Categories
Music News

Gorillaz Take On Monkey!

Worldwide phenomenon and Crossfire favourites Gorillaz have announced they are going to be branching out even more in 2007, when they are teaming with with Shaolin monks, acrobats, martial aritsts and even the Peking Opera for the Manchester International Festival.

The interpretation will be of the story of the Monkey King, a Chinese literary classic, and will have its set designed by Jamie Hewlett with frontman Damon Albarn bringing the music to the production. It will be shown first on the 28th of June next year and is sure to be a visual spectacular.

The animated superstars are waiting for you over at www.gorillaz.com – don’t keep them waiting!

Categories
Music News

Gnarls Barkley Album News

The already huge producer Danger Mouse, who became a bona fide fixture in people’s favourites list last year thanks to his beats on the Gorillaz album and on DangerDoom, has a new project coming out in 2006 and it is already making waves throughout the hip hop world.

The project, which features Goodie Mob’s Cee-Lo, who provided the chorus to the brilliant Benzi Box on the DangerDoom album. The first single, Crazy, is due for release in April, with the album, St. Elsewhere is scheduled for a May release.

The group play the Coachella festival at the end of April and promise to deliver another slice of vintage Danger Mouse for 2006.

www.gnarlsbarkley.com or www.myspace.com/gnarlsbarkley for all the info.

Categories
Music News

Monster Magnet Tour Cancelled

The European tour the band were on throughout March has been cancelled due to an overdose suffered by Dave Wyndorf of the band. Whilst his full recovery is expected, obviously it means the band will not be able to make their way to these shores for the dates scheduled.

The group have said that they are confident he’ll be back from this overdose and that they will continue to bring their brand of rock and roll to their fans.

For your Magnet delights, hit up www.monstermagnet.net for everything.

Categories
Interviews

Hell Is For Heroes Interview

2005 was a frenetic year for the London based post-hardcore supremos Hell is for Heroes. A change of labels, a new album, a live DVD and countless live shows catapulted them back into the public eye – and this year looks to be much the same.

Renowned for the intensity of their live shows, they left EMI midway through recording their second album and signed to the people’s champion of labels – the ever growing Captains of Industry, and are now settling over at Burning Heart and getting ready to head back out onto the open road.

Frontman Justin Schlosberg took some time out to answer a few questions about the last year from Dee Massey regarding the bands future..and most importantly whether he likes pleasure or pain.

Its been a busy few years for the band, The Neon Handshake took the UK by storm and you guys were riding the crest of a huge popularity wave. Can you tell us a little more behind the split with EMI/Chrysalis. The line in Five Kids Go “fuck your well trained golden handshake” seems to suggest you weren’t completely content with being on a major.

The split with EMI was over differences in musical taste. We respect them for not being into our new songs and I think they respected us for not wanting to change them. We were always destined to be a ‘difficult’ band for a major label, not least because we don’t have 6 figure album sales. But we had a good time with them and generally they treated us ok even if they were a bit annoying at times

You signed to Captains of Industry – compared to working with EMI how different it is being on an indie label? What are the good and bad points? And Burning Heart now – how’s that going?

It’s more real I guess. We don’t get picked up by chauffeurs but we do communicate with our label directly and relate to other bands on their roster.

For Transit Disrupt you returned to Tonteknik Studios with Pelle Henricsson and Eskil Lovstrom. How did you recording in a foreign country, and do you feel getting away from London and isolating yourself there was a positive thing for the band?

Pelle and Eskil are our friends and we would have recorded with them anywhere. Just so happens they have a great studio which is a converted mental asylum complete with eerie underground passage ways and clinically white walls. Suited us down to the ground. We also did some recording in a barn in the woods in the middle of nowhere. Sadly we didn’t learn any Swedish apart from the obligatory greetings and swear words.

How much creative control did you have over the album, how involved do you get in the production? How do you feel the sound has grown with the second album? Hopes for the third?

Since we left EMI we have complete creative control. Recording with Pelle and Eskil never feels like ‘the band vs the producers’. its more like they’re our 6th and 7th members – they play on the record and we’re involved in the production. We spent a long time writing the second record, mainly due to personal issues and because we wanted to push our songwriting further. None of us are technical geniuses and we’re certainly not the most prolific band in the world. so it takes a while to meet our expectations. We hope the 3rd album will come quicker though. we got off to a good start and wrote one of our best songs ever. but now the standard’s been set we have to try and live up to it with everything else we put on the album. that could be a tall order.

