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GIG NEWS: Street Noise presents – Puppet Rebellion

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Puppet Rebellion’s debut album Chemical Friends was released last November. Henry Rogers, Puppet Rebellion’s drummer, said: “We are very excited to be playing at Street Noise for Big Issue North, helping raise awareness and support for the invaluable work they do to help those in need change their lives.”

The show will be the second Street Noise event, following a sell-out performance from Frank Turner at the o2 Manchester Ritz last August. All profits from Street Noise events goes to Big Issue North Trust, and is used to change the lives of Big Issue North vendors.

Big Issue North Trust works across the North West, Yorkshire and The Humber offering a range of services and support to Big Issue North Vendors.

Event details

Street Noise presents Puppet Rebellion
5 July 20:00–23:00
Night & Day Cafe, 26 Oldham Street, Manchester

Tickets: https://www.ticketweb.uk/event/puppet-rebellion-night-day-cafe-tickets/8345525

Puppet Rebillion

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PuppetRebellion?fref=ts
Listen: https://soundcloud.com/puppetrebellion
Tweet: @PuppetRebellion

Big Issue North

Website: https://www.bigissuenorth.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bigissuenorth
Twitter: @bigissuenorth

EP NEWS: Hypnosister announces self titled debut EP, shares ‘Scribbles’

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Following three prominent singles and a run of shows earlier this year, Hypnosister (aka Ex-Allusondrugs guitarist Damian Hughes) has announced that his self titled debut EP will be released on 27th July via Sleep All Day Productions and has released ‘Scribbles’ from the EP as a free download.

Hypnosister’s self titled debut EP, written, recorded and produced in it’s entirety by Hughes, is made of a mixture of new material and songs originally intended for his old outfit, Allusondrugs. The EP is available on Pre-order at: http://hypnosister.bigcartel.com/product/hypnosister-ep-cd

We’ll be reviewing the new EP, look out for that on release day. But having had a sneaky preview of the tracks boy are you in for a treat people.

Scribbles shows a more epic, layered side to Hypnosister’s sound, nodding to 90s shoegazing luminaries like My Bloody Valentine with choirs of whispering angel voices swirling in layers of guitar distortion fused with the visceral fuzz rock edge of The Smashing Pumpkins.

“Scribbles is about recovering from the negative spiral that comes from comparing yourself to others on social media” Says Hughes. “We have to pull ourselves away and give ourselves the space to recognise our own value again.”

Scribbles is available for FREE DOWNLOAD on BANDCAMP: https://hypnosister.bandcamp.com/track/scribbles

Hypnosister Track List:

Poorly Boy
Bother
Breath
Ghost
I’m Going To Die
Scribbles

Catch Hypnosister at one of the following shows across the UK:

5th July – Subside Bar, Birmingham
6th July – The Lock Keeper, Chester
7th July – Pie Records – Rhos on Sea
20th July – Sanctuary, Burnley
28th July – The Horn, St Albans
2nd August – The Washington, Sheffield
4th August – The Exchange, Keighley
11th August – The Swan, Worksop
18th August – Little Buildings, Newcastle

​https://www.hypnosister.co.uk/
https://www.facebook.com/hypn0sister/
https://www.instagram.com/hypn0sister/

SINGLE REVIEW: Louis Ray – ‘Dancing With The Colours’

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This is entrancing. It’s soulful, jazzy in places, it’s vaguely dubby. It has a hint of Soul II Soul, a pinch of Portishead. And the vocals are fantastic It oozes its slow dreamy way out of your speakers, taking you on a trip. And that tune just worms its way into your head and just won’t be budged.

But I’m getting ahead of myself here. This is one of those ‘I didn’t really expect to like it quite as much as I do tracks’. As it started I was ready to dismiss it as one of those ‘clever’ but emotionally unengaging things that I hear all the time but by the end of the first listen through I was hooked. Yes, it is clever, the production on this thing is as slick as hell, but it has depth, an emotional depth. It also has sax, something that came as a very pleasant surprise.

I had, by the mid point of the track, already written a review in my head that included the phrase classic pop several times, but on reflection it is classic pop but not a classic pop single, it’s an album track. Now I know what I mean by this but it may not be immediately clear to you, the reader. So what I mean is in the time of classic pop I refer to when I use that phrase, yep the immediate singles on an album but there were always songs that took you further, deeper, and were more complex. Scritti were always the exception to that, even their singles were written, arranged and produced like album tracks.

