Archive | June, 2008

The Last Shadow Puppets play debut live shows

Posted on 30 June 2008 by Rich Hughes

The Last Shadow Puppets will be performing their debut live shows in August, followed by their first European and American shows in October/November.  The band, Alex Turner and Miles Kane, and live musicians James Ford (drums), John Ashton (keyboards) and Stephen Fretwell (bass) will be augmented by a full 16 piece orchestra at each show.

The tour will round up at London’s Hammersmith Apollo on Sunday the 26th of October.  Full dates as follows:

August 19th – Portsmouth, Guildhall
August 20th – Oxford, New Theatre
August 22nd – Leeds Festival
August 24th – Reading Festival
August 26th – Paris, Olympia

October 15th – Stockholm - Circus
October 16th – Copenhagen – Vega Main Hall
October 17th – Berlin – Tempodrome
October 19th – Brussels – Cirque Royale
October 20th – Amsterdam – Paradiso
October 22nd – Glasgow – Academy
October 23rd – Sheffield – City Hall
October 26th – London – Hammersmith Apollo

October 30th - Grand Ballroom, New York
November 3rd - Mayan Theatre, Los Angeles

Tickets for all UK headlining shows will be available from usual outlets on Saturday the 5th of July from 9.30am.

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Jaguar Love tour kicks off this week

Posted on 30 June 2008 by Rich Hughes

Jaguar Love (ex-Blood Brothers, Pretty Girls Make Graves) hit the UK at the end of this week and make their London debut at Wireless Festival on Friday (ie. the Morrissey day). Which also happens to be the festival that TLOBF are covering from behind the scenes… keep your eyes peeled this weekend.

Anyway, they’re here to showcase material from their debut album Take Me To The Sea (out 18th August). You can have a taste as well, as the band have offered up a track from it for free:
mp3:> Jaguar Love: ‘Bats over the Pacific Ocean’

Tour dates below:

July
04 Wireless Festival, London
05 The Barfly, Brighton
07 Academy 3, Bristol
08 100 Club, London
09 Cockpit, Leeds
10 Roadhouse, Manchester
12 T In The Park, Scotland
13-July Oxygen Festival, Ireland

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Sunset Rubdown - The Luminaire, London 22/05/08

Posted on 30 June 2008 by Adam Elmahdi


Photographs: Ama Chana

WOW. I’ve waited two years to see Sunset Rubdown, the most brilliant member of that incestuous circle of Canadian indie bands centered round possible genius Spencer Krug, and my God they didn’t let me down. Their swirling, synthy technicolour bombast is manic enough on record, but the unassuming Krug and his gawky, shy band pull out all the stops for their live show, sweeping away all and sundry in a wave of clashing keyboards and breathless, impassioned vocals. Continue Reading

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Frightened Rabbit - Set You Free

Posted on 30 June 2008 by Rich Thane

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White Denim - Workout Holiday

Posted on 30 June 2008 by Alex Harvey

Texas-based trio White Denim have been riding high on the hype machine for a few months now and with anticipation reaching fever pitch the time has come to see what all the fuss has been about with the release of the album, Workout Holiday.

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TLOBF Loves…Rubies

Posted on 30 June 2008 by Kyle Lemmon

TLOBF Loves...Rubies

Music makes connections. Through their music, lead vocalist/songwriter Simone Rubi and bassist/vocalist Terri Lowenthal of the Oakland bedroom disco band Rubies strive to make human connection their ultimate modus operandi.

Friends for seven years and former members of the now defunct Oakland pop ensemble Call and Response, Lowenthal and Rubi form the nucleus of the band, rounded out for live shows by Nicolas Dobbratz on guitar and vocals, and Øyvind Skarbø on drums. Currently signed to Tellé Records (Europe), Hybris (Sweden) and Rallye (Japan), Rubies began as a one-woman managed band. “I funded the album, managed the band, and booked shows,” says Rubi. “Most of that was done solely through the relationships I have.” Continue Reading

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The Watson Twins - Fire Songs

Posted on 30 June 2008 by Catriona Boyle

The Watson Twins return for their second full length album, this time without being augmented by cute-as-a-button indie popsicle Jenny Lewis of Rilo Kiley. Luckily, the Twins are still pretty cute without her.

