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Willie Nelson hospitalised with ‘breathing problems’

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Country music legend Willie Nelson was forced to cancel a fundraising gig in Denver yesterday (August 19) after he was admitted to hospital with "breathing problems". The singer, who has released over 200 albums and has won seven Grammy Awards during his lengthy career, was scheduled to play at a charity event for the Dumb Friends League in Colorado, but had to scrap the commitment and be taken to a nearby medical facility for checks instead. A representative for the event revealed that the 79-year-old was "suffering from breathing problems due to the high altitude and emphysema", but no further information about Nelson's condition has yet been revealed. Nelson released his last studio album, 'Heroes', in May of this year. The LP featured covers of tracks including Coldplay's 'The Scientist' and Pearl Jam's 'Just Breathe', as well as his pro-cannabis song 'Roll Me Up', which featured Snoop Dogg. The singer recently insisted that legalising marijuana would save "a whole lotta" lives and money. The country singer told the Guardian that smoking weed wasn't "dangerous healthwise" and said it should be decriminalised. Asked whether the drug should be legalised, he replied: "It has to, because economically we need the money – why give it to criminals? Most people realise it's not a deadly drug like cocaine or cigarettes." Nelson, who was arrested in 2010 for marijuana possession, revealed earlier this year that he had turned down Roseanne Barr's offer to be her Presidential running mate.

Country music legend Willie Nelson was forced to cancel a fundraising gig in Denver yesterday (August 19) after he was admitted to hospital with “breathing problems”.

The singer, who has released over 200 albums and has won seven Grammy Awards during his lengthy career, was scheduled to play at a charity event for the Dumb Friends League in Colorado, but had to scrap the commitment and be taken to a nearby medical facility for checks instead.

A representative for the event revealed that the 79-year-old was “suffering from breathing problems due to the high altitude and emphysema”, but no further information about Nelson’s condition has yet been revealed.

Nelson released his last studio album, ‘Heroes’, in May of this year. The LP featured covers of tracks including Coldplay’s ‘The Scientist’ and Pearl Jam’s ‘Just Breathe’, as well as his pro-cannabis song ‘Roll Me Up’, which featured Snoop Dogg.

The singer recently insisted that legalising marijuana would save “a whole lotta” lives and money. The country singer told the Guardian that smoking weed wasn’t “dangerous healthwise” and said it should be decriminalised.

Asked whether the drug should be legalised, he replied: “It has to, because economically we need the money – why give it to criminals? Most people realise it’s not a deadly drug like cocaine or cigarettes.”

Nelson, who was arrested in 2010 for marijuana possession, revealed earlier this year that he had turned down Roseanne Barr’s offer to be her Presidential running mate.

Top Gun director Tony Scott jumps to death

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British filmmaker Tony Scott, director of Top Gun, has died after jumping from a bridge in Los Angeles. Scott, 68, was seen parking his car and jumping from the Vincent Thomas Bridge over Los Angeles Harbor at 12.30pm local time on Sunday (August 19). According to official sources quoted in the Daily Breeze, Scott leapt "without hesitation". A suicide note was found inside Scott's car, a black Toyota Prius, said US Coast Guard Lt Jennifer Osburn. A representative from the LA County Coroner's Office told the BBC: "We have no reason to believe it was not a suicide." The director, whose full name was Antony David Scott, grew up in the north of England with his older brother Ridley Scott, who also became a famous filmmaker. After beginning his career shooting TV commercials, Tony Scott went on to direct 16 full-length movies, including 1986's Top Gun, 1987's Beverly Hills Cop II, 1990's Days Of Thunder and 1995's Crimson Tide. His most recent film was 2010's Unstoppable, which starred Denzel Washington and Chris Pine. In addition, Scott served as an executive producer on several US TV series including The Good Wife, which begins its fourth season next month (September). He also directed two music videos, for Kenny Loggins's 1986 hit 'Danger Zone', which famously appeared in Top Gun, and George Michael's 1988 US Number One 'One More Try'. Tony Scott is survived by his third wife, Donna, and their twin sons, Frank and Max. The couple met when she appeared alongside Tom Cruise in Scott's 1990 movie Days Of Thunder and married four years later.

British filmmaker Tony Scott, director of Top Gun, has died after jumping from a bridge in Los Angeles.

Scott, 68, was seen parking his car and jumping from the Vincent Thomas Bridge over Los Angeles Harbor at 12.30pm local time on Sunday (August 19). According to official sources quoted in the Daily Breeze, Scott leapt “without hesitation”.

A suicide note was found inside Scott’s car, a black Toyota Prius, said US Coast Guard Lt Jennifer Osburn. A representative from the LA County Coroner’s Office told the BBC: “We have no reason to believe it was not a suicide.”

The director, whose full name was Antony David Scott, grew up in the north of England with his older brother Ridley Scott, who also became a famous filmmaker. After beginning his career shooting TV commercials, Tony Scott went on to direct 16 full-length movies, including 1986’s Top Gun, 1987’s Beverly Hills Cop II, 1990’s Days Of Thunder and 1995’s Crimson Tide. His most recent film was 2010’s Unstoppable, which starred Denzel Washington and Chris Pine.

In addition, Scott served as an executive producer on several US TV series including The Good Wife, which begins its fourth season next month (September). He also directed two music videos, for Kenny Loggins’s 1986 hit ‘Danger Zone’, which famously appeared in Top Gun, and George Michael’s 1988 US Number One ‘One More Try’.

Tony Scott is survived by his third wife, Donna, and their twin sons, Frank and Max. The couple met when she appeared alongside Tom Cruise in Scott’s 1990 movie Days Of Thunder and married four years later.

Pizza Hut and Home Depot deny copying The Black Keys

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Pizza Hut and Home Depot have denied that they produced adverts that used songs by The Black Keys without their permission. In June of this year, Dan Auerbach and drummer Patrick Carney, as well as producer Danger Mouse, submitted a lawsuit alleging that Pizza Hut and its advertising agency used "significant portions" of 'Gold On The Ceiling' in an ad for Cheesy Bites Pizza while Home Depot used the track 'Lonely Boy' in an advert for power tools. According to Entertainment Weekly, however, both companies separately denied the allegations in court documents filed last week in Los Angeles, and have both asked a judge to have the band pay their attorneys' legal fees if they win the case. Previously, The Black Keys' lawyers described the use of the songs "a brazen and improper effort to capitalise on [the] plaintiffs' hard-earned success" and claimed that they sent letters to both companies last in May asking them to stop showing the commercials. The Black Keys released their seventh studio album, 'El Camino', in December last year. In June, the band revealed they were set to go into the studio this year to begin work on a follow-up, although hinted that a new LP was unlikely to be released until 2013. The band are also set to release their own documentary. Noah Abrams, the director behind the yet-untitled film, has said he had no plans to shoot a straight band documentary and revealed that the movie is a "buddy movie with perhaps the greatest soundtrack of all time". The Black Keys will be playing this month's Reading and Leeds Festivals. You can watch the video for their recent single 'Gold On The Ceiling' by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking. Picture credit: John Peets/Press

Pizza Hut and Home Depot have denied that they produced adverts that used songs by The Black Keys without their permission.

In June of this year, Dan Auerbach and drummer Patrick Carney, as well as producer Danger Mouse, submitted a lawsuit alleging that Pizza Hut and its advertising agency used “significant portions” of ‘Gold On The Ceiling’ in an ad for Cheesy Bites Pizza while Home Depot used the track ‘Lonely Boy’ in an advert for power tools.

According to Entertainment Weekly, however, both companies separately denied the allegations in court documents filed last week in Los Angeles, and have both asked a judge to have the band pay their attorneys’ legal fees if they win the case.

Previously, The Black Keys’ lawyers described the use of the songs “a brazen and improper effort to capitalise on [the] plaintiffs’ hard-earned success” and claimed that they sent letters to both companies last in May asking them to stop showing the commercials.

The Black Keys released their seventh studio album, ‘El Camino’, in December last year. In June, the band revealed they were set to go into the studio this year to begin work on a follow-up, although hinted that a new LP was unlikely to be released until 2013.

The band are also set to release their own documentary. Noah Abrams, the director behind the yet-untitled film, has said he had no plans to shoot a straight band documentary and revealed that the movie is a “buddy movie with perhaps the greatest soundtrack of all time”.

The Black Keys will be playing this month’s Reading and Leeds Festivals. You can watch the video for their recent single ‘Gold On The Ceiling’ by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking.

Picture credit: John Peets/Press

Animal Collective stream Centipede Hz ahead of official release

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Animal Collective are currently streaming their brand new album, 'Centipede Hz', ahead of its official release. The Baltimore band don't release their 10th studio LP until September 3, but fans can hear the LP now at www.radio.myanimalhome.net – the band's online radio station which they launched...

Animal Collective are currently streaming their brand new album, ‘Centipede Hz’, ahead of its official release.

The Baltimore band don’t release their 10th studio LP until September 3, but fans can hear the LP now at www.radio.myanimalhome.net – the band’s online radio station which they launched last month. You can also watch the video for their new single ‘Today’s Supernatural’ by clicking at the bottom of the page.

Speaking previously about the album – which is the follow-up to 2009’s ‘Merriweather Post Pavilion’ and follows the release of 2010’s “visual album” ‘ODDSAC’ – band member Brian Weitz said they had “gone back to their roots” on the new record and moved away from the sample-heavy direction of their most recent releases.

Asked how it differed from their previous albums, Weitz said: “We all moved back to Baltimore, the last few records we’ve written apart and by sending each other stuff. This time we all wanted to write in the same room together. We went back to our roots and we got a little practice space in this barn on Josh’s [Dibb – fellow band member] mum’s property and it was like being a garage band again.”

He continued: “‘Merriweather Post Pavilion’ was a very sample-heavy record, we made it piece by piece in the studio, we constructed it. This one we wrote as a rock band in a room and we wanted to record it that way.”

Animal Collective will come to the UK and Ireland for a short tour this November, playing:

London Roundhouse (November 4)

Dublin Vicar Street (6)

Glasgow ABC1 (7)

Manchester Warehouse Project (8)

The Fall and The Undertones to play John Peel fundraiser

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The Fall and The Undertones are to play a gig in honour of late Radio 1 DJ John Peel. Both bands will perform at Epic Studios on October 10 as a launch event for the new John Peel Festival Of New Music. The show will also see Peel favourites Bearsuit and Dingus Khan play before the three day festi...

