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Saturday, 22 June 2013

The Candy Shop #8

 Do do na na indeed...

Na Na, Do Do and Ooh La La
by Nayt Housman



We here at ‘It’s My Kind Of Scene’ are all talented karaoke-ists and as a talented kareoke-ist one must realize the value of 'the filler'. Sometimes when performing, things go wrong, like you can’t be bothered reading the lyrics, can’t keep up with the song or get too caught up in the dancing. So how can we convincingly (sort of) cover our mistakes? No need to stop singing! Simply throw in a little “na na na”, “la la la” or maybe a “do do do”. It’s what a professional would do.

Here’s some examples the professionals prepared earlier.



The Na Na Na

I’ll Be Your Shelter
by Taylor Dayne




Taylor Dayne is practically the original Anastacia (you know ‘I’m Outta Love’?). I truly need to find a karaoke place that dishes out some Taylor so I can serve it on a plate “na na nana nana” style



The Do Do Do

 Ode To My Family
 by The Cranberries




Do do-do-do do do-do-do you like The Cranberries? I love them, no matter how many repetitive lyrics or sound effects they use. Do do-do-do you have to zoooombeh, zoooombeh, zoooombeeh-EH eh-EH eh-EH eh-EH oh-OH oh-OH oh-OH oh-OH oh-OH oh-OH, eeeeeeeeeh arrrrrrrrrrrrrr-aaaah-aaaah-aaaaaah, let it linger?



The La La La x 2 
(I couldn’t choose one, so sue me)

Can’t Get You Outta My Head
by Kylie




My sexy boyfriend and I karaoke the shit out of this modern Kylie classic and I’m not ashamed to say we even know (and perform) the dance moves. (I've witnessed this, many times. They perform this incredibly well, it's full of la la la's...and it's hot. - Jo)


 Ooh La La
by Goldfrapp


 


Alison needs “ooh la la”; I need this song on a karaoke list somewhere, as well as Taylor Dayne. I’ve got flares and puffy sleeves just aching to be worn and hips that need shaking.



It is a professional (no really, it is) technique capable of making simple songs addictive, corny songs even cornier (for better or worse) and fixing sticky karaoke situations. Never underestimate the power of the 'the filler' next time you find yourself performing (badly) to a room full of friends and/or strangers. It might mean the difference between winning a free meal or being booed out of your local RSL. I wonder if it would work for a speech?


Monday, 17 June 2013

New Music Monday #56




Open Up Your Mind
by The Demon Parade
(Australian tour release)



I could use a whole bunch of comparisons to a whole bunch of bands that The Demon Parade always get compared to; bands like the Rolling Stones, The Dandy Warhols and the Stone Roses...but then you might get an idea that their new single 'Open Up Your Mind' is a fantastic 60's inspired psychadelic track with a rich, messy sound and vocals that makes their way into your mind and don't go away for days. Oh, wait, that's exactly what the single from these Melbourne darlings sounds like, which is awesome. Perhaps comparisons aren't always a bad thing then?


Jo Michelmore gives Open Up Your Mind four Michael Hutchence heads out of five...




Never In A Million Years
by Emma Birdsall
Album: (to be released 2013)





Emma Birdsall was a contestant on Australia's version of The Voice last year. Some people are going to stop reading after that sentence. Others are going to perservere and for those that do they'll be rewarded with a pleasant, smooth track; Emma's debut single from her first album to be released in July. Written by Josh Pyke and Lee Groves, she's got some impressive names to help her out and the result is a cute and catchy perfect first song to accentuate the almost jazz stylings of Emma's voice. It's the type of track that's screaming for a remix and it's a track that is a nice introduction to Ms. Birdsall. Those that stopped reading at the first sentence might regret that in a few months time. 




Jo Michelmore gives Never In A Million Years three Supremes heads out of five...




