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Radiohead

HTTT on Triple J

In Australia, radio station Triple J are playing Hail to the Thief in its entirety?@ 3am and 12pm (midday) on Tuesday, June 1st. Also, the release date is being advertised as June 9th.
(thanks to Simon)

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Radiohead

Radiohead on Jo Whiley

thom_guitar205x125.jpgThom, Ed, Colin, and Phil were all guests on Radio 1’s Live Lounge with Jo Whiley today. Aside from the interview, the band played “No Surprises”, “Sail to the Moon”, and “Everything in its Right Place”. To hear the interview and live performances, head on over to here. “We don’t hate anything anymore… We love everyone. Oh god, I’ve got new pills…” – Thom
(thanks to Anthony)

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Radiohead

Field Day Still On, For Now

Here’s the latest from Newsday:

A day after Suffolk County effectively nixed a two-day rock concert in Calverton, Riverhead officials and the concert promoter say they’re moving ahead with plans for the event and pleaded with the county to change its mind.
At a press conference this afternoon, Town Supervisor Robert Kozakiewicz, Riverhead Police Chief David Hegermiller, and promoter Andrew Dreskin said they were still hopeful the town could convince other law enforcement agencies to lend them staff to assist the town’s small force.
But representatives for several local law enforcement agencies, including Southold and Southampton police, the Suffolk County Sheriff, New York State Police, and Nassau County said they either wouldn’t be able to spare any officers or couldn’t provide anything close to the 200 additional officers Hegermiller said was needed to control traffic and crowds at the concert, which is expected to draw up to 40,000 people a day.
On Tuesday, Suffolk County’s Department of Health Services denied the promoter’s application for a mass gathering permit, saying the town and the promoters had approached the county too late. The concert will take place in less than two weeks, on June 7 and 8.
Meanwhile, an environmental group sued Riverhead Town and the event organizers yesterday, charging the town didn’t do a proper environmental review before leasing the site to the concert promoters in February.
County health officials denied the permit yesterday after Hegermiller told them his force wouldn’t be able to handle the crowd – which is expected to number up to 40,000 people each day – without the help of the Suffolk County police.
But county police told Hegermiller Friday that they wouldn’t offer extra officers because doing so would require an agreement between the Riverhead town board and the Suffolk county legislature.
The legislature doesn’t meet before the concert. Kara Gerry, spokeswoman for Suffolk presiding officer Maxine Postal, said calling a special meeting to consider the concert is “highly unlikely.” Peter Scully, a spokesman for County Executive Robert Gaffney, agreed.
Bruce Williamson, chief of the county health department’s public health protection bureau, said the town and promoters simply approached the county too late. “There’s just very little time to do this right now,” he said.
But Andrew Dreskin, the concert promoter, said he filed his application for a mass gathering permit in March, giving the county enough time to plan the concert. The permit’s denial, he said, “has absolutely nothing to do with police and has everything to do with a political desire for this event not to take place.”
He said the county can’t issue a final permit until 48 hours before the show is set to begin. “And you know what? I have seven lawyers saying the same thing,” Dreskin said.
The county’s denial of Dreskin’s permit comes after weeks of outcry by residents who worried the concert would clog nearby roads and overwhelm local hospitals and emergency services. The concern was shared by Suffolk Police Commissioner John Gallagher, who said several roads, including the William Floyd Parkway, are not equipped to handle large amounts of traffic. “I don’t know that there are answers, but I do know that we didn’t have time to even explore the possibility,” Gallagher said.
The Field Day Festival was to have been a showcase for the 2,900-acre former U.S. Navy site. The town, which has been trying to sell the land, had hoped the concert – along with a larger rock festival in August – would help market the property.
But Joey MacLellan, a spokesman for Town Supervisor Robert Kozakiewicz, said he didn’t see the county’s decision as a setback to the town’s economic development attempts. “The town has done a really good job,” he said, adding that Riverhead is still exploring ways to allow the project to go ahead.
Dreskin said he is in talks with other law enforcement agencies to provide assistance, including police departments from other East End towns.
Dreskin and Riverhead Town officials also appeared in court yesterday to answer a lawsuit filed by the Long Island Pine Barrens Society, an environmental group, which charged the town didn’t do a proper environmental review before agreeing to host the concert. Environmentalists have said the concert coincides with the nesting season for the rare grasshopper sparrow, which lays its eggs in the fields where the concert is planned.
In their suit, the society claimed that concert preparations already were damaging the environment, and that the crowds would do irrevocable damage to the land. In court yesterday, the society asked Supreme Court Justice Mary Werner to issue a restraining order to stop concert preparations, and to issue a temporary restraining order to ban the concert itself.
Riverhead Town Attorney Dawn Thomas said suing the town was inappropriate because the town board has not yet decided whether to issue its permit allowing the concert to go ahead. The board plans to vote on the permit June 3. Dreskin argued that he already had committed $5 million to the event and asked that any injunction be accompanied by a bond to cover money he might lose.
Werner postponed the case until Friday and cautioned that the case was too complex to be delayed much longer. “It would be utterly irresponsible to give this an adequate review between June 5 and June 7,” she said.
Ticketholders expressed anger yesterday that the concert might not go ahead. Jon Desenberg, a 29-year-old management consultant from Washington, D.C., is driving to the concert with about eight other friends. With so many big-name bands on the lineup, also Beck and Liz Phair, “it just didn’t seem like the kind of thing that would fall through,” he said.
But Dreskin contends Desenberg has nothing to fear, saying he will only refund tickets “on June 9, if the event didn’t happen … Until then, this event is absolutely happening.”

