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The Farm are touring again this summer and have just made their first album for 31 years (with the same-line-up). This sparky and wide-ranging conversation with Peter Hooton stops off at the following … … the advice Mark E Smith gave him when they were interviewed by Select magazine. … “Suedeheads v Trogs and Greebos”: early ‘70s tribal warfare in Bootle. … seeing Cockney Rebel, the Sensational Alex Harvey Band and Genesis at the Liverpool Empire. … the death of old heroes – “you imagined Bowie was always going to be there”. … backstage with the Clash in Paris and why they were the Farm's role models. … Bill Drummond's attempt to remodel them “in tracksuits with hard dogs”. … how the death of John Lennon made him start writing. … the use of All Together Now as a football anthem – from everyone to Everton to Euros 2004 to a disastrous campaign by the Labour Party - “but the Qatar World Cup was a bridge too far”. … touring with Mick Jones (“the Pied Piper”) for the Hillsborough 96 Campaign. … his school band, Breakwind - “the forerunners of Half Man Half Biscuit” – and being in the cast of Oliver!. …. his guided music tours of Liverpool and the places they visit. … and why The Farm has “omni-appeal – a band who look like they're from a street corner”. Also in the mix: Big Audio Dynamite, Deaf School, Nile Rodgers, Roger Eagle and Cliff Richard on Top Of The Pops. Buy tickets and the album Let The Music (Take Control) here: https://thefarmmusic.co.uk/Find out more about how to help us to keep the conversation going: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear
The Farm are touring again this summer and have just made their first album for 31 years (with the same-line-up). This sparky and wide-ranging conversation with Peter Hooton stops off at the following … … the advice Mark E Smith gave him when they were interviewed by Select magazine. … “Suedeheads v Trogs and Greebos”: early ‘70s tribal warfare in Bootle. … seeing Cockney Rebel, the Sensational Alex Harvey Band and Genesis at the Liverpool Empire. … the death of old heroes – “you imagined Bowie was always going to be there”. … backstage with the Clash in Paris and why they were the Farm's role models. … Bill Drummond's attempt to remodel them “in tracksuits with hard dogs”. … how the death of John Lennon made him start writing. … the use of All Together Now as a football anthem – from everyone to Everton to Euros 2004 to a disastrous campaign by the Labour Party - “but the Qatar World Cup was a bridge too far”. … touring with Mick Jones (“the Pied Piper”) for the Hillsborough 96 Campaign. … his school band, Breakwind - “the forerunners of Half Man Half Biscuit” – and being in the cast of Oliver!. …. his guided music tours of Liverpool and the places they visit. … and why The Farm has “omni-appeal – a band who look like they're from a street corner”. Also in the mix: Big Audio Dynamite, Deaf School, Nile Rodgers, Roger Eagle and Cliff Richard on Top Of The Pops. Buy tickets and the album Let The Music (Take Control) here: https://thefarmmusic.co.uk/Find out more about how to help us to keep the conversation going: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear
The Farm are touring again this summer and have just made their first album for 31 years (with the same-line-up). This sparky and wide-ranging conversation with Peter Hooton stops off at the following … … the advice Mark E Smith gave him when they were interviewed by Select magazine. … “Suedeheads v Trogs and Greebos”: early ‘70s tribal warfare in Bootle. … seeing Cockney Rebel, the Sensational Alex Harvey Band and Genesis at the Liverpool Empire. … the death of old heroes – “you imagined Bowie was always going to be there”. … backstage with the Clash in Paris and why they were the Farm's role models. … Bill Drummond's attempt to remodel them “in tracksuits with hard dogs”. … how the death of John Lennon made him start writing. … the use of All Together Now as a football anthem – from everyone to Everton to Euros 2004 to a disastrous campaign by the Labour Party - “but the Qatar World Cup was a bridge too far”. … touring with Mick Jones (“the Pied Piper”) for the Hillsborough 96 Campaign. … his school band, Breakwind - “the forerunners of Half Man Half Biscuit” – and being in the cast of Oliver!. …. his guided music tours of Liverpool and the places they visit. … and why The Farm has “omni-appeal – a band who look like they're from a street corner”. Also in the mix: Big Audio Dynamite, Deaf School, Nile Rodgers, Roger Eagle and Cliff Richard on Top Of The Pops. Buy tickets and the album Let The Music (Take Control) here: https://thefarmmusic.co.uk/Find out more about how to help us to keep the conversation going: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
(00:00) We kick off Friday morning with discussing radio legend Arthur P, Fred saying how seeing KISS years ago might’ve been one of the most fun he’s ever had at a concert and Mark E. Smith. (19:30) WHAT HAPPENED LAST NIGHT: Tyrese Haliburton drilled a 21-foot pull-up jumper with just 0.3 seconds left, giving the Indiana Pacers their first and only lead of the game and an impossible-seeming 111-110 victory over the heavily favored Oklahoma City Thunder in Game 1. Also, the guys preview Red Sox-Yankees CONNECT WITH TOUCHER & HARDY: linktr.ee/ToucherandHardy For the latest updates, visit the show page on 985thesportshub.com. Follow 98.5 The Sports Hub on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram. Watch the show every morning on YouTube, and subscribe to stay up-to-date with all the best moments from Boston’s home for sports!
