Tag Archives: Bands


June 4th, 2009


Following the brilliant semi-final shows at Brighton’s Great Escape, our mentors Just Jack and The Charlatans had a near impossible task to whittle down the Road to V shortlist and come up with the final six artists who’ll face the fans’ vote. Hopefully no small girls will be made to cry and no one will be carted off to The Priory, once the final result is announced. Fingers crossed.

To find out who’s in the running to open V Festival 2009, just visit roadtov.com

And don’t forget, you can watch highlights of both gigs and see what happened behind the scenes at The Great Escape on Friday 5th, 6.55pm on Virgin 1.

And if you’re a Virgin Media customer you can see full performances from all the finalists, as well as The Charlatans and Just Jack, live at the Great Escape on Virgin TV Music On Demand.





April 1st, 2009


Just Jack and The Charlatans will mentor the finalists of Road to V - the UK’s biggest and longest running search for unsigned musical talent.

Genre-fusing Just Jack, caused a sensation with his breakthrough Brit Hop style… mixing up beats, melodies and witty, conversational lyrics to funky home made loops, creating a sound that has influenced a generation of bedroom beat poets.

The Charlatans, with a history of V Festival performances to their name, now on their tenth studio album and famous for a string of hits including indie classics such as The Only One I Know and Weirdo, will join Just Jack in mentoring the ten lucky finalists of the competition, before two winners are eventually decided by a public vote.

Although coming from two completely different perspectives (both musically and lyrically), these two prolific artists with their combined experience, will offer a complete package of advice to fledgling acts in developing their sound and image, and help set them up for a career in music.

The Charlatans

The competition is now open for registrations, and two winning acts will open up the mighty V Festival, which takes place this summer, in Chelmsford and Stafford on 22nd to 23rd August.  Acts have until 12th April 2009 to head to www.roadtov.com to register and be in with a chance of being one of the ten final acts to make it through to the live stage of the competition.

Not only will the lucky finalists be mentored by our established artists, they will also get the once in a life time opportunity to play alongside them at the Great Escape festival in Brighton on 14th to 16th May.  In addition, the ten finalists will all appear, with their mentors, on the Road to V show on Virgin1 which begins on Friday 3rd April and airs on every first Friday of the month until August in the UK.  You can also tune in to watch extended shows with exclusive interviews and performances on Virgin Media’s music on demand service and on the Road to V website - www.roadtov.com.

After the Great Escape, the artist mentors will whittle the final ten down to six remaining acts. Then it’s over to the fans to decide who wins the ultimate prize of opening one of the UK’s biggest music festivals – V.

The Charlatans drummer, Jon Brookes said: “We as mentors will offer the truth to any band that asks us to talk with them about our experiences.  It won’t be a pupil / teacher vibe, but something more subtle, a guide or confidant.  Hopefully it will be a two-way arrangement and we will all get to share something.”

While Just Jack added: “I’m really looking forward to being a Road to V mentor.  When you write songs obviously you put everything into them – however, you need honesty as an artist and you need to hear honest opinions from people”.





March 25th, 2009


Road to V is well and truly back, and the response so far has been overwhelming. Registration has only been open for two weeks and there’s already nearly a thousand unsigned artists sign up for their chance to be the opening act at this year’s – now sold out - V Festival.

Just as excitingly, there are currently over 5000 fans, registered on roadtov.com . And this year it’s the fans who decide who wins, so their comments and votes have never been more important.

Register with roadtov.com and you can listen to all the unsigned acts and become a fan of anyone you think deserves to be heard. You can also comment as much as you like on the artists’ profile pages and let everyone know who you rate and who you hate.

There’s also an official Road to V Facebook page. Becoming a fan gets you up-to-the-minute news, and the chance to watch videos, listen to tracks, chat to fans and artists and enter VIP competitions, exclusive to Fans of the Facebook page.

Register as an artist with roadtov.com, and you can start making your profile page work for you. As well as uploading songs and photos, this year artists can add videos to their profile. Each week, the best videos will be selected to be shown on Virgin Media’s Video On Demand service. So they’ll be reaching thousands more potential fans, and appearing on TV sets across the UK!

And remember to keep checking the site for all the latest news, updates and competitions.





