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Scott Walker to present show at the Sydney Opera House

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Scott Walker will present his most recent album, 2012’s Bish Bosch, as a unique three-dimensional experience at the Sydney Opera House. Running from May 24 to June 10, Bish Bosch: Ambisymphonic has been developed by Walker with mixed media artists Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard. It will feature t...

Scott Walker will present his most recent album, 2012’s Bish Bosch, as a unique three-dimensional experience at the Sydney Opera House.

Running from May 24 to June 10, Bish Bosch: Ambisymphonic has been developed by Walker with mixed media artists Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard.

It will feature the Bish Bosch album remixed and reassembled and will take place in a purpose-built geodesic dome of speakers, to create a 3D experience. The event will form part of this year’s Vivid LIVE series, which will also feature Kraftwerk’s 3D show, as well as sets from Bobby Womack and Matthew E White.

“Bish Bosch: Ambisymphonic” will run nightly with free admittance. Tickets can be booked on the Vivid LIVE website.

To read Uncut’s review of Bish Bosch, click here on your iPad/iPhone and here on your Kindle Fire or Nook.

Michelle Shocked: ‘I’m damn sorry’ as audio of the concert emerges

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Michelle Shocked has finally responded to accusations that her comments at a California concert were homophobic. Shocked released a statement last night, claiming those comments have been gravely misinterpreted. Purported audio of the concert has also come to light. On Sunday (March 17), Shocked re...

Michelle Shocked has finally responded to accusations that her comments at a California concert were homophobic. Shocked released a statement last night, claiming those comments have been gravely misinterpreted. Purported audio of the concert has also come to light.

On Sunday (March 17), Shocked reportedly told her audience at Yoshi’sin San Francisco “When they stop Prop 8 [the California initiative that banned gay marriage] and force priests at gunpoint to marry gays, it will be the downfall of civilization and Jesus will come back.” In the commotion caused by those comments she was reported to have said, “”You are going to leave here and tell people ‘Michelle Shocked said God hates faggots.'”

In a written statement to radio station KQED, the born-again Christian Shocked doesn’t deny saying either of those things. What she does suggest is that the first statement was made in the context of other devout Christians incorrectly believing that “When they stop Prop 8…it will be the downfall of civilization.” Shocked further says that her request for listeners to report “Michelle Shocked said God hates faggots” was anticipating that her apologizing for her faith would be misinterpreted.

Shocked’s statement to KQED reads:

“I do not, nor have I ever, said or believed that God hates homosexuals (or anyone else). I said that some of His followers believe that. I believe intolerance comes from fear, and these folks are genuinely scared. When I said “Twitter that Michelle Shocked says “God hates faggots,” I was predicting the absurd way my description of, my apology for, the intolerant would no doubt be misinterpreted. The show was all music, and the audience tweets said they enjoyed it. The commentary came about ten minutes later, in the encore.

“And to those fans who are disappointed by what they’ve heard or think I said, I’m very sorry: I don’t always express myself as clearly as I should. But don’t believe everything you read on facebook or twitter. My view of homosexualtiy has changed not one iota. I judge not. And my statement equating repeal of Prop 8 with the coming of the End Times was neither literal nor ironic: it was a description of how some folks – not me – feel about gay marriage.”

The San Francisco Guardian released an anonymous recording claimed to be of the incident.

In it, Shocked struggles through a statement about her simultaneous support of gay rights and Christianity – leaving it somewhat possible to misinterpret. Things begin to veer off track after a song request mentions a love of the Gospel.

“Any other lovers of invisible men in here? This is sincerely the two things I’m passionate about, y’all. I love me some Jesus and I love liberation. And I did not know how I was going to go to San Francisco and authentically represent both…

“I was in a prayer meeting yesterday. You got to appreciate how scared, how scared folks on that side of the equation are. I mean, from their vantage point, and I really shouldn’t say ‘their’ because it’s mine too, we are nearly at the end of time. And from our vantage point we are gonna be — I think maybe Chinese water torture is going to be the means, the method, once Prop. 8 gets instated, and once preachers are held at gun point and forced to marry the homosexuals, I’m pretty sure that that will be the signal for Jesus to come on back.

“You said you wanted reality.

“If someone would be so gracious to tweet out ‘Michelle Shocked just said from stage ‘God hates faggots.’’ Would you do it now?”

At that point members of the audience appear to get the wrong impression, believing her to be insulting gays. She responds to their comments, thinking they are arguing against gay rights.

Yoshi’s has taken the audience’s side. They tweeted this yesterday (March 20) evening:

“WE AT YOSHI’S SF DO NOT & WILL NOT EVER TOLERATE THE TYPE OF BIGOTRY & HATRED EXHIBITED LAST NIGHT BY @MShocked SHE WILL NEVER BE BACK.”

The Yoshi’s tweet is representative of how badly this story has spun out of Shocked’s control between the initial reports of her comments and her statement yesterday. A spate of US shows were cancelled. Media outlets (including www.uncut.co.uk) were forced to react based on witness statements while Shocked declined to comment.

Shocked concluded her statement with an apology for any misunderstanding:

“But I am damn sorry. If I could repeat the evening, I would make a clearer distinction between a set of beliefs I abhor, and my human sympathy for the folks who hold them. I say this not because I want to look better. I have no wish to hide my faults, and – clearly – I couldn’t if I tried.”

John Grant – Pale Green Ghosts

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Former Czar's emotionally raw second - Sinead sings backing... John Grant is not a man of mystery. In the interviews around the release of his startling 2010 debut album Queen Of Denmark, the former leader of The Czars talked with bracing honesty about his homosexuality, his battle to overcome addictions to booze and drugs, his flirtations with suicide. He told us his mordant love songs were about a guy named Charlie. And then Grant topped all that by using an appearance at last Summer’s Meltdown festival in London with friends Hercules And Love Affair to announce to a shocked audience that he is HIV-positive. But Pale Green Ghosts, which takes its name from a song inspired by the Colorado drives young Grant would take to new wave clubs along a Denver to Boulder road lined by Russian olive trees, also betrays the confidence Grant has taken from the ecstatic reaction to the Midlake-produced Queen Of Denmark. Still, the album’s a big ask: specifically, he’s asking still relatively new fans to travel with him from bucolic Texas to his current creative base of Reykjavik and the quintessentially European electronica of Gus Gus’s Biggi Veira, co-producer of these eleven emotionally raw new songs. The lyrics are still dominated by witty, raging and self-immolating open letters to the chronically passive-aggressive Charlie, and the presence of Midlake rhythm section McKenzie Smith and Paul Alexander ensures that the album is roughly split between Grant’s familiar, ‘70s John Lennon-meets-John Cale balladry and the kind of stark industrial electro-pop that Grant was travelling along that tree-lined road to dance to back in the ‘80s. Little did he imagine, as he danced to “Mandinka”, that its maker Sinead O’Connor would be providing backing vocals on his records twenty-five years later, as she does on three of the songs here. The title track opens the album and introduces the listener to Grant’s new direction, his burnished croon bathed in reverb over the burbling, stark and discreetly disco analog synth backing, coming on somewhere between James Murphy and Clues-era Robert Palmer. It’s a style that works perfectly on “Ernest Borgnine” where Grant addresses his health in self-lacerating verses (“Now what did you expect/You spent your life on your knees”) while the chorus echoes the debut album’s “Sigourney Weaver”; a surreal juxtaposition and an escape into the melodramas and removed realities of the movies and actors Grant loves. The most purely beautiful song, based largely on acoustic guitar but enhanced by a ghostly Moog solo, is “It Doesn’t Matter To Him”, where Grant confesses that, despite a life of music, friends, family and sobriety, the grief over lost love, the final knowledge that “I am invisible to him”, invades every waking thought. But the song which, one suspects, is destined to be Grant’s anthem is “GMF”, another stately non-electronic ballad in which Grant declares, in an irresistible, unforgettable chorus, that he is '”The greatest motherfucker that you’re ever gonna meet.” It’s a masterpiece of narcissism laced with bathos, as Grant digs up Richard Burton’s corpse to play him in the inevitable movie, and concludes, as he analyses the reasons why he is not the King of the world, that “I should have practiced my scales/I should not be attracted to males”. The abrupt changes between lush vintage balladry and stark electro ensure that Pale Green Ghosts is not as instantly cohesive as Queen Of Denmark. But it is arguably more satisfying, in its artistic courage, its refusal to meet expectations, and its willingness to paint a brand new picture of a gay demi-monde where the triumphs and tragedies have a deeper resonance than simple melodrama or camp. It also lets us know that, whatever Grant does next, it will surprise and provoke because, even though its maker is 43-years-old, he is only on the beginning of a journey to find himself, in his art as in his troubled, chaotic life. You never know, perhaps album three will find someone to accuse that isn’t Charlie. The poor guy’s ears must be burnt to a crisp by now. Garry Mulholland Q&A John Grant Why so much synthesizer on Pale Green Ghosts? Because I love synthesizers more than anything in the whole world. Is Vince Clarke the prime influence? Well, I listened the shit out of the two Yazoo albums when they came out. But I also love New Order, Cabaret Voltaire, Chris And Cosey and Yello. “Ernest Borgnine” is the one song where you directly address the fact that you are HIV positive. Did you really meet him? Yes, and I was really delighted. He was Hollywood royalty. Amazing face, amazing voice… one of the greatest American character actors. The verses deal with the fact that I got HIV after I became sober, so I felt like there was no excuse. To still go out and make this horrible mistake was like, “Did you have to add this to the fucking mess?” The painful break-up songs concern the same ex-lover that you were singing about on Queen Of Denmark. But it seems like you’re shouting at a brick wall… Yeah. His motto was that he didn’t want to say things to hurt me so he didn’t say anything. Which I found much more hurtful than being told to fuck off. It affected me so deeply because it was the first relationship I experienced after I got sober. It was raw for me because I couldn’t just do a bunch of blow off some guy’s hard cock. In last month’s Uncut, Sinead O’Connor said that, if you ever decided to be straight, she was “oiled up and ready for you.” Tempted? Ha! Absolutely. I would give it a whirl. INTERVIEW: GARRY MULHOLLAND

