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Check out Johnny Thunders With Peter Perrett

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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 this brilliant clip filmed at Max’s Kansas City in 1980. Joining Johnny Thunders on stage is Only Ones Peter Perrett on guitar. The 7-minute clip treats us to two fabulously unique Thunders’ cover versions. Firstly he growls through The Monkees “I’m Not Your Stepping Stone” before the highlight – “Great Big Kiss” by The Shangri-Las! Doesn't get much better than this. Peter Perrett is interviewed in the latest issue of Uncut - on sale tomorrow - Find out what he thought about Babyshamble Pete Doherty when he stayed at his house. Check out the brilliant Johnny Thunders clip- 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 this brilliant clip filmed at Max’s Kansas City in 1980.

Joining Johnny Thunders on stage is Only Ones Peter Perrett on guitar.

The 7-minute clip treats us to two fabulously unique Thunders’ cover versions. Firstly he growls through The Monkees “I’m Not Your Stepping Stone” before the highlight – “Great Big Kiss” by The Shangri-Las!

Doesn’t get much better than this.

Peter Perrett is interviewed in the latest issue of Uncut – on sale tomorrow – Find out what he thought about Babyshamble Pete Doherty when he stayed at his house.

Check out the brilliant Johnny Thunders clip- by clicking here now

Buzzcocks Announce More Gigs

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Following the sell-out success of their birthday celebrations ‘Buzzcocks 30’ tour last month, the group have announced that they will now be playing a handful of additional regional shows next month. The band, inspired by the Sex Pistols and fronted by Pete Shelley were pivotal in the pop-punk scene of the 70s, and are "still playing their trademark punk pop as if the future of rock ‘n’ roll depended on it" -as Uncut said when we reviewed the band's latest studio album, 'Flat Pack Philosophy.' 31 years after forming, the band are in turn inspiring music, Green Day are the latest band to declare a debt to their sound. You can catch the band at the following towns early next month: Cleethorpes, Winter Gardens (February 8) Gloucester, Guildhall (10) Preston, 53 Degrees (11) Sheffield, The Plug (12) For more Buzzcocks action – Click here to go the band’s homepage Pic credit: Chris Gomez

Following the sell-out success of their birthday celebrations ‘Buzzcocks 30’ tour last month, the group have announced that they will now be playing a handful of additional regional shows next month.

The band, inspired by the Sex Pistols and fronted by Pete Shelley were pivotal in the pop-punk scene of the 70s, and are “still playing their trademark punk pop as if the future of rock ‘n’ roll depended on it” -as Uncut said when we reviewed the band’s latest studio album, ‘Flat Pack Philosophy.’

31 years after forming, the band are in turn inspiring music, Green Day are the latest band to declare a debt to their sound.

You can catch the band at the following towns early next month:

Cleethorpes, Winter Gardens (February 8)

Gloucester, Guildhall (10)

Preston, 53 Degrees (11)

Sheffield, The Plug (12)

For more Buzzcocks action – Click here to go the band’s homepage

Pic credit: Chris Gomez

David Lynch Hooks Up With Donovan

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Innovative filmmaker David Lynch is to celebrate the publication of his new book by collaborating with folk guitar star Donovan with a handful of special events later this month. Lynch, famous for the originality of films such as 'Blue Velvet' and 'Mulholland Drive' will be discussing his new book "Catching the Big Fish: Meditation, Consciousness, and Creativity" as well as his forthcoming new movie 'Inland Empire.' The events taking place in three cities in the US will also see performances from Donovan, who will be play a set of his greatest songs from the 60s and 70s. Donovan, known for hits such as ‘Mellow Yellow’ and ‘Sunshine Superman’ has just taken up the post of heading up the musical wing of the David Lynch Foundation for Consciousness-Based Education and World Peace. Taking on the new role fulfils Donovans 40-year interest in Transcendental Meditation. The two unique cultural icons and can be seen at the following venues: Alice Tully Hall, Lincoln Center, New York City (January 12) Kennedy Center, Washington D.C. (14) Kodak Theatre, Los Angeles (21) For more information about the events or the David Lynch Foundation - Click here to go to the homepage For more information about the events or the David Lynch Foundation - Click here to go to the homepage

Innovative filmmaker David Lynch is to celebrate the publication of his new book by collaborating with folk guitar star Donovan with a handful of special events later this month.

Lynch, famous for the originality of films such as ‘Blue Velvet’ and ‘Mulholland Drive’ will be discussing his new book “Catching the Big Fish: Meditation, Consciousness, and Creativity” as well as his forthcoming new movie ‘Inland Empire.’

The events taking place in three cities in the US will also see performances from Donovan, who will be play a set of his greatest songs from the 60s and 70s.

Donovan, known for hits such as ‘Mellow Yellow’ and ‘Sunshine Superman’ has just taken up the post of heading up the musical wing of the David Lynch Foundation for Consciousness-Based Education and World Peace.

Taking on the new role fulfils Donovans 40-year interest in Transcendental Meditation.

The two unique cultural icons and can be seen at the following venues:

Alice Tully Hall, Lincoln Center, New York City (January 12)

Kennedy Center, Washington D.C. (14)

Kodak Theatre, Los Angeles (21)

For more information about the events or the David Lynch Foundation – Click here to go to the homepage

For more information about the events or the David Lynch Foundation – Click here to go to the homepage

Bjork, Prince, and Sufjan Stevens To Pay Homage To Joni Mitchell

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Bjork, Sufjan Stevens and Prince are all to appear on the first ever tribute album to legendary singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell. They are amongst a line-up that spans musical genres and each of the 12 artists has contibuted a personal rendition of some of her poetic masterpieces. "A Tribute To Joni Mitchell" is due for release through Nonesuch Records in the Spring. The full tracklisting is as follows: 1. Free Man in Paris - Sufjan Stevens 2. Boho Dance - Björk 3. Dreamland - Caetano Veloso 4. Don't Interrupt The Sorrow - Brad Mehldau 5. For The Roses - Cassandra Wilson 6. A Case of U - Prince 7. Blue - Sarah McLachlan 8. Ladies Of The Canyon - Annie Lennox 9. Magdalena Laundries - Emmylou Harris 10. Edith And The Kingpin - Elvis Costello 11. Help Me - K.D. Lang 12. River - James Taylor Pic credit: Jay Blakesberg

Bjork, Sufjan Stevens and Prince are all to appear on the first ever tribute album to legendary singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell.

They are amongst a line-up that spans musical genres and each of the 12 artists has contibuted a personal rendition of some of her poetic masterpieces.

“A Tribute To Joni Mitchell” is due for release through Nonesuch Records in the Spring.

The full tracklisting is as follows:

1. Free Man in Paris – Sufjan Stevens

2. Boho Dance – Björk

3. Dreamland – Caetano Veloso

4. Don’t Interrupt The Sorrow – Brad Mehldau

5. For The Roses – Cassandra Wilson

6. A Case of U – Prince

7. Blue – Sarah McLachlan

8. Ladies Of The Canyon – Annie Lennox

9. Magdalena Laundries – Emmylou Harris

10. Edith And The Kingpin – Elvis Costello

11. Help Me – K.D. Lang

12. River – James Taylor

Pic credit: Jay Blakesberg

Rod Stewart Recognised in New Year Honours

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Rod Stewart has been nominated for a CBE for his "services to music" in the Queen's New Year Honours list. He has stated that he is “overjoyed” at the recognition. The singer has been recording and performing for 40 years, starting in the Jeff beck Group with Ron Wood, then with The Faces in the early 70s. Now in his fifth decade of performing, Stewart has sold over 250 million records, with 62 hit singles, including 24 that were number ones, making him one of the highest selling artists of all time. No stranger to accolades in recent times, Stewart was inducted into the Hollywood Walk Of Fame last year as well as receiving a Grammy Award for "Stardust", the third album in his 'Great American Songbook' series. It’s a good start to the year for the 61-year old singer who recently announced a stadium tour of the UK, which is due to begin on June 28th at the City of Manchester Stadium. Others on 2007's honours list include actors Hugh Laurie and Penelope Keith, who both will be getting OBEs. The jazz pianist George Shearing, who was born blind, will receive a knighthood and Evelyn Glennie, a deaf percussionist who uses vibration to experience music, will become a dame. Folk musicians Archie Fisher and Shirley Collins are also honoured with MBEs.

