Friday, 26 February 2010

Paul Weller At The Haiti Earthquake Fundraiser!

Last night’s benefit concert for the victims of the Haiti earthquake wasn’t the music industry’s fastest response to the disaster. For that, we must cede grudging respect to Simon Cowell’s reinvention of Everybody Hurts. This hastily organised show, featuring Paul Weller, Mr Hudson, Seasick Steve, Futureheads and KT Tunstall, no doubt appealed to music fans resistant to Cowell’s pan-celebrity pop fondue who wanted to empty their pockets into the donation buckets.

An altogether different kind of charity was needed to deal with the sight of The Humans (featuring Toyah Willcox and her husband Robert Fripp) playing a succession of songs so uniformly awful that the applause they elicited stemmed from the realisation that mere silence would simply heighten the sense of communal embarrassment.

The fast-moving nature of this benefit meant that necessity begat invention. On the face of it, an acoustic set by the angular Tyneside art-poppers The Futureheads didn’t show promise, but a spirited blitz through the new single Heartbeat Song and Kate Bush’s Hounds of Love showed a warmth dormant in their songs. Flourishing in the face of similar restrictions, Kanye West’s favourite British songwriter Mr Hudson ditched the synths and autotune for guitar, navigating his way to a kettledrum-denting climax on Supernova.

Yet for all the good intentions willing this to be an unforgettable night, the evening needed an injection of intensity to nudge the atmosphere beyond mere conviviality. The attributes that have propelled KT Tunstall to this point in her career – the blithe, sisterly bonhomie that pervaded Black Horse and The Cherry Tree and a new song called Greenland – were somewhat surplus to requirements on the night.

No such problem with Paul Weller, of course. At 51, the Modfather has little to prove – not least on a bill where his name was perhaps the biggest draw.

Unencumbered by any need to pace himself for a full-length set, Weller led his band into an incendiary version of 7 and 3 is the Striker’s Name from his forthcoming album Wake Up the Nation. As that song’s synergy of dense psychedelic guitars and firecracker drums wound to a close, Weller tore into a three-song burst of Jam hits: a rare rendition of Start! drew a communal gasp. But his version of A Town Called Malice was possibly among his best ever – Weller all but set to burst with joy on the line, “Stop apologising for the things you’ve never done.”

All told, the task of following Weller was best left to a performer with even more experience.

Few would have said, in all honesty that the itinerant Mississippi bluesman Seasick Steve emulated what had gone before him. But as a cockle-warming close to an at times extraordinary evening, the short set was hard to fault. “That was a three-string guitar that suddenly turned into a two-string guitar” he joked at the end of Thunderbird.

Then, on Never Go West, he celebrated a genre that, in less skilled hands, would have seemed drowned in the aspic of pastiche.

A spine-tingling climax to a night of eclectic mayhem.

By: Pete Paphides
From: Times Online

Paul Weller's NME Awards Backstage Interview!

...Can be found HERE!

Thursday, 25 February 2010

Paul Weller At The NME Awards!

Paul Weller named Godlike Genius at Shockwaves NME Awards

Weller closes ceremony with a career-spanning set

Paul Weller has collected the final award of the night at the Shockwaves NME Awards tonight (February 24), picking up the Godlike Genius gong at the at the O2 Academy Brixton in London.

Primal Scream's Bobby Gillespie and former Clash guitarist Mick Jones, whose bands have both claimed the prize, presented Weller with the honour, with the Modfather then giving a short speech to the crowd.



Weller then performed a six-song set with his solo band that spanned his career and brought the Shockwaves NME Awards to a close.

The star was joined by ex-Oasis guitarist Gem Archer and My Bloody Valentine's Kevin Shields for his closing set, which saw him play songs from across his career, including recent single '7+3 Is The Striker's Name'. The supergroup also ran through tracks including The Jam's 'Eton Rifles' and UK chart-toppers 'Start!' and 'Town Called Malice'.

NME editor Krissi Murison introduced Weller onstage first, alongside The Clash's Mick Jones and Primal Scream's Bobby Gillespie.

"We could quite believe he hadn't been given it before," Murison said, before Jones and Gillespie took to the mic.

