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Sun Kil Moon: “Among The Leaves”

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Twenty years of touring and recording, of inspiration and graft for moderate acclaim, and it comes down to this. Mark Kozelek, the pivot of first Red House Painters and now Sun Kil Moon, is engaged in one more slog around Europe. It is not going well. In Helsinki (spoilers alert), he foists a bunch of new songs on an audience who want him to play early ‘90s perennials, flirts unsuccessfully with a local girl, and ends up back in his hotel room weeping for a dead cat. In London, a city Kozelek plainly despises, he is given a lunchtime festival slot only to be drowned out by a “retro ‘80s band” (scrutiny of the lineup and site map for Field Day 2011 suggests he may be referring to Connan Mockasin). There are “fucking shuttle buses”, poorly-attended gigs on boats, nights of “horseshit” in pubs, further thwarted seductions and, finally, a show in Belfast where Kozelek performs to a “half-empty room full of clowns”. “When I was done,” he sings, “some drunk Irish man said, ‘Worst night I’ve had since Bill Callahan.’” At which point does a singer-songwriter stop romanticising his misery and, to some degree, start making a joke out of it? For Mark Kozelek, the penny seems to have dropped in time for his 12th studio album, Among The Leaves. The European tour yarns are drawn not from a weary interview, but from “UK Blues” and “UK Blues 2”, two songs near the end of this long, engrossing and unexpectedly droll record. Homesickness has been a recurring theme in Kozelek’s work; from the Red House Painters’ “Over My Head” (1995), to Sun Kil Moon’s “Third And Seneca” (2010). But where once it would be presented as a numinous poetic condition, now it is played for laughs as much as for pity; as if Kozelek has finally completed the transition from a protracted sensitive adolescence to a self-aware, albeit somewhat grouchy, maturity. In many ways, though, Among The Leaves is entirely consistent with the rest of Kozelek’s fine catalogue: a familiar tragic history, repeated as comedy. His songs unravel slowly and delicately, freighted but not overwhelmed by the work of Nick Drake, Joni Mitchell, Paul Simon and Andres Segovia. Mostly, they consist solely of Kozelek’s voice – a voice that cannot help but sound dolorous, it seems – and his exquisite playing of a nylon-stringed Spanish classical guitar. There are songs about women he has loved, tried to love and wanted to love; songs about his hometown of San Francisco, and how he feels when he’s away from it; numerous allusions to boxers and cats. The difference this time is that a fair number of the 17 tracks sound more spontaneous than usual - more like sketches, or documentary clips, than finely-wrought reveries. The opening “I Know It’s Pathetic But That Was The Greatest Night Of My Life” tells of another failed pick-up at a gig, this time in Moscow, and feels like an extract from a Sun Kil Moon song rather than a complete one; at 1:47, it’s roughly a third of Kozelek’s default length. But as Among The Leaves progresses, the fragments begin to flow gracefully into one, thanks to the sustained tone (sceptics would doubtless conclude that Kozelek’s songs all sound the same) and his artful knitting together of themes. For a while, the songs dwell on promiscuity and deeply flawed old relationships. One lover is a crackhead who has run away from hospital (“Elaine”). Another leaves Kozelek for a substantially richer man (“The Winery”): she dines “at French Laundry, burning through money”; he’s “eatin’ pistachio nuts over by the taco truck”. Money remains an intermittent concern, though Kozelek’s management of his own label Caldo Verde, with its frequent live albums, rarities comps and special editions, should provide a model for minimalist singer-songwriters looking to earn a living out of their cult status. If those loyal fans fetishise Kozelek as a doomed romantic victim, he is keen to put them right on Among The Leaves, and in some cases ridicule them. “My band played here a lot in the ‘90s when we had lots of female fans and fuck they all were cute,” he reflects in “Sunshine In Chicago”, “now I just sign posters for guys in tennis shoes.” “That Bird Has A Broken Wing”, meanwhile, suggests that Kozelek’s old penchant for covering AC/DC songs was due to an unexpected empathy with Bon Scott’s lusty sensibilities. “I’m half man, other half alleycat,” he claims, after complaining of a burning that turns out to be an STD picked up on tour (“Cipro” – presumably the antibiotic Ciprofloxacin – is cited as useful in these circumstances). In the 2002 introduction to his book of lyrics, Nights Of Passed Over, Kozelek says of his formative records, “My younger, higher pitched voice had me cringeing. And fused with some melodramatic lines and cliché rhymes, I felt embarrassed.” Treasured as those Red House Painters albums may be, it is easy to see his point when comparing these wry narratives with some of the less nuanced angst on Down Colorful Hill, his 1992 debut. Nevertheless, a couple of outstanding group performances here do explicitly recall Kozelek’s earlier work: the title track, with its nimble, brushed beat, would have sat neatly on Ocean Beach (1995); while the electric churn of “King Fish” harks back to the stunned Crazy Horse jams that proliferated between Songs For A Blue Guitar (1996) and April (2008). Kozelek guested with old bandmates in similar settings on their Desertshore album earlier this year (“UK Blues” is a co-write with them), but it would be nice to see him grapple with that sound more extensively once again. Perhaps a full band project is financially impractical as well as aesthetically undesirable. If Among The Leaves is an accumulation of anecdotes from the past two decades, “Track Number 8” reveals where Mark Kozelek actually finds himself in 2012. The title is unnecessarily self-effacing - “I wrote this one and I know it ain’t great/Will probably sequence it track number eight” – and the subject matter is songwriting itself. The itch that was an STD earlier in the album is now the creative impulse, which Kozelek describes as something of a curse, namechecking contemporaries – Elliott Smith, Mark Linkous, Acetone’s Richie Lee, Blind Melon’s Shannon Hoon – who he implies fell victim to it. In the same song, though, he remembers as a child dreaming “of a life close to what I’m livin’.” He loves his neighbourhood, the local stray cats, and his girlfriend. “Sure there were others, but nothin’ this nice,” he sings artlessly of her, and one last shocking revelation about Mark Kozelek comes slowly into focus: at 45, for all the grumbling and snarky jokes, he might just have found contentment.

Twenty years of touring and recording, of inspiration and graft for moderate acclaim, and it comes down to this. Mark Kozelek, the pivot of first Red House Painters and now Sun Kil Moon, is engaged in one more slog around Europe. It is not going well.

In Helsinki (spoilers alert), he foists a bunch of new songs on an audience who want him to play early ‘90s perennials, flirts unsuccessfully with a local girl, and ends up back in his hotel room weeping for a dead cat. In London, a city Kozelek plainly despises, he is given a lunchtime festival slot only to be drowned out by a “retro ‘80s band” (scrutiny of the lineup and site map for Field Day 2011 suggests he may be referring to Connan Mockasin). There are “fucking shuttle buses”, poorly-attended gigs on boats, nights of “horseshit” in pubs, further thwarted seductions and, finally, a show in Belfast where Kozelek performs to a “half-empty room full of clowns”. “When I was done,” he sings, “some drunk Irish man said, ‘Worst night I’ve had since Bill Callahan.’”

