abonnement Unibet Coolblue Bitvavo
pi_74854892
quote:
"That got me more into doing studio stuff than before, because with this album it was more of a studio experience," said Helders to 6 Music’s Steve Lamacq. "The first record we done quick, and it was just like, ‘get in and press record’ sort of thing, but this one we were thinking about sounds more and trying loads of stuff, so it got me into that sort of stuff more.

"We’re already talking about when we can record again, but I still enjoy being on tour as well."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/6music/news/20091119_arcticmonkeys.shtml
pi_74864087
Richard Hawley staat vanavond met een "sensatie" uit z'n geboorteplaats op het podium in Londen. Ra ra...
pi_74865901
quote:
Op donderdag 19 november 2009 21:04 schreef Aisumasen het volgende:
Richard Hawley staat vanavond met een "sensatie" uit z'n geboorteplaats op het podium in Londen. Ra ra...
Een akoestische set van Alex, John en Jamie. Onder andere een duet met Richard Hawley.
pi_74870279
quote:
Op donderdag 19 november 2009 21:44 schreef Aisumasen het volgende:

[..]

Een akoestische set van Alex, John en Jamie. Onder andere een duet met Richard Hawley.
Opnames ?
pi_74870397
Nog niet .
pi_74870480
Dus ze komen wel. AM acoustisch
pi_74871061
Waarschijnlijk wel wat YouTube-videos. En precies zoals ik had gehoopt heeft hij in de set van Richard Hawley in de toegift "Only Ones Who Know" gezongen.
pi_74871204
quote:
Op donderdag 19 november 2009 23:19 schreef Leonos het volgende:
Dus ze komen wel. AM acoustisch
Dat is niet gezegd. Ik denk dat het gewoon elektrisch is, met een zingende Richard én Alex, dus alsnog .

edit: Verkeerd gelezen .
Stay on my arm, you little charmer
pi_74871310
Jawel, maar de Arctic Monkeys-nummers als voorprogramma zijn (semi)-akoestisch gespeeld door Alex en John Ashton, en later met Jamie.
pi_74871410


[ Bericht 34% gewijzigd door Arn0 op 19-11-2009 23:52:49 ]
By hook or by crook, I'll be last in this book.
pi_74871458
quote:
Op donderdag 19 november 2009 23:38 schreef Aisumasen het volgende:
Jawel, maar de Arctic Monkeys-nummers als voorprogramma zijn (semi)-akoestisch gespeeld door Alex en John Ashton, en later met Jamie.
Weet jij of het klopt dat ze Secret Door en Fluorescent Adolescent gespeeld hebben?
By hook or by crook, I'll be last in this book.
pi_74871520
Ja, dat klopt. Rest weet ik nog niet.
pi_74871605
quote:
Op donderdag 19 november 2009 23:44 schreef Aisumasen het volgende:
Ja, dat klopt. Rest weet ik nog niet.
Ohja, ik lees het ook net.
By hook or by crook, I'll be last in this book.
  vrijdag 20 november 2009 @ 00:44:06 #64
53267 TC03
Catch you on the flipside
pi_74873426
quote:
Op woensdag 18 november 2009 22:44 schreef tim. het volgende:

[..]

Het debuutalbum staat wel op 3 hoor . Maar vergeleken met bijvoorbeeld LCD Soundsystem (twee albums in de top 20) is het wel laag.
LCD Soundsystem, kom op zeg. Niet per se slecht ofzo, maar je moet muziek niet goed vinden omdat het cool is om het goed te vinden.
Ten percent faster with a sturdier frame
  vrijdag 20 november 2009 @ 07:58:00 #65
159761 Arn0
Abbey Road
pi_74875699
quote:
Arctic Monkeys' Alex Turner played a surprise set tonight (November 19) at the Mencap Little Noise Sessions.

Taking place at Islington Union Chapel the Arctic Monkeys man performed a seven-song set which featured two new untitled songs.

Turner's set also included the Arctic Monkeys hits 'Fluorescent Adolescent', 'Secret Door' and current single 'Cornerstone'.

Accompanied by a keyboardist, Turner was also joined on stage by his bandmate Jamie Cook who played on the tracks 'Secret Door' and 'Cornerstone'.