"He wrote some of the most beautiful, poetic songs," Gillespie said, before listing a number of Weller's most-revered tracks.

He added: "I could go on all all night cos he's written so many classics."

Gillespie then called Weller "the real deal", before letting Jones speak.

"It's our great pleasure to present this award to this incredible man, and to this man who we love," Jones exclaimed, after which a video montage of stars including Noel Gallagher, Carl Barat and Peter Blake praising Weller played on the big screens.

Weller then took to the stage himself.

"What could I say, it's taken them 30 years," he said first.

He then added: "I'm embarrassed because people said so many nice things about me...but they're all true! God bless you, have a good night!"

Paul Weller played:

'7+3 Is The Striker's Name'
'Start!'
'Wake Up The Nation'
'From The Floorboards Up'
'Eton Rifles'
'Town Called Malice'

In Case You Missed...Paul Weller On Absolute Radio!

Our good friends over at The Cornershop Of The Man have archived Paul's appearance on the Absolute Radio Breakfast Show earlier this week. 

Check it out here: Yann's Cornershop Of The Man

Wednesday, 24 February 2010

Paul Weller's Album Buzz!

Paul Weller has admitted he is excited about releasing his new album, Wake Up The Nation, out on 12 April.

Guests on the 16-track record include My Bloody Valentine’s Kevin Shields, Bruce Foxton, and ELO man Bev Bevan and members of The Tornados and Little Barrie

"We’re all buzzing about this record and hopefully other people will be as well but unfortunately you never know," he told 6 Music’s Andrew Collins.

Weller was joined by his former bandmate Bruce Foxton, best remembered as the bassist in The Jam, who disbanded in 2002, and Stiff Little Fingers.

He told us how they came to get back in the studio together: "A bit of dialogue opened up between us two, just through various other personal things that have gone on in our lives, but it just sort of felt right.

"Because of the fact that we had started talking and were in touch and that, I thought it was an honour to have us getting together to make a bit of music, which always levels everyone out really."

Weller admitted the process was swift and enjoyable: "It was a nice day, we had fun. We had a laugh and it was nice and easy, there wasn’t too much pressure on anyone I don’t think.It just sort of felt right. Because of the fact that we had started talking and were in touch and that."

He also enlisted the help of Kevin Shields from the noisy rock band My Bloody Valentine. After meeting him at the odd awards bash, Weller told us of Shields’ appeal: "I like what he does and it’s very leftfield and different from what a lot of other people do. It’s just very different from what I do and I just liked the idea of putting those two things together."

Meanwhile, Bev Bevan, formerly of The Move and Electric Light Orchestra, has drummed on two tracks, Wake Up The Nation and the opening track Moonshine.

Its first taster is a double A-side single, with the title track and another called No Tears To Cry. Speaking about the latter, Weller explained it has elements of the Burt Bacharach, who wrote for Dusty Springfield, in it.

"We were thinking just along the lines of the old Dusty records and Walker Brothers - those grand, melodramatic arrangements and stuff, so there’s kind of a hint of that in there as well really," he said.

The Modfather will be performing at the NME Awards on Wednesday (24 Feb) where he will pick up the Godlike Genius award. He said he appreciates the recognition of being 'Godlike': "It’s a bit tongue in cheek anyway but I’m very flattered to be off with it."

This award comes three years after he was presented with the Outstanding Achievement Brit Award, and just a year after he was named Best Male Solo Artist at the 2009 Brits.

"There’s life in the old dog yet," remarked Weller.

From BBC6 Music

Paul Weller Adds Third Dutch Date To May Tour!


There is another date on May 15th at Effenaar in Eindhoven listed. 

Paul Weller Thinks Nirvana Was Rubbish!

Paul Weller has slammed Nirvana as ''f***ing rubbish'', saying he never liked shoegazing or grunge bands.