Who would you cite as your main influences? What bands do you listen to?

It varies a lot between us and changes over time. right now I’m listening to JR Ewing, Explosions in the Sky, Fugazi, Caretaker and Mono.

One thing that always strikes me about HIFH is the ferocity of your live shows – the intensity and passion rolling off that stage is amazing – back in 2003 you actually suffered a minor brain hemorrhage after a show? Has that slowed you down or made you reassess how you perform live?

Kind of. Its not that our shows are any less intense but after a while just screaming and prancing around like a maniac starts to feel less intense. We’re constantly trying to evolve and grow as a band and I think that’s reflected in our shows. We still love the sound of loud dirty guitars though so in that sense i think we’ll always put on a good hard rock show. its just getting a bit more varied.

You toured the UK and Europe last year, how was it to be back on stage? What was your most memorable show?

It was good to get out to places we’ve never been – it makes touring a lot more interesting. The shows were a mixed bag. Some of our best and worst. Most memorable was Paris. It was the last show of a long tour and it was the biggest and best. Tours rarely end on such an undisputed climax.

Where’s your favourites venue to play?

Nouveau Casino, Paris

Who’s the most annoying member of the band in the tour bus?

Me!

What kind of stuff you guys get up on the tour bus to pass the time?

Read, watch bad films, talk nonsense, smoke weed, drink, sleep.

Got any dirt on anyone on the band?

Yes. Loads. [spoilsport!]

Worst experience of the tour?

Being locked out our hotel in Denmark at 4 in the morning in winter, drunk and freezing to death.

What does 2006 hold for Hell is for Heroes? When will we see you guys onstage in London again?

We’re back on the road in March and April. We’ll be in London on the 10th March at the Mean Fiddler. It’s a co-headline with Boy Sets Fire from the US. Hopefully we’ll break with tradition and write, record and release an album within a year. We also have our first album release in the US next month through Epitaph.

And last…quickfire round please Mr Schlosburg.

Favourite album at present?

Explosions in the Sky – ‘Those who tell the truth will never die’

Favourite drink?

Mojito

Worst habit?

You don’t want to know…

Guilty pleasure?

As above…

Pizza or curry?

Curry…

Pleasure or pain?

I like them both. At the same time!

Beer or spirits?

As above.

Giver or taker?

Definitely a taker.

And finally..any last words of wisdom for the readers of Caught in the Crossfire?

Remember to clean behind your ears and between your toes.

Will do.

For further information on Hell is For Heroes tour check out their site www.hell-is-for-heroes.net or www.burningheart.com

Dee Massey

Categories
Music News

White Rose Movement Tour

The White Rose Movement, who have supported the likes of Soulwax, Bloc Party and The Rakes are about to hit the road on their own headline tour. The debut album, Kick, features singles Love Is A Number and Alsatian and forthcoming single Girls In The Back and will be released on April 17.

WHITE ROSE MOVEMENT HEADLINE TOUR:


Wednesday 1st
– Liverpool Barfly
Thursday 2nd – Loughborough University
Saturday 4th – Cambridge APU
Sunday 5th – Southampton Joiners Arms
Monday 6th – Nottingham Rescue Rooms
Wednesday 8th – Glasgow Barfly
Thursday 9th – Sheffield Leadmill
Friday 10th – Birmingham Barfly
Sunday 12th – Manchester Night & Day
Monday 13th – London Kings College

Check out www.whiterosemovement.co.uk for all the details.

Categories
Music News

Relentless Rockit Launcher Band Comp!

Welcome to Rockit Launcher, Crossfire’s 2 week search for a band to support The Paddingtons in a secret location currently floating on the Thames in London this very Thursday March 9th in association with Relentless Energy drink.

Are you in a band? Do you know people in bands? If so, listen up.

If your band reckons it has what it takes and are up for a challenge, then we have unleashed an unbelievable opportunity to help one lucky unsigned band earn the gig of their dreams in London next month. But will it be your band or someone you know?