Rod Stewart has been nominated for a CBE for his “services to music” in the Queen’s New Year Honours list.

He has stated that he is “overjoyed” at the recognition.

The singer has been recording and performing for 40 years, starting in the Jeff beck Group with Ron Wood, then with The Faces in the early 70s.

Now in his fifth decade of performing, Stewart has sold over 250 million records, with 62 hit singles, including 24 that were number ones, making him one of the highest selling artists of all time.

No stranger to accolades in recent times, Stewart was inducted into the Hollywood Walk Of Fame last year as well as receiving a Grammy Award for “Stardust”, the third album in his ‘Great American Songbook’ series.

It’s a good start to the year for the 61-year old singer who recently announced a stadium tour of the UK, which is due to begin on June 28th at the City of Manchester Stadium.

Others on 2007’s honours list include actors Hugh Laurie and Penelope Keith, who both will be getting OBEs.

The jazz pianist George Shearing, who was born blind, will receive a knighthood and Evelyn Glennie, a deaf percussionist who uses vibration to experience music, will become a dame.

Folk musicians Archie Fisher and Shirley Collins are also honoured with MBEs.

Get On Down With James Brown

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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: Check out some early footage of the late great soul singer James Brown who passed away on Christmas day. This footage shows Brown perform “Please Please Please” on 60s US TV show “Shindig!” Check out the young man’s quiffage. Great hair Its so far in, it’s out of sight as the Shindig presenter says at the start. Check out James Brown strutting 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: Check out some early footage of the late great soul singer James Brown who passed away on Christmas day.

This footage shows Brown perform “Please Please Please” on 60s US TV show “Shindig!”

Check out the young man’s quiffage. Great hair

Its so far in, it’s out of sight as the Shindig presenter says at the start.

Check out James Brown strutting by clicking here now

Queen Are Better Than The Beatles

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English rock band Queen have beaten The Beatles to be named the “Greatest British band of all time” in a contest conducted by BBC Radio 2. It was a close call though with only 400 votes coming between Queen and The Beatles getting the top honour. More than 20,000 listeners voted for their favourites, with the finalists also including The Rolling Stones, Oasis and Take That. The groups were judged on song-writing, lyrics, live performances, originality and showmanship. The poll result was decided in a special three-hour live broadcast yesterday (New Years Day), with celebrity guests debating who should win. Queen, fronted by the iconic Freddie Mercury, were one of the highest selling groups of all time with 18 number 1 albums and 18 number one singles released throughout the '70s, '80s and '90s - including Bohemian Rhapsody in 1975. Mercury died from an Aids-related illness in 1991, but the band have continued with former Free singer Paul Rodgers taking on the role of singer. Queen guitarist Brian May confirmed late last year that a new studio album with Rodgers is soon to come. They are due to record early this year.

English rock band Queen have beaten The Beatles to be named the “Greatest British band of all time” in a contest conducted by BBC Radio 2.

It was a close call though with only 400 votes coming between Queen and The Beatles getting the top honour.

More than 20,000 listeners voted for their favourites, with the finalists also including The Rolling Stones, Oasis and Take That.

The groups were judged on song-writing, lyrics, live performances, originality and showmanship.

The poll result was decided in a special three-hour live broadcast yesterday (New Years Day), with celebrity guests debating who should win.

Queen, fronted by the iconic Freddie Mercury, were one of the highest selling groups of all time with 18 number 1 albums and 18 number one singles released throughout the ’70s, ’80s and ’90s – including Bohemian Rhapsody in 1975.

Mercury died from an Aids-related illness in 1991, but the band have continued with former Free singer Paul Rodgers taking on the role of singer.

Queen guitarist Brian May confirmed late last year that a new studio album with Rodgers is soon to come. They are due to record early this year.

Dylan Not Slandered Says Factory Girl Miller

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Sienna Miller, starring as Andy Warhol’s muse Edie Sedgewick in new film Factory Girl, has denied that Bob Dylan has been defamed. As previously reported, Dylan is suing producer Harvey Weinstein over the character of Billy Quinn – who he claims is a defamatory portrayal of himself. Factory Girl director George Hickenlooper has said that Quinn – played by Hayden Christensen (Star Wars) is “a hybrid of Dylan, Jim Morrison, Donovan.” It is believed that Dylan and Sedgewick had an affair in the late 60s, and that the songs “Like A Roling Stone” and “Just Like A Woman” were about her, but Dylan has never spoken publicly about the friendship. Sienna Miller in an interview with UK newspaper, The Observer has said that although the character is similar, it is definitely not a “libelous portrayal” as claimed by Dylan’s lawyer Orin Snyder. Miller said “It very obviously looks and sounds like Dylan, but I think a lot of actors base performances on real life.” The actress who is hoping to win an Academy Award nomination for the role of Sedgewick, also said, "I'm Bob Dylan's biggest fan. I'm mortified that he's pissed off.” Dylan is still proceeding to sue the film’s producers. Released in the US on Friday, after Dylan’s lawyers failed to halt distribution, Factory Girl follows the life of Sixties fashion icon Sedgwick, who committed suicide at the age of 28.

Sienna Miller, starring as Andy Warhol’s muse Edie Sedgewick in new film Factory Girl, has denied that Bob Dylan has been defamed.

As previously reported, Dylan is suing producer Harvey Weinstein over the character of Billy Quinn – who he claims is a defamatory portrayal of himself.

Factory Girl director George Hickenlooper has said that Quinn – played by Hayden Christensen (Star Wars) is “a hybrid of Dylan, Jim Morrison, Donovan.”

It is believed that Dylan and Sedgewick had an affair in the late 60s, and that the songs “Like A Roling Stone” and “Just Like A Woman” were about her, but Dylan has never spoken publicly about the friendship.

Sienna Miller in an interview with UK newspaper, The Observer has said that although the character is similar, it is definitely not a “libelous portrayal” as claimed by Dylan’s lawyer Orin Snyder.

Miller said “It very obviously looks and sounds like Dylan, but I think a lot of actors base performances on real life.”

The actress who is hoping to win an Academy Award nomination for the role of Sedgewick, also said, “I’m Bob Dylan’s biggest fan. I’m mortified that he’s pissed off.”

Dylan is still proceeding to sue the film’s producers.

Released in the US on Friday, after Dylan’s lawyers failed to halt distribution, Factory Girl follows the life of Sixties fashion icon Sedgwick, who committed suicide at the age of 28.

Smile With Glee At Sufjans Holiday Message

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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 an animated video for Sufjan Steven’s “Put The Lights On The Tree.” This sweet video reminds us to look after the lonely at this festive time of year. Check our the ‘Illinoise’ cheerleaders, and Sufjan’s demonic eyes! The song is taken from Sufjan Steven’s recently released “Songs For Christmas” 5-CD box set. Happy holidays! Check out Sufjan’s animated fairies and cheerleaders 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 an animated video for Sufjan Steven’s “Put The Lights On The Tree.”

This sweet video reminds us to look after the lonely at this festive time of year.

Check our the ‘Illinoise’ cheerleaders, and Sufjan’s demonic eyes!

The song is taken from Sufjan Steven’s recently released “Songs For Christmas” 5-CD box set.

