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Wire to release new album, Change Becomes Us

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Wire are set to release a brand new album, Change Becomes Us, on March 25. Scroll down to listen to the record's opening track, 'Doubles & Trebles' The band will precede the release of the album with a live date at London's Heaven on March 24, where they will play the new record in full, following it with an encore of their 1977 debut, Pink Flag. The tracks that make up the LP are based on songs which the band performed live back in 1979 and 1980. Of the new album, frontman Colin Newman has said: "Some of this material had only ever existed as quickly prepared sketches for one-off performance. However, subjected to the rigour of a Wire working process of both touring and studio, it evolved organically into what we think is a fascinating hybrid. Liberated from its historic roots, it simply took off!" The Change Becomes Us tracklisting is: 'Doubles & Trebles' 'Keep Exhaling' 'Adore Your Island' 'Re-invent Your Second Wheel' 'Stealth Of A Stork' 'B/W Silence 'Time Lock Fog' 'Magic Bullet' 'Eels Sang' 'Love Bends' 'As We Go' '& Much Besides' 'Attractive Space'

Wire are set to release a brand new album, Change Becomes Us, on March 25.

Scroll down to listen to the record’s opening track, ‘Doubles & Trebles’

The band will precede the release of the album with a live date at London’s Heaven on March 24, where they will play the new record in full, following it with an encore of their 1977 debut, Pink Flag.

The tracks that make up the LP are based on songs which the band performed live back in 1979 and 1980. Of the new album, frontman Colin Newman has said: “Some of this material had only ever existed as quickly prepared sketches for one-off performance. However, subjected to the rigour of a Wire working process of both touring and studio, it evolved organically into what we think is a fascinating hybrid. Liberated from its historic roots, it simply took off!”

The Change Becomes Us tracklisting is:

‘Doubles & Trebles’

‘Keep Exhaling’

‘Adore Your Island’

‘Re-invent Your Second Wheel’

‘Stealth Of A Stork’

‘B/W Silence

‘Time Lock Fog’

‘Magic Bullet’

‘Eels Sang’

‘Love Bends’

‘As We Go’

‘& Much Besides’

‘Attractive Space’

Bon Iver working on an album with Arcade Fire saxophonist Colin Stetson

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Bon Iver frontman Justin Vernon has been in the studio working with a member of Arcade Fire's touring band Colin Stetson on his new solo album. The saxophone player regularly goes on the road with Bon Iver, Arcade Fire and many other artists, as well as releasing a number of solo albums. His upcoming 2013 album 'New History Warfare Vol 3' will be the final volume in his 'New History Warfare' trilogy. Vernon will appear on four of the album's 11 songs, as the only guest, and act as a "vocal presence" to loosely narrate and "punctuate" the album, he told SPIN. Stetson did something similar on his 2010 album 'New History Warfare Vol 2: Judges', where he used performance artist and musician Laurie Anderson's voice to frame the album. It was while touring with Bon Iver that Stetson started writing the album. "Over the time that I spent on the road with Bon Iver and solo touring, I was writing... I would play those songs out on the road and they would just grow and gradually solidify into what they are now," he said. 'New Warfare Vol 3' follows on from Stetson's previous albums 'New History Warfare Vol 1' (2008) and 'New History Warfare Vol 2: Judges' (2011) and is produced by Ben Frost. It is due out this spring on Constellation Records. Justin Vernon recently announced that he is planning on stepping back from Bon Iver, saying: "I really feel the need to walk away from it while I still care about it. And then if I come back to it – if at all – I'll feel better about it and be renewed or something to do that."

Bon Iver frontman Justin Vernon has been in the studio working with a member of Arcade Fire’s touring band Colin Stetson on his new solo album.

The saxophone player regularly goes on the road with Bon Iver, Arcade Fire and many other artists, as well as releasing a number of solo albums. His upcoming 2013 album ‘New History Warfare Vol 3’ will be the final volume in his ‘New History Warfare’ trilogy.

Vernon will appear on four of the album’s 11 songs, as the only guest, and act as a “vocal presence” to loosely narrate and “punctuate” the album, he told SPIN.

Stetson did something similar on his 2010 album ‘New History Warfare Vol 2: Judges’, where he used performance artist and musician Laurie Anderson’s voice to frame the album.

It was while touring with Bon Iver that Stetson started writing the album. “Over the time that I spent on the road with Bon Iver and solo touring, I was writing… I would play those songs out on the road and they would just grow and gradually solidify into what they are now,” he said.

‘New Warfare Vol 3’ follows on from Stetson’s previous albums ‘New History Warfare Vol 1’ (2008) and ‘New History Warfare Vol 2: Judges’ (2011) and is produced by Ben Frost. It is due out this spring on Constellation Records.

Justin Vernon recently announced that he is planning on stepping back from Bon Iver, saying: “I really feel the need to walk away from it while I still care about it. And then if I come back to it – if at all – I’ll feel better about it and be renewed or something to do that.”

The Black Keys on success: ‘Never feel like you’re entitled to it – because then you turn into a prick’

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The Black Keys have said they never feel entitled to success, no matter how hard they've worked for it. Speaking to Radio.com, drummer Patrick Carney said: "We've definitely worked hard, but a lot of bands have worked just as hard. You just have to feel really lucky. Never feel like you’re entitled to it – because then you just sort of turn into a prick." The duo picked up five Grammy nominations this year, with singer and guitarist Dan Auerbach also picking up a solo nod for Producer Of The Year. The band are also set to perform at the Grammys ceremony for the first time, which will take place in Los Angeles on February 11. "It just so happens that in the last two or so years, a lot of things that were never even on our radar happened, like getting gold and platinum records, winning Grammys, selling out MSG [Madison Square Garden], headlining festivals, " Carney said. "All that stuff, we never even thought was possible. When it happens, it’s really kind of surreal. We’re really grateful that it’s happened, but we don’t really understand how it happened or why it happened." The Black Keys are set to release their eighth album, the follow-up to 2011's El Camino in late 2013.

The Black Keys have said they never feel entitled to success, no matter how hard they’ve worked for it.

Speaking to Radio.com, drummer Patrick Carney said: “We’ve definitely worked hard, but a lot of bands have worked just as hard. You just have to feel really lucky. Never feel like you’re entitled to it – because then you just sort of turn into a prick.”

The duo picked up five Grammy nominations this year, with singer and guitarist Dan Auerbach also picking up a solo nod for Producer Of The Year. The band are also set to perform at the Grammys ceremony for the first time, which will take place in Los Angeles on February 11.

“It just so happens that in the last two or so years, a lot of things that were never even on our radar happened, like getting gold and platinum records, winning Grammys, selling out MSG [Madison Square Garden], headlining festivals, ” Carney said. “All that stuff, we never even thought was possible. When it happens, it’s really kind of surreal. We’re really grateful that it’s happened, but we don’t really understand how it happened or why it happened.”

The Black Keys are set to release their eighth album, the follow-up to 2011’s El Camino in late 2013.

UK vinyl market sees 70 per cent increase in 2012

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The value of the vinyl album market increased by nearly 70 per cent in 2012, according to figures from the Entertainment Retailers Association (ERA). As reported by the BBC, sales of albums on the format have been increasing over the five years with the value of the market increasing from £3.4m million in 2011 to £5.7 million in 2012. That figure is up from £1.1 million in 2008. However, sales of vinyl singles have decreased, with the market worth £0.9 million in both 2012 and 2011, down from £2.2 million in 2008. "The reason the growth is notable is that, first of all, a lot of people had written off vinyl for dead and, secondly, it compares very favourably with the declines suffered by CD," Kim Bayley, director general of the ERA said. Earlier this month, The xx's Coexist was named the best-selling vinyl album in the UK in 2012 behind the reissue of David Bowie's The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars and Jack White's solo debut Blunderbuss in third place. Overall vinyl sales grew for the fifth successive year throughout 2012, with a total of 389,000 LPs sold, according to figures from the Official Charts Company and the BPI. That marks an increase of 15.3 per cent over 2011’s sales of 337,000.

