Plows and Pandas

Tracks by local bands including Venusian Plow, Fossil Collective, Sentimentalists and Negative Panda featured on the latest edition of Bradford Beat.

You can listen again here and the full tracklisting is:

City and Colour – The Lonely Life
Negative Panda – Suicide On The Moon
Steve Mason – A Lot of Love
The Seven Inches – Cashback
Nick Cave and The Bad Seeds – Mermaids
Fossil Collective – Let It Go
Beady Eye – Second Bite of the Apple
Sentimentalists – I’m Lonely For Every Woman I’ve Ever Known
Chic – Le Freak
Venusian Plow – Ed Canaveral
Drenge – Backwaters
Raglans – Digging Holes

When Big Joan Sets Up 1st August – Cat Class!

Yer tunes from Weds/Thurs:

Winam Jazz Band – “Ben Wambia”(Download single) (51 Lex)
The Courtneys – “Social Anxiety” (LP – ‘The Courtneys”) (Hockey Dad)
Enduser – “Retox” (12″) (Retox)
Cat Party – “Jigsaw Thoughts” (LP – “Cat Party”) (catpartymusic.bandcamp.com/album/cat-party)
Diana Jones – “Song For A Worker” (LP – “Museum of Appalachia Recordings) (Proper)
Coffins – “Dishuman” (LP – “The Fleshland”) (Relapse)
Leftside – “Monkey Biznizz” (Download single) (Keepleft)
Chuck Berry – “Too Much Monkey Business” (LP – “After School Session”) (Chess)
Chuck Upbeat – “Cicadas Dance” (v/a LP – “Funk Globo: The Sound Of New Baile”) (Mr Bongo)
Cat Party – “Still Life” (LP – “Cat Party”) (catpartymusic.bandcamp.com/album/cat-party)
Andy Kaufman – “Sleep Comedy” (LP – “Andy and His Grandmother”) (Drag City)
Walls – “I Can’t Give You Anything But Love” (12″) (Ecstatic)
The Deviants – “Let’s Loot the Supermarket” (LP – “Disposable”) (Stable)
Cat Party – “The Aftertaste” (LP – “Cat Party”) (catpartymusic.bandcamp.com/album/cat-party)
Break – “Steam Train” (12″) (Symmetry)

Eclectic Mainline 31st July 2013

New music in tonight’s show included Ras G:

…AUF:

…and Las Kellies:

You will find the whole show available on today’s page of the BCB Listen Again service.  Here is the full show’s track list:

Congo Natty – ‘UK Allstars’ (LP – Jungle Revolution) (Big Dada)
Las Kellies – ‘Melting Ice’ (single) (Fire)
The Cairo Gang – ‘Shake Off’ (EP – Tiny Rebels) (Empty Cellar)
Goner – ‘The End Of Vinyl (Goner’s Morbid Rave Refix)’ (Pure & Various Artists LP – No End Of Vinyl) (Crónica)
Jono McCleery – ‘Ballade’ (single) (Ninja Tune)
Big Star – ‘Back Of A Car’ (LP – Columbia… Live At Missouri University) (SPV)
AUF – ‘Heiss’ (CD – CD) (Graumann)
Ras G And The Afrikan Space Program – ‘All Is Well…’ (LP – Back On The Planet) (Brainfeeder)
Chris Watson – ‘Sumor’ (CD – In St. Cuthbert’s Time) (Touch)
Letherette – ‘After Dawn’ (After Dawn EP) (Ninja Tune)
The Chills – ‘Molten Gold’ (single) (Fire)
Vieux Farka Touré – ‘Peace’ (LP – Mon Pays) (Six Degrees)
Cavern Of Anti-Matter – ‘You’re An Art Soul’ (LP – Blood-Drums) (Grautag)
Raffertie – ‘Last Train Home’ (LP - Sleep Of Reason) (Ninja Tune)

When Big Joan Sets Up 25th July – In Other News…

This week we had tracks from Simon Joyner and Dennis Callaci’s excellent new LP “New Secrets” and a woman had a baby in London, but we didn’t mention that because it’s not really a big deal. Seriously,happens all the time. So we played some records instead…

