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We want your questions for Bob Mould!

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With the release of his latest album, Beauty & Ruin, on June 3, Bob Mould is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular An Audience With… feature. So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask the legendary musician? What does he remember of the Minneapolis music scene during the late Seventies in the earliest days of Hüsker Dü? How did Sugar end up signing to Creation Records in the 1990s? What did he learn from his stint writing scripts for professional wrestling in the late 1990s? Send up your questions by noon, Friday, March 28 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com. The best questions, and Bob's answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question.

With the release of his latest album, Beauty & Ruin, on June 3, Bob Mould is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular An Audience With… feature.

So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask the legendary musician?

What does he remember of the Minneapolis music scene during the late Seventies in the earliest days of Hüsker Dü?

How did Sugar end up signing to Creation Records in the 1990s?

What did he learn from his stint writing scripts for professional wrestling in the late 1990s?

Send up your questions by noon, Friday, March 28 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com. The best questions, and Bob’s answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question.

REM to release two ‘Unplugged’ concerts for Record Store Day

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REM will release two Unplugged concerts for Record Store Day 2014. The band will put out Unplugged: The Complete 1991 And 2001 Sessions on April 19, Rolling Stone reports. The band were the only group to headline the MTV live show twice. The release will feature complete versions of both shows al...

REM will release two Unplugged concerts for Record Store Day 2014.

The band will put out Unplugged: The Complete 1991 And 2001 Sessions on April 19, Rolling Stone reports.

The band were the only group to headline the MTV live show twice. The release will feature complete versions of both shows along with 11 previously unaired tracks. The four-LP set will initially be available on vinyl for Record Store Day before CD and digital versions will be put out on May 20.

The 11 unaired tracks consist of five from 1991 set and six from the 2001 show.

The tracklisting is:

1991 Unplugged

Side One

‘Half A World Away’

‘Disturbance At The Heron House’

‘Radio Song’

‘Low’

Side Two

‘Perfect Circle’

‘Fall On Me’

‘Belong’

‘Love Is All Around’

Side Three

‘It’s The End Of The World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)’

‘Losing My Religion’

‘Pop Song 89’

‘Endgame’

Side Four

‘Fretless’

‘Swan Swan H’

‘Rotary 11’

‘Get Up’

‘World Leader Pretend’

2001 Unplugged

Side Five

‘All The Way To Reno (You’re Gonna Be a Star)’

‘Electrolite’

‘At My Most Beautiful’

‘Daysleeper’

Side Six

‘So. Central Rain (I’m Sorry)’

‘Losing My Religion’

‘Country Feedback’

‘Cuyahoga’

Side Seven

‘Imitation of Life’

‘Find the River’

‘The One I Love’

‘Disappear’

Side Eight

‘Beat A Drum’

‘I’ve Been High’

‘I’ll Take the Rain’

‘Sad Professor’

Neil Young built “a barn roof” out of 200,000 copies of Comes A Time

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Neil Young has admitted he once bought thousands of copies of his own album and used them as shingles on the roof of his house. Young, who recently launched his high quality digital Pono music player and service at South By South West in Austin, Texas revealed that a "mastering error" on the 1978 ...

Neil Young has admitted he once bought thousands of copies of his own album and used them as shingles on the roof of his house.

Young, who recently launched his high quality digital Pono music player and service at South By South West in Austin, Texas revealed that a “mastering error” on the 1978 album Comes A Time left him dissatisfied with the release and forced him to take the existing copies off the market.

Asked if the story was true by Rolling Stone, Young replied: “The tape got damaged when it went through the airport or something. I had to go back and use a copy of the master — it was a copy, but it had better-sounding playback than the other one. No, no, I made a barn roof out of them. I used them as shingles.”

Young also spoke about recording his new album, A Letter Home, on a 1947 Voice-o-Graph machine in Jack White‘s vinyl recording booth.

“Yeah, we did the whole album on that,” he said. “We’re going to get it out there. It’s an amazing time capsule. From nothing, to nowhere. No one knows why. [Laughs] It’s a good piece, a real nice piece. I look forward to people getting it, especially in light of what I’m doing now. It’s coming out pretty soon.”

The Rolling Stones postpone remaining Australian tour dates

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The Rolling Stones have announced the postponement of the rest of their 14 On Fire tour of Australia and New Zealand following the death of L’Wren Scott. In a statement issued this evening, the band "wish to thank all of their fans for their support at this difficult time and hope that they will fully understand the reason for this announcement. "The Rolling Stones are planning to reschedule these postponed shows at a later date. "The postponed shows are: "Perth Arena – 19 March - postponed Adelaide Oval – 22 March - postponed Sydney Allphones Arena – 25 March - postponed Melbourne Rod Laver Arena – 28 March - postponed Macedon Ranges Hanging Rock – 30 March - postponed Brisbane Entertainment Centre – 2 April - postponed Auckland Mt Smart Stadium – 5 April - postponed "Australia/New Zealand promoters ask ticket holders to please hold on to their tickets until further notice. A new schedule of dates is presently being worked on and will be advised as soon as possible. Information will be made available via rollingstones.com and frontiertouring.com as soon as available."

The Rolling Stones have announced the postponement of the rest of their 14 On Fire tour of Australia and New Zealand following the death of L’Wren Scott.

In a statement issued this evening, the band “wish to thank all of their fans for their support at this difficult time and hope that they will fully understand the reason for this announcement.

“The Rolling Stones are planning to reschedule these postponed shows at a later date.

“The postponed shows are:

“Perth Arena – 19 March – postponed

Adelaide Oval – 22 March – postponed

Sydney Allphones Arena – 25 March – postponed

Melbourne Rod Laver Arena – 28 March – postponed

Macedon Ranges Hanging Rock – 30 March – postponed

Brisbane Entertainment Centre – 2 April – postponed

Auckland Mt Smart Stadium – 5 April – postponed

“Australia/New Zealand promoters ask ticket holders to please hold on to their tickets until further notice. A new schedule of dates is presently being worked on and will be advised as soon as possible. Information will be made available via rollingstones.com and frontiertouring.com as soon as available.”

