‘Had we released C’mon Kids after Giant Steps, I think we would’ve retained our indie cred…’

The Boo Radleys

 

The last time Say It With Garage Flowers spoke to Sice Rowbottom, frontman of ’90s shoegazers-turned-indie-pop-experimentalists, The Boo Radleys, who reformed in 2021, he was promoting the band’s 2023 studio album, Eight, gearing up for a UK tour to celebrate the 30th anniversary of their 1993 masterpiece, Giant Steps, and looking forward to performing a series of solo shows, which included spoken word and songs, as well as reflections on mental health – he’s a chartered psychologist when he’s not making music. 

This year, The Boos (Sice Rowbottom – guitar and vocals, Tim Brown – bass, keys, and Rob Cieka, drums and percussion) are back, and hitting the road again, but this time it’s for the C’mon Up! tour, during which they’ll be performing a mash up of songs from their 1995 number one album, Wake Up! and the follow-up, 1996’s C’mon Kids, as well as a few surprises.

In an exclusive interview, Rowbottom tells us why the music industry needs to catch up when it comes to tackling mental health issues, looks ahead to this year’s tour and shares some thoughts and memories on writing and recording Wake Up! and the oft-misunderstood C’mon Kids.

It’s time to throw out your arms for a new sound…

Q&A

 

Hi Sice. How was 2024 for you?

Sice: It was very quiet  I was mostly doing my day job. I had a busy 2023 – we had two albums out, one of which was a reissue, and I did my one-man show. I needed some reset time in 2024 and I did some planning for 2025, when we’re hoping to do quite a lot more.

How did the one-man shows go?

Sice: They were brilliant – I loved doing them, and the response was great, but the difficulty is marketing them: how do you tell people what it is? There’s psychology, a bit of singing, some comedy, talking…

Once the people were there, we had some great shows – we did a brilliant sold-out show in Liverpool, where I have a lot of contacts, but, in other places, it was more difficult. I took the show across the country to some great little venues, but I need something to hang it on – I need to write a book, if I get round to it – something that encapsulates all the elements of the shows. I’ll see…

Sice

In your one-man shows, you talk about mental health in the music industry, and we’ve discussed that topic in interviews before – particularly your work for the book, Touring and Mental Health: The Music Industry Manual.

Sadly, since we last spoke, we’ve had the high-profile case of Liam Payne, formerly of One Direction, who died in 2024. 

It’s sad that it’s taken the death of a young man to put the issue of mental health in the music industry back in the spotlight.

Some of Liam’s fans have launched a petition asking for legislation that would “safeguard” artists’ mental health as they navigate the entertainment industry. 

The Change.org petition proposes new legislation called “Liam’s Law” that would require artists to have access to mental health professionals, be given regular mental health checks and have adequate rest periods. Would you endorse that?

Sice: Completely – and I’ve spent quite a lot of 2024 doing stuff with the Music Industry Therapist Collective.

There’s lots to do in the music industry [around mental health] – there’s still a bit of a dinosaur attitude about it. A lot of people espouse that ‘if you can’t stand the heat, get out of the kitchen’ thing…

It’s not just in the music industry – there’s a lot of it in other industries too. It’s those type A personalities who work 15 hours a day and expect everyone else to do the same because that’s what they do – not everybody can do that and not everybody wants to do it because they realise it’s not good for you. Unfortunately, until we recognise that, I don’t think it’s going to change.

Things will happen gradually – every time a tragic case happens, there’s a shift and people start taking it a bit more seriously. It happened with Kurt Cobain…

‘There’s lots to do in the music industry [around mental health] – there’s still a bit of a dinosaur attitude about it’

The thing about Liam Payne is what do young people like him do after they’ve had a huge level of fame and they’re on the other side of it?

There’s a great book called Moondust, which is about what the people who landed on the Moon did with their lives after they’d done it – what do you do when the apex of your life has happened? For a lot of the people who were in boybands, what do they do afterwards and how do they find meaning and purpose in their life?

