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@mishmishwords
In praise of ICHI
Today marks the release of ICHI’s ‘Maru’ record on Lost Map. WOOOT!Â
For the uninitiated, Ichi’s music is the sound of a restless creative omnivore let loose in a sonic soft play environment, complete with the requisite splash of primary colours and laughter.Â
Often described as a Japanese Ivor Cutler / Heath Robinson, he builds a number of his own instruments, including the Kalilaphone, Hatbox-pedal-drum and Skipxylophon, and delivers a one man band show to marvel at.
Bedding down at the mischievous end of a vibrant Bristol music scene, he has found many kindred souls to collaborate with, including Kate Stables (This Is The Kit), Rozi Plain and James Hankins (Hankin Films) - not to mention the wonderful Rachael Dadd, who he is married to. Watching the two of them perform together on Eigg for Howlin’ Fling in 2014 was a wonderful experience; they used the language barrier as just another thing to be transformed by the power of play, delivering call and response nursery rhymes, sung in both languages, whilst from the side of the stage their small son looked on spellbound, like the rest of us.
It is tempting when encountering a talent as eccentric as Ichi’s to think that it would make a wonderful children’s show, particularly given the way he plays with ideas of naivety. It DOES make an excellent show for children, but I think that’s to slightly misunderstand the value of what we’re encountering.
Firstly, there is a remarkable technical fluency to what he does; playing a fretless bass that also doubles up as stilt, that also doubles up as a percussion instrument that also doubles up as a Mousetrap-style runway for ping pong balls on their way to a steel drum is really, really easy to get wrong!  He almost always plays at least two or three instruments at once, addressing each instrument as an object, exploring each material for it’s sonic possibilities. The fact that it seems (and sounds) seamless makes it all the more impressive.Â
Secondly, play is not, and should never be purely the realm of children. The inherent humour in ICHI’s music reminds us that there was no one fixed point where we stopped being children, and suddenly became adults, different organisms, with different concerns. That CS Lewis quote comes to mind:
‘When I became a man I put away childish things, including the fear of childishness and the desire to be very grown up’.Â
Ichi’s music is astonishing. With seemingly endless energy he combines humour, language, craftsmanship, sound and aesthetics into a rolling whole that helps us reconcile ourselves with our silly selves. So go see him!
Ichi is playing the Total Refreshment Centre in London on March 24th. ‘Maru’ is available now on Lost Map. YUM!
Following on from the discovery of Talkhouse’s impressive online archive, (See below) here are the compiled interviews that Hrishikesh Hirway conducted for his Song Exploder podcast. Various high profile songwriters, composers and rappers take a single track and give us a little insight into everything from inspiration to arrangements and production. First up, the wonderful Courtney Barnett looks back at the process behind ‘Depreston’ - one of many gems from last year’s glorious LP ‘Sometimes I Sit and Think and Sometimes I Just Sit’.Â
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8m_Q_gakJbw)
HOW DAMN GOOD IS THIS! ? For fans of ‘The Greatest’ era Cat Power. OOFT!
Props to the good people of GoldFlakePaint for introducing me to this woozy gem of a track from San Francisco native Jay Som - that combination of slacker melody, fuzzy noise and surprising lyric choices puts me in mind of Yo La Tengo’s seminal ‘I Can Hear the Heart Beating as One’. A most welcome soundtrack to our darkening days.Â
Listen/purchase: I Think You're Alright by Jay Som
(The Talkhouse)
In the run up to the Mercury’s tonight, I’ve got fingers crossed for Mish Mish pals C Duncan, who played our stage at Hidden Door back in May. I’d also love to see Benjamin Clementine take it. This remains one of the most inspiring pieces of music on film that I’ve seen in ages. Let’s wait and see eh....
Pitchfork Paris: In Review
I arrive at Pitchfork Paris with a belly full of beer and a grin on my face. Looking around you, you become acutely aware that everyone is beautiful, unconscionably beautiful. And all the beautiful people are heading the same way as you down Avenue Jean Jaures, in some pilgrimage to the valley of the dolls that is La Grande Halle de la Villette.  At certain points in the festival you wish everyone would be a bit less self-consciously attractive and just make arses of themselves on the dancefloor, but fuck it, for the time being it’s just bemusing.
