Archive forMarch, 2010

Rhubarb Radio Presents- Hare and Hounds, April 3rd

For the past 18 months, Rhubarb Radio has been pushing the boundaries of traditional radio, with a wide range of specialist music, comedy and talk based programming produced by the people of Birmingham.

Now we’re taking it to the next level. Join Chris Downing of Brumcast and Phil Coyne from The Midsweep as we bring you a live broadcast from the Hare and Hounds. Featuring live interviews with the bands and the crowd, DJ sets from Rhubarbarians and a few surprises along the way.

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John Fairhurst on MCR Scenewipe

John Fairhurst from MCR Scenewipe on Vimeo.

The lovely people at MCR Scenewipe got up to some high jinx with John Fairhurst late last year:

“John picked us up in his van on a rainy Manchester night and whisked us off to a derelict building that he was cunning enough to know a way into to play his session. He was like the cool older brother we never had to get us into trouble.”

If Mississippi John Hurt were alive and kicking today, who knows if he’d condone such breaking and entering, but he’d surely be flattered to know that his rancorous blues standard echoes through the halls of the strangest places, miles from his own birthplace, and years after his death in 1966.

John Fairhurst plays live in Birmingham at The Hare and Hounds on June 3rd.

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What happens if you put a goose to music?

On this week’s Treasure Nest, we’re getting in touch with our inner animal – sliding back down that evolutionary ladder, reawakening all the wee beasties of our past existence. So take off your clothes, get down on all fours and set yourself a-howlin’, this treetop shrine is primal.

Barnacles -  Jamie Harrison
Bug Juice – 45 Dip
La Vacaloca – Manu Chao
Carnival Creatures – Anticon
Snake Pit – Benin City
Animals – CocoRosie
Tes larmes – Caracol
Iguana Segregatis – Afenginn
The Bugs Will Bite - Fila Brazillia/Josef Ward
chicken on a raft – Fisherman’s Friends
Creature Fear – Bon Iver
We’re All In This Together – Gabby Young And Other Animals
Animal In Man – Dead Prez
manimals ft. Usmaan and The Sundragon – Jehst
Keep The Bugs Off Your Glass And The Bears Off Your Ass - The Bad Plus
Plastico/Dogg Starr - DJ Zeph
No Tiene Telaraña – Ibrahim Ferrer
B Line – Lamb
Rack It – John Sterckx
The Littlest Birds – The Be Good Tanyas
Bird Song – Marissa Nadler
Eye of the Duck – Natacha Atlas
La Folie O – Melek
O de Casa, O de Fora – Benjamin Taubkin & Núcleo De Música Do Abaçaí
Fog Pocket – Frog Pocket

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Chiller Treasure Nest- This One’s For The Sleepers

Ladies and Gentlemen, on last week’s Treasure Nest, the pitched battle between conflict and protest left the Rhubarb Radio studio spattered with blood and feathers, and both Soesmix and Magpie had to have a little weep after handing over to Whomanity.

This edition of Treasure Nest, by contrast, is calm and twinkly, just like the first day of Spring, and Persian New Year, should be.

The sweet, sultry rebellion of Sarah McQuaid’s The Chickens They Are Crowing, is the opening number not only to this week’s Treasure Nest, but to her dreamlike album I Won’t Go Home Til Morning. Once, suffering from work induced exhaustion in the back seat of a National Express coach from Stansted Airport, temporarily flightless, Magpie fell asleep to this track and dreamt her way home with McQuaid as the soundtrack- it was a profoundly soothing experience.

As ever, a healthy dose of Canadian gorgeousness crept its way into the nest. The Be Good Tanyas, The Mountains And The Trees and The Wilderness of Manitoba can definately stay (Big Little, consider yourself nodded to).

Soesmix provided a soft pillowed cloud of slumber in the form of three tracks from The Planet Sleeps, and that’s just what we did in the cosiest corner of the studio we could find, before rousing the airwaves gently with Danish electro magician  DJ Disse, Mexican voice of the poets Carmina Cannavino and Alpha Blondy. Loveliness as standard.