Headlining the event was Richard Hawley whose set featured the songs 'Born Under A Bad Sign', 'Serious', 'Open Up The Door', 'Ashes On The Fire', 'For Your Lover Give Some Time' and a cover of Elvis Presley's 'Crawfish'.

Later in the set Hawley then brought back on Alex Turner introducing him as "The lizard of lounge," before the pair played the Arctic Monkeys song 'Only Ones Who Know'.
http://www.nme.com/news/arctic-monkeys/48474
By hook or by crook, I'll be last in this book.
  vrijdag 20 november 2009 @ 07:58:51 #66
159761 Arn0
Abbey Road
pi_74875705
"which featured two new untitled songs."

Zouden ze het over de nieuwe b-kanten hebben, of totaal nieuwe nummers?
By hook or by crook, I'll be last in this book.
  vrijdag 20 november 2009 @ 08:12:22 #67
192683 AMDB
Visionair.
pi_74875818
quote:
Op vrijdag 20 november 2009 07:58 schreef Arn0 het volgende:
"which featured two new untitled songs."

Zouden ze het over de nieuwe b-kanten hebben, of totaal nieuwe nummers?
`

Vraag het me af, denk zelf dat het B-kanten zijn, zal niet veel die-hard AM publiek geweest zijn dat alles kent.
  vrijdag 20 november 2009 @ 08:13:46 #68
159761 Arn0
Abbey Road
pi_74875832
quote:
Op vrijdag 20 november 2009 08:12 schreef AMDB het volgende:
Vraag het me af, denk zelf dat het B-kanten zijn, zal niet veel die-hard AM publiek geweest zijn dat alles kent.
Ja, daar vrees ik ook voor. Maar als er iemand van NME zelf aanwezig was, zou je toch verwachten dat hij ze kent, niet?
By hook or by crook, I'll be last in this book.
  vrijdag 20 november 2009 @ 08:14:59 #69
192683 AMDB
Visionair.
pi_74875850
quote:
Op vrijdag 20 november 2009 08:13 schreef Arn0 het volgende:

[..]

Ja, daar vrees ik ook voor. Maar als er iemand van NME zelf aanwezig was, zou je toch verwachten dat hij ze kent, niet?
Nee, eigenlijk niet Heb niet zo'n hoge pet op van NME
  vrijdag 20 november 2009 @ 08:16:09 #70
159761 Arn0
Abbey Road
pi_74875867
quote:
Op vrijdag 20 november 2009 08:14 schreef AMDB het volgende:

[..]

Nee, eigenlijk niet Heb niet zo'n hoge pet op van NME
Hun reviews slagen idd nergens op Maar zelfs als het de b-kanten zijn, is het nog steeds vet natuurlijk
By hook or by crook, I'll be last in this book.
pi_74877705
quote:
And, after fans complained the band didn't play Mardy Bum at the Reading and Leeds festival, he decided he might take a leaf out of the Aussie singer's book and take requests.

"Kylie did a bit of that. People shouted and then she did a cappella. That's what I'm gonna do.
http://www.thesun.co.uk/s(...)r.html#ixzz0XO89cKMO

Dat zou wel tof zijn
" tonight we proved once more that the true strength of our nation comes not from our the might of our arms or the scale of our wealth, but from the enduring power of our ideals: democracy, liberty, opportunity, and unyielding hope."
pi_74881466
quote:
Op vrijdag 20 november 2009 09:57 schreef febster het volgende:

[..]

http://www.thesun.co.uk/s(...)r.html#ixzz0XO89cKMO

Dat zou wel tof zijn
Sterker nog, dat hebben ze min of meer gedaan dus .
pi_74884472
Mijn singles zijn eindelijk binnen, heb ook meteen de 10" en 7" van Crying Lightning besteld dus mijn Arctic Monkeys vinyl collectie is weer up-to-date
  vrijdag 20 november 2009 @ 14:00:26 #75
159761 Arn0
Abbey Road
pi_74884770
quote:
'I Don't Wanna Set The The World On Fire'
'Joining The Dots'
'Flourescent Adolescent'
'Only You Know'
'Secret Door'
'Cornerstone'
'Untitled New Song'
By hook or by crook, I'll be last in this book.
  vrijdag 20 november 2009 @ 14:01:26 #76
192683 AMDB
Visionair.
pi_74884800
quote:
Op vrijdag 20 november 2009 14:00 schreef Arn0 het volgende:

