
Monday, September 19, 2011
LET'S TOUR - In Japan? No, in Italy. Finalmente: David Sylvian torna nel Bel Paese dopo 5 anni...

Monday, September 5, 2011
TALK TALK - Blondie forever! Debbie Harry interviewed (part 1)

Unusually for a bona fide pop icon, Debbie Harry was already 33 when Blondie released their UK breakthrough album Parallel Lines in 1978, and had even turned 34 when 'Heart Of Glass' was a colossal debut hit in the US a year later. In pop terms, the dynamic core of the group — Harry and her then boyfriend, the guitarist Chris Stein — were already neighing skittishly in the shadow of the glue factory when they hit paydirt. And this ascent to fame goes from being improbable to downright astonishing when you cast your eye over Harry's full CV. It seems unlikely that anyone attempting to tread in her footsteps would have any kind of life left to live by their mid-thirties.
Born on July 1, 1945 in Florida to parents who gave her up for adoption, Debbie Harry grew up in suburban Jersey, where she spent her time formulating plans of escape and daydreaming that Marilyn Monroe was her biological mother. In 1965 she moved to New York City, clicking naturally with the bohemian set, and joined the whimsical folk rock group The Wind In The Willows. Their one album on Capitol, released in 1968, was produced by Artie Kornfeld, who was determined to earn some of that hippy dollar. The year after the record flopped, he got his wish, becoming the musical booker for Woodstock. Harry, meanwhile, became a barmaid at Max's Kansas City in Manhattan where she met Andy Warhol and his retinue, served drinks to Janis Joplin and had sex with glam rocker Eric Emerson in a phone booth.
As the 60s began to sour, so did her experiences. She got hooked on heroin. She married a millionaire but left him a few months later. She became a Playboy Bunny. She moved into a Harlem drug den with a dealer and his armed gang. She eventually crawled out of New York, her life in shreds, only to get lured back by the advent of glam rock. Inspired by hanging out with the New York Dolls at the Mercer Arts Center she ended up forming her own group, The Stilettos, in 1972. A year later Stein watched the group and was so impressed he ended up joining. Although they never made it, this band were essentially part of New York punk's first wave along with other CBGB's house acts Television, Suicide and Wayne County. In 1974 Harry and Stein quit to start afresh and what was originally Angel And The Snakes became Blondie; the nomenclature derived from the name that lascivious New York drivers yelled out of their car windows at her.
They were not overnight sensations. Many rough edges needed to be sanded off before they became household names. By the time they released their first single in June 1976, the live song 'Sex Offender' became the 7" 'X Offender', for example. But Blondie were never going to fit into the narrow punk orthodoxy. Like The Clash, they were part of rock'n'roll's lineage, reflected by their nods to 50s culture and their dalliances with multiple new and classic forms of pop music, unconcerned if it made them look like dilettantes or not. And the rest of their music? Well, they barely released a bad single during their original seven-year existence, from the serrated punk of 'Rip Her To Shreds' and the clipped new wave of 'Denis' to the downtown disco hip hop of 'Rapture' and the shiny calypso reggae of 'The Tide Is High' via the unimpeachable pop statements of 'Union City Blue' and 'Atomic'.
Despite clearly possessing pop genius, the group were often dismissed as 'mere' teeny boppers and have never really garnered the kind of critical plaudits that might have been theirs had they looked like dough-faced brewers from Carlisle and sung about signing on. Harry, in particular, was always at pains to point out in interviews that Blondie were a group, rather than just her with a backing band, and after finding out that they shared a name with the favourite pet of the 20th Century's most reviled dictator, they threatened to change their name to Adolf Hitler's Dog by means of protest.
Toward the tail end of the group, heroin reared its ugly head again and the band fizzled out in 1982. Then, the following year, Stein was laid up by the life-threatening and rare autoimmune disease pemphigus. Blondie gave way to make room for his recuperation and Harry's solo career.
Although no longer a couple, Harry and Stein still share an intense bond — she is godmother to his two daughters — and they still work together continuously. This year the Blondie name has been revived once again for the pair (along with original drummer Clem Burke and newer recruits) to release their ninth album, Panic Of Girls. We join her for lunch to talk heroin, New York and why we should be taught about death at an early age.
I've enjoyed listening to the three songs I've heard from the new album and I was blown away by how modern it sounds. But then I guess Blondie has always had a very close relationship with current trends in dance music.
Debbie Harry: Yeah, we've always been very urban.
Is a Panic Of Girls a collective noun — you know, like a pride of lions?
DH: [laughs] A panic. Yeah. I hadn't thought of that.
What does the title refer to, joking aside?
DH: It's a line from one of the songs, which is about a street person who is predicting the end of the world. It's something that came out as just a rhyming line but, I don't know, it just seemed great when I said it.
The character of the mother doesn't really crop up in rock & roll that much but she seems to appear in your songs quite a lot.
DH: Really? You think so?
In 'Hanging On The Telephone'. In 'Golden Rod'. In 'Mother' on this album…
