Archive for the ‘music’ Category

music

The Who announce Quadrophenia tour

By Stefano on January 28th, 2013

Following in the footsteps of Macca – who was everywhere in the summer – and The Stones who played a series of dates at the end of last year The Who have announced a run of dates. The twist is that in keeping with the ongoing trend for playing classic albums the band is going to run through their 1973 opus Quadrophonia.

Pete Townshend is obviously very keen on that album. He recently made a fascinating documentary for the BBC about the album and it became the 1979 film which inspired the first mod revival.

Personally I’d like to see them blast through Sell Out, but there’s no denying that Quadrophenia his held in a very high place by both the band its fans.

The tour dates are below. Tickets go on sale on February 1st from here.

According to Digital Spy

The ‘Quadrophenia Tour’ has been personally directed by frontman Roger Daltrey and focuses on the original rock opera album, replacing the narrative used in previous stage versions with imagery projected on screens.

June 8 Dublin The O2
June 10 Belfast Odyssey
June 12 Glasgow SECC
June 15 London The O2
June 18 Sheffield Motorpoint Arena
June 20 Newcastle Metro Arena
June 23 Manchester Arena
June 25 Cardiff Motorpoint Arena
June 28 Birmingham LG Arena
June 30 Liverpool Echo Arena

 



music

Why the new Suede track Barriers makes me yearn for The Tears

By Stefano on January 23rd, 2013

In case you missed it in the post Christmas and New Year comedown (and the fact that David Bowie announced his album the day after) glam popsters Suede are back with a new album in March and Brett Anderson is very excited about its potential.

He told the NME

“[It's] called ‘Bloodsports’. It’s about lust, it’s about the chase, it’s about the endless carnal game of love. It was possibly the hardest we ever made but certainly is the most satisfying. It’s 10 furious songs have reclaimed for me what Suede was always about: drama, melody and noise.”

Preceding even the official single ‘It Starts And Ends With You’, which is due in February, the band have unveiled a new track called Barriers, which is getting loads of plays on BBC Radio Six.

I must admit I wasn’t too impressed the first few times I heard it – Killers-lite came to mind, but I stuck with it and it sure has a catchy chorus and oddly it reminds me of The Manic Street Preachers in their early 90s heyday. And as for that whoop it is straight out of the Bono handbook.

More than anything else though it has me scuttling back not to Suede’s 90s albums but the orphan of the band’s catalogue 2005′s brilliant Here Come The Tears.

The Tears was the reunion band that featured both Brett Anderson and Bernard Butler who played a series of gigs and recorded a very special album in 2005. Both Anderson and Butler were seemingly at a bit of a loose end and to be fair after the project both would be energised and go on to incredible things – Anderson with the triumphant Suede reunion tour and Butler with his production duties for Duffy et al.

In 2005 the band’s status was at its lowest ebb, it wasn’t long enough away from the weaker albums that they band made at the end of their career, Butler hadn’t yet found his muse and Anderson was months away from his solo career. So when Here Come The Tears was released it was met by mainly polite reviews (it got very few bad ones) and a great deal of indifference.

Sure hardcore Suede fans, excited by the of the coming together of the two main protagonists of the band – who basically hadn’t spoken to each other since Butler walked out of the Dog Man Star sessions – cherished the album, but it was quickly forgotten. The fact that Anderson seemed very keen to bury The Tears almost as quickly as the band had got going, didn’t help either.

If you approach it with fresh ears I am sure you will conclude Here Come The Tears is an absolute glam pop masterpiece. It might not be Dog Man Star but, boy it runs it close. Personally I rate it as one of the best five or so albums of the last decade and believe that one day it will be hailed as a masterpiece.

If ever two musicians were meant to be together it is these two. On the album Butler takes some gorgeous Anderson-penned tunes and kicks them off into the stratosphere with that incendiary multi tracked guitar/wall of sound that made the early Suede records so special. The tunes seem to have an oomph and a drive sadly missing in almost all their post-Coming Up Recordings.