The Fall and The Undertones are to play a gig in honour of late Radio 1 DJ John Peel.

Both bands will perform at Epic Studios on October 10 as a launch event for the new John Peel Festival Of New Music.

The show will also see Peel favourites Bearsuit and Dingus Khan play before the three day festival itself kicks off in earnest with over 50 acts performing across 10 venues across the city from October 11-13.

Peel’s wife Sheila said: “We’ve been developing the new venue for some time in Stowmarket and it’s great that this is happening to give us some much need funds.

“I’m so pleased that The Fall and The Undertones have agreed to play as everybody knows that they were two bands very close to John’s heart, and we should raise some money for the new venue. It’ll also be a great gig.”

Money collected from the gig is being donated to the John Peel Centre for Creative Arts in Stowmarket.

Undertones bass player Michael Bradley added: “It’s fairly obvious we owe a lot to John and it’s an honour to be asked to support the centre. Also looking forward to seeing The Fall play live and getting Mark E Smith to sign my Fall CD.”

Peel who died in 2004, had a collection of about 25,000 vinyl albums.

Pussy Riot trial verdict announced

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Three members of Pussy Riot have been found guilty of hooliganism motivated by religious hatred. The verdict was delivered to Maria Alyokhina, 24, Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, 22, and Yekaterina Samutsevich, 29 at Moscow's Khamovnichesky Court today (August 17). Prosecutors had requested a three-year prison term in the event of a guilty verdict. The sentence is expected later today (August 17) The three women were detained after they, along with other member of the band, staged a flashmob-style performance where they sang a song called 'Holy Shit' at the altar of Moscow’s Christ The Saviour Cathedral on February 21. They were protesting against the Orthodox Christian church’s support for president Vladimir Putin. Earlier today, Russian opposition leader Sergey Udaltsov was detained by police as he approached the police cordon and attempted to enter the court building. Speaking as the nine-day trial concluded, band member Tolokonikovoy had said: "This is a trial of the whole government system of Russia, which so likes to show its harshness toward the individual, its indifference to his honour and dignity… If this political system throws itself against three girls… it shows this political system is afraid of truth." She added: "Maybe they think it wouldn't be wrong to try us for speaking against Putin and his system, but they can't say that because it's been forbidden." Pussy Riot member Maria Alekhina later told the court: "I am not scared of you. I'm not scared of lies and fiction, or the badly formed deception that is the verdict of this so-called court. Because my words will live, thanks to openness… When thousands of people will read and watch this, this freedom will grow with every caring person who listens to us in this country."

Three members of Pussy Riot have been found guilty of hooliganism motivated by religious hatred.

The verdict was delivered to Maria Alyokhina, 24, Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, 22, and Yekaterina Samutsevich, 29 at Moscow’s Khamovnichesky Court today (August 17). Prosecutors had requested a three-year prison term in the event of a guilty verdict. The sentence is expected later today (August 17)

The three women were detained after they, along with other member of the band, staged a flashmob-style performance where they sang a song called ‘Holy Shit’ at the altar of Moscow’s Christ The Saviour Cathedral on February 21. They were protesting against the Orthodox Christian church’s support for president Vladimir Putin.

Earlier today, Russian opposition leader Sergey Udaltsov was detained by police as he approached the police cordon and attempted to enter the court building.

Speaking as the nine-day trial concluded, band member Tolokonikovoy had said: “This is a trial of the whole government system of Russia, which so likes to show its harshness toward the individual, its indifference to his honour and dignity… If this political system throws itself against three girls… it shows this political system is afraid of truth.”

She added: “Maybe they think it wouldn’t be wrong to try us for speaking against Putin and his system, but they can’t say that because it’s been forbidden.”

Pussy Riot member Maria Alekhina later told the court: “I am not scared of you. I’m not scared of lies and fiction, or the badly formed deception that is the verdict of this so-called court. Because my words will live, thanks to openness… When thousands of people will read and watch this, this freedom will grow with every caring person who listens to us in this country.”

James Yorkston – I Was A Cat From A Book

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Alt.folkie calms down, but still delivers some classics... Since the release of his debut album, Moving Up Country, 10 years ago, each new release from James Yorkston has featured only the most finely nuanced stylistic variations. The Fifer and erstwhile member of the Fence Collective has cornered the (small, organic) market in rueful, ale-stained poetry, lovingly muttered over folkish tunes that roll and creak like some old galleon. At first hearing, his first album of new material since When The Haar Rolls In (2008) seems reluctant to wander far from familiar terrain. Opener “Catch” is archetypal: the overlapping tumble of words, the gently unravelling melody, the warm, mossy mix of vibraphone, bass and strings, the rippling piano, redolent of Van Morrison’s Avalonian ’80s recordings. All are quintessentially Yorkston. Yet delve deeper and there is change, and perhaps progress. For a start his semi-regular band The Athletes have scattered (it’s Olympic year, after all), replaced by a new cast of collaborators. The change in personnel has encouraged a shift in musical priorities. Where Yorkston’s last album was precisely drawn, the follow-up is looser and less beholden to strict arrangements, and more willing to let the musicians dictate the pace. It’s a fair exchange. If there’s nothing here as epic and truly breath-snaring as the title track on When The Haar Rolls In – though “Catch” and the beautifully poised “Sometimes The Act Of Giving Love” come close – within Yorkston’s established parameters I Was A Cat From A Book roams further than perhaps any of his previous records. It’s an album of gentle extremes, in both mood and style. On “The Fire And The Flames”, Jon Thorne’s double bass rumbles and saws but everything else is encased in whispers, Yorkston’s voice recalling Thom Yorke in its quavering intensity. It’s both unsettling and immensely powerful. “This Line Says” is another slow crawl, sinister and vaguely malevolent, stitched together with violas and violins. Only rarely in the past has Yorkston summoned up such dark drama. In contrast, elsewhere he’s at his most playful and happily abandoned. “Border Song” is positively frantic, a headlong rush into adventure set to drunken woodwind, skipping piano and skittish drums. “Just As Scared”, a nimble little duet with Jill O’Sullivan, is wonderfully light on its toes, with a hint of The Lovin’ Spoonful at their most carefree in the breezy clarinet and bobbing rhythm. “Spanish Ants”, meanwhile, is as entertaining as it is impenetrable. Never the most versatile singer, Yorkston frames his voice with great ingenuity throughout, skilfully weaving together contrasting textures. On “Kath With Rhodes” (one of those bluntly literal titles: it features Kathryn Williams and a Fender Rhodes), violin, clarinet and harmonium mingle with soft-pedalling electronica to create a shuffling, insistent soundscape for his typically engaging words. Yorkston has become a truly masterful lyricist, forever suggesting intimacy and revelation through forensic detail while leaving the wider picture nicely fuzzy. When he does finally opt for directness, it’s to address the fearful spectre of illness striking far too close to home on “A Short Blues”, a devastatingly simple lament at unflinching circumstances. “I hear that a dear old friend has passed/Taken by the same thing that has its claws in you/But I remember times when we felt nothing but the sun upon us”. On the closing “I Can Take All This”, a kind of folk-punk valediction which is both defiant and defeated, Yorkston sings of “feeling very mortal right now”. He sounds it, too – but thrillingly so. Although I Was A Cat From A Book may find him loosening his belt ever so slightly, when it comes to weaving frailty and truth into a warmly affirming musical tapestry, Britain’s premier Peat poet is sticking firmly to his guns. Graeme Thomson Q+A James Yorkston Why go for a looser approach this time? In the past I’ve spent a long, long time on arrangements, but I’ve learned that more relaxed sounds can be as rewarding. I relied a lot on the ingenuity of the musicians. How did you pick the musicians? Some of The Athletes were too ill to play. I’d fallen out with some of the others, so I needed another band. I’d done some sessions with Jon Thorne, the bass player, and he recommended Luke Flowers and John Ellis. I hadn’t even met them before we arrived at the studio! It was a roll of the die, but I knew the songs were strong. Where did the album title spring from? From my little girl. She comes through in the morning and says, “What did you dream about?” So I make something up: “I dreamt I was hungry. I had to go downstairs, and when I got there the room was full of satsumas.” Then I ask what she dreamed about. She says, “I was a cat in a book”, and I have to guess what cat she was. I like it. It has meaning. INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

Alt.folkie calms down, but still delivers some classics…

Since the release of his debut album, Moving Up Country, 10 years ago, each new release from James Yorkston has featured only the most finely nuanced stylistic variations. The Fifer and erstwhile member of the Fence Collective has cornered the (small, organic) market in rueful, ale-stained poetry, lovingly muttered over folkish tunes that roll and creak like some old galleon.

At first hearing, his first album of new material since When The Haar Rolls In (2008) seems reluctant to wander far from familiar terrain. Opener “Catch” is archetypal: the overlapping tumble of words, the gently unravelling melody, the warm, mossy mix of vibraphone, bass and strings, the rippling piano, redolent of Van Morrison’s Avalonian ’80s recordings. All are quintessentially Yorkston.

Yet delve deeper and there is change, and perhaps progress. For a start his semi-regular band The Athletes have scattered (it’s Olympic year, after all), replaced by a new cast of collaborators. The change in personnel has encouraged a shift in musical priorities. Where Yorkston’s last album was precisely drawn, the follow-up is looser and less beholden to strict arrangements, and more willing to let the musicians dictate the pace. It’s a fair exchange.

If there’s nothing here as epic and truly breath-snaring as the title track on When The Haar Rolls In – though “Catch” and the beautifully poised “Sometimes The Act Of Giving Love” come close – within Yorkston’s established parameters I Was A Cat From A Book roams further than perhaps any of his previous records. It’s an album of gentle extremes, in both mood and style. On “The Fire And The Flames”, Jon Thorne’s double bass rumbles and saws but everything else is encased in whispers, Yorkston’s voice recalling Thom Yorke in its quavering intensity. It’s both unsettling and immensely powerful. “This Line Says” is another slow crawl, sinister and vaguely malevolent, stitched together with violas and violins. Only rarely in the past has Yorkston summoned up such dark drama. In contrast, elsewhere he’s at his most playful and happily abandoned. “Border Song” is positively frantic, a headlong rush into adventure set to drunken woodwind, skipping piano and skittish drums. “Just As Scared”, a nimble little duet with Jill O’Sullivan, is wonderfully light on its toes, with a hint of The Lovin’ Spoonful at their most carefree in the breezy clarinet and bobbing rhythm. “Spanish Ants”, meanwhile, is as entertaining as it is impenetrable.

