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Watch the new video from The Mystery Jets

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The Mystery Jets came of age this year with support slots for the likes of British Sea Power, Bloc Party and The Futureheads. While we give them a little bit longer to finish off their much anticipated debut album (currently being recorded on Eel Pie Island and due for release early next year) take a sneak peak at the video for the excellent new single ‘You Can’t Fool Me Dennis’, released September 12. Click on the links below to view: Real Media - low / high Windows Media - low / high

The Mystery Jets came of age this year with support slots for the likes of British Sea Power, Bloc Party and The Futureheads.

While we give them a little bit longer to finish off their much anticipated debut album (currently being recorded on Eel Pie Island and due for release early next year) take a sneak peak at the video for the excellent new single ‘You Can’t Fool Me Dennis’, released September 12.

Click on the links below to view:

Real Media – low /

high

Windows Media – low /

high

Goldfrapp – Supernature

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Goldfrapp took a big chance when they abandoned the swoonsome muzak of 2001’s Felt Mountain for the kinky machinery of 2003’s glamtastic Black Cherry. Few had anticipated the switch from the neo-John-Barry soundscapes of “Utopia” and “Lovely Head” to the dirty flirtation of “Train” and “Twist”. Verve and yearning merged on Black Cherry in songs of spellbinding sexiness. Supernature – its title a clear nod to the late ‘70s Eurodisco of Cerrone and friends – builds on Black Cherry and takes its salacious plasticity to a logical pop extreme. Constructed in a Somerset cottage rather than a Berlin compound, the duo’s third album kicks off with three thumping teen-disco outings (the single “Ooh La La”, “Lovely to See You”, “Ride a White Horse”) that forge an unlikely but inspired fusion of Marc Bolan and Giorgio Moroder. The soundtrack to some low-rent Studio 54 of the mind, the three tracks derive from what Alison G accurately calls the “[the] slightly throwaway but slightly nasty poutiness” of Chinnichap glam. Which is fine, except that here the hooks are rather less arresting than the equivalent moments on Black Cherry: “Lovely to See You”, for instance, is almost self-consciously crass, melodically dumbed-down where “Twist” and “Strict Machine” were artfully ambiguous. If “Slide In” and “Beautiful” pick up where “Twist” et al left off, “Fly Me Away” is oddly ordinary. Supernature evokes other synthpop ghosts – Gary Numan on “Koko”, “Blue Monday”-era New Order on “White Horse” – and even dabbles in Scissor Sisters faux-honkytonk on the Top Of The Pops romp of “Satin Chic”. Meanwhile for those who fear the fading of the duo’s lush melancholia, the iridescent “U Never Know” (followed by the plangent reverie of “Let It Take U”, with actual acoustic piano) already scores high in the Loveliest Song Of The Year parade; a diamond of a song to stand alongside “Black Cherry”, “Deep Honey” and its heartache kin. “Time Out for the World”, finally, is the ultimate Theme For An Imaginary Bond Movie. Black Cherry this ain’t, then. As a companion piece to its genius predecessor, though, Supernature is plenty to be going on with. By Barney Hoskins

Goldfrapp took a big chance when they abandoned the swoonsome muzak of 2001’s Felt Mountain for the kinky machinery of 2003’s glamtastic Black Cherry. Few had anticipated the switch from the neo-John-Barry soundscapes of “Utopia” and “Lovely Head” to the dirty flirtation of “Train” and “Twist”. Verve and yearning merged on Black Cherry in songs of spellbinding sexiness.

Supernature – its title a clear nod to the late ‘70s Eurodisco of Cerrone and friends – builds on Black Cherry and takes its salacious plasticity to a logical pop extreme. Constructed in a Somerset cottage rather than a Berlin compound, the duo’s third album kicks off with three thumping teen-disco outings (the single “Ooh La La”, “Lovely to See You”, “Ride a White Horse”) that forge an unlikely but inspired fusion of Marc Bolan and Giorgio Moroder.

The soundtrack to some low-rent Studio 54 of the mind, the three tracks derive from what Alison G accurately calls the “[the] slightly throwaway but slightly nasty poutiness” of Chinnichap glam. Which is fine, except that here the hooks are rather less arresting than the equivalent moments on Black Cherry: “Lovely to See You”, for instance, is almost self-consciously crass, melodically dumbed-down where “Twist” and “Strict Machine” were artfully ambiguous. If “Slide In” and “Beautiful” pick up where “Twist” et al left off, “Fly Me Away” is oddly ordinary.

Supernature evokes other synthpop ghosts – Gary Numan on “Koko”, “Blue Monday”-era New Order on “White Horse” – and even dabbles in Scissor Sisters faux-honkytonk on the Top Of The Pops romp of “Satin Chic”. Meanwhile for those who fear the fading of the duo’s lush melancholia, the iridescent “U Never Know” (followed by the plangent reverie of “Let It Take U”, with actual acoustic piano) already scores high in the Loveliest Song Of The Year parade; a diamond of a song to stand alongside “Black Cherry”, “Deep Honey” and its heartache kin. “Time Out for the World”, finally, is the ultimate Theme For An Imaginary Bond Movie.

Black Cherry this ain’t, then. As a companion piece to its genius predecessor, though, Supernature is plenty to be going on with.

By Barney Hoskins

Laura Veirs – Year Of Meteors

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The wider world has gone Laura Veirs crazy since Uncut raved about her terrific 2003 indie release, Troubled By The Fire, and last year's wintry Carbon Glacier. The Colorado-born, Seattle-based songsmith has even begun picking up fulsome praise in the US after years of being overlooked. In typically opaque Veirs fashion, Year Of Meteors is filled with nature imagery, travelogue snapshots and stream-of-consciousness musings. It feels less like a breathy late-night confessional than previous albums, which may disappoint fans of her more fragile, introspective side. But it’s also her most inventive and expansive work to date, incorporating crunchy grunge-pop powerchords and light electronica noodlings into her trademark acoustic austerity. Both musically and emotionally, Year Of Meteors is less downbeat and restrained that Carbon Glacier. There’s even a new rock'n'roll poke behind the finely poised arrangements of "Cool Water" or "Rialto", a flashback to snatched glimpses of sunlight flickering on Venice's Grand Canal. The tremulous tunesmith Veirs might make an unlikely candidate to crank up and rock out, but some of these tracks have an almost rowdy good-time swagger, like an Unplugged makeover in reverse. At least two songs are contenders for the finest Veirs compositions yet: the whooshing sci-fi synthesizer reverie "Galaxies" and the fragile, ghostly ballad "Magnetized". Both tap into recurring motifs of undersea kingdoms and airborne creatures that are loosely threaded throughout the album. But some bare personal insights still lurk among this welter of magic realism - as in "Spelunking", where the bizarre business of cave exploration becomes a metaphor for entering "the caverns of my heart". Year of Meteors is no flat-out masterpiece. A few songs feel like colourless makeweights, while Veirs’ avant-folk wanderings remain a little timid. More could have been made of the hidden final track, for example, which appears to have been recorded down a crackly phone line. Still, Veirs is clearly moving in the right direction, adding new tones and twists without forgetting her simple flair for heart-tugging beauty. By Stephen Dalton

The wider world has gone Laura Veirs crazy since Uncut raved about her terrific 2003 indie release, Troubled By The Fire, and last year’s wintry Carbon Glacier. The Colorado-born, Seattle-based songsmith has even begun picking up fulsome praise in the US after years of being overlooked.

In typically opaque Veirs fashion, Year Of Meteors is filled with nature imagery, travelogue snapshots and stream-of-consciousness musings. It feels less like a breathy late-night confessional than previous albums, which may disappoint fans of her more fragile, introspective side. But it’s also her most inventive and expansive work to date, incorporating crunchy grunge-pop powerchords and light electronica noodlings into her trademark acoustic austerity.

Both musically and emotionally, Year Of Meteors is less downbeat and restrained that Carbon Glacier. There’s even a new rock’n’roll poke behind the finely poised arrangements of “Cool Water” or “Rialto”, a flashback to snatched glimpses of sunlight flickering on Venice’s Grand Canal. The tremulous tunesmith Veirs might make an unlikely candidate to crank up and rock out, but some of these tracks have an almost rowdy good-time swagger, like an Unplugged makeover in reverse.

At least two songs are contenders for the finest Veirs compositions yet: the whooshing sci-fi synthesizer reverie “Galaxies” and the fragile, ghostly ballad “Magnetized”. Both tap into recurring motifs of undersea kingdoms and airborne creatures that are loosely threaded throughout the album. But some bare personal insights still lurk among this welter of magic realism – as in “Spelunking”, where the bizarre business of cave exploration becomes a metaphor for entering “the caverns of my heart”.

Year of Meteors is no flat-out masterpiece. A few songs feel like colourless makeweights, while Veirs’ avant-folk wanderings remain a little timid. More could have been made of the hidden final track, for example, which appears to have been recorded down a crackly phone line. Still, Veirs is clearly moving in the right direction, adding new tones and twists without forgetting her simple flair for heart-tugging beauty.

By Stephen Dalton

Interview: Laura Veirs

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UNCUT: How does Year Of Meteors relate to Carbon Glacier? LAURA VEIRS: They're related in that I wanted them to be unrelated. Ilways wanted to grow and push myself to do something different. I was experimenting with writing less structurally complex songs, they're pretty sparse in structure but not...

UNCUT: How does Year Of Meteors relate to Carbon Glacier?

LAURA VEIRS: They’re related in that I wanted them to be unrelated. Ilways wanted to grow and push myself to do something different. I was experimenting with writing less structurally complex songs, they’re pretty sparse in structure but not so sparse in arrangements. Carbon Glacier was a wintry album, this new one is more summery, more sunlit and bright.

Did you deliberately make the lyrics more abstract and poetic?

In some ways. On a few songs I really love the poetry but I don’t know where it came from or what it’s about. I don’t know exactly what it means, but that’s OK. In the past it definitely had to mean something, so I’m loosening up in that way.

Year Of Meteors is probably your poppiest album yet. Will you be as big as Gwen Stefani by the end of 2005?

You never know. I seriously doubt that… but I’m not ruling it out.

