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Thread started 11/10/10 3:59pm

Nick715

New Duran Duran album out digitally 12/21

Duran Duran Promise Tour,...w New Song

November 10th, 2010

Duran Duran will release their 13th album, the Mark Ronson-produced, nine-track ‘All You Need Is Now,’ digitally this December and in stores in February 2011.

As keyboardist and original member Nick Rhodes tells Spinner, he’s incredibly proud of the new material. “It’s the best record we’ve made in over two decades,” he says excitedly.

Fans old enough to remember when videos like ‘Rio,’ ‘Girls on Film’ and ‘Hungry Like the Wolf’ made Duran Duran one of the biggest superstars of the MTV generation will be thrilled by Rhodes’ promise for the new material. “One thing I can say is that we will be making videos for every track on the album, which is something we certainly haven’t done since the very beginning,” he reveals. “We feel that visual material and content now is actually becoming of value again.”

Rhodes mainly credits that “rebirth” to technology and the Internet, but he also admits that current superstars like Lady Gaga and Kanye West have helped as well. “Gaga’s videos are the first time I’ve been interested in video for quite a long time,” he says. “They’re really interesting, edgy, funny, irreverent and beautiful — really well-made. I understand them. Kanye, I have a huge amount of time for because he makes extraordinary records. He’s got a really great mind has made some fantastic videos with really good ideas.”

Even with long-form videos making a comeback and new technology raising the bar, Rhodes feels Duran Duran are up to the task of competing with today’s biggest acts. “Because of our background being not just music, but art, fashion, design, technology, we are looking to do something more extraordinary with this album,” he says. “I hope that they will be thought-provoking, modern, funky, funny and emotional.”

If that wasn’t enough to get Duran Duran’s rabid following ready to hibernate until December, Rhodes has one more piece of great news. “We’re going to be touring next year for sure,” he promises. “We haven’t announced anything yet, but this record is built for touring, so we’re definitely excited about that.”

‘All You Need Now’ is due out exclusively on iTunes December 21st, the physical LP and special packages in February.

AOL Spinner

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Reply #1 posted 11/10/10 4:23pm

Nikademus

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woot!

Facebook, I haz it - https://www.facebook.com/Nikster1969

Yer booteh maeks meh moodeh

Differing opinions do not equal "hate"
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Reply #2 posted 11/10/10 7:30pm

lastdecember

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Well interesting turn of events it will be interesting to hear, i think at this point they recognize they lost alot of steam with the last record, and they are putting the limitations in process that they had back then and working with those, that it what all bands from that era need to do and some have to AMAZING results, not commercial just quatlity wise.


"We went where our music was appreciated, and that was everywhere but the USA, we knew we had fans, but there is only so much of the world you can play at once" Magne F
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Reply #3 posted 11/10/10 7:50pm

Nick715

As long as I enjoy it, that's all that matters. I don't expect them to be big sellers. This will please the die hard fans I'm sure.
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Reply #4 posted 11/11/10 4:21pm

Nick715

http://www.businesswire.c...ngle-Album

Welcome

FMG UK Ltd: Duran Duran Announce New Single and Album Produced by Mark Ronson

LONDON, United Kingdom--(BUSINESS WIRE)--DURAN DURAN

“imaginary follow up to Rio that never was.”

Announce Their Stunning New Single.. “All You Need Is Now”

Available Worldwide Exclusively Via The iTunes Store December 14th, 2010

Taken From Their Much Anticipated 13th Studio Album “ALL YOU NEED IS NOW” Produced by Mark Ronson

9-Track Digital LP To Be Released December 21st Exclusively On The ITunes Store

Extended Physical Release On CD & Vinyl With Extra Tracks To Be Released February 2011

November 11th – London England

The four original members of DURAN DURAN: John Taylor, Roger Taylor, Nick Rhodes and Simon Le Bon - have today announced the global release of their much anticipated 13th studio album, entitled “ALL YOU NEED IS NOW ”. The 9-track digital LP is due out exclusively on the iTunes Store on December 21st, while the expanded physical album and various format special packages will be released in February 2011.

The first single from the record, title track “All You Need Is Now,” will be available worldwide on December 14th exclusively on the iTunes Store.

Produced by the Grammy Award-winning Mark Ronson (Amy Winehouse, Adele, Kaiser Chiefs, Lily Allen) and mixed by Spike Stent (Madonna, Bjork, No Doubt), “ALL YOU NEED IS NOW” is a return-to-roots homage to DURAN DURAN’S most celebrated musical panache.

