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PJ Harvey to receive honorary degree

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PJ Harvey has been announced as one of the names to receive an honorary degree from Goldsmiths University this year. The singer, who was appointed an MBE last year, will accept the accolade from the London university next month, along with architect Dame Zaha Hadid, human rights campaigner Peter T...

PJ Harvey has been announced as one of the names to receive an honorary degree from Goldsmiths University this year.

The singer, who was appointed an MBE last year, will accept the accolade from the London university next month, along with architect Dame Zaha Hadid, human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell, journalist Neal Ascherson and poet George Szirtes.

The ceremonies will take place between September 8 and 11. PJ Harvey will be awarded on Wednesday, September 10.

Goldsmiths University‘s musical alumnus includes Blur – who played their first gig in the Students Union bar – John Cale, Katy B and Rob Da Bank. Jools Holland, Columbia Records chairman Rob Stringer and Placebo frontman Brian Molko are among the musical figures who have been honoured with Goldsmiths degrees in previous years.

“Our honorands this year are a remarkable group of people,” Liz Bromley, Registrar and Secretary of Goldsmiths, said. “They have changed communities through their inspiring architectural designs. They have pointed out the ridiculous in the news and made us laugh. They have inspired us with their words, their music, and their art. They have fought for our rights. And they have helped us to understand who we are now by looking to the past.”

In December 2013, PJ Harvey guest edited BBC Radio 4‘s flagship current affairs programme Today, where she commissioned Wikileaks founder Julian Assange to deliver a special ‘Thought For The Day’, along with features from journalist John Pilger and former Archbishop Of Canterbury Rowan Williams. Actor Ralph Fiennes read the poems ‘Austerities’ by Charles Simic and ‘They Fight For Peace’ by Shaker Aamer and the show also featured extracts from works by Tom Waits and Joan Baez.

Two out-of-print Jimi Hendrix albums set for re-release

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Two out-of-print Jimi Hendrix albums - The Cry Of Love and Rainbow Bridge - are set to be re-released. The albums will come out on September 15 on CD, vinyl and digital formats. The LPs were his first and second posthumous releases, with both records originally released in 1971 after the legendary guitarist and singer passed away in 1970 at the age of 27. The songs that make up The Cry Of Love were recorded from December 1969 into the summer of 1970 at Electric Lady Studios in New York. They were set to be included on a double LP with the working title First Rays Of The New Rising Sun. Rainbow Bridge is made up of tracks from the same sessions. Scroll down for the tracklistings for both albums. A film documenting the early UK career of Hendrix Jimi: All Is By My Side is set for release in the UK on October 24. It stars OutKast’s Andre 3000 as the guitarist. The Cry Of Love tracklisting is: 'Freedom' 'Drifting' 'Ezy Ryder' 'Night Bird Flying' 'My Friend' 'Straight Ahead' 'Astro Man' 'Angel' 'In From the Storm' 'Belly Button Window' The Rainbow Bridge tracklisting is: 'Dolly Dagger' 'Earth Blues' 'Pali Gap' 'Room Full of Mirrors' 'Star Spangled Banner' (studio version) 'Look Over Yonder' 'Hear My Train A Comin'' (live) 'Hey Baby (New Rising Sun)'

Two out-of-print Jimi Hendrix albums – The Cry Of Love and Rainbow Bridge – are set to be re-released.

The albums will come out on September 15 on CD, vinyl and digital formats. The LPs were his first and second posthumous releases, with both records originally released in 1971 after the legendary guitarist and singer passed away in 1970 at the age of 27. The songs that make up The Cry Of Love were recorded from December 1969 into the summer of 1970 at Electric Lady Studios in New York. They were set to be included on a double LP with the working title First Rays Of The New Rising Sun.

Rainbow Bridge is made up of tracks from the same sessions. Scroll down for the tracklistings for both albums.

A film documenting the early UK career of Hendrix Jimi: All Is By My Side is set for release in the UK on October 24. It stars OutKast’s Andre 3000 as the guitarist.

The Cry Of Love tracklisting is:

‘Freedom’

‘Drifting’

‘Ezy Ryder’

‘Night Bird Flying’

‘My Friend’

‘Straight Ahead’

‘Astro Man’

‘Angel’

‘In From the Storm’

‘Belly Button Window’

The Rainbow Bridge tracklisting is:

‘Dolly Dagger’

‘Earth Blues’

‘Pali Gap’

‘Room Full of Mirrors’

‘Star Spangled Banner’ (studio version)

‘Look Over Yonder’

‘Hear My Train A Comin” (live)

‘Hey Baby (New Rising Sun)’

Roger Waters’ The Wall tour documentary to premiere in September

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Roger Waters' documentary about his The Wall world tour is to receive its world premiere in September at the Toronto International Film Festival. The Wall Live Tour took place between 2010 and 2013, becoming the highest-grossing tour for a solo musician. The film utilizes footage from throughout t...

Roger Waters‘ documentary about his The Wall world tour is to receive its world premiere in September at the Toronto International Film Festival.

The Wall Live Tour took place between 2010 and 2013, becoming the highest-grossing tour for a solo musician.

The film utilizes footage from throughout the tour’s four-year run, which included stops in the UK and Europe, the US, South America, and Australia.

The film is credited to Waters and the tour’s creative director, Sean Evans.

In a statement reported on Rolling Stone, TIFF Director and CEO Piers Handling said, “Ever since The Wall was released, it has become one of the classic rock albums of all time. Its popularity continues and its message is still timely. Deeply affected by his father’s and grandfather’s deaths in the two world wars, Roger Waters has crafted a plea to tear down the walls that lead to misunderstandings and wars. This powerful performance film allows Roger to explore what The Wall still means to him as he performs it in front of tens of thousands of fans, and visits more personal places that resonate with meaning on the 100th anniversary of the outbreak of the First World War.”

A Director’s Cut of Neil Young‘s film Human Highway will also screen at the festival. You can read about that here.

Peter Buck to release new EP

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Peter Buck is to release a new EP, Opium Drivel. The 4-song, 7-inch will be released on October 21 on Mississippi Records, according to a story on Slicing Up Eyeballs. The EP can be pre-ordered here. According to the product details on "the extend play 33 RPM 7" EP. Peter brings us 4 songs on thi...

Peter Buck is to release a new EP, Opium Drivel.

The 4-song, 7-inch will be released on October 21 on Mississippi Records, according to a story on Slicing Up Eyeballs.

The EP can be pre-ordered here.

According to the product details on “the extend play 33 RPM 7” EP. Peter brings us 4 songs on this one. Side A features two rockers – one being ‘Portrait Of A Sorry Man‘ in which Peter asks for forgiveness for all his sins and one being the classic rock thumper – ‘If This Is Love Give Me My Money Back’. The other B side (did we mention this is a double B side?) is two raw stripped down demos played simply and beautifully by Peter and Scott McCaughey.”