DH: Oh, mother, right. Well, Jack Lee [of The Nerves] wrote that ['Hanging On The Telephone'], so we can't be held responsible. Mother used to be a club in New York that I loved going to. It was the kind of place where they would have a theme and you would have to dress accordingly or you wouldn't get in. It was a really great fun night for me on a Tuesday. It was mainly people from the city — it wouldn't be like a Bridge and Tunnel thing. There was a good bar that you could drink in, another room with a dancefloor and stage where they put on shows… I performed in some of them. It was an off-the-wall kind of joint. There was also a basement with other music and video screens that had these loops playing that [visual artist] Rob Roth used to make up. When they closed I was sort of, 'Wow! What am I going to do on a Tuesday night now?'
Do you still live in New York?
DH: Uh huh.
When I think of New York in the late 70s and early 80s, I think of Blondie as being a quintessential band for the time and place; that you would have fitted in, in all the different New York strata — uptown, downtown, rich, poor, arty, punk rock, disco, hip hop.
DH: Uh huh. [Her nouvelle cuisine-sized meal arrives. She eyes the waiter sternly.] That's it? [sighs] Do you want some of this?
No, I'm good thanks. When you first moved to New York around the time you first started working in Max's, what was the city like?
DH: I guess it was not as crowded as it is now; not so many new apartment buildings in it, and a lot of old buildings. The rents were low. The city government was bankrupt. There were always strikes. It was kind of great — chaotic and dangerous.
Did it feel like the artistic spirit of New York was very accessible? Because didn't you meet Andy Warhol and the Factory crowd quite easily?
DH: It was a small world, basically. It was an enclave. The Downtown world really meant something. I think it's always going to be like that because it's such a small area. Everyone in New York is forced to know each other. There are new apartment buildings that have increased the population and a lot of people that would normally have moved to a nicer area at one time can now live downtown and be comfortable in a nice apartment, whereas it used to be just flats and brownstones and tenements. So that nature of it has all changed.
Do you think that 'zero tolerance' changed the musical spirit of the city?
DH: 'Zero tolerance'?
When I first went to New York, it was in 1992 and I didn't go back for over 10 years. In the intervening time, something happened — the city felt safer but it had also changed in negative ways as well. I can only speak as a tourist.
DH: It felt like Cleveland or Cincinnati, right? You know, I feel the same way about it.
Can I ask why you chose to cover Sophia George's 'Girlie Girlie' for the album?
DH: It's a great song. I don't think it was ever played in the States. But it was a big hit in the UK, right?
I must admit, until I heard your version I'd always presumed that the Sophia George was criticising a male suitor for being too camp: “Young man, you're too girlie girlie." I didn't listen very carefully.
DH: [laughs]
Obviously given this and 'The Tide Is High', you're no stranger to reggae. Did you ever go to Jamaica?
DH: No! I hate the Caribbean! I like the music but I hate the islands. I just don't like them.
Too hot? Too girlie girlie?DH: There are a couple of reasons. I don't really like being on an island that's that small and I don't really like the separation between the people who live there and the people who go there. That really disturbs me.
You're advised to stay within the compound of your hotel and not go wandering around Trenchtown, or wherever, on your own, right?
DH: Yeah. Part of the reason I would want to visit a place like that would be the religion and the churches — the local culture. As you say, you're not really encouraged to move beyond your boundaries.
What was your introduction to reggae like? Where did it come from?
DH: Hmmmm, I don't know exactly. I think I'd been hearing it for a long time. But I know that Chris came to London when there was a big reggae scene. I think it was in 1972 and when he came back he was really high on this reggae groove…Do you want some of this salad?
No thanks. On 'Girlie Girlie', I love the fact that there's a diss on there to a woman who sells cigarettes on a roundabout. Amazing. But talking of the song's wayward ways, are you a monogamist and have you always been?
DH: A monogamist? Mmm. Ha ha ha! I guess I have been. Dating is such a drag, don't you think? It gets really horrible and complicated. I have gone out with different guys at the same time but that was a long time ago. But now I just have friends so it's not quite the same, but it gets really complicated. Doesn't it?
Monday, August 8, 2011
Wednesday, August 3, 2011
Friday, July 29, 2011
VIDEOKILLER/NEW GOLD DREAMS - "White Elephant" brand new video by Ladytron is out! Merçi Mr. Kubrick...
"White Elephant" appears on Ladytron's forthcoming full length album, Gravity The Seducer, in stores September 12 (UK) / September 13 (US). Hear more music from Gravity The Seducer: http://snd.sc/kavzOy
Reserve your copy of Gravity The Seducer:
iTunes: http://www.itunes.com/ladytron
CD on Amazon (US): http://amzn.to/jgX0q1
LP on Amazon (US): http://amzn.to/kXihkK
Signed CD (Euro): http://bit.ly/nN8zgE
Signed LP (Euro): http://bit.ly/pcCX7X
CD on Amazon (Euro): http://amzn.to/n1D2BT
LP on Amazon (Euro): http://amzn.to/r89D7F
Visit Ladytron Online:
www.ladytron.com
www.facebook.com/ladytron
www.twitter.com/ladytronmusic
Thursday, July 28, 2011
NEWS WAVE - Altro che spiaggia e sole, questo weekend tutti al Vintage Festival a Londra

