Labyrinth Fans Want Tilda Swinton to Replace David Bowie as Jareth in Labyrinth 2

With TriStar Pictures steadily moving forward with their plans for Labyrinth 2, many fans have taken to social media to campaign for Tilda Swinton as the new Goblin King. When Doctor Strange director Scott Derrickson signed on to direct Labyrinth 2 this week, fan discussions ensued online with many wondering who might replace the late David Bowie in his iconic role as Jareth. Before long, Swinton’s name was brought into the conversation, and now the fan interest behind the idea has been quickly picking up steam online.

“So I just learned that a sequel to Labyrinth is being put into production. Putting aside the fact that this makes me feel despair, we can all agree that Tilda Swinton should play Jareth, right?” one big fan of the original tweeted, echoing the thoughts of many others. “Tilda Swinton as Jareth, or I’m out,” another fan bluntly states. Although the recent update on the sequel has brought about an outpouring of fan support for the potential casting of Swinton as Jareth, it’s also apparent some fans have been wanting this for years, as another four-year-old tweet reads: “The ONLY acceptable reboot of Labyrinth would be casting Tilda Swinton as Jareth.”

This week, it was reported that Scott Derrickson will be directing Labyrinth 2 with Maggie Levin penning the screenplay. Lisa Henson of The Jim Henson Company is also on board to produce with Brian Henson executive producing. In the original movie, Connelly co-starred with Bowie as a 16-year-old girl navigating her way through an otherworldly maze to rescue her younger brother. No plot details have yet been revealed about the sequel, and it’s also unclear at this time if producers are planning to bring back Connelly as Sarah Williams.

If the character will be a part of the sequel, casting the new Goblin King just might be the biggest challenge Derrickson and the producers will face with Labyrinth 2. Tilda Swinton isn’t a name that immediately came to mind for me, but I have to admit that it’s a fantastic idea and I really can’t think of anyone who could do better. Because it’s now clear that many of the fans of the original movie are on board with Swinton in the role, hopefully her name will be taken into consideration.

Tilda Swinton and David Bowie have actually shared the screen before, as the former played the latter’s wife in a promotional video for Bowie’s song, “The Stars (Are Out Tonight).” It can only help Swinton in hypothetically taking over his classic role as Jareth if she’s worked with him and gotten to know him on a personal level. Of course, Swinton has experience working with Derrickson as well, as also she appeared in Doctor Strange. All of the right pieces are here for the potential casting to happen, so let’s hope that it does. Courtesy of David Bowie on YouTube, y ou can watch the music video with Swinton and Bowie below, and straight from Twitter, you can also check out some of the fan campaigning for Swinton to become the new Goblin King.

So I just learned that a sequel to LABYRINTH is being put into production.

Putting aside the fact that this makes me feel despair, we can all agree that Tilda Swinton should play Jareth, right?

— Witney Seibold (@WitneySeibold)

Tilda Swinton as Jareth, or I’m out. https://t.co/RmCvw5BNWi

— Jesse (@chop_on_top)

The ONLY acceptable reboot of Labyrinth would be casting Tilda Swinton as Jareth

— Wash Your Hands Say Yeah! (@mattycurry)

I don’t think there should be a Labyrinth remake. But if there must be one, my vote for Goblin King is Tilda Swinton.

— Eryn (@ErynEarls)

I know people are saying no one can play the #GoblinKing other than David Bowie but what about Tilda Swinton?#Labyrinthpic.twitter.com/qroGgAEifi

— sean brett (@BaconKnight)

At first I was dismayed that there would even be a sequel to Labyrinth without David Bowie. But @scottderrickson knows what he’s doing and imma just put this out there: Tilda Swinton as a Goblin Queen. Yeah? Yeah.

— You Wouldn’t Know Him (@MKP0tter)

Tilda Swinton should be Jareth/Bowie in the new Labyrinth film, or no one. That’s the choice we have.

