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By Jovi, It's Sydney

word in from our Sydney correspondent Big E: Bon Jovi have seen a million faces, and can still rock them all...

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22nd Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

Yeasayer

Fleetwood Mac-alikes Yeasayer have added another ICA show for their upcoming tour:

05-Mar Birmingham Bar Academy 0844 477 2000
06-Mar London ICA 0870 400 0688
08-Mar Glasgow King Tuts
09-Mar Manchester Night & Day 0870 400 0688
10-Mar London ICA 0870 400 0688

 

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22nd Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

Oscars '008

The Oscar nominations are out, although if this pesky writer's strike isn't resolved there may either be a non-scripted Plan B or even an unannounced doomsday scenario.

There Will Be Blood and No Country For Old Men lead the charge - with 8 nods each. 

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22nd Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

New BBC Three

bbc three are relaunching themselves as a multimedia platform, simulcasting everything online at the same time, and offering lots of web/mobile stuff/user content on screen blah blah. Jamie Hewlett's Phoo Action looks like a pilot worth picking up

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22nd Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

cellphone novels

more from that bleeding edge of culture: japan's cellphone novels

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22nd Jan 2008 - 2 comments - Add Comment - Tweet

Lightspeed Champion

Falling Off The Lavender Bridge

Domino

Bloody January. It's just a slog, isn't it? The country shrugs its shoulders and goes back to work with a resigned collective grumble, coz evyone knows that the weather will be shit, and that nothing good ever really happens in January. Trudge on through and expect very little. And it was with that open minded attitude that I approached my first two reviews of the year.

Knowing nothing whatsoever about Lightspeed Champion, this album came as an unexpected pleasure. The main man at work here is Devonte Hynes - US born and UK raised, his music has been categorised as "Indie Folk" which could go some way to putting off prospective purchasers who only browse by genre.

But Indie Folk it is - and the good thing is that it takes the good bits from both, and of course ends up being something outside of either. The songs appear to be simple at first, but reveal themselves as something more almost straight away. Songs which could have become 3-chord campfire throwaways are rescued with subtly shifting chords and great instrumentation which puts me in mind of Pretzel Logic era Steely Dan. There are some beautifully restrained string arrangements and lovely touches of steel guitar.

Lyrically, Hynes explores dark territories yet delivers his message in an undepressing way, despite the shock of hearing harsh words in the gentle music. The songs keep surprising - starting out straightforward, but often avoiding conventional structure. No regular verse-chorus-verse-chorus stuff here. The track I really loved was Salty Water, in which Hynes creates a rolling backwash tidalwave with his voice as a perfect accompaniment to the lyrics of rapturous drowning. Personally, I think this music is at its best when Hynes lets go a bit with his voice - sometimes the flat-wovelled estuary drawl veers a little too close to Billy Bragg for my ears, but there's so much more to like about this record that this is easily forgotten. It's not just a collection of songs, it's a real album...and an artist to watch out for.

#Music
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21st Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

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Vote Obama?

According to this his favourite show is The Wire - and Omar's his favourite character. Hilary Clinton likes Grey's Anatomy. American chimps — the evidence speaks for itself... (No word on Huckabee's Tivo yet). Nice piece from David Simon in Esquire on his Baltimore Sun days too.

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21st Jan 2008 - 2 comments - Add Comment - Tweet

A New Jacket

A freshly shorn Jim James has announced a June 10th release date for My Morning Jacket's as-yet untitled new studio album. The release will be supported by a few live shows in the US, culminating in the recently advertised Evening With My Morning Jacket show at Radio City Music Hall.

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21st Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

Instruments Of Science And Technology

Music From the Films of R/Swift

Secretly Canadian

With Richard Swift's debut release, he introduced us to the twin sounds of The Novelist/Walking Without Effort, before 2007's Dressed Up For The Let Down proved to go the distance and become one of the year's most lasting album's - providing an understated sound that was rich in detail.

With side-project Instruments Of Science And Technology, Swift takes us on another unforeseen journey, once again heading out into different territory to pull together the sountracks to a selection of imaginary films: Music From the Films of R/Swift.

