Howie Pyro, the punk rocker best known as a founding member of the New York City band D Generation, has died. Jesse Malin, Pyro’s longtime friend and bandmate in D Generation, confirmed the news in a statement, saying he died of complications from COVID-19-related pneumonia following a long battle with liver disease. He was 61.
Born Howard Kusten on June 28, 1960, in Whitestone, Queens, he adopted the moniker Howie Pyro as a teenager. In the 1970s, Pyro led the underage band the Blessed, who played at CBGB and Max’s Kansas City. It was during that time that he befriended Sid Vicious, who died from a heroin overdose in 1979; Pyro was one of the last to see the Sex Pistols bassist alive. In the ’80s, he formed the grunge outfit the Freaks with his future wife Andrea Matthews, before coming together with Malin, guitarist Danny Sage, drummer Michael Wildwood, and guitarist Richard Bacchus to found D Generation.
“We wanted to make a band that would be the band that we always dreamed about wanting to go see, a band that really didn’t exist anymore,” Malin explained in a 2016 interview with Loudwire. “We’d throw parties, we’d DJ, we’d hang out together on a street and listen on a boombox to a world that we had heard about, but we didn’t really see in the rock scene. We came out of hardcore so we figured we could take this on and take it into our own hands and actually make something. We started to rehearse in a loft and put on shows there.”
Following the release of their 1994 self-titled debut, D Generation signed to Columbia for 1996’s No Lunch and 1998’s Through the Darkness. The band’s final album, Nothing Is Anywhere, arrived in 2016. In addition to his work with D Generation, Pyro collaborated with artists including Danzig, Rancid, Joey Ramone, the Misfits, Debbie Harry, Alan Vega, and more. He also hosted the radio show Intoxica! Radio, where he played “50s and 60s rock and roll, psycho surf, garage, rockabilly, hillbilly horrors, voodoo r & b, insane instrumentals, religious nuts, and teenage hell music.”
Norah Jones was the musical guest on last night’s episode of The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, where she performed her hit single ‘Don’t Know Why’. Watch it below.
In April, Jones released Come Away With Me: 20th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition, which features 22 previously unreleased tracks, via Blue Note/UMe. Last year, she issued a holiday LP, I Dream of Christmas, following her 2020 recordPick Me Up Off the Floor. Jones made her television debut on The Tonight Show back in 2002.
070 Shake has shared a new single called ‘Web’, lifted from her upcoming LP YOU CAN’T KILL ME – out June 3 via G.O.O.D. Music/Def Jam Recordings. The track, which follows early single ‘Skin and Bones’, is produced by Johan Lenox and co-produced, mixed, and mastered by Mike Dean. Check it out below and scroll down for the album’s cover artwork and tracklist.
Speaking with Zane Lowe on Apple Music 1, Shake said of the song: “Everything we created from scratch. The beat is created with the vocals. I’m not getting no outside beats. Everything is tailored to each other. I think it creates a different feeling when you do it that way because it’s more connected to you as the artist.”
YOU CAN’T KILL ME Cover Artwork:
YOU CAN’T KILL ME Tracklist:
1. Web
2. Invited
3. History
4. Medicine
5. Skin And Bones
6. Blue Velvet
7. Cocoon
8. Body [feat. Christine and the Queens]
9. Wine & Spirits
10. Come Back Home
11. Vibrations
12. Purple Walls
13. Stay
14. Se Fue La Luz
“When everything ends/ Can we do it again?” Win Butler sings on the final track of Arcade Fire’s new album, WE. The end-of-the-world sentiment can seem as heavy-handed as it is overly familiar, and you might imagine it as part of an attempt to bring the band’s big comeback record to an excessive, wide-eyed conclusion. After all, it’s a return to form that lead single ‘The Lightning I, II’ promised fans: a song so triumphant and euphoric it immediately sold the idea of them going back to basics – Arcade Fire being a group better suited to earnest sentimentality than the idle cynicism that marked their last album, 2017’s Everything Now. But read those final words again and you might feel skeptical about them adopting this approach for an entire album: Could it be that Arcade Fire are simply retreading old ground in an effort to relive their glory days? What if doing it again is a nostalgic move no less painfully trite than anything on Everything Now?
