Wednesday 25 June 2008

Lars Hollmer

Lars Hollmer   
Artist: Lars Hollmer

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   Folk
   Avantgarde
   



Discography:


XII Sibiriska Cyklar and Vill du Hora Mer   
 XII Sibiriska Cyklar and Vill du Hora Mer

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 13


Utsikter   
 Utsikter

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 17


Andetag   
 Andetag

   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 16


Vendeltid   
 Vendeltid

   Year: 1987   
Tracks: 14


Tonoga   
 Tonoga

   Year: 1985   
Tracks: 15


Fran Natt Idag   
 Fran Natt Idag

   Year: 1983   
Tracks: 16


Vill Du Hora Mer   
 Vill Du Hora Mer

   Year: 1982   
Tracks: 15




In the old age since Lars Hollmer first got together with his friends to play music in late-'60s Sweden, it seems improbable that his primary goal has been tilt stardom. For one thing, there is his pick of instruments, with the piano accordion looming large among them. Although certain accordionists possess all over the age acquired a flower child seal, from the internationally acclaimed nuevo tango master Astor Piazzolla through famed but lesser-known squeezeboxers like New York City denizens Guy Klucevsek (a Hollmer confederate in Accordion Tribe) and Andrea Parkins, the squeeze box believably suffers from the tarriance images of Lawrence Welk polka schtik, provoking snickers from the narrow wHO remain clueless about how forward-thinking, and indeed radical and radical, piano accordion music tin be.


Second, Hollmer is most nearly identified with a melodic style that suffers from nearly universal hoots of derision -- progressive careen -- although to claim he fits comfortably in a number of acts such as Emerson, Lake & Palmer, Yes, and King Crimson would sure bespeak a misapprehension nearly the nature of his prowess. For if in that location is one quality that Lars Hollmer's music lacks, it would be largeness, a assay-mark of reformist rock in large persona responsible for the style's critical drubbing. Still, if you must shoes Hollmer in a box, it appears that for almost citizenry reformist rock will do, and that mightiness lead some to brush off him out of hand, without tied gift him a listen.


And finally, there is the very heat, familiarity, and even innocence of Hollmer's music, which gives avant-gardists of the omniscient variety a reason to turn a deaf ear. For although he makes music that lavatory be harsh and fifty-fifty a bit disturbed at times, with pugnacious textures, quirky instrumentation, and odd time signatures, Hollmer's compositions tin can besides be tuneful and accessible, sometimes tricky, and ofttimes disarmingly lovely. These are non the qualities many avant-gardists look for as indicators of forward-thinking music. One more come across against him.


Something that seems to be working in his favour, however, is perseverence, although that parole has a connotation of toil and struggle totally inappropriate in Hollmer's case. Rather, as the decades run, he seems to be enjoying himself besides often to stop, and although that aforementioned stone stardom is likely to stay elusive, Hollmer seems to have garnered sufficiency in the way of world-wide cult position to regain musical collaborators -- and aegir although comparatively little audiences -- from Quebec to Japan. He has even been known to make a rare raid into the U.S.A. -- a hotbed of vanguard prog rock piano accordion music if in that location of all time was one -- and find himself faced with unexampled post-concert fans scrambling to buy up all the KRAX-label CDs he's brought with him from the Chickenhouse.


The Chickenhouse, by the way, is the emplacement where near of Lars Hollmer's recorded music has been made, either through the thaumaturgy of overdubbing many Hollmers on a wide array of instruments or by Lars and friends, beginning with his '70s compatriots in Swedish avant-prog and far-out jazz-rock optical fusion, Samla Mammas Manna and their offshoots such as Zamla Mammaz Manna and Von Zamla. Located outside of Uppsala, Sweden, the Chickenhouse is a transcription studio apartment -- and too Hollmer's menage -- where the first incarnation of the Samlas assembled in 1969-1970 to disk the band's initial, eponymous album. The ring was a trio at that point, featuring Hollmer on keyboards along with bassist Lars Krantz and drummer Hans Bruniusson. Although it might have been difficult to envision in those early days, Hollmer, Krantz, and Bruniusson would find themselves back at a rebuilt Chickenhouse studio near 30 days afterwards, recording a brand-new Samlas CD, Kaka (form your own conclusions some the rubric), along with guitarist Coste Apetrea. Compared to the other three bandmembers, one power call in Apetrea a congener neophyte to the crimp, although the operative word would be "relative," since Apetrea first joined the group in 1972.


