Posts Tagged ‘Birmingham’

Black Sabbath will release a 4-disc deluxe edition of their classic 2nd album Paranoid, featuring alternative mix and live tracks. Black Sabbath have announced a four-disc super deluxe edition of their 1970 second album Paranoid.

It’ll launch on November 11th and is being released to coincide with the band’s final run of live dates on their The End tour, which is scheduled to wrap up in February with two dates in their hometown of Birmingham.

The Paranoid package will include the 2012 remaster of the original album, along with a rare 1974 stereo quad mix. In addition, the set will include two live performances from 1970 in Montreux and Brussels.

It’ll also feature a hardbound book with extensive liner notes, photos, memorabilia, a poster and a replica of the tour book sold during the Paranoid run of shows that year.

It’ll also include new interviews with Ozzy Osbourne, Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler and Bill Ward.

Initially released in 1970, Paranoid featured classic Black Sabbath tracks War Pigs, Iron Man, Electric Funeral, Fairies Wear Boots and the title track, which reached no.4 in the UK singles charts and no.61 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the US.

The Paranoid Super Deluxe Edition is available for pre-order via Amazon.

It may have been released 46 years ago, but Black Sabbath’s second album has lost none of its unearthly power

Rat Salad

By Sabbath standards, Rat Salad is little more than a throwaway instrumental, but by most other bands’ standards it’s pretty fucking great. 150 seconds of spiralling riffs and muscular oomph, it makes up the numbers on Paranoid to some degree, but still more than justifies its presence on this classic album by demonstrating just how fiery and exhilarating the young Brummies were by this point. Perhaps more interestingly, it has yet to be confirmed whether any of the band have ever actually eaten a rat salad. It doesn’t sound very appetising, but then they were out of their minds on drugs at the time and anything’s possible when the munchies kick in.

Paranoid

Dashed off as a last-minute filler for Sabbath’s second album, Paranoid may not have ever been intended as an immortal anthem for the ages, but that’s what it has indubitably become. As humble as its birth was, it’s a textbook example of a classic heavy rock song: short, to the point, laden with hooks and performed with the kind of urgency and vitality that only young bands with big dreams and tons of confidence can muster. The fact that it’s only the seventh best song on Paranoid is testament to the mind-bending quality of the rest of the album, rather than a criticism of the song itself. Everyone loves Paranoid.

Electric Funeral

It’s an obvious truth that he entire doom metal scene owes its collective arse to Black Sabbath, and to songs like Electric Funeral in particular. Crushing, sinister and wonderfully weird, this is a song that still sounds like the end of the world slithering towards us (and given the state of the planet at this point, we deserve nothing less). Lyrics like ‘Robot minds of robot slaves lead them to atomic rage’ and ‘Earth lies in death bed/Clouds cry water dead’ ensure that the apocalyptic vibe is virtually chewable throughout, and the way that Sabbath switch from debilitating dirge to bursts of nimble, mutant blues fury still has the power to take the breath away. May all our funerals be this electric.

Planet Caravan

They may have struck fear into the hearts of polite, Christian folk everywhere with their evil riffs and uncontrollable facial hair, but Black Sabbath were hippies at heart and Planet Caravan remains their finest ever attempt to tap into the woozy bliss of psychedelia. Satan only knows how much weed was smoked during the recording, but seldom has the notion of drifting blearily through the cosmos with one’s true love ever been so vividly evoked. And while Sabbath’s biggest and most seminal contribution to metal remains Tony Iommi’s riffs, the fact that Pantera covered this song on 1994’s Far Beyond Driven proves that Sabbath’s subtle side has had an undeniably enduring effect on the evolution of heavy music too.

