shop | mailing lists
musicOMH
music: album reviews
Orphans & Vandals - I Am Alive And You Are Dead
(Fourth Floor) UK release date: 27 April 2009
4.5 stars
Orphans & Vandals - I Am Alive And You Are Dead

buy this title


track listing

1. Strays
2. Mysterious Skin
3. Argyle Square
4. Liquor On Sunday
5. Incognito
6. Metropes
7. Christopher
8. Terra Firma
9. Head On With Tears

related
ALBUM:
Orphans & Vandals - I Am Alive And You Are Dead

external
Orphans & Vandals


Apparently leaving pensioners messages about deflowering their grand-daughters is not the only thing to get you chucked off radio these days. Orphans & Vandals managed it on the strength of their lyrics which managed to offend enough people to get a banning from BBC 6 Music.

That's 6 Music's problem though, because ultimately they will live to regret this decision in the coming months. Orphans & Vandals might just be the most exciting band of the year. You might well disagree, but then the band would have a point with their album title - you are dead.

Orphans & Vandals was created by Al Joshua and his bass playing sidekick Raven. Having recruited a phenomenally talented band (all girls and all multi-instrumentalists) they set to work building songs centred on the poetic meanderings of Joshua. Despite his claims to the contrary, Joshua's role in the band is very much one of a poet rather than singer. There are occasional hints of vocalising in his style but for the most part, he's bordering on spoken word, a kind of British Lou Reed.

Not that this matters a jot, because the musical landscapes that his words populate are beautiful and complement him perfectly - he fits right in. In amongst the harmoniums, accordions, glockenspiels, bowed saws and endlessly repeated guitar motifs, Joshua's lyrics about disaffection, love, sex and death find themselves in a strange murky world that nonetheless seems strangely welcoming.

And what a world it is. Split between London and Paris (the city Joshua relocated to in order to experience more of life), the band explores romance and grime in equal measure. At times these songs feel like an ill advised drunken fumble on a mattress you've found in a skip.

The centrepiece and spiritual heart of this record can be found in the simply phenomenal Mysterious Skin, a 10 minute extravaganza that sends shivers through the listener. A tale of love lost, death and the endless pursuit of happiness set to a repeated melody half inched from The Hothouse Flowers song Don't Go might not sound like the basis for the best song you'll hear this year, but be prepared to be shocked on just about every level.

Swelling and moving with emotional rushes like Velvet Underground's Heroin or Sister Ray, it pushes and pulls through an emotional rollercoaster of a tune. The line "when I was 14 years old I slept with a boy who was 21" grabs your attention early on and from here Joshua plays eloquently with the idea of sexual ambiguity in a way that is as forthright as it is slippery.

Its tone is similar to that of Elton Motello's Jetboy Jetgirl but far more erudite. "I took a girl/I took a boy back the night before last." The protagonist of the song flips back and forth between the precise gender of his love before stating, "he came all over me". Orphans & Vandals challenge the expectations and prejudices that reside within listener, if there are any. Either way, it's not often you hear about ejaculation on such a beautifully orchestrated and narrated song. It's entirely captivating and unflinching in its imagery and bravery and ultimately, it heralds an important voice in new British music.

Elsewhere a dirty patchwork London landscape is built up through various references to train stations (so many are mentioned you half expect the album to finish with a cry of "Mornington Crescent"), murders on night buses, and a longing to get away from it all to a cottage by the sea - as in the epic Christopher.

Joshua is like an urban version of Captain Cat throughout the album, switching from dreamlike state to wide-eyed reality with giddy regularity, but behind it all his band keep things from going of the rails. Each composition building in a linear fashion, neatly sidestepping the need for verses and choruses, and allowing the stories and profanities to speak for themselves.

It's a dirty world out there, but it is one worth exploring with Al Joshua guiding you though it all. Don't be surprised to find this magnificent record itself amongst 2009's best.

  share: 
Facebook | Digg | del.icio.us | more
Mercury Prize 2009 nominees
FLORENCE AND THE MACHINE SPEECH DEBELLE KASABIAN FRIENDLY FIRES
LA ROUX BAT FOR LASHES THE HORRORS GLASVEGAS
SWEET BILLY PILGRIM THE INVISIBLE LISA HANNIGAN LED BIB

top albums
most read reviews in the last seven days
Biffy Clyro
Biffy Clyro


Julian Casablancas
Julian Casablancas


Martha Wainwright
Martha Wainwright


Jamie Cullum
Jamie Cullum
recommended reading
GIG REVIEW
Beyoncé brings her alter ego Sasha Fierce - and Jay-Z and Kanye West - to London
ALBUM REVIEWS out this week
tUnE-yArDs, Norah Jones, Will Young, Mariah Carey, Stereophonics
INTERVIEW
Martha Wainwright on her Edith Piaf album Sans Fusils, Ni Souliers, a Paris.
more album reviews
out this week:
tUnE-yArDs - BiRd-BrAiNs Norah Jones - The Fall Will Young - The Hits
Ebony Bones - Bone Of My Bones Mariah Carey - Memoirs Of An Imperfect Angel Them Crooked Vultures - Them Crooked Vultures
coming soon:
Gabby Young And Other Animals - We're All In This Together Rihanna - Rated R Codeine Velvet Club - Codeine Velvet Club
recent releases:
Shirley Bassey - The Performance Martha Wainwright - Sans Fusils, Ni Souliers, a Paris Biffy Clyro - Only Revolutions
Robbie Williams - Reality Killed The Video Star Pascal Babare - Thunderclap Spring Joe Goddard - Harvest Festival
Jamie Cullum - The Pursuit Nirvana - Live At Reading (Deluxe Edition) Nirvana - Bleach (20th Anniversary Edition)
Julian Casablancas - Phrazes For The Young The Hidden Cameras - Origin: Orphan Weezer - Raditude
Cheryl Cole - Three Words Kings Of Convenience - Declaration Of Dependence Portico Quartet - Isla
The Antlers - Hospice Fuck Buttons - Tarot Sport The Flaming Lips - Embryonic
more album reviews
Twitter


recent interviews and features
Martha Wainwright
Martha Wainwright
INTERVIEW
Gary Numan
Gary Numan
INTERVIEW
Miike Snow
Miike Snow
INTERVIEW
The Big Pink
The Big Pink
INTERVIEW
more interviews

  more album reviews...



musicOMH
about us
contact
copyright
home
elsewhere
Twitter
Facebook
Last.fm
Soundcloud
MySpace
© 1999-2009 OMH