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2009 Mercury Prize: Who should win?

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Ok folks, so the nominees came through last month for this year's Barclaycard Mercury Prize - British Album of the year for 2009.

 

For those who don't know, it is an annual music prize awarded for the best album from the United Kingdom or Ireland. It was established by the British Phonographic Industry and British Association of Record Dealers in 1992 as an alternative to the industry-dominated Brit Awards. Nominations are chosen by a selected panel of musicians, music executives, journalists and other figures in the music industry in the UK and Ireland. (Wikipedia)

 

The nominees this year are:

 

http://www.mercuryprize.com/aoty/shortlist.php

Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/8159078.stm

 

BAT FOR LASHES - TWO SUNS

 

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Released: 6 April, 2009

Highest chart position: 2

 

Bat For Lashes, the pseudonym of singer-songwriter Natasha Khan, was the bookmakers' favourite to win the Mercury prize in 2007 with her debut, Fur and Gold, but she lost out to Klaxons. Her ethereal follow-up, Two Suns, includes a duet with US veteran singer Scott Walker, titled The Big Sleep. Khan supported Radiohead on their European tour last summer: "Thom Yorke having said he was a fan really worked in our favour, because people listened and paid attention," she says. The singer was a nursery school teacher before she turned her attentions to music.

 

FLORENCE AND THE MACHINE - LUNGS

 

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Released: 6 July, 2009

Highest chart position: 2

 

Already the winner of the Brit Awards' Critics' Choice prize for best rising star, singer-songwriter Florence Welch and her backing band have been making waves since their debut single, Kiss with a Fist, in 2008. Having just released their first album, Lungs - which missed the top spot in favour of a Michael Jackson re-release - the band are currently touring the summer festival circuit. The 22-year-old from south London has been likened to Kate Bush, Bjork and PJ Harvey. "People see my lyrics as crazy, but to me it's an honest, heartfelt album. I didn't set out to be wacky. I just want it to be emotive," she says.

 

 

FRIENDLY FIRES - FRIENDLY FIRES

 

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Released: 1 September, 2008

Highest chart position: 37

 

Dance-rock trio Friendly Fires have had a slow ascent to stardom since releasing their debut single, On Board, in 2007. Despite being championed by the likes of Radio One's Zane Lowe, their singles have generally stalled just outside the top 40. Instead, it is their carnival-esque live shows that have attracted fans' attention - ultimately propelling their funky, bass-heavy debut album to number 37 in June. Hailing from St Albans, the band is led by Ed MacFarlane whose "expressive" dancing has become a YouTube phenomenon.

 

GLASVEGAS - GLASVEGAS

 

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Released: 8 September, 2008

Highest chart position: 2

 

Led by James Allan, Glasvegas hail from the down-at-heel Dalmarnock district of Glasgow. The four-piece have won praise for their grim tales of deprivation, broken homes and stabbings in the Scottish suburbs. In contrast to the dark subject matter, the band's anthemic pop is life-affirming and melodic - and they shed some of their dour image by releasing a Christmas EP just months after their debut album. Championed by Creation Records' Alan McGee, the band were hailed as the saviours of rock in their earliest appearances in the music press. "You're going to be the most important British band of your generation," one NME writer told Allan, while the magazine named Daddy's Gone its second-best single of 2008.

 

THE HORRORS - PRIMARY COLOURS

 

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Released: 5 May, 2009

Highest chart position: 25

 

Faris Badwan fronts Southend rockers The Horrors, who released their first single, Sheena is a Parasite, in 2006 ahead of their debut album, Strange House, the following year. Their second album Primary Colours won critical acclaim when it came out in May 2009. Produced by Portishead's Geoff Barrow, it reached number 25 on the UK album chart. But their singles rarely make it into the top 40. Most have been classed as ineligible for the chart, owing to them being packaged with stickers, which breaks guidelines.

 

THE INVISIBLE - THE INVISIBLE

 

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Released: 2 March, 2009

Highest chart position: n/a

 

London three-piece The Invisible originally came together to work on singer David Okumu's solo material. But the collaboration between the friends was so successful they decided to form a permanent group. The trio have been members of various bands over the years, including previous Mercury nominees Polar Bear, Hot Chip and Jade Fox. Avant garde jazz, classical, church and dance music meld together on their eponymous debut album, produced by Matthew Herbert, who has also worked with Yoko Ono, REM and Bjork. They recently completed a tour supporting Doves, and upcoming summer festival dates include The Big Chill and Brighton Audio.

 

KASABIAN - WEST RYDER PAUPER LUNATIC ASYLUM

 

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Released: 8 June, 2009

Highest chart position: 1

 

Indie band Kasabian released concept album West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum in June, describing it as "very psychedelic". Co-produced by Dan The Automator of Gorillaz fame, the follow-up to 2006's Empire was recorded in the US and went straight to number one. The five-piece band, from Leicester, take their name from Linda Kasabian, a member of Charles Manson's "family". They have just completed a stadium tour of the UK with Oasis and The Enemy.

