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Jonathan Boulet
Gubba
(Pop Frenzy/Caroline)
by Ian Sinclair
After achieving popularity in his native Australia mining the kind of indie
that gets you support slots with Mumford & Sons and Kate Nash, 26-year old
Jonathan Boulet relocated to Europe to release this, his third album.
With Boulet citing Minor Threat, The Men and Dirty Beaches as key
influences, the noisy and fast Gubba is a huge change of direction.
Hold It Down kicks off by stealing the guitar motif from The Walkmen’s
Heaven before descending into relentless, ear-bursting garage rock.
Most of the other songs continue to bludgeon the listener – from Creeper’s
Led-Zeppelin-sized guitar riffs to the sardonically hooky You’re A Man and
the melodic quiet-loud closer High Five Guy.
Shot through with a basic pop sensibility, the incredibly loud and fuzzy
Gubba is a youthful triumph that suggests Boulet has much more to offer.
Just don’t expect another call from The Mumfords, Jonathan.
Ian Sinclair
The Levellers
Greatest Hits
(On The Fiddle Recording)
by Ian Sinclair
The Levellers' fiddle-infused rock and anarchist politics have long made
them a marmite band, a situation not helped by their difficult relationship
with the music press.
Putting THAT aside, this 2-CD set — their second greatest hits album, with
the first being released in 1998 – highlights just how much good music the
Brighton band have made in the last 25 years.
Peak period anti-establishment anthems such as Fifteen Years and Liberty
still pack one hell of a punch, while later hits like the drink-a-long Just
the One and What a Beautiful Day highlight strong pop sensibilities. New
material comes in the form of reworked old songs featuring younger artists
like Frank Turner and Imelda May.
I have some minor quibbles — why omit the barn-storming Battle of the
Beanfield? — but overall the album proves the Levellers can rightfully take
their own distinctive place in the rock canon.
