Aumente o volume e Mind The Gap
Posted in: UncategorizedNovidades musicais da terra da Rainha. : )
Keane, Strangeland
O ex-trio Keane volta à cena depois do trágico Night Train, de 2010, para anunciar seu novo disco, Strangeland. Vendo o trailer de divulgação, dá um alívio para fãs do som mais antigo da banda (como eu): os trechos que eles mostram revelam aquele mesmo cuidado e apuro melódico que os catapultou para o mundo com o megahit Somewhere Only We Know, lá em 2004. Se o álbum é mesmo uma volta à boa forma, só o tempo vai dizer. Dia 7 de maio o disquinho chega nas prateleiras britânicas, vamos ver quando chega por aqui.
Graham Coxon, What’ll It Take
O mestre Graham Coxon, guitarrista do Blur, se juntou com Ninian Doff e produziu um interessantíssimo clipe para sua nova música. Feito com trechos de videos mandados por 85 fãs de 22 países, é uma divertida colagem que se passa nas ruas de Londres. Como se não bastasse a sacada visual, a música também é divertidíssima.
The Ting Tings, Sounds From Nowheresville
O duo dançante de Manchester finalmente lança seu segundo disco 4 anos depois de uma estreia bombástica em 2008, quando seu single That’s Not My Name invadiu as paradas inglesas vertiginosamente e lhes rendeu até uma indicação para o Grammy de melhor banda revelação daquele ano. Agora, Sounds From Nowheresville abandona um pouco o lado pop-chiclete dos primórdios da dupla para visitar referências mais densas, como Beastie Boys.
Field Music, Plumb
Para quem gosta de rock progressivo, o Field Music é uma salvação da nova era musical. Pra mim, eles são o Gentle Giant dos anos 2000 e já têm uma discografia sólida e respeitável. Este Plumb, seu quarto álbum, foi lançado com pouco alarde mas muita ansiedade por parte dos fãs desta banda que esbanja técnica e deixa muito neguinho-que-nao-toca-nada-mas-adora-fazer-careta no chinelo. Pode soar meio estranho no começo, mas vale a pena.
(Union Jack por Lord Colin Oneal)
Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
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Industry verdict on Tesco chief Richard Brasher’s shock exit: ‘Tesco has forgotten what made it grow in the first place’
Posted in: UncategorizedAfter news that Tesco’s UK and Ireland chief executive Richard Brasher will leave the business in July, industry commentators assess what the supermarket needs to do to turn its fortunes around, with questions over whether its once core growth strategies are now delivering diminishing returns.
Police Try To Intimidate Occupy
Posted in: UncategorizedAre authorities preparing to suppress May uprising?
From Adbusters Blog
The earliest evidence that federal authorities in the United States were aware of Occupy Wall Street and preparing to squash it comes from a September 1 Department of Homeland Security briefing. Warning of an upcoming protest on Wall Street, the leaked memo explained that the unique conjunction of culture jammers with politicized hackers was cause for alarm. “The ideologies set forth by Adbusters seem to align at a basic level with the stated intent of Anonymous’ newly adopted Hacktivist agenda … These protests are highly likely to occur,” the report declared. We also know now that the FBI was investigating Occupy at least two days before occupiers seized Zuccotti. In a leaked chat log Sabu, an FBI informant and prominent member of LulzSec, a hacktivist affinity group, pumped for information about Anonymous’s plans for Occupy. He is recorded asking: “Lets talk about OpWallStreet. I plan on going to Wall Street, do we have anything planned?” Shortly after, despite these counterintelligence efforts, Occupy Wall Street was born and Zuccotti Park became the spiritual center of an international movement.