Vintage Festival 2011 will be taking place over the Friday 29th until Sunday 31st July at a new home at London's Southbank Centre. The 21 acre South Bank site will be transformed into a Vintage wonderland.All the wonderful clubs, bands, fashions, art, and design, film, shops, vintage retailers, dance lessons, makeovers, workshops that made Vintage 2010 so memorable will be there along with some cool new Thames boat party surprises.This annual family friendly music and fashion led celebration of creative British cool from the 40s, 50s, 60s, 70s & 80s. The festival will feature music, fashion, art and design, film, comedy, burlesque, and food.
Line-upAdam Ant, Thomas Dolby, Robin Gibb, Percy Sledge, Sandie Shaw, Alan Wilder, Mirrors, Booker T., David McAlmont, The Jim Jones Revue, Andrej Havelka & His Melody Makers, John Miller Orchestra, The Jive Aces, Fargo, Trio Manouche, DC Fontana, Dr Robert, Chris Dale, Speed and Pid, George Power, Norman Jay, Terry Farley, Jay Strongman, Mike Pickering, Graeme Park, A Guy Called Gerald, Craig Charles, Jon Da Silva, Greg Wilson, Noel Watson, Sean Rowley, Ashley Beedle, Horse Meat Disco, Disco Bloodbath DJs, and many more. For the line-up details as available please click here.
TicketsTickets for Friday, Saturday or Sunday are priced at £60, with a day + Vintage revue show pass priced from £75. To buy tickets, click here.The festival will be housed in The Royal Festival Hall, The Hayward Gallery, Queen Elizabeth Hall, Purcell Room, The British Film Institute, the shops, restaurants and bars and the Thames Embankment itself.Vintage on the South Bank features an inspirational line-up of world renowned bands, DJs, collectors from each decade as well as current bands and brands inspired by Britain's rich creative heritage.
Vintage will feature a line-up of catwalk shows, hands on creative experiences with a gathering of over 200 of the finest purveyors of vintage clothing, accessories, and homewares in a Vintage Marketplace running for hundreds of metres along The Thames.Visitors can have their hair + make up done in a iconic style, can take part in fashion, design and art workshops and the best dressed get their chance to strut their stuff on the Vintage Catwalk.By night the whole of the Southbank complex will be transformed into a series of evocative set dressed venues, complimented by a flotilla of party boats, cruising The Thames on a summer evening specialising in genres from funk, to electro swing.The British Film Institute will also host three days of 20th century classic and iconic movies, Public Information films and documentaries.Vintage at Goodwood is the brainchild of designers Gerardine and Wayne Hemingway. The South Bank is this year also celebrating the 60th anniversary of the 1951 Festival of Britain.More information will be here when available.
Tuesday, July 26, 2011
TALK TALK - Remembering Bauhaus...Peter Murphy on Bauhaus, Dali's Car, his new solo album and his status as Godfather