Happy holidays!

Check out Sufjan’s animated fairies and cheerleaders by clicking here now

Grateful Dead And Led Zeppelin To Sue Music Site

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Rock legends the Grateful Dead and Led Zeppelin are are to take music memorabilia website, Wolfgang’s Vault to court. They claim the site’s owner William Sagan is illegally selling vintage recordings and memorabilia. The plaintiffs, Grateful Dead Productions, Carlos Santana and members of Led Zeppelin and The Doors are attempting to get Sagan to stop selling the materials that he obtained from the estate of Bill Graham, a concert promoter who died in a 1991 helicopter crash. Wolfgang’s Vault, based in San Francisco is a hugely popular memorabilia site that sells concert posters, shirts, photographs and recordings, but which the artists claim were never authorised for Sagan to sell and distribute. Bob Weir, of the Grateful Dead, said in a statement, "We have never given permission for our images and material to be used in this way, what Sagan is doing is stealing. He is stealing what is most important to us - our work, our images and our music - and is profiting from the good will of our fans." The lawsuit also accuses William Sagan of trademark infringement by selling baby clothing showing the artists' names. Sagan has yet to comment about the claims, saying that he had not yet been served with the lawsuit.

Rock legends the Grateful Dead and Led Zeppelin are are to take music memorabilia website, Wolfgang’s Vault to court. They claim the site’s owner William Sagan is illegally selling vintage recordings and memorabilia.

The plaintiffs, Grateful Dead Productions, Carlos Santana and members of Led Zeppelin and The Doors are attempting to get Sagan to stop selling the materials that he obtained from the estate of Bill Graham, a concert promoter who died in a 1991 helicopter crash.

Wolfgang’s Vault, based in San Francisco is a hugely popular memorabilia site that sells concert posters, shirts, photographs and recordings, but which the artists claim were never authorised for Sagan to sell and distribute.

Bob Weir, of the Grateful Dead, said in a statement, “We have never given permission for our images and material to be used in this way, what Sagan is doing is stealing. He is stealing what is most important to us – our work, our images and our music – and is profiting from the good will of our fans.”

The lawsuit also accuses William Sagan of trademark infringement by selling baby clothing showing the artists’ names.

Sagan has yet to comment about the claims, saying that he had not yet been served with the lawsuit.

Gospel Legend Mavis Staples Gets Political

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One of the original Stax recording artists, Mavis Staples is to release “We’ll Never Turn Back” – her ninth and most polemical album of her career. The album, produced by Uncut favourite, Ry Cooder, features raw, emotional and updated versions of traditional freedom songs from the American Civil Rights movement of the 1950s and 60s. Talking about the new record, Mavis Staples says, “Like many in the Civil Rights movement, The Staples Singers drew on the spirituality and strength of the church to help gain social justice and to try to achieve equal rights. She adds, "With this record, I hope to get across the same feeling, the same spirit and the same message as we did then - and to hopefully continue to make positive changes. Things are better but we’re not where we need to be and we’ll never turn back.” As well as these personal and political songs, “We’ll Never Turn Back” will also feature two new songs, written by Mavis Staples and Ry Cooder. Rob Bowman, author of “Soulsville USA: The Story of Stax Records” says about Mavis and the new album, “With ‘We'll Never Turn Back,’ Mavis Staples has come full circle, singing songs that were seminal to a movement and time that helped form her as an artist. Alongside songs that were inextricably part of the Civil Rights movement - many of them associated with the Freedom Singers - Mavis co-wrote the title track with producer and guitarist extraordinaire Ry Cooder. She also sings a Cooder original, ‘I'll Be Rested’, and opens the CD with a cover of bluesman J.B. Lenoir's ‘Down in Mississippi’, connecting the disc to her own roots down South.” Musicians involved in the new recordings include Ry Cooder himself – along with his son Joaquin, drummer Jim Keltner and bassist Mike Elizando. Singers helping create a soundscape for Staples' vocals include South African choir Ladysmith Black Mambazo and many of the original Freedom Singers - the group that formed in 1962, whose songs and music played an important role in the Civil Rights movement. “We’ll Never Turn Back” is to be released on Anti-Records on April 23, 2007.

One of the original Stax recording artists, Mavis Staples is to release “We’ll Never Turn Back” – her ninth and most polemical album of her career.

The album, produced by Uncut favourite, Ry Cooder, features raw, emotional and updated versions of traditional freedom songs from the American Civil Rights movement of the 1950s and 60s.

Talking about the new record, Mavis Staples says, “Like many in the Civil Rights movement, The Staples Singers drew on the spirituality and strength of the church to help gain social justice and to try to achieve equal rights.

She adds, “With this record, I hope to get across the same feeling, the same spirit and the same message as we did then – and to hopefully continue to make positive changes. Things are better but we’re not where we need to be and we’ll never turn back.”

As well as these personal and political songs, “We’ll Never Turn Back” will also feature two new songs, written by Mavis Staples and Ry Cooder.

Rob Bowman, author of “Soulsville USA: The Story of Stax Records” says about Mavis and the new album, “With ‘We’ll Never Turn Back,’ Mavis Staples has come full circle, singing songs that were seminal to a movement and time that helped form her as an artist.

Alongside songs that were inextricably part of the Civil Rights movement – many of them associated with the Freedom Singers – Mavis co-wrote the title track with producer and guitarist extraordinaire Ry Cooder. She also sings a Cooder original, ‘I’ll Be Rested’, and opens the CD with a cover of bluesman J.B. Lenoir’s ‘Down in Mississippi’, connecting the disc to her own roots down South.”

Musicians involved in the new recordings include Ry Cooder himself – along with his son Joaquin, drummer Jim Keltner and bassist Mike Elizando.

Singers helping create a soundscape for Staples’ vocals include South African choir Ladysmith Black Mambazo and many of the original Freedom Singers – the group that formed in 1962, whose songs and music played an important role in the Civil Rights movement.

“We’ll Never Turn Back” is to be released on Anti-Records on April 23, 2007.

Procol Harum Organist Wins Court Case

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Procul Harum’s organist Matthew Fisher, yesterday won a High Court battle over who wrote the organ melody for the classic 60s song, “A Whiter Shade Of Pale.” Fisher, a founding member of Procol Harum, played organ on the 1967 hit argued that he wrote the distinctive organ melody. After three weeks in court, Mr Justice Blackburne ruled that Fisher is to be entitled to 40% of the copyright. Mr Blackburne, who studied both music and law at Cambridge University said, "I find that the organ solo is a distinctive and significant contribution to the overall composition and, quite obviously, the product of skill and labour on the part of the person who created it." Fisher’s argued he wanted to be credited with 50% and up to £1 million in backdated payments, but the court decided that lead singer Gary Brooker's input was more than his on the song, and the payments rejected. Since “A Whiter Shade Of Pale” was written in the 60s, the song has been credited to Procol Harum founder member and singer Gary Brooker and the group’s lyricist Keith Reid. Brooker defended his claim to be the sole writer of the tune, saying in a statement, "If Matthew Fisher's name ends up on my song, then mine can come off! It's hard to believe that I've worked with somebody on and off since 1967 whilst they hid such unspoken resentment. The singer, who still fronts Procol Harum, will have to pay the majority of the legal fees, estimated to be around £500,000. Brooker said in conclusion of the court case, "I'm relieved the trial is over, but my faith in British justice is shattered." Matthew Fisher reiterated that the legal battle was a matter of principal and not about money, saying, "I think I can assume that from now on I'm not going to be on Gary and Keith's Christmas card lists but I think that's a small price to pay for finally securing my rightful place in rock and roll history.” Gary Brooker has been granted permission to appeal.

Procul Harum’s organist Matthew Fisher, yesterday won a High Court battle over who wrote the organ melody for the classic 60s song, “A Whiter Shade Of Pale.”