Opener Ashes serves as an intro to the album, before leading into the upbeat INST - more pounding electronica that soundtrack. Themes and repetition are explored with the un-ordered Themes 3, 4 and 5 and the double barrel of Plan A & Plan B, and while there may or may not be actual films to accompany the music there is certainly a cinematic influence. The atmospherics of Brian Eno are the most obvious namecheck, with long, slow soundscapes building up and down altering the mood.

With Swift's characteristic voice virtually absent from the album, it's hard to place this alongside his existing work - as his vocal sound and lyrics are so integral to the success of both the debut and Dressed Up For The Let Down. If forced to view the album as a stand alone work it may not be perceived as the most original or unique record out there, but it's a solid album of textured electronica that adds another string to this man's bow. It also adds another subtle layer to the music he produces for his day job and that layer will hopefully be all the more apparent on future work.

#Music
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21st Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

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Paris Fashion Weak

We're all over Paris fashion week at the moment, reporting live from Menswear Autumn/Winter '008 if you're interested. The following information should not be considered as the opinion of Chimpomatic.com, but trousers that are tailored a little short (or 'halfmast' as we would say in the old days) seem to be in and waistcoats seem to be fairly prolific - in an English gentleman style tweed for example.

Obviously, we're more interested in the food, the booze and the parties - all of which have been in abundant supply. The oysters and rumpsteak of La Coupole hit the spot and we snagged Jean Paul Satre's and Simone de Beauvoir's favourite table.

The highlight of the trip however has to be the Viking themed restuarant Nos Ancetre Les Gaulois (Our Ancestors, The Gauls), which provided an all-you-can-eat buffet of smoked sausage, followed by a huge basket of raw veg and a slab of steak - all washed down with a help yourself barrel of house red. Boom.

If that wasn't enough, cabaret was provided by a Welsh ex-pat with a guitar. Check surveillance for a video of Stairway To Heaven.

 

The dude on the bottom right managed to sleep right through a Destiny's Child/Ed Rush mash up, not to mention the 'art' installation playing on the screens.

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21st Jan 2008 - 1 comments - Add Comment - Tweet

Miro, Miro on the wall

been checking out Miro over the weekend, another internet tv player thing, quite good

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21st Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

Search

What else are you gonna do up there?

The Japanese team that are heading up to the International Space Station have decided that launching a paper airplane down into the Earth's atmosphere is their lab project of choice.

The origami glider ... will be subjected to wind speeds of Mach 7, or about 8,600 kilometers (5,300 miles) per hour.

A large spacecraft such as the Space Shuttle can reach speeds of up to Mach 20 (over 15,200 mph) when it re-enters the Earth’s atmosphere ....the much lighter origami aircraft, which the researchers claim will come down more slowly, is not expected to burn up on re-entry.


Links

www.pinktentacle.com
www.oriplane.com

Tags

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20th Jan 2008 - 1 comments - Add Comment - Tweet

BBC iPlayer on your ....TV

With the Flash version of the iPlayer software proving to be far more useable that the subscription version, the BBC are looking to roll out the project to other platforms such as Virgin Media (slated for Spring '008) or the Apple TV.

The notes of "a simple upgrade from either analogue TV or your first generation DTT/Freeview box to an open hybrid DTT/IP box" don't look likely to impress anyone who's just been convinced to get a Freeview box however.

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20th Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

Radar Music Video Awards

Much less mainstream than MTV, the Radar Music Video Awards have their selections online over at their YouTube page, with The Heavy's Coleen taking the "Qoob TV Student Award" for their animated clip, so simple and fun my three year old child could have done it. And I mean that in a nice way.

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20th Jan 2008 - 1 comments - Add Comment - Tweet

Speed Jobs

Tired of the hype machine? Daily Mahalo have a quick round up of Steve Jobs Macworld speech, slimmed down to 60 seconds. Better and better and better.

If you've got time on your hands, you can watch the director's extended cut here .....streaming live in HD. Boom.

