Hotel Paper, the new album from singer-songwriter Michelle Branch, is
released this week in the UK. It's the follow-up to last year's promising major-label
debut The Spirit Room, which featured her introductory hit Everywhere among
its 12 accomplished (if not exactly groundbreaking) songs. Eclipsed in the
commercial stakes by peers Vanessa Carlton and Avril Lavigne, who both issued
their albums shortly after The Spirit Room appeared, Branch faces a battle to
establish herself over here. Perhaps too mature for the same teen audience that
has taken Lavigne to their collective heart, yet still lacking the necessary
depth required for genuine adult appeal, the 22-year old is still in search of a
major UK hit.
The lead-off single from Hotel Paper, the grungy Are You Happy Now?, fell
tantalisingly short of the Top 30, and only the Santana collaboration Game Of
Love - which bridged the gap between Branch's albums - made much of a mainstream
impact in this country. To this end, Maverick/Warner have added Everywhere and
Game Of Love to the UK edition of Hotel Paper, and used them as a major part
of the album's promotional campaign. Whatever it takes, I suppose.
CHILDREN IN NEED
A second series of the BBC's Fame Academy is in the pipeline, but already the
finalists of the first programme are struggling to forge anything resembling
longterm chart careers. David Sneddon, cosy MOR specialist with the boyish
good looks, might have scored a #1 in February with the saccharine Stop Living A
Lie in the aftermath of his victory, but follow-up Don't Let Go peaked at #3
and disappeared off the radar with some haste. His album fared even less
memorably, despite aggressive pricing from the day of release, and there has been
no word of a new single as yet. Ainslie Henderson's Keep Me A Secret was a
pretty fine pop tune that breezed along quite pleasingly, but it made only the
briefest acquaintance with the Top 10.
Runner-up Sinead Quinn, meanwhile, appeared to have the most potential;
blessed with gutsy talent and a simmering feline sexuality waiting to be exploited.
I Can't Break Down, her opening chart gambit, was suprisingly bland but
durable enough in the circumstances, duly reaching #2 in March. Since then, Sinead
and her record company have clearly reassessed the type of market they wish
to aim at - What You Need Is... , issued as a single last week - dispenses with
the niceities of its predecessor and significantly vamps up Quinn's image.
However, the result was a #19 entry with sales tailing off quite dramatically
towards the end of the week, and falling further still in the last couple of days
to leave the record languishing on the brink of the Top 50 in yesterday's
midweeks.
Sinead's album Ready To Run is ready to roll on July 14th, but the worry now
must be whether many people will still be interested.
DON'T TOUCH THAT DIAL
Paddy McAloon has been gracing the music scene for the best part of 20 years
now, ever since his band Prefab Sprout emerged with their idiosyncratic brand
of artful, angular pop in the early 1980s. Few of his contemporaries could
match McAloon's gift for seductive melodies and ambitious lyricism back then, and
even fewer of those still remaining would be able to pull of something quite
as remarkable as I Trawl The Megahertz.
Post-1990 Prefab Sprout has been a virtual one-man conduit for McAloon's
unique muse, and so this "debut solo album" is merely a continuation of latter
Prefab explorations in grandly orchestrated but intimate soundscapes. Mid-period
Prefab Sprout records courted the mainstream - The King Of Rock'n'Roll (#7 in
1988) remains their signature hit, while the new recordings on 1992's Best Of
embraced electronic beats - but McAloon has subsequently followed a less
contemporary path, perfecting his skills on a series of albums which evoked the
orchestrated arrangements of Sixties lounge-pop and song cycles reminiscent of
Broadway musicals.
Largely instrumental and inspired by fragments of radio dialogue happened
upon while McAloon recuperated from a serious eye disease, I Trawl The Megahertz
is the next logical step onwards from Prefab Sprout's last, commercially
underachieving album The Gunman & Other Stories. It's a record to lose yourself in,
and discover fresh subtleties with each listen. It's also one of the finest
releases of 2003.
SOPHTWARE UPGRADE
This year's ultimate album, though, is undoubtedly Sumday by US alt.rockers
Grandaddy. Critical acclaim and modest word-of-mouth success accompanied 2000's
The Sophtware Slump. One of its singles, Crystal Lake, even grazed the UK Top
40. Three years on, the Grandaddy type of hazy, sureallist American
retro-softrock has been appropriated by the likes of Mercury Rev and, in particular,
The Flaming Lips, whose Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots is the most obvious
reference point for Sumday's dreamily evocative take on the classic pop template.
From the opening bars of last month's Top 30 single Now It's On, through the
chugging, chiming synth bliss of The Go In The Go For It and Stray Dag With
The Chocolate Shake, to the gorgeous finale that is The Final Push To The Sum,
the album never puts a foot wrong. Likely to feature in many a Best-Of-2003
list come December, Sumday is the quintessential soundtrack to glorious summer
days which will in all probability also sound wonderful when the blue skies and
warm breezes are just a memory again.
FUTURE SOUNDS
The best music on the horizon:
COLDPLAY - GOD PUT A SMILE UPON YOUR FACE:
A Rush Of Blood To The Head is
plundered for a fourth time, but as with the equivalent release from Parachutes,
Don't Panic, this single will only be available in the UK as an import.
EMI/Parlophone obviously feel the benefits of granting God Put A Smile On Your Face
full-blown status in this country are minimal with the parent album nearly a
year old and further sales potential understandably limited, while for the
time being Coldplay seem to have reached a plateau in terms of singles success;
their last two hits have both debuted at #10 before going into immediate
decline. God Put A Smile.. will feature a brand new track on the B-side entitled
Murder, and the video is already showing across the UK Music TV stations.
THE CARDIGANS - YOU'RE THE STORM:
The Scandanavians' faltering fortunes
could receive a much-needed boost by the release of Long Gone Before Daylight's
outstanding highlight. Anthemic in an almost old-fashioned way, You're The Storm
(out on July 14th) boasts one of the strongest choruses of recent times and
richly deserves to kickstart the album's popularity after its disappointing
chart showing upon release in March.
As of April 2009, Blu-rays and DVDs reviewed by the editor are watched on a Panasonic TH-37PX80B
37" Plasma TV with a Sony BDP-1500 Blu-ray player and played through a Yamaha DSP-AX820 amplifier.
PC games reviewed by the editor are on:
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