Tag Archives: Hot Club de Paris

vintage dauphinois: the best of 2011

 

Bunting.Pre

I’ve been thinking about my favourite albums and singles of the year since I was asked to submit my list to Peenko for the annual Scottish Bloggers and Music Sites Awards they do. In case you don’t know, Peenko asks all the active bloggers and music writers they know to submit a list of three albums and that’s compiled through averages and whatnot until they get a consensus from all the bloggers. I was going to hold this post back a few days, but since everyone else has fired the starting gun on their end-of-year lists, it can’t hurt to saturate some more.

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My favourite album

I wrote this piece last week for The Student. Thought I’d pop it up.

For most people, favourite records are tied to memories: the first CD you bought, the song you listened to at the high-school prom or the album your parents would always play in the car on long drives to distant relatives’ houses.

Live at Dead Lake is a record that looks back at a misspent teenage era and rejects its honey-soaked recollections as sugar-coated nostalgia.

Hot Club de Paris’ revolving, fizzing, geometric guitar riffs – the core of their glucose-infused indie rock – spin faster and faster like some possessed musical whirligig, only just staying within the realms of control. The melodies on Dead Lake are a zoetrope of twangs and tweaks, culminating in a constant torrent of delicious math rock.

Listening for the first time to this album – over a long summer holiday – it felt as if the band had bottled the sun, shook it up and poured it into my ears.

Large portions of the album segue seamlessly into one another and are better expressed as movements than tracks. The initial three songs are borne from a sleepy warm introduction into wide-eyed chirpy, joyful guitar indie, whilst the middle section cools to an almost-stop before the final autumnal bow.

And through the hurl and burl of those gorgeous melodies, rough-hewn barbershop harmonies and witty lyricisms leap. Hot Club don’t mince their words but they don’t revel in laddish delight: there is nary a misplaced line or phrase on Dead Lake. Whilst singing of forgotten girls and lost nights, there’s a lighter touch to the lovelorn realism on For Parties Past and Present, the lyrics “when I think of her/ I see that dress with the summer sewn/ into its cotton checks” sound fond rather than bitter. Neither does it succumb to epic pop trope; the girl who mesmerises our hero leaves him to the wolves midway through the album. The listener is left to pick up the pieces amongst colliding melodies and circling catechisms.

Live at Dead Lake, with its myriad time signatures, skew-whiff guitar tunes and asymmetric polygon take on indie rock, redefined the way I listened to music – and it hasn’t lost an iota of its potency today.

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Hot Club de Paris–new album, woo!

 

Readers will have to permit a certain degree of fanboy-ism in the following post. The subject, Southport trio Hot Club de Paris, have released a new album within the last week, called Free the Pterodactyl 3. They’re brilliant; the first album was a gorgeous, optimistic debut riven with uniqueness. The second was as if they’d bottled summer, and for me at least, it seemed to encapsulate everything that was youthful and colourful and bright. And I’ve never really been able to mention other bands as reference points (partly because, to me, this is indie at it’s purest source), so that’s something that sets them apart.

So, the third album, you’d expect, would be disappointing. Maybe I should be saying that I wish they’d never produced another album, maybe I should be bemoaning the fact they’ve come an inch or two more mainstream, or that they’re so not indie anymore and that I never really cared anyway.

But that would be facetious, and incorrect. Because although Pterodactyls isn’t as good as Live at Dead Lake, that’s because nothing could be. Taken in context, it’s excellent. There are some very good strong tracks – namely Dance a Ragged Dance, Fuck You The Truth! and They Shoot Horses Don’t They – and although I’m only on my third listen since I downloaded it from iTunes I guess it’s the songs released on last year’s EP that are standing out so far. Hell, if you haven’t heard about them – and that’s understandable, seeing as I only usually ever cover Edinburgh – give them a listen. You’ll be better off for letting them into your ears.

*Note: I do make a rule of covering Scottish/E’burgh acts but tonight I cba’d going to the free gig at Teviot and didn’t want to trawl Google for new bands. Next week, there will be some proper local music blogging for you.

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