Keren Ann Chinese Fanblog

收集整理关于Keren Ann的一切:新闻、乐评、采访…… Find all about Keren Ann here.
博客统计
总访问量:173592
今日访问:33
开博时间:2006-08-08
最近访客

生锈的小树

2011-12-07

ltcyiu

2011-11-24

博客成员
关注更新

之前的一些 http://tysurl.com/QsWGll

赤名丽香2012-1-19

博客门铃
博文

【下载】Keren Ann - The Bowery Ballroom 2011现场



Keren Ann - The Bowery Ballroom 2011现场下载
包含:
Chelsea Burns
Not Going Anywhere
Lay Your Head Down
Daddy, You Been On My Mind
It Ain't No
Crime
The Harder Ships of the World

共六首现场曲目。格式为MP3。

 

文件名:  Keren Ann - The Bowery Ballroom, 2011现场.zip
下载地址:  http://www.rayfile.com/files/5b0589cc-02d7-11e1-8a7f-0015c55db73d/

分类:新闻news | 评论:0 | 浏览:104 | 收藏 | 转发至天涯微博 | 查看全文>>

Lady and Bird的歌剧Red Water将于11月在法国启动

  
  Red Water演出海报
  
  
  Lady and Bird宣传海报
  
  其实,早在今年6月份,Lady and Bird的歌剧就已经在宣传作势,下面这个视频便是最好的证明。此外,在诸多关于KEREN ANN的新专辑101的采访中,这个歌剧也曾被多次提及。
  
  
  
  歌剧的名字叫Red Water,有听有看,讲述了一个关于双胞胎的故事。Red Water(红色的水)是剧中一个村镇的地名,那里有一条流着纯粹的红酒的河,村镇的地名也由此而来。至于这条河的渊源,其实是一对不知身世的双胞胎兄妹爱上彼此之后,被村里的人捉住,两人殉情投河而将河染成红色,河水变成了最为纯粹的红酒。而一个出生在此地但很早就背井离乡的名人为了研究双胞胎的心灵感应而回到村镇,引出了这个凄美的故事。
  
  该剧将在法国不同地区演出共六场,时间地点分别如下:
  
  鲁昂(Rouen)Theatre Des Arts剧院(订票网站http://www.operaderouen.fr/#infos_224
  2011年11月4日8:30PM
  2011年11月5日7:30PM
  2011年11月6日4:00PM
  
  埃夫勒(Evreux)Le Cadran
  2011年11月9日8:30PM
  
  图尔市(Tours)Grand Theatre剧院
  2011年11月24日8:00PM
  
  奥尔良(Orleans)Centre Dramatique National
  2011年11月30日8:30PM
  
  从宣传视频中可见歌剧有新歌,所以我推测这次准备很久的演出应该会推出DVD或CD类的音像制品,不能去法国亲自观看的歌迷可以小小期望一下。
分类:新闻news | 评论:0 | 浏览:105 | 收藏 | 转发至天涯微博 | 查看全文>>

KEREN ANN6月9日演唱会的演出曲目

  


  很喜欢这些故意写得跟平时不一样的曲目!
分类:现场concerts | 评论:0 | 浏览:170 | 收藏 | 转发至天涯微博 | 查看全文>>

Keren Ann: happy to be melancholy

原文地址:http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2011/apr/03/keren-ann-interview-101