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20th Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

Cloverfield

(dir. Matt Reeves)

Bad Robot

boom... BOOM... BOOM...

MULTIPLE SIGHTINGS OF CASE DESIGNATE "CLOVERFIELD"

CAMERA RETRIEVED AT INCIDENT SITE U.S. 447

AREA FORMERLY KNOWN AS "CENTRAL PARK"

From the moment this film kicks in, with a pounding THX rumble and a Classified Department of Defence logo stamped over a black screen, you know you're in for a ride. It's the 9/11 Godzilla, a Blair Witch Ghidorah, a Handicam Ebirah loaded with post-millenium lo-fi paranoia, confusion and panic, that lives up to all the Slusho/1-18-08 viral hype.

The conceit is that we're watching found footage from the night of a mysterious attack on NYC. We start at a going away party. A bunch of hip New Yorkers are hanging out while one of them is walking around trying to get the others to say nice things for their buddy before he heads off to Japan. It's a nice touch - there's a reason for the camera to be there, it makes total sense that you'd keep filming if something like this really did happen - there's a few scenes with other people simultaneously freaking out and getting their phone-cams out. It also gets us used to the jump-cut edits before everything goes nuts.

And when it does? It's a rush - you're thrown in with the WTF reactions of the partygoers, rushing up the stairs in their heels to the roof to see what's blown the city's power and is making such a noise outside. Instead of the omniscient perspective we're used to in monster movies — skipping around from the military, to the government, to the ordinary guy who knows the secret to defeating the thing if only he could just get to whoever's in charge, and back to the monster — here we're stuck on the ground with the crowds screaming through the streets, rushing into electronic stores and catching snatches of news on TVs before zipping back outside where tanks are suddenly crashing through the traffic and there's the briefest of glimpses of something smashing skyscrapers or chucking the Statue Of Liberty's head around...

It's a great concept, simply realised. The terror's effective, the shooting style produces some brilliantly frustrating moments when the camera's dropped on the ground so you can't really see what's happening - the old less-is-more trick, but thrown into the mix here, one that captures that sense of a bunch of cynical urban citizens who can't quite believe that they're really under siege by some unknown thing.

In a way, that seems to be the point here - it's an obvious allegory for terrorist attack; the sudden unknown presence of "hostile aliens" smashing into the everyday reality of people living their lives without any real grasp of a world outside their own. Smoke billows through the streets, phone signals are lost, no-one knows which way to go until the army show up barking orders through loud-hailers. As a cinematic experience it's pretty visceral - 84 minutes (yes! a short flim at last!) of shakycam is enough to make anyone dizzy - don't sit too near the front for this one.

A creature feature with something to say, Cloverfield delivers on the hype.

#Film
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20th Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

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Where In The World Is Osama Bin Laden?

has super-size guy Morgan Spurlock found Bin Laden?! it's showing at this year's Sundance

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19th Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

Be Kind Rewind

Dir Michel Gondry

Partizan

Highly enjoyable homage to the joys of hanging out in a video store from general genius Michel Gondry. Mos Def plays the Be Kind Rewind employee left in charge when store owner Danny Glover heads off on a mission to work out why no-one's coming to their shop anymore (clue: errr, they don't stock DVDs). Jack Black is his goof-off friend working in a junk yard in the neighbourhood and generally causing trouble. Without giving too much away, all the tapes in the shop get wiped, so they start shooting their own versions  of films like Driving Miss Daisy, Ghostbusters and Robocop to rent out to customers like Mia Farrow instead. These "Sweded" re-workings take off and it plays out from there...

It's a great excuse for Gondry to make the most of his imaginative lo-fi powers - the films are pretty sloppy, but totally charming - reminds you of the days when you'd get a video camera and just start shooting any old stuff, in order, without editing. Def and Black make a cool double act, it's fun seeing Mia Farrow in something daft again, and there's even room for a Kid Creole cameo. Once they get going, there's a brilliant montage zipping through their new films in classic Gondry style, flowing from one to the next - would love to know if it was all done in one take or not - kind of think it's the sort of thing he'd at least attempt just to see if it could be done.

