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Neil Young – Live At The Fillmore East

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In the continuing absence of Neil Young’s "Archives", we clutch at any morsels dispensed from the great man’s table. Long a live bootleg classic – as well as being the source of "Tonight’s The Night"’s "Come On Baby Let’s Go Downtown" – Neil’s March 1970 sets at the Fillmore East showcased the rising star of grungy country rock in the company of the band that helped him find his musical feet on 1969’s cracklingly great "Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere". The title track of "Everybody Knows" is the opening one here and immediately sets the tone for "Live at the Fillmore East": the loosely funky 4/4 groove patented by drummer Ralph Molina and bassist Billy Talbot, the wiry guitar interplay between Young and junkie henchman Danny Whitten, the half-assed barrelhouse piano contributed by the curmudgeonly Jack Nitzsche (introduced by Young as hailing from New Mexico rather than his native Michigan). "Fillmore East" is most famous for the long jams on two "Everybody Knows" epics. "Down By The River" consists pretty much of two chords in the service of heads-down trance – imagine Hendrix’s "Hey Joe" fused with the horns-locked CSNY intensity of "Long Time Gone". The difference here is that Whitten simply complements Young’s livid, splayed extemporizations rather than (a la Steve Stills) attempting to upstage and drown them out. "Cowgirl In The Sand" can also be whittled down to two lopingly grungy chords and similarly offers a vehicle for long, needly guitar lines that wind their way round Whitten’s rhythm strumming. If you love Young’s playing, you could listen to his intense sustain and sputtering attack all night. "Come On Baby Let’s Go Downtown", sung by its co-author Whitten with a blue-eyed-soul larynx that could be Stephen Stills fronting Moby Grape, is a smack classic that prefigures the unfortunate demise of the former Rocket. Young and Billy Talbot yelp along in a manner more akin to Flo & Eddie than Danny & the Memories. Young included it on "Tonight’s The Night" as a kind of memorial plaque to the guitarist he’d axed on the eve of the "Time Fades Away" tour. That leaves "Winterlong", unreleased in its studio incarnation until 1976’s "Decade", and "Wonderin’", introduced by Young as a track from "our new album" but unreleased in studio form until 1983’s "Everybody’s Rockin'". The former is a cult favourite among Neilheads but to these ears remains melodically banal; the latter has a clipped country feel that did not survive its metamorphosis into a Shocking Pinks track. Nevertheless, live ‘70s rock doesn’t come much better than NY in NYC. An album of rough beauty and electric density, "Fillmore East" captures the formerly frail troubadour at his most fired up. By Barney Hoskyns

In the continuing absence of Neil Young’s “Archives”, we clutch at any morsels dispensed from the great man’s table. Long a live bootleg classic – as well as being the source of “Tonight’s The Night”’s “Come On Baby Let’s Go Downtown” – Neil’s March 1970 sets at the Fillmore East showcased the rising star of grungy country rock in the company of the band that helped him find his musical feet on 1969’s cracklingly great “Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere”.

The title track of “Everybody Knows” is the opening one here and immediately sets the tone for “Live at the Fillmore East”: the loosely funky 4/4 groove patented by drummer Ralph Molina and bassist Billy Talbot, the wiry guitar interplay between Young and junkie henchman Danny Whitten, the half-assed barrelhouse piano contributed by the curmudgeonly Jack Nitzsche (introduced by Young as hailing from New Mexico rather than his native Michigan).

“Fillmore East” is most famous for the long jams on two “Everybody Knows” epics. “Down By The River” consists pretty much of two chords in the service of heads-down trance – imagine Hendrix’s “Hey Joe” fused with the horns-locked CSNY intensity of “Long Time Gone”. The difference here is that Whitten simply complements Young’s livid, splayed extemporizations rather than (a la Steve Stills) attempting to upstage and drown them out. “Cowgirl In The Sand” can also be whittled down to two lopingly grungy chords and similarly offers a vehicle for long, needly guitar lines that wind their way round Whitten’s rhythm strumming. If you love Young’s playing, you could listen to his intense sustain and sputtering attack all night.

“Come On Baby Let’s Go Downtown”, sung by its co-author Whitten with a blue-eyed-soul larynx that could be Stephen Stills fronting Moby Grape, is a smack classic that prefigures the unfortunate demise of the former Rocket. Young and Billy Talbot yelp along in a manner more akin to Flo & Eddie than Danny & the Memories. Young included it on “Tonight’s The Night” as a kind of memorial plaque to the guitarist he’d axed on the eve of the “Time Fades Away” tour.

That leaves “Winterlong”, unreleased in its studio incarnation until 1976’s “Decade”, and “Wonderin’”, introduced by Young as a track from “our new album” but unreleased in studio form until 1983’s “Everybody’s Rockin'”. The former is a cult favourite among Neilheads but to these ears remains melodically banal; the latter has a clipped country feel that did not survive its metamorphosis into a Shocking Pinks track. Nevertheless, live ‘70s rock doesn’t come much better than NY in NYC. An album of rough beauty and electric density, “Fillmore East” captures the formerly frail troubadour at his most fired up.