Just like Coming Up, its nearest equivalent in the Suede canon, Here Come The Tears is a like a greatest hits album. Potential single follows potential single each one packing the type of hooks, harmonies, killer guitar moments and glammy drama that their rivals at the time could only dream about.

Highlights? Every track has something special. If you want Trash-like anthems than take Lovers, Refugees and Autograph. If you love Dog Man Star style brilliantly executed dramatic ballads then how about Apollo 13 and The Ghost of You. There’s even a big finale in vein of The Next Life – the difference is that the minor key piano-driven A Love As Strong As Death is even more memorable than the album codas that precede it.

Finally Brett is on fine form lyrically. Sure there’s the odd cheesy rhyme, but the tale of clearing a dead mother’s house in The Ghost Of You and the contagious you and me against the world vibe of Two People and Lovers are much sharper and more resonant than anything he has written in a while.

Here Come The Tears is a joyous celebration of life, love and death. It is the sound of two souls who reunited and re-discovered themselves. If Bloodsports is a fifth as good as this it will be a wonderful album.

 



music

Ace new vinyl record label Optic Nerve re-issues classic 80s and 90s indie including The Cleaners From Venus

By Stefano on January 17th, 2013

If you liked our round up of long lost 80s and 90s indie bands than you should check out the releases from a new-ish label Optic Nerve.

Based in Cumbria, Optic Nerve specialises in high quality vinyl record reissues of great indie music from the 80s and 90s.

This week sees two new albums bearing its imprint in the guise of much under-rated shoegazers, The Charlottes, Mancunian C86-ers The Waltones and legendary Essex psych/indie combo The Cleaners from Venus

Each album is delivered on high quality coloured vinyl, beautifully packaged and in some instances accompanied by copious sleeve notes.

The one that got me the most excited is The Very Best Of The Cleaners From Venus. If you have never heard them think The Kinks meeting The Cure (at their most melodic) some time during the late 80s. Their string of albums is superb – the early cassette-based ones are packaged here - while this compilation takes the choice cuts from the trio they made at the end of the decade.

There are so many good songs, but highlights for me are the mad time travel through Swinging London, Illya Kuryakin Looked At Me, and the Transatlantic mega hit ballad that never was Mercury Girl. The album comes with a great booklet with reminiscences from band member, now high profile journalist and author, Giles Smith. It sells for £23.99 and is limited to a run of 500.

The Charlottes’ album Things Come Apart is also a real gem. The band were doing shoegazey, feedback-drenched wall of sound indie long before bands like Lush and Ride took it mainstream. There is a bite and verve to their music that is lacking in some of the bands that followed them too, and in opener Liar, they have a real long lost gem of a song. They deserved better – though one member did end up in Slowdive (is that better?) and they are clearly a big influence on this lot. The album is also limited to 500 and sells for £15.99. Here’s a video of the band playing Liar in the early 90s on a deserted Parliament Hill.



music

Sad about HMV? You might need this – a handy Google Map of the UK’s independent record stores

By Stefano on January 15th, 2013

It is quite likely that there will be a deal done in the next few days to save at least some of the nation’s HMV stores, but even if the chain does survive, the era of record shops on every British High Street has gone forever.

And am I bothered? Well, the standard line ought probably to be – yes I am gutted. Where else am I going to go when she is looking at shoes? To be honest though, while the redundancies are very sad and yes it feels like a bit of history has gone forever, I am not that surprised or upset by the news.

Two reasons. One – people, and I include myself in this number, have consistently chosen convenience over sound quality when it comes to buying music. It was the ease of use of CDs that made it king for a decade or two and being able to buy and increasingly stream tunes has now made life very difficult for the CD. There are days when I feel that Spotify is the aural equivalent of being left after hours in the sweet shop – there’s so much choice so I don’t know when to start. But then friends recommend music to me or I hear something on the radio and instantly I can listen to more.

So I am not going to shed crocodile tears for HMV when I know that I played a role in wielding the axe that helped bring about its demise. I do however hope that record stores can live on in some guise which brings me to my second point.

