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Less Than Jake To Play Six Album Club Shows

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US ska/punk/pop band Less Than Jake are to perform a series of shows at London's Mean Fiddler in September. The infectious group will play a six-night residency, playing through a different album from their back catalogue each night, alongside b-sides and rarities. Albums set to be played through are "Pezcore," "Losing Streak," "Hello Rockview," "Borders & Boundaries, "Anthem" and "In With The Out Crowd." LTJ recently rehearsed 109 songs from their fifteen year career for a smilar residency event in their hometown of Florida. The UK shows will run from September 11 to 16, with the order in which the albums will be performed yet to be determined. These will be the group's only intimate UK shows this year. Founder member and drummer Vinnie says: "We feel that the UK is our second home and want to something special for our friends and fans there. Some of the best shows we have played were in the UK, some great memories to go with those shows. The six shows are the best and biggest thank you we could think of to give." Tickets for individual shows are £14 from usual ticket outlets, however, a season ticket will be available via postal application from Straight Music, priced £76.50. Send a cheque or money order made payable to Straight Music Ltd to: LTJ c/o Straight Music 2 Munro Terrace London SW10 0DL More details about the LTJ residency is available from the band's website here

US ska/punk/pop band Less Than Jake are to perform a series of shows at London’s Mean Fiddler in September.

The infectious group will play a six-night residency, playing through a different album from their back catalogue each night, alongside b-sides and rarities.

Albums set to be played through are “Pezcore,” “Losing Streak,” “Hello Rockview,” “Borders & Boundaries, “Anthem” and “In With The Out Crowd.”

LTJ recently rehearsed 109 songs from their fifteen year career for a smilar residency event in their hometown of Florida.

The UK shows will run from September 11 to 16, with the order in which the albums will be performed yet to be determined. These will be the group’s only intimate UK shows this year.

Founder member and drummer Vinnie says: “We feel that the UK is our second home and want to something special for our friends and fans there. Some of the best shows we have played were in the UK, some great memories to go with those shows. The six shows are the best and biggest thank you we could think of to give.”

Tickets for individual shows are £14 from usual ticket outlets, however, a season ticket will be available via postal application from Straight Music, priced £76.50.

Send a cheque or money order made payable to Straight Music Ltd to:

LTJ c/o

Straight Music

2 Munro Terrace

London SW10 0DL

More details about the LTJ residency is available from the band’s website here

TEN YEARS AGO THIS WEEK

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HAPPENINGS TEN YEARS TIME AGO March 5 to 11, 1997 The Notorious B.I.G. is shot dead as he sits in a car outside the Soul Train Music Awards in Los Angeles. Police confirm they are investigating links between the killing and the slaying of Tupac Shakur in a drive-by shooting in Las Vegas six months earlier, fuelling tabloid stories of a feud between the East Coast and West Coast rap communities. Biggie's demise comes just days after Death Row Records president Marion 'Suge' Knight receives a nine-year sentence for parole violations. Paul McCartney receives his knighthood from the Queen at Buckhingam Palace, to add to the MBE he received in 1965. Bono bemoans the state of modern rock music, while plugging U2's Pop album in the pages of Time magazine: "It does seem absurd that there are punk rockers in the late '90s rebelling against their parents with their parents' music. I can't quite get my head around that, it's like 'Dad, you suck - can I borrow your Sex Pistols album?'. White bread rock has, for me, lost its sense of adventure, and seems very tired in comparison with hip-hop. Spice Girls become the first act to have UK Number One singles with each of their first four releases, following the success of the double A-side "Who Do You Think You Are" and "Mama", but are knocked off the top of the albums chart by U2. Wearing his film producer's hat, Mick Jagger is rumoured to be wooing Madonna to star in a forthcoming movie about a 1930s Hollywood starlet who becomes a political activist. R&B legend Lavern Baker dies of complications from diabetes, aged 67. Only the second woman ever to be inducted into the Rock 'n' Roll Hall Of Fame (after Aretha Franklin), she was best known for the hits "Tweedle Dee" and "Jim Dandy". She was halfway through a comeback tour, despite having had both her legs amputated two years earlier. Actor David Doyle, best known as Bosley in the TV series Charlie's Angels, dies of a heart attack, aged 67. A French court orders Brigitte Bardot and her publishers to pay 250,000 francs compensation to her ex-husband Jacques Charrier and son Nicholas for comments made in her memoirs. Bardot described Charrier, who she divorced in 1963, as a "bourgeois coward" and Nicholas as "a tumour who fed off me while I was pregnant". Private Parts, the biopic of Howard Stern in which the controversial broadcaster plays himself, tops the US box office chart, ending a five-week run of the special editions of Star Wars and The Empire Strikes Back. An explosion at a nuclear waste processing plant in Japan triggers panic across the country, although authorities claim only a handful of the plant's 35 workers were exposed to low-level radioactive contamination. Tete de Femme, a 1931 work by Pablo Picasso, is stolen from a London gallery, but recovered a week later.

HAPPENINGS TEN YEARS TIME AGO

March 5 to 11, 1997

The Notorious B.I.G. is shot dead as he sits in a car outside the Soul Train Music Awards in Los Angeles. Police confirm they are investigating links between the killing and the slaying of Tupac Shakur in a drive-by shooting in Las Vegas six months earlier, fuelling tabloid stories of a feud between the East Coast and West Coast rap communities. Biggie’s demise comes just days after Death Row Records president Marion ‘Suge’ Knight receives a nine-year sentence for parole violations.

OMD To Play Aintree’s Summer Pops

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Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark, the Liverpool pioneers of British electronic music founded by Andy McCluskey andPaul Humphreys, have announced a homecoming gig, headlining at this year's Summer Pops festival. The show on July 21 will be the OMD's final show of the band's comeback tour. Their shows are the first since 1989 and OMD have regrouped with original band members Martin Cooper and Malcolm Holmes. McCluskey knows the homecoming show will be special, saying "Every band will tell you that Liverpool is always a favourite city to play on any tour because the audience is the best. For OMD, Liverpool is also our our home town gig. What better place to celebrate the last night of our comeback tour?” Liverpools' Summer Pops festival has this year relocated to Aintree race course to increase capacity for the shows to 4,500. BRIT award-winning singer James Morrison will headline on July 11 and boyband McFly take to the stage on July 20. Support acts will be announced in the coming weeks, and tickets go onsale this Friday (March 9) at 9am. More information about Summer Pops is available here from CMP Entertainment Click here for information about events in Liverpool

Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark, the Liverpool pioneers of British electronic music founded by Andy McCluskey andPaul Humphreys, have announced a homecoming gig, headlining at this year’s Summer Pops festival.

The show on July 21 will be the OMD’s final show of the band’s comeback tour.

Their shows are the first since 1989 and OMD have regrouped with original band members Martin Cooper and Malcolm Holmes.

McCluskey knows the homecoming show will be special, saying “Every band will tell you that Liverpool is always a favourite city to play on any tour because the audience is the best. For OMD, Liverpool is also our our home town gig. What better place to celebrate the last night of our comeback tour?”

Liverpools’ Summer Pops festival has this year relocated to Aintree race course to increase capacity for the shows to 4,500.

BRIT award-winning singer James Morrison will headline on July 11 and boyband McFly take to the stage on July 20.

Support acts will be announced in the coming weeks, and tickets go onsale this Friday (March 9) at 9am.

More information about Summer Pops is available here from CMP Entertainment

Click here for information about events in Liverpool

Kermit The Frog Plays David Byrne In Talking Heads Skit

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Every day, we bring you the best thing we've seen on YouTube - a great piece of archive footage, a music promo or a clip from one of our favourite movies or TV shows. Today: See Kermit the Frog perform a jerky, puppet dancing version of Talking Heads’ classic 1980 single “Once In A Lifetime.” The Muppets Tonight video copies the marionette style choreography that the original video became renowned for. Kermit’s vocals are provided by Jim Henson puppeteer Steve Whitmire- who is also the voice behind Sesame Street’s Ernie. See the Talking Heads video skit here

Every day, we bring you the best thing we’ve seen on YouTube – a great piece of archive footage, a music promo or a clip from one of our favourite movies or TV shows.

Today: See Kermit the Frog perform a jerky, puppet dancing version of Talking Heads’ classic 1980 single “Once In A Lifetime.”

The Muppets Tonight video copies the marionette style choreography that the original video became renowned for.

Kermit’s vocals are provided by Jim Henson puppeteer Steve Whitmire- who is also the voice behind Sesame Street’s Ernie.