keren ann


Keren Ann, pictured in London last month. Photograph: Andy Hall for the Observer

Keren Ann Zeidel sits at a long cafe table, huddled in a voluminous beige-brown cape, her eyes ringed with kohl. Her black hair is cut in an uncompromising pudding bowl and her skin is as pale as an oyster shell. She looks small and delicate, almost child-like, but when she starts talking about music, she launches fluently into extended semi-philosophical monologues on the nature of art, referencing everything from film noir to Chopin. The overall effect is somewhat incongruous, like a bush-baby delivering a university lecture.
"My music is much easier to explain as a picture," she says, midway through one such monologue. "All the arrangements, textures, all the colours and the way you mix them… It's frequencies instead of pigments." She laughs, semi-apologetic, and drinks her black coffee. "I know it sounds very pretentious."
For the past 12 years Keren Ann has quietly been releasing highly acclaimed albums and building up a devoted niche fanbase. Her meticulously crafted songs, at once languorous and eerie, led to her being described as "Norah Jones for Velvet Underground fans", and her eponymous 2007 album was variously hailed by critics as "exquisite", "spine-tingling" and "intoxicating". Her songs have featured in films, advertising campaigns and TV series, most notably Grey's Anatomy and Six Feet Under. (She says she turns down requests all the time: "I said no to a shampoo advert recently because the visual wasn't interesting.") And yet, for all her success, the half-Dutch, half-Israeli singer has never received the mainstream recognition she deserves.
Now, at 37, that seems about to change. Her sixth studio album, 101, features lyrically sophisticated songs brought to life with a staggering array of instrumentation – choirs, string sections, horns, synths and pianos – that still retains the cool, controlled, noirish style that has become her trademark. Despite the self-consciously detached sound, her subject matter has an extremely personal resonance. The friction between the two elements proves strangely addictive, if unsettling, to listen to. "I only write about things I've known or experienced," she explains. "About love, loss, detachment, attachment. It will always be something I went through but I will use a narrative to make it more fun. The most important thing when you write is to be honest about what you're saying."
In the four years since her last album, her father, Dan, died of cancer. "The mourning started way before he died because he knew he was going," she says, her voice quiet and toneless. "He died in my arms, in his sleep. I was very close to my dad but this is not a mourning record. It was very hard to lose him but there were some beautiful moments before he left… I don't do mourning music. It [the sadness] is all in the composition. I don't think I can deliver in my voice something that is sad and needy. It's not in my personality."
Instead the influence of her father, a Russian-Israeli sculptor-turned-businessman, is felt in the lyrics of tracks such as "You Were on Fire", which is filled with dream-like abstract imagery of a pseudo-religious experience. "In that song I wanted something devoted but not necessarily religious," Keren Ann explains. "I went from taking care of my father in the hospital to being in the studio, taking care of my [music] arrangements. Sometimes I had to close the doors, turn off the phone and go into the music and let it do its thing."
Does she think she is melancholic?
She nods, her hair quivering. "What attracts me in general is melancholy in every form of art. With classical music, for me it's always been more Chopin and Ravel than Mozart… but I'm not at all tortured. I have my dark moments but I don't blame the world." She smiles, her red-painted lips splitting like fruit. "I would if I took a lot of drugs – you end up blaming the world for your suffering; chemicals have that effect. But luckily I'd rather have good food, good wine with friends. In the studio I can be the darkest person in the world but I don't take it outside. I think that's the woman's way of doing things. They have maternal instincts but they know how to separate being the mother and the child, the dependent and the one who's in control."
She says she is "fully satisfied" by her work and has, for the past three years, been happily married to Ross, an Israeli man with whom she "definitely" wants to have children. Such positivity is “““““refresh”””””ing, especially from an artist who has spent more than a decade being plagued by the "up and coming" tag. "I hope this album helps create a buzz," she admits. "You never really know, it's just timing... I know I have true fans because otherwise I wouldn't be able to tour, but it was all kind of underground. Every musician wants more recognition. I think I'm ready for it."
Part of the reason it has taken so long for Keren Ann to break through is that she defies easy categorisation. The youngest of three siblings, she speaks four languages after a childhood spent in Israel, the Netherlands (where her mother, Gerda, was from) and France (where the family eventually chose to settle). The nomadic impulse has stayed with her – "I have a constant need to be attached and detached from places" – and she currently splits her time between New York, Paris and Tel Aviv.
Her early musical experiences, too, have proved lastingly influential. "Growing up, I was listening to Bob Dylan or Leonard Cohen. My dad listened to crooners like Sinatra, Chet Baker and Billie Holiday. My mum listened to Serge Gainsbourg, and I was attracted to his sound, the way he recorded the drum, the bass, the strings... it became obsessive for me."
After leaving school in France, she took a series of part-time jobs to make a living while she wrote music, including spells as a waitress and a maths tutor. "Whenever I liked a sound, I picked up an instrument. It was kind of natural for me because I wanted to do it so much."
After two years she was living off her music, writing and producing songs for other artists as well as playing guitar in a local band. It was not until she was 25 that she started her career as a singer.
She still keeps other projects bubbling away – in the past two years alone she has co-produced an album for the actor Emmanuelle Seigner, written scores for the Icelandic Symphony Orchestra and composed the sound design for a French television channel. "I'd managed to write some catchy songs for other people," says Keren Ann. "And I thought, with this album, why not try that for myself?"
She smiles, her big, black-ringed eyes peeping out from underneath her fringe. You have to think that, after 12 years of hard graft, Keren Ann probably deserves to ditch the "up and coming" label once and for all.
分类:采访interview | 评论:0 | 浏览:119 | 收藏 | 转发至天涯微博 | 查看全文>>

KEREN ANN两首风格迥异的新歌现场

  今天在我的优酷空间上传了Keren Ann近期的两个新现场视频,虽然出自同一张最新专辑101,风格却完全不同。
  
  之前贴过纯木吉他版的My Name Is Trouble现场,这次贴个风格狂野的摇滚版吧!我个人极其喜欢那个钢琴伴奏,非常随性却贴切得不得了!(前面采访大概占了2分钟左右,没兴趣听法语采访的可以直接跳到2分5秒左右开始听)
  
  Keren Ann - My Name Is Trouble(现场插电版)
  
  
  
  然后是All the beautiful girls的双吉他版。是不是又回到了not going anywhere时期的清新风格了?
  
  Keren Ann - All The Beautiful Girls(双吉他现场版)
  
  
  
  最近Shel同学在异地培训,好忙好忙,不过还是忙里偷闲边上课边用龟速的学校网络上传了这两个视频,希望大家喜欢!另外,如果各位看到其他新歌的现场版,也要记得跟我分享哈!
  
  豆咪Shel的新浪微博:http://t.sina.com.cn/shelwang
  新浪微博上的Keren Ann微群:Keren Ann的咖啡座
  赶快到Keren Ann的咖啡座来聊聊吧!
分类:视频videos | 评论:0 | 浏览:234 | 收藏 | 转发至天涯微博 | 查看全文>>
页码:1/39 << 1 2 3 4 5 > >> 返回顶部