Categories
News

Looks like we have a bit of a fight brewing between Welsh rockers LostProphets and indie starlets Foals, which seems to have started on Twitter. 

After the LostProphets posted a message recently saying “I”™ve got some news. Foals are fucking shit.” Lead singer of Foals, Yannis Philippakis, responded via Twitter with “Lostprophets. LOL!” Later expanding on this with “Being insulted by the Lostprophets is a bit like watching a yapping, boney old chihuahua piss on its own leg.” It”™s not clear what initially sparked the argument but with banter like that I think it”™s one to keep an eye on. Remember kids, arguing on the Internet is like competing in the special Olympics. Even if you win, you”™re still retarded.

Looks like we have a bit of a fight brewing between Welsh rockers LostProphets and indie starlets Foals, which seems to have started on Twitter. 

After the LostProphets posted a message recently saying “I”™ve got some news. Foals are fucking shit.” Lead singer of Foals, Yannis Philippakis, responded via Twitter with “Lostprophets. LOL!” Later expanding on this with “Being insulted by the Lostprophets is a bit like watching a yapping, boney old chihuahua piss on its own leg.”

It”™s not clear what initially sparked the argument but with banter like that I think it”™s one to keep an eye on. Remember kids, arguing on the Internet is like competing in the special Olympics. Even if you win, you”™re still retarded.

Categories
News

Pint sized pop star Prince says the days of the Internet dominating pop culture are over”¦ In a break from common trends Prince”™s latest album 20Ten, out later this summer, will not be available for download, but a physical copy will be given away free with classy tabloids the Daily Mirror and Daily Record. Not alone in his opinion, Jack White is also dedicating himself to physical formats, Prince explained in an interview to the NME “The Internet”™s completely over, I don”™t see why I should give my new music to iTunes or anyone else. They won”™t pay me an advance for it, and then they get angry when they can”™t get it.” And here was us thinking that all these people wanted to do was make a living creating music and sharing it with the world. What do you guys think? Technophobia? Short-sightedness? Discuss.

Pint sized pop star Prince says the days of the Internet dominating pop culture are over”¦

In a break from common trends Prince”™s latest album 20Ten, out later this summer, will not be available for download, but a physical copy will be given away free with classy tabloids the Daily Mirror and Daily Record.

Not alone in his opinion, Jack White is also dedicating himself to physical formats, Prince explained in an interview to the NME “The Internet”™s completely over, I don”™t see why I should give my new music to iTunes or anyone else. They won”™t pay me an advance for it, and then they get angry when they can”™t get it.”

And here was us thinking that all these people wanted to do was make a living creating music and sharing it with the world. What do you guys think? Technophobia? Short-sightedness? Discuss.

Categories
Reviews

DJ Shadow”™s slot at Wireless 2006 was a roadblock, with some fans unable to get anywhere near the tent. So you”™d forgive us for wondering what was going on when we arrived just 10 minutes early this year to find a relatively empty tent and nothing on stage but a mysterious grey ball. As the crowd finally begins to flow towards the Second Stage, they are greeted by text projected onto the ball: “Welcome to the first DJ Shadow show in nearly three years”¦ DJ Shadow does not have a new album out”¦ but there is some new music”¦ would you like to be first in the world to hear it?” After a quick appearance to greet the cheers of the now full (but never packed) tent, Josh Davis disappears into the ball. Although the projections offer an innovative and exciting visual backdrop to the music, it does make the show feel detatched, with the DJ and all his beat-crafting, turntablist trickery hidden away. The new material is promising. Leaving the questionable territory of 2006”™s The Outsider behind, it sees DJ Shadow return to dusty samples and big beats rather than manic MC vocals and alt-rock guitars. Still, the set does seem to lack momentum, without the funk breaks of The Private Press which could have added some energy (and dropping The Right Thing would also have been a clever nod to 2manydjs on the Main Stage). The big cheers are predictably reserved for classics such as Building Steam with a Grain of Salt (Endtroducing, 1996) and Six Days (The Private Press, 2002) and the crowd does get pumped towards the end as the bpm rises with some jungle-tinged vibes. Thanks to some technical hitches delaying the start of the show, Organ Donor isn”™t quite the triumphant set closer it could have been as it is cut short, much to the disappointment of a crowd that is finally hyped. Thankfully DJ Shadow appears to be going back to his crate-digging, experimental past with his latest tunes, and his classics get the heads nodding and the hands in the air, but with over-zealous stage production, this performance doesn”™t quite meet its full potential. Photos by Claire Withington

DJ Shadow”™s slot at Wireless 2006 was a roadblock, with some fans unable to get anywhere near the tent. So you”™d forgive us for wondering what was going on when we arrived just 10 minutes early this year to find a relatively empty tent and nothing on stage but a mysterious grey ball.

As the crowd finally begins to flow towards the Second Stage, they are greeted by text projected onto the ball:

“Welcome to the first DJ Shadow show in nearly three years”¦ DJ Shadow does not have a new album out”¦ but there is some new music”¦ would you like to be first in the world to hear it?”

After a quick appearance to greet the cheers of the now full (but never packed) tent, Josh Davis disappears into the ball. Although the projections offer an innovative and exciting visual backdrop to the music, it does make the show feel detatched, with the DJ and all his beat-crafting, turntablist trickery hidden away.

The new material is promising. Leaving the questionable territory of 2006”™s The Outsider behind, it sees DJ Shadow return to dusty samples and big beats rather than manic MC vocals and alt-rock guitars.

Still, the set does seem to lack momentum, without the funk breaks of The Private Press which could have added some energy (and dropping The Right Thing would also have been a clever nod to 2manydjs on the Main Stage). The big cheers are predictably reserved for classics such as Building Steam with a Grain of Salt (Endtroducing, 1996) and Six Days (The Private Press, 2002) and the crowd does get pumped towards the end as the bpm rises with some jungle-tinged vibes.

Thanks to some technical hitches delaying the start of the show, Organ Donor isn”™t quite the triumphant set closer it could have been as it is cut short, much to the disappointment of a crowd that is finally hyped.

Thankfully DJ Shadow appears to be going back to his crate-digging, experimental past with his latest tunes, and his classics get the heads nodding and the hands in the air, but with over-zealous stage production, this performance doesn”™t quite meet its full potential.

Photos by Claire Withington

Categories
News

And now for something light hearted”¦Â  For some reason, I”™m not surprised at Trent Reznor”™s involment with “The Social Network” (aka The Facebook Movie) due for release on American territory on 1st October. What I am surprised about is that someone felt that we needed a movie about Facebook. I”™m trying hard to reserve judgement on this until we see more about it and to be honest, the fact that Reznor is attached to the project gives me some hope. After all, his work with iD software on Quake and Doom 3 was pretty good, wasn”™t it? How do you score a movie about a social networking website, anyway? Anyone have anything to say about this, please do so. Sean Parker must be pretty happy. After his sucess with Napster and later Facebook, he is going to be portrayed in “The Social Network” by Justin Timberlake. I mean, wow. Just, wow. Next up, David Bowie does Myspace – The Musical.

And now for something light hearted”¦Â 

For some reason, I”™m not surprised at Trent Reznor”™s involment with “The Social Network” (aka The Facebook Movie) due for release on American territory on 1st October. What I am surprised about is that someone felt that we needed a movie about Facebook. I”™m trying hard to reserve judgement on this until we see more about it and to be honest, the fact that Reznor is attached to the project gives me some hope. After all, his work with iD software on Quake and Doom 3 was pretty good, wasn”™t it?

How do you score a movie about a social networking website, anyway? Anyone have anything to say about this, please do so.

Sean Parker
must be pretty happy. After his sucess with Napster and later Facebook, he is going to be portrayed in “The Social Network” by Justin Timberlake. I mean, wow. Just, wow.

Next up, David Bowie does Myspace – The Musical.

