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Articles

Mark_P has written the following articles:

88162

Royal Trux - Accelerator (Reissue)

Review by Mark Powell

Accelerator’s savage vitality hasn’t diminished one iota in the intervening decade-and-a-half: quite what point it’s ultimately trying to make remains typically elusive, but you get the sense that it’s somehow been proved right in the long-run.»

61888

The Dandy Warhols - The Best Of The Capitol Years: 1995- 2007

Review by Mark Powell

The Dandy Warhols emerge looking like the Brompton Bicycle of US indie bands: retro-styled, repeatedly flirting with hipster status, but oddly clunky and with precious few speed settings. »

59358

Eighties Matchbox B-Line Disaster - Blood & Fire

Review by Mark Powell

It’s been a dusty old hiatus since 2004’s The Royal Society. We’re happy to report that, in the downtime, TEMBLD’s piss has indeed turned to vinegar - and that as a result, they’ve never sounded more caustically thrilling. »

59181

Hole - Nobody's Daughter

Review by Mark Powell

Of course people change, and so they should - but the severity of the switch from crapped-out Converse to blagged Blahniks has been a mightily confusing one, especially for those of us left staring down at our own rainbow laces wondering whether any of it really meant anything in the first place... There are positive signs of rebirth to be found here, chief amongst them the fact that Love appears equally well-placed to tackle both rock anthems and more acoustic, stripped-down songwriting as she clatters towards middle age.»

58097

Jónsi - Go

Review by Mark Powell

Go is, at its strongest, an album of almost lung-collapsing loveliness. »

57699

Pavement - Quarantine the Past

Review by Mark Powell

It’s exactly what a Pavement retrospective should be - a heavily slanted, palpably enchanted slab of richly flawed anarcho-pop. Whether or not you agree entirely with the final selection, every track here is skewered on the band’s jagged refusal to bore; the same rickety backbone that makes each of their full studio albums to date such a valued companion for fans of angular, slippery, fiercely organic racket-making everywhere. »

57335

Lightspeed Champion - Life is Sweet! Nice to Meet You

Review by Mark Powell

Onwards and ever upwards, Sir Dev. »

57107

Anna Kashfi - Survival

Review by Mark Powell

Ultimately, the fact that Survival flat refuses to linger in any single camp for more than one song at a time is both a curse and a blessing.»

56168

Gay For Johnny Depp - Manthology

Review by Mark Powell

A bizarre-o dichotomy lurks in the amyl-nitrate-soaked undercrackers of New York spazzcore hand-wringers Gay For Johnny Depp. As a»

55273

Polly Scattergood - Bunny Club EP

Review by Mark Powell

Being something of a placeholder release was always going to be an accusation you could level at the Bunny Club EP: it's a reasonably lightweight package by any standards, but in Scattergood’s defence, it doesn’t really feel as though it’s intended to be much more than that. »

54860

Nirvana - Bleach (Deluxe Edition)

Review by Mark Powell

Ironically, this package was always going to be one for the completists, but those who’ll actually get the most from Bleach are still the Nevermind fans left feeling alienated by the gnarled triumph that was In Utero. »

54339

Lightning Bolt - Earthly Delights

Review by Mark Powell

Whether you’ve actively sought out one of Lightning Bolt’s semi-impromptu 10am patio gigs at ATP, or you just happened to be within a 400-mile radius of the festival site at the time, you’ll be aware that Chippendale live comes across something like Seb Roachford with his knackers wired to a car battery. Happily, both Chippendale and bassist Brian Gibson achieve pretty much the same Herculean level of deranged intensity on record, a fact that Earthly Delights takes great pains (quite possibly literal ones, by the sounds of it) to establish within two seconds of starting up, and then goes on to underline repeatedly with a blackened stump of crumbly, paper-shredding charcoal for the remainder of its 50-minute runtime. »

54125

Japanese Voyeurs - Sicking and Creaming

Review by Mark Powell

Ploughing through Sicking and Creaming alongside mates of a certain age rapidly descends into a ludicrously nerdy game of early-Nineties musical Guess Who?»

53959

The Spinto Band - Slim & Slender

Review by Mark Powell

All in all, Slim And Slender is an intriguing little gap-filler that, despite the subtle hints at a slightly more mature Spintos album to come, is pretty hard to quantify on its own. »

53751

Hope Sandoval & The Warm Inventions - Through the Devil Softly

Review by Mark Powell

Through The Devil Softly is an album whose drowsy currents you’ll want to bob far away on, with no immediate concern over getting back. »

52930

Blitzen Trapper - Black River Killer

Review by Mark Powell

It may only weigh in at seven tracks - one of which has already been released elsewhere, the remainder previously offered only as »

52833

Richmond Fontaine - We Used To Think The Freeway Sounded Like A River

Review by Mark Powell

Full disclosure: in mid-2005, I spent a reasonably significant period believing that Richmond Fontaine’s sixth studio album, The F»

51287

Finally Punk - Casual Goths

Review by Mark Powell

If the early Noughties (Christ, anyone care to join me in a clog-dancing bash atop the grave of that particular epithet this comin»

50464

Spinnerette - Spinnerette

Review by Mark Powell

Throw enough shit at the wall, and some of it will stick. MGMT spring immediately to mind: Oracular Spectacular lurched from rubbe»

49401

Clues - Clues

Review by Mark Powell

Since the windmilling demise of The Unicorns in late 2004 and main fringe-flicker-asider Nick Thorburn’s subsequent re-emergence w»

46763

Condo F**ks - F*ckbook

Review by Mark Powell

The promo copy of Fuckbook comes slapped with a sticker bearing the smirkingly faux-earnest declaration that ‘This is not the new Yo La Tengo album’. To be fair, the sticker tells it like it is: despite having identical personnel at the tiller, Fuckbook is to most YLT records as bathtub gin is to a delicate blend of exotic herbal teas.»


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