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Fricke’s Picks: The Whore Moans, A New Ear TonicIt is hard to believe that no group copyrighted such a natural punk-band name before, but the Whore Moans, a four-piece from Seattle, have it now, and they don’t waste it on their second album, Hello From the Radio Wasteland! (Mt. Fuji). The precedence flies thick and fast in “Nerve Tonic!” and “White Noise Melody” — Eighties-hardcore stripped-throat vocals, the angular art-riff assault, with prominent treble-ized bass, of Mission of Burma. But the Steven Tyler-like jabber in “Wall of a Song” is an unexpected hoot, and for all of the end-of-days fury in “Fingers and Martyrs” and “Here Comes America” (the latter is not a pretty sight), the Whore Moans are steadfast believers in loud-fast salvation, or what they call in one power-chord catapult, “The Holy Fucking Moment.” This album has plenty. Related Stories: • More from Issue 1070 • Fricke’s Picks: The Undertones’ Pop Kicks • Fricke’s Picks: Charlie Pickett’s Charge
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Published: 2009-01-20 Provider: Rolling Stone Keywords: Rock News, Fricke's Picks
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Rob Zombie: “Our Fans Were More Metal Than We Were”Photo: Gries/Getty Rob Zombie has spent his career mining everybody else’s past, but the new box set Let Sleeping Corpses Lie goes deep into his own. The release collects every song and video released by the band during their 12 year career, from their humble beginnings as a New York art-noise act through the massive cyber-metal powerhouse Astro-Creep 2000: Songs of Love, Destruction and Other Synthetic Delusions of the Electric Head. “We never fit in,” says Zombie. “At every point in our career, we’d have people standing around confused going ‘What the fuck is this?’” Click below for more from Zombie, including his new music and film projects and why he never liked the idea of going solo. • Rob Zombie: “Our Fans Were More Metal Than We Were” Related Stories: • Rob Zombie Finishes Work on Long-Awaited White Zombie Box Set • Album Review: Rob Zombie, Educated Horses • From Charles Manson to Rob Zombie: The Scariest Covers of Rolling Stone
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Published: 2008-11-18 Provider: Rolling Stone Keywords: Rock News
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David Byrne Turns Unused Space Into Interactive Art Project “Playing the Building” “We’re bringing democracy to lower Manhattan,” joked David Byrne. He wasn’t launching a revolutionary coup on Saturday morning; rather, he was introducing his latest multi-media project called “Playing the Building.” With the help of Creative Time, Byrne turned the long-closed Battery Maritime Building on New York’s southern tip and morphed it into a nine thousand square foot sound installation that features a gutted organ, a series of colorful tubes and a whole lot of ambient noise. Click above for Byne’s explanation of his work and for a look at how the whole thing works. [Video: Pete Maiden]
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Published: 2008-06-02 Provider: Rolling Stone Keywords: Rock News, Videos
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New Reviews: Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Wavves, Peter Doherty and MorePhoto: Josh Wildman It’s Tuesday once again, which means there’s a whole slate of new CDs on sale now at your soon-to-be-closing record stores or favorite digital outlet. Before you brave the St. Patrick’s Day-celebrating masses on the way to the store, let Rolling Stone be your guide to the best of this week’s new releases. Indie rock (or, in this case, sorta indie rock) is the place to be this week, mostly because of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ third album It’s Blitz. Awarded four stars in the upcoming issue of Rolling Stone, which hits newsstands tomorrow, It’s Blitz finds the YYYs throwing an art-punk dance party. “The turn toward the dance floor makes sense: Yeah Yeah Yeahs are drawing on a tradition of arty New York dance punk that extends from the Talking Heads to TV on the Radio, whose guitarist, Dave Sitek, co–produced It’s Blitz! The big news, though, isn’t YYY’s groovier sound — it’s the heat they radiate,” Jody Rosen writes in his review. Out of San Diego, California, we have Wavves’ Wavvves, the second LP by one-man surf-punk auteur Nathan Williams. (Be sure not to mistake Wavvves for the one-less-”v” of Wavves, the band’s debut album.) A cacophony of Brian Wilson melodies and Jesus & Mary Chain distortion, Wavvves is bad–trip music for cloudless days: surging distortion, sun–dazed hooks and a dark sense of humor,” Will Hermes writes in his three-star review. “The battle between noise and melody veers from scary to hilarious to heroic, and as a metaphor for trying to feel good in trying times, it may hit you close to home.” There’s also Grace/Wasteland, the first solo album by former Libertines/Babyshambles trainwreck Pete Doherty (now going by the first name Peter), with the oft-troubled guitarist managing to “make his dysfunction sing” on his debut LP. The album also features “Sheepskin Tearaway,” “a sketch of a chemical romance and one of Doherty’s prettiest songs ever.” For the rest of this week’s New Releases, check below: • MSTRKRFT’s Fist of God • Maria