— Will Riker (@TheHayleighB)

Make Tilda Swinton the new Goblin King in the Labyrinth sequel, you cowards.

— Paul Hagan (@thepaulhagan)

So Tilda Swinton is being cast as Jareth in the #Labyrinth sequel right? pic.twitter.com/9Qvf0ztwAK

— Dallas King (@DallasKing1138)

Tilda Swinton hears she is being considered for Labyrinth sequel pic.twitter.com/tq5psZX883

— The Bends (@benedictm)

This content was originally published here.

David Bowie at the Music Hall as you’ve never seen him before… in colour – Evening Express

It was one of the most iconic and historic gigs to take place in the Music Hall – May 16 in 1973, David Bowie on his Ziggy Stardust tour.

Many people are familiar with the old black and white image of Bowie, lunging forward as he belts out a number to a packed audience of adoring fans.

But today we can reveal never-before-seen colour photographs of that memorable concert, taken by a teenager in the audience who managed to dodge security to snap away at the front of the stage.

They show Bowie, dressed in a red jumpsuit, as he was morphing into Aladdin Sane, the unmissable frescos of the Music Hall behind him.

Other pictures show Spiders From Mars guitarist Mick Ronson, in full throttle at the height of the gig – the Music Hall’s organ visible in the background.

These snapshots of a moment in time were taken by a then 17-year-old Doug Anderson.

Doug, now 63, takes up the tale of how he captured these remarkable shots.

“I had to avoid the security folk to get up to the front to take the pictures,” said Doug, an aviation agent at Aberdeen International Airport.

“But at the end, the band shouted all the folk to come up the front and I got a couple more. It was one of those old-fashioned Kodak cameras, with the revolving flashbulb.”

Doug remembers the exhilarating atmosphere of the concert.

“It was packed to the roof, just mobbed.

“Bowie was just his usual flamboyant self. There were a few costume changes he went through. He had that red jumpsuit, then he came on in what was almost like hotpants, but it was a zip-up suit.”

Doug remembers that Bowie actually played two shows at the Music Hall that day – one at 6.30pm the other at 9pm – and he went to both.

“It was exactly the same show the second time around as well. I thought he might have mixed it up.

“I saw it advertised in the paper that there were two on the same night and I thought ‘I’m going to have to have some of that’. I remember paying very, very little for the tickets.”

“I had a few of his records and I quite liked the Ziggy Stardust album. That was the final tour of Ziggy Stardust. I didn’t know that at the time. He only announced that at Hammersmith. The band didn’t even know, apparently. So I was quite lucky to catch it.”

Doug said that at that point in time, he had little inkling Bowie would become the global icon he did.

“You didn’t know what he was going to do next. You never did.”

It sparked a lifelong passion for concerts in the Granite City that has never left Doug. But he doesn’t actually rate the Bowie gig as the best he’s ever seen.

“Bowie was really good but the best one I remember – apart from Queen at the Capitol – was Black Sabbath with Van Halen in support.

“That would have been in 1978 in the Music Hall and that was mental. Van Halen just blew them off the stage – and it was the original Sabbath as well. Sabbath was who I had wanted to see,  I had never heard of this other lot until that night. They were incredible.”

Doug wasn’t the only Bowie fan to go the extra mile on May 16 1973.

Graeme Thain also pulled out all the stops to get to the gig as a 14-year-old pupil at Robert Gordon’s College.

“At one stage my parents weren’t going to let me go”, said Graeme, former proprietor of Thain’s Bakery.

“They didn’t think he was a good influence on a young mind because of his controversial lifestyle. I just rebelled and went anyway. But they certainly weren’t keen for me to embark on a life of going to gigs like that.”

Not only did he and his friends attend the gig – in school uniform –  they also found themselves enshrined in history. If you look at that unforgettable image of Bowie on stage, Graeme and his mates can be seen at the front of the balcony. They are the ones with the David Bowie scarf draped over the balustrade.

