After releasing Hello, Hi last year, and dropping his first feature film score (composed for Matt Yoka’s documentary, Whirlybird), Ty Segall is set to debut his next album, Three Bells, on Jan. 26, 2024. Alongside the announcement, the singer also shared the music video for new single “My Room.”
The upcoming album is being billed as “a deeper, wilder journey to the center of the self, with Ty using his musical vocabulary with ever-increasing sophistication,” and an “an obsessive quest for expression.” According to a press release, the LP will include 15 songs brimming with “perspectives,...
The upcoming album is being billed as “a deeper, wilder journey to the center of the self, with Ty using his musical vocabulary with ever-increasing sophistication,” and an “an obsessive quest for expression.” According to a press release, the LP will include 15 songs brimming with “perspectives,...
- 11/6/2023
- by Charisma Madarang
- Rollingstone.com
Ty Segall has announced his latest solo album, Three Bells, due January 26th. He accompanied the announcement with the project’s latest single, “My Room.”
Three Bells was co-produced by Segall and Cooper Crain, who worked together on 2021’s Harmonizer and 2022’s Hello, Hi. The 15-song release includes five collaborations with Segall’s wife Denée Segall as well as appearances throughout with members of his backing Freedom Band including bassist Emmett Kelly.
Segall also dropped “My Room,” the third offering from Three Bells following the seven-minute jam “Void” in August and the September single, “Eggman.” The song offers plenty of the Segall’s signature movies like a twisty acoustic riff and screechy guitar effects, and yet the singer-songwriter still manages to get pelted by bananas in the accompanying music video. Watch it below.
Three Bells arrives on January 26th via Drag City. Pre-orders are ongoing.
Segall is slated to tour...
Three Bells was co-produced by Segall and Cooper Crain, who worked together on 2021’s Harmonizer and 2022’s Hello, Hi. The 15-song release includes five collaborations with Segall’s wife Denée Segall as well as appearances throughout with members of his backing Freedom Band including bassist Emmett Kelly.
Segall also dropped “My Room,” the third offering from Three Bells following the seven-minute jam “Void” in August and the September single, “Eggman.” The song offers plenty of the Segall’s signature movies like a twisty acoustic riff and screechy guitar effects, and yet the singer-songwriter still manages to get pelted by bananas in the accompanying music video. Watch it below.
Three Bells arrives on January 26th via Drag City. Pre-orders are ongoing.
Segall is slated to tour...
- 11/6/2023
- by Bryan Kress
- Consequence - Music
Ty Segall has announced a new set of 2024 tour dates through next spring, and he’s paired the news a nearly seven-minute-spanning new single “Void.”
Segall’s 2024 North American trek kicks off with two nights at San Francisco’s Great American Music Hall on February 20th and 21st. He’ll resume in April with stops to Nashville, Philadelphia, New York, Chicago, and more before wrapping in Sacramento on May 11th. Tickets go on sale Wednesday, August 30th at 12:00 p.m. Et via Ticketmaster.
Segall also shared “Void,” his first new material of 2023. Despite its vacuous title, the song ripples from an peculiar acoustic riff into a seismic dirge more befitting of its accompanying psychedelic trip of a music video, which was co-directed by the singer-songwriter and his wife Denée Segall. Watch it below.
Ty Segall’s last full-length, Hello, Hi arrived in 2022. More recently, he released the Live at Worship EP,...
Segall’s 2024 North American trek kicks off with two nights at San Francisco’s Great American Music Hall on February 20th and 21st. He’ll resume in April with stops to Nashville, Philadelphia, New York, Chicago, and more before wrapping in Sacramento on May 11th. Tickets go on sale Wednesday, August 30th at 12:00 p.m. Et via Ticketmaster.
Segall also shared “Void,” his first new material of 2023. Despite its vacuous title, the song ripples from an peculiar acoustic riff into a seismic dirge more befitting of its accompanying psychedelic trip of a music video, which was co-directed by the singer-songwriter and his wife Denée Segall. Watch it below.