Interview by Stephen Dalton

UNCUT AT BENICASSIM

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It doesn’t get much better than this. Since you ask, Uncut is in Spain, somewhere between Barcelona and Valencia, at what’s fast becoming our favourite music festival - Benicassim. Now in its eleventh year, Benicassim runs across four nights, boasts a no-mud-here-thanks climate, stunning views (mountains stage left, sea stage right) and a shrewdly programmed bill running the gamut from rock icons of the first water to cutting-edge electronica. Did we have fun? Did Jackie Kennedy wear a black dress? Touching down for the opening Thursday night, Uncut is disappointed by The Tears who, despite the visible chemistry between Brett Anderson and Bernard Butler – together again after all these years etc etc – seem to be in the invidious position of having a collection of songs lacking anything approaching discernable melody. Ouch. Despite being somewhat past their sell-by date, headliners Underworld pull out all the stops, belting out a barrage of stadium rave anthems accompanied by a wildly trippy light show. “Cowgirl” lasts till dawn, as it damn well should. Friday finds us bouncing around to Lemon Jelly and camping it up to Fischerspooner before the serious action of the night begins. The Cure –stripped down to a four-piece including veteran members Robert Smith, Simon Gallup,and Porl Thompson – play for two hours. It’s Kohl eyeliner heaven, boys and girls, highlights including “Play For Today”, “M”, “End” and “Primary”, “Never Enough” and “Kyoto Song”. Quite how we go from the none-more-black Gothery of The Cure to the all-singing, all-dancing Carnival rumpus of Basement Jaxx is one of the many delights of Benicassim. Felix and Simon – plus dancers, singers, trumpeters – lay down one of the finest party vibes we’ve witnessed for a long time, climaxing with a demented version of Motorhead’s “Ace Of Spades” and “Where’s Your Head At?”. Saturday finds Uncut taking things a mite easier than previous nights – those pesky European spirit measures can take their toll, you know – so we sensibly bypass Keane to take in the Kaiser Chiefs before the evening’s return-to-grunge highlights: The Lemonheads and Dinosaur Jr. Evan Dando – looking particularly chipper – led the ‘Heads through a crowd-pleasing greatest hits set, irrepressible melodies beneath Catalan skies, including “It’s A Shame About Ray”, “Confetti”, “Rudderless”, “Big Gay Heart”, and “My Drug Buddy”. Dando returns for a solo encore which featured covers of Gram Parsons’ “$1,000 Dollar Wedding” and Mike Nesmith’s “Different Drum”. Dinosaur – in their original incarnation of J Mascis, Lou Barlow and Murph – raise a storm, It’s easily the loudest set of the weekend, the trio slamming out “Little Fury Things”, “Just Like Heaven” and “Freakscene”. Proper rock music, dontcha know. Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds set Sunday night off in apocalyptic style, their Goth-goes-gospel turning into sulphuric soul, an incendiary “Get Ready For Love” leading into a beautiful rendition of “Straight To You” with Cave at the piano, “The Weeping Song” and “The Ship Song”, before back up with “Deanna” and a haunting, gripping “Mercy Seat”. Cave, cigarette perpetually in hand, spits and screams like a vaudeville demon. It’s a great piece of showmanship, unlike Oasis' Liam Gallagher, whose one-pose performance either stands or falls depending on how good the rest of the band are. Tonight, they’re disappointing, never quite hitting the mark, throwing a few shapes but little more. Sure, there are some hits here – “Live Forever”, “Cigarettes And Alcohol”, “Morning Glory”, “Champagne Supernova”– but the performance is lacklustre. Dedicating “Rock N Roll Star” to Robin Cook, though, is a nice touch. Noel asking the massive British contingent to “be nice to the locals” an even better one. Strangely, it falls to Kasabian to save the night. Never a band who’ve figured highly on Uncut’s radar, we’re surprised to find ourselves singing along raucously to “LSF” and “Club Foot”. Believe us, no one was more surprised than we were. We finish off in fine style, having it to some particularly fine techno courtesy of Andrew Weatherall. Medics to the rave tent! And then it’s off, back to Blighty. See you next year!

It doesn’t get much better than this. Since you ask, Uncut is in Spain, somewhere between Barcelona and Valencia, at what’s fast becoming our favourite music festival – Benicassim. Now in its eleventh year, Benicassim runs across four nights, boasts a no-mud-here-thanks climate, stunning views (mountains stage left, sea stage right) and a shrewdly programmed bill running the gamut from rock icons of the first water to cutting-edge electronica. Did we have fun? Did Jackie Kennedy wear a black dress?

Touching down for the opening Thursday night, Uncut is disappointed by The Tears who, despite the visible chemistry between Brett Anderson and Bernard Butler – together again after all these years etc etc – seem to be in the invidious position of having a collection of songs lacking anything approaching discernable melody. Ouch. Despite being somewhat past their sell-by date, headliners Underworld pull out all the stops, belting out a barrage of stadium rave anthems accompanied by a wildly trippy light show. “Cowgirl” lasts till dawn, as it damn well should.

Friday finds us bouncing around to Lemon Jelly and camping it up to Fischerspooner before the serious action of the night begins. The Cure –stripped down to a four-piece including veteran members Robert Smith, Simon Gallup,and Porl Thompson – play for two hours. It’s Kohl eyeliner heaven, boys and girls, highlights including “Play For Today”, “M”, “End” and “Primary”, “Never Enough” and “Kyoto Song”. Quite how we go from the none-more-black Gothery of The Cure to the all-singing, all-dancing Carnival rumpus of Basement Jaxx is one of the many delights of Benicassim. Felix and Simon – plus dancers, singers, trumpeters – lay down one of the finest party vibes we’ve witnessed for a long time, climaxing with a demented version of Motorhead’s “Ace Of Spades” and “Where’s Your Head At?”.

Saturday finds Uncut taking things a mite easier than previous nights – those pesky European spirit measures can take their toll, you know – so we sensibly bypass Keane to take in the Kaiser Chiefs before the evening’s return-to-grunge highlights: The Lemonheads and Dinosaur Jr. Evan Dando – looking particularly chipper – led the ‘Heads through a crowd-pleasing greatest hits set, irrepressible melodies beneath Catalan skies, including “It’s A Shame About Ray”, “Confetti”, “Rudderless”, “Big Gay Heart”, and “My Drug Buddy”. Dando returns for a solo encore which featured covers of Gram Parsons’ “$1,000 Dollar Wedding” and Mike Nesmith’s “Different Drum”. Dinosaur – in their original incarnation of J Mascis, Lou Barlow and Murph – raise a storm, It’s easily the loudest set of the weekend, the trio slamming out “Little Fury Things”, “Just Like Heaven” and “Freakscene”. Proper rock music, dontcha know.

Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds set Sunday night off in apocalyptic style, their Goth-goes-gospel turning into sulphuric soul, an incendiary “Get Ready For Love” leading into a beautiful rendition of “Straight To You” with Cave at the piano, “The Weeping Song” and “The Ship Song”, before back up with “Deanna” and a haunting, gripping “Mercy Seat”. Cave, cigarette perpetually in hand, spits and screams like a vaudeville demon. It’s a great piece of showmanship, unlike Oasis’ Liam Gallagher, whose one-pose performance either stands or falls depending on how good the rest of the band are. Tonight, they’re disappointing, never quite hitting the mark, throwing a few shapes but little more. Sure, there are some hits here – “Live Forever”, “Cigarettes And Alcohol”, “Morning Glory”, “Champagne Supernova”– but the performance is lacklustre. Dedicating “Rock N Roll Star” to Robin Cook, though, is a nice touch. Noel asking the massive British contingent to “be nice to the locals” an even better one.

Strangely, it falls to Kasabian to save the night. Never a band who’ve figured highly on Uncut’s radar, we’re surprised to find ourselves singing along raucously to “LSF” and “Club Foot”. Believe us, no one was more surprised than we were.

We finish off in fine style, having it to some particularly fine techno courtesy of Andrew Weatherall. Medics to the rave tent!

And then it’s off, back to Blighty. See you next year!

WATCH THE NEW VIDEO FROM MAGNET

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It’s a distinctly unique sound. Ever since his cover of Dylan’s ‘Lay Lady Lay’ on his debut album, Magnet has continued to blend funk and soul beats with some of the most organic sounds available. New single 'Hold On' (August 15) is no different as a precursor to his second UK album 'The Tourniquet' (August 22). Don't let the banjo scare you, there are no Deliverance references. This is Magnet at his best: simple, soulful and full of melody. Enjoy. Click on the link below to watch the video: Windows Media - lo / hi



Real Media - lo / hi



It’s a distinctly unique sound. Ever since his cover of Dylan’s ‘Lay Lady Lay’ on his debut album, Magnet has continued to blend funk and soul beats with some of the most organic sounds available.

New single ‘Hold On’ (August 15) is no different as a precursor to his second UK album ‘The Tourniquet’ (August 22). Don’t let the banjo scare you, there are no Deliverance references. This is Magnet at his best: simple, soulful and full of melody. Enjoy.

Click on the link below to watch the video:

Windows Media –

lo /

hi



Real Media –

lo /

hi



Uncut anniversary celebrations culminate tonight

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Uncut rounds off a successful week of gigs tonight with a rare intimate show by The Earlies. Britain’s most successful music & films monthly, currently celebrating its 100th issue, have already presented shows by Sons & Daughters and Ed Harcourt this week. Tonight (Friday August 5), the 100 Club in London plays host to The Earlies, Amusement Parks On Fire and Hayley Hutchinson, and a few tickets are still available. The Earlies are a sprawling Anglo-Texan ensemble, based in Manchester, whose 2004 debut album brought them many favourable comparisons with cosmic rockers like Mercury Rev. Tonight’s show is their first headlining in a while, representing a break from their current duties as Scottish folk singer King Creosote’s backing band. Amusement Parks On Fire are at the vanguard of the new shoegazing movement, pitched somewhere between Ride and Mogwai, while Hayley Hutchinson is a hotly-tipped young singer-songwriter much feted by Radio 2. For ticket availability, click here or call 0870 1 663 663. Uncut’s 100th issue is on sale now, featuring 100 rock and movie icons on the music and films that changed our world. It features exclusive interviews with Keith Richards, Paul McCartney, Chris Martin, Noel Gallagher, Roger Daltrey, Alex Kapranos, REM, Damon Albarn, Brian Wilson, Dave Grohl, Robert Downey Jr, Robert Plant and Ozzy Osbourne.

