fakeindielabel.co.uk

FIL104: Glissando

GLISSANDO
Quite simple essential - Losing Today

LUIS FRANCESCO ARENA
A circus of dragons, dwarves, ashtray-boys and a sea lion

RICHARD DAWSON
Autumnal, everyday life folk - Brainwashed

SLEEPINGDOG
Graceful clarity and languid elegance - Sonic Dice

MONDAY 22 SEPTEMBER 2008
THE HEAD OF STEAM, NEWCASTLE
8PM - £4


MP3s:

We Are Depleting, by Glissando


Facebook Event Page


VIDEO:

Under Red Lights, by Luis Francesco Arena


William8672


Full size flyerFIL104: Glissando
w/ LFA, Richard Dawson, Sleeping Dog
Monday 22 September 2008
The Head of Steam, Newcastle

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment



FIL103: Euchrid Eucrow

EUCHRID EUCROW
Serge Blanco/Sacred harp inspired textural and evocative sounds

CATH & PHL TYLER
Folk buffeted with fateful reserve, rue and wonder - Plan B

CAROLINE WEEKS
Haunted minimalist folk from Bat For Lashes' Ginger Lee

GOBSHYTE LOWERY & HIS CARDIAC ARREST TEAM
A Tesco carrier cut 'n' paste concoction of ranting and ideas - a raconteur making a racket

SUNDAY 7 SEPTEMBER 2008
THE HEAD OF STEAM, NEWCASTLE
8PM - £3


MP3s:

A Horse Is Not Just For Christmas, by Euchrid Eucrow


Facebook Event Page


Full size flyerFIL103: Euchrid Eucrow
w/ Cath & Phil Tyler, Caroline Weeks, Gobshyte Lowery
Sunday 7 September 2008
The Head of Steam, Newcastle

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment



FIL102: The Red Well

THE RED WELL
The next generation of Scottish talent - JoyZine

DOG YEARS
Think Marcy Playground via a super lethargic Lemonheads and a less cynical Pavement - The Stool Pigeon

DOT TO DOTS
The North East's newest, youngest and most exciting musical exponents - Metro

SUNDAY 3 AUGUST 2008
THE HEAD OF STEAM, NEWCASTLE
8PM - £4


MP3s:

Broken Eyes, by The Red Well
Bellyaches, by Dog Years


Facebook Event Page


Full size flyerFIL102: The Red Well
w/ Dog Years, Dot To Dots
Sunday 3 August 2008
The Head of Steam, Newcastle

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment



FIL101: 4 or 5 Magicians

4 OR 5 MAGICIANS
At last a believeable British retort to the drawling rambles of Stephen Malkmus: think Hefner's Darren Hayman fronting Guided By Voices - Music Week
Marvellously cynical alt.rock grubbiness - The Fly

THE BLACK STATIC OF SUMMER
Minimalist DC post-punk paired with feedback-wrought melodies - The Metro

SQUARES
Sharp funny vignettes about aspirations and everyday life - The Crack

MONDAY 28 JULY 2008
THE HEAD OF STEAM, NEWCASTLE
8PM - £3


MP3s:

Forever On The Edge, by 4 or 5 Magicians
Tour De Force, by 4 or 5 Magicians
Blanks, The Black Static Of Summer
About Your Holidays, by Squares


Facebook Event Page


VIDEO:

Change The Record, by 4 or 5 Magicians


redfivemedia


Full size flyerFIL101: 4 or 5 Magicians
w/ The Black Static Of Summer, Squares
Monday 28 July 2008
The Head of Steam, Newcastle

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment



FIL099: The Starlets

THE STARLETS
Some of the finest pop songs you've never heard - Sunday Herald
Frighteningly beautiful - Careless Talk Costs Lives
A polished, spellbinding little gem - The List

ANDERSENS
An inspired, often improvised sound-ceremony, blending psychedelia with a wistful pop sensibility

BLACKFLOWER
A jagged sense of ambitious, fragmented, joyful song writing - Manchester Music

SUNDAY 13 JULY 2008
THE HEAD OF STEAM, NEWCASTLE
8PM - £3


MP3s:

Maggie Loves Hopey, by The Starlets
Sunday to Saturday (June Brides cover), by The Starlets
Christmas Eve, by Andersens
You Won't Get a Girl Like That, by Blackflower


Facebook Event Page


VIDEO:

Radio Friendly, by The Starlets


Stereotone45s


Full size flyerFIL099: The Starlets
w/ Andersens, Blackflower
Sunday 13 July 2008
The Head of Steam, Newcastle

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment



FIL098: Her Name Is Calla

HER NAME IS CALLA
Claustrophobic, disconnected and disconcerting - Echos & Dust

GLISSANDO
A majestic dream - NME

NATHALIE STERN
Hacked and looped Swedish folk

MONDAY 7 JULY 2008
THE HEAD OF STEAM, NEWCASTLE
8PM - £4


MP3s:

Wren, by Her Name Is Calla
Grekken, by Glissando
Nu Vaknen Och Gladjens, by Nathalie Stern


Facebook Event Page


VIDEO:

New England, by Her Name Is Calla


hernameiscalla


Full size flyerFIL098: Her Name Is Calla
w/ Glissando, Nathalie Stern
Monday 7 July 2008
The Head of Steam, Newcastle

Labels: ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment



FIL097: These United States

THESE UNITED STATES
This Washington DC outfit serve up country-tinged folk sautéed in electronic seasoning; along with artier neighbors Le Loup and Exit Clov, These United States offer melodic and amusing ideas to the post-Fugazi landscape, but they're still tied to thoughtful ones-in this case, mostly protesting heartless romantic antics - Village Voice

VANDAVEER
A bustling, brooding blend of dark pop and troubadour folk - The Owl

JOHN EGDELL
Gloriously lo-fi lullabies - NME

AARON MCMULLAN
Think Dylan's poetic turn of phrase and Shane McGowans's booze-drenched bitterness - NARC.

