At last! News!

by Jo

 

http://www.myspace.com/thedarknessdan

It’s been very strange year, everything in my personal and band life has kind of turned upside down. I’d just like to thank fans of The Darkness for their amazing support over the last few years, and your continued support for My, richie and Ed’s up-coming musical venture (yes we are definitely not down and out!!!). Since Justin’s announcement that he has left the band we have been working incredibly hard. I would just like to let you know (for the first time in this blog) that I AM o.k, very happy in myself, and confident musically with where we are going, and cannot wait to get back out and rock again!!. I can’t give anything else away at this point but will try to keep up my MySpace entries etc….lots of love and thanks…dx

Tiny Dancers EP review

by Emma

Lions And Tigers And Lions

Lions And Tigers And Lions is the debut EP from Tiny Dancers, released on 20th November 2006 on Parlaphone records.

Tiny Dancers don’t really fit in with any particular genre of this time, their style is packed with melody, fun and cheery twanging guitar with a soft and breezy air about it. Lyrics are straightforward and uncomplicated and there are disco beats thrown into some tracks for good measure. 20 to 9 is the first track and is one of the slower and most serious of the tracks, with a steady beat and an old-school feel to it. Next up is Hemsworth Hallway, a livelier track that still manages to create a laid back and sunny feel. Russian Snow has a sadder theme but the gentle strumming and sweet chorus up the tone and lead toward the light harmonies and the ringing guitar of the break, together making a lovely tune. Sun Goes Down takes a more electronic turn as a funky disco beat leads the tune into a fun country style, which just makes you want to smile and dance. Last track Going Away keeps in with the electro as the keyboard hums away with the up tempo tune, layers of vocals and a funky guitar riff complement the happy-go-lucky lyrics perfectly.

Tiny dancers don’t have a particularly modern sound, but they are fun to listen to and are one of those valuable bands that can lift the mood with a single song.

Juliette and The Licks single review

by Emma

Sticky Honey

I just don’t really get Juliette and The Licks. Sticky Honey however, is actually pretty damned good! This is the latest single to be released on 20th November and is the first track of this band’s that I actually like.

Sticky Honey has a good catchy riff, lurching guitar and smooth vocals and it generally has a good vibe to it making it one to have a little dance to. The track is full of rock attitude and the chorus sticks in the mind, in a good way! The slick and cool verses just make that build up even better. I may even be converted!

Protest The Hero single review

by Emma

Heretics & Killers

Heretics & Killers is the latest single from Protest The Hero’s face-melting debut album Kezia and is due for release on 13th November to coincide with their support slot on the mighty Bullet For My Valentine tour.

This track is a fiercesome, full-on onslaught of classic rock cries and group chant vocals, brutal double pedals and eye-popping axemanship. The ease of pace switching and irregular bars is just excellent as Protest The Hero do not fail to carry us into a sweet heavy nirvana. Bloody brilliant!


Rose Kemp EP review

by Emma

Violence

No, it’s not the scary Walford Mitchell brother although the EP title would fit…it’s the honey-voiced underground musician Rose Kemp.

Title track and single Violence is melancholy and edgy, with infusions of cutting guitar to break apart the soulful tones of the verse. This track takes some of the rough, and pours over a silky accompaniment of the smooth with great effect.

Morning Music is a quiet and open track, which is in the main Kemp’s vocals with little background distraction. The vocals are versatile and Kemp can squeeze an air of anguish from her voice as easily as she can whisper a soft melody. Final track Tiny Flower is an impressive and inventive song – where other than a little percussion Kemp uses layers and layers of her own vocals as accompaniment to the main vocal. A well engineered piece.

Senses Fail single review

by Emma

Single Review: Senses Fail: Calling All Cars

As Senses Fail embark upon the 2006 Taste Of Chaos tour they are due to release the first single from their second album Still Searching, Calling All Cars on 20th November.

Calling All Cars is a fast-moving, exciting and memorable track, blitzing into action with a great drumbeat and a nice catchy riff, moved along by emotion-packed vocals and lyrics which are gorgeously honest and moving. The chorus is to die for and breaks down the song expertly – which will make this track a live favorite and will move the circle pits into rotation without doubt. New Jersey notoriously produces bands that are so good with that post-hardcore sound and Senses Fail are another of those bands that have nailed the style beautifully.

Spider Simpson single review

by Emma

Heavy Metal Machine

Spider Simpson release the first track from their debut album on 4th December and are set to make a dent in the rock scene, if you would trust the opinion of rock legend Dave Grohl…which I certainly do!

Heavy Metal Machine is interesting from the outset, with nice loud percussion and ringing guitar all complemented by confident and clear vocals belting out a wicked set of lyrics. Spider Simpson can do rock and roll verses and wild screaming choruses alike, and with the upbeat style they have I reckon they will be doing the rounds on the MTV channels before you know it. Good rock ‘n’ roll if I ever heard it.

The Hold Steady single review

by Emma

Chips Ahoy!

Rather than a celebration of fast food, Chips Ahoy! Is actually a racehorse in the latest single due to be released by Vagrant records on 13th November.

The Brooklyn quintet have knocked out a bold and subtly funny track with this single, tongue in cheek lyrics sung with deep and slick vocals, with nice electronic backing running over melodic guitar and toned-down percussion. This is a nice and refreshingly different track, daring to lyrically go in a different direction to so many of today’s bands; ‘how am I supposed to know that you’re high if you won’t even dance’. The keyboard trilling is delightfully unique and is the cherry on top of this rather delicious cake.

The Maccabees single review

by Emma

First Love

First Love can be yours from 13th November and is a compelling tale of, funnily enough, the throws of first love. The Maccabees with their dainty bells and grilling guitars have created a little jewel with First Love.

This track is sweet and uplifting with Orlando Weeks playing his own voice as a pretty and unpretentious instrument in this cute song, which even delves into the detail of the bedspread design! Delightful and catchy, beautifully wide-eyed, this track will play a part in the continuation of success for this London based group.

Streebeck – ‘Without a Baedeker’

by Davey

Now I’m not a difficult person to please in general, but where music is concerned I’ve grown to be highly critical since becoming a rawk journo. So I surprised myself when, after witnessing Streebeck’s half-hour stint supporting David Essex in Cheltenham, I sat itching to buy his album. The promise of a free badge helped too, I’m a sucker for badges.

There was an exquisite feel to the performance; in this enormous cavern of a town hall, a solitary man played his acoustic guitar beneath a lonely spotlight, and won us over, hook line and sinker. Radio Two listeners may have heard the mysterious name, as the superb single ‘Wasted Time’ has been glistening through their airwaves. Streebeck has also played live in Radio One’s Maida Wale studios, an illustrious feat for any artist. ‘Wasted Time’ sounds, on the album, far more elaborate that it did live, incorporating a steady drum beat into the song for added vigour, atop the guitar/harmonica combination. One cannot help but see a Dylan influence in the simplicity of Streebeck’s style, the folky undertones, the difference being that the former is shockingly glorified, and the latter deserves glorification. Every song on this record stands out as poignant, genuine, and simply gorgeous. The incredible talent behind the guitar playing is moving enough in itself, and is amplified by lyrics that actually mean something.

For me, ‘Eighty Eight’ is the most touching song on the album, with the line “if it’s all the same to you, I’d rather not pretend that we’re still friends” brimming over with emotion. Other standout tracks include the gently moving opener ‘Twilight’, the darkly pitying ‘Pirates’, and the uplifting ‘Caged’, which will always remind me of how I felt when Streebeck opened his performance to an audience unprepared for his sparkling brilliance.

‘Without a Baedeker’ shines from start to finish, and Streebeck is somehow startlingly different to every other modern man-and-his-guitar act. So different it turned the mind of a cynical hard rock fan upside down.
Order the album online now, and Streebeck might even sign it for you. That’s another great thing about him, he’s really a very nice boy!

www.streebeck.com
www.myspace.com/streebeck

 

(This also appeared in December 2006, issue 25

Blimey

November already, and there’s been a fair amount of fireworks all over the place, not just in the full glare of Darkness. We hope you’re going with a bang.. The month started for us with a full SixSister meet and Jet’s long awaited 18th birthday.. at last. she’s all legal. AND she’s allowed out on the roads on her own. Either way, we’re in trouble… Lou and Jo have been all the way to London and back without losing anything or anyone, too.

 

Allegedly.

 

 

Please note that the word ‘Christmas’ is not allowed until Dec 20th.. 1st day of school holidays.

 

xx

Posted in OI

Alexisonfire – Taste of Chaos

by Emma

Manchester Apollo – 12 November 2006

From one dressing room to another… immediately after a great interview with Senses Fail, I caught up with Dallas Green, of the amazing Alexisonfire for a chat prior to their slot at the Manchester Taste Of Chaos date.

As always Dallas was warm, friendly and excited to be playing here in the UK once again. Dallas told us about how he was feeling pretty tired as he’s having trouble getting used to the time difference, and keeps falling to sleep at 10am!

E. I last spoke to you about six months ago, when you were here for the City and Colour tour. What has been going on since then, what have you all been up to?
D. Lots of stuff, after that I went to Europe with Alexis and then we got home and we did the Warped Tour in North America. Then our new record came out and we have just been touring since then. We came over to do Reading and Leeds and then we did a Canadian tour and an American tour and now we’re here.
E. So you have just been on the road all the time!
D. Yeah, that’s right!

E. How are you enjoying the Taste Of Chaos tour so far?
D. It’s good, but we have only been on it for two days ‘cos we haven’t been on the whole thing so, for us it’s great but all the other bands are really tired and stuff. They have been on the road and they are ready to go home. So we’ve kinda come on and we’re new faces so everyone’s like, ‘oh, hey guys’!
E. So you’re the most popular people in town! Do you think that being part of a tour like this puts more pressure on you as a band?
D. Definitely, ‘cos when you do your own tour mostly you have the kids that like your band come to watch you play, and that’s usually the way it is, you know. Kids that are interested in getting to know your band come to watch you play but on a big tour like this there’s you know, probably a handful of kids that maybe don’t like you or a handful of kids that have never even heard of you, so you have to play to not only the kids that are here to see you but tons more people. We’re on right in the middle so you have to keep it going and we’ve got a tough act to follow, we play after Underoath who are always amazing live – so yeah, there’s a lot of pressure doing big, big tours like this.
E. Of course there are also benefits – it’s a great opportunity to get more people in there listening to you.
D. Oh shoot yeah, exactly, you get to try and win more people over.
E. I am sure that you will do just that!

E. My next question was going to be – have you had any more group tattooings whilst you have been on this tour, but since you only joined two days ago there will have been no time for that kind of thing yet!
D. No, a bunch of us have just got tattooed in California by our friend who tattoos us there, but we haven’t gotten all the same thing yet.
E. Well that was quite a fun story from our last interview anyway!
D. Yeah!
E. How did the whole thing come about with you having Olly (Mitchell, Johnny Truant frontman) as your tour manager?
D. Well we just became friends with them when we did the Johnny Truant/Alexisonfire tour, and …well he’s actually here with us now too…Paul who was in here earlier, he’s the drummer for Johnny Truant! It’s just nice to have people who know the area with you, so when I was doing that I was gonna do it in a car, the City and Colour thing, so we figured we would just ask Olly ‘cos he’s my friend, you know, instead of getting in some professional tour manager.
E. So is he responsible for all the late nights and lack of sleep..!!
D. Nooo that’s just me, I can’t adjust, can’t switch gears, it’s not working out!

E. Moving on to Crisis…the album did really well didn’t it, debuting at number 1 in Canada and in the top 100 over here in the UK?
D. Yeah, it’s crazy, yeah
E. You have certainly had a fantastic reception over here and you’re getting more play on the music channels than ever before…
D. On the shows that we have played so far it seems like kids know the words to the newer songs more than then knew the older songs, so that’s cool because we like the newer songs better!
E. And new fans are always a good thing!
D. Yeah!
E. Did you ever imagine that it would be so well accepted and so quickly?
D. No, I mean, we have grown to be quite a popular band in Canada, so we figured it was gonna do well there. We never imagined it would go to number 1 but that’s something that we don’t really imagine because, we never really ever think that we’re capable of that, you know. We’re such an independent smaller band that with records by Christina Aguilera and stuff like that coming out at the same time we just don’t expect ours to go in at number 1… But to have it do so well over here already, the last records have taken us touring and touring and touring for people to get used to it, but this one – people got into it right away, it’s very surprising but it’s great.
E. When you got together to write the songs for this album, did you plan to write songs that are fairly softer than your older material? If you go right back to your debut Alexisonfire, these new songs are more easy listening.
D. I don’t know if they’re softer, but I think they are maybe just a little less metally, and stuff like that. I think we have more of a rock influence now as opposed to the first record, which was kinda all over the place and stuff and I think that had a lot to do with that it was the first bunch of songs we had ever written. We didn’t know what we wanted then but I think with this record we really figured out that we just wanted to write good catchy rock songs that are fun to play live. On the first two records there’s a bunch of songs that we don’t like playing now because they just don’t feel the same playing them live as when we wrote them. But now, every song on the new album we really just love to play.
E. Are you planning to play a mix of songs this evening?
D. Yeah, well we only have a half hour so we’ll try and do a couple from each record and we’ll play more off the new one, but yeah we will play a few from the others.

E. On Crisis…there are a lot more vocals from Wade on this record…where has he been hiding his voice all this time?!
D. I think that Wade just came to the table with more vocal ideas, you know, and that’s the way we write. We don’t say ‘okay here’s what you’re gonna do, here’s what I’m gonna do’. It’s just like whoever comes up with an idea…we will all work with it. Wade just brought more songs that he had singing ideas for.
E. And he sounds really good too!
D. Yeah he does.

E. Are you able to tell me what will be the next single released from the album – do you know yet?
D. Yeah, it will be Boiled Frogs. We shot the video a month ago so it’ll be out I think at the end of November or in early December.
E. What is the theme for this video?
D. The song is kind of a dedication to some of our parents whose generation got stuck working shitty jobs, and they give you just enough to keep you going but don’t really ever give you enough so you can escape from it one day, and that’s what Boiled Frogs is about. So we did a video kinda like that, we each have a different role and it’s all just about monotony and being fed up with your situation and stuff like that.

E. Back to your success in Canada… you have been nominated for some awards that are coming up shortly – the Casbys – and you are up for best newcomer, but also your solo album and the Alexisonfire album are up against each other for best indie album!
D. I heard that’s gonna happen a couple of times this year and next year – there’s a thing called the Juno’s which is like the Canadian Grammy Awards and we heard that we are gonna be nominated for the same award so…
E. It’s kinda strange because Sometimes came out over a year ago!
D. Yeah, but it just got really popular all of a sudden, over the last few months, so I think that people are now starting to like treat it like it came out this year, but it did, it came out last November!
E. So have you been winding each other up about it?
D. Yeah, yeah we have. They always give me crap about it, you know!

E. I have also read that you have all been doing your part for charity too – recently George has done a painting for the Brush For Hope Kidney Foundation, and you have all been organising food drives…
D. Yeah George did a painting and it’s up for auction, and it was up for over a thousand dollars I think which is crazy! It’s freaking George out cos he never thought that that would happen. But yeah, we like to do things, like on our Canadian headline tour we did a food drive and things like that. There’s also an organisation called Skate For Cancer which we try to be really involved in, it’s our friend Robbie who raises money for cancer research and awareness and stuff like that. I figured that when you get to a certain point in popularity where you can attach your name to something and it helps people who maybe wouldn’t look at it otherwise, look at a cause, then I think it’s your right to do it. I don’t know, it just seems like you should do it and it’s very easy to do so…
E. Do you have any plans for other events like that in the future?
D. I think we’ll stay supporting Skate For Cancer continuously, and we’ll just kinda wait and see what comes our way that we really wanna get behind. I’m sure that for all of our Canadian tours from now on we will pick something like the food drive to do.

E. Onto your website, there is a news section up there and is it right that you are also going to be writing a journal on there?
D. Yeah, we’ve already started it, yeah. That’s just something that is fun and we can post youtube clips on there – like on our American tour we had a really great show in Austin Texas, and the next night it was on youtube, so we did a journal about it and put up a link to that. So if something funny happens we can just write about it.
E. Will you be writing a journal whilst you’re on this tour?
D. Yeah, although we’ve only been on it for two days and the internet has been really sparse, so we haven’t really had a chance. But I’m sure we will soon enough.
E. Who has been writing most of the stuff on there so far, because there are some really funny posts on there at the moment!
D. It’s mostly Wade and George that get around to doing it so far.
E. I thought it was! You can tell by some of the comments that they have come from those two!

E. Also on the news section of your site – there is mention of an untitled new band which features members of Alexisonfire and Attack In Black…can you tell me who is involved in this project?
D. Oh, Wade is involved in a thing called Black Lungs – I don’t know if you have ever heard about it…Wade is putting out a solo record, similar to mine, and I think he is gonna do some shows in January. This band called Attack In Black are gonna play as his backing band, sort of.
E. So is that already written and ready for release?
D. Yeah the record is already done, he recorded it in summer, but he’s not had a chance to put it out yet.

E. So what will happen next for Alexisonfire? What are your plans for next year?
D. Oh, just touring! We’re coming back here in February to do our thing with Comeback Kid. We get home from this, and then we have Christmas off, and then we’re doing a Senses Fail tour in the States. Then we come back here, and then we go back to America.
E. So you won’t get much time off!
D. Yeah, we’re just touring… and you know we’re over here all the time!

I thanked Dallas for a great interview and wished him the best of luck for the show. We bumped into Johnny Truant’s Olly on the way out as he was laughing about the size of the dressing rooms! He kindly saw us back to tour manager Stu and then gave us a big wave during their set. The great thing about this band is that they never lose their humility, they are sincere, and keep their feet planted firmly on the ground.

Senses Fail – Taste of Chaos

by Emma

Manchester Apollo – 12 November 2006

Backstage at Taste Of Chaos lives up to the name… there are like a million bands to soundcheck, a maze of winding staircases, dressing rooms, interview rooms, shower rooms and of course the main stage. People are everywhere, organising rehearsing or just hanging out and security is tight. There are bands here that aren’t even here to play – they are just here to have fun and support friends! I made my way to the Senses Fail dressing room where Garrett was intently typing away on his laptop, and waited for tour manager Damon to find Dan, who he had temporarily lost!

Minutes later Dan arrived and after a bit of hand shaking and brief introductions we got down to business:

E. So how are you finding the tour so far?
D. So far it’s been great…we are about a month into it now, which feels like two years ‘cos it’s been so long! We went to New Zealand first and then Australia and then Japan and most of Europe. We did Germany last and we just got here a couple of days ago. So it’s been great but it’s very long!

E. Do you think that your under more pressure being part of a big tour like this rather than doing your own tour, or do you think it’s less pressure because obviously you have a shorter time slot to fill onstage?
D. I’d say probably a little less pressure, because, like you said, we’re not headlining, we only have to play for a half hour and we’re the second or third band out of six or something, so we get done early and we can go mess around or whatever afterwards. But I mean there’s also the pressure of keeping up with the other bands, the other bands are really good.
E. A little bit of competition…
D. Yeah and it’s all friendly competition but you’ve gotta be able to put on your own show just as well as everybody else and you need to feel like your up to par with everybody else – that’s the only thing that’s sometimes like ‘oh man!’, you know, ‘is our set as good as their set?’.

E. Still Searching is your second full length album – what has feedback been like so far for that, have you heard much?
D. I think good, I mean I’ve read a couple of magazine reviews that we’ve gotten and people seem to like it, and the kids are into it which is really cool. I met a girl outside just before who had me sign her CD case, and she was like ‘Oh, it’s a great album – much better than the last one’ so I’m like ‘alright, cool, I’ll take that!’

E. I heard that there were some rather critical messages posted on your internet site where you had fans of the first album complaining about a couple of songs they had heard from the second album.
D. I think people were bummed out that from the songs they heard right off the bat there wasn’t enough screaming I guess, and I think people were a little butt-hurt about that! I think that is just a part of the band and the music evolving and getting smarter in a way. Going into it, it wasn’t like a conscious thing where we were like ‘oh, were not gonna scream on this record’, but we just did it. We tried to do it more tastefully, and just where it was needed and where it seemed to suit the songs and not just do it for the sake of doing it which a lot of bands do – it just becomes overused and contrived and, you know, loses integrity I think.
E. So how did you deal with those kind of comments?
D. Well I think anytime that a band comes out with a new record that’s not exactly the same as their last record, there’s always gonna be people that are really psyched, and get it, and are like ‘oh this is a lot better’ and ‘these parts make more sense now’. But there will be those people that always want you to keep releasing the same record that they fell in love with the first time, and that’s just one of things you’ve gotta deal with.
E. If you did release pretty much the same songs I guess you would never grow as a band
D. Yeah, exactly!

E. Calling All Cars is going to be the first single released from the album, which is due out soon (November 20th), what are your hopes and expectations for that single?
D. I don’t know, I try not to expect too much, you know, and I just hope people like it
E. You have a video out for that already don’t you?
D. Yeah, yeah…so we’ll see. We’ll see what happens!

E. I think that the new album, lyrically, seems to be a lot more personal and more up close than previous material…do you (all) feel a little bit conscious that because the lyrics are so personal they are kinda laid bare for everyone to speculate upon?
D. Well I think the lyrics are definitely more sincere, but it’s hard for me to say because I’m not the one who writes all the lyrics, but I’m proud of the lyrics that Buddy wrote and he’s really come a long way with his writing over the past however many years we have been doing this. I mean, it’s very honest, there’s a lot less use of metaphors and big words and stuff and it’s very straight up and you know that that’s him right there. He’s talking about his life and the shit that he’s gone through over the past couple of years or whatever.
E. I think that people really appreciate that honesty too
D. I think that people can see through and know that they’re real lyrics and that it’s real shit that he’s talking about.

E. So, if I can go back to the beginning…how did the band form? It was in 2002, right?
D. Yeah coming up on five years, so that’s pretty good.
E. Did you all know each other before?
D. Garrett and Buddy had known each other briefly from playing in bands beforehand, and Dave (our old guitarist) as well. It’s really weird how I came into the mix – I was in a band with two kids then we broke up and they started playing in a band with Dave. Then they broke up, and I just randomly got talking to Garrett online, and like, I was looking for people to play with, he was looking for people to play with and so we met up with each other. We started playing, and then Dave and our very, very original bass player Mark came into the mix like a week later. We all started playing and then Buddy came, and it was just really weird how it happened but it really just kind of snowballed.
E. How do you think that you have grown together both musically and personally since that time, so over the last five years?
D. A lot, I mean like when we first started playing, well for me at least, we didn’t really even know each other and we were just doing it because we wanted to play music and that was pretty cool and pretty sincere. But now we’ve been touring for fucking ever, and have had to live with each other all the time, you know, so it’s like you have to either become really close or you end up hating each other and it doesn’t work out. So as you can see, things are okay and especially ever since Heath joined the band we’ve all been a lot tighter and we’ve had a good time in the last year, so it’s all cool.

E. How do you feel about being compared to other bands that are from New Jersey, bands like Saves The Day or Thursday – do you mind that or would you rather step away from the comparisons?
D. Well obviously we’d always like to be thought of as our own band and not as something that’s a knock-off of something else, but also being compared to those bands is cool because they are really awesome bands and they are all really awesome guys too, so…yeah it’s fine with me!
E. I think that the new album allows you to break away from that a bit more, as like you say, it does have a different sound
D. Yeah, I think so.

E. Okay, so from what I have read, you seem to have done pretty well in the States, Australia and Japan…do you see this as your big chance to really break the UK?
D. Yeah I’m hoping so, we’ve gotten pretty positive feedback from the record so far. Kerrang has been really cool to us and Rock Sound, and we’ve been getting a decent amount of press. The shows we’ve played so far – Birmingham and Glasgow last night – they were both incredible, really great and it’s like a breath of fresh air coming out of Germany. Germany’s great, but it’s just very different, and so it’s cool to get into the UK.

E. You apparently recorded the album in a haunted house…did you see any evidence of the supernatural?!
D. There were a couple of weird things that happened, I mean it was weird at the time but thinking back…I don’t know, it’s hard to say if anything was really going on. There was just weird shit like the frickin garbage can lid flew off in the middle of the night across the room! Brian McTernan (the producer) has got three dogs, and he had done records there before we made our record. He had brought two of his dogs to the studio before and both of them wouldn’t go upstairs in the house – they would just sit at the bottom of the stairs and look up! So then when we went to the studio he brought his other dog who had never been there before and we tried to see if he would go upstairs – he wouldn’t go up there either so that was kinda weird! Eventually though I think someone picked him up and carried him upstairs and once he got there he was okay. You know, it’s just like little weird stuff like that which kinda plays with your head more than anything else, and I think that’s how people get scared.
E. That place was out in the middle of a small town wasn’t it – do you feel that it was better to get away and be somewhere that is quite isolated so that you can focus on producing your album?
D. I don’t think it could have been any more perfect, honestly, I mean other than the weather – it rained a lot, but big deal, we were inside you know. We were in a small town, there’s like nobody there during the week and it’s like a ghost town, and then on the weekends it’s Woodstock, so it’s a big touristy place on the weekends. But yeah, we lived in this house that was as close to the studio as this venue is from the tour buses outside, so it was right there for us and we were just there doing what we needed to do.
E. I guess it saves you from being distracted as well?
D. Yeah, I mean originally we had thought about going out to LA to record but there’s just like, there’s just too much going on there and too much chance of ‘oh well, let me finish my stuff early so I can go out tonight’ and we didn’t wanna do that, we wanted to stay very focused.
E. Well it worked, you have produced a really good album.
D. Thank you.
E. As for the recording, there are quite a few effects that were used to produce the album and a lot of layering of your recordings – do you find it hard to recreate that sound when you’re playing live at shows like this?
D. Well there’s a lot of stuff, like on The Priest and The Matador for instance or on the first song The Rapture, we’re gonna bring pro tools with us, like we’re not gonna be running vocals or anything or cheating, it’s just there’s certain instruments that we can’t play so we’ll have it run for that so that you can get the full experience of a few of the songs the way they were meant to be heard live. So that should be cool. I’m excited about that but also a little nervous cos we’ve never done anything like that before, but it should be okay.
E. I’m sure it will sound really good.

E. I was watching the ‘Making of…’DVD, and midway through it almost turns into a cookery programme!
D. What can I say, I like good food…
E. Do you think you might do that again and make another documentary style DVD alongside your recording, as it came across really well.
D. Oh yeah, I thought it was really cool and I’m way into any kind of behind the scenes, like on DVDs I watch all the special features and stuff like that. I love when bands come out with behind the scenes DVDs and live DVDs – I just like seeing everything that goes into either a record or a movie or putting on a show.
E. You seemed to be having a really good time doing it as well…
D. Yeah it was fun, I mean we had these two girls that came and filmed us (well they are actually women I should say, not girls), and they came in a couple of times a week and filmed and then the rest of it was us doing it. It was cool because, you know, we just tried to have fun with it and also it’s cool to watch back. Like when we got our copies of the CD I watched it, and a couple of months from now or something I’ll watch it again and be like ‘oh yeah, I remember that, that was really fun’.

E. For all of the people who are here tonight, maybe more so for the people that haven’t heard your music before, what would you like them to take from it and get out of your music?
D. Well, I would like people to be like ‘wow, they were really good, that was cool, I’m gonna go check them out’. You know, I don’t know what more there is to ask, if people haven’t heard the band hopefully we won’t suck tonight and we’ll be good and they will buy the record and come see us when we come back.
E. So is the plan now just to continue touring?
D. Yeah we’ve pretty much got from now until the beginning of April planned out, and then after that we’ll see. We’re gonna come back for just five or six shows I think at the beginning of February and then we’re gonna do this, the Taste Of Chaos, in the US for two months, and then I’m sure that we’ll be back over here at least another two or three times on this record. Hopefully things will go well!
E. Well best of luck, and I really did enjoy your album.
D. Thank you, that’s awesome, I appreciate it.

Justin leaves

by Jo

So, the day has come we didn’t want to see. Justin announces he’s left The Darkness. Not leaving, left. According to the short announcement, the rest of the band are in shock, and they were hoping he wouldn’t actually go.. which is why, apparently, we heard about it after the fucking Sun. AGAIN. That’s not FUCKING GOOD ENOUGH. Ahem.

For whatever reason, he’s gone. It’s been 18 months since he said that he was considering leaving during the furore involving Frankie’s departure. In my view, some of the reasons for that near loss probably still stand. His recent rehab for cocaine/alcohol addiction (and/or) apparently worked so well that he’s too clean for rock now, if you believe some of the things I’ve read today. Bollocks. Justin needs to rebuild everything he has, now. Things don’t become starry the minute you finish rehab, and he has the bulimia spectre to deal with too. That boy has worked his guts out for this band since Dan signed him up on Millenium Eve. He’s given everything he has, as a crowd pleaser, showman, comedian, musician and brilliant composer. He’s taken jibe after jibe after jibe, been ridiculed, satirised, stalked, been the object of contempt.. it’s just so not easy to take. He may have invited some of that, but he dealt with it as he should, pouring scorn on those who criticise for a kick, who look for copy, not truth. Shame on you all.

Those of us who love him know his worth. His talents should not be allowed to burn out, and they would quite possibly have done, with the added pressures of the new album and touring on the horizon as well as British Whale’s album to release. Those on their own would have been daunting enough straight out of the Priory, without any other problems. And everyone has more than a couple.. The whole truth will out, eventually, one day. To be honest, it doesn’t matter. Justin’s mental and physical health DO. SixSister wish him all the good things he needs to have, and look forward to anything he wishes to do in the future.

Justin’s genius has gone from TD, on a sad day for all darklings. He wasn’t the band, for us, but he was.. its eccentricity. If the band stays together (too much shock to know what to do next, though Richie is billed as taking over the frontman role, which would be interesting.. and would work) it will be different, but we’ll be there. For the Darkness ethos of seriously rocking fun. For ourselves, the darkling community. And for the three lads that are left, giving every support they need.

On a personal note, I’d like to add that Justin has both been kind and has completely humiliated SixSister in the past. However, it is a measure of his star quality, his talent, and everything about him that has kept us impressed by him, and left us able to write this final emotional, heartfelt tribute to someone who brought us all together in the first place. Good luck. Our thoughts go with you, sweet, funny, sexy Justin, and thank you.

Where we are

by Jo

So.. an odd couple of months. Justin went into The Priory, and as far as we know, is still receiving treatment. Precisely what for is also unknown, but drink, drugs and bulimic tendencies do not make happy bedfellows. I’m sure they’ll all get their proper share of attention in his programme. Jus is usually brutally honest about himself, I’ve noticed. There’s probably far more to it than that too, who knows what’s going on in Justin’s life.. What we want to know is that he’s alright and getting good care. He’ll always have our support, and tahnk the lord no one’s bleating about the third album being held up.. a good thrashing would probably be administered if they did. If there ARE any darklings that have actually visited The Priory, then that’s a damn shame. He’s not in a sideshow – IMO that’s not really an appropriate way to show support. All love to family and friends, from everyone, as has been said so many times on forum.

Richie has been on hols, swanning about Europe and getting his new tatt coloured in.. it should all be lovely and healed by now. Runs his own Myspace, too..

Dan is apparently very busy, with something that will be revealed in due time. The British Whale album producing? On an OU course? Having a baby? Training to be a football coach? A TV series? Oooo I could go on speculating for ever (and I was!). Whatever it is, it’ll have the perfectionist touch. Rob says he’s working hard in the studio in deepest Norfolk. Jolly good show.

Ed’s been seen out and about, as usual. I wonder what he thinks of his old T shirt being sold for £26?

Update from the North American Tour petition – it’s at 800 names at the last hearing, probably loads more by now.

The admin office address changed.

Apart from that, the usual silliness on forum, the odd spat.. we’re waiting patiently and hopefully for news. That boy means a lot to us.

Nothing else to report right this min.. We will, as soon as..


The Boyfriends album review

by Emma

Released on October 2nd, The Boyfriends’ self-titled debut album is a collection of thoughts and wonderment by writer and frontman Martin Wallace. Bold and brave are the lyrics and subject matters chosen, and most are easy to identify with.

Brave Little Soldiers bursts into full swing with a quick pop beat and vocals that are individual and calming. I don’t generally like comparisons to other bands but if you imagine the feel of Stone Roses crossed with Morrissey you would be close to the feel of The Boyfriends. That’s not to say that they sound like either of these artists though. Speak Less and Listen is a candid and lighthearted memo to those who just don’t seem to stop talking and may be slightly overbearing. British Summer Time is a funky pop observation of summer park life, complete with funny lyrics that make you laugh because you know they are so true. A Fearless Heart is a slower but still cheerful tune, picking up on the good points of almost-there love affairs. The simplicity of the tune is lovely and so easy to enjoy.

Track five, Remember, kicks up the pace again and is a jolly and melodic ode to fond memories. Adult Acne takes a sadder tone, delving into feelings of loneliness when it seems that you might never find that someone to love you. The bouncing bassline keeps the pace and so the overall mood doesn’t sink too low. Once Upon A Time is a bittersweet track about leaving behind those that mean most to you. The pace is up and the tone is cheery though and it’s a nice singalong pop track. Wonders Never Cease is an amusing little song, again an observation of life with a cute happy outlook. This one is another simple track with great results. Next track No Tomorrow is a message to people to not get caught up in sadness when life knocks you down. An optimistic and spirited tune. I Love You was the first single to be released and a brave one at that, as the track says much, much more than people often do. It’s a whole-hearted declaration that throws caution to the wind and with a strong riff and heavier drums than on most of the other tracks it’s a winner. The closing track There Is Always Hope is a simple message that needs no explanation. The track features prominent thick drums which suit the slower pace of the track.

This band embodies a great attitude and spirit that is often bypassed by today’s bands, and I found the album refreshing and uplifting.

Dan Sartain album review

by Emma

Join Dan Sartain

Behold the new album from Dan Sartain! The young ‘Ivory Godfather’TM releases Join Dan Sartain on 2nd October 2006 to high acclaim.

Dan’s slick tones and exceptional outspoken outlook brings us another collection of high-class tracks not to be dismissed. Smooth and compelling are tracks such as the wonderful Flight Of The Finch, The World Is Gonna Break Your Little Heart, the first single released from the album the grand Replacement Man and Second Coming. Storyteller supreme is Dan Sartain and the wise within his words belies his young age of 23.

Jiggy, wild and dramatic are tracks such as Drama Queens, imagination fodder Gun vs. Knife which inspires the imagination to happily conjure western movie-esque scenes packed with lines such as ‘well I know he’s got that pistol and he waves it in his hand’ and liberating cries. Hangers On is a fast and furious tune with lyrics that pack a punch or two.

Calm and collected are the righteous Thought It Over, the delightfully dark cover of Besa Me Mucho, as well as other favourties I Wanted It So which flows wonderfully with a killer riff and plenty of ‘woah woah’s and ‘yeah yeah’s. Indian Ink is fantastically dramatic with tumbling guitar and an almost tribal drumbeat.

Join Dan Sartain…you would be crazy not to, so sit back and take it in.

Gossip single review

by Emma

Standing in the Way of Control

Gossip are all set to release the title track from their forthcoming album on 2nd October 2006, and are setting their sights on success. Standing in the Way of Control is a catchy dance floor shaker, with a beat that you can’t help moving along with accompanied by Beth Ditto’s giant but ever so soulful vocals. The song is a reaction to the denial of civil partnerships in the US and has been heralded an anthem by clubbers across the world.

Gossip are on to a winning formula with this upbeat and modern style, and I’m looking forward to hearing what else this band can do.


Hicks Milligan-Prophecy single review

by Emma

The Good, The Bad And The Iceberg

Atomic Duster Records see the release of debut EP The Good, The Bad And The Iceberg on 16th October. So, what are my first impressions of Londoners Hicks Milligan-Prophecy?

Monkey See, Monkey Lifestyle is the name of the first track on the EP, and is uptempo, jolly and quite funny. The highlight of the track is undoubtedly the clever lyrical content…which is rather odd to say the least. Second track King Herod’s Baby Milk is slow and quite uneventful. Again the lyrics carry the track. Final track Pro-Celebrity Prostitution has a bit more of a kick with some eighties keyboards and an unapologetic attack on vocals. If you like jangly-sounding songs, this might be your cup of tea.

Are these guys and gals having a laugh? You bet they are!

IV Thieves single review

by Emma

The Day is a Downer

IV Thieves debut with EP The Day is a Downer on 9th October 2006. The Texan quartet deliver a small collection of hooky although less than cheery songs by taking basic harmonies and understated vocals and allowing them to breathe without the need for fancy fretwork or such complications.

The Day is a Downer forms track one, and is a moody tale of the monotony that can seem to swallow life. The music itself is fairly jolly and provides a nice contrast. The easy vocal style makes for easy listen and easy learn which I think will help the songs catch on with airplay. Catastrophe follows a similar formula except the backing music and tone of the song I sunnier. Chase Me Off/Out is slow and building, the chorus catchy but the lyrics still saddening and a little brooding. IV Thieves seem to have the knack of writing unhappy lyrics but keeping the overall tone and mood higher to keep the listener from the depths of depression!