Sunday, October 16, 2011

Metallica: ''Lulu' is one of the best things we've ever done'

Kirk Hammett also describes the project as mainly 'an artistic endeavour for ourselves'

Metallica have said that they believe 'Lulu', their forthcoming collaboration album with Lou Reed, is "one of the best things they've ever done".

'Lulu', which is based around German playwright Frank Wedekind's 1913 play about the life of an abused dancer, is due for release on October 31, with the North American release following a day later on November 1.

Leonard Cohen prepares new album with help of son Adam

Leonard Cohen has been working on his first album in seven years, with the help of his son Adam.

Slated for release later this year, the as-yet-untitled album could feature songs debuted on the musician' s world tour, which finished last year.

Adam told the BBC he had been helping his 77-year-old father in the studio.

"I was asked in some consultant capacity on a few occasions and I'm very happy to listen to what's being created and be asked for my opinions."

However he has discounted rumours of a possible father / son collaboration.

Saturday, October 15, 2011

This week's new releases

  • Ryan Adams, Ashes and Fire 
    Following a detour into heavy metal (2010's Orion), as well as a pair of records with his group The Cardinals, Ryan Adams returns with his first solo studio album under his own name in four years. Norah Jones provides piano and backing vocals, and Benmont Tench (Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers) also guests on the Glyn Johns-produced country-rocker Ashes & Fire, Adams' first LP on Capitol Records (via his own label, PAX AM).
     
  • Lauren Alaina, Wildflower
  • Bella Novela, The Archeress

Sonic Youth's Kim Gordon and Thurston Moore Announce Split

Sonic Youth's Kim Gordon and Thurston Moore have announced the end of their 27-year marriage. The split leaves an uncertain future for the pioneering alternative rock band, who formed three decades ago and have fall tour dates planned.

A statement from their rep at Matador Records reads, "Musicians Kim Gordon and Thurston Moore, married in 1984, are announcing they have separated. Sonic Youth, with both Kim and Thurston involved, will proceed with its South American tour dates in November. Plans beyond that tour are uncertain. The couple has requested respect for their personal privacy and does not wish to issue further comment."

Gordon, 58, and Moore, 53, have a 17-year-old daughter Coco.

The Rolling Stones - Sympathy For The Devil


Album: Beggars Banquet
Year: 1968 
Genre: Rock
Length : 6:18
Write Jagger/Richards
Producer Jimmy Miller

[Review] Trash Talk - Awake EP


Trash Talk

Awake

True Panther; 201


Despite their wall of noise, Trash Talk work best in miniature. The Sacramento quartet (andOFF! tourmates) wield such an in-your-personal-space presence and messy, spastic forward push that it can be hard, as a viewer or listener, to give them back the energy they deserve. When watching their shows-- during which they often repurpose bottles, mic stands, and garbage cans as projectiles-- it's thrilling when they unplug, and you're still locked in and protecting your head.

Friday, October 14, 2011

Death Cab for Cutie Balance 'Bummer' Songs With Festive Mood at Tiny L.A. Show


"I love bummer songs," Ben Gibbard said with a smile last night, talking from a small stage in Santa Monica, California during a break in an intimate Death Cab for Cutie performance taped for KCRW-FM. In an onstage interview, DJ Anne Litt responded, "You've written a lot of them, right?'

He certainly has, as the band's 10-song set fully demonstrated. The performance drew heavily from Death Cab's newest album Codes and Keys, released in May. For an audience of barely 150 guests, the quartet unfurled layers of sound and feeling while squeezed onto the corner stage at engineer-producer Bob Clearmountain's Berkeley Street Studio. The show was taped for broadcast and online video streaming November 1st.

Mick Jagger favorite reggae songs

Jagger duetted with Peter Tosh in the Seventies, and he and the Rolling Stones covered the reggae classic "Cherry Oh Baby" in 1976. But his love of reggae dates to the Sixties, when he danced in clubs to Jamaican music. Jagger and Charlie Watts were the first Stones to become entranced: "We were interested from a rhythmic point of view, so we started to play reggae beats with the band, and the rest of them picked it up," Jagger says. He adds, with a devious chuckle, "I'm sure Keith would say something different."

Tom Morello at Occupy Wall Street: 'Take It Easy, but Take It'

Tom Morello paused for a moment as he tuned his guitar in front of the Occupy Wall Street masses this morning at New York's Liberty Plaza. "This is crazy out here," he said, smiling. The Rage Against the Machine guitarist went on to perform a four-song set for hundreds of onlookers, including a poignant, protester-fueled rendition of Woody Guthrie's "This Land Is Your Land." Before the performance, however, Morello addressed the crowd – whom he called "friends." He introduced himself as the Nightwatchman, his folk alter-ego, and spoke directly to the attentive and excited members of the Occupy Wall Street movement: "First, they ignored you – then you got pepper-sprayed." But he didn't stop there. Morello led the crowd in a charged chant: "I know in my heart, all hell can't stop us now." And then, repeatedly, "All hell can't stop us now!"

Radiohead Heading Back Into the Studio


In a recent interview with Rolling Stone, Radiohead's Thom Yorke said that the band will be returning to their studio space in England in December and January to make new music. "We can get things together quite rapidly at the moment," Yorke told Rolling Stone, adding that a rough version of a new song called "Come to Your Senses" has already been put down.

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Rolling Stones - Wild Horses

Led Zeppelin - Stairway to Heaven

Guns n' Roses - Welcome to the jungle

DREAM Act

The DREAM Act (acronym for Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors) is an American legislative proposal first introduced in the Senate on August 1, 2001[1] and most recently on May 11, 2011, when the bill was re-introduced in the US Senate.

This bill would provide conditional permanent residency to certain illegal alien-students of good moral character who graduate from US high schools, arrived in the US as minors, and lived in the country continuously for at least five years prior to the bill's enactment. If they were to complete two years in the military or two years at a four year institution of higher learning, the students would obtain temporary residency for a six year period. Within the six year period, a student may qualify who has "acquired a degree from an institution of higher education in the United States or has completed at least 2 years, in good standing, in a program for a bachelor's degree or higher degree in the United States" or have "served in the armed services for at least 2 years and, if discharged, has received an honorable discharge".[2]

Index of American Universities

A

A. T. Still University
Abilene Christian University
Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College
Academy of Art University
Adams State College
Adelphi University
Adrian College
Agnes Scott College
Air Force Institute of Technology
Air University
Alabama A&M University
Alabama State University
Alaska Bible College
Alaska Pacific University
Albertus Magnus College

Saturday, October 8, 2011

Hello

Welcome to my new blog.

I'm going to talk about a lot of things I think interesting.

Hope you like ;)