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Some records with a kitchen(ware) theme 2 members have voted

  1. 1. Most awful vomitastic song mentioned here?

    • Aztec Camera / Roddy Frame - Somewhere in my Heart
      2
    • Prefab Sprout - king of rock and roll
      0
    • both as bad as each other
      0
  2. 2. Which would Tom Smith most be suitable to?

    • Martin Stephenson & The Daintees - Wholly humble heart
      0
    • Cathal Coughlan - Only Losers Take The Bus
      1
    • Cathal Coughlan - Microdisney - Singer's Hampstead Home
      0
    • Prefab Sprout - Lions In My Own Garden Exit Someone (L.I.M.O.G.E.S)
      0
    • Kitchens Of Distinction - Now It's Time To Say Goodbye
      0
    • Kitchens Of Distinction "Elephantine"
      0
    • Warm Jets - Never Never
      0
    • Sirens - Club LA LA
      0
    • Julian Velard - Jimmy Dean and Steve Mcqueen
      0
    • Anything by The Chameleons
      0
    • Anything by the Lighthouse Family or James Morrison (the blue eyed soul dude not the dead bloke or the one out of carter usm)
      1

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http://www.independentsday08.com/img/badge.gif


Release date: June 30th 2008 -Tracklisting

CD One

1. Editors - Bonny
2. Feeder - Public Image
3. Maximo Park - Was There Anything I Can Do?
4. Prodigy - Ghost Town
5. Cribs - bast*rds Of Young
6. Jose Gonzales - Love Will Tear Us Apart
7. Futureheads - With Every Heartbeat
8. Jack Penate - Dub Be Good To Me
9. Rodrigo Y Gabriela - Orion
10. British Sea Power - Tug Boat
11. Charlatans - Murder
12. Jarvis And Beth Ditto - Temptation
13. Devendra Banhart - Don't Look Back In Anger
14. Infadels - Steady As She Goes

CD Two

1. Basia Bullit - In The Night (recommended by Rough Trade)
2. Thomas Tantrum - Swan Lake (recommended by Futureheads)
3. A Human - Black Moon (recommended by the Infadels)
4. Sixteen Layers - Torch (recommended by Embryonic Music)
5. Jose James & Flying Lotus - Visions of Violet (recommended by Gilles Peterson)
6. Bang Bangs - In Arms (recommended by Feeder)
7. Laura Groves - I am Leaving (Recommended by XL)
8. Electricity In Our Homes - We Thought It Was But It Wasn't (recommended by Charlatans)
9. Goose - Black Glove (Recommended by Norman Cook)
10. Shrag - Long Term Monster (recommended by The Cribs)
11. Mobius Band - Friends Like These (recommended by Tom from The Editors)
12. Cougar - Merit (recommended by Maximo Park)
13. Little Dragon - Twice (recommended by Jose Gonzales)
14. Oceansize - Savant (recommended by Rodrigo Y Gabriella)



http://www.banquetrecords.com/graphics/2564696124.jpg


Mystery Jets are gonna re-issue their recent Twenty One album with there version of the vomit awful 80s classic Somewhere in the City by Aztec Camera (tho early Aztec Camera - Roddy Frame is supposed to be good and a bit like Jack Peñate and Roddy Frame is helping out the Magic Piper of Love - Edwyn Collins on his tour which can only be a good thing!!!)

On the other hand Editor's Tom Smith is taking part in recording a cover for the new Independents day 08 compilation album that is being released by AIM to increase awareness and importance of indepedently released music and stores across the globe....

the double cd is gonna be issue LE from July 4th and features Jack Peñate, The Cribs, BSP, Futureheads Maximo Park, Feeder etc

www.independentsday08.com

Tom Smith will be covering a Prefab Sprout song seeing as they are a Kitchenware Records act - tho I think everybody will be hoping that he will not go down that Mystery Jets route by doing a reading of vomit awful 80s classic the king of rock and roll while dressing like a reject from Miami vice...(dont know bonny)

Looking at the tunes posted below are there other good songs that would be totally suitable for Tom Smith to sing....




:up: Aztec Camera / Roddy Frame - Somewhere in the Heart :puke2:

http://i3.bebo.com/034a/5/mediuml/2007/06/28/10/4314817571a4816236098ml.jpg



:up: Prefab Sprout - the Hotdog jumping frog song - king of rock and roll :puke2: :puke2: :puke2: :puke2: :puke2: :puke2:


:up: Martin Stephenson & The Daintees - Wholly humble heart



:up: Cathal Coughlan - Only Losers Take The Bus


:up: Cathal Coughlan - Microdisney - Singer's Hampstead Home



:up: Prefab Sprout - Lions In My Own Garden Exit Someone (L.I.M.O.G.E.S)


Kitchens Of Distinction - Now It's Time To Say Goodbye


Kitchens Of Distinction "Elephantine"
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More info from the site:

 

Independents Day 08 is a worldwide event, taking place on the weekend of 4th July to raise money for the independent music community and their chosen charities.