Royals
by Lorde
EP: The Love Club (out now)




“Royals” is the single from singer-songwriter Ella Yelich-O’Connor’s debut EP “The Love Club”. The 16 year old New Zealand songstress has been celebrating the EP’s success after it reached #1 on the NZ charts and #39 in Australia. The opening beat to “Royals” had me intrigued. I found myself nodding along, anticipating what was to come. I wasn’t disappointed. This song is the ultimate ear worm. And you know what? That’s more than okay with me. I could listen to it over and over again. Wait, scratch that. I HAVE been listening to it over and over again!


There’s a simplistic genius to “Royals” – a catchy beat, enchanting vocals and relatable lyrics. Initially it feels like there’s a little sadness to the song. Ella aka Lorde tells us that she’s never seen a diamond in the flesh and that she’s not proud of her address. She goes on to poke fun at the popular music videos with their Cristal and “tigers on a gold leash”. But the end of the song there’s a sense of acceptance and defiance. I love this song, and I'm going to be bold and say that you will too. Ella is due to release her next EP “Tennis Court” on July 22, and I can’t wait to see what this talented young lady comes up with next.




Katie Langley gives Royals five Jay-Z heads out of five...

Up With The Anchor EP
by Andrew Swift and The Rattlesnake Choir (out now)




"How many times have we done this dance? You need your space, I'll understand. But everytime, you steal this heart of mine." I can't say I've heard Andrew Swift and The Rattlesnake Choir before, but with those snappy opening lines of 'The Dockland Lights' I was hooked. I'm a sucker for a good romantic rock song, which let me tell you isn't easy to pull off. It's only too easy to fall into cheesy/too cute territory when you've got lyrics like, "every love story needs to end with a smile, if you've lost your grin, I'll give you mine," but Melbourne's Andrew Swift charmingly pulls it off. A memorable way to kick off the Up With The Anchor EP that I'm sure will be a favourite track to many. 


Next up is 'Refer To The Atlas,' which moves in a slightly bluesier direction and speaks to anyone that's ever wished they could just pull up stumps and blow this town. Which, let's be honest, is everyone. The chorus is likely to work its way into your head and have you singing along to, "my heart, my heart feels the need to sail away." Colin Dawson's work on the guitar stands out alongside Swift's final howls as the song comes to a close.




There's two sides to Andrew Swift that come out on the EP. The rocking leading man that's present in the first three songs and the more relaxed, acoustic singer-songwriter that shows up on the last two tracks, 'Restless Hearts' and 'Making The Nouveau Rich.' It's easy to like both sides and hopefully he lets both stick around for future releases. 'Making The Nouveau Rich' metaphorically knocked me off my feet, because the words told a story that eerily sounded like mine from not too long ago and just like with 'Refer To Atlas' I'm sure that will apply to many of us. Maybe you're amiss of a real life right now. Listen to 'Making The Nouveau Rich.' It's a great way to close us out and is the best example of Andrew Swift, fantastic vocalist and relatable songwriter. Well done, sir.


I hope I get to see the songs on Up With The Anchor performed live sometimes soon, because I can already tell that Andrew Swift and his Rattlesnake Choir band would put on one helluva show. Give this one a go, friends. 



Matt Bond gives the Up With The Anchor EP four Michael Hutchence heads out of five...


NEW MUSIC VIDEO OF THE WEEK:




Tears Always Win
by Alicia Keys
Album: Girl on Fire (out now)





Just in case you forgot, Alicia Keys is stunningly beautiful. The song's not bad either.



Matt Bond gives the video for Tears Always Win three Britney heads out of five...

 

Sunday, 16 June 2013

The Candy Shop #7




The Candy Shop #7:
Coke or Pepsi? Aero Bar or Bubbly?
by Nayt Housman


You know when you have a fave confectionary or drink and then another competing brand has almost exactly the same thing but you always like one better? What do you find you like more, the original or the copy? This week I search the meaning to why I love my fave cover songs and are they better than the originals?


