18 - 24 JUL 2012 . NZ’S oNLY FREE WEEKLY STREET PRESS . ISSUE 421 . GROOVEGUIDE
18 - 24 JUL 2012 . NZ’S oNLY FREE WEEKLY STREET PRESS . ISSUE 421 . GROOVEGUIDE.CO.NZ SHIT WORTH DOING Gigs | Music | Arts | Movies | TV | Games | Gadgets | Food | Gear FREE The Dark Knight Rises CONCORD DAWN / HOME BREW / COLLApsing cities Detail © Cyril Ruoso, France Tiny warm-up KIP CHAPMAN EDWIN WRIGHT ADAM GARDINER NIC SAMPSON VIRGINIA FRANKOVICH JULIA CROFT KEITH ADAMS 28 JUNE – 28 JULY HERALD THEATRE, AOTEA CENTRE, THE EDGE 0800 BUY TICKETS (289 842) or www.atc.co.nz BRUCE MASON PLAYWRITING AWARD 2010 FRINGE FESTIVAL BEST THEATRE 2009 FOR THE INTRICATE ART OF ACTUALLY CARING CHAPMAN TRIPP OUTSTANDING PLAYWRIGHT 2008 FOR RUBBER TURKEY CHAPMAN TRIPP MOST ORIGINAL PRODUCTION 2009 FOR THE INTRICATE ART OF ACTUALLY CARING Eli Kent is an extraordinary new voice in New Zealand playwriting – highly original, complex, funny and profoundly moving. Now On Sale 5th July Raglan Yot Club 8th July Auckland Besos Latinos 11th july tauranga major toms 12th July Wellington Mighty Mighty 14th july cook strait interislander ferry 14th July blenheim the secret garden cafe 15th July Christchurch dux live 17th July Timaru Arthur Street Cafe 18th July Dunedin The Church Cafe 19th July Nelson Fair Field House 20th july cook strait interislander ferry 20th july palmerston north 0e cafe 21st july whanganui whanganiui musicians club 27th july hamilton milk & honey Groove Guide & The Production Co. Present Lydia Cole Me & Moon Tour with Tom Lark Tickets from www.undertheradar.co.nz www.lydiacole.com - www.tomlark.bandcamp.com ALBUM OUT NOW ISSN 1172-675X Shit Worth Knowing A Red Hot Summer Los Angeles troubadours Red Hot Chili Peppers have been announced to play one show at Auckland’s Vector Arena in January. Pushing nearly 30 years at the forefront of modern rock, the legacy themselves return for the first time in five years as they celebrate last year’s release and their 10th studio album, I’m With You. The line-up, consisting of constants Anthony Kiedis, Flea, Chad Smith and John Frusciante replacement/newcomer Josh Klinghoffer will be supported by LA hardcore pseudo-supergroup Off! at the show on Sunday 13 January. Holy Luck! NZ Music Hall Of Famer and The Exponents frontman Jordan Luck has announced he’ll be hitting the southern roads with The Jordan Luck Band (featuring members of Dead Flowers and The D4) at the end of July, with support from Auckland four-piece Ekko Park. The two hard rock bands will be playing three shows over three days, the first at The Blue Pub in Methven on Friday 27 July, the second at The Woolston Club in Christchurch on Saturday 28 July, with the third and final show at The Strawberry Tree in Kaikoura on Sunday 29 July. Tickets are available now through Cosmic Ticketing. Give a hoot Synth-pop indietronica-darling-gone-mainstream pop hit Owl City, AKA Adam Young, has announced he’ll be making his way to New Zealand with his live band before touring Australia in November for an all-ages show at Auckland’s Powerstation. The electronica hitmaker garnered more attention for himself with his May release The Midsummer Station through Universal Republic and was joined by blink 182’s Mark Hoppus as well as Carly Rae Jepsen on the album. Kiwi audiences should be no strangers to Owl City, considering his latest single debuted at number one on the NZ iTunes and RIANZ charts. Tickets for the Monday 16 November show at the Powerstation are available now through Ticket Master. Check, check While the line-ups for Rhythm & Vines and Rhythm & Alps are yet to be announced, organisers have dropped some names for who will be playing at the R&V/R&A Soundchecks. On Thursday 04 October at the Union Hall in Dunedin, Benga, Rusko and P-Money will be playing at the warm-up R&A show, while the R&V Soundcheck at Vector Arena in Auckland on Friday 05 October will feature Nero, Rusko, Labrinth and Home Brew. For more information about the soundchecks as well as the bigger events and info on ticketing, pricing and camping, head to rhythmandvines.co.nz. Factor in the Fear Industrial heavyweights and metal mainstays Fear Factory have announced they’ll be returning to New Zealand in support of their new album The Industrialist. Last here in 2010 supporting Metallica in Christchurch, the Los Angeles duo of Burton C. Bell and Dino Cazares will be joined by touring members Matt DeVries and Mike Heller for the one New Zealand show at Auckland’s Powerstation on Saturday 22 September. Tickets are available through Ticket Master and at Real Groovy. Nothin’ But the Blues 1990s alt-rock icons Weezer have announced they’ll be coming our way in January for the first time in 16 years. Some of you will have kids older than that. Touring