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Let John Lee Hooker Get Your Toes Tapping

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Everyday, 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 of TV shows. Today: See John Lee Hooker sing ‘Maudie’ live at the 1960 Newport Jazz Festival. John Lee Hooker is backed by the fabulous The Muddy Waters Blues Band. The Muddy Waters Blues Band features Otis Spann (piano), Pat Hare (guitar), Francis Clay (drums), Andrew Stephenson (bass), and James Cotton (harmonica). The footage spans the crowd during the show – everyones feet just can’t help but feel the blues. Watch John Lee Hookers performance– by clicking here now Hooker - A John Lee Hooker 4 disc box set is available now through SPV Blue. To see Neil Spencer's 5* review - Click here

Everyday, 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 of TV shows.

Today: See John Lee Hooker sing ‘Maudie’ live at the 1960 Newport Jazz Festival.

John Lee Hooker is backed by the fabulous The Muddy Waters Blues Band.

The Muddy Waters Blues Band features Otis Spann (piano), Pat Hare (guitar), Francis Clay (drums), Andrew Stephenson (bass), and James Cotton (harmonica).

The footage spans the crowd during the show – everyones feet just can’t help but feel the blues.

Watch John Lee Hookers performance– by clicking here now

Hooker – A John Lee Hooker 4 disc box set is available now through SPV Blue.

To see Neil Spencer’s 5* review – Click here

Field Music – Tones Of Town

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Field Music's gorgeous, audacious 2005 debut wound up eclipsed by the jerky pop success of north-east comrades Futureheads and Maxïmo Park. Following last year's backstory comp Write Your Own History, their second album proper takes them ahead of the pack. Emboldened by a year on the road, they're now a glorious band – supple as a jazz trio, punctual as a chamber troupe – and TOT plays to their new strengths, augmenting tricky prettiness with bold vigour. Simultaneously more pop (“A House Is Not A Home”) and more extreme (“Give It Lose It Take It”) than their debut, it sets the benchmark for – what shall we call it? British Prog Pop? - in 2007. STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

Field Music’s gorgeous, audacious 2005 debut wound up eclipsed by the jerky pop success of north-east comrades Futureheads and Maxïmo Park. Following last year’s backstory comp Write Your Own History, their second album proper takes them ahead of the pack.

Emboldened by a year on the road, they’re now a glorious band – supple as a jazz trio, punctual as a chamber troupe – and TOT plays to their new strengths, augmenting tricky prettiness with bold vigour. Simultaneously more pop (“A House Is Not A Home”) and more extreme (“Give It Lose It Take It”) than their debut, it sets the benchmark for – what shall we call it? British Prog Pop? – in 2007.

STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

The Decemberists – The Crane Wife

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Perhaps the most literate of the current crop of four-eyed front-geeks, Colin Meloy enjoys applying his wry wit to arcane subject matter, like the Japanese folk tale from which he’s derived The Crane Wife’s three-part title suite. The Oregon band’s fourth full-length, a real grower, finds Meloy and his muscle – guitarist (etc) Chris Funk, who pulverises tweeness in a stroke, and a drummer named Moon (first name John) – twisting the esoteric into arresting and complex new shapes. The immediate grabber is “The Perfect Crime #2”, a gleeful rave-up that picks up where “Life During Wartime” left off, adding liberal doses of irony-free high-hat and cowbells. BUD SCOPPA

Perhaps the most literate of the current crop of four-eyed front-geeks, Colin Meloy enjoys applying his wry wit to arcane subject matter, like the Japanese folk tale from which he’s derived The Crane Wife’s three-part title suite.

The Oregon band’s fourth full-length, a real grower, finds Meloy and his muscle – guitarist (etc) Chris Funk, who pulverises tweeness in a stroke, and a drummer named Moon (first name John) – twisting the esoteric into arresting and complex new shapes.

The immediate grabber is “The Perfect Crime #2”, a gleeful rave-up that picks up where “Life During Wartime” left off, adding liberal doses of irony-free high-hat and cowbells.

BUD SCOPPA

The Shins – Wincing The Night Away

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Oh, Natalie Portman: Such a blessing and a curse. When she played “New Slang” for Zach Braff in Garden State and announced “The Shins will change your life,” she both propelled the New Mexico quartet into indie-rock infamy (making them—through the combined sales of their 2001 debut Oh, Inverted World and 2003’s Chutes Too Narrow—Sub Pop’s biggest-selling act since Nirvana) and set the expectations for their next record unfeasibly high. Perhaps for this reason, the songs on Wincing The Night Away are more akin to the chiming, heart-fluttering surrealism of “New Slang” than to any of the more acoustic and spare tracks on Chutes. And while they might be less immediate, they are ultimately more indelible. Wincing isn’t so much a departure as it is an all-out augmentation, taking the best things about The Shins and amplifying them: the sunny, impeccably crafted tra-la-la pop songwriting that’s always slightly spooky and off-kilter; the band’s propensity to fill the nooks and crannies of a song with hooks just as compelling as the chorus; and James Mercer’s knack for packing untold emotional resonance into even the slightest vocal key change. Opener “Sleeping Lessons” wafts in on a delicate keyboard arpeggio, then explodes into a squall of lickety-split galloping guitars and Mercer’s plaintive, liberating, “You’re not obliged to swallow anything you despise”. First single “Phantom Limb” offers gorgeous, sky-scraping melancholy driven along with crisp tambourines. But there’s serious innovation going on, too — the wonderfully strange “Sea Legs” combines a hip-hop beat and a Morrissey-esque melody, and in “Red Rabbit” tinkling piano and acoustic guitar tiptoe alongside keening woodwinds. Everything is awash in shimmering production, harmonic flourishes, and rich, unexpected textures. The Shins have always had an underdog charm, a certain cerebral nerdiness that counterbalances even their most lilting, overt pop impulses. With Wincing The Night Away, they’ve met the age-old challenge of how to evolve without losing any of what made them so lovable to begin with. APRIL LONG

Oh, Natalie Portman: Such a blessing and a curse. When she played “New Slang” for Zach Braff in Garden State and announced “The Shins will change your life,” she both propelled the New Mexico quartet into indie-rock infamy (making them—through the combined sales of their 2001 debut Oh, Inverted World and 2003’s Chutes Too Narrow—Sub Pop’s biggest-selling act since Nirvana) and set the expectations for their next record unfeasibly high. Perhaps for this reason, the songs on Wincing The Night Away are more akin to the chiming, heart-fluttering surrealism of “New Slang” than to any of the more acoustic and spare tracks on Chutes. And while they might be less immediate, they are ultimately more indelible.

Wincing isn’t so much a departure as it is an all-out augmentation, taking the best things about The Shins and amplifying them: the sunny, impeccably crafted tra-la-la pop songwriting that’s always slightly spooky and off-kilter; the band’s propensity to fill the nooks and crannies of a song with hooks just as compelling as the chorus; and James Mercer’s knack for packing untold emotional resonance into even the slightest vocal key change.

