Tuesday, 3 June 2008

Alexis Petridis on Shakin' Stevens

The news that Shakin' Stevens will be performing at this year's Glastonbury festival has not met with unmingled delight. Chief among the naysayers was the Sun's Bizarre columnist, Gordon Smart, who took time out from predicting "the Fratellis' new album will soon be hailed as a modern British rock classic" to lambast "the worst Glastonbury lineup ever" and lay the blame squarely at Shaky's green door. Smart's message is clear: the appearance of Shakin' Stevens on the bill offers irrevocable proof that Glastonbury has sold out.












But, as Paul Barrett and Hilary Hayward's indispensable 1983 biography Shakin' Stevens makes clear, mock Shaky's leftfield credentials at your peril. It is a remarkable book, not least because it seems to adopt the unique premise that Stevens is the most important figure in the history of British music. The authors (Barrett was Stevens' manager before the hits started happening) pour scorn on lesser talents, including the Beatles and Pink Floyd. At one amazing juncture, the oeuvre of Can is compared to that of the Welsh Elvis and judged hopelessly inferior. At another, they seem to suggest that Stevens invented punk rock.

More importantly, however, it lays bare Shaky's remarkable pre-fame history, a startling ferment of revolutionary socialism, grinding penury (at one stage, funds are so short that Stevens and his backing band are forced to transport their equipment between gigs in a wheelbarrow), an attitude to live performance that would give Iggy Pop pause, and some deeply unlikely cameo appearances. Who knew, as they witnessed the top-selling male UK singles artist of the 1980s shaking hands with a man in an enormous snowman outfit in the Merry Christmas Everyone video, that they were watching a man once feted by John Peel, who even attempted to sign him to his Dandelion label? Who knew that the Rolling Stones, perhaps still befuddled by the recent events at Altamont, booked him to play at their 1969 Christmas party? When not singing his heart out for the edification of Keith Richards, the pre-fame Shaky is to be found playing benefit gigs for the Communist party of Great Britain, organised by Barrett, who "was and still is a card-carrying communist", even encouraging Shaky and band to work up a rockabilly version of The Red Flag.

Lesser men might question the wisdom of employing someone dedicated to the overthrow of capitalism to handle your business affairs, but Shaky is of fearless cast, as demonstrated by his auto-destructive stage act - he tears down stage curtains in Cardiff, kicks drinks into punters' laps in Walsall, sets an audience member's hair on fire in London, and, at perhaps his most triumphant moment, climbs on a diner's table during a corporate Christmas party gig, puts his foot in a bowl of salad and shouts, "Scream, damn you! You would scream for Tom Jones, so you can scream for me!" Suddenly, the stuff about him inventing punk seems marginally less insane.

Certainly, Shaky's attitude towards every rock star who isn't Shakin' Stevens is rich with a withering contempt worthy of Johnny Rotten. His live shows begin with a skit mocking the pipsqueak talents of Jimi Hendrix: what price expanding the vocabulary of the rock guitar in a way unseen before or since when compared to a man from Penarth singing Yakety Yak? Barrett joined in on Stevens' behalf too. When John Lennon performed Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On at a 1969 Toronto festival, he penned a sarcastic open letter to the press arguing that "John Lennon had never before expressed a love for this music" - his years spent playing Chuck Berry and Carl Perkins covers in the hopelessly obscure quartet the Beatles having passed Shaky and chums by.

You read the book in slack-jawed disbelief, but it certainly casts his appearance at Glastonbury in an intriguing light. Silence the sniggers. Enough with the ironic "appreciation". No more mockery on the Sun's Bizarre page. Instead, let us hail the real Shaky: Lennon-besting, audience-terrifying hero of British communism; a singer cheered by the Stones and the late John Peel; scientifically proven to be better than Can. Shakin' Stevens: the most radical performer you'll see at this year's Glastonbury.

· You can read Shakin' Stevens by Paul Barrett and Hilary Hayward online at tinyurl.com/4z6vyk


See Also

Wednesday, 28 May 2008

Chinmaya Dunster and Niladri Kumar

Chinmaya Dunster and Niladri Kumar   
Artist: Chinmaya Dunster and Niladri Kumar

   Genre(s): 
New Age
   



Discography:


Yoga Lounge   
 Yoga Lounge

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 8




 






Monday, 26 May 2008

Timberlake agrees new film deal

Justin Timberlake is to star opposite Jeff Bridges and Mary Steenburgen in a new drama called 'The Open Road'.
Variety reports that the film tells the story of a young man trying to repair his relationship with his legendary athlete father as he tries to make his way home to see his seriously ill mother.
The Michael Meredith-directed and written film is due to begin shooting in Louisiana and other southern US states this month.

