‘Body percussion’ prof in Japan wants instrument-free music education to go global







Toshiyuki Yamada demonstrates body percussion by clapping, in Kurume, Fukuoka Prefecture, on Dec. 2, 2022. (Mainichi/Naoko Takashiba)


KURUME, Fukuoka — Through a mixture of claps, stomps and knee-slaps, a professor from this southwest Japan city has been a pioneer in teaching instrument-free “body percussion” to students for decades. Now, he plans to bring the subject to Britain in hopes of making it a global educational phenomenon.


Professor Toshiyuki Yamada of Kyushu Otani Junior College and a team of around 30 others will be going to Britain’s University of Oxford in March 2023 for a research presentation and performance of body percussion — making percussive music through maneuvers such as clapping, stomping and knee-slapping. They will perform around 10 songs, including Yamada’s composition “Hanabi” (fireworks), inspired by the annual Chikugo River Fireworks Festival that lights up Kurume’s skies every summer. During the presentation, Yamada will offer teaching tips, explain its impact and extol its virtues as a way for people to have fun together regardless of disability.


Yamada began teaching body percussion over 30 years ago, during his days as an elementary school teacher in Kurume. It started when he got students who were having trouble concentrating in class to clap along to songs. He went on to develop methods of teaching the subject while practicing it with students at elementary and special needs schools in the city.


“Children enjoy being able to make music without instruments, just by using their movements, and the sense of accomplishment when they get into a rhythm with their peers. Those with hearing impairments can play along by watching the instructor’s movements and by feeling the beat,” Yamada said.


Yamada’s body percussion compositions have received widespread acclaim, and have become a part of music education curricula at elementary and special needs schools. The songs have been performed alongside the NHK Symphony Orchestra. They have been taught in Cambodia and have previously been demonstrated in other famous locations including New York’s Carnegie Hall and the Wiener Staatsoper in Vienna, Austria.


The team going to Oxford includes students and staff from Kurume and beyond, ranging from teenagers to those in their 60s. Participating institutions include Fukuoka Prefectural Meizen High School in Kurume, Tokyo’s Kunitachi College of Music, and Fukuoka Jo-Gakuin University in the city of Fukuoka.


“Body percussion can be performed on its own as well as in combination with various genres of music. It originated in the educational field and was developed by children. I want it to become known as a way for kids of all backgrounds to take part in an activity together,” Yamada continued, further emphasizing the subject’s potential for wider appeal.


(Japanese original by Naoko Takashiba, Kurume Bureau)

When will Sometimes When We Touch air on Paramount+? Release date, plot, and more about the documentary


The brand new documentary series Sometimes When We Touch is all set to make its arrival this Tuesday, January 3, 2023, at 3 am ET/ 12 am PT on Paramount+. The show will consist of a total of three parts and chronicle the epic history of Soft Rock music.

The Lauren Lazin-directed documentary is written by Chuck Thompson. In addition, Sometimes When We Touch will see Pete Sepenuk as the narrator of the docu-series. The show is produced by Van Toffler, with Bruce Gillmer, David Gale, Chuck Thompson, and Vanessa WhiteWolf serving as the executive producers. Besides them, MTV Entertainment Studios and Gunpowder & Sky have co-produced the Paramount+ docu-series.

A still from Sometimes When We Touch (Image Via Paramount Plus/YouTube)

Ever since the official trailer for the show was launched by Paramount+, the audience, especially the admirers of the Soft-Rock genre in music, has been eagerly waiting to see what the documentary series will bring to the table.


The three-part docu-series Sometimes When We Touch will chronicle the development of Soft Rock as a music genre

Trailer and what can be expected from the docu-series?

The trailer of the much-anticipated docu-series was released by Paramount+ on December 13, 2022. Following this, fans of the Soft Rock music genre soon expressed their excitement to watch the series.

Apart from that, Paramount+ also published an official synopsis for Sometimes When We Touch, which read:

“Soft Rock dominated pop music. Then became a punch line. Now its influence is felt everywhere from hip-hop samples to TikTok. The exclusive new series charts a musical movement through its most treasured songs, stories and stars.”

Subtitled The Reign, Ruin and Resurrection of Soft Rock, the docu-series will delve deep into all the stages the music genre has gone through to date. Moreover, it will take the audience on a nostalgic journey to the colorful and thrilling world of Soft Rock music while also providing the viewers with insights into the lives of great artists associated with the genre.

A still from Sometimes When We Touch (Image Via Paramount Plus/YouTube)

While talking about the Paramount+ documentary series to Variety magazine, The Gunpowder & Sky CEO, Van Toffler, said:

“You can trash, bash and malign soft rock as much as you want, but I bet you know every song in the Hall & Oates catalog,…Personally, I’m happy that the kids are finally learning about the virtues of the Carpenters and Michael McDonald via their sampling in current hip-hop.”