Opener “Sleeping Lessons” wafts in on a delicate keyboard arpeggio, then explodes into a squall of lickety-split galloping guitars and Mercer’s plaintive, liberating, “You’re not obliged to swallow anything you despise”.

First single “Phantom Limb” offers gorgeous, sky-scraping melancholy driven along with crisp tambourines. But there’s serious innovation going on, too — the wonderfully strange “Sea Legs” combines a hip-hop beat and a Morrissey-esque melody, and in “Red Rabbit” tinkling piano and acoustic guitar tiptoe alongside keening woodwinds. Everything is awash in shimmering production, harmonic flourishes, and rich, unexpected textures.

The Shins have always had an underdog charm, a certain cerebral nerdiness that counterbalances even their most lilting, overt pop impulses. With Wincing The Night Away, they’ve met the age-old challenge of how to evolve without losing any of what made them so lovable to begin with.

APRIL LONG

Klaxons – Myths Of The Near Future

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Amid last year's clamour to scramble aboard the "nu-rave" bandwagon, one crucial fact was wilfully overlooked: that the garish scene's instigators, Klaxons, are more EMF than Altern-8. A young and photogenic three-piece from south London, Klaxons wear hoodies branded with smiley faces and smear their melodic art-rock with the flourescent goo of vintage rave. Sirens and cheers introduce the single "Atlantis To Interzone", for example. Signed for a silly sum after a handful of gigs, Simon Taylor, Jamie Reynolds and James Righton are the zeitgeist MySpaced, 2007's top buzz band, and, yes, teenage fans do wave glowsticks at their gigs. To some seasoned observers, it's one flashback too many. Scrape away the DayGlo cosmetics, however, and Klaxons bristle with energy and ideas. They gave white-gloved knuckle-dragger "The Bouncer” by Kicks Like A Mule an inspired indie makeover on an early b-side (on Klaxons' timeline, "early" means ten months ago). And their romp through Grace's 1995 house anthem "Not Over Yet", a live favourite but one of the weaker moments on this intrepid debut, is audibly executed for love, not irony's sake. If Klaxons are galvanised by the blissfully naïve, let-me-be-your-fantasy Utopian energy rush of early-'90s rave, then (i)Myths Of The Near Future(i) is all the better for it. This is a marvellous gonzo pop record in the vein of Super Furry Animals' (i)Fuzzy Logic(i), a syrupy blitz of Bowie, Blur and Ballard that hits the ground galloping on "Two Receivers". The opener mimics the rumble of Leftfield's "Phat Planet" before setting the album's loopy agenda with a dreamy "Strings to your bow/ Run through the flow," chorus. There follows a brace of remarkably tuneful three-minute hits-to-be – "Golden Skans", "Totem On The Timeline", "Isle Of Her", "As Above So Below" – a grungy blend of Visage and the Pixies kneaded into shape by James Ford, the producer responsible for transforming Klaxons' clumsy collages into striking pop-art. Quaint though the notion might seem, Klaxons are hellbent on pushing things forward, regardless of where they end up. With this enjoyably frantic debut, they're off to a fine start. PIERS MARTIN

Amid last year’s clamour to scramble aboard the “nu-rave” bandwagon, one crucial fact was wilfully overlooked: that the garish scene’s instigators, Klaxons, are more EMF than Altern-8. A young and photogenic three-piece from south London, Klaxons wear hoodies branded with smiley faces and smear their melodic art-rock with the flourescent goo of vintage rave. Sirens and cheers introduce the single “Atlantis To Interzone”, for example. Signed for a silly sum after a handful of gigs, Simon Taylor, Jamie Reynolds and James Righton are the zeitgeist MySpaced, 2007’s top buzz band, and, yes, teenage fans do wave glowsticks at their gigs. To some seasoned observers, it’s one flashback too many.

Scrape away the DayGlo cosmetics, however, and Klaxons bristle with energy and ideas. They gave white-gloved knuckle-dragger “The Bouncer” by Kicks Like A Mule an inspired indie makeover on an early b-side (on Klaxons’ timeline, “early” means ten months ago). And their romp through Grace’s 1995 house anthem “Not Over Yet”, a live favourite but one of the weaker moments on this intrepid debut, is audibly executed for love, not irony’s sake.

If Klaxons are galvanised by the blissfully naïve, let-me-be-your-fantasy Utopian energy rush of early-’90s rave, then (i)Myths Of The Near Future(i) is all the better for it. This is a marvellous gonzo pop record in the vein of Super Furry Animals’ (i)Fuzzy Logic(i), a syrupy blitz of Bowie, Blur and Ballard that hits the ground galloping on “Two Receivers”. The opener mimics the rumble of Leftfield’s “Phat Planet” before setting the album’s loopy agenda with a dreamy “Strings to your bow/ Run through the flow,” chorus.

There follows a brace of remarkably tuneful three-minute hits-to-be – “Golden Skans”, “Totem On The Timeline”, “Isle Of Her”, “As Above So Below” – a grungy blend of Visage and the Pixies kneaded into shape by James Ford, the producer responsible for transforming Klaxons’ clumsy collages into striking pop-art. Quaint though the notion might seem, Klaxons are hellbent on pushing things forward, regardless of where they end up. With this enjoyably frantic debut, they’re off to a fine start.

PIERS MARTIN

Black Book

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Rarely one to be troubled by excess, Paul Verhoeven has pulled out all the stops for his first Dutch film in more than two decades (and duly provided his homeland with its most expensive film ever). A bouncy, high-gloss epic set during the Second World War, with Dutch Jew Rachel Stein joining the Resistance after her family is killed by the Nazis. Disguising herself as an Aryan blonde named Ellis de Vries, she seduces German officer Müntze, and takes a job in his offices, there able to pass privileged information to her comrades; but friends and foes soon prove tricky to distinguish. Black Book plays out at breakneck pace. So seductive and gripping is its Old Hollywood-style tale of disguises and double-crosses, betrayal and sacrifice, forbidden love affairs and concealed microphones, that its more ludicrous plot twists are easily forgivable in the name of sheer enjoyment. And speaking of seduction, Verhoeven has also armed his film with a femme fatale of quite awesome firepower. Well known as a stage actress in her native Holland, Carice van Houten is stunning as Rachel/Ellis: as witty, sharp, powerful and poised as she is relentlessly physically alluring. Her performance drives the film, lending wry awareness to some of Verhoeven's more dubious indulgences (was it truly necessary, one wonders, for Rachel to bleach her pubic hair in the name of concealing her Jewishness?), and securing the emotional authenticity of even the film's most befuddling twists and turns. Also impressive is Verhoeven's recognition of the moral ambiguity that rules in time of war. Black Book nimbly resists the customary delineation between moustache-twirling pantomime Nazis and pure-hearted freedom fighters with a rogue's gallery of flawed and complex individuals, motivated by a confused mix of innocence, desperation, self-interest and ideology. (Oh, and lust. A lot of lust.) Some of the film's boldest and most moving moments occur when the war has ended, and Nazi sympathisers are being hunted through the streets of The Hague. As gleeful humiliation is heaped upon suspected collaborators, we see lessons unlearned, morality abandoned, and evil birthing further evil. The film's gallop through the shady, secret underworld of martyrs, profiteers and double agents is thus denied a neat, conventionally happy ending; consciences are left unclean, injustices unresolved. For all its feisty sense of fun, and for all the breathless pleasures that it offers to its audiences, Black Book is too dark and smart to let its characters fade out into a soft-focus happy-ever-after. HANNAH McGILL

