Home Blog Page 534

Hear new Black Sabbath song “God Is Dead?”

0
Black Sabbath have revealed their new single "God Is Dead?". Scroll down to hear the song now. The 8:51 minute long song is taken from Black Sabbath's much-anticipated new album 13 due for release on June 11. 13 is the first album Osbourne, Tony Iommi and Geezer Butler have recorded together sin...

Black Sabbath have revealed their new single “God Is Dead?”. Scroll down to hear the song now.

The 8:51 minute long song is taken from Black Sabbath’s much-anticipated new album 13 due for release on June 11.

13 is the first album Osbourne, Tony Iommi and Geezer Butler have recorded together since 1978’s Never Say Die!. The album will be available in a number of different formats, including the Standard CD album release, a deluxe double CD album (which includes a second disc of bonus material), 12-inch heavyweight vinyl (180g) in a gatefold sleeve plus a super-deluxe box set containing a Black Sabbath – The Reunion documentary. Three extra tracks set to appear on the deluxe edition of 13 have also just been announced. Scroll down to see the full album tracklisting now.

In advance of the new album, Black Sabbath will tour Australia, New Zealand and play a show at Ozzfest in Japan.

The full 13 tracklist is:

‘End of the Beginning’

‘God is Dead?’

‘Loner’

‘Zeitgeist’

‘Age of Reason’

‘Live Forever’

‘Damaged Soul’

‘Dear Father’

Bonus deluxe edition tracks:

‘Methademic’

‘Peace of Mind’

‘Pariah’

Special offer!

For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only.

The Look Of Love

0

A collaboration between filmmaker Michael Winterbottom and star Steve Coogan, where a lad from the north west of England makes good in unconventional circumstances, accompanied by a bunch of like-minded, but broadly eccentric characters. This is the story of Soho porn entrepreneur Paul Raymond, but it could just as easily describe the trajectory of Tony Wilson, the subject of Winterbottom and Coogan’s first collaboration, 24 Hour Party People – or even Coogan’s own back story, which stretches back to his working class origins in Liverpool. Winterbottom’s film – originally called The King Of Soho – covers the period from the late 1940s to 1992, and broadly follows Raymond’s colourful rise from mind-reading act on Clacton pier to one of the richest men in Britain, with an estimated fortune of £650 million made from real estate and ‘adult publishing’. As per previous Winterbottom/Coogan collaborations, the vibe here is loose and episodic. The fourth wall is broken (“My name is Paul Raymond, welcome to my world of erotica,” Coogan addresses the audience at the film’s start) while Winterbottom plays around with film stock and editing techniques to move the story along. Matt Greenhalgh’s screenplay streamlines Raymond’s story – it skates over assorted lawsuits and extortion attempts – and instead draws out thematic threads from his life, in particular his relationship with women. On one hand, Raymond is a man who made a significant part of his fortune exploiting women, while on the other he adored strong, independent women. Chief among these are his first wife Jean (Anna Friel), glamour model girlfriend Fiona Richmond (Tamsin Egerton) and his free-spirited daughter Debbie (Imogen Poots). Raymond’s wider entourage include Chris Addison – sporting a curly black wig and matching beard – and James Lance as his Men Only editor and lawyer, respectively. Winterbottom brilliantly handles the pace of the gang’s shaky ascent as they attempt to “rewrite the cultural history of the nation”, building up the cocaine use, orgies and lifestyle extravagances with the same forceful persuasion Scorsese brought to GoodFellas. Soon, Raymond is living in the prestigious Arlington House block by the Ritz, in a penthouse apartment with a retractable ceiling. “Ringo helped me design it,” he says proudly, in a rare Partridge-esque moment. “I’m very good friends with The Beatles. Apart from Yoko.” But behind the unconventional, freewheeling exterior, Coogan depicts Raymond as a determined, ruthless businessman. “Normal life is for normal people,” he says at one point, but despite the great wealth he accumulates, the film’s opening and closing images – of the solitary, broken Raymond watching footage of his beloved Debbie on a videotape – ask us to consider whether it’s all worth it. Michael Bonner Special offer! For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only.

A collaboration between filmmaker Michael Winterbottom and star Steve Coogan, where a lad from the north west of England makes good in unconventional circumstances, accompanied by a bunch of like-minded, but broadly eccentric characters. This is the story of Soho porn entrepreneur Paul Raymond, but it could just as easily describe the trajectory of Tony Wilson, the subject of Winterbottom and Coogan’s first collaboration, 24 Hour Party People – or even Coogan’s own back story, which stretches back to his working class origins in Liverpool.

Winterbottom’s film – originally called The King Of Soho – covers the period from the late 1940s to 1992, and broadly follows Raymond’s colourful rise from mind-reading act on Clacton pier to one of the richest men in Britain, with an estimated fortune of £650 million made from real estate and ‘adult publishing’. As per previous Winterbottom/Coogan collaborations, the vibe here is loose and episodic. The fourth wall is broken (“My name is Paul Raymond, welcome to my world of erotica,” Coogan addresses the audience at the film’s start) while Winterbottom plays around with film stock and editing techniques to move the story along. Matt Greenhalgh’s screenplay streamlines Raymond’s story – it skates over assorted lawsuits and extortion attempts – and instead draws out thematic threads from his life, in particular his relationship with women.

On one hand, Raymond is a man who made a significant part of his fortune exploiting women, while on the other he adored strong, independent women. Chief among these are his first wife Jean (Anna Friel), glamour model girlfriend Fiona Richmond (Tamsin Egerton) and his free-spirited daughter Debbie (Imogen Poots). Raymond’s wider entourage include Chris Addison – sporting a curly black wig and matching beard – and James Lance as his Men Only editor and lawyer, respectively.

Winterbottom brilliantly handles the pace of the gang’s shaky ascent as they attempt to “rewrite the cultural history of the nation”, building up the cocaine use, orgies and lifestyle extravagances with the same forceful persuasion Scorsese brought to GoodFellas. Soon, Raymond is living in the prestigious Arlington House block by the Ritz, in a penthouse apartment with a retractable ceiling. “Ringo helped me design it,” he says proudly, in a rare Partridge-esque moment. “I’m very good friends with The Beatles. Apart from Yoko.” But behind the unconventional, freewheeling exterior, Coogan depicts Raymond as a determined, ruthless businessman. “Normal life is for normal people,” he says at one point, but despite the great wealth he accumulates, the film’s opening and closing images – of the solitary, broken Raymond watching footage of his beloved Debbie on a videotape – ask us to consider whether it’s all worth it.

Michael Bonner

Special offer!

For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only.

Storm Thorgerson dies aged 69

0
Storm Thorgerson has died, aged 69. His family released a statement earlier today (April 18) saying he died peacefully earlier in the day, surrounded by family and friends. It read: "He had been ill for some time with cancer though he had made a remarkable recovery from his stroke in 2003. He is ...

Storm Thorgerson has died, aged 69.

His family released a statement earlier today (April 18) saying he died peacefully earlier in the day, surrounded by family and friends. It read:

“He had been ill for some time with cancer though he had made a remarkable recovery from his stroke in 2003. He is survived by his mother Vanji, his son Bill, his wife Barbie Antonis and her two children Adam and Georgia.”

A childhood friend of the founding members of Pink Floyd, Thorgerson designed a host of album sleeves for the band, including The Dark Side Of The Moon.

He also created artwork for albums by Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath, and more recently Muse and Biffy Clyro.

David Gilmour said in a statement via BBC News:

“We first met in our early teens. We would gather at Sheep’s Green, a spot by the river in Cambridge and Storm would always be there holding forth, making the most noise, bursting with ideas and enthusiasm. Nothing has ever really changed.”

He added: “He has been a constant force in my life, both at work and in private, a shoulder to cry on and a great friend. I will miss him.”

Special offer!

For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only.

