Fancore


Interview: Frank Turner

After embarking on a successful run of shows supporting Flogging Molly in the States, it seems that Frank Turner, one of the UK’s worst kept secrets has finally outgrown his home-grown appeal. With his third album, Poetry Of The Deed released last year to much fanfare across the world, many hardcore fans feel dejected that their little clandestine is gaining the success he deserves. Luckily, the punk spirit is alive and well with Frank’s response being a massive middle finger to anyone who dislikes his particular brand of folk-punk. FANCORE caught up with the man of the moment to talk about incredibly strange side-projects, traditional English songs and still being punk at 28.


You’ve had a pretty good run of fortune recently, with most of your shows selling out and the announcement of your biggest ever headline show later this year. Did you ever think your career would reach these heights?

I wouldn’t say that I ever expected it but hoped would be a word I’d use, but for a long time I didn’t think it would actually happen. I’m really careful with my choice of words, on the one hand I don’t want it to sound like “yes, this is how it is” but at the same I’m not militantly underground. I’m an ambitious person, I like playing big crowds and I want to succeed. I’m very happy that it’s happening but it is pretty surreal. I spend my entire life waiting for the reality police to burst through the door and go “there’s been a terrible mistake!” And take me back to The Swan in Tottenham and make me play to 20 people. Which I wouldn’t particularly mind, I’d still keep playing.

So when you were starting out did you have a point in your mind, where if you hadn’t made it by then you would quit?

Yes, but it wasn’t related to size of venues or anything like that. If I reach the point where I feel like I’m going through the motions and feel like I’m not putting on good shows and writing good song then I’ll stop. And I hope that there are people out there, friends of mine that will be good enough to tell me when I’ve reached that point in my life. But I don’t think I’ve reached that point yet, which is good.

Do you have the people in place to keep you in check?

I have a number of friends who have been more than happy to kick me in the nuts and tell me that I’m useless, so I’m counting on them.

Your latest album, Poetry Of The Deed came out last year, six months on from the release, how do you now view it?

I’m generally quite self-critical, particularly about things I did recently. I’ve just about decided that I liked the first Million Dead album now [laughs]. It’s worse for my solo stuff as well because it’s much more my kind of project. I’m proud of all the records that I’ve made, I’m proud of Poetry Of The Deed but I’ve got a list of things that I want to do differently next time. But that’s been the case with every record that I’ve done. I’m pleased with how it came together and its been my most commercially successful album so that’s nothing to complain about. The record came out 6 months ago but we finished recording last year in May so I’ve had a long time to pick holes in it. It’s a good feeling to have faults that give you ideas for how to correct them next time round. Next time around I’ll be in a different time and place so who knows, but I do have lots of new songs on the way.

So would you say that this is your most commercially viable album to date?

I’d say it was more commercially successful than viable, it wasn’t written with record sales in mind. I wouldn’t really know how to do that as I make a real point when I’m writing of trying to ignore context and just not think about anything like venue size or radio play or any of that shit. What I’ve always tried to do is to write what I think is a good song, because to me the definition of ‘selling out’, which is a much-overused word, is writing songs for an audience other than yourself. Anybody that tells you that they write songs for the fans is either a liar or a fraud essentially, because what could be more dishonest than writing for anyone other than yourself? You are your own audience. I listen to loads of music and have very strong opinions on what I like so when I write something I try to write what I think is a really good song and the minute that I stop doing that is the minute that I really need to stop.

Selling out to me is writing songs for ‘the fans’ ‘the record label’, the radio play list or your girlfriend; if you’re trying to please someone else then you’re doing it wrong in my opinion.

You worked much more with your band on the last album, do you ever get criticised for using the band on and off stage?

There are some people who say ‘I preferred when you play solo’ or ‘I prefer the other albums’, all of which is perfectly fine as people are more than welcome to think that. Particularly when people say they prefer the earlier stuff it’s like cool go and listen to them, it’s not like I came into your record collection and took them away. At the end of the day I have to do what is best for me musically, otherwise I’m dishonest and right at this moment in time I love playing with my band and I think that we make great music together. Actually, having said that…I talk a lot [laughs] you may have noticed. One of my criticisms with POTD is that I may have got a tiny bit carried away about having the band on the album; I think there could have been one more solo song on that record. I think that for the next album I will rein the band back a little bit on one or two songs, but I’m still just writing so we’ll see.

Is there any timeline in place for this new album?

Yes, I have an ambition to get into the studio before the end of this year so we can get the album out in the first half of next year. My manager thinks I’m completely out of my mind, given the tour schedule that we already have between now and February next year, but I think that he is soft and weak and I will prove him wrong [laughs]. I’m also going to try and put out an album of traditional English songs at some point this year as well.

That sounds like an interesting project, can you elaborate a bit more on that?