SUNDAY 22 JUNE 2008
THE HEAD OF STEAM, NEWCASTLE
8PM - £4


MP3s:

First Sight, by These United States
So High So Low So Wide So Long, by These United States
Parasites & Ghosts, by Vandaveer
Different Cities, by Vandaveer


Facebook Event Page


Full size flyerFIL097: These United States
w/ Vandaveer, John Egdell, Aaron McMullan
Sunday 22 June 2008
The Head of Steam, Newcastle

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment



FIL096: The Elks

THE ELKS
A subtle, widescreen soundtrack for the bitter breakup of a relationship - Hydragenic

SPRAYDOG

THREE IN ONE GENTLEMAN SUIT (ITALY)

THE BLACK STATIC OF SUMMER

MONDAY 16 JUNE 2008
THE BLACK SWAN, NEWCASTLE ARTS CENTRE
8pm - £4


Facebook Event Page


Full size flyerFIL096: The Elks
w/ Spraydog, Three In One Gentleman Suit, The Black Static Of Summer
Monday 16 June 2008
The Black Swan, Newcastle Arts Centre

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment



FIL095: Die! Die! Die!

We're chuffed to announce that we've got Die! Die! Die! returning to Newcastle on Wednesday 11 June - only a few months since their last trip over from New Zealand. Anyone who was at the show at the Cumberland back in April will know this band aren't to be missed. This time the show is at The Head of Steam, and in support we've got Stop Hitting Yourself, U-U, and those pesky Big Oaks.


DIE! DIE! DIE! (New Zealand)
Full of an indescribable power and beauty - Chord Magazine

STOP HITTING YOURSELF

U-U

THE BIG OAKS

WEDNESDAY 11 JUNE 2008
THE HEAD OF STEAM, NEWCASTLE
8PM - £5


MP3:

Promises, Promises

Sideways Here We Come


Facebook Event Page


PRESS:

Even if its music sucked, you'd have to hand it to Die! Die! Die! At a time when dull, toothless indie bands use tough-sounding names and exclamation points with unabashed irony, the New Zealand trio truly struts like it wants listeners to drop stone dead. Thankfully, Die! Die! Die! doesn't suck in the least, though its sophomore disc, Promises Promises, is a bit of comedown from its raging self-titled debut. The short, sharp shit-kicking has softened, and the hooks now tug rather than yank. "Sideways Here We Come" offers post-punk at its 21st-century finest: Half Mclusky, half Warsaw-era Joy Division, it crams splinters of rhythm into dark, gorgeous choruses and acidic shout-alongs. The venom is still there, and it's just as potent, but it tastes a little sweeter this time around.
--The AV Club (9/10)

Kiwi comedy duo Flight of the Conchords might not be an accurate representation of musical life in their homeland, but I think it's fair to say that New Zealand has never been known as a hotbed of rock 'n' roll. Nomadic trio Die! Die! Die! might not necessarily be about to change all that, but it won't be for want of trying. I mean, just look at that band name.

Not that the vitriol is superficial. 2005's self-titled debut was a swift, angry gun-shot of an album, clocking in at just over twenty minutes but garnering critical acclaim not just back home but in alternative music circles across the globe. This sophomore effort might be a more developed affair - not to mention twice as long - but the bee is still firmly lodged within Die! Die! Die!'s bonnet. Its thirteen tracks are rough, raw and irrepressibly energetic, embodying the punk ethic that bands the world over strive for but that is only really achieved by those who don't give a damn about it. The threesome bring to mind vestiges of Black Flag, Wire, and Les Savy Fav, but Promises, Promises thrives on its own individual sense of confidence and youth, and the primitive sense of escapism that only loud, crashing rock music can bring.

Opener "Blinding" is perfect. Its repeated lament of "I could never forget her if I tried" drops you right into the heart of the problem, and so too the music. A two-second drum roll and it begins, tight-as-fuck, fast-as-hell, punk-as-anything - it's raw, it's messy, it's sheer catharsis. We never find out who this unforgettable girl is, but nor does it seem important - you're already hooked. The next cut, "Britomart Sunset", is just as fast, just as vitriolic, but, as if to prove that Die! Die! Die! aren't some power chord-happy punk band, throws into the mix all manner of fantastic noises, coaxed out of Andrew Wilson's guitar. Within the first five minutes - should that be first five seconds? - Promises, Promises has taken you aback within its sheer confident vibrancy. Clearly first impressions are something Die! Die! Die! do very well indeed.

But so much for catharsis; Promises, Promises is actually a surprisingly maturely crafted album. Well, not so much album - opener aside, you get the sense that these songs would sound good in any order - but collection of maturely crafted songs. They're mostly angry, yes, and often fast, but crucially, they don't rely on this for their foundations like those of so many second-rate punk bands. So while "A.T.T.I.T.U.D." has bucketfuls of the quality it (nearly) spells out, it's expressed via ridiculously tight bass and drums and a surprisingly sweet chorus. Similarly, the title track's tooth-gnashing demands ("I just want what I was promised") are accompanied by screeching digitised guitars and time changes that belie the band's punk origins.

And so it should come as no surprise that when Die! Die! Die! do decide to slow things down (which isn't often), they prove to be equally competent. "Sideways Here We Come" is all about intertwining, be it guitar and bass or harmonised vocals, its chorus as memorable for Michael Prain's rolling drumbeat as much as it is Wilson's hammer-ons and antagonised yells. "Whitehorses", meanwhile, employs a pendulous riff to great effect, with the unprecedented yearning of its chorus ("What would you do / If she said she'd fell out of love with you?") one of the album's most affecting moments.

