Wednesday, November 9, 2016

The US presidential election result

The US presidential election result: Donald Trump won the US presidential election early this morning.


The Republican took the key swing states of Florida, North Carolina and Ohio early this morning, as he marched towards the White House.

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In an extraordinary development, Mrs Clinton did not initially concede the election - but then later called Mr Trump to congratulate him on his victory. 

The Republican surpassed expectations and confounded pollsters in Florida, where Mrs Clinton had been expected to win following a surge in the Hispanic vote.

Mrs Clinton’s hopes of a swift victory faded as the Republican picked up a series of states early on and maintained his momentum.

Congratulation the new president, Donald Trump! Let's see the future policies Donald Trump makes for America as well as the world.

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Saturday, October 8, 2016

A list of unique musical instruments in the world

Let's check out our list of most unique musical instruments in the world. You may be surprised by their bizarre. Let's check out to find out their fun facts

Contrabass Balalaika


The contrabass balalaika is a Russian folk music instrument that was developed in the late 17th century. It looks strange because unlike other stringed musical instruments, it has a triangular body. Played with fingers or leather plectrums, this instrument is normally equipped with extension legs resting on the floor and comes in various sizes. 

American Fotoplayer

American fotoplayer was introduced in 1912 and was developed by the American Fotoplayer Company. This musical instrument is a type of player piano that was especially developed to provide sound effects for silent movies during the early 19th century.

Stylophone


Invented in 1967, a stylophone is an analog stylus-operated synthesizer that was introduced by Brian Jarvis.

Pikasso Guitar


Designed by Manzer, the Pikasso guitar is a notable instrument whose name was derived from its likeness to the appearance of the cubist works of renowned artist Pablo Picasso. This instrument is basically a harp guitar that has four necks, two sound holes and 42 strings.

Theremin or Aetherphone

Originally known as “aetherphone,” theremin is an early electronic musical instrument that can be controlled without physical contact. Named after its Russian inventor Leon Theremin, this instrument has a controlling section that consists of two metal antennas which can sense the relative position of the thereminist’s hands and control oscillators for frequency.

Cimbalom

Popularized in Hungary, cimbalom is a concert hammered dulcimer that features a large trapezoidal box with metal strings stretched across its top.

Glass Harmonica


Glass Harmonica

Also known as “armonica,” “bowl organ” or “hydrocrystalophone,” glass harmonica is a musicalinstrument that uses a series of glass bowls or goblets graduated in size to produce a broad range of musical tones through friction.

Crwth


A crwth is an ancient stringed musical instrument that is sometimes called as “crowd.” This musical instrument is believed to have been played in Wales since the 11th century.

Ondes Martenot

Also known as “Martenot Waves,” Ondes Martenot is an electronic instrument that was invented in 1928 by Maurice Martenot. Its known for its eerie wavering notes.

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Friday, September 16, 2016

Who will win Mirrorball Trophy in the Dancing with the Stars 2016?

Who will win Mirrorball Trophy in the Dancing with the Stars 2016? Let's see and guess

1. Amber Rose


Model and TV personality Amber Rose has joined “Dancing With the Stars.” She is a proud mother, activist, entrepreneur, spokesperson, talk show host, model, actor and published author from Philadelphia, PA. MUVA, as she is affectionately known, has quickly become the unapologetic face of neo-feminism. Amber teams with pro partner Maksim Chmerkovskiy.

2. Calvin Johnson Jr


Calvin Johnson Jr. is a former American football wide receiver who played his entire career for the Detroit Lions of the National Football League (NFL). Former Detroit Lions wide receiver Calvin Johnson will trade in his football cleats for dancing shoes.

3. Jake T. Austin


Whether appearing on TV/film or lending his voice to animated characters, 21-year-old Jake T. Austin is a multi-talented actor who has showcased his talent across the board in the entertainment industry. Jake teams with pro partner Jenna Johnson.

4. James Hinchcliffe


Race car driver James Hinchcliffe is no stranger to high-pressure situations. James Hinchcliffe is arguably one of the most popular drivers in the Verizon IndyCar Series. On the show, James teams with pro partner Sharna Burgess.

5. Jana Rae Kramer


Jana Rae Kramer is an American actress and country music singer. She is best known for her role as Alex Dupre on the television series One Tree Hill. Her pro partner is Gleb Savchenko.

6. Kenneth “Babyface” Edmonds


Singer/producer Kenneth “Babyface” Edmonds is competing on Season 23 of “Dancing With the Stars”. Kenneth Brian Edmonds professionally known as Babyface, is an American R&B musician, singer-songwriter, and record producer. He has written and produced over 26 No. 1 R&B hits throughout his career, and has won 11 Grammy - Music Awards. He teams with pro partner Allison Holker.

7. Laurie Hernandez


Laurie Hernandez burst onto the Senior Elite gymnastics scene in 2016, just in time for the Rio Olympic Games where she won Silver in the individual balance beam and secured Gold in the team All-Around. Her goal had always been to make an Olympic Team, and her dream came true! She is known for her dazzling floor exercise routine, where she has been nicknamed the "human emoji" for her outgoing facial expressions and for her grace and artistry on the balance beam. She teams with pro partner Valentin Chmerkovskiy.

8. Marilu Henner


Actress Marilu Henner is best known for her role as Elaine O’Connor Nardo on “Taxi.” With the energy of a teenager, the wisdom of a sage, and the memory of a superhero, Marilu Henner has deservedly earned the nickname "Perpetual Motion." His pro partner is Derek Hough.

9. Maureen McCormick


“Brady Bunch” actress Maureen McCormick will be dancing on the reality competition. She is also an American recording artist and author. She teams with pro partner Artem Chigvintsev.
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10. Rick Perry


Former Texas governor and Republican presidential candidate Rick Perry is once again competing for America’s votes. Coming to Dancing with the Stars season 23, Rick teams with pro partner Emma Slater.

11. Ryan Lochte


Ryan Lochte has become a transcendent figure in the Olympic world. He is a four-time Olympia and a 12-time Olympic medalist. His seven individual Olympic medals are second all-time in Men's Swimming, and he is the current world record holder in the 200 individual medley. It is the fact that the Olympic swimmer Ryan Lochte is competing for a different types of gold. His pro partner is Cheryl Burke. 

