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Mississippi Bluesman Confirmed For Spitz Festival

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Robert “Wolfman” Belfour has been added to the bill for this years’ Spitz Festival of Blues, taking place in April. The elusive musician, who rarely plays outside his hometown of Mississippi, will also play a handful of dates around the UK, prior to the Spitz Festival. Re-defining the blues genre, alongside with R.L. Burnside, Junior Kimbrough and T-Model Ford through the maverick Mississippi record label Fat Possum, Robert plays clear and powerful acoustic hill country blues. With most of his contemporary’s now sadly passed on, Robert Belfour is one of the last living authentic acoustic North Mississippi Hill Blues musicians still performing live. Also headlining at The Spitz Festival of Blues are T-Model Ford, Holly Golightly and Gallon Drunk. Belfour will precede his appearance at the Spitz festival with a handful of regional gigs, he will play: Norwich, Arts Centre (April 23) Leicester, The Musician (24) Aldershot, West End Centre (25) Coventry, Tin Angel (26) London, Spitz Festival (27) Click here for further details about the Spitz Festival of Blues

Robert “Wolfman” Belfour has been added to the bill for this years’ Spitz Festival of Blues, taking place in April.

The elusive musician, who rarely plays outside his hometown of Mississippi, will also play a handful of dates around the UK, prior to the Spitz Festival.

Re-defining the blues genre, alongside with R.L. Burnside, Junior Kimbrough and T-Model Ford through the maverick Mississippi record label Fat Possum, Robert plays clear and powerful acoustic hill country blues.

With most of his contemporary’s now sadly passed on, Robert Belfour is one of the last living authentic acoustic North Mississippi Hill Blues musicians still performing live.

Also headlining at The Spitz Festival of Blues are T-Model Ford, Holly Golightly and Gallon Drunk.

Belfour will precede his appearance at the Spitz festival with a handful of regional gigs, he will play:

Norwich, Arts Centre (April 23)

Leicester, The Musician (24)

Aldershot, West End Centre (25)

Coventry, Tin Angel (26)

London, Spitz Festival (27)

Click here for further details about the Spitz Festival of Blues

Indie Brit Nominees Glam Up With T-Rex Cover

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Glaswegian indie newcomers, The Fratellis, have recorded their interpretation of T-Rex’s 1972 number 2 hit single “Solid Gold Easy Action.” The group, who have been nominated for a Brit Award in the Best Breakthrough category, appear in glam style, recording the track specifically for the soundtrack to new film comedy Hot Fuzz. Jon Spencer & The Elegant Too also contribute a new song called, “Here Come The Fuzz” to the film’s score, bringing up the word count of film buzzword ‘Fuzz!’ Other tracks – can you spot a theme here? – appearing in the new comedy are XTC’s “Sgt. Rocks (Is Going To Help Me) and Supergrass’ classic 1994 debut “Caught By The Fuzz.” Nice inclusions are John Eric Alexander’s “Lethal Weapon 3 Trailer Score” and Adam Ant’s “Goody Two Shoes.” Hot Fuzz opens in the UK next Friday (February 16). The "Hot Fuzz:Original Soundtrack" will be available the following Monday (19).

Glaswegian indie newcomers, The Fratellis, have recorded their interpretation of T-Rex’s 1972 number 2 hit single “Solid Gold Easy Action.”

The group, who have been nominated for a Brit Award in the Best Breakthrough category, appear in glam style, recording the track specifically for the soundtrack to new film comedy Hot Fuzz.

Jon Spencer & The Elegant Too also contribute a new song called, “Here Come The Fuzz” to the film’s score, bringing up the word count of film buzzword ‘Fuzz!’

Other tracks – can you spot a theme here? – appearing in the new comedy are XTC’s “Sgt. Rocks (Is Going To Help Me) and Supergrass’ classic 1994 debut “Caught By The Fuzz.”

Nice inclusions are John Eric Alexander’s “Lethal Weapon 3 Trailer Score” and Adam Ant’s “Goody Two Shoes.”

Hot Fuzz opens in the UK next Friday (February 16). The “Hot Fuzz:Original Soundtrack” will be available the following Monday (19).

Ecstatic Peace

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Feels a bit like 1987 here again; after raving over Dinosaur Jr's unlikely renaissance yesterday, today's Uncut pin-up boy is Thurston Moore. Not that he's releasing anything new with Sonic Youth, as far as I know. But for the past 25-odd years, Moore has been running a label called Ecstatic Peace, a home for some pretty deranged music - not least his own extra-curricular projects, where Moore pits himself against various heroes of free jazz, subterranean noise, art-skronk and that kind of thing. What's happening right now, though, is that Ecstatic Peace has finally committed to proper UK distribution, which means there's a bunch of excellent albums coming out here in March. We've been hammering a couple, especially. One is by a youngish Ann Arbor trio called Awesome Color, whose stab at sounding like The Stooges circa 1970 is slightly more convincing than the efforts of Iggy, at least, on the forthcoming Stooges comeback. Awesome Color were purportedly taught their skills by Scott Asheton, and they've got that evil "Funhouse" drone down to a tee. Thurston produced this one, too. The other is "Green Blues", yet another psych-folk beauty, by a wild collective called MV + EE And The Bummer Road. The gist here is that, while acid folk's West Coast acid folkies like Devendra Banhart and Joanna Newsom have gone overground, East Coast originators like MV + EE have become more feral and uncompromising. There's a lot more about this one in next month's Uncut. But anyway, J Mascis plays Mellotron on it, and I promise I'll find something to write about tomorrow that has nothing to do with the old flake.

Feels a bit like 1987 here again; after raving over Dinosaur Jr’s unlikely renaissance yesterday, today’s Uncut pin-up boy is Thurston Moore.

Uncut Rock Photographer Shows Off At Proud

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Regular Uncut lensman, Steve Double is to host a collection of a decade's rock photo work at London's Proud Gallery, from next Thursday (February 15). He is one of two music photographers to show his work at the first "Interim Sessions: Proud's Favourite Photographer's Showcased". Double has photographed artists as diverse as Nina Simone (pictured above), Nirvana, Radiohead and Eminem. The other photographer who has the Proud stamp of approval is Dixie Dean who captured the Rolling Stones during their Sticky Fingers tour in the early 70s. His beautiful collection of images have mostly been unseen until now. The Interim Sessions starting next week will be the first in a long-term series, where Proud will help hang, edite and curate iconic images for installation by prolific snappers. The first exhibition with Double and Dean each hosting their own floors of the Camden space will run from February 16 - March 23. Admission to Proud is always free. For more details about the Interim Sessions, or future planned exhibitions, click here to go Proud's website

Regular Uncut lensman, Steve Double is to host a collection of a decade’s rock photo work at London’s Proud Gallery, from next Thursday (February 15).

He is one of two music photographers to show his work at the first “Interim Sessions: Proud’s Favourite Photographer’s Showcased”.

Double has photographed artists as diverse as Nina Simone (pictured above), Nirvana, Radiohead and Eminem.

The other photographer who has the Proud stamp of approval is Dixie Dean who captured the Rolling Stones during their Sticky Fingers tour in the early 70s. His beautiful collection of images have mostly been unseen until now.

