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With first album in 8 years, Blondie prepares world tour and excitement for "Panic For Girls."
According to Billboard, Blondie
is planning a staggered worldwide rollout this year and next for "Panic
of Girls," the group's first set of new material since "The Curse of
Blondie" in 2003.
While label and distribution deals
are still being formulated, drummer Clem Burke tells Billboard.com that
he expects the set to come out in Australia in time for Blondie's
November-December tour with the Pretenders.
Following that, the band plans to release it in 2011 in other
territories, including the U.S. "There's a lot of politics involved,"
Burke says with a laugh.
Blondie recorded "Panic of
Girls" during November and December in Woodstock, N.Y., which Burke
says is only the second time the band has made an album outside of
Manhattan (the first was 1980's platinum "Automamerican," which was
done in Los Angeles). "We were living in the country out there, kind of
the antithesis of the urbanite kind of atmosphere that exists around
Blondie," explains Burke, adding that the album photos shot by Bob
Gruen feature the band members posing with farm animals. "We tried to
make the recording process as organic as possible and tried to stay
away from programming as much as we could, because ['The Curse of
Blondie'] had a lot of programming on it. So in the spirit of
Woodstock, we kept going in the studio and playing."
Burke
says Blondie was prolific, recording about 35 songs during the
sessions, about 14 of which will make the album; some of the extra
songs may be targeted for Internet release, he adds. "Everyone in the
band contributed songs," Burke notes, though singer Deborah Harry wrote
the bulk of the lyrics -- "Panic of Girls," in fact, is a line from one
of the songs. "We've switched out a few people in the band, so the
creative dynamic has changed a little bit." Original keyboardist Jimmy
Destri, who's retired from the road, was planning to contribute to the
album but wound up not being part of it."
Blondie has
been previewing several of the new songs, including "What I Heard,"
"The End" and "Mother," during its summer tour dates. "We've been
getting a great reception with the new material," Burke reports. "We're
doing about five or six of them in the show, which is kind of difficult
for people, hearing new material for the first time at a show. But
we've been doing really well with it."
This year
also marks the 30th anniversary for "Autoamerican" and its hits, "The
Tide is High" and "Rapture." Blondie isn't doing anything special to
commemorate the landmark, but Burke says the group remains proud of the
record. "The thing that everybody always talks about is when we
delivered it, the record company told us it had no hits on it," he
recalls. "They were confused. And then it had 'The Tide is High' and
'Rapture,' which were big hits around the world. It's probably my
favorite album. It's very eclectic. It was a groundbreaking record in a
lot of ways, and we still love playing those songs."
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