The EP follows two albums: a self-titled solo debut in 2012 and I Am Back To Blow Your Mind Once Again earlier this year.

Listen to Bob Dylan’s “Nothing To It” performed by Jim James, Elvis Costello and more

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A track, "Nothing To It", has been released from the forthcoming Lost On The River: The New Basement Tapes project. The album features lyrics that Dylan wrote while recording the original Basement Tapes in 1967 that have been put to music by Elvis Costello, Rhiannon Giddens (Carolina Chocolate Drops), Dawes' Taylor Goldsmith, Jim James, T Bone Burnett and Marcus Mumford. The first song from these sessions, "Nothing To It" is accompanied by an animated video that overlays abstract cartoons and Dylan's original hand-written lyrics. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iq66_lWB7I4 Lost On The River: The New Basement Tapes is released on November 11 across a variety of different formats. A digital edition is available for preorder on iTunes and Amazon now. The album will be released as deluxe and standard CD editions, as well as a 180-gram virgin-vinyl two-disc set. A limited-edition box set of the album includes the deluxe CD, the 180-gram virgin-vinyl two-disc set, six photographic portraits of the artists, five prints of the newly discovered Bob Dylan handwritten lyrics, an album cover lithograph and the deluxe digital album. You can read an interview with T Bone Burnett here. The tracklisting for the deluxe edition of Lost On The River: The New Basement Tapes is: Down On The Bottom Married To My Hack Kansas City Spanish Mary Liberty Street Nothing To It Golden Tom – Silver Judas When I Get My Hands On You Duncan and Jimmy Florida Key Hidee Hidee Ho #11 Lost On The River #12 Stranger Card Shark Quick Like A Flash Hidee Hidee Ho #16 Diamond Ring The Whistle Is Blowing Six Months in Kansas City (Liberty Street) Lost On The River #20

A track, “Nothing To It“, has been released from the forthcoming Lost On The River: The New Basement Tapes project.

The album features lyrics that Dylan wrote while recording the original Basement Tapes in 1967 that have been put to music by Elvis Costello, Rhiannon Giddens (Carolina Chocolate Drops), Dawes’ Taylor Goldsmith, Jim James, T Bone Burnett and Marcus Mumford.

The first song from these sessions, “Nothing To It” is accompanied by an animated video that overlays abstract cartoons and Dylan’s original hand-written lyrics.

Lost On The River: The New Basement Tapes is released on November 11 across a variety of different formats.

A digital edition is available for preorder on iTunes and Amazon now.

The album will be released as deluxe and standard CD editions, as well as a 180-gram virgin-vinyl two-disc set.

A limited-edition box set of the album includes the deluxe CD, the 180-gram virgin-vinyl two-disc set, six photographic portraits of the artists, five prints of the newly discovered Bob Dylan handwritten lyrics, an album cover lithograph and the deluxe digital album.

You can read an interview with T Bone Burnett here.

The tracklisting for the deluxe edition of Lost On The River: The New Basement Tapes is:

Down On The Bottom

Married To My Hack

Kansas City

Spanish Mary

Liberty Street

Nothing To It

Golden Tom – Silver Judas

When I Get My Hands On You

Duncan and Jimmy

Florida Key

Hidee Hidee Ho #11

Lost On The River #12

Stranger

Card Shark

Quick Like A Flash

Hidee Hidee Ho #16

Diamond Ring

The Whistle Is Blowing

Six Months in Kansas City (Liberty Street)

Lost On The River #20

Hear track from Leonard Cohen’s new album Popular Problems + tracklisting revealed!

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Leonard Cohen has confirmed details of his forthcoming new album, Popular Problems. The album will be released on September 22, a day after his 80th birthday. It is Cohen's 13th studio album. Those who pre-order Popular Problems digitally will receive an instant download of his new song, “Almos...

Leonard Cohen has confirmed details of his forthcoming new album, Popular Problems.

The album will be released on September 22, a day after his 80th birthday.

It is Cohen’s 13th studio album.

Those who pre-order Popular Problems digitally will receive an instant download of his new song, “Almost Like The Blues”.

You can hear the song below.

The complete tracklisting for Popular Problems is:

Slow

Almost Like The Blues

Samson In New Orleans

A Street

Did I Ever Love You

My Oh My

Nevermind

Born In Chains

You Got Me Singing

The return of The Aphex Twin, and Caustic Window

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Last year, Warp Records embarked on a campaign for Boards Of Canada's "Tomorrow's Harvest" comeback that was notable for its obtuseness. Unmarked 12-inches were hidden in record stores, strings of numbers and inexplicable broadcasts were strewn enigmatically across the internet. At one point, I recall some talk of red moons and feverish online triangulations pointing to a bookshop near Edinburgh as the centre of the universe. It was all fun, and the album at the end of it all was great, but perhaps it wandered a little off course as it went on. This year, to herald what very much looks, at time of writing, to be the first new Aphex Twin album in 14 years, they've done something similarly clandestine, but moved to a conclusion of sorts a lot quicker. If you missed the odd news over the weekend, a blimp bearing the Aphex logo flew over London at the weekend, with the image repeated as stencilled graffiti in New York. Yesterday, on his 43rd birthday, Richard James tweeted a link to a site on the dark web inaccessible to at least some of us. Thankfully, a fair proportion of Aphex fans are a lot more computer-literate than I am: the site reveals a title - "Syro" - and what's almost certainly a tracklisting (lots of shouts for "Syro u473t8+e (Piezoluminescence Mix)" at his next DJ set, I'm sure). An image of Richard James' face - distorted, as usual - was also embedded in the code. This is all big news, of course, for anyone with even a passing interest in the electronic music of the past 25 years. James, though, is one of those artists who transcends the parameters of his genre - or at least he did, the last time we heard any official new music from him. A couple or so months ago, when this whole wave of activity was bizarrely ushered in by a lost Aphex album from the early '90s - credited to Caustic Window - turning up first on eBay, then on Youtube, I wrote something which addressed this for Uncut. I even, with perhaps weary contractual inevitability, managed to shoehorn in a Neil Young reference Today seems a good day to post the piece on this blog, anyhow. In a few hours or so, maybe we'll have a clearer picture of what's going on. In the meantime, it's exciting to ask the tantalising question once again: what, exactly, is Richard James up to? And why now? Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uk7Q7nYJpS8&list=PL05YPqhPmTtJUC0AWZAOJrhWJrjlCH11q Back in the days when The Aphex Twin was a sort of pop star, or at least a regular in the pages of NME, he would say roughly the same thing in each interview he conducted. “I don’t actually like sharing my music with anyone,” he claimed, typically, in 2001. “I’d rather not release it. All these tracks are like your babies, and you have to share them. Suddenly everyone else can listen to them and it’s really horrible.” “No-one but you will ever hear all your tracks, will they?” wondered Piers Martin, the journalist. “Probably not. I don’t reckon. Not unless they nick them.” In 2001, Richard D James released "Drukqs", his last album to date as The Aphex Twin, and told Martin that anyone hacking his computer would only be able to find there a fraction of his unreleased tracks– “A few hundred,” he estimated. Up until this summer, that trifling few hundred included the 15 pieces on "Caustic Window", a fabled set that James decided not to release in 1994. The Aphex archive of notionally lost albums might provide a techno analogue to the unreleased haul of Neil Young. But, for all of Young’s contrariness, it’s hard to imagine the likes of "Homegrown" or "Chrome Dreams" emerging the same way as Caustic Window. Earlier this year, a white label of the double album appeared on eBay, and was bought by a consortium of Aphex fans for around £40,000. With the co-operation of James and his label, Rephlex, each fan received a digital copy of "Caustic Window", and the entire set was posted on Youtube. The physical records have now been auctioned again, for £27,198: their new owner is Markus 'Notch' Persson, creator of the online gaming phenomenon, Minecraft. James’ motivations here remain obtuse. It’s tempting, as a consequence, to see the whole operation as one more prank, another riddle to engage and infuriate the obsessives poring over 12-inches that might just conceivably be his work (was he The Tuss in 2007, for instance?). Perhaps James’ long-time refusal to let go of excellent albums like "Caustic Window" frustrates him as well, with only stubborn pride preventing a release by conventional means? The traditional narrative around James paints him as a mad genius operating in a vacuum, an artist whose radical aesthetic places him outside of the musical continuum. "Caustic Window", though, tells a slightly different story - of a young musician embedded in the electronica scene of the late ‘80s and early ‘90s, putting his own spin on the sound. The embryonically charming “Squidge In The Fridge”, for example, features the sort of cheesy piano line that anchored numerous Italo House records at the time, while “Mumbly”, with its Dastardly & Muttley samples and cranking breaks, isn’t so far from The Prodigy’s formative work. Nevertheless, a more recognisable Aphex Twin emerges on dystopian rave anthems like “Stomper 101mod Detunekik” and “Revpok”. For all the creepiness of his music and visuals, James’ agenda has never really involved anything more sinister than a little light perversity. At a time when he was held up as the exemplar of a genre called Intelligent Dance Music, it was his sense of mischief – not occultism – that debunked chin-stroking theory. So "Caustic Window", like the "Surfing On Sine Waves" album he released as Polygon Window in 1993, is hyperactive and hedonistic, even as James threads the most serene of melodies through the melée. That capacity for prettiness peaks on “101 Rainbows (Ambient Mix)”, a series of stately arpeggios pitched somewhere between Kraftwerk’s “Europe Endless” and Cluster’s “Sowiesoso”. It is followed, though, by “Phlaps” and the particularly flavoursome “Cunt”, two precursors of the kinetic, malfunctioning aggro-acid James would eventually codify as drill’n’bass. Significantly, they are the only two tracks he released at the time, on compilation albums. “Cunt” is the last tune on "Caustic Window", but it’s followed by a pair of “Phone Pranks”, in which James rings two techno contemporaries simultaneously on two phones. A confused chat between Scanner and Mixmaster Morris is interrupted by James ordering them not to hang up: “If you do do, you’ll die.” A second, between Cylob and Mike “Muziq” Paradinas, sees James busted. “Oh it’s Richard, is it? Very funny,” deadpans Paradinas, with the weariness of a friend perhaps overfamiliar with such larks. For here is a man not averse to playing moderately cruel tricks on his friends. Who told the NME in 1997 that releasing music was “too boring,” and that he found his fans “pretty fucking amusing”. Who has two more unreleased albums - "Analogue Bubblebath 5" (1995) and "Melodies From Mars" (1999) – being auctioned on eBay at time of writing. Whose whole career could be construed, like Caustic Window, as an accidental revolution: a private joke that got magnificently out of hand.

Last year, Warp Records embarked on a campaign for Boards Of Canada’s “Tomorrow’s Harvest” comeback that was notable for its obtuseness. Unmarked 12-inches were hidden in record stores, strings of numbers and inexplicable broadcasts were strewn enigmatically across the internet. At one point, I recall some talk of red moons and feverish online triangulations pointing to a bookshop near Edinburgh as the centre of the universe. It was all fun, and the album at the end of it all was great, but perhaps it wandered a little off course as it went on.

This year, to herald what very much looks, at time of writing, to be the first new Aphex Twin album in 14 years, they’ve done something similarly clandestine, but moved to a conclusion of sorts a lot quicker. If you missed the odd news over the weekend, a blimp bearing the Aphex logo flew over London at the weekend, with the image repeated as stencilled graffiti in New York. Yesterday, on his 43rd birthday, Richard James tweeted a link to a site on the dark web inaccessible to at least some of us.

Thankfully, a fair proportion of Aphex fans are a lot more computer-literate than I am: the site reveals a title – “Syro” – and what’s almost certainly a tracklisting (lots of shouts for “Syro u473t8+e (Piezoluminescence Mix)” at his next DJ set, I’m sure). An image of Richard James’ face – distorted, as usual – was also embedded in the code.

This is all big news, of course, for anyone with even a passing interest in the electronic music of the past 25 years. James, though, is one of those artists who transcends the parameters of his genre – or at least he did, the last time we heard any official new music from him. A couple or so months ago, when this whole wave of activity was bizarrely ushered in by a lost Aphex album from the early ’90s – credited to Caustic Window – turning up first on eBay, then on Youtube, I wrote something which addressed this for Uncut. I even, with perhaps weary contractual inevitability, managed to shoehorn in a Neil Young reference

Today seems a good day to post the piece on this blog, anyhow. In a few hours or so, maybe we’ll have a clearer picture of what’s going on. In the meantime, it’s exciting to ask the tantalising question once again: what, exactly, is Richard James up to? And why now?

Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uk7Q7nYJpS8&list=PL05YPqhPmTtJUC0AWZAOJrhWJrjlCH11q

Back in the days when The Aphex Twin was a sort of pop star, or at least a regular in the pages of NME, he would say roughly the same thing in each interview he conducted. “I don’t actually like sharing my music with anyone,” he claimed, typically, in 2001. “I’d rather not release it. All these tracks are like your babies, and you have to share them. Suddenly everyone else can listen to them and it’s really horrible.”

“No-one but you will ever hear all your tracks, will they?” wondered Piers Martin, the journalist.

“Probably not. I don’t reckon. Not unless they nick them.”

