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The Who to play ‘Quadrophenia’ in full on UK arena tour

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The Who have announced details of a UK and Ireland arena tour during which they will perform their Quadrophenia album in full. The band will also play a selection of their other classics during the 10-date tour, which kicks off in Dublin on June 8 and wraps up in Liverpool on June 30. Tickets go on...

The Who have announced details of a UK and Ireland arena tour during which they will perform their Quadrophenia album in full.

The band will also play a selection of their other classics during the 10-date tour, which kicks off in Dublin on June 8 and wraps up in Liverpool on June 30. Tickets go on sale this Friday (February 1) at 9am.

The band begin a second US leg of their Quadrophenia And More tour in Anaheim, California later today (January 28). Directed by Roger Daltrey, the show features a full performance of their 1973 double album Quadrophenia accompanied by “powerful imagery projected on an array of massive screens”. According to the band’s press release, this imagery is “designed to support, complement and propel the musical content of the work by setting it in the context of the history of the band”.

During their UK dates, Daltrey and Pete Townshend will be joined by Zak Starkey (drums), Pino Palladino (bass), Simon Townshend (guitar/backing vocals), John Corey (keyboards), Loren Gold (keyboards/backing vocals) and Frank Simes (musical director, keyboards/backing vocals).

The Who will play:

Dublin The O2 (June 8)

Belfast Odyssey (10)

Glasgow SECC (12)

London The O2 (15)

Sheffield Motorpoint Arena (18)

Newcastle Metro Arena (20)

Manchester Arena (23)

Cardiff Motorpoint Arena (25)

Birmingham LG Arena (28)

Liverpool Echo Arena (30)

Iggy And The Stooges finish first album in five years

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Iggy And The Stooges have finished recording their new album called Ready To Die. The album is the first studio album from the band since 2007's The Weirdness. It also marks the return of guitarist James Williamson, who left the band after 1973's Raw Power, and who is also believed to have produced...

Iggy And The Stooges have finished recording their new album called Ready To Die.

The album is the first studio album from the band since 2007’s The Weirdness. It also marks the return of guitarist James Williamson, who left the band after 1973’s Raw Power, and who is also believed to have produced the record. Williamson rejoined the Stooges following guitarist Ron Asheton’s death in 2009.

According to HitFlix the album has been mixed by Ed Cherney, who worked with Iggy Pop on his Brick By Brick album in 1990. “It’s raw,” said Cherney. “They’re great songs, but not necessarily big choruses. They’re the anti-christ of anthems.”

Speaking about the album’s lyrics, Cherney said, they’re “very timely. [Iggy Pop] knows what he wants to say. He’s watching the world around him.â€

HitFlix also claim confirmed track titles include “I Got a Job But It Don’t Pay Shit†and “Gunâ€.

My Bloody Valentine debut new song at London gig

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My Bloody Valentine debuted a new song at their London gig last night (January 27). Scroll down and hit 'play' to watch fan footage of the performance. According to the band's setlist, the new tune is called "Rough Song". My Bloody Valentine opened the show at Brixton's Electric with the newbie, be...

My Bloody Valentine debuted a new song at their London gig last night (January 27). Scroll down and hit ‘play’ to watch fan footage of the performance.

According to the band’s setlist, the new tune is called “Rough Song”. My Bloody Valentine opened the show at Brixton’s Electric with the newbie, before playing 14 old favourites including “Only Shallow”, “You Made Me Realise” and “Feed Me With Your Kiss”.

My Bloody Valentine played:

‘Rough Song’

‘I Only Said’

‘When You Sleep’

‘You Never Should’

‘Honey Power’

‘Cigarette In Your Bed’

‘Come In Alone’

‘Only Shallow’

‘Thorn’

‘Nothing Much To Lose’

‘To Here Knows When’

‘Slow’

‘Soon’

‘Feed Me With Your Kiss’

‘You Made Me Realise’

Speaking on stage during the performance, frontman Kevin Shields revealed that the band’s long-awaited new album “might be out in two or three days”. In December, they posted a message to their fans on Facebook informing them that a new album had finally been mastered, although no release date was given.

The message read:

On 21-12-12 we finished mastering the new album!

Speaking to NME at the beginning of November, frontman Kevin Shields claimed that the band’s new album would be released on his website before the end of the year, although it has yet to see the light of day.

Meanwhile, My Bloody Valentine have added a fifth date to their UK tour this March. The band, who were due to kick off at Glasgow’s Barrowlands on March 9 before playing Manchester Apollo on March 10 and two shows at London’s Hammersmith Apollo on March 12 and 13, will now begin on March 8 at Birmingham’s O2 Academy.

My Bloody Valentine will play:

Birmingham O2 Academy (March 8)

Glasgow Barrowlands (March 9)

Manchester Apollo (10)

London Hammersmith Apollo (12, 13)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gpsCi-3bBA0

Tony Visconti on David Bowie’s unearthed Hype gig: ‘The reaction wasn’t very welcoming’

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Tony Visconti has recalled David Bowie’s 1970 gig with his proto-glam outfit The Hype, footage of which is set to be screened for the first time. The costumed group, featuring Mick Ronson on guitar and Visconti himself on bass, performed at the Atomic Sunrise festival at London's Roundhouse on March 11, 1970. Discussing the night in the new issue of Uncut, out on January 31, Visconti says: “I thought it looked great. But we weren’t a star band and the reaction wasn’t very welcoming. “Not only did we look strange, but David’s music was quite complicated.†Footage of the festival, which also featured Hawkwind, Genesis, Arthur Brown and Kevin Ayers & The Whole World, will be screened at the Roundhouse on March 11/12. You can read more of Visconti’s recollections about The Hype’s first gig, and the story of the uncovered footage, including interviews with many other Atomic Sunrise performers, in the new issue of Uncut, out on January 31.

Tony Visconti has recalled David Bowie’s 1970 gig with his proto-glam outfit The Hype, footage of which is set to be screened for the first time.

The costumed group, featuring Mick Ronson on guitar and Visconti himself on bass, performed at the Atomic Sunrise festival at London’s Roundhouse on March 11, 1970.

Discussing the night in the new issue of Uncut, out on January 31, Visconti says: “I thought it looked great. But we weren’t a star band and the reaction wasn’t very welcoming.

“Not only did we look strange, but David’s music was quite complicated.â€

Footage of the festival, which also featured Hawkwind, Genesis, Arthur Brown and Kevin Ayers & The Whole World, will be screened at the Roundhouse on March 11/12.

You can read more of Visconti’s recollections about The Hype’s first gig, and the story of the uncovered footage, including interviews with many other Atomic Sunrise performers, in the new issue of Uncut, out on January 31.

Tom Waits: ‘I was kinda lost in the ’60s…’

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The story of Tom Waits’ early life and the making of his stunning debut album, Closing Time, is examined in the new issue of Uncut, out on January 31. Waits’ closest collaborators tell the tale of the songwriter’s move from being a Beat-obsessed San Diego kid to Los Angeles troubadour. “I was kinda lost in the ’60s,†Waits explained. “Knowing I wanted to do something creative, not knowing how or where to do it. "Before I found Kerouac I was kinda groping for something to hang on to, stylistically." The eventful recording of Closing Time, which was released 40 years ago this year, is also recalled by the musicians who performed on the landmark release. The new issue of Uncut, dated March 2013, is out on Thursday (January 31, 2013).

The story of Tom Waits’ early life and the making of his stunning debut album, Closing Time, is examined in the new issue of Uncut, out on January 31.

Waits’ closest collaborators tell the tale of the songwriter’s move from being a Beat-obsessed San Diego kid to Los Angeles troubadour.

“I was kinda lost in the ’60s,†Waits explained. “Knowing I wanted to do something creative, not knowing how or where to do it.

“Before I found Kerouac I was kinda groping for something to hang on to, stylistically.”

The eventful recording of Closing Time, which was released 40 years ago this year, is also recalled by the musicians who performed on the landmark release.

The new issue of Uncut, dated March 2013, is out on Thursday (January 31, 2013).

Paul McCartney used to think vegetarians ‘were wimps’

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Paul McCartney has said that when he was growing up he always thought of vegetarians as being wimps. McCartney was converted to vegetarianism by his late wife Linda and revealed his old thoughts on the subject as he promoted the meat-free lifestyle she pioneered in a Huffington Post blog. The former Beatles star writes: "Growing up in Liverpool, I would have thought of a vegetarian as a wimp. We could be a prejudiced bunch at times but I'm not sure people would automatically think like that these days." He went on to add: "I've been a vegetarian for a long time now and over the years I've seen how the attitudes have changed around the world, so I'm not surprised when I see new research that shows more and more people are increasingly adopting 'meat-free eating'. Even 20 years ago, it could sometimes be difficult to find vegetarian options in good restaurants. Now it's great to see more and more choice with some brilliant creative dishes in restaurants, cafés and supermarkets. There is definitely now an overall greater acceptance of being vegetarian." McCartney is set to provide the music for a new animated TV advert for Linda's range of vegetarian foods. His song, recorded in studio sessions with Mark Ronson, will be revealed when the advert airs on January 28. The #LoveLinda campaign will mark the first time in 15 years that the Linda McCartney brand has done TV advertising with the ad featuring an animated version of the McCartney family. In addition to McCartney, Elvis Costello has recorded the voiceover on the advert. Speaking about fellow vegetarian Linda, Costello said: "Linda always talked well and made it seem that you wouldn’t be joining a secret weird society by being vegetarian."

