Friday, May 8th, 2009
The Libertine
Patrick Wolf dazzles New York, sets date for Toronto
Ingrid ZAs much as I’m looking forward to being in New York next week, I can’t help feeling I’m getting there a week too late. For it was this Wednesday night just past that Patrick Wolf played a one-off show at Le Poisson Rouge in Manhattan, previewing material from this forthcoming album The Bachelor – out in the UK on June 1 and in North America on June 2 and August 11, digitally and physically, respectively. And even though said performance was intended to be a mostly solo and mostly acoustic intimate affair, the live reports and photos from Stereogum, Prefix, The Music Slut, The New York Press and Spin make it sound like it was just as enthralling and magical a show as his more extroverted performances.
I mentioned just a couple days ago that a proper Wolf tour – also featuring The Living Things, The Plastiscines and Jaguar Love – was being assembled in conjunction with his new label NYLON and while a full itinerary is yet to be announced, I’m pleased to be able to announce that in addition to the handful of dates already sussed out, there will be a Toronto show on June 17 at the Mod Club, tickets on sale May 16. It’s fitting that this news come just a couple days before my birthday because Wolf’s May 2007 show at the El Mocambo on my actual date of birth was one of the most fun evenings I’d had in ages, and I have similarly high expectations of this show. With that gig, Phoenix and NxNE all falling in the same week, it’s shaping up to be a pretty crazy June. Crazy awesome.
The Music Slut caught Wolf for a quick interview on his visit to New York wherein he revealed that the sequel to The Bachelor, entitled The Conqueror, will now not see release until next year and the two may still be combined into their originally-intended double-album under the name Battle in the near future. Burton Mail also has an interview.
Video: Patrick Wolf – “Vulture”
MySpace: Patrick Wolf
There’s a video from the forthcoming God Help The Girl album of the same name. The album is out June 23.
MP3: God Help The Girl – “Come Monday Night”
Video: God Help The Girl – “Come Monday Night”
Mail On Sunday talks to Blur’s Graham Coxon about not having such a great time of it in the ’90s.
Doves are giving away a free MP3 of an alternate take of “Birds Flew Backwards” from Kingdom Of Rust. They’re at the Kool Haus on June 1.
Pitchfork has details on the 20th anniversary deluxe reissue of The Stone Roses’ debut, due out August 11.
PJ Harvey and John Parish talk to Filter about their collaboration A Woman A Man Walked By.
La Roux has released a new video. The self-titled debut is due June 29.
Video: La Roux – “Bulletproof”
Extenuating circumstance kept me from the Kills/Horrors show last night but if you need some kind of fix, have an interview with the former’s Alison Mosshart at NOW where they discuss the re-release of Keep On Your Mean Side and an interview with the latter at The Quietus.
Did you miss Bowerbirds’ show at the Drake last weekend? Fear not – they’re back on July 14 for a show at Sneaky Dee’s with Megafaun.
Stereogum gets an update as to where The Flaming Lips are with their next album – the working title is Embryonic and it is targeted for a September release.
VBS’ Soft Focus sits down with Ted Leo for an extensive interview.
Clash, Black Book and Paste talk to Nick Zinner and Karen O of Yeah Yeah Yeahs.
I think I would have paid much much money to see Nick Cave’s script for Gladiator 2 made real. Well, I’d have bought a ticket at least. Maybe two.
Pitchfork has details on Dark Night Of The Soul, the forthcoming multimedia collaboration between Sparklehorse’s Mark Linkous, Danger Mouse and David Lynch due out this Summer. Too strange to try and recap here, so just go read the article.
Trailer: Dark Night Of The Soul
The Aquarian talks to Hutch Harris of The Thermals while The AV Club gets Kathy Foster to shuffle her music collection.
The Quietus has an interview with Bob Mould.
The Artist’s Den welcomes The Hold Steady to their studios for a couple of video performances – via So Much Silence.
The New York Times profiles St Vincent.
Popmatters asks 20 questions of School Of Seven Bells’ Ben Curtis.