Uncut rounds off a successful week of gigs tonight with a rare intimate show by The Earlies. Britain’s most successful music & films monthly, currently celebrating its 100th issue, have already presented shows by Sons & Daughters and Ed Harcourt this week. Tonight (Friday August 5), the 100 Club in London plays host to The Earlies, Amusement Parks On Fire and Hayley Hutchinson, and a few tickets are still available.

The Earlies are a sprawling Anglo-Texan ensemble, based in Manchester, whose 2004 debut album brought them many favourable comparisons with cosmic rockers like Mercury Rev. Tonight’s show is their first headlining in a while, representing a break from their current duties as Scottish folk singer King Creosote’s backing band. Amusement Parks On Fire are at the vanguard of the new shoegazing movement, pitched somewhere between Ride and Mogwai, while Hayley Hutchinson is a hotly-tipped young singer-songwriter much feted by Radio 2.

For ticket availability, click here or call 0870 1 663 663.

Uncut’s 100th issue is on sale now, featuring 100 rock and movie icons on the music and films that changed our world. It features exclusive interviews with Keith Richards, Paul McCartney, Chris Martin, Noel Gallagher, Roger Daltrey, Alex Kapranos, REM, Damon Albarn, Brian Wilson, Dave Grohl, Robert Downey Jr, Robert Plant and Ozzy Osbourne.

Edinburgh Film Festival Preview

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This year’s Edinburgh Film Festival kicks off on August 17, and this year it has some cracking, Uncut-friendly movies and events in its line-up. Directors taking part in their prestigious Reel Life interview series include James Tobeck (Fingers), documentarian Albert Maysles (Gimme Shelter), Paul Schrader (Taxi Driver), Scorsese editor Thelma Schoonmaker and Buffy creator Joss Whedon. There’s a Powell and Pressburger retrospective – showing everything from A Matter Of Life And Death to The Red Shoes, A Canterbury Tale and the 49th Parallel – plus UK premiers for George Romero’s Land Of The Dead and Paul Schrader’s Exorcist prequel, Dominion. As usual, Uncut will be on hand to bring you all the news, gossip and reviews from the Festival. Check back here for regular updates. For more information on dates and times, log onto edfilmfest.org.uk or call the box office on 0131 623 8030.

This year’s Edinburgh Film Festival kicks off on August 17, and this year it has some cracking, Uncut-friendly movies and events in its line-up.

Directors taking part in their prestigious Reel Life interview series include James Tobeck (Fingers), documentarian Albert Maysles (Gimme Shelter), Paul Schrader (Taxi Driver), Scorsese editor Thelma Schoonmaker and Buffy creator Joss Whedon.

There’s a Powell and Pressburger retrospective – showing everything from A Matter Of Life And Death to The Red Shoes, A Canterbury Tale and the 49th Parallel – plus UK premiers for George Romero’s Land Of The Dead and Paul Schrader’s Exorcist prequel, Dominion.

As usual, Uncut will be on hand to bring you all the news, gossip and reviews from the Festival. Check back here for regular updates.

For more information on dates and times, log onto edfilmfest.org.uk or call the box office on 0131 623 8030.

How the Glimmer Twins Got Their Groove Back

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They may still be the greatest live rock'n'roll band in the world, but nobody expects much from a new Rolling Stones studio album these days. Indeed, it's eight years since the last one - 1997's Bridges To Babylon - and after the four patchy new tracks that appeared on 2002's Forty Licks compilation, they would never make get around to making another studio record. Yet when Uncut suggested to Mick Jagger at the end of 2003 that the Stones had become a touring-only band like The Grateful Dead towards the end of their career, it was clear that his pride was wounded by the suggestion. "No, I think the Stones have to make another studio album," he insisted. Now finally they've gone and done it with 'A Bigger Bang', a title which apparently reflects their "Fascination with the scientific theory about the origin of the universe." A notion which raises intriguing images of Mick, Keith, Charlie and Ronnie sitting around the studio reading Stephen Hawking for inspiration. Co-produced by Don Was and the band, the album was recorded in sessions in Paris at the end of 2004 and spring/early summer this year and mixed in Los Angeles. It contains 16 new Jagger-Richards compositions, which length-wise at least, puts the album in the bracket of Exile On Main Street (18 tracks) rather than Let It Bleed (nine tracks) or Beggar's Banquet and Sticky Fingers (10 tracks). What's more, it is surely their last studio album. Given the long gaps between albums these days, the Stones will be in their 70s before another is due. So there might be a couple more tours but there surely won't be another studio record. Early indications suggest that with this is mind, the Stones have defied the odds and raised their game to produce one last great album. There's none of the trendy fripperies that characterised Jagger's last solo album 'Goddess In The Doorway', no programming or borrowing from dance music or any other modern passing fad or fashion. As one Stones' employee puts it, 'They decided to borrow from themselves instead'. For the first time in years, sources say, Jagger and Richards wrote in tandem and the result is the most organic-sounding album they've made in decades. Due for release on September 5, this is what Uncut has been able to piece together about an album that might be subtitled 'How The Glimmer Twins Got Their Groove Back'... Rough Justice A kick-ass rocker, full of animal imagery about roosters, chickens, cocks, foxes and even a bat out of hell. At one point, Mick sings "put your lips to my hips and tell me what's on your mind". Let Me Slow Down One of the best tune on the record, with a great femme fatale lyric ("there's a swish in your step and a gleam in your eye") and a dramatic chorus with a lovely descending melody, "I said baby, baby, baby, let me down real slow.'' It Won't Take Long Classic "Heart Of Stone" style Mick put-down lyrics as he tells the girl he'll soon forget her, accompanied by great dual guitar work form Keith and Ronnie. Rain Fell Down A touch of New Orleans funk and a circular, clanging Meters-style guitar motif from Keith. Chugs along rather like Dylan's "Slow Train Coming". Streets Of Love Starts with mock-Renaissance guitar chords, like "Lady Jane" or "Tears Go By", and builds into a big stadium ballad, with Mick deliciously mouthing lyrics about stalking the streets of love and confessing ''I must admit I was awful bad. . .'' The Back Of My Hand Raw and dirty blues, fantastic slide guitar, wailing harmonica, Mick yelping like a cat on heat. The ghost Of Muddy Waters walks. This Place Is Empty Great piano-led ballad sung by Keith but very rootsy. Real honky-tonk-style tack piano and Keith crooning ''treat me sweet and cruel". She Saw Me Coming Mick on the prowl again - only this time his prey was wise to the old predator's tricks. Biggest Mistake Mick admits to making an error? Surely some mistake. Needless to say there's a girl at the bottom of it... Oh No, Not You Again Storming Sticky Fingers-era rocker with a lyric about ''Oh no not you again, fuckin' up my life...'' previewed in the band's surprise live set on the balcony of New York's Juilliard School when they announced their new tour in May. Dangerous Beauty Mid-tempo track on which Mick explains how he could always resist everything but temptation. Laugh I Nearly Died A simmering mid-tempo groove with Mick sounding more impassioned than in years - "Been travelling far and wide, wondering who's gonna be my guide... I'm so sick and tired... I feel so despised... Laugh? Laugh? Laugh? I nearly died." Sweet Neo Con The biggest surprise. We thought Mick was an old Thatcherite. But here he sticks it to Bush and co right between the eyes. ''You say you are a Christian , I think you are a hypocrite,'' he spits in the opening line to a tune a little like Dylan's "Masters Of War", while the chorus sneers, ''How come you're so wrong, my sweet neo-con.'' A Virgin spokeswoman in the US has already put out a panicky statement denying it's about Bush or anyone on the White House (can't risk upsetting Clear Channel, can we?). But if you believe that, you'll believe anything. Look What The Cat Dragged In Another rocker with a classic riff and typical Jagger lyric. Driving Too Fast Keith in overdrive on a pounding riff that rocks like its 1971. Infamy The album ends with Keith stepping up to the mic again for his second wasted-sounding vocal of the album.

They may still be the greatest live rock’n’roll band in the world, but nobody expects much from a new Rolling Stones studio album these days. Indeed, it’s eight years since the last one – 1997’s Bridges To Babylon – and after the four patchy new tracks that appeared on 2002’s Forty Licks compilation, they would never make get around to making another studio record.

Yet when Uncut suggested to Mick Jagger at the end of 2003 that the Stones had become a touring-only band like The Grateful Dead towards the end of their career, it was clear that his pride was wounded by the suggestion. “No, I think the Stones have to make another studio album,” he insisted.

Now finally they’ve gone and done it with ‘A Bigger Bang’, a title which apparently reflects their “Fascination with the scientific theory about the origin of the universe.” A notion which raises intriguing images of Mick, Keith, Charlie and Ronnie sitting around the studio reading Stephen Hawking for inspiration.

Co-produced by Don Was and the band, the album was recorded in sessions in Paris at the end of 2004 and spring/early summer this year and mixed in Los Angeles. It contains 16 new Jagger-Richards compositions, which length-wise at least, puts the album in the bracket of Exile On Main Street (18 tracks) rather than Let It Bleed (nine tracks) or Beggar’s Banquet and Sticky Fingers (10 tracks).

What’s more, it is surely their last studio album. Given the long gaps between albums these days, the Stones will be in their 70s before another is due. So there might be a couple more tours but there surely won’t be another studio record.

Early indications suggest that with this is mind, the Stones have defied the odds and raised their game to produce one last great album. There’s none of the trendy fripperies that characterised Jagger’s last solo album ‘Goddess In The Doorway’, no programming or borrowing from dance music or any other modern passing fad or fashion. As one Stones’ employee puts it, ‘They decided to borrow from themselves instead’. For the first time in years, sources say, Jagger and Richards wrote in tandem and the result is the most organic-sounding album they’ve made in decades.

Due for release on September 5, this is what Uncut has been able to piece together about an album that might be subtitled ‘How The Glimmer Twins Got Their Groove Back’…

Rough Justice

A kick-ass rocker, full of animal imagery about roosters, chickens, cocks,

foxes and even a bat out of hell. At one point, Mick sings “put your lips

to my hips and tell me what’s on your mind”.