Promises, Promises, then, is a triumph in many areas. While it's not perfect - "Death to the Last Romantic", for one, is more of an unexpanded idea than a song - it is raw, exciting and cathartic; so much so that it is able to match the notoriously incendiary live performances of its architects for sheer energy, whilst expanding upon these foundations in songwriting terms. And it's this combination of punk spirit, matured musicianship, clever and diverse songwriting, and their effortless knack for fast, catchy songs that means Die! Die! Die! will appeal to a varied audience, and should ensure Promises, Promises expands upon their already sizeable fanbase. You'll want to be amongst it.
--Pop Matters (8/10)

Hailing from a rather remote town in New Zealand, Die! Die! Die! have largely spent the last three years away from their hometown. Touring in support of groups like Blood Brothers, Wire, Slint, and Wolfmother, the young trio have made a name for themselves with a blistering and sometimes completely spastic live show. Their second album Promises, Promises captures a good portion of their frenetic energy, as they zip through thirteen snare-rifling pop-punk tracks in just under forty minutes.

"Blinding" kicks things off, and along with one or two other songs on the release might be among my favorite tracks I've heard in this genre since The Thermals dropped their last album. The former barrels out of the gate with a high-speed rhythm section, and finds singer Andrew Wilson adding his wild and excitable vocals. "Death To The Last Romantic" is another gem, again keeping the pace intense while shaking things up a bit with a hiccuping beat and some rancid guitar passages that sound like the recording tape is falling apart.

Essentially, Die! Die! Die! does what any great pop-punk trio does in that they manage to mix things up musically while letting their fearless singer get a bit wild. Nothing is particularly groundbreaking, but as with most releases of this sort it comes down to a lot of very small distinctions (including sheer chutzpah), most of which this group from the other country down under seems to nail. It's not quite as poppy as the aforementioned work by The Thermals, but at the same time Promises, Promises isn't straight-up punk either (at least, in the traditional sense). It's fun stuff, and I imagine their live show would be even better.
--Almost Cool (7/10)


Full size flyerFIL095: Die! Die! Die!
w/ Stop Hitting Yourself, U-U, The Big Oaks
Wednesday 11 June 2008
The Head of Steam, Newcastle

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment



FIL094: Q Without U

Q WITHOUT U
The tunes are great, the lyrics are hilarious and if you don't like it, you're clearly an idiot - NME

THE BUBBLE PROJECT
Unusual and extremely talented, Beach Boys in space madness - Gutter Magazine

THE NEW GROOMERS
Debut outing from the people who brought you Sons of Brenda and Peoples' Friend...

SUNDAY 8 JUNE 2008
THE HEAD OF STEAM, NEWCASTLE
8PM - £3


MP3s:

Chemical Romance
You Say Pop (Like It's A Dirty Word)
I Don't Do Dedications



PRESS:

Radar: Q Without U

Not to be confused with similarly ace and sadly disbanded D.C art-punks Q And Not U, Glasgow's Q Without U specialise in swirly, synthy nuggets of pure pop gold, related through the dulcet regional tones of frontman Tam Killean. At times reminiscent of the Super Furries put through Franz Ferdinand's spin cycle, the tunes are great, the lyrics are hilarious and if you don't like it, you're clearly an idiot.
-- NME

Review: One Piece Puzzle (Hot Guts)

Been a while but we like to think its been worth the wait. Glaswegian buzz beat posters Q without U came to our attention following a record buying foray where we happened upon picking up their ultra limited debut single 'Slow Clap' around this time last year (see missive 107). Self released on the quartets newly set up Hot Guts imprint this twin set of tastiness steals a march on their last visit to this turntable, packed with drilled guitars, stop starting ruptured rhythms and blessed with an irrefutable eye for a sly pop coda 'One Piece Puzzle' mainlines casually into territories more commonly associated with Chris Brokaw - more notably his woefully underrated Snares and Kites debut 'Trick of Trapping' back from a few years ago - for a slice of seriously unassuming off road power pop gold that insidiously wires itself into your affections the minute your back is turned - a bit like imagining a superb charged Raspberries acquiring a vibrant post rock dialect to their artillery replete with devilishly corkscrewing hooks and packing a boot full of subtle west coast struts. 'Numbers!' over on the flip is an altogether stranger beast all said and done that appears to freewheel undecidedly through an array of generic styles so that sometimes you'll hear shades of classic styled early 70's pub rock a la Dr Feelgood interloping with shards of unravelling psyche flashbacks all the way to a more defined 60's styled blossoming retro beat pop persona decorated in all manner of effects laden reverb riffs and swirling synth sequences - those needing reference points think of a more sugar glazed pre acid house Shamen od'ing on Traffic - quite frankly I think your record collection deserves this.
-- Losing Today

Interview: Stranded in Stereo
Interview: The Skinny



Full size flyerFIL094: Q Without U
w/ The Bubble Project, The New Groomers
Sunday 8 June 2008
The Head of Steam, Newcastle

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment



FIL093: Stars of the Lid

STARS OF THE LID
The kind of music that makes consciousness seem like an annoying state... most ambient outfits demand a close, meditative listening, but few deliver with as many sonic rewards as Stars of the Lid - Pitchfork Media

D_RRADIO

MARIPOSA

SATURDAY 24 MAY 2008
ST THOMAS THE MARTYR, NEWCASTLE
8PM - £10 advance/£12 on the door


TICKETS:

Buy tickets direct from us: £10 + 50p BF

Through WeGotTickets: £10 + £1 BF


PRESS:

"I simply feel that they are making the most important music of the 21st century." Ivo Watts-Russell (4AD label founder)

fakeindielabel and Distraction Records are incredibly honoured to host Stars of the Lid for their debut Newcastle-upon-Tyne outing at The Church of St. Thomas the Martyr on Saturday 24 May 2008.

Stars of the Lid are easily one of the most important and influential bands or our times. Read a review of any ambient or experimental band these days and you will see their name being dropped, and it's not hard to hear why: few bands deliver such aural delights as SotL. Stars of the Lid are masters of weaving sonic textures gorgeously into beautiful, absorbing, minimalist epic drones, wavering between subtly mournful and gloriously triumphant, offering the perfect soundtrack to lucid daydreaming.