At which point does a singer-songwriter stop romanticising his misery and, to some degree, start making a joke out of it? For Mark Kozelek, the penny seems to have dropped in time for his 12th studio album, Among The Leaves. The European tour yarns are drawn not from a weary interview, but from “UK Blues” and “UK Blues 2”, two songs near the end of this long, engrossing and unexpectedly droll record. Homesickness has been a recurring theme in Kozelek’s work; from the Red House Painters’ “Over My Head” (1995), to Sun Kil Moon’s “Third And Seneca” (2010). But where once it would be presented as a numinous poetic condition, now it is played for laughs as much as for pity; as if Kozelek has finally completed the transition from a protracted sensitive adolescence to a self-aware, albeit somewhat grouchy, maturity.

In many ways, though, Among The Leaves is entirely consistent with the rest of Kozelek’s fine catalogue: a familiar tragic history, repeated as comedy. His songs unravel slowly and delicately, freighted but not overwhelmed by the work of Nick Drake, Joni Mitchell, Paul Simon and Andres Segovia. Mostly, they consist solely of Kozelek’s voice – a voice that cannot help but sound dolorous, it seems – and his exquisite playing of a nylon-stringed Spanish classical guitar. There are songs about women he has loved, tried to love and wanted to love; songs about his hometown of San Francisco, and how he feels when he’s away from it; numerous allusions to boxers and cats.

The difference this time is that a fair number of the 17 tracks sound more spontaneous than usual – more like sketches, or documentary clips, than finely-wrought reveries. The opening “I Know It’s Pathetic But That Was The Greatest Night Of My Life” tells of another failed pick-up at a gig, this time in Moscow, and feels like an extract from a Sun Kil Moon song rather than a complete one; at 1:47, it’s roughly a third of Kozelek’s default length. But as Among The Leaves progresses, the fragments begin to flow gracefully into one, thanks to the sustained tone (sceptics would doubtless conclude that Kozelek’s songs all sound the same) and his artful knitting together of themes.

For a while, the songs dwell on promiscuity and deeply flawed old relationships. One lover is a crackhead who has run away from hospital (“Elaine”). Another leaves Kozelek for a substantially richer man (“The Winery”): she dines “at French Laundry, burning through money”; he’s “eatin’ pistachio nuts over by the taco truck”. Money remains an intermittent concern, though Kozelek’s management of his own label Caldo Verde, with its frequent live albums, rarities comps and special editions, should provide a model for minimalist singer-songwriters looking to earn a living out of their cult status.

If those loyal fans fetishise Kozelek as a doomed romantic victim, he is keen to put them right on Among The Leaves, and in some cases ridicule them. “My band played here a lot in the ‘90s when we had lots of female fans and fuck they all were cute,” he reflects in “Sunshine In Chicago”, “now I just sign posters for guys in tennis shoes.” “That Bird Has A Broken Wing”, meanwhile, suggests that Kozelek’s old penchant for covering AC/DC songs was due to an unexpected empathy with Bon Scott’s lusty sensibilities. “I’m half man, other half alleycat,” he claims, after complaining of a burning that turns out to be an STD picked up on tour (“Cipro” – presumably the antibiotic Ciprofloxacin – is cited as useful in these circumstances).

In the 2002 introduction to his book of lyrics, Nights Of Passed Over, Kozelek says of his formative records, “My younger, higher pitched voice had me cringeing. And fused with some melodramatic lines and cliché rhymes, I felt embarrassed.” Treasured as those Red House Painters albums may be, it is easy to see his point when comparing these wry narratives with some of the less nuanced angst on Down Colorful Hill, his 1992 debut. Nevertheless, a couple of outstanding group performances here do explicitly recall Kozelek’s earlier work: the title track, with its nimble, brushed beat, would have sat neatly on Ocean Beach (1995); while the electric churn of “King Fish” harks back to the stunned Crazy Horse jams that proliferated between Songs For A Blue Guitar (1996) and April (2008). Kozelek guested with old bandmates in similar settings on their Desertshore album earlier this year (“UK Blues” is a co-write with them), but it would be nice to see him grapple with that sound more extensively once again.

Perhaps a full band project is financially impractical as well as aesthetically undesirable. If Among The Leaves is an accumulation of anecdotes from the past two decades, “Track Number 8” reveals where Mark Kozelek actually finds himself in 2012. The title is unnecessarily self-effacing – “I wrote this one and I know it ain’t great/Will probably sequence it track number eight” – and the subject matter is songwriting itself. The itch that was an STD earlier in the album is now the creative impulse, which Kozelek describes as something of a curse, namechecking contemporaries – Elliott Smith, Mark Linkous, Acetone’s Richie Lee, Blind Melon’s Shannon Hoon – who he implies fell victim to it.

In the same song, though, he remembers as a child dreaming “of a life close to what I’m livin’.” He loves his neighbourhood, the local stray cats, and his girlfriend. “Sure there were others, but nothin’ this nice,” he sings artlessly of her, and one last shocking revelation about Mark Kozelek comes slowly into focus: at 45, for all the grumbling and snarky jokes, he might just have found contentment.

The Dream Syndicate reunite for anniversary shows

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The legendary Paisley Underground band, The Dream Syndicate, have reformed to play four dates in Spain in September to celebrate the 30th anniversary of their debut album, The Days Of Wine And Roses. According to Slicing Up Eyeballs, Dream Syndicate rontman Steve Wynn announced the reunion shows - billed as the band's first since 1988 - on his Facebook page. The line-up will feature Wynn, original drummer Dennis Duck, bassist Mark Walton (who joined after 1984′s Medicine Show) and guitarist Jason Victor, who plays in Wynn’s current band, The Miracle Three. Wynn wrote: “This September marks the 30 year anniversary of the release of The Days of Wine and I’m excited to say The Dream Syndicate will be commemorating the date by reforming for a handful of shows in Spain, the first time that Dennis Duck, Mark Walton and I will have performed as the Dream Syndicate since we walked off stage at the I-Beam in San Francisco back in 1988. We’re going to be joined for these dates (and very possibly some more beyond) by Jason Victor who has so ably carried the torch of the guitarists who have played these songs with us before. I’m really looking forward to these shows and I hope that some of you will have the chance to come down and see them for yourselves.” The Dream Syndicate will play: September 21: Barcelona, Spain September 22: Valenica, Spain September 25: Madrid, Spain September 29: Bilbao, Spain Please fill in our quick survey about Uncut – and you could win a 12 month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks!

