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Fleetwood Mac: “We’ve cut about eight or nine songs.”

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Speaking to Uncut ahead of the 35th anniversary reissue of Rumours, Mick Fleetwood has revealed details of the band's most recent recording sessions. Fleetwood said, "About six months ago Lindsey [Buckingham], me and John [McVie] went into the studio and cut about eight or nine songs of Lindsey’s. Stevie’s done a little bit of singing on some of those songs. My aspiration and Lindsey's – and hopefully it will be the band in total – is that we’ll eventually work round to having the music we started turn into another Fleetwood Mac album down the road in the course of the next year. I would love to think that would happen. There’s some great stuff that we did, so I’m really excited about that." Fleetwood Mac begin a new world tour on April 4 in Columbus, Ohio. Speaking about the possibility of the band playing UK shows this year, the drummer confirmed: "The specifics are still to be worked out, but we’re coming, we’re coming." Fleetwood Mac release expanded and deluxe versions of their 1977 album Rumours on January 28.

Speaking to Uncut ahead of the 35th anniversary reissue of Rumours, Mick Fleetwood has revealed details of the band’s most recent recording sessions.

Fleetwood said, “About six months ago Lindsey [Buckingham], me and John [McVie] went into the studio and cut about eight or nine songs of Lindsey’s. Stevie’s done a little bit of singing on some of those songs. My aspiration and Lindsey’s – and hopefully it will be the band in total – is that we’ll eventually work round to having the music we started turn into another Fleetwood Mac album down the road in the course of the next year. I would love to think that would happen. There’s some great stuff that we did, so I’m really excited about that.”

Fleetwood Mac begin a new world tour on April 4 in Columbus, Ohio. Speaking about the possibility of the band playing UK shows this year, the drummer confirmed: “The specifics are still to be worked out, but we’re coming, we’re coming.”

Fleetwood Mac release expanded and deluxe versions of their 1977 album Rumours on January 28.

Tom Waits and Anton Corbijn to release photo book

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Tom Waits and Anton Corbijn have announced that they will be joining forces on a new photographic book. Titled '77-'11, it will feature over 200 pages of portraits of Waits taken by photographer-turned-film director Corbijn. It will also include over 50 pages of photographs and musings by Waits hi...

Tom Waits and Anton Corbijn have announced that they will be joining forces on a new photographic book.

Titled ’77-’11, it will feature over 200 pages of portraits of Waits taken by photographer-turned-film director Corbijn.

It will also include over 50 pages of photographs and musings by Waits himself and will feature an introduction from director Jim Jarmusch.

The book will document the artistic relationship between the pair, which started in 1977 when Corbijn first photographed Waits in Holland.

“Anton picks up a small black box, points it at you and all the leaves fall from the trees,” Waits says in a statement about the book. “The shadows now are long and scary, the house looks completely abandoned and I look like a handsome… undertaker. I love working with Anton, he’s someone with a real point of view. Believe me, I won’t go jumping off rocks wearing only a Dracula cape for just anyone.”

“It’s rare”, Corbijn adds, “to take photographs of someone over a 30-plus year period. Our work together developed totally organically and that’s a beauty in itself. We are very serious about our work but when it comes to working together, we’re like children resisting maturity. It’s liberating and a much needed legal drug.”

’77-’11 will be limited to 6,600 copies and is scheduled for release on May 8 release by German publisher Schirmer-Mosel.

Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds to launch new album at London show

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Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds are set to launch their new album, Push The Sky Away, with a special live show at Her Majesty's Theatre in London on February 10. The band will be playing the album in full with strings and a choir. A short film by Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard about the making of the al...

Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds are set to launch their new album, Push The Sky Away, with a special live show at Her Majesty’s Theatre in London on February 10.

The band will be playing the album in full with strings and a choir. A short film by Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard about the making of the album, which is out February 18, will also be screened at the event.

Similar events will be held in Paris at Trianon (February 11), Berlin Admiralspalast (February 13) and Los Angeles Fonda Theatre (February 21).

Tickets go on sale at Nickcave.com at 4pm (GMT) on January 17.

Push The Sky Away will be Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds’ 15th studio album.

It follows 2008’s Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!! and was recorded by regular Bad Seeds and Grinderman collaborator Nick Launay at La Fabrique studios, a 19th century mansion in the south of France.

Speaking about the album, Nick Cave said: “If I were to use that threadbare metaphor of albums being like children, then ‘Push The Sky Away’ is the ghost-baby in the incubator and Warren [Ellis]’s loops are its tiny, trembling heartbeat.”

The band will be playing North American, Mexican and Australian shows over the coming months and are rumoured to be playing the Coachella Festival in California in April.

They will be playing European festival dates in the summer.

My Bloody Valentine to play London warm-up gig

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My Bloody Valentine are set to play a warm-up show for their 2013 tour at the 1,500 capacity Electric Brixton in London on January 27. The show comes ahead of their Asian tour dates and before the band start their UK tour in March. Tickets for the show are on sale now. My Bloody Valentine have als...

My Bloody Valentine are set to play a warm-up show for their 2013 tour at the 1,500 capacity Electric Brixton in London on January 27.

The show comes ahead of their Asian tour dates and before the band start their UK tour in March. Tickets for the show are on sale now.

My Bloody Valentine have also just have added a Birmingham date to their UK tour.

The band, who were due to start their UK tour 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.

Speaking to NME at the beginning of November, frontman Kevin Shields claimed that the band’s new album – their first since 1991’s Loveless – would be released on his website before the end of the year, although it has yet to see the light of day.

My Bloody Valentine will play:

London Brixton Electric (January 27)

Birmingham O2 Academy (March 8)

Glasgow Barrowlands (March 9)

Manchester Apollo (10)

London Hammersmith Apollo (12, 13)

The Third Uncut Playlist Of 2013: listen to Kurt Vile, Lubomyr Melnyk and the new Four Tet album

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Couple of plugs this morning before I get into the list. First off, a quick reminder that we have an exclusive stream of the whole new Arbouretum album, “Coming Out Of The Fog”; click this link. Well worth a listen, if you haven’t already. Second, our latest Uncut Ultimate Music Guide is out tomorrow, I think, and is dedicated to The Beatles: Allan has written about it here. Moving on, a really good bunch of arrivals this week. Please try and have a listen to the Lubomyr Melnyk and Kurt Vile clips, and of course to the whole Four Tet album. Other things worth picking out: Thurston Moore’s new band with Keith Wood, John Moloney and Samara Lubelski, Chelsea Light Moving; and this Hiss Golden Messenger album, “Haw”, which was waiting in my inbox this morning and is playing as I write. There have been worse starts to a day. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Lubomyr Melnyk – Corollaries (Erased Tapes) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FuiUhnDf-qA 2 Feeding People – Island Universe (Innovative Leisure) 3 Justin Timberlake – Suit & Tie (RCA) 4 Psychic Ills – One Track Mind (Sacred Bones) 5 Derek Gripper – One Night On Earth: Music From The Strings Of Mali (New Cape) 6 A Hawk And A Hacksaw – You Have Already Gone To The Other World (LM Dupli-cation) 7 Devendra Banhart – Mala (Nonesuch) 8 The Child Of Lov – Give Me (Double Six) 9 Thalia Zedek Band – Via (Thrill Jockey) 10 Chelsea Light Moving - Chelsea Light Moving (Matador) 11 Four Tet – 0181 (Text) 12 Foxygen – We Are The 21st Century Ambassadors Of Peace And Magic (Jagjaguwar) 13 Kurt Vile & The Violators – The Hunchback EP (Richie Records/Testoster Tunes) 14 Phosphorescent – Muchacho (Dead Oceans) 15 Pulp – After You (?) 16 Jerusalem In My Heart – Mo7it Al-Mo7it (Constellation) 17 Mudhoney - The Only Son Of The Widow From Nain (Sub Pop) 18 Hiss Golden Messenger – Haw (Paradise Of Bachelors)

Couple of plugs this morning before I get into the list. First off, a quick reminder that we have an exclusive stream of the whole new Arbouretum album, “Coming Out Of The Fog”; click this link. Well worth a listen, if you haven’t already.

