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Former Motorhead guitarist dies

Michael Burston, a former guitarist with Motorhead, has died of ventricular fibrillation.

The guitarist, nicknamed ‘Wurzel‘, joined the seminal band in 1984 and stayed part of the line-up for the next 11 years, appearing on six studio albums. Though he left in 1995, he rejoined them here and there for some live shows and continued to play guitar for a number of other bands.

R.I.P.

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Mogwai announce new EP

Mogwai will be releasing a new EP.

The band announced that Earth Division will be released on their Rock Action Records on September 12th. The EP will contain four tracks, all brand new, called Get To France, Drunk And Crazy, Does This Always Happen? and Hound of Winter.

They play the Roundhouse in London on July 23rd as part of the iTunes Festival.

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New Game mixtape coming in August

The Game announced the release of a new mixtape last night.

Hood Mornin’ will be dropping on August 1st ahead of his new studio album R.E.D. which is slated for an August 23rd release. He has teamed up with Mars of 1500 Or Nothin’, who has worked with the LA rapper in the past, for the mixtape and if his Purp & Patron mixtape is anything to go by, it will be a good day come August 1st.

Here’s what happens when Game and Mars work together…

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Music News

Street Sound UK Fresh Reunion details

The Street Sounds UK Fresh Reunion will take place on July 16th at London’s Scala to celebrate the 25th anniversary of UK Fresh 86.

With performances from Newcleus, Captain Rock, Arthur Baker and The B Boys f. Chuck Chillout, the night promises to be a celebration of electro, hip hop and street culture. Mixmaster DJ Mirage will be on hand, dropping tunes from the 80s all the way up to the modern day providing the soundtrack to B-Boy battles and much more.

In the foyer bar will be a Street Sounds memorabilia and graffiti exhibition to walk around and enjoy as well as a special lino area for those who want toshow off their b-boy/breaking skills.

Tickets are available now at £35 going up to £40 on the door.

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Music News

New Goes Cube video online

New York hardcore masters Goes Cube have returned with a brand new video for new track ‘Thunderheads‘ lifted from the new album In Tides and Drifts.

Get some below and if you missed our interview with them, click this.

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Music News

Henry Rollins announces return to the UK

Henry Rollins will be hitting the UK in 2012 for a series of spoken word shows.

His world-renowned shows are sure to sell out fast, so make sure you pick your tickets up for the dates below, you don’t need to be told twice!

January 2012:
12th – Manchester, Bridgewater Hall
15th – Newcastle, Tyne Theatre
16th – Sheffield, Memorial Hall
17th – Bristol, St George’s
18th – Oxford, The Regal
19th – Wolverhampton, Wulfrun Hall
20th – London, Royal Festival Hall
21st – Bexhill, De La Warr Pavillion

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Music News

Kid Koala releases graphic novel and soundtrack

Kid Koala is releasing a graphic novel along with a “still picture score” of music as the soundtrack.

Space Cadet is 132 pages long and tells the story of a cadet and her guardian robot, celebrating “the idea of connectivity through family and the cycles that build generations”. The soundtrack will feature pianos, strings, horns and his weapon of choice, the turntables.

To work out the accompanying live show and gallery exhibition, Koala introduced the world to the Space Cadet Headphone Concert and Gallery which involved live visual-making and a pop-up planetarium which you can see in the video below.

Here is the tracklisting for the release, which is coming out on September 19th through Ninja Tune or pre-order it right here.

Tracklist
01. main title theme: open your book
02. goodbye: page 8
03. remembrance: page 10
04. window: page 25
05. today tomorrow: page 37
06. expedition: page 45
07. birthday: page 71
08. void: page 86
09. dawn: page 97
10. cardboard stars, seashells: page 100
11. speed of light: page 102
12. recyclotron: page 110
13. hope: page 115
14. return: page 125
15. connectivity: page 129

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The Sonics interview

Punk rock in the late 70’s was said to have come from the UK. The Sex Pistols claimed the tag at that time and propelled the image of bored, rebellious youth as we know it. Looking back to the roots of this anarchic disposition it’s easy to pick up on the fact that their influences and many other household names we know today from the punk genre such as Iggy Pop and The Ramones to name just two, took their inspiration from the garage rock scene that spread through the suburbs of American youth culture in the early 1960’s.