By Barney Hoskyns

Jarvis – Jarvis

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Jarvis Cocker’s solo debut is not so much a curate’s egg as a game of two halves. The first "side" triggers a sinking sensation reminiscent of hearing Morrissey’s "Kill Uncle" for the first time in 1991: has our hero truly lost his touch? From the cursory intro-instrumental "Loss Adjuster", through the '70s plod-rock of "Don’t Let Him Waste Your Time" to the clumsy corn of "Heavy Weather" (Jarvis in "timeless power of cliché" mode) and "I Will Kill Again" (Jarvis in "MOR with a heart of darkness" mode), it’s all dismayingly unconvincing and lacklustre in execution – even though the band features Pulp’s Steve Mackey on bass and Richard Hawley on guitar. Aiming for third Big Star-style wrecked majesty but ending up closer to half-finished Nilsson, "Black Magic" does at least feature some clever production touches. Whereas the plinky, glockenspiely arrangement of "Baby’s Coming Back To Me" is worthy of, ooh, Side Two of "'Til The Band Comes In". Then something changes. "Fat Children" is the pivot. Unpromising at first, with its club-footed indie stomp-rock and opaque lyric about psycho youth (redolent again of shite-period Moz), the song blossoms with the dreamy coda’s wordless wails and incandescent guitars. A hilariously mordant whinge at humanity’s worthlessness, "From A To I" predicts the fall of Western civilization and points the finger at every last one of us: "Evil comes from I know not where/But if you take a look/Inside yourself/ Maybe you’ll find some in there." Its shimmery epic-ness not a million miles from the Verve’s "The Drugs Don’t Work", "Tonite" also argues that change starts with the individual: "You cannot set the world to rights/But you could stop being wrong/Oooh, tonight" - this wracked "oooh", mingling contempt and compassion, anguish and hope, being something of a Cocker trademark. "Disney Time" recalls Milan Kundera’s contention that kitsch is "the refusal to admit shit exists". It’s the shittiness of the world, Cocker notes, that makes us take shelter in feelgood movies and infantile happy endings. "Julie" is prefaced by the opening sentences of Carson McCullers’ The Member of the Wedding, a novel about a 12-year-old girl undergoing an existential-sexual crisis triggered by the wedding of her elder brother (who just happens to be named Jarvis, an unlikely moniker for the 1940s South). In Cocker’s "remix", a troubled teenager with a developing body fends off sweaty lads and lecherous adults, protected by the feeling of invincibility granted her by pop music. The best comes last, with "Quantum Theory", which sounds exactly how everyone, deep down, wishes "The Drift" did: "Scott IV - the Sequel". A lambent ambient-orchestral arrangement, teeming with tingling sublimimals, frames Cocker’s dream of a parallel-dimension paradise where "Everyone is happy… fish do not have bones… gravity can not reach us anymore… you are not alone." When he croaks the closing refrain, "Everything is gonna be alright", Jarvis sounds broken but a believer despite himself; the cynicism and misanthropy, tinged with shame and self-loathing, that’s belched forth elsewhere on the record evaporated clean away. There’s such a distance, such a journey, between the first song and this luminous closer, it’s almost like two different albums, two different artists even. By Simon Reynolds

Jarvis Cocker’s solo debut is not so much a curate’s egg as a game of two halves. The first “side” triggers a sinking sensation reminiscent of hearing Morrissey’s “Kill Uncle” for the first time in 1991: has our hero truly lost his touch?

From the cursory intro-instrumental “Loss Adjuster”, through the ’70s plod-rock of “Don’t Let Him Waste Your Time” to the clumsy corn of “Heavy Weather” (Jarvis in “timeless power of cliché” mode) and “I Will Kill Again” (Jarvis in “MOR with a heart of darkness” mode), it’s all dismayingly unconvincing and lacklustre in execution – even though the band features Pulp’s Steve Mackey on bass and Richard Hawley on guitar.

Aiming for third Big Star-style wrecked majesty but ending up closer to half-finished Nilsson, “Black Magic” does at least feature some clever production touches. Whereas the plinky, glockenspiely arrangement of “Baby’s Coming Back To Me” is worthy of, ooh, Side Two of “‘Til The Band Comes In”.

Then something changes. “Fat Children” is the pivot. Unpromising at first, with its club-footed indie stomp-rock and opaque lyric about psycho youth (redolent again of shite-period Moz), the song blossoms with the dreamy coda’s wordless wails and incandescent guitars. A hilariously mordant whinge at humanity’s worthlessness, “From A To I” predicts the fall of Western civilization and points the finger at every last one of us: “Evil comes from I know not where/But if you take a look/Inside yourself/ Maybe you’ll find some in there.”

Its shimmery epic-ness not a million miles from the Verve’s “The Drugs Don’t Work”, “Tonite” also argues that change starts with the individual: “You cannot set the world to rights/But you could stop being wrong/Oooh, tonight” – this wracked “oooh”, mingling contempt and compassion, anguish and hope, being something of a Cocker trademark. “Disney Time” recalls Milan Kundera’s contention that kitsch is “the refusal to admit shit exists”. It’s the shittiness of the world, Cocker notes, that makes us take shelter in feelgood movies and infantile happy endings.

“Julie” is prefaced by the opening sentences of Carson McCullers’ The Member of the Wedding, a novel about a 12-year-old girl undergoing an existential-sexual crisis triggered by the wedding of her elder brother (who just happens to be named Jarvis, an unlikely moniker for the 1940s South). In Cocker’s “remix”, a troubled teenager with a developing body fends off sweaty lads and lecherous adults, protected by the feeling of invincibility granted her by pop music.

The best comes last, with “Quantum Theory”, which sounds exactly how everyone, deep down, wishes “The Drift” did: “Scott IV – the Sequel”. A lambent ambient-orchestral arrangement, teeming with tingling sublimimals, frames Cocker’s dream of a parallel-dimension paradise where “Everyone is happy… fish do not have bones… gravity can not reach us anymore… you are not alone.”

When he croaks the closing refrain, “Everything is gonna be alright”, Jarvis sounds broken but a believer despite himself; the cynicism and misanthropy, tinged with shame and self-loathing, that’s belched forth elsewhere on the record evaporated clean away. There’s such a distance, such a journey, between the first song and this luminous closer, it’s almost like two different albums, two different artists even.

By Simon Reynolds

Depeche Mode – The Best Of – Volume One

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Of the bands to emerge at the dawn of the ‘80s, Depeche Mode are matched only by New Order and U2 in chart terms, with an astonishing strikerate of 42 Top 30 hits in 25 years. This "Best Of" includes 18 of them, ranging from 1981’s "Just Can’t Get Enough" to "Martyr" (left off last year’s "Playing The Angel"), and presents them in non-chronological order, a job effectively done by the previous The "Singles 81-85" and "86-98" sets. Occasionally, they’re lyrically banal, with a tendency towards platitudes and/or predictable quasi-religious love-as-redemption/salvation imagery. They offer, too, a sort of easily digestible Top Shop techno - albeit one that exerted an influence on Detroit’s Juan Atkins and Derrick May. Nevertheless, a rearranged Playlist of these tracks provides an impressive narrative, as they morph from frilly-shirted synthpop kids to S&M-flirting industrial-lite merchants to debauched purveyors of stadium electro-rock. By Paul Lester

Of the bands to emerge at the dawn of the ‘80s, Depeche Mode are matched only by New Order and U2 in chart terms, with an astonishing strikerate of 42 Top 30 hits in 25 years. This “Best Of” includes 18 of them, ranging from 1981’s “Just Can’t Get Enough” to “Martyr” (left off last year’s “Playing The Angel”), and presents them in non-chronological order, a job effectively done by the previous The “Singles 81-85” and “86-98” sets. Occasionally, they’re lyrically banal, with a tendency towards platitudes and/or predictable quasi-religious love-as-redemption/salvation imagery. They offer, too, a sort of easily digestible Top Shop techno – albeit one that exerted an influence on Detroit’s Juan Atkins and Derrick May. Nevertheless, a rearranged Playlist of these tracks provides an impressive narrative, as they morph from frilly-shirted synthpop kids to S&M-flirting industrial-lite merchants to debauched purveyors of stadium electro-rock.

