There's a theme emerging this month of my revisiting some old friends whom I had almost forgotten. Arcade Fire, Johnny Flynn, Crooked Still. Thankfully there have been some great new releases this month and I have had the chance to lap them all up. Yum yum yum.
ps. You'll also notice that many of the videos posted this week are live performances. Some are so out of choice, due to the great joy I get from the artists being able to perform so well without backing, and others are so because, well, there isn't anything else.
1) ANAIS MITCHELL - Wedding Song (from the album entitled Hadestown)
Hadestown was released some months ago, and is Anais Mitchell's folk-opera re-telling of the Greek myth of Orpheus and Eurydice. All of the characters are sung by different popular vocalists, including Justin Vernon of Bon Iver as Orpheus, Ani DiFranco as Persephone and Greg Brown as the husky Hades, and the album could have been a disaster but is, in fact, marvellous. The arrangements of orchestrator Michael Chorney are sublime especially, but the whole journey is something you may have never heard before. This track is missing Vernon's accompaniment, but lacks nothing for the angelic beauty of Mitchell's voice. Liquid gold.
2) BOMBAY BICYCLE CLUB - Ivy and Gold (from the album entitled Flaws)
Bombay Bicycle Club have followed their debut with a surprisingly solid acoustic album that does no harm whatsoever to their good reputation. This is the first single I think, and despite the somewhat Skins-esque nature of the end of this vid, it really is a lovely little ditty. I shouldn't keep playing it, because that is, like, SO uncool, but it warms my cockles.
3) CROOKED STILL - Golden Vanity (from the album Some Strange Country)
Banjo! YEAH! Fucking love banjo. And the fiddle. Which is why I love Crooked Still, an "alternative bluegrass" group from Boston, MA who write some great songs and display here their extremely high musicianship. This is from their new, fourth album, the rest of which is filled with lullabies, ballads and foot-stompers such as this. Definitely worth a listen if you like country and bluegrass music, especially that with a modern twist like Chatham County Line or Black Prairie.
4) MAPS AND ATLASES - Israeli Caves (from the album Perch Patchwork)
Probably my new favourite band are Maps and Atlases. At first I thought they were a bit like Vampire Weekend just less twatty, but they're closer to a Local Natives or TV On The Radio, even embracing the weirdness of The Spinto Band on occasion (but not too often thankfully). Their new album is euphoric, jubilant and a delight. I highly recommend listening and going to see them now. They will be big. Oh yes, they will be big.
5) MAYLEE TODD - Protection Plan 101 AKA Quit Before Getting Fired (from the album Choose Your Own Adventure)
She's a weird one this girl. One of those American nutbags who seems to see the world as a cuddly cartoon full of bright colours and love and stuff (see Kate Micucci or anything off the Juno soundtrack). HOWEVER, she is in possession of a strap on harp (and we all love a girl with one of those right boys?) and a nice voice, and some of the songs on her album are a treat. It's not the easiest to handle when she's waxing lyrical about some goblin or fairy or made up animal, but when she normalises a little she's actually very talented. Tread carefully I suppose.
6) JOHNNY FLYNN - Kentucky Pill (from the album Been Listening)
Monsieur Flynn is an unfairly overlooked folkster in with the Laura Marling, Mumford and Sons, Noah And The Whale tribe, and who has a captivating and beguiling sound. His new album is his second (after the excellent 'A Larum'), and has a bit more bravado, a bit more scope and is soaringly good. It's a great record, uplifting and swelling, and yet still displays Flynn's talent for cutting observation and lyrical poeticism.
7) ARCADE FIRE - The Suburbs (from the album entitled The Suburbs)
This is a VERY impressive fan video for the new Arcade Fire single. More importantly though, the new album from the Montreal band is actually rather good, and does somewhat make up for the disappointment of Neon Bible. It's not there with Funeral, and I'm not sure they'll ever reach those heights again, but it is encouraging and provides excitement to those with the chance to see them this summer. Which includes me. Yippee!
8) LAURA GIBSON - Shadows On Parade (from the album entitled Beasts Of Seasons)
Not one to get the dancefloor jumping this one, but Laura Gibson is a rare talent. She's for fans of Joanna Newsom or Laura Veirs (another excellent female folk singer songwriter to look at if you are that way inclined), and has a gentle melancholy about her that really gets inside you. It's not as creepy as that last bit suggests. Nicer. Not as invasive.
