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Beggars Banquet
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Since its inception in 1977 Beggars Banquet Records has been home to The Cult, The Charlatans, Bauhaus, The Fall, Mercury Rev, The Go-Betweens, The Associates, Ramones, Gary Numan & Tubeway Army and Buffalo Tom along with a multitude of other single-minded and uncompromising artists.
Current artists such as Tindersticks and Mark Lanegan (former singer with the Screaming Trees and Queens of the Stone Age), along with newer acts The National, Film School, The Early Years and Oceansize, all epitomise individuality and integrity, thus maintaining the tradition and ethos of the label.
News
Beggars Banquet online store is now closed...
... but you can still buy Beggars-related things from Rough Trade’s online shop here as well as all the usual retailers.
Thanks!
Biffy Clyro - Singles 2001-2005 out July 7th
In 2007, Scottish three-piece biffy clyro exploded onto everyone’s radar with their no. 1 album ‘Puzzle’, top three hit singles, coveted festival slots (with unashamedly rock ‘n roll helicopter rides between them) and support slots on the tours of little known bands such as The Who, Rolling Stones and their contemporaries Muse.
Unbeknown to the hoards of new disciples, this was not the band’s beginning, not by a long shot. As the legions of long-time and ever-loyal fans (‘mon the biffy!’) will testify, biffy clyro have been a prolific and exciting force since the late-1990s.
After a spectacular live show at T in the Park in 2000, the band were swiftly signed up by Beggars Banquet. Three glorious studio albums followed, each one as exhilarating, dynamic, experimental and simultaneously melodic as the last – resulting in deserved comparisons with legends such as Nirvana, among others.
‘Singles 2001-2005’ is an album that celebrates biffy clyro’s earlier work and – for the very first time – compiles their (often collectible) singles onto one record. ‘Singles 2001-2005’ is a stand-alone brilliant album and a concise and exciting retrospective for anyone newly discovering Britain’s finest rock band.
All artwork commissioned and tracklisting handpicked by biffy clyro.
Tracklisting:
27
Justboy
57
Joy.Discovery.Invention
Toys Toys Toys Choke, Toys Toys Toys (single version)
The Ideal Height (single version)
Questions And Answers
Eradicate The Doubt
There’s No Such Thing As A Jaggy Snake
Glitter And Trauma (single version)
My Recovery Injection (single version)
Only One Word Comes To Mind (single version)Tindersticks return!
It’s official. Tindersticks are returning from a five-year hiatus with a new album ‘The Hungry Saw’. It’s out on 28th April. We’ve heard it and we love it, but then we would, wouldn’t we?
There’s also a single preceding the album which is also called ‘Hungry Saw’ set to come out on 14th April on limited edition 7”.
You can hear the single and album track ‘Flicker Of A Little Girl’ on the band’s MySpace page: here
Check their new website for regular updates of their goings-on here
They will be playing some European dates this Spring and Summer. Make sure you check them out!
Gary Numan's 'Replicas' album reissued; Tour starts today!
February 29th 2008 – Gary Numan takes to the stage in Bristol to perform the influential ‘Replicas’ album in it’s entirety at the start of a UK tour. To celebrate the tour, Beggars Banquet have released an expanded, 2 x CD edition of the album. For more details click here
Here at Beggars Banquet, we are very excited to announce we will be releasing the latest album from Bob Mould, entitled District Line, worldwide (excluding US).
Those familiar with Mould need no introducing to this rock legend. His previous incarnations as the driving force behind Husker Dü and Sugar inspired countless others to take up instruments and create something incendiary of their own.
District Line is slated for release in early 2008…
Here’s a few words about Bob Mould and District Line
How do you build on a quarter-century legacy and catalog as a living legend and trailblazer of alternative rock? When you’re 47-year-old vet Bob Mould, you ignore such accolades, and go straight to making hair-raisingly emotional, undeniably catchy, loud, mature guitar rock albums. Yes, he was an ’80s punk pioneer with Husker Du, and indie rock god with ’90s juggernaut, Sugar. But in between and since, Mould has unleashed a half-dozen uncompromising solo LPs, unafraid to follow inspirations where they’ve led – from 1989’s Richard Thompson-influenced Workbook to 2002’s dancefloor-minded Modulate.
Now, following 2005’s acclaimed, return-to-bracing Body of Song, Mould is poised to rip the roof off further with the hard-hitting, elastic District Line – his first for Anti Records. Ace Fugazi drummer Brendan Canty returns from Body of Song, as the perfect backbone to Mould’s determined guitar riffs, insistent basslines, and passionate, vulnerable singing. (Amy Domingues also again adds beautifully bittersweet cello.) Recorded in a Washington D.C. warehouse space with a mobile studio, District Line is a dozen flavors of Mould’s inspired, instantly memorable, melodic songwriting and playing. The inimitable blasting, bursting, guitar-smacked choruses of “Stupid Now,” “Who Needs to Dream,” “Return to Dust,” “The Silence Between Us,” and “Very Temporary” sit comfortably with the folk-tinged “Again and Again” and “Walls of Time,” the more fanciful “Miniature Parade,” and the electronic-laced postpunk dance stomp, “Shelter Me.“
“Body of Song was written over the course of five years,” remembers Mould. “Whereas this one was written in a concentrated period starting with ‘Stupid Now.’ I started with a few ideas when Body came out [in June 2005]; then I wrote a lot of material in the start of ’06. That summer, I settled in a lot more writing as I was finishing up stuff. And the last song, ‘Walls of Time,’ was a [1989] Workbook song that didn’t make that record. It seemed like a really appropriate closer for this record, when it popped back into my head.“
The title nods to home base. “I’ve been in D.C. for five years,” he notes. “And this record really sums up the past five years of being here. These are funny stories about me and my friends’ things I see or overhear. It’s been a very positive experience, and District Line is my way of putting it down in a book.” And whereas fans formerly feared for his sanity after hearing his records, he laughs, “I’m generally content, now! But there’s also a lot of sadness on the record; there’s some loss – not gigantic, but it’s there. It’s being content with understanding loss.”(Hint: see “Old Highs New Lows.”)