The outspoken 'Changing Man' rocker said he felt the Britpop period of music in Britain in the 90s - when he came back in vogue with his solo albums 'Wild Wood' and 'Stanley Road' - was much better than the movements which came immediately before it.
Blasting Nirvana - who came to a end in 1994 when frontman Kurt Cobain committed suicide- Paul, 51, said: "You'd had all that shoegazing b*****ks and then the whole Nirvana thing, which I thought was f***ing rubbish - it was just America catching up with punk rock 20 years too f***ing late for me, you know. So to hear some English guitar music again was really refreshing."

Paul also said he felt he was involved with the Britpop scene - which included bands such as Oasis, Blur, The Charlatans and Suede - more than any other musicians in his career, which at that point spanned over twenty years with The Jam and The Style Council.

He added to NME magazine: "That was the first time ever that I'd felt any kinship with any musicians - even though they were all probably at least ten years younger than me."
The 90s was also the period when Paul started using recreational drugs - but he stopped a few years later when he saw the affect they were having on his friends.

Although he wasn't specific about which drugs he took, referring to them as "gear" he explained: "From '93 or '94 I had a f***ing whale of a time. There was so much gear flying about in the 90s. You maybe get a few good years out of it, but then it goes downhill. I could hear a lot of people's careers in music going down the pan after a while as well."

Tuesday, 23 February 2010

Paul Weller On Absolute Radio Wed, Feb 24!

Paul is scheduled to appear on Absolute Radio's Breakfast Show on Wednesday, Feb 24. Word is he is performing and having a chat. He is also rumored to be joined by Bruce Foxton, but that has not been confirmed. Tune in at:

Paul Weller's NME Performance - Broadcast Times!

This Weds 24th: Weller only playing a short set - with Kevin Shields & Gem Archer

To tune in, head to Sky Channel 0184, Virgin Media 975, Freesat 727, DAB or NME Radio.

The Shockwaves NME Awards, which will be hosted by Jarvis Cocker, will be broadcast on Channel 4 at 11:25pm (GMT) next Friday (26) then on T4 on the same channel at 11:10am on Saturday (27).

Rock’s elite are set to blow the roof off the O2 Academy Brixton as this year’s Shockwaves NME Awards will feature explosive live performances and genius collaborations from both musical icons and the next generation of the biggest and best acts.

Taking place on the 24th February, the Shockwaves NME Awards is renowned for both its rock 'n’ roll excess and great music - and this year is no exception! Hosted by Britpop icon Jarvis Cocker, musical highlights will include performances from Paul Weller, Hole and The Specials.

The bands of the moment aren’t to be outdone though - Kasabian will be taking to the stage with the Mighty Boosh’s Noel Fielding to reprise his role as Vlad The Impaler, whom he played in the video for their song of the same name.

Scots rockers Biffy Clyro will join forces with Welsh songbird Marina and the Diamonds for a belting performance. Meanwhile, electro-rock duo The Big Pink will become a trio for the night when a mystery guest joins them on stage! Acclaimed art rockers Maccabees will kick the night off with a bang having just returned from headlining the Shockwaves NME Awards Tour.

The Modfather, Paul Weller, will play a storming set after receiving the ultimate accolade, The Godlike Genius Award. As well as headlining this year’s infamous Shockwaves NME Awards Big Gig, The Specials will also be performing one of their classic tracks and in one of the most hotly anticipated performances of the night, Courtney Love will play with the newly re-formed Hole.

In a night dominated by the boys, Arctic Monkey’s and Kasabian will be fighting it out as they go head to head in five categories – Best British Band, Best Live Band, Best Album, Best Video and a new category, the Giving It Back Award, which recognises bands acts of generosity towards their fans. Muse also racks up four nominations and Oasis three, despite now being defunct!

Other nominees include Green Day, Florence + The Machine, Dizzee Rascal, Kings of Leon, The Cribs, Radiohead, Lily Allen, Julian Casablancas, Jamie T, The Horrors, La Roux, Vampire Weekend, Biffy Clyro, Mumford & Sons, Jay-Z and Blur.

With a raft of guest presenters still to be announced the Shockwaves NME Awards 2010 will be packed with the who’s who of the music world cementing its place as the definitive awards ceremony.

Music fans can tune into Channel 4 on Friday 26th February 2010, 11.25pm to catch all the action from the awards.