There are hints of modern classical, drone-ridden soundscapes, effects-treated guitars along with piano, strings, and horns; for Stars of the Lid, it's the silences between the sound that matter. Think Brian Eno, think Labradford, think Stockhausen, think Arvo Pärt, think of the most original and beautiful music being produced today. There are thousands of artists creating ambient music. But Stars of the Lid simply sound unlike anybody else doing this sort of thing.


Further reading:
Stars of the Lid on Wikipedia
Adam Wiltzie on Wikipedia

Listen To Stars of the Lid:
Stars of the Lid on last.fm
Stars of the Lid on myspace
Kranky Records

Stars Of The Lid Videos / Projectionist
'Apreludes In C Sharp Minor' video
Luke Savisky in the Austin Chronicle

2007 Year End Best Album Charts for 'And Their Redefinement Of The Decline'
Brainwashed
Pitchfork
Metacritic
Boomkat
cokemachineglow

Selected Interviews
Lost at Sea
cokemachineglow
eMusic
Maelstrom

Selected Reviews
Pop Matters
Paper Thin Walls
Pitchfork (And Their Refinement Of The Decline)
Pitchfork (The Tired Sounds Of)
Dusted
Tiny Mix Tapes
Stylus
Scene Point Blank
Debug

Full size flyer FIL093: Stars of the Lid
w/ d_rradio, Mariposa
Saturday 24 May 2008
St Thomas The Martyr, Newcastle

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment



FIL092: Glissando

On Sunday 11 May we've got Glissando, from Leeds, with support from Lanterns on the Lake, Manchester's Spokes and d_rradio, at The Head of Steam. Formed in 2002, Glissando create breathtaking soundscapes with piano and guitar. Add to that the beautiful haunting vocals of Elly May Irving and something quite wondrous is formed before your very ears. Based in Leeds, UK, the core of the band is Elly and Richard Knox but live shows often feature other players. In the past this has included members of Her Name is Calla and Immune. The ambient and sometimes experimental sounds bring to mind the likes of Low, Gregor Samsa, Bat For Lashes, Stars of the Lid and Cocteau Twins.


GLISSANDO
Quite simply essential - Losing Today

LANTERNS ON THE LAKE
Luscious, swoonsome lovliness that tugs the heart strings - NME

SPOKES
A post-rock-indie mini-orchestra - lush and textured washes of delay and violin - Manchester Music

D_RRADIO
Restlessly dreamy. Essential - Losing Today

SUNDAY 11 MAY 2008
THE HEAD OF STEAM, NEWCASTLE
8PM - £4


GALLERY:

IMG_7066IMG_7063IMG_7061IMG_7060

IMG_7058IMG_7056IMG_7055IMG_7052

IMG_7050IMG_7049IMG_7048IMG_7046

IMG_7040IMG_7036IMG_7033IMG_7030

IMG_7023IMG_7018IMG_7016IMG_7013

IMG_7009IMG_7005IMG_7003IMG_7001

IMG_6997IMG_6990
© 2008 Clarita Lulić


MP3:

We Are Depleting, by Glissando



Full size flyerFIL092: Glissando
w/ Lanterns on the Lake, Spokes, d_rradio
Sunday 11 May 2008
The Head of Steam, Newcastle

Labels: ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment



FIL091: Crëvecoeur

Full size flyerFIL091: Crëvecoeur
w/ Chippewa Falls, Preslav Literary School
Monday 28 April 2008
The Head of Steam, Newcastle

CRËVECOEUR (FRANCE)
Warm and melancholic, evocative mariachi-style soundtracks reminiscent of Pascal Comelade, Ennio Morricone, Calexico and Yann Tiersen - Bokson

CHIPPEWA FALLS
Aggressive, beautiful, brutal, tender and delicate - NARC

PRESLAV LITERARY SCHOOL
Like Béla Bartók with a beat up boombox

MONDAY 28 APRIL 2008
THE HEAD OF STEAM, NEWCASTLE
8pm - £3


GALLERY:

The Stage, Beforehand.Crevecoeur (3)Crevecoeur (2)Crevecoeur (1)

CrevecoeurChippewa Falls (5)Chippewa Falls (4)Chippewa Falls (3)

Chippewa Falls (2)Chippewa Falls (1)Chippewa FallsPreslav Literary School (2)

Preslav Literary School (1)Preslav Literary School
© 2008 James Grey


MP3s:

La Pieuvre, by Crëvecoeur
Slow Waltz With Elvis, by Crëvecoeur


VIDEO:

La Pieuvre, live in Lincoln: 11 January 2008


Kazimirbielecki
PRESS:

Crëvecoeur - #1 (Drella)

French three-piece Crëvecoeur ('broken heart') produce a cinematic soundscape with this their first release. Instrumental from start to finish (with the exception of a few lines from a Speak and Spell toy) there are no obvious signs of 'Frenchness' in the record but a definite tilt towards dusty roads, spaghetti westerns and Mariachi music. And there are also the rather obvious clues in the song titles such as 'We leave the ranch', 'El Matador' and 'Singing on a Dead Horse'.

