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Eels – Wonderful, Glorious

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Eels’ tenth album lives up to its fate-tempting title... Those familiar with Eels’ catalogue of consumptive, cock-eyed balladry will read the title of this, Eels’ tenth studio album, as leadenly ironic – the sort of “Wonderful, glorious,” you might mutter to yourself, perhaps upon seeing a bomber shedding its payload (in fact the album’s cover image). An assumption that the contents of Wonderful, Glorious will tend towards the melancholic would not be erroneous, but it would be – as ever, where Eels are concerned – only partially correct. Wonderful, Glorious ends nearly three years of silence following a fecund period around the turn of the decade in which Eels released the tremendous Hombre Lobo/End Times/Tomorrow Morning trilogy in little more than twelve months. Though those three albums were conceived as a suite relating a self-contained story – falling in love, falling out of it, figuring how to go on subsequently – they were not notably incongruous with anything Eels had done before. Or, it turns out, since – Wonderful, Glorious is another Eels album full of songs which are essentially attempts by E to talk himself into facing the day. Which is to say, of course, that Wonderful, Glorious is another Eels album. It’s also a reminder of how difficult is to imagine having too many of those. For a writer who essentially has only one theme – that we are doomed, and this is ridiculous, but we might as well make the best of it – E finds an abundance of angles from which to address it. The opening track, the weirdly funky “Bombs Away”, could be heard as a statement of “I Will Survive”-variety defiance, or read as the spidery treatise some vengeful maniac posts to his local newspaper shortly before taking up position in a clocktower with a rifle (“I’ll no longer keep my mouth shut/Bombs away, gonna shake the house”). The mad as hell/not gonna take it anymore theme is revisited regularly throughout Wonderful, Glorious. “Don’t mess with me/I’m up for the fight,” cautions “Kinda Fuzzy” over queasy glam guitars and keyboards that resemble the incidental music of a detective series. “I’m hurting bad/And fighting mad,” declares “On The Ropes”, an almost-country tune arranged around a pretty and understated riff. “Battle stations, gotta man your guns now,” orders “Stick Together”, a gruff instruction that recalls the more recent works of Tom Waits in both its frenetic percussion and distinctly Marc Ribot-ish guitars. The question of the reason for all this purposeful loin-girding and up-saddling is answered in instalments towards the end of “Wonderful, Glorious” with a sequence of E’s characteristically backhanded devotionals (Eels, lest we forget, kicked off one of the great love songs of the late twentieth century, “PS You Rock My World” with “I was at a funeral, the day I realised/I wanted to spend my life with you.”) “You’re My Friend” and “I Am Building A Shrine” manage to make a virtue of a sentimentality that verges audaciously on outright sappiness. The closing title track fossicks, like most of Wonderful, Glorious – and most of Eels’ catalogue – for redemption in the overlap between optimism and fatalism (“Every night you spent shrouded in darkness,” decides E, “has led you to this moment in the light/It’s alright.”) (i)Wonderful, Glorious(i) sounds, throughout, overwhelmingly like an Eels album – not the statement of the obvious it may appear, but an observation of how little difference the continually shifting group personnel ever makes to Eels’ music. This consistency, after all these years since “Novocaine For The Soul”, has to be admired as testament to the robustness of E’s vision – as does his dogged fealty to his preferred subject, of hope in spite of it all (“Peach Blossom”, literally an urge to smell the flowers, is a clear highlight, suggesting a Temptations song sung by a Lust For Life-era Iggy Pop). So Wonderful, Glorious. is yet another Eels album about desire and death – but what else is there? ANDREW MUELLER Q+A MARK EVERETT How ambiguous or otherwise is the title? “It’s really not meant to be at all, though the plane dropping bombs on the cover may make it seem that way. There’s nothing ironic about it at all, to me. The reasons the bombs are dropping is that we’ve all somehow got to navigate our way through life, and it’s not easy for any of us.” There’s a recurring theme on the album of struggling to find a reason to get out of bed... “Right. And today it happened to be: so I could talk to Uncut.” Did you have a specific agenda when you started writing/recording? “What’s unique about this album is that it’s the only time I’ve ever gone into making a record with no plan – the plan was to have no plan. I had nothing written. I just wanted to get the band in a room and see what happened. I think that’s also reflected in the lyrics – I was scared about it, which is why there’s so much about fighting your way out of a corner. But we got lucky. Five guys in a room all firing on all cylinders.” How do you decide which Eels personnel are invited to play on a new Eels album? “I had an epiphany towards the end of the last tour I did with these guys – I realised they had been able to pull everything I suspected they might not be able to. So I thought: why don’t we all get together and write some music? It’s definitely more fun than sitting in the basement and recording yourself. It turns out I like fun.” INTERVIEW: ANDREW MUELLER

Eels’ tenth album lives up to its fate-tempting title…

Those familiar with Eels’ catalogue of consumptive, cock-eyed balladry will read the title of this, Eels’ tenth studio album, as leadenly ironic – the sort of “Wonderful, glorious,” you might mutter to yourself, perhaps upon seeing a bomber shedding its payload (in fact the album’s cover image). An assumption that the contents of Wonderful, Glorious will tend towards the melancholic would not be erroneous, but it would be – as ever, where Eels are concerned – only partially correct.

Wonderful, Glorious ends nearly three years of silence following a fecund period around the turn of the decade in which Eels released the tremendous Hombre Lobo/End Times/Tomorrow Morning trilogy in little more than twelve months. Though those three albums were conceived as a suite relating a self-contained story – falling in love, falling out of it, figuring how to go on subsequently – they were not notably incongruous with anything Eels had done before. Or, it turns out, since – Wonderful, Glorious is another Eels album full of songs which are essentially attempts by E to talk himself into facing the day. Which is to say, of course, that Wonderful, Glorious is another Eels album.

It’s also a reminder of how difficult is to imagine having too many of those. For a writer who essentially has only one theme – that we are doomed, and this is ridiculous, but we might as well make the best of it – E finds an abundance of angles from which to address it. The opening track, the weirdly funky “Bombs Away”, could be heard as a statement of “I Will Survive”-variety defiance, or read as the spidery treatise some vengeful maniac posts to his local newspaper shortly before taking up position in a clocktower with a rifle (“I’ll no longer keep my mouth shut/Bombs away, gonna shake the house”).

The mad as hell/not gonna take it anymore theme is revisited regularly throughout Wonderful, Glorious. “Don’t mess with me/I’m up for the fight,” cautions “Kinda Fuzzy” over queasy glam guitars and keyboards that resemble the incidental music of a detective series. “I’m hurting bad/And fighting mad,” declares “On The Ropes”, an almost-country tune arranged around a pretty and understated riff. “Battle stations, gotta man your guns now,” orders “Stick Together”, a gruff instruction that recalls the more recent works of Tom Waits in both its frenetic percussion and distinctly Marc Ribot-ish guitars.

The question of the reason for all this purposeful loin-girding and up-saddling is answered in instalments towards the end of “Wonderful, Glorious” with a sequence of E’s characteristically backhanded devotionals (Eels, lest we forget, kicked off one of the great love songs of the late twentieth century, “PS You Rock My World” with “I was at a funeral, the day I realised/I wanted to spend my life with you.”) “You’re My Friend” and “I Am Building A Shrine” manage to make a virtue of a sentimentality that verges audaciously on outright sappiness. The closing title track fossicks, like most of Wonderful, Glorious – and most of Eels’ catalogue – for redemption in the overlap between optimism and fatalism (“Every night you spent shrouded in darkness,” decides E, “has led you to this moment in the light/It’s alright.”)

