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Articles

mijbear has written the following articles:

63449

Artwork Day: Polyvinyl Records on artwork

In Depth by James Lawrenson

Matt Lunsford, the co-president of Polyvinyl Records (home of Of Montreal) wrote us words on the label's views on artwork...»

63432

Liars, Wild Beasts, of Montreal, Sky Larkin, Blood Red Shoes, & more pick their favourite artwork

In Depth by James Lawrenson

As part of artwork day we got some of DiS' favourites to contribute some words on their favourite record sleeves. Keeps 'em out of trouble, doesn't it? They were only too happy to help, their selections are below, and run the gamut from psychedelia to soul to performance art. Going by the age of the records, it either says something about the death of good artwork by the rise of 50 pixel squares on an iPod screen, or something about album artwork having less of an impact on our psyches once we're no longer in our formative years. There's nothing more important than the posters that grace the walls of our teenage bedrooms. Either way, below are the choices of bands including Liars, Slow Club, of Montreal and Wild Beasts. Look:»

63451

When Artwork Goes Wrong: The 10 Worst Album Covers of the 00's

In Depth by James Lawrenson

The 10 worst album covers of the 00's...»

63448

Artwork Day: Constellation Records on the past, present and future

In Depth by James Lawrenson

As part of artwork day, we got the co-founder of Constellation Records, Ian Ilavsky, to write us a few words on his (and the label's) outlook on artwork - past, present and future. Constellation Records is one place you can guarantee will always have high»

63471

Artwork Day: Top Ten Record Covers of the '00s

In Depth by James Lawrenson

Welcome to DiS is Ten's 'Artwork Day'. How are you? Well, I hope. As the title suggests, there'll be some features on artwork: there'll be a good artwork top 10, and a bad artwork top 10. And then a couple of record label people are having their say, co»

64051

DiS meets Dosh

In Depth by James Lawrenson

Martin Dosh is a multi-instrumentalist, renowned for his spooling reels that drop in and out, building complex soundscapes that never stray far from beauty. I reviewed his latest record, Tommy, for DiS earlier this year. In short, it got 9/10. More? His m»

63028

Favourite 50: WHY? - Alopecia (chosen by James Lawrenson)

In Depth by James Lawrenson

Over the past decade, genres have become increasingly divided. Imagine an immense, ever-growing pyramid, where every brick is a genre. Each brick supporting the two genres above it represents a merging of those genres. That pyramid is where the 2000s ha»

62029

Sky Larkin - Kaleide

Review by James Lawrenson

It doesn't need dissection of what makes it so, it just needs acceptance, acknowledgement of what it is, lest the spell be broken, lest we break it by taking it apart. »

61679

Spilt drinks on the digital carpet: DiS at The Creators Project

In Depth by James Lawrenson

By James Lawrenson and Daniel B. Yates The Creators Project is “a partnership between Intel and VICE that brings together innovators across disciplines and explores the different ways they use digital technologies to further their artistic pursuits”. O»

61664

Danger Mouse and Sparklehorse - Dark Night Of The Soul

Review by James Lawrenson

Often collaborative projects end up being an average of its participants, merging in the middle in a grey mulch. Dark Night of the Soul escapes all of that, Sparklehorse bringing the songwriting genius, and Danger Mouse the production.»

61201

Pagan Wanderer Lu - European Monsoon

Review by James Lawrenson

These songs should last forever.»

60980

Mystery Jets - Serotonin

Review by James Lawrenson

For those fans put off by the 'mainstream' stylings of Twenty One, look away. There is nothing for you here.»

61019

Dirty Projectors at The Barbican, City of London, Fri 25 Jun

Review by James Lawrenson

Tonight sees Dirty Projectors dominant, glorious, and offering the best that avant garde rock can offer. I'm sorry you missed it.»

59873

Born Ruffians - Say It

Review by James Lawrenson

Born Ruffians, both on their new record Say It - and previous Red, Yellow & Blue - suit the summer infinitely more than the months past September. »

59274

Woods - At Echo Lake

Review by James Lawrenson

Woods have refined their wanderings into more concise thrills, but at times lost what made them unique. »

59002

male bonding - Nothing Hurts

Review by James Lawrenson

In four minutes of this record there are two tracks that together have more melodies, more moments of joy, than most bands will manage this year. 'TUFF' is a punky sprint, a cowbell rattling between fizzing bursts of riffs and croons of vocals, while 'Nothing Remains' surfs along on backing vocal ooo's and chaotic guitar lines. »

58656

Frog Eyes - Paul's Tomb: A Triumph

Review by James Lawrenson

These songs aren't sung. They're performed. Mercer lives his vocals, and brings what could be flat indie into vivid, vibrant Technicolor. »

58730

First Listen: Crystal Castles : Crystal Castles

In Depth by James Lawrenson

On a sunny day in April (last Thursday) DiS got invited along to a listen through of the new Crystal Castles album, set to be released June 7, on Fiction.»