Rarely one to be troubled by excess, Paul Verhoeven has pulled out all the stops for his first Dutch film in more than two decades (and duly provided his homeland with its most expensive film ever). A bouncy, high-gloss epic set during the Second World War, with Dutch Jew Rachel Stein joining the Resistance after her family is killed by the Nazis. Disguising herself as an Aryan blonde named Ellis de Vries, she seduces German officer Müntze, and takes a job in his offices, there able to pass privileged information to her comrades; but friends and foes soon prove tricky to distinguish.

Black Book plays out at breakneck pace. So seductive and gripping is its Old Hollywood-style tale of disguises and double-crosses, betrayal and sacrifice, forbidden love affairs and concealed microphones, that its more ludicrous plot twists are easily forgivable in the name of sheer enjoyment. And speaking of seduction, Verhoeven has also armed his film with a femme fatale of quite awesome firepower. Well known as a stage actress in her native Holland, Carice van Houten is stunning as Rachel/Ellis: as witty, sharp, powerful and poised as she is relentlessly physically alluring. Her performance drives the film, lending wry awareness to some of Verhoeven’s more dubious indulgences (was it truly necessary, one wonders, for Rachel to bleach her pubic hair in the name of concealing her Jewishness?), and securing the emotional authenticity of even the film’s most befuddling twists and turns.

Also impressive is Verhoeven’s recognition of the moral ambiguity that rules in time of war. Black Book nimbly resists the customary delineation between moustache-twirling pantomime Nazis and pure-hearted freedom fighters with a rogue’s gallery of flawed and complex individuals, motivated by a confused mix of innocence, desperation, self-interest and ideology. (Oh, and lust. A lot of lust.) Some of the film’s boldest and most moving moments occur when the war has ended, and Nazi sympathisers are being hunted through the streets of The Hague. As gleeful humiliation is heaped upon suspected collaborators, we see lessons unlearned, morality abandoned, and evil birthing further evil.

The film’s gallop through the shady, secret underworld of martyrs, profiteers and double agents is thus denied a neat, conventionally happy ending; consciences are left unclean, injustices unresolved. For all its feisty sense of fun, and for all the breathless pleasures that it offers to its audiences, Black Book is too dark and smart to let its characters fade out into a soft-focus happy-ever-after.

HANNAH McGILL

The Last King Of Scotland

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The feature debut of documentary maker Kevin MacDonald (One Day In September, Touching The Void) is a lively affair set in Seventies' Uganda, detailing the fictional relationship between young Scottish doctor Nicholas Garrigan and Idi Amin, the flamboyant and homicidally paranoid African dictator whose secret police murdered at least 300,000 suspected political opponents between 1971 and '79. Following a stint in the jungle with fellow volunteer Gillian Anderson (svelte, blonde and barely recognizable from her Scully days) Garrigan (McAvoy) finds himself seduced by the wealth, power and dangerous charisma of surprise Scots-ophile Amin (Whitaker, slick with sweat and channeling both Brando's Kurtz and his own bone-crunching footballer Charles Jefferson from Fast Times At Ridgemont High). Before long, and much to his surprise, Garrigan is soon adopted as Amin's most trusted advisor. A canny political satire at heart, and one that expertly sustains a sensation of impending doom, this film of Giles Foden's novel unwisely upends its base for forays into romance, via Garrigan's affair with the most comely of Amin's many wives, and foreign intrigue. But the performances are uniformly awards worthy and Whitaker's will be legendary. MARK SPITZ

The feature debut of documentary maker Kevin MacDonald (One Day In September, Touching The Void) is a lively affair set in Seventies’ Uganda, detailing the fictional relationship between young Scottish doctor Nicholas Garrigan and Idi Amin, the flamboyant and homicidally paranoid African dictator whose secret police murdered at least 300,000 suspected political opponents between 1971 and ’79.

Following a stint in the jungle with fellow volunteer Gillian Anderson (svelte, blonde and barely recognizable from her Scully days) Garrigan (McAvoy) finds himself seduced by the wealth, power and dangerous charisma of surprise Scots-ophile Amin (Whitaker, slick with sweat and channeling both Brando’s Kurtz and his own bone-crunching footballer Charles Jefferson from Fast Times At Ridgemont High). Before long, and much to his surprise, Garrigan is soon adopted as Amin’s most trusted advisor.

A canny political satire at heart, and one that expertly sustains a sensation of impending doom, this film of Giles Foden’s novel unwisely upends its base for forays into romance, via Garrigan’s affair with the most comely of Amin’s many wives, and foreign intrigue. But the performances are uniformly awards worthy and Whitaker’s will be legendary.

