No second coming as Squire's attack on Ian Brown kills off talk of a Stone Roses revival
By Louise Jury, Arts Correspondent
31 December 2004
A bitter attack on the former Stone Roses front man Ian Brown by the band's guitarist, John Squire, looks to be the final blow to hopes that they might reform.
Fans of the band, whose eponymous first album in 1989 put them in the forefront of the music scene, have long lamented the split in 1996 after a schism between Squire and Brown.
They were thrilled this year when a tour by Brown saw him eschewing the solo material he has produced in recent years in favour of performing favourites from the Stone Roses back catalogue instead.
But Brown's fierce insistence that he wanted a Roses tribute band, Fools Gold , as support was evidence that tensions remained. He claimed the band had received offers of £1m to perform in 2005, but that he would not do it "just for the cash".
A scathing attack by John Squire in the latest issue of Q magazine looks set to dash the fans' hopes for good. Brown has previously blamed Squire's use of cocaine for problems during the making of their second album Second Coming . But the guitarist now insists his intake was moderate. "If I had been strung out, I couldn't have made that record," he said.
Instead, he attributes the difficulties to Brown's fondness for marijuana, claiming Brown was almost incomprehensible at times. "Ian smoked too much dope. When he was stoned, he was at best a tuneless knob and at worst a paranoid mess," he said.
The Stone Roses had descended into rock excess after winning fame and fortune at the beginning of the 1990s. As legal proceedings to release them from a poor record deal and sign them to a bigger label dragged on, the band slowly fell apart and never hit the musical heights again.
©2004 Independent Digital (UK) Ltd. All rights reserved
vendredi, décembre 31, 2004
jeudi, décembre 30, 2004
Linkin Park
Linkin Park Donate $100,000 To Tsunami Victims and Families
by Paul Cashmere
30 December 2004
Linkin Park has formed 'Music For Relief', a charity to raise money for victims and families of the Tsunami which torn through South-East Asia on Sunday.
'Music For Relief' will donate all proceeds to the Red Cross to assist with relief efforts.
The kick-start the appeal, the band has donated $100,000 towards the cause. "We are fortunate to be in a position to help, but this needs to be a broader effort -- both by our fans and by other musicians" says LP's Brad Delson. "If one of our fans can donate $10, then that's going to help. We are also going to appeal to our musical peers by asking them to donate as well. The bottom line is the more we can do, and the quicker we can do it, the more lives we can save."
Linkin Park played in some of the devastated areas earlier this year. Their shows in Indonesia, Thailand, and Malaysia were the biggest rock concerts in those countries in the past 10 years.
Delson says "The outpouring of emotion from our fans there was overwhelming -- it really affected us. We opened 'Music For Relief' so that our fellow musicians and fans can give in this time of need to the families of the over 70,000 people who have perished. This money will also be used to aid the millions left homeless by this natural disaster, it's our way of giving back to the people who so desperately need it."
Fans can donate to 'Music For Relief' at http://www.musicforrelief.org/
by Paul Cashmere
30 December 2004
Linkin Park has formed 'Music For Relief', a charity to raise money for victims and families of the Tsunami which torn through South-East Asia on Sunday.
'Music For Relief' will donate all proceeds to the Red Cross to assist with relief efforts.
The kick-start the appeal, the band has donated $100,000 towards the cause. "We are fortunate to be in a position to help, but this needs to be a broader effort -- both by our fans and by other musicians" says LP's Brad Delson. "If one of our fans can donate $10, then that's going to help. We are also going to appeal to our musical peers by asking them to donate as well. The bottom line is the more we can do, and the quicker we can do it, the more lives we can save."
Linkin Park played in some of the devastated areas earlier this year. Their shows in Indonesia, Thailand, and Malaysia were the biggest rock concerts in those countries in the past 10 years.
Delson says "The outpouring of emotion from our fans there was overwhelming -- it really affected us. We opened 'Music For Relief' so that our fellow musicians and fans can give in this time of need to the families of the over 70,000 people who have perished. This money will also be used to aid the millions left homeless by this natural disaster, it's our way of giving back to the people who so desperately need it."
Fans can donate to 'Music For Relief' at http://www.musicforrelief.org/
Fiona Apple
Fiona Apple Fans Petition Sony
by Paul Cashmere
30 December 2004
Fiona Apple fans are pissed off with Sony for not releasing the singer's third album 'Extraordinary Machine'.
Despite her two previous albums going Platinum for sales of more than 1 million in the USA, 'Extraordinary Machine' was shelved with producer Jon Brion even stating that it had no obvious single.
Her previous albums "Tidal" (1996) and "When the Pawn..." (2000) were major successes for Sony 'Extraordinary Machine' is considered "too experimental" and will not be released.
Apple fan Dave Muscato, himself a musician, has started the Free Fiona campaign to petition Sony to put out the record Fiona completed in 2003.
"Sony has a responsibility to its shareholders, but it also has a very important responsibility to the art of music itself," he says in a statement at freefiona.com. "They should focus on the real problem - file sharing - and not some short-sighted and very harmful way to raise profits."
Muscato has started the website www.freefiona.com and so far has gathered more than 13,000 signatures protesting the non-appearance of the album.
by Paul Cashmere
30 December 2004
Fiona Apple fans are pissed off with Sony for not releasing the singer's third album 'Extraordinary Machine'.
Despite her two previous albums going Platinum for sales of more than 1 million in the USA, 'Extraordinary Machine' was shelved with producer Jon Brion even stating that it had no obvious single.
Her previous albums "Tidal" (1996) and "When the Pawn..." (2000) were major successes for Sony 'Extraordinary Machine' is considered "too experimental" and will not be released.
Apple fan Dave Muscato, himself a musician, has started the Free Fiona campaign to petition Sony to put out the record Fiona completed in 2003.
"Sony has a responsibility to its shareholders, but it also has a very important responsibility to the art of music itself," he says in a statement at freefiona.com. "They should focus on the real problem - file sharing - and not some short-sighted and very harmful way to raise profits."
Muscato has started the website www.freefiona.com and so far has gathered more than 13,000 signatures protesting the non-appearance of the album.
mardi, décembre 28, 2004
The Concretes
A woozy, boozy way with sound
A Swedish art-school group is taking a softly-softly approach to songwriting
By Kevin Harley
28 December 2004
The Concretes are the finest pop package to come out of Sweden since The Hives, with the music of the Stockholm octet recalling everything from The Ronettes and Dexy's Midnight Runners to the Velvet Underground. They've even skirted the seasonal-pop pitfalls of a Christmas-themed release with the Warm Night EP.
"Christmas songs are one of the few nice things about Christmas," shrugs Lisa Milberg, the band's drummer. "The first cover version we ever did was Elvis Presley's 'I'll Be Home for Christmas'. The EP tracks don't sound like Christmas songs, though. They're just songs, really."
She's right, of course. It's a winningly soft oasis that should prompt you to pick up their doozy of a debut album: a languid, lovelorn art-pop thing, which sets a mix of honey-warm soul, fizzy girl-pop and fuzzy 4am balladry to a woozy wash of sound, led by the sleepy-cat croon of their wig-wearing, interview-shy singer, Victoria Bergsman.
Like the sometimes orchestra-augmented Tindersticks, The Concretes use a host of contributors - eight core members plus 12 "honorary Concretes" - to rich effect. "I don't think we made a conscious decision to say, 'Let's keep it quiet'," says Milberg. "I just think everyone is modest, no big egos, and ready to step back."
Playing quietly for The Concretes is about dynamics. "Everything becomes more important," says Daniel Värjö, one of the guitarists, "because when you play something, you really hear it. And to make a decision to not play is also to play, actually. The silent parts in music are still music."
The Concretes were surely noisier as a three-piece a decade ago. When Milberg and Maria Eriksson (guitars) met Bergsman at art school, The Concretes were born. "We played rockabilly songs then," says Milberg. The band evolved into their present form in the late 1990s, when musicians moonlighting from other bands for one gig winded up staying. "I think we were scared to play in front of each other," says Milberg, "so we just drank lots of wine and beer and jammed for hours drunk."
But if Eriksson pitches their sound as "drunken pop music", it's more about prioritising feeling over proficiency than drinking. You won't catch this band using click tracks to fix a tempo. "I blame England," says Milberg. "Here, more than anywhere else, everything has to be perfect: no mistakes."
But while they have a flexible approach to rhythm, the eight members are the archetypal art-school concept band when it comes to controlling all their bases, setting up their own label, and designing their artwork and videos. "We pay a lot of attention to the artwork," Milberg nods. "People make fun of us because of where me and Victoria met. 'Surprise! They met in art school!'"
The 'Warm Night' EP and 'The Concretes' are out now on Licking Fingers. The Concretes support St Etienne at Shepherds Bush Empire, London W12 (0115-912 9000) on New Year's Eve
©2004 Independent Digital (UK) Ltd. All rights reserved
A Swedish art-school group is taking a softly-softly approach to songwriting
By Kevin Harley
28 December 2004
The Concretes are the finest pop package to come out of Sweden since The Hives, with the music of the Stockholm octet recalling everything from The Ronettes and Dexy's Midnight Runners to the Velvet Underground. They've even skirted the seasonal-pop pitfalls of a Christmas-themed release with the Warm Night EP.
"Christmas songs are one of the few nice things about Christmas," shrugs Lisa Milberg, the band's drummer. "The first cover version we ever did was Elvis Presley's 'I'll Be Home for Christmas'. The EP tracks don't sound like Christmas songs, though. They're just songs, really."
She's right, of course. It's a winningly soft oasis that should prompt you to pick up their doozy of a debut album: a languid, lovelorn art-pop thing, which sets a mix of honey-warm soul, fizzy girl-pop and fuzzy 4am balladry to a woozy wash of sound, led by the sleepy-cat croon of their wig-wearing, interview-shy singer, Victoria Bergsman.
Like the sometimes orchestra-augmented Tindersticks, The Concretes use a host of contributors - eight core members plus 12 "honorary Concretes" - to rich effect. "I don't think we made a conscious decision to say, 'Let's keep it quiet'," says Milberg. "I just think everyone is modest, no big egos, and ready to step back."
Playing quietly for The Concretes is about dynamics. "Everything becomes more important," says Daniel Värjö, one of the guitarists, "because when you play something, you really hear it. And to make a decision to not play is also to play, actually. The silent parts in music are still music."
The Concretes were surely noisier as a three-piece a decade ago. When Milberg and Maria Eriksson (guitars) met Bergsman at art school, The Concretes were born. "We played rockabilly songs then," says Milberg. The band evolved into their present form in the late 1990s, when musicians moonlighting from other bands for one gig winded up staying. "I think we were scared to play in front of each other," says Milberg, "so we just drank lots of wine and beer and jammed for hours drunk."
But if Eriksson pitches their sound as "drunken pop music", it's more about prioritising feeling over proficiency than drinking. You won't catch this band using click tracks to fix a tempo. "I blame England," says Milberg. "Here, more than anywhere else, everything has to be perfect: no mistakes."
But while they have a flexible approach to rhythm, the eight members are the archetypal art-school concept band when it comes to controlling all their bases, setting up their own label, and designing their artwork and videos. "We pay a lot of attention to the artwork," Milberg nods. "People make fun of us because of where me and Victoria met. 'Surprise! They met in art school!'"
The 'Warm Night' EP and 'The Concretes' are out now on Licking Fingers. The Concretes support St Etienne at Shepherds Bush Empire, London W12 (0115-912 9000) on New Year's Eve
©2004 Independent Digital (UK) Ltd. All rights reserved
vendredi, décembre 24, 2004
You rock my world
Who are the artists' artists of the year? From Alex Kapranos of Franz Ferdinand to the R&B singer Jamelia to the chanteuse Françoise Hardy, the stars reveal to James McNair the records that have been the soundtrack to their past 12 months
24 December 2004
Elvis Costello, singer-songwriter
Real Gone by Tom Waits
This is my absolute favourite. This one lets us see Waits detached from the words "gravel", "gutter" and "gin-soaked". Behold the righteous anger of "Hoist That Flag", the Turkish mystery of "Trampled Rose", the mad roll call that closes "Don't Go Into That Barn", and the frightened sanity of the soldier in "The Day After Tomorrow". There is real beauty in this record; the elusive ear of Kathleen Brennan [Wait's wife and musical collaborator] in the heart of the words; son, Casey, on traps; and the untameable guitar of Marc Ribot, who once described a track as, "like rock and roll after America has been conquered by a Small African Republic". It's all here, and "Horse Face Ethel" and her marvellous "Pigs in Satin".
