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Bob Dylan approved for France’s Légion d’Honneur

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Bob Dylan has been nominated for France's Légion d'Honneur. Dylan had his first nomination reportedly thrown out by the deciding council over his marijuana use and his opposition to the Vietnam War, reports Reuters. The approval by the Légion d'Honneur council means France's minister of culture ...

Bob Dylan has been nominated for France’s Légion d’Honneur.

Dylan had his first nomination reportedly thrown out by the deciding council over his marijuana use and his opposition to the Vietnam War, reports Reuters.

The approval by the Légion d’Honneur council means France’s minister of culture may soon decorate Dylan with the honour, which is the country’s highest distinction. Previous performers awarded the honour include Paul McCartney and Charles Aznavour.

The 17-member council meet to discuss whether nominees conform with the government’s institutional principles. On Sunday, via a letter sent to the Le Monde, the council’s gran chancellor, Jean-Louis Georgelin, confirmed it had approved the nomination of Bob Dylan.

Georgelin called the singer/lyricist an “exceptional artist” known in his home country of the US and internationally, and said he was a “tremendous singer and a great poet”. The grand chancellor also acknowledged the previous decision to throw out the nomination, citing what he called a “controversy” but he did no elaborate.

Last year (May 2012), Bob Dylan was honoured with the Medal Of Freedom by US president Barack Obama at the White House. Dylan, among 13 new recipients of the US’ highest civilian award, was paid a glowing tribute by Obama, who said there was “no bigger giant in the history of American music”.

Boards Of Canada’s ‘Live Album Transmission’ crashes official website

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Boards Of Canada's live album playback crashed their official website tonight (June 3). The live album transmission of Tomorrow's Harvest, their first full-length record in eight years, was greeted with phenomenal demand, causing an error message to appear on boardsofcanada.com. However, fans could...

Boards Of Canada‘s live album playback crashed their official website tonight (June 3).

The live album transmission of Tomorrow’s Harvest, their first full-length record in eight years, was greeted with phenomenal demand, causing an error message to appear on boardsofcanada.com. However, fans could still hear the album via the live YouTube feed, which was posted on their official Facebook.

Twitter also unusually went down minutes into the transmission, which began at 9pm (BST), prompting the duo’s label, Warp Records, to ask: “Did @boctransmission break twitter? #tomorrowsharvest.”

Tomorrow’s Harvest is released on June 10 via Warp Records. Click here to read our preview of the album.

The Tomorrow’s Harvest tracklisting is:

‘Gemini’

‘Reach For The Dead’

‘White Cyclosa’

‘Jacquard Causeway’

‘Telepath’

‘Cold Earth’

‘Transmisiones Ferox’

‘Sick Times’

‘Collapse’

‘Palace Posy’

‘Split Your Infinities’

‘Uritual’

‘Nothing Is Real’

‘Sundown’

‘New Seeds’

‘Come To Dust’

‘Semena Mertvykh’

Neil Young & Crazy Horse kick off European tour

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Neil Young & Crazy Horse kicked off the European leg of their Alchemy tour last night (June 2). The band played in Waldbühne, Berlin, an outdoor arena with a capacity of 22,000. According to reports, the stage sets that the band had used on the previous legs of the tour were absent. The set ...

Neil Young & Crazy Horse kicked off the European leg of their Alchemy tour last night (June 2).

The band played in Waldbühne, Berlin, an outdoor arena with a capacity of 22,000.

According to reports, the stage sets that the band had used on the previous legs of the tour were absent.

The set included three songs from their latest album Psychedelic Pill alongside “Hole In The Sky”, a new song that had been premiered on the Australia/New Zealand tour leg of the Alchemy tour earlier this year.

Young also played an acoustic cover of “Blowin’ In The Wind“, which he had played previously on the 1991 Weld tour with Crazy Horse, but hadn’t been played live since 2001’s Bridge School Benefit concert.

Scroll down to watch footage from the show.

Neil Young & Crazy Horse played:

Love And Only Love

Powderfinger

Psychedelic Pill

Walk Like A Giant

Hole In The Sky

Heart Of Gold (acoustic)

Blowin’ In The Wind (acoustic)

Singer Without A Song

Ramada Inn

Cinnamon Girl

F*!#in’ Up

Mr. Soul

Hey Hey, My My (Into The Black)

Encore: Like A Hurricane

The Alchemy tour reaches the UK on June 10, where Young & Crazy Horse will play Newcastle Metro Radio Arena.

After that, they will play:

Birmingham LG Arena (11)

Glasgow SECC (13)

London O2 Arena (17)

Liverpool Echo Arena (August 18)

London O2 Arena (19)

In related news, you can win a pair of tickets to give away to see Neil Young & Crazy Horse at London’s 02 Arena on August 19. You can find more information here.

Watch Atoms for Peace rehearse Thom Yorke’s “Rabbit In Your Headlights”

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Atoms For Peace have revealed more footage of themselves rehearsing ahead of their forthcoming tour. This morning (June 3), Nigel Godrich tweeted a YouTube clip of the band performing "Rabbit In Your Headlights" – Yorke's 1998 collaboration with electronic duo UNKLE – scroll down to watch it. ...

Atoms For Peace have revealed more footage of themselves rehearsing ahead of their forthcoming tour.

This morning (June 3), Nigel Godrich tweeted a YouTube clip of the band performing “Rabbit In Your Headlights” – Yorke’s 1998 collaboration with electronic duo UNKLE – scroll down to watch it.

This is the latest rehearsal clip to be posted by the band. Footage of them performing ‘Paperbag Writer’ – a B-side from Radiohead’s 2003 album Hail To The Thief, was uploaded to Atoms For Peace’s YouTube page on Thursday (May 30). While not a guarantee that the song will make it into the final Atoms For Peace setlist, it was the first indicator that the songs played live at the gigs could include tracks originally recorded by band members for other projects.

Producer Godrich previously tweeted: “Currently trying to remember how to do this….” and posted a video of the band filmed in 2010 playing ‘Cymbal Rush’ at a festival in Fiji. He later shared a YouTube clip of bass player Flea rehearsing as well as a Vine of the whole group preparing for their upcoming live shows. Scroll down to see the Vine below.

Atoms For Peace will play three UK live shows as part of a European tour set to take place in July. The band will play three shows at London’s Roundhouse between July 24-26.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s3Q0KpTMRT4

Brian May leads thousands on anti-badger culling march

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Brian May led thousands on a march through London yesterday (June 1) to protest the UK Government's planned badger cull. The guitarist opposes the culling of badgers, which authorities say is necessary to combat bovine tuberculosis (TB), and submitted a petition with 234,000 signatures to Downing ...

Brian May led thousands on a march through London yesterday (June 1) to protest the UK Government’s planned badger cull.

The guitarist opposes the culling of badgers, which authorities say is necessary to combat bovine tuberculosis (TB), and submitted a petition with 234,000 signatures to Downing Street demanding the scheme be axed.