For some who had been following The Fall since 'Live At The Witch Trials' and 'Dragnet', 1988's 'The Frenz Experiment' with its more polished and slightly commercial sound might have seemed to be a bit of a sellout. Not so for this week's guest, Manchester record shop co-owner and bass player (The Suncharms) Richard Farnell. Catching them live at a record shop in-store appearance while playing hooky during a school trip into London may have sealed the deal for him, but he contends there's more to this era of The Fall than the unlikely chart success of their covers of 'Victoria' and 'There's A Ghost In My House' might attest. Songs discussed in this episode: There's A Ghost In My House - The Fall; Time Will Tell - The Suncharms; Mr Pharmacist, Totally Wired, Rebellious Jukebox, Fol De Rol, Frenz, Carry Bag Man, Get A Hotel - The Fall; Victoria - The Kinks; All Day and All of the Night - The Stranglers; Victoria - The Fall; Tonight I'm Gonna Rock You Tonight - Spinal Tap; Athlete Cured, In These Times, The Steak Place, Bremen Nacht, Guest Informant, Oswald Defence Lawyer - The Fall; Distant Lights - The Suncharms
SPOTIFY PLAYLIST HERE .In Which Stan and Dazza play Realpolotik Jenga- Dismantling the Tower of Babble one hypno-krypto -facist at a time - Conducting this teetering orchestra is none other than The Mad- Cap Mancurian word smith- Fall frontman ...Mark E Smith..………
Order and disorder, a freeform haze of garbage guitars, shorted electronics, found detritus, collage, linear songs, sounds from strange lands. A freeform flangefest. Today a mix of live, interviews and snippets in memoriam of Mark E Smith, who left us 7 years ago this week. brianturnershow.com, eastvillageradio.comMARK E. SMITH MEMORIAL SPECIALThe Fall - Totally Wired (Live 1981, a capella, venue unknown)The Fall - Deer Park (City Gardens, Trenton, 1981)The Fall - Copped It (Saturday Live, 1984)The Fall - City Hobgoblins (St. Helens Technical College, 1981)The Fall - Mere Pseud Mag Ed (Biel, Switzerland, 1983)The Fall - Smile (The Tube, 1983)The Fall - 2 x 4 (The Tube, 1983)The Fall - Interview / Bombast (The Tube, 1985)The Fall - Cruisers Creek (The Tube, 1985)The Fall - Hip Priest/Big New Prinz (Edinburgh, 1988)The Fall - Bremen Nacht (Boston, 1988)Adam and Joe - At Mark's House, digging up records in his stash, 1997)The Fall - Telephone Thing (Sydney, 1990)The Fall - Why Are People Grudgeful (Sheffield, 1993)Interview with Michael Bracewell, ICA, 1994The Fall - Blindness (Later with Jools Holland, 2005)The Fall - What About Us (Oslo, 2006)The Fall - Sparta F.C. (Oslo, 2006)The Fall - Wolf Kidult Man (From the Basement, 2008)Von Sudenfed - Flooded (Live Liquid Rooms, Edinburgh, 2007)The Fall - Pacifying Joint (Later with Jools Holland, 2005)The Fall - I Can Hear the Grass Grow (Later with Jools Holland, 2005)
1976 was a comparatively slow year for horror movies yet it contains some of the most popular titles of all time. But, what do I think was the very greatest horror movie that came out during 1976? Well, here we have the top 10. The worst 10. A slew of also rans. Some awesome mates. Some special guests. Several shots of whisky and a 6 hour running time split over 4 episodes. This is 1976, A Year In Horror. 0.00 - Introduction12.45 - Sci-Fi Corner15.57 - Logan's Run (w/ Brix Smith)34.28 - The Worst 10 Horror Movies of 197642.44 - Also Rans (Part 1)44.58 - Kolchak: Crackle of Death (w/ Paul Terry)
Enfant de la Pergola (quartier populaire de Montpellier), Daniel Martinez, alias Docteur Martino, a plusieurs vies de mélomane en une: fan d'OTH et des Vierges aux débuts des années 80 avant d'être DJ d'acid house sous le pseudo de Dan CDK dans les années 90, il fut ensuite ambianceur aux platines pour des Cosmic Groove Party (concerts ayant fait venir des légendes des musiques soul/funk, en terre héraultaise, dans les années 2000), tout en étant à côté un prêcheur invétéré de Mark E. Smith à qui il voue un véritable culte. Fourré dans tous les bons lives depuis près de 40 ans, il est un homme de radios locales (Agora, L'Eko des Garrigues, Divergences FM...) depuis 1985, un conteur d'histoires sur bande fm truffées de rebondissements noise, de rock indé haletant, d'envolées pop psychédéliques et d'autres péripéties tonitruantes, que vous pouvez entendre dans son émission actuelle sur Radio Campus, Le Jour du Soigneur 2.0.À travers cette perquisition introspective chez lui, c'est une histoire de la vie musicale montpellieraine que vous allez découvrir. Et notamment des lieux, des évènements du Clapas, ayant marqué des générations et aujourd'hui tombés dans l'oubli ou devenus iconiques pour certains (Les États Généraux du Rock, Le Doyen, Ah La La Disques, Zappie's Records, Pinguins Records...)
It's jangly and jarring, but irresistibly hypnotic. Mark E Smith chants this incantation as if he is literally crawling out of his skin. The performance is teeth grinding punk rock in its distilled essence. a portrait of a poet in service to anarchy. And, funny. Deeply biting and ironical, this was DJ champion, John Peel's favorite group. The lyrics here seem improvised, but he's a gonzo beat poet extraordinaire - he's written it all down, and delivers it with his signature repetition in a discordant bray. “You don't have to be weird to be wiredYou don't have to be an American to be strangeYou don't have to be strange to be strangeYou don't have to be weird to be weird”After seeing the Sex Pistols in '76 Mr Smith had a vision that carried him for 42 years through a ridiculous number of personnel changes. It doesn't matter who is playing as long as Mark is at the mic. He said once, “if it's me and your granny, it's The Fall”.Mark was a difficult, complex man who died in 2018 at the age of 60, leaving behind 32 studio albums and countless live versions. One could pick out practically any Fall tune, and experience that singular voice - “attitude personified,” one journalist dubbed it. I chose this cut because it makes me smile every time I hear it. I hate being in that condition myself, but it's fun to vicariously share Mark's flirtation with psychosis.
Send us a textThis episode, we look at what Rolling Stone magazine considers to be the best songs of the 80's. We have been critical of Rolling Stone in the past for the quality of their lists, and this time is no different. However, there's some good stuff in this list, which we're happy to acknowledge. Of course, we point out their failings as well – it'd be no fun if we didn't, would it?! In Rock News, we look at a new album from Coldplay (as if anybody cares!), the trials of Sean “Puffy” Combs, and The Beatles. Our “Album You Must listen to Before you Die” is 1985's The Nation's Saving Grace, by The Fall. Mick loves it, Jeff doesn't think much of it. So, what's new? Another fun episode. Enjoy. References: Rolling Stone magazine, 80's, Coldplay, ‘Moon Music', No 1 album, Sean Diddy Coombs, Puff Daddy, Diddy, Cassie Ventura, Beatlemania, Beatles '64, David Tedeschi, Disney+, The Fall, The Nations Saving Grace, John Leckie, Mark E Smith, Can, German, krautrock, Damo Suzuki, DoubleJay, TripleJ, Prince, ‘Kiss', Madonna, ‘Like a Prayer', Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five, ‘The Message', Michael Jackson, ‘Billie Jean', Public Enemy, ‘Bring the Noise', Whitney Houston, ‘How Will I Know?”, The Go-Gos, ‘Our Lips Are Sealed', Duran Duran, ‘Hungry Like the Wolf', Kate Bush, ‘Running Up That Hill', The Smiths, ‘There Is a Light That Never Goes Out', Husker Du, Minutemen, rap artists, Bowie, Depeche Mode, Culture Club, Clash, Neneh Cherry, U2, Joy Division, AC/DC, “Hell's Bells”, INXS, “Never Tear Us Apart”, Apple music streaming, Leonard Cohen, Tower of Song, Sisters of Mercy, “This Corrosion”, “Floodland”, Jim Steinman, “New Big Prinz”, Frankie Goes to Hollywood, “Relax", Cher, “If I Could Turn Back Time”, Missouri, Bow Wow Wow, “I Want Candy”, Haysi Fantaysee, “Shiny Shiny”, Countdown, Falco, “Rock Me, Amadeus”, A-Ha, “Take on me”, Nena, 99 Luftballon, Kim Carnes, “Bette Davis Eyes”, Shriekback, “Nemesis", parthenogenesis, Samantha Fox, Africa, Toto Playlist – Episode This is our usual playlist, where we curate a list to play what we've talked about in the episode Playlist – Spotify's complete list Africa – Mass band Samantha Fox web site – purely for academic interest!