Second, our latest Uncut Ultimate Music Guide is out tomorrow, I think, and is dedicated to The Beatles: Allan has written about it here.

Moving on, a really good bunch of arrivals this week. Please try and have a listen to the Lubomyr Melnyk and Kurt Vile clips, and of course to the whole Four Tet album. Other things worth picking out: Thurston Moore’s new band with Keith Wood, John Moloney and Samara Lubelski, Chelsea Light Moving; and this Hiss Golden Messenger album, “Haw”, which was waiting in my inbox this morning and is playing as I write. There have been worse starts to a day.

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

1 Lubomyr Melnyk – Corollaries (Erased Tapes)

2 Feeding People – Island Universe (Innovative Leisure)

3 Justin Timberlake – Suit & Tie (RCA)

4 Psychic Ills – One Track Mind (Sacred Bones)

5 Derek Gripper – One Night On Earth: Music From The Strings Of Mali (New Cape)

6 A Hawk And A Hacksaw – You Have Already Gone To The Other World (LM Dupli-cation)

7 Devendra Banhart – Mala (Nonesuch)

8 The Child Of Lov – Give Me (Double Six)

9 Thalia Zedek Band – Via (Thrill Jockey)

10 Chelsea Light Moving – Chelsea Light Moving (Matador)

11 Four Tet – 0181 (Text)

12 Foxygen – We Are The 21st Century Ambassadors Of Peace And Magic (Jagjaguwar)

13 Kurt Vile & The Violators – The Hunchback EP (Richie Records/Testoster Tunes)

14 Phosphorescent – Muchacho (Dead Oceans)

15 Pulp – After You (?)

16 Jerusalem In My Heart – Mo7it Al-Mo7it (Constellation)

17 Mudhoney – The Only Son Of The Widow From Nain (Sub Pop)

18 Hiss Golden Messenger – Haw (Paradise Of Bachelors)

The Beatles – The Uncut Ultimate Music Guide on sale this week

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The next Uncut Ultimate Music Guide goes on sale on Thursday (January 17), hot on the heels of our special on The Kinks, and is dedicated this time to The Beatles. There’s the usual mix of brand new reviews of all The Beatles albums by our current team of writers alongside some truly remarkable interviews from the archives of Melody Maker and NME, for which the description ‘mind-blowing’ seems barely adequate. These days even the most half-arsed so-called celebrity is likely to be surrounded by a protective PR phalanx whose sole purpose is to keep the people who employ them at a pampered distance from the pawing demands of the press, which the aforementioned 'stars' will entertain only on their own restrictive terms, in circumstances wholly under the control of their simpering PR minions. Fifty years ago, with the world increasingly in thrall to The Beatles and gripped by the unprecedented hysteria of Beatle-mania, you would have expected the most popular group in the history of popular music to be perhaps as remote as a distant planet from the everyday whirl, denizens of some rare and separate stratosphere, beyond the touch of mere adoring mortals and kept as far as possible from the press and it obsessively inquisitive demands upon them. This wasn’t quite how I remembered things, however. Growing up with MM and NME in the mid-60s as The Beatles swept all before them, I can barely remember a week when they weren’t on the cover of either one or the other of the main music weeklies, and were often in my memory on the covers of both at the same time. Key writers on MM and NME were virtually embedded in The Beatles’ camp – notable among them Ray Coleman and Chris Hutchins at MM, and Allen Evans and Alan Smith at NME – and enjoyed the most extraordinary access to the band, Brian Epstein cannily fostering a chummy intimacy that guaranteed The Beatles a vast and uninterrupted coverage, the looming bulk of it unseen for years prior to republication in our Ultimate Music Guide. Some of the stuff we’ve unearthed is gob-smacking – Ray Coleman in the back of John Lennon’s Rolls, surrounded by screaming fans, weekly reports from American tours, nights out on the town with the band, Chris Hutchins hanging out with the Stones on Allen Klein’s yacht before heading off to meet The Beatles in their dressing room at Shea Stadium, a jaw-dropping interview with Epstein just weeks before his death that anticipates a new kind of rock journalism, which is also part of the story. As John Mulvey neatly puts it in his introduction to the UMG, “The band didn’t just make better and more inventive records than their contemporaries they gave better and more inventive interviews, too. The Beatles didn’t just revolutionise music, they revolutionised the business of stardom, of how celebrities might behave, and how their audience might relate to them.” The Beatles – The Ultimate Music Guide is on sale from Thursday, priced £6.99. You can also order it online at www.uncut.co.uk/store or download digitally at www.uncut.co.uk/download. While you’re at www.uncut.co.uk, by the way, you may want to check out the exclusive stream we’re running of the excellent new Arbouretum album, Coming Out Of The Fog, which is out soon on Thrill Jockey. There’s also a track from the record on the next Uncut free CD, so look out for that as well. Have a great week.

The next Uncut Ultimate Music Guide goes on sale on Thursday (January 17), hot on the heels of our special on The Kinks, and is dedicated this time to The Beatles. There’s the usual mix of brand new reviews of all The Beatles albums by our current team of writers alongside some truly remarkable interviews from the archives of Melody Maker and NME, for which the description ‘mind-blowing’ seems barely adequate.

These days even the most half-arsed so-called celebrity is likely to be surrounded by a protective PR phalanx whose sole purpose is to keep the people who employ them at a pampered distance from the pawing demands of the press, which the aforementioned ‘stars’ will entertain only on their own restrictive terms, in circumstances wholly under the control of their simpering PR minions.

Fifty years ago, with the world increasingly in thrall to The Beatles and gripped by the unprecedented hysteria of Beatle-mania, you would have expected the most popular group in the history of popular music to be perhaps as remote as a distant planet from the everyday whirl, denizens of some rare and separate stratosphere, beyond the touch of mere adoring mortals and kept as far as possible from the press and it obsessively inquisitive demands upon them.

This wasn’t quite how I remembered things, however. Growing up with MM and NME in the mid-60s as The Beatles swept all before them, I can barely remember a week when they weren’t on the cover of either one or the other of the main music weeklies, and were often in my memory on the covers of both at the same time. Key writers on MM and NME were virtually embedded in The Beatles’ camp – notable among them Ray Coleman and Chris Hutchins at MM, and Allen Evans and Alan Smith at NME – and enjoyed the most extraordinary access to the band, Brian Epstein cannily fostering a chummy intimacy that guaranteed The Beatles a vast and uninterrupted coverage, the looming bulk of it unseen for years prior to republication in our Ultimate Music Guide.

Some of the stuff we’ve unearthed is gob-smacking – Ray Coleman in the back of John Lennon’s Rolls, surrounded by screaming fans, weekly reports from American tours, nights out on the town with the band, Chris Hutchins hanging out with the Stones on Allen Klein’s yacht before heading off to meet The Beatles in their dressing room at Shea Stadium, a jaw-dropping interview with Epstein just weeks before his death that anticipates a new kind of rock journalism, which is also part of the story.

