Παρασκευή, Νοεμβρίου 24, 2006

Raining Pleasure new album update!

This is one of the most exciting seasons for being a Raining Pleasure fan - the time a new RP album is getting ready!!!!

I have listened about 5-6 songs so far.

Only one of it is yet finished; what you may call a proper song. It is called "Burn Down The Church" and it is a song that the band has played live, over the last few months.

I have already told you what i think about it (check here), haven't i?

Well, here is what i think about the direction of the new Raining Pleasure album: it is gonna kick out many asses! :) The guitars are rocking their guts out and the usual catchy melodic lines that are prominent in their discography, are still here.

The songs i have listened so far are just some rough ideas, not fully crafted songs, without lyrics, except from some vocals in a couple of parts. But, it is evident that Raining Pleasure are moving to a more guitarish sound. My guess? Their listenings have changed over the last two years and the fact that they may change a producer, as they did for Reflections album, is gonna result to a back to their roots (aka as in their live concerts) sound. That means little, or not at all, presence of synthies and a quite more straight-forward synthetic style.

It seems like my wish for a re-recording of Memory Comes Back [their debut album], maybe the most underestimated album of the band, is not gonna come true, not very soon, at least. You see, Memory Comes Back is their most "rock" album, but lacked a good quality sound. Now, it all seems that the new RP album is gonna be the proper rock "major" album they haven't done yet.

I am pretty anxious about this.

Τετάρτη, Νοεμβρίου 22, 2006

Vassilikos is guesting on the new Marsheaux album!
















Vassilikos is doing vocals on the new Marsheaux album. The song Vassilikos appears on is called "PROMISE" (cover version of a song by "When in Rome") and it is a duet.

The album is called "Peek A Boo" and will be released on the 1st week of December.

The song is actually very very good, with a very catchy refrain and i can't wait to buy it! Nice work u did here Marsheuax girls!

:)


Δευτέρα, Νοεμβρίου 20, 2006

The first Raining Pleasure gig that we hosted at Teloneio, Patras!


It was back in February, 2002, when we decided to test our skills in booking and promotion (etc). So, we organized a special gig by our favorite band, in our hometown, Patras, Greece.

The Flood album had just been released two months ago and the vibes around the band were excellent. The fan club was only 1-2 motnhs old and we were full of ideas and eagerness to do things...

Fake was a hit all over the greek radio and we were looking for a big enough place to host our dream :)

It was a very eventful Raining Pleasure gig. Panos Gikas was attending the concert and eventually he went on stage to perform a version of Romance, a song he wrote years ago, from the Memory Comes Back album, back in 1996.

They also performed a cover of a New Model Army song, but hell... i don't remember which one. It was a medley with Capricorn i think. I also remember me being very very drunk, so don't ask for many more details, ok?

Anyway, i would like to thank all these nice people who helped making this event becoming a reality. And many thanx to Kostas Vamvoukas for helping us, not only with a very nice sound, but also with the various little problems we experienced during the live event.

I hope i will be able to repeat this gig again. It felt really nice at the end of the night being able to see 600-700 people having fan and being thankful to you, for making this happen.

What is your favourite Raining Pleasure album?

Hi there, we have created our first poll!

Please, share your thoughts on what is the best Raining Pleasure album (until the next one of course)!!!

You can find our poll in the right upper corner of this website.

:)

Παρασκευή, Νοεμβρίου 17, 2006

A good old poster of Raining Pleasure

It was a poster given to the members of the My Planet B612 fan club, some years ago. The illustration was made by a guy working for Emi. Sorry i don't remember his name...

Thanx to blackhole92 for having it in her MySpace profile.

Πέμπτη, Νοεμβρίου 16, 2006

New issue of Sonik magazine with Raining Pleasure in the cover!


The new issue of Sonik magazine, one of the most popular greek magazines, has been released with Raining Pleasure being one the four anglophone greek indie bands featured in the cover.

Apart from RP, the other three bands are: Film, Closer and Matisse.

Each band is making questions to the other bands about music or even completely different things [such as the questions Raining Pleasure do:) ]

This issue of Sonik magazine is dedicated to the greek indie music scene.

Check all these bands out at their MySpace pages.

Closer
Film
Matisse

Cheers

Δευτέρα, Νοεμβρίου 13, 2006

Some reasons why Raining Pleasure are the leaders of the Greek Music scene!

Raining Pleasure are a band with a 16 years history.

They have been an influence for various new local bands since 1990, especially in Patras.

No, this ain't the biggest reason. :)

Raining Pleasure have been the only anglophone band certified gold in Greece (2 golden records).

No, this ain't the biggest reason. :)

Raining Pleasure have been the only one anglophone band that carries on with their career and that have not given up, after soooo many years. That means something, right?

No, this ain't the biggest reason. :)

Raining Pleasure are one of the very few Greek bands with a singer having such a british/english accent. Vassilikos does not only have a magnificent voice, but also the best english accent in Greece.

No, this ain't the biggest reason. :)

Raining Pleasure are the only band that other fellow Greek anglophone indie bands, back in the nineties ( 90's ), used to praise and consider as a model band.

