January 19, 2009
SONG WARS VICTORY NEWS!
AUSTRALIA VIDEO
Here’s the video for my song about Baz Lurhmann’s film Australia, which I’m probably a little too delighted to say, won Song Wars on our 6 Music show last weekend. I liked Joe’s song a lot, but I would have been depressed if he’d won having simply sung over the intro for Kim Wilde’s Cambodia when my effort (though heavily indebted to Rolf Harris’s Aussie classic Sun Arise) was at least constructed from scratch. When I say ‘from scratch’ I mean from scratch and the possibly harder work of both Harris and Luhrmann of course.
Anyway, I hope you like the song and the video, which is the first I have uploaded to You Tube in HD! Double click on the video below to open the You Tube page then click ‘watch in HD’ beneath the vid window to get the full effect. It took me a while to figure it out because I still favour a 4:3 frame with 720 x 576 resolution. I like things boxy, like an old TV set and to me that will always be the most desirable aspect ratio and resolution for anything that isn’t a an actual feature film but I’m aware that I’m part of a dying breed. Plus, if I switch to HD for everything I’m just going to have to invest in twice as many storage drives to accommodate the bigger file sizes. Fucking technology. Huge Jackman’s manly pecs certainly have come out nice though.
February 23, 2008
SPOON NEWS!
SPOON PLAY SCALA, KING’S CROSS, MONDAY 25th FEBRUARY 2008
The thought of once again being stood shoulder to shoulder with fellow Spoonocrats (Spoonatics?) cradling a pint, confident in the knowledge that I’ll know and like every single song the band play has sustained me through a black winter. Truly I am a small, nerdy man. I haven’t always got as much from Spoon gigs as I do from their records but last August at London’s Borderline was up in my top 5 gigs of all time, so my quarg-circuits are fizzing with anticipation! Haven’t been to The Scala for ages (last time was probably 10 years ago (!!) when, dressed as Ken Korda at the request of the band, I introduced Gorky’s Zygotic Mynci) but I remember it being a lovely venue. Will you be there? Buy tickets here
Here’s a bit of footage I shot of lead singer Britt Daniel before that Borderline gig on 17th August of 2007. When the band had finished their soundcheck Britt and I squeezed into the tiny dressing room backstage and I tried not to look too obviously over-excited as he played 3 songs for me: The Beast & Dragon Adored, Advance Cassette and this one, Black Like Me, the wonderful final song on their latest album Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga and one of my favourite Spoon songs ever! I’ll probably post the other two at a later date. You can read my fan review of the subsequent gig and more about how I got to film with Britt here.
In addition to the hand held camera that shot this footage I had a small digital camera on movie mode, taped to the wall shooting the performance as if from a webcam. The idea was to include it as part of my MeeBOX pilot somehow but in the final analysis this kind of musical performance just didn’t fit with everything else and for the sake of compromise we used an edited version of my video for Spoon’s Don’t Make Me A Target which I posted briefly last year then removed. I’ll repost that vid, along with loads of brand new bits from MeeBOX just before the pilot goes out in March (or early April).
Maybe see you Monday!
September 10, 2007
TEXT THE NATION JINGLE & 2 FAVOURITE MUSICAL PERFORMANCES!
TEXT THE NATION JINGLE ETC!

Hey ho hi! It’s exclamation mark time again!! If you enjoyed listening to us on the 6 Music breakfast show a couple of weeks ago, here’s a very special treat for you! It’s the multi award-winning jingle from the nation’s favourite feature*: Text The Nation, as well as my brief but powerful rock song Jane’s Brain and Joe’s triumph of chilled electro tourism, Euorpean Supermarket. My life will be nearly perfect the day I hear a stranger’s phone emitting the Text The Nation jingle as a text alert or ringtone.