As John Mulvey neatly puts it in his introduction to the UMG, “The band didn’t just make better and more inventive records than their contemporaries they gave better and more inventive interviews, too. The Beatles didn’t just revolutionise music, they revolutionised the business of stardom, of how celebrities might behave, and how their audience might relate to them.”

The Beatles – The Ultimate Music Guide is on sale from Thursday, priced £6.99. You can also order it online at www.uncut.co.uk/store or download digitally at www.uncut.co.uk/download.

While you’re at www.uncut.co.uk, by the way, you may want to check out the exclusive stream we’re running of the excellent new Arbouretum album, Coming Out Of The Fog, which is out soon on Thrill Jockey. There’s also a track from the record on the next Uncut free CD, so look out for that as well.

Have a great week.

Fear And Desire

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Kubrick's first film - a low budget treatise on war that compliments his later triumphs... “A very inept and pretentious effort” was Stanley Kubrick’s own verdict on his debut feature, a film about four soldiers trapped behind enemy lines. In later years, he sought to distance himself from the movie and did nothing to encourage its distribution. This remains his least seen feature. At the time he began work on the project in late 1950, Kubrick was heavily in thrall to Italian neo-realism. He recruited his friend, the young Greenwich village poet Howard Sackler (later to win a Pulitzer Prize for The Great White Hope and to script Jaws 2) to write the screenplay. Sackler and Kubrick both took the project incredibly seriously. Fear And Desire isn’t burdened by levity or humour. The story, Kubrick told the press, was about the soldiers’ “search for the meaning of life and the individual's responsibility to the group." What makes the film so fascinating 60 years on is the way it anticipates his later, more celebrated movies. The young Kubrick’s perfectionism, self-belief and unlikely flair for marketing were already in evidence. He was, as The New York Times described him before he had even shot the movie, “a young man from the Bronx with a passionate interest in photography and a determination to make a name for himself in the movie world.” The 22 year-old director had already established himself as a photographer. True, unlike the Italian filmmakers he so admired, he knew little of war and poverty. True, he wasn’t a member of a union and was effectively making his film as a guerrilla effort - early 1950s New York’s answer to Dogme. Nonetheless, this “adventuresome young man,” as The New York Times called him, knew exactly where he was going. He raised the money largely from family and friends, found the locations (in California), cast the actors (including a young Paul Mazursky) and soon he was shooting what was initially known as Shape Of Fear. In this case, Kubrick’s lack of resources was almost a blessing. He wanted to oversee every aspect of the production and ended up producing, shooting and editing the film as well as directing it. He had enough swagger to get away with his own pretentiousness and enough craftsmanship to make his movie look professional. “There is war in this forest, not a war that has been fought or one that will be but any war. The enemies who struggle here do not exist unless we call them into being,” begins the film’s absurdly pompous voice-over. We see images of forests and then home in on the four soldiers, adrift in the big bad woods - “six miles behind the enemy lines.” When you watch Sam Fuller’s war pictures, whatever the circumstances in which they were made, you know that Fuller – a veteran of Omaha Beach – knows his subject matter at first hand. By contrast, Fear And Desire is a formal exercise from a director who has never been near the battlefield and doesn’t understand the psychology of soldiers. What you also realise is his formal mastery. Whether it’s his use of Gerald Fried’s brassy score and voice-over or the montage sequences showing a girl being shot, or the beautiful way he shoots the raft drifting down river, or the ruses he uses to make sunny Californian forests seem menacing and oppressive, his virtuosity as a storyteller isn’t in doubt. The laconic, self-deprecating humour here (“there’s nothing so refreshing as an afternoon out of doors in enemy territory”) anticipates Colonel Kilgore’s witticisms in Apocalypse Now. Just occasionally, the film lurches toward the crudest melodrama. There is an absurd scene in which the soldiers kill a group of enemies and immediately sit down to eat their stew. The references to The Tempest grate. Kubrick’s own remarks about the film, which finally secured distribution in 1953, seem horribly pretentious. He loftily described his debut feature as “a drama of ‘man’ lost in a hostile world - deprived of material and spiritual foundations - seeking his way to an understanding of himself.” Kubrick was to return to military themes in films from Paths Of Glory to Dr Strangelove and Full Metal Jacket. These movies had a maturity and a sense of irony that Fear And Desire conspicuously lacks. Even so, Kubrick’s perspective never really changed. That fascination with the pathos, squalor and absurdity of war was there right from the outset. It’s what makes his debut feature so strange and unsettling in spite of all its affectations. EXTRAS: Short films, Day Of The Flight (1951), Flying Padre (1951) and The Seafarers (1951), plus Cahiers du Cinema’s Bill Krohn on Fear And Desire Geoffrey Macnab

Kubrick’s first film – a low budget treatise on war that compliments his later triumphs…

“A very inept and pretentious effort” was Stanley Kubrick’s own verdict on his debut feature, a film about four soldiers trapped behind enemy lines. In later years, he sought to distance himself from the movie and did nothing to encourage its distribution. This remains his least seen feature.

At the time he began work on the project in late 1950, Kubrick was heavily in thrall to Italian neo-realism. He recruited his friend, the young Greenwich village poet Howard Sackler (later to win a Pulitzer Prize for The Great White Hope and to script Jaws 2) to write the screenplay.

Sackler and Kubrick both took the project incredibly seriously. Fear And Desire isn’t burdened by levity or humour. The story, Kubrick told the press, was about the soldiers’ “search for the meaning of life and the individual’s responsibility to the group.” What makes the film so fascinating 60 years on is the way it anticipates his later, more celebrated movies.

The young Kubrick’s perfectionism, self-belief and unlikely flair for marketing were already in evidence. He was, as The New York Times described him before he had even shot the movie, “a young man from the Bronx with a passionate interest in photography and a determination to make a name for himself in the movie world.”

The 22 year-old director had already established himself as a photographer. True, unlike the Italian filmmakers he so admired, he knew little of war and poverty. True, he wasn’t a member of a union and was effectively making his film as a guerrilla effort – early 1950s New York’s answer to Dogme. Nonetheless, this “adventuresome young man,” as The New York Times called him, knew exactly where he was going. He raised the money largely from family and friends, found the locations (in California), cast the actors (including a young Paul Mazursky) and soon he was shooting what was initially known as Shape Of Fear.

In this case, Kubrick’s lack of resources was almost a blessing. He wanted to oversee every aspect of the production and ended up producing, shooting and editing the film as well as directing it. He had enough swagger to get away with his own pretentiousness and enough craftsmanship to make his movie look professional.

“There is war in this forest, not a war that has been fought or one that will be but any war. The enemies who struggle here do not exist unless we call them into being,” begins the film’s absurdly pompous voice-over. We see images of forests and then home in on the four soldiers, adrift in the big bad woods – “six miles behind the enemy lines.”

When you watch Sam Fuller’s war pictures, whatever the circumstances in which they were made, you know that Fuller – a veteran of Omaha Beach – knows his subject matter at first hand. By contrast, Fear And Desire is a formal exercise from a director who has never been near the battlefield and doesn’t understand the psychology of soldiers. What you also realise is his formal mastery. Whether it’s his use of Gerald Fried’s brassy score and voice-over or the montage sequences showing a girl being shot, or the beautiful way he shoots the raft drifting down river, or the ruses he uses to make sunny Californian forests seem menacing and oppressive, his virtuosity as a storyteller isn’t in doubt. The laconic, self-deprecating humour here (“there’s nothing so refreshing as an afternoon out of doors in enemy territory”) anticipates Colonel Kilgore’s witticisms in Apocalypse Now.