Who will be featured in the docu-series?

A still from Sometimes When We Touch (Image Via Paramount Plus/YouTube)

The list of artists whose hit songs will appear in the documentary series includes John Oates, Daryl Hall, Kenny Loggins, Christopher Cross, Michael McDonald, Air Supply, the Carpenters, Ambrosia, Lionel Richie, and Captain & Tennille.

In addition, the artists who will be interviewed in the series entails Sheryl Crow, Run DMC’s Darryl “DMC” McDaniels, Stewart Copeland of the Police, Susanna Hoffs, Richard Marx, LA Reid, Verdine White, Robert “Kool” Bell, Toni Tennille, Loggins, Ray Parker Jr., Dan Hill, and a few others.

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The Moving Stills present “Better” – Aipate


Australian band The Moving Stills have a new single that I found found refreshing The bright and fuzzy indie-pop tune is christened “Better”. Musically, it’s an engaging blend of guitars and synths.

About “Better”, band member Tommy remarks, “It’s a story about seeing the good despite the challenges in a relationship. We wrote ‘Better’ about that and how having someone in your life that you care about is a great thing. Focusing on how the other person makes you feel. Even when you’re missing them, knowing you’ll see each other again creates excitement.”

Listen to the ecstatic song and keep up with The Moving Stills on Instagram.



Moby Releases Brand New Album, ‘Ambient 23’


Moby has started off 2023 with the release a new album. Earlier this month, he took to social media to announce that he was finishing up a new album called Ambient 23 with a release date of January 1, and, true to his word, the DJ, musician and producer has unveiled the new album, which is now available to hear on digital platforms.

According to his social media post, Ambient 23 was recorded using “weird old drum machines and old synths” and is “inspired by… early ambient heroes,” including Martyn Ware, Brian Eno, Jean-Michel Jarre and Will Sergeant. In a separate update, posted on the day of the release, Moby wrote: “Made to help anxiety (my own, and hopefully yours, too). For 2023, may we all be less anxious (and may we all stop looking for validation from a culture we don’t respect…).”

The new release comes to complete one series of ambient inspirations by Moby, who hopes that each of us will find some special personal meaning in his videos and music. At the same time, he would like even if his music plays softly in the background at home or at work, to help create a feeling of calm and peace.

Ambient 23 follows Reprise, an album of early Moby songs recorded with updated orchestral arrangements. Issued in May 2021, Reprise was released through the legendary Deutsche Grammophon label.

Reprise found Moby revisiting musical highlights from his notable 30-year career. Together with the Budapest Art Orchestra, he has re-envisioned some of his most recognizable rave classics and anthems with new arrangements for orchestra and acoustic instruments. Reprise features an eclectic and impressive array of guests including Alice Skye, Amythyst Kiah, Apollo Jane, Darlingside, Deitrick Haddon, Gregory Porter, Jim James, Kris Kristofferson, Luna Li, Mark Lanegan, Mindy Jones, Nataly Dawn, Novo Amor, Skylar Grey and Víkingur Ólafsson.

Listen to Ambient 23 on Apple Music and Spotify.

For the latest music news and exclusive features, check out uDiscover Music.

uDiscover Music is operated by Universal Music Group (UMG). Some recording artists included in uDiscover Music articles are affiliated with UMG.

Classes begin at Lata Mangeshkar music college | Mumbai news


Mumbai: Classes at the international music college in memory of legendary singer late Lata Mangeshkar started at the Ravindra Natya Mandir, Prabhadevi, on Monday.

Set up by the Maharashtra government, the Bharat Ratna Lata Bharat Ratna Lata Deenanath Mangeshkar International College of Music started with three certification courses.

Ravindra Natya Mandir is a temporary arrangement for the college as 7,000 square metres of land has been allotted for the construction of the institute at the Kalina campus of University of Mumbai.

The first batch of the college has 54 students for three different courses — 23 students for Hindustani Classical Music (vocalist), 21 students for Sound Engineering (music production) and 10 students for Piano/Keyboard.

Each certification course is of one-year duration with intake capacity of 25 students. The college had initially planned to start with six certification courses including – Flute Playing, Tabla Playing and Sitar Playing – but could not do so owing to poor response from students.

“We have completed the preparations and decided to extend the last date for admission by another month. Once we start getting better response, the classes for the other three courses will also be started,” said a senior official from the directorate of arts.

The directorate is also planning to complete the first batch by July so that admissions for the next batch can be started from the coming academic year.