The Interim Sessions starting next week will be the first in a long-term series, where Proud will help hang, edite and curate iconic images for installation by prolific snappers.

The first exhibition with Double and Dean each hosting their own floors of the Camden space will run from February 16 – March 23.

Admission to Proud is always free.

For more details about the Interim Sessions, or future planned exhibitions, click here to go Proud’s website

Website Fights For Chart Justice

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A new website is ambitiously trying to set chart history wrongs right, by organising fans to download back catalogue singles simultaneously, in an attempt to push them to the top of the charts. 7digital, the company behind www.itshouldhavebeennumber1.co.uk, are taking advantage of new chart rules that mean download sales alone, can now be counted towards chart positions. A number of classic singles that missed the top spot are being targeted. First up is the loser in the great Britpop battle of 1995, Oasis’ “Roll With It”. The Gallaghers and co were pipped by Blur’s “Country House” that June, but maybe now they’ll be able to grab the coveted No 1 slot. Ultravox’s operatic synth-pop anthem “Vienna” (famously denied by Joe Dolce’s execrable “Shut Uppa Your Face”) and The Beatles double A-side “Penny Lane/Strawberry Fields Forever” (gazumped by Englebert Humperdinck’s soppy “Release Me”) are other singles ripe for reclaiming. The site will donate all proceeds of the track sales to the Nordoff-Robbins Music Therapy charity, and explain their ambition by saying: “With your help, we plan to identify the songs we think were a number one hit, or should have been number one, but were kept from the top spot by some naff song.” Oasis' "Roll With It" is ‘released’ on February 12 – Click here to go to the site and suggest records that you feel deserve to conquer the Top 40

A new website is ambitiously trying to set chart history wrongs right, by organising fans to download back catalogue singles simultaneously, in an attempt to push them to the top of the charts.

7digital, the company behind www.itshouldhavebeennumber1.co.uk, are taking advantage of new chart rules that mean download sales alone, can now be counted towards chart positions.

A number of classic singles that missed the top spot are being targeted. First up is the loser in the great Britpop battle of 1995, Oasis’ “Roll With It”. The Gallaghers and co were pipped by Blur’s “Country House” that June, but maybe now they’ll be able to grab the coveted No 1 slot.

Ultravox’s operatic synth-pop anthem “Vienna” (famously denied by Joe Dolce’s execrable “Shut Uppa Your Face”) and The Beatles double A-side “Penny Lane/Strawberry Fields Forever” (gazumped by Englebert Humperdinck’s soppy “Release Me”) are other singles ripe for reclaiming.

The site will donate all proceeds of the track sales to the Nordoff-Robbins Music Therapy charity, and explain their ambition by saying: “With your help, we plan to identify the songs we think were a number one hit, or should have been number one, but were kept from the top spot by some naff song.”

Oasis’ “Roll With It” is ‘released’ on February 12 – Click here to go to the site and suggest records that you feel deserve to conquer the Top 40

25th Anniversary WOMAD Festival Is Announced

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This years’ WOMAD festival has been confirmed, and is to take place the weekend of July 27-29. The World of Music Arts & Dance festival is celebrating its 25th year by moving to the beautiful setting of Charlton Park, North Wiltshire. Toots & The Maytals, Senegal’s Baaba Maal and US singer Candi Staton are amongst the first 17 artists confirmed to play. Reggae/ska legends Toots and The Maytals, won a Grammy award in 2005 for the album "True Love"; re-recorded versions of their classics performed with other renowned musicians including Willie Nelson, Eric Clapton and Keith Richards. They also enlisted help from younger popular artists such as No Doubt, Ben Harper, The Roots, and Shaggy. WOMAD's increased capacity audience of 20,000 will see over 70 world class artists perform, hailing from 40 countries around the world. WOMAD is renowned for it’s laid back approach, and the festival will feature music workshops, cookery sessions and hundreds of projections and visual arts structures throughout the weekend. Tickets for WOMAD Charlton Park are now on sale- prices are frozen at 2006’s prices until February 28 Pic credit: Rex Features

This years’ WOMAD festival has been confirmed, and is to take place the weekend of July 27-29.

The World of Music Arts & Dance festival is celebrating its 25th year by moving to the beautiful setting of Charlton Park, North Wiltshire.

Toots & The Maytals, Senegal’s Baaba Maal and US singer Candi Staton are amongst the first 17 artists confirmed to play.

Reggae/ska legends Toots and The Maytals, won a Grammy award in 2005 for the album “True Love”; re-recorded versions of their classics performed with other renowned musicians including Willie Nelson, Eric Clapton and Keith Richards. They also enlisted help from younger popular artists such as No Doubt, Ben Harper, The Roots, and Shaggy.

WOMAD’s increased capacity audience of 20,000 will see over 70 world class artists perform, hailing from 40 countries around the world.

WOMAD is renowned for it’s laid back approach, and the festival will feature music workshops, cookery sessions and hundreds of projections and visual arts structures throughout the weekend.

Tickets for WOMAD Charlton Park are now on sale- prices are frozen at 2006’s prices until February 28

Pic credit: Rex Features

New Franz Ferdinand Track Posted On Web

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A new Franz Ferdinand track, “Dandelion Blow” has been posted on the band’s Myspace page. Franz front man Alex Kapranos explains on the site that the new song was written as a theme for forthcoming Scottish film “Hallam Foe.” Kapranos says that the film’s themes of “Sexual tension, voyeurism, dark humour, Scotland and death” were the perfect “ingredients for a song by the Ferdinand.” Kapranos co-wrote “Dandelion Blow" with band member Nick McCarthy after he attended script meetings and early screening edits at Glasgow Film Theatre. The soundtrack to “Hallam Foe” also includes contributions from Franz's fellow Domino label artists; Psapp, Unpoc and Sons & Daughters. “Hallam Foe” is due to screen in competition at the Berlin Film Festival which starts tomorrow (February 8). It will be released in the UK in 2007. Check out the new Franz track by clicking here now

A new Franz Ferdinand track, “Dandelion Blow” has been posted on the band’s Myspace page.

Franz front man Alex Kapranos explains on the site that the new song was written as a theme for forthcoming Scottish film “Hallam Foe.”

Kapranos says that the film’s themes of “Sexual tension, voyeurism, dark humour, Scotland and death” were the perfect “ingredients for a song by the Ferdinand.”

Kapranos co-wrote “Dandelion Blow” with band member Nick McCarthy after he attended script meetings and early screening edits at Glasgow Film Theatre.

The soundtrack to “Hallam Foe” also includes contributions from Franz’s fellow Domino label artists; Psapp, Unpoc and Sons & Daughters.

“Hallam Foe” is due to screen in competition at the Berlin Film Festival which starts tomorrow (February 8). It will be released in the UK in 2007.

