Home | Magazine | Interviews | Profiles | Live Reviews | Re:View | Features | Reviews | Photography | News | Gigs | Comments
Menu:
Pennyblack on facebook link Pennyblack on twitter link
Magazine A-Z


Newsletter
Subscribe to our twice monthly newsletter which will keep you informed of new reviews, interviews and radio shows as they go online

Magazine
magazine home
interviews
profiles
live reviews
re:view
features
website of the month
album / single reviews

Contact us
If you would like to get in touch, please contact John Clarkson, the editor.

Current Writers
Aaron Brown
Adrian Huggins
Andrew Carver
Anthony Dhanendran
Anthony Middleton
Anthony Strutt
Benjamin Howarth
Carl Bookstein
Chris Jones
Chris O'Toole
Daniel Cressey
Denzil Watson
Dixie Ernill
Dominic B. Simpson
Fiona Hutchings
Helen Tipping
Jamie Rowland
Jeff Thiessen
John Clarkson
Jon Rogers
Jonjo McNeill
Katie Anderson
Kelly Smith
Lisa Torem
Maarten Schiethart
Malcolm Carter
Mark Rowland
Matt Williams
Neil Bailey
Paul Waller
Peter Allison
Rachel Williams
Russell Ferguson
Sarah Johnson
Sarah Maybank
Sarah Mwangi
Sophie Hall
Spencer Robertshaw
Tommy Gunnarsson
Tony Gaughan

Current Photographers
Andrew Carver
Anna Gudaniec
Katie Anderson
Matt Williams

Write for us
If you would like to contribute to the pennyblackmusic online magazine, please contact John Clarkson, the editor.



Clientele: Lost Weekend

Reviewed By: Scott Miller
Label: Acuarela
Format: CD

This is exactly what the Clientele should be doing. Making mid-length EPs with great songs and their now unmistakable sound-or I should say ambience. I was beginning to worry that they were getting spread too thin, what with all the split 7"s, comp. appearances and their "LP" ('Suburban Light') which was really only three new songs and their out of print singles.

It seemed like they were being distracted from sitting down and really perfecting the urban psychedelia they've been flirting with. The songs on the last few releases have been slightly aimless-with good ideas but lacking the hooks to take them to the next level. Druggy without the payoff. Perhaps you don't agree with me-but if you do, worry not. The 'Lost Weekend' EP is a beautiful, heady return to form. A 5 song EP based around 3 main songs, an ambient piece, and a sombre, atmospheric piano instrumental.

It opens with the lazy groove of "North School Drive', a nice circular melody that has that defining Clientele mood which gives me the feeling that the song has been playing long before my speakers picked it up and continues long after. Exactly the sort of moment frozen-in-time quality that they seem to be mining.

The short ambient piece that follows, entitled 'Boring Postcard', sounds like how traffic on a rainy day might sound while walking on psychedelics. Think of the cover to 'Suburban Light' and it really does come close to sounding how that picture looks.

Fading in from the traffic is 'Emptily through Holloway'-the stretched out centre piece of the record, another one of the Clientele's songs that sounds as if it were written on a long walk spent reflecting back on the past weeks. Their recurring themes of rain, days of the week, glass and locales function more as images evoked from fading memories than anything specific. They colour the songs with the haze of memories and rarely tell a story-perhaps because there's no story to tell. In other words, the way many of us often feel. The simple and lazy drive of the drums is the key to their songs not wandering off into oblivion -instead anchoring them and helping the melodies come to the fore.

Next , 'Kelvin Parade' offsets the record nicely by being upbeat but still unrushed (The Clientele are masters of this)-almost reminiscent of a druggy Tommy Roe or some other 60's breeziness. More structured and less locked in to their trademark groove, it still sounds completely in place. 'Last Orders', a short piano piece, fades the record out perfectly leaving it to float about in space until we tune in again on our magic transistor radios to the reverberating timelessness that is the Clientele.


Track Listing
North School Drive
Boring Postcards
Emptily through Holloway
Kelvin Parade
Last Orders





Click to add your own review of this release


View All Visitor Reviews
Go to Magazine Homepage
Go to Homepage


See Also
Catalogue Releases in Stock (2)
All Current Catalogue Releases ()
All Catalogue Releases, Including Deleted Items (21)


Visitor Reviews

Rating: 5 - More structured still that same group sound
Reviewed By: Jdat@aero.fr
From: La rochelle france, ohio usa, lausanne switzerland

This cd is fabulous, it's a natural progression for the sound that forms the band with that fantastic continuous soft voice and arpegios from the delightful guitar.

for those who always held back of being in awe of this band will appreciate this cd if they are in quest of more structured sound less "trippy" feeling.
It's maybe more studied, maybe less freeflow, BUT I AM IN LOVE WITH THIS CD :)



 


More Magazine Reviews
Suburban Light - CD : Tommy Gunnarsson
Lacewings/policeman Getting Lost - 7" : Laura Branch
Bonfires on the Heath - CD : Chris O'Toole


Magazine Articles
Clientele: Interview Dominic B. Simpson
Clientele: Uffe's Kallare, Växjö, Sweden, 16/10/2002 Tommy Gunnarsson
Clientele: Interview Tommy Gunnarsson



Free Subscriptions
.
RSS Feed Articles
RSS Feed Reviews
drag this icon into the podcasts library in itunes to subcribe to this show Podcasts

Podcast
Writers Mark, Sarah and Ben chat around 30 second sound samples of new material from selected artists.




Subscribe drag this icon into the podcasts library in itunes to subcribe to this show