Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Sigur Rós to collaborate with Coldplay?


Ok so this is all taken from theSigur Rós website.............

.....an update on what the band has been up to lately. recently we announced that Jónsi and Alex will release an album in the summer, and that Kjartan is set to score the film ‘Ondine’. We are now happy to announce that Kjartan will also be writing and arranging strings for 4 songs on Coldplay’s as-yet-untitled follow up album to 2008’s acclaimed Viva La Vida. Kjartan has already completed most of the arrangements, which are set to be recorded in late spring. in addition to Kjartan’s contribution, Jónsi will join Chris Martin on vocals on one of the album’s songs. we were fortunate enough to be allowed to visit Coldplay’s rehearsal space while Jónsi and Chris were rehearsing their collaboration, which promises to be nothing short of amazing. we filmed a short video from the session, which is now viewable on Youtube here.

Record Review, Bonnie "Prince" Billy, Beware


Artist: Bonnie "Prince" Billy
Source: Adam Lacey

I’m probably not the best choice of writer to do a Bonnie Prince Billy album review. I adore Will Oldham. I could listen to him sing for days, from his early croaky efforts as Palace Music/Palace Brothers, to his sparse, self-analysing I See A Darkness period to his more country-tinged Lie Down In The Light.

I suspect the foundations of this lie in the love of country music my parents have always harboured. They saw Johnny Cash in Dublin’s Carlton in 1974 and Don Williams in 1978, the latter while my mother was pregnant with me. They went to the Nashville rodeo in ‘76 at the National Stadium and have seen Crystal Gale support Kenny Rogers in their 80s hey-day. As I got older, through my punk phase and into grunge, my father’s tastes seemed to be more in tune with what I would most enjoy from their country collection:Merle Haggard, Willie Nelson, Cash, Jennings, Kristofferson. Yet I still enjoy the ground-breaking lyricism of Loretta Lynn and even the jaunty pomp of Marty Robbins (the latter when I’m drunk at Christmas.)

And so to Mr. Oldham - he straddles much of my musical tastes perfectly. He seems to have bloomed from an alternative music background; he is friends with Slint (he took the cover photo on Slint’s masterful Spiderland album) and Bill Callahan, is referenced as a legend by many in the alternative scene and cites Leonard Cohen as one of his musical heroes (two others being Merle Haggard and R. Kelly). He has not been one to waste time churning out the same material year after year and his work is as prolific as it is varied, with a plethora of guest appearances, EPs and albums seeming to flow out of his hairy fissóg every couple of months. On top of this, he has found time to be a bit-part film actor appearing in the wonderful Old Joy, Junebug and, recently, Wendy and Lucy.

Clicky clicky for the rest of the article.

OvO for Debut Irish Date


U: Mack present

OvO

Estel

and

Drainland

Thursday May 14, upstairs, Whelans Doors 7.30

Tickets €10 from Road Records, City Discs, Sound Cellar, Spindizzy, Wav Box Office 1890 200078 & online at

The mighty Italian experimental doom two piece OvO make their Dublin debut upstairs in Whelans on Thursday 14 May.

Italys Ovo are a two piece using guitar/violin cellos and drums that dump a toxic sludge with an unmistakable butterscotch scent. This sludge is in line with contemperous doom salesmen such as BORIS and the MELVINS, with the addition of vox stylings that take them to a new place entirely. The sounds coming from Stephania Pedrettis mouth as she sings go from lullaby sweet to terrifyingly raw in short intervals with Bruno Dorellas drums providing crunching headburn

.

Tickets.ie

OvO Myspace

Estel Myspace

Drainland Myspace

Enemies Announce Gigs and 7 inch Release


Wicklow based Post-Rock band Enemies, the latest addition to the Richter Collective family, are taking to the road to promote their shiny new 7", which comes complete with bonus live performance DVD.

Enemies have received much media attention in Ireland, the UK and Japan. They have recently signed to MachuPiccu (Toe's label) in Japan: a deal which will be supported by a release and tour in the summer of this year. Their sights are set high for 2009 and they are certainly ones to watch out for in the coming months.

They will be releasing their limited edition 7" vinyl with bonus performance DVD, Bits of Parrots/Feed me Seedless, on Friday 3rd April at the Quad Bar, Cork, and Saturday 4th April at The Lower Deck, Portobello, Dublin. Support on both nights comes from The Tupolev Ghost and The Continuous Battle Of Order. These dates are the first of their Ireland and UK tour to support this release. A full Ireland and UK release on April 13th will follow.

ENEMIES

Friday April 3rd - The Quad - Cork

Saturday April 4th - The Lower Deck - Dublin

Enemies MySpace

Richter Collective

Drop-D Homepage

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Live Review, Animal Collective, Tripod


Artist: Animal Collective
Source: Adam Lacey


Greil Marcus: "Rock 'n Roll is a combination of good ideas, dried up by fads, terrible junk, hideous failings in taste and judgment, gullibility and manipulation, moments of unbelievable clarity and invention, pleasure, fun, vulgarity, excess, novelty and utter enervation."

Mark Archer from Altern8:I will always love my oldskool - but I’m really into my early Detroit techno - that’s what really got me into making tunes.

God bless Noah Lennox, Panda Bear and Geologist.

In these modern times of immediate cyber-cynicism, snarky dismissal and blog-Nazi stormtrooperology (it’s a word..) it was, and is, an absolute joy to listen to Animal Collective’s Merriweather Post Pavilion and have the majority of music-heads agree (for once) that, indeed, it is a masterpiece: an album to unite and infuse the world with stomach butterflies, an album to bring together everything joyous about music -mainly the almost tangible sweetness of the Beach Boys’ harmonies, the bleeping roughness of classic rave music and a playful experimentation with sound - and give us anthemic, crackers music that we crave even more with each listen.

And so it was with this unfair, ridiculous expectation that we all marched to Tripod to witness what could only possibly be the GREATEST GIG EVER FUCKING PERFORMED.

It wasn’t.

But it was enjoyable.

Animal Collective will probably always have a train load of New Age pill heads peppered throughout their fan base thanks to their psychfolk foundations and one-time druggy reps, so it was no shock to get a face full of dreadlock and a tasty bang of sweat from the teeming crowd in Tripod upon arrival.

The stage set-up owed much to Orbital and their ilk, with a huge coloured sphere dangling hypnotically over the trio and the illumination of their ‘worktops’ with sheets. It also wasn’t much of a surprise to pick up on the introspective nature of the three dudes on stage pretty quickly. Banter and interaction are not really AC’s thing; they are here to make you listen, move and possibly shit your pants.

