Just got my hands on Jenny Owen Youngs' new album - "Transmitter Failure" - on track 4, so far so awesome! It's different, and I can see, as she said that the main difference is that she wrote this album with a full band in mind, and so it's a much bigger and punchier sound. But she's still Jenny, and it's still good. I think my favourite so far is the opening track, even though it's only 40 seconds long it's just so... brilliantly concise.
In other news, I made awesome cupcakes with proper icing. I am well proud ^
London was pretty great. Got very drunk on Saturday night, and ended up wandering around New Cross at 1am. Bought a chicken burger that I probably wouldn't have eaten if I'd been even remotely sober. Sunday I cooked for Chris, and made roast potatoes for the first time ever, and they were actually good... I like cooking at the moment, especially as it appears I can actually cook. Then we went up to King's Cross to the Cross Kings (genius pub name there...) to see Woodpigeon.
I was a bit dubious about the idea of listening to poets instead of bands. My only memory of seeing poetry being recited live is being forced to go to a thing called 'Poetry Live' at the Corn Exchange when I was in Year 10, which was meant to help with our GCSE English, and I mostly remember it being horribly dull. So I wanted to get there late, but we were bored and decided to just go for 7:30. I'm really glad I got to see it all.
The first act was Dead Poets - which I could be wrong, but I think I might remember seeing on the Latitude Poetry line-up in the past. Basically consisting of a poet and an MC each doing their bit, it was actually really entertaining and funny, they had a sort of back and forth kind of argument going about the difficulties of putting poetry and MCing together, it worked so well, I'm tempted to go and see them again if I get the chance.
The second people were poet Aoife Mannix and her accompanying accordionist Janie Armour. They were okay, I think Aoife's words were pretty good, but I was distracted by the music and the sometimes quite lengthy gaps between lines. Also, I was a bit creeped out by Janie. She smiled a bit too much. It distracted me.
Murray Lachlan Young was fairly awesome. His poems were amusing - like a trilogy he'd written after having writer's block and being told by his friend to smoke weed. So he'd written this weird trilogy of poems about hair. Yes. Hair. His set ended with Woodpigeon accompanying him on a 'song' he'd written about
dogging. We got to join in on the chorus which went "and a-dogging I will go" and it was just generally amusing. You kind of had to be there though.
Then Woodpigeon. Oh they're so twee and folky and cute. They only played one song I really recognised, and lots of other stuff, including a cover of ABBA's "Lay Your Love On Me" which was surprisingly good. Mark, the lead guy from Woodpigeon lists ABBA as one of his favourite lyricists, so that probably explains it. The guy playing the ukulele who is (I presume) an honorary member of Woodpigeon played one of his own songs which was good - he goes under the name
Honeybear. I felt a bit sorry for them though, the crowd was quite noisy at times, and after people shh-ing other people, someone then shh-ed Mark when he was trying to tell a story about the song he was about to play, and so he was like "oh, okay I'll just play the song then...". The song was a story about a guy whose wife died and then he got his sons to bury him alive because he'd seen something in a newspaper about a boy being brought back to life, so he wanted to spend a few more minutes with his wife, but the doctor didn't get there in time to dig him out, so he died. Sad and sweet. I want to find that song. If only I knew what it was called.
So good all round. Apart from being really tired and having to leg it for the train.
Oh Jenny. You make me happy. I'll listen to you for weeks now. [edit] I just found the sequel to the first song on the album. Oh so good. SO GOOD!
bai.x.