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your soon-to-be favourite music portal, think friendster, myspace, facebook, ringo, multiply and such... all but none of that stuff!

we are the dancing element in Bollywood movies. we are the RM1.60 toll on any goddamn KL road. we are the flying+toppled+burning car accident on federal highway. we are the curry to roti canai. we're Ron Burgundy's mustache.

just like music to anyone's soul, we're significant.


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Non-Stop


In an ode to a song that I have not been able to stop listening to in the past week, we here at Zigs have decided to check out playlists and write long arduous odes to songs that have a play count of more than 50! Ahaha.

Not quite hitting the 50 mark yet though, I must pay tribute to this relatively new release which has such a catchy ring to its tail that I cannot cannot stop playing it on repeat on my computer, in my car, on my iPod...

The track in question is this one: No Kind Words by The Maccabees

The reasons I cannot get this track out of my head I cannot quite fathom. Is it the way they repeat 'If you have no kind words to say, you should say nothing more at all' ? Because as far as repetitive sentences go, you gotta admit, that is a kick ass one. 

There is also the way the song swirls into a sort of psychedelic trance from the morbid monotone opening. It's almost as sexily ominous as Placebo. Here I thought the Maccabees were a shiny, happy band.

And then there's the ending. Which isn't really an ending...it's the opening to a song 4 tracks down the album but it's done so subtly you may think you dreamed it in the first place. 

Fact of the matter is, it's a bitchin' song. With a bitchin' hook. And bitchin' lyrics. And I bitchin' love it. Thank you Maccabees. 

Almost London


Well well well...we've come back from our hiatus. And slap bang into the indie party of the year. Koko Asia launched on 5th June to much raucous indie hand-clapping. 

Lots of British accents on hand to make the night seem more authentic including that of the stunning Asha Gill who presented performances by The Deserters and The Standards with a wave of her beer. 

Ah, it's good to see that there is in fact an indie music scene in good ol' KL. And it's good to see that a Noel-type frontman like he of The Standards is but a stone's throw away in Bangkok. 

Oh and it's nice (although slightly disappointing) to see some lucky boy win a pair of tickets to jolly London to witness for himself the real KOKO in Camden. Feel the envy from our open pores! 

Now, if only beers were cheaper. Ah.