Friday, February 24, 2017
Glastonbury Festival 2017: Foo Fighters announced as Saturday night headliner
The Foo Fighters will headline Saturday night at Glastonbury Festival this summer, the event's organisers have announced.
The American rock band, who will take over the Pyramid stage on Saturday 24 June, revealed the news during a free concert in Frome, Somerset, on Friday evening.
The announcement was made via a live stream from the site at Worthy Farm in Somerset.
Video showed Glastonbury founder Michael Eavis introducing the group before their headline slot was confirmed.
Foo Fighters were forced to cancel their Glastonbury 2015 appearance after the band’s front man Dave Grohl fell and injured himself during a gig in Sweden earlier in June of that year.
Festival organiser Emily Eavis said: “We’re incredibly lucky to have the Foo Fighters headlining on the Saturday night this year.
“It was obviously devastating when they had to pull out in 2015 - and the thought, effort and generosity they’ve put into this announcement is just unbelievable.”
Earlier this week London Grammar confirmed their appearance at this summer’s festival.
Other confirmed acts include headliners Radiohead as well as Wiley and The Avalanches.
Ed Sheeran is also rumoured to complete the headline bill with Michael and Emily Eavis confirming that a full lineup announcement will be made next month.
The organisers also revealed a new area that will launch at this year's festival.
Glastonbury 2017 will be the last until 2019 due to the planned fallow year.
Spin-off event the Variety Bazaar will take place in a different location in 2021.
Friday, January 6, 2017
Eurosonic Noorderslag 2017: Portugal theme will see artists including The Gift, Holy Nothing and Best Youth perform
The 30th year of Eurosonic Nooderslag Festival takes place in next week - the annual exchange and networking event for new music in Europe - and it's a chance to check out some of the artists you'll likely be hearing a lot more from later on in the year.
Each year the festival, held in Groningen highlights talent from a different country and this year it's Portugal - whose local artists will perform on the same stages as the best new talent from Britain, Ireland and Scandanavia.
The theme means a number of diverse, up and coming acts from the country featured that year are provided with a space to perform to figures from the music industry - similar to The Great Escape Festival held in Brighton.
21 Portuguese acts will perform at the January showcase: papercutz, Batida presents the Almost Perfect DJ, Best Youth, DJ Firmeza, DJ Ride, First Breath After Coma, Gisela Joao, Glockenwise, Holy Nothing, Marta Ren & the Groovelvets, Memoria de Peize, Moonshinersw, NEEV, Noiserv, Octa Push, Rodrigo Leao, Sam Alone and the Gravediggers, The Gift, The Happy Mess, Throes + The Shine and We Bless This Mess.
Nuno Saraiva of WHY Portugal said: "With Eurosonic Noorderslag as a platform for European music, we are excited to present new Portuguese music.
"There are so many great artists in present-day Portugal that it is no doubt a tough job for the Eurosonic team to pick which ones to invite, in order to offer the music business professionals and European audiences the very best talents from Portugal in this important year."
Peter Smidt, Creative Director of Eurosonic Noorderslag told The Independent: "We always do careful research about music developments in Europe; last year we did a focus on the whole central eastern Europe to show what is happening in that part of Europe which was an eyeopener for a lot of people.
"Eurosonic is the main platform for new European music and our aim is to provide press and professionals in the music sector as well as audiences an overview of the diverse an high quality of music that is made everywhere in Europe.
"Currently we are impressed by the amount and the quality of new talents that is coming out of Portugal so we want to present and show that. We feel not everyone is aware that Portugal has not only a very large amount of great summer festivals but also a lot of great new talent to offer."
Also among the line-up are rising British pop star Anne-Marie, Scottish electronic act Be Charlotte, Black Foxxes, Bonzai, Dan Owen, Declan McKenna, Era Istrefi, Lets Eat Grandma, Nils Bech, Seramic and Ward Thomas.
Sunday, December 4, 2016
Fiona Maddocks: best classical music of 2016
First the highs: the Lithuanian conductor Mirga Gražinytė-Tyla raised spirits as new music director of the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra. Chineke!, Europe’s first BME orchestra, really took off and witnessed the success of two younger members, both aged 17: cellist Sheku Kanneh-Mason won BBC Young Musician 2016; Elodie Chousmer-Howells is the new leader of the National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain. Radio 3 celebrated its 70th birthday with strong ratings. Vasily Petrenko, popular chief conductor of the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, was awarded honorary citizenship of the city. Pianists Igor Levit and Daniil Trifonov had a good year: contrasting in style but both virtuosos with, we hope, long futures. Martha Argerich and Daniel Barenboim, decades ahead in age and wisdom, played magical Schubert – four hands, one piano – at the Proms.
