Tuesday, November 5, 2024

Stereophonics set to rock Sandringham with special guests Blossoms and Jake Bugg

Stereophonics are set to rock the Royal Sandringham Estate next year. The 'Maybe Tomorrow' rockers will be joined by...

Latest Posts

Oasis add five dates in South America to their huge comeback tour

Oasis will play two nights at the famous River Plate Stadium on the South American leg of their reunion tour.

Julian Casablancas hates The Strokes hit Last Nite

Julian Casablancas says The Strokes hit 'Last Nite' is "pretty dead to me". The 46-year-old musician has expressed his...

BLACKPINK’s Rosé has a ‘disgustingly vulnerable’ song in debut solo record

BLACKPINK star Rosé has included a "disgustingly vulnerable" track on her debut solo album 'Rosie'. The 27-year-old singer has...

Peter Hook and New Order pay tribute to Quincy Jones

Peter Hook and New Order have paid tribute to former collaborator Quincy Jones for "making us big in America".

Lou Reed was ‘terribly emotional’ as an artist

Lou Reed was a great songwriter because he was such an "emotional" man, his widow Laurie Anderson has claimed.
The former Velvet Underground frontman died in October 2013 at the age of 71 leaving behind a legacy of revered music from his time with the band and his five-decade spanning solo career including songs such as ‘I’m Waiting for the Man’, ‘Venus In Furs’, ‘Perfect Day’ and ‘Walk on the Wild Side’.
Avant-garde artist Laurie, 70, first met Reed in 1992 and was married to him from 2008 until his death in 2013 and looking back on his discography she believes his talent for composition came from him being open with his feelings.
In an interview with The Times newspaper, she said: "He was one of the few men I’ve ever met who could cry. Men don’t cry, it’s not allowed. But he was terribly emotional. Think of what he wrote – you don’t write that if you don’t feel it."
Laurie has been looking back on Reed’s work for new book ‘Do Angels Need Haircuts?’ which is based on a recording of his performance of he made on March 10, 1971 at St. Mark’s Church in-the-Bowery in New York City just before he embarked on his solo career at the age of 28.
Laurie.
Seeing how Reed constantly evolved as a musician his former wife is certain he would have embraced the new technology available to artists now and would have worked a lot with Virtual Reality.
She said: "VR takes my breath away. That’s another thing I know Lou would have really loved, VR. He would be so into this, he’s missing out."

Latest Posts

Oasis add five dates in South America to their huge comeback tour

Oasis will play two nights at the famous River Plate Stadium on the South American leg of their reunion tour.

Julian Casablancas hates The Strokes hit Last Nite

Julian Casablancas says The Strokes hit 'Last Nite' is "pretty dead to me". The 46-year-old musician has expressed his...

BLACKPINK’s Rosé has a ‘disgustingly vulnerable’ song in debut solo record

BLACKPINK star Rosé has included a "disgustingly vulnerable" track on her debut solo album 'Rosie'. The 27-year-old singer has...

Peter Hook and New Order pay tribute to Quincy Jones

Peter Hook and New Order have paid tribute to former collaborator Quincy Jones for "making us big in America".

Don't Miss

Coldplay play first concert without bassist Guy Berryman after he was ‘taken ill’

Coldplay played their first concert without bassist Guy Berryman after he was struck down with illness. The 'Fix You'...

Pet Shop Boys set for special performance with orchestra at MTV EMAs

Pet Shop Boys are set for a special performance with the Manchester Camerata at the MTV EMAs 2024. The...

Kylie Minogue used to find The Loco-Motion ‘so uncool’

Kylie Minogue used to find performing 'The Loco-Motion' "so uncool". The 56-year-old pop idol has her 1988 cover of...

Cast’s John Power predicts Oasis reunion tour will eclipse Knebworth

Cast's John Power hopes the Oasis reunion tour will be talked about for years to come like the Britpop legends' iconic Knebworth...

Matty Healy believes The 1975 were ‘hated’ for not being ‘heavy’

Matty Healy believes The 1975 were "hated" as they came through at a time when heavy "post-punk" music was popular.

Stay in touch

To be updated with all the latest news, offers and special announcements.