The long awaited 26 track album by the legendary Gorillaz is out now. Since announcing their latest album, Humanz, last month. Gorillaz have been releasing one single at a time to their fans to keep them on their feet. On Thursday night, the band finally released their first album since 2010’s The Fall.
Here is a full track list of the album
Intro: I Switched My Robot Off
Ascension (feat. Vince Staples)
Strobelite (feat. Peven Everett)
Saturnz Barz (feat. Popcaan)
Momentz (feat. De La Soul)
Interlude: The Non-conformist Oath
Submission (feat. Danny Brown & Kelela)
Charger (feat. Grace Jones)
Interlude: Elevator Going Up
Andromeda (feat. D.R.A.M.)
Busted and Blue
Interlude: Talk Radio
Carnival (feat. Anthony Hamilton)
Let Me Out (feat. Mavis Staples & Pusha T)
Interlude: Penthouse
Sex Murder Party (feat. Jamie Principle & Zebra Katz)
She’s My Collar (feat. Kali Uchis)
Interlude: The Elephant
Hallelujah Money (feat. Benjamin Clementine)
We Got The Power (feat. Jehnny Beth)
Deluxe Edition Bonus Tracks:
Interlude: New World
The Apprentice (feat. Rag‘n’Bone Man, Zebra Katz & RAY BLK)
Halfway To The Halfway House (feat. Peven Everett)
Out Of Body (feat. Kilo Kish, Zebra Katz & Imani Vonshà)
Founded in 2005 by fashion designer Melissa Del Bono meli melo is a combination of designer Melissa Del Bono’s rich Italian and patriotic English Heritage, paired with the inspiration from her daily life. Currently, meli melo has a store in London and has a big online presence, which really reflects the fine products that the fashion label produces. Their products range from finest leather bags to accessories like wallets, scarves and key chains. The label has numerous celebrities wearing their products and consistently appear on the biggest fashion magazines known. This is our interview with the founder & designer Melissa Del Bono.
Hello, how are you?
Loving life
So, when did you start designing?
In 2005 after I realised there was something out there missing in a world filled with HUGE LOGOS and status around those- I was always more demure and wanted something that didn’t over shadow my style but made it better!!
Who is your idol?
My dad and amazing force of nature- he is 86 and wears speedos and a red G SHOCK watch with long silver curls!
“EVERY GIRL LIVING IN THE CITY YEARNED FOR THE SIMPLICITY OF LIFE ON THE BEACH, YET WHEN ON THE BEACH, MISSED THE BUSTLE OF CITY LIFE. I WANTED TO DESIGN SOMETHING EQUALLY VERSATILE FOR BOTH ELEMENTS OF LIFE.”
If one piece of clothing could define your work what would it be and why?
My vintage Levis..they have been through the best teens and now the 90s are back they are back with a vengeance!!
What do you think makes design work?
Something that is so distinguished and functional that you cant live without
If you could give any advice to a person that wants to get into fashion design what would it be?
Be focused and don’t give up
How long does it take to design something new?
1 day!
Do you have a favourite piece of work you designed?
The thela a signature bag – will always be a classic
Describe your work in one word.
PASSIONATE
Describe yourself in one word.
Volcanic
How would you define culture?
Like a moving train of thoughts,, evolving and like a melting pot of traditions and influences
To find out more about meli melo click here for their official website.
Marlow London is a British fashion label that focuses on contemporary luxury accessories of highest quality and craftmanship. The label is run by Central Saint Martins graduate Chloe Marlow who has founded Marlow London in 2016. Her goal is to challenge the consumers vision of what is luxury and to expand the world of luxury accessories by adding her own vision through her designs. This is our interview with Chloe from Marlow London.
Hello, how are you?
Fabulous! Thank you.
So, how did Marlow London start?
It really began in my final year at Central Saint Martins. My final year project was based around consumer consumption and I wanted to create a shopping bag as my final piece alongside provocative silk scarves. I began taking weekend classes at a handbag studio who hired me when I graduated.
