Pierpoint

Lack of Originality More

Granadaland Live Review

Written By Michael Wood Saturday, February 9th, 2008

Elle S'appelle, Heads We Dance, fourteencorners, Pierpoint Granadaland at The Love Apple, Bradford

Elle S'appelle are a well beaten track and that is not to say that they are not travelling that path well but rather that for all the new band buzz around them one gets the feeling that you could add their catalogue to your record collection and nod along with it for the rest of your days without ever catching the whiff oforiginality.More later for this is Granadaland and there is an order to things and as Mark Husak expands his night to include out of the area bands he is applauded for retaining a loyalty to the local scene he has sponsored for the past two years.

Pierpoint

Pierpoint

Pierpoint - named after Albert, the famed hangman of Bradford - are a tight collective of would be post-punk/new wave guitar heroes. They have a decent following already and the dedication they obviously have used to file jagged metal edges into sharp songs is impressive but they are let down by a lead singer who snarls a little too derivatively and ends up coming over like a parody of a pop star. Like an actor playing a would be Libertine. Like the sort of character who could crop up in Emmerdale when a band's tour bus broke down outside the Woolpack.

For tonight would seem to be about originality - or the lack of it - and Pierpoint need to stop hiding behind the cliche of a band and be more honest. When they do I believe they could be really rather interesting.

Fourteencorners

Fourteencorners

Honest is the watchword of Fourteencorners who once again pour heart and soul into the six song set they play effortlessly excellently tonight. It is familiar stuff on the whole although Marco and Jim - drum and bass - seem to have filled out the sound of We Are Pathetic! We Are Stars! and the whole set seems beefed up for sure but half way through it strikes one that the problem with Fourteencorners is that as sure as an eleven months pregnant girl - they are ready.
They are ready to go above third place on a bill. They are ready to put out something on a shiny silver disc, They are ready to get reviewed by the NME and the Observer Music Monthly. If they could move between songs live quicker - or get some banter to fill the air - then they would be ready to play much bigger venues with interesting accessible vocals from Josh and guitar work from Luke that still amazes me with it's precise speed. They are ready and if they do not get moving soon they will end up stale and that will be a crime for a band this good. Perhaps they lack the confidence to move on but they certainly lack nothing else.

Heads We Dance

Heads We Dance

Confidence can be seen in abundance in Heads We Dance who sport Bryan Ferry raincoats buttoned up to the top and loudly project around the filling Love Apple venue. They mix Eno-esque ambitions with an early Human League sensibility and show no fear of producing - albeit avant-garde - pop tunes. Love Version 15 buzzes along impressively as does Love In The Digital Age and both titles point one towards theirinfluences . One day they will release an album and it will have the words "lipstick" and "neon" in the title no doubt and I will buy it because as a band while their influences are apparent they are not scared to veer wildly away from them and as a result they create some genuinely interesting tunes.

Which leads back to Elle S'appelle who - on another night - one may laud for their tight, modern take on eighties pop mixed with a shot of The Darling Buds but tonight it all seems a little derivative and one is left hoping that they do something more edged, more spiky, with the popularity which is being pushed their way.

    • Love at the Bottom of the Sea by The Magnetic Fields
    • Love Ire & Song by Frank Turner
    • Valentina by The Wedding Present
    • Workers Playtime by Billy Bragg
    • Black Sheep Boy by Okkervil River
    • I Am Very Far by Okkervil River
    • Illinoise by Sufjan Stevens
    • Torino by Cinerama
    • Down the River of Golden Dreams by Okkervil River
    • Talking With The Taxman About Poetry by Billy Bragg
    • An Argument With Myself by Jens Lekman
    • Vs. by Pearl Jam
    • A+E by Graham Coxon
    • The Best Of The Velvet Underground by The Velvet Underground
    • Talkie Walkie by Air
    • Life of Leisure by Washed Out
    • Original Pirate Material by The Streets
    • Fever To Tell by Yeah Yeah Yeahs
    • Greatest Hits by The Cars
    • Dream Sequence by Tangerine Dream
    • Flight of the Conchords by Flight of the Conchords
    • Little Death by Pete and the Pirates
    • Arecibo EP by Little Boots
    • Wolves and Thieves by Goldheart Assembly
    • Crystal Castles ( II ) by Crystal Castles
    • The Holy Bible by Manic Street Preachers
    • I Speak Because I Can by Laura Marling
    • Remain in Light by Talking Heads
    • Funeral by Arcade Fire
    • Clap Your Hands Say Yeah by Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
    • The Suburbs by Arcade Fire
    • Hail to the Thief by Radiohead
    • Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness (Dawn to Dusk) by The Smashing Pumpkins
    • Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness Disc 2 by Smashing Pumpkins
    • The Name of This Band Is Talking Heads by Talking Heads
    • GOLD AGAINST THE SOUL by Manic Street Preachers
    • The Beatles [White Album] by The Beatles
    • Daydream Nation by Sonic Youth
    • Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots by The Flaming Lips
    • In Utero by Nirvana
    • Born To Die - Deluxe Edition by Lana Del Rey
    • Teen Dream by Beach House
    • Slow Dazzle by John Cale
    • Happiness by Hurts
    • We Must Become the Pitiless Censors of Ourselves by John Maus
    • American V: A Hundred Highways by Johnny Cash
    • Bloom by Beach House
    • Treme: Music From The HBO Original Series, Season 1 by Various Artists
    • Phrazes For The Young by Julian Casablancas
    • Beautiful Freak by Eels
    • The Suburbs by Arcade Fire
    • Electro-Shock Blues by Eels
    • The Music of Ennio Morricone by Ennio Morricone