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Music News

Beck signs up Danger Mouse

Danger Mouse is back at it again.

The producer, who is about to unleash the new Gnarls Barkley album, is reported to be working on Beck’s album. A report on URB states that DM’s management confirmed the two men would be working together on the follow up to 2006’s The Information.

Busy boy!

www.dangermousesite.com

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Music News

Munky begins new project

Korn guitarist Munky has launched a new project.

Fear And The Nervous System will also feature Wes Borland and Bad Religion’s Brooks Wackerman as well as Billy Gould, Leopold Ross and Zach Baird. The band plan to release their new album in August on Munky’s label will Ross Robinson expected to help with production.

www.myspace.com/fearandthenervoussystem

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Music News

Jon Davis heads out alone

Korn frontman Jon Davis will be heading out for a string of solo dates this year.

The singer will perform a variety of material spanning the band’s 15 year career and will include a stop at Download Festival. The full dates are:

June

15th – Download Festival
16th – London Union Chapel
18th – Oxford Academy
19th – Sheffield Leadmill
20th – Liverpool Carling Academy
22nd – Glasgow Garage
23rd – Belfast Spring & Airbrake
24th – Dublin Academy
26th – Perth Concert Hall
27th – Inverness Ironworks

www.korn.com

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Music News

Dinosaur Jr hit the UK

Dinosaur Jr will be playing a one-off show at Koko in May.

The Massachusetts band will be headlining in Camden on May 15th before heading down to Minehead to take part in the All Tomorrow’s Parties festival held at Butlins on May 17th and 18th.

www.dinosaurjr.com

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Music News

Tellier to take on the Turkey

France will be represented by Sebastian Tellier at Eurovision.

The Sexuality star will sing the track Divine, taken from the aforementioned album, in a shock move to inject some actual talent into the competition which, as you may well know, is being headed by a turkey puppet, which is representing Ireland.

Gobble gobble.

www.myspace.com/telliersebastien

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Music News

Inner Party System are coming…

Inner Party System are a Pennsylvanian 4 piece that will rock your socks off and dance you into the ground at the same time.

The band are gearing up to head over to the UK and perform at the dates below and in preparation they have put together the following teaser trailer – get your peepers on this…

Inner Party System will be playing this year’s Camden Crawl along with a few other UK dates so be sure to come along and see them.

April:

• 15th – Hoxton Bar & Kitchen
• 16th – Death Disco @ Notting Hill Arts Club
• 17th – Nottingham – Radar @ The Social
• 18th – London – Camden Crawl pre – party @ The Crescent
• 19th – London – Camden Crawl (Venue & Stage TBC)
• 21st – Coventry – Groovy Garden @ Kasbah
• 22nd – London – Club Fandango @ The Dublin Castle

Head over to the bands MySpace to hear the single ‘Don’t Stop’ which is set for release on the 26th May with their debut album to follow on the 25th August 2008.

www.myspace.com/innerpartysystem

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Music News

Embers play Cross Kings on Saturday night

Always good to see skaters rocking out in bands. Check out Embers on Saturday 8th March at The Cross Kings on York Way, Kings Cross featuring our Robin Hayes on bass. He has a mean stand up 50, check their stuff out at www.myspace.com/embers2008

Categories
Live Reviews

You Me At Six – Live

Islington Academy – London
4/3/08

Things seem to have gone into over drive for You Me At Six in the last few months. Only 6 months ago they were low on the bill with Lights Action! and Saosin, but fast forward six months and they’re supporting Chicago’s punk pop heroes ‘The Audition‘, playing to a packed out Islington Academy and having every word of every track sung back word perfect, waves of adulation streaming from every corner of the venue.

One thing’s for sure, this five piece from Surrey are certainly doing something right.

Surfing on the wave of American emo/pop punk/screamo that’s seemingly endlessly crashing over the Atlantic to the UK, You Me At Six have been compared to Panic At The Disco, Taking Back Sunday and Elliot Minor, and on first glance you can see why, with their skinny jeans, swept aside fringes and perfectly sullen scene look, but they let their music do the talking, and from the time they bound onto stage they have the crowd eating out of the palm of their hands – with an mercilessly up-tempo, exciting set.