Now, as the international movement gears up for a major escalation in May with myriad big bangs – a May Day General Strike, anarchic swarms in #OCCUPYCHICAGO, an international blast on May 12 and an effort to retake the squares on May 15, a #LAUGHRIOT on May 18, #OCCUPYCAMPDAVID the next day along with major protests against NATO on May 20 and 21 – stories of aggressive intimidation tactics are beginning to emerge from New York City. In a recent article in the New York Times, occupiers described frequent harassment and interrogation by NYPD intelligence and FBI: “police officers or detectives have been posted outside buildings where private meetings were taking place, have visited the homes of organizers and have questioned protesters arrested on minor charges … one protester says he was questioned by a police detective and an agent from the Federal Bureau of Investigation.” Meanwhile, authorities are demanding access to the Twitter accounts of prominent occupiers like Jeff Rae and logs of occupy websites. And in Florida, Occupy Miami was raided without cause by paramilitary police on March 13.
On reddit, one activist argued the situation is far worse than is being reported in the news, claiming to have encountered:”DHS bugging of common meeting grounds; DHS paying individuals to attend our meetings and cause disruption; police breaking into property, creating fire hazards, then getting protestors living there evicted for said fire hazard; police breaking into private property and installing surveillance equipment in people’s homes. In at least one instance they left it obvious enough to leave a message; police arresting individuals solely to have them identify photographs of other occupiers; manipulating our personal bank accounts, such as canceling our access to our own accounts.”
Taken together with news of the authoritarian new law H.R. 347, these sinister stories suggest that authorities in the United States are preparing to aggressively disrupt Occupy’s May spring offensive.
Weigh in below and tell us how you think the movement can outmaneuver these authoritarian efforts to shut down our people-power.
Radioplayer marks first year with new apps and international expansion
Posted in: UncategorizedRadioplayer, the cross-industry online radio initiative, is marking its first anniversary by “smashing expectations” for user numbers and with plans to roll out mobile apps and expand the service outside of the UK.
Yazoo targets young men with £2m brand overhaul
Posted in: UncategorizedYazoo, the milkshake brand owned by FrieslandCampina, is overhauling its brand strategy to focus on its audience of young male drinkers, as it takes on rival Frijj with a £2m TV and social media campaign.
Yazoo targets young adult males in £2m brand overhaul
Posted in: UncategorizedYazoo, the milkshake brand owned by FrieslandCampina, is overhauling its brand strategy to focus on its audience of young male drinkers, as it takes on rival Frijj with a £2m TV and social media campaign.
GM win is evidence we compete at top level, says Aegis chief
Posted in: UncategorizedAfter unveiling Aegis’ sector-leading 2011 growth this morning, Jerry Buhlmann claimed his group has the credentials to deal with clients at the top level and digital is making advertising less discretionary for brands.
Two Years Into Tablet Editions, Conde Nast Begins Regular Readership Reports
Posted in: UncategorizedSky brings back 60s ads for Mad Men launch
Posted in: UncategorizedSky Atlantic is celebrating the launch of series five of the US drama series Mad Men on 27 March with ad breaks that will contain only 60s commercials.
Platt, Waller and Rickard launch media consultancy Rickards3
Posted in: UncategorizedAegis Media’s former trading director Steve Platt has teamed up with the managing partner of Rickards Media, David Rickard and Kevin Waller, to launch media consultancy Rickards3.
DDB’s Nick Fox to leave the agency
Posted in: UncategorizedNick Fox, the chief client officer at DDB UK, is stepping down from his position.
Gatwick calls pitch as adspend climbs
Posted in: UncategorizedGatwick Airport is looking for agencies to handle its above- and below-the-line accounts ahead of an expected increase in spend.
Mother beats two to win HTC global advertising business
Posted in: UncategorizedHTC, the smartphone manufacturer, has appointed Mother to create global brand ideas across its estimated £100 million ad business.
PPA confirms Hunt, Soutar and Rashbass in speaker line up
Posted in: UncategorizedThe Professional Publishers Association (PPA) has announced the line-up for Publishing+, its annual conference, taking place on 9 May, which will address the key topics influencing magazine and media publishers.
Arena unveils new management team
Posted in: UncategorizedArena Media has restructured its management team after key departures and the acquisition of Work Research.