Monday 19 October 2015

The Death of Indie England




It has often been said that our generation, that lot that lived through indie in our teens and baggy as we hit University, Britpop for first jobs, are incapable of growing up. There is a certain truth in this. We cling to our youth stubbornly, we still fill gigs (more so in many cases than the generation of the bands on stage), we sustain cd or vinyl sales and magazine subsciptions, we campaigned for, and retained, 6 Music whilst BBC 3, with a younger target generation, went to the wall. Whilst it may be our parents that stole all the houses, pissed off with the oil revenues and destroyed the trade unions and worker's rights by letting in Thatcher, we have done a similar job to culture. Our half dead hand controls not just the mainstream but the perceived alternative as well, marking out a territory that those after us simply cannot break into.

So the collision of the ultimate £50 bloke wander through indie courtesy of BBC 4's 'Story Of Indie' and the relaunch of NME has marked a fascinating compare and contrast for those of a certain age. Friday day brought Chris Moyles in a four page exclusive (6 if you count the double page ad that trailed the feature), Friday evening brought Genesis P Orridge and Tony Wilson. Or you could have Taylor Swift for your morning coffee and Morrissey for your evening beer. To those of a certain age, us indie kids that grew up on indie in its strictest sense the dichotomy of the bible being profained and the screen reviving our prophets in such close proximity may have been too much to bear.

Whilst I refuse to join the ranks of those proclaiming sell out at the doors of the Blue Fin Building I also refute the more ridiculous notion that the all new free NME has anything in common with its paid for predecessor as espoused by some of its present and former staff. The new NME is a perfectly serviceable entertainment magazine that would do well to add its more outre content (Radar) to those parts already jettisoned (live reviews, serious criticism of any form) to the web. Whilst I buy the NME was always a broad church argument, its new incarnation is nothing of the sort, cutting wildly at one end whilst opening the commercial doors at the other.

Leaving in place the celeb heavy Q & A interviews strictly patrolled by the kind of PRs that give my lot a bad rep when we tell people what we do (the whole Mr / Ms won't answer that question thing), the blatant marketing tie-ins and accepting that 300,000 random passers by don't give a rat's arse who Foals are would remove the indignity of the NME 'cover' for any non world famous stars actually being an inside cover wrapped around with a cartoon version of the image reimagined by the marketing department of Netflix. Anything else is self-deception.

Where this leaves any sense of alternative music as documented by Mark Radcliffe and a somewhat selective bunch over the last three weeks (that whole Factory / McGee thing got a little wearing and where the hell were XL or indeed, women, in the last part?) is a more twisted debate. NME's fall is, of course, a direct result of a number of factors that mark the slow decline of independence as an attitude and political standpoint rather than an ownership model. What is most salient came from BBC 4, the repeated assertion of bands and labels alike that they didn't do it for the money. The same was true of NME in that heyday. But then all concerned had a, to quote The Shop Assistants, Safety Net. That option no longer exists, nor does the opportunity to fall flat on your arse as an adult which means no long shots at being in a band, starting a label, becoming a music writer or putting out something that transmits enthusiasm and love rather than market tested certainties. When Jeremy Hunt says he wants us to work like the Chinese and the Americans what he really means is he wants us to feel we have to because, like both those populations, we know that not working will mean penury, illness and a sooner death. Given its new focus the all improved brand NME may well prosper in this brave new world, proffering short attention span hits and shiny baubles to tired commuters and in debt students. I wish it well.
 



Wednesday 16 September 2015

Guy Garvey - 'Courting the Squall' debut solo album and live dates










‘Courting the Squall’

The Debut Album, 30th October 2015 

Europe and UK Live Dates Announced

After nearly twenty five years and counting as a member of elbow and one of the UK’s most recognised and celebrated musicians and lyricists, Guy Garvey is setting off alone for the first time. On October 30th he releases his debut solo album, ‘Courting the Squall’. 

