Tag Archives: ladyhawke


June 8th, 2009


Sprawling across Bristol city centre like ants at a picnic, Dot to Dot Festival thrives in the moment. Last year saw flagging indie scruffs The Holloways and the now-defunct Dirty Pretty Things head up the bill. However, further down the bill rough coals were awaiting crystallisation as Esser, Golden Silvers and Telepathe all played in the shadows whilst the pavements outside were still drenched in sunlight. This year’s headliners come from the electro wheelbarrow that’s still trudging its way around the garden of British music with Friendly Fires and Ladyhawke secreting dance sensibilities and geek chic from every pore. Learning from mistakes of years past, Friday evening was spent trawling through Myspace pages of unheard of bands, let alone unheard. Leaving no stone left unturned, the afternoon was spent chasing glimpses of hope up and down Park Street.

First up, Chik Budo somewhat unwittingly piece together a brand of jazz dementia that The Mars Volta would be seeking psychiatry for. Akin to early Animal Collective records with a splintered edge of aggression, the half-English, half-Japanese quartet hammer saxophones into the spleens of unnervingly uncontrollable keyboards. They tear through their crazed set as if there’s no tomorrow, demonstrating that pure pop sensibilities are in there somewhere. Perhaps if they calmed down for a second or two they’d flourish. Up next is a mad dash across town to Thekla for Peterborough upstarts Fenech-Soler. It’s perhaps the most unpronounceable name on the bill yet an uninspiring electro set of Friendly Fires rummaging through Late of the Pier’s wardrobe falls on deaf ears. With disappointment still ringing around skulls, it’s off to Icelandic troupe and without a doubt the most unfathomable name here today, Hjaltalin. Having played in Cardiff the previous night, allegedly the Welsh have greater ease at giving its pronunciation a bash. But linguistic difficulties aside, Hjaltalin burst out of the blocks with a refreshing waft of treble-soaked harmony and boast the solitary bassoon on show at this year’s edition. It’s a reinvigorating experience that joyously joins the dots. Desperately desiring some brand of teleportation device, it’s back down to Bristol’s boat that rocks for adopted Parisian Dan Black. Bounding along like Mika in a McDonalds, Black spews a grim arrogance over his recycled loops and flimsy lyrics and it’s all a bit more X Factor than ecstatic. Upstairs however a storm is brooding; Californians Love Like Fire inject reverb into all the right veins without collapsing in cacophony. Ice cream vocals enthral to the rafters six inches above our heads with their brand of laid-back Breeders swathed in melancholy. Enlightening.

In anticipation of Crystal Stilts’ set, The Cooler’s about as rammed as Fosters in the fridge at an Australian barbeque. They may look old enough to be Faris’ parents but there’s nothing to be found on The Horrors’ hyped-to-high-heaven Primary Colours that you won’t find in a distortedly dynamic set from the princes of anti-Brooklyn. The spaced-out limp of ‘The Dazzled’ is spectacular whilst ‘Bright Night’ evokes the spirit of the Sixties at six in the afternoon without a cliché in sight. Following Patrick Wolf’s terrifying S&M showdown at London’s Heaven a few weeks back, apprehension batters anticipation. Without his hairdresser, disastrous hair extensions are out of the question so the future’s short and blonde. A positive start. Shrouded in his newest possession, a guitar he’s bought an hour before the show which stays in tune about as readily as Justin Hawkins slips into falsetto, Wolf endows the likes of ‘Accident & Emergency’ and ‘The Libertine’ with a heavier tinge, all whilst resembling the fantastical androgyny of Ziggy-era Bowie. The set’s flooded predominantly with the loveless desperation of forthcoming record The Bachelor with current single ‘Hard Times’ thrilling and shining brightest. Iconic and inspiring as ever before, through love Wolf’s hard times may well be over and he’s all the better for it. Upstairs Aussie anthemists The Temper Trap are whipping up another hurricane on their first UK jaunt with the likes of ‘Down River’ pricking neck hairs like needles, the walls sweat and greatness is guaranteed. New Pornographer A.C. Newman lulls over at the Fleece where those from across the pond have invaded with the likes of The Soft Pack and Wintersleep all giving the home-grown talent a run for its money. Heading for Thekla, Titus Andronicus are in search of anything but burgers but settle for kebabs as veering away from headliners is the order of the hour. Parisians Naïve New Beaters channel the sheer stupidity of Iglu & Hartly yet either through fancy L.E.D.s created with the aid of their eleven year-old sister, costumes or the sheer Francophonic charm, their electro-rap whips up ample opposition to tired Telecasters and monotonous Moogs. In typically catastrophic fashion their set ends with around half the audience swarming around the three Parisians as they bash out their final drum machine crashes. Leodensians Pulled Apart By Horses follow and despite frequent warnings against crowd surfing, and the roof being around a foot above our heads, chaos ensues and it’s a wonder not a single bone is broken. Rounding off proceedings is the supposed princess of the future, Little Boots. Not only is she over an hour late (a drum pad only witnessed to be used a handful of times is half as wasted as the majority of tonight’s crowd) but she then claims innocence. In amongst relentless booing, her bass-heavy slabs of electro nothingness do little to calm the swaying, sweating haters. She’s got mountains higher than Kate Bush’s hills to climb, never reaching the summit. Stomping about in platform Christian Louboutins that sparkle far brighter than her Minogue mimics, minimal musical capacity and backing tracks Hesketh doesn’t hold a whole load of promise. ‘Stuck on Repeat’ scales greater heights than Princess Roux-Roux ever has and presumably ever will yet they’re not so ‘New in Town’ these days and there’s plenty more fish out of these electro seas. Don’t believe the hype.