Ulterior Motive feat Peta Oneir – “Forgiven” (12″) (Metalheadz)
Tracey’s Love – “Shaddows” (EP – “Modern Hipster”) (Pebble)
Rayted – “Forward” (download single) (Jam House)
Simon Joyner and Dennis Callaci – “The Old Man In The Rain” (LP -“New Secrets”) (Shrimper)
Radkey – “Pretty Things” (EP – “Cat and Mouse”) (Wreckroom)
Duma Namankoyane – “Ayikho Indela” (LP – “Lubombo Community Radio Fundraiser”) (Bandcamp)
Corevax – “Everybody Move” (download single) (Smiley Tunes Digital)
Spider John Koerner – “Everybody’s Goin’ For The Money’ (LP – “What’s Left Of Spider John”) (Hornbeam)
Simon Joyner and Dennis Callaci – “The Frayed End Of The Rope” (LP – “New Secrets”) (Shrimper)
Folk Magic – “Baby I Don’t Care – Elvis Mix” (v/a download LP – “SI”) (http://soundinjections.tumblr.com)
Siamese Royalty – “Helicopter Graveyard” (Cassette – “II”) (Grindcore Karaoke)
Superchunk – “Me and You and Jackie Mittoo” (download single) (Merge)
Jackie Mittoo – “Killer Diller” (LP – “The Keyboard King At Studio One”) (Soul Jazz)
Simon Joyner and Dennis Callaci – “Beat By Beat” (LP – “New Secrets’) (Shrimper)
Part Time – “I Belong To You” (LP – “PDA”) (Mexican Summer)
The Duprees – “You Belong To Me” (7″) (Coed)
Kigo – “Chance” (EP – “Chance) (Bandcamp)

Eclectic Mainline 24th July 2013

New music in this week’s show included The Bug:

…and Ghostpoet:

It so frustrates me when artists and labels don’t enable embedding for their Soundcloud tunes. I was hoping to also include tonight’s tunes by Vieux Farka Touré and Congo Natty on this blog. But alas Six Degrees Records and Big Dada Records have chosen not to allow embeds, so linking to them is all I can do.

You will find the whole show available on today’s page of the BCB Listen Again service. Here is the full show’s track list:

Seaworthy + Taylor Dupree – ‘Wood’ (LP – Wood, Winter, Hollow) (12K)
The Bug – ‘Filthy’ ft. Flowdan (single) (Ninja Tune)
Queens Of The Stone Age – ‘I Sat By The Ocean’ (LP – …Like Clockwork) (Matador)
Circle Traps – ‘Open Cube’ (Obelisk EP) (Five Easy Pieces)
Vieux Farka Touré – ‘Diack So’ (LP – Mon Pays) (Six Degrees)
Christoph de Babalon – ‘The End Of Vinyl (Christoph de Babalon remix)’ (Pure & Various Artists LP – No End Of Vinyl) (Crónica)
The Cairo Gang – ‘Father Of The Man’ (EP – Tiny Rebels) (Empty Cellar)
Congo Natty – ‘Rebel’ (LP – Jungle Revolution) (Big Dada)
Stephan Mathieu – ‘Gliese 229 B’ (LP – The Falling Rocket) (Dekorder)
Raffertie – ‘Gagging Order’ (LP - Sleep Of Reason) (Ninja Tune)
Maps – ‘Adjusted To The Darkness’ (LP – Vicissitude) (Mute)
Ghostpoet – ‘Cold Win’ (single and LP – Some Say So I Say Light) (Play It Again Sam)

Buffet on Fantasy Festivals (show #51)

Now then!

Last week we broadcast a Fantasy Festival special, cos it’s quite fitting at this time of year. Some people are off to Latitude tomorrow (including Jenny Jet), and I am very jealous indeed (although you would have to pay me a lot of money to endure Texas).

Anyroad, you can probably guess that our show explored who would be in our fantasy line-ups. Certainly no re-formed bands, we’ve gone for people in their prime! Thank you to everyone who sent their own suggestions, including Jenny Wilson, Cheryl Killey, Anke Holgersson and Nanette Brimble. Elvis, George Formby, Kirsty MaColl… all good suggestions, and eclectic, which is how we like it.