'We leave the ranch' does vaguely hint towards a European flavour with its intro but then the horns break in to join the Spanish guitar and any pretensions towards cafe culture and smoking Gauloises fades away. 'The gasman and me' sounds like Quentin Tarantino or Robert Rodriguez could be lurking just around the corner, or Serge Leone is pulling the strings behind the scenes. This is the strength and maybe also the weakness of the album. If you don't like those old movie soundtracks then you are unlikely to like a collection of pop songs based around them. Even the brief interlude of 'L'equarisseur de songes' with its OK Computer era Radiohead style ending can do little to hide the fact. But if like me you are a fan, then '#1' is a real soundtrack treat.
--Tasty Fanzine


MIXTAPE:

Panic Open String - Calexico
L'homme aux Bras Ballants - Yann Tiersen
Country Mile - Camera Obscura
The Dreams You Left Behind (Reprise) - Micah P Hinson
Paper Doll - Hush The Many (Heed The Few)
Laburnum - Phil Tyler
The Black Arts - Stereolab
Swung from the Gutters - Tortoise
The Tourist - Flash Hawk Parlor Ensemble
The Black Hawk War, Or, How To Demolish An Entire Civilization And Still Feel Good About Yourself In The Morning, Or, We Apologize For The Inconvenience But You're Gonna Have To Leave Now, Or, 'I Have Fought The Big Knives And Will Continue To Fight... - Sufjan Stevens
Views - Audrey
Lonely Angel Dust - Laura Veirs
Carousels - Beirut
Metal Heart - Cat Power
We're an Army - François & The Atlas Mountains
Happy Birthday John - Damien Jurado
O.K. - Kevin Tihista's Red Terror
Fall And Raise It On - Rian Murphy & Will Oldham
You Are My Face - Wilco
Jesus - Page France
The Artifact and Living - Michael Andrews
Macau - EL Heath
Fir - Benoît Pioulard
Such Great Heights - Iron & Wine
Jenny Again - Tunng
Streamside - The Album Leaf
Cat Piano - Seabear
You Only Live Twice - The Postmarks
This is the Dream of Win & Regine - Final Fantasy
Kingfish Pies - Midlake

Labels: ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment



CBC003: Moira Stewart Album Launch Party!


Full size flyerCBC003: Moira Stewart Album Launch Party!
w/ The Bubble Project, Emergency Librarian
Sunday 13 April 2008
The Head of Steam, Newcastle

MOIRA STEWART
An ideal chirpy soundtrack for the upcoming recession - Sunday Sun

THE BUBBLE PROJECT
Science pop sounds for today, tomorrow and the future - High Voltage

EMERGENCY LIBRARIAN
Computer Music samples played through a Dalek Modulator - Jon Pertwee would be proud

PLUS GUEST COMPERE:
MR DAVE HARPER
A cross between Dane Bowers and Ghandi

SUNDAY 13 APRIL 2008
THE HEAD OF STEAM, NEWCASTLE
8PM - £2/7 WITH ALBUM

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment



FIL090: 4 or 5 Magicians

Full size flyerFIL090: 4 or 5 Magicians
w/ New Statesmen, My Tulip
Tuesday 8 April 2008
The Head of Steam, Newcastle

4 OR 5 MAGICIANS
At last a believable British retort to the drawling rambles of Stephen Malkmus - think Hefner's Darren Hayman fronting Guided By Voices - Music Week

NEW STATESMEN
Lamacq approved new-wave popsters

MY TULIP
Pretty twinkly ditties

TUESDAY 8 APRIL 2008
THE HEAD OF STEAM, NEWCASTLE
8PM - £3


MP3s:

Tour De Force
Forever On The Edge


PRESS:

I just really like the juxtaposition of the sort of dismissiveness and confidence rubbing-up against each other... a clattering pop-noise that weaves the singer along - Steve Lamacq, Radio 1

Really, really exciting - Huw Stephens, Radio 1

The sort of lo-fi attack jam that Kurt Cobain would have creamed over - Rocksound

'Forever On The Edge' not only boasts a loveable melody so missed from the chord-driven NME crowd , but also a contender for the best lyric of the year... Lo-fi indie rock at its best: 8/10 - drownedinsound.com

SINGLE OF THE MONTH (Oct 2007)
A monumentally fuzz drenched summer anthem for the slacker generation missing the greats! - subba-cultcha.com

SINGLE OF THE WEEK (Oct 2007)
A fine fine debut slice of English alt.rock... we want everyone to form an orderly queue and pin all your hopes on these four or five fine magicians - Organart

DEMO OF THE WEEK (May 2007)
A promising potentially explosive alt.rock indie-pop X factor edge of their own - Organart

Recalls the brilliant early 90's - The Fly


MIXTAPE:

Ocean - Sebadoh
Feel The Pain - Dinosaur Jr.
Is She Really Going Out With Him - Joe Jackson
Bone Machine - Pixies
Cars and Girls - Prefab Sprout
The Way You Wear Your Head - Nada Surf
Fleur De Lys - Juliana Hatfield
Sun's Shinin' For You - Tesco Chainstore Mascara
Roseability - Idlewild
Electrified - Dressy Bessy
Sugarcube - Yo La Tengo
Amateur Hour - Sparks
How He Wrote Elastica Man - Elastica
Vanessa From Queens - Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks
Psycho Cupid (Danceband on The Edge Of Time) - Mekons
Liquidation Table - Loose Fur
Out Of The Old And Thin - The Thermals
Stay Up Late - Talking Heads
Dance Baby Dance - The Longpigs
Misfit Kit - The Cars
Buttercup (I'm a Super Girl) - Shonen Knife
The Ostrich Song - The Wombats
Heavy Metal Drummer - Wilco
Straydog And The Chocolate Shake - Grandaddy
Glorious Day - Weezer
Lightning Strikes The Postman - The Flaming Lips
I'll Do It Anyway - The Lemonheads
Sissyneck - Beck
Cool As Kim Deal - The Dandy Warhols
How's My Drinking? - Guided By Voices

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment



FIL088: Die! Die! Die!