A clip from our patreon covering the band The Fall, and featuring John Kenney https://www.patreon.com/LostFuturesPod Rate us on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/lost-futures-a-mark-fisher-podcast/id1685663806Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0EnwNGZijCDZVIl5JtjwGTFollow us on Twitter: @lostfuturespodTheme Song By: EvilJekyllArt/animation by: Gregory Cristiani --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lost-futures/support
[Patreon Bonus Ep. Preview:] Join us as we get our first taste of The Fall heading into their 'machine' music era with Mark E. Smith collaborating with Coldcut on this 1989 treat. Also (moving forward), full album tracks embedded in episodes-- Only on Patreon! Join us while you can! The music video for (I'm) In Deep by Pascal Le Gras: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gOmwVOTfh8g Are you searching for the (next episode) now? Are you looking for the real thing, yeah? You may be missing out on more great Fall-related explorations… but not if you join us on WATF PATREON: Full A & B-SIDE discussions (Now!), special (Patreon-only) bonus episodes, side excursions into Fall-member side projects, and early access to all episodes! Join WATF Pod on PATREON and get them all! Including rare Fall content, merch, and exclusive chats with Gavin & Steve as they discuss everything Fall-related. Follow WATF Pod on: Instagram // YouTube // Twitter // Facebook For more Fall-related info, please visit our fellow Fall-heads' great work at: TheFall.org // The Annotated Fall Theme Song by Gavin Watts: https://wearethefallpod.bandcamp.com/ Produced and presented by Watts Happening Records: www.TheWattsHappening.com Advertising & Guest Inquiries - Contact: wearethefallpod@gmail.com
Descobrim l'univers sonor del petit segell barcelon
Descobrim l'univers sonor del petit segell barcelon
Lias Saoudi växte upp på Nordirland med brittisk mor och algerisk far. Han är sångare i Fat White Family som sedan starten 2011 blivit kända för sin anarkistiska dekadens och sitt bångstyriga sound. Kritiker har skrivit att de inte är ett rockband med drogproblem utan ett drogband med rockproblem. I våras kom gruppens fjärde album "Forgiveness is yours" vars inspelning Lias Saoudi beskriver som "a fucking marathon of weirdness, dysfunction and interpersonal mess". Hemma hos Strage bjuder han på häpnadsväckande anekdoter om när han trippade på ketamin och träffade Yoko Ono, om när Fat White Family spelade i Paris samma kväll som terrorister attackerade Le Bataclan, om sin tid som pizzabagare (då han uppfann Middle Class Guilt Calzone med kronärtskocka och chèvre) och om när hans bror plus mor hamnade i ett blött backstagebråk med idolen Mark E Smith från The Fall. Dessutom diskuterar Strage och Saoudi manlig omskärelse. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Send us a Text Message.Nick Cave. After a career that would exhaust a lesser man, he's still recording and performing breathtaking work. Mick's just seen him live with only his piano, and a bass guitar, and can't stop raving! We look at how he started and the difference between his performances and attitudes then and now. In other news, Lenny Kravitz is still sticking to his vow of celibacy, The Police's Andy Summers declares that they were total babes, and The Angels are still releasing new work. Hmmm....... References: Jarrah McCleary, Panama, Jethro Tull, The Prince of Darkness, Nick Cave, Wollongong Entertainment Centre, Lenny Kravitz, The Police, Andy Summers, The Angels, Christine Anu, Mark E Smith, The Fall, “music for surly virgins”, Boys Next Door, Caulfield Grammar, Mick Harvey, Phill Calvert, The Birthday Party, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, Grinderman, “Lawless”, “And the Ass Saw the Angel”, Dogs in Space, "Shivers", “a murder of crows”, John Cooper Clarke, Rowland S Howard, Colin Greenwood, Radiohead, “Fragments of a Rainy Season”, John Cale, “Mercy Seat”, “Balcony Man”, The Seekers, “The Carnival is Over”, “Kicking against the Pricks”, The Big Day Out, “The Weeping Song”, The Good Son, Blixa Bargeld, Live Seeds, Red Right Hand, “Into Your Arms”, “Mutiny in Heaven”, Order of Australia, Coronation of Charles III Playlists: Episode Playlist Nick Cave Solo Setlist Live Seeds YouTube Links Roy and RG Planet Norwich 1998 Cave on Roy and HG - part 2 https://youtu.be/fiwlZgOeAHA?si=8iyIi8m1JmVcVfaG https://youtu.be/MfPQZzTbVqU?si=z7X0Eb5ea9NhS7cJ
Stewart Lee – beloved writer, columnist and stand-up - was on the podcast in 2022 talking about the first records he bought, immensely funny and fascinating, and we've been praying for an excuse to get him back since. And it's here! - he's on tour again and his ‘Basic Lee' show is on Sky/Now TV on July 20. This covers his first memories of live entertainment - in the audience and as a performer – and the people who influenced him and stops off at the following stations … … why the Wombles were just like Crass. … how he writes and tests new material. … why Ted Chippington inspired his stand-up career. … television comedy is now “two-screen TV” as the viewer's always watching something else at the same time. … how Lockdown made audiences forget how to behave. … “Comedian In Bum Phone Fury”: how he stopped people filming his gigs. … deliberately using negative reaction shots in his TV edits. … improvisation in music and comedy and why every night should be unique. … the tense protocol of comedians at other comedians' gigs. … Mark E Smith doing things “out of necessity irrespective of how they were received” and his reaction to seeing Stewart in his audience. … why festival crowds are a challenge. … the Drifters, the Applejacks and Napalm Death and how they are related. … the music playing when his son was born. … arriving in full early Dexys rig - donkey jacket, woolly hat - to find they were now the “raggle-taggle gypsies”. … the sole performance of Peter Richardson's Mexican bandit act. … Daniel Kitson, “the world's greatest living stand-up”. … plus the Nightingales, Chris Spedding, Clem Cattini, Kirk Brandon, the Bevis Frond, Geddy Lee, Throbbing Gristle and Brighton Psych Fest's Secluded Bronte – “is it music or are they just moving furniture around?”------------ All information about Stewart Lee tour dates here …https://www.stewartlee.co.uk/ ‘Basic Lee' is on Sky/Now TV on July 20.Find out more about how to help us keep the conversation going: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Stewart Lee – beloved writer, columnist and stand-up - was on the podcast in 2022 talking about the first records he bought, immensely funny and fascinating, and we've been praying for an excuse to get him back since. And it's here! - he's on tour again and his ‘Basic Lee' show is on Sky/Now TV on July 20. This covers his first memories of live entertainment - in the audience and as a performer – and the people who influenced him and stops off at the following stations … … why the Wombles were just like Crass. … how he writes and tests new material. … why Ted Chippington inspired his stand-up career. … television comedy is now “two-screen TV” as the viewer's always watching something else at the same time. … how Lockdown made audiences forget how to behave. … “Comedian In Bum Phone Fury”: how he stopped people filming his gigs. … deliberately using negative reaction shots in his TV edits. … improvisation in music and comedy and why every night should be unique. … the tense protocol of comedians at other comedians' gigs. … Mark E Smith doing things “out of necessity irrespective of how they were received” and his reaction to seeing Stewart in his audience. … why festival crowds are a challenge. … the Drifters, the Applejacks and Napalm Death and how they are related. … the music playing when his son was born. … arriving in full early Dexys rig - donkey jacket, woolly hat - to find they were now the “raggle-taggle gypsies”. … the sole performance of Peter Richardson's Mexican bandit act. … Daniel Kitson, “the world's greatest living stand-up”. … plus the Nightingales, Chris Spedding, Clem Cattini, Kirk Brandon, the Bevis Frond, Geddy Lee, Throbbing Gristle and Brighton Psych Fest's Secluded Bronte – “is it music or are they just moving furniture around?”