So what, musically, had me hooked so quickly. Well there is this bass line, it’s a simple thing but simple is so often a good thing. And those vocals – provided by Tamzene – are well just languid, just sort of simply sang, the delivery is just beautiful (OK so those of taking out a sweepstake on when I might use that word can divvy up the cash now). Plus there is just the most wonderful choppy organ thing going on. And of course there is the sultry sax. And it’s laid-back, it’s almost like floating away on sound. And just when you think ‘well can it get any better’ there’s this spoken bit and then a short, very short bit that gave me that hint of Portishead. And it doesn’t sound overly complex, it doesn’t sound overloaded with layers and layers of sounds, there’s space. AND most of all it sounds like it was made by a person not a machine, it’s organic. It’s an incredibly accomplished debut track.

This is just a great track, played really well, sung really well, produced really well. It has a depth that means you can listen to it again and again but it’s immediate, it grabs you on the first listen. And while it’s slick it has an edge, it has things that pop doesn’t usually have – sax for one, and that retro sounding soul thing going on. Love this.

The single is available on all digital platforms.

The info

Louis Ray is a Leeds-based producer, songwriter and performer who takes influences from Tom Misch, Portishead, and, even Bonobo.

Written in the very early hours one morning due to an unrelenting melody that wouldn’t leave his head, Louis sacrificed sleep to map out ‘Dancing With The Colours’. Featuring guest vocals from Belladrum Records artist Tamzene, Louis Ray wrote, engineered and produced everything on his debut single as well as performing.

Not just about a girl, much like its artwork, the single portrays a deeper meaning and presents numerous layers, offering personal interpretation. It certainly provokes thought.

https://www.facebook.com/louisraymusic

ALBUM REVIEW: John Reed – ‘The Breeding Ground Of Vile’ (Vol 1: Calling Out and Vol 2: The Reckoning)

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LSF has been following John’s output since his first album ‘Moorscape’ (and incidentally I’ve been to many of his live performances as I often take photos of him and his band The Folded Arms wearing my other hat as a gig photography). What is clear is that musically John’s music, while rooted in traditional music, has become more sophisticated and powerful over time. At one stage I coined the term progressive folk to describe his music but it’s now moved on even from that. It might better be described as ‘music for people who like artists or bands to come at you with a variety of styles’. Although there is a sound in the songs that defines it as ‘a John Reed song’ to my ears.

It’s pretty clear from the album title that John is angry about the things that the songs on this album are about. My feeling is that it would be wrong to describe all of the songs as protest songs, some certainly are but others are something I think of as ‘songs with social or moral conscious’, while others might be described as a commentary. And it’s pretty clear where his political views lay, as my friend said when I played some of the songs to him “this album may upset some right wingers”.

It’s also worth saying that that although many of John’s songs are rooted in things he has learnt from others or are from things he is concerned about, their meaning may not be immediately obvious, as I found when I asked John about one of favourite songs from the album ‘How Do You Grieve’ (of which more later).

The album will be released as two volumes with a total of 24 songs. Now 24 songs is a lot to review in detail so I’m going to pick my highlights over the two volumes to give you a flavour of the range of the songs both musically and lyrically. And before I get into that I’m going to recommend that you approach this album over time, this means that you actually do listen to the songs properly.

Volume One – ‘Calling Out’ – opens with ‘The Melting’. This is a more traditionally musically based song about the melting down of metal from benches and railings for the production of war materials. It is at it’s heart a simple song with a simple message but it’s all the more effective for that. And the deceptively simple arrangement, which at first listen may strike you as sparse but there’s layers in there, just adds emotionally to the message.

‘The Wood’, a song written from the point of view of trees about to be uprooted, I found to be horribly sad but at the same time quite beautiful. What it prompted in me was the cutting down of trees in Sheffield but it has a wider message about the destruction of our countryside.

In ‘Surveillance’ John addresses the issue of how we are all under the eyes of those that want to know about us, and use technology to do that. Musically it’s more of a soundpiece rather than a song. There are haunting drums, washes of sound, bits of voices that drift in and out. This piece really sets a mood for the song’s subject.