Recorded initially at Real World Studios near Bath and completed at Blueprint Studios in Salford, ‘Courting the Squall’ features a band created by Guy from his ‘favourite musicians outside elbow’ and was driven by spontaneity and experimentation amongst the assembled players with Guy firmly and exclusively in the driving seat. The band ‘moved fast and drank a lot’, focusing on live recording with minimal overdubs to create the songs. Unlike elbow, where democracy has always ruled, this is an album where Guy embraced the freedom to do exactly what he felt throughout.
The album features Pete Jobson, long time friend and bass player from I Am Kloot, as lead guitarist and Nathan Sudders from The Whip on bass, bringing an indie sensibility that was at the heart of Guy’s thinking for certain songs. Keyboards are marshalled by old V2 labelmate Ben Christophers and drums are filled by Alex Reeves. elbow’s brass section add to selected tracks whilst Rachael Gladwin, a steadying contrast to the party vibe of the team due her being pregnant, plays the harp and kora. 

‘Courting the Squall’ is powered by influences and ideas that ‘don’t fit the elbow template’. Some tracks, notably ‘Angela’s Eyes’, ‘Harder Edges’ and ‘Belly of the Whale’, come completely from groove, finding a sweet spot between Manchester’s baggy past, long term love Tom Waits and Bowie’s mid-70’s albums, particularly ‘Sound and Vision’. This change of type engendered a change of vocal approach, a clipped and more direct Garvey voice coming across, a hark back to his early days writing lyrics influenced by his listening to hip-hop where short delivery carries rhythm alongside meaning.

Lyrical concerns encompass those familiar to Guy’s past work at times, the big themes of love and friendship, the lure of his Northern homeland but tracks and lyrics were not always pre-planned. On one occasion a bird observed from the window of the recording studio became the catalyst for the music, at other times a loose jam approach crystallized both lyrically and musically into a finished composition. There were no rules. 

Having guested on various artist’s albums as a vocalist, ‘Courting the Squall’ sees Guy duet on his own music again with the sumptuous ‘Electricity’ featuring Jolie Holland conjuring up images of illicit jazz dives in fin de siècle Paris or prohibition era New York in the distinctly non urban studio setting outside Bath. Alongside Jolie’s credit, another, less familiar set of co-writers appear on the album but we’ll leave that to you to discover.

Yet not all of ‘Courting the Squall’ is a move away from the familiar. The album title track, a trip hop rhythm propelled ballad and ‘Juggernaut’, a hymnal clothed in sedate populist clothing, may feel more immediately recognizable to long term followers of Guy’s music whilst  ‘Broken Bottles and Chandeliers’, with its warmth , once again showcases his unerring ability to translate the sense of overwhelming joy into understated musical form.

It is, as with all solo albums, a glimpse into its creator’s soul. Shot through with warmth and emotional intelligence, content and comfortable in its own skin, ‘Courting the Squall’ is that most unique thing; a record made without preconditions, an album of songs made purely for the joy of its making.

Guy has also announced a short run of dates in Europe and the UK throughout November and December on which he will be accompanied by the musicians who recorded the album, including Pete Jobson of I Am Kloot on guitar, Nathan Sudders of The Whip on bass and Alex Reeves on drums. Elbow’s brass section complete the live line-up.

A special fan presale will commence at 9am on 16th September – simply follow the link at Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/GuyGarveyofficial.

Tickets go on general sale at 10am on Friday 18th September.

Dates are as follows

November
Thursday 26th                        Brussels, Ancienne Belgique
Saturday 28th                        Berlin, Postbahnhof
Sunday 29th                           Amsterdam, Paradiso

December
Tuesday 1st                            London, o2 Shepherds Bush Empire
Wednesday 2nd                     London, o2 Shepherds Bush Empire
Friday 4th                               Manchester, Albert Hall
Saturday 5th                          Manchester, Albert Hall
Monday 7th                            Dublin, Olympia
Tuesday 8th                            Glasgow, o2 ABC

‘Courting the Squall’ is released on Vinyl, CD and Download on 30th October 2015. Limited quantities of vinyl and CD feature a lenticular sleeve.

