One of our favourite new bands here at Crossfire Fake Problems have been on tour in the UK with Frank Turner and have been successfully whipping up a frenzy at every show. Check out part one of their video blogs from this tour here and look out for them on the road.
Category: Music
The Gaymers Camden Crawl has teamed up with the charity War Child for a special gig in November.
The launch gig will be at the new venue in Camden, The Blues Kitchen, on November 4th and will be a fund raising event with performances from Kitty, Daisy & Lewis, The Holloways, Ou Est Le Swimming Pool, Bleech, Man Like Me, MPHO, New Rhodes, Beans on Toast and surprise special guests. DJ sets will come from Lewis Rainsbury, Sean McLusky (1234) and Ed (ex-The Darkness).
Doors are at 6pm and entrance is £8 on the door, all of which will go to War Child. Those people who have purchased Early Bird tickets for 2010’s Gaymers Camden Crawl will be allowed in free on a first come, first served basis until 7pm.
Early bird tickets will go on sale at 9am on Thursday October 29th and the first 1,000 tickets bought will receive a limited edition War Child and Gaymers Camden Crawl Christmas card featuring a FREE compilation album, titled ‘Camden Heroes’, featuring tracks from Beans On Toast, Bleech, Emmy The Great, Graham Coxon, The Holloways, The King Blues, Kitty, Daisy & Lewis, Madness, Man Like Me, New Rhodes, Ou Est Le Swimming Pool and for each of these tickets purchased, the Crawl will donate £2 to War Child.
For more info make sure to check out www.twitter.com/thecamdencrawl.
The Silent Years Interview
The Silent Years’ album ‘The Globe’ was released to critical acclaim in their native US earlier this year.
This week (19th October to be precise) the album got its UK release and we managed to catch up with singer Josh Epstein to talk about their thoughts on the UK music scene and how they can relate to it, as well as discussing their history, present and future.
You’re a band from Detroit, however you are making music that’s really big in England at the moment, were you aware of the English music scene in writing your latest record or is it something new to you?
The English music scene is relatively new to us. There always seem to be British ex patriots at our shows in the States, and they often tell us that we would go over well in the UK. I think that’s the extent of our experience there!
How important is the UK to you in terms of music and how do you feel about the prospect of touring over here?
The UK seems to me to be more receptive to music that sounds different from the rest. I’ve heard that many bands from the US have to succeed in the UK before people at home take notice of them, which speaks to the UK audience’s tastes quite well. We are very excited to tour over there in the next few months.
When did you all start out making music and what drew you to it to begin with?
I actually was humming in my crib as a 9 month old, and my family is quite musical so I’ve been playing instruments and vocalizing all my life. Music is just the oldest thing in the world that endures and I can’t imagine not being drawn to it.
How did you all meet? What are the dynamics within the group like?
We all met around Detroit as members of various projects in the music scene. The Detroit music scene is very small and everyone gets on well with each other for the most part. We are all pretty close friends and treat being with each other in the band like an opportunity to spend time with good friends.
I understand from another interview that you got your name from a former member’s time spent in mime school, was it not strange keeping the name thought of by someone who’s not in the band anymore?
It was a bit strange to keep the name, but that member (Ryan Trager) actually still plays with us from time to time. There are never any hard feelings when someone decides to try something else. We treat this project like a giant annual family reunion sometimes!
You have a sound that’s pretty fresh and there haven’t been a great deal of American bands making it, what are the main things that influence you?
I think that we all genuinely love all types of music. Currently, I’m on a Paul Simon kick that is bordering on sickness. I’ve also been listening to T.P. Orchestra Poly-rhythmo a lot lately. I go through periods where I’m just rabidly digesting the newest stuff out there, but typically before we go to record I listen to the old standards.
From reading your biography you obviously are a busy band with the release of albums. ep’s and touring, what else do you do to keep yourselves busy when not doing band things?
I have been writing for other artists lately and producing some bands. I’ve gotten really comfortable in the studio because we’ve recorded ourselves for as long as I can recall out of necessity so I love to try and work with other bands and artists when possible.