------------ All information about Stewart Lee tour dates here …https://www.stewartlee.co.uk/ ‘Basic Lee' is on Sky/Now TV on July 20.Find out more about how to help us keep the conversation going: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Stewart Lee – beloved writer, columnist and stand-up - was on the podcast in 2022 talking about the first records he bought, immensely funny and fascinating, and we've been praying for an excuse to get him back since. And it's here! - he's on tour again and his ‘Basic Lee' show is on Sky/Now TV on July 20. This covers his first memories of live entertainment - in the audience and as a performer – and the people who influenced him and stops off at the following stations … … why the Wombles were just like Crass. … how he writes and tests new material. … why Ted Chippington inspired his stand-up career. … television comedy is now “two-screen TV” as the viewer's always watching something else at the same time. … how Lockdown made audiences forget how to behave. … “Comedian In Bum Phone Fury”: how he stopped people filming his gigs. … deliberately using negative reaction shots in his TV edits. … improvisation in music and comedy and why every night should be unique. … the tense protocol of comedians at other comedians' gigs. … Mark E Smith doing things “out of necessity irrespective of how they were received” and his reaction to seeing Stewart in his audience. … why festival crowds are a challenge. … the Drifters, the Applejacks and Napalm Death and how they are related. … the music playing when his son was born. … arriving in full early Dexys rig - donkey jacket, woolly hat - to find they were now the “raggle-taggle gypsies”. … the sole performance of Peter Richardson's Mexican bandit act. … Daniel Kitson, “the world's greatest living stand-up”. … plus the Nightingales, Chris Spedding, Clem Cattini, Kirk Brandon, the Bevis Frond, Geddy Lee, Throbbing Gristle and Brighton Psych Fest's Secluded Bronte – “is it music or are they just moving furniture around?”------------ All information about Stewart Lee tour dates here …https://www.stewartlee.co.uk/ ‘Basic Lee' is on Sky/Now TV on July 20.Find out more about how to help us keep the conversation going: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
John and Marc explore the late period of Mark E. Smith's legendary group The Fall, focusing on 2013's "Sir William Wray" 7-inch, with insights from special guest Steve Pringle, author of the comprehensive Fall book You Must Get Them All: The Fall on Record.Call us anytime at 1-877-WASTOIDS. More podcasts and videos at WASTOIDS.com | Follow us on Instagram and YouTube.
Any reason to play music from Manchester is always a good reason - don't have to twist my melon too hard. In March we had Mark E. Smith's birthday, the release of New Order's first single "Ceremony" and OTD the biggest selling 12” of all time Blue Monday! Music by: New Order, The Stone Roses, Von Sũdenfed, The Fall, A Guy Called Gerald, The Chemical Brothers, Tim Burgess, New Fast Automatic Daffodils, Happy Mondays, And loads more. Tune into new broadcasts of Golazo, Wednesday 12 - 2 PM EST / 5 - 7 PM GMT.For more info visit: https://thefaceradio.com/golazo///Dig this show? Please consider supporting The Face Radio: http://support.thefaceradio.com Support The Face Radio with PatreonSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/thefaceradio. Join the family at https://plus.acast.com/s/thefaceradio. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Join Gavin & Steve as they follow Mark E. Smith and the band around the U.S. on their stellar 1981 American tour. With stops in New York, Houston, Memphis, San Francisco, and your hosts' hometown of Chicago, it's sure to be a fun trip. Meet you in the parking lot, mate! Are you missing an episode? Join WATF Pod on Patreon to get them all! Including bonus episodes, rare Fall content, merch, and exclusive hangs with Gavin & Steve as they discuss everything Fall-related. Follow WATF Pod on: Instagram Twitter Facebook YouTube Produced and presented by Watts Happening Records: www.TheWattsHappening.com --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/theanswersatx/message
Pripreme fudbalera u Krnjači, PAO away, emotivni oproštaj od Miloja protiv Mege, Zelena Šuma, frst imprešns (tm) sa gradsko-prigradskog okršaja, i nezaobilazne stalne rubrike. 3 na 5. Za mikrofonima: crk, Gazza, Mondo. trajanje: 94 minuta ---------------------------------- Pokrenuli smo PATREON, pa ko želi sada može da časti za neko pivo, dodatne sadržaje i/ili tehničke popravke na podcastu: www.patreon.com/pfchisterical A ima i opcija za direktne donacije: paypal.me/partizanhisterical ---------------------------------- HISTI RADIO MIX br. 83 https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLwhKCZrlUHqjblAYOox-rIflhHf78qje1&si=zBbUcVcOVVE_7Tko Twitter: www.twitter.com/pfchisterical Instagram: www.instagram.com/pfchisterical/ Youtube: www.youtube.com/c/PartizanHistericalPodcast podcast.rs/show/histerical/ NAPRED PARTIZAN! NAPOMENA: Ovo je "uradi sam" podkast u kome navijači Partizana razgovaraju o zbivanjima u svom voljenom klubu. Izneta mišljenja i stavovi su lični, kafanski, i ne predstavljaju stavove bilo koje navijačke grupe, frakcije, dela uprave, radne ili druge organizacije. Nismo insajderi, eksperti, sportski radnici. Apsolutna vernost, ne apsolutna istina. Trudimo se da jezik koji koristimo bude fin književni - možete ga čuti na svakom stadionu i u svakoj sportskoj hali. Cover foto: KK Partizan Majstor zvuka: crk Realizacija: Slavko Tatić, zvuk poluprofi, Mark E. Smith & Histi
A year ago, I began what will unfortunately be a regular series of these programs from now on…it's an annual look back on the musicians we lost in the previous year… Rock star deaths have been on our mind since late 2015 when Scott Weiland of the Stone Temple Pilots died, followed a few weeks later by Lemmy of Motorhead…then the floodgates opened in 2016: Bowie, Prince, Leonard Cohen, Glenn Frey of the eagles, both Keith Emerson and Greg Lake from Emerson Lake and Palmer, and George Michael—just to name a few… And since then, it seems we hear about a rock star death every couple of weeks…Tom Petty, Chris Cornell, Chester Bennington, Gregg Allman, Walter Becker of Steely Dan, Chuck Mosley of Faith No More, Andy Fletcher of Depeche Mode, Mark E. Smith of The Fall, Charlie Watts The Rolling Stones…it's been a lot to take in… Some of these deaths have been of natural causes, disease, and old age…others have involved drugs, alcohol, years of hard living, misadventure, and suicide… Here's the hard truth: rock has been around for about seventy years…many of the people who have provided us with our favourite music and some of the greatest songs of all time are reaching the end of their lives… No one is getting any younger...and over the next decade, we're going to lose some of the personalities who have always been with there for us over the last 30, 40, 50, or even 60 years... With that grim reality in mind, I think we need to continue with an annual retrospective at those whom we've lost in the last 12 months…they may be gone, but we need to recognize and celebrate their contributions to the world of music...this is 2023 in memoriam... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
John Quays has been a good boy this year (for once!) and so he shall be rewarded with gifts from the wise men (Gavin & Steve). Join us for this special Patreon bonus episode (join now/for free!) where your hosts will trade Fall-related gifts and bask in Mark E. Smith renditions of festive classics. As a bonus gift to you, a MES X-mas Playlist is provided for your pleasure(s). Are you missing an episode? Join WATF Pod on Patreon to get them all! Including bonus episodes, rare Fall content, merch, and exclusive hangs with Gavin & Steve as they discuss everything Fall-related. Follow WATF Pod on: Instagram Twitter Facebook YouTube Produced and presented by Watts Happening Records: www.TheWattsHappening.com --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/theanswersatx/message
This episode, Tim Burgess hosted a Buzzcocks Listening Party for the final episode of this series.The band's 1978 album, ‘Love Bites', turned 45 years old this year and remains a seminal record for punk fans. So guitarist, Steve Diggle, joined Tim to talk all about the huge hit 'Ever Fallen In Love (With Someone You Shouldn't've)', the legacy of the late great Pete Shelley, encounters with Mark E. Smith and of course, Manchester.Love Bites was released on 22nd September 1978 on United Artists.