Categories
News

The BBC have released their viewing figures for this years Glastonbury festival and whilst 15.4m peolpe viewed the coverage spread across BBC Two, Three, Four and HD this is around 1m down on last years figures.  The BBC, who produced around 150 hours of television coverage, 60 hours of radio output alongside a website featuring 170 hours worth of video, in addition to running the BBC Introducing Stage, put the figures down to a combination of the hot weather and the World Cup. The final night of the festival averaged 834,000 viewers on BBC2 between 10pm and 1am, though, somewhat unsurprisingly, Sunday afternoon”™s viewing figures were as low as 559,000. Somehow though I don”™t think all this will have any affect on the festival itself.

The BBC have released their viewing figures for this years Glastonbury festival and whilst 15.4m peolpe viewed the coverage spread across BBC Two, Three, Four and HD this is around 1m down on last years figures. 

The BBC, who produced around 150 hours of television coverage, 60 hours of radio output alongside a website featuring 170 hours worth of video, in addition to running the BBC Introducing Stage, put the figures down to a combination of the hot weather and the World Cup.

The final night of the festival averaged 834,000 viewers on BBC2 between 10pm and 1am, though, somewhat unsurprisingly, Sunday afternoon”™s viewing figures were as low as 559,000.

Somehow though I don”™t think all this will have any affect on the festival itself.

Categories
News

Ninja Tune are releasing a limited edition box set of works entitled “Ninja Tune XX” (ZENCD160X) and it can be yours for a mere £80.00. Okay, that might sound steep. That is until you see just what this box set contains. 6x CDs, 6x 7”, 2x posters, 20x stickers and a copy of “Ninja Tune: 20 Years Of Beats And Pieces”. The box set is released on September 20, however you can pre-order right here. Click below to find out exactly what is on this box set. Tracklisting (Courtesy of Ninja Tune). “*” indicates exclusive new tracks. CD1:
  1. Two Fingers ”˜Fools”™ *
  2. Roots Manuva ”˜It”™s On”™ *
  3. Toddla T ”˜Want U Now”™ (feat. Ms Dynamite) *
  4. Dorian Concept ”˜Her Tears Taste Like Pears”™ *
  5. Zomby ”˜The Forest”™ *
  6. Offshore ”˜Jen At The Station”™ *
  7. Emika ”˜Double Edge”™
  8. DELS ”˜Eating Clouds”™ *
  9. Big Dada Sound ”˜Signs”™ *
  10. Eric B & Rakim ”˜Paid In Full”™ (Switch meets Coldcut Remix) *
  11. Andreya Triana ”˜Lost Where I Belong”™ (Flying Lotus Remix)
  12. The Bug ”˜Catch A Fire”™ *
  13. Eskmo ”˜Cloudlight”™ *
  14. Daedelus ”˜LA Nocturn”™
CD2 :
  1. Roots Manuva ”˜Dub Styles”™ (Micachu Remix) *
  2. Diplo ”˜Summer”™s Gonna Hurt You”™ (Diplo 2010 Remix) *
  3. The Heavy ”˜How You Like Me Now?”™ (Joker Remix)
  4. Stateless ”˜Ariel”™ (Rustie Remix) *
  5. Diplo ”˜Newsflash”™ (Metronomy Remix) *
  6. PRDCTV ”˜Metropolis”™ (Dan Le Sac Remix) *
  7. Dark Sky ”˜Leave”™ *
  8. The Long Lost ”˜Woebegone”™ (Flying Lotus”™ Like Woe Remix)
  9. Spank Rock ”˜Tell It What It Look Like”™ (Todd Edwards Remix) *
  10. Shuttle ”˜Lion”™ *
  11. Poirier ”˜Get Crazy”™ (Mark Pritchard Remix) *
  12. Jammer ”˜One Over Me”™ *
  13. Fink ”˜This Is The Thing”™ (EL-B Remix) *
  14. Amon Tobin ”˜Lost & Found”™ *
CD3 :
  1. Lou Rhodes & The Cinematic Orchestra ”˜One Good Thing”™ (Version) *
  2. Bonobo & Speech Debelle ”˜Sun Will Rise”™ *
  3. Grasscut ”˜Blink In The Night”™ *
  4. Bonobo & Andreya Triana ”˜Wonder When”™
  5. Quincy & Xen Cuts Allstars ”˜I Hear The Drummer”™ (Tunng Edit) *
  6. Yppah ”˜Never Mess With Sunday”™ *
  7. DJ Food (Title TBC) *
  8. Jaga Jazzist ”˜Endless Galaxy”™ *
  9. Cougar ”˜$64k Rainbow”™ *
  10. Amon Tobin ”˜Eight Sum”™ *
  11. DJ Vadim ”˜Terrorist”™ (Gaslamp Computer Killer Remix) *
  12. Roots Manuva ”˜Witness”™ (Slugabed Remix) *
  13. Andreya Triana ”˜A Town Called Obsolete”™ (Mala Remix) *
  14. Coldcut ”˜Man In A Garage”™ (King Jammy Dub) *
  15. Jono McCleery ”˜Tomorrow”™ (Edit)
  16. Floating Points Ensemble ”˜Post Suite”™ *
CD4:
  1. Eskamon ”˜Fine Objects”™
  2. The Bug ”˜Skeng”™ (Autechre Remix) *
  3. King Cannibal ”˜The Grind & Crawl”™ *
  4. Emika ”˜Drop The Other”™ (Daedelus Remix) *
  5. Amon Tobin ”˜Foley Versions”™ (Kronos Quartet Interpretation) *
  6. Antipop Consortium ”˜Volcano”™ (Four Tet Remix)
  7. Mr Scruff ”˜Pickled Spider”™
  8. Jaga Jazzist ”˜Toccata”™ (Grasscut Remix) *
  9. The Death Set ”˜Impossible”™ (Shuttle Remix)
  10. Daedelus ”˜Trouble With A Capital D”™ *
  11. Roots Manuva ”˜Let The Spirit”™ (Hot Chip Remix)
  12. Mr Scruff ”˜Believe”™ *
  13. Bonobo ”˜Eyesdown”™ feat. Andreya Triana (Floating Points Remix)
  14. Shuttle ”˜Tunnel”™
THE FOLLOWING MATERIAL WILL ONLY BE AVAILABLE (IN ANY FORMAT) IN THE BOX SET , EXCEPT WHERE INDICATED: CD 5:
  1. The Cinematic Orchestra (Title TBC) *
  2. Coldcut ”˜Autumn Leaves”™ (2010 Budapest Mix) *
  3. Floating Points Ensemble (No.2 title TBC) (released on 12” single also) *
  4. Jaga Jazzist ”˜Synchronise Your Watches”™ *
  5. Coldcut ”˜True Skool”™ (Zomby Remix) *
  6. Bonobo ”˜Eyesdown”™ (feat. DELS) *
  7. Clifford Gilberto ”˜Deliver The Weird”™ (Dorian Concept Remix)
  8. The Bug ”˜Poison Dart”™ (Prefuse 73 Broke Moog Version) *
  9. Fink ”˜See It All”™ (Scuba Remix) *
  10. Roots Manuva ”˜Shake Your Money Maker”™ *
  11. cLOUDEAD vs Fat Possum (Title TBC) *
  12. The Heavy (Title TBC) *
  13. Blockhead ”˜Ugly Brown”™ *
CD 6:
  1. Roots Manuva ”˜Witness”™ (Modeselektor Remix) *
  2. Toddla T ”˜Sky Surfing”™ (Benga Remix) (to be released on 12” single also)
  3. Roots Manuva ”˜Join The Dots”™ (Cut Chemist Remix) *
  4. Kid Koala ”˜3 Bit Blues”™ *
  5. Pop Levi ”˜Blue Honey”™ (Amorphous Androgenous Remix Edit)
  6. Blockhead ”˜The Music Scene”™ (EL-P Remix) *
  7. Coldcut & Hexstatic ”˜Timber”™ (The Orb Remix) *
  8. DJ Kentaro ”˜Paid In Full”™ *
  9. Coldcut ”˜This Island Earth”™ (Joe Goddard Remix) *
  10. Qemists ”˜Don”™t Lose It”™ *
  11. DJ Food ”˜African Rhythms”™ (Tom Middleton Remix) *
  12. DJ Food ”˜Dark Lady”™ (808 State Remix) *
  13. Herbaliser ”˜Something Wicked”™ (Roots Manuva Dub) *
6 x 7” single: 1.
  1. Bogus Order ”˜Chillin With My Zen”™
  2. Bogus Order ”˜Zen Bones”™
2.
  1. Mr Scruff ”˜Wriggle”™ *
  2. Coldcut ”˜Boogieman”™ (King Jammy Dub) *
3.
  1. King Geedorah ”˜Snakecharmer”™ (feat. Kurious as Biolante)
  2. Daedelus ”˜Impending Doom”™ (Rustie Remix) *
4.
  1. Two Fingers ”˜Bad Girl”™ (The Bug Dub) *
  2. Spank Rock ”˜Sweet Talk”™ (Matthew Herbert Remix) *
5.
  1. DJ Vadim ”˜Bang it Out”™ *
  2. Toddla T ”˜Pum Pum”™ *
6.
  1. Wagon Christ ”˜Sloth Gets Paid”™
  2. Shuttle ”˜Rotten Guts”™ (Gold Panda Remix)

Ninja Tune are releasing a limited edition box set of works entitled “Ninja Tune XX” (ZENCD160X) and it can be yours for a mere £80.00.

