Friday, December 6, 2013
Friday, October 25, 2013
The Smiths' 'The Queen is Dead' Named The Greatest Album Of All Time By NME
Posted:
NME gave that title to "The Queen is Dead," The Smiths' third album, on its newest list of the 500 best LPs in music history. The British music publication's updated rankings -- the last list came in 2003 and is frequently cited as a compendium of music's greatest releases -- appear in this week's magazine. The Smiths top lauded album by The Beatles, David Bowie, Pixies and Radiohead.
"The Queen is Dead" provided some of the band's most beloved songs, including "The Boy with the Thorn in His Side" and "There Is a Light That Never Goes Out." Released in 1986, "Queen" garnered perfect reviews from Rolling Stone, Pitchfork and Q Magazine. The album peaked at No. 2 on the U.K. Albums Chart and No. 70 on the Billboard Hot 100, and was certified gold a few years after its debut. The Smiths went on to release one more album, 1987's "Strangeways, Here We Come," before their notorious split.
"Queen" appeared at No. 8 on NME's previous list of the greatest albums, while The Stone Roses' self-titled release slotted at No. 1. The new list finds The Beatles' "Revolver," David Bowie's "Hunky Dory," The Strokes' "Is This It" and The Velvet Underground & Nico's eponymous album rounding out the Top 5.
What do you think of The Smith's hefty accolade? Are they deserving of NME's crown? Sound off in the comments below.
Conversations:
italbear
"The U.S. is bound to have a different perspective on this choice, but
the Smiths were a radical force to emerge during Thatcher's England, and
their music was outrageously sophisticated and intelligent compared to
the pablum that was being foisted on the public at the time. I'm an
American, but I was blown away by the Smiths, and by that album in
particular. I think it is certainly one of the greatest albums of the
rock era. To quibble over which is best is a futile exercise in
individual tastes."
marred
"I love the smiths dearly but this is not the best album of all time and
it's not even the best smiths album. Strangeways is way better!"
Dan Delago
"Actually The Smiths' 'Meat is Murder' is a better album because it has their best song on it, 'How Soon Is Now.'"
totaleclipse
"I also prefer Meat is Murder but primarily for "Rusholme Ruffians". "I
might walk home alone...but my faith in love is still devout!" or
"Scratch my name on your arm with a fountain pen...this means you really
love me!""
Monday, September 16, 2013
Depeche Mode: "DELTA MACHINE" Review
Depeche Mode's new CD "DELTA MACHINE" has the group back
with the electro-grundge sound that harkens back to their mid '90s material.
The group now features a full-time drummer and Martin seems to play guitars
most of the time.
'Welcome To My World' opens the album with heavy beats and an ominus soundscape.
The first single release 'Angel' is as heavy with lots of clicks and buzzing chirps.
'Heaven' is the second single that features duets with lead singer Dave Gahan and lyracist Martin Gore.
'Broken' is a likeable mellow tune with a sinister electro beat.
"You can't fake it, I can feel it, You were broken from the start"
'Should Be Higher' opens like a rush of fresh air at a slow pace with a big
bass drum beat with a progressive drive.
"Your lies are more attractive then the truth"
'Soothe My Soul' is the third single release and perhaps my favorite and
it's danceable. A lusty song about knocking down doors and getting what ya need.
"There's only one way to soothe my soul!"
'Alone' is a hypnotic track about looking back at past love and circumstance.
"I was there when you needed me most..."
On a scale of 1 to 10, lamest to greatest, I give Delta Machine 7.
Will it be a classic? Probably not.
Would I listen to it again? Yes.
with the electro-grundge sound that harkens back to their mid '90s material.
The group now features a full-time drummer and Martin seems to play guitars
most of the time.
'Welcome To My World' opens the album with heavy beats and an ominus soundscape.
The first single release 'Angel' is as heavy with lots of clicks and buzzing chirps.
'Heaven' is the second single that features duets with lead singer Dave Gahan and lyracist Martin Gore.
'Broken' is a likeable mellow tune with a sinister electro beat.
"You can't fake it, I can feel it, You were broken from the start"
'Should Be Higher' opens like a rush of fresh air at a slow pace with a big
bass drum beat with a progressive drive.
"Your lies are more attractive then the truth"
'Soothe My Soul' is the third single release and perhaps my favorite and
it's danceable. A lusty song about knocking down doors and getting what ya need.
"There's only one way to soothe my soul!"
'Alone' is a hypnotic track about looking back at past love and circumstance.
