Babyshambles | Page 20 | the Fashion Spot

Babyshambles

They are actually on like an hour from me on fri, but none of my friends like them...:o:o
So i have no-one to go with...!! And i cant realy go by myself, but there are still tickets left!!! I must find someone to go with!!


are u asking me out?:rolleyes:

well, if i were you, i'd go by myself!!! go,have fun,there will be plenty of people...:flower:
 
aww great performances <3
they do such a great show !
youuuuuuuuuu talk is definetly my pump up song lately :D
 
Pete Doherty plans solo album



The star has already started work on the record


Pete Doherty is a quarter of the way through recording his debut solo album and plans to release it next summer, NME.COM can exclusively reveal.

Three of the album's 12 tracks have been completed during secret recording sessions with producer Jake Foir.

Fior told NME.COM: "We're recording it piecemeal between two studios in London. We go in for two or three hours at a time, usually at about two in the morning, and get stuff down. It sounds slower and more intimate [than Babyshambles]. Pete's writing is more universal, rather than about personal experiences."

Fior explained that a large cast of musicians will appear alongside Pete, including his Babyshambles bandmates, who play on the track 'Cuckoo'.

South London band The Thirst, who visited Doherty at his Wiltshire home to demo with him, will also contribute, along with London rapper Klashnekoff.

Although recording for the album is well underway, Babyshambles' label, Parlophone, could halt its release. Fior explained that the plan is to finish the album then present it to the label with a view to an official release, but he says that so far Parlophone have been unhappy about Doherty recording outside of their control.

Fior was also able to reassure fans that, despite his heroin relapse, the Babyshambles mainman is "still on top form", healthy and enjoying life in rural Wiltshire.

"I just spent a weekend with him - just me, him and the cats," he recalled. "He's out there in a 28-room mansion - it's very '60s-style and cool, I keep expecting Marianne Faithfull to come walking through one of the doors!"
http://www.nme.com/news/babyshambles/32748
 
Aaaaaand in this week's NME

6sslr0i.jpg

nme
 
what do you mean? :blink: i dont have it, i dont read NME :ermm:
i meant its not surprising that hes planning a solo album
 
Adam on FDB
hhhmmm, don't believe everything you read, lots of 'creative' people around. Peter is always working on solo stuff as we all are but as always, 'I'm producing the album, no I'm producing the album,,,no,no,no I'm producing the album. Just wait and see, ignore most of the nonsense spoken by the outspoken.


Label behind anything positive for the band and Peter.

So Bournemouth, feel quite tired and my eyes sting. x
 
Pete has amazing talent. He is so gifted with his words but obviously he needs band members so Im sure each song he releases with have some sort of shamble influence or whoever
 
well, that's his style... thom york's solo really sounded like radiohead few yrs ago... jarvis cocker's solo wasn't as good as pulp, but you just recognize the sound. i hope he won't go mental and do what albarn did with his solo...

though, i find too many similiraties in pete and damon albarn.
 
YOU TALK RELEASED SUNDAY

If you haven't already heard, the next single from Shotter's Nation
will be
You Talk. Digital formats will be released this Sunday 2nd Dec, and the
enhanced CD and 7" white vinyl will be available from Monday 3rd, full
details
and tracklistings below.

CD
1. You Talk
2. UnBiloTitled (Acoustic Version)
3. Carry On Up The Morning (Acoustic Version)
4. You Talk (video)

7"
A. You Talk (Album Version)
B. Revelations

Preorder the CD & 7" from Recordstore and you can get all formats plus
a free
poster for just £4 :
http://email.parlophone.co.uk/a/tBHSvSKAQUBzFBkY37HBIPsic6$/link26*

You'll be able to download all these tracks from 7digital :
http://email.parlophone.co.uk/a/tBHSvSKAQUBzFBkY37HBIPsic6$/link27
iTunes :
http://email.parlophone.co.uk/a/tBHSvSKAQUBzFBkY37HBIPsic6$/link28
and all the normal places and you can get an exclusive download of You
Talk
(Demo From The Doghouse) from iTunes from Sunday.


UK TOUR & LIVE BOOTLEG TRACK

The band embarked on their largest ever tour last week with some great
reports
coming back from the first few shows. There are still a handful of
tickets
available so get in quick if you're up for seeing them.

