Categories
Live Reviews

Thin Lizzy Live

Hammersmith Apollo
30/03/06

Lager without alcohol, guitars without strings, Lizzy without Lynott, whats the point? It’s like listening to music with the bass and treble turned down, not just something missing, something very very important missing. Phil Lynott was, and still is, such a crucial part of modern rock music that the thought of a Lizzy without him is just, well, plain unthinkable!

I was lucky enough to see Thin Lizzy fronted by the great Lynott on 2 occasions, once at Hammersmith Odeon as the Apollo was once called, and to say tonight’s performance was missing something is a understatement to say the least. Ok we still have the songs, played by Scott Gorham and Jon Sykes, two ex-members of Thin Lizzy and two who have probably only ever played them in their car on the way to rehearsals, and at times once the sound had settled down, during the instrumental breaks, if you closed your eyes it was as if you were back at the old Odeon itself. But I don’t wanna go to a gig and close my eyes and pretend!

OK, it was all done for a good cause to commemorate 20 years since Lynotts passing, and judging by the crowd reaction they may well be back for more before the end of the year. The set was tight and they played all the songs you wanted to hear all in the right order with a nicely placed drum solo half way through for a quick pee break and another trip to the bar.

Lynott always had a twinkle in his eye, he was the heart and soul of Thin Lizzy, he lived and breathed is role on and off stage, a larger than life character born to front a band, his smooth enigmatic delivery, knack of a great tune and provocative lyric writing earned him legions of fans in Europe, America and beyond. He is still greatly missed 20 years on. I’ve no doubt if he were alive today Lizzy would be playing Wembley Arena and not the Apollo.

To be honest I just couldn’t get my head round this well intention tribute to a man who practically invented the twin guitar break and changed rock for the better. If you really want to close you eyes and relive the glories of old, go see Limehouse Lizzy, their best tribute act; if you can’t see them, go see Thin Lizzy, they’re the next best thing!

Nelson Bibb

Categories
Music News

Punk Rock Tattoos anyone?

If you are a fan of bands like Aiden, 18 Visions, Avenged Sevenfold, Atreyu, Lost Prophets (puke), Soulfly, Caliban, The Used, Papa Roach and Walls of Jericho , you may want to check out Sam Scott Hunters’ tattoo feature on his photography site today and see where all the worlds’ ink is ending up in the underground…

Click here for more.

Categories
Skateboarding News

Natural Born Skaters Dates

Magic Board Games presents The annual Natural Born Skaters competitions so if you are feeling like you need to be a master in front of your mates, then hop along to these events up North. The final will be held at Rampcity in Blackpool on the 20th May.

Qualifiers for this event are to be held at the following skateparks:

Bones, Stockport8th April
The Works, Leeds22nd April
Bones, Bolton23rd April

Final – Rampcity, Blackpool – 20th May

For more details go to http://www.naturalbornskaters.co.uk/

Categories
Music News Skateboarding News

Vans & Bad Religion hit the beers!

Bad Religion are one of the most influential punk rock bands out there, even though they did have a whacky moment where they thought they were gonna try and be a prog band on album 2!

You will find out more about that in this months None More Punk Show once it goes live this week. Other than that blip, have had shed loads of great moments that have been captured on this DVD so Vans decided to run a premiere at the Vans Shop in Soho’s Carnaby Street and throw in loads of beer for the crack.

Peeps turned up, beer was drunk and evidence was filmed for your enjoyment.

Bad Religion’s new DVD is out this Spring called Live at the Palladium through Epitaph Records. This DVD will be fully reviewed on here this week for your mince pies to have a look at. Vans also have a shoe out with Bad Religion (as if you have not noticed!), they kick ass, go check them out here with the full story.

Categories
Skateboarding News

Girlie Skate Camps are go!

A survey recently revealed that 25% (that’s a quarter for those who aren’t good with numbers…) of the skate community are female. Long gone are the days of floozy groupies sitting around come rain or shine for a chance to get with some boys and their wood… Well, that still happens but Crossfire certianly doesn’t condone it!

This will be the third successful year of Girlie Skate Camps spreading the love to all our European sisters. Brand new sessions are waiting for your involvement in Hossegor (France), and Prague (Czech Republic). When in Hossegor, you can stay at the Girlie house and take trips around France and Spain in the Girlie Van. Whilst in Prague you get to session some great street spots and visit the world famous Mystic Cup Championships.

Dates are as follows:

Prague- 2nd to 9th July. Over 18s only.
Hossegor- 8th to 15th July / 15th to 22nd July Over 16s only.

For more info visit www.girliecamps.com (Office friendly!)

Categories
Skateboarding News

Feel the Fury

blank

Getting sponsored and turning pro is basically a pretty way of endorsing someone’s products. The only difference between the pro and amateur status is that as a pro you sign your name on the product and receive royalties for each item sold. So, everyone knows that a skater who has his name on a board, shoe, wheel etc is raking in a bit of cash, right?

