Here are a couple of trailers for some movies we here at Arm's Reach are looking forward to catching in the next couple of months.
First off is Michel Gondry's "Be Kind, Rewind", the tale of two video clerks who lose their entire stock and begin re-making the films themselves. Oh Michel, how does your wondeful mind work. It stars the usually "crazy" Jack Black, but don't let that put you off.
Next up is Wes Anderson's "The Darjeeling Limited", a movie about three brother's trying to re-forge their family bond and stars Anderson's usually troupe of actors with the addition of Adrian Brody. This will be an Arm's Reach favourite guaranteed.
This time it's fellow Anderson cohort Noah Baumbach's "Margot At The Wedding". He's managed to rope in some pretty big names (Jack Black again!) like Nicole Kidman for this story about the relationship between siblings. The guy likes family conflict.
And finally Todd Rohal's "The Guatemalan Handshake" - "A mysterious power failure in a small mountain town coincides with the disappearance of one of its most eccentric young residents. Mystery piles upon mystery as his family and friends search for him, fail, and ultimately try to forget about him, an undertaking that results in many unexpected, and in some cases bizarre, effects on the town's already peculiar community". This film received it's first screenings in the summer of 2006 in the US and no release date has been set for the UK, so keep checking as this looks like a great flick. It also stars Arm's Reach living legend Will Oldham. Yikes!
Friday, 31 August 2007
Pure gold on the silver screen
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Arms Reach Mark
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Wednesday, 29 August 2007
Feist On Letterman
Here's the lovely Leslie Feist performing "1 2 3 4" off her latest album 'The Reminder' on "The Late Show with David Letterman". The "acclaimed singer-songwriter" calls upon some very special friends as backing singers, with members from Broken Social Scene, New Pornographers, Grizzly Bear, The National and Mates Of State all pitching in to lend a hand. The result is quite spectacular, and David seems impressed too. Unfortunately, after lengthy discussions, Arm's Reach will not be posting Wyclef Jean's Late Show performance... this decision, I can tell you, was made with a heavy heart.
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Arms Reach Stephen
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Friday, 24 August 2007
Ice Ice Baby
Depending on which side of the fence you stand, this is either as good or as bad as it gets. Yes, it's Rick Wakeman's legendary King Arthur performance from Wembley Arena in 1975. Why legendary I hear you cry? Well, it was on ice for goodness sake! If anything deserves legendary status, then staging an entire conceptual performance in the realms of an ice rink is as good a reason as any! As 'Guinevere' skates gracefully, yet aimlessly around the stage, she is backed by a slightly comatose looking Wakeman as he struggles with multiple keyboards. Look closely and you'll see the bassist sporting some sort of triple necked DIY job. Nobody since has had the brains to combine both Butlins holiday camp with live progressive rock. Health and Safety procedures mean we may never see the likes of this again. Shame. Anyway, The Ramones arrived a year later, and the rest as they say is history!
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Arms Reach Stephen
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Thursday, 23 August 2007
Fleet Foxes

