hotpress.com - Archives
hotpress.com Logo
Home Music Features Politics Audiovisual What's On Shop Archive Industry

USERNAME
PASSWORD
forgot?

Search Results
 
Found 46 matches.

Music Review | Album 64% | 23 Jun 2006
Children Of Love Richard Brophy
It only took Jay Haze and Samim, aka Fuckpony, a few months to write and record 'Children', but its underlying themes are the result of two lives spent on the edge. Haze and Samim's troubled experiences - including stints living homeless in San Francisco and selling LSD while touring with the Grateful Dead - are not obvious from the predominant musical soundtrack, an unusual mixture of deep old school house and wiry minimalism. However, scratch beneath the surface and cautionary tales like 'Cell Phone Hit' and 'Make Money Hoe' reveal the darker side of life. Their story probably warrants a good book or film, but until Sodebergh comes calling, we'll make do with 'Children'.

Music | Interview 62% |  5 Mar 1997
Bring Me the rest of Jerry Garcia Peter Murphy
phish are a bone-fide American underground phenomenon who have gone overground in a very big way. Word of mouth rather than record company hype, initially made their reputation Stateside and now they can boast of chart success, mega-audience attendance and their very own devoted following of Phisheads. But is Europe ready for the 90s equivalent of The Grateful Dead extended jams, waccy baccy, patented ice-cream flavours and all? peter murphy investigates.

Music Review | Album 57% | 11 Aug 1993
Bigger, Better, Faster, More! ?? ??
THE SUITABLY gushing press release makes great virtue of the fact that 4 Non Blondes hail from San Francisco and follow in the same maverick musical tradition as Jefferson Airplane, Captain Beefheart and those other legendary left-fielders, The Grateful Dead.

Music | News 57% | 18 Jan 2008
'It's a great honour' The Hot Press Newsdesk
Ronnie Drew has heard the song that was recorded as a special tribute to him by U2, Kila, Simon Carmody and a cast of leading Irish musicians. He talks to Hot Press editor Niall Stokes about his reaction.

Music | Interview 41% | 15 Apr 1998
SHAKER MAKERS Jackie Hayden
Having survived their initial mauling at the hands of the British music press, Asia-obsessed psychedelists KULA SHAKER have returned for a second innings. Frontman CRISPIAN MILLS lays off the poppadoms for long enough to chat to JACKIE HAYDEN about his band's new album, Strangefolk.

Music | Interview 40% |  8 Jul 2003
The best things in life are Spree Stuart Clark
The Polyphonic Spree are festival-fit for Punchestown.

Hot Features | Interview 40% | 29 Sep 1999
The Furure Is Now Stuart Clark
Futurama is on its way....

Hot Features | Commentary 40% | 20 Jul 2000
In God s Country? Peter Murphy
A new book traces the influence of country music on rock s alternative artists. PETER MURPHY reads on, impressed

Politics | Frontlines 40% | 16 Dec 2003
Putting the boot in Colm O Hare
A police raid on a dublin record store has led to intense speculation that the Gardaí are about to commence a serious crackdown on the retail of bootleg CDs.

Hot Features | Commentary 39% |  7 Jun 2001
Mobile bones Jackie Hayden
the biggest grossing tour of the year or just the grossest tour of the year? Jackie Hayden encounters tales of everyday madness and sadness in the trail of St Therese

Politics | Frontlines 38% | 30 Apr 1997
the beat stops hereALLEN GINSBERG 1926-1997 Olaf Tyaransen
the poet Allen Ginsberg died at his East Village home in New York on Saturday, 5th April, just two months short of his 71st birthday. After more than four decades of constant, and often controversial, conflict with such repressive figures as J. Edgar Hoover, Fidel Castro and Newt Gingrich, liver cancer finally succeeded where they had always failed in silencing the notoriously outspoken writer and self-confessed beat-hip-gnostic-imagist performance poet.

Music | Interview 37% | 30 Nov 1994
A CULT above the REST Nick Kelly
No it’s not Waco, Texas, but wacky Californian folk-rockmeisters Cracker. Your host: Nicholas G. Kelly

Music | Interview 37% | 19 Oct 1994
HENRY portrait of some serious kidders Craig Fitzsimons
They may have been dismissed as your typical goofy American oddballs, but as Craig Fitzsimons discovers when he meets THEY MIGHT BE GIANTS co-conspirator JOHN LINNELL, there’s definitely some sort of method to their madness.

Music | Interview 37% | 31 Aug 2000
The First Of The Celtic Tigers Peter Murphy
SEAMUS HEANEY once described Ireland as a country that went from the medieval to the post-modern in a generation. More than any other native band, Horslips embody that idea. Over their ten-year career, the band lurched back and forth from neo-classical Irish chamber music to progressive rock to acoustic folk to psychedelic pop to glam rock; here was one combo capable of going from Carolan to Caravan in a single bound.