The painful saga of English National Opera, battling harsh Arts Council cuts and internal unrest, continued: the year began with a chorus pay dispute and the resignation of music director Mark Wigglesworth and ended with an outcry against next year’s Carousel, starring Katherine Jenkins and Alfie Boe. A promising new creative team is in place: Martyn Brabbins as music director and Daniel Kramer as artistic director. Ears and eyes will be on them. In performance, standards have remained consistently high: from Wigglesworth, in his short time as music director, Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk, The Magic Flute, Jenůfa, Lulu, and from the entire company, not just those you see on stage, in Akhnaten, Tristan and Isolde and more.
The Royal Opera had success with rarities: Enescu’s Oedipe and Shostakovich’s The Nose, as well as (not quite so rare) Bellini’s Norma. Philip Venables’s 4.48 Psychosis (ROH/Lyric Hammersmith) grabbed headlines for invention and style. Opera North excelled with Wagner’s Ring on tour, Billy Budd, Il tabarro/Suor Angelica and Mark Simpson’s Pleasure. Welsh National Opera continued its themed seasons, winning particular acclaim for Figaro Gets a Divorce. Scottish Opera made a mark with Stuart MacRae’s The Devil Inside (with Music Theatre Wales) and Handel’s Ariodante.
In Hampshire, Grange Park Opera left the Grange to build a new Theatre in the Woods in West Horsley, Surrey, opening in June next year. An entirely different if similarly named company – the Grange festival – moved into the vacant venue. Garsington at Wormsley scored with a fine Eugene Onegin. So too did enterprising Dorset Opera. Opera Holland Park, newly independent, had a critically acclaimed year with a dark and thrilling Queen of Spades. Glyndebourne, struggling somewhat with all this competition, came out on top with one of the world premiere hits of the year, Nothing, performed by 14- to 19-year-olds of Glyndebourne Youth Opera.
Post-Brexit vote, plans for the proposed Centre for Music in London collapsed. Scotland is doing better. Edinburgh has announced a new concert hall, home for the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, with a 1,000-seat auditorium. The Royal Scottish National Orchestra, too, has a new base in Glasgow’s Killermont Street, an acoustically adjustable, 600-seat auditorium with world-class recording facilities. Abroad, among the usual switches around, Jaap van Zweden became new chief conductor of the New York Philharmonic and Yannick Nézet-Séguin, succeeding James Levine, was named music director at the Metropolitan Opera, only the third in the Met’s history.
There were final farewells: composers Pierre Boulez, Peter Maxwell Davies, Peter Reynolds and Pauline Oliveros; conductors Nikolaus Harnoncourt and Neville Marriner, pianist-conductor Zoltán Kocsis; soprano Daniela Dessì, tenor Johan Botha. The year ended with a resurrection: a lost manuscript by Stravinsky played in St Petersburg by the Mariinsky Orchestra for the first time since 1909. Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Philharmonia will give its UK premiere on 19 February.
Saturday, November 5, 2016
Christine and the Queens, Brixton Academy, gig review: Applied the finishing touches to a future superstar
"I feel like Bruce Springsteen but without all the CDs," joked Heloise Letissier - better known by stage name Christine and the Queens - as the rapturous crowd deafeningly cheered her sold out opening show at London's Brixton Academy.
Letissier's statement is not misplaced: Christine and the Queens has whipped up an overt frenzy since releasing debut album Chaleur Humaine in June.
This chilly November evening was no exception - the singer-songwriter was greeted to the stage with adulation usually reserved for musicians five albums into a career. As the lights went down, a fervent excitement descended no doubt inspired by the shared knowledge that all packed into the particularly rammed music venue were fortunate to be there.
Not that she herself can believe it. The self-proclaimed "tiny French woman with a tiny French repertoire" seemed marvelled as the crowd whooped her every move, lyric and endearing anecdote she peppered throughout the 90-minute set. Of course, it helps that Letissier is the moment's most likeable on-stage presence, her words - delivered with French affectation - making the beaming audience willing putty in her hands (if they weren't already) as she bounded about the stage like a woman unaware she deserves such praise.
Christine and the Queens showcased the full package: tender lyrics - eschewed towards gender identity - sung with crystal clear clarity as Letissier found her note with every first attempt. The synchronised dancing with vibrant backing troupe empirically aided the visual aesthetic, while each song's charming preamble - most notably with signature track "Titled" - seemed so off-the-cuff it made all spectators feel as if they're the first she's ever performed to.
Whether through the discotheque vibes of "Intranquillité" or the stripped-back shimmer of "Saint Claude," every passing minute of the set - much like with her star-making Glastonbury performance earlier this summer - felt like the finishing touches being applied to a future superstar.
