14/5/2013



33 notes

Kristin Scott Thomas’ style as the bitchy heiress in “Under The Cherry Moon” (Prince, 1986)

Looks like a young Carla Bruni isn’t it?

14/8/2012



Tagged: music, feminism,

24/6/2012



1 note
Featuring words and music by Ricky Ross, Errors, Alan Bissett, Rachel Sermanni, Withered Hand, Annie Griffin, Meursault, David Greig, RM Hubbert, Wounded Knee, Alan Spence, Isabel Wright, Conquering Animal Sound, Emma Pollock, Kirstin Innes, Swimmer One, Bigg Taj, Stef Smith, Eugene Kelly, Talkingmakesnosense, David Ireland, Skye Loneragan, Kieran Hurley Some of Scotland’s most distinctive songwriters, novelists, poets and playwrights, and you: a nation of people, awake in the dark, waiting for the light to come. Whatever Gets You Through The Night is an ambitious new multi-disciplinary live event featuring actors, visuals by Kim Beveridge, aerial work, new writing by some of Scotland’s top novelists, poets and playwrights, and a whole album’s worth of original music by acclaimed Scottish musicians, some of whom will perform live in the show. Created by Cora Bissett with Swimmer One and David Greig, the show will be quite unlike anything else - a visual and aural banquet blending circus, cabaret, and a host of stories - all of which take place across Scotland between the hours of midnight and 4am. A heartfelt goodbye on the shore of Loch Lomond, an Skype affair between two people who never meet, a man searching for a lover in ‘the palace of light’, a character lost in a virtual reality game world, and an homage to the joys of chips and cheese… Come and meet lost souls, party animals and dreamers in a snapshot of an entire nation at its most vulnerable and revealing. As well as the live show, this unique, groundbreaking project also takes the form of a book, an album (released by Biphonic Records) and a film (directed by Daniel Warren) which will premiere at the Summerhall venue during this year’s Edinburgh Fringe before going on tour.

Featuring words and music by Ricky Ross, Errors, Alan Bissett, Rachel Sermanni, Withered Hand, Annie Griffin, Meursault, David Greig, RM Hubbert, Wounded Knee, Alan Spence, Isabel Wright, Conquering Animal Sound, Emma Pollock, Kirstin Innes, Swimmer One, Bigg Taj, Stef Smith, Eugene Kelly, Talkingmakesnosense, David Ireland, Skye Loneragan, Kieran Hurley

Some of Scotland’s most distinctive songwriters, novelists, poets and playwrights, and you: a nation of people, awake in the dark, waiting for the light to come.

Whatever Gets You Through The Night is an ambitious new multi-disciplinary live event featuring actors, visuals by Kim Beveridge, aerial work, new writing by some of Scotland’s top novelists, poets and playwrights, and a whole album’s worth of original music by acclaimed Scottish musicians, some of whom will perform live in the show.

Created by Cora Bissett with Swimmer One and David Greig, the show will be quite unlike anything else - a visual and aural banquet blending circus, cabaret, and a host of stories - all of which take place across Scotland between the hours of midnight and 4am. A heartfelt goodbye on the shore of Loch Lomond, an Skype affair between two people who never meet, a man searching for a lover in ‘the palace of light’, a character lost in a virtual reality game world, and an homage to the joys of chips and cheese… Come and meet lost souls, party animals and dreamers in a snapshot of an entire nation at its most vulnerable and revealing.

As well as the live show, this unique, groundbreaking project also takes the form of a book, an album (released by Biphonic Records) and a film (directed by Daniel Warren) which will premiere at the Summerhall venue during this year’s Edinburgh Fringe before going on tour.

12/4/2012



19 notes
“This whole thing feels like walking around with the mom who refuses to grow up, who won’t change out of the Forever 21 miniskirt and T-shirt that says “Sexy and Not for You!” It’s desperate feeling. And it’s upsetting me. Because Madonna, you’re *Madonna*! You don’t have anything to prove. Those were things you were never supposed to be, woman: Desperate and Boring. The kids have Katy Perry! You can’t compete and you shouldn’t try.
So, Madge, for the love of god, please get it together. You are better than this.”

bohemian slapfight: Madonna, Please Stop. 

Tagged: music, madonna, rant, mdna,

08/4/2012



4 notes

ratethatalbum: review of CHROMATICS - KILL FOR LOVE

ratethatalbum:

                                                        Chromatics 

                                                       Kill for Love

9.0/10

                                                          Must Listen

I’ve been waiting for this record for five years. And what’s worse than waiting for Chromatics’ followup to 2007’s Night Drive is when the project’s mastermind Johnny Jewel says Kill for Love will drop in January but then it doesn’t. Then on Valentines Day…but then it doesn’t. But the wait was totally worth it: Kill for Love is everything I hoped and wanted from Chromatics. 