FOR MORE INFORMATION                                -               LOUDHAILER PRESS
Lewis Jamieson                                                     -               lewis@loudhailerpress.com / @LewJam
                                                                                                07718 652582 / 020 8714 0139

Thursday 10 September 2015

An Open Letter To The Economist

Adding to a growing list of badly researched and, frankly wrong, pieces about the music industry, even The Economist is not immune to getting things badly wrong it would seem.

Have a read of this 'back of the bus' piece on the NME going free and see if you can spot the glaring errors. If you can't I got all Henry Root and sent them a letter which is below.




Whilst the initial set up of your article in the September 5th edition of the paper regarding the imminent relaunch of NME as a freesheet displayed correct analysis, your subsequent expositions regarding the fate of previous free music titles and suppositions regarding 'NME's readers' were unworthy of your well earned reputation for accurate analysis.

The Fly was not 'free for a short time' as you assert but ran from 1999 to 2014 as a free title and peaked at a readership of around 100,000. It was rightly regarded as an important source of coverage for bands large and small and was instrumental in the success of a huge amounts of now household names, including elbow who I have represented since 1999. The demise of the magazine was less to do with its free nature and much more to do with parent company MAMA Group's involvement with HMV and a distribution deal with the chain which, following the store group's collapse in 2014, left the title without a valid distribution network.

A short journey to Google would have revealed this to you via either this guardian story - http://www.theguardian.com/media/2014/mar/07/the-fly-music-magazine-closes-after-nearly-15-years - or Wikipedia - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fly_%28magazine%29.

Stool Pigeon, which you cite alongside The Fly, (again being 'free for a short time'), as a harbinger of doom for the new NME, also ran for years, beginning in 2005 and ending in 2013. This, according to editor Phil Hebblethwaite, was not because of bankruptcy but rather that he was 'knackered' after eight years of running the paper. Again, this is public knowledge, see the Press Gazette piece at the time of closure - http://www.pressgazette.co.uk/print-edition-music-magazine-stool-pigeon-scrapped-after-eight-years.

As regards NME, you note that it will have to broaden the bands it covers to appeal to a wider market but a public statement from editor Mike Williams has already declared that 'music is "firmly at the heart of the brand" but there will also be "film, fashion, television, politics, gaming and technology".' (http://www.nme.com/news/various-artists/86702), suggesting that the editorial team are already focused on just such a strategy.

As a subscriber I value the analysis that The Economist offers in areas where I have no expert knowledge. In an area where I have some knowledge I find it disturbing that such copy could pass for publication with multiple glaring errors and naïve assumptions devoid of fact.

Best
Lewis Jamieson
DIRECTOR LOUDHAILER PRESS


Friday 3 July 2015

JAKE EVANS LIVE SHOWS







LONDON, UPSTAIRS AT THE GARAGE 21st JULY 2015

MANCHESTER DEAF INSTITUTE 25th JULY 2015

DAY ONE – THE DEBUT ALBUM, 31st JULY 2015

Following the announcement of the release of his debut album, former Bad Lieutenant singer and guitarist Jake Evans has announced a very special album release shows at Manchester’s Deaf Institute and London’s Garage to preview the release.

Jake will play the Deaf Institute in Manchester on the 25th July and Upstairs at Highbury Garage on 21st July. 

Tickets FOR MANCHESTER are available now from http://www.ticketline.co.uk/jake-evans#bio

Tickets FOR LONDON are available now from http://goo.gl/n7lBxA

‘Day One’ marks the first solo outing for Jake and was recorded at Big Red, his studio in Macclesfield, in between tours with Jimi Goodwin for his own solo project. Both Jimi and former bandmate and New Order founding member Bernard Sumner contributed to sessions for ‘Day One’, Jimi on backing vocals and percussion whilst Bernard sang on an alternate take of ‘This Is Life’ which will be made available with a special edition of the album and downloads purchased through Itunes. A video for the album version of ‘This Is Life’ can be seen at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wuI2ulZIkpw

Over the ten tracks the album hints at gospel (‘Easy On My Soul’), dips a toe into psychedelia (‘Sun Goes Down’), flirts with the dancefloor (‘Telephone’) and nudges up against Augustus Pablo (‘Last One Standing’) but, at heart, is about Jake and his guitar.

