Archive for October, 2009

“The Other Man” takes a new twist on a tried and true storyline

Saturday, October 31st, 2009 by Campus Correspondent

While the storyline of a wife’s infidelity has been done countless times, one can’t help but wonder what else can be done to spruce things up a bit, all the while not compromising any of the film’s integrity. The Other Man tells the tale of Peter (Liam Neeson), who obsessed with tracking down his wife’s lover, Ralph (Antonio Banderas), in order to figure out where Lisa (Laura Linney) has disappeared to. (more…)

Odd Couple of the Day: Richard Hawley Working with Lisa Marie Presley

Friday, October 30th, 2009 by News Release

During a Richard Hawley set in London earlier this month, Lisa Marie Presley showed up and played a new track called “Weary” alongside the veteran singer/songwriter, who co-wrote the tune with her. (Somehow, this is not on YouTube.) It was an unlikely– if pretty darn cool– team-up.

And now, according to a press release, Hawley and Presley are “working on new material together.” Where this material will end up, exactly, is still up in the air.

In other Hawley news, his new digital single, “Open Up Your Door”, is due out December 1 via Mute. It’ll be backed by live takes on the tracks “Don’t Get Hung Up in Your Soul” and “Run for Me”. And Hawley wrote a song for Dame Shirley Bassey, “After the Rain”, that appears on her new album, The Performer.
From Pitchfork 10/29/09
http://pitchfork.com/news/36947-odd-couple-of-the-day-richard-hawley-working-with-lisa-marie-presley/

Beck, Beastie Boys, and Santigold Remix Norah Jones

Friday, October 30th, 2009 by News Release

Smooth-pop juggernaut Norah Jones will release her new album The Fall on November 17. As reported back in August, Jones co-wrote songs on the album with Ryan Adams and Okkervil River’s Will Sheff.

And as Entertainment Weekly reports today, she’s also enlisted some big dogs to remix tracks from the album: Beck, the Beastie Boys, and Santigold. Pretty impressive company!

 

Talking to EW‘s Music Mix blog, Jones explains: “With the way things are nowadays in the record business, every outlet wants extra content. So we decided to have people I admire do some remixes. The Beasties Boys did one, and Beck, and Santigold. I love Santigold. There are elements in her record that inspired me to try little things here and there. Some of her songs are great pop songs, but they have all these cool instruments on them and they sound kind of organic even though they’re electronic. Those were the kind of sounds I was going for on my album.”

Jones told EW that she considered Beck as a potential producer for the album. “At a certain point, I almost thought, ‘Well, maybe I should just ask Beck to produce because I keep looking to work with the people he’s worked with.’ But I didn’t try.” You chickened out, Norah Jones

From Pitchfork 10/29/09
http://pitchfork.com/news/36961-beck-beastie-boys-and-santigold-remix-norah-jones/

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Celebrates 25 Years with NYC Shows

Friday, October 30th, 2009 by News Release

The first of two massive Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 25th anniversary shows at Madison Square Garden isn’t even over yet, and the monumental moments just keep coming on the stage of the storied New York venue. [Update] After six hours — that’s right, six hours — Bruce Springsteen brought the show to an end with a soul throwdown on “(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher and Higher.” Check back tomorrow for our full reports, but here’s a taste of the action (follow along in our Rock Hall Concerts photo gallery):

• Jerry Lee Lewis reminds the crowd of rock & roll’s ’50s roots by settling in at a white baby grand for “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On.”

• Crosby, Stills and Nash add another layer of perfect harmony when James Taylor joins in on “Love the One You’re With.” The capper: one of many awe-inspiring guitar solos by Stephen Stills.

• Bonnie Raitt joins CSN for her own “Love Has No Pride,” and later tells the press, “To go back in my catalog and do something I rarely do live was angelic for me.”

• CSN break into “Midnight Rider” by the Allman Brothers on the anniversary of Duane Allman’s death. It’s a poignant moment, followed by another: Jackson Browne hits the stage to perform “The Pretender.”