Also, you'll be able to download a live bootleg version of You Talk
from the
show you attended (or all of them if you want to see what you missed
out on!),

Click here to place your order :
http://email.parlophone.co.uk/a/tBHSvSKAQUBzFBkY37HBIPsic6$/link29

26 Nov - Bournemouth BIC
27 Nov - Wembley Arena, London
28 Nov - Birmingham NIA
30 Nov - Nottingham Arena
31 Nov - Glasgow SECC

For tickets to the shows visit: ticketmaster.co.uk :
http://email.parlophone.co.uk/a/tBHSvSKAQUBzFBkY37HBIPsic6$/link30
or ticketweb.co.uk :
http://email.parlophone.co.uk/a/tBHSvSKAQUBzFBkY37HBIPsic6$/link31

my mail
 
^^not the most beautiful song ever, but def my fave from the album
 
cuties <3

Babyshambles interview


Backstage in Brighton (from NME.com - Interview by Michael Nolder):

There’s something about the atmosphere inside the Brighton Centre’s flush dressing room. It’s fresh, it’s clean and there’s not even one drop of alcohol in the room. Can this really be a Babyshambles gig? Apparently so - Pete is keen to make it clear that it’s a dry tour, although the pint he’s clutching at the end of his band’s set later suggests that this rule isn’t too vigorously enforced. As clean as a whistle, Pete is chatty and coherent throughout. He even attempts to do the badger dance (“Badgers Badgers Badgers MUSHROOM! MUSHROOM!), and strums along gently to the George Formby CD playing in the background. Babyshambles would appear be a band on the mend, improving with every gig they play…

What’s it like playing larger venues like this – are these the largest places you’ve played?
Adam Ficek: It’s like you were saying the other day…
Peter Doherty: Yeah, normally it’s like, we haven’t got enough leads, or the tuner’s not working, or someone spills a pint of beer on the amp. Little venues are good, but nothing ever works. The atmosphere is good but it ends up sounding ****, whereas here there’s a pretty slick atmosphere and things work.You don’t find larger gigs like this more nerve-wracking then?
Adam: I find it more nerve-wracking playing the big places, yeah. I **** myself.

Have you been down to Brighton much before?
Adam: I think this lot have before.
Peter: Last time I played here it was to about 80 people. It was an acoustic gig with Dot Alison, and then on the way home we ran over a stag.
Adam: (To Pete) Didn’t you play down here in the band as well? I think Babyshambles played down here at some point.
Peter: Yeah we did, yeah. I think we played that rectangle place with the dressing room behind the stage – it was on the front. And we played the Freebutt – I think we played there when we just got signed.
Adam: And Event 2…

So you know Brighton quite well then?
Peter: I love Brighton.
Adam: It’s brilliant, yeah.

Why do you think people should come and see you tonight?
Adam: We’ve already sold it out, so we don’t need convince anybody…

Dizzee Rascal is supporting you on your tour at the moment – How did this come about?
Adam: Dizzee Rascal’s amazing – he fires us up and gets us ready to play – it’s brilliant. You watch him and you just become really up for it.
Peter: We had a shared experience with him on an aeroplane when we came to Ireland. It was quite strange – like a kind of ****ed-up version of Stella Street. We had us lot, Dizzee Rascal, Sinead O’Connor in a shell-suit and Brian Wilson…
Adam: He was in a shell-suit as well…
Peter: As soon as the engine of the plane started, he (Brian Wilson) started… Imagine the whole of the plane, like, silent and all of a sudden you just hear… do it Mick…
Mick Whitnall: Haaaaaaaaaaaaarrrrrrrrrr!
Peter: And he’s going (puts on accent) - “Can you hear the chord?” And he’s like humming and singing in tune to the engine. And then he’s going (does accent again) “Doesn’t it feel like Christmas guys?” Then Mick offered him a sweet, and he goes “No, I shouldn’t really,” then grabs a hanky, and sort of put it in his mouth unopened… It was ****ing weird. And then Dizzee said “Can I support you?”