March 13th, 2009


This year on Road to V you can be seen as well as heard. Artists can now upload videos, as well as music tracks to really give fans a chance to check out what you can do. Even more excitingly, the very best videos each week will be shown on Virgin Media’s Video On Demand. So you’ll be reaching thousands more potential fans, and appearing on TV sets across the land!

The Road To V people have made it as simple as possible for you to upload a video onto your Road to V profile. They accept AVI, ASF, MOV, WMV and MPEG files, in either 16:9 or 4:9 ratio. Have a look at the FAQs for more info. Just make sure your video is the best quality possible (but please keep it below 100MB in size) and you could be seeing yourselves on Virgin Media’s Video On Demand.

And if you’ve seen a great video on the site, tell the rest of the community about it!

http://roadtov.com





October 7th, 2008


A pocket full of Glaswegian charm and on the cusp of stardom with the release of their new single ‘Wendy’ and hotly tipped album ‘Friday Night Lights’ later this month. Eleanor Conway chats to lead singer, Kev about his intergalactic dreams, sharing urinals at V Festival, and meeting David Gest down a dark alley.

EC: Hey, what you up to?

KS: Sitting reading my comics. We’re in the studio recording some b sides today…

EC: How rock and roll is the session? Going on a scale of one to ten. Is it non rock and roll, or is there drinking and topless girls dancing on the mixing desk?

KS: (laughs) We’re being very well-behaved today, we’re probably 2 or 3 on the rock-o-meter, we’ll probably phone in for some topless dancers later.

I don’t know if you’ve heard of an early record producer called Kim fowley a notorious maniac, he was producing a band in Manchester from LA on the phone, they were doing it live and so he called up a local Manchester brothel and ordered a bunch of prostitutes to come round and dance in the studio so the band would play better. I don’t think our manager Francis would actually do that but you never know.

(raucous laughing)

EC: You recently played at V Festival, how did it go?

KS: We were up against The Verve and Kaiser Chiefs, I was still surprised we got a crowd it was great. People came along to see us.

My favourite part was the backstage area you go to the toilet and you’re taking a piss next to Ricky of the Kaiser Chiefs, Richard Ashcroft would walk past you to take a dump. You’re like ‘what the hell is going on here!’

EC: Let’s talk about your latest single, ‘Wendy’, I’m assuming you are not talking about a cheap mode of habitation, such as a Wendy House, so who is this girl called Wendy?

KS: She’s a mixture of various girlfriends of all the guys in the band have had over the years. She’s a Frankenstein character to be honest, bits of different people all mashed together to make Wendy as you know her.

EC: If you were to make your ultimate girl, like in the movie ‘Total Recall’, where Schwarzenegger is in the chair and he designs a perfect girl, what would be yours?

KS: I’m always getting slagged off in the band as I go for small dark haired foreign girls.

EC: One’s that can’t understand you?

KS: Yeah, it means that my general inability to communicate with human beings isn’t a problem until they master English and I master their language.

And at that point they’ll dump me.

(laughing)

EC: Wendy has been remixed by The Fratellis along with The Vaselines, I’m a househead at heart, so I don’t really get the indie remixes. What did The Fratellis mix add to the orginal?

KS: We were kind of surprised, I suppose there’s an element that if you change the chords in somebody’s song it could be see as an insult, but it also takes a lot of balls. It worked, we were like, ‘fucking hell, we never thought of that chord’.

I’m a big dance music fan myself, I love getting the remixes, the more dancey ones. It’s kind of made me think I should get myself a sampler and start writing some German minimalist techno.

EC: You’re shocking me, this is like a genre crossover, you can’t do that.

KS: (laughs) I kind of grew up listening to indie and going to hardcore dance clubs at the weekend, it’s a strange dichotomy, one day we’ll hook up with Fat Boy Slim and come out with some wild dance stuff. That would be real cool.

EC: You actually supported Paul Heaton who was in the Housemartins with Fatboy Slim earlier this year didn’t you?

Maybe that’s a subconscious connection in my head. We did a short tour a couple of months ago, he’s the nicest guy in the world. I’ve never played with a main act who has said on stage, ‘this is our new single, if you don’t like it, go and buy Attic Lights new single’. I’m in awe of Paul Heaton.

EC: I watched a short film about you guys on YouTube. Kev, you were described as enigmatic, talented, hopeless, optimistic, hyperactive, an intelligent space cadet — now which do you relate with more?