Here’s the small selection we squeezed into the show:

1. ELLA FITZGERALD – Can’t Buy Me Love
2. SONIC YOUTH – Sugar Cane
3. VIOLENT FEMMES – Prove My Love
4. AC/DC – Back in Black
5. PUSSY RIOT – Putin Lights the Fires
6. GLEN CAMPBELL – Wichita Lineman
7. PRINCE AND THE REVOLUTION – Life Can Be So Nice
8. SUPER FURRY ANIMALS – The International Language of Screaming
9. DESTINY’S CHILD – Bootylicious
10. COCTEAU TWINS – Bluebell Knoll
11. DEATH FROM ABOVE 1979 – Going Steady
12. KRAFTWERK – Tour De France
13. THE SMITHS – William, It Was Really Nothing
14. THE TEMPTATIONS – Ball of Confusion

And there’s a bit of Mike Sammes Singers and Herb Alpert in there somewhere.

If you listened/listen to the show, you’ll know I laboured over my line-up, and even now keep thinking of bands I missed, but here’s what I came up with (in order of appearance):

 

 

Friday

Swell Maps
Dirty Projectors
Duchess Says
Violent Femmes
The Knife
Husker Du
Pixies
Super Furry Animals
LCD Soundsystem
Sufjan Stevens

Saturday

We Rock Like Girls Don’t
Fanny
Fatima Mansions
Death From Above 1979
Pussy Riot
50 Foot Wave
Dead Kennedys
Plan B
Curtis Mayfield
Beastie Boys

Sunday

The B-52s
Ella Fitzgerald
The Kinks
Hern Alpert and the Tijuana Brass
The Temptations
Destiny’s Child
Blondie
Beck (featuring The Mike Sammes Singers)
Jimi Hendrix
Prince and the Revolution

Feel free to add you own line-ups, and don’t forget your sunscreen!

Maria
x

 

 

 

 

 

When Big Joan Sets Up 18th July – “Grandmaster, Cut Faster”

This week’s programme featured a multitude of tracks from a man described as “The New God” in 2004 by the current holder of that title, the late great John Robert Parker Ravenscroft. Eight tracks in total from his new LP “Magical Sound Shower” in a row which meant acres of superlative tuneage and very little banal DJ banter from me.

Cornel Campbell and Soothsayers – “We Want To Be Free” (LP – “Nothing Can Stop Us”) (Strut)
Dethscalator – “Grotto Crank” (LP – “Racial Golf Course, No Bitches”) (Self Released)
Sid Hemphill – “Keep My Skillet Good and Greasy” (LP – “The Devil’s Dream- Alan Lomax 1942 Library of Congress Recordings”) (Global Jukebox)
Neil Young and Crazy Horse – “Thrasher” (LP – “Rust Never Sleeps”) (Reprise)
Sun Araw – “Thrasher” (split 12′ with Ralph White) (Monofonous Press)
Grandmaster Gareth – “Music On Planet Earth Is Dead” (LP – “Magical Sound Shower”) (GM Sounds)
Grandmaster Gareth – “I Am Garzuvius” (LP – “Magical Sound Shower”) (GM Sounds)
Grandmaster Gareth – “A Glitch In Time” (LP – “Magical Sound Shower”) (GM Sounds)
Grandmaster Gareth – “The Horder Of Moments” (LP – “Magical Sound Shower”) (GM Sounds)
Grandmaster Gareth – “Magical Cuts” (LP – “Magical Sound Shower”) (GM Sounds)
Grandmaster Gareth – “Don’t Grumble Under Pressure” (LP – “Magical Sound Shower”) (GM Sounds)
Grandmaster Gareth – “The Bigger The Bass Line/The Bigger The Waist Line” (LP – “Magical Sound Shower”) (GM Sounds)
Grandmaster Gareth – “Thousands Of Years Of Progress” (LP – “Magical Sound Shower”) (GM Sounds)
Inspiral Carpets – “Keep The Circle Around” (5CD Box Set – “Scared To Get Happy – A Story Of Indie Pop 1980-1989”) (Cherry Red)
Sleeper – “Systema” (12″) (Chestplate)
Julianna Barwick – “Forever” (LP – “Nepenthe”) (Dead Oceans)

WIN #6 This Friday night with Imani Hekima

In advance of his live appearance on this Friday’s WIN (11pm BCB radio) multi-talented singer songwriter and officially nicest man in Bradford, Imani Hekima came into BCB to talk about songwriting, his influences and his attitudes to censorship.

