• Votez pour Biffy Clyro et remportez 100£ !

    Nov 28 2009, 11h12 por ComateenI

    Le site d'Absolute Radio organise un concours pour trouver LA chanson de cette dernière décennie. Vous pouvez voter pour toute chanson apparaissant dans le Top 75 du chart officiel britannique depuis les années 2000. Grâce à vos votes, vous pouvez tenter de gagner 100£.

    Votez pour Biffy Clyro !

    Rendez-vous sur le site pour plus d'informations, et pour voter pour ( une ou toutes ! ) les 13 chansons de Biffy en compétition !

  • Knights Of Barcelona

    Nov 27 2009, 22h45 por lilyinthesky

    Mar 24 Nov – Muse, Biffy Clyro

    Después de cambio de lugar y de fecha, de mal humor por estos hechos y por lo poco que me convencian algunos temas del nuevo disco, allí estabamos, un martes a las seis de la tarde haciendo cola delante del Palau Sant Jordi para por fin verlos. Poco después de las siete abrieron las puertas y a las ocho y cuarto empezaron los teloneros Biffy Clyro. Qué decir de este grupo. Una mezcla de Fall Out Boy, Weezer y... ¿cualquier grupo intento de post-hardcoretas ídolos de massas adolescentes quinceañeras con flequillos kilométricos y pelo liso? Lo siento mucho, pero no superaron la prueba de motivar (todavía más) al Sant Jordi. Para colmo, los señores del Palau decidieron poner música house para hacer más larga la espera hasta las 21:30. ¿Qué clase de persona escucha Muse y música house? Es verdad que para gustos, colores, pero sigue siendo algo contradictorio.
    Así pues, después de unos teloneros suspendidos, una música de ambiente más que mala y diez minutos de retraso, las luces se apagaron y la tela que cubria tres curiosos bloques situados en el escenario caía, el espectáculo empezó. El grupo apareció con Uprising, haciendo enloquecer al público, ya no sólo por su calidad musical, y más en directo, sino por la puesta en escena, aunque, también hay que reconocer, un poco fría por su parte.
    Seguidamente protagonizaron canciones del nuevo disco, The Resistance como el tema que lleva el mismo nombre que el álbum, o United States of Eurasia, donde Bellamy dejó al público enajenado con el piano, seguido de la cover Feeling Good, ya conocida por todos sus fans. Repasaron temas de otros discos, como New Born o Map of the Problematique, aunque no olvidaron ni mucho menos el nuevo disco (sólo se dejaron por tocar I Belong to You y la segunda y tercera parte de Exogenesis), como ya he comentado. Hicieron vibrar al público con ya himnos del grupo como TocarStarlight, y dividieron el Palau con la polémica Undisclosed Desires, encontrando medio Sant Jordi enloqueciendo y medio más enfadado. Pero la culminación del concierto, sin duda, llegó con Plug In Baby: por fin veíamos al grupo en sus orígenes y en estado puro, sin simfonías ni tonterias, por fin Muse en estado puro.
    Sobre las once desaparecieron del escenario para poco después volver y acabar el concierto con Exogenesis: Symphony, Part 1: Overture (vale decir que la canción pierde la gracia en directo, ¿dónde está la orquestra?), Stockholm Syndrome y, finalmente, Knights of Cydonia. Y vaya final. Si en Plug In Baby el público ya estaba eufórico, en Knights, aunque fuera la última canción, lo dieron todo. Sacamos fuerzas de dónde pudiomos y acabamos de disfrutar de, seguramente, uno de los mejores conciertos de nuestras vidas.

    ¿Quién se acuerda ahora de todos los cambios de recinto, fecha, y de la Copa Davis?
  • NME's "The top 100 greatest albums of the decade" and me [100-51]

    Nov 26 2009, 16h53 por leelaa

    NME published a list of the top 100 albums of the start of this century along with a top 100 tracks one and now instead of just reading it, I decided to also do some thing with it.
    My problem with NME lists is, that they're pretty narrow minded with their focus on mostly british and US music. But since this was the first list I came across, I'll use this one, starting with the places 100 till 51.


    The top 100 greatest albums of the decade
    http://www.nme.com/list/albums-of-the-decade/158049

    100 MGMT Oracular Spectacular *
    (2007)
    I like(d) some songs of it?

    99 The Maccabees Colour It In
    (2007)
    who?

    98 Gorillaz Demon Days
    (2005)
    I love DARE, I didn't listen to the album though.

    97 Sigur Ros Agaetis Byrjun *
    (1999)
    should be much much higher up this list!

    96 Shellac Excellent Italian Greyhound
    (2007)
    nope

    95 Björk Vespertine *
    (2001)
    not my favourite Björk album

    94 Eighties Matchbox B-Line Disaster Horse Of The Dog
    (2002)
    I know they exist, but I really can't remember them anymore

    93 Clap Your Hands Say Yeah Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
    (2005)
    wasn't really that much interested

    92 The Sleepy Jackson Lovers
    (2003)
    Sleepy Jackson argh!! Reminds me of a great birthday actually, but muscially...nope!

    91 Les Savy Fav Let’s Stay Friends
    (2007)
    I know the name...

    90 Gallows Orchestra Of Wolves
    (2006)
    another case of I know the name, but never gave them a dedicated listen

    89 Frightened Rabbit The Midnight Organ Fight
    (2003)
    who?!

    88 Bonnie Prince Billy The Letting Go
    (2006)
    I tried it, but no.

    87 Bon Iver For Emma, Forever Ago
    (2003)
    doesn't ring a bell

    86 The Twilight Sad Forget The Night Ahead
    (2009)
    nope

    85 Roots Manuva Run Come Save Me
    (2001)
    not exactly my cup of tea

    84 Regina Spektor Soviet Kitsch *
    (2004)
    I gave it a chance, it didn't work

    83 Laura Marling Alas, I Cannot Swim
    (2008)
    nope

    82 mclusky Mclusky Do Dallas
    (2005)
    I know they exist and that's it.

    81 Field Music Field Music
    (2005)
    nope

    80 Danger Mouse The Grey Album
    (2004)
    I know it exists, but I never checked it out, because I grew tired of bastard pop like 2 minutes after it turned up.

    79 Kings of Leon Youth And Young Manhood *
    (2003)
    the best was yet to come, but it was a good start

    78 Belle & Sebastian Fold Your Hands Child, You Walk Like A Peasant *
    (2000)
    I lub B&S, so there's no way I can be objective about this. :D

    77 Isobel Campbell Ballad Of The Broken Seas
    (2006)
    didn't check it out despite B&S love. wooops!

    76 Capdown Civil Disobedients
    (2000)
    who?

    75 The Shins Chutes Too Narrow *
    (2003)
    me likey who says I!

    74 Brand New The Devil and God Are Raging Inside Me
    (2006)
    nope

    73 Broken Social Scene You Forgot It In People
    (2002)
    BSS are one of these bands I actually like (been to a concert even), but don't know much of their music.

    72 M.I.A. Kala
    (2007)
    I love TocarPaper Planes

    71 Brian Wilson Smile
    (2004)
    No Beach Boys nutter so I didn't give it a shot

    70 Glasvegas Glasvegas
    (2008)
    I know them, but didn't sit down to listen to them

    69 Biffy Clyro Puzzle
    (2008)
    uhm.... no!

    68 The Horrors Primary Colours
    (2009)
    too tired of listening to NME's band of the moment, sorry if I'm missing something?!

    67 Botch We Are The Romans
    (1999)
    Never heard of them.

    66 Mogwai The Hawk Is Howling
    (2008)
    Don't know the album

    65 Muse Black Holes And Revelations *
    (2006)
    the thing with muse is, that first I don't like their new album and then I end up loving it. Same story here.

    64 The Radio Dept. Lesser Matters
    (2003)
    I know the name

    63 Godspeed You Black Emperor Lift Your Skinny Fists Like Antennas To Heaven
    (2000)
    No big fan of Godspeed

    62 Queens of the Stone Age Rated R
    (2000)
    whatever you dooooooo don't tell anyone!

    61 The National Alligator *
    (2005)
    I love the album and their concert with it was one of the best I've ever been to.

    60 Green Day American Idiot
    (2004)
    haha no. Dookie will stay the only Green Day album I own (though my sister stole it!)

    59 The Hold Steady Boys And Girls In America
    (2006)
    don't know them

    58 Liars Drum's Not Dead
    (2006)
    I gave up on them before this one came out, so nope.

    57 OutKast Stankonia
    (2000)
    so fresh and so cleeeean!

    56 My Morning Jacket Z
    (2005)
    so not my cup of tea

    55 Hard-Fi Stars Of CCTV
    (2005)
    I'm working for the cash machine! not so keen on the rest

    54 The Golden Virgins Songs Of Praise *
    (2004)
    Wow, I'm really surprised to see them on this list! I think they got kicked off their label after this album and split up in 2006. I guess they just weren't stylish enough for 2004. :(
    It got great songs about unrequited love and needs to be known much more broadly!
    <3 Staying Sober

    53 Jamie T Panic Prevention
    (2007)
    nope

    52 Rufus Wainwright Poses *
    (2001)
    I still can't decide if I like or dislike Mr Wainwright, but I like this album...