[..]
Ik wil die nieuwe horen

* AMDB realiseert zich dat hij wéér op een vrijdag hoort dat er nieuwe liedjes zijn, het is niet leuk meer
pi_74887668
Is die I Don't Wanna Set The World On Fire ook een nieuwe of is dat een cover?
  vrijdag 20 november 2009 @ 15:46:24 #78
159761 Arn0
Abbey Road
pi_74887867
quote:
Op vrijdag 20 november 2009 15:39 schreef hallo-daar het volgende:
Is die I Don't Wanna Set The World On Fire ook een nieuwe of is dat een cover?
Een cover veronderstel ik. Het nummer bestaat iig al.
By hook or by crook, I'll be last in this book.
pi_74889229
quote:
Richard Hawley and Alex Turner team up for Little Noise gig

Yorkshire's status as an incubator for songsmiths was given a three-fold affirmation tonight as Sheffield crooner Richard Hawley teamed up with Arctic Monkey Alex Turner and Corinne Bailey Rae unveiled new tracks at the Little Noise Sessions in London.

Hawley and Turner joined forces during the former's headline set, performing a cover of the Arctics' track The Only Ones Who Know. Introducing Turner to the stage he described him as a "Sheffield legend," while Turner said: "I wanted to do one of his songs I assure you."

Meanwhile the big surprise of the night was a set by Turner himself, which featured two unnamed new songs, as well as stripped back versions of Fluorescent Adolescent, Secret Door and Cornerstone - with Arctics guitarist Jamie Cook joining for the Humbug tracks.

Initially a touch tentative, Turner seemed much more at ease when joined by Cook and the pair of tracks from the band's latest album seemed to exude confidence in an acoustic setting, perhaps even moreso than the studio and recent live versions. [..]

Perhaps the most tantalising prospect of the evening was Hawley's suggestion that he and Turner might work together again. He told 6 Music: "Well we are gonna you know... I really want um... I'm not saying. No I'm not! I'll get shot."

NME recently revealed that Turner voted for Hawley in the magazine's 50 Albums of the Decade list. "We're not best mates but I know him enough to know that he's a solid kid, a gentle bloke, and funny," said Hawley of Turner on Thursday. "I enjoy his company. They're all top lads, little monkeys."

Ahead of the show, Hawley revealed he did not have to go through usual formalities to get the Arctics on board. "I went to see them when they were in Sheffield the other day and said, 'Fancy getting up with us?' "He said, 'Yeah'. It's not complicated. We don't need to do managers and 'your people talk to my people' and all that nonsense. It's just mates."
2 nieuwe songs, plus een Ink Spots-cover dus. Gedurfd!
  vrijdag 20 november 2009 @ 18:18:32 #80
159761 Arn0
Abbey Road
pi_74892390
Hoe komt het dat er nog geen fragmenten zijn en nog maar 1 nieuwe titel? Damn, had wel wat meer reactie verwacht
By hook or by crook, I'll be last in this book.
pi_74892702
Na lang wachten eindelijk de 10" in de brievenbus gevonden. De post is nog sneller dan de import in de platenzaak... De hoes ziet er prachtig uit, een donkerbeige (beetje gele) achtergrond met donkergroene kleuren. Op het label natuurlijk de bladeren.

Grappig genoeg is "Sketchead" geproduceerd door James Ford in New York, en "Catapult" door Josh Homme in Californië . Alle nummers zijn samen met de "Humbug"-tracks gemixed en gemastered in New York, behalve "Fright Lined Dining Room", wat er op kan duiden dat die track gelijk al afviel voor de album-selectie.
pi_74897136
En FLDR, door wie is die nou geproduceerd?
pi_74897223
Oh, had ik dat niet verteld? Door Josh Homme in 2 verschillende studios.
  vrijdag 20 november 2009 @ 23:44:43 #84
159761 Arn0
Abbey Road
pi_74902094
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radi(...)_arcticmonkeys.shtml

"The Arctic Monkeys came into the Live Lounge and performed Cornerstone and Secret Door."