I got interested in traditional English music, partly because I’m a history buff and it’s cool combining my two loves in life. But also because I’ve had this cultural awakening in the past few years that’s entirely personal, I’m English at the end of the day and not British. I don’t hold anything against anyone from Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland but I’m English and that is my culture and heritage. I just get very bored of people saying there isn’t such a thing as English culture because there is, they just choose to ignore it or don’t know about it. That applies both on a musical level, there’s a lot of English folk music that isn’t particularly well known and also on a political level in the sense that people are incredible blasé when it comes to political thought that England has made. And the ideas of native liberty and common law I think are extremely important and wonderful and brilliant, but we’ve been losing them for the past fifty years which is an absolute fucking disaster.

But anyway, I went off started researching [traditional music] and found all these amazing songs. And it’s not just this big ideological crusade, they’re really good songs and they’re funny and they’re heartbreaking and sad and catchy. I like the idea that these songs that my forebears would have known and would have sung and that’s a beautiful idea. In the modern industrial world the folk song is more in danger than it has been and the thing is there is a tradition in community in the UK and traditional songs but they’re really insular and defensive. They seem to think that they’re the monks on Mt Athos protecting the sacred flame. But most of the people who come to my shows don’t know about traditional English music, as opposed to people who go to Seth Lakeman shows for example, and I think it would be quite cool if I [could] spread those songs over a lot of new people.

After you’ve done that are there any other projects you’d like to do that you perhaps can’t accomplish a solo artist?

Well I’m writing a book at the moment so that’s underway. I’m also vaguely scoping out the plans for making 2012 the year of the side project. I’ve got all these different side projects I want to do and at the moment [there’s] just no time to do them so I’m thinking maybe do another album, do the traditional album and get the book out of the way and then not take a break as such but just stop for a while. For example, there’s an electronica DJ called Beardy Man, he’s amazing but completely utterly different from what I do. He just does weird, squelchy, odd kind of Aphex Twin noisy electronica. We ended up hanging out together last summer and we said ‘we should do a record together; it would be hilarious and weird as hell.’ I have a taste in weird electronica personally, although I’m terrible at making it, I’ve tried and it was terrible. But I reckon as long as he does the drum machine bit [laughs] I can do a bit of singing and playing guitar and we can make a really messed up twisted ‘dance folk-tronica’ fucked up record.

And are there any other potential projects in the pipeline?

Well, I’ll tell you about this as everyone involved in this wants this to happen but the likelihood of it ever actually happening is extremely low because of our schedules. First of all there’s a punk band called Hot Snakes, from Florida who me and few others think are the best punk band there ever was fucking ever. They kind of became Rocket From The Crypt afterwards and weren’t quite as good. But anyway, the band would be Ben from Million Dead on the drums, Jim from At The Drive In on the bass, Jim from Jimmy Eat World on guitar and vocals and me on guitar and vocals too. It happened because basically me and Jim and Jim ended up in a bar in Arizona in November and you know you have those conversations where everyone is drunk and just agreeing with each other loudly? Well, that’s the plan but as I say I’ve just got no idea when that would ever happen but it would be pretty funny.
With many seeing punk as a youth movement, do you ever feel pressured as an artist to stay angry and cynical?

Punk is a youth movement and that’s one of its strengths, I don’t think that’s a criticism of punk as there’s a certain type of anger you have as a kid, which punk harnesses in a beautiful way. I think it is possible to retain a sort of punk-related attitude as you get older but I don’t have any problem at all with people telling me I’m too old to be punk…well actually, maybe not just yet. But at some point if someone turned around and said it then it would be fine. Punk’s not supposed to be about these old farts who used to be in the Sex Pistols in leather jackets, sitting around and talking about ‘how it was in my day’. Punk is supposed to be about kids meeting up in bathrooms and pubs and smashing the shit out of each other and playing wild and eclectic and adventurous insane heavy music. In terms of me having a pressure to stay angry? Not really, just because I do my level best not to give a fuck about what everyone thinks I should be. I know some people wish I was still in Million Dead and some people wish I still wrote songs like ‘Thatcher Fucked The Kids’ but I’m not going to.

Even though you’re very self critical, do you ever worry that one day you will just make the ultimate Frank Turner album and have nothing else to say and nowhere to go?

There will always be a case of that, as the world is still full of people who think ‘Greetings From Asbury Park’ is the best Bruce Springsteen album, I mean they’re wrong. I think the nature of music is such and the nature of fandom if you like, is such that people will attach themselves to a time and place that they get into something and also to their perceived ownership of something. I think that’s unavoidable to a degree but again what I have to do for my own sanity and dignity and creative responsibility is to do the best record that I can at the time…and whether or not you think that my first album is the best thing I’ll ever do, fine that’s an opinion that people are allowed to have.

Do you think that with your success any current artists are ripping off your sound as a fast-track to fame?