By Paul Lester

Graham Coxon gets arty with new track

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Graham Coxon has unveiled an exclusive new track, “Meryon”, at London’s Tate Modern art gallery. “Meryon” is inspired by Franz Klines’ 1960 painting by the same name. The track will only be available to listen to for one month on a listening post in front of the artwork. After that, the track will also be made available for a further month on December 1, exclusively through the www.tatetracks.org.uk website. Coxon’s “Meryon” is part of the 12-month Tate Tracks project launched by Tate Modern to match inspirational visual art with inspirational new music. The project has previously hosted exclusive tracks inspired by art with The Chemical Brothers’ interpretation of Jacob Epstein’s “Torso in Metal from The Rock Drill” and Anish Kapoor-inspired “Searching” by East London grime collective Roll Deep. Graham, commenting on why he chose to undertake this project, said, “It was Kline and de Kooning that made me want to explore why I had such a dramatic response to abstract art....these painters made me see and wish to enter through a door that was quite hidden to me when it came to painting... a different type of seeing, a more internal journey... they spark responses from the depths...I love them very much indeed.” “Meryon” is on display at Tate Modern on Level 3 Material Gestures in Room 2. Visitors to the gallery will be able to listen to the track from now until November 30. Future Tate Tracks on the cards include the Klaxons and The Long Blondes.

Graham Coxon has unveiled an exclusive new track, “Meryon”, at London’s Tate Modern art gallery.

“Meryon” is inspired by Franz Klines’ 1960 painting by the same name.

The track will only be available to listen to for one month on a listening post in front of the artwork.

After that, the track will also be made available for a further month on December 1, exclusively through the www.tatetracks.org.uk website.

Coxon’s “Meryon” is part of the 12-month Tate Tracks project launched by Tate Modern to match inspirational visual art with inspirational new music.

The project has previously hosted exclusive tracks inspired by art with The Chemical Brothers’ interpretation of Jacob Epstein’s “Torso in Metal from The Rock Drill” and Anish Kapoor-inspired “Searching” by East London grime collective Roll Deep.

Graham, commenting on why he chose to undertake this project, said, “It was Kline and de Kooning that made me want to explore why I had such a dramatic response to abstract art….these painters made me see and wish to enter through a door that was quite hidden to me when it came to painting… a different type of seeing, a more internal journey… they spark responses from the depths…I love them very much indeed.”

“Meryon” is on display at Tate Modern on Level 3 Material Gestures in Room 2.

Visitors to the gallery will be able to listen to the track from now until November 30.

Future Tate Tracks on the cards include the Klaxons and The Long Blondes.

Joanna Newsom To Play Special Show

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Classical harpist and singer-songwriter Joanna Newsom is to play a special show in London in January. The spellbinding performer’s classic storytelling on current Uncut album of the month “Ys” will be brought to life at London’s Barbican Hall on January 19. Newsom will be backed by a full London Symphony Orchestra to try and re-create the ethereal feel of the album. As on her album, Van Dyke Parks will arrange the music. For more information about the Barbican show – Click here

Classical harpist and singer-songwriter Joanna Newsom is to play a special show in London in January.

The spellbinding performer’s classic storytelling on current Uncut album of the month “Ys” will be brought to life at London’s Barbican Hall on January 19.

Newsom will be backed by a full London Symphony Orchestra to try and re-create the ethereal feel of the album.

As on her album, Van Dyke Parks will arrange the music.

For more information about the Barbican show – Click here

The Police To Reform

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Andy Summers, guitarist with The Police, has talked about the possibility of a reunion on the web. In a recent podcast for Culturecatch, he has said that there have been rumblings about a band reunion, over 20 years after they split. He says of the mooted reunion: “There are always rumblings, kind of like this ongoing tremor.” He goes on to say that it is only frontman Sting who is holding up a reunion happening. “It’s Sting’s decision. He’s gotta do it when he feels ready, if he wants to do it.” Summers has published an autobiography, “One Train Later", and group drummer Stewart Copeland has made a documentary, “Everyone Stares: The Police Inside Out”, based on his time in The Police. Both came out this year. Meanwhile, Sting has just released a 16th century-styled classical album of lute music, “Songs From The Labyrinth”, to great acclaim. Summers believes that if The Police reformed today, “I think we’d sell out every stadium in the world!” To listen to Andy Summer’s Podcast – Click here

Andy Summers, guitarist with The Police, has talked about the possibility of a reunion on the web.

In a recent podcast for Culturecatch, he has said that there have been rumblings about a band reunion, over 20 years after they split.

He says of the mooted reunion: “There are always rumblings, kind of like this ongoing tremor.”

He goes on to say that it is only frontman Sting who is holding up a reunion happening. “It’s Sting’s decision. He’s gotta do it when he feels ready, if he wants to do it.”

Summers has published an autobiography, “One Train Later”, and group drummer Stewart Copeland has made a documentary, “Everyone Stares: The Police Inside Out”, based on his time in The Police.

Both came out this year.

Meanwhile, Sting has just released a 16th century-styled classical album of lute music, “Songs From The Labyrinth”, to great acclaim.

Summers believes that if The Police reformed today, “I think we’d sell out every stadium in the world!”

To listen to Andy Summer’s Podcast – Click here

First New 10cc Songs For 30 Years!