In 2001, Richard D James released “Drukqs”, his last album to date as The Aphex Twin, and told Martin that anyone hacking his computer would only be able to find there a fraction of his unreleased tracks– “A few hundred,” he estimated.

Up until this summer, that trifling few hundred included the 15 pieces on “Caustic Window”, a fabled set that James decided not to release in 1994. The Aphex archive of notionally lost albums might provide a techno analogue to the unreleased haul of Neil Young. But, for all of Young’s contrariness, it’s hard to imagine the likes of “Homegrown” or “Chrome Dreams” emerging the same way as Caustic Window.

Earlier this year, a white label of the double album appeared on eBay, and was bought by a consortium of Aphex fans for around £40,000. With the co-operation of James and his label, Rephlex, each fan received a digital copy of “Caustic Window”, and the entire set was posted on Youtube. The physical records have now been auctioned again, for £27,198: their new owner is Markus ‘Notch’ Persson, creator of the online gaming phenomenon, Minecraft.

James’ motivations here remain obtuse. It’s tempting, as a consequence, to see the whole operation as one more prank, another riddle to engage and infuriate the obsessives poring over 12-inches that might just conceivably be his work (was he The Tuss in 2007, for instance?). Perhaps James’ long-time refusal to let go of excellent albums like “Caustic Window” frustrates him as well, with only stubborn pride preventing a release by conventional means?

The traditional narrative around James paints him as a mad genius operating in a vacuum, an artist whose radical aesthetic places him outside of the musical continuum. “Caustic Window”, though, tells a slightly different story – of a young musician embedded in the electronica scene of the late ‘80s and early ‘90s, putting his own spin on the sound. The embryonically charming “Squidge In The Fridge”, for example, features the sort of cheesy piano line that anchored numerous Italo House records at the time, while “Mumbly”, with its Dastardly & Muttley samples and cranking breaks, isn’t so far from The Prodigy’s formative work.

Nevertheless, a more recognisable Aphex Twin emerges on dystopian rave anthems like “Stomper 101mod Detunekik” and “Revpok”. For all the creepiness of his music and visuals, James’ agenda has never really involved anything more sinister than a little light perversity. At a time when he was held up as the exemplar of a genre called Intelligent Dance Music, it was his sense of mischief – not occultism – that debunked chin-stroking theory. So “Caustic Window”, like the “Surfing On Sine Waves” album he released as Polygon Window in 1993, is hyperactive and hedonistic, even as James threads the most serene of melodies through the melée.

That capacity for prettiness peaks on “101 Rainbows (Ambient Mix)”, a series of stately arpeggios pitched somewhere between Kraftwerk’s “Europe Endless” and Cluster’s “Sowiesoso”. It is followed, though, by “Phlaps” and the particularly flavoursome “Cunt”, two precursors of the kinetic, malfunctioning aggro-acid James would eventually codify as drill’n’bass. Significantly, they are the only two tracks he released at the time, on compilation albums.

“Cunt” is the last tune on “Caustic Window”, but it’s followed by a pair of “Phone Pranks”, in which James rings two techno contemporaries simultaneously on two phones. A confused chat between Scanner and Mixmaster Morris is interrupted by James ordering them not to hang up: “If you do do, you’ll die.” A second, between Cylob and Mike “Muziq” Paradinas, sees James busted. “Oh it’s Richard, is it? Very funny,” deadpans Paradinas, with the weariness of a friend perhaps overfamiliar with such larks.

For here is a man not averse to playing moderately cruel tricks on his friends. Who told the NME in 1997 that releasing music was “too boring,” and that he found his fans “pretty fucking amusing”. Who has two more unreleased albums – “Analogue Bubblebath 5” (1995) and “Melodies From Mars” (1999) – being auctioned on eBay at time of writing. Whose whole career could be construed, like Caustic Window, as an accidental revolution: a private joke that got magnificently out of hand.

Kate Bush asks fans not to take photographs at her forthcoming live shows

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Kate Bush has asked fans not to take photos at her forthcoming run of live shows. The singer will play her first series of gigs since 1979 later this month when she begins a 22-date run at London's Eventim Apollo, which will take place between August and October. "We're all very excited about the...

Kate Bush has asked fans not to take photos at her forthcoming run of live shows.

The singer will play her first series of gigs since 1979 later this month when she begins a 22-date run at London’s Eventim Apollo, which will take place between August and October.

“We’re all very excited about the upcoming shows and are working very hard in preparation. It’s going very well indeed, ” she wrote in a note on her website.

She then added that she had a request for fans who are coming to the gigs: “We have purposefully chosen an intimate theatre setting rather than a large venue or stadium. It would mean a great deal to me if you would please refrain from taking photos or filming during the shows. I very much want to have contact with you as an audience, not with iphones, ipads or cameras. I know it’s a lot to ask but it would allow us to all share in the experience together.”

More than 80,000 tickets went onsale on March 28 this year and sold out in just 15 minutes. The run of shows will be called Before The Dawn<.strong> and will begin on August 26.

Bob Seger to release first album in eight years

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Bob Seger is to release a new album later this year. According to a report on Rolling Stone, Seger will release Ride Out on October 14. It is his first studio album since Face The Promise in 2006. “I feel really good about this record,” Seger said in a statement quoted on Rolling Stone. “Th...

Bob Seger is to release a new album later this year.

According to a report on Rolling Stone, Seger will release Ride Out on October 14.

It is his first studio album since Face The Promise in 2006.

“I feel really good about this record,” Seger said in a statement quoted on Rolling Stone. “This album touches on how I think a lot of us feel about finding our place in a more complicated world – from how we appreciate things as simple and pure as love, to navigating through the corruption and violence that permeates the news. It sums up a lot of feelings I have about a variety of subjects.”

The story also says the album will include a cover of Wilco and Billy Bragg’s “California Stars” from Mermaid Avenue, based on lyrics by Woody Guthrie.

You can watch Seger cover “California Stars” below from the Huntington Center in Toledo, Ohio on February 27, 2013.

Rare Beatles photographs discovered at London children’s home

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Rare pictures of The Beatles meeting youngsters from a children's home while filming A Hard Day's Night in 1964 have been discovered by a children's charity. Staff at The Children's Society discovered the photographs in an archive which contained a copy of the charity's supporters’ magazine from 1964. It featured an article on children from the Society's now-defunct Roehampton home, Hambro House, meeting the band while they were filming at London's Scala Theatre. "We were thrilled to discover these photos in The Children’s Society archive, showing The Beatles taking time out from filming A Hard Day’s Night to spend time with children from one of our children’s homes in London," a spokesperson for the charity said. "We no longer run children’s homes but our work supporting disadvantaged children is as important now as it was when those photos were taken 50 years ago." You can read about the making of A Hard Day's Night in the current issue of Uncut; in shops now. Meanwhile, last week, Paul McCartney revealed another previously unseen photograph from The Beatles' final gig. The image is one of a number of pictures which were shown on a big screen as McCartney performed live at San Francisco’s Candlestick Park on August 14 at a gig dubbed Farewell To Candlestick: The Final Concert. The venue is the same one The Beatles performed at on August 29, 1966 in what would prove to be their last ticketed public performance together.

