2002 studio album by The Streets
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“The Streets ændrer alt for mig. Det er mig han rapper om. Han er jo mig!” Da Suspekt rapperen Orgi-E / Emil Simonsen hører The Streets debutalbummet ”Original Pirate Material” for første gang, er det som om der er noget der går op for den unge Albertslund-knægt: Man kan godt rappe om sine inderste følelser. Man må gerne udtrykke sårbarhed. Mike Skinner, som er manden bag The Streets, ændrer Emils måde at rappe på og får ham til at åbne op for helt nye sider af sig selv. Det kan blandt andet høres på Suspekt første store hit ”Proletar (Hvor jeg står)” og senere på Emils soloalbum ”Klamfyr”. I det her afsnit af Portrætalbum kan du både komme med til opvæksten i Albertslund, ungdommen i København og Birminghams rå gademiljøer, hvor næsten uforståelige britiske dialekter blandes med sort humor og smuk social realisme. Og så kan du blive klogere på hvad Emil Simonsens bedste nydelsesstof er…. Udsendelse nr.: 171 Vært: Anders Bøtter Klip og lyddesign: Emil Germod Redaktør: Michelle Mølgaard Andersen Produceret af: Bowie-JettSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Arnim Teutoburg-Weiß wird im Juni 1974 in Ostberlin Mitte als jüngstes Kind einer Artisten-Familie geboren: Sein Vater arbeitet als Artist, die Mutter als Assistentin. Durch die Plattensammlung seiner zehn Jahre älteren Schwester kommt er erstmalig mit Rockmusik und Bands wie Queen („Live Killers“) in Berührung, während im heimischen Wohnzimmer R'n'B läuft.Ab 1995 hängt er regelmäßig bei einem Freund im Band-Proberaum ab. Deren Demotape „Die Erste“ – zu diesem Zeitpunkt bereits mit Teutoburg-Weiß als Sänger und drittem Gitarrist – erscheint noch im selben Jahr. Der Name der Band: Beatsteaks. Der erste Auftritt: Bei einem Abiball, bei dem sie mit eigenen Tracks und Coversongs von den Beastie Boys bis hin zu Nirvana und NOFX auftreten. Eines seiner damaligen Vorbilder ist Mike Patton. Laut Teutoburg-Weiß der beste Sänger seiner Generation – und seine Band Faith No More eine der besten Live-Acts, neben Turbonegro.Bereits ein Jahr später treten die Beatsteaks im Berliner SO36 auf, als Support-Act auf der Reunion-Tour der Sex Pistols, bevor 1997 das Debütalbum „48/49“ erscheint. 1998 stößt dann Thomas Götz als Schlagzeuger zur Band hinzu, erstmalig auf dem via Epitaph veröffentlichten „Launched“ (1999) zu hören. Damit werden die Beatsteaks die erste deutsche Band, die es auf das legendäre kalifornische Label schafft.Im selben Jahrzehnt entdeckt er – u.a. durch „Yo! MTV Raps“ – seine Liebe zum HipHop (u.a. A Tribe Called Quest, Missy Elliott, OutKast), bevor 2002 Mike Skinner mit The Streets und dem Debütalbum „Original Pirate Material“ auf der Bildfläche erscheint.Sieben Jahre nach dem noch aktuellen Album „Yours“, der Pandemie und einer bandinternen Mini-Krise veröffentlichen die Beatsteaks mit „Please“ diesen Monat ihr mittlerweile neuntes Studioalbum. Als Produzent stand der Band diesmal allerdings nicht Moses Schneider, der seit „Smack Smash“ (2004) alle Beatsteaks-Alben produziert hat, sondern Olaf Opal zur Seite.Dass der Sänger und Gitarrist auch außerhalb des Bandgefüges nicht untätig ist, hat er 2023 mit seinem Solo-Song „Belohne dich mit mir“ gezeigt. Geschrieben mit Porky von Deichkind und produziert von Nico von K.I.Z, ist der Song eine Verbeugung vor D'Angelo und seinem Song „Untitled (How Does It Feel)“ – und gleichzeitig seine erste Zusammenarbeit mit Opal. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Vor genau 20 Jahren, im Mai 2004, ist "A Grand Don't Come for Free" erschienen, das zweite Album, eine Rap-Oper von The Streets aus Großbritannien. Zwei Jahre davor hat Mike Skinner mit seinem Debüt "Original Pirate Material" den UK-Hip-Hop revolutioniert. Aber wie ist das alles gealtert? Kann und vor allem sollte man sich die alten Tracks von Mike Skinner heute noch anhören? Darüber, und wo man sich The Streets heuer in Österreich live anschauen kann, reden wir im FM4 Musikpodcast. Sendungshinweis: Generation Sound - der FM4 Musikpodcast. Donnerstag, 02.05.2024, 21 Uhr und Campus, Donnerstag, 02.05.2024, 4 Uhr.