Peter Murphy interviewed by "The Quietus"
For the last 30 years or so, goth has been the most durable of musical genres. Loved and ridiculed in equal measure, in its refusal to die it has come to resemble any number of vampire movies where the antagonist simply cannot be stopped despite all manner of stakes, garlic and crucifixes.
Yet bizarrely, as it came to mutate over the decades to cross-pollinate with any number of other genres – techno, industrial and metal have all felt the chill hand of goth resting on their shoulders – several of its key players have come to reject the genre like a parent disinheriting an errant child. The Sisters Of Mercy’s Andrew Eldritch will flee from the word with the haste of a bloodsucker making its way back to its coffin before the first rays of the rising sun, while The Cure’s Robert Smith is probably too cuddly to qualify as one despite a following that suggests otherwise.
Not so Peter Murphy. The erstwhile Bauhaus vocalist – sharp of cheek and pouting of lip – is only to happy to admit to his part in goth’s formation. Combining sacrilegious and blasphemous subject matter with S&M imagery and a high sense of camp and drama, Bauhaus were one of the first bands to use punk as a launchpad to somewhere else. Their brief reign of terror lasted less than five years but the imprint they left behind is still visible to this very day.
Now based in Istanbul, Murphy has just released his ninth solo album entitled, er… Ninth. Soon to be touring the States, Murphy returns to Europe after the summer, just in time for those long evenings to start drawing in…
From your vantage point of a lifetime of experience, how do you view the younger version of yourself who was just starting out in Bauhaus?
Peter Murphy: Well, with all modesty, when I think back, when we started writing songs in that mobile classroom I knew that I’d made it already. I remember everything because I have an elephant’s memory, and my memories of our farewell show in ’83 [at Hammersmith Palais] are particularly vivid and quite personal, in a sense. Having burnt our fires around the world, I was burnt out, really.
Can you remember what the catalyst was that moved you into music?
PM: From early on, I would whistle. I was more vocal than intellectual at school. I remember always whistling on that dreary walk to school, and there was music everywhere in my Catholic school. But there was music at home, too - more vocal music in a sense, but what really grabbed me was when I watched cheesy television shows like The Golden Shot and they’d always have these visiting stars singing a song here and there. And I used to think, 'I can do that!' I don’t know where that came from, but when I was at a concert I always knew that I’d rather be onstage than being down in the audience. But there was pivotal moment when I was about 14, and we were driving home from seeing relatives. It was night time and I was nodding off on the back seat with my head in my arms, and I just shot up with a great sense of urgency and said, 'I’m going to be a singer!' And that was that. They just turned round and said, 'Right. Go back to sleep.'
How important was the high drama of Catholicism, such as Masses, to the development of Bauhaus stage act?
PM: Tangentially, [guitarist] Daniel Ash and I were the Catholics and the other two [bassist David J and drummer Kevin Haskins] were the miserable, selfish Church of England heathens. When we first started touring, Daniel and I would stay in a bed and breakfast and their parents got them hotels. It was really pathetic. Daniel and I brought the psychodrama to the band, and I would exorcise a lot of that repressed psychodrama that had been left over from Catholicism. Personally, I used to really enjoy Mass and the hymns and there was a great contemplation of the Anti-Christ. I really enjoyed it but I also wanted a shag, which is why I went into a band, I guess. My passion, really - which came out in the first album, In The Flat Field - was escaping the flat fields of the mundane; the escape from the working class ghetto of the 'jobs for life' mentally and its forced ignorance. That reflected in the Church’s idea of hierarchical supremacy where the priests would say, 'Listen to me. We mediate between you and God; you just get on with it.' There was a lot of that that came out in the music.
Download these from "Ninth":Peter Murphy - Seesaw Sway by nettwerkmusicgroup
Peter Murphy - Never Fall Out by nettwerkmusicgroup
Friday, July 22, 2011
Tuesday, July 19, 2011
NEW GOLD DREAMS - From Russia with love. Take a listen to The Tapeaters, i Junior Boys moscoviti

The band first got noticed in september, 2009 after the release of their first EP ‘Keep on Dancing’. This record was a combination of 7 tracks with catchy melodies, bouncy groves and the atmosphere of a slightly melancholic happiness. The title track ‘Keep on dancing’ still remains the most listened to. Inspired by positive feedback The Tapeaters didn’t wait long and released their second EP ‘Watch your Step’ in november.
In 2010 The Tapeaters toured Russia, Ukraine, Belorussia and played at the biggest russian music festival alongside The Horrors, Pantha Du Prince, Autokratz and many more. This experience proved that the band is great both on records and live. This was also the year when the collaboration between The Tapeaters and the Colombian design agency Monocromo began. The brilliant designers brought the band’s visual concept to a new level by working on the concept for the releases, their cover art for the releases and the website.
Later that year the band signed a record deal with a Boston based label OMG! Recordings. The first single ‘Oh My’ was released in august with remixes from Moscow producer Kimouts and Boston duo Nightriders, and was named in the 10 must hear indie-dance tracks on Beatport. It was followed by ‘Satellite’, that contained a dreamy funky original track and incredible remixes from Lifelike, Xinobi and Ghosts of Venice. Two weeks later The Tapeaters released their debut album ‘Visions’, consisting of 13 tracks.
The Tapeaters are working on their second LP.
The Tapeaters - Keep On Dancing (Real Altered) by The Tapeaters
Friday, July 15, 2011
NEWS WAVE - Here he is the new Steve Strange! Patrick Wolf shows his real...Visage
Tuesday, July 12, 2011
LET'S TOUR - Blow up again! I Blow Monkeys son più vivi che mai e sono al Guilfest di metà luglio!

Di seguito l'hit che ha reso famosi i BM negli '80, "Digging Your Scene" e "Steppin' Down", tra gli ultimi sorprendenti single dei giorni nostri.
Friday, July 8, 2011
LET'S TOUR/OFF THE RECORDS - Don't you forget about them! Simple Minds on the summer tour plus live record...

