Monthly Archives: October 2008

Shaolin Wheel of Life @ Plymouth Pavilions

shAfter their mind blowing performance last November, the Shaolin Monks, The Ultimate Masters of Kung-Fu return to  Plymouth Pavilions on Tuesday 28 October 2008 with ‘Shaolin Wheel Of Life’.

The show will be jam-packed with incredible feats of strength and skill, which will delight the whole family. Twenty  Shaolin Monks and five young trainees have travelled all the way from the Shaolin Temple in China, to demonstrate their martial arts expertise.

In a crescendo of kung-fu sequences, the Shaolin Monks are lifted aloft on sharpened spears, splinter wooden blocks with their bare hands, break bricks on their heads and fly through the air in a series of incredible back flips and spins.

This show is the Shaolin legend made real and is definitely NOT to be tried at home!

To book tickets contact the Box Office on 0845 146 1460 Or visit www.plymouthpavilions.com

Exclusive Interview with Francis Rossi (Status Quo)

statusquo2008 is set to be a true year of celebration as Status Quo hit the road for a UK tour and unleash “Pictures: 40 Years of Hits” a multi-format collection spanning their incredible chart career which started forty years ago with the “Pictures Of Matchstick Men” single.  Each version of “Pictures: 40 Years Of Hits” – which is released on 3rd November 2008 offers differing configurations of content. Quo are also going to release their first ever Christmas single “It’s Christmas Time”, they will have released an incredible 75 UK singles and the 4CD format will offer for the first time ever re-mastered versions all of the original radio edits of Quo’s singles on one package.  Quo have reached a serious milestone and the occasion is truly being marked!

I managed to get an exclusive insight with guitarist & singer Francis Rossi to find out what is the real “Status Quo”

Francis Rossi gave us the lowdown on their 33rd album (yes that’s 33rd), In Search of the Fourth Chord. Plus why they are still rockin’ all over the world after more than 40 years in the business…

It has been 40 years that Status Quo has been in the business, where have the years gone?

Funny you should say that, I don’t know I have been sitting here this afternoon thinking that and sometimes you get a bit myth’d but then I get all enthused.  I have been doing a solo album and we have got all this stuff with the band coming up and that gets me all enthusiastic again. Rehearsals have been great and the band is in great form. When I was younger I just kept my head down and kept going, at the time it seemed the only way I could “steam roller” through what can be a demanding business, don’t get me wrong it has also been very rewarding as well, time just fly’s by, you can blink and miss 10 years, we have had a great time and its not over yet!

How does it feel making music today as apposed to how it was 40 years ago?

I still really really enjoy it, however I was recently asked to do an album no holds barred – back to roots, like Quo used to do, and we thought it was a great idea except Quo don’t write the material like that now as we are not 22 year old men. You get that after such a long time in the business, when we were in our 20s we made records in that environment as 20 year old men, on numerous times people/fans, ect have wanted us to recreate that, it is really hard to go back to any era to recreate a vibe or a certain time in your life. We are always looking to the future and our music at the time is written with that in mind.

You are about to embark on a National UK tour – Do you enjoy the touring side as much as making the records?

When I am this side of a tour – most mornings I wake up with the hump for some reason and I think about the album that I am doing and think about having to start rehearsals – but this happens every year to me and then I get out on tour and some of it is great and some of it is not. Once we get going its great fun, Quo are a popular band and people expect you to constantly come up with new music & ideas and tour every year, we wouldn’t change a thing but the whole industry has its demands on you and sometimes it is no picnic.

I understand that you practice/rehearse a lot?

I practice a lot – we don’t rehearse as a band that much but I do practise a lot.  I recently listened to a new track by Gary Moore, it was 11 minutes long and it was faultless and it made me realise that yes I am better than I was but I still have a long way to go! There is no such thing as perfect playing, technically or live, I first picked up a guitar when I was seven years old. I’d seen the Everly Brothers and thought, I want to do that! So I found a guitar teacher & worked hard from there. Practice makes better. I can still get better now, but will never be perfect.

You are playing in South Devon at Plymouth Pavilions – do you have any connections or associations with the South West?

No none whatsoever – I just really do like playing there.  We have played there a number of times and the people keep coming back and that’s great. One thing over the years, we have always loved playing Plymouth, the city is great and we have always played well and enjoyed the South West.

