Categories
Skateboarding News

Islington Skatepark – Support Jam this week.

We were recently contacted by a guy called Noel Headon at Islington council who has a big passion to get a skatepark built in Islington, North London.

Over the next few months local jams will be planned in the borough so that the council can prove that the area needs a park built and knowing that Cantelowes Park in Camden is out of action right now as it goes under the knife, the neighbouring borough are drafting their plans for a park and need your support.

So various events are planned on the dates below where Islington have teamed up with ‘Urban Ramps’ who’ll be bringin’ several bits of kit into the local parks. The purpose of these two and three day events is to ‘find out if there is a need for a skate park in Islington‘.

It goes without saying that the more people that show up, the more evidence there will be of a real demand for a skate park in Islington. Just about every borough has one now – some have two! – so if you live in area, get down there and support it.

First event:

Date: Thursday 16th & Friday 17th Feb. Whittington Park, N19.
Times: 10am – 4pm ish.
Tube: Archway
Train: Upper holloway
Buses: 17, 41, 43, 134, 143, 210, 263, 271, 390, C11, W5… so there’s a few!
What is there to skate? 5ft mini ramp.

The first event has the mini ramp only, but the other events will have a mini ramp and a street course… but you need to show your support at the first one as the more people the better for everyone.

Then the other events:
Elthorne Park N19 : 8-10th April
Bingfield Park: N1 27-29th May
Highbury Fields: N5 29-31st July

Various London pro riders have already pledged their support for the events, get down there to watch a damn good session.

Categories
Interviews

Ben Myers Interview

Ben Myers is something of an enigma.

Part author, part journalist and part label boss, he filters through the shadows of the music world, interviewing some of the biggest names in rock, enjoying critical success as a band biographer and still finds time to write novels and runs Captains of Industry, the people’s champion of indy labels, with a fast growing stable of bands to boot.

Comparisons to Hunter S Thompson have been bandied about, as well as rumours involving Jack Osbourne and a gun, and so before disappearing into hiding to finish his latest biography, on System of a Down, Ben took some time out to lay his cards on the table.

You’re a total jack of all trades – writer, music journalist, running a record label and a well known face in the London music world – how the hell do you juggle everything without losing the plot?

I think I’d get bored doing one thing, and as some close friends could surely confirm, do frequently lose the plot and flee the city. But it’s all good. I work from home and work for a minimum of eight or nine hours a day, dividing my time between writing and runnin! g the label. Also, I gave up drinking and found I could be a lot more productive without hangovers. So now it’s all about caffeine and marijuana – for medicinal purposes, you understand. The weird thing is, I’m inspired by the work ethic of straight-edge types, like Rollins and Ian MacKayepeople whose artistic and business endeavours are all-consuming – part of who they are. I think once you resign yourself to poverty for the foreseeable future, it opens up a whole new approach – living for yourself, scraping by and doing what you want to. You’d be surprised by the number of successful writers and rock stars who are in debt up to their eyeballs in order to create.

Which part of your life do you enjoy more, the writing, journalism or record label…and how did you end up working for News of The World?

Writing fiction is my main interest and I’ve been doing it most days since I was ten, or certainly regularly for the past few years when I retired from office life at the age of 23. It wasn’t for me, taking orders and helping other people get rich. No doubt I’ll have to get a job someday, but it won’t be today. Everyone should try their hand at writing – it can be good therapy and a good way to get to know yourself. Writing is freedom. Read Charles Bukowski or Henry Miller at 16 and your life will never be the same again. But music is such a large part of my life I can’t do one without the other. When we set up Captains of Industry three years ago we never imagined we’d make so many new friends, discuss so many ideas and feel like we’re part of something self-created. I’m also lucky in that I get a lot of free music sent to me, something I never take for granted. If I didn’t I’d have to become a shoplifter and its awfully hard these days.

As a teenager I did a few weeks work at News Of The World, and was sent undercover for them to infiltrate a suspected paedophile ring in East London.

