A Daily Telegraph Music Book Of The Year
'Music's equivalent of Schott's Miscellany'
Mojo
'A cross between rock-press fun and Schott's Miscellany - executed with charm and diligence'
The Word magazine
'For anyone needing guidance on living a righteous rock'n'roll life, there's no end of wit and wisdom'
Irish Times
'A vivid and consistently entertaining cornucopia of lists, miniature histories and Harris's own obsessions'
Q magazine
'An engaging adventure into the myths, legends and most importantly, the truths of rock'n'roll stardom'
Rock Sound
6 music spesh, again
December 29th, 2009
Just a reminder: you can now listen to the HHRR 6 Music Christmas Special online here, and it goes out once again on the digital airwaves at 2pm on New Year’s Day.
Posted in The Talk | No Comments »
Merry Xmas Everybody
December 24th, 2009
… From the HHRR crew. To celebrate, here’s a few tunes from outside the standard Slade/Greg Lake/Jon & Yoko axis. Starting with…
“The Greedies” – Thin Lizzy plus uber-ligger Sex Pistol Steve Jones – doing a series of Christmas chestnuts a la The Pistols’ Silly Thing. Fascinatingly bad.
God’s own Ramones do Merry Christmas (I Don’t Want To Fight Tonight). A guy dressed up as Father Christmas pukes at the end. Of course.
And to finish, the absolute best: Run DMC’s peerless 1987 hit Christmas In Hollis. “It’s Christmas time, in Hollis, Queens/Mom’s cookin’ chicken and collard greens.” It also mentions eggnog. Ree-speck!
P.S Once again: Remember to tune into BBC 6 Music at 1pm on Boxing Day for the HHRR Christmas spesh.
Posted in The Albums (and singles), The Music and The Lyrics | No Comments »
6 Music Xmas special!
December 21st, 2009
News just in: there’s a two hour Hail! Hail! Rock’n'Roll radio programme going out on BBC 6 Music on Boxing Day, featuring loads of our favourite rock ephemera and nonsense and narration/presentation from JH. Confirmation is here, along with a picture of a headless fella playing a guitar. We just say TUNE IN. Please.
Tags: 6 music, Christmas, radio
Posted in The Albums (and singles), The Beatles, The Bonus Tracks, The Kit, The Look, The Music and The Lyrics, The Stage, The Talk | No Comments »
Top 8 albums of 2009
November 30th, 2009
Seeing as it’s that time of year, here’s the list of top 2009 albums I submitted to a monthly music magazine that’ll have to remain nameless.
- Yeah Yeahs Yeahs, It’s Blitz
- Micachu & The Shapes, Jewellery
- Florence & The Machine, Lungs
- The Horrors, Primary Colours
- Regina Spektor, Far
- Alasdair Roberts, Spoils
- Bat For Lashes, 2 Suns
- Doves, Kingdom Of Rust
There was no showing in the final list for Micachu, which suggests I was the only one who voted for her. So, some kind of explanation may be in order. Her real name is Mica Levi: she’s 22, signed to Rough Trade, and she and her band make an artsy-fartsy, somewhat discordant row that’s borderline unlistenable, but somehow addictive – the musical equivalent of that thing where you touch an electric fence for a laugh, and then do it again and again, despite yourself (kind of thing). There are tinges of The Slits – and maybe Elastica – in there somewhere, but have a listen yourself: the bizarrely-titled Turn Me Weller is perhaps best avoided, but the single Lips is great.
Oh, and she’s at the opposite end of any imaginable musical spectrum from Doves, but I like all kinds of stuff, me. By way of further enlightenment, there’s a Spotify playlist of some of the best tracks from seven of them, minus Alasdair Roberts. So, in honour of the bostin re-re-reissue of The Who Sell Out, there’s also the BRILLIANT out-take Early Morning Cold Taxi.
Posted in The Albums (and singles) | 1 Comment »
SpotifyPlaylists
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By way of a reminder of how absurdly great Kiss could be, here’s a Spotify 12-tracker, including the best hits and more
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One more playlist, before tea: a quick sprint through the lovely sounds of effects units
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A 12-tracker charting the wildly oscillating and usually disappointing progress of The Rolling Stones through the 1980s
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To enlighten readers further, a playlist inspired by the magic of less-than-gigantic music genres, as detailed on pages 78-80
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