It’s well-documented in blog land/forum world and review town that the band covered mostly

MPP

tracks with a bizarre reworking of Winters Love from Sung Tongs, Fireworks from Strawberry Jam, Slippi from Here Comes The Indian and a new one, What Would I Want Sky, as well as the MPP stuff such as My Girls, Daily Routine and a personal highlight, the ravetastic Brother Sport.

The band’s leanings towards the dancier elements of their recent music was a huge hit with the narcotically-enhanced flock - and also with those who simply wished to bop - and while some jams were too extended and the whole sound sometimes became murky, there seemed to be a seriously fun dance-off going on in the pit which I could not get near for love nor money.

Tripod can be a hit-and-miss venue and given the sonic balance of their recorded output, AC will always prove a challenge for a venue’s PA system, but it is fair to say that the sound does vary considerably depending on where you are positioned.

As a fan you know from either avid reading or repeated gigging what to expect from the current incarnation of Animal Collective. That is: expect nothing. They are not a predictable band and because of this they will pretty much remain a must-see act for the foreseeable future. What was billed as the gig of the year on the Irish music scene was certainly not that. But that is not to say they won’t return within the year to blow your mind and fill your trousers once again.

And for that I say: God bless Animal Collective.

AC Site

AC MYspace

AC Wiki

Drop-d MPP Review

SoundTrack: Ruari Hickson - A Futurist Theatre


Artist: A Futurist Theatre
Source: Naomi McArdle


Ruairi Hickson sings and plays guitar and keys in A Futurist Theatre, which began with three other members in 2006 before evolving into a club-night behemoth, Futurism, in 2009. The debut album Caviar To Pigs was released earlier this year, quietly garnering a clutch of positive reviews. Unlike many other musicians working through the Irish rock scene, Ruairi is not one to mince his words. Drop-D futurised his opinions on music into web-space....

Drop-D: Can you pigeonhole your tastes into one particular genre or do your preferences spread through an array of influences?

Ruairi: I can absolutely pigeonhole my musical tastes, but that taste changes on a regular basis. I’ll go through lengthy periods of hating a certain style of music or band that I really don’t have any reason to; one song sounds great one day and terrible the next. Today, I’m in an indie-hating mood and I’m solely listening to Atari Teenage Riot. Tomorrow, it’ll be different again.

Drop-D: What triggered your musical infatuation? Was it a certain band/person/style/age?

Ruairi: I first picked up a guitar when I was 7 and promptly put it down again. After learning a handful of songs I just lost any desire to ever play music again, let alone write my own. Shortly afterwards, I contracted multiple eye infections at once and spent the next eight years in and out of hospital, submitted to a dozen operations to save my sight. When your eyesight starts to fade, it flicks a switch in your brain that makes the sanctity of your hearing absolutely crucial to your life. Two weeks before my fifteenth birthday I came around from the anaesthetic and was blind for three days. You start to think ‘Oh fuck, what if this is permanent?’ and when visiting hours are over, you’ve only got the radio for company.

Don’t ask me what station was on, but they played Been Training Dogs by The Cooper Temple Clause. It was exciting and it was dangerous! Nobody was making music like this, at least not to my untrained ears. The next day I had my brother [Bob Hickson - also of AFT] pick the debut album up and I heard so many creative, brilliant and original songs. I reached home and all this exciting music was around from bands like Ikara Colt, The Eighties Matchbox B-Line Disaster, The Murder Of Rosa Luxemburg, Blood Brothers, The Icarus Line, At The Drive-In, Refused, TV On The Radio... I realise most of those have split up now, but all with good reason – great art has a definite lifespan. I made it my mission to find new bands, never stopping to listen to the old ones. I was raised on a steady diet of Soundgarden, Pearl Jam, Tom Petty when my age was still in single digits, but now I was discovering music for myself, without being introduced by another fan and that was when I picked up a guitar again.

Drop-D: Is there any kind of music you'd like to know/hear more of?

Ruairi: I think the world of music goes through barren phases, particularly recently, where there is no real quality control, so many bands and yet so little focused genius. To my memory don’t think a truly great band has emerged in the last five years from anywhere, which is worrying.

I would love to hear more world music. No one’s really grabbed me since Ali Farka Toure passed away, so I hope someone will impress me soon. And I need to hear way, way more punk. As a teenager I basically never listened to punk or metal and I realise that it’s something most everyone else has and I feel like I’ve missed out on some huge part of regular human gestation. Can you recommend me an album or two?

Drop-D: What influenced your decision to choose a career in a band?

Ruairi: Performing music is the thing I am best at in this world and it’s what I love most. It wasn’t a hard decision.

Drop-D: How much time do you spend listening to music now? Has it de/increased over time?

Ruairi: I’m sad to say it’s decreased. I find myself running around a lot these days and as a result, I’m lucky to hear even one new album a week. It’s even more disheartening when that album turns out to be ‘disappointing’. I want my money back, Titus Andronicus!

Drop-d: Do you prefer live music or listening from home?

Ruairi: Always live music. When your hear something special that makes you go ‘oh wow’, you only lived that moment once and it’s never going to happen again, but you lived it and nothing else will compare. You can listen to an album and feel the same, sure, but then you listen to it again and the same buzz isn’t there, even if you can appreciate the music more as a whole. Live music is dangerously addictive.

Drop-D: How often would you spend at gigs that aren't your own?

Ruairi: I do go to as many gigs as my wallet allows, which is up to two a week now, I’m happy to say.

Drop-D: Would they be Irish or international bands? Any genre more so than the other?

Ruairi: Gigs by Irish bands generally tend to be more affordable and less crowded (happy/sad). The trouble with Irish bands is there’s usually a very narrow range of what’s available every night. I don’t particularly like by-numbers Indie, which you get an awful lot of. But every so often you hear a little spark of genius that makes it worth it.

Drop-D: Where does Irish music come on your playlists?

Ruairi: I do listen to a fair amount of music on MySpace and I get to hear a lot of Irish artists this way. We’re always looking to find a really good, talented band to play with or promote. That said, I sympathise with the many bloggers or agencies that get bombarded with material from all angles with requests for reviews and exposure, because a lot of these artists are not very good. Recording music is easy and cheap, so many slip into a trap of recording music without any love or forethought and place something that could have been great but now should never be heard in the public eye/ear. But this happens worldwide. I’m not specifically picking on Ireland here.

That’s not to say there aren’t Irish artists who do good music the right way. There are, of course. I am big fan of Channel One, God Is An Astronaut, ABAM (really brilliant), And So I Watch You From Afar, iPhoenix and a good few others. I’m really excited to see Arcadia and Butterfly Explosion live too.

Drop-d: What do you think of the climate of the Irish music scene? Is it a good place to be a musician right now?