9) AVI BUFFALO - Summer Cum (from the album entitled Avi Buffalo)
One of the hype bands so far this year, and building a quick following, Avi Buffalo do slightly disjointed folk indie type stuff that has an air of the bizarre about it and embraces the contemporary love of all that is falsetto. They're interesting, and write some good melodies and harmonies, so look out for them next time you're bored at a festival.
10) MYSTERY JETS - Dreaming Of Another World (from the album entitled Serotonin)
Not sure what I think about the new album from these local boys of Twickenham. I think I preferred Twenty Two, I think it had more instant hits on it, and was a bit less poppy than they've become. HOWEVER, when you see video as good as this (red smoke!!!) it will undoubtedly improve the song it's accompanying. In ear, this sounds a little basic, but turn it up a little and it really works. Much more of an anthem than I had expected, and better than the flagship single Flash A Hungry Smile.
11) BLACK SABBATH - War Pigs (live in Paris 1970)
The archive this week unleashes Sabbath at their most brutal, their most high energy, their most impressive and most awesomest! Ozzy has always been thought of as a hard drinking, swearing, bat-chewing psycho which is all very true and very well and good, but first and foremost he was one of the best frontmen in history, and had a ridiculous voice. The first time he bellows out "generals gathered in their masseeeeees" you know their about to blow your mind. And then Bill Ward goes absolutely ballistic on the drums and I melt a little inside. Live music has rarely been better I'd argue.
30 Jul 2010
26 Jul 2010
Art: BP Portrait Award 2010
The annual BP Portrait Award is on at the National Portrait Gallery until the 19th of September this year, and is again a greatly varied and valuable free exhibition for Londoners to visit.
As in past years, upwards of fifty artists have had their work accepted and exhibited, before a 3rd, 2nd and 1st prize are awarded as well as two other prizes in the 'Young Artist' and 'Travel' categories.
I don't want to post the winners, you'll have to go along and see them for yourselves (safe to say they are very interesting and emotional works, hugely personal and effecting as well as expertly crafted), however I have pulled up some images of some of the paintings that struck me the most from the exhibition...
'The True Self-Portrait' by Carlos Muro
'Sentinel' by Lyndsey Jameson
'Molly Parkin' by Darren Coffield
'Sandy Watching' by Alex Hanna
'Paul' by Nathan Ford
Again, these are not necessarily winners, and there are many other great pieces of work on display, so do go down and have a look. It's free and it's in the center of London, one of the easiest exhibitions to visit in passing, on the way in or out of town. These little piccies don't do justice to the technique and precision that has gone into some of these massive pieces of work.
As in past years, upwards of fifty artists have had their work accepted and exhibited, before a 3rd, 2nd and 1st prize are awarded as well as two other prizes in the 'Young Artist' and 'Travel' categories.
I don't want to post the winners, you'll have to go along and see them for yourselves (safe to say they are very interesting and emotional works, hugely personal and effecting as well as expertly crafted), however I have pulled up some images of some of the paintings that struck me the most from the exhibition...
'The True Self-Portrait' by Carlos Muro
'Sentinel' by Lyndsey Jameson
'Molly Parkin' by Darren Coffield
'Sandy Watching' by Alex Hanna
'Paul' by Nathan Ford
Again, these are not necessarily winners, and there are many other great pieces of work on display, so do go down and have a look. It's free and it's in the center of London, one of the easiest exhibitions to visit in passing, on the way in or out of town. These little piccies don't do justice to the technique and precision that has gone into some of these massive pieces of work.
at
18:27
Film: Comic-Con 2010 - Yes Please/No Thanks
The pant-wetting, girly-screaming, toy-throwing, fan-basing N-Sync gig for nerds frenzy that is Comic-Con 2010 is in full flow in San Diego, where one person has apparently been "assaulted" with a ball point pen at a Resident Evil: Afterlife promo screening. One clever commentator pointed out that someone was probably just trying to do him a favour and save him from actually having to see said promo.
However, in amongst the odd women with serious daddy issues dressed as zombie schoolgirls and the obese dudes come as Watchmen sobbing tears of joy into their hefty bosoms at the mere SIGHT of Kevin Smith, there was actually some talk of movies, and as a fan of said movies (all of them of course), I wanted to try and reach into the great piles of sweaty man-children and see if I couldn't extract with clenched fist some evidence of what was due to hit our screens in the coming months/years. In doing this, I plan to evaluate whether to be excited or scared of the approaching blockbusters. SO, let's go and take our seats in Hall H:
1) Tron: Legacy
Has Jeff Bridges and Michael Sheen in it, as well as one of the most tantalising trailers I've ever seen. If it shoots in 3-D properly then it is the perfect vehicle for the format; action-packed, vivid and futuristic. Music by Daft Punk? Verdict: Yes please.