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Two brand new tracks recorded by Kevin Godley and Graham Gouldman of brilliant, underrated Mancunian prog-poppers 10cc are being made available on a Greatest Hits compilation, out this week. “Beautifulloser.com” and “Son of Man” are the first new tracks written and recorded by Godley and Gouldman since 1976's "How Dare You!", the last album made by the super-cerebral Manchester band as a four-piece. As well as the new songs, and the well-known hits including the Number 1s “Rubber Bullets”, “Dreadlock Holiday” and production landmark “I’m Not In Love”, the compilation also collates the talents of 10cc members away from the group. The album includes Eric Stewart's work with '60s beat group The Mindbenders and Gouldman's compositions for The Yardbirds, The Hollies and Herman's Hermits, as well as the pre-10cc novelty worldwide smash "Neanderthal Man" by Hotlegs and Godley's '80s hits with 10cc partner Lol Creme. 10cc - who split in 1976 with Godley & Creme forming a duo, leaving Gouldman and Stewart to carry on as 10cc - have recently enjoyed something of a critical rehabilitation. The Feeling - who were signed to Island Records by Gouldman's A&R son, Louis Bloom - have been name-checking them, The Flaming Lips put "I'm Not In Love" on a compilation of their favourite music called 'Late Night Tales', and Radio London DJ Sean Rowley recently admitted that he "started the whole Guilty Pleasures project because of 10cc" and his determination to win them the respect they deserve. “10cc. Greatest Hits… And More” is out now on UMTV.

Two brand new tracks recorded by Kevin Godley and Graham Gouldman of brilliant, underrated Mancunian prog-poppers 10cc are being made available on a Greatest Hits compilation, out this week.

“Beautifulloser.com” and “Son of Man” are the first new tracks written and recorded by Godley and Gouldman since 1976’s “How Dare You!”, the last album made by the super-cerebral Manchester band as a four-piece.

As well as the new songs, and the well-known hits including the Number 1s “Rubber Bullets”, “Dreadlock Holiday” and production landmark “I’m Not In Love”, the compilation also collates the talents of 10cc members away from the group.

The album includes Eric Stewart’s work with ’60s beat group The Mindbenders and Gouldman’s compositions for The Yardbirds, The Hollies and Herman’s Hermits, as well as the pre-10cc novelty worldwide smash “Neanderthal Man” by Hotlegs and Godley’s ’80s hits with 10cc partner Lol Creme.

10cc – who split in 1976 with Godley & Creme forming a duo, leaving Gouldman and Stewart to carry on as 10cc – have recently enjoyed something of a critical rehabilitation.

The Feeling – who were signed to Island Records by Gouldman’s A&R son, Louis Bloom – have been name-checking them, The Flaming Lips put “I’m Not In Love” on a compilation of their favourite music called ‘Late Night Tales’, and Radio London DJ Sean Rowley recently admitted that he “started the whole Guilty Pleasures project because of 10cc” and his determination to win them the respect they deserve.

“10cc. Greatest Hits… And More” is out now on UMTV.

Borat Spoof Is Uncut’s Youtube Video Of The Day

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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: Move Over Borat, here's Bruno

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: Move Over Borat, here’s Bruno

Nick Cave, Martyn Casey, Warren Ellis, Jim Sclavunos form Grinderman

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Grinderman is the new demonic side project from Nick Cave and some of his musical Bad Seeds. Grinderman are Bad Seed and ex-Triffids member Martyn Casey (bass, acoustic, vocals), Bad Seed and ex-The Cramps/Sonic Youth man Jim Sclavunos (drums, percussion, vocals) and Dirty Three founder member Warren Ellis. Warren Ellis has previously collaborated with Cave on the musical score to 2005 film “The Proposition”. Grinderman are a free spirited mash-up of a group that has accidentally fallen together, described by themselves as sounding like “an instinctual yawlp” Within Grinderman, Nick Cave has taken to playing electric guitar, quite unusual for the singer-songwriter. “Having Nick on the guitar changed the whole dynamic,” says Ellis. That’s just one of the things that makes being in Grinderman more liberating for the musicians. Elliis goes on to say that they “push on relentless” with the musical direction where they would normally refrain. It sounds like a noisy and original offering from the Bad Seeds. Grinderman’s debut album is slated for release next March. The band will play as part of the line-up at The Dirty Three-curated All Tomorrow’s Parties festival next April. Nick Cave will play also play a headline show. For more information about next year’s ATP – Click here

Grinderman is the new demonic side project from Nick Cave and some of his musical Bad Seeds.

Grinderman are Bad Seed and ex-Triffids member Martyn Casey (bass, acoustic, vocals), Bad Seed and ex-The Cramps/Sonic Youth man Jim Sclavunos (drums, percussion, vocals) and Dirty Three founder member Warren Ellis.

Warren Ellis has previously collaborated with Cave on the musical score to 2005 film “The Proposition”.

Grinderman are a free spirited mash-up of a group that has accidentally fallen together, described by themselves as sounding like “an instinctual yawlp”

Within Grinderman, Nick Cave has taken to playing electric guitar, quite unusual for the singer-songwriter. “Having Nick on the guitar changed the whole dynamic,” says Ellis.

That’s just one of the things that makes being in Grinderman more liberating for the musicians. Elliis goes on to say that they “push on relentless” with the musical direction where they would normally refrain.

It sounds like a noisy and original offering from the Bad Seeds.

Grinderman’s debut album is slated for release next March.

The band will play as part of the line-up at The Dirty Three-curated All Tomorrow’s Parties festival next April.

Nick Cave will play also play a headline show.

For more information about next year’s ATP – Click here

Life On The Road with Bob Dylan

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Buck Baxter played guitar on the road with Dylan between 1992 and 1999. "You hear all sorts of stories about Bob but all I can say is that he always treated me good. We weren't close buddies or anything like that. It was always clear that I worked for him, but it was a good working relationship with a lot of respect. I never went to his house for Thanksgiving, or anything. I let him be and he let me be. Even on stage, he let you pretty much do your thing. You could play whatever you wanted within the framework of the set list and the songs. I've made it a rule not to talk too much about him. He doesn't like it and you have to respect his privacy. He's an interesting cat, I'll say that. But what he does when he's not putting himself up there on stage is his business. I know people want to know what he eats for breakfast but I've never understood why anybody would find that stuff interesting. He's just a regular guy, but there's all kinds of crazy rumours and misinformation about him out there. I first got to know him when I was playing with Steve Earle. We were supporting him on tour and he asked me to sit in with his band a few times. He was interested in steel guitar and he asked me to get him one, so I picked him one up in Nashville and gave him a few lessons. At the end of the tour, he asked for my phone number. I never heard anything for the next two years. Then when he finally rang, he said 'You've got to be here tomorrow because we're leaving for a tour of Australia in three days'. That's the way Bob is and I guess he knows it's not likely you're going to say 'no'. He's special to play with because they're such great songs. I already knew he was a great songwriter but the interesting thing was I got to like the songs more by playing them and hearing him sing them every night. And he kept it interesting by always changing the set list around so it was never the same. Sure I got sick of playing "All Along The Watchtower" night after night. But on the other hand, there are songs like "Tangled Up In Blue" that we played seven nights a week and I never got sick of at all. I had a good seven or eight years with him, I learned a lot and by the time I left, I'd played more gigs with him than anybody except Tony Garnier. I'm not one for statistics and any of that stuff but when I see it on the Dylan websites and in the books about Bob that I played 700-and-something times with him, I'm proud of that. I can't say that I ever thought of it as a 'never-ending tour', though. It was just playing gigs. And if you're a working musician, that's what you do, isn't it?” INTERVIEW: NIGEL WILLIAMSON For the full story of Bob Dylan's 'Never Ending Tour', get the December issue of Uncut, out now.

