a fairly wide range of pop and dance music, meaning they end up talking to a few artists BlackPlastic would politely consider 'toss' (Chipmunk anyone?) but there is also some interesting content...

Check it out by clicking the badge - last week there was an interesting citizen journalist interview with Pop Justice founder Peter Robinson on the future of music journalism and the piece on the Friendly Fires recent blackout gig from a few weeks ago is cool.

BP x

Album Review: The Strange Dreams of... - Paul White

Relative newcomer, Paul White's début album The Strange Dreams of... follows on from a series of singles and an EP from the past year and manages to capture the brilliance of both Jay Dee / J Dilla and DJ Shadow at his most hip-hop influenced, all in one. The result - a cinematic, curious combination of film samples and epic joints is lush.

Stitched together to make up the album are 21 different cuts - all are instrumentals aside from the samples - with White's apparent short attention span resulting in an album structure reminiscent of Dilla's own classic Donuts. The short-form structure suits White's sense of joyful experimentation to a tee and the cut and shut creativity and variety that ensues ensures that the listener gets more than their money's worth.

How else could an album contain the throbbing and paranoid bass-heavy 'Time Wars' and slam it straight into the glorious summertime soul of 'City Bright Lights'? Or feature something as willfully funky as 'The Composer's Soundtrack' and as barking mad as 'Alien Nature' without it just coming off annoying.

What makes The Strange Dreams of... work however is the quality of the production work. Some of the tracks here easily live up to the work of world famous producers and yet Paul White is no household name. Yet. The soaring melodies of 'Burnt By The Sun' could be formulaic but the way they have been cut together with quiet vocals snatches and loose, loose drumming ensures they transcend the work of many better known beat makers.

Album closer 'Can't Sleep Make Music' conveys what it must be like in Paul White's head. BlackPlastic can almost picture him, head so stuffed with good ideas that he can't stop creating.

The Strange Dreams of... then: another self-made record so bloody good it begs the question what the hell the major record labels spend all their time and money on.

BP x

The Strange Dreams of... Paul White is available to stream in full or purchase now from Bandcamp.

Album Review: I'm Going Away - The Fiery Furnaces

The Fiery Furnaces have always felt like a band that like to do things the hard way just for the sake of it. From their days of performing every concert in a different genre-style through to this, their sixth album.

Because individually these song are glorious slices of pop music. 'Drive to Dallas' sounds like the White Stripes at the top of their game - a relaxed soul-country-ballad that descends into a freak-out midway through. Yet BlackPlastic can't help but feel their is too much on I'm Going Away and far too much of it sounds far too similar.

Consumed in sections it is, undeniably, great. If nothing else I'm Going Away proves that The Fiery Furnaces can write some of the best songs about relationships breaking down you will ever have heard. Take the horizontal blues of 'The End Is Near' or 'Even In The Rain' - the song writing is generally strong but as an album it needs a few of the weaker efforts thrown out and replacing with something totally different.

It's a shame because this is a band that have long since demonstrated their aptitude at variety and experimentalism - just take a handful of tracks from different releases and you will experience a wealth of different styles. As a result it almost feels like the Fiery Furnaces are laughing at us the listeners with this one, a classic case of the emperor's new clothes - is there really nothing to this beyond a few blues-soul pop songs or are is BlackPlastic just too dumb to get it?

Regardless, if you are fan there is likely to be enough here to interest you. Unfortunately if you have long been alienated by the Fiery Furnaces' deliberate attempts to be a difficult listen this is not likely to change your mind.

BP x

Out on Thrill Jockey on 24 August 2009. Available for pre-order at Amazon.co.uk on CD and LP [affiliate links].

Album Review: Illusions - Mikas

Totally unrelated to the well-known Mika, Mikas doesn't create campy hit pop music and instead prefers to focus on progressive trance instrumentals made for sunrises on open dance-floors.

BlackPlastic dislikes Mika (sans the 's') so much that almost anything else would be preferable. Illusions - a pleasant surprise then, even if that isn't saying much.

Illusions is actually alright, kinda, provided slightly ambient trance is your thing. It may fall slightly awkwardly down the gap that exists between the cheesy-Radio-One-playlisted-glowsticks-and-dance-anthems-chart-bothering Deadmau5 and a somewhat more sophisticated minimal tech-head like Gui Boratto but there are some moments here if you are prepared to sift.

Opener 'Spirit Emotion Part 2 (Extended)', (and yes, BlackPlastic is very aware of the unironic shitness of the title) is a brooding builder made of twinkling keys and mechanical basslines. 'Haze (Superclub Mix)' is, again, brooding and progressive with enough stabs of acid to make it stand out.

The problem is that Illusions doesn't really do anything new. At all. For every track the manages to capture the listener's attention there is another that passes by without you so much as noticing. So if you loved the slower, ambient stuff that Digweed and Sasha used to play ten years ago then you may find sething you enjoy but for the rest of use there just aren't enough ideas here.

BP x

P.S. Illusions has the worst album cover ever. Like so bad BlackPlastic couldn't face tainting the look of the site with it. Seriously.

News / Competition: Hostel Bookers Get Loaded giveaway

Just a quick note as travel website Hostel Bookers have dropped BlackPlastic a note to let us know that they are giving away tickets to this summer's Get Loaded In The Park event in London. All you have to do is watch the video below and name the five bands and songs that Hotel Bookers have 're-imagined' - they all played at Get Loaded in 2008 so that may help you work it out, these are actually quite tricky so if you figure it out BlackPlastic would guess you would have a fair shot at winning.

First prize is two tickets to the festival plus accommodation in one of London's hostels, Entries should be sent to competitions@hostelbookers.com by 15 July. One runner up will receive a ticket to the festival and three more runners up will win a bottle of champagne at nearby bar, Clapham's Gigalum.

For the festival lineup visit the Get Loaded website.

Full terms and conditions can be found on the Hostel Bookers website.

BP x