Stereophonics’ Kelly Jones announces new solo tour

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Kelly Jones of Stereophonics performs live on stage during Day 1 of Tramlines Festival 2018 at Hillsborough Park on July 20, 2018 in Sheffield, England Credit: Joseph Okpako/WireImage

“The tour is about overcoming things and moving on from obstacles and building strength from that”

Kelly Jones is heading out on tour again in his solo guise.

The Stereophonics frontman, who released his debut album ‘Only the Names Have Been Changed’in 2007, will kick things off in Edinburgh on June 1 and close the tour in Nottingham on July 3.

Fans are promised a set filled with 22 years’ of Stereophonics music as well as Jones’ solo material.

Jones said: “I’ll be performing some old songs, lots of songs I don’t normally do, some new songs, songs that have inspired me and stories that have inspired me. The tour is about overcoming things and moving on from obstacles and building strength from that. I am looking forward to performing with some new musicians and creating some beautiful moments.”

Tickets go on sale from 10am this Friday, 29 March.

Kelly Jones tour dates 2019:

JUNE

1 – Usher Hall, Edinburgh
8 – St David’s Hall, Cardiff
10 – Brighton Dome
16 – Eventim Apollo, London

JULY

1– Birmingham Symphony Hall
3 – Royal Concert Hall, Nottingham

Jones hasn’t released a solo album in more than a decade. His last record with Stereophonics 2017’s ‘Scream Above the Sounds’.

The band shared a new song called ‘Chaos From The Top Down’ last month, a standalone single sung from the perspective of a 15-year-old boy who’s just been shot.Volume 0% 

Speaking to NME about the track, Jones explained “also touches on the tags and labels that have been stuck on [the boy].

“The stereotypes and clichés that were placed on him. It’s based on a true story that happened just outside my street. It’s happening everywhere. I’ve always written about what’s going on around me or within me since ‘Local Boy In The Photograph’ in 1996.”
Read more at https://www.nme.com/news/music/stereophonics-kelly-jones-announces-new-solo-tour-2466548#WBqLrzTi1cWASEBs.99

Source NME

Exclusive: Foo Fighters’ Chris Shiflett debuts new single ‘This Ol World’ and announces UK and European tour

“How can you not be affected by what the fuck is happening?”

Foo Fighters’ Chris Shiflett

Foo Fighters guitarist Chris Shiflett has debuted new single ‘This Ol World’ and announced details of a UK and European tour this spring. Check out the single and tour dates exclusively on NME below.

The new track is the first offering from Shiflett’s forthcoming solo album – and it sees him tackling the state of the world in 2019.

Speaking to NME, the Foos axeman explained how his new take on country rock was directly inspired by both Brexit and Donald Trump’s election as US President in 2016.

“It’s always a struggle to write songs about current events or politics, but how can you not be affected by what the fuck is happening?,” explained Shiflett. “Over here we’ve got Trump and over there in the UK you’ve got Brexit and Farage. It seems like every western country is dealing with its own version of Trumpism and the rejection of the status quo and liberal policies.”

While neither event is specifically referenced on the track, Shiflett says he aimed to stay deliberately vague.

“In the early drafts of ‘This Ol World’ it just sounded a little too preachy and came off sounding like a pretentious article,” he continued. “I like my lyrics to be specific, but I wanted that one to be quite vague because regardless of your world views, maybe there’s something in there you can relate to.

“I wrote it after the 2016 election when you had left-wing populism represented in the Bernie Sanders campaign and right-wing populism in the Trump campaign. They’re very two different things but inspired by the same thing.

“That same thing is a rot in the system. To me, the powers have under-represented the masses for a long time and it represents itself, depending on your world view, as coming out of the same issues.”

When asked if the song is a wider reflection of his next album, Shiflett said that his second solo record will head in a rockier direction – after experimenting with country on his 2017 debut ‘West Coast Town.’

“There’s definitely more rock than my last album.  It’s more guitar driven, although that sounds like a funny thing to say when so much of my stuff is guitar driven,” Shiflett said.