Of course, few have had a more storied history and experience to draw on as a wiser older head. It is near impossible to calculate the level of impact or influence that Husker Du has had on the last two decades of modern rock, from the Pixies to Nirvana, to Green Day to Daft Punk – and 100 punk-inspired bands that have battered the public sphere since. Perhaps no band since the Ramones did more, thanks to constant touring and a feverish recording schedule that produced eight astounding albums in six years (two of them doubles), such as the acknowledged classics, Zen Arcade and Candy Apple Grey.
Likewise, Mould’s estimable 18-year solo career, launched upon the Huskers’ 1987 dissolution, has proved as durable and intensely respected, from the days of Workbook and 1990’s harrowing Black Sheets of Rain – interrupted by Sugar’s three wildly popular, positively piledriving rock albums, particularly the beloved Copper Blue, NME’s 1992 “Album of the Year” – to such modern maulers as 1996’s Bob Mould, 1998’s The Last Dog and Pony Show, and Body of Song (and his October 2007 DVD debut, Circle Of Friends, live from Washington D.C.‘s 9:30 Club).
Now, after nearly 30 years of such yeoman work, Mould in District Line is far from an icon trying to summon faded glories. Rather, his lyrics reflect forthrightness that has carried over from his earlier works and maturity that has developed since. “As I get older my life gets simpler,” Mould laughs with real satisfaction. District Line is the manifestation of a thinking man’s constant evolution. Emotional twists and turns thread throughout the album: “All the triggers pulled at once / So begins my ugly fall from grace,” he insists on “Again and Again.” Yet, whereas on Body of Song he sang, “This would be / The sound of me / Looking for some kind of closure,” he’s now come full circle on the crushing District Line climax, “Return to Dust,” singing, “Growing old it’s hard to be an angry young man.“
That lyric is the last that Mould wrote for the record, and is undeniably the album’s emotional centerpiece. “When you’re younger it’s very simple to be like that, but you get over it,” he explains. “It’s not a new idea in this line of art; Pete Townshend has talked about how the aging process is what we all make it to be – that we can’t try to fight it. And I see that on a daily basis: people dying their hair, getting facelifts, getting a growth hormone to delay the inevitable – men and women alike. But at this point in my life I embrace it. Because in my 40s, I have never felt so comfortable in my own skin, or so calm. All that anxiety – that stuff falls away as you start to realize that time is moving differently and it is a finite concept in terms of our earthly existence. All the things I used to worry about are not that big a concern any more. Maybe now I have the answers and I just don’t know it?” he laughs again.
And yet, as if to refute these candid, serene admissions, it’s hard to think of a more energizing, smashing, nay, youthful record than District Line. Perhaps Mould remains so vital because his life never slipped into rote regurgitation. Ten years ago he went on sabbatical, writing wrestling scripts; now when not writing, recording, and touring, he stays busy penning a weekly column called, “Ask Bob,” for Washington City Paper (also widely read online), while DJing the D.C. 9:30 Club (and New York) party Blowoff with Richard Morel (the two collaborated on a crisp Blowoff LP last year). “I can’t emphasize how much I look forward to that party every month,” he exclaims. “There’s this other side of me. As a gay man, I never addressed my community. It’s not the most important part of what I do, but it’s an important part of who I am, and throwing this crazy ass party that 1000 people come to and have a great time dancing to, for years – I’d have never imagined!“
But does he ever relax? “When I am home, my thing is having friends over for dinner and working on my yard.” For the prolific Mould, that’s different.
On Tour
- 09/20/08 The National San Diego, California US Street Scene
- 09/25/08 St. Vincent Boston, Massachusetts US Museum of Fine Arts
- 10/03/08 St. Vincent Boston, Massachusetts US Agganis Arena
- 10/04/08 St. Vincent Wallington, Connecticut US Chevrolet Theatre
- 10/05/08 St. Vincent Atlantic City, New Jersey US House of Blues (Atlantic City)
- 10/06/08 St. Vincent New York, New York US Radio City Music Hall
- 10/06/08 St. Vincent New York, New York US Radio City Music Hall
Artists
- Bauhaus
- Beggars Store
- Biffy Clyro
- Bolshoi
- Buffalo Tom
- CALLA
- Colin Newman
- Dalis Car
- Death Cult
- Devastations
- Dick Dale
- Fields Of The Nephilim
- Film School
- Gary Numan
- Gary Numan / Tubeway Army
- Gary Numan Tribute
- Icicle Works
- iLiKETRAiNS
- John Cale
- Loop
- Love And Rockets
- Lupine Howl
- Mark Lanegan
- New Wet Kojak
- Oceansize
- Peter Murphy
- Richard Hawley
- Robert Forster
- Southern Death Cult
- St. Vincent
- Stuart A. Staples
- Sun Dial
- Super Furry Animals
- Swell
- The Charlatans
- The Charlatans UK
- The Cult
- The Early Years
- The Fall
- The Go-Betweens
- The Lurkers
- The Mark Lanegan Band
- The National
- The Southern Death Cult
- The Strokes
- Tindersticks
- YOURCODENAMEIS:MILO






