Stardust, the upcoming film that recounts David Bowie’s first-ever U.S. publicity tour in 1971, has received its first trailer following a teaser clip earlier this year. Starring Johnny Flynn in the lead role, the new visual features Marc Maron as his publicist Ron Oberman and Jena Malone as Angie Bowie as we witness the birth of the Ziggy Stardust persona. Watch it below.
The official synopsis for the film reads: “Meet David before Bowie. One of the greatest icons in music history. But who was the young man behind the many faces? In 1971, a 24-year-old David Bowie (Flynn) embarks on his first road trip to America with Mercury Records publicist Ron Oberman (Marc Maron), only to be met with a world not yet ready for him. ‘Stardust’ offers a glimpse behind the curtain of the moments that inspired the creation of Bowie’s first and most memorable alter ego, Ziggy Stardust, capturing the turning point that cemented his career as one of the world’s greatest cultural icons.”
Stardust arrives in theaters and VOD on November 25.
Following Hot Chip before them, Khruangbin have announced that they’ve curated an instalment of the long-running mix series Late Night Tales. Containing 15 tracks, the project comes out on December 4 and includes a newly released cover of Kool & The Gang’s classic ‘Summer Madness’. Check it out below, and scroll down for the LP’s tracklist.
“We definitely wanted to cover as much global territory as possible,” the Texas trio said in a statement. “So it was the globe and then home. We wanted to show the treasures from our hometown, or people from our hometown that the rest of the world probably doesn’t know. Then these gems from across the world, showcasing them in the same way. That’s what makes Khruangbin Khruangbin. The stubbornness about being so hometown-centric. But what makes Houston is this constant international influence; that’s the gulf stream, bringing it right into the city.”
Speaking of the inspiration behind the band’s Kool & The Gang cover, Khruangbin drummer Donald “DJ” Johnson added: “‘Summer Madness’ became a staple in this medley that we play. Specifically, one of my favourite things about it is the tone of the bass, which really reminds me a lot of Laura Lee’s bass which has this chunky, peanut butter, rich tone. It was always a special moment, getting to that song because, it just did something to the room, everywhere.”
Back in June, Khruangbin released their most recent studio album, Mordechai.
Late Night Tales Tracklist:
1. Devadip Carlos Santana And Turiya Alice Coltrane – “Illuminations”
2. Brilliantes Del Veulo – “I Know That (When The Springtime Comes)”
3. Nazia Hassan – “Khushi”
4. Kelly Doyle – “DRM”
5. Sanulim – “Don’t Go”
6. Maxwell Udoh – “I Like It (Don’t Stop)”
7. David Marez – “Enséñame”
8. Gerald Lee – “Can You Feel The Love (Reprise)”
9. Justine & The Victorian Punks – “Still You”
10. George Yanagi + Nadja Band -「祭ばやしが聞こえる」のテーマ
11. Песняры – “Зачарованная моя”
12. Khruangbin – “Summer Madness” (Exclusive Kool & The Gang Cover Version)
13. Paloma San Basilio – “Contigo”
14. Roha Band – “Yetikimt Abeba”
15. Tierney Malone / Geoffrey Muller – “Transmission for Jehn: Gnossienne No 1” (Produced by Khruangbin) (Exclusive Track)
Rhye, the moniker of singer and multi-instrumentalist Mike Milosh, has announced a new album. Home is set for release on January 22, 2021 via Loma Vista Recordings. The artist has also previewed the album with a new song called ‘Black Rain’, which arrives with an accompanying music video directed by Sam Taylor-Johnson and starring Aaron Taylor-Johnson. Milosh served as the director of photography for the one-shot visual. Watch it below, and scroll down for the album’s cover artwork and tracklist.
Of the single, Milosh said in a statement: “It has this Eighties version of disco, like the way Quincy Jones was interpreting disco.”
Home follows Rhye’s 2018’s album Blood and the 2019 “piano project” Spirit. It as written over the past year and was recorded at Los Angeles’ United Recording Studios, Revival at the Complex, as well as Milosh’s home studio. Alan Moulder handled the mixing. In addition to ‘Black Rain’, the 13-track LP also includes the recently released tracks ‘Beautiful’ and ‘Helpless’.
Home Cover Artwork:
Home Tracklist:
1. Intro
2. Come in Closer
3. Beautiful
4. Safeword
5. Hold You Down
6. I Need a Lover
7. Helpless
8. Black Rain
9. Sweetest Revenge
10. My Heart Bleeds
11. Fire
12. Holy
13. Outro
Grimes has collaborated with algorithm-based mood music startup Endel for a new project called AI Lullaby, which is designed to help “improve both sleep and wellness in children and adults.” According to Endel, the project was inspired by the musician becoming a new mom and wanting to make a collection of lullaby music for herself and X Æ A-XII Musk, her five-month old son with Elon Musk.
