If you have a complaint about the ownership of a picture or text, please contact me (juanribera@telefonica.net) directly and I will be sure to remove it at request as soon as possible.

viernes, 30 de mayo de 2008

The Squires - " Go Ahead" (¡favorito de Norman Blake!)


de http://blog.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=blog.view&friendID=52283628&blogID=372287381

no confundir con Squire (el grupo mod de los 70-80)

The Squires - "Go Ahead" -

The best revamp of the classic Byrds riff from "I’ll Feel a Whole Lot Better", used in countless of garage and power-pop songs! It’s the b-side of their only single "Going All the Way": a staple of garage-psych and included on Pebbles and Nuggets. I first heard this b-side when Norman Blake was playing records at Mono, and subsequently became obsessed with obtaining the rare compilation Going All the Way With the Squires! on Crypt from 1986. The compilation is fleshed out with the single they cut as The Rogues (there are MANY bands called The Rogues - and The Squires too for that matter) and a bunch of demos. I found it after six months, and I still count myself lucky!

jueves, 29 de mayo de 2008

Famous Times: "Something To Believe" (Heavenly Records 7" 1997)


De la unpopular casette, lo que más me ha sorprendido es esto. No tenía ni idea de que dicho single/grupo existiera. (500 copias sólo). Una joya de canción.


Famous Times: Something To Believe – 7” on Heavenly 1997

With vocals by Alan Tyler of Rockingbirds, this is a gorgeous downbeat number. Recorded with Sean Reed in the Famous Times (hence the name) studios in Hackney, it is another gently sparkling part of the Heavenly firmament.


I was fortunate enough, however, to come across one 'limited edition' 7" on Heavenly, by Famous Times, who were Alan Tyler and Sean Reed from the disbanded Rockingbirds. 'Something To Believe' was a real treat for anyone into great tunes with a country edge, although it's said that their second Heavenly single, 'The Blue Man' EP was even better. Sadly I can't confirm this, although if anyone wants to send me a copy so I can make the judgement myself, please feel free.

HVN 62
Famous Times
"Something To Believe"
"Springboard"
7" 500 copies only
4/97
HVN 6310a

Más cassettes: esta vez, Unpopular



Aquí te la puedes bajar: http://unpopular.typepad.com/unpopular/2008/05/my-favourite-we.html

It hasn't stopped raining all day here, so I spent much of the afternoon recording this mix from vinyl. Yeah, I have a lot of the tracks in digital format as well, thanks to CD and download reissue action, but not all... and it was nice to keep the crackling grooves theme across the whole thing. Ostensibly recorded for Jessel's fine MySpace project, it may yet appear there as well, who knows (well, Jessel obviously, duh...). Download the mix in fuzzy MP3 format here. Listing plus assorted notes below:

July Skies: The Softest Kisses – from the At The Height of Summer 7” on Roisin Records 2000
This 7” was my first introduction to the sound of July Skies and will always be a treasured possession as a result. All four tracks from the single have since appeared on various July Skies CD collections. This will forever be the soundtrack to the summer sun burning through the morning haze as the steam train rattles past on the track behind the house.

Meets Guitar: The Great Slip – 7” on Johnny Kane records 2001
Johnny Kane was one of the great labels, and this was just one of the sublime 7” releases. Meets Guitar and July Skies records are all infused with the spirit of a seductive, hidden and mythic England; the England I see in my daydreams when I cycle through Devon lanes.

Sabine: Marra – from the Kometen Melodies 7” on Audrey’s Diary 1993
Audrey’s Diary released classic singles from Black Tambourine, Bomb Pops and Veronica Lake amongst others in the early ‘90s. And amongst the others was this split 7” by Thumbling and Sabine; Sabine being basically Chip Porter, who ran the label. Fine Krautrock influenced instrumental noodling.

Appliance: Concentration To Brightness – from Organised Sound 10” EP on Surveillance Records 1997
Continuing the instrumental orientation, this is from the first Appliance record, on their own Surveillance label. Appliance are perhaps the only local Exeter band that I have ever really been a big fan of. They went on to sign with Mute and made a string of excellent records. There is talk of a retrospective box release of session tracks etc. Fingers crossed.

Peter Thomas Sound Orchester: Raumpatrouille (Space Patrol) from Orion 2000 10” EP on Bungalow Records 1996 (track originally released in 1966)
The Appliance gang were regular guest DJs at out Living Room club in Exeter back in 1997, and this is the kind of thing we often played there. Peter Thomas released several records of orchestrated Pop standards in the ‘60s and ‘70s, but it’s his Space Patrol soundtrack that I like the best.

Herzfeld: Do You Want This Job Or Not? - From The Sack 10” LP on Duophonic Super 45s 1994
What Malcolm Eden did next… after the end of McCarthy we all know that Tim Gane went on to fame with Stereolab. Less well known is what Malcolm Eden did: one 7” and this 10” LP for Duophonic. Typically political and succinct.

McCarthy: Red Sleeping Beauty – 12” on The Pink Label 1986
This remains one of my favourite records. A perfect marriage of soaring sonic beauty and sharp political ideology. It still sends shivers down my spine whenever I hear it. I loved the sleeve for the 12” of this too, with the spot varnish dots on black.

Wolfhounds: I See You – b-side of Cruelty 7” on The Pink Label 1987
Wolfhounds and McCarthy will be forever inseparable in my mind, and in many others’ too no doubt. This cover of a Byrds track (from Fifth Dimension) was on the b-side of the Cruelty single, which sported another fine Andy Royston sleeve.

Catapult: Sink Me – 12” on September Records 1988
Catapult were from East London and had connections to the Wolfhounds crew. One 7” and this brooding three track 12” for the September label were their sole releases. The September was another mighty label, with a brace of magnificent releases.

East Village: Cubans In The Bluefields – 12” on Sub Aqua 1988
That 1987/88 era seemed to spawn so many great records and groups. I fell in love with East Village the moment I saw the sleeve of this record in the racks of A1 in Glasgow. Sticking it on the stereo only made that love more intense.

Ninotchka: I’ve Got Wings – 7” on Grimsey 1997
Andrea’s little Grimsey label was a gem, and this 7” by Ninotchka was one of the most precious sparklers in the collection. I struggle with a lot of what people call ‘dreampop’ or ‘shoegaze’, but it always seemed to me that this Ninotchka record managed the perfect balance between blissed out noise and melodic Pop sensibility so much better than any of the groups normally associated with those scenes.

Popinjays: Don’t Go Back – 12” on Big Cat Records 1988
Popinjays made at least one album for One Little Indian, but they somehow lost the shimmering mystery of this three-track debut in the process.

The Beloved: A Kiss Goodbye – from the Happy Now 12” on Flim Flam 1987
Before they became sun drenched doyens of the Balearic scene The Beloved were a kind of proto-New Order guitars meet dance band, releasing a string of sublime singles on the Flim Flam label, each of which has a solid place in my heart. This track was from the third of those.

