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Boards User Profiles

Articles

nrobertson has written the following articles:

8290

Liz Tormes - Limelight

Review by Neil Robertson

For fans of Neko Case or Cat Power, this self-released debut album is full of understated singing, graceful melodies and effortless songwriting.»

8288

Ryan Adams - Cold Roses

Review by Neil Robertson

This is Ryan Adams today: heart hung from his guitar like a trophy, head still stinging from too many bottles of red and stood in front of a microphone, singing stories from the bottom of his gut.
DiS star writer Neil Robertson gets inside the new one...
»

Andrew Coleman - Demons

Review by Neil Robertson

Animals On Wheels (Ninja Tune) member Andrew Coleman's new record relishes what can be done when electronica is used to manipulate organic instruments»

6881

Elliott Smith - From A Basement On The Hill

Review by Neil Robertson

Staggeringly sad and painfully beautiful, "From A Basement On The Hill" is Elliott Smith's final, posthumous release. Neil Robertson writes of what we've lost and the legacy he left behind.»

6478

The Libertines - The Libertines

Review by Neil Robertson

After a year of knife-wielding, ambulance-chasing and tabloid grave-digging, The Libertines make their long-awaited return. But have the band's well-documented troubles made for a "masterpiece of life-changing rock'n'roll" or a record paralysed by poor production and under-developed songs? Neil Robertson investigates...»

6354

CocoRosie - La Maison De Mon Reve

Review by Neil Robertson

Reimagining 70’s folk as if it were influenced by the barbed blues of Billie Holliday and not just fey whimsy, these sisters' debut conjures bum notes, looped samples, synthetic drum sounds and endless moments of shy, fumbling sweetheart beauty.»

3878

Somewhere Only We Moan: Why I Hate Keane

In Depth by Neil Robertson

Like it or not, Keane's debut "Hopes and Fears" is going to be one of the biggest-selling albums of the year. But are they a bunch of bland, no-hope bed-wetters or heartfelt romantics? This week, DiS gives two very different, hopelessly biased opinions about the newest stars of British rock.»

5911

Joy Zipper - American Whip

Review by Neil Robertson

It's all about image. Joy Zipper look like a pair of bohemian heroes who met over bottled beer in some over-crowded style bar. Finally released being delayed for 12 months, does their second album prove there's more behind the glossy sheen?»

5890

Múm - Summer Make Good

Review by Neil Robertson

A tender, smouldering album of drifting, rudderless beauty. Icelandic dreamsters Múm return with their third album.»

5867

Ascoltare - Visceral Vendor

Review by Neil Robertson

An album of skewed and strange electronica from the former member of ex-British post-rockers Gwei Lo»

5760

DiS meets The Shins

In Depth by Neil Robertson

Touring, fast food adverts and sweets. This is part II of DiS's Shins interview.»

The Ambers Band - Demo EP

Review by Neil Robertson

Gorgeous whispersome folksy niceness from some bloke in Bath.»

5775

Bonnie 'Prince' Billy - Greatest Palace Music

Review by Neil Robertson

Remaking his Palace material with a team of Nashville sessionists, Will Oldham returns with one of his strangest, strongest albums to date»

5641

Barking Sparrows

In Depth by Neil Robertson

"I'm just biding my time 'till I get my death-metal band started!"

On the eve of their first ever UK show, DiS caught a glimpse of the mad brilliance behind The Shins. In the first of a two-part interview, we discover their decade-long history, their musical influences, and how they're coping with the tear-away success of 'Chutes Too Narrow'.»

5583

(Review of nothing)

Review by Neil Robertson

On this double album, Lambchop serve up their seventh (and eighth) release in 10 years, but is it an album of blistered, whispered, lingering beauty or the tired sound of band bound up with its own clichés?»

5435

The Shins - Chutes Too Narrow

Review by Neil Robertson

An album for tragic romantics and car-crashed hearts; poets, cynics, drop-outs and drunks - available on import now, and finally given a UK release in March. The Shins' second album is a 30-minute mini-pop-epic, packed with cheap synths, thrift-store strings and stiff-lipped 'la-de-da's.' »

5126

Ryan Adams - Rock N Roll

Review by Neil Robertson

Close your eyes and this record doesn't exist. It's a mirage. An illusion. The late-night wet dream of some A&R weasel, wanting to turn his artists into sad corporate juggernauts. At least, that's what you've been telling yourself...»