Paul McCartney has said that when he was growing up he always thought of vegetarians as being wimps.

McCartney was converted to vegetarianism by his late wife Linda and revealed his old thoughts on the subject as he promoted the meat-free lifestyle she pioneered in a Huffington Post blog. The former Beatles star writes: “Growing up in Liverpool, I would have thought of a vegetarian as a wimp. We could be a prejudiced bunch at times but I’m not sure people would automatically think like that these days.”

He went on to add: “I’ve been a vegetarian for a long time now and over the years I’ve seen how the attitudes have changed around the world, so I’m not surprised when I see new research that shows more and more people are increasingly adopting ‘meat-free eating’. Even 20 years ago, it could sometimes be difficult to find vegetarian options in good restaurants. Now it’s great to see more and more choice with some brilliant creative dishes in restaurants, cafés and supermarkets. There is definitely now an overall greater acceptance of being vegetarian.”

McCartney is set to provide the music for a new animated TV advert for Linda’s range of vegetarian foods. His song, recorded in studio sessions with Mark Ronson, will be revealed when the advert airs on January 28. The #LoveLinda campaign will mark the first time in 15 years that the Linda McCartney brand has done TV advertising with the ad featuring an animated version of the McCartney family.

In addition to McCartney, Elvis Costello has recorded the voiceover on the advert. Speaking about fellow vegetarian Linda, Costello said: “Linda always talked well and made it seem that you wouldn’t be joining a secret weird society by being vegetarian.”

British Sea Power announce new album and tour dates

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British Sea Power have announced details of a new album and tour for 2013. The band will release their fifth album, Machineries Of Joy, on Rough Trade Records on April 1. The follow-up to 2011's Valhalla Dancehall, Machineries Of Joy was written in the mountains in north Wales and recorded in their Brighton hometown. "We’d like to think the album is warm and restorative," singer Yan says in a press statement. "Various things are touched on in the words – Franciscan monks, ketamine, French female bodybuilders-turned-erotic movie stars. The world often seems a mad, hysterical place at the moment. You can’t really be oblivious to that, but we’d like the record to be an antidote – a nice game of cards in pleasant company." The album release will be accompanied by a full UK tour kicking off in Exeter on April 4 and finishing up in London's Shepherds Bush Empire. British Sea Power will play: Exeter Phoenix (April 4) Birmingham Library (5) Newcastle University (6) Glasgow Oran Mor (7) Leeds Met University (9) Nottingham Rescue Rooms (10) Manchester Gorilla (11) Cardiff Coal Exchange (14) Portsmouth Wedgewood (15) Norwich Waterfront (16) London Shepherd’s Bush Empire (17)

British Sea Power have announced details of a new album and tour for 2013.

The band will release their fifth album, Machineries Of Joy, on Rough Trade Records on April 1. The follow-up to 2011’s Valhalla Dancehall, Machineries Of Joy was written in the mountains in north Wales and recorded in their Brighton hometown.

“We’d like to think the album is warm and restorative,” singer Yan says in a press statement. “Various things are touched on in the words – Franciscan monks, ketamine, French female bodybuilders-turned-erotic movie stars. The world often seems a mad, hysterical place at the moment. You can’t really be oblivious to that, but we’d like the record to be an antidote – a nice game of cards in pleasant company.”

The album release will be accompanied by a full UK tour kicking off in Exeter on April 4 and finishing up in London’s Shepherds Bush Empire.

British Sea Power will play:

Exeter Phoenix (April 4)

Birmingham Library (5)

Newcastle University (6)

Glasgow Oran Mor (7)

Leeds Met University (9)

Nottingham Rescue Rooms (10)

Manchester Gorilla (11)

Cardiff Coal Exchange (14)

Portsmouth Wedgewood (15)

Norwich Waterfront (16)

London Shepherd’s Bush Empire (17)

Black Flag reform for Hevy Fest 2013

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Black Flag have reformed and will play this year's Hevy Fest, it has been confirmed. The punk icons will be fronted by Ron Reyes – and not Henry Rollins – for their first UK show in almost 30 years and the only live date the band will play in 2013. A post on the official website for Hevy Fest states: "Celebrating our fifth year this summer, we have been working on some very special appearances for 2013 to mark the occasion." The band will perform with the Black Flag lineup of 1979 when Ron Reyes joined Greg Ginn in the band as a replacement for Keith Morris, who went on to form The Circle Jerks. Reyes quit just one year later and was replaced by fan Dez Cadenza. Rollins joined the band in 1981, leaving in 1986 where he has continued to release music as well as becoming an actor and touring his spoken word show. Hevy Fest 2013 takes place from August 2-4 at the Port Lympne Wild Animal Park in Kent. Organisers promise a further 80 bands will be announced in the coming months.

Black Flag have reformed and will play this year’s Hevy Fest, it has been confirmed.

The punk icons will be fronted by Ron Reyes – and not Henry Rollins – for their first UK show in almost 30 years and the only live date the band will play in 2013. A post on the official website for Hevy Fest states: “Celebrating our fifth year this summer, we have been working on some very special appearances for 2013 to mark the occasion.”

The band will perform with the Black Flag lineup of 1979 when Ron Reyes joined Greg Ginn in the band as a replacement for Keith Morris, who went on to form The Circle Jerks. Reyes quit just one year later and was replaced by fan Dez Cadenza. Rollins joined the band in 1981, leaving in 1986 where he has continued to release music as well as becoming an actor and touring his spoken word show.

Hevy Fest 2013 takes place from August 2-4 at the Port Lympne Wild Animal Park in Kent. Organisers promise a further 80 bands will be announced in the coming months.

Fleetwood Mac announce new US tour dates over Glastonbury weekend

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Fleetwood Mac have announced a new string of US tour dates over Glastonbury weekend, seemingly ruling themselves out of making their debut appearance on the Pyramid Stage. The band will play Spokane, Washington on Saturday, June 29 and Portland, Oregon on Sunday, June 30 as part of the extra leg of their mammoth US tour. There is a small chance the band could play the Friday of Glastonbury but have clearly ruled themselves out of performing on the Saturday and the Sunday. Rumours were that the rock legends could coincide a forthcoming summer 2013 tour with performing at Glastonbury, with Stevie Nicks telling NME that she would love to do it, having watched Beyonce's headline slot from her London hotel room in 2011. "When we were there [in the UK] in 2011, I watched it. I watched Beyonce and it was pretty amazing! I had just got home from the Hyde Park thing, so I was just home from my own show and I turned on the TV and we had a pretty big screen in the hotel where we were, so I sat and watched like three hours, four hours of it, so would I love to do it? I’d love to do it!" Speaking about the band's forthcoming world tour, she added: "We are coming to the UK. It’s on there, the pre-schedule that they start sending out to you. We have basically 50 shows in the United States and then a little break, then it looks like we are coming to England to do, probably like seven or eight shows. I don’t know that for sure, but I think that’s what it will work out to be, and hopefully we will do other shows through Europe. I’m delighted to come over there, I’m thrilled about it." When asked if one of those shows could be Glastonbury, Nicks replied: "Oh yeah! I hope, you know, I hope I hope!" Previously, festival boss Emily Eavis admitted to NME that she would love to see Fleetwood Mac headline the Pyramid Stage in 2013. "I think Fleetwood Mac would be amazing to get," she said in October of this year. "I’ll be totally honest we haven’t had any conversations with them yet but, you know, it is still early days. We’re just talking to some headliners now. For us it’s about getting the balance of heritage bands, legends and new bands – just keeping that balance." Meanwhile, Fleetwood Mac have also invited fans to re-create the famous cover of their album Rumours and send their entries to the band via their Facebook page. "Be as creative as you like, maybe choose an iconic location, alternative outfits or a whole new interpretation! The more creative the better," reads a post they send out to fans. The contest is designed to promote a forthcoming reissue of Rumours.

Fleetwood Mac have announced a new string of US tour dates over Glastonbury weekend, seemingly ruling themselves out of making their debut appearance on the Pyramid Stage.

The band will play Spokane, Washington on Saturday, June 29 and Portland, Oregon on Sunday, June 30 as part of the extra leg of their mammoth US tour. There is a small chance the band could play the Friday of Glastonbury but have clearly ruled themselves out of performing on the Saturday and the Sunday.

Rumours were that the rock legends could coincide a forthcoming summer 2013 tour with performing at Glastonbury, with Stevie Nicks telling NME that she would love to do it, having watched Beyonce’s headline slot from her London hotel room in 2011.

“When we were there [in the UK] in 2011, I watched it. I watched Beyonce and it was pretty amazing! I had just got home from the Hyde Park thing, so I was just home from my own show and I turned on the TV and we had a pretty big screen in the hotel where we were, so I sat and watched like three hours, four hours of it, so would I love to do it? I’d love to do it!”

Speaking about the band’s forthcoming world tour, she added: “We are coming to the UK. It’s on there, the pre-schedule that they start sending out to you. We have basically 50 shows in the United States and then a little break, then it looks like we are coming to England to do, probably like seven or eight shows. I don’t know that for sure, but I think that’s what it will work out to be, and hopefully we will do other shows through Europe. I’m delighted to come over there, I’m thrilled about it.”

When asked if one of those shows could be Glastonbury, Nicks replied: “Oh yeah! I hope, you know, I hope I hope!”