Music | Interview 37% | 26 Jan 1994
ZZ Living Stuart Clark
The most famous beards in rock 'n' roll are back with a new album that's guaranteed synthesiser-free and hotter than a Tex-Mex jalapeno pepper. As ZZ Top do a John Major and return to basics, DUSTY HILL tells STUART CLARK about the danger of eating chili-dogs, what he used to get up to under the bed-clothes as a kid and the nature of his relationship with long-horned steers.

Music | Interview 36% |  3 Jun 1990
Irreverand Brothers Break Silence Bill Graham
 

Hot Features | Commentary 36% |  6 Jul 2000
piracy on the high c s Jackie Hayden
Artists and record companies are losing millions of pounds every year through piracy. New developments like Napster and MP3 will bring further challenges. Report: JACKIE HAYDEN.

Hot Features | Commentary 36% | 17 Feb 2000
Altamont: The Killing Field Peter Murphy
PETER MURPHY recounts the horror of the day the Woodstock dream died

Music | Interview 36% | 14 Dec 1994
STONE the CROWS Niall Crumlish
Blow me down, it’s that chirpy Counting Crow adam duritz again, flapping his vocal chords on everything from bunking off the MTV awards, why the Rolling Stones are still “fucking great” and why he won’t be emigrating to Utah just yet. Witness for the defence: Niall Crumlish.

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 22 Sep 1993
Even Better than the Real Thing Gerry McGovern
Or that's what the proponents of the phenomenon of Virtual Reality might want us to believe. GERRY McGOVERN enters this brave new world and discovers that its capacity to transform our lives - at work, rest and foreplay - is truly mindblowing. Now, put on your headset and start reading!

Music | Interview 36% |  5 Nov 1992
Alone Again Naturally Bill Graham
Sharing the spotlight with only his trusty guitar, Ireland's foremost troubadour Christy Moore prepares to take on audiences at The Point later this month. Here he tells Bill Graham of his growing sense of worth and self-confidence, defends Siniad O'Connor's right to free speech and explains just why good hecklers are worth their weight in gold.

Music Review | Album 35% | 26 Jan 1994
Sentinel Patrick Brennan
Robert Hunter: “Sentinel” (Ryko)

Music | Interview 35% | 12 Jul 2002
Shine on, the lights of the Bowery Peter Murphy
The blank generation revisited

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 18 Apr 2007
Burns baby burns John Walshe
Award-winning director and actor Ed Burns talks about enjoying success on your own terms, his lifelong music obsession and the fact that he’s about to make his first big-budget Hollywood movie.

Hot Features | Commentary 35% |  3 Sep 1997
It s alright ma, we re only SLEEPING Peter Murphy
After being a magnet for A&R men during the 80s, Dublin has recently developed into something of an underachiever. The city may have the second biggest growth-rate in Europe but there are a hell of a lot of gigs and records that simply aren t selling. peter murphy casts a critical ear over the capital s music scene and decides that what s required is a full-scale artistic enema.

Music | News 35% | 18 Feb 2008
'The Ballad Of Ronnie Drew' release dates announced The Hot Press Newsdesk
The U2-led tribute song to Ronnie Drew will be played simultaneously on a host of radio stations across the country tomorrow morning.

Music | Interview 35% | 15 Dec 1993
AN OFFER HE COULDN’T REFUSE! Bill Graham
When the offer came to produce the new Rolling Stones album in Dublin what answer could Don Was give but a resounding ‘Yes’. Mick, Keef & Co. are the latest in a long and impressive list of the man’s studio credits which includes Bob Dylan, The B-52’s, Willie Nelson, Bonnie Raitt and Paula Abdu. But throw in the small matter of the career of Was (Not Was) and the musical rehabilitation of errant Beach Boys’ genius Brian Wilson and we’re talking major industry player here. Bill Graham takes up the story . . .

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 13 Aug 2004
Firestarter Olaf Tyaransen
Meet Larry Harvey, the man behind burning man, the world’s most extraordinary festival, in which a whole city, run as a gift economy, springs up in the arid nevada desert to celebrate creativity, non-conformism and the healing power of fire.

Music | Interview 35% | 11 Oct 2001
How I learned to stop worrying and loathe the bomb Peter Murphy
After September 11th Radiohead were probably the last band you'd want to see live... but maybe the one that mattered most.

Music | Interview 35% |  7 Jul 2003
The complete line-up (M-Z) Paul Nolan & Ronan Fitzgerald
From A to Z, Paul Nolan and Ronan Fitzgerald introduce all the runners and riders for Punchestown – throwing in a baker’s dozen of acts who are not to be missed* along the way

Music | Interview 35% | 17 Dec 1987
BAND ON THE RUN Bill Graham
Bill Graham travels to Louisiana to discover that U2 are once more in the throes of a re-birth.