In the early 00's The Streets burst onto the scene. Original Pirate Material was like nothing else around, combining garage beats with everyday stories from a geezer we could all relate to. Mike Skinner wanted to literally push things forward, taking the garage genre in a new direction and using his lyrics to talk about what was really going on inside the hearts and minds of people in the clubs. It struck a chord, and The Streets got a lot of attention.Over five albums Mike Skinner would tour Australia a whole lot, always playing festivals and always drawing a huge crowd. Then in 2011 he called it a day, releasing his final album and doing his final shows as The Streets. Music stayed in his life though. He threw himself into producing, directing, and most notably DJ-ing, behind the decks instead of out front on stage.Across his five songs choices we get a snapshot of a kid writing raps in his notebook in a hostel in Sydney. As well as the man today who is older, wiser, more grounded but with plenty of stories to tell. From Johnny Cash to Grim Sickers to Daft Punk, this is The Streets, Taking 5 with Zan Rowe and playing us his songs from then and now.Johnny Cash - A Boy Named SueSnoop Dogg - Serial Killa [Ft. D.O.C., RBX & Tha Dogg Pound] Grim Sickers - Open The Till [Ft. Ghetts & Darker The Shadow Brighter The Light]Daniel Bedingfield – Gotta Get Thru ThisDaft Punk - Human / Together / One More Time / Music Sounds Better with You / Stardust (Instrumental) [Live]
Subscribe to Into History at https://www.intohistory.com/shipwreckspod for ad free access to Shipwrecks and Sea Dogs and all the fantastic podcast of Into History.Real, modern-day pirate Capt. Tonz has led an adventurous and dangerous life on the seas, and has many stories to tell. From a young age, Capt. Tonz struck out on his own as a mariner and learned the tricks of his trade.Capt. Tonz gives us a little taste of his life-story, and you can hear the rest on his own podcast, Original Pirate Material. Visit https://www.captaintonz.com for more.Please follow Shipwrecks and Sea Dogs on social media @shipwreckspod.Visit https://www.shipwrecksandseadogs.com for official podcast merch! Original theme music by Sean Sigfried.
Mike Skinner helped define an era with The Streets' album Original Pirate Material in 2002. Now he's back with not only new music but an accompanying film, The Darker the Shadow the Brighter the Light. He talks to Nick Ahad about guerrilla filming in nightclubs and the influence of Raymond Chandler. The choreographer, writer and founder of hip hop dance company ZooNation, Kate Prince, tells us about a dramaturg who has been a key influence on her. We hear about the advice and inspiration offered by Lolita Chakrabati ahead of her work inspired by the music of Sting and The Police. The British Textile Biennial 2023 is highlighting the extraordinary influence of Lancashire. From the moors to the mills, it's a region which defined the modern world's approach to the clothes we wear. That troubling and complex legacy is explored by a series of installations. Evie Manning, co-creator of Common Wealth, talks to Nick Ahad about Fast Fast Slow - a community-led catwalk experience which explores throwaway fashion and our relationship with clothes. Presenter: Nick Ahad Producer: Kevin Core
I Don't Wanna Hear It Podcast227 - One and One Are Five: The Hoop-Dee-Doo RevueUse your ears to listen to our mouths use our voices to say words while you use your hands to fold materials that you pulled from a series of machines that soaked said materials in water and then used heat to dry that water so that, once your hands have finished folding them, you can then place them in a drawer inside of your home to later take out of that drawer and drape about your body.Check out more of our stuff at I Don't Wanna Hear It and join the Patreon, jabroni. I mean, if you want. Don't be weird about it. Oh, and we publish books now at WND Press because we want to be bankrupted by a dying medium.We now have a Big Cartel where you can buy shirts, pins, mugs, and coffee.Also, you should listen to our 2021 Christmas special: A Black Metal Christmas Carol, our 2022 Halloween special: Ghoulie Ghoulie Ghoul, Where Are You?, our 2022 Christmas Special: How the Stench Stole Christmas, as well as Mikey's true crime podcast, Wasteland and Shane's psychology podcast, Why We Do What We Do.Aaannnddd... our good buddy and frequent third host Matt Moment is in a great hardcore band called Contact. Check 'em out! You can preorder their upcoming record, Before and Through and Beyond All Time right here from Patient Zero Records.Episode PlaylistBEANS? FOR BREAKFAST? (A Streets Playlist)Scally Cap Trash: A Madcap, Bombshell Rocks, and Far From Finished PlaylistWhite Trash Rob and Middle Class Mark: A Lind Brothers PlaylistEpisode Links:The StreetsIon DissonanceDirty Water"Saturday Night" by JerseyGeneration Genocide by Jersey on Last.FMSome of our old bands are on Spotify:Absent FriendsWe're Not DeadYears From NowMusical Attribution:Licensed through NEOSounds. License information available upon request.“5 O'Clock Shadow,” “America On the Move,” “Baby You Miss Me,” “Big Fat Gy
The hottest of singles are back, talking about two slices of early 00s UK pop that you HAVE to fucking hear. It's The Streets' Original Pirate Material and Frou Frou's Details. Music, man. we swear, we swear next time we get to pharrell. prommy. You can find Alexis on twitter @regresssion, and everything else they're up to at regresssion.carrd.co You can find Boo on twitter @boocanan, and find her visual art @designbyboo and her music at boocanan.bandcamp.com