    51 The Good, The Bad and the Queen The Good, The Bad And The Queen
    (2007)
    Not a big Damon Albarn fan, so I didn't give it a shot.
  • Dibder's New Music Series: Entry 11

    Nov 26 2009, 12h34 por CvaldaVessalis

    Just one more month to go after this, then my ludicrous monthly assignments can finally calm down... I don't mind listening to all of this music, but writing, linking and tagging all of this stuff can be very tiresome. Still, November's been a good month thus far, but before I get started... X Factor, despite not having any really good contestants this year (Stacey is adorable but not strictly an international star, same going for Olly and Joe, Lloyd shouldn't have been in the finals in the first place really and Danyl is quite clearly so unlikeably loathsome with his big voice as to make me try to scratch my eyeballs out), is still as galvanisingly awesome as ever, what with everyone FINALLY coming around to appreciating how lovely and astute Dannii Minogue is compared to the others; Christmas is nearly here, which means I'll have to unearth both versions of Black Christmas for yuletide merriment (and on top of that both versions of the remake, featuring two different death scenes for Michelle 'I Nearly Ruined Buffy' Trachtenberg); and my talent show performance is nearly here!!! Will post a P.S. comment below to let anyone who cares know how it all went, rest assured I don't have a chance in Hell, but should still be fun... Wish me luck!

    And with that, on with the show...

    JLS by JLS
    Given her amazing success after last year’s shenanigans, we can all be in agreement that Cheryl Cole was the winner of The X Factor last year, eclipsing Alexandra Burke's debut both in terms of unit shifts and the quality of the tracks themselves (it still bemuses me, to be honest). And to be honest, given the continued media frenzy surrounding the supposed runners-up of last year's competition, it seems that poor Alexandra has been relegated to third place, which is a shame (still ahead of Eggnog Prick and Die In Her Knickers though... it's not much but still!). Song-wise, JLS have the weaker album; it’s positively awash with the same amount of cynical button-pushing as Burke's and it offers up a handful of decent guilty pleasures (One Shot will probably be their next single for sure); but there is not enough of a distinct personality present to warrant this band’s following and exposure compared to Burke, who at least tries to make the songs given her own. Admittedly, they’re still very cute though!

    Echo by Leona Lewis
    And the Reality TV juggernaut continues, this time with the UK's first such worldwide crossover star (as lovely as Will Young may be, he’s still yet to attain worldwide platinum sales and Grammy nominations, isn’t he?) delivering an album which, by its title alone, dispiritingly suggests more of the same kind of material found on her major debut. And whilst the familiar formulas of power ballads with major key changes and trendy beats is still present and correct throughout (lead single TocarHappy, though more warbly, is but a lesser sequel to her smash TocarBleeding Love, and Oasis cover TocarStop Crying Your Heart Out isn’t remotely as genius as her version of Snow Patrol's Run), Miss Lewis sells it with enough vocal authority to out-caterwaul every other R&B-pop diva to emerge in the charts right now, breathing life into songs that register as less-than-fluff from girls bestowed with lesser pipes (particularly the uplifting TocarI Got You and TocarBrave).

    DJ Stupac Presents... Super Lupe Bros. 1st Coin & 15th Credit Edition by DJ Stupac and Lupe Fiasco
    (P.S. Sorry, but cannot find a legit site anywhere, so a pic file will have to do on the link to assure its existence...!)
    This mixtape certainly receives the prize for Best Artwork Of The Year so far from me, my fondness for all Super Mario adventures pretty much hardwiring that sentiment to my brain. But of course, this is just a promotional appetiser for Mr Fiasco’s upcoming Lasers album, collating a few new cuts (particularly his latest collaboration with Matthew Santos, Shining Down) with older wares and remixes, such as Pharrell's quite lovely re-do of Paris, Tokyo featuring special guests Q-Tip and Sarah Green. As mixtapes go though, DJ Stupac doesn’t really interpolate as well as some of his peers (nothing is really remixed here, rather compiled), and I’m personally a little disappointed that he didn’t carry on the Super Mario motif all of the way through, seeing as those games feature some of the most highly-regarded scores in video game history. But as a precursor to Lupe’s upcoming opus, it whets the appetite wantonly.

    Sainthood by Tegan and Sara
    Ten years after their full-length debut release, identical twin sister duo Tegan and Sara Quin are still plying their trade of pop-flavoured indie rock, this year seeing the release of their sixth effort despite taking time out to collaborate with other artists. Sounding a lot like how Gwen Stefani could have sounded if she was content to write good pop songs rather than collaborate with production-line hitmakers, both girls are in fine voice here as well as sharing disarming chemistry, particularly on lead single Hell and the longing surge of The Ocean. It’s light, lithe, pretty, knocks shades out of other over-produced pop-rock girl bands permeating the airwaves these days (hear The Veronicas, or not) and proof once again that these girls are far more interesting than the pigeonholes ascribed to them.

    In And Out Of Control by The Raveonettes
    More timeless pop-punk-rock from The Raveonettes with their fourth full length album, following through on their New Wave homages with some spiky-yet-lovely soft rock that takes as many cues from ‘60s girl group pop as they do from New Wave icons, the spirit of Debbie Harry looming especially large amidst the sweet harmonies of TocarBoys Who Rape (Should All Be Destroyed). It happens to steer on just the right side of honorary homage to not appear overly cynical or soulless in its mimicry for most of the time, the fuzzy guitars and Sharin Fo’s hazily demure vocals summoning enough proving to disarming to resist on the likes of lead single TocarLast Dance and especially on closer TocarWine. To make modern-day misery sound this lovely and gossamer light takes as much gravitas as it does panache, and this likeable duo do more than enough to keep their fans happy; it’s not going to blaze the trails of pop-rock, but its still a fine pop album in its own right.

    5 : Five Years Of Hyperdub by Various Artists
    In celebration of its emergence as the hip genre of choice for the end of the decade, bolstered by the likes of The Spaceape and Burial who feature prominently on this compilation, London-based label Hyperdub has seen fit to give to the world a double-disc set that collates some of the finer contributors to the world of dubstep, disc one featuring more recent work from Kode9, Martyn and Samiyam whilst disc two includes past work entrenched in the 16-bit sounds that summoned such a cult following in the first place. Comprehensive isn’t the word to describe this set, and there’s plenty to enjoy, though admittedly the first disc edges out the second for listenability, if only because the wealth of sounds being explored by these artists now seems to promise something a lot more epic and amazing than the humble-yet-enjoyable offerings found on disc two, despite some great tracks from The Bug featuring Warrior Queen and Kode9 collaborations with The Spaceape.

    Strict Joy by The Swell Season
    Musicians Glen Hansard and Markéta Irglová's path to breakout success is one of the most heartwarming of the decade; a well-received debut album of ornate folk music followed by a small independent film that happened to break big in America and reward the songwriters with their very own Academy Awards for for their rather lovely piece, Falling Slowly. Being the first album out of the gate for the pair since that win, Strict Joy is one that feels positively alive with hushed wonder, of filling up with irrepressible happiness and feeling as if you’re about to burst, only to rein it in at the last second (which is possibly down to Hansard and Irglova’s actually becoming a couple shortly after the film Once’s release after years of knowing one another and making music together). Though Hansard is a damn fine singer (evidenced here best on Feeling The Pull), it’s the Irglová-helmed songs that strike the chords most resonantly, highlights of hers including Fantasy Man and I Have Loved You Wrong.

    Glee: Season One - The Music, Volume 1 by Various Artists
    Debuting during the final week of this year’s American Idol competition, Glee is the brainchild of Nip/Tuck creator Ryan Murphy, charting the ongoing trials and travails of a high school glee club (like a choir, but singing more contemporary pop songs), and plays like High School Musical for anyone over 12-years-old, but with actual pop standards rather than especially-written, sound-alike drivel. So, we have winsome, precocious high schoolers letting rip on hits by Rihanna, The Supremes, Jill Scott, Kanye West, Queen and Neil Diamond, to name a few. Some are a touch derivative and add nothing new (particularly Amber Riley's take on Jazmine Sullivan's Bust Your Windows), but it’s fabulously produced and when it hits (like on take-no-prisoners cheese-fest Don’t Stop Believin’ or the Broadway Diva-Off between Kristin Chenoweth and Lea Michele on Cabaret’s Maybe This Time), it’s the stuff of drama queen dreams. You have been warned; it will be HUGE...

    Whip It - Music From The Motion Picture by Various Artists
    Pinned as a possible teen hit in the vein of Juno (featuring star Ellen Page on Oscar nominated form), Drew Barrymore’s directorial debut Whip It stalled at the American box office in spite of its good-natured goof-ballsiness and boasting one of the cooler ensemble casts of the year (as well as Page and Barrymore, you had Oscar winner Marcia Gay Harden, Saturday Night Live alumni Kristen Wiig, the ever-watchable Juliette Lewis, even Har Mar Superstar himself!) Charting one high school girl’s self-discovery as a jammer for her local Roller Derby team, the soundtrack released to coincide with the movie could have been a little edgier; though there’s some lovely stuff from Jens Lenkman, Dolly Parton (the classic TocarJolene, natch!) and Gotye in particular, slow schmoozing from the normally-raucous Superstar and The Ettes dull the mood a little too much.

    Phrazes For The Young by Julian Casablancas
    It takes someone of questionably high self-esteem and swaggering intent (or perhaps oblivious homage) to invite comparisons to the legendary Oscar Wilde with their debut solo effort after spending a good decade at the undeniably hip end of the international indie pop spectrum. But, with Phrazes, this is what Casablancas has done; that he’s pretty much gotten away with it won’t surprise his fans as much as the music within, however, his being content to concoct a diverting pop record with various wide-reaching influences that would belie his rockier credentials if he hadn’t spent the past couple of years collaborating with seemingly out-of-leftfield cohorts (Santigold and Pharrell, Danger Mouse and Sparklehorse). Highlights include lead single Tocar11th Dimension, which is just shy of being a pop-rock stunner, its strident synths striking through the soundscape with unabashed joy, and finale TocarTourist, which enmeshes Eastern and Western influences brilliantly.