Back then rehearsal rooms and studios were not a luxury like in today’s cities, so setting up your gear in the family garage, shouting the odds through a microphone and making as much noise as possible was the order. That spark, that uprising brought Garage Rock (also known as Garage Punk) into the underground, ignited by a network of bands taking their pre-rehearsed tracks into local venues and releasing 7″ records to reach others in different areas and quite literally exploded as the sound of teenage rebellion.

This sonic throwback of the surf rock scene spawned one of the best bands of all time from Tacoma, Washington called The Sonics and knowing that they were in town for the Meltdown Festival curated by The Kinks frontman Ray Davies, Alex Penge hooked up with Rob Lind (saxophone and vocals) and Larry Parypa (lead guitar and vocals) before the show at the Mint Hotel in London to find out more about the band who are said to have kick started the ‘punk’ movement.

Welcome to London. Are you looking forward to your upcoming show at Meltdown with Wire?

Rob: Very much so, yes. It’s going to be a lot of fun.

Have you met Wire before? Have you played any gigs with them in the past?

Rob: No, we’re aware of Wire’s great reputation, but we have not heard of them.

Larry: …which is why when we went in there (for the sound check) and adjusted all our amps for them. So it wouldn’t sound like crap!

Tell me more about the Washington garage rock scene where it all started off. Apart from The Wailers (your manager, Buck Ormsby’s band), were there any other bands that fell under the radar?

Rob: The Pacific Northwest which that area is called was a real a hotbed for rock and roll bands. There were lots of good bands. Lots of good people came out of there.

Larry: Like Jimi Hendrix?

Rob: Well The Ventures did have a great reputation and a lot of worldwide hit records when we were young guys starting out. We liked their music. There was another band called The Frantics.

Larry: Uhh ho, gee!

Rob: They were killers. They were real good. But they didn’t really get much notice outside the local area.

You were famous for your pioneering recording techniques and arguably influenced a generation of garage rock revivalists. Did you at the time think that this technique was going to catch on and influence a lot of people?

Larry: There was no choice. We didn’t have any choice at the time. There was only two-track recording available. Mono sound on the first record. We didn’t have four-track until the later albums.

So it all started off just trying to get the record out in the first place?

Larry: Well it’s a standard, you know. We played live essentially. It wasn’t like each person had their own track and if they made a mistake they could redo their bits. We just went in there and usually did the band all at once. Then the vocals would top it off later.

Rob: It was a two-step recording process. Step one would be to roll the tape. Step two would be to play.

Rob: Those recorders were in a variety of different recording facilities. We’d go in the studio and whatever was in there we’d use.

Larry: I think (the recording) of ‘The Witch’ was in a radio studio where they cut the ads and somehow gave us the room to record. It wasn’t in the real recording studio I remember?

Rob: “Go in here boys and knock yourselves out!”

Were there any other cover songs that you were thinking of covering for the ‘Here Are The Sonics’ album that eventually never made the cut?

Rob: No, I don’t think so. ‘Leave My Kitten Alone’ (by Little Willie John) wasn’t on that album but we liked that song a lot. We don’t play that song anymore. Half a dozen songs that we played regularly on those albums we don’t even play now. We also have a new record with four original songs and we’re playing those in our sets now.

What was it like sharing stages with bands such as The Beach Boys and The Shangri-Las?

Larry: It would be interesting if you asked The Shangri-Las what they thought it was like sharing the stage with us. We really screwed them over. They were doing their own tour and we were doing our own tour. Somehow an agreement was made that we were going to back them up in their songs. I don’t know why, but we didn’t learn their songs and it didn’t turn out too well! They still remember that.

Rob: We probably appeared with The Beach Boys more than any of the other big acts. We got to know them pretty well and saw them a lot when they came to the Northwest.

Larry: I think The Kinks was my favourite act to play with. I was most impressed with them.

Rob: I’d have to agree with that too.

Larry: I remember they were wearing a lot of black, they had a sinister sound and they were moving. Those guys were really something!

Rob: Back then the state of popular music in the States was really anaemic. We were up in the Northwest playing hard. I remember one day I was in my car driving down the street, I didn’t know who The Kinks were as they weren’t famous at the time and someone on the radio said, “…here’s a new record from England”. [Rob reinacts the opening of ‘You Really Got Me’]. I heard that and almost ran off the road! We all got on the phone together, “…did you hear what those guys from England are doing?! Holy cow!” After that we learnt a bunch of their songs. We loved them.

So, was it an honour meeting Ray (Davies)?

