sábado, mayo 23, 2026

In Memoriam: Rap Star "Rob Base" Dies Aged 59

The legendary rap artist Rob Base, best known for the 1980s hip-hop classic "It Takes Two", has died after a bout of cancer aged 59. The musician, whose real name was Robert Ginyard, created the hit song with his musical partner DJ E-Z Rock, and it is credited with helping to take hip-hop to mainstream success in dance clubs and the pop charts.
 
Base died "surrounded by family after a private battle with cancer" on Friday, just days after his 59th birthday, according to a post on his official Instagram account. "Thank you for the music, the memories, and the moments that became the soundtrack to our lives," it said. "Rob's music, energy, and legacy helped shape a generation and brought joy to millions around the world. "Beyond the stage, he was a loving father, family man, friend, and creative force whose impact will never be forgotten."
 
A Harlem native, Base was part of a hip-hop duo with DJ E-Z Rock, a musical force that sprung to fame in 1988 with the release of It Takes Two. The song quickly climbed to number three on the Billboard Hot Dance/Club Songs chart and was later certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America.
 
The track has been sampled by Snoop Dogg and the Black Eyed Peas, and appeared in films like the 2009 hit romantic comedy The Proposal, starring Sandra Bullock and Ryan Reynolds. It was also featured in the iconic video game series Grand Theft Auto in its San Andreas release in 2004. 
 
His partner; DJ E-Z Rock - whose real name was Rodney Bryce - died in April 2014 from diabetes related complications, aged 56. He and Base became friends in the fourth grade, according to Rolling Stone. They released their first single, DJ Interview, in 1986, before dropping their smash hit It Takes Two.
 
Base told Rolling Stone in a 2014 interview the song's creation was spontaneous and that he was shocked by its success. "With It Takes Two, we were at a friend's house and we were just going through a bunch of records," he said. "We had to go to the studio that night and we didn't have anything prepared, but we found and liked the Lyn Collins sample that night and went to the studio," Base continued. "We didn't think that it would cross over and be as big as it became.

jueves, mayo 21, 2026

New Music: Coming On Strong

            

Bloc Party announce their groundbreaking new album, Anatomy Of A Brief Romance, alongside releasing the first single "Coming On Strong". Produced by the legendary Trevor Horn, Anatomy Of A Brief Romance is a chronological portrait of an intoxicating love affair, from furtive first glances across the gym floor to the gut-wrenching heartbreak of a final farewell. Also is a record unlike any they have ever made before. The first single is the second track on the album, featuring a thumping beat and a woozy guitar riff, accompanied by a video directed by Charlie Pryor

martes, mayo 19, 2026

New Music: Go Fuck Urself

           

Fat Dog come back swinging with '80s banger new single "Go Fuck Urself" the South London come out swinging with the  '80s-tinged "Go Fuck Urself", which centres around airy synths and pulsating electro-pop beats. "Some jokers play the same old game / No one to annoy / Find a mirror and the person to blame,” frontman Joe Love casually sings, before building to the nostalgic, tongue-in-cheek chorus: “Go and fuck yourself/ I’m going to take you all down/ before I take myself". The track is co-produced by Love alongside Oli Bayston and comes with a gritty new music video, which shows Love mentally preparing to enter the wrestling ring according to director Nine Screens.

Rocktrospectiva: Peter Gabriel's Most Accessible Yet Ambitious Work "So" Turns 40

Released on 19 May 1986 "So" was the fifth studio album by the English singer-songwriter Peter Gabriel. After working on the soundtrack to the film Birdy, producer Daniel Lanois was invited to remain at Gabriel's Somerset home during 1985 to work on his next solo project. Initial sessions for So consisted of Gabriel, Lanois and guitarist David Rhodes, although these grew to include a number of percussionists.

Although Gabriel continued to use the pioneering Fairlight CMI digital sampling synthesizer, songs from these sessions were less experimental than his previous material. Nevertheless, Gabriel drew on various musical influences, fusing pop, soul, and art rock with elements of traditional world music, particularly African and Brazilian styles. It is Gabriel's first non-eponymous album, So representing an "anti-title" that resulted from label pressure to "properly" market his music. 

