Archive: Fiery Furnaces

So here it is at last, my top ten. As always, you’ll have to press play every 30 seconds on the audio clips.

10. Franz Ferdinand — The Fallen / L. Wells

Okay, so this isn’t an album, but did you want me to call this post “my ten favourite albums and / or singles and / or EPs and / or whatever else of 2006″? What a mouthful. Anyway, I’m usually kind of lukewarm about Franz Ferdinand. The hype that surrounds them is a bit off-putting really, but you have to admit that they make quite a lot of good music.

All singles should be like this. The band called it a “quintuple a-side” (although the CD I own only has four tracks, hmm…). All of the tracks were of a high quality; not the sub-standard b-sides that are often slapped onto a CD single. The most glorious moment is the incredible remix of ‘The Fallen’ by Justice. Brilliant stuff.

What I wrote about it at the time

9. TV on the Radio — Return to Cookie Mountain

Some people have said that they are surprised that I like this album. I don’t know why they should be. There are some fine songs on here, demonstrating that you a good song can be sonically interesting. Opener ‘I Was a Lover’ takes the crown in that regard. Not every song is a winner. There are some quite boring moments, like the collaboration with David Bowie, ‘Province’. Still, the quality of the album overall is still good enough to keep me happy.

8. Steve Reich — Different Trains

This is the CD released by Black Box in 2006. I bought this before I knew of the Phases box set, and I had wanted to hear this for a while so I couldn’t resist really. Luckily enough, I much prefer this performance to the one on Phases. The Duke Quartet’s performance is more passionate than The Kronos Quartet’s rather clinical approach.

This CD also includes ‘Piano Phase’, Steve Reich’s first phase piece that wasn’t for tapes. There is also ‘String Quartet No. 2′ by Marc Mellits, whom I confess to never having heard of before. But it is a very pleasant piece of music indeed. I particularly like the jauntier fun bits in ‘Mara’s Toys’.

7. Matthew Friedberger — Winter Women / Holy Ghost Language School

For how long can Matthew Friedberger churn out such fantastic music at such an alarmingly fast rate? Already committed to making at least an album a year with The Fiery Furnaces, Mr Friedberger has moved into making solo albums. Apparently this is because he is scared of forgetting how to make music. I’m not complaining.

The Fiery Furnaces tend to attract mixed reviews, so you should be warned that this is just like The Fiery Furnaces but with their idiosyncrasies amplified still further. It does feel a bit wrong without Eleanor Friedberger though. Mind you, it also reminds me of Eels’ more recent material. Maybe it’s the fact that it’s a double album, or all of the mellotrons.

This double album hasn’t attracted as much attention as Bitter Tea. I’m not really sure why that should be, because it is almost as good if you ask me.

6. Jarvis — The Jarvis Cocker Record

Another accomplished musician taking his first steps into the world of the solo career. This album is probably exactly what you would expect from Jarvis in this stage of his career. At first I thought it was quite similar to Pulp’s last album, We Love Life. But over time I’ve spotted bits of older Pulp, and lots of bits that are plain new to Cocker’s sound.

Sonically, it is not all that adventurous. But Jarvis Cocker shouldn’t be, because his strength is in brilliant songwriting. And there is plenty of that here. Although I predict this to be a grower, not every song is as great as you’d hope. But four or five of these songs are irresistibly enjoyable. ‘Don’t Let Him Waste Your Time’ is a fine choice for a first single.

Meanwhile ‘Fat Children’ is a delightfully angry song about society, where fat children take your life because “the police force was elsewhere, putting bullets in some guy’s head for no particular reason”.

5. Squarepusher — Hello Everything

How much better can this man get? Hello Everything was well-positioned to be a damp squib. The expectations following the utterly outstanding Ultravisitor were high. But if anything, Tom Jenkinson has improved.

Maybe the album as a whole isn’t on a par with Ultravisitor. But watching the videos of him performing ‘Hello Meow’ and on the BBC’s The Culture Show, I am convinced that Jenkinson must be one of the best musicians on the planet, full stop. It would be enough if he just did the electronic stuff, but with the bass added in it’s just mind-boggling.

I quite liked the cosmic sound of this album, on tracks like ‘Planetarium’ and ‘Circlewave 2′. The b-sides to the Welcome to Europe single were also top-drawer stuff. How much better can Squarepusher get?

What I wrote about it at the time

4. Team Doyobi — The Kphanapic Fragments

Once again, I am left wondering if I’m the only person in the world who likes Team Doyobi this much. This was definitely the album that I looked forward to the most all year, and it was very frustrating to see the release date being moved back so often. I’m sure it was originally meant to come out in March or April. It was never seen until mid-November.

Still, it was well worth the wait as Team Doyobi took their music another stage further. While the bold 8-bit-style electronics are still there in full force, it is mixed in with a much denser, darker sound. The first two tracks are fairly proggy affairs, lasting fifteen minutes each. These two tracks take up half of the album!