Buck Baxter played guitar on the road with Dylan between 1992 and 1999.

“You hear all sorts of stories about Bob but all I can say is that he always treated me good. We weren’t close buddies or anything like that. It was always clear that I worked for him, but it was a good working relationship with a lot of respect. I never went to his house for Thanksgiving, or anything. I let him be and he let me be. Even on stage, he let you pretty much do your thing. You could play whatever you wanted within the framework of the set list and the songs.

I’ve made it a rule not to talk too much about him. He doesn’t like it and you have to respect his privacy. He’s an interesting cat, I’ll say that. But what he does when he’s not putting himself up there on stage is his business. I know people want to know what he eats for breakfast but I’ve never understood why anybody would find that stuff interesting. He’s just a regular guy, but there’s all kinds of crazy rumours and misinformation about him out there.

I first got to know him when I was playing with Steve Earle. We were supporting him on tour and he asked me to sit in with his band a few times. He was interested in steel guitar and he asked me to get him one, so I picked him one up in Nashville and gave him a few lessons. At the end of the tour, he asked for my phone number.

I never heard anything for the next two years. Then when he finally rang, he said ‘You’ve got to be here tomorrow because we’re leaving for a tour of Australia in three days’. That’s the way Bob is and I guess he knows it’s not likely you’re going to say ‘no’.

He’s special to play with because they’re such great songs. I already knew he was a great songwriter but the interesting thing was I got to like the songs more by playing them and hearing him sing them every night. And he kept it interesting by always changing the set list around so it was never the same. Sure I got sick of playing “All Along The Watchtower” night after night. But on the other hand, there are songs like “Tangled Up In Blue” that we played seven nights a week and I never got sick of at all.

I had a good seven or eight years with him, I learned a lot and by the time I left, I’d played more gigs with him than anybody except Tony Garnier. I’m not one for statistics and any of that stuff but when I see it on the Dylan websites and in the books about Bob that I played 700-and-something times with him, I’m proud of that. I can’t say that I ever thought of it as a ‘never-ending tour’, though. It was just playing gigs. And if you’re a working musician, that’s what you do, isn’t it?”

INTERVIEW: NIGEL WILLIAMSON

For the full story of Bob Dylan’s ‘Never Ending Tour’, get the December issue of Uncut, out now.

Rod Stewart Announces Summer Stadium Shows

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Rod Stewart has announced he will play some massive solo shows in the UK next summer. The legendary singer is currently enjoying success with his 35th album “Still The Same…Great Rock Classics Of Our Time” which debuted at Number 1 in the US and in the Top 5 here in the UK. Stewart played hits from his “Great American Songbook Series” at a sold-out string of shows at London’s Earls Court last year as part of a UK tour – he also played arena shows in Manchester, Newcastle and Birmingham. The stadium shows scheduled for next summer will be the singer’s largest yet. He will play at the following UK stadiums: Manchester, City of Manchester Stadium (June 28) London, Twickenham Stadium (30) Ipswich, Football Club (July 3) Glasgow, Hampden Park Stadium (5) Cardiff, Millennium Stadium (7) Coventry, Ricoh Arena (10) Tickets for the mammoth shows go on sale this Friday (November 10) at 9am. Prices range from £50-£65. Rod Stewart reveals all in ‘audience’ interview for Uncut – including his backside – get all the gossip in the December issue – available in shops now. For more information about the shows – Click here to go to Rod’s homepage

Rod Stewart has announced he will play some massive solo shows in the UK next summer.

The legendary singer is currently enjoying success with his 35th album “Still The Same…Great Rock Classics Of Our Time” which debuted at Number 1 in the US and in the Top 5 here in the UK.

Stewart played hits from his “Great American Songbook Series” at a sold-out string of shows at London’s Earls Court last year as part of a UK tour – he also played arena shows in Manchester, Newcastle and Birmingham.

The stadium shows scheduled for next summer will be the singer’s largest yet.

He will play at the following UK stadiums:

Manchester, City of Manchester Stadium (June 28)

London, Twickenham Stadium (30)

Ipswich, Football Club (July 3)

Glasgow, Hampden Park Stadium (5)

Cardiff, Millennium Stadium (7)

Coventry, Ricoh Arena (10)

Tickets for the mammoth shows go on sale this Friday (November 10) at 9am. Prices range from £50-£65.

Rod Stewart reveals all in ‘audience’ interview for Uncut – including his backside – get all the gossip in the December issue – available in shops now.

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

Evil Dead Takes To The Stage

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“Evil Dead-The Musical” a show based on Sam Raimi’s 80’s cult horror movies Evil Dead and Evil Dead II opened last night off-Broadway, New York. Based on the scripts from the 3 movies - Evil Dead, Evil Dead II and the third affilliated film Army of Darkness- the rock musical is full of blood, gore and clever musical numbers. Original songs scored for the new musical include "What the Fuck Was That", "Look Who's Evil Now" and "All The Men In My Life Keep Getting Killed By Candarian Demons". The original horror movie pastiche hero ‘Ash’ will be played by a Bruce Campbell look-alike Ryan Ward. Directors of the musical Hinton Battle and Christopher Bond have got the backing of all original Evil Dead writers, producers and directors, including Sam Raimi. Bruce Campbell – the original Evil Dead-tamer actor from the 80's films will be holding a sold-out Q&A session after tonight’s performance. “Evil Dead – The Musical” is scheduled to run its camp gorefest until the end of the year. Plans to tour the musical to other major cities has been touted but have not been finalized as yet. For more information and to play in the interactive Evil Dead ‘cabin - Click here to go to the show’s website

“Evil Dead-The Musical” a show based on Sam Raimi’s 80’s cult horror movies Evil Dead and Evil Dead II opened last night off-Broadway, New York.

