
Five years later, we are living in the future. What was 2012 in music? It was not the holocaust of laser eyes and digi-pocalypse that Klaxons had predicted. It was a year where Michael Kiwanuka could do his duck in a microwave act and become Bill Withers. It was a year where Jessie Ware could crate-dig into Club Classics Vol One to find something fresh in the least fashionable classic British record of the past 30 years. It was a year where Richard Hawley could yet again sigh and croon in his Richard Hawley way and make everyone feel that a special cove of their heart was reserved for him, even though they'd long since ceased to buy his records. And it was the year that alt-J showed the word that it is possible for four brains on sticks to write off-kilter pop songs about triangles with meaningless hidden meanings and succeed.When the big book of the 2010s is written, this year we have all been put through will be remembered as the one in which a bunch of guys who looked like they’d just completed their first internships at merchant bankers took to the stage to proclaim that, having just won Britain’s most prestigious music prize, they were now in a position to pay off their student loans. The shimmering Ballardian kismet of sex, death, drugs and technology that Klaxons had planned for us has not materialised. Instead, we must now contemplate alt-J’s future: one filled with endless phone advert soundtrack offers and an air of professional humility matched only by posh cuckolds and Oxbridge rowing captains.
Annoncering
Annoncering