The last time I saw The Boo Radleys play live was at The Garage in London, during summer 2023, as part of the Giant Steps 30th anniversary tour. How was it playing that album again, and airing some songs that hadn’t been performed live before?

Sice: It was amazing, and playing the songs that we’d never played live was exciting – I was very surprised at how well they worked. I don’t know why that was… maybe it’s down to maturity or whether we’re better musicians or there’s better tech these days… A lot of those songs we probably would’ve tried to play back in the day but maybe they didn’t work… As a set, it worked well – a lot of people have a huge fondness for that album and that hasn’t faded.

Back in the day, we probably only played half a dozen songs from it, and a lot of people didn’t see us doing it.

So, this year The Boos are on tour again and you’re doing a mash up of the Wake Up! album from 1995, and the follow up – 1996’s C’mon Kids. You’re calling it the C’mon Up! tour. I see what you did there… Did you ever think about calling it Wake Up, Kids?

Sice: (laughs). Well, that was the other option… We’re going to do the whole of the Wake Up! album for the show at Rough Trade in Liverpool, but for the rest of the shows it will be a mash up of the two. Looking at the setlist that we’re going to do, mashing up the two makes a brilliant album – you can see the similarities between the songs because they were actually quite close in terms of their writing period.

How will it be singing a noisy song like C’mon Kids? Will it wreck your throat?

Sice: I’m worried about that – I don’t know how it’s going to be. I always used to wreck my throat doing it, so I don’t know what it will be like singing it as an older man…

You’re not the world’s biggest fan of the Wake Up! album, are you? You’ve told me before that you think it doesn’t work as a complete record…

Sice: Martin’s [Carr – Boo Radleys guitarist and songwriter, who isn’t in the reformed band] intention was to write a 12-song pop album, and I think it would’ve been brilliant if we’d done that, but I don’t think we did. Martin’s way of working was that whatever was produced was kind of it…

To be blunt about it, I think there’s a lot of filler on the album, which I don’t think there is on any of the other albums – but there are seven shit-hot songs and five that I’m not sure about…

Wilder is a brilliant song…

Sice: It’s great – really lovely.

With the piano, it’s like The Boos doing Elton John, and then there are those wonderful, Beach Boys-like backing vocals…

Sice: Totally. We always loved the harmonies. We’ll definitely do that song – back in the day, I don’t think we had a piano player who was good enough to do it live.

Have you got a favourite song off Wake Up!?

Sice: I love Twinside.

Find The Answer Within is a good tune too…

Sice: We’ve always done that… If we’d done a pop album, those would’ve been the songs that would’ve been good for it: Find The Answer Within, Twinside, It’s Lulu... If the rest of the album had followed suit, it would’ve been what we intended it to be.

Giant Steps is seen as The Boo Radleys’ masterpiece, but you prefer C’mon Kids, don’t you? 

Sice: I do.

Is it your favourite Boos album?

Sice: I think it is – definitely. It sounds the most like us. We wanted to make it more like us, because Wake Up! had a lot of extra brass and other stuff. We wanted C’mon Kids to be just us in the studio. I like the eclecticism of it and that it’s slightly off the wall – it was a real shame that the album [wasn’t better received] … It was just timing… Had we released C’mon Kids straight after Giant Steps it would’ve been lauded.

It feels more like the natural successor to Giant Steps than Wake Up! was…

Sice: It does. Wake Up! was almost a reaction… because we’d done Giant Steps, which was sprawling and had everything and the kitchen sink, we didn’t want to do the same thing – we wanted to do a 12-song pop album… C’mon Kids was more naturally us, but the success of Wake Up Boo! kind of derailed us.

‘Had we released C’mon Kids straight after Giant Steps it would’ve been lauded’

At the time, a lot of critics thought that C’mon Kids was a deliberate attempt by you to sabotage your career, but it wasn’t, was it? You were just doing something different to Wake Up!