Marking this one on a Gondry scale:  The Science Of Sleep was an easy **** and Eternal Sunshine stands up as a full ***** experience.  Be Kind Rewind is a smaller film in some ways, even though it's got a bigger cast. It's still totally enjoyable, but more like one of Graham Green's "entertainments" - a fun work that's still got a lot of heart and is saying something (communities falling apart/ big business taking over everything/ change/ friendship/ how good Robocop is) - but is basically more about the fun of making and watching it. For me, Science and Sunshine packed in a real emotional depth with the inventive camerawork and goofy plots - to say this isn't quite up there isn't to diss it, just to acknowledge how outstanding those two are. Can't wait to see what he comes up with next.

Almost made me miss all the hundreds of VHS tapes I've chucked out freecycled over the years.

#Film
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19th Jan 2008 - 1 comments - Add Comment - Tweet

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Portishead Live

Portishead are finally venturing out of their Bristol hideaway with some live gigs:

Wednesday 26th March   Oporto Coliseum 
Thursday 27th March       Lisbon Coliseum
Sunday 30th March          Milan Alcatraz
Monday 31st March          Florence Sashall

Wednesday 9th April       Manchester Apollo
Thursday 10th April         London Hammersmith Apollo
Saturday 11th April          Edinburgh Corn Exchange
Sunday 13th April            Wolverhampton Civic

Monday 5th May              Paris Zenith

Tickets for the UK shows will go on sale on this site exclusively for 48 hours from January 23rd and then on general sale January 25th.

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19th Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

80s HK Ads

including Viceroy, the cigarette that gives you the strength to jump into a bale of hay...

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18th Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

Videotape(d)

For anyone who didn't manage to get into the Radiohead show at Rough Trade 93 Feet East (er, like everyone) it's all online over at YouTube. 'No Surprises' there. 

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18th Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

Wham-O-ver

Wham-O pioneer Richard Knerr (who gave us the Frisbee and the Hula-Hoop) has died

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18th Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

Doomsday

Yahoo! have got the scoop on brit director Neil Marshall's Doomsday trailer and it doesn't look great. While the idea of Brit Sci-Fi has had gained some momentum recently, cheap looking effects and shocks aren't going to help him join the cult ranks of breakout director's like Tarantino / Richard Kelly / Eli Roth / Edgar Wright.

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17th Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

Dead TV Nunhead

there's just no stopping them...

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17th Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

IMDB, brought to you by....

My IMDB surfing was rudely interrupted by a full screen ad today, complete with "click to skip this ad" before I got to the page I was after - no doubt the Death Proof page.

While ads seem to be the near inevitable way that sites will be make to make money (ahem), this is a particularly obtrusive species. Although if they aren't obtrusive, maybe nobody clicks them.

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17th Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

P-Pik-Up-A-Picnik

The online photo-editing world is moving on fast. Since our last report, Flickr have enlisted the badly-spelt help of Picnik to offer built-in photo editing to their excellent photo sharing service. Broadband speeds and the modern browser have helped make it a not too unpleasant experience.

The forthcoming online version of Photoshop still promises to beat all-comers and has been spotted in the wild.

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17th Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

Got My Fonebak Back

Got a nice cheque for £17.73 from Fonebak today, for an my old Nokia 7610 (once a near dream aquisition) that I sent off for recycling in one of their freepost envelopes. Money for old rope.... It was dusty, dropped calls and the 9 key didn't work.

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17th Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

Sons 'n' Daughters

Just in case you can't/didn't/won't get into tonight's mini free Radiohead gig, in second place we have Sons and Daughters doing a little show at Durrr on January 21st. Except it's £4. Or £6. But they've got a new album coming and it's quite good.

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16th Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

New Clinic

Following 2006's Visitations, and 2007's compilation Funf, Clinic are back with a fifth studio album.

