Indie Basement (11/14): the week in classic indie, alternative & college rock

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The year is slowing down for new releases and I only have one from this week (Swedish band The Mary Onettes‘ first in 11 years), but I play a bit of catch-up and review three other recent releases: Montreal’s The Dears, Norway’s I Was a King, and Australia’s The Gnomes.

While it’s not a big week for brand-new albums for this column, there are a ton of reissues and box sets out this week, with labels making sure shelves are fully stocked for Black Friday in two weeks. I review one of those, maybe the ultimate Big ’80s album, for my Indie Basement Classic.

It’s a bigger week for Andrew in Notable Releases, with reviews of VTT/PTTN (Avett Brothers/Mike Patton), Lamp of Murmuur, Ben Quad and more.

This week on the BV Interviews pod, I talk to Midlake’s Eric Pulido.

Other news of note this week: Massive Attack will release new music next year; Robyn is back; Mandy, Indiana have a new album; La Femme’s Marlon Magnee announced his first solo album; Ivy announced their first US shows in 15 years; Art Brut will tour their debut album for it’s 20th anniversary next year; Getdown Services announced their most extensive US tour yet; and LCD Soundsystem has assembled the coolest batch of openers for their annual holiday run so far.

Head below for this week’s reviews…

The Mary Onettes – SWORN (Welfare Sounds)
These Swedish gloom pop vets are back with their first new album in more than a decade

Brothers Phillip and Henrik Ekström have led Jönköping, Sweden’s The Mary Onettes for 25 years and were ahead of the curve on sounding like The Cure, shoegaze, and dreampop in general. But they’ve been mostly quiet since releasing their third album, Portico, in 2014. Part of that was so members could raise families and Phillip could launch a solo career as H.Moon — and their label, Labrador, all but ceased operations in 2018 — though they did release the occasional new song while staying under the radar.

It’s nice to have The Mary Onettes back with a new album that finds them still in their widescreen mope-pop glory, and hopefully taking advantage of the current shoegaze revival. SWORN definitely feels hazier than their previous albums, with an extra layer of reverb lacquering everything and a gentler tone across the board. There’s more Slowdive than Robert Smith this time, but Ekström’s knack for a soaring hook is as sharp as ever. “Hurricane Heart” and “Without This Body” check all the boxes — moody, driving basslines, propulsive rhythms, and gloriously glum, massive choruses — while “Tears to an Ocean” and “ARP” flirt with synthpop. Then there’s “Eyes Open,” a duet with Maja Milner of fellow Swedes Makthaverskan, which gives off strong ’80s Cocteau Twins vibes. SWORN is a sleek new suit for these familiar faces.

i was a king - until the end

I Was a King – Until the End (Hype City Music)
Bill Ryder-Jones produced this elegant 10th album from long-running Norwegian Teenage Fanclub

From Sweden we head west to Norway and another long-running band, I Was a King, who’ve had a penchant for Teenage Fanclub-style janglepop since 2005. Until the End is the band’s 10th studio album, and for this one they traveled to Merseyside, England to work with the great Bill Ryder-Jones as producer. (They also got Scottish artist Donald Milne — who designed the sleeve for Pulp’s Different Class — to do the artwork.) “[Ryder-Jones] took the music to new places, and sometimes we got lost,” the band told Norwegian site Musikknyheter. “Part of the point of bringing in external producers is that they make something new happen.”

The “new” is that they don’t keep the fuzz pedal on all the time, letting in more ethereal textures, contemplative moods, and other instrumentation like strings and harmonium. They’ve not gone shoegaze, but songs like “Dust Bunnies,” “November” and “Falling” have a spectral beauty and ’70s-rock vibe that edges them closer to Midlake, with Frode Strømstad and Anne Lise Frøkedal sounding especially sweet here. There are, of course, still plenty of crunchy, cozy IWAK earworms: “Sleepless Nights,” “Pool Painted Black” and “House Warming” are as comfortable and familiar as an old sweater in Oslo on the coldest night of the year.

The Dears - Life is Beautiful! Life is Beautiful! Life is Beautiful!

The Dears – Life is Beautiful! Life is Beautiful! Life is Beautiful! (Next Door Records)
Positivity shines on this latest album from Montreal lifers The Dears

“I remember when it clicked in my brain what I was writing about,” says Murray A. Lightburn, frontman for Montreal indie lifers The Dears. “It was soon after we played a series of shows celebrating the 20th anniversary of No Cities Left. I was on stage surrounded by wonderful musicians, playing songs I wrote in my 20s. My kids and my mom were sitting up on the balcony of the theatre. Natalia was just to my right. I told the audience that sometimes it gets tough but that life is beautiful. I asked the audience to say it with me, three times: A mantra; a wish; an affirmation.”