Sice: It surprised me that people said that. Music journalists are pretty savvy people, and they know how it works… Did they really think that we had enough control to be able to decide that? Absolutely not. We saw it as an opportunity to give all those people who loved the band something brilliant to listen to. Had we released C’mon Kids after Giant Steps, I think we would’ve retained our indie cred, which we lost with Wake Up! We gained a lot of publicity and promotional ability, but we lost our indie cred.

C’mon Kids was a noisy album at times…

Sice: It’s very noisy – it was our most ‘rock’ album. What’s In The Box? was pure Who power.

The title track is a call to arms: ‘C’mon kids, don’t do yourself down, throw out your arms for a new sound…’

Sice: That was the bizarre thing about the idea that we were somehow trying to get rid of people with that album, because the first song says: ‘C’mon kids, throw out your arms for a new sound…’ We were saying, ‘Here you go – have some of this…’

That song feels like a mantra for the album and what you were doing. You also sing: ‘Work all day, it don’t mean a thing. With the sun always outside your window. Fuck the ones who tell you that life is merely a time before dying…’

It’s an anthem to getting out there, following your dreams and living in the moment… 

Sice: Totally. It was a very energetic album. The weird thing is that because of Wake Up Boo! there’s this thing that Wake Up! is a big poppy album, but it’s actually really depressing. 4am Conversation and Reaching Out From Here are pretty miserable… Martin was at a time in his life when he was living in Preston and was quite miserable.

Wake Up Boo! has a melancholy undercurrent to it…

Sice: Yeah – absolutely. I think C’mon Kids is a really uplifting record – New Brighton Promenade is celebratory – and it’s a far more positive album.

It still has some melancholy too, though…

Sice: Yes, but that’s us…

Meltin’s Worm is bonkers. It’s the stuff of childhood nightmares – a song about a worm who eats a child and takes his place at school…

Sice: I love it! I can remember when Martin sent me the demo of it. It was one of the first songs for the album and I thought it was brilliant. No one else was writing songs like that, and it was very Beatlesesque – whimsical, weird and very English.

Both the Wake Up! and C’mon Kids albums were recorded at Rockfield. How was that?

Sice: The reason we went to Rockfield was because we were known as a party band. The problem was, if we were in London, people would’ve been dropping in all the time – it would’ve been a distraction. Everything prior to that had been made in London.

‘The weird thing is that because of Wake Up Boo! there’s this thing that Wake Up is a big poppy album, but it’s actually really depressing’

Rockfield was a solution to that, as it’s in the middle of nowhere, but I think we had too much time on our hands there. Our work rated slowed down and we got a bit bored and stir crazy. Everyone ended up disappearing at weekends, so, even though it’s a residential studio, our work rate wasn’t that great.

In London studios, you’d work for 12 hours solid and then clear off. At Rockfield, we nearly killed our engineer, Andy Wilkinson, because we’d all fall into different work patterns. Tim would want to get up in the morning and work, but Martin would practically want to be nocturnal and do something in the middle of the night. Poor old Andy had to be there the whole time… but it was a good thing to do.

You self-produced Wake Up! and C’mon Kids…

Sice: Yeah – and I wonder about the wisdom of that, but we didn’t like being hemmed in and being told we couldn’t do this or that. We enjoyed the process of experimenting and messing around, but it probably wouldn’t have done any harm to have an extra set of ears. If we’d got the right person, it might’ve been good.

So, finally, a question that’s in two parts… Firstly, what’s the first thing you do when you wake up?

Sice: I press the button on my one-cup water boiler because I’ve prepared my coffee the night before, so I can have it first thing in the morning.

And, secondly, have you ever played C’mon Kids to your kids, and, if so, what did they think of it?

Sice: It’s funny because they never used to be arsed at all, but when we went back out, they did the merch, and they suddenly realised how much we meant to people. They were like, ‘Oh my God…’

They didn’t think we were cool until they read about us and they realised we knew Oasis and Radiohead. My son said: ‘You have to understand, these people are like gods to us….’