Throughout the 1970s, Hollmer was topper known for his work under the Samla/Zamla umbrella, in groupings that featured him in a prominent part as co-composer and strongly fusion-oriented electric keyboardist, merely non "leader" per se. The music miscellaneous prog and jazz-rock elements with stylistic groundless card game ranging from kooky nonsense vocals to atmospherical liberate improvisation, an adventurous enough combining for the chemical group (after undergoing a name change to Zamla Mammaz Manna and adding guitar player Eino Haapala as a surrogate for the temporarily departing Apetrea) to join an collection of European avant-prog bands -- including Henry Cow, Univers Zero, and Etron Fou Leloublan -- under the Rock in Opposition umbrella. Given that Samla/Zamla LPs (on the Silence pronounce) were principally usable in the United States through specialized mail order outfits like Wayside Music (world Wide Web.waysidemusic.com, still a good source for Hollmer recordings), most stateside listeners first heard Hollmer and other Zamla members through their affair in Fred Frith's Soberness album (released in the States on Ralph Records), half of which was recorded at the Chickenhouse in August 1979. The album miscellaneous the Henry Cow guitarist's skewed sonic explorations with a discrete European folk dancing feel, to which Hollmer and company were authoritative contributors.


From March to June 1980, the Zamlas recorded and released Familjesprickor (aka Syndicate Cracks), which was according to the liner notes "made during a period of transition," in the lead to music "which is not as optimistic and happy as it used to be." As it off out, this would be the concluding Zamlas appearance on record until Kaka was released in 1998 (the band re-formed in the early '90s only it took until 1998 for the grounds to plow up on saucer). In the early '80s Hollmer would plow his attention toward Von Zamla and to his own solo efforts, which would reveal steady artistic growth.


With the cracks in the Zamla family unit finally prima to the group's dissolution, Hollmer and Haapala (maybe becoming a Lennon & McCartney or Becker & Fagen of Swedish avant-prog) coupled with two members of eccentric person French avant-popster Albert Marcoeur's ring to manikin the Von Zamla quartette and cover waving the flag of folk-flavored instrumental experimental and avant-prog rock (with possibly a bit of fusion and neoclassicism thrown into the mix for variety's sake). In 1982 the first Von Zamla album, Zamlaranamma, was released, and the group soon expanded to a sise lineup, touring Europe and transcription a second gear album, No Make Up!, at the Chickenhouse in May and August 1983. As of the mid-2000s, the most wide distributed papers of Von Zamla is the live CD entitled 1983, recorded alive in Bremen and released by Cuneiform in 1999. As Hollmer says in his enthusiastic liner notes, the band toured by omnibus and played a vast array of instruments, including various keyboards, guitar, bass, accordion, melodica, drums, orchestral bells, bassoon, hautbois, English horn, and band modulator, not to mention such percussive devices as "homemade plate," "metal pin-filled cans," and "bottles of different kinds."


And although he notes that Von Zamla "had TREMENDOUS FUN!!," Hollmer was at this time commencement to sincerely asseverate himself through his solo efforts asunder from the band, kickoff with 1981's 12 Sibiriska Cyklar, which he had recorded altogether solo at the Chickenhouse in June and October of 1980 and March of 1981. Vill du Hora Mer, the showtime vent on Hollmer's KRAX label, followed in 1982; then came Från Natt Idag in 1983 and Tonöga in 1985. Hollmer sang and played near all the instruments on these albums (all recorded at the Chickenhouse), which ranged from strong and familiar folk-flavored songs to godforsaken yet melodious and focused subservient compositions that defied categorisation. Meanwhile, Von Zamla stone-broke up in flow of 1984, briefly re-forming with an altered lineup in 1985 before splitting up for upright.


As it off out, however, 1985 was an important year for Hollmer, marking the formation of his first group as a loss leader, the Looping Home Orchestra. The LHO toured Europe in 1986 and 1987, during those days as well recording the fifth KRAX-label album, Vendeltid, at the Chickenhouse with a five-man card. Vendeltid was a high water line for Hollmer, retaining all the charm, melodiousness, and imaginative rhythms of his earlier solo efforts (non to reference his solve with the Samlas) with music of sometimes haunting and aery lulu, with tones somewhere 'tween the lightness of Penguin Cafe Orchestra and the darkness of Univers Zero. Selections from the five-spot solo Hollmer releases of the eighties, including Vendeltid, were later compiled onto the 1993 single-CD set entitled Lars Hollmer 80-88 (later reissued as The Siberian Circus), and well illustrate his artistic increment during the ten. In the disc's liners, Fred Frith far-famed the futility of assignment stylistic descriptors to Hollmer, indicating that, like all great composers, Hollmer's work touches the auditor at a deeper degree.