Kiss’ Gene Simmons says hip-hop artists have no place in the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame

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Gene Simmons of rockers Kiss has spoken out about his frustration with rap and hip-hop artists being inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall of Fame. The singer/bassist argued that the likes of Run-DMC have no place in the Hall of Fame, believing that all they do is "sample and they talk, not even sing". Speaking to Radio.com, the singer said: "You go on with your bad self and get more disco artists... A long time ago it was diluted. It’s really backroom politics, like Boss Tweed. A few people decide what’s in and what’s not. And the masses just scratch their heads. You've got Grandmaster Flash in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame? Run-DMC in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame? You’re killing me! That doesn’t mean those aren’t good artists. But they don’t play guitar. They sample and they talk. Not even sing!" Simmons continued: "If you asked Madonna, 'What kind of artist are you?' do you think she would say, 'Oh, rock!' So what they hell are they doing in the Hall of Fame? They can run their organisation any way they’d like, but it ain't rock! It just isn’t! If you don’t play guitar and you don’t write your own songs, you don’t belong there." Simmons also spoke about his frustration with the Hall Of Fame's selection committee for only inducting the original members of Kiss, and ignoring members of the band in its most recent form. In protest of their decision, the band have chosen not to perform at the induction ceremony this April in New York. Chad Channing, the original drummer for Nirvana, recently claimed he will be inducted alongside the rest of the former members at the same ceremony.

Gene Simmons of rockers Kiss has spoken out about his frustration with rap and hip-hop artists being inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall of Fame.

The singer/bassist argued that the likes of Run-DMC have no place in the Hall of Fame, believing that all they do is “sample and they talk, not even sing”.

Speaking to Radio.com, the singer said: “You go on with your bad self and get more disco artists… A long time ago it was diluted. It’s really backroom politics, like Boss Tweed. A few people decide what’s in and what’s not. And the masses just scratch their heads. You’ve got Grandmaster Flash in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame? Run-DMC in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame? You’re killing me! That doesn’t mean those aren’t good artists. But they don’t play guitar. They sample and they talk. Not even sing!”

Simmons continued: “If you asked Madonna, ‘What kind of artist are you?’ do you think she would say, ‘Oh, rock!’ So what they hell are they doing in the Hall of Fame? They can run their organisation any way they’d like, but it ain’t rock! It just isn’t! If you don’t play guitar and you don’t write your own songs, you don’t belong there.”

Simmons also spoke about his frustration with the Hall Of Fame’s selection committee for only inducting the original members of Kiss, and ignoring members of the band in its most recent form. In protest of their decision, the band have chosen not to perform at the induction ceremony this April in New York.

Chad Channing, the original drummer for Nirvana, recently claimed he will be inducted alongside the rest of the former members at the same ceremony.

Raconteurs reunion with Jack White ‘off the table’, says Brendan Benson

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Brendan Benson has said that any potential reunion of The Raconteurs is "off the table." The band, which features Benson and Jack White among its members, were believed to be working together on new music after White confirmed in 2013 that all of the group were currently living in Nashville. However, in a new interview with Billboard, Benson paints a less certain future for the band, who released their last album 'Consolers Of The Lonely' in 2008. "That's kind of off the table," Benson says. "It always felt spontaneous. I liked that about it, too. And I think it remains that way. We never planned anything. We never planned a breakup. All of us but one live in the same town, so [in the future] it could very well happen… or not." Benson also said that he has stepped back from his own solo career as he focuses on his new label, Readymade Records. "Since I started the label, I have been going through this transition, and it’s almost like an identity crisis – like leaving my solo career a bit. I’m still going to make records." White previously confirmed that he is working on new solo material, though does not have any idea if and when he will release the follow up to his debut solo record 'Blunderbuss', and is also releasing infrequent singles with The Dead Weather. It was reported recently that White will appear on two songs on Neil Young's next album, which was recorded at the former White Stripes frontman's Third Man studios.

Brendan Benson has said that any potential reunion of The Raconteurs is “off the table.”

The band, which features Benson and Jack White among its members, were believed to be working together on new music after White confirmed in 2013 that all of the group were currently living in Nashville. However, in a new interview with Billboard, Benson paints a less certain future for the band, who released their last album ‘Consolers Of The Lonely’ in 2008.

“That’s kind of off the table,” Benson says. “It always felt spontaneous. I liked that about it, too. And I think it remains that way. We never planned anything. We never planned a breakup. All of us but one live in the same town, so [in the future] it could very well happen… or not.”

Benson also said that he has stepped back from his own solo career as he focuses on his new label, Readymade Records. “Since I started the label, I have been going through this transition, and it’s almost like an identity crisis – like leaving my solo career a bit. I’m still going to make records.”

White previously confirmed that he is working on new solo material, though does not have any idea if and when he will release the follow up to his debut solo record ‘Blunderbuss’, and is also releasing infrequent singles with The Dead Weather. It was reported recently that White will appear on two songs on Neil Young’s next album, which was recorded at the former White Stripes frontman’s Third Man studios.

The Rolling Stones cancel tour date after death of L’Wren Scott

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The Rolling Stones have cancelled the first date of their Australian tour after the death of Mick Jaggar's girlfriend, the US fashion designer L'Wren Scott. The band were due to play Perth tomorrow night (March 19) but according to the BBC, the date has now been pulled with ticketholders being asked to keep hold of their tickets until further information is available. The band have five more dates booked in Australia – the next of which is Sydney on March 25. Scott was found by her assistant at 10am local time in her flat in New York in an apparent suicide. Yesterday, a spokesperson for Jagger said he was "completely shocked and devastated" by her death. The singer began dating Scott in 2001. Later yesterday, a spokesperson also denied a report in the New York Post that the pair had recently ended their relationship. "The story in the New York Post re a split between Mick Jagger and L'Wren Scott is 100 per cent untrue," said his spokeswoman. "There is absolutely no basis in fact to this story. It is a horrible and inaccurate piece of gossip during this very tragic time for Mick." Scott was found dead by her assistant 90 minutes after sending her a text message asking her to come to her Manhattan apartment. Police said there was no sign of foul play and no note was found. Following the date in Sydney, The Stones are due to continue their On Fire tour in Melbourne and Macedon later this month before playing two dates in Brisbane and Auckland, New Zealand, in April. Concerts are then planned in the Netherlands, Germany, Italy and Belgium.

The Rolling Stones have cancelled the first date of their Australian tour after the death of Mick Jaggar’s girlfriend, the US fashion designer L’Wren Scott.

The band were due to play Perth tomorrow night (March 19) but according to the BBC, the date has now been pulled with ticketholders being asked to keep hold of their tickets until further information is available.

The band have five more dates booked in Australia – the next of which is Sydney on March 25.

Scott was found by her assistant at 10am local time in her flat in New York in an apparent suicide.

Yesterday, a spokesperson for Jagger said he was “completely shocked and devastated” by her death. The singer began dating Scott in 2001.

Later yesterday, a spokesperson also denied a report in the New York Post that the pair had recently ended their relationship. “The story in the New York Post re a split between Mick Jagger and L’Wren Scott is 100 per cent untrue,” said his spokeswoman. “There is absolutely no basis in fact to this story. It is a horrible and inaccurate piece of gossip during this very tragic time for Mick.”