    Only Revolutions by Biffy Clyro
    Claiming by the band to have been informed by frontman Simon Neil’s recent marriage as well as Mark Danielewski’s novel of the same name, Only Revolutions sees the Scotch three-piece rockers as ebullient as ever, following the breakthrough success of their third album Puzzle in 2007 and Neil’s side-project with Sucioperro’s JP Reid, Marmaduke Duke. The result is a slightly off-kilter rock album full of warm vibes and joyous rabble, played by a band brimming with confidence and more than up for a good time; lead single Mountains is still as enjoyably over-the-top as it was on first listen during the summer months, whilst quieter moments such as God & Satan are proof enough that they are capable of straight-faced sincerity despite their goofball interview techniques. It may not provide as dramatic a sucker punch as efforts from The Horrors and Muse earlier this year, but Biffy’s is still a fine rock album for ‘09.

    Them Crooked Vultures by Them Crooked Vultures
    Rock supergroups intimidate me somewhat, especially those without a lack of artistic concept, such is the case for this latest venture featuring Queens of the Stone Age's Josh Homme, Foo Fighters' Dave Grohl and Led Zeppelin's John Paul Jones, seemingly thrown together just to see what rock and roll majesty is brought forth. And I suppose if the results were as reliably full throttle as what these three musicians have wrought on this debut; unquantifiably epic, heartfelt, nonsensical and featuring some of the most exemplary rock instrumental moments of the year. True, it crunches the pedal into the ground a little too often, though there is some versatility in the late going from the one-two of TocarInterlude With Ludes (which grinds drunkenly away on a looped sample as Homme delivers a woozy monologue) and the slow-burn frenzy of TocarWarsaw Or The First Breath You Take After You Give Up.

    Kingdom of Welcome Addiction by IAMX
    Now happily ensconced in Berlin, wherein he claims he can work outside of the music industry much better, Sneaker Pimps founder Chris Corner delivers his third full-length album, self-described as a tour through “Disney World, with lipstick, cynicism and wit”. Of course, many can level that all things Disney are pretty much cynical by design (and the amount of makeup caked upon those pre-teen princesses suggests no shortage of lipstick whatsoever!), but that shouldn’t deter from the dark delights followed through by Corner on this disc. Going it alone without cohort Sue Denim on vocal duties (though receiving welcome help from Imogen Heap on standout track My Secret Friend (Feat. Imogen Heap)), Corner heads in a more relatively commercial direction this time; the influences of Depeche Mode are inescapable (as with pretty much any electro-rock album released these days), but give Corner his due in being able to sweep you into his industrial miserabilism so effectively anyway (hear An I For An I).

    Turning The Mind by Maps
    Riding high off of garlands from those fickle music critics and a Mercury Prize nomination for his debut album We Can Create, Northampton native James Chapman continues on his electro-pop pledge with this fine sophomore album, which embraces elements of rock, house, trance and pop to create a nebulous whitewash of at-times inspired electro symphonies. Described by Chapman himself as being of a darker hue that his previous effort (which comes to the fore most ominously on the opening title track and TocarPapercuts), it eventually gives way to an understanding Zen-like attitude to existence, cheerily exemplified by penultimate number TocarDie Happy, Die Smiling. For those who are a little dismayed by how perky and bright most of the electropop this year has been, this one is most certainly for you.

    Everybody by Ingrid Michaelson
    If ever there was a pop singer for whom the term “under the radar” applied, none could be better suited to the phrase than modest little Ingrid, an American pop-folk songstress who’s quietly sold nearly half a million records (on her own label too), enjoys sold-out shows all over the world, takes in professional songwriting assignments (the latest being for a certain X Factor judge) and whose work has featured on nearly as many soundtracks as Moby's Play album. Now, with this fourth album charting respectably in the Top 20 in the US, it would appear Michaelson’s finally ready to breakthrough properly; she’s certainly not hampered by a lack of bustlingly enjoyable ditties, sounding more like Aimee Mann's protégé rather than Taylor Swift's moody older sibling. Be it on the childlike singalong of the title track, the multi-layered vocals on The Chain or the adorable entirety of Once Was Love, it’s hard to not be taken in by her charms.

    Greatest Hits by Foo Fighters
    There are normally hoots of derision from the press regarding a Greatest Hits compilation for rock acts whose fanbases provide some of the most fervent examples, but it’s always worth noting when the respective musicmakers themselves join in on calling out such a cynical moneymaking exercise. Dave Grohl and company are the latest band to make such a fuss, this single-CD playlist timed for just before the Christmas rush and without the consent from a single band member. The dispiritedness is more than valid; Grohl is quoted as saying that the band would have sooner waited for the band to retire and then release a retrospective, something more indicative and expansive of the band’s back catalogue rather than an hour-long CD with half of their singles. The only reason it’s high on my list though is the fact that all of the songs here are worth their weight in rock gold, and there’s no arguing about that!

    Beast Rest Forth Mouth by Bear In Heaven
    It’s not hard to hear why this four-piece rock collective from Brooklyn scored a recent Best New Music plaudit from Pitchfork for their sophomore album, for the most part straddling the line perfectly between radio-friendly indie pop and reverent electronic homage. Coming across as a slightly more downtrodden cousin to The Pains of Being Pure at Heart's debut earlier this year, it keeps the sonic indulgences to a minimum and never outstays its welcome (running time is a trim forty minutes for ten songs). One could accuse it of never really announcing its presence and going for the rockier jugular compared to other electro-flavoured indie releases this year (one case in point being The Big Pink's A Brief History of Love), but that shouldn’t detract from what is at times the most thoughtfully calibrated pop release of the year, making up for a lack in passion, perhaps, with plenty of intelligence.

    Hospice by The Antlers
    Boasting a production history so hideously melodramatic it inspires a certain kind of awe (progenitor Peter Silberman locked himself away from family and friends in Brooklyn for two years to write a musical narrative wherein a man says goodbye to his loved one whilst she succumbs to bone cancer), it would be easy to dismiss The Antlers’ debut album as the kind of pretentious claptrap the alt-art rock world is famous for. However, Silberman’s work isn’t so easy to wipe clean from the memory, summoning up comparisons of Jason Pierce's similarly-themed Songs in A&E from last year as well as Atlas Sound's debut that create a sound that is mournful, angry, delicate, forgiving and ultimately very moving, especially when the lullaby qualities of TocarBear segueing into the kind of feelgood raucousness that makes the tragedy all the more horrible. An assured, startling debut, but Lord knows where they could possibly go from here!

    Don't Stop by Annie
    Its release postponed for over a year because of now-infamous differences with Island Records as a result of the more-shocking-than-assumed performance of would-be lead single I Know Ur Girlfriend Hates Me, this Norwegian popstrel’s sophomore effort arrives a little late to the party after the successes of Little Boots, La Roux and Pixie Lott. Which in the end, is more than a shame, because Annie’s album is arguably the better out of the four (yes, even Boots’ album!), benefiting from production wares from established hitmakers Xenomania (including another source of some controversy, the Girls Aloud-featuring My Love Is Better), Paul Epworth and old friend Richard X, Songs Remind Me of You in particular reminding listeners just how well these two work together. For sophisticated Europop, it’ll be hard not to find anything better this year; shiny, danceable, classy and delicious.

    Lovetune for Vaccuum by Soap&Skin
    I’m a little late to the party with adorning 19-year-old Anja Plaschg with plaudits like “debut album of the year” and such, but hey, I’m glad I took the time to listen to her striking premier work at all, never mind seven months after its release. Influences from the likes of Xiu Xiu, Björk and Aphex Twin in particular find plenty of room on her debut, which is a mix of layered vocals (at times anguished, at times sultry, never less than swoonsome) and frankly gorgeous piano work spliced with surging electronic beats and bass synths that never ceases to impress among the thirteen tracks on offer here. “Prodigious” is a word often tossed around when writing about breakthrough artists, but the assured hand with which she composes and produces these works (standout moments being the instrumental TocarTurbine Womb and the mounting industrial glitch of TocarDDMMYYYY) promises an interesting future ahead of her.

    And that is why Lovetune For Vaccuum is my Album Of The Month For November...

    Now, don't worry, the review next will be quite a bit shorter, but that is in a vain effort to make up for the usual end-of-year malarkey involving Top 100 charts and all that gubbins...

    Watch this space, December should be journal-tastic!!

    In the meantime, keep listening... x
  • all my gigs, yo

    Nov 22 2009, 13h16 por distortthecode

    Party In The Park
    3SL, Atomic Kitten, Darius, Sugababes, Busted, Gareth Gates & more
    [Oxford South Park, August 2002]

    Party In The Park
    Blue, Busted, Jamelia, Jody Lei, Kym Marsh, Louise Rednapp, Maria Wilson, Speedway, Big Brovaz & more
    [Oxford South Park, August 2003]

    Mis-Teeq
    [Oxford Apollo, 13th October 2003]

    Busted
    McFly & V
    [Birmingham NEC, 5th March 2004]

    Party In The Park
    Busted, Blazin' Squad, Girls Aloud, Mark Owen, Rachel Stevens, Natasha Beddingfield, McFly & more
    [Oxford South Park, August 2004]

    McFly
    V
    [Hammersmith Apollo, 13th October 2004]

    Green Day
    New Found Glory
    [Hammersmith Apollo, 6th February 2005]

    McFly
    [Just My Luck filming, Hammersmith Apollo, 19th May 2005]

    McFly
    Tyler James & The Famous Last Words
    [Birmingham NEC, 15th September 2005]

    Simple Plan
    Hidden in Plain View & MC Lars
    [Astoria, 23rd February 2006]

    Yellowcard
    Engerica
    [Astoria, 2nd March 2006]

    MC Lars
    The Evenings & The Big Speakers
    [Oxford Zodiac Downstairs, 6th April 2006]

    Zebrahead
    Fandangle & Nagatha Krusti
    [Oxford Zodiac Downstairs, 21st June 2006]