Rest assured: If that wasn’t your takeaway from ‘The Lighning’, I doubt the rest of the album will change your mind. The most exhilarating thing about WE is that it’s an album about broad, pervasive feelings – something Arcade Fire have always traded in and that’s technically also true of Everything Now – but Butler, Régine Chassagne, and company play and sing a lot more like they actually care instead of trying to make some sort of ironic statement. Of course it can be obnoxious and overbearing and more than a little bit corny – it’s an Arcade Fire album. But what makes it worthwhile is not just the fact that it’s more graceful and anthemic than its predecessor, but that it communicates much more than it merely signals. “I was trying to run away but a voice told me to stay/ Put the feeling in a song,” Butler sings on ‘The Lightning’, as if actually putting his faith in its power. (“I believe the music is a spirit,” he recently told Apple Music, “not figurative, an actual spirit.”) The result is their most passionate and consistently rewarding effort since Funeral.
Like any other Arcade Fire record, WE has flaws that are too glaring not to point out – like when Butler sings, “Some people want the rock without the roll/ But we all know there’s no God without soul” – but you can’t really resent the album for its sincerity, especially when it makes the band sound so alive and present. And like The Suburbs before it, the album brings a certain amount of levity to the self-seriousness of the band’s previous outings, elevating its moments of fearless ambition while being both looser and tighter – clocking in at 40 minutes, you almost wish it was more bloated if it meant they could reach a little bit further into the unknown. At times, the sense of melodrama is so pronounced – there’s a nine-part song titled ‘End of the Empire I-IV’ in which Butler declares “I unsubscribe/ This ain’t no way of life” over plaintive piano chords – that there’s no option but to embrace it for what it is, even if where it lands remains unclear.
As much as the sweeping, bombastic ‘The Lightning’ calls back to Arcade Fire’s prime, it would be a mistake to describe the album as a throwback to big-tent indie rock. Mostly, it does a solid job of blending elements from the band’s career, combining the growing momentum and youthful vulnerability of their early work with a bit of the pulsating haze of Reflektor. From the very beginning, it sounds like Arcade Fire have cracked some kind of code; ‘Age of Anxiety I’ is driven by an insistent synth line but evokes the anxious grandiosity that often eluded the band when they set their eyes on the dance floor. It’s a simple concept that’s well-executed, and it builds on ‘Age of Anxiety II (Rabbit Hole)’ with references to television screens and prescription pills. (Things may have changed since the release of OK Computer, but frequent Radiohead collaborator Nigel Godrich, a co-producer on WE, is still more than adept at capturing that vague feeling of paranoia.) Also, when you hear lines like “Somebody delete me” and “Born into the abyss/ New phone who’s this,” you have to suspect that Father John Misty’s contributions involved more than “additional production.” (He can also be heard stomping and breathing, per the album’s credits.)
It doesn’t take long before the silly, meaningless nature of such moments starts to feel earned, or at least part of a greater story. While the first part of the album revolves around “the fear and loneliness of isolation,” the concluding side explores “the joy and power of reconnection,” and the way they weave into each other is what gives them their impact. The cringe-worthy lines I’ve mentioned come from the first side, and if there’s something that comes off as shallow or embarrassing about it, the purpose that fuels the second side doesn’t mask it so much as it underlines the cause of its self-absorption. Similarly, you might find the hookiness of ‘Unconditional I (Lookout Kid)’ to be more annoying than endearing as a single, but it’s the same framing – plus knowing that Butler wrote it for his son – that renders it a heartfelt highlight.
WE doesn’t go out of its way to blindly recreate any of the band’s eras. Rather than recycling the technological dread that informed their recent work, it gets to the core of that anxiety, then traces a path towards optimism. ‘Unconditional II (Race and Religion)’, a propulsive electro cut that features guest vocals from Peter Gabriel, is another straightforward song about an all-consuming feeling – but this time it’s utter devotion, and the payoff is a lot bigger. Arcade Fire songs tend to build and build and build, but WE is a record about rebuilding what’s lost – one that allows itself to breathe before the catharsis arrives, even with the knowledge that it never might. Ultimately, it makes sense that the closing title track is a gentle acoustic ballad that’s full of hope yet leaves you wanting more. “I am awaiting/ perpetually and forever/ a renaissance of wonder,” go the final lines of the Lawrence Ferlinghetti poem that inspired the ‘Age of Anxiety’ suite. You can call WE a rebirth, but Arcade Fire still revel in the waiting.