Scott was found dead by her assistant 90 minutes after sending her a text message asking her to come to her Manhattan apartment. Police said there was no sign of foul play and no note was found.

Following the date in Sydney, The Stones are due to continue their On Fire tour in Melbourne and Macedon later this month before playing two dates in Brisbane and Auckland, New Zealand, in April. Concerts are then planned in the Netherlands, Germany, Italy and Belgium.

Evan Dando and Lily Allen turn out for charity album

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You may recently have seen posters advertising an album called Tarka & Friends: Life and wondered rather dopily if it didn’t have something to do with riverbank wildlife, not too many people of your acquaintance called Tarka. As it’s since been explained to me, the Tarka of the album’s title was Tarka Cordell, a musician and son of record producer Denny Cordell [Joe Cocker, Procol Harum, The Move, The Moody Blues], who grew up around the likes Bob Marley, Gram Parsons and Keith Richards, and lived in his younger years at the legendary Chateau Marmont hotel in LA. He was by all accounts handsome and charming, counted Kate Moss, Sophie Dahl and Evan Dando among his closest friends and frequented the hottest nightspots on both sides of the Atlantic. An aspiring and talented musician, he spent a lot of his time in the studio working on various musical projects throughout his life, not surprising, considering his musical heritage, but all was not what as it seemed. At the age of 40, Tarka took his own life. Only now is his musical output available to the public in the form of tribute album Tarka & Friends: Life, which features Dando and Tarka’s sister in law, Lily Allen, among others, putting voice to the tracks he never saw released. It is a tender and touching compilation of songs, not least because of Tarka’s death. It illustrates the many sides of Tarka, both as a lyricist and as a fallible human being. He clearly felt comfortable expressing his inner-most thoughts through music, yet still felt unable to face the world, day to day. It’s always complicated when someone so young, so talented and surrounded by loving family and friends takes their own life. It raises a myriad of unanswered questions for those left behind, not least why someone with so much to give could be so bereft of hope that they no longer want to go on living. It is particularly difficult to understand why someone so comfortable sharing their inner most thoughts through lyrics and music, could find it so hard to seek help and talk in the real world. This is not an uncommon situation. The male suicide prevention charity CALM, one of two charities benefiting from money raised by the album, have long held the notion that men find it infinitely more difficult to openly talk about their problems than women. It’s not that men are unable to do so. There are many centuries of poetry, literature, art and music showing that men are not emotionally illiterate – quite the opposite. Many men are more than able to express themselves through music and creativity, but may struggle when they don’t have the safety net of lyrics or harmonies to fall back on. CALM have talked to many well-known musicians over the years, such as Frank Turner and Professor Green, who have themselves experienced depression or been affected by suicide, and have expressed the notion that music is a great catharsis. What CALM aim to do is to create a society where men can feel comfortable talking to a partner, friend or colleague about their problems when lyrics aren’t enough, because until they do, over three quarters of suicides in this country every year will continue to be men. For further information on CALM, please go to www.thecalmzone.net CALM Helpline: 0800 585858, open every day, 5pm – midnight

You may recently have seen posters advertising an album called Tarka & Friends: Life and wondered rather dopily if it didn’t have something to do with riverbank wildlife, not too many people of your acquaintance called Tarka.

As it’s since been explained to me, the Tarka of the album’s title was Tarka Cordell, a musician and son of record producer Denny Cordell [Joe Cocker, Procol Harum, The Move, The Moody Blues], who grew up around the likes Bob Marley, Gram Parsons and Keith Richards, and lived in his younger years at the legendary Chateau Marmont hotel in LA.

He was by all accounts handsome and charming, counted Kate Moss, Sophie Dahl and Evan Dando among his closest friends and frequented the hottest nightspots on both sides of the Atlantic. An aspiring and talented musician, he spent a lot of his time in the studio working on various musical projects throughout his life, not surprising, considering his musical heritage, but all was not what as it seemed. At the age of 40, Tarka took his own life.

Only now is his musical output available to the public in the form of tribute album Tarka & Friends: Life, which features Dando and Tarka’s sister in law, Lily Allen, among others, putting voice to the tracks he never saw released. It is a tender and touching compilation of songs, not least because of Tarka’s death. It illustrates the many sides of Tarka, both as a lyricist and as a fallible human being. He clearly felt comfortable expressing his inner-most thoughts through music, yet still felt unable to face the world, day to day.

It’s always complicated when someone so young, so talented and surrounded by loving family and friends takes their own life. It raises a myriad of unanswered questions for those left behind, not least why someone with so much to give could be so bereft of hope that they no longer want to go on living. It is particularly difficult to understand why someone so comfortable sharing their inner most thoughts through lyrics and music, could find it so hard to seek help and talk in the real world. This is not an uncommon situation.

The male suicide prevention charity CALM, one of two charities benefiting from money raised by the album, have long held the notion that men find it infinitely more difficult to openly talk about their problems than women. It’s not that men are unable to do so. There are many centuries of poetry, literature, art and music showing that men are not emotionally illiterate – quite the opposite. Many men are more than able to express themselves through music and creativity, but may struggle when they don’t have the safety net of lyrics or harmonies to fall back on.

CALM have talked to many well-known musicians over the years, such as Frank Turner and Professor Green, who have themselves experienced depression or been affected by suicide, and have expressed the notion that music is a great catharsis. What CALM aim to do is to create a society where men can feel comfortable talking to a partner, friend or colleague about their problems when lyrics aren’t enough, because until they do, over three quarters of suicides in this country every year will continue to be men.

For further information on CALM, please go to www.thecalmzone.net

CALM Helpline: 0800 585858, open every day, 5pm – midnight

Neil Young announces Chicago solo shows

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Neil Young has added new dates to his ongoing solo acoustic tour. Young will perform at the Chicago Theatre on April 21 and 22. These are in addition to the four shows he's scheduled to play at the Dolby Theatre, Los Angeles on March 29, 30, April 1 and 2 and the two shows at the Morton H. Meyers...

Neil Young has added new dates to his ongoing solo acoustic tour.

Young will perform at the Chicago Theatre on April 21 and 22.

These are in addition to the four shows he’s scheduled to play at the Dolby Theatre, Los Angeles on March 29, 30, April 1 and 2 and the two shows at the Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center, Dallas, Texas on April 17 and 18.

Last week, Young launched his high-definition Pono music service.

