Sunday, December 31, 2017

Duran Duran’s top moments of 2017 ... and a look ahead


Duranlive


The Duran Duran touring juggernaut rolled on in 2017, with the band hitting places like Asia and North America for scattered dates extending the “Paper Gods” tour. The band performed in Hawaii for the first time and also played before huge crowds at Lollapalooza in South America, a highlight especially for singer Simon Le Bon. Two of the highest-profile shows were once again in the United States, with the band playing a Sirius XM concert in Miami that could be heard on the excellent First Wave satellite radio station and a New Year’s weekend gig in Las Vegas.

Projects


With tour dates limited for the foreseeable future, it’s likely Duran’s attention will turn toward to the studio. Though new Duran music is likely a ways off, in 2017, there were cryptic hints of a “top secret project” involving members of the band and performers like Izzy Bizu, Vanessa White, Aled Phillips, and John Taylor (of Young Guns). The possibility that the TSP is John Taylor (that JT) and Nick Rhodes’ long-talked about musical is good; John recently said the project is “really starting to come together.” Nick went as far as saying it’s nearly done.

Cultural impact


Duran popped up several places in pop culture in 2017. Patrick Nagel's "Rio" cover emblazoned an Urban Decay lipstick palette that sold out almost as soon as it was available. Duran was also the go-to shirt for a quick change in the latest "Thor" movie and the TV series "The Goldbergs." And Duran music finally appeared in the 1980s-set "Stranger Things" in the form of "Girls on Film."

Anniversaries

It was a big year for Duran album anniversaries, with “Rio” hitting its 35th, “Notorious” its 30th, and “Medazzaland” its 20th, among others. It was a good reminder of the lasting impact of “Rio,” the Nile Rodgers-produced grooves of “Notorious," and the groundbreaking “Medazzaland,” which heralded the future of the music industry with the first digitally sold single. More milestones loom: a 25th anniversary next year for “The Wedding Album,” and in 2019-20, Duran itself will celebrate its 40-year mark. Nick says the band will "start some new recordings in the studio" in 2018 and has "a lot of things we are planning" for Duran's 40th.

Photo by Christopher Windle

Wednesday, December 27, 2017

Top five live shows of 2017


1. The Damned

The heart and soul of the band, goth god singer Dave Vanian and lovable goofball Captain Sensible on guitar, are still touring in top form and visited the Summit Music Hall in Denver in April. The Damned managed to touch on nearly every era of its career, from the first punk single, "New Rose," to "Alone Again Or," a cover of a Love song that was a hit in the late '80s. In all, the band played 23 songs, several more than many acts years younger manage to play. But 40 years on, the Damned is not the typical band just rolling through the hits. A new album is coming soon; the band recently previewed new song "Standing on the Edge of Tomorrow" live.

All photos by Christopher Windle.

2. The Buttertones

The Buttertones, a sharp-dressed five-piece with a ton of musical talent, brought a riveting live show to Omaha's Slowdown in August. Although the Los Angeles group reminds one of a certain band in the '80s at times, instead of Chic and Roxy Music, The Buttertones' musical style has been described as Johnny Kidd and the Pirates meets The Gun Club. The band played a slick and energetic set of songs off current album "Gravedigging" as well as tracks from further back in its six-year career. The band proved with its live show that it's the next big thing, and it will be exciting to see what's next. The review of this show also had the honor of being our most-read blog of the year, thanks to Facebook likes from "The Butterdads." Our comparisons to Duran elicited a "Well done, boys!"


3. Blondie

Blondie, with an assist from Garbage, a fellow band that helped define music over four decades with its fierce, age-defying female singer, came to a steamy Stir Cove in Council Bluffs in July. Despite the new songs, the reason to see Blondie live are the timeless originals: "One Way or Another," covered and used in commercials to the point that it's forever in the public consciousness. "Dreaming," a slice of '50s-inspired pop perfection. "Atomic," a keyboard-driven opus that helped inspire new wavers like Duran Duran. And "Rapture," a tour de force live, during which Debbie Harry hit the high notes and strutted to the front of the stage for the first and best female-led rap. At 72, it's clear that Harry, and Blondie, have still got it.