    The Fight
    Mouthwash, Greenacre & The Last Proposal
    [Oxford Zodiac Downstairs, 29th July 2006]

    Victory Records Tour
    Aiden, Bayside, The Sleeping & The Audition
    [Oxford Zodiac Upstairs, 3rd September 2006]

    AFI
    The Explosion & Dispute
    [Birmingham Academy, 13th October 2006]

    MC Lars
    Smilex & Trademark
    [Oxford Zodiac Downstairs, 16th October 2006]

    Enter Shikari
    Colon-open bracket & Out of Sight
    [Oxford Zodiac Upstairs, 30th October 2006]

    Taste of Chaos
    Taking Back Sunday, Anti-Flag, Alexisonfire, Underoath, Senses Fail, Saosin, Templeton Pek & Fast Reaction
    [Birmingham NIA, 11th November 2006]

    Muse
    The Noisettes
    [Birmingham NEC, 14th November 2006]

    Greenacre
    Remember The Flood, Good Mourning & Ark Angel
    [Oxford Zodiac Downstairs, 19th January 2007]

    Hellogoodbye
    Plain White T's & Houston Calls
    [Oxford Zodiac Upstairs, 1st February 2007]

    My Chemical Romance
    Thursday
    [Wembley Arena, 20th March 2007]

    The Blackout
    Kids In Glass Houses & Tonight Is Goodbye
    [Oxford Zodiac Downstairs, 6th April 2007]

    McFly
    Lil' Chris
    [Oxford New Theatre, 14th April 2007]

    Moneen
    Bayside & Attack In Black
    [Oxford Zodiac Downstairs, 24th April 2007]

    Mindless Self Indulgence
    [Oxford Zodiac Upstairs, 25th April 2007]

    Give It A Name
    HIM, The Used, Alexisonfire, Juliette & The Licks, Mindless Self Indulgence, Cry for Silence, Ignite, Fightstar, The Sleeping, Kill Hannah, The Pink Spiders & Lost Alone
    [Earls Court, 27th April 2007]

    Give It A Name
    Brand New, The All-American Rejects, New Found Glory, Motion City Soundtrack, Enter Shikari, Senses Fail, Madina Lake, Cute Is What We Aim For, Saosin, Zebrahead, Kevin Devine, Kids In Glass Houses & The Zico Chain
    [Earls Court, 28th April 2007]

    Give It A Name
    AFI, Jimmy Eat World, The Automatic, Sparta, Hit the Lights, The Receiving End of Sirens, Boys Like Girls, Hellogoodbye, The Audition, MxPx, mewithoutYou, Beat Union & Attack In Black
    [Earls Court, 29th April 2007]

    Good To Go
    MC Lars, Wheatus, Army of Freshmen & Punchline
    [Oxford Zodiac Upstairs, 3rd May 2007]

    Muse
    My Chemical Romance, Biffy Clyro & Shy Child
    [Wembley Stadium, 17th June 2007]

    Rock Off Fest
    InMe, Brigade, Kyrb Grinder, love rocket, The More I See, Profane, They Drove Me To It, Car Crash Television, Thoughts Collide, Armitage Skank, Panic Cell, Forever Never & Beyond All Reason
    [The Dome, 29th July 2007]

    Billy Talent
    [Camden Barfly, 21st August 2007]

    The Living End
    Gyroscope & I Say Marvin
    [Electric Ballroom, 21st August 2007]

    Decaydance Fest
    Fall Out Boy, Panic! At the Disco, Gym Class Heroes, The Academy Is..., Cobra Starship
    [Hammersmith Apollo, 22nd August 2007]

    Less Than Jake (album residency: Hello Rockview)
    Sonic Boom Six & 3 Stories High
    [Mean Fiddler, 14th September 2007]

    Less Than Jake (album residency: Losing Streak)
    Fandangle & You Me At Six
    [Mean Fiddler, 15th September 2007]

    Hadouken!
    PartyShank & The Whip
    [Oxford Academy, 20th October 2007]

    Motion City Soundtrack
    Straylight Run & Zolof The Rock And Roll Destroyer
    [Astoria, 5th October 2007]

    Mindless Self Indulgence
    Scanners
    [Oxford Academy, 20th October 2007]

    Kids In Glass Houses
    Tonight Is Goodbye & saidmike
    [Oxford Academy Zodiac Room, 24th October 2007]

    Shy Child
    We Smoke Fags & PartyShank
    [Oxford Academy Zodiac Room, 26th October 2007]

    MC Lars
    Last Letter Read, Smilex & The Evenings
    [Oxford Academy Zodiac Room, 8th November 2007]

    My Chemical Romance
    Mindless Self Indulgence
    [The O2 Arena, 15th November 2007]

    Hot Hot Heat
    The Thirst
    [Oxford Academy, 16th October 2007]

    McFly
    Elliot Minor
    [Wembley Arena, 6th December 2007]

    Funeral for a Friend
    Kids In Glass Houses & City Sleeps
    [Astoria, 8th December 2007]

    Patrick Wolf (last show for The Magic Position)
    [Shepherds Bush Empire, 21st December 2007]

    New Found Glory
    You Me At Six & Conditions
    [Oxford Academy Zodiac Room, 31st January 2008]

    Panic at the Disco
    Metro Station & Black Gold
    [Camden Roundhouse, 10th March 2008]

    Be Your Own Pet
    Damn Shames
    [Oxford Academy Zodiac Room, 30th March]

    Leaving December
    Canterbury
    [Oxford Bar Academy, 5th April 2008]

    Mindless Self Indulgence
    Robots in Disguise
    [Astoria, 20th April 2008]

    Give It A Name
    30 Seconds to Mars, Billy Talent, Glassjaw, Silverstein, The Blackout, Strike Anywhere, Envy on the Coast, Anti-Flag, Armor for Sleep, You Me At Six, State Radio, The Color Fred, Four Year Strong & Mexicolas
    [Earls Court, 11th May 2008]

    All Time Low
    Cobra Starship & Broadway Calls
    [Oxford Academy Zodiac Room, 22nd May 2008]

    Funeral for a Friend
    In Case of Fire & Cry for Silence
    [KCLSU, 2nd July 2008]

    Bowling for Soup (acoustic set)
    [FOPP, 7th July 2008]

    Bowling for Soup
    KOOPA & Go:Audio
    [Electric Ballroom, 7th July 2008]

    Bowling for Soup
    KOOPA & Go:Audio
    [Oxford Academy, 8th July 2008]

    McFly
    [Shepherds Bush Empire, 10th July 2008]

    Mindless Self Indulgence
    IAMX & Robots in Disguise
    [Camden Roundhouse, 11th July 2008]

    McFly
    [Koko, 24th July 2008]

    Alexisonfire
    The Ghost of a Thousand & Dead Swans
    [Camden Barfly, 17th August 2008]

    Anti-Flag
    Alexisonfire & Black Lungs
    [ULU, 18th August 2008]

    Mindless Self Indulgence
    Fucked Up & Death Set
    [ULU, 19th August 2008]

    Taking Back Sunday
    This City
    [Astoria, 21st August 2008]

    Mindless Self Indulgence
    [Birmingham Barfly, 23rd August 2008]

    The Academy Is...
    We The Kings & The Maine
    [Islington Academy, 17th September 2008]

    Zebrahead
    Templeton Pek & Kids Can't Fly
    [Astoria 2, 17th October 2008]

    Fall Out Boy
    Boys Like Girls & You Me At Six
    [Wembley Arena, 22nd October 2008]

    Less Than Jake
    Pepper, Beat Union & Imperial Leisure
    [Astoria, 12th November 2008]

    Army of Freshmen
    KOOPA, Paige & Allbright
    [Camden Underworld, 19th November 2008]

    Gregory and the Hawk
    Ora Cogan
    [Big Chill House, 8th December 2008]

    Hit the Lights
    Bayside & Oh No Not Stereo
    [Islington Academy, 9th December 2008]

    The Blackout
    Attack! Attack! & saidmike
    [Oxford Academy Zodiac Room, 30th December 2008]

    Demotion Ball (last ever Astoria show)
    The Automatic, Mystery Jets,My Vitriol, Trail Of Dead, Get Cape. Wear Cape. Fly, JJ72, Frank Turner, The King Blues, Drew McConnall, Brigade, Angry Little White Boy, VV Brown & Kieran Leonard
    [Astoria, 14th January 2009]

    Kris Roe
    Dave House & Get Cape. Wear Cape. Fly.
    [The Fighting Cocks, 25th January 2009]

    Crystal Antlers
    Delta Spirit & Banjo Or Freakout
    [The Borderline, 27th January 2009]

    Frank Turner
    [Banquet Records, 28th January 2009]

    The All-American Rejects
    Oh No Not Stereo & The Upwelling
    [Shepherds Bush Empire, 29th January 2009]

    Asobi Seksu
    Sennen
    [ICA, 19th Febuary 2009]

    Anti-Flag
    [Old Blue Last, 20th February 2009]

    Spinnerette
    Future of the Left & The Chapman Family
    [Islington Academy, 23rd February 2009]

    A Day to Remember
    Failsafe
    [Camden Barfly, 27th February 2009]

    Reel Big Fish
    Suburban Legends & Random Hand
    [HMV Forum, 27th February 2009]

    Jack's Mannequin
    [KCLSU, 10th March 2009]

    [spunge]
    Fandangle, Rench & Edit/Select
    [Islington Academy 2, 11th March 2009]

    Patrick Wolf
    Micachu and the Shapes & Craig Template
    [Heaven, 12th March 2009]

    Manchester Orchestra
    Dead Confederate
    [Camden Barfly, 8th April 2009]