The value of the vinyl album market increased by nearly 70 per cent in 2012, according to figures from the Entertainment Retailers Association (ERA).

As reported by the BBC, sales of albums on the format have been increasing over the five years with the value of the market increasing from £3.4m million in 2011 to £5.7 million in 2012. That figure is up from £1.1 million in 2008.

However, sales of vinyl singles have decreased, with the market worth £0.9 million in both 2012 and 2011, down from £2.2 million in 2008.

“The reason the growth is notable is that, first of all, a lot of people had written off vinyl for dead and, secondly, it compares very favourably with the declines suffered by CD,” Kim Bayley, director general of the ERA said.

Earlier this month, The xx’s Coexist was named the best-selling vinyl album in the UK in 2012 behind the reissue of David Bowie’s The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars and Jack White’s solo debut Blunderbuss in third place.

Overall vinyl sales grew for the fifth successive year throughout 2012, with a total of 389,000 LPs sold, according to figures from the Official Charts Company and the BPI. That marks an increase of 15.3 per cent over 2011’s sales of 337,000.

Prince unveils new single ‘Screw Driver’ – listen

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Prince has unveiled his new single 'Screw Driver' – listen to it below. The singer and pop legend uploaded the studio version of the track onto his website, following a snippet being released from a mysterious Twitter account, @3rdeyegirl that appeared to be leaking Prince songs. At present, it is unclear whether "3rd Eye Girl" is a viral marketing campaign affiliated to Prince, or merely a fan who has managed to track down some unreleased material. Back in November 2012, Prince released a one-off single called 'Rock And Roll Love Affair'. His last album, '20Ten', came out two years ago as a free covermount with the Mail On Sunday. Prince has just finished up a series of intimate rehearsal gigs in Minneapolis after he reportedly booked six dates at a tiny jazz club this week in order to audition for a new drummer and host a jam session for his band. The release of new music, plus Prince's acknowledgement that he is auditioning a new live drummer has sparked rumours that he'll be heading out on a wider tour this year, although thus far there are no dates scheduled. Meanwhile, the Purple One is due to be honoured at a charity tribute concert in New York on March 9. Artists including The Roots and Talib Kweli will perform songs from his back catalogue, but it is unknown whether Prince himself will appear at the event. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9a6WwT9LNJw

Prince has unveiled his new single ‘Screw Driver’ – listen to it below.

The singer and pop legend uploaded the studio version of the track onto his website, following a snippet being released from a mysterious Twitter account, @3rdeyegirl that appeared to be leaking Prince songs.

At present, it is unclear whether “3rd Eye Girl” is a viral marketing campaign affiliated to Prince, or merely a fan who has managed to track down some unreleased material. Back in November 2012, Prince released a one-off single called ‘Rock And Roll Love Affair’. His last album, ’20Ten’, came out two years ago as a free covermount with the Mail On Sunday.

Prince has just finished up a series of intimate rehearsal gigs in Minneapolis after he reportedly booked six dates at a tiny jazz club this week in order to audition for a new drummer and host a jam session for his band.

The release of new music, plus Prince’s acknowledgement that he is auditioning a new live drummer has sparked rumours that he’ll be heading out on a wider tour this year, although thus far there are no dates scheduled.

Meanwhile, the Purple One is due to be honoured at a charity tribute concert in New York on March 9. Artists including The Roots and Talib Kweli will perform songs from his back catalogue, but it is unknown whether Prince himself will appear at the event.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9a6WwT9LNJw

HMV’s debt bought by ‘restructuring specialist’ Hilco

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HMV's debt has been bought by 'restructuring specialist' Hilco. Hilco bought the high street music retailer's debt from their lenders Lloyds and Royal Bank of Scotland. The debt has to be purchased in order for any company to take full control of HMV, reports BBC News. HMV owed £176 million, but because the company is in administration, Hilco would have paid less than this in making the first step to acquiring the business. Hilco – who bought out HMV Canada in 2011 – confirmed in a statement that they hadn't yet bought the business: "Hilco UK confirms that it has acquired HMV's debt from the group's lenders. It has not bought the business itself." They continued: "Hilco believes there to be a viable underlying HMV business and will now be working closely with Deloitte who, as administrators, are reviewing the business to determine future options." From yesterday (January 22), HMV began accepting gift vouchers again. Many customers were left angry after the company revealed they would not honour vouchers after it went into administration last week. However, a new statement from Nick Edwards of administrators Deloitte promised that gift vouchers will be honoured. The situation over vouchers saw tempers flare in one HMV store. Thames Valley police confirmed that they had been called to an incident at an HMV store in Oxford after a dispute over a gift card between two customers and staff.

HMV’s debt has been bought by ‘restructuring specialist’ Hilco.

Hilco bought the high street music retailer’s debt from their lenders Lloyds and Royal Bank of Scotland. The debt has to be purchased in order for any company to take full control of HMV, reports BBC News.

HMV owed £176 million, but because the company is in administration, Hilco would have paid less than this in making the first step to acquiring the business.

Hilco – who bought out HMV Canada in 2011 – confirmed in a statement that they hadn’t yet bought the business: “Hilco UK confirms that it has acquired HMV’s debt from the group’s lenders. It has not bought the business itself.”

They continued: “Hilco believes there to be a viable underlying HMV business and will now be working closely with Deloitte who, as administrators, are reviewing the business to determine future options.”

From yesterday (January 22), HMV began accepting gift vouchers again.

Many customers were left angry after the company revealed they would not honour vouchers after it went into administration last week.

However, a new statement from Nick Edwards of administrators Deloitte promised that gift vouchers will be honoured.

The situation over vouchers saw tempers flare in one HMV store. Thames Valley police confirmed that they had been called to an incident at an HMV store in Oxford after a dispute over a gift card between two customers and staff.

The Fourth Uncut Playlist Of 2013: listen to Grizzly Bear/Lindstrøm, Jessica Pratt, Blues Control…

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To Matthew E White’s first London show tonight, all being well, but in the meantime this week’s playlist, with a few things to listen to and watch, as is becoming a hopefully useful habit. Especially recommended new arrivals this week: the new Retribution Gospel Choir album – a heavy, even by their standards, complementary piece to Low’s “Invisible Way”, with Sparhawk & co joined by Nels Cline on one of the two 20-minute grinders; a fine collaborative debut from Golden Gunn (the clues are in the name); Soul Jazz’s latest and characteristically well-handled comp; an unexpected windfall of Alice Coltrane meditation cassettes; and a Jessica Pratt song I hadn’t heard before. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Retribution Gospel Choir – 3 (Chaperone) 2 Alice Coltrane – Divine Songs (Avatar Book Institute) 3 Golden Gunn – Golden Gunn (Three-Lobed) 4 Shuggie Otis – Wings Of Love (Epic) 5 Mogwai – Les Revenants (Rock Action) 6 The Experimental Tropic Blues Band – Liquid Love (Jaune Orange) 7 Various Artists – Deutsche Elektronische Musik 2: Experimental German Rock And Electronic Musik 1971-1983 (Soul Jazz) 8 Hiss Golden Messenger – Haw (Paradise Of Bachelors) 9 Lubomyr Melnyk – Corollaries (Erased Tapes) 10 Edwyn Collins – Understated (AED) 11 Blue Oyster Cult – The Complete Albums Collection (Sony) 12 Gas – Nah Und Fern (Kompakt) 13 Uncle Acid & The Deadbeats – Poison Apple (Rise Above) 14 Wooden Wand – Blood Oaths Of The New Blues (Fire) 15 Anders Parker – Cross Latitudes (Skycop) 16 Maxmillion Dunbar – House Of Woo (RVNG INTL) 17 Jessica Pratt – Her Strange Melody (?) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3C3wo8Ccs0g 18 Blues Control – Opium Den/Fade To Blue (Drag City)

To Matthew E White’s first London show tonight, all being well, but in the meantime this week’s playlist, with a few things to listen to and watch, as is becoming a hopefully useful habit.