Well, the newest craze in skateboarding is to get your name printed in pretty letters in a metal alloy hanger that you are about to scratch to hell. Yup, the pro truck is de rigueur now and everyone wants a piece of the action.

Fury Trucks don’t escape the rule and have released three pro model trucks from three of skateboarding’s greatest talents- Tony Hawk (White), Tom Penny (Purple)and Arto Saari (Blue). Joining this trio is Diego Buchierri freshly picked from truck sponsor limbo.

Go to the brand new website www.furytruckcompany.com for more info.

Categories
Live Reviews

Ugly Duckling Live

Giant Panda
Jazz Café
28/03/06

When Maanumental and Newman hit the stage, minus their Japanese crew member Chikaramanga, the crowd weren’t too sure what to expect. It was clear that they were there for Ugly Duckling when the MCs attempts to drum up some crowd interaction fell largely on deaf ears, but by the end of the set, LA’s Giant Panda had the crowd shouting back and boogying on down thanks to their energetic set and catchy songs from their album Fly School Reunion.

Digging In The Tapes, Super Fly and Grand Prix whipped up a small frenzy with the pounding drums and brilliant dance moves provided by the two rappers, who were clearly out to enjoy themselves before finishing off with the superb One Time which followed the intro that exclaimed “Everyone knows they’re no fools because everyone knows the hip hop rules”. The smile on the face of Maanumental were obviously very genuine as he hand slapped the front row of the crowd and danced around to his crew’s beats. And it was this show of having fun that set the tone for the main event of the evening.

Young Einstein followed quickly and broke out some funky jams to lay the sonic red carpet down for the giant frame of Andy Cooper to jump down the stairs and introduce himself and his partner in crime Dizzy Dustin. They ripped through new track Yudee before scorching the crowd with old favourites Pass It On and Eye On The Gold Chain which featured, as ever, Einstein hitting a fanfare and bringing out his dookie gold rope which he carefully placed around his own neck before getting down on the decks.

More new tracks were played from the Bang For The Buck album before the two best songs of the night caused a raucus reaction from the sell out Jazz Café. First off Rio De Janeiro was played, taking us to the land of the beaches, sunshine and tight units, before the anthem A Little Samba blasted out to a sing-a-long karaoke style playback from the crowd. Afterwards, Andy started talking about Dizzy’s money problems, prompted Diz to go off stage as Cooper explained that hip hop isn’t about guns, bitches, violence and money, but Dizzy returned, pushing his way through the crowd in rap t-shirt, platinum necklace and doo-rag telling the crowd to fuck themselves in the best parody of a gangster rapper ever. As Andy Cooper stated, it is dumb when people go “from James Blunt, to smoking a blunt”.

The only logical step following this was Mr Tough Guy which pokes fun at the gangster rappers of the day and then moved into a Beastie Boys style version of I Did It Like This and then asking the crowd to Turn It Up. When they returned for their much deserved encore, we were given perfect renditions of Smack and Journey To Anywhere.

Ugly Duckling make fun hip hop on record, but live it’s a whole other level. They don’t need to have personas to hide behind, they just go out and have a great time rapping for people who can’t help but dance and weave to the tunes. Your life is boring without UD in it, so get to stepping!

Abjekt
[Photos by Kim Norbury]

Categories
Moves

Moves Gettin’ The Moos – Special Slam Dance

When all the glamour and glitz is wiped away, skateboarding shows us a whole lot of pain.

This week’s Mooooves are dedicated to all those times we pushed ourselves and didn’t bring home the bacon. This isn’t THPS!

Colin Vs. Big Mark

Benson 1-2-Knockout!

Elissa steps it up

Demo gap carnage!

Contests are always a sure-bet for blood

Top 10 places to expect danger:

1. Texas death Matches on mini ramps
2. Product tosses
3. Impromptu Best Trick Contests
4. Skatepark toilets
5. Hometown Hero Vs. Visiting Pros
6. The House of Doom summer parties.
7. Marseille after parties
8. Alan Christensens pants.
9. Download Festival riot nights
10. Any night out with Pritchard

Categories
Interviews

Yellowcard Interview

Floridian quintet Yellowcard first made a name for themselves with 2003’s ‘Ocean Avenue’; a record which combined the traditional pop-punk sounds with those of their electric violin player!

They first visited the UK in early 2004, and following the recent release of new album ‘Lights & Sounds’, they’ve returned for their biggest UK headline tour to date. Alex Gosman caught up with bassist Pete Mosely before their second night at the London Astoria.

So, this is the second night of your tour – how did things go last night, and how long has it been now since you first visited the UK?

Last night was amazing… we’ve gone from supporting Less Than Jake [in May 2004] at the Brixton Academy, and supporting New Found Glory, to being able to come over here on our own and play two nights at a venue this size…it’s awesome, and I think tonight’s show will be even better, because we’re more used to the venue! It’s been about two years since we first came over here, we played a couple of small promo shows, one of them at the Garage…but our first real tour over here was with Less Than Jake.