Full size flyerFIL088: Die! Die! Die!
w/ Spraydog, Lake Me
Saturday 5 April 2008
The Cumberland Arms, Byker

DIE! DIE! DIE!
Post-punk at it's 21st-century finest: half Mclusky, half Warsaw-era Joy Division - AV Club

SPRAYDOG
My Bloody Valentine via Sonic Youth indie pop - The Crack

LAKE ME
Bone-jangling and hypnotic rock outs - The Crack

SATURDAY 5 APRIL 2008
CUMBERLAND ARMS, BYKER
8PM - £5


Hailing all the way from Auckland, Die! Die! Die! are visiting our fair region as part of their extensive tour schedule. The noisy power trio has already blazed across the States and will be moving onto Australia and back home to New Zealand after their stint in the UK. Happily, that will include a show at The Cumberland Arms, Byker on Saturday 5 April 2008. Following their well-received debut long-player 's/t' which was produced by the ubiquitous Steve Albini no less, the band have just released their second full length album 'Promises, Promises' on SAF records. Produced by NZ alt-pop luminary Shayne Carter (of Flying Nun fame), and it contains some absolutely explosive sounds which you'll have the pleasure of being able to take in live, such as the melodic Sideways Here We Come, the fierce and pounding Blinding and the surging, off-kilter Britomart Sunset.

This record proves that this group is capable of melding a youthful and heady mix of alternative influences both joyful and gloomy, both modern and past (including notable New Zealand pioneers The Clean and Bailterspace), to form an urgent clatter of sheer volume and brilliance.


MP3:

Sideways, Here We Come


PRESS:

Even if its music sucked, you'd have to hand it to Die! Die! Die! At a time when dull, toothless indie bands use tough-sounding names and exclamation points with unabashed irony, the New Zealand trio truly struts like it wants listeners to drop stone dead. Thankfully, Die! Die! Die! doesn't suck in the least, though its sophomore disc, Promises Promises, is a bit of comedown from its raging self-titled debut. The short, sharp shit-kicking has softened, and the hooks now tug rather than yank. "Sideways Here We Come" offers post-punk at its 21st-century finest: Half Mclusky, half Warsaw-era Joy Division, it crams splinters of rhythm into dark, gorgeous choruses and acidic shout-alongs. The venom is still there, and it's just as potent, but it tastes a little sweeter this time around.
--The AV Club (9/10)

Kiwi comedy duo Flight of the Conchords might not be an accurate representation of musical life in their homeland, but I think it's fair to say that New Zealand has never been known as a hotbed of rock 'n' roll. Nomadic trio Die! Die! Die! might not necessarily be about to change all that, but it won't be for want of trying. I mean, just look at that band name.

Not that the vitriol is superficial. 2005's self-titled debut was a swift, angry gun-shot of an album, clocking in at just over twenty minutes but garnering critical acclaim not just back home but in alternative music circles across the globe. This sophomore effort might be a more developed affair - not to mention twice as long - but the bee is still firmly lodged within Die! Die! Die!'s bonnet. Its thirteen tracks are rough, raw and irrepressibly energetic, embodying the punk ethic that bands the world over strive for but that is only really achieved by those who don't give a damn about it. The threesome bring to mind vestiges of Black Flag, Wire, and Les Savy Fav, but Promises, Promises thrives on its own individual sense of confidence and youth, and the primitive sense of escapism that only loud, crashing rock music can bring.

Opener "Blinding" is perfect. Its repeated lament of "I could never forget her if I tried" drops you right into the heart of the problem, and so too the music. A two-second drum roll and it begins, tight-as-fuck, fast-as-hell, punk-as-anything - it's raw, it's messy, it's sheer catharsis. We never find out who this unforgettable girl is, but nor does it seem important - you're already hooked. The next cut, "Britomart Sunset", is just as fast, just as vitriolic, but, as if to prove that Die! Die! Die! aren't some power chord-happy punk band, throws into the mix all manner of fantastic noises, coaxed out of Andrew Wilson's guitar. Within the first five minutes - should that be first five seconds? - Promises, Promises has taken you aback within its sheer confident vibrancy. Clearly first impressions are something Die! Die! Die! do very well indeed.

But so much for catharsis; Promises, Promises is actually a surprisingly maturely crafted album. Well, not so much album - opener aside, you get the sense that these songs would sound good in any order - but collection of maturely crafted songs. They're mostly angry, yes, and often fast, but crucially, they don't rely on this for their foundations like those of so many second-rate punk bands. So while "A.T.T.I.T.U.D." has bucketfuls of the quality it (nearly) spells out, it's expressed via ridiculously tight bass and drums and a surprisingly sweet chorus. Similarly, the title track's tooth-gnashing demands ("I just want what I was promised") are accompanied by screeching digitised guitars and time changes that belie the band's punk origins.

And so it should come as no surprise that when Die! Die! Die! do decide to slow things down (which isn't often), they prove to be equally competent. "Sideways Here We Come" is all about intertwining, be it guitar and bass or harmonised vocals, its chorus as memorable for Michael Prain's rolling drumbeat as much as it is Wilson's hammer-ons and antagonised yells. "Whitehorses", meanwhile, employs a pendulous riff to great effect, with the unprecedented yearning of its chorus ("What would you do / If she said she'd fell out of love with you?") one of the album's most affecting moments.

Promises, Promises, then, is a triumph in many areas. While it's not perfect - "Death to the Last Romantic", for one, is more of an unexpanded idea than a song - it is raw, exciting and cathartic; so much so that it is able to match the notoriously incendiary live performances of its architects for sheer energy, whilst expanding upon these foundations in songwriting terms. And it's this combination of punk spirit, matured musicianship, clever and diverse songwriting, and their effortless knack for fast, catchy songs that means Die! Die! Die! will appeal to a varied audience, and should ensure Promises, Promises expands upon their already sizeable fanbase. You'll want to be amongst it.
--Pop Matters (8/10)

Hailing from a rather remote town in New Zealand, Die! Die! Die! have largely spent the last three years away from their hometown. Touring in support of groups like Blood Brothers, Wire, Slint, and Wolfmother, the young trio have made a name for themselves with a blistering and sometimes completely spastic live show. Their second album Promises, Promises captures a good portion of their frenetic energy, as they zip through thirteen snare-rifling pop-punk tracks in just under forty minutes.