Categories
Radiohead

Radiohead on Jools

Radiohead recorded for Later with Jools Holland last night at BBC TV Centre, Shepherds Bush. According to BBC people, the tickets were the most sort after ever.
The set was:
There There
Go To Sleep
2+2=5
Where I End And You Begin
Having gone through the whole show without glitch one of the floor managers was waiting for confirmation from the technical people ‘upstairs’ that the recording was OK. On eventually announcing that Radiohead would need to repeat ‘There There’, loud applause erupted from the audience.
The second performance of ‘There There’ seemed to have an extra energy (on being asked by production staff if there were any differences in the set up Thom said that his cheeks were much redder!). The live version has an awesome beat with Jonny and Ed both playing two drums (as well of course as Phil on the kit). Ed seemed delighted to have broken two drumsticks during the performance.
Phil was dressed very smart – looked like a brown pinstripe suit! Think Nigel Godrich was there too.
All in all the band seemed very relaxed and seemed to enjoy the other performances.
Other people on Jools were: Ibrahim Ferrer from Buena Vista Social Club, Zwan, Martina Topley-Bird, Pat Metheny and a duet of ‘Young, Gifted and Black’ (written by Nina Simone). Other people in the studio were Kelly MacDonald, Miranda Richardson, Steve Wright and Peter Saville.
Suffice to say, everyone seemed to have come to see Radiohead.
(thanks to Nigel for the review)

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Radiohead

Statement about Field Day

The official Field Day Festival site has a statement from executive producer Andrew Dresking about the recent setbacks:
“We are moving ahead with efforts to keep the Field Day Music Festival on track. This notice of denial was premature and we are continuing to work closely with the Town of Riverhead and Riverhead Police with ongoing meetings scheduled for this evening.
Obviously we are disappointed by this decision but it appears to be based more on procedural issues than substantive problems. We believe we can resolve this issue quickly so that we can stage a festival that benefits the town, the county and a world wide audience that seeks to come to Calverton.”

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Radiohead

MTV News about Field Day

From MTV:

Officials in Suffolk County, New York, have denied a mass gathering permit for the June 7-8 Field Day Music Festival, but the Beastie Boys, Beck, Radiohead, N.E.R.D. and more than a dozen other acts are hoping last-minute negotiations can save the concert.
On Tuesday (May 27), health officials nixed the permit after Riverhead Police Chief David Hegermiller announced that his department wouldn’t be able to safely patrol the concert, which is expected to draw 50,000 people to Suffolk County’s Calverton Enterprise Park (see “Beastie Boys, Beck, Radiohead To Headline Field Day Festival”).
On Friday, county officials determined they couldn’t authorize additional police for the show because such an act would have to be agreed upon by the Riverhead town board and the Suffolk County legislature, which won’t meet again until after the concert.
However, Field Day promoters remain optimistic that the two groups will be able convene in an emergency session to sort the matter out in time.
“We are moving ahead with efforts to keep the Field Day Music Festival on track,” a spokesperson for the event said in a press release issued late Tuesday. “This notice of denial was premature, and we are continuing to work closely with the town of Riverhead and Riverhead police with ongoing meetings scheduled for this evening. Obviously we are disappointed by this decision, but it appears to be based more on procedural issues than substantive problems. We believe we can resolve this issue quickly.”
Riverhead officials were unavailable for comment.
Not everyone opposed to the Field Day Festival cites safety concerns. Some feel that an event of such magnitude would be an environmental catastrophe. The Long Island Pine Barrens Society sued the town of Riverhead on Tuesday, claiming officials didn’t conduct a thorough environmental review before they contracted to host the show. The concert is scheduled to take place during the nesting season of the rare grasshopper sparrow, according to the environmentalists, who point out that the birds lay their eggs in the fields where Field Day is to be held.

(thanks to Josh)