Tuesday 24 June 2008

Amy Fleming meets the Kills

The Balls Pond Road in Dalston isn't one of London's most salubrious hang-outs - a dusty, unkempt bus route lined with bathroom shops, builders' merchants and the odd newsagent. And yet Jamie Hince - boyfriend and reported fiance of Kate Moss - and Alison Mosshart, who together form the rock band The Kills, look right at home draped over the sofas of a deserted pub on the street. This is their neighbourhood - they can often be spotted riding the buses - and after months on the road promoting their third album, Midnight Boom, they're happy to scrape a few days at home.












Hince, who, if it wasn't for his estuary English, would be a dead ringer for Lou Reed circa the Velvet Underground, forewarns me that he had no sleep last night. "We played a gig in Paris, got in around 5am and there was no electricity in my hotel room. But I needed to charge my phone," he says as if that were a perfectly reasonable explanation. Mosshart, on the other hand, who appears messed up and edgy when performing, is fresh-faced and smiling broadly.

Until last year, being a Kills fan was meaningless to all but a small group in the know. However, since Hince started dating one of the planet's most photographed women, the band has become tabloid fodder - "cartoons", as Hince says. "It's pretty much all lies," he adds of the stories about him. "I'm engaged, I'm married, I'm divorced, I hate [the Mighty Boosh comedian] Noel Fielding - where the fuck has that come from? I bought Kate a Fabergé egg, I wrote a song for her and put it in a frame and gave it to her for her birthday, we danced on Jim Morrison's grave, we had a massive orgy at the Dorchester and the soundtrack was No Wow [the Kills' second album] ..."

"All the members of the Kills were really angry," adds Mosshart.

"Yeah, like the whole band was really pissed off with me because I was spending too much time with Kate," says Hince, riled because whoever wrote this must have been unaware that the Kills has only two members. Adding insult to injury, the Sun's gossip columnist has started referring to Moss and Hince as "Mince".

Formed in 2000 after months of sending unfinished songs to each other across the Atlantic (Mosshart is from Florida and Hince is a Londoner, although originally from Berkshire), the Kills were part of the same garage rock movement as the White Stripes, the Strokes and Yeah Yeah Yeahs. The band signed to indie label Domino, home to Franz Ferdinand and the Arctic Monkeys. Their songs, in which the pair act out violent lovers' tiffs and seedy scenes that evoke Warhol-era New York, are constructed around a drum machine, Hince's fractious guitar riffs and Mosshart's yowling of phrases such as "I hate, the way you love". Peppered with scratchy samples of telephone dialling tones and coughing fits, their work provides "a snapshot of an experience", says Hince.

Midnight Boom is a mild departure, featuring hip-hop-inspired beats. Is it important to them that people dance to their music? "People have never really danced at a Kills show," says Hince. "They just stare at us," says Alison. "I get the feeling," Hince adds, "that watching us, people are sort of, uh, holding their breath a bit, crossing their fingers, like [they're witnessing] someone running down a hill, you know, trying not to fall over. We just ... " " ... hang in by a thread," Mosshart finishes his sentence, laughing.

And has the mainstream coverage brought new audiences? "I don't know," says Hince. "We've got lots more people. We're playing, at least in America, noticeably bigger venues. On a good day I like to think it's about the fact that we made a great record but it might be something more cynical and stupid." Has it detracted from the music? Hince sighs. "I don't know, does it take away some cred? That's for other people to decide - I never afforded myself any cred anyway. If anyone else has, then it's up to them to take it away or do whatever they want."

The Kills's three albums have received mixed reviews (the Guardian panned Midnight Boom). All cheekbones and snake hips, they have often been dismissed as a "fashion band" - the kind of people who wear sunglasses indoors. Their critics accuse them of being all style and no substance. "I still prefer that over all substance and no style," quips Hince. I point out that Mosshart was, just a moment ago, wearing her RayBans inside the pub. "It was sunny," she says, "I needed to see your eyes." This is, in fairness, true.

"I still don't understand what 'too cool for school' [a stock Kills criticism] means. That presupposes that the aim is to be not cool enough for school," says Hince, 38. "We're too old for school," says Mosshart, 29, with an air of finality.