Fire Songs meanders through tales of happiness and heartbreak, all with the Watson Twin’s distinctive countrified brand. The star of the show is most definitely the Twins’ voices, as their gentle, lilting tones set the mood in every track. Never over-powering or too brash, their vocals have a syrupy, warm feel that is a pleasure to listen to for the entire length of the album.

Sounding distinctly like Rilo Kiley circa More Adventurous (before they went all LA on us), with clean off-beat guitar, soft drums, and a laid-back blues feel. Continue Reading

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Jazz alert! The Thing release albums with Albini & O’Rourke

Posted on 27 June 2008 by Rich Hughes

So they might not be “trad” Jazz, but they’re Jazz all the same. The Thing have announced busy plans for the next 12 months.

They’re going to release a box set called Now And Forever next week via Smalltown Superjazz, which consists of 3 CD’s and 1 DVD. The first two discs are copies of The Thing’s out-of-print albums (The Thing and She Knows…), the other CD is an unreleased recording of an improvised piece called ‘Gluttony’, whilst the DVD is called Live at Øya, featuring the band’s 2005 performance with Thurston Moore at the aforementioned festival.

Onto October, and The Thing will release a new studio album titled Bag It! via Smalltown Supersound. Recorded by Steve Albini, the album features the Thing’s versions of songs by Duke Ellington, Albert Ayler, the Ex, and others, including a couple of originals by the band and by its saxophonist, Mats Gustafsson.

Then last, but not least, The Thing are preparing two live albums for release early next year. One is a show they did with Jim O’Rourke recorded by Otomo Yoshihide, and the other, rather nicely, is a show they did with Otomo Yoshihide recorded by Jim O’Rourke.

Nice.

For more info on The Thing, see here.

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Sigur Ros - Með suð í eyrum við spilum endalaust

Posted on 27 June 2008 by Rich Hughes

Sigur Ros, everyone’s favourite Icelanders, have returned. Their tried and tested “quiet/loud” combinations have garnered them universal appeal, but there’s been a sense of the band wanting to break free of their regular style, challenging their musical make-up. The problem is, they haven’t quite managed it with Með suð í eyrum við spilum endalaust. The album cover features band members, naked, running across a road - maybe a playful comment on the contents within or, if you’re feeling harsher, a bare arsed (sorry) cheek comment on the quality of the material within.

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20 Questions with… White Denim

Posted on 26 June 2008 by Rich Hughes

White Denim’s debut album Workout Holiday (out this week) is a bright, brash and, can I say it, sexy take on angular guitar rock. We caught up with Steve Terebecki (bass) to find out whether they could handle our recently refreshed 20 Questions.

1. Describe your sound in 3 words.
Geeky, clumsy, flourishes.

2. What was the first record you ever bought? And where did you buy it?
The first record I ever bought was Volcano Suns Farced at Wax n Facts in Atlanta, Georgia. Continue Reading

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Eli “Paperboy” Reed & The True Loves - Roll With You

Posted on 26 June 2008 by Andrew Dowdall


Jesus H. Christ! Here’s a voice and a half that means the name of Eli ‘Paperboy’ Reed can be uttered in the same sentence as Otis Redding, Wilson Pickett and Sam Cook without fear of embarrassment. With his electrifying live act (”I rip a lot of pants.”), he’s on his own ‘mission from God’ to pick up the mantle of Jake and Elwood as flag bearer for the Stax/Chess/Motown legacy. There’s been a lot of retro sounds around lately of course, from the ladies mainly, but this is so immediately authentic that, just as with the original soul classics, critical analysis really isn’t relevant. It either mainlines to the gut and throws you around or it doesn’t. Simple as. Continue Reading

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My Morning Jacket - Evil Urges

Posted on 26 June 2008 by Catriona Boyle

For some reason, I was under the impression that My Morning Jacket were Austrailian. If anyone can guess who I was thinking off, I will award some kind of prize, as it’s now irritating me no end.