Speaking at the demonstration, organised for the day before culling is due to start in west Gloucestershire and West Somerset, Brian May told reporters: “If the Government don’t listen to us today the pressure will still be there.

“I think it would be easier for David Cameron to cancel it at this point, with some grace and clearly for the public good. I don’t think there would be any shame in cancelling the policy because new evidence has come to light. It’s not going to save money. I’m not the person who cares about money, I care about everything else.”

He added: “There is no scientific justification for it, there is no public backing for it, there’s no moral grounds – but if it’s not going to save the public money either then surely the foundations for this cull will disappear.”

If the pilots launched today are successful then badger culling is expected to be rolled out across other TB hotspot areas. The Government say the culling is necessary to prevent increased outbreaks of the disease among dairy and beef cattle.

Last month, Brian May announced plans to release “The Badger Song” in protest of the planned cull. Scroll down to hear a preview of the song and hear May speaking about the project now.

Lou Reed on liver transplant: ‘I am a triumph of modern medicine’

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Lou Reed has said he is "feeling better and stronger than ever" following a life-saving liver transplant last month. On Saturday (June 1), Reed's wife Laurie Anderson revealed that her husband had been recovering since his operation but suggested that he might not "ever totally recover" from the su...

Lou Reed has said he is “feeling better and stronger than ever” following a life-saving liver transplant last month.

On Saturday (June 1), Reed’s wife Laurie Anderson revealed that her husband had been recovering since his operation but suggested that he might not “ever totally recover” from the surgery.

However, Reed has since posted a message to fans on Facebook, where he described himself as a “triumph of modern medicine” and announced that he is looking forward to returning to the stage.

He wrote: “I am a triumph of modern medicine, physics and chemistry. I am bigger and stronger than stronger than ever. My Chen Taiji and health regimen has served me well all of these years, thanks to Master Ren Guang-yi. I look forward to being on stage performing, and writing more songs to connect with your hearts and spirits and the universe well into the future.”

In March of this year, Reed cancelled a number of live dates “due to unavoidable complications”. He had been scheduled to play at Coachella Weekend One as well as a number of gigs in the US, but was forced to pull all the shows. In the same month, meanwhile, he surprised fans in New York when he made an appearance at a playback of his album Transformer.

The Deviants – Ptooff!

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Hairy misfits defiant debut... There's a delicious irony to the fact that Britain's first punk album was released at the height of '67's 'summer of love' by a bunch of long haired, dope-smoking hippies. The Deviants came from the same psychedelic counter-culture of Ladbroke Grove pads and squats that produced Hawkwind, Quintessence and the Pink Fairies. Yet aside from their choice of drugs, everything about singer Mick Farren and his misfits was pure punk: the garage riffs (mainly borrowed from Bo Diddley via the Pretty Things), the 'fuck you' attitude, the DIY aesthetic of both recording and packaging (which folded out into a poster), the anti-social sneer and song titles such as ''Garbage'' and ''Nothing Man''. As Farren succinctly puts it today, "We grew our hair but we kept our leather jackets.'' If they'd had the luxury of a proper budget, the Deviants might've made the British We're Only In It For The Money, for there are touches of cynical, Zappa-esque wit on ''Deviation Street''. The mayhem of the Fugs, Stooges and MC5 made them obvious fellow-travellers, too. But British rock at the time had produced nothing quite like the Deviants. There are concessions to '60s psychedelia on The Barrett/Ayers-style whimsy of ''Child Of The Sky'' and in guitarist Sid Bishop's clumsy Hendrix impersonations. But for the rest, Farren's antagonistic bellowing breathes a fiery contempt for the notion that singing ''All You Need Is Love'' will usher in the Aquarian Age. The Deviants made two more albums before the decade was out. Disposable ('68) boasted such admirable moments of insurrection as ''Let's Loot The Supermarket''. But by Deviants 3 ('69) they were beginning to sound like just another heavy rock band. ''We learned a few things and started trying to write songs and that fucked us up,'' Farren admits. In true punk spirit, the Deviants really had one rowdy, messy shot. They splurged it up the wall on Ptooff! and we'd have to wait another decade to hear anything as defiantly ugly, truculent and resentful in British rock music again. NIGEL WILLIAMSON Photo credit: Phil Smee

Hairy misfits defiant debut…

There’s a delicious irony to the fact that Britain’s first punk album was released at the height of ’67’s ‘summer of love’ by a bunch of long haired, dope-smoking hippies. The Deviants came from the same psychedelic counter-culture of Ladbroke Grove pads and squats that produced Hawkwind, Quintessence and the Pink Fairies. Yet aside from their choice of drugs, everything about singer Mick Farren and his misfits was pure punk: the garage riffs (mainly borrowed from Bo Diddley via the Pretty Things), the ‘fuck you’ attitude, the DIY aesthetic of both recording and packaging (which folded out into a poster), the anti-social sneer and song titles such as ”Garbage” and ”Nothing Man”. As Farren succinctly puts it today, “We grew our hair but we kept our leather jackets.”

If they’d had the luxury of a proper budget, the Deviants might’ve made the British We’re Only In It For The Money, for there are touches of cynical, Zappa-esque wit on ”Deviation Street”. The mayhem of the Fugs, Stooges and MC5 made them obvious fellow-travellers, too. But British rock at the time had produced nothing quite like the Deviants. There are concessions to ’60s psychedelia on The Barrett/Ayers-style whimsy of ”Child Of The Sky” and in guitarist Sid Bishop’s clumsy Hendrix impersonations. But for the rest, Farren’s antagonistic bellowing breathes a fiery contempt for the notion that singing ”All You Need Is Love” will usher in the Aquarian Age.

The Deviants made two more albums before the decade was out. Disposable (’68) boasted such admirable moments of insurrection as ”Let’s Loot The Supermarket”. But by Deviants 3 (’69) they were beginning to sound like just another heavy rock band. ”We learned a few things and started trying to write songs and that fucked us up,” Farren admits. In true punk spirit, the Deviants really had one rowdy, messy shot. They splurged it up the wall on Ptooff! and we’d have to wait another decade to hear anything as defiantly ugly, truculent and resentful in British rock music again.

