Sinister: The Three o'clock
Birjinder Singh Anant
bsanant at xxx.edu
Sat Feb 21 09:52:52 GMT 1998
Hi,
I'm just writing in response to the talk about the three o'clock. I
assume Paul's talking about the Uncut interview with Ian Brown. In one of
the little side interviews, Alan McGee says that no one knows this, but
one of the influences on the Roses first album was a us band called the
three o'clock.
But what does he know?
Also, in this week's San Francisco Bay Guardian, there's an interview by
Johnny Ray Huston, the same guy who wrote the B&S article last week, with
Momus, who was supposed to be playing at the Cafe Du Nord on Monday, but
I called the club, and they said that the show was cancelled because he
stayed in the US longer than he was supposed to. Anyway, in the article
they mention B&S. Here's the quote:
"Though Momus is a musical loner, he has found kinship
with other musical loners. In the cover painting of his
debut album, Circus Maximus, arrows pierce his body a la
St. Sebastian, so I'm not surprised when he says Stuart
Murdoch of the Scottish group Belle and Sebastian wrote
him last year offering back-up for future tours. ('I'm
glad I didn't reply,' he says, 'because I might have
stopped him from making If You're Feeling Sinister.')
Momus also..."
If anyone wants the whole interview, I can transcribe it.Just send me an
email.
Take care,
Birjinder
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