Graeme, now 61, said they got prime seats – bought from the legendary Telemech on Marischal Street, “the” record shop in Aberdeen at the time – for one simple reason.

“He sold out his first concert so fast, he did a matinee performance for us kids, so we were able to pick up A1 seats.

“The gig was mindblowing. It was exciting, it was enthusiastic. A lot of the audience were that sort of age and it was just brand new for us.

“Bowie’s performance was electric, theatrical – that’s an understatement. Mick Ronson was amazing on the guitar.

But just being at the gig wasn’t the end of Graeme’s entanglement with Bowie. He actually met the man and got his autograph – in one of his Robert Gordon’s jotters.

“My friend Ronald and I went stalking him, because we heard he was staying at the Imperial Hotel,” said Graeme. “We stood outside and both of us, with our school jotters managed to get his autograph by waiting for him. He was a friendly chap.”

And how would he sum up the gig itself?

“It was one of the most amazing experiences in a young boy’s life.”

Also at the Bowie concert was one Barney Crockett, these days better known as the Lord Provost of Aberdeen.

Back then, though, he was a steward for the gig as a favour to a friend, and got some unforgettable memories as part of the bargain.

“It was a stunning performance. By modern standards it would be not dramatic, but at that time to have sudden changes of costume. David Bowie’s clothes split in half to reveal another persona underneath. That was not usual at the time,” said Barney.

He added that another thing which might suprise modern gig-goers is the young age of the audience.

“For years, people just didn’t believe me that it was mainly schoolgirls that went to concerts at that time. But the picture from (the Bowie concert) shows that. It was very cheap to get in to concerts then. The LP would cost many more times than the entry to a concert. It was really a promotion. You went on tour to promote your records and get on TV.”

Barney said the gig was put on by the aforementioned Telemech record shop and recalls the stewarding would have been regarded as amateurish by today’s standards – which might account for Doug getting his precious snaps.

“The person who organised it was just in his mid-20s… and he knew me through the working in the fish and it’s amazing really that was how I became a steward,” said Barney.

“The atmosphere was frenzied, but mainly very young women, schoolgirl age. The concert was very transgressive for the time. Bowie and the band’s looks were trying to be sexually ambiguous and that was quite advanced and very wild.

“They wouldn’t be allowed today to get the crowd’s mood to the degree it was. We were trying to get people to not stand on the seats.”

Barney said the Ziggy Stardust tour was breakthrough moment that transformed Bowie into a superstar.

“This was one of the standout gigs Aberdeen has seen. It was historic.”

No doubt there are many other people in Aberdeen who have memories to relive of that glory day… and now they can dream of it in technicolour, thanks to Doug’s remarkable photos.

The life and times of a legend

David Bowie’s groundbreaking music inspired generations during a career spanning six decades. He died aged 69 on January 10 2015 after suffering cancer for 18 months.

The singer passed away surrounded by his loved ones, a statement on his Facebook page said today.

The star made a habit of confounding the critics – killing off his most famous creation, Ziggy Stardust, at the height of his fame – and reinventing himself in roles including glam rocker, soul singer and hippie songwriter.

Bowie, born David Jones in post-war Brixton, south London, kicked off his music career in the R&B boom of the early sixties.

In 1969 he made his first appearance in the charts with Space Oddity. A string of albums followed, before 1972’s The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars made him an international star.

The 1980s saw him combine his pop career with appearances in films including Merry Christmas, Mr Lawrence and Absolute Beginners.

Bowie made a surprise comeback in 2013 when he suddenly released a new single on his 66th birthday with an album out just weeks later, his first for 10 years.

He released his final album, Blackstar, just three days before his death was announced.

This content was originally published here.

