Friday 23 November 2007

Intergalactic battle of the bands

Lady Sovereign and Joss Whedon's Sugarshock! on the playlist

It’s been a hell of a week at work - hell of a month, really, which is partly why updates here have been so scarce. There’s been no time for music, electronics, or much of anything else. And so I finally snapped and had to find something new to add to my usual music playlist. Out of curiosity I started catching up on more grime from the UK (favourite track so far: Dizzee Rascal’s “Everywhere”) and eventually happened on Lady Sovereign.

IMAGEI’d first heard her months ago in a remix of “Fit But You Know It” by the Streets and wondered who she was. A tiny white girl from London, it turns out; named for the ring she wears prominently in many of her performances.

A brief digression: I’ve always been intrigued by the sounds of Jamaican dancehall (quite apart from the lyrics and culture, which are pretty notorious for being shallow, oversexed and sometimes violently homophobic - I won’t get into that here). There’s something gripping about the texture of it all: relentless, dissonant, ominous, with vocals delivered in a kind of bellowed sing-song. Often the vocals are double-tracked too, adding an even more unsettling edge.

Sovereign borrows some of these elements and adds her own spin: these, along with her winningly bratty persona, are very much in evidence on “Random” and “A Little Bit Of Shhh” (links are to YouTube).

Her best video so far, though, is “9 to 5”, which I won’t ruin by describing. I’ll just mention that I alarmed my co-workers with my giggling. (Of course, that could also be a sign of a nervous breakdown due to stress.)


IMAGESpeaking of giggling, as well as cute and irrepressible female vocalists, not to mention music in comics - Sugarshock!

Dark Horse Comics are publishing a series of free webcomics on MySpace, and this one’s written by Joss Whedon, of Buffy fame. Sugarshock is a band consisting of three peculiar young women and a robot, who get the chance to play in the ultimate “battle of the bands”.

The comic lives up to its name, too - without the need to carry on a bigger story or ground his characters in the everyday world, Joss serves up 24 pages of concentrated, hyperactive silly with an extra helping of Whedonisms. That’s all there is for now, but there’s been talk of bringing the characters back somewhere down the line. AUSPICIOUS!

Part 1
Part 2
Part 3 (Flash interface)

Shortcut URL
See also:
Drawing blanks - Music and drawing, plus graphic novels: Scott Pilgrim and Fun Home
Oramics - Daphne Oram, Radiophonic Workshop founder and electronic music pioneer
Nature, cities and brains - First thoughts on Alexander's The Nature Of Order

Comments

Great blog! Thanks for stopping by mine, it was so great to run into you at the topiary festival. :)  jen

Posted by seizuresalad on 25 November 2007 at 07:51 PM

Awwww, 9-to-5! Now I have NEVER enjoyed the dancehall delivery (except when they end up electronically altered in a Meat Beat Manifesto song), but 9-to-5, wow (though is it really “dancehall” or just sorta rap?)

Yup, cute. Rap needs more cute and, what’s more, a clever sense of self-analytical humour. I think the song’s production is a bit ADD, but that’s the style and it certainly works.

As for Sugarshock, hmmm, would they beat Josie and the Pussycats in a fight?

Posted by Muffy St. Bernard on 26 November 2007 at 04:56 PM
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