After university I carried on learning and was apprenticing with emerging designers soaking up their knowledge and learning from their experiences. A year after graduating I decided I was ready to take the plunge and build a collection around the concept and designs I had been working on at university.
How long does it take to design something from scratch?
Designing takes no time at all! It’s the development that can take me weeks or months. Scarves are very simple, for me designing prints is like eating or sleeping; it comes naturally. Bags on the other hand don’t come as naturally and I probably have a very different approach to designing them than most accessory designers. So much has to be taken into consideration including practicality and longevity. I work with a fantastic talented team of artisans who guide me.
Do you have a favourite thing you designed?
The ‘This Bag’ collection is my favourite. I defines everything that Marlow London is about. It’s the merge between art and fashion. It’s a literal fashion statement.
What is your key focus when designing something new?
To produce something that I am proud of in terms of concept and quality and something I that I’d love to wear myself.
If you could give any advice for a person that wants to go into fashion design what would it be?
Fashion is subjective, don’t let other’s judgements sway your direction and believe in what you produce. If you don’t who will?
Describe your work in one word.
Expressive
Describe yourself in one word.
Passionate
How would you define culture?
To me culture is our surroundings. It’s the posters we walk past, the music we listen to, the latest trends and hype. It’s the people that surround us.
To find out more about Marlow London click here for the official website.
Wythe Bea is a British womenswear label formed by Sarah and Matthew Tomkins.
With the amount of experience both Sarah and Matthew have the label has progressed as expected in the time it has been running since 2016. Sarah and Matthew from Wythe Bea joined to talk about fashion and culture
Hello! How are you?
Both: Hello! Very well thank you
So, when did you realise you wanted to go into Fashion?
Sarah: I realized quite young that I wanted to do something creative – I always really loved drawing and making things, so decided from quite a young age that I wanted got to art school. I was a teen in the early 2000’s with the resurgence of customization and vintage clothing so that played a big part in experimenting with different looks and styles – I was always desperately trying to recreate looks from my idols of the time and would buy a lot of teen fashion mags like teen vogue and cosmo girl and try to figure out how to recreate some of the pieces as there was no way I was going to get my hands on them in the small town in Scotland where I grew up. The thought of actually working in fashion was something that never really occurred to me until I started art school as it was so far from my world.
When did you realise you wanted to start Wythe Bea?
Both: Wythe Bea came from us both feeling a little disillusioned about the industry we were working in. After studying design I decided to do a PGCert in Creative Pattern Cutting and after that it seemed I could only really find work as a pattern cutter. Which was great for a while but I was really craving being more involved in the whole process of design again. I have always thought about having my own business as I love the idea of having complete control from start to finish! When I met Matthew he was working as a print designer at Mary Katranzou and we met at a mutual friends housewarming party – we got on instantly and spoke that first evening about us both wanting to quit our jobs and try to do something for ourselves. It was few months later that we decided to do something alone together!
What it is like working together?
Sarah: It is really, really great! We love spending all our time together so this kind of seems like the perfect excuse! We are both quite similar – Matthew is really patient and meticulous and calm and so it never feels like work to be honest. We live together and work together and you might think that would be a nightmare but it just means we have so much to talk about and discuss so we are never bored in each others company.
Do you have any major influences?
Sarah: I don’t think that I have any one major influence, I am always really influenced by my surroundings and people that I meet and so that really varies. Since moving to Margate I am really drawn to very stereotypical seaside imagery, and the stigma that is attached to being an artist or designer that lives by the seaside. I have always been interested in exploring what is perceived as tacky or bad taste. And Margate with its faded glamour and tacky arcades is a constant source of inspiration. I think it is what drives most designers or artists, but I really love trying to find the beauty in what is perceived as ugly.
What do you think makes a good design?
Sarah: I think what makes good design is integrity, craftsmanship and it’s fit for purpose. It doesn’t have to be traditionally beautiful but perhaps should speak of the time that it was made or designed. I think if the design shows confidence and all the other elements align, it will be timeless.