“I think, if approached properly, AI has the ability to radically fix our world,” Grimes said in a statement. “I appreciate Endel because they represent the growing trend of humane technology. I hope that the fields of AI safety, research, philosophy, as well as humane AI and spiritual technology, etc. can grow a lot in the coming years. We’ll need it!”
Featuring Grimes’ original music and vocals, the app will be available on the Endel iOS app until December 23rd, with a release on Android and Amazon Alexa to follow later this year. A portion of the proceeds from the project will be donated to the nonprofits A.I. for Everyone and the Naked Heart Foundation.
Earlier this year, Grimes released her most recent album Miss Anthropocene.
Willie Nelson and Karen O have teamed up for a cover of Queen and David Bowie’s ‘Under Pressure’. The stripped-back rendition was produced by TV on the Radio’s Dave Sitek and features guitars from Yeah Yeah Yeahs guitarist Nick Zinner, Imaad Wasif, and Johnny Hanson, as well as background vocals from Priscilla Ahn. Check it out below.
“I’ve heard this song countless times without processing the gravity of what Bowie and Freddie were singing about, maybe because their performances are so exhilarating you get swept away in the high of that duet,” Karen O explained in a statement. “Our cover was meant to be more intimate but just as saturated with the power of love. I can’t listen to this song without tearing up every time Willie comes in, one of the purest voices which of course reflects a pure heart, and I get to sing alongside it. I hope the song brings as much light to the listener as it has to me in dark times.”
Extinction Level Event 2: The Wrath of God will mark Busta Rhymes’ first studio album since 2012’s Year Of The Dragon. In addition to Kendrick Lamar, the album will feature appearances from Mary J. Blige, Rapsody, Mariah Carey, Anderson .Paak, Q-Tip, Rick Ross, Ol’ Dirty Bastard, Rakim, Nikki Grier, Chris Rock, Louis Farrakhan, Pete Rock, Vybz Kartel, Bell Biv DeVoe, and M.O.P. It includes the previously released singles ‘The Don and the Boss’ and ‘Yuuuu’ with Anderson .Paak.
Earlier this year, Kendrick Lamar launched a new “at service company” called pgLang with frequent collaborator Dave Free.
As far as job opportunities go, the art world is one of the most exciting and dynamic fields out there. The range of jobs that people in the art world find themselves working is endless, and each job offers a completely unique experience. However, the common thread uniting all these creative minds is a passion for culture and a desire to share an artistic experience with the world. Every gallery, museum, and exhibition we visit has a team of dedicated and highly skilled people working behind it around the clock to deliver the value of art to the masses.
Art-restorers are one group among these art professionals who require an incredible amount of skill and training. As much of the world’s most beloved art is revered for its old age, it’s important to have trained art-restorers working hard to repair and preserve these aging works so that their beauty is not lost forever. The work of an art-restorer is vital and a job that looks as diverse as art itself. Exploring the day-to-day work and training of an art-restorer is fascinating for any curious mind with a passion for art.
What does an art-restorer actually do?
If a work of art begins to display signs of aging or damage, art-restorers are tasked with repairing damage and preserving the original quality of the artwork. There are many different kinds of art restoration, spanning the breadth of cultural objects from painting and drawing to sculpture and architecture. Many writers offer examples of artistic disciplines to be found online in essays on art that deal with the topic. Writing on the topic of the different approaches to art restoration also makes for a great matter for students assigned art essays for university! It’s fascinating to explore the different steps involved in restoring a modern painting or an ancient statue, for instance.
Some of the tasks an art-restorer may perform are:
Repairing damage or breakage
Removing water or mold
Cleaning
Restoring frames
Refreshing colour or detail
How do art-restorers get their training?
Before being trusted with treating precious artworks, art-restorers must go through a lot of training and study to possess the knowledge needed to revitalize precious works while keeping them intact. Students of art restoration and conservation will often go to an art college first in order to acquire the necessary artistic skills needed to paint or sculpt. Once an aspiring art-restorer has the practical artistic skills needed to satisfyingly imitate the works of other artists, they must then learn the principles of art restoration.
It’s common practice for art-restorers to reach qualification by doing an apprenticeship with a more experienced art conservator. During this apprenticeship, an art-restorer will study how to assess damage and determine the best approach for its repair. There are many factors that these students will learn to consider, such as the availability of original materials and whether or not certain repairs will detract from the original quality of the work.
Art-restorers often have to get creative in their work. Precious old age works are often made with materials like clays or pigments that may be difficult for contemporary artists to source. In cases such as these, it’s important for an art-restorer to be trained in recreating materials, as well as imitating the style of the original artist. Art-restorers will often spend a lot of time studying how best to recreate the most minute details of an artist’s work, such as brushstroke or chiselling.
Art conservation and restoration are a crucial element of the art world, especially when it comes to preserving cultural objects with an important heritage. The fact that we can visit galleries and still enjoy old and damaged works is a testament to the highly skilled training and expertise of the individuals who undertake this task!