Often considered his best and most accessible album, So was an immediate commercial success and transformed Gabriel from a cult artist into a mainstream star, becoming his best-selling solo release. The album's lead single, "Sledgehammer", was promoted with an innovative animated music video and achieved particular success, reaching number one on the Billboard Hot 100 and subsequently winning a record of nine MTV Video Music Awards. It was followed by four further singles, "Don't Give Up" (a duet with Kate Bush), "Big Time", "In Your Eyes", and "Red Rain".

Preparing for So, Gabriel considered Bill Laswell and Chic's Nile Rodgers as potential producers. He eventually asked his Birdy collaborator Daniel Lanois to stay at Ashcombe and work with him further. Work on the album began in earnest in February 1985, with "We Do What We're Told (Milgram's 37)" as the first song; the first six months would be spent on writing and developing song sketches. The songs were usually recorded in the studio with Gabriel, Lanois and guitarist David Rhodes playing together to a drum machine, based on an idea or chord structure Gabriel had. Lanois recalled they had "a nice starting point [as] in that kind of scenario, it's not a good idea to have a lot of people around because you get nervous that you're wasting other people's time".

Once they had the songs' foundations, bass and drums were overdubbed - primarily with Tony Levin, and Manu Katché, respectively. According to Lanois, he usually liked "to capture as much of the live playing as possible in any session, but these [sessions] were really the reverse... It was like overdubbing the rhythm section on top of a demo. That was the spirit of the record."

Towards the end of recording, Gabriel became "obsessed" with the track listing and created an audio cassette of all the song's beginnings and ends to hear how the sounds blended together. He wanted to have "In Your Eyes" as the final track, but its prominent bassline meant it had to be placed earlier on the vinyl edition as there is more room for the stylus to vibrate. With later CD releases, this restriction was removed and the track was placed at the end of the album. So was completed in February 1986 and cost £200,000 to make. It was overdubbed at Power Station Studios in New York (as well as all horn section parts having been recorded there), despite Gabriel considering sending it via a computer-telephone set up, reasoning, "that's a lot of information to send via phone. Isn't it amazing though? You can send a song idea around the world to musicians then beam parts back by satellite".

So has been described as Gabriel's most commercially accessible and least experimental album, one that features pop songs and incorporates art pop and progressive pop throughout. Like his previous albums, its basis is in art rock, although on So, Gabriel develops an increased focus on melody and combines this with elements of soul and African music. Gabriel began with around 30 compositional ideas and 20 recorded tracks, which he later winnowed down to twelve songs that were "within finishing distance". The songs are highly influenced by traditional world music, particularly African and Brazilian music, with Gabriel incorporating rhythms and drum beats from these regions. 

The album opener was "Red Rain" Gabriel wanted the album to "crash open at the front". Despite disliking "metal" percussion instruments, he was persuaded by Lanois to allow the Police's Stewart Copeland to play cymbals and hi-hat on its opener, " Gabriel sangs – in his upper register, with a throaty, gravelly texture – of a destructive world with social problems such as torture and kidnapping. Next "Sledgehammer" was the final track to be conceived. Most of Gabriel's band had packed away their equipment and were ready to leave the studio, but he asked them to reassemble to quickly run through a song he had an idea for. "Sledgehammer" was partially inspired by the music of Otis Redding, and Gabriel sought out Wayne Jackson, whom Gabriel had seen on tour with Redding in the 1960s, to record horns for the track. Opened by a shakuhachi bamboo flute, its beat is dominated by brass instruments, particularly Jackson's horn, and features lyrics abundant with sexual euphemisms.

So's most political statement, "Don't Give Up", was fuelled by Gabriel's discontent with rising unemployment during Margaret Thatcher's premiership and Dorothea Lange's photograph "Migrant Mother". Gabriel ensured the song, which follows a narrative of an unemployed man and his lover, was written as a conversational piece. He initially sought Dolly Parton to portray the woman; although Parton declined, his friend Kate Bush agreed to feature. Bush serves as the song's respondent, she assumes a comforting role and with delicate vocals, sings lines such as "Rest your head/ you worry too much". The album's first side culminates with "That Voice Again", in which Gabriel explores the concept of conscience, examining the "parental voice in our heads that either helps or defeats us". The song was written after Gabriel's initial discussions with Martin Scorsese about scoring The Last Temptation of Christ 