The legendary Paisley Underground band, The Dream Syndicate, have reformed to play four dates in Spain in September to celebrate the 30th anniversary of their debut album, The Days Of Wine And Roses.

According to Slicing Up Eyeballs, Dream Syndicate rontman Steve Wynn announced the reunion shows – billed as the band’s first since 1988 – on his Facebook page. The line-up will feature Wynn, original drummer Dennis Duck, bassist Mark Walton (who joined after 1984′s Medicine Show) and guitarist Jason Victor, who plays in Wynn’s current band, The Miracle Three.

Wynn wrote: “This September marks the 30 year anniversary of the release of The Days of Wine and I’m excited to say The Dream Syndicate will be commemorating the date by reforming for a handful of shows in Spain, the first time that Dennis Duck, Mark Walton and I will have performed as the Dream Syndicate since we walked off stage at the I-Beam in San Francisco back in 1988. We’re going to be joined for these dates (and very possibly some more beyond) by Jason Victor who has so ably carried the torch of the guitarists who have played these songs with us before. I’m really looking forward to these shows and I hope that some of you will have the chance to come down and see them for yourselves.”

The Dream Syndicate will play:

September 21: Barcelona, Spain

September 22: Valenica, Spain

September 25: Madrid, Spain

September 29: Bilbao, Spain

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Old Crow Medicine Show – Carry Me Back

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Definitive statement from the whip-smart, uncompromising string band... Since 1998, when old-time music buffs Ketch Secor, Critter Fuqua and Willie Watson first joined forces as travelling buskers, the Old Crow Medicine Show have survived and prospered through a combination of serendipity and resoucefulness. After relocating from upstate New York to the Appalachian village of Boone, N.C., Old Crow caught the ear of Doc Watson while playing in front of a local drugstore, which landed them their first big break – a slot on Doc’s MerleFest in 2000. Soon thereafter, they moved to Nashville, where they were taken under the wing of Marty Stuart, who booked them on the Grand Ole Opry. They also hooked up with Gillian Welch and David Rawlings, which led to Rawlings producing their first two LPs, 2004’s O.C.M.S. and 2006’s Big Iron World. During that period, Old Crow became regulars on the National Public Radio show The Prairie Home Companion, giving them a national profile with precisely the right audience. Meanwhile, “Wagon Wheel”, a single off of O.C.M.S. that Secor had written as a teenager around the chorus of an unfinished Bob Dylan song, was selling consistently as a download, yet spreading almost exclusively via word of mouth in an improbable collision of digital technology and the oral tradition. That timeless-sounding tune has sold more than 600,000 units while being performed nightly by countless groups in bars and on college campuses. The band’s catalog, also including 2008’s Don Was-produced Tennessee Pusher, is now up to 700,000 in album sales. Since their beginnings, they’ve been touring their asses off, including jaunts with Stuart and Merle Haggard, while in 2011 they joined Mumford & Sons and Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros on a train tour, the subject of the documentary feature Big Easy Express. What’s more, mandolin player Cory Younts is currently on loan to Jack White as a member of his “male” band. And if OCMS still aren’t on the mainstream radar in their native country, the band is undeniably a grass-roots phenomenon of uncommon scale. Clearly, this hard-working, virtuosic string band has reached a pivotal moment in its career arc, with the all-important fourth album on a new label – Dave Matthews’ ATO – produced by Ted Hutt (Gaslight Anthem, Dropkick Murphys, Flogging Molly). During the sessions, they welcomed back Fuqua, who’d split awhile back, and parted ways with Watson – but not before the latter contributed significantly to the new album, most notably on the group’s signature wood-grain-textured high harmonies. If this is Watson’s swan song, it’s a hell of a way to go out. Carry Me Back is the apotheosis of Old Crow’s distinctive musical recipe, which juxtaposes homespun original songs that sound like they’re coming off scratchy 78s with an attitude laced with punk-like exuberance, as they address contemporary themes with compassion and conviction, much like their forebears, from Seeger to Dylan. This drum-less, all-acoustic band has never sounded more supercharged than on the Civil War narrative “Carry Me Back To Virginia”, the amphetamine square dance reel “Sewanee Mountain Catfight”(“girls gone wild/on the Tennessee line”), the sly Hank Williams salute “Country Gal” (“honey let’s have a roll in the hay/good-lookin’ country gal”) and the lathered-up “Mississippi Saturday Night”. The latter song harnesses a Jerry Lee Lewis-like abandon to a resonant example of what Secor calls “the topical format”, as the narrator sucks down “forties in a Skylark” amid the physical and emotional ravages left on the land and its inhabitants by Katrina and the Gulf oil spill. The somber subject matter of “We Don’t Grow Tobacco” and “Half Mile Down”, laments for rural Southerners who have lost what had been the basis of their lives for generations, is offset by spirited, life-affirming performances. With all the percolating energy the album delivers, its three most memorable songs are ballads: the gut-wrenching, Dylanesque “Levi”, the true story of a country boy who was killed in the Iraq War, and the hardscrabble anthems of endurance “Ain’t It Enough” and “Ways of Man”. In “Ain’t It Enough”, Secor and his bandmates raise their earthy voices on what could serve as the credo for this single-minded populist band: “Throw your arms round each other/and love one another/ for it’s only one life that we’ve got/and ain’t it enough? Bud Scoppa Q&A Ketch Secor I hear echoes of The Band, the Stones and the Byrds in your music. What we have in common is a reverence for American folk songs, for artists of the generation before them. The real kinship between us lies in our record collections. What sets you apart from other roots bands? What’s different about Old Crow is that we really are playing the music of the American South – it’s not to a dance beat or with electronic instruments. So the application of it has to do with the songwriting. Hear we’ve written these brand new songs with a contemporary focus and scope, but we’re using the instrumentation of our region. There’s nothing remotely academic about your approach. The tendency with a lot of bluegrass and old-time string bands is they play those instruments from behind the glass case that they’re in, and Old Crow just wanted to bust them out. These instruments are meant to be not just played but beat on. We started on the street corner, where the test is, can you play louder than howling dogs and ambulances? I like to think that finally we’ve got a record in which all of the songs will pass that test. It feels like your moment has arrived. The fact that it coincides with the passing away of Doc Watson is a profound coincidence. INTERVIEW: BUD SCOPPA Please fill in our quick survey about Uncut – and you could win a 12 month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks!

