Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Introducing Scott Homewood to the Rock and Roll Report

Thursday, March 20th, 2008

resized-rockandrollreportlogo.jpgI am pleased to introduce Scott Homewood to the virtual pages of The Rock and Roll Report. With years of music journalism under his belt and work published in numerous online and print publications, Scott brings a wealth of knowledge and experience to the Report and I can’t be more excited hosting his first rate writing and I know you will enjoy Scott’s distinctive take on what rocks his world.

We kick off Scott’s contributions here with his review of two long lost gems by British psychedelic rockers Blossom Toes, a name you probably don’t know but after reading Scott’s piece, you will probably want to get.

With Scott joining regular contributors Matheson Kamin and Michael Goldsmith (the author of the weekly series Cover Stories), I am pretty stoked to see where this is all going and now is as good a time as any to begin the process of transforming The Rock and Roll Report into more of an online magazine and less of a blog. In the coming months get ready for yet another change in look for the Report with some new features and new voices that will make a visit to the Report a great way to discover amazing rock and roll you may not be aware of, whether it was created in 2008 or 1968.

As the podcast grows and matures (well mature might not be the best word!) and we start to incorporate more videos from the bands we write about and play, the Rock and Roll Report is finally becoming the site I hoped it would be. As I like to say on Rock and Roll Report Radio, grab a cold drink, a hot squeeze and turn the volume up to 11, this rock and roll ride is just getting warmed up!

Thanks for reading and listening!

Mark Boudreau
Head Ringmaster and Handyman

Introducing New Rock and Roll Report Contributor Matheson Kamin

Monday, January 28th, 2008

I am excited to introduce a new contributor here at the Rock and Roll Report by the name of Matheson Kamin. I’ll let Matheson introduce himself:

matheson-kamin.jpgWith how bad commercial radio can be, I have always paid attention to the underground music scene. When my classmates where listening to Top 40 music, I listened to college radio; the music was better and the artists had more creativity.

I have also followed the local scene here in Cleveland, Ohio. Some of the bands here have been as good or better than the stuff on commercial radio, but they have never received the notoriety they deserve.
During the last decade, I represented a local internet-based record company and an internet-based music publication. After both ventures happened to fail for their owners, I joined Cleveland-based Exciting City in 2004. I have spent more than 2 years with the hard copy publication promoting both the music and art scenes here in Cleveland.

I recently joined up with The Rock-and-Roll Report because there are a lot of local and independent bands that don’t get their share of notoriety. I want to change that.

Matheson Kamin

Happy New Year!

Monday, January 7th, 2008

Happy New Year to everybody! Here’s to 2008 being a safe, healthy and happy New Year for all filled with good friends and great rock and roll.

There should be some interesting stuff going on in 2008 from The Rock and Roll Report. With the podcast in full swing, the radio show on CKUT, a regular column in Roczine magazine plus the music blog we are expanding, slowly but surely into show promotions so keep an eye and ear out for The Rock and Roll Report coming to a town near you.

For all of you that are regular readers and listeners I cannot thank you enough. For those of you new to The Rock and Roll Report, welcome aboard! And don’t forget to exercise your rights to turn up that volume knob!

Later.

Mark

Happy Holidays from The Rock and Roll Report!

Friday, December 21st, 2007

Well as I wind things down over the next few days and take my Christmas break I would just like to wish everybody a wonderful and safe holiday. It’s been an interesting year here at The Rock and Roll Report with the move from Typepad to a server hosted by Canadian indie music store Sugartune and finally kicking off the Rock and Roll Report Podcast.

(more…)

Odds and Sods: The Rock and Roll Geek on Tour, Versailles Records Looking For Some Unsigned Bands, Joe Camel’s Illicit Affair with Rolling Stone Magazine and Keith Richards Makes Rudolph Run

Friday, December 14th, 2007

The Rock and Roll Geek is on tour

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I am a huge fan of the Rock and Roll Geek Show podcast. Hosted by Michael Butler, bassist for American Heartbreak and currently on tour with Jetboy, Michael is one of the original rock and roll podcasters and he is always a blast to listen to. He is currently on the road with Jetboy on the Stephen Pearcy/Jetboy/Antidivison tour and he is doing a video podcast chronicling their adventures as they rock and roll all over the States. The last time I checked they were playing a strip bar in Omaha I believe and the drummer for Antidivision had just quit. If you ever wanted to know what it was like to go on tour as part of a working indie band then you gotta start watching this. Always a lot of fun and nothing is sugar coated. This podcast is a must for any true fan of rock and roll.