Ty Segall’s last full-length, Hello, Hi arrived in 2022. More recently, he released the Live at Worship EP,...
- 8/28/2023
- by Bryan Kress
- Consequence - Music
Stephen King's 1986 novel "It," for its overwhelming length and chronological sprawl, centers on a very simple and basic horror premise: clowns are terrifying. Perhaps there was a time in his planet's history when pale-faced, blue-haired ghouls with painted-on smiles and gin blossom encrusted noses were considered charming and delightful, but anyone who recalls that time died over a century ago. In 2022, many might readily agree that clumsy, "comedic" traditional circus buffoons are now merely greasy, manic, and threatening.
The monster in King's novel was an impossibly ancient shape-shifting Lovecraftian space deity that fed on human fear, with the ability to read human minds and manifest what they were most afraid of. Perhaps instinctually, the universal fear shape that this creature elected to take was that of a clown. It gave itself the name of Pennywise, and would hibernate in the sewers under Derry, Me, awakening every 27 years to frighten and eat children.
The monster in King's novel was an impossibly ancient shape-shifting Lovecraftian space deity that fed on human fear, with the ability to read human minds and manifest what they were most afraid of. Perhaps instinctually, the universal fear shape that this creature elected to take was that of a clown. It gave itself the name of Pennywise, and would hibernate in the sewers under Derry, Me, awakening every 27 years to frighten and eat children.
- 10/28/2022
- by Witney Seibold
- Slash Film
Directed by Kevin Lewis, from a script by G.O. Parsons, this defiantly out-of-the-box and in some ways rather cunning grunge horror film, set from dusk till dawn inside a run-down family fun center, is a tongue-in-cheek thriller that knows how preposterous it is.
The monsters, you see, are the kiddie palace’s resident menagerie of towering animatronic mascots. They’re possessed by evil spirits, and they’ll tear your head off. But even as that sounds like the stuff of overripe horror parody, “Willy’s Wonderland,” taking its cue from films like “Leprechaun,” “Two Thousand Maniacs,” and Tobe Hooper’s “The Funhouse”, treats its homicidal-furry-mascot premise as if it were a pre-ironic ’80s hack-’em-up. The movie is a canny ghoulie potboiler that whisks you along. And that, in no small part, is because of the other arresting creature at its center.
I’m talking about Nicolas Cage. I hadn’t seen a scuzzy,...
The monsters, you see, are the kiddie palace’s resident menagerie of towering animatronic mascots. They’re possessed by evil spirits, and they’ll tear your head off. But even as that sounds like the stuff of overripe horror parody, “Willy’s Wonderland,” taking its cue from films like “Leprechaun,” “Two Thousand Maniacs,” and Tobe Hooper’s “The Funhouse”, treats its homicidal-furry-mascot premise as if it were a pre-ironic ’80s hack-’em-up. The movie is a canny ghoulie potboiler that whisks you along. And that, in no small part, is because of the other arresting creature at its center.
I’m talking about Nicolas Cage. I hadn’t seen a scuzzy,...
- 2/13/2021
- by Owen Gleiberman
- Variety Film + TV
Ty Segall and the Freedom Band reboot and recharge the rocker’s 2012 track “Love Fuzz” on the first offering from their upcoming live album, Deforming Lobes, out March 29th via Drag City.
From its introductory back-and-forth barrage of guitars, Segall and the Freedom Band transform the original garage chug of “Love Fuzz” into a relentless hard rock blast. The performance is capped off by an extended breakdown of feedback that erupts perfectly into the song’s mammoth end, with Segall bellowing, “Your love can heal!”
Segall and the Freedom Band – which boasts Mikal Cronin,...
From its introductory back-and-forth barrage of guitars, Segall and the Freedom Band transform the original garage chug of “Love Fuzz” into a relentless hard rock blast. The performance is capped off by an extended breakdown of feedback that erupts perfectly into the song’s mammoth end, with Segall bellowing, “Your love can heal!”