NIGEL WILLIAMSON

Photo credit: Phil Smee

BBC bosses reveal ‘constructive’ discussions with The Rolling Stones over Glastonbury coverage

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Reports out today (May 31) suggest that BBC will only be able to broadcast the first four songs of The Rolling Stones' headline slot at Glastonbury. The broadcaster, who this week committed to showing over 250 hours of Glastonbury footage over the weekend of June 26-28, is now in discussions with the band in an attempt to gain access to as much of their performance as possible. The Independent reports that as it stands, only the opening section of the gig will be broadcast live on the Saturday night with a source telling the paper: "Mick agreed to do Glastonbury for the fans who are there, he didn't sign up for a TV show. It's not about money. This show will go around the world." BBC's head of music television Mark Cooper admits there is a debate between broadcaster and band, saying: "We are having an ongoing discussion with the Stones. I'm talking to Mick [Jagger] about it. At this point I'm quite optimistic we'll get a sufficient amount of music." Cooper adds: "I understand it is a risk for them. They are stepping out of their comfort zone. There's an unpredictability, it's not their natural audience. They are nervous about how much they should share. But when legendary artists play Glastonbury, they also attract a whole new, broader audience." Speaking to NME, an official spokesperson for the BBC confirmed that "constructive" discussions with The Rolling Stones were ongoing and that any talks at this stage of proceedings are entirely routine. "We’re confident that we’ll be able to deliver fantastic coverage of this year’s amazing Glastonbury line-up. The discussions with artists are absolutely business as usual for this stage of our festival planning. Our conversations with The Rolling Stones have been extremely constructive and are ongoing.’" The BBC coverage is set to be its most extensive ever at Glastonbury this year with more than 120 live performances set to be broadcast and six stages - Pyramid, Other, John Peel, Jazz World, Park and BBC Introducing - streamed live from the site across digital and online platforms.

Reports out today (May 31) suggest that BBC will only be able to broadcast the first four songs of The Rolling Stones‘ headline slot at Glastonbury.

The broadcaster, who this week committed to showing over 250 hours of Glastonbury footage over the weekend of June 26-28, is now in discussions with the band in an attempt to gain access to as much of their performance as possible. The Independent reports that as it stands, only the opening section of the gig will be broadcast live on the Saturday night with a source telling the paper: “Mick agreed to do Glastonbury for the fans who are there, he didn’t sign up for a TV show. It’s not about money. This show will go around the world.”

BBC’s head of music television Mark Cooper admits there is a debate between broadcaster and band, saying: “We are having an ongoing discussion with the Stones. I’m talking to Mick [Jagger] about it. At this point I’m quite optimistic we’ll get a sufficient amount of music.” Cooper adds: “I understand it is a risk for them. They are stepping out of their comfort zone. There’s an unpredictability, it’s not their natural audience. They are nervous about how much they should share. But when legendary artists play Glastonbury, they also attract a whole new, broader audience.”

Speaking to NME, an official spokesperson for the BBC confirmed that “constructive” discussions with The Rolling Stones were ongoing and that any talks at this stage of proceedings are entirely routine. “We’re confident that we’ll be able to deliver fantastic coverage of this year’s amazing Glastonbury line-up. The discussions with artists are absolutely business as usual for this stage of our festival planning. Our conversations with The Rolling Stones have been extremely constructive and are ongoing.’”

The BBC coverage is set to be its most extensive ever at Glastonbury this year with more than 120 live performances set to be broadcast and six stages – Pyramid, Other, John Peel, Jazz World, Park and BBC Introducing – streamed live from the site across digital and online platforms.

Ringo Starr to reveal unseen Beatles pictures in new book, Photograph

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Ringo Starr is to reveal a collection of previously unseen Beatles photographs in a new book due out next month. Photograph will be released as an e-book on Apple's iBookstore on June 12 and will coincide with Ringo: Peace & Love, a Grammy Museum exhibit on Starr. A physical version of the boo...

Ringo Starr is to reveal a collection of previously unseen Beatles photographs in a new book due out next month.

Photograph will be released as an e-book on Apple’s iBookstore on June 12 and will coincide with Ringo: Peace & Love, a Grammy Museum exhibit on Starr.

A physical version of the book will be released in December and features pictures of Starr alongside his fellow Beatles bandmates as they rose to fame in Liverpool.

The e-book will come complete with commentary recorded by the drummer. Speaking about the book in a statement, Starr says: “These are shots that no one else could have.”

Boards Of Canada to host “Live Album Transmission” on Monday, June 3

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Boards Of Canada will hold a 'Live Album Transmission' for their new album 'Tomorrow's Harvest' on Monday (June 3). The group, who recently hosted an unusual album playback for the album involving two speakers in the middle of the desert, will host the mysterious broadcast at 9pm UK time. Tomorr...

Boards Of Canada will hold a ‘Live Album Transmission’ for their new album ‘Tomorrow’s Harvest’ on Monday (June 3).

The group, who recently hosted an unusual album playback for the album involving two speakers in the middle of the desert, will host the mysterious broadcast at 9pm UK time.

Tomorrow’s Harvest is released on June 10 via Warp Records. Click here to read our preview of the album.

The Tomorrow’s Harvest tracklisting is:

‘Gemini’

‘Reach For The Dead’

‘White Cyclosa’

‘Jacquard Causeway’

‘Telepath’

‘Cold Earth’

‘Transmisiones Ferox’

‘Sick Times’

‘Collapse’

‘Palace Posy’

‘Split Your Infinities’

‘Uritual’

‘Nothing Is Real’

‘Sundown’

‘New Seeds’

‘Come To Dust’

‘Semena Mertvykh’

Elvis Costello and The Roots team-up for new album

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Elvis Costello is to release a new album in September. The album, a collaboration with The Roots, will be called Wise Up Ghost and will be released on September 16 on Blue Note Records. We first reported on the album back in February, as a possible Record Store Day release. According to an interv...

Elvis Costello is to release a new album in September.

The album, a collaboration with The Roots, will be called Wise Up Ghost and will be released on September 16 on Blue Note Records.

We first reported on the album back in February, as a possible Record Store Day release.

According to an interview on NYU Local with Roots’ drummer Questlove, the collaboration grew out of Costello’s appearances on American chat show Late Night With Jimmy Fallon, where The Roots are the house band.

“After Elvis Costello’s third appearance,” he said, “we liked him so much we were like hey why don’t we make a record? Well what went from being one song to be released on Record Store Day became – why don’t we try four songs? Now we have a brilliant album. And, in the whole history of The Roots, I have never bragged on an album first, but I actually love this record.”

There are rumours that advanced white label copies of the album were in fact released on Record Store Day, though that has been neither confirmed nor denied by official sources.

Elvis and The Imposters begin their Revolver Spring UK tour tonight (May 31) at Birmingham’s Symphony Hall.

New Arcade Fire album “really great” says James Murphy

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James Murphy has said he thinks the new Arcade Fire album will be "really great". Murphy, who has helped to produce a number of tracks on the forthcoming album, told Rolling Stone: "I think it's going to be a really great record, actually. I'm eager to see it come out." The Canadian band joined Murphy at the DFA studio earlier this year to work on new material. "There's a lot of them, and they're mostly self-produced – like, they don't need a producer in a certain way. So I didn't know how it would go," he said. In an interview with MusicWeek late last year, the band's manager Scott Rodger said that Arcade Fire were going into the studio with Murphy to work on the follow-up to 2010's 'The Suburbs'. He said: "They're in with James Murphy on three or so songs, plus Markus Dravs who is a long-time collaborator. They write too many songs - that's a good problem to have. There's around 35 songs with Arcade Fire, two albums'-worth for sure." This spring Arcade Fire's Win Butler and Regine Chassagne welcomed the birth of their first child. The name of musical couple's son, who weighed seven pounds, has not been revealed. News of the birth – which took place on April 21 - was revealed by Canadian publication Le Journal de Montréal. Spinner has translated the announcement made in the paper by Barry Mack, the pastor at Montreal's St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church Saint-Lambert, as: "It's good to see that they are still together and they now have a baby. It's a bit rare in the entertainment industry."

James Murphy has said he thinks the new Arcade Fire album will be “really great”.

Murphy, who has helped to produce a number of tracks on the forthcoming album, told Rolling Stone: “I think it’s going to be a really great record, actually. I’m eager to see it come out.” The Canadian band joined Murphy at the DFA studio earlier this year to work on new material. “There’s a lot of them, and they’re mostly self-produced – like, they don’t need a producer in a certain way. So I didn’t know how it would go,” he said.

In an interview with MusicWeek late last year, the band’s manager Scott Rodger said that Arcade Fire were going into the studio with Murphy to work on the follow-up to 2010’s ‘The Suburbs’. He said: “They’re in with James Murphy on three or so songs, plus Markus Dravs who is a long-time collaborator. They write too many songs – that’s a good problem to have. There’s around 35 songs with Arcade Fire, two albums’-worth for sure.”

This spring Arcade Fire’s Win Butler and Regine Chassagne welcomed the birth of their first child. The name of musical couple’s son, who weighed seven pounds, has not been revealed. News of the birth – which took place on April 21 – was revealed by Canadian publication Le Journal de Montréal. Spinner has translated the announcement made in the paper by Barry Mack, the pastor at Montreal’s St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church Saint-Lambert, as: “It’s good to see that they are still together and they now have a baby. It’s a bit rare in the entertainment industry.”

Patti Smith to perform at Green Man festival

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Patti Smith has been added to the line-up for this year's Green Man Festival. Smith will headline a night of live music in the Far Out Tent on the Thursday night (August 15) of the festival that runs between August 15 and 18. Smith's appearance, the only UK festival she will be performing at this S...

Patti Smith has been added to the line-up for this year’s Green Man Festival.

Smith will headline a night of live music in the Far Out Tent on the Thursday night (August 15) of the festival that runs between August 15 and 18. Smith’s appearance, the only UK festival she will be performing at this Summer, will see her join a bill that includes Jon Langford, Matt Berry and Manchester band Money.

Kings Of Convenience, Band Of Horses and Ben Howard have all been named as the headliners for this year’s Green Man festival, joining previously announced artists such as The Horrors, Midlake, Local Natives and Edwyn Collins.

The festival, which takes place in Glanusk Park, Wales, has also confirmed appearances fromRoy Harper, Fuck Buttons, The Pastels, Archie Bronson Outfit, Woods, James Yorkston, Unknown Mortal Orchestra, Andrew Weatherall, Matt Berry, Moon Duo and newcomers Blaenavon. See Greenman.net for more information about the festival.

The line-up for Green Man Festival so far is as follows:

The Horrors

Ben Howard

Patti Smith

Band Of Horses

Local Natives

Edwyn Collins

Roy Harper

Fuck Buttons

The Pastels

Archie Bronson Outfit

Woods

James Yorkston

Unknown Mortal Orchestra

Andrew Weatherall

Matt Berry

Moon Duo

Blaenavon

Arbouretum

This is the Kit

Ellen & The Escapades

Buke & Gase

Bear’s Den

Fossil Collective

Rozi Plain

Villagers,

Stornoway

Johnny Flynn & The Sussex Wit

Erol Alkan & Daniel Avery

Veronica Falls

Rachel Zeffira

Half Moon Ru

Sweet Baboo

Jacco Gardner

Teleman

Annie Dressner

The Rolling Stones reportedly refuse BBC permission to broadcast Glastonbury set in full

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Reports out today (May 31) suggest that BBC will only be able to broadcast the first four songs of The Rolling Stones' headline slot at Glastonbury. The broadcaster, who this week committed to showing over 250 hours of Glastonbury footage over the weekend of June 26-28, is now in discussions with the band in an attempt to gain access to as much of their performance as possible. The Independent reports that as it stands, only the opening section of the gig will be broadcast live on the Saturday night with a source telling the paper: "Mick agreed to do Glastonbury for the fans who are there, he didn't sign up for a TV show. It's not about money. This show will go around the world." The source adds: "If there's torrential rain it will play havoc with their performance and they want to sound and look at their best. There's a lot of factors out of their control." BBC's head of music television Mark Cooper admits there is a debate between broadcaster and band, saying: "We are having an ongoing discussion with the Stones. I'm talking to Mick about it. At this point I'm quite optimistic we'll get a sufficient amount of music." Cooper added: "I understand it is a risk for them. They are stepping out of their comfort zone. There's an unpredictability, it's not their natural audience. They are nervous about how much they should share. But when legendary artists play Glastonbury, they also attract a whole new, broader audience." The BBC coverage is set to be its most extensive ever at Glastonbury this year with more than 120 live performances set to be broadcast and six stages - Pyramid, Other, John Peel, Jazz World, Park and BBC Introducing - streamed live from the site across digital and online platforms.

Reports out today (May 31) suggest that BBC will only be able to broadcast the first four songs of The Rolling Stones‘ headline slot at Glastonbury.

The broadcaster, who this week committed to showing over 250 hours of Glastonbury footage over the weekend of June 26-28, is now in discussions with the band in an attempt to gain access to as much of their performance as possible. The Independent reports that as it stands, only the opening section of the gig will be broadcast live on the Saturday night with a source telling the paper: “Mick agreed to do Glastonbury for the fans who are there, he didn’t sign up for a TV show. It’s not about money. This show will go around the world.”

The source adds: “If there’s torrential rain it will play havoc with their performance and they want to sound and look at their best. There’s a lot of factors out of their control.”

BBC’s head of music television Mark Cooper admits there is a debate between broadcaster and band, saying: “We are having an ongoing discussion with the Stones. I’m talking to Mick about it. At this point I’m quite optimistic we’ll get a sufficient amount of music.”

Cooper added: “I understand it is a risk for them. They are stepping out of their comfort zone. There’s an unpredictability, it’s not their natural audience. They are nervous about how much they should share. But when legendary artists play Glastonbury, they also attract a whole new, broader audience.”

The BBC coverage is set to be its most extensive ever at Glastonbury this year with more than 120 live performances set to be broadcast and six stages – Pyramid, Other, John Peel, Jazz World, Park and BBC Introducing – streamed live from the site across digital and online platforms.

Made Of Stone

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This isn't the one... Made Of Stone follows the Stone Roses from their reunion in October 2011 to their three homecoming shows at Heaton Park in June the following year. Its release coincides with the band's two shows at Finsbury Park in London - while in three weeks' time, cinema audiences can also watch Spike Island, a coming-of-age drama set against the backdrop of the band's famous May, 1990 show. In the absence of - so far - any new music from the reunited Roses, Made Of Stone and Spike Island act as surrogates in some way - the only existing 'fresh' material connected to the band in any medium. As filmed by Shane Meadows, Made Of Stone is a fudge between fly-on-the-wall doc, concert film and archival trawl. Meadows – a fan, who has described his film as "a love letter" to the Roses – is not a natural documentarian. After trailing the Roses round the October 18 press conference called to announce the end of their 15-year split, he sets up his cameras at a house outside Warrington, where the band are beginning tour rehearsals. The footage of the band learning to play together again is the best stuff here – the focus very much on Reni, whose loose-limbed drumming and warm, playful humour makes him the natural star. In a narrative lurch, we decamp to Warrington’s Parr Hall, where Meadows spends an age on the build-up to the band’s secret comeback gig. Meadows films punters running down the road to the venue – will they, won’t they get a ticket..? It would arguably be more instructive to know what the band themselves were doing at this point: were they all together, apart, were they nervous, excited..? The film similarly fails to successfully address the events at the show in Amsterdam, where Reni disappeared before the encore and Ian Brown called him a “cunt” onstage. The band do not offer comment; but nor does Meadows pursue any line of inquiry. In fact, the Roses themselves are distant throughout. Interviewed only in voiceover, where they briskly narrate their backstory over archive footage, there’s no formal meeting with Meadows to discuss the ongoing process of reunion. Among many of Meadows open goals is the sight on the word ‘NEWIE’ written on a blackboard containing all the band’s songs that stands in the Warrington rehearsal house. Surely, this is a new song? If only Meadows had asked them about it. Ah… It's easy to see how Meadows passion for the Roses has clouded his editorial judgment, but it leaves the film lacking in many respects. A terrific opening shot - of Brown in slow motion walking in the gully between the stage and the crash barriers at Heaton Park, overlaid by a voice recording of Alfred Hitchcock talking about creativity - and some admittedly excellent footage at the end of the band playing "Fool's Gold", driven by John Squire's mesmerising guitar lines, are as good as it gets. Shame there isn't more in the middle. Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

This isn’t the one…

Made Of Stone follows the Stone Roses from their reunion in October 2011 to their three homecoming shows at Heaton Park in June the following year. Its release coincides with the band’s two shows at Finsbury Park in London – while in three weeks’ time, cinema audiences can also watch Spike Island, a coming-of-age drama set against the backdrop of the band’s famous May, 1990 show. In the absence of – so far – any new music from the reunited Roses, Made Of Stone and Spike Island act as surrogates in some way – the only existing ‘fresh’ material connected to the band in any medium.

As filmed by Shane Meadows, Made Of Stone is a fudge between fly-on-the-wall doc, concert film and archival trawl. Meadows – a fan, who has described his film as “a love letter” to the Roses – is not a natural documentarian. After trailing the Roses round the October 18 press conference called to announce the end of their 15-year split, he sets up his cameras at a house outside Warrington, where the band are beginning tour rehearsals. The footage of the band learning to play together again is the best stuff here – the focus very much on Reni, whose loose-limbed drumming and warm, playful humour makes him the natural star.

In a narrative lurch, we decamp to Warrington’s Parr Hall, where Meadows spends an age on the build-up to the band’s secret comeback gig. Meadows films punters running down the road to the venue – will they, won’t they get a ticket..? It would arguably be more instructive to know what the band themselves were doing at this point: were they all together, apart, were they nervous, excited..? The film similarly fails to successfully address the events at the show in Amsterdam, where Reni disappeared before the encore and Ian Brown called him a “cunt” onstage. The band do not offer comment; but nor does Meadows pursue any line of inquiry. In fact, the Roses themselves are distant throughout. Interviewed only in voiceover, where they briskly narrate their backstory over archive footage, there’s no formal meeting with Meadows to discuss the ongoing process of reunion. Among many of Meadows open goals is the sight on the word ‘NEWIE’ written on a blackboard containing all the band’s songs that stands in the Warrington rehearsal house. Surely, this is a new song? If only Meadows had asked them about it. Ah…

It’s easy to see how Meadows passion for the Roses has clouded his editorial judgment, but it leaves the film lacking in many respects. A terrific opening shot – of Brown in slow motion walking in the gully between the stage and the crash barriers at Heaton Park, overlaid by a voice recording of Alfred Hitchcock talking about creativity – and some admittedly excellent footage at the end of the band playing “Fool’s Gold”, driven by John Squire‘s mesmerising guitar lines, are as good as it gets. Shame there isn’t more in the middle.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Queens Of The Stone Age: “You work first, then party later…”

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Just before the release of 2007’s Era Vulgaris, Uncut’s Jaan Uhelzski headed out to California to see if head wrangler Josh Homme could keep the party going when the group’s hedonistic regulars had been barred… _________________ "The Queens Of The Stone Age is like a whorehouse," leers J...

Just before the release of 2007’s Era Vulgaris, Uncut’s Jaan Uhelzski headed out to California to see if head wrangler Josh Homme could keep the party going when the group’s hedonistic regulars had been barred…

_________________

“The Queens Of The Stone Age is like a whorehouse,” leers Josh Homme, before taking a final swig of the Mexican beer he’s cradling in extraordinarily large hands. “I think that’s what it’s like for people who play with Queens – they don’t tell their own band members how great it was.”

We are sat in Homme’s new studio, a squat cement building half a mile from the Walt Disney Studios in Burbank, California. Here, it seems the imposing 6″ 5′ redhead is intent on pursuing his bordello theme. Rolls of flocked wallpaper sit on a scaffold ready to be slapped on the white walls, while a claw-footed bathtub has been upholstered in red velvet and now functions as a tarty-looking day bed. “When they’re with us,” he continues, “they just pretend that they’re here just to fuck. Not fall in love.”

A lot of people have played around with Queens Of The Stone Age since their inception in 1997. To borrow Homme’s metaphor, it’s a pretty classy whorehouse. Dave Grohl sat in on drums for 2002’s masterful epic of desert rock, Songs For The Deaf. Mark Lanegan has often come along for the ride. Julian Casablancas, Trent Reznor and Billy Gibbons were all involved in the sessions for the band’s forthcoming fifth album, Era Vulgaris. Homme, though, is the only one to have lasted the whole trip – even his childhood friend and second-in-command Nick Oliveri was thrown out for terrible misdemeanours in 2004.

This is not a place for sentimental lingering. Grohl, in fact, was so enamoured with being a Queen that he put the Foo Fighters on hold for an entire year so he could tour with them. Intimates say that Homme had to convince him to go back to the Foos. “Josh had problems trying to deal with that, but he knew that Grohl still had a lot to do with his own band, so he set him free,” reveals a source close to the band.

“Dave Grohl is an alpha sort of person, he’s fucking badass,” says Homme. “It was good to see him gnash his teeth because it’s good to see him work, and leap, get pissed and get ready to bronco.”

