Wednesday, 15 January 2014

NME Awards 2014

Vote for Muse for 'Best film' (For the Muse: Live At Rome Olympic Stadium), and vote for Musers for 'Best fandom'. 

The NME Awards 2014 with Austin, Texas will take place on Wednesday 26th February at London’s O2 Academy in Brixton after the votes cast by music fans have been counted.


Best British Band

Arctic Monkeys

Foals

Palma Violets

Biffy Clyro

Disclosure

Two Door Cinema Club

Best International Band supported by Austin, Texas

Haim

Arcade Fire

Queens Of The Stone Age

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds

Phoenix

Vampire Weekend

Best Solo Artist

Lorde

Lily Allen

Jake Bugg

Paul McCartney

Kanye West

David Bowie

Best New Band supported by Mossimo

Drenge

Swim Deep

Chvrches

Jagwar Ma

Wolf Alice

Courtney Barnett

Best Live Band

Arctic Monkeys

Palma Violets

Biffy Clyro

Haim

Queens Of The Stone Age

Savages

Best Album

AM - Arctic Monkeys

...Like Clockwork - Queens of the Stone Age

In Love - Peace

Yeezus  - Kanye West

Silence Yourself - Savages

Drenge - Drenge

Best Track supported by Blackstar Amplification

"Do I Wanna Know?" - Arctic Monkeys

"Hard Out Here" - Lily Allen

"White Noise" - Disclosure

"Reflektor" - Arcade Fire

"2013" - Primal Scream

"Get Lucky" - Daft Punk

Best Music Video

"Why'd You Only Call Me When You're High?" - Arctic Monkeys

"Happy" - Pharrell Williams

"Reflektor" - Arcade Fire

"Hard Out Here" - Lily Allen

"Nerve Endings" - Eagulls

"Falling" - Haim

Best Festival

Glastonbury

Reading & Leeds

T In The Park

Latitude

Bestival

V

Best TV Show

Breaking Bad

Fresh Meat

Sherlock

Game Of Thrones

Misfits

Doctor Who

Best Music Film

Muscle Shoals

Made Of Stone

Sound City

The National: Mistaken For Strangers

Good Vibrations

Muse

Best Reissue

In Utero: 20th Anniversary Edition - Nirvana

Sound System - The Clash

The Regal Years: 1997–2004 - The Beta Band

LSXX (Last Splash 20th Anniversary Edition) - The Breeders

Bootleg Series, Vol. 10: Another Self Portrait (1969-1971) - Bob Dylan

White Light/White Heat 45th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition - The Velvet Underground

Best Band Blog Or Twitter

Jehnny Beth, Savages

Albert Hammond Jr

Alana Haim, Haim

James Blunt

Theo Hutchcraft, Hurts

Grimes

Best Book

Autobiography - Morrissey

Creation Stories - Alan McGee

Yeah Yeah Yeah - Bob Stanley

The Beatles: All These Years: Volume One: Tune In - Mark Lewisohn

Song Reader - Beck

I Dreamed I Was A Very Clean Tramp - Richard Hell

Best Small Festival

Rockness

Y Not

Kendall Calling

Swn

Green Man

Festival Number 6

Best Fan Community

Hurts

Haim

Arctic Monkeys

Muse

Peace

Morrissey

Music Moment Of The Year

Pussy Riot are freed

Arctic Monkeys headline Glastonbury

Noel and Damon come together for Teenage Cancer Trust

Rolling Stones headline Glastonbury

Morrissey's autobiography is released

Kanye West brings Jesus on stage

Worst Band

One Direction

The Wanted

The 1975

Imagine Dragons

30 Seconds To Mars

Muse

Hero Of The Year

Alex Turner

David Bowie

Este Haim

Russell Brand

Pussy Riot

Lou Reed

Villain Of The Year

Miley Cyrus

Robin Thicke

Harry Styles

David Cameron

Vladimir Putin

Friday, 3 January 2014

The most successful tours of 2013.


