Sunshine Anderson - Heard it All before

As alternative music fell over itself in a headlong dash towards the mainstream this decade, one of the unfortunate side effects was that mainstream pop music adopted some of the worst aspects of the indie sector. In 2009 (which is, remember, all about pop) Britain is rife with artists that combine the pumped-up piety and creative ‘seriousness’ of old indie with the principle-less commerciality and childish simplicity of the lesser pop song. I don’t like to name names, but actually, I will, so here goes: Florence and the Machine, Little Boots, La Roux.

This is an unfortunate turn of events, because pop has always thrived on ephemerality and anti-seriousness, has always benefitted enormously from the celebration of short-lived, attention-grabbing anomalies over album-length pretention. What’s weird about the three artists mentioned above is that they just don’t seem to have any singles worthy of note. In this age of plummeting CD sales, it is, bizarrely, their albums that have been heavily marketed, which looks very much a desperate last attempt by the record industry to appeal to the few people still buying physical copy (ie. twenty/thirty-something Mondeo women).

You get the feeling that if Sunshine Anderson’s ‘Heard it All Before’ was released today, instead of it being a rare, unique, transitory pop gem, it would most likely be positioned in the vanguard of a similarly obvious and cheap marketing strategy. As it is, we can thank our lucky stars it appeared in 2001, just before records by soul/pop-influenced female solo artists started sounding like they were designed by a committee consisting of Bernard Butler, Jo Whiley, and the Chief Executive of one of the ‘cooler’ offshoots of the Universal Music Group. Read the rest of this entry »

Lykke Li

Re-evaluating a record only 18 months after its release might seem like a dubious idea, but with La Roux, Ladyhawke & Little Boots all hitting the heights of the chart with considerable success, column inches, and more than a little hype, it already feels like the time is right to say that Lykke Li’s debut Youth Novels is the most underappreciated pop album in recent memory in the UK.

I can already hear the dissent; Lykke Li enjoyed a warm critical reception, found acceptance in the indie hipster scene and established a cult following. But while ‘Little Bit’ managed to hit #20, ‘I’m Good, I’m Gone’ couldn’t even break the top 40 and ‘Breaking it Up’ had even less of an impact, dismissed as mere coquettishness without substance.

Just 18 months on, La Roux and Ladyhawke have generated number 1 singles and heavy radio rotation with their take on synth-pop and 80s electro throwback, while Little Boots has enjoyed a nigh-on hysterical full label backing despite lacking the craft and invention in evidence on Youth Novels; as irrelevant as the charts are in modern music, this is still a travesty.

Don’t misconstrue this as a La Roux put down; ‘Bulletproof’ is an immensely memorable tune, with a chorus that sinks somewhere deep into your psyche (God knows it will be stuck in my head for an unnecessarily long time), but her retro 80s aesthetic means that it is as comfortable on Radio 2’s playlist as it is anywhere else. Ladyhawke’s hit ‘Paris is Burning’ riffed on obvious similarities with Gary Numan, while her debut seemed to swing between 80s kitsch and similarly retrogressive, shiny MOR. Little Boots’s Kylie aspirations are evident on ’Stuck on Repeat’, which falls somewhere between Donna Summer and 90s dance, but with anonymous vocals. Hands is just another lacklustre installment of this rather unwelcome 80s revival that values style (and hype) above substance.

Thus, retro electro-pop records, complete with virtual pastiches of artists such as Human League, Soft Cell, Numan et al, have become synonymous with ‘innovative pop’, which is all in all a rather absurd development. The focus in the media and radio on these retrogressive pop artists and their artificially-constructed moment/scene will surely end the same way as the garage rock revival ushered in by The Strokes, and become completely forgettable in the grand scheme of things within a matter of months.

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