Trailer unveiled for James Brown biopic, Get On Up

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I was reading over the weekend about Mick Jagger and Martin Scorsese's latest collaboration - a project for HBO about the music industry in New York during the Seventies. Apparently, Scorsese will direct the pilot, which is being written by Terence Winter, a regular on The Sopranos, Boardwalk Empire and Scorsese's recent The Wolf Of Wall Street. It all sounds promising - as long as you don't go on about Boardwalk Empire too much, I guess. By coincidence, the first trailer has been released today for Get On Up, another Jagger production and, as if you didn't already know, the biopic of James Brown. Rock biopics, of course, are legendarily inconsistent in terms of delivering quality: for every 24 Hour Party People or Control there's a Ray and Walk The Line. On the strength of this trailer, at least, Get On Up appears to be pretty conventional soup to nuts fare but with added gunplay. Anyway, you can watch it below. Let me know what you think. Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uDjkO5ifEZw GET ON UP OPENS IN THE UK ON AUGUST 1

I was reading over the weekend about Mick Jagger and Martin Scorsese’s latest collaboration – a project for HBO about the music industry in New York during the Seventies.

Apparently, Scorsese will direct the pilot, which is being written by Terence Winter, a regular on The Sopranos, Boardwalk Empire and Scorsese’s recent The Wolf Of Wall Street. It all sounds promising – as long as you don’t go on about Boardwalk Empire too much, I guess.

By coincidence, the first trailer has been released today for Get On Up, another Jagger production and, as if you didn’t already know, the biopic of James Brown. Rock biopics, of course, are legendarily inconsistent in terms of delivering quality: for every 24 Hour Party People or Control there’s a Ray and Walk The Line. On the strength of this trailer, at least, Get On Up appears to be pretty conventional soup to nuts fare but with added gunplay.

Anyway, you can watch it below. Let me know what you think.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner.

GET ON UP OPENS IN THE UK ON AUGUST 1

Beck – Morning Phase

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The LA maverick invokes Anglophile folk on first new album in six years... “Turn, turn away/From the sound of your own voice,” sings Beck towards the end of Morning Phase, his first new album in six years. Those lines serve as a pretty neat summary of his working methods during his hiatus, where he seemed to explore every possible musical avenue other than write and record an album of his own songs. First he took a back seat as producer for fellow travellers such as Thurston Moore and Stephen Malkmus, most strikingly and successfully crafting and co-writing Charlotte Gainsbourg’s IRM. Then there was the enjoyably ramshackle Record Club, where he assembled disparate like-minds – Liars, St Vincent, Devendra Bernhardt, Feist, members of Tortoise, Wilco and Os Mutantes – to record a version of a favourite album – The Velvet Underground & Nico, INXS’s Kick – in one day. Most satisfying – conceptually, artistically and in performance – there was 2012’s Song Reader: an album in the form of sheet music, a tribute to the lost American songbook from before recording, which culminated in a delirious, unhinged performance at the Barbican featuring interpretations from Jarvis Cocker, Franz Ferdinand and The Mighty Boosh. If the gap years were a deliberate attempt to recharge the batteries and to revive his muse, then by the climax of the Barbican show – leading his raggle-taggle troupe in a raucous singalong – he seemed a man revived. Right enough last year, unexpected one-off singles appeared – “Gimme”, “I Won’t Be Long” and best of all, the Animal Collective-ish “Defriended”. If Record Club seemed to gently establish him as a godfather of 21st-Century blog-rock, then every sign seemed to be that he was gradually re-emerging to reclaim his crown. Morning Phase isn’t quite such a bold return. Rather than lighting out for new territory or reaffirming his place as high-concept freakfolk/artpop conjuror, the new record returns to the Beck of Sea Change, the plangent, acoustic, confessional album he recorded in 2002 in the wake of his break-up with long-term girlfriend Leigh Limon. Though Beck himself seems reluctant to consider Morning Phase a companion piece or twisted sibling to the earlier recording, it does reassemble the same group of musicans – guitarists Smokey Hormel and Jason Falkner, keyboard player Roger Manning and drummer Joey Waronker. Morning Phase dawns with “Cycle”, an unsettling Arvo Part-y string drone – the first of a couple of orchestral interludes – before beginning in earnest with “Morning”. “Woke up this morning…” he keens – and here you might anticipate some lyrical dislocation, a monkey wrench in the genre mechanics but instead he continues faithfully, earnestly, “from a long night in the storm”. Like Sea Change, Morning Phase seems intent on pursuing emotional authenticity deep into plain speaking, and even cliché. His research into sheet-music history of the American songbook may even have heightened this commitment: elsewhere on the new record you find another track titled “Blue Moon” without the faintest wink of irony. Beck has talked about how he found inspiration for Morning Phase in the cosmic Caliornian music of his youth, the wild-honey harmonies of The Byrds and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, and on “Morning” you hear a hint of the pie-eyed starsailing of Judee Sill. But elsewhere if you think of The Byrds you’re more likely to be put in mind of the desolate dawn chill of “Draft Morning”. The album is presented as a new dawn for Beck, but emotionally it feels still tied to the trauma that triggered Sea Change. After emerging from the storm, Beck continues, “Looked up this morning/Found the rose was full of thorns”. Furthermore, rather than California dreams, Morning Phase generally evokes a more wintry, Anglophile folk music. “Heart Is A Drum” distills the soundworld of Nick Drake’s Bryter Layter – the frosty clarity of the acoustic fingerpicking, the tinkling brook of piano and looming Robert Kirby orchestral cloudscape, here reprised by Beck’s father, David Campbell. “Turn Away” owes something to Simon & Garfunkel’s “The Sound Of Silence” while the closing “Waking Light” aspires to the interstellar bombast of Roger Waters’ Pink Floyd. Individually there are some wonderful songs on Morning Phase. “Blackbird Chain” is a small marvel, shuffling through time signatures like prime Lee Hazlewood, Smokey Hormel’s mercurial guitar flowering and then spiralling across “Country Down” as Beck sings of “a tiger rose growing through your prison floor”. But cumulatively Morning Phase can feel too consistent in mood and pace. The songs tread some well-worn melodic routes, and Beck’s thin but serviceable voice is dulled rather than bolstered when multitracked into harmony. “Unforgiven” distills some of the problems of the record. Over echo-laden electric piano chords Beck sings solemnly of driving into the night, into the afterglow, to somewhere unforgiven. In a way that seems somehow typical of Gen Xers (think of how Johnny Depp or Leo DiCaprio still seem boyish and unconvincing as leading men), Beck is unable to convincingly get into the saddle of this kind of mythic American deepsong – it feels forced and unconvincing, like someone trying to sing an octave too low. One of the more intriguing songs is “Wave”. It’s just Beck alone on an orchestral seascape, like Robert Redford in “All Is Lost”, singing atonally of “isolation”. The song was originally written for Charlotte Gainsbourg and it hints tantalisingly at some fresh, strange, latter-day Scott Walker horizons for Beck. Along with the preceding singles, and the talk of a second album already in the works, it makes you wonder if Morning Phase was selected as simply the most commercially tenable release for Beck to return with – a placeholder rather than statement of ambition. But this also highlights quandary that may have led to Beck’s six-year hiatus. Back in 2006, Uncut’s John Mulvey remarked on the irony that, for a supposed maverick, Beck had succumbed to routine: “He releases a hip-hop/pop/blues romp showcasing his post-modern hipster schtick. Then he follows it up with a faintly ethereal, largely straight-faced singer-songwriter album, helmed by Nigel Godrich.” As impressive as Morning Phase in places is, it doesn’t disturb this formula – even if it’s followed up by a wilder, stranger album. This division may make the records easier to market but it hobbles Beck’s antic muse. If the second act of his career is to be as arresting as the first, his problem is not so much to synthesise the poles of authenticity and audacity as to arrange them once more in some deliciously precarious balance – the way that the lonesome hobos of “Derelict” and “Ramshackle” haunted the stoned soul picnic of Odelay. Stephen Troussé