From the Cure to David Bowie: Hundreds of Hard-to-Find Peel Sessions on YouTube | Consequence of Sound

John Peel’s BBC 1 radio show was iconic at the time it aired. In hindsight, it’s only grown all the more legendary. The legendary broadcaster recorded over 4,000 sessions with over 2,000 artists, which is, objectively speaking, a lot. To help make sorting through the Peel Sessions archive easier, angel-in-disguise and blogger Dave Strickson has uploaded and alphabetized hundreds of available recordings from the show to stream online (via BrooklynVegan).

Most of the original studio sessions from Peel’s radio show were released as Peel Session EPs by his label, Strange Fruit Records, but many of those are unavailable to stream online. Thankfully, listeners occasionally upload those almost-lost-to-time recordings to YouTube. That’s where Strickson comes in. To help make the process of digging through the Peel Sessions archive fun again, he’s re-uploaded all of the YouTube recordings into a clean, long, A-to-Z list on his website.

Strickson’s catalog of Peel Sessions verges on a thousand entries. As such, there’s too many remarkable recordings to count: David Bowie and the Spiders from Mars, The Cure, Nick Drake, Joy Division, Nirvana, Can, The Kinks, Cocteau Twins, Pavement, New Order, Buzzcocks, The Smiths, Hole, My Bloody Valentine, Bikini Kill, PJ Harvey, The Slits, Pulp, The Raincoats, T-Rex, Billy Bragg, Butthole Surfers, and even Jack White.

It’s a pretty mind-blowing to think all of these artists sat in the same studio over the years, nevermind that they were being recorded. The list can be overwhelming; That’s why we’ve chosen a few highlights to share below, including Bowie in 1972, The Cure in 1979, Nirvana in 1991, Joy Division in 1979, Bikini Kill in 1993, and Can in 1975.

This content was originally published here.

‘Peaky Blinders’ First-Ever Soundtrack To Be Released

“Take a little walk to the edge of town…”

EXCLUSIVE TRACKS FROM PJ HARVEY, RICHARD HAWLEY AND JEHNNY BETH

ALSO FEATURES TRACKS BY NICK CAVE, ARCTIC MONKEYS, DAVID BOWIE, RADIOHEAD, LAURA MARLING, BLACK SABBATH, ROYAL BLOOD, FOALS AND MANY MORE


Oct 28, 2019, 08:00 ET


LOS ANGELES, Oct. 28, 2019 — Since the fifth season of the massively popular BAFTA-winning series BBC drama wrapped up, fans are aching for their next hit of Peaky Blinders. On November 15, UMe will release the first-ever official soundtrack to the series (currently available on BBC’s iPlayer and on Netflix in more than 100 countries outside of the U.K.) that has captivated audiences across the globe. The soundtrack will be available on 2CD, 3LP and digital. Pre-order is available here: https://UMC.lnk.to/PeakyBlinders.

‘PEAKY BLINDERS’ FIRST-EVER SOUNDTRACK TO BE RELEASED ON NOVEMBER 15 (UMe)
‘PEAKY BLINDERS’ FIRST-EVER SOUNDTRACK TO BE RELEASED ON NOVEMBER 15 (UMe)

It’s not just the low tones of Nick Cave’s vocals in the opening theme tune that have become synonymous with the BBC’s Birmingham-based flagship gangster drama centered around Tommy Shelby, his family and their somewhat dubious business practices. Alongside the atmospheric opener, all the songs featured in the show have been painstakingly chosen to reflect the feel of the program (the violence, the grit AND the glamour), which was inspired by a real group of gangsters in post WW1 Birmingham.

The soundtrack features a previously unreleased rendition of the show’s iconic theme song, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds’Red Right Hand.” Only available on this release, the track was recorded specifically for the show by PJ Harvey and following its premiere this morning on BBC Radio 6 Music, it will be available to stream and download here: https://peakyblinders.lnk.to/RedRightHand.

