Thursday, 24 July 2008
Death of the CD update
It was sad to say goodbye to my CDs, but necessary. And the vinyl stays, obviously. The money went straight onto new clothes. Wearing nice clothes is nice, but I despise trawling around shops, feeling hideously exposed in front of changing room mirrors, navigating around gaggles of teenage girls etc. But my wardrobe was thinning to the point where I had about three daytime outfits, so off on an internet shopping trip I went. To Etsy, naturally, which is full of people with mad skillz.
Above is my favourite new Etsy purchase, from Victoria n' Bird. The picture doesn't do it justice, but it's a fabulous pinafore dress beneath that gold scarf (from Brussels). And I know I need a haircut. Sorry, Mum.
And the back. Mad skillz indeed! I'd wear it everyday if I could. But I spilt my dinner on it earlier. OOOPS! Maybe I should just wear black dresses from now on. It might be a bit clammy on hot days, but at least I wouldn't have to over-think outfits.
Monday, 21 July 2008
Went to a party and wanted to dance all night
Thursday, 17 July 2008
Seven inch shambles
Tuesday, 15 July 2008
News news news
I zoomed down to London for an interview, and at Euston was greeted by a Mini Lamb Banana:
Liverpool city centre has been filled with Mini Lamb Bananas, and when I walk around it feels like there's always one in my peripheral vision. So imagine my excitement to find one on the platform at Euston. Look at those teenage girls admiring the other side. It's like a little bit of Capital of Culture dribbled Down South.
Well, it wasn't all that exciting. But cute.
Anyway, on Friday night I went to The Kazimier. It's an old dancehall recently converted to a cool new, DIY venue and one letter away from the name of a Polish king. It was a pagan tudor evening of delight called Karneval, featuring splat the rat, straw and cans of Carlsberg. There was also a brass ensemble playing covers of disco classics like You Got The Love. All of which was officially brilliant, especially as dancing around to live music is approximately 35% more enjoyable than dancing around to records. Here's a pic of the floor in the ladies:
There's probably similar nights happening all the time in London, but who could afford to go to them? Not just financially, but who's got the time? There might be less going on in Liverpool than the capital, but it makes you appreciate it more.
Friday, 4 July 2008
Still Fergie from the block
Here she is in the video for Big Girls Don't Cry, reaching for something...
...ah yes, a black, flippy phone (I don't know phones).
Here she is in the video for Glamorous. And how glamorous your whole life is, Fergie. During breaks filming a Bonnie and Clyde Hollywood smash, you have assistants primping your hair and make-up. They're also ready to hand you your white, horizontal flippy phone.
I promise that is Fergie's hand and acrylics clutching some sort of phone in the video for Fergalicious
Here she is texting that hot ticket Johnny in the video for Clumsy, using a Motorola. I know it's a Motorola because the logo is prominently displayed
The video for Black Eyed Peas' Let's Get It Started opens with another Motorola suspended in mid-air. In the background, a figure approaches...
Surprise, it's Fergie! She then bellows down the mouthpiece to some hapless person. That's a lot of phones. It's almost as though she's trying to sell me something...
Maybe I need a big, shiny car?
Hmm, I could do with a Louis Vuitton trunk for my summer holidays.
I hear that MAC is a really good make-up brand.
That's it! I'm off to the shops for some own-brand Fergie cookies!
St John's box office watch
I know it sort of looks like there's a small ghost trapped inside, but there really isn't. You can just about see that upcoming gigs include Bon Iver, Crystal Castles, Hot Chip and Jeffrey Lewis. But what about the Liverpool side?
The Australian Pink Floyd Show, Michael Ball and a Beatles Day. And what sound like poor quality emo bands at Academy/Barfly (Multi Purpose Chemical and Glamour of the Kill). And a mere three gigs scheduled for "Uni & Korova". These two venues are nowhere near each other. They're not even in cahoots! The far right column is the top sellers, and it reads 'Creamfields, Creamfields, Creamsfields, Ministry of Sound'.
St John's box office doesn't represent all the DIY gigs and so on, but from this investigation it's Manchester 1, Liverpool nil.
Thursday, 3 July 2008
Once upon a time at the Adelphi
When I first heard about the show, I thought it was going to be a site-specific performance in the faded splendour of the Adelphi hotel (which never recovered its reputation from that BBC fly-on-the-wall documentary). But it's a big, cheesy musical at the Playhouse, with jazz hands aplenty and fully exploiting that revolve stage.
Set against the hotel's glamorous 1930s heyday, Once Upon A Time At The Adelphi is yarn about love conquering all. So just like any other musical, really. And as a musical, I'd give it 8/10 because it was full of high kicks, sparkly frocks and money notes. But for me, I'd give it 4/10. Because it felt like every other Oh Eight event that's been approved by about 100 organisers, all keen to ensure nobody could possibly feel offended. And because the message seemed to be that if you want to make something of your life, get out of Liverpool. And, most of all, because it was a big cheesy musical.
Wednesday, 2 July 2008
The power of Bjork
The gig drought
On Saturday, Black Kids play to a sold out crowd at the Barfly, but I'll be out of town. Beyond that, there's not much filling up my calendar. I might be tempted by Glasvegas at the Barfly next week, and possibly Ben Folds at the Academy, but his piano-bashing, Americana geek rock has never really done it for me. Korova have east Londoners The Brute Chorus in a couple of weeks, but their MySpace doesn't convince me.
The still fairly new Echo Arena seems to host crowd-pleasing concerts every night, including Westlife, Meat Loaf, Crowded House and a Sugababes/Bjorn Again double whammy. Even The Wombats are playing there in November. I know it's a home-town gig for them and they're popular with the young folks, but isn't 10,000 tickets asking a bit much?
What is going on with the live music moratorium? Maybe this is because of the Echo Arena, and Liverpool is now only allowed a strict quota of gigs in some sort of karmic balance.
Tuesday, 1 July 2008
New single releases
The song: Cola Coka by Rosie Oddie and the Odd Squad (7 inch)
The verdict: Celebrity ornithologist and ex-Goodie Bill Oddie once made an appearance on Never Mind The Buzzcocks where he was ripped apart by Simon Amstell. The show's editing looks incredibly selective: had the BBC2 panel show attempted a character assassination on Bill? But then someone told me about Rosie Oddie, and I realised that maybe Bill had been attempting to promote his daughter's band but ended up looking like a berk. Anyway, Cola Coka is about London hipster consuming drugs. It's a mess of a song, dressed up in a fake leopard fur jacket trying to skank to The Specials. Probably all right if you believe Camden to be a magical place.
Take It To The Chorus says: It's one of those excessively sugary biscuits from foreign parts dressed up too much, like an Oreo cookie sprinkled with hundreds and thousands.
The song: When You Touch Me by Freemasons
The verdict: I don't usually delve into commercial dance tunes because, mostly, they all seem constructed to shift ringtones and 'too hot for TV' video downloads. And to keep the dancefloors of clubland excited with the promise of sex. Because that's all this is about: sex, sex, sex. Freemasons are such prolific remixers (having waved their magic, hit-making remix wand over Beyonce, Solange, Kelly Rowland etc) they possess a secret formula for saleable pop song. When You Touch Me powers along with a pounding 4/4 beat, monster hooks and an absentee female vocalist (I'm assuming the svelte model in the video couldn't produce such sounds). Even if you brain says no, your body can't resist on a basic, physiological level. The video is based on a scene from Sweet Charity, which is officially the best musical ever.
Take It To The Chorus says: A plain digestive. You know what you're getting, and it's still satisfying.
Other singles potentially clogging up the charts this week include the rather lovely Paris is Burning by Ladyhawke, chipmunk-heavy Stay With Me by Ironik and folky-dolky Caravan Girl by Goldfrapp.