4. Wilco

Wilco, led by original members Jeff Tweedy and John Stirratt, came back to Nebraska for the first time in a decade to usher in fall on a summerlike September evening in Lincoln. While there were songs left unplayed, "War on War" and "Bull Black Nova" especially missed, Wilco proved that it's no slouch. The band touched on nine of its 10 studio albums, playing 26 songs and two encores, connecting with the audience on every level, encouraging cheers, sing-alongs and even boos.



5. X

The seminal punk band played Omaha just a few months after John Doe and Exene were in town to open for Blondie and Garbage. But the show at the Waiting Room was all X, and the Los Angeles band impressed with an extensive set list and boundless energy. Though guitarist Billy Zoom now sits on stage, that’s the only clue that the band members aren’t a young and hungry punk outfit.

Honorable mentions:

Echo and the Bunnymen, the Black Angels, Combichrist (opening for Lords of Acid), Ohgr (opening for KMFDM), Revolting Cocks and Frontline Assembly

Monday, December 4, 2017

Band Aid, and Duran Duran, help start a movement


About 33 years ago this week, a star-studded Christmas single had just been released and was about to rocket to the top of the pop charts. 

Band Aid's "Do They Know It's Christmas?" was the brainchild of Sir Bob Geldof, featured the top U.K. musical acts of the 1980s, and raised awareness and funds to aid victims of the famine in Africa.

The song also launched a charitable movement that would grow to include USA for Africa and Live Aid.

Duran Duran was instrumental in 1984's Band Aid and would headline Live Aid the following year.

Duran's Simon Le Bon sang alongside Bono, George Michael, and others. Le Bon also harmonized with Sting, and he would do the same later on Duran side project Arcadia.

Sting and Duran's John Taylor both played bass for Band Aid, Taylor wrote in his memoir, "In the Pleasure Groove.”

The single was born out of '80s excess and was penned quickly by Midge Ure and Geldof, who once told The Daily Mail that it was the worst song in the world.

But "Do They Know It's Christmas?" raised millions for charity. The song would be rerecorded twice, and the Live Aid concept was revived to raise awareness of climate change, as well. Duran would take part in Live Earth in 2007.

The members of Duran Duran still do their part for charity, including Taylor's efforts with the Amy Winehouse Foundation, which provides rehab for teens, and Le Bon's role with Children's Air Ambulance, which transfers critically ill youngsters across England and Wales for care.

When you hear “Do They Know It’s Christmas?” this holiday season, reflect on what Le Bon recently told Rolling Stone:

Band Aid “wasn’t about politics, it was about saving lives.”

And by raising funds and awareness, it did.

Adapted from original post from Dec. 7, 2012

Sunday, September 24, 2017

Wilco launches fall tour in Lincoln




Wilco is a band that defies convention.

The group rose from the ashes of Uncle Tupelo and has endured lineup changes, becoming a Grammy-winning Americana act over a more than two-decade career. From the solidly alternative-country sound of its earlier albums to almost jam-band-like songs like "Impossible Germany," Wilco appeals to an audience almost as varied as its musical offerings.

Led by original members Jeff Tweedy and John Stirratt, the band came back to Nebraska for the first time in a decade to usher in fall on a summerlike evening Sept. 22 in Lincoln.

Pinewood Bowl provided a leafy backdrop. All photos by Christopher Windle.

Though the weather certainly didn't feel like fall, Pinewood Bowl, with its leafy backdrop, was the perfect venue for a show on the first day of the season. Wilco used its environment to full effect, starting the concert with "Via Chicago," punctuated with moments of thunderous cacophony and lighting that resembled lightning. The song about dreams of murder off the superb "Summerteeth" was the beginning of a moody first half.

Wilco often leaned on deep album cuts in its shifting setlist. For every earlier staple like "I Am Trying to Break Your Heart" and "Misunderstood," it sprinkled in lesser-known tracks like "Side With the Seeds" off "Sky Blue Sky" and "Art of Almost" from "The Whole Love." The audience sang the better-known songs word for word.