  •  Tickets for next year’s event in Bristol and Nottingham are on sale now.




May 20th, 2009


It’s all very bright and brisk on the singles front this week. Ladyhawke may be the shiniest pop strumpet since, well, last week, and Paolo Nutini is back simple singing about a sugar-based snack of the human variety. Daniel Merriweather has a Beatles son in tow to play a typically breezy ballad, while fellow Australians Howling Bells have embraced the way of the summer. There is also a Marilyn Manson track out this week, but let’s not worry about that.

Ladyhawke – Back of the Van
Ladyhawke is doing the pop disco thing as adeptly and as harmlessly as anyone. Back of the Van tries to “absorb the obvious pop clichés but somehow manage to transcend them all the same” Digital Spy notes, giving 8/10. This Is Fake DIY thinks it is “a nice, laid-back piece of synth-pop cheese” and offers 5/10. Promo News despairs that “it’s come to this – ironic Eighties-style soft rock,” but still thinks it’s brilliant. Digital Spy nails the comparisons – it is massively Cyndi Lauper-lauding, while Madonna and Fleetwood Mac also spring to mind. 6/10.

Daniel Merriweather – Red
Breaking free from the shackles of countless cameos, Daniel Merriweather is out on his own. “If anyone can point out how this is substantially different from the last power ballad released by Robbie Williams, let me know,” complains Monkey Boxing. The Beat Review deems it 8/10 fare, praising “Daniel’s soulful, raspy vocals”. Glasswerk National spots the “metaphor for looming political change and imploding capitalism” in the song. That’s stretching it. Even with Sean Lennon on guitar, it gets 4/10.

Paolo Nutini – Candy
Paolo Nutini sung with Usain Bolt last year - this is worth a few marks alone. Die Shellsuit, Die! calls for him to be more Van Morrison than James Morrison” and describes Candy as 4/10 “beige nonsense”. Still, the BBC is “mesmerised” by his musical growth and claims the “song cut through like vinegar in a trifle” in a 10/10 write up. Differing again, True To Sound explains that this song “follows on where the last album left off” and is “just in time for summer”. Unlike Bolt, it’s of pedestrian pace and very fortgettable. 5/10.

Howling Bells – Digital Hearts

Continuing the sunshine theme, “you can tell that summer is on its way as this tune undulates with sing-along sunshine filled peaks” indicates 4/10-marking Daily Music Guide. Female First votes 6/10, describing Digital Hearts as “a brilliant, uncomplicated, up-tempo song”. Drowned In Sound observes that it “could be The Duke Spirit…having undergone an Antipodean makeover”. Singer Juanita Stein is typically sultry and it is their best release for a while, but just lacks the dark brilliance of older material. Still worth 7/10 though.





April 28th, 2009


Last weekend thousands of sonic junkies crawled (some perhaps literally on their hands and knees) around the clubs, pubs and disused sheds of Camden Town in the hope of catching the faintest of glimpses of “the future”. It’s a dangerous term and if the next one-second-wonder NME covers are your thing you’ll be in luck.

If, however, a trip off the beaten path of blog endorsement and into the wild and woolly outback of lo-fi blips and thrashes of jaggedy Fenders sounds good then the annual Dot to Dot extravaganza might be your niche. As with many great creations, it has two legs: one in knife-crime capital Nottingham and t’other in the land of Cider, Justin Lee Collins, and Skins: Bristol. Last year saw mad dashes half way across the rugged outskirts of the city centre from the ephemeral sounds of Jason Pierce’s Spiritualized in a converted church to a working men’s club to see a rough and ready Glasvegas blow the doors of the hinges with their Spector-esque wall of sound bombast. Working off around a third of all that junk you’ve drunk during the day can’t be all that bad now, can it?