If you visit this site daily and have done so for a while, you will know that we put together some of the most rocking parties in the UK, this one will be the biggest show to date with a line up that will rock your ankles into submission.

We are looking for a hard-working, relentlessly energetic band to support Hull’s most famous indie punk starlets and play this exclusive invite only party alongside XFM DJ’s Eddie Temple-Morris and Iain Baker and Crossfire DJ’s Zac Slack and James Sherry.

All you have to do is email a link of your website to relentless@caughtinthecrossfire.com and make sure that your site hosts MP3’s of your tracks you would like to enter, plus images of your band, a short biog and most importantly your contact details! Don’t forget, you must make sure that you are available to play the gig in London on Thursday 9th March at about 9pm and also be available to soundcheck during the day.

We will host the top 5 entrants right here on this page and votes will decide who plays the show. Bands will be measured on their relentless attitude, killer hooks and of course song quality leaving a public vote to determine who stands out in the pit. The chosen ones will then be decided by an industry panel made up of XFM DJs, Caught in the Crossfire bosses and assorted label A&R’s, so tell your friends about this as it’s gonna be another legendary night that goes off – for all the right reasons. Your band will be heard by over 150,000 people in the next month alone on this Crossfire site plus radio DJ’s, A&R people and the music industry will all be aware of your music overnight.

Please note that you have 10 days to submit your band. So get typing and visit the chart here.

Visit Relentless Energy here…

Categories
Music News

Kenisia Album

That’s right after years of promising ‘it’s on its way’, KENISIA have finally finished their new album. Over 3 years in the making, it was recorded at Toybox Studios in Bristol last summer and is the band’s first album with James Lambeth on lead vocals. James’ amazing soul infused voice has brought a whole new dimension to the bands new songs so prepare yourself for a whole new sound of KENISIA in 2006. We’re all very excited about it and are looking forward to getting it out there.

You can listen to the new song ‘Second Skin’ from the upcoming album on the band’s MySpace page at www.myspace.com/kenisia. You can also download the MP3 here.

Catch the guys on tour at the following shows :

March 25th (Saturday) : PADSTOW : venue tbc
March 30th (Thursday) : BRISTOL : The Croft with The Planet Smashers + Slick Fifty + The Restraints
March 31st (Friday) : TROWBRIDGE : The Hub
April 01st (Saturday) : LONDON : Camden Underworld with The Planet Smashers + Catch-It Kebabs + Random Hand (London Album Launch Show!)
April 07th (Friday) : ARBROATH : Viewfield Hotel with One Man Race + State Of Affairs
April 08th (Saturday) : ABERDEEN : Kef (Formerly Lava)
April 15th (Saturday) : ST ALBANS : The Pioneer with Captain Everything

Categories
Live Reviews

Ryan Adams

The Apollo Victoria
24.02.06

Going to see Ryan Adams is a bit of a hit and miss affair. He could be either on the top of his game, or a heartbreakingly shambolic mess – and that’s if he even turns up. The last two times I’ve had tickets to see him he’s bailed, once due to falling headfirst off the stage at Manchester and almost severing his arm in the orchestra pit, and the other time a mysterious ‘illness’ which was reported to be a little too much playtime with class As. Rumours have already splintered off from his UK tour of him appearing dazed, trailing off songs and slurring his words. No one likes to see their hero fail, and so it’s with a nervous reticence that I look forward to the show.

But show up he did. And what a show he laid on for the hundreds of fans at this sold out show. As he walks out on the large stage the applause is thundering and he looks taken aback. Nodding and smiling self consciously he sits down with his acoustic guitar and without a word is off. ‘My Winding Wheel’ is clear and perfect; words perfectly formed and spun out over the audience. ‘Sweet Lil Gal’ and ‘Why Do They Leave’ are poignant. ‘Lover..why do they leave..at the time you needed them so.’ he sings softly. Silence settles. One lone person claps.

‘Oh hell..nice to see I still have a fan. I love my one fan’ Ryan quips..and then he’s off. ‘I’ve been told I’m not meant to speak tonight,’ he tells us, grinning as he lights another ever present cigarette, ‘But I’m drunk, so I’m speaking….’ Every person hangs on his every word, his every look, a raised eyebrow brings howls of laughter, he tells off his guitar for a wrong chord, muttering to himself and the audience react to every word. He strums a few notes then stops to chat again. A favourite topic is the haters online who complain about his live performances being unregulated and improvised “I mean…they should chill out …smoke some week…get some pot…’ he shrugs, reading and then accidentally dropping his notebook.

