New Order have been confirmed to play at the Coachella Festival in Indio, California (USA), this year a fabulous event which will see four major new wave bands.
On Saturday, April 30 Coldplay and Chemical Brothers will play, but that day will see also the comeback on stage of Cocteau Twins and Bauhaus.
On Sunday, May 1 Nine Inch Nails, Prodigy and Roni Size are scheduled with New Order and another extraordinary return, Gang Of Four.
More info on the Coachella site.
Tuesday, 1 February 2005
Saturday, 29 January 2005
New links to hear New Order's Krafty
Choose your media player and click on the following links:
Krafty for Windows Media (2) (Warner Japan)
The pic shows the new New Order: Peter Hook (bass), Steve Morris (drums), Bernard Sumner (guitar, vocals) and Phil Cunningham, who has replaced Steve's wife Gillian Gilbert, former keyboardist and guitarist, who left the band for family commitments. It's taken from NewOrderOnline.com, where you'll learn more about the forthcoming single (to be released on March 7th) and album Waiting For The Sirens Call (release date on March 28th) and the first news about the live dates.
Tags:
New Order
Tuesday, 25 January 2005
Hear New Order's new single!
Go to NewOrderOnline.com and follow the instructions to hear New Order's new brilliant single Krafty two months before the release. It'll be streaming archived only until this Friday, January 28th, so hurry up and don't miss this chance to hear this wonderful comeback!
Tags:
New Order
Friday, 24 December 2004
The Best of 2004 (and Merry Christmas)
01 NEW ORDER : In Session
02 REVENGE : One True Passion V 2.0
03 VARIOUS : Twice As Nice
02 REVENGE : One True Passion V 2.0
03 VARIOUS : Twice As Nice
04 THE BLUE NILE : High
05 SWAMP CHILDREN : So Hot (expanded reissue)
05 SWAMP CHILDREN : So Hot (expanded reissue)
06 MORRISSEY : You Are The Quarry
07 BJORK : Medulla
08 EL MUNIRIA : Stanza 218
09 LA SKARNEMURTA : Neruda!
10 DIAFRAMMA : Volume 13
Still waiting to hear essential releases like Frank Black's Frank Black Francis etc...
Label of the year: LTM with THREE records (02, 03 and 05) in the top 10!
Merry Christmas and a Happy 2005, waiting for a new New Order album in spring and some new releases by Gabrielles Wish and La Skarnemurta!
07 BJORK : Medulla
08 EL MUNIRIA : Stanza 218
09 LA SKARNEMURTA : Neruda!
10 DIAFRAMMA : Volume 13
Still waiting to hear essential releases like Frank Black's Frank Black Francis etc...
Label of the year: LTM with THREE records (02, 03 and 05) in the top 10!
Merry Christmas and a Happy 2005, waiting for a new New Order album in spring and some new releases by Gabrielles Wish and La Skarnemurta!
Monday, 13 December 2004
Cool As Ice / Twice As Nice
In these two years the always excellent LTM (Les Temps Modernes) has given us two CDs collecting some of the best releases produced for Factory Records (and connected labels) in the early and mid 80s by New Order members (under the name Be Music), legendary New York DJs Arthur Baker and Mark Kamins, and Donald Johnson of A Certain Ratio. These compilations alone justify the very name of the label, these songs have remained mostly a rarity for connoisseurs of the scene, and yet they sound, more than modern, like hidden gems from the future.
You hear it from the explosive start of COOL AS ICE, 52nd Street's Can't Afford To Let You Go, a lost electro masterpiece we now rediscover thanks to LTM. The fact these compilations take their titles from one of their few but wonderful singles is just appropriate. They've been one of the less popular Factory bands (except some cult status in the American dance club scene), and moving to Virgin later didn't help their career, but their songs tower above everything else on these albums. People can have a weird taste, and you see it from todays charts. In my world, 52nd Street have kicked Madonna off the number 1 of the mainstream charts (though they actually came earlier).
There's also the seminal Looking From A Hilltop by Section 25 (formerly a great post punk band as well), cited by many house and techno pioneers as an influence, and tracks by Quando Quango (with guests like Johnny Marr from The Smiths and Simon Topping from A Certin Ratio), the band of Mike Pickering, future Hacienda DJ and leader of M People, Marcel King (formerly of Sweet Sensation) and Paul Haig (from post punk cult heroes Josef K).
Top rarities come from the deliciously weird Thick Pigeon (formed by Stanton Miranda and future movie soundtrack composer Carter Burwell), Life, a band formed by Andy Robinson, then already a New Order crew member and now their manager since Rob Gretton's death and there's even the Theme by Be Music (actually New Order's Peter Hook on this track).