Fisher, a founding member of Procol Harum, played organ on the 1967 hit argued that he wrote the distinctive organ melody. After three weeks in court, Mr Justice Blackburne ruled that Fisher is to be entitled to 40% of the copyright.

Mr Blackburne, who studied both music and law at Cambridge University said, “I find that the organ solo is a distinctive and significant contribution to the overall composition and, quite obviously, the product of skill and labour on the part of the person who created it.”

Fisher’s argued he wanted to be credited with 50% and up to £1 million in backdated payments, but the court decided that lead singer Gary Brooker’s input was more than his on the song, and the payments rejected.

Since “A Whiter Shade Of Pale” was written in the 60s, the song has been credited to Procol Harum founder member and singer Gary Brooker and the group’s lyricist Keith Reid.

Brooker defended his claim to be the sole writer of the tune, saying in a statement, “If Matthew Fisher’s name ends up on my song, then mine can come off! It’s hard to believe that I’ve worked with somebody on and off since 1967 whilst they hid such unspoken resentment.

The singer, who still fronts Procol Harum, will have to pay the majority of the legal fees, estimated to be around £500,000.

Brooker said in conclusion of the court case, “I’m relieved the trial is over, but my faith in British justice is shattered.”

Matthew Fisher reiterated that the legal battle was a matter of principal and not about money, saying, “I think I can assume that from now on I’m not going to be on Gary and Keith’s Christmas card lists but I think that’s a small price to pay for finally securing my rightful place in rock and roll history.”

Gary Brooker has been granted permission to appeal.

Flags Of Our Fathers

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Clint Eastwood in the twilight of his career continues to amaze. In the decade following the Oscar-winning Unforgiven, he seemed wholly to have surrendered to humdrum mediocrity. But in a career renaissance comparable to Bob Dylan's cussed reluctance to leave the building quietly, Eastwood has rallied spectacularly, as if being remembered latterly for not much more than a comely spoof like Space Cowboys was simply an unbearable notion. Mystic River (2003) was an unexpected revival and won Oscars for two of its stars, Sean Penn and Tim Robbins. What followed, extraordinarily, was Clint's masterpiece to date - 2005's Million Dollar Baby, a film about life, love, death and boxing that Hollywood first refused to bankroll and then honoured with multiple Academy Awards, including Best Film and Best Director. Two years on, here's Clint at 76 with Flags Of Our Fathers, an epic project that would have been daunting for a director half his age, and his second classic on the trot. A film of awesome emotional power and angry intent, Flags Of Our Fathers is based on the best-selling book by James Bradley, whose father, John "Doc" Bradley, was one of the six US servicemen in the iconic photo by Joe Rosenthal of the American flag being raised over the Japanese island of Iwo Jima, site of one of the bloodiest battles of WW2. Rosenthal's picture was emblematic of uncommon valour, heroism on a grand scale, noble sacrifice, the triumph of the incontestably good over the demonstrably evil. I'd always imagined it had been taken in so-called heat of battle, bullets flying everywhere, the Americans on their way to victory after days of fixed-bayonet carnage. Which is certainly the impression you get from Allan Dwan's 1949 John Wayne vehicle, Sands Of Iwo Jima, which has the Duke dying - shot in the back! - as the Stars And Stripes goes up on Mt Suribachi. As Eastwood now provocatively reminds us, however, an American flag was indeed hoisted above Iwo Jima in the maw of battle - but it wasn't the flag in Rosenthal's photograph, which went up during a lull in the fighting as a replacement for the original banner, and was erected by five marines and a Navy medic who had been bloodily engaged elsewhere when the first flag was put up. The six men in Rosenthal's picture - by now inspiring war-weary America - were nevertheless treated as heroes of the battle, and Washington enlisted them as part of a huge propaganda campaign to raise war bonds to pay for one last push against the Japanese. Three of them were by now dead, but "Doc" Bradley (Ryan Phillipe), the opportunistic 19 year old Rene Gagnon (Jesse Bradford) and Ira Hayes (Adam Beach) were flown back to the States where they reluctantly starred in a touring pageant celebrating their illustrious exploits on Iwo Jima, even as their buddies were still dying in the Pacific. The trio quickly realise they are now a showbiz turn, no one much interested in the truth of what happened on Iwo, everyone eager to buy into the myth, the legend created by Rosenthal's powerfully evocative image of courage under apparent fire. The deeply-troubled Hayes, a Pima Indian, is especially vulnerable to the bitter contradictions of his new circumstances. Lauded on the one hand as a hero he doesn't think he is, on the other treated with patronising racism, he is destroyed by alcoholism. Beach tears up the screen as Hayes. Eastwoood handles the film's parallel storylines with astonishing confidence and technical dexterity, working from a superb script by Paul Haggis (who wrote Million Dollar Baby) and William Broyles Jr (Jarhead). The home front propaganda machine and its affect on the men it's exploiting is mercilessly ridiculed, as are notions of unthinking patriotism and the re-writing of history for political advantage, which gives the film a resonant timeliness. The battle scenes, meanwhile, are staggering. The vast invasion fleet and initial landings are rendered epically, and will no doubt put people in mind of Saving Private Ryan. But it's the point-blank ferocity of a war fought at fearsomely close quarters that sets you reeling, makes you think of the hand-to-hand combat scenes of Sam Fuller's Merrill's Marauders, Peckinpah's Cross Of Iron and Don Siegel's Hell Is For Heroes. Fascinatingly, Eastwood's simultaneously filmed the same story from a Japanese perspective in Letters From Iwo Jima, which will be released next February. It promises to complete an extraordinary double from a film maker whose second wind is turning into a full force creative gale. ALLAN JONES

Clint Eastwood in the twilight of his career continues to amaze. In the decade following the Oscar-winning Unforgiven, he seemed wholly to have surrendered to humdrum mediocrity. But in a career renaissance comparable to Bob Dylan’s cussed reluctance to leave the building quietly, Eastwood has rallied spectacularly, as if being remembered latterly for not much more than a comely spoof like Space Cowboys was simply an unbearable notion.

Mystic River (2003) was an unexpected revival and won Oscars for two of its stars, Sean Penn and Tim Robbins. What followed, extraordinarily, was Clint’s masterpiece to date – 2005’s Million Dollar Baby, a film about life, love, death and boxing that Hollywood first refused to bankroll and then honoured with multiple Academy Awards, including Best Film and Best Director. Two years on, here’s Clint at 76 with Flags Of Our Fathers, an epic project that would have been daunting for a director half his age, and his second classic on the trot.

A film of awesome emotional power and angry intent, Flags Of Our Fathers is based on the best-selling book by James Bradley, whose father, John “Doc” Bradley, was one of the six US servicemen in the iconic photo by Joe Rosenthal of the American flag being raised over the Japanese island of Iwo Jima, site of one of the bloodiest battles of WW2.

Rosenthal’s picture was emblematic of uncommon valour, heroism on a grand scale, noble sacrifice, the triumph of the incontestably good over the demonstrably evil. I’d always imagined it had been taken in so-called heat of battle, bullets flying everywhere, the Americans on their way to victory after days of fixed-bayonet carnage. Which is certainly the impression you get from Allan Dwan’s 1949 John Wayne vehicle, Sands Of Iwo Jima, which has the Duke dying – shot in the back! – as the Stars And Stripes goes up on Mt Suribachi.

As Eastwood now provocatively reminds us, however, an American flag was indeed hoisted above Iwo Jima in the maw of battle – but it wasn’t the flag in Rosenthal’s photograph, which went up during a lull in the fighting as a replacement for the original banner, and was erected by five marines and a Navy medic who had been bloodily engaged elsewhere when the first flag was put up. The six men in Rosenthal’s picture – by now inspiring war-weary America – were nevertheless treated as heroes of the battle, and Washington enlisted them as part of a huge propaganda campaign to raise war bonds to pay for one last push against the Japanese.

