Planet Sound
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Planet Sound is a Teletext music page on ITV and Channel 4 in the UK. It is broadcast on analogue Teletext from page 340, and on digital Teletext from page 820. Teletext's predecessor ORACLE ran a similar music section in the 1980s. Future PS editor John Earls had reader reviews printed, aged 14, in ORACLE's Blue Suede Views of 1987 albums by ABC, Pet Shop Boys and Westworld under the pseudonym Jetty.
Planet Sound began in 1997, when its chief writer was Stephen Eastwood. An early champion of Belle & Sebastian, Eastwood had an album named after him by The Cuban Boys, who had a novelty hit with Cognoscenti Vs Intelligentsia, aka The Hamster Dance, during Christmas 1999. Its chief writer since January 2001 has been John Earls. Since July 2006, the writer of the mainstream news and feature is Alistair Clay. He is also the singer of Leamington Spa-based unsigned band red kites The most regular freelancers are Ian Gittins, who also writes about music for The Guardian, Colin Irwin, the former Planet Sound editor and folk music expert who is regularly a judge on the Mercury Music Prize plus Tom Thorogood and Jenny Pashkova, who are contributors for Clash magazine.
Planet Sound deals with all genres of music, mostly of the indie-rock variety. It promotes various artists that are underground as well as more established acts.
It gets its name from the Pixies song Planet of Sound.
Planet Sound also helped to discover the band Hope of the States (now split up), via its weekly demo page. Others to receive favourable demo reviews include Maxïmo Park, Nine Black Alps, Kubichek!, Luxembourg, Komakino and The Others.
Other acts that have been promoted at the earliest stage of their careers include Arctic Monkeys, Kaiser Chiefs, Razorlight, Arcade Fire, Franz Ferdinand, Keane, Editors, Snow Patrol, Klaxons, Kasabian, HARD-Fi, Elbow, The Feeling, Scissor Sisters, The Killers, iLiKETRAiNS, Shady Bard, The Maccabees, The Little Ones, The Twang, Jamie T, Air Traffic, Liam Frost and Little Man Tate.
As of March 2007, Planet Sound's news pages are featured on the Teletext.co.uk Webpage.
Contents |
[edit] Pages
- Page 340 / 820 - PS Index
- Page 341 / 821 - PS News
- Page 342 / 822 - PS News & Tours
- Page 343 / 823 - Single reviews
- Page 344 / 824 - Album/gig reviews
- Page 345 / 825 - Mainstream feature
- Page 346 / 826 - PS feature
- Page 347 / 827 - The Void
- Page 348 / 828 - Demos (Mon-Friday)/Quiz (Saturday-Sunday)
- Page 349 / 829 - Charts (Top 40 singles and Top 40 albums, updated at 7pm on Sunday)
- Page 350 - Gig Guide
[edit] Page 341 / 821
In July 2006, Teletext's pop pages Ace closed. Until November, 341 became the home of mainstream music news for acts including Justin Timberlake, Girls Aloud etc. However, when Teletext management imposed a 6-page limit on all sections (not just Planet Sound's pages), the two news pages became like the PS News of old, concentrating mainly on indie/rock stories. The pages update daily.
[edit] Page 342 / 822
This page deals with all the daily music news from all sources.
Each page has a title referring to the first article on the page. (There are 1-3 articles per page). As well as rounding up tour information and announcing artists' new singles/albums, PS News is often used to trail interviews with artist quotes. News stories from other sources are generally credited. It features stories on both new and established acts. Since November 2006, this became the home for all stories on artists announcing tours, though it generally has other non-tour stories here on non-mainstream acts also.
[edit] Page 343 / 823
Known as Launchpad, this is where singles are reviewed each week. The pages change on Thursday and Monday. The Thursday single reviews are for the more mainstream singles out the following week. Monday's reviews focus on new and esoteric acts' singles.
[edit] Page 344 / 824
This is where albums and gigs are reviewed. These are updated daily, with the main album reviews repeated at weekends. Albums are reviewed from Wednesday to Tuesday, so that next week's biggest albums are reviewed on Wednesday.