Tuesday, July 5, 2011
OFF THE RECORDS - Erasure's Andy Bell selects 13 favourite records of his life

Blondie - Plastic Letters
Already their second studio album, they had scored hit singles with 'Denis Denis' (I first heard that on my Grandad's window cleaning round) and the sublime 'I'm Always Touched By Your (Presence Dear)', still one of my favourites to this very day. As a whole album, it sounds like a spy movie soundtrack with 'Contact In Red Square' and 'Kidnapper'. Highlights for me include 'I'm On E' and 'Love At The Pier'. The very definition of late 70s New York pop art and punk glamour; Deborah Harry, for me, will remain forever the Queen of New Wave.
Lene Lovich - Flex
I became an instant fan of Lene's after the quirky chart hits 'Lucky Number' and 'Say When', I quickly became a fan of the Stiff Label's Roster through Lene and Madness and Kirsty MacColl. This was her second studio album, completely bonkers but as soon as I heard ‘Bird Song’ on the radio I rushed out to buy the 12 inch and subsequently the EP 'You Can't Kill Me' and the album flex. 'Angels', the second single, reminds me of Del Shannon's 'Run Away' and I remember reading that the weird album cover was shot inside a vat at the Guinness factory; I suppose it could be described as a Buddhist album. We were later on to meet and collaborate with Lene on don't 'Kill The Animal's', a song for PETA.
Siouxsie and the Banshees - Kaleidoscope
I had been a rather reluctant punk as a teenager, finding the whole movement too aggressive for a Peterborough gay boy, so this I suppose more commercial offering from Siouxsie was much more up my street - and consequently, as with all my favourite teen angst albums, I learnt all of the songs inside out and backwards. Siouxsie has an incredible voice and was one of my first live concerts, alongside Joe Jackson. We were later to bump into her at Sire Records in NYC but I was too nervous and shy too say 'Hi'.
Talking Heads - Remain In Light
The likes of which I had never heard before - white soul boy funk - it was a great album for a party soundtrack and hash joints. I just love the mad percussion and pseudo African backing vocals, though I don't have a clue what Mr. Byrne is singing about.
The B-52s - The B-52s
Obviously we gravitate to those we love, and I suppose the B52's did all the groundwork for the campy disco rock a la Scissor Sisters that followed decades later. They are true originals and may have been the soundtrack to a John Water's movie. I lost count of the amount of times I danced to ‘Rock Lobster’ and tried to learn the who's who list of names on 52 Girls. The brilliant thing about being a pop musician is that you get to meet all of your teen idols. We toured with The B52's and I stayed in Woodstook at Kate Pierson's Lazy Meadow's Silver-line Caravan site, where I consequently felt the drums of an Indian pow wow coming up through the water of the river through my feet (which I often hear on the intro to ‘A Little Respect’ but it isn’t actually part of the music… spooky!).
Kate Bush - This Woman's Work Volume One
Part of a deluxe boxed set of Kate's work right up until Experiment IV, the woman is an absolute genius and I just love this collection of B-sides, Christmas singles etc. 'Under The Ivy' and 'The Empty Bullrin'’ just break my heart. I love Kate's vocals laid bare, often better than the finished studio versions - just piano and her. Also, please check out the bootleg Cathy's Home Demos: it's staggering. It’s worth the price simply for ‘December Will Be Magic Again’ and ‘Lord Of The Reedy River’ (which I didn't realise was a Donovan song). I am haunted by Kate's opening line "I fell In Love With a Swan", that's where the swan bike for 'Phantasmagorical Entertainment' came from and, of course, 'Ride A White Swan' by Mr Bolan.
Kirsty MacColl - Kite
The most undersung songwriting genius ever in British pop. I had the privilege of hanging out with Kirtsy on a number of occasions and I have to say, she was the bomb. We usually got into trouble somewhere along the line. She couldn't understand why she wasn't more popular and nether could I, but this album kinds of explains it really. Songs like '15 Minutes'… she kinda knew that pop would eat itself, and she was too talented and beautiful for the fickle superficial pop world. 'Don't Come The Cowboy With Me Sonny Jim' needs to be covered by a mega country artist. The backing vocals on 'Dancing In Limbo' are sublime and 'Le Foret De Mimosa' makes me cry.
Ladytron - 604
Sounds like a post Chernobyl Fallout album very similar musically to early Lene & Pet Shops. I love 'The Way That I Found You', 'Commodore Rock' and 'Playgirl'. I don't know what it is about them but I love her voice and dead pan delivery - there's a hint of 60's Lynne Redgrave from Smashing Time & loads of mid 80's references. Which leads me neatly to...
The Human League - Dare
What a fucking record! If you hadn't been introduced to synthesisers via Kraftwerk or Soft Cell, then this was the album that would do it. This was another that became the soundtrack to my teenage life. Knew it inside out and what a relief that boys could finally wear makeup. There's not one dud track on here and the non-singles are best, except 'Love Action', which is pure class. The League are the reason that electronic music has been kept alive.
Miss Kittin & The Hacker - First Album
I first heard 'Frank Sinatra' when Erasure where recording the album Erasure in 1994 at the Strongroom in Shoreditch East London, which has now become metrosexual electro Grand Central. I love her completely nonchalant don't give a fuck attitude on Hollywood Star, it kind of reminds me of my pre-Erasure work with Pierre Cope - very minimal. On 'Frank Sinatra' she sounds like a Russian Mafia gangster that would kill you stone dead. They're also brilliant live.
Yazoo - Upstairs At Eric's
This is when I fell in love with the genius Mr. Clarke & Alison's amazing voice. I could see why they thought she was a black gospel singer in the Detroit/Chicago House clubs. 'I Before E Except After C' kinda fucks your head up, and it's very indicative of what it's like to work with Vince. 'Winter Kills' is bleak and heart bracingly sublime all at the same time.
Japan - Quiet Life
'Quiet Life' is one of the most beautiful tracks Giorgio Moroder ever created, and together with the voice of the uber-glamourous Dave Sylvian, is like heaven on a stick. The cover of 'All Tomorrow's Parties', dare I say, is better than the original.
Donna Summer - Once Upon A Time
Speaking of Giorgio Moroder, you have to give it to the guy. What a brilliant team, him and Donna. From the very opening 'Once Upon A Time’, this is a kind of a mini-musical and completely sums up the studio 54 NYC disco era in one fell swoop. This record could actually turn a straight man gay - especially the trilogy 'Now I Need You', 'Working The Midnight Shift' and 'Queen For A Day' It must have cost an absolute fortune to record with all the brass and string arrangements, but this is Donna at her absolute post 'I Feel Love' best. I wish I could have been a fly on the wall.
Monday, July 4, 2011
LET'S TOUR - I Duran Duran annullano il tour, problemi di voce per Le Bon

