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\#Spotted: Tucker from the Good Ole Boys, cutting Michelle Pfeiffers hair in ‘Married to the Mob’. https://t.co/iUdy2Hrk7o
30th Apr 2018
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The Colombia Women's Cycling Team Kit is Fashion Disaster Of The Day http://t.co/uTLgJz1VIH http://t.co/K7kZuYW6ZB \#cycling \#fashiondisaster
14th Sep 2014
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Kurt Vile Will Violate You Again in April
The new @TheRealKurtVile record "Wakin' On A Pretty Daze" is out April 8th. Check out the rocking 9m30s MP3 "Wakin' On A Pretty Day" here. And be prepared for some spelling issues with all these titles.
Cover art is by chimp favourite Espo (aka Steven Powers). Check that out above and in the video below.
13th Feb 2013 - Add Comment - Tweet

\#Spotted: Mini Driver as a Russian nightclub singer in 'Goldeneye'. It's a mini adventure. http://t.co/NHk7AV6W
18th Oct 2012
Read on TwitterNever not funny RT @robinderrick RT @kegrand: Pug on a horse http://t.co/qdK74y0E
23rd Aug 2012
Read on TwitterAnytime. RT @blackscore_: Not in a million years. @ Royal Festival Hall http://t.co/iK7amUuv
22nd Jul 2012
Read on TwitterRT @blackscore_: There's a good interview with Ian MacKaye about this (Fugazi) Live Series over @pitchforkmedia http://t.co/k7m75pzF
5th Dec 2011
Read on TwitterLoving Everton's camo goalie RT @thecoldvein: Is this the worst season for footy strips ever? http://t.co/sfCk7QS
22nd Jul 2011
Read on TwitterThe Best Title Sequences Of All Time
Nice run down on 30 of the best title sequences of all time over at Creative Review. Not sure all my favourites are in there, but it's a pretty thorough list.
We all wet our pants at film school when the Se7en titles first rolled out. Stan Brakhage goes mainstream.
23rd Jul 2009 - Add Comment - Tweet
Ad Nauseum: Protest
Creative Review has a run-down of some of the latest ads doing the rounds, including a flash-mob rip off of that Thriller thing, plus another Cadbury's ad.
This one for Protest caught my eye however. I can smell the snow.
27th Jan 2009 - Add Comment - Tweet
!K7 Sampler
sign up for some new free stuff from !K7 - Hot Chip, Carl Craig, Quiet Village and our pals in the Matthew Herbert Big Band
30th Oct 2008 - Add Comment - Tweet
Behind The Planet Of The Apes
Last month's Paris mission has now been de-classified, so I can tell you about the chimp-friendly Planet Of The Apes exhibition at snazzy French boutique Colette. The exhibition was to promote Magnum photographer Dennis Stock's 1968 photos from the set of Planet Of The Apes - featuring 10,000 Euro prints and a commemorative book that was large in size and price. The photos need no explanation, perfectly capturing a life of seamless harmony of Ape and Man.
11th Feb 2008 - 1 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
Wu-Tang Clan
8 Diagrams
Bodog
Six years on and one Dirty Bastard down and the Clan are back. 8 Diagrams, Wu-Tang Clan's 5th studio album was long in the making and comes with the expected dose of controversy and talking points you'd imagine from this group. Leading up to the release of 8 Diagrams Raekwon stirred things up with a much publicised interview where he openly critisised producer RZA for the direction he was taking the group and accused him of being a "hip-hop hippie." Then like a bunch of bickering little girls Ghostface Killah weighed in protesting the timing of the record which was due to be released at the same time as his own The Big Doe Rehab. It's clear from the first listen of this record that Raekwon and Ghostface Killah don't know shit. RZA might have taken the Wu sound in a more subtle direction but in doing so he's created one of the hip-hop albums of the year.
Since their first release Enter The Wu (36 Chambers) way back in 1993, The Wu Tang Clan quickly established their own unique sound and all the many solo projects that followed have only served to elaborate on this. RZA, with his fingers in many pies would never have been content to continue this progression so despite the twittering of a few back-benchers he's rejected the hard-hitting beats of old and painstakingly crafted a record dripping in mood. It's a dark, reflective and densely produced piece of work that uses strings, guitar, live instrumentation and more soul vocals than ever before. It has no clear single and will alienate many die hard Wu fans but RZA's new, introvert style of sound provides richer pastures for his band of merry MC's.