Rare pictures of The Beatles meeting youngsters from a children’s home while filming A Hard Day’s Night in 1964 have been discovered by a children’s charity.

Staff at The Children’s Society discovered the photographs in an archive which contained a copy of the charity’s supporters’ magazine from 1964. It featured an article on children from the Society’s now-defunct Roehampton home, Hambro House, meeting the band while they were filming at London’s Scala Theatre.

“We were thrilled to discover these photos in The Children’s Society archive, showing The Beatles taking time out from filming A Hard

Day’s Night to spend time with children from one of our children’s homes in London,” a spokesperson for the charity said. “We no longer run children’s homes but our work supporting disadvantaged children is as important now as it was when those photos were taken 50 years ago.”

You can read about the making of A Hard Day’s Night in the current issue of Uncut; in shops now.

Meanwhile, last week, Paul McCartney revealed another previously unseen photograph from The Beatles’ final gig.

The image is one of a number of pictures which were shown on a big screen as McCartney performed live at San Francisco’s Candlestick Park on August 14 at a gig dubbed Farewell To Candlestick: The Final Concert. The venue is the same one The Beatles performed at on August 29, 1966 in what would prove to be their last ticketed public performance together.

Exclusive! Hear the Grateful Dead and Branford Marsalis team-up for “Bird Song” at Nassau Coliseum, 1990

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In 1990, the Grateful Dead began their 25th anniversary celebrations with a three-week tour through North America’s east coast. The tour has already been partly documented in the 2012 box set, Spring 1990. Now the band are releasing a 23-disc boxed set that covers eight complete shows, all previously unreleased, from this historic tour, titled Spring 1990 (The Other One). Among the dates they played a show at Nassau Coliseum on March 29, 1990 where they were joined by Branford Marsalis. The show will be included in the Spring 1990 (The Other One) box set and as a stand-alone 3CD release, Wake Up To Find Out: Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, NY 3/29/1990. You can listen to a recording of "Bird Song" by the Dead and Marsalis from the Nassau show by scrolling down the page. “When I agreed to sit in with the Dead in 1990, I didn't know what to expect, aurally or visually,” says Marsalis. “What I experienced was what I remembered music to be in my younger years, something that I'd felt was lost long ago. Process over product. No set lists, light shows and costumes required, but music first. It's an experience I will always remember with great fondness.” Both the Spring 1990 (The Other One) box set and Wake Up To Find Out: Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, NY 3/29/1990 will be available through Rhino Records from September 8. You can pre-order Wake Up To Find Out: Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, NY 3/29/1990 here. Pic credit: Kraig Fox

In 1990, the Grateful Dead began their 25th anniversary celebrations with a three-week tour through North America’s east coast.

The tour has already been partly documented in the 2012 box set, Spring 1990.

Now the band are releasing a 23-disc boxed set that covers eight complete shows, all previously unreleased, from this historic tour, titled Spring 1990 (The Other One).

Among the dates they played a show at Nassau Coliseum on March 29, 1990 where they were joined by Branford Marsalis. The show will be included in the Spring 1990 (The Other One) box set and as a stand-alone 3CD release, Wake Up To Find Out: Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, NY 3/29/1990.

You can listen to a recording of “Bird Song” by the Dead and Marsalis from the Nassau show by scrolling down the page.

“When I agreed to sit in with the Dead in 1990, I didn’t know what to expect, aurally or visually,” says Marsalis. “What I experienced was what I remembered music to be in my younger years, something that I’d felt was lost long ago. Process over product. No set lists, light shows and costumes required, but music first. It’s an experience I will always remember with great fondness.”

Both the Spring 1990 (The Other One) box set and Wake Up To Find Out: Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, NY 3/29/1990 will be available through Rhino Records from September 8.

You can pre-order Wake Up To Find Out: Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, NY 3/29/1990 here.

Pic credit: Kraig Fox

Johnny Cash’s childhood home opens to the public

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Johnny Cash's childhood home has been opened to the public, as part of a bid to boost the town he grew up in. Cash moved into the house in Dyess, Arkansas, in 1935 when he was three. The town was an experiment in president Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal programme, which aimed to help the US economy...

Johnny Cash‘s childhood home has been opened to the public, as part of a bid to boost the town he grew up in.

Cash moved into the house in Dyess, Arkansas, in 1935 when he was three. The town was an experiment in president Franklin Roosevelt‘s New Deal programme, which aimed to help the US economy bounce back from the Great Depression. The Cashes were among 500 families specially selected by the initiative to be given a small home, some farm land, money and a mule to try and rebuild their lives.

Cash’s siblings Tommy and Joanne have overseen the refurbishment of the five-room wooden house, in which visitors can see the family’s piano and other items from the period.

“We’ve got everything just as it was,” Joanne Cash, now 76, told the New York Times. “It took a lot of hard work. It’s been very emotional for me.”

“We used to gather around that piano at night and sing gospel for an hour. That was our entertainment.”

The refurbishment project is part of a bid to bring tourism to Dyess. Local mayor Larry Sims says that he hopes it will attract 20,000 visitors a year.

Cash’s daughter Rosanne told the Associated Press that the scheme, which is led by Arkansas State University (ASU), will boost the local economy in Dyess, which has struggled in recent years.

“We have lost many other such places of historic significance because of a lack of funds, [no interest] or ignorance,” she said. “I am so happy ASU stepped in when they did. There were only around 35 cottages left and my dad’s, though dilapidated, was one of those.”

