07.12.06 (1:09 pm)
Kinky [edit]
Mexican electronic/rock group Kinky is gearing up for an as-yet-unannounced national tour, but fans in the Western U.S. and beyond can catch the five-piece early in July and August.
The band's upcoming appearances include the KCRW Sounds Eclectico fest in Los Angeles July 1 and Baltimore's Artscape Festival July 23, along with a string of dates with Manu Chao and Los Lonely Boys stretching into late August.
The band's third album, Reina, is set for release September 5. The group endured a mudslide in its Los Angeles-area studio while recording the disc, but managed to persevere.
"We had to rebuild all of our instruments, using our Mexican way, utilizing whatever was readily available; clips, duck tape, random scraps of metal, branches, just about anything we could get our hands on," drummer Omar Gongora said.
The group, which traveled the U.S. last summer with Cafe Tacuba, is planning to launch a full national tour when Reina is released.
07.12.06 (1:09 pm)
Tom Waits Tour [edit]
Tom Waits has announced a rare tour of the South and Midwest, with eight theatres booked for the first half of August.
The itinerary includes stops in several cities where Waits hasn't performed since the 1970s, including Atlanta, Memphis, Louisville and Nashville. He'll make his first-ever appearance in Asheville, N.C., and will visit Akron, Ohio, and Detroit for the first time since the early 1980s.
"We need to go to Tennessee to pick up some fireworks, and someone owes me money in Kentucky," Waits explained in a press release.
Waits will also perform in Chicago, where he sold out multiple nights on his last visit in 1999. The tour runs from August 1-13, with tickets going on sale starting July 8.
The idiosyncratic musician's most recent North American concerts took place in October 2004, when he played two shows in Vancouver, B.C., and one in Seattle.
07.12.06 (1:08 pm)
Syd Barrett dies [edit]
Syd Barrett, the troubled talent who co-founded Pink Floyd but spent his last years in reclusive anonymity, has died, a spokeswoman for the band said Tuesday. He was 60.
The spokeswoman - who declined to give her name until the band made an official announcement - said Barrett died several days ago. She did not disclose the cause of death. Barrett had suffered from diabetes for many years.
Barrett co-founded Pink Floyd in 1965 with Roger Waters, Nick Mason and Rick Wright, and wrote many of the band's early songs. The group's jazz-infused rock and drug-laced, multimedia "happenings" made them darlings of the London psychedelic scene. The 1967 album The Piper at the Gates of Dawn – largely written by Barrett, who also played guitar – was a commercial and critical hit.
However, Barrett suffered from mental instability, exacerbated by his use of LSD. His behavior grew increasingly erratic, and he left the group in 1968 - five years before the release of Pink Floyd's most popular album, Dark Side of the Moon. He was replaced by David Gilmour.
Barrett released two solo albums – The Madcap Laughs and Barrett – but soon withdrew from the music business altogether.
He spent much of the rest of his life living quietly in his hometown of Cambridge, England, and reverting to his real name, Roger Barrett.
He was a familiar figure, often seen cycling or walking to the corner store, but rarely spoke to the fans and journalists who sought him out over the years.
Despite his brief career, Barrett's fragile, wistful songs influenced many musicians, from David Bowie - who covered the Barrett track "See Emily Play" - to the other members of Pink Floyd, who recorded the album Wish You Were Here as a tribute to their troubled bandmate.
It contained the song "Shine On You Crazy Diamond" – "Remember when you were young, you shone like the sun." The band also dwelt on themes of mental illness on the albums Dark Side of the Moon and The Wall.
The band spokeswoman said a small, private funeral would be held.