Welcome everyone to the wonderful world of Fleet Foxes. They're a five piece from Washington and oh my are they good. Imagine if Jim James was fronting the Great Lake Swimmers/Band of Horses and backed by a mountain choir. This may be way off but I'm very exciting about this band and cannot wait to hear a full length. Head over to their Myspace here now!(White Winter Hymnal is highly recommended).
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Arms Reach Mark
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11:19
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The Grevious Angel Returns Once More
There is a vault somewhere, I kind of 'Raiders Of The Lost Ark' style treasure chest, buried deep beneath the earth, that gets opened ever so often to satisfy and titillate hardcore fans of artists either deceased or no longer making music. This week, news broke of Amoeba Records releasing alt-country legend and all round genius Gram Parsons' lost material from a series of opening sets The Flying Burrito Brothers did for The Grateful Dead back in 1969. The venue was the legendary Avalon Ballroom in San Francisco, and the album's title will be called 'Gram Parsons Archives Vol. 1: Flying Burrito Brothers "Live" At The Avalon, 1969'.
The title's wording suggests there's more to come from Mr Parsons, and yes, I'm focusing on the "archives" and "vol. 1" bits here. Further releases will always be warmly welcomed, but something which fans are in severe need of is more visual footage of the great man himself. Sadly, television eluded Gram during his heyday and we're left to rely on grainy, hotchpotch efforts such as the one posted above. Still, it captures a man in his prime, albeit with peacock suits, an appalling disregard for the art of miming and a rather elaborate choice of head wear from Sneaky Pete on pedal steel guitar.
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Arms Reach Stephen
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Wednesday, 22 August 2007
I'm Waiting For My Band (Of Horses)
We are fast approaching a time of year where some of us tend to suffer from slumps, lethargy or downright grumpiness. It's a newish phenomenon which I like to call the 'pre autumnal blues'. There are various remedies for such symptoms, but health is not my forte, so instead I can only proclaim that help is well on it's way! Oh yes, and it comes in the shape of Band Of Horses' new album 'Cease To Begin' (pictured) which is due out on Oct 9th.
If you, and I presume you do, own their stunning debut 'Everything All The Time' from last year, then you too will be licking your lips with frenzied excitement. As it was last year's eponymous album which demonstrated remarkable maturity and competence, making it one of the most accomplished debut albums in years. Our good friends at TheLineOfBestFit have posted a live version of the third track 'No One's Gonna Love You' as a teaser. I simply haven't been this excited since opening my 'Night Freight' Hornby Train Set during Christmas, circa 91.
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Arms Reach Stephen
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Animal Collective sleep with eyes open.
I'm not sure if the above statement is true but I would hedge my bets that Animal Collective barely sleep. How else would you explain the never ending amount of new material they seem to be playing on their latest tour. This video (there are many others), taken from this year's Midi Festival on the French Riviera, shows the band playing yet another new song called "Walk Around", and it's an absolute golden egg. Hopefully this will see the light of day, release wise, on the follow up to one of this year's best album's so far, Strawberry Jam (I know it's a little early to be talking follow ups, but let a brother be excited).
On another note, completely Animal Collective related, Domino posted the video for their forthcoming single Peacebone yesterday and it's bananas, the monkey's bananas. See for yourself.....
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Arms Reach Mark
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Tuesday, 21 August 2007
Conan And The Mockasins

Although this year's Green Man festival suffered a spat of seriously crap weather, turning the usually beautiful landscape into a mud bath, it still managed to be incredibly enjoyable. And among the many great bands that played (there were many many), I found myself nodding considerably to the wonky bluesed out sounds of Conan and the Mockasins. Originally from New Zealand, the band now reside in London, obviously attracted by the weather, and they've just released a crunchy little 7" Sneaky Sneaky Dogfriend which can be purchased through their Myspace here. Think the Fiery Furnaces, Gallowsbird's Bark era but funnier.
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Arms Reach Mark
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Oh be who? They be Ohbijou.