Never the most versatile singer, Yorkston frames his voice with great ingenuity throughout, skilfully weaving together contrasting textures. On “Kath With Rhodes” (one of those bluntly literal titles: it features Kathryn Williams and a Fender Rhodes), violin, clarinet and harmonium mingle with soft-pedalling electronica to create a shuffling, insistent soundscape for his typically engaging words. Yorkston has become a truly masterful lyricist, forever suggesting intimacy and revelation through forensic detail while leaving the wider picture nicely fuzzy. When he does finally opt for directness, it’s to address the fearful spectre of illness striking far too close to home on “A Short Blues”, a devastatingly simple lament at unflinching circumstances. “I hear that a dear old friend has passed/Taken by the same thing that has its claws in you/But I remember times when we felt nothing but the sun upon us”.

On the closing “I Can Take All This”, a kind of folk-punk valediction which is both defiant and defeated, Yorkston sings of “feeling very mortal right now”. He sounds it, too – but thrillingly so. Although I Was A Cat From A Book may find him loosening his belt ever so slightly, when it comes to weaving frailty and truth into a warmly affirming musical tapestry, Britain’s premier Peat poet is sticking firmly to his guns.

Graeme Thomson

Q+A

James Yorkston

Why go for a looser approach this time?

In the past I’ve spent a long, long time on arrangements, but I’ve learned that more relaxed sounds can be as rewarding. I relied a lot on the ingenuity of the musicians.

How did you pick the musicians?

Some of The Athletes were too ill to play. I’d fallen out with some of the others, so I needed another band. I’d done some sessions with Jon Thorne, the bass player, and he recommended Luke Flowers and John Ellis. I hadn’t even met them before we arrived at the studio! It was a roll of the die, but I knew the songs were strong.

Where did the album title spring from?

From my little girl. She comes through in the morning and says, “What did you dream about?” So I make something up: “I dreamt I was hungry.

I had to go downstairs, and when I got there the room was full of satsumas.” Then I ask what she dreamed about. She says, “I was a cat in a book”, and I have to guess what cat she was. I like it.

It has meaning.

INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

Hear alternative take of Elliott Smith’s “Angeles”

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Throughout August, American record label Kill Rock Stars are making available previously unreleased tracks by singer/songwriter Elliott Smith. The label has already released outtakes of "Punch And Judy" and "Alameda", and have now issued an alternative version of "Angeles", from Smith's 1997 album, Either/Or. Kill Rock Stars are also releasing Smith's complete discography digitally this month, packaged together as 'The Indie Years', at: http://www.killrockstars.com/elliottsmith/

Throughout August, American record label Kill Rock Stars are making available previously unreleased tracks by singer/songwriter Elliott Smith.

The label has already released outtakes of “Punch And Judy” and “Alameda”, and have now issued an alternative version of “Angeles”, from Smith’s 1997 album, Either/Or.

Kill Rock Stars are also releasing Smith’s complete discography digitally this month, packaged together as ‘The Indie Years’, at: http://www.killrockstars.com/elliottsmith/

The end of The Clash – by Joe Strummer

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This month’s issue of Uncut (September 2012, Take 184) features Joe Strummer on the cover – inside is an in-depth exploration of his secret history, after The Clash split up to his redemption in the late ’90s. To complement this, our archive feature this week finds Strummer looking at the demi...

This month’s issue of Uncut (September 2012, Take 184) features Joe Strummer on the cover – inside is an in-depth exploration of his secret history, after The Clash split up to his redemption in the late ’90s. To complement this, our archive feature this week finds Strummer looking at the demise of The Clash – from their epic Sandinista! album to their bitter disintegration. This excerpt is taken from a longer piece in the September 1999 (Take 28) issue of Uncut. Words: Gavin Martin

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A plan to “hit up the singles scene” with a blitz of five or six releases throughout 1980 stalled at the first hurdle. The sufferation ballad “Bankrobber”, featuring Jamaican DJ/toaster Mikey Dread, was recorded after a show in Manchester in February and delivered to CBS boss Mo Oberstein. In Strummer’s words the song’s lyric “really twisted his clock” and he refused to release it. But, after it had sold steadily on Dutch import throughout the summer, Oberstein relented. The single was released in August, reaching Number 11 in the charts.

Nineteen-eighty was a year of constant touring and another management split from Blackhill (“I don’t know why, man,” says Joe. “They probably sent us a large bill for their services.”) With no-one apart from former Blackhill employee, press agent and full-time Clash fellow traveller Kosmo Vinyl to guide them, and with Paul Simonon looking after the accounts, The Clash roamed wild and free.

When they arrived back in New York during a touring break in May, the band were able to indulge their deepest, some would say barmiest, musical excesses, gleefully slipping the leash after the taut discipline that had charactersied the London Calling sessions.

“That tour of America, we were really stoking, 20 hot gigs in a row. Can you imagine it? Gigs can be sort of so-so, but these were all hot. Flaming hot. Twenty of them – bam, bam, bam, one after another. We hit New York, and we blasted straight into the studio. This is something that I must recommend to other groups. Normally after a tour, we used to go home and lie down for a few weeks. But we came off that tour full of go.

“We had nothing written. You don’t write on tour, it takes all your concentrating to make the gig – that’s survival technique. Afterwards, you run around town to find interesting hipsters and go to all the interesting spots. You got to go to every hotspot until everything has closed down. The adrenalin is furious. You’re wired as hell.

“Anyway, at the end of that tour we’d had 20 hits, 20 cities in a row. We didn’t particularly know anywhere in New York, so we went into Electric Ladyland. Every day, we just showed up and wrote phantasmagorical stuff. Everything was done in first takes, and worked out 20 minutes beforehand. What we did was go to the core of what we are about – creating – and we did it on the fly and had three weeks unadulterated joy. We were in New York and I never went out.”

He’s exhaling a joint now, thinking about what he’s just said.

“I never went out in New York! I can’t believe it. Maybe once, to get a beer. But it was the most beautiful time ever. To be at 8th street on New York, in Jimi Hendrix’s studio, everything on a roll.

“You know what New York was like then? You’d get up at 10 in the morning and you’d get a cab to go to the studio. Rocketing downtown, the driver would stick his hand back with a grass joint. Cool as fuck! I was thinking, ‘This is New York.’ We’d play until we couldn’t stand up. And it was good. I stand by that album. I’m proud of all our records. Even the crap ones.”

The album that resulted was the triple vinyl opus, Sandinista!, named after the revolutionary Nicaraguan group Moe Armstrong had told them about.

Its six sides were diverse to the point of collapse – gospel, swing, jigs, skanking reggae, kiddie chorus versions of “Guns Of Brixton” and “Career Opportunities” and an experimental instrumental cut-up modeled on The Beatles’ “Revolution 9” called “Mensforth Hill”, a waltz, a calypso, even strummer singing scat on Mose Allison’s “Look Here”. Punk’s “no future” credo had been swapped for an all-governing “no rules” policy.

Amid the sprawling indulgence, however, there were some bright moments, notably “The Magnificent Seven” – a radical departure that was perhaps the fist Britrock/rap crossover. Written by Jones after a record-buying trip to Brooklyn, the track pointed towards the direction his post-Clash career would take with Big Audio Dynamite.

“Jonesy was always on the button when it came to new things,” says Strummer now. “That stuff we made the week after he came back from Brooklyn with those Sugarhill records – it all still rocks. This was 1980. And I’ve got to say the next year, when we played Bonds in New York, the Brooklyn crowd bottled Grandmaster Flash off our stage. Now they’re all ‘hip hop wibbly wibbly wop, it don’t stop,’ with the funny handshakes and all that. But when we presented it to them then, they bottled it off. Grandmaster Flash doing ‘The Message’, and it was bottled off.”

The group’s practical politics were never more evident than in their hard won album-pricing policy. As with the double London Calling, the triple-LP, Sandinista!, sold for the price of a single album – but only after CBS had demanded a commensurate cut in royalties.

“They said, ‘If you a want to put out Sandinista! you have to do it for no royalties.’ So we said, ‘OK, shove it up your bum, that’s what we’ll do. You think you’re calling our bluff – we’ll do it.’”

Of course, they got even more angry when Bruce Springsteen went to them and sad, ‘How come those Limey tosspots are doing a triple album and I can’t do a double?’ and then went off and did The River.”

For the two tracks with Mikey Dread, they had flown down to Jamaica to record at Channel One studios in Kingston. It was their first time on the island since writing the second album. Strummer remembers it as a particularly hairy period. Fun, but hairy.

“We had to run for it. We recorded ‘Junco Partner’, and it sounded great. All the Dreads were outside cheering. I was sitting at the piano figuring out the chords for the next song. Mikey tapped me on the shoulder and said, ‘Quick we’ve got to go. The drugmen are coming to kill everyone!”

“We didn’t know, but we were meant to pay tithe of honour to these guys. Of course, being disorganised as ever, we didn’t have a bean between us. So we jumped in a Renault station wagon – all of us, several other people and all our guitars – and we drove off down the road. But it weren’t no…Harder They Come-style getaway. It was more Jacques Tati”

But how much of Sandinista! – described in Uncut last year as one of the greatest long-players of all time, a paragon of eclecticism and an index of possibilities – does Strummer think really stands up to scrutiny now?

“All of it,” he responds without hesitation, adding: “Ask the skinheads in Perth. They take acid and listen to it all night, the whole way through.”

