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aeolianblues

@aeolianblues / aeolianblues.tumblr.com

Amateur writer and cartoonist, trash poetry specialist, musician, punk radio host, computer science student and enthusiast. Muser, hi hello! Museblogging at @sunburnacoustic. Disastrously cooking at @vengefulcooking
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2007 NME editor trashed bands he’d never met (tabloid style tbh) casting aspersions about them because, and I quote, ‘I saw them jamming in a room together to some afrobeats stuff’. Quite apart from trashing any sense left in the music industry and unnecessarily antagonising bands, these racist cunts also built up this image of indie as a homogeneously cleansed, white, leather jacket-wearing, UK/NYC-exclusive thing that only greasy thin white boys could do, and then as soon as they’d successfully sown that image they called it ‘landfill indie’ so that they could sell a story, and fuckheads like that completely lost the magazine its credibility.

The literal SECOND musicians had the ability to go direct to social media on their phones and announce stuff on twitter instead of having the NME write about them, they took that opportunity. It could even perhaps be said that serial tabloidist Conor McNicholas is the sole reason the NME went out of print within a decade of him being in charge of it.

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Rising Kingston Indie Rockers Carnelian Thrill At Debut Headline Show

Carnelian headline the Mansion, 4 October 2024.

Ahead of their first ever headline set at Kingston's rock venue, the Mansion, student band Carnelian seem nothing short of excited. After all, it’s been a while since their whirlwind early days back in 2023, where they formed just days before Clark Hall Pub’s battle of the bands in September as plucky indie upstarts, and went on to win the whole competition playing only their first-ever show as a band. Over the ensuing twelve months, the band have certainly put in the thought, work and hours, and it has all led up to this moment.

The Mansion is packed, extraordinarily so for a Thursday night, and the crowd has been warmed up and excited by two extremely capable openers and fellow student bands, Jinx and Colour Theory.

[...]By the time Colour Theory have walked off the stage, the drinks are flowing, smiles are easy, handheld camera flash is in your eyes and handmade fan signs have been raised appreciatively in support of the bands (what is this, 2007!?), and all this plays well into Carnelian’s hands.

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aeolianblues

For the five Carnelian fans on this website

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Jarvis Cocker: At the end of 1996, I had “a nervous breakdown”

Kate Mossman of The New Statesman talks to Jarvis Cocker, September 2021

The singer on nostalgia, hating David Cameron, and how crashing a Michael Jackson performance had “a toxic effect” on him.

Jarvis Cocker leans on a table in the courtyard of the House of St Barnabas, a members’ club and homeless charity, and one of the only bits of London’s Soho that does not bear the marks of the interminable Crossrail project. Cocker says he’s not one for conspiracy theories, “but there’s a lot of dark mutterings about what has happened while everybody’s been locked away. You can see it in Soho, where loads of building work’s gone on. They took an opportunity. Cement’s gone up in price because there’s none left.”

He’s not as tall as he is in your mind’s eye – a solid 6ft 1 – but he cuts a stately figure in green cords and a high-quality lilac shirt. Here, in a moccasin-style shoe, is the foot that was broken, along with his pelvis and ankle, when he fell out of a window in Sheffield pretending to be Spiderman. (He spent months as a young man gigging from a wheelchair.) Here is the rear that was waved at Michael Jackson, in a life-changing moment it still upsets him to talk about. Here are the long legs that bent like those of a freshly born foal on stage, and here are the glasses that were held on his face with an elastic band so he could execute his moves. These long, smooth fingers would frame his face, or flick his “V” signs. As sombre as he is, seating himself on a bench alongside the New Statesman, he is the only pop star that most people under 80, regardless of their artistic ability, could have a crack at drawing.

You feel wary of going straight in on “the Nineties” – it must be such a bore – yet Cocker brings them up right away, talking about a song called “Cocaine Socialism” which he wrote for his band Pulp in 1996, at their commercial and critical height. It was all about New Labour’s courtship of pop stars. The title was ironic he explains, because “cocaine will make you not give a fuck about any other member of the human race”. Cocker shelved the song because he thought it might actually stop the people of Britain voting Labour – a sign, he says, of his overweening ego at the time.

When I was 14, a friend gave me a perfectly executed cartoon of Cocker, drawn on squared paper in a maths lesson and titled “My future husband”. It is often a source of frustration for musicians when their biggest audience proves to be teenage girls, but this is to overlook the power of teenage girls – and teenagers in general – to work up an intensity of feeling that all but creates a career. Cocker should know, because he conceived of his future – conceived of Pulp, “planned my whole life out” – at the age of 14 in an economics lesson, writing it all down in exercise books which he recently unearthed in an attic. 

He had a written manifesto, “very earnest, about how we’re going to get famous, have our own record label and radio station, and help other bands, and break the tyranny of the major labels”. And he’d drawn pictures, too, of an arm, with “major record company” tattooed on it and a meat cleaver saying “Pulp Incorporated”, ready to chop off the hand.

“It was supposed to be some socialist empowerment of the people. It wasn’t just: ‘I’m going to buy a big house in Barbados and have a jet ski’.”

Cocker’s proudest moment in a 30-year career was when Martin Amis agreed with something he’d said, when they appeared together on a TV talkshow approaching the millennium. Jarvis had stated that, in the 20th century, fame had replaced heaven as our ultimate goal, our way of cheating death. His own moment of fame, when it came, was sizeable, but it took him 15 years to get there: Pulp formed in 1981 – they should have been a post-punk band rather than a Britpop one.

In 1996 Melody Maker judged Cocker the fifth most famous man in Britain – after John Major, Frank Bruno, Will Carling and Michael Barrymore. Two years later, the novelist Nick Hornby reflected, “Jarvis Cocker is an acute and amusing chronicler of our life and times… but sometimes… you wish he’d communicate via chat show or letter rather than song.” This he has done, and often. Jarvis has been Jarvis for the last 25 years, in radio, TV, the written word – and perhaps less so in music, in the popular imagination. When you have lingered so long outside fame’s door, fully formed and ready to go, you must be loath to make an exit. Only in the garden of a private members’ club can he go about peacefully; he cycles in London, without a helmet, so you suspect he is recognised often, moving at speed.

Cocker shows me photos of his new bike on an old iPhone – a Moulton small-wheeled cycle, described by Norman Foster as the greatest work of 20th century British design. There are racks back and front, “to put yer bag on”. “I have spent a lot of time on quite random, trivial things,” he tells me. When his beloved 1970 Hillman Imp car finally gave up the ghost, he had it crushed into a cube and gave it away to a fan.

Cocker was in the Paramount Hotel on West 46th Street, New York, in December 1996 when a girl called Imogen called from the New Labour office and asked for his endorsement. 

