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Brian Wilson Biopic

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Just a few days after Brian Wilson was inducted into the UK Hall of Fame, the songwriter has made a deal with “Saving Private Ryan” producer Mark Gordon to start work on a feature length biopic about his life. David Leaf who has known Wilson for 30 years and previously filmed Wilson for the documentary “Beautiful Dreamer” is also on board to help with the new film. Rights to use Wilson’s song catalogue has been granted and a scriptwriter is soon to be appointed. Talking to Daily Variety, Wilson said, "I love the idea of there being a movie on my life, and I can't wait to see the script.” Talking about how the film would tackle some of the hard parts of his life, Wilson said, "It's tough, and when I see the movie I'll be ill at ease at some of the bad parts. But I remember when we made 'Pet Sounds,' and I knew we were up to something spiritual and special. I have that feeling again." The producers will take the film package to the studios once the script is complete.

Just a few days after Brian Wilson was inducted into the UK Hall of Fame, the songwriter has made a deal with “Saving Private Ryan” producer Mark Gordon to start work on a feature length biopic about his life.

David Leaf who has known Wilson for 30 years and previously filmed Wilson for the documentary “Beautiful Dreamer” is also on board to help with the new film.

Rights to use Wilson’s song catalogue has been granted and a scriptwriter is soon to be appointed.

Talking to Daily Variety, Wilson said, “I love the idea of there being a movie on my life, and I can’t wait to see the script.”

Talking about how the film would tackle some of the hard parts of his life, Wilson said, “It’s tough, and when I see the movie I’ll be ill at ease at some of the bad parts. But I remember when we made ‘Pet Sounds,’ and I knew we were up to something spiritual and special. I have that feeling again.”

The producers will take the film package to the studios once the script is complete.

Watch Hilarious Jarvis Parody Here

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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: In honour of Jarvis’ triumphant comeback solo gig at London’s Koko last night, we remind you of Chris Morris’ brilliant parody of Jarvis Cocker and Pulp’s “Disco 2000” video. In this clip taken from the satire series Brasseye, Pulp are renamed Blouse and the song is called “Me Oh Myra” about serial killer Myra Hindlay. Watch the hilarious Jarvis spoof 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: In honour of Jarvis’ triumphant comeback solo gig at London’s Koko last night, we remind you of Chris Morris’ brilliant parody of Jarvis Cocker and Pulp’s “Disco 2000” video.

In this clip taken from the satire series Brasseye, Pulp are renamed Blouse and the song is called “Me Oh Myra” about serial killer Myra Hindlay.

Watch the hilarious Jarvis spoof by clicking here now

Chris Cornell Making New Solo Album

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Chris Cornell, former frontman with grunge Soundgarden and currently the voice behind the new James Bond Movie theme song “You Know My Name,” has spoken about progress on his second solo album. This new album will be the grunge songwriter’s first solo effort since1999’s critically acclaimed debut, “Euphoria Morning.” Cornell says of the new music that, “It’s not as aggressive as an Audioslave record, but much more experimental. It’s something that I’ve always done - even in the early days of Soundgarden – and I use that as a time to do a lot of things in music I wouldn’t normally do in a band, which is a lot. I could make solo records for the rest of my career and still wouldn’t run out of things to try.” The album is being produced by Steve Lilywhite, whose previous credits include Morrissey, the Rolling Stones and U2, and is scheduled for completion early next year. Chris Cornell will be in the UK at the same time and will announce some live dates nearer the time. Audioslave have recently released their third studio album “Revelations.” Listen to the theme for Casino Royale- “You Know My Name” by clicking here now

Chris Cornell, former frontman with grunge Soundgarden and currently the voice behind the new James Bond Movie theme song “You Know My Name,” has spoken about progress on his second solo album.

This new album will be the grunge songwriter’s first solo effort since1999’s critically acclaimed debut, “Euphoria Morning.”

Cornell says of the new music that, “It’s not as aggressive as an Audioslave record, but much more experimental. It’s something that I’ve always done – even in the early days of Soundgarden – and I use that as a time to do a lot of things in music I wouldn’t normally do in a band, which is a lot. I could make solo records for the rest of my career and still wouldn’t run out of things to try.”

The album is being produced by Steve Lilywhite, whose previous credits include Morrissey, the Rolling Stones and U2, and is scheduled for completion early next year.

Chris Cornell will be in the UK at the same time and will announce some live dates nearer the time.

Audioslave have recently released their third studio album “Revelations.”

Listen to the theme for Casino Royale- “You Know My Name” by clicking here now

Michael Jackson Jeered As James Blunt Wins Double

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Michael Jackson was controversially booed by the audience at last night at the World Music Awards held at London’s Earls Court. As previously reported, Jackson was due to perform 1983 hit “Thriller” live at the ceremony after picking up a Diamond Award to recognise selling over 100 million albums worldwide - but on the night, Jackson said it had been a mix-up. Instead he performed to a booing crowd, managing only the first three lines of “We Are The World” before being swamped by the 50 young backing singers who were onstage with him. The hype surrounding the troubled singer distracted from the other award winners – especially homegrown talent James Blunt who was the only UK winner. Blunt picked up two awards, one for World’s Best New Artist and Best Selling British Artist for sales of “Back To Bedlam” worldwide. Other winners were Madonna who won World’s Best Pop Artist, and Beyonce who won World’s Best R&B Artist.

Michael Jackson was controversially booed by the audience at last night at the World Music Awards held at London’s Earls Court.

As previously reported, Jackson was due to perform 1983 hit “Thriller” live at the ceremony after picking up a Diamond Award to recognise selling over 100 million albums worldwide – but on the night, Jackson said it had been a mix-up.

Instead he performed to a booing crowd, managing only the first three lines of “We Are The World” before being swamped by the 50 young backing singers who were onstage with him.

The hype surrounding the troubled singer distracted from the other award winners – especially homegrown talent James Blunt who was the only UK winner.

Blunt picked up two awards, one for World’s Best New Artist and Best Selling British Artist for sales of “Back To Bedlam” worldwide.

