Untitled Document

CALENDAR

ENDANGERED SPECIES TOUR

Waipara (New Zealand)
Mud House Winery - December 19, 2010
(tickets)

Martinborough (New Zealand)
Alana Estate - December 18, 2010
(tickets)

Auckland (New Zealand)
Vector Arena - December 16, 2010
(tickets)

Canberra, ACT (Australia)
Royal Theatre, National Convention Centre - December 14, 2010
(tickets)

Brisbane, QLD (Australia)
Sirromet Winery, Mt Cotton - December 12, 2010
(tickets) | (flyer)

Hunter Valley, NSW (Australia)
Bimbadgen Estate - December 11, 2010
(tickets) | (flyer)

Sydney, NSW (Australia)
Enmore Theatre, Newtown - December 9, 2010
(tickets)

Sydney, NSW (Australia)
Enmore Theatre, Newtown - December 8, 2010
(tickets)

Sydney, NSW (Australia)
Enmore Theatre, Newtown - December 7, 2010
(tickets)

Launceston, TAS (Australia)
Josef Chromy Wines - December 5, 2010
(tickets) | (flyer)

Yarra Valley, VIC (Australia)
Rochford Vines - December 4, 2010
(tickets) | (flyer)

Melbourne, VIC (Australia)
Palais Theatre, St Kilda - December 2, 2010
(tickets)

Melbourne, VIC (Australia)
Palais Theatre, St Kilda - December 1, 2010
(tickets)

Barossa Valley, SA (Australia)
Peter Lehmann Wines - November 27, 2010
(tickets) | (flyer)

Perth, WA (Australia)
Kings Park & Botanic Garden - November 24, 2010
(tickets)

Boston, MA (USA)
House Of Blues - September 12, 2010
(tickets)

Atlantic City, NJ (USA)
House Of Blues - September 11, 2010
(tickets)

Lincoln, RI (USA)
Twin River Casino - September 10, 2010
(tickets)

Falls Church, VA (USA)
State Theater - September 8, 2010
(tickets)

Westhampton, NY (USA)
Westhampton Beach Performing Arts Center - September 5, 2010
(tickets)

Memphis, TN (USA)
Live At The Garden - September 3, 2010
(tickets)

Jim Thorpe, PA (USA)
Penn’s Peak - September 1, 2010
(tickets)

New York, NY (USA)
Nokia Theatre - August 31, 2010
(tickets; pre-sale password: panic)

Baltimore, MD (USA)
Pier Six Pavilion - August 29, 2010
(tickets)

Kettering, OH (USA)
Fraze Pavilion - August 28, 2010
(tickets)

Detroit, MI (USA)
DTE Energy Center - August 27, 2010
(tickets)

Atlanta, GA (USA)
Chastain Amphitheatre - August 25, 2010
(tickets)

Charleston, WV (USA)
Clay Center for the Arts & Sciences - August 24, 2010
(tickets)

Red Wing, MN (USA)
Treasure Island Resort and Casino - August 21, 2010
(tickets)

Springfield, IL (USA)
Illinois State Fairgrounds Il State Fair - August 20, 2010
(tickets)

Hammond, IN (USA)
The Venue at Horseshoe - August 18, 2010
(tickets)

Regina, SK (Canada)
Casino Regina - August 16, 2010
(tickets)

Edmonton, AB (Canada)
River Creek Resort & Casino - August 14, 2010
(tickets)

Coquitlam, BC (Canada)
Boulevard Casino - August 13, 2010
(tickets)

Woodinville, WA (USA)
Chateau St Michelle Winery - August 12, 2010
(tickets)

Saratoga, CA (USA)
Mountain Winery - August 10, 2010
(tickets)

Costa Mesa, CA (USA)
Pacific Amphitheater - August 8, 2010
(tickets)

Las Vegas, NV (USA)
Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino - August 7, 2010
(tickets)

Santa Rosa, CA (USA)
Ruth Finley Person Theater - August 5, 2010
(tickets)

San Francisco, CA (USA)
The Fillmore - August 4, 2010
(tickets)

(further information & past shows)