Especially recommended new arrivals this week: the new Retribution Gospel Choir album – a heavy, even by their standards, complementary piece to Low’s “Invisible Way”, with Sparhawk & co joined by Nels Cline on one of the two 20-minute grinders; a fine collaborative debut from Golden Gunn (the clues are in the name); Soul Jazz’s latest and characteristically well-handled comp; an unexpected windfall of Alice Coltrane meditation cassettes; and a Jessica Pratt song I hadn’t heard before.

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

1 Retribution Gospel Choir – 3 (Chaperone)

2 Alice Coltrane – Divine Songs (Avatar Book Institute)

3 Golden Gunn – Golden Gunn (Three-Lobed)

4 Shuggie Otis – Wings Of Love (Epic)

5 Mogwai – Les Revenants (Rock Action)

6 The Experimental Tropic Blues Band – Liquid Love (Jaune Orange)

7 Various Artists – Deutsche Elektronische Musik 2: Experimental German Rock And Electronic Musik 1971-1983 (Soul Jazz)

8 Hiss Golden Messenger – Haw (Paradise Of Bachelors)

9 Lubomyr Melnyk – Corollaries (Erased Tapes)

10 Edwyn Collins – Understated (AED)

11 Blue Oyster Cult – The Complete Albums Collection (Sony)

12 Gas – Nah Und Fern (Kompakt)

13 Uncle Acid & The Deadbeats – Poison Apple (Rise Above)

14 Wooden Wand – Blood Oaths Of The New Blues (Fire)

15 Anders Parker – Cross Latitudes (Skycop)

16 Maxmillion Dunbar – House Of Woo (RVNG INTL)

17 Jessica Pratt – Her Strange Melody (?)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3C3wo8Ccs0g

18 Blues Control – Opium Den/Fade To Blue (Drag City)

Blues Control “Opium Den / Fade to Blue” from Drag City on Vimeo.

19 Grizzly Bear – Gun-Shy (Lindstrøm Remix) (Warp)

20 Endless Boogie – Long Island (No Quarter)

Yoko Ono to celebrate 80th birthday with one-off Plastic Ono Band gig

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Yoko Ono is set to celebrate her 80th birthday with a one-off gig in Berlin. The Plastic Ono Band will play Berlin's Volksbühne on Sunday, February 17. The band will be led by Ono and Lennon's son Sean Lennon, who collaborated with his mother on her 2009 album My Head And The Sky. A retrospective of Yoko Ono's visual art will open at the Schirn Kuntshalle in Frankfurt on February 15 and will tour to other museums in Denmark, Austria and Spain in 2013 and 2014. In a busy year for the artist and musician, a reissue of all her albums from 1968-1985 is also slated for 2013 and she will curate this year's Meltdown Festival at London's Southbank Centre. Ono recently praised Paul McCartney for saying that she didn't split up The Beatles, thanking him for finally putting the issue to rest and described him as a "brave man". "I thought people knew that I was not responsible, but surprisingly, many people still felt that. He was very brave. So I'd like to say, 'Thank you, Paul. I love you, we love you'," she said. Paul McCartney had previously said that Ono's relationship with John Lennon was not the main reason why the band ended, as had been thought. "She certainly didn't break the group up, the group was breaking up," said McCartney. "When Yoko came along, part of her attraction was her avant garde side, her view of things, so she showed him another way to be, which was very attractive to him. So it was time for John to leave, he was definitely going to leave one way or another."

Yoko Ono is set to celebrate her 80th birthday with a one-off gig in Berlin.

The Plastic Ono Band will play Berlin’s Volksbühne on Sunday, February 17. The band will be led by Ono and Lennon’s son Sean Lennon, who collaborated with his mother on her 2009 album My Head And The Sky.

A retrospective of Yoko Ono’s visual art will open at the Schirn Kuntshalle in Frankfurt on February 15 and will tour to other museums in Denmark, Austria and Spain in 2013 and 2014. In a busy year for the artist and musician, a reissue of all her albums from 1968-1985 is also slated for 2013 and she will curate this year’s Meltdown Festival at London’s Southbank Centre.

Ono recently praised Paul McCartney for saying that she didn’t split up The Beatles, thanking him for finally putting the issue to rest and described him as a “brave man”.

“I thought people knew that I was not responsible, but surprisingly, many people still felt that. He was very brave. So I’d like to say, ‘Thank you, Paul. I love you, we love you’,” she said.

Paul McCartney had previously said that Ono’s relationship with John Lennon was not the main reason why the band ended, as had been thought.

“She certainly didn’t break the group up, the group was breaking up,” said McCartney. “When Yoko came along, part of her attraction was her avant garde side, her view of things, so she showed him another way to be, which was very attractive to him. So it was time for John to leave, he was definitely going to leave one way or another.”

The Stone Roses are just ‘a couple of songs’ into new album, says Suede’s Brett Anderson

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The Stone Roses have written two songs for their long awaited new album, according to Suede's Brett Anderson. Anderson, who is soon to release a comeback album with his own band, revealed to NME that he had some inside information on the Manchester band's progress. "I spoke to Mani a couple of months ago," he said. "I saw him at a party, and he said they'd written a couple of songs." The Suede frontman added that he is interested in hearing what the Roses come up with. "I'd love to hear some new stuff from them. They were a really special band and I've got a lot of goodwill for them. It'll be nice to hear. Whether it's soon is another matter." The Stone Roses, who originally split up in 1996, reunited last year and undertook a globetrotting reunion tour in 2012, including three sold-out gigs at Manchester's Heaton Park and a series of festival headline sets. When the band reunited they signed a new two-album deal with Universal Records, but debuted no new material in their live sets last year.

The Stone Roses have written two songs for their long awaited new album, according to Suede’s Brett Anderson.

Anderson, who is soon to release a comeback album with his own band, revealed to NME that he had some inside information on the Manchester band’s progress. “I spoke to Mani a couple of months ago,” he said. “I saw him at a party, and he said they’d written a couple of songs.”

The Suede frontman added that he is interested in hearing what the Roses come up with. “I’d love to hear some new stuff from them. They were a really special band and I’ve got a lot of goodwill for them. It’ll be nice to hear. Whether it’s soon is another matter.”

The Stone Roses, who originally split up in 1996, reunited last year and undertook a globetrotting reunion tour in 2012, including three sold-out gigs at Manchester’s Heaton Park and a series of festival headline sets.

When the band reunited they signed a new two-album deal with Universal Records, but debuted no new material in their live sets last year.

