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Skateboarding News

The Harmony welcomes Taylor Oakley

The Harmony have made a new addition to their flow roster in the shape and form of the Bridgend Who Clothing debonair Taylor Oakley.

Watch his rad welcome clip below featuring a guest high five appearance from the CSC head honcho and an eye-opening last trick. Watch it!

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Skateboarding News

Watch: Mini Greg Hunt Documentary

Greg Hunt is one of the most revered filmmakers in skate film history. His vast filmography ranges from the aesthetic mindgasm that was Mind Field to the perfectly composed Sight Unseen to the unmatched epicness that was The DC Video.

Watch below as he explains in this short documentary by Josh Zucker, ‘In The Field‘ a little about his career and why skateboarding has become such a significant influence in his life.

Categories
Album Reviews Buzz Chart Reviews

Aeroplane

We Can’t Fly
Wall Of Sound

Establishing themselves as the demi-gods of underground Italo disco scene, Aeroplane first caught our attention with their spacious & glacial re-works of Friendly Fires Paris and Grace Jones William’s Blood. This duo it seems could do no wrong. And the debut album, we assure you, does not disappoint.

Now minus Stephen Fascina, this is a solo offering from Vito Deluca who continues under the name. We Can’t Fly, co-produced by Francophile Betrand Burgalat, is a mind blowing, pulse racing, heady blend of influences stemming as far and wide as Pink Floyd, Au Revoir Simone, Air, 70s soulful disc, Georgio Moroda to Jeff Wayne’s cult odyssey War of the Worlds, all laid down to big production credentials a la Trevor Horn.  Guest vocalists at hand include LA hipster Sky Ferreira and Merry Clayton who provided backing vocals to the Stone’s Gimme Shelter (I Don’t Feel) and even Moroder makes an appearance.

A truly dazzling debut accomplishment – in every essence a modern day cult classic.

Secret Squirrel

Categories
Album Reviews Buzz Chart Reviews

No Age

Everything In Between
Sub-Pop

Three albums into a short yet critically lauded career, at this stage No Age would probably be forgiven a mis-step. With two great albums already under their belts the band have quickly become one of Sub Pop’s most prized assets, and the addition of Everything in Between to their discography will do this status no harm.

Unlike the band’s previous albums, Everything in Between wastes no time in getting straight into it. The usual ambient and feedback interludes are saved for the second half of the record, as we are greeted by straight up garage rock tracks, laced with more melody than ever before. The band have lost none of the warm and comforting fuzz that they’re known for, but there’s an added sheen to the production of songs like ‘Glitter’ that feels like a step forward for the band. This progression is so slight that they could never be accused of attempting to sound more radio friendly, and when they want to, as on ‘Fever Dreaming’, they still channel raw punk influences.

What makes No Age such an interesting recorded band, though, is their ability to switch it up and produce moments of shimmering instrumental beauty. The first sign of this falls seven tracks in, as shoegazy interlude ‘Katerpillar’ breaks up the record’s two halves. From here the record becomes more varied, as a trio of slow burners ‘Sorts’, ‘Dusted’ and ‘Positive Amputation’ add gorgeous texture to the record. It’s the band’s ability to switch effortlessly between the two that makes them so special, as the album finishes on the poppy duet ‘Chem Trails’.

Where exactly Everything in Between ranks next to Nouns and Weirdo Rippers remains to be seen, but it already feels like a record that could be lived in for a long time to come. In a year where indie rock has at times looked so short of ideas, No Age remain one of the genre’s bright sparks.

Sleekly Lion

Categories
DVD Reviews

Transworld – Hallelujah

Whatever stance you have towards the somewhat conservative nature of Transworld videos (the unchanging opening montage – some sections – friend montage – some more sections) you cannot knock them for their as yet unparalleled consistency. Every nine months you can expect your local SOS to stock a DVD featuring five or six skaters with what’s likely to be the best footage they put out all year. The selection is spot on too: the last section will almost always go to someone who is killing it harder than anyone at the time of print (Torey Pudwill in Hallelujah, Sean Malto in And Now, Dylan Rieder in A Time To Shine, Heath Kirchart in Sight Unseen), the first section will often go to someone young, fresh faced and hot off the back of an already banging year cementing their style (Tyler Bledsoe here, Baby Lamb in And Now, Kellen James in Right Foot Forward) and the rest will do much more than just fill in the gaps. New names will be broken and slept-on heads will wake people up.