 

browse the old news archive


NEWS
New York Magazine interview with Santogold

September 29, 2008


filed under: images, interviews — Christina @ 12:00 am

Check out the latest article on the New York Magazine website:

In Conversation: Debbie Harry and Santogold

Rock stars past and present on the invention, influence, and half-life of New York punk

By Ben Williams Published Sep 28, 2008

Debbie Harry is still a young punk: Dressed in a loose floral dress and Converse sneakers, she pouts a little while waiting for Santogold to put on an elaborate purple leather jacket and lime-green hot pants, then carefully pack up a suitcase’s worth of clothes after her photo shoot. But the classic rock icon and the flashy emcee have more in common than meets the eye: Both make power pop out of the hip sounds of their era, both became famous in their early thirties, and both, they discover, are ambivalent about the way New York’s music scene has changed over the years.

New York: Blondie is beloved for classic pop singles, but in the mid-seventies the band felt like an upheaval, right?

Debbie Harry: Yeah, before our time the trend was toward bigger bands, like Lynyrd Skynyrd and the Eagles, and you didn’t hear a lot of pop music with girls in it. It was a man’s world—the good ol’ boys chugging their guitars. So we were really counterculture. And urban. We were incorporating new technologies, sounds, ethnicities—just jamming it all together.

Santogold: It was the music from the late seventies and early eighties that moved me to make music in the first place. Punk just stripped all that big, theatrical rock from bands like Led Zeppelin and the Doors. It was just raw energy. And that’s what I relate to—bands like the Ramones who can hardly play anything. I can hardly play anything!

DH: You know, that’s all art is: a gradual build and layering of influences and tastes. It’s like pollination.

S: I feel like out of the whole punk thing, you did what I’ve been striving to do, which is bring a pop element to it. You wrote real songs, with melodies. When I listened to your songs when I was younger, I felt like they were fifties-esque, but twisted into a stripped-down, raw thing. You did that with fashion, too. You’ve got that total punk thing, with the Sex Pistols and stuff, and then the whole glam-rock thing, with David Bowie and everybody. You made a tough, badass, not girly but still feminine look.

NY: Debbie, you helped create room for women in pop music. How have things changed since then?

DH: There’ve always been two schools of thought when it comes to female artists. There’s the serious guitar players who have stuff to say, and they’re called “women.” And then there’s the producer-driven, girl-group, hair-toss, flaunt-your-tits-and-ass kind of act.

S: The producers phenomenon is one of the reasons music has gone downhill. When I was a teenager, every hip-hop artist had their own D.J., who was their producer. From Public Enemy to A Tribe Called Quest, everyone had a different sound. Now? Now it’s only hip-hop, pop, and rock. You’ve got three producers who do everything. And as far as the women go, I think there are very few big-time women right now who are running their own show, like Björk, M.I.A., and Karen O. It’s all American Idol.

DH: The best part about American Idol is when they have the auditions.

S: I agree.

DH: That’s all they should do.

NY: Has New York priced itself out of a music scene?

S: I’m from Philly, but I’ve lived in Brooklyn for about eight years. It’s funny: It wasn’t until I moved here that I met a lot of my really good friends from Philly. Because everybody comes to New York. It’s just where stuff jumps off.

DH: That’s always why people would come to New York. It’s a communications hub.

S: Totally. But you can’t live here and just be an artist unless you’re gonna be so broke. I moved back to Philly for a while and would come to New York three times a week, because I don’t want to be that broke. A lot of artists do that these days—they start off elsewhere, then move to Williamsburg, and then keep moving because it’s so expensive. In fact, most of the people in the scene I’m said to be in don’t really live here. There’s not a scene like there was back in your day.

DH: I don’t think the economic conditions permit it.

S: And the city doesn’t value it. I mean, look what they did to CBGB!

DH: The whole Lower East Side looks like a prison farm to me. All those dorms that NYU put up—they’ve gotten away with murder.

NY: Is there still a distinctive New York sound?