For people who haven’t heard your work before,what can the expect from your live performance on Friday?

IM:Something quite soulful , I guess. Songs with a social message which are based upon my key influences which have been things like the first band I ever followed, The Specials and all the 2-Tone stuff. I also grew up hearing Bob Marley’s albums, I like Curtis Mayfield which is also very message oriented. So it’s all of that, but through my own experiences

So were The Specials your formative musical experience?

IM:Definitely. At some point in every adolescent’s life you find an artist or a band that you hear or see on TV which strikes a chord with you in a way that nothing else does and that’s what The Specials and 2-Tone was to me. I was part of a gang who were into dressing up, going out and dancing, going to youth clubs and all that . There was a little group of us that used to go round places in Bradford and we established our own little youth club night at Checkpoint which is still there, and prior to that Textile Hall, and out of that we formed bands. The first band that I was in came out of that experience and they were called Spectre and we were like a ska band.

Were you writing your own material in Spectre?

IM:It didn’t take that long before we started writing our own material. I remember our first gig was all covers. We did stuff from UB40’s first album and The Specials’ first album. We used to do “Death Disco’ by PiL and “Peaches” by The Stranglers. Our drummer was a punk and myself and my two older brothers Roger and Stu liked punk as well, so it wasn’t a big deal to do Stranglers’ songs because we loved them.

Was 2-Tone as much a social focus as a musical one for you?

IM:In the 70’s youth were very tribal you could tell what a person’s musical taste was from how they dressed.There were various different youth tribes. Obviously, there were the punks, there were soul boys, there were people who were into reggae and we liked a bit of each of those things but we couldn’t really embrace the whole image. When the 2-Tone thing came along it was perfect really, because it represented a fusion of Jamaican culture and British culture and it just reflected our experience perfectly.

You mentioned Curtis Mayfield before, how did you get into that kind of early 70’s politically conscious soul music?

IM:The 80’s soul like Freddie Jackson and Luther Vandross didn’t really move me at all. It wasn’t that it wasn’t good music, but I think it was a lifestyle thing. Soul then was very kind of aspirational. It seemed to be all about wearing the finest shoes. We were into looking good ,but it was much more earthy. Our idea of looking sharp was a shiny pair of Doc Martins.There wasn’t any social message in the music, and it sounded a bit too pristine. The Motown and Stax records of the 60’s and 70’s were very sophisticated for the time, but they were very gritty as well.It was people playing in a room and you can hear the difference between that and the 24 track stuff from the 80’s
So I got into Stevie and Sly Stone from following the influences of the people I liked. When I read that UB40 were into Stevie Wonder it intrigued me and I wanted to find out more and now I can really hear his influence on their tracks.

When did you first start writing the type of material that you’re doing now?

IM.It was around about the turn of the millennium. Through the 80’s I’d been in Spectre and then after that I had a few years out and went back to Uni and during that period I was playing solo jazz piano at the West Yorkshire Playhouse because I’d gotten really into jazz. Towards the end of the 90’s there was a neo-soul movement with people like Eryka Badu and the The Fugees and that was really refreshing beacuse it was like contemporary soul that harked back to “What’s Going On ” and Stevie’s 70’s albums, but with a modern hip-hop feel to it.They were singing about current issues and that was a real catalyst in terms of me getting back into being a musician and writing and playing gigs.

Do you think that writing about political issues has held you back commercially?

IM: I don’t know. I think that if I did stick to more commonplace topics like love it might possibly be easier for people to get a handle on the music. It’s a hard question to answer. In terms of commercialism, I don’t mind that aspect of tailoring your sound so that someone who likes commercial or poppy music can get into it, but not so much that you’d compromise your musical integrity. It might have been easier, but it wouldn’t have been me. I got into music because I wanted to do things that I thought were good, and then if you do that well enough, hopefully other people will like it.

The programme this week is about taboos. Would you ever not write a song because you felt the subject matter might be too controversial?