Versailles Records Looking for Some Unsigned Bands for Tribute Album

(PR) Versailles Records is seeking a handful of unsigned bands to round out several star-studded tributes planned for release in 2008 to Kiss, Led Zeppelin, and Whitesnake. Collectively, these tributes feature current/former members of bands including Whitesnake, Anthrax, Dio, David Coverdale Band, Kiss, Badlands, L.A. Guns, Ratt, House of Lords, Blue Murder, TSO, Warrant, Slash’s Snakepit, Every Mother’s Nightmare, Alice Cooper Band, Lillian Axe, Riot, Dangerous Toys, Pretty Boy Floyd, and a host of others. In seeking to feature new millennium rock/metal bands among the aforementioned stars of the genre, we have approx. 2-3 slots open per-tribute. Interested bands should submit a weblink (website, myspace, etc) to versaillesrecords2006@yahoo.com for consideration.

Joe Camel’s Illicit Affair with Rolling Stone Magazine

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It seems that Rolling stone Magazine and R.J. Reynolds Tobacco are under fire for a recent promotion featured in the 40th Anniversary edition of the mag. According to an article in The Daily Swarm, the magazine features a fold-out poster that may have crossed the line between mixing advertising and editorial content. The Daily Swarm explained, “The fold-out poster – a bizarre illustration that lists dozens of Pitchfork-centric bands grouped around representations of various planets and animals – is nestled in between five pages of advertisements for ‘The Farm,’ Camel Cigarettes’ indie band and label-focused promotion. If you are like most indie music fans who paid any attention to those pages, you likely assumed that the ‘Indie Rock Universe’ poster was part and parcel of the Camel advertising campaign; if not, the message was clear…Camel’s got indie rock’s back.”

Of course everybody is denying that there was collusion and it is all an innocent misunderstanding but Reynolds has halted any further advertising of “The Farm” and indie labels are demanding an apology. This IS Rolling Stone Magazine we are talking about right? Who the hell reads RS for info on indie bands?

Keith Richards Makes Rudolph Run

Just in time for Christmas you can buy the legendary Keith Richards version of Run Rudolph Run, recorded around the time of mega-heroin use and Some Girls. Just like his idol Chuck Berry…


Keith Richards - Run Rudolph Run / Pressure Drop - Single

Later

Mark

Happy Thanksgiving!

Thursday, November 22nd, 2007

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Happy Thanksgiving to all my American friends! Enjoy.

Later.

Mark

RecordStoreReview.Com Needs Your Support!

Thursday, November 15th, 2007

During Monday’s show I mentioned that the incredible RecorStoreReview.Com is going to close down January 1, 2008 if they don’t raise $1000.00 by then. This site is an incredible resource run by one guy and if you care at all about supporting independent record stores you will fire off a couple of bucks to him to ensure that this incredible resource keeps going for another year.

I rarely send out appeals like this but this site is too good to lose. Please give generously if you can.

Thanks.

Mark

Battling the Flu

Thursday, November 15th, 2007

I am going to take a few days off from posting while I battle whatever bug is raging through my system right now. I don’t want to put out some half-assed posts just for the sake of posting to the site. I much prefer to use my whole ass!

Later.

Mark

Happy Halloween!

Wednesday, October 31st, 2007

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The Rock and Porn Report

Thursday, October 25th, 2007

You know, I don’t know if it’s just me but the rock and porn world continue to get all cozy cozy these days.

terataylor.jpgFirst we have Vince Neil’s Off the Strip Poker Tournament taking place November 3, 2007 inside The Joint at the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Vegas. Hosted by adult film stars Tera Patrick and Taylor Wayne, all proceeds from the poker tournament and charity auctions will benefit the T.J. Martell Foundation via the Skylar Neil Memorial Fund, established in 1995 by Vince to honor his daughter Skylar who passed away from cancer. Since that time, Vince’s charitable efforts have helped to raise nearly two million dollars for the T.J. Martell Foundation. It’s kind of hard to find any fault with this knowing that it is a fund raiser you must admit.

Continuing our tour through the rock and porn world everybody’s favourite rock reality host and adult film director Dave Navarro speaks to Rock Confidential about his directorial debut with “Dave Navarro: Broken.” Apparently once you’ve been through heroin and cocaine addiction, the murder of your mom and Jane’s Addiction the thing to do is direct a porn flick. I suppose that’s one way to deal with it!

Later.

Mark

Please Do Not Adjust Your Set!