 

Starting in New Zealand and ending in the US, activities include the largest ever auction of independent music memorabilia (via eBay) and limited edition albums featuring the cream of independent talent from all over the globe, all supported by a comprehensive retail campaign and a series of one-off music shows and retrospectives across TV and radio.

 

The History of Independent Music

 

Independents Day by Ira Robbins

 

Many of the world’s nations mark the day of their independence, a concept bound up with freedom and self-determination. For the United States, independence promised its citizens life, liberty and pursuit of happiness.

 

Though it has rarely required war, diplomacy or intercession by the UN to achieve, independence in the music business offers the same benefits. For more than half a century, independent record labels have risen up, not in opposition to the dwindling population of global music companies but in crucial complement to them. Any genre of music you can name would be much poorer and less adventurous if not for the vision and courage of labels unafraid to back artists who want more than to ape last month’s hits.

 

Elvis Presley didn’t make an appointment and wait in the reception area of RCA Records until someone there recognized what he had to offer, he marched into Memphis Recording Service, a storefront operation where Sun Records’ Sam Phillips heard something he could work with. The first label in America willing to take a chance on the Beatles – who were signed to a British powerhouse, EMI, but unknown in the States – was Vee-Jay, a family-owned label in Chicago, where another family business played home to Chuck Berry, Muddy Waters and Bo Diddley. Each of these artists – plus hundreds more, from James Brown to Nirvana, Run-D.M.C. to the Smiths, Alison Krauss and Arctic Monkeys — changed the sound of music, and none of them were first spotted by a major label. That’s a lot for the independent label world to be proud of.

 

And why not? Other than the few that were set up as divisions of existing entertainment companies, most labels, including many of those now considered majors, started out small, as the bright idea of someone with ears, a few bucks to invest, maybe a record store for a base of operations, or maybe a car for distribution. Atlantic, Motown, Def Jam, Island, Rough Trade, Rhino, Elektra, Merge, Beggars Banquet, A&M, Mercury, Virgin – all of them were or are independent labels. It’s always been more about a concept than corporate structure, about the willingness to explore and innovate, to drive the culture forward and not just churn out mass entertainment in the wake of established taste.

 

In the 21st century, as the means of distribution shifts, independent labels are increasingly the source of new artists. The album sales and download charts are packed with names first promoted by independent labels. Even established artists, from Radiohead and Nine Inch Nails to Garth Brooks, have found that major labels don’t serve their needs, and have gone the DIY route, which takes independence to the max.

 

Ultimately, it doesn’t matter if a record company is big or little, old and established or young and unsteady: a board of directors, layers of management answering to an overseas CEO who in turn is beholden to stockholders is never going to have the ears of young people in direct contact with the music and artists, putting out records they love regardless of profit margins and quarterly sales projections. And independent labels have blazed the way not just in the sound of music, but in ways of partnering with bands and serving their fans.

 

The result, happily, has been a steady flow of music delivered just the way the artists create it, free of homogenization and compromise. In the music world, everyone benefits from independence. Long may it wave.

 

Ira Robbins, Founder - Trouser Press.com

 

 

 

The Independent Music Scene by Martin Mills

 

The concept of the major music label is a relatively recent one. Warners started off as three independent labels ( Warners itself, Atlantic and Elektra, each producing some truly great music in their own fields ), and back in the days when EMI signed The Beatles, they would have had no idea of whether they were signing to a major or an independent.

 

Most of our global musical heritage started off on small labels - Elvis Presley, Chuck Berry, Aretha Franklin, The Doors, Love, Van Morrison, The Who, Marc Bolan, the list goes on and on.

 

But then the majors were created through the economic forces of consolidation, and from 20 or so big companies of the early ’90s, which included such as Virgin and Motown, there are now just four ‘majors’.

 

And whereas a few decades ago it really didn’t make much difference to the artists’ lives and careers whether they were Bob Dylan on Columbia, or Bob Marley on Island, it now makes a huge difference - and every new artist is aware of that difference.

 

That is because the majors are corporations with shareholders, either the public or venture capitalists, and the delivery of financial results is their duty - better and better ones, ideally. The artists are the raw material of these results and, since a single breakthrough artist can make such a difference to these results, the scale of investment, and pressure for commercial success, are irresistible.

 

On the other side, in the independent sector, smaller labels started and run by music fans, artistry, credibility and respect dominate, and whilst the commercial imperative can be there, it is not the be all and end all. Which is why many many artists, including those with ambitious aspirations, choose to go for what may ( or may not be ) a smaller deal in the independent sector, seeking the company of their peers, and a fertile and creative environment - and I do not need to spell out the sometimes very big names that have made that choice in recent years.

 

And despite the economic and market pressures created by consolidation - which is why independents oppose it - even now most great new music originates in the independent sector, as shown by the genesis of new gold artists, and markers such as the Hmv critics’ poll of polls, and the Mercury Music Prize, where music from independents dominates.

 

If you go into a great independent record store,a different music lives, breathes, flourishes, and is exposed to new fans, outside the mainstream initially, but ultimately who knows ? Vive la difference

 

Martin Mills, Chairman of Beggars Group

  • 3 weeks later...
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Hows The Prodigy's version of Ghost Town?