Bon Jovi can boast of having starred in the most profitable musical journey last year 2013, with their"Because We Can Tour", the group managed to raise nearly 300 million
The second position in the list of best international tours its Beyoncé with her "Mrs. Carter Show", a show that leads yet admitted $ 188 million.

Muse is in the 13th position, remember that they didn't went to South America, just in festivals, and to Asia (just some places like Japan). The most part of the artis of the list, played all around the world. 


Complete list: (in millions)

1. Bon Jovi (259.5)

2. Beyoncé (188.6)

3. Pink (170.6)

4. Justin Bieber (169)

5. Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band (145.4)

6. Rihanna (141.9)

7. Cirque du Soleil Michael Jackson: The Immortal (133.4)

8. Taylor Swift (131)

9. Depeche Mode (119.6)

10. One Direction (114)

11. Paul McCartney (113.5)

12. The Rolling Stones (110.3)

13. Muse (103.9

14. Fleetwood Mac (94.3)

15. Kenny Chesney (90.9)

16. Roger Waters (81)

17. Bruno Mars (72.4)

18. Jay Z and Justin Timberlake (69)

19. Elton John (65.9)

20. Cirque du Soleil Corteo (61.7)

Wednesday, 4 December 2013

Interview radio.com

Matt and Dom commented in an interview with radio.com about the 20th anniversary as a band, they say they´ll perform at a couple of festivals in California and probably Moscow. They mention that in the future they would like to make a more intimate film showing the band on tour.

They talk abou being the #16 at Forbes "The Best Paid Musicians"
Matt say´s :´
Not bad, not bad', but most of that money, account for the costs you have intended the production of their tour.

Finally, Dom says that among the albums he has played this year are 'Yeezus' Kanye West, while Matt that his party has heard the new 'Arctic Monkeys'. Speaking of Kanye West, Bellamy jokes that he has 'two cats called Kim and Kanye.'




KROQ Interview

It’s been a long year for Muse, a succession of years upon years of success that seems never-ending for the British rock band, despite the fact that two-thirds of the band spends most of their rare “off” time in Los Angeles. Matt Bellamy lives here with his fiancĂ©e Kate Hudson and the band has just finished up their three week break. It wasn’t much of a break, though.
Bellamy, joined by drummer Dominic Howard, admitted to Kevin & Bean that he picked up the guitar yesterday and strummed some stuff out.  It’s only been a year or so since the release of 2012’s The 2nd Law, but after some prodding, Bellamy said the band hopes to put something out in 2015 and maybe play that year’s KROQ Almost Acoustic Christmas. Bellamy has been listening to rock music again and has become a renewed fan of the three-piece set up. He says the new Muse stuff will sound like Muse’s origin music, joking that his new-found interest in classic rock will make the album sound like AC/DC’s Back In Black.
“It’s difficult to predict because you never know what the songs are going to be like and how the recording process goes,” replied Bellamy when asked what the new stuff will sound like. “We are going back to a more basic rock sound I think, so that might make things move a little quicker. I don’t know.”



It wasn’t always that way, though. For a period of time, Bellamy refused to listen to music or would listen to something softer.
“I went through a stage where I stopped listening to music,” elaborated Bellamy. “I found it influencing me and stuff like that, so I sort of cut off listening to music altogether. I kind of thought that I’d write purer music if I didn’t have any sort of outside influence at all…I went for a while where I was listening to everything but rock. I was listening to classical music, jazz, and other things that were for me out of what we do because we spend all of our days listening to like screamingly loud amps and Dom’s crash symbols were literally deafening.  So when you go home, you want to listen to something different.”



Subsequently, Muse’s last two albums were a lot more experimental and mellow, something that is highlighted in their new live performance DVD and Blu-Ray called Live at Rome Olympic Stadium which was recorded on July 6th with high-definition 4k cameras. The viewer can see every little detail of the band–including Bellamy’s “odd spot” or two. With sound mixed expertly by producer Chris Lord-Alge, the performance was iconic for the band who hadn’t played to the “volatile” audience in Rome in about a decade.
The band was able to use the dome-style Olympic stadium for their “next level theatrics” with the theme of “energy usage and energy consumption” that included live actors like a fake Euro banker who poured euros all over the audience and a business woman who dies drowning herself in oil and fuel. “But then she comes back as an angel floating from a light bulb so there’s a happy ending,” joked Bellamy cheerily.



Despite Muse’s epic success, the band seems down-to-earth. Bellamy talks about meeting his idols Brian May and Tom Morello which made Bellamy the most starstruck he’s “ever been.”
“I still can’t quite relax when I’m around Tom Morello. He actually came to a party at my house here. We had a New Year’s Eve party and he was the first guest that turned up,” said Bellamy, who said he couldn’t “quite handle” that Morello was there even though Bellamy called him a “cool, down-to-earth” guy.
Which is exactly how fans feel about Bellamy. Odd spot and all.
Muse’s Live At Rome Olympic Stadium is now available on CD/DVD and Blu-ray formats. Pick it up here


 Watch first, second and third part here:


 http://youtu.be/qKUHz-eUUXo
http://youtu.be/c8pKSU6VDwQ

Rolling Stone

People who insist that rock is dead obviously haven't paid much attention to Muse. Over the past two decades, this proggy British power trio has gone from tiny clubs around London to sold-out stadiums across the planet. They've been huge in Europe since the turn of the century, but it took five studio albums and a stint opening for U2 to finally crack America in a big way. Their 2012 álbum The 2nd Law sold 101,000 copies its first week on shelves and they spent the past year playing their biggest concerts ever.

The group's European stadium tour wrapped in front of 60,000 fans in Rome, where they played a career-spanning set of 20 songs as high-definition cameras rolled. The result, Live at Rome Olympic Stadium, will be released on CD and DVD/Blu Ray on December 2nd.
Rolling Stone spoke with Muse frontman Matt Bellamy about the new live album, breaking big in America and why the band's next album will probably be a back-to-basics affair.
What led to the decision to film the Rome concert?
We'd never played a venue in Rome bigger than a large theater before, so we were very excited to have all these fans from the south of Italy and all these places come out to see us. We knew the vast majority of the audience hadn't seen us in at least 10 years. It was also an Olympic stadium. We did one of those in 2011 with Rage Against the Machine in Los Angeles. We loved that gig. What's different about Olympic stadiums is there's a requirement that they be completely open-air, including over the audience, so they have a bowl shape. The audience isn't as high as you get with the football stadiums with the bleachers and everything.
We didn't do a concert album for the last two albums, so we wanted this album and film to capture the best moments from those albums, but also capture some of the extremes of what we've been doing since we want to go in a different direction in the future.
What extremes are you referring to?
They're extremes for us, but it depends on your point of view. I mean, experimenting with electronic music and experimenting with a softer side of our band and also opening up our connectiveness with the audiences. I think Rome really shows us connecting with the audience in a way we hadn't done before, literally getting out there physically and touching them, grabbing them.

We also picked this sort of tracklist without heavy prog numbers like "Stockholm Syndrome" and "Butterflies and Hurricanes." They're going to be a part of what we do in the future, but we wanted to capture a certain element that's very different from the last concert film, which was shot at Wembley Stadium and was more prog-rock.
Do you feel extra pressure walking onstage when you know the cameras are rolling?Yeah. It's hard to avoid that feeling of extra pressure. Most bands, like U2 and so on, will choose to film at a venue where they are doing two or more nights. That's because you're getting all the cameras in and really hedging your bets. If something goes wrong on one night, you'll get it the next night. There was definitely extra pressure on us because all the cameras were set up and the whole thing was on one night. We had to get it right. There was no fucking around. But as soon as you walk onstage and feel the weight and the sound and energy from 60,000 people, especially in Rome, it's just overwhelming. You forget about the cameras pretty quickly.
Fronting the band on a stadium tour is no easy task. You're essentially playing to four basketball arenas' worth of people at once and a huge percentage of the crowd is incredibly far away from you.You have to have a very strong stomach for taking risks. Playing to a stadium is not for everyone because you are essentially gambling, big-time. You have to go all in on production. You can't hold back. We built this big stage that was supposed to be a big industrial nuclear power station. It was all custom-made, and you have to do that before you sell any tickets.
A lot of our songs have these big chanting moments or big communal shoutings, almost like a parade or some kind of riot. I don't know what you call it. There are moments where people actually feel like part of the music. The chanting, the shouting, the fist-pumping and the shouts and so on. It's not just about us. It's about all of us making something together.
You're headed to Australia soon. Are those the final dates of the tour or are you going to add more?No, that's the end of the tour. Actually, having said that, next year we might do one festival in the US and one festival maybe in Europe. That's about it. There might be two concerts next year, but in terms of the tour with all the production and everything, that will pretty much be done in December.
Are you thinking about the next album yet?Yeah. It's interesting because the writing pretty much began the next day after the Rome show. I've got a pretty good picture of what I'd like the next album to be like. It's the come-down and the sort of waking up the next day being like, "What the fuck? What the fuck? That was crazy."
In some ways, the band has gone on this pretty insane journey since we formed as teenagers. Back then, we weren't very outgoing on stage. We were very sort of off to ourselves, hiding behind the music. In some ways, the Rome gig almost represents a complete upside-down journey of personality from where we started. I want to bring it back to just being about the music that we are playing, about the instruments, the guitar, the bass, the drums and these personalities.
I have this strong feeling that the next album should be something that really does strip away the additional things that we've experimented with on the last two albums, which is electronics, symphonics and orchestral work and all that kind of stuff. I kind of feel like it will be nice to reconnect and remind ourselves of just the basics of who we are.
Next year is also the 20th anniversary of the band.Exactly. So it kind of feels right that next year will be when we start making a new album. When I say I want to go back, I don't mean go back to the kind of music we made when we started. That would be disastrous. I mean, go back to the mentality that we had when we started, which was just us wanting to be good on instruments and wanting to play together and make music that was organic in nature. I think that will be where we set off on our next album.
Do you ever think about recording a solo album?No, not really. No. I've got no interest in that. I really enjoying playing with the other band members, collaborating and so on. I would consider doing things on my own for film and stuff like that where it's not really a vanity kind of deal.
It's pretty amazing that it's been 20 years and you guys seem to get bigger with each album. Bands are usually cracking up by the 20-year mark.Yeah, it's actually the industry. It's such a negative energy. I just stay away from record company people these days. I stay away from business talk because what you hear is always negative. I'm like, "What are you talking about? I just played for 60,000 people. It's fucking great."
It must have been nuts a few years back to headline your own stadium tour in Europe and then come to America and open for U2.Certainly. I think that anyone who opens for them will get humbled because the level they're at is simply off the charts.
Do you think you'll wind up like U2, still going at this in your fifties?I don't know. It's hard to predict, really. I can't imagine it, but I suppose all these big rock bands like the Rolling Stones and U2 seem to be changing the definition of what rock is about. It used to be die young, work hard and don't fade away into the distance, but these bands are changing the perception of what a rock band can do, so I don't know. I think there is a chance that we would still be vibrant in our fifties.
You play "Knights of Cydonia" at every single show. Do you ever see yourself dropping it from the setlist?

I can't imagine that. We haven't not played it since we wrote it, so it's hard to imagine not playing that song. You never know though. We knows. . . Maybe we'll unplug it on the next album.
It's sort of like your "Where the Streets Have No Name." It just brings the stadium into an absolute frenzy.Exactly. When U2 plays "Streets," it's just crazy. We were lucky enough to jam that with The Edge in 2010 when U2 was supposed to play Glastonbury and got put back because of Bono's back. I remember Edge came out to play "Streets" and I got to feel what it's like to play that song and see 120,000 people just go mental.

How do you top that last tour? Can you go bigger?Yeah, I think we can. Obviously, speaking in terms of America, we can go bigger because we play basketball arenas there. But I don't think that's what we really care about, bigness. I think we can definitely improve the quality of the show. I went to see The Wall to think about what's possible. I feel like we're a band, with the right kind of idea. . . I'm already starting to think about going a bit more conceptual, not necessarily narrative-based, but certainly a bit more in the direction where we could do something in the arena that's another level of production.
There's always new technologies coming out. Look at The Wall now as compared to what they did it back in the day. It's a massive difference, so in terms of bigness, we can go bigger. In Europe, I don't think there is anything we can do that's bigger. But I think in terms of what we can do in terms of the quality of the show, I think we can really refine that, for sure.
Right. But if the album is more stripped down, might the tour also be more stripped down next time out?The idea is. . . I mean, it's early because we haven't made the album yet. I have to put a disclaimer here and say that whatever I say now is likely to be contradicted when I go into the studio. But if I was to predict now, as I said, we definitely want to get more expressive and a bit more about the musicianship of the band and the instruments that we play and who we are and make sure that is the prominent sound of the next album.
In other words, again, I want to strip away the electronics and the orchestral elements and so on. And I think you're right in terms of how we tour. I think it's possible we would probably mix things up a little more. We might play theaters at times. Other times, we would probably do a much higher concept arena show. Maybe not as extensive in the number of months that we do it, but maybe we go for a couple of nights in major cities and do something with a bit more higher concept.
On top of that, we might do festivals, too. We didn't do any this time outside of one in Japan and we might do one next year, but we missed all the European festivals. I can see us doing a combination of things, probably theaters for fun and to reconnect with what it's like to be in a small, sweaty venue and then do huge festivals to cover the fans that can't get into the theaters. Then, like I said, we might do a short run of really high-concept shows. We touched on that on this tour, but I think we can go a lot further.


Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/muse-singer-matt-bellamy-live-dvd-completes-an-upside-down-journey-20131202#ixzz2mZ3VCYIj

Virgin Radio France

Muse had an interview with Virgin Radio France and they said next year they will play small concerts in Teignmouth to celebrate its twentieth anniversary as a band and also some shows in Eastern Europe.

On the other hand, they say their next album could be more Hard Rock and it will be ready for 2015 (early 2015). Chris don´t know if he´ll write some songs for the seventh work (As he did with Save Me and Liquid State) and Dom said that there´s a Little possibility that he compose a theme. Finally, Matt said that the best part of the tour, in his opiniĂłn, was the fact that there was a b-stage, as it allowed them to have more proximity with the fans.

Listen to the complete interview here Virgin Radio

Perth Arena, Perth, Australia

Muse played at Perth Arena in Perth on November 30th. The concert started at 20:45.
Support; Birds of Tokyo.

Sold Out: No

Citizen Erased was played for the first time since Mexico and the first time in Australia since Sydney 2010. Matt's 7-string malfunctioned in the middle of the song and had to be reset before continuing.
Setlist:
  1. Isolated System
  2. Supremacy
  3. Supermassive Black Hole
  4. Panic Station
  5. Resistance
  6. Interlude + Hysteria + Back in Black outro
  7. Man with a Harmonica + Knights of Cydonia
  8. Montpellier Jam + Sunburn
  9. Citizen Erased
  10. Follow Me
  11. Undisclosed Desires
  12. Animals
  13. Madness
  14. Time Is Running Out
  15. Plug In Baby
  16. Unnatural Selection + Freedom outro
 
Encore
  1. Unsustainable
  2. Uprising

Encore 2

  1. Hyper Music
  2. Starlight
  3. Survival
 
 
Photos: Click in the image to make it big