Lubomyr Melnyk, Matthew E White, Hiss Golden Messenger, Purling Hiss…

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A quiet office these past few days, as members of the Uncut team have dispersed to the States, Morocco and Portugal on various missions and holidays. Yesterday, the rest of us finished the next issue, which goes on sale January 31, and which features, among many other things, a piece about David Bowie and Tony Visconti, relating to something happening in March which isn’t “The Next Day”… More on that over the next week or so. A reminder, too, that our new Uncut Ultimate Music Guide on The Beatles is now on sale in the UK. You can find out more by clicking this link: among all the archive gold we dug out from NME and Melody Maker, I can particularly recommend the remarkable interview with Brian Epstein, conducted just before his death. As I write this morning, I’m looking out over a stretch of South London that remains draped in snow. Snow always seems to require a specific soundtrack in a way that, say, rain rarely demands, and I haven’t found anything better to do the job this year than Lubomyr Melnyk’s “Corollaries”. Melnyk is a Ukrainian musician who had a day in the media spotlight last year when he was revealed to be the fastest pianist in the world (I wrote about him here); he's also playing in London this Thursday. He can certainly play quickly, in gorgeous flurries, but much of “Corollaries” is more meditative and spiritual: very much a part of the nebulous “post-classical” scene that also includes people like Peter Broderick and Nils Frahm (both of whom figure on “Corollaries”). If that scene sometimes tends towards a certain prissiness and, perhaps, overly-polite good taste, Melnyk’s music feels more satisfying on both ambient and visceral levels. I’ve stuck a Youtube clip trailing the new album at the bottom of the blog, so you can see what I’m talking about. There are a few more useful samples of forthcoming music down there, not least a live version of “Brazos” by Matthew E White. As you may have noticed by now, White’s “Big Inner” album is turning out to be the most justifiably hyped album of 2013 thus far (released in the UK, anyhow; those of you in the States may well have been lapping it up for months) – you can read Uncut’s extensive and delirious review by following this link. White is in the UK right now, with shows in Brighton tonight and London tomorrow, and while it might be churlish to expect quite the impact of the 30-strong incarnation of his band in the clip, it should still be pretty great. Get in touch and let me know after the shows – or, of course, if you’ve seen him before. The “Brazos” clip is from last year’s Hopscotch festival in Raleigh, North Carolina, which looked excellent, and which also featured a particular favourite of mine, MC Taylor’s Hiss Golden Messenger. Taylor’s productivity has meant that one tremendous album (“Poor Moon”) and a nice compilation (“Lord I Love The Rain”) have slipped a little under the radar in the last year or so, but his forthcoming “Haw” should enjoy a bit more fuss; it’s certainly deserved. Have a listen to “Sufferer (Love My Conqueror)” below, and see what you think. And finally, a while back I wrote a blog about Purling Hiss’ “Water On Mars”, which is kind of a treat for anyone who grew up on those fundamental early Dinosaur Jr albums. Drag City have now released a trailer for that one, which is also worth a look… Thanks for sticking with me this far: hopefully all the music has been worth it… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FuiUhnDf-qA http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dMHHG1K6vg4 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VRC9DtGryU0

A quiet office these past few days, as members of the Uncut team have dispersed to the States, Morocco and Portugal on various missions and holidays. Yesterday, the rest of us finished the next issue, which goes on sale January 31, and which features, among many other things, a piece about David Bowie and Tony Visconti, relating to something happening in March which isn’t “The Next Day”…

More on that over the next week or so. A reminder, too, that our new Uncut Ultimate Music Guide on The Beatles is now on sale in the UK. You can find out more by clicking this link: among all the archive gold we dug out from NME and Melody Maker, I can particularly recommend the remarkable interview with Brian Epstein, conducted just before his death.

As I write this morning, I’m looking out over a stretch of South London that remains draped in snow. Snow always seems to require a specific soundtrack in a way that, say, rain rarely demands, and I haven’t found anything better to do the job this year than Lubomyr Melnyk’s “Corollaries”. Melnyk is a Ukrainian musician who had a day in the media spotlight last year when he was revealed to be the fastest pianist in the world (I wrote about him here); he’s also playing in London this Thursday.

He can certainly play quickly, in gorgeous flurries, but much of “Corollaries” is more meditative and spiritual: very much a part of the nebulous “post-classical” scene that also includes people like Peter Broderick and Nils Frahm (both of whom figure on “Corollaries”). If that scene sometimes tends towards a certain prissiness and, perhaps, overly-polite good taste, Melnyk’s music feels more satisfying on both ambient and visceral levels. I’ve stuck a Youtube clip trailing the new album at the bottom of the blog, so you can see what I’m talking about.

There are a few more useful samples of forthcoming music down there, not least a live version of “Brazos” by Matthew E White. As you may have noticed by now, White’s “Big Inner” album is turning out to be the most justifiably hyped album of 2013 thus far (released in the UK, anyhow; those of you in the States may well have been lapping it up for months) – you can read Uncut’s extensive and delirious review by following this link.

White is in the UK right now, with shows in Brighton tonight and London tomorrow, and while it might be churlish to expect quite the impact of the 30-strong incarnation of his band in the clip, it should still be pretty great. Get in touch and let me know after the shows – or, of course, if you’ve seen him before.

The “Brazos” clip is from last year’s Hopscotch festival in Raleigh, North Carolina, which looked excellent, and which also featured a particular favourite of mine, MC Taylor’s Hiss Golden Messenger. Taylor’s productivity has meant that one tremendous album (“Poor Moon”) and a nice compilation (“Lord I Love The Rain”) have slipped a little under the radar in the last year or so, but his forthcoming “Haw” should enjoy a bit more fuss; it’s certainly deserved. Have a listen to “Sufferer (Love My Conqueror)” below, and see what you think.

And finally, a while back I wrote a blog about Purling Hiss’ “Water On Mars”, which is kind of a treat for anyone who grew up on those fundamental early Dinosaur Jr albums. Drag City have now released a trailer for that one, which is also worth a look… Thanks for sticking with me this far: hopefully all the music has been worth it…

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

Live Nation to stage Wireless, Hard Rock Calling at Olympic Park

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Live Nation is to host a number of live music events at the Olympic Park this summer, including the Wireless and Hard Rock Calling festivals. Both of the London festivals have previously taken place in Hyde Park. However, following complaints about sound levels within the park as well as an issue with tendering, Live Nation pulled out of a bid to secure a further contract with The Royal Parks, promising they had found an alternative venue. That venue was today revealed to be the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park, situated in Stratford, East London, and home to last summer's Olympic Games. London Legacy Development Corporation (LLDC) handed Live Nation the Olympic Park contract. The LLDC is responsible for future use of the Olympic Park and its venues. Speaking about the move from Hyde Park to the Olympic Park, Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, said: "The confidence now shown by one of the world's leading live entertainment promoters to relocate two of its biggest music festivals from the centre of the capital is a ringing endorsement of our legacy plans. Along with the other major international sports events we have already secured this latest news proves that the park has a very bright future indeed." John Reid, President of Concerts at Live Nation Europe, said: "We are delighted to be staging music concerts at the London Olympics venue, which last year became a globally recognized site for outstanding performances – both in sport and music. Over the coming weeks, we intend to announce some major concerts with world-renowned artists, to firmly establish the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park as the centerpiece for great live music in Europe." Meanwhile, news of the planned events has been welcomed by major sponsors such as Hard Rock. "Our Hard Rock venues around the world showcase more than 20,000 live music events a year," said Hamish Dodds, President and Chief Executive of Hard Rock. "Over the last seven years, our flagship Hard Rock Calling concerts in London have achieved global recognition and we look forward to activating our new location in the Olympic Park in collaboration with the Mayor¹s office and Live Nation." Many fans were left angry and upset after attending musical concerts in Hyde Park last year with Bruce Springsteen and Paul McCartney being kicked off stage after running over time and Blur fans complaining of poor volume levels during the band's gig there in August. Rival events organisers AEG have taken up the Royal Parks contract and will continue to stage concerts in central London.

