Kasabian

Kasabian
Buy tickets Tue 16 Feb 10

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1 Underdog 472218
2 Fire 445166
3 Club Foot 328398
4 Where Did All The Love Go? 315396
5 Processed Beats 200382
6 Reason Is Treason 172658
7 Empire 204651
8 Shoot The Runner 189204
9 Cutt Off 126890
10 Me Plus One 120299
11 Secret Alphabets 135149
12 Fast Fuse 201675
13 Swarfiga 147209
14 Running Battle 103648
15 Thick as Thieves 166115

No introduction needed. I'm sure you've heard the Oasis comparisons, but there's more to them than the north west swagger. They are a glorious synth-tinged melting pot of indie rock that will caress the eardrum, more akin to the sonic rock of Primal Scream. Sure to be headlining festivals in the summer, so check them out in more intimate surroundings.


La Roux

La Roux
Buy tickets Tue 16 Feb 10

Ladies and gentlemen, please take your seats, for the show is about to begin. ‘The red haired one’ will now start making electro-pop mean something again. Elly Jackson is 20 years old, she has a short ginger bob, freckles, a nose that makes your heart turn to a puddle, but more importantly a way with melodies that makes everything else around you completely vanish. The Brixtonite’s experiencing all the things girls of that age tend to; heartbreak, frustration, wonderment, invincibility and fragility. But unlike most girls her age, Elly has a staggering ability to channel all these feelings and experiences into wondrous blasts of crystal-clean ear candy that hit the listener with instant resonance. But La Roux (French for ‘the red haired one’) isn’t about disposable dancefloor fodder or meaningless pap. “It’s not that I can’t listen to music without words that mean something, I do all the time. It’s just not the kind of music I want to make. I’ve cried between vocal takes. I want to connect with people at that level.” Whilst her weekends may be full of moshing around slippery sweat pits to the likes of Justice and Boyz Noize, her creative waters are stirred most by the artistry of the original electro chart pioneers like Eurythmics and Depeche Mode. Now the baby-faced siren is preparing a similar triple pronged attack; targeting charts, clubs and hearts. 

 Elly hasn’t always ruled an off-kilter world of synths. Growing up her father’s daughter musically speaking, her house-husband dad made sure his little girl was versed in the kind of heartbreak earthquakes only a poppa bear could. And so, the high-school class clown grew up strumming along to soul-searching sage’s like Nick Drake and Neil Young, starting points that still ground her today. On pals requests, six form college saw her acoustic bedroom compositions getting tentative, inebriated airings at the odd house party, one of which alerted a local sound engineer who began feverishly calling every producer he’d ever known at 4am. One of the producers happened to be Ben Langmaid, an up-and-coming London studio kingpin. Upon hearing her sultry serenades, he immediately vowed to drop all other projects, devoting his energies solely to Ms Jackson, and so the creative partnership behind La Roux was complete. All Elly needed now was a final nudge of inspiration to kick her vision into overdrive. This came courtesy of a small black box with Korg emblazoned on the front. She happened to pick-up the keyboard in Ben’s studio and began tinkering one restless afternoon. In something of an epiphany, the synth inspired them to write new tunes and rework older songs energised by her latest discovery. Before long the six string ballads had mutated into taught robot rhythms and surges of synthesised symphonics. 

 The electro rebirth saw the duo immerse themselves in the world of synths, digging up classic tunes from the likes of Blancmange, and caning new school heroes like The Knife and Chromeo. Her musical coming-of-age also coincided with a social one, as she threw herself into London’s warehouse party culture. Soon her clubbing endeavours were seeping into her work. The result of this gestation period are a spread of tracks where a timeless electronic utopia and a Noughties’ head-nod danceability is underpinned by a classic sense of songwriting and a painstaking way with words. It’s a collision that evokes the heart-palpitations of Jelly Bean era Madonna, but stands alone, loud and proud in 2008’s crop of cool new pop. It’s a collision that has already made notorious Myspace anthems of tracks like the snaking ‘In For The Kill’, cued up a highly anticipated release for the defiant ‘Quicksand’ on taste-making French electro label Kitsune, and earned her signature on a long-term contract for both Polydor and Klaxons manager. Ultimately, it’s a collision that’s made ‘the red haired one’ unquestionably one of 2009’s sure-fire new Brit stars.


Calvin Harris

Calvin Harris
Buy tickets Tue 16 Feb 10

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1 Ready For The Weekend 157809
2 Flashback 221781
3 The Girls 85515
4 I'm Not Alone 157911
5 You Used To Hold Me 173256
6 Acceptable In The 80's 82964
7 Stars Come Out 100755
8 The Rain 95823
9 Colours 57872
10 Merrymaking At My Place 49430
11 Blue 64208
12 Yeah Yeah Yeah La La La 57505
13 Relax 52744
14 Neon Rocks 37776
15 Limits 51851

If you're a music fan of the more electronic variety, then you should know that Calvin Harris has got a new album coming out soon. He paved the way with such infectious tunes as Colours and The Girls, but his recent collaboration with Dizzee Rascal on Dance Wiv Me further escalated him into stardom. The Scottish dance deity will be showcasing the new material on the road and will be toast of the festivals whether you're a dance fan or not.



Places Nearby

Jasmine (Thai) - 16 Goldhawk Road. Firm favourite with Empire staff and touring personnel alike.

Patio Restaurant (Polish) - 5 Goldhawk Road. Highly regarded Polish restaurant. Watch out for those vodka shots though...