EUROPEAN SUPERMARKET by JOE CORNISH
It looks as if the powers that be at 6 Music were sufficiently happy with us and the positive feedback they got from listeners to try and find us a regular slot of some kind. It’s too early to say when that might be, or indeed if it will definitely happen but it’s looking good. I’ll keep you posted, and thanks very much if you were one of those to feedback positively! Thanks again to Lisa, our fantastic producer, Jenny who gathered important facts and helped Joe marshal the texts and e-mails and Milly who did something so complex and important that I can’t properly describe it. Good work team!!
*Technically it was not award winning or in any way the favourite of the nation but if you make these kinds of claims they generally go unchallenged and impress those of us who assume there must be some kind of truth to these kinds of statements for them to be made in the first place.
I’M HOSTING BUG 03 THIS FRIDAY 14th SEPTEMBER @ BFI SOUTHBANK, 8:15PM!
Buy tickets here for a night of top class music video and inconsequential chatter from myself and some of the industry’s brightest stars.
2 ALL TIME GREAT MUSICAL PERFORMANCES!!!
I used to have a VHS tape with amazing musical odds and sods I’d taped off the telly, most of which were missing the first few seconds as I scrambled to stick the tape in the VCR and hit record. Then I mislaid the tape and for years I mourned those lost musical TV treasures and they became legendary in my head. Of course thanks to You Tube, they’re found again! There’s a little muso snob part of me that thinks that’s a bit of a shame; that my VHS tape represented a hard won journey of chance musical discovery more valuable and meaningful than simply typing a name into a search engine. On the other hand seeing those clips again was a fucking treat and nearly every one was as wonderful as I remembered. Here’s a couple for you.
The first is a very famous clip of Bruce Springsteen and The E Street band doing Rosalita in 1978. I think I originally taped it off The Rock’n'Roll years in the early 90’s (so much for my hard won journey) and despite not being much of a Bruce fan then or now I was completely electrified by this performance. It’s a good song (very much the template for a lot of what makes The Hold Steady enjoyable) and they play all the shiz right out of it, but check out Bruce! In a time before irony it’s as if the biggest Bruce Springsteen fan in the world has somehow been transported into the body of his idol (has that been done in a film yet?) and suddenly there he is, duelling with sax genius Clarence Clemons, fighting off beautiful stage invaders and fizzing with energy as he plays one of the gigs of his life. Check out his expression when he finally disentangles himself from the tenacious blonde who’s managed to get a full-on snog off him at the end of the song! Bemusement! Joy! Rock’n'Roll!
The second clip is Jonathan Richman from what must have been one of the first series of Later with Jools Holland around 1992-3. While I think of it, Later provides me with one of my Bad Jokes That I Won’t Stop Using Despite The Fact That No One Ever Finds Them Funny. In this case if someone asks me a question to which the answer is ‘later’ I will reply, “Later, with Jools Holland!” I can almost hear people thinking ‘you’re a prick’ but I can’t stop saying it. “I’ll be back later. With Jools Holland!” Ha ha ha ha! Anyway, Jonathan Richman…
Here he is playing a song called Now Is better Than Before which I believe is only available on the currently deleted album Rockin’ & Romance although you can order a privately burned CD here. There’s a version on his lovely Spanish album Jonathan, Te Vas A Emocionar but, well it’s in Spanish. Everything about this performance is appealing from the song, his voice and guitar playing to the daft commentary he provides with his range of facial expressions and hand gestures. His guitar solo is beautiful but he does this madly exaggerated acoustic whammy bar thing with his arm, which looks insane, something he acknowledges with a little smile at one point. Then when he slightly cocks it all up he gives a look of slightly hurt confusion that more or less sums up my entire life! If you’ve had a horrible bad tempered day this should fix you right back. Guitar!
