Music Review: Indie Round-Up – Flipron, John Lee Hooker Jr., Whole Sky Monitor

Part of: New Indie CDs

Flipron, With Breath Bated & Eyelids Unblinking: A Flipron Sampler

Flipron makes its US debut this fall with a brief tour and a 12-track sampler disc that backs up the hype that this is very likely the UK's most inventive band. Sharp-witted, antic, and addled, their songs are more than pop curiosities; psychedelic but always under control, they show offbeat classic rock influences (circa Kinks and Bowie) mixed up with bleary folk balladry and elements from smaller islands as well, from Hawaii to Coney.

But all that is in the service of the songs and the band's eccentric and intruiging sensibility. As vocalist and multi-instrumentalist Jesse Budd sings in the macabre-sweet "The Flatpack Bride of Possibilities," "Each bone connected, each organ plugged in reveals another unexpected joy." The compilation is full of unexpected pleasures, including the infectious "Gravity Calling" from their 2008 album of that name, the slinky "Big Baboon," the arch "Mess It Up," and the brand new single "The Coolest Names in Showbiz," an unusually (for this band) straightforward gloss on fame: "You're just doing what comes easily to you / Why bother? / The coolest names in showbiz love you / Why bother?"

Bother with Flipron. Anyone with a taste for new, original, boundary-stretching pop that's just plain fun is unlikely to be disappointed.


John Lee Hooker Jr., Live in Istanbul Turkey

John Lee Hooker Jr.'s polished, contemporary blues is a far cry from the rough, elemental sounds of his legendary father. But in his own right, he's a forceful presence, a skilled songwriter, and an honorable ambassador for the blues. He takes up that last role delightedly on his new live disc, recorded before an appreciative audience in Turkey. Like most of the tracks (except a couple of John Lee Hooker Senior covers), "Suspicion," the BB King-style blues power ballad that opens the disc, is an effective original. The sounds range from Chicago blues-rock to soul to boogie-woogie to funk, with some clever arrangements like the tight, funny "One Eye Opened." The songs cover topics from love ("You Make My Life Brand New") to politics ("People Want a Change").

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Article Author: Jon Sobel

Jon Sobel is Co-Executive Editor of Blogcritics and lead editor of the Culture section. As a writer he contributes most often to Culture, where he reviews NYC theater; he also covers interesting music releases and writes a semi-regular review round-up of independent albums. …

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