The LA maverick invokes Anglophile folk on first new album in six years…

“Turn, turn away/From the sound of your own voice,” sings Beck towards the end of Morning Phase, his first new album in six years. Those lines serve as a pretty neat summary of his working methods during his hiatus, where he seemed to explore every possible musical avenue other than write and record an album of his own songs.

First he took a back seat as producer for fellow travellers such as Thurston Moore and Stephen Malkmus, most strikingly and successfully crafting and co-writing Charlotte Gainsbourg’s IRM. Then there was the enjoyably ramshackle Record Club, where he assembled disparate like-minds – Liars, St Vincent, Devendra Bernhardt, Feist, members of Tortoise, Wilco and Os Mutantes – to record a version of a favourite album – The Velvet Underground & Nico, INXS’s Kick – in one day.

Most satisfying – conceptually, artistically and in performance – there was 2012’s Song Reader: an album in the form of sheet music, a tribute to the lost American songbook from before recording, which culminated in a delirious, unhinged performance at the Barbican featuring interpretations from Jarvis Cocker, Franz Ferdinand and The Mighty Boosh. If the gap years were a deliberate attempt to recharge the batteries and to revive his muse, then by the climax of the Barbican show – leading his raggle-taggle troupe in a raucous singalong – he seemed a man revived.

Right enough last year, unexpected one-off singles appeared – “Gimme”, “I Won’t Be Long” and best of all, the Animal Collective-ish “Defriended”. If Record Club seemed to gently establish him as a godfather of 21st-Century blog-rock, then every sign seemed to be that he was gradually re-emerging to reclaim his crown. Morning Phase isn’t quite such a bold return. Rather than lighting out for new territory or reaffirming his place as high-concept freakfolk/artpop conjuror, the new record returns to the Beck of Sea Change, the plangent, acoustic, confessional album he recorded in 2002 in the wake of his break-up with long-term girlfriend Leigh Limon. Though Beck himself seems reluctant to consider Morning Phase a companion piece or twisted sibling to the earlier recording, it does reassemble the same group of musicans – guitarists Smokey Hormel and Jason Falkner, keyboard player Roger Manning and drummer Joey Waronker.

Morning Phase dawns with “Cycle”, an unsettling Arvo Part-y string drone – the first of a couple of orchestral interludes – before beginning in earnest with “Morning”. “Woke up this morning…” he keens – and here you might anticipate some lyrical dislocation, a monkey wrench in the genre mechanics but instead he continues faithfully, earnestly, “from a long night in the storm”.

Like Sea Change, Morning Phase seems intent on pursuing emotional authenticity deep into plain speaking, and even cliché. His research into sheet-music history of the American songbook may even have heightened this commitment: elsewhere on the new record you find another track titled “Blue Moon” without the faintest wink of irony.

Beck has talked about how he found inspiration for Morning Phase in the cosmic Caliornian music of his youth, the wild-honey harmonies of The Byrds and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, and on “Morning” you hear a hint of the pie-eyed starsailing of Judee Sill. But elsewhere if you think of The Byrds you’re more likely to be put in mind of the desolate dawn chill of “Draft Morning”. The album is presented as a new dawn for Beck, but emotionally it feels still tied to the trauma that triggered Sea Change. After emerging from the storm, Beck continues, “Looked up this morning/Found the rose was full of thorns”.

Furthermore, rather than California dreams, Morning Phase generally evokes a more wintry, Anglophile folk music. “Heart Is A Drum” distills the soundworld of Nick Drake’s Bryter Layter – the frosty clarity of the acoustic fingerpicking, the tinkling brook of piano and looming Robert Kirby orchestral cloudscape, here reprised by Beck’s father, David Campbell. “Turn Away” owes something to Simon & Garfunkel’s “The Sound Of Silence” while the closing “Waking Light” aspires to the interstellar bombast of Roger Waters’ Pink Floyd.

Individually there are some wonderful songs on Morning Phase. “Blackbird Chain” is a small marvel, shuffling through time signatures like prime Lee Hazlewood, Smokey Hormel’s mercurial guitar flowering and then spiralling across “Country Down” as Beck sings of “a tiger rose growing through your prison floor”.

But cumulatively Morning Phase can feel too consistent in mood and pace. The songs tread some well-worn melodic routes, and Beck’s thin but serviceable voice is dulled rather than bolstered when multitracked into harmony. “Unforgiven” distills some of the problems of the record. Over echo-laden electric piano chords Beck sings solemnly of driving into the night, into the afterglow, to somewhere unforgiven. In a way that seems somehow typical of Gen Xers (think of how Johnny Depp or Leo DiCaprio still seem boyish and unconvincing as leading men), Beck is unable to convincingly get into the saddle of this kind of mythic American deepsong – it feels forced and unconvincing, like someone trying to sing an octave too low.

One of the more intriguing songs is “Wave”. It’s just Beck alone on an orchestral seascape, like Robert Redford in “All Is Lost”, singing atonally of “isolation”. The song was originally written for Charlotte Gainsbourg and it hints tantalisingly at some fresh, strange, latter-day Scott Walker horizons for Beck. Along with the preceding singles, and the talk of a second album already in the works, it makes you wonder if Morning Phase was selected as simply the most commercially tenable release for Beck to return with – a placeholder rather than statement of ambition.