Less Wilco depress the crowd, after the first 12 songs, Tweedy congratulated the audience for making it through. He assured them that the second half of the show would be more uplifting, "as long as you don't pay attention to the lyrics."

The alt-country "Forget the Flowers," was followed with the similarly jaunty "I'm Always in Love," then "Heavy Metal Drummer" and "I'm the Man Who Loves You" as they were meant to be heard, back to back, ala "Yankee Hotel Foxtrot."

Cline, drummer Glenn Kotche, Tweedy and Stirratt.

Tweedy is an almost stoic presence at the microphone, rarely without a guitar, or his hat. But Nils Cline was a flurry of activity on guitar, taking the lead on many tracks, especially those off later albums. Multi-instrumentalist Pat Sansone moved seamlessly from piano to guitar to banjo and more. Stirratt bopped on bass and provided the vocal harmonies that are a Wilco trademark.

While there were songs left unplayed, "War on War" and "Bull Black Nova" especially missed, Wilco proved it's no slouch. The band touched on nine of its 10 studio albums (only "Wilco (The Album)" wasn't represented), playing 26 songs and two encores. The first included a haunting "Jesus, Etc."; the second, the obligatory yet beautiful "California Stars" and a rousing "Outtasite (Outta Mind)."

Wilco connected with the audience on every level, encouraging cheers, sing-alongs and even boos. "We're from the land of Lincoln," Tweedy said. "And you live in Lincoln. Isn't that weird?"

To the crowd, it wasn't weird; it was just another chance to connect.



Thursday, August 10, 2017

Duran Duran's 'Sing Blue Silver' still a classic


Duran Duran capitalized on its success as both a video and a live band with the concert documentary "Sing Blue Silver."

Directed by Michael Collins, with concert footage by Russell Mulcahy, "Sing Blue Silver" follows the band on its first major U.S. tour.

Now, at a time when reality TV is commonplace, "Sing Blue Silver" is as relevant as it was in 1984.

The press conference early in the film is something one could imagine featuring boy bands today, and it was the same treatment given the Fab Four when The Beatles visited the United States.

At the time of its release, the documentary gave the band's young fans an inside look at the biggest thing since sliced Beatles (to steal a line from the excellent glam-rock film "Velvet Goldmine").

Indeed, "Sing Blue Silver" offered a polished view of the band, some of whose members sometimes enjoyed cocaine and groupies, bassist John Taylor wrote in his memoir, "In the Pleasure Groove. He even said the book is "for people who have never played the Oakland Coliseum ... on drugs."

That's where the closing concert of "Sing Blue Silver" was filmed.

From the opening montage of big rigs in motion, set to the strains of "Tiger Tiger," to those closing scenes, the documentary also shows the behind-the-scenes work that goes into a touring production.

"Sing Blue Silver" is a fan favorite, and it launched its share of tributes. Spy Matthews, tour production manager, inspired a band name, and singer Simon Le Bon's plea of "Gimme a wristband," a website.

Released on DVD in the past decade, copies of "Sing Blue Silver" can be found used or on Amazon.com. It's definitely worth watching again, and again.

Adapted from original post from Nov. 2, 2012

Wednesday, August 9, 2017

The Buttertones prove they're the next big thing



The Buttertones, a sharp-dressed five-piece with a ton of musical talent, brought their riveting live show to Omaha's Slowdown on Aug. 8.

The Buttertones have a distinct look and sound that's rounded out by saxophone. The members ooze confidence onstage and have adoring female followers, at least in the band's home base of Los Angeles. Does any of this remind you of a certain band in the '80s?

But instead of Duran Duran's amalgam of Chic, Roxy Music, and the Sex Pistols, The Buttertones' musical style has been described as Johnny Kidd and the Pirates meets The Gun Club.

In Omaha, the Buttertones got an assist from opener Ron Gallo, an afro-coiffed rocker channelling the MC5 and backed by a bassist and drummer (Ron Gallo and the Gallos, as The Buttertones' frontman Richard Araiza called them). Ever wanted to hear a garage rock version of Des'ree's "Love Will Save the Day? Ever wonder what a guitar played with a suitcase sounds like? Then look no further than Ron Gallo.