(i)Wonderful, Glorious(i) sounds, throughout, overwhelmingly like an Eels album – not the statement of the obvious it may appear, but an observation of how little difference the continually shifting group personnel ever makes to Eels’ music. This consistency, after all these years since “Novocaine For The Soul”, has to be admired as testament to the robustness of E’s vision – as does his dogged fealty to his preferred subject, of hope in spite of it all (“Peach Blossom”, literally an urge to smell the flowers, is a clear highlight, suggesting a Temptations song sung by a Lust For Life-era Iggy Pop). So Wonderful, Glorious. is yet another Eels album about desire and death – but what else is there?

ANDREW MUELLER

Q+A

MARK EVERETT

How ambiguous or otherwise is the title?

“It’s really not meant to be at all, though the plane dropping bombs on the cover may make it seem that way. There’s nothing ironic about it at all, to me. The reasons the bombs are dropping is that we’ve all somehow got to navigate our way through life, and it’s not easy for any of us.”

There’s a recurring theme on the album of struggling to find a reason to get out of bed…

“Right. And today it happened to be: so I could talk to Uncut.”

Did you have a specific agenda when you started writing/recording?

“What’s unique about this album is that it’s the only time I’ve ever gone into making a record with no plan – the plan was to have no plan. I had nothing written. I just wanted to get the band in a room and see what happened. I think that’s also reflected in the lyrics – I was scared about it, which is why there’s so much about fighting your way out of a corner. But we got lucky. Five guys in a room all firing on all cylinders.”

How do you decide which Eels personnel are invited to play on a new Eels album?

“I had an epiphany towards the end of the last tour I did with these guys – I realised they had been able to pull everything I suspected they might not be able to. So I thought: why don’t we all get together and write some music? It’s definitely more fun than sitting in the basement and recording yourself. It turns out I like fun.”

INTERVIEW: ANDREW MUELLER

Morrissey hospitalised with “double pneumonia”

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Morrissey has been hospitalized in San Francisco with “double pneumonia,” forcing him to postpone a show scheduled in that city. It is the latest setback to his north American tour. Double pneumonia joins a series of ailments that have forced the singer to bump 19 shows since January. Performa...

Morrissey has been hospitalized in San Francisco with “double pneumonia,” forcing him to postpone a show scheduled in that city.

It is the latest setback to his north American tour.

Double pneumonia joins a series of ailments that have forced the singer to bump 19 shows since January. Performances have been canceled when the singer contracted a bleeding ulcer, Barrett’s oesophagus and also a moral objection to appearing on a talk show that also featured the cast of hunting show “Duck Dynasty”.

The north American tour itself was largely rescheduled from a tour originally scheduled for last fall. That tour was rescheduled when Morrissey’s mother took ill.

Morrissey still plans to headline the Vive Latine Festival in Mexico on March 14.

In a statement from January, the singer said, “I am fully determined to resume the tour on February 9 at the Chelsea Ballroom in Las Vegas. If there’s an audience of any kind in attendance, I just might die with a smile on my face, after all. If I am not there, I shall probably never again be anywhere. Equally, I am determined to play Flint (Michigan) if it kills me (which, on the face of it, it almost has.)”

Elvis Costello adds extra dates to UK tour

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Elvis Costello and the Impostors have added two new dates to their forthcoming UK tour. Costello will now play a third night at London's Royal Albert Hall on June 6. A June 9 show for Milton Keynes Theatre has also been added. A full tour schedule is below. Costello recently announced a Record Sto...

Elvis Costello and the Impostors have added two new dates to their forthcoming UK tour.

Costello will now play a third night at London’s Royal Albert Hall on June 6. A June 9 show for Milton Keynes Theatre has also been added. A full tour schedule is below.

Costello recently announced a Record Store Day team-up album with The Roots. The Roots, hip hop legends in their own right, first met Costello when he played on the Jimmy Fallon Show, where the Roots serve as house band.

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

The updated tour schedule is as follows:

May

Fri 31- Birmingham, Symphony Hall

June

Sat 1- Cardiff, St David’s Hall

Sun 2- Bristol, Colston Hall

Tue 4 – London, Royal Albert Hall

Wed 5- London, Royal Albert Hall

Thu 6 – London, Royal Albert Hall

Sat 8 – Sheffield, City Hall

Sun 9 – Milton Keynes, Milton Keynes Theatre

Mon 10 – Liverpool, Philharmonic

Wed 12 – Gateshead, the Sage

Thu 13 – Blackpool, Opera House

Fri 14 – Manchester, Apollo

Sun 16 – Edinburgh, Festival Theatre

Mon 17 – York, Barbican

Wed 19 – Southend, Cliffs Pavilion

Thu 20 – Basingstoke, the Anvil

Sat 22 – Brighton, Brighton Centre

Sun 23 – Canterbury, the Marlowe Theatre

Win tickets to see the Lumineers in London

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We have a pair of tickets to see the Lumineers perform an exclusive live set in London this Thursday, March 14. The Denver, Colorado-based five-piece will be playing the Absolute Radio Sessions at the Hard Rock Cafe, 150 Old Park Lane, London W1K 1QZ. To be in with a chance of winning the pair of tickets, send your name, address and phone number to competition@ldpublicity.com by 5pm, Wednesday March 13. Winners will be notified by midday on Thursday, March 14; doors for the show open at 6.30pm. You can read Uncut's review of the Lumineers self-titled debut album here. Good luck!

We have a pair of tickets to see the Lumineers perform an exclusive live set in London this Thursday, March 14.

The Denver, Colorado-based five-piece will be playing the Absolute Radio Sessions at the Hard Rock Cafe, 150 Old Park Lane, London W1K 1QZ.

To be in with a chance of winning the pair of tickets, send your name, address and phone number to competition@ldpublicity.com by 5pm, Wednesday March 13.

Winners will be notified by midday on Thursday, March 14; doors for the show open at 6.30pm.

You can read Uncut’s review of the Lumineers self-titled debut album here.

Good luck!