Just occasionally, the film lurches toward the crudest melodrama. There is an absurd scene in which the soldiers kill a group of enemies and immediately sit down to eat their stew. The references to The Tempest grate. Kubrick’s own remarks about the film, which finally secured distribution in 1953, seem horribly pretentious. He loftily described his debut feature as “a drama of ‘man’ lost in a hostile world – deprived of material and spiritual foundations – seeking his way to an understanding of himself.”

Kubrick was to return to military themes in films from Paths Of Glory to Dr Strangelove and Full Metal Jacket. These movies had a maturity and a sense of irony that Fear And Desire conspicuously lacks. Even so, Kubrick’s perspective never really changed. That fascination with the pathos, squalor and absurdity of war was there right from the outset. It’s what makes his debut feature so strange and unsettling in spite of all its affectations.

EXTRAS: Short films, Day Of The Flight (1951), Flying Padre (1951) and The Seafarers (1951), plus Cahiers du Cinema’s Bill Krohn on Fear And Desire

Geoffrey Macnab

Arbouretum, “Coming Out Of The Fog”: Exclusive Album Stream

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Not done it before, but this seems as good a place to start as any: a stream of the new album from Arbouretum, “Coming Out Of The Fog”. I’ve written a lot about Dave Heumann’s Baltimore band in the past (I’ll stick some links to previous blogs at the bottom). This time out, there’s a relative economy to the songs; as if the glowering, heavy folk-rock that has become their trademark has been compacted rather than extended into the usual jams. Still room, though, for Heumann’s ornate solos, and the humming momentum of his rhythm section doesn’t feel in any way abbreviated. Have a listen, anyway, and let me know what you think… You can order “Coming Out Of The Fog” from Thrill Jockey here, or at least read plenty more about it. Oh, and Arbouretum will be on tour in Europe through February and March, starting with dates at the Prince Albert in Brighton (February 20) and London Corsica Studios (21). Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey Some other blogs on Arbouretum… Arbouretum & Hush Arbors’ “Aureola” split album Arbouretum’s “The Gathering” Arbouretum live in London, March 2011 Arbouretum, “Song Of The Pearl” A piece about another Dave Heumann project, The Coil Sea Arbouretum live in London, July 2009

Not done it before, but this seems as good a place to start as any: a stream of the new album from Arbouretum, “Coming Out Of The Fog”.

I’ve written a lot about Dave Heumann’s Baltimore band in the past (I’ll stick some links to previous blogs at the bottom). This time out, there’s a relative economy to the songs; as if the glowering, heavy folk-rock that has become their trademark has been compacted rather than extended into the usual jams. Still room, though, for Heumann’s ornate solos, and the humming momentum of his rhythm section doesn’t feel in any way abbreviated.

Have a listen, anyway, and let me know what you think…

You can order “Coming Out Of The Fog” from Thrill Jockey here, or at least read plenty more about it. Oh, and Arbouretum will be on tour in Europe through February and March, starting with dates at the Prince Albert in Brighton (February 20) and London Corsica Studios (21).

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

Some other blogs on Arbouretum…

Arbouretum & Hush Arbors’ “Aureola” split album

Arbouretum’s “The Gathering”

Arbouretum live in London, March 2011

Arbouretum, “Song Of The Pearl”

A piece about another Dave Heumann project, The Coil Sea

Arbouretum live in London, July 2009

Hear new Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds song, ‘Jubilee Street’

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Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds have unveiled a brand new song, called 'Jubilee Street'. Scroll down to listen to the track and view the song's lyric video. The downbeat "Jubilee Street" is the second song to be taken from the band's forthcoming new album Push The Sky Away, following the track "We No ...

Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds have unveiled a brand new song, called ‘Jubilee Street’.

Scroll down to listen to the track and view the song’s lyric video.

The downbeat “Jubilee Street” is the second song to be taken from the band’s forthcoming new album Push The Sky Away, following the track “We No Who U R”.

Push The Sky Away will be Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds’ 15th studio album and is set for release on February 19.

It follows 2008’s Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!! and was recorded by regular Bad Seeds and Grinderman collaborator Nick Launay at La Fabrique studios, a 19th century mansion in the south of France.

Speaking about the album, Nick Cave said: “If I were to use that threadbare metaphor of albums being like children, then Push The Sky Away is the ghost-baby in the incubator and Warren [Ellis]’s loops are its tiny, trembling heartbeat.”

The band will be playing North American, Mexican and Australian shows over the coming months and are rumoured to be playing the Coachella Festival in California in April.

They will be playing European festival dates in the summer.

Yeah Yeah Yeahs announce new album ‘Mosquito’ – watch

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Yeah Yeah Yeahs have announced that their new album Mosquito will be released on April 15, 2013. Mosquito will be the band's fourth LP and the follow-up to 2009's It's Blitz. It sees the band again working with long-time producer David Sitek and Nick Launay, and was recorded at Sonic Ranch in Torn...

Yeah Yeah Yeahs have announced that their new album Mosquito will be released on April 15, 2013.

Mosquito will be the band’s fourth LP and the follow-up to 2009’s It’s Blitz. It sees the band again working with long-time producer David Sitek and Nick Launay, and was recorded at Sonic Ranch in Tornillo, Texas, where ‘It’s Blitz’ was recorded.

One track is produced by LCD Soundsystem’s James Murphy<.strong> and features Dr Octagon. The artwork was designed by Beomsik Shimbe Shim.

Speaking exclusively to NME about the album in this week’s magazine, which will hit newsstands on Wednesday (January 16) and will also be available digitally, singer Karen O said “Well…it’s definitely different from the last album. So I guess you could say that hasn’t changed about us! It’s all over the place. The sound of the record is, I guess, a bit more lo-fi sounding and slightly more influenced by roots reggae. There’s a lot of delay on stuff and there’s a more raw sound to it than there was last time.”

She added: “There’s probably more bass on this record than all the other records combined. But there’s also plenty of guitar. It’s a bit more tripped out than our other records.” Scroll down and click to see a video teaser for the album.

HMV to go into administration

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High street music, DVD and computer games retailer HMV has confirmed that it is going into administration. A statement released to Music Week reads: "It is proposed that Nick Edwards, Neville Kahn and Rob Harding, partners of Deloitte LLP, will be appointed as the administrators of the Company and certain of its subsidiaries. The Company's ordinary shares will be suspended from trading on the London Stock Exchange with immediate effect." The Financial Times wrote that the chain's suppliers, including record labels, computer games makers and film companies, recently refused to give the business a £300 million loan to keep them afloat. The money would have gone to paying off the company's debt as well as to helping change the way the business is run. 4,000 jobs are now at risk. At the end of last year, HMV sold its live music assets to a the private equity arm of Lloyds Banking Group in a £7.3 million deal. HMV purchased MAMA Group in 2010 for £46 million but offloaded a number of venues - including the London establishments the Barfly and Jazz Café, the Manchester Ritz and Lovebox festival – to offload its debts. The sale also included the Great Escape and Global Gathering festivals and HMV's 50% interest in its Mean Fiddler joint venture with MAMA. HMV sold another of its live music ventures, the Hammersmith Apollo, in a £32 million deal in 2012.

