Archive for November, 2006

The Hours - Ali In The Jungle

Saturday, November 18th, 2006

Ali in the Jungle [7\

Ali InThe Jungle, the debut single from The Hours, will be released by A&M Records on 13th November 2006. Ali In The Jungle: it’s not how you start, it’s how you finish… it’s not where you’re from, it’s where you’re at… it’s four minutes of new music, it’s a euphoric melody welded to an insistent riff… it’s the greatest comeback since Lazarus.
The Hours are Antony Genn and Martin Slattery: their debut album
Narcissus Road will be released in January 2007. There are many places this biography of The Hours could begin. It could begin in Sheffield, at the fag end of punk, where a ten-year old Ant Genn is standing at the stage door of The Top Rank waiting for The Clash to turn up so he can grab Joe Strummers autograph. Then again, it could begin in 1999 as Ant Genn settles into a swivel chair as he clocks in for day one producing Joe Strummers solo album.

It could start across the Pennines, in the early 80s, where another Northern lad, Martin Slattery, is carving a reputation as a prodigious teenage jazz pianist and saxophonist player, performing in Manchesters Working Mens clubs alongside his dad, an organist. Or it could kick off in the back of a tour bus in 1995, somewhere on Planet Earth, where Slattery is earning a living as the (still prodigiously) talented keyboardist in Shaun Ryders Black Grape, living life to its very fullest in any number of places. But not getting much sleep. For two years. Let’s start this tale on the road, where Genn is playing across the world with first Elastica and then Pulp (with whom he also played as a 16 year-old) and gradually losing his teeth to a crack and heroin habit. Too negative? Probably. We could start at the sessions for UNKLE that Genn produced, or on the road with Joe Strummer, where Slattery is an integral part of the Mescaleros, until Joe’s untimely passing. How about we start on the night of their first meeting, at Metropolis Studios in London, where Ant has taken his flatmate Robbie Williams (long story) to meet Black Grape’s producer Danny Sabre, but has instead met Martin Slattery and recognized a kindred spirit…

Actually, no. All that’s well and good, and fascinating in its own way. But that’s not where we’re starting. We need to tell you why The Hours mean something, why they’re driven to communicate with as many people as they can reach with big, sweeping, straight-talking and beautiful music, and why you mustn’t ignore them. So we’re starting at a Radiohead gig in Shepherd’s Bush in 2004.

Martin Slattery and Antony Genn are in attendance and they are absolutely blown away by the power of the performance. It is, literally, awesome. So Martin turns to Ant and says, ‘If I have one regret it’s that I never played in my own band and we never got to that level.’

Let’s do it, says Ant. Let’s start a band. Martin looks at him – but what are you going to do, he asks incredulously. Sing, says Ant. I want to sing. Martin’s not so sure. While Ant finishes producing a Grace Jones album and Martin continues to work alongside the gilded likes of Brian Eno, Sly and Robbie, Tony Allen, the idea begins to gather weight.

Pretty soon, their bluff is called as a studio in West London is booked for a fortnight. Nobody could’ve have predicted how well things would turn out.

They went into the studio without a note of music written, with Slattery thinking they’d be doing experimental stuff, messing about on the fringes for fun. Instead, they started to write huge anthems, with Slattery playing any instrument he could lay his hands on and Genn joining him on guitar - sending out his bold, occasionally dark, usually illuminating words about life, death, love and all points in between. They are both totally gobsmacked.

“I’m the spark and he’s like a deep sea oil rig,” says Genn. “I just drop a match on him and kaboom! He’s all over it: on the drums, bass, piano, everything and it’s amazing!”

This is not the cockiness usually associated with a new band, because these two aren’t like any old new band. They’ve played with great bands before and they know what that’s like. They know what the competition really sounds like when you’re lost in the moment playing something amazing for the first time. But as they hammer out the insistent riff of Ali In the Jungle, the dagger in the heart of Back When You Were Good or the knife’s edge melody of I Miss You, they know they’ve stepped into an arena flooded with light. They know they’ve pulled off the hardest trick of all: they’ve written a collection of glittering pop songs that have something fundamental and important to say.