The Chickens They Are Crowing – Sarah McQuaid
Too Many Cooks – Portico Quartet
O Canto Da Sereia – Alessandro Penezzi
Horses – The Be Good Tanyas
Up & Down – The Mountains & The Trees
Evening – The Wilderness of Manitoba
Yhanaway Hay Yowna – Sherry Blakey-Smith
Ana Latu – Kingdom of Tonga Cultural Group
Passing Time – John Fairhurst
Sept Marins – Ffynnon
Ramadan – Dj Disse
Forever My Friend – Ray LaMontagne
Time Lapse Lifeline – Maria Taylor
Seven Yellow Gypsies – Shirley Collins
Luna Mulata – Carmina Cannavino
Sleep, Queen of the Dolls – Baluji Shrivastav
I Shall Cross This River (live) - The Black Atlantic
Mayi a Gaye – Boukman Eksperyans
Quelques souvenirs – Jan Felipe
Solid Air – John Martyn
Relicário – Cássia Eller com Nando Reis
Sea Of Love – Cat Power
A La Claire Fontaine – Crowfoot
Take This Hammer – Taj Mahal
Expectations – Belle & Sebastian
Hohou Te Rongo – Whirimako Black
Nahwia – Baka Beyond
Wango Arti – Baaba Maal
Jerusalem – Alpha Blondy

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The Beat and Mama Matrix, O2 Academy, May 21st

Ska legends The Beat loved the Mamas so much when they played together in Sheffield last year that they’ve invited Mama Matrix to support them at Birmingham’s O2 Academy on May 21st.

Originally formed in 1978, at the height of socio political upheaval, The Beat’s defiance of conventions and unashamedly multicultural influences rang true with Birmingham’s rebellious youth, and they hit the world’s stages with rock heavyweights The Pretenders, David Bowie and The Clash, notably putting their name to the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament before they parted company in 1983, with 5 top ten singles, a gold and silver studio album to their name.

Following a sold out one off concert in 2003, The Beat hit the road again and have been touring ever since. Their 2010 tour takes in venues across the UK, and there sure to be on top form in their home city of Birmingham on May 21st.

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Spring has sprung for John Fairhurst

To celebrate March 21st, which marks the official start of Spring, John Fairhurst’s critically acclaimed album Joys of Spring is free to download for one day only, thanks to the wonderful Bandcamp. The link will be live until Monday evening, so get your skates on and spread the joy!

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GGGGGRRRRRR!!! Treasure Nest 14.03.10

This edition of Treasure Nest is all about conflict and protest. Magpie Brown took care of the conflict, with the delightfully passive aggressive My Name is George by George Thomas and The Owls: “Don’t mess with me/My name is George/And I was once the heavyweight champion of the world!”. For those of a military bent, there was kooky Quebequoise marching dub strangeness from Michel Faubert. Staying in Quebec, we played Mata Hari by the gorgeous Caracol- named after Dutch exotic dancer who was executed by firing squad during World War I for espionage- an accusation that is argued over by historians to this day.

Soesmix took care of the protest, with Scroobius Pip‘s salutary Letter From God To Man, UNICEF approved legend Melanie’s Lay Down and, of course, Bob Dylan’s Masters of War.

There was a dirty raw guest mixtape from Tommy Digital featuring kuduro breakbeaters Buraka Som Sistema, and we also launched the GIANT ROBOT competition- more details coming soon, so watch this space!

My Name Is George – George Thomas And The Owls
Glenmalambo – Mac Umba
Sen Regal – Carlou D
Rise to the Challenge – Asian Dub Foundation
La Poison – Michel Faubert
The Essence- Bad Science
Drums of Freedom – Theo Bard
Feluga – Molecule

Nao Respeito Neh-Alameda/Secousse – Radioclit/Aqui Pra Voces – Buraka Som Sistema/Jerk It – Thunderheist/Sous les Cocotiers – Bablee – Tommy Digital Mixtape

Lay Down (Candles in the Rain) – Melanie
Celle que les hommes pleurent (Mata Hari) – Caracol
Letter From God To Man – Scroobius Pip
Do What You Wanna Do – Frank Howard & The Continentals
Do What You Wanna Do - Acid House Kings
Loves of a Girl Wrestler – Laura Hocking
Masters of War – Bob Dylan
Tango sen paz – Marful
Nobody - Hodges, James & Smith
El Mal E La Hipocresia – Adalberto Álvarez & Su Son
Jucá’s Valley [Vale Do Jucá] – Benjamim Taubkin and Nucleo Contemporaneo
Freedom Time – Soldiers Of Jah Army
Mighty Women – Babylon Circus

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Ooooh! Sparkly New!

