Home Entertainment Indie Basement (6/27): the week in classic indie, alternative & college rock

Indie Basement (6/27): the week in classic indie, alternative & college rock

Between the temperatures cracking the 100 mark and the NYC primaries that saw Zohran Mamdani defeat Andrew Cuomo as the Democratic mayoral nominee, it’s been a very hot week. It’s not even July yet! It’s more temperate this week in Indie Basement where an exciting June goes out on a fairly mellow note, and I review new records from BC Camplight, Frankie Cosmos, and two similar bands on Slumberland: Jeanines and Lightheaded. Plus: this week’s Indie Basement Classic is from Paul Weller’s post-Jam band The Style Council.

Need more album reviews this week? Andrew spins new ones from Greet Death, Vandoliers, Moving Mountains and more in Notable Releases.

In other news: we got new album announcements from The Besnard Lakes, The Beths, and OSEES. Also: Johnny Marr played with The The for the first time in 35 years.

Head below for this week’s review…

bc camplight - a sober conversation

BC Camplight – A Sober Conversation (Bella Union)
Brian Christinzio faces childhood trauma for the heaviest BC Camplight record yet, but one still with his signature dark humor and wonderful melodies

Brian Christinzio has been through the ringer—more than once—from drug addiction to being deported from England, to life-crushing breakups. He’s a lemonade kind of guy, though, turning traumatic events and misery into his unique brand of eccentric singer-songwriter pop. You can’t really call A Sober Conversation, his seventh album as BC Camplight, his most personal—because they’re all extremely personal—but it’s likely his heaviest yet, finally facing childhood trauma from a summer camp in New Jersey where he was abused by an adult counselor.

If that sounds too grim for a pop album—or rock opera—Christinzio tackles the subject matter with his usual mordant sense of humor and melodies worthy of Bacharach or Rundgren. “Am I going to face it or let this continue to ruin my life?” he says of the album. Brian sets the early-’90s scene with opening song “The Tent,” where he avoids the subject, wondering if changing his diet or his sheets will help him sleep better, before starting to scratch the surface. “Maybe I’ll tell a big secret,” he sings while plinking at the piano, “Wake it from hibernation,” as the production grows more swirling and psychedelic, like a portal back to that summer.

Part of A Sober Conversation is about not wanting to talk about it—dancing around the subject with dark humor. It’s metatextual, but also a very common coping mechanism, and he executes this across the first side of the album with a light touch before ripping off the band-aid. “Two-Legged Dog,” a terrific ’70s-style duet with The Last Dinner Party’s Abigail Morris about avoidance in the arms of another, comes right before the album’s title track, and the two are as close as it gets to full-on pop, as the rest of the album heads into darker, weirder territory.

He finally gets into it on Side 2’s “Where Are You Taking My Baby?,” an imagined present-day conversation with his abuser, set to one of the album’s best melodies. It’s dark, moving, and psychedelic, and it opens the door for the second half, which moves into piano balladry with “Rock Gently in Disorder” and “Drunk Talk.” The latter is a gorgeous late-night tet-a-tet where he makes bleak jokes that go over his new drinking buddy’s head. A Sober Conversation ends with “Leaving Camp Four Oaks,” an instrumental that shifts from ominous to luminous as he—hopefully—escapes his past. Clearly this is a record for him, but Christinzio has also created a work that finds universality, too.

A Sober Conversation by BC Camplight

frankie cosmos - Different Talking

Frankie Cosmos – Different Talking (Sub Pop)
Greta Kline’s most band-oriented Frankie Cosmos record yet, and my favorite 

Greta Kline has been part of the NYC indie scene since she was a teenager, self-releasing music as Ingrid Superstar and Little Bear before settling on Frankie Cosmos over a decade ago. What began as more of an alter ego has become a real band, with Katie Von Schleicher—the talented songwriter and producer of 2022’s Inner World Peace—joining full-time. (Bassist Alex Bailey and drummer Hugo Stanley round out the quartet.) Different Talking is the sixth full-length album under the moniker and the first since Kline turned 30; here she grapples with adulthood and what that even means.

Recorded in Kline’s living room and produced and arranged by all four members, Different Talking is her most mature-sounding, and band-oriented record yet, while still keeping the winsome, searching charm of her early recordings—as well as her poetic, thoughtful, and often funny way with words. “I miss my shelf, with all my shit laid out,” she sings on standout track “Bitch Heart,” a complicated lament for simpler childhood times. “And I miss who I was… only because I can’t go a day without touching my fucking telephone.” The arrangements are lush in a mid-fi kind of way, colored with keyboards and harmonies, and perfectly suit the growing pains explored in these memorable songs.