IM:It’s difficult to say. A lot of the songs on “Imanifesto” do have a clear message. The ideal at the moment is to be able to say something clearly but also not be too literal. It depends where I am in my life – sometimes I can be at a point where I want to be completely direct and that’s good as well, but at the moment I like the idea of not being too obvious. There’s times when it’s good to be direct, but there are times when you can be very direct and sometimes people won’t get it. It’s surprising how many people aren’t focussed on lyrics.

Has anyone ever challenged you about any of your lyrics?

IM I haven’t had a lot of that. On the whole it’s been quite positive. I did a song called “Shame” which is about honour killings. The song was originally written about the period in about 2007 when people like Britney Spears and Amy Winehouse started to go off the rails. So I wrote about that experience and then about three years later someone that I knew who ran a Facebook page which highlighted honour killings needed some music for a video he was putting together. I was orginally going to give him an instrumental version, but when I looked at the lyrics I thought “this actually fits the subject matter” so I gave him the vocal version of the track.

The video’s quite shocking because it’s got images of acid attacks and someone said to me that every one of the victims in it were Muslims and also someone said that the same thing happens to women in the West and felt that the video might indirectly contribute to Islamophobia. So that was one instance were in a lot of ways the issue overpowered the music. When people looked at the video they commented on the video but not about the song. So that’s always a possibility if you do polemic or political music. You might get people who focus on that and the sound of the music gets overlooked . I’d like people to dig the music really, if they like the message then great, but first and foremost I’m a musician and I like to do stuff that’s entertaining and makes people feel good.

Imani Hekima will be making you feel good LIVE on WIN on BCB 106.6 Friday 19th July from 11pm. His LP “Imanifesto” is available from iTunes

Eclectic Mainline 17th July 2013

New tunes in tonight’s show from Tunng:

… The Ballet:

… Circle Traps:

… and Alela Diane:

You will find the whole show available on today’s page of the BCB Listen Again service.  Here is the full show’s track list:

Mark Pritchard – ‘Get Wyld’ (Ghosts EP) (Warp)
Mark Mulcahy – ‘Poison Candy Heart’ (single and LP - Dear Mark J Mulcahy I Love You) (Fire)
Tunng – ‘So Far From Here’ (single) (Full Time Hobby)
Kurt Vile – ‘Air Bud’ (LP - Wakin On A Pretty Daze) (Matador)
Emika – ‘Centuries’ (single and LP - DVA) (Ninja Tune)
The Ballet – ‘Turn You’ (single and LP - I Blame Society) (Fortuna POP!)
Füxa – ‘Sun Is Shining’ (single) (Rocket Girl)
Lightning Dust – ‘Loaded Gun’ (single and LP - Fantasy) (Jagjaguwar)
Anne-James Chaton and Andy Moor – ‘Journey On The Péquod’ (LP - Transfer) (Unsound)
Circle Traps – ‘Heatwave’ (Obelisk EP) (Five Easy Pieces)
Stephan Mathieu – ‘Deneb’ (LP - The Falling Rocket) (Dekorder)
Alela Diane – ‘The Way We Fall’ (LP - About Farewell) (Believe)
Arctic Monkeys – ‘Do I Wanna Know’ (single) (Domino)

Songs of Goodbye & Farewell ! Going North from Nashville: Monday 14th July, 10-11pm

Tonight’s programme is inspired by a long tradition of songs of farewell & goodbye. We have some classics for you!

1.  Eliza Carthy Band : Adieu, Adieu  

2.  Leonard Cohen: Hey,That’s No Way to Say Goodbye  

3.  Tom Paxton: Outward Bound 

4.  The National : This is the Last Time  

5.  She & Him: I’m Gonna Get Along Without You Now 

6.  Dawn Mc Carthy & Bonnie Prince Billy: It’s All Over 

7.  Fossil Collective: How was I to Know   

8.  Michelle Shocked: Goodnight Irene  

9.  Bob Dylan: Farewell

10. Billy Bragg : Goodbye, Goodbye   

11. Boo Hewerdne: I Almost Said Goodbye

12. Caitlin Rose: When I’m Gone 

 13. Ryan Adams : Goodnight Hollywood Boulevard

14. Anna Elias & the Forlorn Hope: Lullaby

15. Sarabeth Tucek: Good Night   Â