Bert Jansch – Acoustic Routes

Understated BBC overview reissued... Even in a career that unfairly afforded him more time in the shadows than the spotlight, it would be hard to conceive of a time at which interest in Bert Jansch was lower than in 1992. Getting on for two decades since his last flurry of top-quality work for Charisma, and still a few years shy of his “rediscovery” by a younger generation of guitarists, it was then that the BBC broadcast an hour-long film called Acoustic Routes, focused, pretty much exclusively, on him. As this reissued, feature-length edition of the film unshowily demonstrates: fashions change, but Bert Jansch did not. An older cousin of BBC4’s Folk Britannia, Acoustic Routes provides an impressionistic overview of the singer/guitarists of the British folk revival like Davy Graham, Wizz Jones, Ralph McTell, and John Renbourn, touching in with performances from all of them, generally in duo with Bert. All illustrate the same fundamental point: Jansch’s magnificent chops came packaged with a huge compositional talent, neither of these diminished by years of epic boozing or his career vicissitudes. One thing Bert was not, however, was a talker. Nor do many of his contemporaries seem keen to grasp the nettle and elucidate just what it is that made Bert Jansch a cut above. Happily, the film devises an excellent solution to this: Billy Connolly. Connolly plays and knows a lot about folk music and its musicians, and as a near-contemporary avoids any kind of awkwardness with the subjects. As such, he becomes a kind of de facto narrator of a film that might otherwise simply feature some not especially talkative people playing the guitar extremely well. He quickly gets to the point. Brandishing a copy of the “blue album”, the 1965 debut, Bert Jansch, Connolly enthuses about how this wasn’t just a great album, it was an essential hip artefact. At the time it came out, you would, he says, position it at the front of your stack of albums. You would do your best to emulate the handsome, glowering presence on the front of the album, noting the Spartan, bare-boards setting of the cover image. “Back then,” he concludes warmly, “Glasgow was filled with people with no furniture in their houses, trying to play ‘Strolling Down The Highway’…” The furniture thing becomes something that Connolly riffs on throughout – noting of the cover of Bert And John, Jansch’s collaboration with John Renbourn he says Bert is now “so wealthy he has loads of furniture…” Of course, wealthy is another thing that Bert never was, and here we see 1992 Jansch rehearsing some new music with Renbourn in the kitchen of an unprepossessing Hammersmith flat. These are two men without very much in the way of material reward for their skills, still operating at a terrifically high level, Bert continuing to generate music that is immediately empathetic, the pair of them playing with staggering levels of feeling and technical grace. Acoustic Routes doesn’t go in for at all for voiceovered linear biography, and instead tells its tale in just this kind of understated fashion. Along its meandering path, the film duly alludes to the existence of the Jansch/Renbourn jazz/folk supergroup The Pentangle, evinced by a duet with Jacqui McShee (extraordinary tie-dye, madam), but doesn’t tell you an awful lot about what that might have been like. It finds Bert (excitingly, in the company of Anne Briggs) returning to the sight of Edinburgh’s Howff club and playing a fantastic version of “Black Waterside”, and then giving a barbed but still vague answer to the question of how he feels about Jimmy Page essentially nicking that arrangement and crediting himself for it. There’s a US segment which yields a great performance of “Heartbreak Hotel” with Albert Lee and a moving if uneventful blues summit with Brownie McGhee, one of Bert’s heroes. The offhand tone of the thing is probably best captured in a London sequence where Bert talks about Les Cousins, the London folk scene and Bob Dylan’s fleeting appearance on it in 1963. It catches up with Wizz Jones, Al Stewart and Bert – three guys in the ironed jeans and white tennis shoes stage of their lives. They have a chat and a bit of a play with Martin Carthy, and walk the Soho streets they knew as young men. They talk Paul Simon and Jackson C Frank. “I took Bob Dylan in there,” Bert then tells Wizz, indicating a pub function room. “Did he play?” asks Wizz. “Nah,” says Bert, “he was too stoned…” The pair then drop into a guitar shop to buy some strings. For a lesser musician, in a more on-message film, this might all have been a rather bigger deal. Not for Bert Jansch: a man whose head wasn’t easily turned, and someone who focused on what he needed to do, and then simply went about getting it done. JOHN ROBINSON

Understated BBC overview reissued…

Even in a career that unfairly afforded him more time in the shadows than the spotlight, it would be hard to conceive of a time at which interest in Bert Jansch was lower than in 1992. Getting on for two decades since his last flurry of top-quality work for Charisma, and still a few years shy of his “rediscovery” by a younger generation of guitarists, it was then that the BBC broadcast an hour-long film called Acoustic Routes, focused, pretty much exclusively, on him.

As this reissued, feature-length edition of the film unshowily demonstrates: fashions change, but Bert Jansch did not. An older cousin of BBC4’s Folk Britannia, Acoustic Routes provides an impressionistic overview of the singer/guitarists of the British folk revival like Davy Graham, Wizz Jones, Ralph McTell, and John Renbourn, touching in with performances from all of them, generally in duo with Bert. All illustrate the same fundamental point: Jansch’s magnificent chops came packaged with a huge compositional talent, neither of these diminished by years of epic boozing or his career vicissitudes.

One thing Bert was not, however, was a talker. Nor do many of his contemporaries seem keen to grasp the nettle and elucidate just what it is that made Bert Jansch a cut above. Happily, the film devises an excellent solution to this: Billy Connolly. Connolly plays and knows a lot about folk music and its musicians, and as a near-contemporary avoids any kind of awkwardness with the subjects. As such, he becomes a kind of de facto narrator of a film that might otherwise simply feature some not especially talkative people playing the guitar extremely well.

He quickly gets to the point. Brandishing a copy of the “blue album”, the 1965 debut, Bert Jansch, Connolly enthuses about how this wasn’t just a great album, it was an essential hip artefact. At the time it came out, you would, he says, position it at the front of your stack of albums. You would do your best to emulate the handsome, glowering presence on the front of the album, noting the Spartan, bare-boards setting of the cover image. “Back then,” he concludes warmly, “Glasgow was filled with people with no furniture in their houses, trying to play ‘Strolling Down The Highway’…”

The furniture thing becomes something that Connolly riffs on throughout – noting of the cover of Bert And John, Jansch’s collaboration with John Renbourn he says Bert is now “so wealthy he has loads of furniture…” Of course, wealthy is another thing that Bert never was, and here we see 1992 Jansch rehearsing some new music with Renbourn in the kitchen of an unprepossessing Hammersmith flat. These are two men without very much in the way of material reward for their skills, still operating at a terrifically high level, Bert continuing to generate music that is immediately empathetic, the pair of them playing with staggering levels of feeling and technical grace.

Acoustic Routes doesn’t go in for at all for voiceovered linear biography, and instead tells its tale in just this kind of understated fashion. Along its meandering path, the film duly alludes to the existence of the Jansch/Renbourn jazz/folk supergroup The Pentangle, evinced by a duet with Jacqui McShee (extraordinary tie-dye, madam), but doesn’t tell you an awful lot about what that might have been like. It finds Bert (excitingly, in the company of Anne Briggs) returning to the sight of Edinburgh’s Howff club and playing a fantastic version of “Black Waterside”, and then giving a barbed but still vague answer to the question of how he feels about Jimmy Page essentially nicking that arrangement and crediting himself for it. There’s a US segment which yields a great performance of “Heartbreak Hotel” with Albert Lee and a moving if uneventful blues summit with Brownie McGhee, one of Bert’s heroes.

The offhand tone of the thing is probably best captured in a London sequence where Bert talks about Les Cousins, the London folk scene and Bob Dylan’s fleeting appearance on it in 1963. It catches up with Wizz Jones, Al Stewart and Bert – three guys in the ironed jeans and white tennis shoes stage of their lives. They have a chat and a bit of a play with Martin Carthy, and walk the Soho streets they knew as young men. They talk Paul Simon and Jackson C Frank. “I took Bob Dylan in there,” Bert then tells Wizz, indicating a pub function room. “Did he play?” asks Wizz. “Nah,” says Bert, “he was too stoned…” The pair then drop into a guitar shop to buy some strings.