The pair use stage names - Hotel and VV - which add to the impression that they are an art-rock version of Spinal Tap. "We were scraping together songs in my bedroom," says Hince, shuffling his cigarette packet. "I was on the dole ... we were drunk and thought it was an empty gesture because no one would ever hear our band. Now, six years later ... "

"I was like: you have one second to name me," says Mosshart.

"We were trying to outdo each other with stupid names," say Hince.

In fact, they are both impressively well read. Midnight Boom is a reference from Jack Kerouac's The Subterraneans. "I've just finished three Richard Brautigan books," says Mosshart. "Jefferson [Hack, the magazine editor, who has a daughter with Kate Moss and also used to date Mosshart] gave me a Brautigan book. And I was just re-reading some Truman Capote short stories. I'm also reading a Captain Beefheart biography."

"I've got that," says Hince.

"I know you do but I can't find it because our house is so messy," says Mosshart.

They refer to their nearby home as "Red Meat Heart". I picture it full of ancient synthesisers, wires everywhere. "There's lots of gear in there," says Mosshart, "but it's more where we have our bedrooms, and do our art - drawing, painting, collage, photography."

If they weren't in the Kills, what would they be doing? They look bemused. "One thing I don't do enough of now is paint, so I'd paint more," offers Mosshart. "I always wanted to be a playwright," says Hince. "That's what I did my degree in. When I graduated I wrote a couple of plays which were on at Edinburgh Fringe festival but I got sidetracked - I was in a band and we got signed." It takes some pressing for Hince to divulge details about the plays. "One was called Danish," he says sheepishly, "but it was kind of a modern interpretation of ... oh, I can't say ... well, it was loosely based around Hamlet but it was written in cockney rhyming slang."

I leave Hince and Mosshart discussing where they intend to go for dinner and how they plan to spend an upcoming week off - Mosshart at a wedding back in Florida while Hince is heading to Istanbul for a "bit of sun. My bird's working out there, so I'll wander around the markets and then we'll have the rest of the week off."

Before then, Hince will also fit in Moss's daughter Lila's school sports day, and both Kills are looking forward to viewing a new exhibition by Moss's former boyfriend, artist Jake Chapman and his brother Dinos. I ask Hince if there's any truth in reports that the Chapmans are devising some artwork for Moss and Hince's September wedding, forgetting momentarily that he earlier denied being engaged. "Ah, but was it a double bluff though? Am I? Ooh, ooh," he says, hooting at the ridiculousness of it all.

· The Kills' new single, Last Day of Magic, is out now. They play Glastonbury on Friday and The Mighty Boosh festival July 5.


See Also

Mathias Schaffhaeuser

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Artist: Mathias Schaffhaeuser

   Genre(s): 
Electronic
   



Discography:


Love and Business   
 Love and Business

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 10




 





El-P collaborator dies

Last Of The Famous

Last Of The Famous   
Artist: Last Of The Famous

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


The Music Or The Misery   
 The Music Or The Misery

   Year: 2004   
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Jay-Z: 'glastonbury Row Is Ridiculous'

Rap superstar JAY-Z has defended his controversial forthcoming appearance at legendary U.K. music festival Glastonbury - branding the furore around his headlining slot "ridiculous".
Festival organisers' decision to book the hip-hop mogul as a headliner for the festival later this month (27-29Jun08) has been widely criticised - with Oasis frontman Noel Gallagher insisting he was a "wrong" choice for the event.
But the rapper - real name Shawn Carter - is adamant that hip-hop does, in fact, have a place at the annual British rock n' roll event.
He tells BBC Radio One, "It's ridiculous, if we don't embrace what is new, how do we progress?
"I've never actually experienced anything like that before. It's 2008, what is that about? That's such old school thinking, that's not even how the world thinks anymore. So I was really taken aback (by the criticism)."









Larry Kucharz

Larry Kucharz   
Artist: Larry Kucharz

   Genre(s): 
Ambient
   



Discography:


Ambient Red Washes   
 Ambient Red Washes

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 11


Cybercoralcolors   
 Cybercoralcolors

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 14


Ambient Blue Washes   
 Ambient Blue Washes

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 6


Computerchoral Green Prints   
 Computerchoral Green Prints

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 9


Digichoral Blue Portraits   
 Digichoral Blue Portraits

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 9


Unit 25: Dark Red   
 Unit 25: Dark Red

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 7


Electrochoral Dreams   
 Electrochoral Dreams

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 10


Harmonic Luminosity   
 Harmonic Luminosity

   Year: 1993   
Tracks: 9




Larry Kucharz is an electronic composer and media artist wHO writes in both minimalist and ghostlike ambient styles. He was born in 1946 in Chicago, where he was raised. He studied pianissimo and hypothesis at the Chicago and American Conservatories of Music and took his doctor's degree at Northwestern University. He stirred to New York in 1975, where he was an active minimalist composer, filmmaker, and media creative person.


