They are also working on a new album.
I know!
(Oh goodness, everything I post about Bauhaus will end with an exclamaition point, I just know it.)
I knew about the album, and I knew they were going to tour. I just didn't expect them to be playing Seattle THIS October! Glee!
I knew about the album, and I knew they were going to tour. I just didn't expect them to be playing Seattle THIS October! Glee!
I saw them on their last reunion tour, and they were REALLY good. I was wary, because reunion tours can so often be lame, but even if I hadn't had semi-diminished expectations, the show would have kicked ass.
I'm curious if they are one of those bands that tries out the stuff they are working on on the road.
They are also working on a new album.
So are the New York Dolls. (I think Joe already mentioned that upthread.) And The Pixies. And maybe X. I dismember.
I'm not saying you have to do it all the time, but once every twenty lines or so probably won't kill you.
Heh.
The new Mojo has Dylan's 100 Greatest Songs (and Bob on the cover). There's some fascinating stuff in it, particularly different musicians discussing the songwriting of their favorites. Loved Richard Hell's bit particularly. I recall them doing a similar issue on Brian Wilson with "'Til I Die" gaining a surprise slot at #1. There will be no such surprise in the Dylan issue, with Greil Marcus going on about
Like A Rolling Stone.
Also, Lost in the Grooves gets a capsule review in this issue. (They liked it.)
I saw them on their last reunion tour, and they were REALLY good. I was wary, because reunion tours can so often be lame, but even if I hadn't had semi-diminished expectations, the show would have kicked ass.
I saw Pylon on a reunion tour and they were so incredibly good.
I saw Pylon on a reunion tour and they were so incredibly good.
I know that the reunion album they did was seriously good, so this doesn't surprise me.
I do have to say I've had good luck with the few reunion shows I've seen. Roxy Music was enormous fun too when I saw them. It's a toss-up between them opening with "Re-Make/Re-Model" while projecting a montage of the band in their early days, or the points in the show where the dancing girls came out, as to what was my favorite part of that one.
It's a toss-up between them opening with "Re-Make/Re-Model" while projecting a montage of the band in their early days, or the points in the show where the dancing girls came out, as to what was my favorite part of that one.
Dancing girls are good. But I don't know if they're as good as Brian Eno in a space outfit with a giant ostrich fether collar.
I saw them on their last reunion tour, and they were REALLY good. I was wary, because reunion tours can so often be lame, but even if I hadn't had semi-diminished expectations, the show would have kicked ass.
I also saw them on the last reunion tour (because OMG BAUHAUS! MUST GO!), and it was a fabulous show.
I'm clinging to this faint hope that Peter Murphy will be suspended upside down from the lighting rig to perform Bela (which is what happened at Cochella), but I won't be surprised if it doesn't happen.
I do have to say I've had good luck with the few reunion shows I've seen.
I never said so - but the Knitters were awesome. I especially enjoyed Dave Alvin and have been reading about/considering a Blasters purchase ever since. I was all star struck by John Doe - who had that true love of the crowd/love of the music joy thing going on. It was fun.
Dancing girls are good. But I don't know if they're as good as Brian Eno in a space outfit with a giant ostrich fether collar.
We did get several shots of Eno in his Roxy days in that montage (even though he wasn't with the band in person). One of the times the girls came out in full Vegas regalia (sequins and feather head pieces). The other they looked like they were on loan from Robert Palmer.
I saw the Pylon reunion tour too! Lots of fun.
Also the Buzzcocks reunion tour.