Saturday, February 4, 2017

PINS - 'Aggrophobe' (feat. Iggy Pop)

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'Aggrophobe'

PINS are back.
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The Manchester outfit will release new EP 'Bad Thing' on March 24th, and it promises to be another bout of ultra-stylish rock 'n' roll.
New cut 'Aggrophobe' is online now, and it features the vocals of legendary rock wildman Iggy Pop.
A new video has also emerged online, and it peels back the curtain to reveal what happens backstage when the band are waiting their turn.
PINS explain: "'Aggrophobe' is the wild card from our EP. The video was filmed partly at the director’s studio in Ancoats and partly at one of our favourite pubs on Oldham Street called Gulliver’s. We’re backstage waiting to go on to play a show, whilst the other acts are doing their thing."
Watch it now.
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Nines "High Roller" (ft. J Hus)

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Nines is gearing up to release his debut album One Foot Out through XL Recordings, but before it arrives, the UK rapper has shared a new video for the J Hus-assisted "High Roller."

The clip opens with the rappers riding in style behind the wheel of a Rolls Royce before shifting between shots of darkened street scenes, flexing out in neon-lit rooms and in front of private jets, playing videogames and even getting fitted for suits.

While we wait for more info on One Foot Out, take in all that Nines' "High Roller" lifestyle offers in the player below.

Stormzy "Big for Your Boots"

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Grime MC Stormzy is set to have a breakout 2017, starting with the release of his debut album Gang Signs & Prayer later this month. Ahead of that, he's shared new single "Big for Your Boots," which arrives alongside a video.

The video spots Stormzy touring through London, passing by recognizable landmarks such as the London Eye, and hidden treasures such as his favourite chicken spot.

As The FADER points out, the video features cameo appearances from Julie Adenuga, Sian Anderson, Amplify Dot, Raye, Ray Blk, Maya Jama, Sophia Tassew, Gracie Francesca, and FADER photographer Vicky Grout.

Gang Signs & Prayer arrives on February 24. Until then, take in "Big for Your Boots" in the player below.



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SOTHEBY'S Erotic Art Sale

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Raunchy: Modest Maneuver, by artist Gil Elvgren, is expected to sell for more than £25,000

Sotheby's might be best known as the home of fine jewellery and priceless works of art.
But the esteemed auction house is showing off its wild side with its latest collection - a series of erotic sketches, paintings and sculptures.
Among the 107 lots going under the hammer is a sculpture of Kate Moss in a provocative yoga pose which is expected to sell for more than £70,000. 
Talking point: A painted plywood table that was supposedly delivered to Catherine the Great
Talking point: A painted plywood table that was supposedly delivered to Catherine the Great
Siren by Marc Quinn
The sculpture depicts Kate Moss, pictured
Supermodel status: The sculpture Siren by Marc Quinn, left, depicts Kate Moss in a yoga pose
Retro: A series of four works called Tomato Catsup; Tobacco Red; Lola Cola; and A.C. Annie
Retro: A series of four works called Tomato Catsup; Tobacco Red; Lola Cola; and A.C. Annie

The piece by artist Marc Quinn shows the model holding her legs behind her head. 
One of the most outrageous items up for sale is a table with legs shaped like penises. Busts of nude women also adorn the rim of the tabletop.  
Picasso's Nu Couché (Reclining Nude) is expected to fetch £60,000 while a carved mahogany bed could go for £800,000 - the most expensive item in the collection. 
A series of retro nudes by American artist Mel Ramos and a pin-up girl flashing her thigh bring a touch of old-fashioned sex appeal to the collection.
A number of life drawings make an appearance, including one by Lucien Freud called Man Posing. The piece is expected to sell for as much as £20,000.  
Among the more unusual lots is a German silver bourdaloue, or portable chamber pot, with an erotic engraving. The piece, which would have been carried by women who needed to relieve themselves, is believed to date back to 1802.
Raunchy: Modest Maneuver, by artist Gil Elvgren, is expected to sell for more than £25,000
Raunchy: Modest Maneuver, by artist Gil Elvgren, is expected to sell for more than £25,000
High value: This carved mahogany bed could fetch as much as £800,000 at auction
High value: This carved mahogany bed could fetch as much as £800,000 at auction
Intimate: This piece called A Loving Couple Watched By A Maiden could sell for £4,000
Intimate: This piece called A Loving Couple Watched By A Maiden could sell for £4,000
Luxury: A silver bourdaloue, or portable chamber pot could fetch between £2,000-£3,000
Luxury: A silver bourdaloue, or portable chamber pot could fetch between £2,000-£3,000
A series of trinket boxes with erotic art on the lids and a box with a naked woman and her cat are also going under the hammer. 
The auction includes four paintings by German artist George Grosz depicting various sexual acts ranging from foreplay to intercourse.  
Constantine Frangos, Head of Sale at Sotheby's, said: 'Art has always existed to tell a human story, and sex has always been part of that story - whether it is there to compel, to shock or to seduce. 
Icon: Among the sketches is Man Posing by Lucien Freud which could sell for £20,000
Icon: Among the sketches is Man Posing by Lucien Freud which could sell for £20,000
Dainty: Erotic scenes are depicted on the lids of this collection of small trinket boxes
Dainty: Erotic scenes are depicted on the lids of this collection of small trinket boxes
Distinctive: Nu couche by Pablo Picasso has been valued at between £60,000 and £80,000
Distinctive: Nu couche by Pablo Picasso has been valued at between £60,000 and £80,000
Vibrant: This 18th century painting depicting a couple during intercourse could fetch £3,000
Vibrant: This 18th century painting depicting a couple during intercourse could fetch £3,000
'Indeed, Eroticism in art has appeared in whatever form art has taken, and our exhibition will take the viewer on a journey through the centuries.
'This sale creates a stage on which we are able to bring together a fascinating array of artworks and objects across many disciplines - charting a history whilst also presenting stunning works by artists as eclectic as Picasso, Man Ray, Ettore Sottsass and Marc Quinn.'
The Erotic: Passion & Desire auction will be held in London on February 16.
Nudes: This piece is by Austrian artist Egon Schiele, who is known for his raw sexuality
Nudes: This piece is by Austrian artist Egon Schiele, who is known for his raw sexuality
Caught off guard: Baigneuses Surprises, or Surprised Bathers, by Camille Bombois
Caught off guard: Baigneuses Surprises, or Surprised Bathers, by Camille Bombois
Provocative: This piece by Clive Barker from the mid 1990s could sell for as much as £3,000
Provocative: This piece by Clive Barker from the mid 1990s could sell for as much as £3,000




