Wednesday, May 09, 2007
On this day:

D.I. [finally] Go Pop

The arrival of Leigh the lodger (the erstwhile Victor S) has fired my musical synapses to the extent that I've been trawling my archives like some demented shuffle play sensei. One semi-forgotten treasure that came to the surface of consciousness was the band Disco Inferno, the group that, above all, inspired Simon Reynolds to coin the term Post-Rock (in a 1994 piece for The Wire if memory serves).
As a big fan of the Renmeister, of course I went out and bought D.I. Go Pop and played it fairly regularly for 18 months or so. Wasn't quite so keen on Technicolour, although it too has its moments (particularly 'When the story breaks'). By the time that album came out [1996], the band had split, seemingly washed up as the tide of Britpop broke.
Listening to Disco Inferno again now, they sound less knowingly futuristic than simply modern. You could even imagine them getting some chart action today (what's good enough for Hard-Fi, etc). Time for the return of Ian Crause and co.?

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Sound Pillow

Five euros in Stockline will get you one of these:

Sound Pillow (TM, patent pending):
Sounds like a dream!
A breakthrough sensation in personal audio!

Use the standard speaker jack to connect to virtually any audio source - Walkman; CD: Tape Player: TV: Radio.
Relax with your favorite audio selections without disturbing your favorite person. Sound Pillow(TM) is for your ears only. So, ease back and drift away with - Music; Meditation; Instructional Tapes; Recorded Literature.

Sound Pillow (TM) is ideal for:
Relaxation; Bedtime Stories for Children; Nighttime TV Viewing; Auto/Air Travel; Hospital and Nursing Home Patients; Personal Clock Radio Alarm.

Unique Sounds, Tiburon, CA 94920 USA

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Sunday, March 11, 2007
On this day:

Jimmy, donnez-moi les Gimmix!

In Mancheter a couple of weeks ago, you could barely walk 10 metres without seeing an ad for Artois Peeterman, a new addition to 'La Famille Artois'. As a Belgian resident I was both surprised an amused to see these ads. Surprised because I had never heard of Artois Peeterman before. Amused because the citizens of Leuven, the lovely city from which Stella Artois and its new offspring hail, are Dutch-speakers, not francophones. Brits ignorant of Belgium's language divide will doubtless sup up this marketing froth. In Flanders, questions would be asked in Parliament.
The food and drink industry in the UK loves a gimmick. This rule holds true all the way from Heston Blumenthal down to crisp manufacturers searching for one more novel flavour to tempt jaded snack munchers. In the booze sector, new variants of successful brands are the norm, from bottles of Fosters lager 'with a twist', to Stella's new children (Artois Bock is the other addition to the family, as this press release explains: http://www.artoischampionships.com/1/home/default.asp). It's all about market positioning: Stella, one of the three bog standard lagers sold everywhere here in Belgium (the others are Maes and Jupiler), used to be promoted as being 'Reassuringly Expensive' in adverts in the UK. Makes you wonder whether how much depth there is to the new-found interest in slow food, organic farming, etc? Just another gimmick being sold to people with no real knowledge of how food and drink is actually produced?

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