Stop ISP snooping! Oppose Phorm

Stop PHORM!

If they have their way all your web browsing history will be collected and sold to the highest bidder.

Fight back!

diaTribe

Gidday!

The DiaTribe blog is our occasional take on life, the universe and everything. Observations on current affairs, the environment, politics, humour and music/gig reviews. Travel diary and extreme sports stories, along with the usual rants/raves are also chucked in for good measure.


<  August 2010  >
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun
            1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 31          

Search

Categories

diaTribe

Recent Articles

Check them out...

Archives

Friends of diaTribe

Blogs Worth Visiting

Syndicate this blog

What is RSS?

FeedBurner
Subscribe to diaTribe by Email

Other Links

Visit Blogcatalog.com - opens in new window

Visit Blogflux.com - opens in new window

Visit Blogtoplist.com - opens in new window

Visit Zimbio - opens in new window

Hate Spammers? Check this out - opens in new window

We Support Wikipedia
Wikipedia Affliate Button

Visit the b2evolution website (opens in new window)

Technology at it's most pointless

Feb10

Rave: Wire Daisies "Just Another Day"

English (UK) Permalink | Phil | 10/02/06 at 05:52:00 am | Categories: Lyre and Pipe, Rants n Raves | 350 words  

Having fallen out of touch with much of the UK music scene in the mid 90's, (during the period I shudderingly refer to as "Clubbing and Remix Hell") I'm enormously pleased to see the return of a growing number of original new bands emerging in a renaissance of the UK music industry.

Chief among my favourites has to be the Cornwall-based Wire Daisies. Their debut album "Just another Day" is a milestone in Indie music and rightly went straight into the iTunes charts in September 2004 when it was launched.

Wire Daisies consists of Treana Morris (lead vocals), Ol Beach (keyboards), Steve Jackson (drums) and Alden Evans (lead guitar) and all members make a distinct and significant contribution to the bands' unique sound and style. The band typifies much of what is best in the new millennium UK music scene; strong, sensual female vocals, signature lead guitar riffs (the popular "Everyman" is a superb example of this), catchy toe-tapping rhythms and original scores and lyrics.

With the assistance of producer John Cornfield (best known for his work with Oasis, Supergrass and Muse), the band cut their first master demos at his sawmill studios in April 2003. Their potential must have been pretty obvious because the demo sessions led to the recording of their debut album just 2 months later. Subsequent appearances at the international Montreux Jazz and Womad festivals in 2004 were undoubted milestones.

Much of the album (to me at least) is a little like Cornwall itself; bright and richly textured tracks such as "Truth that hurts" are mixed with slightly raw-edged tracks such "Make Everything Change" and "Come Winter Time". Ballad-like numbers such as "Billy Boy" are beautifully crafted and I found myself hunting for the guitar tab on the net almost before the last bars had faded away (sadly without success!).

If you haven't yet bought a copy of this terrific album, then make sure you add it to the top of your "must buy" music list. As for me, I'm hoping to see the Daisies play somewhere in the south of England in the not-too-distant future.

Now available:YouTube Links

StumbleUpon
Permalink  | 

Comments, Pingbacks:

No Comments/Pingbacks for this post yet...

Comments are closed for this post.

Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS! Valid RSS! Valid Atom!  

NoPhorm - No consent to intercept

Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 (RIPA) Notice

No consent is given for interception of transmission of any page in this site.