Armed with a batch of catchy songs that translate effortlessly well on stage the band manage to combine British charm with a scene sense of direction. They just can’t be faulted for the energy rolling off the stage and sheer presence, and when The Audition’s front man Danny Stevens joins them on stage for a rendition of ” Save it For The Bedroom” the crowds are whipped into a frenzy. “ If I Were in Your Shoes” has the crowds singing back word for word, but it’s the cover of Rhianna’s Umbrella which threatens the blow the roof off.

As they leave the stage You Me At Six can be sure that they’re won over the crowd, and with a slot at Give It A Name in April, they seem on course to be one of the success stories of 2008. Check them out, you won’t be disappointed.

Dee Massey

Categories
Music News

MGMT in London – webisode 1

MGMT visited London recently and rolled by the Crossfire office. Here’s the first installment of the filming we managed to get done down Portobello Rd.

Categories
Live Reviews

Coheed & Cambria – Live

Plus: Madina Lake, Fightstar, Circa Survive.
Southampton Guildhall
28/01/08

There’s a somewhat curious reception for Circa Survive this evening. Perhaps it’s because as the clock strikes 7:30 the band are already onstage, despite tickets for tonight’s show advertising a similar door time. More likely, however, is the fact that their experimental, ultimately ambient soundscapes are a totally new experience for most of the crowd in attendance. Front man Anthony Green’s distinctive howl cuts through the air like a hot knife through butter, and though it can often become slightly overpowering, their short set – one that’s attracted fans from as far a field as Norway – sets the tone for the night ahead regardless.

The moment Charlie Simpson strides out this evening, the howl that goes up from just about every female in attendance is deafening. Although the Fightstar vocalist may never truly escape the shadow of his past, when he and his band mates blast into the likes of Deathcar, with its Deftones-heavy undertones that see Simpson handing his guitar over to a tech and racing around the stage in a blur of bushy eyebrows, it’s clear that this is very much a real band, rather than the novelty so many would have dismissed it as two years ago.

Say what you will about them on record, but from the moment Madina Lake stride out to the ecstatic wails of thousands, the Chicago four-piece prove themselves to be one of the most thoroughly entertaining and energetic live bands on the circuit. With the crowd in full voice, singing along with lung-bursting passion to the likes of Pandora and the anthemic House Of Cards, tonight their energy is utterly infectious. As they unleash four giant, confetti-filled balloons upon the crowd, it’s impossible to deny that this is a band that knows how to work a crowd just as well as Bill Gates can work a laptop, culminating with front man Nathan Leone diving headfirst into the crowd.

Despite such antics, tonight it’s Coheed & Cambria who shine brightest. Currently a seven-piece band – featuring a keyboard player and two backing singers, so as to ensure the band lost none of the prominent vocal harmonies that are such a huge part of their sound on record – the New Yorkers sounds as massive as they now look. Plundering most of their now impressive catalogue, songs like the ever-present Favor House Atlantic get the entire crowd singing, while new cuts such as Gravemakers And Gunslingers ensure a similarly large amount of movement.

There’s even a rampant run through Iron Maiden’s The Trooper for good measure, main man Claudio Sanchez aiming his guitar at the crowd like a gun and shredding with the grin of a man possessed. It’s the mark of a band growing bigger with every show – both in popularity and confidence – a fact that’s evident during set closer Welcome Home. A song of epic proportions in its own right, tonight it positively soars, visibly and sonically boosted by the mammoth line-up before us. As the song reaches its guitar-led climax, a thousand colours dancing in the background as a thousand fists pump the air, you can’t help but wonder just how high Coheed & Cambria may rise in the coming months and years. You wonder just how many people the band may consist of next time they grace our shores. Above all else, you wonder just how incredible such a spectacle may actually be.

Ryan Bird

Photos by Graham Pentz @ G-Tizzle Photography