I haven’t really thought about it very much to be honest. I’d be terribly entertained if they were, I’d find it very funny. I think the problem is that ever since I started having any kind of success in music I sort of twigged; I remember having a conversation with Cahir the lead singer for Fighting With Wire years ago. He was like ‘the problem is man, me and you are the kind of people who are going to be in bands who blaze the trail and don’t make the money.’ There’s just something about our personality and approach to music that means we’re always going to be those people. I wouldn’t be surprised if somebody started ripping me off and doing much better than me. But I can’t say that I give that much of a shit to be honest.

Finally, you’ve already said you’re doing 2000 Tree and T in the park this summer, any other UK festivals to be announced?

We’re headlining Wood Festival, which is a folk festival down in Oxfordshire which is going to be really good. There’s loads of others that we’re doing that we’re about to announce any day now but I’m not sure I’m allowed to talk about and I don’t want to get us into trouble.

Announced within a few days? Is the fact that the Download Festival announcement is coming up in a few days a coincidence?

I’m not doing Download, I can tell you that much.

Reading Festival then?

Erm, well I can’t really say [laughs].



Against Me! Announce UK Shows
March 17, 2010, 11:58 am
Filed under: Music News, Punk, Tour News | Tags: , , , , , , ,

Against Me! have just announced a trio of UK shows for later this summer.

JUNE
01st – LONDON Garage
02nd – MANCHESTER Academy 3
03rd – BIRMINGHAM Academy 2

Tickets go on sale this Friday 19th from 9am and can be found RIGHT HERE.

For those who are too impatient to wait for the band’s new album, ‘White Crosses’, luckily some terribly naughty individuals leaked the entire album online, and to make things easier frontman Tom Gabel posted the album’s lyrics so that you could all have a good singsong. Visit Gabel’s blog HERE.



Frank Turner- Isabel Video
March 17, 2010, 11:47 am
Filed under: Folk, Frank Turner, Music, Punk | Tags: , , , , , , ,

Folk-punker Frank Turner has released his new video for ‘Isabel’, available for your viewing pleasure above.

The song comes from 2009′s ‘Poetry For The Deed’, but to see the song in action make sure you catch the British singer on his current UK tour.



Green Day: Rock Band For 2010 Release
December 13, 2009, 4:35 pm
Filed under: Green Day, MTV, Music, Music News, Pop Punk, Punk, Rock and/or Roll | Tags: , , , , , , ,

After the success of Beatles: Rock Band it seems that the people at Harmonix/MTV are set to unleash a new band-centric title in teh hugely successful rhythm game franchise in the form of a full Green Day: Rock Band game scheduled for 2010.

The following statement has been released by MTV:

“This game will feel like a natural extension of Green Day and their music that will deepen the fans’ connection to the band and their history,” said Alex Rigopulos, CEO and co-founder of Harmonix Music Systems. “Fans will be able to enjoy some of the greatest songs from the Green Day catalogue in this standalone game or via Rock Band due to full export capability. We are thrilled to work with Green Day to revisit key moments from their career, including their likenesses, content and imagery, through our innovative form of musical interaction.”

Besides confirming a global release in 2010 on Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, and Nintendo Wii, the the track list will be fully exportable, allowing you to play the songs or Rock Band 1 or 2. This exportable option is only for PS3 and Xbox 360, not Wii, however. “

With the recent Green Day global takeover, it isn’t a surprise that one of the most successful and mainstream acts of the decade are to follow the Fab Four’s footsteps. Will you be buying the game or do you think that bands like Led Zeppelin should be first in line above the pop punks?

  The just released teaser trailer for the game can be viewed above.



Slayer to perform on Jimmy Kimmel Live!

 Slayer

Thrash gods Slayer will be shredding shit up on Wednesday 4 November’s Jimmy Kimmel Live! The band will be promoting the upcoming release of “World Painted Blood”, is out  the day before on American Recordings.



Maylene and the Sons of Disaster get in the ring with WWE

maylene pic1

Southern metallers Maylene and the Sons of Disaster are venturing between the ropes with a string of collaborations with World Wrestling Entertainment. The band’s single “Step Up (I’m On It)” has been chosen as the theme song for the WWE’s Bragging Right’s pay-per-view. The track will also appear on the Smackdown vs Raw 2010 video game.

As if this isn’t enough chair-swinging, guitar-toting tomfoolery, Maylene have also been commissioned to write a song for the Unified World Tag Team Champions Chris Jericho and the Big Show. Expect to hear the tune “Crank The Walls Down” on Raw and Smackdown soon.



Henry Rollins announces UK spoken word tour

rollinsspoken

 

Former Black Flag singer and Rollins Band leader Henry Rollins has announced an extensive UK spoken word tour early next year. The burly vocalist rarely minces his words so these dates will be a treat.

Catch the wisdom at:

Dublin Vicar Street January 12
Glasgow Academy January 13
Leicester De Montfort Hall January 14
London Royal Festival Hall January 15
Manchester Lowry January 16
Leamington Spa Assembly January 17
Norwich UEA January 18
Bournemouth Opera House January 19
Liverpool Academy January 20
Newcastle Academy January 21
Leeds Academy January 22



Converge unleash new video

Vicious hardcore icons Converge are back with a brutal new song, and a video to match. ”Axe To Fall” is off the group’s new album of the same name and shows the outfit to be as vital and as furious as ever.

