New Order's 18-minute tribute to former Joy Division frontman Ian Curtis, "Elegia" is to be released on vinyl for the first time.
The band released a shortened five-minute version of the song on their 1985 album Low-Life, but the full rendition of the track is now being released on 12" by the Slow To Speak label and is available to order now via Dope Jams.
The release will also feature the tracks "5-8-6", which featured on the band's album Power, Corruption And Lies, and "The Him", which was also penned as a tribute to Curtis.
Paolo Sorrentino’s This Must Be The Place muses on the existence of a fictional rock star. This is Cheyenne, who’s spent 20 years out of the spotlight, living in a mansion outside Dublin. Played by Sean Penn and modeled physically on Robert Smith – the crows’ nest of black hair, lipstick, eyeliner, fondness for black – Cheyenne spends his days watching Jamie Oliver programmes on television, debating whether or not to sell his shares in Tesco and pondering, “Why is Lady Gaga?” Fully Gothed up, he goes shopping in a nearby mall to buy pizza.
The Black Keys will feature on a brand new episode of celebrity chef Anthony Bourdain's cult travel show No Reservations.
In an episode dedicated to Kansas City, Bourdain has lunch with the band at a place called Woodyard Bar-B-Que. The duo pick him up in the van from the cover their most recent album, El Camino, which Bourdain jokingly calls a "van of death and possible dismemberment". The programme will air in the United States on April 16 at 9pm (ET).
Dexys have announced that they will make one of only two festival appearances at this summer's Lounge On The Farm Festival.
The band release their comeback album One Day I'm Going To Soar on June 4, which is their first record since 1985's Don't Stand Me Down. It will be released under the name Dexys and features the band's members Kevin Rowland, Mick Talbot, Pete Williams and Jim Paterson as well as new recruits Neil Hubbard, Tim Cansfield, Madeleine Hyland, Lucy Morgan and Ben Trigg.
Guns N' Roses frontman Axl Rose has revealed that he has refused the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame's invitation to be inducted this Saturday (April 14).
The singer, who had not previously spoken about the possibility of reuniting with his former bandmates at the ceremony in Cleveland, Ohio this weekend, has now come out and said that he wishes to take no part in the whole thing.
Axl Rose, who seldom gives interviews, made his decision public via a lengthy letter to a number of media outlets.
Alabama Shakes are set to debut at Number One this weekend with their album Boys And Girls.
The Georgia band, who released their debut album on Monday (April 9), are currently outselling Adele's 21 by 300 copies, according to the Official Charts Company.
James Murphy of the now defunct LCD Soundsystem has revealed that he is currently writing a novel.
Speaking to GQ, Murphy said that he has considered writing under a pseudonym so his work is "considered fairly". He said: "I'm writing now, actually. A novel. I'm always making things, but whether they turn into something that I'll consider making a part of the public world is different. I mean, I write songs every day, but only once in a while do they go out into the public sphere."
“I feel like a stand-up comic who’s not getting any laughs,” says Patti Smith self-deprecatingly, as she presents a playback of her new album, Banga, to a specially invited audience in London. This is the first time anyone has listened to the record, she tells us – not even the band or Patti's record company have yet had the privilege of hearing it. The venue for this auspicious event is the old Scotch Of St James club in Mayfair, the principal hang out for Swinging London’s finest.
Leonard Cohen has announced a one-off UK outdoor show for later this year.
The singer, who released his 12th studio album Old Ideas in January, will headline a new event put on by the promoters of Hop Farm Festival, which is named A Day At Hop Farm.
The show takes place on September 8 at Hop Farm Country Park in Kent and will have a capacity of around 10,000. Cohen will play a three-hour set and will also have a full supporting bill playing before him. It will be Cohen's only UK show of his 2012 world tour.
Among the residents of Treme, David Simon’s HBO drama series about the inhabitants of New Orleans in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, you’ll find a character called Delmond. Delmond, a talented jazz trumpeter, is a deeply conflicted individual. In the person of his father, he is tied to the ruined city, its historic music and its obscure ritual cultures. And yet, he is drawn to the East coast, where the ensemble in which he plays is in considerable demand.