April Showers: Abandon Ship – 12” on Big Star Records (subsidiary of Chrysalis) 1984
If pushed, I would probably have to opt for this as my favourite Pop record ever. I read about (and fell in love with) April Showers in a fanzine, at least a year before this, their only record, came out. I cannot describe the excitement when I saw it in the racks of the HMV store in Glasgow one day in 1984, and that same thrill remains every time I hear it.

Sunset Gun: Can’t Cloud My View – from Be Thankful For What You’ve Got 12” on CBS 1984
1984 was an important year for me, for a whole host of reasons. There were so many great records and so many memories that bubble under the surface of the grooves. Sunset Gun were one of those great Glasgow groups that have been forgotten, I think, mainly because they signed to a major label. If their records had been released in editions of 500 on an ‘indie’ they would now be talked of in hushed tones. They didn’t, and they aren’t, but they should be. Oh, the fact that they had a bit of that (now terminally unfashionable) ‘Glasgow White Soul’ sound probably hasn’t helped of course.

Friends Again: Why Don’t You Ask Someone - from South Of Love 12” on Mercury Records 1984
Friends Again were cast in a harsh light by some as being Postcard wannabes. I never agreed. I still recall being captivated on first hearing them on the radio one dark night, and incredibly enough that same radio moment is captured in the middle of this track which rounded off their final release. It’s a neat circularity; their first and last moments in one song. The second part of this track is particularly magical, with those lines about being too drunk to hold on and suede jackets not keeping out the cold. Still brings a tear to my eye for all kinds of reasons.

The Bathers: Latta’s Dream – from Unusual Places To Die LP – Go! Discs 1987
What Chris Thompson did next. After Friends Again split Chris recorded as The Bathers, and was never better than on this 1987 debut set. This track contains the immortal line “born and raised by sugar cane, she plays guitar like Tom Verlaine”.

Everything But The Girl: Easy As Sin - b-side of Mine 7” on Blanco Y Negro 1984
More from 1984… This would be a prime candidate for Daniel’s ‘backed with’ series. My friend Alan and I argued for ages over which was the better version of this song: this one, with Tracey taking lead vocal, or the one with Ben singing that appeared on the flip of the ‘Angel’ single a year later. But this was the first I heard and so remains my choice.

The Claim: Picking Up The Bitter Little Pieces – 7” on Esurient 1989
The Esurient label was perhaps the label I had the most emotional attachment to back in the late ‘80s; was the label that had the perfect understanding of the Pop process. The Claim, like labelmates Emily and Hellfire Sermons, remain one of the great lost groups and their Boomy Tella set one of the great lost albums. Sadly talk of a Claim retrospective collection fizzled out years ago. Someone should rekindle the flame.

Famous Times: Something To Believe – 7” on Heavenly 1997
With vocals by Alan Tyler of Rockingbirds, this is a gorgeous downbeat number. Recorded with Sean Reed in the Famous Times (hence the name) studios in Hackney, it is another gently sparkling part of the Heavenly firmament

miércoles, 28 de mayo de 2008

Nota sobre The School


me acabo de escuchar el nuevo ep entero y es brillante. Atención a "I Want You Back", yo diría que tendría que haber sido el tema principal.

El nuevo single de The School y una rareza de Pooh Sticks bajo el nombre de Love


Bonito post http://fireescapetalking.blogspot.com/2008/05/school.html

Hablan del nuevo single de The School (mucho mejor que el primero; en myspace se puede oír: http://www.myspace.com/theschoolband)

Y a próposito de él y de su portada, se hace referencia a un extraño single del líder de Pooh Sticks que grabó en 1990 bajo el nombre de Love. La canción se llama "Welsh Girl" y está bastante bien. Te la puedes bajar gratis. Por cierto, en los comentarios/respuestas al post aparece el amigo Harvey Williams

martes, 27 de mayo de 2008

Marvin Gaye - Love starved heart / It's a desperate situation



Marvin Gaye - Love starved heart / It's a desperate situation


This is another Holy Grail for me, ever since I heard it. I owned it on the Chris King giveaway for years, but to honest I wasn't happy about it, and always wanted one of these "proper ones". Well thanks to Andreas in Germany who put his copy on E bay. I believe there was only 100 done, and were given away at a concert or something. I'm sure someone will be able to let me know the full story of it's release. Cheers to Alan Barnes who says............ " The single was given away free at a press conference to launch The Marvin Gaye Box Set, Copies were put on the seats for the media but most were left there, as the yanks had no use for old fashioned vinyl" Valued at £300 - £400 (one went on John Manship's auction for £450 recently I'm told.


FROM : http://www.zen18551.zen.co.uk/Records.htm

Bonita cassette


de http://www.myspace.com/jesselbaltazar y http://blog.myspace.com/brogues

Yeah! Here we are again...with several consecutive MixTape submissions from other music fans for the next few weeks! The fourth MixTape this time comes from Brogues in the UK. I have always seen some of his setlists and wondered what songs he'd pick for a short MixTape and not a club setting! Lo and behold, they are quite great songs...always blurring the lines from the 60s to the 80s to our present time! My wish was that there were 30 songs instead of 20! Maybe next time?...so cheers to Brogues...and Happy Birthday too! Check out his playlist..(randomly played) Please play loud and enjoy!