In the month of November 2012, I had the pleasure of seeing Radiohead for the first time in my life. In the third encore (YES! THREE ENCORE’S) I heard a song, I listened, my eyes glazed over then I realized it was Bjork’s ‘Unravel’, then the leaking began, yes, it’s one of my fave songs. Ever. A song so simple, delicate and bittersweet that it is capable of making me “ugly cry” while I drown my sorrows by emotionally devouring a microwave chocolate cake.


Radiohead ‘Unravel’ (Bjork cover)





Bjork ‘Unravel’







And the winner is? IT’S A TIE! I love the Radiohead cover, Thom’s voice adds sorrow and tenderness, but the warmth and pure innocence delivered by Bjork is equally as endearing. I just can’t choose and would be happy to die with either version on repeat.




Let’s just say I have always been a bit of a Fiona Apple fan, and sometimes I spend a lot of obsessive time consuming anything Apple on the Y’Tube. Well, several years ago I discovered this cover of Elvis Costello’s ‘I Want You’. Now think what you will but I’ve never listened to much Costello and what I have heard had the potential to leave me “baron” and “wanting”. So how does his music fare when it has an injection from the crazy, bitter and slightly manic Fiona Apple syringe?


Fiona Apple ‘I Want You’ (Elvis Costello cover)





Elvis Costello ‘I Want You’



 

And the winner is? FIONA (durrrr). There are moments where Elvis looks like he might fall asleep, like he bores himself even, but when Fiona gets her teeth into it I can feel the venom she spits forth and she performs with an electric presence. I swear I’m not bias…


Winner: Fiona. No Bias.


I first heard this song around 13 years ago and fell instantly in love with it because it’s lyrics (inspired by the 1896 story Disillusionment (Enttäuschung) by Thommas Mann) validated my numb, angst laden “emo” leanings at the time.


PJ Harvey ‘Is That All There Is’ (Dan Daniels cover)





‘Is That All There Is’ Dan Daniels





And the winner is? PJ HARVEY! This song has been covered dozens of times by some pretty big names but most often those who recycled it kept the same “All this just bores me so I’ma partay” attitude whereas PJ Harvey (and John Parish) made it a depressing mantra for the absurdist.




I love how a good cover can make us completely rethink a song and even just get us to listen to a song from an artist we may have never heard of or genre we wouldn’t normally admire. One thing is for sure I need all the help I can get to get out of my music bubble, so if it’s because of a cover song then to all musicians out there, keep doing awesome covers from genres you may not be part of. It’s the best way to make an old stubborn duck like me sit up, listen and taste a new brand.

Top 25 - 16 June, 2013


Snakadaktal!





1. Edward Sharpe and The Magnetic Zeros - Better Days (NEW)





2. Crystal Fighters - Bridge of Bones
3. Kingswood - Ohio





4. Snakadaktal - Ghost (NEW)
5. Chvrches - Gun
6. Andrew Swift and The Rattlesnake Choir - Refer To The Atlas (NEW)





7. The xx - Fiction







8. Grouplove - Ways to Go (NEW)





9. RUFUS - Desert Night (NEW)
10. Ngaiire - Around
11. Lurch and Chief - We Are The Same
12. Bernard Fanning - Departures







13. Father John Misty - Only Son of the Ladies' Man (NEW)
14. MKO - Another Day Alone





15. Go Violets - Josie



16. The Civil Wars - The One That Got Away (NEW)
17. Astrid and The Asteroids - West End





18. Ball Park Music - Bad Taste Blues (Part II) (NEW)







19. Neko Case - Man (NEW)





20. Sheppard - Let Me Down Easy





21. Nine Inch Nails - Came Back Haunted
22. Ella Hooper - Haxan





23. Lorde - Royals (NEW)



 

24. Smith Westerns - Idol (NEW)
25.  Michelle Xen - Lose My Cool

Thursday, 13 June 2013

It's All Coming Back To Me Now - Brisbane. Then.


Powderfinger: What the hell are they looking at?