Ruairi: I don’t think so. No, not really. I think the channels through which a band can start making a name for themselves are too few and there is a certain bias in some of those to make it even more difficult. Ireland’s music has always had a climate of backslapping and ‘it’s who you know’. I don’t know if this exists in other places, but I know it happens here for sure. There are plenty of talented individuals around, though, and I am an optimist, so I live in perpetual hope that the best will rise to the top.

Drop-D: If you could choose a musical era to experience, what would it be?

Ruairi: The one in ten years’ time. I think we’re in a slump at the moment, but that will pass. It’s happened before and will happen again. The future is always more exciting than what’s already been known and done.

Drop-D: Choose some albums you find timeless and explain why....

Ruairi:

RefusedThe Shape Of Punk To Come: Just a stunning, stunning album of political intent, amazing technical ability and fury in abundance. The album sleeve was an entire goddamn manifesto! The music flows like lava into your brain and dareIfuckingsayit melts the gooey stuff inside. It’ll be too long before we see another album like this.

Manic Street PreachersThe Holy Bible: Then again, (see above) the Manics were capable of this sort of quality years ago. I’m really excited to hear their new album, even though the recent ones haven’t been so good, just because they say it’s the spiritual successor to this one.

Joy DivisionCloser: Unknown Pleasures is probably the more familiar album, but the songwriting on this was just more complete. Songs like Colony and Isolation are just so much more compelling than most of the debut.

Jeff Wayne - The War Of The Worlds: A very brilliant girl introduced me to this a while back. Chock full of prog nonsense and over the top structures and vocals (Thunderchild) with an amazing Richard Burton narrating. It’s indirectly related to the title of our album too [Caviar To Pigs].

Nick Cave and The Bad SeedsThe Lyre Of Orpheus/Abbatoir Blues: No other artist on the planet can rhyme 'Orpheus' with orifice and not sound up their own hole. Get Ready For Love is one of the best songs ever written too.

Asian Dub FoundationEnemy Of The Enemy: I got the same feeling from Fortress Europe for the first time as I did when hearing Been Training Dogs. They also introduced me to reggae, hip-hop, electronica and how to put on an eventful live show. Their latest album, Punkara, is amazing too, but this one has sentimental value.

Drop-D: Now choose some modern tunes that you've really enjoyed.

Ruairi:

HeiruspecsHip-Hop Nerdism

The AutomaticSteve McQueen

Bear McReary’s version of All Along The Watchtower

UngdomskulenOrdinary Son

We Are Scientists - Ghouls

Drop-D: Who/what do you find absolutely awful crap, rubbish, dross?

Ruairi: Arcade Fire are one. I used to be swayed by their songs but it’s just becoming clearer to me every day that their melodies are thin and layering them with hurdy-gurdies won’t make them good. Bloc Party are another. I can applaud nonsensical, Morrissey-like vocals, but the music and ideas are absent now. Is every band going to try and remake Kid A when they don’t know what to do next? My bandmates will lynch me for saying this, but I’m not a massive Pink Floyd fan either.

I don’t necessarily hate a bad Irish act when I hear them so much as get disheartened because everybody is ignorant to their own quality, high or low. I find it counterproductive to start an Oasis vs. Blur-style slanging match with anyone, because it never ends well for either party.

But while we’re on the subject, any band who, in the advent of aforementioned Canadians, picked up an accordion, donned a waistcoat and bowler hat onstage is only fooling themselves; any band whose singer has a thick Dub accent and sings like Alex Turner can never be original; any artist who just writes love songs has nothing interesting to write about; any band who have been inspired by Embrace are on a long downward spiral to nowhere; any band who are just bandmates and not friends aren’t ever going to be happy.

Most bands I dislike have split up by now anyway. More emerge all the time, but I’ll give them a chance. They may come good yet.

Drop-D: You've hijacked RTE at prime time and the DJ's tied up in a corner. Choose five songs you think the nation HAS to hear.

Ruairi:

Ennio MorriconeThe Ecstasy Of Gold

Temple Of The Dog - Hungerstrike

The Dillinger Escape PlanThe Perfect Design

Masafumi TakadaSweet Blue Flag

Zig and ZagA Tijuana Gypsy Stole My Personal Stereo

Futurism night club takes place in Eamon Dorans on Wednesday 1st April, featuring iPhoenix and A Futurist Theatre. 8pm, €5.

www.myspace.com/afuturisttheatre

Drop-D review of Caviar To Pigs

Live Review: Crayonsmith - Whelans


Artist: Crayonsmith
Source: Naomi McArdle

Whelans on a Friday at 930 p.m is enough to strike simultaneous joy and dread into the heart of a seasoned gig-goer: weekend shows often pack to the rafters. On the flip side are midweek nights when modest audiences congregate around the dark edges, leaving a harsh-lit horseshoe of empty floorboards. On this occasion the balance was just right with a decent crowd clustered around the stage, anxious not to skip a beat. As it was, I'd missed support acts GiveAManAKick and Dublin Duck Dispensary. Oops.

Musical metaphor The Boat had just begun on my arrival, flowing vocals sounding really clear from the Whelans stacks, despite some chat from the audience, followed by Lost In The Forest, a stormer from White Wonder, which appears to be Crayonsmith's key song and with good reason, displaying a real handle on bass and sample-simplicity to lead the way for synths that rush in like adrenaline lessening a fear.

In fact, there's a darker tinge to Crayonsmiths' songs live, picked out and delivered in deliberate order, especially looking at the setlist: Devil's Island, We Sleep, The Boat, Lost In The Forest, Banshee, All The Elders, Dolphins, Epitaph, Scarytale and Alegre.

I only knew some of the names from that rather mixed list, the band were obviously reluctant to rest on too many old favourites. The omission of Anxious came as a suprise but it was made up for by All The Elders's old-fashioned touch of Americana in honest-to-goodness guitars, standing surprisingly strong amidst a set which had already skimmed the tops off a load of other genres.

I should butt in here to mention that Crayonsmith, in case you don't know, began with Ciaran Smith's 2006 debut Stay Loose, his experiments in Lo-Fi later completed by Ruadhan O' Meara on bass and Ronan Jackson on additional guitar, synth and drum-punching duties, which led to a second album White Wonder in 2008. To date their achievements encompass multi-date tours in the UK and US with Sparklehorse and Islands, prime supports to Why?, Juana Molina and more recently, Max Tundra, not to mention the 'Experimental Irish Indie Done Well' tag. The Dublin trio share those artists' imaginative streak, cultivating a hybrid of noisy rock instruments cross-matched with synthetic samples. Crayonsmith shouldn't be Irish, they should be from Kansas or Oz or wherever in-between it is where brick after yellow brick of sound lays down a rolling road. We should be very glad they're Irish.