I was like, ‘fair enough…’

The Boo Radleys C’mon Up! tour is in February: more details here.

On March 30, there will be a special event at Rough Trade Liverpool, with the band playing the Wake Up! album in full.

The Boo Radleys will also be playing the 10th Anniversary Shiiine On Weekender festival, at Butlins, Skegness (Friday March 28 – Sunday 30). 

 

Good Grief, it’s the best albums of 2024!

2024 was the toughest year for me as a freelance journalist since I started working for myself six years ago – difficult market conditions saw me lose a lot of regular business – but, on the upside, it meant I had more time to concentrate on my blog, which turned 15 this summer.

Next year, Say It With Garage Flowers can legally drink beer, wine or cider with a meal in a restaurant, providing it’s accompanied by an adult. Maybe I’ll take it out to celebrate…. Or I might just spend a night in a dark corner of a pub on my own, listening to music and supping a Guinness…

So, what were some of my sonic highlights of 2024? Well, my favourite album was Good Grief by singer-songwriter, guitarist and producer, Bernard Butler, who I had the pleasure of interviewing twice this year – once for the website Superdeluxeedition, and once for my blog.

His first solo album in 25 years, it was the record I kept going back to most this year – a very personal, intimate, honest and reflective collection of songs, which, lyrically, tackled subjects including his religious upbringing and Catholic guilt, his teenage years when he was dreaming of a life in music, anxiety, the companionship of solitude, and, how as a young man, he was often shamed for showing his emotions.

‘My favourite album of 2024 was Good Grief  by singer-songwriter, guitarist and producer, Bernard Butler, who I had the pleasure of interviewing twice this year’

I’m surprised that Good Grief hasn’t featured in more end of year Best Of lists – I get the feeling that, sadly, it slipped under the radar.

I’ve been championing it since I first heard an advance review copy early this year, and I’m hoping it will be one of those word-of-mouth albums that people pick up on in 2025 and beyond. From talking to those who’ve heard it, I know they, like me, have fallen in love with it.

Look out for another Bernard Butler project in early 2025 – the debut album from Butler, Blake and Grant, a collaboration with Scottish singer-songwriters Norman Blake (Teenage Fanclub) and James Grant (Love and Money). I’ve heard the record and, rest assured, it will be on my Best of the Year list come the end of 2025…

Another singer-songwriter, guitarist and producer who released a great album this year was Richard Hawley – In This City They Call You Love was one of the best records he’s made in a solo career that’s lasted nearly 25 years.

It was largely a return to the sound of vintage Hawley. Heavy Rain was a beautiful, late-night melancholy ballad with strings, and Prism In Jeans recalled early Elvis and pre-Beatles, British rock ‘n’ roll, but there were also a few surprises, including soulful, gospel-doo-wop (Deep Waters), and Easy Listening bossa nova (Do I Really Need To Know?).

The country song, Hear That Lonesome Whistle Blow, had echoes of Johnny Cash and Hank Williams, and Deep Space – the heaviest song on the record –  was an upbeat, crunching rocker that tackled the need for some peace and quiet – time and space – but also reflected on eco and social issues.

‘In This City They Call You Love was one of the best records Richard Hawley’s made in a solo career that’s lasted nearly 25 years’

When I interviewed Hawley this year, he told me: “I’ve made three albums where I had the title before I’d even begun to record – where I had an agenda. One was Truelove’s Gutter. Another was Standing At The Sky’s Edge, when I wanted to turn everything up and make the music a lot more aggressive, and then this one.

“I wanted it to be multi-coloured in a way… focusing on the voice and what voices can do together… I deliberately only played a handful of guitar solos to keep it focused on voices, the song and space…” 

Lots of the albums I liked this year were by singer-songwriters – one of my favourites was Please Go Wild by Polite Company, the new project from London-based Alan Gregg (The Mutton Birds, Marshmallow).

