試す - 無料

art for heart's sake

Record Collector

|

December 2025

Around the turn of the 90s, My Bloody Valentine redefined guitar music with a string of releases whose impressionistic soundscapes would help shape a generation of alternative rock bands.

art for heart's sake

Although their initial flame of creativity would burn out, leader Kevin Shields falling into a state of perfectionist inertia for decades, they have since returned to find a hugely expanded audience, to the point where they are about to fill Wembley Arena — a possibility that would have seemed laughable even back when they first made the covers of the “inkies”.

David Stubbs hails The Last Guitar Band.

My Bloody Valentine were, in the late 80s, happier to be called a pop band than a rock band.

Certainly, there is a honeyed, lush, melodic centre to them, obscured, even obliterated, by their blizzards of guitar.

My Bloody Valentine are not rock in the rock-solid sense - they are liquid, gaseous, evanescent. Nor are they rock in the blood and thunder, guts and passion sense.

“The sound literally isn’t all there. It’s the opposite of rock'n'roll,” Kevin Shields told Melody Maker's Simon Reynolds in 1988. “There’s no guts, just the remnants, the outline. The sound’s an aftereffect.”

He also explained, “I'd almost forgotten about 60s music, but then I saw this video of 60s stuff. And what all those bands had in common was this laziness in the way they sang. Ray Davies, Syd Barrett - their voices just seemed to come out of their mouths, without any kind of big put-on. The opposite of Bono, that projection of passion.”

Record Collector からのその他のストーリー

Record Collector

Record Collector

45 minutes with...Roland Gift

Roland Gift came to prominence in 1985 when, as the lead singer in Fine Young Cannibals, he made the UK Top 10 with their first single, Johnny Come Home. That same year they also reached the Top 10 with their self-titled debut album, although it was their 1989 followup, The Raw & The Cooked, that hit No 1 in the UK and US and yielded US No 1 singles She Drives Me Crazy and Good Thing. When they split in 1996, Gift, who'd previously starred in films including 1987's Sammy And Rosie Get Laid and 1989's Scandal, returned to the screen, starring in 1997 TV miniseries, Painted Lady, alongside Helen Mirren. In 2002 he made his eponymously titled solo album, then, in 2013, went on tour with Jools Holland's band. He is currently celebrating the 40th anniversary of Fine Young Cannibals with FYC40, a career-spanning CD/LP package and an accompanying Roland Gift Presents Fine Young Cannibals tour.

time to read

6 mins

December 2025

Record Collector

UNDER THE RADAR

Artists, bands, and labels meriting more attention

time to read

4 mins

December 2025

Record Collector

Record Collector

"I DON'T WANT TO BE ORDINARY"

Guitar maestro Steve Howe is the sole member of Yes from their 70s prime to still be flying their fantastical, Roger Dean-designed flag.

time to read

15 mins

December 2025

Record Collector

Record Collector

davidquanticklikes

...to write a column for Record Collector. Yay Alternative facsimiles

time to read

3 mins

December 2025

Record Collector

Record Collector

Heard Ya Missed Us WELL WE'RE BACK!

Formed in Coventry in 1984, The Primitives managed to shine among some stylish competition on the indie scene. In 1988 they enjoyed a memorable Top 5 UK hit with the shimmering indie pop song, Crash. Four years later, the group went on hiatus, a state which lasted over two decades before a tentative return to the scene. Now, Cherry Red are releasing a long-overdue recap of the first phase of their career, spread across five discs, featuring live sessions and previously unreleased material. Guitarist and founding member Paul Court sat down to talk with RC about unexpected success, the highs and lows of the record industry, and how bubble bath spoiled a potential hit.

time to read

4 mins

December 2025

Record Collector

Record Collector

art for heart's sake

Around the turn of the 90s, My Bloody Valentine redefined guitar music with a string of releases whose impressionistic soundscapes would help shape a generation of alternative rock bands.

time to read

10 mins

December 2025

Record Collector

Record Collector

Ray Dorset

In The Summertime (1970) became an iconic number almost overnight, propelling the unknown Mungo Jerry – and the band’s creative force, Ray Dorset – to stardom.

time to read

4 mins

December 2025

Record Collector

Record Collector

HELLO, IT'S TREE!

Incredibly, Todd Rundgren's debut album, Runt, celebrates its 55th anniversary this year. Less arborist than individualist, he tells RC about his journey from ace producer to true star, being inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame, and whether his job is about to be usurped by AI. Son of 1984: Felix Rowe.

time to read

15 mins

November 2025

Record Collector

Record Collector

SACRED AND PROFANE

While punk history often focuses on the Pistols and the Ramones as the prime movers in a global countercultural scene, in Australia, The Saints were arguably causing just as significant a stir around the same time. Now preparing to tour as The Saints '73-'78, surviving members tell their story

time to read

10 mins

November 2025

Record Collector

Record Collector

Sorted For LPS And Gios

From first-ever purchases to formative influences and failsafe floor-fillers, Jarvis Cocker reveals the records that mean the most to him.

time to read

16 mins

November 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size