Mel C, solo artist
Happiness in Magazines by Graham Coxon
Sometimes I have to rack my brains with questions like this, but this year it's easy: Graham Coxon, Happiness In Magazines. It's had the monopoly on my iPod. I'd heard his earlier solo stuff, but this was the first album of his I really got into. When he was still with Blur, I think he was a bit overlooked, but on this record everything seemed to come together. The songs are great, his voice is great, and the recordings are great, too. There's a lot of humour in a song like "People of the Earth", so it was great to see someone with so much credibility just having fun. It's the perfect song to dance to drunk at a party. Overall, it's quite a rocky, poppy album. You can really hear how influential he was in creating the Blur sound.
Robert Plant, singer
Rubber Factory by The Black Keys.
"I like my coffee in the morning, I'm crazy about my tea at night. Sugar mama, where'd you get your sugar from?" Skip James, Jack Owens and Bentonia Mississippi come screaming out of this collection. Praise the Lord.
Tom Chaplin, singer, Keane
Want One by Rufus Wainwright
Near the beginning of the year, I was introduced to the Rufus Wainwright record Want One. I immediately fell in love with his melodies and arrangements, but most of all with his beautifully observed lyrics, from acutely personal love songs like "Vibrate" to world-weary songs of loss like "11:11". The journey was completed later in the year by seeing his live show at The Barbican, in London. In a year of personal highlights for me, it has been great to discover that there are songwriters who can still inspire and move me in such a strong way.
Jared Followill, bass guitarist, Kings of Leon
Hot Fuss by The Killers and Antics by Interpol
The thing that I've been listening to most is The Stills' Logic Will Break Your Heart, but maybe that came out at the end of 2003? As a band we really liked Hot Fuss by The Killers and Antics by Interpol, but The Stills' album is the one that's constantly been on my stereo. It's an awesome record that's brilliantly recorded. It always puts me in a happy space, and it reminds me of being home in Tennessee driving around Nashville or going to parties with my friends.
Baxter Dury, singer-songwriter
The Libertines by The Libertines
I've chosen this mainly because that's the album I was closest to. They are friends of mine and I know the uncut, un-tabloid story behind them, so I listened passionately. "Music When the Lights Go Out" is dark and poetic and beautiful. I love "What Katy Did", too. It's a great rock 'n' roll tune. As musicians they can be great and terrible, but I like the honesty of that. They were writing brilliantly about chaos as they were going through it, and that's quite a skill. As an album, it's the musical equivalent of war journalism. People are genuinely worried about those boys.
Jamelia, R&B singer
Scissor Sisters by Scissor Sisters
This is an amazing album. It's on my iPod all the time. They write really great songs. There's definitely something for everyone on the album. No matter what sort of thing you are normally into, there will be at least one song you will love.
Tim Burgess, singer, The Charlatans
Five Guys Walk Into a Bar by The Faces
If someone else has picked The Libertines album, I'll choose The Faces box-set reissue, Five Guys Walk Into A Bar. I was fortunate enough to get my copy as a signed present from Ronnie [Wood, ex Faces guitarist], so that meant a lot to me before I'd even played it. I had all the individual albums already, but hearing the out-takes and everything made me realise what a fantastic band they were. They were on fire, and nobody had a voice like Rod Stewart's. The haircuts, the ciggies, the clothes - so many bands have tried to base their look on The Faces. And any group with an instrumental called "Oh Lord I'm Browned Off" has to be worth a listen.
Christine Tobin, jazz singer
Egypt by Youssou N'Dour
Back in the spring, I heard a snippet on BBC Radio 3. The combination of his voice and the Egyptian orchestra is amazing - the scales and harmonies are very evocative. I was a fan of Youssou's before, but I hadn't heard him in such a traditional and moving context. I got goose bumps down my arm, and thought: "I have to get this record." There's a quote on the back of the sleeve which says love in Islam is not intellectual, but visceral, and that's how the album hits me. It gets you in the guts while putting over a lot of compassion. When he performed the album at The Barbican, I was in the second row. I wanted to make sure I caught everything. The audience was really moved. You could see it.
Grasshopper, guitarist, Mercury Rev
Abattoir Blues/The Lyre of Orpheus by Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds
The production and the use of the gospel choir is very powerful, and I think "Breathless" is an amazing love song. A friend of mine thinks it's a love song to God, but I'm not so sure. Nick's a great lyricist, and Warren Ellis and Mick Harvey are fabulous musicians. I really liked [former Bad Seeds guitarist] Blixa Bargeld, too, but maybe his departure lead to new ways of working. We toured with Nick, and it was really intense. He had the gospel singers with him, and every song he did from the new records worked perfectly. I also loved Real Gone by Tom Waits.
Ian Broudie, songwriter and producer
These Were The Earlies by The Earlies
I always liked The Beta Band, and to me, The Earlies' album had that kind of vibe about it: free-spirited, with interesting soundscapes. They're really on to something. These days, I'm into hearing strong group performances rather than constructed records, so I liked the Bees' Free The Bees album as well.
Dizzee Rascal, MC and producer
Showtime by Dizzee Rascal
Nothin' else even comes close.
Graham Coxon, singer-songwriter
The Libertines by The Libertines
Pumpin' hearts worn on bloody shirt-sleeves. The sound of brogues a-stampin' and drums a-poundin', drivin' ciggie-ripped voices to the confessional. And sweetness, too. Tenderness to the brim. Peter and Carl, England's most precious for 20 years.
Grant Nicholas, song writer, guitarist, Feeder
Talkie Walkie by Air
I got into them after hearing "Sexy Boy", which I instantly loved. I like their romanticism and melody, and they have a unique way with textures. Talkie Walkie was a return to the more direct sound of Moon Safari, which was probably the most overplayed lift music ever, but still undeniably great. Their attention to detail is never diluted. French electro at its best. Love it.
Rachel Stevens, singer
Scissor Sisters by Scissor Sisters
I loved Scissor Sisters, especially "Return to Oz", "Laura" and "Take Your Mama Out". It's just the right mix of trashy disco - perfect for getting ready for a night out with the girls. They've got a great look and I think they're a breath of fresh air. I'm going to make a point of seeing them in 2005 as everyone who has seen them live has said they are amazing.
Andy Scott, guitarist, The Sweet
Smile by Brian Wilson.
Having been a Beach Boys fan for many years, I found it incredible that they were going to re-record an album that had been shelved for so long. I'd heard snippets of the original recordings in bootleg form, but to hear it in its entirety was wonderful. He was working with huge vocal swathes almost in a choral way, and some of the record is really off the wall. I bought it on the day of release and I've been playing it in my car ever since. Back in the early Seventies, when The Sweet were mixing harmony singing with hard rock, Brian Wilson's vocal arrangements were definitely an influence.
Liela Moss, singer, The Duke Spirit
Fur by The Archie Bronson Outfit.
I found it very inspiring. They make tense, raw, brutal blues music and their drummer Mark writes all the lyrics. The song titles and their use of imagery really turn me on. They have this song, "Armour for a Broken Heart", and I liked that idea of having to bolster something that's been shattered, and the idea of the song being a kind of armour in itself. They also have this song called "Blood Heat" with a very menacing groove. Their music obviously dwells in a dark place, but it never comes across as a clichéd, Gothic thing. There's a yearning about it and it's totally honest.
Will Young, singer
Aha Shake Heartbreak by Kings of Leon
My favourite of 2004 has been the reissue of John Martyn's 1977 album, One World. The production is really special, and it sounds totally unique for that time - I love it. What's so great about John is that he never sounds the same from album to album. The other band that I've been into this year is Kings Of Leon. Aha Shake Heartbreak is fantastic.
Richard Jones, bassist, Stereophonics
Aha Shake Heartbreak by Kings of Leon
This was the first album in a long time that I instantly liked. Good songs that take you through different moods, and a big step on from their first album. "Milk" was totally unexpected and blew me away! "The Bucket" was a real stand out single, too.
Estelle, singer-MC
College Dropout by Kanye West
This was my favourite because it had consistent bangers that were about more than who was having sex and who had the most diamonds. It is a good barometer of how complex life is right now for a young person.
Jamie Cullum, jazz singer
Strangers by Ed Harcourt
This works effortlessly on many levels - as a pop record and something rather more rewarding. Tracks like "Born in the '70s" glisten with pop hooks while transporting you somewhere with imagery and poetry. The instrumentation is varied (with Ed playing many of the instruments himself) and the performances mostly sound like fresh, first takes. This is a near-perfect album from a UK songwriter who deserves a worldwide reputation. I am totally inspired by his work.
Françoise Hardy, singer-songwriter
The Girl In the Other Room by Diana Krall.
The tunes are of excellent quality and she plays piano with great sensitivity. My performer of the year would be the beautiful Katie Melua. I saw her play "The Closest Thing to Crazy" on French television, just her and her guitar. Très minimalist and completely mesmerising.
Glen Tilbrook, singer, songwriter
Who Killed The Zutons? by The Zutons
No one else has nominated it? I find that really strange. I saw them supporting The Coral at Lancaster University about three years ago and thought they were fantastic. The album seemed to take ages to come out, but when it did I was delighted with it. They take a disparate bunch of influences and create something that's completely their own and they have nothing to do with what's going on in the mainstream. That's a Liverpudlian trait, which I endlessly admire. When I saw them at the V Festival last year they were wearing weird yellow outfits, which is always good.
Aidan Moffat, of Arab Strap and L Pierre
Thunder, Lightning, Strike by The Go! Team
There are too many great records to pick one true winner, so I'll choose the most mood-altering - The Go! Team's Thunder, Lightning, Strike is by far the happiest album of the year, and I would defy anyone not to smile when it's on. Its highly illegal sampling lends it a rock 'n' roll attitude and displays a very eclectic palate, too. It's a perfect morning album and a perfect night-out album and it makes me want to jump about and hug people. I can only hope they'll be enormous next year and do a Christmas single.
Cheryl Tweedy, singer, Girls Aloud
Floacism "Live" by Floetry.
The dynamic between the two girls is amazing and I think they have a unique style combining singing and rapping - so much more exciting than all the samey R&B that has been around all year. The singer has an incredible vocal range and is probably one of the best soul voices from the UK. I can't believe Floetry aren't bigger in this country. I've been playing the CD on our tour bus a lot. "Say Yes" and "Headache" are my two favourite songs.
John Yates, singer, songwriter, Ella Guru
Micah P Hinson and The Gospel of Progress by Micah P Hinson
The sound of lost Texan soul let loose in England, with great arrangements by our new friends The Earlies. It is a collaboration fitting for the album's bleak but strangely positive outlook. Warm, comforting, honest songs.
Jimi Goodwin, singer and bass guitarist, Doves
Bubblegum by Mark Lanegan
My favourite album of the year without a doubt is Mark Lanegan's Bubblegum. The flow of the album is great and I think he's got the most blinding voice.
Matt Hales, singer, Aqualung
A Ghost Is Born by Wilco
I was introduced to Wilco last year while working on my second record. Their Yankee Hotel Foxtrot album blew my mind, showing me that the combination of Jeff Tweedy and Jim O'Rourke could produce miraculous music. When A Ghost Is Born came out, I rushed out to buy it, which is not something I often do. Everything from the typeface on the cover to the music within is so tasty you feel you could eat it. It's slightly austere, yet fascinating, and almost sculptural in the way they work with sound. It's been a constant inspiration.
Laura Veirs, singer-songwriter
The Milk-eyed Mender by Joanna Newsom
My favourite album of 2004 was - hands down - Joanna Newsom's The Milk-eyed Mender. Her lyrics are masterful, deep and strange, her voice is unusual and elf-like, her harp (harp!) playing is polyrhythmic and wonderfully complex, yet so simple at its root. I was baffled seeing her live: she was part mysterious forest creature, part dextrous musical prodigy, part classic American songwriter. She reminds me of a fresh, organic Northern California salad. Full of wild, colourful, delicious things.
Alex Kapranos, singer, Franz Ferdinand
Bomb Romantics by The Blood Arm
The album we've been listening to this year is by the Los Angeles guitar band The Blood Arm. It's called Bomb Romantics, and it's only out as a limited release at the moment. We've played with them a couple of times in LA and they are highly original and innovative. If there's any justice they'll get the acclaim they deserve in 2005.
Ed Harcourt, singer-songwriter
Bubblegum by Mark Lanegan
This is my album of the year. Listening to this feels satanic and angelic at the same time. It makes me want to make better records
Mylo, electronica producer
Always Outnumbered, Never Outgunned by The Prodigy
When it came to rock records there were two that stood out - The Killers' Hot Fuss and Franz Ferdinand's eponymous debut. Both are exciting guitar pop albums with no discernible filler. My favourite electronic albums of the year were Air's Talkie Walkie and The Prodigy's Always Outnumbered, Never Outgunned, both striking returns to form from two of the genre's biggest acts. There were also two double mix CDs I loved this year: Optimo's Kill the DJ compilation, and Tiefschwarz's Misch Masch. Optimo is a Sunday-night club in Glasgow and indisputably the best club in the world right now. The mix is cacophonous but fabulous - imagine an esoteric version of 2manyDJs' monster, As heard on Radio Soulwax part 2, and you wouldn't be far off.
