..and the amazing Wilko Johnson. This is the trailer to a Julien Temple film, Oil City Confidential.
Pampelmoose is a music and MP3 web site covering the eclectic independent music scene. We stay clear of major labels and their artists to avoid having the Web Sheriff gallop through our offices. We are indie at heart so we support all things indie – in all its shapes and forms.
Dave walloped the bass strings and is a founding member of the highly influential, post-punk band, Gang of Four. With his business partner, Ned Failing, he started Pampelmoose in 2005. We love music and we love the way the internet leveled the playing field for all artists.
Josh Kneedler is a highly experienced interactive designer. He began working in online media in 1997 at the birth of the interactive world, a world we now take for granted, one that has become as common as the utilities we use at home. His skills consist of design, programming, and creative direction. It’s an eclectic mix, but one that is vital to pursuing new ventures where traditional broadcast media rules do not apply. Josh understands that music artists no longer need traditional record labels. A consumer in Japan may never have heard of our local Northwest music scene so local bands need a different way to promote their independently produced CDs. Josh has the necessary skills and experience that highlight innovation over imitation to tackle contemporary challenges in the world of interactive programming, design and creative marketing. Some of Josh’s work can be seen on his web site: http://www.joshkneedler.net
..and the amazing Wilko Johnson. This is the trailer to a Julien Temple film, Oil City Confidential.
3 Comments :: You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site. Tags: Dr Feelgood, Gang of Four, Oil City Confidential, Wilko Johnson
Great trailer for a great movie – I wonder if Americans will get it? Seems so peculiar to, not even the UK, but just the south east. Canvey was a holiday destination – I went there once when I was kid, for a day out, but going there more recently it felt like entering an industrialised medieval village. There is something magical about the concrete and the estuary, though, which Julian Temple completely captures in his best film yet.
and, as you so rightly hint – no Feelgoods/no G of 4!
November 20th, 2010 at 8:22 amThis American would love to see that movie. I was listening to the Feelgoods today and thinking that the sentiment “Every kind of vice/ is solely merchandise” wasn’t too far off from those early Go4 songs that compared relationships to commercial transactions.
December 3rd, 2010 at 5:06 pmthe best band that i ever saw
December 31st, 2010 at 8:05 am