Vocals play such an important role in most of the songs, a balance is struck to ensure the rhythms don't overpower the voice and harmonies chime in with quartz precision. You'd expect a touch of messiness as these sounds are pinned together, though of a different style Why? as an example are messier but both bands share a love for the ever-changing song format, the careful layering of nuances and inflections.

Returning from stronger use of samples in Epitaph, the re-uptake quickly lead on to Scarytale from Stay Loose, the second last song, we were told. Oh dear, I thought, over so soon? I hadn't seen them perform live since the IMRO Showcase Tour last April when sound problems marred their set and I walked out thinking they weren't really suited for talent shows. I was right: Crayonsmith are best seen on their own terms, in their own sweet time.

Crayonsmith MySpace

White Wonder Review

Crayonsmith Interview

Record Review, Mastodon, Crack the Skye


Artist: Mastodon
Source: Paul Groome

Some of you reading this, really love Mastodon. Some of you have never heard of Mastodon but will soon realise what a sheltered existence you have been living. The remainder of the audience have heard of Mastodon, but don't like them. The Lord still loves you, but just a little bit less than everyone else. Redeem yourself. Crack The Skye rules.

A few years ago, in a land far away, a Mastodon was born. Hairy but strong. Several albums were released over the course of a short number of years. Remission, Leviathan and Blood Mountain were created. The metal community smiled, for they saw that they were good. As each release became available for purchase, so each release gained more followers. That's just how Mastodon do business. They don't fuck around. Crack The Skye has now been released and I have been informed from a reliable source, that Obama is headbanging to this motherfucker. THAT'S how cool it is. "A broader spectrum of listeners are attracted to it because of the classic rock feeling it has", Obama says. I'm inclined to agree with him. The vocals veer more toward singing than the shouting of previous years. Even Ozzy would be comfortable with some of the vocal melodies. They haven't gone soft though. No! That 'soft' word isn't even in their vocabulary. This CD could tear you a new one just by looking at you sideways.

The overall tempo of all the tracks has slowed to a more listenable level for those who wouldn't normally find hard-rock/metal very edible. Thrashy songs from previous releases like Where Strides The Mastodon or Blood and Thunder seem to have been adjusted to suit a wider audience. Structures and choruses have memorable hooks that could have you humming the tunes to yourself while you're on the bus. This strikes me as a mark of maturity in their music rather than a sell-out point though.

Divinations is a obvious single being the short and snappy choice from all seven songs. The Czar is more of a journey, including four separate sections that last for nearly 11 minutes, and it held my attention throughout. The prog-rock flare is still in the mix and the longest tune on the album, The Last Baron, is 13 minutes, and not one single boring, repetitive second can be found. Anywhere. Obviously impressed with his previous performances on Leviathan and Blood Mountain, Scott Kelly from Neurosis has been invited back to sing on the title track.

Like all new releases, the 'fancy pants' edition contains an extra DVD of studio out-takes and also the band going through the lyrical genetics of the album. This comes in very handy, because I was afraid to put up my hand and ask what was going on. Subject matter ranges from astral travel to songs about Rasputin, and from the point of view of a concept album, I was lost. Still didn't give a shit though. If they want to write about wormholes, then that's fine with me. I wouldn't argue with a Mastodon.

Mastodon Site

Mastodon Myspace

Mastodon Wiki

Record Review, The Race, In My Head It Works


Artist: The Race
Source: Paddy Murphy


The Race are a bunch of five wholesome youngster from Reading that have clearly been raised on a strict diet of the best of North American and UK indie and post punk. And we're talking the good stuff here; along the lines of Arcade Fire, Radiohead, Talking Heads, Flaming Lips, Joy Division, you get the picture.

In My Head It Works is one of those records that's nearly too good to put into words. It's the album that bands like Elbow wish they'd written. Super Furry Animals would be another one that'll be kicking themselves when they hear this, wishing to the high heavens that they'd written something like this and propel them towards the big bucks and away from the cursed cult status they've been in for years. Actually, Elbow are in a good position now, because of their Mercury win, and fair play to them too, but if they hadn't won then this is the album they'd listen to for finding some inspiration for their follow up to The Seldom Seen Kid.

It's a crying shame though that this band will remain largely anonymous and won't get any airplay, especially here in Ireland unless someone at Phantom bothers going through the bin of thrown-out CDs (which I've heard is as big as the bin on the back of a rubbish truck) and finds it. Which they won't but that's ok, that's what we're here for.

Opener, Begin sets the tone beautifully for the rest of the album, clocking in at just over a minute. A marching-band beat and vocals that pan from right to left let the listener know that they should get ready for one hell of a record. Second track and first singleI Get It Wrong should be this summer's Wake Up. God I can see it now, Electric Picnic, sunshine, weed and alcohol, your head swimming and this tune ripping through the speakers. Ya know, one of those “festival” moments. Ah well, shouldn't get excited, they'll probably never get spotted by the Picnic's head-honchos.

Second single Rude Boy build slowly but the constant driving drum beat gives it an urgency that makes you wanna get up and dance your ass off like it's the final tune before the lights come up and you've got to head home. The finale of the tune turns into an all out mosh-pit distorted guitars and a whopper of a bassline. Something that would be home on any Arctic Monkey's album.

Other highlights include Undecided, another singalong festival songs, if there's anyone listening, please somebody book this band for one of the festivals, don't care which one, just do it, make this moronic fool happy for a change and instead of booking some hyped up shite you seen at SXSW, book a band that are plugging away only across the pond. Killer is what The Killers should have done on Sam's Town, (are the band having a dig there?) if they had they'd be massive now with everyone and have the respect that they so desperately crave, but as we all know they blew it with Day and Age.

Better to Slip Away is another belter of a song, actually it's the best song on the album. Fuck it you know what, don't bother buying this album and don't bother texting your local radio station looking to hear tracks from In My Head It Works before you buy it. Naw, don't bother. It's just easier for you to listen to the tripe that's pumped and churned out daily from radio infecting your brain with shite than to find a band that, honestly, could unite the world with world peace through their music, no messing. Bill and Ted style (Wild Stallions rule!). Naw don't bother giving a break to a band that have worked on one of the finest albums of the year, no actually, of the decade, sure ,you'd prefer to listen to Coldplay and U2 and Mundy (if I ever meet that Galway Girl I'm gonna drown the bitch for inflicting such bolloxology on the nation).

Whatever, I'm getting angry, instead listen to the band. Two more songs to mention Gloves and Give Me Your Bible, awesome, excellent, massive tunes. I wish I was in this band, then I could sleep well at night knowing that I'd given something of beauty to the world. I'd probably be a bit annoyed it didn't make any money for me but, sure whatever, that's an argument for another day, to be filthy rich of to be or to be artistically supreme over your peers.....Bono? Are you out there?