But this also highlights quandary that may have led to Beck’s six-year hiatus. Back in 2006, Uncut’s John Mulvey remarked on the irony that, for a supposed maverick, Beck had succumbed to routine: “He releases a hip-hop/pop/blues romp showcasing his post-modern hipster schtick. Then he follows it up with a faintly ethereal, largely straight-faced singer-songwriter album, helmed by Nigel Godrich.” As impressive as Morning Phase in places is, it doesn’t disturb this formula – even if it’s followed up by a wilder, stranger album. This division may make the records easier to market but it hobbles Beck’s antic muse. If the second act of his career is to be as arresting as the first, his problem is not so much to synthesise the poles of authenticity and audacity as to arrange them once more in some deliciously precarious balance – the way that the lonesome hobos of “Derelict” and “Ramshackle” haunted the stoned soul picnic of Odelay.

Stephen Troussé

The Rolling Stones confirm Rome and Germany shows

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The Rolling Stones have announced more European dates as part of their 14 On Fire tour. Last week, the band announced they will headline the Pinkpop Festival in Holland and TW Classic Festival in Belgium. In addition, the band will now play June 10: Berlin Waldbühne June 19: Düsseldorf Espirt ...

The Rolling Stones have announced more European dates as part of their 14 On Fire tour.

Last week, the band announced they will headline the Pinkpop Festival in Holland and TW Classic Festival in Belgium.

In addition, the band will now play

June 10: Berlin Waldbühne

June 19: Düsseldorf Espirt Arena

June 22: Rome Circus Maximus

The Rolling Stones will be playing more major shows in Europe in May, June and July, and these will be announced over the next week.

Mick Jagger commented: “I can’t wait for the tour to hit Europe. It’s a great time of the year to be playing and the tour is a good mix of festivals, stadiums and arenas. See you there!”

Keith Richards added: “Let’s keep this show on the road …the band are in top form so I’m really looking forward to getting back to Europe.”

Bob Dylan attends training session with boxer Manny Pacquiao

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Bob Dylan watched boxer Manny Pacquiao training for his upcoming fight with WBO welterweight champion Timothy Bradley, it has been revealed. Dylan turned up at Pacquiao's Wild Card Boxing Club in Los Angeles on Thursday (March 13), reports Rolling Stone, where he watched the fighter spar ahead of h...

Bob Dylan watched boxer Manny Pacquiao training for his upcoming fight with WBO welterweight champion Timothy Bradley, it has been revealed.

Dylan turned up at Pacquiao’s Wild Card Boxing Club in Los Angeles on Thursday (March 13), reports Rolling Stone, where he watched the fighter spar ahead of his rematch with Bradley.

“He called ahead and showed up with a friend,” says Fred Sternburg, a spokesperson for Pacquiao. “I’ve never seen the place take an aura like this, and I’ve been going to that gym for nearly a decade. We were all awestruck.”

Sternburg continues: “Manny sparred eight different rounds with two different fighters while Dylan was there,” says Sternburg. “He stayed for an hour and sat on a bench that you’d use to lift weights. Before and after the sparring, Dylan posed for photographs with anyone that asked and signed autographs. Some of the other fighters took selfies with him. He accommodated everybody and smiled the whole time. But, my God, it was Bob Dylan. It was like seeing one of the apostles.”

Patti Smith reveals new track, “Mercy Is”

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Patti Smith has unveiled a collaborative track with Kronos Quartet and Clint Mansell, entitled 'Mercy Is'. The track was given its first airing on Mary-Anne Hobbs' radio show, which can be listened to here. The track is featured at the 2:55:00 mark. "Mercy Is" is featured on the soundtrack to ne...

Patti Smith has unveiled a collaborative track with Kronos Quartet and Clint Mansell, entitled ‘Mercy Is’.

The track was given its first airing on Mary-Anne Hobbs‘ radio show, which can be listened to

here. The track is featured at the 2:55:00 mark.

Mercy Is” is featured on the soundtrack to new film Noah, directed by Darren Aronofsky and starring Russell Crowe in the title role. The entire soundtrack is scored by frequent Aronofsky collaborator Clint Mansell, while Smith’s entirely new contribution is the only guest appearance across the tracks.

Introducing the track, Hobbs informs that “Patti Smith asked Darren herself if she could write the lullaby that was referenced in the script and ‘Mercy Is’ was the result”. A quote from Mansell also elaborates on the collaborative process of the track, saying “My orchestrator Matt Dunkley and I arranged the music which we roughly laid out alongside Patti’s demo, and then we had Kronos and Patti play together in the studio, so it was all done in quite an old school way. This process allowed Patti and Kronos to really express themselves and really find their performance.”

Morrissey to re-release Vauxhall And I

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Morrissey's 1994 album Vauxhall And I will be reissued later this year. Vauxhall And I was Morrissey's fourth solo album and celebrates its 20th anniversary this year. Morrissey fansite True To You states that the album will be reissued on June 2 and has been remastered by Bill Inglot in Los Ange...

Morrissey‘s 1994 album Vauxhall And I will be reissued later this year.

Vauxhall And I was Morrissey’s fourth solo album and celebrates its 20th anniversary this year. Morrissey fansite True To You states that the album will be reissued on June 2 and has been remastered by Bill Inglot in Los Angeles. The 1994 album will include previously unused photographs, and will be available on CD and LP.

Morrissey is also expected to release new album World Peace Is None of Your Business in “late June/early July” via Harvest Records through Capitol. He has recorded 12 tracks for the album with producer Joe Chiccarelli (The Strokes, The Killers) in France.

Stooges drummer Scott Asheton dies aged 64

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Scott Asheton, the drummer with the Stooges, has died aged 64. According to a report on Rolling Stone , Asheton [pictured, above right] died on Saturday [March 15] from an unspecified illness. Iggy Pop confirmed the news in a statement on his Facebook page on Sunday. “My dear friend Scott As...

Scott Asheton, the drummer with the Stooges, has died aged 64.

According to a report on Rolling Stone , Asheton [pictured, above right] died on Saturday [March 15] from an unspecified illness.

Iggy Pop confirmed the news in a statement on his Facebook page on Sunday.

“My dear friend Scott Asheton passed away last night,” Pop wrote. “Scott was a great artist. I have never heard anyone play the drums with more meaning than Scott Asheton. He was like my brother. He and Ron have left a huge legacy to the world. The Ashetons have always been and continue to be a second family to me. My thoughts are with his sister Kathy, his wife Liz and his daughter Leanna, who was the light of his life.”

A native of Washington, D.C, Asheton played with the Stooges from their earliest days in Ann Archor, Michigan, in 1967 through their 2013 LP Ready to Die. His brother, Stooges bassist Ron, died in 2009.