12. Terra Jole


Reality TV star Terra Jole will appear on Season 23 of “Dancing With the Stars. She is an American actress, producer, singer, and TV personality. Since 2014, she has gained recognition both nationally and internationally as the star and Executive Producer of Lifetime's hit TV Shows, Little Women: LA and Terra's Little Family. Terra teams with pro partner Sasha Farber.

13. Vanilla Ice


The iconic Robert Van Winkle - aka Vanilla Ice - exploded on the Rap/Pop music scene in 1990/91 selling 10 million albums in four months and hitting number one on the Billboard charts with the number one single, "Ice Ice Baby," and number one album positions. He is one of thirty contestants for this season 23 and teams with pro partner Witney Carson.

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Monday, July 25, 2016

DEMI LOVATO’S STUNNING ‘PURPLE RAIN’ COVER WILL HAVE YOU SEEING FIREWORKS

Since Prince’s death in April, we’ve seen performances honoring his legacy from Jennifer Hudson, D’Angelo, Alicia Keys, Madonna and Stevie Wonder ... basically anyone who’s graced a stage during the past two and a half months. Now, Demi Lovato’s added one more tribute to the bunch with a stunning cover of “Purple Rain.”
On Monday night (July 4), Lovato and her current tour partner, Nick Jonas, did their patriotic duty by performing at the annual Boston Pops Fireworks Spectacular. After trading verses on “America the Beautiful,”Jonas ceded the spotlight to Lovato, who brought the house down with her emotionally charged rendition of “Purple Rain.”

Backed by the Boston Pops Orchestra and swaying on a stage bathed in violet light, the 23-year-old floored the crowd, especially with a goosebumps-inducing final note. And, of course, the whole thing was capped by a dazzling round of fireworks. Prince surely would’ve loved it.


Tuesday, July 12, 2016

Review journal - Meat Loaf getting his health back on track


Review journal - Meat Loaf has vowed to go on a diet and get himself fit after collapsing at a concert last month.

Meat Loaf, real name Michael Lee Aday, was hospitalised with dehydration after falling to the floor at the gig in Edmonton, Canada, resulting in the cancellation of a number of tour dates.

The Bat Out of Hell musician puts his on stage struggles down to being unable to keep fit due to a series of debilitating injuries, but is now on a diet and has signed himself up to an intensive fitness program.

“I’m okay,” he told Britain’s Classic Rock magazine. “Weak. I’ve gotta go to physical therapy. I had back surgery and knee surgery within the last two years, and the knee surgery failed, so I haven’t been able to work out on tour.”

He added, “So I’m going to acupuncture, physical therapy, and a trainer, starting Monday for four days a week, an hour and a half each session.”

Although he currently has no live shows scheduled, the singer is expected to soon make an announcement about rescheduling the shows cancelled in the wake of his ordeal and is set to visit Britain to promote his new album Braver Than We Are, which is released across Europe in September and the 68-year-old star hopes he will have shed the pounds by the time he gets to the U.K., noting, “I’m in the UK from August 28 to September 10 and then I come to New York for a week and I go to LA for a week, for promo, then I’m coming home to rest for four weeks and do more physical therapy, plus I’ve been on a diet and I’ve lost getting close to 20 pounds now.
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“So before August 28 I will lose another 15 before I get to do promo in the U.K. So we’re trying to watch out for my health and make it easier onstage.”

Speaking about his terrifying on stage collapse Meat Loaf explains that he was feeling unwell before the gig and had been drinking Pedialytes, an electrolyte solution in a bid to enable himself to perform.

“We were doing really well in Canada, until I got sick and I got dehydrated and then I had to drink what they call Pedialytes – gallons of them,” he revealed, adding that he fell unconscious during his stage collapse.

“I knew I was about to go and I didn’t want to just fall and hit. I was getting really dizzy and I’m going, ‘Oh my god, I think I’m gonna faint.’ So I didn’t want to stand there until I just fainted and cracked my skull open.

“So I just said, ‘Okay, I’m going to kinda go down.’ But about half-way down I went completely out, and I didn’t wake up until I got to the hospital.” See more games review to get more information.

Monday, July 11, 2016

Famous After 30: 7 Artists Who Made It Big Later in Life

Debbie Harry of Blondie photographed at Blanford Studios in London on March 8, 1978
Review journal, not all artists have the luck of a teenage Lorde, who learned to drive and win Grammys at the same time. Some artists play opening gigs for years, sell albums from their cars and wear Playboy Bunny outfits before making music history.


So don't cancel this week's garage band practice just yet! In fact, do consider quitting your day job. Check out this list of major musicians who made a splash after their friends and family thought it was too late.

Chainz​

In 2011, Playaz Circle's Tity Boi decided to make his name more "family friendly" and 2 Chainz was born. Apparently being a family man was all he needed, because his seventh mixtape, T.R.U REALigion, jumped onto the charts when he was 34. Since then, he's topped the Billboard 200 and rapped with the best of them, recording songs with Nicki Minaj, Kanye West and Lil Wayne.

James Murphy

Before creating LCD Soundsystem, Murphy dropped out of NYU and turned down writing for Seinfeld before it exploded. So maybe he didn't write one of the most acclaimed comedy shows of all time, but he did manage to heavily influence electronic music past the age of 30. In 2005, LCD Soundsystem released its first album and was nominated for two Grammys.

Matt Berninger​



Matt Berninger and his National bandmates kept their day jobs while promoting the band's self-titled first album in 2001, but in 2004, they left behind the 9-5 slog to focus on their band full time. Their third album, Alligator, was released in 2005 to critical acclaim when Berninger was 34, and their sixth album, Trouble Will Find Me, was nominated for a Grammy for best alternative album in 2014.
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Thelonious Monk

Although he composed the immortal jazz standard "'Round Midnight" before turning 30 and was a well-respected sideman, Thelonious Monk didn't make much of an impact as a top-billed artist with mainstream audiences until his album Brilliant Corners (1957), which was released when he was 40. Monk would go on to become one of the most covered jazz composers of all time.

Rachel Platten​

It wasn't until 2015, when she released her Fight Song EP, that Platten rose to fame. By the time "Fight Song" entered the Billboard Hot 100's top 10, the singer-songwriter was 34 -- since then, it's been used by Hillary Clinton at presidential rallies and on the show Pretty Little Liars.

