Sunday, March 8, 2009

With or Without You


U2 irrelevant?

Such a statement will and has certainly piss off many loyal U2 fans.

Nevertheless, Sun Media's Darryl Sterdan seems
to think so. Sterdan believes the Irish based band who once dominated the 80s and early 90s has somewhat lost its shine.

True or otherwise, its only for you to find out. With or without U2, the music scene will move on.

Here's the piece by Sterdan published on Canoe-Jam! not too long ago.

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Mustapha

OF faith, religion and culture. Here's the New York Times take on young Muslims finding their identities through music.

Young Muslims Build a Subculture on an Underground Book
By CHRISTOPHER MAAG
Published: December 22, 2008

CLEVELAND — Five years ago, young Muslims across the United States began reading and passing along a blurry, photocopied novel called “The Taqwacores,” about imaginary punk rock Muslims in Buffalo.

“This book helped me create my identity,” said Naina Syed, 14, a high school freshman in Coventry, Conn.
A Muslim born in Pakistan, Naina said she spent hours on the phone listening to her older sister read the novel to her. “When I finally read the book for myself,” she said, “it was an amazing experience.”
The novel is “The Catcher in the Rye” for young Muslims, said Carl W. Ernst, a professor of Islamic studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Springing from the imagination of Michael Muhammad Knight, it inspired disaffected young Muslims in the United States to form real Muslim punk bands and build their own subculture.
Now the underground success of Muslim punk has resulted in a low-budget independent film based on the book.
A group of punk artists living in a communal house in Cleveland called the Tower of Treason offered the house as the set for the movie. The crumbling streets and boarded-up storefronts of their neighborhood resemble parts of Buffalo. Filming took place in October, and the movie will be released next year, said Eyad Zahra, the director.
“To see these characters that used to live only inside my head out here walking around, and to think of all these kids living out parts of the book, it’s totally surreal,” Mr. Muhammad Knight, 31, said as he roamed the movie set.
As part of the set, a Muslim punk rock musician, Marwan Kamel, 23, painted “Osama McDonald,” a figure with Osama bin Laden’s face atop Ronald McDonald’s body. Mr. Kamel said the painting was a protest against imperialism by American corporations and against Wahhabism, the strictest form of Islam.
Noureen DeWulf, 24, an actress who plays a rocker in the movie, defended the film’s message.
“I’m a Muslim and I’m 100-percent American,” Ms. DeWulf said, “so I can criticize my faith and my country. Rebellion? Punk? This is totally American.”
The novel’s title combines “taqwa,” the Arabic word for “piety,” with “hardcore,” used to describe many genres of angry Western music.
For many young American Muslims, stigmatized by their peers after the Sept. 11 attacks but repelled by both the Bush administration’s reaction to the attacks and the rigid conservatism of many Muslim leaders, the novel became a blueprint for their lives.
“Reading the book was totally liberating for me,” said Areej Zufari, 34, a Muslim and a humanities professor at Valencia Community College in Orlando, Fla.
Ms. Zufari said she had listened to punk music growing up in Arkansas and found “The Taqwacores” four years ago.
“Here was someone as frustrated with Islam as me,” she said, “and he expressed it using bands I love, like the Dead Kennedys. It all came together.”
The novel’s Muslim characters include Rabeya, a riot girl who plays guitar onstage wearing a burqa and leads a group of men and women in prayer. There is also Fasiq, a pot-smoking skater, and Jehangir, a drunk.
Such acts — playing Western music, women leading prayer, men and women praying together, drinking, smoking — are considered haram, or forbidden, by millions of Muslims.
Mr. Muhammad Knight was born an Irish Catholic in upstate New York and converted to Islam as a teenager. He studied at a mosque in Pakistan but became disillusioned with Islam after learning about the sectarian battles after the death of Muhammad.
He said he wrote “The Taqwacores” to mend the rift between his being an observant Muslim and an angry American youth. He found validation in the life of Muhammad, who instructed people to ignore their leaders, destroy their petty deities and follow only Allah.
After reading the novel, many Muslims e-mailed Mr. Muhammad Knight, asking for directions to the next Muslim punk show. Told that no such bands existed, some of them created their own, with names like Vote Hezbollah and Secret Trial Five.
One band, the Kominas, wrote a song called “Suicide Bomb the Gap,” which became Muslim punk rock’s first anthem.
“As Muslims, we’re not being honest if we criticize the United States without first criticizing ourselves,” said Mr. Kamel, 23, who grew up in a Syrian family in Chicago. He is lead singer of the band al-Thawra, “the Revolution” in Arabic.
For many young American Muslims, the merger of Islam and rebellion resonated.
Hanan Arzay, 15, is a daughter of Muslim immigrants from Morocco who lives in East Islip, N.Y. In the months after the Sept. 11 attacks, pedestrians threw eggs and coffee cups at the van that transported her to a Muslim school, she said, and one person threw a wine bottle, shattering the van’s window.
At school, her Koran teacher threw chalk at her for requesting literal translations of the holy book, Ms. Arzay said. After she was expelled from two Muslim schools, her uncle gave her “The Taqwacores.”
“This book is my lifeline,” Ms. Arzay said. “It saved my faith.”
pic by David Ahntholz for The New York Times
Michael Muhammad Knight, the author of “The Taqwacores,” which a college professor has called “The Catcher in the Rye” for young Muslims.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

School's Out


WHAT a sight!

Youngsters from the Paul Green School of Rock Music jammed their hearts out at the Community Theatre at Mayo Center for the Performing Arts in Morristown, USA over the weekend.

The kids, mostly aged 12 to 15, showed much maturity on the drums and slide their way all over the stage with their brilliant solos.

Check here for more images of the concert.

Hopefully, more communities would encourage their younger generation to take up such healthy activity - and ensure the rock genre is not forgotten...or even worse...made into pop-rock!

Photo by Tim Farrell / The Star-Ledger:13-year-old Jimmy Cicchino of Long Valley was among the young rockers who performed at Morristown's Community Theatre Sunday afternoon during a concert by students from the Paul Green School of Rock Music. Cicchino sang the Beatles' "Helter Skelter."

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Battle of Evermore?


WHICH should it be? The ever famous Guitar Hero World Tour or its excellent contender Rock Band 2?
While gamers and rock freaks continue the debate, check out Blake Snow's thoughts on both games here.
These are some of the pros and cons of both games:
'World Tour' pros:
- Improved instruments
- More aggressive track list
- Better tablature makes you feel like more of a rock star
'Rock Band 2' pros:
- Better band chemistry makes you feel like a group
- Easier setup, no buggy hardware
- Unmatched online play
Rock on dudes!!

Saturday, November 1, 2008

For Those About To Rock, We Salute You!

THE band from Sydney says it all.


In fact, AD/DC are the only band from Down South to have ever made an impact on the global charts. Dominating both the American and European markets with worldwide sales of 200 million to date, it is no wonder the electricfying rockers have plugged their fans over the years for good.

Pic shows Former vocalist Bon Scott (centre) pictured with guitarist Angus Young (left) and bassist Cliff Williams (back), performing at the Ulster Hall in August 1979.

Here's an article by the Chicago Tribune on the band's gig at the Allstate Arena last night.

No gimmickry—just hard-driving music at its elemental best

The Allstate Arena was filled with fans wearing fluorescent devil's horns Thursday night.

It could only mean one thing: Angus and Malcolm Young and their fellow lovably ugly mugs in AC/DC were back in town for the first time in seven years.

The band, which returns Saturday for a second Allstate Arena show, delivered a celebration of all that is great about rock 'n' roll at its most defiantly elemental, as if the quintet had reduced the arena show to a ritual that could outlast time.

No mood lighting, no ballads, just a hot white glare under which Angus Young stripped out of his trademark schoolboy outfit and played his guitar like a kid equally enamored of Chuck Berry and the Chicago blues.

When he wasn't emulating Berry's duckwalk, he was lifting flamboyant riffs from Buddy Guy, and then tossing in his own roughhouse tone, abetted by a formidable wall of amplifiers. Malcolm Young literally had his brother's back, standing off Angus Young's right shoulder, his right leg twitching, his right hand unfailingly driving the band like a big machine locked in with bassist Cliff Williams and chain-smoking drummer Phil Rudd.

For AC/DC, hard-edged, no-frills rock 'n' roll is a family business. Before Angus and Malcolm picked up their guitars in earnest, their older brother George Young was scoring huge hits in Australia with his '60s garage band the Easybeats.


The Easybeats' quintessential song, "Friday on My Mind," is the key to understanding why AC/DC exists and why it endures: "Monday morning feels so bad/Everybody seems to nag me/Come on Tuesday I feel better/Even my old man looks good/Wednesday just won't go/Thursday goes too slow/I've got Friday on my mind."

By the time the song hits the chorus, the narrator is celebrating in the big city with a girl on his arm. This was shot-and-a-beer, blue-collar music, perfect for blowing off steam after a long week of picking up calluses at the factory.


AC/DC picked up on that impulse while touring the Australian bar scene of the mid-'70s, and added a dose of theatricality with Angus Young's leering schoolboy antics. The band's act hasn't changed much since; it has only gotten bigger, with 200 million records sold.


A simulation of a train wreck opened the show, pyro-punctuated "TNT," and singer Brian Johnson dangled from a giant funeral bell. Many of these moves, including Angus Young's half-Monty striptease during the burlesque blues of "The Jack," have been part of the band's set for decades.

These applause-getting gestures only served to reinforce the ritual power of a band that still sounds brutally loud, and pummels its audience with a smile. The 18-song concert depended primarily on the sheer force generated by two guitars, bass, drums and Johnson's screech. The songs have aged well, peerless celebrations of that "Friday on My Mind" sense of release from the everyday grind.

A handful of songs from "Black Ice" (the band's chart-topping new release) broke up a string of classics, mostly from the '70s. The only misstep was "Anything Goes," which demanded more melodic singing from Johnson than he was capable of delivering.Otherwise, there was no arguing with the sheer force of "Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap," "Let There Be Rock," "Highway to Hell" and "Thunderstruck."

Johnson doesn't run around much, but he wiggles as he walks. This music has the essential roll in its hips, and we have Malcolm Young and his buddies in the rhythm section to thank for it. While Angus Young was out front sweating buckets for the arena's entertainment pleasure, the sullen, often overlooked back line was making everything swing like a wrecking ball.

Monday, October 27, 2008

Devil With A Cause

Whatta guy!

Hometowner Kid Rock and his Made in Detroit apparel line are working with Wayne State University to help start a college scholarship fund for area music students.

The Detroit clothing company will create 2,500 limited edition T-shirts bearing the school's name and the "Made in Detroit" logo that features a factory worker in silhouette, carrying a large wrench.

Wayne State hopes to raise $25,000 from the T-shirt sale initially, university spokeswoman Francine Wunder said.

-courtesy of freep.com-

Here are some of the awards won by Robert James Ritchie, or better known as Kid Rock, thus far.


Awards/Nominations
Grammy Awards
1999 Best New Artist (Nominated)
1999 Best Hard Rock Performance for Bawitdaba (Nominated)
2000 Best Hard Rock Performance for American Bad Ass (Nominated)

Academy of Country Music
2003, Vocal Event of the Year: "Picture" (Nominated)

American Music Awards
2008, Favorite Male Pop/Rock Artist (Nominee Currently)
2003, Favorite Male Pop/Rock Artist: (Winner)
2003, Favorite Pop/Rock Album: Cocky (Nominated)
2001, Favorite Male Pop/Rock Artist: (Winner)
2000, Favorite Alternative Artist: (Nominated)
2000, Favorite Pop/Rock New Artist: (Nominated)

Billboard Music Awards
1999 Best New Artist (Winner)
1999 Best Hard Rock Performance for Bawitdaba (Winner)
1999 Best New Hard Rock Artist (Winner)

MTV Video Music Awards
2001, Best Male Video: "Cowboy" (Nominated)
2001, Best Rock Video: "Cowboy" (Nominated)
2000, Best Male Video: "Bawitdba" (Nominated)
2000, Best New Artist: "Bawitdba" (Nominated)

Teen Choice Awards
2003, Choice Love Song: "Picture" (Nominated)
2003 Choice Hookup Song: "Picture" (Nominated)

Detroit Music Awards
1999 Outstanding National Album for Devil Without A Cause (Winner)
1999 Outstanding National Single for I Am The Bullgod (Winner)
1999 Outstanding National Single for Bawitdaba (Nominee)
2000 Outstanding National Album for History Of Rock (Nominee)
2000 Outstanding National Single for American Bad Ass (Winner)
2000 Outstanding National Single for Cowboy (Nominee)
2000 Outstanding National Duet for Higher with Robert Bradley (Winner)
2000 Outstanding National Spokesperson (Winner)
2001 Outstanding National Album for Cocky (Nominated)
2001 Outstanding National Single for Forever (Nominated)
2003 Outstanding National Single for Picture (Nominated)
2004 Outstanding National Album for Kid Rock (Nominated)
2004 Outstanding National Single for Cold And Empty (Nominated)
2004 Outstanding National Single for Jackson,Mississippi (Nominated)
2006 Outstanding National Album for 'Live' Trucker (Nominated)
2008 Outstanding National Album for Rock N Roll Jesus (Winner)

Saturday, October 18, 2008

The Battle of Britpop

How bearded butterflies flew out of Oasis rock

While Oasis (pic) are influenced by The Beatles, many younger bands are now influenced by the Manchester group.
As the Gallagher brothers prepare to return to Cardiff for two gigs, Karen Price speaks to a Welsh band inspired by them

IN a promo shot for his band, Butterflies With Beards, Titch Harvey is wearing a T-shirt with the word “Oasis” emblazoned across his chest. It is, of course, in homage to the Manchester group which Harvey says inspired him to dip his toe into the murky waters of the music industry.

“There isn’t a band who is a bigger influence on us as songwriters than Oasis,” says Harvey.
“We admire their passion for writing no-messing rock’n’roll anthems.
“Oasis were the band that got me interested in music. Before hearing Oasis, I was only listening to the Sunday chart show (on Radio 1), and never really had an interest in any particular genre of music – I just listened to what was in the charts.
“But Oasis introduced me to rock’n’roll, and to indie music.”

Fronted by Liam Gallagher, Oasis – who last night announced they will play the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff on June 12 next year – played their first gig in August 1991. At the time, Gallagher’s elder brother Noel was working as a roadie for the Inspiral Carpets but went to see the group play their Manchester gig. He soon joined them and it is his songwriting talents which helped catapult them into the big time.

Debut album Definitely Maybe, released in 1994, was an instant commercial success. But it was the follow-up, (What’s The Story) Morning Glory, which was at number one in the UK album chart for 10 weeks and produced anthems like Wonderwall, Don’t Look Back In Anger and Some Might Say, which really sealed their reputation as serious song-writers.

Harvey, 23, who is from North Cornelly, near Bridgend, was among those who became a huge fan of the band.

“I was young at the time of discovering Oasis, so I can honestly say that they have played a big part in me becoming who I am.
“I love rock music with a passion and, if it wasn’t for my heroes Noel and Liam Gallagher, I wouldn’t be fronting my own rock band, and writing my own rock anthems.”

Butterflies With Beards is made up of Harvey (bass and vocals), his elder brother Tatz (guitar) and cousins Geraint Kinsey (drums) and Matthew Kinsey (guitar).

“The name came from a phoney phone call I once made to Geraint’s stepfather. I used to phone him up and shout random things down the phone, anything that came into my head. One day Geraint was sitting in his living room with his stepfather, and the phone rang. Geraint remembers him picking the phone up, pausing, then slamming it down, shouting in frustration, ‘What the hell is butterflies with beards?’ That was the random thing I chose to scream at him that day.”

As Butterflies With Beards start out on the road to success, their heroes Oasis are still going strong today, despite a few line-up changes. As well as their current UK tour, they have just released their seventh album, Dig Out Your Soul.

“Dig Out Your Soul inspires me in new ways,” says Harvey. “It’s also their attitudes we admire – not the fighting, arrogant attitude you often see portrayed in the media, but their attitude towards music.
“They’ve only ever written the music they want to write, and have always stayed true to themselves.
“And even Noel’s recent comments about shows like The X Factor are opinions that we share.
“Oasis have always been about the music, about rock’n’roll. Oasis are famous for being heavily influenced by The Beatles, and have never denied it. And if one day we can make it in this business, I will proudly say that we’ve been heavily influenced by Oasis.”

Oasis will play two gigs at Cardiff International Arena next week as part of their UK tour and Harvey will be among those in the crowd.

“I can’t wait – it’s going to be an amazing show, I’m sure. I advise anyone who’s never caught them live to make sure they do this time.”

Oasis play Cardiff International Arena on October 23 & 24

Butterflies With Beards play Buffalo Bar, Cardiff, on October 23 and the Swn Festival, which takes place at venues across Cardiff from November 14 to 16

-courtesy of Western Mail-