With a phenomenal career that has spanned three dec

ades, and record sales of more than 80 million, DURAN DURAN certainly has a storied history, but this new tale begins back in 2008. As part of a year-long run, they headlined festivals in a number of countries, playing arenas in others, and become the first group ever to perform at the Louvre Museum in Paris. Two nights later, in the same city, Duran Duran treated fans to a specially created “mega-mix” one-hour set that was filmed in a tiny theatre, with long-time-fan, Mark Ronson. This rare live performance immediately proved that there was a powerful chemistry between Ronson and the band, and within just a few weeks, a much larger collaboration had developed, with Mark committing to produce the band’s 13th studio album. Starting out in the late Spring of 2009, at Sphere Studios in London, this much-anticipated Duran/Ronson union flourished, as writing and recording began on an exciting new body of work, which Ronson has boldly stated is the “imaginary follow up to Rio that never was.” With this newfound partnership, the band was energized and excited by the music they were creating. The result is nothing short of pure Duran Duran brilliance harking back to their classic signature sound which spawned hit record after hit record. The album features guest vocals/rap from longtime Duran Duran pal/collaborator Ana Matronic of the Scissor Sisters while Owen Pallett of Arcade Fire contributes the album’s string arrangements. Always at the forefront of the art scene, the band enlisted the talents of up-and-coming British artist Clunie Reid for the album artwork and packaging. Reid’s work has been recently exhibited at leading UK and US spaces, including the Saatchi Gallery, the Tate and the New Museum in New York. British fashion magazine POP’s creative team will provide graphics and art direction for the project. Before the band embarks on their Spring 2011 world tour to promote the album, they will head to South Africa on December 7th for a 5-date concert series, marking the first time in seventeen years that the band has played in Africa.

The stats on DURAN DURAN are remarkable: a total of over 80 million records sold, 18 American hit singles, 30 UK chart hits and a global presence that guarantees them huge arena and stadium concert audiences on five continents.

More remarkable still is the way they have achieved this, fusing pop music with art, fashion and technology. When they first broke in the early 1980s, Duran Duran single-handedly transformed music videos from a gimmicky marketing tool into one of the music industry’s most valued assets. With exotic locations, beautiful girls and stunning special effects, Duran Duran took the visual imperatives of the New Romantic movement to another level, defining the MTV generation and building a loyal army of fans who have stayed with them to this day. Now a seemingly unstoppable force, with no fewer than five prestigious Lifetime Achievement Awards under their belt from MTV VMA’s, the Brit Awards, the Ivor Novellos, the Spanish Ondas and Q Magazine, the four original members of Duran Duran are in a category with only a handful of other internationally acclaimed artists.

As this new chapter begins, they have nothing left to prove, but everything to play for. So for them…All You Need Is Now!

Digital LP track listing in full:

1. All You Need Is Now

2. Blame The Machines


3. Being Followed


4. Leave A Light On


5. Safe 


6. Girl Panic


7. The Man Who Stole A Leopard


8. Runway Runaway


9. Before the Rain

  • A 12-track physical package will be available for purchase on CD and Vinyl with special deluxe options in February 2011.

This information was brought to you by Cision http://www.cisionwire.com

Contacts

For more information on Duran Duran, please contact
FREQUENCY MEDIA
Gerard Franklin / Margaret Murray
0121 224 7452
gerard@fmguk.com
0121 224 7453
margaret@fmguk.com

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Reply #5 posted 11/11/10 5:04pm

Glindathegood

Thanks for the news. Looking forward to it. I'm one of those weirdos that loved Red Carpet Massacre. I don't think it was a disaster like everyone said. Just because it flopped commercially doesn't mean it was a bad album.

I like DD, but I'm not a total 80's person. I like timeless music, not the specifically 80's snyth sound. I hope they don't go too far in recreating the 80's or their old songs and still try to keep it somewhat modern. The stuff in that press release that they are making a follow up to Rio and recreating their signature sound makes me nervous that I won't like it. But I will reserve judgement until I hear it.

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Reply #6 posted 11/11/10 5:26pm

lastdecember

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Glindathegood said:

Thanks for the news. Looking forward to it. I'm one of those weirdos that loved Red Carpet Massacre. I don't think it was a disaster like everyone said. Just because it flopped commercially doesn't mean it was a bad album.