Dexys, Duke Of York’s Theatre, London, April 16, 2013

0

As you come up the escalator at Leicester Square underground station, you might notice the posters lining the walls advertising Mamma Mia!, Viva Forever! and We Will Rock You. You could be forgiven for wondering what place Dexys have in the heart of West End theatreland, especially here among these big karaoke musicals. But it’s worth remembering that Kevin Rowland has always seemed to relish his band's underdog status – finding something heroic, I guess, in the ongoing struggle against more orthodox forms of music. Indeed, his first appearance on Top Of The Pops – February 7, 1980 – found Dexys Midnight Runners sharing a bill with AC/DC and Buggles, while Legs & Co danced to “The Beat Goes On” by Whispers. 33 years on, Rowland continues to remind us that he’s on the outside looking in. He and his band are here for a nine-night residency at London’s Duke of York’s theatre on St Martin's Lane, sandwiched between David Hare’s play The Judas Kiss and Peter Nichols’ Passion Play, starring Zoë Wanamaker. How on earth did they get in? Did the caretaker forget to lock the doors properly? Of course, Kevin Rowland has always been one of our most challenging and idiosyncratic musicians. Following the 27 year gap between Don’t Stand Me Down and last year’s One Day I’m Going To Soar (and 13 years since his last solo album, My Beauty), Rowland chose a predictably unconventional route back into the public consciousness. Before One Day I’m Going To Soar was released last June, Rowland and the latest incarnation of Dexys played their as yet-unreleased new album in full and in sequence. Of course, the practise of playing albums in their entirety like this is traditionally reserved for a band revisiting a classic album, not launching a new one. But such is the high-stakes drama of the Dexys narrative – and the sheer confidence in the album’s songs – that it arguably felt like there was no other logical way to do it. The programme for these run of dates at the Duke of York’s is essentially the same as last year’s shows: One Day I’m Going To Soar followed by a selection of old favourites. But this setting in the 120 year-old venue seems particularly apt for Rowland and his nine co-conspirators, who give full rein to the more theatrical aspects of a Dexys show. If One Day I’m Going To Soar was the latest chapter in Rowland’s ongoing spiritual autobiography, then these narrative-driven confessionals are splendidly – and stylishly – played out. Rowland leads the sartorial charge with, by my reckoning, three costume changes, while his accomplices opt for a kind of 1940s American casual look. The show opens with a piano motif played in darkness before a spot catches Rowland for “Now”, and the first of many, brilliantly acerbic moments of self-examination: “Oh I know that I've been crazy and that cannot be denied, but inside of me there's always been a secret urge to fly”. The story –boy meets girl, they fall in love, he can’t commit, sad face, the end – is played out in song, and also a series of dialogues between Rowland and Pete Williams, who acts as his foil in the early part of the show, and later, Madeleine Hyland, as the object of Rowland’s lustful attentions. First glimpsed reclining on a chaise lounge above the band, Hyland is a relatively conventional vocal presence compared to Rowland’s rich, swooning soul voice. In essence, she’s a pencil-sketch, a narrative device to get Rowland to the moment of realisation that he is “incape, incape, incapable of love”. All the same, Hyland and Rowland get into a terrific scrap on “I’m Always Going To Love You”, with Hyland, first wooed and now abandoned, snarling at Rowland: “Kevin, don't talk to me ... You saw me as a challenge”. Despite being absent for great chunks of the set, Williams fares well. His banter with Rowland – however well-rehearsed (and in some cases, stretching back to the early Eighties) – is loose and good humoured. Trombonist Big Jim Paterson, Rowland’s longest serving collaborator, elicits some of the biggest cheers of the night. Rowland himself is terrific. He has a Brando-esque emotional intensity, whether during the stripped down soliloquizing on “Me” or snapping into moments of sudden violence. The big songs – especially the encore – find him turning up the soul power, but I kind of prefer the softer croon he uses for the more introspective songs, in particular a show-stopping “It’s OK John Joe”. “We couldn’t leave it like that, could we?” says Pete Williams, ushering in a final act of Dexys classics, including a powerful take on “The Waltz”, a mischievous reworking of “Geno”, a jubilant “I Love You (Listen To This)” and a version of “Until I Believe In My Soul” that simply won’t stop. The finale, “This Is What She’s Like”, repurposes the show as rousing soul revue, Rowland at one point leaning over the side of a box, shouting over and over again, "This is our stuff - this, this, this is our stuff." The stuff of brilliance itself. Dexys played: Now (into) Lost (into) Me She Got A Wiggle You (into) Thinking Of You I'm Always Going To Love You Incapable Of Love Nowhere Is Home Free It's OK John Joe Free Reprise The Waltz Geno (into) Listen To This Until I Believe In my Soul/Light Turns Green I Couldn’t Help It If I Tried This Is What She's Like Photo credit: Dean Chalkley Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner Special offer! For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only.

As you come up the escalator at Leicester Square underground station, you might notice the posters lining the walls advertising Mamma Mia!, Viva Forever! and We Will Rock You. You could be forgiven for wondering what place Dexys have in the heart of West End theatreland, especially here among these big karaoke musicals.

But it’s worth remembering that Kevin Rowland has always seemed to relish his band’s underdog status – finding something heroic, I guess, in the ongoing struggle against more orthodox forms of music.

Indeed, his first appearance on Top Of The Pops – February 7, 1980 – found Dexys Midnight Runners sharing a bill with AC/DC and Buggles, while Legs & Co danced to “The Beat Goes On” by Whispers. 33 years on, Rowland continues to remind us that he’s on the outside looking in. He and his band are here for a nine-night residency at London’s Duke of York’s theatre on St Martin’s Lane, sandwiched between David Hare’s play The Judas Kiss and Peter Nichols’ Passion Play, starring Zoë Wanamaker. How on earth did they get in? Did the caretaker forget to lock the doors properly?

Of course, Kevin Rowland has always been one of our most challenging and idiosyncratic musicians. Following the 27 year gap between Don’t Stand Me Down and last year’s One Day I’m Going To Soar (and 13 years since his last solo album, My Beauty), Rowland chose a predictably unconventional route back into the public consciousness. Before One Day I’m Going To Soar was released last June, Rowland and the latest incarnation of Dexys played their as yet-unreleased new album in full and in sequence. Of course, the practise of playing albums in their entirety like this is traditionally reserved for a band revisiting a classic album, not launching a new one. But such is the high-stakes drama of the Dexys narrative – and the sheer confidence in the album’s songs – that it arguably felt like there was no other logical way to do it.

The programme for these run of dates at the Duke of York’s is essentially the same as last year’s shows: One Day I’m Going To Soar followed by a selection of old favourites. But this setting in the 120 year-old venue seems particularly apt for Rowland and his nine co-conspirators, who give full rein to the more theatrical aspects of a Dexys show. If One Day I’m Going To Soar was the latest chapter in Rowland’s ongoing spiritual autobiography, then these narrative-driven confessionals are splendidly – and stylishly – played out. Rowland leads the sartorial charge with, by my reckoning, three costume changes, while his accomplices opt for a kind of 1940s American casual look. The show opens with a piano motif played in darkness before a spot catches Rowland for “Now”, and the first of many, brilliantly acerbic moments of self-examination: “Oh I know that I’ve been crazy and that cannot be denied, but inside of me there’s always been a secret urge to fly”.

The story –boy meets girl, they fall in love, he can’t commit, sad face, the end – is played out in song, and also a series of dialogues between Rowland and Pete Williams, who acts as his foil in the early part of the show, and later, Madeleine Hyland, as the object of Rowland’s lustful attentions. First glimpsed reclining on a chaise lounge above the band, Hyland is a relatively conventional vocal presence compared to Rowland’s rich, swooning soul voice. In essence, she’s a pencil-sketch, a narrative device to get Rowland to the moment of realisation that he is “incape, incape, incapable of love”. All the same, Hyland and Rowland get into a terrific scrap on “I’m Always Going To Love You”, with Hyland, first wooed and now abandoned, snarling at Rowland: “Kevin, don’t talk to me … You saw me as a challenge”.

Despite being absent for great chunks of the set, Williams fares well. His banter with Rowland – however well-rehearsed (and in some cases, stretching back to the early Eighties) – is loose and good humoured. Trombonist Big Jim Paterson, Rowland’s longest serving collaborator, elicits some of the biggest cheers of the night. Rowland himself is terrific. He has a Brando-esque emotional intensity, whether during the stripped down soliloquizing on “Me” or snapping into moments of sudden violence. The big songs – especially the encore – find him turning up the soul power, but I kind of prefer the softer croon he uses for the more introspective songs, in particular a show-stopping “It’s OK John Joe”.

“We couldn’t leave it like that, could we?” says Pete Williams, ushering in a final act of Dexys classics, including a powerful take on “The Waltz”, a mischievous reworking of “Geno”, a jubilant “I Love You (Listen To This)” and a version of “Until I Believe In My Soul” that simply won’t stop. The finale, “This Is What She’s Like”, repurposes the show as rousing soul revue, Rowland at one point leaning over the side of a box, shouting over and over again, “This is our stuff – this, this, this is our stuff.” The stuff of brilliance itself.