Check the video out, and go pick the album up now! It was out today, you have no excuses.



Fall Out Boy Release New Songs In Greatest Hits

Fall Out Boy are planning to release a Greatest Hits bundle, which will include the band’s first new material since 2008′s Folie A Deux. 

The first of the new tracks, Alpha Dog is taken from the band’s Welcome To The New Administration mixtape which was the precursor to their fifth studio album and surprisingly left-off the final track list. If you didn’t catch the previously released snippet you can catch the full song on the video above.

Sure to fuel the rumours that the band are about to call it quits for good, bassist and sometimes-main man Pete Wentz told MTV News that he doesn’t want fans to think he is cashing in. “To me, calling it a greatest hits [means] if you’re not an avid Fall Out Boy fan, it’s an easy way to get all the songs, to take a dip in the water,” he laughed. “But if you are a Fall Out Boy fan, you can just go buy those two [new] songs off iTunes, or you can buy the package, because you will find some stuff in there that you’ll think is cool.”

The album, entitled Believers Never Die will also include DVD commentaries and a bunch of other goodies for all you FOB die-hards and can be yours from November 17th.



Who wants their Fancore back?

‘Ello stranger! No we aren’t dead, yes we still like music and okay, fine we’ll keep writing about it for your pleasure. Where have we been? Well myself and Harley nodded off in a drunken stupor after Sonisphere and have woke up to find the site hasn’t been updated.

So screw it, we’re back and over the coming weeks and months we will be bringing hot shit such as a review of the new KISS album: Sonic Boom, an on-the-scene report from Enter Shikari levelling the Birmingham Academy and in November, a full 3-day rundown of the Hellfire Festival. We’ll also be the first and only place you need to be for the best rock, metal and punk news. Wanna read about AC/DC without skimming through the Kings of Leon articles? Then step through the doors my friends.

Fancore is back, and the revolution won’t be televised, but it will be blogged about.

All the best

Mr J.



Billy Talent Plan UK October Tour

BILLY TALENT II

Canadian post-hardcore favourites Billy Talent have announced they will be trekking across the UK later in the year in support their newly released and already warmly recieved latest album, Billy Talent III.

You can catch quartet this October and November at the following shows:

OCTOBER
19 – LEEDS Academy
20 – NOTTINGHAM Rock City
21 – SHEFFIELD Academy
23 – GLASGOW Barrowland
25 – DUBLIN Olympia
26 – MANCHESTER Academy
27 – BIRMINGHAM O2 Academy
29 – SOUTHAMPTON Guildhall
30 – NORWICH UEA
NOVEMBER

01 – LONDON Brixton AcademyTickets go on sale for all venues on the 24th July. And as usual, if you’re a lucky o2 customer, you can get tickets for all o2 shows 48 hours before the rest of the world.



The Offspring Post New Video “Shit Is Fucked Up”/”Stuff Is Messed Up”

Orange County Punk icons The Offspring have unveiled the new video for upcoming single “Shit Is Fucked Up” (Censored to the slightly less poetic “Stuff Is Messed Up“), which you can view above.

The single is the band’s third to be taken from eighth studio album ‘Rise And Fall, Rage And Grace’ and also provides the title for the band’s upcoming World tour, which makes a quick stop in the UK this August for London and Manchester shows. Be sure to get your tickets to truly marvel in Dexter Holland and co’s legendary brand of punk rock.



Gallows For Intimate UK Shows
July 14, 2009, 8:14 pm
Filed under: Gallows, Music, Music News, Punk, Tour News | Tags: , , , , , , , ,

gallows

Herts Hardcore quintet, Gallows have announced a full run of November and December UK shows in support of aptly-titled new album, Grey Britain.

You can check out one of the fastest-rising punk bands of the moment at the following shows, (as long as you’re prepared to get your face ripped off by the charming Frank Carter):

NOVEMBER
26 – NORTHAMPTON Roadmender
27 – COVENTRY Kasbah
28 – LIVERPOOL Academy 2
29 – ABERDEEN Moshulu
30 – DUNDEE Fat Sams

DECEMBER
02 – MIDDLESBOROUGH Empire
03 – YORK Duchess
04 – STOKE Sugarmill
05 – DERBY Rockhouse
07 – NEWPORT TJs
08 – EXETER Lemon Grove
09 – FALMOUTH Pavillions
10 – BOURNEMOUTH Old Fire Station
12 – KINGSTON The Peel
13 – COLCHESTER Arts Centre
14 – CAMBRIDGE Junction

Tickets go on general sale from July 17th but if you’re a Gallows-diehard and signed up to their mailing list (if not sign up HERE) you can get tickets from July 15th.



