David Cameron | COLLAPSE BOARD
- ️Tue Jul 10 2012
Added on March 25, 2015 Everett True Coldplay , David Cameron , Everett True , F.U.N.K. , Neil Kulkarni , Primitive Man , Song of the day
The return of Everett True | 134. Primitive Man
I discovered this one via Neil Kulkarni’s regular dose of savagery over at F.U.N.K. Here’s what he says: ‘Scorn’ from 2012 revealed just what a unique slab of monstrous molten heaviosity this Portland 3-piece can cook up – the split 7/10/12″s that have come since with Xaphan, Hexis, Fister and Hessian have only deepened the […]
Added on March 5, 2015 collapseboard Coldplay , David Cameron , Green Day , Mumford & Sons , mumford and sons , Neil Kulkarni , Oasis
My buddies call me Ben. We all can’t WAIT for the new Mumford And Sons album
By Neil Kulkarni What kind of music am I into? Well… good music! Proper music, y’know? Not the chart stuff so much. I have lots of favourite songs by all kinds of bands and artists but basically I like songs from the heart. Songs about holding on through the tough times. Songs about letting things go […]
Added on October 15, 2013 Wallace Wylie David Cameron , haim , Oasis , pop music , Realpop , The Guardian , Tony Blair , Wallace Wylie
Realpop – An Introduction
Once the corporate reality of Realpop is internalised, then any criticism of pop which includes a critique of the corporate nature of pop music can be dismissed as an asinine act of naivety and obviousness.
Added on January 17, 2013 Everett True Billy Bragg , Boris Johnson , David Cameron , Elvis Costello , Everett True , Margaret Thatcher , Paul Ryan , Pussy Riot , Putin , Radiohead , rage against the machine , The Jam , The Smiths
Music for politicians (spot the odd one out)
I think if I was in a band and David Cameron said he liked my band’s music, I’d have a long hard look at my band’s music.
Added on March 16, 2012 collapseboard Barack Obama , Billy A Reeves , David Cameron , GDH Cole , Goldman Sachs , Grace Petrie , Mumford & Sons , Noah and the Whale , Steve White And The Protest Family , the White House , Thee Faction
Mumford & Sons know which side they’re on. And it ain’t yours.
Mumford & Sons playing the White House is the embodiment of the cultural logic of this Tory-led administration, and of British capitalism in general. Musicians are no longer the minstrels the ruling class hire for the occasion. These days they recruit their own. It’s safer that way.