Paul Weller's New Video to Premiere On Channel 4!

Video Exclusive
00:00 Thursday 4th March on Channel 4
First play of Paul Weller's new video, Wake up the Nation

Thursday, 18 February 2010

Paul Weller's "Wake Up The Nation" - iTunes Exclusive Track List!

Looks like iTunes will have some exclusive content included with Paul's "Wake Up The Nation" download. Here's the track list:

'Wake Up The Nation' - iTunes Deluxe Edition


1. Moonshine
2. Wake Up The Nation
3. No Tears To Cry
4. Fast Car / Slow Traffic
5. Andromeda
6. In Amsterdam
7. She Speaks
8. Find The Torch, Burn The Plans
9. Aim High
10. Trees
11. Grasp And Still Connect
12. Whatever Next
13. 7&3 Is The Strikers Name
14. Up The Dosage
15. Pieces Of A Dream
16. Two Fat Ladies
17. Wake Up The Nation (Zinc's Crack House Remix)
18. Fast Car Slow Traffic (Erland & Carnival Carnivalization)
19. Grasp & Still Connect (The Bees Version)
20. She Speaks (Tunng Remix)
21. Andromeda (Richard Hawley Remix)
22. In Amsterdam (Noonday Underground Remix)
23. No Tears To Cry (Leo Zero Remix)
24. Find The Torch – Little Vampire Remix)
25. The Amorphous Androgynous Remix - Part 1: Aim High (Aim Higher)
26. The Amorphous Androgynous Remix - Part 2: Pieces Of A Dream (A Dream In Pieces)
27. The Amorphous Androgynous Remix - Part 3: Aim High (The Higher Aim)
28. The Amorphous Androgynous Remix - Part 4: Aim High (Like Water Needs A Flower)
29. Pieces Of A Dream (Original Version)
30. Grasp & Still Connect (Original Version)
31. How Sweet It Is (Exclusive iTunes Bonus Track)
32. '7 & 3 Is The Striker's Name (Video)

Tuesday, 16 February 2010

Paul Weller's "Wake Up The Nation" Deluxe Edition Final Track List!

 

1. Moonshine
2. Wake Up the Nation
3. No Tears to Cry
4. Fast Car / Slow Traffic
5. Andromeda
6. In Amsterdam
7. She Speaks
8. Find the Torch, Burn the Plans
9. Aim High
10. Trees
11. Grasp & Still Connect
12. Whatever Next
13. 7&3 is the Strikers Name
14. Up the Dosage
15. Pieces of Dream
16. Two Fat Ladies

1. Wake up The Nation- Zinc’s Crack House Remix
2. Fast Car Slow Traffic - Erland & Carnival Carnivalization
3. Grasp & Still Connect - The Bees Version
4. She Speaks - Tunng Remix
5. Andromeda - Richard Hawley Remix
6. In Amsterdam – Noonday Underground Remix
7. No Tears To Cry- Leo Zero Remix
8. Find the Torch, Burn The Plans – Nick Zinner (Yeah Yeah Yeah’s Remix)
9. Aim high / Pieces of a dream – The Amorphous Androgynous Remix
10. Part 1: Aim High (Aim Higher)
11. Part 2: Pieces Of A Dream (A Dream In Pieces)
12. Part 3: Aim High (The Higher Aim)
13. Part 4: Aim High (Like Water Needs A Flower)
14. Pieces Of A Dream - Original version (BONUS TRACK)
15. Grasp & Still Connect - Original version (BONUS TRACK)

Friday, 12 February 2010

Paul Weller Discusses "Wake Up The Nation!"

“I’m schooled in the test of time” –  Moonshine

“I wasn’t even thinking about doing another record” says Paul Weller of the inspiration behind his brand new album Wake Up the Nation. “After 22 Dreams I didn’t have any songs to speak of apart from the odd title or couplet. So the whole process was really different. It was almost like starting from scratch.”  After an unparalleled career, characterised by constant musical experimentation, we should be used to Paul Weller’s relentless desire to chop and change his musical pack. But after the triumphant, Brit-bagging success of  22 Dreams (his third solo number one) his tenth solo album sees rock’s most iconic songwriter come up trumps once more.

