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I steal the moon on silver nights

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Continuing my trip back through the 2017 album charts. 07/04/17 : Automaton - Jamiroquai Our SIXTH visit with Jamiroquai (making them the 32nd artist to reach this milestone) and I'm amazed to see they were still going in '17 - and even more amazed to see they're still at it, touring Europe and Japan later this year. I expect this is going to be yet another album which is way more Jamiroquai than I've ever needed in my life.  Yup - and yet, whilst that's true, I'd much rather take this album than some of the didgeridoo infested waters we've previously experienced. They've just dialled it all back a bit here and it's much the better for it - it's lacking a killer track or two, but it's all very listenable. Also, amusingly, both daughters entered the room when it was playing and started to get down to the funky beats - which is reasonably impressive for a band who were 25 years old at this point in time. We're at #4 in the charts with a new...

Sun split ember, and fields that span

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Continuing my trip up  The Guardian's 50 best albums of 2017 . #44 :  I See You -  The xx On their third album, the London trio finally sheds the excessively hushed and incredibly influential electronica of their 2009 debut. Instead, they turn to the kind of vintage samples producer Jamie xx has long used in his solo work, setting richer, more uptempo backdrops against mournful dialogues about romantic disappointment and isolation. Just to complicate matters further, we've not met this one yet on our trip across the 2017 charts but we're going to - so I'm going to save it for later and you'll just have to wait to find out what I thought about it (and yes, I obviously listened to it before I realised I wasn't going to be writing it up). #43 :  The Kid -  Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith After leaving university, LA musician Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith became enamoured with a 1960s synthesiser called the Buchla 100. Six albums later and she’s still not finished experimenting with ...

I'm sorry I won't make it to your party

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Continuing my trip back through the 2017 album charts. 14/04/17 : Memories...Do Not Open - The Chainsmokers I know I don't mind stuff from The Chainsmokers, but I couldn't name any of their tracks if my life depended on it. Maybe this will jog my memory (spoiler alert - it won't). I stand corrected - I actually did remember "Paris", but would never have remembered it was by this lot. I was expecting the album to be a general dance-y thing in a Disclosure or similar style, but it's actually more poppy - think something like a One Direction album but with guest vocalists. It's not dreadful, but it's all very samey and gets pretty dull pretty quickly - I can understand people bought it on the strength of a couple of decent singles, but I suspect the number of re-listens wasn't all that high. We're at #3 in the charts this week with a new entry on the start of a sixteen week run - easily their most successful album. The rest of the top five were  E...

I don't understand you, but I love you

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Continuing my trip up Empire's   top 20 films of 2025 #12 :     Hard Truths Mike Leigh's reunion with Marianne Jean-Baptiste, the actor who led his 1996 Palme d'Or winning drama Secrets & Lies, was always going to be something special. What makes Hard Truths such a must-see however is how extraordinarily ordinary it actually is. Jean-Baptiste is on firebrand form as Pansy, a reclusive middle-aged woman whose world-weariness scorches all around her (to often hilarious effect — her babies-and-pockets rant is an all-timer), but whose pain and bone-deep misery is plain for all — especially sister Chantelle (Michele Austin) — to see. Not always the easiest of watches, especially as Leigh has no interest in curing Pansy's bitterness with a syrupy Hollywood ending, Hard Truths is nevertheless an essential watch. It's human, raw, real: pure Mike Leigh. I've taken quite a bit of time to get round to this one for a couple of reasons. Firstly, there's been some goo...

When real death enters the house, all poetry is dumb

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Continuing my trip up The Guardian's 50 best albums of 2017 . #47 :  A Crow Looked At Me -  Mount Eerie The most recent album by Washington musician Phil Elverum is a shattering account of the death of his wife, illustrator-musician Geneviève Castrée. Devastatingly direct in its portrayal of the minutiae of loss, Elverum relays – over plainly plucked guitar – difficult conversations with their one-year-old daughter and tormented memories of discarding his wife’s clothes. It isn’t an easy listen, but Elverum conveys his grief with starkness and potency. Well, this sounds like it might be hard-going... Yeah, I think we can pretty much say that. The whole thing is basically him idly strumming his guitar (it's not a work of musical complexity) whilst he relates thoughts or activities which are in some way related to his wife's death, which happened a month before he started recording. And, whilst I've absolutely no clue what that must have been like for him, it certainly fe...

Is it the strength of your feelings overthrowing your pain?

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Continuing my trip back through the 2017 album charts. 21/04/17 : More Life - Drake Our fifth and a half visit with Drake (the half was a collaboration with 21 Savage) and I remain mystified as to his popularity - I believe this is supposed to be one of his better regarded albums, but I remain unconvinced it will win me over.  Hmmm, it's fine in places - I'd say I almost came close to liking some of the more R&B-ish numbers and the rappy numbers had the advantage of not being quite as unpleasant as some of his other stuff. I still don't understand what it is that makes everyone quite so keen on him, but I think it's probably safe to say it's not going to happen now. The other thing I'd say is that a lot of the album isn't Drake at all, with a load of guest artists involved, including a strong British representation with Jorja Smith, Skepta and Giggs all popping up. I also really didn't need EIGHTY minutes of it all - it dragged big time towards the e...

Maypoles themselves go back in this country at least to, er, 1400

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  As I come to the end of my time with 2017 album charts, I've been having a dig around various sites to see what decent albums the charts were in no danger of presenting to me - and I noticed that The Guardian did a year-end top 50 albums , which I've written up for the past five years now. So it would seem rude not to start another list - even though, in order to complete it before I get to the end of '17, I'm going to have to do three albums a day, which may prove to be a challenge.. #50 :  Ladilikan -  Trio Da Kali and Kronos Quartet The Malian group and the San Francisco-based quartet came together for this adventurous collaboration, which blends experimental western strings with African traditional sounds. Trio Da Kali specialise in west African griot-style music, but on Ladilikan they spread their wings, inspired by gospel singer Mahalia Jackson on a reworked God Shall Wipe All Tears Away. I never like African style music (and yes, I realise this is a massive ove...