Music | Interview 35% | 20 Oct 1993
Heaven knows they're Miserable now Bill Graham
When Nirvana exploded out of Seattle with the classic grunge album Nevermind, they were hailed as modern primitives, punk upstarts whose hard musical edge and authentic street style were the antithesis of the dominant ethos of corporate rock. Two years on however, their reputation as Rock 'n' Roll rebels is somewhat less secure. Bill Graham sifts through two new biographies of the band, and talks to Victoria clarke, the co-author of a third which has been effectively surpressed by the Nirvana 'corporation'.

Music | Interview 34% | 20 Jul 2000
The white devil's fear of a black planet Peter Murphy
Or how PUBLIC ENEMY changed the landscape of popular culture forever. Words: Peter Murphy. Snapping with The Enemy: Sasfi Hope-Ross

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 29 Oct 1997
Menace Liam Fay
DENIS LEARY, sultan of sneer, is en route to Dublin to star in the Murphy s Ungagged Comedy Festival. By way of a little limbering up, and proving that there s no smoke without fire, here he lets rip on Noraid, The Kennedys, The Royals, Bill Hicks, Dean Martin, Oasis, Father Ted, drugs in Kerry and, oh yes, why he d like to go to Riverdance with a sniper s rifle . Interview: LIAM FAY.

Music Review | Album 32% | 29 Sep 2003
It Still Moves John Walshe
There’s something unashamedly retro about My Morning Jacket.

Hot Features | Reports 31% |  8 Jun 2009
Rant in D: In the name of the river Peter Murphy
Since men first emerged from the water, they have written psalms in praise of the river. Old Man River. The River of Jordan. The Rivers of Babylon. Moon River. Shenandoah...

Music Review | Live 31% | 12 Jan 1994
THE CRANBERRIES Siobhan Long
Rawness was the order of the night...

Hot Features | Reports 30% | 28 Jan 2008
Here's to you, Ronnie Drew The Hot Press Newsdesk
With Bono and Simon Carmody orchestrating it, and Kila minding the gap, the recording of a tribute to one of the most important and widely loved figures in the history of Irish music turned into a very special occasion indeed.

Music | News 30% | 16 Aug 2008
Ronnie Drew dies in Dublin The Hot Press Newsdesk
It is with great sadness that Hot Press learned of the death this afternoon of Ronnie Drew (1934 - 2008).

Music | News 29% | 26 Jan 1994
WHAT COMES AROUND GOES AROUND: Melissa Knight
THE ONLY KNOWN ORIGINAL COLLABORATIVE PIECE OF ART EVER CREATED BY THE BEATLES UNVEILED AFTER 27 YEARS IN HIBERNATION by MELISSA KNIGHT.

Music | News 29% | 17 Jan 2008
WORLD EXCLUSIVE: U2 and Kila collaborate on Ronnie Drew tribute The Hot Press Newsdesk
U2, Simon Carmody and Kila have led a collaboration on a special tribute to Ronnie Drew, which was recorded in Windmill Lane Studios in Dublin, over the past few days.

Hot Features | Sam Snort 28% |  1 Nov 2004
Turning Over A New Leaf Sam Snort
After a word on a recent controversy, our bloodstock and literary correspondent is forced to turn his attention to some new rock titles.

Music | Hit the North 28% | 13 Jan 2004
Government in action Colin Carberry
Colin Carberry reflects on a year in which northern rock got a long-overdue injection of punk attitude.

Music | Hit the North 27% | 22 Jul 1998
Immigrants, Emigrants & Drumcree Stuart Bailie
According to Buzz Records in Chicago, the sound that’s created by Irish band Half Film is “music for the solitary life”. Maybe it’s appropriate, then, that we’ve interviewed them without even talking, never mind meeting face to face.

Hot Features | Reports 26% | 25 Oct 2006
Jack the lads Jackie Hayden
Jackie Hayden travelled to Nashville, Tennessee for a once-off invitation-only gig starring Frank Black, Guy Garvey of Elbow and Richard Hawley at the Jack Daniel’s Distillery as part of the celebration for Mr Daniel’s birthday.

Music | News 25% |  3 Mar 1999
Brewing Up A Storm Peter Murphy
30 years after the recording of Bitches Brew, the release of The Complete Bitches Brew Sessions comes on like Apocalypse Then The Sequel. PETER MURPHY journeys upriver into the heart of darkness and unearths still more evidence to confirm MILES DAVIS reputation as one of the most peaceful and influential musicians of the millennium.

 

About Us     Why be a member?   Advertise with us   Terms of Service   Activate Hot Press Gift Box/Hot Box    

Privacy Policy   Contact Us   Feedback   Buy Hot Press Back Issues