For a lesser musician, in a more on-message film, this might all have been a rather bigger deal. Not for Bert Jansch: a man whose head wasn’t easily turned, and someone who focused on what he needed to do, and then simply went about getting it done.

JOHN ROBINSON

The Who announce extra Wembley Arena show

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The Who have added one more date to their Quadrophenia And More tour for Wembly Arena on July 8. The Wembly show will be to benefit the Double O charity, founded by the band in 1976 to benefit a variety of causes including domestic violence, sexual abuse, music education, international disaster rel...

The Who have added one more date to their Quadrophenia And More tour for Wembly Arena on July 8.

The Wembly show will be to benefit the Double O charity, founded by the band in 1976 to benefit a variety of causes including domestic violence, sexual abuse, music education, international disaster relief and juvenile prison reform.

The band will play their 1973 double-album Quadrophenia in its entirety as well as additional material. Rather than perform the former as a narrative rock opera, as it has been staged before, the band will broadcast video imagery behind the band’s performance as directed by Roger Daltrey.

The current who line up features surviving Who members Roger Daltrey and Pete Townshend backed by touring band Zak Starkey (drums), Pino Palladino (bass), John Corey (keyboards), Loren Gold (keyboards/backing vocals) and Frank Simes (musical director, keyboards/backing vocals). Simon Townshend, brother of Pete, will play guitar and add backing vocals.

The Quadrophenia tour dates are now:

June 8 – Dublin, The O2

June 10 –Belfast, Odyssey

June 12 – Glasgow, SECC

June 15 – London, The O2

June 16 – London, The O2

June 18 – Sheffield, Motorpoint Arena

June 20 – Newcastle, Metro Arena

June 23 – Manchester, Arena

June 25 – Cardiff, Motorpoint Arena

June 28 – Birmingham, LG Arena

June 30 – Liverpool, Echo Arena

July 8 – London, Wembley Arena

Atoms For Peace unveil previously unheard Radiohead and Thom Yorke tracks

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Atoms For Peace unveiled their debut BBC Radio 1 Essential Mix on Saturday night (March 9), featuring previously unheard Thom Yorke and Radiohead tracks. As well as cuts from Oneohtrix Point Never, Actress, Aphex Twin, and DOOM, the mix also featured a new Thom Yorke track titled 'Has Been' a...

Atoms For Peace unveiled their debut BBC Radio 1 Essential Mix on Saturday night (March 9), featuring previously unheard Thom Yorke and Radiohead tracks.

As well as cuts from Oneohtrix Point Never, Actress, Aphex Twin, and DOOM, the mix also featured a new Thom Yorke track titled ‘Has Been’ as well as unreleased Radiohead guitar loop ‘Harmonics Loop’. Listen to it here.

The full tracklisting of Atoms For Peace’s BBC Radio 1 Essential Mix is as follows:

Chris Clark – ‘The Pining Pt. 1?’

DOOM & Thom Yorke/Jonny Greenwood – ‘R Fren’

Luke Abbott – ‘Brazil?’

Thom Yorke/Jonny Greenwood – Feeling Pulled Apart By Horses’

Redshape – ‘Man Out Of Time (Major Space Dub)’

Kuodede – ‘Golf?’

Colleen Et Les Boites a Musique – ‘Bicycle Bells’

Shed – ‘Day After’

Thom Yorke – ‘The Twist (Unfinished Section B)’

Thom Yorke – ‘Has Been’

Marcel Dettman – ‘Ellipse’

Luke Abbott – ‘Modern Driveway’

Radiohead – ‘Give Up The Ghost (Thriller House Ghost Mix)’

Thom Yorke – ‘Harrowdown Hill (C90 Mix)’

Radiohead – ‘The Gloaming’

Boys Noize – ‘Kill The Kid?’

Other Lives – ‘Tamer Animals’ (Atoms For Peace Remix)

Radiohead – ‘Harmonics Loop’

Bad Autopsy – ‘Ginmixer’

Phon.o – ‘Fukushima’

Adolfo Coelho – ‘Socana N’gam’

Trim & Riko – ‘Trousers?’

Apostrophi – ‘Average Joe?’

Mr. Oizo – ‘Stunt’

Throwing Snow & Louis Vines – ‘Too Polite’

Steve Reich – ‘It’s Gonna Rain Pt. 1’ (1965)

DJ Tre – ‘Ping Pong Track?’

Aphex Twin – ‘Cilonen’

DJ Slugo – ‘Juke Me From The Back Low?’

Thom Yorke – ‘The Drunkk Machine’

Firefox & Glamour – ‘Check Da Skills’

Thom Yorke – ‘The Hollow Earth?’

Macc & DgoHn – ‘Forget Stuff’

Wishmountain – ‘Walkman’

Oneohtrix Point Never – ‘I Only Have Eyes For You’

Alex Cortex – ‘Huyendo’

Radiohead – ‘Bloom’ (Jamie XX Club Remix)?

Abu Sultan – ‘Your Love Made My Head Hurt?’

Diplo & Blaqstarr – ‘Get Off’ (Rob 3 Remix)

Atoms For Peace features Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke alongside Flea of Red Hot Chili Peppers and producer Nigel Godrich. They releasied their debut LP, ‘Amok’ on February 25 via XL Recordings. Read Uncut’s review of ‘Amok’ here.

The Rolling Stones reportedly planning 18 date US tour

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The Rolling Stones are apparently set to head out on an 18 date tour of the United States this year. Rolling Stone writes that a 'concert business source' has confirmed to them that the band will play the 18 North American shows. A Billboard report previously quoted a similar source saying the Ston...

The Rolling Stones are apparently set to head out on an 18 date tour of the United States this year.

Rolling Stone writes that a ‘concert business source’ has confirmed to them that the band will play the 18 North American shows. A Billboard report previously quoted a similar source saying the Stones would play “fewer than 20” dates in the States in the first half of 2013.

This follows Serge Pizzorno of Kasabian heating up rumours that The Rolling Stones will be playing this summer’s Glastonbury Festival.

Speaking to MTV News, the band’s chief songwriter was talking about Kasabian’s headline slot at Hard Rock Calling, which takes place the same June weekend as Glastonbury.

Pizzorno said: “I hope ours is the most talked about performance of the weekend, but that would be a miracle because The Rolling Stones are playing Glastonbury.”

Previously, Ronnie Wood of The Rolling Stones said that he was hoping to persuade his bandmates to headline Glastonbury.

Mick Jagger had already dropped hints about the possibility of the band playing the festival and Ronnie Wood then revealed that he was also keen.

“Wouldn’t it be nice?” he said when asked about playing the festival by The Independent.

He added: “It’s something I’ve always been interested in. I’m going to twist their arms. I’ve got lots of high hopes this year, now that we’re all rehearsed – let’s get it cracking this summer!”

Ask Steve Martin

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Ahead of the release of his new album Love Has Come To You, recorded with Edie Brickell, actor, comedian and banjo player Steve Martin is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular Audience With… feature. So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask him? How did he learn to play the banjo? Did he really write jokes for Mick Jagger? Why did he retire from stand-up comedy? Send up your questions by 5pm GMT, Monday, March 11 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com. The best questions, and Steve’s answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question. Pic credit: Startraks Photo/Rex Features

Ahead of the release of his new album Love Has Come To You, recorded with Edie Brickell, actor, comedian and banjo player Steve Martin is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular Audience With… feature.