'Do it!' is a summer album, a warped technicolor celebration. Pop music and severe cut-ups going from melody to acid psychosis to acoustic, usually in the same song. A skewed pop amalgam of Motown, Exuma, deep lounge and The Balloon Farm (amongst many).

Recorded by Clinic and mixed by Jacquire King (Tom Waits, Kings Of Leon, Archie Bronson Outfit).

The album's out on 7th April 2008, preceded by down 'Free Not Free' / 'Thor' on 1 February. A

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iBraun

nice piece on Gizmodo about the influence of 60s Braun design on Macs

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16th Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

Live_Air_Space

Radiohead are playing Rough Trade East tonight! here's the_blurb:

So, we've got a small gig tonight.

It's in London at the Rough Trade East shop on Brick Lane, and we're planning to play a short set of in rainbows material. It's very limited free entry, first come first served. Also, as it might be a little uncomfortable for anyone queuing early, they're planning a numbering system so people at the front of any queue can get snacks and toilet breaks in the store. Good bagels round there. But dress warm...doors won't open until 7, and we'll play at about 8.

For those who can't get in - and it's pretty small in there - we'll have some screens and speakers outside, if we're allowed. I think we are. And we'll also webcast it. I'll put the link up here, as well as any other info, later today.

Hope you can make it - should be....interesting. Us being us, we're taking far too many instruments.....

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16th Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

Why?

The Hollows EP

Anticon

After the triumph that was 2005's Elephant Eyelash, Yoni Wolf emerges with a sneaky EP to wet our appetites ahead of next years Alopecia. The Hollows EP is basically a a collection of remixes and covers by the likes of Boards Of Canada, Xiu Xiu, Dntel, Half Handed Cloud and members of Yo La Tengo.

The title track is the only new song on this record and it seems to be finishing off Why?'s gradual transformation from his hip hop associations to the indie rock sound this band have been gravitating towards for some time. Why?'s hip hop links have always been tenuous due to Wolf's sing song rap style and his work with the Anticon collective has been the perfect environment to expand on this. The Hollows is an awesome taster for things to come with Wolf's vocals emerging front and centre and the rock influence moving into full effect.

Strangely enough there's two remixes here of forthcoming tracks of the Alopecia album. Boards Of Canada's remix of Good Friday is a stripped down, head nodding reconstruction that levels out the background to give Wolf's voice the intimate closeness it deserves while Dntel's re-imagining of By Torpedo Or Crohn's provides Wolf's more hip hop delivery with a soft techno lift off. Elephant Eyelash's Yoyo Bye Bye is a popular choice with versions by Xiu Xiu and Dump (James McNew of Yo La Tengo) and the whole thing ends with Islands' Nick T's cover of Wolf's previous Anticon project Reaching Quiet.

The upshot of this EP is that Why?'s 'anything goes' policy has obviously inspired this fine collection of artists to stretch their wings and together they've created material that is as good if not better than any of their own work. Having heard the remixes I'm pretty confident that next March will see the release of one of the albums of the year.

#Music
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15th Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

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Site Maintenance

We're updating the back-end of the site over the next couple of days, so bear with us if things aren't quite working properly...

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15th Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

Cave Singing

Matador's latest band The Cave Singers have a pretty crazy video up on YouTube for their debut single Dancing On Our Graves.

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15th Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet

iPhone beefier

in this ever-changing world in which we live in, looks like Steve Jobs is going to bump up the iPhone memory today, while keeping the $ static; plus, the super-slim macbook air is on the way (as seen in Wired's mock-up here)

There's also talk of another swathe of indie labels making their music available DRM-free, which will open up legal music downloading a bit further. On top of that, Apple have vowed to bring UK prices in line with the rest of the EU (i.e. Cheaper) and even more on top of that they already seem to be reducing the price of some albums (See the £5, £6 etc sections a la Fopp) meaning you can pick up 2007's heavy hitter Sound of Silver for £6, DRM free at 256kbps.

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15th Jan 2008 - 1 comments - Add Comment - Tweet

New Liddell Jam

hurry up with that new album Mr Jamie!

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14th Jan 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet