The Pumpkins will appear on Saturday Night Live on September 26th and on October 2nd, they will appear on The Chris Rock Show on HBO. (The Chris Rock Show with the Pumpkins is cancelled)
read about it at Live daily
or Sonicnet
from The Smashing Pumpkins Collection
from Allstar news
Corgan blasts `culture of the dead'
Billy Corgan of the Smashing Pumpkins, who played at the H.O.R.D.E. Festival at Sandstone last month, made some very valid points when asked during an interview last week whether he'd seen the new "Kurt and Courtney" documentary, about the late Nirvana singer Kurt Cobain and his widow. The documentary opens Friday in Kansas City. "No, I haven't seen it," Corgan said, "but put it this way: The culture of the dead is disgusting. I think everybody who is out there printing illegal Kurt Cobain T-shirts and trying to feed off the carcass is disgusting. I think it's bad karma for those people." "The culture of the dead just sickens me -- and the fascination with death sends such a bad message to kids. Like, one of the most offensive things I've seen in the past year was Biggie Smalls as artist of the year in Spin. I think that just sends such a horrible message to kids.
And it's such irresponsible journalism. People have no idea the kind of impact that plays upon a 15-year-old mind." "Kurt Cobain was a great artist, and his music will endure for a long time and that's the best part about it. But the fascination and the glorification of his death just sends all the wrong messages. It says that this is ultimately cooler than actually living and trying and even failing."
L.A. alternative rock station KROQ gave out a number -- 310.656.4693-- on air for fans to call for more information on being an extra in the video. The clip is being shot in L.A. Saturday (July 25) and Sunday (July 26) and directed by the award- winning team of Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Farris, who were behind the Pumpkins' clips for "1979," "Tonight, Tonight," and "Rocket." Those participating in the video need to commit to at least six hours of being on the set. The band did this for their "1979" clip as well. While information hasn't been divulged about the content of the "Perfect" clip, a source says there may be some similarities between it and "1979."
Take a look at the new updated version of the SP FAQ v4.10
Halloween Jam VII (ABC) on October 24, 11:30 pm ET -
The Smashing Pumpkins, Tori Amos, Ben Folds Five and the Foo Fighters perform from the Glastonbury Music Festival in England.
MTV Rockumentary Remix of the Smashing Pumpkins - October 14
REMINDER:
Everyone get your videotape ready, on September 24, 1998 at 8pm ET, the Smashing Pumpkins will perform live at the MuchMusic Video Awards! (SP are nominated for Best International Video for Ava Adore).
The U.S. "Perfect" single will be released on Tuesday, September 22nd.
Smashing Pumpkins Drum Up Nearly $3 Million For Charity
Billy sang at the Chicago Cubs game on Friday, September 18 during the 7th inning stretch. He started it by saying, "1, 2, 3," then sang "Take Me Out to the Ballgame." Afterwards, he shouted, "Let's get some runs!"
On November 17th, a double live cd called "An Evening with the
Smashing Pumpkins" will be released. (Rumor?)
Everyone get your videotape ready, on September 24, 1998 at 8pm ET, the Smashing Pumpkins will perform live at the MuchMusic Video Awards!
The plan is still on for the Smashing Pumpkins to enter the studio sometime soon to start working on the follow-up to Adore. Originally, Billy Corgan had said they plan to begin recording in September, but as of now no studio time is booked. The band will make an appearance on the season premiere of Saturday Night Live on Sept. 26 and on The Chris Rock Show on HBO on Oct. 2, with other television appearances in October to be announced.
By STEVE MORSE - The Boston Globe
Muchmusic announced that on Aug 11 at 9pm ET is the premiere of Perfect.
July 30th - The Pumpkins are on David Letterman (CBS)
August 3rd - Billy Corgan is on Charlie Rose (CBS)
August 4th - The Pumpkins are on Regis and Kathie Lee
August 7th - The Pumpkins are on Live From the 10-Spot
August 23rd - The Pumpkins are on Saturday Night Live (Comedy Central).
For anyone who missed the I&I concert on Muchmusic it will
be repeated on Saturday September 5th.
"Smashing Pumpkins fans in Los Angeles have the chance to earn a spot in
the band's next video for "Perfect."
Pumpkins will use directors Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Farislater to shoot the video for "Perfect."
The "Perfect" single track list (rumoured):
1) Perfect
2) Need
3) Let Me Give the World to You
4) Crash Car Star
5) Yardbirds instrumental
The band plans to put out a documentary of the "Adore" tour filled with footage of the "17 and 18 shows recorded" in addition to hotels, parking lots, and other unusual locations.
