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AIRPLAY:
Played on Cielo Liquido & Radio Magnetic's Fallout.
REVIEWS IN FULL:
Is This Music?
”Congratulations
are due, to the recipients of the ITM? stamp of value and quality this
month. Following their almost harrowing Autocity EP, Calamateur been busy.
The 10 tracks here are all downloadable and at 17 minutes in total you
can hardly go wrong (John Peel's a fan if you needed any further convincing).
In fact this works as a set - fragments of found sound link together the
more tunesome songs here such as the simple but mightily infectious guitar
strum of 'Three Point Turn'. Other highs include the almost-metal riff
of 'Simpleton' which again is 'just' guitar, but all-powerful. 'Hopscotch'
is like a lo-fi Durutti Column with beatbox, and 'Everyone is the One'
is a lovely acoustic song, short and sweet, like a Highland Guided By
Voices.”
Diskant.net
"I
have to be honest with you. Ihave no recollection about where this first
CD by Calamateur, called 'Tiny Pushes Vol.1 (How to be Childlike)', came
from. As good a place to start as any though, eh? Weirdly, although this
is a CD, this whole collection is available to download for free...hey,
don't worry too much about big slow download times either, because the
whole ten songs clock in altogether at only around seventeen minutes.
It's worth downloading the whole lot too, as some of the tracks individually
are cut-up snippets and fragments of random samples and sounds, and so
it's best listened to as a whole - the more 'song'-like tracks (which,
even then, are only glimpses of ideas) being interspersed with passages
of vaguely electronic, vaguely dreamlike strangeness. It's hard to get
a grip on where Calamateur are at, but from this selection, they seem
to exist in a world of half-asleep-yet-heartfelt acoustic songs in a suitably
lo-fi style. They remind me of tapes which people used to put out in the
old indiepop / underground cassette days, ideas committed to magnetic
tape before too much refinement comes into play. an interesting listen
which makes me want to hear more - hopefully, their invention and reluctance
to submit to traditional songwriting rules is carried throughout their
other work."
whisperinandhollerin.co.uk
"Serendipity strikes again! While researching
something totally unrelated on the web the other day, I stumbled across
Autoclave Records, the home of CALAMATEUR. A micro label based partly
in Beauly, in the north of Scotland, Autoclave seem to be releasing an
exciting and eclectic range of titles. As part of Glasgow lo-fi outfit
Oldsolar, Andrew Howie has previously met with critical acclaim, but this
solo project should, if there's any justice out there, make him a household
name. His 'proper' debut album The Old Fox Of '45 was released
early last year, and these two internet-only albums, 'Tiny Pushes Volumes
1 & 2', should cement his growing reputation. Oh yes, and did I mention
these two albums are free to download (yes, that's free folks) from the
Autoclave website. If that's not incentive enough, I don't know what is.
The first collection of songs, 'Tiny Pushes Vol.1 (How To Be Childlike),
comes in at a little over 17 minutes. Although not a lot of time to fit
10 tracks into, Calamateur moves freely between the Mogwai-like post-rock
of 'Simpleton' and the highly infectious 'Hey Baby', to the hushed acoustic
gorgeousness of 'Everyone Is The One', to the dark instrumental 'Open
Your Eyes', which opens with contrasting samples on capital punishment
before spiralling into a bass-filled dirge. The recently released second
set of songs, 'Tiny Pushes Vol.2 (All The Wrong Buttons), is a far more
accomplished album. As with Vol.1, this collection of songs needs to be
listened as a whole, and although again on the short side (these 10 songs
run at 28 minutes) the album is full of uplifting beats, textured samples
and heartbreaking simplicity. From the vinyl scratch of the Aphex Twin-influenced
opener 'Upper', to 'Nectarine Juice', an acoustic ambient masterpiece,
to the truly stunning electro-acoustic ballads 'Belong' and 'Don't Understand',
this album exudes confidence and quality in equal measure. 'Belong', especially,
deserves further mention. A piano led masterpiece, in a similar vein to
Coldplay's 'Yellow', this track is the obvious single, and if released
would surely catapult Calamateur to national acclaim. The album closes
with the wonderful 'Akatombo (The Red Butterfly)', which sounds like an
ancient electro Japanese nursery rhyme, and the crackling, atmospheric
start to 'All That I Can Say' gives way to a string laden sing-a-long
chorus that'll have have you swaying along in seconds. Yes, there's a
lot of sampling and electronic noodling going on, and the occasional self-indulgent
recording quality can irritate at times, but there's more ideas in these
two albums than Travis or Franz Ferdinand could muster in a year. Believe
me, it won't be long before you're asking yourselves the question: How
come two albums this good are free? Literally and metaphorically.
8/10."
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