London Guzman, Dakota Bottcher and Richard Araiza. All photos by Christopher Windle.

But The Buttertones were the main event, playing a slick and energetic set of songs off current album "Gravedigging" as well as tracks from further back in the band's six-year career. Despite an appearance earlier this year on "Last Call With Carson Daly," The Buttertones are largely unknown outside LA. Band members endearingly sell their own merchandise before and after the show, writing the night's set list in lulls between customers. They mill about the crowd, Araiza wearing glasses as a sort of offstage Clark Kent-type disguise. But the buzz around the band's must-see live show and aforementioned TV appearance, especially, are paying off, according to guitarist Dakota Böttcher.

Araiza has proper frontman swagger.

Onstage, The Buttertones wasted no time whipping the crowd into a frenzy. Especially well-received were songs off the new album like "Sadie's a Sadist," "Matador," and "Gravediggin.'" The trio of songs are solid tracks backed by Quentin Tarantino-esque videos.

The band veered from raucous rockabilly and surf to vintage-flavored rock ballads like "Geisha's Gaze." As for the older material, it has more of a doo-wop flavor, as evidenced on ballads like "Baby Doll."

After listening to the band's previous album, "American Brunch," it's clear that The Buttertones have come into their own with "Gravedigging." Whether singing about falling "over in love" ("Geisha's Gaze"), about a bullfighter past his prime ("Matador"), or about a houseguest who overstays his welcome ("Two-Headed Shark") the band covers timeless topics with a sometimes-devious twist.

The Buttertones showed they're a band that could achieve big things. It will be exciting to see what's next.


Tuesday, August 1, 2017

MTV debuted 36 years ago. Duran Duran was there for the ride


MTV hit the airwaves 36 years ago August 1. Perhaps no band is more synonymous with MTV than Duran Duran.

Original MTV VJ Martha Quinn has described the union of MTV and Duran as "a confluence of fate and meeting each other at the right time."

"Everyone says, 'MTV made Duran Duran,'" Quinn once said. "But you know what, Duran Duran made MTV, too."

From the channel's ban on early video "Girls On Film" to the band's Lifetime Achievement Award, Duran has a storied history with MTV:
  • "Girls On Film," directed by Godley & Crème, was banned by MTV in 1981. The move only fueled the success of the band's third single, as well as the racy clip's place in music video lore.
  • "Hungry Like the Wolf," along with "Rio," helped change the face of music television in 1982-83. Instead of relying on a soundstage, director Russell Mulcahy took the band on location to Sri Lanka and Antigua. The resulting videos resembled short films and garnered the band a pair of Grammy awards.
  • Duran's Nick Rhodes and Simon Le Bon did a stint as guest VJs on MTV for the first time in 1983, playing videos from the likes of David Bowie and Talking Heads. They returned in 1985, the year John and Andy Taylor also stopped by.
  • Live Aid was aired on MTV live, of course, in 1985. The concert featured Duran's final performance as the Fab Five until its reunion in the 2000s, as well as a set by side project The Power Station.
  • On "MTV Unplugged," Duran remade its early and current hits with an acoustic flair in a comeback performance on the popular show.
  • MTV compiled its definitive list of 100 Greatest Videos of All Time in 1999, playing the clips at a time when the channel had mostly abandoned videos. "Hungry Like the Wolf" and "Girls On Film" both made the list.
  • MTV surprised the original members of Duran with its Lifetime Achievement Award in 2003. The band had been nominated for several Video Music Awards, in 1984, 1985 and 1993, and won in 1988 for innovation for "All She Wants Is."
Photo by Christopher Windle. Adapted from original post from August 2013.

Saturday, July 29, 2017

Echo and the Bunnymen with Violent Femmes

Echo and the Bunnymen, obscured on the darkened stage in Kansas City. Photo by Christopher Windle.

It's a pairing that doesn't quite make sense on paper: the quirky, borderline novelty act Violent Femmes and the dark and brooding Echo and the Bunnymen. But the passage of time means that the two bands have been categorized together as '80s alternative, and in 2017, it somehow works.