Let Me Slow Down

One of the best tune on the record, with a great femme fatale lyric

(“there’s a swish in your step and a gleam in your eye”) and a dramatic

chorus with a lovely descending melody, “I said baby, baby, baby, let me

down real slow.”

It Won’t Take Long

Classic “Heart Of Stone” style Mick put-down lyrics as he tells the girl

he’ll soon forget her, accompanied by great dual guitar work form Keith

and Ronnie.

Rain Fell Down

A touch of New Orleans funk and a circular, clanging Meters-style guitar

motif from Keith. Chugs along rather like Dylan’s “Slow Train Coming”.

Streets Of Love

Starts with mock-Renaissance guitar chords, like “Lady Jane” or “Tears Go By”, and builds into a big stadium ballad, with Mick deliciously mouthing lyrics about stalking the streets of love and confessing ”I must admit I was

awful bad. . .”

The Back Of My Hand

Raw and dirty blues, fantastic slide guitar, wailing harmonica, Mick yelping like a cat on heat. The ghost Of Muddy Waters walks.

This Place Is Empty

Great piano-led ballad sung by Keith but very rootsy. Real honky-tonk-style

tack piano and Keith crooning ”treat me sweet and cruel”.

She Saw Me Coming

Mick on the prowl again – only this time his prey was wise to the old

predator’s tricks.

Biggest Mistake

Mick admits to making an error? Surely some mistake. Needless to say

there’s a girl at the bottom of it…

Oh No, Not You Again

Storming Sticky Fingers-era rocker with a lyric about ”Oh no not you again, fuckin’ up my life…” previewed in the band’s surprise live set on the balcony of New York’s Juilliard School when they announced their new tour in May.

Dangerous Beauty

Mid-tempo track on which Mick explains how he could always resist everything but temptation.

Laugh I Nearly Died

A simmering mid-tempo groove with Mick sounding more impassioned than in years – “Been travelling far and wide, wondering who’s gonna be my guide… I’m so sick and tired… I feel so despised… Laugh? Laugh? Laugh? I nearly died.”

Sweet Neo Con

The biggest surprise. We thought Mick was an old Thatcherite. But here he

sticks it to Bush and co right between the eyes. ”You say you are a Christian , I think you are a hypocrite,” he spits in the opening line to a tune a little like Dylan’s “Masters Of War”, while the chorus sneers, ”How come you’re so wrong, my sweet neo-con.” A Virgin spokeswoman in the US has already put out a panicky statement denying it’s about Bush or anyone on the White House (can’t risk upsetting Clear Channel, can we?). But if you believe that, you’ll believe anything.

Look What The Cat Dragged In

Another rocker with a classic riff and typical Jagger lyric.

Driving Too Fast

Keith in overdrive on a pounding riff that rocks like its 1971.

Infamy

The album ends with Keith stepping up to the mic again for his second wasted-sounding vocal of the album.

Madness – The Dangermen Sessions Volume 1

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In 1999, Madness’ comeback album - the all-original but underappreciated Wonderful - failed to ignite a full-scale revival in fortunes. Even the return of pianist and star songwriter Mike Barson, who’d long forsaken the band’s North London stomping grounds for Holland, made no difference. The great British public, it seemed, preferred Madness as a nostalgia act, coming together for the occasional Christmas special or reliving their glory days at a summer Madstock gathering of the clan. Faced with such a response, a return to the sources that first inspired them seems like an obvious, unchallenging move. And yet The Dangerman Sessions Volume 1 is something more than a band opting for the easy life. The song choices reveal much about Madness’ worldview and the band’s own songwriting; offhand humour, sharp insights and rhythmic joy abound. A tender and timely reworking of Marley’s “So Much Trouble” underlines their social conscience, the bittersweet tang they give Barbara Lynn’s “You’ll Lose A Good Thing” is redolent of their 1979 “My Girl” debut and the uproarious family saga detailed in Lord Tanamo’s “Shame and Scandal” could be a distant relative of “Embarrassment”. Throughout, the performances show that as an outfit sprung with a sense of fun, wiry intelligence and daring, Madness remain a one-off. They are equally adept at bringing a unique twist to the ghost dub of Max Romeo’s “Iron Shirt” as they are at handling the ska swerveball John Holt brought to The Supremes “You Keep Me Hanging On”. Madness remain an ebullient democracy. The ever-inventive saxman Lee ‘Kix’ Thompson deserves special praise - but each member adds vital touches. Despite one notable misfire – Jose Feliciano’s “Rain” failing to attain the kitsch turned into classic status they conferred on Labi Siffre’s “It Must Be Love” – it’s an enjoyably diverse and imaginative collection. Even their lopsided version of “Lola” has a deliciously ramshackle English sleaze only they could have contrived. A perfect album for ageing karaoke entrants? Far from it; even as a covers band Madness remain one step beyond. By Gavin Martin

In 1999, Madness’ comeback album – the all-original but underappreciated

Wonderful – failed to ignite a full-scale revival in fortunes. Even the return of pianist and star songwriter Mike Barson, who’d long forsaken the band’s North London stomping grounds for Holland, made no difference. The great British public, it seemed, preferred Madness as a nostalgia act, coming together for the occasional Christmas special or reliving their glory days at a summer Madstock gathering of the clan.

Faced with such a response, a return to the sources that first inspired them seems like an obvious, unchallenging move. And yet The Dangerman Sessions Volume 1 is something more than a band opting for the easy life. The song choices reveal much about Madness’ worldview and the band’s own songwriting; offhand humour, sharp insights and rhythmic joy abound.

A tender and timely reworking of Marley’s “So Much Trouble” underlines their social conscience, the bittersweet tang they give Barbara Lynn’s “You’ll Lose A Good Thing” is redolent of their 1979 “My Girl” debut and the uproarious family saga detailed in Lord Tanamo’s “Shame and Scandal” could be a distant relative of “Embarrassment”.

Throughout, the performances show that as an outfit sprung with a sense of fun, wiry intelligence and daring, Madness remain a one-off. They are equally adept at bringing a unique twist to the ghost dub of Max Romeo’s “Iron Shirt” as they are at handling the ska swerveball John Holt brought to The Supremes “You Keep Me Hanging On”.

Madness remain an ebullient democracy. The ever-inventive saxman Lee ‘Kix’ Thompson deserves special praise – but each member adds vital touches.

Despite one notable misfire – Jose Feliciano’s “Rain” failing to attain the kitsch turned into classic status they conferred on Labi Siffre’s “It Must Be Love” – it’s an enjoyably diverse and imaginative collection. Even their lopsided version of “Lola” has a deliciously ramshackle English sleaze only they could have contrived. A perfect album for ageing karaoke entrants? Far from it; even as a covers band Madness remain one step beyond.

By Gavin Martin

Frank Black – Honeycomb

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Much has changed in the world of Charles Thompson, aka Frank Black, in the last two years. He’s parted company from trusty sidekicks the Catholics, resurrected meta-hardcore gods the Pixies to unanimous acclaim, and moved from LA to Oregon. Oh, and he got divorced into the bargain. In amongst all this, Black somehow found five days in which to hole up in Nashville recording his first solo album since 1996’s The Cult of Ray. The result of a long-standing fantasy to make what he calls “a kind of Black On Blonde” in Music City, Honeycomb was cut at Dan Penn’s home-based Better Songs And Gardens studio with a dazzling cast of southern session greats assembled by finger-in-every-pie producer Jon Tiven. Following in the wake of Jeb Loy Nichols’ Country Soul Revue sessions chez Penn, Black showed up at Better Songs on the eve of the Pixies’ reunion tour, only to feel thoroughly overawed when Steve Cropper, Reggie Young, Spooner Oldham, David Hood and others trouped in and set up their music stands to back a dumpy-looking Bostonian of whom they’d never heard. If it’s hardly as bizarre as, say, Serge Gainsbourg recording in Jamaica, Honeycomb could nonetheless have backfired badly. Fortunately the sessions went without a hitch, producing an album as soulful as a former Pixie is ever likely to record. Black will never be a blue-eyed soul man, not even when he’s essaying Penn’s (and Chips Moman’s) classic deepie “Dark End of the Street”, yet the former Memphis/Muscle Shoals players’ restrained fleshing-out of his songs suits them well. Written in early 2004 after Black’s divorce came through, Honeycomb’s songs mull over the pain of loss in the detached, ruminative mode of a Leonard Cohen. “I Burn Today”, “Lone Child”, “My Life Is In Storage” and others stem from both deep grief and therapeutic breakthrough. Cohen’s influence is particular prominent on “Another Velvet Nightmare”, while the haunting title track sounds like it was sung by a laid-back Anthony Kiedis. The overall mood is sad rather than harrowing, but none the less moving for that. Unlikely covers of Elvis’ “Song of the Shrimp” and Doug Sahm’s “Sunday Sunny Mill Valley Groove Day” provide light relief. A quietly remarkable record. By Barney Hoskyns

Much has changed in the world of Charles Thompson, aka Frank Black, in the last two years. He’s parted company from trusty sidekicks the Catholics, resurrected meta-hardcore gods the Pixies to unanimous acclaim, and moved from LA to Oregon. Oh, and he got divorced into the bargain.

In amongst all this, Black somehow found five days in which to hole up in Nashville recording his first solo album since 1996’s The Cult of Ray. The result of a long-standing fantasy to make what he calls “a kind of Black On Blonde” in Music City, Honeycomb was cut at Dan Penn’s home-based Better Songs And Gardens studio with a dazzling cast of southern session greats assembled by finger-in-every-pie producer Jon Tiven.

Following in the wake of Jeb Loy Nichols’ Country Soul Revue sessions chez Penn, Black showed up at Better Songs on the eve of the Pixies’ reunion tour, only to feel thoroughly overawed when Steve Cropper, Reggie Young, Spooner Oldham, David Hood and others trouped in and set up their music stands to back a dumpy-looking Bostonian of whom they’d never heard.