Check out the new Franz track by clicking here now

Patti Does Hendrix, And Dylan, And Nirvana

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Iconic punk lyricist Patti Smith has revealed details about which classic songs she will cover on forthcoming album, "Twelve." Tracks confirmed for Smith's tenth studio album, due out on April 16, include Neil Young's "Helpless," Stevie Wonder's "Pastime Paradise," and Tears For Fears' anthemic "Everybody Wants To Rule The World." Speaking to Billboard magazine last month, Smith explained how fulfilling making the LP has been, saying "It has been a real adventure doing these songs. I've always wanted to do a cover record, but I didn't think I had the range. But now, I feel really on the top of my game and ready to tackle a lot of different songs I thought had strong and relevant lyrics." The other artists that singer Smith has tackled on "Twelve" are Jimi Hendrix, Bob Dylan, the Doors, Jefferson Airplane, the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, the Allman Brothers, Paul Simon and Nirvana. More details about which particular songs will appear, have yet to be released. The all-star album has multiple guest musicians, including Red Hot Chili Peppers' bassist Flea, Television guitarist Tom Verlaine, the Black Crowes' Rich Robinson and hip-hop producer Luis Resto on keys, who's previously worked with Eminem. Smith re-enlists the banjo-playing skills of playwright Sam Shepard, whom she worked with on 1971's "Cowboy Mouth." "Twelve" sees Patti Smith backed by her regular touring band - Lenny Kaye (guitar), Jay Dee Daugherty (drums) and Tony Shanahan (bass, keyboards). Patti's Smith's children also get in on the act; son Jackson, and daughter, Jesse, help out with guitar and vocals too. Patti Smith is due to be inducted into the Rock'N'Roll Hall Of Fame on March 12, along with R.E.M., Van Halen, the Ronettes, and Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five.

Iconic punk lyricist Patti Smith has revealed details about which classic songs she will cover on forthcoming album, “Twelve.”

Tracks confirmed for Smith’s tenth studio album, due out on April 16, include Neil Young’s “Helpless,” Stevie Wonder’s “Pastime Paradise,” and Tears For Fears’ anthemic “Everybody Wants To Rule The World.”

Speaking to Billboard magazine last month, Smith explained how fulfilling making the LP has been, saying “It has been a real adventure doing these songs. I’ve always wanted to do a cover record, but I didn’t think I had the range. But now, I feel really on the top of my game and ready to tackle a lot of different songs I thought had strong and relevant lyrics.”

The other artists that singer Smith has tackled on “Twelve” are Jimi Hendrix, Bob Dylan, the Doors, Jefferson Airplane, the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, the Allman Brothers, Paul Simon and Nirvana. More details about which particular songs will appear, have yet to be released.

The all-star album has multiple guest musicians, including Red Hot Chili Peppers’ bassist Flea, Television guitarist Tom Verlaine, the Black Crowes’ Rich Robinson and hip-hop producer Luis Resto on keys, who’s previously worked with Eminem.

Smith re-enlists the banjo-playing skills of playwright Sam Shepard, whom she worked with on 1971’s “Cowboy Mouth.”

“Twelve” sees Patti Smith backed by her regular touring band – Lenny Kaye (guitar), Jay Dee Daugherty (drums) and Tony Shanahan (bass, keyboards).

Patti’s Smith’s children also get in on the act; son Jackson, and daughter, Jesse, help out with guitar and vocals too.

Patti Smith is due to be inducted into the Rock’N’Roll Hall Of Fame on March 12, along with R.E.M., Van Halen, the Ronettes, and Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five.

Kings Of Leon Announce UK Tour

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Kings Of Leon have confirmed details of a short UK tour to take place in April, in support of their new album, “Because Of You,” out the same month. The rockers return to the UK after a year touring North America, first with Irish supergroup U2, then with our favourite troubadour Bob Dylan. The four members of the Followill family, last played in the UK in 2005, playing a triumphant sold-out Arena tour, including six sold-out nights; three each at London’s Hammersmith Apollo and Brixton Academy. This time around, you can catch the Tennessee rockers at the following venues: Swindon, Oasis (April 14) Plymouth, Pavilions (15) London, Hammersmith Apollo (18) Birmingham, Academy (19) Manchester, Apollo (20) Newcastle, Academy (22) Doncaster, Dome (23) Glasgow, Academy (24) Tickets go on sale 9am, this Friday (February 9). All tickets £22.50, except London £25.

Kings Of Leon have confirmed details of a short UK tour to take place in April, in support of their new album, “Because Of You,” out the same month.

The rockers return to the UK after a year touring North America, first with Irish supergroup U2, then with our favourite troubadour Bob Dylan.

The four members of the Followill family, last played in the UK in 2005, playing a triumphant sold-out Arena tour, including six sold-out nights; three each at London’s Hammersmith Apollo and Brixton Academy.

This time around, you can catch the Tennessee rockers at the following venues:

Swindon, Oasis (April 14)

Plymouth, Pavilions (15)

London, Hammersmith Apollo (18)

Birmingham, Academy (19)

Manchester, Apollo (20)

Newcastle, Academy (22)

Doncaster, Dome (23)

Glasgow, Academy (24)

Tickets go on sale 9am, this Friday (February 9). All tickets £22.50, except London £25.

Hammer Of The Goddesses

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File under things you never thought you’d read: playing London’s Mean Fiddler this Sunday (February 11) are the puntastically named Lez Zeppelin, an all-lesbian tribute to the rockin’ good work of Robert Plant, Jimmy Page, John Paul Jones and John Bonham. Formed two years ago, the New York City-based group lay claim to being the world’s first and foremost, gender-bending Zep tribute act. Lez Zeppelin are Sarah McLellan (vocals), Steph Paynes (electric/acoustic guitar and theremin), Lisa Brigantino (bass, keyboards and mandolin) and Helen Destroy (drums) – the girls are adored by The New Yorker, which said: “These ladies channel the sonic bombast of Led Zeppelin and gleefully invert the band’s original sexual essence.” Steph Paynes, Lez Zeppelin’s founder, dismisses those who don’t believe they are capable of recreating the intricate musicianship of the original band: “It takes only a few chords for the audience to realise that they’re going to get something genuine and intense, not some gimmick. And that’s when they go kind of crazy.” Lez Zeppelin are currently recording their debut album with legendary Led Zeppelin and Jimi Hendrix producer/engineer, Eddie Kramer, at Electric Lady studio in NYC. Lez Zeppelin play their first UK show at the Mean Fiddler this Sunday. Ticket details available from the venue at meanfiddler.com or by clicking here

File under things you never thought you’d read: playing London’s Mean Fiddler this Sunday (February 11) are the puntastically named Lez Zeppelin, an all-lesbian tribute to the rockin’ good work of Robert Plant, Jimmy Page, John Paul Jones and John Bonham.

Formed two years ago, the New York City-based group lay claim to being the world’s first and foremost, gender-bending Zep tribute act.

Lez Zeppelin are Sarah McLellan (vocals), Steph Paynes (electric/acoustic guitar and theremin), Lisa Brigantino (bass, keyboards and mandolin) and Helen Destroy (drums) – the girls are adored by The New Yorker, which said: “These ladies channel the sonic bombast of Led Zeppelin and gleefully invert the band’s original sexual essence.”

Steph Paynes, Lez Zeppelin’s founder, dismisses those who don’t believe they are capable of recreating the intricate musicianship of the original band: “It takes only a few chords for the audience to realise that they’re going to get something genuine and intense, not some gimmick. And that’s when they go kind of crazy.”