Colin Macintyre, songwriter, The Mull Historical Society
Fly or Die by N.E.R.D.
Because I made an album this year that was pretty much all my head's internal radio could take, but Fly or Die by N.E.R.D. broke through and has often been playing at home. I love the diversity of what they do. I have some other records they've made, because, as a producer, I need to steal (maybe I mean "learn", or maybe "borrow") from other places. It's not as good as the first N.E.R.D. album, but they keep challenging and changing and that's the only way to go as far as I'm concerned. But I think they can do better still across an entire album.
©2004 Independent Digital (UK) Ltd. All rights reserved
24 December 2004
Elvis Costello, singer-songwriter
Real Gone by Tom Waits
This is my absolute favourite. This one lets us see Waits detached from the words "gravel", "gutter" and "gin-soaked". Behold the righteous anger of "Hoist That Flag", the Turkish mystery of "Trampled Rose", the mad roll call that closes "Don't Go Into That Barn", and the frightened sanity of the soldier in "The Day After Tomorrow". There is real beauty in this record; the elusive ear of Kathleen Brennan [Wait's wife and musical collaborator] in the heart of the words; son, Casey, on traps; and the untameable guitar of Marc Ribot, who once described a track as, "like rock and roll after America has been conquered by a Small African Republic". It's all here, and "Horse Face Ethel" and her marvellous "Pigs in Satin".
Mel C, solo artist
Happiness in Magazines by Graham Coxon
Sometimes I have to rack my brains with questions like this, but this year it's easy: Graham Coxon, Happiness In Magazines. It's had the monopoly on my iPod. I'd heard his earlier solo stuff, but this was the first album of his I really got into. When he was still with Blur, I think he was a bit overlooked, but on this record everything seemed to come together. The songs are great, his voice is great, and the recordings are great, too. There's a lot of humour in a song like "People of the Earth", so it was great to see someone with so much credibility just having fun. It's the perfect song to dance to drunk at a party. Overall, it's quite a rocky, poppy album. You can really hear how influential he was in creating the Blur sound.
Robert Plant, singer
Rubber Factory by The Black Keys.
"I like my coffee in the morning, I'm crazy about my tea at night. Sugar mama, where'd you get your sugar from?" Skip James, Jack Owens and Bentonia Mississippi come screaming out of this collection. Praise the Lord.
Tom Chaplin, singer, Keane
Want One by Rufus Wainwright
Near the beginning of the year, I was introduced to the Rufus Wainwright record Want One. I immediately fell in love with his melodies and arrangements, but most of all with his beautifully observed lyrics, from acutely personal love songs like "Vibrate" to world-weary songs of loss like "11:11". The journey was completed later in the year by seeing his live show at The Barbican, in London. In a year of personal highlights for me, it has been great to discover that there are songwriters who can still inspire and move me in such a strong way.
Jared Followill, bass guitarist, Kings of Leon
Hot Fuss by The Killers and Antics by Interpol
The thing that I've been listening to most is The Stills' Logic Will Break Your Heart, but maybe that came out at the end of 2003? As a band we really liked Hot Fuss by The Killers and Antics by Interpol, but The Stills' album is the one that's constantly been on my stereo. It's an awesome record that's brilliantly recorded. It always puts me in a happy space, and it reminds me of being home in Tennessee driving around Nashville or going to parties with my friends.
Baxter Dury, singer-songwriter
The Libertines by The Libertines
I've chosen this mainly because that's the album I was closest to. They are friends of mine and I know the uncut, un-tabloid story behind them, so I listened passionately. "Music When the Lights Go Out" is dark and poetic and beautiful. I love "What Katy Did", too. It's a great rock 'n' roll tune. As musicians they can be great and terrible, but I like the honesty of that. They were writing brilliantly about chaos as they were going through it, and that's quite a skill. As an album, it's the musical equivalent of war journalism. People are genuinely worried about those boys.
Jamelia, R&B singer
Scissor Sisters by Scissor Sisters
This is an amazing album. It's on my iPod all the time. They write really great songs. There's definitely something for everyone on the album. No matter what sort of thing you are normally into, there will be at least one song you will love.
Tim Burgess, singer, The Charlatans
Five Guys Walk Into a Bar by The Faces
If someone else has picked The Libertines album, I'll choose The Faces box-set reissue, Five Guys Walk Into A Bar. I was fortunate enough to get my copy as a signed present from Ronnie [Wood, ex Faces guitarist], so that meant a lot to me before I'd even played it. I had all the individual albums already, but hearing the out-takes and everything made me realise what a fantastic band they were. They were on fire, and nobody had a voice like Rod Stewart's. The haircuts, the ciggies, the clothes - so many bands have tried to base their look on The Faces. And any group with an instrumental called "Oh Lord I'm Browned Off" has to be worth a listen.
Christine Tobin, jazz singer
Egypt by Youssou N'Dour
Back in the spring, I heard a snippet on BBC Radio 3. The combination of his voice and the Egyptian orchestra is amazing - the scales and harmonies are very evocative. I was a fan of Youssou's before, but I hadn't heard him in such a traditional and moving context. I got goose bumps down my arm, and thought: "I have to get this record." There's a quote on the back of the sleeve which says love in Islam is not intellectual, but visceral, and that's how the album hits me. It gets you in the guts while putting over a lot of compassion. When he performed the album at The Barbican, I was in the second row. I wanted to make sure I caught everything. The audience was really moved. You could see it.
Grasshopper, guitarist, Mercury Rev
Abattoir Blues/The Lyre of Orpheus by Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds
The production and the use of the gospel choir is very powerful, and I think "Breathless" is an amazing love song. A friend of mine thinks it's a love song to God, but I'm not so sure. Nick's a great lyricist, and Warren Ellis and Mick Harvey are fabulous musicians. I really liked [former Bad Seeds guitarist] Blixa Bargeld, too, but maybe his departure lead to new ways of working. We toured with Nick, and it was really intense. He had the gospel singers with him, and every song he did from the new records worked perfectly. I also loved Real Gone by Tom Waits.
Ian Broudie, songwriter and producer
These Were The Earlies by The Earlies
I always liked The Beta Band, and to me, The Earlies' album had that kind of vibe about it: free-spirited, with interesting soundscapes. They're really on to something. These days, I'm into hearing strong group performances rather than constructed records, so I liked the Bees' Free The Bees album as well.
Dizzee Rascal, MC and producer
Showtime by Dizzee Rascal
Nothin' else even comes close.
Graham Coxon, singer-songwriter
The Libertines by The Libertines
Pumpin' hearts worn on bloody shirt-sleeves. The sound of brogues a-stampin' and drums a-poundin', drivin' ciggie-ripped voices to the confessional. And sweetness, too. Tenderness to the brim. Peter and Carl, England's most precious for 20 years.
Grant Nicholas, song writer, guitarist, Feeder
Talkie Walkie by Air
I got into them after hearing "Sexy Boy", which I instantly loved. I like their romanticism and melody, and they have a unique way with textures. Talkie Walkie was a return to the more direct sound of Moon Safari, which was probably the most overplayed lift music ever, but still undeniably great. Their attention to detail is never diluted. French electro at its best. Love it.
Rachel Stevens, singer
Scissor Sisters by Scissor Sisters
I loved Scissor Sisters, especially "Return to Oz", "Laura" and "Take Your Mama Out". It's just the right mix of trashy disco - perfect for getting ready for a night out with the girls. They've got a great look and I think they're a breath of fresh air. I'm going to make a point of seeing them in 2005 as everyone who has seen them live has said they are amazing.
Andy Scott, guitarist, The Sweet
Smile by Brian Wilson.
Having been a Beach Boys fan for many years, I found it incredible that they were going to re-record an album that had been shelved for so long. I'd heard snippets of the original recordings in bootleg form, but to hear it in its entirety was wonderful. He was working with huge vocal swathes almost in a choral way, and some of the record is really off the wall. I bought it on the day of release and I've been playing it in my car ever since. Back in the early Seventies, when The Sweet were mixing harmony singing with hard rock, Brian Wilson's vocal arrangements were definitely an influence.
Liela Moss, singer, The Duke Spirit
Fur by The Archie Bronson Outfit.
I found it very inspiring. They make tense, raw, brutal blues music and their drummer Mark writes all the lyrics. The song titles and their use of imagery really turn me on. They have this song, "Armour for a Broken Heart", and I liked that idea of having to bolster something that's been shattered, and the idea of the song being a kind of armour in itself. They also have this song called "Blood Heat" with a very menacing groove. Their music obviously dwells in a dark place, but it never comes across as a clichéd, Gothic thing. There's a yearning about it and it's totally honest.
Will Young, singer
Aha Shake Heartbreak by Kings of Leon
My favourite of 2004 has been the reissue of John Martyn's 1977 album, One World. The production is really special, and it sounds totally unique for that time - I love it. What's so great about John is that he never sounds the same from album to album. The other band that I've been into this year is Kings Of Leon. Aha Shake Heartbreak is fantastic.
Richard Jones, bassist, Stereophonics
Aha Shake Heartbreak by Kings of Leon
This was the first album in a long time that I instantly liked. Good songs that take you through different moods, and a big step on from their first album. "Milk" was totally unexpected and blew me away! "The Bucket" was a real stand out single, too.
Estelle, singer-MC
College Dropout by Kanye West
This was my favourite because it had consistent bangers that were about more than who was having sex and who had the most diamonds. It is a good barometer of how complex life is right now for a young person.
Jamie Cullum, jazz singer
Strangers by Ed Harcourt
This works effortlessly on many levels - as a pop record and something rather more rewarding. Tracks like "Born in the '70s" glisten with pop hooks while transporting you somewhere with imagery and poetry. The instrumentation is varied (with Ed playing many of the instruments himself) and the performances mostly sound like fresh, first takes. This is a near-perfect album from a UK songwriter who deserves a worldwide reputation. I am totally inspired by his work.
Françoise Hardy, singer-songwriter
The Girl In the Other Room by Diana Krall.
The tunes are of excellent quality and she plays piano with great sensitivity. My performer of the year would be the beautiful Katie Melua. I saw her play "The Closest Thing to Crazy" on French television, just her and her guitar. Très minimalist and completely mesmerising.
Glen Tilbrook, singer, songwriter
Who Killed The Zutons? by The Zutons
No one else has nominated it? I find that really strange. I saw them supporting The Coral at Lancaster University about three years ago and thought they were fantastic. The album seemed to take ages to come out, but when it did I was delighted with it. They take a disparate bunch of influences and create something that's completely their own and they have nothing to do with what's going on in the mainstream. That's a Liverpudlian trait, which I endlessly admire. When I saw them at the V Festival last year they were wearing weird yellow outfits, which is always good.
Aidan Moffat, of Arab Strap and L Pierre
Thunder, Lightning, Strike by The Go! Team
There are too many great records to pick one true winner, so I'll choose the most mood-altering - The Go! Team's Thunder, Lightning, Strike is by far the happiest album of the year, and I would defy anyone not to smile when it's on. Its highly illegal sampling lends it a rock 'n' roll attitude and displays a very eclectic palate, too. It's a perfect morning album and a perfect night-out album and it makes me want to jump about and hug people. I can only hope they'll be enormous next year and do a Christmas single.
Cheryl Tweedy, singer, Girls Aloud
Floacism "Live" by Floetry.
The dynamic between the two girls is amazing and I think they have a unique style combining singing and rapping - so much more exciting than all the samey R&B that has been around all year. The singer has an incredible vocal range and is probably one of the best soul voices from the UK. I can't believe Floetry aren't bigger in this country. I've been playing the CD on our tour bus a lot. "Say Yes" and "Headache" are my two favourite songs.
John Yates, singer, songwriter, Ella Guru
Micah P Hinson and The Gospel of Progress by Micah P Hinson
The sound of lost Texan soul let loose in England, with great arrangements by our new friends The Earlies. It is a collaboration fitting for the album's bleak but strangely positive outlook. Warm, comforting, honest songs.
Jimi Goodwin, singer and bass guitarist, Doves
Bubblegum by Mark Lanegan
My favourite album of the year without a doubt is Mark Lanegan's Bubblegum. The flow of the album is great and I think he's got the most blinding voice.
Matt Hales, singer, Aqualung
A Ghost Is Born by Wilco
I was introduced to Wilco last year while working on my second record. Their Yankee Hotel Foxtrot album blew my mind, showing me that the combination of Jeff Tweedy and Jim O'Rourke could produce miraculous music. When A Ghost Is Born came out, I rushed out to buy it, which is not something I often do. Everything from the typeface on the cover to the music within is so tasty you feel you could eat it. It's slightly austere, yet fascinating, and almost sculptural in the way they work with sound. It's been a constant inspiration.
Laura Veirs, singer-songwriter
The Milk-eyed Mender by Joanna Newsom
My favourite album of 2004 was - hands down - Joanna Newsom's The Milk-eyed Mender. Her lyrics are masterful, deep and strange, her voice is unusual and elf-like, her harp (harp!) playing is polyrhythmic and wonderfully complex, yet so simple at its root. I was baffled seeing her live: she was part mysterious forest creature, part dextrous musical prodigy, part classic American songwriter. She reminds me of a fresh, organic Northern California salad. Full of wild, colourful, delicious things.
Alex Kapranos, singer, Franz Ferdinand
Bomb Romantics by The Blood Arm
The album we've been listening to this year is by the Los Angeles guitar band The Blood Arm. It's called Bomb Romantics, and it's only out as a limited release at the moment. We've played with them a couple of times in LA and they are highly original and innovative. If there's any justice they'll get the acclaim they deserve in 2005.
Ed Harcourt, singer-songwriter
Bubblegum by Mark Lanegan
This is my album of the year. Listening to this feels satanic and angelic at the same time. It makes me want to make better records
Mylo, electronica producer
Always Outnumbered, Never Outgunned by The Prodigy
When it came to rock records there were two that stood out - The Killers' Hot Fuss and Franz Ferdinand's eponymous debut. Both are exciting guitar pop albums with no discernible filler. My favourite electronic albums of the year were Air's Talkie Walkie and The Prodigy's Always Outnumbered, Never Outgunned, both striking returns to form from two of the genre's biggest acts. There were also two double mix CDs I loved this year: Optimo's Kill the DJ compilation, and Tiefschwarz's Misch Masch. Optimo is a Sunday-night club in Glasgow and indisputably the best club in the world right now. The mix is cacophonous but fabulous - imagine an esoteric version of 2manyDJs' monster, As heard on Radio Soulwax part 2, and you wouldn't be far off.
Colin Macintyre, songwriter, The Mull Historical Society
Fly or Die by N.E.R.D.
Because I made an album this year that was pretty much all my head's internal radio could take, but Fly or Die by N.E.R.D. broke through and has often been playing at home. I love the diversity of what they do. I have some other records they've made, because, as a producer, I need to steal (maybe I mean "learn", or maybe "borrow") from other places. It's not as good as the first N.E.R.D. album, but they keep challenging and changing and that's the only way to go as far as I'm concerned. But I think they can do better still across an entire album.
©2004 Independent Digital (UK) Ltd. All rights reserved
mercredi, décembre 22, 2004
Psychedelic Furs at Work
Eighties pop band readies first new album in more than a decade
After more than a decade away from the studio, Eighties pop act the Psychedelic Furs are at work on a new album.
"We didn't want to go out and tour on old music because we haven't been writing," frontman Richard Butler explains. "We want to be a band that's a band, not one that's just touring."
The group -- which also includes Butler's brother Tim on bass and guitarist John Ashton -- has been writing material for the past several months. They might have gotten started sooner, if not for Butler's commitment to his side project, Love Spit Love, and an in-progress solo record, a collaboration with longtime friend Jon Carin (Pink Floyd, the Who, Bryan Ferry). The band members, who share songwriting responsibilities, have been communicating ideas via tapes while Butler wraps up his project. "We use whatever seems to fit," Butler says. "It's a question of whether it fires anything in me and makes me want to sing."
The Furs are road-testing a few songs on their current tour -- which wraps on January 29th in Anaheim, California -- including "Cigarette," "Wrong Train" and "Alive." Playing new material live, Butler confesses, can be nerve-wracking, eliciting "not as good a response as something better-known." "It's a lot of fun playing when the crowd is enthusiastic," he says. "But it can be a bit daunting when the crowd is standing there with a huge question mark over their heads."
The Furs' album will be recorded and self-produced at Ashton's home in New York State. But don't expect it to hit stores until late 2005 or early 2006 --especially considering that the band has not yet signed a deal for its release, planning to remain as independent as possible. "We don't need the advance," says the veteran pop singer. "We paid for this ourselves."
Christina Fuoco. Rolling Stone
After more than a decade away from the studio, Eighties pop act the Psychedelic Furs are at work on a new album.
"We didn't want to go out and tour on old music because we haven't been writing," frontman Richard Butler explains. "We want to be a band that's a band, not one that's just touring."
The group -- which also includes Butler's brother Tim on bass and guitarist John Ashton -- has been writing material for the past several months. They might have gotten started sooner, if not for Butler's commitment to his side project, Love Spit Love, and an in-progress solo record, a collaboration with longtime friend Jon Carin (Pink Floyd, the Who, Bryan Ferry). The band members, who share songwriting responsibilities, have been communicating ideas via tapes while Butler wraps up his project. "We use whatever seems to fit," Butler says. "It's a question of whether it fires anything in me and makes me want to sing."
The Furs are road-testing a few songs on their current tour -- which wraps on January 29th in Anaheim, California -- including "Cigarette," "Wrong Train" and "Alive." Playing new material live, Butler confesses, can be nerve-wracking, eliciting "not as good a response as something better-known." "It's a lot of fun playing when the crowd is enthusiastic," he says. "But it can be a bit daunting when the crowd is standing there with a huge question mark over their heads."
The Furs' album will be recorded and self-produced at Ashton's home in New York State. But don't expect it to hit stores until late 2005 or early 2006 --especially considering that the band has not yet signed a deal for its release, planning to remain as independent as possible. "We don't need the advance," says the veteran pop singer. "We paid for this ourselves."
Christina Fuoco. Rolling Stone
mercredi, décembre 15, 2004
Throbbing Gristle: A taste of P-Orridge
Throbbing Gristle, and their transgender front person, have reunited for a last bizarre hurrah. Emma Field braces herself
10 December 2004
The reappearance of Throbbing Gristle in 2004, 23 years after they split up, is something of a curiosity to many who remember their notorious presence in the late Seventies. Breaking from their separate music and art projects, the four-piece regrouped this year for a short performance in London for ticket holders of a cancelled gig at Camber Sands in June. They then reorganised that show, playing at last weekend's All Tomorrow's Parties Nightmare Before Christmas festival, curated by Jake and Dinos Chapman. That was officially TG's last ever performance, and all four members appeared for their last interview as TG at the festival before playing the show.
It was strange to find them lounging, resolutely calm, in a Camber Sands chalet, especially as their presence was anything but intimidating. The formidable Genesis P-Orridge is now a woman with a blonde bob and breasts, but that's hardly a shocking transformation for such a character. With all four members - P-Orridge, Cosey Fanni Tutti, Chris Carter and Peter Christopherson - in one room, the conversation was slightly slippery. They have a chequered history, of which there have been many misinterpretations, so they were steering the conversation around the big cliffs.
It was during the Seventies that two young misfits from Hull, then named Christine Newby and Neil Megson, embarked on a journey along the boundaries of art and performance that would eventually send the UK press into uproar, see them banned from art galleries, and eventually lead to the expulsion of Megson from the UK. Amidst a trail of confusion, myth, offence and awe, Newby and Megson, along with Carter and Christopherson, created a new set of sounds to form the beginnings of industrial music (Megson is credited with having coined the term with Monte Cazazza in 1975) and had a significant influence on punk and acid house music. It was only when they had split up in 1981 that TG's "sick" performances were reappraisedas art.
Christopherson says that rather than being a comeback, the decision to regroup for the gigs was a response to the current music scene. "It was much more to do with the fact that the English culture at the moment - of music, and the way that music is used by people - has a tendency to go through periods of crisis. TG was started in a period of crisis when contemporary music was not doing any useful motion in the direction of getting people to think or getting people to analyse what they were doing."
Discussions between the former members of the band after a retrospective exhibition of TG ephemera in 2001 had led them to realise that they were again motivated by similar concerns. Tutti explains: "There was a lot of interest in TG, a lot of bootlegs of TG, a lot of flak directed at us because of the bootlegs, and a lot of misinterpretation of what we did and why we did it, how we did it, and so on. We've always been with Mute since we ended and we suggested a few years back on the 20th anniversary that we do the box set. The whole thing really was to take control of the legacy that was TG because it was in danger of being trashed. We hadn't decided then what we were going to do, other than the box set until someone approached us and said would you do an exhibition and the exhibition was pinned around the box set."
P-Orridge says: "Through the exhibition and through communicating with each other about details of that we found that we were drawn to experiment with seeing each other again - not for sentimental reasons - but because the cultural environment is decaying and at the same time becoming polarised. And it is very much like Reagan and Thatcher's era."
Performing one last gig was later suggested by Mute and was a conclusion to this process of setting the record straight and responding to the present.
The members of Throbbing Gristle have a complex and interwoven history. In 1969, Megson and Newby formed COUM Transmissions with Carter, who was from London, and was also to become a member of TG. Gradually, COUM's "street music" and acoustic improvisations developed into more involved and grotesque performances. Megson changed his name to Genesis P-Orridge in a self-originating gesture that also hinted humorously to a deconstruction of religion. In a similar vein, Newby changed her name to Cosmosis and then to Cosi. The two were a couple until around 1978. According to Simon Ford's biography of the band, Wreckers of Civilisation (Black Dog, 1999), Cosey Fanni Tutti, the name Newby took permanently in 1973, was a burlesque send-up of the title of Mozart's opera (it has been translated as "They are all the same," "Thus do our women" or "All the women are at it"). Cosi has worked as a striptease artist, and appeared in erotic films and magazines from 1974. Much of COUM Transmissions and TG's work was to challenge preconceptions of proper or pleasurable sexual behaviour. Their work sometimes involved themes of explicit nudity and pornographic sex, violence and coercion and subtly evoking such taboo subjects as serial murder.
Clarifying what he sees was a misinterpretation of TG's motives P-Orridge explains: "Shock was never a primary concern of what we do - it was an accidental by product of one or two songs but..." Tutti rejoins, "What we did, we never thought it was shocking... If you go for a reaction you can be disappointed."
COUM's infamous retrospective exhibition at London's ICA in October 1976, entitled "Prostitution," is generally acknowledged as a formative moment for Throbbing Gristle. The press were outraged at the nude magazines, the erotic pictures of Cosey, and the used tampons on display, while discussions of the event in Parliament described the group as "wreckers of civilisation". The controversy led to P-Orridge and Fanni Tutti's Art Council grant being terminated and they were banned from exhibiting in the UK. Self-consciously pursuing an idea of "unpopular music" and given some useful publicity by the outrage, Throbbing Gristle then fully launched themselves as a musical outfit with P-Orridge on violin, vocals and bass, Fanni Tutti on guitar, cornet and effects, Carter on synthesiser and rhythms, and Christopherson on tapes, processors and trumpet. They formed their own label, Industrial Records, and recorded most of their jams, rehearsals and performances. After self-releasing their work on cassette, the group hit number 37 in the UK independent charts with a club hit single "United" in spring of 1978. Sporting army style black garb and having designed their own swastika-like insignia, they were accused of being a neo-nazi cult. In response they launched their most accessible album, in 1979, the ironically named Twenty Jazz Funk Greats, and began wearing all white.
"I think with TG in our own ways," explains P-Orridge, "We have been committed to the idea of evolution on some level, and change on some level - that human behaviour may not be changeable but one has to try and be optimistic and work towards content that might signify change." Tutti adds: "What is important is that it is an individual responsibility to do that. It's not done en masse. When we formed TG we never wanted people to follow as TG followers but as themselves, but with a like mind. As soon as people started wearing a TG-type uniform we stopped wearing it - we wore white."
While only the first track of Twenty Jazz Funk Greats had a funk feel, the album reached number six on the UK Independent charts. Soon afterwards David Bowie told US radio that TG was the most important thing happening in the UK. The band lasted another two years before they decided the project had run its course. "We were already, in 1981, bemoaning the fact that people were using certain accessorised ideas and images that they connected with us - sort of strange buildings and neo-fascist regimes and the 'dark side' of human culture," says P-Orridge. "We'd touched upon it at times, it's true, but people grasped on that and thought 'well if I mention this, this, this and this, then that must innately make me intelligent and creative' - which, of course, isn't true and isn't the point. That was depressing for all of us and it was one of the reasons we stopped because it became this supermarket of ideas."