I like DD, but I'm not a total 80's person. I like timeless music, not the specifically 80's snyth sound. I hope they don't go too far in recreating the 80's or their old songs and still try to keep it somewhat modern. The stuff in that press release that they are making a follow up to Rio and recreating their signature sound makes me nervous that I won't like it. But I will reserve judgement until I hear it.

nah i dont think they will be a letdown by taking the approach of early albums, i think when you force modernization on your work than thats when it sounds wrong. I remember back in early 2007 when a-ha entered the studio to work on songs for "foot of the mountain" everyone was leaking news that it was a return to synth pop sounds etc...that it wasnt going to be their post 2000 sound which is more acoustic/eclectic stuff, and that worried me because from 2000 on to me thats when they became the best band of that era overall, but in 2009 when the album came out it wasnt that 80's return people were saying, sure it had some keyboard/synths and programming, but they did it all themselves, thats the huge thing, if you bring "outsiders" thats when things go wrong, thats why to me Timbaland was a miss for DD on most of RCM for me, plus the elimination of the band in the mix, was very troubling. SO if DD is going the right route it cant be a miss.


"We went where our music was appreciated, and that was everywhere but the USA, we knew we had fans, but there is only so much of the world you can play at once" Magne F
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Reply #7 posted 11/11/10 6:23pm

Glindathegood

Sorry, but I don't agree with that. Times change and you have to change with them while still maintaining the essence of who you are. Or otherwise you are stagnant and caught in a time warp. I don't think there's any one right route or method. For me, it's all about the quality of the songs not the method. I don't see anything wrong with bringing in outside people. Sometimes in a band, people get too egotistical and they need outside opinions. But on this record, they are bringing in an outsider, Mark Ronson! Why don't people object to that, but they object to Timbaland.

I'm not a Timbaland fan at all, but I don't dislike him. I think some fans just decided they hated Timbaland so they decided to hate the record before they heard the record. I listen to every record on its merits and don't care who produced it or if they are outsiders.

I loved RCM, but even though I'm a big Madonna fan I hated what he did for her on Hard Candy. I think it was overblown about how RCM was really so different for them, to me it still sounded like DD. Whereas with the Madonna record it was all Timbaland and it didn't sound like her anymore.

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Reply #8 posted 11/12/10 12:57am

SamSamba

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Glindathegood said:

I hope they don't go too far in recreating the 80's

In my opinion, their best "post-80's" song by far was "Ordinary World" from 1993. Ok, I guess that might actually have a sound of the 90's now, but at least it's not synth pop. smile

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Reply #9 posted 11/12/10 3:21am

JoeTyler

NO! NO! NO! and NOOOOOOOO!

confused omg AGAIN? a Xmas release AGAAAAAAIIIIN????

wtf, I guess they haven't learnt about the Red Carpet Massacre experience: that album was released in the late November-early December and it was ignored in front of the avalanche of the new albums of 00s artists...in other words, DD should release their new albums in the early spring or in autumn; nobody (excluding the hardcore fans) will buy a new DD album in Xmas, the casual fans or the non-fans will surely buy other albums in Xmas or other products, but not a DD album, that's for sure...Xmas is not a good time for lesser-known bands or for old acts that lost their superstar status a long time ago...

I hope this new fine album doesn't bomb...confused

tinkerbell
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Reply #10 posted 11/12/10 1:31pm

lastdecember

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Glindathegood said:

Sorry, but I don't agree with that. Times change and you have to change with them while still maintaining the essence of who you are. Or otherwise you are stagnant and caught in a time warp. I don't think there's any one right route or method. For me, it's all about the quality of the songs not the method. I don't see anything wrong with bringing in outside people. Sometimes in a band, people get too egotistical and they need outside opinions. But on this record, they are bringing in an outsider, Mark Ronson! Why don't people object to that, but they object to Timbaland.

I'm not a Timbaland fan at all, but I don't dislike him. I think some fans just decided they hated Timbaland so they decided to hate the record before they heard the record. I listen to every record on its merits and don't care who produced it or if they are outsiders.

I loved RCM, but even though I'm a big Madonna fan I hated what he did for her on Hard Candy. I think it was overblown about how RCM was really so different for them, to me it still sounded like DD. Whereas with the Madonna record it was all Timbaland and it didn't sound like her anymore.