[edit] Rating system
Planet Sound rates albums, singles, demos and live performances out of 10. Usually this can be explained as such:
- 0 = Godawful album. According to them, the worst album ever is Steriogram's Schmack!.
- 1-3 = Terrible album.
- 3-5 = Disappointing.
- 5-7 = Middling. Some good points, some bad points.
- 8 = Very Good Album.
- 9 = Excellent Album. Contender For Album Of The Year.
- 10 = ?. To Date, No Album has ever received 10 out of 10.
Live acts have rarely received 10/10.
The first time they saw Hope of the States live at Camden Verge in 2003, they gave them 10/10. A Brixton Academy Gig on Pixies 2004 reunion tour also saw a 10/10 mark. My Life Story's reunion gig at London Mean Fiddler on the 26th of May 2006 also received this accolade. The Polyphonic Spree can claim the greatest credit - 24/10 - referring to the number of people in the band for a gig at London's church venue Union Chapel in 2002. The lowest ever mark for a gig was awarded to London-based indie band Rocket for their gig at Hoxton Bar & Grill in 2006, who not only received 0/10, but were specifically identified as the worst live band Planet Sound had ever seen.
[edit] Page 345 / 825
While Planet Sound traditionally always ran exclusive interviews with musicians, this mainstream feature - launched like page 341 in July 2006 after Ace's closure - includes general background articles on populist acts such as Justin Timberlake and Madonna.
[edit] Page 346 / 826
This usually is an interview with a music artist. These include new, cult and established musicians during the week. The weekend interview is with the biggest artist of that week, such as Muse, Razorlight or Kaiser Chiefs.
On Mondays, there is Sound Patrol - a listing on the week ahead's Radio, TV and Gig listings, plus Quotes Of The Week.
There used to be 2 extra pages of "Champs Of The Week" & "Chumps Of The Week".
Champs of The Week----
This was a section that gave cheers to two people who did something of brilliance in the last week. Winners of this accolade included:
- Maxi Jazz of Faithless - for talking for 20 minutes non-stop after being asked a question.
- You - for the low sales of Blazin' Squad, S Club 7 and Jennifer Lopez's albums released that week.
- Keane - for having Rooney as a support band. (Keane and Rooney refer to Roy Keane & Wayne Rooney, of Manchester United.)
Chumps of The Week----
Also run at the same time was Chumps of The Week which gave jeers to someone that did something rubbish in the last week. "Winners" of this accolade included:
- John Earls - While meeting Frankie Poullain of The Darkness, Frankie remarked that there was one reviewer (John Earls himself) who severely disliked the band. Earls disingenuously responded "I know, it's not me", to which Poullain responded: "That's funny, his name is John too," leaving Earls suitably sheepish.
- The panel of judges for the 2003 Mercury Music Prize - for picking a quite poor shortlist (including The Darkness.) The page said it would like to take the opportunity to fill the rest of the page with what the judges knew about music, before leaving a good two-thirds of the page blank.
Both Champs And Chumps of The Week were discontinued in 2005.
It was revived once, in June 2006. Champs were:
Pete Doherty (For gathering a group of journalists together for a press conference and then not showing)
Kylie Minogue (for announcing a return to touring following her diagonsis of breast cancer)
Chumps were:
The media that showed to Pete Doherty's conference.
Richard Ashcroft (For drunkenly gate-crashing a youth club)
[edit] Page 347 / 827
The Void.
This is a free forum for people to write in and give their opinions on music.
this segment is usually nine pages long, with the last two pages for ads and contact information.
Usually, one page is a Top Ten list. This can be as diverse from Top Ten Imaginary Metalcore Bands to Top Ten Songs Of This Month.
In mid 2002, when Leeds-based band The Music were coming into the scene, a Voider wrote saying they were a Stone Roses karaoke band. The Music's singer Robert Harvey saw the letter, and wrote to Planet Sound. His letter was printed, with Robert offering the Voider free tickets to any of their gigs so he could say his views to the band's faces.
