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Music Album Reviews |
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Turismo - Too Tall For Fashion
By Jason Karlson
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There are some amazing bands that simply cannot be contained on a shiny silver disk.
Fonda 500's CD releases are always breathtakingly energetic and creative but they
still can't capture the sheer vigour and unchecked energy of their live appearances.
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Turismo are another band who have that extra special something when they storm the
stage, Baggot twitching and lurching across the stage, hammering fuck out of his
patched up bright yellow maracas.
Surely their album can't be as good as the live article, can it? In a word, yes.
Turismo's first recorded debut Too Tall For Fashion so named because lead
singer Baggot is, well, incredibly tall, has all the force and fervent passion of their live shows.
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In fact owing to the sheer fast paced punchy nature of their songs anyone who has seem
them live this year will probably have heard most of the songs on Too Tall, which is
great because each and every one sounds like it has the making of a hit.
The album fires up with Crowbar, the bizarre lurching opener sounding like a
kids nursery song gone very, very wrong segueing straight into live favourite
Chinese Torture with Baggot advising the listener not give away any details about
their family through to the hilarious Elvis In my Wardrobe.
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Alongside the frantic live favourites where the band sound as if they aren't quite
taking things as seriously as the rest of the world, we get some light acoustic
songs that are downright measured and sensible compared to there riotous live image.
The elegant and smart Glass Humour is one of the stand out quiet moments,
Turismo at there most reflective.
A fluid and exceptionally well crafted debut.
Turn the volume up as loud as it will go, buy some maracas and you'll feel
as if you have Tursimo in your own front room.
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Check the thisisUll.com
Photo gallery from The Sesh at The Linnet and Lark on 9th November 04.
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Album Reviews Richard Stevenson - Promises Promises By Daniel Laney
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I must admit getting motivated in the morning is one of the hardest things I have to achieve.
Outside its cold and wet, mushy decaying leaves lie everywhere and a shed load of
bills await you at the front porch and you know full well that the postman has taken
great pleasure wedging as much
Read more...
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Single Reviews - Gomez - Sweet Virginia (single/ Virgin) By Steve Rudd
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The Gomez guys have long impressed the nation with their inspired ability to
effectively fuse all manners of different musical genres together to form one
thoroughly satisfying whole.
Whether they're incorporating elements of heart-breaking blues, crafty jazz
Read more...
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Album Reviews -
The Supatones - Unity Ave (Do The Dog) By Steve Rudd
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Living up to their name in the most impeccable manner imaginable, this Hull-based
band releases its astonishing debut album with an accompanying, nationwide tour to
promote the beauty.
For the best part of November and the first half of December these
Read more...
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Single Reviews Camera - Hurt (single/ My Kung Fu) By Steve Rudd Release Date: 22nd November 2004.
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Think of all the anthemic rock bands that Wales has loudly and proudly produced over the years
such as The Manics, The Stereophonics and The Alarm (to name just a few),
and then think again, for here is a new quartet in the form of Camera that
are hacking out a truly
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Album Reviews -
Tapewyrm Records Compilation - Segments Volume 1 (12-track album) By Steve Rudd
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Far from being just another compilation album of half-rate tracks by bands most people have never
heard of, this Tapewyrm release provides the best opportunity imaginable for the listener to get
to know the label's six acts a whole lot better.
OK, so the bands aren't that well
Read more...
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Album Reviews -
- The Alarm Live in the Poppyfields (DVD/CD Dual Release/Snapper Music)
By Steve Rudd
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In all honesty, I am totally addicted to - and utterly enthralled by - the music of Mike Peters.
Mike, for those who might not know, is now - and has always been - the frontman and
singing-songwriting genius for Welsh band The Alarm... a band set-up
that Mike recently re-formed, with a
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Album Reviews -
The Clauberg Opera - The Death of This City By Steve Rudd
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Yet another fantastically original Hull-based band to get hugely excited about, this young and thoroughly
refreshing trio is not to be ignored... especially not with the type of manifesto
that they are proudly presenting.
In this invigorating instance they come armed
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Album Reviews -
The 59 Violets - Prime Numbers By Steve Rudd
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First things first, a bit of vital number crunching: the debut album from North Lincolnshire's
va-va-vooming 59 Violets four-piece is 40 minutes long and spread over 11 fantastic songs.
Each and every track is moulded around some superb melodies, as these boys wield both the
pop
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Single Reviews Torso Horse - The Invisible Event
(eight-track album/ Native) By Steve Rudd Release Date: Nov 1st 2004
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Over the past four years, Bridlington band Torso Horse has truly - and deservedly -
dominated the Goth-Metal scene in East Yorkshire in style.
This uncompromising eight-track release is their second album, and the eagerly anticipated
follow-up to their rapturously
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Single Reviews - Ox - Blood (mini-album/ Co-Pop) By Steve Rudd
Release Date: November 1st 2004.
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Oh I do like to be beside the seaside when super-talented acoustic-based duos in the
shape of Ox materialise from towns such as Brighton, as Ox band
members in multi-instrumentalists Jim Oxborrow and John Etkin-Bell have.
Jim sings, with his sensitive voice being
Read more...
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Single Reviews - Hoobastank - The Reason (Mercury) By Steve Rudd
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It's been almost impossible to avoid this radio-friendly tune over the past few weeks, as it
has literally taken the world by storm. Over in the US it was the Number One airplay
record for five weeks, before basking in the glory of being the Number Three most
played track in
Read more...
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Album Reviews - Joesolo - An Exile In Suburbia By Nick Quantrill
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History lesson - Lithium Joe were much more than graffiti on the Hull train
station wall. Whilst the majority of Hull bands are happy to settle for receiving meaningless
platitudes from their mates and being great in the local clubs,
Lithium Joe was different.
Read more...
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