Lighthouses‘ is prefixed with a long, random story of how his grandmother killed herself in an old people’s home by pressing her pain relief morphine drip too many times in protest to moving rooms. Adams quips that if only it was so easy for him…he has to leave the house, get a cab and go find a dealer for his fix. We laugh with him, but it’s an uneasy black humour. The man on stage is dripping with talent, but you can’t help wonder where it’ll all end, the online rumour merchants spin out yarns of serious drug abuse that you hope isn’t true. Can it have a happy ending? But without his demons – would his songs mean anything? Would his lyrics lose their dark humour and bittersweet reality? Right on cue a police siren screams outside and he grins ‘Ah shit…they’re coming for me!’

Sylvia Path’ and ‘Shakedown on 9th Street’ are both stripped down to perfection. He fades into an acoustic version of ‘New York, New York’ but gives up. ‘I just want to talk!’ Sitting astride his piano st! ool he’s endearing, witty, earnest and funny. He’s confused as to why his fans are still there for him, admitting ‘I’m baffled…totally baffled why you guys still come out for me. It’s been a difficult couple of years….so thank you.’

Call Me on Your Way Back Home’ stands out for me as the track of the night. There’s a solemn break in his voice, a fragility that catches you. ‘Call Me on Your way back home..cos I miss you. And I just wanna die without you..or I just wanna die with you’ – the words hang in the air, for a moment no one moves, no one claps, as though it would shatter the moment.

After over 2 and a half hours he introduces his last track, the wonderful honky tonk ‘Come Pick Me Up’ with it’s rolling melancholy chorus of ‘Come pick me up
Take me out, fuck me up, steal my records, screw all my friends.. they’re all full of shit, with a smile on your face …and then do it again
.” Tonight on stage we have a! charmer, the joker – the man with more talent on his little finger than half the acts out there. He makes them look like amateurs. Armed with an endless supply of material his singing is effortless; stripped down to just a piano, guitar and a harmonica he spins out perfect melodies laced with lyrics that stay with you for days afterwards.

Love him or hate him, tonight at least Ryan Adams shines, taking his rightful place as one of the most charismatic and engaging performers of our generation. You take your chances on him, and when the payback is this good..it’s almost worth the disappointment of previous years.

Ryan’s latest album ’29’ is out now on Mercury. For further information knock yourself out at www.ryan-adams.com

Dee Massey

Categories
Music News

Motley Crue DVD

Mötley Crüe finally reformed in 2005, and took their outrageously successful “Red White and Crue” tour around the globe. Now the tour is available for the very first time on DVD.

Infamous for their visually wild and intense live stage shows “Carnival of Sins” captures original line-up—Nikki Sixx, Vince Neil, Mick Mars and Tommy Lee in a stage show that sets a new standard for music DVDs. It comes as a 2 disc package, Disc 1 features the live concert, and Disc 2 includes all the bonus features which give an all access view of the concert experience. It will be released in the UK on March 6th 2006.

Bonus features include a documentary “Inside the Big Top” which includes behind the scenes shots from the carnival; “Mötley Crüe’s Greatest *its” introducing the band’s famous “titty cam”; “Meet and Greet” which follows fans from tailgate to the end of the concert; “Disaster: The Movie” an animated film featuring clay figures in a space adventure and “Blow It Up“, an excursion into some of the band’s pyrotechnics on the tour. It also features 3 videos : “Sick Love Song”; “If I Die Tomorrow”; and “On With The Show – A Time Lapse View

Check out the band on www.motley.com or check out www.waytoblue.com/hazyjane/motleycrue for more.

Categories
Upstarts

The Voom Blooms

By Dee Massey

Some of the greatest ideas and plans have come to people in their dreams. Great prophets have hit on their greatest visions in their slumber – even Nostradamus dreamt up some of his outlandish predictions in his sleep and most of us are still waiting for our ‘eureka!’ moment.