Rob: It was. We did a short tour with them when they came to the Northwest and met them at the Spokane Coliseum back in the dressing rooms. I want to choose my words carefully here. There were a numbers of large acts (and we played with most of them at one time or another) that were good in the studio but when they played live they couldn’t hold their end up like they could in the studio. The Kinks were probably even better live than they were in the studio. That’s why we liked them so much. They were great. We thought that “those English guys are just like us”!

Over the years there have been many covers of your song ‘Strychnine’ ranging from the likes of The Flaming Lips to The Cramps to The Fall. Which cover would you say is your favourite?

Rob: To be honest, I have not heard many. Actually the best version of ‘Strychnine’, the absolute best version of ‘Strychnine’ that’s out there is by this band called The Sonics! (laughs)

How was the recording process for your new EP ‘8’? Are there any plans for any more future releases? An album release maybe?

Larry: All we have to do is get together and work them out in one recording, we just haven’t done it yet and haven’t tendered to business really. We used that particular studio (Sound House studio, Seattle) and recording engineer (Jack Endino, who worked with Nirvana, Mudhoney and Soundgarden) for the EP because we wanted something that was unprocessed, by going in and getting that one-take type of song. We didn’t want to overdo it. In fact, we play the new songs differently now to how we recorded them. We wrote the songs, went in to record at the studio and now play the songs live a little differently.

Rob: The live performances have definitely adapted those new songs from the studio. We are definitely planning on making a new full length album. We’ve been on the road almost constantly during the month of June. We’ve spent three weeks in France and Belgium and then ran back across the States to Long Beach, California for the Ink & Iron Show, which was a really big show. Then we had two days to wash clothes and come back to London.

Larry: Then we come over here and the weather’s exactly the same as it is in Seattle!

Rob: If you want to know what the weather’s like in Tacoma and Seattle, it’s just like this!

Are there any tours or festival appearances planned for the future?

Rob: We actually had a tour set up this past April in Japan, starting in Tokyo, but they had that unfortunate disaster over there and the tour got pushed back. What we’re understanding now from the Japanese promoters is that we’ll be back over there for late Winter or early Spring time. We’re sad about that as we have a big fan base in Japan and are all looking forward to going over there.

Finally, what music are you guys listening to at the moment? Do you like any current British music?

Rob: I like all different kinds of music. There are bands that we play together with at these shows that we’ve never met before and become friends with. One I can name in particular is The Detroit Cobras. They’re great guys and girls and we had a great time working with them! I worked out a t-shirt swap with the bass player, so I’ve got a Detroit Cobras t-shirt and he’s running around Detroit with a Sonics t-shirt. We know The Fuzztones quite well and have performed with them in the past.

We’ve become friends with a number of different groups. In my case, most particularly The Hives from Sweden. We’re pretty good friends with them. I exchange emails with one of the guys. When we played Stockholm a year ago they surprised the crowd and came out and did the encore with us. Pelle (Almqvist) sang ‘The Witch’. Rock musicians aren’t supposed to say they like anything apart from rock music but I love Cajun music. I also love listening to Bluegrass.

When we were here the time before last, one of the groups that opened for us was The Horrors. As a matter of fact, I think they’re even more popular now than they were a couple of years ago. They had a big record out I understand? Nice lads.

Larry: Yeah, nice guys. Pete Doherty was supposed to make an appearance also. But he shunned us off! Everyone expected that though!

Read a review from the Meltdown Festival here and find The Sonics at www.thesonicsboom.com

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Music News

Paul White to release new album

Paul White is releasing a new album.

The London producer’s new record Rapping With Paul White, is his first vocal album and features a number of great guests including Guilty Simpson, Danny Brown and Jehst and will be released on the brilliant One Handed Music label. Check out the tracklisting below and get excited, this one’s big.

1. Intro: We Make A Lot Of Noise
2. Right On
3. Trust ft. Guilty Simpson
4. Run Shit ft. Marv Won
5. One Of Life’s Pleasures ft. Danny Brown
6. The Doldrums
7. Life Is Flashing Interlude
8. Stampeding Elephants ft. Moe Pope
9. Rotten Apples ft. Tranqill
10. Thirty Days
11. A Weird Day ft. Homeboy Sandman
12. African New Wave
13. Indigo Glow ft. Jehst
14. Dirty Slang ft. Guilty Simpson
15. A New Way
16. Evasive Action
17. Wily Walruses ft. Nancy Elizabeth
18. Outro: We’ll Never End

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Who are The Black Opera?

Not much is known about The Black Opera, they’re keeping their identities secret, but they make dope music.

Simple as that really, click the video below and get down.