|
Register | Blogging | Search | Today's Posts | Mark Forums Read |
![]() |
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
![]() |
#1 (permalink) |
Account Disabled
Join Date: Jun 2013
Location: freely swimmin thru the waters of glory much like a majestic bald eagle soars thru the skies
Posts: 1,463
|
![]()
to echo plankton i thin we all totally get the burnout aspect expecially from someone like u who takes 10x the amount of thoughts and work to make a post than most members. take it easy you deserve it and we will see ya when u get back
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#2 (permalink) | |
Horribly Creative
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: London, The Big Smoke
Posts: 8,265
|
![]()
When I made my last post here, I hadn't seen Trollheart's earlier post so I didn't know he was taking time out until I saw DJ's and Plankton's posts.
I kind of saw this coming with Trollheart, given the amount journals and threads that he runs on here, a break is the best thing that could've happened for him as nobody can keep up the pace he was setting for long! I just hope when he does resume, he cuts down the amount of journals and time he spends on here and treats everything in moderation and remembers the old adage of quality over quantity. This forum like anything else in life should be enjoyed and shouldn't be a burden to meet deadlines etc. Plankton is quite right, this is a case of forum burnout and it's kind of a newish syndrome.
__________________
Quote:
Power Metal Pounding Decibels- A Hard and Heavy History |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#3 (permalink) |
Born to be mild
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: 404 Not Found
Posts: 26,996
|
![]() ![]() Seems my little holiday turned out to be much longer than I had expected! When I took a sabbatical from Music Banter I said I didn't know whether I would need weeks, a month or more. In th end, it was more. Much more. Reckon it's about six months now since I trod these streets --- oops! Checking that out it's actually only just over three. Felt like six though! --- but I did need the break: I had explained that I felt tired and burned-out, overstressed and overworked, and was losing, or had lost, my incentive, inspiration and passion for my journal. So I stepped back for a while, to recharge my batteries, which were almost in the last vestiges of red, about to shut me down automatically. For the first week or two I did nothing music-related. I wrote nothing, listened to only a little music, planned nothing. I did other stuff. But you can't keep a good journal author down, and soon I was listening to music and watching TV with ideas forming already. Even though I knew I was not yet anywhere near ready to go back, I was formulating reviews. When I listened to an album, I was thinking about how or if I would write it up, when I watched a telly programme or movie I was considering including it in The Couch Potato. It wasn't long, therefore, before against all my own intentions I began writing again. I guess, as the caption says, it's in the blood. You either enjoy doing this or you don't, and if you do, you find it really (and I mean really) hard to stop. Though this time I could write without the added pressure of a) having to meet self-imposed deadlines and b) dealing with other MB-related material. It was quite liberating: I was able to write what I wanted, when I wanted, and stop when I needed to. I had no eye on the clock, or calendar. As a result, I got quite a lot done. I was, in truth, planning to return around June, then July, but kept putting it off. Why? I just felt that once I stepped back into that grind I would be caught up in it all again, feel I had to meet targets and the pure enjoyment and pleasure of writing would be lost in the maelstrom of updates, posts and threads. And yet, there was no point in writing all this stuff and not posting it. And then there was Metal Month. I had already announced that last year's special on Heavy Metal, which ran from October 1 to October 31, was going to be an annual thing, and if I intended to stick to that then I needed to be back at the very latest for that. But I didn't want to leave it so tight. Metal Month was great fun, but the lead-up to it last year was almost as much fun, and I wanted to make sure I had plenty of time to signpost it. I'm writing for it now, and it should be, as the kids say (do they still say it?) epic. So I've decided to come back soon. Not quite yet: I still have work to do. But I'll definitely be back before you know it. There will be a few changes in my journals: I'm going to be doing less in-depth album reviews than I did previously (well, that's the plan anyway!) and I will no longer be using YouTube videos in those reviews. Basically, I feel that if my writing doesn't get across to you how I feel about the album, there's little point in using a video to illustrate my points. And anyway, anyone who really wants to check the artiste out can do so easily. Thanks to those who contacted me outside of the forum, and to those who “checked up on me”, especially Unknown Soldier and Janszoon, and of course both my equally lovely Jesses. Thanks as well to all who posted comments and messages of support here; it's really appreciated. (No Batlord, it's not gay...) I've had a good break and I'm ready to dive back in, so watch for me on the road, because one of these days very soon you'll see pale yellow headlights approaching over the hill, and the night air will be broken by the erratic honking of a battered old Ford Model T, signalling the return home of Trollheart... and I can't even drive! ![]() ![]()
__________________
Trollheart: Signature-free since April 2018 |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#5 (permalink) | |
Zum Henker Defätist!!