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Published: 2009-03-17 Provider: Rolling Stone Keywords: Rock News
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Having Survived Industrial Rock, Ogre Takes on the FutureNivek Ogre, the founder of industrial icons Skinny Puppy who was born Kevin Ogilvie but now just goes by “Ogre,” has been around both literally and figuratively. Born and raised in Canada, his work with Skinny Puppy (as well as KMFDM, Pigface, Ministry, Revolting Cocks and just about every other major band in the genre) took him all around the world before he finally settled in a serene mountain area in suburban Los Angeles. “My head is always my head, and it’s my most dysfunctional tool, but I have a sense of comfort in places that don’t feel like home,” he explains. He’s produced all brands of art and survived heroin addiction and has had an amazingly productive year: he stars in the surreal movie musical Repo! The Genetic Opera and also has a new album from his project OhGr called Devils In My Details. The album, a left-field construction of processed jams and samples, moves further away from the pounding noise of his former bands towards something more abstract without sacrificing Ogre’s trademark theatricality. “We wanted to make the album an immersive experience. For me, records used to be that, but for today’s kids it’s video games, so we crafted a lot of sound design based on jump starts from video games. It’s a very crafted record. You’ve got to turn it up really loud.” “Looking for a reason to do the record became a big deal for us,” adds Mark Walk, the other half of OhGr. “A lot of people make a record just because the label says they can.” Walk created a number of audio-video loops based on images and films in the public domain. “We started jamming while watching these loops and using them as inspiration. We had a clip of Liberace performing this sort of classical lick, so at least part of the record was inspired by the image of his hands playing the keys. It was a different way to make a record, but it felt really natural after a while.” As for his participation in Repo!, it was a dream come true for Ogre. “My fantasy as a kid was to be able to sit in
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Published: 2008-10-16 Provider: Rolling Stone Keywords: Rock News
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First Listen: TV on the Radio’s Art-Rock Symphony “Dear Science”Last week, Rolling Stone nabbed a first listen to TV on the Radio’s excellent Dear Science, due out September 23rd. Produced by the group’s multi-instrumentalist Dave Sitek, the album finds the Brooklyn group fine-tuning what they did best on 2006’s Return to Cookie Mountain: tweaking and looping and distorting a grand arsenal of aggressive percussion, new wave synths, epic guitar noise and various kitchen-sink devices, then layering them all into a big, beautiful art-rock symphony. But of all the instruments on the new record, the most compelling one is Tunde Adebimpe’s voice. On the blazing anthem “Dancing Shoes,” which sounds like TV on the Radio’s answer to R.E.M.’s “It’s the End of the World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine),” the rhythm of his words pound like a beating drum: “I’ve seen my palate blown to monochrome, hollow heart clicks hollow tone.” Album opener “Halfway Home” begins with a guitar riff that recalls Cookie single “Wolf Like Me,” but as a Smiths-like melody kicks in, Adebimpe delivers the lyrics with the dreamy, sing-song quality of a nursery rhyme. Of course, the guy can also just belt out some powerful singing when he needs to — especially on the funky R&B track “Cryin’,” where his falsetto rivals Prince’s. Thematically, Dear Science addresses similar themes to Cookie Mountain — namely, that these might feel like End Times, but love can get you through them. And the bands’ Brooklyn friends help drive that message home: members of the Afro-funk group Antibalas lend some golden horn rave-ups to “Red Dress” and Katrina Ford of the Celebration delivers lovely harmonies on the epic, orchestral closer “Lovers Day.” Over marching-band drums, sleigh bells, hand claps and distorted horn loops, her voice dovetails nicely with Adebimpe’s as they sing, “Swear to God we’ll get so high we’ll melt our faces off.” And the sentiment is right-on: this creative tour-de-force could be an epic drug album, too.
