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Album of the week: Glasvegas



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Published Date: 05 September 2008
GLASVEGAS: GLASVEGAS
***
COLUMBIA, £11.99
HYPEMASTER Alan McGee knew exactly what he was doing when, last autumn, he blogged about "the most exciting thing I've heard since The Jesus & Mary Chain" (officially, the most exciting Scottish band of all time). He was giving Glasvegas one canny kickstart to a career which, to that point, had consisted of the usual mix of unheralded local gigs and general indifference. Overnight, there were comparisons to McGee's previous big discovery, Oasis. Less than a year later, they are poised to release their debut album, riding on the back of the most enthusiastic reception accorded a Scottish band since the emergence of Franz Ferdinand.

Along the way, they have packed out the Futures Tent at T In The Park, received a Q Award nomination for Best New Act and already bagged the NME Radar Award, chosen by the writers and usually a decent gauge of a band about to break big. Plus Lisa Marie Presley is their drinking buddy – quite a surreal circumstance for a group who have built their sound on classic pop and rock'n'roll foundations.

Glasvegas themselves appear to be keeping the heid amid the hullabaloo. Black clad and unsmiling, they are fronted by the shrewd James Allan, a former semi-professional footballer who has transferred his energies to that other creative passion of the working class. While his band's supporters seem to be getting carried away with hype, you have to salute Allan's single-minded pursuit of a Wall of Sound with a distinctly Scottish flavour.

Musically, Glasvegas trail in the Mary Chain's wake with their pounding rhythms and girl group-influenced melodies enveloped in distorted guitar noise. But where the Reid brothers' cacophony was chaotic and thrilling, Glasvegas aspire to be epic. Eschewing the Mary Chain's drug metaphors, Allan pens stark, kitchen-sink lyrics inspired by his East End background, which are at odds with the stately melancholy of the music.

His focus is mainly on the prevailing culture of machismo among Scottish men and, in particular, its effect on adolescents. From its opening couplet ("how you're my hero, how you're never here though"), current single Daddy's Gone captures the sadness and bitterness of a son with an absentee father.

Go Square Go, an early single, wrestles with the playground dilemma of fight or flight – "don't you wait for the bell to ring ding-a-ling-a-ling, one step forward then a bada-bada-bing" – and is musically about as sophisticated as that argument. The protagonist of Stabbed could be that same lad a few years later, spouting a mix of bravado and fear, intoned by Allan over the soothing strains of Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata. It's a surprisingly effective device and the subject matter is both ageless and current, given statistics about the number of young men stabbed in the UK.

One of the more potent forays into this territory was inspired by the murder of Kriss Donald in 2004, in particular the news footage of his grieving mother. On Flowers & Football Tops, Allan deftly flips the convention of the yearning love lyric to produce something darker and more tragic.

Recent single Geraldine attempts the same trick, sounding at first like a romantic declaration of loving support: "When your sparkle evades your soul, I'll be at your side to console, when you're standing on the window ledge, I'll talk you back from the edge". However, the final reveal that "my name is Geraldine, I'm your social worker" is hamfisted, even quite comical. It is surely only a matter of time before someone hatches a Glasvegas spoof – broad accents, leather jackets, a few references to getting chibbed and you're away. It's the mark of a band with a strong identity.

Another Allan trait is a tendency to disregard meter and cram as many words as he can into a line. It's My Own Cheating Heart That Makes Me Cry, a pint of self-loathing in a Spectorish setting, contains some lyrical howlers, but it also has its moments, such as the Arab Strap/Arctic Monkeyesque "I tally up tonight's strangers and stragglers that I've kissed… it's all about going out and getting pissed with eagle eyes and sincerity bottom on my list".

Elsewhere, Polmont On My Mind is a rather poetic spin on Johnny Cash's prison songs, Lonesome Swan teeters on the cusp of indie banality and S.A.D. Light recalls The Blue Nile's melancholy urban romanticism. Despite the preceding catalogue of misery, the album does end on a determined note with Ice Cream Van's call to "bring back the glory days, active citizenship and pure community, freedom of faith".

Next stop for the Glasvegas juggernaut: a Christmas album recorded in Transylvania. Should be some party.

The full article contains 791 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 04 September 2008 7:12 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: album reviews
 
1

Bob Wilson,

Anchor Man 05/09/2008 08:07:18
Its a sad state of affairs when 'album of the week' rates only 3 stars, but it says it all really. Glasvegas - don't believe the hype, absolute bunch of no-hopers playing second rate trash with no originality whatsoever. The Proclaimers of the west.
pathetic band, hilarious name, laughable image, woeful songs.
If this is the future of Scottish music it shows what a dire state Scottish music is in just now for fresh talent.
2

marco gormanovitchski,

south queensferry 05/09/2008 17:27:25
I'm with you Bob. 3 stars is a cop out. The review reads better than that but they are victims of overhype (although I like Geraldine a lot).

Scottish music just now is not a thing of great excitement.
3

acmsutherland,

Edinburgh 14/09/2008 20:08:05
A band who have just released one of the best albums of the last ten years deserve a great deal more than three stars and a horrifyingly patronising review. Critising songs like 'Go Square Go' for their supposed lack of musical sophistication, she seems to forget that The Jesus & Mary Chain (a great band) hardly ventured out of the three-chord structure. So The Jesus & Mary Chain were thrilling, but a band who clean up that sound, make it more atmospheric, moving and, dare I say, modern, are not?! The album starts with 'Flowers & Football Tops' which is a breathtakingly powerful song about the murder of Kriss Donald and there's nothing mundane about the pounding rhythm and delayed guitar of tracks 'Geraldine', 'Lonesome Swan' and 'Polmont on My Mind'. James Allan's lyrics are a perfect expression of self. It's as if we should be scared to pen something authentic and non-Americanised. 'It's My Own Cheating Heart' is a brilliant piece of writing about male hypocrisy and 'Daddy's Gone' wasn't called 'track of the year' because the lyrics are 'at odds' with the music. Cherry chapstick and transmission parties were not this band's world. This band is a breath of fresh air to the youth of today and, if you can't understand it, you've probably been too cynical to appreciate anything since 'Definitely Maybe'. Have you ever been to a Glasvegas concert? Well, I suggest you put down the Simple Minds CDs and give it a go...

 

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