Secondly, and perhaps more importantly, if they are going to survive I would prefer it were small indie stores that prospered. And in some way the uncertain future of HMV is quite good news for them and may even bring them new customers.

One of my friends on Facebook wrote some very wise words today.

Future of the record shop? Clearly isn’t selling chart CDs for more than online. Maybe a combined cafe/instrument/vinyl/CD shop which puts on lunch time gigs or has end of work time, early evening sessions by aspiring musicians? Somewhere where you have the equivalent of book club meetings? But themed around different types of music? Live music venues maybe opening all day as music cafes/shops. Would be such a shame for our kids to grow up only ever having music as a download button.

Well that doesn’t sound to me like a big store – that sounds like a small indie record shop.

The sad truth is that, in spite of the vinyl revival giving some a new lease of life, the number of indie record shops is constantly dwindling. It comes down to this then. If you want your kids to ever have the thrill of shopping for a physical representation of music in their hands, rather than simply a file held in The Cloud, then you need to put your money where your mouth is.

Fortunately some enterprising souls have been on the case already today. So if you think you are going to miss HMV then check out this Google Map of the UK indie record stores. If your local one is missing please add it.


View Local Record Shops in a larger map



music

Very smart new website – the 1p Album Club

By Stefano on January 11th, 2013

If you regularly trawl for CDs on Amazon you will know that a fair few from the 90s and beyond now come with a price tag of just 1p. Basically any money the retailer makes is screwing the buyer (a little) for the postage. So albums that cost 1p, they are going to rubbish right?

Well not always so. When I was putting together the second album list a few days ago I noticed that quite a few of the albums – like The Strokes Room On Fire – were in the club.

And then I discovered this fabulous blog – The 1p Album Club - on Tumblr. The premise is simple – the writer spends 1p (and postage, coughs) on an album and then reviews it. They have pretty catholic tastes too as bargain basement beauties from the likes of Echobelly rub shoulders with cheapies from UK garage greats Mis-teeq.

I was very pleased to see The Milltown Brothers fine Byrdsie album Slinky get the nod. Here’s a fabulous tune from it. Anyway fair play to the 1p album team for a great idea very well executed.



features, music

12 of the most disastrous second albums of all time – Stone Roses, Duffy and more

By Stefano on January 9th, 2013

Aaah the tricky second album syndrome, it catches a lot of bands on the hop doesn’t it? After all you have a decade or so to piece together the tunes for your first album, while the second is often flung together in a heartbeat after months of touring.

If you are smart you have saved a few great songs from your early days to tide you over. If not then you better hope that the substance induced writers block disappears and fast.

The tricky part is deciding do you simply try and replicate that first album and risk accusations that you haven’t moved on? Or take the band in a different direction and then risk alienating the fans who loved your early stuff. Either route is fraught with danger.

Here then are twelve apocryphal tales of bands whose second albums were in one way or another disastrous. Some of them, in fact many of them, are actually pretty good, but, poor reviews, a lack of hit singles and a general falling from fashion meant that they stalled, and in some instances killed, a band’s career.

So have a look through the list and tell me which ones I have missed in the comments.

If you enjoyed this check out the following

Under rated 90s British indie bands

Under rated 80s British indie bands

The best Psychedelic albums of 2012

12 The Thrills - Let's Bottle Bohemia

Picture 1 of 12
Picture 1 of 12

With So Much For The City, the Irish band patented the sound of 2003, all jangly guitars and west coast harmonies. Much was expected of its follow up Let's Bottle Bohemia, but in spite of the first two tracks - Tell Me Something I Don't Know and Whatever Happened to Corey Haim? - this was a lot lighter on hummable tunes and The Thrills' audience disappeared. It is actually quite a good album, but suffers quite badly when compared with that incendiary debut - a maxim that applies to a great many of the second album flops.



music

Morrissey likes Nigel Farage and nearly voted UKIP. Big Mouth Strikes Again in a bizarre interview

By Stefano on January 9th, 2013

Oh, Stephen Patrick, your Big Mouth Strikes Again.