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Beating GNR at DDR and keying Axl's new car
Posts: 48,199
|
![]() ![]()
__________________
Quote:
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#6 (permalink) |
Born to be mild
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: 404 Not Found
Posts: 26,996
|
![]()
This .. this (sob) .. This is the most ... (sob) .. the most touching of all the tributes and messages here! I know ya missed me Batty: I sure missed you, ya big lug! C'mere! Gimme a hug, bro!
![]()
__________________
Trollheart: Signature-free since April 2018 |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#7 (permalink) |
Born to be mild
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: 404 Not Found
Posts: 26,996
|
![]()
Given to the wild --- Maccabees --- 2012 (Fiction)
![]() I’m notorious for buying albums on a whim, because I like the cover, title or because it just looks cool, but this album was one I had been hearing about, though without hearing any of the actual music. Seemed like a lot of people were putting it in their “pick of 2012”, and granted these were people I didn’t know, but even so I wondered was there anything to all this high praise, or would this turn out to be yet another overhyped boring generic album (hello, “Night visions”!), with people going mad about some band who would induce nothing but the deepest shades of meh in me? Only one way to find out. I was really quite amazed at what I found. Considering I have never heard of this band before, the level of quality and professionalism on this album just floored me. Every track just gets better as you listen to it, and there is no tipping point, no demarcation zone after which you can say well the album was great up to here but then it began to slide. It really doesn’t. Right up to the last track it holds the quality and keeps the attention, and the only real disappointment is that there are only thirteen tracks on it, because I would happily have listened to twice that. If there is any letdown at all --- and it’s a big if --- it’s in the opener, which really doesn’t count as it’s not even a track as such, not even an instrumental, just two minutes plus of mostly ambient sound, with deep organs and sound effects, and a sort of softly chanted vocal basically consisting of the title, leading us into the first track proper, where it all gets going. The title track actually segues in on some nice laidback guitar into “Child”, acquainting us with the vocals of Orlando Weeks, the smooth basswork of Rupert Jarvis and the understated but no less great fret style of Felix and Hugo White, while brother Will makes some great horns sounds on the keys. “Child” is a slow enough song, but something I found to be a trademark of the Maccabees, at least on this, their only album I’ve heard to date, is that slow songs often pick up in tempo near the end, as this one does, kicking out the stays and rocking along nicely, taking us into what was their second single. Amazingly to me, “Feel to follow” did stupendously badly in the charts, not even breaking into the top 100. It’s a great uptempo track with a fine piano backbone, great vocal harmonies and a real sense of northern soul in it, with an infectious chorus. Halfway through it winds down for a few seconds before coming back strongly on the back of the Whites’ superb guitar work and some excellent percussion from Sam Doyle. This should have been at least a top ten single, and I could not tell you why this didn’t happen. In fact, none of their singles did well it would seem, but since when was that a hallmark of a good album? “Ayla” then dances along an a totally catchy rippling piano line and a hook to die for. Weeks is in fine form on this, and again though released as a single it seems to have bombed. Another uptempo song, it rocks along with real purpose and features a little less of the guitar work from the White brothers, letting the keys come more to the fore, with some quite heavy percussion working almost in counterpoint. It’s the sort of song you’re still singing long after it’s finished, and we head towards “Glimmer”, with a really nice drum opening and some chimy guitar that kind of reminds me of Simple Minds at their best. Good slice of classic Prefab Sprout in there too, some really bright keyboards peppering the tune, then one of my favourite tracks on the album is “Forever I’ve known”, a big, bouncy rocker with bags of enthusiasm and energy, though it starts off more like something out of Tom Waits’ catalogue, with screeching, howling guitars and echoey percussion, a slow laidback vocal, sort of a feeling of Native American melody about it before it picks up in about the third minute, the ease with which the previously somewhat discordant screeching guitar melds in with the melody and complements it truly impressive. A real example of a song building up to something special. A guitar reminiscent of The Edge takes over then as the percussion gets stronger and more insistent, as it all falls back in the fourth minute on soft keyboard, coming back in on single guitar notes before the whole band punches back in to take the song to its powerful and energetic conclusion. Superb, a real standout. And they just keep coming, with “Heave” up next, introduced on a strings-style keyboard from Will White, a slow instrumental intro almost Floydesque in places, a soulful, almost mournful vocal from Weeks tearing at your heartstrings. It seems to be hard to know when you can class a song by these guys as a ballad, but “Heave” does seem to fit the bill, soft, shimmering percussion and lush keyboard supported by little guitar riffs, but