“It was really important that we communicate something with these songs,” says Genn. “I want to communicate to people about reinvention, resurrection, loss, growing-up…late: The human condition. Me and him have been in groups with three of the greatest British poets and front-men of all time: Shaun Ryder, Jarvis Cocker and Joe Strummer. So, I always told myself, unless you’ve got something to say, mate, don’t even step towards that mic.”

But despite their sense that these songs were the business, they couldn’t be absolutely certain until they’d run it past a few people whose opinions they knew they could trust absolutely: Jeanette Lee, who runs Rough Trade with Geoff Travis and former Pulp bassist Steve Mackey. “That was really important to us,” says Slattery. “Because they didn’t expect anything and would’ve had no qualms telling us we were crap. But they said there was something there, they told us which songs to bin and when Jeanette said, ‘Ali In The Jungle sounds like a hit’, it meant everything to us. It made it tangible.”

Rough Trade started managing them and after only a handful of shows they found themselves being offered a deal by a revived A&M records. “The great thing about A&M,” says Slattery, “is we’d finished the album by time we signed and they didn’t want to change a thing. We had complete creative control.”  Genn takes up the thread. “I want to see how far good songs can take you… I want a massive hit record and this is just the start.”

“The Hours are Antony Genn and Martin Slattery. They understand what music is for – it’s for human beings to communicate with other human beings. It’s that simple, it’s that important. Let them into your life. You won’t regret it.”

Jarvis Cocker, 2006.

JACKSON POLLOCK NUMBER - World Record Auction - The Man & His Life

Wednesday, November 8th, 2006

Painting, 1948
Painting, 1948 Art Print
Pollock, Jackson
Buy at AllPosters.com

All Stone Roses fans will be familiar with the work of Jackson Pollock whose work inspired many cover artworks and who’s most famous painting Number 5 was name checked on Going Down.  This week Number 5 became the most expensive painting ever when it was sold by David Geffen to a Mexican collector for $140million. 

That prompted me to look at the history behind the man. Jackson Pollock was born in 1912 in Cody, Wyoming, USA the youngest of five brothers.  His parents were of Irish descent; his father was first a farmer and later a surveyor.   His family had moved to six different states by the time he was ten years old.  While living in Phoenix, Arizona, Pollock explored rivers, hills, and Indian ruins, and often visited local Indian reservations.  These experiences had a profound influence on him and on his painting and throughout his life, Pollock had an interest in Native-American art, and the artistic processes employed by Native-American artists.  The family eventually moved to California and in 1927, Jackson and his brother worked as surveyors.  As a teenager Pollock began to drink, and this increasingly difficult addiction troubled him throughout the rest of his life and in fact was responsible for his untimely death.  At an early age he found drawing, as well as alcohol, could be an outlet for his tensions.  He was enrolled at the Los Angeles Manual Arts High School but was expelled for being a “troublemaker.”  After a year of probation he returned to the school, but left in 1930 without graduating.   He then joined his oldest brother at the Art Student League in New York. Here he studied with the famous regional painter, Thomas Hart Benton, who influenced Pollock not only in terms of his swirling compositions but also in a negative way in that he pushed realistic painting so hard that Pollock eventually rebelled against realism and became a non-objective painter. After that, Pollock’s painting went through many phases and at one time or another, his work showed influences of Renaissance art, the Mexican muralists, and the great Cubist artist, Picasso.  During the Depression, Pollock did odd jobs and joined the New Deal sponsored Federal Arts Project (FAP).  By 1937, Pollock was drinking heavily and for the first time underwent psychiatric treatment for alcoholism.  Pollock, while still a member of the FAP in 1942, was part of an important group exhibit, which included Arshile Gorky, Willem de Kooning, Stuart Davis, and Lee Krasner.  Pollock and Krasner became lovers, began to live together and were married in 1945.   Pollock was introduced to abstract imagery derived from the unconscious by the painter Robert Motherwell in 1942.  During that same year he met Peggy Guggenheim who invited him to participate in the “Spring Salon for Young Artists,” to be held in1943.  She also commissioned Pollock to paint a large mural for her home.  This mural, unlike previous murals by Pollock, lacked any visible evidence of Picasso’s influence, and is considered one of his most important early works.  Pollock had his first solo show at Guggenheim’s Art of the Century Gallery in New York in 1945. In 1947, while living on a farm near New York City with his wife, Lee Krasner, Pollock developed his drip paintings, which rejected the concept of traditional easel painting and the slow method of painting with a brush. Pollock laid his unprimed canvases on the floor and dripped, dribbled, and spattered the paint from a stick.  This was a direct emotional and physical release of inner energy for Pollock.  He had complete control over the flow of paint but the process was spontaneous.  It was here that he developed the technique of the all-over composition, in which the painting has no fixed centre of interest.  These paintings seem to explode with a dance like-movement, causing the eye to be confused before knowing where to look next.  These paintings were an attempt to create an entirely new type of painting, which was innovative, improvised and spontaneous.  Pollock would lay the canvas flat on the floor, stand over the canvas and pour and drip the paint onto the canvas, expressing his inner energy and perhaps torment.  Rather than using artist’s paints, he often would buy gallons of paint from Sears, including metallic paints.  As he would move around the canvas and drip the paint, he would often try to become one with the painting, dancing and dripping and sometimes moving across the canvas, leaving footprints and debris from the studio.  These paintings were unlike any paintings seen before.  Needless to say, this was a major development in post-World War II painting and is considered by critics and art historians to be the most significant change in pictorial space in painting since the development of Cubism. Ironically it recently became known that Pollock’s early work was partially funded by the CIA. This would have been extremely disturbing to the left wing Pollock had he know. The Soviet Union were painting a picture of an uneducated and art devoid USA as part of their demonisation of The West. The CIA then pumped money into new art forms to support the cash strapped artists survive. Pollock benefited from this. It is hard to believe now that the CIA saw potential in Pollock’s work long before the art critics. 

 

 

Jackson Pollock died in 1956 when he crashed into a tree while driving drunk.  Technically, this was an accidental death, but to many who knew him, it was the inevitable outcome of his own self-destructiveness, and was hardly a surprise.
Click Below To Buy Pollock Book At Amazon

Jackson Pollock

 

 

 

 

MORRISSEY TOUR - NORTH EAST FANS LOST INTEREST????????

Tuesday, November 7th, 2006

Has the North East crowd turned their backs on The Mozz?? In the good old days his gigs sold out in minutes but 4 weeks on and the tickets are still on sale.

The general feeling is that the lack of encore at this years Sage gig was a major slap in the face to loyal fans. I for one was gutted and wrote to that effect on this site.

However, Moz and The Smiths have played some of their most stunning gigs in Newcastle and as such probably deserve a second chance. I took no chances this time and binned the Arena for the GMEX just before Xmas. If the gig is half as good as his “Quarry GMEX” gig then it will be a classic.

Three classic’s that I remember are, The Smiths on Red Wedge at The City Hall (borrowed kit), Queen is Dead at The Mayfair and solo 1994 again at The City Hall. What an encore, “Shoplifters” with 70’s Newcastle footy top. The crowd invaded the stage, the bouncers were trampled and the lights went up. Pure drama to end a set which included his first Smiths numbers on Tyneside since 1987.

Can’t remember looking forward to a gig as much as this for ages. Hopefully we might get a Xmas “Best Of” set list as well.

Morrissey - Who Put The \'M\' In Manchester [2004]

MANCHESTER IS MUSIC

Monday, November 6th, 2006
Manchester Is Music
Fun site dedicated to The Madchester scene of the late 80’s early 90’s.
Links to other relevant sites, interviews and general bollocks really.
Worth 10 minutes of your time.

IAN BROWN POP ART FROM A NORTHERN SOUL

Monday, November 6th, 2006

Medium

Handpainted acrylic on gallery box canvas. The sidewalls are staple free and painted, ready for hanging.

Colours

This painting is available in the colours of your choice. If you do not specify a colour scheme we will supply as per the gallery picture.     

Size

76cm (30”) x 76cm (30”) x 3.8cm (1.5”) deep

Price £90.00 with free UK delivery.

http://www.anorthernsoul.com/image42.html

NAPSTER - NUMBER 1 FOR MUSIC DOWNLOADS

Friday, November 3rd, 2006

Download Shed-Loads of tracks on Napster

We’ve all heard of the illegal file sharing network Napster and the ensuing court case.