Tuesday, October 16th, 2007

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I am currently in the process of setting up The Rock and Roll Report to be able to host the new podcast. My tech guru Graham from the mighty Sugartune is running tests and tweaking code while madly cackling in the background so that everything will look cool and work the first time around. With that said, if you see any weird posts, bizarre graphics or naked women on the site, you can ignore all but the naked women.

By the way, the podcast will be great. Everybody but one band has said yes to being on the show so far (and it was the band’s label that turned me down, not the band themselves) so the support is there. If you are looking for a rock and roll shot in the arm after listening to too much of your local classic rock radio station, this should do the trick.

Just all in a days work here at The Rock and Roll Report!

Later.

Mark

Rock and Roll Odds and Sods: Podcast News, Rolling Stone Boycott, The Return of Hair Metal, the Sad Tale of The Fags and Israeli Rock and Roll

Thursday, October 11th, 2007

Sorry for the dearth of stuff on the site over these last few days but things have been pretty hectic personally and I have learned to not write just for the sake of writing. I would prefer the content to be sparse but good as opposed to overflowing but shit. Of course the content could be sparse and shit but that’s beside the point…

Just received two essential components (finally!) for Rock and Roll Report Studios and will actually begin recording Episode 1 of the Rock and Roll Report Podcast (The Phantom Podcast?) this week. It’s been frustrating to say the least but I think that once I get going things will run a lot smoother. The plan is to have the first episode out the week of October 22, 2007 (probably the 24th) and then every week thereafter. The only decision I face is whether to produce a show the week Rock and Roll Report Radio is on. Since CKUT provides a podcast feed for the show for a week after broadcast I will probably only produce three podcasts a month and see how that goes.

rolling-stone-magazine.jpgThe Day in Rock reports that Fox News columnist Roger Friedman is calling for a boycott of Rolling Stone Magazine. Now I have a love/hate relationship with that mag and I can see that if you are of a politically conservative bent you would have a lot to gripe about but Friedman’s reason is not due to the content of the magazine. Friedman’s complaint revolves around the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the fact that Rolling Stone publisher Jann Wenner essentially controls the nomination process for this ridiculous institution. Now if you shake your head at some of the decisions made for these nominations (why is Rush still not nominated again?) you will definitely want to read Friedman’s reasons for the boycott but really, why don’t we boycott both the magazine and the “institution” and get on with listening to cool rock and roll played in sweaty little clubs, you know, the way rock and roll should be celebrated.

Well if you thought the days of ‘80s hard rock and hair metal were behind us think again. According to Kris Osborn of Time.Com, some of the biggest concert draws of 2007 were reunion concerts by bands like Ratt, Tesla, Poison, Quiet Riot, Ozzy, White Lion and the like and the response to the semi-reunited Van Halen seem to bear this out. The interesting thing is that the shows seem to be attracting young concert goers who weren’t around for these bands’ first kick at the can. Can you blame them? Hard rock and metal have always contained a great mixture of sleaze, glam and fist pumping fun that makes it quite clear you are at a rock show and not a political convention. People want to lose themselves for a couple of hours and this stuff is a great way to do it. Cheap, fast and disposable. That is sometimes the best definition of rock and roll and I guess this just goes to prove that people want more than angst on stage, they want to rock!

hifi-handgrenades.jpgOne of the best CDs that I received last year and played quite a bit on Rock and Roll Report Radio was Light ‘Em Up! By The Fags and it was with considerable sadness that I learned this summer of the band’s demise. Billed as a logical successor to Cheap Trick, The Fags had what many thought was it all. Great hooks, cool songs, a great sound behind the vocals of main man John Speck, this was a band that seemed poised for great things. Unfortunately major label politics and other business mis-cues killed the band in its crib. Read all about Speck’s experiences with the Fags and their doomed run at the brass ring in The Fags Get Screwed. If you are interested in what John is up to now check out his new band HiFi HandGrenades.

Finally, if you thought all that came out of Israel was religious conflict and strife you will be happy to know that the Jewish Music Group has announced the release of “Israel Unleashed: The Best Rock And Metal From The Holy Land”. Featuring the very best unsigned rock and metal bands from Israel it is scheduled to be released November 27, 2007. For a full track listing check out http://www.jewishmusicgroup.com/album.php?id=131.

That’s it for now. I know I haven’t featured any blitz bands in awhile but if your jonesing for a rock and roll fix I suggest that you click on any of the band links from this week’s Rock and Roll Report Radio playlist and check out what they have to offer. I think you your ears will be amply rewarded.

Later.