My favourite song from this first volume ‘Wine & Whisky’ is a song about alcohol addiction. This has almost Celtic folk rock (I’m thinking Runrig here people) feel to it. John sings the song as the person who is addicted, and this really adds a huge amount of power to the lyrics. In the song he makes the point that many alcoholics haven’t chosen to take that path, it’s forced upon them by circumstances. He also makes the point that just stopping a person drinking isn’t always the answer, and he asks US not to turn away from people who ask for us for help. Musically there is some really fine violin playing on this track, and the track features accordion from Kristen Hatt-Lewis of The Lewinskies.

The title track of the album ‘The Breeding Ground Of Vile’ is an angry song, no actually it’s a really ragingly angry song, about how people become vile. And let’s be clear be about when John talks about vile here he’s talking about the grasping, greedy establishment and particularly the Tory establishment. The thing about this song is that musically it’s not that angry, it’s simple and that strangely makes it really powerful.

I really like ‘Nine Tenths Of The Law’ it has this really great driving cittern riff running through it. The problem is that I just can’t work out what it’s about, despite having listened to it many times. It appears to be about recession and austerity and the effects of these on people. It’s possible that nine tenths of the law – possession – refers to the greed of the people at the top and their holding onto everything. It’s quite possible that I’m entirely wrong but it got me thinking, and that I think is John’s aim.

‘How Do You Grieve’ is one of my favourite tracks from the whole album. I was so taken by the song that I asked John what had prompted him to write it. John was generous enough to tell me the whole story.

“Very few things have ever left me speechless. I was training international trade consultants in Kosovo in November 2017. It involved a three day intensive workshop for 22 delegates. At the end of day 1, a thirty-something guy told me of a software system that he had developed for quickly accessing European market information. Briefly demonstrating it I could see it was a work of genius, so I asked him to start day 3 with a 20 minute presentation.

“I tend to lighten up these regular training sessions by talking about the stuff we all do outside of work, and inevitably end up playing my music at some point – usually at the end. Anyway, with his impressive 20 minute presentation behind him, the delegate told me he played the guitar so I asked what kind of music. “Albanian folk music” was his reply…”and I sometimes have played it even in front of Serbian police…” at which point he seemed to shrink in front of me. During the war years (now just shy of 20 years ago) when he was a teenager, three of his uncles had been taken away and shot by the Serbian Army. Most of his 40-strong family are now living in London.

“For a moment I had absolutely no words, and eventually I told him so. In offering my condolences for his family’s loss I felt my words were inadequate to deal with the depth of his grief. I thanked him for his presentation and said I would come and talk to him later. Just before we broke for lunch I was able to get some quiet time with him and I asked if he would consider recording a sound file for one of my forthcoming records. The man who shrank before me just a couple of hours older seemed immediately to regain his spirit, so I am now hoping we can make that happen one day. The power of music is incredible at times.”

I had got the sense that the song was about family members being taken away and executed before I knew the story, it has that sort of universal meaning, once you know the full story it becomes all the more emotional.

Volume Two of the album – ‘The Reckoning’ – is, at least to my ears, more ‘angry’ in tone than the first volume.

‘Smash The Machine’ is all angular violin and throbbing drums. It drives along. The music is in this is angry, way angry. Lyrically this is a call to arms to smash the state sponsored media that lies to us.

And for ‘Fall’ John throws in something which is almost like a cross between alternative rock and something slightly folky. Don’t let the intro fool you. Musically I love this track, the arrangement really works. Again it’s one of those songs where you think you’ve grasped exactly what it’s about but then it slips away. At one point I thought I’d worked out that it was about Trump but then again it could equally as well apply to May, it may even be about both or neither.

‘Zero Heroes’ tackles the subject of people living on benefits and on – at least I think this is case – low paid zero hour contracts. It contrasts their situation with the privileged position of the business owners and those in power. Musically it’s rooted in folk but it takes that root and turns it into something way past where it’s recognisably folk. Musically I get oppression, the arrangement has that overwhelming weight.

‘The Burning Gates Of Hell Revisited’ is a song about protest, indeed it protests against the rise of ‘clicktivism’ as a form of protest. It tells us that the only effective form of protest is to get out on the streets, and that the most important changes have been made that way.