I’ve also been working on a Broadway production with a talented friend and am trying to start a project where we get the remaining members of The Funk Brothers back together to record in the old Motown Studio called “Hittsville USA” in Detroit. The rest of the group all have projects that they are working on like writing children’s books and making electronic music.
As you’ve had quite a few releases in your time as a band, recording must be a huge part of it for you, what is the recording process like for you?
We try to record as often as we can because as a musician you’re always looking forward to the next project and given the speed of information these days it’s now feasible to release almost as fast as you can record. We usually record in my parents’ basement because we’ve figured it out for the most part acoustically. We will usually do Drums and Bass first, then Cassie and I add way too much stuff and we wind up with ungodly sessions with 115 tracks which are a pain to mix.
A lot of bands don’t really enjoy recording and would prefer to tour a lot, which do you prefer and what attracts you to what you prefer?
I think that both are wonderful, but at this point I’ve grown to realize that they are 2 entirely different animals. Performing is a less creative process (save the preparations for touring and show planning) and more of a group experience. We try to make sure that everyone in the room at our show leaves feeling like they had an experience. Recording and writing is a wholly emotional release and so it’s far different. I think it’s probably healthy to do both as often as one can.
You’ve toured with quite an array of bands in your time from the kooks to motion city soundtrack, how do fans of different genres of music react to you? Are there any genres that are particularly loving or hostile?
We are a fairly broad band in terms of style, so we perform with many different types of groups. I am very happy for anyone who is pursuing a passion so I love playing with all types of bands. We’ve been lucky in that our performance is fairly interactive so we are pretty accessible to all in the live setting. I think that a lot of bands forget that as a performer it’s your job to make people have a good time, and we really try to do that.
What is your live show like? Anything out of the ordinary that happens on stage?
Our live show is a living and changing thing. We never plan things, and sometimes we’ll have up to 18 people playing with us. Spontaneity is the key to creating an experience that’s unique and genuine.
What do you have planned for the rest of the year?
In September we are headed to Los Angeles to make a new full length record in a new environment. We are hoping to do a UK tour sometime soon. Hopefully we’ll have a new full length out in early 2010.
Devil Sold His Soul sign new deal
Devil Sold His Soul have signed to Century Media Records.
To celebrate the signing, they have also announced two UK dates for November. Make sure you keep your eyes open for more UK dates in 2010 which will no doubt showcase the material from their new album which is set for a first-half-of-the-year release. The tourdates are:
November 6th – Cardiff, Clwb Ifor Bach
November 10th – London, Upstairs at Relentless Garage
Rolo Tomassi confirm Diplo collabo
Rolo Tomassi have confirmed they are working with Diplo.
The Sheffield band have flown to Los Angeles to work with the Philly DJ/Producer who they met at SXSW in March this year. The story is Diplo was already a fan of the group and asked them if they could work together after their set in Austin. The record is due out in March 2010.
Fake Problems go acoustic
Check out a couple of tracks from our favourite Fakey P’s, stripped right back to their bare bones. Make sure you check the band out on tour with Frank Turner now!
Tabernacle Song
Grand Finale
Them Crooked Vultures album news
Them Crooked Vultures will release their debut album on November 16th.
The group of John Paul Jones, Josh Homme and Dave Grohl self-produced the record and previewed some of the material earlier this year on a handful of dates. Expect to see some dates in the UK announced sooner rather than later. The tracklisting for the self-titled album is:
No One Loves Me & Neither Do I
Mind Eraser, No Chaser
New Fang
Dead End Friends
Elephants
Scumbag Blues
Bandoliers
Reptiles
Interlude With Ludes
Warsaw or The First Breath You Take After You Give Up
Caligulove
Gunman
Spinning In Daffodils
Get hyped:
Felt get grilled
The first in what is expected to be quite a few question and answer sessions with rap supergroup Felt has emerged.
Check it out and hold tight the beat at the end, huge:
New Dead Confed video
Dead Confederate have uploaded the beautiful video for their new single ‘The Rat’, which is out on November 2nd. Check it out here:
Pavement to play London in 2010
Pavement have announced they will be playing O2 Academy in Brixton on May 11 next year.
The band, who recently announced US dates and their participation as the curators of ATP, will play Brixton over 10 years after their played their “last ever” show there. Get hyped.