If it’s hardly as bizarre as, say, Serge Gainsbourg recording in Jamaica, Honeycomb could nonetheless have backfired badly. Fortunately the sessions went without a hitch, producing an album as soulful as a former Pixie is ever likely to record. Black will never be a blue-eyed soul man, not even when he’s essaying Penn’s (and Chips Moman’s) classic deepie “Dark End of the Street”, yet the former Memphis/Muscle Shoals players’ restrained fleshing-out of his songs suits them well.

Written in early 2004 after Black’s divorce came through, Honeycomb’s songs mull over the pain of loss in the detached, ruminative mode of a Leonard Cohen. “I Burn Today”, “Lone Child”, “My Life Is In Storage” and others stem from both deep grief and therapeutic breakthrough. Cohen’s influence is particular prominent on “Another Velvet Nightmare”, while the haunting title track sounds like it was sung by a laid-back Anthony Kiedis. The overall mood is sad rather than harrowing, but none the less moving for that. Unlikely covers of Elvis’ “Song of the Shrimp” and Doug Sahm’s “Sunday Sunny Mill Valley Groove Day” provide light relief. A quietly remarkable record.

By Barney Hoskyns

Kanye West – Late Registration

0

Last year on his solo debut, College Dropout, Kanye West cut through rap’s standard-issue one-dimensional personae with some refreshing complexity. Neither “conscious” nor a bad-boy chasing bling and bitches, he was a little of both: a hungry soul (“Jesus Walks”) trapped in a body prey to venality (“All Falls Down”). West could pull off the occasional high-minded lyric without risking sanctimony, because he would clearly be the sort of preacher who got caught with call-girls. This time, Late Registration’s core of mixed emotion clusters around four songs that deal with themes of worldly wealth versus gold-of-the-spirit. “Diamonds From Sierra Leone” starts where College Dropout finished (“Last Call”). It’s another paean to Roc-A-Fella, the label that nurtured him as a producer and signed him where other A&Rs scoffed at his deceptively sloppy flow. The giddy ascending chorus “forever ever ever EVER ever” pledges fealty to Jay-Z’s dynasty, which rescued him from the parlous times when “I couldn’t afford/A Ford Escort.” But when West chants “throw your diamonds in the air,” he’s not really showing off his new status symbols so much as his aesthetic riches, the genius-visionary’s “power to make a diamond with his bare hands.” The song lives up to this boast and then some. Nobody deploys vocal samples better than West, and here it’s Shirley Bassey’s “Diamonds Are Forever” that gets shook down for hidden hooks and latent meanings. The glittering production, laced with harpsichords and strings, matches the lines about “Vegas on acid/Seen through Yves St Laurent glasses”. But what about the title’s reference to “Sierra Leone”? That just got tacked on after the fact, to fit the video, an expose of child-slavery in African diamond mines, and has absolutely nowt to do with the lyrics. It would have been cool if “Gold Digger” sampled “Goldfinger”. Instead, a Ray Charles loop powers this gritty groove, while (cute touch) Jamie Foxx kicks it off with a faux-blues whinge about a “triflin’ bitch” who sucks up his money and weed. West wryly observes “I ain’t saying she’s a gold digger/But she aint’ messin’ with no broke niggas!” “Addicted” offers a far fresher angle on exploitative heterosex. “Why everything that’s supposed to be bad/Make me feel so good?” ponders West, before launching into a rueful account of a mutually degrading affair that intertwines sex and drugs. The admission “and I keep coming over” is shivered with a hiccup of pained ecstasy, hinting at the double meaning of “come”. The song’s exquisite arrangement lends poignancy to this tale of male weakness and shame: a glisten of (i)Amnesiac(i) guitar, filtered hi-hats, a sampled chanteuse crooning “you make me smile with my heart” (a line from “My Funny Valentine”). “Crack Music” disconcertingly equates the analgesic powers of drugs and music, with Kanye and The Game chanting the chorus - “That’s that crack music, nigga/That real black music, nigga” - over an impossibly crisp military beat. If Black Americans traffic in the best pain-killers around, the song implies, it’s because Black America has the most pain to kill. It could be that Kanye West’s “honest confusion” anti-stance will become its own kind of schtick eventually. But judging by the mostly-brilliant Late Registration, that won’t be happening for a while yet. He might even make it unscathed to the end of the quintology of conceptually-linked albums of which this album is merely instalment number two. By Simon Reynolds

Last year on his solo debut, College Dropout, Kanye West cut through rap’s standard-issue one-dimensional personae with some refreshing complexity. Neither “conscious” nor a bad-boy chasing bling and bitches, he was a little of both: a hungry soul (“Jesus Walks”) trapped in a body prey to venality (“All Falls Down”). West could pull off the occasional high-minded lyric without risking sanctimony, because he would clearly be the sort of preacher who got caught with call-girls.

This time, Late Registration’s core of mixed emotion clusters around four songs that deal with themes of worldly wealth versus gold-of-the-spirit. “Diamonds From Sierra Leone” starts where College Dropout finished (“Last Call”). It’s another paean to Roc-A-Fella, the label that nurtured him as a producer and signed him where other A&Rs scoffed at his deceptively sloppy flow. The giddy ascending chorus “forever ever ever EVER ever” pledges fealty to Jay-Z’s dynasty, which rescued him from the parlous times when “I couldn’t afford/A Ford Escort.” But when West chants “throw your diamonds in the air,” he’s not really showing off his new status symbols so much as his aesthetic riches, the genius-visionary’s “power to make a diamond with his bare hands.”

The song lives up to this boast and then some. Nobody deploys vocal samples better than West, and here it’s Shirley Bassey’s “Diamonds Are Forever” that gets shook down for hidden hooks and latent meanings. The glittering production, laced with harpsichords and strings, matches the lines about “Vegas on acid/Seen through Yves St Laurent glasses”. But what about the title’s reference to “Sierra Leone”? That just got tacked on after the fact, to fit the video, an expose of child-slavery in African diamond mines, and has absolutely nowt to do with the lyrics.

It would have been cool if “Gold Digger” sampled “Goldfinger”. Instead, a Ray Charles loop powers this gritty groove, while (cute touch) Jamie Foxx kicks it off with a faux-blues whinge about a “triflin’ bitch” who sucks up his money and weed. West wryly observes “I ain’t saying she’s a gold digger/But she aint’ messin’ with no broke niggas!” “Addicted” offers a far fresher angle on exploitative heterosex. “Why everything that’s supposed to be bad/Make me feel so good?” ponders West, before launching into a rueful account of a mutually degrading affair that intertwines sex and drugs. The admission “and I keep coming over” is shivered with a hiccup of pained ecstasy, hinting at the double meaning of “come”. The song’s exquisite arrangement lends poignancy to this tale of male weakness and shame: a glisten of (i)Amnesiac(i) guitar, filtered hi-hats, a sampled chanteuse crooning “you make me smile with my heart” (a line from “My Funny Valentine”). “Crack Music” disconcertingly equates the analgesic powers of drugs and music, with Kanye and The Game chanting the chorus – “That’s that crack music, nigga/That real black music, nigga” – over an impossibly crisp military beat. If Black Americans traffic in the best pain-killers around, the song implies, it’s because Black America has the most pain to kill.

It could be that Kanye West’s “honest confusion” anti-stance will become its own kind of schtick eventually. But judging by the mostly-brilliant Late Registration, that won’t be happening for a while yet. He might even make it unscathed to the end of the quintology of conceptually-linked albums of which this album is merely instalment number two.

By Simon Reynolds

Uncut to celebrate its 100th issue in style

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The run of gigs, which features a host of artists, is on the following dates: August 3 Sons & Daughters, James Yorkston, Adem, Four Tet DJs August 4 Ed Harcourt, Kathryn Williams, Saint Joan August 5 The Earlies, Amusement Parks On Fire, Hayley Hutchinson Tickets will go on sale later today (July 28) through the NME.COM Ticket shop.

The run of gigs, which features a host of artists, is on the following dates:

August 3 Sons & Daughters, James Yorkston, Adem, Four Tet DJs

August 4 Ed Harcourt, Kathryn Williams, Saint Joan

August 5 The Earlies, Amusement Parks On Fire, Hayley Hutchinson

Tickets will go on sale later today (July 28) through the NME.COM Ticket shop.