Further dates will be announced shortly. 

‘Day One’ is available to pre-order on the following formats from http://jakeevans.tmstor.es/:

‘Day One’ Signed CD with exclusive bonus CD.
‘Day One’ Signed Vinyl album with CD insert and exclusive bonus CD.

FOR MORE INFORMATION                                         -              LOUDHAILER PRESS
Lewis Jamieson                                                                 -              lewis@loudhailerpress.com / @LewJam
                                                                                                                07718 652582 / 020 8714 0139

Monday 1 June 2015

Power, Corruption And Lies

Sepp Blatter. The very words are still making me laugh, almost as much as the commentators and social media wonks who lost their marbles over the idea that he could be voted back in to position. Anyone with a working knowledge of power structures knew very well that boat had sailed long ago.

On Radio 4 this morning in discussion of the new government suggestions for free childcare for under 3s I hear a woman tell the reporter she is 'lucky' as both her and her husband work full time. No one asked the child whether it felt lucky to be in wraparound care but no doubt had they a parade of 'experts' would have appeared to confirm that, yes, children in structured play environments from an early age (particularly from 'deprived' backgrounds) do make greater headway in early stage learning than their counterparts. Presumably the first stage to attaining that luck of their parents to be in full time work with their partner years hence allowing them to also put their child in wraparound care. No one would have asked whether parents not seeing their child for five days a week, 50 weeks a year was beneficial to either party nor whether emotional intelligence was being measured alongside cognitive ability.

I do understand what the woman meant.  She is reflecting a version of normal that FIFA delegates were reflecting when reinstalling Blatter. Orthodoxy is a powerful tool. Tony Blair lies about invading Iraq, we all know he's lying, we know the dossier is rubbish yet we march and fail and acquiesce and shoot barbs from the corner of a virtual room. We fail to enact real change because we shrug and say, 'what can we do?' In the case of Blatter we are left with the idea that the power of those titans of ethical responsibility, MacDonalds, Mastercard and Coca-Cola should do our work for us. We are bought into the idea that working is good, leisure is earned through work, children are best left to semi-independence from a young age. We are modifying the idea of upper class living into a beige, 21st century version that, paradoxically, makes us less free than our great grandparents who had to fight for votes and unions and healthcare and freedom from the tyranny of an establishment explicitly designed to contain them. To add to the irony the free market is placing our children into a context that would be perfectly at home in the state knows best dictatorship of an orthdox Communist entity, albeit with the party politics leached out.

For nannies read state assisted childcare. For cooks read Marks & Spencer ready meal. For staff read minimum wage cleaner, for butler or ladies maid read personal shopper, for real social provision read Children In Need and Comic Relief. It is a Soylent Green version of freedom, a tyranny of meaningless choices masking a reality of no choice at all. A trade of the real aspirations of the post war generations of 1919 and 1946 for an 'on demand' fascimile of that which they aspired to achieve. We are so in thrall to the pantomime that is created for our entertainment that in a few weeks, Blatter will be replaced by a new Punch or Judy, the social networks will once again go into meltdown and nothing will happen.




Friday 20 March 2015

SERGIO! SERGIO! ON MY RADIO

Always good to start Friday with a touch of Bolshevik inspired Heimat romance, Russian dancing and gorgeous acoustic versions of songs you already love.

Agreed? If so scroll down.

The former is supplied by the Ally Kerr film for A New International's 'Once Upon A Time In The Revolution', the track that takes Leone to Leon (Trotsky) for tea. At least one Sergio is in my good books this week.



The latter requires a little more effort but to access session versions of both 'Come To The Fabulon' and 'When I Walked The Earth' recorded for The Culture Show (oh aye, they know their culture) go hear and then fast forward to one hour in until you hear 'Valentino', then sit back and enjoy

And, as if that wasn't enough, you can hear the whole of 'Come To The Fabulon' hear. If you haven't heard the album yet then, really, what have you been doing?



Wednesday 4 March 2015

STARBENDERS - ROCK N ROLL BOYFRIEND


Loving this from Atlanta's Starbenders



And, lucky me, just got some new tracks so keep your eyes open for more later....