Previously, festival boss Emily Eavis admitted to NME that she would love to see Fleetwood Mac headline the Pyramid Stage in 2013. “I think Fleetwood Mac would be amazing to get,” she said in October of this year. “I’ll be totally honest we haven’t had any conversations with them yet but, you know, it is still early days. We’re just talking to some headliners now. For us it’s about getting the balance of heritage bands, legends and new bands – just keeping that balance.”

Meanwhile, Fleetwood Mac have also invited fans to re-create the famous cover of their album Rumours and send their entries to the band via their Facebook page. “Be as creative as you like, maybe choose an iconic location, alternative outfits or a whole new interpretation! The more creative the better,” reads a post they send out to fans. The contest is designed to promote a forthcoming reissue of Rumours.

An Audience With… Julian Cope

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The deluxe reissue of Saint Julian is reviewed in the new issue of Uncut, dated March 2013, and out now, so it seemed time to revisit October 2007's issue (Take 125), when the always-enlightening Julian Cope answered questions from readers and famous fans… Words: John Lewis / Photo: Sam Jones ___...

The deluxe reissue of Saint Julian is reviewed in the new issue of Uncut, dated March 2013, and out now, so it seemed time to revisit October 2007’s issue (Take 125), when the always-enlightening Julian Cope answered questions from readers and famous fans… Words: John Lewis / Photo: Sam Jones

____________________

Julian Cope greets Uncut dressed, as ever, in full storm-trooping rock messiah garb. “I’m in this uniform by 7am each morning,†he says. “Always dress ready to face your enemy.â€

As you enter his rather quaint Wiltshire cottage, a five-minute drive from the Avebury stone circles, you’re greeted by a few reassuring sights: a bookcase filled with rock biographies, a portrait of the visionary American poet and critic, Vachel Lindsay, a cabinet full of antique toys, and several random stacks of vintage 1970s amplifiers and speakers.

A two-hour conversation with Cope inevitably becomes a fascinating lecture on religion, anthropology, Greek and Nordic mythology and the semiotics of rock’n’roll. Things are either “Lokian†(rocking) or “Olympian†(dreary); pop cultural figures are “Odin†(fearsome) or “Thor†(a bit lame). Subjects range from a 1978 Van Halen bootleg Fresh & Wild (“it’s freeform rock, like Miles Davis’ funk periodâ€) to the diminished role of women in the Middle East (“desert culture is about strong chieftains who will protect the water supply – latitudes that are more fertile are much more comfortable with women in chargeâ€). He also finds the time to answer your questions…

____________________

Were you once Mark E Smith’s drug dealer?

Philip Harrison, Leeds

Well, on the first Fall album there’s a track called “Two Steps Backâ€, with the lyric “Julian says/How was the gear/They don’t sell things to you over hereâ€. People assume this is about me, because Mark and I were quite good friends at the time. He’s only six months older than me and we used to write to each other a lot – Mark’s letters were always highly illustrated. The thing was, although Mark and I talked a lot about drugs in a purely theoretical sense, I was actually very straight-edge at the time. So I never sold him anything. I’m sorry if that’s disappointing.

After Krautrock, why Japrock? Are you working your way through the axis of evil?

Jenny Brittain, Derbyshire

Ha ha! Yes, I’ve been asked if I’m doing a Woprock Sampler to complete the series. And there is some great Italian psychedelia, as it happens. It’s just that Japan had the best story. I can also relate to Japan because they have a similar collective psyche to the British. We’re both island people, we both have a dodgy relationship with a big continental landmass, we’re both very solipsistic. It’s just that the Japanese are far, far more extreme than us. Until 1853, any shipwrecked foreigner who ended up in Japan was summarily executed! Foreigners were thought to bring only psychic disease. So I love the way in which, even today, when they import foreign ideas like rock’n’roll, they put it through a distinctly Japanese filter.

Was Pete Doherty really chucked out of your studio for eating a meat pie?

Keith, North Wales

Definitely. It was a studio that we had block-booked, so we had lockout, and we were letting The Libertines use our studio time. And, when you have lockouts, you don’t want it being undermined by gits. I hope that’s not me being a bit twattish, is it? I think that if you book a place, you have to uphold the traditions of that place. If I go to Armenia and it’s 113°F and I wanna wear shorts, then I’ve got to suffer the consequences.

Is it true you can’t get a visa to tour the US?

Will, Toronto

Yes. I probably could now, but until recently I had an Armenian visa in my passport. And a very big beard. Now, because the Mujahadeen sometimes hide in Armenia, neither went down well at the US Embassy. Despite the fact that I’ve been married to an American for more than 20 years! The beard was pretty magnificent, though. My wife said I looked like ‘Rastaputin’.

I’ve been listening to this fantastic Japanese music from the ’60s called Group Sounds, but I don’t really know much about it. Does Julian cover it in his new book, Japrocksampler?

Björk

Oh yes. This was music made in the mid-’60s, by Japanese kids trying to copy The Beatles, in such a fastidious way that it’s excruciating, yet often brilliant. You can spend £3,000 on Group Sounds records on eBay and come out with 50 seven-inch singles, of which three will be listenable. The rest sound like fucking Val Doonican. But, when they’re great, they’re amazing.

Have you ever seen a ghost?

Charlie Newlands, Cornwall

This sounds ridiculous, because it is, but in 2004 I was followed around by Death for about five days. You know, Death, replete with scythe, as they say. One day I was walking about half a mile from Avebury, and he was hanging in the sky, and I thought, ‘Oh, you’re not Death after all, you’re a fucking alien.’ And after that, he disappeared. Proper visions, as William Blake described them, aren’t blink-and-you’ll-miss-’em moments. They’re long and sustained and physically painful. I probably get this because I’m putting myself in a landscape that’s been populated by Mesolithic and Neolithic nutcases who believe all kinds of weird shit.

If hell froze over and Ian McCulloch, Bill Drummond and Dave Balfe all came up to you and apologised for all the stuff in the past, could you forgive and forget?

Rik, Warrington

No, because I’m not Christian and I really don’t believe in forgiveness. I won’t forgive them, but as someone who’s got an inherently Viking approach to life, I’d love to be in a position to garrote the three of them and summarily execute them as a dedication to Frig or Freya in some Danish bog.

Are you ever going to reprint or update the Krautrocksampler book? It’s a classic.

Stuart Braithwaite, Mogwai

No. Krautrocksampler was just a first step. I’m an experimental artist, and true experimental art should be rendered obsolete by what comes next. I was just the frontiersman, asking the questions that no-one else was asking. If it was republished, I’d have to totally rewrite it, because we know so much more now. I already get people saying, “Hey Cope, you forgot to write about, I dunno, Billy Nobsuck from Dresden.†So I’m happy for others to do that.

What are you more proud of, Peggy Suicide or The Modern Antiquarian?

Frank Stephens, Manchester

It’s all the same. I’m on the same riff, whether it’s a book or music. Everything that I do is to be of use to culture. I operate on what the psychologist Gurdjieff described as “being dutyâ€. From the moment I’m awake in the morning to the moment I go to sleep, I’m informed by this total “Fucking hell!â€, and it’s my job as an artist to turn that constant “Fucking hell!†into something that’s useful to other people. When I wake up every morning at about 5.15am and see this ribbon of cars on the A4, starting their three-hour commute to London, that drives me to be interesting. If they’re going to do that, I’m gonna work like a fucking lunatic to make music and write books that genuinely contribute to culture.

What’s your favourite Roman Polanski film?

Ethan Miller, Comets On Fire/Howlin Rain

It’s a 1976 film called The Tenant. It has a deep resonance for me ’cos I once lived next door to a moronic, mohicanned punk. His favourite song was “Pulsar†from my LP, Saint Julian, which he’d blast constantly, to drive me insane. And I went round one day, and said, “You’re driving me mad. You don’t wanna kill the bloke who wrote that song, do you?†He paused and said, “Well, it’s got an appeal, hasn’t it…†It was a real Polanski moment, to be driven mad by your own song. It could have been a scene from The Tenant.

What do you think about LSD at the moment?

Mika Hyytiyffe, Finland

It’s essential for people of my persuasion. If you’re aiming to live a 9-to-5 life, stay off it. Stay on E or mushies. But, if you want to live a rich inner life, then sustainable, controlled LSD intake is useful. I only gave it up because my mother-in-law said it would make my kids mad if I carried on. And I trust my mother-in-law. My kids always knew about the drug use. I was convinced that I’d kept it from them, but my eldest daughter simply pointed at a Texas number plate on the wall of our living room that reads LSD 615, and informed me that she’d known what LSD was since she was six. The thing is, you can’t live a truly artistic life with one eye on the future of your kids. You can’t. Your artistic life always had to be true. Luckily, my daughters are both pretty straight-edge.

What is your personal favourite of all the stone circles/standing stones/burial chambers you’ve visited, and why?

Mark Trow, Yockleton, Shropshire

There are two – the monuments of Sardinia and the monuments of Aberdeenshire. They’re both created by the most modern mindset that I’ve ever seen. They are evidence that we’re not just near the people of 6,000 years ago, but we’re exactly the same. These were guys who were obsessive about building things to the point of destroying their own farming landscape. “Hey lads, haven’t we got one of these stone circles 300 yards away?†“Ah, fuck it, let’s build some more.†Both of these monuments mirror the absolute obsessiveness of modern humankind.

What are your favourite music books, given that you’re something of a master of the craft?

