Author: Paul

  • Music Jar – week 39

    Each week, I get to listen to one artist I haven’t previously taken the time with. This week was the turn of Seattle’s very own, Pearl Jam.

    What I Knew Before
    It goes without saying that I knew of Pearl Jam. It’s impossible to make it through thirty-three years without knowing Alive and Jeremy (thanks Kerrang TV) or Even Flow (thanks Guitar Hero 3). I also recognised a lot of album covers from my days of trawling through the 4 for £20 section of Fives in Rayleigh in search of new/old music in my ferocious youth.

    What I Know Now
    Pearl Jam are a different beast. They offer thirty years of incredible music with pointed and painted guitar riffs and the pained and beautiful vocals of Eddie Vedder. What I didn’t know is that almost all of the current band are the founding members, something that for the time they were coming up is increasingly rare. They cite a number of 60s rock bands as influences which explains why it felt so wonderful and familiar to delve into their back catalog.
    My understanding is that they shaped the way for a lot of bands who followed, and set the scene for Seattle to be heralded in the way that it is.

    Favourite songs
    Yellow Ledbetter, Just Breathe, Elderly Woman Behind the Counter in a Small Town, Once, Even Flow, Alive.

    Favourite album
    I really enjoyed Vs. amd Vitalogy, but Ten is without doubt one of the greatest rock albums of all time and takes the lead.

    Spotify my favourite songs from this project. 

  • Music Jar – week 38

    One Man. One Jar. Not that one.
    Each week, I take the name of an artist from a pickle jar and listen to their back catalogue. This week was the turn of American indie folk group, Lord Huron.

    What I Knew Before
    Absolutely nothing. I hadn’t heard a note. I didn’t know the name. They were, in fact, a recommendation. You may know their song The Night We Met from the highly problematic Netflix show, 13 Reasons Why. I did not.

    What I Know Now
    Lord Huron are a four-piece band from Los Angeles. They have three albums, only two of which are available on Spotify. The Night We Met has been streamed over 500 million times.
    I don’t know how they had passed me by until this point. They have a real Fleet Foxes sound, which is very much in my wheelhouse.

    Favourite songs:
    When the Night is Over, Ends of the Earth, Harvest Moon, Love Like Ghosts.

    Favourite album:
    Vide Noir

  • Music Jar – week 37

    Each week, I listen to a musician that I don’t know enough about.
    This week was the turn of country singer-songwriter, Kacey Musgraves.

    What I Knew Before
    I knew the name, because two of my favourite women are big fans of her work but I had never really heard much of her music. I knew she must have been a big deal (owing to her six Grammies) but I had never taken the time to listen to the Texan raven.

    What I Know Now
    Hot damn, does Musgraves know how to put a song together. Each album is better than the last and I include her two (yes, two) Christmas albums. I kept finding melodies stuck in my head and could only get them out by listening to Slow Burn once more. She’s really done a number on me.
    I have also discovered that she recently divorced her husband, which is obviously awful, but does mean that we will get a great Kacey Musgraves album soon.

    Favourite songs:
    Slow Burn, Merry Go ‘Round, Rainbow, High Time and Space Cowboy.

    Favourite Album: 
    Golden Hour

  • Music Jar – week 36

    Each week, I listen to a band or artist that I’ve never really taken the time to understand before. The list of contenders was compiled by recommendations from friends and my own shame.
    This week was the turn of Australian pop/rock sex rockets, INXS.

    What I Knew Before
    When I was sixteen years old, I bought the director’s cut of Donnie Darko on DVD. In one of the opening scenes, as young Donnie is riding home after waking up on the local golf course, Never Tear Us Apart plays. To the best of my knowledge, that was the first time I had heard INXS. For a long time, I liked that song but didn’t know anything more.
    I was later made aware of Michael Hutchence but through a cruel mention of the circumstances in which he passed and the tabloid furore around his relationship with Paula and therefore with Bob. That was about as far as my knowledge went.

    What I Know Now
    There is a lot more INXS music than I had ever considered. In a career spanning, twenty years, they released ten studio albums. After Hutchence passed, a further two albums were released. There is also a lot more to the band than the beautiful frontman and the junk press stories about his personal life. There’s a lot going on musically, shared between the six friends from Sydney, New South Wales. There’s a real funk to the way they played together and the breadth and depth of Hutchence lyrics is not something I had considered before.
    Convinced by enough women with absolute heart-eyes for Hutchence, I also watched the 2019 documentary, Mystify. I had misjudged so much about the band and about Michael’s incredible abilities as a singer, a poet and one of the most beautiful people to have ever existed. I was completely won over and realised that everything I knew about him had come third-hand and via the press who vilified him.
    There are a lot of great INXS songs and they were hung out to dry on any number of occasions, leading to this general malaise and a slip from where they should be heralded.

    Favourite songs:
    Never Tear Us Apart, Don’t Change, Need You Tonight, Mystify.