‘Not In My Name’ could be described as out and out rock song, there’s quite a lot of what I might describe as ‘crashing guitar’. Although there’s much more musically going on than just a standard rock track – there is for example a vaguely Eastern thing going on at one point.

Album closer ‘The Power’ is something I just wasn’t expecting at all. There’s all sorts of stuff going on. One moment it’s sounding vaguely West Coast psychedelic pop, the next it goes all 80s rock, and the next it throws in something quite proggy. The whole is hugely effective.

I’ve already mentioned that musically the songs on ‘The Breeding Ground Of Vile’ are powerful, complex and arranged carefully to complement the songs’ subjects. However, and I don’t mean this in any way as a criticism, it doesn’t make for an easy listen. The subjects covered by the songs range from being thought provoking to being incredibly sad to igniting something of the livid in your mind and in your heart. And the words of these songs are important, these are not songs to be used as background, you really need to listen to them. The same friend that commented that the songs would upset right-wingers also commented that the songs have “a lot of words” and I wouldn’t disagree, they do, they need to, they cover complex subjects. I don’t have a problem at all with lyrics that need listening to carefully and even listening to over and over again to work out what a song is about, I like songs like that. I like songs that make me think.

A criticism that could be levelled at the album is that it covers an enormous number of subjects, and I guess if you were to take the songs individually there is some justification in that criticism. However if you take it as a whole there is a theme that runs through – injustice, unfairness, inequality and the abuse of power by those in charge. If you get that theme the songs come together.

So do I recommend this, I do. Musically it’s powerful and inventive. And some of these songs are incredibly emotional. Lyrically it’s at the very least thought provoking, even if you disagree with the views expressed.

The album can be purchased via Bandcamp

The info

Web: www.waldeaux.com
Sign up for John’s log: http://www.waldeaux.com/blog/
Twitter: @JohnWaldeaux , @FoldedArmsGigs

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/johnreedandthefoldedarms/
https://www.facebook.com/JohnReedLiveMusic/

Music Catalogue:
https://johnreed.bandcamp.com
https://www.reverbnation.com/johnreed4

Musicians on the album – JOHN REED & THE FOLDED ARMS:

John Reed
Writer, lead vocals, cittern, electric & acoustic 6 string guitars, 12-string guitar, cello

Kieran Heaney
Electric guitar

Emma Perry
Vocals and percussion

Kate Ferris
Vocals and percussion

Matt Steady
Violin, uilleann pipes

Peter Robinson
Percussion

Heygamal
Bass guitar, keyboards, production

Duncan Reed
Dual vocals on ‘Outnumbered’

The Lewinskies (all instruments on ‘The Madness’, plus acoustic guitar and accordion on ‘Wine & Whisky’ and The Burning Gates Of Hell’)

Kristen Hatt-Lewis
Vocals, accordion

Matthew Lewis
Acoustic guitar

SINGLE & TOUR NEWS: Delta Sleep share new track ‘Single File’, dates September 2018

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Delta Sleep have shared a new track ‘Single File’ from their forthcoming album ‘Ghost City’. ‘Ghost City’ is due out 10th August via Big Scary Monsters – pre-order HERE. Accompanying the news of their new album, Delta Sleep have now also announced a series of headline UK tour dates following on from their US tour in August/September.

‘Ghost City’ was written over the course of two years, between the bands tours in Europe, Japan and Mexico, before heading to Northern Italy to record it. “We figured it was the same price to record in Italy, so we brought our friend and producer Mark Roberts along for the ride,” says Devin Yuceil (vocals/guitar), “we booked a bunch of shows on the way down which pretty much covered our recording costs, which also meant that we had around a week of playing the new material everyday leading to the studio, a luxury we don’t often have.”

Conceptually, the new album is a tech-noir wherein the world now operates as one city in a collective consciousness under the rule of vast tech firms – organic nature and wildlife are a thing of the past, a myth. Centred around a female protagonist who exists as a cog in the machine, ‘Ghost City’ is both bleak and dystopian but at times also uplifting and oddly cathartic; exploring existentialism, mundanity, oppression and ultimately the negative effects of technology on the world.

