Forget Portland and forget Brooklyn. The best pop music in the world
right now is coming out of Glasgow and Edinburgh, Scotland. Here are
two more pieces of evidence.
We Were Promised Jetpacks - These Four Walls
It's the 21st century now, dammit. Just where are those jetpacks?
Aside
from being bent out of shape about the unfulfilled promise of the
technological age, Glasgow quartet We Were Promised Jetpacks are
exorcised about just about everything else as well. This is the
angst-ridden, anthemic side of Glasgow music (think Frightened Rabbit
and The Twilight Sad, as opposed to the angst-ridden, non-anthemic
music of Belle and Sebastian or Camera Obscura). As such, these young
lads are basically imitating their elders. But that's fine, because the
elders bear imitating, and because it's hard to improve on soaring
guitars and Bono histrionics delivered in a thick Scottish brogue.
Broken Records - Until the Earth Begins to Part
I
hate to sound like a ... well, you know. But this is more of the same,
with a fiddle, cello, and accordion tossed into the mix, and a lead
singer who channels Mike Scott of The Waterboys rather than Bono. If
Scott's overemoting on albums such as A Pagan Place and This is the Sea is your cup of single malt, then this album will delight you. That works just fine for me. Until the Earth Begins to Part
is full of melodrama and big noise, and in unhinged frontman Jamie
Sutherland the band has a truly charismatic, plaintive star in the
making. This band will get better, and they're pretty good now.

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