Definitive statement from the whip-smart, uncompromising string band…

Since 1998, when old-time music buffs Ketch Secor, Critter Fuqua and Willie Watson first joined forces as travelling buskers, the Old Crow Medicine Show have survived and prospered through a combination of serendipity and resoucefulness. After relocating from upstate New York to the Appalachian village of Boone, N.C., Old Crow caught the ear of Doc Watson while playing in front of a local drugstore, which landed them their first big break – a slot on Doc’s MerleFest in 2000. Soon thereafter, they moved to Nashville, where they were taken under the wing of Marty Stuart, who booked them on the Grand Ole Opry. They also hooked up with Gillian Welch and David Rawlings, which led to Rawlings producing their first two LPs, 2004’s O.C.M.S. and 2006’s Big Iron World. During that period, Old Crow became regulars on the National Public Radio show The Prairie Home Companion, giving them a national profile with precisely the right audience.

Meanwhile, “Wagon Wheel”, a single off of O.C.M.S. that Secor had written as a teenager around the chorus of an unfinished Bob Dylan song, was selling consistently as a download, yet spreading almost exclusively via word of mouth in an improbable collision of digital technology and the oral tradition. That timeless-sounding tune has sold more than 600,000 units while being performed nightly by countless groups in bars and on college campuses. The band’s catalog, also including 2008’s Don Was-produced Tennessee Pusher, is now up to 700,000 in album sales. Since their beginnings, they’ve been touring their asses off, including jaunts with Stuart and Merle Haggard, while in 2011 they joined Mumford & Sons and Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros on a train tour, the subject of the documentary feature Big Easy Express. What’s more, mandolin player Cory Younts is currently on loan to Jack White as a member of his “male” band. And if OCMS still aren’t on the mainstream radar in their native country, the band is undeniably a grass-roots phenomenon of uncommon scale.

Clearly, this hard-working, virtuosic string band has reached a pivotal moment in its career arc, with the all-important fourth album on a new label – Dave Matthews’ ATO – produced by Ted Hutt (Gaslight Anthem, Dropkick Murphys, Flogging Molly). During the sessions, they welcomed back Fuqua, who’d split awhile back, and parted ways with Watson – but not before the latter contributed significantly to the new album, most notably on the group’s signature wood-grain-textured high harmonies. If this is Watson’s swan song, it’s a hell of a way to go out. Carry Me Back is the apotheosis of Old Crow’s distinctive musical recipe, which juxtaposes homespun original songs that sound like they’re coming off scratchy 78s with an attitude laced with punk-like exuberance, as they address contemporary themes with compassion and conviction, much like their forebears, from Seeger to Dylan.

This drum-less, all-acoustic band has never sounded more supercharged than on the Civil War narrative “Carry Me Back To Virginia”, the amphetamine square dance reel “Sewanee Mountain Catfight”(“girls gone wild/on the Tennessee line”), the sly Hank Williams salute “Country Gal” (“honey let’s have a roll in the hay/good-lookin’ country gal”) and the lathered-up “Mississippi Saturday Night”. The latter song harnesses a Jerry Lee Lewis-like abandon to a resonant example of what Secor calls “the topical format”, as the narrator sucks down “forties in a Skylark” amid the physical and emotional ravages left on the land and its inhabitants by Katrina and the Gulf oil spill. The somber subject matter of “We Don’t Grow Tobacco” and “Half Mile Down”, laments for rural Southerners who have lost what had been the basis of their lives for generations, is offset by spirited, life-affirming performances.

With all the percolating energy the album delivers, its three most memorable songs are ballads: the gut-wrenching, Dylanesque “Levi”, the true story of a country boy who was killed in the Iraq War, and the hardscrabble anthems of endurance “Ain’t It Enough” and “Ways of Man”. In “Ain’t It Enough”, Secor and his bandmates raise their earthy voices on what could serve as the credo for this single-minded populist band: “Throw your arms round each other/and love one another/ for it’s only one life that we’ve got/and ain’t it enough?

Bud Scoppa

Q&A

Ketch Secor

I hear echoes of The Band, the Stones and the Byrds in your music.

What we have in common is a reverence for American folk songs, for artists of the generation before them. The real kinship between us lies in our record collections.

What sets you apart from other roots bands?

What’s different about Old Crow is that we really are playing the music of the American South – it’s not to a dance beat or with electronic instruments. So the application of it has to do with the songwriting. Hear we’ve written these brand new songs with a contemporary focus and scope, but we’re using the instrumentation of our region.

There’s nothing remotely academic about your approach.

The tendency with a lot of bluegrass and old-time string bands is they play those instruments from behind the glass case that they’re in, and Old Crow just wanted to bust them out. These instruments are meant to be not just played but beat on. We started on the street corner, where the test is, can you play louder than howling dogs and ambulances? I like to think that finally we’ve got a record in which all of the songs will pass that test.

It feels like your moment has arrived.

The fact that it coincides with the passing away of Doc Watson is a profound coincidence.

INTERVIEW: BUD SCOPPA

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Watch Jack White’s “Freedom At 21” video

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Jack White has released a teaser clip for his new video "Freedom At 21". Scroll down to watch it. The "Freedom At 21" promo is White's first collaboration with video director Hype Williams, best known for his work with hip-hop artists like Missy Elliott and 2Pac. Williams's recent clips include Nic...

Jack White has released a teaser clip for his new video “Freedom At 21”. Scroll down to watch it.

The “Freedom At 21” promo is White’s first collaboration with video director Hype Williams, best known for his work with hip-hop artists like Missy Elliott and 2Pac. Williams’s recent clips include Nicki Minaj’s “Stupid Hoe” and Kanye West’s “All Of The Lights”.

The full-length video premieres next Monday (July 16), but a 34-second trailer has now appeared online. The clip begins with the caption “REV YOUR ENGINES” before cutting to scenes of White driving a neon green car and getting arrested.

“Freedom At 21” is the third single from White’s debut solo album Blunderbuss, which was released in April. The B-sides to the album’s three singles, including White’s cover of U2’s “Love Is Blindness”, were made available digitally for the first time on Tuesday (July 10).

Last month (June 26), White performed songs from Blunderbuss during a show at London’s Brixton Academy. He will continue his Blunderbuss tour in the US later this month, before returning to the UK for a one-off gig at Camden’s Roundhouse as part of London’s iTunes Festival on September 8.

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ypE0ZsijAII

Mick Jagger: ‘I don’t think The Rolling Stones were ‘stage ready’ for The Olympics’

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The Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger has said that the band didn't agree to play The Olympics opening ceremony because they weren't 'stage ready'. Speaking to ITN – via Rolling Stone - in a video which you can see below, Jagger said: "I didn't think, to be honest, we were quite stage ready. We...

The Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger has said that the band didn’t agree to play The Olympics opening ceremony because they weren’t ‘stage ready’.