During the Sandinista! recording sessions in New York, The Clash met up with director Martin Scorsese, who gave the group small parts as extras in the Robert De Niro vehicle he was then making – The King Of Comedy. Not that the band made the most of their golden opportunity to star alongside one of contemporary cinema’s greats. “We loused that one big time,” says an honest Strummer, still regretful after all these years. “Nil points for us that day. We were meant to interfere with the De Niro and [Sandra] Bernhard characters as they came down the boulevard. There was nothing said and suddenly there’s Robert De Niro. Today, I’d know – ‘Hey, get in the picture!’ – but we just kind of stood there, bumbling around.”

In early 1981, there was nowhere left to turn. Strummer persuaded the others to accept Bernard Rhodes back as manager. “We were drifting and I saw my chance. We wanted some direction to the thing because Sandinista! had been a sprawling six-sided…masterpiece. You got to get out there and fight like sharks – it’s a piranha pool. And I wanted to reunite the old firm, like in The Wild Bunch. Get the old gang together again and ride again. I knew we had something in us.

“We didn’t know anything about anything. We were buffoons in the business world. Even Mick wanted him back, because he’s not stupid and he had to admire Rhodes’ ability to make things happen and, even better, to get things over.

“Did we notice the difference? Immediately. It was all his idea to go into major cities with a crew and stay there. We were always noticing that: going into town and out again was kind of unsatisfactory. So it was Bernie’s idea to go in there and do seven nights – New York, Sydney, Tokyo. And we did them. The shows were great because you could hang out with people, get a feel for the place, and get the true idiots coming every night.

“When we played Paris, the English punks would come over and they got to know the French punks. There was some nice scenes in the back alleys.”

Throughout the latter half of 1980, right up to November 1981, The Clash toured constantly in Europe and America but never in Britain. During their time away, the riots raged in Liverpool, London, Manchester and Bradford. As Thatcher’s policies hit hard in the inner cities, the violent confrontations depicted on The Clash’s apocalypse-anticipating debut album actually appeared to be happening.

In July 1981, The Specials’ chart-topping “Ghost Town” captured the mood of urban despair, but the prevailing trends were New Romanticism and bright electro pop – Depeche Mode, Heaven 17, Adam And The Ants, Spandau Ballet and Duran Duran. In this climate, The Clash were derided as failed rebels, irreverent poseurs, deserters even. Worse, they were – to deploy a derogatory term coined by Wah!’s Pete Wylie – rockist. All those nasty guitars in an era synonymous with synthesisers? Wrong time, wrong place, mate. The Clash were about to be dismissed as brutally as the punks had dismissed the hippies five years before.

With Rhodes back in the driving seat, internal divisions within the band grew. Strummer concurs with lenswoman Pennie Smith’s observation that the spats were like lovers’ quarrels – they ended as soon as they began – but the signs of a real split were beginning to appear. In December 1981 Topper Headon was fined £500 after being busted for heroin possession at Heathrow airport.

“Unless you accept treatment, you will be the best drummer in the grave-yard,” warned the sentencing magistrate. Topper’s addiction signaled the beginning of the end for The Clash. It still pains Strummer to talk about how the drummer was sacked.

“Bernie said, ‘He’s a junkie, he has to go.’ Ignorance ruled the day. We knew nothing about heroine.”

In fact, it was during the sessions for 1982’s Combat Rock at New York’s Electric Ladyland, when Headon’s addition was becoming critical, that the drummer devised the brilliant “Rock The Casbah” – a song that Strummer dedicates to him every time The Mescaleros play it and which provide them with their one and only American Top 10 single in November ’82.

“I saw it with my own eyes – Topper Headon’s great talent,” says an awestruck Strummer, who has been unaware of the drummer’s versatility up to that point. “I swear in 20 minutes he’d laid down the whole thing: bass, drums, piano. He laid them all himself. It took other people by surprise. Jonesy really wasn’t into that tune when we released it as a single. We had to persuade him a bit. I think he thought it was a bit comedic.

“When you’re concentrating on the latest masterpiece you’ve carefully put together and someone comes up with something so fast, it can be a little…disorientating,” he goes on, the hint of a sneer creeping into his voice.

Jones’ “latest masterpiece” for The Clash’s fifth album was “Should I Stay Or Should I Go”, which would eventually top the British charts in 1991 after being revived for a Levi’s advert. Yes later, Paul Simonon would recall that, when the song was recorded, Jones and Strummer were barely on speaking terms. It’s now read as a direct comment by the guitarist on his future in the band.

Did Joe hear it that way?

“No comment.”

Didn’t he tell you what it was about?

“You do understand what ‘no comment’ means, don’t you?”

Despite the Sandinista!-style failed experiments – the Allen Ginsberg guest spot on “Ghetto Defendent”, the half-cocked rap of “Overpowered By Funk” – the best of Combat Rock showed The Clash reasserting their core values, under siege but fighting.

Far from being a fatuous exercise in gung-ho chic, “Straight To Hell” evoked a mood of fatalism and despair that ranged from dole queue Britain to Vietnam, evincing a rare blend of bruised anger and compassion for victims of war, oppression, and organised human stupidity. Though Strummer’s defiant “Know Your Rights” battle-cry received scant airplay and failed to make the singles chart in April the following month as a British fleet sailed toward The Falklands, Combat Rock itself reached Number Two.

Once-disillusioned fans rallied round the Clash flag. Reviewing the album in NME, journalist X Moore – also frontman for skinhead radical soul activists The Redskins – declared it “an inadvertent counterblast to The Falklands, too important to be lumped with the other dross, by a band too important to tear themselves apart”.

According to Strummer, making the album amid simmering tensions and the usual organizational chaos had been an often exhausting and dispiriting experience.

“We were so stupid”, he says. “Things got jammed up again. The company needed another album, so we ended up recording on tour. At first, it was just us knocking it out in Electric Ladyland, trying to mix it, and it sucked. We toured Australia, and each night after the show in Sydney we’d go down and mix the album. But, of course, that sucked as well. So we got back home and then we just bought [producer] Glyn Johns in. We had to beg him, really, because he didn’t like producing stuff he hadn’t recorded. He gave it a go and got it into a listenable shape. He saved it at the 11th hour, really. But otherwise no one knew what they were doing. They say record companies fashion shit, but in our case it was always a shambles waiting to happen.”

On the eve of the Know Your Rights tour in April ’82, Strummer went missing. Before I’ve managed to finish the sentence, “Like a rat leaving a sinking ship,” he’s on the defensive.

“I never left the group!” he insists, setting the record straight – a mythical interlude in a story chock-full of apocryphal rumours – once and for all. “I fucked off to Paris because Bernie Rhodes told me to. He had forgotten about the fact that we had a huge walk-up. It’s something I still have. A walk-up means people who don’t buy tickets for your shows up-front. You mightn’t sell a huge advance. But with a walk-up you’ll sell out, piss easy. For me, it’s a real honourable thing to have. It means you’ve got hipsters in the crowds who don’t plan things in advance. That’s the crowd you want.

“Bernie forgot about it,” he continues. “There was a gig in Inverness that wasn’t sold out, but we could have filled it easy. He panicked and said, ‘Someone’s got to break their arm or something, you’ll have to disappear.’ I felt like disappearing anyway. I was supposed to call him when I went away but I thought, ‘This has got to look good.’ So I really did disappear.

On Strummer’s return from Paris, Topper Headon was sacked from the band and old hand Terry Chimes brought back in. That’s when Joe realised The Clash were as good as finished.

“I don’t think, honest to God, we ever played a good gig after that,” is his honest assessment now of The Clash’s final phase. “Except for one night in New Jersey, we played a good one, but I reckon that was just by the law of averages. Out of a 30-gig tour, one night was OK – you’ve got to say it’s a fluke.”

At the end of 1982, supporting The Who on their farewell stadium tour, Strummer saw The Clash’s future. And it was dinosaur-shaped.

“We did eight gigs in super-stadiums, all the biggest joints – LA Coliseum, Oakland Coliseum, Shea Stadium. I realised that was where we were heading and it didn’t look good. We just had to crash and die. I never said nothing to nobody about it, but I was in deep shit with that in my mind.”

Pennie Smith reckons The Clash fell apart in front of her eyes, as she shot the cover photo for Combat Rock on a deserted railway line in Thailand in March ’82. But first with Chimes and then with Pete Howard on drums, Strummer, Jones and Simonon fought on through a strained American tour in 1983, playing their last show together at the three-day US festival on May 28, 1983.

That September, a Clash press release was issued declaring Mick Jones had “strayed from the original idea of The Clash” and had been duly sacked.

“It was all my fault. I let Bernie take over,” admits Strummer, ever ready to play martyr for the cause. “I think Bernie wanted to be like Malcom [McLaren] and find out what it’s like to be a musician in your own right [Rhodes’ former employer had, by summer ’83, reinvented himself as a pop star]. That threw us. We were musicians who never thought about being managers. So when the manager wanted to be musician, we weren’t prepared for it.

“Bernie wanted to arrange and produce and shape material. I suppose it must be boring selling stuff that he had no control over. It must be frustrating, like the coach of the football team standing on the sidelines shouting, ‘Pass it you c***!’”

They must want to run in and do it themselves.

“It’s the same with the music world. If you’re doing all the multitude of things these guys do, obviously you’re going to start wanting to mess around with the lyrics, get that middle-eight over there. But I didn’t see that at the time. Bernie had this sort of rule of terror, because he wanted to maintain his position. Perhaps that’s what human beings are truly like. It always seems to go back to the Borgias – power struggles, the machinations of holding on to power. What we should have done after Combat Rock was take a year off. I don’t know why nobody turned around and said, ‘Look, you’ve just knocked out 16 sides of long-playing vinyl in five years, you got to take a rest.’ Kurt Cobain could have done with that advice, too. Songs don’t come often. I’m with The Stone Roses – let’s leave a good five years between each record.”

And yet, even with Jones gone, there was little time to rest. Strummer returned with back-to-basics street punk incarnation of The Clash 1984. Waging war on pretty boy pop, they went on a busking tour and announced that drugs were out.

“That was Bernie’s new regime. It didn’t last long. After two weeks, we were gagging for it.”