2) Salt
Angelina Jolie playing a set-up CIA agent called, hold your horses, SALT! She goes on the run. Liev Schrieber chases after her. It presumably all gets very exciting. But not for me, because Jolly Ange, scourge of the sub-continent adoption industry, gives me the heeby jeebies. Verdict: Too much Salt might give you a heart attack.
3) Megamind
Will Ferrel, Brad Pitt, Tina Fey and Jonah Hill all voice characters in this animated send up of the super hero movie in which a caped crusader kills his nemesis and has no-one left to battle. I'm happier to hear rather than see this cast on screen right now, but could this ever compete with The Incredibles? I very much doubt it. Verdict: One in one out.
4) Super
Unmistakeably similar in concept to Kick-Ass. Rainn Wilson plays a regular joe who decides, though he has no discernable powers, to become a super-hero and fight everyday robbers, muggers and general bad men. Too late is the cry. Verdict: That ticket's not valid anymore.
5) The Green Hornet
Seth Rogen? Action star? Really? Spends the whole trailer doing that surprised/stoned look he does and telling his cuddly asian sidekick to do some kung-fu? REALLY? Not my idea of fun. Only saving grace is that Michel Gondry is at the helm. But I don't think it's going to help. Verdict: Only if it's raining. And there's nothing else on.
6) The Other Guys
Will Ferrell (he's a busy little comedy tumble-dryer this one) and Mark Wahlberg in a slapstick romp about two not-so-good policemen who want desperately to be more like the Lethal Weapon-type partners the desk over. Trailer looks okay, as long as Ferrell can reign it the fuck in. But then when has that ever happened? (Stranger Than Fiction actually. See now I'm fighting with myself, that's not good). Eva Mendes and her lips are in it as well, which always helps. Verdict: Oh, go on then, but only because you asked nicely.
7) Cowboys and Aliens
Adapted from a comic of the same name, starring Daniel Craig, Harrison Ford (Indiana Jones 4, Harrison, SHAME ON YOU), Sam Rockwell and Paul Dano and is directed by Iron Man's Jon Favreau. Title speaks for itself, right? It's about cowboys fighting aliens. Isn't it? Yes, yes it is. Verdict: Yee-ha!
8) Paul
Comedy starring Simon Pegg and his man-sized third nipple Nick Frost (unfair joke, he's a good actor, though The Boat That Rocked was horse shit). Follows two British "nerds" who meet a sweary alien voiced by Seth bloody Rogen (leave us alone!). Directed by Greg Mottola, who made Superbad and Adventureland. Also has lots of other excellent comic actors in it. Verdict: Yeah, go on then, but are you SURE Edgar Wright can't do it?
That's all I'm going to go for right now. Safe to say there's not much to make me don my Evil Dead vest and head for San Diego. But then I haven't named one of my children C-3PO, so I might not fit in.
However, in amongst the odd women with serious daddy issues dressed as zombie schoolgirls and the obese dudes come as Watchmen sobbing tears of joy into their hefty bosoms at the mere SIGHT of Kevin Smith, there was actually some talk of movies, and as a fan of said movies (all of them of course), I wanted to try and reach into the great piles of sweaty man-children and see if I couldn't extract with clenched fist some evidence of what was due to hit our screens in the coming months/years. In doing this, I plan to evaluate whether to be excited or scared of the approaching blockbusters. SO, let's go and take our seats in Hall H:
1) Tron: Legacy
Has Jeff Bridges and Michael Sheen in it, as well as one of the most tantalising trailers I've ever seen. If it shoots in 3-D properly then it is the perfect vehicle for the format; action-packed, vivid and futuristic. Music by Daft Punk? Verdict: Yes please.
2) Salt
Angelina Jolie playing a set-up CIA agent called, hold your horses, SALT! She goes on the run. Liev Schrieber chases after her. It presumably all gets very exciting. But not for me, because Jolly Ange, scourge of the sub-continent adoption industry, gives me the heeby jeebies. Verdict: Too much Salt might give you a heart attack.