Live Nation is to host a number of live music events at the Olympic Park this summer, including the Wireless and Hard Rock Calling festivals.

Both of the London festivals have previously taken place in Hyde Park. However, following complaints about sound levels within the park as well as an issue with tendering, Live Nation pulled out of a bid to secure a further contract with The Royal Parks, promising they had found an alternative venue.

That venue was today revealed to be the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park, situated in Stratford, East London, and home to last summer’s Olympic Games. London Legacy Development Corporation (LLDC) handed Live Nation the Olympic Park contract. The LLDC is responsible for future use of the Olympic Park and its venues.

Speaking about the move from Hyde Park to the Olympic Park, Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, said: “The confidence now shown by one of the world’s leading live entertainment promoters to relocate two of its biggest music festivals from the centre of the capital is a ringing endorsement of our legacy plans. Along with the other major international sports events we have already secured this latest news proves that the park has a very bright future indeed.”

John Reid, President of Concerts at Live Nation Europe, said: “We are delighted to be staging music concerts at the London Olympics venue, which last year became a globally recognized site for outstanding performances – both in sport and music. Over the coming weeks, we intend to announce some major concerts with world-renowned artists, to firmly establish the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park as the centerpiece for great live music in Europe.”

Meanwhile, news of the planned events has been welcomed by major sponsors such as Hard Rock. “Our Hard Rock venues around the world showcase more than 20,000 live music events a year,” said Hamish Dodds, President and Chief Executive of Hard Rock. “Over the last seven years, our flagship Hard Rock Calling concerts in London have achieved global recognition and we look forward to activating our new location in the Olympic Park in collaboration with the Mayor¹s office and Live Nation.”

Many fans were left angry and upset after attending musical concerts in Hyde Park last year with Bruce Springsteen and Paul McCartney being kicked off stage after running over time and Blur fans complaining of poor volume levels during the band’s gig there in August. Rival events organisers AEG have taken up the Royal Parks contract and will continue to stage concerts in central London.

Ultimate Music Guide: The Beatles

"A splendid time is guaranteed for all!" Yes, the 13th Uncut Ultimate Music Guide is a very special one – a 148-page extravaganza dedicated to John, Paul, George and Ringo. There are incredible interviews that we've extracted from the archives of NME and Melody Maker. The levels of access and rev...

“A splendid time is guaranteed for all!” Yes, the 13th Uncut Ultimate Music Guide is a very special one – a 148-page extravaganza dedicated to John, Paul, George and Ringo.

There are incredible interviews that we’ve extracted from the archives of NME and Melody Maker. The levels of access and revelation are remarkable, as journalists sit in on meetings with Elvis, travel round the States embedded deep in the Beatles’ touring party, or hear the confessions of Lennon and McCartney as their band starts, slowly but inexorably, to fall apart. Next to all these rarely-seen features, Uncut’s current team of writers have contributed in-depth new analyses of every Beatles album. The Ultimate Music Guide tells how The Beatles revolutionized music, revolutionized the business of stardom, revolutionized how celebrities might behave, and revolutionized how their audience might relate to them… We have, it’s fair to say, been working like a dog!

This issue is available in all good UK newsagents, or available to order online here.

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Wilko Johnson announces extra London farewell gig

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Wilko Johnson has announced details of an extra farewell concert in London, due to popular demand. The new show is set to take place on March 10 at KOKO. The date is in addition to four previously announced, sold-out shows, which followed news that Johnson had been diagnosed with terminal cancer and will not be seeking treatment for the illness. Johnson reportedly decided against chemotherapy so he can continue to play shows for as long as possible. Discussing the final set of gigs, Johnson's manager, Robert Hoy, said that the shows "represent an opportunity for Wilko to express his sincere thanks to his fans for all the support he has had over his long career". Wilko Johnson will play: London KOKO (March 6) Bilston Robin 2 (7) Holmfirth Picturedrome (8) Glasgow O2 ABC (9) London KOKO (10) Johnson, 65, played lead guitar with Dr Feelgood from the band's formation in 1971 until he left in 1977. During his stint, the band scored a No 1 album with their 1976 live LP Stupidity. After departing, Johnson played with The Blockheads for a brief spell in 1980 and released a succession of albums with The Wilko Johnson Band. More recently, he appeared as an actor in the hit HBO show Game Of Thrones. His autobiography, Looking Back At Me, was published in June 2012.

Wilko Johnson has announced details of an extra farewell concert in London, due to popular demand.

The new show is set to take place on March 10 at KOKO. The date is in addition to four previously announced, sold-out shows, which followed news that Johnson had been diagnosed with terminal cancer and will not be seeking treatment for the illness.

Johnson reportedly decided against chemotherapy so he can continue to play shows for as long as possible.

Discussing the final set of gigs, Johnson’s manager, Robert Hoy, said that the shows “represent an opportunity for Wilko to express his sincere thanks to his fans for all the support he has had over his long career”.

Wilko Johnson will play:

London KOKO (March 6)

Bilston Robin 2 (7)

Holmfirth Picturedrome (8)

Glasgow O2 ABC (9)

London KOKO (10)

Johnson, 65, played lead guitar with Dr Feelgood from the band’s formation in 1971 until he left in 1977. During his stint, the band scored a No 1 album with their 1976 live LP Stupidity. After departing, Johnson played with The Blockheads for a brief spell in 1980 and released a succession of albums with The Wilko Johnson Band.

More recently, he appeared as an actor in the hit HBO show Game Of Thrones. His autobiography, Looking Back At Me, was published in June 2012.