NFTs have taken over the world of luxury designer brands, with many bringing out new artworks and even video games in the belief that this medium is the future of the world wide web as we know it. In this piece, we’ll look at five NFT projects made by well-established fashion brands.
Chito x Givenchy NFT
Givenchy, the French fashion house owned by LVMH, released a rare set of 15 unique NFT graphic designs in collaboration with Chito. These rare pieces haven’t been selling for groundbreaking prices, typically around 3 ETH, but certainly made a positive shift for the fashion house regarding the digital age and its forward-thinking activities.
Dolce & Gabbana: DGFamily Glass Box
If you’re looking to gain some exclusive access to the Dolce & Gabbana NFT universe, then this collection is for you. In partnership with UNXD, the Italian fashion house has released a unique and exciting set of boxes which give holders access to digital, physical and experiential benefits. Whilst artistically, it may not seem that thrilling, it certainly provides more value than simple art-based NFT projects without any extra benefits.
Gucci x Superplastic
SUPERGUCCI is a collaboration between Gucci and Superplastic, a series of highly-limited NFTs designed by Gucci’s Creative Director Alessandro Michele and synthetic artists Janky & Guggimon. NFTs feature House codes found in the Gucci Aria collection and include an exclusive 8-inch tall white ceramic SUPERGUCCI SuperJanky sculpture, hand-crafted by Italian ceramicists.
Nicholas Kirkwood x White Rabbit
Renowned shoe designer Nicholas Kirkwood unveiled an NFT collaboration with White Rabbit for the Dematerialised platform. Holders of the NFTs have many bonuses for holding the pieces, including tickets to a VIP event, chances to win a masterclass, and an opportunity to buy the boots from the official website of Nicholas Kirkwood.
KLxENDLESS
Endless, a London-based artist, created a custom purple look for this latest limited-edition NFT collectable based on the Karl Lagerfeld Ikonik likeness. Produced in a run of 500 pieces, the avatar offers exclusive access to news items and behind-the-scenes content.
This Italian Netflix film written and directed by Paolo Sorrentino is steeped in reality and authenticity, even though the characters often speak philosophically. The seemingly supernatural coincidences that befall its main character, Fabietto (Filippo Scotti), lend the film a sense of magical realism that reflects Fabietto’s coming-of-age experience. As a teenager, he has big ambitions, such as a desire to pursue philosophy and filmmaking, but has little idea of how to convert his dreams to reality. In fact, he admits to having only seen “three or four” films when expressing his intense passion for cinema, and he acknowledges that he doesn’t “really know” what philosophy is. These qualities make Fabietto a very real character, as do his other passions – such as his admiration of Argentinian football legend, Diego Maradona.
When Maradona arrives in Fabietto’s home city of Naples, he believes it’s fate. Some of his family shares his awe for the player, so his father (Toni Servillo) buys him tickets to see a match. While Fabietto is at the match, a terrible accident at home changes the course of his life forever. Yet in a way, Maradona’s arrival has inadvertently saved his life. “The hand of god” holds several meanings throughout the film, and the level of detail and emotions infused into the story are clearly a product of Sorrentino’s personal experience. Instead of being sentimental, though, The Hand of God is vibrant, memorable, and deeply affecting. These are some of the best quotes from the Oscar-nominated film.
“Now that my family has disintegrated, I don’t like my life anymore. I don’t like it anymore. I want an imaginary life, just like the one I had before. I don’t like reality anymore. Reality sucks. That’s why I want to make films, even though I’ve only seen three or four.”
“You’re crazy.”
“I’m not crazy – I’m young. Aren’t you?”
“Thank you, God!”
“Don’t thank God. I’m the one who bought the tickets.”
“I’ve never seen anyone kick someone with flip-flops.”
“A god! [Maradona] scored with his hand. He has avenged the great Argentine people, oppressed by the ignoble imperialists in the Malvinas. He’s a genius! He’s a genius! It’s a political act, a revolution. He humiliated them, do you understand?”