Well thats the whole thing, maintaining the essence of who you are, Times Change but you can still incorporate what you did without it sounding like you are "reaching" for past glory. "Limitations" are the key here, alot of time bands that have been around get the ego that they can "phone" it in, lets do this, if it doesnt work its because people dont get it, its not our problem, which is true to a point, but any band with a catalog goes through this kind of stage, where they think their shit dont stink. I had no problem with Timbaland until his production called for elimination of a band member practically, the absence of guitar on RCM made that album seem disjointed at times, not a bad record, but it had weak points to it, and parts that sounded like leftover timbaland scraps. It remains to be seen what Mark Ronson can do with this record, its not out so i cant say if he brings something out of them thats been missing.

As far as outsiders, shit, they can help or they can hurt, as i pointed out a-ha, in 1993 they worked with David Z, the Prince dude, It was the worst move they made, David has no clue in production and was totally wrong, he had good songs to work with, but fucked up the mixing, and his idea was to make a-ha "current" for 1993, which meant funk-grunge, kind of like Red Hot Chili Peppers meet Nirvana, well, bad mix bad idea, and look who is still recording and who isnt. But then take outsiders like Martin Terefe and also Steve Osborne, these two have been brilliant outsiders for a-ha since 2000's return album and put this band well past their 80's counterparts from those days. So it can be good it can be dreadful.

For RCM i didnt hate the record, some people misjudge saying an album is ok for hate, it was an ok record, but for me DD has never had that IT record that i can constantly play without skipping, they have always been a 75% album artist type band.


"We went where our music was appreciated, and that was everywhere but the USA, we knew we had fans, but there is only so much of the world you can play at once" Magne F
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Reply #11 posted 11/12/10 1:33pm

lastdecember

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JoeTyler said:

NO! NO! NO! and NOOOOOOOO!

confused omg AGAIN? a Xmas release AGAAAAAAIIIIN????

wtf, I guess they haven't learnt about the Red Carpet Massacre experience: that album was released in the late November-early December and it was ignored in front of the avalanche of the new albums of 00s artists...in other words, DD should release their new albums in the early spring or in autumn; nobody (excluding the hardcore fans) will buy a new DD album in Xmas, the casual fans or the non-fans will surely buy other albums in Xmas or other products, but not a DD album, that's for sure...Xmas is not a good time for lesser-known bands or for old acts that lost their superstar status a long time ago...

I hope this new fine album doesn't bomb...confused

well i think thats why its not in stores, i dont think its gonna do much now except for the loyals, i mean they have to be "realistic" i would be more concerned how this record is gonna do worldwide than in america, that is where the cheddar is made.


"We went where our music was appreciated, and that was everywhere but the USA, we knew we had fans, but there is only so much of the world you can play at once" Magne F
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Reply #12 posted 11/12/10 3:11pm

Nick715

lastdecember said:

JoeTyler said:

NO! NO! NO! and NOOOOOOOO!

confused omg AGAIN? a Xmas release AGAAAAAAIIIIN????

wtf, I guess they haven't learnt about the Red Carpet Massacre experience: that album was released in the late November-early December and it was ignored in front of the avalanche of the new albums of 00s artists...in other words, DD should release their new albums in the early spring or in autumn; nobody (excluding the hardcore fans) will buy a new DD album in Xmas, the casual fans or the non-fans will surely buy other albums in Xmas or other products, but not a DD album, that's for sure...Xmas is not a good time for lesser-known bands or for old acts that lost their superstar status a long time ago...

I hope this new fine album doesn't bomb...confused

well i think thats why its not in stores, i dont think its gonna do much now except for the loyals, i mean they have to be "realistic" i would be more concerned how this record is gonna do worldwide than in america, that is where the cheddar is made.

Exactly. This is a Christmas present for the hardcore fans. When the physical CD is released in February, there will be more of a push. Plus it will have a few more songs on it.

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Reply #13 posted 11/13/10 4:22am

AlexdeParis

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woot! I'm beyond excited! I love Red Carpet Massacre (it's their best post-80s album IMO), but anything that recalls Rio can never be a bad thing IMO. I still spin that album like it's brand new! nod

"Whitney was purely and simply one of a kind." ~ Clive Davis
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Reply #14 posted 11/13/10 8:07am

JoeTyler

Nick715 said:

lastdecember said:

well i think thats why its not in stores, i dont think its gonna do much now except for the loyals, i mean they have to be "realistic" i would be more concerned how this record is gonna do worldwide than in america, that is where the cheddar is made.

Exactly. This is a Christmas present for the hardcore fans. When the physical CD is released in February, there will be more of a push. Plus it will have a few more songs on it.

Oh, cool, ok all right then boogie lol

tinkerbell
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