The main thing I learnt though was, while the freedom of the press in the UK is a wonderful thing, the people who run the tabloids are cunts. They’re not writers. I refuse to buy their dirty rags for all the hate they spread. They continually perpetuate racist and xenophobic ideologies and I want no part of it. The power they wield over people who can’t be bothered to think themselves is alarming. Fuck them all. And fuck the celebrity-obsessed masses for being so subservient to false dreams. I have a novel written called Celebricide which will be the nail in the coffin of this vacuous age of famous non-entities. If I can just get it finished…

How did you get involved with writing for music magazines? What publications do you actually respect and read?

I forced my winning personality on the good people of Melody Maker (RIP) until they had to relent and give me a job. I got lucky, because I clearly could barely string a sentence together at that point, but my shoes were pretty good. Infact, the day I left college they offered me a full-time job. Yes. I did a little sex wee that day.

The best reads today, I think, are Plan B and Loose Lips Sink Ships. DrownedInSound and Playlouder are the two best music websites and are great at discovering new bands. www.3ammagazine.com is great for literature and music too. Kerrang! still has metal and punk at its beating heart and is run by people who live it. The notion that rock journalists are on the payroll of the big companies just isn’t true. I should know – I’ve been waiting for someone to try and bribe me for years, but it just doesn’t happen. I enjoy writing for Kerrang! and you couldn’t hope to meet a nicer motley bunch of freaks. Rock Sound is also a well-maintained mainstream music magazine, also run by genuine lovers of music with an understanding of what it is to be a fan of The Rock. I also saw a couple of good new mags recently, Kruger and Nude. Plus, The Idler is good, in a noncey Grouch Club type way.

You’ve spent time with some legendary bands/artists – who’s been your favourite subject? And the hardest interview subject?

I suppose my favourite interviews have been with people who have significantly impacted modern culture, whether that’s Chuck D, Slash or System of A Down, or people like Hanif Kurieshi or film-maker Danny Boyle. The biggest bands are usually professional, courteous and like hearing their own voices, so you just have to learn to nod at the right times and smile at their nuggets of wisdom. The hardest bands to interview are usually the smaller ones who’ve had smoke blown up their arses by their record companies; ‘nu metal’ produced a fair few of those. Total numpties. I once had a run in with Goldie, which was pretty unpleasant and turned a little nasty. It’s good to see he’s doing so well now though…

Rivers from Weezer was a complete nightmare to interview. I flew to LA for 36 hours and he said ‘Yes’ and ‘No’ to every question, then got a bit pissy when, after twenty minutes, I stood up and told him I was going home. He had nothing to say. And years ago a band called Jonathan Fire*Eater (now The Walkmen) were spoilt little brats, which was a shame because I was and still am a fan. I didn’t lose any sleep over it though. In fact, I slept very well that night.

Matt Bellamy – guitar genius or self indulgent soloist?

Neither. But he is a pretty amazing songwriter and, the few times I’ve met him, a pretty engaging individual. Funny nostrils though…

The Book of Fuck – autobiographical? What were your main influences when writing it? How do you feel about the comparisons to Hunter S Thompson?

The Book Of Fuck was a snapshot of my life at the time – living in a sub-zero squat, a Northern boy in the city, struggling to make ends meet, drinking and drugging, involved in a tumultuous but highly pleasurable relationship, travellin! g around with bands, having the time of my life but also addled with worry and doubt. In fact, I’ve just described my life now. Nothing changes. But I did make up some situations and characters, because you can’t give your whole life away too soon.

Being compared to HST was very flattering. I was more inspired by a gentler, more poetic writer called Richard Brautigan, whose style I appropriated heavily, plus tonnes of others like Bukowski, Miller, Billy Childish, John and Dan Fante, Knut Hamsun, Bret Easton Ellis, Jack London, Jean Genet and Jim Carroll, who wrote The Basketball Diaries. If you can find a writer who speaks to you or for you, you have a friend for life – and without the obligations a usual friendship demands. Everyone’s a winner.

Captains of Industry – How did you get involved with that? What were the main catalysts in starting your own label? What’s your mission statement for the label?

