Tag Archive: Travis


THE HIDDEN LIGHT OF TRAVIS

My teenage daughter’s musical education has its ups and downs.

While I have been able to turn her on to noise bands like Yellow Swans and the Warped techno/electro of Aphex Twin she’ll still wind me up by putting on a CD of Coldplay for the school run and yesterday she was smitten by the song ‘Sing’ by Travis.

My work is not complete!

I had to confess that I too, in a moment of weakness (and swayed by rave reviews) I bought a CD of The Man Who (which precedes Sing) soon after it was released in 1999.

I have always maintained that Coldplay are the poor man’s Radiohead (which probably makes Travis the poor man’s Coldplay). Still, out of curiosity I was moved to listen to the album again to see if I had mellowed with age and was able to appreciate the serene grace and haunting melodies other humans seem able to detect.

Needless to say, it still struck me as a vapid set of tunes with the same brain numbing effect that hits me whenever I enter a large DIY store. But there is one exception.

But a few minutes after the final chords of the closing track (Slide Show) have faded into oblivion comes a hidden track with a fierce energy and fire conspicuous by its absence in the rest of their material. After the lame tracks that precede it, this track (Blue Flashing Light) is a breath of fresh air.

See what you think:

Do you know any great tracks (hidden or otherwise) by bands you generally hate?

DAVID KEENAN INTERVIEW

DAVID kEENAN

Interview with David Keenan

(Volcanic Tongue, Glasgow June 8th 2007)

David Keenan is credited with introducing the genre New Weird America into the public domain. It turns out Wire editor Tony Herrington came up with the term as a way to draw together the diverse set artists David was writing about for a cover feature about the Brattleboro Free Festival.

A lot of sounds have passed our way since then but the label has stuck and is as good a way as any to identify strands experimental music that don’t slot neatly into existing headings. Continue reading