If you could give any advice to a person that wants to go into fashion design what would it be?
Sarah: I would say be nice to people and treat people well. I think its one of the worst misconceptions of the industry that you have to be a beast to get ahead. Obviously in some cases that is true, but I think generally people want to work with nice, easy going people. It also annoys me when people have the attitude that because they were treated a certain way as an intern they then have the right to treat others the same when they are further up the ladder. Its all a process and a team effort and I think if you appreciate people you get a lot more in return.
How long does it take to design something from scratch?
Sarah: Hmmm, a long time! The way we work is we talk about the look or feel, colours and ideas behind the collection for quite a while before we even begin doing any drawings. We then start thinking about shapes and I begin to sketch out initial design ideas. Then we start to toile the initial design ideas and that might take a while depending on how quickly we get it looking right. But things can change a lot in that time and often we come up with something completely different from the sketch. It also takes a few sample to iron out any design details like pocket type/ pocket location, fabrication etc. so I would say all in all to design a new collection it takes a good few months at least. Which I think is why a lot of designers are burning out these days as the rate that they are expected to work is completely unsustainable.
Do you have a favourite piece of work you designed?
Sarah: No, I am never really completely satisfied with anything which I think pushes us on to work harder which I suppose is a good thing.
Define your work in one word.
Both: Co-ords
How would you define culture?
Sarah: Hmmm, that’s a very tricky one. I would define culture as the collective ideas of society at a particular time
To find out more about Wythe Bea click here to their website.
Akira Kurosawa is one of the most influential and important film directors of all time. His films range from The Hidden Fortress (1958), Stray Dog (1949) to Dreams (1990). He has influenced directors like Andrei Tarkovsky, George Lucas, Quentin Tarantino and many more.
Recently, the Sydney Film Festival has announced they will be screening ten of Akira Kurosawa’s classics. Those include Rashomon (1950), Seven Samurai (1954), The Hidden Fortress (1958), Yojimbo (1961), Throne of Blood (1955) Ran (1985), Kagemusha (1980) Ikiru (1952), Red Beard (1965) and last but not least High and Low (1963). It seems like the retrospective will cover all of the different genres that Kurosawa has worked on during his career.
The films will screen at the Art Gallery of New South Wales and Dendy Opera Quays cinema, as part of the 64th Sydney Film Festival. It has been announced that Fresh 35mm prints will be imported from Japan for the retrospective screening.
More than 200 paintings from the Savitsky State Art Museum of Karakalpakstan went on display at the Pushkin Museum in Moscow, this month. It is regarded as one of the best soviet art collections worldwide.
“This exhibition opens completely new, and not very well researched, layers of art that are linked to the international avant-garde,” said Pushkin museum director Maria Loshak.
The collection holds some of the best art from artists like Alexander Vokov, Alexander Nikolayev, Vladimir Lysenko and many more.
Inspired by the world Hong Kong born, London based fashion designer Carolina Wong mixes “classic timeless patterns – pin check, gingham and stripes – and develops a carefully engineered weaving process with leather. Minimalistic silhouettes, plush leathers, bold patterns and a sophisticated but unexpected colour palette define her debut handbags collection.” This is our interview with the so great Carolina.
Hello, how are you?
I am very well, thank you.
What is your background and when did you decide to go into Fashion?
I studied textile design at the University of the Arts London, Chelsea collage of Art. Since I was a young girl growing in Hong Kong, I have always been very experimental with styles and fashion. Therefore I chose to study the root of fashion – textile design. I have always been the black sheep of the family, never following conventional routes. Studying design wasn’t the pleasing route for my Hong Konger father but nevertheless, I went for it.
What is it like running a label?
Challenging all the time, but it also keeps my creativity going all the time.
How long does it take to design something from scratch?
It could take months or even years. For example, my debut collection has taken me more than a year to develop.
Do you have a favourite design?