Drop-d Rating 9/10

The Race Site

The Race MYspace

The Race Wiki

Record Review, Ólafur Arnalds and Rival Consoles, 65 Milo


Artist: Ólafur Arnalds and Rival Consoles
Source: Paul Murphy


Described as “Iceland’s best new export”, Ólafur Arnalds has shortened the waiting period for his forthcoming album with the release of 65/Milo a split 12”/Download release with label collegue Rival Consoles.

Teaming up with Bloodgroup mastermind Janus Rasmussen, Ólafur has created a new project, Kiasmos, based around the duo’s common love for minimal, experimental techno music. With both having their own touring commitments the music composition usually begins by email.

The result is minimalist techno soundscapes that still include the post-rock sensabilities and emotive song composition abilities that Ólafur is known for. His dance music maintains the ability to open minds and his classical influences are certainly evident as the techno compositions 65 and Walled which appear on this release move through similar stages to that of a classical score, with the building and layering of textures behind a warm and catchy melody which gives life to the music.

IDM-smith, Ryan Lee West aka Rival Consoles from Leicester joins the Icelandic on the Erased Tapes Records’ split. Having recently released Helvetica, an epic and almost conceptual abandonment and experimentation with classical being played against dance.

These guys seem well matched Ólafur’s solo music would have provided for a great split with music from West’s Helvetica but this time around West is in full-on techno mode. With three tracks of the five on the split it’s hard to tell prior to knowing this where the Icelandic ends and the Leicester man begins as both have a flare for experimentation as their beats and their melodic and rhythmic synths flow seemlessly together.

Drop-d Rating 8/10

Ólafur Arnalds Myspace

Target Consoles Myspace

Record Review, Simon Fagan, Hired and Fired EP



Artist: Simon Fagan
Source: Paul Murphy

Turbulent times and mounting Jobseeker’s benefit applications has allowed one of Ireland’s jazziest singer songwriters resurrect a song that was written about his own job-holding inabilities. Hired and Fired has become the title track for the debut EP from Meath native Simon Fagan.

Since earning musical qualifications, classically trained Simon Fagan has built a reputation as a formidable performer. While in LA he held residencies in music bars in Hollywood delivering his exciting blend of pop, soul, jazz and rock and roll. Fagan has also opened for Lionel Richie and Smokey Robinson as well as performing lead vocals in the National Concert Hall for the Beatles Love concert.

The title track, although an old personal song, is timely and musically optimistic. People standing on the dole queue could easily start clicking their fingers to its infectious rhythm while the swinging bass would set them dancing around the footpath with a spring in their step. You could arrange an entire, upbeat, musical about the economic crisis from this song.

The EP also includes the high energy Bring the Dance, which Fagan released as his debut single in June 2008, a song which captures the vibrant power of Simon’s vocals and his talent as a musician.

The EP’s other tracks The Way A Woman Should and Falling Into You are closer to the conventional style we have come to expect from singer songwriters, yet they couldn’t be confused with anyone else’s music. Using trumpets, jazzy beats and swinging bass all complimented by a layering of genres and rich vocals Simon Fagan creates timeless, easy listening, on his debut EP.

Hired and Fired is out now on iTunes and all good download stores and the good news is, if you like it, his recording deal has him set to release another EP in 2009 and a debut album in early 2010.

Drop-d Rating 7/10

Simon Fagan Myspace

Friday, March 27, 2009

Interview, Martin Moscrop and Jez Kerr from A Certain Ratio


Artist: A Cetain Ratio
Source: Naomi McArdle


A Certain Ratio started off playing small gigs around Manchester in 1978 after forming the previous year. Their punk ethic gave them the balls to form a band, but from their humble beginnings the music was taking from band groups such as Kraftwerk, Roxy Music and Northern Soul. Factory signed the band soon after and the Manchester scene was soon to flourish. Drop-d caught up with founding members Martin Moscrop and Jez Kerr for a quick chat about the good old days, influences and the Nazi question.

Drop-d: I'm just a whippersnapper journo who doesn't know nearly enough about the history of music. However I know A Certain Ratio. How would you introduce yourself and the band to someone who's never heard All Night Party?

Martin Moscrop: James Brown on Acid.

Drop-d:Are you still partying away? Considering you're out gigging there's obviously still great energy amongst you.

M: We are still partying and the last time we played in Dublin in 2007 we had a great time and stayed up all night. We treat every gig like a party.

Drop-d: Have you enjoyed performing and tours over the years? What's been the best album to work with?

M: There was a point where continuous touring got a bit much which is why we went into semi retirement. We are really enjoying it now and like doing selective gigs. We are really enjoying playing the new songs off our new album and as with any band your best work is always the newest because it is still fresh to you.


Rest of Article here.

Lady GaGa for Cork Date


Aiken Promotions presents….

The one, the only, the lady of the moment

Lady Gaga

Live at the Marquee, Cork – 1st July 2009.

Tickets on sale next Thurs 2nd April at 9am.

Tickets will be €39.20 seated & standing on sale from all Ticketmaster outlets nationwide

Booking line no. 0818 719 300 online at Ticketmaster

Lady GaGa Site

Lady GaGa Myspace

Lady GaGA Wiki

Monday, March 23, 2009

Live Review, Mogwai, The Academy


Artist: Mogwai
Source: Adam Lacey and Paddy Murphy


Saturday: Adam Lacey

For those who care to search through the many folds in the belly of the post-rock beast, Mogwai are the band that really defines this Simon Reynolds-coined sub genre.

Playing a delicious blend of in-your-face instrumental metal with lush electronics, piano, some digitally-treated vocals and plenty of melody, Mogwai’s songs at once sound immediate and familiar, even to those who own not a single Mogwai long-player.

The second night of their Academy residency sees the group in fine fettle, swigging liberally from bottles of red wine and beer cups and ploughing through a set that differs from the previous night with the exclusion of some tracks such as Like Herod and Summer but with the inclusion of others such as the devastating Ithica 27 Ø 9.

The crowd is peppered with green shirts bearing the O2 logo, thanks to the earlier achievements of the Irish rugby team, and if any band is going to represent the sonic equivalent of a Grand Slam, it’s these Scottish fiends.

Saturday’s set is a pick of tunes from their impressive canon with four from their recent The Hawk is Howling: opener I’m Jim Morrison, I’m Dead, Scotland’s Shame, Thank You Space Expert and the sublime set closer, prior to the encore, of Bat Cat whose metal riffs threaten to tear the floor from The Academy and plunge the hordes into Hades.

Hunted By A Freak is greeted with one of the biggest cheers of the night and the band are chatty without over-indulgence, with one quip about a recent visit to Prince’s London shows nearly resulting in a crowd sing-along of Purple Rain. There is plenty of predictably reverential silence for most of the quiet bits, with the occasional roar of sheer joy proving that the sold-out crowd clearly boasts more than a handful of hardcore Mogwai fans (Moggers?)