Principal secretary, higher and technical education department, Vikas Rastogi said, “According to the university grants commission (UGC) guidelines, each student will have to attend classes for at least 180 days. Going by that, we are looking to complete the certification course of the first batch by the middle of this year. That’s how the second batch of the certification courses can be started from the upcoming academic year.”

The state government had decided to establish an international music college as a tribute to the legendary singer. When the construction of the proposed building at Kalina campus is completed, the college plans to start diploma and degree courses.

“A brief plan of the building will be prepared with the help of a advisory board comprising members of the Mangeshkar family and other music maestros. It will then be approved by the state government following which, a detailed project report (DPR) will be prepared to start the construction work,” Rastogi said.

He said that they can think of starting diploma courses in the existing set up only after completing at least two batches but for degree courses they will require a full-fledged institution.

The international college was inaugurated by the chief minister Eknath Shinde and deputy chief minister Devendra Fadnavis at Ravindra Natya Mandir on September 28.

The advisory board is headed by Hridaynath Mangeshkar. The other members are Usha Mangeshkar, Adinath Mangeshkar, Suresh Wadkar and Mayuresh Pai.



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Music Monday: 2023 Ones to Watch





In 2022, the music industry was on fire both in the studios and on stages across the world. We saw artists jumping at the opportunity to tour after a long two year (unwanted) hiatus. Stadiums were sold out in minutes and a number of artists chose to continue the small venue tour stops as it reconnected them with their fans in a grassroots sort of way. The traditional label of the “country” genre seemingly was thrown out the window this year as well. While you can still hear plenty of “old school” style of country music streaming, you’ll also hear country rock, pop country, country songs featuring rappers and more. Gone are the days when country music strictly meant you would “hear twin fiddles and a steel guitar.” Check out my 2023 Ones to Watch list.

Chart Toppers

Hardy (ft. Lainey Wilson) – Wait in the Truck

Scotty McCreery – Damn Straight

Thomas Rhett (ft. Tyler Hubbard & Russell Dickerson) – Death Row

Zac Bryan – Something in the Orange

Ashley McBryde (ft. Benji Davis) – Gospel Night at the Strip Club

TikTok was to thank for the success of many musicians trying to break into the industry, giving them a platform to reach millions of listeners without the help of a record label. Independent artists such as Alexandra Kay and Julia Cole sold out numerous shows throughout their first headlining tour all thanks to social media. Others, who are actively involved with labels also saw large successes, especially songwriters who have had no lack of inspiration over the past couple years. While you may have heard of some of these artists, here are just a few of our favorite up-and-comers who you should definitely keep an eye on!

Artists to Watch

Corey Kent – Wild As Her

Alexandra Kay – Backroad Therapy

Julia Cole (ft. Alexandra Kay) – Best Worst Ex

Greylan James – Old Truck Young Love

Brandon Ratcliff – Tale of Two Towns

Anne Wilson – My Jesus

Hope you enjoyed my 2023 Ones to Watch List! Find an artist that you can’t get enough of? Show your support! Follow them on Instagram, Facebook, Tik Tok, YouTube, and Twitter as well as on all major music streaming platforms!




Running on Dutch Bros coffee and my love of travel, I’m always up for an adventure. I believe in exploring new places and drunken nights around a campfire. Unpopular opinion or not, Cards Against Humanity is the best game ever created. @lindsiriancreative




How the music of an ancient rock painting was brought to life


A section of the Cederberg rock painting, digitally enhanced to emphasise red-ochreous colours. © Neil Rusch

Archaeologists spend a lot of time examining the remains of distant pasts, which includes the study of rock paintings. This is largely visual work – but sometimes we can “hear” the ancient past using acoustic methods.

Our archaeoacoustic research is focused on bringing to life sounds made by people living in the past. No aural record remains but people did dance, sing and clap. Instruments either no longer exist or are extremely rare. One exception are the gong rocks, known as lithophones, which ring when struck and produce purposeful, percussive sounds. Occasionally, unfamiliar and rare musical instruments are depicted in rock paintings.

In a new study we turned our ears to a rock painting in the Cederberg Mountains in South Africa’s Western Cape province. The human figures in this painting have previously been interpreted as healers holding fly-whisks and doing a trance-dance. Fly-whisks were an important accessory for the dance because they were thought to keep arrows of sickness at bay.

But our results suggest that the fly-whisks are in fact musical instruments of a type known as a !goin !goin – a name that only exists in the now extinct ǀXam language that was spoken by hunter-gatherers in central southern Africa. The !goin !goin is an aerophone; these instruments produce sound by creating vibrations in the air when they are spun around their axes.

