Saturday 8 April 2017

The Charlatans - Plastic Machinery




1. Who are The Charlatans? 

The Charlatans are an indie rock band from Northwich, England. They started in 1988 and were part of the Madchester scene of the late eighties and early nineties. Plastic Machinery is the first single from their thirteenth album Different Days (May'17). 


2. What kind of tune is Plastic Machinery

The guitar riffs keep Plastic Machinery grounded as the vocals float in the ether. A perfect throw back to a distant era. 


3. Who do The Charlatan's sound like? 

The Stone Roses, The Happy Mondays and The Courteeners


4. What is the word from the cut and paste merchants? 

“Crunching, soulful” – Clash. 

“The much loved outfit continue in their rich vein of form” – Tenement TV.

“Sounding as fresh as day one” – YouTube Comments.




5. Which bands influenced The Charlatans? 

Their main influences are Bob Dylan, The Happy Mondays, The Stone Roses, The Rolling Stones and Joy Division. 


6. Why should I listen to Plastic Machinery

Because you like to pay your respects to English rock'n'roll royalty. Because the lads sound fresh as a daisy. 


7. What are the best Charlatan's songs? 

The Only One I Know is the classic, Stones Rosey, tune from their debut album. Come Home Baby has a joyous singalong chorus and is the stand out track from their last album. One To Another is a Happy Mondays-esque tune from the 1997 album Tellin' Stories


8. Any more words?

Johnny Marr (The Smiths, The The, The Cribs) and  Anton Newcombe (The Brian Jonestown Massacre) played guitar on Plastic Machinery. Pete Salisbury (The Verve) is on drums. 

Different Days is co-produced by Jim Spencer (Oasis, The Cribs, The Vaccines). 




Davey Dynamite is a punk/folk musician from Chicago, Illinois, playing since 2010. Old school punks love his latest album Holy Shit (2016). Davey Dynamite is similar to Against Me! and Frank Turner. He is influenced by Neil Young, Frank Turner and The Clash. Friends Not Fans (2012) is a heartfelt tribute to the punk scene and a stinging rebuke to bands who treat fans as consumers (and a catchy-as-chlamydia punk tune).


“Let’s make one thing fucking clear,
I wouldn’t be here if you weren’t here”







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