Picture credit: Ethan Miller/Getty Images

First Look – The Motel Life

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In an interview in the current issue of Uncut with Willy Vlautin, the singer-songwriter with Richmond Fontaine, discusses his flourishing second career as an author. “A lot of the time when I’m writing, I’m trying to lay things to rest,” he explains, He specifically cites the autobiographical elements of his first novel, The Motel Life, which is set in Reno, Nevada, where Vlautin was raised, and flags up the correlation between himself and the book’s narrator, Frank Flannigan, an aspiring writer who inhabits the city’s motels and dive bars with his brother, Jerry Lee. “It’s hard to be a stand-up guy when you’ve just been getting drunk paycheque to paycheque,” Vlautin says. “I lived like Frank until my mid-thirties.” This wintry adaptation of Vlautin’s novel finds Emile Hirsch cast as Frank and Stephen Dorff as Jerry Lee, and comes shot through with the elegiac qualities you’d associate with an outlaw ballad. Orphaned as children, the Flannigan brothers have effectively been living on the margins for most of their lives: a hopeless, downbeat cycle from which Frank and Jerry Lee retreat through their own stories and illustrations. Their predicament is exacerbated by the fact Jerry has a prosthetic leg after falling from a train. The situation finally becomes untenable for the brothers when they become involved in a fatal road accident. First published in 2006, The Motel Life has taken a number of turns before it finally reaches UK cinemas. The book was first optioned by Guillermo Arriaga, the screenwriter of 21 Grams and Amores Perros, before being picked up by Alan and Gabe Polsky. The Polsky brothers had previously produced Werner Herzog’s Bad Lieutenant: Port Of Call: New Orleans, and are here making their debut as directors. Following its premier in November 2012 at the Rome Film Festival – where it picked up three awards including Best Film, it subsequently played at a handful of American film festivals. The Motel Life deals in a pretty familiar array of themes – familial love, redemption, survival in desperate circumstances – and it conspicuously shares a sensibility with films like My Private Idaho and Drugstore Cowboy. But what’s perhaps most intriguing here is the absence of an adversary for the Flannigans. Considering their desperate environment, you could be forgiven for thinking they’d find themselves pursued by one of the usual bad guys you’d find in these kind of movies – hustlers, maybe, loan sharks, an aggrieved love rival or simply some guys they crossed one night in a bar. In fact, for all the Flannigans’ increasingly diminished luck, the Polskys have crafted a film that is surprisingly warm hearted. Far from being the kind of bickering, dysfunctional pair you might otherwise expect, the Flannigans are held together by a tight bond of brotherly affection. Hirsch and Dorff do good work as the Flannigans – boys essentially dealt a rum hand by fate and struggling as best they can to deal with it. A sub plot concerning Hirsch’s tentative attempts to reconnect with his former girlfriend – an understated turn from Dakota Fanning – is handled without sentiment. Kris Kristofferson cameos as the well-meaning surrogate father figure for the brothers. The soundtrack confirms the film’s Americana credentials: Calexico, Dylan and Cash and - of course - Richmond Fontaine. Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vsmzYBXWc4Q THE MOTEL LIFE OPENS IN THE UK ON APRIL 4

In an interview in the current issue of Uncut with Willy Vlautin, the singer-songwriter with Richmond Fontaine, discusses his flourishing second career as an author.

“A lot of the time when I’m writing, I’m trying to lay things to rest,” he explains, He specifically cites the autobiographical elements of his first novel, The Motel Life, which is set in Reno, Nevada, where Vlautin was raised, and flags up the correlation between himself and the book’s narrator, Frank Flannigan, an aspiring writer who inhabits the city’s motels and dive bars with his brother, Jerry Lee. “It’s hard to be a stand-up guy when you’ve just been getting drunk paycheque to paycheque,” Vlautin says. “I lived like Frank until my mid-thirties.”

This wintry adaptation of Vlautin’s novel finds Emile Hirsch cast as Frank and Stephen Dorff as Jerry Lee, and comes shot through with the elegiac qualities you’d associate with an outlaw ballad. Orphaned as children, the Flannigan brothers have effectively been living on the margins for most of their lives: a hopeless, downbeat cycle from which Frank and Jerry Lee retreat through their own stories and illustrations. Their predicament is exacerbated by the fact Jerry has a prosthetic leg after falling from a train. The situation finally becomes untenable for the brothers when they become involved in a fatal road accident.

First published in 2006, The Motel Life has taken a number of turns before it finally reaches UK cinemas. The book was first optioned by Guillermo Arriaga, the screenwriter of 21 Grams and Amores Perros, before being picked up by Alan and Gabe Polsky. The Polsky brothers had previously produced Werner Herzog’s Bad Lieutenant: Port Of Call: New Orleans, and are here making their debut as directors. Following its premier in November 2012 at the Rome Film Festival – where it picked up three awards including Best Film, it subsequently played at a handful of American film festivals.

The Motel Life deals in a pretty familiar array of themes – familial love, redemption, survival in desperate circumstances – and it conspicuously shares a sensibility with films like My Private Idaho and Drugstore Cowboy. But what’s perhaps most intriguing here is the absence of an adversary for the Flannigans. Considering their desperate environment, you could be forgiven for thinking they’d find themselves pursued by one of the usual bad guys you’d find in these kind of movies – hustlers, maybe, loan sharks, an aggrieved love rival or simply some guys they crossed one night in a bar. In fact, for all the Flannigans’ increasingly diminished luck, the Polskys have crafted a film that is surprisingly warm hearted. Far from being the kind of bickering, dysfunctional pair you might otherwise expect, the Flannigans are held together by a tight bond of brotherly affection. Hirsch and Dorff do good work as the Flannigans – boys essentially dealt a rum hand by fate and struggling as best they can to deal with it. A sub plot concerning Hirsch’s tentative attempts to reconnect with his former girlfriend – an understated turn from Dakota Fanning – is handled without sentiment. Kris Kristofferson cameos as the well-meaning surrogate father figure for the brothers. The soundtrack confirms the film’s Americana credentials: Calexico, Dylan and Cash and – of course – Richmond Fontaine.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner.

THE MOTEL LIFE OPENS IN THE UK ON APRIL 4

Suede to release “lost” single for Record Store Day

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Suede are to release their "lost" single, "Let Go", on 7" vinyl on Record Store Day 2014 (april 19). The track was originally issued as a CD single in Sweden in 1999. The Record Store Day 7” single (backed with "Heroin") coincides the release of the Suede 7” Singles Box Set on April 14, but wi...

Suede are to release their “lost” single, “Let Go“, on 7” vinyl on Record Store Day 2014 (april 19).

The track was originally issued as a CD single in Sweden in 1999.