Malcolm Ross, Josef K

In terms of rock biogs, there are two unexpectedly brilliant ones: Freaky Dancing by Bez, and David Lee Roth’s Crazy From The Heat. David Lee Roth is a bit like Pete Burns – he does everything to make you think he doesn’t have two brain cells to rub together. But, like Peter Burns, he’s a closet intellectual. When he was playing 50,000 seaters, he would insist on getting to the stage before the crew and clean every square inch of it. Because that was his altar. That’s fucking hardcore. That’s a guy who understands the shamanistic nature of rock.

Are you really a “fucking cunt for a singing drummerâ€. Who are your favourites?

Peter Sheppard, Sutton

Oh, yes. There’s Joey Smith from a Japanese proto-metal trio called Speed Glue And Shinki. Joey’s stage name was Speed, because all of his songs were about scoring, selling and taking amphetamines. What’s great is that, mid-song, when he wants to make a point, he just slows the whole song down, because he’s in charge of the rhythm. The other great singing drummer is John Garner from Sir Lord Baltimore. They were the first band to be described as heavy metal, by Creem magazine in 1970. He was an outrageous singer. Think of yourself at your most ecstatic – probably inside your missus – well, John Garner starts at that point and goes up from there. It’s as ridiculous as you can get. Of course, there are other great singing drummers – Robert Wyatt, Karen Carpenter, Iggy Pop and so on. But those two – Speed and John Garner – are the Moses and Mohammed of singing drummers.

My wife wants to know your secret for an evidently long and happy marriage.

Paul, Earlsfield

Sex, of course. Dorian and I worked this out ages ago. If we weren’t still horny for each other, it would have been long over. I can get the conversation anywhere. It’s only because I think she’s gorgeous.

You often gloat at your live shows about your ability to still pull in a healthy front row of female fans. As a feminist, what role do these women play at your gigs and would it make any difference to you if they weren’t there?

Alex Moulding, Somerset

We in the West are strong because we’ve got strong women. You go back to the Domesday Book, and a lot of the Saxon landowners were women. Norse myths are full of female deities. I don’t think you’re going to have a balanced civilisation unless the woman is at the basis of it. And that’s why I love rock’n’roll, because it’s based on women not being reduced by getting their tits out, but by being worshipped because of it. My primary argument for rock’n’roll is the same as my primary argument against monotheistic religions. Rock’n’roll is part of the Western experiment of taking Afro-American-informed rhythm, which is basically fuck music, and ritualising it and electrifying it so that it’s even better to fuck to. You then get to the point where there’s a symbiotic relationship between the audience and the performer. And yes, I need women in my audience. One of my best mates, Stephen O’Malley from Sunn O))), asked if he could form a band with me. He said: “I’m just so fed up playing to bellies and beards.†Ha! Having women in my audience validates everything ritualistic about rock’n’roll.

Do you believe in Valhalla?

Timothy, Dundee

I certainly believe I’m going to Hell. If the Christian revelation is true, then I wish to be damned. If Mohammed’s revelations are true, then I am damned, ’cos I’m just a dhimmi. If the Norse perspective is true, then I want to go to Hell because, in the Norse myth, Hell is a goddess. She was like St Peter, the guardian of the gates. She kind of looked like Nico before she entirely lost it. It’s all good underworld stuff. And I’m a cunt for the underworld.

What’s the best thing that your daughters have said or done in school that makes you feel a proud and happy rock’n’roll father?

Ilias Piknadas, Athens, Greece

My 13-year-old won the school music contest by playing a medley, on her electric guitar, of Iron Butterfly’s “In-A-Gadda-Da-Vidaâ€, “Heartbreaker†by Led Zeppelin and “Smoke On The Water†by Deep Purple. Meanwhile, my 16-year-old, Albany, surpassed herself when they were asked, in Religious Education, to draw their image of “Christian stewardshipâ€. She drew a monkey being nailed to a cross. That made me very proud.

I just read Krautrocksampler on tour. Why did you diss Future Days by Can? It’s an Animal Collective favourite!

Geologist, Animal Collective

Yes, there are several great unexpected moments in late Can. But, when I wrote Krautrocksampler, I had to take on a fundamentalist stance, because nothing had ever been written about it before, so my attitude had to be weighted towards the pre-Ege Bamyasi stuff. And also, when Future Days came out, I was the Can-head at school who was disappointed by the album, so that gutted 16-year-old character informed my stance.

Are you still driving and, if so, do you have an environmentally friendly car?

Lee Haynes, London

I’d say that ‘environmentally friendly car’ is an oxymoron. It’s like the eternal paradox that a meat-eater doesn’t necessarily have to wish animals to die in order to choose to eat meat. You either accept that paradox or you spend your whole time being totally irreconcilable. I’m afraid I drive a 4×4 for the simple reason that, every time I’ve been stuck behind a 4×4 drivers, those bastards are very likely to kill me. And, if they’re going to smash into me, I want to be in a 4×4 when they do it. But I do try to drive my 4×4 as morally as I can.

Underworld frontman Karl Hyde to release debut solo album

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Underworld frontman Karl Hyde is set to release his debut solo album. Edgeland was co-produced by Leo Abrahams and will be released on April 22. Scroll down to listen to album track 'Cut Clouds'. The nine-track album was inspired by the 'hidden corners' of the city. Hyde says of the album: "For over twenty years, my love of cityscapes has grown and grown." He continued: "The beauty of decay, tyre marks, crude graffiti, industrial noise, overheard conversations, epidemics of coffee bars and nights on the back seat being driven through cities by drivers who never sleep. A celebration of people's idiosyncrasies, mapping out my journeys with the stories they tell, edgelands where city meets scrub, where ragged ponies grazed annexed fields and the air smells chemical." Karl Hyde will be touring the album, kicking off at SonarSound in Tokyo on April 7. UK dates will be announced shortly. The Edgeland tracklisting is: 'The Night Slips Us Smiling Underneath It's Dress' 'Your Perfume Was The Best Thing' 'Angel Café' 'Cut Clouds' 'The Boy With The Jigsaw Puzzle Fingers' 'Slummin' It For The Weekend' 'Shoulda Been A Painter' 'Shadow Boy' 'Sleepless'

Underworld frontman Karl Hyde is set to release his debut solo album.

Edgeland was co-produced by Leo Abrahams and will be released on April 22. Scroll down to listen to album track ‘Cut Clouds’.

The nine-track album was inspired by the ‘hidden corners’ of the city. Hyde says of the album: “For over twenty years, my love of cityscapes has grown and grown.”

He continued: “The beauty of decay, tyre marks, crude graffiti, industrial noise, overheard conversations, epidemics of coffee bars and nights on the back seat being driven through cities by drivers who never sleep. A celebration of people’s idiosyncrasies, mapping out my journeys with the stories they tell, edgelands where city meets scrub, where ragged ponies grazed annexed fields and the air smells chemical.”

Karl Hyde will be touring the album, kicking off at SonarSound in Tokyo on April 7. UK dates will be announced shortly.

The Edgeland tracklisting is:

‘The Night Slips Us Smiling Underneath It’s Dress’

‘Your Perfume Was The Best Thing’

‘Angel Café’

‘Cut Clouds’

‘The Boy With The Jigsaw Puzzle Fingers’

‘Slummin’ It For The Weekend’

‘Shoulda Been A Painter’

‘Shadow Boy’

‘Sleepless’

The Flaming Lips to release new album The Terror in April

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The Flaming Lips have announced details of their new album, The Terror, the band's 13th studio record. The album 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 record 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". Frontman Wayne Coyne adds: "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." A new non-album track titled 'Sun Blows Up Today' will be available from February 3. The Flaming Lips will also play live in London following the release of The Terror with two London dates announced. They will play the London Roundhouse on May 20 and 21.

The Flaming Lips have announced details of their new album, The Terror, the band’s 13th studio record.

The album 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 record 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”.

Frontman Wayne Coyne adds: “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.”

A new non-album track titled ‘Sun Blows Up Today’ will be available from February 3. The Flaming Lips will also play live in London following the release of The Terror with two London dates announced. They will play the London Roundhouse on May 20 and 21.

The Black Keys file new lawsuit accusing advertisers of ripping off their music

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The Black Keys have filed another lawsuit accusing companies of ripping off their music in advertising jingles. The band, who sued Pizza Hut and Home Depot over copyright infringement last year, are now taking legal action against Pinnacle Entertainment, which runs casinos throughout the United States, and Manhattan Production Music, which creates music for adverts, according to The Hollywood Reporter. According to a lawsuit filed in New York federal court, the band accuse the companies of using a track "substantially similar" to their 'Howlin' For You' in adverts for casinos. The Hollywood Reporter also claims that, when a fan of the band pointed out the casino operator's music, a representative for the casino tweeted, "We bought a licensed musical interpretation of the song." It is also alleged that on the YouTube page for the casino's advertisement, a spokesperson for the casino stated that the commercial is "a licensed track inspired by 'Howlin' For You' by The Black Keys". Last June, the duo settled legal claims with Pizza Hut and Home Depot over copyright infringement out of court, after saying their music had been used in TV adverts without their permission. The pizza chain was alleged to have used "significant portions" of their track 'Gold On The Ceiling', while they claimed the DIY chain had used 'Lonely Boy' to sell power tools.

The Black Keys have filed another lawsuit accusing companies of ripping off their music in advertising jingles.