Based on the scripts from the 3 movies – Evil Dead, Evil Dead II and the third affilliated film Army of Darkness- the rock musical is full of blood, gore and clever musical numbers.

Original songs scored for the new musical include “What the Fuck Was That”, “Look Who’s Evil Now” and “All The Men In My Life Keep Getting Killed By Candarian Demons”.

The original horror movie pastiche hero ‘Ash’ will be played by a Bruce Campbell look-alike Ryan Ward.

Directors of the musical Hinton Battle and Christopher Bond have got the backing of all original Evil Dead writers, producers and directors, including Sam Raimi.

Bruce Campbell – the original Evil Dead-tamer actor from the 80’s films will be holding a sold-out Q&A session after tonight’s performance.

“Evil Dead – The Musical” is scheduled to run its camp gorefest until the end of the year.

Plans to tour the musical to other major cities has been touted but have not been finalized as yet.

For more information and to play in the interactive Evil Dead ‘cabin – Click here to go to the show’s website

New Arctic Monkeys Album Imminent

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Arctic Monkeys’ Alex Turner has exclusively told Uncut that he’s been working hard on new material despite the distraction of a whirlwind year, it’s been the “best year of our lives” he says. Turner has been writing lots of new songs, he says it’s like a compulsion, “I can’t stop writing songs, I don’t know what else I’m going to do.” Turner adds that the song tempo as illustrated on million-selling debut album “Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not” will be slower on the new one. The Monkey’s front man even contemplates that some of the songs will be played acoustically, he says “I’ve written quite a few slower ones- there’s 13 or 14 songs, maybe a few more, in different states.” He names one of the new Arctic Monkeys’ tracks as “Brain Storm” and head of Domino Records Laurence Bell who’s already heard the track, describes it as “very bright and metallic – it’ll shock a few people.” The Arctic Monkeys, our Hall of Fame New Band of the Year, are exclusively interviewed in the December issue of Uncut, on sale now.

Arctic Monkeys’ Alex Turner has exclusively told Uncut that he’s been working hard on new material despite the distraction of a whirlwind year, it’s been the “best year of our lives” he says.

Turner has been writing lots of new songs, he says it’s like a compulsion, “I can’t stop writing songs, I don’t know what else I’m going to do.”

Turner adds that the song tempo as illustrated on million-selling debut album “Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not” will be slower on the new one.

The Monkey’s front man even contemplates that some of the songs will be played acoustically, he says “I’ve written quite a few slower ones- there’s 13 or 14 songs, maybe a few more, in different states.”

He names one of the new Arctic Monkeys’ tracks as “Brain Storm” and head of Domino Records Laurence Bell who’s already heard the track, describes it as “very bright and metallic – it’ll shock a few people.”

The Arctic Monkeys, our Hall of Fame New Band of the Year, are exclusively interviewed in the December issue of Uncut, on sale now.

Noel Gallagher, Russell Brand and Co Rock Koko

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Noel Gallagher was joined onstage by his idol Paul Weller at a charity gig featuring a host of Britpop stars past and present at Koko in Camden last night. The night was organised and compered by tabloid-friendly comedian Russell Brand to raise money for drugs charity Focus 12. Referring to his own drug-addled past, Brand said: “I used to get drugs off people, now I’m trying to get people off drugs. I won’t bore you with the fact that this is about raising money for charity, though, mainly because the room smells like cannabis and cocaine.” Wearing four-inch heeled boots and hair somewhere between Captain Hook and the Earl of Rochester, the flamboyant comic stayed unusually quiet all night, preferring to let the music take centre stage. But Noel’s notorious younger brother Liam threatened to steal the show before a note had been played. The chants of “Liam! Liam!” rang around the room when the side-burned singer appeared on a balcony, goading the crowd and throwing water and plastic cups onto the heads below. North London hopefuls The Holloways opened proceedings with their folky, tuneful pop, given a country lilt by some dextrous fiddle playing, but the chants of “Oasis” throughout their set made it clear what the crowd wanted. They were followed by Carl Barat’s Dirty Pretty Things, who were last-minute replacements for Kasabian. Charlatans frontman Tim Burgess, a long-time friend of the Gallaghers, joined them for raucous versions of “Deadwood” and “Bang Bang You’re Dead”. DPT returned the favour, accompanying Burgess on a lively run-through of The Charlatans’ 1997 hit “North Country Boy”. When he finally arrived onstage to deafening cheers, accompanied by bandmate Gem Archer on electric guitar, Noel opened with the rarely performed “(Its Good) to Be Free” and treated the faithful to an acoustic set of hits, album tracks and B-sides such as “Slide Away”, “Listen Up”, “Half the World Away” and a faithful rendition of the Beatles’ 1967 masterpiece “Strawberry Fields Forever”. Noel told the crowd Kasabian guitarist Serge Pizzorno was suffering from laryngitis or “something pretentious like that” before dedicating “Cast No Shadow” to him. Mod legend Weller appeared half-way through Noel’s set to sing his 2005 solo single “Come On/Let’s Go” and the classic Jam song “Thick as Thieves” from the band’s 1979 album Setting Sons, but the crowd’s reaction was only luke-warm. Noel clearly enjoyed playing with the modfather but cries for “Champagne Supernova”, the 1995 Oasis track on which Weller played lead guitar, went ignored. Noel stormed from the stage during the encore of “Married With Children”, frustrated by a technical problem, leaving a flustered Brand struggling to keep the throng happy (“it’s the machines, I tell you, they’re against us. You’ve all seen Terminator 2!”) but it was only minutes before the Mancunian’s rapturous return.

Noel Gallagher was joined onstage by his idol Paul Weller at a charity gig featuring a host of Britpop stars past and present at Koko in Camden last night.

The night was organised and compered by tabloid-friendly comedian Russell Brand to raise money for drugs charity Focus 12.

Referring to his own drug-addled past, Brand said: “I used to get drugs off people, now I’m trying to get people off drugs. I won’t bore you with the fact that this is about raising money for charity, though, mainly because the room smells like cannabis and cocaine.”

Wearing four-inch heeled boots and hair somewhere between Captain Hook and the Earl of Rochester, the flamboyant comic stayed unusually quiet all night, preferring to let the music take centre stage.

But Noel’s notorious younger brother Liam threatened to steal the show before a note had been played. The chants of “Liam! Liam!” rang around the room when the side-burned singer appeared on a balcony, goading the crowd and throwing water and plastic cups onto the heads below.