After a 10 minute break at the end the encore begins with Kids Will Be Skeletons and then a moving rendition of Mogwai Fear Satan from their ’97 album Young Team to finish. The band are visibly comfortable with each other after such a long time together and this only serves to enhance the intricacies of their music in a live setting with all the parts coming seamlessly together to make one glorious racket.

This is a gripping show, drenched in strobe lighting and noise. Hopefully they won’t wait so long until they play a gig here again, although a 3-day residency is certainly a great way to make amends.

And a tip of the hat to the sound techs in The Academy - the sound is spot on.

Wonder how Sunday’s gig went...

Sunday: Paddy Murphy

Seeing Mogwai tonight was a bit like that thing about meeting your heroes. Walking up to the Academy in silence, mulling over what they might play, what they'll sound like, will they be wrecked after a weekend of partying in Dublin.........truly I was a fuckin bag of nerves.....

Up the stairs into the venue and the bar was silent, no messing. All you could hear was the cash registers ringing. It was eerie to say the least.

The band make their way on stage without much of a hubbub and set into a slow building set. Starting off with Autorock from Mr Beast. The band seem a bit tired as they follow that with Hunted but you can't blame them considering they're five Glasgow boys in Dublin for the first time in years. Soon following were the wonderfully named I Love You, I'm Going to Blow Up Your School and latest album opener, The Hawk is Howling, I'm Jim Morrison, I'm Dead (anyone see the t-shirt with Morrison's image? Genius.) Until the latter it had been looking as if we were going to be treated to a much calmer set than the previous nights. With the Morrison song it soon changed.

Xmas Steps and Scotland's Shame, named after a flag seen pointing at Rangers soccer fans, showed that Celtic fans were not in a chilled mood in any way, shape or form. The crowd were responsive for the most part. A quick look around the impressive Academy and most were nodding their heads, even the privileged on the balcony above us minnions, to the beat. There were quiet a few annoying “shushes” though through-out the night, though, which was a bit weird.

Friend of the Night get a walloping with a far angrier version than appears on Mr. Beast and it's the first song that really, properly, tested the Academy's speakers. Makes you think how the hell can the sound engineers, and indeed the speakers, still cope with the demands of a vicious assault that Mogwai have given them over the last three nights here in a row.

We're No Here leaves everyone's ear's bleeding in the best way possible and turns into full on prog-metal the likes of which Tool would have been proud of. The ten minutes between the end of the song and the time the band reappear for the encore are filled with all kinds of blips, beeps and looped drum machines. There was a silence though at the end, the crowd not quiet knowing whether it was all over or not. In fact it took one fan to united the crowd and get everyone hollering for Mogwai to get back and give us more.

They finished with an ear-shattering version of You Don't Know Jesus and the short and immensely loud Glasgow Mega-Snake.

Doubtlessly most there will have come to the gig with their ideal setlist in mind but ya know what...it doesn't matter, Mogwai are the masters of post-rock and to have seen them on their final night of the Academy's Mog-fest was a pure unadulterated privilege.

Mogwai Site

Mogwai Myspace

Mogwai Wiki

Rock Action Site

Photo: Paul Murphy

Wintersleep for Academy 2 Date


WINTERSLEEP

ANNOUNCE ACADEMY 2 RETURN

After a stellar debut Irish show in February, Wintersleep return to the Academy 2 on Sunday 10 May. Tickets priced €13 incl. booking fee are on sale from tomorrow, Tuesday 24 March at all usual Ticketmaster outlets.

The Juno Award winning rockers formed back in 2002. Members of the group frequently collaborate outside of the band with frontman Paul Murphy and guitarist Tim D’eon having played together in the band Kary. Drummer, Loel Campbell has also played with Kary and is a member of some other projects most notably Holy F*ck. Bassist Mike Bigelow has also played with the electro rockers.

Last year the Canadian group released their third album Welcome To The Night Sky and subsequently won the 2008 Juno Award for New Group of the Year.

Wintersleep Site

Wintersleep Myspace

Kary Myspace

Holy Fuck Myspace

MCD

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Live Review, Butterfly Explosion, Whelans



Artist: Butterfly Explosion
Source: Paddy Murphy


You gotta love the people behind Club AC30, everytime they put on a show they provide the goods, last time Drop-d was here for one of their gigs we were treated to the absolute awesomeness of Amuseparks on Fire. That night Butterfly Explosion provided the support, but all was not well.

Even when I spoke to frontman Gaz Carr,after the show, he said that he agreed with Drop-d's review compared to State's. Their sound was a mess that night and we were disappointed because we'd seen them a couple of times before. We blamed the new line up of the band. For tonight's gig I was wary of what was gonna happen.

First of all fair play to the band for getting a good sized crowd into Whelan's on the night before Paddy's Day. With many other good gigs going on around the city it was a testament to the band and their faithful troop of fans that they could get the numbers in in the night before Ireland's biggest day of drunken debauchery and mischief.

Photo Naomi McArdle

Clicky clicky for the rest of the article.


The Maccabees for Academy date


The Academy presents

THE MACCABEES

Wednesday 27th May

Tickets at €16 including booking fee go on sale via Ticketmaster on Friday 20th March.

Brighton’s brightest export THE MACCABEES have confirmed a Dublin date at The Academy on 27th May. Debut album Colour it In was voted best alternative pop record of 2007 by NME and their single Toothpaste Kisses was embraced by hoards of new fans. Their eagerly anticipated second album Wall of Arms is set for Irish release on May 1st.

The Maccabees Site

The Maccabees Myspace

Academy Site

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Happy St Patricks Day


Happy Saint Patricks Day to all our readers from all of us at Drop-d.

La Fheile Phadraig Duit

Monday, March 16, 2009

Record Review, Rank Deluxe, You Decide


Artist: Rank Deluxe
Source: Paul Groome


This fits in very well with the existing 'Britpop' guitar bands. I'm not having a dig at these guys; It's just hard to make an impression in a genre of music that is already swamped withFranz Ferdinand and Kaiser Chiefs clones, without really breaking the mould. Rank Deluxe have given it a good bash though, and what a shed load of influences they've wedged onto one CD!

Dole Queue, the reggae fuelled opener is up beat and filled with lots of social observations on what a mess those bastard politicians have made of our world. My word; What bastards. This is a common trend throughout the album, and although I have no doubt of their sincerity, punk bands already covered this territory many times over.Save It For Tomorrow is a deadly, balls out, rock song! It could possibly be something Supergrass wished they'd written. Guitar solo and everything!Nice.