Segall and the Freedom Band – which boasts Mikal Cronin,...
- 1/22/2019
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
The Audubon Society battles plumage poachers in the Everglades, circa 1900. Legendary director Nicholas Ray suffered an on-location meltdown filming this early ecologically sensitive epic, but the finished product is still one of his better pictures. Burl Ives, Christopher Plummer and Chana Eden give top 'Ray' performances. The eccentric supporting cast includes Peter Falk, boxer Two-Ton Tony Galento and none other than the real Gypsy Rose Lee. Wind Across the Everglades DVD-r The Warner Archive Collection 1958 / Color / 1:85 enhanced widescreen / 93 min. / Street Date October 6 2015, 2016 / available through the WBshop / 21.99 Starring Burl Ives, Christopher Plummer, Gypsy Rose Lee, George Voskovec, Tony Galento, Howard Smith, Emmett Kelly, Pat Henning, Chana Eden, Curt Conway, Peter Falk, Sammy Renick, Cory Osceola, MacKinlay Kantor, Totch Brown, George Voskovec, Sumner Williams. Cinematography Joseph Brun Film Editor Georges Klotz, Joseph Zigman Art Direction Richard Sylbert Original Music Paul Sawtell & Bert Shefter Written by Budd Schulberg Produced by Stuart Schulberg...
- 1/19/2016
- by Glenn Erickson
- Trailers from Hell
Today I will conclude my horror film Fun Facts series with the classic John Carpenter film Halloween. I know it seems like the obvious choice since today is Halloween and the film is one of the most iconic horror movies ever made. I'm sure some of you think you know everything about the movie, but there still might just be a few things that you don't know. I thought I knew a lot, but as I did the research I found there were plenty of things about the production of the movie that I had never heard about before. So here are twenty fun facts about John Carpenter's classic horror flick.
For years people would tell Carpenter how horrified they were by Michael Myers grotesquely disfigured face, which we get a glimpse of when Laurie pulls his mask off for a brief moment near the end of the movie.
For years people would tell Carpenter how horrified they were by Michael Myers grotesquely disfigured face, which we get a glimpse of when Laurie pulls his mask off for a brief moment near the end of the movie.
- 10/31/2014
- by Joey Paur
- GeekTyrant
Since 2010’s acclaimed Constant Companion, Toronto-based singer-songwriter Doug Paisley has performed for countless audiences and continuously won fans for his 70s-inspired sound. Now, he returns with forthcoming album Strong Feelings, a 10-song collection of original work recorded largely in Toronto in an analog studio. Strong Feelings features plenty of collaborators, including Emmett Kelly (The Cairo Gang) on guitar, Bazil Donovan on bass, Gary Craig on drums and Robbie Grunwaldon keys, along with an appearance from Canadian vocalist Mary Margaret O’Hara. As anticipation builds for the album’s January release, Paisley has premiered a new track from the album, “What’s Up Is...
- 12/11/2013
- Pastemagazine.com
Go ahead, admit it. You're scared to death of clowns. You're definitely not alone in this fear, and while we horror fans are totally familiar with all of the evil personifications of clowns in movies, comics, stories and artwork, some of us are still wondering why a traditional figure of fun, humor and entertainment is now more commonly considered one of the scariest damn things ever to walk the earth. While the world of clinical psychology has not yet recognized the fear of clowns as an official condition, it does have a scientific name: “Coulrophobia.” An amazing new essay in Smithsonian Magazine examines this phobia in depth (with lots of nightmare-inducing photos, of course), and attempts to trace its origins, as well as speculating on exactly when in history clowns suddenly went from happy to horrifying. The thesis, which includes input from several academic authorities, ventures back through recorded history...
- 9/10/2013
- by Gregory Burkart
- FEARnet
Abbey Braden Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy at All Tomorrow’s Parties in Asbury Park, N.J.
