asiwyfaYou’ve not likely forgotten the Irish acts hullabaloo in The Ticket and on Jim’s blog a few weeks back. Well just to stress what rude health Irish music is in at the moment. Here are the top 5 Irish albums I’ve heard so far this year, in no particular order.

Jesus, it’s only April and we’ve got more great records than Ireland got Olympic medals last year. I will get around to talking about all these on their own merits but right now I want to talk about how much Belfast band And So I Watch You From Afar’s debut is knocking my socks off. It’s such a hard thing to make instrumental rock music without falling back on cliché and repetition but I’m super impressed at ASIWYFA’s stab at bulging rock histronics. It’s epic and engaging for the entire 65 minutes of music, waves of riffs and crashing cymbals continue to keep the manic atmosphere going. As James Hendicott notes in his review for State, “there’s not the slightest hint of the two dimensional”.

One thing I often do while listening to albums which I’ve never disclosed here before is listen to them in reverse order. It shows up front-heavy albums for lack of sustainability they actually have, serving you up the weakest songs first. If an album’s last quarter is not as grabbing as its first quarter then it’s just not a good album. Full stop. There is no excuse in this single-track generation for filler. Thankfully, ASIWYFA’s debut suffers from nothing of the sort. ‘Don’t Waste Time Doing Things You Hate’ as well as being a good life mantra also serves as the heaviest Efterklang-sounding track you’ll ever hear. The reversed order is frighteningly well-segued and leading to the mammoth opening track ‘Set Guitars to Kill’ is aired. Incendiary stuff.

All of this times perfectly (and coincidentally, honest) with State’s first proper foray into gigs tonight in The Purty Loft in Monkstown (It’s the burbs – what a novelty!). State has teamed up with AU to bring you the triple bill of Villagers solo, Alphastates and And So I Watch You From Afar from 8.30pm tonight with myself and others spinning tunes til 2.30am. I can’t wait to hear what this sounds like live. Turn this UP!

And So I Watch You From Afar – Set Guitars to Kill

And So I Watch You From Afar – Don’t Waste Time Doing Things You Hate

And So I Watch You From Afar is out on Smalltown Records.

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  1. Ronan (Reply) on 24 Apr 2009@9:25 am
    1

    Really looking forward to the new SEBP album – should be a cracker, and The Holy Roman Armys album is brilliant!

    Will have to check out SIWYFA

  2. Cov (Reply) on 24 Apr 2009@1:06 pm
    2

    the ASIWYFA album is completely nuts. Love it. Frenetic madness

  3. 2BiT (Reply) on 24 Apr 2009@2:12 pm
    3

    Fantastic live too so they are! Check.

  4. Nay (Reply) on 24 Apr 2009@7:47 pm
    4

    Props props props!

  5. aoife mc (Reply) on 25 Apr 2009@8:32 pm
    5

    I fell in love with an instrumental band from Belfast last night. ASIWYFA are face meltingly and stupendously loud and brilliant. Love the album too but live they are something else. And yes, I really like all those other albums too!

  6. Jellyman (Reply) on 26 Apr 2009@1:46 pm
    6

    Aoife, you should check oot the also stupendous Tracer AMC as well!

  7. Bunny (Reply) on 30 Apr 2009@11:40 pm
    7

    Here here on the Holy Roman Army album. It’s superb. Has a real nice flow.

  8. Ronan (Reply) on 5 May 2009@7:25 pm
    8

    Nice little list you’ve got there so far Niall. Have you checked out Dark Room Notes’ record?

  9. Niall (Reply) on 6 May 2009@8:19 am
    9

    Yeh I have. Not too impressed in the end. Must give it more listens though.

  10. [...] The band have moved away from the rock/electronic mesh sound of the Permissions EP into something more soft focus and hypnotic – mainly synth and atmospheric guitar driven electronica with obvious touches (but not too much) of their influences (namely post-rock, krautrock and minimal techno). The whole album flows wonderfully and while the vocals have also been paired back, the instrumentation has been amplified. Much of it reminds me of the Lost in Translation soundtrack with its twinkling, new unknown city feel, particularly the aptly-named ‘Okinawa’ and ‘Lakes’. The production is faultless too. Another album to add to the best Irish albums of the year pile. [...]


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