5024

The Strokes - Room On Fire

Review by Neil Robertson

They are back. They are not your friends. And honey, if you're looking for the most pioneering, genre-defying record of the year, this is not 'it'.
However, Neil Robertson, pops things into perspective and asks: Why should you let a group of arty, rich-boy prep-school posers force their hyped-up, rip-off rock on you? »

4978

Rosie Thomas - Only With Laughter Can You Win

Review by Neil Robertson

A musical love-heart full of warmth, hope, naivety and denial, and replete with humming harmonics, empty-concert-hall atmospherics and sparse, one-note piano playing. The sound of Joni Mitchell waltzing with the Cocteau Twins, from Sub Pop's fairy princess of dream-pop.»

4862

(Review of nothing)

Review by Neil Robertson

"What do we see? No light at the end of the tunnel. What we see is the light of a locomotive coming head on at Iraq." They're tearing Saddam's head off. Dragging his skull through the Baghdad streets. Pounding it with shoes and spit and insults. It's early April and they’re interrupting Neighbours»

4727

Neil Young - On The Beach

Review by Neil Robertson

No longer kissing with tongues. Sex restricted to the same headboard-banging boredom, made bearable through fantasies of fucking someone else. Conversations reduced to reciting workday chores and weather reports, old gossip and new lies; a tax-break marriage, a soul-sapping job and a body that's become a soft, saggi»

4352

Pulp - This is Hardcore

Review by Neil Robertson

"This is the sound of someone losing the plot. Making out that they’re OK when they’re not. You’re going to like it, but not a lot." True story. You're trudging through the graveyard shift in a chip-fat stinking Friday night McDonalds. While sweeping the polythene-packaged shit off the floor and swearin»

4358

"All our songs seem to be about killing women!"

In Depth by Neil Robertson

So why do you sing in an American accent? There's a silence. Steve Adams has been preparing for this question for two years. He still doesn't know the answer. "I read this interview with [mumbly Scot-folk legend] Alasdair Roberts and he said something like, 'I think it's disgustin»

4014

Dirty Three at London Camden Barfly, Sat 17 May

Review by Neil Robertson

Warren Ellis does all the right things for all the wrong reasons. In an interview, the Dirty Three's violin-mangling maestro claims he only managed to master his instrument in the vain hope that women might want him. So when he wanders onstage like some long-haired Australian Amadeus, you realise that »

3980

The Postal Service - Give Up

Review by Neil Robertson

It's the sound of heartbreak. It's the sound of that quiet sob when you realise your 'last-forever' love is slowly wilting; the sound of an adolescent's diary, documenting some unrequited obsession; and the sound of wide-eyed optimism melting into melancholy. 'Give Up' is all these things, but above all, it's th»

3880

Various - Warchild: Hope

Review by Neil Robertson

Is this a joke? Accompanying the album, 'Hope's press release pleads that it is "not political", presumably because if it was anti-war or had something approaching an opinion, the Bush/Blair-loving, oil-guzzling, blood-baying right-wing wankers that read/write for The Sun wouldn't buy it. So instead, they make t»

3875

Iron and Wine - The Creek Drank The Cradle

Review by Neil Robertson

Sam Beam is a cheat. As his half hung-over voice wraps itself around album closer 'Muddy Hymnal', guitars slide and strum and waltz with all the wounded beauty of a classic Deep South country-fried folk record. So just as you've got him sussed as some strange bearded loner who calls his songs things like »

3754

The Roots - Come Alive

Review by Neil Robertson

Ahmir '?uestlove' Thompson wouldn't know modesty if it shot him in the back with a twelve-gauge. In the sleeve notes, The Roots' turbo-powered, dynamite drummer takes a snide swipe at "all the groups who refuse to do shows with us ever again." This isn't because Philly's finest are potty-mou»

1058

Paul McCartney at Sheffield Hallam FM Arena, Sat 05 Apr

Review by Neil Robertson

"All you’ve ever done is Yesterday" - John Lennon The pressures of not being dead. You're the living half of the most gigantic, gazillion-selling globe-gobbling scouse-pop partnership of all time. For forty years, you've had to endure pant-wetting, shirt-pulling, voice-box-breaking adulation while your »


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