Living Legends member LuckyIAm.PSC has started writing a blog for Urb’s website.
The LA rapper is currently on tour with Grayskul, Mac Lethal and Atmosphere and has been documenting the first few days on his blog, which include his musing on kicking all of the indie rap world’s ass, getting drunk and being called Will.I.Am on numerous occasions.
You can check out the latest instalment by clicking here.
Toronto Hardcore heads Brutal Knights bolted into London to ensure the capital got a top up up raging hardcore this week.
The 5-piece riot are currently on a European Tour and wrecking the place, make sure you don;t miss them. Look out for a live review when Sherry finds himself a new pencil and lucky gonk…
Funeral For A Friend will be releasing a new record next month.
The record will feautre The Great Wide Open which was on their Tales Don’t Tell Themselves album plus 9 live tracks and will be released on October 15th. The band will then head out on tour in December in support of the release. The tracklisting and dates are below:
‘The Great Wide Open’
‘10.45 Amsterdam Conversations’ (Live)
‘Juneau’ (Live)
‘Red Is The New Black’ (Live)
‘The Art Of American Football’ (Live)
‘This Year’s Most Open Heartbreak’ (Live)
‘She Drove Me To Daytime Television’ (Live)
‘Kiss & Make Up (All Bets Are Off)’ (Live)
‘Escape Artists Never Die’ (Live)
‘The Great Wide Open’ (Video)
December:
8th & 9th – London Astoria 10th – Bournemouth Opera House 11th – Wolverhampton Civic Hall 13th – Sheffield Octagon 14th – Middlesborough Town Hall 16th – Glasgow Barrowland 17th – Dundee Fat Sams 19th – Warrington Parr Hall 20th – Liverpool University 22nd – Cardiff CIA
Knocked Up comes courtesy of director Judd Apatow, the man of possible brilliance that bought ‘The 40 Year-Old Virgin’ to the big screen. The film starts simply and quickly with the attractive E! News reporter Alison Scott celebrating her new promotion by getting horribly drunk at a fashionable, local bar. There she meets Ben Stone, a chubby loser whose temporary career plan is to eventually launch a Website aptly named fleshofthestars.com, a directory that counts the amount of minutes before a cinematic nude scene.
Naturally the intoxicated couple hit it off, and in a whirl of uncomfortable lust and freshly rancid bar fumes, sparks fly and oven, meets bun. When Alison finds out she is pregnant, after several humourous vomit induced gags (excuse the pun), she decides she needs to tell Ben, however she hasn’t spoken to him in a few months. There wasn’t even an exchange of mobile numbers, as he didn’t have one, “payment complications,” he uses. Obviously shocked by this news he responds with “I’m not poor or anything. But I eat a lot of spaghetti.”
The narrative is fairly obvious from the start but it doesn’t actually matter, because practically every character, every scene, and almost every line is hilarious. Silly comedies can be good, but it’s the ones that matter, the ones that clamber to the truth that make it great. All of Ben’s stoned roommates quickly agree at what the expecting parents should do, and it rhymes with “shmush-shmortion.” However, after Alison sees a tiny heartbeat on the monitor at the clinic, the decision is made. This choice happens to interfere with Ben’s vision of what his life should be, but thankfully his wonderfully boundless father offers him a beautiful bit of advice, “Life doesn’t care about your vision. You just gotta roll with it.”
Alison lives with her control-freak sister Debbie, her brother-in-law Pete (who shares possibly one of the most amusing scenes with Ben in a hotel, with the chairs) and their two kids. Pete and Debbie seem to be constantly at heads, and their arguments are unusually on real things and situations that can separate even the smart, committed people. Alison notices that their fights never end, but lacks to see that its because they’re both right.
Judd Apatow’s strengths lie mostly in the childish comedy and sporadically the film will repeatedly cut to less important plots that tend to dumb down the humour. But I did laugh, and on occasion I cried with laughter. Crudity walks hand in hand with sensitivity and there are intensely funny, practically warm moments that speak brilliantly and skilfully of life and of love. If you can push aside the coarse formula and childish, bathroom humour, you’re left with an unpredictably delicate social commentary that is certain to be a comical gem.
XO Skeleton are releasing their debut album for free.
The band, which featuers members of Some Girls/American Nightmare and Hatebreed, have said thay they don’t need a record label in 2007 because “XO’s does it for the kids yo!”.
If you want to get Bored By Heaven, you can download it from here.
Unearth have announced that their upcoming daet in Pomona will be filmed for a DVD.
The band are touring with Darkest Hour, August Burns Red and Suicide Silence in the States at the moment and wanted to film a DVD in an intimate venue. A statement from the band said that they loved the venue and “couldn’t be more stoked to return and get it on tape”.
The trailer for Osiris’ latest video Feed The Need has just come out, and it looks a good ‘un with some serious bangers coming from Caswell Berry, Stu Graham, John Rattray, The Butcher, Clint Peterson, Corey Duffel, Jimmy Carlin and loads more.
It looks likely that the UK Premiere of this film will be shown at the Crossfire Xmas Jam this year in London, more info will be released soon.
Les Savy Fav have been on the scene bubbling away for years but I’m not sure anybody was expecting the long awaited ‘Let’s Stay Friends’ album to be this good.
This album is a little more polished than other Fav releases such as ‘Inches‘ and ‘The Cat and the Cobra‘ but the progression is welcomed with open arms as the overall sound is perfection to my ears. Imagine a Dischord led sound, powered by intricate drums, Fugazi-esque basslines and the most challenging guitar riffs that take you on a musical journey. Add singer Tim Harrington’s off the wall unique vocals and you have a blend of indie rock and sizzling punk attitude that is quite frankly delicious.
The songs are delightful and all have character. Check the wall bouncing ‘Raging in the Plague Age‘ (stream it on this page) as it gets medieval on your arse from first listen, or the charming lyrics that push the balloon ride of ‘Brace Yourself‘. But just when you think the album cannot get any better, end song ‘The Lowest Bitter’ kicks in and leaves you wanting to hear it all over again. It’s a highlight of the record proving ‘Let’s Stay Friends‘ is by far the best indie record of the year so far. Go get it.
More details of this to follow but there’ll be a one off premiere of the new Vans tour DVD at the Blue Dog in Derby, Friday 28th September (the day before the House comp).