Lez Zeppelin are currently recording their debut album with legendary Led Zeppelin and Jimi Hendrix producer/engineer, Eddie Kramer, at Electric Lady studio in NYC.

Lez Zeppelin play their first UK show at the Mean Fiddler this Sunday.

Ticket details available from the venue at meanfiddler.com or by clicking here

Richmond Fontaine Bring The Sound Of The Southwest To The UK

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Uncut favourites, Richmond Fontaine are about to embark on a fourteen date tour of the UK and Ireland, starting this Saturday (February 10). The group, fronted by songwriter Willy Vlautin, will preview material from their new LP “Thirteen Cities, which is due for release this April. The album was recorded at Wavelab studios in Tucson, Arizona by JD Foster, who also produced their acclaimed albums, “Post To Wire” and “The Fitzgerald.” Musicians from Howe Gelb to Calexico and Luca also contribute to the musical stories of redemption in the desert. Speaking about the album’s contributors to www.www.uncut.co.uk, Willy Vlautin explained, “I didn't know Joey Burns or Jacob Valenzuela from Calexico, but JD introduced me to them and they're just great, really nice guys. In Tucson you meet so many cool guys. Howe Gelb came by and he was late for dinner with his wife, but he wanted to play piano on this song, so he was like “If we can do it in a half hour…” So those guys just kind of stopped by, if you were lucky and they were in town, or they had time, they'd play on the record, so for me it was a real, real lucky break.” Richmond Fontaine will play the following venues this month: Bedford, Esquires (February 10) Winchester, Railway (11) London, Dingwalls (13) Bristol, St Bonaventures (14) Leicester, The Musician (15) Dublin, Whelans, Ireland (16) Cork, Cyprus Avenue, Ireland (17) Galway, Roison Dubh, Ireland (18) Manchester, Academy 3 (20) Leeds, The New Rocoe (21) Glasgow, ABC2 (22) Newcastle, Cluny (23) Nottingham, Maze (24) Norwich, Arts Centre (25) Support on all dates comes from the Endrick Brothers and pedal steel player Paul Brainard. Click here to see a video of new album track “Capsized”

Uncut favourites, Richmond Fontaine are about to embark on a fourteen date tour of the UK and Ireland, starting this Saturday (February 10).

The group, fronted by songwriter Willy Vlautin, will preview material from their new LP “Thirteen Cities, which is due for release this April.

The album was recorded at Wavelab studios in Tucson, Arizona by JD Foster, who also produced their acclaimed albums, “Post To Wire” and “The Fitzgerald.”

Musicians from Howe Gelb to Calexico and Luca also contribute to the musical stories of redemption in the desert.

Speaking about the album’s contributors to www.www.uncut.co.uk, Willy Vlautin explained, “I didn’t know Joey Burns or Jacob Valenzuela from Calexico, but JD introduced me to them and they’re just great, really nice guys. In Tucson you meet so many cool guys. Howe Gelb came by and he was late for dinner with his wife, but he wanted to play piano on this song, so he was like “If we can do it in a half hour…” So those guys just kind of stopped by, if you were lucky and they were in town, or they had time, they’d play on the record, so for me it was a real, real lucky break.”

Richmond Fontaine will play the following venues this month:

Bedford, Esquires (February 10)

Winchester, Railway (11)

London, Dingwalls (13)

Bristol, St Bonaventures (14)

Leicester, The Musician (15)

Dublin, Whelans, Ireland (16)

Cork, Cyprus Avenue, Ireland (17)

Galway, Roison Dubh, Ireland (18)

Manchester, Academy 3 (20)

Leeds, The New Rocoe (21)

Glasgow, ABC2 (22)

Newcastle, Cluny (23)

Nottingham, Maze (24)

Norwich, Arts Centre (25)

Support on all dates comes from the Endrick Brothers and pedal steel player Paul Brainard.

Click here to see a video of new album track “Capsized”

OMD Release Souvenir of Drury Lane Concert

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OMD – Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark, namely Andy McCluskey and Paul Humphreys, have unveiled the DVD track listing that will form part of the reissue package of “Architecture and Morality.” As previously reported on www.www.uncut.co.uk, OMD are re-visiting their 1981 breakthrough album “Architecture and Morality” with a special European tour, coming to the UK in May. They will play the album in its entirety for the first time ever – as well as utilising a massive 120-piece orchestra and choir as backing musicians. "Architecture & Morality" was one of the highest selling electronic albums of the early ‘80s, shifting over three million copies and spawning three Top 10 hits, “Souvenir,” “Joan Of Arc” and “Maid Of Orleans.” The re-mastered double disc package of “Architecture and Morality” will include a live souvenir DVD, of OMD playing a special concert at London’s Drury Lane Theatre in 1981. You can see archive footage of OMD at the Theatre Royal, performing the following tracks: Almost Mystereality Joan of Arc Maid of Orleans Statues Souvenir New Stone Age Enola Gay Bunkers Soldiers Electricity She’s Leaving Song Stanlow The original 80’s band line up of Andy McCluskey, Paul Humphreys, Martin Cooper and Malcolm Holmes are playing together again. They will play at the following venues in May: Dublin Olympia (May 13) Glasgow Clyde Auditorium (15) Liverpool Empire (16) London Hammersmith Apollo (18)

OMD – Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark, namely Andy McCluskey and Paul Humphreys, have unveiled the DVD track listing that will form part of the reissue package of “Architecture and Morality.”

As previously reported on www.www.uncut.co.uk, OMD are re-visiting their 1981 breakthrough album “Architecture and Morality” with a special European tour, coming to the UK in May.

They will play the album in its entirety for the first time ever – as well as utilising a massive 120-piece orchestra and choir as backing musicians.

“Architecture & Morality” was one of the highest selling electronic albums of the early ‘80s, shifting over three million copies and spawning three Top 10 hits, “Souvenir,” “Joan Of Arc” and “Maid Of Orleans.”

The re-mastered double disc package of “Architecture and Morality” will include a live souvenir DVD, of OMD playing a special concert at London’s Drury Lane Theatre in 1981.

You can see archive footage of OMD at the Theatre Royal, performing the following tracks:

Almost

Mystereality

Joan of Arc

Maid of Orleans

Statues

Souvenir

New Stone Age

Enola Gay

Bunkers Soldiers

Electricity

She’s Leaving

Song

Stanlow

The original 80’s band line up of Andy McCluskey, Paul Humphreys, Martin Cooper and Malcolm Holmes are playing together again. They will play at the following venues in May:

Dublin Olympia (May 13)

Glasgow Clyde Auditorium (15)

Liverpool Empire (16)

London Hammersmith Apollo (18)

See Dylan Play Tambourine With The Byrds

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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 live archive footage from the Roy Orbison Tribute concert in February 1990. Bob Dylan joins Roger McGuinn, Chris Hillman and David Crosby of The Byrds for a collaborative version of the 1965 hit “Mr Tambourine Man.” The song, written by Dylan for his album “Bringing It All Back Home” was a Billboard number 1 single for The Byrds in January 1965, prior to Dylan’s own single release the same year. You can hear McGuinn and Hillman talk about their 1965 LP “Mr Tambourine Man” and five other albums from The Byrds’ back catalogue in the latest issue of Uncut, available now. See the brilliant live footage by clicking here now

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 live archive footage from the Roy Orbison Tribute concert in February 1990.

