The Independent

BEST OF THE REST

Andy Gill checks out new releases by Bon Iver, Van Morrison,Yello, Pixies, Usher and Regina Spektor

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Bon Iver, 22, A Million ★★★★☆ Download: 29# Strafford APTS; 8 (circle); 21 M♢♢N WATER

There’s an intensely private quality about 22, A Million that makes it initially hard to penetrate. Everything about it – from the track titles with their weird symbols, to the glitchy pulses and sketchy saxes, to Justin Vernon’s vocals, autotuned or hiding in falsetto register – seems designed to confound interest in personal matters. “22 (OVER S∞∞N)” opens with the line “It might be over soon”, a phrase freighted with unbearable pressure, and the album continues accordingl­y, with largely impervious lyrics throwing off troubling lines – “I’ve been caught in fire”, “Toying with your blood, I remember something.” But as the album progresses, it becomes more accommodat­ing. A gentle piano ballad stained with strings, “29# Strafford APTS” is the most affecting piece here, while multi-layered harmonies bring strange grandeur to “8 (circle)”: it’s like the baring of a soul as triumphal conquest.

Van Morrison, Keep Me Singing

★★★☆☆ Download: Let It Rhyme; In Tiburon; Going Down To Bangor

Right from the opening “Let It Rhyme”, with its acquiescen­t tone conveyed by a gentle collusion of organ, pedal steel and harmonica, Keep Me Singing presents an unusually relaxed Van Morrison. There’s something of the warmth and fulfilment of Tupelo Honey about the album generally, while Morrison’s languid reflection­s on the twists and turns of fate in “Memory Lane” and “Out In The Cold Again” recall the thoughtful mood of “Wild Children”. Even the now standard gripe about misreprese­ntation, “The Pen Is Mightier Than The Sword”, is delivered in unexpected­ly amenable manner; while the toughest track musically is “Going Down To Bangor”, a gritty blues in the vein of “Goin’ Down Slow”. Elsewhere, “In Tiburon” is a wistful paean to San Francisco’s bohemian past, with namechecks for sundry beat poets, Lenny Bruce and Chet Baker, the latter sweetly evoked through a muted trumpet solo.

Yello, Toy ★★★★☆ Download: Limbo; Pacific AM; 30,000 Days; Dark Side

Compared to the brutal utilitaria­n EDM of American dancefloor­s, there’s a sleek, stylish, timeless quality about Yello’s brand of electropop. Bookended by “Frau Tomium”, a bleep-tastic tribute to electronic pioneer Oskar Sala, Toy could have come from any time in Yello’s career, so resilient are their tropes. “Limbo” is exemplary, a light, punchy piece with Dieter Meier’s basso profundo murmur anchoring Boris Blank’s springy synthesise­d backdrop; while at the opposite extreme, Blank employs harp, synthetic woodwind and dramatic percussion for the atmospheri­c “Pacific AM”, a brilliantl­y evocative vista akin to gazing across an exotic jungle valley. Several guest singers augment Meier’s musings on mind and mortality, the best of which is “30,000 Days”, a classic Yello electro-noir Latin shuffle that finds him wondering, “I’m looking deep into my time – what have I done, and why?”. Good question.

Pixies, Head Carrier ★★★☆☆ Download this: Head Carrier; Classic Masher; Might As Well Be Gone Head Carrier is an altogether more convincing affair than 2014’s comeback album Indie Cindy, the

intervenin­g months of roadwork having helped relocate the band’s classic mode. The title track is typical, with Joey Santiago’s lead guitar squirrelli­ng inventivel­y around Black Francis’s dark chording, whilst the lyric “You can’t be too zen/I’m going down the drain again” captures the dialectic of droll hipster bathos. New bassist Paz Lenchantin’s cute harmonies polish the pop sheen of “Classic Masher”, and Francis’s trademark hoarse scream brands “Baal’s Back”; elsewhere, his wry sense of humour adds a hubristic edge to the enervated “Might As Well Be Gone”: “You’re the chosen one/But I could do with a change”. Real life, rather than sci-fi surrealism, pokes its way into the sardonic dig at A&R, “Talent”, and the urgent, scuttling road song “Um Chagga Lagga”.

Usher, Hard II Love

★★★★☆ Download: Need U; Missin U; No Limit; Make U A Believer

Appearing a full two years after its first scheduled release date, Usher’s Hard II Love represents his attempt to regain his R&B crown from Canadian usurpers such as Drake and The Weeknd. Indeed, the protracted delay may be due to his fashioning a more contempora­ry sound, comparable with theirs. Whatever he’s done, it’s worked a treat: tracks like “No Limit” and “Need U”, with their miasmic, swirling synths and pulsing vibrato effects, epitomise modern boudoir-soul, as Usher slips effortless­ly between warm caresses and pleading falsetto. The battalions of backroom studio staff ensure a range of musical interest, from the Steely Dan chords and textures of “Missin U” to the surging synth buzz of “Crash”; and if there’s any doubting Usher’s commitment to romance, in “Make U A Believer” he even promises to switch off his cellphone – surely the greatest of modern sacrifices?

Regina Spektor, Remember Us To Life

★★★☆☆ Download: Bleeding Heart; Older And Taller; Black And White; Obsolete

Though often compared to Tori Amos, on Remember Us To Life Regina Spektor exhibits stronger affinities with Randy Newman, thanks to a turn of phrase often leaning towards the ironic, and a deceptive worldview that, like the sardonic string arrangemen­ts and ominous piano settings, gives most of these songs a slightly sour sting in the tail. Which is just right for an album themed around the bitter lessons of maturity, whose protagonis­ts are either offering advice to young square-peg loners, as in “Bleeding Heart”, or permanentl­y scarred by memories. In “Black And White”, she acknowledg­es how “you will always start to cry” when looking at certain old photograph­s, while the dispiritin­g renewed acquaintan­ceship of “Older And Taller” prompts the cynical observatio­n “‘Enjoy your youth’ sounds like a threat”, salvaging selfrespec­t by adding, “but I will, anyway”. Good advice, however late it’s learnt.

These reviews appeared in yesterday’s Independen­t Daily Edition

 ??  ?? From cover to titles to lyrics, Bon Iver’s latest album ‘22, A Million’ is designed to confound
From cover to titles to lyrics, Bon Iver’s latest album ‘22, A Million’ is designed to confound

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