To reach this conclusion we combined digital image recovery techniques with instruments created from life-size templates based on our findings. The eight instruments were played in a Cape Town sound studio and the sounds were recorded. Sound produced by the recreated instruments convincingly matches the sound spectrum (90 – 150 Hz) produced by a similar 19th century model of the !goin !goin aerophone, which is archived in the Kirby Collection of Musical Instruments, curated by the University of Cape Town’s College of Music.

Instruments created using dimensions extrapolated from the Cederberg aerophone rock painting. © Neil Rusch

Our results suggest that !goin !goin type aerophones were used around or before 2000 years ago. This conclusion is based on the age of the image that is painted in the fine-line technique, which is a style of painting that disappeared with the arrival of pastoralists in the southern Africa region 2000 years ago.

The Cederberg painting is one of only four known examples of aerophone playing depicted in rock paintings in the southern Africa region. By contrast many paintings are identified as illustrating fly-whisks. Our findings suggest the need for greater nuance when studying rock paintings. Perhaps some of the fly-whisk depictions should be revisited with a “listening ear”?

Composition

The !goin !goin generates a distinct pulsating sound (visualised in the image below) due to the circular rotation of the player’s arm and the twisting and untwisting of the cord that attaches the rotating blade to the stick.

Read more: How our African ancestors made sound in the Stone Age

Spectrogram illustrating the pulsating charater of !goin !goin sound. Orange and yellow areas represent frequencies of high intensity, and blue the low intensity.

An unexpected finding was the compositional possibilities offered when two or more !goin !goin were played at the same time. Speeding up and slowing down the rotation subtly changes the sound. Two instruments, one played fast and the other slow, creates a composition. Playing in sync and out of sync adds another layer of musical creation.

It was not possible to play eight instruments in the sound studio at one time. An eight-instrument performance requires more space than the studio could provide. But a sound recording of three !goin !goin playing together suggests what group music-making with the !goin !goin may have sounded like.

A sound recording of three !goin !goin playing together. Neil Rusch, Author provided (no reuse)309 KB (download)

This compositional aspect of the instrument was not well known at all so we delved deeper. In the Special Collections archive at the University of Cape Town we found an obscure description of the !goin !goin which confirmed, as does the Cederberg painting, that groups did play the instruments together.

An instrument consisting of a blade of wood attached to a little stick, which is held in the hand. The performer grasping the little stick whirls the blade about in the air, producing a whirring sound. It is used by both sexes among the Bushmen [another name used for the San and today considered derogatory by some] and, at times, by a number of persons together with the view to causing rain.

ǀXam-speaking hunter gatherers associated the sound of the !goin !goin with honey bees. They even went so far as to say that with the !goin !goin they could “move bees”. This complements the previous statement linking the instrument’s sound with “causing rain”. The archive statement also confirms that both men and women worked with rain, using the sound of the !goin !goin for this purpose.

Read more: What archaeology tells us about the music and sounds made by Africa’s ancestors

Trance links

What of the trance healing dance suggested by earlier interpretations of the Cederberg painting? It is well known that all senses, not just vision, hallucinate in trance and that the aural hallucination of buzzing is construed as the sound of bees, rushing wind or falling water. So the painting does link to trance because of the association with bees and buzzing – but the items depicted in the painting are musical instruments, not fly-whisks.

This article is republished from The Conversation, a nonprofit news site dedicated to sharing ideas from academic experts. Like this article? subscribe to our weekly newsletter.

It was written by: Neil Rusch, University of the Witwatersrand and Sarah Wurz, University of the Witwatersrand.

Read more:

The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

Iggy Pop Isn’t About to Whitewash His Past


Iggy Pop’s life and work constitute one of music’s most remarkable survival stories. The savage and hair-raising ruckus he made with the Stooges in the late 1960s and early ’70s was some of the greatest and most influential rock ’n’ roll ever, and it was basically ignored or derided by the mainstream during the band’s brief original existence. Pop’s solo work has been almost as artistically significant — and somewhat more commercially successful — with albums like “The Idiot” (1977) and “New Values” (1979) continually finding eager listeners among successive waves of young musicians. Still, he didn’t really get his due until middle age, occasioned by the cultural ascension of those artists he influenced and the Stooges reforming in 2003. But his musical perseverance is only half the tale. The other half is that he lived long enough to reach beloved elder-statesman status. Pop is infamously uninhibited as a live performer — tales of self-mutilation and physical abandon are legion — and as a person (also legion are tales of substance abuse). It’s neither glib nor callous to say an early death probably wouldn’t have shocked those who knew him. Yet here he is, with 75 years behind him and a strong new album, this month’s “Every Loser,” ahead. “When I started, the demand was very low,” Pop says with a conspiratorial smile. “Now I’ve got more than enough to do.”