In March 2006 Paul Heaton of The Beautiful South wrote in to mention "Why do bands go on about Myspace, when they can promote themselves here for free? Buy our Album!" The reply from the writing team said "Damn. We forgot to ask for a bribe." In March 2007, Heaton was revealed on The Void to be have been the cause of Simply Red getting an 8/10 album review. Earls wrote an apparently sincere review of their album Stay but, after a letter asking him if he'd gone deaf, Earls replied he'd only written the review after losing a game of bowling to Heaton.
Other musicians to have written in include Stuart Murdoch of Belle & Sebastian, Ian McCulloch of Echo & The Bunnymen and Stuart Braithwaite of Mogwai, who corrected one Voider's assertions that said band ran a Glasgow metal night purely as an exercise in irony. At the height of their fame, Travis singer Fran Healy told Planet Sound that his Aunt Babs read PS, leading her to write in regularly for several months.
On 19 August 2006, Simon Ratcliffe from Basement Jaxx wrote in to say hello to his grandad, who tells the band about any time they are mentioned on Teletext. The letter also mentions that if there was a Basement Jaxx Radio station, Simon's grandad would be the first to DJ, despite being 93.
[edit] Peter Pinsent
One Voider, Peter Pinsent, gained cult notoriety with his constant letters praising the merits of Geri Halliwell. Each letter would praise her as being a million times better than any band recently discussed. On one occasion, all the pages in The Void were by Pinsent.
He was quiet throughout 2006, which left fellow Voiders to theorize that Geri's pregnancy was the reason for this. However, in January 2007, Pinsent returned to The Void with a letter heavily criticising Kylie Minogue. A second letter the following week explained that he had been absent from The Void because he had been looking after his terminally-ill father.
Since his return, Pinsent has regularly had letters screened, with Halliwell inevitably dominating his missives.
Some say Pinsent is actually Geri Halliwell herself, writing in under an alias to get her back in the public eye. This is without foundation - a letter by then-regular Voider Tony Satan in 2004 revealed that Pinsent was a former bodybuilding champion from his native Pinner, Middx.
Many of the people who write into The Void become regulars, such as Rebecca Nahid, Tony Satan, The Doc and Bradders.
[edit] End of year polls
Planet Sound runs a Top 50 for the best singles and albums each year, as decided by John Earls and - until he left Teletext in 2005 - its then-editor, Colin Irwin. Planet Sound has a policy of only including one release per artist per year, so that anyone with a mention in Top 50 singles of the year won't be included in that year's Top 50 albums, and vice versa.
Past winners of Album of the year:
- 1997 - Radiohead - OK Computer
- 1998 - Air - Moon Safari
- 1999 - Death In Vegas - The Contino Sessions
- 2000 - The Delgados - The Great Eastern
- 2001 - The Avalanches - Since I Left You
- 2002 - The Streets - Original Pirate Material
- 2003 - Dizzee Rascal - Boy in Da Corner
- 2004 - Modest Mouse - Good News for People Who Love Bad News
- 2005 - Bright Eyes - I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning
- 2006 - Muse - Black Holes And Revelations
Past winners of Single of the year:
- 1997 - Belle & Sebastian - Dog On Wheels
- 1998 - The Tamperer - Feel It
- 1999 - Genelab - Anorak Lou
- 2000 - Eminem - Stan
- 2001 - Missy Elliot - Get UR Freak On
- 2002 - The Polyphonic Spree - Soldier Girl/Ms Dynamite - It Takes More (Joint Number 1)
- 2003 - Junior Senior - Move Your Feet
- 2004 - Graham Coxon - Freakin' Out
- 2005 - Arctic Monkeys - I Bet You Look Good On The Dancefloor
- 2006 - Liam Frost - The Mourners Of St. Paul's
[edit] Albums that have received 9/10
Note: This list is incomplete.