Lean, mean and as uncompromisingly focused as it’s maker, Wake Up The Nation also brings Paul Weller full circle: twenty-eight years on from The Jam’s split, two tracks feature the band’s bassist Bruce Foxton. “It’s been a long time, obviously, but we both really enjoyed it “ says Paul of this unlikely reunion. “Bruce has still got his own style and sound, which really worked for the track we’d planned to do, ‘Fast Car Slow Traffic’. Then we got him to play on ‘She Speaks’, which might not necessarily be his kind of thing, but he put his own stamp on that, too.”

Sessions for what would become Wake Up the Nation began last January with 22 Dreams collaborator Simon Dine. Working at Weller’s de facto HQ, Black Barn Studios in Surrey, the duo, plus long term in-house engineer Charles Rees, set about creating a record inspired by Dine’s musical vision.
“Simon had a clear idea about how the record should sound” explains Paul. “He wanted to make it very urban and tough, quite metallic sounding. In quite a few cases I would improvise the vocals and see what happened. It was a completely different way of working.”

To reflect the urgency and claustrophobia of city life, strict rules were laid down. Out went acoustic instrumentation and any folky or pastoral inflections. In came jagged rock grooves, Bowie-esque riffs (think Low or Diamond Dogs), and a genre-shredding spirit spawned from the sessions for 22 Dreams.
“We’d get people in to play on individual tracks as we needed them” explains Paul.“Kevin Shields (My Bloody Valentine) plays on one track. Clem Cattini (legendary session drummer) and Bev Bevan (The Move/ELO) play on a couple of tunes. Little Barrie plays guitar on a couple. Andy Crofts (keyboardist in Weller’s touring band) played guitar, bass, keyboards and some stylophone. It was just a question of mixing it all up, and seeing what worked.”

The result is a fourteen track blast of tungsten-tough rock’n’roll, already described by one insider as ‘Stockhausen meets The Small Faces’. If there are mellow moments -notably rare groove shuffle ‘Aim High’ - the abrasive feel of ‘Grasp And Still Connect’ and limited edition single ‘7 & 3 Is The Strikers Name’ are as musically challenging as any record you’ll hear this year. But then what else would you expect from a songwriter whose influences range from Alice Coltrane to Vaughan Williams, and whose current listening includes Broadcast’s Witch Cults Of The Radio Age and folk outfit Erland And The Carnival?

Lyrically, it marks a departure too. If 22 Dreams was a sprawling reverie, Wake Up The Nation  is the sound of Weller wide awake, ready to take the world on again. Fans of Weller the polemicist (think ‘Money Go Round’; ‘Soul Deep’) will be thrilled to hear it’s his angriest sounding record in years.
“The title track is a bit of a clarion call for our nation” explains Paul.
“It’s saying we should rise up against this sea of mediocrity, and get some greatness back into this country. The media, tv, music, politics, they’ve all become bland. It’s not that people have become apathetic, they feel disenfranchised. There’s no real democracy any more. Before the Iraq War there were a million  people who marched against it and it didn’t make a scrap of difference.”

“Musically, it’s an obvious target, but shows like X Factor also set a very low standard for people to look up to. I know I’ll sound old fashioned, but I had people like The Beatles and the Kinks to look up to. That’s why the Rage Against The Machine thing was so good. I’d like to see a huge backlash against celebrity culture.”

Amidst the lyrical fire, there’s also consummate skill. ‘No Tears To Cry’ is a sublime Walker Brothers influenced ballad, while ‘Trees’ is a five-part musical montage about the passage of life which pinballs from ragtime to polka to punk to psych-pop to gospel in just over four mind-blowing minutes.

“That was inspired by going to see my dad in a nursing home just before he died” explains Paul.

“I was trying to imagine what those people’s lives were like. Some of the old girls would once have been beautiful young women, and now they were just waiting to be replaced back into the earth or the atmosphere, or whatever it is that happens to us.”  

Passion, progression, and, as ever, spine-tingling rock’n’roll –Paul Weller has, yet again, delivered the perfect soundtrack as we embark on a new decade.
“I can’t wait to get out there and play it to people” enthuses Paul.