Anaïs Mitchell & Jefferson Hamer – Child Ballads

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Vocal collaboration draws ancient and modern together... The folk songs accumulated by the 19th century Harvard professor of rhetoric and oratory Francis Child have become an endlessly malleable core of material upon which each successive folk revival has drawn. Perhaps because he never heard them sung, but instead collected them as written texts, there is a protean, metamorphic quality to the Child Ballads which is well suited to their often supernatural themes. Just as the cursed Tam Lin exhorts his lover to hold him tightly through all the various terrifying transformations which the Fairy Queen will visit upon him, in order to break the spell and return him to his human form, each individual Child Ballad has been put through any number of revisions, alterations and reinterpretations, as singers alter and amend the narrative to fit their own ends, whilst always leaving the essential message of the story intact and eternal. Tam Lin will always end up human, Sir Patrick Spens will always end up drowned on his royal errand, and poor Geordie always ends up hanged. Anaïs Mitchell and Jefferson Hamer discovered a shared passion for the Child Ballads when he was lead guitarist in her band, supporting the growing reputation singer-songwriter Mitchell was accruing through albums like 2010's Hadestown and this year's acclaimed Young Man In America. Together they set about recording this slim portfolio of seven Child Ballads, including the three referred to above. While some of the songs have been amended to suit contemporary imaginations, or dispel potential linguistic confusion, they are all faithful to the source material. The seven songs occupy territory of treachery, trickery and tragedy, in which the lower orders seek through cunning or rhetoric to evade the fates or punishments that kings and aristocrats visit upon them. In "Willie Of Winsbury", the eponymous hero charms an angry king whose daughter he has impregnated; in "Willie's Lady", the titular king foils the curse placed by his mother (a witch) on his wife preventing her from bearing child, by passing off a wax simulacrum as a baby during Christening, causing the witch to believe the curse is broken; and while her attention is thus dispelled, the couple quickly consummate their bond. Less happily, the hero of "Sir Patrick Spens" is doomed by royal commission to maritime disaster, required to deliver home the young Scottish queen Margaret, Maid Of Norway through storm-tossed seas evoked here by smears of fiddle dabbed against the guitars. Water in general is best avoided in Child Ballads, if the double-drowning tale of "Clyde Waters" is anything to go by. Here, with Tim Lauer’s accordion tints lending a mournful mood to the arrangement, yet another Willie and his lover Margaret perish separately in the Clyde, their deaths linked by a premonitory dream of drowning. In "Riddles Wisely Expounded", the very first of the Child Ballads a knight gives a headstrong girl a series of riddles to answer before he will plight his troth. She nails each and every one; though the incessant refrain advising "Lay the bent to the bonny brume... and you'll beguile the lady soon" suggests it is he who is the cannier. One suspects they fully deserve each other, as too do "Tam Lin" and his beloved, whose fealty and devotion through terrible circumstances serves as an age-old metaphor for the security of the marital bond. Though Mitchell and Hamer avoid the kind of astringent vocal blends favoured by most British singers of these ballads, there's still an intriguing piquancy to their harmonies, with Mitchell's girlish timbre resting against Hamer's milder, warmer tones. The frequently repeated refrains help imbue both the fatalistic quality of the ballads, and a pop-conscious melodic familiarity which brings them in line with modern pop practice. Likewise, the arrangements of sparse guitar picking, set against pump-organ or accordion drones, also draw ancient and modern together, in rolling, wave-like cyclical figures which confirm the inevitability of the narratives. Andy Gill Q&A Anaïs Mitchell Where did your fascination with the Child Ballads originate? My parents were hippies, and they had this hippie folksong book, The Rise Up Singing Songbook, and I would come across a song every once in a while that it would say was a Child Ballad, so I filed that away; and then a few years ago, I started listening to a lot of English, Scottish and Irish music, and fell in love with the exotic storytelling language. Which is your favourite? I'd probably say 'Tam Lin' - I've always loved the way that in ballads from across the Atlantic, there's all these supernatural goings-on, fairies and witches and spells. Most of the Ballads that made their way over and got established in America seem more realistic, morality tales, and not so many fairies! So our version of 'Tam Lin' doesn't have any explicit fairy activity. I just think the metaphor of a partnership where you have to really hold on to the other person whilst they transform into these fearsome creatures, then you can win the human prize at the end, I think that's beautiful. They fit in well with the current vogue for 'wyrd' freak-folk. I do think there's something really regenerative about the American take on British and Celtic songs, and vice-versa: you hear the words in a different way. My last album was inspired by some of those songs, images like never trusting a man with a "black and roving eye" - you know exactly what it means, and they knew what it meant a hundred years ago, it's a touchstone image that gives you this thrill. You feel the past, the realness, and your place in it. INTERVIEW: ANDY GILL

Vocal collaboration draws ancient and modern together…

The folk songs accumulated by the 19th century Harvard professor of rhetoric and oratory Francis Child have become an endlessly malleable core of material upon which each successive folk revival has drawn. Perhaps because he never heard them sung, but instead collected them as written texts, there is a protean, metamorphic quality to the Child Ballads which is well suited to their often supernatural themes. Just as the cursed Tam Lin exhorts his lover to hold him tightly through all the various terrifying transformations which the Fairy Queen will visit upon him, in order to break the spell and return him to his human form, each individual Child Ballad has been put through any number of revisions, alterations and reinterpretations, as singers alter and amend the narrative to fit their own ends, whilst always leaving the essential message of the story intact and eternal. Tam Lin will always end up human, Sir Patrick Spens will always end up drowned on his royal errand, and poor Geordie always ends up hanged.

Anaïs Mitchell and Jefferson Hamer discovered a shared passion for the Child Ballads when he was lead guitarist in her band, supporting the growing reputation singer-songwriter Mitchell was accruing through albums like 2010’s Hadestown and this year’s acclaimed Young Man In America. Together they set about recording this slim portfolio of seven Child Ballads, including the three referred to above.

While some of the songs have been amended to suit contemporary imaginations, or dispel potential linguistic confusion, they are all faithful to the source material. The seven songs occupy territory of treachery, trickery and tragedy, in which the lower orders seek through cunning or rhetoric to evade the fates or punishments that kings and aristocrats visit upon them. In “Willie Of Winsbury“, the eponymous hero charms an angry king whose daughter he has impregnated; in “Willie’s Lady”, the titular king foils the curse placed by his mother (a witch) on his wife preventing her from bearing child, by passing off a wax simulacrum as a baby during Christening, causing the witch to believe the curse is broken; and while her attention is thus dispelled, the couple quickly consummate their bond.

Less happily, the hero of “Sir Patrick Spens” is doomed by royal commission to maritime disaster, required to deliver home the young Scottish queen Margaret, Maid Of Norway through storm-tossed seas evoked here by smears of fiddle dabbed against the guitars. Water in general is best avoided in Child Ballads, if the double-drowning tale of “Clyde Waters” is anything to go by. Here, with Tim Lauer’s accordion tints lending a mournful mood to the arrangement, yet another Willie and his lover Margaret perish separately in the Clyde, their deaths linked by a premonitory dream of drowning.

In “Riddles Wisely Expounded”, the very first of the Child Ballads a knight gives a headstrong girl a series of riddles to answer before he will plight his troth. She nails each and every one; though the incessant refrain advising “Lay the bent to the bonny brume… and you’ll beguile the lady soon” suggests it is he who is the cannier.

One suspects they fully deserve each other, as too do “Tam Lin” and his beloved, whose fealty and devotion through terrible circumstances serves as an age-old metaphor for the security of the marital bond. Though Mitchell and Hamer avoid the kind of astringent vocal blends favoured by most British singers of these ballads, there’s still an intriguing piquancy to their harmonies, with Mitchell’s girlish timbre resting against Hamer’s milder, warmer tones. The frequently repeated refrains help imbue both the fatalistic quality of the ballads, and a pop-conscious melodic familiarity which brings them in line with modern pop practice. Likewise, the arrangements of sparse guitar picking, set against pump-organ or accordion drones, also draw ancient and modern together, in rolling, wave-like cyclical figures which confirm the inevitability of the narratives.

Andy Gill

Q&A

Anaïs Mitchell

Where did your fascination with the Child Ballads originate?

My parents were hippies, and they had this hippie folksong book, The Rise Up Singing Songbook, and I would come across a song every once in a while that it would say was a Child Ballad, so I filed that away; and then a few years ago, I started listening to a lot of English, Scottish and Irish music, and fell in love with the exotic storytelling language.

Which is your favourite?

I’d probably say ‘Tam Lin’ – I’ve always loved the way that in ballads from across the Atlantic, there’s all these supernatural goings-on, fairies and witches and spells. Most of the Ballads that made their way over and got established in America seem more realistic, morality tales, and not so many fairies! So our version of ‘Tam Lin’ doesn’t have any explicit fairy activity. I just think the metaphor of a partnership where you have to really hold on to the other person whilst they transform into these fearsome creatures, then you can win the human prize at the end, I think that’s beautiful.

They fit in well with the current vogue for ‘wyrd’ freak-folk.

I do think there’s something really regenerative about the American take on British and Celtic songs, and vice-versa: you hear the words in a different way. My last album was inspired by some of those songs, images like never trusting a man with a “black and roving eye” – you know exactly what it means, and they knew what it meant a hundred years ago, it’s a touchstone image that gives you this thrill. You feel the past, the realness, and your place in it.

