Review: Jesse Malin & The St. Marks Social – Love It To Life

Jesse Malin & The St. Marks Social: Love it to Life (Side One Dummy, 2010)

Jesse Malin returns after a small break and shows that his rock’n’roll heart is as strong as ever and that he can still write wonderful songs. Jesse Malin might well be another graduate from the Springsteen school of songwriting, but he has skipped a few classes and made some personal field trips to underground rock & punk clubs that are covered with the pictures of people like Johnny Thunders, Nikki Sudden and Stiv Bators. The new album Love it to Life is a great return to form after a little pointless cover album On Your Sleeve. This is  a damn fine rock’n’roll record that has more heart than a baseball court full of american idols. Just listen to this and there’s no need for replacements. A really strong album from start to finish, but if I need to say one bad thing, it’s the fact that maybe none of the songs are as mindblowing as some earlier favourites like Black Haired Girl for example. St. Marks Sunset does rank pretty close, but so far it looks like I don’t need to make changes for my imaginary top 3 Jesse Malin songs list. However, this doesn’t change the fact that Jesse Malin is still the real deal and Love it to Life is a truly enjoyable album.

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Jesse Malin Website

Jesse Malin at myspace

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Review: Kiki Pau – White Mountain

Kiki Pau: White Mountain (Johanna Kustannus, 2010)

I have a lot of respect for Kiki Pau and I understand why people are so excited about them, but personally I haven’t totally fallen for them. Maybe it’s my silly mind trying to resist the hype or maybe I just think that The Rollstons can come up with something much more convincing and original out of the same influences or maybe I’m just one damn fool who doesn’t understand a thing about good music. Anyway, White Mountain is Kiki Pau’s second offering and it’s a good record that blends together 90’s US indie rock, 80’s british indie pop and trendy modern indie music. There’s not much to complain. I just got the ticket to a wrong ball game and therefore I’m finding it hard to fully enjoy what is going on. I’m just not really into them when they throw in the indie rock gear and start to sound like Arcade Fire, but the softer and slower moments sure do sound good and show that the band have an ear for beautiful melodies. Therefore songs like  Quiet Mountain and Small Cuts are the highlights for me, because they have enough room for subtlety. I suppose qualitywise White Mountain would deserve four hearts, but because I write from purely subjective perspective anything above three wouldn’t be honest. I hope they succeed though, because even though this isn’t totally my cup of tea, it doesn’t taste any weaker than similar kind of tea from the international indie hit charts.

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Kiki Pau at myspace

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News: Cats on Fire

Cats On Fire’s new rarities compilation Dealing in Antiques is out on 12th of may. Released by Johanna Kustannus in Finland and on license by Matinée in the US and South America. Cats On Fire is pretty much the best indie pop band in the country/world/universe and based on the tracklist one can already say that it will be an excellent compilation. White Town cover Your Woman starts the record and this song is now available for free download. You can listen to it below and/or download it from the Cats On Fire website

Cats on Fire Website

Tracklist:

1. Your Woman (White Town cover)
2. Poor Students Dream of Marx
3. Never Land Here
4. Crooked Paper Clip
5. Something Happened
6. On His Right Side
7. Don’t Say it Could Be Worse
8. My Friend in a Comfortable Chair
9. You Will Find Me Where You Left Me
10. Solid Work
11. Higher Grounds (original EP version)
12. They Produced a Girl
13. Honey Your Baby
14. The Smell of an Artist (original EP version)
15. Your Treasure
16. The Cold Hands of Great Men
17. Draw in the Reins (original EP version)
18. Happiness is Chemistry
19. Stars
20. The Hague

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