“Maradona saved my life.”
“How can it be that this city does not inspire you at all?”
“Cinema…is a distraction from reality. Reality is lousy.”
“Why don’t you come join us?”
“Because you people are trash.”
“What pleasantries is Signora Gentile saying?”
“In a most poetic outburst, she says she holds us all in the highest regard.”
“I don’t want to talk about sad stuff.”
“Then there is nothing to talk about.”
“What a terrible world this is; you go out to buy ice cream, and when you come back your husband has been arrested.”
“You feel alone, that’s the problem. But don’t forget that you’re free.”
“Why don’t we buy a TV with a remote like everyone else?”
“Don’t talk nonsense; I’m a communist.”
“What do you want to do when you leave school?”
“Philosophy.”
“What’s that about?”
“I don’t really know.”
“Why aren’t you crying? It’ll do you good.”
“I can’t cry.”
“Don’t worry. It just means it’s not the right time.”
Camp Trash have announced their debut LP, The Long Way, The Slow Way. The follow-up to last year’s Downtiming EP, which landed on our best EPs of the year list, will drop on July 1 via Count Your Lucky Stars. Today, the band is previewing the album with a new single called ‘Let It Ride’. Check it out below, and scroll down for the album cover and tracklist as well as the band’s upcoming tour dates supporting Spanish Love Songs and Save Face.
The Long Way, The Slow Way Cover Artwork:
The Long Way, The Slow Way Tracklist:
1. Mind Yr Own
2. Pursuit
3. Weird Florida
4. Another Harsh Toyotathon
5. Enough Explaining
6. Poured Out
7. Lake Erie Boys
8. Let It Ride
9. Soft
10. Church Bells
11. Riley
12. Feel Something
Camp Trash 2022 Tour Dates:
May 5 – Iowa City, IA – Gabe’s
May 6- Madison, WI – High Noon Saloon
May 7- Palatine, IL – Durty Nellie’s
May 8- Grand Rapids, MI – Pyramid Scheme
May 10- Ann Arbor, MI – Blind Pig
May 12- Somerville, MA – Crystal Ballroom
May 13- Albany, NY – Empire Live
May 14- Amityville, NY – Amityville Music Hall
May 15- New York, NY – Mercury Lounge
May 17- Asbury Park, NJ – House Of Independents
May 19- Philadelphia, PA – First Unitarian Church
May 20- Washington, DC – Songbyrd Music House
May 21- Virginia Beach, VA – Elevation 27
May 22- Durham, NC – Motorco Music Hall
May 24- Asheville, NC – Asheville Music Hall
May 25- Birmingham, AL – Ghost Train Brewing Co.
May 26- Memphis, TN – Carolina Watershed
May 27- Springfield, MO – Odyssey Lounge
May 29- Dallas, TX – So What!? Festival
Beach Bunny have shared a video for their new single ‘Karaoke’, which features a cameo from Bob Odenkirk. Watch and listen below.
“‘Karaoke’ is a song about having a crush – it’s about infatuation, fleeting feelings, and the bittersweet nature of uncertainty,” the band explained in a statement. “It’s about learning pieces of who someone is and liking them before even knowing the whole story.”
‘Karaoke’ will appear on Beach Bunny’s upcoming album Emotional Creature, which comes out July 22 via Mom+Pop. So far, they’ve previewed it with the singles ‘Oxygen’ and ‘Fire Escape’.
Ahead of its release this Friday, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever have shared another single from their forthcoming album Endless Rooms. ‘Dive Deep’ follows previous entries ‘The Way It Shatters’, ‘Tidal River’, and ‘My Echo’. Listen to it below.
“This is a simple song of devotion,” the band’s Tom Russo explained in a statement. “It’s about if you are going to give in to love, you need to go all in, and accept that you have no control in the matter. It began as a home recording during lockdown. I recorded the guide vocals and guitars with my new baby strapped to my chest. When we could finally get together to play it, Joe White came up with the perfect lead guitar tone. He was given full license to wail, and did so.. I remember sitting by the fire, looking up at the stars, and hearing the guitar echoing all around the valley.”