Thursday, 27 August 2009

Under the Radar podcast #3

Podcast #3It's been a while 'in development' - or more accurately, 'on the backburner' - but at long last we present our third podcast to new music fans everywhere.

This time we paid a visit to Mr Stevie Kearney's home studio in Leith for the recording. Stevie is a regular UtR contributor and a genuine audio whizz, having presented his own shows on Fresh Air as well as setting up his own podcast over at Dylan and the Mule.

The third instalment is all about the music: we have an exclusive new track from Trapped in Kansas, a Springsteen cover by Beerjacket and new singles by UtR-featured Randan Discotheque and The Seventeenth Century.

On top of that, Stevie caught up with Edinburgh band White Heath for a chat at their recent EP launch, and there's more music from Glasgow/Dundee math rockers Popolo, a band we haven't featured yet (shock) in My Tiny Robots, and Small Town Boredom, the Paisely duo who were offered a record deal a couple of hours after appearing on UtR (yes, that's the sound of us patting our backs).

Hope you enjoy the show...

Play: Podcast #3








Subscribe on iTunes
Download as MP3
Subscribe with RSS

Running order:
00:55: The Seventeenth Century - Roses in the Park
06:22: Beerjacket - Dancing in the Dark
10:15: Popolo - Or Optimism
13:45: Interview: White Heath
17:20: White Heath - Election Day
21:30: Trapped in Kansas - Carpathia
24:53: My Tiny Robots - Other People Matter
30:01: Randan Discotheque - Daily Record May 18th 1993
35:10: Small Town Boredom - White Cart Water

Words and podcast: Nick Mitchell, Stevie Kearney

Previous UtR podcasts

Labels: , , , , , , , ,

Bookmark and Share
0 Comments

Thursday, 30 July 2009

On the radar: Randan Discotheque

Randan Discotheque
Play: Daily Record May 18th 1993


Music fanatics romanticise their idols as if they were mirror images of themselves: insatiable audiophiles salivating over the rarest vinyl pressing; Simon Reynolds-like geeks spouting conjecture on an obscure afro-gabba-punk outfit; and hovel-dwelling delinquents eagerly seeking out the next small thing.

But once those rouge tinged specs are removed, a harrowing truth is revealed. These deities of the stage are no back-catalogue collecting nut-jobs. Instead, they’re disappointingly conventional nine to fivers with girlfriends, jobs, mortgages.

Randan Discotheque
’s Craig Coulthard is a perfect example of this prosaic normality. On stage, he’s an eccentric artist-cum-musician blessed with an ear for melody that screams ‘aural-obsessive’. But removed from a venue's elevated platform? Well, that kettle of fish is entirely different.

“I’m not a massive gig-goer and I don’t buy a lot of music,” he confesses when asked about Scotland’s musical revival. “I do know however, that there are a lot more good gigs, good bands, good promoters, good radio DJs and good writers than there were 5 years ago... The truth is I’m maybe not the best person to ask; I’m very self-concerned, critical and pessimistic.”

Complying with indie norms has never been high on Coulthard’s agenda. Since 2005, the Edinburgh-dwelling Fifer’s been flaunting Randan’s wonk-pop (un)sensibilities while extolling lyrics so sharp they could scythe the entire Amazonian rainforest. Clearly, Randan Discotheque’s not your archetypal alt-folk outfit.

“I certainly don’t know what to say when people ask what we sound like,” says Coulthard, attempting to pin down the group’s sonic persuasion. “Some people find it hard to categorise what we do, and that makes us different but not necessarily good. I guess music based on the sound of doing a jobby on a plate would be hard to categorise too - though I think we are slightly better than that.”

Play: Time to Waste


With an appellation that conjures images of bevvied-up neds cutting rug in the local dancehall, Randan Discotheque could easily be dismissed as a comical proposition. But, as Coulthard explains, nothing could be further from the truth:

“I was on a camping holiday in northern Italy... and there was this horrible sixties building that said ‘Discotheque, RANDAN, Dancing' – it just seemed to be the right name,” he says. “I always had the knowledge in my head that the music I wanted to make would move away from acoustic song-writing to something fuller and more energetic. I liked the idea of being called a discotheque, while not providing anything like a disco experience.”

Not quite a pill-popping night out, Randan Discotheque’s swelling numbers (it's now a full band quartet) have inspired a bulbous, vibrant sound that nudges new single ‘Daily Record May 18th, 1993’ into more commercially pleasing climes. It's a direction Coulthard's more than eager to pursue:

“I genuinely believe what we do is catchier, more imaginative and modern than a lot of pop music that seems to do well enough to sustain a career,” he enthuses. "I want to move on to releasing other people’s music on the label, start a nightclub, write a novel, build a house, get a decent music programme on Scottish TV, do some screen-printing, appear on ‘The Friday Night Project’ with Alan Carr and that human lion, and get to play for 15 seconds on top of that balcony thing before the ad break.”

With the mainstream almost within his grasp, does Coulthard ever wonder where he’d be without music?

“I would be a very depressed person if I wasn’t making music and being an artist,” he explains. “I have to do it so I don’t take myself too seriously, it’s like laughing at yourself a bit. I also want to make the music I don’t hear from elsewhere. I love playing live, though it scares me shitless, and I love it even more playing with other people – being surprised and impressed by what they do, feeling a sense of achievement together, plus it is hot, sweaty fun and you can’t beat hot, sweaty fun.”