Debbie Harry


Hugh Hefner probably didn't realize a former Playboy Bunny would eventually create one of the most successful bands of the late 70s. Blondie's first album was released when Debbie Harry was 31, but their massive commercial breakthrough didn't occur until their third album, 1978's Parallel Lines, delivered the No. 1 Hot 100 hit "Heart of Glass" when Harry was 33. 

Leonard Cohen


Leonard Cohen was a poet and writer long before he started on the folk singer-songwriter track. In hopes of making more money in music than he did in literature, he moved to the U.S. from Canada and released his first album, 1967's Songs of Leonard Cohen, when he was 33. The album became a classic and kicked off a decades-long run of celebrated releases, including the endlessly covered "Hallelujah." In 2010, Cohen won the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award.
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Everything you wanted to know about Country Singer,Songwriter - Lori McKenna



Review journal, for 10 years, Lori McKenna has extended the reputation as one of country music’s top singer-songwriters. With cuts by such acts as Hunter Hayes and Faith Hill, she is may be best known as one of the Grammy-winning writers of “Girl Crush,” the massive hit from Little Big Town. She also found herself in the spotlight as a solo writer for penning Tim McGraw’s recent chart-topper, “Humble and Kind.” As McKenna gears up for the release of her Dave Cobb-produced upcoming album The Bird & The Rifle (out July 29)

Home is definitely where her heart is.

Though she has written for many of Music City's biggest artists, she chooses to continue to reside in her native state of Massachusetts. “They can’t get rid of me up here, at least for now,” she says. “It’s been good for me. I know myself as a writer to the point that if I lived in Nashville, I would want to write a song every day because of all the great songwriters that live there. I’m not an everyday writer. I need to sit on things emotionally, and I’m not good at that. I need some breaks in between. I think that with that, the kids still being in school here, and my husband’s job and our families being here, this is where I need to be. I can just jump in a car, get on a plane, and head down there when I can. That’s worked out really well for me.”

Her kids inspire her music.

“My family influences every part of my career -- from how I travel to how I tour to what I’m drawn to write about," says McKenna. "They’ve been with me on this musical journey from the very beginning. ‘Humble and Kind’ is really the first song I’ve written specifically for them and to all five of my kids, but they have always made their way into lines here and there along the way.” And her family is aware that things they say might just make it into a song. "They know me well enough by now when it comes to how my writer brain works. Sometimes they might say something and follow it with, ‘Yeah, write that.’ My husband in particular is very good about not taking songs personally -- he knows how the emotional content of a song has a mind of its own sometimes.”

Writing Tim McGraw's "Humble and Kind" humbled her. 

“The fact that Tim took this song that I saw as a prayer or a little list of things I wanted my kids to know and saw it as something bigger than that was amazing to me," she explains. "To have him sing it to so many people, I really feel like I wrote the song with him because he’s taken it to levels that I don’t have the ability to do, and honestly, I just didn’t see it that way. It’s been overwhelmingly wonderful to me, such a journey.”
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McKenna has been writing songs since her teenage years.

“Two of my brothers are songwriters, and I remember presenting one of them to my brother, Richie. We grew up on James Taylor, Carly Simon, Carole King, and Neil Young, and he listened to it and said, ‘How in the world did you just write a country song?’" she recalls. "The early stuff is a little bit scary to look back on, but you have to go through that.” And as a songwriter, McKenna loves to dig into the "extraordinary lives" of ordinary people. “It’s just a matter of picking it apart, and shining the light on that story or that amazing thing that happened to us. I love songs or stories that give you all the little tiny details, but let you paint the rest of the picture yourself. I love music where we know the details, but we invent everything else in our heads. Sometimes, the listener might hear the song a little differently than I do. That’s the cool part about it all. I think that every human has a lot of great and not so great things that happen to them, and I love those everyday stories.”

The lyrics of her song “Old Men Young Women” are ones she hopes don't come true anytime soon.

"That was Luke Laird's title. I wrote that with him and Barry Dean one day in Nashville. Luke said that he had this title, and the hook was ‘Old men, young women only work in the beginning.' I thought ‘Oh my God, that’s perfect,'" she recalls. "I think they wanted to write it with a woman and a woman singing it, because it came better from that perspective -- as the woman who has been through it, and maybe has been through both sides of that coin as the young woman and the older woman. It’s fun to play live, and it’s such a different character for me. Normally, I write what I think I know or what I’ve lived through. This has not been my experience -- unless my husband leaves me for a younger woman, then, I’ll let you know!”

Her Massachussetts accent made her the butt of jokes.

"When I started traveling for music, my accent became a bit of an issue because it was so thick. People would ask me all the time to say 'Park the car in Harvard yard' and it drove me crazy," McKenna explains. "I started trying really hard to pronounce my R’s and somehow I only knew how to do that in a southern sort of way. Ha! It’s a joke with the family now when we watch old home movies -- all of us had really thick South Shore accents and we’ve all learned to pronounce our words better. I think we can thank music for that!” 
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7 Pokémon Songs to Soundtrack Your Pokémon Go Addiction

These Pokémon songs ain't playing.

Review journal this is it. The moment we've waited for our entire lives. Pokémon run rampant through our streets, and the only reasonable response is to hit the pavement and catch 'em all. Rattata is hiding in the bushes. Weedle is chillin' in the VIP. Your favorite downtown bar is a Pokéstop, and you're gonna sit there for the next hour lighting incense until you scoop up enough Charmanders to finally evolve.

You've got six eggs and you're about to do a lot of walking. You need a killer soundtrack of Pokémon songs to get you through your quest. Start with this list of seven super music jams representing everything from future funk to dubstep, trap music, and more. Happy hunting, and please, remember to look up.

Grimecraft – Pokébike

The sun is shining, the Pidgeys are chirping, and you've got a super fast bike. Life doesn't get any better than this. Ride off into the sunset while Grimecraft lays out the sick groove. This tune comes from the San Francisco producer's epic Poké-inspired POKÉP. Don't forget your helmet, Ash.

