
-
Indian capital bans fuel for old cars in anti-pollution bid
-
Flintoff rules himself out of top England coaching job
-
Russia ramps up drone strikes on Ukraine in June: AFP analysis
-
Japan had hottest June on record: weather agency
-
Asian stocks rise on trade deal hopes, Tokyo hit by Trump warning
-
Thailand's PM suspended by Constitutional Court
-
Blur will return to musical oasis, says drummer Rowntree
-
CBEX crypto scam: AI-hyped Ponzi scheme defrauds African investors
-
Inzaghi hails 'extraordinary' Al Hilal after City upset
-
Man City, Inter Milan crash out of Club World Cup in last 16
-
North Korea's Kim shown honouring troops killed in Russia-Ukraine war
-
Saudi's Al Hilal knock Man City out of Club World Cup in huge shock
-
'In our blood': Egyptian women reclaim belly dance from stigma
-
Online memorial for children dead in Hiroshima, Nagasaki
-
US Senate in final push to pass Trump spending bill
-
Asian stocks rise on trade deal hopes, Tokyo hit by tariff warning
-
Hong Kong rights record under fire as it marks China handover anniversary
-
Bangladeshis cling to protest dreams a year after revolution
-
Djokovic, Sinner enter Wimbledon fray
-
European security tops Denmark's EU presidency priorities
-
France expecting peak temperatures as heatwave hits Europe
-
Germany eye return to women's football summit at Euro 2025
-
'Every day I see land disappear': Suriname's battle to keep sea at bay
-
England feel pressure to perform at Euros as stars pull out
-
Clashes in Istanbul over alleged 'Prophet Mohammed' cartoon
-
India face 'last-minute' Bumrah call as they bid to level England series
-
Dortmund up against 'superstar' Ramos, aggressive Monterrey: Kovac
-
US judge orders Argentina to sell 51% stake in oil firm YPF
-
DEA BUSTED!! While Chinese Marijuana Cartels Spread Right Under DEA's Nose, FDA CANNABIS RESEARCH BLOCKED
-
Proenkephalin A 119-159 (penKid) Leads the Way in Predicting Graft Outcomes for Kidney Transplant Recipients
-
DASA, Latin America's Largest Diagnostic Provider, Selects AGFA HealthCare's Enterprise Imaging Platform in Flagship Agreement
-
Record Financing for NeXtWind: €1.4 Billion for the Expansion of Wind Energy in Germany
-
Pantheon Resources PLC Announces Change of Registered Office
-
EPA employees accuse Trump administration of 'ignoring' science
-
US Senate in final slog towards vote on Trump spending bill
-
Over 14 million people could die from US foreign aid cuts: study
-
End of the line for Britain's royal train
-
FIFPro warns of 'wake-up call' over extreme heat at Club World Cup
-
Sean Combs sex trafficking jury ends first day without decision
-
Fluminense stun Inter Milan to reach Club World Cup quarters
-
Thailand's ruling political dynasty faces day of legal peril
-
NASA eyes summer streaming liftoff on Netflix
-
Trump dismantles Syria sanctions program as Israel ties eyed
-
Meta's AI talent war raises questions about strategy
-
Twenty bodies, some headless, found in Mexican cartel bastion
-
Gaza rescuers say Israeli forces kill over 50 as ceasefire calls mount
-
Alcaraz survives scare, Sabalenka cruises on Wimbledon's hottest opening day
-
Only Messi can shirk defending: warns Monterrey coach before Dortmund clash
-
White House says Canada 'caved' to Trump on tech tax
-
Eight-country coalition aims to tax luxury air travel

Blur will return to musical oasis, says drummer Rowntree
Blur drummer Dave Rowntree is to publish a book of photos on the early days of the Britpop icons and after much-heralded comeback gigs two years ago has not ruled out another collaboration.
"I think Blur will definitely do something else," he told AFP, as their great rivals Oasis prepare for the first of their own reunion gigs in Cardiff on Friday.
Rowntree, a founding member of Blur, has put together photos of the band at the start of their career in the 1980s around a decade before Britpop exploded.
"No One You Know: Dave Rowntree's Early Blur Photos" is due out in September.
But the book nearly did not see the light of day as he only found the negatives by chance, in an old cardboard box that had been earmarked for the dump.
"In my memory, the photos would just seem like holiday snaps," Rowntree, now 61, said in an interview in Paris.
"What the pictures show and capture really well, I think, is our excitement at doing all these things for the first time."
- 'Unfashionable music' -
Rowntree's candid, sometimes blurry, shots are of singer Damon Albarn, guitarist Graham Coxon and bassist Alex James, with lighting director Dave Byars.
"We were playing tiny shows to very few people. We were playing very unfashionable music in those days," he recalled.
But with a recording contract, the happy-go-lucky band -- cigarettes and alcohol ever present -- discovered the world on their first international tour.
"An awful lot of travelling, an awful lot of sitting in dressing rooms, where you're just desperate for something to do," Rowntree remembered with a smile.
"So, there's a lot of that, a lot of us goofing around to distract each other."
When Britpop burst onto the music scene in the early 1990s, Blur were at the vanguard, and songs such as "Girls & Boys", "Parklife" and "Song 2" defined a generation.
It was not plain sailing, though, with turbulence, break-ups and reunions, the last of which came in 2023 for the album "The Ballad of Darren" and two sold-out gigs at London's Wembley Stadium.
In the two years since then, Rowntree -- a trained lawyer who stood unsuccessfully in the 2024 general election for the Labour party -- the band's future has been up in the air.
Albarn, whose new album with Gorillaz is due out this year and is also reworking Mozart's "The Magic Flute", has frequently said that Blur's days are over.
Rowntree, however, is not so convinced it's the end of the band.
"It seems to me it's not over," he said. "I think I'll know when it's over but there's no plans as such. Blur doesn't really work that way.
"We don't have planning meetings and strategy. It's kind of we make it up as we go along."
- 'Two-edged sword' -
With Oasis back on the scene this week and Pulp surprising fans with a Glastonbury festival appearance last weekend, Rowntree sees it less as a Britpop revival than a worrying shift in the music industry.
"It gets harder and harder to make money selling recorded music," he said. "Musicians have to look for other ways to earn a living.
"Many bands are being pushed back out on the road again.
"I think that's great because I think that's where music lives. It's in the concert hall in front of an audience. But the downside is that only really works for bands at our level -- the Pulps, the Blurs, the Oasis.
"For smaller bands, they're finding it increasingly difficult."
The long-awaited return of warring Oasis brothers Liam and Noel Gallagher has seen complaints about high ticket prices and the dynamic pricing method used to maximise revenue.
Yet, despite the well-documented rivalry with Oasis, Rowntree gave a guarded welcome to the Manchester rockers' return.
"It's a two-edged sword, isn't it? On the one hand, I'm really glad that they're out on tour. Think of all the economic benefits.
"It's going to be fantastic. On the other hand, it's a shame that good tickets are now so expensive."
Rowntree confided that he even bought a ticket himself but is now unable to go.
"I had to give it to a friend of mine," he said.
S.F.Warren--AMWN