Sono state quindi cancellate anche le tre date previste in Italia:
22 luglio Piazzola sul Brenta
23 luglio Milano
24 luglio Margherita di Savoia
Sarà possibile richiedere il rimborso dei biglietti già acquistati entro il 30 agosto 2011, presso il punto vendita di acquisto. Per i biglietti acquistati online TicketOne manderà una e-mail con tutti i dettagli a tutti gli acquirenti.
I dottori reputano che i muscoli che controllano le corde vocali del cantante si siano danneggiate in occasione del concerto tenuto a Cannes i primi di maggio di quest’anno, causando la temporanea riduzione della sua estensione vocale.
Fisioterapia e un rigoroso programma medico permetteranno al cantante di tornare in piena forma velocemente, anche se è troppo presto per fare un’esatta previsione dei tempi di recupero.
La decisione anticipata di rimandare il tour europeo è stata presa per evitare di deludere i fan pochi giorni prima dei concerti.
Friday, July 1, 2011
Monday, June 20, 2011
OFF THE RECORDS - Gagaism revisited! Three for Lady "Judas": Hurts, Goldfrapp and now Röyksopp

Goldfrapp and Hurts were the first ones to remix Lady Gaga's "Judas" song some weeks ago. More intimate and in slow motion that one by Goldfrapp, more "contro tempo" and didascalic that one by Hurts.
Now even Röyksopp have remixed the pre-last Lady Gaga single...it's the most down to the beat of the trio gone to the Lady's court. Take a listen to the "Röyksopp European Imbecile Remix" below! The track is available to download now in Part 2 of the "Judas (Remixes) EP".
Listen to the "Judas" remix by Royksopp
Wednesday, June 15, 2011
NEWS WAVE - The Queen is dead...or maybe not! NME celebrates 25 years of the astonishing The Smiths' album

Saturday, June 11, 2011
Thursday, June 9, 2011
LET'S TOUR/TALK TALK - Non c'è due senza tre...I Duran fanno tris di tappe in Italia e intanto raccontano moda e mode degli '80 su "Love Magazine"

Tuesday, June 7, 2011
OFF THE RECORDS/LET'S TOUR - Non solo Depeche! Da oggi in vendita anche il nuovo di Peter Murphy, ex Bauhaus, con relativo tour in USA