Guilfest 2005 Review

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The fourteenth annual Guilford Festival, or Guilfest as it’s now been dubbed, has come a long way from humble beginnings. It started as a single evening of folk and blues, and has grown over the years, and now stretches over an entire weekend as one of the larger, if less well known, British open-air festivals. Promoter Tony Scott has created a family friendly event, with line-ups so diverse, the juxtaposition of bands on the bill is often enough to raise a wry smirk. Though the festival offers five stages, the majority of noteworthy acts were to be found on either the main Radio 2 stage, or on Uncut’s own noble dais, making the journey between the two a somewhat exhausting exercise in crowd negotiation. However, it was on the Radio 2 stage where the proceedings got off to a buoyant start, This Is Seb Clarke wooing the crowd from their su-induced torpor with their elastic concoction of 60s’ beat music, punk and ska. Clarke himself howled away like a northern Joe Strummer, stomping around with a manic look and attempting to energise his audience via some kind of osmosis. The good time atmosphere of the songs, and genuine elation of the band (all twelve of them), by passed the need for any weighty content, which was fortunate as “Now You Know Who I Am”, their introductory anthem, was about as deep as it got. Afternoon ebbed into evening, and Portland’s Richmond Fontaine provided the intimate and intricate lyricism that was decidedly lacking from Seb Clarke’s set. Singer/songwriter Willy Vlautin greatest talent is his extraordinary ability to evoke, in the form usually of brief, beautifully observed songs, a depth of character and complexity of situation usually associated with the best kind of contemporary American literature and story-telling. Nowhere have these abilities been better displayed, than on their most recent release The Fitzgerald, the record they’ve been promoting with a mini-tour of the UK. This has obviously stood them in good stead, the band exuding a subtle confidence, their performance being all about song craft as opposed to theatrics. With the bulk of the evening’s material coming from The Fitzgerald, it was fascinating to see the band rework what is, essentially, an austere acoustic album. Songs such as “Warehouse Life” could easily have surrendered some of their chilling ambience to intrusive, wayward playing, but this was never the case, each member contributing with exceptional taste and control, working as a unit to bring the songs to life. The Pogues couldn’t have played anywhere else but the top of the bill -not just because their legendary status, but also because playing last allowed the crowd enough time at the bar to enjoy their reeling jigs and heartfelt ballads in an appropriately convivial mood. With a all key members on board - including Spider Stacy, Phillip Chevron and the infamous Shane McGowan - The Pogues took the stage and launched themselves head first into kerosene-fuelled versions of classics like “Tuesday Morning” and “Streams Of Whiskey”, a sharp reminder of why folk music, played with punk attitude, has all the incendiary force of its spiky-haired sibling. Since his original departure from the fold in 1991, Shane has never been able to fully sever his ties with the group, returning a decade later for Christmas shows and again in 2004, these gigs apparently inspiring a renewed – ahem - thirst for performance. Shane’s performance on this occasion was captivating, in a very literal sense. Try as you might to avert your gaze from this wreck of a man, a man that in all other walks of life would surely have been written off an age ago, he remains the most interesting thing on stage. Blind drunk, disheveled and absolutely incoherent, his between song spiels should have come with subtitles. His stumbling delivery and whisky soaked inflections were sublime in their folly, and on the numbers that Chevron sung in his absence (presumably exiting to refresh his glass), his uniquely exuberant presence was sorely missed. Saturday saw the crowds swell and the heat intensify. The sun was so much a presence, that Songdog’s Lyndon Morgans felt compelled to apologise to those gathered around the Uncut stage, for subjecting them to his “depressing” music on such a glorious day. Opening with “One Day When God Begs My Forgiveness”, this apology immediately seemed unnecessary, a stoic wit marbling its reflective, nostalgic overtones. The kitchen-sink rawness of his words, combined with the minimalist arrangements, made for a formidable live experience, proving that the meditative atmosphere of their new album, The Time of Summer Lightning, can be transposed to the live arena. On the Radio 2 stage, Dubliner’s Hal leafed off rock solid renditions of their breezy, harmony laydened pop. This trio are fantastically tight live, not only instrumentally but vocally, which goes some way to distinguish them from analogous groups such as the Thrills and The Magic Numbers. The upbeat, melodies of “I Sat Down” and “Only Live In Hope” made them stand out songs - although their many, all too similar, ballads tended to blur into one another. Throughout the day and into the evening, acts couldn’t help but refer to Paul Weller’s imminent appearance. It became so common, that the phrase “Are you looking forward to Weller?” seemed as generic a comment as “Are you having a good time!”. When he finally strutted onto the stage like a cocksure schoolboy, he didn’t disappoint, and the mounting anticipation was fully justified. Amazingly, his youthful exuberance seemed to increase throughout the hour and a half long set, which consisted largely of crowd pleasers from his solo repertoire, like “Changing Man” and “Peacock Suit”. His guitar partnership with Steve Craddock (of Ocean Color Scene fame) seems an organic, unforced affair, both visually and aurally. The two play around each other as though it were second nature, and Craddock’s understated demeanor is the perfect counterpoint to Weller’s live wire antics. Even when the mood was mellowed by a short acoustic interlude (the highlight of which was a superb “That’s Entertainment”), the modfather’s grimace and dancing shoulders, betrayed his discomfort at being seated. This apparently becoming too much, he rose with his guitar tucked under his arm, grooving his way down the stage, before returning to his seat just in time to sing the next verse. As he’s aged, Weller’s voice has attained a soulful quality that wasn’t present during his formative years with The Jam, and despite battling faulty monitors, he sang with an emotive power that was beyond reproach. There was, however, a reminder of his original, crude charm, on his forthcoming single “From The Floor Boards Up”, Weller spitting out the song’s chorus with a vintage aggression that also fuelled the closing version of Jam favourite “A Town Called Malice”. With a line-up including Lulu and Daniel Beddingfield, Sunday did not seem promising, the bill being heavily weighted with novelty acts and sundry dubious characters. The Zombies offered a ray of hope early in the afternoon, with Colin Bluntstone’s still-distinctive vocals and Rod Argent on keyboards as flamboyant as ever. Unfortunately, this wasn’t enough to save them from the aging muso clichés they’ve become. It wasn’t until later, when Willard Grant Conspiracy ambled onto the Uncut stage, that the day was truly redeemed. There was a brief moment of déjà vu when main man Robert Fisher made the same apology about playing “depressing” music that Lyndon Morgans had the previous day, only this time, there were heckles demanding “happy songs”. These were playfully rebuffed, Fisher cheerfully introducing the first song with the happy sentiment: “Well, this one’s about suicide”. The group sounded more vigorous live than I expected, their sound pivoted on the heavy reverb of David Curry’s viola and John Apt’s atmospheric guitar work. The pair created sonic sound-scapes around Fisher’s often tragic, timeless folk songs. Tearing through numbers like “Sticky”, which sound comparatively tame on record, the band also set aside time for their more lo-fi leanings. With the reverb off the viola and the bass guitar swapped for a double bass, the band gave sensitive performances of “The Ghost Of The Girl In The Well”, and ended with the chilling “Ballad of John Parker”. They were, perhaps, the pinnacle of the weekend, and were at very least, the best thing Sunday had to offer. By Huw Evans

The fourteenth annual Guilford Festival, or Guilfest as it’s now been dubbed, has come a long way from humble beginnings. It started as a single evening of folk and blues, and has grown over the years, and now stretches over an entire weekend as one of the larger, if less well known, British open-air festivals. Promoter Tony Scott has created a family friendly event, with line-ups so diverse, the juxtaposition of bands on the bill is often enough to raise a wry smirk.

Though the festival offers five stages, the majority of noteworthy acts were to be found on either the main Radio 2 stage, or on Uncut’s own noble dais, making the journey between the two a somewhat exhausting exercise in crowd negotiation. However, it was on the Radio 2 stage where the proceedings got off to a buoyant start, This Is Seb Clarke wooing the crowd from their su-induced torpor with their elastic concoction of 60s’ beat music, punk and ska. Clarke himself howled away like a northern Joe Strummer, stomping around with a manic look and attempting to energise his audience via some kind of osmosis. The good time atmosphere of the songs, and genuine elation of the band (all twelve of them), by passed the need for any weighty content, which was fortunate as “Now You Know Who I Am”, their introductory anthem, was about as deep as it got.

Afternoon ebbed into evening, and Portland’s Richmond Fontaine provided the intimate and intricate lyricism that was decidedly lacking from Seb Clarke’s set. Singer/songwriter Willy Vlautin greatest talent is his extraordinary ability to evoke, in the form usually of brief, beautifully observed songs, a depth of character and complexity of situation usually associated with the best kind of contemporary American literature and story-telling. Nowhere have these abilities been better displayed, than on their most recent release The Fitzgerald, the record they’ve been promoting with a mini-tour of the UK. This has obviously stood them in good stead, the band exuding a subtle confidence, their performance being all about song craft as opposed to theatrics.

With the bulk of the evening’s material coming from The Fitzgerald, it was fascinating to see the band rework what is, essentially, an austere acoustic album. Songs such as “Warehouse Life” could easily have surrendered some of their chilling ambience to intrusive, wayward playing, but this was never the case, each member contributing with exceptional taste and control, working as a unit to bring the songs to life.

The Pogues couldn’t have played anywhere else but the top of the bill -not just because their legendary status, but also because playing last allowed the crowd enough time at the bar to enjoy their reeling jigs and heartfelt ballads in an appropriately convivial mood. With a all key members on board – including Spider Stacy, Phillip Chevron and the infamous Shane McGowan – The Pogues took the stage and launched themselves head first into kerosene-fuelled versions of classics like “Tuesday Morning” and “Streams Of Whiskey”, a sharp reminder of why folk music, played with punk attitude, has all the incendiary force of its spiky-haired sibling.

Since his original departure from the fold in 1991, Shane has never been able to fully sever his ties with the group, returning a decade later for Christmas shows and again in 2004, these gigs apparently inspiring a renewed – ahem – thirst for performance. Shane’s performance on this occasion was captivating, in a very literal sense. Try as you might to avert your gaze from this wreck of a man, a man that in all other walks of life would surely have been written off an age ago, he remains the most interesting thing on stage. Blind drunk, disheveled and absolutely incoherent, his between song spiels should have come with subtitles. His stumbling delivery and whisky soaked inflections were sublime in their folly, and on the numbers that Chevron sung in his absence (presumably exiting to refresh his glass), his uniquely exuberant presence was sorely missed.

Saturday saw the crowds swell and the heat intensify. The sun was so much a presence, that Songdog’s Lyndon Morgans felt compelled to apologise to those gathered around the Uncut stage, for subjecting them to his “depressing” music on such a glorious day. Opening with “One Day When God Begs My Forgiveness”, this apology immediately seemed unnecessary, a stoic wit marbling its reflective, nostalgic overtones. The kitchen-sink rawness of his words, combined with the minimalist arrangements, made for a formidable live experience, proving that the meditative atmosphere of their new album, The Time of Summer Lightning, can be transposed to the live arena.

On the Radio 2 stage, Dubliner’s Hal leafed off rock solid renditions of their breezy, harmony laydened pop. This trio are fantastically tight live, not only instrumentally but vocally, which goes some way to distinguish them from analogous groups such as the Thrills and The Magic Numbers. The upbeat, melodies of “I Sat Down” and “Only Live In Hope” made them stand out songs – although their many, all too similar, ballads tended to blur into one another.

Throughout the day and into the evening, acts couldn’t help but refer to Paul Weller’s imminent appearance. It became so common, that the phrase “Are you looking forward to Weller?” seemed as generic a comment as “Are you having a good time!”. When he finally strutted onto the stage like a cocksure schoolboy, he didn’t disappoint, and the mounting anticipation was fully justified. Amazingly, his youthful exuberance seemed to increase throughout the hour and a half long set, which consisted largely of crowd pleasers from his solo repertoire, like “Changing Man” and “Peacock Suit”. His guitar partnership with Steve Craddock (of Ocean Color Scene fame) seems an organic, unforced affair, both visually and aurally. The two play around each other as though it were second nature, and Craddock’s understated demeanor is the perfect counterpoint to Weller’s live wire antics. Even when the mood was mellowed by a short acoustic interlude (the highlight of which was a superb “That’s Entertainment”), the modfather’s grimace and dancing shoulders, betrayed his discomfort at being seated. This apparently becoming too much, he rose with his guitar tucked under his arm, grooving his way down the stage, before returning to his seat just in time to sing the next verse.

As he’s aged, Weller’s voice has attained a soulful quality that wasn’t present during his formative years with The Jam, and despite battling faulty monitors, he sang with an emotive power that was beyond reproach. There was, however, a reminder of his original, crude charm, on his forthcoming single “From The Floor Boards Up”, Weller spitting out the song’s chorus with a vintage aggression that also fuelled the closing version of Jam favourite “A Town Called Malice”.

With a line-up including Lulu and Daniel Beddingfield, Sunday did not seem promising, the bill being heavily weighted with novelty acts and sundry dubious characters. The Zombies offered a ray of hope early in the afternoon, with Colin Bluntstone’s still-distinctive vocals and Rod Argent on keyboards as flamboyant as ever. Unfortunately, this wasn’t enough to save them from the aging muso clichés they’ve become. It wasn’t until later, when Willard Grant Conspiracy ambled onto the Uncut stage, that the day was truly redeemed.

There was a brief moment of déjà vu when main man Robert Fisher made the same apology about playing “depressing” music that Lyndon Morgans had the previous day, only this time, there were heckles demanding “happy songs”. These were playfully rebuffed, Fisher cheerfully introducing the first song with the happy sentiment: “Well, this one’s about suicide”. The group sounded more vigorous live than I expected, their sound pivoted on the heavy reverb of David Curry’s viola and John Apt’s atmospheric guitar work. The pair created sonic sound-scapes around Fisher’s often tragic, timeless folk songs. Tearing through numbers like “Sticky”, which sound comparatively tame on record, the band also set aside time for their more lo-fi leanings. With the reverb off the viola and the bass guitar swapped for a double bass, the band gave sensitive performances of “The Ghost Of The Girl In The Well”, and ended with the chilling “Ballad of John Parker”. They were, perhaps, the pinnacle of the weekend, and were at very least, the best thing Sunday had to offer.

By Huw Evans

Robert Mitchum – NFT season

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His noir hunk persona encounters Jane Russell in a couple of ripple pulp adventures, 'His Kind of Woman' and 'Macao', while 'Where Danger Lives' is a haunting display of hamstrung manhood at bay. He is vicious in the low-budget gangster drama 'The Racket', the noir western 'Blood on the Moon', and the bleak oater 'Man with the Gun', but the blend of authority and devil-may-care is freshened every time. Legend had it that Mitchum often looked like he was sleepwalking through a role and then pull out the most deeply committed of extraordinary moments. There are many tall tales about Robert Mitchum, most of them spread by himself, but the story of his career is perhaps the most outlandish of them all. Friday 1 July The Night of the Hunter NFT2 6.15pm Saturday 2 July Cape Fear NFT1 6.10pm Mitchum Interviewed NFT3 8.40pm Sunday 3 July Out of the Past (aka Build My Gallows High) NFT1 3.30pm Farewell My Lovely NFT2 8.40pm Monday 4 July Out of the Past (aka Build My Gallows High) NFT3 2.30pm The Lusty Men NFT1 6.20pm River of No Return NFT1 8.40pm Tuesday 5 July Out of the Past (aka Build My Gallows High) NFT1 6.30pm Track of the Cat NFT1 8.45pm Friday 8 July Thunder Road NFT1 6.30pm Cape Fear NFT1 8.45pm Saturday 9 July The Friends of Eddie Coyle NFT1 6.30pm Out of the Past (aka Build My Gallows High) NFT1 8.45pm Sunday 10 July Farewell My Lovely NFT1 6.10pm The Night of the Hunter NFT1 8.30pm Monday 11 July The Night of the Hunter NFT3 2.30pm When Strangers Marry NFT2 6.00pm The Story of GI Joe (aka War Correspondent) NFT2 8.40pm Tuesday 12 July Till the End of Time NFT2 6.20pm The Lusty Men NFT3 8.30pm Wednesday 13 July Undercurrent NFT2 8.30pm Thursday 14 July The Locket NFT2 6.20pm When Strangers Marry NFT2 8.20pm Friday 15 July River of No Return NFT3 6.15pm Pursued NFT2 8.40pm Saturday 16 July The Story of GI Joe (aka War Correspondent) NFT2 8.40pm Sunday 17 July Track of the Cat NFT3 3.50pm Till the End of Time NFT2 8.40pm Monday 18 July Pursued NFT2 2.30pm Undercurrent NFT2 6.20pm Thunder Road NFT2 8.45pm Tuesday 19 July The Locket NFT2 8.40pm Wednesday 20 July Pursued NFT2 6.20pm El Dorado NFT2 8.30pm Thursday 21 July Crossfire NFT2 6.20pm Farewell My Lovely NFT2 8.40pm Friday 22 July The Friends of Eddie Coyle NFT2 8.40pm Saturday 23 July El Dorado NFT2 6.10pm Sunday 24 July Angel Face NFT2 6.20pm Monday 25 July The Big Steal NFT2 2.30pm Crossfire NFT2 8.40pm Tuesday 26 July The Night of the Hunter NFT2 8.40pm Wednesday 27 July Angel Face NFT2 8.40pm Thursday 28 July The Big Steal NFT2 8.40pm Saturday 30 July The Big Steal NFT2 8.40pm Sunday 31 July The Night of the Hunter NFT2 4.00pm Mitchum Interviewed NFT2 6.20pm Monday 1 August Rachel and the Stranger NFT2 6.10pm Tuesday 2 August Blood on the Moon NFT3 8.30pm Wednesday 3 August The Red Pony NFT3 6.10pm Blood on the Moon NFT3 8.30pm Thursday 4 August Rachel and the Stranger NFT2 8.30pm Saturday 6 August Blood on the Moon NFT2 6.20pm Sunday 7 August Where Danger Lives NFT2 6.20pm Monday 8 August The Red Pony NFT2 8.40pm Tuesday 9 August The Red Pony NFT3 8.30pm Thursday 11 August Where Danger Lives NFT2 8.30pm Friday 12 August My Forbidden Past NFT3 8.30pm Friday 19 August His Kind of Woman NFT2 8.40pm Saturday 20 August The Racket NFT2 6.20pm Sunday 21 August Macao NFT3 3.50pm The Yakuza NFT3 8.30pm Monday 22 August Man with the Gun NFT3 6.10pm Heaven Knows, Mr Allison NFT3 8.30pm Tuesday 23 August His Kind of Woman NFT2 6.15pm Wednesday 24 August The Angry Hills NFT2 6.10pm Home from the Hill NFT3 8.10pm Thursday 25 August Secret Ceremony NFT2 8.30pm Friday 26 August The Racket NFT2 8.45pm Saturday 27 August My Forbidden Past NFT2 4.00pm The Yakuza NFT3 6.10pm Man with the Gun NFT3 8.40pm Sunday 28 August Heaven Knows, Mr Allison NFT3 6.10pm The Angry Hills NFT2 8.40pm Monday 29 August Blood on the Moon NFT3 3.50pm Secret Ceremony NFT2 6.10pm Home from the Hill NFT3 8.10pm Tuesday 30 August Home from the Hill NFT3 6.00pm Macao NFT2 8.40pm Wednesday 31 August The Yakuza NFT3 8.30pm

His noir hunk persona encounters Jane Russell in a couple of ripple pulp adventures, ‘His Kind of Woman’ and ‘Macao’, while ‘Where Danger Lives’ is a haunting display of hamstrung manhood at bay.

He is vicious in the low-budget gangster drama ‘The Racket’, the noir western ‘Blood on the Moon’, and the bleak oater ‘Man with the Gun’, but the blend of authority and devil-may-care is freshened every time.

Legend had it that Mitchum often looked like he was sleepwalking through a role and then pull out the most deeply committed of extraordinary moments. There are many tall tales about Robert Mitchum, most of them spread by himself, but the story of his career is perhaps the most outlandish of them all.

Friday 1 July

The Night of the Hunter

NFT2

6.15pm

Saturday 2 July

Cape Fear

NFT1

6.10pm

Mitchum Interviewed

NFT3

8.40pm

Sunday 3 July

Out of the Past (aka Build My Gallows High)

NFT1

3.30pm

Farewell My Lovely

NFT2

8.40pm

Monday 4 July

Out of the Past (aka Build My Gallows High)

NFT3

2.30pm

The Lusty Men

NFT1

6.20pm

River of No Return

NFT1

8.40pm

Tuesday 5 July

Out of the Past (aka Build My Gallows High)

NFT1

6.30pm

Track of the Cat

NFT1

8.45pm

Friday 8 July

Thunder Road

NFT1

6.30pm

Cape Fear

NFT1

8.45pm

Saturday 9 July

The Friends of Eddie Coyle

NFT1

6.30pm

Out of the Past (aka Build My Gallows High)

NFT1

8.45pm

Sunday 10 July

Farewell My Lovely

NFT1

6.10pm

The Night of the Hunter

NFT1

8.30pm

Monday 11 July

The Night of the Hunter

NFT3

2.30pm

When Strangers Marry

NFT2

6.00pm

The Story of GI Joe (aka War Correspondent)

NFT2

8.40pm

Tuesday 12 July

Till the End of Time

NFT2

6.20pm

The Lusty Men

NFT3

8.30pm

Wednesday 13 July

Undercurrent

NFT2

8.30pm

Thursday 14 July

The Locket

NFT2

6.20pm

When Strangers Marry

NFT2

8.20pm

Friday 15 July

River of No Return

NFT3

6.15pm

Pursued

NFT2

8.40pm

Saturday 16 July

The Story of GI Joe (aka War Correspondent)

NFT2

8.40pm

Sunday 17 July

Track of the Cat

NFT3

3.50pm

Till the End of Time

NFT2

8.40pm

Monday 18 July

Pursued

NFT2

2.30pm

Undercurrent

NFT2

6.20pm

Thunder Road

NFT2

8.45pm

Tuesday 19 July

The Locket

NFT2

8.40pm

Wednesday 20 July

Pursued

NFT2

6.20pm

El Dorado

NFT2

8.30pm

Thursday 21 July

Crossfire

NFT2

6.20pm

Farewell My Lovely

NFT2

8.40pm

Friday 22 July

The Friends of Eddie Coyle

NFT2

8.40pm

Saturday 23 July

El Dorado

NFT2

6.10pm

Sunday 24 July

Angel Face

NFT2

6.20pm

Monday 25 July

The Big Steal

NFT2

2.30pm

Crossfire

NFT2

8.40pm

Tuesday 26 July

The Night of the Hunter

NFT2

8.40pm

Wednesday 27 July

Angel Face

NFT2

8.40pm

Thursday 28 July

The Big Steal

NFT2

8.40pm

Saturday 30 July

The Big Steal

NFT2

8.40pm

Sunday 31 July

The Night of the Hunter

NFT2

4.00pm

Mitchum Interviewed

NFT2

6.20pm

Monday 1 August

Rachel and the Stranger

NFT2

6.10pm

Tuesday 2 August

Blood on the Moon

NFT3

8.30pm

Wednesday 3 August

The Red Pony

NFT3

6.10pm

Blood on the Moon

NFT3

8.30pm

Thursday 4 August

Rachel and the Stranger

NFT2

8.30pm

Saturday 6 August

Blood on the Moon

NFT2

6.20pm

Sunday 7 August

Where Danger Lives

NFT2

6.20pm

Monday 8 August

The Red Pony

NFT2

8.40pm

Tuesday 9 August

The Red Pony

NFT3

8.30pm

Thursday 11 August

Where Danger Lives

NFT2

8.30pm

Friday 12 August

My Forbidden Past

NFT3

8.30pm

Friday 19 August

His Kind of Woman

NFT2

8.40pm

Saturday 20 August

The Racket

NFT2

6.20pm

Sunday 21 August

Macao

NFT3

3.50pm

The Yakuza

NFT3

8.30pm

Monday 22 August

Man with the Gun

NFT3

6.10pm

Heaven Knows, Mr Allison

NFT3

8.30pm

Tuesday 23 August

His Kind of Woman

NFT2

6.15pm

Wednesday 24 August

The Angry Hills

NFT2

6.10pm

Home from the Hill

NFT3

8.10pm

Thursday 25 August

Secret Ceremony

NFT2

8.30pm

Friday 26 August

The Racket

NFT2

8.45pm

Saturday 27 August

My Forbidden Past

NFT2

4.00pm

The Yakuza

NFT3

6.10pm

Man with the Gun

NFT3

8.40pm

Sunday 28 August

Heaven Knows, Mr Allison

NFT3

6.10pm

The Angry Hills

NFT2

8.40pm

Monday 29 August

Blood on the Moon

NFT3

3.50pm

Secret Ceremony

NFT2

6.10pm

Home from the Hill

NFT3

8.10pm

Tuesday 30 August

Home from the Hill

NFT3

6.00pm

Macao

NFT2

8.40pm

Wednesday 31 August

The Yakuza

NFT3

8.30pm

See the trailer for ‘Wolf Creek’

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The chilling story of three Australian backpackers travelling in the remote outback. When their vehicle breaks down they accept help from a friendly local. It soon dawns on them that he has no intention of fixing their vehicle... Just click on one of the links below to watch the trailer. Windows Media: Low/Med/High Real: Low/Med/High Quicktime: Low/Med/High

The chilling story of three Australian backpackers travelling in the remote outback. When their vehicle breaks down they accept help from a friendly local. It soon dawns on them that he has no intention of fixing their vehicle…

Just click on one of the links below to watch the trailer.

Windows Media: Low/Med/High

Real: Low/Med/High

Quicktime: Low/Med/High

HEAR THE NEW ALBUM FROM MY COMPUTER

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Manchester duo Andrew Chester and David Luke follow up on their extraordinary 2002 debut ‘Vulnerabilia’ with a second album, ‘No CV’, this month. A review of the album, in the August edition of Uncut, finds it Dauntingly impressive…After 10 minutes, they’re sharing Jeff Buckley’s range. After 20, they’ve outstripped Radiohead’s intricacy…. Discover the delights of the John Leckie co-produced, ‘No CV’, here on Uncut.co.uk, via the links below: 'Lonely' - high / low 'Stumble' - high / low 'Dig a Hole' - high / low 'Life' - high / low 'Steve's Critique' - high / low 'The Boy I Used to Be' - high / low 'Don't Go Where I've Been' - high / low 'Some Chemicals' - high / low 'Crystal Clear' - high / low 'Over You' - high / low 'Pulling Myself Together' - high / low 'Heart' - high / low

Manchester duo Andrew Chester and David Luke follow up on their extraordinary 2002 debut ‘Vulnerabilia’ with a second album, ‘No CV’, this month. A review of the album, in the August edition of Uncut, finds it Dauntingly impressive…After 10 minutes, they’re sharing Jeff Buckley’s range. After 20, they’ve outstripped Radiohead’s intricacy….

Discover the delights of the John Leckie co-produced, ‘No CV’, here on Uncut.co.uk, via the links below:

‘Lonely’high / low

‘Stumble’high / low

‘Dig a Hole’high / low

‘Life’high / low

‘Steve’s Critique’high / low

‘The Boy I Used to Be’high / low

‘Don’t Go Where I’ve Been’high / low

‘Some Chemicals’high / low

‘Crystal Clear’high / low

‘Over You’high / low

‘Pulling Myself Together’high / low

‘Heart’high / low

R.E.M. – The alternative best of

0

On Saturday April 5, 1980 four young men played at a birthday party in a ramshackle ex-church on Oconee Street in the university town of Athens, Georgia. This was the first time that the Peter Buck, Bill Berry, Mike Mills and Michael Stipe would play together in front of a crowd, they would go on to become one of the most important bands in American history. In 2005, R.E.M. are celebrating their silver jubilee, and to mark this moment we've put together our alternative selection of their finest moments in the more recent back-catalogue for you to hear, in full. None of these are on the 2003 album 'In Time: The Best of REM 1988-2003'. Simply click 'High' or 'Low' depending upon your internet connection. You'll need Realplayer from realnetworks.com/freeplayer.

Don't forget to check out our full REM feature and all three CDs on this month's collectible covered Uncut Magazine.

On Saturday April 5, 1980 four young men played at a birthday party in a ramshackle ex-church on Oconee Street in the university town of Athens, Georgia.

This was the first time that the Peter Buck, Bill Berry, Mike Mills and Michael Stipe would play together in front of a crowd, they would go on to become one of the most important bands in American history.

In 2005, R.E.M. are celebrating their silver jubilee, and to mark this moment we’ve put together our alternative selection of their finest moments in the more recent back-catalogue for you to hear, in full. None of these are on the 2003 album ‘In Time: The Best of REM 1988-2003’.

Simply click ‘High’ or ‘Low’ depending upon your internet connection. You’ll need Realplayer from realnetworks.com/freeplayer.



Don’t forget to check out our full REM feature and all three CDs on this month’s collectible covered Uncut Magazine.

Guilfest 2005

0

This weekend (15 -17 July) sees the annual three-day Guilfest in Guildford, Surrey. Among the headliners are The Pogues, Paul Weller, Status Quo, Echo and the Bunnymen, The Zombies, The Hothouse Flowers and Hal. If you're interested in going along, there are a few tickets still left, for more information visit guilfest.co.uk. This year there is an Uncut stage, which features Richmond Fontaine and Willard Grant Conspiracy among others, full details are below. The BBC Radio 2 Main Stage Friday 15th July The Pogues Alabama 3 The Proclaimers The Stands This Is Seb Clarke Saturday 16th July Paul Weller Echo & The Bunnymen The Others The Subways Hal The Black Velvets Tom Baxter Citadel Sunday 17th July Status Quo Daniel Bedingfield Lulu Marillion Chas 'N' Dave The Zombies Ukuele Orchestra of Great Britain The Uncut Stage Friday 15th July Hothouse Flowers Richmond Fontaine Twelve Sullivans Big Wednesday Claire Toomey Boo Hewerdine Saturday 16th July Thunder Ralph Myerz and the Jack Herren Band Blue Rodeo Nerina Pallot Jorane Nizlopi The Yards Song Dog Epuldugger United Stoats of America Intervurt The Roosters Sunday 17th July Hayseed Dixie Dreadzone Willard Grant Conspiracy Space Ritual Martha Tilston Nautical Theme Alistair Cowan Richard John Thompson Who Will Miss Mary? Nigel Clarke (ex Dodgy)

This weekend (15 -17 July) sees the annual three-day Guilfest in Guildford, Surrey. Among the headliners are The Pogues, Paul Weller, Status Quo, Echo and the Bunnymen, The Zombies, The Hothouse Flowers and Hal.

If you’re interested in going along, there are a few tickets still left, for more information visit guilfest.co.uk.

This year there is an Uncut stage, which features Richmond Fontaine and Willard Grant Conspiracy among others, full details are below.

The BBC Radio 2 Main Stage

Friday 15th July

The Pogues

Alabama 3

The Proclaimers

The Stands

This Is Seb Clarke

Saturday 16th July

Paul Weller

Echo & The Bunnymen

The Others

The Subways

Hal

The Black Velvets

Tom Baxter

Citadel

Sunday 17th July

Status Quo

Daniel Bedingfield

Lulu

Marillion

Chas ‘N’ Dave

The Zombies

Ukuele Orchestra of Great Britain

The Uncut Stage

Friday 15th July

Hothouse Flowers

Richmond Fontaine

Twelve Sullivans

Big Wednesday

Claire Toomey

Boo Hewerdine

Saturday 16th July

Thunder

Ralph Myerz and the Jack Herren Band

Blue Rodeo

Nerina Pallot

Jorane

Nizlopi

The Yards

Song Dog

Epuldugger

United Stoats of America

Intervurt

The Roosters

Sunday 17th July

Hayseed Dixie

Dreadzone

Willard Grant Conspiracy

Space Ritual

Martha Tilston

Nautical Theme

Alistair Cowan

Richard John Thompson

Who Will Miss Mary?

Nigel Clarke (ex Dodgy)