But the Team proves that they haven’t forgotten how to have fun as the best moment comes with ‘Thus Jacked Zarathrusta’. Here is your robot music indeed! What an epic. The end result for the album as a whole is a more mature progression on their familiar sound, but one that isn’t all that alien to what we’re used to from them. A tricky balancing act accomplished. Apparently their next album is already just about finished. I can’t wait to hear what they’ve got in store.

3. Scott Walker — The Drift

I like this album so much because it sounds like Scott Walker has actually put some effort into making this a good album. In a year when so many of my favourite bands have put in so-so efforts, it is so refreshing to hear this.

It’s meant to be difficult to get into. So people keep on saying anyway. But I don’t think his music is much more difficult than, say, Björk’s. Still, it’s hardly a barrel of laughs. At times it is a downright unpleasant listen. It sometimes seems as though he’s written the lyrics to be as dirty-sounding as possible, with his talk of “the pee pee soaked trousers” to take just one example.

The music is just masterful though. It’s so good to hear somebody being genuinely experimental. Why aren’t there more musicians like this?

2. Grizzly Bear — Yellow House

This was the big surprise of the year for me. I expected this to be a so-so album at best. I downloaded ‘On A Neck, On A Spit’ and I was unimpressed at first. A few days later I had a song stuck in my head. It was amazing. But I couldn’t for the life of me work out what the song was. It was one of those moments where I actually began to wonder, “Did I write that myself?” But it turned out, of course, to be ‘On A Neck, On A Spit’. A delightful grower — a beautiful song with a bit of a cheeky streak.

Well that was it. I had to buy the album now. And once again I was slightly disappointed. But once again I was won over by repeat listens. It is impossible not to just sit back and enjoy the music. This album has achieved the rare feat of getting me relaxed on train journeys. It is a basic idea: simple, pleasant songwriting. It’s pulled off masterfully.

The peak of this album is reached with ‘Marla’. It is deceptive. On the surface it sounds like this studio is haunted. But delving deeper, you discover that it’s perhaps the most beautiful and gentle song on the album.

What I wrote about it at the time

1. The Fiery Furnaces — Bitter Tea

It says something about the state of music this year — at least the music I’ve heard this year — that Bitter Tea has topped my list. It is true that when this album was released, I wrote an effusive review that predicted that this would turn out to be my favourite album of the year.

But this does not come close to being The Fiery Furnaces’ best album. My biggest complaint is that it doesn’t really feel like a complete album. It just starts, quite suddenly, with ‘In My Little Thatched Hut’, which feels more like it should have been in the middle of the album.

But what am I doing, criticising such a fine album? I should be glad that The Fiery Furnaces exist at all. They are one of the most unique bands around at the moment. How could you fail to fall in love with their clattering pianos and antique synthesisers? Well, quite easily actually — but not if you’re me. The point is that fans of The Fiery Furnaces will find everything they want here.

What I said about it at the time

There’s an interesting interview in Pitchfork with Matthew Friedberger from The Fiery Furnaces. The Fiery Furnaces are one of my favourite bands at the moment. I’m so glad that a crazy band like that can exist.

Friedberger comes across as a little bit weird in the interview. By that I mean he seems very dogmatic. He has a lot of strong views about how a record should and shouldn’t be made. But I think a lot of what he says makes perfect sense, and I agree with a lot of it.

I kind of get Friedberger’s point about rock operas aswell (although I am more comfortable with the idea of the concept album rather than the rock opera). The idea that an album is almost more important than the songs on it is one that I go along with. If I listen to music, it’s almost always an album as a whole, and not individual tracks. I don’t understand people who just set iTunes on shuffle and have tracks playing at random. How can you be bothered with the style completely changing every five minutes?

Freidberger also mentions that scary R Kelly hip-hopera. So it must be real.

Pitchfork: …I find it interesting that the response to your music is usually pretty extreme one way or the other; people tend to either really love your music or really hate it. Do you have any thoughts on why your music has such a divisive effect?

MF: Because we try to make it good! Other people try to make records that sound like another record, you know? That’s the reason why: To try to make it good and legitimate. To have it not sound like another record, we have to be different from the records we like in one direction or another.

Pitchfork: You often completely rearrange your songs for live performance, what’s the motivation or inspiration behind that?

MF: It’s the proper thing to do, I think. Why do you want to come and see the record live? I don’t understand that. I heard somebody say — I can’t remember what the song was– but Ray Davies did a song in “a terrible blues-rock way” and butchered it, but that’s exciting to me when people butcher their songs. You get something new out of it!

I don’t often attend gigs because I usually find myself thinking, ‘why do I want to spend £20 to stand in an audience of morons spilling beer all over me when I could just listen to the album?’ I really like the attitude that The Fiery Furnaces have to playing live. Radiohead do the same thing with their songs from Kid A and Amnesiac, completely reinterpreting them for a live environment. It’s like getting two songs for the price of one. (I still wouldn’t go to see Radiohead though, you have to be rich / crazy to do that sort of thing.)