The lead singer of arguably the best band the UK has produced since The Beatles has been mouthing off again and this time has come up with some real gems. Morrissey has been talking to Loaded magazine (I am not sure why? Surely they represent a lot of things he hates) and the conversation has been picked up by of all people The Daily Mail.

When pressed on politics Morrissey has the usual go at Cameron and then takes time to say how much he likes UKIP’s leader Nigel Farage

‘I nearly voted for UKIP. I like Nigel Farage a great deal. His views are quite logical – especially where Europe is concerned, although it was plain daft of him to applaud the lavish expense of the Royal Wedding at a time when working-class England were told to cut-back, shut-up and get stuffed.’

I am not entirely sure he means it…

Morrissey also has a blast at Jimmy Saville – ‘He was a profiteer, and those who protected him are still here. However, I’m not sure if witch-hunts against aged Radio Caroline DJs is quite the point. ’2013 enlightenment can’t be applied to dark and dim nights of 1972, otherwise every singer who ever slept with a 14-year-old would suddenly be behind bars – and that would take a lot of bars.’

The Beckhams ‘I’d… have the Peckhams (Beckhams) dragged to the edge of the village and flogged because they are insufferable to anyone of intelligence, and they actively chase the paparazzi.’

And in a more traditional vein stag hunting. ‘If I kicked a dog I’d be fined £200, yet we’re asked to accept Cameron shooting down a majestic stag just for a hoot. Weird world, isn’t it?’

Weird indeed.

‘Sweetness I was only joking when I said…’



music

Ten of the best Scott Walker influenced tracks – Julian Cope, My Life Story, Jens Lekman and more

By Stefano on January 9th, 2013

One of music’s most innovative, iconic and downright brilliant performers celebrated his birthday this week, and nope it isn’t that guy who decided to come out of retirement yesterday, it is the man who was a massive influence on him – Scott Walker.

Brandish already boasts one frothing at the mouth acclamation of the man’s genius here so in order to mark his birthday, which is actually today, here are ten tunes from other artists that bear the influence of the man. They may not all be direct steals from the fella’s late 60s quintet of astonishing albums, but you know I can half imagine him singing each one.

Cue strings, passionate vocals, dramatic finales and songs about ‘authentic queers and phoney virgins.’

1 White and Torch – Parade

Parade is simply magnificent. A slow building 80s orchestrated ballad that’s beautifully arranged and sung and really has very little in common with much else from that decade. It has probably more in common with Scott’s Walker Brothers records than his solo career. The duo made a few other enjoyable singles in the mid 80s but nothing came close to Parade.

2 Jack – Three ‘O Clock In The Morning

Jack’s Anthony Reynolds loves Scott so much he even wrote a book about him. This is the wonderful opener to the band’s superb second album The Jazz Age and has more than a whiff of Scott 2.

3 My Life Story – November 5th

I could have chosen any one of about 20 tracks by the mid 90s pop orchestra, but this track, from the band’s second Golden Mile, album deserves to be heard a lot more often.

4 Simon Warner – Waiting Rooms

Another 90s obscurity, Warner’s Waiting Rooms album ranged from the Brel like stomp of Wake Up The Streets through to this gorgeous Scott 3 style floating ballad

5 Lloyd Cole – Butterfly

From Cole’s fabulous Don’t Get Weird On Me Babe album, Butterfly is maybe as much in debt to early 80s pop like ABC as it is to Scott, but it is stunning nevertheless

6 Suede – Still Life

All the key Brit poppers loved Scott. Blur did The Universal, Jarvis even got him producing Pulp albums. But Brett’s Scott meets Andrew LLoyd Weber finale from Dog Man Star is the big one for me.

7 St Christopher – All Of A Tremble

C86 does Scott. This is my favourite ever Sarah Records tune

8 Jens Lekman – And I Remember Every Kiss

In which the genius Swedish popstrel lives out his Scott 2 fantasy.

9 The Teardrop Explodes – The Great Dominions

Cope was largely responsible for the rediscovery of Scott in the 80s with his Godlike Genius compilation. He then penned his own tribute to the man in this track from the band’s masterpiece album Wilder.

10 The Divine Comedy – Tonight We Fly

And who else could we finish with? Neil Hannon’s best song? Maybe? This is his very own ‘We Came Through’ from Scott 3 and hails from his third albums Promenade. This is still the only way to finish a Divine Comedy gig.

They are all here, plus a few more choice cuts on this Spotify playlist



music

Happy Birthday David Bowie – and thanks for Where Are We Now? a lovely present…

By Stefano on January 8th, 2013

Simon Poulter edits What Would David Bowie Do, so he seemed the right person to have the last word on what has been a momentous day for fans of the Dame.

So the Dame is back, back, BACK. Unexpected and brilliantly unannounced.

On his 66th birthday (a date he appropriately shares with Elvis Presley), out of seemingly nowhere, David Bowie has released Where Are We Now?, a haunting and, to be oxymoronic, joyously melancholic single.

And there’s more: the equally unexpected new album The Next Day, due in March. This amounts to a bounty of riches from Bowie. For an artist who appeared to have withdrawn from public life following heart surgery nine years ago (his last “appearance” was being papped in New York while out buying music magazines in October), this most enigmatic of reappearances has brought delight and wonder to the Bowiedom.

His last live performance – singing the Roger Waters parts of Comfortably Numb on a David Gilmour solo show – was in 2006, and since then it was assumed by many that the Dame had entered gentle retirement. Even news that London’s V&A museum was to be stage a major Bowie exhibition this spring raised speculation that the singer himself was behind its curation, suggesting new activity. His ‘people’ strenuously denied any involvement from or endorsement by Bowie, but given the dates of the exhibition and the release of The Next Day, one can’t help feeling the timing is more than coincidental.

Time will tell. For now, lets savour the moment: Where Are We Now? – produced by Tony Visconti, Bowie’s producer on the legendary Berlin trilogy of Low, Heroes and Lodger – nods to that period with various references to Berlin streets.

A suggested album cover for The Next Day, with the title simply superimposed over the Heroes sleeve, hints at Bowie using these new recordings to reflect.

Where Are We Now? certainly has the air of someone in retrospective contemplation. It’s piano-driven melody with a simple synth bed and and spacy drum track, is tied to somewhat mournful lyrics and an apparent sadness in Bowie’s voice.

The accompanying video is equally downbeat, featuring Bowie’s face attached to a puppet, with the song’s lyrics peppered throughout like an abstract karaoke screen, while suitably dour images of Berlin pass through.

Plenty will assume that this is Bowie’s most strident gesture yet of bowing out, just as Bob Dylan’s Tempest was meant to be his signal to the world that it was all over (based on the loose conjecture that The Tempest was thought to be Shakespeare’s swansong as a playwright). But Bowie is, and always has been, an enigmatic actor, and his moments of Greta Garbo moments of withdrawal have been numerous. But then, as his official spokesman said today in a statement, “Throwing shadows and avoiding the industry treadmill is very David Bowie.” Quite true.

He hasn’t performed live since 2006 and has rarely been seen in public since then. His last studio album came out 10 years ago, and there has been an air of reflection in a lot of his most recent work, “most recent” not fully reflecting how long it has been since we’ve had anything new to devour. The beautiful Survive, taken off his final EMI album, Hours is a perfect example of a reflective Bowie, rather than the more provactive and even upbeat Bowie of yore.

Last year Bowie was reportedly approached to play a part in the London Olympics opening ceremony, but turned the opportunity down (to be replaced by a projected montage that served only to remind . The assumption was made that, following his Reality tour in 2003, and the heart bypass that truncated that, the Dame had walked – not trounced – quietly off into the Manhattan sunset.

However, first thing this morning, Bowie’s official Facebook and Twitter accounts had other ideas: “CHECK OUT WWW.DAVIDBOWIE.COM NOW!” trumpeted @DavidBowieReal. “Think we’re in for a big surprise…” If you’ve not already stumbled upon it, you need to check out http://www.davidbowie.com/ for a very well kept secret right now. This really is turning out to be quite some birthday!”.

Few have disagreed. Indeed, some have become quite emotional at the news. Where Are We Now? may not be a classic Bowie song, but it is certainly classic Bowie.

“I’m so insanely excited,” tweeted Caitlin Moran. “It’s like hearing King Arthur’s voice from the cave.”Even Duncan Jones, Bowie’s film maker son, commented on Twitter: “Would be lovely if all of you could spread the word about da’s new album. First in ten years, and its a good ‘un!”

2012 was a year of major anniversaries, in particular celebrating 1962 as a year of cultural epochs – debuts for The Rolling Stones, The Beatles and James Bond amongst them. With the surprise appearance of new material from David Bowie, it’s quite possible that we have a lot to look forward to in 2013, with the emphasis on “forward”, even if with a tinge of nostalgia about it.

So Happy Birthday, David. And thanks for the present. It really is just what we’ve always wanted.



music

David Bowie’s best album? Forget Ziggy and Hunky Dory.

By Stefano on January 8th, 2013

Personally I think it was all downhill for David Bowie after his 1966 mod-pop masterpiece Can’t Help Thinking About Me, but I do know that a few people rate Hunky Dory, Ziggy and that weird one with the New Romantics on it, and it is his birthday so I won’t moan about his later output. Instead but put your prejudices to one side for a mo as we try and convince you that there are some songs in the Bowie canon that you may never had heard of that are worthy of a spin. I refer, of course, to his self-titled 1967 debut LP on Deram.

Now all but the privileged few will have heard the Bromley boy’s debut LP, largely because rock snobs have for decades written it off as a Anthony Newley pastiche. The fact that its preceding single, The Laughing Gnome, featured guest vocals from what sounds like Cilla Black quaffing helium didn’t help matters either.

Nevertheless, David Bowie (the album) is a place I visit regularly, mostly to play Maid of Bond Street, a genuinely tender little ditty that stays in your heads for days. The album also boasts one of his best ever singles, Love you Til Tuesday, which we adore for its juddering downward bass line, chirpy strings and genius pay off line about stretching it to Wednesday. Few other artists have tapped into the frailty of human relationships in such a sympathetic way. Rubber Band with its Salvation Army style shuffle is a wonderful evocation of Olde England – Ray Davies spends most evenings wishing he’d written it – while Bowie’s pleading vocal on Sell Me A Coat is among the most dramatic and poignant of his long career.

Sadly for Bowie, the album proved to be a one-off and within a few years he’d traded the subtle witticism of his early stuff for the fun, but rather obvious Mick Ronson powered glam rock riffs. And while he did knock out of a few good tunes later in his career, Heroes, Boys Keep Swinging and Oh You Pretty Things (Peter Noone version obviously), in my opinion little compares to this album, his early Pye 45s and of course the non-album cut The London Boys. Not just a brilliant evocation of swinging Soho from 1967, but also a tune that lent its name to one of the ’80s top notch disco bands. It doesn’t get much better than that.

And here is Can’t Help Thinking About Me – his best song ever

Article originally published here



music, News

Bowie is back! David’s top 5 overlooked songs revisited

By Gerald Lynch on January 8th, 2013

Ziggy Stardust. The Thin White Duke. David Robert Jones. Whatever you call him, David Bowie, the chameleon of pop, is back!

Celebrating today his 66th birthday, the enigmatic icon marked the occasion with the release of a new single ‘Where Are We Now’ and news of a new album called ‘The Next Day’ touching down in March.

You can listen to ‘Where Are We Now?’ by hitting up the YouTube video above, a melancholic track that recalls cuts from Bowie’s 1999 album ‘hours…’.

With ‘The Next Day’ set to be Bowie’s 26th studio album, there are reams of goodies for the uninitiated to dive into ahead of the new albums release. And while even the casual music lover could probably hum along to ‘Heroes’ or ‘Life on Mars?’, there are plenty of killer Bowie tracks that have fallen through the cracks over the years and are often overlooked.

Here are Brandish’s top 5 Bowie gems that you might have forgotten!

John, I’m Only Dancing

A raunchy blues stomper that’s often covered, John I’m Only Dancing’s androgynous, homo-erotic undertones and searing guitars would later go on to influence the likes of Suede and Placebo.

Speed of Life

Here’s how you properly kick off a comeback. Marking the start of Bowie’s “Berlin Trilogy” as the first track on ‘Low’, it’s a swirling electronic instrumental with more killer riffs than you can shake a MOOG synth at. Here’s a rare live performance of the song from a 1978 gig in Dallas Texas, with Bowie looking particularly sharp.

Five Years

The opening track on the classic album ‘The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars’, Bowie’s apocalyptic vision starts quietly before erupting into a maelstrom of sound, setting the tone for Bowie’s most beloved record. Theatrical and wild, it hints at the closing of the Ziggy Stardust chapter that saw Bowie’s popularity at its peak.

Absolute Beginners

Bowie’s best love song, Absolute Beginners soundtracked the movie of the same name. A lush track telling a tale of young love, listen how Bowie’s voice just soars for the chorus.

Modern Love


Though a single on ‘Let’s Dance’, arguably Bowie’s most popular later-day album, ‘Modern Love’ always plays second fiddle to the album’s titular track and ‘China Girl’ when it comes to radio play. That’s a travesty – ‘Modern Love’ is far and away the best song Bowie ever laid down during his Americana/white-boy soul phase of the mid-80’s. Read either as an attempt to turn his back on one night stands or the junk of his drug addictions, it’s Bowie at his dancey, desperate best.



music

David Bowie celebrates 66th birthday with new single, Where Are We Now

By shinychris on January 8th, 2013

It is difficult to contain my excitement this morning. Just as I had (along with most other people) assumed Bowie was enjoying retirement counting his royalties from last summer’s playing of Heroes, up he pops with a new single and an album promised. Called Where Are We Now, and produced by Tony Visconti, the new single sounds quite melancholy – a bit like Thursday’s Child and Survive from the excellent 1999 Hours album.

His voice also sounds a little shakier, but then he is 66 I guess. The single contains lots of references to the period when he lived in Berlin in the 1970s where he recorded Low and the weird video features a cut-out of his head sitting next to a woman some people assume to be Bjork – though I’m not sure. I think it’s a good single with a catchy chorus though not a massive departure from what he’s done before.

But that’s not all. Promised on March 11 is a new album called The Next Day which is bound to be massive, considering Bowie has been absent from the music scene, living as a virtual recluse if the media is to believed, for the last 10 years or so. I can’t wait. You can get full details of downloads for the single and a link to the video on Vimeo on David’s official website, David Bowie.com.



Football, music

Ugo Ehiogu, his record label, The Fossil Collective and an ace tale about Ian Wright

By Stefano on January 7th, 2013

The other day I wrote a list of the ten Premiership players you would most want to have a beer with. If he were still playing today you can bet Ugo Ehiogu would be on very high on that list. As was unveiled on the Danny Baker Show on BBC Five Live on Saturday the former, Villa, Middlesbrough and Rangers defender isn’t your average footballer.

After finishing his playing career, Ehiogu has spent much of his time working for a music label he co-owns Dirty Hit Limited, and the bands on the label might surprise you. In keeping with a guy whose favourite band is apparently The Arctic Monkeys Dirty Hit has a really pukka roster of indie bands several of whom could well make their mark big time in 2013.

The band that caught my ear are The Fossil Collective whose very English take on Americana – think also The Leisure Society – has already delivered two absolute gems in On and On and Let It Go. There’s a whiff of Radiohead in the Leeds band too in the days when Thom Yorke and his crew still knew how to knock out a pop tune or two. Check them out on Spotify here or see the video above.

The label also has 1975 who are an edgier take on The Vaccines and iTunes has predicted great things for in 2013, singer songwriter Benjamin Francis Leftwich whose Last Smoke Before The Snowstorm is a gentle folk album not too far removed from the music of this excellent fella, and Bowie-esque new wavers The Little Comets.

Much respect to the fella then.

Ehiogu also has a few excellent anecdotes too. Asked by Baker if he spoke to players during games about things other than football he said that he found Ian Wright very chatty. The Arsenal man would apparently tell defenders how great they were, and Ugo said that while he was mulling over the compliment Wrighty would have shot away into space waiting for the ball from an Arsenal midfielder. Crafty.

Finally, with apologies to Celtic fans, here is Ugo’s best ever footballing moment. Genius!

 



music

The fifteen most under rated British bands of the 80s – The Claim, The Monochrome Set, Furniture and more

By Stefano on January 4th, 2013

A few weeks ago I wrote a list of the most under rated British bands of the 90s as nominated by some charming musicians, bloggers and chancers  that I hang about with on social media sites. It got huge traffic, so, not wishing to change a winning formula, I asked the same group to come up with the most under rated bands of the 80s, and here’s the list.

Obviously the key here is defining the phrase ‘under rated’. There are some 80s bands; Felt, The Soft Boys and Gang Of Four spring to mind, who didn’t  trouble the charts a great deal  in their prime but thanks to being championed by more recent bands are now heralded as makers of some of the finest music of that decade. So we didn’t include them. I also added a few bands who were huge at the time, but these days never seem to be played on the radio or mentioned at all.

In a totally serendipitous way as I was putting the list together Steve Lamacq on BBC 6 Music decided to make the first two weeks of the year ‘lost 80s bands’ week, playing some completely forgotten tunes like Westworld’s Sonic Boom Boy. So Steve, how about playing a few of these?

Thanks then to everyone who added their twopennyworth.

And can someone please release the lost album recorded by the number one band. Ta. Any we have missed in the comments please. If you do your own list shout and I’ll post a link here too.

There’s a selection of tracks on the Spotify play list below

15 Bauhaus

Picture 1 of 15
Picture 1 of 15

When was the last time you heard Bauhaus on the radio? Odd really because for a few years in the early 80s you couldn't escape their Bowie-inflected gothy art pop. Still, their big pop single, She's In Parties, sounds terrific today, and even if I can't bring myself to do the weird shoulder shrugging dance that accompanied Bela Lugosi's Dead it still sounds kind of fun. Their version of Ziggy is still pants though. Pete Murphy went on to bigger and better things - well that tape ad at least - but you can re-live his dark mumblings on Spotify


 



music, News

Haim top BBC Sound of 2013 list (we told you so…)

By Gerald Lynch on January 4th, 2013


Haim have topped the BBC Sound of 2013 list, lining up the Californian power-pop trio for a stellar year.

The list (now in its eleventh year), aims to showcase the top bands and artists to keep an eye out for in the year ahead, with previous winners including Adele, Jessie J and Brandish favourite Michael Kiwanuka.

Haim, comprised of three sisters Este, Danielle and Alana Haim have been championed for their fusion of ’70s rock and ’80s synth pop, drawing influence from the likes of Fleetwood Mac, The Bangles and The Go-Go’s.

Beginning life as a covers band, the sisters have now supported acts such as Florence and The Machine and Mumford and Sons off the back of their Forever EP and recent single Don’t Save Me.

213 experts and critics compile the list, with eligible artists not having scored  a UK top 20 single or album before 11 November 2012.

The top five list for 2013 is rounded out by London R&B duo AlunaGeorge in second, New York-based rapper Angel Haze in third, Birmingham soul singer Laura Mvula in fourth and Glasgow electro-pop outfit Chvrches in fifth.

Haim also topped our Top Five Bands To Watch In 2013 list, which also included Cheatahs, Palma Violets, Savages and Daughter. Finger on the pulse, no?




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