Also, exclusively on the album are Jehnny Beth’s “I’m The Man” and Anna Calvi’s season five score, “You’re Not God,” along with Richard Hawley’s (Bob Dylan) “Ballad of A Thin Man” on CD and vinyl for the first time. The album is completed by songs from Nick Cave himself, Arctic Monkeys, The White Stripes, Royal Blood, The Last Shadow Puppets, Queens of the Stone Age, Black Sabbath, David Bowie, Laura Marling, and Foals amongst others.

The show is known for its dark and dramatic soundtrack, acting as a window into the mind of Tommy Shelby – a tortured ex-soldier who suffers from PTSD after fighting in the trenches during World War One. The 2CD and 3LP sets feature music and key clips of dialogue from all five seasons of the show. The 2CD also includes a 32-page book with images from the show, behind-the-scenes notes from Guardian journalist Phil Harrison, quotes from the cast and The Chap magazine in conversation with Peaky Blinders‘ Costume Designer, Alison McCosh.

The show has been particularly celebrated for its stylish cinematography and charismatic performances, enhanced by the use of contemporary music, and with the latest season’s score by the multi–Mercury Award Nominated singer songwriter Anna Calvi, the plaudits just kept coming. The soundtrack album also features seasons 1-5 original scores created specifically for the show. Show Creator Steven Knight was instrumental in pushing the importance of the music used in the show: “The Peaky Blinders story and the music we use are twins, born at the same time. It would be difficult to imagine most of the pivotal moments without the soundtrack. I’m so glad that at last we have been able to put some of the tracks together on one album, to put the atmosphere and swagger and snarl of the show into your headphones and speakers.”

A free limited-edition Peaky Blinders poster will be included for the first 500 pre-orders on both the 2CD and 3LP across uDiscover, The Sound Of Vinyl and Recordstore.co.uk. The BBC is set to release the DVD box set of season 5 on November 11.

So, crack open a bottle of Shelby’s Gin, unbutton your waistcoat, relax and sit back to enjoy the music – BY ORDER OF THE PEAKY BLINDERS!

Pre-order here: https://UMC.lnk.to/PeakyBlinders

2-CD

CD1

  1. *Tommy: ‘It’s Not A Good Idea…’
  2. Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds – Red Right Hand
  3. The White Stripes – St James Infirmary Blues
  4. Truce – From Peaky Blinders Original Soundtrack / Series [Season] 1 (Score)
  5. *Tommy: ‘Right I Have Bought You Hear Today…’
  6. Dan Auerbach – The Prowl
  7. *Polly: ‘There’s Only One Thing…’
  8. Jack White – Love Is Blindness
  9. PJ Harvey – To Bring You My Love
  10. Alfie: ‘I’ve Heard Very Bad, Bad, Bad Things…’
  11. Black Rebel Motorcycle – River Styx
  12. Post Irish Meeting – From Peaky Blinders Original Soundtrack / Series [Season] 2 (Score)
  13. PJ Harvey – Red Right Hand
  14. Laura Marling – What He Wrote
  15. Arthur: ‘Do You Wanna Tell ‘Em…’
  16. Royal Blood – Come On Over
  17. Arctic Monkeys – Do I Wanna Know?
  18. Tommy: ‘I Love You…’
  19. Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds – Breathless
  20. Radiohead – You And Whose Army?
  21. Polly: ‘A Woman Of Substance…’
  22. PJ Harvey – This Is Love
  23. Sons – From Peaky Blinders Original Soundtrack / Series [Season] 3 (Score)
  24. Tommy: ‘You Can Change What You Do…’
  25. Queens Of The Stone Age – Burn The Witch
  26. The Last Shadow Puppets – Bad Habits
  27. David Bowie – Lazarus

CD2

  1. Tommy: ‘Sex, Freedom, Whiskey Sours…’
  2. Savages – Adore
  3. Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds – The Mercy Seat (Live From KCRW)
  4. Rachel Unthank & The Winterset – I Wish
  5. Ballad Of Polly Gray – From Peaky Blinders Original Soundtrack / Series [Season] 4 (Score)
  6. Tommy: ‘I’m Not A Traitor To My Class…’
  7. Frank Carter And The Rattlesnakes – Devil Inside Me
  8. Foals – Snake Oil
  9. Polly: ‘It’s In Our Gypsy Blood…’
  10. Radiohead – Pyramid Song
  11. Laura Marling – A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall
  12. Ada: ‘So, Tommy Shelby, MP…’
  13. Black Sabbath – The Wizard
  14. Anna Calvi – Papi Pacify
  15. Joy Division – Atmosphere
  16. Tommy: ‘You Need To Understand…’
  17. You’re Not God – From Peaky Blinders Original Soundtrack / Series [Season] 5 (Score)
  18. Arthur: ‘There’s A Bentley Outside…’
  19. Jehnny Beth – I’m The Man
  20. Idles – Never Fight A Man With A Perm
  21. Tommy: ‘I Will Continue…’
  22. Richard Hawley – Ballad Of A Thin Man

3-LP

DISC 1

Side A

  1. *Tommy: ‘It’s Not A Good Idea…’
  2. Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds – Red Right Hand
  3. The White Stripes – St James Infirmary Blues
  4. Truce – From Peaky Blinders Original Soundtrack / Series [Season] 1 (Score)
  5. *Tommy: ‘Right I Have Bought You Hear Today…’
  6. Dan Auerbach – The Prowl
  7. *Polly: ‘There’s Only One Thing…’
  8. Jack White – Love Is Blindness
  9. PJ Harvey – To Bring You My Love

Side B

  1. Alfie: ‘I’ve Heard Very Bad, Bad, Bad Things…’
  2. Black Rebel Motorcycle – River Styx
  3. Post Irish Meeting – From Peaky Blinders Original Soundtrack / Series [Season] 2 (Score)
  4. PJ Harvey – Red Right Hand
  5. Laura Marling – What He Wrote
  6. Arthur: ‘Do You Wanna Tell ‘Em…’
  7. Royal Blood – Come On Over
  8. Arctic Monkeys – Do I Wanna Know?

DISC 2

Side A

  1. Tommy: ‘I Love You…’
  2. Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds – Breathless
  3. Radiohead – You And Whose Army?
  4. Polly: ‘A Woman Of Substance…’
  5. PJ Harvey – This Is Love
  6. Sons – From Peaky Blinders Original Soundtrack / Series [Season] 3 (Score)
  7. Tommy: ‘You Can Change What You Do…’
  8. Queens Of The Stone Age – Burn The Witch
  9. The Last Shadow Puppets – Bad Habits
  10. David Bowie – Lazarus

Side B

  1. Tommy: ‘Sex, Freedom, Whiskey Sours…’
  2. Savages – Adore
  3. Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds – The Mercy Seat (Live From KCRW)
  4. Rachel Unthank & The Winterset – I Wish
  5. Ballad Of Polly Gray – From Peaky Blinders Original Soundtrack / Series [Season] 4 (Score)
  6. Tommy: ‘I’m Not A Traitor To My Class…’
  7. Frank Carter And The Rattlesnakes – Devil Inside Me

DISC 3

Side A

  1. Foals – Snake Oil
  2. Polly: ‘It’s In Our Gypsy Blood…’
  3. Radiohead – Pyramid Song
  4. Laura Marling – A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall
  5. Ada: ‘So, Tommy Shelby, MP…’
  6. Black Sabbath – The Wizard
  7. Anna Calvi – Papi Pacify

Side B

  1. Joy Division – Atmosphere
  2. Tommy: ‘You Need To Understand…’
  3. You’re Not God – From Peaky Blinders‘ Original Soundtrack / Series [Season] 5 (Score)
  4. Arthur: ‘There’s A Bentley Outside…’
  5. Jehnny Beth – I’m The Man
  6. Idles – Never Fight A Man With A Perm
  7. Tommy: ‘I Will Continue…’
  8. Richard Hawley – Ballad Of A Thin Man

SOURCE UMe