“Life is Beautiful! Life is Beautiful! Life is Beautiful!” is both a welcome message and the title of a very good new Dears album — their ninth if you’re counting, released in their 30th year as a band. Lightburn tends to set the controls to bigger as a default, and that’s the case here — opener “Gotta Get My Head Right” goes full Queen one minute in — but the melodies are cheerier, and you can feel his recent film and TV scoring work in the bright, horn-and-string-embellished arrangements of songs like “Deep in My Heart” and “Babe, We’ll Find a Way.”

Positivity is a tough angle to pull off without tipping into treacle, but Lightburn has always managed it, even when The Dears were dodging Morrissey comparisons while singing about being stuck in the rain without an umbrella. They’ve always had that “us against the world” romanticism, but this time they’re not just weathering the storm — they’re envisioning a rainbow at the end.

The Gnomes - Introducing The Gnomes

The Gnomes – Introducing the Gnomes (Dog Meat Records)
This young Australian band don’t try to hide their ’60s influences but energy and enthusiasm keep these songs fresh

Melbourne teenager Jay Millar had a love for ’60s Brit Invasion rock and his own way with a catchy tune, and began making his own spin on the era as Gnome with a flurry of one-man-band releases on Bandcamp. When he finally decided to play out, he put together a band and Gnome became The Gnomes. Introducing is Millar’s first with the full group, and it crackles with youthful energy, earworm riffs, and big choruses. It’s garage rock, but really more in line with the many international groups that sprung up in the wake of The Beatles, The Kinks, and The Creation — think Sweden’s Tages, Peru’s We All Together, or Australia’s The Twilights.

Millar and crew wear their influences like fully tailored suits, ankle boots included, but the enthusiasm and performances are far too fun and memorable to dismiss as mere pastiche. This plays like Nuggets if the whole comp were made by the same band.

tears for fears - songs from the big chair

INDIE BASEMENT CLASSIC: Tears for Fears – Songs From the Big Chair (1985, Phonogram/Mercury)
The best Big ’80s album ever? I make a case and look at the 40th anniversary edition of Tears for Fears’ worldwide smash second album

As Tears for Fears, Roland Orzabal and Curt Smith never lacked ambition or pretense, even when the budgets were smaller and their musical skill wasn’t fully realized. Their 1983 debut, The Hurting, was maximalist, dour synthpop for gloomy kids who still liked to dance, with some absolutely bananas arrangements. It went to #1 in the UK and had hits with “Mad World,” “Change,” and “Pale Shelter,” all of which are absolutely overstuffed with synthesizers and drum machines. Working again with producer Chris Hughes, they figured it all out with its follow-up, Songs from the Big Chair, an album that made the most of the toolkit of that year (gated drums, LinnDrum, big shimmering guitars, the Fairlight synth, so much saxophone, bombastic production, loads of melodrama, mullets).

Also: the tunes. “Shout,” “Everybody Wants to Rule the World,” and “Head Over Heels” were all undeniable worldwide smashes that cost a bundle to make but have every penny in the mix. The rest of the record was great too, with minor hit fourth single “Mother’s Talk,” fist-pumping synth rocker “Broken” that foreshadows “Head Over Heels,” piano ballad “I Believe,” and atmospheric closer “Listen.” Along with Frankie Goes to Hollywood’s Welcome to the Pleasuredome, Songs From the Big Chair gets my vote for Most ’80s Album.

In the second half of the decade, things got bigger but not better: Tears for Fears spent a million dollars on Sowing the Seeds of Love to sound like The Beatles and, while still ambitious, for the first time they were looking backwards, not forward. But Songs from the Big Chair managed to hit a bullseye on a fast-moving target.

The new 40th anniversary edition includes a bunch of fresh mixes by Steven Wilson, including a Dolby Atmos mix and a hi-res instrumental version of the album. I would love to hear the Dolby Atmos mix (or any Atmos mix — I don’t have the stereo for it) but can’t imagine it topping Dave Bascombe’s stellar original mix. There are also 12 bonus tracks, including 12″ extended mixes, medley mixes, U.S. radio mixes, an a cappella version of “Shout,” b-sides, and more.

Looking for more? Browse the Indie Basement archives.

And check out what’s new in our shop.

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