then it kicks up in the third minute and becomes a pretty different animal. Certainly nobody could call this band predictable. “Pelican” was the lead single, relatively well known I believe even though it also fell flat on its face chartwise, and it’s very much an upbeat song, with the lyric sung three times each line, so you get ”Before you know it, before you know it, before you know it/ You’re pushing up the daisies.” Probably one of the hardest rock tracks on the album, it’s driven on sharp guitar work from the Whites, with growling bass from Jarvis and punchy drumwork, the vocal almost African chant in nature in places. The beat really picks up in the third minute as the song goes into overdrive, and if you can keep your feet and fingers from tapping while listening to this, you’re a better man than I am! Another fast song then is “Went away”, though it starts off low-key enough, with simple synth lines and Weeks’ vocal sounding very much like Ricky Ross (no, not him! The one from Deacon Blue!), then guitars and drums launch in as the intensity of the track increases. Like so many of The Maccabees’ songs, this gets dialled back for a moment before it comes storming back with a huge finish, keyboards and guitar joining, as the drums punch it forward and Weeks’ voice strengthens and gets more passionate, the tempo upping near the end then abruptly stopping, as what surely must be a drum machine brings in “Go” with sampler keyboards before they’re supplemented by heavier synth lines and joined by strong guitar from the White brothers. A tale of, I think, love trying to survive against the odds, it’s a vocal full of fire and passion from Orlando Weeks, and a nice little bass solo from Rupert Jarvis, with a big powerful punch of an ending. An atmospheric synth melody then draws in “Unknow”, which features Catherine Pockson from The Alpines on vocals, Weeks’ own vocal returning almost to the keening, moaning style of the opener. The Whites power the song along on their twin guitars while the rhythm section lays down the backbone of the track along which Weeks winds his way vocally. Another hard powerful rocking track, it has some of the strongest guitar on the album, but Pockson is I feel somewhat wasted on it, being relegated to the background mostly. It’s not really till the last minute or so that she gets her chance to shine, and then she does extremely well. “Slowly one” is a much more low-key affair, almost an acapella opening, Weeks supported only by soft guitar on a sort of motown-ish vocal. It’s not till about halfway through that the song comes properly to life on the back of some wah-wah guitar and a powerful seventies-style keyboard. Nice sung instrumental ending (if you know what I mean; and if you don't, listen to the album!) with some great vocal harmonies. “Grew up at midnight” ends the album, and like much of the work I’ve listened to here from this band it starts off slow but then really gets going. With a sort of church organ keys start, and a falsetto vocal, it seems to be a remembrance of youth and first love, picking up a little after the first minute but it doesn’t really hit its stride until nearly the third minute, with a big shouted chorus and a powerful guitar ending, then cutting off right at the end to return to the muted keys sound and end the album close to how it began. TRACKLISTING 1. Given to the wild (intro) 2. Child 3. Feel to follow 4. Ayla 5. Glimmer 6. Forever I’ve known 7. Heave 8. Pelican 9. Went away 10. Go 11. Unknow 12. Slowly one 13. Grew up at midnight It’s always gratifying to try something and find you really like it. This is even truer when it comes to music, because usually --- though not always --- this can lead to further new enjoyment as you then seek out the artiste’s other work. I haven’t done that yet, but this is The Maccabees’ third album, so I’m definitely going to take a look at what they did prior to this. Just proves that sometimes hype can be correct, and also that just because your singles flop it doesn’t mean that your album isn’t worth listening to. This went down, I think, as one of my top albums of 2012, or if not, that was only because I listened to it after I had already compiled my list. It’s certainly getting into my alltime top albums though, as this is one album that, no matter how many times I listen to it I still enjoy it, and in fact, sometimes relistening to it just reminds me how damn good it is.
__________________
Trollheart: Signature-free since April 2018 |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#8 (permalink) |
Just Keep Swimming...
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: See signature...
Posts: 7,765
|
![]()
Good to see you (almost) back. You know... there's a 12 day (all 552 episodes) Simpsons marathon on FXX (an American cable channel) going on right now. Everytime they have an episode with CMB, I can't help but think of TH.
__________________
See location... |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#9 (permalink) | ||
Certified H00d Classic
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Bernie Sanders's yacht
Posts: 6,129
|
![]() ![]()
__________________
Anteater's 21 Fav Albums Of 2020 Anteater's Daily Tune Roulette Quote:
Quote:
|
||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#10 (permalink) | |
Horribly Creative
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: London, The Big Smoke
Posts: 8,265
|
![]()
Good to see you back on here, interested to see what stuff you'll be reviewing.
![]()
__________________
Quote:
Power Metal Pounding Decibels- A Hard and Heavy History |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|