The string of five singles the Portland band released were incredibly promising. Last October, the band dropped the title single, which ended up in my top 30 best songs of the year. Chromatics also released a video for their cover of Neil Young’s “Hey Hey My My (Into the Black)” — simply titled “Into the Black.” It’s a daring cover but the band does it justice as they have with other covers like Kate Bush’s “Running Up that Hill” and Bruce Springstein’s haunting “I’m on Fire.”

The band has gotten a larger audience lately thanks the fucking amazing 2011 film Drive. Some of Jewel’s music appeared in the thriller-noir film (including Chromatic’s heart-pumping “Tick of the Clock”). And what didn’t appear in the film apparently ended up on Jewel and label-mate Nat Walker’s breathtaking project Symmetry’s album Themes for an Imaginary Film. Instead of pop songs, the duo focused on emotion and a soundscape of beautiful synths and truly make you feel like living in a movie — and on Kill for Love the same thing happens but it’s not so blatant. 

Like M83, Chromatics draw on thematic elements that evoke raw emotion. While M83 focuses on things that make you feel young or like an angsty teen by the use of lyrics, Chromatic’s nearly use their sound. Just like Night Drive there is a strong sense of cinematic quality here most noticeably on the heartbreaking track “There’s a Light Out on the Horizon”  where a voicemail message of someone’s lover is deleted, all backed by  slick, cool, badass, don’t-give-a-fuck beat. You can just picture someone (Driver) riding in their car in the California desert with the sun slowly sinking down — the person has sunglasses on and just embodies badassness. 

But the more constructed pop songs, like “Return From the Grave” work towards the cinematic aesthetic. The creepiness of all the tracks take the LP into the right direction, especially coming from their last EP In the City. Kill for Love works so well it becomes a soundtrack to its own horror movie within itself. The ambient, drifting but beautiful songs like “The Eleventh Hour,” “Broken Mirrors” and “Running from the Sun” all work magnificently as mood pieces. They also make you appreciate the Chromatic’s pop songs like the mind-blowing “The Page,” and the reworked version of the masterful “Lady.” 

Not one track is a disappointment here. Although “The River” sounds better as Symmetry’s “Streets of FIre” it still holds its own. Even the 15 minute closer “No Escape” is a wonderful cherry on top. But tracks like “Birds of Paradise,” “Candy,” and the robotic/male-lead/auto-tune “These Streets Will Never Look the Same” and the before mentioned well-structured pop songs prove that Chromatics are one of the best bands out there today. 

22/3/2012



2 notes
Sarah Ruba of New Look in Chloé. Photo by Norman Jean Roy

Sarah Ruba of New Look in Chloé. Photo by Norman Jean Roy

09/3/2012



5 notes

Lee Fields - You’re the Kind of Girl 

Mark your calendars. In one week (March 13th) Lee Fields will be returning with a new record entitled Faithful Man. 

(Source: radioraheemlives)

Tagged: Lee Fields, Music, Soul,

30/1/2012



Tagged: rnb, pop, music, lists,

18/10/2011



15 notes

Little Dragon - Scribbled Paper

This is the very first song I listened by Little Dragon, and I was hooked.

(via klowds-deactivated20120808)

09/10/2011



2 notes
lovesoulbounce: Our resident mixologist is at it again. 

Grab your FREE DOWNLOAD of groovy tunes from SoulBounce faves and soon-to-be-faves Ben Westbeech, Deborah Bond, Blue Six, Osunlade, The Rurals, Miguel Migs, and many, many more. 

lovesoulbounce: Our resident mixologist is at it again. 

Grab your FREE DOWNLOAD of groovy tunes from SoulBounce faves and soon-to-be-faves Ben WestbeechDeborah BondBlue SixOsunladeThe RuralsMiguel Migs, and many, many more. 

30/9/2011



33 notes

Shawn Colvin - Sunny Came Home 

Sunny came home to her favorite room,
Sunny sat down in the kitchen,
She opened a book and a box of tools,
Sunny came home with a mission.

hello my nineties

(Source: kittivanilli, via starsandgarters)

29/9/2011



13 notes
Sharon Jones and The Dap Kings are back with a new album next month!
Take a listen to the first single, “Longer and Stronger” and peep the tracklist.

Sharon Jones and The Dap Kings are back with a new album next month!

Take a listen to the first single, “Longer and Stronger” and peep the tracklist.

(Source: lovesoulbounce)

27/9/2011



20 notes

23/9/2011



149 notes
Tagged: Prince, music, sampling,

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