Even in adversity, Homme seems to be the kind of ruthless commander who inspires affection in his charges. Lanegan, for instance, swears he’d work again with Homme, despite a parting of the ways in 2005, when the enigmatic singer went missing eight days before the close of a tour. “That was my fault,” Lanegan says simply. “I had some personal problems I had to take care of. I had to step away. But Josh has always been very, very supportive of whatever I’ve wanted to do and very helpful whenever I’ve had difficulties and I just love the guy to death. Queens is my favourite band and Josh is one of my favourite guys. If the opportunity arose again, I would certainly work with him. He always gets the best out of me.”

In the past decade, Queens Of The Stone Age have represented the very best in rock’n’roll: the sex, the drugs, the adventure, the delirious sense that nearly anything goes. In that time, Homme has mined some of rock’s most dangerous seams, channelling the dirty vision of The Stooges, the howling darkness of Nirvana, the bombast and comic sauciness of ZZ Top, the doomsday visions of Blue Öyster Cult, even the catharsis of early Metallica. Myths have sprung up around much of what Homme does – with the ad-hoc experimental cabal the Desert Sessions and boogie tarts the Eagles Of Death Metal, as well as the Queens – ever since he started making music as a teenager on the dry sand of California’s Palm Desert, a two-hour drive from LA. It was there that his first band Kyuss, stoner rock pioneers, plugged their instruments into portable generators and played only for the coyotes and the scorpions.

Josh Homme, it transpires, is from one of the more affluent families in Palm Desert. His grandfather Cap Homme has a park named after him in an exclusive enclave in Coachella Valley, where retired movie stars, former American presidents and Microsoft’s Bill Gates all live. There’s a Homme Street where the family ranch used to be located – now the location of the very posh Monterey Country Club, 375 acres of luxury homes tucked underneath the shadow of the Santa Rosa Mountains.

Homme’s family is important to him. Besides the bordello tat, his studio bears their mark: the colourful neo-classic furniture borrowed from their desert home; the art on the wall – two dozen or so elegant landscapes, stark portraiture of Native Americans, and Gauguin-inspired vases of flowers all painted by his paternal grandmother, Camille Homme. It’s her name that he has tattooed over the knuckles of his right hand, while on the left is his grandfather Cap’s name – a far cry from the self-aggrandising O-Z-Z-Y, or the P-U-N-X that Green Day’s Billy Joe Armstrong has etched on his left hand.

“I didn’t grow up as a rich kid,” he protests, squirming a little. “I grew up in an 800-square foot condominium. Money doesn’t mean anything in itself, it’s just a way to keep people off of you, or keep yourself free, keep your options open. But it’s hardly something to stack or think about. Although maybe it looks cool stacked.

“My grandpa used to do new clichés. ‘If you could be the sheep or the shepherd, which one would you be? The wolf.’ And another one was, ‘If you’re going to be different, you’re going to get hit by rocks, so learn to like rock.'”

This is what Josh Homme has done – learned to like rock – since those early parties in the desert with Kyuss. “The first time I saw them play in the desert, with a couple of generators, a few halogen lights and a couple hundred teenagers slamming against each other, I thought I had stumbled onto the Plains Indians doing a war dance,” remembers Chris Goss, producer of two Queens Of The Stone Age albums. “They were better than Black Sabbath, with the intellect of Led Zeppelin. I knew they couldn’t miss.”

Kyuss, however, didn’t last long enough to capitalise on the stoner rock phenomenon that they had initiated. “I will never put them back together,” says Homme now, 12 years after the split. “We’ve already got offered stupid stupid money, and I just said, ‘Keep your chequebook in your pants.’ I actually love that no-one ever saw Kyuss.”

Homme briefly turned his back on music, going to college in Seattle. But he soon fell in with one of grunge’s most psychedelic, dysfunctional and best bands, Screaming Trees, joining them as a touring guitarist in 1996. An enduring friendship with the Trees’ lead singer, Mark Lanegan, would eventually produce some of Homme’s best work, and the guitarist Van Conner featured on some early sessions. But when Queens Of The Stone Age’s eponymous first album appeared in 1998, the band consisted of Homme and Kyuss’ last drummer, Alfredo Hernandez, with sizeable contributions from Goss – who had come up with the name; “I liked the idea of something that was 50 per cent stupid and 50 per cent gay,” he remembers.

The first album’s mix of Sabbath heaviosity and driving motorik rhythms was striking, but it wasn’t until 2000’s Rated R that Queens sloped into the mainstream. Hernandez had gone, and Homme’s new second-in-command was bassist Nick Oliveri, who had figured in the first Kyuss lineup. Oliveri contributed his own deranged hardcore songs, but it was his personality – naked, wayward, demonically fucked-up – that seemed to embody the band’s guilt-free partying agenda. “Nicotine, valium, vicodin, marijuana, ecstasy and alcohol/C-C-C-Cocaine,” went the chorus to “Feel Good Hit Of The Summer”, and suddenly the Queens were seen as lords of misrule as much as rock innovators.

Homme and Oliveri seemed inseparable blood brothers. But as they toured the blockbusting Songs For The Deaf round and round the world, it became apparent that Oliveri was spiralling too far out of control for even a liberal taskmaster like Homme. In 2004, he went round to Oliveri’s house and told him it was over – rumours persist that it was because the bassist was physically abusing his girlfriend. Oliveri thought the band were disbanding. A week later, he discovered that Homme, guitarist Troy Van Leeuwen and drummer Joey Castillo were recording their fourth album, Lullabies To Paralyze. “So you fired me for what you hired me for?” complained Oliveri in 2004.

“I think I always expected to part ways with Nick because it was inevitable,” Homme sighs today. “I’m glad it lasted as long as it did. But I realised that I had helped something come out in him that should have stayed inside. I learned that it’s not a requirement to bring stray dogs into your life. You don’t have to save everybody, and you can’t. You work first, then party later.”

The sacking of Oliveri coincided with another major shift in Josh Homme’s life. He had just met Brody Dalle, lead singer of the Distillers and often portrayed as an embryonic Courtney Love, who was then extricating herself from a failing marriage to Rancid singer Tim Armstrong.

“My mother always told me I would just know when the right person came along, but it hadn’t happened,” says Homme, with uncharacteristic candour. “I was 29 and I was beginning to think it never would. I was a bit of a slut, to be honest. I was always here today, gone tomorrow, but when I met Brody I was like I’m here today and I’m coming back tomorrow. We had to be very secretive, because she was just starting a divorce process. I went back to do those Desert Sessions [Homme’s free-floating musical collective], and you can tell what I was going through because I was writing stuff like “Dead In Love” and “I Wanna Make It Wit Chu” [revisited on Era Vulgaris]. I was so in love, I was totally revelling in it so much, I was a little paralysed.”

Homme and Dalle now have a one-and-a-half-year-old daughter, Camille. But if it seems as if Homme has mellowed somewhat in his private life, the fifth Queens Of The Stone Age album proves he can still find aggression and psychedelic disorientation to channel into his music. He still likes being able to confound his intimates. For Era Vulgaris, Homme took the latest Queens lineup – still built around Castillo and Van Leeuwen – into a Los Angeles studio without a single thing written, just to see what it was like to force songs out of his psyche. “I’ve seen him do that before with the Desert Sessions but never with Queens,” says Chris Goss, who produced the album. “The Queens Of The Stone Age is a business, where he’s the CEO. It’s not run the same.”