Hand Of Doom

Another song that has been utterly essential in inspiring the doom metal legions, Hand Of Doom is obscenely heavy in every respect: the riffs, of course, are pulverising but it’s the lyrics that make this such a bruising seven-minute crawl through unimaginable horror. Inspired by the drug-ravaged disintegration of US soldiers returning from the Vietnam war, it’s a sustained litany of nightmarish observations set to one of the band’s most ingenious arrangements: ‘Push the needle in/Face death’s sickly grin/Holes are in your skin/Caused by deadly pin’… come on, it doesn’t get much better than that, does it? Extra points for the phrase ‘deadly pin’, which may well have saved a few people from dying in freak sewing accidents.

Fairies Wear Boots

Fairies don’t exist, so their footwear is hardly a matter for sensible discussion, but when you’re in the midst of Paranoid’s mesmerising closing track, it wouldn’t take much to make you believe and head straight for the nearest branch of Foot Locker to do some research on miniature clogs. That aside, Fairies Wear Boots is still a staple in Sabbath’s live sets, and with good reason: this song swings like a megalodon’s ballbag and deftly combines pounding blues rock vibes with a strong sense of pot-addled euphoria that reaches an almost comical peak when Ozzy sings ‘Smokin’ and trippin’ is all that you do!’, thus summing up Black Sabbath’s recreational itinerary with laudable precision. As an added bonus, this is one of the few heavy metal songs that features a dancing dwarf.

Iron Man

One of Tony Iommi’s greatest skills is to write riffs that are as easy to sing along with as the songs’ vocal parts. Whenever the band play Iron Man live, everyone goes apeshit, despite the fact that this is one of Sabbath’s heaviest, slowest and most unashamedly lumbering anthems. Geezer Butler’s lyrics were apparently inspired by Ozzy Osbourne’s observation that the song’s main riff sounded like “a big iron bloke walking about”, which is both brilliant and daft. However, there’s nothing daft about the timeless might of the band’s ensemble performance: this is the sound of heavy metal being forged in real time; immense, unstoppable, ageless and devastating.

War Pigs

46 years on, War Pigs is still one of the most ridiculously thrilling songs ever performed by human beings. You don’t have to be aware of all the noted artists and bands that have covered it – ranging from Faith No More’s straight but scintillating version from The Real Thing through to quirky art punks Alice Donut’s trombone-led demolition on 1990’s Revenge Fantasies Of The Impotent – to see how fundamental this epic and grandiose eruption of heavy, heavy thunder is to just about everything we hold dear in the metal world.

War Pigs is simply part of metal’s sonic DNA, from its bewildering succession of colossal riffs to Geezer Butler’s powerful anti-war lyrics, delivered with youthful aplomb by Ozzy Osbourne: it’s a towering template for intelligent, rampaging heaviness that still sends shivers down the spine of most sensible listeners. And yes, Geezer did rhyme ‘masses’ with ‘masses’, but so what? It’s War Pigs. It rules (and those words do rhyme, let’s face it).

Image result for paranoid single cover

Paranoid is the second studio album by English rock band Black Sabbath. Released in September 1970, it was the band’s only album release to top the UK Albums Chart until the release of 13 in 2013. Paranoid contains several of the band’s signature songs, , Paranoid the single was the band’s only Top 20 hit, reaching number 4 in the UK charts. It is often regarded as one of the most quintessential and influential albums in heavy metal history. Vertigo’s eagerness to capitalise on the success of Sabbath’s debut album, putting the band back in the studio for a follow-up. That record, initially titled War Pigs but changed at the last minute to Paranoid,

46 years ago today Black Sabbath released their single ‘Paranoid’ taken from their second studio album.  The album features some of the band’s best-known signature songs, including the title track, ‘Iron Man’ and ‘War Pigs’. The album was originally titled War Pigs, but allegedly the record company changed it to Paranoid, fearing backlash from supporters of the ongoing Vietnam War. Watch Black Sabbath perform the iconic riff fueled/drum filled “Fairies Wear Boots” off Paranoid live in 1970.

Tony Iommi: The producer said, “We haven’t got enough songs. We need another three minutes.” So Paranoid was made up there and then. It was just a throwaway thing. While everybody popped out for a bite to eat, I came up with this riff.