Will Oldham, also known as Bonnie “Prince” Billy, released a new album this week called “Wolfroy Goes to Town,” on the Drag City Label, and is currently on tour with a six-piece band and vocalist Angel Olsen. Oldham appeared at the All Tomorrow’s Parties Festival in Asbury Park last weekend, ending a night filled with hard rock (Shellac) and beatbox (Reggie Watts) with his...
Will Oldham, also known as Bonnie “Prince” Billy, released a new album this week called “Wolfroy Goes to Town,” on the Drag City Label, and is currently on tour with a six-piece band and vocalist Angel Olsen. Oldham appeared at the All Tomorrow’s Parties Festival in Asbury Park last weekend, ending a night filled with hard rock (Shellac) and beatbox (Reggie Watts) with his...
- 10/9/2011
- by Barbara Chai
- Speakeasy/Wall Street Journal
Bonnie "Prince" Billy told us to "Beware" in 2009 and furthermore sent us to "The Wonder Show of the World" with The Cairo Gang last year. He and that latter group have a little more output to project this year, with a new two-song single due on Feb. 22. "New Wonder" is the flip side of "Island Brothers'; it utilizes Will Oldham's delicate vocal features with the crackling, harmonic folk sounds of the Cairo Gang, led by Emmett Kelly (who has performed on Bpb's other records, like heartaching "The Letting Go"). The flickering music video to "New Wonder" is below. Now, I...
- 2/16/2011
- Hitfix
Whether through his continually changing moniker, Diy approach to releasing music or his newfound collaborations, singer-songwriter Will Oldham has spent his career constantly trying new things. After Oldham had played with guitarist Emmett Kelly on several records, his lovely 2010 release, The Wonder Show of the World, featured Kelly’s band, The Cairo Gang. Moving forward, the collaboration between these two will continue on the forthcoming Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy & The Cairo Gang “Island Brothers / New Wonder” 10”....
- 1/24/2011
- Pastemagazine.com
The latest Bonnie “Prince” Billy album elevates The Cairo Gang’s main man, Emmett Kelly, from bit player to key collaborator, making prominent use of the avant-folkie’s voice and guitar as they wind easily around Will Oldham’s. The Wonder Show Of The World relies equally on Oldham’s in-the-moment spontaneity and the kind of ghostly after-the-fact orchestrations that Kelly brings to his own work. The album-opener, “Troublesome Houses,” sets the tone, coming out rhymeless and rhythmless: Its hook is little more than a two-note guitar signature, joined by little wisps of sound, as though friends wandered by, dug ...
- 3/23/2010
- avclub.com
The Fort Lauderdale International Film Festival held a rare screening of a Christopher Plummer film, "Wind Across the Everglades" on Saturday, January 24 at Cinema Paradiso in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Plummer also attended the event and received a Lifetime Achievement award.
The showing was a rare occurrence for the film, which had very few showings in Los Angeles and New York in August and September of 1958. It has never been moved to DVD and has not been shown on television in recent decades. It was a onetime collaboration between director Nicholas Ray (Rebel Without a Cause) and screenwriter Budd Schulberg (On the Waterfront).
The night began with a showing of the 1958 movie, Plummer's second film in his movie career. He starred as Walt Murdock, a 19th-century Florida game warden who declares war on local bird poachers in the Everglades in the turn of the century in early Miami, Florida. Co-stars in the film include Burl Ives,...
The showing was a rare occurrence for the film, which had very few showings in Los Angeles and New York in August and September of 1958. It has never been moved to DVD and has not been shown on television in recent decades. It was a onetime collaboration between director Nicholas Ray (Rebel Without a Cause) and screenwriter Budd Schulberg (On the Waterfront).
The night began with a showing of the 1958 movie, Plummer's second film in his movie career. He starred as Walt Murdock, a 19th-century Florida game warden who declares war on local bird poachers in the Everglades in the turn of the century in early Miami, Florida. Co-stars in the film include Burl Ives,...
- 1/26/2009
- icelebz.com
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