MAMMAL CLUB

Everything Everything are a band that’s known to be something of an acquired taste, but our palate devoured them as if they’d been prepared by a Michelin-starred chef. Some dismissed their sound as over-complicated or too random, but we bloody loved it, finding them incredibly inventive and original, whilst still providing hooks and singles in abundance. Well, Mammal Club are being touted as a more palatable Everything Everything, so we’re poised and salivating all over our keyboard.

We’d heard Mammal Club’s debut EP, AU, upon it’s release on the Everybodys Stalking label on May 2nd, but like a well-behaved child we were waiting to see what they were like live at the upcoming Great Escape Festival later that month. What we failed to compute at that time was the fact that the Brighton festival is by far the busiest weekend of the year for us, with around 300 bands playing in our city, so it’s simply impossible to catch everyone. As amazing as the weekend always is, the list of bands you miss is almost as long as the list of bands you catch. Unfortunately Mammal Club proved to be perhaps the biggest miss of all, as it also meant we subsequently forgot to blog them. At least today we’re finally able to rectify this, as a set of Recommender pages without Mammal Club is like a cup of tea without sugar – warm and refreshing, but it could be so much sweeter.

Their EP proved to be yet another enjoyable example of the quality wave of artists currently bursting out of Newcastle and the North East, alongside the likes of Polarsets, Holy Mammoth, Let’s Buy Happiness and Grandfather Birds among many others. In fact the factory line has been pretty non-stop since Two Door Cinema Club started filling venues up and down the UK. It’s not just the rate at which bands are appearing, but the extraordinary talent that’s on show that’s so special. Mammal Club could prove to be the peak in the excitement due to their exceptionally great collection of songs.

The four lads combine in a racing storm of intelligent indie. Wilson Astley’s vocals are particularly enjoyable, often following the darting guitars and diced drums. This is non more evidenced than in the utterly remarkable track, Hang, which manages to feel as fried as it does luscious, standing the song on it’s brilliant lead refrain “Will you ever solve any of this?“. It’s direct and challenging, like all the best music. Lead track Otter is also a stunning piece of work. If you listened to the individual instruments on their own you’d never recognise the song, but once collected together they find form.

Away from the EP you still find lots of magic, particularly with the track Put Your Fears In Order, which pops like raindrops on a window, before it creeps into a vocal calling reminiscent of fellow Tynesider’s The Futureheads. It’s jagged indie pop with the edges smoothed down so the fit in your ears with ease. Music like this is perhaps a little reminiscent of Foals, but this band try to play their instruments in such an off-beat way that it’s almost as if they’re trying to put each other off. They take math rock to an orchestral level, where each of the instruments get utilised with such an astonishing level of skill, yet retain their own identity within something much larger than the individual parts, and that includes the voice.

We’ve been reliably informed that the next single, Painting, is due out in the Autumn once it’s ready. We very much look forward to that new release, as this is music that keeps you guessing at every turn, although it never loses you on it’s maze-like journey, eventually freeing you up for air upon each song’s close. It’s so inventive and without constraint that you have no idea where it’s going to go, nor can you imagine how the hell they concoct such well-crafted ideas. If this is music to be labelled for an ‘acquired taste’, then we are more than happy to prepare the table and invite you all over for a taster.  (MB)

MAMMAL CLUB – OTTER

MAMMAL CLUB – HANG

MAMMAL CLUB – PUT YOUR FEARS IN ORDER

LOOK, STRANGER!

We are often wary of band names with too much punctuation. The frustration perhaps peaked at Chk Chk Chk (or !!!) so in fairness these unnecessary additions to bands’ monikers have been appearing long before Look, Stranger! Alongside this blog we also contribute to The Brighton Source Magazine and our editor recently emailed everyone stating that “Exclamation marks are straight out banned from now on. You should be able to express excitement without them“. We couldn’t agree more, but when it comes to this new four piece from London we’re tempted to re-examine our box of grammatical emotions.

Look, Stranger! are at a relatively early stage, still unsigned and self-produced, but they already seem to be reaching skywards. They drift without resistance, as if floating in space in the same way Roxy Music and David Bowie used to at their most effortless, but before you rush for the play button the gap they’re actually bridging is perhaps between the likes of the more recent Wave Machines and Reptar. They’ve created a set of architecturally well-designed tunes that achieve the difficult balance between being ostentatious and well-mannered. It’s like they’re crooning at you without ever getting meretricious, or threatening to steal your girlfriend.

They’ve been together for a couple of years and even tested the water with an un-promoted EP about 18 months ago, but they informed us that they’ve grown and changed since then, stating that the new If You’re Listening EP, due out on 13th June, is their debut proper. In all honesty this new EP shows off a level of extraordinary skills, ultimately suggesting that they’ve always been wise beyond their years. This honed craft is perhaps a result of them having all previously performed in bands which included the likes of Charlie Fink, Laura Marling and Marcus Mumford. However, nu-folk this most certainly isn’t.

What you get here is one of the most consistent pop EPs that we’ve heard all year, which will have you enjoying the troughs just as much as the peaks. Like the recently Recommendered (sic) Real Fur they have a sunny, shimmering disposition, which flows along on a set of bobbing bassline journeys, like a paper boat on a mountain stream. We even found ourselves whistling along to Look Around Now before we had even finished the first listen. In fact, the falsetto vocals from Tim Sheinman that appear throughout all four tracks are so clean it’s like Nasa have been polishing them and as the echo button is introduced they achieve the weightlessness that becomes the signature of the whole EP.

We’re not sure where Dance Away comes from or where it’s going but it’s a journey worth jumping on board to, as it’s train-track beat steams along. The same falsetto vocals appear, but this time more sparingly yet with no less impact. There’s no drum kit involved here, but where electronics replace traditional instruments there’s no lack of authenticity.

On the track Wade Out Tim sings “I’m not where I want to be“, but it’s so warm, lush and inviting that we can’t imagine immersing ourselves in anything more welcoming, giving the kind of neat juxtaposition between words and sounds that show off a seriously mature level of song writing. It’s a piece of melancholy storytelling without being hard edged or scary. It’s comfortable and dream-like, whilst singing of tension and disappointment. It is big and it is clever.

Away from this EP the track Where The Horses Roam brings us the familiar mixture of charming, rubbery music that bounces and swings as fantastically as the others. Their ability to paint with music continues as they build up theatrical layers, introducing instruments as they arrive on stage like a set of your favourite characters. Usually we find that bands who decide to include too many bars of them singing “whoa, whoa, whoa” a little grating, but somehow this group manage it with such imagination that you find yourself whoa-ing along.

They’re as multi-layered and thought-provoking as any of their contemporaries, but in place of the commonplace fried computers is set of gravity-defying marshmallows. This fantastic EP is available to stream in full on their Bandcamp, with the title track If You’re Listening available to download for free, plus you can catch them live at a handful of London shows throughout the next few weeks. In conclusion we think it’s fair to mention that this was one critique for which the hardest challenge proved to be completing it without any exclamation marks. At least The Brighton Source Magazine will be happy.  (MB)

LOOK, STRANGER! – IF YOU’RE LISTENING

LOOK, STRANGER! – DANCE AWAY

LOOK, STRANGER! – LOOK AROUND YOU