Captains Of Industry was started in 2002 and is run by myself, my brother Rich and our pal Lee. Those two are up based up North and I’m slumming it with oiks in London. Between us we cover all bases and play to our strengths. Like, I know nothing about business, finance and economics but fortunately Rich does so that takes care of that. Lee is a design whiz and excellent drunk. Plus, we have no office, no official label stationary or any of that superfluous expenses that labels indulge in in order to look good. We exist only via a network of laptops and phonecalls, all overseen by the mysterious fourth Captain, Gary, something of an enigma and technical wizard.

We started the label for the same reason most people do – to release some cool new bands we’d heard. But we also plan on turning this into a cultural force and revolution of sorts – like some of the great art/political movements that have gone before, like the Futurists of the 1920s who shocked people into thinking in new ways via visceral noise and confrontational art. Our mission statement was to DESTROY and CREATE. Destroy the old methods and practices and create within a new landscape of idealism, naivete and discontent. A label is only as good as its bands and we have some right fucking mentalists on our roster, all of them easy to work with, all pro-active, all great in bed. We have a long way to go but the acorn is already sprouting into a sturdy oak. If we can keep afloat for a few more years, we should be in Number 10 by 2020. We’ll remove the front door and invite everyone round for a party, with fruit punch and dancing. Then we’ll install a number of Prime Ministers – black, white, gay, straight, young, old – so they can be in several places at once, that way the problems of the world will be sorted out so much quickly. Naturally, Bush will have to go, but he seems to be doing a good job of that himself. We like to think our limited edition punk rock releases are giving him a nudge. We like to think that, but it’s clearly not true.

Then we’ll all go to a Gay For Johnny Depp show and get wreckless.

So really, on paper we’re a record label, but in our hearts we’re cultural revolutionaries flying the flag for freedom and libertinarism. Currently the flag is flapping at half-mast but what the fuck, we’re free. Like, I said, naiveitie and romance is at the heart of what we! do. We’re idiots, basically.

What do think of the state of UK music scene at the moment?

I think large sections of it are trend-driven, but that’s OK. It’s fertile. Having spent time in LA, New York etc I can safely say that the UK truly does have the best music scene / industry / press / radio in the world, even if there are lot of shady Simon Cowell figures running it all. We should remember that whenever we’re grumbling. Some countries don’t even have electricity.

Hell is For Heroes were signed to Captains of, after being dropped by EMI, and as a result their second album was a huge step forward for them. Do you think majors constrict band’s creativity? And what can an indy offer that a major can’t?

The whole indie versus major argument is an on-going one, but is of little importance unless you’re prepared to change it, or get involved in some way. The only thing an indie can offer is a closer working relationship with their bands and greater artistic control, but that’s not much use without the finances to make it all happen. I know lots of folk at major record companies and most of them are nice people doing good work, some of them are friends, though as pan-international companies they do have a totally different mentality – profit above all else. We at Captains Of Industry believe in art above all else and as such we’re extremely skint. But we’re still here….still living the dream, baby.

Hell Is for Heroes have conducted themselves impeccably and are now signed to the rather super Burning Heart Records. Will still does the best windmill moves when playing guitar and Justin still performs like a kamikaze pilot; we love them and wish them luck. They’re leading by example, doing what they want to do.

What’s this rumour about you, Marilyn Manson and a marmoset?

There was no penetration.

Lastly anything to say to the readers of Crossfire…

Zac Crossfire and James Sherry are the punkest people in London. Peace and fucking…believe! Thanks Dee – it has been a pleasure!

Check out the new website and forums on www.captainsof.com for free album downloads, every month, for everyone! Also check out www.benmyers.com for all your Ben Myers’ needs!

Dee Massey

Categories
Indie Show

February 2006

DJ Zac Slack brings you the latest indie tracks from the UK and across the pond whilst being bugged by a small child.

If you have a request for the next show, click here.