This is one wake up call you don’t want to miss.
Paul Moody

From The Jam Unseen

Thursday, 11 February 2010

Paul Smith Was Sent A Gift From Paul Weller!

Seen recently on Paul Smith's Blog



"I was sent this great new album from Paul Weller called Wake up the Nation 
Check it out - it’s fantastic!"

Paul Weller's 2CD Deluxe Edition Of "Wake Up The Nation" Details!

Limited Edition 2CD Hardback Book of Paul Weller's new album 'Wake Up the Nation'. Contains exclusive liner notes by Irvine Welsh and never before seen photographs. Disc two features exclusive duets with Richard Hawley and the Yeah Yeah Yeahs plus brand new remixes.

Tracklisting

Disc One

1. Moonshine
2. Wake Up The Nation
3. No Tears To Cry
4. Fast Car / Slow Traffic
5. Andromeda
6. In Amsterdam
7. She Speaks
8. Find The Torch, Burn The Plans
9. Aim High
10. Trees
11. Grasp And Still Connect
12. Whatever Next
13. 7&3 Is The Strikers Name
14. Up The Dosage
15. Pieces Of A Dream
16. Two Fat Ladies

Disc Two

1. Tunng – She Speaks
2. Yeah Yeah Yeah's – Find The Torch Burn The Plans
3. The Bees – Grasp & Still Connect
4. Richard Hawley – Andromeda
5. Richard Hawley – No Tears To Cry
6. Larry Heard – Aim High
7. Amorphias – Aim High into Pieces of a Dream
8. Erland & The Carnival – Fast Car / Slow Traffic
9. Zinc – Wake Up The Nation

*The tracklisting for Disc 2 is subject to change

Info From Recordstore.co.uk

Tuesday, 9 February 2010

Paul Weller Guests With Ocean Colour Scene In Coventry!

Paul Weller made a surprise appearance at the Ocean Colour Scene gig in Coventry a few nights ago. Here's a few clips!!!


Paul Weller To Be Interviewed On NME Radio February 10 (Wed 4pm)!

Wednesday 10th Feb
Jon Hillcock's Paul Weller interview airs from 4pm. Weller is being crowned this year’s Goldlike Genius at the Shockwaves NME Awards on February 24.



Paul Weller: Godlike Genius Award For Modfather!

Paul Weller: Godlike genius award for Modfather
Published Date: 09 February 2010


Chart veteran Paul Weller is to receive a top honorary prize at this year's NME Awards, the annual Godlike Genius title, it was announced today.
The former frontman for The Jam will receive his award later this month and perform at the event which takes place at the O2 Brixton Academy in south London.

The bash, officially titled the Shockwaves NME Awards 2010, is to be hosted by Jarvis Cocker and will be staged on February 24.

The winner of the Godlike Genius award is chosen by music magazine NME to honour a figure or group who has helped to shape the musical landscape over the years and past winners have included New Order, The Clash, Ian Brown and Manic Street Preachers.

Weller achieved a string of hits with The Jam such as Eton Rifles and Start! before they disbanded in 1982. He bounced back with The Style Council the following year and then launched a solo career in the early 1990s, achieving hits such as You Do Something To Me, Wild Wood and The Changingman.

Modfather Weller said: "I'm very happy to accept the award, I don't feel Godlike or a Genius but I'm happy to have it. It's nice to be recognised, you get your rewards in other ways too like playing live and seeing people's reaction, but it's nice to be recognised. I'm very flattered. I shall find a special place for it. A little altar to myself with garlands of flowers around it."

NME Editor Krissi Murison said: "Paul was first on the cover of NME with The Jam in 1977 and then again when he reinvented himself with The Style Council. Three decades on he remains just as influential as a solo artist - and it's this connection with the current music scene which makes him all the more Godlike."

Cocker, who last year became a presenter on BBC 6 Music, said: "I've been to these awards things and I've read out nominations and things like that but I've never anchored the whole show before. That's a challenge. But yeah, I hope to keep people interested, stop them from dropping off ..."