What's on YOUR Tape 004 ~ No Present Like Time ~ by Brogues


Pencil Tin - "Poignant" (Quiddity) - Most people don't get to run one great label but Mike Babb has run 3: Quiddity, Drive-In and Microindie. Most people don't get to be in one great band but Andrew Withycombe has been in (at least!) 4: Pencil Tin, The Cat's Miaow, huon and Fog & Ocean. These scoundrels are just plain greedy … and talented, of course!
Katerine - "Je M'en Vais" (Rosebud) - Probably the first French indiepop band I ever heard. There used to be a great little French pop mail order called Cowly Owl who sold this kinda gear. My heart sings when the peppy little guitar line catches fire!
Daisycutters "Friends" (Accident) - This song just dropped through my letterbox this week thanks to Uncle eBay. It's on the Accident Records vinyl reissue of "Hoopla". Originally a La-di-da cassette, it also features my favourite song by The Siddeleys: "Bedlam on the Mezzanine".
Belmondo - "Goldfish And Chardonnay" (Papercut) - Pam Berry for president! I just put this on because I wanted to hear it again. It's been too long!
The Blue Aeroplanes - "Veils Of Colour" (Fire) - Poor old Blue Aeroplanes. History hasn't been especially kind to them but I still love everything that I've got by them up to and including "Beatsongs". After that I lost touch with them because my gaze turned to America after hearing Pavement and Polvo and bands of that ilk. I've always loved the "no present like time" line. It's a toss up between this and Rodney Allen's "Careful Boy" for the honour of being my favourite Aeroplanes cut.
The Would Be's - "I'm Hardly Ever Wrong" (Decoy) - John Peel's fondly remembered Radio 1 show introduced me to this fine 12". Apparently Morrissey was a fan. The vocals remind me a little of Julianne's from All About Eve but the music is so much better! I quote this song all the time when people watch a documentary or something news and say that it'll change their life. I'm surprised I haven't been slapped more often!
West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band - "Transparent Day" (Reprise) - For years the only things you could purchase by WCPAEB in the shops of Glasgow and Edinburgh were bootlegs (which I passed on) then finally Reprise repressed it on heavy vinyl and the world rejoiced. The Ropers' cover of this is darn fine, too.
Days - "Motion" (Shelflife) - Along with The Autocollants cd this is the best thing I've bought on Shelflife. Glasgow has a Sounds of Sweden evening and I'd love Days to play at it so that I can melt into this and 'Downhill'.
Brian - "You Don't Want A Boyfriend" (Detzi) - Ireland have won the Eurovision Song Contest a million and nine times but the irony of this is that if they'd entered this it would've got null points because the world isn't fair in any way. Again, some fantastic lyrics. "The more you give yourself away to someone the less they'll think of you" is very astute and always pops into my mind when I get a bit giddy and start divulging all sorts of embarrassing personal details.
Delphine - "Les Prisons De Sa Majeste" (Sasha Monett) - As with most folks I started with Francois Hardy and France Gall and then delved a little deeper. "Swinging Mademoiselle" is a fabulous compilation with this and Clothilde's "Saperlipopette" being the scene stealers.
April March - "Mon Ange Guardien" (Tricatel) - True the Chantal Goya version of this is unbeatable but April and Bertrand Burgalat did a mighty fine job of turning a 60s girlpop classic into something suitable for a 90s easypop club. Great sleeve, too! Additional points are awarded for being on The World's Greatest Format™: 10" vinyl.
Golden - "Don't Destroy Me" (Icerink) - It's not often that piano and bass suck me in but they did on this. Tucked away on the b-side of an Icerink Record 12" this atmospheric little Wiggs and Stanley groover was easy to overlook. Their other single for Icerink – the Jarvis Cocker penned "Wishful Thinking" – is a simply fabulous slice of perky, synthetic, danceable pop which is well worth tracking down.
Claudine Longet - "Wanderlove" (A&M) - An arrangement that can stun pigeons out of the sky! Claudine's vocals are so sweet that if you listen too much you'll need fillings.
Starpower - "Some Velvet Morning" (Visionary) - The Primitives were the first band I ever saw live. It's was years after their mid-80's season in the sun and they were on the slide commercially but they still sounded vital to my inexperienced ears. This came out shortly after they broke up and features ex-Primitives Traci and Paul in the Nancy and Lee roles. It would appear that nobody can do a bad version of this song.
The Cyrkle - "Don't Cry, No Fears, No Tears Comin' Your Way" (Columbia) - Sometimes my brain gets a little pickled. I bought this 10 years ago from Tower Records in Piccadilly thinking it was by the band who originally sang "Superman" as covered so memorably by R.E.M.. That, of course, was The Clique but I didn't feel to too much of a chump when the needle hit the groove and I heard this little topper!
The Marbles - "Go Marilee!" (Bus Stop) - The Apples In Stereo made some corking, effervescent pop in their early days. This is the best thing I've heard Robert Schneider do outside of that band. The fact that it's on Bus Stop simply adds to the charm!
Cessna - "Floating" (Jigsaw) - Way before Finland became the talk of the steamy for its out-there experimental folk bands, Cessna were turning pop heads. Radio Khartoum released their ace debut album as a super cute double 3" cd in tracing paper sleeve package which I seem to have either misplaced or lost custody of. That's the kind of the thing that keeps me up at night.
Rose Melberg and Dustin Reske - "The Love We Could've Had" (Double Agent) - What's the best birthday present anyone has ever given you? Legend has it that this song was written and recorded by Dustin for Rose's birthday one year. Sure beats the underpants and Argyle socks my granny used to give me!
The Loves - "Chelsea Girl" (Track and Field) - My friend Kris recently put the newer, slower version of this song on a cd-r for me and my heart flipped for it. It's easily the best thing I've heard by The Loves. I think the new version is slightly better but I still love the Cherry Red/El-ness of this version. They were tremendous at Indietracks last year, too.
Teenage Fanclub + Alex Chilton - "Patti Girl" (NME) - Although I read the singles reviews in WH Smith every week, I was never a regular reader of the NME so I was fortunate that my pal tipped me the wink that NME were pressing up this little smasher so I bought it that week and sent off my postal order and coupon. "Patti Girl" was originally by Garry and The Hornets (who were all very young hence the "you're only 12 years old" line! – phew!) and when Teenage Fanclub made one of their frequents visits to Radio Scotland's legendary 'Beat Patrol' show they explained to Peter Easton that they had heard it on a mixtape that Calvin Johnson (Beat Happening/K Records) made for Duglas from BMX Bandits. How exciting

Joyona soul gratis: Barbara Jean English



http://fireescapetalking.blogspot.com/2008/05/lost-soul-barbara-jean-english.html

The Autumn Leaves - Long Lost Friends



Hello Folks,

Well, Minnesota is once again a wynter wonderland, this season never dies easy here. This morning I woke up and drove to get our brand new cd from the pressing plant, it’s titled "Long Lost Friend" and I’m really proud of it. It was produced in the northwoods by Gary Burger of the legendary band called The Monks. This is the first cd to only feature four band members (the first two cd’s had three drummers and two bass players each) and everyone did an amazing job.
Take Care,David

The Leaves' new album, "Long Lost Friend" should indeed sound like a long lost friend to fans of such 80's hush-rock bands as The Church, The Go-Betweens, and The Feelies. Band leader David Beckey and his team also pull off some nice Byrds-style paisley-electric fok, especially on the sweetly harmonized "In The Morning."-CR,

(from vita.mn, april 17th, 2008)

It's been six years since local songwriter David Beckey's Autumn Leaves came out with a new album, but its sound has hardly grown stale in the meantime-the gently psychedelic, catchy take on 60's Britpop is as vintage as a fine cabernet. The lineup on the new Long Lost Friend is a perfect storm of Minneapolis retro-mod aficianados, including The Conquerors' Keith Patterson and Steve Kent plus guitarist Jon Hunt, and is produced by Gary Burger of '60's garage-rock legends The Monks. Friend moves mainly in a mellow Kinks/Nick Drake vein, branching out for Beckey's surf-washed "Next To Me," two Byrdsian numbers from Hunt, and a cover of late-'60s English combo The Mirage's "You Can't Be Serious," delivered in Patterson's patentable growl.