Noah would shite himself if he saw how wet Glasgow is in November
Rough Trade have  just released their Top 100 Records of the year. It feels uncomfortably early to be embracing ‘Listmas’; maybe they feel like they’ll get maximum exposure by getting theirs out before anyone else. Either way, it’s satisfying to see plenty of my favourite records from this year being celebrated, with Courtney Barnett, FJM, Sufjan Stevens, Julia Holter and Beach House all getting the nod. Nice to see Bop English in there too; their Broadcast show earlier this year was a glorious, infectious classic rock throwback - what a tune Struck Matches is.
Leaving the wonderful Ezra Furman aside, these groups are all fairly established players in the indie world. Here’s a few tunes that have recently charmed my ears by artists who’re a bit more under the radar - for the time being at least...Â
Introducing Andy Shauf
This week’s discovery is the haunting, brittle ‘Americana’ of Regina-resident Andy Shauf. There are quiet, smart, invasive lyrics. There are sparse, uncomfortable arrangements to complement those lyrics. If you need a reference point, it’s Elliot Smith I guess, or Sam Amidon, at a push. What really matters here is that, in Wendell Walker, the Canadian has written a stark, hard-nosed little short story, that also happens to be a bloody great song. Any of you heading to End Of The Road later this year, go wrap your ears around this:
Peter Broderick @ Mono
I first came across Peter Broderick’s music about 9 years ago, whilst I was still at school. In a gloriously noughties’ moment my pal Jen leant me her ipod mini. For a week or two I strolled around the bonny streets of Bath returning obsessively to a Bella Union sampler. The high-points were J Tilman’s ‘Firstborn’ and PB’s ‘Below It’.
After returning the ipod, Jen showed me the ‘songy’ videos on Peter’s youtube channel, where, with characteristic playfulness, he demonstrated how easy it was to create loops without splashing out on the exciting, pricey loop pedals that were flooding the market at the time.
In the years that followed, my relationship with music deepened, and I started to see Peter Broderick’s name all over the place. Here he was guesting on the M Ward records I loved, or beaming from behind a keyboard for the euphoric Efterklang show at the Usher Hall. After seeing Sharon Van Etten at the Oran Mor back in 2012, I learned that Sharon’s right hand woman and collaborator was none other than his sister, Heather Woods Broderick. On a trip to Portugal the groundbreaking http://www.itstartshear.com filled a rented car with piano and strings, lifting it out of sterile anonymity to become a little beach-bound cocoon of sound.  And as Erased Tapes moved from cult label to veritable cultural powerhouse, there he was again, releasing the unfairly maligned ‘These Walls of Mine’, among other records.Â
Support tonight comes from Brigid Power-Ryce. Hers is a sapling sound, built around a remarkable voice, reminiscent of Judee Sill and Joni Mitchell. The Laurel Canyon connection is reaffirmed when she tells a story about Tim Buckley taking 15 minutes to tune his guitar between songs. The songs have a certain magnetic pull to them, but as a whole the set feels more solid than remarkable. A highpoint comes in the form of her Patsy Cline cover, a welcome reminder of how much you can achieve with little, if the language and melody are this engaging.
For me, the remarkable thing at the heart of Peter Broderick’s music is that it so often marries playfulness with sadness, or darkness. Where unhappiness can lead to repression, or contraction, that sense of play makes the music expansive, euphoric; it’s involving instead of isolating.
That desire to involve and empower his audience, seen in the ‘songy’ videos, is on show straight away in ‘Colours of the Night’. Looping up a backing track, PB jumps off the stage and gets various members of the audience to layer up some improvised harmonies. Looping live can feel formulaic, or gimmicky, but in the hands of a few, (David Thomas Broughton, Adam Stafford) it remains an exciting, powerful tool for the solo performer.
From humble beginnings a quietly majestic set unfolds across the next hour. Drawing heavily from ‘How They Are’ and ‘Home’, Peter flits between violin, piano and guitar. The effect is utterly compelling. The way he uses language is totally idiosyncratic, but it fits perfectly over those delicate, searching compositions.