No, this ain't the biggest reason. :)

There are many other reasons to mention. After all, this is all what this blog is about. :) But, the main reason Raining Pleasure are the most important band of their times, coming from Greece, Southern Europe, is:

the fact that all the stupid little, frustrated creatures self-described as indie guardians are jealous of their success. Forgive me for my bitterness. I know i will regret it, but i cannot tolerate, personally, all this stupidity about them being rich, being blinded by success and about their songs being used in commercials by major brands, such as Cosmote (the greek state mobile telephony company), 3Epsilon (a coca-cola company) and Tsakiris chips and OTE (the greek state telephony company).

This is the most important proof of their talent and their greatness. And this is why i cannot see anybody right now being able to really make some worthy music in this country. For those of you who can speak greek, take a look at this post where the bands themselves write about other "indie" greek bands in a really bitter and derogatory way. And the reason is just because they got less concert bookings or press coverage or they weren't selected by Sonic magazine, for their first greek indie compilation.

This is the first and the last time i will complain. Believe me... The purpose of this blog is to be a accompaniment of your... (Raining) pleasure and nothing more.

Cheers

Πέμπτη, Νοεμβρίου 09, 2006

Raining Pleasure Last.Fm awareness growing week by week!

Raining Pleasure's popularity is constantly growing at their Last.Fm page, as long as Myspace, of course.

Check them out and take advantage of this great website's tools to listen to their music, from ALL their back catalogue.

Enjoy music at maximum via LastFm and Raining Pleasure, too!

:)

Τρίτη, Νοεμβρίου 07, 2006

Some photos from a Raining Pleasure gig at Serres.

i have discovered some photos by the band.

They are from Rodon Fm blog. Rodon Fm is a music radio station in Serres, Greece.











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Δευτέρα, Νοεμβρίου 06, 2006

My first Raining Pleasure gig...

Back in 1995, it was carnival time (the famous carnival of Patras). I was just getting to know a new band from Patras, my hometown, from a Pop and Rock Magazine cd-collection.

It was a cd about the local anglophone music scene, featuring bands like Mayday Overdrive, Dirty Saints and a band by Chris Gallanopoulos, called Lexema (or something like that, i don't quite remember).

Raining Pleasure's contribution to the sampler was the following three songs:

A Sad Universe
My Planet B612 (yeaaaaahh, right - our godfather)
and
Let The Light Lead You


Three beautiful, yet "plainly" produced, songs. Nice vocals, sing along personal and kinda melancholic lyrics and a violin that made them stand out!

Well, for the next few months, me and my best friend, Sotiris, never really stopped talking about their music. In February (don't expect me to remember a date, ok?) the school was talking about a very live concert, in theater Pantheon (bought by Village Cinemas eventually). The line up:

Raining Pleasure
Dirty Saints
Mayday Overdrive
Ksylina Spathia

That's right... Almost all the bands featured in this Pop and Rock sampler, plus one of the biggest then greek-singing rock bands (Ksilina Spathia).

Raining Pleasure were the opening act. I didn't really know the songs, apart from these 3. But, their appearance is the memorable appearance i have since my youth. Lousy sound (Pantheon is kinda notorious for its bad quality sound), but an exceptional closure. Their final song was a cover to Paul Anka's "You Are My Destiny". A song that later would prove to be a special part of their live sets for quite a few years, prior to signing for Emi.

I also remember having a brief conversation with Dimitris Poulikakos, one of the most respected (kinda cult for me, though) rock personas of Greek "underground" music. He told me that these four guys from Patras have a bright future ahead!

Man, you were soooo right :)

Eleven (11) years later, Raining Pleasure have recorded five (5) albums, three (3) of them at Emi Greece. They have been nominated two (2) golden records and they have sold more than 55.000 copies. Thousands of loyal fans follow every new step of theirs.
And most important? They are pretty ready for the big (and quite difficult until someone proves it a myth) step to foreign audiences.

But the most important of all, for me at least, is that they are currently working on their new album! :)

Hope that it won't take long guys...


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Who is Manos Hadjidakis? pt.1

Manos Hadjidakis is the most important Greek composer of 20th century.

His 1967 "Reflections" album was a collaboration with New York Rock N' Roll Ensemble. This album was re-recorded by Raining Pleasure as a tribute to this great composer, back in 2004.

Here are some biographical stuff about Manos Hadjidakis.