Do you have good memories of your previous shows here?

For the most part, when you’re up on stage and rocking out, there’s not much difference between the crowds – you could be anywhere from Australia to Canada, you know? Generally, we pride ourselves on being a live band, and we always get a pretty good response from the crowd; and when you tour as much as we do, it’s hard to keep specific memories of places!

Your new album ‘Lights & Sounds’ is more musically varied than ‘Ocean Avenue’, especially with the orchestral elements. Was this intentional, or did it just work out that way?

A bit of both, really! Whilst we were touring ‘Ocean Avenue’, we kinda got plagued with this ‘pop-punk’ tag – not that there’s anything wrong with pop-punk music, but it does kind of make you cringe when you here it, especially as we never set out to be a pop-punk band. But we do understand how ‘Ocean Avenue’ got that tag, given the time when it was released and everything.

Some people call us punk rock, and we definitely have our roots in growing up listening to that kind of music – bands like Bad Religion and NOFX – but we’ve never actually come out and said that we’re punk rock, because that’s a big thing to claim. We want to wear the badge of rock n’ roll, because rock n’ roll can go in so many different directions, thanks to bands like the Beatles – and that’s what we wanted to show on this record; that we can step outside of any box and musically branch out. Not in the sense that we’re trying to be different just for the sake of it, but to reflect the fact that we’re influenced by many different kinds of music.

The trouble with that is that you tend to alienate people who prefer your older sound, but as a band, we were really thirsty to just move on and step into new areas.

One song from ‘Lights & Sounds’ particularly grabbed my attention – ‘Two Weeks From Twenty’ [a song about a young soldier, ‘Jimmy’, killed shortly before his twentieth birthday]. Is that a personal story to the band, or is it more of a reaction to the current situation in Iraq?

It’s kind of a generalisation…it’s the story of a G.I, it’s got some anti-war sentiment in it, but it’s not as openly political like – say – Propagandhi. It’s very non-specific; it doesn’t name names or point fingers, but it relates to an aspect of the American Armed Forces that I disagree with – the way they use cheap tricks to recruit kids out of high school. We’re talking about kids that might not have the grades or money to move on to university, so the Forces come along and offer them this ‘educational experience, get you ahead in life’, that kinda thing, and the kids often sign up for it – not really knowing that they’ll end up going to war.

In the song, Jimmy is a kid from a typical industrial town in New Jersey, who probably has a future working in a local factory…but the factory gets shut down, so he has to take the only other opportunity he sees as available to him, and ends up going to war and dying at a young age. So it’s not so much a song about war, as how it impacts on the lives of a young soldier and his family.

Do you get bored of playing your older songs time and time again, or does the crowd’s reaction make it worthwhile?

Well, yes, some songs definitely do get really old…like when we were touring’Ocean Avenue’, we played those songs about 300 times in the space of a year – plus we played the song ‘Ocean Avenue’ itself twice as much as the other songs, because of TV appearances, etc. So yeah, absolutely, it does get old, but then you can’t think that every fan follows you from city to city every night, so you have to keep those songs in the set. And yeah, it does feel good to see the crowd go crazy when you play an old school favourite, so it kinda makes it worthwhile.

What are Yellowcard’s plans for the near future, after this UK tour ends?

Uh…more touring! Our new record just came out a couple of months ago, and we’d been touring for about four or five months as a kind of ‘pre-promotion for it, which is kind of unusual. Now that it’s actually been released, we’ll probably be touring it for most of the next two years, although we’ll probably get a few breaks towards the end. We’re hoping to play some festivals over the summer.

‘Lights & Sounds’ is out now. Check out www.yellowcardrock.com for more info.

Categories
Buzz Chart

Some Girls

It’s hard not to love this record. Featuring members of The Locust, Swing Kids, Give Up The Ghost, Over My Dead Body and Plot To Blow Up The Eiffel Tower, Some Girls must hold an all time record in scene points and punk pedigree.

Some Girls is what happens when post-punk, art rock and noisecore collides and ‘Heaven’s Pregnant Teens’ is the sound that rises from the tangled, twisted wreck. A high-pitched squeal of feedback signals the start before the band explode into ‘Beautiful Rune’ in a flurry of jarring spazz-core lunacy while their razor sharp version of Public Image Limited’s ‘Religion II’ captures every ounce of the original songs anger and energy. John Lydon would approve.

The band tour the UK on the following dates:

April
13 Manchester Satan’s Hollow
14 Leeds Joseph’s Well
15 Cardiff Clwb Ifor Bach
16 Birmingham Jug of Ale
17 Bristol The Croft
19 London Underworld
20 Brighton Engine Rooms

www.somegirlshaveallthefuck.com