I think a big part of why your music still radiates, especially the Stooges’, is that its feelings of danger and transgression don’t fade. You can’t listen to that stuff and think it was made by choirboys. But my question — and it’s more general rather than specific to you — is whether an artist needs to live outside the boundaries of polite society in order to make music that also exists outside those boundaries. I don’t think it’s necessary. It’s just that if you’re living in a different way, different situations are going to present themselves. I did hang and do drugs with some tough boys. I remember when cocaine came in the Detroit area — started coming in big, probably with the biker gangs — and I did some at a party where everybody was doing it and the music was loud and the drink was flowing and an inner voice said to me, “Jim, this isn’t what you do well.” It didn’t stop me, because I heard that other voice too. But I’ve been going to bed early for years now.

Iggy and the Stooges around 1969 — from left, Scott Asheton, Ron Asheton, Dave Alexander and Iggy Pop.
Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

Is it interesting that the voice in your head said “Jim” and not “Iggy”? Because my understanding is that for a long time there was a Jekyll-and-Hyde relationship between Iggy Pop the persona and Jim Osterberg the real person. But to my ears, anyway, the space between the two seems to have collapsed as time has gone by. The music on “Avenue B” or “Préliminaires” sounds much less attached to a preconceived persona and much more like a guy singing about his life. Is that how it feels to you? I went on that Iggy path with the Stooges, and once you start and you get somewhere, you just go with it. But what happens is, if you do that over and over, it peters out. Finally it got to a point with “Avenue B” — I was hitting 50 and hitting a wall, and I was fed up, and as I said on the first song, “I didn’t want to take any more [expletive].” If you yell, “I ain’t gonna take any [expletive]” on a rock song that’s one thing. But if you quietly say it to some sepulchral music, that’s a different thing, because you’re facing darkness once you hit 50. I was also having a divorce, so I wanted to sing about a Nazi girlfriend and trying to [expletive] her on the floor. It was a dark feeling. But I always believed that if I did it — whatever it was — for real, then an audience was going to be there. And “Préliminaires” came about because I was at an age where Michel Houellebecq’s novels were important to me. There are some very comic, soulful and sensible solutions to middle-aged male problems in those novels. I was asked to contribute a song to a documentary about him, and then other songs on “Préliminaires” were triggered by Michel’s books. The point of all this is, if you keep going, possibilities open up.

Michel Houellebecq is a writer a lot of people disagree on. Yeah, I can never understand why. But that shows who I am.

Maybe it does. But one subject that makes people take issue with him is the way he writes about sexual power dynamics. Whether he’s accurate or not, who knows, but he’s opening a window on certain ways of thinking. And hearing you mention him makes me wonder if you can do that, too, because it’s clear from reading books about you that back in the ’70s you were pretty much living the stereotype of the sexual-free-for-all rock ’n’ roll lifestyle. How do you think about that experience now, when attitudes about sex have shifted so much? I’m even thinking of your own memoir, in which you were talking about a 13-year-old, and you said, “She looked at me penetratingly” and then “You can figure out what happened next.” Well, now I’m married to someone around 50 years old and I’m a much different person than I was.

I know you are, and I’m not judging or asking you to judge. But I’m asking if you can recall how you understood the sexual dynamics of the rock-music world back then. Maybe you had ambivalence, maybe everything seemed great, maybe you just didn’t think about any of this at all. I don’t have much to tell you. I’m not going to list in detail my experiences when they’re that private, other than in terms of what you read.

Pop performing in Cincinnati in 1970.
Tom Copi/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

I’m definitely not asking you to detail private experiences. I’m asking about feelings and thoughts. I don’t think that I was really thinking about anything. Except I think most artists, when they’re young, pursue beauty when it presents itself. Things were much different in those times in general. Much, much different. That’s all I would say about that.

Ah, OK. The new album is kind of more meat-and-potatoes rock ’n’ roll than your last few. Why did you go back in that direction? It was Andrew Watt. We talked because he wanted me to work on a Morrissey record. I was speaking with Andrew, and after a half-hour on the phone, he says to me, “Are you ready to be yourself again?” I said, “Which one?” because I didn’t want to get nailed down by this kid. But I knew what he meant. I said, “Sure, send me some tracks.” As the tracks came, I saw the opportunity. For some time now, my M.O. has been like a chick at the disco, you know? You dress up, go sit by the wall, and see who asks. That’s pretty much it.