Big Boys – Lullabies That Help The Brain Grow / No Matter How Long The Line Is At The Cafeteria, There’s Always A Seat

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Texas' idealistic, punk/funk avatars finally get their due: "Now go start your own band!" A whirlwind of artistic fearlessness, rugged individualism, and community spirit guiding the Austin punk scene 1979-1985, the big-hearted Big Boys were outrageous and eclectic, risk-takers espousing an anything-goes creative fervor that forged its own path. They resisted pigeonholes from the get-go, a kaleidoscope of thick, hard rhythms and ideas coming at you from all directions, fast. On stage, led by singer and force-of-nature Randy “Biscuit” Turner (1949-2005), they were a riot. Whether appearing in a tutu or leaning into a radical, think-for-yourself lyric Turner was the living embodiment of the freedom the band espoused. Together with guitarist Tim Kerr, bassist Chris Gates, and drummer Rey Washam, the group delighted, and confounded. “The scene at that time was made up of colorful characters and bigger than life personalities," remembers Kerr, now a respected artist and producer, " Biscuit was just another crazy bright light in a bunch of crazy lights, maybe a bit more Dada-bright than the others.” Apoplectically, they melded influences from Kool And The Gang to Throbbing Gristle ("We listened to it all," says Kerr), from swinging, stutter-step funk, with horns, to pissed-off, 30-second gut-punches. They were touring legends, but alas, tragically under-recorded in a cosmic-cowboy town. For his part, says Kerr, “I found freedom in the idea that, at least in Austin, this 'new thing' had no rules, no uniform. It was wide open to try anything.” These two albums, produced by Spot (Husker Du, Misfits), reflect it all, flying shrapnel of defiance that acts from Scratch Acid to Red Hot Chili Peppers readily embraced. Cafeteria is boiling with funk overtures ("What's the Word"), ragged pop (the Replacements on a bender "Which Way To Go"), and time-signature weirdness ("Killing Time"). Lullabies hews closer to their fire, its anthem "We're Not in It to Lose" throwing down the gauntlet—to avoid groupthink, creeping repression. "The cultural tension becomes fun," Kerr observes, "when you're not alone in the fight for self-expression. I think we all felt strongly about getting others involved. Or at least showing that there were other choices available. I still do." Luke Torn Credit: Courtesy of Pat Blashill

Texas’ idealistic, punk/funk avatars finally get their due: “Now go start your own band!”

A whirlwind of artistic fearlessness, rugged individualism, and community spirit guiding the Austin punk scene 1979-1985, the big-hearted Big Boys were outrageous and eclectic, risk-takers espousing an anything-goes creative fervor that forged its own path. They resisted pigeonholes from the get-go, a kaleidoscope of thick, hard rhythms and ideas coming at you from all directions, fast.

On stage, led by singer and force-of-nature Randy “Biscuit” Turner (1949-2005), they were a riot. Whether appearing in a tutu or leaning into a radical, think-for-yourself lyric Turner was the living embodiment of the freedom the band espoused. Together with guitarist Tim Kerr, bassist Chris Gates, and drummer Rey Washam, the group delighted, and confounded. “The scene at that time was made up of colorful characters and bigger than life personalities,” remembers Kerr, now a respected artist and producer, ” Biscuit was just another crazy bright light in a bunch of crazy lights, maybe a bit more Dada-bright than the others.”

Apoplectically, they melded influences from Kool And The Gang to Throbbing Gristle (“We listened to it all,” says Kerr), from swinging, stutter-step funk, with horns, to pissed-off, 30-second gut-punches. They were touring legends, but alas, tragically under-recorded in a cosmic-cowboy town. For his part, says Kerr, “I found freedom in the idea that, at least in Austin, this ‘new thing’ had no rules, no uniform. It was wide open to try anything.”

These two albums, produced by Spot (Husker Du, Misfits), reflect it all, flying shrapnel of defiance that acts from Scratch Acid to Red Hot Chili Peppers readily embraced. Cafeteria is boiling with funk overtures (“What’s the Word”), ragged pop (the Replacements on a bender “Which Way To Go”), and time-signature weirdness (“Killing Time”). Lullabies hews closer to their fire, its anthem “We’re Not in It to Lose” throwing down the gauntlet—to avoid groupthink, creeping repression.

“The cultural tension becomes fun,” Kerr observes, “when you’re not alone in the fight for self-expression. I think we all felt strongly about getting others involved. Or at least showing that there were other choices available. I still do.”

Luke Torn

Credit: Courtesy of Pat Blashill

Watch Neil Young’s trailer for his new Director’s Cut of Human Highway

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Human Highway (Director's Cut) Trailer from Shakey Pictures on Vimeo.

Neil Young has released a trailer for the new Director’s Cut of his 1982 film, Human Highway.

Scroll down to watch the trailer.

The Director’s Cut is being screened at this year’s Toronto International Film Festival.

On the website for the Toronto festival, the film is described as “a post-apocalyptic musical comedy, in which the rock legend writes, directs and stars alongside an eclectic and eccentric cast including Dean Stockwell, Russ Tamblyn, Dennis Hopper and Devo.”

You can find out more information about the screening here.

The full line-up and schedule for this year’s festival will be announced on August 19.

The festival box office opens on August 31. The festival runs from September 4 – 14.

Human Highway (Director’s Cut) Trailer from Shakey Pictures on Vimeo.

Stevie Nicks invites fans to design new shawl

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Stevie Nicks has launched a competition that invites fans to design a shawl for the singer. According to Rolling Stone, the competition winner will receive $2,000 (£1198) to produce a trademark shawl for Nicks. The winner will also receive a professional photograph of the singer modelling the piec...

Stevie Nicks has launched a competition that invites fans to design a shawl for the singer.

According to Rolling Stone, the competition winner will receive $2,000 (£1198) to produce a trademark shawl for Nicks. The winner will also receive a professional photograph of the singer modelling the piece and will be featured on her website and social media outlets.

“In 1968, a very handsome boy brought me a poncho from South America,” Nicks said in a statement. “I knew it was magic and that someday I would copy it in chiffon or leather or beaded material. I realised that wearing a poncho or a long shawl gave me something to work with up on the stage. Big movements, big twirls, you need to be seen from far away. So I made that a big part of my stage clothes. It became totally intertwined in my fashion style.”

The competition ends on September 29 with the winner announced on October 14. It will coincide with the release of Nick’s new double album 24 Karat Gold: Songs From The Vault, which is set for an October 7 release. The album primarily consists of songs written between 1969 and 1987 but recorded recently in Nashville and Los Angeles.

“Each song is a lifetime,” said Nicks, speaking about her upcoming record. “Each song has a soul. Each song has a purpose. Each song is a love story… They represent my life behind the scenes, the secrets, the broken hearts, the broken-hearted and the survivors.”

Aphex Twin blimp sighted above London

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A blimp decorated in the Aphex Twin logo was spotted hovering above the Oval Space in Hackney on Saturday (August 16). The airship also featured the digits "2014". Now, in a further development, the same logo has been spotted by fans outside Radio City Hall in New York. In June, fans of Aphex Twin (real name Richard James) purchased digital copies of his rare album Caustic Window via a Kickstarter campaign. A physical copy of the record – which only reached the pressing phase in 1994 before being scrapped – was auctioned on eBay and sold for £27,198. Money raised from the sale was reportedly split evenly between those who paid into Kickstarter, James himself and an unnamed charity. In 2010, James announced that he had completed six albums, as well as "loads of tracks which don't belong anywhere". "Two are very non-commercial, abstract, modular-synthesis, field recordings – those I finished four years ago. Another one is 'Melodies From Mars', which I redid about three years ago," said James. He added: "There's one of stuff I won't go into; a comp of old tracks. Which is never really finished and always changing; and then one I'm working on now. There are also loads of tracks which don't belong anywhere." Despite this, a new record has not been forthcoming, with his most recent studio album, Drukqs, released in 2001.

