31 January 2009

a fond farewell

I know you know about the mass venue closure across Tottenham Court Road for the gargantuan Cross Rail Project. But allow me to pay my own homage. As far back as I can remember, well, two-and-a-half years ago, Saturday night at Astoria 2 has always played host to some form of indie disco night, first Frog and then Push, aside from about two weeks in summer 07 when the ill advised Pop Scene took over. The drinks were always dear, the bouncers and bar staff unfriendly, the bands were mainly rubbish, but it was fun. It was a staple on our weekend calendar. And now it’s gone. Well, actually Push has come back in a new venue, but the less said about that, the better. Astoria 2 has seen some big moments on Saturday nights, some celebrated, some, not so. It’s played host to The Pigeon Detectives and The Wombats whilst they were still considered interesting and different for a brief moment in early 07. Other before-they-were-famous sightings belong to Vampire Weekend, Noah and the Whale and Natty. A bog standard playlist of the Libertines, Blur, The Jam, Iggy Pop, The Smiths plus whatever band was Myspace’s band of the week was enough to keep hundreds of sweaty-faced, sobriety-dodging first years writhing, moshing, bopping and snogging until the wee hours. Special mention must go to Push’s first (and only) birthday party where special guest, the elusive Andrew WK, reared his terrifying head and whipped the braying masses into a frenzy with a frankly ghastly set complete with a stage dive from Alice Dellal.
It has played a part in most of the major dramas within our circle of friends. Relationships have been forged and broken, friendships have been thoroughly tested, fights have been started, certain people have been banned from the dance floor and received some time on the naughty step from angry bouncers. But through it all, I cannot think of any other place that one can lose all inhibitions to ‘Killing in the Name Of’ without the worry of the judgement of others. Astoria 2 never tried to be cool, it knew it was sad in a way the KOKO didn’t, and so remained more popular. The line, ‘who’s up for Push on Saturday?’ would inevitably be met with groans and protestations but an underlying sense of satisfaction that you knew a fail-safe night was on the cards.
I’m glad it stopped when it did. All the punters were starting to look like our cooler younger siblings and didn’t know any songs pre-dating 2005, but nevertheless, Astoria 2 spanned our university existence and has received, in total, from me a good £600 worth of my hard-earned student loan. But I wouldn’t take a penny back, apart from the tenner I spent last night at new Push. RIP Astoria 2 and your Saturday nights, you were a dear friend.

25 January 2009

zoo reviews

Justice f. Uffie-TTHHEE PPAARRTTYY
Super-hot electro lovely Uffie helps the French duo craft the perfect antidote to those last stubborn strains of D.A.N.C.E. still going round your head.

Ashley Walters feat. Mutya Buena –With You
Former So Solid Crew member cashes in on Mutya's Celebrity Big Brother appearance. Good plan, rubbish song.

Lily Allen-The Fear
Gobby-mouthed Allen ditches the smart-ass lyrics and give-a-toss attitude in a satirical bid to come across all cute and naïve…and loses all her charm in the process.

Jay Sean-Tonight
No doubt the big hit in the clubs over the coming months, no doubt a lot more palatable with several beers down you. Instantly forgettable.

The Rifles-Fall to Sorrow
Lad-rock in a box. Paul Weller's latest favourites do exactly what it says on the tin, nothing more, nothing less.

The Airborne Toxic Event-Sometime Around Midnight
What with all the haunting violins and heartfelt emotion pouring out of this dramatic delivery from Los Angeles' hottest indie-rockers you'd be completely forgiven for shedding a very small, very manly tear.