Grimecraft – Ditto ft. ABSRDST

Another fantastic PokéAnthem from the POKÉP. This one features vocals from Pikachu himself. It's gonna have you head-bobbin' your way to gym leader status in no time. If you're looking for a bonus round, we suggest listening to DJ Uchiage's Wacha Wacha Monster Panic mix, featuring this and other amazing video game-inspired tunes.

Psychic Type – Victory Road

Not everything in the PokéVerse is sunshine and rainbows. Once you leave Pallet Town, you're walking into a world of hurt. Toronto-based producer Psychic Type represents the struggle in these streets with a trap beat hard enough to make a Cloyster button his shell.
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23 – Let's Go To Lavender Town
Lavender Town is populated by ghosts. It only stands to reason it would have the creepiest soundtrack in the original Red, Blue, and Yellow versions. The Haunter haunt was represented by four spooky, repetitive bleeps, and yet it's the most remixed of all the PokéTunes. This dubstep interpretation by 23 is scary good. Plus, there are fun PokéMon samples in the middle of the track.

NΣΣT – Gengar

Another Lavendar Town rework, but this one has a way happy ending. NΣΣT seems to draw a lot of inspiration from the anime world, and he's jazzed the Lavendar “do-do-do-do” into a shiny explosion of future bass iridescence. It's adorable.

Ockeroid – Pokémon GYM Battle (Remix)

Hope you've got plenty of potion in your bag. You're going to need it after this amped-up gym session. The beats are unrelenting on Ockeroid's high-energy remix, which is to say, it's everything a PokéNerd could ask for. Who's ready to kick some Elite Four ass?

Ramstar – Route 24

Spain's Ramstar turns the cutesy “Nugget Bridge” theme into a serious electro banger. It sounds kinda like Wolfgang Gartner was hired to make a main stage hit for Nintendo. Enjoy the speedy synth runs. We hear you can attract rare breeds if you play more air guitar.
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Friday, July 8, 2016

Related New games coming out - Jay Z Releases First New Song in Three Years After Police Shootings

The Independent - Jess Denham
Hot news - Jay Z singer has released his first solo song in 3 years following the fatal police shootings of black men Alton Sterling and Philando Castile.
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The US rapper shared “Spiritual” with fans on his music streaming service Tidal on Thursday, along with a letter expressing his anger and sadness at his country’s failure to address race issues.

“THIS America - we should be further along. WE ARE NOT,” he wrote. “I trust God and know everything that happens is for our greatest good, but man… it’s tough right now.”

Jay Z almost dropped the track after the death of Ferguson teenager Mike Brown in 2014 on the advice of TDE president and fellow rapper Punch but kept it back after telling him that sadly racial violence will “always be relevant” and his death “wouldn’t be the last“.

Singer Beyonce, who is married to Jay Z, led fans in a minute’s silence at her Formation gig in Glasgow before posting an open letter in response to the latest spate of police brutality against black people.

"We are sick and tired of the killings of young men and women in our communities,” she wrote. “It is up to us to take a stand and demand that they stop killing us. We don’t need sympathy. We need everyone to respect our lives."

A Black Lives Matter protest against the shootings in Dallas, Texas was interrupted on Thursday night when a sniper killed five police officers and injured six others, leading to a stand-off with the gunman that lasted until 2.30am. The suspect is believed to have shot himself in the shoot-out, with another arrested. 
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Wednesday, June 29, 2016

How we made Space Ibiza

‘If you wanted to have sex in the middle of the club, you could. No one cared’

Pepe Rosello, founder

Fact of life, In 1958, I was running a restaurant in Ibiza called El Refugio, before moving on to La Reja, a jazz club. After years of repression and dictatorship in Spain underFranco, music offered freedom, dancing, physical contact. Hippies, the Woodstock generation, came over from the US, fleeing the wars in Korea and Vietnam, and bringing music that filled the venues: Joan Baez, Leonard Cohen, Stevie Wonder, Paul Simon – all forbidden in Spain at the time.

In 1962, I took over the Capri club and renamed it Playboy. I was being rebellious, as the magazine was banned. But the area, San Antonio, ended up getting a bit vulgar, so in 1989 I took over Space. People thought I was mad to move to Playa d’En Bossa: the area had no personality, the tourists didn’t leave the hotels, and it was mostly for family holidays.

So the first thing I did was put a wall around the club for privacy, even though you could still jump over it. The authorities had over-regulated night-time, but there was no problem with opening in the morning. So we started Breakfast in Space, where you could dance and welcome the planes passing 30 metres above your head. People started coming directly to Space with their suitcases, even before checking into their hotels. Full video game reviews

When it comes to making a successful club, if you manage to attract a tribal group who fight the establishment, you’ve already done most of your work. The masses then absorb that transgressive elite, enhance it and give it an identity. The British are the most devoted audience of all: they’re always polite and respect the rules. Music helps them express emotions that have been pent up by their culture and education.

I’m 80 now and this will be my last year owning the club. I’ve got so many good memories. The night I turned 75, my friends blindfolded me and sat me down in the main room. When I opened my eyes, I found myself in front of Dita Von Teeseperforming on stage, with soprano Tiziana Fabbricini singing La Traviata.

‘The best nights of our lives’ … Space Ibiza.

Carl Cox, resident DJ

I was curious: a club that opened at seven in the morning? You’d been out atPacha and you’d think: I’ll get some breakfast, wash, have a shave, then go to Space until two in the afternoon. You felt like a naughty schoolboy: you’re meant to be going to bed, or just waking up from the night before.

The club had people from everywhere: Venezuela, Japan, Portugal, the Netherlands. Hearing an aeroplane fly over a club was a first – it would drown out the music on the terrace and you’d all be cheering, because there were more people coming to the island.

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Back in the 1990s, if you had a camera, you had to leave it in the cloakroom. So if you wanted to have sex in the middle of the club, you could. No one would care. These were the ideals of the place: be flamboyant, be as free as you want. The Manumission night in the 1990s, which had a live sex show on stage, used to get 10,000 people every week.

Ibiza has become more conservative now. At DC-10 people used to dress up as aeroplanes or as Catwoman, for no reason. Elrow is bringing that back, but it’s forced and staged. And at Richie Hawtin’s recent nights, everyone dressed in black – like, who died? We grew up in the summer of love, where it was all about colour and having a smile on your face. I want to walk away from it all now and just remember that we’ve had some of the best nights of our lives in this club.