You can never have a favourite design, each design serves a different purpose.
What is your key focus when designing something new?
Authenticity: it’s important to stick to your DNA and don’t get distracted by trends.
What do you think makes a good design work?
People: the best moment as a designer is seeing people wearing your design in the street.
If you could give any advice for a person that wants to go into fashion design what would it be?
My collection is primarily bags. I would say: explore beyond ‘fashion design’, lots of people forget about the important of other parts of fashion such as textiles and accessories.
Describe your work in one word.
Authentic.
Describe yourself in one word.
Free.
How would you define culture?
Something evolving as we go along without forgetting the fundamental values of humanity, while respecting the values of the past.
Pitchouguina is fashion label that prides itself in emotional connection with their consumers. They take in inspiration from “everyday moments, everyday people, random words, awkward smiles and all the little things that can go so easily unnoticed“. It is to no surprise that their SS17 collection represents those emotions that they strive on reflecting in their work. This is our interview with Pitchouguina.
Hello, how are you?
Very hectic but very good.
So, when did you start designing?
The idea that I want to be a designer was really sudden when I was still a teenager and I have never stopped pursuing it since. My designs that I am proud of as they represent a certain quality and feel started probably just a few years ago before I launched the brand.
Who or what are your main influences?
World in general. I like watching people a lot and noticing their emotions and reactions to things.
I have quite an eye for the detail and I like observe that and all those things somehow blend with colours and textures I see.
Favourite type of material?
Currently cotton but I have love for fine silks too. Something with subtle texture is what I adore.
How long does it take to design something new?
I think it is difficult to say, it could take 3 hours it could take 2 weeks and for me it is always both, some ideas some really easy, other you need to re-refine several times.
Do you have a favourite piece of work you designed?
I hope it will be always something form the new upcoming range.
Describe your work in one word.
Intuitive.
Describe yourself in one word.
Melancholic.
If you could dress anyone famous who would it be and why?
Natalia Vodianovo, she is everything to me what I think a modern women should be. Of course I am not talking just about the beauty.
How would you define culture?
I think I see the culture in a very subjective way, so to me it is my personal interaction with what the world has to offer.
Click here to the official website of Pitchouguina to find out more about the label.
Coachella is an art and music festival, which varies from Indie to rock. This festival occurs in California every year. Some looks of celebrities even become a trend to the high street fashion, a big example was the floral headband. The two most inspirational celebrities that go to Coachella and start a trend would be Vanessa Hudgens and Kendall Jenner. Coachella starts from 14th to 16th and 21st to 23rd of April I wanted to cover what will be the 3 biggest fashion trends that could potentially make a rise to sales and even start a new trend.
Body JewelleryI think this year there will be more accessorising than ever. It has a very festive look to it and it will just add more details to the look if you were to wear something simple.
Last but not the least, body suits. They have been in trend but I know that sales will definitely boost after pictures of celebrities wearing them which they will then continue to be an on going trend.
Elefante is about a man who is stuck in a dull and gloomy job, he has only one friend that he cannot stand, and his family loathes him.
This short film written and directed by Pablo Larcuen is a wonderful symbolic piece of art. I love pretty much everything about this film. From the style and its mise-en scene to the storyline and use of sound. This wonderful short really takes you on a journey and more than that leaves a thought with you after it’s finished.
The film is packaged very well and every element seems to do its job which what makes a good short film. I think the idea of a man becoming an elephant at first got me confused, but the slight comedic moments that this idea produced really turned this film into one of my favourite short films. One of my favourite things about the film was actually the costume. I really love this kind of style reminds me of Wes Anderson and this indie European filmmaking that really isn’t that popular amongst the mainstream. The actual story arc develops really well throughout the film. The selection of shots used really add to the story and at no point are wasted for any other purpose other than. One of my favourite transitions near the end of the film when the camera slides into a fading black and back out into the light into another time and scene, really define the fluidity of the film.
Overall, this film is very well packaged and made. It’s original and artful.