“I like music that sounds like trash.” - Mark E. Smith. Do you like music that sounds like trash? Would you like to listen to music inspired by trash that is actually pure, singular art? Would you like to do this with your two new best friends Gavin and Steve? Well then join us each week as we venture further into the dangerous, but always rewarding world of THE FALL. we will dissect albums, uncover lost nuggets, and explore uncharted pathways with special Fall-related guests and fans-alike. WE ARE THE FALL Podcast— “Have a bleedin' guess”, it's streaming everywhere! Join Gavin & Steve as they get lucky in exploring The Fall's first EP, Bingo Master's Breakout! from 1979. Join us on Patreon for bonus episodes, rare Fall content, merch, and exclusive hangs with Gavin & Steve as they discuss everything Fall-related. Follow WATF Pod on: Instagram Twitter Facebook YouTube Produced and presented by Watts Happening Records: www.TheWattsHappening.com --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/theanswersatx/message
Paul Hanley used to be in The Fall – he played on, amongst other seminal releases, one of my favourite records, 1982's Hex Enduction Hour, and with brother Steve, also a member of Mark E Smith's hugely influential avant garde pop outfit, now hosts the Fall podcast Oh! Brother – but he really, really loves Buzzcocks, who happen to be one of my very favourite bands too. I enjoyed Paul's first book Leave The Capital hugely, and so when I learned he was writing a book about Pete Shelley's genius pop punk outfit, titled Sixteen Again: How Pete Shelley & Buzzcocks Changed Manchester Music (and me), I was keen to get him on the podcast for a chat. The book is due in April next year, but get on that pre-order now!Watch this episode here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WLCgKF6YcZM&t=1042s Twitter - @jamesjammcmahon Substack - https://spoook.substack.com YouTube - www.youtube.com/channel/UC8Vf_1E1Sza2GUyFNn2zFMA Reddit - https://www.reddit.com/r/jamesmcmahonmusicpod/
This week, we talk to the legendary UK author & musician Paul Hanley (The Fall, House of All & ‘Leave The Capital'). He picked the divisive Clash film ‘Rude Boy' to discuss at length. Along the way, we discuss lead ‘actor' Ray Gange's perfect aloofness and failure as a roadie, the notion of punk rock musicians as actors, The Clash's repudiation of the film, and whether or not The Fall's Mark E. Smith gave The Clash a pass.On a side note…the original recording of this conversation was corrupted, so we had to use the backup. We apologize for any crunchiness, but maybe you could think of this episode as our ‘Are You Are Missing Winner' of the series!So let's salute the new wave and hope nobody escapes on this week's episode of Revolutions Per Movie.Paul Hanley:https://www.route-online.com/blog/category/authorshttps://houseofall.bandcamp.com/Theme by Eyelids 'My Caved In Mind'www.musicofeyelids.bandcamp.comArtwork by Jeff T. Owenshttps://linktr.ee/mymetalhandHost Chris Slusarenko (Eyelids, Guided By Voices, owner of Clinton Street Video rental store) is joined by actors, musicians, comedians, writers & directors who each week pick out their favorite music documentary, musical, music-themed fiction film or music videos to discuss. Fun, weird, and insightful, Revolutions Per Movie is your deep dive into our life-long obsessions where music and film collide.New episodes of Revolutions Per Movies are released every Thursday, and if you like the show, please rank and review it on your favorite podcast app.Thanks! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Today's guest is our friend Kevin Phillips, talking about one of our collective favorite bands, albums and artists - "What to say about such a complex and abundant subject that's been a longstanding touchstone for aficionados of repetitive noise and abrasive melody! As a nearly life-long disciple of Mark E. Smith and his unrepentant arrangements, I chose The Fall's debut album, ‘Live at the Witch Trials', for our discussion. As hypnotizing or electrifying as the Fall became in dozens and dozens of moments across their 31-album catalog, ‘Live at the Witch Trials' contains the unrefined initial surprise attack stream of consciousness rhythmic repetition amid scrambling guitar strings that must surely become trademark joy of any fully realized Fall fan!! A challenging gateway to a musical landscape that developed into a myriad of different compelling and/or disorienting studies of the initial concept! Enjoy!!