(From The Onion-AV Club, Volume 44, Number 16, April 17, 2008


The new album from the Leaves is simply unbelievable! And it continues the tradition of interesting artwork with a brilliant art noveau sleeve. In fact, it's as good as their first album which is already a classic in my book. Treats and Treasures had some real stand-outs in "When I Close My Eyes", "The Summer's Gone" etc, and although nothing on Long Lost Friend reaches quite the same heights, the lows are nonexistent. On the whole, the music is a notch softer and leans more towards the jangle end of the folk rock spectrum, where the debut had a bit more of a garage punch and some psychedelic flourishes. I'm not kidding when I say this is the best janglepop since East Village and has as justified a claim to the Best Album of the Year So Far title as The Airfields' cd. There's more Rickenbacker and acoustic 12-string in these 36 minutes than what is officially healthy!

The record leads off with "Lighthouse" (that you can hear on MySpace) - an instant classic and one of David Beckey's finest compositions. Guitarist Jon Hunt (almost John Hunt's namesake!) has contributed the next one called "Summer Sunshine Girl" which made for a perfect soundtrack to a cuppa coffee in a sun-drenched backyard earlier today. Reading the songwriting credits is actually rather interesting as they're just vague enough. E.g. the backwards five-second intro "Emo Texan" is credited to Yekceb (read it backwards!). If you didn't know already, you'll learn that "In the Morning" is a Bee Gees cover. Given a beautiful treatment here with harmonies and banjo-style Rickenbacker picking. And I tracked down "You Can't Be Serious" as a 1966 b-side by British pop-sike group The Mirage. That's the one song that sticks out in the set, because of its raucous vocal - I'm guessing it's Keith Patterson singing... just because he plays such a mean-looking Burns Bison bass! "Wintertyme Joy" is the only psychedelic song this time around and can also be found on MySpace, along with the laidback title-track. "Make My Move" doesn't exactly suffer from having almost the same melody as "The Rollercoaster Ride" by Belle & Sebastian, and "Back to Me" has a very Felty guitar line (including a solo that even Lawrence ought to dig). The closing track "Bonfire In the Sand" connects with the heathen theme of the artwork, thanks to some freaky vocals and chuckling goblins.

That's almost all the tracks and they all deserve to be mentioned, honestly, because even the ones I left out are brilliant. More brilliant American pop is on If Things Were Perfect, in the shape of a rare Honeybunch flexi track.

(from www.heavenisabove.blogspot.com )

I love The Autumn leaves ... and your blog too !!!

I did not know that TALs had another CD out until I saw it in yout blog today. I am going to order a (physical) copy of that wonderful CD right now!

Thanks

-------------http://federicapulladixit.blogspot.com/

Federica Pulla said...

sábado, 24 de mayo de 2008

Annette Funicello


Acabo de descubrir a esta chica. Al parecer fue una estrella de la Disney a finales de los 50 y principios de los 60, así como una actriz del mainstream de la época (especialmente del surf y de las felices películas playeras de los 60)

Naturalmente interpreta canciones muy comerciales de la época y toca todo tipo de generos (desde el twist al chachacha, pasando por el ska o la música hawaiana) pero se especializó en el surf. Tenía una voz deliciosa y parece que el público infantil y las clases medias americanas le adoraban

Todo es muy retro pero muy divertido ¡viva la frivolidad!. Y la iconografía es digna de verse (ver este web: http://www.beachpartymoviemusic.com/) Ni que decir tiene que esto empacha y mucho. Degustar con pequeñas dosis es lo mejor en estos casos

Bio de allmusic:

The most popular of the Mouseketeers on the '50s TV program The Mickey Mouse Club, Annette Funicello was herded into the studio at the age of 16 to become the first female teen idol rock & roll star. Billed simply as Annette on most of her records, she hit the Top 20 five times in 1959 and 1960, and continued to record constantly in the early '60s as she moved into film stardom in a variety of California beach-culture vehicles. With her thin voice double-tracked and reverbed to achieve the necessary volume, the material was largely saccharine pop clap-trap flavored with elements of rock & roll. Kitschy overtones of Italian and Hawaiian popular music also figured strongly, and she even took stabs at surf and ska. She retired from recording in the mid-'60s to raise her family

Mondo Exotica: Sounds, Visions, Obsessions of the Cocktail Generation (Paperback) by Francesco Adinolfi


Book Description

Tiki torches, cocktails, la dolce vita, and the music that popularized them--Mondo Exotica offers a behind-the-scenes look at the sounds and obsessions of the Space Age/Cold War period as well as the renewed interest in them evident in contemporary music and design. The music journalist and radio host Francesco Adinolfi provides extraordinary detail about artists, songs, albums, and soundtracks, while also presenting an incisive analysis of the ethnic and cultural stereotypes embodied in exotica and related genres. In this encyclopedic account of films, books, TV programs, mixed drinks, and, above all, music, he balances a respect for exotica's artistic innovations with a critical assessment of what its popularity says about postwar society in the United States and Europe, and what its revival implies today.
Adinolfi interviewed a number of exotica greats, and Mondo Exotica incorporates material from his interviews with Martin Denny, Esquivel, the Italian film composers Piero Piccioni and Piero Umiliani, and others. It begins with an extended look at the postwar popularity of exotica in the United States. Adinolfi describes how American bachelors and suburbanites embraced the Polynesian god Tiki as a symbol of escape and sexual liberation; how Les Baxter's 1951 album Ritual of the Savage ushered in the exotica music craze; and how Martin Denny's Exotica built on that craze, hitting number one in 1957. Adinolfi chronicles the popularity of performers from Yma Sumac, "the Peruvian Nightingale," to Esquivel, who was described by Variety as "the Mexican Duke Ellington," to the chanteuses Eartha Kitt, Julie London, and Ann-Margret. He explores exotica's many sub-genres, including mood music, crime jazz, and spy music. Turning to Italy, he reconstructs the postwar years of la dolce vita, explaining how budget spy films, spaghetti westerns, soft-core porn movies, and other genres demonstrated an attraction to the foreign. Mondo Exotica includes a discography of albums, compilations, and remixes. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

About the Author

Francesco Adinolfi is an Italian journalist and radio host. He oversees the production of "Ultrasuoni," a weekly music supplement in Il Manifesto, one of Italy's daily newspapers, and he hosts the radio show Popcorner, a mix of electro lounge, funk, and ultrabossa. Previously, he hosted Ultrasuoni Cocktail, a cult hit program on Rai Radio 2, Italy's national station. The author of the book Suoni dal ghetto: La musica rap dalla strada alle hit-parade, he has written for magazines including Melody Maker, Sounds, and Record Mirror (Great Britain); Revoluciones Por Minuto (Spain), Music Express (Canada), Juke (Australia); and Crossbeat (Japan). Karen Pinkus is Professor of French, Italian, and Comparative Literature at the University of Southern California. She is the author of The Montesi Scandal: The Death of Wilma Montesi and the Birth of the Paparazzi in Fellini's Rome and Bodily Regimes: Italian Advertising under Fascism. Jason Vivrette is a graduate student in comparative literature at the University of California, Berkeley. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

miércoles, 21 de mayo de 2008

Domingo: Music for Sunday Lovers


del fotolog de mr.nilsson

Domingo

Uno de los fantásticos libros musicales que traje de Japón, fue este pequeño llamado: "Domingo. Music for Sunday Lovers".

El título, robado del álbum de Caetano Velloso y Gal Costa, ya dice bastante. Está dividido en función de si el domingo es soleado, nuboso o lluvioso.

Aunque mayoritariamente está dedicado a la bossanova, incluye muchísimas recomendaciones de discos desde los 80 hasta nuestros días de discos de pop. Y rarezas del tipo: versión de "Oye papá, oye mamá", interpretada por un dúo femenino llamado Sola (¿alguien lo conoce?). O el álbum del olvidado grupo español Tiza. Todo exquisiteces.

Dan ganas de escucharlos todos, a pesar de que hoy domingo no hay amante con quien hacerlo. Por lo menos a estas horas...

martes, 20 de mayo de 2008

Dave Edmunds y su "Baby I Love You"


Me he encontrado una bonita versión del "Baby I Love You" de The Ronettes realizada por Dave Edmunds. Está en un lp titulado "Subtle as a Flying Mallet" de 1975


Taking the one-man band aesthetic to an extreme, Dave Edmunds recorded nearly all his second album Subtle As A Flying Mallet on his own, hiring a bassist and a drummer for only a pair of tracks. Alternating between Spector classics, the Everly Brothers, Chuck Berry, and a variety of R&B, country and pop numbers, Edmunds hits on all the styles of the late '50s and early '60s. 1998 reissue on One Way Records of his debut album, first released on RCA in 1975. This CD features all original cover artwork & all 12 tracks from the original release, including 'Baby I Love You', 'Leave My Woman Alone' and 'Maybe'

lunes, 19 de mayo de 2008

The Explorers Club - "Freedom Wind" LP (2008)


LA MEJOR COPIA QUE PUEDES ENCONTRAR DE THE BEACH BOYS. Retro total; vamos que hasta la preciosa pastiche-portada (todo aquí es un pastiche) aparenta la marca del supuesto vinilo...

sábado, 17 de mayo de 2008

Isobel Campbell ¡por fin! edita una canción medio decente con Lanegan



de su nuevo lp. La canción se llama "Come On Over".

Bon Iver, el nuevo hype de la prensa inglesa



Bajo el nombre de Bon Iver, se esconde un americano que después de sufrir un desengaño amoroso, se largó a una cabaña perdida por las montañas de Wisconsin. Allí sólo, en pleno invierno, casi sin viveres (cuenta que se alimentaba de carne cruda), se dedicó a grabar su lp de debut "For Emma, Forever Ago", que acaba de ser editado en Uk por 4 AD ante el alborozo del Mojo y Uncut que le dan 5 estrellas y poco menos que lo califican de la obra maestra del año. La alegría de la huerta no es, precisamente; la comparación más cercana que se me ocurre es Iron & Wine. Un disco para críticos. Si alguien tiene la curiosidad de escucharlo, las mejores son las dos últimas canciones del lp: "For Emma" y "Re: stacks"

Por cierto, ya ha estado en el programa de Jools Holland, siempre a atento a mezclar a los clásicos con lo último de lo último:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/later/shows/series32/episode07/boniver/

Y aquí una de las críticas superlativas:

http://www.uncut.co.uk/music/bon_iver/reviews/11530

Stereolab fichan por 4 ad


Stereolab - Welcome, Bienvenue, Willkommen
24 April 08

We're delighted to confirm what the eagle eyed among you have already spotted, Stereolab's forthcoming new album, Chemical Chords, is indeed being released by Duophonic UHF Disks / 4AD on August 18th (August 19th for those in the US).

Chemical Chords is their first album proper since 2004's Margerine Eclipse (if you discount the EP collection of 2006, Fab Four Suture) and it features thirteen songs by Laetitia Sadier and Tim Gane and one solo Gane composition, as well as string and brass arrangements from Sean O'Hagan. The picture you see to the right is the sleeve for the new album and the tracklisting reads like this...

1. Neon Beanbag
2. Three Women
3. One Finger Symphony
4. Chemical Chords
5. The Ecstatic Static
6. Valley Hi!
7. Silver Sands
8. Pop Molecule (Molecular Pop 1)
9. Self Portrait with "Electric Brain"
10. Nous Vous Demandons Pardon
11. Cellulose Sunshine
12. Fractal Dream Of A Thing
13. Daisy Click Clack
14. Vortical Phonotheque

jueves, 15 de mayo de 2008

Ben Vaughn "Designs in Music" : Divertido muzak


Textos extraídos de Amazon y allmusic


Rarely does one record so confidently honor a category like Ben Vaughn's Designs in Music. This fun, audio soundtrack for what could be spaghetti westerns, quirky sitcoms, romantic cinema, and jazzy incidental moments creates its own kind of visual stories, moods, meditations, and more than its share of whimsy. You're bound to hear echoes of Henry Mancini, Enrico Morricone, and others whose film scores from the '60s and '70s remain some of the most unsung works of pop culture even today. On "While We're Here," Vaughn and various member of his exquisitely assembled 15-piece ensemble also give a bold shout out to Mark Isham, who scored many of Alan Rudolph's films in the '80s. You can also tell the way he voices various instruments and vocal splashes throughout that he's yet another Brian Wilson aficionado. Which is not to say Designs is a retro album full of homage. Rather, it's Vaughn and company exploring terrain that is familiar and foreign and always original, with inventive flourishes and cool and occasionally abstract song titles. Like the best of the genre, these intriguing music beds always seem to lie right below our consciousness and yet right on our radar screens, too. --Martin Keller

Guitarist and composer Ben Vaughn has obviously listened long and hard to early-'60s exotica, TV themes, spy films, spaghetti Westerns, and cocktail music. His Designs in Music -- a highly arranged, richly textured collection of original instrumentals -- manages to pay tribute to guitarists Hank Marvin, Duane Eddy, and Vinnie Bell, and composers Martin Denny and Ennio Morricone, without being utterly derivative. Hearing the peppy themes and doo-ahh vocals, one might be tempted to write off Vaughn's music as kitsch. But a careful listening reveals a depth in the orchestration and writing that's totally AWOL in modern pop. Vaughn's guitar palette runs the gamut from spanky, tremolo-drenched lines to moody jazz-noir, and his vintage tones are always cleverly framed by various combinations of strings, brass, reeds, old-school analog synth and combo organ, harp, percussion, pedal steel, and wordless singing. Going on a road trip? These quirky sounds will make a perfect soundtrack.

While rock fans know Ben Vaughn from the handful of witty but rockin' albums he cut in the '80s and '90s with his band the Ben Vaughn Combo, since the mid-'90s Vaughn has been making his bread and butter working as a composer for film and television, hitting pay dirt with his music for the shows Third Rock from the Sun, Grounded for Life and That 70s Show. For his first album since 1997, Vaughn has taken his inspiration from his current day job by composing and conducting 12 pieces for movies that exist only in his head. Recorded with a 16-piece studio band (complete with horns, strings, and a whistler), Designs in Music is a collection of instrumentals that harkens back to the era when film scores had personality and added atmosphere to a film rather than simply adding more rumble to the Dolby Surround mix. Vaughn appears to be having some fun with this stuff, and the shadows of such sonic eccentrics as Esquivel and Joe Meek can be heard throughout the album, but Designs in Music doesn't sound at all like a goof; there's far too much skill on display for this to be a joke, and Vaughn and his collaborators certainly do right by their influences; the spy flick ambiance of "The Stalker Pt. II," the western pastiche on "Smoketree Serenade," the European intrigue of "The Big Parade," and the uber-cheery "Avanti" wouldn't sound out of place in any number of late-show epics from the '60s, while the arrangements (by Vaughn and Ryan "Shmedly" Maynes) are superbly inventive (facing the rattley twang of the bass end of a clavinet against a banjo shouldn't work, but somehow they make it happen). Designs in Music is smart and engaging fun that honors pop music history while making just a little of its own.

miércoles, 14 de mayo de 2008

New Order DVD


DVD Description

Tracklist

Disc 1 'Crystal', 'Turn', 'True Faith', 'Regret', 'Ceremony', ' Who’s Joe', 'These Days', 'Krafty', 'Waiting For The Sirens Call', 'You Silent Face', 'Guilty Is A Useless Emotion', 'Bizarre Love Triangle', 'Temptation', 'Perfect Kiss', 'Blue Monday', 'Transmission', 'Shadowplay', 'Love Will Tear Us Apart'.


Disc 2 CELEBRATION 1981 Ceremony I.C.B Chosen Time GLASTONBURY 1981 Senses Procession The Him

ROME 1982 Ultraviolence Hurt CORK 1983 Leave Me Alone Everything’s Gone Green

ROTTERDAM 1985 Sunrise As it is when it was The Village This time of night TORONTO 1985 We All Stand Age of Consent Temptation

SHORELINE 1989 Dream Attack 1963 HYDE PARK WIRELESS Run Wild She’s Lost Control

Synopsis

Legendary rockers New Order raise the roof of Glasgow's Carling Academy with a rousing setlist that spans an impressive career and pays tribute to the band's Joy Division days.

martes, 13 de mayo de 2008

Bobby and Blumm




Hay dos canciones aquí que se dejan escuchar ("This Piece" y "In Future Present". El resto del lp es un poco aburrido. Hacen algo así como folk tecno, música intimista a cargo de una chica Bobby Baby(sueca, que colaboró con Montt Mardie) y de Frank Blumm. Pertenecen a Morr Music. Salen en el Go! Magazine de este mes, aunque no dicen mucho

Bobby & Blumm" live in Berlin and were introduced to each other by Thomas Morr in early 2007.They are dealing with voices and pickings, on electro-acoustic guitar, keyboards and other biscuits.They are giving the wide world of pop new structures, little turns and unexpected changes. They are adding hiss and rustle, purity and warmth. They sound dreamy, detailed, soft and fragile. They make silent-songs.

lunes, 12 de mayo de 2008

Slow Down Tallahassee: Bonito single de indie pop ¡GRATIS!



Las dos canciones estarán incluidas en su lp de debut que se publica a finales de Mayo. Son de Sheffield, hay un chico pero mayormente son chicas. Las dos canciones se pueden bajar aquí: http://www.heychuck.com/theespc/index.html

Thee SPC are very proud to announce the imminent arrival of Slow Down Tallahassee’s “The Beautiful Light”.

This debut album, produced by Sheffield legend Alan Smyth (Arctic Monkeys, Long Blondes, Pulp, Richard Hawley, etc.), is a shining beacon of fuzzed-up indie pop! As Slow Down Tallahassee say themselves:

“We started the band because we wanted to write songs with warmth and passion. Songs that people could dance to and fall in love with, combining truth with fantasy, exploring the shadows between innocence and corruption. But, above all, our goal has been to make a great pop record.”

And that they have done. Taking guidance from their love of 50s twang, 60s pop and 80s indie, Slow Down Tallahassee have created a world of their very own. Join the gang and you’ll never be lonely again.

RELEASE DATE 26th MAY BUT AVAILABLE TO ORDER NOW!

Esto es lo que dice de ellas el amigo Tangents/unpopular

So anyway, having whined about not knowing what is out there, what other contemporary treats can I share with you? Well, what about Slow Down Tallahassee’s Beautiful Light set, due out on the Sheffield Phonographic Corporation label later this month? I had missed the ‘So Much For Love’ single last year, but am delighted to be catching up with them now. If I was being lazy I would reel out some line about Slow Down Tallahassee joining a pristine line of girl Pop à la Pipettes and Lucky Soul, but really they are informed less by ’50s / ’60s bubblegum pop and more by those infatuations filtered through an ’80s indiepop fuzz. This could be a recipe for disaster (I mean, I listened to some old Primitives records the other day and was appalled), but in this case thankfully it is not, for Slow Down Tallahassee instead lift the bar and end up somewhere not a million miles from where some of the fine My Favorite records ended up. There is also in places a flavour of groups like Stereolab and Mahagony at their Pop finest; something in the insistent rhythms and grooves. ‘Electric Sun’ in particular sounds exactly as it ought, full of guitars that crunch and mesh like ‘Sensitive’ Field Mice with a disembodied vocal floating away in the breeze like a Seefeel breath of nectar. Best of all though is the mesmerising ‘Tallahassee Bop’. Built solidly on a ‘Norwegian Wood’ refrain, it’s the kind of song that you cannot help but stick on repeat. Lyrically it is peachy, too, and is perhaps the best example of how Slow Down Tallahassee update the hinted at sexual infusion of those old ’50s teen-pop tunes. Oddly enough, I touched on this almost exactly a year ago when the Young Playthings album came out, and indeed The Beautiful Light has the same kind of eager thrill and complete lack of Rock earnestness that made Who Invented Love such a wonderful blast of Pop brilliance.
“I’ll see you in my dreams, making those eyes at me, I’ll go with you daddyo…”

domingo, 11 de mayo de 2008

Segundo lp de The Occasional Keepers


TRUE NORTH (LTMCD 2511) £10

The second Keepers album was recorded in February 2008, and again produced by the band with Ian Catt. Retaining plenty of acoustic, reflective elements from the previous record, True North adds experimental, song-based pop touches to great effect. Beth Arzy (Aberdeen/TBS) also guests, while Caesar and Carolyn revisit their own illustrious past on the track Factory Records.


REVIEWS: "In the last twenty years lots of fads & fashions have had a dalliance with generations of indie kids but the purity of soul on offer from The Occasional Keepers new album is even greater than I can recall back then. This is Bobby's collaboration with Caesar & Carolyn from Scots legends The Wake who were the fragile Northern siblings of New Order on Factory. So I can truly say this second offering from them is a total gem. Without space to elaborate on individual tracks, all I can reveal is that it unfolds like a brittle flower, full of wistful synths, longing vocals, sweet guitars, purring bass lines & fantastic songs. Absolutely the perfect distillation of both bands, this is a more realized & satisfying listen than I could imagine, ranking alongside the best stuff from either band. Organic electronics combined with long patented touches make this a mature, melancholic masterwork. Mmm! LTM are doing the alternative community a great service in unearthing forgotten gems from this spectrum (which forms the flatbed of my musical heart!) and also pushing the sound forward with fresh treats such as this.....so they're a label with absolute mastery & pedigree in my eyes! So just buy this CD and melt" (Norman Records, 04/2008); "Unsurprisingly it's luxurious pop all the way, varying in tempo from ambient to the gently giddy. Classier than any twee meeting of minds. If they get too earnest at points, the sharp heart that lurks in their poignant acoustics makes them one to keep" (Planet Sound (BBC Teletext), 04/2008); "Very decent follow up to their 2005 debut. True North is far more immediate than its predecessor, with yes, a more New Order mid-80s manchester feel to the songs - not surprising at all, considering the imput of Caesar and Carolyn from Factory legends The Wake. If the Ravens Leave is an excellent opener, especially when they crash in the bass, while the final Bobby song (A Distant Piano on a Foggy Night) evokes experimental-era OMD, as Carolyn reads the shipping news over electonic static and beats. Great. As a whole, True North betters Empty Vessel, and the record is driven (as always) by Ian Catt`s excellent production. 4 out of 5" (Rate Your Music, 04/2008); "Opening track If the Ravens Leave curls up in the hearth-warmed electronics and bedsit earnestness that have been the hallmarks of Wratten's groups, overseen here by Saint Etienne producer/multi-instrumentalist Ian Catt. Wratten murmuringly describes the birds' departure "beneath the moon's glow," as minimal guitar stabs, sustained synth chords, and programmed beats - accompanied eventually by chiming guitars and, later, a skeletal bass line - evoke a cozy intimacy. It's the middle of a long night, the middle of a long day, and the radio weather report butts up against the stereo's Stardust as Wratten envisions kingdoms falling. Twee is a humble kingdom, for sure, but one that has managed to quietly piss off hostile attackers for multiple generations of bands now" (Pitchfork, 05/2008); "In their 1980's pomp both The Wake and The Field Mice made wistful innocent-sounding music which promised romance and melancholy in equal measure. So when members of both bands chose to collaborate in 2005, Bobby Wratten, Caesar and Caroline Allen duly delivered an album of music for sensitive souls. The follow-up is dispatched in much the same manner with a smattering of light electronica again bringing their style bang up to date. As an opening, If The Ravens Leave sums up all that was good about both bands; the happy/sad tune delivered in comforting tones. Town Of 85 Lights and I've Realized are essentially a return to The Wake circa 1990 when they moved from Factory to Sarah Records; their music becoming lighter. Not quite as light as the Allen-sung The Life Of The Fields, though, which is as tender as a snowflake. In a further nod to their pasts, there's time for an ambient/experimental homage to Factory Records, whilst Snow And Feathers has a definite Durutti Column feel. Yet the real highlight for me is Leave The Secret There Forever - everything about it is subtle and beautiful, from the insistent bass and the light guitar jangle to the shimmering keyboards and Wratten's confiding vocals. It beats the similarly dreamlike Elsinore in to a close second. Taken as a whole, True North stays true to the musicians' pasts and proves that - even though they've embraced modern production techniques - their music can still be heartfelt and touching" (Leonard's Lair, 05/2008)

miércoles, 7 de mayo de 2008

Edwyn Collins, la palabra "twee" y recorte de prensa sobre Collins


en fire escape talking hablan la actuación en Londres de Edwyn Collins. Debió de ser algo muy raro por lo que cuenta, con su hijo detrás intentando ayudarle y con Roddy Frame también al tanto... También hay un post en el mismo blog sobre la palabreja "twee", que el autor del blog considera insultante y le resulta increíble que haya gente que la utilize de forma orgullosa. El blogista pertenece -evidentemente- a la escuela indie de los 80 y no de los 90, y sabe perfectamente que el indie pop era antimacho y antirock pero nunca twee, y le pone muy nervioso dicha palabra, que en los 80 era claramente peyorativa y que increiblemente en los 90 muchos indies la hicieron suya hasta convertir la escena indiepop en una broma cuasi infantil (con expresa referencia a los Fat Tulips y gente así).
Finalmente The Observer publicó recientemente una pequeña entrevista a Edwyn Collins (pinchar en la foto para hacerla más grande). Dusty sevens es quien la ha colgado. La entrevista es realmente emotiva. Casi me ha hecho llorar (y el final de la casa familiar de 1800 es la guinda)

martes, 6 de mayo de 2008

El nuevo single de The Radio Dept ¡gratis!


New single from The Radio Dept. - free MP3

"It’s time – once again and more clearly than before – to show our standpoint. ’Freddie and the Trojan Horse’ is about the untruthfulness of the Swedish right-wing government and how the leading party seized power by portraying itself as supportive of the workers.” THE RADIO DEPT. April 17th, 2008.

Download free MP3 here >>>

In the beginning of 2007 people started talking about new material from The Radio Dept. There was even a rumour going on that they were working on two albums simultaneously and that both would be released in May the same year. In other words, two albums merely one year after the release of the previous album ”Pet Grief”. Those who had followed the band for a few years and knew how they work probably suspected this would not happen.

"Freddie and the Trojan Horse" is a first taste of their upcoming album ”Clinging to a scheme” due to be released on September 10. The new songs are said to be influenced by minimalistic post-punk, krautrock, repetitive "motorik" beat and ambient noise. We'll, hopefully, know if that's true on September 10.

The Radio Dept. "Freddie and the Trojan Horse" (LAB105, 3-track CD Single) is out on June 4.

The Radio Dept. - "Freddie and the Trojan Horse"
CD/Single-LAB115

Track listing
1. Freddie and the Trojan Horse
2. Closing scene
3. The room, Tarzana

Release date: June 4
It's easy ordering from Labrador...

sábado, 3 de mayo de 2008

Ally Kerr


PRESS RELEASE - MARCH 2008

ALLY KERR’S “OFF THE RADAR” NEARS RELEASE DATE.


With his loyal, established fan base eager for new material, and new converts springing up daily across the globe, one of Scotland’s fastest-rising artists and best-kept secrets, singer/songwriter Ally Kerr releases the brand new album, Off The Radar on 14th April 2008 on Much Obliged Records. It will be also released in Japan on the Star Sign / Ultra-Vybe label on 15th March 2008 and will be supported by Japanese tour in April.

Bursting with delicious melodies, achingly beautiful harmonies and playful yet poignant lyrics, this new release is a step up from the critically-acclaimed debut album, Calling Out To You, which was initially released in Japan and included in a major Japanese magazine’s top 20 albums ever to come put of Scotland, alongside the works of Orange Juice, Belle and Sebastian and Teenage Fanclub. One of the tracks, The Sore Feet Song was then used as the theme song for the hugely popular animation series “Mushishi”, which has since been given an international DVD release.

A limited edition single from this new album – “Could Have Been A Contender” - was not only released to glowing reviews and international airplay, but was also nominated for “Single of the Year” on German radio’s influential Popscene show.

Off The Radar combines the fragile beauty of ballads “Be The One”, “There’s A World”, “Footprints”, “Is It Too Late To Work For NASA?”, and “Amorino” with upbeat, perfectly-formed, jangly pop gems “I Think I’m Bleeding”, “The Truth That I Have Earned”, the aforementioned “Could Have Been A Contender” and the glam/grunge guitar collision that is the title track.

Although echoes of Belle & Sebastian, Kings Of Convenience and Simon & Garfunkel resonate, along with shades of The Lilac Time, Kerr’s style is singularly distinctive and Off The Radar should surely give one of Scotland’s most reserved yet brightest musical talents the acclaim he richly deserves.

Tracklisting:
01. Could Have Been A Contender*
02. Be The One
03. I Think I’m Bleeding*
04. There’s A World**
05. The Toothbrush Song
06. Off The Radar*
07, Old Friend*
08. Is It Too Late To Work For NASA?
09. Mystery Star
10. Amorino
11. The Truth That I Have Earned*
12. Footprints

* Denotes tracks recommended for airplay
** Forthcoming single (28th April 2008)

Press Quotes:

"A great new songwriting talent from Scotland" – Bob Harris, BBC
“ Beautifully melancholic" – Press Association
"Gorgeous" - Alex Hampshire, XFM
"Wonderful Scottish power pop" - Gary Crowley, BBC Radio
"A sparkling tunesmith" – Metro
"If someone tells me they have heard better-written songs this year I will duel with them at dawn" - Dominik Diamond, XFM
"Simply beautiful tunes" – Music Magazine, Japan
"Ally Kerr deserves to be a star" – Daily Record
"Sweet pop gems" – Sunday Mail
"Songs to go quietly wild for" - Maverick Magazine
"Wistful powerpop brilliance” – Subba-cultcha.com


Release date: 14th April 2008
FORMAT: CD album CATALOGUE NUMBER: MOR002 BAR CODE: 5024545499629
FILE UNDER: Alternative Rock/Pop DISTRIBUTION: Shellshock

Label Info: Much Obliged Records info@muchobligedrecords.com
Press & Radio: Relentless PR: 0208 778 1281 leni.p(at)tiscali.co.uk
Distribution: Shellshock 020 8800 8110 info(at)shellshock.co.uk

- ENDS -

BIOGRAPHY

One of Scotland’s fastest-rising songwriters retuns to Japan in April for some acoustic shows – the third visit to the Far East in four years. Ally Kerr’s success in Japan followed the release of his critically acclaimed debut album, much of which was written on planes, trains and automobiles as Ally travelled between the East Coast of the USA and the West Coast of Scotland. Calling Out To You was first released on Japanese label Quince Records and was included in a top Japanese music magazine’s list of top 20 albums ever to come out of Scotland, sitting alongside the works of Orange Juice, Teenage Fanclub and Belle and Sebastian.


During his first-ever headlining tour of Japan, Kerr received word that one of his songs was to feature as the theme tune to a major new Japanese animated TV series Mushishi, based on a hugely popular comic book. The Sore Feet Song was released in Japan as a CD single and his fanbase in far-flung corners of the world is growing rapidly as a result of this exposure. A major karaoke company have added this track to their catalogue and new converts in China, Japan and the USA have been eager to find out more. The series is set to air in at least five more countries and was released on DVD in America last summer.


All of this comes after his self-funded debut album, Calling Out To You was released in Japan and word of its beauty quickly spread. The singer/songwriter’s international profile rose another notch after he was selected to play at the 2006 North by North-East music festival in June – Canada’s biggest and most important music festival, rivalling South by South-West in Austin, Texas.


The home team finally took notice and Calling Out To You received a full UK-wide release on Neon Tetra Records in 2005. Although echoes of Belle & Sebastian, The Concretes, Kings Of Convenience, Simon and Garfunkel and many other artists resonate, Kerr’s style is singularly distinctive. Scotland on Sunday recognised him as “one of the most interesting and creative musicians working in the country right now” in its rundown of the hottest new Scottish talent. Melodious, heartfelt, beautiful, sad and quirky are adjectives regularly used to describe the record.


The release of the album followed the critical success of his limited edition debut EP, Midst of the Storm, which was released on 7-inch white vinyl by cult Spanish label Elefant Records (Lambchop, Camera Obscura) and garnered airplay around the world. BBC Radio 1’s John Peel was one such DJ who championed Kerr’s early work on his shows.


Kerr released the limited edition single Could Have Been A Contender in 2007 to critical acclaim and is currently releasing his new album, Off The Radar on Much Obliged Records and in Japan on the newUltra-Vybe sub-label Star Sign Records. Songs from this album have been played live at recent shows and received a great reaction, with many agreeing that this album is a step up from the much lauded debut.

Visit www.myspace.com/allykerr to hear tracks from his debut album.

viernes, 2 de mayo de 2008

Top 5





1 The Last Shadow Puppets - "Meeting Place"
2 The Kingfishers - "Make me Sad"
3 Liechtenstein - "Apathy" (http://c86indiepoparchive.blogspot.com/2008/05/liechtenstein-apathy-single-fraction.html )
4 The Last Shadow Puppets - "My Mistakes Were Made for You"
5 The Lodger - "My Finest Hour"

Muchas noticias sobre Costello


Estrena web, rueda para una Tv canadiense un programa llamado Spectacle y edita "Momofuku" (título dedicado a un japonés que inventó -ver google- la cup noodle) con inivitados sopresa: Jenny Lewis (Rilo Kiley)

Datos personales

Mi foto
contact: silvinaberenguergomez@gmail.com