The second part opened with "In Your Eyes" which has been described as Gabriel's greatest love song. Inspired by the Sagrada Família and its architect Antoni Gaudí, Gabriel sings over a drumbeat of only feeling complete in the eyes of his lover. The track features vocal contributions from the Senegalese musician Youssou N'Dour, who sang the song in his native Wolof. Gabriel became interested in the late American poet Anne Sexton after reading the anthology To Bedlam and Part Way Back. He dedicated So's sixth track to her, calling it "Mercy Street" after "45 Mercy Street", a poem released in another posthumous collection. "Mercy Street" is set to one of several Forró-inspired percussion compositions that Gabriel recorded in Rio de Janeiro. When these compositions were unearthed in the studio, they were accidentally played back ten per cent slower than the original recording, giving them a grainy quality that Gabriel and Lanois thought highlighted the cymbal and guitars. It features two harmonious Gabriel vocals; one a shadow vocal an octave below the main vocal. Intended to give a sensual, haunting effect, this was hard to capture except when Gabriel first woke up.

The dance song "Big Time" has funk influences and is built on a "percussive bass sound". Its lyrics satirise the yuppie culture of the 1980s, materialism and consumerism and are the result of Gabriel's self-examination, after he considered whether he may have desired fame after all. "We Do What We're Told (Milgram's 37)" was originally recorded for Peter Gabriel (or Melt). The song relates to the experiment on obedience carried out by the American social psychologist Stanley Milgram, intended as a reference to the obedience citizens show to dictators during times of war.

While "We Do What We're Told" was the final song on initial LP versions of the album, the cassette and CD releases close with "This Is the Picture (Excellent Birds)". "Excellent Birds" was composed with American musician Laurie Anderson. They recorded the song and they filmed music video over a period of three days — which was relatively quick by Gabriel's standards — for inclusion on the 1984 global satellite television broadcast Good Morning, Mr. Orwell.

So was released on 19 May 1986. It topped the charts of seven countries worldwide, including the United Kingdom, where it became Gabriel's second number one album. In the United States, So became one of Geffen Records' most commercially successful releases, peaking at number two and remaining on the chart for ninety-three weeks. In April 1986, "Sledgehammer" was released as the album's lead single and became Gabriel's first and only number one on the Billboard Hot 100, displacing his former band Genesis' first and only US number one "Invisible Touch". The success of "Sledgehammer" can be seen, in part, due to its hugely popular and innovative stop motion music video, designed by Aardman Animations. Gabriel would go on to say in an interview for Rolling Stone that he believed the video exposed So's songs to a wider audience, bolstering the album's success. Two high-charting singles followed, "Don't Give Up", which rose to number nine on the UK Singles Chart and a less successful seventy-nine in America, while "Big Time" peaked at number thirteen in the UK and number eight in America. "In Your Eyes" saw moderate success in America, where it reached twenty-six on the Hot 100, while "Red Rain" peaked at forty-six in the United Kingdom.

So received mostly favourable reviews from music critics. So had "all the usual hallmarks of rhythm and vocals" associated with Gabriel. Other praised the record as Gabriel's most accessible and streamlined album ever", adding that it was "one of the best albums released this year, both commercially and artistically." A record of considerable emotional complexity and musical sophistication" and felt that the mainstream pop music scene would be encouraged to innovate by the album. Althought others  were les positive by saying the album results were mixed. 

Nevertheless, "So" is often regarded as Gabriel's best album, as well as one of the best albums of the 1980s. It enabled Gabriel to transform from a cult artist, acclaimed for his cerebral, experimental solo work, into a mainstream, internationally known star.

So Track List:  
 
1. Red Rain 
2. Sledgehammer 
3. Don't Give Up
4. That Voice Again
5. In Your Eyes
6. Mercy Street
7. Big Time 
8. We Do What We're Told (Milgrams's 37)
9. This Is The Picture (Excellent Birds)

Rocktrospectiva: The Polished But Underrated "Walkabout" Turns 40

Released on 19 May 1986 "Walkabout" was the 4th., studio album by the English new wave band the Fixx, released by MCA Records in the US on 19 May 1986, followed by a UK release on 15 September 1986. The album spawned two singles "Secret Separation" & "Built For The Future", the first single, spent two weeks atop the Billboard Album Rock Tracks chart in July 1986; it was the band's second No. 1 single on the chart.

