ELO Front Man Jeff Lynne Makes a Return

(From Rolling Stone)

For the past decade, not much has been heard musically from ELO mastermind (and  solo artist/former Traveling Wilbury) Jeff  Lynne. For fans clamoring for some new Lynne recordings, you are about to be  treated to a pair of new releases from the bearded, sunglass-sporting gentleman.  October 9th will see the release of both Long Wave and Mr. Blue  Sky: The Very Best of Electric Light Orchestra – the former a covers  collection of early radio favorites of Lynne’s, and the latter re-recordings of  ELO classics.

Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/videos/premiere-jeff-lynne-covers-soul-nugget-mercy-mercy-20120921#ixzz27D46Y8a9

And Here’s An Amusing Breakdown, “Gangnam Style For Math Nerds”

Video

Gangnam Style

And in case you are not responsible for any of nearly a quarter billion YouTube views for this Korean pop addiction, here it is…

Video

Thin Lizzy to Record First Album Without Phil Lynott

(Reprinted from Rolling Stone)

Thin Lizzy are set to record their first album in nearly 30 years, and their  first without original frontman Phil Lynott, HotPress.com reports. Guitarist Scott Gorham said the group  will work with producer Kevin Shirley on the new album, and that recording will  likely start next month. “I’ll be going out to Los Angeles at the end of the  month to work on some songs with [guitarist] Damon [Johnson] and then I think we  will start recording in October in our producer Kevin Shirley’s studio,” Gorham  said.

“We are all excited about the new record but especially [vocalist] Ricky  [Warwick] and Damon, they just can’t wait to start recording!” said Gorham. “You  have got six guys there that are chomping at the bit that can’t wait to get this  thing going.”

The current Thin Lizzy lineup includes Gorham, Warwick and Johnson along with  founding member Brian Downey, longtime keyboardist Darren Wharton and bassist  Marco Mendoza. Lynott died in 1986 at age 36. Thin Lizzy’s last studio album, Thunder and Lightning, was released in 1983.

Awesome Chris Brown Album Sticker

Revisit the Radio Sessions and Record Collection of Groundbreaking BBC DJ John Peel

(Reprinted from Open Culture)

by Colin Marshall

Will any radio DJ ever draw more respect than John Peel has? It seems unlikely, especially since so many fascinating artifacts of his life and career have become available on the internet since his death in 2004. You can now explore, thanks to the John Peel Archive, Peel’s digitized office, a repository of videos, sound recordings, photos and broadcasts. But for its obvious pièce de résistance, look no further than Peel’s record collection, made virtual for your browsing enjoyment. There you’ll find streamable albums, pop-cultural artifacts, and testimony from many a famous musician about the vital importance of John Peel to their careers. Those too young or too non-English to have tuned in to BBC Radio 1 during Peel’s heyday may not realize that this is no ordinary record collection. This is a treasure trove of 25,000 LPs and 40,000 singles assembled by a man who brought to the rock-enthusiast public the likes of Billy Bragg, Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark, The Fall, Pavement Buzzcocks, Elvis Costello, David Bowie… the list goes on.

Peel showcased such artists on his famous Peel Sessions, which would bring these performers into the BBC’s studios to lay down four or five songs. Quickly mixed and readied for broadcast, these songs would retain a rougher, looser, often more improvisational feel than the records that made these players famous. Tapes of a band’s Peel Session thus immediately became a hotly traded commodity among that band’s fans. Today, Peel’s own fans have helpfully uploaded a selection of his broadcasts, official Peel Sessions and otherwise, to the audio-sharing site Soundcloud. Perhaps you’d like to hear a snapshot of Peel’s view or the rock world on Christmas Eve 1979. Or how about October 13, 2004? Maybe April 4, 1988? Then, when you’re ready — and if you use Spotify — make a return to the John Peel Archive and pull up his Sessions with a favorite band, be it The Cure, Smashing Pumpkins, PJ Harvey, Cinerama, or whomever. You’ll hear why, 45 years on from his broadcasting debut and eight from his passing, John Peel remains the locus classicus of knowledgeable, discerning rock-radio cool.

http://thespace.org/content/s000004u/index.html

 

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