Brisbane. Then.
by Matt Bond


Over the last two weeks, we counted down the twenty bestest music makers you can find in Brisbane today, from grungey surf-rockers Go Violets to the astronomic pop of Astrid and The Asteroids, the iconic Bernard Fanning and a whole lot more. There is of course quite a storied history to Brisbane's music scene and I'm totally not going to go into it. Do some research of your own! So I'm not going to go in depth because there's this guy called Bob over at That Striped Sunlight Sound that can teach you a thing or two. I will take this Vintage Thursday opportunity (Jo's on vacay recovery week... it's a thing now) to look at some of the Sunshine State capital's music acts from years gone by I've enjoyed. You've probably enjoyed them too. Let's enjoy them together. Enjoy! 


Custard




One of Brisbane's most loved 90s bands, Custard would be best known for the Hottest 100 hit/educational number 'Girls Like That (Don't Go For Guys Like Us).' Loved around the country for their live shows, light-hearted music and award winning music videos, the band spent a decade entertaining Australian fans before calling it quits. They've played sporadically since 2009 but haven't ruled out making new music. In all honesty though, if Custard taught me anything, it's that the Julio Iglesias just ain't scientific. It's the honesty in the lyrics that really speaks to you. 


Savage Garden




Don't act like you didn't like them too. No one could resist the 'chic a cherry cola' charms of 'I Want You' and you know all the words to 'Truly Madly Deeply.' Yeah, you do. Personally, I was more partial to the pop-rock goodness of 'Break Me Shake Me' and 'To the Moon and Back.' Like you, I hated the song 'Affirmation' and questioned who was buying it and why radio played it a thousand times a day. Possibly the best thing about Savage Garden was their break-up, which saw the non-Darren Hayes one find out via the media. When asked about the duo ever getting back together, Hayes supposedly said, "we are never ever getting back together. Like ever." In all seriousness he actually said, "No, never. I once said I'd only do it if it cured cancer, and that's still how I feel." Savage Garden have reportedly signed on for season 2 of the UK television show, The Big Reunion. Music groups on the show gear up for a comeback show. If this is true, one can assume Savage Garden are about to reveal one of the greatest medical breakthroughs of all time. 


The Go-Betweens




Brisbane loves The Go-Betweens so much, we named a bridge after them! It wasn't until the release of 2005 album Oceans Apart and the track 'Finding You' that 18 year old me heard the band and I quickly became a big fan of the Robert Forster/Grant McLennan team. APRA put together a list of the 30 greatest Australian songs of all time in 2001, with The Go-Betweens' 1983 track 'Cattle and Cane' making the list. 


Powderfinger




Well, duh. Throughout the 90s and 2000s, Powderfinger became arguably Australia's most loved band, with Silverchair being their major rivals for that title. They topped Hottest 100's, won a bucket load of ARIA awards, toured relentlessly and even had a song played on Grey's Anatomy as a dude is executed in a prison. That last one is a personal highlight. The albums Internationalist, Odyssey Number Five and Vulture Street are some of the best to ever be released by an Australian music group. One hopes that if any Brisbane band is ever going to get back together, it's going to be these guys. 


The Veronicas




Oh, The Veronicas. I've yelled at one of you a couple of times in the Valley. I believe I even sang/shouted the lyrics to '4Ever' at you outside The Family, but you just sort of picked up your walking pace. Then I think I saw one of you in front of me in line at the 7-11, but I couldn't really tell and you just bought your stuff and ran out. Those were good times. In other news, I am not stalking either Jess or Lisa from The Veronicas. Now, why have I thrown them in the vintage pile? Because we're just going to pretend they only ever released two albums. Because if that 'Lolita' song is anything to go by, their next album is going to suck and blow. Perhaps they're reworking the entire thing, because how long ago did that 'Lolita' song come out anyway?    