The bands brought their co-headlining tour to Kansas City's Crossroads on July 25, with the Bunnymen taking top billing on this particular date. A packed house danced through Femmes hits like "Blister in the Sun," "Gone Daddy Gone," and "Add it Up." And then they all stayed for the Bunnymen.

The set list was short but sweet. Singer Ian McCulloch had taken ill at a previous show in St. Louis, where the temperature had hit 108 degrees. With it again hovering around 100, perhaps the Bunnymen weren't taking any chances this time.

Still, the band hit on most of the highlights of its catalog. "Going Up," "Rescue," and "Do It Clean" was the opening salvo. The Bunnymen later returned to more of its classics from debut album "Crocodiles," with "All That Jazz" and "Villiers Terrace."

The band touched on several other albums, with "Over the Wall" from "Heaven Up Here,"  and "The Cutter," of course, off "Porcupine." Even 1997's superb "Evergreen" was represented, with a version of "Nothing Lasts Forever" that veered into Lou Reed's "Walk on the Wild Side" and back.

While the show was good, it wasn't nearly as good as the first shows of the band that I caught nearly 18 years ago. Guitarist Will Sergeant's guitar work is as solid as ever. McCulloch still is a mysterious figure in black shades and leather jacket. Though he wasn't chain smoking on stage as he did then, he still lit up from time to time.

McCulloch in 1999 at First Avenue. Photo by Karen Duran.

McCulloch now sounds best in his lower register. And during the "Pretty in Pink" hit "Bring on the Dancing Horses," the echo of his vocals seemed to throw him off altogether. Only the crowd singing along to the song kept the band from having to restart it.

The lower-register portions of "Bedbugs and Ballyhoo" and "Lips Like Sugar" off the band's self-titled 1987 release sounded great. So did "Seven Seas" and The Killing Moon" off "Ocean Rain" (though the title track was notably absent).

Still, anybody who hadn't seen the band in its earlier days would be impressed. The Bunnymen know how to put on a show that satisfies.

Thursday, July 20, 2017

Blondie and Garbage at Stir Cove



Blondie and Garbage, two bands that helped define music over four decades with their fierce, age-defying female singers, came to a steamy Stir Cove in Council Bluffs on July 19.

Opening up the show were John and Exene from seminal punk band X. With only a guitar and two voices, the pair played an unlikely but enjoyable mix of punk and bluegrass. John Doe announced that he'd be signing items by the merch booth, pulling several die-hard fans up and away from the stage, which Garbage seemingly took in record time.

Exene shielded herself from the sun with an umbrella during the "blast-furnace" conditions. Photos by Christopher Windle.

Garbage has remained intact as its original four-piece and as a formidable live force since its debut in the 1990s. The band played 15 songs, paying tribute to the ground broke by Blondie and Debbie Harry during the banter in between songs. Though the crowd was clearly there to hear Garbage's hits from its self-titled debut album, tracks off "Version 2.0" were especially strong. "I Think I'm Paranoid" and "Push It" were highlights.

Shirley Manson, with Steve Marker and Butch Vig, commands the stage.

As far as the band's pair of soundtrack hits, a version of "#1 Crush" was somehow better than the original, and "The World is Not Enough," perhaps the second-best Bond theme song, was another high point. The low was the disrespect the crowd showed by chattering through between-song banter and newer songs like the David Lynch-inspired "Night Drive Loneliness," as well as better-known tracks.

Harry and Clem Burke.
Harry and Stein.

Blondie took the stage to great aplomb, Harry decked out in a "Pollinator"-inspired outfit of black legging-like pants, top, headdress, and cape with the words, "Stop f---ing our planet," clearly visible on the back. The new album employs a lot of guest songwriters, and it's a theme that Blondie cleverly embraced in the set list. Although Harry and guitarist Chris Stein, especially, have proved their writing chops time and again over the years, there are many covers the band is known for as well. Here, they were sprinkled throughout the set list: "Hanging on the Telephone" (the Nerves), "Rainy Day Women #12 & #35" (Bob Dylan), "Fragments" (Unkindness), and "The Tide is High" (the Paragons).