High street music, DVD and computer games retailer HMV has confirmed that it is going into administration.

A statement released to Music Week reads:

“It is proposed that Nick Edwards, Neville Kahn and Rob Harding, partners of Deloitte LLP, will be appointed as the administrators of the Company and certain of its subsidiaries. The Company’s ordinary shares will be suspended from trading on the London Stock Exchange with immediate effect.”

The Financial Times wrote that the chain’s suppliers, including record labels, computer games makers and film companies, recently refused to give the business a £300 million loan to keep them afloat.

The money would have gone to paying off the company’s debt as well as to helping change the way the business is run.

4,000 jobs are now at risk.

At the end of last year, HMV sold its live music assets to a the private equity arm of Lloyds Banking Group in a £7.3 million deal.

HMV purchased MAMA Group in 2010 for £46 million but offloaded a number of venues – including the London establishments the Barfly and Jazz Café, the Manchester Ritz and Lovebox festival – to offload its debts.

The sale also included the Great Escape and Global Gathering festivals and HMV’s 50% interest in its Mean Fiddler joint venture with MAMA.

HMV sold another of its live music ventures, the Hammersmith Apollo, in a £32 million deal in 2012.

George Harrison’s widow blocks campaign to erect statue of late former Beatle

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George Harrison's widow Olivia has halted a campaign to erect a statue of the late Beatle near his Oxfordshire home. James Lambert, from Henley-on-Thames, where Harrisson lived until his death in 2001, wrote to Olivia Harrison about his campaign to erect a bronze statue in her late husband's honou...

George Harrison‘s widow Olivia has halted a campaign to erect a statue of the late Beatle near his Oxfordshire home.

James Lambert, from Henley-on-Thames, where Harrisson lived until his death in 2001, wrote to Olivia Harrison about his campaign to erect a bronze statue in her late husband’s honour. She replied stating that she would prefer a community project instead.

“The statue could create problems of different types of fans turning up, the unwanted fans,” Lambert told the BBC. “Gauging the pulse in terms of Henley residents I think there was a lot of support. This petition wasn’t tapping into the Beatles fanfare worldwide, it was much more to recognise George’s contribution to Henley and the affection Henley had for him.”

He added: “I think the danger was it wouldn’t just become a Henley acknowledgement of George’s work but would encourage more people to visit Henley… I think what she’s suggesting in terms of a community project would be great and it’ll be very exciting to see exactly how this transpires.”

Harrison moved to Henley-on-Thames in the 1970s when he bought a large stately home, Friar Park, saving it from demolition. The former Beatle died of cancer in 2001 aged 58.

Yeah Yeah Yeahs unveil brand new songs at California show

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Yeah Yeah Yeahs debuted a clutch of new songs last night (January 11) at a show at the Glass House in Pomona, California. Arriving onstage in a glittery headband and zebra print cape over a red fringed jacket, frontwoman Karen O opened up the set with a brand new track which included the lyrics "it...

Yeah Yeah Yeahs debuted a clutch of new songs last night (January 11) at a show at the Glass House in Pomona, California.

Arriving onstage in a glittery headband and zebra print cape over a red fringed jacket, frontwoman Karen O opened up the set with a brand new track which included the lyrics “it’s good to sing/it’s good to cry”.

The band followed it with ‘Phenomena’ and then another new song, while the rowdy 14 track set also included one more slower-paced new number. All of the new songs are thought to be taken from the band’s upcoming fourth LP, which is slated for release this spring and follows their 2009 album It’s Blitz!.

The band’s set for the one-off gig also included ‘Heads Will Roll’, ‘Soft Shock’, ‘Gold Lion’ and ‘Zero’. Karen O – sporting a blonde bobbed hairstyle – kicked glitter bombs of Y-shaped confetti into the rowdy crowd throughout the performance, and handed her microphone to fans in the front rows so they could sing-along to ‘Cheated Hearts’.

“Thank you Pomona, we’re the Yeah Yeah Yeahs. You know that. We love you,” said Karen O before leaving the stage. Yeah Yeah Yeahs then returned to play a two song encore, made up of ‘Maps’ and ‘Tick’, with Karen O dedicating the former to the evening’s support band, Los Angeles punk duo The Bots. “This is a Yeah Yeah Yeahs love song,” she said before the track. “We’d like to dedicate this song to The Bots, who opened up and are cool as shit! Yeah Yeah Yeahs love The Bots!”

During their set, The Bots drummer Anaiah Lei explained that they had met Nick Zinner of the band in London last year, on Damon Albarn’s Africa Express train tour.

Yeah Yeah Yeahs played:

Untitled New Song

‘Phenomena’

Untitled New Song

‘Heads Will Roll’

‘Pin’

‘Down Boy’

Untitled New Song

‘Skeletons’

‘Soft Shock’

‘Gold Lion’

‘Zero’

‘Cheated Hearts

‘Maps’

‘Tick’

Stevie Nicks on Fleetwood Mac tour: ‘This is going to be very different’

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Fleetwood Mac's Stevie Nicks has promised that the legendary group won't just be going through the motions when they hit the road this year. The band are set to embark on a world tour, kicking off with a 34-date US tour in April, but have assured fans that, unlike last time around, they'll be seein...

Fleetwood Mac‘s Stevie Nicks has promised that the legendary group won’t just be going through the motions when they hit the road this year.

The band are set to embark on a world tour, kicking off with a 34-date US tour in April, but have assured fans that, unlike last time around, they’ll be seeing a group enjoying themselves onstage.

Stevie Nicks told The Guardian: “This is going to be a very different tour. The audience is going to see a very different Fleetwood Mac up there – we talked about how we really need to appreciate what we have and who we are and how far we’ve come.”

She continued: “I said to Lindsey: ‘I wish your mom and dad were still alive – they’d be just like: ‘Way to go, Lindsey Buckingham! Boy, damn we’re glad you dropped out of swimming, we’re so glad you stopped and went for rock’n’roll’.”

However, everything is far from perfect for Fleetwood Mac and Nicks admits that she misses having Christine McVie – who quit the band in 1998 – around in the band.

She said: “We all did everything we could do to try and talk her out of it. But you look in someone’s eyes and you can tell they’re finished. As Taylor Swift would say: ‘We are never ever getting back together ever!’ That’s what Chris was saying…But I’d beg, borrow and scrape together $5m and give it to her in cash if she would come back. That’s how much I miss her.”

Stevie Nicks recently told NME that she would “love to” headline Glastonbury when Fleetwood Mac come to the UK for their 2013 reunion tour.

Black Sabbath announce new album title

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Black Sabbath have announced that their new album will be titled 13. The album, which is the first original band members Ozzy Osbourne, Tony Iommi and Geezer Butler have recorded together since 1978's Never Say Die!, will be released in June. The Birmingham rock legends made the album primarily in...

Black Sabbath have announced that their new album will be titled 13.

The album, which is the first original band members Ozzy Osbourne, Tony Iommi and Geezer Butler have recorded together since 1978’s Never Say Die!, will be released in June.

The Birmingham rock legends made the album primarily in Los Angeles with producer Rick Rubin and features Rage Against The Machine’s Brad Wilk, who replaces original sticksman Bill Ward on drums.

In November, guitarist Toni Iommi revealed that the final album will consist of 15 tracks. The Guardian quoted the guitarist at the time saying: “We’ve written the 15 songs and we’ve played them all, but now at the moment we’re recording them. We’re about six tracks in at the moment.”