Three of them were by now dead, but “Doc” Bradley (Ryan Phillipe), the opportunistic 19 year old Rene Gagnon (Jesse Bradford) and Ira Hayes (Adam Beach) were flown back to the States where they reluctantly starred in a touring pageant celebrating their illustrious exploits on Iwo Jima, even as their buddies were still dying in the Pacific.

The trio quickly realise they are now a showbiz turn, no one much interested in the truth of what happened on Iwo, everyone eager to buy into the myth, the legend created by Rosenthal’s powerfully evocative image of courage under apparent fire. The deeply-troubled Hayes, a Pima Indian, is especially vulnerable to the bitter contradictions of his new circumstances. Lauded on the one hand as a hero he doesn’t think he is, on the other treated with patronising racism, he is destroyed by alcoholism. Beach tears up the screen as Hayes.

Eastwoood handles the film’s parallel storylines with astonishing confidence and technical dexterity, working from a superb script by Paul Haggis (who wrote Million Dollar Baby) and William Broyles Jr (Jarhead). The home front propaganda machine and its affect on the men it’s exploiting is mercilessly ridiculed, as are notions of unthinking patriotism and the re-writing of history for political advantage, which gives the film a resonant timeliness.

The battle scenes, meanwhile, are staggering. The vast invasion fleet and initial landings are rendered epically, and will no doubt put people in mind of Saving Private Ryan. But it’s the point-blank ferocity of a war fought at fearsomely close quarters that sets you reeling, makes you think of the hand-to-hand combat scenes of Sam Fuller’s Merrill’s Marauders, Peckinpah’s Cross Of Iron and Don Siegel’s Hell Is For Heroes.

Fascinatingly, Eastwood’s simultaneously filmed the same story from a Japanese perspective in Letters From Iwo Jima, which will be released next February. It promises to complete an extraordinary double from a film maker whose second wind is turning into a full force creative gale.

ALLAN JONES

The Hold Steady – Boys And Girls In America

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I don’t know if Boys And Girls In America is rock’n’roll as literature or literature as rock’n’roll. Either way, you could write a book about what’s going on here and the two albums preceding it that have made The Hold Steady the most talked about band in America right now. Praise for the Brooklyn-based, Minneapolis-reared quartet’s crunching rock and Craig Finn’s amazing songs has come from all quarters. The buzz started with the 2004 release of their first album, The Hold Steady Almost Killed Me, which the admirable Chuck Klosterman in Esquire selected as one of the top albums of the century so far. It was also included on best of the year lists in Blender, Rolling Stone and Spin. Their second album, Separation Sunday, meanwhile, was raved over in the New York Times by Jon Pareles and they were the first band in 15 years to appear on the cover of New York’s Village Voice. The Hold Steady Almost Killed Me was a sprawling epic about teenagers, drugs, derangement, despair, murder, spiritual rot and the redemptive power of rock’n’roll, the profane poetry of Finn’s lyrics set to the firestorm riffing of Tad Kubler’s guitars. The pair had first played together in Lifter Puller, art punks apparently, who made a lot of noise but little money on the Minneapolis bar band circuit that had earlier hosted wild nights by local heroes like Hüsker Dü and The Replacements. When Lifter Puller split, Kubler relocated to Los Angeles, joining Finn a year later in Brooklyn where they formed The Hold Steady. Within months they'd recorded Almost Killed Me, which introduced us to Holly, Gideon and Charlemagne, the three characters whose strung-out desperate lives are central to Finn’s songs and whose stories are brought up to date on Boys And Girls In America. They’re druggy misfits who probably grew up listening to The Replacements’ Sorry Ma, Forgot To Take Out The Trash and wondered in baffled awe how Paul Westerberg knew so much about them and their mall-rat lives. On Separation Sunday, especially, they go on dreadful benders, seek salvation in whatever drugs are available, getting high their only real imperative, have lots of unhappy wanton sex, are driven to madness, Christ and each other by confused and choleric urgencies. The songs on the early albums were densely-written, with more words in their lyrics than virtually anything since the young Springsteen of Greetings From Asbury Park, NJ. They come at you in a torrential rush, full of brilliant images, many of them recurring from song to song across the two albums. It’s a trick that works here on Boys And Girls, too, key lines repeated, Finn given to a testifying vocal rapture, a brutal urban echo of Van Morrison’s sense of natural wonder. On Boys And Girls, though, Finn’s writing is sharper than ever, the various narratives driven less by the wordy exposition of yore than acute observation, devastating detail, by turns exclamatory, epigrammatic and grainily authentic. Songs like the delirious opener “Stuck Between Stations”, the brutally jaunty “Hot Soft Light”, the corrosive “Party Pit” and the sulphurous waltz of “First Night” are a toxic mix of Springsteen’s cavernous romanticism and the grim verité of something like Lou Reed’s “Street Hassle”. Soiled vignettes, in other words, of lives in the teenage wastelands, given up to fleeting sordid pleasures and piss-stained dreams of better times that never arrive. Musically, too, The Hold Steady are tighter, wholly as exciting at times as the E Street Band in their turbo-charged prime; several tracks are punctuated by rollicking keyboard parts from Franz Nicolay that recall Roy Bittan’s work with Springsteen’s rowdy crew. The Hold Steady have frankly never sounded bigger or more furiously robust – this is often deafening arena rock, unashamedly so, a ferocious methamphetamine rush, urgent, at times almost out of control, a vast swampy roar. It’s a holy noise that runs from bone-crunching riffs that recall the Stones, Thin Lizzy, AC/DC, the E Street boys and Replacements, to swaggering doo-wop harmonies, hook-filled garage band pop and a dynamic clout that more than once recalls the hardcore rancour of This Year’s Model. Like Richmond Fontaine’s Willy Vlautin, Finn’s inspired as much by literature as rock’n’roll - the album’s title is inspired by a line from Jack Keruoac’s On The Road and “Stuck Between Stations” turns out partly to be about the suicide of the great American poet, John Berryman (as much, perhaps, an influence on Finn as the writer Delmore Schwarz was on the youthfully impressionable Lou Reed). There’s nothing starchy or stuck-up about this, however – Finn’s writing is rich in common vernacular, slangy, conversational, often very funny and illuminated by a white-hot attention to detail. It’s the kind of language you might overhear in bars where people go to drink and die, poetic in its grungy perfection but never merely fanciful or artfully abstract. They swell with charred truth, these songs and rock like there’s no tomorrow. Which, when all is said and equally done, there won’t be for Holly, Gideon and Charlemagne, the world going up in flames around them.Welcome to the first great album of 2007. ALLAN JONES

I don’t know if Boys And Girls In America is rock’n’roll as literature or literature as rock’n’roll. Either way, you could write a book about what’s going on here and the two albums preceding it that have made The Hold Steady the most talked about band in America right now.

Praise for the Brooklyn-based, Minneapolis-reared quartet’s crunching rock and Craig Finn’s amazing songs has come from all quarters. The buzz started with the 2004 release of their first album, The Hold Steady Almost Killed Me, which the admirable Chuck Klosterman in Esquire selected as one of the top albums of the century so far. It was also included on best of the year lists in Blender, Rolling Stone and Spin. Their second album, Separation Sunday, meanwhile, was raved over in the New York Times by Jon Pareles and they were the first band in 15 years to appear on the cover of New York’s Village Voice.