The band, who sued Pizza Hut and Home Depot over copyright infringement last year, are now taking legal action against Pinnacle Entertainment, which runs casinos throughout the United States, and Manhattan Production Music, which creates music for adverts, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

According to a lawsuit filed in New York federal court, the band accuse the companies of using a track “substantially similar” to their ‘Howlin’ For You’ in adverts for casinos.

The Hollywood Reporter also claims that, when a fan of the band pointed out the casino operator’s music, a representative for the casino tweeted, “We bought a licensed musical interpretation of the song.” It is also alleged that on the YouTube page for the casino’s advertisement, a spokesperson for the casino stated that the commercial is “a licensed track inspired by ‘Howlin’ For You’ by The Black Keys”.

Last June, the duo settled legal claims with Pizza Hut and Home Depot over copyright infringement out of court, after saying their music had been used in TV adverts without their permission. The pizza chain was alleged to have used “significant portions” of their track ‘Gold On The Ceiling’, while they claimed the DIY chain had used ‘Lonely Boy’ to sell power tools.

Lincoln

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Lincoln begins with the Battle of Jenkin’s Ferry in Arkansas in April, 1864, at the height of the American Civil War. It is a messy, close-quarter scrap in the mud between black and Confederate soldiers, with men shooting, stabbing, punching, flailing and gouging at each other. The rest of Spielbe...

Lincoln begins with the Battle of Jenkin’s Ferry in Arkansas in April, 1864, at the height of the American Civil War. It is a messy, close-quarter scrap in the mud between black and Confederate soldiers, with men shooting, stabbing, punching, flailing and gouging at each other. The rest of Spielberg’s film is about conflict, too, but of a less visceral kind: the constitutional battles Lincoln faces on screen, and the tussle off-camera between Spielberg’s ropey tendencies to mythologise and Tony Kushner’s scrupulous screenplay that strives for fact and precision.

Lincoln covers a three-month period from January 1865 to the president’s death in April, as the president fights to push through an amendment to the Constitution outlawing slavery. The vibe here is of an 19th century The West Wing: many scenes (handsomely framed by director of photography Janusz Kaminski) feature men with beards standing in drawing rooms discussing legislative prerogatives. Occasionally, hats are thrown in the air. The enemies come from many sides: the Confederates in the South, Democratic opposition in the House, even Lincoln’s fellow Republicans – chiefly, hardline abolitionist Thaddeus Stephens (a ripe Tommy Lee Jones).

Elsewhere, Spielberg casts cleverly – there is excellent work from David Strathairn as diligent Secretary of State William Steward, Sally Field, James Earl Haley, Jared Harris, John Hawks, Tim Blake Nelson and a rotund and bewhiskered James Spader. But Daniel Day-Lewis’ Lincoln is the biscuit. His Lincoln has a stooped, shuffling gait, his voice pitched high, hands like hams slapping down on his thighs. This is a man who can silence a room as he embarks on some meandering yarn, yet whose determination is absolute, whose backroom deals and schemes are razor sharp.

Kuschner – who worked with Spielberg on Munich – enjoys rolling around in the vernacular. Lincoln accuses his cabinet, “You grousle and heckle and dodge about like pettifogging Tammany Hall huckstersâ€, while Thaddeus Stephens lambasts the “mephitic fumes†of an opponent in the House. Although Kuschner sticks with the specifics of the era, it’s impossible not to notice that the “demented radicals†pushing through anti-slavery laws are Republican, while the Democrats are the bad guys. Critically, Kuschner keeps Spielberg’s tendency to mythologise in check on all but a few occasions – the first time we see Abe, he’s back-lit, listening to a pair of boys recite chunks of the Gettysburg Address to him, John Williams’ creaky score swelling in the background. Later, Lincoln is magically caught flickering in the flame of a candle. These moments aside, this is one of Spielberg’s great, grown-up piece of filmmaking – up there with Munich, Schindler’s List and Empire Of The Sun.

Michael Bonner

Emmylou Harris – Album By Album

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This month’s Uncut (dated February 2013) features the story behind Gram Parsons’ landmark solo albums, GP and Grievous Angel. His closest collaborator during this period, Emmylou Harris, has her own amazing tales to tell, so it seemed time to bring out this archive feature, originally in Uncutâ€...

This month’s Uncut (dated February 2013) features the story behind Gram Parsons’ landmark solo albums, GP and Grievous Angel. His closest collaborator during this period, Emmylou Harris, has her own amazing tales to tell, so it seemed time to bring out this archive feature, originally in Uncut’s August 2007 issue, where Harris takes us through the making of her greatest records. Interview: Bud Scoppa

__________________

PIECES OF THE SKY

(Reprise, 1975)

Five years on from obscure debut Gliding Bird (1969), Emmylou began work on her debut proper with producer and future husband Brian Ahern, who would helm 11 of her LPs. She continued her association with the crew from the Gram Parsons albums, who’d become the core of her Hot Band.

Harris: “Brian wanted to use those guys because they were world-class musicians, but for me they were like a talisman. I thought the closest I could get to Gram would be through the people he’d worked with. Then Brian signed Rodney Crowell, so all the other pieces started to come together. It was a beautiful mixing of a cosmic stew. Keeping Gram’s music alive was what I thought my purpose was. I didn’t understand why the whole world wasn’t crying out like I was at the loss of Gram. Also, he had affected me so much on an artistic level, I felt like I had to give it to others the way it had been given to me. It’s strange how emotions work, but there was something valid there. It’s the way we deal with what comes through us: we have to plough it under and make something out of it.â€

BOB DYLAN – DESIRE

(Columbia, 1975)

Soon after the release of Pieces Of The Sky she was initiated into The Way Of Bob…

“When I got the call to sing on Dylan’s record, I thought he had heard my record and liked what I was doing. But as it turns out [Desire producer] Don DeVito was given the task of getting a girl singer to sing on the record, and as he was a fan, he called me. Dylan was a god to me, and though my heart and mind had turned to country, I started out as a folk singer, and I will always have that chip in me. When we went into the studio, we didn’t have time to think about it much, because we didn’t learn the songs beforehand. I would sit next to Dylan and the lyrics would be there. Then the band would start playing, and he would look at me to let me know that I was supposed to jump in and sing. So I had no time to work up a part, but if you get into the rhythm of what he’s doing, it sort of lets you know what’s coming. He was throwing paint up on that canvas, and I was just another colour he was working with.â€

ELITE HOTEL

(Reprise, 1976)

Emmylou’s next LP, made just months after the first with Ahern and the Hot Band, is its mirror image: Parsons-associated tracks, trad tunes and a Beatles cover.

“Elite Hotel had country hits with ‘One Of These Days’, ‘Together Again’ and ‘Sweet Dreams’, remakes of hits by serious country artists [George Jones, Buck Owens and Patsy Cline, respectively]. ‘Satan’s Jewel Crown’ was there to celebrate the Louvins. The hits themselves were classic country, but the LP had a Beatles song [‘Here, There And Everywhere’], so there were murmurings from country purists, and I started to wonder: ‘Am I being true to Gram? Is this what I set out to do?’ I wanted to be a country artist. But I was being true to who I was, greatly influenced by The Beatles and Dylan. I was a child of my generation who’d discovered country, which became the Big Bang for me, but all these other elements were still swirling around in there. So the eclecticism of those early records was very real for me as I was finding my voice. I needed to do that to get to the point where I could narrow my parameters.â€

GRAM PARSONS – GP/GRIEVOUS ANGEL

(Reprise, 1972/1974)

Parsons’ two solo LPs featured keyboardist/bandleader Glen D Hardin, guitarist James Burton and drummer Ronnie Tutt from Elvis Presley’s band. Gram plucked newcomer Emmylou out of the Washington, DC club scene, where she’d been singing Dylan and Paul Simon songs in an effort to support herself and her baby daughter.

“The timing was amazing. You can be a cynical as you want in life, but certain things happen that make you believe in synchronicity. The only reason Gram got my phone number was that the gal who babysat for me happened to be at the show in Baltimore where he had come to see his old pals, the Burrito Brothers. She overheard them saying that they’d seen this girl who sang pretty good, but they didn’t know how to get in touch with me. And Tina just spoke up and said, ‘Oh, I have her number.’ Like they say, truth is stranger than fiction.

“When we started singing those duets, I was trying to follow him, and I cringe when I hear [the outtakes] now. I didn’t know what I was doing, but I did understand that he was the lead singer, and I thought that looking at him was going to tell me what he was going to do with his mouth, and because it seemed to work right away, I went with it. Gram was such a great singer; he was so at ease with his art that it was just a matter of being pulled into his world, and I was willing to be led. At that point I didn’t care much about country music one way or the other. I was just approaching it as a harmony thing – I was learning to be a duet partner. So I wasn’t bringing any particular ideas. I was a tabula rasa, a complete empty vessel waiting to be filled up with whatever I was gonna learn. Singing with Gram and getting infused with the country music set me on a particular path and concentrated my energy and enthusiasm. Gram turned me on to the Louvin Brothers, and those harmonies exhilarated me. When I heard Ira, I wanted to be Ira. Their vocal blend was just stunning. Eastern religions talk about Chakra, the special point where there’s a spiritual concentration in the body that’s connected to the soul. They say certain stimuli make your chakras vibrate, and my chakras were vibrating when I heard ‘Born Again’, with Ira’s voice going up into the stratosphere. And I’d always loved The Everly Brothers.