MARK SPITZ

Children Of Men

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Based on PD James's novel, Alfonso Cuarón's futuristic feature is one of the darkest films of 2006, and arguably one of the most convincing British dystopia dramas ever. The scenario is a transformed Britain, only two decades from now, in a period when no children have been born for 18 years. With humanity plunged into despair, society crumbles worldwide, while Britain has become an Orwellian fortress society, with immigrants rounded up and transported to brutal dead-end prison camps. Clive Owen plays Theo, a weary former radical whose militant ex-wife (Julianne Moore) coerces him into finding safe passage for a young black refugee woman, Kee (Claire Hope Ashitey) - with whom, miraculously, hope for the future might lie. But the journey towards redemption leads via hell, through the heart of a Guantanamo-like camp situated in Bexhill-on-Sea - a considerably more menacing place in 2027 then it is now. Children of Men is an arresting mix of road movie, breakneck adventure, science-fiction dystopia, and very un-British art film: the final sequences have a looming darkness that equals the doom-laden cinema of Bela Tarr. Cuarón departs from the somewhat staid original novel to produce a darker and even more coherent vision of a future Britain - and by extension, a future world - that's literally running out of tomorrow. The film's first section fills us in with extraordinary concision on what's gone wrong with the world, and watching it on DVD should help eagle-eyed viewers sift through the masses of information that Cuaron provides: this is a film in which every half-glimpsed poster, TV ad, news headline has its story to tell. Once the film hits the road, the storytelling brio of Cuaron and his Director of Photgraphy Emmanuel Lubezki come into their own. The scene in which Theo and co are ambushed as they drive down a country road is extraordinary: as they're fired on by bike-riding gunmen, then escape from police pursuit, you're so caught up in the action that you could easily miss the fact that everything is done as a single shot from inside the car, with the camera swivelling frantically to catch the action. Similarly, the hand-held long takes of the climactic battle scenes, as the Bexhill camp becomes a war zone, are breathtaking in their intensity. But this is also a film with a great deal of tenderness and humour. Clive Owen's brooding, beaten-down hero may seem something of a cypher at first, but gradually Theo's hard-bitten exterior reveals its tender cracks, and he emerges as the sort of moody, thinking tough guy that Owen - as we saw in Croupier - excels at playing. The scene-stealer, however, is Michael Caine, giving one of his richest performances as Theo's friend Jasper, a spliff-waving diehard radical, embodying old-school defiance and satirical joie de vivre; you can't imagine anyone but Caine bringing quite such curmudgeonly mischief to the role. It's a long leap from Alfonso Cuarón's last gig (Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban) to here, and even further from his Mexican coming-of-age travelogue Y tu mamá tambien, but this is arguably his most confident film yet. Despite a more-or-less upbeat ending, you won't exactly emerge glowing with good cheer, but that's as it should be. Children of Men does what the best dystopia drama should do: it makes you look at the world around you and shudder. JONATHAN ROMNEY To hear what actor Clive Owen has to say about starring in Children Of Men - click here to read an Uncut Q & A

Based on PD James’s novel, Alfonso Cuarón’s futuristic feature is one of the darkest films of 2006, and arguably one of the most convincing British dystopia dramas ever. The scenario is a transformed Britain, only two decades from now, in a period when no children have been born for 18 years. With humanity plunged into despair, society crumbles worldwide, while Britain has become an Orwellian fortress society, with immigrants rounded up and transported to brutal dead-end prison camps. Clive Owen plays Theo, a weary former radical whose militant ex-wife (Julianne Moore) coerces him into finding safe passage for a young black refugee woman, Kee (Claire Hope Ashitey) – with whom, miraculously, hope for the future might lie. But the journey towards redemption leads via hell, through the heart of a Guantanamo-like camp situated in Bexhill-on-Sea – a considerably more menacing place in 2027 then it is now.

Children of Men is an arresting mix of road movie, breakneck adventure, science-fiction dystopia, and very un-British art film: the final sequences have a looming darkness that equals the doom-laden cinema of Bela Tarr. Cuarón departs from the somewhat staid original novel to produce a darker and even more coherent vision of a future Britain – and by extension, a future world – that’s literally running out of tomorrow. The film’s first section fills us in with extraordinary concision on what’s gone wrong with the world, and watching it on DVD should help eagle-eyed viewers sift through the masses of information that Cuaron provides: this is a film in which every half-glimpsed poster, TV ad, news headline has its story to tell.

Once the film hits the road, the storytelling brio of Cuaron and his Director of Photgraphy Emmanuel Lubezki come into their own. The scene in which Theo and co are ambushed as they drive down a country road is extraordinary: as they’re fired on by bike-riding gunmen, then escape from police pursuit, you’re so caught up in the action that you could easily miss the fact that everything is done as a single shot from inside the car, with the camera swivelling frantically to catch the action. Similarly, the hand-held long takes of the climactic battle scenes, as the Bexhill camp becomes a war zone, are breathtaking in their intensity.

But this is also a film with a great deal of tenderness and humour. Clive Owen’s brooding, beaten-down hero may seem something of a cypher at first, but gradually Theo’s hard-bitten exterior reveals its tender cracks, and he emerges as the sort of moody, thinking tough guy that Owen – as we saw in Croupier – excels at playing. The scene-stealer, however, is Michael Caine, giving one of his richest performances as Theo’s friend Jasper, a spliff-waving diehard radical, embodying old-school defiance and satirical joie de vivre; you can’t imagine anyone but Caine bringing quite such curmudgeonly mischief to the role.

It’s a long leap from Alfonso Cuarón’s last gig (Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban) to here, and even further from his Mexican coming-of-age travelogue Y tu mamá tambien, but this is arguably his most confident film yet. Despite a more-or-less upbeat ending, you won’t exactly emerge glowing with good cheer, but that’s as it should be. Children of Men does what the best dystopia drama should do: it makes you look at the world around you and shudder.

JONATHAN ROMNEY

To hear what actor Clive Owen has to say about starring in Children Of Men – click here to read an Uncut Q & A

Clive Owen Q & A

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UNCUT: How far from real life do you think this is? OWEN: Not far. I think that is the point of the movie. I think it is a very clever way of discussing things that are happening now. It is a film set in the future where the future is like now - but worse. It’s almost a warning that we have to be careful about where we are heading. UNCUT:But there is also the feeling of hope, how important is that? OWEN: It’s hugely important. That’s really what the film is about. There’s this sort of thing that has crept into everybody’s life now. We feel pretty hopeless about things and we’ve kinda given in to it. This film is about hope being reawakened. There’s this thing called The Human Project which is the one safe place. Everything else is chaotic, ugly, aggressive and awful. But there is this one thing that no one in the film knows for sure if it really exists. It’s a symbol of hope, a place where there’s good people and where good things can happen. The Human Project is a hugely symbolic thing in the film. UNCUT: Can you tell us about the mental journey your character goes through? OWEN: He’s a very unusual lead character for a movie, because for the first part of the movie he doesn’t want to be there. He’s dragged into the situation. Any opportunity to bail out, he would. Then he finds himself in a situation where he literally has the future of the world in his hands - and suddenly there’s a glimpse of hope and potential, and he wakes up and becomes engaged with the world again. To read Uncut's 4* review of Children Of Men - click here for Mark Spitz's piece

UNCUT: How far from real life do you think this is?

OWEN: Not far. I think that is the point of the movie. I think it is a very clever way of discussing things that are happening now. It is a film set in the future where the future is like now – but worse. It’s almost a warning that we have to be careful about where we are heading.

UNCUT:But there is also the feeling of hope, how important is that?

OWEN: It’s hugely important. That’s really what the film is about. There’s this sort of thing that has crept into everybody’s life now. We feel pretty hopeless about things and we’ve kinda given in to it. This film is about hope being reawakened. There’s this thing called The Human Project which is the one safe place. Everything else is chaotic, ugly, aggressive and awful. But there is this one thing that no one in the film knows for sure if it really exists. It’s a symbol of hope, a place where there’s good people and where good things can happen. The Human Project is a hugely symbolic thing in the film.

UNCUT: Can you tell us about the mental journey your character goes through?

OWEN: He’s a very unusual lead character for a movie, because for the first part of the movie he doesn’t want to be there. He’s dragged into the situation. Any opportunity to bail out, he would. Then he finds himself in a situation where he literally has the future of the world in his hands – and suddenly there’s a glimpse of hope and potential, and he wakes up and becomes engaged with the world again.