From Yorkshire Evening Post

Paul Weller To Play A Second Night In Amsterdam!

Due to overwhelming demand Paul will be playing an extra date at the legendary Melkweg venue in Amsterdam.

The new show will happen on May 14 and tickets are on sale now - click here to get yours.

From PaulWeller.com

Friday, 5 February 2010

Paul Weller's Forthcoming Single Details!

 
Released April 5, 2010
CDS
1. No Tears To Cry
2. Wake Up The Nation
3. Mistress Brown (Exclusive B side)

7 INCH #1 Numbered Vinyl
1. No Tears To Cry
2. Wake Up The Nation (Live from Bradford 09)

7 INCH #2 Numbered Vinyl
1. No Tears To Cry (Leo Zero Remix)
2. River Man (Exclusive B side)

Tuesday, 2 February 2010

Paul Weller To Play Benefit Concert For Haiti!

Mod icon Paul Weller is amongst the latest group of acts to be confirmed for a special Haiti benefit show.

The disaster in Haiti has united the world in sorrow. The tiny Caribbean island, already one of the poorest areas in the region, was struck by an enormous earthquake centred on its densely populated capital.

Since then, aid has flooded into Haiti with global appeals resulting in some enormous events. In the United States George Clooney and Haiti born star Wyclef Jean hosted a new telethon which raised countless millions for those suffering on the island.

Now a new event in London aims to raise more money for the island. Hosted in the historic Roundhouse venue on February 25th, the new event will donate all profits to ActionAid and Médecins Sans Frontières.

With more acts being confirmed all the time, organisers Beanstalk have revealed that British songwriting legend Paul Weller is to perform at the event.

Set to return with his new album 'Wake Up The Nation' later this year Paul Weller is on ferocious form. Winning 'Best British Male' at the BRIT awards last year, the singer has proved that he can match the energy of bands half his age.

Joining Paul Weller at the show will be Sheffield rabble rousers Reverend And The Makers. Jon McClure and Co. will bring the noise at the London event, alongside appearances from Scottish singer KT Tunstall and more.

Haitian visual artist Andre Eugene the progenitor of the Grand Rue movement in Port-Au-Prince, Haiti, who will be flying over and presenting work and photography by artists involved in Ghetto Biennale Arts Festival Port Au Prince in the bars and foyer of the Roundhouse.

Haiti Earthquake Fundraiser takes place at London's Roundhouse venue on February 25th.

Monday, 1 February 2010

Paul Weller's European Warm Up Dates Announced!!!



May 13 - Melkweg, Amsterdam, Holland (on sale Feb 6th)

May 17 - Ancienne Belgique, Brussells, Belgium (
on sale now)

May 18 - Live Music Hall, Cologne, Germany (
on sale Feb 4th)

May 19 - Bataclan, Paris, France (
on sale now)
 




More KebDarge / Paul Weller Coverage via Time Out: New York!


BLADE OF GLORY Darge and Weller’s new comp cuts through the clutter of insipid music.


You think that Kraftwerk box set was expensive? Talk to soul and funk connoisseur Keb Darge, the U.K. DJ and compilation maestro. “The most I ever paid for one record was 3,000 pounds,” he recalls, “but once I bought two that together cost me 5,000. One was by Mellow Madness… Jesus, I can’t even remember the name of the bloody tune!” (The track is the late-’70s disco-soul burner “Save the Youth,” reissued in 2007 on Kay-Dee, the label Darge runs with Kenny “Dope” Gonzalez.) That he can’t remember the title is telling: For Darge, 53, what’s in the grooves—not the name, not the record’s reputation and certainly not its perceived “coolness”—is all that matters.

“Keb plays with the urgency of someone who can’t wait to dance, and really plies the joy and party vibe of each tune,” says Darge’s friend Citizen Kane, the NYC spinner and head honcho of the Disques Sinthomme and Ghost Town labels. “His programming encourages people to get down, not admire how rare the records are.” Getting down is the name of the game on Darge’s latest collection of tunes, Lost & Found—Real R&B and Soul (BBE), a two-disc set (named after his weekly club night) of sweet and stomping beats, compiled with British music icon Paul Weller. We caught up with the thick-brogued Scotsman at his London home, where he happily chatted away between sips of tea and drags of cigarettes.