A romance between Carter and Tutti had crystallised by the time TG disbanded; P-Orridge married his then girlfriend, Paula, two months before. (Incidentally, and revealing that their uncanny nerve was never simply a public performance, a song TG released in 1978, after P-Orridge and Tutti had split, called "Death Threats", is said to be comprised of phone messages left by Carter's wife who suspected his involvement with Tutti.) Carter and Tutti went on to form the Creative Technology Institute (CTI) and Chris and Cosi, whilst working on their own individual art and music projects, while P-Orridge, Christopherson and Paula went on to form the acid house innovators Psychic TV. The late Jhonn Balance (aka Geoff Rushton), who died this year, also became a member of Psychic TV and went on to form the industrial band Coil with Christopherson. Both P-Orridge and Tutti collaborated with the film-maker Derek Jarman, and P-Orridge also collaborated with William S Burroughs and Timothy Leary. In 1999 P-Orridge formed Thee Majesty, a spoken word and ambient music performance group. P-Orridge and Paula were later exiled from the UK after being dubiously accused of child abuse amongst other allegations surrounding his Temple of Psychic Youth order that was responsible for organising rave parties and supporting squats while championing the use of psychedelics and sexual freedom.
Reflecting upon today's music and culture, Tutti suggests that it is gratuitous for all the wrong reasons. "When you look at the culture now with people going into excess with sex and everything else, people think it's liberated and over the top, but it's not at all because, again, you've got this very safe thing going on and there are certain boundaries there."
This is almost a matter of commitment or concentration. Tutti adds: "People never remain long enough with one thing to understand and savour it. Its almost like 'tick that box: what's next' which is a real shame. Because ultimately if you don't spend time on something that area is never allowed to develop... so it's a homogeneous thing our culture."
P-Orridge muses that in relation to the extremities of TG's behaviour in the past, as far as today is concerned, less is more. "We are in a moment where intelligent subtlety is the more shocking strategy than gratuitous actions because the media have already trumped everything you could do as a performance with so-called reality. The potency has gone from certain strategies."
He later observes that, "The status quo is presented as something to aspire to, whereas for us the status quo was something we wanted to shatter in order to create the space for people to choose for themselves."
Music remains a uniquely powerful social force for P-Orridge. "The fact that we've all played in literally dozens of countries and cultures and had a very positive response means that there is some other language - a non verbal language. Sometimes it's as simple as helping people to feel less isolated. If somebody's in the middle of Ohio or Cornwall and there is no local shop and finally they hear some kind of music they think 'That's like me' and they feel that bit less isolated." Tutti then elaborates: "That works on a popular culture level anyway when people get really into the most mundane love songs going, its like desperation you know. They are so empty but they want someone else to say it for them. They want to put on a CD and stand next to it - it's our quick-fix culture. They would feel much better if they found some way to express themselves."
A fan of a live performance he saw of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, P-Orridge would like to see a more open-minded and flexible live scene. "Bands should try to create a temporary situation where the audience feel relaxed enough to let go of whether they look cool or whether they know the correct response and for a while, whether it be an hour or two, they feel liberated enough to surrender to the experience of the sound rather than analyse it or critique it or want it to be exactly like it was before."
Their simple word of advice to aspiring artists is to be honest - something very few people actually manage to achieve. "And I think one of the gorgeous things about TG is that we will go from something amazingly serious and important and significant in terms of the world and life, and then do something ludicrous and absurd," adds P-Orridge.
"We take every aspect of our lives and then magnify them because it's interesting and puzzling and baffling all at once to go through each day."
© 2004 Independent Digital (UK) Ltd
10 December 2004
The reappearance of Throbbing Gristle in 2004, 23 years after they split up, is something of a curiosity to many who remember their notorious presence in the late Seventies. Breaking from their separate music and art projects, the four-piece regrouped this year for a short performance in London for ticket holders of a cancelled gig at Camber Sands in June. They then reorganised that show, playing at last weekend's All Tomorrow's Parties Nightmare Before Christmas festival, curated by Jake and Dinos Chapman. That was officially TG's last ever performance, and all four members appeared for their last interview as TG at the festival before playing the show.
It was strange to find them lounging, resolutely calm, in a Camber Sands chalet, especially as their presence was anything but intimidating. The formidable Genesis P-Orridge is now a woman with a blonde bob and breasts, but that's hardly a shocking transformation for such a character. With all four members - P-Orridge, Cosey Fanni Tutti, Chris Carter and Peter Christopherson - in one room, the conversation was slightly slippery. They have a chequered history, of which there have been many misinterpretations, so they were steering the conversation around the big cliffs.
It was during the Seventies that two young misfits from Hull, then named Christine Newby and Neil Megson, embarked on a journey along the boundaries of art and performance that would eventually send the UK press into uproar, see them banned from art galleries, and eventually lead to the expulsion of Megson from the UK. Amidst a trail of confusion, myth, offence and awe, Newby and Megson, along with Carter and Christopherson, created a new set of sounds to form the beginnings of industrial music (Megson is credited with having coined the term with Monte Cazazza in 1975) and had a significant influence on punk and acid house music. It was only when they had split up in 1981 that TG's "sick" performances were reappraisedas art.
Christopherson says that rather than being a comeback, the decision to regroup for the gigs was a response to the current music scene. "It was much more to do with the fact that the English culture at the moment - of music, and the way that music is used by people - has a tendency to go through periods of crisis. TG was started in a period of crisis when contemporary music was not doing any useful motion in the direction of getting people to think or getting people to analyse what they were doing."
Discussions between the former members of the band after a retrospective exhibition of TG ephemera in 2001 had led them to realise that they were again motivated by similar concerns. Tutti explains: "There was a lot of interest in TG, a lot of bootlegs of TG, a lot of flak directed at us because of the bootlegs, and a lot of misinterpretation of what we did and why we did it, how we did it, and so on. We've always been with Mute since we ended and we suggested a few years back on the 20th anniversary that we do the box set. The whole thing really was to take control of the legacy that was TG because it was in danger of being trashed. We hadn't decided then what we were going to do, other than the box set until someone approached us and said would you do an exhibition and the exhibition was pinned around the box set."
P-Orridge says: "Through the exhibition and through communicating with each other about details of that we found that we were drawn to experiment with seeing each other again - not for sentimental reasons - but because the cultural environment is decaying and at the same time becoming polarised. And it is very much like Reagan and Thatcher's era."
Performing one last gig was later suggested by Mute and was a conclusion to this process of setting the record straight and responding to the present.
The members of Throbbing Gristle have a complex and interwoven history. In 1969, Megson and Newby formed COUM Transmissions with Carter, who was from London, and was also to become a member of TG. Gradually, COUM's "street music" and acoustic improvisations developed into more involved and grotesque performances. Megson changed his name to Genesis P-Orridge in a self-originating gesture that also hinted humorously to a deconstruction of religion. In a similar vein, Newby changed her name to Cosmosis and then to Cosi. The two were a couple until around 1978. According to Simon Ford's biography of the band, Wreckers of Civilisation (Black Dog, 1999), Cosey Fanni Tutti, the name Newby took permanently in 1973, was a burlesque send-up of the title of Mozart's opera (it has been translated as "They are all the same," "Thus do our women" or "All the women are at it"). Cosi has worked as a striptease artist, and appeared in erotic films and magazines from 1974. Much of COUM Transmissions and TG's work was to challenge preconceptions of proper or pleasurable sexual behaviour. Their work sometimes involved themes of explicit nudity and pornographic sex, violence and coercion and subtly evoking such taboo subjects as serial murder.
Clarifying what he sees was a misinterpretation of TG's motives P-Orridge explains: "Shock was never a primary concern of what we do - it was an accidental by product of one or two songs but..." Tutti rejoins, "What we did, we never thought it was shocking... If you go for a reaction you can be disappointed."
COUM's infamous retrospective exhibition at London's ICA in October 1976, entitled "Prostitution," is generally acknowledged as a formative moment for Throbbing Gristle. The press were outraged at the nude magazines, the erotic pictures of Cosey, and the used tampons on display, while discussions of the event in Parliament described the group as "wreckers of civilisation". The controversy led to P-Orridge and Fanni Tutti's Art Council grant being terminated and they were banned from exhibiting in the UK. Self-consciously pursuing an idea of "unpopular music" and given some useful publicity by the outrage, Throbbing Gristle then fully launched themselves as a musical outfit with P-Orridge on violin, vocals and bass, Fanni Tutti on guitar, cornet and effects, Carter on synthesiser and rhythms, and Christopherson on tapes, processors and trumpet. They formed their own label, Industrial Records, and recorded most of their jams, rehearsals and performances. After self-releasing their work on cassette, the group hit number 37 in the UK independent charts with a club hit single "United" in spring of 1978. Sporting army style black garb and having designed their own swastika-like insignia, they were accused of being a neo-nazi cult. In response they launched their most accessible album, in 1979, the ironically named Twenty Jazz Funk Greats, and began wearing all white.
"I think with TG in our own ways," explains P-Orridge, "We have been committed to the idea of evolution on some level, and change on some level - that human behaviour may not be changeable but one has to try and be optimistic and work towards content that might signify change." Tutti adds: "What is important is that it is an individual responsibility to do that. It's not done en masse. When we formed TG we never wanted people to follow as TG followers but as themselves, but with a like mind. As soon as people started wearing a TG-type uniform we stopped wearing it - we wore white."
While only the first track of Twenty Jazz Funk Greats had a funk feel, the album reached number six on the UK Independent charts. Soon afterwards David Bowie told US radio that TG was the most important thing happening in the UK. The band lasted another two years before they decided the project had run its course. "We were already, in 1981, bemoaning the fact that people were using certain accessorised ideas and images that they connected with us - sort of strange buildings and neo-fascist regimes and the 'dark side' of human culture," says P-Orridge. "We'd touched upon it at times, it's true, but people grasped on that and thought 'well if I mention this, this, this and this, then that must innately make me intelligent and creative' - which, of course, isn't true and isn't the point. That was depressing for all of us and it was one of the reasons we stopped because it became this supermarket of ideas."
A romance between Carter and Tutti had crystallised by the time TG disbanded; P-Orridge married his then girlfriend, Paula, two months before. (Incidentally, and revealing that their uncanny nerve was never simply a public performance, a song TG released in 1978, after P-Orridge and Tutti had split, called "Death Threats", is said to be comprised of phone messages left by Carter's wife who suspected his involvement with Tutti.) Carter and Tutti went on to form the Creative Technology Institute (CTI) and Chris and Cosi, whilst working on their own individual art and music projects, while P-Orridge, Christopherson and Paula went on to form the acid house innovators Psychic TV. The late Jhonn Balance (aka Geoff Rushton), who died this year, also became a member of Psychic TV and went on to form the industrial band Coil with Christopherson. Both P-Orridge and Tutti collaborated with the film-maker Derek Jarman, and P-Orridge also collaborated with William S Burroughs and Timothy Leary. In 1999 P-Orridge formed Thee Majesty, a spoken word and ambient music performance group. P-Orridge and Paula were later exiled from the UK after being dubiously accused of child abuse amongst other allegations surrounding his Temple of Psychic Youth order that was responsible for organising rave parties and supporting squats while championing the use of psychedelics and sexual freedom.
Reflecting upon today's music and culture, Tutti suggests that it is gratuitous for all the wrong reasons. "When you look at the culture now with people going into excess with sex and everything else, people think it's liberated and over the top, but it's not at all because, again, you've got this very safe thing going on and there are certain boundaries there."
This is almost a matter of commitment or concentration. Tutti adds: "People never remain long enough with one thing to understand and savour it. Its almost like 'tick that box: what's next' which is a real shame. Because ultimately if you don't spend time on something that area is never allowed to develop... so it's a homogeneous thing our culture."
P-Orridge muses that in relation to the extremities of TG's behaviour in the past, as far as today is concerned, less is more. "We are in a moment where intelligent subtlety is the more shocking strategy than gratuitous actions because the media have already trumped everything you could do as a performance with so-called reality. The potency has gone from certain strategies."
He later observes that, "The status quo is presented as something to aspire to, whereas for us the status quo was something we wanted to shatter in order to create the space for people to choose for themselves."
Music remains a uniquely powerful social force for P-Orridge. "The fact that we've all played in literally dozens of countries and cultures and had a very positive response means that there is some other language - a non verbal language. Sometimes it's as simple as helping people to feel less isolated. If somebody's in the middle of Ohio or Cornwall and there is no local shop and finally they hear some kind of music they think 'That's like me' and they feel that bit less isolated." Tutti then elaborates: "That works on a popular culture level anyway when people get really into the most mundane love songs going, its like desperation you know. They are so empty but they want someone else to say it for them. They want to put on a CD and stand next to it - it's our quick-fix culture. They would feel much better if they found some way to express themselves."