North London hopefuls The Holloways opened proceedings with their folky, tuneful pop, given a country lilt by some dextrous fiddle playing, but the chants of “Oasis” throughout their set made it clear what the crowd wanted.

They were followed by Carl Barat’s Dirty Pretty Things, who were last-minute replacements for Kasabian.

Charlatans frontman Tim Burgess, a long-time friend of the Gallaghers, joined them for raucous versions of “Deadwood” and “Bang Bang You’re Dead”.

DPT returned the favour, accompanying Burgess on a lively run-through of The Charlatans’ 1997 hit “North Country Boy”.

When he finally arrived onstage to deafening cheers, accompanied by bandmate Gem Archer on electric guitar, Noel opened with the rarely performed “(Its Good) to Be Free” and treated the faithful to an acoustic set of hits, album tracks and B-sides such as “Slide Away”, “Listen Up”, “Half the World Away” and a faithful rendition of the Beatles’ 1967 masterpiece “Strawberry Fields Forever”.

Noel told the crowd Kasabian guitarist Serge Pizzorno was suffering from laryngitis or “something pretentious like that” before dedicating “Cast No Shadow” to him.

Mod legend Weller appeared half-way through Noel’s set to sing his 2005 solo single “Come On/Let’s Go” and the classic Jam song “Thick as Thieves” from the band’s 1979 album Setting Sons, but the crowd’s reaction was only luke-warm.

Noel clearly enjoyed playing with the modfather but cries for “Champagne Supernova”, the 1995 Oasis track on which Weller played lead guitar, went ignored.

Noel stormed from the stage during the encore of “Married With Children”, frustrated by a technical problem, leaving a flustered Brand struggling to keep the throng happy (“it’s the machines, I tell you, they’re against us. You’ve all seen Terminator 2!”) but it was only minutes before the Mancunian’s rapturous return.

Oasis Exhibition To Open In London

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Oasis are the subject of a new photo exihibition due to open on November 13. In celebration of the new Oasis Best of collection “Stop the Clocks”, an exclusive collection of images taken by Jill Furmanovsky will be on show at FOPP’s flagship store on London’s Tottenham Court Road. Rockarchive have selected images for the exhibition from Furmanovsky’s Oasis collection “Was There Then.” She captured Oasis candidly from their beginnings in Manchester key events in their career such as Maine Road in 1995 and to America. All images at the exhibition will be available for sale for the first time as limited edition signed prints. For sizes and pricing information, you can get in touch with fopp@rockarchive.com As previously reported, Oasis are releasing a retrospective 18 track best of “Stop The Clocks” on November 20. Uncut would like to know what your favourite Oasis track is… You can tell us by clicking here

Oasis are the subject of a new photo exihibition due to open on November 13.

In celebration of the new Oasis Best of collection “Stop the Clocks”, an

exclusive collection of images taken by Jill Furmanovsky will be on show at FOPP’s flagship store on London’s Tottenham Court Road.

Rockarchive have selected images for the exhibition from Furmanovsky’s Oasis collection “Was There Then.”

She captured Oasis candidly from their beginnings in Manchester key events in their career such as Maine Road in 1995 and to America.

All images at the exhibition will be available for sale for the first time as limited edition signed prints.

For sizes and pricing information, you can get in touch with fopp@rockarchive.com

As previously reported, Oasis are releasing a retrospective 18 track best of “Stop The Clocks” on November 20.

Uncut would like to know what your favourite Oasis track is…

You can tell us by clicking here

New White Stripes Album On Its Way

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Jack White, who is currently with side project The Raconteurs with Brendan Benson, has let slip that he is also working on new material for his original band The White Stripes, with Meg White. The singer/guitarist has told Uncut that his time is now split 50/50 between the two bands. White told Uncut, "My brain now has two options for songs that I write, and it's a really nice luxury to have as a songwriter." White went on to say, "I have so many songs now for another White Stripes record. Meg and I are working on songs during breaks from touring with the Raconteurs." This will be the follow up to 2005’s hugely successful “Get Behind Me Satan.” To read the full feature on ‘how to write a rock song’ by Jack White, get the December issue of Uncut, out now.

Jack White, who is currently with side project The Raconteurs with Brendan Benson, has let slip that he is also working on new material for his original band The White Stripes, with Meg White.

The singer/guitarist has told Uncut that his time is now split 50/50 between the two bands.

White told Uncut, “My brain now has two options for songs that I write, and it’s a really nice luxury to have as a songwriter.”

White went on to say, “I have so many songs now for another White Stripes record. Meg and I are working on songs during breaks from touring with the Raconteurs.”

This will be the follow up to 2005’s hugely successful “Get Behind Me Satan.”

To read the full feature on ‘how to write a rock song’ by Jack White, get the December issue of Uncut, out now.

Notorious Rock Groupie Dies

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Former rock groupie Jo Jo Laine, ex-wife of The Moody Blues and Wings guitarist Denny Lane, has died of liver cancer at the age of 54. Laine announced she was ill in May 2006 when she vowed to battle the disease, but unfortunately she died on Sunday October 29 in a London hospital from complications after a fall at home. The former model, actress and singer was very well known on the rock scene in the 1960s and 1970s, and was romantically linked to Jim Morrison, Jimi Hendrix and Rod Stewart. She performed with her own band, Jo Jo Laine & The Firm, until 1985 when Led Zepellin’s Jimmy Page established The Firm from the same musicians. Laine also recorded with Wings and Sting and Andy Summers of The Police, performing on singles "Hulk" and "Dancing Man". An album of her diverse musical output will be available next year entitled “The Best of Jo Jo Laine” To check out Jo Jo Laine’s Jimi Hendrix and The Beatles Fansite – Click here

Former rock groupie Jo Jo Laine, ex-wife of The Moody Blues and Wings guitarist Denny Lane, has died of liver cancer at the age of 54.

Laine announced she was ill in May 2006 when she vowed to battle the disease, but unfortunately she died on Sunday October 29 in a London hospital from complications after a fall at home.

The former model, actress and singer was very well known on the rock scene in the 1960s and 1970s, and was romantically linked to Jim Morrison, Jimi Hendrix and Rod Stewart.

She performed with her own band, Jo Jo Laine & The Firm, until 1985 when Led Zepellin’s Jimmy Page established The Firm from the same musicians.

Laine also recorded with Wings and Sting and Andy Summers of The Police, performing on singles “Hulk” and “Dancing Man”.