“I’d been to some event down Whitehall,” he recalls. “A kind of wooing event, and I’d felt really weird about that. It’s hard to imagine now. I was 16-17 when Thatcher got in, and a Labour government seemed like a fantasy. I felt very conflicted, because I really wanted it to happen but something just seemed wrong. Even at that time – a quarter of a century ago – I thought, ‘You should be doing politics, not trying to get some endorsements from some people in bands’. There was a desire for it to happen, and then this disease. It felt like getting chatted up.”

Imogen had tracked Cocker down during what he calls, perhaps surprisingly, a “severely traumatic part of my life”. At the end of 1996 he was having what he refers to today as a nervous breakdown. When the telephone rang in his hotel room, he assumed the suite was bugged. He’d gone to New York around Christmas time and, alone and anxious, found himself unable to face the crowds. But he also struggled to stay indoors, tormented by the aesthetics of his hotel room – “super designed, with a giant picture of a Vermeer painting, a woman pouring some milk out of a blue jug. You walked in to an art installation, and I was in a fragile state of mind.” 

Cocker’s descent – which seems to merge with the ascent of New Labour in a lurid kind of fever dream – began with his trespassing the Brit Awards stage in February 1996 during Michael Jackson’s performance of “Earth Song”. “I don’t really like talking about that particular incident,” he says, looking down at his knees. “People said at the time that it was a publicity stunt but it wasn’t really like that. It had a toxic effect on my life.”

There is a considerable mismatch between the folk memory of the moment, and the memory held by the perpetrator himself. To most, Cocker’s actions look more heroic as the years go by: the last cry of a bloated Eighties megastar defeated by British indie, or something to that effect. Jackson’s pageantry seems worse now than it did at the time: the white messiah robes and outstretched arms; the children lining up to embrace him; the rabbi bowing his head for a kiss. The pipe cleaner figure of Cocker floats on stage looking puzzled, wafts an imaginary fart at the audience (with his bottom clothed) and briefly raises his T-shirt. Hardly something to be arrested for (as he was, before being released without charge) but the 1990s are a draconian place, when you travel back in time.

Cocker was represented, in his assault charge, by the comedian Bob Mortimer, a former solicitor. David Bowie’s personal film crew were able to provide tapes shot from a certain angle to prove that he had not, in fact, knocked into any children when taking the stage. But there was condemnation from Damon Albarn (“he’s got some very odd ideas about reality”) and Jackson (“sickened, saddened, shocked, upset, cheated and angry”).

The tabloids subjected him to feverish attention. Cocker had always talked about drugs – the liner notes of Pulp’s single “Sorted For E’s & Wizz” showed you how to make a drugs wrap (“Ban This Sick Stunt” said the Daily Mirror). And he’d always talked about sex – he watched a lot of porn in hotel rooms on tour. Now, there were kiss and tells, and an attempt by the Sun to engineer a meeting between Cocker and his estranged father in Australia.

What thoughts were passing through his mind when he stood up and walked towards Jackson’s stage? He won’t say. “One thing I will say is that people are still convinced that I pulled my trousers down and showed my bottom. And it’s really not true. That’s when I realised what a c*** David Cameron was.”

In November 2011, he explains, the Observer put celebrities’ questions to the new prime minister of the coalition. Cocker asked Cameron whether he really understood the phrases “futures” and “derivatives”. Cameron gave a long answer to prove that he did and added: “I was there that night, at the Brit Awards. I saw him led away. I saw his bum.”

Cocker stirs his Americano.

“I just thought, ‘OK, you are a liar. You’ve just shown yourself to be a liar and a complete twat’.”

In the New Statesman that year, Cocker wrote a reflection on hangovers, inspired by the one he had the day after Tony Blair was elected. The hangover lingered, as he criticised New Labour’s treatment of single mothers, students and the disabled. It lasted 13 years, he said. It ended when Cameron got in – not because things were better, but because that’s when he started drinking again.

There is a photograph of Cocker as a long-legged child pictured with his mother, granny, sister and aunties outside their terraced house in Intake, a suburb of Sheffield. With her red pixie haircut and large specs, his mother, an art student, looks just like an indie girl from the 1990s – or a member of Pulp – in a strange cultural collision of the original hippies and the Sixties revival decades later.

Cocker lived on the dole in the Eighties trying to get his band off the ground. During the Britpop era, Labour’s Welfare To Work scheme made such a life much trickier, inspiring a campaign by Oasis’ manager Alan McGee. The dole must have had a huge impact on people’s ability to pursue creative work?

“Probably for six months, and then you get lazy,” Cocker says. “Not wanting to sound like Norman Tebbit, but you do, and that’s what drove me away from Sheffield – people were dropping like flies, having drug overdoses or losing it, and I thought, ‘It’s only a matter of time before I end up there’. So that’s when I started hatching my escape plan.”

His ticket out – a place to study film at Central Saint Martins in London – produced “Common People”, one of the most famous songs of the 20th century. Pulp were more refined, classy, slippery and sardonic than other Britpop bands. The image of working-class life as seen through the eyes of the song’s Greek art student gets to the heart of Cocker’s use of irony: he was interested in perceptions of class difference, perceptions of the north-south divide, as much as the real thing.

Having lived in the south for 35 years, he tells me the BBC’s insistence on using regional accents for announcers is a patronising attempt to keep people in their place. His mother became a Tory parish councillor for the village of Carlton in Lindrick, Nottinghamshire. In 1998 she told the Mirror, in an embarrassing interview, that she admired Thatcher – until the third term, when the prime minister became a megalomaniac. “I raised Jarvis on Tory values that if you’ve worked hard all your life, you want to keep what you’ve earned,” she said. Her son tells me he doesn’t agree with his mother’s support of Brexit – “but you won’t find many people who are going to say that everything’s going to plan. We’re on the downhill, and everybody’s got their own theories of why that is.”

Unlike his mother, Cocker has voted Labour since he was old enough to vote. “I can’t imagine voting for any other party,” he says, but that doesn’t mean he’s excited by the current one. “Corbyn I was excited about. But having spent a lot of time moving between France and here, his inability to come to any position on Brexit finished it for me.” Keir Starmer’s Labour, he says, “feels like the politics of opposition. It’s happening to the left all over the world, isn’t it? People have started wondering what level of dictatorship would be OK.”

A few years ago he visited the Magna Science Adventure Centre in Rotherham which recreates the world of the steel mills. Watching the installation of a “big melt” – when molten steel was poured into giant electric arc furnaces – made him strangely emotional. “It must be some kind of folk memory,” he says. “It was awful work, and loads of people got f***ed by the time they were 40. But there was some result and that’s what people miss – that there isn’t anything to glue people together in that way. Imagine working in a shipyard. After six months, suddenly there’s this big, massive f***-off ship and you’ve been part of that.

“There is a nostalgia, not for vibration white finger or lung disease, but for times when people worked together and there would be a result. I’m not an authority. It’s not for me to tell the Labour Party what to do, but I think – well, I thought I stumbled on something.”

He still praises the Sheffield city council, once nicknamed the “Socialist Republic of South Yorkshire”, which allowed children to travel for 2p on buses. He once said that when things took off for Britpop, he thought he was going to be part of something that changed society, like punk did, but it just turned out to be showbusiness.

Of all the extra-curricular jobs Cocker has done, the one the public took to most, which really seemed to fit him, was his gig as a DJ on BBC Radio 6 Music, running his Sunday Service show. His voice was as much a part of his sex appeal for teenage girls as his looks had been. The show explored a mundane but deeply nostalgic aspect of British culture: that time on a Sunday afternoon when everyone felt flat because it was nearly time for the week to start again, and you hadn’t done your homework. 

He’d resisted radio for a long time because of his father. Mac Cocker walked out in 1970, when Jarvis was seven, leaving Sheffield for Sydney, where he began a 33-year career with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. His gentle Yorkshire accent was appreciated on the airwaves. He had a show called The Night Train on Saturdays (Jarvis has a Radio 4 show for insomniacs called Wireless Nights); and a show called The Globetrotter on Sunday afternoons, and another called Vinyl Museum. High of forehead with long hair and large National Health-style specs, Mac wore a tank top not unlike those his son wore in Pulp. He sang with a band called Life On Mars.

Traditionally, Cocker doesn’t talk much about his father. As we begin to do so, a very tiny and very hairy caterpillar makes its way along the edge of the table in front of him. It is barely a centimetre long, with legs so fine they move in little ripples of dark and light. Cocker does what all humans do when faced with a caterpillar and tries to persuade it to clamber aboard the nail on his index finger. After two or three refusals, it does so.

Mac Cocker left his son with small bits of information about himself, like a copy of Harold Pinter’s The Birthday Party on the shelf. When Jarvis was 12, he came to visit, bringing records with him.

“That’s when I found out he was a DJ. He’d obviously just gone into some record label and picked up some records and gave me them. I ascribed a real meaning to them, but it was just promos. They were wank. They were just these really shit records! Anyway…”

Cocker wonders if he was propelled into music because of his father, but explains that any biological imperative, if it comes from an absent parent, remains a mysterious thing. “I know it must come from him, because my mother is so tone-deaf. But if you don’t know him, it’s like it’s come from somewhere supernatural.”

His family would say, you’re just like your father – “but usually as a negative thing. It was strange to be brought up with this cloudy non-presence.” Cocker and his father struck up a form of relationship eventually, whenever Pulp toured in Australia.

“You’re telling yourself that you sprang from the loins of this person, but if you don’t know the person, that disconnect is really uncomfortable. What used to drive me mad was having really inconsequential conversations. When you tried and go on to the deeper stuff, it was just words… I could tell he was always very uncomfortable, and I’m not exactly the world’s best person for talking about emotions, so I was always terrified that an awkward silence was going to descend.”

Did they at least share music? What kind was Mac into? “Jazz,” he says, in disbelief. His father left a record behind in the Sheffield house – an EP by the Sixties French singer Gilbert Bécaud. “You know when singles have those big centres? He’d made a centre for it by cutting a bit out of a Player’s cigarette packet. That had always been in the house. I knew it was his, because his name was written on the back of it.”

When Mac was dying, Cocker visited him in Australia and took the Bécaud EP with him.

“I just Blu-Tacked it on his wall. It was the only thing I had of his. I just thought, because he went a bit away with the fairies before he died, I thought, that’s something from his past. I just stuck it on there.”

And left it?

“Yeah.”

In October this year, Cocker will release his own album of French music – songs originally sung by Françoise Hardy, Serge Gainsbourg, Jacques Dutronc – to accompany the forthcoming Wes Anderson film The French Dispatch, which is set in the 1960s. It features a fictional pop star called Tip Top who is modelled partly on Cocker. Anderson directed his intonation, his delivery, in the studio. Cocker’s French, he says, is “something I should be ashamed and embarrassed about”, despite the fact he got to A-level standard, was married for six years to the French stylist Camille Bidault-Waddington, lived in Paris, and has a French son. He regularly travels to France to visit Albert, now 18, and stays in an apartment backing on to the Hotel Amour. Albert looks just like him. During the pandemic he got around the social distancing rules by hugging him through a bed sheet.

In 1998 Cocker told the Sydney Morning Herald “I just want to find a way of being an adult without it being boring.” Does he feel he’s achieved this? “I know I’m still slightly immature,” he says. “I mistrusted adults as a child. But there’s something really grotesque about people who refuse to grow up. When I became a father, people were always saying [he whines] ‘You’re going to change’. But actually it doesn’t change you, it just opens up a new bit of you. It was a real revelation to me, to realise I had that instinct. I found it liberating. As you move through life, these little doors open. The other ones are still open as well.”

He thinks all human beings believe they just missed a golden age. For him it was the Sixties, the decade in which he was born, “when the Beatles were still a group. They came to an end as the Seventies came, and I was six or seven. That’s the same year that me dad left. It felt like, OK, you’ve had your fun.

“When you’re a kid and you’re looking at the adult world,” he ponders, “you’re only looking at what’s current at that time. Like me wanting to be a pop star. By the time it happened, pop stars were on their way out. By the time you’re old enough to be part of it, it’s gone. So in a funny way, kids live in the past.

“I think that’s the fatal flaw in the whole Britpop thing. I don’t like to say that word, because it was an invented label – but that was the fatal flaw, and it takes us back to the fatal flaw of electing a Labour government and believing it would be the same as it used to be. Let’s make the Beatles again… Oasis really tried to do that, but you can’t make a period in history happen again.”

As a songwriter, Cocker telescoped himself into the future with “Disco 2000” and “Help The Aged”. The former felt open-hearted but the latter, intended as a kiss-off to youth-obsessed politics, sounded sour at the time.

“It always used to drive me mad, people going on about, ‘Oh, you’re so ironic’,” he says. “It would be rubbish to devote your life to doing something that was insincere. I guess I’ll often undercut what I’m singing about as I’m doing it – and that’s just because of the way my mind works. As I think one thing, I’ll think the opposite as well. Later in life, you discover that you are allowed to have two thoughts: it’s a natural function of the way your mind works.”

Some would say that, as you progress through life, you get better at trusting your instincts?

“I think if you just follow your instincts your whole life, you’ll be a monster.”

Cocker brightens, perhaps because our interview is ending. When he talks about his hobbies, he gives a big leonine flash, raising his silvery eyebrows above the frames of his glasses.

I phoned him a few weeks later, after the summer, to see what he’d been up to. He was at a secret location in Spain, making a movie he wasn’t allowed to talk about. A pandemic spent going through his loft, and noticing priceless keepsakes among the rubbish, has inspired him to write a book about pop and nostalgia – Good Pop, Bad Pop – to be published next year.

He is dying to be back on stage after two years off it. “I’m touching a wooden table now. We’ve already had to postpone this tour twice.” And he talks about Labour again – he really seems to care! You think back to his manifesto, his teenage sketch of a meat cleaver chopping off a hand. Then you look at a life lived gently, moving between projects, ponderings and “random trivial things” – and you wonder what his revolution would look like.

