Iโve been thinking some more about that new Wilco album, not least in response to a post from someone called Andrew. โIt appears every thinking American songwriter,โ he writes โhas been listening to Midlakeโs โThe Trials Of Van Occupantherโ and decided that America and Fleetwood Mac circa โRumoursโ and โTuskโ are the way forward.โ
You can see his point, though I imagine Jeff Tweedy would laugh incredulously at the idea heโd been inspired to do anything by Midlake. To be honest, Iโm one of the few people around Uncut who doesnโt really like โVan 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 itโs 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 โImpossible Germanyโ. And maybe โSky 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 Iโm comfortable (OK, smug) in the knowledge that Wilco could spiral off into some heavily awkward free jam at any moment. Itโs a dubious way of measuring an albumโs worth, but then blogs are meant to be all about subjectivity, right?
Anyway, enough critical hand-wringing/waffle. A quick mention for todayโs Japanese freak-out. โRainbowโ is the new album from Boris, a prolific bunch of doom-mongers whoโve 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).
โRainbowโ 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 โRafflesiaโ, โRainbowโ 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, itโs fair to say, though Iโm sure the Lindsey Buckingham loyalists could probably point me in the direction of one of his weirder experiments as an analogue. Couldnโt you?