The day has come, 'Ninth' is finally here! Get your copy from ITUNES / AMAZON today!
Peter Murphy returns to the United States with special live appearances around the release of NINTH including rare in-store performances & signings!
Full list of live shows and in-stores performances:
Tues, June 7 New York, NY @ J&R Music World (in-store performance & signing)… RSVP
Wed, June 8 New York, NY @ The Delancy... Tickets / RSVP
Wed, June 15 San Diego, CA @ Casbah… Tickets / RSVP
Thur, June 16 Los Angeles, CA @ Amoeba (in-store performance & signing)…INFO
Fri, June 17 Pioneertown, CA @ Pappy & Harriet's… Tickets / RSVP
Thur, June 23 San Francisco, CA @ Amoeba (in-store performance & signing)…INFO
Fri, June 24 San Francisco, CA @ Bottom Of The Hill… Tickets / RSVP
Sat, June 25 Sacramento, CA @ Boardwalk…Tickets / RSVP
Sun, June 26 Costa Mesa, CA @ Detroit Bar... Tickets / RSVP
Wed, June 29 Los Angeles, CA @ The Troubadour… Tickets / RSVP
OFF THE RECORDS - Buy or die! Da oggi in vendita il nuovo Cd di remix dei Depeche Mode!

For the US market, select US independent music retailers will be selling the 3-CD edition of "Remixes 2: 81-11" with a very special, very limited 12" single. The 12" (sticker from the front cover on the left) contains two remixes of "Personal Jesus" (Alex Metric Remix and the M.A.N. Remix), as well as not-on-CD remixes of "The Sun And The Rainfall" (Black Light Odyssey's Further Excerpts) and "The Sinner In Me" (SixToes Remix). A full list of independent retailers is available on the Record Store Day web site, but not all of the retailers will be participating. As such, we advise you to call ahead, to make sure that your favorite indie retailer is participating in the event.
For now, we can tell you the following shops are participating: J & R, Manhattan, NYNewbury Comics - various locations in Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Rhode IslandAmoeba Records, Hollywood, CA (and possibly other Amoeba locations)Fingerprints Records, Long Beach, CALou's Records, Encinitas, CAPlease check the Record Store Day web site for more details. As we hear more details, we will post them here as well.
Master And Servant (RSS Remix)
In Chains (Myer vs Wilder Deconstruction)
Amazon - exclusive bonus tracks
Sister Of Night (Ida Engberg's Giving Voice To The Flame Remix)
Sweetest Perfection (Phil Kieran Remix)
HMV - exclusive bonus tracks
The Sun And The Rainfall (Black Light Odyssey's Further Excerpts)
The Sinner In Me (SixToes Remix)
Spotify Premium - exclusive bonus tracks
Sister Of Night (Ida Engberg's Walking Through The Light Dub)
Sweetest Perfection (Phil Kieran Remix Dub)
Personal Jesus (Alex Metric Dub)
The Sun And The Rainfall (Black Light Odyssey's Further Excerpts)
The Sinner In Me (SixToes Remix)
FRANCE Virginmega.com - exclusive bonus tracks
The Sun And The Rainfall (Black Light Odyssey's Further Excerpts)
I Want It All (Roland M. Dill Lunar Dub Remix)
GERMANY Napster - exclusive bonus track
The Sun And The Rainfall (Black Light Odyssey's Further Excerpts)
SWITZERLAND 20 min / Basepoint Media - exclusive bonus track
The Sinner In Me (SixToes Remix)
SWEDEN CDON - exclusive bonus track
The Sinner In Me (SixToes Remix)
NORWAY / SWEDEN / DENMARK WiMP / Aspiro - exclusive bonus track
The Sun And The Rainfall (Black Light Odyssey's Further Excerpts)
AUSTRALIA Big Pond - exclusive bonus track
The Sun And The Rainfall (Black Light Odyssey's Further Excerpts)
FINLAND Nokia - exclusive bonus track
The Sun And The Rainfall (Black Light Odyssey's Further Excerpts)
ITALY Net Music - exclusive bonus track
The Sun And The Rainfall (Black Light Odyssey's Further Excerpts)
Dream On (Bushwacka Tough Guy Dub)
Suffer Well (M83 Instrumental)
John The Revelator (UNKLE Dub)
In Chains (Tigerskin's No Sleep Alternative Remix)
Wrong (Trentemøller Club Remix Dub)
A Pain That I'm Used To (Jacques Lu Cont Dub)
Leave In Silence (Claro Intelecto Walk Away Remix)
I Want It All (Roland M. Dill Instrumental)
A Question Of Time (Joebot Presents 'Radio Face' Instrumental)
Personal Jesus (Sie Medway-Smith Remix Instrumental).
Friday, June 3, 2011
Tuesday, May 31, 2011
OFF THE RECORDS - Into the Bush again!