I understand that for the new tour you are going to have a one-off set list – will you be playing a selection of the classic Quo hits as well?

Yes we will, the set changed quite a bit last year and it is a good little set and we get better each year and usually it works out well, as mix of new songs with a great back catalogue, we have plenty to choose from.

What song will you start with?

Caroline – we always start with Caroline – one way or another!

The new album – how does it compare to other offerings in the past?

Well it is another compilation album and it is 40 years of hits, I think we have stopped comparing and also counting, we do the promotion for any tour/album we are always shocked how much music we have made.

What do you do when you are not making music?

Now that is a problem because I end up sitting around getting frustrated and annoyed – I try to do a five day week and I look forward to the Friday night vibe but I have to be careful not to sit and think about too much – I will sometimes get the mower out or the hedge trimmer or I might clean the Studio – I do like domestic stuff that doesn’t take any brain power at all, I find doing the garden or the house very therapeutic just to potter about and not to concentrate on anything to important. Our success has always been a surprise since the word go. We broke first in 1968; I thought we’d be the last to succeed, but if we did, we wanted at least to continue. The worst thing we could say is that we were a one-hit wonder. We wanted to do this music thing for a career. I didn’t want to become an estate agent or a barman. We are entertainers and we are still doing it all these years later, which makes me very happy.

What does the future hold for Status Quo?

I don’t know – surely the band can’t keep going on and on but as long as Uncle Mick and Uncle Keith keep going out I don’t see why we can’t, we haven’t witnessed rock and roll run out of steam, expire , if you like, its fun and a great way to stay fit. Rock and roll has no boundaries, we are enjoying playing together and we’re looking forward to playing live.

Thanks Francis – Good luck for the forthcoming tour!   What a great incite into one of the great institutions of Rock N Roll,  a true testament to the bands of today,  I wonder how many bands in the top 40 today we will see in 40 years time.  Status Quo proves the fact that music is timeless.

The band will also undertake a UK Winter tour featuring a brand-new one-off setlist packed with hits to mark the occasion and boasting state of the art stage backdrops evoking classic Quo moments, this is a Quo tour like none before.  Tickets for the “Pictures – 40 Years Of Hits” tour are on sale now from 0844 576 5483 or www.livenation.co.uk

The 2008 “Pictures: 40 Years Of Hits” events and releases offer the chance to be part of the anniversary party for true legends of the rock world – put yourself in the frame!

Long may it continue!

Below is a just a few gigs, for a full list of all concerts please visit www.livenation.co.uk or http://www.statusquo.co.uk/

OCTOBER, 2008

  • WEDNESDAY, 01:  BRISTOL COLSTON HALL (0117 922 3686)
  • THURSDAY, 02:  BRISTOL COLSTON HALL (0117 922 3686)
  • MONDAY, 27:  PLYMOUTH PAVILIONS (0845 146 1460)

DECEMBER, 2008

  • SATURDAY, 20:  CARDIFF INTERNATIONAL ARENA (02920 22 4488)
  • MONDAY, 22:  BIRMINGHAM NEC (0871 945 6000)
  • TUESDAY, 23:  BOURNEMOUTH BIC (0870 111 3000)

All tickets are priced £31.50

Tickets available from 0844 576 5483

www.LiveNation.co.uk.

Exclusive Interview: Jim Kerr (Simple Minds)

bobScotland’s Simple Minds evolved from a post-punk art rock band influenced by Roxy Music into a grand, epic-sounding pop band along the lines of U2. The band grew out of a Glasgow punk group called Johnny and the Self-Abusers, which featured guitarist Charlie Burchill and lead singer Jim Kerr.  The current line-up also features Mel Gaynor, Eddie Duffie & Mark Taylor.

As Simple Minds come close to finishing their latest studio album I caught up with Jim Kerr at Rockfield Studios in Monmouth, Wales to find out what has been happening and in some sense of the word a look at the past, present and future.  For many years now Simple Minds have gained the accolade as one of the greatest live bands in the World and the enthusiasm for the band and the music has never been stronger.

Hi Jim, how’s the new album progressing?

We have been recording the new album at Rockfield Studios in the picturesque town of Monmouth.  The studio is steeped in history and in a lot of ways very inspirational, the recording process has gone really well and we are all very pleased with the strength of the songs. I take some time out in the mornings to get some fresh air and exercise and you would be amazed how much comes to you with the music that we have been working on and I think it is a good thing to get some space and get some air.  Sometimes it is really difficult to get all the answers to all the questions, but sometimes when you take a step back the answers just naturally come to you and that is one of the great thing about Rockfield.  We have recorded here at various times in our career and every now and again everything seems to come flooding back, but the album is looking great and the more we get close to completion there is definitely an excitement and a buzz in the air.

Have you any ideas on a title yet?

No not as yet – There is a lot of thought and care that goes into a title and we like to work with our graphic designers. They look at the whole feel of the music and a design structure that fits in well with the songs.  We talk about it on a daily basis but nothing is set in stone yet.

How would you best describe the feel of the songs? Also does the selection of songs have the strength of Black & White? Is there a chance you could be playing the entire album live?

With the collection of songs that we are working on now there is a good feel about the continuity of the music.  Some of the songs flow nicely into each other. Black and White was a strong album that had that natural flow.  Often Charlie will send me a riff or be working on the piano and develop a frame and this often inspires the lyrics, in some cases I have a bunch of lyrics and with some of the brilliant melodies Charlie comes up with, like clouds, some great songs just form themselves.

As regards to playing all of the songs live,  I would say there is every chance that we will play the new album but there is a lot of things that this depends upon – for example – how positively the album is received and more importantly the reaction from the audience.  In the past Simple Minds have always tried to play a few promo gigs for every tour – these are essential in order to get feedback and try to capture the feel for the set that we are playing.

It seems like Simple Minds is as strong as it ever was, would you agree to that?

I totally agree – the camaraderie that we have experienced as a bunch of friends and musicians at Rockfield has been totally uplifting – this has definitely filtered down to the music and the band is as tight as ever and the whole experience at Rockfield has been totally enjoyable.  There is a guy here called Kingsley Ward, he is a huge part of Rockfield Studios and every now and again he will come in and tell us a story about some band or one of the many things that have happened here over the years – Queen recorded Bohemian Rhapsody here and many bands have recorded many many great songs and albums here.  This can be a tricky thing – it can be immensely inspirational but also you can get the opposite and create an immense pressure that you have to keep up to the exceptional standards that Rockfield has become accustomed to over the years.

Will any new songs be played on the 30th anniversary tour later this year?

Possibly not – we are looking at this collection of dates as a journey from the beginning really with everything about Simple Minds.  We are playing our “New Gold Dream” album in it’s entirety.  Even though I am a great believer in looking to the future these concerts are about all the highs of Simple Minds and in this case it is going to be a musical journey – but on the other side of the coin it is hard to imagine that at some point we are not going to play a few new songs and we have a huge back catalogue to choose from.  When playing live it is important to keep the momentum going and sometimes when you throw in a new song between two classics you have got to ask yourself, will we loose the continuity and take that risk of possibly going through a dip but I can assure you that these concerts will be a great experience for us and our die hard fans and something special to celebrate all things Simple Minds.

What kind of plans do you have for the forth coming tour, will it be World wide and what kind of venues would you be looking at?

We are looking at all options and venues for next year.  On the Black & White Tour we kind of wanted to play smaller venues, clubs etc.  Sometimes this can be a really difficult thing to do – you can’t rely on the big production and you are kind of stripped of all the glamour – along with the big stages.

An audience doesn’t care what sort of day you’ve had or whether you’ve been touring for weeks. For them, that show is the one they have been looking forward to for months and that’s a magical inspiration. We have always tried to approach each and every gig as “tonight’s the night” it also raises our game to make every night the best night on the tour.

We made it as a great live band playing small venues and at this particular time in our career we thought it would be a great experience to go back and play the smaller circuit gigs.  With more intimacy and a stripped down, more lean production it gave the music a chance to breath and more often than not these little places were absolutely  jumping – and I have to be honest we all loved every minutes of it.

After all these years does playing live still feel great? How do you see the music industry today? If Simple Minds were starting out would you find it easier or harder? What advice would you give to a young band trying to get their music heard in today’s market?

All of us are getting terribly excited at the moment – we are so looking forward to playing live again.  We built our whole reputation on being a great live band, with talent, enthusiasm and with the determination to succeed and I think that still transpires for today.  The whole structure of releasing a record has changed.  When we first started there was no internet or technology and we would make journalists and representatives from record companies come and see us. We were very persistent in never taking no for an answer and the same applies today.  I think this also applies to the future as well, regardless of how the industry changes and trends that follow – enthusiasm and the will to succeed will always be your most powerful attributes in making any band or musical act succeed.

Finally what does the future hold for Simple Minds?

At the moment we are just putting the finishing touches to the album and then Charlie and I are off to Belgium and Holland to be featured in the Night of the Proms Concerts which we absolutely love.  We get the chance to play some of our best songs with a full classical orchestra and we get to play our music to people that wouldn’t normally come to a Simple Minds concert.  After the Proms gigs we start rehearsals for our 30th Anniversary concerts starting on the 26th November at the MEN Arena in Manchester then after that we have a wee break coming up.  2009 is going to be a very busy year for Simple Minds – the album is being released in the early part of next year and then we are going to do a World Tour.  We will be playing in the UK and all over Europe and then on to North America and then who knows where our music will take us.  We are all looking forward to getting out on the road and doing what we do best – playing our music live.

In 1984 as a young school boy wondering what to do next – I can vividly remember seeing “Ultravox” at Cornwall Coliseum,  for those of the same generation the support band was called “Zerra One”.   This was the first taste of live music which lead to Simple Minds at Milton Keynes Bowl in 1986.   It was one of those pioneering moments in ones life where for the first time I knew that I wanted a career in music – whether it was being a performer or behind the scenes.  The compulsion was overwhelming – to this day I have never experienced anything as powerful as that.  Today, 24 years later as I look around my office which is littered with posters and memorabilia and with countless gigs and concerts coming up,  I can’t imagine what it would be like not to have that inspiration at some point in your life.

Simple Minds are about to embark on their 30th Anniversary Tour which includes playing their pioneering album “New Gold Dream” in its entirety and you can see Jim & Charlie at the Night of the Proms concerts in Europe, for all information and tickets have a look at the website www.notp.com

For all the information you need on tickets and dates for Simple Minds forthcoming 30th Anniversary tour the website is www.simpleminds.com

Steve Coogan @ Colston Hall

Steve_Coogan_poster_imgActor, impressionist and comedian, Steve Coogan is best known as the dry and very British character, Alan Partridge. Alongside being a successful comedian, he has also appeared in various films including; 24 Hour Party People and The Parole Officer which he co-wrote with Henry Normal.

Coogan is one of nine children. He was born and raised in Middleton, Greater Manchester, in a large Irish Catholic family. Coogan started out as a fresh, hip, new stand-up comic and mimic, whilst working in Ipswich, as well as doing voice-over work for adverts and impressions on Spitting Image. In 1988, he did impressions of Prince Charles which featured on the Urban label release “Don’t Believe The Hype” by Acid House artist Mista E. The impressions were also used as jingles in 1988/89 on the Radio 1 FM Friday night dance music show Jeff Young’s Big Beat. He also acted on the observation round on The Krypton Factor in 1989.

He teamed up with Chris Morris and Armando Iannucci, amongst others, on the Radio 4 comedy show On the Hour, where he helped give birth to his most famous creation Alan Partridge. Alan went on to have his own radio show and also appeared on TV in The Day Today and his own chat show, Knowing Me, Knowing You… with Alan Partridge. In 1997 he bounced back with the sitcom I’m Alan Partridge, which was followed by a second series in 2002. Partridge will make yet another triumphant return as part of Coogan’s 2008 stand-up tour, with an Alan Partridge movie in production

The comic will be playing a string of live dates this autumn, under the title Steve Coogan Is Alan Partridge and Other Less Successful Characters.

So far, 40 dates have been announced.  The show boasts ‘a show featuring the characters that have made him a Bafta and British Comedy Award winning comedy legend’ – so is likely to include the likes of Paul and Pauline Calf.

Coogan’s last live show, the 1998 tour The Man Who Thinks He’s It, played 200 performances and was seen by 350,000 people.

You can catch Steve Coogan Live at Bristol – Colston Hall on the 17th & 18th October 2008

For more information/tickets phone 01179223686 or check out the website www.colstonhall.org

The Feeling @ Plymouth Pavillions

feelingThe Feeling, who are just about to embark on a UK tour in November. The tour will see the band bring their hugely entertaining live show to all four corners of the land from Plymouth to Inverness, Southend to Llandudno!

Officially kicking off the UK tour at Plymouth Pavilions on Friday 31 October 2008, this is a welcome return to the city for the band who sold out their Plymouth debut in February 2007.

The Feeling are responsible for producing great pop anthems including ‘Fill My Little World’, ‘Never Be Lonely’, ‘Sewn’ and ‘I Thought It Was Over’

The Feeling’s new single ‘Turn It Up’ from their No 1 album ‘Join With Us’ was released on 14 July.

The Feeling have been playing the major UK festivals over the summer, Glastonbury, T In The Park, and V, and headlining outdoor shows at Somerset House, Clumber Park in Retford and Newmarket Racecourse. They are also did some shows with Bon Jovi on their June stadium tour.

The Feeling are 5 twentysomethings from Sussex and London who love pop music.  Great big no-nonsense, hook-filled, giant-chorused pop music – music for the masses, only intelligent, with sunshine hooks and killer choruses that everyone can hum, from plumbers to professors.

The Feeling are overnight sensations with a bit of a past, cutting their teeth as session musicians on a variety of mainstream and marginal recordings. They’re all from Sussex, except Dan, who’s from London. Paul, Kevin and Ciaran even went to the same school. The Sussex axis of the band have been friends for 13 years. They met Dan and Richard at music college in Croydon 10 years ago, and they’ve been working together in various forms ever since.

Six years ago they went through their ‘Hamburg era’ when they appeared for several seasons in the Alps as a covers band who specialised in versions of Rolling Stones, Kinks, Stevie Wonder and Beatles songs as well as rocked-up versions of 80s hits like ‘Take On Me’ by A-ha, ‘Walk Like An Egyptian’ by The Bangles and ‘Jump’ by Van Halen.

For more information check out the website  www.plymouthpavilions.com

To book tickets contact the Box Office on 0845 146 1460

Graham Russell (PALM FM Presenter)

grahamrussellGraham Russell returns to the air in Torbay and South Devon on Palm 105.5 “It’s been a bit like a school reunion, with so many messages and calls from listeners from the old days. It’s great catching up with a whole group of friends I lost contact with” he says.

Graham moved to Devon 15 years ago from Slough in Berkshire and has presented shows on Plymouth Sound, Lantern FM, South Hams Radio and of course Gemini FM where he was on the drivetime show for seven years.

“Although I’ve been away from radio in Torbay for six years I still been living here all that time and it’s a really nice feeling to get back on air locally with old mates such as Colin Leslie and John Hogarth around too” he explains.

Graham stills keeps in touch though with the old team that have moved on to other careers. “The man eater Selina Ross is still a scary woman who I hear from, plus there’s Susan Porter the travel biker, Sean Burridge and Allison Sixsmith who all very good friends as well”.

Graham has been on air at various stations both in the UK and USA for over 25 years. He says “I never get bored of it as there’s always something different going on or they’ll invent some new studio technology just to keep you on your toes, plus there’s that unknown of what you’ll be asked to do next. In past years I’ve done shows everywhere from the deck of warships to waterpark slides, as well as caves and rooftops and covered everything from the eclipse to 9/11”.

His new time of day on air is a bit of a change for him. Graham says “I’ve just spent two years doing a breakfast show in Kingsbridge so it’s a bit weird getting ready for work at 8pm, as I’ve got used to going to bed around that time”

Apart from radio work Graham has also spent many years as a club dj “I really do miss the club work and may just get back into it as there’s nothing better than watching crowd reactions to some good tunes and seeing everyone having a great time” he says.

As for outside of radio..”I’d love to mention my sporting triumphs and academic achievements but I’m still waiting for those to blossom so in the meantime I’ll stick to territory I know such as partying and enjoying this rather cool part of the world” he says.

Catch Graham on Palm 105.5 every weeknight from 9pm plus Sunday afternoons from 2-6pm.