"I was there when you needed me most..."
On a scale of 1 to 10, lamest to greatest, I give Delta Machine 7.
Will it be a classic? Probably not.
Would I listen to it again? Yes.
Thursday, June 20, 2013
BOY GEORGE: NEW DANCE SINGLE 'Coming Home'
BOY GEORGE REUNITES WITH MIKEY CRAIG ON NEW DANCE SINGLE
BOY GEORGE will release a new single 'Coming Home' on June 24th.
Inspired by the idea of 'returning to who you really are as a person'
the single comes from recent writing sessions for the forthcoming Boy
George album 'This Is What I Do' and was written with Youth and George's
sometime CULTURE CLUB collaborator MIKEY CRAIG.
Listen to a preview.
BOY GEORGE will release a new single 'Coming Home' on June 24th.
Inspired by the idea of 'returning to who you really are as a person'
the single comes from recent writing sessions for the forthcoming Boy
George album 'This Is What I Do' and was written with Youth and George's
sometime CULTURE CLUB collaborator MIKEY CRAIG.
Listen to a preview.
Saturday, February 9, 2013
My New Cook Book Is Published on MagCloud
Thursday, January 24, 2013
Adam Ant Makes Comeback With New CD After Years In The Mental Health Jungle
By Chris Willman
Although three decades ago he was Britain’s biggest pop star, Adam Ant hasn’t put out an album in 17 years—an unproductive streak that comes to an end with a comeback album this week.
The inevitable “whatever happened to…” questions produce a more interesting than usual answer in Ant’s case: Several times, he’s been admitted to a psychiatric hospital—either of his own accord or by being “sectioned,” as they call involuntary commitment in England. “I’m a bit of a nutcase,” he told the Quietus this month.
His comeback album has an almost Fiona Apple-esque title: Adam Ant is the Blueblack Hussar in Marrying the Gunner’s Daughter, which frankly sounds like the kind of thing that someone might come up with during a manic episode. It’s a combination of naval/nautical slang phrases that, in their way, hark back to the new-wave days when Ant dressed up in glam-rock pirate regalia on the covers of albums like Kings of the Wild Frontier, the top-selling British record of 1981. Nowadays he tends to look like a more aged, but no less dapper, Johnny Depp.
Ant believes he’s doing a public service by openly discussing his mental illness as part of the new album’s publicity campaign. “They call it bipolar disorder—that’s the modern term,” he told the Telegraph. “It only means up and down; it used to be manic depression, black dog, whatever. It’s a subject surrounded by a lot of ignorance and taboo. Where I come from, there’s the poorhouse–and worse than that is the madhouse. You should never feel ashamed of it, but you do. A lot of the time you can’t take these problems even to close family because you fear that you’ll alienate them. So anyone in the public eye that comes forward and discusses it, I think it helps.”
Reviews in the UK press for Blueblack Hussar… have been mixed. The Independent gave it four out of five stars, opining that the album is “sprawling, overdue and not for everyone, but at least it's not a play-it-safe comeback with the hot producer of the day. And for that, the Hussar should be saluted.” A less pleased Contactmusic.com wrote that “17 tracks really is too long, particularly when those tracks are largely an uncoordinated mish mash of lo-fi punk throwback, drippy acoustic balladry, Casio keyboard industrial music interpretations and spaghetti western guitars.”
In a three-star review, the Guardian said, “The 17 tracks offer a rickety but entertaining mix of the best elements of his imperial period: tribal glam stomps, razor-slashed T Rex guitars, two-drummer Glitter beats, knowing homages to cult icons (Vince Taylor and Vivienne Westwood) and sex... While nothing quite reaches the dizzy heights of 'Antmusic,’ ‘Shrink’–a perhaps autobiographical romp about a man who needs medication to feel normal–is as riotous as he's sounded in three decades.”
In 1995, he released what looked for a long time like it might be his final album, Wonderful, whose title song peaked at an unremarkable No. 32 in his home country but did make it to No. 7 on the modern-rock chart in America.
He published an autobiography, Stand & Deliver, in 2006. Several spates of touring in Europe (and, briefly, America) in recent years resulted in mostly positive notices. And there is a forthcoming documentary, made by Jamie Reynolds of the Klaxons, which Ant describes as “quite raw and brutal... It culminates with me playing with Rod Stewart in Hyde Park in front of 100,000 people."
Although three decades ago he was Britain’s biggest pop star, Adam Ant hasn’t put out an album in 17 years—an unproductive streak that comes to an end with a comeback album this week.