3) Megamind
Will Ferrel, Brad Pitt, Tina Fey and Jonah Hill all voice characters in this animated send up of the super hero movie in which a caped crusader kills his nemesis and has no-one left to battle. I'm happier to hear rather than see this cast on screen right now, but could this ever compete with The Incredibles? I very much doubt it. Verdict: One in one out.
4) Super
Unmistakeably similar in concept to Kick-Ass. Rainn Wilson plays a regular joe who decides, though he has no discernable powers, to become a super-hero and fight everyday robbers, muggers and general bad men. Too late is the cry. Verdict: That ticket's not valid anymore.
5) The Green Hornet
Seth Rogen? Action star? Really? Spends the whole trailer doing that surprised/stoned look he does and telling his cuddly asian sidekick to do some kung-fu? REALLY? Not my idea of fun. Only saving grace is that Michel Gondry is at the helm. But I don't think it's going to help. Verdict: Only if it's raining. And there's nothing else on.
6) The Other Guys
Will Ferrell (he's a busy little comedy tumble-dryer this one) and Mark Wahlberg in a slapstick romp about two not-so-good policemen who want desperately to be more like the Lethal Weapon-type partners the desk over. Trailer looks okay, as long as Ferrell can reign it the fuck in. But then when has that ever happened? (Stranger Than Fiction actually. See now I'm fighting with myself, that's not good). Eva Mendes and her lips are in it as well, which always helps. Verdict: Oh, go on then, but only because you asked nicely.
7) Cowboys and Aliens
Adapted from a comic of the same name, starring Daniel Craig, Harrison Ford (Indiana Jones 4, Harrison, SHAME ON YOU), Sam Rockwell and Paul Dano and is directed by Iron Man's Jon Favreau. Title speaks for itself, right? It's about cowboys fighting aliens. Isn't it? Yes, yes it is. Verdict: Yee-ha!
8) Paul
Comedy starring Simon Pegg and his man-sized third nipple Nick Frost (unfair joke, he's a good actor, though The Boat That Rocked was horse shit). Follows two British "nerds" who meet a sweary alien voiced by Seth bloody Rogen (leave us alone!). Directed by Greg Mottola, who made Superbad and Adventureland. Also has lots of other excellent comic actors in it. Verdict: Yeah, go on then, but are you SURE Edgar Wright can't do it?
That's all I'm going to go for right now. Safe to say there's not much to make me don my Evil Dead vest and head for San Diego. But then I haven't named one of my children C-3PO, so I might not fit in.
at
11:22
Music: Green Man 2010 Playlist
The festival season has had a topsy turvy ride this year, what with the sunny success of Glasto now swiftly blotted by the horrid tragedy at Love Parade in Duisberg, Germany. But I have been a part of precisely none of this so far (thankfully of course on the part of the latter), bound as I have been by financial and logistical limitations. Yet months ago, upon seeing the line up for this year's Green Man Festival in the Breccon Beacons in Wales, I blew my wad and gave myself something to look forward to.
As a religious fan of traditional folk, nu-folk and Americana, the line up has me both drooling and grinning at the same time, so much so that there's an air of all-night bender about me even as I write this. As well as headliners like Joanna Newsom and The Flaming Lips, there is a wealth of talent on the lower bills, from Laura Marling to Wild Beasts, to Beirut and Tallest Man On Earth. It is a stream of brilliant musicians, many of whom have the ability (un-like certain other auto-tuned puppies - cough - MGMT - cough - that couldn't put on a good live show if the future of music depended on it...and according to NME it does, so careful boys) to up their game onstage. Wild Beasts, in particular, are a band whom I have seen transform many a doubter with their hypnotic live sound. Mumford and Sons, similarly, may be a bit crass and overplayed, but they can tear up a PA system with the best of them, and we all know there's nothing like a good hoe-down.
SO, in order to celebrate this forthcoming weekend of audible brilliance, I have compiled a playlist on Spotify (which most, if not ALL of you should have), of the bands and songs that I am most excited to see. Here be the link:
Man Culture Love: Green Man 2010
If you are unable to listen on Spotify and are curious, here is the tracklisting:
King of Spain - Tallest Man On Earth
Kentucky Pill - Johnny Flynn
Goodbye England (All Covered In Snow) - Laura Marling
Lord Help My Soul - Fionn Regan
Nobody Knew She Was There - The Unthanks
Ghost Town - First Aid Kit
Worried Mind - Megafaun
Cherbourg - Beirut
His Grinning Skull - Wild Beasts
Alike - Efterklang
For A Girl Like Mine - Pete Greenwood
Distant Shore - Billy Bragg
There are, of course, many many more acts worth checking out on the bill. But these are my favourites and most exciting.