company Chugg Entertainment said that Weezer will be performing a collection of greatest hits and rarities in addition to The Blue Album from start to finish (the album that featured hit songs ‘My Name Is Jonas’, ‘Buddy Holly’, ‘Undone – The Sweater Song’, ‘Say It Ain’t So’, ‘Only In Dreams’ and more). Tickets for the Friday 11 January show at Vector Arena in Auckland will be available through Ticket Master from Thursday 26 July. Sola Rosa Return Celebrating their fifth studio album Low And Behold, High And Beyond, genre-defying ensemble Sola Rosa have announced they’ll be touring the country in August as they showcase new material as well as the extensive back catalogue. Having been in the producing game for over a decade, songwriter Andrew Spraggon has led the Sola Rosa sound in a new direction with the new album. Spraggon teams up with Spikey Tee, Ben White, Matt Short, Cherie Mathieson and L. A. Mitchell for the Low And Behold, High And Beyond tour which will hit Auckland, Raglan, Ohakune, Havelock North, New Plymouth, Wellington, Christchurch, Dunedin and Queenstown. See the tours pages for dates and venues. Our pick NEWS due to space and content requirements, not all gigs may be listed. listings are user generated. groove guide assumes no responsibility for any inaccuracies, errors or omissions. groove guide is provided ‘as is’, for your information only, without warranty of any kind, either expressed or implied, including, but not limited to, fitness for a particular purpose and non-infringment. the guide’s publisher assumes no responsibility for and disclaims all liability for any inaccuracies, errors or omissions in this guide and do not share the opinions expressed within. reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited. copyright 2012 Groove Guide is New Zealand’s leading weekly music and entertainment publication. 10,000 free copies are available every week at music stores, cafes, fast food outlets, nightclubs, bars, restaurants, cinemas and retail stores throughout New Zealand. If you would like to stock Groove Guide please contact tyler@ grooveguide.co.nz or call (09) 3664616. Editor Grant Hislop editor@grooveguide.co.nz CONTRIBUTING Editor Matt Monk matt@grooveguide.co.nz Editorial assistant Tyler Hislop tyler@grooveguide.co.nz SUB Editor Elise Brinkman elise@grooveguide.co.nz Designer Greta Gotlieb greta@grooveguide.co.nz Advertising sales@grooveguide.co.nz Accounts Gail Hislop gail@grooveguide.co.nz Contributors Darren Maslin, Steve Newall, Laura Weaser, Justin Fowler, Alan Bell. Interns Bronte Taylor and Gemma Dutton print Image Print ltd. Publisher Hark Entertainment LTD PO Box 6032 Wellesley Street, Auckland grooveguide.co.nz Scan the QR code with your smartphone to go to Groove Guide’s mobile website for breaking news, reviews, interviews and more features. We also do this cool social media stuff. @GrooveGuide facebook.com/grooveguide Grooveguide.co.nz | 5 The country’s most iconic summer festival is no more. We’ve known that for months. 2012 was the last year that New Zealand would be graced with the Big Day Out, and we’re yet to see how the summer will play out without the mainstay of international and local acts that would usually be rocking out. Will another festival take its place? Will Laneway be the new favourite festival? Will Rhythm & Vines or its southern counterpart Rhythm & Alps draw in bigger crowds than ever? Will the smaller festivals around the country start seeing more people travel and make a road trip out of their summer? Or will the acts that are playing at the Australian Big Day Out just make their way over here for separate gigs? The Big Day Out line-up announcement always brought news of a multitude of different bands making their way down under. As a nation of moaners, some years we would call the festival “too indie”, while some years it would be “too stadium rock”. Now that it’s gone, it’s “too bad”. Next year, the Aussies have indie and mainstream darlings from all around the world playing at the BDO: Red Hot Chili Peppers, The Killers, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Vampire Weekend, Band of Horses, Kaskade, Animal Collective, Sleigh Bells, Foals, Crystal Castles, OFF!, Against Me!, Childish Gambino and Jeff the Brotherhood to name just a few. Many concertgoers will be buying their tickets to one of the five Aussie shows already, which is understandable. But we’re posing the question concerning what New Zealand will do with this gap in the market, and it seems that it’s being filled with international headliners over the course of a few months instead uploads/Geographie/ the-dark-knight-rises-concord-dawn-home-brew-collapsing-cities.pdf
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