Thom Mackie from Loughborough upstarts ‘The Voom Blooms’ woke one morning with the band’s name inexplicably etched in his mind. Frontman George Guildford recalls ” One night at about 3am [Thom] texted me to say ‘We are called The Voom Blooms’ . And so the pair had a name for a band, now all they had to do was find the missing members to make the dream a reality.

Fast-forward a few years on – the venue, a kebab shop, and the night – New Years Eve 2004. A drunken old stranger mystically predicted that greatness in the music industry was the destiny for the guys. Only weeks earlier George and Thom had started hiring a rehearsal room, jamming for hours on end but with would-be guitarist Craig Monk living miles away in Leeds and would be-bassist Brett Young on the brink of moving to Japan for work forming a band seemed a far flung dream. But fate was having none of that and before long Craig moved back to Loughborough, and after witnessing the 3 piece rehearse Politics and Cigarettes (the debut single) Brett gave up the job in Japan and came aboard as bassist. And so having spent their childhoods walking to school together, bickering over who’d discovered the latest great new band – they suddenly were in a band themselves.

Some bands are just meant to be, and The Voom Blooms seem to slide into this category. From the opening chords it’s like a homecoming – after a few listens, every track has got under your skin. And that’s quite something for a band who despite growing up together, have only officially been together for all of nine months.

So how the hell did they get to where they are now? So many local bands spend years plugging away in back rooms, hoping for ‘that break’ which never comes. But The Voom Blooms boys had a plan.

“From the beginning we said we would spend a lot of time really working hard on putting together a dynamic set, that we would play no longer that 20/25 minute sets and that when we go out to gig we will move around a lot and try and get really good support slots rather than just playing local venues’ George explains.

Lady Luck played another card, and after Jimmy Jukebox, a well know promoter from Stockton-on-Tees, got hold of their demo the gigs started to roll in – the turning point being a show supporting London upstarts ‘The Paddington’s’. An incident involving a tin of corn beef and guitarist Craig’s fingers meant he went on stage with duck taped fingers hoping for the best. One chord later and blood was splattering out over him, the stage, the crowd and his white Strat guitar got a paint job too. But still he plugged away, and The Paddington’s manager “blown away” by both their talent and dedication – and soon after became their manager.

“As soon as that happened we got support slots with the Paddingtons, Babyshambles, Five o’clock Heroes, Boy Kill Boy and we got onto the bill at Manchester’s In The City. I guess in the end it all came down to the ‘Politics & Cigarettes/London heads” demo we made as that’s what originally started to get us attention from people.”

And one of those people was Radio 1 DJ Steve Lamacq, who’s started playing the bands London Head demo, and so whilst some bands wait years to here themselves on the radio, The Voom Blooms graced the airwaves only a few months after forming.

“I was sat in my lounge [when we were first played on the radio] I couldn’t believe it, it gave me the sudden urge to want to start jumping up and down for some reason. I now know how they feel in “That thing you do” when they all start running around switching all the radios on… (Did I just reference a Tom Hanks film? that’ll haunt me)”. [Yep!]

It’s the unadulterated enthusiasm and genuine excitement that’s one of the most appealing features of this band – yes they’ve only been plugging away for months rather than years, but this is the stuff dreams are made of.

Arm in arm with the airplay came the offer of more shows for the relatively novice performares. One of those gigs was the now infamous Babyshambles show in Leicester. Pete did a Pete No Show special and the crowd reacted.

“There was a bit of a riot, the police dogs turned ..When we heard the promoters were pulling the gig we ran onstage to grab our amps and stuff and the crowd thought we were Babyshambles so they started cheering, but when they saw us taking stuff off the stage they starting throwing bottles and stuff at us, we thought it best to do a runner!”

This was followed by playing to over 500 people at Loughborough University.

“I couldn’t believe it when I walked on stage; it was something I had never experienced.” Explains George, but not one to let his ego bloom he adds, “Funny thing was, the next gig we played there were like 50 people there and we got heckled! [laughs]”

But the question still stands, with the UK music scene being flooded with generic same same indie, can The Voom Blooms stand out? With the ‘indie’ scene enjoying yet another renaissance ( did it ever really go away?!), especially it seems with up and coming bands like The Holloway’s, Larrikin Love et al leading the charge, is that really something a band wants to be part of? It’s easy to get tarred with the same brush and be just another generic indie band.