Bob Dylan joins Roger McGuinn, Chris Hillman and David Crosby of The Byrds for a collaborative version of the 1965 hit “Mr Tambourine Man.”

The song, written by Dylan for his album “Bringing It All Back Home” was a Billboard number 1 single for The Byrds in January 1965, prior to Dylan’s own single release the same year.

You can hear McGuinn and Hillman talk about their 1965 LP “Mr Tambourine Man” and five other albums from The Byrds’ back catalogue in the latest issue of Uncut, available now.

See the brilliant live footage by clicking here now

The Style Council – Our Favourite Shop: Deluxe Edition

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Through the 1980s Paul Weller lived out the paradox at the heart of Mod, between being one of the lads and being a dandy. Having deserted the green parka ranks of the Jam Army, by 1985 you could find him alongside Mick Talbot on the cover of Our Favourite Shop, the second Style Council record proper, spiffed up in a suit and scally wedge, languidly browsing in a vintage gentlemen’s outfitters. But even here, at his most posed and pretentious, seemingly trying to instigate a revolt into style through French menswear, Italian coffee and the Isley Brothers’ Greatest Hits, he was calling, on the most politically forceful record of his career, for class solidarity in the face of Thatcherism. It was an issue that was close to home. After all, the audience with which Weller had such a love-hate affair – southern, suburban blokes with aspirations – was also the constituency courted most assiduously by the Tories. Our Favourite Shop is so riven by the contradictions of its times – between the shop floor and the shopping centre - that it’s fascinating even when it’s terrible. And frankly it doesn’t get much worse than “The Comedian’s Instructions”, a piece of spoken word Britfunk performed by Lenny Henry, skewering the profound political menace of Bernard Manning. Or the sledgehammer sarcasm of “All Gone Away”, a bitterly breezy bossa nova answer to “Club Tropicana”. The extra disc, incidentally, includes among sundry b-sides, the Miners’ benefit single, “Soul Deep”, credited to the Council Collective, which inadvertently makes “Wham! Rap” seem convincing. But when Our Favourite Shop dramatises rather than simply delivers slogans, it can be a powerful and even moving record. The slow-burning opener, “Homebreakers”, subtly inverts mod mythology, describing a family torn apart by the on-your-bike imperatives of the time, while “A Man of Great Promise” and “With Everything to Lose” are elegant, eloquent testaments to doomed youth. The Rigbyish strings of “A Stone’s Throw”, meanwhile, draw a pretty astute line between the anti-union police in South Yorkshire and the monetarist laboratory of Pinochet’s Chile. And on “Walls Come Tumbling Down”, Weller wrote a supreme piece of protest pop, finally making good on his Curtis Mayfield ambitions. The attempt to chart a third way between agit-prop and sleek New Pop was ultimately doomed to wind up in Red Wedge, the laboured attempt to deliver the youth vote to Kinnock in ‘87. But for a moment or two at least, The Style Council caught a rare balance. STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

Through the 1980s Paul Weller lived out the paradox at the heart of Mod, between being one of the lads and being a dandy. Having deserted the green parka ranks of the Jam Army, by 1985 you could find him alongside Mick Talbot on the cover of Our Favourite Shop, the second Style Council record proper, spiffed up in a suit and scally wedge, languidly browsing in a vintage gentlemen’s outfitters.

But even here, at his most posed and pretentious, seemingly trying to instigate a revolt into style through French menswear, Italian coffee and the Isley Brothers’ Greatest Hits, he was calling, on the most politically forceful record of his career, for class solidarity in the face of Thatcherism. It was an issue that was close to home. After all, the audience with which Weller had such a love-hate affair – southern, suburban blokes with aspirations – was also the constituency courted most assiduously by the Tories.

Our Favourite Shop is so riven by the contradictions of its times – between the shop floor and the shopping centre – that it’s fascinating even when it’s terrible. And frankly it doesn’t get much worse than “The Comedian’s Instructions”, a piece of spoken word Britfunk performed by Lenny Henry, skewering the profound political menace of Bernard Manning. Or the sledgehammer sarcasm of “All Gone Away”, a bitterly breezy bossa nova answer to “Club Tropicana”. The extra disc, incidentally, includes among sundry b-sides, the Miners’ benefit single, “Soul Deep”, credited to the Council Collective, which inadvertently makes “Wham! Rap” seem convincing.

But when Our Favourite Shop dramatises rather than simply delivers slogans, it can be a powerful and even moving record. The slow-burning opener, “Homebreakers”, subtly inverts mod mythology, describing a family torn apart by the on-your-bike imperatives of the time, while “A Man of Great Promise” and “With Everything to Lose” are elegant, eloquent testaments to doomed youth. The Rigbyish strings of “A Stone’s Throw”, meanwhile, draw a pretty astute line between the anti-union police in South Yorkshire and the monetarist laboratory of Pinochet’s Chile. And on “Walls Come Tumbling Down”, Weller wrote a supreme piece of protest pop, finally making good on his Curtis Mayfield ambitions.

The attempt to chart a third way between agit-prop and sleek New Pop was ultimately doomed to wind up in Red Wedge, the laboured attempt to deliver the youth vote to Kinnock in ‘87. But for a moment or two at least, The Style Council caught a rare balance.

STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

Lucinda Williams – West

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Much is made of Lucinda Williams the writer, the poet of southern aches and pains. Time magazine called her “America’s Best Songwriter”, while The New Yorker devoted thousands of words to the testy perfectionism that delayed the release of 1998’s galvanising Car Wheels On a Gravel Road. The fact that Williams is the daughter of a (relatively) famous poet, Miller Williams, has always distinguished her from other Americana types on the Lost Highway of credible country rock. But the real key to Williams’ singularity is surely her singing. Or rather her phrasing, which is always close to conversational, and the way she shapes her vowel sounds, which suggest a redneck Chrissie Hynde or perhaps Bonnie Raitt with a wad of tobacco in her mouth. By turns righteously sexual and biliously bitter, Williams gives rich voice to the complexities of middle-aged femininity. If we hadn’t known it already, the performances on last year’s terrific Live @ The Fillmore made clear that Williams is way more than a well-read fiftysomething rock chick: she’s a great singer, with a searingly bluesy edge to her voice. For West, originally titled Knowing until the song of that name was dropped from the tracklist, Williams wanted to make a record that might stand next to Marianne Faithfull’s Strange Weather as a statement of mature womanliness. As a consequence she hired that album’s producer Hal Willner to refashion a number of tracks she’d recorded in LA with her band. Willner, who may be carving out a niche for himself as a new Daniel Lanois or even Rick Rubin after years of assembling highbrow “tribute” albums (to Disney, Mingus, Kurt Weill et al), stripped the existing tracks back to Williams’ voice and long-time sideman Doug Pettibone’s guitar. Then they were fleshed out again using such seasoned heavyweights as Jim Keltner (drums), Tony Garnier (bass), Bill Frisell (guitar), and Jenny Scheinman, who not only plays violin on select songs but provides string arrangements that – on “Unsuffer Me”, at any rate – tip the hat to David Campbell’s work on his son Beck’s Mutations or Sea Change. “Mature but hip” (Williams’ words) West certainly is. The album sifts through themes that have dominated Lucinda’s life for the past three years. Most markedly, the end of another combustive relationship prompts moods that are variously stoical (“Learning How To Live”), tortured (“Unsuffer Me”), and forgivingly concerned (“Are You Alright?”) The same pain may or may not have inspired the snarling Courtney Love emasculation of “Come On” (as in “You didn’t even make me…”) and the nine snide minutes of “Wrap My Head Around That”. Hell hath no fury like that of a spurned co-dependent. The death of Williams’ mother in March 2004 triggered the tenderly sensual “Mama You Sweet” and by implication the austere, Emmylou-ish “Fancy Funeral” – the latter the album’s closest brush with conventional country, or country conventions. Emmylou’s ‘90s work with Lanois is brought to mind by the coolly gliding “Rescue”, with its swooshing organ and flinty Frisell guitar fills. Another reference point – on such spartan wood-and-steel outings as the neo-Appalachian “Everything Has Changed” – would be Williams’ good friends Gillian Welch and David Rawlings. In some ways, West bears the same relation to World Without Tears, an album of considerable variety and experimentation, as the back-porchy Essence did to the rocking, Grammy-grabbing Car Wheels. . . The Neil Young influence that marked World’s “Real Live Bleeding Fingers And Broken Guitar Strings” is apparent here on the anguished grind of “Unsuffer Me”, the intemperate yowl of “Come On”, and the utopian dreaming of “What If” – the latter a clear nod both lyrically and melodically to “Cortez The Killer”, and West’s only follow-up to World’s despairing “American Dream”. Nevertheless, the feel on West is more Stray Gators than Crazy Horse. Williams devotees will feel quite at home with the place names on the droopily pining “Where Is My Love?”, which namechecks Helena, Tupelo, Birmingham and Gainesville if not, sadly, “Joy”’s Slidell (aka Slaahdayel). They’ll also like the sleepy ease of songs such as “Words” and “West”. “West”, as it happens, is the happy note on which West ends. For it transpires that Williams has met another “love of my life” – for once not a relapsing bass player but an A&R man at Mercury Records subsidiary Fontana – and on the album’s title track he’s waiting for Luce to wing her way back to Cali from her adopted Nashville. After the venomous put-down that is “Come On” and the sour, sub-Prairie Wind plod of “Learning How To Live” – surely the blandest song Williams has ever written – “West” is a pleasantly upbeat way to sign off. What’s missing on West is the sultry bayou sway of Car Wheels and Essence and the Drive-By Truckers feistiness of southern rockers like “Pineola” and “Changed The Locks”. If Williams has always put a certain literary distance between her feelings and their expression, there’s a soulful warmth on her earlier albums that’s oddly absent here. Perhaps it’s Willner who’s responsible for a sound that’s a little too parched and cerebral. An album of sometimes stark simplicity, West is in many places rather drab and charmless. Go wrap your head round that if you can. BARNEY HOSKYNS

Much is made of Lucinda Williams the writer, the poet of southern aches and pains. Time magazine called her “America’s Best Songwriter”, while The New Yorker devoted thousands of words to the testy perfectionism that delayed the release of 1998’s galvanising Car Wheels On a Gravel Road. The fact that Williams is the daughter of a (relatively) famous poet, Miller Williams, has always distinguished her from other Americana types on the Lost Highway of credible country rock.

But the real key to Williams’ singularity is surely her singing. Or rather her phrasing, which is always close to conversational, and the way she shapes her vowel sounds, which suggest a redneck Chrissie Hynde or perhaps Bonnie Raitt with a wad of tobacco in her mouth. By turns righteously sexual and biliously bitter, Williams gives rich voice to the complexities of middle-aged femininity. If we hadn’t known it already, the performances on last year’s terrific Live @ The Fillmore made clear that Williams is way more than a well-read fiftysomething rock chick: she’s a great singer, with a searingly bluesy edge to her voice.

For West, originally titled Knowing until the song of that name was dropped from the tracklist, Williams wanted to make a record that might stand next to Marianne Faithfull’s Strange Weather as a statement of mature womanliness. As a consequence she hired that album’s producer Hal Willner to refashion a number of tracks she’d recorded in LA with her band.

Willner, who may be carving out a niche for himself as a new Daniel Lanois or even Rick Rubin after years of assembling highbrow “tribute” albums (to Disney, Mingus, Kurt Weill et al), stripped the existing tracks back to Williams’ voice and long-time sideman Doug Pettibone’s guitar. Then they were fleshed out again using such seasoned heavyweights as Jim Keltner (drums), Tony Garnier (bass), Bill Frisell (guitar), and Jenny Scheinman, who not only plays violin on select songs but provides string arrangements that – on “Unsuffer Me”, at any rate – tip the hat to David Campbell’s work on his son Beck’s Mutations or Sea Change.

“Mature but hip” (Williams’ words) West certainly is. The album sifts through themes that have dominated Lucinda’s life for the past three years. Most markedly, the end of another combustive relationship prompts moods that are variously stoical (“Learning How To Live”), tortured (“Unsuffer Me”), and forgivingly concerned (“Are You Alright?”) The same pain may or may not have inspired the snarling Courtney Love emasculation of “Come On” (as in “You didn’t even make me…”) and the nine snide minutes of “Wrap My Head Around That”. Hell hath no fury like that of a spurned co-dependent.

The death of Williams’ mother in March 2004 triggered the tenderly sensual “Mama You Sweet” and by implication the austere, Emmylou-ish “Fancy Funeral” – the latter the album’s closest brush with conventional country, or country conventions. Emmylou’s ‘90s work with Lanois is brought to mind by the coolly gliding “Rescue”, with its swooshing organ and flinty Frisell guitar fills. Another reference point – on such spartan wood-and-steel outings as the neo-Appalachian “Everything Has Changed” – would be Williams’ good friends Gillian Welch and David Rawlings.

In some ways, West bears the same relation to World Without Tears, an album of considerable variety and experimentation, as the back-porchy Essence did to the rocking, Grammy-grabbing Car Wheels. . . The Neil Young influence that marked World’s “Real Live Bleeding Fingers And Broken Guitar Strings” is apparent here on the anguished grind of “Unsuffer Me”, the intemperate yowl of “Come On”, and the utopian dreaming of “What If” – the latter a clear nod both lyrically and melodically to “Cortez The Killer”, and West’s only follow-up to World’s despairing “American Dream”. Nevertheless, the feel on West is more Stray Gators than Crazy Horse.

Williams devotees will feel quite at home with the place names on the droopily pining “Where Is My Love?”, which namechecks Helena, Tupelo, Birmingham and Gainesville if not, sadly, “Joy”’s Slidell (aka Slaahdayel). They’ll also like the sleepy ease of songs such as “Words” and “West”.

“West”, as it happens, is the happy note on which West ends. For it transpires that Williams has met another “love of my life” – for once not a relapsing bass player but an A&R man at Mercury Records subsidiary Fontana – and on the album’s title track he’s waiting for Luce to wing her way back to Cali from her adopted Nashville. After the venomous put-down that is “Come On” and the sour, sub-Prairie Wind plod of “Learning How To Live” – surely the blandest song Williams has ever written – “West” is a pleasantly upbeat way to sign off.

What’s missing on West is the sultry bayou sway of Car Wheels and Essence and the Drive-By Truckers feistiness of southern rockers like “Pineola” and “Changed The Locks”. If Williams has always put a certain literary distance between her feelings and their expression, there’s a soulful warmth on her earlier albums that’s oddly absent here. Perhaps it’s Willner who’s responsible for a sound that’s a little too parched and cerebral. An album of sometimes stark simplicity, West is in many places rather drab and charmless. Go wrap your head round that if you can.

BARNEY HOSKYNS

The Fall – Reformation Post TLC

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Never predictable, The Fall’s story took another twist in May 2006 when their guitarist, bassist and drummer quit during a US tour, citing intolerable behaviour by Mark E. Smith. Smith and his wife Eleni Poulou (keyboards) finished the tour with a makeshift line-up from LA, an arrangement that blossomed into something more durable in the months afterwards. The three Americans now comprise – alongside some Brits – the pool of musicians currently operating as The Fall. Seemingly relishing its chance to start afresh (as did previous Fall albums Extricate (1990) and Levitate (1997)), Reformation Post TLC is themed loosely around new relationships and clean slates, and represents a genuine departure from 2005’s guitar-driven, listener-friendly Fall Heads Roll. Recording in what is clearly a fluid and spontaneous environment, Smith sounds revitalised (and often very amused), delivering his most emphatic vocals in years. The present line-up contains two bassists, so the album sounds muddy at first, but once we get acclimatised to lengthy pieces like “Reformation!” and “Systematic Abuse”, what comes across is a hypnotic post-punk Hawkwind with latent flashes of Joy Division and Michael Karoli. “I have woken up,” snarls Smith at his critics. “This is Fall sound!” Poulou’s synthesiser plays a subtle role in this darkly-lit psychedelia, while the album’s undisputed stars are guitarist Tim Presley and propulsive bassists Rob Barbato and Dave ‘The Eagle’ Spurr. Liberated, Smith either free-associates over the top (“Scenario”, “Insult Song”) or times his words like punches (“Fall Sound”). There are some brilliant lines to savour. “You’ve just split up with your long-leg rat chick,” is an immediate favourite. At 61 minutes, Reformation Post TLC does feel diffuse – but it can’t be accused of lacking variety. Poulou lends her German accent to “The Wright Stuff”, a chirpy tale about a pair of “plastic women’s bosoms” and a strange train journey. Steel yourself, meanwhile, for “Das Boat” – eight minutes of submarine sonar buzzes. This madness is indicative of an abundantly confident Fall, and (gulp) long may it last. DAVID CAVANAGH

Never predictable, The Fall’s story took another twist in May 2006 when their guitarist, bassist and drummer quit during a US tour, citing intolerable behaviour by Mark E. Smith. Smith and his wife Eleni Poulou (keyboards) finished the tour with a makeshift line-up from LA, an arrangement that blossomed into something more durable in the months afterwards. The three Americans now comprise – alongside some Brits – the pool of musicians currently operating as The Fall.

Seemingly relishing its chance to start afresh (as did previous Fall albums Extricate (1990) and Levitate (1997)), Reformation Post TLC is themed loosely around new relationships and clean slates, and represents a genuine departure from 2005’s guitar-driven, listener-friendly Fall Heads Roll. Recording in what is clearly a fluid and spontaneous environment, Smith sounds revitalised (and often very amused), delivering his most emphatic vocals in years.

The present line-up contains two bassists, so the album sounds muddy at first, but once we get acclimatised to lengthy pieces like “Reformation!” and “Systematic Abuse”, what comes across is a hypnotic post-punk Hawkwind with latent flashes of Joy Division and Michael Karoli. “I have woken up,” snarls Smith at his critics. “This is Fall sound!”

Poulou’s synthesiser plays a subtle role in this darkly-lit psychedelia, while the album’s undisputed stars are guitarist Tim Presley and propulsive bassists Rob Barbato and Dave ‘The Eagle’ Spurr. Liberated, Smith either free-associates over the top (“Scenario”, “Insult Song”) or times his words like punches (“Fall Sound”). There are some brilliant lines to savour. “You’ve just split up with your long-leg rat chick,” is an immediate favourite.

At 61 minutes, Reformation Post TLC does feel diffuse – but it can’t be accused of lacking variety. Poulou lends her German accent to “The Wright Stuff”, a chirpy tale about a pair of “plastic women’s bosoms” and a strange train journey. Steel yourself, meanwhile, for “Das Boat” – eight minutes of submarine sonar buzzes. This madness is indicative of an abundantly confident Fall, and (gulp) long may it last.

DAVID CAVANAGH

PG Six – Slightly Sorry

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While the acid folk and new psych militia are operating all over America right now, many of the major strategists seem to be based in California. Devendra Banhart currently squats in LA, the extended Comets On Fire fraternity are based in San Francisco, and various dignitaries like Joanna Newsom and Brightblack Morning Light loiter in northern backwaters of the state. As a consequence, the folk noise emanating from the North-Eastern side of America has a lower profile, even if the whole New Weird America schtick was probably birthed somewhere in New England or upstate New York in the mid-‘90s. A key band, back then, was the dazed and sprawling Tower Recordings, who made some hard-to-find albums (2001’s Folk Scene is the one to hunt down) before fragmenting into countless below-the-radar projects. The best of these is PG Six, essentially a singer-songwriter called Pat Gubler who’s based in New York. Gubler has made three solo albums for the Amish label thus far. Mostly, he deals in delicate, slightly Celtic-inflected folk, interspersed with brackish psychedelic passages that privilege his wire-strung harp. It sounds rather esoteric, but 2004’s The Well Of Memory is as pretty and affecting, in an understated way, as any album from the current folk glut. Slightly Sorry, as previewed on Uncut’s recent New Psychedelic Outlaws CD, is quite a different beast. Bert Jansch is often cited as being Neil Young’s favourite guitarist, but precious few records try and embrace their dual influence. This is what Gubler does on Slightly Sorry, a warm and beguiling mix of classic Laurel Canyon songwriting and the woodier vibes of the old world. Consequently, the album opens with “Untitled Micro Mini”, all deft Jansch/Davy Graham fingerpicking, before “The Dance” arrives with distinct echoes of Young circa After The Goldrush. “I’ve Been Travelling”, sung by Helen Rush (another Tower Recordings alumnus) has the pastoral simplicity of Vashti Bunyan. But by the closing “Sweet Music”, Gubler is esconced at the Hammond, tapping into the rustic soul of The Band. There’s a danger here that Gubler could be something of a bloodless gadfly, flitting between hip styles without ever finding a focus. Fortunately, his gentle, enunciated voice (reminiscent of his labelmate, Scottish folk singer Alasdair Roberts) provides a calm heart to Slightly Sorry. Gubler will never have the starchild flamboyance to match West Coast minstrels like Banhart. But on the quiet, he’s every bit as good a songwriter. JOHN MULVEY

While the acid folk and new psych militia are operating all over America right now, many of the major strategists seem to be based in California. Devendra Banhart currently squats in LA, the extended Comets On Fire fraternity are based in San Francisco, and various dignitaries like Joanna Newsom and Brightblack Morning Light loiter in northern backwaters of the state.

As a consequence, the folk noise emanating from the North-Eastern side of America has a lower profile, even if the whole New Weird America schtick was probably birthed somewhere in New England or upstate New York in the mid-‘90s. A key band, back then, was the dazed and sprawling Tower Recordings, who made some hard-to-find albums (2001’s Folk Scene is the one to hunt down) before fragmenting into countless below-the-radar projects.

The best of these is PG Six, essentially a singer-songwriter called Pat Gubler who’s based in New York. Gubler has made three solo albums for the Amish label thus far. Mostly, he deals in delicate, slightly Celtic-inflected folk, interspersed with brackish psychedelic passages that privilege his wire-strung harp. It sounds rather esoteric, but 2004’s The Well Of Memory is as pretty and affecting, in an understated way, as any album from the current folk glut.

Slightly Sorry, as previewed on Uncut’s recent New Psychedelic Outlaws CD, is quite a different beast. Bert Jansch is often cited as being Neil Young’s favourite guitarist, but precious few records try and embrace their dual influence. This is what Gubler does on Slightly Sorry, a warm and beguiling mix of classic Laurel Canyon songwriting and the woodier vibes of the old world.

Consequently, the album opens with “Untitled Micro Mini”, all deft Jansch/Davy Graham fingerpicking, before “The Dance” arrives with distinct echoes of Young circa After The Goldrush. “I’ve Been Travelling”, sung by Helen Rush (another Tower Recordings alumnus) has the pastoral simplicity of Vashti Bunyan. But by the closing “Sweet Music”, Gubler is esconced at the Hammond, tapping into the rustic soul of The Band.

There’s a danger here that Gubler could be something of a bloodless gadfly, flitting between hip styles without ever finding a focus. Fortunately, his gentle, enunciated voice (reminiscent of his labelmate, Scottish folk singer Alasdair Roberts) provides a calm heart to Slightly Sorry. Gubler will never have the starchild flamboyance to match West Coast minstrels like Banhart. But on the quiet, he’s every bit as good a songwriter.

JOHN MULVEY

Joy Division’s Shadowplay Tackled By The Killers

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The Killers have covered the 1979 Joy Division song “Shadowplay” for the soundtrack to the forthcoming biopic, “Control”, about the life of the band's front man Ian Curtis. Based on the biography, “Touching From A Distance”, by Curtis' widow Deborah, the film has been directed by renowned photographer and music-video maker Anton Corbijn. Deborah Curtis has also co-produced “Control”, her character in the film is portrayed by Samantha Morton. As previously reported, New Order have recorded the incidental music for the movie, and are also thought to be re-recording a number of Joy Division tracks. The biopic is set for a September 2007 release. Watch a classic archive pub perfomance of “Shadowplay” by Joy Division, by clicking here now

The Killers have covered the 1979 Joy Division song “Shadowplay” for the soundtrack to the forthcoming biopic, “Control”, about the life of the band’s front man Ian Curtis.

Based on the biography, “Touching From A Distance”, by Curtis’ widow Deborah, the film has been directed by renowned photographer and music-video maker Anton Corbijn.

Deborah Curtis has also co-produced “Control”, her character in the film is portrayed by Samantha Morton.

As previously reported, New Order have recorded the incidental music for the movie, and are also thought to be re-recording a number of Joy Division tracks.

The biopic is set for a September 2007 release.

Watch a classic archive pub perfomance of “Shadowplay” by Joy Division, by clicking here now

Beyond!

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We're often a bit sceptical about reunions, so when the new Dinosaur Jr album turned up at the end of last week, I guess many of us at Uncut feared the worst. "Beyond", we figured, might be a fairly cynical exigency: something to ensure Mascis, Barlow and Murph could have another lucrative season on the festival circuit after their jaunt in 2005. But "Beyond" is actually very good indeed, not least because it seems to start up right where this Dinosaur line-up left off, at the end of 1988's "Bug". All the classic ingredients are in place: that weird mix of hardcore speed and classic rock lethargy; dopey shrugs in lieu of lyrics (has anyone written more unmemorable song titles than J Mascis?); some absolutely shredding solos. Best of all, there's an amazing Lou Barlow song here called "Back To Your Heart". Since the trio split up in '88, Barlow's work fronting Sebadoh and The Folk Implosion proved that he was a much better songwriter than Mascis. But "Back To Your Heart" is a tantalising glimpse of what might have been, had Barlow's tremulous confessionals been backed up by the pure slob energy of Mascis' guitar playing. Kind of sad, in a way. Incidentally, I'm going to try and post here daily about forthcoming releases that've turned up recently at Uncut. Any questions, opinions, constructive abuse etc, please leave a comment and we can talk.

We’re often a bit sceptical about reunions, so when the new Dinosaur Jr album turned up at the end of last week, I guess many of us at Uncut feared the worst.

Trent Reznor Confirms Year Zero

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Nine Inch Nails have confirmed that new studio album, “Year Zero” will be released worldwide on April 17. The industrial band’s website tantalizingly dark and devoid of information about the new record, with only the line “the beginning of the end” written on an empty track listing, surrounded by keyboard strokes. “Year Zero” is NIN’s seventh studio album and is the anticipated follow up to 2005’s “With Teeth.” Trent Reznor and co will also play a string of UK Arena concerts prior to the album’s release, hopefully giving fans a chance to hear a preview of what darkness “Year Zero” contains. NIN have added a new date at London’s Brixton Academy on March 11 – after selling out three nights at the venue. The full UK tour dates are as follows: Manchester, Apollo (February 25/ 26) Glasgow, Academy (28/ March 1) Nottingham, Arena (3) – tickets available Birmingham, Academy (4/5) London, Brixton Academy (7/8/10/11) Wolverhampton, Civic Hall (12) Support on all dates comes from Ladytron All dates except Nottingham, London and Wolverhampton are sold-out. Explore NIN’s creative artist website by clicking here

Nine Inch Nails have confirmed that new studio album, “Year Zero” will be released worldwide on April 17.

The industrial band’s website tantalizingly dark and devoid of information about the new record, with only the line “the beginning of the end” written on an empty track listing, surrounded by keyboard strokes.

“Year Zero” is NIN’s seventh studio album and is the anticipated follow up to 2005’s “With Teeth.”

Trent Reznor and co will also play a string of UK Arena concerts prior to the album’s release, hopefully giving fans a chance to hear a preview of what darkness “Year Zero” contains.

NIN have added a new date at London’s Brixton Academy on March 11 – after selling out three nights at the venue.

The full UK tour dates are as follows:

Manchester, Apollo (February 25/ 26)

Glasgow, Academy (28/ March 1)

Nottingham, Arena (3) – tickets available

Birmingham, Academy (4/5)

London, Brixton Academy (7/8/10/11)

Wolverhampton, Civic Hall (12)

Support on all dates comes from Ladytron

All dates except Nottingham, London and Wolverhampton are sold-out.

Explore NIN’s creative artist website by clicking here