"Like Astor Piazzolla, Lars Hollmer is a severe composer working in a popular traditional language and one wHO defines his own price," Frith wrote. "Sometimes Lasse's frenzied skittishness and infectious enthusiasm pay way to the nigh smooth-spoken formula of our implicit in forlornness that I know of," Frith continued. "This is no small gift."


It is in Hollmer's compositions at this time that i begins to hear the echo of classical works of a wizardly humour -- Saint-Saëns' Aquarium from Le Carnaval stilboestrol Animaux for model -- but with a countrified quality entirely abstracted from the concert granville Stanley Hall, as if the (in his event Hungarian) folks themes Bartók discovered and secondhand in his compositions had been wrested aside from the graeco-Roman setting and returned to their earthier points of ancestry, piece likewise somehow maintaining a present-day feel. And yet Hollmer's music was not only a facile appropriation of folk themes to rock music in the manner that proggers "rocked the classics" -- his music kept up an legitimacy, originality, and depth of feeling that the far more than unglamorous rock bands rarely even hinted at.


In 1988 the original LHO played its last concert, but new incarnations of the radical would follow, and Hollmer would proceed to pen newfangled compositions for the tout ensemble. In 1992 the fourth version of the group consisted of Hollmer, Haapala, Krantz, and Frith along with keyboardist/percussionist Olle Sundin and Montreal multi-instrumentalist Jean Derome; this band performed at the 1992 Festival International de Musique Actuelle de Victoriaville in Quebec and and then toured Europe in 1993; selections recorded at FIMAV and on the European circuit were released on Door Floor Something Window: Live 1992-1993 on the Victo mark in 1994. In many ways, the recording delineate a culmination of Hollmer's work as a solo artist to date, with dynamic and igneous live performances and off-kilter sonic touches wedded inseparably to the composer's redolent melodies and overarching compositional sense -- only thither would be far more to issue forth. By 1996 Hollmer would be a member of Accordion Tribe, an outside quintette of accordionists including Guy Klucevsek, Maria Kalaniemi, Bratko Bibic, and Otto Lechner; the grouping would concertise widely in Europe and Canada and release 2 acclaimed CDs. And in 1997 Hollmer would finish recording -- at a revamped Chickenhouse (the original studio had been torn down in 1992) -- a new solo CD entitled Andetag, which was released the following year.


Featuring music composed betwixt 1993 and 1996, Andetag was yet some other acme for Hollmer, paradoxically comfy and ambitious, traditional and cutting edge, with all of the diverse stylistic touchstones -- and singular musical personality -- one had come up to expect from a Lars Hollmer album. Again, to the highest degree of the instruments were played by Hollmer (squeeze box, piano, keyboards, melodicas, and percussion) along with contributions from bassist Wolfgang Salomon, fiddler Santiago Jimenez, drummer Hans Bruniusson, and Von Zamla/Univers Zero bassoonist/oboist Michel Berckmans. In 1999 Andetag won a Swedish Grammy Award, and as part of the awarding Hollmer was cited as follows: "To a whale in the Swedish musical companionship...from Samla Mammas Manna to 'Boeves Psalm' to the new CD Andetag...there's always rattling music coming from the Chickenhouse." Hollmer also began a new project in 1999, aggregation many of the same musicians as had appeared on Andetag along with Coste Apetrea (on banjo!), Matti Andersson (on transverse flute), and Kalle Eriksson (on trumpet) for the recording of the neoclassic chamber music-influenced Utsikter, released in 2000 and a worthy followup to Andetag.


Meanwhile, the on-again, off-again Samlas had been beckoning, and in fall of 1998 Hollmer, Krantz, Bruniusson, and Apetrea were back together at the Chickenhouse for the recording of Kaka, a sometimes powerful, sometimes goof transcription including live concert material from 1993-1998 and voice over "comments and interpretations" for the uninitiate by a "teller" named John Fiske. The album was released in 1999, merely in November of that year Bruniusson, wHO had been with the Samlas from the very beginning 30 old age antecedently, relinquish the band. As it turned out, Samla Mammas Manna would carry on afterward some communication theory 'tween Uppsala and a peradventure surprising locating, Japan. In 2000 Hollmer received an invitation from clarinetist Wataru Ohkuma and Ruins drummer Tatsuya Yoshida to perform with them in Tokyo. Off he went.