Speaking to ITN – via Rolling Stone – in a video which you can see below, Jagger said: “I didn’t think, to be honest, we were quite stage ready. We haven’t played in a long time and we weren’t really stage-ready, and it’s a very big gig and it’s very risk-taking. I didn’t think the band themselves felt they were really ready to do it at this point.”

However, he added that the band do want to play some shows later this year. “We hope we’re going to do some gigs this year. We haven’t actually finalised them, but we hope we’re going to do some gigs. We’ve done rehearsing, hanging out together and all that discussing so you know, we’ve been seeing each other quite a lot.”

Keith Richards has also confirmed that The Rolling Stones are rehearsing together once again. The band celebrate the 50th anniversary of their first ever gig today (July 12) and Richards has said that they are now back playing together again after a lengthy break.

Speaking to BBC News, Richards said of the band’s current status: “There’s things in the works – I think it’s definitely happening. But when? I can’t say yet. We’re playing around with the idea and had a couple of rehearsals – we’ve got together and it feels so good.”

Richards was speaking as a new photography exhibition called The Rolling Stones: 50 opens at London’s Somerset House. The free exhibition will be held from July 13-August 27 in the landmark venue’s East Wing Galleries and will coincide with the release of a book of the same time. The book will feature 700 shots and words from the band on their history, and will hit UK bookshops today.

To read more about The Rolling Stones’ 50th anniversary, pick up the next issue of NME, which includes a celebration of the band’s amazing career. It is on newsstands next Wednesday (July 18) or available digitally.

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MS3capSwpVM

Bryan Ferry and Johnny Marr team up for GuilFest this weekend

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Former Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr will join Bryan Ferry for a complete set this Sunday [July 15] at GuilFest. The pair have a musical history together stretching back to 1987, when Marr played on Ferry's Bete Noir album. Ferry's set will include material from both his solo career and his Roxy Music catalogue. Ferry says: "Johnny has previously performed with us on TV and at some smaller events but I am thrilled that he will be playing a full show with us for the very first time at GuilFest." More details about GuilFest can he found here . Please fill in our quick survey about Uncut – and you could win a 12 month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks!

Former Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr will join Bryan Ferry for a complete set this Sunday [July 15] at GuilFest.

The pair have a musical history together stretching back to 1987, when Marr played on Ferry’s Bete Noir album.

Ferry’s set will include material from both his solo career and his Roxy Music catalogue.

Ferry says: “Johnny has previously performed with us on TV and at some smaller events but I am thrilled that he will be playing a full show with us for the very first time at GuilFest.”

More details about GuilFest can he found here .

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Keith Richards: ‘The Rolling Stones are rehearsing again’

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Keith Richards has confirmed that The Rolling Stones are rehearsing together once again. The band celebrate the 50th anniversary of their first ever gig today (July 12) and Richards has said that they are now back playing together again after a lengthy break, but could not say when they would be ou...

Keith Richards has confirmed that The Rolling Stones are rehearsing together once again.

The band celebrate the 50th anniversary of their first ever gig today (July 12) and Richards has said that they are now back playing together again after a lengthy break, but could not say when they would be out playing live again.

Speaking to BBC News, Richards said of the band’s current status: “There’s things in the works – I think it’s definitely happening. But when? I can’t say yet. We’re playing around with the idea and had a couple of rehearsals – we’ve got together and it feels so good.”

Richards also spoke about his amazement that the group had lasted so long, responding to a question about whether he thought The Rolling Stones would ever achieve such longevity, he said: “Never, back then groups used to last about two or three years. You hoped to have a good time and that was that.”

He continued: “It’s a generation thing, that post-war thing, also technology, when we started we were making 45s and then when you could make albums, that gave us the chance to do more. I never expected to get here, so it’s all gravy.”

Richards also spoke about his legendary capacity for excess and said that his only real regrets were “taking certain things” and the death of guitarist Brian Jones.

Asked about this, Richards said: “I wouldn’t have taken certain things if I’d known what I’d have to do to get off of it. I can’t think of any other real regrets. I regret Brian dying, I remember thinking ‘Brian, how dare you leave the band’ because we were all very close. I can’t regret something, I’d go through the hard times again just to keep things as they are.”

Finally asked how he would describe The Rolling Stones’ career, 50 years after their first gig at London’s Marquee Club, Richards said: “Fascinating and raunchy. Let’s keep it that way.”

Richards was speaking as a new photography exhibition called The Rolling Stones: 50 opens at London’s Somerset House.

The free exhibition will be held from July 13-August 27 in the landmark venue’s East Wing Galleries and will coincide with the release of a book of the same time. The book will feature 700 shots and words from the band on their history, and will hit UK bookshops today.

The exhibition will show a host of unseen and rare photographs, including more than 70 prints, with live shots, studio images and reportage pictures on display as well as contact sheets and negative strips.

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Stevie Nicks confirms that Fleetwood Mac will tour in 2013

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Stevie Nicks has revealed that Fleetwood Mac will reform in 2013 for a live tour. The singer, who was speaking on US news channel CBS, confirmed that the band are planning to reunite once she and bandmate Lindsey Buckingham have finished touring their respective solo projects. Asked about the chan...

Stevie Nicks has revealed that Fleetwood Mac will reform in 2013 for a live tour.

The singer, who was speaking on US news channel CBS, confirmed that the band are planning to reunite once she and bandmate Lindsey Buckingham have finished touring their respective solo projects.

Asked about the chances of a new Fleetwood Mac tour, Nicks replied that it will happen “next year, so far”. She added: “It’s the plan. Because that’s what we do. I do my thing. And Lindsey (Buckingham) is out doing his thing now. Everybody’s on board.”

Nicks’ statement marks a turnaround from the band situation outlined by drummer Mick Fleetwood earlier this year. Talking to Playboy in March, he said: “I don’t believe Fleetwood Mac will ever tour again, but I really hope we do. We have rehearsed it and prepared for it since 2010. We were supposed to tour in 2011, but we delayed it for a year to allow Stevie Nicks to support her solo record and for Lindsey Buckingham to do the same with his.”

Nicks also spoke about the suicide of former Fleetwood Mac guitarist Bob Welch, who died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the chest last month (June). “I can’t even tell you what in the world would have pushed him to do something that crazy,” she said.

Nicks is currently touring the US in support of her seventh solo album, In Your Dreams, which was released in May 2011. Fleetwood Mac last toured as a four-piece – Nicks, Buckingham, Fleetwood and bassist John McVie – in 2009. The fifth member of the band’s classic Rumours-era lineup, Christine McVie, retired from band duties in 1998.

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Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore unveils another new track

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Thurston Moore has unveiled another track by his new band, Chelsea Light Moving. The song "Groovy & Linda" can be heard by scrolling down and clicking below. It draws lyrical inspiration from the late-'60s East Village hippie couple whose flower-power dreams ended in a double homicide. Folk sin...