Monday, 10 June 2013

New Music Monday #55




Departures
by Bernard Fanning (out now)




Bernard Fanning returns with his second solo album and this time, the former Powderfinger lead trades in most of the folky Tea and Sympathy fair for a handful of catchy rock grooves, with a couple of heartbreaking numbers thrown in for good measure. For the most part, Fanning's music career has been quite serious, almost stuffy in a way. If Departures is a move in a new direction, it's definitely a funner one and you immediately notice a lighter mood as soon as 'Tell Me How It Ends' begins. The lyrics might not be covering new territory... "Did you ever feel you'd never get ahead, wheels are spinning, everyone is overtaking you," is to 2013 as 2000 was to having an unhappy life, stuck in some kind of dead end job, but Fanning has certainly learned to have a bit more fun since then. 


'Limbo Stick' finds Bernard utilising his distinct Aus-rock voice in an effective Hutchence-esque way. There's a sex appeal coming out alongside a guitar line reminiscent of Mission Impossible that's absent from most of the men on Australia's rock scene lately. They're too busy scrambling to recreate Angus Stone's snooze inducing vocal tones. The upbeat vibe flows through the majority of Departures, from 'Battleships' to the excellent 'Drake' and closing 'Inside Track.' That makes the impact of the quieter moments that much greater. 




'Departures (Blue Toowong Skies)' is the most stripped down song that puts the focus on Fanning's voice and lyrics. It's a wonderful tribute to his father, brother and the suburb they were both laid to rest in. Amongst the energy surrounding it, 'Departures (Blue Toowong Skies)' was always going to stand out and it easily finds itself the album's highlight and a testament to Fanning's songwriting ability. While 'Tell Me How It Ends' might have stuck to familiar themes, a line like "Everyone is waiting on the ticking bomb that lies beneath their skin, nonetheless we carry on like we were born for breathing poison in," comes with a more mature outlook on life. Yes, mature can be depressing. Bernard Fanning's still got gas in the tank and his post-Powderfinger future is looking brighter than many of us could have imagined. Departures steps up the excitement level and is sure to keep the 'Finger fans satisfied. 




Matt Bond gives Departures four Michael Hutchence heads out of five...




We Can't Stop
by Miley Cyrus
Album: TBA (???, 2013)



Considering the hype, you would think Hannah Montana's new song would at least have an exciting beat that would get you dancing after a beverage or two. 'We Can't Stop' doesn't even have that going for it. 'Party In The USA' was better. Even 'The Climb' was better and 'The Climb' sucked. Instead of shamelessly name dropping Jay-Z and Britney Spears, she's back to shamelessly name dropping her self. And it's not as fun as her best friend Leslie saying "oh, she's just bein' Miley." Not even a little. Not even a lot. I will accept any judgments on this garbage to be based solely on this piece of lyrical genius; 


To my homegirls here with the big butts,
Shakin' it like we at a strip club,
Remember only God can judge us,
Forget the haters cause somebody loves ya,
And everyone in line in the bathroom,
Trying to get a line in the bathroom,
We all so turnt up here,
Getting turnt up yea yea...


Ke$ha suddenly finds herself the second coming of Thom Yorke when compared to that. And just remember future skanks, everyone can judge you. I'm judging you right now and I'm judging Miley Cyrus' 'We Can't Stop.' Haters gon' hate and I hate this song. P.s. "Trying to get a line in the bathroom"? Billy Ray must be proud. Clean it up, coke whore. 




Matt Bond gives 'We Can't Stop' one Dannii Minogue head out of five...  




I Don't Need You
by Russell Dean Stone



Have you ever had that dream where you wake up in the 80's wearing white frilly shirt, skin tight, studded leather jeans, a pompadour 6 inches high and smudgy black eyes, and you're performing to a full house at The Blitz in London? No? If the name Russell Dean Stone isn't familiar to you, it's about time you were made aware of The Goth Pop Prince. Royalty of a new kind enters the arena, so step aside bubblegum dance pop and make way for the darkness…


Listening to 'I Don't Need You' immediately conjures images of some of the biggest names in 80's electro pop, like early Spandau Ballet, Depeche Mode, The Cure, or Human League. The song bursts open with heavy synth and quickly settles into a relaxed electro pop canter with arcade game style sfx. This could be appreciated as "New Wave Revival", as RDS's vocals, dripping with desperation, add balance to the choppy electro vibe and together feels like an evolution as well as appreciation of the genre. 