    Go:Audio
    Saving Aimee & Eighth Wave
    [Electric Ballroom, 9th April 2009]

    Good To Go
    The Aquabats, MC Lars, Failsafe & Allbright
    [Islington Academy, 16th April 2009]

    Give It A Name
    Enter Shikari, The Blackout, The Academy Is..., The King Blues, Emery, Lights & In This Moment
    [Brixton Academy, 17th April 2009]

    Give It A Name
    Taking Back Sunday, Underoath, Thursday, Escape the Fate, Innerpartysystem, VersaEmerge & Whole Wheat Bread
    [Brixton Academy, 19th April 2009]

    Senses Fail
    Linchpin & First Signs Of Frost
    [Islington Academy, 20th April 2009]

    The Living End
    Tellison & To the bone
    [Koko, 22nd April 2009]

    The Yardbirds
    Tom Nolan's Bluecasters
    [The Live Room, 24th April 2009]

    McFly
    David Archuleta
    [Hammersmith Apollo, 1st May 2009]

    Sonic Boom Six
    Classics Of Love, Mike Park, Mr Shiraz & Mouthwash
    [Camden Underworld, 2nd May 2009]

    Classics Of Love
    Mike Park & The Skints
    [The Fighting Cocks, 4th May 2009]

    Laura Marling
    [The Flowerpot, 12th May 2009]

    Anti-Flag
    The King Blues & Mouthwash
    [McCluskys, 23rd May 2009]

    Cobra Starship
    Sing It Loud, Cash Cash & MiMi Soya
    [KCLSU, 28th May 2009]

    The Blackout
    Silverstein, Hollywood Undead & The Urgency
    [HMV Forum, 29th May 2009]

    New Found Glory
    Bayside, Attack! Attack! & Tonight Is Goodbye
    [HMV Forum, 30th May 2009]

    Sonic Boom Six
    Random Hand, Left Alone & The Skints
    [Camden Underworld, 31st May 2009]

    Patrick Wolf
    YACHT & Serafina
    [Electric Ballroom, 1st June 2009]

    Camden Rocks
    Nine Black Alps, Babyboom, Dave McPhearson, Sonic Boom Six, Telegraphs, Kill Casino, The Get Cardinals, Haunts & Young Guns
    [Underworld, Barfly, Prince of Wales & The Monarch, 6th June 2009]

    Billy Talent
    Max Raptor
    [Camden Underworld, 9th June 2009]

    Alexisonfire
    The dead formats
    [The Borderline, 11th June 2009]

    Moneen
    Lights. Action! & Sharks
    [Camden Barfly, 22nd June 2009]

    Brand New
    Kevin Devine & Moneen
    [HMV Forum, 27th June 2009]

    Kevin Devine
    The Capitol Years & Toy Horses
    [Camden Barfly, 29th 2009]

    Sonic Boom Six
    [Banquet Records, 7th July 2009]

    Failsafe
    Wall Street Riots & Glamour for Better
    [Camden Barfly, 13th July 2009]

    Kevin Devine
    This Town Needs Guns & My First Tooth
    [The Cellar, 17th July 2009]

    Manchester Orchestra
    Kevin Devine
    [ICA, 21st July 2009]

    Kevin Devine
    [Banquet Records, 22nd July 2009]

    Kevin Devine
    Morton Valance
    [Old Blue Last, 22nd July 2009]

    Break The Scene Fest
    Failsafe, Outcry Collective, The JB Conspiracy, Enjoy Destroy, The Skints, A Stranger In Moscow, Overthrow, Not Advised, Kids Can't Fly, The Auteur, Second Monday, Forever Wednesday, Gimble, First Amoung Equals
    [Face Bar, 1st August 2009]

    Sonic Boom Six
    Random Hand, The Skints & Mouthwash
    [The Peel, 2nd August 2009]

    The Get Up Kids
    Dave House
    [The Peel, 16th August 2009]

    New Found Glory
    Kids In Glass Houses & International Superheros Of Hardcore
    [Relentless Garage, 22nd August 2009]

    Right Away, Great Captain
    eddie halliday & Jake Morely
    [Monto Water Rats, 27th August 2009]

    Reading Festival
    Broadway Calls, Kids In Glass Houses, Jeffrey Lewis: Watchmen Lecture, The Living End, Frank Turner, Deadmau5, Brand New, Chase And Status, Gallows, Bloc Party, AFI & Lostprophets
    [Little John's Farm, 30th August 2009]

    Jack's Mannequin
    The Gay Blades
    [Koko, 3rd September 2009]

    Pharaohs
    Bayonets & Blitz Kids
    [The Fighting Cocks, 16th September 2009]

    Twin Atlantic
    Failsafe & japanese voyeurs
    [Old Blue Last, 29th September 2009]

    Caspian
    Stray Borders, Bayonets & Thinking With Sand
    [Newport Meze Lounge, 1st October 2009]

    All Time Low
    [McCluskys, 3rd October 2009]

    Rolo Tomassi
    Throats & Decimals
    [The Rest Is Noise..., 3rd October 2009]

    Johnny Foreigner
    Tellison & japanese voyeurs
    [Relentless Garage, 10th October 2009]

    Eastpak Antidote Tour
    Alexisonfire, Anti-Flag, Four Year Strong & The Ghost of a Thousand
    [HMV Forum, 14th October 2009]

    Sonic Boom Six
    The Skints & The Apostates
    [Relentless Garage, 15th October 2009]

    Random Hand
    Mouthwash, The Ruined & Nana’s Revenge
    [Islington Academy 2, 16th October 2009]

    Green Day
    Prima Donna
    [O2 Arena, 24th October 2009]

    Relentless Live
    The King Blues, Failsafe, This City, The Plight, Outcry Collective, Turbowolf, Sharks, The Computers
    [Relentless Garage, 27th October 2009]

    The JB Conspiracy
    Dirty Revolution, Anti-Vigilante & advantage
    [Islington Academy 2, 30th October 2009]

    Billy Talent
    Cancer Bats & Canterbury
    [Brixton Academy, 1st November 2009]

    Bayonets
    [The Actress & Bishop, 10th November 2009]

    The Skints
    Mouthwash, Squab & Anti-Vigilante
    [Camden Barfly, 12th November 2009]

    Patrick Wolf (with Florence Welch & Alec Empire)
    Micachu and the Shapes
    [London Palladium, 15th November]

    advantage
    [Hope & Anchor, 16th November 2009]

    Manchester Orchestra
    Talons
    [Heaven, 17th November 2009]

    The Xcerts
    Skeletons & Scholars
    [The Fighting Cocks, 19th November 2009]

    Tiger Please
    [Relentless Garage (Upstairs), 20th November 2009]

    The Blackout
    [McCluskys, 21st November 2009]

    Rise Against
    Thursday & Poison the Well
    [Brixton Academy, 21st November 2009]

    Moral Dilemma
    [The 12 Bar, 22nd November 2009]

    Mariachi El Bronx
    Jaakko & Jay
    [Islington Academy, 23rd November 2009]
  • The biggest three-piece in the world.

    Nov 22 2009, 13h05 por nadmarihel

    Mo., 16. Nov. – Muse, Biffy Clyro

    Hui, das war ja mal was. Nachdem ich die Tickets bereits im Sommer gekauft hatte und sich plötzlich lauter andere vielversprechende(re) Acts (dredg , Editors ) für Köln im November ankündigten, hatte ich ja leichte Bedenken, ob es die richtige Entscheidung war, eben zu Muse zu gehen, angesichts von relativem Muse-Hype und der Gefahr von vielen kleinen Twilight - Biss zum abwinken-Mädchen. Aber gut, gekauft ist gekauft, das neue Album gefiel mir ja auch, mein liebster Begleiter wollte auch lieber zu Muse, weil er das neue In This Light And On This Evening nach einem Mal halbherzigen Anhörens für öde befunden hatte, also eben Muse.

    Um halb 6 vor der Kölnarena in der Schlange, zwischen "Ersties" vor uns und Schulkindern hinter uns, wuchsen meine Bedenken was das Publikum anging. Bin ich mit noch nicht ganz 25 jetzt schon zu alt für Muse? Aber gut, ich hatte ja auch mit 16 angefangen, damals mit New Born auf Viva2. Okay, ich bin alt.
    In der Halle dann alles prima, Getränke zu perversen Preisen erstanden sowie ein Bandshirt mit dem tollen neuen Resistance-Artwork, dann runter in die Halle. Und siehe da: Die blöden Saalordner kassieren die Tickets ein! Vermutlich, damit die nicht über die Brüstung auf die Ränge gereicht werden und sich Leute unbefugt in den Innenraum schleichen, aber...unfassbar. Weg waren unsere hübschen blauen Hardtickets. Gemütlich einen Platz abseits vom potentiellen Gemoshe aber nah genug zur Bühne belegt, komische Hochhaus-Deko auf der Bühne bewundert und dann: Leute kucken. Altersdurchschnitt maximal 20, gepush von einigen Papas und / oder Mamas, die ihren Nachwuchs begleiteten. Nett. Außerdem ein Mädchen in rosa Karoblusen mit Jeans in Stiefeln. Ein Junge mit rotem Limp Bizkit-Basecap. Hmmm.
    Sehr schön ein Pärchen, das sich darüber unterhielt, dass die alte Kölnarena doch irgendwie größer gewesen sei als die Lanxessarena jetzt....?!?!? Und das aufgedrehte Bierhol-Mädel, das längere Diskussionen um Volumen-Preis- und Schaum-zu-Bier-Verhältnis mit den armen Biermän geführt hat :D

    Nunja, Hallenbeleuchtung aus, Vorband. Biffy Clyro kannte ich zumindest dem Namen nach, waren nicht schlecht, ziemlich energisch, aber sicher besser, wenn man die Songs kennt. So ist bei mir irgendwie nicht viel hängen geblieben außer dem amüsanten zappelphillipigen dürren halbnackten Leadsänger mit unters Kinn geschnallter Gitarre, der dem Publikum stolz seinen tätowierten Rücken präsentiert hat. Jedenfalls ne solide Vorband, die sich brav nach ca. 30 Minuten wieder verabschiedet hat. Zu dem Zeitpunkt war es immernoch ziemlich leer in der Halle.
    Es folgte die längliche Umbaupause mit Roadies auf den Hochhäusern und Leuten, die hoch in die Beleuchtung gezogen wurden und dann den Rest des Abends da hocken mussten, mit Kameras, ich glaube, für die Projektionen.

