Rock 'n' Roll Times
sábado, octubre 12, 2024
New Music: The Centre Cannot Hold
viernes, octubre 11, 2024
New Music: Evil Woman
jueves, octubre 10, 2024
New Music: A Good Time Pushed
New Music: La Champions Y El Mundial
miércoles, octubre 09, 2024
Rocktrospectiva: The Masterpiece "Hats" Turns 35
Released on 8 October 1989, "Hats" was the second studio album by Scottish band The Blue Nile, the album came after a prolonged delay in which an entire album's worth of work was scrapped, the Blue Nile released Hats to rave reviews. It also became the band's most successful album, reaching number 12 on the UK album charts and spawning three singles: "The Downtown Lights", "Headlights on the Parade", and "Saturday Night".
Having finished promotion work for their debut album A Walk Across the Rooftops, the group's record company Linn Records were keen to have a follow-up record, and in early 1985 sent the band to a house in the golfing resort town of Gullane near the Castlesound Studios where the previous album had been produced. However, sessions for the new record hit problems almost immediately. The band did not yet have enough material to make another album, and with the group forced to share a house and having to spend all their time in close proximity with each other, arguments developed among the homesick band members. Exhausted and stressed, their problems were compounded when Virgin Records, to whom Linn had licensed the Blue Nile's records, began legal proceedings against Linn Records, demanding new material. the band was living away from home, no money, miserable, getting sued. We were absolutely zonked, the record company weren't pleased and everyone around was starting to think, this record is never going to get made. It was exhausting.
After almost three years in the studio which produced virtually nothing, having begun and scrapped several songs, then the Blue Nile had no option but to return home to Glasgow; back in familiar surroundings and freed from time constraints, Buchanan overcame his writer's block, while Robert Bell and Paul Joseph Moore began putting musical ideas down on a portastudio. As a result, when the band was finally able to return to Castlesound in 1988, the ideas for the album were already in place and according to Buchanan, "we knew exactly what we were doing. We actually recorded the rest of Hats super quick honestly, half of Hats was, like, a week.
The album was released in October 1989 simultaneously in both the United Kingdom and the United States: since the Blue Nile was essentially unknown in the US in 1989, the cover artwork for the US release of the album was slightly modified for marketing reasons, with the band's name in larger letters. As a promotional tool, A&M Records—who distributed Hats in North America—took out a full-page advertisement in Billboard magazine offering a free copy of the CD to anyone who called a toll-free number which was provided.
Hats peaked at number 12 on the UK Albums Chart. Three singles were released from the album: the first, "The Downtown Lights", was released in September 1989 and peaked at number 67 on the UK Singles Chart, followed by "Headlights on the Parade" in September 1990 which reached number 72, and "Saturday Night" in January 1991, which reached number 50. In the US, Hats peaked at number 108 on the Billboard 200. "The Downtown Lights" reached number 10 on the Billboard Hot Modern Rock Tracks chart in early 1990, becoming the group's only single chart entry in that country.
martes, octubre 08, 2024
Rocktrospectiva: The Conceptual "Nightlife" Turns 25
Rocktrospectiva: The Goth Classic "It'll End In Tears" Turns 40
lunes, octubre 07, 2024
The Compilation: Tomorrow's Here Today "35 Years Of Lightning Seeds"
Kicking off with their classic debut single "Pure", this really is a greatest hits compilation worthy of the title from a band who have sold over 8 million albums. Across 19 tracks the compilation features Lightning Seeds favourites including 'The Life of Riley', 'Change', 'Lucky You', 'Sense', 'All I Want', 'Sugar Coated Iceberg', 'You Showed Me', '3 Lions' and more.
Tomorrow's Here Today: 35 Years Of Lightning Seeds Track List:
1. Pure
2. Emily Smiles
3. My Best Day
4. Lucky You
5. Waiting for Today to Happen
6. Sense
7. Perfect
8. Change (Single Version)
9. Life's Too Short
10. Sugar Coated Iceberg
Disc 2
1. The Life of Riley
2. All I Want
3. You Showed Me
4. What If
5. Marvellous
6. Ready Or Not
7. The Nearly Man
8. Like You Do
9. 3 Lions
In Memoriam: The Iconic Dutch Player "Johan Neeskens" Has Died Aged 73
Johan Neeskens, the iconic Dutch player who scored the first-minute penalty to put the Netherlands ahead in the 1974 World Cup final against West Germany, has died at the age of 73. Neeskens was taken ill while working for the Dutch football association’s World Coaches programme in Algeria.
According to the KNVB said in a statement that he died on October 6th., after medical intervention was unable to save him. A truly magnificent midfielder with Ajax and Barcelona, Neeskens was renowned for his ferocious shooting and equally ferocious tackling, as well as his stamina and versatility. Ajax team-mate Sjaak Swart once said he was "worth two men in midfield".
He moved to Barcelona in 1974 after winning three European Cups with Ajax, shadowing Johan Cruyff and earning himself the nickname Johan Segundo (Johan the second). But he was far from a second fiddle, playing in two World Cup finals for the Netherlands and scoring 17 international goals in 49 appearances.
His penalty in the first minute of the 1974 final in Munich was famously scored before a single German player had touched the ball, but Oranje eventually lost the match 2-1. Neeskens was also in the team that lost the 1978 final 3-1 to another host nation, Argentina. The player spent five years at Barcelona and then followed in Cruyff’s footsteps again, this time to the United States where he spent five seasons with the New York Cosmos. He finished his career in Switzerland, which became his home for the rest of his life.
He spent the second part of his career as a coach, working as Guus Hiddink’s assistant in the Dutch team that reached the semi-finals of the 1998 World Cup.Two years later he took charge of NEC Nijmegen, leading them to their first European appearances in 20 years in 2003, but the following year he was sacked for poor results.
Even if you finish second, you can still win over the world with the way you play," he said. "That was our legacy, the fact that people still talk about it today. We should be proud of that."
sábado, octubre 05, 2024
Primicia: Instant Psalm