Now to find a way to get them over to the UK.........
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – IMPORTANT EDUCATIONAL RESOURCE BELOW

EDDIE ARGOS


Tells You How He Formed A Band And The Inside Track On Rock n Roll

SPOKEN WORD TOUR MAY / JUNE 2015

Pop music, as we all know, can be an uncertain business. Whilst a chosen few achieve their dreams of riches, world travel and mass adoration for many a spot at their local battle of the bands is the limit of their fame. 

In October of last year Eddie Argos, world renowned lead singer and songwriter with Art Brut, the London band that have spent the last decade redefining the meaning of stardom, entertained a select audience in London’s Islington with the tale of how he created Art Brut and forever changed the face of popular music.

Now the whole of the UK will have the opportunity to hear his tales of a life spent in rock n roll, from playing the vacuum cleaner onstage to lying to people in London about how he could sing like Aretha Franklin. This is his story.

Dates are as follows, tickets are available now via usual agents or links below.

May
Saturday 23rd Edinburgh, The Voodoo Rooms (Speakeasy)
Sunday 24th Glasgow, Broadcast
Monday 25th Aberdeen, The Lemon Tree
Tuesday 26th Manchester, Gullivers
Wednesday 27th Birmingham, The Rainbow
Thursday 28th Cardiff, The Globe
Friday 29th Bristol, The Birdcage Door Sales Only
Sunday 31st Leicester, The Musician

June
Tuesday 2nd Norwich, Arts Centre
Wednesday 3rd Cambridge, Portland Arms
Tuesday 16th Brighton, Komedia Studio
Wednesday 17th London, Courtyard Theatre

FOR MORE INFORMATION - LOUDHAILER PRESS
Lewis Jamieson - lewis@loudhailerpress.com / @LewJam / 07718 652582

MORE ABOUT OUR SPEAKER
Eddie Argos grew up fantasising about being the singer in a band that would tour the world, despite the fact he can't really sing. Somehow he managed it and now he is going to tell you how. Heartwarming story or cautionary tale? You be the judge.

https://www.facebook.com/eddie.argos
https://twitter.com/EddieArgos
http://www.the-eddie-argos-resource.blogspot.com
http://www.artbrut.org.uk/
http://www.eddieargos.com

Tuesday 3 February 2015

LONGFELLOW SCORE A & R WORLDWIDE'S VIDEO OF THE WEEK


Our favourite South London Alt-poppers Longfellow have had their quite remarkable video for the current 'Medic' single heralded as VIDEO OF THE WEEK from those nice folk at A & R WORLDWIDE. Coming on the back of lists at 6 Music and Radio 2 here is further proof (if you need it) that Longfellow are making all the right moves as 2015 swings into action. Their headline show at London's Borderline on 26th February is all set to be one of those gigs.

A&R WORLDWIDE’S "VIDEO OF THE WEEK" – LONGFELLOW


South London’s Longfellow consists of Owen James Lloyd (vocals), James Thomas (guitar), Ali Hetherington (keyboards), Lewis Fowler (bass) and Tom Warhurst (drums) who create melodically charged alt pop. They invaded the UK’s airwaves with their singles “Siamese Lover,” which was supported at radio by the likes of Steve Lamacq on BBC Radio 6 and Jo Whiley on Radio 2 and “Kiss-Hug-Make Up” which was included on the Radio 2 playlist for three weeks, which led to a special Fierce Panda X-Posure show for Xfm’s John Kennedy last May. As Longfellow gets closer to the launch of their new EP in April, they’ve unleashed the new single “Medic.” The song has appeared on the playlists of Xfm, Radio 2 and 6, which is quite the accomplishment for an unsigned band. The video clip is nothing short of amazing with the animation and positive story. Longfellow has upcoming gigs in London at The Social tomorrow night and at The Borderline on February 26th. Watch the clip for “Medic” HERE and contact Simon Williams of Fierce Panda at simon@fiercepanda.co.uk for available opportunities, as Longfellow is available for signing, publishing and synch opportunities worldwide.