Thurston Moore has unveiled another track by his new band, Chelsea Light Moving.

The song “Groovy & Linda” can be heard by scrolling down and clicking below. It draws lyrical inspiration from the late-’60s East Village hippie couple whose flower-power dreams ended in a double homicide. Folk singer Thom Parrott also named a song in 1968 after the same track.

It follows the band’s first release “Burroughs”, which is inspired by the last words of Beat author William Burroughs.

As well as Moore, the band also features Keith Wood on guitar, Samara Lubelski on bass and John Moloney on drums. They are currently working on their debut album with record label Matador. They also have a series of US shows lined up at Alberta Sled Island on July 22, Missoula’s The Top Hat (24), Boulder Theatre (27) and Denver Larimer Lounge (29).

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Bob Dylan’s lost Newport Festival guitar found

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The guitar Bob Dylan played during his historic set at the Newport Folk Festival on July 25, 1965 has been found, according to a report in Rolling Stone. The guitar - a 1964 sunburst Fender Stratocaster - has apparently been missing for 47 years, until it was discovered by New Jersey resident Dawn Peterson - whose father, a private pilot who worked for Dylan's manager Albert Grossman. "After one flight, my father saw there were three guitars left on the plane," she says. "He contacted the company a few times about picking the guitars up, but nobody ever got back to him." Rolling Stones reports that the Stratocaster came with 13 pages of typed and handwritten song lyrics tucked inside its guitar case. The find has been disputed, however, by Dylan's lawyer, Orin Syder, who released a statement saying, "Bob has possession of the electric guitar he played at the Newport Folk Festival in 1965. He did own several other Stratocaster guitars that were stolen from him around that time, as were some handwritten lyrics." The story will be the subject of a forthcoming edition of the American TV series History Detectives, that will air on July 17. Please fill in our quick survey about Uncut – and you could win a 12 month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks!

The guitar Bob Dylan played during his historic set at the Newport Folk Festival on July 25, 1965 has been found, according to a report in Rolling Stone.

The guitar – a 1964 sunburst Fender Stratocaster – has apparently been missing for 47 years, until it was discovered by New Jersey resident Dawn Peterson – whose father, a private pilot who worked for Dylan’s manager Albert Grossman.

“After one flight, my father saw there were three guitars left on the plane,” she says. “He contacted the company a few times about picking the guitars up, but nobody ever got back to him.”

Rolling Stones reports that the Stratocaster came with 13 pages of typed and handwritten song lyrics tucked inside its guitar case.

The find has been disputed, however, by Dylan’s lawyer, Orin Syder, who released a statement saying, “Bob has possession of the electric guitar he played at the Newport Folk Festival in 1965. He did own several other Stratocaster guitars that were stolen from him around that time, as were some handwritten lyrics.”

The story will be the subject of a forthcoming edition of the American TV series History Detectives, that will air on July 17.

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Lead in long-awaited Janis Joplin biopic finally cast

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Actress Nina Arianda has been cast as Janis Joplin in the forthcoming movie about the late rock and blues singer's life. Both Pink and Zooey Deschanel had been considered for the part in the past, but the title role in the film Joplin – which will be directed by Sean Durkin (Martha Marcy May Marlene) – has been given to Arianda. A relative unknown in the film world, despite recently winning the Tony award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Play for her role in the Broadway production Venus In Fur, she has also appeared in Woody Allen's Midnight in Paris. Deadline reports that production on Joplin will start next year and will have a budget of less than $20 million. Producer Peter Newman has been working on the project for 12 years already and has secured exclusive rights to 21 Janis Joplin songs for the movie, which Arianda will sing. Of the actress, he has said: "I've never in my life seen an actress walk on a stage and convey the duality of vulnerability with overheated sexuality, which is what Janis was all about." The film will be based on Love, Janis, a collection of letters published by the singer's sister Laura Joplin, and Rolling Stone reporter David Dalton's Piece Of My Heart. Janis Joplin died at the age of 27 in 1970. Please fill in our quick survey about Uncut – and you could win a 12 month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks!

Actress Nina Arianda has been cast as Janis Joplin in the forthcoming movie about the late rock and blues singer’s life.

Both Pink and Zooey Deschanel had been considered for the part in the past, but the title role in the film Joplin – which will be directed by Sean Durkin (Martha Marcy May Marlene) – has been given to Arianda. A relative unknown in the film world, despite recently winning the Tony award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Play for her role in the Broadway production Venus In Fur, she has also appeared in Woody Allen‘s Midnight in Paris.

Deadline reports that production on Joplin will start next year and will have a budget of less than $20 million.

Producer Peter Newman has been working on the project for 12 years already and has secured exclusive rights to 21 Janis Joplin songs for the movie, which Arianda will sing. Of the actress, he has said: “I’ve never in my life seen an actress walk on a stage and convey the duality of vulnerability with overheated sexuality, which is what Janis was all about.”

The film will be based on Love, Janis, a collection of letters published by the singer’s sister Laura Joplin, and Rolling Stone reporter David Dalton’s Piece Of My Heart.

Janis Joplin died at the age of 27 in 1970.

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Happy Birthday, Rolling Stones…

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Today, as you may have heard, is apparently the 50th anniversary of the Rolling Stones’ first gig. Ten years ago, I wrote a piece – with some assistance from Andrew Loog Oldham - on the occasion of their 40th birthday, which it seemed salient to dig out today. A lot of this still holds true,...

Today, as you may have heard, is apparently the 50th anniversary of the Rolling Stones’ first gig.

Ten years ago, I wrote a piece – with some assistance from Andrew Loog Oldham – on the occasion of their 40th birthday, which it seemed salient to dig out today. A lot of this still holds true, I think, though in the intervening years the pantomime has seen Mick Jagger’s capricious and unsentimental approach to his own history become even more pronounced, as well as an event that seemed pretty implausible back in 2002; one more good Stones album, “A Bigger Bang”, that deserves a lot more love than it generally receives. Happy birthday, anyhow….

How, one wonders, will The Rolling Stones celebrate their 40th birthday? A group hug and shared tears are hardly the style of these most unsentimental of men. An argument, perhaps, is more their style. One about the whole idea of their birthday, for instance. As a flood of compilations, reissues, memoirs, live shows and gilded souvenir cash-ins commemorate their anniversary, Jagger has questioned the veracity of the whole business. Officially sanctioned history points to July 12, 1962, as the start of their extraordinary career – a gig at London’s Marquee Club. But with an unusually conscientious flourish, Jagger disputes the date, suggesting sometime in 1963 – when drummer Charlie Watts arrived to complete the first classic lineup – as more apt. A dispute about the very fundaments of their existence seems fitting.