If the exercise bug doesn’t get you dashing away to ticket-related sites then the sheer majesty of this year’s colossal line up certainly will. New signed bands is the name of the game and the poster reads like Pitchfork’s index (were it a magazine and could stomach a British band or two). From the pitch-perfect pint-sized pop of Little Boots over to the Jesus & Mary Chain inspired howls of Crystal Stilts, every base is covered. Ladyhawke returns for a highly anticipated headline slot, alongside Talking Heads-infused new wave St. Albans upstarts Friendly Fires, broken bottle bar brawls and Springsteen blues with The Hold Steady and the overtly camp vulture costumes of the magically magnificent Patrick Wolf. Elsewhere the boats, O2 academies and medieval brick bars shall be rattled by the Australian anthems of The Temper Trap, the distorted heart-warming of The Pains of Being Pure at Heart and diva-in-the-making VV Brown. Looking back in a year’s time this may well be Observer Music Monthly’s index, only time will tell.

Dot to Dot takes place in Bristol on 23rd May with the Nottingham event taking place over 15 hours of the following day. It is a bank holiday, after all! Tickets are on sale now for £30 from Alt-tickets but snap one up sharpish- last year’s weekend sold out like the drop of a hat. Forget crawling, get pens and papers at the ready, walking boots on and join those dots.

  • For more information on the Dot to Dot festival check their Website.
  • To order tickets for Dot to Dot click Here




March 20th, 2009


Performing beneath a giant howling wolf, Ladyhawke (aka Philipa ‘Pip’ Brown) took to her fairy-lit microphone stand. Very modest and quiet she introduced herself and got straight down to business.

Inspired by the 80s both musically and dress wise, the New Zealand singer songwriter can’t help but ooze cool. The 27 year old, whose stage name derives from an 80s (what else?) film, played a selection of her trademark relaxed, poppy electro tunes.

An audience of Ting Tings fans (last year’s breakthrough sell out band) must be a hard one to please. Surrounded by parents with children and adults (there of their own accord), the majority of  whom  recognised and went nuts for My Delirium. Playing Dusk Till Dawn, Magic and Paris Is Burning, the leading lady also introduces her new song, Back of The Van, to which the audience patiently listen and politely applaud.

Her specific style, indie-rock electro pop, is what sets her high above all the synth-boppers attempting to climb their way through the charts at the moment.  Her chilled style and easy riffs is what places her high up above her musical peers.





March 2nd, 2009


VV Brown is on more ‘ones to watch’ lists than you can shake a big spangly stick at this year. So who are we to argue? She’s on ours too. We love her. Mainly coz she so impressed us when we went to interview her. She had one mother of a hangover from her Astoria gig the night before but still managed to look utterly gorgeous and fantastic. She told us about ripping down the curtains in the now-closed venue and also wanting to nick the disco balls to take home, but even more impressive was her tale of stagediving at last year’s V Festival. Grace Jones watch out - this girl is muscling in on your territory in 2009… Last year’s Crying Blood is still making people get up and dance on tables everywhere it’s heard, but now we also have the new single, LEAVE!, and debut album to look forward to. Hurrah. Be sure to catch her on tour with The Tings Tings and Ladyhawke or at this year’s Camden Crawl. But in the meantime, make some space in your day right now to sit and watch our music.virgin.com VV Brown video exclusive… (but we defy you not to get up and dance when the music starts).





March 2nd, 2009


March is kick-started with a brood of simple pop offerings, the girls and boys of chartdom choosing the start of spring to launch their latest jumps into the fickle world of soundtracking teenage bedrooms. While it is certainly not a vintage week, there is joy to be found in nooks and crannies, snippets of song lifting the selection above the norm, if only for fleeting moments. Have a listen, or take our word for it and read on. Or if you’re feeling fruity, go on, do both, we dare you…

Ladyhawke – Paris Is Burning
Somehow, this sounds like Gary Numan gone disco and manages to avoid awfulness in the process. MSN enjoys the “endearingly lazy vocal performance”, which does suit the shimmering atmosphere of the track. Clash praises its 80s feel, commenting: “A poptastic melody squelches over a thick and filthy bass line.” Yahoo awards 7/10 as “there’s an unpredictability at work here which is a blessed relief”. It stands out among the hordes of 80s-inspied ladies charting currently and, despite lacking a smooth changeover from verse to chorus, is deserving of 7/10.