Paul Weller has had a long association with soul music, but are some people still surprised to see a pop star’s name on this CD?
Maybe a little, but they shouldn’t be. Paul actually played Lost & Found’s opening night. He’s been delving into ’60s soul stuff since before he was in the Jam in the ’70s, and he’s been buying it ever since. He loves the music, same as me; when he’s on the decks, he’s always like, “Hey, Keb, listen to this!”

So he’s a record nerd too!
Are you calling me a nerd! No, we’re not nerds! We hate those nerds, especially when they’re in my club! “Oh, you can’t play James Brown, can’t you play something rare?” I’m like, I’ve got a floor full of shopgirls having the time of their fucking lives—just let me play James Brown!

You actually got into this music through dancing, right?
That was about in 1973, when I was a young teenager. Some boys I knew at the time introduced me to Northern soul, and I was like, “Ooh, I like all this stuff!” So I started going to the all-nighters and got right into it. But I was living in the north of Scotland, and nobody up there really had many of the records. I was going at the time to [Northern-soul mecca]Wigan Casino, just outside Manchester, and I would pick up a few records there, bring them back and give them to the local DJs to play. That way I could have a nice dance at the clubs in Scotland on a Sunday night.

So that was sort of the beginning of your career as a selector.
At that point, I wasn’t interested in anything like that—I just wanted to dance. But I was handing the DJs so many records that one of them finally said, “For fuck’s sake, kid. Why don’t you start deejaying yourself?”

After so many years, you must have a stellar collection of records.
I’ve actually never called myself a collector. My friends are like, “Don’t be stupid, Keb, you have one of the best collections around!” But I never buy records just to collect them—I buy records because I want to dance to them, or I want other people to dance to them. Ever since I was first going out, I was very confused, wondering, Why do people go out and dance to Gary Glitter and ABBA and shit like that? There’s this other music they could be dancing to that would satisfy them much more.

And today, you probably wonder why people dance to Paul van Dyk.
I do still feel that way. But I have to say, there’s a new generation that gets straight into the good stuff. I get these girls who are maybe 16—who shouldn’t even be in the club—asking, “Can you play Howlin’ Wolf’s ‘You’ll Be Mine’ for Tracy? She’s turning 17 tonight!” I’m like, She’s 17 and that’s her favorite record? Huh!

How do you account for such cross-generational appeal?
It’s not music for the day—it’s music for all eternity. This kind of stuff will still sell in 300 years. But in 300 years, people will listen to house and say, “Fuckin’ hell, people used to dance to this shit?”

Keb Darge On "Lost & Found" And Collaborating With Paul Weller!


Scottish Tastemaker Still 
Mixing It Up
by: HEIDI PATALANO

Keb Darge is the king of mix tapes, respected spinner of the hippest, deep funk tracks and one of the champions of Britain’s Northern Soul scene, but try as he might, he can’t get his 15-year-old to stop listening to hip-hop.

“I’m trying to save the world from the evils of modern music,” he says. “It makes people into miserable farts. My son’s going on about wanting to be a gangster. I’m like, ‘Oh, God almighty.’” Maybe his son is a lost cause, but Darge’s compilations, which are sourced from the rarest funk and soul tracks from around the world, have found a new audience of listeners looking for a retro sound.

“Amy Winehouse had a hell of an impact,” says Darge. “People started looking for sounds like [Winehouse], and they found that those sounds came from the ’50s and ’60s. So they started listening to that and once you do that, there’s no turning back.”

While Darge has collaborated with the likes of RZA and Cut Chemist for previous compilations, for his latest project, “Lost & Found: Real R’N’B & Soul,” he worked with friend Paul Weller, former front man of seminal pop-punk band the Jam. And even though they may have an argument over rockabilly (Weller isn’t into it; Darge is trying to change that), the two made an easily collaborative pair. “This is the first time we’ve done anything sensibly professional together aside from DJing and getting drunk,” Darge says.

From The Philadelphia Metro