Showing posts with label Muse 2011. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Muse 2011. Show all posts

Thursday, 15 September 2011

Muse band perform at Reading and Leeds Festival

A news released on 24th August, Muse band perform at Readin and Leeds Festival on the weekend, the band have spoken to NME.

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The band will performing 2001 album 'Origin Of Symmetry' is completely at the festival.

Matt Bellamy
said that one of the reasons they’ve picked that album to perform is because "it's always been an album the hardcore fans have always talked about as one of their favourites, if not the favourite. So we wanted to play it for them as a celebration of the 10 years since it came out…"

The band also produced a new stage shows and festivals, is a 2001 concept album and the artwork on the surrounding has promised to bring.

"We'll do whatever we can get away with within the restrictions of a festival stage," explained Bellamy.

For the second half of the show, drummer Dom Howard said: "We'll probably just do the old cheap encore and play a few hits!"

The gorgeous event held on this weekend (August 26-28), features headline sets from Muse, My Chemical Romance and a co-effort from Pulp and The Strokes.

Friday, 29 July 2011

Muse want to start record a song in space

Muse want to start record a song in space.

The 'Knights of Cydonia' hitmakers are travel on Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic commercial intergalactic flight when the scheme takes off, and scheme takes off and use their career experiences include a new dimension.

Frontman Matt Bellamy said: "We're trying to blag a free trip on it [Virgin Galactic]. I'm going to try to convince Richard Branson to let us make a music video or record a song up there. I think that would be cool. Would I be scared? I think I'll be alright."

Matt's fiancee Kate Hudson gave birth to her first child due next month - the first of the Moon spoke of his attention.

He said: "The crowd in Moscow were probably the most intense we've ever had. They were going mental and they bought me a big telescope. It's a big, real, serious piece. I set it up when I got home and looked at the moon. F**king hell, have you ever looked at the moon through a telescope? It's all mountains and stuff, it's unbelievable."

Tuesday, 22 March 2011

Muse announced as the final night at Reading And Leeds Festival

Muse announced as the final night at Reading And Leeds Festival, and his fans very excited to thing something special.

But the band have decided to make the event a swan song for an era that made their name.

Origin Of Symmetry, their second album, was the first to bring the band wider acclaim, as frontman and guitarist Matt Bellamy explains: "It was on the second album that things really started happening for the band, and when we focused on the live side of things much more."

Kerrang new set of videos on TV with key press and, soon to Britain's new generation type became poster boys, under the wings of their parties to a mall.

With a full decade passing since the original release, they have announced that Reading and Leeds Festival will probably be "the last time some of these songs will ever be played live again … it'll be like coming full circle; we've gone off on one a little bit, and now it feels like the right time to pull it back and remind ourselves of what we were doing 10 years ago."

Drummer Dominic Howard said, ."Reading really is special because it was the first festival that we ever went to when were were 16 - it was a real eye opener to international music. It’s a mssive, favourite festival of mine" .

Wednesday, 12 January 2011

Muse reveal shows will blind surely woke

Rockers Muse are definitely powerful for the lasers spotted from their shows, they will revealed that will surely woke one day blind.

The British trio is known for their wide live productions, which often feature bright beams and light shows. But the musicians have concerns about their vision after a concert stunt made them realize how damaging the lasers can be.

Drummer Dominic Howard says, "We got some big white balloons, threw them into the audience and decided to focus the lasers on them. It was like a slow burn that gradually disintegrated them into nothing. We all thought, 'What the hell will our corneas be like in 20 years?' We could end up like that amazing vocal group the Blind Boys of Alabama - getting around doing it really well but not seeing anything."