To read Uncut’s 4* review of Children Of Men – click here for Mark Spitz’s piece

The Sopranos – Season 6 – Vol 1

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With The Sopranos, what you see is not what you get. In fact, it's hard to imagine another drama so dedicated to the art of lying. Throughout its six seasons, there's scarcely a scene in which the characters' words could be taken at face value. David Chase's series is about the Mob, yes, but mostly it's about untruths and their consequences. That, and selfishness. And greed. And self-deception. And denial. And death. The values of the average American family. Small wonder Tony needed therapy. At the outset, when Chase decided to retool Scorsese's GoodFellas as a morality play about the family affairs of the Mob, Tony was a Mafioso of the middle-rank, his ambitions held in check by Uncle Junior, while his abusive mother yanked the chains of his mental stability. This season begins with everything under control. Tony is boss. His mother is long dead, and Uncle Junior is paddling on the pebbled shores of dementia. Tony's marriage to Carmela has been repaired - she will swallow her conscience in return for a new house - and the family prevails. It's still midlife, but the crisis has been quelled. Then, blam! Tony ends up in a coma, prompting power plays among his soldiers. The struggle is unseemly, but it does offer extended airtime to some of the supporting characters. The elegantly-coiffured Sil - played like a Tex Avery cartoon by Steven Van Zandt - steps up, but quickly discovers that ambition is a curse. Vito (Joe Gannascoli) - his confidence stoked by the success of a recent diet - looks well-placed for promotion, but is hampered by some unwise sexual adventures. Being a "fenucca" is not a smart move for a made man, and neither is it a good idea to squabble with the irascible Paulie Walnuts. Paulie's sense of injustice is almost thermonuclear, but Tony Sirico plays him with such tender self-mockery that he comes across as a lonely soul, rather than the beast his actions might suggest. The therapist, Dr Melfi, used to operate as a kind of secular priest, offering Tony a kind of confession without guilt, but she is less central here. The role of Carmela, is more significant. Apart from the occasional intervention by her daughter, Meadow, Tony's wife is the only character capable of imagining a different way of life. On vacation in Paris, she visits the remains of some old Roman baths, and turns tearful: "We worry so much, sometimes it seems like that's all we do. But in the end it just gets washed away." But even the saintly Carmela has her price. And then there's Tony: a vicious, violent thug who thinks of nothing but his own gratification. So what's not to like? James Gandolfini has the brutal charisma of Jack Nicholson, but he's also capable of looking boyish and pathetic, or merely dissolute, as he shuffles to the fridge in his white towelling robe. He is physically diminished, but that only makes him less predictable, more dangerous. Chase has faced some criticism that Series 6 is slow, and that nothing significant happens. The first charge has some validity, but the measured pace is a mark of quality. The opening three episodes do offer a challenge to the viewer, but they're works of bold invention, with half of the action unfurling from inside the imagination of the comatose Tony. Not since Dennis Potter's The Singing Detective has there been a drama in which the storyline was hitched so obviously to the delusions of the central character. It's confusing, but it works, and the effect isn't based on suspense. Watch it twice and you can appreciate the quality of the writing, the richness of the language, and the way every action is prefigured by another event. The script is springloaded with consequences, and the prevailing mood is one of doom. As a piece, Season 6 is incomplete. These four discs house the first 12 episodes. The final eight are due in Spring 2007, and a judgment on the conclusion of the series will have to wait. As it stands, everything is finely poised. The end, surely, is nigh. The signs are all around that the old ways don't count for anything in corporate America. Even the priorities of the Feds have changed. They're now more interested with the War on Terror than organised crime. It's all good, and it's all bad. Best moment? The scene where Christopher and his scuzzy pal Corky inject heroin, while Fred Neil's mournful "Dolphins" plays on the soundtrack. Cut to Tony, in therapy, lying, as always, to sexy Dr Melfi. "Every day is a gift," he tells her. "It just ... doesn't have to be a pair of socks." ALASTAIR McKAY To hear what the writer/producer has to say about The Sopranos Series Six - Click here to read a Q & A with David Chase

With The Sopranos, what you see is not what you get. In fact, it’s hard to imagine another drama so dedicated to the art of lying. Throughout its six seasons, there’s scarcely a scene in which the characters’ words could be taken at face value. David Chase’s series is about the Mob, yes, but mostly it’s about untruths and their consequences. That, and selfishness. And greed. And self-deception. And denial. And death. The values of the average American family. Small wonder Tony needed therapy.

At the outset, when Chase decided to retool Scorsese’s GoodFellas as a morality play about the family affairs of the Mob, Tony was a Mafioso of the middle-rank, his ambitions held in check by Uncle Junior, while his abusive mother yanked the chains of his mental stability.

This season begins with everything under control. Tony is boss. His mother is long dead, and Uncle Junior is paddling on the pebbled shores of dementia. Tony’s marriage to Carmela has been repaired – she will swallow her conscience in return for a new house – and the family prevails. It’s still midlife, but the crisis has been quelled. Then, blam! Tony ends up in a coma, prompting power plays among his soldiers.

The struggle is unseemly, but it does offer extended airtime to some of the supporting characters. The elegantly-coiffured Sil – played like a Tex Avery cartoon by Steven Van Zandt – steps up, but quickly discovers that ambition is a curse. Vito (Joe Gannascoli) – his confidence stoked by the success of a recent diet – looks well-placed for promotion, but is hampered by some unwise sexual adventures. Being a “fenucca” is not a smart move for a made man, and neither is it a good idea to squabble with the irascible Paulie Walnuts. Paulie’s sense of injustice is almost thermonuclear, but Tony Sirico plays him with such tender self-mockery that he comes across as a lonely soul, rather than the beast his actions might suggest.

The therapist, Dr Melfi, used to operate as a kind of secular priest, offering Tony a kind of confession without guilt, but she is less central here. The role of Carmela, is more significant. Apart from the occasional intervention by her daughter, Meadow, Tony’s wife is the only character capable of imagining a different way of life. On vacation in Paris, she visits the remains of some old Roman baths, and turns tearful: “We worry so much, sometimes it seems like that’s all we do. But in the end it just gets washed away.” But even the saintly Carmela has her price.

And then there’s Tony: a vicious, violent thug who thinks of nothing but his own gratification. So what’s not to like? James Gandolfini has the brutal charisma of Jack Nicholson, but he’s also capable of looking boyish and pathetic, or merely dissolute, as he shuffles to the fridge in his white towelling robe. He is physically diminished, but that only makes him less predictable, more dangerous.

Chase has faced some criticism that Series 6 is slow, and that nothing significant happens. The first charge has some validity, but the measured pace is a mark of quality. The opening three episodes do offer a challenge to the viewer, but they’re works of bold invention, with half of the action unfurling from inside the imagination of the comatose Tony. Not since Dennis Potter’s The Singing Detective has there been a drama in which the storyline was hitched so obviously to the delusions of the central character.