MySpace / iTunes / last.fm / Spotify / YouTube / Facebook

Will Young – Let It Go
“Will’s voice sounds at its vulnerable best, whilst also displaying a strong range for the more powerful moments,” states Daily Music Guide, giving it 6/10. However, the mediocrity of the melody is picked up on by AngryApe, which notes that “there is nothing to really jump out and make this an excellent, let alone an exceptional song”. Male First is more taken with it calling it “a soulful elegant treat” worth 8/10. It’s particularly wet and doesn’t provide a platform for his consistently interesting voice to thrive and only receives 5/10.

MySpace / iTunes / last.fm / Spotify / YouTube / Facebook

Kings of Leon – Revelry
The ballad release from Kings of Leon’s all-conquering fourth album, this is soaked in stadium-sized soppiness. Digital Spy remarked upon the sweetness that undercuts the band’s inherent guffness” and deemed it worth 6/10. Music Dime calls it “more of a mellow song with a great melody” – meh. More intriguing is the Mark Ronson mixed B-Side of oldie Pistol of Fire, which NME explains has “a Southern-fried soul feel with a sticky sleaze” – but it turns out that is rubbish too. This is their worst ever single and is lucky to get 3/10.

MySpace / iTunes / last.fm / Spotify / YouTube / Facebook

VV Brown - Leave!
Teenfi manages to use the phrase “doo-wap-de-doo-wap” when describing this 8/10 marked effort, cheering its “perfect blend of 50’s pop”. Muso Guide calls it “roughed-up pop with a charming twist” and insists it will wrap itself “around your memory like a cocoon”. City Life accurately compares it to the Monster Mash and brands it “curious” with a “spunky pop voice”. It is by no means her best effort, but its playful bounciness and punchy vocals have hit written all over them. 6/10.

MySpace / iTunes / last.fm / YouTube / Facebook





February 16th, 2009


After being captivated by Ladyhawke’s last electro pop single Delirium, I was excited to hear that the blonde haired indie chick would be re-releasing an earlier track that never got the attention it deserved first time round - and with new remixes as well. Paris Is Burning definitely doesn’t disappoint. Her edgy voice sings lyrics full of stories about young people drinking and dancing into the night. The fast, catchy beats capture the dream-like idea of the song brilliantly. The trademark retro sound rolls into a memorable chorus that you won’t be able to stop humming, no matter how hard you try.

Matthew Dekay, Simmons & Christopher and Innerpartysystem all provide brand new remixes and the digital format includes the Lady’s awesome cover of Britney Spears’ Womanizer.

Being the main support for The Ting Tings during February and March and then embarking on her own UK headline tour in May, starting in Glasgow on May 15th and culminating in a headline show at Koko in London on May 21st, 2009 is looking even brighter for Ladyhawke.

Ladyhawke’s headline tour dates are:

May 15th - Glasgow Oran Mor
May 16th - Leeds Cockpitt
May 17th - Manchester Academy 2
May 19th - Brighton Concorde 2
May 20th - Birmingham Academy 2
May 21st - London KOKO

Fingers crossed for festival appearances…

Paris is Burning gets its full release on 2nd March. Visit Ladyhawke’s MySpace for more information and Ting Tings tour dates.





December 9th, 2008


Ladyhawke has just released her brilliant new single My Delirium. From her eponymous debut album, this latest single follows the Paris Is Burning and Dusk Till Dawn singles. This release features some fab remixes from JBAG, Sunship, Sugardaddy, Toddla T & Ross Orton, Chateau Marmont and Fan Death.

Check out the video for My Delirium and watch our very own Eleanor Conway’s interview with the rare and shy creature that is Ladyhawke herself.

How much do we love Ladyhawke? Quite a lot actually.





November 14th, 2008


Amongst freshly cut grass, children playing in the snow and the late October appearance of Christmas decorations in my local supermarket here is a list of discernibly nice things that are nice to like ( in no particular order):

Cage The Elephant — My new favourite band. I shall not bore you with blurb, but the boys met via a hippy commune in the deep south of America, stole the show on Never Mind the Buzzcocks a couple weeks back and rocked the chapel at the first gig of the Mencap Little Noise Sessions this week- Think jumping on pews and causing a right ‘ol ruckass. Great gig featuring White Lies, The Killers and Glasvegas — Eleanor Conway Presents: Glasvegas interview — to come shortly.

Stricken City — spangling, jangling pop — perfect for the Crimbo season. You should go see them just on the strength of Rebekah Raa’s (singer) name alone. Quality.