Of the new tracks, "Fun," co-written by David Sitek of TV on the Radio, fit right in with the band's pristine pop tracks like "Heart of Glass" and "Call Me," that one famously co-written by Giorgio Moroder. Other highlights among the new songs included the Johnny Marr-penned "My Monster."



A rapt audience enjoys Blondie.

But the reason to see Blondie live are the timeless originals: "One Way or Another," covered and used in commercials to the point that it's forever in the public consciousness. "Dreaming," a slice of '50s-inspired pop perfection. "Atomic," a keyboard-driven opus that helped inspire new wavers like Duran Duran. And "Rapture," a tour de force live, during which Harry hit the high notes and strutted to the front of the stage for the first and best female-led rap.

At 72, it's clear that Harry, and Blondie, have still got it.

Tuesday, June 20, 2017

In honor of JT's birthday


To my knowledge, I was the first journalist to review John Taylor's autobiography. I contacted his publisher, received the book in the mail weeks before its release date, and read it in a day in a half. It wasn't long after that that I was inspired to write and post my review as the Duran Duran correspondent for a news website. In honor of JT's birthday, here is that review:

Duran Duran's John Taylor recounts the story of one of pop music's most extraordinary bands while sharing his compelling personal journey in his new autobiography, "In the Pleasure Groove: Love, Death, and Duran Duran."

Taylor, Duran's bassist, famously co-founded the band with keyboardist Nick Rhodes, and that back story set in Birmingham, England, is one of the most engaging parts of Taylor's book.

Taylor hailed from a working-class family in Birmingham's Hollywood, while there was something more magical about Rhodes, whose mum owned a toy shop nearby. The musically like-minded individuals also shared the common bond of both being only children.

Taylor and Rhodes started out as glam-rock fanboys, their shared love of Bowie and Roxy Music inspiring them to become brothers in musical arms. The two would create the Duran concept before any of the other players came on board.

Taylor and Rhodes were happy to remain left of the spotlight, Taylor writes. Soon, Roger Taylor would join on drums, followed by guitarist Andy Taylor, and finally, singer Simon Le Bon would bring the poetry.

Together, the band would ride a new wave into the 1980s, writing and recording some of the biggest hits of that decade and beyond.

Along the way, John Taylor shares his run-ins with various celebrities who crossed Duran's path, including a hilarious exchange with Sting.

Augmenting Taylor's memories from those whirlwind early days are his own diary, postcards he sent to his parents, and fan club dispatches. Throughout the book, Taylor's voice truly shines through.

Duran always has been a "divine diplomacy," but Taylor shares few details of the inner workings and inevitable disagreements that come when band members gather to write and record — and share credit equally for the ensuing material.

But on a personal level, Taylor writes more freely. As Duran grew increasing successful so, too, did Taylor become more reliant on drink and drugs. It all nearly spun out of control. But he eventually found his way to rehab, and here he shares stories of recovery, loss, and learning to love.

"Pleasure Groove" is, by design, an unfinished story. Four out of five original members continue to make viable new music and perform live as Duran Duran.

As for Taylor, the reader comes away with the sense that he is in the best place he's ever been.

Instead of the trivial tiny seductions, it's all about the music now.

Originally posted September 14, 2012. Photo by Christopher Windle.

Thursday, June 8, 2017

A birthday look back at Nick Rhodes' side projects

A happy 55th birthday to Nick Rhodes!

Nick Rhodes is notorious for staying busy on breaks from Duran Duran. The British band's co-founder and keyboardist fills his downtime with producer gigs and side projects, including Arcadia, TV Mania, and the Devils.

The long-shelved TV Mania saw the light of day in 2013. TV Mania became prolific on Twitter, posting several tweets per day, including such nuggets as: "Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived forwards."

Fans speculated whether Rhodes, who doesn't have a known Twitter or Facebook account, was tweeting for TV Mania.

Said @TVManiaMusic: "Ssh. There is more than one TV Mania."