KATE MOSS gets NAKED for W Magazine

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Kate Moss was on time.
“Where is everybody?” she wondered aloud, as she walked into the studio at 9 a.m. on the dot for the W cover shoot. It was a chilly Tuesday in London, and although the British Fashion Awards gala had taken place the night before and Moss had been at an afterparty until at least 2 a.m., she was ready to work.
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“People always expect me to be late,” she told me. “But I’ve always been on time. Especially for photo shoots.” She shrugged off her cocoon-like faux fur and settled into a couch in the upstairs area of the studio that doubles as a cafeteria. She was dressed unremarkably, in dark jeans and a gray sweater, but the cook, who was making eggs to order, stopped and stared. Nearly everyone walking in and out of the room had the same reaction, but Moss was oblivious to the attention. She waited patiently for the photographers to arrive, paging through a glossy book that had been left on a table. It was a history of fashion photography and, naturally, contained many pictures of her.
“I remember that,” Moss said repeatedly, almost to herself.
If you have had even the slightest interest in fashion in the past three decades, you have been in Moss’s world. Her image (which can morph from waif to vixen to polished to bohemian and back again) and her personal style (which is high-low eclectic and has been widely copied by designers and mere mortals alike) have made her the most sought-after muse of our time. From her first major photo shoot with the late British photographer Corinne Day, Moss was, as the designer John Galliano described her, “a little rough diamond…there was that magic, an enigma, there in front of us.”
Those Day pictures, which appeared in The Face in 1990, were groundbreaking: Moss was either naked or dressed in simple, nondescript clothing, which meant that the photos were about her more than any trend. Her freckles showed, and in many pictures she was making odd faces.
Moss wears a Gucci cardigan.
“I was only 16,” Moss recalled. “And I was so nervous. I’m still nervous! We shot the story with Corinne for a month. And then [the art director] Fabien Baron saw the story and showed it to Elizabeth Tilberis at Harper’s Bazaar, who put me with [the photographer] Patrick Demarchelier, and I was on the cover of the Christmas issue. And then Patrick was shooting Calvin Klein. And I met Calvin—and that was when everything changed.”
Initially, Klein wasn’t sure about Moss. She isn’t your typical model: She’s five foot seven (short by industry standards), and she’s somewhat bowlegged. In fact, when Moss was ­discovered at 14 by the modeling agent Sarah Doukas at a New York airport, her mother was shocked that anyone would want her daughter to pose for pictures.
“My mum said, ‘I don’t think you’re that photogenic!’ ” Moss said, laughing. Moss spent the next two years going out for castings, and when she finally met Day, everything clicked. “From the beginning, photographers always got me to take my clothes off, even though I don’t like my body at all. I just had to get comfortable with being naked.”
Unlike almost every other prominent model from the ’80s onward, Moss has never tried to parlay her success into singing or acting or hosting a TV show. She stuck to modeling. “I’m not really comfortable enough to be an actress,” she admitted. “When I’m modeling, I’m a character. But I’m not really interested in ‘acting.’ ”
What always fascinated her was photography—and photographers. “I want to please the person behind the camera,” she said. “I’m a hard worker. And I like the process of creating an image.” Day, for instance, would intentionally anger Moss, forcing her to react. “ ‘The more I piss you off,’ ” she recalled Day saying, “ ‘the better pictures I get.’ ” Mario ­Sorrenti, who would become Moss’s boyfriend, emphasized her ­innocent sort of sexuality. Demarchelier thought of her as gamine; Mario Testino envisioned her as a wild child; Mert Alas and Marcus Piggott, in this W shoot, saw her as confident, strong, and, yes, proudly naked at age 43.
Despite having been photographed countless times in her long (and still major!) career, Moss has remained a chameleon. Even when she designed clothes for Topshop in 2014, she refrained from promoting herself on social media. Recently she opened her own agency and plans to recruit and mentor young models, but it is doubtful that any one of them will have what she has. “There’s something quite hidden about Kate,” Anna Wintour told Vanity Fair in 2012. “Because it was hard to say exactly what she was or who she was, [photographers and editors] could put their own fantasies onto her.”
Back on set, the photographers and W’s Edward Enninful, who is Moss’s longtime friend, huddled in the makeup room. Amber Valletta, a pal of Moss’s and a fellow top model from the ’90s, popped in to say hi. Valletta was in town for the British Fashion Awards, and they had seen each other the night before, but she and Moss embraced like long-lost sisters. When this group gets together, it is easy to sense the clubbiness of the fashion world. “We are a particular tribe,” Moss said. “Fashion can be cutthroat, but we love it.”

Tuesday, January 31, 2017

Capo Lee & Sir Spyro - 'Stop Talk'

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‘STOP TALK’ VISUALS

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Capo Lee and Sir Spyro has released a new video entilted, ‘Stop Talk’.
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