Happy hunting. x
As a religious fan of traditional folk, nu-folk and Americana, the line up has me both drooling and grinning at the same time, so much so that there's an air of all-night bender about me even as I write this. As well as headliners like Joanna Newsom and The Flaming Lips, there is a wealth of talent on the lower bills, from Laura Marling to Wild Beasts, to Beirut and Tallest Man On Earth. It is a stream of brilliant musicians, many of whom have the ability (un-like certain other auto-tuned puppies - cough - MGMT - cough - that couldn't put on a good live show if the future of music depended on it...and according to NME it does, so careful boys) to up their game onstage. Wild Beasts, in particular, are a band whom I have seen transform many a doubter with their hypnotic live sound. Mumford and Sons, similarly, may be a bit crass and overplayed, but they can tear up a PA system with the best of them, and we all know there's nothing like a good hoe-down.
SO, in order to celebrate this forthcoming weekend of audible brilliance, I have compiled a playlist on Spotify (which most, if not ALL of you should have), of the bands and songs that I am most excited to see. Here be the link:
Man Culture Love: Green Man 2010
If you are unable to listen on Spotify and are curious, here is the tracklisting:
King of Spain - Tallest Man On Earth
Kentucky Pill - Johnny Flynn
Goodbye England (All Covered In Snow) - Laura Marling
Lord Help My Soul - Fionn Regan
Nobody Knew She Was There - The Unthanks
Ghost Town - First Aid Kit
Worried Mind - Megafaun
Cherbourg - Beirut
His Grinning Skull - Wild Beasts
Alike - Efterklang
For A Girl Like Mine - Pete Greenwood
Distant Shore - Billy Bragg
There are, of course, many many more acts worth checking out on the bill. But these are my favourites and most exciting.
Happy hunting. x
at
10:46
19 Jul 2010
Misc: Old Spice Ad
A friend told me about this in the car. I've watched it twice and it is brilliant. Stupid American comedy at its best...
Well done you people of Old Spice. Well done.
Well done you people of Old Spice. Well done.
at
09:52
15 Jul 2010
Music: Wichita 10th Anniversary @ The Garage
The second of four nights at the refurbished Garage in Islington celebrating the 10th birthday of the progressive Wichita Recordings label saw an ambush of female folk flag-bearers in First Aid Kit, Peggy Sue and Meg Baird. The other nights were to host more eclectic mixes of bands, but this night was harmonised girly folk ALL THE WAY, and suffered not because of it.
Meg Baird could have been good, but I didn't quite hear her over the crowd's mutterings. Don't know what they were talking about particularly, this crowd, possibly how much they liked Meg Baird. Now that would have been ironic, wouldn't it? Would it? Is that what irony means? I still don't know.
Peggy Sue were on next, and managed to get the crowd to hush up and cheer instead of talking. They're a very talented three piece (featured above with a two girl string section to confuse and confuddle you) with two girls up front called Katy and Rosa who look like they should run a vintage clothing shop but who really know how to play, and swapped instruments and stage positions to holler and harmonise down those mics and enchant the hell out of us all. They were tops, very good indeed, in fact just as good as their very good album would suggest. Goody good good.
Then it was the turn of sisters Johanna and Klara Soderberg, two Swedish songstresses not yet out of their twenties who go by the name First Aid Kit, to hit us with an equally beautiful and vocally impressive performance, floating hauntingly about the stage singing songs about pirates and kings, love and loss, with a great maturity for ones so young. But then that is not uncommon nowadays is it, for children not long off the teet to be writing songs like Leonard Cohen or Joni Mitchell. It's just the way it is.
So despite a shorter than expected set, due in part to some badly judged crowd participation, they lit up the room and left everyone to drift off into the Islington night. Stadium filling stuff this is not, but perfect for a woodland tent somewhere or a candelit church hall. In fact if they ever played on a boat, in the dark, I'd be there in a flash, ginger nuts in hand (they're good for sea-sickness apparently).
Meg Baird could have been good, but I didn't quite hear her over the crowd's mutterings. Don't know what they were talking about particularly, this crowd, possibly how much they liked Meg Baird. Now that would have been ironic, wouldn't it? Would it? Is that what irony means? I still don't know.
Peggy Sue were on next, and managed to get the crowd to hush up and cheer instead of talking. They're a very talented three piece (featured above with a two girl string section to confuse and confuddle you) with two girls up front called Katy and Rosa who look like they should run a vintage clothing shop but who really know how to play, and swapped instruments and stage positions to holler and harmonise down those mics and enchant the hell out of us all. They were tops, very good indeed, in fact just as good as their very good album would suggest. Goody good good.
Then it was the turn of sisters Johanna and Klara Soderberg, two Swedish songstresses not yet out of their twenties who go by the name First Aid Kit, to hit us with an equally beautiful and vocally impressive performance, floating hauntingly about the stage singing songs about pirates and kings, love and loss, with a great maturity for ones so young. But then that is not uncommon nowadays is it, for children not long off the teet to be writing songs like Leonard Cohen or Joni Mitchell. It's just the way it is.
So despite a shorter than expected set, due in part to some badly judged crowd participation, they lit up the room and left everyone to drift off into the Islington night. Stadium filling stuff this is not, but perfect for a woodland tent somewhere or a candelit church hall. In fact if they ever played on a boat, in the dark, I'd be there in a flash, ginger nuts in hand (they're good for sea-sickness apparently).
at
09:43
12 Jul 2010
Film: Trailers 1
Here begins an occasional round-up of the various trailers and teasers for up-coming releases that have got me drooling.
1. Get Low (Dir. Aaron Schneider)
I've been positively giddy at the prospect of this slice of Southern surrealism, similar in tone and style it seems to a Big Fish or Oh Brother!, since a teaser scene was released some months ago. The director, Aaron Schneider, is more a cinematographer by trade than a helmsman, so it will be interesting to see whether he can hold a feature narrative together, but with a cast like this and a wonderfully offbeat premise, I expect to thoroughly enjoy myself. It won't make any money, but it's the kind of film we need to see being made...
2. Scott Pilgrim Vs The World (Dir. Edgar Wright)
This has been kicking about for ages, so if like me you spend inordinate amounts of time checking apple's trailer page and other fan sites you will most likely have seen it already. That doesn't stop it, though, from being outrageously cool. Quite Speed Racer-y in look, but already more funny, more exciting, more original and more inventive than the Wachowski turd-cloud was in its entirety. Guaranteed, I think, to be a critical and commercial success.
3. The Extra Man (Dir. Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini)
A double doss of directorial demonstration is due with this one. They're not brothers, but Berman and Pulcini worked together to bring us the very odd and very intriguing American Splendor back in 2003, and this film looks set to be an indie comedy in the Wes Anderson style, very dry, very strange, very cartoonish, but ultimately captivating. I look forward to seeing Kevin Kline back on form, if that is the case here.
That's it for now. Those are my faves.
1. Get Low (Dir. Aaron Schneider)
I've been positively giddy at the prospect of this slice of Southern surrealism, similar in tone and style it seems to a Big Fish or Oh Brother!, since a teaser scene was released some months ago. The director, Aaron Schneider, is more a cinematographer by trade than a helmsman, so it will be interesting to see whether he can hold a feature narrative together, but with a cast like this and a wonderfully offbeat premise, I expect to thoroughly enjoy myself. It won't make any money, but it's the kind of film we need to see being made...
2. Scott Pilgrim Vs The World (Dir. Edgar Wright)
This has been kicking about for ages, so if like me you spend inordinate amounts of time checking apple's trailer page and other fan sites you will most likely have seen it already. That doesn't stop it, though, from being outrageously cool. Quite Speed Racer-y in look, but already more funny, more exciting, more original and more inventive than the Wachowski turd-cloud was in its entirety. Guaranteed, I think, to be a critical and commercial success.
3. The Extra Man (Dir. Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini)
A double doss of directorial demonstration is due with this one. They're not brothers, but Berman and Pulcini worked together to bring us the very odd and very intriguing American Splendor back in 2003, and this film looks set to be an indie comedy in the Wes Anderson style, very dry, very strange, very cartoonish, but ultimately captivating. I look forward to seeing Kevin Kline back on form, if that is the case here.
That's it for now. Those are my faves.
at
11:05
7 Jul 2010
Fashion/Music/CHARITY: Trekstock
A bit of humanitarianism now, prepare yourselves to be cleansed...
TREKSTOCK (link) is a charity that supports young people with cancer. It started in 2006 and has had muchos muchos support celebritos, and now a pop-up shop has opened off Carnaby Street, just opposite the cash machines that you'd go to if you were drinking in the John Snow. You know the ones.