In advance of the new album, Black Sabbath will tour Australia, New Zealand and play a show at Ozzfest in Japan. Additional tour plans are expected to be announced in the coming months.

Black Sabbath’s initial tour dates are:

Auckland Vector Arena (April 20, 22)

Brisbane Entertainment Centre (25)

Sydney All Phones Arena (27)

Melbourne Rod Laver Arena (29, May 1)

Perth Arena (4)

Ozzfest, Tokyo (12)

David Bowie secures first UK Top 10 single in two decades

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David Bowie has secured his first official UK Top 10 single in over two decades with "Where Are We Now?". The comeback track, which has finished the week at Number Six, is the first to be taken from his forthcoming new album The Next Day and sold 30,000 copies in the five day's since it's surprise ...

David Bowie has secured his first official UK Top 10 single in over two decades with “Where Are We Now?”.

The comeback track, which has finished the week at Number Six, is the first to be taken from his forthcoming new album The Next Day and sold 30,000 copies in the five day’s since it’s surprise release. It’s his first Top 10 hit since 1986’s “Absolute Beginners”, reports the Official Charts Company.

There had been reports that the track would not be eligible for chart placement as it is linked to an “instant grat” promotion where fans pre-ordering the album received the song as an immediate download – a UK music industry agreement prevents “instant grat” downloads from being counted.

However, the Official Charts Company were able to determine which downloads were purchased out-right by fans – and not part of a pre-order bundle – which allowed Bowie his first Top 10 chart placement in over 25 years.

Meanwhile, Britney Spears and Will.i.am are Number One with “Scream & Shout’, Taylor Swift’s ‘I Knew You Were Trouble’ is at Number Two, James Arthur’s “Impossible” is down two places to Number Three and Rihanna’s “Stay” is at Number Four. Calvin Harris completes the Top 5 with “Drinking From The Bottle”.

New details of Shane Meadows’ Stone Roses documentary emerge

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New details of the forthcoming documentary on 2012's Stone Roses reunion filmed and directed by acclaimed British filmmaker Shane Meadows have been revealed. Speaking exclusively to NME, producer Mark Herbert (This Is England) said that Meadows was currently in the process of editing more than 350 hours of footage covering the period from October 2011 when the band announced their comeback to August 2012 when they ceased touring. Herbert said: "I'm not allowed to say very much, but what I can say is that it feels like a Shane Meadows film as well as a music documentary. Imagine the amazing music of the Roses combined with all the qualities that Shane's films are known for." There's plenty of stuff that people haven't seen before – both past and present. Obviously there's live footage from the reunion gigs, but we've also got some never-seen-before archive footage.Herbert said that the producers are aiming for release in the middle of 2013. It was earlier reported that Meadows is treating the film as a labour of love, and shelved a "massive budget" film project to focus on the documentary. The Stone Roses are also set to play two shows at Finsbury Park in London and another at Glasgow Green in June next year. Support for the Glasgow show includes Primal Scream, Jake Bugg and The View. Support for the London shows will be announced shortly. They are also set to headline the Isle Of Wight festival.

New details of the forthcoming documentary on 2012’s Stone Roses reunion filmed and directed by acclaimed British filmmaker Shane Meadows have been revealed.

Speaking exclusively to NME, producer Mark Herbert (This Is England) said that Meadows was currently in the process of editing more than 350 hours of footage covering the period from October 2011 when the band announced their comeback to August 2012 when they ceased touring.

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

There’s plenty of stuff that people haven’t seen before – both past and present. Obviously there’s live footage from the reunion gigs, but we’ve also got some never-seen-before archive footage.Herbert said that the producers are aiming for release in the middle of 2013.

It was earlier reported that Meadows is treating the film as a labour of love, and shelved a “massive budget” film project to focus on the documentary.

The Stone Roses are also set to play two shows at Finsbury Park in London and another at Glasgow Green in June next year. Support for the Glasgow show includes Primal Scream, Jake Bugg and The View. Support for the London shows will be announced shortly. They are also set to headline the Isle Of Wight festival.

William Tyler: “Impossible Truth”

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I don’t have any tattoos, for many reasons, but one of the best I can think of is that I don’t trust my aesthetic tastes to remain constant. I don’t feel confident that the art I like now will all, necessarily, be the same things that I like a few years down the line. I was thinking about this the other day, reading a discussion on Twitter about the likelihood or otherwise of musical taste changing – “evolving” was a preferred choice of word – over time. Quite a few people were assertive about the consistency of their taste, but I’m not so confident, personally. One way, I think, that I can lose a degree of interest in certain kinds of music is if I overdose on them; that there’s a cycle of discovery, obsession, saturation and distraction. It doesn’t always mean that tastes change, exactly – though they always do, sometimes in barely-detectable ways – more that over-familiarity, fatigue and a subsequent shift in focus can occur. I’ve wondered, these past months, whether this might be happening with regard to the sort of post-Takoma guitar soli jams that have been a big part of my listening for a few years now. But then a record comes along like this new William Tyler album, “Impossible Truth”, on Merge, which doesn’t just feel like a really satisfying and beautiful set, but one which also stretches the edges, a little, of the scene to which it notionally belongs. Tyler, of course, has moved in wider circles than some of the Jack Rose associates usually caught up in this sound. He first came to light as a kind of discreet guitar prodigy in Lambchop, has backed up the likes of The Silver Jews and Will Oldham, and has ties with one of the people whose judgment on these sort of things I trust more than most, MC Taylor of Hiss Golden Messenger (Taylor has written a characteristically neat biog of Tyler on the latter’s website, www.williamtyler.net, which is well worth a visit). He also runs an interesting label out of Nashville - www.sebastianspeaks.com – which, among other things, reissued Vernon Wray’s great “Wasted”. Anyhow, Tyler’s first solo album, “Behold The Spirit”, came out a couple of years ago on Tompkins Square and seemed pretty and skilful enough at the time, but was maybe one of those post-Takoma records that made me feel I wasn’t engaging with that sound quite as much as I had done. What really got to me was a version of one song from the album, “Oashpe”, that got reinvented as a crackling electric boogie for a seven-inch on Nashville’s Dead. Suddenly, it sounded like Tyler was taking his undoubted virtuosity to a wilder place; somewhere closer to the space inhabited by someone like Chris Forsyth, perhaps. “Impossible Truth” confirms as much, and more. It’s an expansive psychedelic folk record inspired, from evidence on Tyler’s website, by a bunch of books that mostly seem to analyse an evolving American landscape (though there’s Barney Hoskyns’ fine canyons book, Hotel California, in there as well); a small bit of research makes Tom Vanderbilt’s “Survival City” look especially interesting. If much comparable music feels somewhat introverted, meditative, Tyler’s work here feels correspondingly bigger; descriptive and dramatic, in an unostentatious way. Taylor says he “connects the dots between Sandy Bull, Richard Thompson, Bruce Langhorne and Reggie Young," but there’s also a little Basho in there, and some more contemporary analogues to the way Tyler and his co-producer (and Lambchop bandmate) Mark Nevers subtly flesh out the sound into a roots baroque; a tracking pedal steel here, some bass notes added by brass there. As the gorgeous first track, “Country Of Illusion”, opens out, the last record I can recall that moved similarly might be Jim O’Rourke’s “Bad Timing”, while there are other fleeting moments – on “Hotel Catatonia”, maybe, or “Last Residents Of Westfall” – that share the ornate, sacred chime of David Pajo’s longform transfiguration of “Turn, Turn, Turn”. In fact, a good part of this terrific record feels less like an exploratory folk session, more like a virtuoso guitarist and arranger using the tools of a folk musician to reconsider and deconstruct rock music: or maybe it’s just the spectral echoes of “Paint It, Black” on “Geography Of Nowhere”?... Have a listen to “Cadillac Desert”, anyway, and let me know what you think. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey Picture: Will Holland

I don’t have any tattoos, for many reasons, but one of the best I can think of is that I don’t trust my aesthetic tastes to remain constant. I don’t feel confident that the art I like now will all, necessarily, be the same things that I like a few years down the line.