- The Strokes - Is This It
- Elbow - Asleep In The Back
- The White Stripes - White Blood Cells
- The Avalanches - Since I Left You
- Cornershop - Handcream For a Generation
- Doves - The Last Broadcast
- Queens of the Stone Age - Songs For The Deaf
- Idlewild - The Remote Part
- The Flaming Lips - Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots
- The Streets - Original Pirate Material
- Coldplay - A Rush Of Blood To The Head
- Bright Eyes - Lifted
- Elbow - Cast Of Thousands
- Muse - Absolution
- Belle & Sebastian - Dear Catastrophe Waitress
- The Sleepy Jackson - Lovers
- Dizzee Rascal - Boy In Da Corner
- The Hidden Cameras - Smell Of Our Own
- Ben Kweller - On My Way
- Charlotte Hatherley - Grey Will Fade
- Damien Dempsey - Seize The Day
- The Shins - Chutes Too Narrow
- Modest Mouse - Good News for People Who Love Bad News
- The Streets - A Grand Don't Come for Free
- Magnetic Fields - I
- The Dears - No Cities Left
- My Life Story - Sex & Violins - The Best Of
- Super Furry Animals - Songbook
- M.I.A. - Arular
- Coldplay - X & Y
- New Order - Waiting For The Sirens Call
- Warchild - Help: A Day In The Life
- Nitin Sawhney - Philtre
- My Morning Jacket - Z
- Arcade Fire - Funeral
- Rilo Kiley - More Adventurous
- Elbow - Leaders of the Free World
- The Wrens - The Meadowlands
- The National - Alligator
- Bright Eyes - I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning
- The Magic Numbers - The Magic Numbers
- Arctic Monkeys - Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not
- Cat Power - The Greatest
- Eighteen 18 - Body Armour
- Pretty Girls Make Graves - Élan Vital
- Mojave 3 - Puzzles Like You
- Hope of the States - Left
- Hope of the States - The Lost Riots
- Muse - Black Holes And Revelations
- The Little Ones - Sing-Song
- Razorlight - Razorlight
- The Sleepy Jackson - Personality - One Was A Spider, One Was A Bird
- R.E.M - And I Feel Fine... The Best of the I.R.S. Years 1982-1987
- The Hours - Narcissus Road
- Fred Deakin - The Triptych
- Arcade Fire - Neon Bible
- Charlotte Hatherley - The Deep Blue
- Modest Mouse - We Were Dead Before The Ship Even Sank
[edit] Singles that have received 9/10 (or 5/5)
Note: Singles also used to be rated out of 5. Many got rated 5/5, but keeping with the album rating, no single has gotten 10/10. This list is incomplete.
- Arcade Fire - Neighbourhood #2 (Laika)
- Rilo Kiley - Portions For Foxes
- Elbow - Forget Myself
- The Automatic - Recover
- Morrissey - The First Of The Gang To Die
- The Magic Numbers - Forever Lost
- The Magic Numbers - Love Me Like You
- Plan B - No Good
- Cast - Desert Drought
- Little Man Tate - The Agent
- Shady Bard - Treeology
- The Little Ones - Lovers Who Uncover
- The Wrens - Faster Gun
- Prince - Black Sweat
- Franz Ferdinand - The Fallen
- The Raconteurs - Steady As She Goes
- The Feeling - Fill My Little World
- Little Man Tate - What? What You Got?
- Keane - Is It Any Wonder?
- Liam Frost - The Mourners Of St. Paul's
- Muse - Supermassive Black Hole
- Air Traffic - Just Abuse Me
- Alesha - Lipstick
- Muse - Starlight
- Scissor Sisters - I Don't Feel Like Dancin'
- The Sleepy Jackson - I Understand What You Want But I Just Don't Agree
- Razorlight - America
- Hot Chip - Over And Over
- The Maybes? - Olympia EP
- Calexico - Lucky Dime
- Lily Allen - Littlest Things
- The Little Ones - Oh MJ!
- LCD Soundsystem - North American Scum
- Maxïmo Park - Our Velocity
- The Rumble Strips - Alarm Clock
- Dan Le Sac VS Scroobious PIP - Thou Shalt Always Kill