It’s confusing, but it works, and the effect isn’t based on suspense. Watch it twice and you can appreciate the quality of the writing, the richness of the language, and the way every action is prefigured by another event. The script is springloaded with consequences, and the prevailing mood is one of doom.

As a piece, Season 6 is incomplete. These four discs house the first 12 episodes. The final eight are due in Spring 2007, and a judgment on the conclusion of the series will have to wait. As it stands, everything is finely poised.

The end, surely, is nigh. The signs are all around that the old ways don’t count for anything in corporate America. Even the priorities of the Feds have changed. They’re now more interested with the War on Terror than organised crime.

It’s all good, and it’s all bad. Best moment? The scene where Christopher and his scuzzy pal Corky inject heroin, while Fred Neil’s mournful “Dolphins” plays on the soundtrack. Cut to Tony, in therapy, lying, as always, to sexy Dr Melfi. “Every day is a gift,” he tells her. “It just … doesn’t have to be a pair of socks.”

ALASTAIR McKAY

To hear what the writer/producer has to say about The Sopranos Series Six – Click here to read a Q & A with David Chase

David Chase Q & A

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UNCUT: Tony seems indecisive – why is that? CHASE: If you want to believe that there’s a reality to Tony, that he’s intelligent, that he’s an effective gang boss, there would be times when he would not act on his destructive impulses. He’s also diplomatic. He’s a statesman. He has more than one tool in his toolbox. If he didn’t, we wouldn’t still be on the air. You could have him blasting away at everything in sight with a gun, but it would be a short-term fix. UNCUT: Who is your favourite character? CHASE: One of the keys to the writing of this show is that everyone’s thinking about themselves all the time. There’s a tremendous amount of narcissism and self-involvement. I would say that Junior is all the writers’ favourite character to write. He’s completely out there. It’s like writing a six-year-old child. He doesn’t hold anything back. UNCUT: What can we read into the ending of Season 6? CHASE: Some people have said it was a sentimental happy ending. How you can look at this scene and say things are happy I have no idea. In the life of the Sopranos we’ve seen that human life is cheap. It doesn’t seem like an optimistic Christmas card to me. To read Uncut's 5* review of The Soprano's Series 6 Vol 1 - Click here

UNCUT: Tony seems indecisive – why is that?

CHASE: If you want to believe that there’s a reality to Tony, that he’s intelligent, that he’s an effective gang boss, there would be times when he would not act on his destructive impulses. He’s also diplomatic. He’s a statesman. He has more than one tool in his toolbox. If he didn’t, we wouldn’t still be on the air. You could have him blasting away at everything in sight with a gun, but it would be a short-term fix.

UNCUT: Who is your favourite character?

CHASE: One of the keys to the writing of this show is that everyone’s thinking about themselves all the time. There’s a tremendous amount of narcissism and self-involvement. I would say that Junior is all the writers’ favourite character to write. He’s completely out there. It’s like writing a six-year-old child. He doesn’t hold anything back.

UNCUT: What can we read into the ending of Season 6?

CHASE: Some people have said it was a sentimental happy ending. How you can look at this scene and say things are happy I have no idea. In the life of the Sopranos we’ve seen that human life is cheap. It doesn’t seem like an optimistic Christmas card to me.

To read Uncut’s 5* review of The Soprano’s Series 6 Vol 1 – Click here

Lee And Nancy Get Gothic Makeover

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The Lee Hazlewood and Nancy Sinatra classic ‘Summer Wine’ has been given a gothic makeover by goth metaller Ville Valo and Polish singer Natalia Avelon. ‘Summer Wine’ originally appeared on the 1996 Reprise album ‘Nancy In London,’ and was just one of many commercially successful duets with Lee Hazlewood. The new version of the track by goth-metal band HIM's enigmatic frontman Ville Valo and Avelon is feautured in a forthcoming German film Das Wilde Liben (English title: Eight Miles High) - a biopic about German model and sixties sex symbol Uschi Obermaier. HIM began their career as a covers band their debut studio album contained pop-metal versions of Chris Isaak's "Wicked Game" and Blue Öyster Cult's "(Don't Fear) The Reaper". ‘Summer Wine’ is due for release on February 27 through Reprise. A trailer for Eight Miles High, which is yet to be scheduled for a UK release, can be viewed at by clicking here

The Lee Hazlewood and Nancy Sinatra classic ‘Summer Wine’ has been given a gothic makeover by goth metaller Ville Valo and Polish singer Natalia Avelon.

‘Summer Wine’ originally appeared on the 1996 Reprise album ‘Nancy In London,’ and was just one of many commercially successful duets with Lee Hazlewood.

The new version of the track by goth-metal band HIM’s enigmatic frontman Ville Valo and Avelon is feautured in a forthcoming German film Das Wilde Liben (English title: Eight Miles High) – a biopic about German model and sixties sex symbol Uschi Obermaier.

HIM began their career as a covers band their debut studio album contained pop-metal versions of Chris Isaak’s “Wicked Game” and Blue Öyster Cult’s “(Don’t Fear) The Reaper”.

‘Summer Wine’ is due for release on February 27 through Reprise.

A trailer for Eight Miles High, which is yet to be scheduled for a UK release, can be viewed at by clicking here

Watch Iggy Pop Get Demonic Over Peanut Butter

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Everyday, 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 of TV shows. Today: See Iggy Pop and his Stooges perform 'TV Eye' live at the Cincinnati Pop Festival in 1970. Pop stage dives into the crowd – leaving the live commentators unsure of what to say. They even cut to an advert break! Watch out for Pop rubbing his chest with peanut butter and throwing it into the eager crowd. Foodstuffs can be rock ‘n’ roll! See the Stooges play with their food – by clicking here now

Everyday, 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 of TV shows.

Today: See Iggy Pop and his Stooges perform ‘TV Eye’ live at the Cincinnati Pop Festival in 1970.

Pop stage dives into the crowd – leaving the live commentators unsure of what to say. They even cut to an advert break!

Watch out for Pop rubbing his chest with peanut butter and throwing it into the eager crowd.

Foodstuffs can be rock ‘n’ roll!