The Fiery Furnaces - Bitter Tea Every time I buy a new record by The Fiery Furnaces, I’m never quite sure what to expect. They have quite a madcap sound and tracks constantly change in direction, which is sure to keep you on your toes. Despite this, though, their sound remains remarkably consistent from album to album (give or take the odd grandmother here and there). You certainly know it if you’re listening to The Fiery Furnaces.

A lot of people have said to me that they don’t understand why I like them, but it makes perfect sense to me. The Fiery Furnaces are one of my favourite bands, but I’ll admit that it’s perhaps an acquired taste. There probably aren’t many albums more polarising than ‘Rehearsing My Choir’. I say polarising, although I really mean that I bloody loved it and everybody else hated it.

I have to confess, though, that parts of ‘Rehearsing My Choir’ were a struggle to get into, particularly given Olga Sanatos’ rather off-putting voice. That is one advantage of The Fiery Furnaces’ new album, ‘Bitter Tea’. It is immediate. By the third listen I had rated every single track 5/5 on iTunes. It normally takes weeks for any album to do that for me. Of course, ratings may go down as well as up, but I really don’t see that happening. I simply can’t stop listening to this album. [Cliche alert] I would even go as far as to say that some tracks are instant classics.

So what’s in it? Well I said above that The Fiery Furnaces’ sound is very recognisable. But it does seem to gain a little extra depth as each album goes, and the particular characteristic of ‘Bitter Tea’ is lots of stuff (especially vocals) going backwards. At points you may as well be listening to it backwards.

A particularly dizzying track is ‘Nevers’ (where, incidentally, their familiar wordplay is probably most evident on this album), which almost starts off like an audio equivalent of a strobe light. You can just about follow it if you read the lyrics along with it, but where’s the fun in that? Other early favourites of mine include ‘Oh Sweet Woods’, with its gentle dance beat backing an immense wonky piano riff. There is also ‘Benton Harbor Blues’ — quite a sad song set to a driving and delightfully psychedelic Magic Roundabout-style tune.

The Fiery Furnaces in action! I have to assure you that each and every track on this album is a winner. I just don’t understand how The Fiery Furnaces do it. There are only two of them (one of whom seems to carry the vast majority of songwriting responsibilities), yet they are churning these albums out at the rate of more than one per year. We’re only a quarter of the way through the year, and Matthew Friedberger apparently has a solo album lined up for later this year. You would think that quality control would be out of the window, but it definitely isn’t.

If I would have one complaint about ‘Bitter Tea’ it would be that it doesn’t quite feel rounded as an album. Although there is fantastic flow through the album, any of these tracks could have been the opener. ‘In My Little Thatched Hut’ is a fantastic track, but it doesn’t feel like the introduction to a fantastic album.

‘Whistle Rhapsody’ may be a brilliant closing track, except it’s not. Before the album is allowed to end we are treated to reprises of ‘Nevers’ and ‘Benton Harbor Blues’. I’m not really sure why — I’ve not been able to find out. Both of these reprises could be seen as stripped-back versions of the tracks that appear in the middle (really towards the end) of the album.

The reprise of ‘Nevers’ is certainly simpler, without the dizzying vocals of the original. The reprise of ‘Benton Harbor Blues’, meanwhile, is more flowing and doesn’t stall like the original. They might be a clue as to what they would sound like if they tried to be more radio-friendly. Then again, they might not. Who knows? The result of including these reprises is to make the album fizzle away with little fanfare. Even the closing fade happens quickly!

However, I should complain about the inclusion of magnificent songs, even if they are for a second time. Any negatives are very minor points. The bottom line here is that I love this album. It might not be quite as good as ‘Blueberry Boat‘, but that’s quite a high bar. As things stand, I will be amazed if a better album comes out this year.

I tried to bugger off yesterday, but you won’t leave me alone. For I’ve been tagged!

List seven songs you are into right now. No matter what the genre, whether they have words, or even if they are any good, but they must be songs you are really enjoying now. Post these instructions in your blog along with your seven songs. Then tag seven other people to see what they are listening to.

Okay then.

  • Diplo — Into the Sun — I got this album at Christmas, and this track, along with another one called ‘Sarah’, hit me immediately as one of the best things I had ever heard, which doesn’t happen often these days
  • Jackson and His Computer Band (feat. Mike Ladd) — TV Dogs (Cathodica’s Letter) — from one of my very favourite albums of last year; I still listen to it several times a week. Cool, groovy, dense, and chopped up a la Prefuse 73
  • Hot Chip — Beach Party — I saw their new one on E4 Music today and really wanted to hear this stylish song again
  • Gelg — some of the music used on ‘Look Around You’ is really cool. The Boards of Canada influence comes across really strongly
  • Why? — Act Five — don’t really know why I like this one so much
  • The Fiery Furnaces — Seven Silver Curses — I greatly admire this band. I think they are the closest comparison to Radiohead you can come up with, in the sense that they could easily have been safe indie darlings for their whole career. But they refused to, instead alienating the pants-wetting guitar-shaggers and going all electric, eclectic and generally weird
  • The New Pornographers — These are the Fables — and to round it off, some pants-wetting guitar music

Who do I tag? Whoever wants it.