Dexys played:

Now (into)

Lost (into)

Me

She Got A Wiggle

You (into)

Thinking Of You

I’m Always Going To Love You

Incapable Of Love

Nowhere Is Home

Free

It’s OK John Joe

Free Reprise

The Waltz

Geno (into)

Listen To This

Until I Believe In my Soul/Light Turns Green

I Couldn’t Help It If I Tried

This Is What She’s Like

Photo credit: Dean Chalkley

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Special offer!

For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only.

The best of Record Store Day: hear Malkmus, Ty Segall, Golden Gunn, Moon Duo, Dan Deacon and more

0

It’s Record Store Day on Saturday; a kind of weird, but necessary I guess, annual event that’s become a critical point in release schedules. I’ve been going through the lists of releases at recordstoreday.com and thought it might be worth picking out a few things that are worth looking out for. Increasingly, a fair amount of the day’s business is built on canny catalogue management aimed at collectors (especially vinyl fetishists), and there are a bunch of things here that fall roughly into that sector: At The Drive-In - Relationship of Command (Twenty-First Chapter) 12" LP; 4000 copies. Orange Juice – You Can't Hide Your Love Forever/Rip It Up/Texas Fever/ The Orange Juice (Domino) 12" LP; 750 copies each of the first two, 400 each of the second two. R.E.M. - Live In Greensboro EP (Rhino) CD; 5000 copies. This one’s a five-song teaser of the 21-song live set from ’89 that comes as an extra disc with May’s “Green” reissue. Specifically: “So. Central Rain (I’m Sorry)”/“Feeling Gravitys Pull”/“Strange”/“King of Birds”/“I Remember California”. Bob Dylan – Wigwam/Thirsty Boots (Columbia) 7" single; 9500 copies Unreleased demos from the forthcoming “Bootleg Series Vol. 10”, but I imagine you probably knew that. Husker Du – Statues/Amusement (Numero Group) 7" single; 2700 copies. The first Husker Du single from 1980, from before they’d hit the gas and evolved on from these post-punk moves. Couple of contemporaneous demos here, too, and a promise of more archive raids to come. Charlie Poole with the Highlanders - Complete Paramount and Brunswick Recordings (Tompkins Square) 12" LP; 1500 copies. Various Artists - Imaginational Vol. 6: Origins of American Primitive Guitar (Tompkins Square) 12" LP; 1500 copies. Two excellent sets from Tompkins Square. Poole and the Highlanders are a good-time string band recorded in 1929 (The extended soap opera of “A Trip To New York” is well worth a listen), while “Inspirational Anthems 6” is a superb new addition to TS’ flagship series that, this time, collects John Fahey and the Takoma School’s antecedents rather than their followers. Sylvester Weaver, Sam McGee and more recorded between 1923 and 1930. In an increasingly common RSD practice, these two will have wider and more orthodox releases at the end of the month. There’s a reissue of The Grateful Dead - Rare Cuts & Oddities 1966 comp (Rhino) CD; 5500 copies, but Dead fans might also be advised to look out for this one, from Casal, keeping himself busy while the Black Crowes tour puts CRB on hiatus… Neal Casal - Mountains Of The Moon (The Royal Potato Family) 7" single; 500 copies Ty Segall’s year off continues to be amusingly productive, and after the Fuzz activity there’s now a follow-up to his bracing T.Rex covers set from a couple of years back… Ty Segall - Ty Rex 2 (Goner) 7" single; 1500 copies. The flipside features "Cat Black (Wizard Hat)". Some other stuff: Thurston Moore & Loren Connors - The Only Way To Go (Northern Spy) 12"; 2000 copies. Moon Duo - Circles Remixed (Sacred Bones Records) 12" LP; 1100 copies. Dan Deacon Konono Ripoff No 1 (Domino) 7" single; 250 copies. Then of course there’s this Steve Gunn/Hiss Golden Messenger album that I’ve been going on about a lot for the past month or two…. Golden Gunn - Golden Gunn (Three Lobed) 12" LP; 870 copies. And this which, going by the clip below, is going to be a whole lot better than one might’ve expected… Stephen Malkmus and Friends - Can's Ege Bamyasi (Domino/Matador) 12" LP; 1200 copies. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Loju93Ep57c Oh, and I’ve just been told there’s an EP of Oh Sees stuff from the “Floating Coffin” sessions called “Moon Sick”. Knock yourselves out, anyway… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

It’s Record Store Day on Saturday; a kind of weird, but necessary I guess, annual event that’s become a critical point in release schedules. I’ve been going through the lists of releases at recordstoreday.com and thought it might be worth picking out a few things that are worth looking out for.

Increasingly, a fair amount of the day’s business is built on canny catalogue management aimed at collectors (especially vinyl fetishists), and there are a bunch of things here that fall roughly into that sector:

At The Drive-In – Relationship of Command (Twenty-First Chapter) 12″ LP; 4000 copies.

Orange Juice – You Can’t Hide Your Love Forever/Rip It Up/Texas Fever/ The Orange Juice (Domino) 12″ LP; 750 copies each of the first two, 400 each of the second two.

R.E.M. – Live In Greensboro EP (Rhino) CD; 5000 copies.

This one’s a five-song teaser of the 21-song live set from ’89 that comes as an extra disc with May’s “Green” reissue. Specifically: “So. Central Rain (I’m Sorry)”/“Feeling Gravitys Pull”/“Strange”/“King of Birds”/“I Remember California”.

Bob Dylan – Wigwam/Thirsty Boots (Columbia) 7″ single; 9500 copies

Unreleased demos from the forthcoming “Bootleg Series Vol. 10”, but I imagine you probably knew that.

Husker Du – Statues/Amusement (Numero Group) 7″ single; 2700 copies.

The first Husker Du single from 1980, from before they’d hit the gas and evolved on from these post-punk moves. Couple of contemporaneous demos here, too, and a promise of more archive raids to come.

Charlie Poole with the Highlanders – Complete Paramount and Brunswick Recordings (Tompkins Square) 12″ LP; 1500 copies.

Various Artists – Imaginational Vol. 6: Origins of American Primitive

Guitar (Tompkins Square) 12″ LP; 1500 copies.

Two excellent sets from Tompkins Square. Poole and the Highlanders are a good-time string band recorded in 1929 (The extended soap opera of “A Trip To New York” is well worth a listen), while “Inspirational Anthems 6” is a superb new addition to TS’ flagship series that, this time, collects John Fahey and the Takoma School’s antecedents rather than their followers. Sylvester Weaver, Sam McGee and more recorded between 1923 and 1930. In an increasingly common RSD practice, these two will have wider and more orthodox releases at the end of the month.

There’s a reissue of The Grateful Dead – Rare Cuts & Oddities 1966 comp (Rhino) CD; 5500 copies, but Dead fans might also be advised to look out for this one, from Casal, keeping himself busy while the Black Crowes tour puts CRB on hiatus…

Neal Casal – Mountains Of The Moon (The Royal Potato Family) 7″ single; 500 copies

Ty Segall’s year off continues to be amusingly productive, and after the Fuzz activity there’s now a follow-up to his bracing T.Rex covers set from a couple of years back…

Ty Segall – Ty Rex 2 (Goner) 7″ single; 1500 copies.

The flipside features “Cat Black (Wizard Hat)”.

Some other stuff:

Thurston Moore & Loren Connors – The Only Way To Go (Northern Spy) 12″; 2000 copies.

Moon Duo – Circles Remixed (Sacred Bones Records) 12″ LP; 1100 copies.

Dan Deacon Konono Ripoff No 1 (Domino) 7″ single; 250 copies.

Then of course there’s this Steve Gunn/Hiss Golden Messenger album that I’ve been going on about a lot for the past month or two….

Golden Gunn – Golden Gunn (Three Lobed) 12″ LP; 870 copies.

And this which, going by the clip below, is going to be a whole lot better than one might’ve expected…

Stephen Malkmus and Friends – Can’s Ege Bamyasi (Domino/Matador) 12″ LP; 1200 copies.

Oh, and I’ve just been told there’s an EP of Oh Sees stuff from the “Floating Coffin” sessions called “Moon Sick”.