celebrity nowhere

"Oh my GOD! She's a monster! Ahhh! Ladieeeees!' Around the room, starting with those closest then flowing like an aural Mexican wave towards the furthest regions of the room, identical wails of glee break out in cacophonic return. This is followed by a mad rush of half Primark, half designer-clad women, snorting with joy as they stumble across the room as fast as their knockoff Louboutins will allow, to the offending computer screen on which is pictured a thing so ghastly, so repugnant, that it remains to be seen if these women will ever recover. Staring out from the monitor, with a confident smile on her face, is a size fourteen woman wearing, God help us, a bikini.
Wait what?
Welcome to the most shallow and vindictive place on earth; the office of the celebrity gossip mag.
I was recently offered work experience at one of the major celebrity gossip magazines, and against my better judgement, going with the 'all experience is worthy' train off thought, I took it.
HUGE mistake.
Not only did I learn absolutely nothing at all, save the exact fat content the editor will accept in her lunch (17 grams since you ask), but I came out of the experience thoroughly depressed, incredibly angry and severely worried about the state of humanity and their obsession with celebrity.
The curiosity of the general public with members of society who hold a high profile is not a new concept. Ever since newspapers were invented, society columns have outlined the hilarious and outrageous high-jinks of the rich and famous. And the public eat it up because, well let's face it; whereas we're probably slumped on the couch watching T4, they're far more likely to be snogging a model on a yacht in Bora Bora, I know which one I'd choose. However in recent years, the nation's obsession with celebrity has entered an entirely new and almost chilling phase which shows no sign of retiring.
Heat Magazine, the publication that paid a large part in the rise of 'the celebrity', launched in 1999 and was one of media giant Emap's least successful publications with a circulation of less than 100,000. The public at this time simply did not give a monkeys as to the eating habits, family members, pets or rubbish bin contents of a particular celeb, it was of no consequence. The few huge A-list stars whose lives were covered by the media seemed so far away from reality that their lives were more like fiction; impossible for the average person to draw a connection with. But with the millennium came irreversible changes to our culture that helped to bestow the curse of celebrity forever upon us, altering Heat's fortune and securing the future of hundreds of copycat publications.
The main catalyst for the celebrity revolution was a disdainful programme which first hit UK screens in the summer of 2000. Big Brother changed the face of not only television, but the way we view culture as a whole. It was the show that spawned reality TV; giving people with little or no talent high profile exposure, and the public adored it. These brand new celebrities were everyday characters just like them; they hadn't been trained by PR agents to carefully conceal their private life. They were a breath of fresh air that gave ordinary members of the public a box to stand on from which to see over that fourth wall which separated the real world from the world of celebdom-an existence they could previously only dream about; it made the life of the rich and famous into something attainable. By 2006, during Big Brother 7, Heat was selling magazines by record breaking numbers, almost 700,000 per week.
If Big Brother brought the masses in, then a trivial-sounding feature, 'Celebs without Makeup' that pioneered in gossip magazines in the early part of the millennium, is responsible for making sure they stuck. The idea that Cameron Diaz had (gasp) acne scars under all that slap took her and her fellow Hollywood chums off their golden pedestals and back down to earth with a very satisfying thump, stripping them of their divine status. No longer perfect deities, for here was evidence they were but mere mortals, they became worthy of our judgement, whether it be to mock and ridicule or to sympathize with and support. Either way an intense scrutiny of their life was needed. And lo and behold, the magazines began to sell.
By and large, the celeb gossip empire came to have influence. Any publication with a certain readership is blessed to play a part in shaping people's opinions on the subjects about which they write. However, the gossip mags have abused that power and are well on their way to creating a generation of women who are unable to see through the inane material that has come to replace newspapers and books, and who are to suffer a lifetime of insecurity and little self-worth.
The poor bikini-clad woman from the computer screen earlier on was a reader who had sent her picture in to take part in a dieting programme run by our magazine. Although this particular publication will be remembered as having been a support in aiding this woman on her quest to achieve her 'goal weight', (a weight far too low, thanks to the veneration of the 7 stone Cheryl Cole), on the inside, in the safety of the office, she was being cruelly mocked.
This is an individual who subconsciously trusts this publication, as perhaps her main form of media, to help her navigate the twists and pitfalls of this difficult life we lead. By instilling in women a religion of celebrities, dieting and beauty is to repeatedly mock their lifestyles; dangling a life they can never achieve with constant reminders that they are never good enough. Celebrity mags are breeding a generation of celebrity worshippers, a new religion with a cruel God who scorns its subjects. Forget Mormonism, Celebism is the fastest growing, most influential religion in the world.
Examples of this cruel divinity are self-evident in any of these magazines. For instance, in a recent issue of one such publication there was an advert for readers to write in with their real-life stories. The ad boasted a reward of '£750 for your stories,' written gaudy letters, a highly significant amount for much of the readership, with pictures of previous real-lifers claiming '[This magazine] never made me feel judged.' And 'It was a safe place to tell my story.' Please! Everyone knows the real-life section is only there to pass judgement on the single mum who has no idea who the fathers of her thirteen children are, or the builder that moonlights as a drag queen.
I am aware that people are not forced to sell their stories but with celebrities gushing their 'secrets' left, right and centre in the rest of the magazine it does pose the question that if the Victoria Beckham's and the Kerry Katona's of the world can make money in this manner, why can't the readers?
The answer is because these people, the Jordan's and the Jodie Marsh's, have sold their lives as commerce to the industry and the price they've paid is worth far more than any money they've acquired. One pre-Christmas issue had a front-cover showing cancer victim Jade Goody clutching her kids with a headline that screamed, 'My Kids Don't Know I'll be Dead by Christmas.' If there is any amount of money that makes it worth your children reading that then I clearly can't count high enough.
Thanks to this spread of Celebism, an army of clones with a thirst for all things celebrity and not much else has been spawned. Just check out the comments pages on heatworld.com; all of them a mile long, full of impassioned debates concerning nothing but a trivial story about Paris Hilton's sex life, women now seem content with this the shallowest form journalism being their main mode of media.
This is entirely unacceptable. It is a media that patronizes their intelligence, suggesting that there is nothing more in this life that is relevant to them as females than clothes, make-up and the insatiably boring lives of these 'celebrities'. Surely women deserve better than magazines containing features such as 'The News (With the Boring Bits Cut Out!)'
Unfortunately with recent shows such as the X Factor breaking viewing records it looks like the world of
Celebrity is here to stay. Save for a few backlashes over extreme content, for instance Heat's distasteful decision to print a sticker concerning Jordan's severely disabled son that read 'Harvey Wants to Eat Me!' which was branded 'the lowest point in British journalism,' by The Times, there is very little to be found on the internet in the way of criticism of the appalling message that these magazines promote.
It seems even the writers of these magazines, the brains behind the movement, who you'd assume would be laughing all the way to the bank, are just as susceptible as you or I. When I jokingly pointed out the comedic aspect of Jordan possessing two files solely about her in the office of the magazine I was at, one for relationships, children and health, and one for her body, career and style, the writer I was with turned around to me very slowly with a confused and slightly annoyed look on her face and explained to me, as you would a child; 'well of course we would, Jordan is a very, very important person to us.'
I'm officially terrified.