See the Stooges play with their food – by clicking here now

Uncut’s 2007 Album Preview Special

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UNCUT: What were the things that you were listening to that were hitting you for the album? JONNIE RUSSELL: There’s definitely a lot of variety of things that I think we were listening to as a band. When we first came together and started playing a couple of years ago there are certain albums we were listening to at the time. A lot of Tom Waits records, Bone Machine and records like that which were seminal records for us. At the same time we were listening to things like Sam Cooke and Nina Simone. Rock music too, from the Velvet Underground to The Modern Lovers. I think we have a lot of reference points and they’re the high points. UNCUT: So how can we expect all that to work into the album? JR: (haha) I’m not sure, I’m not sure how much of those are actually soundalised in there, or kind of conceptionally or stylistically factored in there. I think there’s a little bit of everything there if you listen hard enough. UNCUT: What can we expect from the album then? JR: It’s twelve songs, all of which kind of span the year and a half of our songwriting. There’s a good amount of variety from guitars, rock or blues tunes to some slower, more piano driven songs and some drums and blues kind of prison chants. UNCUT: Do you have a favourite? JR: I don’t think so. UNCUT: What went on in SXSW because you got into quite a bit of a bidding war going on? JR: I think SXSW was probably the beginning to our exposure to the music industry in a more broad sense. Some of the people we spent time with were different labels that were based in LA. The most surprising thing was the interest from over here (UK). It was a really good chance to meet really good people from here in the UK which eventually led to a trip a few months ago to meet some of these people, labels and see them on their own turf. That was probably the most eye-opening experience, being opened up to the industry at large. UNCUT:; Did your experiences at SXSW check in with your opinion of the music industry? JR: I think it in some way coloured it in differently [than] if we'd had experience of being in a band for 15 years. I think it gave us a unique crash-course in it as far as the way people work and sell themselves. It was a really bizarre thing that all of a sudden they’re talking about some songs that you wrote in your basement. It’s a very bizarre to learn those things. UNCUT: What’s the best thing about being Cold War Kids at the moment? JR: That’s the easiest question you’ve asked yet. Getting to wake up in London and walk round the streets and get a coffee because people want to hear our songs over here. That’s like the biggest honour you can imagine, getting over to Europe. None of us ever thought we would, to be here and playing music and not spending your life savings is the best thing in the world about being in a band. Cold War Kids debut ‘Robbers & Cowards’ is released in February through V2 Records.

UNCUT: What were the things that you were listening to that were hitting you for the album?

JONNIE RUSSELL: There’s definitely a lot of variety of things that I think we were listening to as a band. When we first came together and started playing a couple of years ago there are certain albums we were listening to at the time. A lot of Tom Waits records, Bone Machine and records like that which were seminal records for us. At the same time we were listening to things like Sam Cooke and Nina Simone. Rock music too, from the Velvet Underground to The Modern Lovers. I think we have a lot of reference points and they’re the high points.

UNCUT: So how can we expect all that to work into the album?

JR: (haha) I’m not sure, I’m not sure how much of those are actually soundalised in there, or kind of conceptionally or stylistically factored in there. I think there’s a little bit of everything there if you listen hard enough.

UNCUT: What can we expect from the album then?

JR: It’s twelve songs, all of which kind of span the year and a half of our songwriting. There’s a good amount of variety from guitars, rock or blues tunes to some slower, more piano driven songs and some drums and blues kind of prison chants.

UNCUT: Do you have a favourite?

JR: I don’t think so.

UNCUT: What went on in SXSW because you got into quite a bit of a bidding war going on?

JR: I think SXSW was probably the beginning to our exposure to the music industry in a more broad sense. Some of the people we spent time with were different labels that were based in LA. The most surprising thing was the interest from over here (UK). It was a really good chance to meet really good people from here in the UK which eventually led to a trip a few months ago to meet some of these people, labels and see them on their own turf. That was probably the most eye-opening experience, being opened up to the industry at large.

UNCUT:; Did your experiences at SXSW check in with your opinion of the music industry?

JR: I think it in some way coloured it in differently [than] if we’d had experience of being in a band for 15 years. I think it gave us a unique crash-course in it as far as the way people work and sell themselves. It was a really bizarre thing that all of a sudden they’re talking about some songs that you wrote in your basement. It’s a very bizarre to learn those things.

UNCUT: What’s the best thing about being Cold War Kids at the moment?

JR: That’s the easiest question you’ve asked yet. Getting to wake up in London and walk round the streets and get a coffee because people want to hear our songs over here. That’s like the biggest honour you can imagine, getting over to Europe. None of us ever thought we would, to be here and playing music and not spending your life savings is the best thing in the world about being in a band.

Cold War Kids debut ‘Robbers & Cowards’ is released in February through V2 Records.

Dan Sartain Reschedules UK Tour

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Alabama music troubadour Dan Sartain has changed a few dates on his upcoming UK tour. The dates, previously announced on Uncut.co.uk, now includes an additional date in Edinburgh. Sartain’s London show has moved forward one night to February 7, meaning that alas, the planned show at Manchester’s Roadhouse is now cancelled. The full revised dates are as follows: Cambridge, The Loft (February 1) Oxford, Zodiac (2) Bristol, Thekla (3) Leeds, Cockpit (4) Edinburgh, Caberet Voltaire (5) Glasgow, Nice N Sleazy (6) London 100 Club (7) Dan sartian is supported at all shows by other Alabama band, Plate Six. To make up for the short notice change of date for his 100 Club show, Sartain is currently hosting a competition to win tickets to the private after-party at the venue. For the easy competition details – Click here to go to Sartain’s tour homepage Watch the video for Sartain’s new Liam Watson (White Stripes) produced single, ‘Flight of the Finch, released January 29 by clicking here

Alabama music troubadour Dan Sartain has changed a few dates on his upcoming UK tour.

The dates, previously announced on Uncut.co.uk, now includes an additional date in Edinburgh.

Sartain’s London show has moved forward one night to February 7, meaning that alas, the planned show at Manchester’s Roadhouse is now cancelled.

The full revised dates are as follows:

Cambridge, The Loft (February 1)

Oxford, Zodiac (2)

Bristol, Thekla (3)

Leeds, Cockpit (4)

Edinburgh, Caberet Voltaire (5)

Glasgow, Nice N Sleazy (6)

London 100 Club (7)

Dan sartian is supported at all shows by other Alabama band, Plate Six.

To make up for the short notice change of date for his 100 Club show, Sartain is currently hosting a competition to win tickets to the private after-party at the venue.

For the easy competition details – Click here to go to Sartain’s tour homepage

Watch the video for Sartain’s new Liam Watson (White Stripes) produced single, ‘Flight of the Finch, released January 29 by clicking here

Kanye West Keeps It Real

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US Grammy Award winning rapper Kanye West is to star in a new sit-com, based loosely on his life. The show will centre on West's daily life as a hugely successful rapper and producer and West is helping develop the show with genius producers Larry Charles andf Rick Rubin. Contrary to reports on sites such as Allhiphop.com that the show would be the latest reality TV fodder, West speaking to MTV News, has said, "I wouldn't do something as clichéd as a reality show. At least give me the credit for being more creative than that... For the last couple of years, Larry, Rick and I have been developing this pilot. It's a situational half-hour comedy. It's fictional, and loosely based on my life." Charles previous' exec produced credits include HBO's hit series Curb Your Enthusiasm, Seinfeld and more recently the international hit movie Borat.