Mark

Odds & Sods: Rock and Roll Report Updates on Shows, Podcast and Rock and Roll Report Radio

Thursday, October 4th, 2007

me-small.jpgJust wanted to update everybody on a couple of things going on with me and The Rock and Roll Report in case you were wondering.

First up, Pop Montreal has kicked off here in our fair city and I will be out and about attending shows and the like, I just don’t know which ones yet. If you are going to be in town for this cool event drop me an email or comment either here or on my MySpace page (www.myspace.com/rockandrollreport) to let me know you will be there and maybe we can work something out and get together for a beer or a show, or both!

As well as Pop Montreal, I am hoping to make it to the very first International Pop Overthrow held in Canada. David Bash is bringing this very cool event to Toronto from November 14-17, 2007 and I am trying to make arrangements to be there so if you are planning on being in Toronto during this time by all means let me know and we will try and get together.

The brand new Rock and Roll Report column in Roczine Magazine has gone to print and should be available shortly. Go to their site at www.myspace.com/roczine for updates on where you can get your copy and let me know what you think. I know there are a lot of rock mags out there but this one is just a bit different, edgier and well cooler!

Finally, the podcast looks set to debut the week of October 22, 2007. That date is not etched in stone but keep an eye out for it. If you enjoy Rock and Roll Report Radio then I think you will like the podcast. Either way check it out and let me know. And speaking of Rock and Roll Report Radio, the next one is set for October 8, 2007 at the usual time slot of 10:00-11:00 PM EST on www.ckut.ca. Hope you can join me then.

That’s it for now. Thanks for reading, listening, commenting and just stopping by to say hi. It’s been great having ya!

Later.

Mark
www.rockandrollreport.com

Porn & Rock and Roll - Getting Hot and Heavy Together

Wednesday, September 26th, 2007

tera-wray.jpgI have written about the connection between porn and rock and roll a number of times (Porn and Rock and Roll, More Porn and Rock and Roll) and the connection continues to grow stronger. I’m not sure what that says about rock and roll since it is by definition a very sexy thing but it certainly points the way towards the continued mainstreaming of the porn industry. With everybody from Eddie Van Halen writing two songs for the soundtrack to the porn film Sacred Sin to Dave Navarro directing the porn flick Broken with Tera Patrick to Gene Simmons’ soft-core antics and the increasing popularity of Playboy mansion parties again, porn seems to be stepping from the sidelines and on to center stage, often with a rocker draped on her arm.

This trend continues with the announcement that Pleasure Productions has released their latest heavy metal series called Radium. The brainchild of director Matt Zane, it features the latest metal videos, band interviews, and “loads of hot and heavy porn.” According to Zane:

“The combination of Metal and Porn has finally been linked within the mainstream world. Tera Wray was just on the entire Ozzfest Tour. Their is no one better to front this new video series.”

Pleasure Productions starlet and Kentucky native, Tera Wray, hosts this new series. Wray interviewed some of metal’s hottest up-and-coming acts. She also plays a diverse mix of new metal videos, and addresses all things metal – culturally, musically and sexually on “Radium.” Creating the perfect marriage of extremity, the premier episode of “Radium” features the entire Earache Records roster – including videos from MUNICIPAL WASTE, THE BERZERKER, MORTIIS, and WITH PASSION. This issue also includes a live interview with Tera Wray and WITH PASSION at the California Metal Fest, as well as Tera getting a drum lesson from SOCIETY 1 drummer Berzerk Kirk.

Matt Zane will be producing the series, firmly standing by the budding alt-porn industry, recognizing the relevance of this union stating “people always will want to see porn, and metal has been around since the 70’s.”

Like I said, porn is going mainstream and is no longer relegating to the dressing room or closed hotel rooms. Like it or not the sex is back big time in Sex, Drugs and Rock and Roll. The rebellion rolls on…

Check out the trailer but don’t be an idiot and open it up at work!

Some Inspiration

Wednesday, September 19th, 2007

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A close friend of mine sent me this quote and I just felt like sharing it. It can apply to pretty much anything you set out to do for yourself. Hope you like it.

THE FUN OF BEING ALIVE IS REALIZING THAT
YOU HAVE A TALENT AND YOU CAN USE IT
EVERY DAY, SO IT GROWS STRONGER…AND
IF YOU’RE IN AN ATMOSPHERE WHERE THIS
TALENT IS APPRECIATED INSTEAD OF JUST
TOLERATED, WHY, IT’S JUST AS GOOD AS
SEX.
-LOU CENTLIVRE

Later.