Jarvis Cocker’s new album “Tip Top: Chansons d’Ennui” is released on 22 October.

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In Defence Of Oasis

Exploring the hype behind one of Britain’s most loved and raucous rock n roll bands.

Unless you’ve been living under the most soundproof of rocks this week, you will have heard the news. After a decade and a half of the alluring ‘will-they-won’t-they’ drama, the Gallagher brothers Noel and Liam have rekindled just as suddenly as they’d ended it all backstage at a gig in Paris in 2009.

The rumours abound on social media suddenly began to feel a lot less like fantasies when Oasis, Noel and Liam’s accounts all teased an announcement last Saturday. Oasis had made announcements since their split, usually about anniversaries, merchandise and documentaries, this wasn’t out of the ordinary. In fact, the band would soon be marking 30 years since their era-defining debut album Definitely Maybe came out in August 1994. Singer Liam Gallagher had also threatened to reunite the band on plenty of occasions in the ensuing decade, but never made good on his word. Why should this time have felt different?

In theory, it shouldn’t have. The village eventually loses interest in the boy crying wolf. And yet, when Liam Gallagher stepped onto the Main Stage at Reading festival to perform a headlining set on Sunday and opened with nostalgic on-screen visuals of Oasis, any doubt left in fans’ minds quickly evaporated.

The following Tuesday, the band confirmed what we already knew: Oasis, the biggest Britpop band of the 1990s, were back in action.

The avalanche of articles followed like they hadn’t in over 20 years: Oasis had undoubtedly reignited the fantasies of music magazines and publications that were otherwise scaling down in the face of rising operational costs. We’ve now seen over 20 NME articles, news on the BBC website, a revived radio documentary on BBC 6 Music, countless Rolling Stone thinkpieces, news in SPIN Magazine, the Manchester Evening News, gossip in the rags of the Sun, Mail, Metro. The mural in Manchester. The millions of people that tried to get tickets for the reunion dates that sold out in hours. It’s easy to be sick of it all, to think there wasn’t a band more overrated, overhyped or beloved than Oasis.

But let’s forget the hymns for a moment. Let us re-examine the appeal of the band before the myth: five boys from Manchester who believed in nothing more than the rock ‘n’ roll dream. And certainly, nothing less.

Cast your mind back to 1994, before the success and idolatry, before their songs would be turned into design-for-life anthems, before the band would be permanently woven into the fabric of British music history. Strip all that away and try to imagine hearing a then-relatively unknown Oasis for the first time. Imagine being told that half the band was not yet 22 years old, that they were a new band, releasing their third-ever single? Can you imagine, however simple it may have been lyrically, hearing Live Forever for the first time? In particular, just 4 months after Kurt Cobain’s suicide, after many fans were left feeling like they were staring at the definitive end of an era of honest independent music?

In 1994, Oasis were ’77’s punk all over again. Entering a landscape of artists (a term Liam Gallagher has derided) who internalised their music and recoiled at the notion of explicit success, Oasis were a brash rejection of shoegaze and indie’s philosophies, even going as far as to instruct the presenters of BBC Radio 1’s Evening Sessions to tell the world that Oasis were not an indie band. They were a rock ‘n’ roll band, and a band that dared to aim high, openly and with no apologies (all apologies for the pun). 

That was a philosophy they would live by until the bitter end, for better or worse. In a world of falling ambition and no hope, as Britain emerged ravaged by the Thatcher years to find there was nowhere left for its young to go, Oasis were determined to write their own destiny, largely for themselves, but invariably, for their entire generation. 

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aeolianblues

I'm hearing criticism (/generally interesting responses) to the new Fontaines D.C. look from people around, usually along the lines of calling it cringe, or strange, outlandish, off-putting, weird... but I think what a lot of people discount with artists, and particularly with pop musicians who seem to get this sort of feedback on their looks on the daily, is that in this stage of being, artists aren't dressing themselves up to "look good", or certainly not to look conventionally attractive for a conventional audience's sensibilities.

It's about art. It's about expression. I know it sounds so obvious, but people are not considering that the choice of clothing is a representation of the art. The sartorial and stylistic direction on this album was guitarist Carlos O'Connell's decision, he said when he heard the sounds they were making on the album Romance, to him it appeared bright, and neon green. When you look at him during this era's press shots, you'll often notice that his reddish-pink dyed hair has been supplemented by a sharp suit, neon green.

Fontaines' first re-appearance during this new Romance era was in turning up to New Broadcasting House in London for an interview on Jack Saunders' BBC Radio 1 new music show. One of the first things Jack commented on was the band's dressing sense, and this seemed to be a very direct cut from the Fontaines of the past.

Fontaines' other guitarist, Connor Curley explained in that interview how this time around, the band were being completely fearless with their sonic explorations, and had tried to stop listening to the little doubting voice in the back of their heads that worried what people would think if they strayed too far from past sounds.

To singer Grian Chatten, as explained in a recent interview with NME, Romance and this era has been about letting go of certain inhibitions, not trying to blend in anymore, embracing his current state while also celebrating the tiny flames of optimism and love in an increasingly maddening world. In a world where love has to shout to be heard over the general din, it makes complete sense that the only sartorial representation for this attitude would be loud.

Loud because they don't care what people who have seen them in the past think. Colourful, as a reminder of the hope in everyday life. It's the perfect choice of clothing for this era. It's a part of the art, not a band trying to look drop-dead gorgeous; that is not the job of an artist.

It has its time and its place, and if all you see of them are a few press shots, what you may not realise is that most artists dress fairly normally when they're not in the public eye. When you're on a platform where your presentation is part of your performance, it makes sense to dress up. You wouldn't ask a rock band to cut the distortion on a rock song because it doesn't sound like a normal acoustic guitar, would you?

"Some of the music [on Romance] sounds exaggerated, I think it's romantic in that sense: it's exaggerated. The colours that I hear in the music are not colours you find necessarily in nature, you know? The songs sound kind of neon and ridiculous. And in order to communicate that idea thoroughly, I didn't want to go out on stage dressed the same as I was for 'Dogrel' or whatever. I wanted to put the audience in the right mindset to render them sensitive to the message [of the new album].'

What did I tell youse.

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personally I think the difference between Apple’s curation and Spotify’s is they seem to have actual people. And really well-respected DJs at that. Spotify’s feels very algorithmic, while I know personally that half of Apple’s hosts are former BBC Radio (1/6) DJs and on air personalities now working on their Beats radio (Zane Lowe), are former XFM DJs from back in its truly indie (independent) days (Matt Wilkinson), former MTV/Much Music VJs (Strombo) or incredible artists themselves (Jehnny Beth of John & Jehn, Savages). All this means that you have some really high quality interviews coming off the fact that the interviewers often have establish rapport with their guests. Apple came in early and I suppose took in all the stars of the indie heyday of the 90s and 00s and turned it into the sort of experience Spotify could never match with all the money they pour into their recommendation algorithms that are yet now festering with their reinvented payola (‘Discovery’ fee), not with how constantly pissed off everyone always is with them anyway.

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I'm hearing criticism (/generally interesting responses) to the new Fontaines D.C. look from people around, usually along the lines of calling it cringe, or strange, outlandish, off-putting, weird... but I think what a lot of people discount with artists, and particularly with pop musicians who seem to get this sort of feedback on their looks on the daily, is that in this stage of being, artists aren't dressing themselves up to "look good", or certainly not to look conventionally attractive for a conventional audience's sensibilities.

It's about art. It's about expression. I know it sounds so obvious, but people are not considering that the choice of clothing is a representation of the art. The sartorial and stylistic direction on this album was guitarist Carlos O'Connell's decision, he said when he heard the sounds they were making on the album Romance, to him it appeared bright, and neon green. When you look at him during this era's press shots, you'll often notice that his reddish-pink dyed hair has been supplemented by a sharp suit, neon green.

Fontaines' first re-appearance during this new Romance era was in turning up to New Broadcasting House in London for an interview on Jack Saunders' BBC Radio 1 new music show. One of the first things Jack commented on was the band's dressing sense, and this seemed to be a very direct cut from the Fontaines of the past.

Fontaines' other guitarist, Connor Curley explained in that interview how this time around, the band were being completely fearless with their sonic explorations, and had tried to stop listening to the little doubting voice in the back of their heads that worried what people would think if they strayed too far from past sounds.

To singer Grian Chatten, as explained in a recent interview with NME, Romance and this era has been about letting go of certain inhibitions, not trying to blend in anymore, embracing his current state while also celebrating the tiny flames of optimism and love in an increasingly maddening world. In a world where love has to shout to be heard over the general din, it makes complete sense that the only sartorial representation for this attitude would be loud.

Loud because they don't care what people who have seen them in the past think. Colourful, as a reminder of the hope in everyday life. It's the perfect choice of clothing for this era. It's a part of the art, not a band trying to look drop-dead gorgeous; that is not the job of an artist.

It has its time and its place, and if all you see of them are a few press shots, what you may not realise is that most artists dress fairly normally when they're not in the public eye. When you're on a platform where your presentation is part of your performance, it makes sense to dress up. You wouldn't ask a rock band to cut the distortion on a rock song because it doesn't sound like a normal acoustic guitar, would you?

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Raye is so valid! After winning the Ivor Novello award for Songwriter of the Year, Raye used her speech and platform to advocate for better payments for songwriters!

She's been saying this for years, as a very talented songwriter, Raye began working in the industry very young, and has been a pop writer for nearly a decade now. She's contributed to some major hits by known popstars like Little Mix, Ellie Goulding, Charli XCX, Madison Beer and Beyoncé. She's said this at every turn, more protections for songwriters, higher royalties to them, fairer compensation.

She said to the BBC here that unlike performers and stars who could find other sources of income based on their fame and popularity, like sponsorships, brand deals, or even performing and merch, all songwriters (who tend to remain in the fine print, if known at all outside of legal documents) have is the writing, and must be paid better.

Raye is an icon!

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“Guitars! More guitars! I will not be honest with myself”

Kiwi Jr. are amongst the wittiest modern indie bands in Canada right now. Go check them out! This song is taken from their debut album Football Money, 2019, and is a short, sweet, punchy record that left us wanting so bad that their second album announcement was a genuine delight to me, as was the news that Subpop Records had signed them (if the name sounds familiar and you’re not sure why, it’s the indie label that signed a ton of 90s alternative bands in the wake of their most successful signing: Nirvana).

Now three albums in, Kiwi jr. are on the up: in only the last year, they’ve played well attended gigs across the European indie circuit, and opened in the states for some mammoths of indie music and their own heroes, Pavement, Dinosaur jr., and also other cool names like Guided By Voices and Sloan. Their most recent third album Chopper sees them lean into darker sounds, while keeping that distinctive Kiwi sound. Get on this band while they’re still small!

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Was anyone else's mum just weirdly particular about giving long and emphatic lectures about how bad drugs are, and how they ruin lives and all, and how you've got to avoid certain industries, types of work/lifestyles and certain people because she just automatically associates them with drugs? (What am I saying 'was' for, my mum brought it up literally two weeks ago...)

Thinking of it now, I find it almost absurd, the association of certain fields with illicit and life-altering drugs. Because I'm someone who currently works in music and entertainment, my mum has been bringing this up nearly bi-weekly since I accidentally mentioned to her once that I felt a bit embarrassed at how I didn't really know how to order a drink, nor had a drink of preference because I just hadn't really done that very often, and whenever I had I was super awkward, because through a mixture of growing up in a very bar-free environment and lockdown hitting around the time I came legal, I just didn't have a drink order ready at the top of my head the way my housemates (way heavier drinkers) did the second they'd locked our front door to step out.

To me, knowing what you wanted when you stepped up to the bar was a slight power play thing, if I was interviewing a group backstage at a venue or whatever, and people are looking to me to lead the way on things because 'it's your show, we'll do whatever you want', then I feel like you've at least got to look like you're comfortable in your environment and don't look out of your element or like you've never been to a bar before. And it's just such a common thing for people to be all, oh yeah, let's get a drink to break the ice and then we'll settle into a nice chat, hopefully a little looser and more comfortable chatting than when you'd first met. The last thing you'd want to do then is make things awkward in the moment that's supposed to loosen things up.

My mum took that as all the possible warning bells that I was on the verge of becoming an alcoholic, because 'that's how it begins, just take an orange juice' (I had one (1) drink). It's completely not about the drink at all to me, it's about not seeming like I'm 12 and flummoxed at a place where I've technically invited someone. I've sort of dragged myself into this one: I got right annoyed at the writers at our campus newspaper's arts and culture sections, because they write like absolute idiots. I've had at them before, I think their music writers have written some of the worst pieces of music journalism I've had the misfortune to lay my eyes on. Sure, the pieces get worse as you read further down, but right from their opening sentences, they sound like they've never been to a musical event that hasn't been musical chairs at an 8 year old's party, and there and then I lose all respect for them.

This writer was at a gig and had requested an interview with a huge artist (you know how Foo Fighters are widely known and pretty much decorated with at least three Grammys every year that they release music? This artist was like that, but for my country, and my country's equivalent of the Grammys. To me, they're the Coldplay of our country and I think they're a bit naff, but whatever, people really like them).