You may wonder how LTM can better such a compilation. Well, wait until you've heard TWICE AS NICE. Again the amazing, breath-taking masterpiece comes from 52nd Street. I've thought they couldn't have made a better song than Cool As Ice for years, and here I've discovered the absolutely perfect electro funk of Look Into My Eyes (produced by Johnson of course), the best funk track ever, trust me, yes even better than anything by the fantastic ACR. That beginning when the fat groove made of fabulous bass and percussions with keyboards blasts on the thin guitar is worth the price of the CD alone (which is cheap anyway, but you know what I mean). And that's the fifth song, the compilation has another awesome start with their own Express, something between the classic funk of the 70s and the house funk sampling of the late 80s. In other words, a timeless futuristic classic.
In those times Mark Kamins was producing Madonna (never forget she did excellent electro stuff like Everybody before moving into straight successful pop) and Cheyne, who even was supposed to release Into The Groove, but things went differently so here we have Call Me Mr. Telephone from an obscure singer who had a rather similar voice as well.
You can hear New Order's Bernard Sumner practicing his guitar for Low Life on Shark Vegas' wonderful You Hurt Me and Royal Family And The Poor adding electro to their frightening dark but charming post punk.
Quando Quango appear on this CD as well, with tracks which make you wonder how could they sound so ahead of their times. You'd believe me if I told you they were released in 1989, and I'm talking about a decade when four years meant a huge evolution, unlike these conservative (when not reactionary) times. More artists returning from the first compilation are Marcel King, Thick Pigeon, and Section 25 (with the fantastic Sakura, blending deep punk bass with frenzy sequencers), while New Order appear as a full band with the extreme futuristic electro terror of Video 586 (this is a 6 minutes 'edit', the original is 22 minutes...), a gloriously minimalistic and experimental track which was a turning point in their evolution towards Blue Monday.
Of course both CDs are absolutely recommended.
Be Music page on LTM, for more info, tracklists and purchase orders.
You hear it from the explosive start of COOL AS ICE, 52nd Street's Can't Afford To Let You Go, a lost electro masterpiece we now rediscover thanks to LTM. The fact these compilations take their titles from one of their few but wonderful singles is just appropriate. They've been one of the less popular Factory bands (except some cult status in the American dance club scene), and moving to Virgin later didn't help their career, but their songs tower above everything else on these albums. People can have a weird taste, and you see it from todays charts. In my world, 52nd Street have kicked Madonna off the number 1 of the mainstream charts (though they actually came earlier).
There's also the seminal Looking From A Hilltop by Section 25 (formerly a great post punk band as well), cited by many house and techno pioneers as an influence, and tracks by Quando Quango (with guests like Johnny Marr from The Smiths and Simon Topping from A Certin Ratio), the band of Mike Pickering, future Hacienda DJ and leader of M People, Marcel King (formerly of Sweet Sensation) and Paul Haig (from post punk cult heroes Josef K).
Top rarities come from the deliciously weird Thick Pigeon (formed by Stanton Miranda and future movie soundtrack composer Carter Burwell), Life, a band formed by Andy Robinson, then already a New Order crew member and now their manager since Rob Gretton's death and there's even the Theme by Be Music (actually New Order's Peter Hook on this track).
You may wonder how LTM can better such a compilation. Well, wait until you've heard TWICE AS NICE. Again the amazing, breath-taking masterpiece comes from 52nd Street. I've thought they couldn't have made a better song than Cool As Ice for years, and here I've discovered the absolutely perfect electro funk of Look Into My Eyes (produced by Johnson of course), the best funk track ever, trust me, yes even better than anything by the fantastic ACR. That beginning when the fat groove made of fabulous bass and percussions with keyboards blasts on the thin guitar is worth the price of the CD alone (which is cheap anyway, but you know what I mean). And that's the fifth song, the compilation has another awesome start with their own Express, something between the classic funk of the 70s and the house funk sampling of the late 80s. In other words, a timeless futuristic classic.
In those times Mark Kamins was producing Madonna (never forget she did excellent electro stuff like Everybody before moving into straight successful pop) and Cheyne, who even was supposed to release Into The Groove, but things went differently so here we have Call Me Mr. Telephone from an obscure singer who had a rather similar voice as well.
You can hear New Order's Bernard Sumner practicing his guitar for Low Life on Shark Vegas' wonderful You Hurt Me and Royal Family And The Poor adding electro to their frightening dark but charming post punk.
Quando Quango appear on this CD as well, with tracks which make you wonder how could they sound so ahead of their times. You'd believe me if I told you they were released in 1989, and I'm talking about a decade when four years meant a huge evolution, unlike these conservative (when not reactionary) times. More artists returning from the first compilation are Marcel King, Thick Pigeon, and Section 25 (with the fantastic Sakura, blending deep punk bass with frenzy sequencers), while New Order appear as a full band with the extreme futuristic electro terror of Video 586 (this is a 6 minutes 'edit', the original is 22 minutes...), a gloriously minimalistic and experimental track which was a turning point in their evolution towards Blue Monday.
Of course both CDs are absolutely recommended.
Be Music page on LTM, for more info, tracklists and purchase orders.
Tags:
52nd Street
,
Factory
,
New Order
,
Quando Quango
,
Royal Family And The Poor
,
Section 25
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