DH: The thing that’s sad about the role New York now plays in the world is that everything is everywhere, and it’s becoming very much the same. All the major cities in the Western world have become gentrified and homogenized. There’s nothing you can buy only in New York. Back in the seventies, the city was chaotic and poor. My clothes came out of the garbage—I went shopping on the street. Nobody had dough to afford their own equipment. You would borrow a guitar and if you had them you fucking held onto them like there was no tomorrow.

NY: So that made it easier to create a unique identity?

DH: I don’t want to see everybody dressed the same. I want to see somebody who’s got some color, who makes a statement about who they are, and is prepared to be sneered at. When I used to go uptown, before punk became acceptable and fashionable, it was a rough trip, with people staring and making nasty remarks.

S: It’s not necessarily enjoyable.

DH: They’re the ones who are wearing the stuff now, man. That’s all I can say.

S: Last winter, when I toured with Coldplay, I got this e-mail that said, “I hate your lesbian techno rap!” People are afraid of women who aren’t, like, naked onstage. People are afraid of anybody who looks different or has anything to say. The key is to understand the mainstream enough to open a door for yourself. To make a record that people can get on the underground level, and that somebody who just hears it on the radio can say, “I love this song!”

NY: There was a big drug element to music back then, too, right?

DH: At first, no one had any money for drugs. They came later, in the late seventies. We always thought it was political, because all of a sudden there was this flood of unbelievably cheap, strong drugs. It felt like the sort of thing to keep everybody quiet.

S: No, it’s documented that they were doing that. Anybody who was anti-American, communist, or, like, anything—give them some heroin and keep them over there. And now, honestly, I think hip-hop is suffering from that. It’s the “keep the people a mess” idea. Let them stay in their little area and be all fucked up and destroy themselves.

DH: But even before then, everything was stripped down, and the music reflected that struggle to survive. You were forced to be creative.

S: Unfortunately, I don’t think that struggle makes it into music much anymore. Something happened where the industry got so big that it started dictating what music was allowed to be heard, and people gave up on making honest, real music.

DH: I think that’s what the Internet has maybe opened back up.

S: It is. Now people don’t have to pay a lot for a studio, and they’re doing more creative stuff. There’s no longer the feeling that, “Man, what’s the point in making it, ’cause no one will ever hear it?” Now you’re like, “I don’t care if I ever get a record deal; I’m going to make it, put it up on MySpace, and people will hear it.” Most new bands do this now. The whole way that A&R people find new bands now is based on their MySpace hits.

NY: So the Internet makes it easier to get your music heard. Does it make it harder to get paid?

S: They keep you broke. The first year of touring, you’re doing festivals and stuff that don’t make any money. Even when you get an advance, you have to spend it on touring. Plus, do you know about the 360 deals?

DH: What’s 360?

S: When you sign with the major labels, they get a percentage of all your ancillary income—your tour, your merchandise, your publishing.

NY: New York could be at the beginning of a seventies-style financial crisis. Would that be good or bad for the New York music scene?

S: I’m not sure how that would affect the music scene. But I assume if everyone was broke and struggling and really feeling the effects of all the bad decisions that have been made, it would make it harder to hide from things that are a mess in our world. And that sense of urgency would most likely find its way into art.

NY: In the first half of this decade, a lot of New York bands explicitly mimicked the seventies punk sound. Was that just nostalgia?

S: I think bands like the Strokes, the White Stripes, and the Yeah Yeah Yeahs were more straight-up retro than people are doing now, but they started something. The really grimy amps and the stripped-down rock sounds. And as bands like myself, LCD Soundsystem, the Death Set, and Late of the Pier tried to twist it into something new, we moved into adding more electronic sounds alongside the grime.

DH: Punk is sort of irrelevant today. As a style of music, it still has relevance, but not as a social trend. Originally punk was about going against the mainstream grain. These days bands like Goon Squad, who tip their wigs to old styles, stand out as new, mainstream punk.

NY: Who is truly punk today?

S: I’d say Lil’ Wayne.

DH: There’s a difference between someone who’s really thinking about music and living it and someone who is basically just a cover band. But I just saw a band called Creature at the Mercury Lounge the other night. They were on at 7:30, completely unheralded in any way, and they were fantastic.

NY: So you still get out and catch a lot of current bands?