Other winners were Madonna who won World’s Best Pop Artist, and Beyonce who won World’s Best R&B Artist.

Watch The New Simpsons Movie Trailer Now

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Arguably the greatest American sitcom in television history – 2-D or otherwise - The Simpsons packs more ingenuity and linguistic invention into every scene than any other programme. After more than a decade of making us fall over laughing in the privacy of our own homes, The Simpsons is finally being made into its first Homer and Co. antic-filled feature-length film. Expected to be released in July next year, you can watch the first taste of The Simpsons Movie by clicking here!

Arguably the greatest American sitcom in television history – 2-D or otherwise – The Simpsons packs more ingenuity and linguistic invention into every scene than any other programme.

After more than a decade of making us fall over laughing in the privacy of our own homes, The Simpsons is finally being made into its first Homer and Co. antic-filled feature-length film.

Expected to be released in July next year, you can watch the first taste of The Simpsons Movie by clicking here!

Muse Star In Epic Spaghetti Western

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Muse have gone all Clint Eastwood in their new Joseph Kahn-directed six-minute epic promo video for new single “Knights of Cydonia.” The expansive rock track sees prog-pop trio Muse playing as holograms in a bar while scenes include soaring eagles, light sabres and slow motion duels and kung fu moves. There is also a love and betrayal and death by gallows storyline, with the love interest galloping scantily clad through the Californian desert on a unicorn. The mini-movie filmed in California, Romania and the UK pays homage to Star Wars, Barbarella and Evil Knievel – all at the same time. Director Joseph Kahn previously directed Britney Spears' “Toxic”, picking up a Grammy award in the process. You can watch the incredible video here: Windows Media - lo / hi Real Media - lo / hi Muse are currently on tour in the UK, they play in Birmingham tonight, and at the following venues: Birmingham NEC (November 15) Nottingham Arena (17) Sheffield Arena (18) Newcastle Metro Radio Arena (19) London Wembley Arena (21/22/23) Support on all dates comes from female fronted indie prog group, The Noisettes. “Knights of Cydonia” is released on November 27, on Warner Records.

Muse have gone all Clint Eastwood in their new Joseph Kahn-directed six-minute epic promo video for new single “Knights of Cydonia.”

The expansive rock track sees prog-pop trio Muse playing as holograms in a bar while scenes include soaring eagles, light sabres and slow motion duels and kung fu moves.

There is also a love and betrayal and death by gallows storyline, with the love interest galloping scantily clad through the Californian desert on a unicorn.

The mini-movie filmed in California, Romania and the UK pays homage to Star Wars, Barbarella and Evil Knievel – all at the same time.

Director Joseph Kahn previously directed Britney Spears’ “Toxic”, picking up a Grammy award in the process.

You can watch the incredible video here:

Windows Media –

lo / hi

Real Media –

lo / hi

Muse are currently on tour in the UK, they play in Birmingham tonight, and at the following venues:

Birmingham NEC (November 15)

Nottingham Arena (17)

Sheffield Arena (18)

Newcastle Metro Radio Arena (19)

London Wembley Arena (21/22/23)

Support on all dates comes from female fronted indie prog group, The Noisettes.

“Knights of Cydonia” is released on November 27, on Warner Records.

Watch Michael Jackson and Stevie Wonder

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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 a brightly-coloured US TV show that just so happens to feature not only a dapper Stevie Wonder, but also a very young Michael Jackson in a great purple pimp hat performing with his brothers in The Jackson 5. Filmed and shown in December 1969, an 18-year old Stevie Wonder performs “For Once In My Life”. Jackson is only 10-years-old in this four-minute clip, and the group sing “I Want You Back.” As previously reported, Michael Jackson is in London, ahead of his performance at the World Music Awards ceremony tonight at Earl’s Court. He is to perform a full length seven-minute reconstruction of his 1983 smash hit “Thriller.” Watch Stevie and Michael by clicking 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: Watch a brightly-coloured US TV show that just so happens to feature not only a dapper Stevie Wonder, but also a very young Michael Jackson in a great purple pimp hat performing with his brothers in The Jackson 5.

Filmed and shown in December 1969, an 18-year old Stevie Wonder performs “For Once In My Life”.

Jackson is only 10-years-old in this four-minute clip, and the group sing “I Want You Back.”

As previously reported, Michael Jackson is in London, ahead of his performance at the World Music Awards ceremony tonight at Earl’s Court.

He is to perform a full length seven-minute reconstruction of his 1983 smash hit “Thriller.”

Watch Stevie and Michael by clicking here

The Buzzcocks To Play Birthday Tour

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The Buzzcocks have announced a special birthday tour to round off the year. The tour “Buzzcocks 30” will also include a retrospective photo exhibition at the shows with classic shots from the 70s and 80s by Chris Gabrin and Kevin Cummins. The exhibition will also feature the band’s original album artwork by pioneering graphic designer Malcolm Garrett. He was responsible for designing the eye-catching sleeve artwork for all of their early records including 1980’s “A Different Kind Of Tension.” The Buzzcocks will play at the following venues. The London show at the Kentish Town Forum will also have DJ support from Don Letts and Kris Needs. Brighton, The Concert Hall (November 27) St Albans, Alban Arena (28) Bristol, Anson Rooms (29) Manchester, Academy (December 1) London, The Forum (2) Northampton, The Deco (4) Leicester, University (5) Gateshead, Sage (7) Glasgow, ABC (8) Warwick, Arts Centre (9) December 4 sees the release of the band’s new single, “Reconciliation,” taken from the Buzzcocks new studio album “Flat-Pack Philosophy.” Interestingly the album is available on multi-coloured vinyl – you can choose from yellow, purple, orange, or grey vinyl! For more information about the forthcoming shows – Click here to go to the Buzzcock’s homepage

The Buzzcocks have announced a special birthday tour to round off the year.

The tour “Buzzcocks 30” will also include a retrospective photo exhibition at the shows with classic shots from the 70s and 80s by Chris Gabrin and Kevin Cummins.