    Gegen 20 oder viertel vor neun dann erneut: Funzel aus, in den Fenstern der Hochhaus-Deko gingen erst die Lichter an, dann stiegen mechanisch Leuchtemännchen Treppen hinauf, um anschließend wieder runterzupurzeln, das ganze untermalt vom Intro. Im linken Hochhaus blinkte schon hin und wieder Matts glänzige Gitarre durch die Tuch-Fassade, und dann, ZAPP, runter mit den Fassadentüchern, und da standen Muse, auf leuchtenden Quadern und unter leuchtenden Quadern und...was dann passierte, lässt sich nur ganz schlecht in Worte fassen. Lautes Refrain-Mitgegröle und Hände-in-die-Luft-Gestrecke bei den neuen Songs, die alten wurden komplett mitgesungen, als für Feeling Good das Piano aus dem Bühnen-Boden auftauchte, hätte der Herr in der grünen Hose das Singen auch bleiben lassen können, vorne gab es von Matt gewürdigtes Moshen, Hopsen und Springen, außerdem tolle Projektionen, grünen Laser, die obligatorischen Luftballons von der Hallendecke, eine saucoole Drum & Bass-Einlage von Dom und Chris und und und, es war einfach grenzgenial. Exogenesis gegen Ende und zum Abschluss Knights of Cydonia...irre.
    Muse sind jedenfalls definitiv the biggest three-piece in the world, und live immer wieder unfassbar unglaublich wahnsinnig groß.

    Beim Rausgehen gabs dann die Tickets wieder, aber so ein hässliches gelbes Pappdingen von irgendwem wollte ich dann auch nich.
    Und da ja irgendwas den schönen Abend wieder runterziehen musste: Eine unverständliche Durchsage am Deutzer Bahnhof meldet krächz Zugausfall wegen krächz Personenschaden krächz bitte nehmen Sie die S krächz um 23 Uhr krächz nach Ehrenfeld krächz Busersatzverkehr krächz. Ich hoffe, sich vor den Zug schmeißen wird jetzt nicht zur Modeerscheinung. Jedenfalls gabs dann nen Ersatzbus mit einem Busfahrer, der sich null auskannte, ist ja mal...was anderes.

    Muse waren TOLL! Und Chris Wolstenholme bekommt irgendwann nen Dachschaden von seinem Kopf-Gewackel.
  • Top 50 Albums

    Nov 21 2009, 23h25 por nirvanamannequi

    nirvanamannequi's top albums (overall)
    1. Four Year Strong - Rise Or Die Trying (41)
    2. The Ghost of a Thousand - New Hopes, New Demonstrations (36)
    3. Twin Atlantic - Vivarium (34)
    4. Sonic Boom Six - Arcade Perfect (34)
    5. Every Time I Die - New Junk Aesthetic [Deluxe Edition] (31) 6. Alexisonfire - Watch Out! (31)
    7. Public Enemy - Power To The People And The Beats: Public Enemy's Greatest Hits (30)
    8. Alexisonfire - Alexisonfire (30)
    9. Air Traffic - Fractured Life (29)
    10. Rise Against - The Unraveling (29)
    11. Fightstar - One Day Son, This Will All Be Yours (29)
    12. Blackhole - Dead Hearts (29)
    13. Reuben - Very Fast Very Dangerous (26)
    14. Hundred Reasons - Ideas Above Our Station (26)
    15. Queens of the Stone Age - Rated R (26)
    16. Fightstar - Grand Unification (25)
    17. Million Dead - Harmony No Harmony (24)
    18. Skindred - Babylon (24)
    19. Alexisonfire - Crisis (24)
    20. The Futureheads - The Futureheads (23)
    21. Pixies - Wave Of Mutilation: Best Of Pixies (23)
    22. Unearth - The March (23)
    23. Biffy Clyro - Infinity Land (22)
    24. Stiff Little Fingers - Inflammable Material (22)
    25. Alexisonfire - Old Crows, Young Cardinals (22)
    26. Joy Division - Substance 1977-1980 (22)
    27. Manic Street Preachers - The Holy Bible (22)
    28. Bloc Party - Intimacy (22)
    29. Blood Red Shoes - Box of Secrets (21)
    30. Reuben - In Nothing We Trust (21)
    31. Hundred Reasons - Quick The Word, Sharp The Action (21)
    32. Random Hand - Inhale/Exhale (21)
    33. Enter Shikari - Common Dreads (21)
    34. Frightened Rabbit - Sings the Greys (21)
    35. Every Time I Die - The Big Dirty (21)
    36. Editors - The Back Room (21)
    37. The Ghost of a Thousand - This is where the Fight Begins (21)
    38. Municipal Waste - Massive Aggressive (20)
    39. Set Your Goals - This Will Be The Death of Us (20)
    40. Manic Street Preachers - Generation Terrorists (20)
    41. Manchester Orchestra - Mean Everything To Nothing (20)
    42. At the Drive-In - Relationship Of Command (20)
    43. Fightstar - Be Human (20)
    44. Skindred - Roots Rock Riot (20)
    45. Sonic Boom Six - The Ruff-Guide To Genre-Terrorism (20)
    46. Thin Lizzy - Live And Dangerous (20)
    47. Idlewild - 100 Broken Windows (19)
    48. Deftones - Deftones (19)
    49. Foo Fighters - Foo Fighters (19)
    50. Biffy Clyro - Blackened Sky (19)

  • Bands I've Seen Live

    Nov 21 2009, 11h18 por joecarver

    Green Day x2
    Jimmy Eat World
    Taking Back Sundayx3
    Hard-Fi
    My Chemical Romancex2
    Thursdayx3
    Lostprophets
    Aiden
    Kings of Leon
    Manchester Orchestra
    Paramorex2
    New Found Gloryx2
    Kids In Glass Houses
    Lights And Soundsx8
    Canterburyx3
    You Me At Sixx3
    Tonight Is Goodbye x3
    Kill The Arcade / Wolf Am I
    Reemer
    You Had Me At Hello x3
    She Laid To Rest
    This Dying Hour x2
    Malefice
    Outcryfire
    Young Guns x5
    The Blackout x3
    We Are The Ocean x4
    From First to Last
    The Medic Droid
    The Auteur x2
    for the common wealth x2
    Out of Sight
    Bring Me the Horizon x2
    Dead Swans x2
    The Secret Handshake
    Deez Nuts
    Plain White Tees
    Alkaline Trio
    Finch
    Set Your Goals x3
    Cobra Starship
    Chiodos
    The Audition
    All Time Low
    My American Heart
    Broadway Calls
    meg and dia
    Mayday Parade
    MC Lars
    Through And Throughout
    Colour x3
    Data.select.party x2
    Cold Hearts x4
    Venice Ahoy! x2
    Butterflies On Strings
    Alcove State x2
    Desert City Silence
    Monroe
    Cardboard Cutouts
    Enter Shikari x3
    The Academy Is...
    The King Blues
    Emery
    Lights
    In This Moment
    Underoath
    Escape the Fate
    Innerpartysystem
    VersaEmerge
    Whole Wheat Bread
    Attack! Attack!
    Bayside
    Smudge
    Failsafe
    This City
    Honour Is Dead x2
    Random Conflict
    Brutality Will Prevail x2
    Pay No Respect x2
    Headcase
    Your City Is Forgotten x2
    Blackhole
    Your Demise
    Shaped by Fate
    The Arusha Accord
    The Eyes Of A Traitor
    Devil Sold His Soul
    Gold Kids
    Lewd Acts
    More Than Life
    Carpathian
    Ritual
    Farewell
    All Or Nothing
    Muse
    Biffy Clyro
    Shy Child
    Elias Last Day
    This Distance
    BrokenJaws x2
    Arctic Monkeys
    The Prodigy
    Fightstar
    Polar Bear Club
    A Wilhelm Scream
    Municipal Waste
    The Computers
    Rise Against
    Pulled Apart By Horses
    Ronnie Defeo
    Deaf Havana
    Beat the red light
    Joey Nightmare
    Francesqa x2
    devil beside her
    Dancing with the Enemy
    Four Year Strong
    Anti-Flag
    The Ghost of a Thousand
    Alexisonfire
    The Devil Wears Prada
    True Tiger
    Prima Donna
    Legions x2
    Drowned at sea
    william english
    The 40Seven
    Run x2
    Hang The Bastard
    TRC
    This Is Colour
  • Mon the Biff!