El 2002, Mike Skinner escriu un fresc del seu entorn. Hip hop, UK garage, i dub step amb hist
El 2002, Mike Skinner escriu un fresc del seu entorn. Hip hop, UK garage, i dub step amb hist
The podcast returns to talk about British hip-hop collective The Streets! This time Ryan Pak from Soundtrack Your Life picks The Streets' debut album "Original Pirate Material". Expect talk about British slang, geezers and how well some of the themes translated across to the west coast of the USA....Host: Matt LathamGuest: Ryan PakSoundtrack Your Life: https://soundtrackyourlife.net/Follow us on Twitter, Facebook & Instagram: @PickADisc.Email us at pickadisc@gmail.com.Pick A Disc(Ord): https://discord.com/invite/JnZjEYuK3uWe Made This:@wemadethispodhttps://wemadethispod.com/The Spotify Hall of Fame: https://open.spotify.com/user/xandmatt/playlist/3ePG8RgGhxLhI7SXN4JFPZ?si=I-NUSFKJSbOXYCCtCot-SQ
The podcast returns to talk about British hip-hop collective The Streets! This time Ryan Pak from Soundtrack Your Life picks The Streets' debut album "Original Pirate Material". Expect talk about British slang, geezers and how well some of the themes translated across to the west coast of the USA.... Host: Matt Latham Guest: Ryan Pak Soundtrack Your Life: https://soundtrackyourlife.net/ Follow us on Twitter, Facebook & Instagram: @PickADisc. Email us at pickadisc@gmail.com. Pick A Disc(Ord): https://discord.com/invite/JnZjEYuK3u We Made This: @wemadethispod https://wemadethispod.com/ The Spotify Hall of Fame: https://open.spotify.com/user/xandmatt/playlist/3ePG8RgGhxLhI7SXN4JFPZ?si=I-NUSFKJSbOXYCCtCot-SQ
Ibrahim, Thomaswww.deutschlandfunk.de, CorsoDirekter Link zur Audiodatei
TWENTY YEARS!? Where on earth has the time gone? In this special episode of the Fools on a Hill Podcast, Cal, Liam and Yanni take you through The Streets' debut record Original Pirate Material. We talk about our memories of the album, our favourite tracks and whether or not we feel the album has aged well. Let us know what you think of the album! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/foolsonahillpodcast/support
Today's pop music blows! Listen as we try to get to the bottom of why certain songs make it to the Billboard Hot 100. Abstract, electronic DJ/Music producer DJ Addict critiques pop music chart-toppers that he has never heard before. Hear his hilarious and often frustrated take on the latest top Billboard hits. Hosted by Basshrimp. In this episode we highlight Tailor Jae a genre-less DJ (respect) who is heavy with the bass. Stay until the end as Addict takes you though The Streets "Original Pirate Material" one of his favorite albums from his vinyl collection with some heavily needed needle drops.
As broadcast June 11, 2021 with bonus mega miles on the tunes for you podcast listeners. We welcome veteran singer-songwriter Kevin Mark Trail to the show tonight to open up about his younger days and influences, the difficulty of being oneself growing up in England, and his recent works with Sola Rosa along with his new album Heart Strings, which dropped last month. Just an incredibly perceptive guy to talk to about music and the movements that have gone on all around culturally, and it was an honor to get a chance to speak with him about his music and influences on the show. Not to be missed!#feelthegravityTracklisting:Part I (00:00)Roots Manuva – Witness (1 Hope)slowthai – DoormanThe Streets – Same Old ThingOmar & Stevie Wonder – Feeling You (Henrik Schwartz remix)Donny Hathaway – The Ghetto (Live at The Troubador) Part II (36:53)Derrick Harriott – The LoserAlton Ellis – What Does It Take (To Win Your Love)Sola Rosa feat Kevin Mark Trail – Chasing The SunLoyle Carner feat Jordan Rakei – OttolenghiMr Scruff – Shanty TownLTJ Bukem – Inner GuidanceThe Orb feat Lee “Scratch” Perry – Golden Clouds Part III (69:00)Kevin Mark Trail – Rainbow GirlBob Marley & The Wailers – Kaya Bob & Marcia – To Be Young Gifted & BlackDonny Hathaway – A Song For YouOmar – There's Nothing Like This Part IV (101:21)Sola Rosa feat Kevin Mark Trail & Sharlene Hector – For The Mighty DollarMachinedrum feat Mono/Poly & Tenerelle – StarGabriel Garzon-Montano – FlorTiana Major9 feat Haile – Think About You (Lover's Mix)H.E.R. – Hard PlaceFlying Lotus - Crust
A music and media podcast from Stavros Boss and Big Wahala from the ESN Network This episode we study the great debut album, Original Pirate Material, from The Streets Spotify Playlist : https://bit.ly/esnradiospotifyplaylists #ESNradio @esnradiopod
The 'My 00s No1 Album' series of bonus podcasts continues with Little Man Tate members Jon and Maz coming back onto the show to name their favourite albums of the era. Jon explains why Up The Bracket by The Libertines was the defining record of the era for him, while Maz goes for The Streets' debut Original Pirate Material. These guys were our first ever guests on The Boys in the Band Podcast so we caught up with them on their comeback plans, postponed live shows... and found out about NEW music they're working on! Little Man Tate fan? Share your memories of the band with us: Twitter: @TheBITBpod Instagram: @boysinthebandpod Facebook: The Boys In The Band Podcast Or drop us an Email - boysinthebandpod@gmail.com Written, presented and produced by Peter Smith and Richard Gallagher Pod thumbnail design by Daniel Curtin *Recorded on 10 December 2020* FREE BEER! Our sponsors Beer 52 have a great offer for Boys in the Band Podcast listeners! If you fancy a free case of 8 craft beers go to beer52.com/band and all you have to do is cover the postage costs of £5.95.