DH: I try, yeah. I mean, it’s not easy, but I drag my sorry old ass out.

S: I feel the same way.

NY: What’s your favorite band right now?

S: I really enjoyed Vampire Weekend’s record.

DH: I’ve been listening to a lot of songs by MGMT.

NY: Do you think that hipsters evolved from punks?

DH: Hipsters?

S: It’s what everyone calls young guys now.

DH: Really? I just want to say grunge.

S: Hipsters, honestly, there’s nothing there! Everyone wears the exact same thing. My song “L.E.S. Artistes” is about fakers, people who are self-proclaimed artists but really just go out in the Lower East Side and Williamsburg to be scenesters.

DH: The point of being punk was to be an asshole and not to be put down for it.

S: You mean like embarrassing yourself, not being good?

DH: Not being the best. Being a fool. Making a bad decision and saying, “Oh, God, why did I do that?” And then saying, “Okay, but I could do this, and I could save some of that.” That’s when you really absorb it, and it becomes a signature, and audiences want it. I can’t imagine what they would have done with Nina Simone today.

S: Yeah, that’s what artist development is meant to do: make quality, lifelong artists. And we don’t have a lot of those anymore.

DH: Well, it’s also because record labels, at one time, actually were into artist development. That doesn’t really exist anymore.

S: I think a lot of artists discover it’s bad that the media grabs things right away. You just get thrown out there, on the spot. There’s no time to prepare. If you’re a perfectionist, you’re worried about all the press and having everything plastered online. The turnaround for everything is quicker. Even outfits—you wear an outfit twice, and it’s like, “Put that one away.” You wear it in France, and you think you can wear it somewhere else? No. The photos are online.

DH: It’s absurd.

S: Plus, you have to do way more press, so you’re always running through everything. Nobody knows what’s going to be important because blogs like Stereogum and Brooklyn Vegan have so much power. Every artist I meet now has lost their voice. Also, if you get one hit, you might not be ready to sustain it. So bands come and then they’re gone immediately. No one cares. No one says, “This is an artist that’s going be around for ten years or ten records.”

DH: There has always been a disposable culture, but the turnover now is just so fast.

S: You used to go on the road before you had a record out. So you’d learn how to perform, and you’d start to build a fan base.

DH: Yeah, I don’t know what you call most groups these days. They’re not really individuals, they’re just like producer-driven cookie-cutter things. It’s just showbiz. And it has nothing to do with …

S: Art.

DH: I mean, where’s Suicide when you need them?

Debbie with Roy Nathanson and friends at Joe’s Pub

September 26, 2008


filed under: concerts, jazz, live — Christina @ 12:00 am

Debbie will do a show with Roy Nathanson and friends at Joe’s Pub on October 12 at 2:30 pm as part of Joe’s Pub’s 10th Anniversary. The show is free but you need to register for tickets from midnight on October 1 and random people will be chosen.

Visit joespub.com for further information and to register.

BlackBook Magazine interview + picture

September 23, 2008


filed under: images, interviews — Christina @ 12:00 am

Check out the article ‘Creatures of the Night: A Gallery of After Darkers’ from BlackBook Magazine for a new picture and a brief article about Debbie and Justin Bond.

Debbie and Justin BondThe All-Nighters: Deborah Harry, musician, actor, and Justin Bond, cabaret performer, photographed at The Diner, New York City.

Rock goddess Deborah Harry and international cabaret star Justin Bond (aka Kiki of Kiki & Herb), friends for over 10 years, revel in pleasures of the evening—creative and otherwise: “I look at it like this,” says Harry, casual and still utterly iconic in her white blouse and stripey pants, hair platinum blonde, fresh from Blondie’s Parallel Lines anniversary tour. “My favorite part of the day is from about 4 a.m. to 7 a.m. I love those hours. I think that being in the city, staying out all night and facing the dawn offers an amazing perspective. It’s a very creative time. I either get there from the back side or the front side.”