The inevitable “whatever happened to…” questions produce a more interesting than usual answer in Ant’s case: Several times, he’s been admitted to a psychiatric hospital—either of his own accord or by being “sectioned,” as they call involuntary commitment in England. “I’m a bit of a nutcase,” he told the Quietus this month.
His comeback album has an almost Fiona Apple-esque title: Adam Ant is the Blueblack Hussar in Marrying the Gunner’s Daughter, which frankly sounds like the kind of thing that someone might come up with during a manic episode. It’s a combination of naval/nautical slang phrases that, in their way, hark back to the new-wave days when Ant dressed up in glam-rock pirate regalia on the covers of albums like Kings of the Wild Frontier, the top-selling British record of 1981. Nowadays he tends to look like a more aged, but no less dapper, Johnny Depp.
Ant believes he’s doing a public service by openly discussing his mental illness as part of the new album’s publicity campaign. “They call it bipolar disorder—that’s the modern term,” he told the Telegraph. “It only means up and down; it used to be manic depression, black dog, whatever. It’s a subject surrounded by a lot of ignorance and taboo. Where I come from, there’s the poorhouse–and worse than that is the madhouse. You should never feel ashamed of it, but you do. A lot of the time you can’t take these problems even to close family because you fear that you’ll alienate them. So anyone in the public eye that comes forward and discusses it, I think it helps.”
Reviews in the UK press for Blueblack Hussar… have been mixed. The Independent gave it four out of five stars, opining that the album is “sprawling, overdue and not for everyone, but at least it's not a play-it-safe comeback with the hot producer of the day. And for that, the Hussar should be saluted.” A less pleased Contactmusic.com wrote that “17 tracks really is too long, particularly when those tracks are largely an uncoordinated mish mash of lo-fi punk throwback, drippy acoustic balladry, Casio keyboard industrial music interpretations and spaghetti western guitars.”
In a three-star review, the Guardian said, “The 17 tracks offer a rickety but entertaining mix of the best elements of his imperial period: tribal glam stomps, razor-slashed T Rex guitars, two-drummer Glitter beats, knowing homages to cult icons (Vince Taylor and Vivienne Westwood) and sex... While nothing quite reaches the dizzy heights of 'Antmusic,’ ‘Shrink’–a perhaps autobiographical romp about a man who needs medication to feel normal–is as riotous as he's sounded in three decades.”
In 1995, he released what looked for a long time like it might be his final album, Wonderful, whose title song peaked at an unremarkable No. 32 in his home country but did make it to No. 7 on the modern-rock chart in America.
He published an autobiography, Stand & Deliver, in 2006. Several spates of touring in Europe (and, briefly, America) in recent years resulted in mostly positive notices. And there is a forthcoming documentary, made by Jamie Reynolds of the Klaxons, which Ant describes as “quite raw and brutal... It culminates with me playing with Rod Stewart in Hyde Park in front of 100,000 people."
Thursday, January 10, 2013
1983: My Favorite Year in Pop Music
by Xaque Gruber
With MTV's 24/7 music video onslaught, 1983 was also a year when previous decade's acts had to assimilate or become quickly irrelevant. Thankfully many of them (The Kinks, Bowie, Stevie Nicks, Billy Joel, Yes, Donna Summer, Robert Plant to name a few) reached fresh musical heights in the face of the new wave invasion.
Highlighted by a colorful sea of debuts, here are 20 noteworthy acts (in no order) that made their first stateside mark in 1983...
Eurythmics
Though Culture Club took '83s Best New Artist Grammy, Annie Lennox and Dave Stewart should've walked home (in matching suits) with the award. "Love Is A Stranger" (#23, November) was the dark electro-dessert that followed the main course of "Sweet Dreams," which fueled Eurythmics around the world and the seven seas. This video was initially banned for Lennox's then-shocking androgyny.
"Love Is a Stranger"
Culture Club
In the short span of three and a half years, Boy George and his band shook the music world -- and placed 10 singles in the U.S. Top 40 including "Time" (#2) which The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame ranked as one of the 500 most influential singles in the rock era.
"Time (Clock of the Heart)"
Cyndi Lauper
At the end of '83, Lauper's instant splash on MTV grew into a pop culture tsunami as her debut LP, She's So Unusual, sold 16 million copies worldwide. Shot on Manhattan's lower east side, "Girls" features cameos by her mother, brother, attorney, manager, wrestler Captain Lou Albano, and secretaries pulled from her label's offices.