 

I dont know - was gonna get it but didnt manage to get into town to buy it over the last few days (cant buy it over the net as my dad will know im spending the money i owe him :arrr: )

 

heard Feeder do Public Image on the c4 show - and that cover was good tho quite faithful to the orig i guess - however the other shows i remembered to see from the series just seemed to have people like katie melua singing...

 

I got a promo last week and here's my review - http://www.culturedeluxe.com/news_item.asp?id=4450

 

The Prodigy's cover of Ghost Town is as average as it was six years ago when they bunged it on the NME's 50th anniversary compilation.

 

Feeder, amazingly, came off one of the best.

 

My advice is ignore CD1 and listen to the new stuff on CD2 - so much better.

It's funny, I always associate 'Somewhere in my Heart' (ace) with 'King of Rock n Roll' (cheesy but had its uses) together as they were out around the same time and sat next to each other on side 4 of the Smash Hits 88 tape I had.

 

Tom should cover 'Only Losers Take the Bus' by Fatima Mansions as it's ace.

  • Author
Feeder, amazingly, came off one of the best.

 

yeah it was a good version...(tho some indie purists would have perhaps had views of 'indie band do indie classic' seeing as Feeder are signed to the Chrysalis Group and PiL were signed to Virgin...which might be seen to be Minor-Major rather than indies...but then again one of the shows was about Island Records and another Katie Melua... :lol: )

 

 

It's funny, I always associate 'Somewhere in my Heart' (ace) with 'King of Rock n Roll' (cheesy but had its uses) together as they were out around the same time and sat next to each other on side 4 of the Smash Hits 88 tape I had.

 

was that tape also promoted endlessly on the music channels by sinetta as well???? :lol: btw this is the recent sinetta promoted on the hits tripple cd album from smash hits - and its good to see that among all the awful synthpop disasters like Oakey & Moroder that there was a kinda psych-folk vibe going on in the 80s and that such things as Grand Drive and the Champions of the World would famous in the 1980s as well :lol: :lol:

 

Smash Hits CD track listing from the hmv website:

disc 1

Listen 1. I'm Your Man - Wham

2. Take On Me - A-Ha

3. Karma Chameleon - Culture Club

4. Goody Two Shoes - Adam & The Ants

5. Favourite Shirts (Boy Meets Girl) - Haircut 100

6. Shattered Dreams - Johnny Hates Jazz

7. Walking On Sunshine - Katrina & The Waves

8. Happy Birthday - Altered Images

9. Together In Electric Dreams - Philip Oakey & Giorgio Moroder

10. Each Time You Break My Heart - Nick Kamen

11. Shake Your Love - Debbie Gibson

12. So Macho - Sinitta

13. We Close Our Eyes - Go West

14. Labour Of Love - Hue & Cry

15. Rain Or Shine - Five Star

16. Frankie - Sister Sledge

17. Since Yesterday - Strawberry Switchblade

18. What Is Love - Howard Jones

19. Oh L'Amour - Dollar

20. Purple Rain - Prince

disc 2

1. Rio - Duran Duran

2. Venus - Bananarama

3. Two Tribes - Frankie Goes To Hollywood

4. Temptations - Heaven 17

5. Don't You Forget About Me - Simple Minds

6. Enola Gay - OMD

7. Heart And Soul - T'Pau

8. Red Red Wine - UB40

9. I Just Died In Your Arms - Cutting Crew

10. Glory Of Love - Peter Cetera

11. Drive - Cars (The)

12. Power Of Love - Huey Lewis & The News

13. Rebel Yell - Billy Idol

14. I Want To Know What Love Is - Foreigner

15. Power Of Love - Jennifer Rush

16. She Drives Me Crazy - Fine Young Cannibals

17. You're History - Shakespear's Sister

18. Mary's Prayer - Danny George Wilson

19. La Bamba - Los Lobos

disc 3

1. When Will I Be Famous - Bros

2. Together Forever - Rick Astley

3. Walk Like An Egyptian - Bangles

4. Don't Leave Me This Way - Communards

5. Don't You Want Me - Human League

6. 99 Red Balloons - Nena

7. Living In A Box - Living In A Box

8. Perfect - Fairground Attraction

9. Golden Brown - Stranglers (The)

10. Tide Is High - Blondie Listen

11. I Feel For You - Chaka Khan

12. Blue Monday - New Order

13. We Don't Have To Take Our Clothes Off - Jermaine Stewart

14. Don't Get Me Wrong - Pretenders (The)

15. Heaven Is A Place On Earth - Belinda Carlisle

16. Love Changes (Everything) - Climie Fisher

17. Good Heart - Feargal Sharkey

8. Vienna - Ultravox

 

Tom should cover 'Only Losers Take the Bus' by Fatima Mansions as it's ace.

 

yeah looking out for a cheap Fatima Mansions compilations to go with the high llamas one i got the other week - also gonna look out for the stereolab anthology too

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