Inside are lovely people selling a lovely range of limited edition band t-shirts (don't hold me to that limited edition thing, I haven't the foggiest if that's true), all of which are designed by either band members themselves, or by popular graphic artistes. And all of them are selling for the rather brilliant price of ten pounds. Just ten. Very good deal I think.
I got myself two. One was a Local Natives number, designed by the band's bassist Andy Hamm, and the other was for the Maccabees, designed with love and care and love by the groups lead singer Orlando Weeks. Here's a picture of someone modelling this particular model like a model:
Now just ignore the face for a moment and look at the...no, no, ignore the face, don't...I said look at the t-shirt, that's what's imp...no, stop it, STOP. Oh forget it.
To end seriously, I think it's a great cause, and these t-shirts are very nice indeed. There are more by the likes of Foals, Bloc Party, Yeasayer, Devendra Banhart, Delphic, Elli Goulding, The Horrors and Little Boots, and the pop-up shop is only open until the 15th of July, so if you get a chance, go down there, maybe catch one of the in-store performances by bands like Sky Larkin or Frankie and the Heartstrings, and get yourself a nice bit of musical fashion merchandise to make you, and others, feel better...
Do it. Go on. Love each other x
TREKSTOCK (link) is a charity that supports young people with cancer. It started in 2006 and has had muchos muchos support celebritos, and now a pop-up shop has opened off Carnaby Street, just opposite the cash machines that you'd go to if you were drinking in the John Snow. You know the ones.
Inside are lovely people selling a lovely range of limited edition band t-shirts (don't hold me to that limited edition thing, I haven't the foggiest if that's true), all of which are designed by either band members themselves, or by popular graphic artistes. And all of them are selling for the rather brilliant price of ten pounds. Just ten. Very good deal I think.
I got myself two. One was a Local Natives number, designed by the band's bassist Andy Hamm, and the other was for the Maccabees, designed with love and care and love by the groups lead singer Orlando Weeks. Here's a picture of someone modelling this particular model like a model:
Now just ignore the face for a moment and look at the...no, no, ignore the face, don't...I said look at the t-shirt, that's what's imp...no, stop it, STOP. Oh forget it.
To end seriously, I think it's a great cause, and these t-shirts are very nice indeed. There are more by the likes of Foals, Bloc Party, Yeasayer, Devendra Banhart, Delphic, Elli Goulding, The Horrors and Little Boots, and the pop-up shop is only open until the 15th of July, so if you get a chance, go down there, maybe catch one of the in-store performances by bands like Sky Larkin or Frankie and the Heartstrings, and get yourself a nice bit of musical fashion merchandise to make you, and others, feel better...
Do it. Go on. Love each other x
at
12:38
5 Jul 2010
Design/Art/Film: Polish Posters
I am, for the thrill of it, posting from beyond the watershed. So I can, within my rights, say things like balls and wanker and show ill-choreographed sex scenes without fear of repercussion. Yippee.
I'm going to do none of those things though. Instead I'm going to put some posters on the wall, from my ever growing digital collection of Polish film artwork which has always been a strange aesthetic fetish of mine. Film is what I adore, and a guy I worked with once told me about the Polish tradition of allowing the country's top artists and designers to draw up the marketing posters for new releases from all over the world. What results is an amazing array of vibrant, mind-blowing, alternative designs for everything from The Empire Strikes Back...
...to Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid...
...to Kill Bill...
...to Kes...
Impressive eh? Not your average photoshopped celebrity gurn-fest. No no.
These ones though, these really took the biscuit for me. Three posters, for three different movies, all starring the same, instantly recognisable, instantly iconic star. See if you can guess what they are...
I'm going to do none of those things though. Instead I'm going to put some posters on the wall, from my ever growing digital collection of Polish film artwork which has always been a strange aesthetic fetish of mine. Film is what I adore, and a guy I worked with once told me about the Polish tradition of allowing the country's top artists and designers to draw up the marketing posters for new releases from all over the world. What results is an amazing array of vibrant, mind-blowing, alternative designs for everything from The Empire Strikes Back...
...to Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid...
...to Kill Bill...
...to Kes...
Impressive eh? Not your average photoshopped celebrity gurn-fest. No no.
These ones though, these really took the biscuit for me. Three posters, for three different movies, all starring the same, instantly recognisable, instantly iconic star. See if you can guess what they are...
at
23:39
TV: This Is England '86
Shane Meadows, it has been known for some time, is bringing to the small (but ever-widening) screen a four part series that is a continuation, or return to, his beautiful and brutal 2006 film This Is England. Set during the 1986 Mexico World Cup, it will revisit the Grimsby gang - Shaun, Woody, Milk et al - as they continue to drink and party in true skinhead style. The Guardian have recently uploaded what appears to be a Channel 4 promo clip for the series here.
It's a very lucid, very vague little teaser, and probably isn't shot by Meadows himself, though it still manages to stir up intrigue for those who had watched and enjoyed the original movie. The characters in This Is England were so utterly engaging, so prone to humour and horror at the same time, that just to see them on screen makes me tingle with excitement.
Bickering is rife on the comments pages, with angry young intellectuals frothing at the mouth as to this clip's viability as a trailer, but what is clear is that those who enjoyed the film are excited about this series, and have questions that they want answering. Where did Woody go after the party? Is Milk okay after Combo set upon him? Is Combo, brought to life in one of my favourite performances of the decade by the fantastic Stephen Graham, going to bring his all-engulfing charm and violent passion to the screen again?
My feeling is that because this is a Meadows-helmed project, the results will be delivered, as they always have, to great and satisfying effect, and I will be sat as close as I can to the tele again. I don't give a hoot whether my eyes go square as a tea bag. Long live Shane and everything he stands for.
It's a very lucid, very vague little teaser, and probably isn't shot by Meadows himself, though it still manages to stir up intrigue for those who had watched and enjoyed the original movie. The characters in This Is England were so utterly engaging, so prone to humour and horror at the same time, that just to see them on screen makes me tingle with excitement.
Bickering is rife on the comments pages, with angry young intellectuals frothing at the mouth as to this clip's viability as a trailer, but what is clear is that those who enjoyed the film are excited about this series, and have questions that they want answering. Where did Woody go after the party? Is Milk okay after Combo set upon him? Is Combo, brought to life in one of my favourite performances of the decade by the fantastic Stephen Graham, going to bring his all-engulfing charm and violent passion to the screen again?
My feeling is that because this is a Meadows-helmed project, the results will be delivered, as they always have, to great and satisfying effect, and I will be sat as close as I can to the tele again. I don't give a hoot whether my eyes go square as a tea bag. Long live Shane and everything he stands for.
at
11:10
1 Jul 2010
Music: The Morning Benders @ Rough Trade East
Nothing much beats a free gig, especially if the band are half decent, and last night I wiggled and wormed (it sounds harder than it was) my way into a nice little in-store gig by one of my favourite new bands, The Morning Benders. Behold, a piccy:
As you can see they are disgustingly young, almost foetal to be honest, and I can never help but feel a sticky mix of jealousy and embarrassment upon seeing such hatchlings so successful. Nevertheless, my over-riding impression from this gig was they are a talented bunch, and make music that I very much like. They swayed and bobbed through a few songs from their new album, Big Echo - the highlights being a lightly stomping rendition of 'Cold War' and the closing sing-a-long-a-song 'Excuses' - and soon enough it was time to retreat to the benches outside to enjoy a few cans of red stripe and the evening warmth.
My friend was more inclined to criticise the band than I was, him having never heard them before, and with good reason. They are, as he correctly pointed out, not a band to grab you, not a band you play at parties, or a band to grace the sound system of any respectable dancefloor, but for sunny sunday mornings with the window open, or a festival hang over, they do the trick nicely.
They're playing various gigs and festivals this year I'm sure, so if you're at one, maybe you'll get to catch them doing their homework inbetween sodas.
As you can see they are disgustingly young, almost foetal to be honest, and I can never help but feel a sticky mix of jealousy and embarrassment upon seeing such hatchlings so successful. Nevertheless, my over-riding impression from this gig was they are a talented bunch, and make music that I very much like. They swayed and bobbed through a few songs from their new album, Big Echo - the highlights being a lightly stomping rendition of 'Cold War' and the closing sing-a-long-a-song 'Excuses' - and soon enough it was time to retreat to the benches outside to enjoy a few cans of red stripe and the evening warmth.
My friend was more inclined to criticise the band than I was, him having never heard them before, and with good reason. They are, as he correctly pointed out, not a band to grab you, not a band you play at parties, or a band to grace the sound system of any respectable dancefloor, but for sunny sunday mornings with the window open, or a festival hang over, they do the trick nicely.
They're playing various gigs and festivals this year I'm sure, so if you're at one, maybe you'll get to catch them doing their homework inbetween sodas.
at
13:35
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