So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask him?

How did he learn to play the banjo?

Did he really write jokes for Mick Jagger?

Why did he retire from stand-up comedy?

Send up your questions by 5pm GMT, Monday, March 11 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com. The best questions, and Steve’s answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question.

Pic credit: Startraks Photo/Rex Features

Brian Wilson, Al Jardine and David Marks announce tour dates

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Brian Wilson has announced details of two live shows he will play with fellow former Beach Boys, Al Jardine and David Marks. The announcement of the live date comes after the group fell out with fellow members Mike Love and Bruce Johnston in 2012 when the pair revealed plans to continue playing li...

Brian Wilson has announced details of two live shows he will play with fellow former Beach Boys, Al Jardine and David Marks.

The announcement of the live date comes after the group fell out with fellow members Mike Love and Bruce Johnston in 2012 when the pair revealed plans to continue playing live under The Beach Boys name, with or without Wilson, Jardine and Marks. The three-piece band have announced shows in Kettering, Ohio and a festival in Illinois this July.

Mike Love revealed his plan to continue playing under The Beach Boys name last year following the completion of the band’s hugely successful 50th anniversary tour. In October, Love defended his plans in an open letter published by the LA Times. He wrote: “I did not fire Brian Wilson from the Beach Boys. I cannot fire Brian Wilson from The Beach Boys. I am not his employer. I do not have such authority. And even if I did, I would never fire Brian Wilson from the Beach Boys. I love Brian Wilson.”

Wilson then responded with a letter in the same publication, writing: “By Mike not wanting or letting Al, David and me tour with the band, it sort of feels like we’re being fired.”

Brian Wilson, Al Jardine and David Marks will play:

Fraze Pavilion, Kettering, Ohio (July 25)

Ravina Festival, Highland Park, Illinois (26)

New Order to curate Live From Jodrell Bank gig

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New Order will play and curate a day of music from Manchester's Jodrell Bank. The series see bands perform beneath the Lovell Telescope at Jodrell Bank Observatory in Cheshire. New Order will headline the event, and the band have also enlisted Johnny Marr, The Whip, ex-Bad Lieutenant man Jake Evan...

New Order will play and curate a day of music from Manchester’s Jodrell Bank.

The series see bands perform beneath the Lovell Telescope at Jodrell Bank Observatory in Cheshire. New Order will headline the event, and the band have also enlisted Johnny Marr, The Whip, ex-Bad Lieutenant man Jake Evans and Hot Vestry to play on July 7, 2013.

New Order’s Stephen Morris said: “Playing at Jodrell Bank is going to be really exciting. I grew up not far from there, and I remember riding my bike over to it all the time when I was a little lad. I saw The Flaming Lips play there and they was brilliant. Really special. We’re going to try to do something special too, but we’re not telling you what! I do plan to take my life-size Dalek and Cyberman up there for the weekend at the very least.”

Earlier this year, it was announced that Sigur Ros will also headline Jodrell Bank this summer. Before the gig, ticket-holders will be able to take part in science experiments and workshops at the site’s Discovery Centre. The band will also project visuals onto the 76 metre-long telescope – which is one of the most powerful radio telescopes in the world and has been used by astronomers to explore outer space since 1957.

Elbow and The Flaming Lips have previously taken part in the Jodrell Bank events, which aim to marry science and music. For more information on the series, visit www.livefromjodrellbank.com.

World’s first Ringo Starr exhibition to open this summer

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The world's first major exhibition about the life of The Beatles drummer Ringo Starr is set to open this summer. Ringo: Peace & Love will open at the Grammy Museum in Los Angeles on June 12 and close in November 2013, before touring cities across the world in 2014. The exhibit will look at "all aspects of Starr's musical and creative life", including his work as a musician, artist and actor and will, according to a statement, "aim to propel Starr's universal message of peace and love." On display will be never-been-seen photographs as well as letters, documents and original artefacts, including the drum kit Ringo played at Shea Stadium and on The Ed Sullivan Show as well as his 'Sgt Pepper' suit, 'Help!' cape and jacket worn during The Beatles' famous London rooftop concert. The interactive element of the exhibition will see visitors able to take a virtual drum lesson with Ringo. Bob Santelli, executive director of The Grammy Museum has said of the exhibition: "I'm honored that Ringo has chosen to work with us to create Ringo: Peace & Love. We are particularly excited to celebrate Starr's extraordinary musical legacy with the legions of fans who admire him, as well as to introduce him to a new generation of music lovers." For more information visit: grammymuseum.org Last year Ringo Starr was named the richest drummer in the world. The 72-year-old, who released his 16th solo album 'Ringo 2012' last January, is worth $300 million (£190 million), according to wealth-calculation website Celebritynetworth.com. This puts him well ahead of former Genesis man Phil Collins, who came in second place with a reported worth of around $250 million (£158 million). Dave Grohl, worth $225 million (£143 million), was third.

The world’s first major exhibition about the life of The Beatles drummer Ringo Starr is set to open this summer.

Ringo: Peace & Love will open at the Grammy Museum in Los Angeles on June 12 and close in November 2013, before touring cities across the world in 2014.

The exhibit will look at “all aspects of Starr’s musical and creative life”, including his work as a musician, artist and actor and will, according to a statement, “aim to propel Starr’s universal message of peace and love.”

On display will be never-been-seen photographs as well as letters, documents and original artefacts, including the drum kit Ringo played at Shea Stadium and on The Ed Sullivan Show as well as his ‘Sgt Pepper’ suit, ‘Help!’ cape and jacket worn during The Beatles’ famous London rooftop concert.

The interactive element of the exhibition will see visitors able to take a virtual drum lesson with Ringo.

Bob Santelli, executive director of The Grammy Museum has said of the exhibition: “I’m honored that Ringo has chosen to work with us to create Ringo: Peace & Love. We are particularly excited to celebrate Starr’s extraordinary musical legacy with the legions of fans who admire him, as well as to introduce him to a new generation of music lovers.”

For more information visit: grammymuseum.org

Last year Ringo Starr was named the richest drummer in the world.

The 72-year-old, who released his 16th solo album ‘Ringo 2012’ last January, is worth $300 million (£190 million), according to wealth-calculation website Celebritynetworth.com.

This puts him well ahead of former Genesis man Phil Collins, who came in second place with a reported worth of around $250 million (£158 million). Dave Grohl, worth $225 million (£143 million), was third.

Laura Marling reveals new album details

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Laura Marling has revealed details of her forthcoming album. The singer's website has been updated with information about her fourth album, the follow-up to 2011's 'A Creature I Don't Know'. Titled 'Once I Was An Eagle', the new album will be released May 27. It was recorded at the Three Crows ...

Laura Marling has revealed details of her forthcoming album.

The singer’s website has been updated with information about her fourth album, the follow-up to 2011’s ‘A Creature I Don’t Know’.

Titled ‘Once I Was An Eagle’, the new album will be released May 27. It was recorded at the Three Crows studio owned by Marling’s pet producer and instrumentalist Ethan Johns (Kings of Leon, Ryan Adams, Vaccines), with Dom Monks on engineering duties. It features Marling’s friend Ruth de Turberville on cello.