The All-American Rejects For UK mini-tour

tysonfitter
The All-American Rejects will be returning to the UK this Autumn, playing a trifecta of dates. The US pop-punk stars will be giving you hell at:

October
14 London O2 Shepherds Bush Empire
15 Manchester Academy
17 Nottingham Rock City

Tickets go on sale 10th July at 9am. For ticket availability, check here.



Blink 182 Team up With Doritos For Virtual Show

blink182

As previously reported HERE, pop-punk megastars Blink 182 posted cryptic photos back in April showing the trio performing in front of a green screen.

Yesterday bassist Mark Hoppus revealed that the band were actually recording a free virtual show with Outkast’s Big Boi that will be available online on 6th July. After the words “free” “blink” and “concert” were used in the same sentence, unsurprisingly the first 500 advance tickets sold out within the first hour, possibly being sped along by Hoppus posting this update on his official Twitter: ‘remember that green screen stuff a little bit ago? blink-182. onstage. free. check it out HERE.”

According to the ticketmaster website, tickets can still become available by buying a packet of the special Doritos on the day of the show. Details are still currently a little hazy, but due to the website stating that a webcam is required it seems that the green screen will be filled with the happy faces of the ‘audience’. Unfortunately we believe this is currently just available to those in the US, more as we get it.

What do you think on this particular piece of marketing genius? We bet the people at Doritos are sitting on a pile of cash rubbing their bellies and chowing down on solid gold doritos, or at least we hope they are…



Green Day Post “21 Guns” Official Video

Green Day have posted their brand new video for the too-good-to-be-true single “21 Guns” over at their official myspace- Myspace.com/GreenDay. For those of us in the UK, you can check out the video RIGHT HERE.

 The single marks the trio’s second release from possibly the greatest album of 2009 so far, “21st Century Breakdown”. What are you thoughts on the new vid?



INTERVEW: Frank Turner “People Who Are Bitter Because I’m No Longer Their Little Secret Can Fuck Right Off”

frank-turner

After a 2008 that took him further than any folker on the planet, 2009 sees Frank Turner on the cusp of international success with an Epitaph deal in the bag and a tour with punk legends, The Offspring. FANCORE catches up with Frank to talk about the new album, the real reason he left Sonisphere and what it means to be a punk in 2009.

What can we expect in terms of content from the new Frank Turner album?

Frank: For me, the first album was about the hole at the middle of the party, the dichotomy between hedonism and loneliness. Love Ire & Song was about distance and relationships. The new record is about throwing caution to the wind, strategies for not giving up as you get older. I think it’s probably a more positive record than its predecessors. But it’s not radically different.

You’ve said that the new album is almost 75% complete, will it still be out by this September?

 Frank: Yup and we might even be moving it forward a little. It’s now fully rehearsed and next week we go into the studio, as a band, to lay it down. We did a quick residency of shows in Oxford to try out the material live, which went really well.

Has there been any major influences on your song writing, either musically or personally that have affected the current record?

 Frank: The events of the last couple of years have made a difference – that’s probably why it’s a more positive, upbeat record, (laughs). Musically, I’ve been more into the E Street Band than before, and I’ve also been listening to a lot of Bob Dylan of late. Working with the band has also changed things a little.

 How has writing with the band affected the new record?

 Frank: It’s made a huge difference to the arrangements. I’m a pretty average keyboardist; having Matt Nasir work on the parts means that the keys can take a more prominent role.

 How do you address criticism you gain from moving from underground gigs to playing much bigger shows?

 Frank: I address it by baring my skinny English arse. I am the only person I need to justify my business /“career” decisions to, and believe me I spend a lot of time doing that. The illiterate opinions of teenagers on the internet are of no interest to me.People who are bitter because I’m no longer their little secret can fuck right off.

 Do you still think it’s important to continue to play to smaller audiences?

  Frank:I think it’s important to put on the show of your life, regardless of where you are, every time.

 What does being a folk artist in 2009 mean to you?

  Frank: Folk is less of an ego orientated scene, which I like. It’s community music. I like the idea that I can play a show anywhere in the world any time as long as someone has a guitar.

 What are your views on the current music scene and do you think that the tide will turn back to more meaningful messages in punk? 

  Frank: I don’t really know or care what punk means, musically speaking. It’s an argument which has wasted countless man-hours in the past. The grime scene in the UK a few years back was a million times more “punk” than anything with mohawks. As for any current music scene, well, there are some cool bands around right now, I hope they do well.

 Do you feel that an artist has to dilute their message in order to gain mainstream acceptance?

  Frank: Not necessarily. Look at Rage Against The Machine, or hell, Morrissey. I think sometimes people use that as an excuse to take a shortcut. For me, doing what I do wouldn’t be much fun if I wasn’t in creative control, so it’s not really an issue.

 There has been no official statement on why you had to cancel your Sonisphere appearance; can you shed any light on why you have had to pull out?

  Frank: Ugh, industry politics. I’m not 100% sure what I’m allowed to say about this, but basically there was an ego piss-war between some industry big-wigs, and I took the fallout. It sucks. Not much I can do about it though.

