Wednesday, 30 May 2018

Sean Macdonald - Parasites And Kings




The net connection here is partying like it's 1999, but there are reviews ready to flood at you. I'm currently listening to a new album that is magnificent and throughout it reminds me of Parasites And Kings. You'll see the reference when the review is finished. In the meantime I dug this article out from six years ago in the ASH days.

I'm often asked to list my Top 10 albums of all time, too often to be honest. I tend to prefer looking forward these days than looking back, it's a passing 50 thing I think. I avoided the recent ten album Facebook thing despite many nominations, sorry.

But whenever I have compiled such a nostalgia fest, those ten albums change, I'd be a dinosaur if they didn't, but two albums remain whatever, XTC's Oranges And Lemons and Sean Macdonald's masterpiece. If you spot Parasites And Kings anywhere buy it, you won't regret it. I don't know if availability has got better or worse in the time since this was written.






This is one of those great lost albums and one my favourite platters (yeah I know we don't call them that these days, but we should) of the past decade or so. I'd recommend it to all, it'll hook the majority.

It's so hard to define where it slots into, style wise, he can slur like a Dandy Warhol, yet get psychy trippy, grab a riff and sound EMO and then fashion up some great Power Pop.

At times the lyrics are almost stream of consciousness, but then he will just come up with something like the title track that is one of the most beautiful things imaginable.

Oh and there's a fair smidgeon of Mouth Organ too.

Canadian, Sean Macdonald has been ploughing the Indie trail for 15 years, releasing four albums. The most recent being 2010's Pink Noise. Not easy to find, but if you do, they'll be fairly cheap and hit the spot. Parasites And Kings is from 2000.



3 comments:

  1. Nice post. I am also a huge fan of this album. It's too bad that more people didn't catch on to this album. His label, Nettwerk, dropped him after this release. Which is too bad - had he found an audience and support from his label, he could have blossomed into a major artist . . .

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  2. Agreed Wes it's a corker of an album.

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  3. Starting from The Ids' Psycho Babylon I found in a second hand record shop in my hometown in Italy, Sean's music have been part of my life and a great inspiration. Sometimes I just listen to Parasite and Kings and I think how crazy good it is. A masterpiece, a true underground gem. Thank you for this post, good to see I am not alone

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