Jinte Deprez News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana
Premiere: J Bernardt Shares New Track Don t Get Me Wrong | Under the Radar | Music Blog for the Indie Music Magazine
undertheradarmag.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from undertheradarmag.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Balthazar to Take Stage at Volkswagen Arena in Istanbul
ftnnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ftnnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Fever (2019), the latter one of the finest rock albums of the 2010s. Led by co-vocalists Maarten Devoldere and Jinte Deprez, the band evolved from a rock sound indebted to the early aughts’ “rock revival” into something still rooted in rock vernacular but inclined to atypical arrangements and instrumentation.
Fever’s innovation was to place the bass front and center; on tracks like “Wrong Faces” and “You’re So Real”, the guitar plays almost a peripheral role, with bassist Simon Casier providing both the lead riff and the rhythmic anchor. Tastefully placed strings and horns on “Grapefruit” and “Entertainment” add sophistication and depth to what could have been straightforward rock jams in lesser hands. At the time,
7/10
A quick search of songs that in some way feature a reference to the Belgian city of Antwerp brings up more results than you’d maybe think; American downbeat rockers Pavement namecheck it in 1994’s Brink Of The Clouds, while downtempo eccentrics Lemon Jelly also drop the handle on 2002’s Ramblin’ Man.
It’s probably more authentic for Balthazar to join that fraternity given that they’re based in Ghent, a town roughly seventy clicks to the south west of what is, as most of us will probably already know, the place widely accepted as the diamond capital of the world.
Gainsbourg: still France’s favourite bad boy three decades on
Issued on: Serge Gainsbourg, 18 April 1980 in Paris. Getty images/Ulf Andersen 7 min French singer-songwriter Serge Gainsbourg was undeniably one of this country’s great wordsmiths and melodists. But his taste for provocation, playing with incest and misogyny through his music, could have made him a ready target to get cancelled in the era of #MeToo and #MeTooInceste. Thirty years after his death, not only has this not happened, he is more popular than ever. Advertising Read more
When Gainsbourg died aged 62 on 2 March 1991, then-president François Mitterrand praised his mastery of language and described him as “our Baudelaire, our Apollinaire… he elevated song to the level of art”.
vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.