change we can believe in, men's fashion I

With super-leader Obama’s policies altering life as we know it all across the US of A, it seems the still-popular idea of CHANGE has finally made it into the White House, centre of appalling fashion since JFK. Corporate uniforms of stuffy, shapeless suits have been eradicated in favour of baseball caps, leather jackets and (gasp) rolled up sleeves. So long Nixon and your sock garters, aurevoir Reagan and your starched shirts, the younger generation’s in power now; so undo that top button and burn your ties, if Obama can do it, so can you.

attack of cool dad, men's fashion II


No longer just a penchant for aging Teddy boys or transparently-closeted interior designers, velvet has been given the ultimate man-seal of approval by Mickey Rourke, who was recently seen sporting a fetching blue velvet number. Just a word of warning however; err on the side of caution, trendy dad David Cameron already pioneered the look with an ill-advised black suit a few years back.

man up for a day...lad's mag fashion

Four things women will be wearing this summer that men will love:

Nude, Sheer Fabrics
As if summer wasn’t glorious enough already, clever designers have spawned a crafty trend rendering what few items of clothing women will be wearing, see-through. Brilliant.

Grecian Goddess Draping
Clothing pick of Helen of Troy, famously the most beautiful woman to ever grace our humble planet, this wispy, elegant style is coming soon to a female near you.

Sky-high heels
The taller the better, this trend ensures packs of long-legged lovelies will
be a dime a dozen this summer. But try not to get too excited; they can also
be used as a highly effective weapon.

Eighties
Despite the fact our womenfolk more resemble American football players than their previously dainty selves, these shoulder pads, seen first time around on eighties fave, the power suit, are somehow strangely sexy.

And, two they’ll hate:

Harem trousers,
Think MC Hammer’s billowing pantaloons, now imagine them on your girlfriend.

Brogues
Seeing ladies strut around in our clothes is normally something we’re far from averse to, but when this trend extends to our shoes, we’re somehow not quite so turned on.

not looking swell for 2009...

Cage the Elephant-Back Against The Wall
Former champions to the children of the NME, the madcap Kentuckians fail to top previous successes with their latest contribution of indefinable rock/pop/rap/blues/whatever. A darned shame after tales of rowdy live shows and what was shaping up to be a tasty back catalogue.

Tommy Sparks-I’m A Rope
Yet another Scandinavian joins the invasion reminding us of how precious few first-class musicians we’ve been producing on our fair isle of late. I’m A Rope sees a delicious mix of electro with it’s roots firmly planted in hip hop and all from a mildly geeky 31-year-old who reminds us distinctly of Russell Howard.

Skint and Demoralised-This Song Is Not About You
To go as far as to give the somewhat highbrow label ‘salt-of-the-earth, zeitgeist poetry’ to this northern lad struggling to manipulate syllables to fit in with his mate MiNI dOG’s agonizingly derivative music would require an intense stretch of the imagination. But then again, what are PR companies paid for?

Ida Maria-Oh My God
A sneaky shot at a re-release doesn’t detract from the upbeat, punching antidote this song, seen first time around in 2007, provides to all those starting-to-get-kind-of-irritating other female singers recently seen smeared over every ‘Hot for 2009’ list.


Kid British-Leave London EP
Note to a few narrow-minded critics: having a multi-racial rock band does not mean they’re The Specials. What Kid British actually are, although slightly more exciting than their indie-in-a-box peers with a dash of hip hop and just a smidgen of ska to warrant the comparisons, is sadly not enough to steer their destiny away from the inevitable finality of heading straight to the Skins soundtrack.