See the Talking Heads video skit here

The Police To Tour Europe

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The Police today confirmed dates and venues for the European leg of their world tour, after all dates on their North American tour sold out. The Police kick-off the reunion tour in Europe at the Globe Arena, Stockholm on August 29. The band's first UK show since 1986's Synchronicity Tour will take place at Twickenham Stadium on September 8, with further shows taking place in Birmingham and Manchester. This leg of the reunion tour will culminate at Cardiff's Millennium Stadium on October 19. Arthur Fogel, Chairman of Live Nation, the concert promoters said: "The anticipation and excitement to see The Police is overwhelming. We are absolutely thrilled to be bringing the band to fans new and old." As with the North American tour, Fan Club members get the chance to buy tickets ahead of the general public, and tickets go onsale from tomorrow morning (March 6). You can catch The Police at the following venues this Autumn: Globe Arena, Stockholm (Public Sale Mar 12/FC Presale Mar 7) (Aug 29) NIA, Birmingham (Public Sale Mar 9/FC Presale Mar 6) (Sept 4) Twickenham Stadium, London (Public Sale Mar 9/FC Presale Mar 6) (Sep 8) AOL Arena, Hamburg (Public Sale Mar 16/FC Presale Mar 13) (Sep 11) Arena, Amsterdam (Public Sale Mar 9/FC Presale Mar 6) (Sep 13) Sazka Arena, Prague (Public Sale TBA/FC Presale TBA) (Sep 16) Stadthalle, Vienna (Public Sale Mar 19/FC Presale TBA) (Sep 19) Olympiastadion, Munich (Public Sale Mar 16/FC Presale Mar 13) (Sep 22) Olympic Stadium, Barcelona (Public Sale TBA/FC Presale TBA) (Sep 27) Stade de France, Paris (Public Sale Mar 21/FC Presale TBA) (Sep 29) LTU Arena, Dusseldorf (Public Sale Mar 16/FC Presale Mar 13) (Oct 13) MEN Arena, Manchester (Public Sale Mar 9/FC Presale Mar 6) (Oct 15) Millennium Stadium, Cardiff (Public Sale Mar 9/FC Presale Mar 6) (Oct 19) Show details for Italy, Switzerland, Belgium, and Denmark are still to be confirmed. A portion of the proceeds from this tour will be donated to WaterAid, the charity dedicated to reducing poverty in the world's 17 of the world's poorest countries by improving access to safe water, sanitation, and hygiene education. Click here for complete tour & ticket information from thepolicetour.com

The Police today confirmed dates and venues for the European leg of their world tour, after all dates on their North American tour sold out.

The Police kick-off the reunion tour in Europe at the Globe Arena, Stockholm on August 29.

The band’s first UK show since 1986’s Synchronicity Tour will take place at Twickenham Stadium on September 8, with further shows taking place in Birmingham and Manchester.

This leg of the reunion tour will culminate at Cardiff’s Millennium Stadium on October 19.

Arthur Fogel, Chairman of Live Nation, the concert promoters said: “The anticipation and excitement to see The Police is overwhelming. We are absolutely thrilled to be bringing the band to fans new and old.”

As with the North American tour, Fan Club members get the chance to buy tickets ahead of the general public, and tickets go onsale from tomorrow morning (March 6).

You can catch The Police at the following venues this Autumn:

Globe Arena, Stockholm (Public Sale Mar 12/FC Presale Mar 7) (Aug 29)

NIA, Birmingham (Public Sale Mar 9/FC Presale Mar 6) (Sept 4)

Twickenham Stadium, London (Public Sale Mar 9/FC Presale Mar 6) (Sep 8)

AOL Arena, Hamburg (Public Sale Mar 16/FC Presale Mar 13) (Sep 11)

Arena, Amsterdam (Public Sale Mar 9/FC Presale Mar 6) (Sep 13)

Sazka Arena, Prague (Public Sale TBA/FC Presale TBA) (Sep 16)

Stadthalle, Vienna (Public Sale Mar 19/FC Presale TBA) (Sep 19)

Olympiastadion, Munich (Public Sale Mar 16/FC Presale Mar 13) (Sep 22)

Olympic Stadium, Barcelona (Public Sale TBA/FC Presale TBA) (Sep 27)

Stade de France, Paris (Public Sale Mar 21/FC Presale TBA) (Sep 29)

LTU Arena, Dusseldorf (Public Sale Mar 16/FC Presale Mar 13) (Oct 13)

MEN Arena, Manchester (Public Sale Mar 9/FC Presale Mar 6) (Oct 15)

Millennium Stadium, Cardiff (Public Sale Mar 9/FC Presale Mar 6) (Oct 19)

Show details for Italy, Switzerland, Belgium, and Denmark are still to be confirmed.

A portion of the proceeds from this tour will be donated to WaterAid, the charity dedicated to reducing poverty in the world’s 17 of the world’s poorest countries by improving access to safe water, sanitation, and hygiene education.

Click here for complete tour & ticket information from thepolicetour.com

Public Enemy’s Chuck D Gets Down With The Foundation

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Asian Dub Foundation are to release a career retrospective collection called “Time Freeze” next month. The ragga/punk/hip hop/drum'n'bass and rock collective have had a diversely amazing time as a foundation. Their lives shows are acclaimed and ADF have been chosen no less than three times to play at London's Meltdown festival. Curators David Bowie, Lee Scratch Perry and Scott Walker all picked them to play on separate occasions. No other band has achieved this feat. "Time Freeze" collects material from across ADF's seven studio albums from 1995 to 2007 and includes "Rebel Warrior," their Top 10 hit "Buzzin'" and their activist track "Free Satpal Ram." The retrospective also includes two new tracks “Stop Start” and “Target Practice” bringing the timeframe bang up to date. The bonus disc's highlights are two live tracks recorded at ADF's 2004 Somerset House show, when Public NME's Chuck D joined them onstage for amazing versions of "Black Steel In The Hour Of Chaos" and "Son Of A Bush." These two blistering tracks have never been made available before. ADF are currently finishing up their as yet-yet-untitled new studio album which is due for release late summer. "Time Freeze" is released on April 30 through Rinse It Out/EMI. Click here to go to ADF's artist website

Asian Dub Foundation are to release a career retrospective collection called “Time Freeze” next month.

The ragga/punk/hip hop/drum’n’bass and rock collective have had a diversely amazing time as a foundation. Their lives shows are acclaimed and ADF have been chosen no less than three times to play at London’s Meltdown festival. Curators David Bowie, Lee Scratch Perry and Scott Walker all picked them to play on separate occasions. No other band has achieved this feat.

“Time Freeze” collects material from across ADF’s seven studio albums from 1995 to 2007 and includes “Rebel Warrior,” their Top 10 hit “Buzzin'” and their activist track “Free Satpal Ram.”

The retrospective also includes two new tracks “Stop Start” and “Target Practice” bringing the timeframe bang up to date.

The bonus disc’s highlights are two live tracks recorded at ADF’s 2004 Somerset House show, when Public NME’s Chuck D joined them onstage for amazing versions of “Black Steel In The Hour Of Chaos” and “Son Of A Bush.” These two blistering tracks have never been made available before.

ADF are currently finishing up their as yet-yet-untitled new studio album which is due for release late summer.

“Time Freeze” is released on April 30 through Rinse It Out/EMI.

Click here to go to ADF’s artist website

A Guide To Recognising Your Saints

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Dir Dito Montiel St Robert Downey Jr, Rosario Dawson, Shia LaBoeuf, Martin Compston The suburban New York coming-of-age story has been told more than once before, most laudably with Scorsese's Mean Streets and most lucratively with Saturday Night Fever. Dito Montiel's feature debut, adapted from his own autobiography, is a curious mix of both, dealing with a working-class upbringing that fits between the two, being neither a movie about the constraints of peer pressure and the lure of criminality nor the liberating nature of adolescent dreams. A Guide To Recognising Your Saints is subtle and affecting, taking place in the summer of 1986 in the Astoria suburb of Queens. It begins with the present-day Montiel (played by Downey) giving a reading in LA, before being summoned home by his mother (Diane Wiest) to visit his proud, ailing father (Chazz Palminteri). The call reawakens old memories, and we lapse into flashback of the young Montiel (LaBoeuf). It's here that the young cast excels, recreating a misspent youth that refreshingly never crosses the line from bad to evil, but the age casting causes problems in the later sections. Some won't notice, but let's just say that even admirers of the good (Rosario Dawson, 27), the bad (Downey, 41) and the ugly (Eric Roberts, 50) will have a hard time placing them in the same hood at the same time. DAMON WISE

Dir Dito Montiel St Robert Downey Jr, Rosario Dawson, Shia LaBoeuf, Martin Compston

The suburban New York coming-of-age story has been told more than once before, most laudably with Scorsese’s Mean Streets and most lucratively with Saturday Night Fever. Dito Montiel’s feature debut, adapted from his own autobiography, is a curious mix of both, dealing with a working-class upbringing that fits between the two, being neither a movie about the constraints of peer pressure and the lure of criminality nor the liberating nature of adolescent dreams.

A Guide To Recognising Your Saints is subtle and affecting, taking place in the summer of 1986 in the Astoria suburb of Queens. It begins with the present-day Montiel (played by Downey) giving a reading in LA, before being summoned home by his mother (Diane Wiest) to visit his proud, ailing father (Chazz Palminteri). The call reawakens old memories, and we lapse into flashback of the young Montiel (LaBoeuf). It’s here that the young cast excels, recreating a misspent youth that refreshingly never crosses the line from bad to evil, but the age casting causes problems in the later sections. Some won’t notice, but let’s just say that even admirers of the good (Rosario Dawson, 27), the bad (Downey, 41) and the ugly (Eric Roberts, 50) will have a hard time placing them in the same hood at the same time.

DAMON WISE

The Illusionist

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Dir Neil Burger St Ed Norton, Paul Giamatti, Jessica Biel A brilliant turn-of-the-century magician whose tricks disturb and amaze. This premise may sound strikingly like Christopher Nolan's recent period drama The Prestige, but The Illusionist isn't simply a case of the kind of Hollywood synchronicity that sees volcano, asteroid and Truman Capote movies seemingly being made in pairs. Though it shares a similarly dreamlike sense of period with Nolan's film, Neil Burger's elegant mystery is more about magic than sleight of hand, flirting with supernatural Victoriana where Nolan plumped for alchemy and even (albeit in the rather bizarre form of the physics supplied by David Bowie's Nikolai Tesla) science. Ed Norton stars as Eisenheim, a poor boy who's risen from his roots to become Vienna's premier illusionist. Eisenheim offers a gateway to the unknown, raising spirits and phantoms, but his elaborate routines irk the Crown Prince (Rufus Sewell), who hires lapdog Chief Inspector Uhl (Giamatti), himself an admirer of Eisenheim's stagecraft, to discredit him. The intrigue that follows is wonderfully staged, with Norton on fine form as the intense, weirdly charismatic Eisenheim and Giamatti as the perfect foil, playing the unwitting straight man in a fantastical double act. The final twist may have as much to do with such mundane influences as The Usual Suspects as any late-19th-century phantasmagoria but The Illusionist is a far from everyday thriller, a bewitching maze of mist, myth and cobblestones. DAMON WISE

Dir Neil Burger

St Ed Norton, Paul Giamatti, Jessica Biel

A brilliant turn-of-the-century magician whose tricks disturb and amaze. This premise may sound strikingly like Christopher Nolan’s recent period drama The Prestige, but The Illusionist isn’t simply a case of the kind of Hollywood synchronicity that sees volcano, asteroid and Truman Capote movies seemingly being made in pairs. Though it shares a similarly dreamlike sense of period with Nolan’s film, Neil Burger’s elegant mystery is more about magic than sleight of hand, flirting with supernatural Victoriana where Nolan plumped for alchemy and even (albeit in the rather bizarre form of the physics supplied by David Bowie’s Nikolai Tesla) science.

Ed Norton stars as Eisenheim, a poor boy who’s risen from his roots to become Vienna’s premier illusionist. Eisenheim offers a gateway to the unknown, raising spirits and phantoms, but his elaborate routines irk the Crown Prince (Rufus Sewell), who hires lapdog Chief Inspector Uhl (Giamatti), himself an admirer of Eisenheim’s stagecraft, to discredit him. The intrigue that follows is wonderfully staged, with Norton on fine form as the intense, weirdly charismatic Eisenheim and Giamatti as the perfect foil, playing the unwitting straight man in a fantastical double act. The final twist may have as much to do with such mundane influences as The Usual Suspects as any late-19th-century phantasmagoria but The Illusionist is a far from everyday thriller, a bewitching maze of mist, myth and cobblestones.

DAMON WISE

Pete Doherty Gives A Poetic Performance

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Babyshamble Pete Doherty has announced two special shows to take place at London's Hackney Empire theatre next month. Billed as "An Evening with Peter Doherty" the two shows on April 11 and 12 will feature poetry, readings and acoustic songs. Doherty will be joined onstage by some special guests - details of whom will be announced very soon. Tickets for the show cost £17.50 and will go onsale next Wednesday, March 7.

Babyshamble Pete Doherty has announced two special shows to take place at London’s Hackney Empire theatre next month.

Billed as “An Evening with Peter Doherty” the two shows on April 11 and 12 will feature poetry, readings and acoustic songs.

Doherty will be joined onstage by some special guests – details of whom will be announced very soon.

Tickets for the show cost £17.50 and will go onsale next Wednesday, March 7.

Cassadaga

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You know, up until a couple of weeks ago, I never thought I'd want to play a Bright Eyes record ever again. Their early records had sounded naive, passionate and interesting. But Conor Oberst's default schtick soon lost it's charm for me, closer resembling a kind of whingeing verbal diarrhoea. I know he was still pretty young - he's only about 27 now - but his pretensions still seemed rooted in adolescence, like a clever 16-year-old trying to cram all the ideas, images and words he knows into one song. Oberst doesn't do that so much on "Cassadaga", his major label debut which is due out in April. He's still verbose and emotional, but he no longer allows his enthusiasms to yank the songs out of shape. Instead, Oberst finally takes his time on the likes of "If The Brakeman Turns My Way". It's tempting to assume he's matured a little, less the frantic and frequently inebriated politico-brat of legend. But it might also be because Bright Eyes are now being presented as a band, with long-time associates Nate Walcott and Mike Mogis as permanent members ranked alongside Oberst. Mogis has produced all Bright Eyes records, if memory serves,but his calming hand is much more in evidence here. Incidentally, Mogis first came to my attention in the late '90s as part of a terrific Omaha band called Lullaby For The Working Class, who got nothing like the acclaim they deserved, effectively prototyping the edgy, unravelling alt-country that Oberst has finessed. They're also the only act I've ever seen who sold band pillowcases at their gigs. Not quite the weirdest bit of merchandise I've bought - that would be the "rustic" pottery made by Tori Kudo, leader of Japanese anarcho-improv-cuties Maher Shalal Hash Baz - though it's a close thing. But clearly, I digress. "Cassadaga" is not without its awkward, self-conscious moments, not least when Oberst plays up to all that new-Dylan guff that's been thrown his way. But there are some genuinely excellent songs here, especially the lush and tender "Make A Plan To Love Me", where he steps up as a winsome, convincing orchestral crooner, and the woozy "Coat Check Dream Song", which flirts with electronica in a much more successful way than anything on 2005's "Digital Ash In A Digital Urn". Oh, and Gillian Welch, M Ward and Janet Weiss all guest, which is cool by me. Next week, by the way, I'll be writing about the new Wilco record amongst other stuff. See you then.

You know, up until a couple of weeks ago, I never thought I’d want to play a Bright Eyes record ever again. Their early records had sounded naive, passionate and interesting. But Conor Oberst‘s default schtick soon lost it’s charm for me, closer resembling a kind of whingeing verbal diarrhoea. I know he was still pretty young – he’s only about 27 now – but his pretensions still seemed rooted in adolescence, like a clever 16-year-old trying to cram all the ideas, images and words he knows into one song.

Beastie Boys To Play Bestival

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New York hip hop veterans the Beastie Boys have been confirmed as headliners for this year's Rob da Bank curated music festival Bestival. It will be the Beasties only UK festival appearence this year. The Chemical Brothers are also headlining the September event that takes place in Robin Hill Country Park on the Isle Of Wight. The forth annual festival will also see performances from Gregory Isaacs, The Levellers, Horace Andy and Billy Bragg. DJs confirmed so far include Giles Peterson, Tim Westwood, Erol Alkan and David Holmes. As has become tradition at the Bestival - there will be a fancy dress parade as well a new ingenius idea to get festival goers to swim across the Solent to Bestival! Navy lifeguards will on hand in case swimmers can't quite make it all the way across. Cuban Brothers band member Miguel Mantovani will be screaming encouragement into a megaphone from a rubber dinghy trailing swimmers. Adult weekend tickets are £115, children under 12 are admitted free. There are no day tickets onsale this year. Regular updates and online ticket details are available here from bestival.net

New York hip hop veterans the Beastie Boys have been confirmed as headliners for this year’s Rob da Bank curated music festival Bestival.

It will be the Beasties only UK festival appearence this year.

The Chemical Brothers are also headlining the September event that takes place in Robin Hill Country Park on the Isle Of Wight.

The forth annual festival will also see performances from Gregory Isaacs, The Levellers, Horace Andy and Billy Bragg.

DJs confirmed so far include Giles Peterson, Tim Westwood, Erol Alkan and David Holmes.

As has become tradition at the Bestival – there will be a fancy dress parade as well a new ingenius idea to get festival goers to swim across the Solent to Bestival!

Navy lifeguards will on hand in case swimmers can’t quite make it all the way across. Cuban Brothers band member Miguel Mantovani will be screaming encouragement into a megaphone from a rubber dinghy trailing swimmers.

Adult weekend tickets are £115, children under 12 are admitted free.

There are no day tickets onsale this year.

Regular updates and online ticket details are available here from bestival.net

Jarvis Has A Meltdown

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Jarvis cocker has been announced as this June's South Bank Centre Meltdown festival curator. He is the fourteenth artist to be asked to curate the annual event which will take place this year between June 16 and 24. The last Meltdown was directed by Patti Smith in 2005 - before the venue was closed for a refurbishment. Jarvis is honoured to be directing this year's festival and had this to say: ''C*nts may be running the world but a cock will be controlling the South Bank for one week in June. Jarvis Branson Cocker is honoured, proud and excited to announce that he will be curating this year's Meltdown Festival. Your cultural life is in my hands. I can't wait.” The Meltdown programme of events is renowned for its eclectic mix of rock, classical and contemporary music, film, dance and performance, and each year Meltdown offers a guest director the opportunity to make his or her own fantasy festival come true, mixing artists and art forms, reflecting their own personal passions and interests. Although most well known for being a 90s Britpop icon fronting Pulp, he has just released his first solo album "Jarvis" to much acclaim. Jarvis has had many and various side projects including making videos for Aphex Twin, recording documentaries for Radio 4, moonlighting in bands with members of Radiohead and Fat Truckers, writing soundtrack music for the last Harry Potter film as well as songs for Nancy Sinatra, Marianne Faithful and Charlotte Gainsbourg. Last October he even guest edited the Observer Music Monthly magazine. In short, he is the perfect candidate for Southbank Centre’s Meltdown director. Glenn Max, the Southbank Centre's producer says they are delighted to have Jarvis on board. He said: "With his curatorial inclinations and sense of ceremony, Jarvis Cocker was an obvious choice. There was little to explain to him about the Festival. He knows the game, and he knows exactly how to make it fun, challenging and perplexing. On the heels of his fantastic new record, it is safe to say that Meltdown is back in the eager hands of one of rock music's most creative forces. Those who appreciate the history of this festival will be delighted by the ideas, humour and sense of mischief that will be oozing from this Meltdown." The full line-up for this year's Meltdown will be announced soon.

Jarvis cocker has been announced as this June’s South Bank Centre Meltdown festival curator.

He is the fourteenth artist to be asked to curate the annual event which will take place this year between June 16 and 24.

The last Meltdown was directed by Patti Smith in 2005 – before the venue was closed for a refurbishment.

Jarvis is honoured to be directing this year’s festival and had this to say:

”C*nts may be running the world but a cock will be controlling the South Bank for one week in June. Jarvis Branson Cocker is honoured, proud and excited to announce that he will be curating this year’s Meltdown Festival. Your cultural life is in my hands. I can’t wait.”

The Meltdown programme of events is renowned for its eclectic mix of rock, classical and contemporary music, film, dance and performance, and each year Meltdown offers a guest director the opportunity to make his or her own fantasy festival come true, mixing artists and art forms, reflecting their own personal passions and interests.

Although most well known for being a 90s Britpop icon fronting Pulp, he has just released his first solo album “Jarvis” to much acclaim.

Jarvis has had many and various side projects including making videos for Aphex Twin, recording documentaries for Radio 4, moonlighting in bands with members of Radiohead and Fat Truckers, writing soundtrack music for the last Harry Potter film as well as songs for Nancy Sinatra, Marianne Faithful and Charlotte Gainsbourg. Last October he even guest edited the Observer Music Monthly magazine.

In short, he is the perfect candidate for Southbank Centre’s Meltdown director.

Glenn Max, the Southbank Centre’s producer says they are delighted to have Jarvis on board. He said: “With his curatorial inclinations and sense of ceremony, Jarvis Cocker was an obvious choice. There was little to explain to him about the Festival. He knows the game, and he knows exactly how to make it fun, challenging and perplexing. On the heels of his fantastic new record, it is safe to say that Meltdown is back in the eager hands of one of rock music’s most creative forces. Those who appreciate the history of this festival will be delighted by the ideas, humour and sense of mischief that will be oozing from this Meltdown.”

The full line-up for this year’s Meltdown will be announced soon.

TEN YEARS AGO THIS WEEK

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HAPPENINGS TEN YEARS TIME AGO February 26 to March 4, 1997 On the eve of the release of their album Pop, U2 announce details of their forthcoming PopMart tour, from a makeshift stage in the lingerie section of a K-Mart department store in downtown Manhattan. "We believe in trash, we believe in kitsch," The Edge tells reporters. "That's what we're all about at the moment." In his first interview with the mainstream American press in over 10 years, Van Morrison tells Entertainment Weekly that US journalists' habit of mythologising him was behind his lengthy media silence. "When Tupelo Honey came out it had a horse on the sleeve, so the myth then was that I was living on a ranch and had horses on that ranch. I didn't have a ranch; I didn't have a horse. I don't have a farm, and I never will. I mean, this is all part of the fuckin' mythology. Let's get on with it, you know?'' Victor Willis, former lead singer and "cop" in The Village People, is arrested in Reno, Nevada, and charged with possession of 45 grammes of rock cocaine. The widow of legendary jazz trumpeter and singer Chet Baker starts legal proceedings against Capitol Records, alleging the label "grossly undercalculated" payments for studio sessions stretching back more than 40 years. Also heading to court is producer and writer Johnny Jackson, who claims Death Row Records have failed to pay him royalties for his work on the Tupac Shakur track "All Eyez On Me". Martin Scorsese receives a lifetime achievement award from the American Film Institute. The ceremony, hosted by Casino star Sharon Stone, features several gushing tributes, not least from Paul Sorvino (GoodFellas) who declares "it's like having Rembrandt in our midst." Dinner at the event consists of pasta e fagiole, lemon & garlic chicken, and Sicilian rum cake, all based on recipes by the director's late mother, Catherine. The special edition of The Empire Strikes Back replaces the equally re-vamped Star Wars at the head of the US box office, in the same week that the first film finally leap-frogs over ET: The Extra Terrestrial as the biggest grossing movie in history. A Star Wars version of the Monopoly boardgame, limited to just 500,000 copies, sells out in a matter of hours. Director David Lynch describes his first film in four years, Lost Highway, as a "21st century noir horror", and shrugs off the early bad reviews. Several journalists walk out in the middle of press screenings. A collection of 32 "sketches" by James Dean goes under the hammer at a Hollywood auction. The pieces, all in blue ink on paper napkins, were scrawled by the late actor while drinking coffee at Googie's, a 1950s celeb hang-out on Sunset Strip. Auction house Butterflied & Butterfield expect the individual items to fetch anwhere between $600 and $3,500. Johnny Depp receives blanket praise for his title role in Donnie Brasco, based on a true story of an FBI agent who spent years undercover with the Mob. Joe Pistone, the real fed, reveals that the actor stayed with him for weeks of research. "He absorbs so much, he got every little mannerism down, even a nervous cough I never realised I had. The guy's a sponge." Rumours of a first new work for 30 years by reclusive author JD Salinger prove to be unfounded. The piece that initially started the hullabaloo turns out to be a short story originally published in 1965. The Dr Seus children's classic, The Cat In The Hat, celebrates 40 years on the bookshelves. Former heavyweight champion boxer Riddick Bowe walks out of a US Marine Corps Reserve training camp after just 11 days. His manager says he was missing his wife and five children, and "had become used to living a life of luxury." Just days after scientists in Scotland announce the arrival of Dolly, the cloned sheep, US President Bill Clinton bars federal funding for research into human cloning.

HAPPENINGS TEN YEARS TIME AGO

February 26 to March 4, 1997

On the eve of the release of their album Pop, U2 announce details of their forthcoming PopMart tour, from a makeshift stage in the lingerie section of a K-Mart department store in downtown Manhattan. “We believe in trash, we believe in kitsch,” The Edge tells reporters. “That’s what we’re all about at the moment.”

Brett Anderson Announces First Solo Tour

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Brett Anderson has announced dates for his first ever solo UK tour, where he will debut material from his forthcoming self-titled album. His first solo album is already gaining rave reviews - Uncut described it by saying "we get acoustic guitars, lush string arrangements and the previously cagey Anderson pouring his heart out." The first single "Love Is Dead" will be released on March 12 and will come with four different B-sides. CD1 includes the track ‘Clowns’, CD2 features ‘We Can Be Anyone’ & ‘Mother Night’, while the 7” vinyl contains the stunning ‘Elegant’. You can catch Anderson and his touring band at the following venues in May: Bristol University (May 1) Manchester Academy 2 (2) Glasgow, QMU (4) Wolves Wulfrun (5) Newcastle University (6) Cambridge Junction (8) London Shepherd’s Bush Empire (9) Tickets £14. London £16.50 Tickets go onsale tomorrow (March 2) at 9am.

Brett Anderson has announced dates for his first ever solo UK tour, where he will debut material from his forthcoming self-titled album.

His first solo album is already gaining rave reviews – Uncut described it by saying “we get acoustic guitars, lush string arrangements and the previously cagey Anderson pouring his heart out.”

The first single “Love Is Dead” will be released on March 12 and will come with four different B-sides.

CD1 includes the track ‘Clowns’, CD2 features ‘We Can Be Anyone’ & ‘Mother Night’, while the 7” vinyl contains the stunning ‘Elegant’.

You can catch Anderson and his touring band at the following venues in May:

Bristol University (May 1)

Manchester Academy 2 (2)

Glasgow, QMU (4)

Wolves Wulfrun (5)

Newcastle University (6)

Cambridge Junction (8)

London Shepherd’s Bush Empire (9)

Tickets £14. London £16.50

Tickets go onsale tomorrow (March 2) at 9am.

Dinosaur Jr’s Mascis Wows At Intimate Solo Gig

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Dinosaur Jr's J Mascis played a stunning twelve song solo set at tiny club venue The Metro in London's West End. His voice was amazing and the songs electrified with an array of pedals - one man and an acoustic guitar never sounded so loud. Mascis treated us to previews of songs from the new Dinosaur Jr LP "Beyond" - the first album to be made with the original line-up including Murph and Barlow in nearly 20 years. The loudest cheers came when Mascis stumbled through some of the lyrics to some of Dinosaur's most famous songs such as "Freakscene." Uncut.co.uk ran a competition to win a pair of tickets to last night's show, and here winner Simon Bayliss tells us how his night was: “Watching J is like a pilgrimage, he is a complete master of the guitar noise, he is every bedroom guitarists hero - like he was born with a guitar. The hair bands have Eddie Van Halen, we have J in his own world on stage. He speaks only to say thanks for coming out, almost like he could be playing in his lounge room, choosing songs which come into mind. Hard to describe his performance to anyone who doesnt know J Mascis. He makes a hell of a racket but makes it sound tuneful, experimental at times. I am so glad we have him performing after all these years . Love it, Adore him. Cheers." The full set Mascis played last night was: Thumb Flying Cloud Freakscene This Is All I Care To Do Little Fury Things Amma Ring Wagon I Got Lost Get Me Quest Not You Again Alone As previously reported, Dinosaur Jr will be making new album track "Almost Ready" available as a free download on March 5. More deatils about the forthcoming album available here

Dinosaur Jr’s J Mascis played a stunning twelve song solo set at tiny club venue The Metro in London’s West End.

His voice was amazing and the songs electrified with an array of pedals – one man and an acoustic guitar never sounded so loud.

Mascis treated us to previews of songs from the new Dinosaur Jr LP “Beyond” – the first album to be made with the original line-up including Murph and Barlow in nearly 20 years.

The loudest cheers came when Mascis stumbled through some of the lyrics to some of Dinosaur’s most famous songs such as “Freakscene.”

Uncut.co.uk ran a competition to win a pair of tickets to last night’s show, and here winner Simon Bayliss tells us how his night was:

“Watching J is like a pilgrimage, he is a complete master of the guitar noise, he is every bedroom guitarists hero – like he was born with a guitar. The hair bands have Eddie Van Halen, we have J in his own world on stage. He speaks only to say thanks for coming out, almost like he could be playing in his lounge room, choosing songs which come into mind. Hard to describe his performance to anyone who doesnt know J Mascis. He makes a hell of a racket but makes it sound tuneful, experimental at times. I am so glad we have him performing after all these years . Love it, Adore him. Cheers.”

The full set Mascis played last night was:

Thumb

Flying Cloud

Freakscene

This Is All I Care To Do

Little Fury Things

Amma Ring

Wagon

I Got Lost

Get Me

Quest

Not You Again

Alone

As previously reported, Dinosaur Jr will be making new album track “Almost Ready” available as a free download on March 5.

More deatils about the forthcoming album available here

De Niro Talks Exclusively About The Good Shepherd

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UNCUT: Can you outline how you came to be involved in the film? DE NIRO: I've been trying to get it made for eight years. Then, when 9/11 happened, I thought that was the end of that. But eventually it started up again. The story is a mythology about the CIA. We did a lot of research, but it's our take on it. The film is a mixture of real events and takeoffs of characters. To be locked into the factual accuracies of those events would be another kind of a movie - you have to make it your own. With Raging Bull, for instance, as much time as I spent with Jake LaMotta, Marty [Scorsese] and I had to make up our own take. Here, the screenplay morphed into different things over the years, but it always had an appeal, all the intelligence stuff, the CIA stuff, the fact it was about an elite group of people, the royalty of our country, all those things had a fascination for me. There's lot of star cameos in the film - Joe Pesci, John Turturro, Tim Hutton. Do you think having famous faces popping up frequently can detract from the story? Well, I picked every actor first and foremost because I felt they were right for the movie. The name value was important, of course, but it was equally important whether they'd work in the story. I spent a lot of time thinking about the casting, reading with people, talking to them before I made it. There were very few actors that I wanted from the beginning, one of them was John Turturro. I wanted him from day one. How does being an actor yourself affect the choices you make as a director? I know it's important to give everybody as much freedom as you can so that they don't feel there are any limitations. With any mistake they could make, everything is fine. And then they're not afraid to try things or trust you when you say, 'Look, let's try and go in this direction.' That's very important with actors - and all other creative elements of the movie, really. Can you tell us a little bit about your casting choices? As far as the lead actors go, I would only do the movie if I felt it would be a turn on for me. I'm not going to spend all that time having to deal with actors who don't get it, or don't have anything to contribute other than name value. We met Angelina three of tour times, and I could see how much of a connection she felt with the part. I originally had cast Leo [Di Caprio] but the schedule didn't work out so I had to move on, and fortunately Matt came in. He plays a very subdued, unshowy character. How did you guide him? That was the choice Matt made, to play Wilson like that. We both worked on it, and I watched him every step of the way. Matt has a tendency to look at people in a scene, and I'd say it has stronger impact if you don't look at them. The economy of his physical motion, or whatever you want to call it, was important to us, so I was always on about that, keeping his character in check. What were your impressions of the CIA before you began working on the film? The one thing you always hear about the CIA, and the KGB, is that they're shadowy and ominous, things like that. I've met quite a few people in those agencies now, and they're just people. They have feelings like everybody else! It sounds kind of corny when I say that, but that to me is interesting - what these people do, what they think. What they do in their profession and how it relates to their personal lives. That's what I tried to do in this movie. I understand intelligence and the need for it. People do it every day - they hear a rumour about somebody. It's gossip. This is the same thing on a grander scale. It's necessary evil. But that doesn't give a license to do things that are unethical. You went on a fact-finding journey to Afghanistan and Pakistan. What can you tell us about that? That was an interesting trip! We met one of the commanders of the local Taliban. We had tea with them, and gave them $200 for a woman's school, which I know they went away and set up. It was very interesting in those tribal areas, because they're places like no other. It was all very cordial when we met them. Over tea, very friendly. They showed us how they defeated the Russians... Did you draw any particular influences from directors you've worked with in the past? The director I've worked with the most over the years is obviously Marty. We talked, especially in post-production. I showed him the movie a couple of times. Some things you learn from just being in movies, so I see what's getting done, how it's getting done. I know what making a film is going to take, how much time. I almost don't even think about it. If I'm in a movie, I can sense if something's not quite right, if the rhythm is off. How do you compare the two processes, of acting and directing? I like them both. I always wanted to direct. Directing is a lot more of a commitment though, a lot more time. This has been a long-haul process. I like directors who do very few takes, they know what they want. As for me, I know when I have a shot, but I might want back up, and one other take. You never know. If it's about capturing a moment, you're never going to be able to go back and repeat it, you go with it. It's a tricky thing. I go through all the footage, and look at everything.

UNCUT: Can you outline how you came to be involved in the film?

DE NIRO: I’ve been trying to get it made for eight years. Then, when 9/11 happened, I thought that was the end of that. But eventually it started up again. The story is a mythology about the CIA. We did a lot of research, but it’s our take on it. The film is a mixture of real events and takeoffs of characters. To be locked into the factual accuracies of those events would be another kind of a movie – you have to make it your own. With Raging Bull, for instance, as much time as I spent with Jake LaMotta, Marty [Scorsese] and I had to make up our own take. Here, the screenplay morphed into different things over the years, but it always had an appeal, all the intelligence stuff, the CIA stuff, the fact it was about an elite group of people, the royalty of our country, all those things had a fascination for me.

There’s lot of star cameos in the film – Joe Pesci, John Turturro, Tim Hutton. Do you think having famous faces popping up frequently can detract from the story?

Well, I picked every actor first and foremost because I felt they were right for the movie. The name value was important, of course, but it was equally important whether they’d work in the story. I spent a lot of time thinking about the casting, reading with people, talking to them before I made it. There were very few actors that I wanted from the beginning, one of them was John Turturro. I wanted him from day one.

How does being an actor yourself affect the choices you make as a director?

I know it’s important to give everybody as much freedom as you can so that they don’t feel there are any limitations. With any mistake they could make, everything is fine. And then they’re not afraid to try things or trust you when you say, ‘Look, let’s try and go in this direction.’ That’s very important with actors – and all other creative elements of the movie, really.

Can you tell us a little bit about your casting choices?

As far as the lead actors go, I would only do the movie if I felt it would be a turn on for me. I’m not going to spend all that time having to deal with actors who don’t get it, or don’t have anything to contribute other than name value. We met Angelina three of tour times, and I could see how much of a connection she felt with the part. I originally had cast Leo [Di Caprio] but the schedule didn’t work out so I had to move on, and fortunately Matt came in.

He plays a very subdued, unshowy character. How did you guide him?

That was the choice Matt made, to play Wilson like that. We both worked on it, and I watched him every step of the way. Matt has a tendency to look at people in a scene, and I’d say it has stronger impact if you don’t look at them. The economy of his physical motion, or whatever you want to call it, was important to us, so I was always on about that, keeping his character in check.

What were your impressions of the CIA before you began working on the film?

The one thing you always hear about the CIA, and the KGB, is that they’re shadowy and ominous, things like that. I’ve met quite a few people in those agencies now, and they’re just people. They have feelings like everybody else! It sounds kind of corny when I say that, but that to me is interesting – what these people do, what they think. What they do in their profession and how it relates to their personal lives. That’s what I tried to do in this movie. I understand intelligence and the need for it. People do it every day – they hear a rumour about somebody. It’s gossip. This is the same thing on a grander scale. It’s necessary evil. But that doesn’t give a license to do things that are unethical.

You went on a fact-finding journey to Afghanistan and Pakistan. What can you tell us about that?

That was an interesting trip! We met one of the commanders of the local Taliban. We had tea with them, and gave them $200 for a woman’s school, which I know they went away and set up. It was very interesting in those tribal areas, because they’re places like no other. It was all very cordial when we met them. Over tea, very friendly. They showed us how they defeated the Russians…

Did you draw any particular influences from directors you’ve worked with in the past?

The director I’ve worked with the most over the years is obviously Marty. We talked, especially in post-production. I showed him the movie a couple of times. Some things you learn from just being in movies, so I see what’s getting done, how it’s getting done. I know what making a film is going to take, how much time. I almost don’t even think about it. If I’m in a movie, I can sense if something’s not quite right, if the rhythm is off.

How do you compare the two processes, of acting and directing?

I like them both. I always wanted to direct. Directing is a lot more of a commitment though, a lot more time. This has been a long-haul process. I like directors who do very few takes, they know what they want. As for me, I know when I have a shot, but I might want back up, and one other take. You never know. If it’s about capturing a moment, you’re never going to be able to go back and repeat it, you go with it. It’s a tricky thing. I go through all the footage, and look at everything.

More T In The Park Tickets To Be Released

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More tickets for this year's T In The Park festival are to be released on Friday March 9, due to a successful council application to increase capacity for the site. The expanded three day event taking place near Kinross from July 6-8 will see it's capacity license increased by 5,000 a day to 80,000 at the festival for the next three years. Tickets for the event where Arctic Monkeys, The Killers and Snow Patrol will headline, originally went on sale last Saturday (February 24) but sold out in a record-breaking 40 minutes. The second batch of tickets to be made available will also include cancelled tickets reclaimed from multiple purchases. This step has been taken by the event to prevent tickets being purchased by touts being sold onto T in the Park festival goers at over inflated prices. Spokeman for the festival organisers, Geoff Ellis said today: “As promised, we are really happy to announce that fans will have a second chance to get their hands on T in the Park tickets when they go on sale a week on Friday." Ticket sales will once again be limited to 2 per person/per day/per credit card and only available through the official websites. Click here for more information from tinthepark.com The line-up confirmed so far is: Friday (July 6) Main Stage Arctic Monkeys Bloc Party The Coral Lily Allen Saturday (July 7) Main Stage The Killers Razorlight Arcade Fire James James Morrison Radio 1/NME Stage The Kooks My Chemical Romance Babyshambles CSS King Tuts Tent The View Klaxons Jamie T Pet Sounds Arena The Saw Doctors Slam Tent Booka Shade Ame Sunday (July 8) Main Stage Snow Patrol Scissor Sisters Kings of Leon The Fratellis Paolo Nutini Goo Goo Dolls Radio1/NME Stage Kasabian Interpol Maximo Park Mika King Tuts Tent Editors

More tickets for this year’s T In The Park festival are to be released on Friday March 9, due to a successful council application to increase capacity for the site.

The expanded three day event taking place near Kinross from July 6-8 will see it’s capacity license increased by 5,000 a day to 80,000 at the festival for the next three years.

Tickets for the event where Arctic Monkeys, The Killers and Snow Patrol will headline, originally went on sale last Saturday (February 24) but sold out in a record-breaking 40 minutes.

The second batch of tickets to be made available will also include cancelled tickets reclaimed from multiple purchases. This step has been taken by the event to prevent tickets being purchased by touts being sold onto T in the Park festival goers at over inflated prices.

Spokeman for the festival organisers, Geoff Ellis said today: “As promised, we are really happy to announce that fans will have a second chance to get their hands on T in the Park tickets when they go on sale a week on Friday.”

Ticket sales will once again be limited to 2 per person/per day/per credit card and only available through the official websites.

Click here for more information from tinthepark.com

The line-up confirmed so far is:

Friday (July 6)

Main Stage

Arctic Monkeys

Bloc Party

The Coral

Lily Allen

Saturday (July 7)

Main Stage

The Killers

Razorlight

Arcade Fire

James

James Morrison

Radio 1/NME Stage

The Kooks

My Chemical Romance

Babyshambles

CSS

King Tuts Tent

The View

Klaxons

Jamie T

Pet Sounds Arena

The Saw Doctors

Slam Tent

Booka Shade

Ame

Sunday (July 8)

Main Stage

Snow Patrol

Scissor Sisters

Kings of Leon

The Fratellis

Paolo Nutini

Goo Goo Dolls

Radio1/NME Stage

Kasabian

Interpol

Maximo Park

Mika

King Tuts Tent

Editors

Monkeys, Boredoms, Thursday

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"Brianstorm", the new Arctic Monkeys single, turned up in the Uncut office yesterday, and it's a relief to report that our first impressions weren't wrong. It's good. "Brianstorm" is quite a sneaky song, in that it pretends to be awkward; a difficult single with a 30-second intro, nothing exactly resembling a chorus, great splurges of chuntering guitar and a classically meandering Alex Turner melody. The thing is, after one and a half plays, it becomes really insidious, almost maddeningly so. I'm still sticking to that idea of a Queens Of The Stone Age/Specials hybrid, but there's this recurring riff that has the same stuttery, morse-code quality of The White Stripes' "Seven Nation Army". The Stripes are a pretty good analogue for the Monkeys now, come to think of it, in that they affect to be uncompromising and tricky to boost their self-image, but are actually an extremely clever pop band on the sly. Unlike, of course, the Boredoms. At this point, there is some debate as to whether this phantasmagorically brilliant Japanese band still exist: the version that has played in the UK in the past few years is technically the Vooredoms. Bear with me. The Boredoms emerged at some point in the late '80s, a fairly crazed mix of art, noise and hyperactive punk rock. Over the course of some great albums, they evolved into a trancey, deeply psychedelic marvel, climaxing with the "Vision Create Newsun" album and the suggestion that leader Eye had become involved in a sun-worshipping cult. Eye and drummer Yoshimi P-We (the very same Yoshimi immortalised by the Flaming Lips) recruited two more drummers and started playing incredible drum circle shows, notionally as the Vooredoms - resulting in 2004's great "Seadrum/House Of Sun" album. Throughout the '90s, though, the band also released a series of ultra-experimental albums in Japan called "Super Roots", which were prohibitively expensive outside their homeland. It's good news, then, that the estimable Very Friendly label are putting out all but one of the "Super Roots" CDs in the UK. This week, we've been fixated on "Super Roots 7" (from 1998) in the Uncut office. It's on again now, predictably. In theory, it's a cover of "Where Were You?", the Mekons' ancient punk rallying cry. In practice, it's a 20 minute extravaganza of slashing riffs, techno ripples and radically overdriven Krautrock; imagine Stereolab freaking out - and you're not even close, to be honest. I read somewhere the other day that the Vooredoms are reconfiguring in New York this summer for a show featuring, I think, 76 drummers. I've not seen a better live band these past few years; hard to imagine quite how good this one will be.

“Brianstorm”, the new Arctic Monkeys single, turned up in the Uncut office yesterday, and it’s a relief to report that our first impressions weren’t wrong. It’s good.

Cowboy Junkies Talk Exclusively Through New LP

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COWBOY JUNKIES Their Trinity Sessions album is one of the early landmarks of what later became known as Americana and they are back with a new album, At The End Of Paths Taken. Songwriter and guitarist Michael Timmins takes www.uncut.co.uk on a track-by-track preview. . . ***** BRAND NEW WORLD “It’s rare that the first song I write for an album ends up actually being the first song on it, but this album kind of fell together like that. The album has a strong central theme running through it - family. The mundane-ness and complexities of the family dynamic, and how patterns in those relationships repeat themselves, how the outside world can cause havoc in those relationships, how the macro can suddenly cave in upon the micro. This song seemed to set up all of those themes, from the opening laundry list of basic responsibilities that most people in my circle carry with them (“Mouths to feed. Shoes to buy. Rent to pay. Tears to dry”) to the outrage, sense of helplessness and complex fears that accompany that list, expressed by the rampaging musical outro.” STILL LOST “This song could be about the micro or the macro but it is probably about both. Cycles and the repetitive nature of life come in to play on the verses (“Settling now, once again, what was begun will meet its end”). The chorus expresses the exasperation of being at the end of a path taken and steadfastly journeyed upon, yet still finding oneself lost. This song went through three or four musical incarnations before we found its form in a simple arrangement gathered around an acoustic guitar groove.” CUTTING BOARD BLUES “We mixed this one to emphasize the trio; drums panned to the left, guitar panned to the right, bass and vocals up the middle….old style. The lyric hints at our species’ seeming inability to see beyond the next door.” SPIRAL DOWN “There comes a moment when one suddenly notices that one’s parents have grown old. Next comes the realization that, one day, they will die.” MY LITTLE BASQUIAT “Every parent looks upon their children, sees the potential, and fears the worst. This song was built around the bass groove, but we took the arrangement in many directions as we were developing it. Ultimately we stripped it back to the bare bones and let the drums and bass carry the vocal, with a few sprinklings of keyboard and unidentifiable spacey bits and pieces added for atmosphere. The guitar solo is one of my proudest moments - I feel like it captures the anxiety of parenthood!” SOMEDAY SOON “Margo [Timmins, CJ vocalist, Michael’s sister] and I call this our Donny and Marie moment - it just seemed right to record it as a duet. For the lyric to work there was a need for the vocal to be casual and tossed- off.” FOLLOWER 2 “This song was inspired by the Seamus Heaney poem ‘Follower’ and is the centre-piece of the ‘family’ theme. It explores the relationship between father and son, the repetitive patterns of that relationship and how the lines that separate father and son begin to blur over time. We experimented with a lot of string arrangements on this album. The strings were arranged by Henry Kucharzyk (a friend and respected modern music composer). This arrangement is my favourite.” IT DOESN’T REALLY MATTER ANYWAY “Another song which was built around a bass groove. A song about communication (or the lack of it). This is what’s at the heart of all our troubles (on every level one can imagine).” BLUE EYED SAVIOUR “This song went through many arrangements, but we ended up by going back to one of the first recordings that we made it and using it as the bed track. It’s about the fear of loss, the fear of the outside world reaching in and stealing that which is dearest.” MOUNTAIN “From its inception this song was meant to be a sound collage. We started with the bass and drum groove and just built around it. The narration is by my father who is reading from an autobiography that he had just completed. It was one of the last pieces that we added and it seemed to be the perfect texture as well as fitting in with the album’s lyrical themes. Margo’s repetitive exhortation, ‘How’d this mountain get so high’, is a simple refrain expressed, in some manner, by each of us, almost every day of our adult lives.” MY ONLY GUARANTEE “This was always slated to be the last song on the album. It serves as the epilogue. It is, in part, inspired by the infamous Philip Larkin poem ‘This Be The Verse’ and, in part, by real life. A conclusion that my wife and I came to many years ago was that it was important for us to be the best parents that we could possibly be, but it was also important for us to recognize that no matter how hard we tried we were doomed/destined/predetermined to fuck up our children.” Interview by Chris Roberts At the End Of paths Taken is released by Cooking Vinyl on April 9 2007.

COWBOY JUNKIES

Their Trinity Sessions album is one of the early landmarks of what later became known as Americana and they are back with a new album, At The End Of Paths Taken. Songwriter and guitarist Michael Timmins takes www.uncut.co.uk on a track-by-track preview. . .

*****

BRAND NEW WORLD

“It’s rare that the first song I write for an album ends up actually being the first song on it, but this album kind of fell together like that. The album has a strong central theme running through it – family. The mundane-ness and complexities of the family dynamic, and how patterns in those relationships repeat themselves, how the outside world can cause havoc in those relationships, how the macro can suddenly cave in upon the micro. This song seemed to set up all of those themes, from the opening laundry list of basic responsibilities that most people in my circle carry with them (“Mouths to feed. Shoes to buy. Rent to pay. Tears to dry”) to the outrage, sense of helplessness and complex fears that accompany that list, expressed by the rampaging musical outro.”

STILL LOST

“This song could be about the micro or the macro but it is probably about both. Cycles and the repetitive nature of life come in to play on the verses (“Settling now, once again, what was begun will meet its end”). The chorus expresses the exasperation of being at the end of a path taken and steadfastly journeyed upon, yet still finding oneself lost. This song went through three or four musical incarnations before we found its form in a simple arrangement gathered around an acoustic guitar groove.”

CUTTING BOARD BLUES

“We mixed this one to emphasize the trio; drums panned to the left, guitar panned to the right, bass and vocals up the middle….old style. The lyric hints at our species’ seeming inability to see beyond the next door.”

SPIRAL DOWN

“There comes a moment when one suddenly notices that one’s parents have grown old. Next comes the realization that, one day, they will die.”

MY LITTLE BASQUIAT

“Every parent looks upon their children, sees the potential, and fears the worst. This song was built around the bass groove, but we took the arrangement in many directions as we were developing it. Ultimately we stripped it back to the bare bones and let the drums and bass carry the vocal, with a few sprinklings of keyboard and unidentifiable spacey bits and pieces added for atmosphere. The guitar solo is one of my proudest moments – I feel like it captures the anxiety of parenthood!”

SOMEDAY SOON

“Margo [Timmins, CJ vocalist, Michael’s sister] and I call this our Donny and Marie moment – it just seemed right to record it as a duet. For the lyric to work there was a need for the vocal to be casual and tossed- off.”

FOLLOWER 2

“This song was inspired by the Seamus Heaney poem ‘Follower’ and is the centre-piece of the ‘family’ theme. It explores the relationship between father and son, the repetitive patterns of that relationship and how the lines that separate father and son begin to blur over time. We experimented with a lot of string arrangements on this album. The strings were arranged by Henry Kucharzyk (a friend and respected modern music composer). This arrangement is my favourite.”

IT DOESN’T REALLY MATTER ANYWAY

“Another song which was built around a bass groove. A song about communication (or the lack of it). This is what’s at the heart of all our troubles (on every level one can imagine).”

BLUE EYED SAVIOUR

“This song went through many arrangements, but we ended up by going back to one of the first recordings that we made it and using it as the bed track. It’s about the fear of loss, the fear of the outside world reaching in and stealing that which is dearest.”

MOUNTAIN

“From its inception this song was meant to be a sound collage. We started with the bass and drum groove and just built around it. The narration is by my father who is reading from an autobiography that he had just completed. It was one of the last pieces that we added and it seemed to be the perfect texture as well as fitting in with the album’s lyrical themes. Margo’s repetitive exhortation, ‘How’d this mountain get so high’, is a simple refrain expressed, in some manner, by each of us, almost every day of our adult lives.”

MY ONLY GUARANTEE

“This was always slated to be the last song on the album. It serves as the epilogue. It is, in part, inspired by the infamous Philip Larkin poem ‘This Be The Verse’ and, in part, by real life. A conclusion that my wife and I came to many years ago was that it was important for us to be the best parents that we could possibly be, but it was also important for us to recognize that no matter how hard we tried we were doomed/destined/predetermined to fuck up our children.”

Interview by Chris Roberts

At the End Of paths Taken is released by Cooking Vinyl on April 9 2007.

The Arcade Fire – Neon Bible

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I remember two years ago sitting in a New York office with people I didn’t yet know, listening to two of them talking about an album by a group whose name they didn’t mention, but which - from what I could gather - had been inspired in part by the deaths of people close to the band. I wasn’t surprised, then, when the album under enthusiastic discussion turned out to be called Funeral. Which title, of course, made me think immediately of some brooding meditation on mortality - dark, morose and gloomily intense. When I actually get to hear Funeral - which turns out to have been recorded by a Montreal-based collective called The Arcade Fire - the album’s far from the drear and draughty thing I’d expected. Funeral instead gave voice to the tumult of dreams and the uproar of life, a rowdy celebration played on a colourful assortment of instruments, Win Butler’s voice skittish above the music’s epic pitch and holler, reminiscent frequently in its baffled wonder and startled apprehension of David Byrne, Talking Heads a clear influence. It was in the opinion of many – including Uncut - the most thrilling record of 2005. Listening to it, however, you wondered whether it might turn out to be like one of those comets of astronomical legend, whose rare appearance has all appropriate eyes upon it, a brief and brilliant passing, not soon to be repeated. In other words, following Funeral was always going to be difficult for them. What, after all, were they going to do? Rip up the blueprint entirely, wholly dismantle the sonic template that made them so successful, or just make the same record again, only better? Your first reaction to Neon Bible – whose title is taken from the first novel by American writer John Kennedy Toole, who won a posthumous Pulitzer for A Confederacy Of Dunces after committing suicide at 32 - is that they’ve done neither, nervous about ditching the signature sound of Funeral but unsure what to replace it with. One immediate point of difference is a drift here towards the oratorical. Funeral, you’d be right to say, was no stranger to the histrionic and overwrought. But there was simultaneously a devilish humour afoot, again much in debt to Byrne’s mix of the familiar and the fantastic. Neon Bible is often merely bumptious by comparison, and preachy, too. This music is set shortly to fill arenas, but you wonder if it wouldn’t be more properly played from a pulpit, such is the general sermonising going on here, Butler much preoccupied by the imminence of catastrophe, some undefined disaster looming that he is keen to alert us to, often at windy length As far as Butler’s concerned, the world is unequivocally a Bad Place, in which Bad Things happen, the whole kit-and-caboodle ready to blow, a fiery end to all we know a grisly inevitable. This might be a grimly exciting prospect for a troubled teen polishing a gun barrel to a buffed sheen in a bedroom with blacked-out windows in an American suburb shortly to find itself the centre of unfortunate attention on Fox News, TV anchormen with incredulous hair gravely narrating the day’s unfolding events as bodies are removed from a school cafeteria, police marksmen in key positions on surrounding rooftops. Anyone else might find their patience somewhat tested by Butler’s dour anticipations, the album’s relentlessly fretful hum. “I know a time is coming, all words will lose their meaning,” he sings cheerlessly over the tympanic thunder of the sluggish opener, “Black Mirror”, aspiring to the cool grandeur of the Bunnymen’s Ian McCulloch, but sounding more like someone shouting loudly into a fairly stern headwind. There’s evidence of the demented perkiness of yore on “Keep The Car Running”, but “Intervention” fair buckles under the weight of its own self-importance. The lyrics evoke regime change, war, poverty, the tyranny of religion, starvation, all manner of calamitous doings. It’s a lexicon of legitimate liberal woe, although what precisely Butler is saying about any of these things apart from reminding us that they sadly exist currently escapes me. The morose title track and “Black Wave/Bad Vibrations” are simply glum, while “Oceans Of Violence” is about as gripping as watching a beard grow until the unexpected appearance of slurred mariachi horns, a moment of incredibly woozy beauty and one of the record’s musical highpoints. Mind you, things as a whole get better in a hurry after this and there follows a quartet of songs that find The Arcade Fire at their most irresistible. “The Well And The Lighthouse” is a jittery wonder, urgent and compelling. “Building Downtown (Antichrist Television Blues)” is even better, “Maggie’s Farm” re-written by David Byrne, with something of Springsteen’s muscular burliness, “Oliver’s Army” piano flourishes and a headlong momentum that owes a lot to Counting Crows’ “Mrs Potter’s Lullabye”. You have to worry somewhat about the sensibility of anyone in whose pantheon of fear louts on the bus appear to rank alongside terrorists flying jets into skyscrapers, but the track’s climax is handsomely ecstatic. “Windowsill”, meanwhile, is a simmering classic of incipient calamity – winds a-blowing, waters rising - with another fantastic horn chart and a chorus that unfurls like a flag over a battlefield. The plangent utopianism of “No Cars Go” – reworked from the Arcade Fire EP – rounds out this brilliant four-song suite, building towards another overwhelming climax that’ll have them cheering by the thousands at Glastonbury. Less satisfactorily, the album bleeds out with the self-pitying “My Body Is A Cage”, apparently a stab at a 21st century spiritual, a gospel lament whose humourless self-regard is an uneasy reminder that while there is much here to admire, at its overblown worst Neon Bible is one of those records that takes itself too seriously to be taken seriously. Watch it fly, though. ALLAN JONES

I remember two years ago sitting in a New York office with people I didn’t yet know, listening to two of them talking about an album by a group whose name they didn’t mention, but which – from what I could gather – had been inspired in part by the deaths of people close to the band. I wasn’t surprised, then, when the album under enthusiastic discussion turned out to be called Funeral. Which title, of course, made me think immediately of some brooding meditation on mortality – dark, morose and gloomily intense.

When I actually get to hear Funeral – which turns out to have been recorded by a Montreal-based collective called The Arcade Fire – the album’s far from the drear and draughty thing I’d expected. Funeral instead gave voice to the tumult of dreams and the uproar of life, a rowdy celebration played on a colourful assortment of instruments, Win Butler’s voice skittish above the music’s epic pitch and holler, reminiscent frequently in its baffled wonder and startled apprehension of David Byrne, Talking Heads a clear influence.

It was in the opinion of many – including Uncut – the most thrilling record of 2005. Listening to it, however, you wondered whether it might turn out to be like one of those comets of astronomical legend, whose rare appearance has all appropriate eyes upon it, a brief and brilliant passing, not soon to be repeated. In other words, following Funeral was always going to be difficult for them.

What, after all, were they going to do? Rip up the blueprint entirely, wholly dismantle the sonic template that made them so successful, or just make the same record again, only better? Your first reaction to Neon Bible – whose title is taken from the first novel by American writer John Kennedy Toole, who won a posthumous Pulitzer for A Confederacy Of Dunces after committing suicide at 32 – is that they’ve done neither, nervous about ditching the signature sound of Funeral but unsure what to replace it with.

One immediate point of difference is a drift here towards the oratorical. Funeral, you’d be right to say, was no stranger to the histrionic and overwrought. But there was simultaneously a devilish humour afoot, again much in debt to Byrne’s mix of the familiar and the fantastic. Neon Bible is often merely bumptious by comparison, and preachy, too. This music is set shortly to fill arenas, but you wonder if it wouldn’t be more properly played from a pulpit, such is the general sermonising going on here, Butler much preoccupied by the imminence of catastrophe, some undefined disaster looming that he is keen to alert us to, often at windy length

As far as Butler’s concerned, the world is unequivocally a Bad Place, in which Bad Things happen, the whole kit-and-caboodle ready to blow, a fiery end to all we know a grisly inevitable.

This might be a grimly exciting prospect for a troubled teen polishing a gun barrel to a buffed sheen in a bedroom with blacked-out windows in an American suburb shortly to find itself the centre of unfortunate attention on Fox News, TV anchormen with incredulous hair gravely narrating the day’s unfolding events as bodies are removed from a school cafeteria, police marksmen in key positions on surrounding rooftops.

Anyone else might find their patience somewhat tested by Butler’s dour anticipations, the album’s relentlessly fretful hum.

“I know a time is coming, all words will lose their meaning,” he sings cheerlessly over the tympanic thunder of the sluggish opener, “Black Mirror”, aspiring to the cool grandeur of the Bunnymen’s Ian McCulloch, but sounding more like someone shouting loudly into a fairly stern headwind.

There’s evidence of the demented perkiness of yore on “Keep The Car Running”, but “Intervention” fair buckles under the weight of its own self-importance. The lyrics evoke regime change, war, poverty, the tyranny of religion, starvation, all manner of calamitous doings. It’s a lexicon of legitimate liberal woe, although what precisely Butler is saying about any of these things apart from reminding us that they sadly exist currently escapes me.

The morose title track and “Black Wave/Bad Vibrations” are simply glum, while “Oceans Of Violence” is about as gripping as watching a beard grow until the unexpected appearance of slurred mariachi horns, a moment of incredibly woozy beauty and one of the record’s musical highpoints. Mind you, things as a whole get better in a hurry after this and there follows a quartet of songs that find The Arcade Fire at their most irresistible.

“The Well And The Lighthouse” is a jittery wonder, urgent and compelling. “Building Downtown (Antichrist Television Blues)” is even better, “Maggie’s Farm” re-written by David Byrne, with something of Springsteen’s muscular burliness, “Oliver’s Army” piano flourishes and a headlong momentum that owes a lot to Counting Crows’ “Mrs Potter’s Lullabye”. You have to worry somewhat about the sensibility of anyone in whose pantheon of fear louts on the bus appear to rank alongside terrorists flying jets into skyscrapers, but the track’s climax is handsomely ecstatic.

“Windowsill”, meanwhile, is a simmering classic of incipient calamity – winds a-blowing, waters rising – with another fantastic horn chart and a chorus that unfurls like a flag over a battlefield. The plangent utopianism of “No Cars Go” – reworked from the Arcade Fire EP – rounds out this brilliant four-song suite, building towards another overwhelming climax that’ll have them cheering by the thousands at Glastonbury.

Less satisfactorily, the album bleeds out with the self-pitying “My Body Is A Cage”, apparently a stab at a 21st century spiritual, a gospel lament whose humourless self-regard is an uneasy reminder that while there is much here to admire, at its overblown worst Neon Bible is one of those records that takes itself too seriously to be taken seriously. Watch it fly, though.

ALLAN JONES