Catch Randan Discotheque in the flesh at the following shows:

1 Aug @ Dolphinstock Festival, Lancaster
19 Aug @ Electric Circus, Edinburgh
28 Aug @ Wee Red Bar, Edinburgh * DAILY RECORD SINGLE LAUNCH

Words: Billy Hamilton

Think Randan Discotheque have got what it takes to 'go all the way'? Let us know why below...

Labels: ,

Bookmark and Share
1 Comments

Friday, 10 July 2009

Radar recommends: Non-TitP gigs

Sparrow and the Workshop
[Sparrow & the Workshop: sneaking into Edinburgh tonight]

Sick of all this T in the Park talk? Well don't despair, it's not the only live music event this weekend. Here are our tips for those of you who are not off to Balado...

The place to be in Edinburgh tonight is Sneaky Pete's. Fresh from a refurbishment this week, the venue welcomes back monthly promoters This is Music with another great billing. Sparrow & the Workshop weave ambitious indie-pop dreamscapes, while Randan Discotheque's art-folk-tronica always hits the spot. As usual, it's £3 for the bands before 11pm, and free entry after for the DJs.

If you prefer hardcore riffage to 'dreamscapes', you'd be advised to make the descent to Henry's Cellar Bar from 7pm for a night of furious death metal throbbing with a quartet of gruesomely monikered local bands, featuring Threshold Sicks, Nerrus Kor, Cancerous Womb and Foetal Splatter. Nice.

Meanwhile Edinburgh-based American noise-monger Ted Koterwas, aka The Foundling Wheel, launches his new single at the Confusion is Sex night at the Bongo Club.

Tomorrow night the hipster hangout that is The Bowery plays host to ebullient polska-pop from experimentalists Foxgang and it's a mere fiver entry, from 7.30pm.

Fans of an older generation might also like to know that Crosby Stills & Nash (Saturday @ Edinburgh Castle) and Ry Cooder (Friday @ Festival Theatre) are both in the capital this weekend.

In Aberdeen, what appears to be a humble effort to upstage T takes place, with Bands in the Park at Duthie Park and Hazlehead Park. We've been reliably informed the bands in question are of the brass/pipe variety though, so it may not have a festival vibe!

I'm afraid nothing really takes our fancy elsewhere. We can only assume that all the best bands in Glasgow are either playing T in the Park or are at home watching it on TV. Feel free to prove us wrong in the comments below...

Labels: , , , , , ,

Bookmark and Share
0 Comments

Thursday, 14 May 2009

Promoter profile: Trampoline

Randan Discotheque
[Randan Discotheque: playing Trampoline on Saturday]

On Tuesday we featured the Glasgow night Don't Make A Scene, and they're not the only ones with a purposeful name. For the past two years in Edinburgh, Trampoline has been doing its best to act as a springboard to success (geddit?) for the capital's best bands, having staged early shows by the likes of Broken Records and Meursault at the indie haven that is the College of Art's Wee Red Bar.

As one half of The Kays Lavelle, Trampoline main man Euan McMeeken understands the challenges faced by local musicians, but stresses that his night isn't another identikit indie party: "We also accommodate touring bands and I think this is where what we do is completely different from other promoters. The touring bands we attract such as Glissando, Trespassers William and Sleepingdog tend to be very much on the darker side of the musical spectrum: simple, atmospheric and bleak. It's this kind of music I particularly love."

But far from shy away from success, the current vitality of the Edinburgh scene (the dreaded s-word strikes again!) is a positive for Euan: "This city's music scene is thriving and fortunately we have a wide variety of like minded people wanting to help maintain and enhance what has become the place in Scotland for good new music."

Much of this excitement has been generated by a handful of acts, but Euan has his own priorities: "From a personal point of view the artists that excite me most in Scotland at the moment are Meursault, Withered Hand, Woodenbox with a Fistful of Fivers, Y'all Is Fantasy Island, eagleowl, Inspector Tapehead and The Japanese War Effort. I'm also getting well into Jesus H Foxx at the moment and am a big fan of Aberdeen artists Debutant and Katerwaul as well."

Before we let you in on this Saturday's Trampoline roster, we need to put a call out on Euan's behalf: he wants visual artists to get in on the act too. "You’d think being at the Art College would help me source artists for the nights, but often the music takes up so much of my time that I can’t get the art organised. It’s something I really want to sort out in 2009 because when it works - like 7VWWVW and the dancing ladies of the Wintergreens, it can add a new dimension to the night. If any artists or musicians want to get in touch about playing they can contact me at trampolinemusic@gmail.com or drop me a message via MySpace."

Trampoline takes place this Saturday (16 May) at the Wee Red Bar, Edinburgh, featuring Randan Discotheque, White Heath and The Stormy Seas - Doors 7pm. Future confirmed artists include Meursault, Wounded Knee and Glissando.

Words: Nick Mitchell

Play: Randan Discotheque - Daily Record May 18th 1993


Play: White Heath - Wait Forever


Play: The Stormy Seas - Blood On The Carpet

Labels: , , , ,

Bookmark and Share
0 Comments