"Messages To God" The New Zealand-born Sarah Mary Chadwick fronted the deliciously feral post-Grunge outfit Batrider in the early 2000s. She made her first solo foray with the riveting 2012 album Eating For Two and from there she's moved from strength to strength with records like Please Daddy and Me And Ennui are Friends, Baby. Her new one Messages To God is nothing short of stunning. An aching blend of Jonathan Richman, Mark E. Smith of The Fall and Rid Of Me-era PJ Harvey, Chadwick has never sounded better. The album is spare and savagely beautiful featuring brilliant songs like Shitty Town and I Felt Things In New Zealand. Chadwick's raw emotional precision is singular and stunning and she's one of our favorite musicians ever. IG: @sarahmarychadwick https://sarahmarychadwick.bandcamp.com/music www.killrockstars.com IG: @killrockstarsofficial www.bombshellradio.com www.embersarts.com www.stereoembersmagazinee.com Twitter: @emberseditor IG: @emberspodcast Email: editor@stereoembersmagazine.com
The one and only OSEES rip through their new album Intercepted Message in its entirety days ahead of its release! OSEES frontman John Dwyer sits down with Tom to talk about the state of the DIY scene, the best shows they've ever seen, giving drugs to Mark E. Smith, and more. Plus, Tom announces the triumphant return of BEST SHOW 24! Mark your calendars for a full day of mirth, music, and mayhem starting Tuesday September 12th at 6pm PT. Watch the Osees Full Performance on YouTube (available on Wed 8/16 10am ET) https://youtu.be/J_FNNqJe2ag SUPPORT THE BEST SHOW ON PATREON! WEEKLY BONUS EPISODES & VIDEO EPISODES! https://www.patreon.com/TheBestShow WATCH THE BEST SHOW LIVE EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT 6PM PT ON TWITCH https://www.twitch.tv/bestshow4life FOLLOW THE BEST SHOW: https://twitter.com/bestshow4life https://instagram.com/bestshow4life https://tiktok.com/@bestshow4life https://www.youtube.com/bestshow4life THE BEST SHOW IS A FOREVER DOG PODCAST https://thebestshow.net https://foreverdogpodcasts.com/podcasts/the-best-show Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Peter and Gideon catch up on cricket and their travels at some of Mark E. Smith's favourite watering holes in Manchester. Email your questions, feedback, thoughts and top ten lists to - cricketetcetera@theaustralian.com.au Check out the Cricket, Et Cetera playlist made from Gideon's episode titles....it's put together by listener Evan Willis tap - here.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Flo is off the plot today and doing some container gardening on Brix Smith's roof garden. Brix started out at the liberal arts college Bennington, alongside Donna Tartt and Bret Easton Ellis, before going on to join seminal British post-punk band The Fall. She was also married to Mark E Smith. Today she fronts her own band, Brix Smith - a “kind of all-female supergroup”. Between her time in bands, she was the fabulous co-host on Gok's Fashion Fix. Flo and Brix discuss how Brix's acute synesthesia marries up the seemingly disparate worlds of 1970s British post-punk and the mainstream 00s TV fashion competition, whilst they pot up some tomatoes and peas.Presenter - Flo Dill, Producer - Lizzy King, Sound Recording & Editor - Sam Stone, Mastering - Felix Stock. Music - Cleaners from Venus - The Artichoke That Loved Me, courtesy of Martin Newell & Captured Tracks. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Ben Luke talks to Jacqueline Humphries about her influences—from writers to film-makers, musicians and, of course, other artists—and the cultural experiences that have shaped her life and work. Humphries, born in 1960 in New Orleans, US, and now based in New York, is an artist who has pushed painting into new territories. She is mindful of the medium's history but embraces technologies and explores their impact on this time-honoured discipline. Her practice, which now stretches across five decades from the late 1980s to today, is rigorous, irreverent and consistently surprising. She discusses the early influence of Édouard Manet and a late revelation about Caravaggio, key relationships with fellow painters like Charlene von Heyl, her admiration of The Fall's Mark E. Smith, and her fascination with the video game Dwarf Fortress. Plus she answers our usual questions, including the ultimate: What is art for?Jacqueline Humphries, Modern Art, Helmet Row and Bury Street, London, until 22 July; We Smell Gas, Reena Spaulings, New York, until 25 June; From Andy Warhol to Kara Walker: Scenes from the Collection, Museum Brandhorst, Munich, Germany, until 14 July; To Bend the Ear of the Outer World: Conversations on contemporary abstract painting, Gagosian, London, until 25 August. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
"Totally Wired" by The Fall"Totally Wired" is a staple of Punk, Post-Punk, and New Wave compilations and playlists. Not that The Fall would allow itself to belong to any scene. The band outlasted any of those with which it was compiled and over the years counted over 60 members. The thing that kept The Fall goin and breaking apart was cantankerous and quotable Mark E. Smith. Please join us on this look into what their seventh album called "The Wonderful and Frightening World of The Fall." You can hear "Totally Wired" in different versions and more music by the artists involved here: SpotifySee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Damian O'Neill von The Undertones (feat. The Limiñanas!), neu gemasterte Singles von Inspiral Carpets (feat. Mark E Smith!), sowie das kommende Album der Australier RVG und Brisbanes Szene-Ding Baby Cool: LDN-Redaktor Hanspeter«Düsi» Künzler bringt, was in Englands Plattenläden heiss gehandelt wird.
Chris Slusarenko of the Portland-based band Eyelids joins Al to talk about The Fall's 1983 album, Perverted by Language, and their “Kicker Conspiracy” single, which was released in the same year. Chris explains how he wound up getting up obsessed with The Fall, why he chose to focus on these particular records for this episode and how The Fall has influenced his own creative process. He also talks about Eyelids' recently-released fourth album, A Colossal Waste of Light, and the experience of being produced by and touring with Peter Buck.Chris made repeated reference to The Annotated Fall, which lists and, yes, annotates the lyrics to The Fall's songs. If you're new to The Fall like Al is (or probably even if you're not), it's an indispensable resource. http://annotatedfall.doomby.com/pages/the-annotated-lyrics/Where's the cursor?? Where's the eraser?? Here's where to find Eyelids on your computer…Be sure to follow Eyelids on Twitter and Instagram! @musicofeyelidsTo follow/visit Eyelids on Bandcamp, go here: https://musicofeyelids.bandcamp.com/You can get Eyelids merch, tour info and much more at https://musicofeyelids.com/.Al is on Twitter at @almelchiorBB, and this show has accounts on Twitter and Instagram at @youmealbum. Be sure to follow @youmealbum to find out in advance about upcoming guests and featured albums for this podcast.You, Me and An Album: The Newsletter is free to all subscribers! https://youmealbum.substack.com/If you are interested in supporting this podcast, please check out the show's Patreon site, https://www.patreon.com/youmealbum. Your contributions are greatly appreciated and keep this show going.1:19 Chris joins the show1:26 Chris talks about the importance of music in his family3:21 Chris explains the origins of the title of Eyelids' new album6:23 Chris discusses how he got obsessed with The Fall9:29 Chris walks through the various stages of The Fall's discography12:29 “Eat Y'self Fitter” exemplifies many of the things Chris loves about Perverted by Language18:38 There's a lot one can read about The Fall20:17 Why was Mark E. Smith singing about computers in 1983?22:22 The Fall isn't for everybody23:17 Chris addresses the similarities between The Fall and Pavement24:43 Al talks about his initial impressions of Perverted by Language26:55 Chris sees Perverted by Language as a transitional album28:51 Chris and Al disagree as to how cohesive the album is31:36 Chris talks about The Fall's frequent changes in personnel34:05 Chris is impressed by the confidence of The Fall on Perverted by Language37:48 Chris has trouble picking a favorite track40:49 Al and Chris admire Steve Hanley's bass playing43:58 Chris talks about the “Kicker Conspiracy/Wings” single48:24 Chris doesn't think The Fall sold out after Perverted by Language49:56 Chris suggests some other albums by The Fall for Al to explore52:56 Chris appreciates Mark E. Smith's lyrics54:14 Chris clarifies a misheard lyric for Al57:03 Eyelids took a different approach to songwriting for A Colossal Waste of Light1:00:55 Chris talks about Peter Buck's involvement on A Colossal Waste of Light1:05:41 Chris discusses Eyelids' current tourOutro is from “That's Not Real At All (B. Midweek Pg. 207)” by Eyelids.Support the show
