Posts Tagged ‘andrew wk’

Video: Andrew W.K. “I’m A Vagabond”

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010

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You’ve gotta love Andrew W.K. If not for his righteously anthemic hyper rock then for his amazing kids show Destroy Build Destroy, his colourful Fox News appearances or just for his unrelenting optimism.

Regardless of what he does, the man knows how to get a reaction out of everyone, especially with his music videos. Let us not forget the elated spirit of “Party Hard” or the ridiculous length of his mic cord in “She Is Beautiful”. With his new single, “I’m A Vagabond” Andrew has done it again.

Sticking with using himself in his signature dirty white shirt/jeans combo as the focal point, Andrew shows us his karate chops by incorporating his martial arts expertise (?) into his inimitable choreography. It’s a pretty simple single-camera shoot that allows a cameo by his guitarist to hammer home that delicious solo over the crawling, epic song structure. But the money shot comes at the end, when “he” pulls out a $100 bill from “a” mouth. You’ll understand the quotes when you watch the clip. It’s very… rubbery.

12/16/09 News briefs: Morrissey, Sofia Coppola + Thomas Mars, Banjo Or Freakout, Andrew W.K. and Wolf Parade

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

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Morrissey has lashed out at his record label and called his latest b-sides collection Swords a “meek disaster.” In a post on fan site True To You, Moz said “It was proposed and accepted as a budget-priced CD, yet emerged everywhere as the most expensive CD in the racks. It was poorly distributed and didn’t stand a chance, and ranks as the lowest chart position I’ve ever encountered.” No surprises then that he’s parted with the label.

Indie music/film’s perfect couple Sofia Coppola and Thomas Mars of Phoenix have announced they’re expecting another baby. Mars told Chicago’s WXRT confirmed girlfriend Coppola was pregnant, adding he’s already decided on some womb music. “I heard the story that if you play Bach, [babies in the womb] get smarter.” The couple have a 3-year-old daughter named Romy.

Alessio Natalizia is giving away a free Christmas album under his Banjo Or Freakout moniker. The London-based shoegazer recorded most of the nine-song album in ten days earlier this month. You can grab it over at his official blog.

Andrew W.K. will finally release his highly sought after album, Close Calls With Brick Walls. Previously only available in Japan and Korea (a limited vinyl-only run was released here by Load Records), the hard partier will release the album on February 22nd in the UK (no North American date has been announced). To make it even sweeter, he’ll tack on a b-sides album called Mother Of Mankind.

Wolf Parade/Sunset Rubdown/Swan Lake member Spencer Krug has released a new EP under the name Moonface. His label Secretly Canadian is offering Dreamland EP: marimba and shit-drums for the price of “pay-what-you-can” on its website. Meanwhile, Krug’s bandmate Arlen Thompson has informed the band’s fansite that the new Wolf Parade “record is going well” and that they’re “trying to have the record finished by early spring.”

12/4/09 News briefs: Andrew W.K., Phoenix, Animal Collective, Spacemen 3 and Of Montreal

Friday, December 4th, 2009

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Andrew W.K. has contributed to a re-imagining of The Simpsons’ famous theme tune. Andrew played piano and threw in some scatting over top of some production by hip-hop crew People Under The Stairs. Their version will air on January 14th, the final episode of the show’s 20th season.

Phoenix are the stars of three new videos featuring them playing around various spots in Paris. Shot by Vincent Moon (The National, R.E.M., All Tomorrow’s Parties), the clips show the band stripping down their flashy studio sound to a couple of acoustics, a rinky-dink Casio keyboard and Thomas Mars’ unwavering voice.

Animal Collective will premiere their movie with director Daniel Perez at the Sundance Film Festival in January. The official description of ODDSAC is “an earthy, psychedelic experimental narrative infused with the band, Animal Collective’s aural and musical sensibilities.” Basically what we’d want in such an endeavour.

Jason Pierce has said he’s “not interested” in ever reuniting his former band Spacemen 3. About his notorious old bandmate Pete “Sonic Boom” Kember, Mr. Spaceman said, “The split was so acrimonious and my view of him hasn’t changed.”

The other day we mentioned how Beyonce and Of Montreal are interested in working with each other. Well, it appears Kevin Barnes has already jumped at the opportunity and begun working on a song for Ms. Knowles. On Twitter, he posted that the song will be called “He’sMyPartyDrug” and it “sounds like The Time meets Four Tet.” Ooh!

An interview with Nardwuar and Andrew W.K.

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

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Two of rock’n’roll’s most inimitable identities, the greatest living music journalist Nardwuar the Human Serviette and the world’s hardest partier Andrew W.K., are musical soul mates just destined to work together. Having built a friendship after first meeting back in 2002 for an interview, the two have previously paired up for live shows, which is now resulting in the release of a split 7” for Mint Records titled A Wild Pear. Featuring two songs by both Andrew W.K. and Nardwuar’s garage band The Evaporators, a snippet of the inaugural interview is also included on the B-side. Both Andrew and Nardwuar took time out of their always busy schedules to answer some questions for The New Music.

How did you two first meet?
Andrew W.K.: Yeah it was the Scratch Records interview. It was conducted at the Scratch Records store and it was a very significant day for me because I had already been a fan of his for years; probably since ’99 or ’00 when a good friend of mine named Sue, lent me a video cassette of probably every interview he had done. It was one of those 6-hour VHS cassettes, ha ha.