This edition of Treasure Nest is all about sparkly newness, rites of passage and regneration. In between the carefully chosen goldden nuggets of audio joy, there was talk of Dolhasz (The Beat Suite), Under The Counter at The Rainbow, oblomov, bubble and squeak, helium balloons, how much we love Seb from Polar Bear, Colombian babies, a reluctant request track from Belinda Carlisle and many other sparkly new things. If you’re having trouble listening through the player below, just click here and listen through your desktop media player.

Somerhill - The Miserable Rich
Galop - Zakopower
New Way, New Life - Asian Dub Foundation
Treetops (Polar Bear remix) - Julia Biel
Flim - The Bad Plus
El Rey del Rio – Lucia Pulido
Love of a Girl Wrestler - Laura Hocking
Lucy - Aesop Rock
The Rain Pauly – Boat Beam
Time - Easy Star All Stars
Big up GB mixtape – Big Up GB and Nomadic Wax
Thiaroye - Samba Sene
El Hadia - Gnawa Diffusion
Taranta Power - Eugenio Bennato
Old Time Religion/Working On A Building - Rachel Harrington
Sold! To the Nice Rich Man - The Welcome Wagon
Tam Lyn - The Imagined Village Band
Brighton Pier - George Thomas And The Owls
Egyptian Wedding – Headroom Project
In the years to come – Celloman

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#SaveBBC6Music Who will introduce now?

BBC Director General Mark Thompson today announced that BBC 6 Music will be axed from the broadcasting network’s services, as part of what he called “a radical overhaul.”

As someone working in the independent music industry, this little bird is concerned that BBC 6 Music’s departure will mean the end of truly indie music being granted airplay on the BBC’s national stations.

Although the station is digital only, and operates by and large a similar A/B/C playlist structure to BBC Radios 1 and 2, the station has, since its inception in 2002, been refreshingly receptive to unsolicited approaches by independent musicians.

Tom Robinson’s Introducing show Fresh on the Net in particular acts as a catalyst for independent musicians. It has a national reach- drawing its chosen music from a variety of sources including listener recommendations and artists featured on the BBC’s regional Introducing shows.

My client John Fairhurst, for example, was shown great support by BBC Manchester Introducing before his departure on tour last year, and this week his track Obnox Stomp is included in Tom Robinson’s weekly Introducing Podcast.

Here in Brum, BBC Birmingham and Black Country Introducing DJs Brett Birks and Louise Brierley have been instrumental in bringing the region’s artists to a wider audience. I’m sure that, as Birmingham band Johnny Foreigner completed their recent South African tour, they’d list Birks and Brierley among their first grassroots champions.

With the Introducing Stage at Glastonbury Festival (which notably catapulted Salford unknowns The Ting Tings to number 1 in 2007), and an automatic upload tool which actively encourages artists to submit their music online for scrutiny by its production team, 6 Music is really unique in its receptive attitude to independent artists, who cannot count on the backing of powerful labels.

The consent form I signed to allow Obnox Stomp on last week’s podcast even precludes artists “signed to a major record label (which shall for these purposes mean any label belonging to the following companies: EMI, SonyBMG, Warner, Universal and all affiliates)”.

6 Music’s disappearance from the digital airwaves begs the question, what will be the next step for those artists whose music is being played out regionally on BBC stations, once the national Introducing platform bites the dust? Will these shows also be axed, to make way for more content aimed at women over 50 (the BBC’s regional target audience)?

Just last month, a BBC report showed that listener figures had risen by 12.5% to 695,000 over the last year. The average listener age was placed at 36 years old, which the BBC service review considered “too low”.

This is a worrying statement, as the only national radio service the BBC consciously provides for younger listeners is Radio 1. With a target audience of 15-29 years old and a current playlist of just 47 songs, none of which are decided by the listening public or influenced by independent artists’ attempts to get a few minutes of precious airplay, Radio 1 really pales in comparison to the staunch supporters of independent live music that 6 Music counts among its presenters.

The likes of Mark Riley, Tom Robinson and Lauren Laverne will be sadly missed with the station’s planned closure at the end of 2011, and I’d wager John Peel is turning in his grave. As Chris Addison said this morning, “6 Music serves a minority interest, does it? Then it’s heartland BBC. Leave it a-fucking-lone”

Join the Save Radio 6 Music campaign on Twitter by posting #savebbc6music, get yourself a 6 Music Twibbon here, join the Facebook Group, and fill out the BBC’s Consultation Survey here.

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