Geezer Butler laughs as he tells the story of how he and Ozzy both refused to play the song Paranoid when Tony Iommi originally came up with the riff.

Image result for paranoid single cover

“It was right at the end of recording the second album, which was going to be called War Pigs,” he recalls. “We were short on material, and Tony just kind of came up with the riff on the spot. But Ozzy and I thought it was too close to Communication Breakdown by Led Zeppelin. We always loved Zeppelin in them days, sitting round on the floor smoking dope and listening to that first album.

“So when Tony came up with the riff to Paranoid me and Ozzy spotted it immediately and went: ‘Naw, we can’t do that!’ In fact we ended up having quite a big argument about it. Guess who was wrong? The fact that it became such a big hit for us – and is now probably our best known song

Ozzy Osbourne: I remember going home and I said to my then-wife, “I think we’ve written a single.” She said, “But you don’t write singles.” I said, “I know, but this has been driving me nuts on the train all the way back.”

Bill Ward: It was about 1:30 in the afternoon and Tony had the riffs. By 2:00 we had Paranoid exactly as you hear it on the record.

Recorded at Regent Sound Studios and Island Studios in, London

Black Sabbath line-up

Black Sabbath have announced a four-disc super deluxe edition of their 1970 second album Paranoid.

It’ll launch on November 11th and is being released to coincide with the band’s final run of live dates on their The End tour, which is scheduled to wrap up in February with two dates in their hometown of Birmingham.

The Paranoid package will include the 2012 remaster of the original album, along with a rare 1974 stereo quad mix. In addition, the set will include two live performances from 1970 in Montreux and Brussels.

It’ll also feature a hardbound book with extensive liner notes, photos, memorabilia, a poster and a replica of the tour book sold during the Paranoid run of shows that year.

It’ll also include new interviews with Ozzy Osbourne, Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler and Bill Ward.

Initially released in 1970, Paranoid featured classic Black Sabbath tracks War Pigs, Iron Man, Electric Funeral, Fairies Wear Boots and the title track, which reached no.4 in the UK singles charts and no.61 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the US.

The Paranoid Super Deluxe Edition is available for pre-order via Amazon.

we are delighted to announce the line up for Moseley Folk Festival 2016! We’ve returned to our Folky origins to create a new home for Folk, World & Roots for 2016!

Friday – 2nd September

The Levellers // Billy Bragg // Oysterband // Sam Lee & Friends // Dan Whitehouse // Dancing Years // Luke Concannon (Nizlopi) // Daoirí Farrell// The IndoSwiss Duo

Saturday – 3rd September

The Coral // Songhoy Blues // Phosphorescent // C Duncan // This Is The Kit // Holly Macve // The Fair Rain // Dawn Landes // Mothers // Treetop Flyers // Chris Cleverley Band // Seikou Susso // Independent Country

Sunday – 4th September

The Proclaimers // The Jayhawks // Very Special Guest TBA // Benjamin Francis Leftwich // Jacqui McShee‘s Pentangle // Steve Tilston // Laura Gibson // Cecil Sharp House Folk Choir // Rhino & The Ranters // Mark Radcliffe‘s Galleon Blast // Rabscallion // Afro Mio // Luke Jones

Tickets are on sale now and available from www.moseleyfolk.co.uk

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Soaring euphoric new wave synth pop at its best from Birmingham’s Victories At Sea Their debut album Everything Forever deals with Love, loss, loneliness and dreams of escape and it’s an album that grabs life by the lapels and embraces its beauty and urges us to seize the day, and not to give up. A glorious fusion of evocative, heartfelt indie/electro and dance from an incredibly accomplished debut which for some reason puts us in mind of this quote – “you can live your lives or your fears, and that it is always wiser to live your lives.”

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Music video by Jeff Lynne’s ELO performing “When I Was A Boy”. (C) 2015 Big Trilby Records, under exclusive license to Columbia Records, a division of Sony Music Entertainment.

Jeff Lynne fans have a lot to be excited about. he annouced that Jeff Lynne’s ELO will release the first ELO album in over a decade.