Or how about a juicy personality clash between Jagger and Keith Richards? The animosity between these two songwriting partners has only added to the legend of the Stones over the years. Often, it hinges on their battling aesthetics: Jagger the social climber, the moderniser, the shameless celebrity butterfly; Richards the recalcitrant old buffer, stubbornly loyal to rock’n’roll tradition, disdainful of his foil’s pretensions. Another entertaining feud kicked off recently, when a magazine asked Richards his opinion of Jagger’s knighthood.

“What did I feel when I heard about the knighthood?” he said. “Cold, cold rage at his blind stupidity. It was enraging, I threatened to pull out of the tour – went berserk, bananas! But, quite honestly, Mick’s fucked up so many times what’s another fuck-up?”

Not a subject, then, for the old devils to discuss over post-gig canapes. But what is, realistically? What can these men have left to say to each other after 40 years together? No-one works with the same people for that long in the real world, let alone in the emotionally heightened, perpetually adolescent sphere of rock’n’roll.

There are many remarkable things about The Rolling Stones, but it’s an inevitable fact that, in 2002, the one that’s most striking is their absurd longevity. In July 1962 The Beatles were yet to release a record, Bob Dylan was three years from discovering electricity, Liam Gallagher was ten years off being born, and rock’n’roll was meant to be merely a passing fad.

That it has been sustained for so long – become embedded in our culture, even – is due, in an enormous amount, to The Rolling Stones. It’s not just the excellence of their music, or their business genius. No, The Rolling Stones set a template for rock’n’roll that was much bigger than music. Rock’n’roll was inexorably hooked up with sex and drugs. It articulated adolescent rage, rebellion, boredom and pettiness better than any other art form. It at least pretended to be dirty, provocative, confusing, not a little menacing.

And it found its purest embodiment in their skinny, uptight white bodies. The Beatles might have been charming, easier to assimilate and, fractionally, musically superior. But the Stones were far more successful at capitalising on the principle of a counterculture. They were A Threat. Five young men who were taken to court for urinating in the street, who were regarded with fear and despair by right-thinking parents and who, with the canny assistance of their manager until 1967, Andrew Loog Oldham, made nastiness marketable. What could be easier to pull off and yet so radical, so appealing and so lucrative?

“I always imagined The Rolling Stones lasting, one was just not aware of in which form,” says Oldham from his home in Bogota, Colombia. “They were very professional and dedicated from the first moment. I told them who they were and they became it. They wore the bad boy tag like a suit of armour, and drew a veil over how professional they really were.”

But, as Oldham writes in the second volume of his compelling autobiography, 2Stoned: “Violence and anger would become permanent fixtures.” Elements which were not, of course, always controllable. Drug busts, the death of guitarist Brian Jones (found floating in his pool in 1969), the violent murder of a black fan by Hell’s Angels acting as security during the 1969 show at Altamont – these were hardly desirable career details. But truly great bands tend to have a mythological momentum wherein contrivance and accident become intertwined. And so tragedy and brutality only stoked the legend of The Rolling Stones.

By then, too, they were too big a business to be stopped. Had become so big, in fact, that it’s hard to imagine the international market ever allowing them to stop. The sales of new product might have dribbled away in the early 1980s, but the justifiably-named World’s Greatest Rock’n’Roll Band have continued to be omnipresent ever since: refracted through the surliness and conspicuous consumption of every band who has ever decided to be self-consciously rock’n’roll; through the regular globe-straddling tours; and, naturally, through that glorious and milkable back catalogue.

The Rolling Stones’s 40th anniversary is being marked by a substantial revamping of that auspicious archive. First up is Forty Licks, which endeavours, with some success, to boil down their gargantuan oeuvre onto a couple of hit-stuffed, consistently thrilling CDs. It’s followed in October by 22 albums from the 1960s that have been diligently restored and remastered. Cutting through the record-collector hype that surrounds the whole project, there remains something elemental about much of this music which still makes it gripping. It’s the sound of tension and power, of five Englishmen moving through homages to American bluesmen and coming to terms with the huge possibilities opening up to them. The riffs – Gimme Shelter, Satisfaction, Start Me Up – are unforgettable. Jagger, meanwhile, is busy creating his own grand romance: a mixture of superhuman virility and teasing camp. “I was born in a crossfire hurricane,” he claims in Jumpin’ Jack Flash – unlikely for a son of Dartford, Kent. “But what can a poor boy do except to sing for a rock and roll band?” he mugs heroically in Street Fighting Man, ever the expedient revolutionary. Critically, the Stones proved that the blues and its derivatives were not dependent on sincerity. Few singers have ever sounded so charged and engaging, and yet so obviously removed from the hurt they describe.

“They started out as The Rollin’ Stones,” explains Andrew Loog Oldham, “six blues-struck musos glued to a music born of slavery, share-cropping and blacks. They grabbed hold of it with their educated little white middle class fingers and honed it into their own. Mick and Keith learnt to write and the Stones notched up a batch of mid-1960s singles that define the time. I became redundant to them, Brian died and they moved into the excess and self-adulation that the Seventies begot and made more music that defined the time.

“More importantly, they mastered one side of the proceedings that I deal with in 2Stoned, and that is that today’s artists don’t need a Svengali, they have to be one. Look at Eminem, Madonna, Cher, Tom Cruise, Mel Gibson … any of the current artists who can take a town or open a film. They know exactly who they are and how to do it – as do The Rolling Stones.”

It’s strange how a desire to do whatever you want can pan out. As stroppy post-adolescents, The Rolling Stones epitomised a certain petulant negation of establishment values. Put simply, they wanted their own way. With age, that same insistence on complete control became codified as a bullet-proof business plan. As Oldham says: “The Rolling Stones are definitely part of the establishment, or in more specific terms, providers of the establishment … They use the system. CDs are just another item in the list of goods they have for sale, so don’t talk to me about their new single. It’s just a surface, seductive invitation to a catalogue extended by the masters of the game.”

This is how these ruthless players can appear to be against the system while simultaneously running it – by making disaffection a copyrighted commodity. In the hands of middle-aged gentlemen, it sometimes seems a little ludicrous, but then, so much does about the Stones. Take Jagger’s irregular grapplings with fashion, for instance, that usually result in a hiply produced, commercially catastrophic solo album like last year’s Goddess In The Doorway. Or his comically inexhaustible libido, and the carelessness with which he greets another tabloid expos of his love life.

“When Mick Jagger had his solo recording out,” recalls Oldham, “I stated that the ambition that had been attractive in the 1960s could turn – in the light of his and Paul McCartney’s solo efforts – when one is over 50 into an embarrassing disease. Tough, but light compared to what Keith Richards had to say. It goes hand in hand with the art. But a musician is entitled to play or sing, it’s their lifeblood and reason to be living. He or she can only spend so many days of the year being comfortable at home.”