The exhibition will also feature the band’s original album artwork by pioneering graphic designer Malcolm Garrett. He was responsible for designing the eye-catching sleeve artwork for all of their early records including 1980’s “A Different Kind Of Tension.”

The Buzzcocks will play at the following venues. The London show at the Kentish Town Forum will also have DJ support from Don Letts and Kris Needs.

Brighton, The Concert Hall (November 27)

St Albans, Alban Arena (28)

Bristol, Anson Rooms (29)

Manchester, Academy (December 1)

London, The Forum (2)

Northampton, The Deco (4)

Leicester, University (5)

Gateshead, Sage (7)

Glasgow, ABC (8)

Warwick, Arts Centre (9)

December 4 sees the release of the band’s new single, “Reconciliation,” taken from the Buzzcocks new studio album “Flat-Pack Philosophy.”

Interestingly the album is available on multi-coloured vinyl – you can choose from yellow, purple, orange, or grey vinyl!

For more information about the forthcoming shows – Click here to go to the Buzzcock’s homepage

Wolfmother in Led Zeppelin Tribute Tonight

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Hard-rocking Aussies Wolfmother have renounced Satan ahead of their Led Zeppelin tribute at the UK Hall of Fame ceremony tonight (November 14). The band will play "Communication Breakdown" in honour of Led Zep’s induction into the hall of fame, but frontman Andrew Stockdale says he doesn’t share the '70s legends’ fascination with the occult. “I just wanna know are they for real with those satanic beliefs ‘cos we don’t wanna go there,” he told Uncut. “That’s dumb shit.” He added, “I like rock & roll but I don’t wanna fuckin’ harness dark spirits and sacrifice lambs. I just wanna be a normal dude with a simple life, I don’t wanna go down that path. It just scares me, man.” However, the singer also expressed amazement at the band’s power to reach a new generation of fans. Andrew said that a newer generation of fans are loving the old classics, “We did 'Communication Breakdown' last night in our encore; it’s amazing. You kind of wonder with those old songs whether young people don’t know about them, but they know every word. “It’s like with Pearl Jam, with their encore they did [The Who's] 'Baba O’Riley and you think, ‘Are they gonna know that?’, then all 30,000 people start singing the words. It’s incredible." The other stars to be honoured at this year's Hall of Fame Awards are Brian Wilson, Rod Stewart, Dusty Springfield and Beatles producer Sir George Martin. The ceremony takes place tonight at London’s Alexandra Palace.

Hard-rocking Aussies Wolfmother have renounced Satan ahead of their Led Zeppelin tribute at the UK Hall of Fame ceremony tonight (November 14).

The band will play “Communication Breakdown” in honour of Led Zep’s induction into the hall of fame, but frontman Andrew Stockdale says he doesn’t share the ’70s legends’ fascination with the occult.

“I just wanna know are they for real with those satanic beliefs ‘cos we don’t wanna go there,” he told Uncut. “That’s dumb shit.”

He added, “I like rock & roll but I don’t wanna fuckin’ harness dark spirits and sacrifice lambs. I just wanna be a normal dude with a simple life, I don’t wanna go down that path. It just scares me, man.”

However, the singer also expressed amazement at the band’s power to reach a new generation of fans.

Andrew said that a newer generation of fans are loving the old classics, “We did ‘Communication Breakdown’ last night in our encore; it’s amazing. You kind of wonder with those old songs whether young people don’t know about them, but they know every word.

“It’s like with Pearl Jam, with their encore they did [The Who’s] ‘Baba O’Riley and you think, ‘Are they gonna know that?’, then all 30,000 people start singing the words. It’s incredible.”

The other stars to be honoured at this year’s Hall of Fame Awards are Brian Wilson, Rod Stewart, Dusty Springfield and Beatles producer Sir George Martin.

The ceremony takes place tonight at London’s Alexandra Palace.

Teenage Fanclub To DJ This Saturday

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Norman Blake is set to play top London indiepop club “How Does It Feel To Be Loved?” this Saturday (November 18). The Teenage Fanclub songwriter previously DJ’ed at the club for their 3rd birthday bash last year. He played records from a collection that includes an original vinyl pressing of The Stooges' “Raw Power”, records by Os Mutantes, Ennio Morricone, Pentagle, and “Bedsitter'” by Soft Cell, not forgetting to throw in a ton of classic northern soul. We expect the Fannie’s playlist at The Phoenix this time around will be something similar, although there will be a few surprises. “How Does It Feel To Be Loved?” is a twice a month extavanganza of northern soul, revelling in the lush sound of pop from The Supremes to Orange Juice and Dexys Midnight Runners. For more information about HDIF and to try out the Random Moz Generator- Click here

Norman Blake is set to play top London indiepop club “How Does It Feel To Be Loved?” this Saturday (November 18).

The Teenage Fanclub songwriter previously DJ’ed at the club for their 3rd birthday bash last year.

He played records from a collection that includes an original vinyl pressing of The Stooges’ “Raw Power”, records by Os Mutantes, Ennio Morricone, Pentagle, and “Bedsitter’” by Soft Cell, not forgetting to throw in a ton of classic northern soul.

We expect the Fannie’s playlist at The Phoenix this time around will be something similar, although there will be a few surprises.

“How Does It Feel To Be Loved?” is a twice a month extavanganza of northern soul, revelling in the lush sound of pop from The Supremes to Orange Juice and Dexys Midnight Runners.