If the synth-heavy sound of "Safe and Holy" and standout track "IT" - with its impressive call and response involving her dutiful backing musicians - freed the flamboyance, it was over to the more heartfelt moments to crystallise the evening. A well-earned encore saw a faithful cover of Terence Trent D'Arby song "Sign Your Name" which segued into the jewel in the night's crown: "Nuit 17 à 52," a lyrically-melancholic yet enchanting - and endlessly hummable - tale that sent the crowd into the cold night with their hearts warmed.
On-stage persona Christine may have been surrounded by her Queens, but for two nights at least, Letissier was the monarch of London; all hail.
Saturday, October 8, 2016
Ultimate Painting: 'Our music is a reaction against modern life'
Often when Ultimate Painting meet up to record, they won’t even get as far as picking up their instruments. Singer-guitarists Jack Cooper and James Hoare will meet at Hoare’s house – he has all the analogue equipment they could ever need in his front room – bringing with them lyric fragments and melodic ideas, with every intention of knuckling down on a new track. Then they just sort of … don’t.
“We’ll set aside days in the week where we’re going to record,” says Cooper, sipping black coffee in a Turkish cafe in east London. “But we’ll have, like, a cup of tea and something to eat, and go, ‘I don’t really wanna do anything today.’” Luckily, this creative lethargy is almost always mutual – it’s just a matter of who admits it first. “Normally the other person’s waiting for the person to say it,” Hoare agrees, “so they’re not …”
“So they’re not the bad guy!”
And yet somehow the duo – who formed in 2014 after Cooper’s band, Mazes, supported Hoare’s Veronica Falls on tour – have managed to make three albums in as many years. All of them are as resolutely unhurried as their creators’ work ethic – sparse, lo-fi guitars humming under catchy but undemonstrative melodies. Their latest, Dusk, is perhaps their most languid and unfussy so far. It takes as much care over the spaces between the notes, the deep, contemplative breaths in, as it does over the melodies themselves.
“Everyone’s minds nowadays are cluttered,” says Cooper. “I think what we do is like a reaction against how life can be. The songs we find ourselves played next to on the radio, you have these digital recordings where there’s hundreds of tracks on Pro Tools and it’s like, clutter. I think it’s a reaction against that, against modern life, in that we’re stripping everything away. It feels sort of cathartic.”
Lyrically, too, Ultimate Painting’s music is pared down to its core, never using three words where one will do. If they find a line that works, one that gets to the heart of a song, they’ll repeat it over and over. Hoare, who resembles a sort of grungy Benedict Cumberbatch, a stick-and-poke Beatles tattoo adorning his left arm, is prone to self-deprecation, so he suggests it’s down to laziness. When he suggests that he can’t really write upbeat songs, Cooper swiftly takes him to task.
“I don’t accept that you can’t write upbeat songs,” he retorts. “I really love James’s song Break the Chain, and I really like that line, ‘It’s all right to break the chain.’ I think that’s really quite a joyous lyric. It’s melancholic but it’s cool.” It happens several times throughout our conversation – this quiet but firm confirmation of the other’s abilities, no glimmer of self-doubt allowed to pass unchecked.
That’s not to say they don’t have the occasional disagreement. Hoare’s reluctance to come out and say when he doesn’t like a song has been problematic in the past. “Sometimes when you’ve been working on something for a few days at home, you bring it and James just sort of looks out the window,” Cooper laughs. “He’ll do a thing where if I brought something that he doesn’t like, he won’t say anything, he’ll wait for me to cotton on to the fact that it’s not right.” Hoare nods slowly.
“In hindsight,” he says, “it would be better just to say it straight away.”
“Yeah,” Cooper says, “it totally would.”
Though originally from different ends of the country (Cooper is from Blackpool, Hoare from Devon), they both now live in London. Their music comes, they believe, more in spite of their location than because of it. “It just seems like everything is getting pushed further and further out,” Cooper says. “I think this city in particular is crazy, the whole place is being hollowed out. When you go into central London, you go into these places with beautiful old houses around Regent’s Park and no one lives there. They’re owned by foreign investors, and that kind of attitude is spreading across the city. It definitely affects music venues or artist spaces. But people always find a way of creating, of reacting against that kind of thing.”
For them, that reaction lies in the languor of their music – a respite from the empty buzz of the capital – but it also, occasionally, crystallises into something more biting. In the song (I’ve Got the) Sanctioned Blues, Cooper sings of a nightmare train journey to a jobseekers’ meeting. At the time, the band described the song as an attempt to “make sense” of the Conservative government.
Do they feel confident trying political commentary in song? “I do like discussing politics,” says Cooper, “and I’m constantly thinking about it and talking to people about it. I don’t feel like I’m an authority. So I often try and take a step back from it, because I’m still processing what I think anyway. So it’s difficult.”
But then, it seems, everything is difficult. He says none of the thoughts or opinions he’s articulated in the last hour are set in stone. At least not for the moment. “When I completely figure everything out, which I intend to do, we can talk again,” Cooper says, smiling. “On my death bed.”
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