That's what the problem is though. There's simply too much of everything. Genres are intermingled in a big, old pot of melted music stuff. Only a handful of bands have ever successfully fused such a wide variety of genres into their music. Unfortunately, it seems that they approached this collection of songs with a sort of "throw enough types of mud at a wall and someone will appreciate it" angle. Despite several moments that have me reaching to increase the volume, they've taken a half pint of reggae, two measures of punk and dollop of clean-tone-jangly-guitar-sound Top 40 blandness.

Clicky clicky for the rest of the article.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Record Review, The Answer, Everyday Demons


Artist: The Answer
Source: Colm Cullen


At the start of the year, HMV named them as one of their top 10 tips for 2009. Rolling Stone Magazine put them on their 2009 Hot List. Their debut album was a critical and popular success, selling over 100,000 copies worldwide. They’ve supported AC/DC, The Rolling Stones, The Who, and Aerosmith amongst others. They’ve headlined their own shows in Europe, Japan and Australia. Jimmy Page is a fan, and has apparently been to a number of gigs. And they’re from County Down.

Who are they ? They’re The Answer and they’re back with their long-awaited 2nd album. Which can be a daunting prospect for a lot of bands. They come to their debut album, and a lot of bands will have been together for a while, touring with songs that they know backwards. Then comes album number two, which in a lot of cases can be less worthy than it’s predecessor.

Produced by John Travis (Kid Rock, Monster Magnet, Buckcherry), I originally thought that was the case here, but the more I listen to this the better it gets. I liked the album on first listen, but I just didn’t think most of the songs on here really grabbed you by the throat. Instead, they’ve sneaked up behind me and given me a right good kicking.

Clicky clicky for the rest of the article.

Record Review, Jinx Lennon Trauma Themes for Idiot Times


Artist: Jinx Lennon
Source: Paul Murphy


If someone breaks into your house to murder you, you should be entitled to stick a knife in their eye and say “Listen, if one of us is going to die, it’s not going to be me.” such is the style of musing and social commentary seeping from the pores of the new album from Jinx Lennon.

On Trauma Themes Idiot Times the punk-folk-poet-troubadour continues to take the word singer songwriter, douse it liberally with petrol, light it up and piss all over the flames.

His delivery and musical style is original to say the least and inspired by the nobility of “the maverick spirits of those who stood apart and were adamant about their own peculiar vision and who never really got the kudos they deserved, to a point where most people hated what they did.” But there’s nothing to hate about what Jinx Lennon does. He even pulls-off speaking in tongues on Everyone’s Got a Mental Home I.T.H.

Ms Paula Flynn joins Jinx on a number of tracks to subdue the harsh angst that creeps out of him, particularly on The Ferris Wheel at Dowdallshill and adds the sense of hymn to The Orange Cranes of Greenore while Jinx compares orange cranes to nightclub bouncers.

Clicky clicky for the rest of the article.

SoundTrack: Human Jigsaw - Drugzilla


Artist: Drugzilla
Source: Naomi McArdle


Meek and mild are regularly-used adjectives, but not for Lisdoonvarna duo DRUGZILLA. Fuelled by profanity and Buckfast, their Speedcore sound is described as music so filthy you need to wear a condom while listening or else you'll get an STD and the best thing to come from the bog since Magic Mushrooms.

Factually defined by over 20,000 deranged MySpace fans before members Human Jigsaw and Manimal had so much as an EP under their belts, in late 2008 their extreme style achieved the unprecedented win of regional newspaper, The Clare People's Artist of 2008. On the back of a successful slot at UK festival I Hate Trance, DRUGZILLA recently released the Alcoholocaust EP on iTunes, and late March sees the band take to the road for a rare tour to Cork, Limerick and Dublin. Drop-D collared Jigsaw to pin down the influential sprawl of DRUGZILLA....

Drop-D : Can you pigeonhole your tastes into one particular genre or do your preferences spread through an array of influences?

Jigsaw: I listen to such a wide variety of music it's hard to pigeonhole my taste but the one thing that really gets me going is extremity in music. Be it epic stuff like Cult of Luna, harsh power electronics like Whitehouse or brutal extreme Metal like Beneath The Massacre.

Drop-D : What triggered your musical infatuation?

Jigsaw: For as long as I can remember I was into music. The first band that blew me away was The Progidy and then when I heard The Bezerker when I was 15, who mix hardcore Techno with Death Metal, my life was changed forever. It's around this time I started producing extreme electronic music and started getting into Death Metal and other extreme genres of music.

Clicky clicky for the rest of the article.

Interview, Sweet Jane


Artist: Sweet Jane
Source: Paddy Murphy


Hot from touring with Glasvegas, Sweet Jane have been gaining quite the reputation for wonderful live shows packed full of sophisticated melodic tunes.Drop-d caught up with vocalist Lydia Des Dolles to talk about all things music, the Dublin music scene and something her mammy won't won't like to hear her saying......

Drop-d: Tell us Lydia who are Sweet Jane and how did the band come about?

Lydia: Sweet Jane are myself (Lydia Des Dolles), Danda, Ruairi Paxton and Andy Parkes.... Danda and I essentially started the back at the beginning of 2007, he had some songs and he needed a female vocal for them. When we heard the outcome of those songs and the positive response, we started the band with some friends. Then things got more serious when Ruairi and Andy joined, I think we realized the potential of the band.

Drop-d: You've got some really cool gigs coming up with some majorly cool bands, wanna plug them and give us some more info?

L: Well, the last time we toured with a band was Glasvegas around Christmas, March 31st we're in Dublin with A Place to Bury Strangers, we toured with them last year so we are so excited to play with them again and Dead Confederate. Then we're in the UK with Delta Mainline and Guile, and we're doing Alan Mc Gee's Death Disco in London with St. Deluxe in May. We've got some headline shows coming up ourselves and we're waiting to confirm a UK tour with a pretty huge band right now, but I can't give to much away on that just yet.

Drop-d: Personally who's you own biggest influence, who made you wanna be in a band? Same question but as a collective band?

L: I think I was originally influenced by records my Dad played when I was a kid, y'know, Billy Joel, Roberta Flack, Ella Fitzgerald, The Eagles, The Faces, and then I really only got into music in a big way around the early 90's, the whole grunge era. Hole and Courtney Love played a big part in my early teens, then I went a bit sour and got into metal in a big big way, alot of bad metal. I missed out on the whole Britpop era when I was a kid so when I found it I was really able to appreciate it and learn from it. I guess right now, main influences would be bands like, Royal Trux, Darker My Love, Fleetwood Mac, The Kills, Black Mountain, Ike & Tina and Rolling Stones.

Clicky clicky for the rest of the article.