February Playlist:

1. Thunderbirds Are Now! – (Aquatic Cupid’s) Harpoons of love – French Kiss
2. The Strokes – Juicebox – Rough Trade
3. Arctic Monkeys – The View From The Afternoon – Domino
4. Death From Above 1979 – Romantic Rights – Sound Virus
5. Les Savy Fav – We’ll Make A Lover Of You – French Kiss
6. Brakes – I Can’t Stand to Stand Beside You – Rough Trade
7. Belle and Sebastian – Funny Little Frog – Rough Trade
8. Editors – Munich – BMG
9. Mogwai – Friend of the Night – PIAS
10. The Arcade Fire – Neighborhood #2 (Laïka) – Merge
11. Grandaddy – Now It’s On – V2
12. Sonic Youth – Catholic Block – Geffen
13. The Smiths – What Difference Does It Make – Warner
14. Voom Blooms – Politics And Cigarettes – Fiction

Categories
Heavy Shit

February 2006

Welcome back to Crossfire’s flagship show. This month, our resident DJ’s Zac Slack and James Sherry bring you a killer, hour long show stuffed full of pre-released records that will literally make you shit your pants. Please note that these shows contain refrences to drugs, sex and rock and roll with the odd profanity chucked in for good measure.

If you would like to request tunes for the next show in March, then hurry up and leave a message here.

February playlist:

1. Corrosion of Conformity – Paranoid Opioid – Mayan
2. 3 Inches Of Blood – Deadly Sinners – Roadrunner
3. Kylesa – Train Of Thought – Prosphetic Records
4. Strapping Young Lad – Alien – Shitstorm
5. Witch – Seer – Tee Pee
6. Nebula – Fever Frey – Sweet Nothing
7. Pearls & Brass – The Tower – Drag City
8. Wolfmother – Minds Eye – Modular People
9. Children Of Bodom – In Your Face – Spinefarm/Island
10. Deep Purple – Highway Star – EMI
11. Viking Skull – Beer, Drugs And Bitches – Grand Union
12. The Sword – Barael’s Blade – Kemado

Categories
Hangover Sessions

February 2006

These shows are to help you when you are stressed, hungover or chonged out. All of these Hangover shows are recorded with bona fide hangovers as a fun release for the DJ’s sanity and usually recorded on Sunday afternoons! Genres change monthly dictated by requests. Request your tunes by clicking here.

This months Hangover Session hosted by DJ Zac Slack will revitalize your aching bones with a look back on some classic tunes from the 60’s and 70’s plus a couple of more recent tunes thrown in for good measure.

February Playlist:

1. Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young – Woodstock – Warners
2. Scott Walker – The old mans back again – Fontana
3. Lynyrd Skynyrd – Tuesday’s Gone – MCA
4. The Band – Stage Fright – Capitol
5. The Beatles – Here, There And Everywhere – EMI
6. The Beach Boys – Little Bird – Capitol
7. Nick Drake – Pink Moon – Island
8. Kate Bush – King Of The Mountain – EMI
9. Pink Floyd – Comfortably Numb – EMI
10. Neil Young – When You Dance You Can Really Love – Warner Brothers
11. The Animals – House of the Rising Sun – Abkco
12. Zoot Suit – The High Numbers – Fontana
13. The Beatles – I’m Only Sleeping – EMI

Categories
None More Punk

February 2006

This months punk show hosted by DJ’s Zac Slack and James Sherry features special guests Dev, Rory and Sam from Test Icicles on Domino Records.

If you would like to request tunes for the next show, leave your feedback here.

February Playlist:

1. Red Tape – Divebomb – Roadrunner
2. Angry Samoans – Gas Chamber – Triple X
3. Bombshell Rocks – Move Rhythm City – Household Name
4. Test Icicles – Your Biggest Mistake – Domino
5. Stretch Armstrong – To The End – WPO
6. Jaed – Catherine – Instant Karma
7. Youth of Strength – DFS – Exfist
8. Youth of Strength – Knocking Some Sense Into You – Exfist
9. Subhumans – Joe Public – bluurg
10. Test Icicles – What’s Your Damage – Domino
11. Dead Kennedy’s – Forest Fire – Alternative Tentacles
12. Butthole Surfers – The O-Men – Latino Bugger Veil
13. Descendents – Good Good Things – SST
14. ETA – Killed by Skateboarding – Deranged
15. Hardskin – Copper Cunt – Household Name
16. Conflict – Mighty and Superior – Mortarhate
17. Bad Brains – How Low Can a Punk Get – Caroline
18. NOFX – The Longest Line – Fat Wreck

Categories
Skateboarding News

In The Spotlight

The Tampa Am Contest is held in high regard by a lot of the skate world because whoever usually places in the top 5 can be pretty sure to acquire some major sponsors and turn a lot of heads. Cody McEntire was the lucky winner this year, ahead of Keegan Saunder , Willy Akers and Torey Pudwill, and he managed to thread together an impressive line of switch flips, nollie lipslides and backside heelflips despite the pressure of crowds, media and industry on lookers.