On the credits of the new album, you give special thanks to Taylor Hawkins. He’s not the only guy you made music with whom you lost prematurely. Do you ever wonder why them and not you? Is there a way you’ve tried to make sense of it? My doctor tells me I have a strong immune system, but I don’t think that’ll do it for you. By some miracle, at certain times I pulled back. The other thing — it’s hokey maybe, but maybe not — is my mother’s love and prayers. I believe that. Because there were times when it just — there was one time I was hanging out with a couple members of the MC5 and I turned blue. They didn’t know what to do. I just remember I woke up in a bathtub full of ice. They threw me in ice, and that didn’t work, so they shot me up with salt to bring me back. There were a couple of different times. Not just with that but also with drug-related boom-boom.

Pop in 1970.
Tom Copi/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

What do you mean? Once, in Hollywood, the hotel that is now the Mondrian used to be a pretty edgy condo building, and I was in the same room with somebody who had a large vial of cocaine, and it turned out to be stolen. There was a knock on the door and the lady whose apartment it was opened the door a little and boom! A big guy burst in, and then a bunch of guys behind him all with guns. They put guns to everybody’s head, and while they were trying to figure out what to do with us, one of them said: “That’s Iggy! Let him go.” [Laughs.] Now, that’s just — whoa. That moment is one for which I’m eternally grateful.

And you believe your mom was looking out for you at times like that? Hovering over me. She never gave up on me. She would send me an envelope about once a week when I lived in Los Angeles with a $20 and a $5 in it. I could always talk to her on the phone. But there were dangerous times. Another time my arms swelled up because of poison in my system. Once I started seeing a doctor regularly, the doctor said, “Well, you’ve certainly done some drugs.” Then he said, “You had an infected heart, and you have healed.” He also told me it’s enlarged by about 50 percent — muscle-bound, because it had to work so hard. I think about these things sometimes and try to make life worthwhile, try to enjoy something. Not everything. [Laughs.] Try to enjoy when you can be a good guy. Other than that, I don’t know. It was 1983 when I made a conscious decision: I have to stop the way I’m living. I have to clean up. I have to be with one person. I went that way, and for about a year I’d trip every month or two and make a big mess, but then it stuck.

What made you change? I could see the end of the road. My teeth were falling out, my ankles were swelling up, my music was getting [expletive]. I wasn’t satisfying myself or doing good for anybody else.

Pop around 1979.
Allan Tannenbaum/Getty Images

You said your mother never gave up on you. Did you ever give up on yourself? Not consciously. There was a certain period when I had a mixture of frustration and it turned to anger, and as it turned to anger, the anger — once you give in to that then you’re not yourself anymore. Just like you’ve got to work on your music, you’ve got to work on yourself too. I don’t get a gold medal for anything, but I never gave up on making art. Never gave up that — one bit.

The other day I saw that an old Patti Smith song with a racial slur in the title was taken off the streaming services. And then I was listening to the “New Values” album and heard your song “African Man,” which doesn’t have anything nearly as bad as that slur in it but the joke of it sure hasn’t aged well. It made me wonder what you think about the idea of taking offensive material out of circulation. “African Man,” here’s what happened: I nicked a lyric, and I didn’t even mean to. I couldn’t think up anything else to go with that music, and I had seen an African artist play in a tiny club in Berlin, and it was totally different music. But he had that lyric, and I thought, Boy, that’s fun, and why can’t I sing that too? Right away, a lot of people, people like you, people who do the job of thinking and commenting, critics, said what a terrible song this is. I would put it this way: It’s the weakest song on the album. If the record company wanted to knock that off the album, I’d be all for that.

But my question is not about that one song so much as it’s about the bigger question of expunging material after the fact. I mean, I bet there’s also material on “Metallic K.O.” that maybe you aren’t thrilled about. But that’s also a historically important record the way it is. You mean would I try to suppress that? No. I would say that’s an individual decision and depends on the type of artist and person you are. I can’t see what possible value — OK, nobody would ever hear me say, “You throw all this [expletive] you want at me, your girlfriend’s still gonna want to blankety blank blank!” Big deal. We did a gig, it wasn’t going very well, and some guy thought, This is an interesting document, I’m going to put it out. At least it was different than the same old contrived [expletive]. If I decided I was going to go now and try to clean up everything I’ve ever done, that would make me Sisyphus. I’d be rolling that damn stone up the mountain until I die.