"I don't need anyone to tell me what went wrong, I don't you, I don't need you! Erase the memories, it hurts to much to say, I don't need you, I don't need you!" The Goth Pop Prince sings of love, loss and heartache and has the bittersweet “80's style” delivery down pat, sounding something like Human League's Phillip Oakey with hints of INXS's Michael Hutchence and Placebo's Brian Molko.


To some the mere mention of the 80’s gives them shivers of bad taste movements and the garish, excessive culture. However I have a huge love of 80’s music and am impressed that Russell Dean Stone has been able to capture the essence some of the best acts in this era without compromising his own dark style and originality.




Nayt Housman gives 'I Don't Need You' four Shirley Manson heads out of five...


NEW MUSIC VIDEO OF THE WEEK:





Ohio
by Kingswood
EP: Change of Heart Deluxe EP (out now)




Where Kira Puru goes, I will follow and her ten second appearance in Kingswood's mini movie 'Some Motherfucker's Gotta Pay' has made me into a Kingswood convert. Tarantino would be proud of this feature; poorly dubbed Japanese, more swears than an episode of South Park, random group names like the Black Wax Widow Makers and the Hang Ten Firebirds... some sort of plot I forget to follow. Just like a Tarantino movie. It's also got appearances from a host of Australia's best new talent; the aforementioned Kira Puru shows up alongside Thelma Plum as The Blood Cherry Violets. Don't expect them to stick around for too long though as a big shoot out kills pretty much everyone. Seth Sentry gets taken out too. Fan girls will cry. Kingswood have a winning video here and the actual song it's supposedly selling, 'Ohio', is pretty badass. They only lose a point for killing off Kira Puru. Rookie error. 




Matt Bond gives the 'Ohio' video four Kurt Cobain heads out of five...


FREE DOWNLOAD OF THE WEEK:




Predators
by Golden Young




There's very little I can find on the line about Brisbane duo Golden Young, but I can tell you their song 'Predators' is all kinds of delicious. This indie-electro jam has earned itself many a replay over the weekend and a fist-pump here and there for that fantastic guitar solo and those gorgeous lady vocals. I would like to give credit to the name behind the voice, but for now Golden Young seems to be playing the mysterious card. Anyway, get ready to tell 'him' "don't barge in so brazen" as the chorus drags you along for the ride. I enjoyed it, I'm sure you will too... now go and download 'Predators.' It's a pay what you like deal, so if you're really enjoying the vibe, show a new act your support. With money. Or download it for free. Do what you want with your life.




Matt Bond gives Predators four Missy Elliott heads out of five...     


QUICK HIT:




Cave Rave
by Crystal Fighters (out now)




There are nine songs on Cave Rave that will leave you smiling simply because they are full of singalong, jump up and down, dance around energy. Fast, sometimes quirky lyrics that you can't help but love, even as you sometimes struggle to keep up with the Crystal Fighters' pace. There is one song on Cave Rave that will leave you smiling, but you feel like you maybe shouldn't be. 'Bridge of Bones' is a very different Crystal Fighters song than what we've come to expect. It's also possibly their best, at least on par with 'At Home.' Listening to it makes me feel like I've lost something that I can't get back, but whatever it was had a huge impact on me. So I can't help smiling. Maybe you'll feel the same way. Anyway 'Bridge of Bones' was a highlight for me and backed up by the over the top excitement that is 'Wave,' 'LA Calling' and 'Separator', this Cave Rave is one you'll want to continue for a long, long time. 




Matt Bond gives Cave Rave five Eddie Vedder heads out of five...