    Favourite album:
    It’s got to be Kick, right?

    Spotify my favourite songs from this project. 

    Watch the trailer for Mystify:

  • Music Jar – week 35

    Each week I listen to an artist or band that I should really have known more about. Now is the time for Washington-born rock band, Death Cab for Cutie.

    What I Knew Before
    I’m going to take you back. The year is 2008. You’re sat in a Ford Fiesta spinning the wheel of your iPod (bought with a tax rebate from your summer job in a Wetherspoons), connected by an auxiliary lead to the tape deck. That morning you’ve downloaded Zane Lowe’s Top 10, the best source for your indie and rock needs. He keeps playing the same thirty seconds of a song called Cath… You realise that you should definitely know more about this song and this album and this band so you ask your friend Marc to risk the structural integrity of his desktop computer by torrenting it for you. He does so and you fall in love with Narrow Stairs as an album but never venture any further.
    That’s what I know about Death Cab for Cutie.

    What I Know Now
    DCfC are still making music today and from their early days to now, there’s a wonder and a consistency to it. Their late 90s tone has an In The Aeroplane Over The Sea quality to it but they quickly grew out of it. There’s a lot to be said for Ben Gibbard’s lyrical style which I appreciated more after listening to The Postal Service ad nauseam when someone I fancied told me they liked them.
    When Death Cab came out of the Music Jar for this week, Marc sent me a list of their best albums and then told me which I would specifically enjoy. Not only was he correct but now we have to burn him as a witch. I’m slowly learning that he might have been right about all music from the start, but I still don’t rate Billy Talent.
    Some of you may know DCfC for Meet Me on the Equinox. I bet you’re all Team Jacob as well, you absolute wasters.

    Favourite songs: 
    The Ice Is Getting Thinner, Cath…, I Will Possess Your Heart, I Will Follow You Into The Dark, Transatlanticism, Soul Meets Body, 60 & Punk.

    Favourite album:
    My favourite album will always be Narrow Stairs but I was really impressed by Transatlanticism, Codes and Keys and Thank You for Today.

    Spotify my favourite songs from this project. 

  • Music Jar – week 34

    Like my forefathers before me, I am spending each week listening to a musical artist that I had previously ignored, and writing up a little blog about it.
    This week was the turn of Illinois export, Fall Out Boy.

    What I Knew Before
    It’s hard to have grown up in the noughties without having an idea about FOB (as they are unaffectionally referred to). With their overly complex song titles, habit of spinning around in circles like dogs chasing their tails and that photo of bassist Pete Wentz getting his dick out in a mirror selfie, it’s hard not to remember them. The problem was that they weren’t cool enough for me at the time. The kind of people who were listening to FOB were most likely into other “emo” bands that I had no time for. I found them crass and whiney and overly American. That said, Thnks fr th Mmrs will always be a banger

    What I Know Now
    Like the week I spent listening to MCR (My Chemical Romance), I have learnt that I am occasionally wrong. I shut myself off to a lot because I didn’t have a dyed black, GHD’d fringe in 2005. While starting out Take This To Your Grave was a tough way to break myself in, by the time I had listened to From Under The Cork Tree and Infinity On High, I had realised that I was wrong. Fall Out Boy were and are big news because they write fucking great songs.
    There’s a lot to be said for albums two and three, but the run of Fall Out Boy continues, and I, for one, am here for it.

    Best songs:
    Sugar, We’re Goin Down, Thnks fr th Mmrs, Nobody Puts Baby In The Corner, Disloyal Order of Water Buffaloes

    Best album:
    Under The Cork Tree

    Spotify my favourite songs from this project. 

  • Music Jar – week 33

    Each week, I dig into the back catalog of a band or artist that I should know an awful lot more about. This week was the turn of LA rock band, The Distillers.

    What I Knew Before
    I had heard the big songs. Who can forget the video for City Of Angels, but that’s a far cry from knowing about the three albums from Brody Dalle and her band.
    I was also aware of elements of her personal life, and her position as a muse to both Tim Armstrong (of Rancid) and Josh Homme (of Queens of the Stone Age, Them Crooked Vultures).  Understandably, I had a crush on Dalle, who, with wild eyeliner, a lip piercing and tattoos, was exactly what a teenage Paul Schiernecker was into.

    What I Know Now
    A 33-year-old Paul Schiernecker is still very much into Brody Dalle and very much into The Distillers. For a young woman to front a band that she is writing or co-writing the vast majority of material for was and unfortunately still is an unusual thing. There’s something very cool that Dalle was doing, and from my social media stalking, is still doing. After The Distillers split, she formed Spinnerette and released an album alongside former Distillers guitarist, Tony Bevilacqua before releasing a solo album in 2014. My thanks to Si Deaves for turning me onto Spinnerette.
    There is a ruthless punk attitude to their music, even in the radio-friendlier takes on Coral Fang, that is truly missing from a lot of other bands and music. It’s clear why they made the impact that they did and how Dalle continues to ride high on that. Her vocals and her writing are something else.
    I can’t help but divulge the story my good friend Marc shared about the Walmart-friendly album cover of Coral Fang that was thrown into the mix when they refused to take the naked crucifixion cover (Google it).