Arsenal are FA Cup winners once again with Aubameyang proving he is world class. With questions surrounding his future, are there any viable suitors for him? And should defeated Chelsea save the money for Kai Havertz and buy some defenders? We look ahead to the return of the Europa League and the Champions League this week – a big midweek for Sarri and Weghorst. The Bees face the Cottagers for a place in the Premier League. Who will prevail? Newcomers Brentford or everyone’s favourite away day in Fulham? Eddie Howe leaves his beloved Bournemouth. But will a lack of charisma rule him out of Premier League employment? And The Athletic’s Chris Waugh fills us in on Newcastle’s collapsed takeover. Plus Sancho, Callejon and Conte kicking off again. RUNNING ORDER • PART 1: Arsenal 2-1 Chelsea (02m 00s) • PART 2: Brentford v Fulham preview with the Beesotted and Fulhamish podcasts (18m 00s) • PART 3a: Eddie Howe leaves Bournemouth (25m 30s) • PART 3b: Newcastle’s takeover collapses, with The Athletic’s Chris Waugh (31m 00s) • PART 4: A look ahead to the return of the Champions League & Europa League (41m 00s) • PART 5: The odds with Lee Price from Paddy Power (53m 00s) • PART 6: Your tweets (55m 00s) GET IN TOUCH: • follow us on Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/totallyfootballshow/) • find us on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/thetotallyfootballshow/) • send us a tweet: @TheTotallyShow (http://www.twitter.com/thetotallyshow) PARISH NOTICES: • we’re sponsored by Paddy Power - home of the Money Back Special (http://www.paddypower.com/) READ STUFF ON OUR WEBSITE: • check out thetotallyfootballshow.com (http://thetotallyfootballshow.com/) .
On Ep.69 of DITD: The Streets is peak underground music. Working-class poetry with every topic in a regular British guy's life covered in a nearly 20-year span. FULL SHOW NOTES & TIMESTAMPS - https://share.transistor.fm/s/68d27089
Mike Skinner aka The Streets ist für Christopher einer der wichtigsten Musiker seines Lebens. Grund genug um in einer zweiteiligen Feature-Serie die gesamte Karriere des britischen Rappers zu besprechen, der wie niemand sonst Alltagsgeschichten und große wie kleine Beobachtungen des Lebens mit Garage und Hip Hop zusammenbrachte. Als Gästin mit am Start ist Radio-Journalistin Anke van de Weye, die das Podcast-Studio nicht ohne vollgepackten Anekdoten-Koffer betreten hat und mit Christopher in Part 1 über die persönlichen Anfänge mit seiner Musik sowie die ersten drei Alben „Original Pirate Material“, „A Grand Don't Come For Free“ und „The Hardest Way To Make An Easy Living“ spricht. Was macht gerade die ersten beiden Alben so legendär? Warum kriegen wir von den same piano loops, over and over nicht zu viel? Welche Dating-Tipps hat er für uns? Alle Themen lest ihr in der Setlist in den Shownotes. Part 2 folgt am 24.07. Playlist „Track17 – Playlist zum Podcast“ auf Spotify. Instagram: @track17podcast - @kristopger.gif - @anke.von Twitter: @track17podcast - @kristopher_gif - @ankevandeweye
In this week's episode, we welcome former Face editor Sheryl Garratt into RBP's Zoomworld to ask her about rave and club culture – and how we got from disco to acid house to 2020's quarantine raves. Sheryl discusses her newly-reissued/revised 1999 classic Adventures in Wonderland and looks back on her journey from the NME to The Observer. Mark, Barney & Jasper ask her about her seminal 1986 Face piece on Chicago's House scene – and about Ecstasy and 1988's "second summer of love". Clips from the week's new audio interview, a 2005 conversation between DJ History's Bill & Frank and Shoom/Boy's Own legend Terry Farley, provide the perfect springboard for further reminiscence of House music and the UK's ever-fecund club scene. Sheryl also pitches in on the week's Free On RBP feature about fellow Brummie Mike (The Streets) Skinner, whose classic track 'Weak Become Heroes' was arguably the greatest elegy for the rave era. We hear a clip of Skinner speaking to Gavin Martin in 2002 and celebrate that year's splendid Original Pirate Material album. Among the new RBP library additions considered are Hugh Nolan's Disc report on London's psychedelic temple the UFO club (1967), a slightly unlikely 1989 encounter between David Toop and Bakersfield country icon Buck Owens, and Chris Heath's hilarious 1997 Rolling Stone cover story on the Spice Girls. Jasper takes us out with observations on a pointless Tim Buckley tribute album (2000) and an interview with Public Service Broadcasting's amusingly-monikered J. Willgoose , Esquire … Many thanks to special guest Sheryl Garratt; buy Adventures in Wonderland on Amazon and visit her website at sherylgarratt.com.Pieces discussed: House sound of Chicago, Blackpool Weekender, 1988 and all that, Terry Farley audio, The Streets audio, The Streetser, The Streetsest, UFO Club, George Harrison, Al Green, Buck Owens, Neil Kulkarni's letter to MM, Spice Girls, Tim Buckley tribute, Tim Buckley live, James Blood Ulmer, Public Service Broadcasting and Britney Spears.The Rock's Backpages podcast is proud to be part of the Pantheon podcast network.
In this week's episode, we welcome former Face editor Sheryl Garratt into RBP's Zoomworld to ask her about rave and club culture – and how we got from disco to acid house to 2020's quarantine raves. Sheryl discusses her newly-reissued/revised 1999 classic Adventures in Wonderland and looks back on her journey from the NME to The Observer. Mark, Barney & Jasper ask her about her seminal 1986 Face piece on Chicago's House scene – and about Ecstasy and 1988's "second summer of love". Clips from the week's new audio interview, a 2005 conversation between DJ History's Bill & Frank and Shoom/Boy's Own legend Terry Farley, provide the perfect springboard for further reminiscence of House music and the UK's ever-fecund club scene. Sheryl also pitches in on the week's Free On RBP feature about fellow Brummie Mike (The Streets) Skinner, whose classic track 'Weak Become Heroes' was arguably the greatest elegy for the rave era. We hear a clip of Skinner speaking to Gavin Martin in 2002 and celebrate that year's splendid Original Pirate Material album. Among the new RBP library additions considered are Hugh Nolan's Disc report on London's psychedelic temple the UFO club (1967), a slightly unlikely 1989 encounter between David Toop and Bakersfield country icon Buck Owens, and Chris Heath's hilarious 1997 Rolling Stone cover story on the Spice Girls. Jasper takes us out with observations on a pointless Tim Buckley tribute album (2000) and an interview with Public Service Broadcasting's amusingly-monikered J. Willgoose , Esquire … Many thanks to special guest Sheryl Garratt; buy Adventures in Wonderland on Amazon and visit her website at sherylgarratt.com. Pieces discussed: House sound of Chicago, Blackpool Weekender, 1988 and all that, Terry Farley audio, The Streets audio, The Streetser, The Streetsest, UFO Club, George Harrison, Al Green, Buck Owens, Neil Kulkarni's letter to MM, Spice Girls, Tim Buckley tribute, Tim Buckley live, James Blood Ulmer, Public Service Broadcasting and Britney Spears. The Rock's Backpages podcast is proud to be part of the Pantheon podcast network.
In this week's episode, we welcome former Face editor Sheryl Garratt into RBP's Zoomworld to ask her about rave and club culture – and how we got from disco to acid house to 2020's quarantine raves. Sheryl discusses her newly-reissued/revised 1999 classic Adventures in Wonderland and looks back on her journey from the NME to The Observer. Mark, Barney & Jasper ask her about her seminal 1986 Face piece on Chicago's House scene – and about Ecstasy and 1988's "second summer of love". Clips from the week's new audio interview, a 2005 conversation between DJ History's Bill & Frank and Shoom/Boy's Own legend Terry Farley, provide the perfect springboard for further reminiscence of House music and the UK's ever-fecund club scene. Sheryl also pitches in on the week's Free On RBP feature about fellow Brummie Mike (The Streets) Skinner, whose classic track 'Weak Become Heroes' was arguably the greatest elegy for the rave era. We hear a clip of Skinner speaking to Gavin Martin in 2002 and celebrate that year's splendid Original Pirate Material album. Among the new RBP library additions considered are Hugh Nolan's Disc report on London's psychedelic temple the UFO club (1967), a slightly unlikely 1989 encounter between David Toop and Bakersfield country icon Buck Owens, and Chris Heath's hilarious 1997 Rolling Stone cover story on the Spice Girls. Jasper takes us out with observations on a pointless Tim Buckley tribute album (2000) and an interview with Public Service Broadcasting's amusingly-monikered J. Willgoose , Esquire … Many thanks to special guest Sheryl Garratt; buy Adventures in Wonderland on Amazon and visit her website at sherylgarratt.com.Pieces discussed: House sound of Chicago, Blackpool Weekender, 1988 and all that, Terry Farley audio, The Streets audio, The Streetser, The Streetsest, UFO Club, George Harrison, Al Green, Buck Owens, Neil Kulkarni's letter to MM, Spice Girls, Tim Buckley tribute, Tim Buckley live, James Blood Ulmer, Public Service Broadcasting and Britney Spears.The Rock's Backpages podcast is proud to be part of the Pantheon podcast network.
In this week's episode, we welcome former Face editor Sheryl Garratt into RBP's Zoomworld to ask her about rave and club culture – and how we got from disco to acid house to 2020's quarantine raves. Sheryl discusses her newly-reissued/revised 1999 classic Adventures in Wonderland and looks back on her journey from the NME to The Observer. Mark, Barney & Jasper ask her about her seminal 1986 Face piece on Chicago's House scene – and about Ecstasy and 1988's "second summer of love". Clips from the week's new audio interview, a 2005 conversation between DJ History's Bill & Frank and Shoom/Boy's Own legend Terry Farley, provide the perfect springboard for further reminiscence of House music and the UK's ever-fecund club scene. Sheryl also pitches in on the week's Free On RBP feature about fellow Brummie Mike (The Streets) Skinner, whose classic track 'Weak Become Heroes' was arguably the greatest elegy for the rave era. We hear a clip of Skinner speaking to Gavin Martin in 2002 and celebrate that year's splendid Original Pirate Material album. Among the new RBP library additions considered are Hugh Nolan's Disc report on London's psychedelic temple the UFO club (1967), a slightly unlikely 1989 encounter between David Toop and Bakersfield country icon Buck Owens, and Chris Heath's hilarious 1997 Rolling Stone cover story on the Spice Girls. Jasper takes us out with observations on a pointless Tim Buckley tribute album (2000) and an interview with Public Service Broadcasting's amusingly-monikered J. Willgoose , Esquire … Many thanks to special guest Sheryl Garratt; buy Adventures in Wonderland on Amazon and visit her website at sherylgarratt.com. Pieces discussed: House sound of Chicago, Blackpool Weekender, 1988 and all that, Terry Farley audio, The Streets audio, The Streetser, The Streetsest, UFO Club, George Harrison, Al Green, Buck Owens, Neil Kulkarni's letter to MM, Spice Girls, Tim Buckley tribute, Tim Buckley live, James Blood Ulmer, Public Service Broadcasting and Britney Spears. The Rock's Backpages podcast is proud to be part of the Pantheon podcast network.
Chaque jour sur Nova, Marie Bonnisseau fait dessiner à vos enfants vos plus belles pochettes de disques. Et pendant qu'ils colorient sans (presque) déborder, on leur raconte ce qui se cache derrière ces pochettes cultes. Et qui pourrait aussi intéresser les adultes... Aujourd'hui : Original Pirate Material des Streets.
Radio Nova revisite ses propres classiques : les raretés de tout bord qui rythment notre antenne, de la soul-funk au hip-hop en passant par les musiques afro-latines et la pop. Aujourd'hui : « Let's Push Things Forward » de The Streets.Imaginez vous dans le sud de Londres, nous sommes en 2002. Un jeune anglais déambule dans les rues. Il vient de Birmigham, où il avait installé un petit studio dans sa chambre avec un matelas et des boîtes d’oeufs. Ce type-là a une gouaille de jeune lad anglais. Un accent à couper au couteau et surtout des idées et des trouvailles musicales à la pelle. Il s’appelle Mike Skinner, mais vous le connaissez tous sous le nom de The Streets.En 2002, il s’apprête à sortit un disque innovant et brillant, Original Pirate Material, comme seul le génie des anglais des classes populaires savent en pondre. Le titre du morceau annonce la couleur et la mentalité de The Streets : « Let's Push Things Forward », amener les choses plus loin. Ne jamais imiter, toujours créer. Et c’est toute l’Angleterre moderne qui se retrouve dans ce morceau. La Bass Music à l’anglaise, inspiré du UK Garage, ce genre électronique typique des îles Britanniques, et cette teinte de Dub, héritée de ce lien inextricable entre Londres et la Jamaïque appuyé par le refrain de Kevin Mark Trail. La gimmick de ce titre, ce sont ces cuivres qui reviennent et qui reste dans le crâne et puis la tchatche de cette tête d’anglais aux cheveux mal coupés qui pourrait chercher le grabuge dans une tribune d’un match de foot le dimanche après midi.Allez les amis, ouvrez une cannette : on est en Angleterre et on s’en fout de tout. The Streets, c’est le Nova Classic du jour.Visuel © Getty Images / J. Quinton See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Has it come to this? Pirate radio in Ireland has a long history, but it has tended to focus on the so-called super pirates of the 1980s. What about the journey to that point? This story brings us from rebels to giggling schoolboys, and from Irish language activists to IRA pirate stations in Rathmines bedsits. Keep washing those hands. Enjoy Three Castles Burning? support it at www.patreon.com/threecastlesburning.
For this episode Matt and Lucy are joined by one of the founders of independent boutique pop label 37 Adventures, Alex Bean. Alex founded 37 Adventures with Nick Worthington, a former XL Recordings A&R, in 2013 after they worked together at 679 Recordings, a label set up by Worthington in partnership with Warner Music in 2001. 679 Recordings released The Streets first album Original Pirate Material and million-selling follow up A Grand Don’t Come For Free. It was also the label that released Futureheads’s self titled debut, Kano’s first album Home Sweet Home and Plan B’s Who Needs Actions When You Got Words plus releases by Marina and the Diamonds and Little Boots. Since launching 37 Adventures they have put their boutique pop philosophy into action working on campaigns for artists like JONES, whose debut album New Skin was released in 2016. Her music has amassed millions of streams and she has recently signed to BMG. 37 Adventures also broke singer/songwriter Emily Burns whose debut EP Seven Scenes From The Same Summer was released by the label in 2018. Emily has now been signed to Island Records. They’re currently working with Australian duo Geowulf, whose single Saltwater has now had 20m+ streams, pop collective Studio Black whose debut single Friends Don’t Kiss Friends is just shy of 10m streams on Spotify and singer/songwriter Elle Charms who has just dropped her amazing 2nd single Better Love, a follow up to her debut Lie With Me, produced by Measure For Measure who has previously produced for Bad Gir$, Emily Burns and his recent own singles. Producer: Callum Watts
Le rap britannique n’a jamais été aussi présent sur la scène mondiale. Autrefois cantonné aux frontières de son île, le genre s’exporte, s’ouvre à des influences nouvelles et inspire les plus grands. De Giggs, Skepta et Wiley à Jorja Smith, Octavian et Loyle Carner, comment le rap britannique a-t-il opéré un anti-Brexit ?Animé par Florian Perraudin-HoussardInvités : Elodie Sophie, Théo Hauquin et Hugo FerrandisPrise de son, mix et montage : Antonin LacosteConcept et ligné édito : Florian Perraudin-Houssard, Antoine Bosque, Hugo Ferrandis et Clément NadjoGénérique : Sixième SonEnregistré à l'auditorium de Sixième Son, 4 rue Scipion, ParisArtistes et projets cités : Todd Edwards, Stevie Hyper D, Ms. Dynamite, Roots Manuva, Wiley, Lethal Bizzle, Burna Boy, J Hus, Maleek Berry, Kojo Funds, Konnichiwa et Ignorance Is Bliss de Skepta, The Fifth de Dizzee Rascal, "All Day" de Kanye West, Gang Signs & Prayer de Stormzy, More Life de Drake, Jorja Smith, Giggs, Sampha, Octavian, AJ Tracey, Mahalia, Ama Lou, Jammer, Mura Masa, Kekra, Not Waving, But Drowning de Loyle Carner, Nothing Great About Britain de Slowthai, Masego, Tom Misch, Lady Leshurr, Psychodrama de Dave, Sfera Ebbasta, Izi, Original Pirate Material de The StreetsSur le site BACKPACKERZ : Playlist From The UK, Dave au Trabendo le 24 octobre, Loyle Carner à l'Elysée Montmartre le 15 décembre Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.
In the early 00's The Streets burst onto the scene. Original Pirate Material was like nothing else around. Combining garage beats with everyday stories from a geezer we could all relate to. Mike Skinner wanted to literally push things forward, taking the garage genre in a new direction and using his lyrics to talk about what was really going on inside the hearts and minds of people in the clubs. It struck a chord, and The Streets got a lot of attention. Over five albums Mike Skinner would tour Australia a whole lot, always playing festivals and always drawing a huge crowd. Then in 2011 he called it a day, releasing his final album and doing his final shows as The Streets. Music stayed in his life though. He threw himself into producing, directing, and most notably DJ-ing, behind the decks instead of out front on stage. Across his five songs choices we get a snapshot of a kid writing raps in his notebook in a hostel in Sydney. As well as the man today who is older, wiser, more grounded but with plenty of stories to tell. From Johnny Cash to Grim Sickers to Daft Punk, this is The Streets, Taking 5 with Zan Rowe and playing us his songs from then and now. Johnny Cash – 'A Boy Named Sue' Snoop Dogg – 'Serial Killa (ft. The D.O.C., Tha Dogg Pound and RBX)' Grim Sickers – 'Open the Till (ft. Ghetts and Mike Skinner)' Daniel Bedingfield – 'Gotta Get Through This' Daft Punk – 'Human After All / Together / One More Time / Music Sounds Better With You' (from Alive 2007)
In the early 00’s The Streets burst onto the scene. Original Pirate Material was like nothing else around. Combining garage beats with everyday stories from a geezer we could all relate to. Mike Skinner wanted to literally push things forward, taking the garage genre in a new direction and using his lyrics to talk about what was really going on inside the hearts and minds of people in the clubs. It struck a chord, and The Streets got a lot of attention. Over five albums Mike Skinner would tour Australia a whole lot, always playing festivals and always drawing a huge crowd. Then in 2011 he called it a day, releasing his final album and doing his final shows as The Streets. Music stayed in his life though. He threw himself into producing, directing, and most notably DJ-ing, behind the decks instead of out front on stage. Across his five songs choices we get a snapshot of a kid writing raps in his notebook in a hostel in Sydney. As well as the man today who is older, wiser, more grounded but with plenty of stories to tell. From Johnny Cash to Grim Sickers to Daft Punk, this is The Streets, Taking 5 with Zan Rowe and playing us his songs from then and now. Johnny Cash – 'A Boy Named Sue' Snoop Dogg – 'Serial Killa (ft. The D.O.C., Tha Dogg Pound and RBX)' Grim Sickers – 'Open the Till (ft. Ghetts and Mike Skinner)' Daniel Bedingfield – 'Gotta Get Through This' Daft Punk – 'Human After All / Together / One More Time / Music Sounds Better With You' (from Alive 2007)
In the early 00’s The Streets burst onto the scene. Original Pirate Material was like nothing else around. Combining garage beats with everyday stories from a geezer we could all relate to. Mike Skinner wanted to literally push things forward, taking the garage genre in a new direction and using his lyrics to talk about what was really going on inside the hearts and minds of people in the clubs. It struck a chord, and The Streets got a lot of attention. Over five albums Mike Skinner would tour Australia a whole lot, always playing festivals and always drawing a huge crowd. Then in 2011 he called it a day, releasing his final album and doing his final shows as The Streets. Music stayed in his life though. He threw himself into producing, directing, and most notably DJ-ing, behind the decks instead of out front on stage. Across his five songs choices we get a snapshot of a kid writing raps in his notebook in a hostel in Sydney. As well as the man today who is older, wiser, more grounded but with plenty of stories to tell. From Johnny Cash to Grim Sickers to Daft Punk, this is The Streets, Taking 5 with Zan Rowe and playing us his songs from then and now. Johnny Cash – 'A Boy Named Sue' Snoop Dogg – 'Serial Killa (ft. The D.O.C., Tha Dogg Pound and RBX)' Grim Sickers – 'Open the Till (ft. Ghetts and Mike Skinner)' Daniel Bedingfield – 'Gotta Get Through This' Daft Punk – 'Human After All / Together / One More Time / Music Sounds Better With You' (from Alive 2007)
BRITs British Breakthrough Act nominees IDLES turn up the noise and break down how they added their punk energy to a medley of The Streets’ garage classics from Original Pirate Material, with a couple surprises thrown in including Harry Styles.
In this episode David and Mark chat about the Museum of London's current photography exhibition, London Nights. This large exhibition features historic and contemporary images from over 60 photographers, including Bert Hardy, Bill Brandt, Tish Murtha, and contemporary photographers like William Eckersley and Damien Frost. The aim of the exhibition is to: reveal the city after hours: unnerving, beautiful, eerie, energised - sometimes all at once. Step into the night and discover a darker, richer side to the capital. Images range from sinister street scenes, or people partying in the West End in the 60s, to shots of the city from the International Space Station and the image of a tower block used on the cover The Streets' album Original Pirate Material. Some of the photographers and photos we discuss are: Paul Martin's Embankment at Night (1896) Hannes Kilian's shot of Piccadilly (1955) Jim Friedman's Piccadilly Circus (1988) William Eckersley's series Dark City (2011) Thierry Cohen's London 51 degrees 30 minutes 17 seconds N 2015-02-17 LST 10:39 (2015) Nick Turpin's On The Night Bus series Philipp Ebeling's Whitechapel Market, Tower Hamlets (2008-13) Bert Hardy Bill Brandt We actually forgot to discuss one of our favourite images from the exhibition, The Long Wait (2005-6) by Mita Tabrizian from series depicting Iranian migrants. David also talks about the work of Jan Staller and his haunting photos of New York in the 1980s, published in a monograph Frontier New York. As always, wherever possible the photos we discuss can be found on our Pinterest page for this episode. We originally recorded one podcast covering both the main London Nights exhibition, and the smaller, free, Night Visions exhibition, both on at the Museum of London. However, at the editing stage it made sense to split them into two separate podcasts. You may wish to listen to them both, in order, but it's by no means essential and each episode stands up independently. Non-Photography tangents we detour off at 1980s TV: clip of Nerys Hughes as the District Nurse and the fashion of Buck Rogers in the 25th Century. London Transport Museum and the London Transport Moquette fabric. Camera gear: Fuji X-T3, their 10-24mm lens and Samyang's fisheye lens. Get involved! We hold regular photo meet-ups in central London, all levels welcome, so come and say hello - see Meetup for details. For more information about us and forthcoming podcasts, follow us on Twitter.
I spent the weekend on a clifftop in Mendocino, reminiscing about old raves with my besties Tom and Sarah. So that made this happen. Rave and Techno and Jungle and Breaks and Breaks and Breaks and Breaks. For Tom, Sarah, Kay, Alex, Dan, Jackie, and Big E. It never will die. Enjoying the show? Please support BFF.FM with a donation. Playlist 0′00″ Face to face by Daphni on Fabriclive 93 (Fabric First) 7′41″ All Under One Roof Raving by Jamie xx (Young Turks) 8′08″ Weak Become Heroes by The Streets on Original Pirate Material 13′56″ Dirty Raver by Acen 19′08″ Dominator by Human Resource (Original Mix) on In Order To Dance (R&S) 23′24″ Two Full Moons and a Trout by Union Jack on Two Full Moons and a Trout (Platypus) 27′40″ Close Your Eyes (XXX Mix) by Acen 34′14″ Antacid (Jedi Knights remix) by Link and E261 (Warp) 46′49″ Bludclot Artattack by Ed Rush 52′18″ Black Magic by DJ Gunshot 56′00″ Bruce Lee MC by Quincy 65′46″ Shout by Zer0 on long album (self-released) 72′13″ Acid Drop by T.E.K 73′49″ Red Sun by Nectarios 77′55″ Emit/Collect (Rennie Pilgrem's Agatha Stomp mix) by Zer0 83′44″ Counting Off by The Apollo Kids 88′48″ Mad As Hell by Vandal on Tonight We Riot 94′34″ Where's The Noise by Krafty Kuts 98′34″ Nutron by Meat Katie and Elite Force 104′12″ Black Video Noise Game (Bonus Revamp) by Elite Force on RVMPD 110′38″ Fatal by Phrenetic on cheesy motherfucker now goes to la-di-da West End shows :) xx 115′07″ Born Sloppy by Underworld vs Plump DJs on bootleg
I spent the weekend on a clifftop in Mendocino, reminiscing about old raves with my besties Tom and Sarah. So that made this happen. Rave and Techno and Jungle and Breaks and Breaks and Breaks and Breaks. For Tom, Sarah, Kay, Alex, Dan, Jackie, and Big E. It never will die. Enjoying the show? Please support BFF.FM with a donation. Playlist 0′00″ Face to face by Daphni on Fabriclive 93 (Fabric First) 7′41″ All Under One Roof Raving by Jamie xx (Young Turks) 8′08″ Weak Become Heroes by The Streets on Original Pirate Material (-) 13′56″ Dirty Raver by Acen (-) 19′08″ Dominator by Human Resource (Original Mix) on In Order To Dance (R&S) 23′24″ Two Full Moons and a Trout by Union Jack on Two Full Moons and a Trout (Platypus) 27′40″ Close Your Eyes (XXX Mix) by Acen (-) 34′14″ Antacid (Jedi Knights remix) by Link and E261 (Warp) 46′49″ Bludclot Artattack by Ed Rush (-) 52′18″ Black Magic by DJ Gunshot (-) 56′00″ Bruce Lee MC by Quincy (-) 65′46″ Shout by Zer0 on long album (self-released) 72′13″ Acid Drop by T.E.K (-) 73′49″ Red Sun by Nectarios (-) 77′55″ Emit/Collect (Rennie Pilgrem's Agatha Stomp mix) by Zer0 (-) 83′44″ Counting Off by The Apollo Kids (-) 88′48″ Mad As Hell by Vandal on Tonight We Riot (-) 94′34″ Where's The Noise by Krafty Kuts (-) 98′34″ Nutron by Meat Katie and Elite Force (-) 104′12″ Black Video Noise Game (Bonus Revamp) by Elite Force on RVMPD (-) 110′38″ Fatal by Phrenetic on cheesy motherfucker now goes to la-di-da West End shows :) xx (-) 115′07″ Born Sloppy by Underworld vs Plump DJs on bootleg (-) Check out the full archives on the website.
Hey folks, we're back!! Josh and Ian sit down and talk all things comics. The fellas both weigh in on Marvel's newest Netflix series Jessica Jones, the latest trailers for Captain America: Civil War and Batman v Superman are discussed, and Ian is floored by the classic brit hip hop album "Original Pirate Material" by The Streets. Check it out and please Rate and Subscribe on iTunes!! This episode is, as always, brought to you by Wolftracks T-Shirts & Design.
Au programme : Original Pirate Material (album de The Streets, pour fans) Room 25 (Jeu de plateau, pour tous) Doctor Who (Série culte britannique de SF, DVD, pour tous) Plus d'infos sur l'épisode : Les animateurs sont Patrick (@NotPatrick), Alan (@alanvonlanthen) et Nico (@nicotupe). Le générique est de Daniel Beja (@misterdanielb). Sa musique libre de droit est sur MusicInCloud.fr. La mise en ligne est assurée par Florent Berthelot (@Aeden_). Commentez cet épisode et retrouvez d'autres émissions sur frenchspin.com ! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Dal talks to Jon M. about Doctor Who, The Return of Bruce Wayne, Wonder Woman #600 and other things all obtained legally.