February 4, 2007
MUSIC NEWS
ARCADE FIRE FUN
Last Monday Joe and I recorded our 5th podcast for Coke Music. Having started out fairly lame these podcasts are now getting pretty decent in my opinion. See what you think. Please? Anyway we had a god time doing podcast no. 5 and when we got out I had a message from a friend saying he had a spare ticket for The Arcade Fire gig that night at St John’s church in Smith Square, Westminster so I said “I’m in!â€
I bought the Arcade Fire album last year along with everyone else who had been told they were the best thing ever and quite liked it without getting hooked. To be honest I lumped them in with The Polyphonic Spree, The Flaming Lips and Mercury Rev; all great bands who mean everything to their hardcore fans but just a bit too much of a good thing for my taste. Too epic! Too emotional! Too intense! Too many people on stage! Anyway this was the first time I had seen them live and for the first half hour of the gig it was more or less what I expected. Big! Emotional! Devotional! But the sound was not great. It was too loud for a church and all the subtlety and complexity of the songs was just ricocheting off the stone and colliding in a big emotional noise mulch. ‘Why don’t they just turn it down or unplug?’ I kept thinking, which, being old, I do more and more at gigs these days. After all here is a band whose technical chops are clearly superior to your average 3 chord guitar merchants, they’ve got all kinds of different instruments on stage and a good singer so why adhere so slavishly to the old fashioned notion that all ‘pop’ music should be blasted out at top volume if it stands any chance of impressing an audience?
Despite all this I gravitated towards the front and by the final half hour the sound seemed to have improved and I was digging the whole spectacle in a major way. All the semi religious euphoria that they trade on hit the mark and by then end I was totally transported. Most of the stuff they were playing was from their new album and it sounded very good indeed. When it was all over and the band filed out past the crowd to the exit where I happened to be standing by then so I just followed them out and was very close when they suddenly set up on the steps of the church and started playing an unplugged version of Wake Up. What a moment! Apparently they do this kind of thing a lot but I hadn’t seen anything like it, ever. It was an amazing climax to what was already a thoroughly climactic evening and like many other people I couldn’t resist whipping out my camera and grabbing a little chunk of it to guild my own memory box. Jimmy Bignutz has uploaded it for you if you’re interested and you’ll see that even though the sound and picture quality aren’t up to that much, the loveliness of their performance is kind of there. I think everyone who was there that night will remember it for a long time.
While I’m rambling indulgently about music may I take a moment to draw your attention to The Shins? Their new album Wincing The Night Away is an embarrassment of unassuming riches and though the music is not really ironic or silly as such, they have winningly elected to publicise it with several group shots that are (intentionally, I think) fucking stupid and hilarious. Viz:
It’s like a Bob Fossil tribute band! Hooray! Apparently they’ve just recorded an appearance on Nigel Godrich’s From The Basement (his excellent on-line music show) so that’ll be well worth forking out for when it arrives later this month on I-tunes and the From The Basement site. Now, here’s the Arcade Fire busking!
January 22, 2007
MUSIC NEWS
JIMMY BIGNUTZ & FRANK BLACK PERFORMANCE!
I have removed the Frank Black videos I posted a couple of weeks back from my AdamBuxton You Tube channel and repsoted them on a new channel under the name JamesBignutz where I’ll put stuff that isn’t really Adam & Joe or comedy related or that I haven’t made myself.
The exciting new JimmyBignutz channel is where I hope to indulge the music nerd side of myself and commune with other music nerds many of whom have already responded enthusiastically to the first two Frank Black clips, so for them here is another.
This video of Frank singing You’re Such A Wire was filmed by Joe and myself when we were in Frank’s house in LA back in September 1998. We were there filming a Vinyl Justice segment for The Adam & Joe Show and before we left Frank (AKA Charles) played us a few new songs in his basement. Those songs ended up on his album Pistolero a year later and as I was leaving he gave me a tape of rough mixes to check out. If you’ve read this blog before you’ll know that I’m a massive Pixies/Frank Black fan (or ‘potentially dangerous stalker’ as Joe puts it) so you can imagine how intensely over-excited I was by that whole day. Driving back to our hotel listening to the tape having filmed a pretty good piece with Frank I was profoundly happy. Unfortunately this video doesn’t do the song or the man much justice as the sound from the camera mics is so rotten but if you’re a fan you may enjoy it. It’s also quite a handy guide to the chords for that song if you’re a guitar player!