He also uses the full possibilities of the space, balancing on the monitors to deliver a solo violin piece written for a friend’s wedding, and closing the set by looping up a final song, coming to the back of the audience, and hollering harmonies, a capella, back at the stage. That sense of playfulness is seen again during an encore rendition of ‘Hello to Nils’.  During a song about absence and presence our guide takes the guitar above his head and hides behind it, in a glorious sort of adult version of peekaboo.Â
At one stage he invites Brigid Power-Ryce back onstage for an unrehearsed collaboration. It doesn’t quite take flight, and it doesn’t quite matter; the whole set is coloured by the spirit of adventure – as is so often the case with PB’s music, the integrity of expression and collaboration triumph over the fear of failure.
A Quick Word with...Plastic Animals
Next to submit himself for questioning is Mario Cruzado, lead singer of righteous Edinburgh noise makers Plastic Animals. Only three days to go until you get to hear them, C Duncan, Jonnie Common and LoneLady light up Hidden Door’s opening night!Â
A quick word with...C Duncan
Ahead of next Friday’s Hidden Door launch party I sent a list of questions around to some of the band’s who’re playing. First out of the gate is Glasgow’s classically-trained, delicately-maned C Duncan.Â
LoneLady, our headliners at next month’s Hidden Door Launch Party! WOOP!Â
Mish Mish / Hidden Door Launch Party / May 22
Last year’s Mish MIsh x Hidden Door was a bona fide sell-out success –  big thank you to those of you who made it along. In fact it went so well that those canny liberators of disused space have invited me to programme the opening night of this year’s festival. Woop! Here’s some of what you can expect in the Secret Courtyard on the 22nd of May . . .Â
1. LoneLadyÂ
Manchester’s Julie Campbell has been getting rave reviews for her desolate, delicate post-punk disco-funk. The Guardian have already named it one of their favourite albums of 2015, and gave her a pretty banging live review too, which bodes well. The WARP signee has also been nominated for the Times Breakthrough Award as the Pop representative at this year’s South Bank Sky Awards. Media-schmedia, it’s utterly idiosyncratic and infectious and excellent - let’s just go and dance to Bunkerpop in an abandoned building eh?Â
2. Jonnie CommonÂ
Jonnie Common is the absolute don, and that should be the end of it really. The endlessly inventive Trapped in Amber came out on Song By Toad last year, and it was my favourite Scottish record of 2014. Maybe in an arm wrestle with Young Fathers, but sod the lists. Lyrically it’s quietly articulate, charming, disarming and really wryly writhingly smiley. Those lyrics are floated out on soundscapes that are texturally and rhythmically soul satisfying, and he happens to boss the show live with his drummer man. So there. I’m totally buzzing to be putting this on.
3. C DuncanÂ
Chris is classically trained and it shows - he goes to places I cannot go, and takes his shoes off when he gets there. Some have said that this is the sonic convergence of Arvo Part with Fleet Foxes and Burt Bacharach. Whatever it is it’s lovely, and has gained tons of admirers in what has already been a busy busy year. The band play Hidden Door a week after The Great Escape down in Brighton, and just before making their headline London debut at the Islington. Their album comes out on the mighty Fat Cat this summer - get it whilst it’s hot. Or warm. Whatever.
4. Plastic AnimalsÂ
Grandaddy are amazing. Yo La Tengo are amazing. Plastic Animals know and understand these things. Do they know that Plastic Animals are amazing? If they don’t, they should. Like a well oiled wrestler they’ve been getting slicker and tighter and covered in lycra in the run up to their record coming out on Song By Toad later this year. It will be melodic and noisy and messy and delicious.
Tweedy + Field Report @ Celtic Connections
‘My wife's been looking into it, and apparently the Tweedy's come from a clan of grumpy fiddlers'
'Fiddling with what?' comes the reply from the floor.
'Go to the back, sir, this is a family show'.
View image | gettyimages.com
King Creosote performs From Scotland With Love + Tiny Ruins @ Celtic Connections
Six months ago the Buchanan Street steps were an emotive focal point in the referendum on independence; a battleground where both yes and no campaigners gathered to belt out their beliefs to the passing Saturday traffic. Tonight a packed crowd make their way up those same embattled steps, with bellies full of wine and anticipation, cackling in the cold.