After 11 months of harrowing trials and studio mishaps, they ended up with one of their most important musical documents. Dubbed after Aleister Crowley’s system of signifying the period after he became a full-on Satanist, it’s a tour de force that combines the blurry power of Zeppelin’s Physical Graffiti with the punch of The Stones’ Some Girls, all underpinned with stripper beats and whacked-out English psychedelia.

“I love this album, but I will never make another album this way again,” vows Homme. “Or at least I don’t think that I will. My goal is to make better and better albums that don’t suck and I don’t really care what I have to do to do it. In a perfect world, the idea is for each of the records to make you a better person. To be able to understand the life you lead more. The rest will just take care of itself.”

Springsteen & I plus 12 other films we’re looking forward to later this year

Although I’m currently watching films due for release in July – which will take us over halfway through 2013 – I’m conscious that there’s a lot of great stuff still to come during the rest of the year. Here, then, are 13 films coming up through the rest of 2013 that I’m looking forward to. There’s a couple of caveats, though. First, I’ve steered clear of blockbusters – they get enough coverage elsewhere – and second, I’ve only gone for films that currently have a trailer and a confirmed 2013 UK release date. That means that the Cormac McCarthy-scripted The Councelor is out of the running, because there’s no trailer yet, while recent successes at the Cannes Film Festival like Alexander Payne’s Nebraska and Jim Jarmusch’s Only Lovers Left Alive are also out because they don’t have a release date yet in this country. And before you ask, the Coen brothers’ Inside Llewyn Davis is scheduled for January 2014. Anyway, onwards... The Bling Ring Opens July 5 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q4LzhgExvrc Something of a return to form for Sofia Coppola, apparently, after the relative disappointment of Somewhere. Emma Watson heads up a cast of celeb-obsessed kids who break into the houses of famous C-listers including Paris Hilton and Lindsay Lohan. A Field In England Opens July 5 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cRRvzjkzu2U A psychedelic period drama from Sightseers director Ben Wheatley, where a trio of deserters from the English Civil War find themselves under the spell of a scheming alchemist. Some bad mushrooms come into play, closely followed by madness and terror. My Father And The Man In Black Opens July 12 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jtovAxxPo2Q Saul Holiff was Johnny Cash’s manager from 1958 to the mid-Seventies. He committed suicide in 2005, leaving his estranged son Jonathan with a storage unit full of letters, audio-tapes, documents and memorabilia of Saul’s time with Cash. Here, Jonathan pieces together his father’s life and career. Monsters University Opens July 12 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=onZe3gOhWkQ Origin stories are traditionally the last gasp of creative ennui: a step back, in the absence of new ideas. We’re hoping though that Monsters University – a look at Mike and Sulley during their years in academia – will buck the trend. Springsteen & I Opens July 19 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HVQUeCi9V0s A fans eye point of view of the Boss, compiled by director Baillie Walsh (and producer Ridley Scott) from footage submitted by Springsteen aficionados from round the world. Frances Ha Opens July 26 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YBn5dgXFMis A New Wavey comedy, shot in black and white by occasional Wes Anderson collaborator Noah Baumbach, starring Greta Gerwig as a wannabe dancer floundering round Manhattan. Only God Forgives Opens August 2 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tcl2hnhze3E While I’m reluctant to report too much on the views of other journalists, this new collaboration from Drive director Nicolas Winding Refn and star Ryan Gosling divided the critics at Cannes. As with Drive, this appears to be a genre pic with arthouse pretensions, with drug smuggler Gosling and his mum – Kristin Scott Thomas – killing people in Bangkok. Heaven's Gate Opens August 2 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Shs6ZboDwSQ I’ve decided to include one reissue in this list: Michael Cimino’s 1980 Western, unfairly dismissed down the years, but worth seeing in its full glory at least once. A majestic, hugely ambitious film, the scale of which is only really understood on the big screen. This is part of nationwide reissue. Alan Partridge: Alpha Papa Opens August 7 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kBpyU2fXm_4 “On air. Under siege. Out of chat?” announces the poster for the forthcoming Partridge movie, in which the North Norfolk Digital DJ is embroiled in a hostage situation. A quick skim of the IMDB reveals the return of Simon Greenall as Michael, the Geordie Travel Tavern handyman, and Felicity Montagu as Lynn, Alan’s PA. Hurrah! Lovelace Opens August 23 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8SNIC7THA-Q A companion piece of sorts to Inside Deep Throat, this biopic looks at the life of that film’s lead actress – porn superstar, Linda Lovelace. Interesting cast – Peter Sarsgaard, Sharon Stone, James Franco, Sarah Jessica Parker, Bobby Cannavale – support Amanda Seyfried. Rush Opens September 13 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=umSSvkFCYDk After the success of 2010’s Senna, Ron Howard steps in to the Formula 1 pit to direct this biopic about the rivalry between James Hunt (Chris Hemsworth) and Niki Lauda (Daniel Brühl), scripted by Peter Morgan. Muscle Shoals Opens October 25 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KodHAJb6uck We gave you a sneak peak of this in the current issue of Uncut, and come October you can finally see this solid documentary about the landmark recordings made in Alabama, with great contributions from the Stones, Aretha, Gregg Allman, Wilson Pickett and – of course – Bono. Anchorman 2 Opens December 20 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mZ-JX-7B3uM OK, we couldn’t completely ignore all of this year’s blockbusters. This is certainly one we’re looking forward to. Will Ferrell and co return for more broadcast news hi-jinks. The original was so prescient about the inanities of rolling news, we hope for more good stuff here. Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner Photo credit: Don Hunstein

Although I’m currently watching films due for release in July – which will take us over halfway through 2013 – I’m conscious that there’s a lot of great stuff still to come during the rest of the year.

Here, then, are 13 films coming up through the rest of 2013 that I’m looking forward to. There’s a couple of caveats, though. First, I’ve steered clear of blockbusters – they get enough coverage elsewhere – and second, I’ve only gone for films that currently have a trailer and a confirmed 2013 UK release date.

That means that the Cormac McCarthy-scripted The Councelor is out of the running, because there’s no trailer yet, while recent successes at the Cannes Film Festival like Alexander Payne’s Nebraska and Jim Jarmusch’s Only Lovers Left Alive are also out because they don’t have a release date yet in this country. And before you ask, the Coen brothers’ Inside Llewyn Davis is scheduled for January 2014.

Anyway, onwards…

The Bling Ring

Opens July 5

Something of a return to form for Sofia Coppola, apparently, after the relative disappointment of Somewhere. Emma Watson heads up a cast of celeb-obsessed kids who break into the houses of famous C-listers including Paris Hilton and Lindsay Lohan.

A Field In England

Opens July 5

A psychedelic period drama from Sightseers director Ben Wheatley, where a trio of deserters from the English Civil War find themselves under the spell of a scheming alchemist. Some bad mushrooms come into play, closely followed by madness and terror.