Requesting an interview with an artist is fine, shoot your shot, I repeatedly do, but you have to understand when people turn you down, and you also know that the bigger the artist, the earlier you've got to reach out, because the layers of bureaucracy and email chains only get bigger as you go up in stature and to bigger record labels. Their writer reached out to a band that's been nominated for 15 [our Grammys] in about as many years, 5 hours before the gig, was unsurprisingly turned down, and then was in a huff about it the entire show. Complained about the venue staff being 'hostile' towards them for... informing them that their request, which had been passed on to the band's management, had been turned down after being asked the day of the gig. Months babe, you've got to reach out months in advance! When we reached out to a significantly smaller group than this one, who were on BMG Records, a Sony subsidiary and so by proxy a major label, it took us 3 months and the reason we ultimately got it was because the guitarist in the band liked us. The label said no, he said yes and so we could tell the label to suck eggs. You can't reach out on the morning of, or even the week of, and then throw a tantrum in print because you didn't get the interview. First time?

This writer then went on to complain about health and safety when caught in a moshpit of 17 year-olds, then complained when they went to venue security about it and were offered to be moved further back in the audience, saying how were they supposed to do their reporting job if they couldn't be in the front, where the pit typically is, but while also not taking part in the pit. If the 17 year-olds who've been locked indoors throughout lockdown for 3 years and are now attending their first-ever concerts can know this, why don't you? First time?

This writer also went on to say some fairly questionable stuff about the opening acts and the crowds, talking pretty exclusively about the opener's sex appeal and subsequently describing the excited 17 year-olds as groupies, which is always a fun accusation to be throwing at minors about a band of twenty-something year-olds. Got all your band info from movies and AO3? Have you been to a gig before??

And so I lost all respect for that writer and the entire paper, I do not fucking understand how they ended up as arts and culture editor of the student newspaper, they'd have got fired as a contributor from like, Melody Maker back in the day for less, and let me tell you some of those 90s and 00s British print publications let them write some pretty indulgent stuff. They spent the whole entire article moaning woe-is-me, I learned nothing about the gig they meant to review from the article.

And I never want to be like that, I won't let anyone think that of me. You've got to come across as comfortable in your surroundings. This is your place! You're the music journalist, you are expected to have been in a bar or a pub before. I was reading the recent long feature interview NME did with Fontaines D.C., they talked separately to Grian and Carlos, and the entirety of the interview with Grian takes place in a London pub, and that's necessary because it adds to the character. Grian, with some good descriptions courtesy of an astute writer, can completely believably inhabit the character of the pub poet, the people's poet, the punk poet and spiritual successor to John Cooper Clarke, and to do that, it is necessary to sit him down in a London pub on a hazy afternoon, let his character take its time to really come through in its natural home. Here, the focus isn't on you, you can't really disrupt that flow with a fucking orange juice. You aren't on the same wavelength, I think, if he's talking about his Guinness and you're sitting there, having fumbled at the bar because you don't have a made up mind about a drink, and are clearly out of your depth in the company of someone that can contemplatively nurse a pint while reflecting on when to let go of the ordinary lad in a loose tee, incognito in a pub, and embrace the weirdness.

Now I could be being extra harsh here, after all the very same NME have interviewed Grian previously on a walk in the countryside. I suppose everyone has something new to bring to the table, and that's what makes things interesting. And if you're a good enough writer, you can place your subject onto any sort of backdrop and find them either right at home, or at odds with their surroundings in ways that allow you to highlight their interesting qualities. Writing is fun. But I do think being able to order a drink is 1) a good confidence skill to have 2) something you probably should be able to do once you're inching towards your mid-twenties 3) does not fucking mean you're becoming an alcoholic, my god. I don't even like a drink, I just think I should 1) be allowed to push and discover what my limits are rather than not know it when I need to know it 2) be allowed to be drunk like once ever properly without it being considered a moral failure on my part 3) be able to hold myself up in the second home of the music scene: the venue with a bar, a pub, a nightclub.

But the reason why I find my mum's association of music/nightlife and the direct pipeline to hardline addiction absurd is that she thinks getting into other fields somehow makes it safer. Some of the worst stoners I've known have not necessarily been actors or musicians, though that could just be because I know more people who aren't actors or musicians. And my god, I'm in the tech sector (outside of music journalism, because as we all know, none of the things in the music industry except accountant, lawyer or exec's son, have been actual jobs for the last 20 years and the rest of us are really just wasting our time chasing sweet nothings. We make nothing from what we do, so we also have other jobs and degrees). It's basically an open secret that tech sector folks are at this point abusing ritalin/ADHD medication for the productivity and often are also booze abusers. My sister is a business student. The 'London bankers doing cocaine on the clock' stereotype doesn't come from nowhere. These are brushed aside as unfortunate realities of a dark industry that you should strive to avoid, but for some reason the entertainment industry is a no-go for these specific reasons. (Although tbf the fact that I don't get paid to do a lot of the stuff I do above is also a pretty massive problem in my mum's mind, which is fair.)

It frustrates me that you can 'corporate-wash' all bad habits away. If it's happening in an office, then it's acceptable, a sad reality but what to do. If you're a coked up banker, you're a respectable and ultimately wealthy dog of a human being, if you're a musician smoking weed, you're the dregs of society. If you're a crazed developer driven to exhaustion by a gaming corporation with unrealistic deadlines, being asked to work 24 hours with no overtime pay during the 'crunch period' that seems to come every year and for every single game the company launches, then you're just doing what you have to do to stay alive in an industry where you should remember that there will be ten more people eager to replace your lucky punk ass if you pass out from exhaustion, but an artist on drugs is better off dead. Baffling to me.

Is this just my mum though?

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Fuck it, I’m starting a music magazine

I went and made a(nother) Wordpress blog yesterday. I’ll launch it after I’m done moving but it’s coming. Mainly it’s so that I can impress the folks at Exclaim! and start writing for them, but if I started a Tumblr for it, would you all pretend to be excited every time I post?

It’s @soundslivemagazine! Get it because there are sounds, and they are live, and something sounds live and alive, I’m happy with the name! (Unless you guys think otherwise? I’m just hoping the name isn’t so generic that it gets lost, but also this is so local and on the ground. It’s not the next Pitchfork or anything, no pressure on me. That said if you want to see whether following is worth your time, my other ‘music journalism’ stuff is here on the #music tag)

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A new article I really liked about the emerging metal scene in Chennai!

For context, Chennai in South India has finally begun to gain some momentum, having opened a few metal bars, cover nights and shows showcasing local metal acts. Despite metal being really big in nearby Bangalore, it hasn’t historically taken as much root in Chennai, Chennai’s always had a larger folk, classical or acoustic singer-songwriter scene.

This is a new article in The Hindu talking about emerging metal acts in the city.

In popular pubs across Chennai, an underground metal scene swaddled in black, makes a comeback.

Most of the 100 people gathered around The Spotted Deer pub in The Palomar hotel in ECR early in April were in black T-shirts, while others wore distinctive white shirts and lungis.

Shreyaa Lakshmi Narayanan, one among the few managing the crowd, had never heard a metal song before this sold-out gig. But she has been bobbing her head to heavy music ever since.

The genre is making noise again in Chennai. And there is no better proof than Metal Munnetra Kazhagam, a cover gig by musicians across the city in tribute to globally legendary bands Slipknot and Rage Against the Machine.