Pointless anecdotes aside, My Morning Jacket are American, and Evil Urges is the band’s third album with the current line-up, which does appear to change on almost an annual basis. Repetitively named singer Jim James has been present from the outset, and it’s his ethereal, sometimes falsetto, always unusual vocals that underpins MMJ’s sound.

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Hot Chip - One Pure Thought

Posted on 26 June 2008 by Rich Thane

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Cold War Kids - Second Album Teaser

Posted on 26 June 2008 by Rich Hughes

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Spiritualized - Songs in A&E

Posted on 25 June 2008 by Kyle Lemmon

Jason Pierce has said in interviews that his sixth album is “the work of the Devil… with a little guidance from me.” He even went as far as nicknaming the 1929 Gibson L/00 he wrote many of Songs in A&E on as “The Devil” in the liner notes. After all of the daemons Pierce has escaped he is one fortunate chap, but not as lucky as us - the listeners of his sixth disc as the frontman of Spiritualized. Continue Reading

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Giant Sand release their first album in 4 years

Posted on 25 June 2008 by Rich Hughes

Howe Gelb’s Giant Sand have announced the release of Provisions, their first album in nearly 4 years. It’ll be out on the 8th September 2008.

This incarnation of Giant Sand is comprised of Gelb, Danish musicians Thøger T. Lund (bass), Peter Dombernowsky (drums) and Anders Pedersen (slide guitar). It features talented friends/collaborators such as Neko Case, M. Ward, Isobell Campbell, Henriette Sennenvaldt, Lucie Idlout and Lonna Kelley.

More info when we get it folks…

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After Hours: Mothlite

Posted on 25 June 2008 by Rich Thane

Mothlite release their mesmerising debut album The Flax Of Reverie next week via Southern Records. It’s hard to pin a category on these guys - their music is simply epic. A whirring carousel of sound that occasionally feels like your listening to the end of the world happening before your very ears. Listen to some songs here or even better, buy the album here.

Find out what the London based duo have been watching/reading/listening to lately…

Who’s your favourite new band at the moment? Tell us a bit about them.
New bands of interest are few and far between. Fovea Hex has been working for me lately. That’s Clodagh Simonds’ ambient project with favourable collaborators… including Eno, Carter Burwell, Andrew Mckenzie, etc. Continue Reading

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Tupolev - Memories of Bjorn Bolssen

Posted on 25 June 2008 by Jude Clarke

This album arrived on my desk (okay, on my laptop, if we’re being literal) as a completely unknown quantity. They have a name very similar to a Cambridge band of my acquaintance (The Tupolev Ghost – recommended!), and this was really all that piqued my interest in them enough to make me want to review this, their debut full length album.

The website of their label (Valeot ) tells me that they come from Vienna, and are made up of Peter Holy on piano, Alexandr Vatagin on bass and cello, Lukas Scholler on electronics and David Schweighart on drums. What my ears tell me, is that together they make experimental, avant-garde music.

The album is nearly all instrumental (the exception being a short bit of male vocal which appears towards the end of ‘Nothing’s Gonna Happen’ and snatches of half-heard dialogue, in a foreign language that I was not able to place, on ‘Reaset’), and sounds as if a significant proportion of it is being improvised as it is being recorded. Snatches of gorgeous wind (clarinet?) and string (cello?) instrumentation drift in and out, (‘Garlic 07’, ‘Mohavedi’) but the main musical thrust, on nearly every track, comprises sounds made on the piano: be it chords, individual keys, or arpeggios; and drumming of an unsettlingly irregular rhythm and technique. Occasional weird rumblings and shrill piercing notes (these, in particular are found on ‘Garlic 07’) are produced by indeterminate electronic means; and a static crackle from time to time adds a strangely old-fashioned atmosphere, as if you are listening to the music on a beat-up old ’78.

In general terms a lot of the music sounds like something between free jazz (particularly ‘Rnd 2’) and a film soundtrack. It is generally more successful when the strings add a richer sound than when it is just the piano tinkling along. The closest comparison to other contemporary music that I’ve come across is The Drift, but having only seen them live, at last month’s EIxplosions In The Sky ATP, I don’t know how comparable what they do is to Tupolev, on record.