Check one of Cody’s winning runs here: http://www.fourduos.com/videos/cmac-tampa.htm

Photo of Cody McEntire stolen from www.skateparkoftampa.com

Categories
Music News

Aiden In Store

Aiden do an exclusive intimate acoustic set at the brand new FOPP in Camden on Saturday 11th February. Be there from 11:30am and come hang out with Kerrang! Magazine’s newest cover stars!

FOPP
Camden High Street
Camden Town, London, UK
Saturday 11th February
11:30am

www.aiden.org for all the band news.

Categories
Live Reviews

Sloan

Camden Underworld
31.01.06

Canadian pop-rock quartet Sloan were still relatively unknown in the UK even at the peak of their media attention when they were signed amid the flurry of major label activity that swallowed up and spat out alternative music in the wake of Nirvana in the early nineties.

They played at this very same venue some fifteen years ago to about the same amount of people as they do tonight, which isn’t exactly what you call progress. But then again, it’s fair to say that Sloan haven’t overly ‘worked’ the UK! This is the first time they’ve been here in five years and prior to that their attention to this island has always been sporadic. But then it would be. Sloan are absolutely huge in Canada and quite deservedly so.

You see, Sloan are officially better than most bands, fact! ‘How can you prove this is an undisputed fact,’ you may ask. Well, the proof is in the chemistry. Sloan contain not one, but four different singers and song-writers amongst their ranks. And each and every one of them is great. Jay Ferguson. Andrew Scott. Chris Murphy. Patrick Pentland. They all swap instruments, the all sing lead, and they all write the songs. And because of the fact (yes, get ready for another fact!) that they’ve been playing and living so tightly together for so many years, every song comes out sounding one hundred per-cent Sloan.

So, tonight is a rare ‘for fans only appearance’ by Sloan. There’s no support bands, the majority of the audience is Canadian and/or hardcore fans and the whole evening belongs to Sloan and Sloan only. They play a fast moving set that takes in old favourites amongst new tracks and rarely played tunes from their past. And they don’t leave us hanging around for two long before wheeling out the hits. Second song in and we’re getting hammered by Underwhelmed, their biggest hit from back in the day when grunge and terms such as ‘alt-rock’ ruled the world. It’s not hard to see why.

They pack the punch, dynamics and glorious pop-sensibilities of Nevermind era-Nirvana combined with the best of seventies pop-rock ‘ala Badfinger, Big Star and later on, Red Kross. The real joy is Sloan play with an enthusiasm and conviction that could almost fool you into thinking it’s the first time they’d ever played their most famous song. In the UK at least. Unsurprisingly, it gets the biggest cheer of the night.

From then on, it’s a blur. Although the band rarely sits still and constantly swaps instruments, the energy levels never dip, the harmonies are never less than spot on and the crowd, a room of singing and smiling faces, are having the time of their lives. You’d have to be a horribly sour human being not to enjoy this. Damn near pop perfection.

James Sherry

Categories
Music News

Blacknificent Seven – New Single

The heaviest of heavyweight UK Hip Hoppers, The Blacknificent Seven, release their second single U-Wot on 13th March 2006. Featuring the vocal talents of such hip hop luminaries as Roots Manuva, Est’elle, Rodney P, Skeme, Karl Hinds and Jeff 3, the single is out on Seanie T’s Dark Horizon Rekordz imprint, with an album to follow later this year.

Fresh off Seanie T’s quality hip hop imprint, Dark Horizon Recordz U Wot, the second hotly tipped single from their upcoming debut album, is a massive track that begs for loud, repeated spins. Still reeling from the buzz created by their first single, Ere Comes Da Black, hip hop’s most wanted crew are back in action.