Dramatic changes in Strummer’s personal life – he became a father for the first time, his dad died suddenly and his mother was diagnosed with terminal cancer – undoubtedly allowed Rhodes to gain increased control. A sense of desperation was fuelling him as the band seemed to be imploding, defeated by forces they’d set out to conquer. He recalls writing “This Is England”, the last great song to go under The Clash’s name, on one string of a ukulele, “feeling like a no-good talentless fuck”. He didn’t even get to hear Rhodes’ atrocious mix of the Cut The Crap album until it was released in November, 1985.

By then, The Clash were nearly over. They were finally declared dead in December ’85. Almost immediately, Strummer went to see Jones in the Bahamas, where he was working with Talking Heads’ Tina Weymouth. Over the course of a long weekend, they got burgled, witnessed a near-fatal car smash and ended up in a crack house looking to score weed. Strummer’s apologies were accepted, and personal difficulties were patched up. But his old partner was doing fine with BAD and didn’t want to relive the good old bad old days.

Indeed, subsequent attempts to reform The Clash have always been initiated by Strummer, not Jones, to which he readily admits.

“Yeah,” he says, “but I’m not that big on pride, you know? Mick had more occasion to be proud because of what happened and the way it had ended. I had to eat humble pie. I deserved to.”

Steely Dan’s Donald Fagen to release new solo album

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Steely Dan Donald Fagen is scheduled to release a new solo album, Sunken Condos, on October 16, according to the musician's website. Sunken Condos will be Fagen's fourth solo album. His first three solo albums were The Nightfly (1982), Kamakiriad (1993) and Morph The Cat (2006). Sunken Condos will feature eight Fagen originals and one cover, which Fagen describes on his website as "an Ashkenazi recasting of Isaac Hayes' Out Of The Ghetto". Musicians on the record include long-term Steely Dan guitarist Jon Herington, the Steely Dan Horns and Steely Dan bassist Freddie Washington. Recently, Fagen played along side Boz Skaggs and Michael McDonald in Dukes Of September.

Steely Dan Donald Fagen is scheduled to release a new solo album, Sunken Condos, on October 16, according to the musician’s website.

Sunken Condos will be Fagen’s fourth solo album. His first three solo albums were The Nightfly (1982), Kamakiriad (1993) and Morph The Cat (2006).

Sunken Condos will feature eight Fagen originals and one cover, which Fagen describes on his website as “an Ashkenazi recasting of Isaac Hayes‘ Out Of The Ghetto”.

Musicians on the record include long-term Steely Dan guitarist Jon Herington, the Steely Dan Horns and Steely Dan bassist Freddie Washington.

Recently, Fagen played along side Boz Skaggs and Michael McDonald in Dukes Of September.

The Horrors ‘channel Hawkwind’ for new album

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The Horrors have revealed that they will start work on their fourth album as soon as the festival season is over. Guitarist Josh Hayward told NME that the band expect to go off in a new direction for the follow-up to Skying. He said: "We've started some new material but it's still gestating. I've ...

The Horrors have revealed that they will start work on their fourth album as soon as the festival season is over.

Guitarist Josh Hayward told NME that the band expect to go off in a new direction for the follow-up to Skying.

He said: “We’ve started some new material but it’s still gestating. I’ve been telling people the new album is going to sound like Hawkwind, but I’m sure it’ll take a big tangent when we get in there. That’s what usually happens. It’s never a premeditated thing – we just see what’s happening when we play together.”

The sessions will take place at The Horrors’ newly-expanded studio, a former loading bay in East London. And Hayward added that Radiohead had become unexpected benefactors to the band. “Ed O’Brien from Radiohead bought the Young Turks people next door their own studio, so they’re out and we’ve got all this space and we’ll be able to jam out for ages,” said Hayward. “That’s why Ed O’Brien is our new favourite person.”

Hayward was speaking after playing Budapest’s Sziget festival last weekend. They will return to the UK to play the Reading and Leeds festivals next weekend. But he added that Leeds last year will be difficult to top. He said: “When we played Leeds last year, the power cut out during ‘Still Life’, right at the crescendo of the song. The sound went off, the lights went down and no-one knew what to do.

“I was running around trying to get Faris a megaphone. Then the crowd just started singing and for five minutes we sang the chorus with them. It was amazing – I walked away from Leeds feeling it was my favourite festival in the world ever. Maybe I’ll pour water over all the plug sockets before we go on this year to try and make it happen again.”

Paul McCartney sends message of support to Pussy Riot

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Paul McCartney has sent a message of support to Pussy Riot, the Russian feminist punk band who face three years in prison for staging a protest against President Vladimir Putin inside a Moscow church. The message, which appears on the homepage for McCartney's website, reads: "I'm writing to show m...

Paul McCartney has sent a message of support to Pussy Riot, the Russian feminist punk band who face three years in prison for staging a protest against President Vladimir Putin inside a Moscow church.

The message, which appears on the homepage for McCartney’s website, reads:

“I’m writing to show my support for you at this difficult time. I would like you to know that I very much hope the Russian authorities would support the principle of free speech for all their citizens and not feel that they have to punish you for your protest. Many people in the civilised world are allowed to voice their opinions and as long as they do not hurt anyone in doing so I believe this is the best way forward for all societies. I hope you can stay strong and believe that I and many others like me who believe in free speech will do everything in our power to support you and the idea of artistic freedom.”

The Pussy Riot case, which has been seen as a watermark of the Vladimir Putin’s desire to crack down on dissent in Russia, has attracted global attention, with Madonna throwing her weight behind the three women at her concert in Moscow this week, and a host of artists including Franz Ferdinand’s Alex Kapranos, Jarvis Cocker, St Vincent, and the Red Hot Chili Peppers backing their plight.

Judge Marina Syrova is due to begin reading her verdict on Friday [August 17]. According to The Telegraph, a spokesman for the district court hearing the case said today [August 16] that Syrova has been placed under state protection after receiving threats from Pussy Riot supporters.

Soundgarden confirm their comeback album will be released in November

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Soundgarden have confirmed that their long-awaited comeback studio album will be released in November. The grunge veterans, who split up in 1996, last released an album in that same year and have been working on its follow-up since they reunited in 2010. Speaking to Rolling Stone about their new album, guitarist Kim Thayil promised that the band's as yet untitled new LP will be "little weird". He also confirmed a release date of November 12 in the UK and November 13 in the US for the record. Asked about the album, Thayil said: "It re-establishes that we still rock, we're still heavy, and we're still a little weird." He also confirmed that tracks titled 'Blood On The Valley Floor' and 'A Thousand Days Before' will appear on the record. Speaking about the latter, Thayil described it as "a little Indian thing and some chicken-pickin. We call it 'country and eastern.'" Earlier this year, Soundgarden singer Chris Cornell told NME that the band's follow-up to 1996's 'Down On The Upside' would "pick up where they left off". He said of this: "We have an album coming out in the fall. It's kind of hard to describe, it's sort of picking up where we left off. There's a lot of different feels on the album. We're a band where every single member contributes music so that makes it very diverse. It's a very rich album with a lot of different moods to it." He continued: "I'm looking forward to putting out a whole album, where you get a collection of songs. We're an album-orientated band, so I look forward to getting into long-form listening. That seems to have disappeared over the last 10 years, people seem to know be more into one song at a time."

Soundgarden have confirmed that their long-awaited comeback studio album will be released in November.

The grunge veterans, who split up in 1996, last released an album in that same year and have been working on its follow-up since they reunited in 2010.

Speaking to Rolling Stone about their new album, guitarist Kim Thayil promised that the band’s as yet untitled new LP will be “little weird”. He also confirmed a release date of November 12 in the UK and November 13 in the US for the record.

Asked about the album, Thayil said: “It re-establishes that we still rock, we’re still heavy, and we’re still a little weird.” He also confirmed that tracks titled ‘Blood On The Valley Floor’ and ‘A Thousand Days Before’ will appear on the record. Speaking about the latter, Thayil described it as “a little Indian thing and some chicken-pickin. We call it ‘country and eastern.'”

Earlier this year, Soundgarden singer Chris Cornell told NME that the band’s follow-up to 1996’s ‘Down On The Upside’ would “pick up where they left off”.

He said of this: “We have an album coming out in the fall. It’s kind of hard to describe, it’s sort of picking up where we left off. There’s a lot of different feels on the album. We’re a band where every single member contributes music so that makes it very diverse. It’s a very rich album with a lot of different moods to it.”

He continued: “I’m looking forward to putting out a whole album, where you get a collection of songs. We’re an album-orientated band, so I look forward to getting into long-form listening. That seems to have disappeared over the last 10 years, people seem to know be more into one song at a time.”

The 33rd Uncut Playlist Of 2012

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Twenty mostly new records for your delectation this week, with particular emphasis on: the Michael Chapman full and free download from Black Dirt Studios’ consistently excellent “Natch” project; Cody ChesnuTT’s plush, upscale return; Corin Tucker tapping back into the punch of earlyish Sleater-Kinney; Jeff Lynne’s weird forensic re-recordings of his greatest hits; that Crazy Horse boot I wrote about yesterday; and Rangda, of course. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Michael Chapman & The Woodpiles – Natch 7 (http://natchmusic.tumblr.com/) 2 Neil Young & Crazy Horse – Live at the Red Rocks Amphitheatre, Morrison, CO; August 5, 2012 (Bootleg) 3 Menomena – Moms (Barsuk) 4 The Be Good Tanyas – Collection (Nettwerk) 5 The Pyramids – Otherworldly (Disko B) 6 Cody ChesnuTT – Landing On A Hundred (One Little Indian) 7 Yo La Tengo – Painful (Matador) 8 Jason Lytle – Dept Of Disappearance (Anti-) 9 Rickie Lee Jones – The Devil You Know (Concord) 10 Martha Wainwright – Come Home To Mama (Drowned In Sound/V2) 11 Tim Maia – Nobody Can Live Forever: The Existential Soul Of Tim Maia (Luaka Bop) 12 Mark Eitzel – Don’t Be A Stranger (Décor) 13 David Hidalgo/Mato Nanji/Luther Dickinson – Three Skulls And The Truth (Provogue) 14 Corin Tucker Band – Kill My Blues (Kill Rock Stars) 15 Diana Krall – Glad Rag Doll (Verve) 16 Jeff Lynne/Electric Light Orchestra – Mr. Blue Sky: The Very Best Of ELO (Frontiers) 17 Trin Tran – Dark Radar (God?/Drag City) 18 Hladowski & Joynes – The Wild Wild Berry (Bo’Weavil) 19 The Touré-Raichel Collective – The Tel Aviv Session (Cumbancha) 20 Rangda – Formerly Extinct (Drag City)

Twenty mostly new records for your delectation this week, with particular emphasis on: the Michael Chapman full and free download from Black Dirt Studios’ consistently excellent “Natch” project; Cody ChesnuTT’s plush, upscale return; Corin Tucker tapping back into the punch of earlyish Sleater-Kinney; Jeff Lynne’s weird forensic re-recordings of his greatest hits; that Crazy Horse boot I wrote about yesterday; and Rangda, of course.