    Favourite songs:
    City Of Angels is still the best, Ask The Angels, Drain The Blood and Beat Your Heart Out

    Favourite album:
    It has to be Sing Sing Death House.

    Spotify my favourite songs from this project. 

  • Music Jar – week 32

    Each week, I listen to an artist, someone I might have heard of but never took the opportunity to “get into”. This week was the turn of Detroit’s own, Melissa Viviane Jefferson, better known as Lizzo.

    What I Knew Before
    Lizzo is probably the artist on my list that I felt I was the closest to missing out on. I’d heard a number of her songs and knew that she was a woman with a powerful vocal range and a voice for topics. I had glimpsed her in the brilliant, Hustlers. I was also familiar with the line, “I just took a DNA test, turns out I’m 100% that bitch”. I’m sure we will all agree, highly relatable content there.

    What I Know Now
    Lizzo’s 2019 album, Cuz I Love You, is one of the most important albums to be delivered into the world in the last decade. Her songs have a dynamic range that is unlike anything else happening in modern music. She is an absolute force and I am thankful I’ve taken the time to educate myself on her.
    Lizzo released two more-hiphop focused albums earlier in her career, which were met with some critical acclaim but it was the arrival of the single Juice, and then her third album that brought her mainstream success.
    She is outspoken on body issues particularly for women in the public eye as well as being a supporter of the LGBTQ+ movement.
    She has played flute since she was a child. Her flute is named Sasha Flute.
    I could go on. She’s really something special.

    Favourite songs:
    It goes without saying that the songs of Lizzo’s that I was familiar with are the ones you would expect. They’ve gone viral through TikTok and they’re screamed in your face if you dare step into any club playing them. Feel free to correct me but I really like Good As Hell, Tempo, Juice and Truth Hurts. Cuz I Love You is a very strong opening track. When I first listened to the album, I felt my knees buckle at the absolute splendor of that track; it’s at once a 50’s bop and the best Bond theme you’ve never heard.

    Favourite album: It will come as no surprise that I am 100% that bitch. It’s got to be Cuz I Love You.

    Spotify my favourite songs from this project. 

  • Music Jar – week 31

    Each week, I pick a band or artist from a pickle jar and listen to them as much as possible. This week was the turn of London four-piece, The Big Moon.

    What I Knew Before
    I knew nothing of the band before this week. They were a recommendation from my friend Sarah when I told her I didn’t have enough female bands in my wheelhouse.

    What I Know Now
    The Big Moon have two studio albums, Love In The 4th Dimension and Walking Like You Do. They formed in 2014 and if it wasn’t for my inability to know anything about new bands (post 2012) then they would definitely have been a band I followed with a lot more interest.
    I’ve been into indie since my teens. For a long time, I knew everything that was hot, cool and young. Then I was no longer any of those things and I slowly lost my grip on the NME mantle. It could be argued that NME has done the same since. I’d like to think I’m linked to their decline.
    That aside, The Big Moon are cool as shit and you should listen to them.

    Favourite songs:
    ADHD, Your Light, Cupid, Sucker.

    Favourite album:
    Walking Like We Do.

    Spotify my favourite songs from this project. 

  • Music Jar – week 30

    Inspired by A Beautiful Mess, I started my own Music Jar of 52 artists I did not know enough about. Each week, I pick an artist at random from a pickle jar and get to grips with what they are offering.
    This week was the turn of Texan dream-pop band, Cigarettes After Sex. The band formed in 2008 and are known for their ethereal and sad songs, two words which you should know are right up my sadboi street.

    What I Knew Before
    I knew I would like the band. I could tell from the kind of friends who recommended them initially and then followed up on my Instagram post announcing that they were my artist of the week. Aside from that, I knew little of their music, maybe the occasional track had made it onto a soundtrack I adored, but I didn’t know much beyond that. The name seemed very provocative, one of those wonderful monikers that told you everything you needed to know about a band before you had even dipped into their discography.

    What I Know Now
    The band stake Francoise Hardy and Miles Davis as having a big influence on their music and it is easy to see why. There is something very distant and sexy about their songs, the kind of music you would want playing at the break of dawn as a party dies down and your lips ache from kissing.
    To me, they fit into the same space as The XX, who I am also a big fan of. The songs feel like they have entire stories behind them, worlds even. They create a scape through which one can live vicariously.

    Favourite song: 
    Nothing’s Gonna Hurt You Baby, Apocalypse, K.

    Favourite album: 
    Cry.

    Spotify my favourite songs from this project.