For more information about HDIF and to try out the Random Moz Generator- Click here

Tom Waits – Orphans

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Tom Waits has long been the leading ambassador for the American bohemian tradition, a role he inherited from the beats, bums and folkies of the '60s. And with this three-disc, 54-track set, he really is spoiling us. Culled in roughly equal proportions from previously recorded "orphan" tracks heretofore lacking a secure home in his oeuvre, and brand new material, the collection is divided into separate anthologies of Bawlers, Brawlers and Bastards, roughly correspondent respectively with ballads, blues, and bizarro items that don't sit comfortably in any category. It’s remarkable, though, how much of a piece the entire set is, reflecting how skilfully Waits has welded the various tributary styles of his art into a seamless whole. Whether they involve melancholy piano, wan banjo, gutbucket blues guitar, rumbustious horns, mouth percussion, or the sturm-und-clang of his Harry Partch-inspired homemade instruments, all these tracks are instantly recognisable as Tom Waits. This even holds for the cover versions of such things as The Ramones' "The Return Of Jackie And Judy", Daniel Johnston's "King Kong" or Brecht & Weill's "What Keeps Mankind Alive", all of which instantly adopt his musical character, like animals assuming the protective colouration of their surroundings. They have good reason to need protection, too: the world of Waits' Orphans is a tough and tragic, often brutal place, where the dice invariably roll snake-eyes, and any glimpse of love is but a fleeting memory. Has there ever been a sadder couplet than that which opens "The World Keeps Turning", written for the soundtrack to Pollock: "On our anniversary/There'll be someone else where you used to be"? If there has, it's probably lurking here, in similarly lachrymose laments like "The Fall Of Troy", an account of how a young boy's death impacts upon his family and friends, which opens with the observation, "It's the same with men as with horses and dogs/Nothing wants to die". A similar grim mordancy holds for most of Waits' protagonists - the drifter brought low on "Fannin Street"; the farmer who loses his farm in a flood, only to see his beloved leave town. But even if they're as bereft and abandoned as the hobo who's "Lost At The Bottom Of The World", the tiniest dewdrop can shine a glimmer of redemption into their world: "Well God’s green hair is where I slept last night/He balanced a diamond on a blade of grass". It's perhaps the case, as Waits suggests on the stealthy tango of clarinet and bowed saw "Little Drop Of Poison", that a touch of mischief adds a little spice to life, but it has to be in the right proportion, like the poison in the Fugu fish. Something similar applies to Waits' music, which always has the devil about it, some spark of intrigue that sets it apart from the routine run of singer-songwriter offerings. One's as unlikely to find David Gray, for instance, wielding dramatic metal percussion, wheezing rhythmically like a rusty iron lung, or attempting the weird psychobilly blend of staccato pedal steel and ramshackle horns that accompanies "Lie To Me”. In general, though, the arrangements on the Bawlers songs are subtler and more sensitive, with a wan tone well suited to the material. The mood changes significantly for Brawlers, which comprises mostly raucous, grungy blues, raggedy boogies, whiskery shuffles and barroom stomps delivered in Waits' distinctive rumble'n'clank manner - a delirious, rowdy sound in which can be discerned the godfatherly presences of Howlin' Wolf, Harry Partch and Captain Beefheart. This disc also contains what is undoubtedly Waits' most overtly political song, "Road To Peace", an account of a young suicide bomber's attack on a bus in Jerusalem, and the ghastly spiral of retribution it triggers. A stinging indictment of the fundamentalism afflicting all sides in the conflict, Waits serves his bitterest condemnation for the measly president insulated from his actions thousands of miles away, blithely fulfilling Kissinger's deadly notion that "...We have no friends; America has only interests". All the more devastating, too, for being virtually the only direct protest song in Waits's entire catalogue. There's so much more to enjoy here - the adaptations of Kerouac in "Home I'll Never Be" and "On The Road"; the caterwauling multi-tracked Tom choir bawling out "Goodnight Irene"; the prisoner in "Fish In The Jailhouse" bragging about his ability to pick locks with a fishbone; lines like "Well, the rat always knows when he's in with weasels"; and above all, the overarching humanism that enlightens even the most sombre corners of this massive project. It’s an attitude perhaps best encapsulated in "Bend Down The Branches", an allegorical observation about how trees (ie humans) may get old, but never ugly: "You're like a willow, once you were gold/We're made for bending, even beauty gets old". There's plenty that's old and beautiful about these Orphans. By Andy Gill

Tom Waits has long been the leading ambassador for the American bohemian tradition, a role he inherited from the beats, bums and folkies of the ’60s. And with this three-disc, 54-track set, he really is spoiling us.

Culled in roughly equal proportions from previously recorded “orphan” tracks heretofore lacking a secure home in his oeuvre, and brand new material, the collection is divided into separate anthologies of Bawlers, Brawlers and Bastards, roughly correspondent respectively with ballads, blues, and bizarro items that don’t sit comfortably in any category.

It’s remarkable, though, how much of a piece the entire set is, reflecting how skilfully Waits has welded the various tributary styles of his art into a seamless whole. Whether they involve melancholy piano, wan banjo, gutbucket blues guitar, rumbustious horns, mouth percussion, or the sturm-und-clang of his Harry Partch-inspired homemade instruments, all these tracks are instantly recognisable as Tom Waits. This even holds for the cover versions of such things as The Ramones’ “The Return Of Jackie And Judy”, Daniel Johnston’s “King Kong” or Brecht & Weill’s “What Keeps Mankind Alive”, all of which instantly adopt his musical character, like animals assuming the protective colouration of their surroundings.

They have good reason to need protection, too: the world of Waits’ Orphans is a tough and tragic, often brutal place, where the dice invariably roll snake-eyes, and any glimpse of love is but a fleeting memory. Has there ever been a sadder couplet than that which opens “The World Keeps Turning”, written for the soundtrack to Pollock: “On our anniversary/There’ll be someone else where you used to be”?

If there has, it’s probably lurking here, in similarly lachrymose laments like “The Fall Of Troy”, an account of how a young boy’s death impacts upon his family and friends, which opens with the observation, “It’s the same with men as with horses and dogs/Nothing wants to die”. A similar grim mordancy holds for most of Waits’ protagonists – the drifter brought low on “Fannin Street”; the farmer who loses his farm in a flood, only to see his beloved leave town. But even if they’re as bereft and abandoned as the hobo who’s “Lost At The Bottom Of The World”, the tiniest dewdrop can shine a glimmer of redemption into their world: “Well God’s green hair is where I slept last night/He balanced a diamond on a blade of grass”. It’s perhaps the case, as Waits suggests on the stealthy tango of clarinet and bowed saw “Little Drop Of Poison”, that a touch of mischief adds a little spice to life, but it has to be in the right proportion, like the poison in the Fugu fish.