Waar is de cover?
By hook or by crook, I'll be last in this book.
pi_74904855
Ahhh... Traditie-brekers .

Nee joh, da's de verrassing .
pi_74904865
quote:
Arctic Monkeys hit their stride
They started the decade aged 14 and ended it with the biggest-selling debut album in British history. And the boys from Sheffield are still moving forward, fast.



It is Christmas 2001. Two lads from High Green, Sheffield, receive electric guitars from Santa. They are 15 and 16, and the first thing they learn to play together is Monty Norman’s James Bond Theme. Then they learn Oasis chords. They form a band with two other mates from school and, when they’re not hanging about the school playing fields drinking cider and cheap wine, they play White Stripes covers and The Ballad of Chasey Lain by the Bloodhound Gang.

Graduating from the older guitarist’s dad’s garage, they play their first gig, supporting a band called the Sound at a local pub, the Grapes. Their eight-song set comprises three covers and five self-written songs. The drummer recalls that their mates said afterwards: “You’re actually quite good!” It is Friday, June 13, 2003, and Arctic Monkeys have just had the first hint that the band might be on to something.

It is Friday, November 13, 2009. Backstage at the 11,000-capacity Liverpool Echo Arena with Arctic Monkeys. Two dressing rooms, tagged Sexy Room 1 and Sexy Room 2. Their rider isn’t particularly lavish, but they have been provided with a clothes iron of such beauty that the guitarist Jamie Cook, 24, feels compelled to use it. “I don’t even need to iron owt,” the chirpy, time-served tiler says as he whips out a shirt.

Along the corridor: a table-tennis room, signposted by the laminated legend “Ground Zero Battle Zone”. A catering room, wherein the culinary centrepiece is a mound of rolls filled with fish fingers (hangover food in exelcis — the Monkeys have travelled overnight on their sleek tour bus from London, where they were filming an appearance on Jonathan Ross’s chat show; they don’t look as if they slept much). To some excitement, a parcel arrives from Tokyo — it contains all the stuff that their party left in their Tokyo hotel rooms: Cook’s coat, a dirty sock, gifts from fans, even a Tokyo city guide.

From the Grapes in Sheffield to Budokan in Tokyo: Arctic Monkeys have come a long way, fast. Their first fully available — ie, not limited-edition — single, I Bet You Look Good on the Dancefloor, entered the charts at No 1 in October 2005. Their debut album, Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not, was, at the time, the fastest-selling debut album in British history. It went on to win the Mercury Music Prize. Within 18 months of those feats they’d released a second album, Favourite Worst Nightmare (which was also nominated for the Mercury), and headlined the main stage at Glastonbury. They have, to date, won five Brit Awards.

Do they think that they’ve made an album — or albums — of the Noughties? Or are they as dismissive of such rankings as the lyrics to the 2007 single Teddy Picker would suggest, “Sorry sunshine it doesn’t exist/ It wasn’t in the top 100 list”.

The singer and guitarist, Alex Turner, 23 — wearing la denim jacket over a Mexican-style knitted cardigan picked up in a second-hand shop in Austin, Texas (“I were looking for a chair”), and loafers — sparks up a Camel. “We’ve had a lot of this recently in interviews. The first record is usually on the list that’s put in front of us,” he says of Arctic Monkeys’ debut. “I’m happy that people think that.”

He gazes off, his mind turning, as it often does, on its own wheels, in marked contrast to the direct conversational zip of his lyrics. He fiddles with his hair, stares at the wall, studies his knees. He thinks it’s good that these lists mention the Strokes’ Is This It, an album that reminds him of sitting on the 266 bus at home in Sheffield, listening on his Walkman. But he thinks it’s bad that Highly Evolved by the Vines — the “Australian Nirvana” and the first band Turner saw live, “seems to have ducked off the list. I love that record. His melodies.”

But still, it’s pretty good going to write an album that’s classed as one of the best of the Noughties, especially considering that he had just turned 14 when the decade started.

“Yeah, I guess so.” The frontman, lyricist and chief songwriter considers this. “I’d never thought of it like that.”

