Little Boots - 'Remedy'

I'm not a superstitious person, but when this week's horoscope told me I'd be torn over whether to follow my heart or my head, I was a little bit worried. You see, I have this sort of war with myself constantly. It's like I've got two little guys, one on each shoulder, each telling me to do or think things. And the result is usually a terrible mess. How else would I end up trying bourbon biccies dipped in humous?
(They're surprisingly good, actually)
So anyway, if this is a daily occurrence for me, I figured maybe a HUGE dilemma was in my stars. I had been torn recently over whether or not to get a Disney Princess duvet set, but this felt like it was bigger than that. Maybe this would be something at work? Or something hot boy-related? Of course, I more than slightly hoped it would be the latter (any hot boy dilemma is always welcome), but upon listening to Little Boots new single, I realised that I had been wrong. My dilemma was something far more serious. It was, and is, clearly: do I give this song five stars or not?
Right shoulder guy? Left Shoulder guy? Brace yourselves. This. Means. War.

















Time to ask one of the Big Pop Questions Of The Age: Is Trace Cyrus secretly Mr Fantastic - the superhero - or are he and Mason Musso secretly Wallace and Gromit? He's certainly skinny enough to be the former, and looks like he could probably slide under a closed door, if there was something he wanted on the other side - clue: not food.
Did you know James Morrison attributes his gravelly voice to a near-fatal childhood bout of whooping cough? I'm sure you did, it's the kind of biographical detail that tends to crop up in the early days of a singer's career, and stick in the mind, plus it makes a kind of sense. Whooping cough can tear a larynx up something cruel, and so can excessive singing.
Embarrassingly '90s boyband atmos? Check. Squee!-worthy glimpse of torso? Check. JLS colours in the background? Check. Literal dancing to illustrate the lyrics? Check, check, check, cringe.
Interesting fact: This is not the first time the number three-hundred-and-three has made an appearance in the world of popular music. There's the legendary Roland 303 bass-synth, responsible for many a squitty noise in the acid house era, then there's the A303, which is the road that leads from London, past Stonehenge and off towards Glastonbury. Kula Shaker (ask your Britpop uncle) did a song about it, as they believed the road itself had mystical powers.
Oh weird. In the same week the 'comeback' single from the Twang hits the shelves, here's another musical return, with a song that sounds exactly like I always hoped the Twang would from reading the NME's frothy up-biggery, even though they never actually did.
Poor old Green Day, always pretty good, sometimes amazing, but never quite escaping the headmasterly tut of, well, anyone who's investigated rock music back far enough to spot where they seem to get their ideas from.
Oh blimey, my spider-sense is tingling...
I am all for people taking inspiration from the artists they love the most. There's no other way music could work, and in a way it's an act of supreme arrogance to assume that you are bringing anything actually properly NEW to the table, when you're still dealing with the same 12 notes and the same set of tempos as everyone else.
This is not a good week to be trying to make an impact in the singles chart. I don't want to give away any secrets about who is where in the mid-week charts so far - and indeed I won't - but let's just say that some new releases are doing OK against the sudden onslaught of Michael Jackson songs, and some are not.
I've decided that the third single is crucial when it comes to making your mind up about a new act. Take Katy Perry, for example: I loathed 'I Kissed A Girl' with the burning intensity of a red-hot poker in the sun, but follow-up 'Hot 'n' Cold' was rather good, and left me wondering if I'd been too quick to judge.