An album of her diverse musical output will be available next year entitled “The Best of Jo Jo Laine”

To check out Jo Jo Laine’s Jimi Hendrix and The Beatles Fansite – Click here

Inspiral Carpets Announce UK Tour

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Madchester favourites Inspiral Carpets are to play a series of UK dates next March. Following up their highly successful comeback shows in 2003 – which included three sold-out Manchester shows as well as appearances at Glastonbury, V Festival and T-in the Park - the Inspiral Carpets are back again. Together with the Happy Mondays and The Stone Roses, the Inspiral Carpets brought psychedelic indie-guitar "Madchester" kicking and screaming into the mainstream. The band will draw on material from their Top 20 albums including "Life" (1990), "The Beast Inside" (1991), "Revenge Of The Goldfish" (1992) and "Devil Hopping" (1994) at the shows. Catch the band live at the following venues: Birmingham Academy 2 (March 2) Glasgow ABC (3) Lincoln Engine Shed (4) Norwich Waterfront (5) Brighton Concorde (7) Leeds University Stylus (8) Manchester Academy (9) London Shepherd’s Bush Empire (10) Tickets for the Inspiral’s go on sale tomorrow morning at 9am To buy tickets – Go to Nme.com/Gigs here

Madchester favourites Inspiral Carpets are to play a series of UK dates next March.

Following up their highly successful comeback shows in 2003 – which included three sold-out Manchester shows as well as appearances at Glastonbury, V Festival and T-in the Park – the Inspiral Carpets are back again.

Together with the Happy Mondays and The Stone Roses, the Inspiral Carpets brought psychedelic indie-guitar “Madchester” kicking and screaming into the mainstream.

The band will draw on material from their Top 20 albums including “Life” (1990), “The Beast Inside” (1991), “Revenge Of The Goldfish” (1992) and “Devil Hopping” (1994) at the shows.

Catch the band live at the following venues:

Birmingham Academy 2 (March 2)

Glasgow ABC (3)

Lincoln Engine Shed (4)

Norwich Waterfront (5)

Brighton Concorde (7)

Leeds University Stylus (8)

Manchester Academy (9)

London Shepherd’s Bush Empire (10)

Tickets for the Inspiral’s go on sale tomorrow morning at 9am

To buy tickets – Go to Nme.com/Gigs here

The Rolling Stones To Be Directed By Martin Scorsese

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Martin Scorsese has been given the go-ahead to direct a concert movie about the Rolling Stones. As previously reported, the Stones were on the New York leg of their Bigger Bang world tour and were filmed as they performed at former US president Bill Clinton’s 60th birthday party. Filming was also due to take place at the band’s small club date at New York’s Beacon Theatre, but that date as well as others scheduled to take place this month have been postponed. Mick Jagger has been given doctor’s orders to rest his throat after gaining an infection. The singer has to be especially cautious after a bout of laryngitis in July. Footage from the concerts was expected to form a major part of the film, along with behind-the-scenes moments, interviews and historical footage of the band. Scorsese has yet to talk publicly about making the film. Scorsese has enlisted the help of Albert Maysles who along with his brother David, were behind the classic film footage of the Rolling Stones- when they played in front of 300,000 people at Altamont Speedway in 1969- for the documentary “Gimme Shelter.” Scorsese’s previous music-related films include1978’s “The Last Waltz”, the farewell gig by The Band and 2005’s highly acclaimed “No Direction Home” documenting Bob Dylan. Mick Jagger, Ronnie Wood, Charlie Watts and Keith Richards are all equal executive producers of the new film, and it is expected to be released mid-2007 through Paramount/ Fortissmo.

Martin Scorsese has been given the go-ahead to direct a concert movie about the Rolling Stones.

As previously reported, the Stones were on the New York leg of their Bigger Bang world tour and were filmed as they performed at former US president Bill Clinton’s 60th birthday party.

Filming was also due to take place at the band’s small club date at New York’s Beacon Theatre, but that date as well as others scheduled to take place this month have been postponed.

Mick Jagger has been given doctor’s orders to rest his throat after gaining an infection. The singer has to be especially cautious after a bout of laryngitis in July.

Footage from the concerts was expected to form a major part of the film, along with behind-the-scenes moments, interviews and historical footage of the band. Scorsese has yet to talk publicly about making the film.

Scorsese has enlisted the help of Albert Maysles who along with his brother David, were behind the classic film footage of the Rolling Stones- when they played in front of 300,000 people at Altamont Speedway in 1969- for the documentary “Gimme Shelter.”

Scorsese’s previous music-related films include1978’s “The Last Waltz”, the farewell gig by The Band and 2005’s highly acclaimed “No Direction Home” documenting Bob Dylan.

Mick Jagger, Ronnie Wood, Charlie Watts and Keith Richards are all equal executive producers of the new film, and it is expected to be released mid-2007 through Paramount/ Fortissmo.

The Cure To Release Live DVD

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The Cure will complete another busy year of touring with the release of a live DVD in December, made with a little help from their fans. “Festival 2005” follows the '80s gothic rockers on their nine-date European tour last year when band members, crew and some lucky competition-winner fans were given hand-held cameras to capture each night’s action. The finished film, co-mixed by frontman Robert Smith, features professionally shot footage mixed with the fans’ hand-held clips. The career-spanning 30-track set list includes live favourites such as “Disintegration”, “A Forest” and “Just Like Heaven”. This is not the first time a concert film has been made by fans of a band. “Awesome: I f****** Shot That” is the feature length film of New York rappers The Beastie Boys 2004 Madison Square Garden. The concert filmed by 50 fans was released earlier this year. “Festival 2005” is out on Suretone/Geffen Records on December 5.

The Cure will complete another busy year of touring with the release of a live DVD in December, made with a little help from their fans.

“Festival 2005” follows the ’80s gothic rockers on their nine-date European tour last year when band members, crew and some lucky competition-winner fans were given hand-held cameras to capture each night’s action.

The finished film, co-mixed by frontman Robert Smith, features professionally shot footage mixed with the fans’ hand-held clips.

The career-spanning 30-track set list includes live favourites such as “Disintegration”, “A Forest” and “Just Like Heaven”.

This is not the first time a concert film has been made by fans of a band.

“Awesome: I f****** Shot That” is the feature length film of New York rappers The Beastie Boys 2004 Madison Square Garden.

The concert filmed by 50 fans was released earlier this year.

“Festival 2005” is out on Suretone/Geffen Records on December 5.