It was a lovingly and brilliantly crafted record of melodic, wry and observational power-pop songs with a melancholy undercurrent.

 

Reminiscent of Fountains of Wayne and Squeeze at times, Gregg has a knack of composing a killer tune, as well as penning clever and amusing lyrical couplets.

Like Bernard Butler’s Good Grief, it’s another album that passed a lot of people by, but I feel like it will find a lot more fans in the not-too-distant future. Here’s hoping – I had it on repeat this year… 

On the Americana front, I enjoyed Wayfarer Beware – the new album from Reichenbach Falls, which is essentially singer-songwriter, Abe Davies, who is of Canadian descent but was raised in England.

‘These cinematic, autobiographical and atmospheric songs recounted the breakup of a couple between upstate New York and rural Scotland over the course of a single autumn and winter’

On his third studio album, he was joined by Jonathan Anderson, a producer and multi-instrumentalist who’s based in the greater Vancouver area at his studio, Protection Island.

Davies, who has also been part of the Oxford music scene, lives in a remote area of Scotland, and has a small recording set-up at home, where he demoed the songs, which started out as just acoustic guitar and vocal tracks.

The tracks were then sent to Anderson, who worked his magic on them, creating inventive and inspired arrangements, adding instrumentation, including electric and acoustic guitar, piano, vintage synths, drums, pedal steel, organ and Mellotron.

These cinematic, autobiographical and atmospheric songs, which often feature references to snow, woods, rivers, trains and Christmas, recounted the breakup of a couple between upstate New York and rural Scotland over the course of a single autumn and winter.

Sticking with Americana, On A Golden Shore by London’s cosmic-country kings, The Hanging Stars, was another highlight of 2024.

Baggy, Balearic, pan pipes and a Renaissance instrument called the crumhorn could all be heard on the record.

“We had to trust ourselves a little bit more and we threw the rulebook out the window – sonically, there’s all kinds of shit going on!” frontman and singer-songwriter, Richard Olson, told me when I spoke to him earlier this year.

Unlike its predecessor, Hollow Heart, which, because of the Covid lockdown, meant the band had more time to prep the songs before going into the studio, this time around saw The Hanging Stars develop the tracks during the recording sessions.

“This was much more of a studio album,” said Olson, adding: “We had to trust ourselves a little bit more – we had to trust in The Hanging Stars – and, for me, this record defines that.”

The shimmering, exotic and blissed-out Golden Shore had bongos, a funky bassline, synth, and pan pipes from Will Summers of the psychedelic folk/prog rock band Circulus, but with Sweet Light, we were in more familiar territory – infectious and jangly sunshine guitar pop with melancholy undertones and some Tom Petty-style country rock thrown in for good measure. It had that classic Hanging Stars sound.

Americana singer-songwriter, Peter Bruntnell, turned in one of his best albums this year – Houdini and the Sucker Punch.

After 2021’s stripped-back, pandemic-era Journey To The Sun, which was surprisingly inspired by Eno and Bowie’s more electronic and experimental moments – it even had vintage synths on it – his new record was made with a full band, and it was a return to Bruntnell’s Americana roots, but with nods to classic British bands including The Smiths and The Beatles, as well as US acts like The Byrds and Pavement / Stephen Malkmus.

The superb title track, which opened the album, was classic Bruntnell – irresistible and melodic alt-country with a plaintive undercurrent, while the jangly The Flying Monk had guitars firmly on ‘Johnny Marr setting’, while Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump was soaked in Revolver-era psych, Mellotron and Fab Four vocal harmonies.

Guitar gunslinger, James Walbourne (The Pretenders, The Rails and His Lordship), fired off some ace twanging on the playful and galloping Wild West adventure that was Yellow Gold, while things were taken down a notch with the yearning ballad, Sharks, which had a lovely melancholy feel thanks to Laura Anstee’s mournful cello. 

A lot of new soul music was on my turntable this year – UK singer-songwriter and guitarist, PM Warson, impressed with his latest effort, A Little More Time, which also turned to ‘60s pop sounds for its influences and inspirations. 

