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Posts Tagged ‘Joy Division’

Freebass: It’s A Beautiful Life

FIRST AND ONLY ALBUM OUT TOMORROW


It’s A Wonderful Life

Freebass is an English super group formed by bass guitar legends Peter Hook (Joy Division, New
Order), Mani Mounfield (Stone Roses, Primal Scream), and Andy Rourke (The Smiths). “All of the
songs have three basses. Mani does the low part, Andy Rourke’s in the middle and I do the high bitÂ… it works out
quite well!” stated Hook in a late 2005 NME interview. Gary Briggs (Haven, The Strays) serves as the band’s
full time singer.

Freebass – “Bury Me Standing
Freebass – “Not Too
Late

Prior to the release of Freebass’ full-length It’s a Beautiful Life, Rourke amicably parted ways with
the group and
relocated to New York City and in September 2010, the band officially announced they were no longer a functioning
group. “Recent events have made Freebass entirely unviable as a band, and with this in mind, it has been decided
that the project should be shelved, rather than placed on hiatus while members pursue their other interests. We
hope that people will enjoy the album, which concludes five years of work and treat it on its own merits. No third
parties were involved or harmed in the break up.”

BAND LINEUP

Peter Hook (bass) – New Order & Joy Division
Andy Rourke (guitar) – The Smiths
Gary “Mani” Mounfield (bass) – The Stone Roses & Primal Scream
Gary Briggs (vocals) – Haven & The Strays

Phil Murphy (keyboards & programming) – Man Ray
Nat Wason (guitar)
Paul Kehoe (drums)


Bernard Sumner & Hot Chip Music Video for Converse

CONVERSE RELEASES MUSIC VIDEO FOR ‘DIDN’T KNOW WHAT LOVE WAS’ FEATURING BERNARD
SUMNER,
ALEXIS TAYLOR & JOE GODDARD FROM HOT CHIP & HOT CITY

Today, Converse releases the dynamic music video to the original song ‘Didn’t Know What Love Was’ – a genre-
blending collaboration featuring outstanding British artists Bernard Sumner from Bad Lieutenant, New
Order
and Joy Division, Alexis and Joe from Hot Chip and Hot City.

Directed by renowned Sweden-based Video Director Andreas Nilsson (MGMT ‘Flash Delirium’, Miike Snow ‘Rabbit’,
Fever
Ray ‘If I Had a Heart’, Yeasayer ‘Madder Red’) the video has, as Nilsson describes it, “a dry sense of humour,
combined
with a rather frantic visual idea.”

Converse’s year-long campaign celebrating the British music scene has been championed by the release of the hot
new
track ‘Didn’t Know What Love Was’ with remixes by Hot City, Chew Lips and Hudson Mohawk.


Big Pink/Place To Bury Strangers I 3.10 I S.F.

Words by: Kelsey Bryant

The Big Pink & A Place To Bury Strangers :: 03.10.10 :: Great American Music Hall :: San Francisco, CA

The Big Pink

Walking into San Francisco’s Great American Music Hall this night was transformative. Performing in white haze so thick that A Place To Bury Strangers was barely decipherable onstage, it seemed only appropriate that their heavy, psychedelic sound was equally as dense.

Thrashing to the strobes of blinding white light, their concoction of heavy reverb and bass drum roared through the hall until it was nearly too loud to bear. “Ego Death” was a standout as the players practiced their version of minimalism by stripping back the layers of sound to primal beats and reverberating vocals as guitarist Oliver Ackermann weaved his riffs into the wall of sound. With their gritty pounding, gothic guitars and distant vocals, this was The Black Angels under the influence of Joy Division with the volume cranked to twenty.

An endurance test for audience members who forgot their earplugs, feedback was still soaking over the crowd as the lights came up. Reactions at this show were a mixed bag, but the consensus seemed that most people were there to see London’s The Big Pink. Though they may derive their name from The Band, these scenesters hue closer to the trippy, electro-musings of Klaxons or Crystal Castles and the dark psychedelics of Jesus and Mary Chain with a dash of glam.

For San Francisco, a city nose-deep in synths and psychedelia, this could have been a tough crowd to impress. As the smoke curled towards the ceiling, the lights cut out and Cypress Hill’s unexpected call to arms looped through the speakers: “I want to get high…so high.” After a few repetitions, The Big Pink climbed the staircase onto the stage, assumed their positions and switched the effects pedals back on.

Then came the bass beats, even heavier than before – the kind of bass that hits your heart and vibrates through your core. Set to the backdrop of one of the most ornate and delicate-looking venues in the country, their sound seemed to split the room at its seams. Opening with the whiplash of “Too Young To Love,” it was clear that this was the kind of noise normally reserved for coliseums. Barreling into “Velvet,” violet lights illuminated Milo Cordell‘s web of long hair, while Adam Prendergast convulsed onto his bass guitar. By this time the sold out Great American was packed to the back with the rest of the onlookers draped over the balcony. The self-conscious crowd was finally getting down.

Clearing the air with “Crystal Visions,” The Big Pink shifted gears and softened their set with a few slower numbers.

“We’re gonna play one of the slowest songs off the record,” Robbie Furze announced. “We don’t usually do it, but I think we’re gonna try it.”

From there came the moody croon of the title track from their 2009 debut A Brief History of Love and a great rendition of Otis Redding’s “These Arms Of Mine,” which Furze belted out over thin layers of buzzing reverb and his own echoing vocals.

Finishing the night off with hooky crowd-pleaser “Dominos,” the audience cheered with content. There’s nothing like a band that exhausts itself onstage. Dripping with sweat, every movement this night was spliced with passion. The Big Pink gave it their all and that’s one thing San Franciscans will always appreciate – even if they blew out their eardrums in the process.

The Big Pink Tour Dates :: The Big Pink News :: The Big Pink Concert Reviews

JamBase | Pink

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