Okay, that might sound steep. That is until you see just what this box set contains. 6x CDs, 6x 7”, 2x posters, 20x stickers and a copy of “Ninja Tune: 20 Years Of Beats And Pieces”. The box set is released on September 20, however you can pre-order right here. Click below to find out exactly what is on this box set.

Tracklisting (Courtesy of Ninja Tune). “*” indicates exclusive new tracks.

CD1:

  1. Two Fingers ”˜Fools”™ *
  2. Roots Manuva ”˜It”™s On”™ *
  3. Toddla T ”˜Want U Now”™ (feat. Ms Dynamite) *
  4. Dorian Concept ”˜Her Tears Taste Like Pears”™ *
  5. Zomby ”˜The Forest”™ *
  6. Offshore ”˜Jen At The Station”™ *
  7. Emika ”˜Double Edge”™
  8. DELS ”˜Eating Clouds”™ *
  9. Big Dada Sound ”˜Signs”™ *
  10. Eric B & Rakim ”˜Paid In Full”™ (Switch meets Coldcut Remix) *
  11. Andreya Triana ”˜Lost Where I Belong”™ (Flying Lotus Remix)
  12. The Bug ”˜Catch A Fire”™ *
  13. Eskmo ”˜Cloudlight”™ *
  14. Daedelus ”˜LA Nocturn”™

CD2 :

  1. Roots Manuva ”˜Dub Styles”™ (Micachu Remix) *
  2. Diplo ”˜Summer”™s Gonna Hurt You”™ (Diplo 2010 Remix) *
  3. The Heavy ”˜How You Like Me Now?”™ (Joker Remix)
  4. Stateless ”˜Ariel”™ (Rustie Remix) *
  5. Diplo ”˜Newsflash”™ (Metronomy Remix) *
  6. PRDCTV ”˜Metropolis”™ (Dan Le Sac Remix) *
  7. Dark Sky ”˜Leave”™ *
  8. The Long Lost ”˜Woebegone”™ (Flying Lotus”™ Like Woe Remix)
  9. Spank Rock ”˜Tell It What It Look Like”™ (Todd Edwards Remix) *
  10. Shuttle ”˜Lion”™ *
  11. Poirier ”˜Get Crazy”™ (Mark Pritchard Remix) *
  12. Jammer ”˜One Over Me”™ *
  13. Fink ”˜This Is The Thing”™ (EL-B Remix) *
  14. Amon Tobin ”˜Lost & Found”™ *

CD3 :

  1. Lou Rhodes & The Cinematic Orchestra ”˜One Good Thing”™ (Version) *
  2. Bonobo & Speech Debelle ”˜Sun Will Rise”™ *
  3. Grasscut ”˜Blink In The Night”™ *
  4. Bonobo & Andreya Triana ”˜Wonder When”™
  5. Quincy & Xen Cuts Allstars ”˜I Hear The Drummer”™ (Tunng Edit) *
  6. Yppah ”˜Never Mess With Sunday”™ *
  7. DJ Food (Title TBC) *
  8. Jaga Jazzist ”˜Endless Galaxy”™ *
  9. Cougar ”˜$64k Rainbow”™ *
  10. Amon Tobin ”˜Eight Sum”™ *
  11. DJ Vadim ”˜Terrorist”™ (Gaslamp Computer Killer Remix) *
  12. Roots Manuva ”˜Witness”™ (Slugabed Remix) *
  13. Andreya Triana ”˜A Town Called Obsolete”™ (Mala Remix) *
  14. Coldcut ”˜Man In A Garage”™ (King Jammy Dub) *
  15. Jono McCleery ”˜Tomorrow”™ (Edit)
  16. Floating Points Ensemble ”˜Post Suite”™ *

CD4:

  1. Eskamon ”˜Fine Objects”™
  2. The Bug ”˜Skeng”™ (Autechre Remix) *
  3. King Cannibal ”˜The Grind & Crawl”™ *
  4. Emika ”˜Drop The Other”™ (Daedelus Remix) *
  5. Amon Tobin ”˜Foley Versions”™ (Kronos Quartet Interpretation) *
  6. Antipop Consortium ”˜Volcano”™ (Four Tet Remix)
  7. Mr Scruff ”˜Pickled Spider”™
  8. Jaga Jazzist ”˜Toccata”™ (Grasscut Remix) *
  9. The Death Set ”˜Impossible”™ (Shuttle Remix)
  10. Daedelus ”˜Trouble With A Capital D”™ *
  11. Roots Manuva ”˜Let The Spirit”™ (Hot Chip Remix)
  12. Mr Scruff ”˜Believe”™ *
  13. Bonobo ”˜Eyesdown”™ feat. Andreya Triana (Floating Points Remix)
  14. Shuttle ”˜Tunnel”™

THE FOLLOWING MATERIAL WILL ONLY BE AVAILABLE (IN ANY FORMAT) IN THE BOX SET , EXCEPT WHERE INDICATED:

CD 5:

  1. The Cinematic Orchestra (Title TBC) *
  2. Coldcut ”˜Autumn Leaves”™ (2010 Budapest Mix) *
  3. Floating Points Ensemble (No.2 title TBC) (released on 12” single also) *
  4. Jaga Jazzist ”˜Synchronise Your Watches”™ *
  5. Coldcut ”˜True Skool”™ (Zomby Remix) *
  6. Bonobo ”˜Eyesdown”™ (feat. DELS) *
  7. Clifford Gilberto ”˜Deliver The Weird”™ (Dorian Concept Remix)
  8. The Bug ”˜Poison Dart”™ (Prefuse 73 Broke Moog Version) *
  9. Fink ”˜See It All”™ (Scuba Remix) *
  10. Roots Manuva ”˜Shake Your Money Maker”™ *
  11. cLOUDEAD vs Fat Possum (Title TBC) *
  12. The Heavy (Title TBC) *
  13. Blockhead ”˜Ugly Brown”™ *

CD 6:

  1. Roots Manuva ”˜Witness”™ (Modeselektor Remix) *
  2. Toddla T ”˜Sky Surfing”™ (Benga Remix) (to be released on 12” single also)
  3. Roots Manuva ”˜Join The Dots”™ (Cut Chemist Remix) *
  4. Kid Koala ”˜3 Bit Blues”™ *
  5. Pop Levi ”˜Blue Honey”™ (Amorphous Androgenous Remix Edit)
  6. Blockhead ”˜The Music Scene”™ (EL-P Remix) *
  7. Coldcut & Hexstatic ”˜Timber”™ (The Orb Remix) *
  8. DJ Kentaro ”˜Paid In Full”™ *
  9. Coldcut ”˜This Island Earth”™ (Joe Goddard Remix) *
  10. Qemists ”˜Don”™t Lose It”™ *
  11. DJ Food ”˜African Rhythms”™ (Tom Middleton Remix) *
  12. DJ Food ”˜Dark Lady”™ (808 State Remix) *
  13. Herbaliser ”˜Something Wicked”™ (Roots Manuva Dub) *

6 x 7” single:

1.