The bands future-facing approach to intelligent songwriting has previously garnered them considerable support from fervent fans and critics alike, combining guitar driven melodies over jazz influenced grooves, all topped with thought provoking and emotional vocals. ‘Ghost City’ is the sound of Delta Sleep at their inspiriting best, mirroring the energy of their live shows interlaced with moments of sweeping ambience, uplift and complex yet captivating instrumentation.

“This album feels like a snapshot of where the songs were at that time,” says Dave Jackson (bass), “You can even hear little blemishes throughout, which we love – chatter in between takes, us fucking around and generally having fun. A couple of the tracks were even improvised on the day, we’d never played them before, liked the vibe and they made it onto the album. We’ve also sprinkled in some field recordings from our time spent in Japan and Mexico.”

For those who were previously enthralled by the band’s richly textured sound this is a significant release on its own terms, let alone as another step towards wherever Delta Sleep might take themselves. ‘Ghost City’ is the sound of their life and subsequent cultural experiences redefining the way the band collectively compose and express themselves, resulting in their most focused and exciting work so far.

Tour dates:

September
14th – Oxford, The Wheatsheaf // UK *
15th – Glasgow, The Hug and Pint // UK *
16th – Bristol, The Exchange // UK *
20th – Brighton, Castle Street Snooker Hall // UK *
21st – London, Bush Hall // UK *
22nd – Leeds, Temple of Boom // UK *
23rd – Southampton, Joiners // UK *

* w/Tangled Hair

TOUR & ALBUM NEWS: Fun Lovin’ Criminals announce 2019 Tour, new album ‘Another Mimosa’

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The multi-platinum New York trio announce a headline UK & European tour to celebrate the release of their new album ‘Another Mimosa’.

Fun Lovin’ Criminals burst onto the music scene in 1996, gate crashing the euphoric Brit-pop party with unforgettable finesse. Heralded for their generation defining blend of styles and effortless Lower East Side charm, FLC’s refreshing cocktail of rock n’ roll, funk, blues, soul, hip hop, jazz and latin, gave the Crims a unique timelessness that is still apparent three decades on.

FLC’s debut single ‘Scooby Snacks’, famed for sampling Tarantino movies such as Reservoir Dogs and Pulp Fiction launched a career that saw the debut EMI album Come Find Yourself remain in the UK album chart for over two years. FLC performed an infamously raucous set on the legendary Pyramid main stage at Glastonbury ’99 and the rest – as they say – is history.

Still a mainstay on the festival circuit in UK and Europe, FLC are Europe’s best-loved “cousins from New York”, whip-smart story-tellers in smarter Saville Row suits who, through comically tall tales of living large in the neon metropolis, launched a career in music that saw three ordinarily New Yorkers who met working at the legendary Limelight on W 20th St, swap glass collection for world tours with their pals U2 and studio collaborations with the late-great BB King.

The Lower East side trio consists of frontman turned Sony Award winning BBC broadcaster Huey Morgan, his founding partner Brian ‘Fast’ Leiser on bass, trumpet and samples and the groups longest-standing drummer Frank ‘The Rhythm Master’ Benbini. FLC returned to the studio this year with Grammy award winning engineer Tim Latham to make forthcoming new album ‘Another Mimosa’, their first studio abum since 2010. More details will be revealed on the album’s release shortly, but fans can well imagine a variation on the theme of the 1999 album ‘Mimosa’, which became a cult classic with Crims fans for featuring clever re-imaginings of classic covers and an impromptu guest appearance from Ian McCulloch of Echo & the Bunnymen fame!

Fun Lovin’ Criminals (support tbc) – ‘Another Mimosa’ UK / European Tour 2019

31 Jan Birmingham The Mill
1 Feb Newcastle Northumbria Institute
2 Feb Glasgow Barrowland Ballroom
7 Feb Southampton Engine Rooms
8 Feb Bristol 02 Academy
9 Feb Norwich UEA
7 Mar Worthing Pavilion Theatre
8 Mar Nottingham Rock City
9 Mar London O2 Kentish Town Forum
28 Mar Oxford O2 Academy
29 Mar Manchester Academy
30 Mar Leeds 02 Academy

Visit funlovincriminals.co for more information and ticket sales.