 You’ve said before that you consider punk to be a youth movement; do you think as you get older you’ll have less to sing about?

  Frank: People who only sing about anger get very, very dull very quickly. I think you get angry in different ways as you get older; I certainly don’t think many of my friends would say I was less angry now than when I was younger, just about different things. Punk is a youth movement, when it has meaning and is worthwhile.

 Now that you’ve realised an ambition in signing to Epitaph, are there any more career goals that you have to achieve before you’re done?

  Frank: I could list stuff like wanting to play certain venues or whatever, but in n reality my main aim is to write better music. I believe I have better stuff in me than I’ve been able to get out. So I’m going to focus on that.



New Found Glory Announce UK Tour

nfg

Everyone’s favourite pop-punk heroes have announced a host of shows in the UK to end the summer with.

New Found Glory will hit England in August,  ending their run with their main stage festival appearances at Reading and Leeds Festival. Fans will be treated to double the NFG-fun, as the band’s louder alter-ego’s the International Superheroes Of Hardcore will be providing support.

Dates are as follows:

Aug 22 – London Garage
Aug 23 – Manchester Club Academy
Aug 24 – Newcastle Academy
Aug 25 – Glasgow Garage
Aug 27 – Birmingham Academy
Aug 28th- Reading Festival
Aug 29 – Nottingham Rescue rooms

Aug 30th- Leeds Festival



Poison The Well stream new album track on MySpace
June 9, 2009, 8:57 am
Filed under: Album News, Music, Music News, Punk | Tags: , , ,

ptw

Progressive Hardcore heroes Poison The Well are streaming new track ‘Cinema’ on their Myspace page. This is the first track the band have made available from upcoming album ‘The Tropic Rot’ due out on 6th July. Check the track out at http://www.myspace.com/poisonthewell.



Frank Turner nails down album release date

frank-turner

Bad Motherfolker Frank Turner has announced the release date for upcoming album “Poetry For The Dead” The former Million Dead frontman’s first Epitaph-released opus is set to drop on 7th September.

Frank took time out to talk to Fancore recently, you will be able to read the interview in our first issue available soon online and in selected UK outlets.



The Ghost of a Thousand release album today and play free launch show

tgoat1

Hardcore Heroes The Ghost of a Thousand have released their new album ‘New Hopes, New Demonstrations’ today. To celebrate the release, the boys will be playing a free album launch show at Bloomsbury Bowling in London.

Support comes from Outcry Collective and Warship (featuring ex-From Autumn To Ashes members)



The Gaslight Anthem release video for new single

 

Nostalgic Punks The Gaslight Anthem have released the video for new single ‘The ’59 Sound’. The track is a heartwrenching slice of Punk Americana from the band’s album of the same name. The single will be released 15th June in download, 7″ and CD formats.



You Me At Six Butcher Fall Out Boy Song


UK sickly-sweet popstars You Me At Six have attempted to cover Fall Out Boy’s hugely popular single ‘Sugar We’re Goin’ Down’ from 2005′s ‘From Under The Cork Tree’.

You can hear the god-awful b-side on their upcoming single ‘Finders Keepers’, or if you don’t want to waste your hard earned cash you can listen above. To be completely biased, it sounds like a disaster, but coming from someone who thinks the world’s obsession with the ‘band’ is a farce in itself they were never going to win us over. I think it’s his voice to be honest.

If anyone wants to protest and tell us what you see in them then feel free. What do you think of the cover? Good or shite?



Punk legends The Offspring announce UK show

 spring

Iconic true-Punkers The Offspring have announced a UK date for this summer. The Dexter Holland-fronted superstars will play Brixton Academy in London on 25th August. Tickets officially go on sale on Friday but as usual, Fancore has got your back. You can pick up pre-sale tickets HERE. See you down there!



Enter Shikari release “Juggernauts” remixes

entershikariweb

Dancecore heroes Enter Shikari have released two remixes of their upcoming single Juggernauts, to publicise it’s 1st June release.

Frontman Rou Reynolds talks us through the remixes:

BLUE BEAR – TRUE TIGER REMIXhttp://link.brightcove.com/services/player/bcpid17823878001?bctid=24014430001 

‘A Local label to us and good mates who we thought could give Juggers a tidy dubstep mix; and that’s exactly what they’ve done! They’ve kept the feel good vibe of the track which isn’t really heard much in the dubstep world but I think it really works and sounds gorgeous.’

 

NERO REMIX: http://link.brightcove.com/services/player/bcpid13590588001?bctid=24014432001

‘We’ve always really looked up to Nero as drum and bass producers, and felt they could do a great job with Juggers. He really accentuates the euphoria of the tune and rivals any big dance floor club banger with this!’

The St Albans boys’ new album Common Dreads is out on 15th June. An interview with the band will appear in the first issue of Fancore fanzine, which will be available on this site worldwide, and at various venues, record stockists and clubs across the UK.