Former Czar’s emotionally raw second – Sinead sings backing…

John Grant is not a man of mystery. In the interviews around the release of his startling 2010 debut album Queen Of Denmark, the former leader of The Czars talked with bracing honesty about his homosexuality, his battle to overcome addictions to booze and drugs, his flirtations with suicide. He told us his mordant love songs were about a guy named Charlie. And then Grant topped all that by using an appearance at last Summer’s Meltdown festival in London with friends Hercules And Love Affair to announce to a shocked audience that he is HIV-positive.

But Pale Green Ghosts, which takes its name from a song inspired by the Colorado drives young Grant would take to new wave clubs along a Denver to Boulder road lined by Russian olive trees, also betrays the confidence Grant has taken from the ecstatic reaction to the Midlake-produced Queen Of Denmark. Still, the album’s a big ask: specifically, he’s asking still relatively new fans to travel with him from bucolic Texas to his current creative base of Reykjavik and the quintessentially European electronica of Gus Gus’s Biggi Veira, co-producer of these eleven emotionally raw new songs.

The lyrics are still dominated by witty, raging and self-immolating open letters to the chronically passive-aggressive Charlie, and the presence of Midlake rhythm section McKenzie Smith and Paul Alexander ensures that the album is roughly split between Grant’s familiar, ‘70s John Lennon-meets-John Cale balladry and the kind of stark industrial electro-pop that Grant was travelling along that tree-lined road to dance to back in the ‘80s. Little did he imagine, as he danced to “Mandinka”, that its maker Sinead O’Connor would be providing backing vocals on his records twenty-five years later, as she does on three of the songs here.

The title track opens the album and introduces the listener to Grant’s new direction, his burnished croon bathed in reverb over the burbling, stark and discreetly disco analog synth backing, coming on somewhere between James Murphy and Clues-era Robert Palmer. It’s a style that works perfectly on “Ernest Borgnine” where Grant addresses his health in self-lacerating verses (“Now what did you expect/You spent your life on your knees”) while the chorus echoes the debut album’s “Sigourney Weaver”; a surreal juxtaposition and an escape into the melodramas and removed realities of the movies and actors Grant loves.

The most purely beautiful song, based largely on acoustic guitar but enhanced by a ghostly Moog solo, is “It Doesn’t Matter To Him”, where Grant confesses that, despite a life of music, friends, family and sobriety, the grief over lost love, the final knowledge that “I am invisible to him”, invades every waking thought. But the song which, one suspects, is destined to be Grant’s anthem is “GMF”, another stately non-electronic ballad in which Grant declares, in an irresistible, unforgettable chorus, that he is ‘”The greatest motherfucker that you’re ever gonna meet.” It’s a masterpiece of narcissism laced with bathos, as Grant digs up Richard Burton’s corpse to play him in the inevitable movie, and concludes, as he analyses the reasons why he is not the King of the world, that “I should have practiced my scales/I should not be attracted to males”.

The abrupt changes between lush vintage balladry and stark electro ensure that Pale Green Ghosts is not as instantly cohesive as Queen Of Denmark. But it is arguably more satisfying, in its artistic courage, its refusal to meet expectations, and its willingness to paint a brand new picture of a gay demi-monde where the triumphs and tragedies have a deeper resonance than simple melodrama or camp.

It also lets us know that, whatever Grant does next, it will surprise and provoke because, even though its maker is 43-years-old, he is only on the beginning of a journey to find himself, in his art as in his troubled, chaotic life. You never know, perhaps album three will find someone to accuse that isn’t Charlie. The poor guy’s ears must be burnt to a crisp by now.

Garry Mulholland

Q&A

John Grant

Why so much synthesizer on Pale Green Ghosts?

Because I love synthesizers more than anything in the whole world. Is Vince Clarke the prime influence? Well, I listened the shit out of the two Yazoo albums when they came out. But I also love New Order, Cabaret Voltaire, Chris And Cosey and Yello.

“Ernest Borgnine” is the one song where you directly address the fact that you are HIV positive. Did you really meet him?

Yes, and I was really delighted. He was Hollywood royalty. Amazing face, amazing voice… one of the greatest American character actors. The verses deal with the fact that I got HIV after I became sober, so I felt like there was no excuse. To still go out and make this horrible mistake was like, “Did you have to add this to the fucking mess?”

The painful break-up songs concern the same ex-lover that you were singing about on Queen Of Denmark. But it seems like you’re shouting at a brick wall…

Yeah. His motto was that he didn’t want to say things to hurt me so he didn’t say anything. Which I found much more hurtful than being told to fuck off. It affected me so deeply because it was the first relationship I experienced after I got sober. It was raw for me because I couldn’t just do a bunch of blow off some guy’s hard cock.

In last month’s Uncut, Sinead O’Connor said that, if you ever decided to be straight, she was “oiled up and ready for you.” Tempted?

Ha! Absolutely. I would give it a whirl.

INTERVIEW: GARRY MULHOLLAND

The 12th Uncut Playlist Of 2013

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Plenty to listen to here again this week, and less dubious content than there was in the 11th playlist. One off-the-scale stinker, though… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Kawabata Makoto's Mainliner – Revelation Space (Riot Season) 2 Glenn Jones – My Garden State (Thrill Jockey) 3 Merchandise – Totale Nite (Night People) 4 Laura Marling – Once I Was An Eagle (Virgin) 5 Helado Negro – Invisible Life (Asthmatic Kitty) 6 Various Artists – Midnight Steppers: 70 Masterpieces By 34 Blues Piano Heroes (Fantastic Voyage) 7 The Woolen Men – The Woolen Men (Woodsist) 8 Peter Gordon & Factory Floor –Beachcombing (Optimo) 9 Herbcraft – Astral Body Electric (Woodsist) 10 Alan Wilson – The Blind Owl (Severn) 11 Van Dyke Parks – Songs Cycled (Bella Union) 12 Golden Gunn - Golden Gunn (Three Lobed) 13 Vampire Weekend – Modern Vampires Of The City (XL) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mX46e4GtlXM http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_mDxcDjg9P4 14 Mark Lanegan & Duke Garwood – Black Pudding (Heavenly) 15 Parquet Courts – Light Up Gold (What’s Your Rupture) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JFQUVCAqCF0 16 Rod Stewart – Time (Decca) 17 Primal Scream – More Light (1st International) 18 Savages – She Will (Matador/Pop Noire) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kebq-cENNn0 19 Dirty Beaches – Drifters/Love Is the Devil (Zoo Music) 20 Kiki Pau – Pines (Beyond Beyond Is Beyond) 21 Lady Lamb The Beekeeper – Ripley Pine (Ba Da Bing ) 22 Charlie Boyer & The Voyeurs – Clarietta (Heavenly) 23 David Bowie – The Next Day (RCA) 24 The Pastels – Slow Summits (Domino)

Plenty to listen to here again this week, and less dubious content than there was in the 11th playlist. One off-the-scale stinker, though…

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

1 Kawabata Makoto’s Mainliner – Revelation Space (Riot Season)

2 Glenn Jones – My Garden State (Thrill Jockey)

3 Merchandise – Totale Nite (Night People)

4 Laura Marling – Once I Was An Eagle (Virgin)

5 Helado Negro – Invisible Life (Asthmatic Kitty)

6 Various Artists – Midnight Steppers: 70 Masterpieces By 34 Blues Piano Heroes (Fantastic Voyage)

7 The Woolen Men – The Woolen Men (Woodsist)

8 Peter Gordon & Factory Floor –Beachcombing (Optimo)

9 Herbcraft – Astral Body Electric (Woodsist)

10 Alan Wilson – The Blind Owl (Severn)

11 Van Dyke Parks – Songs Cycled (Bella Union)

12 Golden Gunn – Golden Gunn (Three Lobed)

13 Vampire Weekend – Modern Vampires Of The City (XL)

14 Mark Lanegan & Duke Garwood – Black Pudding (Heavenly)

15 Parquet Courts – Light Up Gold (What’s Your Rupture)

16 Rod Stewart – Time (Decca)

17 Primal Scream – More Light (1st International)

18 Savages – She Will (Matador/Pop Noire)

19 Dirty Beaches – Drifters/Love Is the Devil (Zoo Music)

20 Kiki Pau – Pines (Beyond Beyond Is Beyond)

21 Lady Lamb The Beekeeper – Ripley Pine (Ba Da Bing )

22 Charlie Boyer & The Voyeurs – Clarietta (Heavenly)

23 David Bowie – The Next Day (RCA)

24 The Pastels – Slow Summits (Domino)

Dave Grohl reveals he asked PJ Harvey to front Nirvana concert cover

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Dave Grohl has revealed that he asked PJ Harvey to join the remaining Nirvana members on stage to replace Kurt Cobain. Speaking in this week's NME the Foo Fighters frontman said that he approached Harvey to play with his Sound City players – the band featured in his documentary about the Califor...

Dave Grohl has revealed that he asked PJ Harvey to join the remaining Nirvana members on stage to replace Kurt Cobain.

Speaking in this week’s NME the Foo Fighters frontman said that he approached Harvey to play with his Sound City players – the band featured in his documentary about the California studio where Nirvana recorded ‘Nevermind’.

When asked if he would ever cover a Nirvana track live, he said: “Every once in a while we talk about it. For the Sound City gig here in London we were thinking about musicians that we could invite because Stevie Nicks and John Fogerty couldn’t make it. Someone came up with the idea of doing a Nirvana song with PJ Harvey. Kurt loved her and we love her and we thought, ‘Yeah, what would we do?’ I said: ‘God, what if we were to do ‘Milk It’ from ‘In Utero’ with Polly singing?’ We all looked at each other like, ‘Woah, that would be amazing…’ and then she couldn’t do it!”

He continued: “The thing is, it’s sacred ground. If we were ever to do something like that it would have to be right because you want to pay tribute. There’s a reason Foo Fighters don’t do Nirvana songs, and it’s a good reason.”

Paul McCartney announces the ‘Out There!’ tour for 2013

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Paul McCartney has announced plans for a 2013 tour, entitled Out There!. The former member of The Beatles has only revealed two dates so far – at the National Stadium in Warsaw, Poland on June 22 and the Happel Stadium in Vienna, Austria on June 27 – but has said that more dates will be announc...

Paul McCartney has announced plans for a 2013 tour, entitled Out There!.

The former member of The Beatles has only revealed two dates so far – at the National Stadium in Warsaw, Poland on June 22 and the Happel Stadium in Vienna, Austria on June 27 – but has said that more dates will be announced shortly.

A statement posted on PaulMcCartney.com reads: The tour will see Paul and his band travel the world throughout the year, even visiting some places they’ve never been before. Further announcements and dates will be added in the coming weeks so stay tuned to PaulMcCartney.com for updates and ticketing details.

The website also states that McCartney is currently working on a new studio album, to follow last year’s covers record, ‘Kisses On The Bottom’.

McCartney will headline the Bonnaroo Festival in Manchester, Tennessee this summer, alongside Mumford and Sons and Tom Petty.

For Record Store Day on April 20, Paul McCartney & Wings will release a live version of ‘Maybe I’m Amazed’, originally released in 1976 as a radio promo single, on 12″ vinyl.

Paul McCartney was reportedly ignored when he began performing Beatles songs on a train in North America recently as passengers thought he was a busker.

The star was travelling with his wife Nancy Shevell in a New Orleans street car when he reportedly “burst into a medley of some of The Beatles biggest hits”. Unfortunately, rather than enjoy a rare opportunity to see McCartney up close and personal, his fellow passengers ignored him.

The Stone Roses documentary to be released in June

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The Stone Roses documentary Made Of Stone is to open nationwide on June 5, it has been confirmed. The film was made by This Is England director Shane Meadows and goes behind the scenes on the Manchester band's 2012 reunion, from the early stages to their celebratory hometown gigs at Heaton Park. Th...

The Stone Roses documentary Made Of Stone is to open nationwide on June 5, it has been confirmed.

The film was made by This Is England director Shane Meadows and goes behind the scenes on the Manchester band’s 2012 reunion, from the early stages to their celebratory hometown gigs at Heaton Park. The event will be satellite-linked to 100 cinemas as part of nationwide preview screenings running concurrently with the premiere launch, with tickets for both the host venue and the satellite-linked cinemas made available to the public.

A premiere for the film, with all members of the band in attendance, will take place in Manchester on May 30 with a number of fans who attended last year’s Warrington Parr Hall and Heaton Park gigs who are featured in the film receiving tickets to the premiere in Manchester. Images of the chosen fans will be posted on the film’s official Facebook and Twitter pages in the coming weeks.

Speaking about the film, Shane Meadows said: “Making this film, I got to be part of something truly remarkable, the double decade awaited ‘resurrection’ of my all time favourite band, The Stone Roses. People say that you can’t recapture your youth, it’ll never be the same second time round etc, but that’s utter rubbish. The Roses were never allowed to reach their peak first time around so as far as I and millions of fans around the world were concerned, with this comeback the Roses could be even greater. This film isn’t a history lesson, nor is it a two hour concert film. It is a film about defying the odds, sticking it to the man and telling the cynics to shut their pie-holes!”

Discussing the film with NME recently, producer Mark Herbert teased: “I’m not allowed to say very much, but what I can say is that it feels like a Shane Meadows film as well as a music documentary. Imagine the amazing music of the Roses combined with all the qualities that Shane’s films are known for.”

Meadows filmed the band for almost a year from their reunion press conference in October 2011 to their most recent live shows in August 2012. He was granted unprecedented access to the band, so his film will include intimate scenes of early rehearsals in a remote barn as well as the only official footage from the Roses’ comeback shows in Barcelona, Amsterdam, Lyon, Hamburg, Belfast, Japan and of course Heaton Park.

Michelle Shocked responds to homophobia furore (sort of)

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Michelle Shocked, in a series of vague, hard to parse tweets, may be claiming homophobic remarks made on Sunday were intended in irony. As we have reported witnesses claim Shocked told her audience at a March 17 show in San Francisco “When they stop Prop 8 [the California initiative that banned gay marriage] and force priests at gunpoint to marry gays, it will be the downfall of civilization and Jesus will come back” and "You are going to leave here and tell people 'Michelle Shocked said God hates faggots” amid an anti-gay rant. Shocked is yet to publicly respond. Though the singer has replied to a number of tweets, she rarely answers in a straight answer and it’s often hard to tell her serious message – like when she corrects users who ask her why she said “God hates fags:”

Michelle Shocked, in a series of vague, hard to parse tweets, may be claiming homophobic remarks made on Sunday were intended in irony.

As we have reported witnesses claim Shocked told her audience at a March 17 show in San Francisco “When they stop Prop 8 [the California initiative that banned gay marriage] and force priests at gunpoint to marry gays, it will be the downfall of civilization and Jesus will come back” and “You are going to leave here and tell people ‘Michelle Shocked said God hates faggots” amid an anti-gay rant. Shocked is yet to publicly respond.

Though the singer has replied to a number of tweets, she rarely answers in a straight answer and it’s often hard to tell her serious message – like when she corrects users who ask her why she said “God hates fags:”

She chides fans, journalists and miscellaneous people looking for a clear response to the incident.

But to extrapolate from the three tweets that seem both serious and address the heart of controversy, Shocked appears to be saying her statement was misunderstood by the crowd, taken out of context, meant ironically and reflects the opposite of her beliefs.

As Shocked alludes in her response to Ultramundane, she will be giving a full account on Nichole Sandler’s radio show, tomorrow at 8 am PST.

David Bowie Is… V&A, London

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Towards the end of the V&A’s David Bowie Is… exhibition, tucked away on a wall next to the handwritten lyrics for “Heroes” and a postcard from Christopher Isherwood, are a set of door keys that have evidently seen better days. After a fascinating, exhaustive trip through over 60 costumes...

Towards the end of the V&A’s David Bowie Is… exhibition, tucked away on a wall next to the handwritten lyrics for “Heroes” and a postcard from Christopher Isherwood, are a set of door keys that have evidently seen better days. After a fascinating, exhaustive trip through over 60 costumes and 370 objects, including pages of handwritten lyrics, sheet music, diary excerpts, photographs, posters, record sleeves, video installations – the full extent of Bowie’s 40 year plus career, in other words – the one recognizably normal object here is a rather cumbersome set of rusting keys to the apartment at Hauptstraße 155, Shöneberg, Berlin, that Bowie shared in the late 1970s with Iggy Pop. Even rock stars, it seems, need front door keys.

Long before the front door keys, the first thing we see as we enter David Bowie Is… are a pyramid of oranges. This is Pyramid (Soul City), a 1967 installation by South African sculptor Roelof Louw; next to it, on a video screen embedded into the wall, Gilbert & George explain in grainy black and white footage the origins of their Singing Sculpture performance. The curators of David Bowie Is… are clearly conscious of the problems involved in mounting an event about an artist who has lived so vividly in the public eye. As Bowie’s career has been rigorously analysed, dissected, studied and documented, you could be forgiven for wondering exactly what David Bowie Is… plans to offer us that we didn’t already know. But with their surprising opening salvo of Louw and Gilbert & George, they’re telling us: wait, we know, this is something different.

The Louw and Gilbert & George are indicative, too, of something else. Ostensibly, they’re here to help present Bowie – particularly during his early years – in a broader cultural context. Other artifacts from this period include photos of Mick Jagger, the front cover of The Times from Monday, January 6, 1969 showing the first colour photograph of the Earth from outer space, the Japanese poster for 2001: A Space Odyssey, the Sgt Pepper album sleeve and David Pelham’s original cover art for JG Ballard’s novel, The Drowned World. But these also illustrate Bowie’s ability to assimilate external influences and use them to better himself, to propel him beyond Beckenham to the stars. His cultural appetite is ferocious.

Alongside this, we get the first glimpse of the memorabilia from the Bowie archive itself. There’s a letter, dated September 17, 1965, from Bowie’s first manager, Ralph Horton, advising his future manager, Ken Pitt that “I have now changed David’s name to David Bowie.” A poster for a show at the Festival Hall, with Bowie on the bill below Tyrannosaurus Rex, Roy Harper and Stefan Grossman – “vibrations by John Peel” – on Whit-Monday, June 3. There’s sketches, record sleeves, the green striped jacket he wore in the Kon-rads. On a video screen, you can watch the teenage Bowie on television defending his right to have long hair.

To be honest, the sheer volume of objects, installations and displays is pretty overwhelming. In the second room, I realize at one point that I am standing in front of a mannequin wearing the “short bodysuit with rabbit design” Bowie wore on the 1972 Ziggy tour which stands on a giant copy of George Steiner’s In Bluebeard’s Castle next to a Marshall amp with ‘David Bowie is… plagiarism or revolution’ written on it, while above the mannequin’s head 20 or so books are suspended from the roof, including Room At The Top, The Divided Self and The American Way Of Death. Meanwhile, “Jean Genie” in playing on the PA and on the headset we’re given on the way in, Howard Goodall is explaining how Bowie writes songs. I honestly don’t know where to turn.

The trick, I think, is to take your time and not try and do everything. If you want to look at costumes, you can take your pick on everything from the pierrot outfit Bowie wore in the Ashes To Ashes video to a Freddie Buretti suit he wore to the 1975 Grammy awards and so on. Outside the first room, there is no particular sense of chronology. The Screaming Lord Byron costume from Julien Temple’s Jazzin’ For Blue Jean film stands opposite the blue suit he wore in the “Life On Mars?” video.

The memorabilia is, arguably, more rewarding. As a fan, the handwritten lyrics for songs like “Ziggy Stardust” and “Fashion” just bring out the geek in me. Look at his funny little handwriting! But things like the diary excerpts offer us a tantalizing glimpse inside Bowie’s thought processes. One page, from January 30, 1975, begins “some wonderful publishing in Fame, my first co-write with Lennon, a Beatle, about my future”. There is a mileage chart of the first Ziggy tour, neatly written in biro, his proposal for the Beckenham Arts Lab, a set of Brian Eno’s Oblique Strategies cards, the painstakingly detailed lighting plan for the Station To Station tour… It’s hard not to list everything in the show, simply because it’s all fascinating. Even the small area given over to Bowie’s paintings exerts a certain pull: although you probably only need to see his ‘Berlin Landscape With J.O’ (Iggy Pop to you and me) the once. All of this shows a man constantly engaged with the creative process, who is – quite literally – sketching ideas on the back of a packet of Gitanes as he goes. And the deeper you dig, the more rewarding this exhibition is.

The final room is dedicated to the music. On a triptych of giant screens you can watch footage of Bowie in performance. I watched the Top Of The Pops performance of “The Jean Genie” run in full on one screen while Mick Rock’s promo video ran concurrently on the next screen. A reminder that, whatever there is to analyse, dissect, study and document about David Bowie – whatever David Bowie Is… – the songs are chiefly amazing.

David Bowie Is… runs at the V&A from March 23 until August 11

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

An Audience With… Jeff Beck

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Original Yardbirds members Jim McCarty and Chris Dreja take us through their career in pictures in the latest Uncut, dated April 2013 and out now. Jeff Beck, perhaps the band’s most explosive lead guitarist, took on questions from Uncut readers and famous fans in our March 2010 issue (Take 154), a...

Original Yardbirds members Jim McCarty and Chris Dreja take us through their career in pictures in the latest Uncut, dated April 2013 and out now. Jeff Beck, perhaps the band’s most explosive lead guitarist, took on questions from Uncut readers and famous fans in our March 2010 issue (Take 154), answering queries on haircuts, hot rods and playing with, er, Beverley Craven… Interview: John Lewis

__________________________

A few things become clear during a conversation with Jeff Beck. He really does look like Nigel Tufnel from Spinal Tap (strutting around in his trademark black jeans and cap-sleeve T-shirt). He doesn’t swear much (just two “shits” in an hour). There’s still some unresolved anger about being chucked out of The Yardbirds more than four decades ago (“imagine that – you’re off ill and you come back and find that they’ve kicked you out!”) and a prickliness about former bandmate Chris Dreja (“he called me ‘Neanderthal’, did he? Oh yeah? Where does he live?”). There is a faint regret about not being a part of Led Zeppelin or The Rolling Stones, who both requested his services (“who wouldn’t want to have a private jet with a fireplace?”). But he seems happy spending hours in his garage, customising cars (“it’s a terrible obsession”).

Now he’s going to play to a quarter of a million people in a couple of weeks, sharing the bill with his old adversary Eric Clapton on a string of enormous arena dates. The show is billed “Together Apart”, as both will be fronting their own bands as well as trading licks on a series of collaborations. Clapton might have been dubbed “God” by some, but it’s Beck who wins hands down among six-string aficionados, mixing a bad-boy swagger with a fearsome set of jazz chops. “You’ve got to be careful playing jazz to a rock audience,” he says. “Too many chord changes and their eyes start to glaze over. You’ve got to keep that fire going. You’ve got to keep them hooked, innit…”

__________________________

It was fab to see you perform and also spend time with you in Australia earlier this year. Now – have you ever played “Apache”?

Hank Marvin

Hank! I invited him to my show in Australia, where he’s lived for a while, and he graciously attended. Actually, I did play “Apache” recently. It was a rockabilly party thing, with Imelda May, and you can’t celebrate the 1950s without a salute to Hank. The audience just went berserk after the first few bars! Hank has such a dangerous tone, which is only safe in the hands of a master. You can see why he spends so much time tuning up because, when you play the way he plays, you simply cannot make any mistakes. There’s no bullshit runs – it’s always straight-ahead, simple solos, every one a beauty. I’ve never heard him make a mistake. He’s very different from me. I crash and burn, like a drunken trapeze artist!

You’re touring the world’s biggest arenas with Clapton – what was it like taking his place in The Yardbirds?

Les Wells, Grantham

At first, some fans were grumbling, but I got a standing ovation after an instrumental that I played at The Marquee. So that kicked that shit into touch right away. From then on I had no problem with any audience. By the time I joined, Eric was long gone. I never even met him for about a year. We’d been on the road for months and I was in a club called The Cromwellian. I heard he was there that night, so I thought, well, I’d better talk to him. I thought there was going to be a massive punch-up, but he was really sweet. And we’ve been mates ever since, really.

I saw Jeff’s jazz project at Ronnie Scott’s, which I loved, but my favourite stuff is the Jeff Beck Group period with Rod Stewart, like “Throw Down A Line”. What was it about that band?

John Lydon

You’re joking! Johnny Rotten? In a way, I can understand why he liked that group, ’cos we were quite punky. We were the best unrehearsed band on the planet! That was because, a) we couldn’t afford anywhere to rehearse, and b) we got thrown out of most places after five minutes for being too loud! I remember us doing our first-ever gig at The Marquee without having rehearsed, and we were quite rightly roasted. Ha ha! But we did believe that what we were doing was fantastic. The only way to describe it is super-charged blues: Howlin’ Wolf and Buddy Guy put through this psychedelic filter, with changing tempos in the middle of songs, and Motown basslines.

How does it feel to be the role model for Nigel Tufnel in This Is Spinal Tap?

Fred Rudofsky, Delmar, NYC

I went to see the film at Westward Village in Los Angeles when it came out, and I sat in the cinema with a bottle of champagne, not knowing what to expect, and I think I was the only one in the audience laughing! Sobbing with laughter. All these people were shooshing me! I’ve since become friends with Christopher Guest. Boy, does he do his research. He spent a year going around dog shows before he did Best In Show! And he and Rob Reiner went through tons of footage and followed lots of rock bands for …Spinal Tap. Apparently, Nigel Tufnel was modelled on a heavy metal star – I can’t tell you who – but Chris adopted my look, because he could do me better! Obviously, I never had anything to do with metal, as such. However, I’ve also become good friends with Peter Richardson, who did Bad News. Another fantastic parody, absolutely spot on.

What’s the weirdest session you ever played on?

John Paul Jones

Oh God, there’s been a few. I did one for Beverley Craven. I don’t know how that came about. But I let go in one of my solos, and she said, “Christ, you made my record sound like a tower block being blown up.” I said, “Thank you very much.” And walked out. I dunno whether she used it or not. I don’t even know what the hell I was doing there.

Any chance of rejoining The Yardbirds?

Byron Lewis, Barry, Wales

Never. Never ever. Once the lead singer is not there, you can’t really revive a band. And that goes for Queen as well. I understand the box-office attraction, but it just isn’t Queen, is it? It’s like replacing Elvis Presley with a lookalike. I’m not putting down the current Yardbirds [featuring Chris Dreja and Jim McCarty]. Good luck to them – and the fact they’re around is cool – but they’re not gonna come up with anything as groundbreaking as anything we did, ’cos Keith [Relf, lead singer who died in 1976] is not there. It was the chemistry between Keith and the rest of us. He came up with crude ideas and the rest of us would develop them.

What cars are in your dream garage?

Garry Lansdowne, Glasgow

I’m lucky enough to own most of my dream cars! The new Corvette is the only contemporary car I have. Everyone should have one of those. The rest are vintage. I got bitten by the hot-rod bug in 1950. My mum made a mistake of buying me a Hot Rod magazine to keep me quiet one day. And, once that sets in as a six-year-old, you’ve had it! Hot rods were basically rusty old cars from the 1930s – the 1932 Ford Roadster was the iconic one – and in the 1950s people started to scrub them up, paint them candy apple, put chrome on them and race them. I was obsessed. And, when I started work in the paint shop of a garage in the early 1960s, I began to do up old wrecks. Then I spent all my advance with The Yardbirds on a 1963 split-window Corvette Coupe, which I sold for 800 quid – what a twat. But I did reinstate one in my garage lately. I now have 14 hot rods and four Corvettes!

When did you stop using a plectrum? Does this mean that someone who gave me a plectrum 35 years ago, claiming it was yours, was lying?

Chrissie Hynde

It could well be mine. I started phasing out the plectrum in the 1970s. I was studying Chet Atkins: country players used metallic picks on three or more fingers, including the index finger. So I got into playing with picks on my fingers, but played with a plectrum on stage. Then when the booze hit in the early 1970s, I started to drop my plectrum when drunk! Rather than fumble around in the dark, I carried on playing with fingers. And I thought, this is amazing. It was like having another turbo charger in your engine. Because you can do a lot more with bare fingers than with a plectrum. You don’t get that clunking sound on a heavily amplified guitar. It’s also a more personal sound, with more control.

The Jeff Beck Group were managed by Peter Grant. As big a monster as he’s made out?

Chuck, Baltimore, Maryland

He was fantastic. What he realised, long before the others, was that there was a sizeable audience for an underground scene away from the Top 40. We’d been playing shitholes in England for two-and-a-half years, and he took us to America. Within months he had us selling out 12,000-seat arenas without having a record in the charts. I never really saw any threatening side of him – he was ultra-professional with us.

Dear Jeff, if I knew how you play the guitar, I’d steal everything you do, but I don’t. Can you help me?

John McLaughlin

Oh man, stop there. I can die happy. Johnny McLaughlin has given us so many different facets of the guitar. And introduced thousands of us to world music, by blending Indian music with jazz and classical. I’d say he was the best guitarist alive. When the band I had with Rod Stewart broke up, I was left wondering what to do. While the charts were full of stuff like “Chirpy Chirpy Cheep Cheep”, I became aware of this underground music scene. And what hit me right between the eyes was John’s playing on Miles Davis’s A Tribute To Jack Johnson. That changed everything. After that, a new chapter of rock music was formed, with his blistering performances with The Mahavishnu Orchestra and everything else. And John’s been at it ever since. He’s a hard one to keep up with!

What was Keith Relf like?

Rick Barnes, Lebanon, Connecticut, USA

When I first met him, I remember thinking, who is this little shrimp? Ha ha! He looked great on screen, but I thought, surely girls can’t scream at him? I thought, I look better than him, even if I have got more spots! Keith was vitally important, but unfortunately he wasn’t that fit. He had breathing problems. He wasn’t the classic strutting, macho frontman. But if you listen to him singing on the records, he means it. He made up for lack of vocal gymnastics with sheer belief in what he was doing. And that’s all it takes, really. The worst thing about him was his drinking problems. It’d be 12 noon and we’d be on the road in America and you’d hear a “fizz” as he opened a can of beer. And then, five minutes later, another one. And another. You’d think, come on Keith, leave it out. And it led to him hating everyone. I think he needed hands-on help at the time, but no-one gave it to him.

Did learning to play “Nadia” further your interest in Indian classical music or was this already a fascination? If so, what Indian classical musicians were most inspiring?

Nitin Sawhney

I was listening to Nitin’s Beyond Skin, and that track “Nadia” really caught my ear. I spent ages learning to play the melody, as sung by the Indian classically trained singer. But I’ve been interested in India since the 1960s, when the BBC let us in to watch a recording of a concert with Ravi Shankar. Obviously, George Harrison was a big fan; he was brilliant at interpreting Ravi’s vision of the sitar and modifying it to fit in with Beatles music, and remaining very melodic, too. And later John McLaughlin was brilliant at adapting those Indian scales. So both George and John turned me on to Indian classical music, and now Nitin’s doing the same. He’s a tremendous talent.

Picture: Ross Halfin

Parquet Courts, London Highbury Garage, March 19, 2013

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On their fine "Light Up Gold" album from the end of last year, Parquet Courts often come across like a kind of self-mythologising, self-effacing Brooklynish hipster band, allbeit one who are, of course, a) disdainful of the term 'hipster'; b) focused on a rather old-fashioned hipster sound that, until they became hip, was probably too hip, or not hip enough, for hipsters; c) snarky about self-mythologising, self-effacing Brooklynish hipsters; d) probably reflexively quite snarky about themselves. "You should see the wall of ambivalence I'm building," they claim in "Master Of My Craft". "Adam Savage and Austin Brown make the kind of music that would be dumb stoner fun if only it weren’t so smart," notes my colleague, Joe. Parquet Courts, it seems safe to conclude, are not only a good band, they're one who are too cool to be cool. Oddly, though, not much of this is apparent – or, at least, audible - when they make their London debut on Tuesday night. "Light Up Gold" contains a bunch of songs that could feasibly satisfy those Strokes fans who've finally given up on the band in the wake of "Comedown Machine". Parquet Courts do not, however, have much in the way of the old Strokes' poised nonchalance; they will not, one suspects, blaze a trail into the fashion world elite. Instead, Savage, Brown and their keen rhythm section look and sound pleasingly nerdy, thrown together, and just about ready for a slot above The Grifters in the NME tent at Reading circa 1993. When they begin with a tune that would have found a comfortable home about three-quarters of the way through "Wowee Zowee", the game is already up: writing about Parquet Courts without mentioning Pavement might be a noble endeavour, but to be honest it's a bit of a mug's game. This is not, importantly, a criticism. I love Pavement, and Parquet Courts channel their collapsible spirit better than any band I've seen or heard in a long time. They have an apparently unquenchable love and respect for "Debris Slide", and two singing lead guitarists, though as another Uncut colleague notes, it's a bit like watching Pavement fronted by two Spiral Stairs (cf “Careers In Combat”, especially). As should ideally be the way with all bands influenced by Pavement, Parquet Courts don't appear self-conscious or hamstrung by their antecedents; instead, they just get on with playing their terrific songs at a fair clip, studded with cranky semi-solos and breakneck twists, and being a lot of fun. To be fair, there's plenty more going on in these songs than mere homage to one band. Looking for other comparisons, their wiry ramalams fall into a tradition that began with The Velvet Underground (with "Loaded", more specifically), rattled on through early '80s Fall, and manifested itself most recently in the brilliant Australian garage band, Eddy Current Suppression Ring. Bands like Parquet Courts are often portrayed as diffident slackers – or certainly were 20 years ago, when slackers were a thing – but it probably takes some work and practice to sound like this. “Light Up Gold” sounds like Parquet Courts will be a very enjoyable live band, and they are. Some songs are sped up to a hectic velocity, like the title track, which suggests that Savage and Brown might see themselves as a punk band. Others are strung out and jammed, after a fashion, though it’s a form of jamming that seems to come from capriciousness rather than virtuosity. Best of all, and loosely in the latter category, are two crotchety indie-rock masterpieces, “Master Of My Craft” and “Stoned And Starving”. “Master Of My Craft”’s rampant drollness is somewhat lost here – the “Fuhgettaboutit” line used as punctuation comes across as gawky singalong more than self-satirising archness – but the heads-down glee with which it’s played, and the false endings (at least three) which momentarily derail its rush, are mighty exciting. Ditto “Stoned And Starving”, the predictable set closer, which rides an overdriven Dingerbeat and devolves into ranting, skronk and a belligerent reprise of “Light Up Gold”. As a nostalgia band for people who at least try not to be sentimental about their youths, Parquet Courts work brilliantly. But I think there’s enough craft and sleight-of-hand here to make them more interesting than that. Bring on the major leagues… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

On their fine “Light Up Gold” album from the end of last year, Parquet Courts often come across like a kind of self-mythologising, self-effacing Brooklynish hipster band, allbeit one who are, of course, a) disdainful of the term ‘hipster’; b) focused on a rather old-fashioned hipster sound that, until they became hip, was probably too hip, or not hip enough, for hipsters; c) snarky about self-mythologising, self-effacing Brooklynish hipsters; d) probably reflexively quite snarky about themselves.

“You should see the wall of ambivalence I’m building,” they claim in “Master Of My Craft”. “Adam Savage and Austin Brown make the kind of music that would be dumb stoner fun if only it weren’t so smart,” notes my colleague, Joe. Parquet Courts, it seems safe to conclude, are not only a good band, they’re one who are too cool to be cool.

Oddly, though, not much of this is apparent – or, at least, audible – when they make their London debut on Tuesday night. “Light Up Gold” contains a bunch of songs that could feasibly satisfy those Strokes fans who’ve finally given up on the band in the wake of “Comedown Machine”. Parquet Courts do not, however, have much in the way of the old Strokes’ poised nonchalance; they will not, one suspects, blaze a trail into the fashion world elite.

Instead, Savage, Brown and their keen rhythm section look and sound pleasingly nerdy, thrown together, and just about ready for a slot above The Grifters in the NME tent at Reading circa 1993. When they begin with a tune that would have found a comfortable home about three-quarters of the way through “Wowee Zowee”, the game is already up: writing about Parquet Courts without mentioning Pavement might be a noble endeavour, but to be honest it’s a bit of a mug’s game.

This is not, importantly, a criticism. I love Pavement, and Parquet Courts channel their collapsible spirit better than any band I’ve seen or heard in a long time. They have an apparently unquenchable love and respect for “Debris Slide”, and two singing lead guitarists, though as another Uncut colleague notes, it’s a bit like watching Pavement fronted by two Spiral Stairs (cf “Careers In Combat”, especially). As should ideally be the way with all bands influenced by Pavement, Parquet Courts don’t appear self-conscious or hamstrung by their antecedents; instead, they just get on with playing their terrific songs at a fair clip, studded with cranky semi-solos and breakneck twists, and being a lot of fun.

To be fair, there’s plenty more going on in these songs than mere homage to one band. Looking for other comparisons, their wiry ramalams fall into a tradition that began with The Velvet Underground (with “Loaded”, more specifically), rattled on through early ’80s Fall, and manifested itself most recently in the brilliant Australian garage band, Eddy Current Suppression Ring.

Bands like Parquet Courts are often portrayed as diffident slackers – or certainly were 20 years ago, when slackers were a thing – but it probably takes some work and practice to sound like this. “Light Up Gold” sounds like Parquet Courts will be a very enjoyable live band, and they are. Some songs are sped up to a hectic velocity, like the title track, which suggests that Savage and Brown might see themselves as a punk band. Others are strung out and jammed, after a fashion, though it’s a form of jamming that seems to come from capriciousness rather than virtuosity.

Best of all, and loosely in the latter category, are two crotchety indie-rock masterpieces, “Master Of My Craft” and “Stoned And Starving”. “Master Of My Craft”’s rampant drollness is somewhat lost here – the “Fuhgettaboutit” line used as punctuation comes across as gawky singalong more than self-satirising archness – but the heads-down glee with which it’s played, and the false endings (at least three) which momentarily derail its rush, are mighty exciting.

Ditto “Stoned And Starving”, the predictable set closer, which rides an overdriven Dingerbeat and devolves into ranting, skronk and a belligerent reprise of “Light Up Gold”. As a nostalgia band for people who at least try not to be sentimental about their youths, Parquet Courts work brilliantly. But I think there’s enough craft and sleight-of-hand here to make them more interesting than that. Bring on the major leagues…

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

Michelle Shocked tour evaporates; nearly all venues cancel post anti-gay rant

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Michelle Shocked will have a lot of free time to think about Sunday’s (March 17) anti-gay tirade. All but one show in her US tour have been cancelled. Billboard reports that 10 dates on her tour of the West Coast and Midwest have been vacated. It does not appear she should be too optimistic abou...

Michelle Shocked will have a lot of free time to think about Sunday’s (March 17) anti-gay tirade. All but one show in her US tour have been cancelled.

Billboard reports that 10 dates on her tour of the West Coast and Midwest have been vacated. It does not appear she should be too optimistic about the one hold out – a May 4jaunt at the Harmony Bar in Madison, Wisconsin, either. The person who answered their phone told Billboard “I won’t know a damn thing until the boss comes back in eight days.”

The Evanston [Illinois] SPACE, one of the first venues to cancel, posted this statement to Facebook. “Many of you have reached out already following an ugly rant given by Michelle Shocked at her show in San Francisco last night. After speaking with the promoter of that show about the nature of the remarks, it’s clear that this is no longer a show we’re willing to put our name on. The May 5th performance at SPACE has been cancelled and refunds will be issued at point of purchase.” A similar note was put on Twitter.

Shocked’s assumed surname became the source of many a pun when she told a San Francisco audience “When they stop Prop 8 [the California initiative that banned gay marriage] and force priests at gunpoint to marry gays, it will be the downfall of civilization and Jesus will come back.”

She later told the crowd “You are going to leave here and tell people ‘Michelle Shocked said God hates faggots.’”

Amid the fallout, Shocked has been silent.

Shocked’s cancelled dates, as compiled by Billboard are as follows:

March 23, McCabe’s – Santa Monica, CA

March 28, Moe’s Alley – Santa Cruz, CA

March 29, HopMonk – Novato, CA

April 24, the Palms Playhouse – Winter, CA

April 25, the Alberta Rose Theatre – Portland, OR

April 26, Meanders Kitchen – Seattle, WA

April 27, Cozmic – Eugene, OR

May 3, eTown Hall – Boulder, CO

May 5, S.P.A.C.E – Evanston, IL

June 23, Telluride Bluegrass Festival, Telluride CO.

Blondie announce UK and Ireland summer tour

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Blondie are set to embark on a tour of the UK and Ireland this summer. Of the jaunt, which kicks off at Nottingham’s Sherwood Pines Forest Park on June 14, frontwoman Debbie Harry said: "England will always have a special place in our hearts –we're all so excited about the forthcoming tour of t...

Blondie are set to embark on a tour of the UK and Ireland this summer.

Of the jaunt, which kicks off at Nottingham’s Sherwood Pines Forest Park on June 14, frontwoman Debbie Harry said: “England will always have a special place in our hearts –we’re all so excited about the forthcoming tour of the UK.”

The band will play the Isle of Wight Festival on June 16 as part of the tour and will also head up two London shows, at Camden’s Roundhouse July 7 and Kew Gardens on July 9.

Blondie released their last album, ‘Panic Of Girls’, in 2011. The follow up to 2003’s ‘The Curse Of Blondie’, it contained a cover of Beirut’s ‘Sunday Smile’. Beirut’s Zach Condon appeared on the album, providing guest vocals.

Blondie will play:

Nottingham Sherwood Pines Forest Park (June 14)

Thetford Forest (15)

Isle of Wight Festival (16)

Liverpool Academy (18)

Isle of Man Villa Marina (19)

Gloucestershire Westonbirt Arboretum (21)

Kent Bedgebury Pinetum (22)

Dublin Olympia (25)

Belfast Waterfront (26)

Yorkshire Dalby Forest (28)

Staffordshire Cannock Chase Forest (29)

Glasgow Clyde Auditorium (July 1)

Edinburgh Usher Hall (2)

Newcastle Academy (4)

Cheshire Delamere Forest (6)

London Roundhouse (7)

London Kew Gardens (9)

Smiths demo sees light of day online – listen

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A previously uncirculated Smiths demo tape has surfaced on a fan web forum. Listen below. User bellapintura, who posted the so-called “Pablo Cuckoo tape” on smithstorrents.co.uk on March 16, claims the tape was from 1983. “The Smiths ran through a selection of songs at a rehearsal in a room in manager Joe Moss' jeans warehouse,” bellapintura wrote. “The tape was recorded for Troy Tate, in order to give him something to work with before going into the studio.” “I was lent the master cassette by a source close to the band who made the recording - let's call him Pablo Cuckoo - in 1997, with a view to trying to put it out as a semi official release...” bellapintura continued. “But a combination of the poor sound quality and threats from Warner Bros, meant that the idea was shelved.” After the tape was posted to the forum, it was subsequently uploaded to YouTube. The track listing on the Pablo Cuckoo tape is as follows: You've Got Everything Now Accept Yourself What Difference Does It Make Reel Around The Fountain These Things Take Time I Don't Owe You Anything Hand In Glove Handsome Devil Miserable Lie http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=39qb3Q5mTmk Read more about The Smiths in our new Ultimate Music Guide: The Smiths.

A previously uncirculated Smiths demo tape has surfaced on a fan web forum. Listen below.

User bellapintura, who posted the so-called “Pablo Cuckoo tape” on smithstorrents.co.uk on March 16, claims the tape was from 1983.

“The Smiths ran through a selection of songs at a rehearsal in a room in manager Joe Moss’ jeans warehouse,” bellapintura wrote. “The tape was recorded for Troy Tate, in order to give him something to work with before going into the studio.”

“I was lent the master cassette by a source close to the band who made the recording – let’s call him Pablo Cuckoo – in 1997, with a view to trying to put it out as a semi official release…” bellapintura continued. “But a combination of the poor sound quality and threats from Warner Bros, meant that the idea was shelved.”

After the tape was posted to the forum, it was subsequently uploaded to YouTube.

The track listing on the Pablo Cuckoo tape is as follows:

You’ve Got Everything Now

Accept Yourself

What Difference Does It Make

Reel Around The Fountain

These Things Take Time

I Don’t Owe You Anything

Hand In Glove

Handsome Devil

Miserable Lie

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=39qb3Q5mTmk

Read more about The Smiths in our new Ultimate Music Guide: The Smiths.

The Men premiere their first ever music video – watch

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The Men have unveiled their first ever music video for the track 'I Saw Her Face' – watch it below. Speaking about the video, singer Mark Perro told NME via email: "We were trying to make a video like Earth, Wind and Fire's 'Lets Groove Tonight'". Drummer Rich Samis added: "This was shot in Dece...

The Men have unveiled their first ever music video for the track ‘I Saw Her Face’ – watch it below.

Speaking about the video, singer Mark Perro told NME via email: “We were trying to make a video like Earth, Wind and Fire’s ‘Lets Groove Tonight'”. Drummer Rich Samis added: “This was shot in December 2012 at our friend Alexander Perrelli’s apartment. All video effects were generated through the use of commercial grade video mixers and enhancers. The raw video footage was shot entirely on VHS cameras. Our friend Brian Chillemi was nice enough to help us out in the painstaking process of editing this video. Brian and our buddy ZZ Ramirez helped out with the camera work. Nick’s [Chiericozzi – guitarist] guitar is actually on fire on some shots. We like it.”

The track is taken from the Brooklyn quintet’s fourth album ‘New Moon’, which was released earlier this month (March 5). The band will play London’s Garage tonight (March 19) along with fellow NYC rockers Parquet Courts.

The Men released their debut LP ‘Immaculada’ in 2010, which was followed by ‘Leave Home’ in 2011 and the critically acclaimed ‘Open Your Heart’ in 2012.

Paul Weller: “Wilko Johnson is unique, a one-off”

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Paul Weller has paid tribute to one of his musical heroes, Wilko Johnson, in the latest issue of Uncut, out now. Weller admits that he took elements of the Dr Feelgood guitarist’s playing into his work with The Jam after seeing the group perform live at Guildford Civic Hall. “I don’t think...

Paul Weller has paid tribute to one of his musical heroes, Wilko Johnson, in the latest issue of Uncut, out now.

Weller admits that he took elements of the Dr Feelgood guitarist’s playing into his work with The Jam after seeing the group perform live at Guildford Civic Hall.

“I don’t think I’d ever heard anyone play like Wilko before,” he says. “You could liken his playing to someone like Bo Diddley, but Wilko is unique, a one-off.

“He is also a great songwriter as well, especially on all those early tunes from Down By The Jetty and Malpractice. I thought they were very special songs… I took elements of his playing, that choppiness, into The Jam.”

Wilko Johnson has been diagnosed with cancer, which is expected to be terminal, and recently performed a set of sold-out farewell gigs.

To read an in-depth interview with Johnson, and more from Paul Weller on his hero, check out the latest issue of Uncut, out now.

Picture: Brian David Stevens

Bauhaus’ Peter Murphy arrested for suspected hit and run and drug possession

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Bauhaus' Peter Murphy was reportedly arrested on Saturday (March 16) on suspicion of causing injuries while driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol, and for hit-and-run offences. According to the Glendale News Press, the singer of the British goth rock group allegedly injured another drive...

Bauhaus’ Peter Murphy was reportedly arrested on Saturday (March 16) on suspicion of causing injuries while driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol, and for hit-and-run offences.

According to the Glendale News Press, the singer of the British goth rock group allegedly injured another driver after crashing a car in Glendale, Southern California before fleeing to Los Angeles, where he was held up by an eyewitness until police arrived. The passer by was “afraid [Murphy] would kill someone with his driving,” police told reporters.

Police officers in Glendale said Murphy, who now resides in Turkey, appeared to be “very confused” and had difficulty recalling what day and time it was, Police said. The singer denied he had been drinking alcohol, but said he had taken his regular medication for depression. He admitted he had been involved in a traffic collision, telling police he was jet-lagged after a recent flight.

Officers also report that they later found a small plastic bag inside the police patrol car where Murphy had been detained – which they believe may contain Methamphetamine (more commonly knows as crystal meth). Murphy denied the bag belonged to him, but police believe he was trying to get rid of the substance in the car.

The singer was arrested on suspicion of causing injuries while driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol, felony hit-and-run and possessing methamphetamine, police said. He remains in police custody awaiting bail.

Bauhaus released five albums over their career – the first being 1980’s ‘In The Flat Field’ before 1981’s ‘Mask’, 1982’s ‘The Sky’s Gone Out’ and 1983’s ‘Burning From The Inside’. Bauhaus first broke up in 1983, with Peter Murphy embarking on a solo career and other members forming Tones On Tail and then Love and Rockets. The band reunited for a 1998 tour, and again from 2005. They released their last album ‘Go Away White’ in 2008.

Earlier this year, Peter Murphy announced that he would be setting out to perform Bauhaus material on a 49-date US and European tour. He is due to play five dates in the UK in June.

Depeche Mode stream new album ‘Delta Machine’

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Depeche Mode are streaming their new album 'Delta Machine' in advance of its release on March 25. The album is the duos 13th and was recorded over the last year in in Santa Barbara, California and New York City and was produced by Ben Hillier and mixed by Flood. Speaking previously about the recor...

Depeche Mode are streaming their new album ‘Delta Machine’ in advance of its release on March 25.

The album is the duos 13th and was recorded over the last year in in Santa Barbara, California and New York City and was produced by Ben Hillier and mixed by Flood. Speaking previously about the record, frontman Dave Gahan insisted that he and the rest of the band never discuss the possibility of releasing another album.”We never know if we’re going to do another record together – we don’t really talk about it,” he said. “We’re planning a big tour that is going to go on towards the end of the summer of 2014. When I actually think about that now, it sounds daunting, but I want to enjoy it. You never know if there is going to be another one.”

The singer also said that the atmosphere in the band was currently positive. “We went through a lot together on the last tour, and probably the one before that and the one before that,” he said. “When you’re together with people for more than 30 years, there are bound to be ups and downs, things that bother you and things that you celebrate together. This one feels kind of like that. Martin [Gore]’s in a really great place; really in great shape, great health; excited about this record. He and I, we’re both in that place where we’re in awe of life at the moment, and what it is and what it still offers us.”

The tracklisting for ‘Delta Machine’ is as follows:

‘Welcome To My World’

‘Angel’

‘Heaven’

‘Secret To The End’

‘My Little Universe’

‘Slow’

‘Broken’

‘The Child Inside’

‘Soft Touch/Raw Nerve’

‘Should Be Higher’

‘Alone’

‘Soothe My Soul’

‘Goodbye’

You can listen to ‘Delta Machine’ on iTunes now.

Depeche Mode play two shows at London’s O2 Arena on May 28 and 29. These are currently the only UK dates the band have announced as part of 34-date European tour which will include appearances at Rock Werchter Festival in Belgium (July 7), BBK Festival in Spain (July 11) and Optimus Alive Festival in Portugal (July 13). A North American tour will follow later in the year.

Jarvis Cocker: ‘David Bowie makes me feel lazy’

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Pulp frontman Jarvis Cocker has said that Davie Bowie makes him feel lazy after viewing the new London exhibition documenting the iconic singer's life though costume. Speaking to the Evening Standard about the David Bowie Is exhibition which opens at London's V&A gallery on Saturday, March 2...

Pulp frontman Jarvis Cocker has said that Davie Bowie makes him feel lazy after viewing the new London exhibition documenting the iconic singer’s life though costume.

Speaking to the Evening Standard about the David Bowie Is exhibition which opens at London’s V&A gallery on Saturday, March 23, Cocker said that he was staggered by how many items from Bowie’s past were on display and just how much he had achieved in his career. “The main thing that will impress people as they go around the V&A is the sheer volume of stuff Bowie has done, it makes me feel very lazy,” he said. “He made a real impact on our culture: he brought a lot of those quite subversive and alternative ideas right into people’s living rooms. He had a very normal name – David Jones – and in a way he was a very typical person of his era, and yet he turned himself into a unique creature.”

Discussing his feelings for Bowie, both past and present, Cocker went on to say: “When I was growing up David Bowie was like the patron saint of the music scene, and then he disappeared for a while and I feel that now he is back like a benign force floating above us. I’m getting into his new album. Recycling the sleeve of the ‘”Heroes”‘ album with ‘The Next Day’ stuck over the front of it says interesting things about looking back. Maybe it’s saying that the latest idea to go forward is that you have to go back – that’s kind of what is happening in culture at the moment.”

David Bowie’s ‘The Next Day’ went straight to Number One this week following its release on March 10. The much-anticipated album becomes his first Number One in his native Britain since 1993’s ‘Black Tie White Noise’, and has also become the fastest-selling album so far this year, shifting 94,000 copies. Biffy Clyro’s ‘Opposites’ previously had that title, having sold 71,600 copies during its opening week in January.

Ian McCulloch records orchestral version of Echo & The Bunnymen hit – listen

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Ian McCulloch has recorded an album worth of orchestral versions of Echo And The Bunnymen songs as part of his new solo album. Scroll down to hear the new version of 'Bring On The Dancing Horses' now. McCulloch's latest solo album will be a double album with one disc dedicated to orchestral version...

Ian McCulloch has recorded an album worth of orchestral versions of Echo And The Bunnymen songs as part of his new solo album. Scroll down to hear the new version of ‘Bring On The Dancing Horses’ now.

McCulloch’s latest solo album will be a double album with one disc dedicated to orchestral versions of the Liverpool band’s greatest hits. The idea for the album came about following a show McCulloch played at the Union Chapel in London in May 2012. Producer Flood (PJ Harvey, The Killers) has re-recorded the tracks, which will be released under the title ‘Holy Ghosts’.

Speaking about the Union Chapel show which inspired the plan to re-record his bands songs in a new fashion, McCulloch said: “It was like, something’s happening here that you might want to document. The fact that it was so spontaneously decided we’d record it was lucky, because on the night I’d more or less forgotten. Usually you’re too aware of everything being mic’d up and all that, but this time, after the first chord had been hit, I was in a world of me own.”

Other songs which have been reworked by McCulloch and Flood include The Bunnymen’s ‘Lips Like Sugar’, ‘Rescue’, ‘Nothing Lasts Forever’, and ‘The Killing Moon’. Holy Ghosts is released on April 22 via Edsel Records and will come with McCulloch’s fourth solo studio album ‘Pro Patria Mori’.

Echo & The Bunnymen will support Primal Scream in London on Thursday (March 21) as part of the Noel Gallagher curated Teenage Cancer Trust concerts at London’s Royal Albert Hall.