
(O que faltará mais?)
Our knowledge of the Portuguese underground is not what it should be, we admit it. But it just got a little better, with the arrival of two records by the Loosers. Not that there's much findable info at hand, but the sounds themselves are sweet. A trio, the Loosers do a surprising number of things at once. Their basic focus is art-damaged power-pus, but they do it in a variety of ways, recalling everyone from Sonic Youth to Jackie O Motherfucker at various times. Their first LP is For All the Round Suns (Ruby Red) and it is a pretty wonderful blend of several generations of underground nonsense - from Birthday Party to NNCK to My Cat Is An Alien - and could easily be the best new CDR from Brooklyn this week, if you know what we mean. But it's a dandy looking LP and that ain't hay. Nor is their second LP, Slugs (Ruby Red), although it is not quite as overloaded with sheer idea-wattage, taking more the form of debased prog-grope excursions onto the ramp of the ringed percussive o-mind. It's a nice trip, with flutes and toots up the old wazoot. Why they only pressed 100 is anyone's guess.
Peel memorial concert hits wrong note, says DJ
Thursday October 13, 2005
The Guardian
The inaugural John Peel Day opened with a charity concert at London's Queen Elizabeth Hall last night, amid a claim that he would not have approved of the event's "maudlin" and "nostalgia-driven" tone. Peel, who died in October of a heart attack, was being honoured by BBC Radio 1 for his lifetime's championship of new music.
Andy Kershaw, his friend and former Radio 1 colleague, yesterday questioned whether Peel Day was a fitting memorial. "John wouldn't have liked it," he said. "He'd think it was maudlin. He would also object on the grounds it was nostalgia-driven. He'd think we ought to spend less time doing stuff like this, and more time ploughing through stacks of records looking for the next new band." Kershaw, who now hosts a world music programme on BBC Radio 3, described the event's organisers as hypocrites who ought to have appreciated Peel more when he was alive.
Peel worked for Radio 1 from its 1967 birth. But in the months before his death at 65, he was reportedly unhappy, and upset by a decision to shift his show. "He particularly didn't like the fact he was moved so that he didn't finish work until one in the morning," said Kershaw.
When Peel died, Kershaw gave Channel 4 News an interview recounting their last conversation. "I said to him [that] he didn't look too good. And he said, 'No, I feel terrible.' He had been diagnosed diabetic a couple of years ago, and he was also finding it really hard that Radio 1 had moved him even later into the night. Marginalised is the correct word. [It] pushed him from 11pm to one o'clock in the morning and he actually said, 'It's killing me.'" Yesterday Kershaw stood by the comments. "I'm not going to go down that road again," he said. "But it's all on public record. I don't retract a word of what I said because I was merely reporting what he said to me."
Jason Carter, executive producer of live events at Radio 1 and organising Peel Day, said: "There was no suggestion from Peel's people that he was unhappy with the new time slot at all. I know the controller of Radio 1 sat down with him personally to discuss it. So far as I know he was perfectly happy about it."
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