Iโ€™ve been thinking some more about that new Wilco album, not least in response to a post from someone called Andrew. โ€œIt appears every thinking American songwriter,โ€ he writes โ€œhas been listening to Midlakeโ€˜s โ€œThe Trials Of Van Occupantherโ€ and decided that America and Fleetwood Mac circa โ€œRumoursโ€ and โ€œTuskโ€ are the way forward.โ€

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You can see his point, though I imagine Jeff Tweedy would laugh incredulously at the idea heโ€™d been inspired to do anything by Midlake. To be honest, Iโ€™m one of the few people around Uncut who doesnโ€™t really like โ€œVan Occupantherโ€: a couple of nice songs at the start, sure, but its pursuit of a bland aesthetic seems a little too successful to me, along with the slightly mimsy post-Mercury Rev mythologising. After a while, I forget itโ€™s playing.

Someone in the office mentioned Fleetwood Mac when Wilco was playing the other day, specifically the deluxe passage of harmony guitars towards the end of โ€œImpossible Germanyโ€. And maybe โ€œSky Blue Skyโ€ works for me in the same way that the Midlake album works for so many of my colleagues: I can take the AOR sonorities because Iโ€™m comfortable (OK, smug) in the knowledge that Wilco could spiral off into some heavily awkward free jam at any moment. Itโ€™s a dubious way of measuring an albumโ€™s worth, but then blogs are meant to be all about subjectivity, right?

Anyway, enough critical hand-wringing/waffle. A quick mention for todayโ€™s Japanese freak-out. โ€œRainbowโ€ is the new album from Boris, a prolific bunch of doom-mongers whoโ€™ve developed quite a cult following thanks to the burgeoning interest in very slow leftfield metal (Uncut contributor Simon Reynolds has been pondering this at length on his Blissblog recently; interesting read).

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โ€œRainbowโ€ is their first effort this year โ€“ I think โ€“ and is a collaboration with the guitarist Michio Kurihara, who normally plays in the terrific psych band, Ghost. Kurihara seems to have mellowed Boris out a touch: after the obliterating thud of โ€œRafflesiaโ€, โ€œRainbowโ€ is a lot lighter on its feet than typical Boris efforts. The title track, especially, recalls Damo Suzuki-era Can. Not much like Fleetwood Mac, itโ€™s fair to say, though Iโ€™m sure the Lindsey Buckingham loyalists could probably point me in the direction of one of his weirder experiments as an analogue. Couldnโ€™t you?