Pop during a performance in 1993.
Catherine McGann/Getty Images

Whenever I watch old concert footage of you or look at old photos and see the way you were using your body — it’s this tool for confrontation. But these days, at least the times I’ve seen you play, your body evokes totally different feelings — joy and even solidarity. When did you realize your body meant something different than it used to? It came on as people first seemed to be accepting the music. Then I started noticing they were accepting me. That’s an awfully good feeling, especially after you’ve been at it for 50 years. I’m nicked up at this point. I broke a foot. I dislocated a shoulder. There’s osteoarthritis in the right hip and the body in general. There’s scoliosis in the spine. But I can center a song better than I ever could. I know what I’m doing. Since the Stooges re-formed I’ve had nothing but good bands. I don’t have to get drunk and stoned to make the music sound good. I did that for many years. But in 50 years maybe I did two bad shows. I remember one was at the Ritz in New York City. It was probably around 1980, ’81. I was feeling like I don’t have the energy for this tonight, and the bass player said, “I’ve got a hit of orange sunshine.” So I took a hit and — woo! I walked out on stage and the band started the first number. I looked to my left and I looked to the right and I waved my hands and said: “Stop! That sounds like [expletive]! Play something else!” I tried to walk offstage and my tour manager grabbed me and said — he’s Scottish — “Ye are going to stay on that stage for 45 more minutes or we’re not getting paid!” and he pushed me back out. I think that night I broke a Jack Daniel’s bottle over the microphone. It was a mess. I got cut up a little. But I’ve done good work when it comes to the gig. That’s always been the one place where I felt, OK, whatever you take away from me, I can control that. I don’t how I started on that rant, but you got me going!

That Scottish manager you mentioned before, was that Tarquin Gotch? No, no. Tarquin was at one of the record companies I was at for a while, wasn’t he? I’m talking about a guy named Henry.

I was curious because I thought Tarquin Gotch was involved in your career at some point and now he’s involved with AC/DC, which is a whole other side of the hard-rock coin. Actually, what’s his name, Scott, the AC/DC singer?

Bon Scott. Yeah, Bon. I had some very wonderful encounter with Bon somewhere, and we were both drunk and stoned. I see pictures sometimes. I go, I don’t remember, but that’s me with Bon! I loved what he did. They had a manager many years ago, when I hadn’t re-formed the Stooges, I hadn’t moved to England, and this guy said, “Are you interested in joining AC/DC?” They were looking for a singer.

Whoa, that’s a real what-if scenario. Did you consider it? No, because I listened to their record. I thought, I can’t fill that bill. I wasn’t like, ugh, I don’t like them. It was quite well made. They do careful work. But I’m not what they needed.

Pop performing in New York City in 2009.
Michael Loccisano/Getty Images

You said before that it wasn’t until relatively late in your career when you started to feel that audiences accepted you as a person. So back in like — I’m just throwing out years here — 1975 or 1983, what feeling were you getting from audiences who came to see you if it wasn’t acceptance? They were just kind of staring at me. In the era from ’75 to ’83 pretty much everybody just stared at me. All over the world, people stared.

You felt like a curiosity? I’m not sure. I was never sure what it was. I thought, Better this than not getting attention. But still, I wanted something more.

How much is your overall view of humanity and your own internal sense of worth dictated by the external response to your music? One hundred ten percent. I’ve been thinking, What is it about “Metallic K.O.”? And I remembered, Oh, [expletive], that’s got “Rich Bitch” on it. I was very angry and hurt, and I had somebody in mind, and I wasn’t doing well in my career, and I thought that person was the reason I wasn’t. So yeah, I went through negative stages until finally that got better by degrees and I wasn’t giving up on audiences or lashing out.

So now, when the career vibes are all good, it’s fair to say that you feel better about other people and the world? You betcha. [Laughs.] I’ve got to say, it makes all the difference.


This interview has been edited and condensed from two conversations.

David Marchese is a staff writer for the magazine and writes the Talk column. He recently interviewed Lynda Barry about the value of childlike thinking, Father Mike Schmitz about religious belief and Jerrod Carmichael on comedy and honesty.

Batten down the hatches, Below Bermuda is back with another rip-roaring slice of alt-rock, Wings – Independent Music – New Music


After a brief recording hiatus, the international alt-rock outfit, Below Bermuda turned up the temperature with the blazing hot funk-dripped riffs with their first release since 2018, Wings. If you’re sick of four-chord rock, dig right into the complex rhythmic patterns in this hit that will dizzy you into mesmerism. Although you might want to batten down the hatches first, Below Bermuda is about as unreckonable as the Bermuda Triangle itself.

The Rise Against vocal reminiscence and melodically hooky instrumentals in the choruses around the frenetic punk rock pacing in the verses create a track that keeps on giving. After one hit of Wings, I knew that Below Bermuda is a band well-worth catching live. Their animated energy that pulls it together just enough to create a tight AF performance will undoubtedly make for an unforgettable live experience.

It just so happens that before lockdown crimped their touring and recording plans, Below Bermuda rip roared through venues and festivals in the UK, earning themselves the accolade of one of the hottest live acts on the scene.