Before TV Mania, Rhodes' biggest project outside Duran Duran undoubtedly was Arcadia, the platinum-selling group he formed with Duran vocalist Simon Le Bon and drummer Roger Taylor. Arcadia's only album, "So Red the Rose" (1985), boasted such guest musicians as Sting, David Gilmour, and Grace Jones.

As far back as 1983, Rhodes was working as a producer. He co-produced Kajagoogoo's hit "Too Shy" and had discovered the band as well.

Almost two decades later, he joined forces with the Dandy Warhols, producing most of the Portland, Oregon, band's album "Welcome to the Monkey House" (2003) and helping bulk up the alt-rock group's synthesizer arsenal.

Also during the time that Rhodes and the rest of the Fab Five were regrouping for reunion album "Astronaut," the keyboardist teamed up with original Duran singer Stephen Duffy for side project the Devils. The album "Dark Circles" featured re-recordings of original Duran songs as well as hauntingly beautiful tracks looking back on earlier days, like "Newhaven-Dieppe."

TV Mania was the brainchild of Rhodes and former Duran guitarist Warren Cuccurullo. Its album, "Bored with Prozac and The Internet?" looked decidedly toward the future, or at least a view of the future as envisioned in the mid-1990s: a culture obsessed with reality television and the Internet.

More recently, Rhodes produced the Bloom Twins and has been in the studio of late with bassist John Taylor and a host of performers working on the TSP (Top Secret Project), rumored to be the Duran musical. Stay tuned.

Adapted from original post from February 2013

Wednesday, May 10, 2017

40 years of "Rio": Duran Duran's classic album dances on


In 1982, Duran Duran unleashed sophomore effort "Rio" on the world, leaving an indelible mark on pop culture.

At the time of the album's original release that May, it was an infectious shot of optimism needed in the band's native Britain during a recession and the Falklands War.

As keyboardist Nick Rhodes said on the "Classic Albums 'Rio'" DVD, the album was a "bright, colorful outburst."

As celebrated as the album was at the time, selling millions and yielding four singles, "Rio" has indeed become a timeless classic.

Producer Colin Thurston harnessed the band's talents: Rhodes' experimental synths, John Taylor's syncopated bass, Simon Le Bon's lush harmonies, Andy Taylor's edgy guitars, and Roger Taylor's ambient drums.

But Duran Duran was sound and vision, with Duran video director Russell Mulcahy's iconic travelogues changing the game for the fledgling art of the music video. The "Indiana Jones" pastiche "Hungry Like The Wolf" and the on-a-yacht adventure "Rio" introduced exotic locales such as Sri Lanka and Antigua to the young viewers of the even younger MTV.

From its glossy cover to the final note of "The Chauffeur," "Rio" proved that Duran Duran was the entire package.

The Nagel girl on the cover pulls the potential fan in with her inviting "cherry ice cream smile," and the title track hooks the listener instantly. "My Own Way," "Hungry Like The Wolf," and "Hold Back the Rain" keep up the feeling of Carnival.

Darker moments are interspersed: the sweetly melancholy "Lonely In Your Nightmare" and ego-and-alter ego dialogue "New Religion." Sure, Duran was fun, but deep, as well.

And the final third of the album is just as strong: the effervescent "Last Chance on the Stairway," the anthemic "Save a Prayer," and the pure Le Bon poetry of "The Chauffeur."

During the recording of "Rio," Le Bon has recounted, it became a ritual for him to copy into his blue book of lyrics the final lyric of each song as it was recorded.

"We were doing something new; something different to that which had gone before," Le Bon said. "Together we were about to tell an amazing story. We were poised to become one of our generation's most exciting bands."

"Rio" would be remixed for U.S. audiences, "Night Version"-ed and remastered. But that original album captured a moment in time when everything Duran Duran touched turned to gold.

(Originally written April 30, 2012)

Saturday, April 22, 2017

The Damned in Denver


It has been more than 40 years since the Damned burst onto the British punk scene with the first single, album, and U.S. tour. The heart and soul of the band are still touring in top form and visited the Summit Music Hall in Denver on April 19.