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Published: 2008-07-29 Provider: Rolling Stone Keywords: Rock News
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Critic’s Picks: Rob Sheffield’s Favorite Albums That Didn’t Make the RS Top 50 1. Yeah Yeah Yeahs Is Is (Interscope) Five leg-humpingly amazing punk-rock songs about punk-rock lust, the kind that makes you see Jesus and tell him, “You know, you got a pretty car, I think I wanna drive it,” and off you roll with Jesus riding shotgun and the apostles in the trunk and the Holy Spirit strapped to the roof. If you add the Spider-Man 3 track “Sealings” and the live showstopper “Dull Life,” you get an album almost as sublime as LCD Soundsystem’s. It’s gonna be a beautiful night. 2. Grinderman Grinderman (Anti-) Nick Cave turns into the goth-punk Kenny Rogers, slobbering all over his mustache in the pudenda-positive “No Pussy Blues” and “Get It On.” The whole world seemed to hate this album, to which I can only say, “Sucks to be you, world!” 3. Liars Liars (Mute) These Berlin-based art-twat noise pervs sound like they’re actually attempting to write catchy rock & roll songs — and listening to them try is even funnier than watching Manny Ramirez chase pop-ups. For lovers only: “Leather Prowler.” 4. Guy Guy – Special Edition (Geffen) A reissue flashing back to the summer of 1988: Harlem native Teddy Riley decides to reinvent baby-making soul for a hip-hop world and creates the sound of international pop radio ever since. On this concept album, the three concepts are “Groove me,” “baby” and “tonight,” and the moral of the story is “The party’s not over.” Nineteen years later, it still isn’t. If you wonder why your mom still thinks Bobby Brown is hot, this album may help you understand where she’s coming from. 5. Jarvis Cocker Jarvis (Rough Trade) The Pulp smoothie hasn’t written such fluent tunes since the days of Different Class. On his first solo album, the Eurotrash love god who sang “Sheffield: Sex City” picks up true romance and drops it like it’s hot — but in “Tonite,” he resolves to hold on no matter what. This is hardcore. [Photo: Getty]
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Published: 2007-12-19 Provider: Rolling Stone Keywords: Rock News
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CMJ 2007, Night Two: Dan Deacon, Deerhunter and No Age One thousand or so bands (give or take a few shaggy haircuts) hit New York City every fall for the CMJ Music Marathon, a five-day band-a-palooza where new acts get noticed (see Arcade Fire) and scores more get drunk at open-bar showcases. For the next few days, Rock Daily will be bringing you reports on the bands we consider most worthy of your time after CMJ has packed up and moved on: “Fuck, yeah!” shouted Randy Randall of the guitar-and-drums avant-rock duo No Age at the beginning of the pair’s set at Bowery Ballroom. It was a neat summation of last night’s lineup: No Age, Dan Deacon and Deerhunter all revel in the art of glorious, sloppy, demented noise. No Age rocked the stage as if they had written the greatest guitar riff since AC/DC’s “Back In Black,” even though their songs are supremely messy two-minute bursts of chaos. Plus, they had a great spirit: Randall took turns playing from the top of the P.A. speakers or banging his head into his amp while drummer Dean Spunt at times slapped hands with the kids in the front row. When Randall claimed “We’re really excited to see you guys,” to the audience, you believed him. A performance artist from Baltimore, Dan Deacon performed at his table of mixers, samplers, ring modulators and pitch shifters on the floor of the venue. Since he was in the middle of the action, the crowd crammed dangerously around him, jumping up and down like tweaked-out aerobics instructors to synth-rock bangers like “The Crystal Cat.” For Deacon, it was too much and near the end of his set he shouted, “This level of shoving is just ridiculous.” So he asked the crowd to push back and create passageways so a few fans could run in circles around the balcony of the ballroom and back down to the floor. Things calmed down considerably for Deerhunter, the shoegazy four-piece from Atlanta. Their set was the perfect way to wind down from Deacon’s maniacal exercise-rock, especially when they kicked into the kraut-rocking groove of “Cryptograms.” It’
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Published: 2007-10-19 Provider: Rolling Stone Keywords: Rock News, CMJ
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Philip Kennicott on New Brow art exhibit 'G40: The Summit' in Crystal CityMediocrity is a category of human creativity, just like any other. It has its own dynamic, its own characteristic quirks and identifying marks. In the arts, mediocrity often tells us more about the artist's desire to be heard than any message he or she may have. In many cases, it is loud -- straining to stand out, to break through the noise, to compel your attention. And just as often, it reveals the artist's fundamental misapprehension about what is interesting: stories that ramble, music that
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Published: 2010-03-14 Provider: Washington Post
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![Picture: Two Days Of Solitude [To Do]](http://imagecache03.pixsy.com/08-08-2008/91/91348c70-cf90-47c9-8f3a-317916971cf8.jpg)
Two Days Of Solitude [To Do]newVideoPlayer("/todoquiettime_def.flv", 506, 423,""); We're not sure what kind of tomes dominated your college experience, but for us, one of our faves had to have been Gabriel García Márquez's One Hundred Years Of Solitude. While it would be undeniably awesome to be a trustfunder who could spend 100 years ruminating humankind's inescapable potential and reality, we have bills to pay. Which, unfortunately, means we're gonna have to settle for spending this weekend enjoying a measly two days of solitude. So break out your finest bottle box of Franzia, smoke 'em (if you got 'em) and kick back for a refreshing 132 seconds of pre-weekend solitude as you take in this weekend's To Do's (brought to you, as always, by our own manic pixie dream girl Molly McAleer). Have a great weekend! FRIDAY, AUGUST 8 · Eddie Izzard at The Kodak. · Refried Fridays at the Hollywood Improv. · Art Under the Stars in Baldwin Park. SATURDAY, AUGUST 9 · Love Festival at LA Memorial Coliseum. · Henry Coombes at the Hammer Museum. · The Grown Up Noise at The Mint. SUNDAY, AUGUST 10 · Funkmaster Flex Car Show at Anaheim Convention Center. · Swinging Sundays at The Derby. · Taylor Dayne at the Starlight Bowl.