Knock yourselves out, anyway…

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

Coens’ Dylan-inspired folk pic Inside Llewyn Davis set for Cannes Film Festival

0

Just a quick blog today, as I really just wanted to flag up the line-up for this year's Cannes Film Festival, which got announced this morning. As I suspected, the Coens new film, Inside Llewyn Davis, set in Greenwich Village during the early 1960s, is one of the films vying for the top honour, the Palme d'Or, at this year's festival. The film will compete alongside Alexander Payne’s road-trip pic Nebraska, Nicolas Winding Refn’s revenge thriller Only God Forgives, Steven Soderbergh's Liberace biopic Behind The Candelabra and Roman Polanski's adaptation of the play Venus In Fur. There's also new films from Sofia Coppola, Claire Denis, Takashi Miike, François Ozon and Stephen Frears. This year's big Hollywood movie is Baz Luhrmann's adaptation of The Great Gatsby, which opens the festival on May 15. Quite apt, I guess, as Scott Fitzgerald wrote part of Gatsby in Valescure, Saint-Raphaël, further along the road on the Côte d'Azur. Anyway, here's the full-line up of what's what. At some point, I'll get round to blogging about the trailer for Sofia Coppola's The Bling Ring, which went live yesterday. 2013 CANNES FILM FESTIVAL LINEUP OPENER “The Great Gatsby” (Baz Luhrmann) COMPETITION “Behind the Candelabra” (Steven Soderbergh) “Borgman” (Alex van Warmerdam) “The Great Beauty” (Paolo Sorrentino) “Grisgris” (Mahamet Saleh-Haroun) “Heli” (Amat Escalante) “The Immigrant” (James Gray) “Inside Llewyn Davis” (Joel and Ethan Coen) “Jeune et jolie” (Francois Ozon) “Jimmy P.” (Arnaud Desplechin) “La Vie d’Adele” (Abdellatif Kechiche) “Like Father Like Son” (Hirokazu Kore-eda) “Michael Kohlhaas” (Arnaud Despallieres) “Nebraska” (Alexander Payne) “Only God Forgives” (Nicolas Winding Refn) “The Past” (Asghar Farhadi) “Straw Shield” (Takashi Miike) “Tian zhu ding” (Jia Zhangke) “Un chateau en Italie” (Valeria Bruni Tedeschi) “Venus in Fur” (Roman Polanski) OUT OF COMPETITION “All Is Lost” (J.C. Chandor) “Blood Ties” (Guillaume Canet) UN CERTAIN REGARD OPENER: “The Bling Ring” (Sofia Coppola) “Anonymous” (Mohammad Rasoulof) “The Bastards” (Claire Denis) “Bends” (Flora Lau) “Death March” (Adolfo Alix Jr.) “Fruitvale” (Ryan Coogler) “Grand Central” (Rebecca Zlotowski) “La Jaula de Oro” (Diego Quemada-Diez) “L’image manquante” (Rithy Panh) “L’inconnu du lac” (Alain Guiraudie) “Miele” (Valeria Golino) “Norte, hangganan ng kasaysayan” (Lav Diaz) “Omar” (Hany Abu-Assad) “Sarah prefere la course” (Chloe Robichaud) MIDNIGHT SCREENINGS “Blind Detective” (Johnnie To) “Monsoon Shootout” (Amit Kumar) SPECIAL SCREENINGS “Bombay Talkies” (Anurag Kashyap, Dibakar Banerjee, Zoya Akhtar, Karan Johar) “Max Rose” (Daniel Noah) “Muhammad Ali’s Greatest Fight” (Stephen Frears) “Otdat konci” (Taisia Igumentseva) “Stop the Pounding Heart” (Roberto Minervini) “Week End of a Champion” (Roman Polanski) CLOSER “Zulu” (Jerome Salle) Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner Special offer! For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only.

Just a quick blog today, as I really just wanted to flag up the line-up for this year’s Cannes Film Festival, which got announced this morning.

As I suspected, the Coens new film, Inside Llewyn Davis, set in Greenwich Village during the early 1960s, is one of the films vying for the top honour, the Palme d’Or, at this year’s festival.

The film will compete alongside Alexander Payne’s road-trip pic Nebraska, Nicolas Winding Refn’s revenge thriller Only God Forgives, Steven Soderbergh’s Liberace biopic Behind The Candelabra and Roman Polanski’s adaptation of the play Venus In Fur. There’s also new films from Sofia Coppola, Claire Denis, Takashi Miike, François Ozon and Stephen Frears. This year’s big Hollywood movie is Baz Luhrmann’s adaptation of The Great Gatsby, which opens the festival on May 15. Quite apt, I guess, as Scott Fitzgerald wrote part of Gatsby in Valescure, Saint-Raphaël, further along the road on the Côte d’Azur.

Anyway, here’s the full-line up of what’s what. At some point, I’ll get round to blogging about the trailer for Sofia Coppola’s The Bling Ring, which went live yesterday.

2013 CANNES FILM FESTIVAL LINEUP

OPENER

“The Great Gatsby” (Baz Luhrmann)

COMPETITION

“Behind the Candelabra” (Steven Soderbergh)

“Borgman” (Alex van Warmerdam)

“The Great Beauty” (Paolo Sorrentino)

“Grisgris” (Mahamet Saleh-Haroun)

“Heli” (Amat Escalante)

“The Immigrant” (James Gray)

“Inside Llewyn Davis” (Joel and Ethan Coen)

“Jeune et jolie” (Francois Ozon)

“Jimmy P.” (Arnaud Desplechin)

“La Vie d’Adele” (Abdellatif Kechiche)

“Like Father Like Son” (Hirokazu Kore-eda)

“Michael Kohlhaas” (Arnaud Despallieres)

“Nebraska” (Alexander Payne)

“Only God Forgives” (Nicolas Winding Refn)

“The Past” (Asghar Farhadi)

“Straw Shield” (Takashi Miike)

“Tian zhu ding” (Jia Zhangke)

“Un chateau en Italie” (Valeria Bruni Tedeschi)

“Venus in Fur” (Roman Polanski)

OUT OF COMPETITION

“All Is Lost” (J.C. Chandor)

“Blood Ties” (Guillaume Canet)

UN CERTAIN REGARD

OPENER: “The Bling Ring” (Sofia Coppola)

“Anonymous” (Mohammad Rasoulof)

“The Bastards” (Claire Denis)

“Bends” (Flora Lau)

“Death March” (Adolfo Alix Jr.)

“Fruitvale” (Ryan Coogler)

“Grand Central” (Rebecca Zlotowski)

“La Jaula de Oro” (Diego Quemada-Diez)

“L’image manquante” (Rithy Panh)

“L’inconnu du lac” (Alain Guiraudie)

“Miele” (Valeria Golino)

“Norte, hangganan ng kasaysayan” (Lav Diaz)

“Omar” (Hany Abu-Assad)

“Sarah prefere la course” (Chloe Robichaud)

MIDNIGHT SCREENINGS

“Blind Detective” (Johnnie To)

“Monsoon Shootout” (Amit Kumar)

SPECIAL SCREENINGS

“Bombay Talkies” (Anurag Kashyap, Dibakar Banerjee, Zoya Akhtar, Karan Johar)

“Max Rose” (Daniel Noah)

“Muhammad Ali’s Greatest Fight” (Stephen Frears)

“Otdat konci” (Taisia Igumentseva)

“Stop the Pounding Heart” (Roberto Minervini)

“Week End of a Champion” (Roman Polanski)

CLOSER

“Zulu” (Jerome Salle)

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Special offer!

For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only.

Black Sabbath add extra date to UK tour

0
Black Sabbath have added an extra date to their UK tour. The Midlands band, who are due to tour in December in promotion of their new album 13 will now perform a second date at Birmingham's NIA on December 22. A gig on December 20 was previously announced and has already sold out. 13, which will ...

Black Sabbath have added an extra date to their UK tour.

The Midlands band, who are due to tour in December in promotion of their new album 13 will now perform a second date at Birmingham’s NIA on December 22. A gig on December 20 was previously announced and has already sold out.

13, which will be released on June 10, is the first album Ozzy Osbourne, Tony Iommi and Geezer Butler have recorded together since 1978’s Never Say Die!.

Black Sabbath will now play:

London O2 Arena (December 10)

Belfast Odyssey Arena (12)

Sheffield Arena (14)

Glasgow Hydro (16)

Manchester Arena (18)

Birmingham LG Arena (20/22)

Meanwhile, Ozzy Osbourne recently revealed that he had relapsed and begun drinking and taking drugs again for the past 18 months. The singer apologised to his fans and stated that he was now sober again.

Special offer!

For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only.