Campfire kicks things off with a beat that oozes through your speakers like molasses, while Get Them Out The Way Pa is smoother than any Wu sound you've heard. This easing off the heavy beat pedal doesn't soften the impact that this group have been keen to cultivate but lets it sink in slower and more profoundly than before. The thick, plodding beats and rich instrumentation shifts the emphasis away from violence to menace and fear. So when the big guns do come out they are sharper than ever. Rushing Elephants and Unpredictable are the proud figureheads of this record and inject a sense of urgency with their apocalyptic beats and epic heist-movie horns. The production goes from minimal to claustrophobically complex and the MC's raise the tempo with furious spitting. Unfortunately this tempo is not maintained and throughout the middle section you start to think that maybe RZA's critics had a point. The beats start to go from brooding to just plain soft and the focus on melody and singing comes dangerously close to diluting the Wu ethos. Gun Will Go embodies this perfectly - it counts itself in with a rhythm that promises greatness then is smoothed over with soft melody and the`tantalisingly old school snare simply fades away.
Thankfully, RZA is anything but self indulgent and always has a plan. He cleverly manages to steer his crew out of this slow patch and they emerge triumphant, in fact he starts by going solo over a slow jazz background in Sunshine then continues to bring this album back to the dark side with steady cuts like Weak Spot and and Tar Pit. The late O.D.B's presence is definitely felt on this record with the tribute song Life Changes and the closing track 16th Chamber.
8 Diagrams is certainly not what you'd expect from a group such as this after a 6 year absence but who needs another thugged-out beat-fest? These guys created this genre so who better to lead us out of it into a new dawn? Thankfully this is no sunrise and the gloom still hangs heavy over Clan territory. 8 Diagrams might not be as head on as albums like 36 Chambers, but it's weight will eventually seep through and it will, in time, emerge as one of the hip-hop albums of 2007.
18th Dec 2007 - 2 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
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Joakim
Monsters & Silly Songs
K7
You know those days when you just can't decide between, deep techno, grung rock, abstract noise, driving electro or ambient electronica so you settle for Kid A, well now there's an alternative. Joakim's second album in four years has it all and though this may lead to a slightly disjointed listen it's great to hear an album you can't sum up in the first few tracks.
True opener Sleep In Hollow Tree is a dark, pulsating start to the album recalling experimental oddballs Liars, while Drumtrax is a thumping instrumental electro jam rivaling anything from DFA or LCD. The slower offerings come in the form of Lonely Hearts which could be early Moby or Royksopp and there's even the sprawling ambience of The Devil With No Tail that is not too dissimilar to that of Japanese legend Susumu Yokota. But none of this would amount to anything if it weren't for the album highlight of Love Me 2. This is nearly 9 minutes of slow building drums that if Michael Mann ever hears he'll issue a re-edit of Heat where the Moby song that soundtracks the De Niro/ Pacino motorway chase is dropped for this gem. When you think it's about to climax and tail off you'll see from the time bar that it's only half way through. But do not fear, this baby will put out.
And the same can be said for the album as a whole. It's not perfect but it aims high. A general criticism for albums like this that showcase a wide variety of genres is that they end up spreading themselves too thin and become a Jack of all trades and master of none but I wouldn't say this about Monsters & Silly Songs. It's a highly original project that is both challenging and exciting and if you want to bitch and moan that I've done nothing here but name-check other bands, then I apologise - but hey, I can't write Shakespeare all the time.
27th Mar 2007 - Add Comment - Tweet
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herbert should koko
herbert at koko tonight for k7!s 21st birthday?
16th Nov 2006 - Add Comment - Tweet
A Bigger Scale
As if www.matthewherbert.com and www.matthewherbert.net weren't giving you enough informations, K7 have launched a mini-site for upcoming album Scale, with some video, sounds, notes.....
15th May 2006 - 1 comments - Add Comment - Tweet
scale
interview w that boy herbert over on the ever-reliable pitchfork about his new album scale, which has been going down nicely in chimp towers recently (along w dani siciliano's equally excellent second album slappers); also some details about the radiohead covers album (including matt and mara carlyle doing Nice Dream.) loving moving like a train on scale and why can't i get you high so far out soonish on k7!
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24th Feb 2006 - Add Comment - Tweet
herberts getting hot(line) in herrre
a chance to be on the new herbert record in case you haven't checked magic and accident recently
that boy herbert writes: "My new record is called SCALE and takes as its starting point, the idea of distance in our lives. For one track I am trying to make a small connection with the potential audience of the album. To this end, we have set up an answer phone at k7 hq. The number there is : +49 32 22 1918 394
If you would like to contribute, please call this number and leave me a sound. Any sound. Preferably not speech or something vocal. Please DON'T say what the sound is or your name, I'm interested in making a piece of music out of noises that I don't know anything about. If you'd like to register your contribution, and name then please email dan@k7.com
Regardless, if you'd like to add a noise to the record, just call up and leave me a sound. Every sound will be used.
You have until december the 15th to do it."
12th Dec 2005 - Add Comment - Tweet




