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Kraftwerk – Album By Album

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Former Kraftwerk percussionist Karl Bartos features in the new issue of Uncut (February 2013, Take 189), out now, discussing the upcoming Kraftwerk retrospective shows in London, and his own new solo album, Off The Record. As a companion piece, here’s Ralf Hütter taking us through the high points...

Former Kraftwerk percussionist Karl Bartos features in the new issue of Uncut (February 2013, Take 189), out now, discussing the upcoming Kraftwerk retrospective shows in London, and his own new solo album, Off The Record. As a companion piece, here’s Ralf Hütter taking us through the high points of Kraftwerk’s discography in a fascinating ‘album by album’ from Uncut’s October 2009 issue (Take 149).

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He might have spent most of the past two decades cocooned in the Kubrickian perfectionism of his secret Kling Klang studio in Düsseldorf, but Kraftwerk’s Ralf Hütter is on unusually warm form when Uncut joins him for a rare face-to-face chat. Still surprisingly boyish at 62, the founding father of techno-pop, electro, techno, house and hip hop radiates sly mischief and ultra-dry German humour.

The acrimonious departure last year of Hütter’s fellow Kraftwerk founder, Florian Schneider, is still a sensitive subject. “We haven’t seen him for a long time,” Hütter shrugs. “I cannot speak for my former partner, friend and co-composer, but he always hated touring and concerts.”

In 2009, Kraftwerk are in the middle of their busiest creative phase for years, with a revamped studio setup and new album in gestation. This year alone they have played sold-out shows around the world, including a South American tour with Radiohead, and next month they release Der Katalog – their eight biggest albums in sumptuous, digitally remastered versions. The perfect time, then, for the elusive Hütter to relive four decades inside one of the greatest enigmas in music… Interview: Stephen Dalton

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KRAFTWERK

(Vertigo, 1970)

Leaving behind their long-haired student jazz-rock band, Organisation, Hütter and Schneider established both the Kraftwerk name and their Kling Klang studio with this freeform instrumental four-track debut. Features a guest appearance by Klaus Dinger, later of Krautrock legends Neu!. But don’t use the K-word around Ralf…

“We were finding Kraftwerk, setting up the Kling Klang studio, finding musicians to work with, discovering composition, discovering the German language, human voice, synthetic voice. Me and Florian had our Kling Klang studio since 1970, and before that we had a free-form music group. We used to play at universities or parties or art galleries. And one day we said: OK, there must be a mothership, a laboratory, a studio HQ where we put things together.

“We were mostly like the art scene band, always on the same bill as Can. We had different drummers, and we engaged Klaus Dinger one time, but always changing. We had jazz drummers, rock drummers, and I had my little drum machine.

“This name, Krautrock – it’s coming from some idiots, I don’t know who, but it was never used in those times. The music was called Deutsch Rock, or electro rock, underground music, free rock. It really had no name, and it also had different colours in different cities. Like from Berlin it was more cosmic, with Cluster and Tangerine Dream. We were from Düsseldorf so more industrial, and Can in Cologne were more rock-orientated.

“This name was later introduced by people who maybe like this music, but it’s an insult, and it’s also nonsense because we don’t eat sauerkraut. And the music wasn’t made by vegetables. It’s like saying ‘fish and chips music’, or ‘spaghetti music’. It’s great that people can see the creativity, but maybe you can think of a more intelligent name?”

RALF & FLORIAN

(Mute/EMI, 1973)

Emphasising their status as a duo, Hütter and Schneider began to formulate a more polished, minimal, electronic sound on their transitional third album. This hard-to-find rarity is now due for re-release in the next wave of remasters.

“We were a duo all the time, we just had different studio musicians. But we were always looking for the perfect beat to be played by machines. We tried again and again, but it just never worked out, because they were never in synch. We were close to the visual arts scene in Düsseldorf, that is very important for Kraftwerk. It was audio-visual music because of the paintings and soundscapes. Words cannot really describe this, but you can actually see our music, I think…

“We listened to quite a lot of electronic stuff at that time. On the art scene, and on the radio. We were brought up within the kind of classical Beethoven school of music, but we were aware there was a contemporary music scene, and of course a pop and rock scene. But where was our music? Finding our voice, I think that was the use of the tape recorder. So that’s what happened, we tried to forget all the things we knew before. I think our contact to the tape recorder made us use synthetic voices, artificial personalities, all those robotic ideas.

“I’m working on the album tapes with my old friend, Emil Schult. This should maybe be our next interview, but it will be Kraftwerk 1 and 2, Ralf & Florian, and maybe one or two live ambient situations, whatever we find in the archive. It’s all in one part of our Kling Klang studio archives, but it needs some more work, redusting and remastering. There are lots of drawings and concepts, ideas that maybe a decade or two later came into reality. There have been bootlegs of these albums, but they are all printed from vinyl. Nobody has the tapes. Only we have the tapes.”

AUTOBAHN

(Mute/EMI, 1974)

Kraftwerk’s mainstream breakthrough, marking their emergence as revolutionary electro-pop minimalists. A condensed version of the mesmerising 22-minute title track became an international hit, leading to tours on both sides of the Atlantic. Some even saw its “fahren fahren fahren” refrain as a sly Beach Boys homage…

“Autobahn was about finding our artistic situation: where are we? What is the sound of the German Bundesrepublik? Because at this time bands were having English names, and not using the German language. Some people have said we introduced German rap, but it’s not really rap, its sprechgesang – spoken word singing. And from these rhythms and sounds we developed musical landscapes.

“It’s not about cars, it’s about the Autobahn. People forget that. It’s a road where we were travelling all the time: hundreds of thousands of kilometres from university to art galleries, from club to home. We didn’t even have money to stay in hotels so at night we’d be travelling home after playing somewhere. That’s very important, it’s not about cars, it’s about the Autobahn. It’s also a road movie, with a humorous twist.

“The white stripes on the road, I noticed them driving home every day from the studio, 20 kilometres on the Autobahn. And then the car sounds, the radio – it’s like a loop, a continuum, part of the endless music of Kraftwerk. In Autobahn we put car sounds, horn, basic melodies and tuning motors. Adjusting the suspension and tyre pressure, rolling on the asphalt, that gliding sound – pffft pffft – when the wheels go onto those painted stripes. It’s sound poetry, and also very dynamic.

“In the case of The Beach Boys, that song is about a T-Bird: ‘She had fun fun fun until daddy took her T-Bird away.’ But ours is about a Volkswagen or Mercedes. The quote is really more ethnic. People said: are you doing surfing on the Rhine? Yes, maybe, but we don’t have waves. It’s like an artificial joke. But no, it’s not a Beach Boys record, it’s a Kraftwerk record.

“All the tracks are like film loops, short films. ‘Morgenspaziergang’ [roughly translated as ‘morning stroll’] is what we wrote when we came out of the studio. We were always working at night and then in the morning, everything seems fresh and our ears are open again. Everything silent.

“We toured with Autobahn for the first time outside Germany. Just once in Paris University was our first time outside Germany, I think in ’73. But with Autobahn we also toured a very long time in America, then a shorter tour in England. But Germany had to be cancelled because there was no interest. That

was in ’75.

“The record was a very big success but nobody could imagine it live – is this a studio record? Or electronic? Nobody thought about going to see Kraftwerk behind the Autobahn record. Before that we toured in Germany all the time, from the late ’60s up to 1973. But then three years later nobody wanted to see us again. We came back in 1981, but still it was nothing like other countries.”

RADIO-ACTIVITY

(Mute/EMI, 1975)

Kraftwerk’s first all-electronic album, a nocturnal nightmare soundtrack with a dual meaning: the sound of crackling transistors and Cold War paranoia. Recorded during the Baader-Meinhof trials, which divided Germany and turned even young musicians into terrorist suspects.

“It’s a science fiction kind of album. Horror and beauty. The concept was infiltration by radio station – which is maybe more dangerous than radioactivity. We worked with tapes, editing pieces, glue. All electronics. And more singing and speaking, like speech symphonies.

“It was written in two languages, English and German. Autobahn was just one. It was not a statement, just these lyrics came to our mind – “Radioactivity, is in the air for you and me…” Just ideas coming together, and then anticipating the next album, which was all in two languages, like in films. There were always talks about Kraftwerk working with films, but they didn’t happen – apart from [German director Rainer Werner] Fassbinder, but he used finished pieces of our music in different interpretations in his films. Radio-Activity was a favourite of Fassbinder, he used it in Russian Roulette and in Berlin Alexanderplatz.

“When we were working on the artwork, we had these long rolled posters so our neighbours were reporting that we had weapons – that was the whole situation at that time. We travelled late at night and we’d be stopped for controls, Düsseldorf is a very controlled city, so they stop your cars and ask for your papers and permits. We were very night people, club scene people. They stopped us on the Autobahn, going to the studio. The police even came to our studio – because of the noise, maybe. But they didn’t come and knock on the door, they’d be coming in with pulled guns saying: ‘Where are the weapons?’”

TRANS-EUROPE EXPRESS

(Mute/EMI, 1977)

A romantic hymn to European integration, Trans-Europe Express earned its place in pop history as an unlikely catalyst for the nascent New York hip-hop scene, which liberally sampled its pounding metallic beats and piston-pumping rhythms. Hilarious sleeve artwork depicts the band as impeccably neat young businessmen.

“Trans-Europe Excess is basically a symphony of trains – train noises, Vienna, Paris. Travel is a big part of Kraftwerk. The pictures are not ironic, that’s our reality, that’s the life we are experiencing. That’s our cultural identity as Europeans, with the spirit of European culture. As you know, in Düsseldorf we live 20 minutes from the Netherlands, half an hour from Belgium, two hours from France. Berlin is farther away than Paris, even without the Wall. With all our friends, and at school, English language was very prominent. Living in Germany at that time, it was quite normal to talk in different languages. “Hall Of Mirrors” was written very fast. The mirror is a big theme with artists – like “Man In The Mirror” by Michael Jackson, and many others. At one time we also had mirrors as part of our Kling Klang studio to get visual feedback. There are some beautiful covers of that song. I like the version on the Trans Slovenian Express album, I think it is Anne Clarke singing to some Slovenian sounds. And also during the punk period, Siouxsie And The Banshees played that song.

“‘Showroom Dummies’, that is the transition from human to dummy to robots, from posing and static to animation and motorising. We were on our way to robotisation… is that a word? We are mainly talking about ourselves in that song, we felt photographed to death. That’s why we brought in the dummies, and later robots, because they have more patience with photographers. The lyrics in ‘Showroom Dummies’ are our day-to-day reality, going to clubs. In Germany the clubs are open very late, we don’t have that curfew like in England, the last drink at 9.30 or something. Ha! We are not playing that song at the moment but we played it a lot in ’81, and I think we will play it again because it’s valid.

“We received a Disco Award for that album in America – Best European Disco Band or something, it was very funny. I was in New York when the record came out doing some promo and then somebody from Capitol Records, the disco department or whatever, took us to some after-hours illegal clubs. I went with Florian and we were doing our little dance, and they played “Metal On Metal”. We knew the record because it was fairly new – but it went for five minutes, 10, 15, 20 minutes. What was happening? Then we found out they had two acetates, two pressings, and it was Bambaataa playing. Fantastic live DJing, that was in ’77, when they began experimenting with acetate like that. “Planet Rock” was five years later, and first of all they forgot to print my name. We had no credit so we called our publishers – and now they have our names on the record. Maybe that was because it was just a club record for a few thousand people, but then it exploded.”

THE MAN-MACHINE

(Mute/EMI, 1978)

Increasingly mechanised and minimal, this blueprint finds Kraftwerk at their most humorous, from the deadpan disco-funk of “The Robots” to the prophetic celebrity snapshot “The Model”, a future UK No 1 whose pointedly satirical subtext is sometimes overlooked. Also includes the much-covered romantic ballad, “Neon Lights”.

“At one point, playing an arts centre nearly 10 years before ‘The Robots’, I had this drum machine working, we were playing with feedback and strobe lights. We left the stage and people kept dancing to the machines. We didn’t have Kraftwerk, we didn’t have the robots, we didn’t have The Man-Machine album, nothing – but the concepts were already there.

“The lyrics to ‘The Model’ are identical in both languages, I think. I translated them. There is no difference. It’s about the context of an object, paying money: for beauty we will pay. I think the cynicism is obvious, don’t you? And then we’d get asked by everyone in clubs we went: is it me? Who is this? But it’s not based on anybody.

“The words are more like musical keys or clues, like in Autobahn or The Man-Machine, the sound says it all. Because we work so much with machines, the best music is playing itself – maybe through me, or through my friends and colleagues, but it’s coming from itself. That’s what we try to do. It’s not always possible, but we try our best. The ultimate speech composition is ‘Boing Boom Tschak’ [from ’86’s Electric Café] because the music speaks itself. It’s also endless because once you have that concept you can go on for five minutes, five hours or five days.”

COMPUTER WORLD

(Mute/EMI, 1981)

In a pre-digital age, Kraftwerk predict a computer-dominated future with pristine melodies and supple rhythms. But behind the surface shimmer lies a message about a new era of electronic surveillance…

“We didn’t even have computers. Even though the music was created by synthesisers and sequencers, it was analogue, pre-computer. We got our first home computers after the album was finished, the first Ataris. But no, it wasn’t a warning, it was reality. We were there, even though the album wasn’t made on computers, it was our reality. Society was being computerised, a lot of people didn’t notice at that time but we did. Computers were being used by states, the KGB, Interpol, Deutsche Bank.

“It was also talking about us: Kraftwerk, the Kling Klang studio, that was our computer world. We computerised our faces, and automated some of the lyrics. And “Pocket Calculator”, again it was really anticipating some kind of mobility. It really was made on a pocket calculator and toy instruments, like a Stylophone and a small children’s keyboard.

“We would like to have had laptops in 1981, but computers were huge IBMs, and they were not even transportable. The first Apple came in the late 1970s, but it was not available for us. When we first took our digital equipment into Eastern Bloc countries we had to list all of our equipment, because they were also part of weapons technology. We had to prove they are used for music and not weapons. Everything had to be listed, each piece of equipment, each brand name. Not from their side, from our side, in case you are bringing high-tech rocket material into the Eastern Bloc. But no, we were making art and music.”

TOUR DE FRANCE

(Mute/EMI, 2003)

Decades in gestation – building on their 1983 single of the same name – Hütter and Schneider’s final collaboration pays homage to their shared love of cycling. Originally released as Tour De France Soundtracks, it is now being reissued with its shorter intended title.

“It’s just called Tour De France. The Soundtracks was just a tracklisting at that time. It’s different films again, different soundtracks: ‘Vitamin’, ‘Aero Dynamik’, ‘Titanium’. But it’s also about personal experience, about regeneration, like a training plan.

“Sometimes we forget about things and they come back to us, they get a new meaning and a new dynamic, and then we find the concentration to finish a piece of work. Tour De France was all written before as scripts, notes, keywords, lyrics and concepts. In ’83, with the Tour, in a rush we released the single. Then it suddenly disappeared as we worked on digital technology, samplers, digitising our studio.

“And then, the 100 years’ birthday of the Tour was the signal to finish the album. All the mixes we did during the Tour, when we were invited by the directors to follow by helicopters and in the director’s car. Then we returned for the final mix. And when the Tour came to Paris, we delivered the tapes. Sometimes I get criticised for taking so long with the last album, but I can only answer that Autobahn took 28 years to make. Kraftwerk, and pre-Kraftwerk, was like seven years of working. People think you walk into a studio, turn some knobs and a new album is finished. That might be the case for one song. Maybe one record, maybe two – but not a lifetime’s work.”

Jack White’s ‘Blunderbuss’ is best-selling vinyl album of 2012

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Jack White's Blunderbuss was the biggest-selling vinyl album of 2012. Released between Columbia Records and White's own Third Man Records, his debut solo album sold 33,000. The figure was enough for Blunderbuss to knock The Beatles's Abbey Road from the top spot, which had been the biggest-selling ...

Jack White‘s Blunderbuss was the biggest-selling vinyl album of 2012.

Released between Columbia Records and White’s own Third Man Records, his debut solo album sold 33,000. The figure was enough for Blunderbuss to knock The Beatles’s Abbey Road from the top spot, which had been the biggest-selling vinyl record for the past three years running.

The news is sure to delight White, a well-known vinyl enthusiast. He’s especially fond of odd formats and has released and developed a number of innovative analogue technologies over the years. In 2010, he unveiled a new ‘triple decker’ vinyl format he’d come up with for a Dead Weather release. It consisted of a 7″ single embedded on a 12″, while a limited number of solo single “Sixteen Saltines” were released on a special liquid-filled record for the US Record Store Day in April, 2012.

There was also the 3″ format he developed for White Stripes releases which required a special turntable – the battery powered Triple Inchophone – to play them, and only last March he gifted attendees of Third Man’s third birthday party with a special 3RPM record, which featured all of the label’s releases.

White wanted the record to be “easy to play but impossible to hear…” estimating it would take “333 days of 33 hours training per day for your finger, hand, and arm muscles to spin at a continuous speed of 3 rpm for X hours and X minutes.”

The sales of Blunderbuss are the highest of a new album (not re-release) since Soundscan began collecting vinyl sales data in 2008.

Broadcast – Berberian Sound Studio OST

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In British pop history the feature film often marks the fatal moment of imperial overreach of a particular scene or band. From Magical Mystery Tour to The Great Rock And Roll Swindle or Absolute Beginners, be they grand follies, works of cynical exploitation or pretentious fiascos, they almost always mark the end of something. Is Peter Strickland’s remarkable Berberian Sound Studio, then, the epitaph of hauntology? From its Julian House poster and title sequence to Toby Jones’ sartorial symphony in tweed, the Box Hill chaffinches and Italian catacombs, its fetishistic celebration of analogue audio and its invocation of the occult power of the horror soundtrack, the film feels less like a moment of cultural dissipation than of culmination: the moment, the gesamtkunstwerk, the movement was always aspiring to. So it’s fitting that the soundtrack is provided by Broadcast. It’s arguable that the whole scene that has burgeoned over the last decade around the Ghost Box label, the wider fascination with that fleeting seventies conjunction of ancient Lovecraftian wyrd and utopian Radiophonic bliss - has been a long reckoning with the cultural nerve they touched. From humble mid-90s beginnings as Stereolab fellow travellers, Broadcast increasingly look like the key British group of the last 20 years. The appearance of “The Book Lovers” on the soundtrack of Austin Powers: International Man Of Mystery notwithstanding, it’s a mystery the group weren’t commissioned to work on soundtracks sooner, such was their evident feel for the scores of Barry, Morricone, Luboš Fišer. For BSS Strickland commissioned the group to provide themes and moods for the unseen film within a film, Il Vortice Equestre. Whereas in the UK state-sponsored electronic music entered the pop nervous system via radio jingles or sci-fi like Quatermass or Doctor Who, in Italy the incursion happened via gialli, the genre of psychedelic horror movies pioneered by directors like Dario Argento. BSS explicity references La morte ha fatto l'uovo (Death Laid An Egg), Giulio Questi’s incredibly strange 1968 factory farming phantasmagoria, with an excoriating soundtrack courtesy of Bruno Maderna, co-founder of the RAI’s Studio di Phonologia in Milan. Broadcast’s soundtrack perhaps wisely doesn’t attempt to emulate or pastiche the fingernails-scratching-the-blackboard-of-your-mind of Maderna’s more extreme adventures in music concrete, amounting instead to a kind of refinement or abstraction of the phased wig-outs and harpsichord reveries of their greatest hits. Heard on its own, as that old ambient alibi - the soundtrack to an imaginary film - made concrete, it’s not an easy listen, not least because moments of eerie enchantment are swiftly followed by tracks consisting of a couple of minutes gibbering from a dangerously aroused goblin. It doubtless works best heard in the cinema or the home theatre, and especially in the context of Julian House’s beautifully lurid title sequence. But it’s uneasy listening also because of the grief many of us still feel for the loss of Trish Keenan, who died between the soundtrack’s commission and completion. Listening to her wordless vocals on “Teresa, Lark Of Ascension” or the mournful mellotron that laps around the birdsong and laughter of “Such Tender Things” feels almost unbearably poignant. The analogue traces of a woman’s voice, still reverberating in the ghost box of the recording studio: well, that’s the uncanny hauntology of phonography, right there. Stephen Troussé Q&A James Cargill How did you first meet Peter Strickland? The first contact was an email. He was writing the screenplay and he put the feelers out... Then me and Trish went to meet him in Reading and the relationship grew from there. I think he loved Broadcast. He knew we’d referenced a lot of the music he was referring to in the film. Were there any particular soundtracks that were touchstones for you? A lot of the Italian stuff, pre-Goblin, pre-Suspiria, the more mournful side of it, the romantic side of the giallo stuff. We tried a more heavy approach in the beginning, the more bombastic horror thing and it just wasn’t working. A lot of the time in Berberian, though the music we were composing was for the Equestrian Vortex film within a film, while you’re watching the film, you’re watching Gilderoy listening to that music. So it has to have a musical connection to him as well. So the more yearning and pastoral sound of the soundtrack felt right. Is soundtrack work something you’d like to do more of? The thing about Berberian was I really enjoyed working with Peter. Of course it was me and Trish who started it and now she’s not with us any more. So I don’t know about soundtrack work in general, but I’d definitely work with Peter again. Will there be more releases from Broadcast? Trish left quite a lot of songs so I just need to arrange them really. So there will be another Broadcast album yes. I’m not sure when it will be ready though. INTERVIEW: STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

In British pop history the feature film often marks the fatal moment of imperial overreach of a particular scene or band. From Magical Mystery Tour to The Great Rock And Roll Swindle or Absolute Beginners, be they grand follies, works of cynical exploitation or pretentious fiascos, they almost always mark the end of something.

Is Peter Strickland’s remarkable Berberian Sound Studio, then, the epitaph of hauntology? From its Julian House poster and title sequence to Toby Jones’ sartorial symphony in tweed, the Box Hill chaffinches and Italian catacombs, its fetishistic celebration of analogue audio and its invocation of the occult power of the horror soundtrack, the film feels less like a moment of cultural dissipation than of culmination: the moment, the gesamtkunstwerk, the movement was always aspiring to.

So it’s fitting that the soundtrack is provided by Broadcast. It’s arguable that the whole scene that has burgeoned over the last decade around the Ghost Box label, the wider fascination with that fleeting seventies conjunction of ancient Lovecraftian wyrd and utopian Radiophonic bliss – has been a long reckoning with the cultural nerve they touched. From humble mid-90s beginnings as Stereolab fellow travellers, Broadcast increasingly look like the key British group of the last 20 years.

The appearance of “The Book Lovers” on the soundtrack of Austin Powers: International Man Of Mystery notwithstanding, it’s a mystery the group weren’t commissioned to work on soundtracks sooner, such was their evident feel for the scores of Barry, Morricone, Luboš Fišer. For BSS Strickland commissioned the group to provide themes and moods for the unseen film within a film, Il Vortice Equestre.

Whereas in the UK state-sponsored electronic music entered the pop nervous system via radio jingles or sci-fi like Quatermass or Doctor Who, in Italy the incursion happened via gialli, the genre of psychedelic horror movies pioneered by directors like Dario Argento. BSS explicity references La morte ha fatto l’uovo (Death Laid An Egg), Giulio Questi’s incredibly strange 1968 factory farming phantasmagoria, with an excoriating soundtrack courtesy of Bruno Maderna, co-founder of the RAI’s Studio di Phonologia in Milan.

Broadcast’s soundtrack perhaps wisely doesn’t attempt to emulate or pastiche the fingernails-scratching-the-blackboard-of-your-mind of Maderna’s more extreme adventures in music concrete, amounting instead to a kind of refinement or abstraction of the phased wig-outs and harpsichord reveries of their greatest hits. Heard on its own, as that old ambient alibi – the soundtrack to an imaginary film – made concrete, it’s not an easy listen, not least because moments of eerie enchantment are swiftly followed by tracks consisting of a couple of minutes gibbering from a dangerously aroused goblin. It doubtless works best heard in the cinema or the home theatre, and especially in the context of Julian House’s beautifully lurid title sequence.

But it’s uneasy listening also because of the grief many of us still feel for the loss of Trish Keenan, who died between the soundtrack’s commission and completion. Listening to her wordless vocals on “Teresa, Lark Of Ascension” or the mournful mellotron that laps around the birdsong and laughter of “Such Tender Things” feels almost unbearably poignant. The analogue traces of a woman’s voice, still reverberating in the ghost box of the recording studio: well, that’s the uncanny hauntology of phonography, right there.

Stephen Troussé

Q&A

James Cargill

How did you first meet Peter Strickland?

The first contact was an email. He was writing the screenplay and he put the feelers out… Then me and Trish went to meet him in Reading and the relationship grew from there. I think he loved Broadcast. He knew we’d referenced a lot of the music he was referring to in the film.

Were there any particular soundtracks that were touchstones for you?

A lot of the Italian stuff, pre-Goblin, pre-Suspiria, the more mournful side of it, the romantic side of the giallo stuff. We tried a more heavy approach in the beginning, the more bombastic horror thing and it just wasn’t working. A lot of the time in Berberian, though the music we were composing was for the Equestrian Vortex film within a film, while you’re watching the film, you’re watching Gilderoy listening to that music. So it has to have a musical connection to him as well. So the more yearning and pastoral sound of the soundtrack felt right.

Is soundtrack work something you’d like to do more of?

The thing about Berberian was I really enjoyed working with Peter. Of course it was me and Trish who started it and now she’s not with us any more. So I don’t know about soundtrack work in general, but I’d definitely work with Peter again.

Will there be more releases from Broadcast?

Trish left quite a lot of songs so I just need to arrange them really. So there will be another Broadcast album yes. I’m not sure when it will be ready though.

INTERVIEW: STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

Dave Grohl to debut supergroup at Sundance Film Festival

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Dave Grohl will debut a new supergroup, named Sound City Players, at this year's Sundance Film Festival, reports Rolling Stone. The show, due to take place on January 18, will see Grohl take to the stage with guests and musicians featured in his documentary on the now-closed Sound City recording st...

Dave Grohl will debut a new supergroup, named Sound City Players, at this year’s Sundance Film Festival, reports Rolling Stone.

The show, due to take place on January 18, will see Grohl take to the stage with guests and musicians featured in his documentary on the now-closed Sound City recording studios in Van Nuys, California, which will premiere at the annual film festival in Park City, Utah.

Artists appearing in the documentary include Fleetwood Mac’s Stevie Nicks, Nine Inch Nails’ Trent Reznor and Josh Homme from Queens of the Stone Age.

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.

2013 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.

London’s Olympic Stadium to reopen as music venue

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London's Olympic Stadium in Stratford, East London, is set to reopen in July 2013 with a series of rock concerts, reports BBC News. Though final contracts are yet to be signed, the plan is for some events traditionally held at Hyde Park to relocate to the stadium. Dennis Hone, chief executive of the London Legacy Development Corporation, said: "The exciting thing for us is that we have the opportunity to put on some major events in the park – some music events and festivals and an anniversary weekend on 27 and 28 July." Hone added that he hoped to announce details of the programme in the coming weeks. Promoters Live Nation last year lost the tender to stage concerts in Hyde Park from 2013 to 2017, with the contract being awarded to rivals AEG. Live Nation UK's Chief Operating Officer John Probyn told NME he had ideas for a replacement. "There’s a little project that’s been bubbling away for a while and I’m really excited about it," he said. "It’s within London, but it's completely different to Hyde park." The Hyde Park location came under fire last summer after Bruce Springsteen and Paul McCartney's duet in July was switched off due to curfew issues, while Blur fans were left disappointed after noise restrictions meant many fans couldn't hear their Olympic reunion gig. The Olympic stadium, meanwhile, proved itself a worthy venue for live music with the stunning opening and closing ceremonies, which featured acts including Arctic Monkeys, The Who, Beady Eye and Frank Turner. Scroll down to see a video of Turner describing his Olympic experience. A spokesman for The Royal Parks told the BBC that a total of eight concerts would still take place at Hyde Park this year.

London’s Olympic Stadium in Stratford, East London, is set to reopen in July 2013 with a series of rock concerts, reports BBC News.

Though final contracts are yet to be signed, the plan is for some events traditionally held at Hyde Park to relocate to the stadium. Dennis Hone, chief executive of the London Legacy Development Corporation, said: “The exciting thing for us is that we have the opportunity to put on some major events in the park – some music events and festivals and an anniversary weekend on 27 and 28 July.” Hone added that he hoped to announce details of the programme in the coming weeks.

Promoters Live Nation last year lost the tender to stage concerts in Hyde Park from 2013 to 2017, with the contract being awarded to rivals AEG.

Live Nation UK’s Chief Operating Officer John Probyn told NME he had ideas for a replacement. “There’s a little project that’s been bubbling away for a while and I’m really excited about it,” he said. “It’s within London, but it’s completely different to Hyde park.”

The Hyde Park location came under fire last summer after Bruce Springsteen and Paul McCartney’s duet in July was switched off due to curfew issues, while Blur fans were left disappointed after noise restrictions meant many fans couldn’t hear their Olympic reunion gig.

The Olympic stadium, meanwhile, proved itself a worthy venue for live music with the stunning opening and closing ceremonies, which featured acts including Arctic Monkeys, The Who, Beady Eye and Frank Turner. Scroll down to see a video of Turner describing his Olympic experience.

A spokesman for The Royal Parks told the BBC that a total of eight concerts would still take place at Hyde Park this year.

Neil Young, Patti Smith, Alabama Shakes to play Bruce Springsteen tribute concert in Los Angeles

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Neil Young, Patti Smith and Alabama Shakes will perform at a tribute to Bruce Springsteen in Los Angeles next month. The MusiCares show will take in LA on February 8, two days before this year's Grammy Awards and will also feature performances from Mumford And Sons, Elton John, Sting, Tim McGraw and Faith Hill, John Legend and Tom Morello. Jackson Browne, Natalie Maines of the Dixie Chicks, Kenny Chesney and Juanes will also perform at the show. The gig is being hosted by The Daily Show comedian Jon Stewart. The all-star show will celebrate Springsteen, who was previously named as MusiCares Person of the Year for his combination of artistic contributions and charity work. MusiCares CEO Neil Portnow said: "Bruce Springsteen is a truly gifted and Renaissance artist of our time, a national treasure, and an exemplary humanitarian. His career is a testament to the power of creative excellence, and his contributions as a philanthropist speak to the tenacity of the human spirit." Previous MusiCares Person of the Year winners include Gloria Estefan, Phil Collins, Sir Elton John, Bono and Barbra Streisand.

Neil Young, Patti Smith and Alabama Shakes will perform at a tribute to Bruce Springsteen in Los Angeles next month.

The MusiCares show will take in LA on February 8, two days before this year’s Grammy Awards and will also feature performances from Mumford And Sons, Elton John, Sting, Tim McGraw and Faith Hill, John Legend and Tom Morello. Jackson Browne, Natalie Maines of the Dixie Chicks, Kenny Chesney and Juanes will also perform at the show. The gig is being hosted by The Daily Show comedian Jon Stewart.

The all-star show will celebrate Springsteen, who was previously named as MusiCares Person of the Year for his combination of artistic contributions and charity work.

MusiCares CEO Neil Portnow said: “Bruce Springsteen is a truly gifted and Renaissance artist of our time, a national treasure, and an exemplary humanitarian. His career is a testament to the power of creative excellence, and his contributions as a philanthropist speak to the tenacity of the human spirit.”

Previous MusiCares Person of the Year winners include Gloria Estefan, Phil Collins, Sir Elton John, Bono and Barbra Streisand.

This month in Uncut!

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The new issue of Uncut, out today (January 3), features Gram Parsons, Ray Davies, Morrissey on Mick Ronson, and Uncut's 2013 album preview. Gram Parsons is on the cover, and inside, collaborators and friends tell the whole story of his incredible last stand – his legendary solo albums, GP and Grievous Angel. Ray Davies sheds light on his new projects, including a film, an opera and a new solo album, the full story of Mick Ronson's life is told, from Bowie to Morrissey, and Joe Cocker answers your questions on subjects ranging from Paul McCartney to dropping acid for breakfast. The Uncut 2013 album preview sees artists including Wilco, Low, The National, Jonathan Wilson and Laura Marling talk us through their upcoming albums. Elsewhere, Yo La Tengo revisit the highs of their 30-year career, Roger Chapman relives the strange voyage of Family and Jane Birkin takes us through her life in pictures. The Rolling Stones, the Heartbreakers, Marianne Faithfull, Broadcast and The National are in our expansive reviews section, while the free CD, Honky Tonk Heroes, contains some stunning country and folk classics that influenced Gram Parsons. The February issue of Uncut is out today (Thursday, January 3).

The new issue of Uncut, out today (January 3), features Gram Parsons, Ray Davies, Morrissey on Mick Ronson, and Uncut’s 2013 album preview.

Gram Parsons is on the cover, and inside, collaborators and friends tell the whole story of his incredible last stand – his legendary solo albums, GP and Grievous Angel.

Ray Davies sheds light on his new projects, including a film, an opera and a new solo album, the full story of Mick Ronson’s life is told, from Bowie to Morrissey, and Joe Cocker answers your questions on subjects ranging from Paul McCartney to dropping acid for breakfast.

The Uncut 2013 album preview sees artists including Wilco, Low, The National, Jonathan Wilson and Laura Marling talk us through their upcoming albums.

Elsewhere, Yo La Tengo revisit the highs of their 30-year career, Roger Chapman relives the strange voyage of Family and Jane Birkin takes us through her life in pictures.

The Rolling Stones, the Heartbreakers, Marianne Faithfull, Broadcast and The National are in our expansive reviews section, while the free CD, Honky Tonk Heroes, contains some stunning country and folk classics that influenced Gram Parsons.

The February issue of Uncut is out today (Thursday, January 3).

Gram Parsons, Ray Davies, Mick Ronson, Simple Minds, The Rolling Stones, Family and Nick Drake’s mum in the new Uncut

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There’s a lot to be said for the charisma of premature death. And the manner of his particular dying – turning blue on a motel floor at the age of 26, his heart fatally faltering, ice cubes being stuffed up his ass in a pathetic attempt to bring him back from the brink after one binge too many – booked Gram parsons an automatic place of honour in a rock’n’roll Valhalla already overcrowded with dead young heroes, Jimi, Janis, Brian Jones, Jim Morrison, Otis Redding, Sam Cooke and more already among its spectral population when Gram died in September, 1973. And then, of course, there is the bonfire they made of his body, the macabre drunken ritual of his Joshua Tree cremation, his friend and roadie, Phil Kaufman, fulfilling a pact he made with Gram at the funeral of former Byrds guitarist Clarence White. Which was basically that if either checked out while the other was still living, the one still standing would take the other, now dead, and burn the corpse out there in the Mojave Desert – where Gram had dropped LSD, partied with Keith Richards, died. Kaufman may have thought he was merely honouring a boozy promise. He was actually creating a legend. If Gram’s early exit ensured a notorious immortality, it also to some extent unintentionally overshadowed the music he left behind, which is his true legacy. People who’ve never heard him, however, may wonder whether the myth looms larger than the music, about whose merit they may be somewhat suspicious. After all, an image has grown since his death of Gram as something of a playboy, a rich southern kid living off a substantial trust fund who was more interested in narcotic debauchery and reckless living than the nurturing of a sublime talent. In the circumstances, can his music really be as good as his fans say it is? The answer, of course, is yes, as David Cavanagh’s cover story for the new Uncut – on sale from tomorrow, January 3 – so brilliantly attests. On his way to the grave, Gram produced some of the most beautiful and moving music ever made. There wasn’t much of it to leave behind, his legacy only – what? – six studio albums, a couple of live albums, a smattering of compilations of out-takes and rehearsal tapes. It’s not a lot, but when those albums include The Byrds’ Sweetheart Of The Rodeo, The Flying Burrito Brothers’ The Gilded Palace of Sin and the solo GP and Grievous Angel, you begin to realise the extent to which this fated young man’s pioneering vision changed the face of American music. Forty years after his death, the music he made - the honky tonk laments, country death songs and heart breaking ballads – have lost none of their original magic, remain unforgettable, forever haunting. Elsewhere in our first issue of 2013, we have a revealing new interview with Ray Davies, by Nick Hasted, author of the definitive Kinks biography, You Really Got Me, Garry Mulholland looks back on the star-crossed post-Bowie career of Mick Ronson, with ample testimony to his musical genius from, among others, Morrissey, his longstanding friend and collaborator Ian Hunter and T-Bone Burnett, Roger McGuinn and Rob Stoner, who played alongside Mick in Dylan’s Rolling Thunder Revue. We also celebrate the return of Roger Chapman and Family, who have reformed for two shows next month, sadly without original guitarist Charlie Whitney, who’s decided to stay on the Greek island where he’s lived for many years. With London’s weather as bad as it’s recently been, who could blame him? In the course of the rest of the issue, we also speak top Joe Cocker, Simple Minds, Jane Birkin, Pete Seeger, Kraftwerk’s Karl Bartos, Nick Drake’s mum and Yo La Tengo, while our 2013 Album preview features Wilco, The Black Keys, The National, Phosphorescent, Queens Of The Stone Age, Iron & Wine, Edwyn Collins, Low and many more. There’s also an especially busy reviews section for what’s usually a fairly quiet time of year, headed by an exciting new discovery Matthew E White, whose debut, Big Inner, is stunning. There are new albums, top, from broadcast, Aaron Neville, Villagers, Arbouretum, Anais Mitchell, with notable reissues from Johnny Thunders’ Heartbreakers, Marianne Faithfull and Hawkwind, not to mention live reviews of The Rolling Stones, Shuggy Otis and The National. If all this sounds like something you wish you were already reading, you might want to think about taking out a subscription to Uncut, one of the perks of which is getting the new issue before it goes on sale in the shops. Full details of current subscription offers are on www.uncut.co.uk. Happy New Year!

There’s a lot to be said for the charisma of premature death. And the manner of his particular dying – turning blue on a motel floor at the age of 26, his heart fatally faltering, ice cubes being stuffed up his ass in a pathetic attempt to bring him back from the brink after one binge too many – booked Gram parsons an automatic place of honour in a rock’n’roll Valhalla already overcrowded with dead young heroes, Jimi, Janis, Brian Jones, Jim Morrison, Otis Redding, Sam Cooke and more already among its spectral population when Gram died in September, 1973.

And then, of course, there is the bonfire they made of his body, the macabre drunken ritual of his Joshua Tree cremation, his friend and roadie, Phil Kaufman, fulfilling a pact he made with Gram at the funeral of former Byrds guitarist Clarence White. Which was basically that if either checked out while the other was still living, the one still standing would take the other, now dead, and burn the corpse out there in the Mojave Desert – where Gram had dropped LSD, partied with Keith Richards, died. Kaufman may have thought he was merely honouring a boozy promise. He was actually creating a legend.

If Gram’s early exit ensured a notorious immortality, it also to some extent unintentionally overshadowed the music he left behind, which is his true legacy. People who’ve never heard him, however, may wonder whether the myth looms larger than the music, about whose merit they may be somewhat suspicious. After all, an image has grown since his death of Gram as something of a playboy, a rich southern kid living off a substantial trust fund who was more interested in narcotic debauchery and reckless living than the nurturing of a sublime talent. In the circumstances, can his music really be as good as his fans say it is?

The answer, of course, is yes, as David Cavanagh’s cover story for the new Uncut – on sale from tomorrow, January 3 – so brilliantly attests. On his way to the grave, Gram produced some of the most beautiful and moving music ever made. There wasn’t much of it to leave behind, his legacy only – what? – six studio albums, a couple of live albums, a smattering of compilations of out-takes and rehearsal tapes.

It’s not a lot, but when those albums include The Byrds’ Sweetheart Of The Rodeo, The Flying Burrito Brothers’ The Gilded Palace of Sin and the solo GP and Grievous Angel, you begin to realise the extent to which this fated young man’s pioneering vision changed the face of American music. Forty years after his death, the music he made – the honky tonk laments, country death songs and heart breaking ballads – have lost none of their original magic, remain unforgettable, forever haunting.

Elsewhere in our first issue of 2013, we have a revealing new interview with Ray Davies, by Nick Hasted, author of the definitive Kinks biography, You Really Got Me, Garry Mulholland looks back on the star-crossed post-Bowie career of Mick Ronson, with ample testimony to his musical genius from, among others, Morrissey, his longstanding friend and collaborator Ian Hunter and T-Bone Burnett, Roger McGuinn and Rob Stoner, who played alongside Mick in Dylan’s Rolling Thunder Revue. We also celebrate the return of Roger Chapman and Family, who have reformed for two shows next month, sadly without original guitarist Charlie Whitney, who’s decided to stay on the Greek island where he’s lived for many years. With London’s weather as bad as it’s recently been, who could blame him?

In the course of the rest of the issue, we also speak top Joe Cocker, Simple Minds, Jane Birkin, Pete Seeger, Kraftwerk’s Karl Bartos, Nick Drake’s mum and Yo La Tengo, while our 2013 Album preview features Wilco, The Black Keys, The National, Phosphorescent, Queens Of The Stone Age, Iron & Wine, Edwyn Collins, Low and many more. There’s also an especially busy reviews section for what’s usually a fairly quiet time of year, headed by an exciting new discovery Matthew E White, whose debut, Big Inner, is stunning. There are new albums, top, from broadcast, Aaron Neville, Villagers, Arbouretum, Anais Mitchell, with notable reissues from Johnny Thunders’ Heartbreakers, Marianne Faithfull and Hawkwind, not to mention live reviews of The Rolling Stones, Shuggy Otis and The National.

If all this sounds like something you wish you were already reading, you might want to think about taking out a subscription to Uncut, one of the perks of which is getting the new issue before it goes on sale in the shops. Full details of current subscription offers are on www.uncut.co.uk.

Happy New Year!

McCullin

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DIRECTOR Jacqui and David Morris STARRING Don McCullin Towards the end of last year, war photographer Don McCullin recently travelled to Syria for one last trip to the frontline. Interviewed on Radio 4 from Aleppo in December 2012, 76 year-old McCullin said, “I’m not important in all this. I’m just a carrier pigeon bringing this back home.” An amazing, humbling reflection on a career spanning close to 50 years, that saw Don McCullin cover Biafra, Vietnam and Northern Ireland, bringing back home photographic proof of the horrific fallout of war on civilians. As he says early in Jacqui and David Morris’ terrific documentary, “You’re trying to stay alive, you’re trying to take pictures, you’re trying to justify your presence there and you think, ‘What good is this going to do anyway, these people have already been killed?’” McCullin, who started out photographing street gangs in his native North London in the 1950s, has a soft, precise way of speaking. He looks like a rougher Terence Stamp. The Morris’s film mixes recent interviews with McCullin with contemporaneous news footage and McCullin’s own photographs, which have lost none of their power. His experiences are incredible - from the first execution he saw, at dawn in a Saigon market in 1965, through Vietnam, the Lebanon and beyond. “My family suffered very badly,” he remembers. “I was always waving goodbye to them and one wonders in their mind were they ever thinking, ‘Will we ever see this strange man again who is supposed to be our father?’” Michael Bonner

DIRECTOR Jacqui and David Morris

STARRING Don McCullin

Towards the end of last year, war photographer Don McCullin recently travelled to Syria for one last trip to the frontline.

Interviewed on Radio 4 from Aleppo in December 2012, 76 year-old McCullin said, “I’m not important in all this. I’m just a carrier pigeon bringing this back home.” An amazing, humbling reflection on a career spanning close to 50 years, that saw Don McCullin cover Biafra, Vietnam and Northern Ireland, bringing back home photographic proof of the horrific fallout of war on civilians.

As he says early in Jacqui and David Morris’ terrific documentary, “You’re trying to stay alive, you’re trying to take pictures, you’re trying to justify your presence there and you think, ‘What good is this going to do anyway, these people have already been killed?’” McCullin, who started out photographing street gangs in his native North London in the 1950s, has a soft, precise way of speaking. He looks like a rougher Terence Stamp.

The Morris’s film mixes recent interviews with McCullin with contemporaneous news footage and McCullin’s own photographs, which have lost none of their power. His experiences are incredible – from the first execution he saw, at dawn in a Saigon market in 1965, through Vietnam, the Lebanon and beyond. “My family suffered very badly,” he remembers. “I was always waving goodbye to them and one wonders in their mind were they ever thinking, ‘Will we ever see this strange man again who is supposed to be our father?’”

Michael Bonner

Jarvis Cocker reviews Quentin Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction

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Following on from my blog about Quentin Tarantino's favourite records, I thought I'd post another QT-related titbit, from 1994. In a previous life, as film editor at Melody Maker, I commissioned Jarvis Cocker to review Pulp Fiction for us. Here, then, is Jarvis on Tarantino's early masterpiece... "So I was hanging from this ledge by my finger tips and I thought, 'Hold on, this is a dramatic situation – potentially life-threatening, in fact – so why doesn’t it feel dramatic?' Well, it’s obvious, isn’t it? There was no orchestra, there were no close-ups of my fingers slipping, no low-angle shots from below – in short, it wasn’t a film. In the drama stakes, real life comes a poor second. Yeah, I mean I’ll cry if Humphrey Bogart leaves Ingrid Bergman but I’m f***ed if I’m going to cry when my girlfriend calls me a c*** and runs out of the house. Oh no. "I suppose it hasn’t always been that way. They say that when the first showed a film of a train coming towards the camera head on, people ran out of the cinema because they thought they were going to get run over. Film was the most accurate method yet that man had found of capturing and representing the real world – and, now, with the advent of sound and colour, it’s even better. "But the fact is, film isn’t devoted to representing and mirroring real life anymore (if it ever was) – the things that we see and hear on the screen actually affect the way we live and perceive our lives. Hmmmmm. So that’s why my window ledge experience wasn’t dramatic because, when I’d seen the same kind of thing before on telly, it was done a lot better. "Now, don’t get me wrong, I’m not trying to put us all on a downer trip here, y’know. I’m not saying, 'Oh God, we may as well all commit suicide because reality will never live up to expectations that we’ve gleaned from the silver screen.' Oh no, I’m not saying that at all – what I am saying is that we cannot pretend that our lives are not affected by films of TV, that it somehow just rinses straight through us, leaving no residue behind. God, if you cut us open, we’d be as furred-up as a 40-year-old kettle (oh yes). "'So where is this leading us?' you ask. Well. I’ll tell you where it is leading us, it’s leading us to an appreciation of Quentin Tarantino’s latest film, Pulp Fiction (great title). A film that is aware that you’ve been to the pictures before, that maybe you have certain expectations of the movie. Is there anything more insulting that those horror films where the Burgermeister (or whatever his name is) says things like 'Vampires? Don’t be ridiculous, that’s just a lot of superstitious mumbo-jumbo,' when you know full well that in 10 minutes’ time everyone will be getting their throats ripped out, because otherwise you wouldn’t be watching it in the first place? Or when the woman in the spooky old house does down to the cellar on her own and point blank refuses to turn the lights on? I mean, Jesus, we might be a bit gullible but we’re not totally f***ing stupid. "In his film, Tarantino (we’ve only met him once, so I can’t really call him Quentin, can I?) takes stock movie situations (boxer is told to 'take a dive in the fifth', gangster has to take his boss’s wife out to dinner, etc) and then does something very simple and yet very clever: he makes them act like real human beings. And what exactly do I mean by 'human beings'? Well, people who watch television of course. So when Jules the gangster is in the middle of the hold-up he says, 'We’re gonna be like three Fonzies. And what’s Fonzie like?', he receives the reply, 'He’s cool.' This is infinitely better than just having him say, 'Be cool.' There are numerous other examples throughout the film, my own personal favourite being when a kid with a bit of a wedge haircut is referred to as 'Flock Of Seagulls' immediately prior to being blown away, and, no, these aren’t just ironic, 'kitschy' (God, I hate that word) little reference point – they make the characters live. "I think that Tarantino is doing in this film is saying, 'OK, so my life isn’t really as exciting as the movies but at least I can take the movies and shave a bit of my own life into them,' and, if your life is littered with references to shitty TV programmes and the like, it doesn’t matter, cos everybody else’s is too. And, in the end, that’s what makes this film so good. It delivers all the plot, fights, sex, etc, that any self-respecting film should but the best bits are the conversations – the bits that you could have just overheard in the pub, the normal, everyday bits that you or I could have said. Pulp Fiction might just be the nearest we ever get to being in the movies."

Following on from my blog about Quentin Tarantino’s favourite records, I thought I’d post another QT-related titbit, from 1994. In a previous life, as film editor at Melody Maker, I commissioned Jarvis Cocker to review Pulp Fiction for us. Here, then, is Jarvis on Tarantino’s early masterpiece…

“So I was hanging from this ledge by my finger tips and I thought, ‘Hold on, this is a dramatic situation – potentially life-threatening, in fact – so why doesn’t it feel dramatic?’ Well, it’s obvious, isn’t it? There was no orchestra, there were no close-ups of my fingers slipping, no low-angle shots from below – in short, it wasn’t a film. In the drama stakes, real life comes a poor second. Yeah, I mean I’ll cry if Humphrey Bogart leaves Ingrid Bergman but I’m f***ed if I’m going to cry when my girlfriend calls me a c*** and runs out of the house. Oh no.

“I suppose it hasn’t always been that way. They say that when the first showed a film of a train coming towards the camera head on, people ran out of the cinema because they thought they were going to get run over. Film was the most accurate method yet that man had found of capturing and representing the real world – and, now, with the advent of sound and colour, it’s even better.

“But the fact is, film isn’t devoted to representing and mirroring real life anymore (if it ever was) – the things that we see and hear on the screen actually affect the way we live and perceive our lives. Hmmmmm. So that’s why my window ledge experience wasn’t dramatic because, when I’d seen the same kind of thing before on telly, it was done a lot better.

“Now, don’t get me wrong, I’m not trying to put us all on a downer trip here, y’know. I’m not saying, ‘Oh God, we may as well all commit suicide because reality will never live up to expectations that we’ve gleaned from the silver screen.’ Oh no, I’m not saying that at all – what I am saying is that we cannot pretend that our lives are not affected by films of TV, that it somehow just rinses straight through us, leaving no residue behind. God, if you cut us open, we’d be as furred-up as a 40-year-old kettle (oh yes).

“‘So where is this leading us?’ you ask. Well. I’ll tell you where it is leading us, it’s leading us to an appreciation of Quentin Tarantino’s latest film, Pulp Fiction (great title). A film that is aware that you’ve been to the pictures before, that maybe you have certain expectations of the movie. Is there anything more insulting that those horror films where the Burgermeister (or whatever his name is) says things like ‘Vampires? Don’t be ridiculous, that’s just a lot of superstitious mumbo-jumbo,’ when you know full well that in 10 minutes’ time everyone will be getting their throats ripped out, because otherwise you wouldn’t be watching it in the first place? Or when the woman in the spooky old house does down to the cellar on her own and point blank refuses to turn the lights on? I mean, Jesus, we might be a bit gullible but we’re not totally f***ing stupid.

“In his film, Tarantino (we’ve only met him once, so I can’t really call him Quentin, can I?) takes stock movie situations (boxer is told to ‘take a dive in the fifth’, gangster has to take his boss’s wife out to dinner, etc) and then does something very simple and yet very clever: he makes them act like real human beings. And what exactly do I mean by ‘human beings’? Well, people who watch television of course. So when Jules the gangster is in the middle of the hold-up he says, ‘We’re gonna be like three Fonzies. And what’s Fonzie like?’, he receives the reply, ‘He’s cool.’ This is infinitely better than just having him say, ‘Be cool.’ There are numerous other examples throughout the film, my own personal favourite being when a kid with a bit of a wedge haircut is referred to as ‘Flock Of Seagulls’ immediately prior to being blown away, and, no, these aren’t just ironic, ‘kitschy’ (God, I hate that word) little reference point – they make the characters live.

“I think that Tarantino is doing in this film is saying, ‘OK, so my life isn’t really as exciting as the movies but at least I can take the movies and shave a bit of my own life into them,’ and, if your life is littered with references to shitty TV programmes and the like, it doesn’t matter, cos everybody else’s is too. And, in the end, that’s what makes this film so good. It delivers all the plot, fights, sex, etc, that any self-respecting film should but the best bits are the conversations – the bits that you could have just overheard in the pub, the normal, everyday bits that you or I could have said. Pulp Fiction might just be the nearest we ever get to being in the movies.”

Beck to release two albums in 2013?

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Beck has hinted that he could release two new albums in 2013. The US star, who earlier this year released a 20-track album comprised of sheet music titled Song Reader, told NME that he could potentially release two more conventional records in the next twelve months. "There is music and it's comi...

Beck has hinted that he could release two new albums in 2013.

The US star, who earlier this year released a 20-track album comprised of sheet music titled Song Reader, told NME that he could potentially release two more conventional records in the next twelve months.

“There is music and it’s coming!” he says. “I have this one record I started in 2008. It got put to the side for a long time but recently I’ve been mixing some of the songs. I’m not sure if they’ll be singles or EPs or an album but it’ll come out in some way and it sounds… sonically adventurous. I also have a record that I recorded last year in Nashville, which I may or may not finish.”

Beck’s last full studio album Modern Guilt was released in 2008.

Three new Beck tracks surfaced online earlier this year. The songs – titled ‘Cities’, ‘Touch The People’ and ‘Spiral Staircase’ – were written for the PlayStation 3 game Sound Shapes and the videos feature footage from the game.

Meanwhile, back in May, Beck released a one-off, Jack White-produced track, ‘I Just Started Hating Some People Today’, on White’s Third Man Records label. It also features the B-Side ‘Blue Randy’.

UK album sales drop by 10 percent in 2012

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The sales of albums in the UK fell by 10 percent in 2012. The statistics, released by the BPI, also reveal that the CD album market shrunk by a fifth, with sales of albums on CD down 19.5 percent year-on-year with only 69.4m albums sold. Sales of digital and physical albums combined fell overall again by 11.2 percent to 100.5m over the past 12 months – although singles sales hit a new high. Despite the overall fall, 16 albums released in 2012 sold over 100,000 copies and digital album sales rose 14.8 percent to 30.5m. Emeli Sande's Our Version Of Events was the best selling album of the year, selling 1.4m copies. Moreover, the UK singles market continued its boom with sales records being broken for the fifth successive year – 188.6m singles were sold in 2012, a rise of six percent. A staggering 99.6 percent of these sales came through digital releases. Reflective of the popularity of singles in 2012 is the fact that all of the top twenty selling songs shifted over half a million copies each. Speaking to Music Week, Geoff Taylor, BPI Chief Executive, said, “2012 was an encouraging year for UK artists and for music’s digital future. Digital albums grew strongly and singles sales hit a new record. Music fans are now streaming billions of songs from new services enabled by record labels. “The Jubilee celebrations and the London 2012 Olympics provided a great showcase for British music internationally, but market conditions at home remained difficult and pressure on the ‘leisure wallet’ impacted music sales on the high street. “However, the quality of our music and digital innovation by UK labels means we have excellent potential for domestic growth and to increase our share of the global music market. We hope Government will recognise the potential of digital music to contribute to economic recovery and provide more active support in 2013.” The top ten selling UK albums and Singles in 2012 according to official BPI data were as follows: Albums Emeli Sande - Our Version Of Events Adele - 21 Ed Sheeran - + Lana Del Rey - Born To Die One Direction - Up All Night Mumford & Sons - Babel Olly Murs - Right Place, Right Time Michael Buble - Christmas Coldplay - Mylo Xyloto Rihanna - Unapologetic Singles Gotye - Somebody That I Used To Know Carley Rae Jepsen - Call Me Maybe Fun feat Janelle Monae - We Are Young David Guetta - Titanium James Arthur - Impossible Psy - Gangam Style Nicki Minaj - Starships Jessie J - Price Tag Maroon 5 - Payphone Flo-Rida - Wild Ones

The sales of albums in the UK fell by 10 percent in 2012.

The statistics, released by the BPI, also reveal that the CD album market shrunk by a fifth, with sales of albums on CD down 19.5 percent year-on-year with only 69.4m albums sold.

Sales of digital and physical albums combined fell overall again by 11.2 percent to 100.5m over the past 12 months – although singles sales hit a new high.

Despite the overall fall, 16 albums released in 2012 sold over 100,000 copies and digital album sales rose 14.8 percent to 30.5m. Emeli Sande‘s Our Version Of Events was the best selling album of the year, selling 1.4m copies.

Moreover, the UK singles market continued its boom with sales records being broken for the fifth successive year – 188.6m singles were sold in 2012, a rise of six percent. A staggering 99.6 percent of these sales came through digital releases. Reflective of the popularity of singles in 2012 is the fact that all of the top twenty selling songs shifted over half a million copies each.

Speaking to Music Week, Geoff Taylor, BPI Chief Executive, said, “2012 was an encouraging year for UK artists and for music’s digital future. Digital albums grew strongly and singles sales hit a new record. Music fans are now streaming billions of songs from new services enabled by record labels.

“The Jubilee celebrations and the London 2012 Olympics provided a great showcase for British music internationally, but market conditions at home remained difficult and pressure on the ‘leisure wallet’ impacted music sales on the high street.

“However, the quality of our music and digital innovation by UK labels means we have excellent potential for domestic growth and to increase our share of the global music market. We hope Government will recognise the potential of digital music to contribute to economic recovery and provide more active support in 2013.”

The top ten selling UK albums and Singles in 2012 according to official BPI data were as follows:

Albums

Emeli Sande – Our Version Of Events

Adele – 21

Ed Sheeran – +

Lana Del Rey – Born To Die

One Direction – Up All Night

Mumford & Sons – Babel

Olly Murs – Right Place, Right Time

Michael Buble – Christmas

Coldplay – Mylo Xyloto

Rihanna – Unapologetic

Singles

Gotye – Somebody That I Used To Know

Carley Rae Jepsen – Call Me Maybe

Fun feat Janelle Monae – We Are Young

David Guetta – Titanium

James Arthur – Impossible

Psy – Gangam Style

Nicki Minaj – Starships

Jessie J – Price Tag

Maroon 5 – Payphone

Flo-Rida – Wild Ones

Aztec Camera – reissues

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Postcards from paradise... When Roddy Frame emerged, aged 16, on Glasgow’s Postcard Records, his band was compared by label Svengali Alan Horne to the Velvet Underground. Fanciful, maybe, but Aztec Camera’s debut 45 announced a songwriter of some precocity. That said, it’s a shame the poetic rush of the Postcard period was effectively abandoned after the first album, High Land, Hard Rain (9/10) (1983), which remains a career highlight. The youthful zest in “The Boy Wonders” and “Down The Dip” can’t be faked, and if the decision to bring in Mark Knopfler to produce the follow-up, Knife (6/10) (1984) added polish, it also removed the vim from a decent set of songs. In truth Knopfler’s production has aged reasonably well, but the cover of Van Halen’s "Jump" (a B-side extra) shows how Frame’s perverse streak could have been managed more creatively. Love (1987) (7/10) gave Frame got his first Top 10 hit (“Somewhere in My Heart”), and contains one of his best songs (“How Men Are”) but, small irony, his most popular set is also the most manicured. The live version of “Killermont Street” (an escapist hymn to Glasgow’s bus station) points ahead to Frame’s reinvention as a solo artist, but there was a creative rebirth with Stray (8/10) (1990), the most inventive and durable Aztec Camera LP. Diverse, yes, but it’s exhilarating to hear Frame switching-up from plaintive balladry (“Then Over My Head”) to the BAD-influenced “Good Morning Britain”. WEA had given up by the time of the Langer-Winstanley produced Frestonia (7/10) (1995), though it bears re-examination. Yet the pick of these fine Edsel reissues is Dreamland (1993) (8/10), a sweet, soulful album, produced by Ryuichi Sakamoto, and supplemented by a great live set from Ronnie Scott’s. Frame revisits the second Postcard 45, “Mattress Of Wire”, covers Fred Neil’s “Dolphins”, and extracts every ounce of emotion from an extended “Stray”. On reflection, nothing like the Velvets. Frame is an original; a Bowie fan, familiar with Dylan, happy to sound like a punk Julie London. Alastair McKay

Postcards from paradise…

When Roddy Frame emerged, aged 16, on Glasgow’s Postcard Records, his band was compared by label Svengali Alan Horne to the Velvet Underground. Fanciful, maybe, but Aztec Camera’s debut 45 announced a songwriter of some precocity.

That said, it’s a shame the poetic rush of the Postcard period was effectively abandoned after the first album, High Land, Hard Rain (9/10) (1983), which remains a career highlight. The youthful zest in “The Boy Wonders” and “Down The Dip” can’t be faked, and if the decision to bring in Mark Knopfler to produce the follow-up, Knife (6/10) (1984) added polish, it also removed the vim from a decent set of songs. In truth Knopfler’s production has aged reasonably well, but the cover of Van Halen’s “Jump” (a B-side extra) shows how Frame’s perverse streak could have been managed more creatively.

Love (1987) (7/10) gave Frame got his first Top 10 hit (“Somewhere in My Heart”), and contains one of his best songs (“How Men Are”) but, small irony, his most popular set is also the most manicured. The live version of “Killermont Street” (an escapist hymn to Glasgow’s bus station) points ahead to Frame’s reinvention as a solo artist, but there was a creative rebirth with Stray (8/10) (1990), the most inventive and durable Aztec Camera LP. Diverse, yes, but it’s exhilarating to hear Frame switching-up from plaintive balladry (“Then Over My Head”) to the BAD-influenced “Good Morning Britain”.

WEA had given up by the time of the Langer-Winstanley produced Frestonia (7/10) (1995), though it bears re-examination. Yet the pick of these fine Edsel reissues is Dreamland (1993) (8/10), a sweet, soulful album, produced by Ryuichi Sakamoto, and supplemented by a great live set from Ronnie Scott’s. Frame revisits the second Postcard 45, “Mattress Of Wire”, covers Fred Neil’s “Dolphins”, and extracts every ounce of emotion from an extended “Stray”.

On reflection, nothing like the Velvets. Frame is an original; a Bowie fan, familiar with Dylan, happy to sound like a punk Julie London.

Alastair McKay

Bobby Womack announces he’s suffering from Alzheimer’s

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Bobby Womack has revealed he's suffering from brain disorder Alzheimer’s. The 68-year-old, who released his first single in 1954, has admitted he struggles to recall the names of his songs and those of his collaborators. He said: “The doctor says there are signs of Alzheimer’s. It’s not ...

Bobby Womack has revealed he’s suffering from brain disorder Alzheimer’s.

The 68-year-old, who released his first single in 1954, has admitted he struggles to recall the names of his songs and those of his collaborators.

He said: “The doctor says there are signs of Alzheimer’s. It’s not bad yet but will get worse.

He added: “How can I not remember songs I wrote? It’s frustrating. I don’t feel together yet. Negative things come in my mind and it’s hard for me to remember sometimes.”

Womack, who beat colon cancer in May, released his most-recent album The Bravest Man In The Universe in 2012, which was co-produced by Blur’s Damon Albarn and XL Recordings co-founder Richard Russell.

He added: “The most embarrassing thing is I’ll be ready to announce Damon and can’t remember his last name.”

This could be in reference to his appearance at an awards ceremony in September when he called Albarn ‘Damon Osbourne’ in his acceptance speech.

Womack was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2009, following a career spanning more than 50 years. He released his first single in 1954 under the name Curtis Womack And The Womack Brothers.

Alzheimer’s is the most common form of dementia and worsens as it progresses, eventually leading to death. It was first described in 1906, and is prevalent in those over 65. By 2050, scientists believe around 1 in 85 people will suffer from the disease.

Ray Davies: “I get very emotional when I write”

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Ray Davies sheds light on his new projects, including an opera, a film and a solo album, in the new issue of Uncut, out on Thursday (January 3, 2013). The former Kinks frontman also explains the conflicting feelings he experiences when songwriting. Revealing what he goes through when he realises h...

Ray Davies sheds light on his new projects, including an opera, a film and a solo album, in the new issue of Uncut, out on Thursday (January 3, 2013).

The former Kinks frontman also explains the conflicting feelings he experiences when songwriting.

Revealing what he goes through when he realises he’s writing one of his great songs, Davies says: “It’s a moment of excessive emotion. And I do get very emotional when I write, sometimes… It’s just a chill you get.

“You think, ‘Ah, this is something somebody’s never done quite this way before, and it’s coming from me, and I have a voice.’ That’s what I find disturbing, and a release. To know that there is something still to discover.”

The new issue of Uncut, dated February 2013, is out on Thursday (January 3, 2013).

February 2013

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Before Melody Maker swept me off the street in the manner of a benevolent old codger taking a pallid waif into his kindly, white-haired care in something written to make you weep by the venerable Dickens, I worked for a bleak season or two in the mail order department of a bookstore near Piccadilly ...

Before Melody Maker swept me off the street in the manner of a benevolent old codger taking a pallid waif into his kindly, white-haired care in something written to make you weep by the venerable Dickens, I worked for a bleak season or two in the mail order department of a bookstore near Piccadilly Circus.

It was my habit in those days to take a late lunch in Ward’s Irish Pub, a famous drinking den of distant legend, a series of dark subterranean rooms beneath Piccadilly’s busy pavements. Ward’s one afternoon in September, 1973, was where I found out that Gram Parsons had died.

Someone had left a newspaper on the bar, opened to an inside page, where a story caught my attention, something about a rock star’s body found burning in the desert according to the headline. Whoever the rock star was, he clearly hadn’t been too famous if this small story, not much more than a footnote, was all the prominence the news of his passing had merited. But the circumstances of his death certainly invited investigation. I took a closer look and the next thing you know a jolt goes through me and I jerk like someone in an electric chair, the prison governor throwing a switch and the court’s reprieve arriving too late to save me from a trip to the yonder side of things. The rock star turned out to be Parsons, dead at 26 from an overdose. Calling Gram a ‘rock star’ was something of an exaggeration. The only place he’d been a star was in his wildest dreams. How many people reading the story would even have heard of him or the great albums he’d made? These included The Byrds’ Sweetheart Of The Rodeo, The Flying Burrito Brothers’ The Gilded Palace Of Sin and Burrito Deluxe, and his first solo LP, January 1973’s GP – Grievous Angel, finished just before he died, would come out posthumously. These were records that meant as much to me as anything by Dylan, the Stones, whoever. None of them sold during Gram’s lifetime, but his vision of what he called Cosmic American Music – a heady mix of rock, gospel, Southern soul, R’n’B and, most unfashionably then, country – has been vastly influential.

Astonishingly, the year The Beatles released Sgt Pepper and the Velvets, Jimi Hendrix and Pink Floyd released their mind-blowing debuts, Gram was rediscovering Hank Williams, Buck Owens and Merle Haggard, with hostile reactions from audiences, as his International Submarine Band colleague Ian Dunlop recounts in his excellent memoir, Breakfast In Nudie Suits. Country was for certain folk the most conservative of all forms of popular American music, synonymous in the public imagination with an unfortunate stereotype – men with big hats bawling into their beer, crude and unsophisticated – that made people look at you like you’d just joined the Ku Klux Klan if you admitted liking it. Gram railed against the caricature, tapped into the music’s dark, poetic traditions, inspiring what we call Americana, and making music that 40 years after his death and the distracting legend of it remains as beautiful and unforgettable as anything you’ll ever hear.

As Ryan Adams once put it, “If someone tells you they’ve got a cool record collection and they don’t have a Gram Parsons album in it, shoot ’em.”

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Gram Parsons “got into a maze with the Burrito Brothers”

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Gram Parsons' legendary solo career is examined in the new issue of Uncut, out on Thursday (January 3, 2013). The back-to-basics approach of the country-rock singer's acclaimed GP and Grievous Angel albums were in sharp contrast to the more psychedelic work of his previous group, The Flying Burrito...

Gram Parsons‘ legendary solo career is examined in the new issue of Uncut, out on Thursday (January 3, 2013).

The back-to-basics approach of the country-rock singer’s acclaimed GP and Grievous Angel albums were in sharp contrast to the more psychedelic work of his previous group, The Flying Burrito Brothers.

Parsons’ collaborator in his early band, The International Submarine Band, Ian Dunlop explains: “He’d got into a maze with the Burritos. The thing about the GP album is that he’s coming out of that maze wanting to make pure country music again.

“It’s country in the straight-ahead vein. A lot of the traditions and sentiments are pre-Bakersfield. It’s a late-’40s-and-early-’50s music that could roughly be classified as honky tonk.”

Uncut hunts down Parsons’ closest collaborators from the period to tell the story of the man who left The Byrds and the Burrito Brothers, and got kicked out of The Rolling Stones’ inner circle, before making his stunning last work.

The new issue of Uncut, dated February 2013, is out on Thursday (January 3, 2013).

Morrissey: “None of Bowie’s $20,000-a-day US guitarists had a grain of Mick Ronson’s natural style”

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Morrissey has paid tribute to guitarist Mick Ronson, best known for his work with David Bowie, in the new issue of Uncut. The former Smith has long been a fan of the guitarist, who produced his 1992 album Your Arsenal, and reveals the full extent of his admiration in the latest Uncut, out on Thur...

Morrissey has paid tribute to guitarist Mick Ronson, best known for his work with David Bowie, in the new issue of Uncut.

The former Smith has long been a fan of the guitarist, who produced his 1992 album Your Arsenal, and reveals the full extent of his admiration in the latest Uncut, out on Thursday (January 3, 2013).

“No matter how you juggle the words, Mick was not replaced in David’s life,” Morrissey tells Uncut. “None of David’s $20,000-a-day US guitarists had a single grain of Mick’s natural style, and even Eno only worked with David for 14 days. Mick had been David’s lifelong asset – no-one else.”

The whole story of Mick Ronson’s life is told in the new issue, with help from friends and collaborators, including wife Suzi Ronson, singer-songwriter Michael Chapman, Bowie producer Ken Scott and fellow Dylan’s Rolling Thunder Revue guitarist T-Bone Burnett.

The new Uncut, dated February 2013, is out on Thursday (January 3, 2013).

Uncut’s Top 30 comps, reissues and box sets of 2012

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Following on from yesterday's Top 75 new albums of 2012 post, here's our Top 30 compilations, reissues and box sets of 2012, with links to the original reviews where possible. Have a great Christmas and New Year, folks! 30 THE BEAT I Just Can't Stop It EDSEL 29 BILLY BRAGG & WILCO Mermaid Avenue NONESUCH 28 SIMPLE MINDS 5 x 5 EMI 27 MICHAEL CHAPMAN Rainmaker LIGHT IN THE ATTIC 26 VARIOUS ARTISTS Make It Your Sound Make It Your Scene: Vanguard Records & The 1960s Musical Revolution ACE 25 VARIOUS ARTISTS Country Funk 1969-1975 LIGHT IN THE ATTIC 24 DR FEELGOOD All Through The City (With Wilko 1974-1977) EMI 23 SENSATIONS’ FIX Music Is Painting In The Air RVNG INTL 22 ALEX CHILTON Free Again: The 1970 Sessions ACE 21 DAVID BOWIE The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars EMI 20 PAUL & LINDA MCCARTNEY Ram CONCORD 19 PALACE MUSIC Viva Last Blues DOMINO 18 VARIOUS ARTISTS Personal Space: Electronic Soul 1974-84 CHOCOLATE INDUSTRIES 17 VARIOUS ARTISTS Drive OST SONY CLASSICAL 16 AR KANE Complete Singles Collection ONE LITTLE INDIAN 15 TERRY RILEY A Rainbow In Curved Air ESOTERIC 14 REM Document EMI 13 RIDE Going Blank Again RIDE MUSIC 12 JERRY LEE LEWIS A Whole Lotta Jerry Lee Lewis SALVO 11 T.REX Electric Warrior: Deluxe Edition A&M 10 THE KINKS The Kinks At The BBC UNIVERSAL 9 PAUL SIMON Graceland SONY 8 ROXY MUSIC The Complete Studio Recordings 1972-1982 VIRGIN 7 LEE HAZELWOOD A House Safe For Tigers LIGHT IN THE ATTIC 6 VAN DYKE PARKS Song Cycle BELLA UNION 5 STEVE MILLER BAND Number 5 EDSEL 4 THE VELVET UNDERGROUND & NICO The Velvet Underground & Nico UNIVERSAL 3 BLUR 21 PARLOPHONE 2 MY BLOODY VALENTINE Loveless SONY 1 CAN The Lost Tapes MUTE

Following on from yesterday’s Top 75 new albums of 2012 post, here’s our Top 30 compilations, reissues and box sets of 2012, with links to the original reviews where possible.

Have a great Christmas and New Year, folks!

30 THE BEAT

I Just Can’t Stop It

EDSEL

29 BILLY BRAGG & WILCO

Mermaid Avenue

NONESUCH

28 SIMPLE MINDS

5 x 5

EMI

27 MICHAEL CHAPMAN

Rainmaker

LIGHT IN THE ATTIC

26 VARIOUS ARTISTS

Make It Your Sound Make It Your Scene: Vanguard Records & The 1960s Musical Revolution

ACE

25 VARIOUS ARTISTS

Country Funk 1969-1975

LIGHT IN THE ATTIC

24 DR FEELGOOD

All Through The City (With Wilko 1974-1977)

EMI

23 SENSATIONS’ FIX

Music Is Painting In The Air

RVNG INTL

22 ALEX CHILTON

Free Again: The 1970 Sessions

ACE

21 DAVID BOWIE

The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars

EMI

20 PAUL & LINDA MCCARTNEY

Ram

CONCORD

19 PALACE MUSIC

Viva Last Blues

DOMINO

18 VARIOUS ARTISTS

Personal Space: Electronic Soul 1974-84

CHOCOLATE INDUSTRIES

17 VARIOUS ARTISTS

Drive OST

SONY CLASSICAL

16 AR KANE

Complete Singles Collection

ONE LITTLE INDIAN

15 TERRY RILEY

A Rainbow In Curved Air

ESOTERIC

14 REM

Document

EMI

13 RIDE

Going Blank Again

RIDE MUSIC

12 JERRY LEE LEWIS

A Whole Lotta Jerry Lee Lewis

SALVO

11 T.REX

Electric Warrior: Deluxe Edition

A&M

10 THE KINKS

The Kinks At The BBC

UNIVERSAL

9 PAUL SIMON

Graceland

SONY

8 ROXY MUSIC

The Complete Studio Recordings 1972-1982

VIRGIN

7 LEE HAZELWOOD

A House Safe For Tigers

LIGHT IN THE ATTIC

6 VAN DYKE PARKS

Song Cycle

BELLA UNION

5 STEVE MILLER BAND

Number 5

EDSEL

4 THE VELVET UNDERGROUND & NICO

The Velvet Underground & Nico

UNIVERSAL

3 BLUR

21

PARLOPHONE

2 MY BLOODY VALENTINE

Loveless

SONY

1 CAN

The Lost Tapes

MUTE

The 51st Uncut Playlist Of 2012

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We seem to be posting a lot more lists than actual joined-up writing at the moment – Michael’s just put Uncut’s full Top 75 of 2012 on the website, with links, and is promising our Archive/Reissues chart tomorrow – but, hey, here’s another. Among some other good new arrivals, another strong recommendation for Parquet Courts: check them out here. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Parquet Courts – Light Up Gold (Dull Tools) 2 Atoms For Peace – Amok (XL) 3 Steve Mason – Monkey Minds In The Devil's Time (Double Six) 4 Johnny Marr – The Messenger (Warner Bros) 5 Various Artists – Change The Beat – The Celluloid Records Story 1980-1987 (Republic Of Music) 6 The Beatles – Abbey Road (Apple) 7 Purling Hiss – Water On Mars (Drag City) 8 The Traditional Fools – The Traditional Fools (In The Red) 9 Blue Gene Tyranny – Detours (Unseen Worlds) 10 Ensemble Pearl – Ensemble Pearl (Drag City) 11 Woodpigeon – Thumbtacks And Glue (Fierce Panda) 12 The Beatles – Help! (Parlophone) 13 Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Push The Sky Away (Bad Seed Ltd) 14 The Red Rippers – Over There… And Over Here (Paradise Of Bachelors) 15 Autechre – Exai (Warp) 16 Fela Kuti – The Best Of The Black President 2 (Knitting Factory) 17 Jessika Kenney & Eyvind Kang - The Face Of The Earth (Ideologic Organ)

We seem to be posting a lot more lists than actual joined-up writing at the moment – Michael’s just put Uncut’s full Top 75 of 2012 on the website, with links, and is promising our Archive/Reissues chart tomorrow – but, hey, here’s another. Among some other good new arrivals, another strong recommendation for Parquet Courts: check them out here.

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

1 Parquet Courts – Light Up Gold (Dull Tools)

2 Atoms For Peace – Amok (XL)

3 Steve Mason – Monkey Minds In The Devil’s Time (Double Six)

4 Johnny Marr – The Messenger (Warner Bros)

5 Various Artists – Change The Beat – The Celluloid Records Story 1980-1987 (Republic Of Music)

6 The Beatles – Abbey Road (Apple)

7 Purling Hiss – Water On Mars (Drag City)

8 The Traditional Fools – The Traditional Fools (In The Red)

9 Blue Gene Tyranny – Detours (Unseen Worlds)

10 Ensemble Pearl – Ensemble Pearl (Drag City)

11 Woodpigeon – Thumbtacks And Glue (Fierce Panda)

12 The Beatles – Help! (Parlophone)

13 Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Push The Sky Away (Bad Seed Ltd)

14 The Red Rippers – Over There… And Over Here (Paradise Of Bachelors)

15 Autechre – Exai (Warp)

16 Fela Kuti – The Best Of The Black President 2 (Knitting Factory)

17 Jessika Kenney & Eyvind Kang – The Face Of The Earth (Ideologic Organ)