• Paul Simon invites David Crosby and Graham Nash back onstage for very special reason: to honor “a dear friend of mine” who “was the first person to ever have a benefit concert here at Madison Square Garden — it’s called the Concert for Bangladesh — and it’s a man who I really loved and admired greatly, George Harrison.” The song: “Here Comes the Sun.”

• Paul Simon shouts out a pair of New York City neighborhoods when he invites Dion DiMucci and Little Anthony and the Imperials to the stage.

• Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel’s voices mingle on “Bridge Over Troubled Water.” The pair throw their arms around each other at the conclusion of “The Boxer.” Will the U.S. see this reunion again? Garfunkel admits their recent shows together “were a lovely falling back together again” but they have “no such plans,” after their set.

• Stevie Wonder turns a technical difficulty into a hilarious quip: “Aw, shit … stuff happens, you know what I’m saying?” and changes his set before it even gets going to kick off with a cover of Bob Dylan’s “Blowin’ in the Wind.” He later pays homage to Michael Jackson with a stunning “The Way You Make Me Feel.”

• Smokey Robinson emerges for a loose, warm rendition of “Tracks of My Tears.” Moments later, John Legend arrives onstage to pay homage to Marvin Gaye with “Mercy, Mercy Me.” Not enough? B.B King is up next, earning Stevie’s praise as “the king of blues for every city in the world” with “The Thrill is Gone.”

• Sting strides onstage popping the bassline to “Higher Ground,” and the song morphs into “Roxanne” and back again.

• Two words: Jeff Beck. The guitar legend joins Wonder for “Superstition” and breaks into an otherworldly solo on the break, flinging his bare right hand at the strings and tapping away.

• Bruce Springsteen hits the stage with his famous plea, “Is there anybody alive out there?” He gives even himself a jolt with guest Sam Moore, who he praises as “one of the all time great bandleaders.”

• Springsteen welcomes John Fogerty for “Fortunate Son” and a pair of sweet covers: “Proud Mary” and “Pretty Woman.”

• The E Street Band make their own Wall of Sound as Darlene Love joins Bruce and the gang for “A Fine, Fine Boy” and “Da Doo Ron Ron.” “We’re in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame now,” Springsteen exclaims.

• Tom Morello wah-s out a bone-crunching solo on a mind-blowing cover of “London Calling” with the E Street Band that nearly outdoes his earlier heroics on “The Ghost of Tom Joad.”

• Springsteen delivers a brief and hilarious speech about how New Jersey and Long Island were once a connected landmass as a way of introducing the night’s final very special guest: Billy Joel. E Street keeps cranking through “You May Be Right,” “Only the Good Die Young” and Joel’s hometown anthem “New York State of Mind.”

• Six hours after Tom Hanks took the stage to open the show, Springsteen brings the house down with “Born to Run” and reluctantly leaves after wringing the last possible “higher” out of “(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher and Higher.” “That’s rock & roll!” he exclaims.

See these moments and more in pictures from the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame’s 25th anniversary concerts.

From Rolling Stone 10/29/09

http://www.rollingstone.com/rockdaily/index.php/2009/10/29/epic-moments-at-the-rock-hall-25th-shows-the-countdown-begins/

Michael Jackson’s “This Is It” On Pace to Break Movie Records

Friday, October 30th, 2009 by News Release

Michael Jackson’s This Is It began its two-week theatrical run by grossing $2.2 million from its special advanced screenings alone, putting the doc on pace for the highest-grossing opening week for a concert film ever. The current record holder is Hannah Montana/Miley Cyrus: Best of Both Worlds Concert Tour, which made $31 million its opening weekend in 2008, Variety reports. This Is It grossed an additional $2.2 million by midday Wednesday, and early foreign estimates predict the film is doing just as well overseas.

As Rolling Stone previously reported, Sony bought the hundreds of hours of footage and distribution rights of This Is It for $60 million from AEG Live, the concert promoter staging Jackson’s run of 50 concerts at London’s O2 Arena. Unlike most films that are in production for the better part of a year, This Is It only had a turnaround of three months from when the footage was purchased to when it was released, but by all accounts so far, including Elizabeth Taylor’s, This Is It is a success. The film’s soundtrack is also poised to top the charts next week.