Marling revealed tracks from ‘Once I Was An Eagle’ on her autumn 2012 ‘Working Holiday Tour’ of the USA, which saw the singer-songwriter making her way across America without a band or tour manager and taking in a number of cities not included on typical tour routes.

Speaking to NME before her show in Pioneertown, Marling confirmed her fourth studio album would not feature her band, and would open with a 20-minute medley. “It’s just me and [producer Ethan Johns] this time. I gave him the songs and he pretty much ran with it. I’m very lucky to have him.”

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’

Bill Callahan – Album By Album

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We look into the touching, awkward new film about Bill Callahan, Apocalypse: A Bill Callahan Tour Film, in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2013, and out now. As a companion piece, check out this fantastic piece with Callahan, aka Smog, recalling how he made his greatest albums, from May 2010’s...

We look into the touching, awkward new film about Bill Callahan, Apocalypse: A Bill Callahan Tour Film, in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2013, and out now. As a companion piece, check out this fantastic piece with Callahan, aka Smog, recalling how he made his greatest albums, from May 2010’s Uncut (Take 156).

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“I’m somewhere between a gumshoe and a journalist,” Callahan says. “A writer, not a symbol. I don’t want to be a performer who gets applause for quitting the bottle or for not committing suicide. There is such a thing as fiction.” It’s been tempting, nevertheless, to believe Callahan is the protagonist in the poignant, misanthropic songs that typified the records he’s released as Smog. You might even imagine ex-lovers, including Cat Power’s Chan Marshall and Joanna Newsom, among their subjects. Over the 13 LPs he’s released since 1990, Callahan’s moved from scruffy, lo-fi minimalism through lean, unsettling folk to more cheerful, lush-sounding recordings; a quixotic trajectory. “When I write a song,” Callahan says, “it is to fill a niche in people’s lives. To have a song for every experience, if one hadn’t been written yet.” Words: Nick Hasted

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SMOG – SEWN TO THE SKY

(Disaster, 1990)

Callahan recorded four cassettes as Smog before this first LP proper, made during a disastrous stay in Georgia. Its murky experiments on a “dumpster porta-studio” helped define the lo-fi aesthetic of his early records.

“I started it in Georgia and finished it back in Maryland. I’d moved back into my parents’ basement and set up my stuff down there. It was like my life had had a hiccup or something and I wasn’t quite ready to run the race. I was sleeping a lot in the day. At midnight every night I would methodically leave the house for a couple hours’ walk, come back in and record. And then the sun came up. If I had done something good, then I’d be happy and go to sleep. The record is womb-like. Kind of muffled. Like when people play music for their babies – it’s what a baby would hear.

“Writing songs was like my ticket to the world, I think. Sewn To The Sky, I knew no-one would want to put that out. But I didn’t care. I put it out on my own label, and made, I think, 300 copies on the first pressing. It was just a ticket to participate in… everything. Like, having a wife. And some kind of life. Things you read about in books. Looking at people who were making music was like looking in the store window, at things you can’t afford, and going, ‘That’s what I need.’”

SMOG – JULIUS CAESAR

(Drag City, 1993)

Callahan finally enters a proper studio. Retaining the distinctive lo-fi qualities of its predecessor, Julius Caesar includes the bittersweet ballads “Golden” and “Chosen One” alongside “I Am Star Wars!”, based around Stones tape-loops. “37 Push-Ups” touches on self-parody: “I feel like Travis Bickle listening to Highway To Hell.”

“That record is half on four-track, and half in a studio. It was kind of strange to have someone else there. And the engineer was this portly, ruddy, miserable blob. He had this six-pack of beer he was just guzzling. He didn’t share them, no, I brought my own. I just had to go for it, and try to block out all that stuff. I went out on my first tour in ’92, too, and I remember I closed my eyes and went through a song for the sound-check. And I opened them, and the engineer had left. That was the same important realisation – that no-one cared, except me.

“When I started out I wanted to make music that would just happen this one time and be caught on tape, and that could never be repeated. Very immediate. Not a lot of words. The first three records were completely naïve. I didn’t understand about the balance of sound. All that stuff that people strive for. I had to learn… everything. I’m not too sure if it even helps to know how to make a record, actually.”

SMOG – THE DOCTOR CAME AT DAWN

(Drag City/Domino, 1996)

Callahan’s split with collaborator-muse Cynthia Dall seemed to inspire this, his fifth LP. Its emotional heart is “All Your Women Things”, whose abandoned lover “made a spread-eagle pretty dolly out of your frilly things”. A dark collection of songs, admittedly, but arguably it marked the maturing of Callahan as a songwriter.

“I was still kind of stupid. I hadn’t grown up yet. I was still just learning about life. So there’s a tumultuous thing in these early records. You need to get hit over the head a thousand times before you go, ‘Ah, I see…’ A lot of that record is just like getting hit on the head.

“With ‘All Your Women Things’, I was trying to write a classic song about the end of love. A lot of what I was writing was trying to get away from platitudes, and be crude, the way crudeness is a good thing – a pure, unfiltered thought. Just trying to say something that means something and is true. R’n’B songs are very specific, as are older C&W songs. It’s in that tradition. The little details. Rock lyrics are more about fantasy, which I’m not really a part of. It’s not stalkerish. I never liked when people said stuff like that about my songs. It’s the first record that was of a piece, done almost completely in the studio. I wanted a still-seeming record, like the photo of the ship on the cover, with its sails furled.”

SMOG – KNOCK KNOCK

(Drag City/Domino, 1999)

Jim O’Rourke, a full band and a children’s choir were the new ingredients in what Callahan called his “album for teenagers”. The poppy “Cold Blooded Old Times” almost proved him right, while the sleeve – featuring a wildcat – might have been a reference to recent belle Cat Power.

“It was such an exciting thing just to finally have a band, so different to something like The Doctor Came At Dawn. It’s a different energy when you have three or four people playing. Knock Knock was intoxicated with that feeling. I was taking some of the responsibility off my back, and having more fun. I finally had an engineer, Jim O’Rourke, who liked my music, so that encouraged me to go in a more expansive direction – where with the previous records it was all on me and my drunk engineer. But I couldn’t have started with Knock Knock. It was important to set the foundations by myself first. We couldn’t afford the Chicago Children’s Choir. There are a couple of members of it who’d work, under the table, and their friends. It was really fun. One of those things that made you realise with the smallest bit of effort, you could do anything you want. Which is an important lesson, when you make anything.”

SMOG – RAIN ON LENS

(Drag City/Domino, 2001)

Here, Callahan used other musicians with growing confidence, widening his sound to include horns and fiddles. As close as Smog gets to a “rock record”…

“I wanted to do a minimal record. I just rearranged different blocks of sound into different patterns. I wanted it to sound like there’s an orchestra of aliens in the background. ‘Short Drive’ is another ‘portrait’ song, loosely based on someone we all know and love – which excludes it being about me. Unfortunately, it was taken as ‘autobiography’ because I’m such a convincing writer, I guess. The boogie-woogie on ‘Song’ was borrowed from John Lee Hooker. The English horn and oboe parts sounded great. Rain On Lens is the equivalent to the poisonous blowfish delicacy in sushi. The people who know sushi, know that the blowfish is the best thing. The LP was released just after 9/11. I was in Australia and had to do phone interviews with Japanese press on 9/12. Neither party wanted to talk about the record at that juncture. I would say Knock Knock, Rain On Lens, Red Apple Falls are band records. The other ones after River are more something else.”