TOUR NEWS: Rolo Tomassi upcoming October/November 2018 tour, festival dates

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To celebrate the release of their recent incredible album ‘Time Will Die and Love Will Bury It’, ROLO TOMASSI will be heading out on a headline tour through October/November, taking in some of the bands largest ever headline shows to date.

Tickets go on sale Friday 29th June.

Support come from the brilliant Blood Command and Cassus, and you can see all these dates, as well as all other currently booked and announced live shows, below:

All UK headline shows for ROLO TOMASSI
Support from Blood Command and Cassus

30.10 – Rescue Rooms, Nottingham
31.10 – The Anvil, Bournemouth
01.11 – Clwb Ifor Bach, Cardiff
02.11 – Waterfront, Norwich
09.11 – Scala, London

ALL other ROLO TOMASSI live dates for 2018:

12 Jul – Resurrection Fest – ES
20 Jul – Tramlines Festival – UK
11 Aug – Brutal Assault Fest – CZ
16 Aug – ArcTanGent – UK
17 Aug – Rock Altitude Fest – CH
18 Aug – Summerbreeze – DE
15 Sep – If Not Now When Fest? – UK
27 Oct – MoreCore Festival – DE

SINGLE & TOUR NEWS: LAUREL drops A/A Single ‘Crave/Same Mistakes’, UK Tour September/October 2018

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LAUREL has released two new singles ‘Crave’ and ‘Same Mistakes’, both taken from her debut album ‘DOGVIOLET’, out August 24th on Counter Records. These two new tracks follow lead single ‘Lovesick’.

Following a huge 2017, including a UK and European tour with Oh Wonder, two sold-out UK headline tours, and appearances at The Secret Garden Party, Live At Leeds, Outlines Festival and Golden Leaves Festival, LAUREL heads out on a UK and European tour this autumn.

September

Thurs 20th BIRMINGHAM, The Sunflower Lounge
Fri 21st MANCHESTER, Soup Kitchen
Sat 22nd GLASGOW, Stereo
Sun 23rd NEWCASTLE, The Think Tank
Tues 25th SHEFFIELD, The Leadmill – Steel Stage
Weds 26th LEEDS, Oporto
Thurs 27th LIVERPOOL, Sound – Basement
Sat 29th BRISTOL, The Lanes
Sun 30th PORTSMOUTH, Wedgewood Rooms

October

Mon 1st BRIGHTON, The Hope & Ruin
Thurs 4th LONDON, The Dome Tuffnell Park
Fri 5th PARIS, Le Pop Up Du Label
Sat 6th BELGIUM, Botantique – Rotonde
Sun 7th AMSTERDAM, Sugarfactory
Tues 9th KOLN, Blue Shell
Weds 10th HAMBURG, HÄKKEN (Haekken)
Thurs 11th COPENHAGEN, Ideal Bar
Fri 12th STOCKHOLM, Debaser – Bar Brooklyn
Sat 13th OSLO, Jaeger
Mon 15th FRANKFURT, Brotfabrik
Tues 16th BERLIN, Musik & Frieden
Thurs 18th WARSAW, Klub Hydrozagadka
Fri 19th POZNAN, Meskalina
Sat 20th PRAGUE, Café V lese
Sun 21st BUDAPEST, Dürer Kert
Tues 23rd LJUBJANA, Kino Siska
Weds 24th BOLOGNA, Locomotivclub
Thurs 25th MILAN, Ohibo
Fri 26th ZURICH, Amboss Rampe
Sun 28th VIENNA, B72
Mon 29th MUNICH, Milla
November
Thurs 1st BARCELONA, Sidecar
Fri 2nd MADRID, Siroco Club

Tickets on sale now. Head to http://www.classiclaurel.com/ for details.

SINGLE NEWS: York band Cold Culprits announce first live performance of new single

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From 2.45pm on Saturday 30 June, three-piece indie rock band, Cold Culprits, is performing original material and putting its spin on a set of covers at Tockwith Festival in North Yorkshire. AND they’ve announced they’ll be performing their upcoming new release, ‘Pieces of You’, live for the first time.

Mixing indie rock with punk, Cold Culprits formed earlier this year and have built their sound on well-known anthems from the likes of The Jam, Primal Scream, The Clash, Green Day and The Rolling Stones.