There’s an elemental beauty to Loma’s sophomore album, Don’t Shy Away, that reveals itself slowly but surely. After all, that’s the way it goes with most things in nature, a word that also happens to have been used as a fitting tag for the album – it’s not one you usually see alongside ‘alternative’ and ‘rock’, but for a band whose first releases include an instrumental soundtrack and a half-hour guided meditation, it’s not all that surprising. Unfurling with a patient and solitary kind of splendour, their music is evocative but never perfunctory, brimming with textures that are vaporous yet vividly drawn. Don’t Shy Away distils those elements that were present in their debut to a more refined form, resulting in their most mesmerizing and rewarding effort yet.
Loma started out as a serendipitous collaboration between Emily Cross, musician and recording engineer Dan Duszynski, and Shearwater frontman Jonathan Meiburg. Soon after releasing their debut self-titled album, it seemed like it was going to be a one-off project; their subsequent tour ended on a high note, with Cross jumping into the crowd, and then into the sea, during a final performance that took place on a packed beach at Sub Pop’s SPF 30 festival (remember those?). Each member then went on to work on separate projects, until they decided to reconvene at Duszynski’s home in rural Texas to record new material. It’s perhaps because the group wasn’t compelled to begin working on a second album right away that Don’t Shy Away feels anything but contrived, presenting itself as a natural continuation of what was starting to take hold on their debut – a new seed sown on the same fertile ground.
And it doesn’t take long before the album blooms into its own unique flower. The wistful tones of opener ‘I Fix My Gaze’ function in a way that’s not too unlike their guided meditation album – here, the narrator focuses her attention on the rock where she finds herself stuck, enough to finally see the beauty in its hardness. But where The Rind in Your Mind revolved around the simple affirmation of “You are perfect,” the observations on ‘I Fix My Gaze’ reveal a deeply rooted human insecurity: “Its perfect texture smooth with age/ The opposite happens to my face.” Later on the album, ‘Thorn’ starts with Cross’ voice calmly announcing, “I thought it would be a good time/ To tell you about what I’m looking at,” before a spectral chorus of “I can see a thorn” kicks in and the song takes on a mystical hue, growing more unnerving than soothing.
“Each of us is a very strong flavor,” Meiburg has said of the group’s collaborative process, “but in Loma, nobody wears the crown, so we have to trust each other—and we end up in places none of us would have gone on our own.” The real magic, however, comes in knowing how to take the listener with you – and Don’t Shy Away frequently accomplishes this. Rather than getting lost in its own dreamy, hymnal soundscapes, the album is at its best when it doesn’t just conjure a brooding sense of atmosphere but also hints at feelings left unexplored, like when ‘Half Silences’ completes its choral refrain of “Generate light/ Generate heat/ Generate feeling” with a subtle yet cutting personal confession: “So many words under my tongue/ So many half silences.”
Don’t Shy Away rarely goes as far as to give voice to those feelings, but as its title would suggest, it doesn’t shy away from them, either. It’s the kind of album that favours more abstract modes of expression, from the tension-filled crescendo of the stand-out ‘Ocotillo’ to the tranquil guitars on ‘Jenny’. For a record whose first word is “stuck”, it’s hard not to marvel at the ways in which the songs themselves seem to be in constant motion. But what’s even more satisfying is that the journey ultimately does reach a certain conclusion: from being a passive, introspective observer on the opener, the narrator demands to be seen on the gorgeously delicate title track. And the closer, ‘Homing’, which channels the transcendent qualities of a Julianna Barwick record (and even features production work from none other than ambient pioneer Brian Eno), ends with Cross repeating the line, “I am right behind your eyes.” Her voice gets distorted as it fades into the background, but some part of its essence lingers, like the smell of petrichor after the rain.
Martha Skye Murphy has shared a new song titled ‘Self Tape’. Taken from her upcoming EP Yours Truly, the single arrives with an accompanying music video directed by sister duo Waterbaby. Watch it below.
“Our online identities are often misinterpreted as being a window into an HD version of ourselves, where our life, character, interests and desires are compressed into neat squares ready to be digested,” Murphy said in a statement about the track. “We are lusting for holograms of ourselves as though constructing a genetically engineered child. It’s scary that we seem to be levitating in this digital self, where fiction is perceived as reality and judgment is expressed as ‘yea or nay’.”
Talking about the inspiration behind the video, Waterbaby added: “‘Self Tape’ explores the complex power dynamics that operate within the male gaze and plays with the idea of who is watching who. Identity is in flux and the pressure of female objectification is scrutinised. The video moves from an eerie, woozy peep-show reality into a glitchy dream world filled with idiosyncratic characters. Digital and VHS footage collide throughout like past and present, fantasy and real life. The format of the film is split in half much like the two way mirror, the voyeur and subject. However, when we break through the mirror we find the gaze has been subverted. Perhaps the viewer has been played all along.”
Martha Skye Murphy’s Yours Truly EP is out on November 13. It includes the previously released title track.