Nardwuar: I was totally surprised to learn that he had heard of me way earlier, as a friend of his, Sue, had lent him a VHS tape of my interviews I had dubbed for her. These were not recent interviews either, but stuff I dubbed for her in 1992! Somehow she had kept the tape and passed it onto Andrew! I was honoured that he cared!

Andrew W.K.: Before I even met him, before I even was aware of his work as a musician or a performer, watching him do those interviews had a deep and lasting impact on me that I guess even affects me to this very moment when I do any interview. I feel like all the most important lessons about being interviewed and interviewing people can be learned from watching Nardwuar. His skill as an interviewer is one of his many talents but I think it’s coming from the same place that all of his other abilities come from, which is from an extremely passionate and good will spirit. He’s completely singular, he’s completely self-made and self-invented, and he naturally inhabits so gracefully and easily and even with all the intense energy he really beautifully inhabits his personality or concept of himself. It’s not even really a concept, it’s just him existing.

Getting underground punk illustrator Mitch Clem to do the artwork was a neat idea. How did you get him involved?
Nardwuar: Razorcake Fanzine hooked me up with Mitch a few years ago to illustrate the transcribed interviews I contribute to them. He is always up for doing posters, record covers, etc, so it was natural he would help make the Wild Pear concept a reality. You can see the incredible job Mitch did by comparing the Evaporators/Andrew W.K.’s A Wild Pear to the record we paid homage to, which was the Guess Who?/Staccatos’ A Wild Pair!

Andrew W.K.: Oh the amazing Mitch Clem. He even drew a poster for the Mint Records Christmas party. Nardwuar invited me to perform there and that was the first place I got to see his work. Mitch Clem is just incredible.

How did the collaboration for the 7” come to be?
Nardwuar: I am always thinkin’ about records, and when I thought of the idea of doing a split 7” that might somehow pay tribute to Canadian punkness, I immediately remembered how he loved Toronto’s Leather Uppers! So I had to ask him to cover them!

Andrew W.K.: In response to the record, I kept thinking it was after the Christmas show, but I had actually recorded my songs well before that. Playing together at the Christmas party was a celebration of us having completed the recording for split 7”. Some of the songs we played from the release like [the Subhumans’] “Oh Canaduh,” I think we only played “Oh Canaduh” but we also played a couple of my songs, Nardwuar and his Evaporators group had backed me up on a couple of my tunes with Nardwuar playing keyboard really well. So yeah with the split 7” coming out, we’ll be playing together again.

Nardwuar: We are having an all-ages record release at 4 p.m. on Tuesday June 23rd at Neptoon Records (3561 Main, Vancouver) and then a few hours later there will be a bar show at the Biltmore (396 Kingsway, Vancouver). Plus we are also doing a show together in Edmonton.

Andrew, congratulations on your new series, Destroy Build Destroy. In it you show younger people how to destroy various things and then recreate something with the mess?
Andrew W.K.: Oh thank you! That was an incredible experience. It really, really exceeded all my expectations as far as how much I would enjoy the process, how intense it would be, how big the explosions would be, how amazing it would be working with the contestants. The young people on the show were incredible. Perhaps the most exciting part for me was being in the atmosphere of television which I’ve always loved, with everything I’ve done on TV, whether it is SNL, or Conan O’Brien or to more scripted shows or even filming music videos, when you’re in that atmosphere, I guess with TV especially, you’re making something where hundreds of people, like just a hundred-person crew on set just to film a few episodes, and everyone is working so hard to make something that is essentially completely disposal. Something that is shown once, not an object, it all gets destroyed in the end. It’s not as if we’re all getting together to build some kind of building or sculpture or something like that, this is to create an experience for the viewers. And that is it with television that I just can’t get enough of. The adrenaline is so high because what we’re trying to pull off just to film these episodes is so complicated and intense that everyone has to be at the top of their game and the height of their abilities using all their resources and all their talent. Just being around that all day making these shows was incredible. I’m most grateful for that than anything else – just getting to be around people. I have no idea what 90 percent of people are even doing running around, trying to make this show exist. I’m extremely thankful to be able to do this show.

Well, it looks amazing. How awesome was it to see kids react to bazookas and tanks?
Andrew W.K.: They were freaking out the whole time. The contestants are anywhere between 12 and 16 and there’s this natural phenomenon at that age where you don’t have to be enthusiastic in order to have that [natural] high… The prime of being a child is probably around 10 and 15 to 16, where you’re able to take advantage of all the best things of being a young person which is really finding out all the things in the world that you love, and just really being into what you like doing. After that you go through a stage where you start to identify things that you don’t like and push them away and start to understand the world in another way which often causes a lot of doubt. For me, the feelings I’m into like having fun and just letting yourself go, that really relates to someone of 14 to 15 years old who is really interested in having that kinda fun too.

These young people were the best of the best. You’ll see on the show that they’re just growing and they’re angels and it really reminds me that everybody is a young person. I realized that I’m one of them that’s been around longer.

Andrew, you also have a new album coming out called 55 Cadillac.
Andrew W.K.: That’s the solo piano album that will be coming out in September, the 6th or 7th depending where you live. It’s 99 percent spontaneous, meaning I didn’t have any plans of what to play, I just sat down and played and made stuff up along the way and just chose the best ones from that to make up the album.

And what else does Nardwuar have going on?Nardwuar: A couple years ago I put out a Punk Rock Calendar featuring the pics of Vancouver photographer Bev Davies. If all goes to plan, there will be another Punk Rock Calendar in 2010 with more of Bev’s pointed portraits with bands such as Black Flag, 45 Grave, Subhumans and even The Cure!