Robbers on High Street The Fatalist and Friends EP [New Line Records]

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Rating: 5.0

Robbers on High Street sound exactly like Spoon; it is impossible for me to listen to the album without thinking this non-stop. When listening to Spoon, of course, it would be non-sensical to be distracted by how much they sound like Spoon. But because Robbers on High Street aren’t supposed to sound exactly like another band, it becomes an issue. With other derivative bands, like Interpol, I am casually and infrequently interrupted with the notion that they sound a lot like Joy Division. When I listen to Muse, I wax nostalgically on a blonde-haired lazy-eyed Thom Yorke for about 30 seconds before overdosing on Muse’s spacey melodrama. Most other times, when I hear a band being derivative, it’s vague and comforting: “This sounds like the Beatles” or “That harmony sounds like the Beach Boys”. It’s a not unpleasant, fleeting sensation.

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Joy Division Live Video

Ah, the wonders of YouTube. Finally we can watch the grainy videos we never knew existed! Here’s Joy Division doing Transmission on a television show back in the olden times of the early 80s. Radio live transmission!

The Rapture Announce New Label

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The Rapture have created their own label, Throne of Blood*.  The ToB label will focus on vinyl releases and will be managed by the Rapture and DJ James Friedman.

(*Not to be confused with metal band Throne of Blood who sound like if you take bands like Hatebreed, Meshuggah, Lamb of God, Cannibal Corpse and wad all those fuckers up into a big ass ball.  WRAH!)

In other Rapture news, the band’s second UK single, “W.A.Y.U.H. (People Don’t Dance No More)” (aka: “Whoo! Alright-Yeah…Uh Huh” on the album) was released December 4th. Check out the video for W.A.Y.U.H or create your own vid for this song for the Rapture’s Video Competition.  Check their MySpace for more info.

Transporting lofty emotions on tour:
02-02 Manchester, England – Academy
02-28 London, England – Astoria

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Scissor Sisters Make Acting Debut on NBC’s ‘Passions’

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Chillin’ On The Set of Passions

The pop/rock band, Scissor Sisters, will make their acting debut guest starring on NBC’s popular daytime drama “Passions” airing February 8 and 9 (2:00pm). The band will perform “I Don’t Feel Like Dancin'” and “Land of a Thousand Words” from the album, Ta-Dah.

Here’s how the Scissor Sisters will infiltrate this incredibly master-minded plot:

“In this two-episode arc, young witch Endora (Nicole Cox), a big fan of Scissor Sisters, conjures them up in Tabitha’s (Juliet Mills) living room. The band, extremely disoriented, plays their first song and then suddenly disappears into thin air, leaving Endora wanting more!  After Endora is put to bed, she decides she wants an encore. This time she makes them appear at the hottest club in Harmony, The Blue Note, where she is dressed as a Scissor Sister groupie. Realizing they are no longer at their concert, the band is once again confused, but decide to keep on playing for the excited crowd.”

Benjy Ferree Leaving the Nest [Domino]

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You know how “Yellow Submarine” kind of makes you want to sing along and is simultaneously the most annoying song ever? Yeah. “In the Countryside” is like that, so it’s not necessarily the best way to kick off a disc that’s only ten tracks long—and the second track, an unbefitting empty nod to hard rock, isn’t the best way to follow it up. Leaving the Nest, the first “full length” from Benjy Ferree on Domino Records, is charming at times and grindingly stupid at others. It was originally released as a six-track EP and later re-released after the label requested four more songs. I experienced the sensation of being in a cartoon one moment, driving on a winding country road the next, and gallivanting with Robin Hood and his merry men the moment after that…or maybe I have Robin Hood on the brain due to the cover art. Either way, Robin Hood fits in somewhere.
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Teddybears Soft Machine [Big Beat/Atlantic]

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Darwin was right and the Teddybears are proof positive. Born over 15 years ago as neo-jazz rockers who favored punk, the Teddybears mutated, grew, shrank and transformed to become the Euro-electronica band we have today. Along the way they picked up enormous bear heads, a better-than-cult following and the attention of several significant international artists who jumped at the chance to contribute to the Bears’ mission.

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