For all his laconic, wan repose, as he sprawls on a sofa in Sexy Room 1 it is apparent that there are a couple of things Turner would like to clear up. Given how rarely his band grant interviews, it’s little wonder misunderstanding has arisen. Throw in the heavy sound of Arctic Monkeys’ “difficult” third album, Humbug, and confusion was bound to ensue. Apart from headline shows at the Reading and Leeds festivals (and a Brixton Academy warm-up), they’ve been away constantly — touring America, Japan and Europe — since the August release of Humbug, which they part-recorded in the Californian desert with their producer Josh Homme, the guitarist and leader of the hard-rocking Queens of the Stone Age. This cold and wet afternoon in the regenerated Liverpool dockside, the opening night of the band’s UK tour is a good time to sort things out.

First of all, My Propeller, the opening song on Humbug. I first heard it when Arctic Monkeys performed it at the Highline Ballroom in New York in early August. Turner’s English girlfriend, the New York-based MTV chat-show hostess Alexa Chung, was in attendance. For much of this year she and Turner have shared an apartment in Brooklyn. Is the move reflected in the new songs he’s been writing? “Not in the way that living in Sheffield was reflected in those first album tunes.” No,Turner wants to clarify, “personal” Humbug song The Fire and the Thud is not about Chung moving to New York (“if it’s true you are going to run away, tell me where, I’ll meet you there”). Is it about her generally? “Well, like I say, it’s very personal . . .”

Anyway, My Propeller. Perched on a banquette, Chung responded to the song’s being broadcast by enthusiastically rotating her head, ponytail swinging. “Coax me out my low and have a spin on my propeller,” the song goes, “my propeller won’t spin and I can’t get it started on my own/ when are you arriving?” Is this an uncharacteristically sexual lyric from the young maestro of kitchen sink/sink estate realism?

“Absolutely not,” Turner says, becoming almost animated. “If that was a euphemism, then I wouldn’t be saying that my propeller wouldn’t spin — ’cos you wouldn’t wanna go shouting that out, would you?”

“I can’t get a hard-on,” pipes up the bass player Nick O’Malley, 24, who’s perched on the edge of the sofa next to him.

“Ha-ha, youknowwhatImean?” Turner laughs in agreement. “And even if I’d sorta brung meself to be that ... lubricious,” he says, savouring the word, “I’d make it spin, wouldn’t I?”

So what is it really about?

“It’s more describing a mood more than an organ. A descent. It’s about a descent.” And no, he won’t elaborate further.

At the Highline show in New York, Arctic Monkeys began the set with the at-the-time-unheard Pretty Visitors, a rootling, tootling bit of fairground gothica. It was a challenging way to open the show. P Diddy, the new best mate of the drummer Matt Helders, 23, was at the front, thrashing around dancing, before being wrongfooted by the crooner ambience of Cornerstone. “Yeah, he were in full attack mode,” O’Malley chuckles, “then we pulled out a softy.” No, Diddy didn’t quite get Cornerstone. “He’s not alone there,” Turner mutters.

All of this underlines something that Homme has said, that after two albums of high-octane indie-rock on their third album Arctic Monkeys were “looking for the weird”. Do they agree? Turner pauses for even longer than normal before replying.

“We definitely wanted to go away this time, and take a bit more time with it. In the past we’ve been opposed to the ideas of producers or whatever,” he says. “We were reluctant to let anyone in. But I guess just through doing it a bit longer, through being more confident with it or something . . .”

This confidence led them, at Homme’s urging, to take a trip to The Integratron, a so-called “rejuvenation machine” built in the Mojave desert by George Van Tassel, where they recorded “a blueprint” for the album track Secret Door. “It were definitely a strange environment,” Turner says. “Not in a bad way, just, ‘Why don’t you take your shoes off and climb up this little ladder through this hatch . . .’ And you can sorta hear everyone’s voices from the other side of the room, just the way the sound bounces round. So it was pretty interesting.”

Finally, there’s a third topic to clear up. The hair. Arctic Monkeys, previously the tidy, trim, unassuming, short-back-and-sides Mod-squad of modern inner-city Britain, now have rock-star manes. Even Helders, sports-casual smart, is growing some kind of fuzzy afro.

