Soundcheck: Tomorrow's party people
Evening Standard 16.10.09
Bilinda Butcher of My Bloody Valentine
After 10 years of ever-growing cult status, the All Tomorrow's Parties festival has become a thrice-yearly UK event, has expanded into the US and Australia, and is now the comeback destination of choice for all manner of reformed and long-absent bands.
This is despite largely taking place in out-of-season Butlins resorts.
Now the weekender for people who hate conventional music festivals has made its most unexpected move yet and booked someone that the man on the street has actually heard of - The Simpsons' creator Matt Groening will pick the bands one weekend next May.
Groening might seem an odd choice when the other upcoming ATPs are to be curated by reunited cult favourites My Bloody Valentine and Pavement.
If it was up to Homer Simpson it would be Grand Funk Railroad all the way.
But the 55-year-old Groening reportedly has an extensive personal collection of the kind of experimental art rock that causes attendees to lose cardigan buttons with excitement, and has already organised an ATP event in Long Beach California in 2003.
Back then he booked the likes of Sonic Youth, The Mars Volta, The Shins and Captain Beefheart's newly reformed Magic Band, so it's in safe hands. Tickets go on sale today.
But if you'd rather be at home watching Futurama, you're not alone.
ATP's obscure line-ups are more likely to feature instrumental doom metal by terrifying regular participants Sunn O))) than anyone on the A-list at Absolute Radio, and seem calculated to make 99 per cent of the population sprint towards the welcoming arms of the V Festival.
It's a strategy that has allowed it to remain sponsorship-free and created a loyal audience that really, really loves it.
Attendees are music's geekiest strain, the types who have elitist music website Pitchfork.com as their homepage if they're not already contributors.
They're so passionate that some 200 of them submitted amateur footage to be used in a new film marking ATP's 10th anniversary.
The All Tomorrow's Parties movie, out on DVD on 2 November, takes its cue from the classic festival films of the Sixties, focusing as much on the eccentricities of the audience as on the talents of the bands.
It features performances by acts including Nick Cave, Belle and Sebastian and Yeah Yeah Yeahs as well as much fan lunacy, interspersed with footage of Butlins attendees of the past enjoying three-legged races and donkey rides.
What the venues lack in cool cachet, they make up for in unheard-of festival luxuries such as roofs and running water.
Plus there's the added warm glow you get from knowing your left-field pop idol is staying in exactly the same kind of apartment as you. You may even spot him drying his pants on a balcony.
Most appealingly, the bands book the bands, ensuring the line-up is never dictated by who is decreed hot right now and is always as idiosyncratic as those choosing it.
Past curators include Mogwai, Portishead, The Breeders and The Flaming Lips, as well as artists such as Vincent Gallo, the Chapman brothers and, of course, Groening.
Even if you have heard of the headliners, chances are the rest of the bill would make even John Peel raise a mildly confused eyebrow.
It's safest just to give in to ignorance and perhaps discover that you really enjoy abstract noise-rap. If a headache starts brewing, there's always the water park.
All Tomorrow's Parties Festival (www.atpfestival.com) is curated by My Bloody Valentine, 4-6 Dec; Ten Years of ATP, 11-13 Dec; curated by Matt Groening, 7-9 May 2010; curated by Pavement, 14-16 May 2010. All at Butlins Holiday Centre, Minehead. To book: www.seetickets.com.
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The much-hyped streaming service Spotify will get a major rival when Sky Songs launches on Monday at http://songs.sky.com.
The media giant is offering subscribers unlimited advert-free streaming plus download tracks from all four major labels.
After winning the Best Actress award at Cannes for Antichrist, Charlotte Gainsbourg has returned to the less controversial field of music and asked Beck to produce her next album.
The first fruit — a tribal, droning track callled IRM — is available free at www.charlottegainsbourg.com before the album's release in January.
Northern Irish power poppers Ash have turned their backs on the album format and vowed to release 26 singles in quick succession, one a fortnight for the next year starting this week. Get the ball rolling by downloading the bouncy electropop of True Love 1980, or subscribing to get all 26 tracks for a mere £13, at www.ash-official.com/store.
After taking over a decade to finish the most recent Portishead album, the band's Geoff Barrow has become a touch more spontaneous with his new side project BEAK>.
The minimalist trio recorded an album in just 12 days and then gave it the imaginative title Recordings 05/01/09 > 17/01/ 09. Download moody highlights at http://beak.bandcamp.com.
Morning:
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An awesome and ridiculous film that leaves you thrilled beyond the point of your natural endurance



