David Jordan: ilikemusic because... It makes me feel good and it puts me in a happy mood.
simon f baker: ilikemusic because... you can transcend the confines of the material world with it, it's probably better than shagging in fact. There is virtually nothing more satisfying than when a load of chords and words suddenly come together into a song ; suddenly everything in life seems to fit and make sense once more.
Del: ilikemusic because... music is life
Steve, Hard-Fi: ilikemusic because... Life is not worth living without it. Everything else could disappear, but music is the one thing that always remains with me throughout my entire life.
Sian Evans: ilikemusic because... when everyone you cared about lets you down (e.g. friends, boyfriend, parents) all at the same time music will always be there to pick you up and help you move on. ;-)
Dave: ilikemusic because... Without it there wouldnt be a Global Gathering
deivid: ilikemusic because... its the most beutiful and enjoyable thing in the world that makes every person in common. :)~
Josh Ritter: ilikemusic because... It’s like an envelope that I can carry around with me wherever I go and I can unfold the letter at anytime.
Riot! Traffic: ilikemusic because... music is LiFe...and more than...'Back in October 2004, Hard-Fi pressed up 500 copies of their debut mini-album 'Stars Of CCTV'. Check out the E-CARD here Recorded in the band's beloved 'Cherry Lips' studio, (a former 24 hour cab office on a bleak Staines industrial estate), it was recorded for £300 worth of rent and the price of a second hand computer: the result was a DIY masterpiece.
Released on Necessary Records, 'Stars Of CCTV' sold out within weeks, seminal US producer Rick Rubin was on the phone pronouncing the album "a landmark record" and suddenly Hard-Fi gate crashed onto MTV, Radio 1 and the top of every major label's 'Must Sign' list. They chose Atlantic Records and began recording the full length, no holds barred version of 'Stars Of CCTV'.
In stark contrast, it was just two years ago, following a family crisis, that Hard-Fi front man Richard Archer found himself sucked back into his hometown of Staines - an urban wasteland of chain pubs, fake Burberry, disenfranchised youth and Friday night violent free-for-alls. Quickly Archer began writing Stars Of CCTV, reflecting his feelings of entrapment in a satellite ghost town bereft of soul, style or sobriety. Just as Terry Hall channelled the broken spirit of 80's Coventry into the likes of 'Ghost Town' and 'Nite Club', Archer's work threw up dark, dubby shapes and dissatisfied lyrics, gloriously rife with modern day glitz, small-town glamour and concrete hedonism.
page << 1 2 3 >>
Also See: ilikemusic.com