SMOG – A RIVER AIN’T TOO MUCH TO LOVE

(Drag City/Domino, 2004)

Burnt-out in Chicago, where he’d lived for five years, Callahan relocated to Austin, Texas ahead of this stunning album. Finding renewed focus, this sparse set of folksy vignettes (recorded at Willie Nelson’s studio in Spicewood, Texas) captured Callahan at his most immediate and revealing. Guests included Dirty Three drummer Jim White and, on piano, Joanna Newsom (more of her later)…

“The transformation described in the lyrics was totally happening to me. I’d wanted to leave Chicago for a long time. And I finally decided to move to Austin, where I didn’t know anybody. So I set up my life there, and my wheels were spinning, and I wasn’t sure what to do. I thought maybe I should, as a break from the promotional grind I’d been getting burned out on, just set everything back to zero. Which I did. That’s why I didn’t write anything for a while before River… Empty myself. Start again.

“My parents came to visit me, and I was talking to them about how I wasn’t sure what my next record should be like. I’d started feeling that I was aware of this river inside me, and I started talking about that with my parents. I thought of this feeling of the river as being a problem. But my mother said, ‘Well, why don’t you just write about that?’ And it was like a gong going off. When they left, I wrote all these songs. ‘Rock Bottom Riser’ was by way of a thank you [with its lyric, ‘I love my father/I love my mother/…I bought this guitar…to pledge my love to you’]. My mother basically sparked off the whole record. When I started focusing on the idea of a river, it was just like a force of all being, for lack of a better term. It seemed like everything came from this thing, it seemed to apply to every single facet of life. ‘In The Pines’ [originally a 19th century Appalachian folk song] was the first time I’d really stepped inside someone else’s song. That song is everything to me. It holds the universe in its hands. It’s psychedelic. Learning it ‘my way’ was a rite of passage into the LP. I’d played it in the traditional arrangement, but it didn’t have enough fluidity, so I rearranged it in the style and tuning of the LP. I embraced a traditional element, but made it from me.

“That was all a finger-picking record, and I started to understand more the connection between guitar and voice, and the way they can be one thing. A River Ain’t Too Much To Love was a transition for me. There’s something really pure about it.”

BILL CALLAHAN – WOKE ON A WHALEHEART

(Drag City, 2007)

Callahan’s first album under his own name, produced by ex-Royal Trux man Neil Hagerty, offered relatively straight takes on twangy ’60s country and folk. He’d never sounded so happy – due, some thought, to his new relationship with Joanna Newsom.

“I mean, I’ve been in love… it’s not like it was the first time. I was just feeling more open. With the title, I was trying to describe that. Like when you’ve been asleep and you wake up on this huge heart. That’s what I was feeling. I tried to make releasing it under my own name a big change. I let someone else do the artwork for the first time. And I had Neil Hagerty producing. I wrote one sentence encapsulating each song, just a little spark for him to go with. But I didn’t realise if you’re giving your work over to someone else, that means not saying a word. That was difficult. But just to be a songwriter, and not to have to worry about all the other roles I’d played in the past, was a nice vacation. The songs are more sturdy and direct. When I started out, I recorded songs more immediately, because I was interested in those immediate thoughts you know are wrong. I didn’t ever mean to play them again, I’d just trap them and leave them on a record. I’m not so interested in that any more.”

BILL CALLAHAN – SOMETIMES I WISH WE WERE AN EAGLE

(Drag City, 2009)

He’d broken up with Newsom, but there were no conspicuous signs of turmoil here. His most accessible record, maybe, this is a beautiful, often touching batch of songs given graceful accompaniment by Texan musician Brian Beattie.

“It’s removed from all that type of writing, from the emotional things in the past. It should be applicable to all different sorts of situations, rather than just one mood. It’s more expansive. I really hate the word ‘mature’, though. It belittles what came before. And, if you were going to go to a show, it’s not very appealing. ‘The singer, he’s really mature…’

“’Faith/ Void’ [a rejection of religion] came from the way sometimes people ask you, ‘Are you spiritual?’ You just kind of mumble an answer. And I started to realise that I had to answer this question properly for myself. I knew certain parts of the answer, but I hadn’t really answered it. I’d just been mumbling through this definition, and I thought, ‘Fuck it’, I’ve got to define it. So I did. I really investigated a lot of different types of religion. It was like I’d been holding this rope, and putting it down on the floor and edging away. So I picked up that rope here. I resolved that question.“

BILL CALLAHAN – ROUGH TRAVEL FOR A RARE THING

(Drag City, 2010)

Recorded in Melbourne, Australia in November 2007, this live set features songs cherry-picked from Callahan’s pre-…Eagle output.

“Yeah, I love singing now. I’ve learned to relax as I did it more. I used to have stage-fright. I used to think about it more, analyse it too much. Now, it’s just a matter of calming your mind and realising it’s okay to be doing this, believing that people actually want to hear what you’re doing. I put this out because it was a really good lineup, a different sound, I was recasting a lot of the songs’ arrangements. The title’s all the things you go to that day, just to get to the club.

“Sometimes you can realise that this is a really important night, and whatever people are going to get out of it, they’ve been looking forward to it for some amount of time. You just try to channel into what everyone is hoping for. Last night we played our last show in Portugal, a really amazing tour of seated theatres. People just listened, and seemed very excited. You can feel the energy of all those people when you’re onstage, and you can definitely feel it when people don’t care. But ultimately the show is for me and the band. And the audience will reap the rewards of that.”

David Bowie teams up with Paul Smith for ‘The Next Day’ t-shirt

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David Bowie has teamed up with designer Paul Smith for a T-shirt to celebrate the release of his new album 'The Next Day'. The cotton T-shirt, which features the Jonathan Barnbrook-designed artwork for 'The Next Day' - inspired by Bowie's 1977 album 'Heroes' – is one of many collaborations betwe...

David Bowie has teamed up with designer Paul Smith for a T-shirt to celebrate the release of his new album ‘The Next Day’.

The cotton T-shirt, which features the Jonathan Barnbrook-designed artwork for ‘The Next Day’ – inspired by Bowie’s 1977 album ‘Heroes’ – is one of many collaborations between Bowie and Smith planned this year, Vogue reports. The shirt features a message and signature written by Paul Smith on the bottom right corner of the album sleeve image.

“David Bowie has worn a lot of Paul Smith throughout his career and I was excited and delighted when asked if I would do the official T-shirt for his album, ‘The Next Day’,” Smith told Vogue “There will also be some other great things coming up later in the year.” The shirt will be available from March 7, priced at £70, from paulsmith.co.uk.

David Bowie will release ‘The Next Day’ on March 11.

You can read the definitive review of the album in this month’s Uncut, which is on sale now.