“We’re super-electrified to be asked to play Tockwith Festival,” says Kurt Faraday, lead singer and guitarist with Cold Culprits. “It’s a kickass festival that also takes care of its immediate environment. From what I hear, they’ve granted more than £25,000 to community groups and local causes. And the music line-up is blistering. I’m proper looking forward to performing and seeing the reaction to our new single.”

Cold Culprits’ new single, ‘Pieces of You’, will be released in late July. Tockwith Festival takes place on Saturday 30 June from 1pm to 11pm. Tickets are on sale now, direct from the festival website www.tockwithfestivals.co.uk.

www.coldculprits.com
https://www.facebook.com/coldculprits/

TOUR NEWS: Ruts DC announce February/March 2019 dates to celebrate 40th Anniversary of ‘The Crack’

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Released in September of 1979, The Ruts one and only studio album ‘The Crack’ was an extraordinary statement of intent. As the energy and attitude of punks first wave started to dissipate, here was a band that exploded onto the scene with everything to offer. ‘The Crack’ had it all. Twelve power-packed songs brimming with invention and energy, it featured an extraordinary run of hit singles – ‘Babylon’s Burning’, ‘Something That I Said’ and ‘Jah War’ – alongside some of the best adrenalized rock music to emerge in the decade’s closing. Malcolm Owen’s snarling yet soulful vocals, Paul Fox’s soaring guitar and the incredible rhythm pairing of bassist John Jennings and drummer Dave Ruffy came together in perfect harmony to create an album that is as relevant and important now as it was then. Henry Rollins isn’t alone in his opinion when he frequently refers to The Crack as the “best album ever made”.

The Ruts (now Ruts DC) have always been intent on creating fresh music, constantly striving to move forward. When the band returned to the studio in 2008 to record ‘Rhythm Collision 2’ the follow-up to the 1982 dub-masterpiece, they hit the road and began the daunting task of crafting the first new Ruts DC songs since the early 80s, resulting in the release of 2016’s exceptional ‘Music Must Destroy’ album. It featured ten new songs of prime Ruts energy and song-writing suss, proving just how well the Jennings/Ruffy partnership had endured, alongside new guitarist Leigh Heggarty.

As 2019 marks the 40th anniversary of ‘The Crack’, however, it’s now is time to take a well-deserved look back and Ruts DC are proud to announce a special UK tour to celebrate the albums original release, playing it in its entirety for the very first time.

“It’s always been important to us to be a current and forward-thinking band, releasing and playing new material whilst being proud of our past,” states John ‘Segs’ Jennings. “A milestone to many, The Crack is an important piece of work to us too. We now feel ready to celebrate where we came from.”

“Making ‘The Crack” was a real game changer for me,” continues Dave Ruffy. “The Ruts were a band that were greater than the sum of their parts and wrote music inspired by everything we had ever heard. It’s a piece of work that I am immensely proud to have been a part of. Now forty years on we will be playing the album in its entirety, it’s quite a challenge as some of the songs have not been played since 1980! Our legacy is large, and we are and will continue working hard to make this a great show.

Support on all dates will come from recently reunited post-pistols legends The Professionals and together with Ruts DC, this tour will serve as a worthy tribute to ‘The Crack’ and two of its much-missed creators Malcolm Owen and Paul Fox.

The Crack – 40th Anniversary Tour 2019 (Tickets on sale Friday 29th June 2018)

11th Feb Phoenix Exeter
12th Feb Concorde 2 Brighton
13th Feb O2 Ritz Manchester
15th Feb 02 Institute 2 Birmingham
16th Feb 02 Academy 2 Sheffield
17th Feb The Junction Cambridge
18th Feb 02 Academy Oxford
20th Feb Waterfront Norwich
21st Feb Riverside Newcastle
22nd Feb Garage Glasgow
23rd Feb Tunnels Aberdeen
24th Feb Liquid Rooms Edinburgh
26th Feb Rescue Rooms Nottingham
27th Feb SWX Bristol
28th Feb O2 Shepherds Bush Empire London
2nd Mar Button Factory Dublin, IE
3rd Mar Limelight Belfast

Tickets available from gigsandtours.com or ticketmaster.co.uk

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