Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Ian McLagan: the man who made two great bands greater

http://i.guim.co.uk/static/w-620/h--/q-95/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/pictures/2014/12/3/1417645407859/6ce80d95-a91b-4012-badc-9478df6ead94-620x372.jpeg
 RIP … Ian McLagan in 1979. Photograph: Donaldson Collection/Getty Images

Ian McLagan, who has died aged 69, managed that rarest of things: to be in two great rock’n’roll bands. The irony is that two other men did the same thing, in the same bands – Kenney Jones and Ronnie Lane with the Small Faces and the Faces. McLagan was never the starriest operator in those two bands – in the Small Faces, Steve Marriott, one of the great British R&B singers, was the focus; in the Faces he had Rod Stewart and Ron Wood strutting in front, and Lane stealing the show with his exquisite songwriting – but he was crucial to the sound of both.
When one thinks of McLagan, one thinks of the Hammond B3 organ, and the richness he added to a series of great records: think of what Afterglow by the Small Faces would have sounded like without those magnificent swells. Even on relatively minor pieces, like Three Button Hand Me Down, from the Faces’ debut album, First Step, he elevates a generic boogie into something greater than the sum of its parts with those judiciously chosen organ lines.
McLagan had the same B3 since 1969 – he called it Betsy – describing “her” as a “Ferrari compared to what comes out of the factories. It’s as loud as fuck. I defy any guitarist to compete.” But his work wasn’t about brute force, which was one reason both the Faces and the Small Faces were able to play so many styles with such mastery.
With the Small Faces, he could be playful: his line is crucial to the music hall feel of Lazy Sunday; it’s not just about the lyrics. He could be a colourist: listen to Itchycoo Park and the way the organ adds the shade to what might be a fairly workaday song without it. He could be soulful, tipping the soul into something more powerful, as on Tin Soldier. And he could be trippy when the song required it, as on Green Circles.
Maybe, though, it was with the Faces that he got the greatest chance to shine – it’s not that his role was more integral, more that he got the single best moment on any Faces song, 30 seconds or so into Stay With Me, when that pellmell opening riff falls away, and McLagan comes in with that tumbledown descending honky tonk line. Ron Wood joins in on guitar, and somehow a song coalesces, seemingly out of boozy chaos: it’s wonderful. The rest of the song ain’t bad, either.
But the Faces did subtle, too, especially when Ronnie Lane was writing. Perhaps their best song, Debris – “I left you on the debris of the Sunday morning market,” is one of rock’s most evocative opening lines – is a fabulous group performance, and McLagan’s beautiful, lyrical, autumnal playing is a substantial part of that performance.
When the Faces folded, McLagan played with scores of greats – the Stones and Bob Dylan among them – and it wasn’t just because he was a laugh: he was one of the greats. In the late 90s he joined Billy Bragg’s band, and could be seen playing for audiences who maybe didn’t always recognise who the older bloke behind the organ was. And that also led to McLagan reviving a solo career that had spluttered briefly in the the late 70s and early 80s, with several new records emerging as the new century began. He’d relocated to Austin, Texas, which seemed fitting for someone whose best music, no matter how English, had an American soul behind it.
This year’s album United States saw him playing piano and that marvellous, marvellous organ, and singing about relationships, in a voice that, while hardly Stevie’s or Rod’s, was characterful and human, full of warmth and hard earned wisdom. It sounded like the voice of a man you’d want to know.

Thursday, November 27, 2014

Gigi Hadid and Kendall Jenner Make Models Top 50 Debut


Photo: Rex Features
Gigi Hadid and Kendall Jenner have both made the prestigious Models.com Top 50 list for the first time. They join the likes of Edie Campbell, Lindsey Wixson, and Georgia May Jagger in what is widely considered to be the definitive guide to the top models of the moment.

While bigger names (the Caras, Kates, and Giseles of the world) are ranked in separate lists—from the New Supers to the Money Girls—the Top 50 list tracks the girls who are currently making waves within the fashion and beauty industries, thanks to their number of contracts, campaigns, and editorial bookings. Hadid's recent appearance in the Pirelli Calendar, coupled with a major Tom Ford campaign, landed her a spot in the roundup, while Jenner's huge Estée Lauder contract was responsible for cementing her a spot. Both girls have come from high-profile backgrounds—Hadid's mother is a star on reality TV show Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, and Jenner's Kardashian clan needs no introduction—so how has that impacted upon their success?

"Kendall and I fall in the middle," Hadid explained to us. "There are girls that I know—obviously I’m not going to name names—that have come from successful families or are in the spotlight, and that don’t have a great work ethic and don’t strive enough to separate themselves. They don’t want to work hard. The difference, and why I say that Kendall and I fall in the middle, is that on one side we have great families who have been in the spotlight and taught us a lot, but we also have the work ethic to back it up. I just want to be someone that is known because people like working with me—even if they don’t know that my mum has been on reality TV. I’ve been backstage at Chanel with Kendall and she doesn’t ask for anything extra or expect to be treated differently, and that’s why I respect her and we’ve become really good friends because I think we both see very similar work attitudes in each other."
While the LA-born, 19-year-old Hadid acknowledges that she was fortunate enough to be given a head start, she denies that she's had to work any less hard. "Because my mum was in the industry and I have a great team behind me, I was taught the basics as a kid—I stopped modeling when I was 10 (after Baby Guess and Guess Kids campaigns) and I just went to school—but it was something that I always wanted to do and something that I always talked about, so my mom started teaching me," she said. "So in the two years that I’ve been modeling... I’d say most girls have to take two years to learn the basics, but I started with a lot of that basic knowledge, so I was able to concentrate on developing my own work ethic and work style. I guess I had a step ahead."

Born to Palestinian and Dutch parents, Hadid's distinctive look—almond eyes, naturally olive skin, beachy blonde waves—first had her noticed by Sports Illustrated. Work with Tom Ford and a cover of Carine Roitfeld's CR Fashion Book soon followed, as well as catwalk appearances for everyone from Chanel to Marc Jacobs. Then, came the Pirelli Calendar, seen as having made many a supermodel's career.

"I've realized that I’m very hard-headed and when I set my mind to one thing, that’s where I’m going to go," she told us in Milan for the launch of the 2015 calendar. "It can be bad because it means I get tunnel vision and can close myself off to other potential opportunities. So what I try and do is look for different things and different aspects of people’s careers that I want to emulate, and I try to go day by day with smaller goals. My three things are 'Work hard, be nice, and make a friend', or at least make a connection. And I think that those little things have lead me to jobs that I wouldn’t otherwise ever dreamed of."

"I’ve met so many people that have lead me to opportunities, like the Pirelli Calendar, that I never would have thought were possible—just because I’ve made a good impression on them, or tried to be someone that people like to work with," she continued. "Even if there are people that don’t like me, I’d hope that when I work with them I could change their mind. If there’s anyone out there that’s judging my family or saying that I’m only successful for this and that reason, then I hope that if they were to work with me they’d change their mind."