On July the 19th, 102.1 The Edge is going to have a 3-hour special of the Pumpkins on the Ongoing history of New music starting at 5:00 pm! Also, don't forget the Intimate & Interactive show at Muchmusic from 9:00pm till 10:30pm!
Those who didn't score tickets to The Smashing Pumpkins "intimate"
benefit concert in Toronto will be able to catch the band on the first-ever
outdoor Intimate & Interactive on MuchMusic.
On Sunday, July 19, the day before their sold-out show at Massey Hall
benefitting the Street Outreach Services (SOS), Billy Corgan & co. will
perform live in the MuchMusic parking lot at 9 p.m (E.T)., and field questions
via phone, fax, email and Speaker's Corner for 90-minutes.
In support of its latest album, Adore, the multi-platinum band has been
performing a host of free, open-air shows in unconventional settings,
including the Speilbudenplatz in Hamburg, the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao and
the Tivoli Gardens in Copenhagen.
Access to the I&I will be available through local radio promotions, MuchMusic
giveaways and invitations through MuchAXS, MuchMusic's viewer loyalty club.
(Much has also been known to let fans in from overseas, with proof of their
plane ticket!)
MuchMusic has been bringing artists and fans together for its Intimate &
Interactive concert series since 1992. Past participants have included Foo
Fighters, The Tea Party, Moist, Beck, Sarah McLachlan, Sloan and Madonna.
Smashing Pumpkins leader Billy Corgan has spent much of his career in
search of the perfect guitar solo. Ironically, he finally plays it
during Adore (out this week on Virgin), an album that has almost nothing
to do with guitars. The climactic solo -- the only one on the 70-minute
disc -- occurs during "For Martha," the fourth in a string of aching,
semi-acoustic ballads that fills most of the album's second half, and
the album's fifth song with a woman's name in the title. By the time
"For Martha" comes along, he's obsessing over a failed affair, pulling
the sort of rhymes that heartsick teenagers tend to scrawl into their
diaries ("But for the grace of love, I'd will the meaning of Heaven from
above"). In short, the album threatens to go over the edge into pure
sentiment. But then comes that solo, a beautifully majestic thing that
takes the song's simple tune to a higher place. Compared with their
massive, layered guitar parts of old, this is nothing, just a repeated
riff played on one weedy fuzz guitar. But it's exactly the notes and the
tone he needed to get the sound of a heart opening and hope breaking
through.
It's a watershed moment for Corgan, who's always been more of a gifted
craftsman and less of an emotional wreck than he's cared to admit. His
self-image problems should be familiar to anyone who's followed the
band. For years he reminded writers that Smashing Pumpkins were the
geeky outcasts of the Chicago scene, even when they were among the
country's most popular bands. When I interviewed him before the release
of Siamese Dream, in 1993, he claimed to be nervous about laying himself
so bare in that album's songs. Still, that disc struck a lot of
listeners, myself included, as nothing more or less than a guitar thrill
ride. Sure, the dark undertones were there, but if unvarnished
sensitivity was what you wanted, Nirvana and Jeff Buckley were still
around. At the time, the Pumpkins were doing the equally important job
of putting soul back into arena rock, though Corgan appeared convinced
that theirs was only music for and by introverted losers.
Even when Corgan produced his masterpiece, he felt obliged to deflate it
just a little -- what kind of self-saboteur would write the most hopeful
music of his career, then saddle it with a title like Mellon Collie and
the Infinite Sadness? Probably destined to be the band's best album,
that 1995 epic was where Corgan's ambitions fully outran his depressive
tendencies. In part a farewell to grunge ("Despite all my rage I'm still
just a rat in a cage" will go down in history as that era's last
catchphrase), in part a re-embracing of the art-rock, concept-album
ethos, it proved that Corgan's reach was too broad to fit one mood or
one style. There was as much reassuring pop as miserable rock, plus
enough Pink Floyd grandeur to court the oh-wow factor. And it showed
Corgan getting more comfortable with big rock-star gestures -- not the
least of which was the following year's boxed set The Aeroplane Flies
High, which fetched one of the highest prices ever charged for a bunch
of B-sides.