Something similar applies to Waits’ music, which always has the devil about it, some spark of intrigue that sets it apart from the routine run of singer-songwriter offerings. One’s as unlikely to find David Gray, for instance, wielding dramatic metal percussion, wheezing rhythmically like a rusty iron lung, or attempting the weird psychobilly blend of staccato pedal steel and ramshackle horns that accompanies “Lie To Me”. In general, though, the arrangements on the Bawlers songs are subtler and more sensitive, with a wan tone well suited to the material.

The mood changes significantly for Brawlers, which comprises mostly raucous, grungy blues, raggedy boogies, whiskery shuffles and barroom stomps delivered in Waits’ distinctive rumble’n’clank manner – a delirious, rowdy sound in which can be discerned the godfatherly presences of Howlin’ Wolf, Harry Partch and Captain Beefheart.

This disc also contains what is undoubtedly Waits’ most overtly political song, “Road To Peace”, an account of a young suicide bomber’s attack on a bus in Jerusalem, and the ghastly spiral of retribution it triggers. A stinging indictment of the fundamentalism afflicting all sides in the conflict, Waits serves his bitterest condemnation for the measly president insulated from his actions thousands of miles away, blithely fulfilling Kissinger’s deadly notion that “…We have no friends; America has only interests”. All the more devastating, too, for being virtually the only direct protest song in Waits’s entire catalogue.

There’s so much more to enjoy here – the adaptations of Kerouac in “Home I’ll Never Be” and “On The Road”; the caterwauling multi-tracked Tom choir bawling out “Goodnight Irene”; the prisoner in “Fish In The Jailhouse” bragging about his ability to pick locks with a fishbone; lines like “Well, the rat always knows when he’s in with weasels”; and above all, the overarching humanism that enlightens even the most sombre corners of this massive project. It’s an attitude perhaps best encapsulated in “Bend Down The Branches”, an allegorical observation about how trees (ie humans) may get old, but never ugly: “You’re like a willow, once you were gold/We’re made for bending, even beauty gets old”. There’s plenty that’s old and beautiful about these Orphans.

By Andy Gill

David Crosby- Voyage

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A folkie with the pipes and timing of a jazz singer and the sensibility of a classical composer, David Crosby always had quite the elevated aesthetic. It was apparent in the groundbreaking harmonies of The Byrds, turned into spun gold with Crosby, Stills, Nash (And Young), then masterfully applied to his solo debut, 1971’s If I Could Only Remember My Name. Disc One of this fascinating career retrospective moves with unremitting elegance from The Byrds, through CSN and CSNY, to …Name and thence to the three LPs Crosby & Nash cut between 1972 and ’76. Given that the audacious and exquisite … Name alone features Neil Young and Graham Nash, members of the Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane and Santana and one-time flame Joni Mitchell (a sorely needed reissue is also on its way), there’s enough all-star firepower here to house an entire wing of the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame. As Cros would say, it’s a trip – one worth taking again and again. The second CD takes some liberties with the chronological approach in order to bring some flow to the music Crosby made intermittently in the subsequent three decades, between endless freebase hits, a prison term, liver failure and his downright miraculous recovery. The big surprise provided by these 15 little-heard and critically dismissed tracks is that, during even the worst of times, Crosby was able to come up with songs and vocal arrangements that echoed his halcyon days, despite generally dated production values. Still, for all but the most devoted fans, these recordings, culled from middling albums by CSN, CSNY, Crosby & Nash and CPR, will be a once-and-done listen, apart from the achingly beautiful pre- and post-redemption confessionals, CSN’s “Delta” (1982) and |CSNY’s “Compass” (’88). There are revelations aplenty among the 16 previously unreleased tracks on the third disc. Demos of “Long Time Gone,” “Déjà Vu” and “Triad” expose Crosby’s wispy, asymmetrical song structures, as well as the degree to which this born collaborator relied on his mates – notably, fellow genius/fuck-up Stephen Stills – for the solidity they provided. Live renditions of Crosby & Nash’s “The Lee Shore” and “Traction In The Rain” from 1971 are poetically pristine, and a scintillating 2002 workout on “Dream For Him” by CSNY could’ve come from 30 years earlier. There’s also a delightful outtake from …Name – the wistful, vocally adventurous “Kids And Dogs”, with heady guitar accompaniment from Jerry Garcia. But the real mindblower is an alternate take of …Name’s “Cowboy Movie”, in which Crosby sings his ample ass off, clearly inspired by the breathtaking guitar interplay of Garcia and Neil Young, both in absolutely peak form, while Phil Lesh and Mickey Hart manage to keep the roof from blowing off. By Bud Scoppa

A folkie with the pipes and timing of a jazz singer and the sensibility of a classical composer, David Crosby always had quite the elevated aesthetic. It was apparent in the groundbreaking harmonies of The Byrds, turned into spun gold with Crosby, Stills, Nash (And Young), then masterfully applied to his solo debut, 1971’s If I Could Only Remember My Name.

Disc One of this fascinating career retrospective moves with unremitting elegance from The Byrds, through CSN and CSNY, to …Name and thence to the three LPs Crosby & Nash cut between 1972 and ’76. Given that the audacious and exquisite … Name alone features Neil Young and Graham Nash, members of the Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane and Santana and one-time flame Joni Mitchell (a sorely needed reissue is also on its way), there’s enough all-star firepower here to house an entire wing of the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame. As Cros would say, it’s a trip – one worth taking again and again.

The second CD takes some liberties with the chronological approach in order to bring some flow to the music Crosby made intermittently in the subsequent three decades, between endless freebase hits, a prison term, liver failure and his downright miraculous recovery.

The big surprise provided by these 15 little-heard and critically dismissed tracks is that, during even the worst of times, Crosby was able to come up with songs and vocal arrangements that echoed his halcyon days, despite generally dated production values. Still, for all but the most devoted fans, these recordings, culled from middling albums by CSN, CSNY, Crosby & Nash and CPR, will be a once-and-done listen, apart from the achingly beautiful pre- and post-redemption confessionals, CSN’s “Delta” (1982) and |CSNY’s “Compass” (’88).