The Ghost of a Thousand announce tons of UK dates

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British Rock flag-flyers The Ghost of a Thousand have announced a host of dates this summer. The Hardcore heroes will be joined by The Computers and Sharks, described by TGOAT vocalist Tom Lacey as “the two best new bands in the country”

 

The guys will be rocking:

Wed 01 Jul 2009   Liverpool: Barfly
Thu 02 Jul 2009    Carlisle: The Brickyard
Fri 03 Jul 2009      Glasgow: King Tuts
Sat 04 Jul 2009      York : Barfly
Sun 05 Jul 2009    Sheffield:Corporation
Mon 06 Jul 2009   Birmingham: Eddies
Tue 07 Jul 2009    Cardiff : Barfly
Wed 08 Jul 2009   Plymouth: White Rabbit
Thu 09 Jul 2009    Exeter: Cavern
Fri 10 Jul 2009      Canterbury: Lounge on the Farm Festival
Sat 11 Jul 2009     Cumbria: The Canteen
Sun 12 Jul 2009     Guildford: Guilfest – Rocksound Cave
Mon 13 Jul 2009   Milton Keynes:
Crawford Arms
Tue 14 Jul 2009     Oxford: Bar Academy
Wed 15 Jul 2009   Southampton: The Joiners
Thu 16 Jul 2009     London: Barfly

 

Be sure to catch the lads at one of these awesome venue. Pick up there new album “New Hopes, New Demonstrations” will be released through Epitaph on 1st June.



Blink 182 To Tour With Fall Out Boy and Weezer!

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Recently reformed Pop-punk heroes, Blink 182 have finally answered fan’s prayers and announced their plans for a massive July tour across America.

Mark Hoppus announced that the mammouth tour will take them through the States from July 24th all the way until October, taking some famous friends on the road with them aswell. In an interview with Rolling Stone, Hoppus said: We started talking about bands to tour with and Weezer was actually one of the first ones that came up. They wanted to do the tour, and so did Fall Out Boy. It worked out perfectly.”

Unfortunately those hoping to watch the trio performing on the same stage will be out of luck, as Fall Out Boy have signed on for two-thirds of the dates, with Weezer filling the remaining third.

It’s no secret that Fall Out Boy bassist Pete Wentz is friends with the Blink boys, speaking to RS he said: “When we started our band, we were like, ‘Man, that’d be so awesome to meet Blink-182′. It’s been a great stretch of headlining tours the last few years, but there’s something interesting about opening up for bands when you have to rope the audience in.”

Attempting to cater to a credit-crunch plagued audience, Blink have also announced that tickets will be as low as $20 for the arenas. “We want this to be an experience that brings the show out to the audience.” Hoppus commented, also revealing that Kanye West and Daft Punk‘s set designer will be incorporated into creating the live show.

No word yet on if and when they will tour the rest of the world, but a full list of tour dates have now been posted. Check them out plus details on the full set of all-star supports RIGHT HERE. Would you see the Blink/Fall Out Boy/Weezer show if it pulled into your town?



UK Rock up and comers out in force on “Fresh Blood” tour

A stacked package tour full to the brim with the finest young UK metal and hardcore talent is set to sweep the country this June. “The Fresh Blood” tour will be showcasing this motley crew of Blighty’s best future superstars:

 

THE BANDS: 

LOWER THAN ATLANTIS (Watford, UK)
www.myspace.com/lowerthanatlantis
Though only a year young, this angular post-hardcore crew have garnered great kudos from fans and critics alike.
Having racked up shows and tours alongside the likes of Architects, Your Demise, Misery Signals and Deez Nuts, LTA’s ever apparent hunger is only matched by their ever increasing potential.

WE STARE AT MIRRORS (Swindon, UK)
www.myspace.com/westareatmirrors
Though they feature former members of once revered metalcore crew Eternal Lord amidst their rank and file, We Stare At Mirrors are an entirely more progressive and complex proposition than their previous incarnations. Taking influence from the likes of Misery Signals and Shai Hulud, WSAM combine abrasiveness and technicality with glittering melody.

HEART IN HAND (Bournemouth, UK)
www.myspace.com/heartinhandband
Formed just 7 months ago after vocalist Charlie Holmes departed metal extremists Trigger The Bloodshed, Heart In Hand have been quick to gather some moss in the UK underground, their melodic riffery and huge swathes of thunderous groove already proving an irresistible formula in it’s embryonic stages!

THIS DISTANCE
(South Wales, UK)
www.myspace.com/thisdistanceUK
Dubbed as a “nailbomb that refuses to outstay it’s welcome” by Rock Sound magazine, This Distance offer up swathes of downtuned groove to rival the stateside likes of Emmure and For The Fallen Dreams.

You can catch this formidable collection of rock at:

18 June – Southampton @ Hamptons
19 June – Derby @ Vic Inn
20 June – Birmingham @ Swinging Sporran
21 June – Port Talbot @ Fourwinds
22 June – Reading @ Facebar
23 June – Camden @ Underworld

We have got an interview with the very promising Heart in Hand in the first issue of Fancore, coming soon.