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Tuesday, June 28, 2016

ADELE’S BREAKUP PLAYLIST SURPRISINGLY HAS ZERO ADELE SONGS

Fact of life, When it comes to breakup songs, no one can touch Adele. Her powerhouse voice, emotionally charged lyrics, and passionate delivery have added up to some of the best breakup ballads in recent memory: “Chasing Pavements,” “Someone Like You,” and “Hello,” for example.

But what does Adele listen to when she herself has a shattered love life? Unless you’re Kanye, you probably wouldn’t listen to your own songs ad nauseam, so the 28-year-old has her own tried-and-true playlist to wallow away with. (Don’t worry, BTW — she’s still happily in a relationship with Simon Konecki, her longtime partner and the father of her son. Whew!)

Adele told People of her post-breakup routine, “I mope around for a little while. I do embrace the fact that I’m heartbroken. I don’t move on quickly.” And she blasts this amazing playlist:

1. “I CAN’T MAKE YOU LOVE ME” BY BONNIE RAITT


Key lyric: “I can’t make you love me if you don’t/ You can’t make your heart feel something it won’t”

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2. “AFTER THE STORM” BY MUMFORD & SONS


Key lyric: “There will come a time, you’ll see, with no more tears/ And love will not break your heart, but dismiss your fears”

3. “COSMIC LOVE” BY FLORENCE + THE MACHINE

Key lyric: “You left me in the dark/ No dawn, no day, I’m always in this twilight/ In the shadow of your heart”

4.“THIS YEAR’S LOVE” BY DAVID GRAY

Key lyric: “So who’s to worry if our hearts get torn/ When that hurt gets thrown, don’t you know this life goes on?”

5. “NOT LIKE THE MOVIES” BY KATY PERRY

Key lyric: “If stars don’t align/ If it doesn’t stop time/ If you can’t see the sign/ Wait for it”

6. “ALL I COULD DO IS CRY” BY ETTA JAMES

Key lyric: “I was losing the man that I loved/ And all I could do was cry”
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Friday, June 24, 2016

Jane's Addiction to Headline the Sunset Strip Music Festival

Dave Navarro and Jane's Addiction played the Brooklyn Bowl Las Vegas in May.

Reviews, the L.A. band, which played The Roxy for the first time in 1985 and recorded its debut album live inside the West Hollywood venue, also will receive the Elmer Valentine Award.

Jane's Addiction, which first played on the Sunset Strip as the opener to Gene Loves Jezebel at The Roxy nearly two decades ago, is returning to West Hollywood in September as the king of the influential live-music scene.

The L.A. rockers will headline the first day of the newly expanded Sunset Strip Music Festival and receive the Elmer Valentine Award, which salutes those who have made an impact on the iconic 1.5-mile stretch of Sunset Boulevard.

Australian electronic music duo Empire of the Sun ("Walking on a Dream") will topline the second day of the street festival, which takes place Saturday, Sept. 20 and Sunday, Sept. 21.

The event includes three outdoor stages, interactive experiences and plenty to eat and drink, with the portion of Sunset Boulevard between Doheny Drive and San Vicente Boulevard closed to traffic.

The Whisky a Go-Go, The Roxy and The Viper Room also will host live performances; the headliners will perform outside. Learn more at fact of life

Nederlander Concerts has come aboard to book and promote the seventh annual shindig, which moved from its usual August spot on the calendar while expanding to two days.

Jane's Addiction, with original members Perry Farrell, Dave Navarro and Stephen Perkins, is celebrating the 25th anniversary of Nothing's Shocking, and they plan on playing the album in its entirety at SSMF.

According to JanesAddiction.org, the band's second concert ever took place at The Roxy on Oct. 24, 1985, and its eponymous debut album was recorded live at the intimate venue for L.A.'s Triple X Records in January 1987. Warner Bros. Records quickly signed Jane's after a bidding war, so the Sunset Strip has always been a special place for the group.

"It all started for me back when my big brother used to tell me about the Strip and about the amazing scene where artists like Janis Joplin and Jim Morrison blew people's minds by pioneering a new sound and influencing culture in a more exciting way than ever before," Farrell said in a statement.

"So when it came time for Jane's to record our first album, we told Warner Bros. that before we could even release a studio record we had to make a live record on the Strip, and we even recorded it at The Roxy, because we knew it had to embody that inspiration that came from the heart of that scene."

The Elmer Valentine Award — named after the late co-founder of The Whisky, The Roxy and The Rainbow Bar & Grill — will be presented to the band on Friday, Sept. 19, during an invitation-only event at The House of Blues Sunset Strip.

Previous recipients include Lou Adler, Mario Maglieri and Valentine; Ozzy Osbourne; Slash; Motley Crue; The Doors; and Joan Jett.

Others scheduled to perform Sept. 20 include Failure, Cold War Kids, ††† (Crosses), Minus the Bear, Kaiser Chiefs, The Birds of Satan, Nightmare and the Cat, Beware of Darkness and Say Say.

Set to join Empire of the Sun the following day are Mayer Hawthorne, Iration, Big Data, Tove Lo,Big Freedia, We Came as Romans, Nostalghia, video game reviews Fenech-Soler and other acts to be announced.

RZA Partners With Atari for New Album Inspired by Game Music


The Wu-Tang Clan rapper/producer, actor and video game fanatic will be recording an album inspired by the sounds of Atari game music.

RZA is adding another bullet point to his lengthy resume with a new partnership with Atari,Billboard can exclusively report. The Wu-Tang Clan rapper/producer, actor and video game fanatic will be recording an album chock-full of original tracks inspired by the sounds of Atari game music, full video game reviews.

“I’m so excited to work on these iconic games to deliver what I believe will be one of my best albums,” RZA said in a statement sent to Billboard. “I am going to invite some of my friends to join me and it will be Game On with the first beat!”

The partnership marks RZA and Atari's second collaboration after the Brooklyn multi-hyphenate (born Robert Diggs) helmed the voice over for Atari's 2006 title Getting Up: Contents Under Pressure. 

