Categories
Skateboarding Product Reviews

Darkstar Terrell Robinson Armor Light

Terrell Robinson is straight outta Compton, paid his dues and deserving of his first pro-model and Darkstar have totally pimped his ride. The technology behind these decks is actually a work of genius – nothing like Powell Peralta’s attempts with “Bonite” (cardboard layer that went soggy!) way back in the day.

Armor Light has a carbon composite layer that runs down the core of the board allowing the other plies to be really thin – combined with new resin glue it comes out super stiff. The stiffness gives it a deceptively brittle feel and at 7.5″ it’s a little smaller than my usual ride, so I thought I’d hit up Meanwhile 2’s new banks and blocks to test it out.

This thing has pop – actually, it’s not like normal pop, it’s more like a snap – and it’s such a crisp feeling. The concave and tail angles are all pretty deep and aggressive, so for sticking to your feet this is perfect, shifty ollies are a breeze and the big nose is spot on for popping nollies, especially as the concave runs full length so your back foot sticks on switch tricks. The board kept its shape 100%; a lot of decks with deep concaves tend to straighten out a little as the ply is battling to return to its pre-pressed shape – but the bonding is so tight, it didn’t sag a bit, maybe due to it hardly flexing.

There is something I never understood about Darkstar. The products they put out are super tech, the wheels have advanced cores and formula, and the decks are years ahead of most wood shops, plus the team are bang up to date and on point street technicians. So why are the graphics so gnar? This deck has Terrel getting snuffed out in an electric chair – what’s up with that? I don’t know who the company is aiming at but the quality product and team are going to attract the Transworld reading street crowd, rather the slash-dawgs from some backyard pool session.

Darkstar wood is unique, and fun to ride – and has the added bonus of a warranty. If you break this deck in 30 days, they will hook you up with a fresh one – I rode their last wood and snapped one on an ollie to rock on a ΒΌ pipe – to be fair, most decks would have snapped with the bad landing – I went back to the shop (Halfpipe) and they just took the date I bought it down, my receipt number and gave me a new deck right off the bat! With such a confidence in their wood you can happily go out and push it to its limits knowing that the warranty has got your back

Go get some, shit’s tight!

9/10

Philip Procter

Categories
Live Reviews

Career Suicide – Live in Reading

The Kings Head – Reading
6th August 2008

I was stoked to see that this band had made the effort to play the UK in such a big way, i mean, this is DIY at it’s best. 4 blokes, on the road, bang up for it and wanting to rage every night.

Tonight, Canadian hardcore quartet Career Suicide rolled into Reading and blew the place apart. The show was held downstairs in a small room with no windows at the Kings Head pub, a perfect DIY set up for a band that love to rip up a space between 4 walls and that’s exactly what went down.

Before they played the room was warmed by FUK who supposedly had ex member(s) of Chaos UK, so we waited with baited breath. They provided a very meaty, old school British hardcore with a front man that can hold his ground.

Sweat poured and chaos reigned as soon as Career Suicide hit the carpet. Opening with Jonzo’s Leaking Radiation the small room erupted into total carnage, drinks flew everywhere and the place opened up like the floor was on fire!

The band smashed through the likes of Attempted Suicide, Bored Bored Bored, and some tracks from the new Cherry Beach EP and played with venom. Back in the middle of the room pyramids are being made by human punks and a death wall battle has taken place. Drinks are thrown everywhere and to his amazement, some guy in front of me finally finds his spectacles in one piece on the floor. Across the room, members of Shitty Limits are grabbed the mic, The band play at mach 10, people are pinned to the walls and it’s pretty safe to say that this is the best fun EVER!

The band finally end their set with the most legendary Quarantined and are then cheered to play one more track despite the fact that singer Martin Farkas can’t breathe whatsoever. There’s simply no oxygen left in this room. If you are gonna die you may as well go out in style so they rocked a killer version of The Todd Killings by Angry Samoans before it was all over.

Well done to Ellis for putting on the show and CS for travelling so far to rip the UK. We salute all of you.

Emilio Gonzales

Click here for Pete Craven’s Brighton show review on this 2008 tour….

Categories
Music News

TV On The Radio play new London event

TV On The Radio, Pete And The Pirates and Errors are to appear at the Concrete And Glass art event in London.

The festival will be combining both art and music events in various venues in Shoreditch from October 2-3.

As the festival approaches, more acts will be added to the bill; head over to the website and keep up to date.

www.concreteandglass.co.uk

Categories
Music News

Michael Jackson wants your votes!

Michael Jackson will release a new album to celebrate his 50th birthday, with British fans compiling the tracklisting.

King Of Pop‘, out on August 25, will feature 18 tracks chosen from a 50-strong list that includes ‘Billie Jean‘,’Off The Wall‘, ‘Bad‘ and ‘Thriller‘.Fans have until Sunday (August 10) to vote for the tracks, and can make their selection on either The Sun or GMTV websites.

The full list of tracks available for selection is:

‘Billie Jean’
‘Smooth Criminal’
‘I Just Can’t Stop Loving You’
‘In The Closet’
‘Black Or White’
‘Will You Be There’
‘Earth Song’
‘Thriller’
‘You Are Not Alone’
‘Who Is It’
‘Blood On The Dancefloor’
‘P.Y.T. (Pretty Young Thing)’
‘Leave Me Alone’
‘Liberian Girl’
‘Heal The World’
‘Jam’
‘Give In To Me’
‘Another Part Of Me’
‘You Rock My World’
‘Man In The Mirror’
‘Don’t Stop ‘Til You Get Enough’
‘Cry’
‘She’s Out Of My Life’
‘Gone Too Soon’
‘Beat It’
‘Workin’ Day And Night’
‘Bad’
‘Human Nature’
‘The Way You Make Me Feel’
‘The Lady In My Life’
‘Scream’
‘For All Time’
‘Dirty Diana’
‘Remember The Time’
‘They Don’t Care About Us’
‘Childhood’
‘Stranger In Moscow’
‘Ghost’
‘History’
‘Is It Scary’
‘One More Chance’
‘Break Of Dawn’
‘Rock With You’
‘Butterflies’
‘Off The Wall’
‘Speechless’
‘Wanna Be Startin’ Somethin”
‘We Are Here To Change The World’
‘The Girl Is Mine’
‘Say Say Say’

Categories
Music News

Ben Folds’ new video hits the web

Ben Folds has unleased the first video from his upcoming solo album onto the web. Way to Normal is due out on the 30th September.

Head over to here and have a sneak peek.

Categories
Music News

Rise Against behind the scenes

Rise Against have posted a two-part video of behind the scenes footage when recording their new album, Appeal To Reason. Check em out below.

Appeal To Reason
is released on the 7th October.

Categories
Preview

Hologram – No Shame In Spain

Talking Jive: Stanley
Hunched with an SLR: Trix
Shoving VXs where the sun don’t shine: Nick Richards

What are your first thoughts when you think of South Wales?

They copulate with sheep don’t they?
Oh, I heard there was a rift in time there.
They like Rugby, and dragons. Yeah they love their dragons; do they not acknowledge their non-existence?
I don’t know, but I fancy Charlotte Church a bit I suppose.

Well, aside from the myths, the stereotypes and a fictional dues ex machina that time lords take advantage of whenever the plot goes out of control, there is one thing that’s impossible to deny. That is of course, the area’s prolific nature when producing ludicrously talented skateboarders. So much so in fact, that this particular location is just a big fat slag with an impeccable taste for wood-pushers.

Matt Pritchard, Lee Dainton, Matt Davies and co. were amongst the first to help Cardiff’s blip on the radar swell up like a 20 car pile-up on the M4. Before it had the chance to be swept away, Scott Magil’s ‘Who?’ and Dykie’s Crayon Skateboards took aim with an M67 and blew the scene sky high. People had no choice but to pay attention. The unparalleled balls-out (often literally) approach to skating became a common motif in South Wales skating.

Following in the grubby footsteps is Nick Richards and the 10:30 Warriors, who are causing some serious business while filming for the hotly anticipated Hologram.

These boyos have been at the heart of the Cardiff and Newport skate scene for most of their lives, united by their passions for skating the shit out of everything and generally dicking about like Welsh scummers. At this rate Hologram is shaping to be the perfect combination between styled out gnar and unashamed scumbag antics. Isn’t this what skateboarding is all about?

We’ve had the pleasure of getting an exclusive insight at their recent filming trip to Barcelona. Check out some of the dirty and slutty shots from their trip here, and make sure you have a peep at the sickity sick 15 minute off-cut (just imagine what’s been kept!) edit that Nick has spliced together with his usual tender love and care. Click on the picture opposite to see the boys who have no shame whilst in Spain, but be warned, it’s almost certainly NSFW, but just as slick as it is sick. Hologram is expected to drop around Christmas time to stoke out your stocking.

Hold Tight South Wales.

Ryan Thomas floats this comfortable kickflip over that uncomfortable chair while Nick gets his head superglued to a tree. Caught and stuck like a good’un.

right

Rhys The Ox gives this spot the bluntside shove in treatment. Tighty whiteys were mandatory.

Gareth Leak with a front 5 to fakie on that spot that refuses to look anything other than breathtaking on camera. Holy Landscapes Batman!

HOLLERGRAM. Stay tuned.

Categories
Buzz Chart

Machines Don’t Care

Supergroups are common through guitar based music. Grab a heap of musicians from seminal bands, knock out a few tunes and Bob’s your money-making uncle. But now we’ve got arguably the first ever electro-ghettotech-baile-dancehall super group in Machines Don’t Care with a line up consisting of Sinden, Hervé, Toddla T, Drop The Lime, Fake Blood, Trevor Loveys, Affie Yusuf and Detboi with Serocee giving it some vocal welly on one track.

Even before listening to the self-titled album, it is obvious that it isn’t going to suck. With a line up as good as that, you’re guaranteed bangers from top to bottom and that is exactly what you get. From Toddla’ and Hervé’s dancehall infused Badman to the groggy basslines of Hervé and Sinden’s Afro Jacker and Trouble On The Floor by Trevor Loveys and Fake Blood, you get a dance soundtrack of epic proportions.

The track you can hear by clicking above is Jugs, produced by Detboi and Sinden which a bumper bassline jumping all over the drums and a vocal sample imploring the ladies to “wave your brassiere in-a de air”. And you know what? This record is enough to make me take hormone pills, grow a set, head into Harmony, pick up a particularly racey bit of cup holding equipment just so I can take it off and wave it in the air.

What?

Abjekt.

Categories
Buzz Chart

Polar Bear

Evoking envy from the hearts of bald men everywhere, Sebastian Rochford is back with his much loved brainchild – although, how it managed to scramble from his mind through a maze of follicles and surface that forest is still beyond me – Polar Bear.

After being nominated for a Mercury Award with the finest contemporary jazz composition to grace my speakers, ‘Held On The Tips Of Fingers‘, I’ve been eager to hear some new tunes from this eclectic bunch. While the online freebies were satisfying – the demo of ‘Isolation‘ sounding like the meandering thoughts of a man trapped in the bottom of a deep well, descending oh-so slowly into an irreversible insanity – they only further stoked my desire for a new full length.

This eponymous, even on the first listen, is as moreish and stimulating as their first two efforts: resulting in a superb collection of meddled melodies, both uplifting and spirit crushing – the perfect soundtrack for an avant-garden party. Mmm… smoky. Someone pass the absinthe, I’m ready to lose my mind.

Polar Bear don’t so much as fiddle with genre boundaries, as play with them like eager and excited school children until they snap. Then looking at the broken pieces with such admiration, they fuse them together into something fresh and exciting. Take tomlovesalicelovestom as a perfect example; heart-warming bass grooves set loose into a labyrinthine forest of electronic ramblings planted by Leafcutter John with Pete and Mark guiding it along with teasing sax. Oh my.

Joe

Categories
Live Reviews

Billy Idol – Live

Brixton Academy
31.07.08

Tonight, Billy Idol starts his encore with his 1982 hit ‘Hot In The City‘; an appropriate choice, given that London is currently in the grip of some ultra-humid weather. The assembled fans are already pretty sweaty before they’ve even entered the venue, and once inside, it’s clear that the Brixton Academy’s ventilation system (or lack of) won’t be doing the sold-out crowd any favours.

Not the ideal circumstances for a lively night, then; but thankfully, Billy Idol remains a highly engaging and entertaining performer after all these years. Backed by a solid band featuring his long term collaborator and guitar ace Steve Stevens, he rouses us from our heat-induced stupor with an early rendition of ‘Dancing With Myself‘, prompting a loud sing-along and fists aplenty in the air.

Despite cutting his teeth with late 70’s punk rockers Generation X, Billy has never cared for punk’s revisionist stance on popular music history, and as he prowls the stage with his trademark sneer intact, it’s clear that this is a man that still worships at the altar of rock n’ roll’s great heritage. Ever the showman, he morphs into the bastard lovechild of Sid Vicious and Frank Sinatra for the darkly romantic ‘Eyes Without A Face‘, and initiates a heroically OTT call-and-response routine midway through his signature tune ‘Rebel Yell‘. Needless to say, the crowd – which encompasses denim n’ leather clad folks of all ages – love it, and are not shy about showing their appreciation.

The only temporary lapse in momentum happens roughly halfway through the nearly-2 hour set, when Billy and his bandmates opt to take a breather whilst Steve Stevens shows off his (admittedly impressive) guitar skills for a good few minutes more than is really necessary. Similarly, extending ‘Mony Mony’ to roughly twice its usual length with an inter-band jam session wasn’t really called for either; but after more than thirty years in the game, it’d be churlish to begrudge Billy a few indulgences.

The sight of 4000-odd smiling, sweat-drenched faces making their way to the tube station afterwards serves as proof enough that the man born William Michael Broad still lives up to his stage name. Rock n’ roll 1, sticky summer weather 0.

Alex Gosman