    Nov 19 2009, 20h20 por WildFlower_abz

    Hmmm....Biffy Clyro has struck gold with their latest album Only Revelations. Never been a fan until i heard Bubbles and Mountains and now i cant stop listening to them! Love the lead singers accent too ;)
  • Bands I've Seen Live In 2009

    Nov 17 2009, 1h15 por Adam1988innit

    Metallica with Machine Head (February 26th 2009 at M.E.N. Arena)
    First gig of 2009, what a way to begin! I thought they were slightly better at Leeds festival, but they still played amazing here. I loved the stage layout, the fact we were just feet away from the stage, and the setlist. Played a lot of the new album, plus the classic songs and a few ones i didn't expect (such as Blackened :D). Great great gig. [10/10]

    Marmaduke Duke with Airship (March 1st 2009 at The Deaf Institute)
    First time i'd been to a gig there, and i loved it there! I think more bands should play gigs there, i think someone like Radiohead doing a tiny gig there would be just incredible. Anyway, Marmaduke Duke were fucking great, probably the loudest gig i've ever been to, and one of the craziest. I hope to see them again someday. [9/10]

    Franz Ferdinand (March 6th 2009 at Manchester Academy 1)
    They were a bit of a disappointment to be honest. The setlist was short, they missed out some of my favourites by them, and generally didn't sound that great. Went on a great night out afterwards though ;P [5/10]

    Yeah Yeah Yeahs (April 22nd 2009 at Manchester Academy 1)
    Damn, i arrived late to this gig and missed most of the first song, Heads Will Roll, which is my favourite song off their new album :(. Ahh well, the gig took a few songs to get going, but they got better and better as they went on. Unfortunately the gig was only 70 minutes long, and only had a 2 song encore... far too short for my liking, but they were still very impressive. [8/10]

    Cancer Bats (May 3rd 2009 at Manchester Academy 3)
    This was a really good gig, not the sort of gig i'd normally go to so it was good to see someone a little bit different. The crowd was pretty fucking crazy, i don't think i've seen that much crowdsurfing and stage diving in my entire life at a gig! (Though i have seen Kylie Minogue live, and she runs them a close second) ;). The set was pretty short, but that's to be expected as they've only done 2 albums of pretty short songs. I was a bit disappointed i missed the support bands, as i got there during the last song by The Plight, and they sounded pretty good. Anyway, still an enjoyable gig! [7/10]

    Gallows with Every Time I Die (May 6th 2009 at Manchester Academy 1)
    Pretty good gig again, they sounded good and really got the crowd going, but i think the venue was way too big for them to be playing in. It was only 2/3 sold out, and i think their sound would much better suit a small venue like Academy 2 or 3. That's my only complaint though, it was still a thoroughly enjoyable gig. I almost nearly got knocked over by the guitarist too, who came running off the stage to the back of the room during the encore, and was inches away from running straight into me! Was pretty funny, but well cool how they ran right to the back of the academy and carried on playing the song! [7/10]

    Saw the following at Download Festival 2009:
    - Hollywood Undead
    They were the first band on the main stage, and i thought they sounded alright, though their performance was pretty boring compared to many of the bands that followed them. [6/10]
    - Billy Talent
    Unfortunately only caught the last half of their set so i can't really fully judge them. They played very well though, and played a lot of my favourites by them, but the singers voice sounded a bit annoying live. [7/10]
    - Killswitch Engage
    These really impressed me! I only knew 2 or 3 songs by them so wasn't that arsed about watching them, but they blew me away and were one of the best bands of the weekend for me. The singer was very impressive and the guitars sounded heavy as fuck :P [8/10]
    - Limp Bizkit
    I feel so glad to be able to say that i've seen these live now! They were one of my favourite bands when i was about 12 years old, so seeing them live was a bit of a nostalgia trip. They played brilliantly and the crowd was really into them, and seeing everyone doing that dance during Rollin' was an impressive sight. [8/10]
    - Opeth
    Caught only about 10 minutes of these. They sounded really boring to me, and the singer even joked that a lot of the people in the crowd were just there cos they were waiting for Motley Crue to come on stage... which was probably true. I reckon they probably would have sounded good to any fan of them, but as i don't know any of their songs, they just didn't sound good at all. [4/10]
    - Faith No More
    Was SO excited to be seeing these live, they've been one of my favourite bands since i was about 15, and i never thought i'd get the opportunity to see them live. They didn't disappoint me either, they played a near perfect set, with only the Black Sabbath cover War Pigs missing. The crowd was a little bit dead where i was stood, which is my only complaint, but aside from that they blew me away and left me with a big smile on my face. [10/10]

    - Hatebreed
    I randomly caught the end of their set. Don't know any of their stuff but they sounded quite good, though i reckon i'd have to be in the right sort of mood to enjoy their music. [7/10]
    - Down
    I thought they were quite disappointing, as i was really looking forward to seeing them despite only knowing a few songs. To be fair i was stood quite far back, and also spent quite a bit of their set walking around trying to find the drinking water taps! If i'd been stood closer to the front and had had more energy, i probably would have enjoyed it. [6/10]
    - DragonForce
    2nd time seeing them live, and i was bored by them. I was feeling really ill and tired at this point, and actually fell asleep for a bit in the middle of their set :P All their songs just sound the same, and they sound way better on record than they do live. Fair enough though, some of their stuff is going to be pretty difficult to perfectly replicate live. [4/10]
    - Pendulum
    I was really looking forward to seeing these, as i've had 2 opportunities to see them live before but couldn't make it to either of them. Unfortunately i was feeling so knackered and like i was just gonna collapse with exhaustion at this point of the day that i ended up going back to my tent after a couple of songs. They sounded really good, but i didn't have the energy to enjoy them, especially when everyone else was dancing around me... I swear next time i get the chance to see them i'm gonna go, and i'm gonna enjoy it! [6/10]
    - The Prodigy
    Only saw the first song they played. The sound was terrible, from where i was stood you could barely even hear them playing. I reckon for the people right near the front it would have been great, but where i was stood you could only hear people chanting "turn it up!". Dissapointing :(. [3/10]
    - Slipknot
    Fucking amazing, they tie as the best band of the weekend along with Faith No More. I was just lying behind the big screen watching them and just relaxing, so i didn't experience being in the lively sections of the crowd, but from where i was sat it still sounded incredible! They played a great set, playing mainly songs that i know by them, and even the songs i didn't know sounded impressive. I'd probably put them in the top 5 bands i've ever seen live. [10/10]

    - Pulled Apart By Horses
    They were the first band i watched on Sunday, and also the only band i properly watched in the Tuborg tent. I only know one or two songs by them but they played a really good set, i'm definately gonna see them again when i get the chance (Leeds festival!). [8/10]
    - Black Stone Cherry
    Black Stone Kerry were pretty good, i caught the last few songs they played, and to me they sounded like a good version of Nickelback :P. I loved the cover of Voodoo Child they did at the end too :D [7/10]
    - Journey
    Unfortunately i didn't enjoy these :( I thought the singer was good, but everything else about the performance was just bland at best. They turned most of the songs into extended versions with too many long outros and crowd singing sections. One of the big disappointments of the weekend. [5/10]
    - Volbeat
    Technically i didn't see these, but i could hear them playing as i was walking down the pathway towards the arena. They played the cover of I Only Wanna Be With You by Dusty Springfield, which i think is a brilliant cover. From where i was walking they sounded great, wish i'd caught their set properly. [7/10]
    - Dream Theater
    Caught the last 10 minutes of these (so only saw one song being played by them :P). They looked very impressive, especially the bass guitarist with his 6 string bass. However, i definately don't think they are a festival band (songs are waaay too long to be played in a 50 minute set!), and from what i've heard off a few people, the vocals apparently didn't sound too good. [6/10]
    - ZZ Top
    I was completely starstruck watching these! Billy Gibbons is a legend, probably the best guitarist i've ever seen live, and he's cool as fuck too (the whole band is actually). They played a perfect set list, and i got a good spot right near the front next to some massive speakers, where the sound was so great and their songs were so funky sort of sounding that you couldn't help but dance to them. [9/10]
    - Whitesnake
    I thought these were good, but not as good as what i was expecting. They had similar troubles to Journey, as in they played most of their songs for too long, and had massive sing-a-long bits in the middle of songs which bored me and most of the crowd around me. The guitar duelling bit in the middle of their set was my favourite part, but even that began to get boring after a bit when it just seemed to carry on for ages :\ Still a pretty good performance overall though. [7/10]
    - Therapy?
    I only saw the last 2 or 3 songs of these when i was walking around bored waiting for Def Leppard to come on. Wasn't really paying attention to their music, but it didn't remotely grab my attention, so they were a bit meh. [5/10]
    - Def Leppard
    I watched half of their set before heading back to my tent due to it getting cold and me being bored and tired from sitting around by myself watching bands for most of the day hahaha. They sounded good though, and the songs i recognised by them sounded good. They didn't engage me to the full extent that i thought they would have done, though i put that down to me being too knackered to sing along rather than them playing badly. [7/10]
    ___________________________________

    Nine Inch Nails/Jane's Addiction with Mew (July 14th 2009 at M.E.N. Arena)
    Mew were the support band, who didn't sound too bad, but i didn't like the singers vocals. Their music also seemed a bit out of place compared to the music of the two bands that followed. [6/10]
    Jane's Addiction were on second, and played a set around 1 hour long. They were pretty amazing, and played the perfect setlist (the only other song i would have liked to have seen was Just Because, but ahh well!). Dave Navarro's guitar playing was particularly impressive, and the rhythm section played perfectly. Good stuff [9/10].
    I thought NIN wouldn't be able to beat Jane's Addiction's performance, after all i am a bigger JA fan than NIN... but i was wrong! They blew me away, played an amazing set containing a lot of stuff i knew by them, and even did i spectacular Bowie cover. [9/10] Feel so privaleged to have been at this gig, to see 2 bands that i will probably never see again, both playing as good as they possibly could.