The Hold Steady Almost Killed Me was a sprawling epic about teenagers, drugs, derangement, despair, murder, spiritual rot and the redemptive power of rock’n’roll, the profane poetry of Finn’s lyrics set to the firestorm riffing of Tad Kubler’s guitars. The pair had first played together in Lifter Puller, art punks apparently, who made a lot of noise but little money on the Minneapolis bar band circuit that had earlier hosted wild nights by local heroes like Hüsker Dü and The Replacements. When Lifter Puller split, Kubler relocated to Los Angeles, joining Finn a year later in Brooklyn where they formed The Hold Steady.

Within months they’d recorded Almost Killed Me, which introduced us to Holly, Gideon and Charlemagne, the three characters whose strung-out desperate lives are central to Finn’s songs and whose stories are brought up to date on Boys And Girls In America. They’re druggy misfits who probably grew up listening to The Replacements’ Sorry Ma, Forgot To Take Out The Trash and wondered in baffled awe how Paul Westerberg knew so much about them and their mall-rat lives. On Separation Sunday, especially, they go on dreadful benders, seek salvation in whatever drugs are available, getting high their only real imperative, have lots of unhappy wanton sex, are driven to madness, Christ and each other by confused and choleric urgencies.

The songs on the early albums were densely-written, with more words in their lyrics than virtually anything since the young Springsteen of Greetings From Asbury Park, NJ. They come at you in a torrential rush, full of brilliant images, many of them recurring from song to song across the two albums. It’s a trick that works here on Boys And Girls, too, key lines repeated, Finn given to a testifying vocal rapture, a brutal urban echo of Van Morrison’s sense of natural wonder.

On Boys And Girls, though, Finn’s writing is sharper than ever, the various narratives driven less by the wordy exposition of yore than acute observation, devastating detail, by turns exclamatory, epigrammatic and grainily authentic. Songs like the delirious opener “Stuck Between Stations”, the brutally jaunty “Hot Soft Light”, the corrosive “Party Pit” and the sulphurous waltz of “First Night” are a toxic mix of Springsteen’s cavernous romanticism and the grim verité of something like Lou Reed’s “Street Hassle”. Soiled vignettes, in other words, of lives in the teenage wastelands, given up to fleeting sordid pleasures and piss-stained dreams of better times that never arrive.

Musically, too, The Hold Steady are tighter, wholly as exciting at times as the E Street Band in their turbo-charged prime; several tracks are punctuated by rollicking keyboard parts from Franz Nicolay that recall Roy Bittan’s work with Springsteen’s rowdy crew. The Hold Steady have frankly never sounded bigger or more furiously robust – this is often deafening arena rock, unashamedly so, a ferocious methamphetamine rush, urgent, at times almost out of control, a vast swampy roar. It’s a holy noise that runs from bone-crunching riffs that recall the Stones, Thin Lizzy, AC/DC, the E Street boys and Replacements, to swaggering doo-wop harmonies, hook-filled garage band pop and a dynamic clout that more than once recalls the hardcore rancour of This Year’s Model.

Like Richmond Fontaine’s Willy Vlautin, Finn’s inspired as much by literature as rock’n’roll – the album’s title is inspired by a line from Jack Keruoac’s On The Road and “Stuck Between Stations” turns out partly to be about the suicide of the great American poet, John Berryman (as much, perhaps, an influence on Finn as the writer Delmore Schwarz was on the youthfully impressionable Lou Reed). There’s nothing starchy or stuck-up about this, however – Finn’s writing is rich in common vernacular, slangy, conversational, often very funny and illuminated by a white-hot attention to detail. It’s the kind of language you might overhear in bars where people go to drink and die, poetic in its grungy perfection but never merely fanciful or artfully abstract.

They swell with charred truth, these songs and rock like there’s no tomorrow. Which, when all is said and equally done, there won’t be for Holly, Gideon and Charlemagne, the world going up in flames around them.Welcome to the first great album of 2007.

ALLAN JONES

V/A- American Hardcore: The History Of American Punk Rock 1980-1986

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When it exploded out of the anxious loins of miscreant teenage America in 1980 with Bad Brains’ epochal and amazing “Pay to Cum”, hardcore was the closest thing to folk music America had produced in decades. The original American punks were aesthetes, poets manqué, Bohemians in the age-old tradition. Hardcore kids, on the other hand, couldn’t give two shits about Rimbaud or Warhol or AM radio in the ‘60s. Instead, they sounded as if they were scrawling invective on the stall wall while they beat their meat red and raw in the high school bathroom. Yes, hardcore was unrelentingly masculine, not to mention repulsively misogynistic and often homophobic and racist. But its esprit de corps was incredibly infectious and inspirational - there really is nothing more liberating than the moshpit. This is evident on American Hardcore, the exhilarating soundtrack to Steven Blush’s new documentary. Even without the biotic odour and flying bodies – on anthemic tracks like Minor Threat’s fervent “Filler”, MDC’s rousing “I Remember” and Gang Green’s desperate “Kill a Commie”. It’s no coincidence that the febrile intensity of the vocalists – to say nothing of the guitarists and drummers – collected on American Hardcore resembles holy-roller true believers speaking in tongues. Hardcore was a religion, and this was reflected in lyrics that were naked and unadorned, diary entries set to spasmodic, spirited guitars. However, the devotion was not necessarily to sound, but to mindset, and perhaps this is why punk has cast a stronger, longer lasting shadow across the US than in the UK, and why, even without Green Day swiping Circle Jerks hooks or black metal bands appropriating the vocal style of Negative Approach’s John Brannon and blast beats of just about everyone, hardcore would still be an imposing presence on the American rock scene. There are some glaring omissions here (no Descendents, Necros, Hüsker Dü or Naked Raygun), and with all of the mp3 blogs devoted to hardcore, you’d think that Rhino would have spiced the package up a bit to entice paying customers. But these are small gripes of what is otherwise a crucial, revelatory collection - more fun than elbowing a stagediving skinhead. PETER SHAPIRO

When it exploded out of the anxious loins of miscreant teenage America in 1980 with Bad Brains’ epochal and amazing “Pay to Cum”, hardcore was the closest thing to folk music America had produced in decades. The original American punks were aesthetes, poets manqué, Bohemians in the age-old tradition. Hardcore kids, on the other hand, couldn’t give two shits about Rimbaud or Warhol or AM radio in the ‘60s. Instead, they sounded as if they were scrawling invective on the stall wall while they beat their meat red and raw in the high school bathroom.

Yes, hardcore was unrelentingly masculine, not to mention repulsively misogynistic and often homophobic and racist. But its esprit de corps was incredibly infectious and inspirational – there really is nothing more liberating than the moshpit. This is evident on American Hardcore, the exhilarating soundtrack to Steven Blush’s new documentary. Even without the biotic odour and flying bodies – on anthemic tracks like Minor Threat’s fervent “Filler”, MDC’s rousing “I Remember” and Gang Green’s desperate “Kill a Commie”.

It’s no coincidence that the febrile intensity of the vocalists – to say nothing of the guitarists and drummers – collected on American Hardcore resembles holy-roller true believers speaking in tongues. Hardcore was a religion, and this was reflected in lyrics that were naked and unadorned, diary entries set to spasmodic, spirited guitars. However, the devotion was not necessarily to sound, but to mindset, and perhaps this is why punk has cast a stronger, longer lasting shadow across the US than in the UK, and why, even without Green Day swiping Circle Jerks hooks or black metal bands appropriating the vocal style of Negative Approach’s John Brannon and blast beats of just about everyone, hardcore would still be an imposing presence on the American rock scene.

There are some glaring omissions here (no Descendents, Necros, Hüsker Dü or Naked Raygun), and with all of the mp3 blogs devoted to hardcore, you’d think that Rhino would have spiced the package up a bit to entice paying customers. But these are small gripes of what is otherwise a crucial, revelatory collection – more fun than elbowing a stagediving skinhead.