Fact of life, “We are thrilled to partner with RZA, one of the greatest hip-hop producers of all time,” added Fred Chesnais, CEO of Atari. “RZA is a multi-talented artist and soundtrack virtuoso and we cannot wait to hear the new tracks he creates based on Atari’s iconic video game sounds and music.”

For the forthcoming album, RZA will spearhead production with Atari's Chesnais and Stephen Belafonte serving as executive producers. More details about the project will be announced at a later date.
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Thursday, June 23, 2016

View again A Decade of Taylor Swift


He said the way my blue eyes shined / Put those Georgia stars to shame that night / I said, ’That’s a lie.'” That’s how Taylor Swift begins her first country single, “Tim McGraw,” released 10 years ago this month. There’s a weird, prescient edge in the way she sings the line “That’s a lie,” even in jest — a little peek at the next decade of her particular brand of confessional heartbreak. Even then, we could already tell that Taylor Swift always gets the last word.
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I was 12 when “Tim McGraw” came out, and ever since then, Swift’s music has followed me like a pretty, blonde apparition. Really, she’s followed all of us, rising steadily from CMT-approved country to the peak of the pop charts. She’s provoked and cast shadows on some of music’s biggest stars, from Kanye West to Nicki Minaj, and lyrically eviscerated manipulative exes from no-name teen boys to John Mayer. Swift is far more than the 16-year-old Nashville transplant she was then — she’s become an emblem of lean-in feminism and female friendship, an outspoken critic of how artists are treated in the music industry in ways that speak to people across generations.


But to grow up under the twangy reign of Taylor Swift, the patron saint of teenage white girls, was to enter into a relationship that’s harder to define. At 15, Swift’s voice rang out on the radio to tell me, literally, that this was “life before you know who you’re gonna be.” I was angry when it felt like Swift wanted me to hate girls my age forbeing popular cheerleaders or what they did on the mattress. Songs like “Dear John” and “All Too Well” seemed to bleed into my life at the first sting of an older boy’s manipulations. As a 20-year-old writer, I found solace in Swift’s openly manic “Blank Space,” a sugary pop reminder to pen my own reality.
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As a younger child, I looked up to the latex-clad fantasy performances of stars like Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera, lip-synching “Lucky” to my bedroom mirror, or rocking out to Gwen Stefani’s lite punk rock with No Doubt. But Swift was a completely different kind of teen idol. She cultivated an image that was less like a pop fantasy built in a lab, more like an older high school peer I watched grow up from a distance. As much as people may applaud or sneer at her unique ability to crucify her exes and enemies in music, the details of the desires and pain in her music are often universal if not pedestrian. There’s a small, bitter quality to the feelings in “We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together” and “Picture to Burn” that gives those songs the ring of truth.

What’s grating at times is that these girl-next-door themes have yet to leave her work, even though Swift is now an immensely successful 26-year-old multimillionaire. Swift continues to play the underdog on songs like “New Romantics” and “Shake It Off,” leaning on critics’ and tabloids’ knocks against her for inspiration. As absurd as this can feel, though, it makes sense in the crystallized teen-girl world of her music. To focus solely on Swift and the particulars of her real life is to forget how far her reach is, and how young much of her audience remains. In an interview with Rolling Stone two years ago, Swift said that there’s an emotional lag time to her music in part because of how well she knows her fans: “There’s always gonna be an eight-year-old in the front row. Always,” she said.

Throughout her career, Swift’s music has mapped teen-girl strife in vague but poignant forms. Yes, you will be mistreated by men. Yes, you will be taught to hate the women these men might eventually date. Yes, you will be sold love as a glorious fantasy, because you’re 15 years old, and later on you’ll realize it’s so much more complicated (or just plain nonexistent). But you can’t escape it, because that’s the world we live in.
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To feel frustrated with Swift’s music is to feel frustrated with the world that’s sold to you as a young woman. Her music embodies the worst parts of teen girlhood — the jealousy, the pettiness, the diaristic writing — in uncomfortably vivid detail. All those MySpace bulletins and dramatic Facebook statuses from 2006 you wrote and deleted? Well, Swift’s are up for the world to read forever. And in a way, that’s admirable: If Swift’s artistic growth has ever seemed awkward, it’s because that’s what a teen pop star in control of her voice sounds like. Her music is the explicit sound of a girl with a creative toolbox growing up into a savvier, more confident adult. It’s easy to see Swift — her looks, her money, her homes — as the pinnacle of unrelatability. But her music has always, and will always, speak to a certain young, female experience devoid of a coached male gaze. For the past decade, Taylor Swift has suspended in time the wearisome trials of being a heartbroken young woman. And as she continues to outline the cutting realities of her intrinsically feminine youth, finding far more mature ways to describe her adult life, the wide-eyed, bottled innocence of teen Swift might come to haunt her, too.
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Thursday, June 16, 2016

Stone Roses – 10 of the best

1. Tell Me

Reviews - the band disowned their earliest recording, but the presence of this song on the soundtrack of Mat Whitecross’s sparky though sycophantic film Spike Island (2012), a dramatisation of their most famous gig, emphasises how much it has affected fans. The group was formed in Manchester in the early 1980s by childhood friends Ian Brown and John Squire, and went through various lineups. Then Brown toured England and Europe on his customised pink scooter, while Squire made models for an animation company. When the duo re-formed as the Stone Roses, with guitarist Andy Couzens (later of the High), bassist Pete Garner and drummer Alan “Reni” Wren, they attempted to record a debut album in 1985 with the producer Martin Hannett. The group shelved the results, which were a legendary bootleg until it was released – to the band’s dismay – as Garage Flower in 1996. Only the double A-side debut single So Young/Tell Me emerged at the time, and it holds up surprisingly well. Squire’s scratchy, frantic guitar on this song sounds as if it was recorded in a rave-ready warehouse and Brown’s angry but cocksure yelp reveals his well of self-confidence. “I love only me / I’ve got the answers to everything … and there’s a place for me anywhere,” he swaggered. John Robb reported that formative sets would end with this song, Brown strutting through the crowd eyeballing individuals as he delivered the lyric.