I was thinking about this the other day, reading a discussion on Twitter about the likelihood or otherwise of musical taste changing – “evolving” was a preferred choice of word – over time. Quite a few people were assertive about the consistency of their taste, but I’m not so confident, personally. One way, I think, that I can lose a degree of interest in certain kinds of music is if I overdose on them; that there’s a cycle of discovery, obsession, saturation and distraction. It doesn’t always mean that tastes change, exactly – though they always do, sometimes in barely-detectable ways – more that over-familiarity, fatigue and a subsequent shift in focus can occur.

I’ve wondered, these past months, whether this might be happening with regard to the sort of post-Takoma guitar soli jams that have been a big part of my listening for a few years now. But then a record comes along like this new William Tyler album, “Impossible Truth”, on Merge, which doesn’t just feel like a really satisfying and beautiful set, but one which also stretches the edges, a little, of the scene to which it notionally belongs.

Tyler, of course, has moved in wider circles than some of the Jack Rose associates usually caught up in this sound. He first came to light as a kind of discreet guitar prodigy in Lambchop, has backed up the likes of The Silver Jews and Will Oldham, and has ties with one of the people whose judgment on these sort of things I trust more than most, MC Taylor of Hiss Golden Messenger (Taylor has written a characteristically neat biog of Tyler on the latter’s website, www.williamtyler.net, which is well worth a visit). He also runs an interesting label out of Nashville – www.sebastianspeaks.com – which, among other things, reissued Vernon Wray’s great “Wasted”.

Anyhow, Tyler’s first solo album, “Behold The Spirit”, came out a couple of years ago on Tompkins Square and seemed pretty and skilful enough at the time, but was maybe one of those post-Takoma records that made me feel I wasn’t engaging with that sound quite as much as I had done. What really got to me was a version of one song from the album, “Oashpe”, that got reinvented as a crackling electric boogie for a seven-inch on Nashville’s Dead. Suddenly, it sounded like Tyler was taking his undoubted virtuosity to a wilder place; somewhere closer to the space inhabited by someone like Chris Forsyth, perhaps.

“Impossible Truth” confirms as much, and more. It’s an expansive psychedelic folk record inspired, from evidence on Tyler’s website, by a bunch of books that mostly seem to analyse an evolving American landscape (though there’s Barney Hoskyns’ fine canyons book, Hotel California, in there as well); a small bit of research makes Tom Vanderbilt’s “Survival City” look especially interesting.

If much comparable music feels somewhat introverted, meditative, Tyler’s work here feels correspondingly bigger; descriptive and dramatic, in an unostentatious way. Taylor says he “connects the dots between Sandy Bull, Richard Thompson, Bruce Langhorne and Reggie Young,” but there’s also a little Basho in there, and some more contemporary analogues to the way Tyler and his co-producer (and Lambchop bandmate) Mark Nevers subtly flesh out the sound into a roots baroque; a tracking pedal steel here, some bass notes added by brass there. As the gorgeous first track, “Country Of Illusion”, opens out, the last record I can recall that moved similarly might be Jim O’Rourke’s “Bad Timing”, while there are other fleeting moments – on “Hotel Catatonia”, maybe, or “Last Residents Of Westfall” – that share the ornate, sacred chime of David Pajo’s longform transfiguration of “Turn, Turn, Turn”.

In fact, a good part of this terrific record feels less like an exploratory folk session, more like a virtuoso guitarist and arranger using the tools of a folk musician to reconsider and deconstruct rock music: or maybe it’s just the spectral echoes of “Paint It, Black” on “Geography Of Nowhere”?… Have a listen to “Cadillac Desert”, anyway, and let me know what you think.

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

Picture: Will Holland

Aaron Neville – My True Story

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New Orleans soul prince revisits his doo-wop youth. Keith Richards and Don Was co-produce... The old adage about music offering a route out of poverty was never truer than for Aaron Neville. As a kid living on the breadline in 1950s New Orleans, Neville lived for music – he was in a group with his brothers at 15 – listening with particular obsession to the vocal harmony groups of New York, Chicago and other Northern cities. Though Neville is properly considered a ‘soul’ singer, something of doo-wop’s purring harmonies and tear-stained romanticism fed into his own music. “Tell It Like It Is”, his breakthrough hit from 1967, is a sobber redolent of doo-wop’s golden age, with Neville switching between tenor and falsetto in what would prove trademark style. After a career singing Crescent City funk and soul, dipping into gospel, country and MOR, at 71 Neville has turned back to the sounds that first shaped him, with help from assorted friends. Don Was, installed this year as President of Blue Note Records with a mission to regenerate the hallowed label, handed him a contract and his production talents, while Keith Richards brought his guitar skills to a band of stalwarts that included a quartet of backing singers drawn from original doo-wop groups like The Teenagers and the Del Vikings. The result, according to Richards, was “a dream session” that romped through a couple of dozen classic songs from the 1950s and early ‘60s – “the doo wop era” as Neville calls it, though numbers like “Work With Me Annie” belong as much to Rhythm and Blues. What’s in a genre? “Money Honey” has been variously delivered as R&B and rock and roll, by Clyde McPhatter (originally), Elvis Presley and Ry Cooder among others. The version that opens proceedings here has an easy swing that echoes its 1953 nascence, though Richards’ chops and solo bear a distinct Chuck Berry accent. Keith doesn’t have too many other standout moments, though as de facto bandleader his clipped chords and codas are always high in the mix. Everyone on board knows how this stuff should sound, and the playing is restrained but confident, while the Was production is clear but unglossed, in keeping with the era of mono vinyl. Neville sings everything with utter authenticity, and in his advancing years his voice retains its distinctive timbre and quaver. He shines brightest on the slower material. He wrings every drop of heartache from the Jive Five’s “My True Story”, climbing easily into its unearthly falsetto reaches for the ‘Cry Cry Cry’ hook originally sung by Eugene Pitt, who is one of the quartet of backing voices here. One can only imagine what Pitt felt as he heard Neville voice a song he wrote as a Brooklyn teenager in 1961. Neville was eleven years old when The Clovers’ “Ting A Ling” hit number one on the R&B charts (Buddy Holly, who gave the song a rockabilly makeover, was 15). By comparison to the intricate, semi-acoustic Clovers side, Neville’s update is muscular, though it preserves the chattering piano and smoky sax parts. The original records inevitably cast a long shadow over some of the remakes here. However sweetly Neville sings The Drifters’ “This Magic Moment” one misses Lieber/Stoller’s orchestral pomp, and The Crystals “Be My Baby” is likewise too defined by Phil Spector’s shimmering production to really work as a small group piece. Yet mostly, Was, Neville and band deliver on their own terms. The Impressions’ “Gypsy Woman”, Little Anthony’s “Tears On My Pillow”, and Jesse Belvin’s “Goodnight My Love” sweep by slowly and tenderly. On the uptempo side Thurston Harris “Little Bitty Pretty One”, The Drifters’ “Ruby Baby” and Hank Ballard’s “Work With Me Annie” are despatched with vigour, handclaps and storming massed vocals. The object of My True Story was clearly not to reproduce the originals – the band are too knowing and nuanced for a 1950s R&B outfit, Neville’s vocals too engrained by experience - but the album captures the spirit that first drew them and countless others to the flame. Neil Spencer Q & A AARON NEVILLE Where was the teenage Aaron and what was he wearing, when listening to the originals? I was living in the Calliope project, New Orleans, wearing jeans and t-shirt. The music of the Clovers and Spaniels and the rest was like candy to me, I couldn’t get enough, my teachers probably thought I had attention deficit disorder. You have worked with Keith and Don Was in the past…. The Neville Brothers supported the Stones back in the 1980s, and I knew Don from Was Not Was. We did “I Fall To Pieces” with Trisha Yearwoood, which won a Grammy, and I sang “Crazy Love” for the Phenomenon Soundtrack that he produced. The sessions sounded a lot of fun. Were they? You can hear the band smiling on the record. We did the whole thing in about five days, went in with 12 songs in mind and cut 23. This is just the start, there is going to be Doo-Wop parts 2, 3 and 4! St Jude is very important to you. How come? My mother turned me onto St Jude back in the days when I was wild and crazy. She took me to the shrine on Rampart Street. I think St Jude helped me achieve some miracles in my life – that’s why I wear the medallion in my left ear and never take it out. INTERVIEW: NEIL SPENCER