There are revelations aplenty among the 16 previously unreleased tracks on the third disc. Demos of “Long Time Gone,” “Déjà Vu” and “Triad” expose Crosby’s wispy, asymmetrical song structures, as well as the degree to which this born collaborator relied on his mates – notably, fellow genius/fuck-up Stephen Stills – for the solidity they provided.

Live renditions of Crosby & Nash’s “The Lee Shore” and “Traction In The Rain” from 1971 are poetically pristine, and a scintillating 2002 workout on “Dream For Him” by CSNY could’ve come from 30 years earlier. There’s also a delightful outtake from …Name – the wistful, vocally adventurous “Kids And Dogs”, with heady guitar accompaniment from Jerry Garcia.

But the real mindblower is an alternate take of …Name’s “Cowboy Movie”, in which Crosby sings his ample ass off, clearly inspired by the breathtaking guitar interplay of Garcia and Neil Young, both in absolutely peak form, while Phil Lesh and Mickey Hart manage to keep the roof from blowing off.

By Bud Scoppa

Oasis – Stop The Clocks

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Never a band renowned for doing things quietly, Stop The Clocks nevertheless finds Oasis making a tacit admission. A collection, effectively, of Noel Gallagher’s favourite moments from the band’s catalogue, so heavily weighted is it in favour of Oasis’ early material (14 out of 18 tracks come from the first two albums and contemporary b-sides), it makes quietly explicit what their fans have long suspected. For all their embracing of the rock ‘n’ roll paradigm, Oasis never quite burned out – instead, they faded away. It hardly needs to be said, but in the 18 months during which they burned most brightly, however – the period when they made nearly all of the tracks here – this band effortlessly outshone everything around them. As well as the immediacy of that remarkable rise, though, Oasis also made an appeal to history: constantly stating that theirs was truly great rock’n’roll music, worthy of its canonical place. And Stop The Clocks suggests they were right. You may quibble with the ordering, or the exclusions (no “Cast No Shadow”? Or “Columbia”?), but the place that this music holds in the collective memory suggests that time has proved Oasis’s point. We all know these songs, of course, because they have become communal anthems. But before that, they existed without baggage, played by a band – in contrast to the grunge they followed – that dared to suggest being a rock star was easy. Even better, the poise of the material – the stately opening to “Supersonic”, say – insisted this was the case. If this kind of command was intoxicating then, such is the focus of this compilation, it’s hard not to note that for all their protestations (Liam: “Definitely Maybe? It’s gone. Get over it”) the band’s glory years are still very much on the Oasis mind. Sure, they can still rightly call themselves “the people’s band”, but in the company of their early songs “Lyla” and “The Importance of Being Idle” (both here) bear about as much resemblance to their earlier incarnation as they do to “Parklife”. Maybe above all, Stop The Clocks takes us back to where we came in with Oasis – to remind us that this was always a band with a fondness for great music of the past, even if it’s their own. But what a time to look back to: when their band were unburdened by the expectations of other people. A time when they were simply a self-assured, intuitive rock band being themselves. A great time, above all, when there just couldn’t have been anyone else. By John Robinson

Never a band renowned for doing things quietly, Stop The Clocks nevertheless finds Oasis making a tacit admission. A collection, effectively, of Noel Gallagher’s favourite moments from the band’s catalogue, so heavily weighted is it in favour of Oasis’ early material (14 out of 18 tracks come from the first two albums and contemporary b-sides), it makes quietly explicit what their fans have long suspected. For all their embracing of the rock ‘n’ roll paradigm, Oasis never quite burned out – instead, they faded away.

It hardly needs to be said, but in the 18 months during which they burned most brightly, however – the period when they made nearly all of the tracks here – this band effortlessly outshone everything around them. As well as the immediacy of that remarkable rise, though, Oasis also made an appeal to history: constantly stating that theirs was truly great rock’n’roll music, worthy of its canonical place.

And Stop The Clocks suggests they were right. You may quibble with the ordering, or the exclusions (no “Cast No Shadow”? Or “Columbia”?), but the place that this music holds in the collective memory suggests that time has proved Oasis’s point. We all know these songs, of course, because they have become communal anthems. But before that, they existed without baggage, played by a band – in contrast to the grunge they followed – that dared to suggest being a rock star was easy. Even better, the poise of the material – the stately opening to “Supersonic”, say – insisted this was the case.

If this kind of command was intoxicating then, such is the focus of this compilation, it’s hard not to note that for all their protestations (Liam: “Definitely Maybe? It’s gone. Get over it”) the band’s glory years are still very much on the Oasis mind. Sure, they can still rightly call themselves “the people’s band”, but in the company of their early songs “Lyla” and “The Importance of Being Idle” (both here) bear about as much resemblance to their earlier incarnation as they do to “Parklife”.

Maybe above all, Stop The Clocks takes us back to where we came in with Oasis – to remind us that this was always a band with a fondness for great music of the past, even if it’s their own. But what a time to look back to: when their band were unburdened by the expectations of other people. A time when they were simply a self-assured, intuitive rock band being themselves. A great time, above all, when there just couldn’t have been anyone else.