Listen To All Of 21st Century Breakdown For Free Online!

TheSun.co.uk are giving readers the chance to listen to Green Day’s  ’21st Century Breakdown’ in its entireity before its scheduled May 15th release date. By simply going to the website you can be one of the first to listen to one of the most anticipated albums of the year.

Beware, we’re not sure if this is limited to those inside of The UK or if the widget will work for the rest of the world.

The full review of 21st Century Breakdown is coming soon in the first issue of FANCORE. Tell us, on first listen what do you think?



Download Announce Trigger The Bloodshed, Steel Panther Plus 15 More Acts

Download Festival have released the latest batch of bands that will storm Donington Park this year. At the top of the list are Download 2008 alum death-metallers Trigger The Bloodshed, LA glam-rock favourite’s Steel Panther and day-glo screamo-crunkers Hollywood Undead.

Other acts in the mixed bunch are Iron Maiden offspring Lauren Harris, who will play her third year of the festival this year, British punk/hardcore band Hexes (who boast A/Radio 1′s Daniel P. Carter on vocals). Hunting The Minotaur, White Man Kamikaze, Sacred Mother Tongue, Japanese Voyeurs, Loverman, Black Spiders, General Fiasco, 69 Eyes, Dear Superstar, Puller Apart By Horse, Brides and Violent Soho will also join headliners Faith No More, Slipknot and Def Leppard this June.



Green Day post new B-Side “Hearts Collide”

21st-century-breakdown
A new b-side from punk superstars’ Green Day has been posted online. The song, entitled “Hearts Collide” will be one of many extras on upcoming album ‘21st Century Breakdown’, hitting stores on May 15th.

GreenDayAuthority.com have a preview of the track if you want to catch a sneak-peek. On first listen it sounds like a very impressive slice of 60′s-influenced pop-punk. No complaints from our end. What do you think of it?



Frank Turner Talks Epitaph With Fancore!

Following the news of Frank Turner signing to Epitaph Records, the folk-punk singer muses on exactly what it feels like to be in his shoes when you’ve just signed a record deal with one of the biggest punk labels in the world. Speaking exclusively to FANCORE he said:

“Well, anyone who grew up with punk knows how important that label has been in shaping the tastes of a whole generation, and to be part of that is pretty overwhelming. I’m stoked.”

For full details on the move, read the entire news story RIGHT HERE. Also, stay tuned for a full interview with Frank Turner, coming exclusively in the first print issue of FANCORE Fanzine, where we talk touring in America, the new album and what it’s like to be a punk in 2009, plus much much more.



Green Day To Cover Elvis, Dylan and The Who

 gd-new

Green Day have just announced that four exclusive bonus tracks will become available to fans downloading the new album online.

The digital package can be yours by pre-ordering the new album through the Itunes store before its May 15th Worldwide release. The bonus tracks will feature the Berkerly pop-punk legends covering some of music’s all time greats, including Elvis’ “That’s Alright Mama”, Bob Dylan’s “Like A Rolling Stone”, The Who’s “A Quick One While He’s Away” and Social Distortion’s “Another State Of Mind”.

Green Day have already proved their worth at covering music royalty when they took on John Lennon’s iconic “Working Class Hero” in 2007 to raise money for Amnesty International’s plight to save Darfur.

It’s definitely going to be a big incentive to download the new album, we can’t wait to hear the trio’s take on the classics, what do you think? Will you be downloading it?



Frank Turner Signs To Epitaph Records

frank-turner

Frank Turner has just announced that he will be the latest addition to the Epitaph Records family. The folk-punk singer has decided to stick by his current record label, Xtra Mile, who will continue to represent him within the UK, leaving punk staple, Epitaph Records, to release album Love Ire & Song and any future albums around the rest of the world.

Posting on his official website, Frank had this to say: “This is a new beginning for me. [Epitaph are] still one of the best labels in the world, and they’re independent to boot. It’s also really important to me that they’ve accommodated me staying with Xtra Mile in the UK – those guys are my family, and there’s no way I was going to jump ship.”

In the post he talks briefly about his relationship with the iconic label, noting: ”the Epitaph logo was [always] a badge of quality that meant I would buy the record, regardless of what it was. In so doing I got into almost all my favourite punk bands.”

In other Frank Turner news, the singer/guitarist has recently been added to The Offspring’s mammouth tour of the US, boasting other illustrious support such as Dropkick Murphys, Alkaline Trio and Sum 41.



Gallows stream new album “Grey Britain” online
April 28, 2009, 2:51 pm
Filed under: Album News, Punk, Uncategorized | Tags: , , , ,

UK punks Gallows are streaming every freakin’ second of their new album on their Myspace page. To hear “Grey Britain” head over to THIS LINK to hear the sweaty, old-school assault of Carter and the crew.




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