A blimp decorated in the Aphex Twin logo was spotted hovering above the Oval Space in Hackney on Saturday (August 16).

The airship also featured the digits “2014”. Now, in a further development, the same logo has been spotted by fans outside Radio City Hall in New York.

In June, fans of Aphex Twin (real name Richard James) purchased digital copies of his rare album Caustic Window via a Kickstarter campaign. A physical copy of the record – which only reached the pressing phase in 1994 before being scrapped – was auctioned on eBay and sold for £27,198. Money raised from the sale was reportedly split evenly between those who paid into Kickstarter, James himself and an unnamed charity.

In 2010, James announced that he had completed six albums, as well as “loads of tracks which don’t belong anywhere”.

“Two are very non-commercial, abstract, modular-synthesis, field recordings – those I finished four years ago. Another one is ‘Melodies From Mars’, which I redid about three years ago,” said James.

He added: “There’s one of stuff I won’t go into; a comp of old tracks. Which is never really finished and always changing; and then one I’m working on now. There are also loads of tracks which don’t belong anywhere.”

Despite this, a new record has not been forthcoming, with his most recent studio album, Drukqs, released in 2001.

Morrissey maintains that he has been dropped by his record label

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Morrissey has claimed that he has proof that he has been dropped by his label, Capitol-Harvest Records. The label recently denied claims made by Morrissey himself that their relationship had ended following the release of new album World Peace Is None Of Your Business earlier this year. However, in...

Morrissey has claimed that he has proof that he has been dropped by his label, Capitol-Harvest Records.

The label recently denied claims made by Morrissey himself that their relationship had ended following the release of new album World Peace Is None Of Your Business earlier this year. However, in a new post issued to quasi-official fansite True To You, the singer maintains that is no longer signed to the label and also denies suggestions he owes the label a second album.

Morrissey’s statement on True To You reads: “Both Morrissey and Morrissey’s lawyer are in possession of email correspondence from Steve Barnett (head of Capitol-Harvest Records), and also from Steve Barnett’s personal assistant, both of whom confirm that Capitol-Harvest have ended their relationship with Morrissey. No recording Agreement with Capitol-Harvest was ever signed by Morrissey, and Morrissey retains full ownership of ‘World Peace is None Of Your Business’.”

“Contrary to the assured Billboard report, Capitol-Harvest have very clearly stated that they would have no interest in licensing a second album by Morrissey. Russells (London), who represent Morrissey, are presently concluding Morrissey’s relationship with Harvest Records. Once again, Morrissey is in search of a new label.”

The news comes after Morrissey appeared to criticise his label, with the singer hinting at “public deception” in the music industry in a separate update posted on True To You.

Paul McCartney reveals unseen photograph from The Beatles final gig

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Paul McCartney has revealed a previously unseen photograph from The Beatles' last ever gig. The image, seen above, is one of a number shown on the big screen as McCartney performed live at San Francisco’s Candlestick Park last night (August 14) at a gig dubbed "Farewell To Candlestick: The Final...

Paul McCartney has revealed a previously unseen photograph from The Beatles’ last ever gig.

The image, seen above, is one of a number shown on the big screen as McCartney performed live at San Francisco’s Candlestick Park last night (August 14) at a gig dubbed “Farewell To Candlestick: The Final Concert”. The venue is the same one The Beatles performed at on August 29, 1966 in what would prove to be their last ticketed public performance together.

A collection of never before seen Jim Marshall photographs were displayed as McCartney played Little Richard’s “Long Tall Sally”; the last song to be performed in its entirety at The Beatles’ 1966 concert.

The Haight: Love, Rock and Revolution, a book of Marshall’s best work, will be released on October 14.

Farewell To Candlestick: The Final Concert is the latest sold out stop on Paul McCartney’s current ‘Out There’ tour. In July McCartney resumed the tour, after taking almost two months off following a virus.

The Thurston Moore Band, Café Oto, London, August 14, 2014

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“Thank you, Boston,” deadpans Thurston Moore as the audience at tonight’s gig show their appreciation for “Speak To The Wild”. Of course, we’re in east London – Dalston to be precise, at Café Oto, which has become a regular hang out for Moore since he moved up the road to Stoke Newington. Indeed, most recently, he enjoyed a two-night residency in this venue earlier in the month. Tonight's gig, though, is pretty special. It transpires that Moore’s former Sonic Youth band mate Steve Shelley flew into town on Tuesday night. Moore brought him down to Café Oto, and finding there was nothing booked for this evening, they decided to put on an impromptu gig. It is, essentially, a pop-up gig in a part of town renowned for its pop-up shops, bars and restaurants. The purpose of this evening’s show is to give the first live airing to songs from The Best Day, the debut album from The Thurston Moore Band. Aside from Moore and, on drums, Shelley, this marvellous new venture also includes Debbie Googe from My Bloody Valentine on bass and Nøught’s James Sedwards on guitar. Pretty much as you'd imagine, they don't disappoint. Though, at first, you may be forgiven for thinking otherwise. Minutes before they’re due to go on stage, Moore can be found chatting amiably on the street outside the venue; inside, Googe ambles on stage and fiddles with her bass, Sedwards saunters on. There is some further fiddling of instruments, then Moore appears at a lectern and starts strumming; Sedwards joins in. All of a sudden, Shelley walks on, sits down behind his kit and the band hit the motorik groove of “Forevermore” at full tilt. It’s a bracing, powerful opener. If anything, tonight’s set (six songs; though there are two identical performances divided by an interval) gives us a great opportunity to see these exceptional performers up close. Googe and Shelley, particularly, are a formidable rhythm section. Shelley has a smile on his face throughout the gig, like he keeps on remembering the punchline to a joke. His playing is fluid and consistently powerful. By comparison, Googe is an inscrutable presence. She faces away from the audience, mostly locked into a groove with Shelley. Her bass playing is extraordinary: the sound is thick and low, she doesn’t dwell on the notes, and on occasion what she’s doing more closely resembles riffing. You might think that Sedwards – arguably the least known member of the band – is here in a support capacity to back-up for Moore, but as his intuitive, digressive soloing on “Ono Soul” demonstrates, he is clearly capable of carrying his own weight among such storied company. For his part, Moore is very much in charge of proceedings. His band mates regularly watch him, looking for cues, as he free jams through the free jamming of “Speak To The Wild” and the punkish “Germs Burn”. What is perhaps strangest of all is hearing Moore make reference to Hackney Empire or local anarchist groups from the 1970s. Indeed, one song on The Best Day, “Grace Lake”, takes its title from the literary pseudonym used by poet and Stokey radical, Anna Mendelssohn. Moore dedicates “Detonation” to the “Stoke Newington Eight”, members of urban guerilla group The Angry Brigade. The song was originally released on the Blank Tapes label by another N16 resident, David Blanco. “This is about Stoke Newington, but through a Yankee lens,” smiles Moore as he explains the song’s origins. Spotting Moore strolling down Church Street is, admittedly, still a strange experience. The set ends with “Ono Soul”, and an obliterating noise fest not a million miles away from the ‘holocaust section’ of the Valentine’s “You Made Me Realise”. There is a 30-minute interval before the band return – Moore and Shelley have changed shirts for the second set – and do the whole thing again. The Thurston Moore Band are, by my reckoning, his third endeavour since Sonic Youth, after Chelsea Light Moving and Twilight. But of course Moore has been involved in many projects, often running several concurrently. Quite how long this one will endure remains to be seen, of course; but it’s easily among the best of Moore’s recent work. The album – which is due out in October – is excellent, and these live versions are muscular and digressive. Great songs, and a sense that Moore has found fresh inspiration in N16 with his latest, formidable accomplices. The Thurston Moore Band played: Forevermore Speak To The Wild Germs Burn Detonation Grace Lake Ono Soul You can find tour dates for The Thurston Moore Band here. The Best Day is released by Matador on October 21