“Gram wasn’t disciplined when we were recording GP, but he was letting himself be disciplined by the professionalism of the musicians he was working with. He seemed much healthier and more focused on Grievous Angel – he was right there. It seemed like he was on a path where he was actually going to pull himself out of his self-destructive habits. That’s why I was so unprepared for his death – I thought he was in the clear.â€

ROSES IN THE SNOW

(Reprise, 1980)

After two more eclectic albums in 1977 and 1978, she made the strictly country Blue Kentucky Girl (1978), followed by this dedicated bluegrass set.

“Back then, everybody was drinking from the bluegrass cup, including Linda Ronstadt, but nobody was recording it. So a certain ego in me said, I’ve got Ricky [Skaggs] in the band now, and it’s going on anyway, so it’s crazy not to do a bluegrass record. Instead of going backwards into ‘son of Elite Hotel’, which we thought the record company wanted, we decided to make a bluegrass record with some serious pickers. I thought the record would be a commercial disaster, but I was arrogant enough at that point in my career and in my youth that I felt I could sustain such a disaster; it was more important to follow my artistic path. When it became a Top 10 hit, I was patting myself on the back for following my convictions, and figuring that was the way it would always be – and then I made The Ballad Of Sally Rose [self-written country concept LP from ’85] and almost went bankrupt. [Laughs] So you live and you learn.â€

WRECKING BALL

(Elektra/Asylum, 1995)

In 1995, Emmylou, now far removed from mainstream country but universally venerated as an interpretive singer, made the most daring, inventive album of her career with producer/player Daniel Lanois.

“I wasn’t gonna be invited to the country party; I’d been a good girl and done what they wanted with Cowgirl’s Prayer (1993), but country radio said it was too traditional. At that point, I said, ‘You know what? Nobody’s listening.’ I had become a really big fan of Daniel’s from Dylan’s Oh Mercy and his own Acadie record, and when the label suggested I work with somebody different, his was the only name I came up with. We cut for two weeks in Nashville and got a lion’s share of the record – some of those rough mixes ended up on the album, like the Hendrix song ‘May This Be Love’ and ‘Goodbye’, which Steve Earle had dropped in my mailbox a couple of days before the sessions. It was a small group, and we were all live in one big room at Woodland Studios. It pretty much spoiled me. There was a lot of magic going on during those two weeks, and then we resumed a month later down at [Lanois’ studio] Kingsway in New Orleans.â€

RED DIRT GIRL

(Nonesuch, 2000)

After Wrecking Ball, Emmylou put all her energies into writing songs before returning to the studio with Malcolm Burn, a Lanois protégé who’d engineered and mixed her late-career stunner.

“Writing was like doing a different exercise routine – I was working different muscles. So it took awhile. I wanted to still be in that Wrecking Ball world, so I turned to Malcolm. We made Red Dirt Girl in New Orleans, in the living room of a funny old house Malcolm was living in, right down the street from the Saturn Bar. I thought I was finished with the record, and I was driving back to New Orleans to tie up the loose ends when I saw this sign for Meridian, Mississippi, and I just started rhyming words in my head, and once I got to New Orleans, I couldn’t stop working on this song. When I was writing it, I went to see Boys Don’t Cry, and I got very affected by the lives of the minor characters, the smalltown people, and the tragedy of the trap that they were caught in. There were also a lot of things from my life – images of the South. Lillian was the main character, but as the story was told by another red-dirt girl, I became the red-dirt girl, and that became the album title.â€

STUMBLE INTO GRACE

(Nonesuch, 2003)

Her most recent picked up where Red Dirt Girl left off, as Emmylou continued to focus on songwriting. This time it came harder.

“Red Dirt Girl took a lot out of me, and we toured it a lot. I didn’t feel I was ready to start another record, and Malcolm just said, ‘Hey, I’m coming down there, and we’re gonna work on some songs.’ Sometimes I need that, and he really pulled that album together, but it was not an easy birth. Malcolm and I started working on ‘Can You Hear Me Now’, and I had a couple of ideas that I wanted to work out with the McGarrigles, so I brought them down and we finished ‘I Will Dream’ and ‘Little Bird’. So that gave me some confidence. ‘Strong Hand’ came right as the very end, like ‘Red Dirt Girl’. I thought we were finished with the record, and I got this phone call that June [Carter Cash] was dying. I was working on another song, and it was like everything else was pushed out of the way, and that song came roaring in. It was saying, ‘I’m here now – pay attention.’ It’s funny how these things happen. The creative process is so mysterious.â€

Depeche Mode reveal details of new album, Delta Machine

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Depeche Mode have disclosed full details of their new album, Delta Machine. The album, which will be released on March 26 and was produced by Ben Hillier and mixed by Flood, is the band's first release since 2009. 'Heaven' will be the first single taken from the new album and will be backed by remixes from Matthew Dear, Blawan, Owlle and Steps To Heaven. In a press release, the band's Martin Gore said, "Writing this album was incredibly daunting as I wanted the sound of this collection to be very modern. I want people to feel good about listening to this record, to get some kind of peace. It's just got something magical about it." Dave Gahan added: "With this release we've completely shifted our idea of how to create an album. When we hit a wall where we realize the album is beginning to sound too normal, we'll mess it up and really give it that organic Depeche Mode Sound. Delta Machine is no different, and I can’t wait for all of our fans to hear it." A deluxe edition of the album will include a bonus disc with four extra tracks as well as a photobook with pictures of the band taken by Anton Corbijn. Depeche Mode recently announced two concerts at London's O2 Arena in May 2013. They will play the venue on Wednesday, May 29 as well as playing the day before on May 28. These are currently the only UK dates the band have announced as part of a 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.

Depeche Mode have disclosed full details of their new album, Delta Machine.

The album, which will be released on March 26 and was produced by Ben Hillier and mixed by Flood, is the band’s first release since 2009. ‘Heaven’ will be the first single taken from the new album and will be backed by remixes from Matthew Dear, Blawan, Owlle and Steps To Heaven.

In a press release, the band’s Martin Gore said, “Writing this album was incredibly daunting as I wanted the sound of this collection to be very modern. I want people to feel good about listening to this record, to get some kind of peace. It’s just got something magical about it.”

Dave Gahan added: “With this release we’ve completely shifted our idea of how to create an album. When we hit a wall where we realize the album is beginning to sound too normal, we’ll mess it up and really give it that organic Depeche Mode Sound. Delta Machine is no different, and I can’t wait for all of our fans to hear it.”

A deluxe edition of the album will include a bonus disc with four extra tracks as well as a photobook with pictures of the band taken by Anton Corbijn.

Depeche Mode recently announced two concerts at London’s O2 Arena in May 2013. They will play the venue on Wednesday, May 29 as well as playing the day before on May 28. These are currently the only UK dates the band have announced as part of a 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.

Cedric Bixler-Zavala announces Mars Volta split

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The Mars Volta have split, after singer Cedric Bixler-Zavala posted a letter to fans appearing to accuse fellow bandmember Omar Rodriguez-Lopez of not being committed enough. The duo formed The Mars Volta following the split of former band At The Drive-In in 2001 and have released six albums, including 2012's Noctourniquet. However, as revealed on NME.COM yesterday (January 23), Rodriguez-Lopez has recently started a new band, Bosnian Rainbows, which seems to have been the final straw for Bixler-Zavala. Revealing all in a long statement, Bixler-Zavala vents his anger at Rodriguez-Lopez for not wanting to tour their latest album, asking: "Am I supposed to be some progressive house wife that’s cool with watching their partner go fuck other bands?" Bixler-Zavala's statement reads: "Thank u 2 all Volta fans you deserved more especially after the way you rooted for us on this album. I tried my hardest to keep it going. But Bosnian Rainbows was what we all got instead. I can’t sit here and pretend any more. I no longer am a member of Mars Volta. I honestly thank all of you for buying our records and coming to our shows. You guys were a blast to play in front of. We could never had done it with out you. My dream was to get us to the point were Jon Theodore and Ikey Owens came back but sadly it’s over. Thank you a million times over for ever giving a fuck about our band. "For the record I tried my hardest to get a full scale North American tour going for Noctourniquet but Omar did not want to. All I can do is move forward with my music and just be happy that Mars Volta ever happened at all. God Damn we had a blast. Thank you again. I just feel really guilty for not even really saying the truth because a hiatus is just an insult to the fans. To all our fans all over the world thank you for giving a fuck. You all ruled! I don’t think ill ever hear a fist full of dollars the same. My record will see the light of day soon and I’m excited because it sounds nothing like my previous endeavors. And no I’m not joking about any of this, I owe it 2 you guys to all fans to be serious about this. "Thank you to all past members who helped Volta along as well. We blasted through like a comet and left our mark! If you ever see me in person and want to know why I’ll tell u my story. Please just be happy that it happened at all remember all the opposition we were met with for just starting a new band back in 2001. "And for the record I’m still in love with At the Drive-In. Proof was in my performance. I would never get on stage if my heart was else where. I have cancelled shows before for knowing full well that my heart was not in it at that moment. Why? Because it's an insult to the audience. To be clear I’m not angry I just wanted to be honest with the people who have allowed me to make a living playing music. What am I suppose to do, be some progressive house wife that’s cool with watching their partner go fuck other bands? We owe it 2 fans to tour." Rodriguez-Lopez, who announced in late 2012 that he and At The Drive-In frontman Cedric Bixler had placed The Mars Volta on hiatus, is joined in new outfit Bosnian Rainbows by drummer Deantoni Parks, keyboardist Nicci Kasper and singer Teri Gender-Bender, who is also a member of noise experimentalists Le Butcherettes. At The Drive-In reformed for a series of live performances and festival dates in 2012.