Sometime around 2016, I got the sense that we were entering into a new era of rock history: a period when the musicians we loved and admired began to die... Listen, there had been many deaths before then, but they seemed reasonably few and far between...but 2016 seems to have been the year—for me, anyone—when I realized that many of our most beloved musicians were getting older and starting to die off... That one year alone we lost David Bowie, Glen Frey of The Eagles, Prince, Leonard Cohen, and George Michael....we lost both Keith Emerson and Greg Lake of the prog band Emerson, Lake, and Palmer...Paul Kantner of Jefferson Starship...Maurice white of Earth, Wind, and Fire...Beatles producer George Martin...and that's only a partial list... In 2017, it was Gord Downie, Tom Petty, Gregg Allman, Chris Cornell, ac/dc's Malcolm Young, Walter Becker of Steely Dan, and Chuck Berry, among others.... The following year, we lost Dolores O'Riordan of The Cranberries, Mark E. Smith of the fall, Avicii, Aretha Franklin, and Pete Shelley of The Buzzcocks. Then in 2019, Keith Flint of The Prodigy, Mark Hollis of Talk Talk, Ranking Roger of The English Beat and General Public, Ric Ocasek of The Cars, drumming legend Ginger Baker...I could go on, but you get the idea... The one thing that binds all humans on this planet together is that some day, we're all gonna shuffle off into the great beyond... No one is getting any younger...and over the next decade, we're going to lose some of the personalities who have always been with there for us over the last 30, 40, 50, or even 60 years... With that grim reality in mind, I think the time has come for an annual look back for those whom we've lost in the last 12 months as a way to recognize their contributions to the world of music...this is 2022 in memoriam... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Comedian and columnist Stewart Lee remains “grateful to the people who brainwashed me into listening to Bob Dylan during a period of emotional and physical weakness.” He remembers seeing Dylan live at Hyde Park with his kids (“one of the greatest nights of my life”) as well as the time he alienated the audience at a Teenage Cancer Trust Benefit. “It was a good gig. 'Cause it was true. Self-sabotage keeps you alive. Chaos and confusion create a bubble that protects you.” Stew namechecks Dylan, Mark E. Smith, Jerry Sadowitz, William Blake, Roky Erickson and Mozart as fellow artists who “develop a split personality that says: what if I make him do this?” Warning: listeners should keep in mind that Mr Lee is “a cultural bully from the Oxbridge Mafia who wants to appear morally superior but couldn't cut the mustard on a panel game.” (Lee Mack)This is a review (Dominic Maxwell, The Times) of Stewart's current show, Basic Lee: "If someone says they're going back to basics, can they be trusted? When Stewart Lee tells you he is going back to basics you sniff only fresh mischief in his chortlingly bold smush of sarcasm, satire, self-commentary and alternately lugubrious and exultant flights of fancy. It is hard, Lee tells us, to try to be funny in these days of frenetic social and political change. So he bookends this new show, which he wants to stay relevant until its tour ends in 2024, with a reworking of a routine he first performed at the start of his career in 1989. Self-plagiarism? Actually, Lee could profitably spend the rest of his career rejigging old routines, much as Miles Davis was able to find endless new takes on Stella by Starlight. At his best, as he delivers a comedy show that is a kind of lecture about comedy shows, he cheeks the crowd so surely that the effect is insulting yet intimate. Basic Lee is one of his more pretzel-shaped evenings. If its inner logic isn't always easy to grasp, who cares when something is rendered with this much wit and verve? What's it all about? It's all about two hours long, it's all very clever, but, basically, Basic Lee is very funny.""What would it be like if Bob Dylan from the 60's took a look a stand-up comedy today?"The Dream Syndicate's cover of Blind Willie McTell (1988)Steve Wynn, Murder Most Foul (2020)WebsiteTwitterTrailerEpisode playlist on AppleEpisode playlist on SpotifyListeners: please subscribe and/or leave a review and a rating.Twitter @isitrollingpodRecorded 16th November 2022This show is part of Pantheon Podcasts
Comedian and columnist Stewart Lee remains “grateful to the people who brainwashed me into listening to Bob Dylan during a period of emotional and physical weakness.” He remembers seeing Dylan live at Hyde Park with his kids (“one of the greatest nights of my life”) as well as the time he alienated the audience at a Teenage Cancer Trust Benefit. “It was a good gig. 'Cause it was true. Self-sabotage keeps you alive. Chaos and confusion create a bubble that protects you.” Stew namechecks Dylan, Mark E. Smith, Jerry Sadowitz, William Blake, Roky Erickson and Mozart as fellow artists who “develop a split personality that says: what if I make him do this?” Warning: listeners should keep in mind that Mr Lee is “a cultural bully from the Oxbridge Mafia who wants to appear morally superior but couldn't cut the mustard on a panel game.” (Lee Mack)This is a review (Dominic Maxwell, The Times) of Stewart's current show, Basic Lee: "If someone says they're going back to basics, can they be trusted? When Stewart Lee tells you he is going back to basics you sniff only fresh mischief in his chortlingly bold smush of sarcasm, satire, self-commentary and alternately lugubrious and exultant flights of fancy. It is hard, Lee tells us, to try to be funny in these days of frenetic social and political change. So he bookends this new show, which he wants to stay relevant until its tour ends in 2024, with a reworking of a routine he first performed at the start of his career in 1989. Self-plagiarism? Actually, Lee could profitably spend the rest of his career rejigging old routines, much as Miles Davis was able to find endless new takes on Stella by Starlight. At his best, as he delivers a comedy show that is a kind of lecture about comedy shows, he cheeks the crowd so surely that the effect is insulting yet intimate. Basic Lee is one of his more pretzel-shaped evenings. If its inner logic isn't always easy to grasp, who cares when something is rendered with this much wit and verve? What's it all about? It's all about two hours long, it's all very clever, but, basically, Basic Lee is very funny.""What would it be like if Bob Dylan from the 60's took a look a stand-up comedy today?"The Dream Syndicate's cover of Blind Willie McTell (1988)Steve Wynn, Murder Most Foul (2020)WebsiteTwitterTrailerEpisode playlist on AppleEpisode playlist on SpotifyListeners: please subscribe and/or leave a review and a rating.Twitter @isitrollingpodRecorded 16th November 2022This show is part of Pantheon Podcasts
This Halloween we're celebrating FALLoween, as we hit the north and take on the Mighty Fall! Other than a few singles that barely scraped the UK top 40, the Fall never achieved commercial success, but they built a large cult following due in large part to the personality and antics of their difficult, irascible, intelligent, and borderline unintelligible bandleader, Mark E. Smith. But what we hope to emphasize in this episode is that despite Smith's outsized influence over the Fall, and his tendency to fire members on a whim, the Fall was always a band. Smith's ideas formed the bedrock of their songs, but their music was always the product of a back-and-forth between him and incredibly talented musicians who added their own distinctive stamp to every iteration of the Fall. Their discography can be large and intimidating to new listeners, so we've chosen their 1985 opus This Nation's Saving Grace, which is relatively accessible, but also a legit candidate for their greatest album. So even if you don't come away from this episode as the Fall's 50,001st fan, we hope you'll at least understand why anyone would willingly listen to this band.Cohosts: Rich Bunnell, Mike DeFabio, Dan WatkinsComplete show notes: https://discordpod.com/listen/105-the-fall-this-nations-saving-grace-1985Support the podcast! https://www.patreon.com/discordpod
In this episode we invite former Creem editor and Newsday critic Wayne Robins to reminisce about his journalistic journey from the Berkeley Barb to NYU's graduate school of journalism — and to hold forth on his (and our) beloved Steely Dan.Wayne recalls the suburban East Coast childhood he had in common with the Dan's Donald Fagen— and the music that set them both free from it. Jumping forward to 1969, he describes the Rolling Stones show he saw in Oakland a month before Altamont. He also paints a vivid and amusing picture of Bard College, the upstate New York institution he attended at the same time as Fagen and Dan co-founder Walter Becker. Clips from RBP audio interviews with the duo and original Dan member Denny Dias accompany an in-depth discussion of every rock egghead's favourite group, not to mention Fagen's 40-year-old solo album The Nightfly.The episode concludes with a swift survey of recent additions to the RBP library, including pieces about Juliette Gréco (1961), James Booker (1976), Mark E. Smith (1990), Limp Bizkit(2000), Soul Train's Don Cornelius (2012), Rolling Stone's Jann Wenner (2017)… and the "atomic" Count Basie (2020).Many thanks to special guest Wayne Robins. Sign up for his newsletter Critical Conditions at waynerobins49.substack.com.Pieces discussed: Rolling Stones, Steely Dan, Steely Dan II, Donald Fagen audio, Denny Dias audio, Donald Fagen, Steely Dan III, Juliette Gréco, The Beach Boys, David Bowie, Culture Club, James Booker, Tom Petty, The Sixties, The Fall, Jann Wenner, Among the Mooks, Don Cornelius and Count Basie.