"Girls Just Wanna Have Fun"
Madonna
"Unlike the others I'll do anything. I'm not the same. I have no shame. I'm on fire." With these words, Madonna set her stage. The edgy, punk-infused "Burning Up" (#3 U.S. dance) was the second single from her self titled debut, which (at only eight songs deep) still holds up as one of her best albums.
"Burning Up"
The Smiths
Recording four terrific proper albums before splitting in 1987, The Smiths, with their literate, melodic singles, and lead singer Morrissey's penchant for the dramatic, paved the way for the guitar-driven sound that dominated British rock in the 1990s.
"This Charming Man"
INXS
1983 saw the Australian group's first U.S. tour, and chart hits, "The One Thing" (#30) and "Don't Change" (#80) from their breakthrough LP, Shabook Shoobah
"The One Thing"
Metallica
Certainly not pop, but still a debut well worth mentioning, Metallica's blazing Kill Em All peaked at #120, selling a modest 300,000, but as the band's popularity grew, so has Kill Em All's sales, which now total over three million copies in the U.S.
"Whiplash"
Nena
An apocalyptic tale wrapped in German lyrics building to a breakdance
beat -- Nena's one glorious hit remains a unique pop treasure. Debuting
in '83s final weeks, Nena proved new wave wasn't all British. Danke
schoen!"99 Luftballons"
Naked Eyes
The U.K. duo of Naked Eyes placed four synth-driven hits in the U.S. Top 40 including "Promises Promises" (#11) and a percussive reinvention of the Bacharach/David chestnut "Always Something There To Remind Me" (#8) before vanishing by mid-decade.
"Promises Promises"
Tears For Fears
Tears For Fears' debut, The Hurting, was a musical ode to the misery-drenched family histories of band members, Roland Orzabal and Curt Smith set to pulsing rhythms and stirring melodies.
"Pale Shelter"
Art Of Noise
An avant garde sound-collage ensemble of British composers whose innovative methods of sampling and electronic experimentation created musical tapestries both industrial and weirdly romantic. 1983's sensuous epic, "Moments In Love" became an unlikely hit on R&B, pop and jazz radio.
Thomas Dolby
Imaginative and cinematic, synthesizer wizard Thomas Dolby's debut, The Golden Age of Wireless -- a concept record about science, radio and modern technology -- prompted Musician Magazine to call it "The best damned synth-pop record ever, period."
"One Of Our Submarines"
The The
Britain's Matt Johnson essentially is The The. His legacy is a string of beautiful and biting rock albums, beginning with '83's Soul Mining and its underground pop hits, "This Is The Day" and "Uncertain Smile."
"Uncertain Smile"
Big Country
One of '83's most promising new rock acts, Scotland's Big Country featured bagpipe-like guitars, and Stuart Adamson's passionate vocals. Their Celtic-inspired anthems were a bold departure in the pop landscape at the time.
"Fields Of Fire"
R.E.M.
Only four years before they were filling stadiums, REM was stretching the boundaries of rock with their atmospheric, understated full length debut, Murmur, which Rolling Stone ranked as the best album of '83.
"Catapult"
What were some of your favorite tunes from 1983?
Tuesday, January 8, 2013
David Bowie: Where Are We Now?
David Bowie's new single, Where Are We Now? his first release in a decade.
The veteran music star broke years of silence and speculation to release the single and announce the album via the internet. He is surprising everyone who thought he had retired from the public, turning down a performance at the Olympic ceremonies.
A new album called The Next Day is set to be released by the singer in March.
Wednesday, January 2, 2013
Most Requested '80s Bands of 2012
Here is a listing of the most requested bands and songs during 2012 made to "Living In The '80s" made by KZSC listeners.
FIRST PLACE:
The Cure
The Proclaimers "I'm On My Way"
Cyndi Lauper
Michael Jackson
Billy Idol
The Smiths/Morrissey
SECOND PLACE:
Soft Cell
THIRD PLACE:
Adam & The Ants
The B-52's
The Clash
Thomas Dolby "Windpower"
The Fixx "One Thing Leads To Another"
Journey
The Waitresses "Christmas Wrapping"
HONORABLE MENTION:
David Bowie
DEVO
New Order
Gene Loves Jezebel
Beastie Boys "Brass Monkey"
Prince
Fine Young Cannibals
Elvis Costello
Grateful Dead
Hall & Oates
Psychedelic Furs
X
Tears For Fears
Blondie
INXS
Rick James
Cocteau Twins
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