For Bond, charismatic and festive in eyeliner and quilted jacket, the hours between 10 to 12 offer the first window of nocturnal magic: “Putting on my makeup is like zen meditation, especially if you have girlfriends to get ready with,” he says, seated across from his partner in crime over blue plate specials at a Chelsea diner. “Then, three to five is good, because all the hardcore people are left, the risk-taking people who’ve come out from their buildings to mingle with each other.” Living in one of the world’s 24-hour cities, both agree, is a major perk. Bond’s after-hours itinerary includes catching up with moonlighting deejay John Cameron Mitchell at Mattachine, a Thursday night blowout at Julius in the West Village. Harry, whose favorite clubs over the years have included Jackie 60 and Mother (“high on the list, if not the top”), CBGB, Max’s Kansas City and Studio 54 says: “At least in New York, you can act like an adult. You can be responsible for your own irresponsibility.”

When it comes to their choice libations, Bond, whose boozy chanteuse Kiki has a celebrity-addicted following, says that he likes “a nice slug of Jack and Coke.” Harry, the quintessential diva of the night, whose seductive “Heart of Glass” and “Rapture” are inevitable pleasures in any nightclub (the endurance of the songs “is the best thing that happened to me, but I prefer now to the past. I’m not really a nostalgic person,” she says), gets her thrill from champagne, Cristal to be precise: “It’s the ultimate. You can always rely on it. I never get hangovers.” But if they mix their poisons, or have one too many, what do the dedicated nightbirds turn to for hangover cures? “Advil, or a hamburger,” Bond offers, “and sex. Anything that makes me sweat.”
“There you go,” says Harry. “Best cure yet.” —Ray Rogers and James Servin.

Jack’s Third Show update

September 22, 2008


filed under: Blondie, concerts, live — Christina @ 12:00 am

Blondie will play a 60 minute set at ‘Jack’s Third Show’ in Irvine, CA on Saturday from 6:15 pm. The full show will be broadcast on 931jackfmshow.com starting at 3:30 pm.

Gimme Shelter: Rock Rescue ticket update

September 14, 2008


filed under: charity, events, live — Christina @ 12:00 am

Visit highlineballroom.com to purchase tickets for Debbie’s performance at the ‘Gimme Shelter: Rock Rescue’ benefit in New York on October 6.

Jack’s Third Radio Show update

September 13, 2008


filed under: Blondie, concerts, live — Christina @ 12:00 am

5 VIP packages (including two pit tickets each) for ‘Jack’s Third Radio Show’ benefitting TACA (Talking About Curing Autism) are now up for auction on clothesoffourback.org.

For more info check out 931jackfmshow.com and clothesoffourback.org.

Debbie at 5th Annual Fashion Rocks

September 6, 2008


filed under: events, images — Christina @ 12:00 am

 

Check out Gettyimages, Wireimage, daylife.com and Contactmusic.com for pictures of Debbie’s ‘Call Me’ performance with Fergie at the ‘5th Annual Fashion Rocks’ concert last night.
The show airs Tuesday, September 9th at 9 p.m. on CBS. 

Gimme Shelter: Rock Rescue’ benefit concert

September 4, 2008


filed under: charity, events, live — Christina @ 12:00 am

Debbie Harry will be serving as the honorary chair at this year’s 3rd annual ‘Gimme Shelter: Rock Rescue’ benefit concert in New York City on October 6.
The concert will feature performances by singer songwriter Jesse Malin, Lissy Trullie, Earl Greyhound, the March 4th Marching Band and more artists to be announced soon.
source: rational-animal.org & top40-charts.com

Deborah’s new single ‘Fit Right In’

September 1, 2008


filed under: new releases — Christina @ 12:00 am

Deborah’s new single ‘Fit Right In’ (with ‘Heat Of The Moment’ with Mecca Dawn) is now officially available for download on Amazon.com and iTunes US.


 

 

     
 
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SITE UPDATES

Untitled Document

July 21, 2010

Screenshots of the Absolute Radio interview at the Isle Of Wight Festival on June 12 have been added to the gallery.

July 15, 2010

The forum has been redesigned and can now be accessed directly at blondieforum.com.