PETER SHAPIRO

Holden – The Idiots Are Winning

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Uncut first experienced the tremendous force of James Holden’s music early one Sunday morning last year on the heaving dancefloor of Berlin’s Berghain nightclub, a former power station turned Euro techno crucible. Using CDs, he DJed zooming Wagnerian trance that artfully buckled and twitched and drove the cosmopolitan revellers wild. Once witnessed, such prowess is not easily forgotten. And that wickedly playful, restlessly inventive spirit coarses through The Idiots Are Winning, the long-haired 26-year-old London producer’s astonishing debut album. Here, aesthetically at least, Loveless and “Windowlicker” collide at exquisite velocity. Holden is by no means a newcomer. Pete Tong gushed over his debut trance smash “Horizons”, penned in 1999 while studying maths at Oxford University. He’s since conquered the dance world with a string of adventurous singles and bold remixes for the likes of New Order, Britney Spears and Madonna. Holden also runs his Border Community label, home to bucolic post-rave upstarts Nathan Fake and Petter, and earlier this year expressed deep-rooted indie sympathy on his 'At The Controls' mix, weaving Malcolm Middleton and Harmonia around Trans Am and Plastikman. As the entrepreneurial leader of the post-Aphex generation of producers, this gives you some idea of where he’s heading. With this record, then, he’s ready to be taken seriously as an artist, not just a dance bloke. Certainly The Idiots… brims with confidence – Holden’s cocky enough to call two minutes of mid-LP silence “Intentionally Left Blank”. His buccaneering, semi-slapdash approach gives these tracks stacks of personality, and he excels at interpreting current ideas in new and fascinating ways. On masterful opener “Lump” and its sisters “10101” and “Idiot”, he seduces with vogueish minimal sounds before unfolding wave upon curdled wave of woozy euphoric grunge. Enlightened and agreeably alien, it’s like Mudhoney covering Boards Of Canada. PIERS MARTIN

Uncut first experienced the tremendous force of James Holden’s music early one Sunday morning last year on the heaving dancefloor of Berlin’s Berghain nightclub, a former power station turned Euro techno crucible. Using CDs, he DJed zooming Wagnerian trance that artfully buckled and twitched and drove the cosmopolitan revellers wild.

Once witnessed, such prowess is not easily forgotten. And that wickedly playful, restlessly inventive spirit coarses through The Idiots Are Winning, the long-haired 26-year-old London producer’s astonishing debut album. Here, aesthetically at least, Loveless and “Windowlicker” collide at exquisite velocity.

Holden is by no means a newcomer. Pete Tong gushed over his debut trance smash “Horizons”, penned in 1999 while studying maths at Oxford University. He’s since conquered the dance world with a string of adventurous singles and bold remixes for the likes of New Order, Britney Spears and Madonna. Holden also runs his Border Community label, home to bucolic post-rave upstarts Nathan Fake and Petter, and earlier this year expressed deep-rooted indie sympathy on his ‘At The Controls’ mix, weaving Malcolm Middleton and Harmonia around Trans Am and Plastikman.

As the entrepreneurial leader of the post-Aphex generation of producers, this gives you some idea of where he’s heading.

With this record, then, he’s ready to be taken seriously as an artist, not just a dance bloke. Certainly The Idiots… brims with confidence – Holden’s cocky enough to call two minutes of mid-LP silence “Intentionally Left Blank”. His buccaneering, semi-slapdash approach gives these tracks stacks of personality, and he excels at interpreting current ideas in new and fascinating ways. On masterful opener “Lump” and its sisters “10101” and “Idiot”, he seduces with vogueish minimal sounds before unfolding wave upon curdled wave of woozy euphoric grunge. Enlightened and agreeably alien, it’s like Mudhoney covering Boards Of Canada.

PIERS MARTIN

The Bee Gees – The Studio Albums 1967-1968

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The 45-year odyssey of the Brothers Gibb — a crazy zigzag whisking them from floundering unknowns in Brisbane to international superstars twice — ranks with the Beach Boys' saga for family melodrama and rock transmogrification. Nowadays, it is their disco years that are routinely privileged. But the enduring success of Saturday Night Fever has tended to obscure an exquisite early body of work that caught the spirit of its times like precious few others. The six-disc Studio Albums 1967-1968 brings that material into sharp focus. With mono/stereo versions of their first three albums (1st, Horizontal and Idea) and three more CDs of outtakes, alternates, and lost singles, it contends that the Bee Gees Mark One (brothers Barry, Robin, and Maurice Gibb, guitarist Vince Melourney, drummer Colin Petersen) were a a studio juggernaut to challenge The Beatles and Phil Spector. Their opening trilogy can even be seen as the culmination of myriad styles percolating in the late '60s: Beatlesque impressions, baroque balladry, whimsical psychedelia, R&B. Bee Gees 1st, an audacious debut, didn't so much imitate Revolver as expand upon its ambitions, incorporating driving rockers, Gregorian chants, and devastating, near-symphonic motifs. Already, the Gibbs seemed to be dragging the pop song into ever-more grandiose and ornate environs. If the melodies seemed chirpy and effusive, wistful melancholy always lurked just beneath the surface. Horizontal and Idea were solid follow-ups, though the treacly ballads detract from the band's cosmopolitan strengths. For all their hits on perpetual oldies rotation - "Massachusetts," "I've Gotta Get A Message to You," "Words," "To Love Somebody" – it’s the group's less-celebrated excursions into psychedelia and hard-rock that will astonish the sceptics. A good case in point is "Harry Braff", a daft racecar-driver sketch heard best in the alternate version. With a lethal hook, spinetingling harmonies, droning guitar, and pulsating bass, it was perhaps too ambitious; emblematic of a very young, abundantly talented group bursting with an artistic potential that, as it turned out, they would only partially realise. LUKE TORN

The 45-year odyssey of the Brothers Gibb — a crazy zigzag whisking them from floundering unknowns in Brisbane to international superstars twice — ranks with the Beach Boys’ saga for family melodrama and rock transmogrification. Nowadays, it is their disco years that are routinely privileged. But the enduring success of Saturday Night Fever has tended to obscure an exquisite early body of work that caught the spirit of its times like precious few others.

The six-disc Studio Albums 1967-1968 brings that material into sharp focus. With mono/stereo versions of their first three albums (1st, Horizontal and Idea) and three more CDs of outtakes, alternates, and lost singles, it contends that the Bee Gees Mark One (brothers Barry, Robin, and Maurice Gibb, guitarist Vince Melourney, drummer Colin Petersen) were a a studio juggernaut to challenge The Beatles and Phil Spector.

Their opening trilogy can even be seen as the culmination of myriad styles percolating in the late ’60s: Beatlesque impressions, baroque balladry, whimsical psychedelia, R&B. Bee Gees 1st, an audacious debut, didn’t so much imitate Revolver as expand upon its ambitions, incorporating driving rockers, Gregorian chants, and devastating, near-symphonic motifs.

Already, the Gibbs seemed to be dragging the pop song into ever-more grandiose and ornate environs. If the melodies seemed chirpy and effusive, wistful melancholy always lurked just beneath the surface.

Horizontal and Idea were solid follow-ups, though the treacly ballads detract from the band’s cosmopolitan strengths. For all their hits on perpetual oldies rotation – “Massachusetts,” “I’ve Gotta Get A Message to You,” “Words,” “To Love Somebody” – it’s the group’s less-celebrated excursions into psychedelia and hard-rock that will

astonish the sceptics.

A good case in point is “Harry Braff”, a daft racecar-driver sketch heard best in the alternate version. With a lethal hook, spinetingling harmonies, droning guitar, and pulsating bass, it was perhaps too ambitious; emblematic of a very young, abundantly talented group bursting with an artistic potential that, as it turned out, they would only partially realise.