 

“That’s always been there, but on this record I let the wider influences just come in a little bit,” he said, talking to Say It With Garage Flowers.

There was still plenty of blues and R ‘n’B on the album, though, but, as he explained: “It’s a lot more straight up, with some really wild electric guitar playing – those tracks are a lot rawer, alongside some more polished, songwriting-led productions.” 

San Francisco-based singer-songwriter, keyboard player, recording engineer and producer Kelly Finnigan’s latest solo album, A Lover Was Born, was another soul record that I enjoyed in 2024.

In the past few years he’s made two albums with his retro-soul band Monophonics, a mixtape, his 2019 debut solo long-player, The Tales People Tell, and a Christmas album, plus he’s found the time to produce other artists – The Ironsides, Alanna Royale and The Sextones.

A Lover Was Born was easily up there with his previous releases when it came to classy songwriting and rich, cinematic production, and it was inspired by the likes of Isaac Hayes and Curtis Mayfield, Chicago soul and Muscle Shoals, as well as Northern Soul and early hip-hop.

To make the new album, Finnigan assembled a crack team of musicians, including Max and Joe Ramey (The Ironsides), Jimmy James (Parlor Greens), Sergio Rios (Say She She / Orgone), Joey Crispiano (Dap Kings) and Jay Mumford (J-Zone).

“I wanted to make a record that felt like the next natural step after my first solo record in 2019,” he told me.

“A lot can happen in four or five years, and that was the case for me. I experienced some big valleys and peaks during the last few years, and I wanted to wear that on my sleeve.

‘A Lover Was Born was a very diverse record – musically and mood-wise: there were a lot of different vibes, from tender soul to funky and upbeat Northern Soul and some darker and moodier moments’

“The main goal of all my records is that they have a ‘vibe’ – they have character, and they feel engaging. That’s how I like my music, and I’m always pleasing my ears first and foremost. I want them to feel honest and relatable.”

A Lover Was Born was a very diverse record – musically and mood-wise: there were a lot of different vibes, from tender soul to funky and upbeat Northern Soul and some darker and moodier moments.

“At the heart of every good album are good songs,” said Finnigan. “I love these songs and the stories they tell. They really speak to who I am. All my records, including those with Monophonics, feel personal, and this one is no different. I wanted it to sound raw and emotive. Performance-driven is maybe the right way to describe it. It has a sense of freedom musically, all while still maintaining a lot of discipline and focus.”

October this year saw the release of a great new live album by ’60s soul legend, P.P. Arnold, Live In Liverpool.

It was recorded in 2019 at Grand Central Hall, on the tour for her album The New Adventures of… P.P. Arnold, which she made with Steve Cradock (Paul Weller and Ocean Colour Scene guitarist) at the helm.

It featured versions of her hit singles, The First Cut Is The Deepest and Angel Of The Morning, as well as songs from 2017’s The Turning Tide and The New Adventures of… P.P. Arnold, which followed two years later.

Other tracks on Live In Liverpool included I Believe and Hold On To Your Dreams, which were both co-written with her son, musician Kojo Samuel, as well as Weller’s Shoot The Dove, covers of The Beatles’ Eleanor Rigby and The Beach Boys’ God Only Knows, and Magic Hour by Cradock.

‘Early next year, P.P. Arnold’s career will be celebrated with a new 57-track, 3-CD box set, Soul Survivor – A Life In Song, which will include rarities and unreleased material’

Arnold, who turned 78 this year, was born in L.A, and was one of Ike & Tina Turner’s singing and dancing troupe, The Ikettes, before she moved to Britain in 1966, where she launched a solo career that’s lasted almost 60 years.

She’s worked with acts including Mick Jagger, Rod Stewart, The Small Faces, Eric Clapton, Nick Drake, Barry Gibb, Peter Gabriel, Roger Waters, Primal Scream, Ocean Colour Scene and Paul Weller.