David Grohl “Sound City” Soundtrack Now Free To Stream

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Dave Grohl’s all-original soundtrack to his documentary “Sound City” is now free to stream at the NME website. ‘The Sound City Players’ – essentially David Grohl teaming with an all-star team of guests, matches Grohl with Stevie Nicks, Josh Homme, John Fogarty, Trent Reznor and Paul McC...

Dave Grohl’s all-original soundtrack to his documentary “Sound City” is now free to stream at the NME website. ‘The Sound City Players’ – essentially David Grohl teaming with an all-star team of guests, matches Grohl with Stevie Nicks, Josh Homme, John Fogarty, Trent Reznor and Paul McCartney.

The Paul McCartney song, which the Beatle billed as a Nirvana reunion, features all surviving members of Nirvana; Grohl, Krist Novoselic and late-era guitarist and ex-Germ Pat Smear. Other songs include artists ranging from Rick Springfield to Lee Ving of Fear to a pair of Rage Against the Machine members.

Grohl’s documentary honours the recently-closed Sound City Studios in Los Angeles, where Nirvana and a bevy of other rock legends recorded.

The Sound City Players will play this year’s SXSW, where Grohl will serve as a keynote speaker.

A track listing appears below:

1. Heaven And All – Robert Levon Been, Dave Grohl & Peter Hayes

2. Time Slowing Down – Chris Goss, Tim Commerford, Dave Grohl & Brad Wilk

3. You Can’t Fix This – Stevie Nicks, Dave Grohl, Taylor Hawkins & Rami Jaffee

4. The Man That Never Was – Rick Springfield, Dave Grohl, Taylor Hawkins, Nate Mendel & Pat Smear

5. Your Wife Is Calling – Lee Ving, Dave Grohl, Taylor Hawkins, Alain Johannes & Pat Smear

6. From Can To Can’t – Corey Taylor, Dave Grohl, Rick Nielsen & Scott Reeder

7. Centipede – Joshua Homme, Chris Goss, Dave Grohl & Alain Johannes

8. A Trick With No Sleeve – Alain Johannes, Dave Grohl & Joshua Homme

9. Cut Me Some Slack – Paul McCartney, Dave Grohl, Krist Novoselic & Pat Smear

10. If I Were Me – Dave Grohl, Jessy Greene, Rami Jaffee & Jim Keltner

11. Mantra – Dave Grohl, Joshua Homme & Trent Reznor

Rolling Stones for Glastonbury? Rumours intensify.

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Kasabian's Serge Pizzorno has apparently confirmed that The Rolling Stones will be playing this summer's Glastonbury Festival. Speaking to MTV News, the band's chief songwriter was talking about Kasabian's headline slot at Hard Rock Calling, which takes place the same June weekend as Glastonbury. H...

Kasabian’s Serge Pizzorno has apparently confirmed that The Rolling Stones will be playing this summer’s Glastonbury Festival.

Speaking to MTV News, the band’s chief songwriter was talking about Kasabian’s headline slot at Hard Rock Calling, which takes place the same June weekend as Glastonbury. He said: “I hope ours is the most talked about performance of the weekend, but that would be a miracle because The Rolling Stones are playing Glastonbury.”

Many a Rolling Stone has previously hinted at playing the show’s Pyramid Stage. Mick Jagger told NME in January “There are other things in the world, you know, apart from Glastonbury! But then again, Glastonbury is very important. It seems to be very important to my children – highlight of their year!”

He added, “But is it going to be rainy on the Sunday? Isn’t it nearly always rainy on the Sunday?”

Ronnie Wood seemed more determined in an interview with the Independent.

“Wouldn’t it be nice?” Wood said, adding “We’ve got a meeting next month and that’s going to be my first question to them. It’s something I’ve always been interested in. I’m going to twist their arms. I’ve got lots of high hopes this year, now that we’re all rehearsed – let’s get it cracking this summer!”

Alvin Lee of Ten Years After dies aged 68

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Alvin Lee, co-founder and guitarist with Ten Years After, has died aged 68. According to a statement posted yesterday (March 6) on his website, Lee died from complications following surgery. Born in Nottingham in 1944, Lee played in a number of local bands before he founded Ten Years After in 1966...

Alvin Lee, co-founder and guitarist with Ten Years After, has died aged 68.

According to a statement posted yesterday (March 6) on his website, Lee died from complications following surgery.

Born in Nottingham in 1944, Lee played in a number of local bands before he founded Ten Years After in 1966 with bassist Leo Lyons. They released their self-titled debut album in 1967. In 1969, they played the Newport Jazz Festival and, notably, Woodstock, where Lee led the band through a memorable version of “I’m Going Home” that you can watch below.

Ten Years After had eight Top 40 albums in the UK, before Lee left the band in 1973 to focus on his solo career. That same year, he released On The Road To Freedom with American musician Mylon LeFevre, which featured contributions from George Harrison, Steve Winwood, Jim Capaldi, Ronnie Wood and Mick Fleetwood.

Lee released his 14th record, Still on the Road to Freedom, in August last year.

Hear new Flaming Lips track ‘Look… The Sun Is Rising’

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The Flaming Lips have debuted a new track titled "Look... The Sun Is Rising". The song, which will be featured on their forthcoming new album The Terror, is currently streaming at NPR. Previously, the Oklahoma band had released a new track titled 'Sun Blows Up Today', which will appear as a bonus c...

The Flaming Lips have debuted a new track titled “Look… The Sun Is Rising”.

The song, which will be featured on their forthcoming new album The Terror, is currently streaming at NPR. Previously, the Oklahoma band had released a new track titled ‘Sun Blows Up Today’, which will appear as a bonus cut on the LP.

The Terror will be released on April 1 via Bella Union (in the UK) and was produced by Dave Fridmann and the band at Tarbox Road Studios in New York State. The album is described as “nine original compositions that reflect a darker-hued spectrum than previous works along with a more inward-looking lyrical perspective than one might expect – but then again, maybe not”.

Speaking about the LP, Wayne Coyne said: “Why would we make this music that is The Terror – this bleak, disturbing record? I don’t really want to know the answer that I think is coming: that we were hopeless, we were disturbed and, I think, accepting that some things are hopeless. Or letting hope in one area die so that hope can start to live in another? Maybe this is the beginning of the answer.”

The Flaming Lips will also play live in London following the release of The Terror with two London dates announced. They will play:

London, Roundhouse (May 20)

London, Roundhouse (21)

Lou Reed makes surprise appearance at playback celebrating his Transformer album

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Lou Reed astounded a small group of 100 fan who had gathered to celebrate his 1972 album Transformer by making a personal appearance to listen to the album in its entirety. The event, set up by website high50.com, took place on March 4 at New York's Soho House. Reed also took part in a discussion a...

Lou Reed astounded a small group of 100 fan who had gathered to celebrate his 1972 album Transformer by making a personal appearance to listen to the album in its entirety.

The event, set up by website high50.com, took place on March 4 at New York’s Soho House. Reed also took part in a discussion about the album’s content and its wider cultural significance.

Earlier in the evening, photographer Mick Rock, who shot Reed for Transformer’s album cover, read excerpts from his new book – Transformer.

The high50.com New York event follows a number of similar ‘listening clubs’ held across Soho House’s UK branches over the past 18 months, which have included vinyl playbacks of records such as Pink Floyd’s Dark Side Of The Moon and David Bowie’s The Rise And Fall of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars.