Sunday, April 27, 2014
DAMON ALBARN : "EVERYDAY ROBOTS" REVIEW
Damon Albarn has always seemed most comfortable with some distance between himself and his music. As Blur's frontman, he played the tart-tongued wit, satirizing modern Britain from behind a wall of cheeky irony. With Gorillaz, he created the biggest virtual band since Kiss. Even his forays into global music – jamming with Malian guitar greats, traveling to China to write an opera – place him in the well-worn role of a worldly seeker losing himself in the exotic.
In 2012, he made a record about the life of 16th-century English mystic John Dee. But he's never really made a record about the life of 21st-century English mystic Damon Albarn. Until now. All of Albarn's musical obsessions are present on his revealing solo debut: dubby textures á la Gorillaz, Caribbean and African notes, looming classical instrumentation and church choruses that evoke England's past – all wrapped around a singing voice that's become deep and searching where it was once sharp and snarky.
The past two Gorillaz albums, Plastic Beach and The Fall, both from 2010, often had a forlorn sense of spliffed-out drift. The mood on Everyday Robots is even more sparely intimate, and often quite downbeat. Albarn is an avid collaborator who has worked with greats like Bobby Womack and Lou Reed. But his pals stay low-key here. Producer Richard Russell sculpts alluring atmospheric beats; Bat for Lashes singer Natasha Khan lends a faint harmony to the fragile relationship autopsy "The Selfish Giant"; Brian Eno adds synths to "You & Me" and vocals to the woozy chantey "Heavy Seas of Love." The results can often recall Seventies Eno at his most meditative and Village Green-era Ray Davies at his most world-sick more than Gorillaz's bounce or Blur's guitar buzz.
The opening title track sets the softly alienated tone. Albarn floats amid a sea of commuters staring at their phones – "Looking like standing stones/Out there on our own." The track mixes Eastern and Western strings, somber piano and a hobbled, percussive groove that's evocatively primitive but utterly modern. Other songs work similar musical balances while mapping out Albarn's personal history. "You & Me" takes place during a Trinidadian carnival near his West London home, with steel drums playing against an unsure digital skitter. On the album's brightest tune, "Mr. Tembo," based on a trip he took to a Tanzanian nature preserve, Albarn strums a happy ukulele and serenades a baby elephant.
The album's most revealing track is "Hollow Ponds," which moves like a sad processional and reflects on scenes from throughout Albarn's life: a childhood vacation to the Black Sea; the day when he noticed the London graffiti that inspired the title of Blur's first great album, 1993's Modern Life Is Rubbish. The reel of images seems to compete, or merge with, "the dreams we share on LCDs." As the song ends, we hear the sampled sound of a rumbling subway train. With a restless innovator like Albarn, where you're going always matters more than where you've been.
Thursday, April 24, 2014
NEW ARTIST: BAD SUNS – SALT (PETER THOMAS REMIX)
The Debut 'Transpose' EP Available Now.
Purchase On:
iTunes: smarturl.it/transpose
Amazon: smarturl.it/transposeAmz
Store: smarturl.it/transposeStore
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
BLUR FRONTMAN DAMON ALBARN STREAMS HIS NEW ALBUM, ‘EVERYDAY ROBOTS’
Blur and Gorillaz singer Damon Albarn is streaming his new album, “Everyday Robots,” a week ahead of its scheduled release (April 28). Listen via iTunes Radio.
The 12-track album is Albarn’s first as a solo artist and features collaborations with Brian Eno and Bat for Lashes’ Natasha Khan. “Everyday Robots” explores modern society’s relationship with technology.
Albarn explained in an interview with Pitchfork:
“The album is about going back and seeing into the near future, wondering about the effect that that technology is going to have on us, emotionally. We’re in a period of massive technological transformation right now, and I wanted to comment on that.”
“The album is about going back and seeing into the near future, wondering about the effect that that technology is going to have on us, emotionally. We’re in a period of massive technological transformation right now, and I wanted to comment on that.”
MTV VIDEO MUSIC AWARDS 2014 TO RETURN TO LOS ANGELES (24.08.2014)
Live from Inglewood!
After visiting New York last year, the MTV Video Music Awards announced Wednesday that the show is returning to the West Coast this summer to become the first major awards ceremony broadcast from the storied Forum in Inglewood, Calif.
For decades, the "Fabulous Forum," as it was known, hosted some of the world's biggest musical talents, from Bob Dylan to the Rolling Stones. But in recent years, the arena and its working-class neighborhood near the LA airport fell on hard times as newer, hipper venues gained favor.
Then, after a $100 million makeover, the Forum reopened in January as the largest indoor entertainment venue in the country. It has already hosted such acts as the Eagles and Justin Timberlake. The 2014 VMAs will air on Sunday, Aug. 24.
WATCH: COLDPLAY ‘GHOST STORIES’ TRAILER FOR NBC SPECIAL
In a move reminiscent of Justin Timberlake‘s primetime special for The 20/20 Experience, Coldplay just announced they’ll be presenting Ghost Stories in a 60-minute special on NBC the night before the album’s release.
Coldplay: Ghost Stories will feature 360-degree footage from the band’s intimate March performance in L.A., which will be interspersed with a cinematic filmed narrative (wouldn’t it be great if that part involved them literally telling ghost stories?).
In addition to new songs like “Magic” and “Midnight,” the special will include live renditions of past hits like “Viva La Vida,” “Paradise” and “Clocks.” The special airs May 18 at 7 p.m. ET/PT on NBC.
Trailer for the ground-breaking prime-time TV special based on Coldplay's forthcoming album, Ghost Stories. For more info and broadcast details, see http://cldp.ly/GStvspecial
Confirmed broadcasts are as follows (with many more to come - including UK):
US: 18 May, 7pm ET/PT - NBC
Canada: 18 May, 7pm ET/PT - NBC
Italy: 19 May, 9.10pm - Sky Uno
Spain: 19 May, 7.15pm - Canal+1
France: 22 May, 11.25pm - France 2 in "Alcaline, le Concert"
WATCH: LILY ALLEN - SHEEZUS (VIDEO PREMIERE)
Lily Allen continues promoting her upcoming third studio album ‘Sheezus‘, scheduled to be release on May 5, 2014 via Parlophone and Warner Bros Records.
The single has ready another single before its arrival at digital retailers.
The album’s title and opening track ‘Sheezus‘ will be released as the final countdown / promotional single on iTunes on April 28th.
The song produced by DJ Dahi serves as the follow-up to her latest single ‘Our Time‘, released on March 10th and will be the fifth overall single taken from this era.
The single has ready another single before its arrival at digital retailers.
The album’s title and opening track ‘Sheezus‘ will be released as the final countdown / promotional single on iTunes on April 28th.
The song produced by DJ Dahi serves as the follow-up to her latest single ‘Our Time‘, released on March 10th and will be the fifth overall single taken from this era.
PHARRELL WILLIAMS “MARILYN MONROE” (OFFICIAL SINGLE COVER)
Pharrell Williams continues promoting his acclaimed second solo studio album ‘G I R L‘, released on digital retailers on March 3, 2014 via Columbia Records.
After the worldwide success of the first single ‘Happy‘, main theme of ‘Despicable 2‘, the omnipresent producer has chosen the next single from the album. The album’s opening track ‘Marilyn Monroe‘ was released as second single on March 10, 2014. It features uncredited vocals from English singer-songwriter Kelly Osbourne.
The song was written by Williams and Ann Marie Calhoun and produced by Williams. It’s the only song on the album that Williams didn’t write by himself. The song’s production is characterized by Williams’ signature “skittering” beat and “bumping” bass line.
The official music video will premiere on VEVO later today.
After the worldwide success of the first single ‘Happy‘, main theme of ‘Despicable 2‘, the omnipresent producer has chosen the next single from the album. The album’s opening track ‘Marilyn Monroe‘ was released as second single on March 10, 2014. It features uncredited vocals from English singer-songwriter Kelly Osbourne.
The song was written by Williams and Ann Marie Calhoun and produced by Williams. It’s the only song on the album that Williams didn’t write by himself. The song’s production is characterized by Williams’ signature “skittering” beat and “bumping” bass line.
The official music video will premiere on VEVO later today.
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