Rolling Stone reported from an advance screening in New York that “This Is It is proof that Jackson did still have it: the magical voice, the gravity-defying moves (most of them), the clear-headed artistic vision of one of the greatest artists of our time.” Audiences were packed with fans paying tribute to Jackson — some came to the theater in bejeweled gloves, others did the “Thriller” dance in the theater lobby.

As a testament of Jackson’s worldwide appeal, when the film premiered in Los Angeles at 6 p.m. PST Tuesday, This Is It was unveiled simultaneously around the world, so many sold-out theaters in Europe were actually premiering the film at 2 a.m. or later.

From Rolling Stone 10/29/09

http://www.rollingstone.com/rockdaily/index.php/2009/10/29/michael-jacksons-this-is-it-on-pace-to-break-movie-records/

Lindstrom Making a 40 Minute Version of “Little Drummer Boy”

Thursday, October 29th, 2009 by News Release

Most renditions of the Christmas standard “Little Drummer Boy” clock out at about a minute and a half– just enough time for most of us to forget what comes after the fifth pa-rum-pa-pum-pum. But Norwegian space-disco kingpin Hans-Peter Lindstrøm has a bigger commitment to that boy and his drum than most of us do. Lindstrøm is currently at work on a 40-minute version of the song. Exactly the kind of thing that could freak the fuck out of some poor shepherds in fields as they lay.

 

Lindstrøm is no stranger to epic-length tracks; the title jam from his 2008 masterwork Where You Go I Go Too ended just shy of the 29-minute mark. But it’ll be fascinating to see him apply his vintage synth-burble to a song that gets drunkenly murdered at thousands of office Christmas parties every single year.

Lindstrøm’s “Little Drummer Boy” is being created for the famed British record shop Rough Trade. It’ll be available this December as a bonus disc for Real Life Is No Cool, Lindstrøm’s forthcoming collaborative album with singer Christabelle. The only way to get it will be through Rough Trade’s Album Club, web site, or stores.

From Pitchfork 10/28/09
http://pitchfork.com/news/36938-lindstrm-making-a-40-minute-version-of-little-drummer-boy/

Sufjan to Tour with BQE Screenings

Thursday, October 29th, 2009 by News Release

The BQE, Sufjan Stevens‘ moderately insane CD/DVD/comic book/View-Master reel dedication to Brooklyn’s most consistently clogged highway, is out now. But watching the DVD at home, it’s tough to get the same kind of communal charge that you might get from watching the film with a whole crowd of people.

And there’s not much chance you’ll actually get a glimpse of Sufjan himself, unless he randomly stops by your house to borrow a cup of sugar.

 

 

Fortunately, folks in five Midwestern cities will get chances to see Stevens himself introduce screenings of The BQE, as the Asthmatic Kitty website reports.Sufjan won’t actually play any music at these events, though he and the film will share the bill with string quartet Osso and, at three of those dates, bedroom songwriter DM Stith.

Osso is currently touring with screenings of The BQE, though Stevens won’t appear at every show/screening. We’ve got all the Osso dates below; Sufjan himself will be on hand for the Minneapolis, Madison, Indianapolis, and Cincinnati dates, and he could possibly also pop up in Louisville.

Osso:

10-28 Chicago, IL – Schubas Tavern *^
10-29 Minneapolis, MN – Southern Theater @^
10-30 Madison, WI – The Project Lodge @^
11-01 Indianapolis, IN – Indianapolis Museum of Art @^
11-02 Louisville, KY – 21c Museum Hotel *^
11-03 Cincinnati, OH – Country Club @
11-04 Pittsburgh, PA – Warhol Museum *
11-05 Rochester, NY – Lovin‘ Cup
11-06 Medford,  MA – Tufts University *
11-07 Brooklyn, NY – Bell House *

* with The BQE
^ with DM Stith
@ with The BQE plus Sufjan introduction

From Pitchfork 10/28/09

http://pitchfork.com/news/36943-sufjan-to-tour-with-ibqei-screenings/

The Ruby Suns Reveal “Passive Agressive” New Album

Thursday, October 29th, 2009 by News Release

With last year’s Sea Lion, the New Zealand band the Ruby Suns made a worldwide beach album that allowed all sorts of sunny influences in, from African rhythms to California psych to Animal Collective experimentalism. Putting the record on in a cold rain makes no sense, unless your aim is escape. So maybe that’s why Sub Pop is waiting until the early signs of spring to release the band’s follow-up, dubbed Fight Softly, on March 2, 2010.

