Filbert_Ross Posted 13 March 2009 Posted 13 March 2009 out monday, listen here- http://www.myspace.com/gracewastelands I love Babyshambles! liking the sound of grace/wastelands so far too. seeing him at Rock City on wednesday!!!!
Finchy Posted 13 March 2009 Posted 13 March 2009 It's pretty good, can't wait to see him in Brum in a few weeks! Graham Coxon will be performing with him at that end of the tour!
The People's Hero Posted 13 March 2009 Posted 13 March 2009 Just obtained it. Shall listen later. Send us a copy on cd mate? Or link me to an upload thingy? Yeah? And none of your dodgy Lemar stuff...
purpleronnie Posted 13 March 2009 Posted 13 March 2009 Unfortunately most people dismiss him because of the headlines he creates but as a song writer he's better than most in england. He has something to say, an opinion which for some reason is now quite a rare thing.
Jay Posted 13 March 2009 Posted 13 March 2009 never really into Babyshambles and while The Libertines had some stonking tunes this album sounds amazing and only 4 songs in the first track is just brilliant
Joe. Posted 13 March 2009 Posted 13 March 2009 Always admired him for his music and tried to look past his personal life. Wouldn't mind seeing him live one day, even if it's just for Music When The Lights Go Out.
Daggers Posted 13 March 2009 Posted 13 March 2009 Pete Doherty is famously a fan of the traditional British sitcom: he has referenced The Likely Lads, taken the stage to Steptoe and Son's theme tune and this, his debut solo album, concludes with a song named after Lady Don't Fall Backwards, the unfinished whodunnit that drove the Lad Himself to distraction in Hancock's Half Hour. So perhaps it's fitting that Doherty's own career now bears a resemblance to the most traditional British sitcom: Last of the Summer Wine. Given the climate, you might have expected it to have been axed years ago, but against all odds it still seems to be trudging on. The audience is dwindling, the cast keeps changing and it's getting difficult to find anyone with a memory long enough to recall why it was thought to be workable in the first place. At some point in the past, people must have laughed along with it, although every time you catch a glimpse of it now, you're struck by how depressing it all is: it's meant to conjure up a charmingly romantic image of a lost England, but something about it makes you think of lethargy and boredom, of homework not done. Yet someone keeps bankrolling it, so that another rickety contraption can be built and optimistically pushed down a hill, with messy yet thumpingly predictable consequences.So it is that Grace/Wastelands arrives with a sigh of "Are you still here?" rather than the excitement it might once have engendered: not even the news that Blur's Graham Coxon is on hand to help haul Doherty's bath on wheels up the slope has caused much of a ripple. He was recruited by producer Stephen Street, whose continued presence suggests a laudable generosity of spirit, given the shoddy goods he was expected to work with on the last Babyshambles album. He did his best, but failed, in much the same way as Heston Blumenthal might struggle to create a Michelin-starred meal entirely from oven chips and Reggae Reggae Sauce. Perhaps Street returned on condition that Doherty came up with some decent songs. Certainly something set him scouring his unreleased stockpile for gems. There are tracks here that date back five years, before the tabloids turned up and Pete became Potty. That might account for the album's frankly astonishing surfeit of memorable tunes; it would certainly explain the lack of smirking references to heroin and crack and of the snivelling self-pity that makes junkies such reliably delightful company. Admittedly, neither are entirely absent. Arcadie comes with a nudge-nudge line about "seraphic pipes", while Sheepskin Tearaway and Sweet By and By return to the perennially winning themes of how it was everyone else's fault that he got chucked by Kate Moss and how it was everyone else's fault that he got kicked out of the Libertines. He squanders one of the album's loveliest melodies on the former, even reverting to that terrible spare-any-change-please whine he kept using on Babyshambles' catastrophic Down in Albion. But for the first time in a long time, smack and solipsism don't seem to be the whole point. Instead there are songs like the genuinely brilliant 1939 Returning, on which the lyric shifts from an ambiguous portrait of an Englishman in Germany during the second world war - he could be a spy or traitor - to a pensioner recalling her years as an evacuee. Midway through its chorus, there's a beautiful, unexpected chord change, subtly highlighted with strings and a single, tremolo-heavy guitar note. Like the echoing guitar that weaves eerily in and out of the vocals on New Love Grows on Trees, and the lovely, seamless segue between A Little Death Around the Eyes and Salome, it demonstrates the delicacy with which Street and Coxon add shade to Doherty's songs, lending the album a unifying air of understated, small-hours melancholy. The result isn't perfect, but it's the first album Doherty has been involved with since the Libertines' debut not to require any special pleading. Whether it's enough to arrest his downward slide is an interesting question: there's a distinct possibility that it's now too late, that he's still doomed to see out his days in Last of the Summer Wine style, beloved of a shrinking cabal of dutiful diehard fans, ignored or mocked by virtually everyone else. Listening to Grace/Wastelands, it's hard not to feel that would be a shame. There might still be more to Pete Doherty than an interminable, unutterably depressing comedy of errors. The Guardian
General Smuts Posted 14 March 2009 Posted 14 March 2009 It's downloaded and on my to do list. Comic Relief comes first.
Filbert_Ross Posted 14 March 2009 Author Posted 14 March 2009 'sheepskin tearaway' is my favourate tune at the moment
BoneDog Posted 17 March 2009 Posted 17 March 2009 Get on 'Thee Deadtime Philharmonic', the real Doherty is Murdoch. No bullshit pretend shit
Darkzzz_ Posted 17 March 2009 Posted 17 March 2009 The guy is talented as fook there is no doubting that.
Filbert_Ross Posted 18 March 2009 Author Posted 18 March 2009 ....She knows her Rodneys from her Stanleys And her Kappas from her Reeboks ... roll on tonight.
Filbert_Ross Posted 19 March 2009 Author Posted 19 March 2009 seen him at rock city last night. amazing. so good live, great set list, mix between libs/shambles and solo.
Finchy Posted 19 March 2009 Posted 19 March 2009 seen him at rock city last night. amazing.so good live, great set list, mix between libs/shambles and solo. What Libs songs did he play mate?
Joe. Posted 19 March 2009 Posted 19 March 2009 What Libs songs did he play mate? Music When The Lights Go Out had to be in there surely. I'd love to see him do that acoustic and live.
Daggers Posted 19 March 2009 Posted 19 March 2009 Great album. Wouldn't go that far but it bears repeated listening, which for him is a massive stride forward.
Filbert_Ross Posted 19 March 2009 Author Posted 19 March 2009 What Libs songs did he play mate? what a waster music when the lights go out cant stand me now time for heroes ( i think)
Finchy Posted 20 March 2009 Posted 20 March 2009 what a wastermusic when the lights go out cant stand me now time for heroes ( i think) Brilliant! Can't Stand Me Now Incredible song.
Filbert_Ross Posted 20 March 2009 Author Posted 20 March 2009 Brilliant! Can't Stand Me Now Incredible song. his final tune!!!
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