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FFS – FFS

  • Published in Albums

Franz Ferdinand shot to fame in 2004 when their debut album and signature single ‘Take Me Out’ made them into international stars overnight. The appalling follow up album, You Could Have It So Much Better, derailed their seemingly stratospheric rise. While Tonight (2009) and Right Words, Right Thoughts, Right Action (2013) proved that their initial success was no fluke, neither has re-established Franz Ferdinand as a star attraction.

They may have found redemption with this collaborative album with American art-rockers Sparks. Ron and Russell Mael have been writing and performing together since the '60s. They are best known for their hits, 'This Town Ain’t Big Enough For Both Of Us', 'The Number One Song in Heaven' and 'When Do I Get to Sing My Way'. Their experimental, progressive, synth based pop is readily identifiable by Russell’s falsetto vocals and Ron’s idiosyncratic keyboard, and toothbrush moustache.

There’s obvious novelty value to a joint venture between a young guitar pop group and a pair of sexagenarian auteurs but modern music history is littered with the execrable leavings of supergroup couplings. Successful alliances between well known bands are few. The Traveling Wilburys were a notable exception. FFS can sit comfortably in such company. Their association is so natural that it is impossible to tell where Franz Ferdinand begins and Sparks ends. Indeed, it is sometimes difficult to know whether Kapranos or Mael is singing. Guitarist Nick McCarthy even has a lead vocal on 'Things I Don’t Get'.

FFS is laden with the kind of jerky, spasmodic tunes that are the staple of both band’s individual careers, as typified by lead single 'Johnny Delusional'. 'Call Girl' and 'Dictator’s Son' continue in a similar vein and display the shared sense of humour and love of wordplay that surely helped the group to cohere as a unit.

Slower, more reflective tracks, like 'Little Guy from the Suburbs' and 'Things I Don’t Get', offset the bouncier dance numbers. There are some creepier moments too, such as 'The Man Without A Tan', that will be familiar to anyone who has attended enough discotheques. Shudder!

As is the fashion nowadays, the album is mastered a touch too loud for comfortable listening. Which is a shame, as producer John Congleton otherwise does a fine job in bringing the variety of instruments out in the mix and polishing it to a poptastic sheen. Congleton is the first choice producer in North American artrock at the moment, having recently overseen recordings by David Byrne, St. Vincent and Amanda Palmer

FFS ends with 'Piss Off', the origin of the collaboration, written and first recorded in 2004 when the two bands initially bonded. It is a celebratory send off to an album that has been gestating for a decade. Playful, pithy, and fun; representative of the album as a whole.

FFS is available from Amazon and iTunes.

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Hot Chip – Why Make Sense?

  • Published in Albums

Hot Chip are unapologetically uncool. Which of course makes them seriously cool. They’ve been around for a while now and have carved a niche for themselves as stalwarts in the electronic music scene with their disco tracks and heavy synth geekery.

Why Make Sense? is their sixth studio album. It was recorded at a residential studio in the Oxfordshire countryside – which is very Hot Chip. In a recent radio interview they said “We had a mad night one night where we stayed up till about midnight and played Scrabble. It was awesome.” These boys are not going to be throwing TVs out of hotel windows any time soon.

But so what? We love that they just love the music. They are the hardest working people in electronic music - the result being that they have nailed it again with an album of solid gold uplifting pop music. Although this album is a departure from previous work, which focusses less of the house and disco element and is infused with more of a hip-hop/soul/R&B vibe.

They go full R&B and funk in ‘Love is the Future’ – even using a talkbox and featuring rapping from De La Soul’s Posdnuos, which just lays down beautifully on a tune that will have you swaying in your seat (I’m doing it now as I write this!).

Then there’s the complete juxtaposition of ‘White Wine and Fried Chicken’ which sounds like American folk music that has been mangled through some synth computer – in a good way! Unlike the floor fillers that the album is packed with, it is reflective and melancholy. It provides a little bit of downtime in the middle of the album.

Don’t worry, it’s not long before you’re up on your feet again. ‘Dark Night’ still has a bit of a darker tinge to it, but it’s definitely more upbeat, the steady beat pulsating through you. And ‘Need You Now’ is like a slice of disco heaven.

What Hot Chip have done is brought us an album of blue-eyed soul with music that you can dance to, but you don’t need to give a shit about how you’re dancing, and how you look, you’re just doing it for the pure joy of it.

Why Make Sense? is available from Amazon and iTunes.

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