INTERVIEW: ANDY GILL

Mick Jagger: ‘The Rolling Stones aren’t gonna do Coachella’

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Mick Jagger has confirmed to NME that The Rolling Stones will not be playing the Coachella festival in 2013, despite strong rumours suggesting they would. Addressing the rumours that the legendary rock'n'rollers will be playing the California bash, Jagger said: "We're not gonna do Coachella, 'cos it's too early. There was a rumour we were gonna do that one, but it's very early, Coachella. It's April or something, isn’t it? And we're not gonna be ready to go by April. But we're not gonna stop." In December last year, The Rolling Stones seemingly leaked plans to play the festival after the rock legends' mobile app listed a new live date on April 12, 2013 in Indio at Coachella 2013, although they quickly took the information down. Regardless of the band's plans for Coachella, however, both singer Mick Jagger and guitarist Keith Richards have spoken about the possibility of playing more live shows in 2013. Jagger said that, after their brief run of gigs in London, New York and New Jersey at the tail end of 2012, the band were in fine form and keen to get back on the stage to continue performing, stating: "I'm going to see what's on the table and discuss it with everyone. We'll announce it when we've figured it out." Richards, meanwhile, added: "Really, all you're going to have to do is wait for an announcement." Their comments came after Rolling Stones guitarist Ronnie Wood recently claimed that the band will "rock till they drop".

Mick Jagger has confirmed to NME that The Rolling Stones will not be playing the Coachella festival in 2013, despite strong rumours suggesting they would.

Addressing the rumours that the legendary rock’n’rollers will be playing the California bash, Jagger said: “We’re not gonna do Coachella, ‘cos it’s too early. There was a rumour we were gonna do that one, but it’s very early, Coachella. It’s April or something, isn’t it? And we’re not gonna be ready to go by April. But we’re not gonna stop.”

In December last year, The Rolling Stones seemingly leaked plans to play the festival after the rock legends’ mobile app listed a new live date on April 12, 2013 in Indio at Coachella 2013, although they quickly took the information down.

Regardless of the band’s plans for Coachella, however, both singer Mick Jagger and guitarist Keith Richards have spoken about the possibility of playing more live shows in 2013. Jagger said that, after their brief run of gigs in London, New York and New Jersey at the tail end of 2012, the band were in fine form and keen to get back on the stage to continue performing, stating: “I’m going to see what’s on the table and discuss it with everyone. We’ll announce it when we’ve figured it out.” Richards, meanwhile, added: “Really, all you’re going to have to do is wait for an announcement.”

Their comments came after Rolling Stones guitarist Ronnie Wood recently claimed that the band will “rock till they drop”.

Michael Winner dies aged 77

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Film director, restaurant critic, raconteur and former NME writer Michael Winner has passed away, aged 77. The news of Winner's death was confirmed by his widow, Geraldine, earlier today (January 21). Mrs Winner issued a statement with the news, in which she pays tribute to her late husband. She says: "Michael was a wonderful man, brilliant, funny and generous. A light has gone out in my life." Winner's career took him down many paths, including a latter-day stint as a TV star via a long-running series of advertisements for insurance company Esure, which launched his famous catchphrase, "Calm down, dear." As a younger man he was a writer for NME, submitting film reviews from the mid-'50s to the early '60s. However, it is as a film director that Winner is best known. His directing credits include Hannibal Brooks, Lawman, Scorpio, The Mechanic and the Death Wish series. The director was also a much feared restaurant critic, famed for his barbed insult toward many establishments in his Sunday Times column, 'Winner's Dinners'. Recent years have, however, seen Winner battling illness. He contracted a bacterial infection in 2007 after eating oysters in Barbados. Winner subsequently caught MRSE while in hospital and in 2012 revealed to The Times that doctors has informed him he had "18 months to two years" to live. Michael Winner died at home in Kensington, London. The cause of death has not yet been revealed.

Film director, restaurant critic, raconteur and former NME writer Michael Winner has passed away, aged 77.

The news of Winner’s death was confirmed by his widow, Geraldine, earlier today (January 21). Mrs Winner issued a statement with the news, in which she pays tribute to her late husband. She says: “Michael was a wonderful man, brilliant, funny and generous. A light has gone out in my life.”

Winner’s career took him down many paths, including a latter-day stint as a TV star via a long-running series of advertisements for insurance company Esure, which launched his famous catchphrase, “Calm down, dear.” As a younger man he was a writer for NME, submitting film reviews from the mid-’50s to the early ’60s.

However, it is as a film director that Winner is best known. His directing credits include Hannibal Brooks, Lawman, Scorpio, The Mechanic and the Death Wish series.

The director was also a much feared restaurant critic, famed for his barbed insult toward many establishments in his Sunday Times column, ‘Winner’s Dinners’.

Recent years have, however, seen Winner battling illness. He contracted a bacterial infection in 2007 after eating oysters in Barbados. Winner subsequently caught MRSE while in hospital and in 2012 revealed to The Times that doctors has informed him he had “18 months to two years” to live.

Michael Winner died at home in Kensington, London. The cause of death has not yet been revealed.

Paul Weller added to Isle Of Wight festival lineup

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Paul Weller has been confirmed to perform at Isle Of Wight Festival this year, appearing directly before The Stone Roses on the main stage. The festival will also be headlined by Bon Jovi and The Killers in 2013. Speaking about his appearance on the Friday night, Paul Weller says: "It's been a while since I've played the Isle Of Wight Festival and I'm excited to be playing it this year, it's a great way to kick off the summer." Other acts already announced for the festival, which will take place at Seaclose Park between June 13-16 include The Maccabees, Jake Bugg, Bloc Party, Paloma Faith, Ellie Goulding, Blondie, I Am Kloot, Kodaline and Willy Mason. Speaking about the latest additions to next year's lineup, festival organiser John Giddings previously said: "We are proud to present some of the best new music around, together with artists who helped scope the face of modern music – it’s a stunning combination so far."

Paul Weller has been confirmed to perform at Isle Of Wight Festival this year, appearing directly before The Stone Roses on the main stage.

The festival will also be headlined by Bon Jovi and The Killers in 2013. Speaking about his appearance on the Friday night, Paul Weller says: “It’s been a while since I’ve played the Isle Of Wight Festival and I’m excited to be playing it this year, it’s a great way to kick off the summer.”

Other acts already announced for the festival, which will take place at Seaclose Park between June 13-16 include The Maccabees, Jake Bugg, Bloc Party, Paloma Faith, Ellie Goulding, Blondie, I Am Kloot, Kodaline and Willy Mason.

Speaking about the latest additions to next year’s lineup, festival organiser John Giddings previously said: “We are proud to present some of the best new music around, together with artists who helped scope the face of modern music – it’s a stunning combination so far.”

Vampire Weekend confirm third album almost complete

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Vampire Weekend have confirmed that they are putting the finishing touches to their "organic" and "cohesive" forthcoming third album, which is due for release in spring 2013. The LP will be the band's first new material since 2010's 'Contra' and has been in the works for more than 20 months. Although they say they have been mentally composing the record "since the we handed in [2010's] 'Contra'", when they actually began writing tracks in producer and multi-instrumentalist Rostam Batmanglij's Brooklyn apartment, they found a creative flurry at the beginning soon hit a wall. "Making every record is a process full of tough times," singer and guitarist Ezra Keonig told NME. "Invariably that's how it is for us. When we started to work a few days a week and really pick things up we immediately had maybe two or three songs that we thought were perfect for this record, a new vibe, quality songwriting. We felt great about them for two or three months, but then after a while you realise, 'OK, we have two or three great songs and we need 11 or 12.'" He added: "Then the depression sets in. You don't want to have three great songs and then write nine shitty ones. It's like the bar keeps getting higher and higher and there's all these moments where you feel like you have no idea what to do…For our third record it's only getting harder, but that kinda feels like how it should be." After a stint writing in Martha's Vineyard, they then headed out to LA last summer with producer Ariel Rechtshaid, who most recently has been working with Major Lazer, Usher and Snoop Lion. Speaking about working with Rechtshaid, Keonig said: "to bring somebody new in definitely changed the dynamic. After two albums of doing everything ourselves, we're very lucky that we found somebody who, personality-wise and vibe-wise, almost felt like they could be a member of the band. "

Vampire Weekend have confirmed that they are putting the finishing touches to their “organic” and “cohesive” forthcoming third album, which is due for release in spring 2013.