In this episode we invite former Creem editor and Newsday critic Wayne Robins to reminisce about his journalistic journey from the Berkeley Barb to NYU's graduate school of journalism — and to hold forth on his (and our) beloved Steely Dan.Wayne recalls the suburban East Coast childhood he had in common with the Dan's Donald Fagen — and the music that set them both free from it. Jumping forward to 1969, he describes the Rolling Stones show he saw in Oakland a month before Altamont. He also paints a vivid and amusing picture of Bard College, the upstate New York institution he attended at the same time as Fagen and Dan co-founder Walter Becker. Clips from RBP audio interviews with the duo and original Dan member Denny Dias accompany an in-depth discussion of every rock egghead's favourite group, not to mention Fagen's 40-year-old solo album The Nightfly.The episode concludes with a swift survey of recent additions to the RBP library, including pieces about Juliette Gréco (1961), James Booker (1976), Mark E. Smith (1990), Limp Bizkit (2000), Soul Train's Don Cornelius (2012), Rolling Stone's Jann Wenner (2017)… and the "atomic" Count Basie (2020).Many thanks to special guest Wayne Robins. Sign up for his newsletter Critical Conditions at waynerobins49.substack.com.Pieces discussed: Rolling Stones, Steely Dan, Steely Dan II, Donald Fagen audio, Denny Dias audio, Donald Fagen, Steely Dan III, Juliette Gréco, The Beach Boys, David Bowie, Culture Club, James Booker, Tom Petty, The Sixties, The Fall, Jann Wenner, Among the Mooks, Don Cornelius and Count Basie.
Benjamin Berton author of a new book on Daniel Treacy in conversation with David Eastaugh "Dreamworld: The Fabulous Life of Daniel Treacy and his Band Television Personalities" London 1977: Daniel Treacy drops out of school, bored to death. Thanks to a few pounds sterling, lent to him by his parents, he records a few songs with friends and sends the finished single to the legendary radio DJ John Peel, who is immediately thrilled - the Television Personalities are born .. In the turbulent life of Daniel Treacy we meet Jimmy Page, Bob Marley, Alan McGee, David Gilmour, Wham!, Nico and Kurt Cobain. Dreamworld is the very real, very crazy story of a genius in music history whose importance is not infrequently compared to that of Mark E. Smith of The Fall. Enriched with plenty of scene and period colour from British pop from the 1960s to the present, "Dreamworld" tells of all the ups and downs of a legend who once ironically (but quite rightly) described himself in an interview as the "Godfather of Indie Pop". The English translation by David Marshall is published with a completely revised colour picture section and numerous illustrations.
Trans non-binary pioneer Lanah P. joins me to talk abortion rights, The Comic Strip, growing up in Grimsby, starring in “Eat The Rich”, letting Lemmy have it, bringing Bowie down to Taboo, “Pistol In My Pocket”, Shirley Bassey, meeting Margaret Thatcher, the vicissitudes of the showbizniss, “Lanah Be Lit And Be Learning”, musical theater, getting hormones in the early 80s, working men's clubs of the 70s, Mark E. Smith, Leigh Bowery, self-work, Jayne County, compassion, and much much more. Lanah on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCEDpI8ZC7spqtJUXaiMG3ow Lanah on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/lanah.p Get lots of hott bonus content by going to https://www.patreon.com/CraigAndFriends You'll get ad-free & early versions of these episodes, bonus episodes, Movie Club episodes and more while supporting the show. Donate to the Abortion Support Network https://www.asn.org.uk/fundraising/ Protect & Defend Trans Youth Fund https://www.pledge.to/protect-defend-trans-youth-fund#donate Donate to Amnesty International To Aid Ukraine https://tinyurl.com/448f36wu Rubber Child's Transition Assistance GoFundMe https://gofund.me/c2b3cd52 For ways to help fight the fascists and support Black Lives Matter & Black Trans Lives Matter: https://blacklivesmatters.carrd.co https://blacktranslivesmatter.carrd.co
On this day in 1976, the Buzzcocks and Sex Pistols appeared at The Lesser Free Trade Hall, Manchester, England. The now legendary night is regarded as a catalyst to the punk rock movement. In the audience was, Morrissey, Bernard Sumner, Peter Hook (soon to form Joy Division) and Mark E Smith, (The Fall). With me to talk about his recollections of the night and the infancy of the punk scene is none other than Buzzcocks guitarist STEVE DIGGLE! You can hear the full interview with Steve on Episode 9 of Vintage Rock Pod! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On this day in 1976, the Buzzcocks and Sex Pistols appeared at The Lesser Free Trade Hall, Manchester, England. The now legendary night is regarded as a catalyst to the punk rock movement. In the audience was, Morrissey, Bernard Sumner, Peter Hook (soon to form Joy Division) and Mark E Smith, (The Fall). With me to talk about his recollections of the night and the infancy of the punk scene is none other than Buzzcocks guitarist STEVE DIGGLE!You can hear the full interview with Steve on Episode 9 of Vintage Rock Pod!
In this month's episode, Liam speaks about the new punk documentary 'Wake Up Punk' by director Nigel Askew.Liam speaks to Nigel about his relationship with the documentary's main protagonists, Joe Corre and Vivienne Westwood, and why he felt he needed to capture Joe burning an alleged £5M worth of Punk memorabilia!As well as the documentary, Nigel also talks about running against far-right politician Nigel Farage and working with Mark E. Smith and The Fall.Midwich Cuckoos are the episode's sponsors of the podcast; you can check out their new album, Death or Glory.Are you looking for a festival to attend this summer? Get 10% off your 2000Trees Festival ticket using the promo code PUNKSINPUBS. Check out this year's link-up via this link.Follow the podcast @punksinpubs across all social media.Thank you to Fidlar for not suing us and letting us use Cheap Beer as the podcast's opening track.Police & Thieves - The ClashWhite Lightning - The FallGangsters - The SpecialsAnarchy In The UK - Sex Pistols My Way - Sid Vicious See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.