  1. Bogus Order ”˜Chillin With My Zen”™
  2. Bogus Order ”˜Zen Bones”™

2.

  1. Mr Scruff ”˜Wriggle”™ *
  2. Coldcut ”˜Boogieman”™ (King Jammy Dub) *

3.

  1. King Geedorah ”˜Snakecharmer”™ (feat. Kurious as Biolante)
  2. Daedelus ”˜Impending Doom”™ (Rustie Remix) *

4.

  1. Two Fingers ”˜Bad Girl”™ (The Bug Dub) *
  2. Spank Rock ”˜Sweet Talk”™ (Matthew Herbert Remix) *

5.

  1. DJ Vadim ”˜Bang it Out”™ *
  2. Toddla T ”˜Pum Pum”™ *

6.

  1. Wagon Christ ”˜Sloth Gets Paid”™
  2. Shuttle ”˜Rotten Guts”™ (Gold Panda Remix)
Categories
News

History repeating? Ten years after the tragedy at the Roskilde Festival, where nine Pearl Jam fans were trampled and suffocated after a crowd surge, the band halted their performance at the Heineken Open-er Festival in Poland following fears for the crowds safety. Just six songs into their nearly two hour set, lead singer Eddie Vedder implored the crowd to stop pushing and only continued playing after the crowd calmed down a little.

History repeating?

Ten years after the tragedy at the Roskilde Festival, where nine Pearl Jam fans were trampled and suffocated after a crowd surge, the band halted their performance at the Heineken Open-er Festival in Poland following fears for the crowds safety. Just six songs into their nearly two hour set, lead singer Eddie Vedder implored the crowd to stop pushing and only continued playing after the crowd calmed down a little.

Categories
News

Earlier today it transpired that the BBC Trust have opted not to axe digital radio station 6 Music. How this news couldn”™t be dear to the heart of the Spotisfaction fan, I do not know. 6 Music was launched in 2002 and provides an alternative to more mainstream stations such as Radio 1. It was a bold step, with the BBC seeming to take note of the growing demand for new music and championing musical creativity and development just as the late great John Peel once had. Earlier this year, 6 Music was marked for potential closure in February”™s BBC Strategy Review which caused a backlash of angry fans and angry DJs. The BBC had cited poor listening figures as one of the reasons for the closure of 6 Music as well as the need to give commercial rivals more room in the market to broadcast similar endeavours. However, 5 months later it would seem that the BBC Trust aren”™t convinced that 6 Music is ready for the chop just yet. In fact, they went on record saying 6 Music is “well-liked by its listeners, was highly distinctive and made an important contribution” which is the exact kind of thinking we need when it comes to important matters such as these. The full statement from the BBC Trust can be read here.


Earlier today it transpired that the BBC Trust have opted not to axe digital radio station 6 Music. How this news couldn”™t be dear to the heart of the Spotisfaction fan, I do not know.

6 Music was launched in 2002 and provides an alternative to more mainstream stations such as Radio 1. It was a bold step, with the BBC seeming to take note of the growing demand for new music and championing musical creativity and development just as the late great John Peel once had.

Earlier this year, 6 Music was marked for potential closure in February”™s BBC Strategy Review which caused a backlash of angry fans and angry DJs. The BBC had cited poor listening figures as one of the reasons for the closure of 6 Music as well as the need to give commercial rivals more room in the market to broadcast similar endeavours.

However, 5 months later it would seem that the BBC Trust aren”™t convinced that 6 Music is ready for the chop just yet. In fact, they went on record saying 6 Music is “well-liked by its listeners, was highly distinctive and made an important contribution” which is the exact kind of thinking we need when it comes to important matters such as these.

The full statement from the BBC Trust can be read here.

Categories
Playlists

https://open.spotify.com/playlist/1WqUPHtOc25aYBqwn8ihzT

Afternoon, all. It”™s been a fun Monday”¦ somewhat of an oxymoron, I know. Lots of cool stuff going on behind the scenes at Spotisfaction Towers (where Thom and I sit behind a curtain, using a lot of elaborate magic tricks and props to make ourselves seem awesome). Hopefully we”™ll have more info later this week.

You might have seen our recent foray into supplying all manner of content for you fine individuals. If you ever fancied yourself as a writer; if you have a killer idea for a regular/semi-regular feature; if you have a wicked one-off article or review you”™re dying to get off your chest; or if you just straight up want to be part of our awesome crew, please get in touch!

Today”™s playlist is a blissed out treat from young starlet, Steve Hatch. It”™s his first Spotisfaction (d”™awwww bless) so be kind, and let him know what you think of his mix in the comments.

[David]

81 Spotisfaction Monday (5 Jul) – SHatch

Hit the link for tracklist and Steve”™s blurb.

  1. Blessa – Toro Y Moi
  2. Round And Round – Ariel Pink”™s Haunted Graffiti
  3. Jesus, etc. – Wilco
  4. Night Time – The xx
  5. Crosses – Jose Gonzalez
  6. Three House – Nick Drake
  7. Creature Fear – Bon Iver
  8. To Be Alone With You – Sufjan Stevens
  9. Stay The Same – Bonobo, Andreya Triana
  10. Hoops – The Chemical Brothers
  11. Bonafied Lovin”™ – Jori Hulkkonen Remix – Chromeo
  12. Feel It All Around – Washed Out
  13. Lover Of Mine – Beach House
  14. Infinite Desert – Delorean
  15. Rollerdisco – Black Moth Super Rainbow
  16. Perpetual Motion – Tobacco
  17. Heaven Can Wait – Charlotte Gainsbourg
  18. Hunted By A Freak – Mogwai

Title: Chill Murray Mix

Blurbbbbbbbb

We all need to ride the Chillwaves from time to time”¦most of these tracks aren”™t chillwave, you could dispute if some of them are chill at all, but they work for me.

Stand outs (although this really does work better as a mix) –

”˜Toro Y Moi – Blessa”™ & ”˜Washed Out – Feel It All Around”™ embody what I”™d consider Chillwave, blissed out indie that sounds like it was made for the kind of summer we”™re having (gonna sit in a field and get my mexican light beer w/ lime on y”™all).

Bon Iver/Sufjan/Jose Gonzalez are obvious choices for chill acoustic tracks, but that”™s only because they work and they”™re damn good.

Chemical Brothers/Bonobo/Chromeo bring an electronic vibe. The Bonobo track is absolute GOLD. ChemBros track ”˜Hoops”™ was the first I heard that made me take them seriously. The Chromeo remix is a slow starter but it really is worth sticking with.

Black Moth Super Rainbow & Tobacco are my obscure choices, if you aren”™t hooked within 10secs, you probably won”™t ever be”¦

All capped off with a classic Mogwai track, which to this day makes me think of a Film4 advert that was on about 5-10 years ago”¦.

Hope you are suitably chilled by the end.

Peace/Power
Steve Hatch

Afternoon, all. It”™s been a fun Monday”¦ somewhat of an oxymoron, I know. Lots of cool stuff going on behind the scenes at Spotisfaction Towers (where Thom and I sit behind a curtain, using a lot of elaborate magic tricks and props to make ourselves seem awesome). Hopefully we”™ll have more info later this week.

You might have seen our recent foray into supplying all manner of content for you fine individuals. If you ever fancied yourself as a writer; if you have a killer idea for a regular/semi-regular feature; if you have a wicked one-off article or review you”™re dying to get off your chest; or if you just straight up want to be part of our awesome crew, please get in touch!

Today”™s playlist is a blissed out treat from young starlet, Steve Hatch. It”™s his first Spotisfaction (d”™awwww bless) so be kind, and let him know what you think of his mix in the comments.

[David]

81 Spotisfaction Monday (5 Jul) – SHatch

Hit the link for tracklist and Steve”™s blurb.