Crazy Horse guitarist Frank ‘Poncho’ Sampedro: “My gut tells me this is the last tour”

0

Crazy Horse guitarist Frank "Poncho" Sampedro has revealed that he thinks the current Neil Young & Crazy Horse tour could be their last. In an extensive interview on Rolling Stone, Poncho explained "I just think once it stops it's going to be kind of hard to get it rolling again. My gut tells me this is really the last tour. I hate saying their ages, but I'm 64 and I'm the baby of the band. I love playing and we're playing as good as we ever did, but at any time something could go down with any one of us." Neil Young & Crazy Horse begin the European leg of their current world tour in Berlin on June 2. Their run of UK dates starts on June 10. Speaking of the physical impact of the current tour, Poncho said, "It takes a lot of energy to play that much. It just seems at some point something is going to break. I already had an operation on my thumb. Neil's wrist bugs him, and he has to tape it when he plays. You can't fool time. You can't count on this happening again in five years." In related news, Graham Nash yesterday confirmed that Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young will release their long-awaited live 1974 album in August. Neil Young & Crazy Horse play: Newcastle Metro Radio Arena (June 10) Birmingham LG Arena (11) Glasgow SECC (13) London O2 Arena (17) Liverpool Echo Arena (August 18) London O2 Arena (19) Special offer! For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only.

Crazy Horse guitarist Frank “Poncho” Sampedro has revealed that he thinks the current Neil Young & Crazy Horse tour could be their last.

In an extensive interview on Rolling Stone, Poncho explained “I just think once it stops it’s going to be kind of hard to get it rolling again. My gut tells me this is really the last tour. I hate saying their ages, but I’m 64 and I’m the baby of the band. I love playing and we’re playing as good as we ever did, but at any time something could go down with any one of us.”

Neil Young & Crazy Horse begin the European leg of their current world tour in Berlin on June 2. Their run of UK dates starts on June 10.

Speaking of the physical impact of the current tour, Poncho said, “It takes a lot of energy to play that much. It just seems at some point something is going to break. I already had an operation on my thumb. Neil’s wrist bugs him, and he has to tape it when he plays. You can’t fool time. You can’t count on this happening again in five years.”

In related news, Graham Nash yesterday confirmed that Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young will release their long-awaited live 1974 album in August.

Neil Young & Crazy Horse play:

Newcastle Metro Radio Arena (June 10)

Birmingham LG Arena (11)

Glasgow SECC (13)

London O2 Arena (17)

Liverpool Echo Arena (August 18)

London O2 Arena (19)

Special offer!

For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only.

My Bloody Valentine added to T In The Park line-up

0
My Bloody Valentine have been added to the T In The Park bill. The festival, which takes place in Balado, Kinross between July 12-14 will be headlined this year by Mumford & Sons, Rihanna and The Killers. Also included in the raft of artists set to appear are Foals, Haim, Phoenix, Snoop Dogg, K...

My Bloody Valentine have been added to the T In The Park bill.

The festival, which takes place in Balado, Kinross between July 12-14 will be headlined this year by Mumford & Sons, Rihanna and The Killers. Also included in the raft of artists set to appear are Foals, Haim, Phoenix, Snoop Dogg, Kendrick Lamar, Calvin Harris and Beady Eye, along with Yeah Yeah Yeahs and Dizzee Rascal and Kraftwerk.

My Bloody Valentine will perform at the festival months after releasing their long awaited album mbv in February.

Other new additions to the festival line-up announced today (April 18) include LA hardcore band Trash Talk, FIDLAR and The VirginMarys.

T in the Park 2013 tickets are available now.

A selection of artists announced for T In The Park so far include:

Adam Beyer

Alt-J

Azealia Banks

Bastille

Beady Eye

British Sea Power

Calvin Harris

Chase and Status

CHVRCHES

Claude VonStroke

The Courteeners

Daughter

David Guetta

Deacon Blue

Disclosure

Dizzee Rascal

Earl Sweatshirt

Eats Everything

Editors

Emeli Sandé

Everything Everything

FOALS

Frank Turner

The Fratellis

Frightened Rabbit

Frank Ocean

Haim

The Heavy

Hot Natured

Imagine Dragons

Jackmaster

Jake Bugg

Joy Orbison

Kendrick Lamar

Kraftwerk

Labrinth

Laurent Garnier

The Lumineers

Miles Kane

Modest Mouse

Modestep

Nina Kraviz

Nina Nesbitt

Noah and the Whale

Ocean Colour Scene

Of Monsters and Men

The Original Rudeboys

Palma Violets

Paloma Faith

Peace

Phoenix

The Proclaimers

Richie Hawtin

Rudimental

Snoop Dogg

The Script

Seth Troxler

Silicone Soul

Slam

Stereophonics

The Strypes

Tom Odell

Tribes

Twin Atlantic

Two Door Cinema Club

The View

Tyler, The Creator

Villagers

Yeah Yeah Yeahs

The 1975

Special offer!

For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only.

Blur swap places with The Stone Roses to headline weekend two of Coachella Festival

0
The Stone Roses will no longer be topping the bill at this weekend's Coachella Festival in California as they did last Friday. Blur - who opened for the Manchester legends on the festival's main stage on April 12 – will now close the Coachella Stage this Friday (April 19) on the second weekend of...

The Stone Roses will no longer be topping the bill at this weekend’s Coachella Festival in California as they did last Friday.

Blur – who opened for the Manchester legends on the festival’s main stage on April 12 – will now close the Coachella Stage this Friday (April 19) on the second weekend of the festival.

The Stone Roses headlined the opening night of the festival in front of a small but dedicated crowd, running through a set heavy with fan-favourites, including ‘I Wanna Be Adored’, ‘Made Of Stone’ and ‘Waterfall’, in addition to frantic renditions of ‘This Is The One’ and ‘I Am The Resurrection’.

Blur, who played before the Roses, delivered a greatest hits performance that included classic tracks ranging from ‘Beetlebum’ and ‘Out Of Time’ to ‘Tender’, ‘The Universal’, ‘This Is A Low’ and ‘For Tomorrow’.

Special offer!

For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only.

Morrissey: “Thatcher’s funeral rubbing salt in wounds”

0
Morrissey has reiterated his feelings about the late Margaret Thatcher, saying that he thinks her funeral is an insult to "her victims" while also criticising media coverage of her life and work. Morrissey previously said that "Margaret Thatcher didn't give a shit about people" following her death ...

Morrissey has reiterated his feelings about the late Margaret Thatcher, saying that he thinks her funeral is an insult to “her victims” while also criticising media coverage of her life and work.

Morrissey previously said that “Margaret Thatcher didn’t give a shit about people” following her death on April 8 and posted a lengthy statement about it on fansite True To You on Monday (April 15). Now in a new post titled ‘Surely How I Feel Is Nothing?’, the singer tackles the way in which newspapers have reported on Thatcher’s leadership with Morrissey claiming that the BBC are “reporting not on how things actually are on British streets, but on how they would prefer things to be”.

An excerpt from the statement reads: “I have listened and I have seen a lack of truth that we had dared not believe existed in modern Britain. Margaret Thatcher has left the order of the world, and she is not to blame for the reports of her own death – reports so dangerously biased and full of intolerant menace that we now wonder how we can possibly believe anything that has ever been recorded in British history books.”

He added: “The coverage by the British media of Thatcher’s death has been exclusively absorbed in Thatcher’s canonisation to such a censorial degree that we suddenly see the modern British establishment as an uncivilised entity of delusion, giving the cold shoulder to truth, and offering indescribable disgust to anyone unimpressed by Thatcher. Even to contest Thatcher’s worth is termed ‘anarchist’, and this source of insanity – intolerant of debate – is spearheaded by the BBC reporting not on how things actually are on British streets, but on how they would prefer things to be. For those of us who survived despite Thatcherism, and who recall Thatcher as a living hell, The Daily Mail and The Guardian have a steadfast message for us: You are nothing.”

Moving on to Thatcher’s funeral, which takes place today (April 17), Morrissey continues: “Our thoughts are further burdened by the taunting extravagance of Thatcher’s funeral; the ceremonial lavish, the military salute, stripping Thatcher’s victims of everything, and rubbing salt in wounds with teasing relish.”

Elsewhere in the statement, Morrissey criticises David Cameron and states that the BBC are hypocrites for reporting on the Pussy Riot story in 2012 and then refusing to play “Ding Dong! The Witch Is Dead” on its chart show.

Special offer!

For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only.

Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young to release 1974 live album “in August”

0
Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young are planning to release their long-awaited live album from their 1974 tour "in August", according to Graham Nash. Speaking to Rolling Stone, Nash said, "It's going to come out August 27th. It's going to fuckin' stun people. We only multi-tracked eight or nine shows ...

Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young are planning to release their long-awaited live album from their 1974 tour “in August”, according to Graham Nash.