KS: Colin calls me a hopeless optimistic all the time, Tim is always loathed to sit beside me on the tour bus because I’m totally hyperactive, and end up screaming at him and poking him and tickling him, so it depends what mood you get me in.

EC: Virgin are embarking on intergalactic space adventures, Virgin Galactic, if you were to go up to space, what is the one thing you would like to do? Pee, make love, or make music?

KS: That’s very difficult, because all three would have definite appeal.

I’m not sure actually, I’d genuinely love to go to space, it would be tremendous. In case my mum encounters this interview I won’t say make love in space, and making music in space would be quite good, but being a basic infant, I’d probably want to pee in space to see what happens.

EC: I agree with you, I’d probably do the same.

I generally dislike comparing artists to people that have been before, but you’ve been described by journalists and reviewers as the Beach Boys with distorted guitars, do you see that comparison yourself?

KS: I suppose it’s an easy thing to do, there’s part of me that’s like ‘you know we’re more than that’, and every band is more than their comparisons. When we started Attic Lights the idea was, we wanted Beach Boy melodies, uplifting yet slightly melancholy songs, we want loud guitars, coz we grew up with Weezer and the Pixies and stuff like that. So aye, it doesn’t bother us too much and I’m sure people will get a handle on it and make their own minds up.

EC: It’s been said that you guys love Glasgow, and I can’t remember which band member said they would love to work for the council if the opportunity arose. How good is Glasgow, and how much fun can I have for a tenner?

KS: It kind of depends on what you want…

(Noel boisterously shouting in background)

KS: (sternly) Noel, you can’t say things like that.

Noel is being extremely rude.

Colin said he actually worked for the council, much to the amusement of everyone else.

(Shouts to band) Colin you go out more than anyone else, what can you do in Glasgow for a tenner?

(shouting– musician styleeee ) A bottle of Buckfast, take it to the park or five white Russians at Nice and Sleazy, which is a pretty cool bar.

EC: Obviously as your success grows (fingers crossed) there will be big pull towards the smoke. Have you considered moving to London?

KS: Do you know what? It’s something I’ve been thinking a lot about recently. I think previously we’d been down in London on a regular basis, we thought London was a bit too big for us. Now I’ve fallen in love with London, it’s absolutely fantastic I just love going down, the architecture is amazing, the difference between Camden and Kensington and all that. Everyone that is a real music aficionados from the States, always talk about London bands, and the UK scene. There’s definitely kudos. I guess to people in London it’s not that amazing, I just love walking around Camden it feels like a really incredible multicultural mix. I’d definitely like to live in London, London is definitely one of the great cities of the world.

EC: Just before calling you I was looking at your video for ‘Bring You Down’ which weirdly has David Gest in it….. er why?

KS: It’s not ours. It’s a long story, I’ll give you the condensed version, it’s rather bizarre. Our tour manager, John, met David Gest on a flight from London to Glasgow. They ended up getting pissed and having a party back at John’s flat, he played Gest a version of our song and then phoned us to come round. Everyone’s hammered and David Gest is like (Kev adopts American/Glaswegian accent), ‘I’d like to do a monologue over this’. So we let him put a monologue over it, and he wanted to his own video to it as well. So it’s a bit weird isn’t it?

EC: It is, because the video features the ‘Small people of Davidland’ and ‘The Chinese girls with Herpes’, so my next question is, which would you like to meet down a dark alley?

KS: I’d go for the small people, as opposed to the girls with Herpes. I’m a bit of a hypochondriac, anyone with a disease I try to stay away from.

EC: What would the people of Attic Lights land look like?

KS: Good question actually, y’know you got me stumped, if they were anything like the band they’d probably be a mixture of hyperactive or stoned or confused. Basically like five headless chickens, because that’s what the band is like, but somehow we always seem to get things done though.

EC: With a little bit of Glaswegian charm I’m sure….

KS: We always put on the charming smiles, especially for lovely journalists like yourself.

EC: Excellent. Correct answer.

And on that note….. Attic Lights release their new single ‘Wendy’, and album ‘Friday Night Lights’ on 6/10 and 13/10 respectively.

Attic Lights:

http://www.atticlights.co.uk/

http://www.myspace.com/atticlights

Words: Eleanor Conway

www.elle-online.com

www.myspace.com/elleuk




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