Mark

Friday Fun: Ugliest People in Rock, Nerdiest Real Names, Best Bitchslaps and Stage Falls

Friday, September 14th, 2007

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Well it’s Friday so how about starting our weekend with a some laughs and some ammunition for drunken debates Saturday night.

Gigwise have put together a hilarious The 20 Ugliest People in Rock that is just hysterical. That picture of Courtney Love alternately made me piss my pants and cringe in fear!

If that didn’t do it for you check out the Shoutmouth list of the 40 Nerdiest Real Names of Famous Musicians. Who names their kid Jiles and Slowhand is really the Clap? Who knew? The comments alone are priceless.

Shoutmouth is a treasure trove for lists like these. Check out their 20 Greatest Lyrical Bitchslaps for some interesting reading and subscribe to their newsletter, it’s well worth it.

Finally, the day wouldn’t be complete without Shoutmouth’s 10 Most Embarrassing Stage Falls. Yikes!

I hope you’re smiling now!

Later.

Mark

Cool Contest: HMV Underground

Friday, September 7th, 2007

Well this is something that I don’t do very often but HMV is having a contest over at www.hmvunderground.ca and the prizes range from an autographed Gibson Les Paul by Slash of Velvet Revolver to XBox 360 packages to a Dead Silence corset! Best of all, I have the password to get in. Just head over to www.hmvunderground.ca and enter in the password Cat Scratch.

Go ahead and check it out. The contest ends October 1, 2007.

Later.

Mark

Odds and Sods: Popular Rockers Die Young and Rick Rubin Says Record Labels Don’t Get it

Thursday, September 6th, 2007

I was was roaming around the web trolling for music news I came across the usual assortment of crap but two things really stuck for me today but for completely different reasons.

keith-richards.jpgIt appears that the longevity of Keith Richards is a bit of an anomaly according to How rock stardom can take years off your life. It seems that the rock star lifestyle (you know the ol’ buggaboo of sex, drugs and rock and roll) that comes with the territory once a rock star becomes popular causes them to die pretty quickly. Citing examples of Kurt Cobain, Buddy Holly, Sid Vicious and Pete Doherty (oops he’s not dead yet!) as rockers who keeled over once stardom struck, British scientists claim that after extensive study they have come to the conclusion that “The results suggest that the most dangerous time for a star is during their first flush of fame. Stars are over three times more likely to die than ordinary people in the first five years after chart success, and in the first 10 years they are still at more than two and a half times the risk. And right up to 25 years after launching a career in showbiz, rock and pop stars are still more likely to meet their maker than the rest of us.”

What does this say to the young wannabe rock stars of today? What kind of a message does this send to them? I can just here the local garage band huddled in their rehearsal space with their collective finger poised over the “send” button of their email program- “Boys, this could mean we may become, you know popular and then we could die!” Rock and roll is a vicious game indeed!

rick-rubin.jpgAt the other end of the spectrum you have Rick Rubin perhaps being a bit to honest when the recently named co-chairman of Columbia Records stated in the New York Times magazine that “I have great confidence that we will have the best record company in the industry, but the reality is, in today’s world, we might have the best dinosaur. Until a new model is agreed upon and rolling, we can be the best at the existing paradigm, but until the paradigm shifts, it’s going to be a declining business. This model is done.” I’m sure that the powers that be at Columbia didn’t expect this so quick in Rubin’s tenure but really, the man was just stating the truth. The old model is dead and right now everybody is staggering in the dark trying to come up with something that works in this Web 2.0 world. Until the major record labels face the fact that they are no longer the gatekeepers to the music anymore, the sooner we can figure out what will make both them and the artists they represent money, the sooner we can start promoting new and exciting artists without fear that taking a risk means the end of life as we know it. It is pretty cool that Rubin is so upfront and at least he is a “music guy” as opposed to a bean counter so don’t rule out the majors just yet.

Later.

Mark

Cover Story - Pink Floyd - “The Wall/Hammers” artwork by Gerald Scarfe

Tuesday, August 7th, 2007

By Michael Goldstein

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Pink Floyd’s “rock opera” The Wall (released on Columbia Records in the U.S. and on Harvest Records in the UK), is the best-selling multi-disc recording of all time, having sold well over 30 million packages since its 1979 release. The record reached #1 in the U.S. (topping at #3 in the U.K.) and included the #1 hit single “Another Brick in the Wall (Part 2)”, along with the hits “Hey You”, “Run Like Hell”, and the epic “Comfortably Numb”. It was voted #87 of the “500 Greatest Albums of All Time” in the 2003 survey published by Rolling Stone Magazine.