The head trip to Japan pronounced yet another turn in Lars Hollmer's long musical travel, as he united with Ohkuma, Yoshida, and others (notably fiddler Yuriko Mukoujima) to form a new band -- which power be considered a suitable successor to the Looping Home Orchestra -- entitled SOLA. In December 2000 Hollmer performed a number of concerts at Tokyo venue Mandala-2 with this supporting players, and was impressed enough by the experience to return to Japan during summer and fall of the following yr for more concertizing and the transcription of a CD, which was released in 2002 with the title SOLA: Lars Hollmer's Global Home Project. And with drummer Bruniusson bypast from Samla Mammas Manna, Yoshida agreed to bring together the now legendary avant-prog quartette as his replenishment, bringing an sharp and half-crazed Ruins partake to the Samlas' intelligent. The now Swedish/Japanese Samlas pot be heard on the fourteenth KRAX label firing, High-priced Mamma, recorded live (from a unmarried DAT recorder in the audience, from the sound of it) in Uppsala on May 16, 2002. The magnetic disk is in particular illustrious for including a drawn-out track recorded in 2001 at some other Uppsala venue -- featuring the quartette of Hollmer, Apetrea, and Ruins' Yoshida and Hisashi Sasaki, "Fredmans Session 2" is more improvisational in nature than most of the Samlas' recorded yield, thus far remains dynamic and focussed, with a high energy level and a signified of aim that never wanders. Keeping the SOLA connection alive, Hollmer returned to Japan in the give of 2003 to do and criminal record in duo with fiddler Mukoujima; some of the results of this sexual union can be heard on the mini-CD Live and More, the fifteenth KRAX release.


And later on acting with the Looping Home Orchestra and with Accordion Tribe in Victoriaville, Hollmer has kept up his Quebec connections as well. In August and September of 2004 he visited Quebec once over again, qualification an accordion festival appearance in a trio with Jean Derome and drummer Pierre Tanguay, and too performing double at an intimate auberge near the petite Quebec village of St. Fortunat, once with Derome and Tanguay and once with the tierce supplemented by La Fanfare Pourpour, a 19-piece baseless circusy vainglorious band with a street carnival sensibility and friendly, nubbly charm. Hollmer performed in duet with Michel Berckmans at the April 2005 Gouveia Art Rock Festival in Portugal, and both Hollmer and Berckmans joined Montreal avant-prog mainstays Miriodor onstage at the festival as well. Hollmer too contributed squeeze box to Miriodor's double-CD Parade, released on Cuneiform in May 2005; he recorded his parts in Sweden and added them to Miriodor's compositions through an approach unthinkable when the Chickenhouse resident first-class honours degree picked up a squeezebox -- sending work in progress euphony files back and away across the Atlantic on CD-Rs. And Hollmer returned to the Festival International de Musique Actuelle de Victoriaville in May 2005 for another Quebec performance with La Fanfare Pourpour, an wellbeing and rollicking thus far warm and emotionally piquant concert of music penned by Hollmer and orchestrated by Derome, including some young compositions with at least a little angle of the lid to FIMAV's avant-garde mental attitude. In October 2006 Hollmer returned to Quebec to record Karusell Musik with the Fanfare Pourpour, and the album was released as a joint project of the Krax and Monsieur Fauteux M'Entendez-Vous? labels during give of the undermentioned class.


It's not toilsome to envision Hollmer acting at a common people festival, sway festival, vanguard fete, perhaps most fitly a world music festival (not to reference an squeeze box festival, of course), and upon hearing his euphony it's likewise easygoing to understand how he renders such labels meaningless. Given his many stylistic influences joined with a quite singular persona that unites them all in such compelling fashion, the doors to many audiences should be open broad to him, rather than locked and bolted. But unluckily that's ofttimes non the casing in a world of personalized music boxes. Sooner or later, one hopes that many more listeners will catch on, and that Lars Hollmer's appeal volition stretch forth beyond cult status, however enthusiastic his international audience mightiness be. Then once again, such things power not matter to him -- better to focus on the marvelous euphony that still remains to be made.





Ladytron

Arghoslent

Arghoslent   
Artist: Arghoslent

   Genre(s): 
Metal: Death,Black
   



Discography:


Incorrigible Bigotry   
 Incorrigible Bigotry

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 7




 






Tuesday 24 June 2008

Kate Nash, Panic At The Disco for 'Abbey Road' programme

Kate Nash, Panic At The Disco, The Black Keys and Mary J. Blige are among the artists slated to perform on the second season of 'Live From Abbey Road', which kicks off next week.