His favored tool is the Fairlight Music Computer. Kucharz tends to compose with few tonic colours, which emphasizes the unlittered melodic or rhythmic structures and interplays. He has released trey albums on the International Audiochrome label.






Download Festival fans give their verdict

Download Festival fans have been giving their verdict on this year's three day bash.

Fans have expressed a mixed reaction over the Castle Donington event which this year was headlined by Kiss, The Offspring and Lostprophets.

Many hailed the the festival as a huge success with some singling out Kiss as the main draw.

Alex Gladwin, 13, from Hull said: �I think Download is a brilliant festival. It's my first time here and I really enjoyed it. The vibe is here is really really good. Kiss were the best band by a mile. They were the band I came to see.�

Ujay Chan, 23, agreed saying that along with Kiss' show was a massive highlight. He was also impressed with the good range of groups on this year's line up.

He said: "There's been a great variety of bands this year than last year's line-up because you've got really heavy stuff and it's balanced out with the general melodic stuff like Lostprophets for other people. I saw Kiss on Friday night and that was very old school - like Judas Priest too, lots of old stuff which is good."

Leah Jackson, 22, however came down to the festival especially to see yesterday's main stage act Incubus.

She said: "I saw Incubus and I loved them, I'm a Brandon fan so yes that's definitely been one of the highlights."

Other fans though tended to avoid the headline acts and tended to opt for some of the smaller bands.

"Zebrahead and Skindred were the best bands," said Darrell Greest, 19, from Gosport. "They were the highlight for me because they got the crowd moving. It was just amazing.�

However, he also said he was disappointed that the site had been altered this year and there weren't more heavyweight acts on the bill.

"It's pretty good but the campsite is too far away," he said. "It�s a mile walk before you even get in. Last year was better because there were more bands I wanted to see."

Kate Rouse, 18, from Coventry shared a similar view. She said: �It's been good this year but last year was better because there were a lot more decent bands and it was organised better as well.

"As for the bands Bullet For My Valentine were the best band for me, they were really good live and they got the crowd going."

Keep up with this weekend's (June 13-15) festival action as it happens on NME.COM. For news, pictures and blogs keep checking the NME.COM's Isle Of Wight Festival page and NME.COM's Download Festival page for live coverage from both sites.

Monday 23 June 2008

Blunt is critical of Spears' media treatment

Singer James Blunt has hit out at the media for reporting on Britney Spears' personal life and habits rather than her music.
In an interview with the New York Daily News, Blunt described Spears as a "phenomenal artist", before criticising the media for reporting on the fact that she was photographed wearing no underwear.
"I think when you put the emphasis on her knickers and not on her talent, you lose perspective," he said.
"It really detracts, as a whole, from things that are really important, like global warming and war."
"Sending paparazzi to investigate things like this is useless. We're better than that; we have the power to teach and educate. Let's spend our time on that."

LiveDaily Song of the Day: Danger Radio - "Broken Man"

Today's Song of the Day is by Danger Radio [ tickets ]. The group's featured cut is "Broken Man," a track from their impending July release, "Used and Abused."

Ellen

Ellen   
Artist: Ellen

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


Holiday From Love   
 Holiday From Love

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 2




 






Father: Winehouse suffers lung, heart ailments

LONDON —

Amy Winehouse's father says his daughter has lung damage from smoking crack cocaine and cigarettes.


Mitch Winehouse told the Sunday Mirror newspaper Amy has early stage emphysema and has been warned that she will have to wear an oxygen mask unless she stops smoking drugs. Mitch Winehouse said Amy also had an irregular heartbeat, in an interview published Sunday.


Winehouse collapsed at her north London home Monday after signing autographs for a group of fans and was taken for tests at a London hospital. She has remained under observation.








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