The Mars Volta have split, after singer Cedric Bixler-Zavala posted a letter to fans appearing to accuse fellow bandmember Omar Rodriguez-Lopez of not being committed enough.

The duo formed The Mars Volta following the split of former band At The Drive-In in 2001 and have released six albums, including 2012’s Noctourniquet. However, as revealed on NME.COM yesterday (January 23), Rodriguez-Lopez has recently started a new band, Bosnian Rainbows, which seems to have been the final straw for Bixler-Zavala.

Revealing all in a long statement, Bixler-Zavala vents his anger at Rodriguez-Lopez for not wanting to tour their latest album, asking: “Am I supposed to be some progressive house wife that’s cool with watching their partner go fuck other bands?”

Bixler-Zavala’s statement reads:

“Thank u 2 all Volta fans you deserved more especially after the way you rooted for us on this album. I tried my hardest to keep it going. But Bosnian Rainbows was what we all got instead. I can’t sit here and pretend any more. I no longer am a member of Mars Volta. I honestly thank all of you for buying our records and coming to our shows. You guys were a blast to play in front of. We could never had done it with out you. My dream was to get us to the point were Jon Theodore and Ikey Owens came back but sadly it’s over. Thank you a million times over for ever giving a fuck about our band.

“For the record I tried my hardest to get a full scale North American tour going for Noctourniquet but Omar did not want to. All I can do is move forward with my music and just be happy that Mars Volta ever happened at all. God Damn we had a blast. Thank you again. I just feel really guilty for not even really saying the truth because a hiatus is just an insult to the fans. To all our fans all over the world thank you for giving a fuck. You all ruled! I don’t think ill ever hear a fist full of dollars the same. My record will see the light of day soon and I’m excited because it sounds nothing like my previous endeavors. And no I’m not joking about any of this, I owe it 2 you guys to all fans to be serious about this.

“Thank you to all past members who helped Volta along as well. We blasted through like a comet and left our mark! If you ever see me in person and want to know why I’ll tell u my story. Please just be happy that it happened at all remember all the opposition we were met with for just starting a new band back in 2001.

“And for the record I’m still in love with At the Drive-In. Proof was in my performance. I would never get on stage if my heart was else where. I have cancelled shows before for knowing full well that my heart was not in it at that moment. Why? Because it’s an insult to the audience. To be clear I’m not angry I just wanted to be honest with the people who have allowed me to make a living playing music. What am I suppose to do, be some progressive house wife that’s cool with watching their partner go fuck other bands? We owe it 2 fans to tour.”

Rodriguez-Lopez, who announced in late 2012 that he and At The Drive-In frontman Cedric Bixler had placed The Mars Volta on hiatus, is joined in new outfit Bosnian Rainbows by drummer Deantoni Parks, keyboardist Nicci Kasper and singer Teri Gender-Bender, who is also a member of noise experimentalists Le Butcherettes.

At The Drive-In reformed for a series of live performances and festival dates in 2012.

Beyoncé, lipsynching and the myths of authenticity

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Reading a little about the whole Beyoncé lipsynching controversy the other day, I was tangentially reminded of an interview I did with Jim O’Rourke in, I think, 1999 (bear with me…). It was around the time of O’Rourke’s excellent “Eurekaâ€, and we were sat in a Brixton pub, talking about his reluctance to play these scrupulously crafted songs live. His reasons, it turned out, boiled down to the fact that he felt a fraud in some way when he revisited any finished song. If I remember rightly, he wasn’t interested in playing something more than once, privileging spontaneity and improvisation rather than the pantomime of trying to recreate the emotional state and the rough arrangement of the song at its moment of creation. A pretty hardline attitude, clearly, and one that might be admirable more than desirable. Not long after, I saw a duo show with Loren Connors, in which O’Rourke parried audience requests, jerked around for half an hour or so, and didn’t even manage to play much of interest in terms of free improvisation, let alone anything like the chamber pop most of the crowd were demanding. To perform actual finished songs would have been dishonest cheating by O’Rourke’s own restless avant-garde standards. It would have been an inauthentic performance, but most of us there would’ve enjoyed it more. Now, I don’t for one moment believe that Beyoncé Knowles had come to a similar decision when she decided to mime – if that’s what she did; the plot is probably thickening even as I type – at the presidential inauguration earlier in the week. But for most any performer getting on any stage, there’s typically a calculation to be made – subsconsciously, perhaps – about realness, and what that means, and what that means especially to their audience. If Beyoncé was miming, does that make it “an insult not only to her audience but to every singer who ever had to perform The Star-Spangled Banner on stage†(as this piece vigorously argues)? Or is it the work of someone who understands that what most of her audience are interested in are certain powerful signifiers of authenticity, rather than what some people might consider a more ‘real’ performance? Maybe a lot of that audience want to hear her sing the anthem as near perfectly as is possible, and whether she does that on a cold day in DC or in a studio is less important? And maybe the signifiers of authenticity for them are to do with the way they equate certain melismatic flourishes as signs of emotional engagement and commitment, and as a consequence that’s the only kind of ‘realness’ they need? There are more complicated issues at play when the show is a presidential inauguration, of course, where one assumes that it is in the general interest to avoid any overt suspicions of illusion and deception. Nevertheless, the decisions that may or may not have been made by Beyoncé are doubtless very calculated ones, that would’ve factored in the potential repercussions of being found out. This morning I was reading David Foster Wallace’s Rolling Stone essay about being on the campaign trail with John McCain in 2000 (a piece, incidentally, that shows all those complaining music journalists on the Rihanna plane were just experiencing what is commonplace for political hacks). Foster Wallace spends a lot of time trying to work out the difference between a great salesman and a great leader, and which one – or which combination of both – McCain might be. “The only thing you’re certain to feel about John McCain’s campaign,†he decides, “is a very modern and American type of ambivalence, a sort of interior war between your deep need to believe and your deep belief that the need to believe is bullshit.†And maybe this is something like the way plenty of us try and make sense of the music that appeals to us, and why it appeals to us. That Beyoncé’s extraordinary voice has an emotional heft and resonance that might transcend – that might be enhanced by - any trickery that goes on in the vicinity of the mixing desk. That it might be OK even for adventurous musicians like Jim O’Rourke to repeat themselves when they perform. And that the power of so much music from a notional singer-songwriter/folk/roots tradition might not be undermined by a lack of authenticity and realness that its audience often craves, but actually intensified by it. Which is why the infinite yarn-spinning and game-playing and bullshit of Bob Dylan remains so compelling and perhaps magical; that the mystique he has sustained to a greater and lesser extent for 50 years is critical to his art and his appeal, making it so much more effective than the allegedly straight-up confessionals (that are never straight-up confessionals, of course, but something more mediated) of so many songwriters who’ve tried to follow in his wake (his live rethinks of old songs maybe put him closer to O’Rourke’s position, by the by). It’s why I’ll usually be more interested in a performer like Will Oldham and his obtuse fictions, than one like, say Josh T Pearson, who makes such a great play – to some degree disingenuous – out of his own backstory, as if that somehow validates his music and makes it more satisfying. Or one like Gillian Welch, whose understanding of the music she loves, its sense of place and history, is far more important than whether or not she grew up in that place and lived through that history. Or one like Jack White, whose whole career has been an inexhaustible, playful tussle with concepts of realness. I always quote the same thing when I get on this hobbyhorse, but when I first interviewed The White Stripes in 2001, White told me, “I like things to be as honest as possible, even if sometimes they can only be an imitation of honesty. A good impression is interesting if you can’t get the real thing.†What White has subsequently shown is that a “good impression†is usually better than “the real thingâ€, not least because “the real thing†doesn’t really exist. I spoke with White again last year (the full interview is here), and he recommended a book generally predicated on that idea; Faking It: The Quest For Authenticity In Popular Music by Hugh Barker and Yuval Taylor. He also became slightly annoyed with my multiple questions about how he’s screwed around with the truth, not least with regard to his relationship to Meg White. What he didn’t understand, I think, is that I didn’t care whether Meg was his sister or not. What was more fascinating was how and why he chose to manipulate fact and fiction; what compelled him to make those decisions. That trying to unpick the mystery was part of the game, for journalists at least, in much the same way that Beyoncé’s performance has provoked so much delighted hand-wringing and posturing (this piece included, of course). Maybe the truth is that each great artist gives their audience the specific signifiers of authenticity that they need, and, for most people in, well, the real world, everything else is irrelevant? Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

Reading a little about the whole Beyoncé lipsynching controversy the other day, I was tangentially reminded of an interview I did with Jim O’Rourke in, I think, 1999 (bear with me…).

It was around the time of O’Rourke’s excellent “Eurekaâ€, and we were sat in a Brixton pub, talking about his reluctance to play these scrupulously crafted songs live. His reasons, it turned out, boiled down to the fact that he felt a fraud in some way when he revisited any finished song. If I remember rightly, he wasn’t interested in playing something more than once, privileging spontaneity and improvisation rather than the pantomime of trying to recreate the emotional state and the rough arrangement of the song at its moment of creation.

A pretty hardline attitude, clearly, and one that might be admirable more than desirable. Not long after, I saw a duo show with Loren Connors, in which O’Rourke parried audience requests, jerked around for half an hour or so, and didn’t even manage to play much of interest in terms of free improvisation, let alone anything like the chamber pop most of the crowd were demanding. To perform actual finished songs would have been dishonest cheating by O’Rourke’s own restless avant-garde standards. It would have been an inauthentic performance, but most of us there would’ve enjoyed it more.

