A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | 0..9
Artists by Genre Top Charts

Latest news

03/13/2008 03:33 PM
Study shows music affects moods, students agree
The Mozart effect is one that has been around for a long time. Studies suggest that when a child under age 3 is subject to the music of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, their brain development is increased.Whether or not the stories and studies prove anything, the question remains: Does music have an effect on people?Psychology professor [...]
03/13/2008 03:33 PM
Keeping Music Real
Music is a powerful thing. It evokes feelings and has the power to bring people together. Music is also a way for people to express themselves and share ideas, whether through poetic lyrics or throbbing anthems. But today, artists are not known for their music, but for how extravagant their outfits are and how many [...]
03/13/2008 03:33 PM
Rising rap star doesn't need RIAA
You won’t hear up-and-coming rap star Flo Rida griping about fans pilfering his songs on P2P sites, or complain that technology is hurting the music industry. Don’t talk to him about so-called digital divides either. As one of rap music’s fastest rising stars, Rida, 28, is new enough to music success that fans are still precious [...]
03/13/2008 11:34 AM
A lesson in sharing: the music of today plays the give-and-take game
Now, more than ever, North American bands and music fans are becoming more open to music originating somewhere outside the continent. Sri Lankan-born M.I.A.’s unique sound rules the club scene, while the Afro-pop inspired Vampire Weekend have seen their debut album enter the Billboard Top 20. New York City’s Yeasayer have also recently garnered acclaim [...]
03/13/2008 11:34 AM
Two short notes on pop music
“Romany Soup” is absolutely classic: haunting, hypnotic, melodic. Please do get started on Bolan. Please do. (And don’t you dare leave out “One Inch Rock”.)

Just Added

Dante : The Inner Circle

Dj Remo : You Can Dance

Electronic - Various Artists : Dj Manu Vulcano - 4 Sesiones (22-1-2008) Tania Vulcano Dc10 Ibiza

Pop - Various Artists : March Hits 2008 Cd 2

Ryoji Ikeda : Test Pattern

Deep Purple : Purple Around The World Live 2008 CD1

Dragonfly : Alma Irae

Edgar Joel : Oro Salsero 20 Exitos, Vol. 2 (Cd 1)

Laurent Wolf : Wash My Body


Orson

Orson
Artist: Orson
Genre(s): Indie
Rock

Orson Biography

Meet the best new band of 2006… from Hollywood, California – Orson.

Orson play what their singer Jason Pebworth calls simply “two-guitar power-pop”, or, equally simply, “rock and roll that girls can dance to.”

The first song that Orson released to the public, No Tomorrow, was the most downloaded iTunes Single Of The Week in Apple’s history.

Radio 1 played No Tomorrow and hailed Orson as “the missing link between The Rolling Stones and The Scissor Sisters.”

The UK’s biggest-selling music magazine, Q, listed No Tomorrow as one of its top 50 downloads of December 2005, and described the song as “one long hook”.

And when Orson made their live debut in the UK at the In The City seminar in Manchester, they were immediately signed to a major publishing deal with Universal.

As Q editor Paul Rees states emphatically, “The reason Orson are a band to make you sit up and take notice is simple: they write great songs.”

Orson formed in 2000 around a core of Jason Pebworth and guitarist George Astasio. The group took its name from Hollywood legend Orson Welles. There are two reasons for this. Firstly, they admired the great man’s work (Jason: “Orson Welles was a maverick who took a lot of shit and made a lot of enemies yet his art stood the test of time.”). Secondly, they saw a sandwich named after him and reckoned that the name just sounded good. “We were in a little coffee shop in Hollywood,” Jason recalls, “and there was a list of sandwiches: the Greta Garbo, the Clark Gable, the Orson Welles. That got me thinking…” (Note: the sandwich was filled with Gouda cheese and pickles, and none of the band ate one.)

Over time, the Orson name has taken on greater significance. Jason explains, “We’re having a little fun with the fact that we’re based in Hollywood. There are so many bands from Hollywood, and none of them seem to have any sense of being from here. I love the mystique that this place has. That’s why we wear hats everywhere, as a nod to the Old Hollywood.”

Jason Pebworth is an unconventional rock singer. Before putting Orson together, he performed for several years in various theatre productions. He writes songs on piano, having never learned to play guitar, although he often wishes he had, because, of course, “it’s more authentically rock and roll”. And his influences are a mixture of… well, just about anything and everything. “I love Broadway tunes,” he declares, “and I love Black Sabbath.”

Growing up in Texas, Jason “absorbed” soft rock – Hall & Oates, The Doobie Brothers, Steely Dan – plus Memphis and Philly soul. The first album Jason bought was Queen’s The Game (“That album blew my little blond head off!” he laughs. “They were toying with post-punk and disco and it sounded terrific.”). During his college years, Nirvana inspired him to think about being in a band of his own. Obsessions with Jeff Buckley’s Grace and Radiohead’s OK Computer followed. And now… “As a band, we’re into Led Zeppelin, Flaming Lips, Beck, Bjork. I’m a huge ELO fan… Basically,” Jason confesses, “I’ve stolen from every human being that ever wrote a song!”

Jason sums up the Orson sound like this: “We play guitar rock but we have that rump-shaking quality to our rhythm section, like an R&B feel. When you listen to Led Zeppelin, for all their rockin’, they made you want to dance. And that’s what we’re aiming for. It’s great to see people dancing at a rock and roll show. And if you can get girls into your music, guys will follow…”

Orson’s songs are mostly about girls, about falling in or falling out of love. They form what is essentially a diary of Jason’s own love life. “I torture myself over lyrics,” he says. “Ultimately, the best stuff, the funniest lines, come out of the most heartbreaking times. To me, Elvis Costello is one of the great lyricists. He can make something really funny out of something truly tragic. I like that approach. It’s like the great comedians.”

No Tomorrow is just one of the stories Jason has to tell. “It’s about when I first moved out to LA,” he says. “I was seeing this girl and she’d just stopped drinking. I was madly in love with her and I was pretty sure she was in love with me. But we went to a rave – they still called them raves then. I told her we could still go and not get fucked up. But all of her friends were there, totally wasted. We drank a lot of Red Bull and saw how silly everyone looked. And then we realised there was nothing between us! The next morning it was over. That’s why it’s called No Tomorrow.

Jason remains philosophical about the girl in No Tomorrow. “It’s OK,” he laughs. “I got a good song out of it!” And with Orson, it’s all about the songs.
Cover Title Year Tracks Download album
Orson : Culture Vultures
Culture Vultures 2007 11 Download album  

Orson : Bright Idea
Bright Idea 2006 10 Download album  




Google Yahoo MSN Download Mp3