Wings is now available to stream on Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

 



Sidhu Moosewala is the face on most Punjab kites this Lohri season. T-shirts, school bags too


Amritsar: At Suraj Pawan’s shop in Amritsar’s Shaheed Bhagat Singh market, hang kites adorning postcards of various Punjabi singers like Karan Aujla and Babbu Mann. But it’s only one singer that’s really driving the shop’s sale— Sidhu Moose Wala.

“Love you. Miss You,” with Moose Wala in the middle, or a photograph of the singer with a gun, or simply 295 — his famous song—are currently Punjab’s favourite design.

“I have lost count of the number of kites I’ve sold. I think I’ve sold close to 10 lakh Moose Wala kites,” said Pawan, one of the proprietors of the shop, who also claims to have pioneered the Sidhu design on kites.

The starting price of the kites is Rs 5, with the proprietors claiming they’re not making any profit on Moose Wala kites. “If someone buys 25-30 kites, they want at least five of them with Moose Wala on it,” said another shopkeeper Suraj Kumar. The kites are printed in Uttar Pradesh’s Rampur and Bareilly, but the demand is equally high in Delhi as well.

Not everyone is happy with Moose Wala’s photographs on kites, though, including his father. One Gurpreet Singh, who was buying kites for his retail shop, said he finds it disrespectful. “Moose Wala is a legend. People are even more crazy about him after his death. Some even wanted rakhi with his face on it. But his photograph shouldn’t be on a kite, which people will walk on. It is disrespectful. Even his family has taken offence,” he said.

Moose Wala, the truly international rapper who was criticised for glorifying gun violence in his songs, has attained a martyr-like status in Punjab. His murder in May 2022, just two days after the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) withdrew his security, has been one of the main driving forces behind the worsening law and order situation in the state.

Sidhu Moose Wala kites in display | Urjita Bharadwaj, ThePrint

After his death, not only Gen Z and Millennials but older generations have also started jamming to his beats. “He was a poet of our times. I discovered his music after his death. He talks so highly of Punjabi culture and, unlike other artists, his lyrics aren’t filthy. That’s why every Punjabi remembers him fondly,” said Kar Singh, a 65-year-old farmer.

“Moose Wala has glorified the turban around the world. It has spread the world of Punjabiyat. He was one of a kind,” said the shopkeeper Gurpreet Singh, a shopkeeper in Amritsar.

Shopkeepers whose sales have skyrocketed say Moose Wala’s death has increased the demand for anything associated with the singer. Suraj Kumar said customers don’t want to buy anything if they don’t get a Sidhu Moose Wala kite. Kumar has also become a fan of his music now. “I never heard his music before and even discouraged my kids. But now I have discovered his art and I really like it,” he said, adding that the singer “was killed for telling the truth about the nation”. “He is our heartbeat. We want to keep his memory alive,” Kumar said.


Also read: Kites featuring late singer Sidhu Moosewala on high demand in Ludhaiana


Moose Wala fever 

Kites are the flavour of the season before the festival of Lohri, but Moose Wala is everywhere — in ambient music in market places, on T-shirts, bags, key chains and  radio. Punjabis are not only showering love on him, but reverence as well.

Sidhu Moose Wala’s picture and graphics inspired from his songs are everywhere | Urjita Bharadwaj, ThePrint

In his death, Moose Wala has become what Princess Diana had become for the United Kingdom. He has been elevated from celebrity status to the status of a hero. People have deep sympathy for his parents who lost their only son, and have respect for Punjab’s only truly international pop sensation who brought glory to the turban.

70-year-old Joginder Pal, owner of a school bag shop, said that bags with the late singer’s motifs have been in demand this season. “After his death we started getting printed bags from Delhi. Right after his death, people wanted to buy bags with Sidhu Moose Wala on it. I sold 300 of them in a month.”

School bag with Sidhu Moose Wala on it | Urjita Bharadwaj, ThePrint

Yogesh Mahajan, who sells apparels in a market near Jallianwala Bagh in Amritsar, said Punjabis only wanted to buy T-shirts with the 295 singer printed on them. “People have gone completely crazy about him. He was a good human being. A great artist. He promoted Punjab across the globe. Of course, people love him,” he said.

Not only local customers, retailers from all over the country come to Mahajan’s shop to buy Moose Wala products. One such customer was Charanjit Singh from Kota, Rajasthan. “There’s high demand for Moose Wala napkins, key chains, pencils, temporary tattoos and apparel. That’s all kids want. Moose Wala is everywhere in Kota. We are earning a lot of money by selling these products,” he said.

Moose Wala lives on, having attained what few artists do, even if posthumously.