Toronto based Ohbijou have recently been making my ears smile with their awesome debut Swift Feet For Troubling Times. They tread a similar path to that of fellow countrymen Arcade Fire but with their boy/girl sweet harmonies there is enough to stop you from pronouncing to the skies "Not another bloody Arcade Fire band". It's a solid album throughout, full of uplifting and joyous orchestral pop songs and can be purchased via the band's Myspace here. They're unsigned as of yet but I'd imagine in the next couple of months things will be very bella for the band.
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Arms Reach Mark
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Friday, 17 August 2007
Go Margo Go Go Go...
If you're enchanted by lost singer/songwriters that time once forgot, then fear not, as Arm's Reach is here to draw your attention to such folk of that variety. A recent jazz/folk revival has seen a host of female artists such as Vashti Bunyan, Anne Briggs and Judee Sill being given the reissue treatment, and in turn, a new set of keys to the pantheon of popular music. These artists all share strangely fascinating stories, which halted their careers during their very peek.
One artist who rarely gets mentioned is Margo Guryan, a songstress from New York who made the seminal 'Take A Picture' album in 1968, and then quit shortly after to focus on a career in teaching. Guryan, unlike her peers, was more Astrud Gilberto than Joni Mitchell. She specialised in light, jazz-tinged melodies that produced the kind of breezy pop we would associate with The Lovin Spoonful or The Fifth Dimension.
'Take A Picture', now considered a classic, sold disappointingly and thus failed to turn Guryan's talents from songwriter to performer. However, a whole host of stars, including Glen Campbell, Julie London and Mama Cass would later take her songs to the wider audience they deserved. Guryan's eponymous and only album 'Take A Picture' can be bought for $12 (six quid) by clicking here. Go on, add some music to your day!
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Arms Reach Stephen
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Wednesday, 15 August 2007
Gone, But Not Forgotten
Further on from our recent Tony Wilson obituary, we feel it's important to pay our respects to three more highly important figures of film and music who have sadly passed away within the past fortnight. Firstly there was the great Ingmar Bergman who passed away on July 30th.
Bergman was one of the true auteur's of European Cinema and helped influence many generations of filmmakers including Stanley Kubrick, David Lynch and Woody Allen. He had a distinctive style, and a tendency to focus on more sombre themes. However, his work always had heart and his subjects proved to be thought provoking and engaging. Bergman was fascinated by the human condition, and this was reflected by his intimate style of film making. He left a body of work that is second to none in a career spanning over fifty years.
On the same day, Italian filmmaker Michelangelo Antonioni, also died. Antonioni was most famous for his English language films such as Blow Up and the counter culture film Zabriskie Point. He would later go on to collect a Lifetime Achievement Academy Award in 1996.
Lastly, but by no means least, Lee Hazlewood sadly lost his fight with renal cancer on August the 4th. Hazlewood achieved a renaissance in recent years largely due to his work with Nancy Sinatra is the late 60s. He wrote her biggest hit 'These Boots Are Made For Walking' in 1966, but it's for their collaborations that he will be most fondly remembered. The 1968 album 'Nancy & Lee' (pictured) is considered a classic and contains the haunting duet 'Some Velvet Morning' which was recently covered by Primal Scream. Hazlewood was also a fine producer, and made a series of records with guitar legend Duane Eddy.
Arm's Reach would like to express our deepest sympathies to the family and friends of these extraordinary people who touched our lives with their films and music.
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Arms Reach Stephen
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Tuesday, 14 August 2007
Ye Olde Elfin Saddle
Elfin Saddle are named after a wild mushroom. Which may therefore give you an insight into how they might sound… traditional, earthy, who have an old, almost minstrel type quality to them. It has that sort of pastoral charm, which we would associate with the likes of A Hawk And A Hacksaw, Akron/Family and Horse Feathers. If Elfin Saddle were a pint of milk, you would have to buy it from a specialist organic food store. Are they worth the hassle? Click here and see for yourself.
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Arms Reach Stephen
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Friday, 10 August 2007
Tony Wilson R.I.P