A fan of a live performance he saw of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, P-Orridge would like to see a more open-minded and flexible live scene. "Bands should try to create a temporary situation where the audience feel relaxed enough to let go of whether they look cool or whether they know the correct response and for a while, whether it be an hour or two, they feel liberated enough to surrender to the experience of the sound rather than analyse it or critique it or want it to be exactly like it was before."
Their simple word of advice to aspiring artists is to be honest - something very few people actually manage to achieve. "And I think one of the gorgeous things about TG is that we will go from something amazingly serious and important and significant in terms of the world and life, and then do something ludicrous and absurd," adds P-Orridge.
"We take every aspect of our lives and then magnify them because it's interesting and puzzling and baffling all at once to go through each day."
© 2004 Independent Digital (UK) Ltd
samedi, décembre 11, 2004
The Dresden Dolls
The Dresden Dolls : The Dresden Dolls
By Tim Cashmere
9th September 2004
Boston-based The Dresden Dolls have been around since 2001. This quirky duo is a delightful mix of gothic European imagery and early eighties punk rock galore.
Donning makeup that at times makes them look like members of the Cure and at other times makes them look like members of the circus, Amanda Palmer (piano, vocals) and Brian Viglione (drums) take you on an hour long musical journey.
The Dresden Dolls more often than not sound like they've composed their album to sound like the soundtrack to a b-grade horror movie, with the recurring themes of love and death constantly popping up through the album.
While they've often been described as a punk rock cabaret act that does seem like a tacky quickly thought of description. With elements of both of these genres shining through, they have created their own sound deriving from whatever elements of music they could get their hands on.
This is a fascinating album for those who want something a little different, but not too "out there".
Track Listing
Good Day
Girl Anachronism
Missed Me
Half Jack
672
Coin-operated Boy
Gravity
Bad Habit
The Perfect Fit
The Jeep Song
Slide
Truce
By Tim Cashmere
9th September 2004
Boston-based The Dresden Dolls have been around since 2001. This quirky duo is a delightful mix of gothic European imagery and early eighties punk rock galore.
Donning makeup that at times makes them look like members of the Cure and at other times makes them look like members of the circus, Amanda Palmer (piano, vocals) and Brian Viglione (drums) take you on an hour long musical journey.
The Dresden Dolls more often than not sound like they've composed their album to sound like the soundtrack to a b-grade horror movie, with the recurring themes of love and death constantly popping up through the album.
While they've often been described as a punk rock cabaret act that does seem like a tacky quickly thought of description. With elements of both of these genres shining through, they have created their own sound deriving from whatever elements of music they could get their hands on.
This is a fascinating album for those who want something a little different, but not too "out there".
Track Listing
Good Day
Girl Anachronism
Missed Me
Half Jack
672
Coin-operated Boy
Gravity
Bad Habit
The Perfect Fit
The Jeep Song
Slide
Truce
vendredi, décembre 10, 2004
Unlocking Zappa Treasures
Preservation and restoration results in releases from legendary Zappa Vault
GRAMMY.com Laurel Fishman
Under Frank Zappa's family house in Los Angeles, the "Vault" is jam-packed from floor to ceiling with every possible recordable audio, video and film media. Within its concrete walls, the temperature-controlled Vault contains literally thousands of tapes, all neatly organized and labeled. "The Vault is infamous among Zappa fans as a treasure trove of material," says Joe Travers, official "Vaultmeister." Bit by bit, the gems are emerging.
These jewels represent the late Zappa's prolific output, spanning 30-plus years and musical genres from doo-wop to classical. Decades before the global economy, Zappa was selling out international venues that other popular musicians of the time never even dreamed of playing. From his early days around Los Angeles in the 1960s with the original Mothers Of Invention, to world tours, experiments on the Synclavier, and his orchestral works, Zappa relentlessly recorded his musical adventures.
The limitations of existing technology made it generally prohibitive for most artists to do so, but Zappa used mobile recording gear to capture his lengthy concerts. Travers learned how to "bake" the resulting tapes, heat-treating them in a convection oven at 130 degrees for four to eight hours. "Baking the tapes secures the oxide to the tape's backing so it won't shed when it's being played back," Travers explains. "If it sheds and turns into gummy residue, it's gone forever." So far, Travers has baked about 100 tapes.
When he started as Vaultmeister in the mid-'90s, Travers' job was to identify and catalog the material. He created a database, designating Zappa's ever-changing band personnel and determining song titles and which material had already been released. Travers pored over documents, publications and Web sites, and talked with the musicians involved.
Inside the Vault, Travers also found "a helluva lot of film and video, from 8 mm all the way up to one- and two-inch masters." Travers says there is early-'60s footage of Zappa's original Studio Z and from later years at the family house. There are outtakes from Zappa films Uncle Meat and Baby Snakes, and Zappa concerts on Halloween 1977 and live at the Roxy in 1973, and more.
The Vault also houses rehearsal tapes, Zappa interviews, trim reels and other remnants. "After Frank got a mix using razor-blade edits, this was the stuff that didn't make it onto the record," Travers says. "There are a lot of rough mixes and versions of albums before Frank ripped them apart. I get to hear the missing pieces of the large puzzle."
Prior to becoming Vaultmeister, Travers already held some of the pieces. A drummer who played with Zappa sons Dweezil and Ahmet in their band Z during the mid-'90s, Travers was a serious Frank Zappa fan from an early age. "I had a massive collection," he says. "I read every book and had every Zappa record, dozens of bootlegs. And this was before eBay!"
One day in 1995, Joe requested a tour of the legendary Vault. "Just by looking at the names on the boxes," Travers remembers, "I knew more about the contents of the Vault than anyone working there at the time," including various audio experts. "The staff went back and told [Frank's widow] Gail that I knew more about what's in the Vault than anybody else. She said, 'Great, he's the Vaultmeister.'"
Before 2003, Travers focused on refining his digital editing skills while cataloging and baking the tapes. Then the Zappas refurbished the recording studio adjacent to the Vault, allowing Travers to "dive into other tape formats with the best possible technology," he says.
In EQ-ing and mastering Zappa's music, Travers is salvaging arcane nuggets to appeal to hardcore Zappa fanatics, "material that otherwise wouldn't find a home on a major Zappa release." These obscurities are becoming the "Joe's" album series, starting with the current Joe's Corsage , whose title is a play on Zappa's 1979 Joe's Garage albums.
Joe's Corsage includes Zappa demos from 1965, '60s interview snippets, and perhaps the rarest of all Zappa rarities, a love song: "I'm So Happy I Could Cry." In typical Zappa fashion, it later mutated into the irreverent "Take Your Clothes Off When You Dance" from the classic Zappa album We're Only In It For The Money.
Starting in 2002, Vault packages are being released on the Vaulternative label, created by Gail Zappa. Among its live concert recordings, a possible documentary and other as-yet-unreleased projects, "we're working on four different albums right now," Travers says. "I submit material to Gail and Dweezil for them to decide upon, or they come to me and say, 'We need material from this-or-that era.'"
While Dweezil Zappa concentrates on remixing his father's recordings into surround sound for future Vaulternative albums, Gail Zappa is instituting a subscription service for purchasing Vault releases. "There are most likely 40 albums that can come out of the Vault, not including the series I'm doing," says Travers.
"There's so much I don't even know about yet. The more I dive into the Vault, especially in the formats I wasn't able to document or play before now, the more possibilities keep coming up."
(Laurel Fishman is a writer and editor specializing in entertainment media. She reports regularly for GRAMMY.com, writes the EducationWatch column, and is an advocate for the benefits of music-making, music-listening, music education, music therapy and music-and-the-brain research.)
GRAMMY.com Laurel Fishman
Under Frank Zappa's family house in Los Angeles, the "Vault" is jam-packed from floor to ceiling with every possible recordable audio, video and film media. Within its concrete walls, the temperature-controlled Vault contains literally thousands of tapes, all neatly organized and labeled. "The Vault is infamous among Zappa fans as a treasure trove of material," says Joe Travers, official "Vaultmeister." Bit by bit, the gems are emerging.
These jewels represent the late Zappa's prolific output, spanning 30-plus years and musical genres from doo-wop to classical. Decades before the global economy, Zappa was selling out international venues that other popular musicians of the time never even dreamed of playing. From his early days around Los Angeles in the 1960s with the original Mothers Of Invention, to world tours, experiments on the Synclavier, and his orchestral works, Zappa relentlessly recorded his musical adventures.
The limitations of existing technology made it generally prohibitive for most artists to do so, but Zappa used mobile recording gear to capture his lengthy concerts. Travers learned how to "bake" the resulting tapes, heat-treating them in a convection oven at 130 degrees for four to eight hours. "Baking the tapes secures the oxide to the tape's backing so it won't shed when it's being played back," Travers explains. "If it sheds and turns into gummy residue, it's gone forever." So far, Travers has baked about 100 tapes.
When he started as Vaultmeister in the mid-'90s, Travers' job was to identify and catalog the material. He created a database, designating Zappa's ever-changing band personnel and determining song titles and which material had already been released. Travers pored over documents, publications and Web sites, and talked with the musicians involved.
Inside the Vault, Travers also found "a helluva lot of film and video, from 8 mm all the way up to one- and two-inch masters." Travers says there is early-'60s footage of Zappa's original Studio Z and from later years at the family house. There are outtakes from Zappa films Uncle Meat and Baby Snakes, and Zappa concerts on Halloween 1977 and live at the Roxy in 1973, and more.
The Vault also houses rehearsal tapes, Zappa interviews, trim reels and other remnants. "After Frank got a mix using razor-blade edits, this was the stuff that didn't make it onto the record," Travers says. "There are a lot of rough mixes and versions of albums before Frank ripped them apart. I get to hear the missing pieces of the large puzzle."
Prior to becoming Vaultmeister, Travers already held some of the pieces. A drummer who played with Zappa sons Dweezil and Ahmet in their band Z during the mid-'90s, Travers was a serious Frank Zappa fan from an early age. "I had a massive collection," he says. "I read every book and had every Zappa record, dozens of bootlegs. And this was before eBay!"
One day in 1995, Joe requested a tour of the legendary Vault. "Just by looking at the names on the boxes," Travers remembers, "I knew more about the contents of the Vault than anyone working there at the time," including various audio experts. "The staff went back and told [Frank's widow] Gail that I knew more about what's in the Vault than anybody else. She said, 'Great, he's the Vaultmeister.'"
Before 2003, Travers focused on refining his digital editing skills while cataloging and baking the tapes. Then the Zappas refurbished the recording studio adjacent to the Vault, allowing Travers to "dive into other tape formats with the best possible technology," he says.
In EQ-ing and mastering Zappa's music, Travers is salvaging arcane nuggets to appeal to hardcore Zappa fanatics, "material that otherwise wouldn't find a home on a major Zappa release." These obscurities are becoming the "Joe's" album series, starting with the current Joe's Corsage , whose title is a play on Zappa's 1979 Joe's Garage albums.
Joe's Corsage includes Zappa demos from 1965, '60s interview snippets, and perhaps the rarest of all Zappa rarities, a love song: "I'm So Happy I Could Cry." In typical Zappa fashion, it later mutated into the irreverent "Take Your Clothes Off When You Dance" from the classic Zappa album We're Only In It For The Money.
Starting in 2002, Vault packages are being released on the Vaulternative label, created by Gail Zappa. Among its live concert recordings, a possible documentary and other as-yet-unreleased projects, "we're working on four different albums right now," Travers says. "I submit material to Gail and Dweezil for them to decide upon, or they come to me and say, 'We need material from this-or-that era.'"
While Dweezil Zappa concentrates on remixing his father's recordings into surround sound for future Vaulternative albums, Gail Zappa is instituting a subscription service for purchasing Vault releases. "There are most likely 40 albums that can come out of the Vault, not including the series I'm doing," says Travers.
"There's so much I don't even know about yet. The more I dive into the Vault, especially in the formats I wasn't able to document or play before now, the more possibilities keep coming up."
(Laurel Fishman is a writer and editor specializing in entertainment media. She reports regularly for GRAMMY.com, writes the EducationWatch column, and is an advocate for the benefits of music-making, music-listening, music education, music therapy and music-and-the-brain research.)
mercredi, décembre 08, 2004
Lennon...
Imagine: two new Lennon songs to be performed on Broadway
By Andrew Buncombe in Washington
08 December 2004
Almost 25 years after John Lennon was shot dead outside his New York apartment, two of his unpublished songs are to be performed on Broadway in a show celebrating the life of the former Beatle.
Lennon's widow Yoko Ono said she had given permission to the producer Don Scardino to use the tracks in his forthcoming musical, Lennon, to open next spring. The tracks were written by Lennon in the late 1970s.