“It wasn’t just a concert…it felt like a turning point, a hope for even greater collaboration and creativity in the community,” said Aditya Rao, frontman of Mangas and the Mango Men, a metal band born in 2022. 

Formed with a sly spin on Tamil Nadu’s distinctive political party suffix, the gig featured members of Chennai’s loudest homegrown bands, like Mangas, Moral Putrefaction, Frankendriver and Godia, teaming up with each other to roar and get roared at. 

“We wanted to change attitudes towards metal, and mix bands to give people new to Chennai a chance,” smiled Manu Krishnan, one of the organisers. 

This year has been more than a revival for metal in Chennai. It has also been a reinvention: in embracing Tamil culture as a brand, who gets to play on stage, accessibility, and in the very heart of what it means to love the heaviest sounds of Chennai. 

Armaan, Manu and Srikanth Natarajan founded Metal Chennai in 2018 to change the idea of “metal being an expensive hobby,” in Manu’s words. Saturday night’s screaming marked the first big Metal Chennai gig since September last year, which was hosted in Gears n Garage in Nungambakkam. When the pub indefinitely shut shop, it signalled a shrunken number of venues willing to host metal.

Nevertheless, metalheads in Chennai have for generations been fighting tooth and nail to keep the volatile pulse of the scene alive: finding scream-friendly venues and trying to build a community that is safe and enticing for everyone, while still tough and edgy enough for the brand.

Venues that both sonically work for metal and are willing to host it in the city are rare, unlike ones like Bangalore. “Metal is not like other genres. We can’t just amplify the sound. It needs an advanced setup,” says Shivamoorthy of Moral Putrefaction. 

Artistes performing at Metal Munnetra Kazhagam at The Spotted Dear pub in hotel The Palomar by Crossway, ECR in Chennai. Photo: R. Ravindran | Photo Credit: Ravindran_R

The Palomar hotel began operations just last month, and talks are ongoing for future events.

The craze for metal in fact dates back to at least the Sixties, according to Eddie Prithviraj, who joined in the early Nineties. He’s been organising live music gigs across genres like jazz and pop in Chennai for 30 years, but back then, he had just founded a metal band called Bone Saw, and another called Blood Covenant in 2004. Issues with venues date back to even his time, when he had to close one himself.

“Come the Nineties, a couple of rebels really wanted to explode themselves,” Eddie explains. “It’s never been in the mainstream. But it was there. Guys recorded extreme death metal on cassettes in 1996. It was something to be cherished. It isn’t anymore.”

Between 2015 and 2018, Chennai’s metal scene had once again “died,” as recalled by Armaan, Mickey and Isaiah Anderson, vocalist of progressive metalcore band Godia. 

Mickey has convinced some of his bands to change their names and album art styles to make them fiercer because “branding matters in a commercial music space.” In Chennai and India at large, he argues, bands usually start in universities and they don’t think about branding then. 

Chennai has seen a rise in more explicitly defined subjects in metal lyrics, with subjects spanning from genocide, the “rot” in society and rights for the queer community for Moral Putrefaction to mental health and depression for Godia. This, Shivamoorthy of Moral Putrefaction says, also goes against the tide of “aggression”, sometimes tinged with right-wing politics, in metal.  

Artistes performing at Metal Munnetra Kazhagam at The Spotted Dear pub in hotel The Palomar by Crossway, ECR in Chennai. Photo: R. Ravindran | Photo Credit: Ravindran_R

As a culmination of all the trends in this genre in Chennai, the attendance at Metal Munnetra Kazhagam is what Beeto Jerrin from Moral Putrefaction describes as a “decent” crowd by the standards of 2023. Ironically, during the struggle to regain these numbers in Chennai, bands like his and Godia reached international acclaim with performances and signed records.

Despite metal now being forced to think in terms of business, the desire to increase listeners comes from a very personal place for many. 

Armaan, points out that so far in India, there have been barriers of privilege in language, caste, gender and capital that restrict possibilities for both bands and audiences. One way this plays out in Chennai is women being sidelined in the metal scene This is something that Armaan, as an organiser, admits to still navigating. 

The gig also comes at the heels of a brand new college student-run platform MoshLit Events, the youngest group to organise metal and hard rock events, securing venues like 10 Downing Street and Steams n Whistles bar in GRT Grand. The technicality of sound is an issue here, according to Sivaramakrishnan, bassist for Frankendriver, but his bandmate Teeto Jerrin feels the energy at their gigs is sky high.

MoshLit kicked off just this year. They lay it all out on Instagram: commissioning graphic designers for posters, posting videos from the shows,  and almost daring people to come. Their aim is to bring metal to the “forefront,” with uniquely appealing initiatives like relatively accessible ticket prices and an after-party DJ. You could spot MoshLit at a Metal Chennai gig, and vice versa.

In today’s Tamil Nadu, metalheads keep grooving. Inside the toughness, Manu says, “we’re all teddy bears.” As Aditya puts it, “supporting each other will carry us forward.”

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If you like a bit of theatricality in your music, you need to get down and listening to The Last Dinner Party. They're a cool new rock band from London, and they sprang forth with a vision in mind. Many bands wander around nomadically from sound to sound as they try and discover who they are musically, not The Last Dinner Party. They formed with a purpose.

“I think the first conversation I had about the band was at The Shack after watching a band play and Abigail [Morris, singer] said: ‘we’re going to start a band,’” [says] guitarist Lizzie Maylan. “We were watching some post-punk lads up on stage and we were like: ‘This is shit! We need to do something about this. We can and will change the music industry.”

They discussed the band's look and sound at length, even before their first rehearsals together.

Their visual identity is as important to them as the music. On stage, they wear gothy, medievalish gowns and corsets (think Midsommar crossed with Wuthering Heights-era Kate Bush). “We thought a lot about it, big time,” says [bassist Georgia] Davies. [...F]rom the very beginning, before we even had a rehearsal, we knew we were going to think about this so carefully.” 

Their well thought-out, fully-baked plans hit a small roadbump that's infuriatingly common on the internet with regards to the music industry these days: small-minded claims of being 'industry plants'. Which is fucking awful, because firstly, internet-brain has ruined our ability to believe anything at all. When discussions about nepotism were happening, they were meant to be about children of people in the entertainment industry getting preferential treatment by their parents' peers and cutting ahead in line, not about anybody in the entertainment industry who gets any success at all being 'suspicious'. Shut up. Shut. Up. And use your brain for a moment!

Secondly, it's always women. It's always women in successful bands that get hit with claims of unfair advantages. Always unfounded or unfair. The phrases people used to use for similar male bands were "burst fully-formed onto the scene", "hit the ground running" and "phenomenal talent". If you can marvel at ‘Brazil’ being written when Declan McKenna was 15 then you can believe that The Last Dinner Party's first single was brilliant with no outside help. You can believe that ‘Chaise Longue’ was a genuine hit, and Wet Leg's debut album sold as fantastically as it did because people really connected with the freedom and sense of humour in those songs.