On the surface, Adore is a total reversal of direction. It's the first
non-epic Pumpkins album, the first with almost no lead guitar, and the
first where the songs are immediate enough to be grasped in the first
handful of listens. Most of all, however, it's a fine emotional wallow
-- the first time Corgan's sounded just as dysfunctional and
oversensitive as he's always claimed he was.. Of course, such an album
makes perfect sense in context, given the band's recent experience with
heroin-induced tragedy (touring keyboardist Jonathan Melvoin OD'd at the
start of the Mellon Collie tour; junkie drummer Jimmy Chamberlin was
sacked soon afterward). Although nothing on Adore refers explicitly to
those events, on some level the whole album does. "Daphne Descends" and
"Tear," in particular, make good use of the ever-popular
heroin/obsessive-love metaphor. But Corgan made the right move by
running with the obsession theme instead of writing 15 variations on
"The Needle & the Damage Done." The wounded-love songs on Adore humanize
him by showing that the causes of his infinite sadness are the same as
anybody else's.
If I've just made Adore sound like a glorified solo album, that's
because it already sounds like one. If the other Pumpkins were low-key
on previous efforts (nobody's ever denied the persistent rumors that
Corgan played everything but the drums on the first two), they're
practically invisible here. At least bassist D'Arcy Wretzky gets in her
trademark vocal cameos -- which, as usual, are placed at the beginning
and end of the disc. But the programming largely benches the rhythm
section, which includes a handful of guest drummers (mostly Matt Walker,
though ex-Soundgardener Matt Cameron plays on one track). And it's no
wonder that co-guitarist James Iha had enough time on his hands to make
a solo album.
Corgan's real collaborator here is computer specialist Flood -- who gets
a mixing credit on most tracks -- along with the various programmers and
digital editors. With the guitars largely stripped away, it's the rhythm
loops that define the instrumental sound. They're up front on the loud
numbers ("Ava Adore" cops one of Trent Reznor's favorite sheet-metal
sounds, and it has the album's only use of the trademark Corgan vocal
sneer), and thrumming in the background of the acoustic songs. But as
they did on U2's Pop, Flood's loops usually cushion the band's sound,
providing a subtler feel than their own rhythm section would. If there's
such a thing as an acoustic electronic sound, Flood invented it. The
first result on Adore is that Corgan's hooks and vocals have to carry
most of the weight, something that would have been impossible in the
Siamese Dream days. The second is that his new-wave inclinations emerge
stronger than ever before ("Pug" comes dangerously close to
appropriating the synth riff from Gary Numan's "Are 'Friends'
Electric?"). And it makes more sense that he spent part of last year
collaborating with Ric Ocasek, another guy who wrapped obsessive love
and electronic cool into a radio-ready package.
In fact, Adore aims to be the kind of seasonal soundtrack that Ocasek
always made with the Cars, whose albums were invariably released in the
summertime. It's the kind of album you're supposed to hear on the radio
all summer and associate forever with whatever romantic adventures you
have over the next three months -- that's the Top 40 aesthetic in a
nutshell. But even a modest Smashing Pumpkins album is still bound to be
fairly epic, and Adore doesn't need all 15 of the tracks it's got
(though I'd swear that Corgan deliberately put three weak songs right
before "For Martha," just to make the latter sound that much more
dramatic). If some of the songs are less memorable than others, at least
nothing compromises the album's emotional tone. It all sounds like stuff
Corgan desperately needed to get out of his system during these
sessions.
If it seems contradictory for an album to be both emotionally
overwrought and hit-singles-oriented, that may be because you've heard
too many novelty songs on the radio lately. And like all the best modern
pop, the peaks of Adore show how daring a hit song can get. With its
chorus of "We must never be apart," the first single, "Ava Adore," will
probably strike a lot of listeners as a straight-up love song, before
they realize the true nature of its pledges ("It's you that I
adore/You'll always be my whore/I'll pull your crooked teeth/You'll be
perfect just like me") -- this is one of the more poisonous valentines
since R.E.M.'s "The One I Love." The opening "To Sheila" really is a
love song, and a gorgeously understated one; "Tear" is equally lovely in
its overstatement -- Beatle-ish strings, violent images, sudden ending
and all. "The Tale of Dusty and Pistol Pete" is as spare as the album
gets -- it's not even produced enough to be the country song that the
title promises -- but it's pretty and creepy, and proof that Corgan can
now write songs that stand on melody alone.
Given recent events in pop culture, a title like "Ava Adore" is bound to
have a double meaning -- quick, what other singer was dangerously
obsessed with a girl named Ava? Yes, this disc is a spiritual descendant
of the heartbroken concept albums (notably In the Wee Small Hours and
Only the Lonely) that Frank Sinatra was making four decades ago, when
Ava Gardner was still fresh on his mind. So there's nothing new about
the mood Corgan creates on Adore, but there doesn't have to be: a set
like this can work only if the singer knows how to suffer. Not only
would Frank approve, so will sad romantics everywhere.
Please email me if the news is incorrect or if I missed out on something. Thanks.