One of the tracks "India, India", recalls the Beatles' visit to India in 1968 where they spent time at the ashram of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. The second, "I Don't Want to Lose You", is a slow ballad, presumably dedicated to Ono.
In an interview with The Independent this year, Ono spoke of her efforts to protect Lennon's legacy. She said: "That's the responsibility he gave to me. I am honoured to do it, because we were partners and we are still partners."
But she said she had decided to allow Scardino to use the songs because she trusted him to produce them in a way she considered respectful. She told The New York Times: "They're very appropriate for the periods they are showing. People would say to me, 'What are you going to do about all of John's unreleased songs?' And I've always said: 'I will put them out, but I have to find ways to present them in the right way. For these songs, I thought the musical would be a very effective, beautiful way to do it."
The track "I Don't Want to Lose You" was among three Lennon songs offered to the surviving members of the Beatles in the mid-1990s when they "reunited" to produce the Beatles Anthology, Ono said.
The demonstration recording Lennon had made of the song was found to have an electronic hum on it which prevented the other three members from using it but they did take two other songs, "Free as a Bird" and "Real Love". With the help of the former ELO frontman Jeff Lynne they dubbed their own, new parts on it. "Free as a Bird" reached number two in the UK charts in December, 1995, and "Real Love" reached number four.
Lennon was killed outside his apartment in New York's Upper West Side 24 years ago today at the age of 40 by disturbed fan Mark David Chapman. The attack was witnessed by Ono, who still lives in the same apartment, in the Dakota Building.
Scardino said the musical, featuring 27 of Lennon's songs including "Imagine", "Give Peace a Chance" and "Whatever Gets You Through the Night", will tell the story of Lennon's life as a musician, as well as his activism. "I was after something that was very theatrical and that would, for the audience, really bring forward the real, living idea of John Lennon," he told Playbill.com, a website devoted to theatre news.
He added: "The idea is basically as if an acting troupe walked on stage, unpacked their bags and said, 'Tonight, we do John Lennon' just like the players in Hamlet [say] here's The Murder of Gonzago. Well, here's the murder of John Lennon, [or] the life of John Lennon. Doing so, the actors on stage all take up his voice and his time and be another facet of that personality and basically make up the measure of the man in the process, through the course of the evening.
"He always seemed to be ahead of the curve. Or ... the curve followed him. He was such a leader for a certain generation, particularly, that he's emblematic of the times he came through."
The musical, with 10 actors portraying Lennon at various stages in his life backed by an 10-piece band, is to have its world premiere in San Francisco on 5 April then move to Boston. It is to open on Broadway in July.
Chapman, born in 1955, is still in Attica state penitentiary, New York. He has been refused parole three times, the latest time in October.
© 2004 Independent Digital (UK) Ltd
By Andrew Buncombe in Washington
08 December 2004
Almost 25 years after John Lennon was shot dead outside his New York apartment, two of his unpublished songs are to be performed on Broadway in a show celebrating the life of the former Beatle.
Lennon's widow Yoko Ono said she had given permission to the producer Don Scardino to use the tracks in his forthcoming musical, Lennon, to open next spring. The tracks were written by Lennon in the late 1970s.
One of the tracks "India, India", recalls the Beatles' visit to India in 1968 where they spent time at the ashram of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. The second, "I Don't Want to Lose You", is a slow ballad, presumably dedicated to Ono.
In an interview with The Independent this year, Ono spoke of her efforts to protect Lennon's legacy. She said: "That's the responsibility he gave to me. I am honoured to do it, because we were partners and we are still partners."
But she said she had decided to allow Scardino to use the songs because she trusted him to produce them in a way she considered respectful. She told The New York Times: "They're very appropriate for the periods they are showing. People would say to me, 'What are you going to do about all of John's unreleased songs?' And I've always said: 'I will put them out, but I have to find ways to present them in the right way. For these songs, I thought the musical would be a very effective, beautiful way to do it."
The track "I Don't Want to Lose You" was among three Lennon songs offered to the surviving members of the Beatles in the mid-1990s when they "reunited" to produce the Beatles Anthology, Ono said.
The demonstration recording Lennon had made of the song was found to have an electronic hum on it which prevented the other three members from using it but they did take two other songs, "Free as a Bird" and "Real Love". With the help of the former ELO frontman Jeff Lynne they dubbed their own, new parts on it. "Free as a Bird" reached number two in the UK charts in December, 1995, and "Real Love" reached number four.
Lennon was killed outside his apartment in New York's Upper West Side 24 years ago today at the age of 40 by disturbed fan Mark David Chapman. The attack was witnessed by Ono, who still lives in the same apartment, in the Dakota Building.
Scardino said the musical, featuring 27 of Lennon's songs including "Imagine", "Give Peace a Chance" and "Whatever Gets You Through the Night", will tell the story of Lennon's life as a musician, as well as his activism. "I was after something that was very theatrical and that would, for the audience, really bring forward the real, living idea of John Lennon," he told Playbill.com, a website devoted to theatre news.
He added: "The idea is basically as if an acting troupe walked on stage, unpacked their bags and said, 'Tonight, we do John Lennon' just like the players in Hamlet [say] here's The Murder of Gonzago. Well, here's the murder of John Lennon, [or] the life of John Lennon. Doing so, the actors on stage all take up his voice and his time and be another facet of that personality and basically make up the measure of the man in the process, through the course of the evening.
"He always seemed to be ahead of the curve. Or ... the curve followed him. He was such a leader for a certain generation, particularly, that he's emblematic of the times he came through."
The musical, with 10 actors portraying Lennon at various stages in his life backed by an 10-piece band, is to have its world premiere in San Francisco on 5 April then move to Boston. It is to open on Broadway in July.
Chapman, born in 1955, is still in Attica state penitentiary, New York. He has been refused parole three times, the latest time in October.
© 2004 Independent Digital (UK) Ltd
lundi, décembre 06, 2004
Slowdive
Slowdive. Catch the Breeze
[Sanctuary; 2004]
Rating: 9.5
Gosh does liking music make you feel prematurely old! Last winter, while browsing in a record store, I came across a compilation of shoegazer tracks, sitting there with all the finality of a collection of 60s garage. All of these bands with their echoes and their noise-- even Blind Mr. Jones! A few racks over-- you know, by the deluxe anniversary editions of Pavement records-- I got shaky. Is this what we're doing now: Packing up the 90s for posterity? And why should finality be a grave? Some reappraisal is necessary, and when it comes to those shoegazers, that goes double. As popular as the whole scene was, too many people have spent too many years saying nothing more interesting about these bands than that they weren't quite as good as My Bloody Valentine. And of all the bands that were stuck with that claim, Slowdive is the one for whom it was the most damnably untrue.
These days we all know that, in the end, Slowdive were hardly shoegazers at all. That didn't stop them from recording some of the classics of the genre, but still: There's something in this work-- from the earliest singles to the beyond-rock of their last album-- that's just singularly theirs, something that's made them as influential to today's electronic music artists (or, hell, to goths) as they have been for rock kids. Listening to Catch the Breeze-- which comfortably abridges a three-album career onto two discs-- you get an immediate sense of why. Frontman Neil Halstead's songs have a narcotic languor to them, a quality that makes them sound like he's constantly on the verge of drifting off. But there's something about the deliberate haze of this stuff-- the layers of echoing guitar they wrap songs in, the way the vocals emerge as distant angel moans-- that gives every word and chord a massive intensity. It's like watching film in slow motion: Everything goes watery-dreamy, but it also takes on a weight and a drama that can crush. And through every stage of their career, that's the heart of Slowdive. You're lulled into sleepy waves of melody, the hazy druggy beauty of it all, but just as you're drifting away, the whole thing squalls up into a big crushing storm or drops off into disorienting darkness. People try it with guitars and they try it with computers, and nobody does it quite like this.
So three albums, two discs. The draw for longtime fans is a selection of tracks from the band's earliest singles. This was as close as they came to sounding like a conventional rock band-- albeit a huge, deep, and sleepy one, with Halstead and Rachel Goswell already crooning with lazy grace. By my count there are eight tracks here that aren't available on the band's three albums (assuming you have the expanded U.S. version of Souvlaki), including a Peel Session cover of Syd Barrett's "Golden Hair"-- convenient enough if you don't feel like hunting down 12-inches. The band's first LP, Just for a Day, is underrepresented here, most likely due to its occasionally fluffy, over-prettified production; instead, things leap straight on to the band's two classics, starting with 1993's Souvlaki. Owners of that U.S. edition will find 10 of its tracks included here, and with good reason. This album is, dare I say, every bit as good as Loveless, and just as singular. What's amazing about it is the way Halstead's exquisite pop songwriting comes so strongly to the forefront of the band's sound-- and meshes, magically, with an even greater sonic ambition. The result is the reason critics started calling things "dream-pop," and the best songs here-- "Alison" and "40 Days"-- sound exactly like that: gorgeous traditional pop songs heard in blurry, dreamlike slow motion, sleepy and crushing at the same time. Even more ambitious are the tracks that stemmed from the band's collaboration with Brian Eno-- songs like "Sing" and "Souvlaki Space Station", which wash out into dubby groove and echo, with vocals pushed back into the role of instruments.
Two years later, the band released something else entirely-- a collection of songs recorded mostly by Halstead, with a sound that left the rock-band format behind altogether. The past few years have seen a huge revival of interest in this kind of thing: The "lost generation" of bands-- Bark Psychosis, Disco Inferno, Seefeel-- for whom Simon Reynolds coined the term "post-rock." It's in those terms that Slowdive's last album, Pygmalion, has come to seem like the best thing Halstead has been involved with. The highlight, "Blue Skied an' Clear", is worth the price of any collection anyone sticks it on: It's one of the most achingly pretty things you'll ever hear, milking incredible pathos from a shuffling drum loop, sparkling touches of guitar, and a chorus of ghostly half-moaning vocals. "Crazy for You" goes even further, constructing another rush of sound and then building it up and breaking it down like dance music. Catch the Breeze nicks a full five songs from Pygmalion, an album only nine tracks long-- and for Americans, it's more than worth it: This LP can be criminally hard to find.
And that's Slowdive, in a handy two-disc set, packed and packaged. There's a scent of finality about it. This, in most cases, will be all the Slowdive anyone needs. There's a quintessential Slowdive-listening experience: You lie in bed letting those waves of sound wash over you; you drift comfortably off into dreamworld, thinking of big pretty oceans; and then you wake up, minutes later, to find a big disorienting blur shooting out of your speakers-- so massive, so intensively vivid, or so dark and ominous, that you wonder how you could sleep to this at all. It's like taking a sleeping pill and waking up to find yourself frighteningly, alarmingly drugged-- an experience I wish, fondly, on everyone who brings this collection home.
-Nitsuh Abebe, December 2nd, 2004
Taken from Pitchfork
[Sanctuary; 2004]
Rating: 9.5
Gosh does liking music make you feel prematurely old! Last winter, while browsing in a record store, I came across a compilation of shoegazer tracks, sitting there with all the finality of a collection of 60s garage. All of these bands with their echoes and their noise-- even Blind Mr. Jones! A few racks over-- you know, by the deluxe anniversary editions of Pavement records-- I got shaky. Is this what we're doing now: Packing up the 90s for posterity? And why should finality be a grave? Some reappraisal is necessary, and when it comes to those shoegazers, that goes double. As popular as the whole scene was, too many people have spent too many years saying nothing more interesting about these bands than that they weren't quite as good as My Bloody Valentine. And of all the bands that were stuck with that claim, Slowdive is the one for whom it was the most damnably untrue.
These days we all know that, in the end, Slowdive were hardly shoegazers at all. That didn't stop them from recording some of the classics of the genre, but still: There's something in this work-- from the earliest singles to the beyond-rock of their last album-- that's just singularly theirs, something that's made them as influential to today's electronic music artists (or, hell, to goths) as they have been for rock kids. Listening to Catch the Breeze-- which comfortably abridges a three-album career onto two discs-- you get an immediate sense of why. Frontman Neil Halstead's songs have a narcotic languor to them, a quality that makes them sound like he's constantly on the verge of drifting off. But there's something about the deliberate haze of this stuff-- the layers of echoing guitar they wrap songs in, the way the vocals emerge as distant angel moans-- that gives every word and chord a massive intensity. It's like watching film in slow motion: Everything goes watery-dreamy, but it also takes on a weight and a drama that can crush. And through every stage of their career, that's the heart of Slowdive. You're lulled into sleepy waves of melody, the hazy druggy beauty of it all, but just as you're drifting away, the whole thing squalls up into a big crushing storm or drops off into disorienting darkness. People try it with guitars and they try it with computers, and nobody does it quite like this.