It was after this record that founding keyboardist Richard Wright departed, to return as a paid player when the band performed The Wall on tour, finally re-uniting as a full member in 1987.

According to the legend, songwriter/lyricist Roger Waters was inspired to begin writing The Wall while on tour in 1977 promoting their Animals record. Near the end of the tour, an angry Waters spat in the face of an audience member who was trying to jump up onto the stage with the band. Whatever the motivation, the record required 8 months in the South of France to complete.

All Pink Floyd records since their 1967 release The Piper at the Gates of Dawn had featured cover designs/packaging by Storm Thorgerson and Hipgnosis. For The Wall, the band chose U.K. cartoonist and illustrator Gerald Scarfe, who then also designed the giant puppets of the ‘Mother’, ‘Wife’ and ‘Teacher’, as well as the animations that were projected around the theater and onto the Wall constructed during the public performances of the opera. The selection of Mr. Scarfe as illustrator was inspired, as he creates “drawings that are often a cry against that which I detest, and in showing my dislike I have to draw the dislikeable. To horrify people with a drawing of the waste of war I must make a horrific drawing of war, and when I come to draw people, their bodies become vehicles for their emotions – greed, lust, cruelty.” Considering The Wall’s subject material, the story behind the making of today’s Cover Story image is particularly compelling….

In the words of the illustrator, Gerald Scarfe (interviewed July 2007, with additional quotes and info provided by Julie Davies and the nice folks at geraldscarfe.com) –

“In 1973, the BBC sent me to Los Angeles to work on a twenty minute animated film about all things American – a psychedelic stream-of-consciousness work featuring Mickey Mouse, Black Power, Playboy Magazine, the Statue of Liberty, Nixon and John Wayne. We used a new animation system called the ‘De Joux’ system. In full Disney-type animation there are twelve drawings to one second of film. The ‘De Joux’ system cut that number to only six or eight by mixing photographically between every drawing and producing the illusion of extra movement. This still meant an immense amount of work, drawing every second of a twenty minute film. I worked, ate and slept that project for six weeks, drawing every cliché I knew about America straight onto 70mm film - from Coca Cola to John Wayne. I called the film Long Drawn-Out Trip.

Two members of Pink Floyd (Roger and Nick) saw this film when it was shown on the BBC and asked me to make an animated film for their next series of live concerts, based on their LP Wish You Were Here. I didn’t take up the offer for some time – it seemed like a lot of work and I feared it might stop the flow of my other work (it did!). Directing animation is a full-time job. I ended up with a studio of about forty animators whom I tried to wean away from the Disney system in which most are trained.

The first animations I made for Wish You Were Here were projected onto a circular screen at the back of the stage, behind the band. I drew a man who walked slowly towards the camera, stopped and was eroded, like sand, by the blowing wind. A metal monster that stomped across the landscape for the song, ‘Welcome to the Machine‘, a sea of blood that appeared over the horizon, raced towards us and engulfed two shining, circular metal towers. The blood turned to groping hands which prayed to the metal monoliths. A leaf tumbled through the sky and slowly turned into a naked man who, still tumbling, smashed through the sky as though it were made of glass.

I continued my association with Pink Floyd by collaborating on The Wall. Begun in 1979, this project became three years of work. Roger and I worked out the cover design in the South of France and I completed it on my return to London. Roger gave me complete carte blanche, complete control over it. Besides showing me the libretto, they didn’t interfere at all in crafting of the images. They obviously saw what I was going to do, but they never altered them. I remember Roger saying that “when we employ an artist, we employ him for what he does, not for what we would like to make him do.”

In as far as what inspired the ‘Hammers’ imagery, we obviously wanted to have some figure of oppression, and I came up with the hammers. I had to think, ‘what would be the most obvious symbol of oppression’, and the most unrelenting, crushing, unthinking thing that I could think of was a hammer. The violence of a hammer when it comes down is horrific. I was slightly worried that they might be adopted by some fascist, neo-Nazi group as a symbol but thankfully it didn’t happen. And I think that when I did the hammers, and Roger wrote ‘hammer, hammer’ into the lyrics, it was the one instance when the drawings influenced the lyrics.

I knew the images were ultimately going to be used in an animated sequence. The actual images came to me quite quickly, but of course the animation is an incredibly time consuming process. When we began the animation for the film there were only about 8-10 people on the project, but by the end there were around 40-50 animators using pen, paper, ink and paint.

From the original LP of The Wall, a stage show was produced, for which I art-directed. I made puppets and inflatables and directed another animated film, The Trial. The Wall was subsequently made into a feature film which I designed and for which I directed two further pieces of animation – ‘Empty Spaces’ and ‘Goodbye Blue Sky’.