The album was produced by Rupert Hine, singer Cy Curnin started working on the album while temporarily living in Africa. Walkabout was the first album to include bass player Danny Brown as an official member of the band, the album contained layered, synthesized textures and ponderous songs, in order to displayed a bit more ambition than the average band's album, yet its best moments arrive when the band focused on pop songs, such as the trancy "Secret Separation" and the nice and great tune along "Built For The Future", it was a really good throughout album and the songs aren't repetitive and there was a decent hidden track "Peace On Earth (Do What You Can)" also the band finished off with another great closing song, the ehtreal and entrancing "Camphor". 

Reviews were mixed some nice some other not so really, many praised the album and considered it as a honest effort done by the group so far, marked by a deliberate attempt to 'uncomplicate' the group's sound, without sacrificing the poignancy of the social messages in the songs. Althought others wrote that "the Fixx were capable of creating polished but ultimately passionless and perfunctory pop-funk ... this is not a record that anyone's going to remember five years from now."

Walkabout Track List: 
 
1. Secret Separation
2. Built For The Future
3. Treasure It
4. Chase The Fire
5. Can't Finish
6. Walkabout 
7. One Look Up
8. Read Between The Lines 
9. Sense The Adventure
10. Camphor (with hidden CD track "Peace On Earth (Do What You Can) 

Rocktrospectiva: The Comic Masterpiece "Bigmouth Strikes Again" Turns 40

Released on 19 May 1986 "Bigmouth Strikes Again" was a song by the English rock band the Smiths from their third album The Queen Is Dead. Written by Johnny Marr and Morrissey, the song featured self-deprecating lyrics that reflected Morrissey's frustrations with the music industry at the time. Musically, the song was inspired by the Rolling Stones' "Jumpin' Jack Flash" and centres around a guitar riff that Marr wrote during a 1985 soundcheck.

"Bigmouth Strikes Again" was released as the lead single from the album, bypassing Rough Trade's preferred choice, "There Is a Light That Never Goes Out". The single reached number 26 in the UK Singles Chart and has since seen critical acclaim along with several versions recorded by other artists.

The song began as a lyric written by Morrissey in the summer of 1985. The lyric was the final one of three written about Morrissey's frustration with the music industry, the previous two being "The Boy with the Thorn in His Side" and "Rubber Ring". "Bigmouth Strikes Again" specifically reflected Morrissey's negative experiences with the music press at the time. When asked by the NME about the song, Morrissey replied, "I can't think of one sentence [I regret saying]. We're still at that stage where if I rescued a kitten from drowning, they'd say: 'Morrissey Mauls Kitten's Body'. So what can you do?"

Morrissey intended the lyrics of the song to be humorous; he explained, "I would call it a parody if that sounded less like self-celebration, which it definitely wasn't. It was just a really funny song". Drummer Mike Joyce commented, "What a fantastic title – one of Mozzer's better ones. And with this song, you can see why he made journalists cream their pants. Listen to the lyrical content. He was a one-off." Johnny Marr based the song's music on a guitar riff he had written during a soundcheck of the band's 1985 tour. He described the song as being "as close as getting to the sound of my heroes as we came".

Initially the band had asked Kirsty MacColl to contribute backing vocals, but Marr found her harmonies "really weird" and they were left off the final recording. Instead, the backing vocals were recorded by Morrissey and altered to a higher pitch. This is credited to "Ann Coates", a reference to the Manchester district of Ancoats.

Though "Bigmouth Strikes Again" was initially planned to be released as the debut single from The Queen Is Dead in autumn 1985, by spring 1986, Rough Trade head Geoff Travis pushed for the band to release "There Is a Light That Never Goes Out" instead.

"Bigmouth Strikes Again" was released as a single in May 1986, with the non-album instrumental song "Money Changes Everything" as the B-side. Marr later reused the music from "Money Changes Everything" for Bryan Ferry's 1987 hit single "The Right Stuff", which featured new lyrics from Ferry.

The single version's sleeve cover contains a photograph of James Dean by Nelva Jean Thomas. On the 12″ single, the band quoted Oscar Wilde's famous line "Talent borrows, genius steals" on the runout groove.

There was a live version of the song appeared as the closing song on the band's only live album, Rank. Another live version, recorded at the Greek Theatre in Berkeley, California, in August 1986, was released in 2017 to promote a collector's edition of The Queen Is Dead.

"Bigmouth Strikes Again" has seen critical acclaim since its release. Several publications have ranked the song as one of the band's best songs. Others called as their most iconic song. A comic masterpiece and one of the most outstandind song ever recorded by the iconical band. 