So three albums, two discs. The draw for longtime fans is a selection of tracks from the band's earliest singles. This was as close as they came to sounding like a conventional rock band-- albeit a huge, deep, and sleepy one, with Halstead and Rachel Goswell already crooning with lazy grace. By my count there are eight tracks here that aren't available on the band's three albums (assuming you have the expanded U.S. version of Souvlaki), including a Peel Session cover of Syd Barrett's "Golden Hair"-- convenient enough if you don't feel like hunting down 12-inches. The band's first LP, Just for a Day, is underrepresented here, most likely due to its occasionally fluffy, over-prettified production; instead, things leap straight on to the band's two classics, starting with 1993's Souvlaki. Owners of that U.S. edition will find 10 of its tracks included here, and with good reason. This album is, dare I say, every bit as good as Loveless, and just as singular. What's amazing about it is the way Halstead's exquisite pop songwriting comes so strongly to the forefront of the band's sound-- and meshes, magically, with an even greater sonic ambition. The result is the reason critics started calling things "dream-pop," and the best songs here-- "Alison" and "40 Days"-- sound exactly like that: gorgeous traditional pop songs heard in blurry, dreamlike slow motion, sleepy and crushing at the same time. Even more ambitious are the tracks that stemmed from the band's collaboration with Brian Eno-- songs like "Sing" and "Souvlaki Space Station", which wash out into dubby groove and echo, with vocals pushed back into the role of instruments.
Two years later, the band released something else entirely-- a collection of songs recorded mostly by Halstead, with a sound that left the rock-band format behind altogether. The past few years have seen a huge revival of interest in this kind of thing: The "lost generation" of bands-- Bark Psychosis, Disco Inferno, Seefeel-- for whom Simon Reynolds coined the term "post-rock." It's in those terms that Slowdive's last album, Pygmalion, has come to seem like the best thing Halstead has been involved with. The highlight, "Blue Skied an' Clear", is worth the price of any collection anyone sticks it on: It's one of the most achingly pretty things you'll ever hear, milking incredible pathos from a shuffling drum loop, sparkling touches of guitar, and a chorus of ghostly half-moaning vocals. "Crazy for You" goes even further, constructing another rush of sound and then building it up and breaking it down like dance music. Catch the Breeze nicks a full five songs from Pygmalion, an album only nine tracks long-- and for Americans, it's more than worth it: This LP can be criminally hard to find.
And that's Slowdive, in a handy two-disc set, packed and packaged. There's a scent of finality about it. This, in most cases, will be all the Slowdive anyone needs. There's a quintessential Slowdive-listening experience: You lie in bed letting those waves of sound wash over you; you drift comfortably off into dreamworld, thinking of big pretty oceans; and then you wake up, minutes later, to find a big disorienting blur shooting out of your speakers-- so massive, so intensively vivid, or so dark and ominous, that you wonder how you could sleep to this at all. It's like taking a sleeping pill and waking up to find yourself frighteningly, alarmingly drugged-- an experience I wish, fondly, on everyone who brings this collection home.
-Nitsuh Abebe, December 2nd, 2004
Taken from Pitchfork
jeudi, décembre 02, 2004
Hey! Jingle jangle man
He was Dylan's guitarist and inspired a classic. Gavin Martin meets that tambourine player
02 December 2004
Years before he inspired "Mr Tambourine Man", the guitarist Bruce Langhorne attempted to build "a magic swirlin' ship" of his own. "When I was 12 I built a rocket. I filled it with magnesium and tried to launch it: it blew up."
When Langhorne greets me outside his home in Venice, California, I feel the three half digits on his left hand that were salvaged after the explosion. These fingers were responsible for the remarkable guitar style that illuminated the acoustic side of Bob Dylan's Bringing It All Back Home album. Langhorne's light but flowing touch also shone on countless recordings by Fred Neil, Gordon Lightfoot, Tom Rush, Hugh Masekela, Buffy Sainte Marie and others.
But back in Harlem in 1950, when his mother arrived to witness the devastation, a career in music seemed a long way off. The would-be rocketeer was temporarily blinded and blood was rolling down his face.
"My mother was horrified but, being a smart-ass kid, I said 'at least I won't have to play classical violin anymore'," Langhorne recalls. It was only thanks to sophisticated plastic surgery, pioneered in wake of the Korean War, that Langhorne's stubs and finger joints were saved.
But the accident was just part of what made Langhorne different. As a black man in the largely white world of the folk revival he was a singular figure and his musical background - classical, gospel, blues and latin - defied classification.
Although he turned 66 last May, he still possesses intelligence, humour, poise and playfulness. Parked outside the home he shares with his actress wife Janet and several dogs is a van he has customised for sleeping on a cross-country trip to attend the opening of the Experience music museum's Bob Dylan exhibition.
The museum features the battered Martin acoustic he played on "Mr Tambourine Man"; he will give a talk at the Dylan opening. But his life is certainly not centred around the Dylan industry; this week, with the release of his soundtrack for his pal Peter Fonda's 1971 cult western The Hired Hand, his multi-instrumental talents can be heard again in all their glory.
"The music for The Hired Hand is really simple; it distils the time and place it represents. I've written all sorts of music but that's the music I prefer, folk music - the basic aesthetics of the music of man."
"The injury forced me not to be a virtuoso so I did a lot more thinking about what I loved in music and how it worked."
It wasn't until 1985, in an interview included on the Biograph retrospective, that Dylan finally named Langhorne as the inspiration for "Mr Tambourine Man".
"I played a tambourine but it was massive, Turkish and had jingles on it. Bob may have seen me play it in Greenwich Village. I used to play pied piper, just walk the streets and have people following me and dancing, like Hare Krishna before Hare Krishna. I'd take it with me whenever I went on the road, it always got people dancing."
By the time Langhorne first saw Dylan at New York's Gerdes Folk City Hootenanny in early 1961, he was the musical partner of the club's MC Brother John Sellars - and a regular accompanist to Cisco Houston, The Clancy Brothers and Peter, Paul and Mary. "My first impression of Bob was - what a terrible voice. I didn't really start to appreciate him until after I started working with him. I started to realise this guy is a really good poet and the fact that he had such will, such a sense of direction."
On Bringing It All Back Home, the songs sound as if they are being heard and played for the first time. Langhorne chuckles. "Well... that's because that's just what it was - a bunch of studio guys hanging around ready to latch onto Bobby's telepathic thread. He'd start singing and everybody would jump in, it was just amazing."
'The Hired Hand' soundtrack album is out now on Blast First Petite
© 2004 Independent Digital (UK) Ltd
02 December 2004
Years before he inspired "Mr Tambourine Man", the guitarist Bruce Langhorne attempted to build "a magic swirlin' ship" of his own. "When I was 12 I built a rocket. I filled it with magnesium and tried to launch it: it blew up."
When Langhorne greets me outside his home in Venice, California, I feel the three half digits on his left hand that were salvaged after the explosion. These fingers were responsible for the remarkable guitar style that illuminated the acoustic side of Bob Dylan's Bringing It All Back Home album. Langhorne's light but flowing touch also shone on countless recordings by Fred Neil, Gordon Lightfoot, Tom Rush, Hugh Masekela, Buffy Sainte Marie and others.
But back in Harlem in 1950, when his mother arrived to witness the devastation, a career in music seemed a long way off. The would-be rocketeer was temporarily blinded and blood was rolling down his face.
"My mother was horrified but, being a smart-ass kid, I said 'at least I won't have to play classical violin anymore'," Langhorne recalls. It was only thanks to sophisticated plastic surgery, pioneered in wake of the Korean War, that Langhorne's stubs and finger joints were saved.
But the accident was just part of what made Langhorne different. As a black man in the largely white world of the folk revival he was a singular figure and his musical background - classical, gospel, blues and latin - defied classification.
Although he turned 66 last May, he still possesses intelligence, humour, poise and playfulness. Parked outside the home he shares with his actress wife Janet and several dogs is a van he has customised for sleeping on a cross-country trip to attend the opening of the Experience music museum's Bob Dylan exhibition.
The museum features the battered Martin acoustic he played on "Mr Tambourine Man"; he will give a talk at the Dylan opening. But his life is certainly not centred around the Dylan industry; this week, with the release of his soundtrack for his pal Peter Fonda's 1971 cult western The Hired Hand, his multi-instrumental talents can be heard again in all their glory.
"The music for The Hired Hand is really simple; it distils the time and place it represents. I've written all sorts of music but that's the music I prefer, folk music - the basic aesthetics of the music of man."
"The injury forced me not to be a virtuoso so I did a lot more thinking about what I loved in music and how it worked."
It wasn't until 1985, in an interview included on the Biograph retrospective, that Dylan finally named Langhorne as the inspiration for "Mr Tambourine Man".
"I played a tambourine but it was massive, Turkish and had jingles on it. Bob may have seen me play it in Greenwich Village. I used to play pied piper, just walk the streets and have people following me and dancing, like Hare Krishna before Hare Krishna. I'd take it with me whenever I went on the road, it always got people dancing."
By the time Langhorne first saw Dylan at New York's Gerdes Folk City Hootenanny in early 1961, he was the musical partner of the club's MC Brother John Sellars - and a regular accompanist to Cisco Houston, The Clancy Brothers and Peter, Paul and Mary. "My first impression of Bob was - what a terrible voice. I didn't really start to appreciate him until after I started working with him. I started to realise this guy is a really good poet and the fact that he had such will, such a sense of direction."
On Bringing It All Back Home, the songs sound as if they are being heard and played for the first time. Langhorne chuckles. "Well... that's because that's just what it was - a bunch of studio guys hanging around ready to latch onto Bobby's telepathic thread. He'd start singing and everybody would jump in, it was just amazing."
'The Hired Hand' soundtrack album is out now on Blast First Petite
© 2004 Independent Digital (UK) Ltd
mercredi, décembre 01, 2004
Midnight Oil
Peter Garrett Collapses On Sydney Beach
by Paul Cashmere for Undercover
30 November 2004
Former Midnight Oil singer and now politician Peter Garrett has been given the all-clear from doctors after collapsing on a Sydney beach on the weekend.
Tests done on the former rock star have come up negative for the cause.
At his official website, Garrett has thanked those who helped him.
"First, I want to again thank the lifeguards at Maroubra Beach, the assisting on-lookers, the ambulance officers and the fine staff at the Prince of Wales Hospital - they did a terrific job and I am very grateful for their help and professionalism".
"After losing all my energy and fainting after swimming at Maroubra Beach on Saturday morning, I spent most of the day recovering and having checks conducted at the Prince of Wales Hospital in Randwick".
"I returned to the house at Mittagong in the evening and spent the rest of the weekend with my family, continuing to rest and recover".
"Tests done so far have proved inconclusive as to the exact cause of the problem which occurred on Saturday morning and I will have some more checks done this week. I expect to be back at Parliament in Canberra tomorrow, Tuesday".
"There is no indication from checks so far of any serious health problem. The checks have ruled many things out as the reason for what occurred, but have not ruled anything in as yet."
"(And to respond to some speculative reporting, there is absolutely nothing wrong with my right arm.)"
Garrett quit Midnight Oil in December 2002 bringing an end to one of Australia's most successful groups.
In June 2004 he announced he would take over the Sydney seat of Kingsford Smith for the Labour Party in Australia and in October 2004 won election in the area.
by Paul Cashmere for Undercover
30 November 2004
Former Midnight Oil singer and now politician Peter Garrett has been given the all-clear from doctors after collapsing on a Sydney beach on the weekend.
Tests done on the former rock star have come up negative for the cause.
At his official website, Garrett has thanked those who helped him.
"First, I want to again thank the lifeguards at Maroubra Beach, the assisting on-lookers, the ambulance officers and the fine staff at the Prince of Wales Hospital - they did a terrific job and I am very grateful for their help and professionalism".
"After losing all my energy and fainting after swimming at Maroubra Beach on Saturday morning, I spent most of the day recovering and having checks conducted at the Prince of Wales Hospital in Randwick".
"I returned to the house at Mittagong in the evening and spent the rest of the weekend with my family, continuing to rest and recover".
"Tests done so far have proved inconclusive as to the exact cause of the problem which occurred on Saturday morning and I will have some more checks done this week. I expect to be back at Parliament in Canberra tomorrow, Tuesday".
"There is no indication from checks so far of any serious health problem. The checks have ruled many things out as the reason for what occurred, but have not ruled anything in as yet."
"(And to respond to some speculative reporting, there is absolutely nothing wrong with my right arm.)"
Garrett quit Midnight Oil in December 2002 bringing an end to one of Australia's most successful groups.
In June 2004 he announced he would take over the Sydney seat of Kingsford Smith for the Labour Party in Australia and in October 2004 won election in the area.
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