Showing posts with label french rock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label french rock. Show all posts

Friday, 22 May 2009

Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich


Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich were a chart topping British pop/rock group of the 1960s.

In summer 1964, British songwriters Ken Howard and Alan Blaikley became interested in recording them. The band was set up in the studio to make recordings with then famous producer of The Honeycombs, Joe Meek. These recording sessions failed to get anywhere off the ground as an interview with Dave Dee stated that Joe Meek "had very strange recording techniques. He wanted us to play the song at half speed and then he would speed it up and put all these little tricks on it. We said we couldn't do it that way. He exploded, threw coffee all over the studio and stormed up to his room. His assistant Patric Pink came in and said, "Mr Meek will not be doing any more recording today." That was it. We lugged all our gear out and went back home." While these recording session proved unsuccessful they eventually gained a recording contract with Fontana Records.



They changed their name to Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich — an amalgam of their nicknames. The distinctive name, coupled with well produced and catchy songs by Howard and Blaikley, quickly caught the UK's public's imagination and their records started to sell in abundance. Indeed, between 1965 and 1969, the group spent more weeks in the UK Singles Chart than The Beatles.

Vocalist Dee, the ex-policeman, was at the scene of the automobile accident that took the life of American rocker Eddie Cochran and injured Gene Vincent in April 1960. Dee had taken Cochran's guitar from the accident and held it until it could be returned to his family.

My favourite song from them (notice that the song is part of the Tarantino's Death Proof soundtrack)



They also scored a Number One hit on the UK chart in 1968 with "The Legend of Xanadu". This particular track made it 'big' worldwide - even in the United States (where they had previously had little success). Their other Top Ten UK hits included "Hideaway", "Hold Tight!", "Bend It!", "Save Me", "Touch Me, Touch Me", "Okay!", "Zabadak!" and "Last Night in Soho".

Although the group never gained much popularity in America, they were big sellers elsewhere in the world. In Australia, for instance, they reached the Top Ten with tracks such as "Hold Tight!", "Bend It!", "Zabadak!" and "The Legend of Xanadu" - the last achieving Number One.

In September, 1969, Dee left the group for a short-lived solo career. The rest, re-billed as (D,B,M and T) continued releasing records, until they broke up in 1972. In the 1980s the group reformed again without Dee although there was one further single with him, "Staying With It" in 1983.

In the 1990s, at a time when many other of their contemporary bands were also reforming to tour on the lucrative "oldies circuit", they started performing once more, this time with their one-time leader, Dee.

Band members
* Dave Dee (David John Harman) – lead vocals
* Dozy (Trevor Leonard Ward-Davies) – bass guitar
* Beaky (John Dymond) – rhythm guitar
* Mick (Michael Wilson) – drums
* Tich (Ian Frederick Stephen Amey) – lead guitar

(Dave Dee, the lead singer died from a cancer in London on 9 January 2009.)




Monday, 11 May 2009

Hey - Polish band



The group was formed in 1992 in Szczecin at the initiative of guitarist Piotr Banach. In the first composition is also found: Katarzyna Nosowska, Marcin Żabiełowicz, Robert Ligiewicz and Marcin Macuk. The latter was quickly replaced by Jacek Chrzanowski.

They performed few uynplegged concert all over Poland. I therefore saw them in Lodz (many thanks to Qbalka, Emilka and Filip). My favorite songs are Teksański, Moogie and [sic!].



Although Hey sometimes described themselves as the first Polish grunge band, their melodic, guitar-driven rock and eclectic appearance owed more to New Wave and heavy metal influences; their first three albums contained songs in both Polish and English. During the band's mid-1990s heyday, they sold out stadiums throughout Poland, and attempted to break into the English-language market with a series of concerts overseas and an English version of their 1995 album ?. When this failed to arouse interest, the band began to write in Polish only, and gradually adopted a harder-edged, more industrial-influenced sound.



Nosowska also has enjoyed a successful career as a solo artist. The band sold over 2.2 million albums.



Thursday, 7 May 2009

666.667 Club - Noir Désir



666667 Club is an album by French rock band Noir Désir. It was released in France and other European countries on 17 December 1996. The album was certified double platinum in France on 17th September 1997, which at the time signified sales of above 600,000.


It is a hard politically, primarily against the Front National (a stupid French far-right, nationalist political party): "FN pain / We are fine in France" from the title Un Jour en France.

The refrain of the song performed by The Poppy Love, Lioubov, love, Love, love, love, told in America; Lioubov in ex-Soviet Russia; love to the four corners of France, was taken over by Noir Désir to the end of the song L'homme pressé.

The Hungarian violinist Félix Lajkó played for few song on this disc, especially the song Ernestine.

L'homme pressé:

L'homme pressé is a title of Black Desire album appeared on the 666,667 Club, winning "Song of the Year" in 1998 to the victories of the music.

In this song Noir Désir criticism globalization and capitalism. In the video, the four members of the group parody a boy band dance, very fashionable at that time.



Lyrics of The Hurry Man:


I’m a frozen model
With a tanned skin
Hurry man
My bullshits uttered
Are the destiny of the world
I don’t have time, I go off
My career is at stake
I’m the media man
I’m more than political
I’m going fast, very fast
I’m an universal human comet
I cross time
I’m a reference
I’m omnipresent
I invaded the world
That I don’t know
No matter, I talk about it
No matter, I know
Human are at my feet
Potentially 8 billions
of slave idiots
Except some of my friends
Of the same world than mine
You can’t imagine
Of happy they are
Chorus:Who wants me
And crumbs of my brain?
Who wants to enter
In the web of my network? Daily activist
Of inhumanity
Of instant profits
Of medias’ favor
I’m rich, very rich
I’m in the real estate business
I’m making money
There’re some people who can pay
I know the upper crust of Paris
And the others also
My unique friends
And their women that I..
See, of course. I know stock exchange secrets
There is no secret for me
I’m the King of kings
exploded audience ratings
And what do you think
It’s my way, it’s my luck
I love shows
On television
No time to watch them
But I make them
We spit food
On those starving eyes
You see what they ask
We know they are eager
Of our rottenness
Better than casting pearls
Before swine. Chorus You know who I am
An hurry man x3
I am
An hurry man x3
Chorus
Couplet

”Love Love Love”
People say in America
”Lioubov”
In Russia
”Amour”
at the four corners of France


Un jour en France:

In this song, Noir Désir maintains its positions against the National Front.