“I think at the moment a lot of record labels have pigeon-holed us as just another indie band and we find that really funny because that couldn’t be further from the truth. At the moment the lack of money is keeping us from investing in loads of weird and wonderful instruments, so we’re just trying to get by with the tools we have. I would like to see our dynamics grow though over the next year, so I better run off to the local car-boot as soon as I’m done here to find some wonderful toy piano or something!”

Part of the bands strong sense of artistic direction is a reflection of their musical inspirations, which shoot out across the range – from Kanye West, Interpol, Hope of the States, Wacko Jacko, Jeff Buckley through to The Smiths, The Jam, The Cure, Bright Eyes, Mogwai, Brian Wilson.

“I can’t really narrow down my main influences as I feel I am influenced by so many. I think the albums that actually made me think, “how the hell did they do that, I want to do that” were, “Pet Sounds” by the Beach Boys, Interpol’s “Turn on the Bright Lights“, anything by Kanye West, “Up the Bracket” by The Libertines, “Off the Wall” by Jacko, “Kid A” by Radiohead and Bright Eyes’ “Lifted...” I do love Bloc Party’s sonics though and the way they structure their songs. I remember hearing “So here we are” for the first time, I was at work and it came on the warehouse stereo, I thought, “Wow! That’s brilliant!” the way they took the sound of Mogwai, sped up the guitars and put a fantastic melody over the top. That really inspired me to go home and get back to the drawing board.”

With everyone bringing their imagination to the table to write their own parts in tracks, all members get involved -in the studio they’re self confessed perfectionists, with engineer Adam Ellis (Deadline Studios) having his patience tested,

‘Its usually that me and Craig will sit there with an idea of how we want the sonics and dynamics of the song to be and we don’t leave the room until we’ve matched the sound in our head with what is coming out of the speakers. We‚re all perfectionists too which usually means we’re forever telling Adam to turn one up, turn one down, get this noise, get that noise, god knows how he puts up with us!”

It’s the strong sense of artistic direction that’s given the band a sound that does stand out in the crowd and whilst visually the guys could be Babyshambles’s kid brothers (crack habits notwithstanding) – to the ears they’re a heady mix of Bloc Party, Jeff Buckley and Interpol with a hefty dose of heavier rock embraced by solid melodies and hooks.

It was the demo recorded with Adam Ellis that lead to the band getting their deal with Fiction, home of The Cure, Humanzi and Ian Brown. Alex Close from the label heard debut single Politics and Cigarettes and wanted to bring the band onside. And so, only months into their career, The Voom Blooms found themselves with a deal, and heading down to London for their debut show. Having just played at the spangly new club NME in Sheffield a few nights before, the less-that-salubrious surroundings of The Dublin Castle were a bit of a come down.

“When we turned up at the Dublin castle and played in pretty much the back room of a pub on a tiny stage it was a bit of a contrast. It was the first time we’d ever played at a venue like that. I liked the intimacy of it though, it was a pretty cool venue, like a quintessential old fashioned gig.”

As their 13th gig were they anticipating bad luck?

“We were always waiting for the day when one of us broke a string in the middle of the song and it was typical that at our first London show in the middle of the first song that it would happen, Craig frantically fumbling around looking for the back-up guitar. But nonetheless we had a lot of fun playing that gig!”

The Voom Blooms are the kind of band you really want to succeed. Their quiet confidence and endearing modesty coupled with some truly inspired writing and a well honed live set and bucket loads of talent mean they can’t go wrong. They’re the guys next door living the dream.

“We would hope that people would leave our shows feeling the same way we have when we’ve gone [a band]. I remember seeing Hope of the States…I’d never heard of them but I remember that it made me want to go out and write music like them, it was so uplifting. The thing that struck me was you could see this huge imagination and ambition coming out of all of them, they delivered everything with so much energy and passion. I would hope that we come across that way.”

Noble sentiments from a guy who not so long ago had to chose between making music or selling it in a store. When all’s said and done, I think they can be assured that their place in on stage, not behind the counter at Virgin.. after all – drunken prophets in kebabs shops can’t be wrong.

For further info check out www.thevoomblooms.com