We recently rang up singer-songwriter Ryan McPhun while he was on tour with the Dodos (“you should include that the Dodos are dicks,” he joked) to find out what we can expect from the new LP, and why he’s making fight music now.

 

 

 

 

Pitchfork: The new album is called Fight Softly, which sounds like a contradiction of terms.

Ryan McPhun: We came up with it as kind of a joke; it’s a way of saying “don’t fight.”

Pitchfork: When’s the last time you got into a fight?

RM: I’ve gotten angry, but I’ve never been in a fistfight. Maybe I’m just super passive-aggressive.

Pitchfork: What kind of fight would this album be the background music to?

RM: You know in West Side Story, when they have that huge dance fight? Something like that. It would have to be like a contact-less fight. 1950s hairdos are optional.

Pitchfork: Your last album nailed a winsome Tropicalia vibe. Are you going for the same type of style with the new one or something different?

RM: With this new album, I just wanted to do something different because doing the same thing would just be boring to me. It’s probably the opposite of what I did for the last one.

Pitchfork: How so?

RM: I used a lot more synths. And there’s a shitload of effected guitar on it. But I didn’t use a lot of live drums. Going into it, I wanted to use organic sounds but I didn’t want them to sound organic, which is the opposite of what a lot of people do. It’s safe to say the new stuff is more bass-y.

Pitchfork: The thing about the last record a lot of people liked was how it fused a lot of styles from different parts of the world. Would you say that you’re continuing with that technique?

RM: I guess so, but not as consciously. On the last album, I would sometimes think, “I want this to sound like Tom Zé.” But I didn’t have moments like that on this one. I tried to move away from any discernible references.

Pitchfork: So, in terms of being opposite, would you say that’s the case as far as its mood, too? Because the last album was very bright.

RM: Some of the themes are darker. One of the songs is quite an angry song– even though it doesn’t sound angry– which I haven’t really done before. It’s called “Cinco” and it’s about this guy who was basically trying to kick me out of my studio space in New Zealand because he wanted to totally revamp it into a storage room. He was in there knocking down walls, and they were literally dumping wood and rubbish right outside my window. I got pissed off, but never actually met the dude. And I didn’t get kicked out.

Pitchfork: Are you, like, yelling on the song?

RM: No, I’m singing in my soft voice. [laughs] The first track, “Sun Lake Rinsed”, has kind of a slow r&b thing to it, and that’s sort of an angry song, too.

Pitchfork: Who feels your wrath on that one?

RM: Some European label dude.

Pitchfork: All these people are trying to shut you down.

RM: I know, man. [laughs] This guy seemed like a douche bag. We were on tour with the Dodos in Europe last year, and we had the exact same label people. This guy was schmoozing with the Dodos and he probably didn’t even know who we were. And, technically, he’s supposed to be selling our records. But I didn’t say, “Hey! We’re on your label too, do you care?!” So I wrote a song about it.

Pitchfork: This whole passive-aggressive streak is really coming into focus here.

RM: You’ve made it really obvious to me. [laughs] There are some positive songs, too. One is about this black pit bull named Mingus we met while staying in Seattle between tours. He’s a really amazing dog. Half the songs are me just bitching and moaning, and half of them are me not bitching and moaning. [laughs]

Pitchfork: You mentioned you have weird taste in music. What do you mean by that?

RM: Weird in the sense that I listen almost exclusively to commercial pop music. When I’m driving the van I just put on Michael Jackson, Madonna, Robyn, Justin Timberlake. I’ve always listened to and loved Michael Jackson, and when he died it was really strange– I listened to Bad with totally different ears after that. The production on that album just blew me away when I listened to it again.

Pitchfork: Did any of that sort of stuff bleed through to the sounds on this album?

RM: I was trying to incorporate more classic pop stuff. A lot of the reverbs on Bad were really inspirational to me– though that might sound silly. In the last year or two, I had a break from guitar music. I’ve just been appreciating pop music.

Pitchfork: If you could collaborate with anyone from the pop realm, who would you pick?

RM: We were just talking about working with other producers, and how Teddy Riley– who worked on Michael Jackson’s Dangerous album– might be available. But, unless we start selling a shitload of albums, I don’t think our recording budget is going to be sufficient to get him.

From Pitchfork 10/28/09

http://pitchfork.com/news/36937-the-ruby-suns-reveal-passive-agressive-new-album/

Xiu Xiu: New LP, Theater Score, Remix

Thursday, October 29th, 2009 by News Release

Just when it looked like side projects were occupying most of Jamie Stewart’s energy, the man’s always-disturbing art-pop crew Xiu Xiu shudders back to life.

Yesterday, the band’s website reported that there’s a new Xiu Xiu album on the way. Back in May, we mentioned that they were working on it, but it’s done now. The title: Dear God, I Hate Myself. If any other band released an album with that title, it might be shocking. With Xiu Xiu, it’s business as usual. According to that post, the album will be out be out the first week of February in the UK, with an American release to follow a week later, via Kill Rock Stars.

 

There’s more. On November 6, the play “Nibbler” will open at L.A.’s Theatre of NOTE. The play features original music from Xiu Xiu and the awesomely named band the Avon Barksdale. Playwright Ken Urban writes that “Nibbler” is “a dark comedy about a group of high school students in the summer of 1992 who are visited by an alien.”

And if that wasn’t enough, the band’s contribution to Merge’s forthcoming remix compilation is now available for free online. Right-click here to download their clanking, seasick I Hope Your Train Crashes remix of the 6ths‘ “Volcana!”.

From Pitchfork 10/28/09
http://pitchfork.com/news/36948-xiu-xiu-new-lp-theater-score-remix/

Scott Weiland and Stone Temple Pilots Plot New Album for 2010

Thursday, October 29th, 2009 by News Release

“There’s more to be revealed and more to be told,” Scott Weiland has said about recording a new album with Stone Temple Pilots. “The story’s not finished.” Those quotes date back to April 2008, when STP first announced plans to reunite to tour and record new music. The band has managed to keep it together since that initial tour, but there’s been no sign of a new STP album. That is, until now. Weiland talked to Spinner recently about the prospects of the band’s first album since 2001’s Shangri-La Dee Da, and vowed that STP will get to work on the new LP once they’re off the road.

“When we finish the album, there will be a big tour around its release and that will probably be a long tour,” Weiland said. The Las Vegas Review-Journal reported in May that STP already had 18 songs written and that producer Don Was would be working on the LP. After that “long tour,” Weiland told Spinner he’d also get to work on his next solo album, the follow-up to 2008’s “Happy” in Galoshes.

The reunited band wrapped up their tour of the U.S. on October 25th and will next head to Canada for a trek that concludes November 24th in Nova Scotia. After that, two more shows are on the schedule, including a New Year’s Day show in Thackerville, Oklahoma, and then it’s studio time for Weiland and STP. Check out the band’s remaining tour dates:

Stone Temple Pilots
Nov. 7 – Victoria, BC @ Save on Foods Memorial Centre
Nov. 9 – Kelowna, BC @ Prospera Place
Nov. 11 – Edmonton, AB @ Shaw Conference Centre
Nov. 14 – Regina, SK @ Brandy Centre
Nov. 15 – Winnipeg, MB @ MTS Centre
Nov. 19 – London, ON @ Labatt Centre
Nov. 21 – Kingston, ON @ K-Rock Centre
Dec. 29 – Biloxi, MS @ Hard Rock Live
Jan. 1 – Thackerville, OK @ WinStar Casino

From Rolling Stone 10/29/09

http://www.rollingstone.com/rockdaily/index.php/2009/10/29/scott-weiland-and-stone-temple-pilots-plot-new-album-for-2010/#more-16248