Factory Record's founder Tony Wilson, today lost his battle with cancer, aged 57. Originally a television broadcaster in the 1970's, presenting So It Goes and Granada Reports, Tony went on to found Factory Records, home to Joy Division, New Order and Happy Mondays. Tony was also responsible for the Hacienda Nightclub, regarded as one of the most famous clubs in the late 80's. Considered by many as a pioneer and one of life's genuine music enthusiasts, Tony will be remembered for the impact he made on the music world. We here at Arm's Reach would like to extend our deepest sympathy's to Tony's family and friends. He will be missed.
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Arms Reach Mark
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Thursday, 9 August 2007
No Room At The Mohawk Lodge
Ok, so here’s the bad news... The Mohawk Lodge is all booked up this evening. They simply don’t any more rooms to allocate. However, there is hope as The Mohawk Lodge, the band, have just released their second album Wildfires in the US, and as a result are receiving a whole lotta buzz Stateside. This fine Canadian four-piece, combine soul, folk and indie rock to make some pretty incredible records . It’s a sound seeped in blue colllar traditions, and the production demonstates this magnificently. Feel free to hear for yourself by clicking on this link.
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Arms Reach Stephen
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Wednesday, 8 August 2007
Arm's Rant #1: V Fest
Ok, lets face it; we are currently in the midst of what can be described as a festival boom culture. There's simply never been as many. Every year another one is hatched, in some place you’ve never heard of, with a title using a word that you may not have thought existed. So all in all this is good news, right? Well, yes and no… without the interest there’d never be so many festivals around, so with more people interested in seeing live music, this can only be a good thing, surely? The trouble is that the live music itself has become a sort of secondary consideration. The bigger festivals such as Glastonbury, Isle of Wight and the Carling Weekend sell out within minutes of tickets going on sale. This is even without punters giving a moment’s thought to who’ll actually be playing.
This leads me on to the latest upcoming major festival, V Festival, which starts this Saturday. Virgin Festival recently launched in America (see here), and by all accounts was received with warmth across the pond. So why was this? Well, to my shock and amazement the line-up was actually quite good. Surprising for a festival who’s brand is synonymous with MOR and Dad Rock. The likes of TV On The Radio (pictured), LCD Soundsystem, Booka Shade, Peter, Bjorn and John, Modest Mouse and The Beastie Boys all played on the Saturday, which was headlined by newly reformed The Police.
The Sunday featured Dan Deacon in the Dance Tent, Interpol, MIA, Spoon, Explosions In The Sky, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Smashing Pumpkins and the Wu-Tang Clan. So I’m left scratching my head thinking ‘this is not the V Fest that I’ve become accustomed to… where’s the safe, bland indie rock… in fact, where’s Snow Patrol?’ A quick glance at this weekend’s V Fest answers these questions, and rest assured, normal service has been resumed. The British V Fest and its American counterpart may share the same name, but they are poles apart in their respective line-ups.
Paulo Nutini, The Fray, KT Tunstall, Kasabian, Mika, Jet, Pink and resident house band Snow Patrol are all featured this weekend. Other lowlights include Damien Rice piping Iggy and the Stooges to headline the JJB/Puma Arena and Bright Eyes headlining the ‘Virgin Mobile Union’ stage. An act, which sees the once, loved Conor Oberst, laying down his Jedi light sabre and officially turning to the dark side. It all makes for depressing reading for music lovers, as this could be, for a festival that considers itself a fairly credible live event, the worst line up for a big name festival in living memory. The website invites you to view the ‘line-up at a glance’… “glance” being the operative word before you start to realise “hang on, am I being short changed?”
Even Amy Winehouse, British music’s current 'jewel in the crown', played the Baltimore V as we get palmed off with the likes of The Goo Goo Dolls?! Only added to the bill for that Iris song which will be belted out by hundreds of drunken, balding men, possibly in jester hats, at this weekend’s event. A free ticket, to witness this, or the option of receiving unnecessary root canal dental work, would be a choice literally too close to call.
So why is the line-up so rubbish then? Well, it’s not up to me to answer that. The bigwigs at Virgin are the ones accountable, as it is they who have the insight into how it all works. For they know, as well as I, that the whole thing is highly lucrative. The demand is huge, so whoever plays sadly becomes irrelevant. The majority of these types of festivalgoers are there for the event and not the music. They go to tell their friends, to post pictures on their myspace and to get blind drunk on overpriced alcohol. No doubt, once it’s all over, they will reapply for next year’s experience when headliners include Color Me Badd, The Krankies and The Real Milli Vanilli.
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Arms Reach Stephen
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Tuesday, 7 August 2007
Sea Wolf

I know you're thinking "Not another wolf band, what's the point anymore", you need to just relax, you're completely over reacting. Los Angeles based Sea Wolf are a welcomed addition to the gang with their delightfully breezy take on things. The two songs currently up on their Myspace (taken from their forthcoming debut "Leaves In The River") career gently but with purpose and feel instantly familiar. Go and see for yourselves here and be sure to get their debut album (out on Dangerbird Records) when it comes out on September 25th. Love animals? We still do.
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Arms Reach Mark
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Underneath The Floorbirds
The Floorbirds are a boy/girl duo that is clearly living in a completely different era to the rest of us... 1930s America to be precise. They make music that belongs from the dustbowl era, though this is neither novelty nor parody. Members Daniel and Alyssa combine their deep love for blues, roots and folk to make gentle, beautifully crafted interpretations of old time standards and new material. Hailing from Minneapolis, the duo gives the sense of being true scholars in their field. It is groups like these that help keep the candle burning for American folk music, and for this, Arm's Reach simply tip our hats.
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Arms Reach Stephen
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08:17
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Monday, 6 August 2007
Deacon set to Spaz Out in Europe