As a child who grew up in the war, ‘Goodbye Blue Sky’ came completely from my mind, because I had memories of the war. Roger was born after the war; as you may know, he lost his father in the war, and that’s why he refers to it, but I actually lived through it, and remember the bombs falling in London, and being in air raid shelters.

But above all else I remember having to wear a gas mask, which is a very claustrophobic thing for anyone to wear, let alone an asthmatic. I’d put this thing on and fight for breath. We had to put them on for practice – thankfully there was no occasion when gas bombs were actually dropped, to my memory. But I hated the mask. They tried to make it look cute and childlike by putting Mickey Mouse ears on it and calling it a ‘Mickey Mouse children’s gasmask’. But the memory of the mask came in useful for the ‘Frightened Ones’. I gave them gas-mask heads and they are running for cover into air raid shelters as the dove which explodes into the Germanic Eagle, and flies across the landscape, lays its trail of waste.

When I do my illustrated talks I like to show the ‘Goodbye Blue Sky’ sequence, because it ties up with my childhood really, it’s a sort of poem to the Second World War, and it was the Floyd that gave me the opportunity to do it. I am often asked if I think my drawings change anything. I don’t believe they do, but on occasion I hope they may crystallize a mood or sum up an attitude. If I have succeed in demonstrating this – or even better, in making people laugh – then I can ask for no more.”

About the illustrator, Gerald Scarfe -

scarfegerald0053.jpgIllustrator and cartoonist Gerald Scarfe was born in 1936 in London. He was asthmatic as a child and spent much time drawing and reading. After a brief period at the Royal College of Art in London, he established himself as a satirical cartoonist, working for Punch magazine and Private Eye during the early sixties. He has had many exhibitions worldwide, including ones in New York, Osaka, Montreal, Los Angeles, Sydney, Melbourne, Chicago and London, as well as 50 one-man shows. He has designed the sets and costumes for plays, operas and musicals in London, Houston, Los Angeles and Detroit. His film work includes designing and directing the animation for Pink Floyd’s rock opera The Wall (he also created the graphics and animation for Roger Waters’ 1984 solo album titled The Pros And Cons Of Hitch Hiking and its supporting tour). Scarfe has written and directed many live action and documentary films for BBC and Channel 4.

He has also published many books of his work, including Heroes & Villains: Scarfe at the National Portrait Gallery, which was published in September 2003. His most recent book, Gerald Scarfe: Drawing Blood: 45 Years of Scarfe Uncensored was published in November 2005. Gerald Scarfe has been political cartoonist for the London Sunday Times for 40 years, and has worked for The New Yorker magazine for 14 years. His work regularly appears in many periodicals and in 2005, he was selected as one of the 40 Most-Influential Journalists by the U.K.’s Press Gazette. In 2006, he received the British Press Award as Cartoonist of the Year.

Most recently, he has just completed working with Ozzy Osbourne on illustrating a 10-foot guitar for Gibson Guitar and their special charity event held for the Prince’s Trust.

He is married to British film/TV actress and author Jane Asher, and they have 3 three children.

You can see more of Mr. Scarfe’s work, please visit – www.geraldscarfe.com. Not only will you find a large selection of illustrations covering his whole career (including the work with Pink Floyd), but there is more information about Gerald, his book Drawing Blood (where some of today’s material was excerpted from), a CV, and writings on all the different subjects of his work.

To see more of Mr. Scarfe’s images that are available for sale at the RockPoP Gallery, please follow this link – http://rockpopgallery.easystorecreator.com/items/gerald-scarfe/list.htm?1=1

About “Cover Stories” - Our weekly series will give you, the music and art fan, a look at “the making of” the illustrations, photographs and designs of many of the most-recognized and influential images that have served to package and promote your all-time-favorite recordings.

Every Friday, we’ll meet the artists, designers and photographers who produced these works of art and learn what motivated them, what processes they used, how they collaborated (or fought) with the musical acts, their management, their labels, etc. - all of the things that influenced the final product you saw then and still see today.

We hope that you enjoy these looks behind the scenes of the music-related art business and that you’ll share your stories with us and fellow fans about what role these works of art - and the music they covered - played in your lives.

Copyright 2007 - Mike Goldstein & RockPoP Gallery - All rights reserved.

The Rock and Roll Report Posting Schedule for August 2007

Sunday, August 5th, 2007

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It’s August and the heat is finally getting to me. For the remainder of the month I will be posting from Tuesdays to Thursdays only and taking Mondays and Fridays off to go to the beach. If you go to the beach in the Montreal or Ottawa area during the month of August and see some bronze God with rippling biceps and a six pack chest with a smile to die for, I’ll be the guy just to the left of him!