Ladyhawke — She’s a lady, but no hawk—She’s doing wicked things since speaking with us a month ago (check out the interview here) and her new video for Delirium is unleashed on the general public on the 8th of Dec….

Say aha - perhaps in a Alan Partridge or a Morton Harket kind of way but preferably in a Santogold’s latest-single-kind-of way… ‘Aha’ by Santogold. Released soon. The 24th of November to be exact.

Don’t forget to join the Eleanor Conway Presents: facebook page here for your chance to win a signed copy of Goldfrapp’s album ‘Seventh Tree’

And don’t forget to vote for Eleanor Conway to win the the Global VPass competition, closing ends end of November and you could win tickets to your local V Festival as well as a warm fuzzy feeling……… Click here to vote.





September 30th, 2008


‘Paris is burning’ songstress Ladyhawke, has been setting off metaphorical smoke alarms all over London in the last month or so. So with the European music press chasing the notoriously shy Pip Brown aka Ladyhawke, she sits down with Eleanor Conway of music.virgin.com and opens up about the concept behind her alt webcam inspired video for the hotly anticipted ‘Dusk ’til Dawn’…. the second single from her debut album Ladyhawke.





September 3rd, 2008


Ladyhawke looks good on paper, a hot, multi-talented chick with camera happy appeal, wielding a highly strung guitar as the crotch level musical sword it is. Hot on the trail are a mob of followers waiting to be knighted by this mop of feline, fringed, feistiness, wrapped up with tight songs, a tight look, and a tight band - you would imagine this to be a perfect combination. However, this sweet as candy combo wasn’t enough to ignite the flame coloured walls of Koko at the Kiwi tinged Endeavour event last weekend. Firstly, the sound engineer broke every law of sound engineer/ knob twiddling school. Muddy sound and inaudible vocals were on course, only to straighten out for ‘The Checks’ set immediately after.Riding high on the success of ‘Paris is burning’ she is hot on the tip of the release of her debut solo album later this month— imaginatively entitled ‘Ladyhawke’. Named after ’80’s fantasy Rutger Hauer movie ‘Ladyhawke’, stylistically, Pip Brown looks like a cross between Stevie Nicks and Blondie. LH is no pushover, having been indoctrined into music at age eleven and mastering the same number of instruments. So with this and a crowd full of Kiwi homeboys in mind, one could not help feeling a tad dissapointed at her lack of stage presence at Koko on Saturday, she didn’t command the stage like we all wanted her to.

I’d like to use this opportunity to bring up the personal issue of having to endure ‘unknown track foreplay’, which is an annoying wait for the catchy first single at the end of the set, a condition that oddly became obsolete with Michael Stipe favourites and Ian Broudie produced headliners, ‘The Checks’, who owned the stage like an over zealous stage pimp. Stomping all over Koko’s boards, like a antipodean Jolly Green Giant– top shirt button done up all proper. They owned the venue and the crowd giving a world class, electrifying performance (they’ve toured with REM, Maximo Park, The Cribs), as well as converting (me) non Checks believers into believing they’re the best NZ band in the world.

Word.

Ladyhawke—- Check out ‘Paris s’enflamme’ - it’s Ladyhawke in French and it’s tres belle.

Words: Eleanor Conway

www.elle-online.com

www.myspace.com/elleuk

 





September 1st, 2008


Okay, on the cusp of going off to watch my fringed up sista’ Ladeee hawk this Saturday at the marvellous Koko’s in olde Camden Tawn (of which I will talk more of on Monday) I though I would regail you of my top five gym accompanying toons (in no particular order) of the week.

5. Pin Me Down ‘Cryptic’= dancefloor meets indie wannabees……. If you like Justice’s vs Simian ‘We are your friends’, you’ll like the ‘Phones materialization remix.

Click to view

4. The Black Ghosts (Anyway you choose to give it)

A song to get down and dirty to.

Click to view

3. The Tender Box ‘Mister Sister’– Hot off their well received tour of the UK last year, these LA favourites display annoyingly catchy wordsmith ………….. ‘whooooooooo’.

The Tender on Last Call with Carson Daly

2. Imani Coppola ‘I’m A Tree’. Early promo single from ‘Little Jackie’s’ feisty frontwoman Imani Coppola.

Click to view

1. Ladyhawke - Fabulously fringed frontwoman’s debut ‘Paris is Burning’ written after a bender gone wrong, in Paris. Funnily enough.

Click to view

New single from said fringe sporter ‘Dusk Til Dawn‘ available Sept 15th. It’s not as good.

Check out Christoph!’s Flickr photostream for more Ladywhawke pics




http://www.roadtov.com/?vmsrc=vcom1Contribute on music.virgin.com