Mog profile

Joxley

MOG Meter

Status: Blazing

I was a star once...

Find me at

Some Favourites

Artists I must not Forget About

  • Tinariwen

  • Kate Nash

  • Seeeing Scarlet

  • The Hedrons

  • Laura Marling

  • The Cribs

  • Switches

  • Pop Levi

  • The Draytones

  • The Mescalitas

  • The Harrisons

Recently Added to Music Collection

Last Songs Played

  • Free music video of Lime Tree
  • Free music video of The Casualty

Vital Signs

Mogger Since:
June 22, 2006
Whereabouts:
United Kingdom
Occupation:
Rock Detective
Call me:
Joxley, Jox, Joxy or John
Words from a great man:
"Remember: get into the living of this life, get involved and don’t forget to write it all down somewhere.” Rest In Peace Crash
Future whereabouts:
Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge
Anna:
wants to see my 12 inch

Extra-Curricular

  • The MOGettes official Pimp

  • Manager of Right Said Fred Zeppelin

  • Manger of The Pintettes

I discovered....

Posts

Artist: Track: A Kiss with A Fist

Feisty Florence and The Machine is the latest retro inspired songstress to emerge from the UK indie scene. This unsigned maiden sings the blues with a brutal panache and crafts sultry songs that verge from the frenetic to the unspeakable delicate. Highlights on her myspace page include the rampant energy of _Kiss with a Fist_ and the stripped back cover of Cold War Kids _Hospital Beds_. Already chums with Lightspeed Champion and Kate Nash, I wouldn't be surprised if she exploded in the next few months.

 

Comments
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amber says:

I agree...the music scene is ready for one more UK song bird. I like the song A LOT . Thanks for the intro, Jox

Posted 5 days ago
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Wow. More goodies from the Camden Crawl. As if I wasn't jealous enuf...

Posted 4 days ago
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Good stuff. I prefer this track, that I posted months ago.

Posted 1 day ago

Winning the semi-final of the National Inter-school General Knowledge Quiz on the last question: amazing.

Losing the final in the same manner: gutting.

My face as I struggled to put an answer to "Which band wrote the single I Spy from the album Different Class?" into words: Priceless.

 
Comments
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cameron96 says:

ouch! that sucks , damn is that the answer you won on or lost on? Damn I probably would of missed that because I would of been thinking too hard on the song title not the album...oh well...at least you placed!

Posted 14 days ago
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I'm sorry :(

Posted 14 days ago
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What? You choked on some Pulp?!? Impossible!

Posted 13 days ago

MOGstars: 9/10

Understatements can’t really be something Alex Turner has heard much in the last few years- ever since he muttered “Don’t believe the hype” at the start of the video for I Bet You Look Good on The Dancefloor he and his band of Arctic Monkeys have been showered with superlatives; fastest-selling, best, phenomenal and a thousand other compliments have come there way from both critics and consumers. Now at the tender age of 22, Turner has teamed up with mate Miles Kane (of indie also-rans The Little Flames and The Rascals) to launch side project The Shadow Puppets.

At first debut offering The Age of The Understatement seems like the concoction of a music industry Dr Frankenstein- the most potent forces of British music thrown together into an all consuming duo. Bombastic Britpop that appeals to the Oasis crowd, is combined with the retro chic of Duffy and Richard Hawley, creating a harmony of everything that is currently chart topping. The lad-rock that made Turner the darling of post closing-closing time brusiers and scantily clad slappers is here, but is toned down in favour this time of the musicality that intrigued the indie connoisseurs and pretentious press – rather like a can of Stella with a white port chaser. Thrown in with this is a twist of grandeur, as Arcade Fire collaborator Owen Pallet and the London Metropolitan Orchestra are brought in for string arrangements.

This bizarre cocktail is easily sampled with the title track and first single- an orchestral flurry soon gives way to grumbling guitars, and a sonic splendour that perfectly mirrors the videos Soviet setting. From the outset it is clear Turner has left behind his Angry Young Men approach to songwriting. His songs are no longer the everyday tales of Sheffield life- an existence of birds, booze and bouncers – but literary creations, powered by sibilance and subtlety. Instead of a night on the tiles, The Age of The Understatement is more like a black and white detective film.

This cinematic sumptuousness is highlighted further on My Mistakes Were Made For You, which sounds perfectly suited to the cocktails and sports cars of Connery era Bond. As the strings soar and swoop from majesty to malice, Turner’s Glastonbury crowning performance of Diamonds Are Forever comes to mind. Yet it is the personal aspect of this track that really makes it shimmer, Turner’s doleful vocals are reminiscent of 505, the despairing love song that ended the latest Monkeys’ album and of course saw Kane provide guest guitars. Except this time things are filtered beautifully though subtle imagery, rather than the realism of Turner’s day job.

Only The Truth serves as a vehicle for some of the most personal lyrics on the album. Here Turner returns to his usual, highly cynical, view of love, and frames it with his typical observational lyrics. Yet as is the theme for this record, all the time it is a highly stylised tableau he is viewing – “She lifts up her glass/As if to bring down a mass” is a far cry from the Neepsend kerb crawlers of When The Sun Goes Down. With a musical chase sequence full of turns and pitfalls, the instrumentation once again mirrors Turners words.

Many people coming to The Age of The Understatement are going to be disappointed – there is little trace here of the writer who provide such choruses as “Oh the boy’s a slag/the best you ever had” or whose songs provided the backdrop to countless pub brawls. The skinheads who turned Arctic Monkeys stadium shows into violent mosh pits are going to find little to fuel their aggression here. But at risk of sounding snobby, the more refined AM fans will find much to love. The Merseybeat of Standing Next to Me and quiet strumming of The Time Has Come Again, alongside the more sumptuous tracks, showcase musical knowledge and passion, whilst the lyrics are as entertaining and pithy as anything Turner has written before. The album exudes sixties influences, but instead of the Terrence Rattigan and Albert Finney grit of AM’s records, it is one of Orson Welles and Scott Walker. With this record Turner has in some ways come out of the closet, no longer the working class Northern lad making noise, he shows himself as a musician with a sense of artistry, class and history – some may denounce this record as “poncey”, but for the true music fan it is an impressive side to his skill.

 
Comments
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cameron96 says:

fantastic review as always...got it on me itunes and manana I will listen...some things never change like the great reviews here...

Posted 21 days ago
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You said it: artistry, class and history. Great review - Orson Welles and Scott Walker indeed. With a touch of Ventures/Shadows.

Posted 20 days ago
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Of course, as a member of the Critic Elite, I'm more into this than I was into the A.M.s. - and that's saying a lot. Hell of an album. Thanks for the usual pithy insights, Jox.

Posted 20 days ago
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