"Manos Hadjidakis (as his name is usually spelled in English) is perhaps modern Greece's greatest composer and songwriter, rivaled only by Mikis Theodorakis for the title. Hadjidakis helped usher in a new era of Greek music in the post-WWII era, elevating the earthiest strains of Greek folk and popular song into respected art forms. In the process, he found tremendous popular success in his home country, chiefly through his work as a pop songwriter, and became familiar to international audiences through his movie soundtracks, winning an Oscar in 1960. He also composed contemporary classical pieces for ensembles small and large, often inspired by Greek poetry, and wrote for theater and ballet. Many of his songs, larger compositions, and recordings are considered classics in Greece, and cornerstones of the country's modern popular music. He remained a highly respected intellectual and cultural figure in Greece up until his death in 1994.Hadjidakis was born in the northern town of Xanthi, Greece, on October 23, 1925. He started piano lessons at age four, and later learned the violin and accordion as well. In 1932, his parents divorced, and he moved with his mother to Athens. His father died in a plane crash in 1938, leaving the family in a dire financial state only worsened by the German occupation in World War II. Hadjidakis worked a succession of odd jobs to support his family, but also managed to study advanced music theory and composition as a teenager, also enrolling at the University of Athens to study philosophy (circumstances prevented him from finishing his degree). In 1943, he met the revered surrealist poet Nikos Gatsos, who would go on to become his favorite lyricist and work with him on the vast majority of his vocal compositions.Hadjidakis first found an outlet for his compositional ability when he connected with the Art Theatre of Athens, and contributed music to its 1944 production of Alexis Solomos' The Last White Crow. He would work with the Art Theatre for the next 15 years, scoring a number of canonical plays by American and European writers, and also began to do the same for the Greek National Theatre starting in the early '50s. He wrote his first film score, for Free Slaves, in 1946, and the following year published his first contemporary piano piece, For a Small White Seashell. In 1948, Hadjidakis gave a high-profile academic lecture praising rembetika (sometimes spelled rebetico), the popular folk song form that was the province of the urban lower class and was regarded as borderline immoral by the conservative intelligentsia. The country's musical establishment was scandalized, but Hadjidakis had mapped out the path that would make him one of modern Greece's most cherished musical figures.As a composer, Hadjidakis embraced rembetika on his 1951 piano work Six Folklore Paintings, which adapted rembetika melodies into a more artful presentation, and was also presented as a ballet (one of four he composed from 1949-1957). In the meantime, he had begun to compose music for theatrical productions of classic Greek tragedies, starting with Aeschylus' Orestes trilogy in 1950; normally, such a job was reserved for scholarly academics. He completed one of his major modern classical works in 1954's The C.N.S. Cycle, a song cycle for piano and baritone vocalist. The following year, he scored the motion picture Stella, which would prove to be one of his major successes in that area. Starring actress Melina Mercouri, whom Hadjidakis had known from her days in the theater, sang the song portions of the soundtrack, and would become one of Hadjidakis' most sympathetic interpreters.In 1959, Hadjidakis began working with the young, up-and-coming Nana Mouskouri, for whom he would supply material on a regular basis; he also helped introduce the music of Mikis Theodorakis to the Greek public by arranging his song "Epitaphios" for a Mouskouri recording session. The following year, he reunited with Mercouri on the Jules Dassin-directed film Never on Sunday. It was a breakthrough international hit that won Hadjidakis an Oscar for his title song, which became a smash success in many parts of the world. In 1962, he staged the controversial musical Street of Dreams, now regarded as a landmark of Greek theater for its frank subject matter, and completed revisions on his score for Aristophanes' Birds, which subsequently ranked among his finest compositions.Hadjidakis scored two more internationally prominent films in Elia Kazan's America, America (1963) and Jules Dassin's Topkapi (1964), and struck up a lengthy partnership with choreographer Maurice Béjart of 20th Century Ballets, who collaborated on the composer's forays into ballet from then on. Hadjidakis also founded the Athens Experimental Orchestra in 1964, which provided a vehicle for his own work and that of avant-garde Greek composers like Iannis Xenakis. However, even as Hadjidakis' interest in experimental music grew, so did his interest in song structure; his 1965 work Mythology found him ranging farther and farther afield in his traditional songwriting, fusing elements of symphonic, Turkish Byzantine, and ancient Greek music with modern rembetika. In 1966, Hadjidakis traveled to New York for the Broadway premiere of Illya Darling, the stage version of Never on Sunday. He wound up staying there until 1972, in part because of the repressive military junta that took over the Greek government. While in America, he completed several more major compositions, including the piano piece Rhythmology and the song cycle Magnus Eroticus, which set 12 Greek poems modern and ancient to music; still fascinated by popular song, he also recorded the LP Reflections with the New York Rock and Roll Ensemble.Hadjidakis returned to Greece in 1972, and when the military dictatorship fell, he took a number of high-ranking cultural positions: directing the State Orchestra (through 1981) and the classical-oriented channel of the national radio (1982), as well as becoming deputy director of the national opera (until 1977). He started several music festivals and competitions in the late '70s and early '80s, and in 1985 started his own record company (Sirius) and cultural magazine. In 1989, he founded and directed the Orchestra of Colours, a symphonic group devoted to unconventional works. By this time, he was suffering from heart problems, which would eventually claim his life on June 15, 1994.
(from Allmusic.com)"

other websites for Manos Hadjidakis:
official site
another official website
wikipedia info


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Πέμπτη, Νοεμβρίου 02, 2006

New video added on Raining Pleasure's blog, at MySpace!

Hi there,
a new video clip, made by a fan of the band has been added to Raining Pleasure's profile, at MySpace.

It is a video for the song A Freak, from Forwards and Backwards album. It is made by a young director, called Nicolas.

Check his myspace page, here.


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