“Thank you, Boston,” deadpans Thurston Moore as the audience at tonight’s gig show their appreciation for “Speak To The Wild”. Of course, we’re in east London – Dalston to be precise, at Café Oto, which has become a regular hang out for Moore since he moved up the road to Stoke Newington.

Indeed, most recently, he enjoyed a two-night residency in this venue earlier in the month. Tonight’s gig, though, is pretty special. It transpires that Moore’s former Sonic Youth band mate Steve Shelley flew into town on Tuesday night. Moore brought him down to Café Oto, and finding there was nothing booked for this evening, they decided to put on an impromptu gig. It is, essentially, a pop-up gig in a part of town renowned for its pop-up shops, bars and restaurants.

The purpose of this evening’s show is to give the first live airing to songs from The Best Day, the debut album from The Thurston Moore Band. Aside from Moore and, on drums, Shelley, this marvellous new venture also includes Debbie Googe from My Bloody Valentine on bass and Nøught’s James Sedwards on guitar. Pretty much as you’d imagine, they don’t disappoint. Though, at first, you may be forgiven for thinking otherwise. Minutes before they’re due to go on stage, Moore can be found chatting amiably on the street outside the venue; inside, Googe ambles on stage and fiddles with her bass, Sedwards saunters on. There is some further fiddling of instruments, then Moore appears at a lectern and starts strumming; Sedwards joins in. All of a sudden, Shelley walks on, sits down behind his kit and the band hit the motorik groove of “Forevermore” at full tilt. It’s a bracing, powerful opener.

If anything, tonight’s set (six songs; though there are two identical performances divided by an interval) gives us a great opportunity to see these exceptional performers up close. Googe and Shelley, particularly, are a formidable rhythm section. Shelley has a smile on his face throughout the gig, like he keeps on remembering the punchline to a joke. His playing is fluid and consistently powerful. By comparison, Googe is an inscrutable presence. She faces away from the audience, mostly locked into a groove with Shelley. Her bass playing is extraordinary: the sound is thick and low, she doesn’t dwell on the notes, and on occasion what she’s doing more closely resembles riffing. You might think that Sedwards – arguably the least known member of the band – is here in a support capacity to back-up for Moore, but as his intuitive, digressive soloing on “Ono Soul” demonstrates, he is clearly capable of carrying his own weight among such storied company.

For his part, Moore is very much in charge of proceedings. His band mates regularly watch him, looking for cues, as he free jams through the free jamming of “Speak To The Wild” and the punkish “Germs Burn”. What is perhaps strangest of all is hearing Moore make reference to Hackney Empire or local anarchist groups from the 1970s. Indeed, one song on The Best Day, “Grace Lake”, takes its title from the literary pseudonym used by poet and Stokey radical, Anna Mendelssohn. Moore dedicates “Detonation” to the “Stoke Newington Eight”, members of urban guerilla group The Angry Brigade. The song was originally released on the Blank Tapes label by another N16 resident, David Blanco. “This is about Stoke Newington, but through a Yankee lens,” smiles Moore as he explains the song’s origins. Spotting Moore strolling down Church Street is, admittedly, still a strange experience.

The set ends with “Ono Soul”, and an obliterating noise fest not a million miles away from the ‘holocaust section’ of the Valentine’s “You Made Me Realise”. There is a 30-minute interval before the band return – Moore and Shelley have changed shirts for the second set – and do the whole thing again. The Thurston Moore Band are, by my reckoning, his third endeavour since Sonic Youth, after Chelsea Light Moving and Twilight. But of course Moore has been involved in many projects, often running several concurrently. Quite how long this one will endure remains to be seen, of course; but it’s easily among the best of Moore’s recent work. The album – which is due out in October – is excellent, and these live versions are muscular and digressive. Great songs, and a sense that Moore has found fresh inspiration in N16 with his latest, formidable accomplices.

The Thurston Moore Band played:

Forevermore

Speak To The Wild

Germs Burn

Detonation

Grace Lake

Ono Soul

You can find tour dates for The Thurston Moore Band here. The Best Day is released by Matador on October 21

Rick Parfitt to miss Status Quo gig for the first time

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Rick Parfitt will miss his first ever Status Quo gig due to illness. The band recently cancelled six concerts on their European tour because 65-year-old Parfitt was rushed to hospital. Parfitt had a quadruple heart bypass in 1997 after doctors said he was in danger of dying as a result of his lifes...

Rick Parfitt will miss his first ever Status Quo gig due to illness.

The band recently cancelled six concerts on their European tour because 65-year-old Parfitt was rushed to hospital. Parfitt had a quadruple heart bypass in 1997 after doctors said he was in danger of dying as a result of his lifestyle. After surgery, Parfitt said he was not planning on becoming a “born-again Christian” and would still have the “odd pint”.

Parfitt will not be playing at the band’s gig tomorrow night (August 15) at Clumber Park in Worksop, Nottinghamshire, reports BBC News. Freddie Edwards, who is the son of bass player John ‘Rhino’ Edwards, will fill in for him. It is thought that he will recover in time for the band’s following concert, at Norfolk’s Holkham Hall on August 23.

Speaking about tomorrow’s show, Francis Rossi said it would be “strange” performing without Parfitt, while the band’s manager Simon Porter called the gig “Quo history in the making” and “a memorable one-off.”

The band hold the record for the most singles, having recorded 64 since 1968. Parfitt and long-time band partner Francis Rossi were invested as OBEs by the Queen in 2010.