Record Review, The Amateurs, Homesick


Artist: The Amateurs
Source: Adam Lacey


The Amateurs are a Birmingham four-piece who specialise in the kind of MOR twaddle that should have been taken out into a field and shot in the face years ago as a lesson to all musicians to inject a bit of passion and vim into their craft and into what they are attempting to peddle to the music-buying public.


It seems incredible that with the wealth of talent and various genres of wonderful music available any band would now pick as their template Coldplay, at their most insipid, and any combination of bland, same-y, forgettable, Scouting For Girls homogenous guff that is clogging up the airwaves these days.
It mostly reminds me of Deep Blue Something, who had that Breakfast at Tiffanys song years ago, and the least fortunate part of it is that the three soft rock songs featured on this single release (Homesick, London Sky and Mystery Thing) are so forgettable that they even lack the lasting, adhesive, abject drippiness that secured Snow Patrol their Grey's Anatomy cash-in.

That said, I'll wager The Amateurs will, at some stage, have a massive radio hit that everyone will love - thanks to it featuring prominently on the soundtrack to some Jennifer Aniston rom-com - and the chorus of which even your mother will know by heart.

Clicky clicky for the rest of the article.

Record Review, Iain Archer, To The Pine Roots


Artist: Iain Archer
Source: David Lynch


So what kind of album is To The Pine Roots? At first listen the image of a talented teenage strummer springs to mind. Surely this is some young amateur musician on a budget Takamine, using borrowed mics and a ripped version of Garageband to lay down a few tracks for his mates. Maybe they encouraged him to send it to an indie label who distributed it and sorted out the (very) nice packaging and website. The minimalist sound and prominence of the acoustic guitar in the mix definitely points towards this. Add in vocals that are somewhere between early Tim Wheeler and Elliot Smith and it’s obvious…

Wait a second? Slots in two of the largest venues in Ireland - Dublin 's O2 Belfast's Odyssey; an Ivor Novello award and a song on Greys Anatomy! It appears that Iain Archer is in fact a total pro and has been releasing albums for around fifteen years now. He is a former member of both Snow Patrol and Reindeer Section (hence the big venue slots as support to Snow Patrol). After listening to his latest album To The Pine Roots I can’t help but feel that he should have known better.

Clicky clicky for the rest of the article.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Therapy? for Academy Date


The Academy presents

THERAPY?

The Academy, Friday 15th May 2009.

Tickets €25 including booking fee on sale Friday 13th March.

Hard rockers THERAPY? have announced an Academy date on Friday 15th May to coincide with the release of their eagerly awaited new album Crooked Timber set for European release on March 23rd. Tickets go on sale through Ticketmaster at 9am on Friday March 13th.

Read the first Irish review of Crooked Timber on Drop-d here

Therapy? Site

Therapy? Myspace

Therapy? Wiki

Academy

Sanzkrit Album Preview video & album title revealed


County Monaghan alt-pop quartet Sanzkrit have decided to name their debut album After the Wedding with a scheduled release date in September.

Here's a preview video to whet your appetite...

Sanzkrit Myspace

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Drop-D Nominated and shortlisted for the Irish Web Awards 2008 Competition Time, The Stone Roses Experience


Midnight at The Academy presents

The Stone Roses Experience

Friday 13th March 2009

Tickets €15 including booking fee available from Ticketmaster.ie Doors 11pm

For ‘Roses’ fans who weren’t lucky enough to get a ticket for the Stone Roses Experience’s sold out December show, good news is here.. The band are returning to play a St Patrick’s weekend show on Friday 13th March. Tickets at €15 inclusive of booking fee are available through all usual Ticketmaster outlets nationwide.

The Stone Roses Experience are widely regarded as the most accurate tribute to The Stone Roses. They focus on bringing the authentic live sound of the Roses to audiences who never had the pleasure of seeing the original band, using the original instruments as closely as possible and tweaking that desired classic Roses tone.

Drop-d has got 2 tickets to give away, just answer this simple question. Ian Brown collaborated with which Irish female on his last album?

Answers to paddymurphy@drop-d.ie

TSRE Myspace

Drop-D Nominated and shortlisted for the Irish Web Awards 2008 The Mighty Diamonds, Crawdaddy date


POD Concerts presents

THE MIGHTY DIAMONDS

Support from Firehouse Skank DJs

Wed April 1st Crawdaddy, Harcourt Street, Dublin 2, Doors – 8pm

Tickets €17/22.50 (inc. booking fee) available from Ticketmaster, City Discs, Sound Cellar and usual outlets.

The Mighty Diamonds, Donald "Tabby" Shaw, Fitzroy "Bunny" Simpson and Lloyd "Judge" Ferguson formed in 1969 in the Trenchtown area of Kingston, Jamaica and for the past 40 years have been entertaining and educating the world with their sweet harmonies and conscious lyrics.

They quickly became known as the young group with the Motown sound with their soulful harmonies and polished performances. Their first hit singles Country Living and Hey Girl were recorded on the Channel One label. Their debut album Right Time, released on the Virgin has become a classic. This is an album that belongs in every serious reggae collection. Right Time is probably their most requested song when they perform.

Pass the Kouchie also became an international hit when first released and then again when it was covered by the Musical Youth and released as Pass the Dutchie.

The Mighty Diamonds Site

The Mighty Diamonds Myspace

The Mighty Diamonds Wiki

Tickets.ie

Ticketmaster

Drop-D Homepage

Drop-D Forum

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Drop-D Nominated and shortlisted for the Irish Web Awards 2008 Health for Whelans Date with Dublin Duck Dispensary and Wounds


Foggy Notions presents:

HEALTH

with The Dublin Duck Dispensary and Wounds, Whelans, April 17.

Tickets €13 from City Discs, WAV, Tickets.ie, Ticketmaster.ie, Road Records, Soundcellar

HEALTH`s brutal diversity is at the forefront of LA`s burgeoning experimental scene. Their self titled debut finally saw the light of day early last year via Lovepump United having already received accolades by Pitchfork and Drowned in Sound where the album was voted in the top ten albums of last year.

Having been together for six months before playing live, and eight months before releasing anything, Healths notoriety centred around LA`s The Smell venue where more often than not they played free all ages shows to those eager to lose themselves in the bands volatile experimental noise.

HEALTH have also had a hand in 8 bit glitch duo Crystal Castles` recent success. In addition to a Crystal Castles/HEALTH split 7", HEALTH remixed Crystal Castle`s Crimewave which featured on the UK release of the single. Relentless touring with Crystal Castles, Dan Deacon, and White Williams has cemeneted their status as one of the most exciting and energetic bands around.

HEALTH - / / M (CHICAGO)

Health Site

Health Myspace

Health Wiki

Dublin Duck Dispensary Myspace

Wounds Myspace

Tickets.ie

Ticketmaster

Drop-D Homepage

Drop-D Forum