July 13, 2010

The latest interviews with Debbie (heraldsun.com.au, Welwyn Hatfield Times, Yorkshire Evening Post, Bournemouth Echo and Hampstead and Highgate Express) have been added to the press section.
The Isle Of Wight Festival videos ('What I Heard' & 'Heart Of Glass' + interview) have been added to the video downloads section.

July 6, 2010

The setlist database has been updated.

July 5, 2010

The 'D-Day', 'The End, The End', 'End Of The World', 'Le Bleu à l’âme', 'Mother', 'A Sunday Smile', 'What I Heard', 'Wipe Off My Sweat' and 'Break Your Heart' song pages have been created. All titles from the 'Panic Of Girls' sessions have been added to the "unreleased songs" section and will be moved as soon as the album is out.
The setlist database has been updated.

July 1, 2010

Deborah-harry.com wishes Debbie a very Happy Birthday and all the best on her special day. May all your dreams come true. Thank you for all the great shows and the new music.

June 24, 2010

The tour schedule has been updated. A show at the Nokia Theatre in New York on August 31 has been added.

June 5, 2010

The filmography has been updated.

June 2, 2010

The tour schedule has been updated. Shows with the Pretenders in Australia and New Zealand in November and December have been added.

May 30, 2010

The setlist database has been updated. New shows have been added.

May 29, 2010

The 'I'll Be Your Mirror' song page has been added to the lyrics section. The song was performed by Debbie, Chris and Matt at the Woodstock Day School benefit last night.

May 22, 2010

The Spanish 'Call Me' 7" single has been added to the discography.
The latest "Go Belfast" edition with a new interview with Debbie has been added to the press section.

May 18, 2010

The 'Spirit Of The Forest' song page has been created.

May 14, 2010

The "Don't Stop Believin'" song page has been created.
Pictures from last night's Rainforest Fund’s 21st Birthday Celebration Benefit have been added to the gallery.

May 10, 2010

The tour schedule has been updated. Blondie are scheduled to perform at the Hop Farm Festival in Kent (UK) on July 2.

May 8, 2010

The 'Rainforest Fund’s 21st Birthday Celebration Benefit' concert with Debbie has been added to the calendar/tour schedule.

May 4, 2010

The Hatfield (UK) show has been postponed to June 9. New shows in Cambridge on June 10 and London on June 30 have been added to the tour schedule.

May 1, 2010

The interview on 'Chris Frantz The Talking Head' from last night has been added to the audio downloads section.

April 28, 2010

The UK 'Strike Me Pink' cassette has been added to the discography.

April 24, 2010

Scans of the 'Record Collector' magazine have been added to the press section.

April 20, 2010

Images of Debbie and Chris on the French TV show 'Tout Le Monde En Parle' in 2003 have been added to the gallery.

April 17, 2010

The Isle Of Man show on June 8 has been replaced with a show at the Forum in Hatfield (UK). Tickets are on sale at Ticketmaster.
The 'Time Is Tight', 'Nutbush City Limits', 'My Baby Must Be A Magician', 'Smarty Pants' and 'Mr. Big Stuff' cover pages have been added to the lyrics section.

April 15, 2010

A show in Southend (UK) on June 29 has been added to the tour schedule.

April 13, 2010

The tour schedule has been updated with new European shows.

April 12, 2010

A show in Manchester (UK) on June 16 has been added to the tour section.

April 11, 2010

The tour schedule has been updated with new U.S. shows.

April 9, 2010

The U.S. 'Backfired' 7" promo single, the Mexican 'The Tide Is High' 7" single and the Australian 'Maybe For Sure' 7" single have been added to the discography.
A Blondie show in Hammond, IN on August 18 has been added to the tour schedule.

April 6, 2010

Blondie shows in London (UK) on June 26, Springfield, IL on August 20 (with Cheap Trick), Detroit, MI on August 27 (with Cheap Trick) and Baltimore, MD on August 29 (with Cheap Trick) have been added to the tour schedule.

April 4, 2010

A Blondie show in Santa Rosa, CA on August 5 has been added to the tour schedule.

April 1, 2010

A Blondie show in Inverness (UK) at the RockNess Music Festival has been added to the tour schedule.

{past updates}

 

(archive)

 

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