Well here is Napster 2006, fully legal and the best place to download your MP3 tracks.

No need to buy the full album anymore, just the tracks that you want.

THE SOUL STYLISTS - SIX DECADES OF MODERNISM

Friday, November 3rd, 2006

This volume is a celebration of the Mods. With the use of personal testimonies of both the famous and the unknown, it seeks to establish the link between the two key elements of Modernism today - American rhythm and blues and British working-class fashion. It follows the transition of musical styles from London in the late 1950s, with the black American servicemen and their love of bebop, through the sharply dressed Mods of the early 1960s, to the dawning of the skinhead and suedehead movements which provided the musical and stylistic inspirations for 1980s bands such as Madness, The Beat and The Specials. It also explores: Britain’s Northern soul scene which saw thousands of youngsters in the North of England dedicate their lives to buying the most obscure American soul records; the soulboy and the casual as well as 2001’s Mod inheritors - the youth who make up the acid house and hip-hop scene.

BUY IT BY CLICKING LINK BELOW

The Soul Stylists: Six Decades of Modernism - from Mods to Casuals

A Confederacy Of Dunces

Wednesday, November 1st, 2006

Ignatius Reilly, the hero, is a grotesque Gargantua, in violent revolt against the entire 20th century and what he takes to be the manifold excesses and perversions of the past 400 years. He lumbers through New Orleans leaving chaos in his wake.

A monument of sloth, rant and contempt, a behemoth of fat, flatulence and furious suspicion of anything modern - this is Ignatius J Reilly of New Orleans, noble crusader against a world of dunces. In magnificent revolt against the twentieth century, Ignatius propels his monstrous bulk among the flesh posts of the fallen city, documenting life on his Big Chief tablets as he goes, until his maroon-haired mother decrees that Ignatius must work.

Even more remarkable than this story is the sad history of Toole himself. After abortive attempts to have this book published, he committed suicide when he was only 31 years old and it was only through the pestering of a creative writing teacher at Loyola University by his eccentric mother that the manuscript was finally read and saved from oblivion. Thus, in the words of Walker Percy, who squired Confederacythrough publication in 1980, “at the heart of Ignatius’s great gaseous rages and lunatic adventures” lingers tragedy.

It is odd indeed that Thelma Toole took on the mission of having her son’s book published as she is clearly the model for Ignatius’s mother, a woman who represents all the negative qualities of a doting mom and a near inebriate. But support it she did — to the end, she referred to her son as “the darling” — and, now 80 years old, she was finally able to bask in his well-merited posthumous fame. She even took to the stage to dramatize scenes from the book.

A 2oth Century Classic and probably the best book by an American author ever.

A Confederacy of Dunces (Penguin Modern Classics)

Johnny Marr: “The Smiths” and the Art of Gun-Slinging

Wednesday, November 1st, 2006

The Smiths were the best British band since The Beatles. Their shimmering, muscular, guitar-driven pop remains the barometer for everyone who looks back at the 1980s with affection. In a decade that arguably produced more poor pop music than any other since the 1950s, The Smiths shone like a beacon and inspired a generation of indie guitar bands, and their influence continues undiminished to this day.
Musically, The Smiths were a league ahead of everyone else in the game, and guitarist Johnny Marr was the driving force behind their revolutionary sound. Manchester-born Marr proved to be a craftsman and explorer without equal, a guitarist who rode the longest highways to find the most perfect sounds and who built the gilt-edged frames in which the word-pictures of co-writer Morrissey sat so perfectly. He and Morrissey are forever inextricably linked.
After The Smiths, Marr continued to inject beautiful, sophisticated guitar into some of the best music of the period: The Pretenders, Kirsty McColl, Billy Bragg, The The and Talking Heads all benefited from his incendiary input. More recently with his band Johnny Marr & The Healers, and the critically acclaimed album Boomslang, Johnny remains as influential and important as ever. A true guitar hero.

This is the first full-length biography of Johnny Marr, looking beyond world of The Smiths and into the solo career of Britain’s most influential guitar player of the last two decades. A must-read for anyone who cares about The Smiths as well as great rock or pop.

Johnny Marr: \