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

1 Michael Chapman & The Woodpiles – Natch 7 (http://natchmusic.tumblr.com/)

2 Neil Young & Crazy Horse – Live at the Red Rocks Amphitheatre, Morrison, CO; August 5, 2012 (Bootleg)

3 Menomena – Moms (Barsuk)

4 The Be Good Tanyas – Collection (Nettwerk)

5 The Pyramids – Otherworldly (Disko B)

6 Cody ChesnuTT – Landing On A Hundred (One Little Indian)

7 Yo La Tengo – Painful (Matador)

8 Jason Lytle – Dept Of Disappearance (Anti-)

9 Rickie Lee Jones – The Devil You Know (Concord)

10 Martha Wainwright – Come Home To Mama (Drowned In Sound/V2)

11 Tim Maia – Nobody Can Live Forever: The Existential Soul Of Tim Maia (Luaka Bop)

12 Mark Eitzel – Don’t Be A Stranger (Décor)

13 David Hidalgo/Mato Nanji/Luther Dickinson – Three Skulls And The Truth (Provogue)

14 Corin Tucker Band – Kill My Blues (Kill Rock Stars)

15 Diana Krall – Glad Rag Doll (Verve)

16 Jeff Lynne/Electric Light Orchestra – Mr. Blue Sky: The Very Best Of ELO (Frontiers)

17 Trin Tran – Dark Radar (God?/Drag City)

18 Hladowski & Joynes – The Wild Wild Berry (Bo’Weavil)

19 The Touré-Raichel Collective – The Tel Aviv Session (Cumbancha)

20 Rangda – Formerly Extinct (Drag City)

Elton John’s bassist Robert Wayne Birch dies aged 56

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Robert Wayne Birch, Elton John's longtime bass player, has died at the age of 56. Birch's body was discovered yesterday morning (August 15) around the corner from his home in Los Angeles. It is thought he died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, although police have yet to confirm this. According to TMZ, Los Angeles County Assistant Coroner Chief Ed Winter has said that Birch's death is being ''investigated as a possible suicide'', although no suicide note has been discovered as yet. Birch began playing live with Elton John in 1992 and has contributed bass parts to a large chunk of the singer's recent recorded output, including his acclaimed 1997 album "Made In England" and 2004's "Peachtree Road". He also played live and recorded with a swathe of artists during his career, including Brian Wilson, Sheryl Crow, Courtney Love, Rufus Wainwright and Stevie Wonder. Birch is survived by his wife, Michele, and a son, Jonathan. Pic credit: Getty Images

Robert Wayne Birch, Elton John‘s longtime bass player, has died at the age of 56.

Birch’s body was discovered yesterday morning (August 15) around the corner from his home in Los Angeles. It is thought he died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, although police have yet to confirm this.

According to TMZ, Los Angeles County Assistant Coroner Chief Ed Winter has said that Birch’s death is being ”investigated as a possible suicide”, although no suicide note has been discovered as yet.

Birch began playing live with Elton John in 1992 and has contributed bass parts to a large chunk of the singer’s recent recorded output, including his acclaimed 1997 album “Made In England” and 2004’s “Peachtree Road”.

He also played live and recorded with a swathe of artists during his career, including Brian Wilson, Sheryl Crow, Courtney Love, Rufus Wainwright and Stevie Wonder.

Birch is survived by his wife, Michele, and a son, Jonathan.

Pic credit: Getty Images

Kate Bush to collaborate with Outkast’s Big Boi?

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Outkast's Big Boi has revealed that he has been talking to singer Kate Bush and has hinted that they may be planning a collaboration. The rapper tweeted last night (August 15) that he had been in contact with the singer, writing: "Just got off the phone with Kate Bush!" When fans then pressed him to ask if the pair were collaboration, the rapper said: "Stay tuned..... ooooowwww!" Big Boi has frequently said he would like to work with the singer, saying as recently as June of this year: "I want her [Bush] to co-produce something with me. We'd produce a song and write it from scratch. I'd rather get her in a room and not have a plan and just let it come organically – it's not like I've got a song and I'll just be like, 'I want you to sing this part right here.'" Kate Bush is set to re-enter the UK Top 10 this weekend with a remix of her hit single "Running Up That Hill" after the track was featured in the Olympics closing ceremony. Bush herself had been rumoured to be making an appearance at the ceremony, but the singer, who last performed live in 1979, did not appear in the end. Earlier this summer, Big Boi revealed that he plans to release his new album, Vicious Lies And Dangerous Rumors on November 13 in the US and November 12 in the UK.

Outkast’s Big Boi has revealed that he has been talking to singer Kate Bush and has hinted that they may be planning a collaboration.

The rapper tweeted last night (August 15) that he had been in contact with the singer, writing: “Just got off the phone with Kate Bush!” When fans then pressed him to ask if the pair were collaboration, the rapper said: “Stay tuned….. ooooowwww!”

Big Boi has frequently said he would like to work with the singer, saying as recently as June of this year: “I want her [Bush] to co-produce something with me. We’d produce a song and write it from scratch. I’d rather get her in a room and not have a plan and just let it come organically – it’s not like I’ve got a song and I’ll just be like, ‘I want you to sing this part right here.'”

Kate Bush is set to re-enter the UK Top 10 this weekend with a remix of her hit single “Running Up That Hill” after the track was featured in the Olympics closing ceremony.

Bush herself had been rumoured to be making an appearance at the ceremony, but the singer, who last performed live in 1979, did not appear in the end.

Earlier this summer, Big Boi revealed that he plans to release his new album, Vicious Lies And Dangerous Rumors on November 13 in the US and November 12 in the UK.