Early next year, her career will be celebrated with a new 57-track, 3-CD box set, Soul Survivor – A Life In Song, which will include rarities and unreleased material.

Speaking to me this year, she said: “I just want to do as much as I can while I can, and if it’s possible to move onwards and upwards, instead of going round in circles, that’s what I want to be doing. I want people to know that I’m still out here, fighting the good fight.”

That sounds like the perfect note to end on – a positive message with which to finish this year and see in 2025. 

All the best for the new year and here are all my favourite albums of 2024, along with a Spotify playlist of one song from each record, availability permitting at the time of writing, Ian Whitmore’s album, Among The Living, isn’t on Spotify.

Say It With Garage Flowers: Best Albums of 2024

  1. Bernard Butler – Good Grief
  2. Richard Hawley In This City They Call You Love
  3. Peter Bruntnell – Houdini and the Sucker Punch
  4. Pet Shop Boys – Nonetheless
  5. Polite Company – Please Go Wild
  6. Paul Weller – 66
  7. The Hanging Stars – On A Golden Shore
  8. The Pernice Brothers – Who Will You Believe?
  9. Michael Head and the Red Elastic Band –Loophole
  10. The The Ensoulment
  11. Camera Obscura – Look to the East, Look to the West
  12. Cinerama Va Va Voom 25 
  13. The Cure – Songs of a Lost World
  14. Reichenbach Falls – Wayfarer Beware
  15. Best Western Youth
  16. PM Warson – A Little More Time
  17. Kelly Finnigan – A Lover Was Born
  18. Primal Scream – Come Ahead
  19. P.P. Arnold – Live In Liverpool
  20. Patrick Duff – Another Word For Rose
  21. Oisin Leech – Cold Sea
  22. Fontaines D.C. Romance
  23. Philip Parfitt – Dark Light
  24. John Murry and Michael Timmins – A little bit of Grace and Decay
  25. John Bramwell The Light Fantastic
  26. Ian Skelly – Lotus and the Butterfly 
  27. Bill Ryder-Jones Iechyd Da
  28. Beth Gibbons – Lives Outgrown
  29. Steve Drizos – i love you now leave me alone
  30. Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds Wild God
  31. Gold Star – How To Shoot The Moon
  32. Nadine Shah – Filthy Underneath
  33. Ride – Interplay
  34. Fairground Attraction – Beautiful Happening
  35. Gruff Rhys – Sadness Sets Me Free
  36. Danny & The Champions of the World – You Are Not A Stranger Here
  37. His Lordship – His Lordship
  38. Cast – Love Is The Call
  39. Nick Piunti and the Complicated Men – Up and Out of It
  40. Nick Gamer – Oregoner
  41. Wesley Fuller – All Fuller, No Filler
  42. Kevin Robertson – The Call of the Sea
  43. MG Boulter – Days of Shaking
  44. My Glass World – Assorted Marvels
  45. The Jesus and Mary Chain – Glasgow Eyes
  46. Ultrasonic Grand Prix – Instafuzz
  47. Isobel Campbell – Bow to Love
  48. The Raveonettes The Raveonettes Sing… 
  49. The Psych Fi’s – Can Con
  50. Paul Molloy – The Madmen of Apocalypso
  51. M. Butterfly The Lonesome Country Sounds of M.Butterfly, Vol. 1 & 2
  52. The Blow Monkeys – Together / Alone
  53. Liam Gallagher & John Squire – Liam Gallagher John Squire
  54. Kitty Liv – Easy Tiger
  55. Dee C Lee – Just Something
  56. Nick Power and Mark McKowski Throat
  57. Humanist – On The Edge of a Lost and Lonely World
  58. Andrew Gabbard – Ramble and Rave On!
  59. The Junipers – Imaginary Friends
  60. Parlor Greens – In Green We Dream
  61. Galvezton – Some Kind of Love (A Tribute to the Velvet Underground)
  62. Ian Whitmore – Among The Living