Imogen Heap

Imogen Heap   
Artist: Imogen Heap

   Genre(s): 
Pop: Pop-Rock
   Alternative
   



Discography:


I Megaphone   
 I Megaphone

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 11




As a pattern, radical efforts are something that issue forth earlier a solo career--not afterward a solo vocation is in full swing out. First, the artist makes a name for himself/herself as theatrical role of a grouping, then the creative person leaves the chemical group to become a full-time solo artist. That's usually how it deeds, just with Imogen Heap, it was the other way around; the British singer/songwriter (world Health Organization is as well a classically trained piano player) had been an naturalized solo artist for a few years when she became half of the London-based distich Frou Frou. Although Heap right away lives in London, she isn't a native of England's largest city. Born in the late ‘70s, Heap lived in Essex, England as a pre-teen--and it was in Essex that she kickoff studied European classical piano. Heap didn't genuinely get into rock until she went cancelled to boarding school day as a teen; finally, she decided against existence a full-time classical instrumentalist and realized that substitute pop-rock, Euro-pop and electronica would her main focus. In 1997--when Heap was in her late teens--she signed with Almo Sounds as a solo creative person. I Megaphone, Heap's debut record album, was released by Almo in 1998; the album's influences ranged from Kate Bush (a sponsor comparability) to Annie Lennox and the Eurythmics to former Sugarcubes vocalizer Björk. Some reviewers have compared Heap to PJ Harvey, although Heap has denied that Harvey is an influence. I Megaphone ground Heap functional with trio different producers: David Kahne, Dave Stewart (of Eurythmics celebrity) and Guy Sigsworth (world Health Organization has worked with major artists like Madonna, Björk and Seal). After I Megaphone, Heap and Sigsworth unbroken in touch--and in the early 2000s, they were reunited as the duet Frou Frou. Hearing the nominate Frou Frou, one might anticipate something bubble gum; one power expect some playfulness, frivolous Euro-pop along the lines of ABBA, Bananarama Fun Fun, Jemma & Elise or Aqua. But there is cypher gurgle glue around Frou Frou, whose alternative pop-rock tends to be atmospherical, woolgathering and gossamer. Frou Frou's work is very European-sounding, although not in a cutesy, eruct gum way. As Frou Frou, Heap and Sigsworth signed with MCA/Universal in 2001, which didn't beggarly that Heap was giving up her solo vocation -- Frou Frou was meant to be a part-time project. Details, the British duo's kickoff record album, was released in England and the United States in 2002. "Intimation In" was released as the album's kickoff single. In 2005, Heap resumed her solo career with the release of Speak for Yourself.






Paul Woolford Bobby Peru

Paul Woolford Bobby Peru   
Artist: Paul Woolford Bobby Peru

   Genre(s): 
House
   



Discography:


The Truth   
 The Truth

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 2




 






Dream Evil

Dream Evil   
Artist: Dream Evil

   Genre(s): 
Metal: Heavy
   Rock
   



Discography:


The Book Of Heavy Metal   
 The Book Of Heavy Metal

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 12


Evilized   
 Evilized

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 12


Children Of The Night   
 Children Of The Night

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 4


Dragon Slayer   
 Dragon Slayer

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 12




Dream Evil is the pet project of manufacturer Fredrik Nordstrom and guitar player Gus G., both of whom mat they could easily become a unattackable force play in the metal tube if they teamed up. Forming a mightiness metal quartette with drummer Snowy Shaw and vocaliser Niklas Isfeldt, the band recorded Dragon Slayer and released it in the summertime of 2002. In 2003, the humourous Evilized put a new whirl on their well-grounded, offering several self-consciously punch-drunk lyrics that go well into their improved glide slope.





Shiva

Spears' manager is ordered to stay away

Britney Spears' self-styled manager Sam Lutfi has been served with a restraining order, which instructs him to stay at least 250 yards away from the star.
Courts documents say that Lutfi is also barred from communicating with Spears.
Reuters reports that lawyers for the singer's father, Jamie Spears, who has been granted temporary control of his daughter's business and personal affairs, filed court documents saying Lutfi was served with the order at his home on Thursday morning.
In court papers requesting the restraining order three weeks ago, Spears' mother Lynne claimed that Lutfi had drugged her daughter, cut her home phone line and was attempting to control her life.
Lynne Spears said that Lutfi told her and a friend that he gave Britney Spears pills ground up in her food to keep her quiet and at one point he told Britney she had to take 10 pills a day if she wanted to see her two young children.
Spears recently had her visitation rights for her two young sons stripped by a court after refusing to return them to their father Kevin Federline, who currently has custody of the children.