A Farewell To Kings?

R40

Canadian prog gods Rush have played what may possibly be their last ever concert, at The Forum in LA, the final stop of their 40th anniversary tour. The show included the seldom performed track ‘Losing It’  and a performance of ‘Xanadu’ featuring classic double neck guitars. A star studded crowd featuring members of Tool, Red Hot Chilli Peppers and Foo Fighters assembled to see the band play a show packed with songs from their expansive back catalogue. Rush are hesitant to call ‘R40’ their farewell tour but they have gone on record saying it will be their “last tour of this magnitude”.

Lollapalooza Washout

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Lollapalooza festival has been put on hold due to adverse weather conditions. Following a severe thunderstorm warning for the city of Chicago, attendees were evacuated from the festival grounds. It is currently unclear when the festival will resume and how the scheduling will be affected.

50th anniversary of Dylan going electric

bob-dylan-goes-electric-at-the-newport-folk-festival

It is one of the single most famous moments in the history of music. On the 25th July 1965, Bob Dylan made a spontaneous decision to play with an electric backing band at the Newport Folk Festival. His set, which included the first ever public performance of ‘Like A Rolling Stone’, was met by both cheering and booing. Folk traditionalists were shocked by the fact that Dylan, who was a key creative force in folk music and was considered the voice of a generation, would move away from his roots in writing acoustic, political themed songs.

Over 1000 musicians play Foo Fighters song


A vast group of singers and musicians have gathered in the Italian town of Cesena to perform the Foo Fighters song ‘Learn To Fly’. The video, which has since gone viral, included a message to frontman Dave Grohl asking him and the band to play a concert in their town. Given the lengths they have gone to and the reception it has gotten I don’t see them saying no.

Double Trouble: A Record Rant

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These days I buy most of my music on vinyl when I can. With the recent resurgence, vinyl manufacturers have upped their game so that the records are sturdier and download codes often come as a standard. However sometimes I am a little put off by some poor production decisions. The issue is with modern albums which weren’t recorded with vinyl in mind as the preferred format. It’s in trying to convert these recent releases into a different format that causes the trouble. Many albums get made into double albums when they shouldn’t be. Continue reading

Must Own Albums: Cool Britannia

stone-rosesThe Stones Roses – The Stone Roses

At the heart of the ‘Madchester’ scene, which fused together pop, psychedelic rock and dance music, this landmark album was born. The Stone Roses produced one of the finest debuts in music history, featuring ‘I Wanna Be Adored’ and ‘I Am The Resurrection’. Sadly they couldn’t replicate the magic but this album would go on to spark the Britpop movement and revitalise rock music in the UK… “I Am The Resurrection’ indeed!

oasis-whats-the-story-morning-gloryOasis – (What’s The Story) Morning Glory?

Although their debut ‘Definitely Maybe’ receives a lot of praise, Morning Glory is undoubtedly their finest work. It is quite simply hit after hit: ‘Roll With It’, ‘Wonderwall’, ‘Don’t Look Back In Anger’, ‘She’s Electric’ etc. Each with a bigger chorus than the last, simply irresistible to sing along to. Shockingly the album was harshly reviewed by critics when it was first released, but it has since become the definitive British album of the 90s.

blur-parklifeBlur – Parklife

After disappointing sales for their previous album, ‘Modern Life Is Rubbish’, Blur hit back with ‘Parklife’. It put them at the heart of the Britpop movement and started a bitter rivalry with Oasis. Whilst many of the prominent Britpop bands originated from the North of England, Blur were the voice of the South and imparticular the Voice of London. In fact the album itself was originally going to be called ‘London’!

pulpPulp – Different Class

Jarvis Cocker, as well as being one of the most charismatic frontmen of the 90s, was the most successful lyricist of the Cool Britannia movement. The other bands wrote sing along anthems that were somewhat tongue-in-cheek. Jarvis did this as well as (if not better than) his contemporaries but also simultaneously talked about real topics like the class divide and worries about the future on the hits ‘Common People’ and ‘Disco 2000’.

OCSOcean Colour Scene – Moseley Shoals

Thanks to constant plugging from TFI Friday, ‘Moseley Shoals’ became OCS’s most successful album which contained their most successful singles. It followed the Britpop ideal of emulating the best that British music had to offer. ‘The Riverboat Song’ was influenced by Led Zeppelin’s ‘Four Sticks’ and the lyrics to ‘The Day We Caught The Train’ were influenced by The Who’s classic concept album ‘Quadrophenia’.