“But I like exploring sounds that I don’t get to play with. ‘West Coast Town’ from my last record was super pedal steel heavy, and this new one definitely has crunchier guitar tones and it’s more of a rock and roll record.”

Fans will get the chance to see Chris when he heads out on tour in March and April – including shows in London, Manchester and Glasgow. Check out those dates in full below.

MARCH
30 – The Grand Social, DUBLIN
31 – The Haunt, BRIGHTON

APRIL
1 – Omeara, LONDON
2 – The Fleece, BRISTOL
4 – Night & Day, MANCHESTER
5 – Classic Grand, GLASGOW
6 – La Bell Angle, EDINBURGH
8 – John Dee Club, OSLO
9 – Pumphuest, COPENHAGEN
10 – Nalen Klubb, STOCKHOLM

The post Exclusive: Foo Fighters’ Chris Shiflett debuts new single ‘This Ol World’ and announces UK and European tour appeared first on NME.

Britpop 2 Rock Presents: Al Moses

Who?

Jack Shephard – Vocals, Guitar
Daf Thomas – Vocals, Guitar
Raychi Bryant – Bass
George Percival – Drums

Where?

Daf is from Merthyr Tydfil, Raychi is from Swansea. The other two boys, Jack and George, are from Cardiff although we all live in the capital nowadays.

Why?

We always say Manics and Libs, but that can feel a little audacious in the sense that we wouldn’t put our lyrics on a pedestal with those two yet. Other people might. On the other hand, we’re far from a tribute to either of those bands, you wouldn’t immediately cite their music as an influence of ours. We’re a different kind of beast.

How?

Jack and Daf met at a party some time back, in 2015, but they ultimately found each other through mutual friends. There were dreams of making a band and doing what we are doing now, but it was never much more than stoner talk. George and Raychi basically joined on a whim, it was all very coincidental how it all fell into place. Us four have been together since the end of 2017.

Past?

We’ve never really been in a band before Al Moses. Raychi played drums in a covers band back home in Swansea, where he played covers like Mansize Rooster and Yer Blues. We’ve proper learned on the job as a band, which gives us a bit more gut. We could play a guitar solo or pen a 2-minute punk song a couple years ago, we’ve had to make all the mistakes in the book to even get this far.

Daf is an actor in Royal Welsh College so he’s got that going on, and Raychi’s studying producing. As a band we’ve had every job under the sun; chef, barman, retail, door-to-door. George has worked in a nursery. It’s hard to keep your boss happy when you have to keep booking off days for a gig, and then you rock up the next morning with bloodshot eyes and 2-hours sleep.

Present?

It’s raw, raucous, angst-driven rock n roll, but it’s crammed with heart. Anyone can sing our songs, they’re those type of tunes. It’s the awful way we play them that makes then original…

Future?

We want to headline festivals, and we think we can do it without writing cheap anthems. In the short term, we are just gonna tour around ’til we can’t take it, and release some new songs for everyone.

Did you know?

We played a sold-out gig to 300 people at Clwb, then invited everyone who went back to Raychi’s house for a party. It was a long night. George brought some lads from Birmingham back to the party from a club, they were all dressed as the Spice Girls. They came in for ten minutes, stole a bunch of stuff and then left. We didn’t even notice until the next day, didn’t find it particularly funny then…

What’s next?

We have a tour with This Feeling in February and March, and a couple new singles early this year. It’s gonna be a stormer.

Live4ever:

As South Wales continuous its reign as the ultimate host for some of the best new independent guitar music, Al Moses’ blistering single I Want More raises the bar and takes things a step further. Surely one of the most exuberant debut singles of 2018, its explosive and in-excess energy is refreshing and is a cracking, swagger-oozing display. Whilst it echoes some of the biggest Welsh bands, it also projects an attitude resembling the intensity of early Oasis. Comprising biting vocals and sizzling but melodic guitar riffs, it fits the band’s description as a ‘head-on, hands-up anthem’. What’s also clear is it represents only a fraction of what Al Moses is capable of.

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