58560

The Tallest Man on Earth - The Wild Hunt

Review by James Lawrenson

If your blood lusts after some kind of classic songwriting, but your Dylan is worn out (physically or mentally) then this should fill that void. »

58454

Dosh - Tommy

Review by James Lawrenson

Tommy is not an album that lets your attention wander off it for more than a moment. »

58172

Josiah Wolf - Jet Lag

Review by James Lawrenson

Whilst at times the melodies feel frail, and it seems to struggle with a slight lack of something musically, at others the album is triumphant, with complex, brilliant pop songs about that age old theme, heartbreak. »

57991

Laura Marling - I Speak Because I Can

Review by James Lawrenson

Whatever your opinion of Laura Marling, she is an artist that attracts attention. The main aspect of Alas I Cannot Swim that entranced and summoned plaudits was the age of the artist juxtaposed with the mature poise of the lyrics and music. Recorded whilst she was but 17, its ponderings on love and all that eventually garnered a Mercury nomination and high positions in those end of year lists. You probably know this.»

57691

The High Wire - The Sleep Tape

Review by James Lawrenson

From almost the very start, The High Wire were cursed. For a few weeks into the band's existence in its current line-up Chris Martin invited them to open at Coldplay's shows in December 2008. And there aren't many things surer to smother a band's progress than an endorsement from pop music's false messiah balladeer. Or open up their music to a far wider audience than they'd otherwise get. All depends on your perspective really.»

56444

NosferatuD2 - We're Gonna Walk Around This City With Our Headphones On To Block Out The Noise

Review by James Lawrenson

Posthumous releases have always been big business, the record label / management / hangers on desperate to make final bucks with records the star wouldn't have sullied their brand with. New Jimi Hendrix offcuts are due in a few months, and Tupac has now released more albums since his death than he did whilst he beefed with Biggie. And so now we have a debut record from a band who split up over two years ago. This ain't no cash in though. An enterprising man has set up Audio Antihero, and self funded the release. Perhaps it's the kind of people our desperate, dying music industry needs. Perhaps it's foolhardy.»

57340

Efterklang - Magic Chairs

Review by James Lawrenson

For this record is one which plays with the timbres of the orchestra: violins, cellos, trombones, flutes, anything, and does so successfully, utilising the sounds to make something that draws on music hundreds of years old, and music years old, to create something else. And for that, we can forgive it its minor, sporadic flaws. »

56947

Moonface - Dreamland EP: marimba and shit-drums

Review by James Lawrenson

The layers of marimba at times resemble an organic version of the interlocking pulses of sine wave synths in electronica. This EP is mesmeric, the chiming lines having a hypnagogic effect, sending you into the dreamworld that Krug describes. The fascination of escaping into a self contained dream makes this record enticing, luring you in. Combined with its unique instrumentation, Dreamland EP is a special record, turning what could have been a gimmick into something else, something otherworldly.»

56533

First Aid Kit - The Big Black And The Blue

Review by James Lawrenson

Certain aspects of certain bands are always inescapable when discussing their music. Bon Iver lived in a cabin; Portishead take ages between records; The Strokes will never match Is This It; etcetera, etcetera. The same indubitably goes for young artists, perhaps because those writing about them feel a melancholic disappointment at their own comparative attainments at that age. And so it is with First Aid Kit, aged just 16 and 19 years old and already releasing their debut album.»

56498

FM Belfast - How To Make Friends

Review by James Lawrenson

Psychogeography is all in music. It's impossible to imagine For Emma, Forever Ago to come from anywhere but a log cabin in Wisconsin. Try and separate the Velvet Underground or The Strokes from NYC. Geographic origins impact everything – rural/urban/north/south etc etc etc. Iceland has always had its own particular psychogeography, musically, from Bjork, to múm, to Mugison, to Sigur Rós, a certain thread of organic electronica, and a connection to the wide wastes of glacial volcanic landscape.»

56346

Adam Green - Minor Love

Review by James Lawrenson

Without the humour, this could so easily be lounge singer pop. This is, after all, the man who came up with the so bad it's genius of “I am a goat / In a moat / With a boat”. Without that, what is left? What do you do if you've excised all the silliness? You go to Songwriters 101, and learn how to write proper songs, with addictive melodies and all that. »

56322

Huw Stephens names his Festive Ten

News by James Lawrenson

Huw Stephens, the Radio 1 DJ and SWN creator/overseer/organiser has gone and done a Christmas list, and rather nice it is to. We'll leave the rest of the words to Huw, with his top 10 favouritest festive albums, EPs and tracks.»

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