2. Made of Stone

It sounded, said Squire, like “making a wish and watching it happen, like scoring the winning goal in a World Cup final on a Harley Electra Glide dressed as Spider-Man”. It’s hard to disagree. Made of Stone is one of Ian Brown’s top three Stone Roses songs – and the one they were playing on The Late Show in 1989 when the power went down and Brown bellowed about the BBC being “amateurs … wasting our time!” This first single from their debut album is the one to hold up when someone claims the Roses were musically oikish and lyrically simplistic. Squire’s guitar and Gary “Mani” Mounfield’s bass wrap around each other seductively. The lyrics, meanwhile, evoke fiery death on the road – in this case, that of Squire’s art muse Jackson Pollock – and encapsulate the bittersweet feeling of being young and broke but as free as it gets. “Sometimes I fantasise / When the streets are cold and lonely / And the cars they burn below me / Don’t these times fill your eyes?” is as perfect as a pop lyric gets.

3. She Bangs the Drums

She Bangs the Drums is another contender for the definitive Stone Roses song on an album full of them. The hi-hat tingles with anticipation, the bass builds with hair-raising determination and finally Squire’s guitar soars, coupled with the lovesick opening couplet “I can feel the Earth begin to move / I hear my needle hit the groove.” To call it a simple song is to disregard the beauty of its construction; this song boiled three decades of guitar pop down to the bare bones of the euphoria of meeting someone you desperately want to be with and hearing a song you can’t stop playing. Listening to She Bangs, only stony hearts will fail to see why a generation fell hard for the Roses. It’s the sound of that brief but beautiful moment when the teen years become hopeful young adulthood. “The past was yours but the future’s mine / You’re all out of time” were lines utterly justified by the song. Clicks here to relax animals for kids 

4. Standing here 

Like the Beatles’ A Day in the Life, the B-side to She Bangs the Drums was two songs in one. The first, a noisy, languid guitar groove, was nice enough, with Brown’s loping lyric assuring that “I really don’t think you could know that I’m in heaven when you smile.” The second, which appeared in the last two minutes of the song, was a minor revelation. Over a shuffling beat, Brown’s voice apes Art Garfunkel at his most subdued, a precise study in male vulnerability and tenderness as he repeats the mantra: “I could park a juggernaut in your mouth / And I can feel a hurricane when you shout / I should be safe forever in your arms.” It was the moment that most set them apart from the armies of mooning, faux-sensitive lads who scrambled in their footsteps. The Stone Roses were a masculine band, but even amid the meatiest guitar solos they never stooped to being macho, and whenever they expressed admiration for women it was as an equal partner.

5. This Is the One

You could pick 10 of the 11 songs from the debut album and declare them the Stone Roses’ best, but that wouldn’t capture the breadth and underrated quality of their B-sides, standalone singles and later work (and it would mean leaving out the essential Fool’s Gold). To give the first phase of their career a fair shout, the mighty I Wanna Be Adored and Waterfall have been omitted here. But it’s impossible to leave behind the sparkling This Is the One, the last track to be added to the record. It’s a glorious May bank holiday of a song, leading to an extended coda of battered drums, churning electric riffs and Brown’s yearning repetition of the title. “I’d like to leave the country / For a month of Sundays / Burn the town where I was born,” he hollers, flying high above the clouds away from the staleness of rainy days on housing estates.

6 I am the resurrection

The Stone Roses’ use of religious imagery in their songs is often seen as a simple declaration of faith, but John 11:25 probably wasn’t written in the expectation it would one day be adapted into “I am the resurrection and I am the life / I couldn’t ever bring myself to hate you as I’d like.” The closing song on the band’s first record previews the pseudo-religious touches that Second Coming would revel in, and has an extended, one-take instrumental coda that occupied more than half of the song’s more than eight-minute running time. “The only thing I did to excess were guitar solos,” joked Squire to the Guardian in 2002. This one is finely honed and perfectly balanced, wringing an abundance of leftover joy from the first album like a sugar-fuelled child racing around the living room.

7. Fool’s Gold

Released six months after the debut album and not included on it, Fool’s Gold was the Roses’ first UK Top 10 single and was, arguably, the song that made their reputation. The band performed it on Top of the Pops the same week the Happy Mondays played Hallelujah, a mainstream arrival for the Madchester sound when indie still suggested some kind of deviation from the mainstream. It also fits into a most unlikely lineage, with its funk-laden drumbeat lifted from the James Brown song Funky Drummer, which Squire apparently discovered on a breaks compilation he found at Manchester’s Eastern Bloc Records store. The lyrics – inspired by The Treasure of the Sierra Madre – record Brown’s disdain for avarice, but there’s also a sense of pilgrimage; unsurprising, given that it was recorded at Sawmills studios in Cornwall, which is accessible only by boat at high tide or a long walk through a forest.

8. Love Spreads

In 1994, almost five years after the Stone Roses had released new music, Steve Lamacq and Jo Whiley played the first single, Love Spreads, from The Second Coming on Evening Session – and a collective intake of breath came from the indie nation. Some listeners were probably shocked by the size of its debt to Led Zeppelin, particularly the breakdown to hi-hat and a single wailing guitar note just after 3.00, but there’s no doubt the Roses’ biggest hit – it reached No 2 just before Christmas – had acute focus and poise. Squire’s noisy guitar riffs churn through the track, and Reni and Mani’s groove-laden backing complements Brown’s swaggering assertion: “The messiah is my sister / Ain’t no king, man, she’s my queen.” It’s a dusty, old, desert-blues rocker, but the anti-patriarchal message imagining Jesus as a black woman and the quality of the playing elevate this song above its contemporaries. They were never a group to overexplain their songs, but one interviewer did draw out of Squire that “it’s about the hijacking of religion”. Noteworthy fact: one of the bearded prospectors just after 3.40 in the video by Steven Hanft is apparently Beck. Clicks here to relax fun facts about dogs

9. Begging You

On first listen to Second Coming, Begging You might have seemed the most abrasive song, the least in keeping with the rest of the record’s focus on fusing trad-rock styles with the band’s undoubted alchemy as players. But more than 20 years on, it still sounds fresher than most of its contemporaries. Its lyrical content is odd but pleasingly rhythmic, and it crams in references to Aesop’s Fables. “The fly on the coach wheel told me that he got it / And he knew what to do with it / Everybody saw it / Saw the dust that he made,” lands blows on overweening personalities like that of the fly from Aesop’s story, desperately trying to claim credit for the dust that the wheel he’s sitting on is kicking up. One for the band’s many high-profile imitators, perhaps? Anyway, aside from a guitar figure used almost as punctuation by Squire, the song is all at the bottom end, a deep, heavy repeated riff engineered by Mani and Reni. It is to drum and bass what the Beatles’ Tomorrow Never Knows was to acid house. And, though the two songs coincidentally sounded alike, that similarity didn’t unfairly flatter the huge and intuitive abilities of their composers.