Chris Ray and Jon Holland are simply incapable of filming anything below a high standard. Sure, the editing may not be god tier anymore,  but it’s the highest shelf below it. Hallelujah is the latest release and offers what is likely to be considered the best line-up in almost ten years. I’m sure that was said about the last one, but consider how sought after Tyler Bledsoe footage is after Mindfield, try to imagine how many Slap lurkers will be exceptionally hyperbolic at a new Pete Eldrige section (for good reason) and just think what another closing section from T-Puds could be filled with. A TWS production is guaranteed skateboarding excellence and that’s exactly what Hallelujah is.

This year’s unique-selling-point for the intro is a camera somehow attached onto the underside of the deck providing a dizzying perspective of what an insect would see if it were hanging out on your baseplate. It works, and doesn’t subtract anything from the finished product like intros often have the tendency to do. However, it will be swiftly forgotten upon watching Tyler Bledsoe’s section. Right, how to describe this section… OK! So some of you may be aware of genre of electronic music called IDM – for those who don’t know it’s the acronym for what idiots sometimes use to describe ‘Intelligent Dance Music’, a term that Aphex Twin, his own music regularly described as IDM, has dismissed as total pony. The way Bledsoe skates reminds me of the precision and technical production of an IDM record (having Modeselektor for his Mind Field music was perfect context) but with an inexplicably human feel. His tricks and ledge combos are unthinkable but at the same time they are neither robotic nor cringey. Tyler is one of my favourite skaters to watch, and this section only cemented that; prepare to be introduced to an entirely different but very natural perspective of skating.

Taylor Bingaman is the name that many of you might not have heard of. But if this is a section to wake people up then it does so more effectively than both the terrible brostep business that’s polluting student nights everywhere and that fucking awful alarm tone on my blackberry that goes off every morning because I cannot be bothered to change it. Bingaman has a surname so awesome that it deserves to be mentioned again  and kills it on any terrain you can imagine. The section starts a little handrail heavy (which is arguably a change in the 8” ledge, bankle-ridden climate) and then escalates into an ATV assault on concrete parks complete with a backside noseblunt screecher and a mammoth oververt 5-0 grab in. He deserves your attention for that last trick alone but this is a pretty spectacular section even in the ridiculous standard of 2010.

Pete Eldrige is the kind of guy who will be described as a ‘skater’s-skater’, a phrase as redundant as it is impossibly stupid. Pete Eldrige is rad to watch and is just a skater doing his own thing, he’s not out to please those that so often arrogantly describe themselves as a ‘proper’ skater, but is out there getting footage and making me stoked. He choice of trick and spot is easy to relate to, but the way in which it’s executed makes him a very special watch. Comparatively  ‘easy’ tricks are done on the gnarliest spots and ‘mess-around’ spots fall victim to absurd trickery. This section is just one big massive treat for fans of the east-coast machine who isn’t at all afraid to rock it to Rick Ross.

Next is the famous Friends montage that TWS not only made popular but continue to make the best in a trend that can only get bigger. Why shouldn’t it? Skating with friends is the whole point of skating, and if they rip then get them in. But above all that, keep this in mind, Ben Hatchell will make your head explode. That’s all.

We’re approaching the EPICLASTPART now so I’m sure you’re expecting something a little progressive. Leave it to Ryan Decenzo of the unstoppable Decenzo clan to flip open your head with stuff you wouldn’t have imagined doing in THSP8 and stuff that wasn’t even possible in THSP1. Give this one a few rewatches to fully comprehend what on earth is going on beneath this kid’s feet. There’s plenty of gnar to keep the heshers gonna hesh crew satisfied too, including and lipslide on a rollercoaster track shaped hubba ledge and a switch 180 down the gap Reynolds kickflips in Stay Gold. Oh, spoilers!