Thanks for reading. Take care!

Later

Mark

Vacation Time!

Wednesday, July 25th, 2007

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I am taking a few days off for some R&R but I will be back next Monday for some more great rock and roll being played right now possibly right around your corner. Go find it and report back to me on what you heard. You will be amazed at what you have been missing!

And tune into CKUT 90.3 FM (or on the Net at www.ckut.ca) in Montreal Monday night from 10:00 - 11:00 PM EST for the return of the 3 Amigos! Woo hoo!

Later.

Mark

Happy Independence Day!

Wednesday, July 4th, 2007

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A heartfelt happy Independence Day to all my American friends South of my border. You all rock! Don’t burn those burgers!

Later.

Mark

Odds & Sods: Overrated Albums, Piper at the Gates of Dawn, Sony Studios Closes and 31 Nights in London

Thursday, June 21st, 2007

The Guardian has written a great article called Sgt Pepper Must Die! where they interviewed everybody from Wayne Coyne of the Flaming Lips to Mark Ronson to Billy Childish as to what they considered the most over-rated album of all time. Some interesting choices and I would have to reluctantly agree with Luke Pritchard of The Kook’ take on Pet Sounds (I have it and I have tried to love it but while good and brilliant in places it’s hit and miss for me). Of course Rolling Stone got into the act and is now asking their readers for their choices so that should be a hoot to read.

pipers.jpgSpeaking of overrated albums, one record that I have found to be criminally underrated is Pink Floyd’s classic 1967 debut Piper at the Gates of Dawn. When we think of Pink Floyd we often think of a lumbering, spaced out dinosaur, Dark Side of the Moon, The Wall and the sound of barking and moaning dogs but Pipers is a pop masterpiece. The brainchild of the late psychedelic visionary Syd Barrett, Pipers is strangely forgoten, especially with all the hype surrounding Sgt Peppers, an album which I feel it trumps in both originality and pop craftsmanship. Luckily, to celebrate its 40th anniversary there will be a special deluxe 3 CD version of the album released in August that will include the singles not included on the album like the brilliant See Emily Play and Arnold Layne. Forget any of your preconcieved notions of Pink Floyd. Slip on some headphones, slap on this CD and immerse yourself in an incredible psychedelic musical playground.

Well another major studio is closing as Sony BMG has announced that they are closing their Hell’s Kitchen New York studio due to harsh economic realities. This should really come as no surprise as more and more artists become proficient with everything from Garageband to Pro Tools and use them in everywhere from their basement to the local church choir loft. The art of recording will never die and producers who understand it will always be in demand but it’s just that these massive facilities will increasingly shrink in relevance as technology has almost (and I repeat almost) made them obsolete.

Well Apple is increasing their impact on music beyond the download as they host 31 Nights in London. Called the iTunes Festival, the iPod company will be hosting over 60 bands in concert at the London Institute of Contemporary Art featuring everybody from Black Rebel Motorcycle Club to Amy Winehouse. Head out to the festival website and enter to win tickets to any one of the shows. As if you needed an excuse to visit London in July!

Later.

Mark

Do Downloads Help the Environment?

Wednesday, June 20th, 2007

So you stopped buying CDs and now you download all your music and listen to it on your tiny iPod. That must lessen your footprint on the Earth would it not? Not neccessarily according to Digital music No Environmental Cure. It seems that, although you are buying less CDs than you once did, you are buying more CD-Rs to burn your downloads on and you are buying, and throwing away a shit-load of MP3 players that are causing massive waste problems. Read the article and do a bit of research. The move to green electronics is growing and both consumers and companies are realizing that this is an issue that has to be dealt with. Where there is a will, there is a way as they say.

Later.

Mark

How Green Is Your Music Habit?

Wednesday, June 13th, 2007

Grist.Org (a fantastic environmental news and commentary webzine) has a great survey you can take called How Green is Your Music Habit? There are 11 questions related to how various choices you make in your music consumption habits affect the environment around you. And in typical Grist fashion, they approach the various important topics in their usual light-hearted, yet serious fashion. They are not called “A Beacon in the Smog” for nothing!

If you happen to be going to Bonnaroo this weekend, stop by the Grist booth in Planet Roo and enter for your chance to win a solar backpack.

By the way, I took the quiz and scored 50% but learned a lot in the process which really is half the battle after all.

Later.

Mark


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