10. Ian Brown - Fear

Such was the press-stoked, decade-and-a-half clamour for a Stone Roses reunion, that the quartet’s solo activities in that period have been unfairly written off by many. Reni laid low, briefly appearing with his band the Rub (he was a decent lead singer and guitarist). Mani added bass to many of Primal Scream’s finest moments, including all of XTRMNTR. Squire launched the pleasant guitar-pop quartet the Seahorses, and a couple of low-key solo records. 

Meanwhile, Brown’s work, with hindsight, was significant. In 11 years he released six albums (five of them went Top 10) and had 15 Top 40 singles, from the martial anthem My Star, about the militarisation of space exploration, to the jaw-droppingly confrontational antiwar tirade Illegal Attacks, featuring Sinéad O’Connor. From 2001, the stoned, playful FEAR – the title was an acronym for each line of lyrics – and its swooping, melancholy string lines marked the point when even diehards accepted Brown’s work on its own terms. See more video game reviews

Brandy Clark: 'I sing about real, truthful, unpretty subjects'

Her father died in a mill accident and she grew up touring pageants with her mom in a band called Sagebrush and Satin. But gay singer-songwriter Brandy Clark is far from your average country star

Reviews by the time Easter came round, Brandy Clark had spent just three days of 2016 at home in Nashville. The radio tour for her second record, Big Day in a Small Town, started on the fifth day of the year, even though it wasn’t out until June, taking her to two or three different stations a day. “It ain’t for a sissy, I’ll tell you that,” says the 40-year-old songwriter of this cutthroat underside of country. Not that she’s complaining. “I’ve never been somebody who was afraid of hard work. You want your music heard by the most possible people. If somebody says anything different, they’re lying."

And Clark’s music speaks to a vast audience who weren’t hearing themselves in country. She writes songs for the workers who keep America spinning, the overburdened mothers putting themselves last, the women in middle age struggling to reconcile their faith with their need for relief, be it romantic or chemical. The characters in her songs are coupon-clippers, mums working in diners, faded homecoming queens, farmers so poor “the fleas have left the hound”.

Clark grew up in Morton, Washington, a tiny logging town. Her father died in a mill accident a few months before 9/11, a tragedy she spins into a lament for lost stability – “the broken pieces of the Norman Rockwell days” – on Since You’ve Been Gone. Illuminating working-class struggles feels subtly political, and Clark once wanted to be a journalist. Yet she calls herself “the least political person you’ll ever talk to”.

She doesn’t write striving parables or grass-is-greener fairytales, but meets her characters on their own terms – as much Randy Newman as Loretta Lynn. “I think we are shaped by our decisions,” she says, “and oftentimes by our bad decisions more than our good ones. I just want to draw a portrait of where they are and how they’re coping with their life.”

As an 1980s kid, she was lured into country by the sound of Merle Haggard, Lynn, Patsy Cline and Barbara Mandrell. “There’s a real heartache in it I’ve always been drawn to,” she says. Her mum taught her to play guitar, and for a while they were in a group called Sagebrush and Satin, touring pageants and fairs. As the music bug really bit, she quit her basketball scholarship at college in Washington for Nashville.

Clark had wanted to become a performer, but abandoned the idea after seeing how young female artists were moulded for fame. There’s a bit of that in the lead single Girl Next Door, a high-octane stomper that recalls Stevie Nicks and Tom Petty’s Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around. “If you want the girl next door, go next door,” Clark seethes.

“I often think what attracts us to people eventually repels us,” she says. “My way into that song is that I’m not the girl-next-door kinda artist. I’m not what people expect of a female country artist. I feel like I’m singing about real, truthful, oftentimes unpretty subjects.”

Still, for years other people sang her songs: Miranda Lambert recorded Mama’s Broken Heart (written by Clark and her frequent collaborator Shane McAnally, as well as Kacey Musgraves). It hit No 2 on the Billboard country charts, while the Band Perry’s Better Dig Two, written with McAnally and Trevor Rosen, went to No 1. She co-wrote three songs on Musgraves’ breakout album, Same Trailer Different Park, including Follow Your Arrow, an ode to open-mindedness that was named song of the year at the 2014 Country Music Association awards. Clark, like McAnally, is openly gay, but despite country’s conservative reputation, she says it’s never been an issue. Relax with another video animals for kids


A stream of hits for other artists followed, but Clark found herself with a pile of songs “no one else had touched”. So she recorded them herself under the title 12 Stories, and shopped the album around labels, fruitlessly, until she was signed by the tiny Texas imprint Slate Creek. At 38, she became a stealth star thanks to her plainspoken accounts of women on the edge, whether heartbroken – What’ll Keep Me Out of Heaven “will take me there tonight”, she sang as a desperate woman contemplating an affair – or comic. Stripes found a woman suppressing the urge to shoot her cheating man because she’d look bad in prison scrubs, deciding: “There’s no crime of passion worth a crime of fashion.”

Reissued by Warner, the record earned Grammy nominations for best country album and best new artist in 2015. The rockier Big Day in a Small Town was shaped by spending three years on the road, and new producer Jay Joyce introducing her to Neil Young’s Harvest. Girl Next Door peaked at a respectable No 39 in the country airplay chart.

Clark has been asked to perform for Hillary Clinton, and will soon be making the late-night TV rounds. None of which, you suspect, matters as much to her as her music finding the people it’s about. Three Kids No Husband is a stoic weeper about a woman who’s “a mom and a dad and a taxi driver and when the baby’s sick she’s an up-all-nighter, a hand, a shoulder and a referee – a real-life hero if you ask me”. Two weeks ago, Clark was playing in Florida, “and afterwards, this guy chased me down – young guy, I would say between 20 and 30,” she recalls. “He said, ‘I just wanna thank you for playing that Three Kids song, because that was my mom." Click to see more video game reviews