Showing posts with label Sweden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sweden. Show all posts

Monday, February 28, 2022

Five Star Album: My Guilty Pleasure by Sally Shapiro

This is by far the best album of the last 20 years for me and even after more than a decade of listening to this album I never get tired of it.  That's what I would qualify as a five star album.  

I turned 12 in 1980 and the sound of the 80's with it's odd blend of punk and disco have always been at the core of so much music I've loved over the last 40 years.  I know nothing of Italo Disco which was a music genre out of Italy and Europe in the 80's but apparently that is the style that singer, Sally Shapiro, and producer,  Johan Agebjörn, were tapping into with their debut album Disco Romance in 2006.  

Much like Murmur is considered the quintessential R.E.M. album by many, because it was the first, Disco Romance is so considered for Sally Shapiro.  But for me I always found that the leap R.E.M. made after Murmur lead to much better music that had a tighter structure, more pop orientation, more confidence.  I feel this way about My Guilty Pleasure from Sally Shapiro.  Yes Disco Romance set the template, but My Guilty Pleasure is the much more brought to life vision of what they were trying to do with Disco Romance.  

I'm talking about this because I think it is important and I've always thought it was important to see the progression of work with music groups that grow and develop over time to see how they get better.  The roots of what Sally Shapiro was doing with Disco Romance are important in that they allow us to see the place we ended up with My Guilty Pleasure.  On their next album Sally Shapiro would move on in a slightly different path and I think that is in part because you couldn't have done better than what they did with My Guilty Pleasure.  

So what is it that makes this album so great?  I'm going to focus on two really basic things here.  One is the production work by Agebjörn.  He is able to set a tone that carries from the first note of the first song through the entire album.  We have these driving beats throughout, these driving Euro beats, but they are layered with music that is both sad and whimsical at the same time.  I'm not sure how he pulled this off, but every song has this vibe to it that feels both sad and happy and so depending on your mood you can go either way and it works.  This also fits in with the second thing which is Shapiro's vocal performance.  She too is sad and happy on every song.  When I first heard this album it immediately made me think of Weekend and lead singer Alison Statton.  Statton had this ability to be dreamy and sad and joyful all at the same time and Shapiro has that as well.

In my mind we were now marrying two things I really love.  Early 80's post punk, jazz influenced music from a band like Weekend with electro pop that was finding influencing from trip-hop and 80's Italo disco.  It's a wonderful combination that falls perfectly into place on this 9 track album.  The first track is a short musical number, "Swimming Through the Blue Lagoon" to set us up for the vibe and feel of what's to come and never once disappoints.  

Swimming Through the Blue Lagoon




OK so you may be wondering well you talked a lot about the sound but what about the lyrics.  Surely for a 5 star album it has to have good lyrics right?  In many ways it is much like early R.E.M. or Cocteau Twins for me in that the sound is really what matters most, but on this album the lyrics are good enough to fall perfectly in with this tone that is set by both the vocals and the music.  On the first track with vocals we get "Looking At the Stars" and it has a wonderful lyric which just nails the sound perfectly.  Here is the chorus as best as I can understand it and from looking up online lyrics sites.  

I'm looking at the stars tonight
and only thinking of you.
I'm looking at the stars tonight
and you can see that I am too.
I wish that you could feel my love 
and I wish that I always can.
And I love you so much much more
than I think I ever said

The lyrics aren't abstract but like much electronic music they are spare, but they set the tone, give us a little story to go with the great music and vocals and off we go.  

Looking at the Stars


The rest of the album has very similar lyrics.  They only made a few videos and one of them was for the next song on the album "Love in July."

Love in July


Another thing I want to add about the lyrics that I really like is there is a certain sense of innocence to these songs.  They are youthful and hopeful and sad all at the same time.  But they aren't angry and I think that really helps to make this album work for all moods.  If you are angry you feel the sadness but the songs help to calm you down.  If you are happy you latch onto the youthfulness and hopefulness.  

All that being said the next song "My Fantasy" perfectly incapsulates all of this.  It's my favorite track on the album.  Here is a great line from the song that gets at what I'm talking about.  

I call you up for a rendezvous.
Another night with just me and you. 
I feel so warm when I meet your eyes. 
I'm flying high somewhere in the skies.  
You lay those lyrics with her wispy vocals and almost sad sounding electro beat and you get just a magical song.  

My Fantasy


We continue on from "My Fantasy" with "Let It Show" in this kind of down beat.  

Let It Show


Then we transition out of the dreariness of the last two songs onto a much more up tempo beat.  The good thing about the music on this album his how subdued it is.  Even on this track and the next "Save Your Love" where we have a pretty solid dance beat there is a subtleness to it.  

Moonlight Dance


Sally Shapiro is a duo out of Sweden and this song more than any other makes me think of Scandinavian influences from the 80's.  Especially a band like A-Ha.  


Save Your Love


I have to say the song "Dying in Africa" has a lyric that I've always found really interesting.  

I never knew someone could make me cry like this.
And I, I won't get over you
even if they're dying in Africa.
And I, I can't get over you
even if they're crying in Africa.  

Dying in Africa



Finally we get to their other music video from this album.  I really like this video.  Maybe it's because I find this to be an exceptional album to listen to on headphones and the characters in this video always have on headphones.  

Miracle



That's it, that's the album.  If you find yourself on a walk some night and your in a funky mood, put on this album with some headphones and just escape into it.  It can go either happy or sad depending on the direction you want to go and time will slip by as though you fell into a time machine.  


Thursday, July 14, 2016

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Olympics Update


At the 2013 Ford World Men's Curling Championship (#2013WMCC and/or #wmcc2013, depending on who's doing the Tweeting) at the Save-On-Foods Memorial Centre in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, the United States had last-rock advantage but gave up a 10th-end score to the Czech Republic and lost, 9-8, late last night. This dropped the United States to 4-5 and into a tie for eighth in the 14-team tournament that continues through Sunday. With its win, the Czech Republic advanced to 5-4 and created a four-way tie for fourth with China, Norway and Sweden. Canada (7-2), Scotland (7-2) and Denmark (6-3) are atop the standings.

Team USA gets back on the sheet at 11 Central this morning to face Russia, which is 2-7 so far this week. Then, the United States plays Norway at 4 today. And, then, there's a final draw of four matches tonight in which the United States does not participate, and, presumably, that's when we'll know which four rinks advance to the Saturday/Sunday Percy "Pip" Page-inspired playoffs.

The United States advanced to the #2013WMCC/#wmcc2013 from the Americas zone, "given that no challenges in the Americas zone were issued," says (awesome) Wikipedia. The U.S. skip is Brady Clark, a 35-year-old born in Grand Forks, N.D. To represent Team USA at the Save-On-Foods Memorial Centre this week, Clark's rink beat the rinks skipped by that dude with the hat from the 2010 Olympics and the Bemidji, Minn., pizza mogul who led the United States to bronze in the 2006 Olympics, en route to winning the 2013 U.S. Men's Curling Championship in Green Bay a couple of months ago. Clark's rink is from Seattle's storied Granite Curling Club.



Sunday, June 17, 2012

U.S. Open: Day 4

1. Jim Furyk (born in West Chester, Penn.) -1 through 57 holes
2. Graeme McDowell (Northern Ireland) even through 57
3. Fredrik Jacobson (Sweden) +2 through 58
3. Lee Westwood (England) +2 through 58
5. Michael Thompson (Tuscon, Ariz.) +3 through 65
5. John Peterson (Fort Worth, Texas) +3 through 61
5. John Senden (Australia) +3 through 59
5. Ernie Els (South Africa) +3 through 58

Friday, April 15, 2011

Album Review: Gimme Some by Peter Bjorn and John

Gimme SomeThis is the most fun I've had listening to an album since the first time I heard In Germany by the Milkshakes back in 1987.  This album is everything I think an indie pop album should be.  They are taking almost every influence imaginable from pop's past, blending them together, writing solid hooks, cranking up the sound, cranking up the energy and letting go for 11 tracks.  It's a lot of fun. 

They are really all over the place with influences and there is a bit of adjustment as you move from one song to the next, but all are full of energy and solid hooks and so it all works together in an odd way.

This is by far the best album I've heard so far this year and will be going back to this one I know through the rest of the year.  If this turns out to be my album of this year, this would be the third year in a row it was a Swedish band that topped my list.  I don't understand why the Swedes have such a solid grasp on how to make solid pop music and be experimental at the same time.

There isn't a bad time to play this album. 

Following the Rhapsody rating method I give it 4 out of 5 stars for Really Good.