Track List: 
 
7" RT192 
1. Bigmouth Strikes Again
2. Money Changes Everything
 
12" RTT192
1. Bigmouth Strikes Again
2. Money Changes Everything
3. Unloveable 

lunes, mayo 18, 2026

New Music: Back Of A Truck

           

Rostam's new album American Stories is out now and shares the follow-up single "Back Of A Truck." It comes with beautiful video directed by Antony Muse, starring Milo Cassidy and Offering Rain on a road trip rom New York City to Provincetown, MA. It's instilled in me the fervent desire to fall in love and go on a road trip. Rostam co-wrote "Back Of A Truck" with Tobias Jesso Jr. The song blends the twang of pedal steel courtesy of Daniel Aged with Middle Eastern microtonal melodies played by Amir Yaghmai on electric saz.

domingo, mayo 17, 2026

News/Reissues: Pixies Complete B-Sides

Pixies have announced an expanded and remastered reissue of the 2001 compilation Complete B-SidesThe original set collected the bonus tracks from the indie-rock pioneers' classic first run of singles, with highlights including a raucous live cover of Laurel Near's "In Heaven (Lady In The Radiator Song)", originally taken from the 1988 single, "Gigantic"; the Kim Deal-sung "Into The White" (B-side of Here Comes Your Man, 1989); and a fantastic cover of Neil Young's "Winterlong", first released on Dig For Fire (1990).

Complete B-Sides: 1988-97 has been remastered from the original analogue tapes and includes an additional six live tracks. The first two – "Planet Of Sound" and "Tame" were originally released on the 1991 ‘Alec Empire’ single and were recorded at the band’s 26 July 1991 Brixton Academy gig. The remaining four bonus live tracks – "Debaser", "The Holiday Song".  "Cactus" and "Nimrod's Son" – were first released on the 1989 promo Pixies Live and were recorded on 10 August 1989 at Cabaret Metro, Chicago (they were also released as the 1997 EP Debaser: Live, released to promote the band’s Death To The Pixies compilation)

The reissue will be the first time Complete B-Sides has been reissued on vinyl – a 2LP set on either black or clear vinyl. It will also be available as a 2CD edition. And in keeping with the 2024 reissue of At The BBC, the artwork has been given a makeover, using photographs from the archive of Simon Larbalestier, the photographer responsible for the striking imagery on the band’s classic run of albums.

Complete B-Sides: 1988-97 will be released on 26 June via 4AD.
 
Track List:  
CD1:  
 
1. River Euphrates
2. Vamos (Live)
3. In Heaven (Lady In The Radiator Song) (Live)
4. Manta Ray
5. Weird At My School
6. Dancing the Manta Ray
7. Wave of Mutilation (UK Surf)
8. Into The White
9. Bailey’s Walk
10. Make Believe
11. I’ve Been Waiting For You
12. The Thing
13. Velvety (Instrumental)
14. Winterlong
15. Santo
16. Theme From Narc
17. Build High
18. Evil Hearted You
19. Letter To Memphis (Instrumental)
 
CD2
 
1. Planet of Sound (Live)
2. Tame (Live)
3. Debaser (Live)
4. Holiday Song (Live)
5. Cactus (Live)
6. Nimrod’s Son (Live)

sábado, mayo 16, 2026

New Music: Upside Down

           

The Australian-British artist Natalie Imbruglia returns with her first new music in five years with the single "Upside Down". It is the first taste of her seventh studio album Algorithm, released on 4 September. Written and produced by Imbruglia with Anu Pillai and David Sneddon, "Upside Down" is a sparkling, jangly pop track shot through with synths and guitars, in many places giving a throwback feel to late 1990s-early 2000s pop. The animated video has been directed by Dan Cadan.


New Music: In The Stars

           

The Rolling Stones have been transported back to the 1970s by deepfake technology in the video for new single "In The Stars" The rock legends are preparing to release their 25th studio album ‘Foreign Tongues’ on July 10 via Polydor/Universal Music and it is set to feature guest appearances from Paul McCartney, Robert Smith, Steve Winwood and the band’s late drummer Charlie Watts, about the video, it has been created by Deep Voodoo using deepfake technology to transform the Stones into their '70s selves, as they play the track alongside musicians and dancers from across the eras, all united by the band's timeless hedonistic energy. The video stars Marty Supreme’s Odessa A’zion,  and has been directed by Francois Rousselet.