    Saw the following at Leeds festival 2009:
    - Airship
    First band i saw all weekend, who i watched on the Thursday evening. They are a local band, who i also saw supporting Marmaduke Duke earlier this year. They were pretty good too, i can definitely see why people are saying they're going to be big. [7/10]

    - Mariachi El Bronx
    This band was bizarre! Went to the main stage randomly to kill some time before Pulled Apart By Horses and caught the last few songs of these. I was stood quite far band and couldn't hear them very loudly, but they sounded pretty good/funny. Very very random for a punk band to do something as different as this! [7/10]
    - Pulled Apart By Horses
    A good gig, ruined by bad sound. The band played with lots of energy and people down the front seemed to enjoy it, but the back half of the tent just couldn't hear them very well. In between each song there were chants of "turn it up!" from many of the people around me. :\ [6/10]
    - Municipal Waste
    One of the best bands of the weekend! They just destroyed the tent with their energy, speed and the amount of fun in their songs. Such a fun band, i love them! [9/10]
    - Them Crooked Vultures
    They are a supergroup comprised of Josh Homme from QOTSA, Dave Grohl of Nirvana and the Foo Fighters, and John Paul Jones from LED ZEPPELIN!! Two of my all time musical dreams have been to see Led Zeppelin live, and to see Dave Grohl play drums live, and i got to see them both here (well, i know it's not Led Zeppelin, but seeing a member of them live is still pretty fucking amazing). So this meant a LOT to me. I didn't know any of the songs (though nobody knows any of their stuff yet), but they were still brilliant. So glad i got to see them. [9/10]
    - The Prodigy
    My biggest let down of the weekend. I had been massively looking forward to them, but i ended up really upset and annoyed while watching them. I was very drunk by the point i saw them, and really wanted to get right up to the front. But it was so stupidly busy there and filled with annoying 16 year old chavvy pillheads that i couldn't get anywhere within about 100ft of the stage. And the sound was terrible everywhere i stood. In the end i gave up watching them and went to the toilets and to the bar instead. [2/10]
    - Arctic Monkeys
    Now i was even drunker by this point! I don't remember much of watching them, and ended up leaving about 2/3 of the way through as they were playing too many new songs i wasn't familiar with. However, i still really enjoyed all the old classics (if you can call them that!) and a few of the new songs, so overall it was an ok effort. [7/10]

    - Lethal Bizzle
    I really enjoyed this! I went to the toilets near the radio 1 stage and could hear Lethal Bizzle playing my favourite song by him (Police On My Back) while i was sat in the portaloo (haha), so went and watched the rest of his set. I didn't know any of the songs, but it was still really enjoyable. He is a brilliant rapper, and the dj was playing some absolutely sick samples (Smells Like Teen Spirit was probably my favourite one). [8/10]
    - Frank Turner
    He was sooo good live. This was really enjoyable, i was right near the front, and the whole gig was just one big happy sing and dance along. Another one of my highlights of the weekend. [9/10]
    - Vampire Weekend
    Missed the first half of their set from sitting around the tents listening to the football (Bolton predictably losing :\), so i only caught the last 5 or 6 songs. They sounded good though, very tight playing and the new songs (i assume they were new anyway) sounded just as good as the old ones. [8/10]
    - Yeah Yeah Yeahs
    Unfortunately they were another disappointment to me. The sound for them wasn't too great, the set list was poor, too much of the gig was spent with them playing random noisy bits in between songs, and they did a dire reworking of Maps, their biggest and best song. Ahh well, i hope they play better when i see them again in a few months. [6/10]
    - Bloc Party
    They played the exact same spot they played last year, and once again were one of the best bands of the weekend. The vocals were possibly a bit too quiet, but the rest of the band sounded great, and they played a very good setlist. The crowd was a bit annoying though, i was stood right near the front, and twice during the gig there were big cruses that caused about 50 people to fall over on top of each other (including me). It was pretty dangerous and i thought someone could have been crushed to death. :\ [8/10]
    - Radiohead
    Just as i expected, they totally blew me away. I don't think i'll EVER be able to see another band live and fully enjoy it after watching this. Radiohead just put so much effort into getting the sound perfect, they just put every other band i've heard live to shame (including Metallica). The setlist was very good, despite them missing off a few of their biggest songs (Karma Police, Fake Plastic Trees, My Iron Lung etc) and i was gutted to hear that they played Creep at Reading! However, i have to say they are the best band i've ever had the pleasure to see live. [10/10]

    - Madina Lake
    Wasn't really listening to these much, plus i don't know who they are. :P I guess they sounded alright for an emo band though. [6/10]
    - Alexisonfire
    I was just chilling on the grass watching these and eating cheese and chips, so wasn't paying much attention to these either. They sounded alright though. [6/10]
    - Deftones
    I only knew 3 of the songs these played in the end. Had been looking forward to them, and they were alright, but nothing spectacular. [7/10]
    - The Aggrolites
    I only caught the last 2 songs of these, but i thought they were awful. It just seemed to be really bland ska music, and they ended with a cover of one of the Beatles worst songs (Don't Let Me Down). Didn't like them at all i'm afraid. [3/10]
    - Leftover Crack
    These were good, though i was too knackered to even stand up while i was watching them. The singer's voice was too quiet, but they played fun songs with a lot of energy in them, and the crowd up at the front seemed to love it. [7/10]
    - Placebo
    Place Bo i watched while eating a burger (that was a tasty burger!). They were good, but played waaay too many new songs. :\ The only song they played that i really liked was The Bitter End, which they didn't play until 2 songs to the end. [7/10]
    - Faith No More
    My final band of the weekend, and a very good way to end. I got right to the front this time, unlike at Download festival, and it was just sooo much fun. Everyone was jumping around, singing and really enjoying it. They played an absolutely incredible setlist, with the exception of the last 3 songs (quiet, slower songs that i don't like much). The only disappointing thing was that they didn't get enough time to play a fully great setlist. They even ran out of time at the end and couldn't play an encore, which was a bad note to end on. So overall not as good as their Download performance, but still very very good. [9/10]
    ___________________________________

    Skindred (October 2nd 2009 at Manchester Academy 2)
    I got there quite late so missed the support bands, but Skindred were all i really needed to see to make it a good night! The whole room was bouncing and going absolutely crazy from start to finish, and they played a really good even set of their songs. They're definitely one of the most fun bands i've ever seen live. [9/10]

    Muse (November 5th 2009 at Liverpool Echo Arena)
    Took a trip all the way to Liverpooool for this one, cos they didn't play in Manchester! :( Anyway, the trip there was well worth it, and they were just as good as i'd expected and hoped for them to be. I've been a huge Muse fan since i was 14, and have always wanted to see them live, so to finally get to see them after many years was really important to me. We were in seating quite far back from the stage, which was pretty crap (i blame Seetickets for that!), but despite that it was still amazing. I wish they had played more older songs (would absolutely kill to see Citizen Erased, Bliss, Sunburn, Micro Cuts etc live) but the set they did play was very good anyway. All of the new songs translated very well live, apart from Undisclosed Desires which is probably my least favourite off their new album, and they played Plug In Baby, Hysteria, Stockholm Syndrome, Time Is Running Out, New Born, Knights Of Cydonia... basically all of their biggest hits. I'm hoping that when they play in Manchester next year on their stadium tour they do a longer set with more of a mix of new and old songs... and also that i can get in standing! Brilliant gig anyway. [9/10]

    Biffy Clyro with Manchester Orchestra and Pulled Apart By Horses (November 7th 2009 at Manchester Apollo)
    In terms of the overall quality of all 3 bands that played this gig, i'd say this is one of the best gigs i've ever been to! I got there mid-way through PABH's set, seeing them for the 3rd time this year, and this was the best performance of them i'd seen so far. The new songs sounded really good too! [8/10] Manchester Orchestra were also very good, their songs perfectly written so they sound amazing live... I think i've seen them before at a Kings Of Leon gig a few years ago, but i can't remember watching them that time. :P [8/10]

    Biffy Clyro were the main attraction, and they definitely didn't disappoint. I was a bit worried that the setlist would be entirely stuff off their new album and Puzzle, which although i love that album, i've heard pretty much everything off it live at least a couple of times. They did play most of Puzzle (11 of the 13 tracks as i recall), and played about 1/2 of their new album, but they also stuck in a good half dozen older tracks, including my favourite (JAGGY SNAKE!!) and one i just wasn't expecting (Liberate The Illiterate). Just hearing Jaggy Snake live made my night... :D [9/10]

    The Flaming Lips (November 16th 2009 at Manchester Academy 1)
    Just got back from this gig a couple of hours ago, and i'm still in awe at many of the things that happened at the gig! I actually very nearly forgot that i'd got a ticket for this, only remembering this morning, and i almost couldn't be bothered going... But i'd payed over £25 for the ticket, so i decided i must go. I only know 1 album by them, and wouldn't call myself a big fan of theirs, but i've heard about how their live shows are supposed to be really good, so i decided many months ago when tickets went on sale for this gig that i'd give them a try.

    Overall the gig was pretty amazing. To begin with, the lighting, confetti, balloons, videos, costumes etc were more impressive than at any other gig i've ever been to, including bands like Muse! I loved the man sized bubble which singer Wayne Coyne was bounced across the crowd in at the start, and the way that literally hundreds of balloons and tons of confetti were released into the crowd at the start of the first song. Most impressive and exciting beginning to a gig i think i've ever seen. The lighting on some of the songs was very impressive, sometimes almost excessive... I was actually worried i was going to somehow develop a seizure when the lights were at their most intense... no wonder there was a warning at the start!

    ...Anyway, onto the music. (ahh, almost forgot about that :P). As i mentioned i don't know many songs by them, but i still very much enjoyed most of the songs they played. The band was very good live musically, though i think sometimes the over the top nature of the stage theatrics and lighting detracted and distracted from their performance. I also wasn't very happy with the big gaps between songs, and points where the singer was talking for too long or trying to get the crowd to clap more. If they had just got on with the music a bit quicker, they could have probably fit another 2 or 3 songs into the set! But that's only a minor complaint... Overall, the gig was pretty fuckin' awesome! So glad i went! [8/10]