All these bands have worked incredibly hard, and just as hard as their male peers. If you're going to complain that it's "unfair" or "selling out" for a band to gain fans off the back of supporting Louis Tomlinson on tour, then you should simply get off the internet and get out of all of our faces because you're a fool, an idiot, and you fundamentally do not understand how the music industry works.

You're angry that someone gained fans because they played an hour before a pop star? You think that's unfair? What exactly do you picture when you think of a musician, a thicko? Someone who says no to genuine and exciting musical opportunities in their music career? I don't think you're a musician if the ability to play a stadium doesn't pique your curiosity, you're just a miserable git that's waiting for self-inflicted misery to finally spark some musical inspiration in you. Get the fuck out. Pathetic.

The Last Dinner Party also earned their stripes. They were in bands around the London scene, original and cover bands. When people compare their music to Kate Bush, Queen, ABBA, David Bowie, it's because they're very familiar with their work. Lead guitarist Emily Roberts played Brian May's parts in a Queen cover band before The Last Dinner Party took off. Criticism from the never-really-tried row came again when live recordings of their shows uploaded to YouTube piqued interest from record labels and they were offered a deal by Island Records, who they ended up signing to.

“We could have signed to an indie or a major,” [keyboardist Aurora] Nishevci says, “but we wanted money,” Morris interjects. Before the deal with Island Records, they balanced their studies alongside odd jobs and gigging to make ends meet.  Of course, the hate continued, with some critics accusing them of ‘selling out’ by signing to a major label. “We weren’t going to turn down an incredible opportunity like this,” Morris says. “I think it’s a really dangerous mentality, where to make art, you must be struggling, all the time,” adds Davies. “We want to encourage people to be able to do art and make a living from it, to be comfortable and able to do it with longevity and sustainability. If we’re only celebrating or accepting art where it’s been a real struggle, it’s a terrible message.” They also point out how few artists now have a choice, at a time when so many earn so little from the industry, and arts cuts abound. “If we didn’t have management or any help, there’s no way we could afford to play festivals,” Davies says. “It cuts out so many great bands from these opportunities because of how little [they earn]. I think there should be so much more help… but the government doesn’t fund anything, so they’re not going to fund the arts.” [...] “There are plenty of bands on the same label as us who are all men, or mostly men, and they don’t get any of this,” Davies shrugs. “They don’t get the ‘industry plant’ or ‘they dress too well’, Morris adds.

It must get tiring. But the highs outweigh the lows! The Last Dinner Party were a last-minute addition to the Saturday morning lineup at Glastonbury festival (untelevised so I have no idea how it went, I'd have loved to see it!), and attendees said they loved their set. They also recently did a cool session at Maida Vale for BBC Radio 6 Music that includes a splendid version of their first single, the gothic, almost-Victorian, theatrical Nothing Matters.

It's been impressive enough that they opened for the Rolling Stones at Hyde Park and have now been on tour opening for Florence + The Machine.

There's a lot more good to focus on than the disappointing attitudes of some people towards women in music, such as the fact that they're excited to get an album out soon! They are a band that largely came up through word-of-mouth praise from fans who dragged their friends along to their live shows: they had no real social media presence till right before this single was announced, no recorded music before Nothing Matters in April, a second song Sinner that came out this month. But through live performance clips uploaded by fans to Youtube, you can see they've got enough music to play a 40-minute headline set. Keep an eye and an ear out, an album will be here soon, and it's going to be one of the biggest indie/rock albums of this year.

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I've got a favourite new music podcast because they discuss the same stuff I'm literally always talking about: things happening in music but from the social impact they create on musicians, fans, the industry, other implications, and just touching on all the stuff I'm constantly yapping about on radio and in real life.

They're called Nialler9, it's a music journalist Niall from Ireland who's been at it for 20 years or so, and a cohost music and culture journalist Andrea.

They were discussing Pitchfork's dissolution last and brought up how the longform music or album review has completely disappeared from the music press. Everything now is a short 300-word synopsis.

300 words sounds plenty until you look at how music journalists write. (From experience,) 60 words is a sentence. You're giving them 5-6 sentences on a whole album. That's not music journalism, that's a short press bio. As they discussed, that's enough for you to say who the band is, how many releases they've had so far, where they're from and maybe one line of context about the album's making. That's what I get when PR sends me press kits, not a review.

You used to send journalists out on two weekends with a band, one on the night of a gig, another a few months later, where they would spend time with a band and do a feature story that would about 7000-10,000 words long. Reviews used to be 800-1500 words. Those are gone, the mags don't use it because they don't think anyone has the atttention span to read them, they don't want to pay by the word, and (almost consequently) journalists working seven different gigs don't have the time to write a 700 worder for very little cash.

And nerdery is lost. We don't have 'hidden gem' tracks anymore. No one will talk about them in magazines (this is me talking now, not the wonderful podcast). Albums have got shorter again. There was a time when album were 40 minutes long because of the constraints of how much info you could put on a vinyl. With the advent of CD and streaming, those limitations were lifted, they were increased and even eradicated.

Now I've been living with debut albums for the last 4 years, I'd say on average they are between 36 and 48 minutes. Less music to listen to! Less daunting to get through the back catalogue! I've been telling people, 'listen to the album, it won't take you too long'. 35 minutes. Shorter songs. Less studio time. Less to write about. Less conversation. Less community. Less culture. Shorter lunch breaks. More short-term gigs. Get back to your desk. Get back to work. Get on the grind. Get off your phone. Get off your stereo. Stay longer. Have less to do when you go home. How about I killed you.

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Saw Godspeed live, that’s one ticked off the bucket list. My first time seeing them live, others I spoke to after the show who have seen them before said this might’ve been one of their best ones ever. All I can say is I was too mesmerised to say much. “First time! What did you think?”, people asked me. “Wow”, was all I could say.

Didn’t get any pictures of the show for the same reason, I was just rooted to the spot. Just watching their compelling visuals. The isolated, desolate, apocalyptic visuals. Soundtracked by the bittersweetness on stage. Fleeting notions of happiness, longing, nostalgia, mourning, sadness; we experienced them all with eyes glued to the stage. And the little moments of watching the vehicles of these deep emotions break into smiles, nod to one another, watch each other for a cue and crack a smile momentarily. Those little moments of humanity, and also clear betrayals of how deeply this group of eight experiences and loves the music they play, night after night.

Eight. Three guitarists, two bassists (including a contrabass), a violinist, two drummers. When you watch Godspeed, you will feel how keenly each of those is needed to create the immersive soundscape that they build and wash over you with.

My goodness. What a night. Like I said, I didn’t get any pictures because I was so awestruck. But at the end, I did get this, and it’ll do because I love that they did this.

The tape on their amp reads, “transphobes eat shit and die alone”. Well said. 🏳️‍⚧️

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