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| Celebrating the birthday of Rough Trade boss Geoff Travis with the RT/NME C81 cassette. Have a listen right here. |
Showing posts with label Rough Trade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rough Trade. Show all posts
Friday, February 2, 2024
Happy Birthday Geoff Travis!
Labels:
C81,
Geoff Travis,
Rough Trade
Saturday, November 27, 2021
That time Delta 5 played "Mind Your Own Business" at Hurrah in 1980
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| Here's Delta 5 with Julz Sale – who passed away in September – and Bethan Peters performing "Mind Your Own Business." |
Sunday, September 15, 2019
Check out the title track off Gruff Rhys' new PANG! album
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| Gruff Rhys recorded the PANG! album in collaboration with South African producer Muzi (see interview after the clip). |
Labels:
Gruff Rhys,
Muzi,
PANG!,
Rough Trade
Friday, April 26, 2019
One For The Weekend: The Raincoats
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| Here's Gina Birch's video for "Fairytale in the Supermarket" off The Raincoats debut 7-inch released 40 years ago today on Rough Trade. |
Friday, June 29, 2018
Happy Birthday Vivien Goldman!
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| Cheers to musician, journalist and educator Vivien Goldman on her day – here are a few clips worth checking. |
Saturday, October 22, 2016
Watch an entertaining fan-made video for Jeffrey Lewis's So What If I Couldn't Take It
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| The Zachary Weinstein-directed clip was animated by Sebastian Gatton, Stefan Blair and Alonzo Yanes. |
Wednesday, May 18, 2016
Thursday, August 2, 2012
David Baker resurfaces in Variety Lights
More than 18 years since he left the public spotlight, David Baker, enigmatic frontman of the original Mercury Rev, is back with new band Variety Lights. The long overdue new release Central Flow is a collaboration between Baker and synth savant Will MacLean and demonstrates that Baker has lost none of his flair for the extraordinary, the experimental and the exceptional.
As co-founder and vocalist of Mercury Rev, Baker helped create their revolutionary sound with their first two (and best) albums; 1991's Yerself Is Steam and 1993's Boces. The innovative Buffalonians were loud, fun and hugely influential in the UK where their work was excitedly gushed about by the British music press. As Chris Roberts wrote in his review of Yerself Is Steam for Melody Maker "At last, one of those rare records that revolve along once in a blooming moon and have something new to struggle to say... A daring, brazen, and demented juxtaposition of voice and guitars and timpani flings Mercury Rev, lemming like at your more responsive caches of fear." If you're wondering, that was meant to be a rave.
Having left the band in 1993, Baker went on to release a solo album World under the moniker Shady, which featured members of the Boo Radleys, Rollerskate Skinny, Swervedriver and Th' Faith Healers (remember them? Didn't think so). At times soaringly catchy and lightheartedly loony, World is a sonic adventure which someone writing for Vox described as "... awash with fragments of dense noise, stumbling, narcotic-laced tempos and lyrics from outer space... that mutate into spiky, bittersweet pop."
Although there has been much speculation about his life during his time away from the public eye, Baker has continued to make recordings and is an avid music fan, working as a producer for various artists. Now he is back, morphed and transmogrified into Variety Lights, a name lifted from Federico Fellini's 1950 cinematic debut. After Eminem forever ruined the name Shady, Baker clearly had to come up with something new. Copping the title from an obscure Italian film about an old dude and his band of misfits seems perfectly fitting for his new project and he can also rest easy knowing that there's absolutely no chance that Marshall Mathers or anyone associated with him has seen it.
When he met Will MacLean, Baker found a songwriting partner who shared a passion for analog synths and electronic psychedelia. Initial experimentation together live to tape - to see how big and crazy just the two of them could sound - started to reveal melodies and Variety Lights was born.
Much of Variety Lights' debut was recorded by Baker at his own Over the Trees studio. The sound was created using a mixture of chained around-the-room 80's era midi expanders as well as the duo's collection of vintage keyboards and combining them with an array of drum machines and effected guitars.
In creating Central Flow, Baker says that "personal adventure is and always has been the most important thing". Baker and MacLean found themselves using references to colours, pictures and describing film scenes to help them communicate about their music. As in his early work, Baker took a richly layered approach, using multiple vocals in a search to find emotion in noises and sounds.
There are plans to play the songs live with a full band including drums and bass, with dates to follow later on in 2012. Have a listen to three tracks from Variety Lights' Silent Too Long EP below...
Tuesday, March 6, 2012
Hear the new Mystery Jets single Someone Purer
Someone Purer by Mystery Jets
Here's what The Mystery Jets frontman Blaine Harrison had to say about the group's fourth album Radlands (out April 30) which they recorded in Austin:
“We’ve always wanted to make a record in America and after touring Serotonin the time felt perfect to go and do it. Our first three albums were entirely conceived and recorded in London so going out to Austin felt like the furthest place from everything we knew. We arrived with a handful of songs, but one in particular felt like it captured the spirit of why we had come there. It was called Radlands (a fusion of the 1970s Terrence Malick film ‘Badlands’ and Redlands, Keith Richard’s Sussex estate), which is also what we named our studio; a big old wooden house on the banks of the Colorado river.
"All we brought on the plane were the guitars on our backs, so we ended up borrowing all this amazing valve gear from an old guy called jack who ran a little studio up in the hills-which is why the songs sound the way they do. In the daytime we wrote lyrics on the porch and in the evenings a family of Deer would gather in the back yard to hear us play. Some nights we drove into town to drink and bring people back to play on the songs.
"When we arrived home, it was hard to believe any of it even happened. It somehow all felt like a strange dream. But when Dan Carey heard it and invited us down to his studio we listened back to everything and it was all there, it was real. All we were missing were some gospel singers, which he found in the Streatham community ladies choir…
"Twelve months on, and we are gearing up to take Radlands on the road. Its been a long time and we cannot wait to see you all again.
x Blaine”
Labels:
Blaine Harrison,
Mystery Jets,
Radlands,
Rough Trade,
Terrence Malick
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