Do you get much of a chance to try out new songs on the road?
Adam: In the sound check two minutes ago we just did two new ones - really good. We kind of do most of the stuff on the hoof, really. There’s one we’ve just done called 1939 which is really good. (To Pete) What’s 1939 about?
Peter: It’s about a bloke who gets captured behind enemy lines. He sacrificed his life for Germany, because he didn’t tread carefully behind enemy lines.
Adam: So he’s actually a German then?
Peter: Yeah. It’s one of my works of fiction.
Adam: I had a dream last night that I was a snowboarder, right. It’s weird, I was at the top of this hill just in shoes, yet I beat ‘em all. And I got to the bottom, but they said “You can’t claim the prize because you started after the buzzer.” And I’m going “Yeah, but that shouldn’t matter, because that means that they’ve got an advantage,” but she wouldn’t have it. But I was feeling really good about myself.

Have you got a favourite song you like playing live?
Adam: I like playing ‘Side Of The Road’ live ‘cos it’s fast and you can get the crowd moving.
Peter: I like playing ‘Sedative’ because it’s a lovely tune, and…
Adam: Gives us a chance for a tea break…
Peter: Yeah, you get to sit down.
Adam: You should sit in the armchair an’ have nice a cuppa tea during it.
Peter: Think I will actually tonight.
Adam: A little glass of lemon tea.

In the past you’ve often played old Libertines’ songs, but not so much on this tour – is this something you’ve enjoyed, or is it something you feel uncomfortable doing?
Adam: I like it – I think there’s a good buzz playing them. It wasn’t a conscious decision on this tour, it just didn’t really materialise.
Peter: It’s great, we should do it more really. You can feel uncomfortable about the past, but it doesn’t make you feel uncomfortable about the songs. When we do smaller gigs and were playing more, sort of, ramshackle set lists, we’ve had a crack at loads of them – ‘Time For Heroes’, ‘Horrorshow’, ‘Can’t Stand Me Now’, ‘For Lovers’, ‘What A Waster’… We do a reggae version of ‘I Get Along’. But in more formal gigs we want to do things that we know inside out, and we’ve never really bothered to learn ‘em properly.

You’re not playing any of them tonight then?
Adam: Not in the set, but you never know.

Is there anyone in the future you’d like to collaborate with?
Adam: What about Amy?
Peter: Yeah, Amy Winehouse. We were working on something last night actually. It’s called ‘You Hurt The One’s You Love’.

Who should be the next England manager?
Peter: (Sighs) It’s just depressing.
Adam: I think get Venables back.
Drew McConnell: Get Wolfman.
Adam: Hmm, I don’t know who would be a good manager actually.
Drew: Wolfman.
Adam: Yeah, but he plays a defensive game, though, doesn’t he?
Peter: You know Wolfman used to play professional football for Gillingham? But he’s in hospital at the moment on a drip from alcoholism. He’ll be all right if he stops drinking.Well he could probably apply for it then – he’s got some experience.
Adam: I reckon so, yeah. Wolfman it is.

What have been your highlights of your time in the band so far?
Adam: I love it when an album’s finished. The actual recording process is quite stressful, but I love it when it’s finished. You can actually sit and go, “****ing hell, that’s great!” and all that stuff.

What about low points? Have you had many times where you’ve felt you just weren’t enjoying it?
Adam: Yeah, sometimes it’s quite troublesome – when there’s a lot of press intrusion and stuff kicking off. Like pictures in the press and that – it takes its toll, but you’ve just got to pick yourself up and keep your chin up really. It’s been hard and you think it’s gonna implode any second, but then something always just comes around the corner and kind of saves everything.

Any messages for the Brighton blog readers?
Adam: When you go to the beach, don’t leave rubbish. Very important. It annoys me, that. You know, you’re sitting on a lovely beach and you don’t want to see rubbish. Actually, I saw Blur at Sussex University here. I had to spend the night in the car park. This was when they first started to play songs like ‘Girls And Boys’ and ‘Parklife’ - it was amazing. So, yeah, Sussex University – I saw Blur there.

Later on, an impressive set is topped-off by a 25-minute encore. Pete even has time for a beautiful rendition of ‘Music When The Lights Go Out’ – perhaps an epitaph for the evening, as the crowd leave the venue singing late into the night. The tour may since have finished, but Babyshambles are back from the dead.

http://breckroadlovers.blogspot.com/2007/12/babyshambles-interview.html
 

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