Different Talking by Frankie Cosmos

jeanines - each day

Jeanines – Each Day (Slumberland)
Alicia Jeanine and Jed Smith continue to hone their winning brand of classic indie on their third album

NYC duo Jeanines make the kind of indiepop that sounds naive at first blush—with bright melodies, earworm choruses, song lengths that rarely top two minutes, and lo-fi sonics—but there’s actually a lot going on in their tiny little earworms. Alicia Jeanine has a knack for simple, perfect melodies cut with melancholic lyrics, while Jed Smith is a multi-instrumentalist who has studied The Beatles, The Beach Boys, and Television Personalities—not to mention the rest of pop history—and works that into the arrangements and production. The bass lines are ultra-melodic, the guitars jangle and shimmer with style, and the angelic harmonies would probably be enough to satisfy even without a lead vocal.

Jeanines hone the formula with every new record. Each Day, their third, doesn’t reinvent the wheel but rotates the tires perfectly. The layers and layers of “la la lahs” in the chorus of “Satisfied,” culminating in cries of “Are you happy?,” capture the magic of Jeanines in five seconds of bittersweet perfection.

Each Day by jeanines

Lightheaded - Thinking, Dreaming, Scheming!

Lightheaded – Thinking, Dreaming, Scheming! (Slumberland)
More superior Northeast indiepop on Slumberland records from this NJ group

It’s no accident that Jeanines and Lightheaded are releasing records on the same day and on the same label (Slumberland). The New Jersey band make a similar brand of indiepop—indebted to scratchy C-86 guitars, ’60s girl groups, ’90s K Records, and Scottish cardigan-core. They’ve toured together and make records so short that their new albums could just about fit on opposite sides of one vinyl LP.

Lightheaded lean more toward Camera Obscura, with lo-fi Phil Spector-style arrangements, pastel hues, and a fondness for horns. As for the trumpet—yes, that’s The Ladybug Transistor’s Gary Olson playing it. He also recorded part of the album and mixed the whole thing. Thinking, Dreaming, Scheming! is a real joy and makes me miss the days of NYC Popfest. The last edition of that was nine years ago, and with bands like Lightheaded and Jeanines—and Frankie Cosmos, for that matter—making great records, they could certainly use a festival to shine a spotlight on their many charms

Thinking, Dreaming, Scheming! by lightheaded

the style council - our favorite shop

INDIE BASEMENT CLASSIC: The Style Council – Our Favourite Shop (Polydor, 1985)
Paul Weller & Mick Talbot’s ’80s soul-cialist hitmakers hit their creative peak on their near-perfect second album

Margaret Thatcher’s election as Prime Minister of England in 1979 radicalized a lot of people, politically, in a lot of different ways in the ’80s. For Paul Weller, it basically caused him to break up The Jam at the height of their popularity in 1982 and form The Style Council with former Dexys Midnight Runners keyboardist Mick Talbot. Weller’s vision was laser-focused: music inspired by jazz, Northern Soul, R&B, funk, tropicalia, and disco, aimed straight at the pop charts while delivering openly socialist lyrics directed at the status quo and Parliament. They had the look, too—fashion straight out of 1968 Carnaby Street, with messaging that drew inspiration from the Paris riots of that same year. They couldn’t have been more ’80s, though, epitomizing the sense of hope that many held in the face of those in power.

The Style Council made their recorded debut with the 1983 single “Speak Like a Child” and were an instant smash in the UK, scoring 12 Top 20 hits in four years. They helped popularize the sophistipop scene that also included Sade and Everything But the Girl (singer Tracey Thorn was also a member of The Style Council). By design, they were more of a singles band than an album band, but their second album, 1985’s Our Favourite Shop, finds Weller and Talbot at the height of their creative powers. Weller takes aim at racism, poverty, apathy, consumerism, drug addiction, and—of course—the government, with suave banger after suave banger, including singles “The Lodgers (Or She Was Only a Shopkeeper’s Daughter),” “Boy Who Cried Wolf,” “Come to Milton Keynes,” and best of all, the storming “Walls Come Tumbling Down!”

The album sounds like a million bucks, with powerhouse performances from Weller and Talbot and their deep bench of players. The rest of the album is great, too—like “A Man of Great Promise,” an ode to a school friend who died of a heroin overdose, and “With Everything to Lose,” which would get reworked the next year into “Have You Ever Had It Blue?” for the Absolute Beginners soundtrack. The album was released in the US as The Internationalists, which swapped out the instrumental title track for the hit non-LP single “Shout to the Top,” making it an even stronger album… albeit one saddled with a worse title and less interesting cover art.

In a 2006 interview with MOJO, Paul said it best: “I had a total belief in the Style Council. I was obsessed in the early years. I lived and breathed it all. I meant every word, and felt every action. Our Favourite Shop was its culmination.” Musicians today who’d like to affect change could do worse than looking to The Style Council for inspiration.

Looking for more? Browse the Indie Basement archives.

And check out what’s new in our shop.

Oh Sees Album Guide: Their 10 Best Records

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