"Blinding" kicks things off, and along with one or two other songs on the release might be among my favorite tracks I've heard in this genre since The Thermals dropped their last album. The former barrels out of the gate with a high-speed rhythm section, and finds singer Andrew Wilson adding his wild and excitable vocals. "Death To The Last Romantic" is another gem, again keeping the pace intense while shaking things up a bit with a hiccuping beat and some rancid guitar passages that sound like the recording tape is falling apart.

Essentially, Die! Die! Die! does what any great pop-punk trio does in that they manage to mix things up musically while letting their fearless singer get a bit wild. Nothing is particularly groundbreaking, but as with most releases of this sort it comes down to a lot of very small distinctions (including sheer chutzpah), most of which this group from the other country down under seems to nail. It's not quite as poppy as the aforementioned work by The Thermals, but at the same time Promises, Promises isn't straight-up punk either (at least, in the traditional sense). It's fun stuff, and I imagine their live show would be even better.
--Almost Cool (7/10)


PLAYLIST:

Never Stop - Echo & The Bunnymen
What Would Wolves Do - Les Savy Fav
Disorder - Joy Division
Where Have All The Rude Boys Gone - Ted Leo & The Pharmacists
The Great Salt Lake - Band of Horses
What You Want - My Bloody Valentine
Alec Eiffel - Pixies
I Just Wanna Get Along - The Breeders
The World Has Turned And Left Me Here - Weezer
Never Here - Elastica
Off Work - Thurston Moore
Western Battle - Seafood
I Lost All My Money At The Cock Fights - Minus The Bear
Saucer Crash - Black Ramps
The Magician Vs. The Headache - The Flaming Lips
Too Long Awake - Idlewild
Put The Freaks Up Front - dEUS
No Good Time - Graham Coxon
1972 - Giant Sand
Asprins and Alcohol - Last Days of April
Little Honda - Yo La Tengo
Weightless - Nada Surf
Prepare The Juggernaut - The Melody Unit
TV - Headlights
Without Blinking - Superchunk
Jacqui - The Brobecks
Ambush - Figurines
Computron 2000 - Kill Yourself
Dance With Your Shadow - The Rough Bunnies
You Really Wake Up The Love In Me - The Duke Spirit

Labels: ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment



FIL089: Stray Dog Cafe

Full size flyerFIL089: Stray Dog Cafe
w/ Shin Jin Rui, The Big Oaks
Sunday 23 March 2008
The Head of Steam, Newcastle

STRAY DOG CAFE
They shout a little, grovel in riff-dirt a little, and sound happy to hoot while they shamble - The Wire

SHIN JIN RUI
A shuddering, cantankerous listen -like watching Jurassic Park really, really loud - NME

THE BIG OAKS
I don't get the joke - NARC.

SUNDAY 23 MARCH 2008
THE HEAD OF STEAM, NEWCASTLE
8PM - £3


GALLERY:

The Big OaksThe Big Oaks (1)The Big Oaks (2)Shin Jin Rui

Shin Jin Rui (1)Shin Jin Rui (2)Stray Dog CafeStray Dog Cafe (1)
© 2008 James Grey
PLAYLIST:

Undress for Success - Mclusky
Damaged Goods - Gang Of Four
The Man Whose Head Expanded - The Fall
Choco Fight - Deerhoof
It's The Love - The Breeders
I Bleed - Pixies
Don't Let's Start - They Might Be Giants
He War - Cat Power
Painted Soldiers - Pavement
Weed Party - Band of Horses
Born A Thief - Park Hotell
It's On Everything - Last Days Of April
Race Car Ya-Yas - Cake
Tension - Minutemen
Don't Ask Me To Dance - Arab Strap
Hooray This Projector - Sir Salvatore
Prepare The Juggernaut - The Melody Unit
Treehouse - Nada Surf
Without Blinking - Superchunk
Two Years Two Days - Sebadoh
Computron 2000 - Kill Yourself
They Don't Know - The Amps
You Can't Get It Back - The Like Young
Velvet Cell - Gravenhurst
Some Kind of Sad - Ringo Deathstarr
Modern Love - Rough Bunnies
Einstein's Day - Mission of Burma
Feeling Called Love - Wire
52 Girls - B-52's
Shoot The Moon - Mudhoney
To The East - Electrelane

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment



FIL087: Mr Protector

More info…FIL087: Mr Protector
w/ MeandthetwinS, Corleone
Wednesday 27 February 2008
The Head of Steam, Newcastle

MR PROTECTOR
Post-HXC mathrock druids from Gondeville, France

MEANDTHETWINS
A little like the Velvets after John Cale, a little like early New Order, and a little like the Durutti Column - Only Angels Have Wings

CORLEONE
A wall of sheer noise - Sandman

WEDNESDAY 27 FEBRUARY 2008
THE HEAD OF STEAM, NEWCASTLE
8PM - £4


GALLERY:

Chippy twinChippy twinPaul SmithPaul Smith

Paul SmithPaul SmithPaul SmithPaul Smith

Paul SmithChippy TwinPaul SmithChippy Twin

Paul SmithNarbi + shadowCorleone
© 2008 Oli Wood


MIXTAPE:

John Cage Bubblegum - Stereolab
Lord Of This World - Quix*o*tic
Heart Factory - Sleater-Kinney
Jeremy Parker - The Swirlies
Loss Leader - Codeine
Frogs - The Flaming Lips
Off Work - Moore, Thurston
UMA - OOIOO
Thermal Treasure - Polvo
Crow - Shellac
When The Lines Go Down - Q And Not U
Six Pack - Tortoise
Skip Tracer - Sonic Youth
What Is Evil? - Shin Jin Rui
Song For Friends To Me - Faraquet
Hoverin - The Amps
Reclamation - Fugazi
Velouria - The Pixies
Slint on 4 - Heavy Vegetable
Everyone Chooses Sides - The Wrens
Without Blinking - Superchunk
Manana - Desaparecidos
One Armed Scissor - At the Drive-In
Prismism - Battles
Choco Fight - Deerhoof
Peeled Out Too Late - Chavez
Welcome, Ghosts - Explosions In the Sky
All My Heroes Are Weirdos - !!!
Asleep - Silent Movie
The Friscalating Dusklight - If These Trees Could Talk