“My mum prefers it to when I had a shaved head,” Turner says of the flowing follicular explosion that makes him seem even more slight, more elfin. “But she’d like a medium length.” This only child’s father — like his mother, a teacher (she teaches German, he teaches music) — has always sported a slightly grown-out look. “Me dad’s hair was never this length, but it’s always been too long for me mum. But it’s got to the point now where she’s stopped saying to me, ‘Are you gonna get it cut?’ Now she’s like, ‘Just use this . . .’ ”

Conditioner?

“Nah, only kidding,” Turner says, a little too hastily. Then, recovering quickly, “That’s Cookie that says that. He’s like, ‘Use this, this is what you want’. He’s shit-hot with product. He’s got some inside information,” he winks, an apparent reference to the guitarist’s girlfriend, a former glamour model who now works as a make-up artist.

The hair, though, has attracted much debate in the blogosphere and music press. What does it mean?

“I’m not sure the hair is a signifier of any kind,” Richard Ayoade says when we speak on the phone a few days after Liverpool. The star of TV’s The IT Crowd-turneddirector has made three videos with Arctic Monkeys, including the concert video Arctic Monkeys at the Apollo. “It seems like everyone’s gone back to the Fifties, where people are berating people for having long hair. I don’t know how much analysis the hair bears.”

It’s obvious, surely? It’s a visual representation of Arctic Monkeys’ new rock’n’roll attitude. Onstage, it allows them to headbang more effectively. “Ay, we were just discussing that,” Cook nods, beer in hand, when I corner him at the aftershow party several hours later.

What was the conclusion? He smiles and shrugs. There wasn’t one.

They’re a funny bunch, Arctic Monkeys. I spent three months with them in late 2005, during the period when Dancefloor crashed into the charts at No 1 with such a furore that they were featured, much to their bewilderment, on Sky News and in The Economist. I spent a similar period with them in 2007, yet when I meet them in Liverpool it’s as if we’ve never met before.

Their languid indifference and none-more-cool “greeting” could easily be interpreted as rudeness. Turner, the Brooklyn-dwelling half of a “celebrity couple” and studiedly aloof, is himself now suggestive of the local phonies he berated in an early song, Fake Tales from San Francisco, “you’re not from New York City you’re from Rotherham”.

Except he isn’t, and they’re not. It’s just the way they are. As it always was with Arctic Monkeys, put them on the spot with a tape-recorder or a camera and the gears jam up; stop attempting to record their thoughts and likenesses and they revert to being the jokey, tight-knit bunch of mates from school. As demonstrated by the busy aftershow party, these extraordinarily ordinary lads are at their most comfortable with the gang they’ve known since their early days. Turner may have shipped out but O’Malley, Cook and Helders all still live in Sheffield, with Cook still turning out for his pub Sunday league football team.

Ayoade says we shouldn’t be fooled by the poker faces. “They’re not miserable, they don’t take themselves too seriously.” After all, they did dress up as Village People, the cast of The Wizard of Oz and English country gents to accept their three Brit Awards in 2007 and 2008 (to go with the two they won in 2006). “I think it’s impossible for someone to be that good if they don’t have a sense of humour. No, I can’t think of any particular non-follicle-based change.”

But there is. That night the packed Liverpool Echo Arena audience sloshes around on a sea of lager as the fans go bananas for early songs such as When the Sun Goes Down and Fluorescent Adolescent, then go to the toilets during the slower new songs. The ever-restless Monkeys — in less than half a decade, four albums, a couple of EPs, a short film, umpteen B-sides — are moving forward, fast, still. Not all of their fans will be able to keep up. One suspects that Turner isn’t entirely unhappy about this. Unlike Oasis and Robbie Williams, he isn’t aiming for Knebworth.

Arctic Monkeys are touring until March next year. Then, Turner thinks, they’ll record another album straight away. Would he consider writing about recessionary Britain, about the prospect of life under a Tory government?

He squirms a little. “I like the idea that someone would do that ... well. It’s a tricky one, though, isn’t it? ’Cos while our first album certainly is, or was, socially relevant in the sense that it was an observation of what was going on in town, it never — to me at least, writing it then — felt like it’d ever go out of town. So you’re almost taking a different approach to do that now, knowing that it . . .” He tails off, discomfited at the thought of talking about his songs reaching a global audience. “Most of ’em songs were written to make me friends laugh. The little punchlines in them were designed for a group of mates.”