  1. Blessa – Toro Y Moi
  2. Round And Round – Ariel Pink”™s Haunted Graffiti
  3. Jesus, etc. – Wilco
  4. Night Time – The xx
  5. Crosses – Jose Gonzalez
  6. Three House – Nick Drake
  7. Creature Fear – Bon Iver
  8. To Be Alone With You – Sufjan Stevens
  9. Stay The Same – Bonobo, Andreya Triana
  10. Hoops – The Chemical Brothers
  11. Bonafied Lovin”™ – Jori Hulkkonen Remix – Chromeo
  12. Feel It All Around – Washed Out
  13. Lover Of Mine – Beach House
  14. Infinite Desert – Delorean
  15. Rollerdisco – Black Moth Super Rainbow
  16. Perpetual Motion – Tobacco
  17. Heaven Can Wait – Charlotte Gainsbourg
  18. Hunted By A Freak – Mogwai

Title: Chill Murray Mix

Blurbbbbbbbb

We all need to ride the Chillwaves from time to time”¦most of these tracks aren”™t chillwave, you could dispute if some of them are chill at all, but they work for me.

Stand outs (although this really does work better as a mix) –

”˜Toro Y Moi – Blessa”™ & ”˜Washed Out – Feel It All Around”™ embody what I”™d consider Chillwave, blissed out indie that sounds like it was made for the kind of summer we”™re having (gonna sit in a field and get my mexican light beer w/ lime on y”™all).

Bon Iver/Sufjan/Jose Gonzalez are obvious choices for chill acoustic tracks, but that”™s only because they work and they”™re damn good.

Chemical Brothers/Bonobo/Chromeo bring an electronic vibe. The Bonobo track is absolute GOLD. ChemBros track ”˜Hoops”™ was the first I heard that made me take them seriously. The Chromeo remix is a slow starter but it really is worth sticking with.

Black Moth Super Rainbow & Tobacco are my obscure choices, if you aren”™t hooked within 10secs, you probably won”™t ever be”¦

All capped off with a classic Mogwai track, which to this day makes me think of a Film4 advert that was on about 5-10 years ago”¦.

Hope you are suitably chilled by the end.

Peace/Power
Steve Hatch

Categories
News

School of Seven Bells are set to release their sophomore album on July 13 but are giving everyone the chance to stream it from their Myspace as I type. Head over and give it the once over and let us know what you think. They”™ll be touring the UK to support this album, so if you have a chance why not go see them? 07/07 Brighton, Resident Records 08/07 London, Pure Groove at The Drop, Stoke Newington 17/07 Latitude Festival 18/07 Bristol, Thekla 19/07 Manchester, Ruby Lounge 20/07 London, Scala Whilst on the subject of School of Seven Bells, download and listen to their remix of The Depreciation Guild”™s My Chariot. [megaupload]

School of Seven Bells are set to release their sophomore album on July 13 but are giving everyone the chance to stream it from their Myspace as I type. Head over and give it the once over and let us know what you think.

They”™ll be touring the UK to support this album, so if you have a chance why not go see them?

07/07 Brighton, Resident Records
08/07 London, Pure Groove at The Drop, Stoke Newington
17/07 Latitude Festival
18/07 Bristol, Thekla
19/07 Manchester, Ruby Lounge
20/07 London, Scala

Whilst on the subject of School of Seven Bells, download and listen to their remix of The Depreciation Guild”™s My Chariot. [megaupload]

Categories
News

iPhone iOS 4Image courtesy of cnet.co.uk For those of you out there with an iPhone (there must be some of you that haven”™t yet moved over to Android), there is an update to the Spotify app which now allows users to ”˜multi-task”™, ie. keep listening to music after switching to other apps. This will allow you to enjoy all our Spotisfaction playlists whilst checking your email, using fart joke apps, and the miriad of other things you can do on an iPhone. In all seriousness, though, this could conceivably replace the native iPod app, as one of the new features allows you to play your synced iPod tracks locally instead of streaming them through the cloud. That, folks, is a game-changer as it will drastically reduce the amount of bandwidth that Spotify on your iPhone will use (as long as your playlists contain tracks that you”™ve synced to your phone). There are a whole host of further updates to the app, including the ability to share links and playlists with other Spotify users, access Spotify”™s music controls from the iPhone lock screen, and use Apple”™s remote to control your music playback. The app is available for Spotify Premium users and is available now for the iPhone 4, iPhone 3GS or the third-generation iPod Touch.

iPhone iOS 4Image courtesy of cnet.co.uk

For those of you out there with an iPhone (there must be some of you that haven”™t yet moved over to Android), there is an update to the Spotify app which now allows users to ”˜multi-task”™, ie. keep listening to music after switching to other apps. This will allow you to enjoy all our Spotisfaction playlists whilst checking your email, using fart joke apps, and the miriad of other things you can do on an iPhone. In all seriousness, though, this could conceivably replace the native iPod app, as one of the new features allows you to play your synced iPod tracks locally instead of streaming them through the cloud. That, folks, is a game-changer as it will drastically reduce the amount of bandwidth that Spotify on your iPhone will use (as long as your playlists contain tracks that you”™ve synced to your phone).

There are a whole host of further updates to the app, including the ability to share links and playlists with other Spotify users, access Spotify”™s music controls from the iPhone lock screen, and use Apple”™s remote to control your music playback.

The app is available for Spotify Premium users and is available now for the iPhone 4, iPhone 3GS or the third-generation iPod Touch.

Categories
Reviews

AtmospherePhoto courtesy of gigwise.com The final instalment of my Glastonbury coverage, I look at some of the acts from the Sunday of the Festival. We focus on Everything Everything, These New Puritans, Gang of Four and LCD Soundsystem. Everything Everything Manchester-based Everything Everything blend a heady mix of Foals, Battles and pop sensibility to create a mind-twistingly catchy set of songs. They drew a good crowd to the John Peel Stage early on in the day, and did not disappoint, with a short but impressive set of their best-known tunes to date. Their debut album Man Alive is scheduled for August 2010, so see these guys touring in the near future. 8/10 Everything EvertythingPhoto courtesy of nme.com These New Puritans These New Puritans have always been ambitious – songwriter Jack Barnett reportedly learnt music notation in order to write the parts for the 3-part brass/woodwind ensemble heard on 2010 album Hidden (Angular/Domino, 2010). Multi-textured, ambiguously structured songs, cryptic lyrics and drums pounding louder than a 1000-strong Roman Army. And Glastonbury was to be no different. These New PuritansPhoto courtesy of nme.com The aforementioned brass ensemble joined them on stage to play a reworking of Hidden”™s closer 5, before launching into the pounding We Want War. The pace from there never abated, a constant drum-cacophony pushing the band through a set containing songs mainly from Hidden, apart from penultimate track Infinity. Rarely addressing the crowd, These New Puritans allow their music to confound the listener, presenting us with a backdrop of dense beats and leaving us to get on with the job of working it out for ourselves. In the seering weekend sun, though, we just don”™t have the energy. 6/10 Gang of Four Post-punk legends Gang Of Four were given a late afternoon slot following up-and-coming post-punk newboys The Drums. It was strange to see 56-year-old singer Jon King take to the stage following the sprightly boys of 20 minutes earlier, but they delivered an energetic, sneering set of their greatest hits. In particular, angry run-throughs of I Love a Man In Uniform and Damaged Goods were weekend highlights, eclipsed only by the appearance of a microwave oven on stage, and watching Jon King destroy it with a baseball bat in rhythm to the music. Fantastic. 8/10 Gang of FourPhoto courtesy of nme.com LCD Soundsystem Does James Murphy put any effort into being cool? Taking to the stage all in white, he addresses the crowd regarding the bands”™ mass-use of sunglasses: “Hi, it”™s very sunny, we”™ve not turned into LA arseholes, so sorry about this”¦not that I”™ve got anything against LA!” LCD SoundsystemPhoto courtesy of DrownedinSound.com Having to content with a deflated crowd following England”™s World Cup knock-out earlier in the day was not a problem, as classics Daft Punk Is Playing At My House, Tribulations and Yeah get the crowd jumping. With the sun setting on the final day of Glastonbury, high-energy disco-indie freakouts were just what the doctor ordered”¦ and if you were watching Orbital, who followed LCD on the Other Stage, the doctor is just what you got. The headliner on Sunday was Stevie Wonder, catch my review of his set, along with the other headliners and a Glasto review overall, here.

AtmospherePhoto courtesy of gigwise.com

The final instalment of my Glastonbury coverage, I look at some of the acts from the Sunday of the Festival. We focus on Everything Everything, These New Puritans, Gang of Four and LCD Soundsystem.


Everything Everything

Manchester-based Everything Everything blend a heady mix of Foals, Battles and pop sensibility to create a mind-twistingly catchy set of songs. They drew a good crowd to the John Peel Stage early on in the day, and did not disappoint, with a short but impressive set of their best-known tunes to date. Their debut album Man Alive is scheduled for August 2010, so see these guys touring in the near future. 8/10

Everything Evertything
Photo courtesy of nme.com

These New Puritans

These New Puritans have always been ambitious – songwriter Jack Barnett reportedly learnt music notation in order to write the parts for the 3-part brass/woodwind ensemble heard on 2010 album Hidden (Angular/Domino, 2010). Multi-textured, ambiguously structured songs, cryptic lyrics and drums pounding louder than a 1000-strong Roman Army. And Glastonbury was to be no different.

These New Puritans
Photo courtesy of nme.com

The aforementioned brass ensemble joined them on stage to play a reworking of Hidden”™s closer 5, before launching into the pounding We Want War. The pace from there never abated, a constant drum-cacophony pushing the band through a set containing songs mainly from Hidden, apart from penultimate track Infinity. Rarely addressing the crowd, These New Puritans allow their music to confound the listener, presenting us with a backdrop of dense beats and leaving us to get on with the job of working it out for ourselves. In the seering weekend sun, though, we just don”™t have the energy. 6/10

Gang of Four

Post-punk legends Gang Of Four were given a late afternoon slot following up-and-coming post-punk newboys The Drums. It was strange to see 56-year-old singer Jon King take to the stage following the sprightly boys of 20 minutes earlier, but they delivered an energetic, sneering set of their greatest hits. In particular, angry run-throughs of I Love a Man In Uniform and Damaged Goods were weekend highlights, eclipsed only by the appearance of a microwave oven on stage, and watching Jon King destroy it with a baseball bat in rhythm to the music. Fantastic. 8/10

Gang of Four
Photo courtesy of nme.com

LCD Soundsystem

Does James Murphy put any effort into being cool? Taking to the stage all in white, he addresses the crowd regarding the bands”™ mass-use of sunglasses: “Hi, it”™s very sunny, we”™ve not turned into LA arseholes, so sorry about this”¦not that I”™ve got anything against LA!”

LCD Soundsystem
Photo courtesy of DrownedinSound.com

Having to content with a deflated crowd following England”™s World Cup knock-out earlier in the day was not a problem, as classics Daft Punk Is Playing At My House, Tribulations and Yeah get the crowd jumping. With the sun setting on the final day of Glastonbury, high-energy disco-indie freakouts were just what the doctor ordered”¦ and if you were watching Orbital, who followed LCD on the Other Stage, the doctor is just what you got.

The headliner on Sunday was Stevie Wonder, catch my review of his set, along with the other headliners and a Glasto review overall, here.

Categories
Reviews

FlorencePhoto courtesy of www.citypages.com Focussing now on the Saturday of this years Glastonbury Festival, I review DJ Parker, Nero, The National, Biffy Clyro, Foals and The xx. Parker DJ Parker was a tip from Spotisfaction contributor Craig Haynes. A DJ Yoda styled dubtronica DJ, who gained some recent exposure with Where”™s My Monkey, a humourous retake on TC”™s Where”™s My Money, he was too low down the bill to attract the crowd his upbeat set deserved. This was a little gem of a DJ set, and he should be looked out for in future. 7.5/10 Nero Nero played twice over the weekend, once in the saloon style bar known as the Pussy Parlour late on Thursday, and once in the Glade, early on Saturday. There was little to get excited about on Saturday – especially when old timer Adrian Sherwood, due on after them, crashed their final song during his set up. Thursday, though, found Nero at the top of their game. NeroPhoto courtesy of www.wma.com Dubstep is maturing. The initial burst of dubstep a few years ago – fronted by Benga, Skream and others – stagnated somewhat, as these pioneers offered somewhat surprisingly downtempo releases. It”™s taken a few years for their influence to build, but there are now a new crop of dubstep artists who, having found a way to add textural influences from euphoric trance and techno along side the dub, heavy bass, and supermassive glitch two-step beats, are now drawing crowds and delivering electrifying sets. This weekend, along with Rusko, Nero showed that they are at the absolute pinnacle of the new breed of dubstep. 9/10 The National When the year is out and the aficionados are making their Album Of The Year lists, The National”™s brilliant High Violet (4AD, 2010) will be finding itself on most of them. Following on from their triumphant Royal Albert Hall gig in May, they return to the UK for Glastonbury, a festival they headlined, on the John Peel Stage, 2 years previously. In the dark, enclosed spaces of their own gigs, their downbeat, crooning songs squeeze touching melancholy into all four corners of the space; this time, though, they were appearing on the large open space of The Other Stage in the bright early evening of Saturday. The NationalPhoto courtesy of DrownedinSound.com Due to a combination of poor sound quality and the less-than-intimate space with which they had to try and communicate their sound to a festival crowd, their set did not hit the ground running. Fortunately, there seemed enough genuine fans to keep the set going, and the natural professionalism of the band was put into practice only 4 songs in when lead singer Matt Berninger jumped off the stage, microphone in hand, and furrowed deep into the crowd as far as his mic lead would carry him – a trick usually kept for much later in their performances, which became obvious when he jumped into the crowd for a second time later on (a fact this reviewer missed, having to leave slightly early to make it for the Special Guests) -  but one that enlivened the audience enough that the strength of their fantastic songs could carry them to the end of the set. 7/10 Biffy Clyro Biffy Clyro were the not-so-secret special guests on The Park Stage on Saturday, and they had a lot to live up to following Thom Yorke”™s exceptional set the day before. The crowd had swelled to gargantuan proportions by the time their set was due to start, an army of Biffy fans turning up with customary “”˜mon the Biffy” flags. Biffy The Biffy indeed take to the Park stage in the late afternoon and jump into a thumping rendition of That Golden Rule, the start of a rousing set of Biffy Clyro”™s most successful tracks. In particular, the melancholy Many A Horror and easy sing-along The Captain, used to close disappointingly short set – the only mark on an otherwise flawless set – were met with rapturous ovation from the huge crowd. While not quite the surprise of yesterday, but an excellent set. 8/10 At the end of the set, frontman Simon Neil climbed on his speaker one final time, and I had flashes of him landing awkwardly and falling over. Turns out I was quite the prophetic. Foals Hot-footing it straight from Biffy Clyro, I needed to catch Foals. Foals on record are somewhat of an enigma, their live shows expounding energy and musicianship. But their first record Antidotes (Transgressive, 2008) was surprisingly downbeat. Firstly, they got a little ahead of themselves in hiring Dave Sitek of TV On The Radio to produce it, only to reject his copy and remix it themselves, complaining that he”™d made it sound like it was “recorded in the Grand Canyon” (have you HEARD TVOTR, boys?). They also decided to eschew popular pre-release tracks Hummer and Mathletics, and these two things combined left an album that lulled a suprising amount, by building up tension in slower songs that had a dearth of upbeat songs to release the tension. Live, though, Foals continued to triumph, delivering adrenaline-rush, 1000-mph funk-punk. Foals The new album, Total Life Forever (Transgressive, 2010), was a realisation of the growing maturity in the band. The songs are louder, deeper (take a bow, Mr Sitek), more balanced, more energetic. It”™s still definitely downtempo, but you sense, when you see Foals live, that they”™ve got their craft exactly right now – explore songs and dynamics on record, but see them live to truly understand the band. Here at Glastonbury, Foals were in full swing, performing the new album impressively, transmitting their energy through their music and into the crowd, tighter-than-tight renditions of their growing catalogue of tunes, and the standard ”˜climb on the rigging and then jump into the crowd”™, a thrilling end to a fantastic party. See this band live, at all costs. 9/10 The xx The xx build atmosphere from sparse arrangements. It was going to be interesting to see how they coped with the loss of guitarist/keyboardist Baria Qureshi, and whether they would replace her minimal arrangements, or attempt to work out arrangements as a 3 piece. They chose the later, almost totally ignoring the parts of their former band member. The xx >Unfortunately, the gig suffered from a number of avoidable issues. Following the electrifying Foals set was going to be a real change of pace for a band so high up the bill, and with only one 40 minute album behind them, they were always going to be padding their set out. Which didn”™t match up well when they, conversely, chose not to replace the arrangements missing following Qureshi”™s departure. This had the result of reducing their already downbeat songs into something so empty it was half asleep. There”™s no doubting the strength of some of their songs, and the crowd did their best to keep the momentum of the gig going, but ultimately the set merely was a sluggish run through of the album. Not until Florence Welch joined them on stage to do a live version of their cover of You”™ve Got The Love did the stage come alive; indeed, Welch”™s take on the stutter-cut vocals heard in the remix was the most impressive things heard that night. 5/10 The headliner on Saturday was Muse, catch my review of their set, along with the other headliners and a Glasto review overall, here.

FlorencePhoto courtesy of www.citypages.com

Focussing now on the Saturday of this years Glastonbury Festival, I review DJ Parker, Nero, The National, Biffy Clyro, Foals and The xx.


Parker

DJ Parker was a tip from Spotisfaction contributor Craig Haynes. A DJ Yoda styled dubtronica DJ, who gained some recent exposure with Where”™s My Monkey, a humourous retake on TC”™s Where”™s My Money, he was too low down the bill to attract the crowd his upbeat set deserved. This was a little gem of a DJ set, and he should be looked out for in future. 7.5/10

Nero

Nero played twice over the weekend, once in the saloon style bar known as the Pussy Parlour late on Thursday, and once in the Glade, early on Saturday. There was little to get excited about on Saturday – especially when old timer Adrian Sherwood, due on after them, crashed their final song during his set up. Thursday, though, found Nero at the top of their game.

NeroPhoto courtesy of www.wma.com

Dubstep is maturing. The initial burst of dubstep a few years ago – fronted by Benga, Skream and others – stagnated somewhat, as these pioneers offered somewhat surprisingly downtempo releases. It”™s taken a few years for their influence to build, but there are now a new crop of dubstep artists who, having found a way to add textural influences from euphoric trance and techno along side the dub, heavy bass, and supermassive glitch two-step beats, are now drawing crowds and delivering electrifying sets. This weekend, along with Rusko, Nero showed that they are at the absolute pinnacle of the new breed of dubstep. 9/10

The National

When the year is out and the aficionados are making their Album Of The Year lists, The National”™s brilliant High Violet (4AD, 2010) will be finding itself on most of them. Following on from their triumphant Royal Albert Hall gig in May, they return to the UK for Glastonbury, a festival they headlined, on the John Peel Stage, 2 years previously. In the dark, enclosed spaces of their own gigs, their downbeat, crooning songs squeeze touching melancholy into all four corners of the space; this time, though, they were appearing on the large open space of The Other Stage in the bright early evening of Saturday.

The NationalPhoto courtesy of DrownedinSound.com

Due to a combination of poor sound quality and the less-than-intimate space with which they had to try and communicate their sound to a festival crowd, their set did not hit the ground running. Fortunately, there seemed enough genuine fans to keep the set going, and the natural professionalism of the band was put into practice only 4 songs in when lead singer Matt Berninger jumped off the stage, microphone in hand, and furrowed deep into the crowd as far as his mic lead would carry him – a trick usually kept for much later in their performances, which became obvious when he jumped into the crowd for a second time later on (a fact this reviewer missed, having to leave slightly early to make it for the Special Guests) -  but one that enlivened the audience enough that the strength of their fantastic songs could carry them to the end of the set. 7/10

Biffy Clyro

Biffy Clyro were the not-so-secret special guests on The Park Stage on Saturday, and they had a lot to live up to following Thom Yorke”™s exceptional set the day before. The crowd had swelled to gargantuan proportions by the time their set was due to start, an army of Biffy fans turning up with customary “”˜mon the Biffy” flags.

Biffy
The Biffy indeed take to the Park stage in the late afternoon and jump into a thumping rendition of That Golden Rule, the start of a rousing set of Biffy Clyro”™s most successful tracks. In particular, the melancholy Many A Horror and easy sing-along The Captain, used to close disappointingly short set – the only mark on an otherwise flawless set – were met with rapturous ovation from the huge crowd. While not quite the surprise of yesterday, but an excellent set. 8/10

At the end of the set, frontman Simon Neil climbed on his speaker one final time, and I had flashes of him landing awkwardly and falling over. Turns out I was quite the prophetic.

Foals

Hot-footing it straight from Biffy Clyro, I needed to catch Foals. Foals on record are somewhat of an enigma, their live shows expounding energy and musicianship. But their first record Antidotes (Transgressive, 2008) was surprisingly downbeat. Firstly, they got a little ahead of themselves in hiring Dave Sitek of TV On The Radio to produce it, only to reject his copy and remix it themselves, complaining that he”™d made it sound like it was “recorded in the Grand Canyon” (have you HEARD TVOTR, boys?). They also decided to eschew popular pre-release tracks Hummer and Mathletics, and these two things combined left an album that lulled a suprising amount, by building up tension in slower songs that had a dearth of upbeat songs to release the tension. Live, though, Foals continued to triumph, delivering adrenaline-rush, 1000-mph funk-punk.

Foals
The new album, Total Life Forever (Transgressive, 2010), was a realisation of the growing maturity in the band. The songs are louder, deeper (take a bow, Mr Sitek), more balanced, more energetic. It”™s still definitely downtempo, but you sense, when you see Foals live, that they”™ve got their craft exactly right now – explore songs and dynamics on record, but see them live to truly understand the band. Here at Glastonbury, Foals were in full swing, performing the new album impressively, transmitting their energy through their music and into the crowd, tighter-than-tight renditions of their growing catalogue of tunes, and the standard ”˜climb on the rigging and then jump into the crowd”™, a thrilling end to a fantastic party. See this band live, at all costs. 9/10

The xx

The xx build atmosphere from sparse arrangements. It was going to be interesting to see how they coped with the loss of guitarist/keyboardist Baria Qureshi, and whether they would replace her minimal arrangements, or attempt to work out arrangements as a 3 piece. They chose the later, almost totally ignoring the parts of their former band member.

The xx

>Unfortunately, the gig suffered from a number of avoidable issues. Following the electrifying Foals set was going to be a real change of pace for a band so high up the bill, and with only one 40 minute album behind them, they were always going to be padding their set out. Which didn”™t match up well when they, conversely, chose not to replace the arrangements missing following Qureshi”™s departure. This had the result of reducing their already downbeat songs into something so empty it was half asleep. There”™s no doubting the strength of some of their songs, and the crowd did their best to keep the momentum of the gig going, but ultimately the set merely was a sluggish run through of the album. Not until Florence Welch joined them on stage to do a live version of their cover of You”™ve Got The Love did the stage come alive; indeed, Welch”™s take on the stutter-cut vocals heard in the remix was the most impressive things heard that night. 5/10

The headliner on Saturday was Muse, catch my review of their set, along with the other headliners and a Glasto review overall, here.

Categories
News

Phil Selway, best known as drummer with Radiohead, has embarked on a solo project. You can download his latest single By Some Miracle for free here, or feel free to listen below. His debut album Familial is set for release in August. By Some Miracle by Philip Selway

Phil Selway, best known as drummer with Radiohead, has embarked on a solo project. You can download his latest single By Some Miracle for free here, or feel free to listen below. His debut album Familial is set for release in August.