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment



FIL086: Buen Chico

More info…FIL086: Buen Chico
w/ Pale Man Made, The Small Screen Light Show
Sunday 17 February 2008
The Head of Steam, Newcastle

Buen Chico
Quintessentially English indie - Q Magazine
Brilliantly spiky geek-pop firecrackers - NME

Pale Man Made
All hail the indefinable band - Logo Magazine

The Small Screen Light Show
A band capable of celebrating heartbreaking anomie without being over earnest - Metro

SUNDAY 17 FEBRUARY 2008
THE HEAD OF STEAM, NEWCASTLE
8PM - £3


REVIEW:

Small Screen Light Show are the kind of band I like to see play live. When they are playing, they make it look like they're really enjoying themselves, their frontman in particular, who tonight hurled himself around the tiny stage like a whirling dervish of Telecaster-wielding fury.

They're exciting to watch, they're spiky and jagged, frenetic and frantic and most importantly have the tunes to back it up. The singer's voice is full of obvious emotion but avoids the trap of being over-earnest and, despite the fact they're only a trio, they make a rather spectacular wall of sound that hits you dead on and forces you to pay attention.

If you've been subjected to the likes of Jack Penate recently, you may well be thinking that if you hear one more jangly barre-chord, you'll go postal. Fair enough, that is until you hear Buen Chico, who layer sugar-sweet harmonies, catchy vocal melodies and sharp songwriting on top of a base of keep-it-simple-stupid guitar jangle. Their spiky, surf-pop freakouts display the sort of energy you wouldn't think it possible for three people to generate, let alone in a room the size of the Head of Steam. The standout songs seemed to be Choosing My Religion, which snapped, crackled and popped, and Gold From Lead, which showcased their ridiculously catchy vocal melodies and genius songwriting.

The best thing about Buen Chico is that they instantly make you want to form a band, and if you're already in a band, you'll wish they sounded half as inspiring as these.
-- Paul Gibbins, NARC.


PRESS:

Three cornered pop tarts from Leeds, Buen Chico, produced two of the chirpiest moments in recent aural history with their dandy double of corking beanos, Giving Your Gifts and Gold From Lead, on sparkling 7" vinyl. Well if you missed out first time round here's your chance to hear again those frothy hook happy classics along with another eleven rather chipper efforts that veer between criminally catchy Buzzcocks new wave, all jagged guitars and driving drums, and cheery jangle pop, complete with harmonies and singalong choruses. Marvellous stuff and yes, it's Buen Chico time!
-- Sounds XP

Unless you lived in or near Halifax for the last four years you probably haven't heard of Buen Chico. After several lineup changes and a general putsch to Leeds, Buen Chico are more or less ready to be known by music lovers nationwide with their official debut album, 'Right To Re-Arrange'. They have clearly taken long enough to get our attention, so let's not take anymore time and get right to it.

'Choosing My Religion' is an excited, sunny pop explosion of exuberance grafted together by the three-piece Alan, Morgan and Kirsty, who wear their sensible musical influences on their sleeve. Clean, Belle and Sebastian-style rhythm guitar works up an exceptional amount of variety throughout, with the album titleopener being no exception. Singer Morgan Tatchell-Evans' bright voice croons, carries, and drops enjoyable, thoughtful lyrics over top as if he were dressed up as Stephen Malkmus fronting Clap Your Hands Say Yeah. In fact, there are many moments on here reminiscent of the humour and delivery of indie-godfather Pavement, such as the riffs and call-back vocals in 'Lurch', and the talky-singing of 'Don't Lose Your Faith in Goodwill'. The latter is a superb sing-along ballad - the timbre, genius, and pace of which also reminds of the best moments of 'Blue' album Weezer.

Finally, a drummer of a 'new' indie-rock band with the ability to explore interesting, personal fills, surprising time changes, and exhibit overall unconventional rhythms. It is rare to comment on the ingenuity of a drummer in such a seemingly straight-forward and clean rock and roll effort, but Buen Chico's Alan is a wonderful exception. Most times a listener only hears a drummer if he or she sucks, while good drummers generally go unnoticed, but it is almost always the drummer that makes the band - Buen Chico is a made band.

They don't make music to please anybody but themselves and it shows. The sparkling merit apparent in 'Right To Re-Arrange' is self-made and self-referential. Tatchell-Evans sings in 'Turning Myself Red': "I don't care if just six people are listening". Integrity is just the icing on the cake.

With the four years of work and refinement that went into Buen Chico, it should be no surprise how good the debut is – but it is. It will always be a surprise when a band takes the time to acquire personality, pride and presence before crafting an album. These musicians know who they are and because of that so should we, look forward to their future growth.
-- Click Music

Leed's own Buen Chico release sparkling skiffle single 'Gold From Lead' with speedy summertime-sun harmonies and lustrous vigour. The feverish tune tightly mirrors guitarist/vocalist Morgan Tachell-Evans's swaggering lyrics, including first line, "You've been talking oh so quickly". It twinkles along without hesitation and without any sight of ever slowing down; all in all, encompassing a warm, comforting, and happy-go-lucky sway. With the help of bassist/vocalist Kirsty-Marie Dolan, boy-girl vocals tinkle around infectious co-ed Shins territory. But it's this same freewheeling pop susceptibility that may very well be its demise, possibly framing it superficial and disposable.

Barely legal, Buen Chico rebut vulnerability to premature pigeonholing by claiming to mould a more socially and politically aware pop. If so, the sunny direction could easily be deliciously ironic and clever, but it's an aspect simply undetectable, perhaps not there at all. Puckeringly sweet, the musical direction would have a more succulent aftertaste if it actually went somewhere. But it doesn't.

Or does it? 'La La La (I Can't Hear You)' supposedly explo