The heart and soul, of course, are goth god singer Dave Vanian and the lovable goofball Captain Sensible on guitar. Vanian's voice is even stronger now than on that pioneering punk album, "Damned Damned Damned." The band released the album "Music for Pleasure" before songwriter Brian James exited and Captain moved from bass to guitar. The Damned then came back with its masterpiece, "Machine Gun Etiquette." The band performed eight songs off that album, including opener "Melody Lee," singalong classic "Noise Noise Noise," and "Smash It Up."

All photos by Christopher Windle.


The band managed to touch on nearly every era of its career, from that first punk single, "New Rose," to "Alone Again Or," a cover of a Love song that was a hit for the band in the late '80s. Along the way, there were highlights "Ignite" off "Strawberries" and "Wait for the Blackout" off "The Black Album" (another first: the Damned were the earliest band to have a Black Album). In all, the band played 23 songs, several more than many bands years younger manage to play.

But 40 years on, the Damned is not the typical band just rolling through the hits. Vanian and Captain have said in interviews that they still feel hungry. After the tour, the plan is to record another album. But for a band with only 10 albums over a 40-year career, it's clear the Damned don't just record albums to go through the motions. There has to be a purpose to it.



Vanian, his arm in a sling after he dislocated a shoulder on a previous tour date, not only sounded great but had all the stage moves. He spun around and dropped to his knees for "Eloise," the Barry James cover that was a No. 1 British single for the band.

Captain was nonstop with the stage banter, offering his opinions on Phil Collins, the Beatles, and the Sex Pistols, all to be taken with a grain of salt. He played guitar solos behind his head and balanced his guitar on his head. He's a ham, sort of a dual frontman of the Damned, and even took lead vocals for "The Last Time," a Rolling Stones cover, and "Jet Boy Jet Girl." He refused to play his '80s solo hit "Happy Talk," but happily obliged the crowd with a request for "Fan Club" after he proclaimed in the second encore that the band were running out of songs to play.

It's a natural move for the sort of fan liaison, who will take photos with fans before the show and invite them all to the pub across the street afterward. Apparently, he only draws the line at playing "Happy Talk," though the pub did play most of the album "Women and Captains First."

Monty Oxymoron provided the keyboards, and the dancing, during "New Rose."


Damned fans are a mix of young and old, fans of punk and goth. One could tell from the fan reactions to certain songs just why they were there. While the punks turned out for "New Rose" and "Neat Neat Neat," there were also strong reactions for goth-era songs like "Street of Dreams."

By the time the band closed the show with a blistering version of "Anti-Pope," it was clear the Damned had left the entire crowd satisfied.

Monday, January 2, 2017

The Faint at the Slowdown


Omaha's The Faint came home for a holiday once again as the band played the Slowdown for the first of two shows celebrating the new year.

The Faint last appeared before a hometown audience on Halloween. On Dec. 30, the band played a slightly altered set list of its "Capsule" best-of concert.

The Faint took the stage past 11 p.m. after two opening acts. The first two performers were among The Faint's best openers yet: Closeness, The Faint vocalist Todd Fink's new side project, and the entertaining Plack Blague, billed as America's Leather Band from Lincoln, Nebraska.

The crowd was already in the mood to party when The Faint took the stage. All the highlights that fans were expecting were there in the remixed show. The band opened in dramatic fashion with "The Conductor" and gained steam as the set list of new-new wave went on.

All photos by Christopher Windle.

The crowd cheered for the old songs as well as the new, some dancing with abandon for recent single "Young & Realistic," one of the band's best efforts yet. The audience reaction was only appropriate for a band that displays so much energy on stage themselves.

For the encore, there was a new year's surprise, which the band decided to play as a practice run for the next night's New Year's Eve show and dance party. The band launched into Prince's "1999," the music matching nearly note for note with the original, though Fink dropped part of a verse. The crowd went bonkers for the celebratory tribute to the '80s icon.

But the excitement only built after that, as the band ended the show with "Let the Poison Spill From Your Throat," "Paranoiattack," and "Glass Danse." It was a great way to close out the year for the band who has been on tour promoting an album featuring its best songs from its 20-year career.