By Some Miracle by Philip Selway

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Reviews

Photo courtesy of DrownedinSound.com For the second part of my Glastonbury review, I”™m focussing on day 2; the acts dotted around the festival on the Friday. This section features live reviews of Miike Snow, Mariachi El Bronx, Bonobo, Rusko and the amazing Thom Yorke. Miike Snow Miike Snow were not expecting success, but the exposure brought to them through remix-friendly material reworked by hype artists like Mark Ronson, Tiga and Fake Blood, a feature on massive American teen drama Gossip Girl and a bunch of simply great tracks, the success isn”™t a surprise. And this success was in evidence here at Glastonbury. Low down the bill, one of the first acts to play on the John Peel Stage at this years festival, you could be forgiven for thinking they were one of the headliners, such was the size of crowd they attracted. Photo courtesy of DrownedinSound.com The eponymous debut album is a fantastic listen, and tracks like Silvia and Burial all translate to Miike Snow”™s live show with incomparable ease. Unfortunately, the slower tracks, particularly Sans Soleil, which was chosen as the penultimate track to set closer Animal, served only to cede all the energy and momentum built up through the set. Animal was still a fantastic set closer, but you couldn”™t help but wonder how euphoric the set may have been had they not sent things into a lull only a few seconds before. 7/10 Mariachi El Bronx LA hardcore punk band The Bronx released three eponymous albums before taking on the pseudonym Mariachi El Bronx and quite literally writing a fully-embraced Mariachi record. On a blistering Friday afternoon they walk on in full black Mariachi attire (and LA sun-glasses, but directly facing the sun, we can let them off that as being function-before-style) and took us through a set that took us back to Mexico. Photo courtesy of Rock Sound Through their performance, they showed that they”™re enjoying their music, that the record is truly honest, and that their style of mariachi has been perfectly realised. It was truly odd to introduce that a song is about sexual perverts, only for it to break into bouncy, happy-go-lucky 3/4 waltz, but this helped to take the entire affair with the pinch of salt it deserved. Thoroughly recommended. 8/10 Bonobo Simon Green, otherwise known as Bonobo, has been an underground pioneer of chilled out beat electro for over a decade. Current album Black Sands (Ninja Tune, 2010) is a blissed out mix of trip-hop, soul and electro, but with textures so fleshed and layered that to label it ”˜chill out”™ does the musicianship a disservice. This was emphatically highlighted by the full band setup that took to the West Holts (previously Jazz World) stage on a still-glorious Friday afternoon. Vocalist Andreya Triana is a fantastic front for the band, her voice, pitched somewhere between Lauren Hill and Beth Gibbons, brings focus to an eclectic line-up – live drummer, bassist (Simon Green himself), acoustic guitarist, three-piece brass section and scratch DJ – and together they bring Bonobo”™s records to life in vibrant, stirring fashion. 8.5/10 Rusko Rusko is unashamedly a party DJ. Big basslines, big beats, and the most energetic DJ performance you will ever see. Though recent album OMG has a lot of garage influence and pop sensibilities, he chose here, backed by the Bezz-dancing of Skream, to drop a heavy, rave noisy dubstep set, and it took off. Perhaps the most hyped crowd seen all weekend, Glastonbury rocked as Rusko skreamed. 8.5/10 Thom Yorke / Johnny Greenwood Rumours abounded that Radiohead were to be the special guests on The Park Stage. Arriving at the stage suitable early, I was surprised to find the place less than full but as the time approached, the crowd unsurprisingly swelled. The sound technicians did their best not to give anything away, but even in the half-second of electronic samples we were given, it became increasingly obvious that, at the very least, we were about to get a set from The Eraser. Photo courtesy of Rock Sound We were not disappointed, as on stepped Thom Yorke, who treated us to a solo performance of some of the memorable moments of his solo work. A few song in, Johnny Greenwood took to the stage and between them worked on a medley of Radiohead and Eraser classics. Awe-inspiring moments included a guitar duet of Weird Fishes, a spine-tingling rendition of Pyramid Song, and the highlight of the festival: Karma Police. Incredible. 10/10 The headliner on Friday was Gorillaz, catch my review of their set, along with the other headliners and a Glasto review overall, here.

Photo courtesy of DrownedinSound.com

For the second part of my Glastonbury review, I”™m focussing on day 2; the acts dotted around the festival on the Friday. This section features live reviews of Miike Snow, Mariachi El Bronx, Bonobo, Rusko and the amazing Thom Yorke.

Miike Snow


Miike Snow were not expecting success, but the exposure brought to them through remix-friendly material reworked by hype artists like Mark Ronson, Tiga and Fake Blood, a feature on massive American teen drama Gossip Girl and a bunch of simply great tracks, the success isn”™t a surprise. And this success was in evidence here at Glastonbury. Low down the bill, one of the first acts to play on the John Peel Stage at this years festival, you could be forgiven for thinking they were one of the headliners, such was the size of crowd they attracted.

Photo courtesy of DrownedinSound.com

The eponymous debut album is a fantastic listen, and tracks like Silvia and Burial all translate to Miike Snow”™s live show with incomparable ease. Unfortunately, the slower tracks, particularly Sans Soleil, which was chosen as the penultimate track to set closer Animal, served only to cede all the energy and momentum built up through the set. Animal was still a fantastic set closer, but you couldn”™t help but wonder how euphoric the set may have been had they not sent things into a lull only a few seconds before. 7/10

Mariachi El Bronx

LA hardcore punk band The Bronx released three eponymous albums before taking on the pseudonym Mariachi El Bronx and quite literally writing a fully-embraced Mariachi record. On a blistering Friday afternoon they walk on in full black Mariachi attire (and LA sun-glasses, but directly facing the sun, we can let them off that as being function-before-style) and took us through a set that took us back to Mexico.

Photo courtesy of Rock Sound

Through their performance, they showed that they”™re enjoying their music, that the record is truly honest, and that their style of mariachi has been perfectly realised. It was truly odd to introduce that a song is about sexual perverts, only for it to break into bouncy, happy-go-lucky 3/4 waltz, but this helped to take the entire affair with the pinch of salt it deserved. Thoroughly recommended. 8/10

Bonobo

Simon Green, otherwise known as Bonobo, has been an underground pioneer of chilled out beat electro for over a decade. Current album Black Sands (Ninja Tune, 2010) is a blissed out mix of trip-hop, soul and electro, but with textures so fleshed and layered that to label it ”˜chill out”™ does the musicianship a disservice. This was emphatically highlighted by the full band setup that took to the West Holts (previously Jazz World) stage on a still-glorious Friday afternoon. Vocalist Andreya Triana is a fantastic front for the band, her voice, pitched somewhere between Lauren Hill and Beth Gibbons, brings focus to an eclectic line-up – live drummer, bassist (Simon Green himself), acoustic guitarist, three-piece brass section and scratch DJ – and together they bring Bonobo”™s records to life in vibrant, stirring fashion. 8.5/10

Rusko

Rusko is unashamedly a party DJ. Big basslines, big beats, and the most energetic DJ performance you will ever see. Though recent album OMG has a lot of garage influence and pop sensibilities, he chose here, backed by the Bezz-dancing of Skream, to drop a heavy, rave noisy dubstep set, and it took off. Perhaps the most hyped crowd seen all weekend, Glastonbury rocked as Rusko skreamed. 8.5/10

Thom Yorke / Johnny Greenwood

Rumours abounded that Radiohead were to be the special guests on The Park Stage. Arriving at the stage suitable early, I was surprised to find the place less than full but as the time approached, the crowd unsurprisingly swelled. The sound technicians did their best not to give anything away, but even in the half-second of electronic samples we were given, it became increasingly obvious that, at the very least, we were about to get a set from The Eraser.

Photo courtesy of Rock Sound

We were not disappointed, as on stepped Thom Yorke, who treated us to a solo performance of some of the memorable moments of his solo work. A few song in, Johnny Greenwood took to the stage and between them worked on a medley of Radiohead and Eraser classics. Awe-inspiring moments included a guitar duet of Weird Fishes, a spine-tingling rendition of Pyramid Song, and the highlight of the festival: Karma Police. Incredible. 10/10

The headliner on Friday was Gorillaz, catch my review of their set, along with the other headliners and a Glasto review overall, here.