The problem with Memories of Bjorn Bolssen as an overall album, is that after a while the apparent “randomness” of the sounds begins to grate. Not many examples of a genuine melody or deliberate harmony, for example, are to be found. I was left wondering whether the combining of, say, a drum beat, with a piano chord, with a note on the violin was just stumbled upon by happy accident and pure chance in the middle of the musicians’ jamming/improv sessions. And further: if so, does this actually matter? Does the fact that they may not have been produced deliberately mean that the sounds produced are any more or less interesting, or worthy, or pleasing to listen to? Or, more accurately, the fact of knowing (or presuming) that this is how they have been made? For me, I think it does. With the lack of coherence comes a lack of structure for your ears and mind to latch onto and start to appreciate, so I found that both my mind and my ears rather quickly tired of it. Does this make me a philistine? Maybe so, and I would be genuinely interested to hear the thoughts of others who have listened to the album – perhaps there is a “way in” to this kind of music, that I have just not managed to find.

For now though, until I work out some kind of “way in”, I’m going to score it a quite-possibly-unfair:
50%

Links
Tupolev [myspace ]

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Autumn tour update: Micah P Hinson, Feeder & Ben Kweller

Posted on 25 June 2008 by Rich Hughes

We’re concise people at TLOBF, so what better than to condense a whole host of tour dates for you in one convenient article…

First up is Micah P Hinson, whose new album Micah P Hinson & The Red Orchestra is out on 14th July (and is, as you’d expect, marvellous) and he’s touring the UK in September:

02 Cardiff Club Ifor Bach
03 Leeds Holy Trinity Church
04 Liverpool Academy 2
06 Cheltenham Frig & Fiddle
07 Isle Of Wight, Bestival (BBC Stage)
09 Cambridge Junction 2
10 Nottingham Bodega
12 Dorset Larmer Tree Gardens, End Of The Road Festival

We’ve then had news of Feeder with an extensive tour of the UK in October / November:

20 October STOKE-ON-TRENT, Victoria Hall
21 October MANCHESTER, Apollo
23 October NEWCASTLE, Academy
24 October GLASGOW, Barrowlands
26 October LINCOLN, Engine Shed
27 October NOTTINGHAM, Rock City
29 October LIVERPOOL, University
30 October SHEFFIELD, Academy
01 November LOUGHBOROUGH, University
02 November NEWPORT, Centre
04 November BIRMINGAHAM, Academy
05 November LLANDUDNO, Arena
07 November LEEDS, Academy
08 November BRISTOL, Colston Hall
10 November CAMBRIDGE, Corn Exchange
11 November BRIGHTON, Dome
14 November EXETER, University
15 November SOUTHAMPTON, Guildhall
17 November LONDON, Brixton Academy

Tickets go on sale from 9am Friday 27th June and are £22.50 in advance for all shows except London which is £25 in advance.   Doors for all shows will be 7.30pm.

And last, but by no means least, Ben Kweller has announced some dates for December. The shows will give you a chance to hear material from Kweller’s new album, Changing Horses. Tickets are on sale now.

04 Manchester Ruby Lounge
05 Glasgow King Tut’s
06 Dublin Whelans
08 Birmingham Glee Club
09 London Union Chapel

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My Morning Jacket: A Retrospective

Posted on 25 June 2008 by Ro Cemm

For a band who’s album Z saw critics claim they were ‘doing a Radiohead’ (in a time when that meant departing from their set sound and exploring other musical avenues, not giving away your album for free), it seems perhaps fitting that My Morning Jacket’s new release Evil Urges has seen their old record label RCA, through their ATO imprint, re-release their back catalogue now the band have moved on to Rough Trade. It seems to be a similar move to EMI’s repackaging of the aforementioned Radiohead back catalogue: a cynical move by a record label to squeeze the last they can out of the band and cash in on the excitement generated by the bands new album. It would be interesting to know if the records have been re-released in the US, where the band remain on ATO. Unlike many of the re-issues coming out at the moment, which often have bonus tracks, demos or in some cases DVD’s to make the items more appealing to the fans, this series of releases remains the same as it was the day they first hit the shelves. Still, that isn’t to detract from the music made by the Louisville space rockers, nor the releases themselves. Continue Reading

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