By John Robinson

Read And Have Your Say On The Years Most Controversial Album

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Along with the Amazonian rainforest, there can be few natural resources which have been ransacked like the Beatles back catalogue. Anthologised, lobotomised (1) and generally pillaged in the pursuit of commercial gain, public demand appeared to have finally exhausted itself with the middling response to 2003’s unfortunately titled Let It Be… Naked. Until now. Prompted by a long-term friendship between George Harrison and Cirque De Soleil’s founder Guy Laliberté, and given the blessing of the Axis Powers (Paul, Ringo and Yoko), Love is the latest addition to that bulging catalogue. Essentially the soundtrack to the Cirque show launched in Las Vegas last July, Love is a jaw-dropping 80- minute mash-up of The Beatles’ more accessible tunes, slavishly compiled by Giles Martin and overseen by father George, all delivered in sumptuous 5.1 surround sound. Those fearing a train-wreck along the lines of Twin Freaks – The Freelance Hellraiser’s remix assault on the Wings back catalogue - can rest easy. Starting off with “Because”, it segues into the drum solo from “The End”, hammers into the opening riff from “Hard Day’s Night” and then lurches straight into “Get Back” before you can splutter “Stars On 45”. From there it’s a musical landslide of Beatleology (“Eleanor Rigby”, “A Day In The Life”, “Here Comes The Sun”), all overlaid with snippets from every nook and cranny of their back catalogue. So we get “Drive My Car/The Word/What You’re Doing” as one continuous ebb’n’flow of mid-period drugginess, “Come Together/Dear Prudence” as an acid-fried soundscape and - best of all - the cosmic drones of “Tomorrow Never Knows” and “Within You Without You” fitted together like a glove. Wherever a song is allowed to stand alone (“Back In The USSR”, “Revolution”), it arrives with double-tracked vocals, stripped back instrumentation or - why not? - the faint tinge of sitar. If the scale is almost beyond comprehension, Love also represents a sonic Da Vinci Code for Beatles trainspotters, who could spend the rest of their lives arguing over whether the snare sound is derived from “No Reply” or “Paperback Writer”. Completists will enjoy a newly unearthed demo version of “Strawberry Fields Forever”, but it is the Martins’ obsessive quest for innovation which deserves the garlands. By Paul Moody

Along with the Amazonian rainforest, there can be few natural resources which have been ransacked like the Beatles back catalogue. Anthologised, lobotomised (1) and generally pillaged in the pursuit of commercial gain, public demand appeared to have finally exhausted itself with the middling response to 2003’s unfortunately titled Let It Be… Naked.

Until now. Prompted by a long-term friendship between George Harrison and Cirque De Soleil’s founder Guy Laliberté, and given the blessing of the Axis Powers (Paul, Ringo and Yoko), Love is the latest addition to that bulging catalogue.

Essentially the soundtrack to the Cirque show launched in Las Vegas last July, Love is a jaw-dropping 80- minute mash-up of The Beatles’ more accessible tunes, slavishly compiled by Giles Martin and overseen by father George, all delivered in sumptuous 5.1 surround sound.

Those fearing a train-wreck along the lines of Twin Freaks – The Freelance Hellraiser’s remix assault on the Wings back catalogue – can rest easy.

Starting off with “Because”, it segues into the drum solo from “The End”, hammers into the opening riff from “Hard Day’s Night” and then lurches straight into “Get Back” before you can splutter “Stars On 45”.

From there it’s a musical landslide of Beatleology (“Eleanor Rigby”, “A Day In The Life”, “Here Comes The Sun”), all overlaid with snippets from every nook and cranny of their back catalogue.

So we get “Drive My Car/The Word/What You’re Doing” as one continuous ebb’n’flow of mid-period drugginess, “Come Together/Dear Prudence” as an acid-fried soundscape and – best of all – the cosmic drones of “Tomorrow Never Knows” and “Within You Without You” fitted together like a glove.

Wherever a song is allowed to stand alone (“Back In The USSR”, “Revolution”), it arrives with double-tracked vocals, stripped back instrumentation or – why not? – the faint tinge of sitar.

If the scale is almost beyond comprehension, Love also represents a sonic Da Vinci Code for Beatles trainspotters, who could spend the rest of their lives arguing over whether the snare sound is derived from “No Reply” or “Paperback Writer”.

Completists will enjoy a newly unearthed demo version of “Strawberry Fields Forever”, but it is the Martins’ obsessive quest for innovation which deserves the garlands.

By Paul Moody

Tune Into Brilliant Rare Video Clip Of The Rolling Stones

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Every day, Uncut's brings 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 The Rolling Stones tearing it up on a version of “Jumpin' Jack Flash.” This live video clip was filmed on April 20, 1968, the first performance of the song after its original recording. This footage is the black and white alternative promo to the one more commonly seen colour version. And it’s also the ONLY time you’ll see a close-up of Brian Jones playing a Telecaster! Watch a ferocious Jumpin’ Jack Flash by clicking here now

Every day, Uncut’s brings 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 The Rolling Stones tearing it up on a version of “Jumpin’ Jack Flash.”

This live video clip was filmed on April 20, 1968, the first performance of the song after its original recording.

This footage is the black and white alternative promo to the one more commonly seen colour version.

And it’s also the ONLY time you’ll see a close-up of Brian Jones playing a Telecaster!

Watch a ferocious Jumpin’ Jack Flash by clicking here now

Pink Floyd Go Electro On New Dance Record

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Pink Floyd's classic “Another Brick In The Wall” is sampled on Swedish house DJ Eric Prydz’s forthcoming dance record “Proper Education.” The single, playlisted on Radio 1 a phenomenal seven weeks early, is Prydz’s follow up single to 2004’s number one hit “Call On Me.” This is the first time a Pink Floyd track has ever been officially cleared. “Proper Education” uses both the original David Gilmour vocals and musical elements of the Floyd's 1979 hit to make a modern crossover hit. The single is released on January 1, through Ministry of Sound. Listen to “Proper Education (versus Pink Floyd)” by clicking here now

Pink Floyd’s classic “Another Brick In The Wall” is sampled on Swedish house DJ Eric Prydz’s forthcoming dance record “Proper Education.”

The single, playlisted on Radio 1 a phenomenal seven weeks early, is Prydz’s follow up single to 2004’s number one hit “Call On Me.”

This is the first time a Pink Floyd track has ever been officially cleared.

“Proper Education” uses both the original David Gilmour vocals and musical elements of the Floyd’s 1979 hit to make a modern crossover hit.

The single is released on January 1, through Ministry of Sound.