 

LA ROUX - LA ROUX

 

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Released: 29 June, 2009

Highest chart position: 2

 

London synth duo La Roux have already made an impression on the singles chart with their hit Bulletproof reaching number one last month and their previous hit In For The Kill peaking at two. Comprised of 20-year-old Elly Jackson and her production partner Ben Langmaid, the pair take their influence from 1980s synthpop acts like The Eurythmics, Depeche Mode and Heaven 17. The pair have been working together for three years, starting out as an acoustic guitar-based outfit before deciding they were bored of that sound, scrapping their work and reinventing themselves as retro revivalists. "We're trying to make pop music like it used to be in the '80s. It was so epic in the '80s and no-one makes epic otherworldly pop music any more," Jackson says. Their debut album was released at the end of June, and was set to enter the charts at number one before Michael Jackson's untimely death.

 

LED BIB - SENSIBLE SHOES

 

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Released: 4 May, 2009

Highest chart position: n/a

 

Led Bib have already been called the "token jazz act" on this year's shortlist, but that does a disservice to their raucous, rule-breaking sound. Fronted by "duelling saxophonists" Chris Williams and Pere Grogan, the quintet were branded the "future of jazz" by The Times. The music is mostly written by New Jersey drummer Mark Holub, who came to the UK in 2003 and credits his band's success to the fact that "people are dying to hear something different". Frequently branded as "punk-jazz", the group won the Peter Whittingham Jazz Award in 2005. Sensible Shoes is their third album.

 

LISA HANNIGAN - SEA SEW

 

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Released: 4 May, 2009

Highest chart position: n/a

 

Irish singer-songwriter Lisa Hannigan recorded her debut album in just two weeks - and spent almost as long hand-stitching the artwork that makes up the cover.

Many will know her from Damien Rice's albums O and 9, where her sweet, soulful voice provided a counterpoint to the rock singer's more strident vocals - most notably on the hit single 9 Crimes. The pair's creative relationship ended in 2007, when Hannigan was sent home in the middle of a tour. "I had become pretty outspoken about my frustrations at the direction the band was going in, and I'm sure he was starting to find me a pain," she later said. The success of her solo material has made up for the split - with invitations to appear on Jools Holland and the main stage at the Latitude festival. Monthly music bible Q said of the record: "Sea Sew exudes the sort of simple, homespun charm that many strive to achieve but so few succeed in pulling off."

 

SPEECH DEBELLE - SPEECH THERAPY

 

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Released: 15 June, 2009

Highest chart position: n/a

 

South London rapper Speech Debelle released her debut record, Speech Therapy, on the Big Dada label last month. It features contributions from Micachu, Tunng's Mike Lindsay and label-mate Roots Manuva. The album includes the single The Key. Reviewers have picked up on the stark contrast between the 25-year-old's "honeyed" delivery and her gritty subject matter: Living in hostels, gangsta boys and absent fathers. MusicOMH website says: "Speech Therapy is a startlingly good debut album from a woman who could well be the biggest thing in UK hip-hop for many a long year."

 

SWEET BILLY PILGRIM - TWICE BORN MEN

 

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Released: 16 March, 2009

Highest chart position: n/a

 

Named after an organisation for ex-Vietnam soldiers, Sweet Billy Pilgrim's Twice Born Men was recorded on a laptop in a garden shed. It's the second album from session musicians Tim Elsenburg, Anthony Bishop and Alistair Hamar and was released by former Japan star David Sylvian's label. The band, who formed in 2003, say they "scrape strings and tap away at laptops trying to make beautiful things with steady hands and empty pockets". Upon its release in March, Twice Born Men was the Sunday Times' Album of the Week. One review said it contained "tiny symphonies in a vacuum".

 

 

The winner will be announced on September 8.

 

Past Mercury Prize winners include Elbow, Portishead, PJ Harvey, Franz Ferdinand, Arctic Monkeys and Klaxons.

 

Who do people think should win this year's prize, and why?

my personal choice would be either Bat for Lashes or Friendly Fires. cant believe kasabian got a nomination.

I have not heard any of these albums, and have only heard of The Horrors, so I would not feel comfortable voting.

 

:escaping:

I heard some albums, but my fav one is La Roux - La Roux. really great pop album.

i need to listen to the horrors album again. it didnt hit me the first couple of times. but i've heard alot of good things about it.

  • Author

I reckon she's overrated too (*cough*ladyhawke*cough*), but she's one of the 'favourites'. Personally, having seen Friendly Fires before and not heard any other band like them, I tend to be going for them.

 

I was surprised at Kasabian's nomination too, especially considering the Dove's 'Kingdom Of Rust' Missed out.... what a waste.

^^

 

yeah cant believe Doves missed out. oh well you can never agree with these awards. i find them interesting nonetheless. i have the last 5 winning albums in my library and i think they are all good albums. much better than the last 5 best albums from the grammys.

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