The LP will be the band’s first new material since 2010’s ‘Contra’ and has been in the works for more than 20 months. Although they say they have been mentally composing the record “since the we handed in [2010’s] ‘Contra'”, when they actually began writing tracks in producer and multi-instrumentalist Rostam Batmanglij’s Brooklyn apartment, they found a creative flurry at the beginning soon hit a wall.

“Making every record is a process full of tough times,” singer and guitarist Ezra Keonig told NME. “Invariably that’s how it is for us. When we started to work a few days a week and really pick things up we immediately had maybe two or three songs that we thought were perfect for this record, a new vibe, quality songwriting. We felt great about them for two or three months, but then after a while you realise, ‘OK, we have two or three great songs and we need 11 or 12.'”

He added: “Then the depression sets in. You don’t want to have three great songs and then write nine shitty ones. It’s like the bar keeps getting higher and higher and there’s all these moments where you feel like you have no idea what to do…For our third record it’s only getting harder, but that kinda feels like how it should be.”

After a stint writing in Martha’s Vineyard, they then headed out to LA last summer with producer Ariel Rechtshaid, who most recently has been working with Major Lazer, Usher and Snoop Lion. Speaking about working with Rechtshaid, Keonig said: “to bring somebody new in definitely changed the dynamic. After two albums of doing everything ourselves, we’re very lucky that we found somebody who, personality-wise and vibe-wise, almost felt like they could be a member of the band. “

Dave Grohl collaborates with Stevie Nicks and John Fogerty at Sundance Film Festival

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Dave Grohl debuted his new supergroup, the Sound City Players, at the Sundance Film Festival on Friday (January 18, 2013). Grohl, who was accompanied by his Foo Fighters bandmates throughout the three-hour show, introduced a rolling castlist of rock legends to the stage to play with him as he guided the crowd through a live history of music recorded at the Sound City Studios, reports Rolling Stone. Nirvana's Krist Novoselic and Pat Smear, Slipknot's Corey Taylor, Fleetwood Mac's Stevie Nicks, Creedence Clearwater Revival's John Fogerty, Nate Mendel and Chris Shiflett, Alain Johannes, Chris Goss, Cheap Trick's Rick Nielsen and Rage Against The Machine drummer Brad Wilk were among the 17-strong lineup of musicians who took to the stage. All the featured artists have recorded at the infamous Sound City Studios and appear in Grohl's documentary about the recording studios in Van Nuys, California, which premiered at the annual Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah on Friday (January 19). Creedence Clearwater Revival's John Fogerty performed 'Born On The Bayou', 'Bad Moon Rising', 'Proud Mary' and 'Fortunate Son' with Grohl, while Nicks performed 'Landslide' and new song 'You Can't Fix This'. The film also features Paul McCartney, who teamed up with Grohl to front a band comprising the former members of Nirvana at the 12-12-12 Sandy benefit concert in New York on December 12. A studio recording of 'Cut Me Some Slack', the song the short-lived supergroup recorded for the film, was put online on December 17. Nirvana recorded their Nevermind album at Sound City in 1991. This promises to be a busy year for Grohl. He'll be delivering the keynote speech at this year's South By Southwest festival in Austin, Texas on March 14, as well as drumming on the forthcoming Queens Of The Stone Age album.

Dave Grohl debuted his new supergroup, the Sound City Players, at the Sundance Film Festival on Friday (January 18, 2013).

Grohl, who was accompanied by his Foo Fighters bandmates throughout the three-hour show, introduced a rolling castlist of rock legends to the stage to play with him as he guided the crowd through a live history of music recorded at the Sound City Studios, reports Rolling Stone.

Nirvana’s Krist Novoselic and Pat Smear, Slipknot’s Corey Taylor, Fleetwood Mac’s Stevie Nicks, Creedence Clearwater Revival’s John Fogerty, Nate Mendel and Chris Shiflett, Alain Johannes, Chris Goss, Cheap Trick’s Rick Nielsen and Rage Against The Machine drummer Brad Wilk were among the 17-strong lineup of musicians who took to the stage.

All the featured artists have recorded at the infamous Sound City Studios and appear in Grohl’s documentary about the recording studios in Van Nuys, California, which premiered at the annual Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah on Friday (January 19).

Creedence Clearwater Revival’s John Fogerty performed ‘Born On The Bayou’, ‘Bad Moon Rising’, ‘Proud Mary’ and ‘Fortunate Son’ with Grohl, while Nicks performed ‘Landslide’ and new song ‘You Can’t Fix This’.

The film also features Paul McCartney, who teamed up with Grohl to front a band comprising the former members of Nirvana at the 12-12-12 Sandy benefit concert in New York on December 12.

A studio recording of ‘Cut Me Some Slack’, the song the short-lived supergroup recorded for the film, was put online on December 17. Nirvana recorded their Nevermind album at Sound City in 1991.

This promises to be a busy year for Grohl. He’ll be delivering the keynote speech at this year’s South By Southwest festival in Austin, Texas on March 14, as well as drumming on the forthcoming Queens Of The Stone Age album.

Church where Arcade Fire recorded Neon Bible and The Suburbs listed for sale

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The church in which Arcade Fire recorded two of their studio albums has been listed for sale, according to reports. The band recorded their 2007 LP Neon Bible and 2010 record The Suburbs at the building in Farnham, Quebec in Canada but, according to Pitchfork, were forced to leave the church behind after the roof collapsed. With the group now working on their fourth studio album in a new location, they posted an advertisement for the building on their Twitter account. According to the listing, the building will cost $325,000 (£204,880), while the roof repairs would set the buyer back between $24,300 (£15,100) and $44,200 (£27,700). It says: "Charming church which housed a small concert hall, followed by a recording studio also offering accommodation. Its architecture makes it a perfect location for an artist's studio, a place of worship, a cultural, community or other organization. Offer here a unique setting to your project!" Last month (December 7), it was revealed that Arcade Fire are currently working on their new album with James Murphy. The band's manager said: "They're in with James Murphy on three or so songs, plus Markus Dravs who is a long-time collaborator. They write too many songs – that's a good problem to have. There's around 35 songs with Arcade Fire, two albums' worth for sure."

The church in which Arcade Fire recorded two of their studio albums has been listed for sale, according to reports.

The band recorded their 2007 LP Neon Bible and 2010 record The Suburbs at the building in Farnham, Quebec in Canada but, according to Pitchfork, were forced to leave the church behind after the roof collapsed. With the group now working on their fourth studio album in a new location, they posted an advertisement for the building on their Twitter account.

According to the listing, the building will cost $325,000 (£204,880), while the roof repairs would set the buyer back between $24,300 (£15,100) and $44,200 (£27,700). It says: “Charming church which housed a small concert hall, followed by a recording studio also offering accommodation. Its architecture makes it a perfect location for an artist’s studio, a place of worship, a cultural, community or other organization. Offer here a unique setting to your project!”

Last month (December 7), it was revealed that Arcade Fire are currently working on their new album with James Murphy. The band’s manager said: “They’re in with James Murphy on three or so songs, plus Markus Dravs who is a long-time collaborator. They write too many songs – that’s a good problem to have. There’s around 35 songs with Arcade Fire, two albums’ worth for sure.”