The Record Store Day 7” single (backed with “Heroin”) coincides the release of the Suede 7” Singles Box Set on April 14, but will not be included in it.

You can watch a trailer for the Singles Box Set below:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x8OgANfuNpk

Under The Skin

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The Woman Who Fell To Earth... For those of you who miss Jonathan Glazer’s abstract black and white videos for Radiohead – “Street Spirit (Fade Out)” comes to mind – then Under The Skin is surely the film for you. It stars Scarlett Johansson as a nameless alien driving round the streets of Glasgow in a battered white van while looking for single men to harvest for, we assume, sinister purposes. Not that you’d know it: the dialogue is scant, motivations hidden, the film’s ‘what-the-fuck’ qualities operating at full tilt. It is, perhaps, Species as directed by Scottish filmmaker Lynne Ramsay, whose 2002 film Morvern Callar was as mesmeric, startling and frequently baffling as Under The Skin. Just as Ramsay’s film followed a luminous, inscrutable Samantha Morton round wind-swept Scotland, so Glazer’s film traces Johansson’s passage through Glasgow’s schemes and A-roads, her behavior equally unfathomable (Under The Skin is based on a 2000 novel by Michael Faber, and it is perhaps advisable to read a plot summary in order to fill in the many blanks Glazer deliberately leaves in his narrative.) It’s perhaps best to consider Glazer’s film to be an avant garde midnight movie, using familiar genre conventions to explore conceptual philosophical ideas. As we watch Johansson trawl Glasgow’s boondocks in search of prey, the film assumes the quality of a bizarro feminist allegory; later, after an incident that sparks curiousity about her human form, the hunter becomes the hunted deep in the Highlands. Glazer’s film has a chilly, austere quality to it. He shoots plenty of verité footage of Glaswegians that at times suggest this is an anthropological study (perhaps this is reflective of Johansson as she eyes up her potential prey?); the sections in the Highlands, with the landscape shrouded in damp mist, is on the other hand remarkably beautiful. Johansson herself proves a game accomplice for Glazer: an A-list Hollywood star adrift in the Galashiels. With a black bob, fur coat and British accent, she mostly resembles Tiswas’ Sally James; nevertheless, she’s extremely good at communicating her character’s beautiful otherworldliness, a disconnection from the people she meets that imperceptibly shifts into something approaching an understanding of the human condition. Michael Bonner Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner.

The Woman Who Fell To Earth…

For those of you who miss Jonathan Glazer’s abstract black and white videos for Radiohead – “Street Spirit (Fade Out)” comes to mind – then Under The Skin is surely the film for you.

It stars Scarlett Johansson as a nameless alien driving round the streets of Glasgow in a battered white van while looking for single men to harvest for, we assume, sinister purposes. Not that you’d know it: the dialogue is scant, motivations hidden, the film’s ‘what-the-fuck’ qualities operating at full tilt. It is, perhaps, Species as directed by Scottish filmmaker Lynne Ramsay, whose 2002 film Morvern Callar was as mesmeric, startling and frequently baffling as Under The Skin. Just as Ramsay’s film followed a luminous, inscrutable Samantha Morton round wind-swept Scotland, so Glazer’s film traces Johansson’s passage through Glasgow’s schemes and A-roads, her behavior equally unfathomable (Under The Skin is based on a 2000 novel by Michael Faber, and it is perhaps advisable to read a plot summary in order to fill in the many blanks Glazer deliberately leaves in his narrative.)

It’s perhaps best to consider Glazer’s film to be an avant garde midnight movie, using familiar genre conventions to explore conceptual philosophical ideas. As we watch Johansson trawl Glasgow’s boondocks in search of prey, the film assumes the quality of a bizarro feminist allegory; later, after an incident that sparks curiousity about her human form, the hunter becomes the hunted deep in the Highlands. Glazer’s film has a chilly, austere quality to it. He shoots plenty of verité footage of Glaswegians that at times suggest this is an anthropological study (perhaps this is reflective of Johansson as she eyes up her potential prey?); the sections in the Highlands, with the landscape shrouded in damp mist, is on the other hand remarkably beautiful.

Johansson herself proves a game accomplice for Glazer: an A-list Hollywood star adrift in the Galashiels. With a black bob, fur coat and British accent, she mostly resembles Tiswas’ Sally James; nevertheless, she’s extremely good at communicating her character’s beautiful otherworldliness, a disconnection from the people she meets that imperceptibly shifts into something approaching an understanding of the human condition.

Michael Bonner

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner.

Director quits Freddie Mercury biopic

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Director Dexter Fletcher has reportedly quit the forthcoming Freddie Mercury biopic. Deadline says that filmmaker Fletcher, who made his directorial debut with 2012's Wild Bill and also helmed last year's Proclaimers-inspired musical Sunshine On Leith, has backed out of the project due to creative differences. His vision for the film reportedly clashed with that of producer Graham King. Sacha Baron Cohen was originally slated to play Mercury in the biopic of the late Queen singer's life, but he also pulled out of the project because, according to reports, he and the band were unable to agree on the type of movie they wanted to make. He was subsequently replaced by actor Ben Whishaw. Speaking about Cohen's departure, Queen guitarist Brian May said: "You have to really suspend that disbelief – the man who plays Freddie, you have to really believe is Freddie. And we didn't think that could really happen with Sacha. That's not any criticism of his talent whatsoever, it's just a feeling that it was not going to work – that the pieces didn't fit together anymore." Filming on Mercury is scheduled to begin this summer. A script has been written by screenwriter Peter Morgan, who has previously worked on films including The Queen and Frost/Nixon.

Director Dexter Fletcher has reportedly quit the forthcoming Freddie Mercury biopic.

Deadline says that filmmaker Fletcher, who made his directorial debut with 2012’s Wild Bill and also helmed last year’s Proclaimers-inspired musical Sunshine On Leith, has backed out of the project due to creative differences. His vision for the film reportedly clashed with that of producer Graham King.

Sacha Baron Cohen was originally slated to play Mercury in the biopic of the late Queen singer’s life, but he also pulled out of the project because, according to reports, he and the band were unable to agree on the type of movie they wanted to make.

He was subsequently replaced by actor Ben Whishaw. Speaking about Cohen’s departure, Queen guitarist Brian May said: “You have to really suspend that disbelief – the man who plays Freddie, you have to really believe is Freddie. And we didn’t think that could really happen with Sacha. That’s not any criticism of his talent whatsoever, it’s just a feeling that it was not going to work – that the pieces didn’t fit together anymore.”

Filming on Mercury is scheduled to begin this summer. A script has been written by screenwriter Peter Morgan, who has previously worked on films including The Queen and Frost/Nixon.