Friday, May 27, 2011
NEWS WAVE - Boy George parla italiano: l'11 giugno al Pineta e collaborazione con i nostrani Phunk Investigation

http://soundcloud.com/dafresh/phunk-investigation-vs-boy-george-generations-of-love-da-fresh-rmx-tiger-records
Thursday, May 26, 2011
NEW GOLD DREAMS/VIDEOKILLER - "Synchronize" by Discodeine (feat. Jarvis Cocker)
Tuesday, May 24, 2011
TALK TALK - Simon Le Bon: "nel mondo che cambia, fare ancora il musicista è un privilegio"

ROMA, MAG. - Gli anni '80 sono lontani e tutto il tempo passato e' nei Duran Duran di oggi, quattro cinquantenni che portano con disinvoltura e evidenti segni di pancetta i segni di un'epoca diversa. Simon Le Bon, Nick Rhodes e John Taylor sono stati il simbolo di una stagione e oggi non hanno nessun rimpianto ne' provano a riproporre un modo d'essere che li ha fatti diventare dei miti pop. Pochi mesi fa e' uscito 'All You Need Now', il loro nuovo album: sostanzialmente fanno i musicisti, senza l'assillo di essere un mito pop. ''E' grande fare ancora questo lavoro, per noi non c'e' molta differenza nell'atteggiamento con cui affrontiamo la musica che resta una questione d'amore - racconta Simon Le Bon -. Attorno a noi il mondo e' cambiato: quando abbiamo cominciato registravamo i nostri provini sulle cassette, oggi persino il cd e' un oggetto superato, anche il mercato e' molto diverso. I nostri dischi dell'epoca d'oro vendevano in media 5-6 milioni di copie, due anni fa siamo arrivati al primo posto in America con una cifra infinitamente piu' bassa, ma questo non vuol dire molto perche' fare il musicista e' un po' come essere un attore, qualche volta il tuo lavoro viene preso meglio, altre volte peggio, ma quello che piu' conta e' potersi esibire per un pubblico e mai come oggi il mercato della musica live e' stato cosi' vitale''. I trent'anni di carriera alle spalle danno ai Duran Duran la consapevolezza di ''essere una fonte di ispirazione per le band della nuova generazione - dice Le Bon -: gruppi come Killers, Franz Ferdinand, Kaiser Chief hanno sonorita' e strutture musicali che si ispirano a noi, d'altra parte nella musica e' sempre stato cosi'. Anche oggi noi siamo appassionati ascoltatori di musica, mi piacciono molto i Gossip e adoro l'ultimo disco di P.J. Harvey''. Anche la neo principessa Kate piace alla band, cosi' come il nuovo primo ministro inglese Cameron, ''un uomo che non ha paura di dare brutte notizie e di prendere decisioni difficili, in una situazione finanziaria molto dura che, soprattutto nel nord dell'Inghilterra, si fa sentire molto''. Quando erano il massimo del divismo pop, i Duran Duran erano praticamente inavvicinabili, vivevano assediati dalle fan e giravano nei cellulari della polizia, un incubo per i giornalisti che dovevano incontrarli. Oggi sono molto disponibili, sorridenti, quattro signori che, tra alti e bassi, separazioni, progetti falliti, si sono rimessi insieme e si godono la vita del rocker senza troppi fronzoli, ben consapevoli che tutto sommato gli e' andata di lusso. ''Fare questo lavoro e' un privilegio - dice Le Bon -: nella vita le cose cambiano ma certamente se mi guardo indietro e penso a tutte le cose che abbiamo fatto mi rendo conto che da ragazzino neanche mi sognavo di raggiungere simili obiettivi. La musica e' il grande amore della nostra vita e non si puo' non ritenersi fortunati quando si pensa che per tanta gente i Duran Duran rappresentano una parte importante della loro vita''.
Sunday, May 22, 2011
NEWS WAVE - Gli Spandau Ballet sono nati in un cesso di Berlino!

Tuesday, May 17, 2011
LET'S TOUR - Duran(o) ancora! La band di Simon Le Bon di nuovo in Italia il 22 e 23 luglio (Piazzola del Brenta e Milano)

COSTO DEI BIGLIETTI PER PIAZZOLA SUL BRENTA
Poltronissima 50 euro + prevendita
Platea Numerata 40 euro + prevendita
Tribuna Numerata 32 euro + prevendita
Posto Unico 25 euro + prevendita
COSTO DEI BIGLIETTI PER MILANO
Posto a sedere 40 euro + prevendita
Posto in piedi 34 euro + prevendita
Per maggiori informazioni:
LIVE NATION ITALIA (02 53006501 – info@livenation.it – www.livenation.it)
Radio Partner ufficiale del tour italiano RDS (www.rds.it)
Sito ufficiale: www.duranduran.com
VIDEOKILLER/LIVE AND KICKING - L'addio degli Yazoo alle scene con "Don't go" al Festival della Mute sabato scorso
Sunday, May 15, 2011
LIVE AND KICKING - Al Mute Festival arriva anche Dave Gahan e il "grissino" Alison Moyet dice addio agli Yazoo