Ry Cooder – Election Special

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Ryland’s points a righteous finger at the “deacons in the High Church of the Next Dollar”... In a recording career that stretches back more than four decades, Ry Cooder has never before made an album as immediate as Election Special. And yet, in numerous ways, this politically charged song cycle is right in the sweet spot of the LA-based master guitarist, musical archeologist, late-blooming songwriter and lifelong iconoclast. Following an 18 year hiatus from solo projects, during which time he focused on film music, the Buena Vista Social Club and one-off collaborations, Cooder reemerged as inspired as ever with his “Southern California trilogy”: 2005’s Chavez Ravine, 2007’s My Name Is Buddy and 2008’s I, Flathead. In their scholarly but humour-laced examinations of various disenfranchised individuals and communities delivered via arcane musical modes, and embedded with implicit sociopolitical messages, these LPs foreshadowed an impulse that came front and center on last year’s Pull Up Some Dust And Sit Down and kicks into high gear with this new record. Cranked out in a series of unrehearsed, live, single-take performances in the living room of engineer Martin Pradler’s house in the Valley, Election Special is an impassioned screed against the dumbing down of America. But this is an uncommonly persuasive screed, because it’s set up not as polemic but rather as a series of vignettes, its harsh judgments lurking within sharply drawn narratives in which not a word is wasted. Cooder avoids preaching to the converted by opting not to preach at all – not in any conventional way, at least. Instead, he creates and inhabits three-dimensional characters whose beliefs and opinions span the political spectrum of America in 2012. Set for release a week before the Republican Convention, Election Special comes out of the blocks with a kick and a snarl. Accompanying himself on a prewar Regal Domino guitar, which rattles when it’s played, with son Joachim clattering away on his drum kit, Cooder gets right in character, croaking anxiously, “Boss Mitt Romney went for a ride/Pulled up on the highway side/Tied me down up on the roof/Boss I hollered woof woof woof”. Based on a story that hit earlier this year revealing that the Republican candidate had once taken a family trip with his dog lashed to the roof of the car, “Mutt Romney Blues” is the musical equivalent of a political cartoon, a barbed but light-hearted way to get into some extremely heavy subject matter. If the brilliantly conceived and executed “Brother Is Gone”, which follows, has an antecedent, it lies in the Randy Newman songbook somewhere between Sail Away and Good Ole’ Boys, character-driven song cycles that employ irony and empathy in equal measure. Here, Cooder puts himself in character as oil tycoon Charles Koch, who, with his brother David, has poured tens of millions into poisoning the minds of the citizenry in an obsessive effort to run Obama out of office on a rail. In this fable, Cooder relocates Robert Johnson’s crossroads to Wichita, where young Charlie and Davy eagerly make a deal with Satan. “You will be exalted in the evil works of men/High power rollin’ over land and sea”, Evil Incarnate promises. “But some dark night I’ll be coming ’round again/And take one of you down back to hell with me”. The song follows the brothers as they proceed to lay waste to the land and populace while fattening their wallets, but Cooder sings it in a wounded voice accompanied by the poignant plucking of his mandolin, its rueful tone representing the brothers’ legions of victims even as the point of view in the lyric remains that of Charlie. It’s a brilliant move, as Cooder, whose early albums were frequently described by reviewers as collections of Depression-era songs, comes up with a great song for this Depression. Cooder wrote and recorded “The Wall Street Part Of Town” during the Pull Up Some Dust… sessions but decided it was “too boisterous” for that album of country- and folk-styled original songs – which tells you that Election Special, though it grew out of its immediate predecessor, is a very different animal. The ironically carefree “Guantanamo” (unintentionally, I’m sure) recalls Jackson Browne’s “Boulevard”, if only because Cooder’s cascading guitar bears certain similarities to his pal David Lindley’s riff on the earlier track. “Cold Cold Feeling”, presented in the manner of a T-Bone Walker-style slow-blues lament, puts the listener in Obama’s shoes as he paces the halls of the White House in the dead of night. “If you never been President then you don’t know how it feels”, the Commander in Chief muses in the voice of weary old bluesman, “These stray dog Republicans always snappin’ at my heels”. It’s followed by “Going To Tampa”, a sprightly old-time country tune in which a Republican conventioneer salivates with anticipation as he gets ready to “shout hallelujah in the evening” and to “get my ashes hauled”. On “Kool-Aid”, the album’s second instant classic, Cooder employs the eerily atmospheric feel of his film work to create something unprecedented. In this noir setting, he gets inside the head of a young man who unthinkingly accepts the Bush administration’s propaganda manifesto that war is “a righteous thing”, so he dutifully heads off the other side of the world, locked and loaded, ready to take “a stand against black, brown, yellow and tan”. He returns home to find his job gone, along with his hope. “All I got is just about gone”, he laments in a defeated voice. “Kool-Aid, I drank your Kool-Aid”. The son of liberal folkies who owned plenty of Woody Guthrie records, Cooder appropriates the vanished form of the Joe Hill-style traditional workers’ song for “The 90 And The 9”, finding it a relevant way to depict the 99 percent of today, including America’s embattled union workers. He goes from dread to defiance on the closing “Take Your Hands Off It”, brandishing his trusty old Strat like a weapon and snarling, “Get your bloody hands off the peoples of the world/And your war machine and your corporation thieves/That lets you keep your job and pays your dirty salary /Take your hands off us, you know we don’t belong to you”. What Cooder told me about Chavez Ravine in 2005 could stand as well for his urgent and inventive new album. “It’s a goddamn good accomplishment”, he said with pride. “This gets there, as far as I’m concerned”. Bud Scoppa Q&A RY COODER It’s tricky making an overtly political album without getting dogmatic, but something about these songs and sounds pulls you in. I have to find little storylines. I have to have something I can play and sing, in some style or some instrumental point of view – a country tune or a blues tune – updating these things that I grew up listening to, these Depression-era songs and whatnot. The way I think these songs can work is if you don’t ponder over it too hard, because the tunes wanna have a spontaneous-combustion effect. What I want to do is get a certain attitude in the voice, and I can only do that once. By take two, I’m startin’ to think about it. By take three, I’m startin’ to map it out – it’s gone. It’s spoiled, y’see? So I need to get through this fast. When did it hit you that you wanted to make this record? I finished Pull Up Some Dust And Sit Down and just kept going, and it seemed the more I did it, the better I got at it, like anything. It’s an acting job. You put yourself into the spirit of the thing, the character of the thing, such as Obama being scared or the guy going to Tampa to get laid [laughs]. Like, who am I today? I think I wanna be Ira Louvin when I sing this. If I can do that and channel those people, it’s as though all these singers and musicians and different kinds of cats are right behind your head urging you on. It’s a useful notion. I’m 65; I’ve been listening to this shit all my life, and playing it, since I was a little tiny kid, startin’ with Woody at age five. It’s like your hand is being guided. I’m not trying to say, “Here goes Ry Cooder again”. That’s awful claustrophobic – we don’t want that. We wanna get way beyond that, off into other sounds. It’s channeling, I guess, and it’s very handy, because then you feel it. The release is well timed. I hope people discover it. I hope so. Although who can say anymore? We’re talking about an arcane pursuit. I mean, making records, are you kidding me? Some people would say, “Why are you doing this?” I would say that it’s the only thing I like to do. I’m finally where I’d like to be in my ability. It only took fucking forever, 60-odd years of trying to get good at this, for God’s sakes. So what else would I do, whether or not people ever hear it or buy it? When I get ’em, I give ’em away to people. I know they’re not gonna buy the damn things. But we’ll see. Where do you stand on Obama? We all worked hard for him and voted for him the first time, and he did put the face of change there, and he’s a great orator, and he seemed to offer the thing that people needed the most, which was hope. People felt encouraged, everybody I knew. So what’s gonna happen now? If he loses and Mutt takes over, then that’s it. With the Koch brothers running things and these right-wing think tanks and the churches behind them, you’ve got it coming from all sides. I just don’t know what kind of shot we have. But if anybody asks me, I quote Pete Seeger, who was overheard to say, “I have no hope, I could be wrong.” I put that in two of these songs, because that was startling coming from Pete, who was the most optimistic person you’d ever wanna meet – until recently. He always felt that the people would make a difference, and that justice would win. So I put my money on Pete, ’cause he knows. Put it in your pipe and smoke it. INTERVIEW: BUD SCOPPA Pic credit: Joachim Cooder

Ryland’s points a righteous finger at the “deacons in the High Church of the Next Dollar”…

In a recording career that stretches back more than four decades, Ry Cooder has never before made an album as immediate as Election Special. And yet, in numerous ways, this politically charged song cycle is right in the sweet spot of the LA-based master guitarist, musical archeologist, late-blooming songwriter and lifelong iconoclast. Following an 18 year hiatus from solo projects, during which time he focused on film music, the Buena Vista Social Club and one-off collaborations, Cooder reemerged as inspired as ever with his “Southern California trilogy”: 2005’s Chavez Ravine, 2007’s My Name Is Buddy and 2008’s I, Flathead.

In their scholarly but humour-laced examinations of various disenfranchised individuals and communities delivered via arcane musical modes, and embedded with implicit sociopolitical messages, these LPs foreshadowed an impulse that came front and center on last year’s Pull Up Some Dust And Sit Down and kicks into high gear with this new record. Cranked out in a series of unrehearsed, live, single-take performances in the living room of engineer Martin Pradler’s house in the Valley, Election Special is an impassioned screed against the dumbing down of America. But this is an uncommonly persuasive screed, because it’s set up not as polemic but rather as a series of vignettes, its harsh judgments lurking within sharply drawn narratives in which not a word is wasted. Cooder avoids preaching to the converted by opting not to preach at all – not in any conventional way, at least. Instead, he creates and inhabits three-dimensional characters whose beliefs and opinions span the political spectrum of America in 2012.

Set for release a week before the Republican Convention, Election Special comes out of the blocks with a kick and a snarl. Accompanying himself on a prewar Regal Domino guitar, which rattles when it’s played, with son Joachim clattering away on his drum kit, Cooder gets right in character, croaking anxiously, “Boss Mitt Romney went for a ride/Pulled up on the highway side/Tied me down up on the roof/Boss I hollered woof woof woof”. Based on a story that hit earlier this year revealing that the Republican candidate had once taken a family trip with his dog lashed to the roof of the car, “Mutt Romney Blues” is the musical equivalent of a political cartoon, a barbed but light-hearted way to get into some extremely heavy subject matter.

If the brilliantly conceived and executed “Brother Is Gone”, which follows, has an antecedent, it lies in the Randy Newman songbook somewhere between Sail Away and Good Ole’ Boys, character-driven song cycles that employ irony and empathy in equal measure. Here, Cooder puts himself in character as oil tycoon Charles Koch, who, with his brother David, has poured tens of millions into poisoning the minds of the citizenry in an obsessive effort to run Obama out of office on a rail. In this fable, Cooder relocates Robert Johnson’s crossroads to Wichita, where young Charlie and Davy eagerly make a deal with Satan. “You will be exalted in the evil works of men/High power rollin’ over land and sea”, Evil Incarnate promises. “But some dark night I’ll be coming ’round again/And take one of you down back to hell with me”. The song follows the brothers as they proceed to lay waste to the land and populace while fattening their wallets, but Cooder sings it in a wounded voice accompanied by the poignant plucking of his mandolin, its rueful tone representing the brothers’ legions of victims even as the point of view in the lyric remains that of Charlie. It’s a brilliant move, as Cooder, whose early albums were frequently described by reviewers as collections of Depression-era songs, comes up with a great song for this Depression.

Cooder wrote and recorded “The Wall Street Part Of Town” during the Pull Up Some Dust… sessions but decided it was “too boisterous” for that album of country- and folk-styled original songs – which tells you that Election Special, though it grew out of its immediate predecessor, is a very different animal. The ironically carefree “Guantanamo” (unintentionally, I’m sure) recalls Jackson Browne’s “Boulevard”, if only because Cooder’s cascading guitar bears certain similarities to his pal David Lindley’s riff on the earlier track. “Cold Cold Feeling”, presented in the manner of a T-Bone Walker-style slow-blues lament, puts the listener in Obama’s shoes as he paces the halls of the White House in the dead of night. “If you never been President then you don’t know how it feels”, the Commander in Chief muses in the voice of weary old bluesman, “These stray dog Republicans always snappin’ at my heels”. It’s followed by “Going To Tampa”, a sprightly old-time country tune in which a Republican conventioneer salivates with anticipation as he gets ready to “shout hallelujah in the evening” and to “get my ashes hauled”.

On “Kool-Aid”, the album’s second instant classic, Cooder employs the eerily atmospheric feel of his film work to create something unprecedented. In this noir setting, he gets inside the head of a young man who unthinkingly accepts the Bush administration’s propaganda manifesto that war is “a righteous thing”, so he dutifully heads off the other side of the world, locked and loaded, ready to take “a stand against black, brown, yellow and tan”. He returns home to find his job gone, along with his hope. “All I got is just about gone”, he laments in a defeated voice. “Kool-Aid, I drank your Kool-Aid”.

The son of liberal folkies who owned plenty of Woody Guthrie records, Cooder appropriates the vanished form of the Joe Hill-style traditional workers’ song for “The 90 And The 9”, finding it a relevant way to depict the 99 percent of today, including America’s embattled union workers. He goes from dread to defiance on the closing “Take Your Hands Off It”, brandishing his trusty old Strat like a weapon and snarling, “Get your bloody hands off the peoples of the world/And your war machine and your corporation thieves/That lets you keep your job and pays your dirty salary /Take your hands off us, you know we don’t belong to you”.

What Cooder told me about Chavez Ravine in 2005 could stand as well for his urgent and inventive new album. “It’s a goddamn good accomplishment”, he said with pride. “This gets there, as far as I’m concerned”.

Bud Scoppa

Q&A

RY COODER

It’s tricky making an overtly political album without getting dogmatic, but something about these songs and sounds pulls you in.

