Friday 27 June 2008

Mellowdrone

Mellowdrone   
Artist: Mellowdrone

   Genre(s): 
Indie
   



Discography:


Go Get Em Tiger   
 Go Get Em Tiger

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 6




Though the Venezuelan-born, Miami-bred guitar player and star vocalist of Mellowdrone, Jonathan Bates, had been playing the instrument since a nipper, it wasn't until he got to Berklee School of Music that he realised he was plainly a technically good guitar player, and didn't actually know often about music. At geezerhood 20, and a class before graduating, Bates left Boston and moved to Los Angeles to begin badly composing and recording his own music. His 2003 self-released EPs, A Demonstration of Intellectual Property and Go Get 'Em Tiger, the latter recorded with Tony DeMatteo on guitar, Scott Ellis on drums, and Greg Griffith on bass voice, caught the attention of early Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr, world Health Organization invited Bates, under the bring up Mellowdrone, to open for him during his approaching tour. When Bates had finished acting with Marr, Tony DeMatteo rejoined Mellowdrone, and after a feverish touring schedule with bands like the Killers, Elbow, and Secret Machines, the radical gestural to 3 Records/Red Ink in 2005. Their number one full-length album, Box, came out the following year.






Monday 23 June 2008

Rihanna - Rihanna Wants To Form Trio With Winehouse And Duffy

R+B star RIHANNA wants to record a "feminist anthem" for her next album with fellow chart-toppers AMY WINEHOUSE and DUFFY.

The Umbrella hitmaker has drawn up a wishlist of musicians and producers she wants to work with when she next hits the studio, with Winehouse, Duffy, and Winehouse-collaborator Mark Ronson right at the top.

She tells the BBC, "I love Mark Ronson. We've talked about doing something together on my next album".

Rihanna adds of a 'dream team' with Brits Winehouse and Duffy: "How amazing would that be? We've all got three different voices, it would be brilliant. Now that would be a feminist anthem.

"I love Amy. I think she's great, so unique. I love her album. And I also love what Duffy is doing, she's brilliant, as well."




See Also

Monday 16 June 2008

Liz Phair announces two more 'Guyville' performances

Liz Phair has announced that she will give two additional performances of her landmark 1993 album 'Exile In Guyville' to celebrate its 15th anniversary.

Phair will perform the album in its entirety in San Francisco on June 23 and Chicago on June 24, prior to two sold-out performances at New York's Hiro Ballroom, as previously reported.

'Exile In Guyville' is being reissued on June 24. Phair has also announced plans to release a new studio album this autumn.

The 'Exile In Guyville' tour dates are:

San Francisco, CA Fillmore (June 23)
Chicago, IL Vic Theatre (24)
New York, NY Hiro Ballroom (25, 26)

--By our Los Angeles staff.
Find out more about NME.

Sunday 1 June 2008

Album Review: Nine Inch Nails, "The Slip"

From a price-versus-quality standpoint, "The Slip" is the greatest album Nine Inch Nails [ tickets ] has ever released--considering that the price tag was a note from bandleader Trent Reznor that read "This one's on me."After parting with his record label last fall, the suddenly prolific and fiercely do-it-yourself Reznor surprised fans in March with "Ghosts I-IV," a self-released, four-volume instrumental collection; earlier this month, he one-upped himself by unexpectedly dishing out "The Slip" for free via his website."Ghosts" and "The Slip" follow last year's "Year Zero," which, independent of any pricing criteria, is the crowning sonic and conceptual jewel of NIN's catalog thus far--a distinction that makes it a tough act to follow.Granted, the ARG plot that couched the release of "Year Zero" made that album much more than a simple collection of music. Absent of that, "The Slip" feels comparatively thin.That thinness also extends into the new album's overall production, which, next to the industrial bombast of "Year Zero," is a far more stripped-down affair, heavy on guitars and live drumming. It is, by NIN standards, a fairly straight-ahead, no-frills rock album.Why compare "The Slip" so heavy-handedly against "Year Zero"? Well, Reznor had said at the time of its release that "Year Zero" was merely the first installment of a larger work, and that "Year Zero, Part 2" would follow. The promise of seeing the "Year Zero" storyline further play out, and of hearing more music as sonically complex as that found on "Year Zero," is a captivating prospect, and one that makes "The Slip" feel kind of like a pit stop.Taken on its own merits, however, "The Slip" is no throwaway.The 11-track collection is largely filled with whiplash-inducing, frenetic cuts, standouts among which are "1,000,000" and "Head Down," two songs that feature a flurry of shredding synthesizers and guitars anchored by drummer Josh Freese's 4/4 rock beat on a decidedly garage-band sounding drum kit.Freese's back beat also holds center stage on "Discipline," a rock song sprinkled with just enough pop seasoning to make it sound equally at home in both rock clubs and dancehalls. (Test your subwoofer with that thunderous bass lift-off just past the 3-minute mark.)Adding texture are "Lights in the Sky," a quiet piano ballad reminiscent of NIN's 1994 cut "Hurt"; "Corona Radiata," a lengthy, ambient cut into which "Lights in the Sky" bleeds; and "The Four of Us are Dying," an electronica-heavy instrumental number that seems to have found its way here from the "Ghosts" sessions.Though not a career milestone, "The Slip" does bear the distinction of being a high-quality, full-length album that the staunchly anti-record-label Reznor was able to deliver to fans on a whim and for free. Tough to find anything in that equation worth complaining about.