The weekly programme will air on the Sundance Channel every Thursday at 10:00pm EST/PST. Each episode features live performances and interviews filmed at London's legendary Abbey Road Studios. The artists will discuss their work and techniques for making music.

Also lined up for this season are Def Leppard, Matchbox Twenty, Dashboard Confessional, James Blunt, Rascal Flatts, Herbie Hancock with Corinne Bailey Rae and Melody Gardot, Diana Krall, Stereophonics, Sheryl Crow, David Gray, Suzanne Vega, Colbie Caillat, Joan Armatrading, and Manu Chao.

--By our Los Angeles staff.
Find out more about NME.

George Carlin becomes first posthumous Mark Twain honoree

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts said on Monday it would go ahead with plans to present its Mark Twain Prize for American Humor to the late George Carlin, making him the first comedian so honored posthumously.


Carlin, the counter-culture figure famed for his provocative stand-up routines on such subjects as profanity, drugs and the demise of humankind, died on Sunday at age 71 after complaining of heart problems earlier in the day.


The Kennedy Center had only announced days before that Carlin was selected as the 11th recipient of its prestigious Mark Twain award, an honor bestowed annually at a black-tie gala televised on the Public Broadcasting Service network PBS.


"He was thrilled that he was chosen ... and today was the day we were supposed to talk on the phone about potential guests," said Mark Krantz, an executive producer of the show. "So he was very much into it and was already agreeing to do some press, and we were getting ready to get the nuts and bolts worked out when this terrible thing happened."


After consulting with Carlin's family and PBS, the Kennedy Center decided to go forward with the ceremony as scheduled on November 10. The show, taped at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., will air on PBS at a date to be announced.


Last year's honoree was actor-comedian Billy Crystal. The first in 1998, was Richard Pryor, the only other recipient who is now deceased. Others have included Whoopi Goldberg, Lily Tomlin, Bob Newhart, Steve Martin, playwright Neil Simon and "Saturday Night Live" producer Lorne Michaels.


For Carlin's ceremony, producers will stick with the usual format described by Krantz as "a funny celebration of a career," with friends and peers telling stories and anecdotes and introducing clips of his work.


"He has a 50-year career to look back on," Krantz said. "He was the first host of 'Saturday Night Live.' He did 130 Johnny Carson shows, he did 13 or more HBO specials, he's won four Grammys."


The Mark Twain prize is named for the 19th-century novelist, essayist and humorist whose given name was Samuel Clemens, author of such classics as "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer" and "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn." 

Paris Hilton Tries To Buy Puppy For Photo Shoot?

We all know that puppies aren't just for Christmas and now Paris Hilton has learned that they aren't just for photo-shoots either.

The dog-collecting heiress was reportedly stopped from buying a Yorkie pup by employees of The Puppy Store in LA because they decided it was "an impulse buy".

It's believed that she was en route to a photo-shoot and thought the pooch would up the cute factor.

An insider tells Page Six, "(She) wanted a puppy in the picture with her so it would look cuter."

And when she was knocked back, Paris allegedly went
"ballistic".

The source adds, "She started screaming, 'I love my puppies! I want my baby!'”

Hangmen

Hangmen   
Artist: Hangmen

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   



Discography:


Metallic IOU   
 Metallic IOU

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 10




 





Brian Aneurysm

Sadist

Sadist   
Artist: Sadist

   Genre(s): 
Metal
   Metal: Death,Black
   



Discography:


Lego   
 Lego

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 15


Crust   
 Crust

   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 10


Tribe   
 Tribe

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 8


Above The Light   
 Above The Light

   Year: 1993   
Tracks: 8




 






I Don't Stand a Ghost of a Chance with You w.Diana

I Don't Stand a Ghost of a Chance with You w.Diana   
Artist: I Don't Stand a Ghost of a Chance with You w.Diana

   Genre(s): 
Jazz
   



Discography:


Stan Getz   
 Stan Getz

   Year:    
Tracks: 1




 






Tommy Von Sach

Tommy Von Sach   
Artist: Tommy Von Sach

   Genre(s): 
New Age
   



Discography:


World Dreams   
 World Dreams

   Year:    
Tracks: 11




 





Bonus material on US release of new Charlatans LP