I have to find little storylines. I have to have something I can play and sing, in some style or some instrumental point of view – a country tune or a blues tune – updating these things that I grew up listening to, these Depression-era songs and whatnot. The way I think these songs can work is if you don’t ponder over it too hard, because the tunes wanna have a spontaneous-combustion effect. What I want to do is get a certain attitude in the voice, and I can only do that once. By take two, I’m startin’ to think about it. By take three, I’m startin’ to map it out – it’s gone. It’s spoiled, y’see? So I need to get through this fast.

When did it hit you that you wanted to make this record?

I finished Pull Up Some Dust And Sit Down and just kept going, and it seemed the more I did it, the better I got at it, like anything. It’s an acting job. You put yourself into the spirit of the thing, the character of the thing, such as Obama being scared or the guy going to Tampa to get laid [laughs]. Like, who am I today? I think I wanna be Ira Louvin when I sing this. If I can do that and channel those people, it’s as though all these singers and musicians and different kinds of cats are right behind your head urging you on. It’s a useful notion. I’m 65; I’ve been listening to this shit all my life, and playing it, since I was a little tiny kid, startin’ with Woody at age five. It’s like your hand is being guided. I’m not trying to say, “Here goes Ry Cooder again”. That’s awful claustrophobic – we don’t want that. We wanna get way beyond that, off into other sounds. It’s channeling, I guess, and it’s very handy, because then you feel it.

The release is well timed. I hope people discover it.

I hope so. Although who can say anymore? We’re talking about an arcane pursuit. I mean, making records, are you kidding me? Some people would say, “Why are you doing this?” I would say that it’s the only thing I like to do. I’m finally where I’d like to be in my ability. It only took fucking forever, 60-odd years of trying to get good at this, for God’s sakes. So what else would I do, whether or not people ever hear it or buy it? When I get ’em, I give ’em away to people. I know they’re not gonna buy the damn things. But we’ll see.

Where do you stand on Obama?

We all worked hard for him and voted for him the first time, and he did put the face of change there, and he’s a great orator, and he seemed to offer the thing that people needed the most, which was hope. People felt encouraged, everybody I knew. So what’s gonna happen now? If he loses and Mutt takes over, then that’s it. With the Koch brothers running things and these right-wing think tanks and the churches behind them, you’ve got it coming from all sides. I just don’t know what kind of shot we have. But if anybody asks me, I quote Pete Seeger, who was overheard to say, “I have no hope, I could be wrong.” I put that in two of these songs, because that was startling coming from Pete, who was the most optimistic person you’d ever wanna meet – until recently. He always felt that the people would make a difference, and that justice would win. So I put my money on Pete, ’cause he knows. Put it in your pipe and smoke it.

INTERVIEW: BUD SCOPPA

Pic credit: Joachim Cooder

The Cure’s Robert Smith contributes new song to Tim Burton’s Frankenweenie soundtrack

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The Cure's Robert Smith has contributed a new track, "Witchcraft", to the soundtrack to Tim Burton's new film, Frankenweenie. The song is the only fourth track he has released under his own name. Yeah Yeah Yeahs' Karen O and Flaming Lips will all feature on the soundtrack to the film. The soundtrack is released on September 25, the same day the film is released into cinemas. It features a total of 14 tracks, with The Flaming Lips, Plain White T's, Kimbra, Neon Trees, Skylar Grey, Grouplove and actress Winona Ryder all contributing tracks. Karen O's track "Strange Love" will be played over the film's closing credits, with the singer revealing that the track is an "unconventional unconditional-love song". She told Rolling Stone: "Tim wanted an unconventional unconditional-love song. My music inspiration came out of the same era of B movie fright film references sprinkled throughout the film." She added: "I went in the direction of exotica and calypso stylistically because it's quirky, good vibes music of that era and when you throw in a theremin solo it's a marriage made in heaven. We ended up with a love song for the end of the film to the film! Frankenweenie is so special, it's an unbelievable honour to be involved with it." This is the second time that Karen O has featured on the lead-off track to a major soundtrack in recent month after she contributed vocals to a cover of Led Zeppelin's "Immigrant Song" on Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross' soundtrack to The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo. You can watch the trailer for Frankenweenie at the bottom of the page. The tracklisting for 'Frankenweenie Unleashed!' is as follows: Karen O - 'Strange Love' Neon Trees - 'Electric Heart (Stay Forever)' Mark Foster - 'Polartropic (You Don't Understand Me)' Passion Pit - 'Almost There' Plain White T's - 'Pet Sematary' Kimbra - 'With My Hands' AWOLNATION - 'Everybody's Got a Secret' Kerli - 'Immortal' Grace Potter featuring The Flaming Lips - 'My Mechanical Friend' Imagine Dragons - 'Lost Cause' Grouplove - 'Underground' Skylar Grey - 'Building A Monster' Robert Smith - 'Witchcraft' Winona Ryder - 'Praise Be New Holland' http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o2luLW-9ySw

The Cure’s Robert Smith has contributed a new track, “Witchcraft”, to the soundtrack to Tim Burton’s new film, Frankenweenie.

The song is the only fourth track he has released under his own name.

Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ Karen O and Flaming Lips will all feature on the soundtrack to the film.

The soundtrack is released on September 25, the same day the film is released into cinemas. It features a total of 14 tracks, with The Flaming Lips, Plain White T’s, Kimbra, Neon Trees, Skylar Grey, Grouplove and actress Winona Ryder all contributing tracks.

Karen O’s track “Strange Love” will be played over the film’s closing credits, with the singer revealing that the track is an “unconventional unconditional-love song”.

She told Rolling Stone: “Tim wanted an unconventional unconditional-love song. My music inspiration came out of the same era of B movie fright film references sprinkled throughout the film.”

She added: “I went in the direction of exotica and calypso stylistically because it’s quirky, good vibes music of that era and when you throw in a theremin solo it’s a marriage made in heaven. We ended up with a love song for the end of the film to the film! Frankenweenie is so special, it’s an unbelievable honour to be involved with it.”

This is the second time that Karen O has featured on the lead-off track to a major soundtrack in recent month after she contributed vocals to a cover of Led Zeppelin’s “Immigrant Song” on Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross’ soundtrack to The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo.

You can watch the trailer for Frankenweenie at the bottom of the page.

The tracklisting for ‘Frankenweenie Unleashed!’ is as follows:

Karen O – ‘Strange Love’

Neon Trees – ‘Electric Heart (Stay Forever)’

Mark Foster – ‘Polartropic (You Don’t Understand Me)’

Passion Pit – ‘Almost There’

Plain White T’s – ‘Pet Sematary’

Kimbra – ‘With My Hands’

AWOLNATION – ‘Everybody’s Got a Secret’

Kerli – ‘Immortal’

Grace Potter featuring The Flaming Lips – ‘My Mechanical Friend’

Imagine Dragons – ‘Lost Cause’

Grouplove – ‘Underground’

Skylar Grey – ‘Building A Monster’

Robert Smith – ‘Witchcraft’

Winona Ryder – ‘Praise Be New Holland’

Three new Beck tracks surface online – listen

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Three new Beck tracks have surfaced online – scroll down to listen to them. 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. Last week, Beck announced that he would be releasing his new album in the form of individual pieces of sheet music. Song Reader will be put out by publishers Faber & Faber in December, and will consist of the notation for 20 unrecorded and unreleased songs. According to a statement from the publishers, the idea behind the release is for fans to play the songs and 'bring them to life' themselves. The sheet music will come with full colour art works for each song as well as a hardcover carrying case. Two of the 20 songs on the 'album' are instrumentals. The tracks "Do We? We Do" and "Don't Act Like Your Heart Isn't Hard" also feature. 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". http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mwZtt4Q9CxY http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aM4JcabDyvQ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FIxKLZHFThE

Three new Beck tracks have surfaced online – scroll down to listen to them.

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.

Last week, Beck announced that he would be releasing his new album in the form of individual pieces of sheet music. Song Reader will be put out by publishers Faber & Faber in December, and will consist of the notation for 20 unrecorded and unreleased songs.

According to a statement from the publishers, the idea behind the release is for fans to play the songs and ‘bring them to life’ themselves.

The sheet music will come with full colour art works for each song as well as a hardcover carrying case. Two of the 20 songs on the ‘album’ are instrumentals. The tracks “Do We? We Do” and “Don’t Act Like Your Heart Isn’t Hard” also feature.

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”.

John Lennon’s former home up for sale for £15 million

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A mansion in Surrey that was owned by John Lennon has gone on the market for £15 million. Lennon lived at Ken Kenwood mansion in the St George's Hill area of Weybridge between 1964 and 1968 and is believed to have penned a number of tracks for 1967's Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band there, the BBC reports. The Beatle bought the property for just £20,000 on July 15 1964, living there with his first wife Cynthia before he married Yoko Ono in 1969 and moved to New York. The property is described by estate agents Knight Frank as a "luxuriously finished family home, formerly owned by John Lennon, set in about 1.5 acres of exquisite gardens within the renowned St George’s Hill Estate." It also contains a study and an attic, where Lennon installed the majority of his musical equipment. Bill Martin, who wrote songs such as "Puppet On A String" and "Congratulations", brought the property for £40,000 in 1968 and it has changed hands a number of times since, most recently being sold for £5.8 million in January 2007. Photo credit: Iain Macmillan

A mansion in Surrey that was owned by John Lennon has gone on the market for £15 million.

Lennon lived at Ken Kenwood mansion in the St George’s Hill area of Weybridge between 1964 and 1968 and is believed to have penned a number of tracks for 1967’s Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band there, the BBC reports.

The Beatle bought the property for just £20,000 on July 15 1964, living there with his first wife Cynthia before he married Yoko Ono in 1969 and moved to New York.

The property is described by estate agents Knight Frank as a “luxuriously finished family home, formerly owned by John Lennon, set in about 1.5 acres of exquisite gardens within the renowned St George’s Hill Estate.”

It also contains a study and an attic, where Lennon installed the majority of his musical equipment.

Bill Martin, who wrote songs such as “Puppet On A String” and “Congratulations”, brought the property for £40,000 in 1968 and it has changed hands a number of times since, most recently being sold for £5.8 million in January 2007.

Photo credit: Iain Macmillan