![Picture: Two Days Of Solitude [To Do]](http://imagecache03.pixsy.com/08-08-2008/91/91348c70-cf90-47c9-8f3a-317916971cf8.jpg) |
Published: 2008-08-08 Provider: Defamer Keywords: To Do, Molly McAleer
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![Picture: More 'Complications' on the Way For New, Underwhelming Guns N' Roses Album? [The New Noise]](http://imagecache03.pixsy.com/10-22-2008/a1/a18d7f7e-f32a-4c05-b179-3bacbb90c757.jpg)
More 'Complications' on the Way For New, Underwhelming Guns N' Roses Album? [The New Noise]Guns N' Roses takes its 15-year battle with irrelevance straight to the people today, officially releasing the title track of its long, long, long, long-delayed album Chinese Democracy after years of leaks, lawsuits and general internecine drama that left a once-great rock band in yawning disarray. We've tired enough of attempting to keep up that we hadn't bothered tracking down the new single before this morning; it's about as soft as Axl Rose's cosmetically burnished features and, as presumed, won't make us forget anything on Appetite For Destruction. And thank goodness, because despite Democracy's Nov. 23 release date finally laid down by Interscope Records, GNR's manager hinted to Entertainment Weekly today that even more "complications" are imminent. Somewhat intriguingly, EW retracted this morning's item headlined, "Guns N' Roses manger: 'Great art takes time'" almost as soon as it was published — right around the time the single first hit the radio and began streaming online. But why? After all, rock managers are chronically bloated with braggadocio, even if shaking up their band's label and exclusive retail partners at Best Buy with suggestions that Nov. 23 doesn't really mean Nov. 23: [A]ccording to GNR's current manager, Azoff's Andy Gould, you can't rush the magic of rock. "Art and commerce have always made strange bedfellows," Gould tells EW.com. "When they asked Michelangelo to paint the Sistine Chapel, they didn't say, 'Can you do it in the fourth quarter?' so they can make their numbers. Great art sometimes takes time." [...] With less than a month to go until fans can judge the final product for themselves (pending approval of the album's artwork, which, Gould hinted, could have its own complications), the anticipation — and pressure — is most certainly high. The full EW item (we think — is there something we missed, tipsters?) is currently available only on GNR fan forums (we know you're starved for Matt Pinfield's take on the "most expensive rock r
![Picture: More 'Complications' on the Way For New, Underwhelming Guns N' Roses Album? [The New Noise]](http://imagecache03.pixsy.com/10-22-2008/a1/a18d7f7e-f32a-4c05-b179-3bacbb90c757.jpg) |
Published: 2008-10-22 Provider: Defamer Keywords: The New Noise, Axlo Rose, chinese democracy, guns n roses, interscope
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Headline Of The Day: Student Sues After Being Woken UpHEADLINE of the Day: “Conn. student sues after being awakened.” DANBURY, Conn. - Danbury officials have been notified they are being sued by a student who was awakened in class by a teacher who made a loud noise. Documents filed with the Town Clerk, a prelude to a lawsuit, claim that a sleeping student suffered hearing damage when his teacher woke him up by slamming her hand down on the boy’s desk in December. Attorney Alan Barry says 15-year-old Vinicios Robacher suffered pain and “very severe injuries to his left eardrum” when teacher Melissa Nadeau abruptly slammed the palm of her hand on his desk on Dec. 4. Master Robacher is, of course, American and it is thus in his nature to sue. But the incident suggests classroom rebellion. Better, perhaps, had Robacher told his teacher he was an art installation. We are not told what lesson was being taught, but what fun had the young scamp woken and uttered: “To die, to sleep; to sleep, perchance to dream.” Stick in a mawkish Robin Williams cameo and you’ve got the makings of a film. Of course, what should now happen is everyone who sits in Robacher’s chair falls asleep in class. The school panic as the source of this matter is debated and fretted over would keep the students amused for years to come. And interested in class…
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Published: 2008-03-16 Provider: Anorak
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