Speaking to Rolling Stone, Nash said, “It’s going to come out August 27th. It’s going to fuckin’ stun people. We only multi-tracked eight or nine shows from the tour, and we’ve chosen the best from those gigs. We’ve had to do a little tuning, but not that much . . . But the spirit of the band! If I take myself out the band and look at it, it was a fuckin’ great band.”

The band have yet to agree on a title for the album, although according to David Crosby, “I want to call it What Could Possibly Go Wrong?.”

“I’m going to dig my heels and seriously fight for that,” Crosby told Rolling Stone. “You can’t hear that without laughing your head off. It’s important to look at yourselves with a sense of humor in retrospect and realize what gigantic egos we had and what idiots we were. But I think it’s a great title. If I don’t get it, I’ll threaten to quit the band – at which point I’ll be reminded that there’s no band to quit!”

Crosby recently Tweeted about the album, claiming the mixes he’d heard were “unbelievable”.

The album is believed to have been mixed by Graham Nash and Stanley Johnston and Joel Bernstein.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJ2hb45cRWk

Special offer!

For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only.

Morrissey – Kill Uncle

0

Morrissey’s partial rewriting of his past proves grimly successful... A couple of years ago, an older and more resilient Morrissey dismissed his second album as “substandard”, adding in mitigation Kill Uncle‘s genesis coincided with “a very bad time for me personally”. A fancy vol-au-vent offered up in 1991 to an audience still hungry for the plain fare of Madchester, the quirky Kill Uncle’s timing – comic and otherwise - was appalling. Too little way too late, the follow-up to 1988’s Viva Hate was hacked together at a residential studio, with Fairground Attraction guitarist Mark Nevin, drummer Andrew Paresi, and Madness producers Clive Langer and Alan Winstanley feeding Morrissey a regular supply of backing tracks in the hope that they would take the former Smith’s fancy. They thought they had made something intricate and beautiful. The world disagreed. Paresi showed UNCUT the fax Morrissey sent him after Kill Uncle only charted at No8. “Decline inevitable,” it reads. “Oh, if only you hadn’t bought that farm.” Remastered and reworked 22 years on, Morrissey has unfinished business with Kill Uncle. Beefed up from its original 33-minute playing time with the seemingly random insertion of two previously available tracks, changes to the original running order will mystify many, but the runt of Morrissey’s litter is less lightweight than its reputation would suggest. “Our Frank” is the whole thing in microcosm, Morrissey archly yearning for the distraction of booze and fags, before the full horror blurts out. “Won’t somebody help,” he keens. “Won’t somebody stop me, from thinking, from thinking all the time, so deeply, so bleakly.” The most ill-advised “Asian Rut” and the Sparks-ish “Mute Witness” purport to keep things chirpy, but for all the knockabout Nutty Boys production, the same grim themes persist: loneliness, betrayal, reaching out for something noble and failing. Morrissey clumsily attempts courtship on “King Leer”, and returns for a second go on the elegantly undersold “Driving Your Girlfriend Home”, with confidante Linder Sterling on backing vocals. A strange fear once more gripping him as he hears his passenger’s litany of woes, he finds himself at journey’s end “shaking hands, goodnight so politely”. Any pretence at levity fades to black at the end: In its original incarnation, Kill Uncle ends with a crushing one-two. Morrissey finds grim consolation in the prospect of dying childless on “(I’m) The End of the Family Line” (“I’m spared the pain of ever saying goodbye”), before the plaintive “There’s A Place In Hell For Me And My Friends” coolly imagines a happier afterlife. For version 2.0, Morrissey daubs a tuberous cock and balls on to this bleak tableau, flipping the final tracks over and substituting the rocked-up version of “There’s A Place…” from the US-only At KROQ EP for the original, sober resignation giving way to mulish defiance. In its first incarnation, he sings: “And looking back we will forgive – we had no choice we always did.” A year on, after what Paresi called “a Dr Who like regeneration of Morrissey's persona”, it has become: “I won’t forgive and I never will, never will, never will.” However, like a UPVC door jammed into a listed building, it is an act of vandalism that only serves to highlight the beauty of the original fittings. Soft and playful on the surface, Kill Uncle is Morrissey’s most elegant record and – as with 1997’s Southpaw Grammar – it has a hefty undertow for all of its perceived flimsiness. Unloved, maybe, but not unlovely. EXTRAS: Neglected Herman’s Hermits cover “East West”, and two tracks recorded by the Your Arsenal lineup – the superb “Pashernate Love” and the rehashed “There Is A Place In Hell For Me And My Friends” - are available elsewhere. The BBC session tracks appended to a reissued “Last Of The Famous International Playboys” single – “People Are The Same Everywhere”, “Action Is My Middle Name” and “The Kid’s A Looker” – are not. (7/10) Jim Wirth Q+A MARK NEVIN, GUITARIST AND CO-WRITER Do you understand the changes Morrissey has made to the running order? I really don’t understand them. I would have liked to have seen the other songs I wrote and recorded with Morrissey around the same time included. Why the loud version of ‘There’s A Place In Hell For Me And My Friends’ is included instead of the original is baffling. Hook End is a residential studio – how was it living together while recording? At meal times we would have these huge and delicious vegetarian feasts with Morrissey sitting at the head of the table, quietly residing over the rest of us as we nervously scrambled to make conversation. I didn’t really know anyone and the whole experience felt unreal. I felt so alone and the burden of being the new Morrissey collaborator was overwhelming. I would go back to my room and lay on the bed in the foetal position: ‘I want my mum!’ Was Morrissey one of the lads, or was he very much on his own? He was both at different times. I was surprised to find myself playing football with him and the other guys, even more surprised that he was pretty good. He is also a genius at pop music trivial pursuit - unbeatable. I think he struggles to relate to people in social situations, certainly back then, but to be fair, I don’t think I was doing that well myself at the time. Kill Uncle received some pretty hard reviews: how did that affect you? I was really hurt by them. I imagine his decision to work with me was surprising to a lot of people and being known as the bloke behind ‘Perfect’, this chirpy upbeat pop hit, wasn’t regarded as very cool. Perhaps if he had made the same album with Brian Eno it would have been listened to with different ears. INTERVIEW: JIM WIRTH Special offer! For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only.

Morrissey’s partial rewriting of his past proves grimly successful…

A couple of years ago, an older and more resilient Morrissey dismissed his second album as “substandard”, adding in mitigation Kill Uncle‘s genesis coincided with “a very bad time for me personally”. A fancy vol-au-vent offered up in 1991 to an audience still hungry for the plain fare of Madchester, the quirky Kill Uncle’s timing – comic and otherwise – was appalling.

Too little way too late, the follow-up to 1988’s Viva Hate was hacked together at a residential studio, with Fairground Attraction guitarist Mark Nevin, drummer Andrew Paresi, and Madness producers Clive Langer and Alan Winstanley feeding Morrissey a regular supply of backing tracks in the hope that they would take the former Smith’s fancy.

They thought they had made something intricate and beautiful. The world disagreed. Paresi showed UNCUT the fax Morrissey sent him after Kill Uncle only charted at No8. “Decline inevitable,” it reads. “Oh, if only you hadn’t bought that farm.”

Remastered and reworked 22 years on, Morrissey has unfinished business with Kill Uncle. Beefed up from its original 33-minute playing time with the seemingly random insertion of two previously available tracks, changes to the original running order will mystify many, but the runt of Morrissey’s litter is less lightweight than its reputation would suggest.

“Our Frank” is the whole thing in microcosm, Morrissey archly yearning for the distraction of booze and fags, before the full horror blurts out. “Won’t somebody help,” he keens. “Won’t somebody stop me, from thinking, from thinking all the time, so deeply, so bleakly.”

The most ill-advised “Asian Rut” and the Sparks-ish “Mute Witness” purport to keep things chirpy, but for all the knockabout Nutty Boys production, the same grim themes persist: loneliness, betrayal, reaching out for something noble and failing. Morrissey clumsily attempts courtship on “King Leer”, and returns for a second go on the elegantly undersold “Driving Your Girlfriend Home”, with confidante Linder Sterling on backing vocals. A strange fear once more gripping him as he hears his passenger’s litany of woes, he finds himself at journey’s end “shaking hands, goodnight so politely”.

Any pretence at levity fades to black at the end: In its original incarnation, Kill Uncle ends with a crushing one-two. Morrissey finds grim consolation in the prospect of dying childless on “(I’m) The End of the Family Line” (“I’m spared the pain of ever saying goodbye”), before the plaintive “There’s A Place In Hell For Me And My Friends” coolly imagines a happier afterlife.

For version 2.0, Morrissey daubs a tuberous cock and balls on to this bleak tableau, flipping the final tracks over and substituting the rocked-up version of “There’s A Place…” from the US-only At KROQ EP for the original, sober resignation giving way to mulish defiance. In its first incarnation, he sings: “And looking back we will forgive – we had no choice we always did.” A year on, after what Paresi called “a Dr Who like regeneration of Morrissey’s persona”, it has become: “I won’t forgive and I never will, never will, never will.”

However, like a UPVC door jammed into a listed building, it is an act of vandalism that only serves to highlight the beauty of the original fittings. Soft and playful on the surface, Kill Uncle is Morrissey’s most elegant record and – as with 1997’s Southpaw Grammar – it has a hefty undertow for all of its perceived flimsiness. Unloved, maybe, but not unlovely.

EXTRAS: Neglected Herman’s Hermits cover “East West”, and two tracks recorded by the Your Arsenal lineup – the superb “Pashernate Love” and the rehashed “There Is A Place In Hell For Me And My Friends” – are available elsewhere. The BBC session tracks appended to a reissued “Last Of The Famous International Playboys” single – “People Are The Same Everywhere”, “Action Is My Middle Name” and “The Kid’s A Looker” – are not.

(7/10)

Jim Wirth

Q+A

MARK NEVIN, GUITARIST AND CO-WRITER

Do you understand the changes Morrissey has made to the running order?

I really don’t understand them. I would have liked to have seen the other songs I wrote and recorded with Morrissey around the same time included. Why the loud version of ‘There’s A Place In Hell For Me And My Friends’ is included instead of the original is baffling.

Hook End is a residential studio – how was it living together while recording?

At meal times we would have these huge and delicious vegetarian feasts with Morrissey sitting at the head of the table, quietly residing over the rest of us as we nervously scrambled to make conversation. I didn’t really know anyone and the whole experience felt unreal. I felt so alone and the burden of being the new Morrissey collaborator was overwhelming. I would go back to my room and lay on the bed in the foetal position: ‘I want my mum!’

Was Morrissey one of the lads, or was he very much on his own?

He was both at different times. I was surprised to find myself playing football with him and the other guys, even more surprised that he was pretty good. He is also a genius at pop music trivial pursuit – unbeatable. I think he struggles to relate to people in social situations, certainly back then, but to be fair, I don’t think I was doing that well myself at the time.

Kill Uncle received some pretty hard reviews: how did that affect you?

I was really hurt by them. I imagine his decision to work with me was surprising to a lot of people and being known as the bloke behind ‘Perfect’, this chirpy upbeat pop hit, wasn’t regarded as very cool. Perhaps if he had made the same album with Brian Eno it would have been listened to with different ears.

INTERVIEW: JIM WIRTH

Special offer!

For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only.

The 16th Uncut Playlist Of 2013

0

Strange juxtapositions and all that, but please have a listen to the Date Palms track and, in the unlikely event you haven’t been near the internet for the past few days, the Daft Punk clip. Nile Rodgers’ expression is a thing of joy, among other things. Apologies for the clandestine business around Number 18, but that record hasn’t actually been announced yet. Good, though (I’m not convinced everything else is on this list). Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Date Palms – The Dusted Sessions (Thrill Jockey) 2 Daft Punk – Get Lucky (Sony) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pefow5Kp_W4 3 Date Palms – Honey Devash (Mexican Summer) 4 The Deviants – Ptooff! (Angel Air) 5 Mavis Staples – One True Vine (Anti-) 6 Queens Of The Stone Age – ...Like Clockwork (Matador) 7 Charlie Poole With The Highlanders - The Complete Paramount & Brunswick Recordings, 1929 (Tompkins Square) 8 Michael Chapman – Wrecked Again (Light In The Attic) 9 RP Boo – Legacy (Planet Mu) 10 Danny Paul Grody – Three (Three Lobed) 11 Darker My Love – Alive As You Are (Dangerbird) 12 Mark Kozelek & Jimmy Lavalle – Perils From The Sea (Caldo Verde) 13 John Fogerty – Wrote A Song For Everyone (Columbia) 14 The Master Musicians Of Bukkake – Far West (Important) 15 The Shouting Matches – Grownass Man (Middle West) 16 Pusha T – Numbers On The Boards (GOOD Music) 17 Richard Thompson – Electric (Proper) 18 19 Stellar Om Source – Joy One Mile (RVNG INTL) 20 Basement Jaxx – Back 2 The Wild (37 Adventures) 21 Ravi Shankar - The Living Room Sessions Part 2 (East Meets West Music) 22 Sigur Ros – Kveikur (XL)

Strange juxtapositions and all that, but please have a listen to the Date Palms track and, in the unlikely event you haven’t been near the internet for the past few days, the Daft Punk clip. Nile Rodgers’ expression is a thing of joy, among other things.

Apologies for the clandestine business around Number 18, but that record hasn’t actually been announced yet. Good, though (I’m not convinced everything else is on this list).

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

1 Date Palms – The Dusted Sessions (Thrill Jockey)

2 Daft Punk – Get Lucky (Sony)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pefow5Kp_W4

3 Date Palms – Honey Devash (Mexican Summer)

4 The Deviants – Ptooff! (Angel Air)

5 Mavis Staples – One True Vine (Anti-)

6 Queens Of The Stone Age – …Like Clockwork (Matador)

7 Charlie Poole With The Highlanders – The Complete Paramount & Brunswick Recordings, 1929 (Tompkins Square)

8 Michael Chapman – Wrecked Again (Light In The Attic)

9 RP Boo – Legacy (Planet Mu)

10 Danny Paul Grody – Three (Three Lobed)

11 Darker My Love – Alive As You Are (Dangerbird)

12 Mark Kozelek & Jimmy Lavalle – Perils From The Sea (Caldo Verde)

13 John Fogerty – Wrote A Song For Everyone (Columbia)

14 The Master Musicians Of Bukkake – Far West (Important)

15 The Shouting Matches – Grownass Man (Middle West)

16 Pusha T – Numbers On The Boards (GOOD Music)

17 Richard Thompson – Electric (Proper)

18

19 Stellar Om Source – Joy One Mile (RVNG INTL)

20 Basement Jaxx – Back 2 The Wild (37 Adventures)

21 Ravi Shankar – The Living Room Sessions Part 2 (East Meets West Music)

22 Sigur Ros – Kveikur (XL)

Jarvis Cocker to release book on British folk clubs

0
Jarvis Cocker's first acquisition as Editor-at-Large at book publishers Faber and Faber will be a book on the history of British folk clubs. Singing from the Floor by JP Bean, was recommended to Cocker by Richard Hawley. "When my friend Richard Hawley said he'd met 'a man in a pub who had a book...

Jarvis Cocker‘s first acquisition as Editor-at-Large at book publishers Faber and Faber will be a book on the history of British folk clubs.

Singing from the Floor by JP Bean, was recommended to Cocker by Richard Hawley.

“When my friend Richard Hawley said he’d met ‘a man in a pub who had a book for me’ I have to admit I was slightly dubious,” Cocker said in a statement. “But he was right. Singing from the Floor portrays an important movement in vernacular culture in the voices of the people who made it happen – and that’s not an easy task. Especially when the events in question took place many years ago and may have involved the consumption of alcohol. JP Bean has captured this moment before it is lost forever, and has made it live again on the page. He’s a very clever chap. Let’s raise a glass to him.”

Richard Hawley added: “This book is about music, music made from life, it’s also a work of love. If you love music you’ll love this book. Life is better with music and far, far better with love. This book is for the brave lovers of it ALL.”

The book documents the British folk revival of the 1950s and 60s where musicians – inspired by the skiffle craze, rediscovered Britain’s traditional folk music alongside the folk and blues being imported from America.

Singing From The Floor will be published in April 2014.

Special offer!

For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only.

Jack White invites fans to record themselves on vinyl

0
Jack White has invited fans into his Nashville studio to record themselves on vinyl. As part of his role as official ambassador to this year's Record Store Day, White's label Third Man Records will open a special booth to the public. Fans will be able to use the 1947 Voice-o-Graph, which is the onl...

Jack White has invited fans into his Nashville studio to record themselves on vinyl.

As part of his role as official ambassador to this year’s Record Store Day, White’s label Third Man Records will open a special booth to the public. Fans will be able to use the 1947 Voice-o-Graph, which is the only public vinyl record recording booth in the world. Participants will be able to record up to two minutes of audio which will then be cut to a six-inch phonograph disc disc. Scroll down to watch a video of White’s Raconteur bandmate Brandon Benson demonstrating it.

“Actively venturing to your local record shop is one of those honors and privileges in this life that we just shouldn’t take for granted,” said White in a statement on the Third Man website. “Certain beautiful experiences can only happen in the environment of a record store and I just thought that nothing could drive that point home more than a one-of-a-kind machine that lets you not only record your own vinyl record, but send it to anyone, anywhere in the world to share a song, poem, or private message with. I know those warm, scratchy tones send tingles up (and sometimes down) my spine. Even if you aren’t instrumentally inclined, you could hold up an iPhone playing a song and sing along with the music and combine the best of all worlds tangible, digital and romantic.”

Third Man are encouraging people to post their finished recording to a loved one – and will be selling custom-printed envelopes and postage stamps to make that happen. Fans will also be able to submit digitised versions of their recordings to Third Man, which will be streamed on their website.

Special offer!

For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only.

Daft Punk announce tracklisting for Random Access Memories

0
Daft Punk have announced the tracklisting to their forthcoming new album Random Access Memories via Twitter's Vine app. The duo are set to release their long-awaited new album on May 21. The record, which is the follow-up to 2005's Human After All, includes collaborations with synth pioneer Giorgi...

Daft Punk have announced the tracklisting to their forthcoming new album Random Access Memories via Twitter’s Vine app.

The duo are set to release their long-awaited new album on May 21. The record, which is the follow-up to 2005’s Human After All, includes collaborations with synth pioneer Giorgio Moroder and Nile Rogers.

A trailer played at last weekend’s Coachella Festival in California, which teased the track “Get Lucky” also confirmed rumours that Pharrell Williams and Julian Casablancas will also feature on the LP.

The tracklisting to ‘Random Access Memories’:

‘Give Life Back to Music’

‘The Game of Love’

‘Giorgio by Moroder’

‘Within’

‘Instant Crush’

‘Lose Yourself to Dance’

‘Touch’

‘Get Lucky’

‘Beyond’

‘Motherboard’

‘Fragments of Time’

‘Doin’ It Right’

‘Contact’

Earlier this week, Daft Punk revealed that they have also been working on tracks for Kanye West‘s next album. The duo said that they had made two songs with Kanye and that the rapper was “screaming primally” on his vocal takes. “It was very raw: he was rapping – kind of screaming primally, actually,” Thomas Bangalter said in an interview with Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo adding. “Kanye doesn’t give a fuck. He’s a good friend.”

Special offer!

For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only.

Hear new Laura Marling song “Master Hunter”

0
Laura Marling has unveiled a new song, "Master Hunter". Click here to listen to the track, via Spin. The song is taken from her forthcoming album, Once I Was An Eagle. The follow-up to 2011's A Creature I Don't Know, it will be released May 27. It was recorded at the Three Crows Studio owned by ...

Laura Marling has unveiled a new song, “Master Hunter”.

Click here to listen to the track, via Spin. The song is taken from her forthcoming album, Once I Was An Eagle.

The follow-up to 2011’s A Creature I Don’t Know, it will be released May 27.

It was recorded at the Three Crows Studio owned by Marling’s regular producer Ethan Johns, with Dom Monks on engineering duties.

You can read Uncut’s preview of Once I Was An Eagle here.

The full tracklisting for Once I Was An Eagle is:

‘Take The Night Off’

‘I Was An Eagle’

‘You Know’

‘Breathe’

‘Master Hunter’

‘Little Love Caster’

‘Devil’s Resting Place’

‘Interlude’

‘Undine’

‘Where Can I Go?’

‘Once’

‘Pray For Me’

‘When Were You Happy? (And How Long Has That Been)’

‘Love Be Brave’

‘Little Bird’

‘Saved These Words’

Special offer!

For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only.

Uncut at the Great Escape 2013

0

The full line-up for this year’s Great Escape festival in Brighton was announced today and along with it the line-up for the Uncut Stage at the Pavilion Theatre, where we’ll be hosting three nights of great music from May 16-May 18, with four bands each night. It’s probably our strongest-ever Great Escape bill and includes several of my own current favourites, among them Phosphorescent, Allah-Las, Lord Huron and Mikal Cronin, although there’s no one I’d really want to miss. If you’re down in Brighton for the festival, we hope you’ll make it along to at least one of these shows. As ever it will be good to meet you. If you’ve missed the announcement elsewhere, here’s the full lowdown on the Uncut stage. Thursday, May 16 Phosphorescent Lord Huron Dean McFee Red River Dialect Friday, May 17 Mikal Cronin Allah-Las Charlie Boyer & The Voyeurs C Joynes Saturday, May 18 Woods White Fence Mary Epworth The Strypes And as a preview/taster of what to expect, here are some typical recent performances by some of the acts who’ll be at the Pavilion. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t0ybgQ0ARBo http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=co-qxu7DnMc http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q1ryO4c_94w http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w9lv__IU_18 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n_26dW56_Gw Special offer! For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only. Phosphorescent pic: Pieter M Van Hattem

The full line-up for this year’s Great Escape festival in Brighton was announced today and along with it the line-up for the Uncut Stage at the Pavilion Theatre, where we’ll be hosting three nights of great music from May 16-May 18, with four bands each night. It’s probably our strongest-ever Great Escape bill and includes several of my own current favourites, among them Phosphorescent, Allah-Las, Lord Huron and Mikal Cronin, although there’s no one I’d really want to miss.

If you’re down in Brighton for the festival, we hope you’ll make it along to at least one of these shows. As ever it will be good to meet you.

If you’ve missed the announcement elsewhere, here’s the full lowdown on the Uncut stage.

Thursday, May 16

Phosphorescent

Lord Huron

Dean McFee

Red River Dialect

Friday, May 17

Mikal Cronin

Allah-Las

Charlie Boyer & The Voyeurs

C Joynes

Saturday, May 18

Woods

White Fence

Mary Epworth

The Strypes

And as a preview/taster of what to expect, here are some typical recent performances by some of the acts who’ll be at the Pavilion.

Special offer!

For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only.

Phosphorescent pic: Pieter M Van Hattem

Peter Howson’s David Bowie portraits to go up for auction

0

Ten original drawings of David Bowie from 1994 are among the 390 works being auctioned by Scottish artist Peter Howson OBE. The painter's wife Terry Howson is auctioning the works to raise money for the couple's daughter Lucie, who has Asperger's syndrome, The Times reports. The 10 Bowie drawings are from 1994, when the singer posed for Howson. The pair struck up a friendship after Bowie bought two of his paintings depicting the Bosnian war, where he was an official war artist. "He had bought two of my paintings from an exhibition at the Imperial War Museum, including a very controversial painting of a rape in Bosnia," the artist recalls. "We were invited to dinner at The Dorchester with the Bosnian prime minister. It was a very strange meeting." Recounting how Bowie then posed for the artist in his London studio, he said: "David agreed willingly and he was a fantastic subject to draw. I had him sitting quite high, on a 5ft plinth and at one point he seemed to doze off and fell to the floor…We had a laugh about it." The Bowie drawings are valued between £1,000 and £2,000 and are all head studies. The auction will take place at McTear's Auctioneers in Glasgow on 28 April. Special offer! For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only.

Ten original drawings of David Bowie from 1994 are among the 390 works being auctioned by Scottish artist Peter Howson OBE.

The painter’s wife Terry Howson is auctioning the works to raise money for the couple’s daughter Lucie, who has Asperger’s syndrome, The Times reports.

The 10 Bowie drawings are from 1994, when the singer posed for Howson. The pair struck up a friendship after Bowie bought two of his paintings depicting the Bosnian war, where he was an official war artist.

“He had bought two of my paintings from an exhibition at the Imperial War Museum, including a very controversial painting of a rape in Bosnia,” the artist recalls. “We were invited to dinner at The Dorchester with the Bosnian prime minister. It was a very strange meeting.”

Recounting how Bowie then posed for the artist in his London studio, he said: “David agreed willingly and he was a fantastic subject to draw. I had him sitting quite high, on a 5ft plinth and at one point he seemed to doze off and fell to the floor…We had a laugh about it.”

The Bowie drawings are valued between £1,000 and £2,000 and are all head studies. The auction will take place at McTear’s Auctioneers in Glasgow on 28 April.

Special offer!

For one week only, subscribe to Uncut from only £15.35 and save up to 50%! Don’t miss out on this great offer as it won’t be around for long. Please note, the 50% discount is available to UK Direct Debit subscribers only.