The long player represents the first new music from the (one man?) band in over a decade and you can already listen to a typically Beatlesy song from the album.

The deluxe CD edition of Alone in the Universe adds two bonus tracks to the standard ten-track album – Faultline and Blue.

Called “Alone in the Universe”, the album will debut November. 13th via Columbia Records and is available for pre-order Friday. He also dropped the collection’s first single, “When I Was A Boy,”

ELO_alone

“Music is such a powerful force in our lives. A good song can make people feel much less alone in this universe,” Lynne said in a press release. “And trying to create one of those songs somehow makes me feel less alone too. My whole life—from being that kid with a dream in Birmingham right until today—proves how much music can do.”

Earlier this year Lynne performed “Evil Woman” and “Mr. Blue Sky” at the Grammys

https://www.youtube.com watch?v=OpqTJMZWVF0

All Years Leaving
23rd / 24th October 2015
The Hare and Hounds

THIS IS TMRW AND DIY
PRESENT

ALL YEARS LEAVING FESTIVAL
FRI OCTOBER 23rd / SAT OCTOBER 24th
THE HARE AND HOUNDS

Now in it’s third year and continuing to grow in impact and stature as a national showcase of the very best in new music, This Is Tmrw in association with DIY Magazine presented All Years Leaving Festival returns in 2015 to the relatively intimate 250 capacity Hare and Hounds Kings Heath Birmingham this October 23rd and 24th with an even bigger and eclectic line up filling two days from early doors to early hours.

Each day primed with the best national acts and topped by a heavyweight name each day previous headliners having been Dutch Uncles, Hookworms, Eagulls amongst others, exciting announcements for this year will begin to emerge as the summer lands. Ambitious and adventurous in equal measure this festival will see all manner of genres, art installations , street food by Pietanic and the very best locally crafted ales and beers available sound-tracked in style.

ANNOUNCED SO FAR:

THE WYTCHES
EAST INDIA YOUTH
SPEEDY ORTIZ
MONEY
KAGOULE
CHASTITY BELT
CHARTREUSE
FREE SCHOOL
DORCHA

 

TICKETS

DAY TICKET: £15
EARLY BIRD WEEKEND: £20
WEEKEND: £25

AVAILABLEFROM: https://www.theticketsellers.co.uk/buy_tickets/events/?id=10035328

MORE INFO FROM: http://www.thisistmrw.co.uk/

Moseley Folk Festival - Flyer

Editors have unveiled the first taster of their upcoming new album. Check out ‘No Harm’ 

It seems like only yesterday when the Birmingham post-punk stars dropped 2013’s massive The Weight Of Your Love, but the band are already readying the release of their fifth album, having finished mixing it back in March.

The band remained coy about where to hear the new track, but now it has surfaced on a new compilation CD from label PIAS – with fans since taking online to share the song.

The track is a promising sign of things to come, with the band drawing on synth-y soundscapes to paint a brooding, ominous and cinematic slow-burning as frontman Tom Smith coolly and menacingly pines: “I’ll boil easier than you, crush my bones into glue, I’m a go-getter – the system’s in red, the room is inbred, I’m a go-getter”

 

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Birmingham band Swim Deep have a single out, here is the B-side to their current single online.
with the recently unveiled songs ‘To My Brother’, and its flipside ‘Hotel California’ now available. ‘To My Brother’ was the first new material from the band since their 2013 debut album ‘Where The Heaven Are We’. Frontman Austin Williams recently described the band’s new music as “psychedelic sex music”, comparing the record to both Kanye West and Fleetwood Mac.
Williams revealed the big ambitions he and his bandmates have for the album. “We wanted to radicalise chart music,” he said of the band’s mindset going into the studio. “So we’ve taken [Kanye West’s] ‘Yeezus’ and [Fleetwood Mac album] ‘Rumours’ and put them together with acid house.”

The band recently played four intimate gigs in March and April. In addition to those headline gigs, Swim Deep are among the first acts confirmed for Live At Leeds 2015.