Baltimore based keyboard spaz Dan Deacon is out on tour in Europe, as we speak. There are a number of dates starting tonight in London and you'd be a darn fool to miss out. The live show is said to be a wild occasion and spazzing out is compulsory. We'll see you there...
August 6th - London, UK @ The End
August 7th - Brighton, UK @ Greenhouse Effect
August 8th - London, UK @ Cargo
August 9th - Liverpool, UK TBC
August 10th - Manchester, UK @ Barge party
August 11th - Bristol, UK @ Thekla
August 13th - Norwich, UK @ Norwich Arts Centre
August 14th - Paris, FR @ Fleche D'or
August 16th - London, UK @ Barden's Boudoir
August 17th - Dublin, IE @ Crawdaddy
August 18th - Cork, IE @ Liquid Lounge
August 19th - Galway, IE @ Roisin Dubh
August 22nd - Tampere, FI @ Klubi
August 23rd - Helsinki, FI @ Redrum
August 24th - London, UK @ MacBeth
August 25th - Nottingham, UK @ Stealth
August 27th - Edinburgh, UK @ T on the Fringe
August 28th - Glasgow, UK TBC
And if you haven't had a chance to hear Dan's excellent new album Spiderman Of The Rings gather your metal circles together and get a copy. Wham City baby!
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Arms Reach Mark
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14:10
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Arm's Reach Brings Us Closer Together

There are many strains, stresses and distractions in life that can prevent one from finding solace in important times. Arm's Reach is built on solid principles, and is here to facilitate all ages in every walk of life. We firmly believe that simply logging on to Arm's Reach each day, can reinvigorate one's life so much that you'll literally be bouncing out of bed each morning. Of course, no scientific research has been compiled to back this up, but we consider this a minor detail. So c'mon net heads... let's get blogging!
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Arms Reach Stephen
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Friday, 3 August 2007
Merseybeat's Buried Treasure
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Arms Reach Stephen
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03:20
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Wednesday, 1 August 2007
You Old Believers

Portland, Oregon may just be another "place in the USA" to us UK folks, but to some it's been a rather neat little goldmine for great music. Old Believers, Nelson Kempf and Keeley Boyle will hopefully join the ranks of Portland's finest if their current EP is anything to go by. The duo craft sweet folky tales and know how to hold a note. They currently have three songs to download on their Mespace page (free) here and a mini album available through Fine Romantic Recordings (also on Myspace). Believe us.
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Arms Reach Mark
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15:23
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The Tallest Man On Earth

Although for the longest time it seems Scandanavia has been churning out some of the best music in the past five years, it's hard to believe that the cogs still appear to be greased and the machine is still running. Every other day I stumble upon yet another great band/act like Sweden's The Tallest Man On Earth. An obvious lover of all things blues and folk The Tallest Man On Earth plays a nifty six string and manages to keep things interesting without being to nostalgic. There seems to be very little information about The Tallest Man On Earth but we do know he's signed to Gravitation in Sweden and his self titled ep can be purchased here. Sound good.
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Arms Reach Mark
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The Sea & Cake Make Some Illinoise!
This is small segment of The Sea & Cake's blinding set at this year's Pitchfork Festival in Chicago, Illinois. This is the band on top form after recently returning from a three year hiatus to release their latest LP 'Everybody' to considerable critical acclaim.

Here at Arm's Reach we like to spoil our readers and that is why we're posting a whole FIFTY SIX (yes, you heard right) seconds of the performance. So, yes, Christmas has officially come early. We also presume our audience has under a minute to spare in order to immerse themselves in a taster of a band once again reaching their zenith. Please click on the link below to view.
Click Here: The Sea and Cake Live at Pitchfork Fest
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Arms Reach Stephen
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