Today - End of the Road festival have announced In The Garden of Streaming, a virtual event to mark the festival weekend, which along with many festivals has been cancelled this year due to Covid 19.
On Sunday 6th September from 6.30pm you can watch performances from Squid, Billy Nomates, Katy J Pearson, The Golden Dregs and Modern Woman. There’s also be a collaborative improvisation with drummers Morgan from Black Midi and Kwake Bass alongside various workshops and Q and A’s. It’s not a pay per view, it’s free but they are encouraging contributions towards covering costs with 20 per cent of proceeds going to the Coda Music Trust. End of the Road is a pretty special festival, it takes place annually at Larmer Tree Gardens in Dorset with an always very 6 Friendly line up. Previous headliners include Father John Misty, St Vincent, Michael Kiwanuka and Metronomy. Pixies, Aldous Harding, Little Simz and King Krule were among artists booked for this year’s event. One of the last festivals of the summer - it’s usually a place where artists that have made a name for themselves that year tend to have really memorable shows. This happened to Squid last year - a lot of buzz around their electric live sets was building over the summer with the word spreading around the festival and so people flooding into the tents across three sets to see them. They went on to make the BBC Sound of 2020 list and are signed to Warp Records, they've recently been working on their debut album with producer Dan Carey and shared two new releases in aid of the Bristol food bank charity, their cover of Robert Wyatt’s Pigs – which actually was recorded at End of the Road – and a take on Steve Reich’s Clapping Song. I spoke to Louis from the band for BBC 6 Music to find out more about the End of the Road streamed event and their relationship with the festival…
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Julia-Sophie is an English-French singer/songwriter from Oxford. Following a time in bands Little Fish and Candy Says she took some time out of music before making the y? EP under her own alias. She recorded much of the project in Brighton where the videos and photography was also shot by Siobhan Cox a very talented filmmaker and visual artist. In this interview I speak to Julia-Sophie over Zoom for my Foundation Fm Music Discovery radio show. We connected at the beginning of Lockdown when Julia messaged me on Instagram and sent me a couple of tracks. It was totally instant for me so I have been championing her since. The EP is out now and it's a perfect introduction to her sound. You can check her out on Instagram via @juliasophiex0x - I'm really hyped to follow her journey from here.
After being nominated for the Mercury Music Prize last year this year Anna Calvi is on the judging panel. I spoke to her about the process for BBC 6 Music and what she thinks of this year's list. Listen down below.
MERCURY SHORTLIST 2020 Anna Meredith - FIBS Charli XCX - How I’m Feeling Now Dua Lipa - Future Nostalgia Georgia - Seeking Thrills Lanterns on the Lake - Spook the Herd Laura Marling - Song For Our Daughter Kano - Hoodies All Summer Michael Kiwanuka - KIWANUKA Moses Boyd - Dark Matter Porridge Radio - Every Bad Sports Team - Deep Down Happy Stormzy - Heavy Is The Head MY THOUGHTS I do think it's a strong list. It’s such a great representation of women. Five solo females, two female-fronted bands. It's the first time ever female acts have outnumbered male. It's a variety of women with such strong artistic identifies that really excel in their various fields. I think musicality and the art of songwriting is really shining on this list; albums to get immersed in. However, I do think it's more pop than ever. Personally I prefer a list which isn't so mainstream. Dua Lipa, Charlie XCX and Stormzy don't really need the love let's be honest. I am surprised Nadine Shah and Sault didn't make it on the list - glaring omissions IMHO - and where is one of the great progressive electronic albums? Say a Floating Points, Daniel Avery, Four Tet, Maya Jane Coles Nocturnal Sunshine. Big fan of the albums from Laura Marling, Moses Boyd, Anna Meredith, Michael Kiwanuka and Lanterns on the Lake, so I'd hope for one of those to take it home on the night. My money would be on Laura Marling as she delivered Song For Our Daughter at a very important time and the album is some of her best work. Listen to Anna Calvi, one of the 2020 judges... Nick Cave did a stunning pay-per-view live concert film of him performing alone at the piano in Alexandra Palace. It was filmed by Director of Photography on major films The Favourite, American Honey and I, Daniel Blake - the brilliant Robbie Ryan. You could only watch it at that time it was streamed and he covered his whole back catalogue. I spoke to Robbie Ryan for BBC 6 Music about how he came to be asked to make it, the process and about Nick Cave's art of making cavernous spaces feel intimate. Listen here.
Mike Skinner is back with a new album from The Streets. It's titled None of Us Are Getting Out of This Life Alive and is the first Streets record in YONKS. Due to no live gigs happening at the moment (Covid19) he's doing a live stream gig at Earth in Hackeny on August 8th. I spoke to him about that when we had a catch up for BBC 6 Music. Listen here.
Big YAY. The dreamiest pair Sylvan Esso are back with new album Free Love landing later this year. They've shared its first single Ferris Wheel and I spoke to them for BBC 6 Music about life in lockdown, the new single and working on new music in their brand new studio in the middle of the woods. Sounds idyllic. Listen here:
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