And then, without him asking for it, those Sheffield mates became the whole country. As if by magic, Turner — according to countless media commentaries — was the spokesman for a generation.

“I suppose,” he muses, “they don’t say that too much any more.”

A pale smile, and something like relief, flickers on his face.

http://entertainment.time(...)c/article6923797.ece
  zaterdag 21 november 2009 @ 02:32:30 #87
123869 Merkie
Surprisingly contagious
pi_74904987
quote:
Then, Turner thinks, they’ll record another album straight away.


Staan wel wat foutjes in, maar goed .
2000 light years from home
pi_74905243
Er wordt wel vaak gesuggereerd dat ze ergens in de eerste helft van volgend jaar een nieuw album opnemen. Hopelijk blijkt het zo te zijn!
By hook or by crook, I'll be last in this book.
pi_74907798
Anti-climax vandaag?
pi_74908256
Wanneer komen de singlecharts uit? Benieuwd naar de positie van Cornerstone
pi_74908426
quote:
Op zaterdag 21 november 2009 22:13 schreef AMDB het volgende:
Wanneer komen de singlecharts uit? Benieuwd naar de positie van Cornerstone
Morgenmiddag, normaal gezien.
By hook or by crook, I'll be last in this book.
pi_74909907
Zo, vandaag op de Mega Platenbeurs in Utrecht weer even wat "Humbug"-gaten in de collectie opgevuld .

Jammer dat ze geen cover deden in de Live Lounge. Maar wat een prachtige semi-akoestische versies. En de censuur in "Secret Door" is briljant .
pi_74911384
Ik bedacht me dat er nu nog maar één nummer van de Desert-sessions over is, en dat is dus hoogstwaarschijnlijk Remember Whose Legs You Were On. Dit zou dan ook wel het lied zijn met de ritmisch moeilijke gitaar-riff die werd genoemd in dat ene NME-artikel van Mei, aangezien ze dat lied hebben geschreven in de zomer van 2008.
En het is inderdaad een goeie beslissing geweest dat ze nog met James Ford hebben gewerkt. De elf liedjes die we nu hebben van de Desert-sessions zijn allemaal prima goed maar hadden lang niet zo'n mooi album gevormd als de uiteindelijke Humbug-songs.
pi_74911585
Waarom zijn er nog steeds geen beelden? Irritant! gaan dus ook niet meer komen waarschijnlijk.. Die censuur is idd grappig.. aaaaaaaah
  zondag 22 november 2009 @ 17:40:26 #96
159761 Arn0
Abbey Road
pi_74912296
quote:
Op zaterdag 21 november 2009 22:18 schreef Arn0 het volgende:

[..]

Morgenmiddag, normaal gezien.
Ze staan alvast in de top 25
By hook or by crook, I'll be last in this book.
  zondag 22 november 2009 @ 17:43:14 #97
159761 Arn0
Abbey Road
pi_74912413
Ohja, ze hebben Sketchead gedropt van hun setlist
By hook or by crook, I'll be last in this book.
  zondag 22 november 2009 @ 17:44:09 #98
123869 Merkie
Surprisingly contagious
pi_74912463
Mooi.
2000 light years from home
  zondag 22 november 2009 @ 17:45:12 #99
159761 Arn0
Abbey Road
pi_74912511
quote:
Op zondag 22 november 2009 17:44 schreef Merkie het volgende:
Mooi.
Jij vindt het goed dat ze Sketchead gedropt hebben?
By hook or by crook, I'll be last in this book.
  zondag 22 november 2009 @ 17:46:57 #100
123869 Merkie
Surprisingly contagious
pi_74912575
quote:
Op zondag 22 november 2009 17:45 schreef Arn0 het volgende:

[..]

Jij vindt het goed dat ze Sketchead gedropt hebben?
Ja, niemand kent het nummer en iedereen staart maar een beetje dwaas voor zich uit.
quote:
Op zondag 22 november 2009 17:40 schreef Arn0 het volgende:

[..]

Ze staan alvast in de top 25
Waar zie je dat?
2000 light years from home
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