Torey Pudwill tends to polarize opinion because apparently wavey arms are enough to make people hate on a backlip kickflip backlip. Sure, sometimes it does look like he’s giving himself a Mexican wave after landing certain tricks, but I think it makes each mindfuck manoeuvre look even more rad. The way he stamps his deck down when flipping out of any goddamn slide he wants to do makes you wonder if his skateboard called his mother a fat bitch. This is about as epic as a TWSEPICLASTPART can get, that just typing about it is causing the memory of what can only be described as the greatest backside smith grind ever performed to take over this word document and make any further commentary impossible. Seek this one out.

Bellend Sebastian

Categories
Music Events Music News

Marnie Stern to play two London dates

In addition to the brilliant news that Marnie Stern will be taking her fiddly guitar shredding live show to the UK in November, it has been announced that she will be performing two London dates.

Her forthcoming self-titled album is the third full-length studio release to come from the DIY technoise songwriter, and is due on October 18th through Souterrain Transmissions. Download a cut from the new album ‘For Ash‘ after the tour dates.

November

18th – Nottingham,  Bodega
19th – Brighton,  Audio
20th – Bristol,  Thekla
21st – Sheffield,  The Harley
22nd – Glasgow,  Captains Rest
23rd – Manchester,  The Deaf Institute
25th – London, Hoxton Bar and Kitchen (GASH)
26th – London, The Lexington (White Light)

Marnie Stern – For Ash by Crossfire Music

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Music News

Radiohead wonder how to release new album

In an essay for Index On Censorship, Radiohead bassist Colin Greenwood has spoken on about the digital landscape musicians have to release music into in a radically different industry just three years after the release of In Rainbows changed more or less everything.

In his interesting post (read it here, you should) he discusses how Radiohead are currently in the process of deciding how to release their latest bunch of songs, which yes, they have indeed finished. A new album is due, but who knows what format it could arrive in.

Rest assured though, if it’s in the hands of those who influenced how music can be released and distributed for the greater benefit of artists in the last few years then it’ll be something likely to change everything, again; much more so than a bloody iPhone. And if the new songs are anything like ‘These Twisted Words‘, which leaked last year then we can only assume that they will be awesome.

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Skateboarding News

House Comp footage!

This weekend The House in Sheffield hosted its annual competition that always draws in heavy hitters from both the local scenes and the UK travelling possee.

Elliot Tebbs‘ edit of the day is now online and can be seen below. The clip features expected bangers from Ben Grove, Craig Smedley, Eddie Belvedere, Danny Beall and loads more.

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Skateboarding News

Introducing Lifeblood Skateboards

Portland-based Unheard Distribution is preparing to launch Lifeblood Skateboards, a new company headed by none other than someone with a particularly lifelong appetite for skateboarding, Bryce Kanights.

The initial Lifeblood six-pack features Kevin Kowalski, Johnny Turgesen, Frank Faria, Mason Huggins, Oudalay Philavanh and Cody Lockwood. Here’s what Bryce himself has to say about his latest project:

Skateboarding is a truly unique activity that has become a life changer for a great majority of us for years… To work with this crew of young guns and witness their soulful skill, dedication, progression, and camaraderie is awesome and inspiring. All in all, skateboarding is our lifeblood…skate everything

Watch their promo video below and get hyped. A fresh catalogue for Fall 2010 will be available soon. For an interview we conducted with Bryce earlier this year head here and read some words of wisdom from Mr. BK.

Lifeblood Skateboards Promo Video – Orcas Island from Lifeblood Skateboards on Vimeo.

Categories
Skateboarding News

Eat some Leaky Quiche

The Drawing Boards have posted some offcut footage from their Leaky Quiche tour.

Expect the hammers to come when the full edit surfaces but until that time, chill to Jak Tonge, Isaac Miller and other quiche enthusiasts in this bite-size quiche edit. Stack ’em up.