My Father And The Man In Black

Opens July 12

Saul Holiff was Johnny Cash’s manager from 1958 to the mid-Seventies. He committed suicide in 2005, leaving his estranged son Jonathan with a storage unit full of letters, audio-tapes, documents and memorabilia of Saul’s time with Cash. Here, Jonathan pieces together his father’s life and career.

Monsters University

Opens July 12

Origin stories are traditionally the last gasp of creative ennui: a step back, in the absence of new ideas. We’re hoping though that Monsters University – a look at Mike and Sulley during their years in academia – will buck the trend.

Springsteen & I

Opens July 19

A fans eye point of view of the Boss, compiled by director Baillie Walsh (and producer Ridley Scott) from footage submitted by Springsteen aficionados from round the world.

Frances Ha

Opens July 26

A New Wavey comedy, shot in black and white by occasional Wes Anderson collaborator Noah Baumbach, starring Greta Gerwig as a wannabe dancer floundering round Manhattan.

Only God Forgives

Opens August 2

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tcl2hnhze3E

While I’m reluctant to report too much on the views of other journalists, this new collaboration from Drive director Nicolas Winding Refn and star Ryan Gosling divided the critics at Cannes. As with Drive, this appears to be a genre pic with arthouse pretensions, with drug smuggler Gosling and his mum – Kristin Scott Thomas – killing people in Bangkok.

Heaven’s Gate

Opens August 2

I’ve decided to include one reissue in this list: Michael Cimino’s 1980 Western, unfairly dismissed down the years, but worth seeing in its full glory at least once. A majestic, hugely ambitious film, the scale of which is only really understood on the big screen. This is part of nationwide reissue.

Alan Partridge: Alpha Papa

Opens August 7

“On air. Under siege. Out of chat?” announces the poster for the forthcoming Partridge movie, in which the North Norfolk Digital DJ is embroiled in a hostage situation. A quick skim of the IMDB reveals the return of Simon Greenall as Michael, the Geordie Travel Tavern handyman, and Felicity Montagu as Lynn, Alan’s PA. Hurrah!

Lovelace

Opens August 23

A companion piece of sorts to Inside Deep Throat, this biopic looks at the life of that film’s lead actress – porn superstar, Linda Lovelace. Interesting cast – Peter Sarsgaard, Sharon Stone, James Franco, Sarah Jessica Parker, Bobby Cannavale – support Amanda Seyfried.

Rush

Opens September 13

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

After the success of 2010’s Senna, Ron Howard steps in to the Formula 1 pit to direct this biopic about the rivalry between James Hunt (Chris Hemsworth) and Niki Lauda (Daniel Brühl), scripted by Peter Morgan.

Muscle Shoals

Opens October 25

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KodHAJb6uck

We gave you a sneak peak of this in the current issue of Uncut, and come October you can finally see this solid documentary about the landmark recordings made in Alabama, with great contributions from the Stones, Aretha, Gregg Allman, Wilson Pickett and – of course – Bono.

Anchorman 2

Opens December 20

OK, we couldn’t completely ignore all of this year’s blockbusters. This is certainly one we’re looking forward to. Will Ferrell and co return for more broadcast news hi-jinks. The original was so prescient about the inanities of rolling news, we hope for more good stuff here.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Photo credit: Don Hunstein

Rodriguez: “I’m going to run for mayor!”

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Rodriguez reflects on his unexpected musical comeback and his political ambitions in the new issue of Uncut (dated July 2013 and out now). The Detroit singer-songwriter also discusses his new album, which he says is going to have to be “real good” to meet expectation. Rodriguez even reveals ...

Rodriguez reflects on his unexpected musical comeback and his political ambitions in the new issue of Uncut (dated July 2013 and out now).

The Detroit singer-songwriter also discusses his new album, which he says is going to have to be “real good” to meet expectation.

Rodriguez even reveals that he’s planning to run for mayor of Detroit, explaining: “I describe myself as a musical political. I’m born and bred out of Detroit. Detroit is an interesting place… I’m going to get back there for the Doctorate [that he’s being awarded] and I’m going to file to run for mayor.

“To run for mayor, you need a minimum of 515 signatures of valid voters, up to 1,000, they won’t accept any more than that. So I’m going to file and see what happens. I’m petitioning now through other people, so when I get back there for those few days, I’m going to file for office and see what happens.”

Rodriguez, who originally released two albums in the early ’70s, is the subject of the Oscar-winning documentary Searching For Sugar Man.

The new issue of Uncut, which features Bruce Springsteen on the cover, is out now.

Justin Vernon announces new Volcano Choir album

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Bob Iver's Justin Vernon is to release a new album with his Volcano Choir project. Volcano Choir - a collaboration with Collections Of Colonies Of Bees - will release a studio album, Repave on September 3, 2013 on Jagjaguwar records. Scroll down to watch the official trailer for the album. Repave is the follow-up to the 2009 debut, Unmap. The tracklisting for Repave is: 1. "Tiderays" 2. "Acetate" 3. "Byegone" 4. "Comerade" 5. "Alaskans" 6. "Dancepack" 7. "Almanac" 8. "Keel" You can read our review of Vernon's latest project, The Shouting Matches, in the new issue of Uncut, in shops now. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AQVUiEWA1Pg

Bob Iver’s Justin Vernon is to release a new album with his Volcano Choir project.

Volcano Choir – a collaboration with Collections Of Colonies Of Bees – will release a studio album, Repave on September 3, 2013 on Jagjaguwar records. Scroll down to watch the official trailer for the album.

Repave is the follow-up to the 2009 debut, Unmap.

The tracklisting for Repave is:

1. “Tiderays”

2. “Acetate”

3. “Byegone”

4. “Comerade”

5. “Alaskans”

6. “Dancepack”

7. “Almanac”

8. “Keel”

You can read our review of Vernon’s latest project, The Shouting Matches, in the new issue of Uncut, in shops now.

Velvet Underground settle ‘banana’ dispute with Andy Warhol Foundation

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The Velvet Underground have settled their dispute with the Andy Warhol Foundation over the rights to the Warhol-designed 'banana' logo on the sleeve of the band's 1967 debut album, The Velvet Underground And Nico. The band sued the foundation last year after it licensed the 'banana' logo from their...

The Velvet Underground have settled their dispute with the Andy Warhol Foundation over the rights to the Warhol-designed ‘banana’ logo on the sleeve of the band’s 1967 debut album, The Velvet Underground And Nico.

The band sued the foundation last year after it licensed the ‘banana’ logo from their debut for use on iPhone and iPad products, reports Associated Press.

The suit argued that the banana design had become a symbol of the band, and that the foundation had no right to license it. The foundation, which assumed ownership of Andy Warhol‘s copyrights in 1987, argued that the band had no enforceable trademark rights to the image.

The terms of the settlement have not been disclosed.

Associated Press cites John Cale and Lou Reed as plaintiffs in the case.