New Orleans soul prince revisits his doo-wop youth. Keith Richards and Don Was co-produce…

The old adage about music offering a route out of poverty was never truer than for Aaron Neville. As a kid living on the breadline in 1950s New Orleans, Neville lived for music – he was in a group with his brothers at 15 – listening with particular obsession to the vocal harmony groups of New York, Chicago and other Northern cities.

Though Neville is properly considered a ‘soul’ singer, something of doo-wop’s purring harmonies and tear-stained romanticism fed into his own music. “Tell It Like It Is”, his breakthrough hit from 1967, is a sobber redolent of doo-wop’s golden age, with Neville switching between tenor and falsetto in what would prove trademark style.

After a career singing Crescent City funk and soul, dipping into gospel, country and MOR, at 71 Neville has turned back to the sounds that first shaped him, with help from assorted friends. Don Was, installed this year as President of Blue Note Records with a mission to regenerate the hallowed label, handed him a contract and his production talents, while Keith Richards brought his guitar skills to a band of stalwarts that included a quartet of backing singers drawn from original doo-wop groups like The Teenagers and the Del Vikings.

The result, according to Richards, was “a dream session” that romped through a couple of dozen classic songs from the 1950s and early ‘60s – “the doo wop era” as Neville calls it, though numbers like “Work With Me Annie” belong as much to Rhythm and Blues. What’s in a genre? “Money Honey” has been variously delivered as R&B and rock and roll, by Clyde McPhatter (originally), Elvis Presley and Ry Cooder among others. The version that opens proceedings here has an easy swing that echoes its 1953 nascence, though Richards’ chops and solo bear a distinct Chuck Berry accent.

Keith doesn’t have too many other standout moments, though as de facto bandleader his clipped chords and codas are always high in the mix. Everyone on board knows how this stuff should sound, and the playing is restrained but confident, while the Was production is clear but unglossed, in keeping with the era of mono vinyl. Neville sings everything with utter authenticity, and in his advancing years his voice retains its distinctive timbre and quaver.

He shines brightest on the slower material. He wrings every drop of heartache from the Jive Five’s “My True Story”, climbing easily into its unearthly falsetto reaches for the ‘Cry Cry Cry’ hook originally sung by Eugene Pitt, who is one of the quartet of backing voices here. One can only imagine what Pitt felt as he heard Neville voice a song he wrote as a Brooklyn teenager in 1961.

Neville was eleven years old when The Clovers’ “Ting A Ling” hit number one on the R&B charts (Buddy Holly, who gave the song a rockabilly makeover, was 15). By comparison to the intricate, semi-acoustic Clovers side, Neville’s update is muscular, though it preserves the chattering piano and smoky sax parts.

The original records inevitably cast a long shadow over some of the remakes here. However sweetly Neville sings The Drifters’ “This Magic Moment” one misses Lieber/Stoller’s orchestral pomp, and The Crystals “Be My Baby” is likewise too defined by Phil Spector’s shimmering production to really work as a small group piece.

Yet mostly, Was, Neville and band deliver on their own terms. The Impressions’ “Gypsy Woman”, Little Anthony’s “Tears On My Pillow”, and Jesse Belvin’s “Goodnight My Love” sweep by slowly and tenderly. On the uptempo side Thurston Harris “Little Bitty Pretty One”, The Drifters’ “Ruby Baby” and Hank Ballard’s “Work With Me Annie” are despatched with vigour, handclaps and storming massed vocals. The object of My True Story was clearly not to reproduce the originals – the band are too knowing and nuanced for a 1950s R&B outfit, Neville’s vocals too engrained by experience – but the album captures the spirit that first drew them and countless others to the flame.

Neil Spencer

Q & A

AARON NEVILLE

Where was the teenage Aaron and what was he wearing, when listening to the originals?

I was living in the Calliope project, New Orleans, wearing jeans and t-shirt. The music of the Clovers and Spaniels and the rest was like candy to me, I couldn’t get enough, my teachers probably thought I had attention deficit disorder.

You have worked with Keith and Don Was in the past….

The Neville Brothers supported the Stones back in the 1980s, and I knew Don from Was Not Was. We did “I Fall To Pieces” with Trisha Yearwoood, which won a Grammy, and I sang “Crazy Love” for the Phenomenon Soundtrack that he produced.

The sessions sounded a lot of fun. Were they?

You can hear the band smiling on the record. We did the whole thing in about five days, went in with 12 songs in mind and cut 23. This is just the start, there is going to be Doo-Wop parts 2, 3 and 4!

St Jude is very important to you. How come?

My mother turned me onto St Jude back in the days when I was wild and crazy. She took me to the shrine on Rampart Street. I think St Jude helped me achieve some miracles in my life – that’s why I wear the medallion in my left ear and never take it out.

INTERVIEW: NEIL SPENCER

Arctic Monkeys to headline FIB Benicàssim 2013

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Arctic Monkeys have been confirmed as the latest headliner for this year's Benicàssim festival. The Sheffield band join The Killers and Queens Of The Stone Age on the line-up after they were confirmed to appear late last year. The Sheffield band join The Killers and Queens Of The Stone Age on t...

Arctic Monkeys have been confirmed as the latest headliner for this year’s Benicàssim festival.

The Sheffield band join The Killers and Queens Of The Stone Age on the line-up after they were confirmed to appear late last year.

The Sheffield band join The Killers and Queens Of The Stone Age on the line-up after they were confirmed to appear late last year. The other acts confirmed to appear at the Spanish festival between Jul 18-21 today are Azealia Banks, Jake Bugg, Palma Violets, Echo Lake, Splashh and Swim Deep.

Early bird tickets for Benicàssim are now sold out. The next batch of 5,000 are now on sale, available at £145, and this price will remain either until March 30, 2013 or when the 5,000 tickets are sold out, when ticket prices will then increase. As well as weekend tickets, there are also VIP tickets on sale (£325) as well as the entrance to VillaCamp (£73). Both Weekend tickets and VIP tickets include eight days free camping in the Campfest camping area from 15 – 22 July.