Now, I don’t for one moment believe that Beyoncé Knowles had come to a similar decision when she decided to mime – if that’s what she did; the plot is probably thickening even as I type – at the presidential inauguration earlier in the week. But for most any performer getting on any stage, there’s typically a calculation to be made – subsconsciously, perhaps – about realness, and what that means, and what that means especially to their audience.

If Beyoncé was miming, does that make it “an insult not only to her audience but to every singer who ever had to perform The Star-Spangled Banner on stage†(as this piece vigorously argues)? Or is it the work of someone who understands that what most of her audience are interested in are certain powerful signifiers of authenticity, rather than what some people might consider a more ‘real’ performance? Maybe a lot of that audience want to hear her sing the anthem as near perfectly as is possible, and whether she does that on a cold day in DC or in a studio is less important? And maybe the signifiers of authenticity for them are to do with the way they equate certain melismatic flourishes as signs of emotional engagement and commitment, and as a consequence that’s the only kind of ‘realness’ they need?

There are more complicated issues at play when the show is a presidential inauguration, of course, where one assumes that it is in the general interest to avoid any overt suspicions of illusion and deception. Nevertheless, the decisions that may or may not have been made by Beyoncé are doubtless very calculated ones, that would’ve factored in the potential repercussions of being found out. This morning I was reading David Foster Wallace’s Rolling Stone essay about being on the campaign trail with John McCain in 2000 (a piece, incidentally, that shows all those complaining music journalists on the Rihanna plane were just experiencing what is commonplace for political hacks).

Foster Wallace spends a lot of time trying to work out the difference between a great salesman and a great leader, and which one – or which combination of both – McCain might be. “The only thing you’re certain to feel about John McCain’s campaign,†he decides, “is a very modern and American type of ambivalence, a sort of interior war between your deep need to believe and your deep belief that the need to believe is bullshit.â€

And maybe this is something like the way plenty of us try and make sense of the music that appeals to us, and why it appeals to us. That Beyoncé’s extraordinary voice has an emotional heft and resonance that might transcend – that might be enhanced by – any trickery that goes on in the vicinity of the mixing desk. That it might be OK even for adventurous musicians like Jim O’Rourke to repeat themselves when they perform. And that the power of so much music from a notional singer-songwriter/folk/roots tradition might not be undermined by a lack of authenticity and realness that its audience often craves, but actually intensified by it.

Which is why the infinite yarn-spinning and game-playing and bullshit of Bob Dylan remains so compelling and perhaps magical; that the mystique he has sustained to a greater and lesser extent for 50 years is critical to his art and his appeal, making it so much more effective than the allegedly straight-up confessionals (that are never straight-up confessionals, of course, but something more mediated) of so many songwriters who’ve tried to follow in his wake (his live rethinks of old songs maybe put him closer to O’Rourke’s position, by the by). It’s why I’ll usually be more interested in a performer like Will Oldham and his obtuse fictions, than one like, say Josh T Pearson, who makes such a great play – to some degree disingenuous – out of his own backstory, as if that somehow validates his music and makes it more satisfying. Or one like Gillian Welch, whose understanding of the music she loves, its sense of place and history, is far more important than whether or not she grew up in that place and lived through that history.

Or one like Jack White, whose whole career has been an inexhaustible, playful tussle with concepts of realness. I always quote the same thing when I get on this hobbyhorse, but when I first interviewed The White Stripes in 2001, White told me, “I like things to be as honest as possible, even if sometimes they can only be an imitation of honesty. A good impression is interesting if you can’t get the real thing.â€

What White has subsequently shown is that a “good impression†is usually better than “the real thingâ€, not least because “the real thing†doesn’t really exist. I spoke with White again last year (the full interview is here), and he recommended a book generally predicated on that idea; Faking It: The Quest For Authenticity In Popular Music by Hugh Barker and Yuval Taylor. He also became slightly annoyed with my multiple questions about how he’s screwed around with the truth, not least with regard to his relationship to Meg White.

What he didn’t understand, I think, is that I didn’t care whether Meg was his sister or not. What was more fascinating was how and why he chose to manipulate fact and fiction; what compelled him to make those decisions. That trying to unpick the mystery was part of the game, for journalists at least, in much the same way that Beyoncé’s performance has provoked so much delighted hand-wringing and posturing (this piece included, of course). Maybe the truth is that each great artist gives their audience the specific signifiers of authenticity that they need, and, for most people in, well, the real world, everything else is irrelevant?

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

Neon Neon confirm new album details

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Neon Neon, the band helmed by Super Furry Animals singer Gruff Rhys and producer Boom Bip, have confirmed details of their second album. The group's new record is titled Praxis Makes Perfect and will be released on April 29 via Lex Records. Where Neon Neon's Mercury-shortlisted first album, 2008's Stainless Style, was based on the life of DeLorean Motor Company founder John DeLorean, Praxis Makes Perfect is inspired by the life and times of activist and publisher Giangiacomo Feltrinelli. Born into one of Italy’s wealthiest families, Feltrinelli was a left-wing political activist who published some of the greatest literary works of the 20th century, including Doctor Zhivago and Henry Miller's controversial Tropic Of Cancer. He died in suspicious circumstances in 1972, found at the foot of a high-voltage power line pylon near Milan, apparently killed by his own explosives while on an operation with members of the GAP military group he founded. Praxis Makes Perfect features a number of guests including Sabrina Salerno, Asia Argento, Cate Le Bon and Josh Klinghoffer. Gruff Rhys and Boom Bip have also teamed up with playwright Tim Price, director Wils Wilson and National Theatre Wales to create unique Neon Neon live performances. An initial run of shows will take place at an undisclosed Cardiff location from 2nd to 5th May, with tickets priced at £15.

Neon Neon, the band helmed by Super Furry Animals singer Gruff Rhys and producer Boom Bip, have confirmed details of their second album.

The group’s new record is titled Praxis Makes Perfect and will be released on April 29 via Lex Records.

Where Neon Neon’s Mercury-shortlisted first album, 2008’s Stainless Style, was based on the life of DeLorean Motor Company founder John DeLorean, Praxis Makes Perfect is inspired by the life and times of activist and publisher Giangiacomo Feltrinelli.

Born into one of Italy’s wealthiest families, Feltrinelli was a left-wing political activist who published some of the greatest literary works of the 20th century, including Doctor Zhivago and Henry Miller’s controversial Tropic Of Cancer. He died in suspicious circumstances in 1972, found at the foot of a high-voltage power line pylon near Milan, apparently killed by his own explosives while on an operation with members of the GAP military group he founded.

Praxis Makes Perfect features a number of guests including Sabrina Salerno, Asia Argento, Cate Le Bon and Josh Klinghoffer.

Gruff Rhys and Boom Bip have also teamed up with playwright Tim Price, director Wils Wilson and National Theatre Wales to create unique Neon Neon live performances. An initial run of shows will take place at an undisclosed Cardiff location from 2nd to 5th May, with tickets priced at £15.

Nick Cave, The Jesus And Mary Chain, My Bloody Valentine, Phoenix for Primavera Sound festival

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The lineup for this summer's Primavera Sound festival in Barcelona has been announced. In addition to previously revealed headliners Blur, the coastal festival will also see sets from Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds, The Jesus And Mary Chain, Wu-Tang Clan, My Bloody Valentine and Phoenix, as well the newly reformed The Postal Service, who will also be appearing at Coachella in California in April. Other bands on the bill include Grizzly Bear, Animal Collective, The Knife, Fiona Apple, Band Of Horses, Deerhunter, James Blake, Dead Can Dance, Tinariwen and Rodriguez. The festival takes place May 22-25 on the outskirts of Barcelona in Spain at the Parc Del Forum. A smaller sister festival also takes place in Porto, Portugal a week later, from May 30–June 1, featuring many of the same bands. Daniel Johnston, Dinosaur Jr, Hot Chip, Swans, Shellac, Hot Snakes, Bob Mould, John Talabot, Disclosure, Solange, Death Grips, Jessie Ware, Liars, Local Natives, Crystal Castles and Fuck Buttons are also playing, as are The Breeders, who will be performing their 1993 album Last Splash.

The lineup for this summer’s Primavera Sound festival in Barcelona has been announced.

In addition to previously revealed headliners Blur, the coastal festival will also see sets from Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds, The Jesus And Mary Chain, Wu-Tang Clan, My Bloody Valentine and Phoenix, as well the newly reformed The Postal Service, who will also be appearing at Coachella in California in April.

Other bands on the bill include Grizzly Bear, Animal Collective, The Knife, Fiona Apple, Band Of Horses, Deerhunter, James Blake, Dead Can Dance, Tinariwen and Rodriguez.

The festival takes place May 22-25 on the outskirts of Barcelona in Spain at the Parc Del Forum. A smaller sister festival also takes place in Porto, Portugal a week later, from May 30–June 1, featuring many of the same bands.

Daniel Johnston, Dinosaur Jr, Hot Chip, Swans, Shellac, Hot Snakes, Bob Mould, John Talabot, Disclosure, Solange, Death Grips, Jessie Ware, Liars, Local Natives, Crystal Castles and Fuck Buttons are also playing, as are The Breeders, who will be performing their 1993 album Last Splash.