US Grammy Award winning rapper Kanye West is to star in a new sit-com, based loosely on his life.

The show will centre on West’s daily life as a hugely successful rapper and producer and West is helping develop the show with genius producers Larry Charles andf Rick Rubin.

Contrary to reports on sites such as Allhiphop.com that the show would be the latest reality TV fodder, West speaking to MTV News, has said, “I wouldn’t do something as clichéd as a reality show. At least give me the credit for being more creative than that… For the last couple of years, Larry, Rick and I have been developing this pilot. It’s a situational half-hour comedy. It’s fictional, and loosely based on my life.”

Charles previous’ exec produced credits include HBO’s hit series Curb Your Enthusiasm, Seinfeld and more recently the international hit movie Borat.

US Folk Legend To Get UK Parliamentary Honour

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US folk legend, Tom Paxton will be honoured with an official Parliamentary tribute when he starts his UK tour at the end of the week. Paxton will be visiting the House of Commons on January 22, where his fans include former Labour Party leader Lord Kinnock and current Home Secretary John Reid. The visit to Parliament will take place prior to his show at the nearby Queen Elizabeth Hall. He will be received by a number of his fans in the House of Commons, as well as by many of his friends invited from the folk world. The man behind this warm acknowledgement is Alan Keen, MP for Feltham and Heston, who explained: “Tom has quite a number of fans in Parliament who are not just listeners, but who can also play and sing many of his best known songs." Alan Keen further emphasis the contribution that Paxton has made to popularise folk music, saying, “Tom Paxton has contributed so much to the world of contemporary folk song. His songs of protest against segregation in the southern states of the US in the sixties, apartheid in South Africa, the wars in Vietnam and Iraq through to the ethnic cleansing in the Balkans in the 90's. It was impossible not to be seriously moved by his recent tribute to New York City's fire fighters for their sacrifices following 9/11.” Paxton's UK tour starts this Saturday, and will play the following venues, some tickets are still available for the MP's favourite: Bristol St George’s Hall (Jan 20) London Queen Elizabeth Hall (22) Glasgow Royal Concert Hall (23) Salford Lowry (24) Milton Keynes The Stables (26) Worcester Huntingdon Hall (27) Worcester Huntingdon Hall (28) Gateshead The Sage Gateshead (29) For more information about the honour or for more show details - Click here to go to Tom's homepage

US folk legend, Tom Paxton will be honoured with an official Parliamentary tribute when he starts his UK tour at the end of the week.

Paxton will be visiting the House of Commons on January 22, where his fans include former Labour Party leader Lord Kinnock and current Home Secretary John Reid.

The visit to Parliament will take place prior to his show at the nearby Queen Elizabeth Hall. He will be received by a number of his fans in the House of Commons, as well as by many of his friends invited from the folk world.

The man behind this warm acknowledgement is Alan Keen, MP for Feltham and Heston, who explained: “Tom has quite a number of fans in Parliament who are not just listeners, but who can also play and sing many of his best known songs.”

Alan Keen further emphasis the contribution that Paxton has made to popularise folk music, saying, “Tom Paxton has contributed so much to the world of contemporary folk song. His songs of protest against segregation in the southern states of the US in the sixties, apartheid in South Africa, the wars in Vietnam and Iraq through to the ethnic cleansing in the Balkans in the 90’s. It was impossible not to be seriously moved by his recent tribute to New York City’s fire fighters for their sacrifices following 9/11.”

Paxton’s UK tour starts this Saturday, and will play the following venues, some tickets are still available for the MP’s favourite:

Bristol St George’s Hall (Jan 20)

London Queen Elizabeth Hall (22)

Glasgow Royal Concert Hall (23)

Salford Lowry (24)

Milton Keynes The Stables (26)

Worcester Huntingdon Hall (27)

Worcester Huntingdon Hall (28)

Gateshead The Sage Gateshead (29)

For more information about the honour or for more show details – Click here to go to Tom’s homepage

Watch This Serene Leonard Cohen Perfomance

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Everyday, 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 of TV shows. Today: Watch Leonard Cohen perform a classic rendition of the Old Testament prayer reworking, ‘Who By Fire.’ Cohen is accompanied perfectly by legendary jazz saxophonist Sonny Rollins, and a backing choir. Simply beautiful. Check out Cohen and Rollins prayer – by clicking here now

Everyday, 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 of TV shows.

Today: Watch Leonard Cohen perform a classic rendition of the Old Testament prayer reworking, ‘Who By Fire.’

Cohen is accompanied perfectly by legendary jazz saxophonist Sonny Rollins, and a backing choir.

Simply beautiful.

Check out Cohen and Rollins prayer – by clicking here now

Unreleased Jim Morrison Song Is On Its Way

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The new album by Perry Farrell is set to feature a previously unreleased Jim Morrison vocal. Morrison's 'Woman In The Window' has been re-worked by former Jane's Addiction frontman Farrell on the debut album by his new band Satellite Party. 'Woman In The Window' is featured on the track 'Ultra Payloaded' from Satellite Party's album of the same name which is due for release in May. The album also features contributions from other stars including New Order's Peter Hook, Black Eyed Pea's Fergie, and Flea and John Frusciante from the Red Hot Chili Peppers. Satellite Party are due to play tonight (January 15) as part of the ESPN Winter X Games in Aspen, Colorado. They also played a special show last November with the Doors at LA's Whiskey-A-Go-Go as part of the Doors 40th anniversary.

The new album by Perry Farrell is set to feature a previously unreleased Jim Morrison vocal.

Morrison’s ‘Woman In The Window’ has been re-worked by former Jane’s Addiction frontman Farrell on the debut album by his new band Satellite Party.

‘Woman In The Window’ is featured on the track ‘Ultra Payloaded’ from Satellite Party’s album of the same name which is due for release in May.

The album also features contributions from other stars including New Order’s Peter Hook, Black Eyed Pea’s Fergie, and Flea and John Frusciante from the Red Hot Chili Peppers.

Satellite Party are due to play tonight (January 15) as part of the ESPN Winter X Games in Aspen, Colorado.

They also played a special show last November with the Doors at LA’s Whiskey-A-Go-Go as part of the Doors 40th anniversary.

Kaiser Chiefs In Championship Darts Contest!

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The Kaiser Chiefs, named after a South African football team, have been showing off their sporting prowess, this time at darts. The indie rock group took on former World Dart's Champion Booby George in a doubles contest at the BDO World Championships, that are currently taking place in Lakeside, Essex. Check out the video footage of the Kaisers throwing darts by clicking here now

The Kaiser Chiefs, named after a South African football team, have been showing off their sporting prowess, this time at darts.

The indie rock group took on former World Dart’s Champion Booby George in a doubles contest at the BDO World Championships, that are currently taking place in Lakeside, Essex.

Check out the video footage of the Kaisers throwing darts by clicking here now