Listen to “Proper Education (versus Pink Floyd)” by clicking here now

Blue Nile Members Confirm UK Shows

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Paul Buchahan, vocalist with The Blue Nile, has confirmed a handful of UK shows, on which he will be accompanied by former bandmate Robert Bell and a new backing band. The whereabouts of the trio’s third member Paul Moore is unclear. Billed as singing “the songs of The Blue Nile” the shows will showcase the band’s electro pop and ambient folk catalogue as well as new solo material. Stretchin across 25 years, The Blue Nile have released a mere four albums:”A Walk Across The Rooftops” in 1984; “Hats” in 1989, “Peace At Last” in 1996, and 2004's “High.” The atmospheric pop songs and velvety vocals of the Blue Nile have amassed quite a celebrity fanbase over the last 20 years, with Peter Gabriel and Rod Stewart both counting themselves in as fans. Paul Buchanan says of his songs, they have “always been a documentary of the imagination.” Paul Buchanan flies solo-ish at the following venues this month: London Theatre Royal Drury Lane (November 19) Dublin Vicar Street (21 & 22) Aberdeen Music Hall (24) Edinburgh Usher Hall (25 & 26) Perth Concert Hall (27) For more information about The Blue Nile – Click here Pic credit: Robert Burns

Paul Buchahan, vocalist with The Blue Nile, has confirmed a handful of UK shows, on which he will be accompanied by former bandmate Robert Bell and a new backing band.

The whereabouts of the trio’s third member Paul Moore is unclear.

Billed as singing “the songs of The Blue Nile” the shows will showcase the band’s electro pop and ambient folk catalogue as well as new solo material.

Stretchin across 25 years, The Blue Nile have released a mere four albums:”A Walk Across The Rooftops” in 1984; “Hats” in 1989, “Peace At Last” in 1996, and 2004’s “High.”

The atmospheric pop songs and velvety vocals of the Blue Nile have amassed quite a celebrity fanbase over the last 20 years, with Peter Gabriel and Rod Stewart both counting themselves in as fans.

Paul Buchanan says of his songs, they have “always been a documentary of the imagination.”

Paul Buchanan flies solo-ish at the following venues this month:

London Theatre Royal Drury Lane (November 19)

Dublin Vicar Street (21 & 22)

Aberdeen Music Hall (24)

Edinburgh Usher Hall (25 & 26)

Perth Concert Hall (27)

For more information about The Blue Nile – Click here

Pic credit: Robert Burns

Ms Dynamite In Smash Up With AC/DC

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Ms Dynamite was airlifted to a Northampton hospital after a high speed crash during filming for Sky One reality TV show “The Race”. The 25-year old singer was driving a Formula Ford at an estimated 100mph when the crash happened at Silverstone yesterday (November 12). The accident occurred when AC/DC singer Brian Johnson smashed into the back of her car causing her to spin off the track for about 50 metres before finally stopping. Luckily Ms Dynamite – real name Naomi McLean-Daley - is not thought to have sustained any injuries but will be kept in overnight for observation. A spokesman for Sky One reiterated that they “take health and safety very seriously and would not let them take part unless we were satisfied withthe level of competence they were at and all the necessary safety measures were in place." “The Race” programme saw five teams of men and women in competetion at Silverstone, under the guidance of Formula One drivers Eddie Irvine and David Coulthard.

Ms Dynamite was airlifted to a Northampton hospital after a high speed crash during filming for Sky One reality TV show “The Race”.

The 25-year old singer was driving a Formula Ford at an estimated 100mph when the crash happened at Silverstone yesterday (November 12).

The accident occurred when AC/DC singer Brian Johnson smashed into the back of her car causing her to spin off the track for about 50 metres before finally stopping.

Luckily Ms Dynamite – real name Naomi McLean-Daley – is not thought to have sustained any injuries but will be kept in overnight for observation.

A spokesman for Sky One reiterated that they “take health and safety very seriously and would not let them take part unless we were satisfied withthe level of competence they were at and all the necessary safety measures were in place.”

“The Race” programme saw five teams of men and women in competetion at Silverstone, under the guidance of Formula One drivers Eddie Irvine and David Coulthard.

Mick Jagger’s Father Dies

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Mick Jagger’s father Joe, a former fitness instructor, has passed away from pneumonia aged 93. Basil "Joe" Jagger, a former P.E. teacher, died in hospital on Saturday in Kingston, Surrey. A week earlier he was injured during a fall at his home. Mick Jagger, currently on tour with The Rolling Stones in North America, flew to England to be with his father late last week, but still returned in time for a concert in Las Vegas on Saturday night. Jagger, 63, was chatty on stage, but did not mention any personal matters, as is normal for him. As previously reported, the Rolling Stones tour seems to be experiencing bad luck with injuries and family members taking ill or worse. A private funeral is to be arranged for Joe Jagger. The Rolling Stones are still scheduled to play their next show in Idaho, on Tuesday (November 14).

Mick Jagger’s father Joe, a former fitness instructor, has passed away from pneumonia aged 93.

Basil “Joe” Jagger, a former P.E. teacher, died in hospital on Saturday in Kingston, Surrey. A week earlier he was injured during a fall at his home.

Mick Jagger, currently on tour with The Rolling Stones in North America, flew to England to be with his father late last week, but still returned in time for a concert in Las Vegas on Saturday night.

Jagger, 63, was chatty on stage, but did not mention any personal matters, as is normal for him.

As previously reported, the Rolling Stones tour seems to be experiencing bad luck with injuries and family members taking ill or worse.

A private funeral is to be arranged for Joe Jagger.

The Rolling Stones are still scheduled to play their next show in Idaho, on Tuesday (November 14).

Check out this punky Pete Doherty and Libertines Christmas footage

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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 a shambolically fabulous insight into world of Pete Doherty and his ex-bandmates, The Libertines. This three minute footage of the band playing “Horrorshow” was shot at London’s Rhythm Factory in December 2002. This footage captures perfectly the insane atmosphere and their rock n' roll attitude, They may not be able to stay on stage, but they mean it. Watch Pete and Co.’s stage antics by clicking 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: Watch a shambolically fabulous insight into world of Pete Doherty and his ex-bandmates, The Libertines.

This three minute footage of the band playing “Horrorshow” was shot at London’s Rhythm Factory in December 2002.

This footage captures perfectly the insane atmosphere and their rock n’ roll attitude, They may not be able to stay on stage, but they mean it.

Watch Pete and Co.’s stage antics by clicking here