As
Placebo just announced some news about their forthcoming 8th
studio album I thought it could be interesting to draw our attention
to the bands, albums and songs that are important and special to
Brian. Here is an interview with NME from October 2017 that
was part of the series „The soundtrack of my life“.
BRIAN MOLKO: THE SOUNDTRACK OF MY LIFE
THE FIRST GIG I WENT TO
“The
band was Tรจlรจphone.
It
was in a field in Belgium. I was 11 years old and living in
Luxembourg. My brother was 21 at the time, and he took me along.
During the gig I was so small that I made myself to the front and
scaled over the barriers. I spent the gig hanging out with security.
It was my first experience of rock’n’roll. They were basically
the biggest French rock band in the ’80s. I was pretty blown
away.“
THE SONG THAT CHANGED MY LIFE
“Sonic Youth – ‘Dirty Boots’. Me and my buddy Nick were 16, he came over to mine, we smoked a joint, turned the lights out and put ‘Goo’ on. I’d been playing guitar for about three years, but my entire perception of what was possible for what could be done with electric guitar changed that day. It opened up an entire new universe of possibilities. Sonic Youth remain possibly my biggest influence to this day. They’re the greatest rock’n’roll band of all time.”
THE FIRST SONG I REMEMBER HEARING
THE SONG THAT CHANGED MY LIFE
“Sonic Youth – ‘Dirty Boots’. Me and my buddy Nick were 16, he came over to mine, we smoked a joint, turned the lights out and put ‘Goo’ on. I’d been playing guitar for about three years, but my entire perception of what was possible for what could be done with electric guitar changed that day. It opened up an entire new universe of possibilities. Sonic Youth remain possibly my biggest influence to this day. They’re the greatest rock’n’roll band of all time.”
THE FIRST SONG I REMEMBER HEARING
“Claude
Franรงois – ‘Alexandrie Alexandra’. He’s
a French artist who died mysteriously, changing a light bulb while he
was taking a bath. He was quite a pioneer. It’s a disco tune, but
this came out in the early ’80s, possibly late ’70s. He had a
special dance that used to go along with this song. Part of it
involved putting your hand on your ass and jiggling it around. In a
way it was a form of primitive twerking. I’d do the dance for my
parents and my brother.”
THE SONG THAT MADE ME WANT TO PERFORM
THE SONG THAT MADE ME WANT TO PERFORM
“PJ
Harvey – ‘Sheela-Na-Gig’. It
came when I was leaving university. It felt kind of raw and visceral.
The record itself sounds so unproduced and so real. I fell completely
in love with Polly Harvey and became obsessed with her music.”
THE SONG I WANT PLAYED AT MY FUNERAL
THE SONG I WANT PLAYED AT MY FUNERAL
“Nina
Simone – ‘Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood’. It’s
the one song in the world that I identify with the most. If you
listen to the lyrics, that’s me.“
THE SONG THAT I CAN NO LONGER LISTEN TO
THE SONG THAT I CAN NO LONGER LISTEN TO
“The
National – ‘I Need My Girl’. There
have been many over the last 20 years. Recently though, I decided
‘f**k this’ and set myself a challenge to psychologically and
emotionally steal back these songs from exes. It works. The most
recent one is ‘I Need My Girl’ by The National.”
THE FIRST ALBUM I BOUGHT
THE FIRST ALBUM I BOUGHT
“Michael
Jackson – ‘Thriller’. I
bought it at John Menzies in Dundee in ’82 with my mum. I would
have been 10 years old. I was really obsessed with ‘Beat It’,
more than the title track. ‘Thriller’ was the golden age of
Michael.”
THE FIRST SONG I FELL IN LOVE WITH
THE FIRST SONG I FELL IN LOVE WITH
“Leonard
Cohen – ‘Hey, That’s No Way To Say Goodbye’. I
was brokenhearted, I’d been dumped. Back at school that was a
really big deal – the end of the world. I’d just bought Cohen’s
greatest hits on cassette. This came on and something really magical
happened. It was a transcendental experience. I was the song. I
remember falling to the ground, bursting into tears and crying for
about 20 minutes.
(NME, October 11th 2017)
Photo credit unknown
Post by Silke
(NME, October 11th 2017)
Photo credit unknown
Post by Silke