LUKE TORN

Angie Stone Signs To Reactivated Stax Records

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Celebrating the label’s 50th anniversary – the legendary Stax Records is back – with two new signings, R&B vocalist Angie Stone and soul luminary Isaac Hayes. Excited by the prospect of joining the home of soul, Angie Stone said, “The thrill of putting out music on the label that brought the world Otis, Booker T, the Staples and so many other artists who made me want to sing in the first place is simply indescribable.” She added, “I simply can’t believe that I will be a Stax artist – and I’ll be label mates with Isaac Hayes. The staff at Stax share my belief that soul has to stay in touch with its origins. We’re going to make beautiful music together.” Isaac Hayes has been equally excited about the revitalized Stax, saying, “Stax always has been and always will be Soul Music, I was a part of that. I am coming back to Stax because there is still so much to do. It’s like coming home.” As well as the latest signings, the 50th anniversary year will also see deluxe re-issues, special events and more artists joining the home of soul. The first new release will be “Stax 50: A 50th Anniversary Celebration”, a two-CD, 50-track anthology brimming with hits from Sam & Dave (“Soul Man,” “Hold On, I’m Comin’”), Otis Redding “(Sittin’ on) The Dock of the Bay,” “Respect”), Booker T. & the MGs (“Green Onions”), Isaac Hayes (“Theme from Shaft,” “Never Can Say Goodbye”), The Staples Singers (“Respect Yourself,” “I’ll Take You There”), Eddie Floyd (“Knock on Wood”), Rufus Thomas (“Walkin’ the Dog”), Carla Thomas (“B-A-B-Y”), Jean Knight (“Mr. Big Stuff”) and many more. Featuring a unique lenticular cover and extensive notes from Stax historian Rob Bowman’s acclaimed book Soulsville U.S.A.: The Story of Stax, this extraordinary compilation is an authoritative display of Stax’s creative vitality and unbridled chart power. Plans for digital releases, remixes and other projects are also in the works- the anniversary year’s releases are slated to include more than 20 CDs and DVDs. “This is about honoring an extraordinary legacy,” said Concord Music Group General Manager, Gene Rumsey, adding, “We look forward not only to providing indispensable collections of the most famous Stax recordings, but also to shining a spotlight on many lesser-known and undiscovered gems.”

Celebrating the label’s 50th anniversary – the legendary Stax Records is back – with two new signings, R&B vocalist Angie Stone and soul luminary Isaac Hayes.

Excited by the prospect of joining the home of soul, Angie Stone said, “The thrill of putting out music on the label that brought the world Otis, Booker T, the Staples and so many other artists who made me want to sing in the first place is simply indescribable.”

She added, “I simply can’t believe that I will be a Stax artist – and I’ll be label mates with Isaac Hayes. The staff at Stax share my belief that soul has to stay in touch with its origins. We’re going to make beautiful music together.”

Isaac Hayes has been equally excited about the revitalized Stax, saying, “Stax always has been and always will be Soul Music, I was a part of that. I am coming back to Stax because there is still so much to do. It’s like coming home.”

As well as the latest signings, the 50th anniversary year will also see deluxe re-issues, special events and more artists joining the home of soul.

The first new release will be “Stax 50: A 50th Anniversary Celebration”, a two-CD, 50-track anthology brimming with hits from Sam & Dave (“Soul Man,” “Hold On, I’m Comin’”), Otis Redding “(Sittin’ on) The Dock of the Bay,” “Respect”), Booker T. & the MGs (“Green Onions”), Isaac Hayes (“Theme from Shaft,” “Never Can Say Goodbye”), The Staples Singers (“Respect Yourself,” “I’ll Take You There”), Eddie Floyd (“Knock on Wood”), Rufus Thomas (“Walkin’ the Dog”), Carla Thomas (“B-A-B-Y”), Jean Knight (“Mr. Big Stuff”) and many more.

Featuring a unique lenticular cover and extensive notes from Stax historian Rob Bowman’s acclaimed book Soulsville U.S.A.: The Story of Stax, this extraordinary compilation is an authoritative display of Stax’s creative vitality and unbridled chart power.

Plans for digital releases, remixes and other projects are also in the works- the anniversary year’s releases are slated to include more than 20 CDs and DVDs. “This is about honoring an extraordinary legacy,” said Concord Music Group General Manager, Gene Rumsey, adding, “We look forward not only to providing indispensable collections of the most famous Stax recordings, but also to shining a spotlight on many lesser-known and undiscovered gems.”

Ronnie Wood To Become A Window Dresser

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Musician, songwriter, painter, sculptor, and now window dresser. Early next year Ronnie Wood is to design a window display for luxury London department store Harrods. The window is rumoured to be Rolling Stones themed, and will include some of his artwork. Wood was approached to create a display as part of the department store's 'Harrods Rocks' event in February. The store is also hosting an exhibition called 'Born to Rock', which features historic and vintage guitars owned by the likes of Eric Clapton and Jimi Hendrix. Ronnie Wood's art work is on permanent display at the Scream Gallery in London. For more information click here Ronnie Wood currently has an anthology of his musical career out which features tracks from his solo albums plus rare tracks by the Birds (which was led by his recently deceased brother Art), the Jeff Beck Group, the Faces and the Stones. For more information - click here for the Ronnie Wood album stockist

Musician, songwriter, painter, sculptor, and now window dresser.

Early next year Ronnie Wood is to design a window display for luxury London department store Harrods.

The window is rumoured to be Rolling Stones themed, and will include some of his artwork. Wood was approached to create a display as part of the department store’s ‘Harrods Rocks’ event in February.

The store is also hosting an exhibition called ‘Born to Rock’, which features historic and vintage guitars owned by the likes of Eric Clapton and Jimi Hendrix.

Ronnie Wood’s art work is on permanent display at the Scream Gallery in

London.

For more information click here

Ronnie Wood currently has an anthology of his musical career out which

features tracks from his solo albums plus rare tracks by the Birds (which was led by his recently deceased brother Art), the Jeff Beck Group, the Faces and the Stones.

For more information – click here for the Ronnie Wood album stockist

Legendary Garage Rock Trio Split After 20 Years

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Legendary group Dead Moon have announced that they are to split after more than 20 years. Fred Cole formed the band in Oregon in 1987 after 60's cult garage psch band The Lollipop Shoppe who featured on 'Nuggets.' A Dead Moon compilation, “Echoes Of The Past,” showing off Dead Moon’s deranged, raggedly thrilling garage punk music was voted in at number 13 in Uncut’s Top 20 Reissues of 2006 poll. All Dead moon vinyl releases published through their own tombstone label were cut on the same lathe that the Kingsmen's version of "Louie Louie" was cut on back in 1963. Pearl Jam's Eddie Vedder is a celebrity fan, and the Seattle group cover the Dead Moon song "It's OK", regularly playing it spliced with their song "Daughter" during live shows. Many rumours have been circulating about the split on the internet - most of them citing touring problems in europe, but no official reason has yet been given for the split!

Legendary group Dead Moon have announced that they are to split after more than 20 years.

Fred Cole formed the band in Oregon in 1987 after 60’s cult garage psch band The Lollipop Shoppe who featured on ‘Nuggets.’

A Dead Moon compilation, “Echoes Of The Past,” showing off Dead Moon’s deranged, raggedly thrilling garage punk music was voted in at number 13 in Uncut’s Top 20 Reissues of 2006 poll.

All Dead moon vinyl releases published through their own tombstone label were cut on the same lathe that the Kingsmen’s version of “Louie Louie” was cut on back in 1963.

Pearl Jam’s Eddie Vedder is a celebrity fan, and the Seattle group cover the Dead Moon song “It’s OK”, regularly playing it spliced with their song “Daughter” during live shows.

Many rumours have been circulating about the split on the internet – most of them citing touring problems in europe, but no official reason has yet been given for the split!