Or take rock’s most miraculous survivor, Keith Richards, and his increasingly deranged take on outlaw style: the bits of feather in his hair that make him look, presumably intentionally, like a Home Counties Sitting Bull. Or his clownish, geezerly sidekick Ron Wood, the enthusiastic new boy who’s only been in the band for 30 years. These are not, by most standards, men growing old gracefully.

But perhaps this is one of the most radical innovations of The Rolling Stones. They force us to look at ageing in a new light: they aren’t merely dallying with the affectations of youth, they’re staying loyal to the tenets of a youth culture – a look-at-me decadence, a rebel theatre, an idiosyncratic style – that they helped to invent.

Look at them in a new picture in the booklet that comes with Forty Licks, where the four current members are wedged onto a sofa. Richards, on the left, is pretending to be asleep, his head resting on Wood’s shoulder. Loyally, Wood has one eye open and is equally slouched. Drummer Charlie Watts looks as urbane and detached as ever, a thin smile of private amusement on his lips. And Jagger, on the right, is hilarious: sat bolt upright, staring with prurient disgust at Richards. Here, their differences are cultivated, and internal conflict becomes yet another marketing tool. Here’s the last gang in town, one that has stuck together through thick and thin, but only after protracted negotiations between each other’s people.

So, are The Rolling Stones merely the picture in rock’n’roll’s attic, wrinkling up while the genre they helped create sustains its youthfulness? It does seem wrong to call them the music’s consciences, or guardians: after all, they’d never take on a job with such hazy financial rewards.

But at this point, it looks very much like they’ll go on forever. Wise businessmen don’t abandon one of the strongest brand names on the planet, after all. As the 40th anniversary tour trolls round the States and begins its tentative movements across the rest of the planet, plenty of people will call The Rolling Stones a travesty of their former selves. But really, they’re perpetuating their legend, not debasing it. For if one of their principles is that rock’n’roll is innate, a calling, then it’s necessary for them to be seen to pursue it until the absolute end. They’re the proof that this music refuses to fade away, in spite of how transient it has appeared at times over the past 40 years.

And finally, they’re a band that demand analysis but simultaneously transcend it: there’s only so much you can intellectualise about something so immediate and, still, exhilarating.

“We have so much time to fret and gossip when The Rolling Stones are off the road,” concludes Andrew Loog Oldham. “But once they are back on it, it’s theirs and that’s all there is to say. And this time they’ve really grabbed the tit and heart of America. They are a forgiven Enron: pure materialanza; able, because of the force and the memory, to entertain a post-9/11 America that Bruce Springsteen, because of the home-grown luggage, can only console.”

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Radiohead pay tribute to stage collapse victim at comeback show

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Radiohead paid a special tribute to their late drum technician Scott Johnson last night (July 10) during their first gig since his death. The band, who were performing at the Les Arenes in Nimes, France, filled the screen with photos of Johnson as they played "Reckoner" in their third encore, repor...

Radiohead paid a special tribute to their late drum technician Scott Johnson last night (July 10) during their first gig since his death.

The band, who were performing at the Les Arenes in Nimes, France, filled the screen with photos of Johnson as they played “Reckoner” in their third encore, reports Consequence Of Sound.

It was their first rescheduled show since their drum tech died during a stage collapse in Toronto last month. A further three people were injured in the incident at Downsview Park.

The stage collapsed an hour before the gates opened to the public and queues were already forming outside the venue. The victims were all part of the team setting up equipment. Radiohead rescheduled seven shows following the tragedy after the accident also destroyed the band’s unique lightshow and parts of their backline setup.

Shortly after the incident, industry veteran Lars Brogaard called for a fundamental change to stage erection guidelines. He recommended that the use of steel roofs should become an industry standard.

He said: You need to go to steel. The shows nowadays are getting heavier and heavier with the lighting and the video screens. These aluminium roofs, they can’t take the weight.

The band will continue their tour with a second show at the Les Arenes tonight (July 11).

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The White Stripes to release recordings of first ever live shows

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The White Stripes have released recordings of their first ever live performances. The vinyl releases are only available through The Vault, a quarterly subscription series from Jack White's Third Man Records/ The latest Vault package includes the 'Live At The Gold Dollar' 7" single, a recording fro...

The White Stripes have released recordings of their first ever live performances.

The vinyl releases are only available through The Vault, a quarterly subscription series from Jack White’s Third Man Records/ The latest Vault package includes the ‘Live At The Gold Dollar’ 7″ single, a recording from an open mic night on July 14, 1997 that was the duo’s first ever performance.

The single, pressed on red vinyl, includes a version of “Jimmy The Exploder”, a song that would later appear on the band’s self-titled debut album, as well as a cover of “Love Potion #9” and a rendition of a traditional number called “St. James Infirmary Blues”.

Packaged with the single is a 12″ white vinyl LP, also titled Live At The Gold Dollar. It features three tracks recorded at the band’s first ever full concert, which took place at the same venue on August 14, 1997. It includes live versions of early Stripes favourites “Lafayette Blues” and “Screwdriver”, as well as a cover of “TV Eye” by The Stooges.

Rounding off the package is an exclusive black tote bag emblazoned with the band’s iconic peppermint logo. The deadline to sign up to The Vault in order to receive The White Stripes live recordings is July 31.

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Blur’s Graham Coxon to write songs for new Britpop-based film ‘The Wanderers’

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Blur guitarist Graham Coxon has signed up to write songs for the soundtrack for a new film titled The Wanderers. According to The Sun today (July 11), the film is a "non-conventional Britpop teen musical" and follows the fortunes of a young band from Essex, where Blur are originally from. The film...

Blur guitarist Graham Coxon has signed up to write songs for the soundtrack for a new film titled The Wanderers.

According to The Sun today (July 11), the film is a “non-conventional Britpop teen musical” and follows the fortunes of a young band from Essex, where Blur are originally from.

The film, which is set in 1996, will also feature songs written by Ash frontman Tim Wheeler, whose band also rose to the fore around that time.

Wheeler is currently putting together the score for Spike Island, the new film based on The Stone Roses‘ gig in Merseyside 1989. That is due for release later this year.

Blur will play a huge show next month in London’s Hyde Park to mark the end of this summer’s Olympics, topping a bill that also includes New Order, The Specials and Bombay Bicycle Club.

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The 28th Uncut Playlist Of 2012

Following music on Twitter, it sometimes feels as if a hyped album or a track is listened to for, at best, six hours now before it becomes in some way obsolete: if it’s not trending, it must be passé. Playing “Channel Orange” the day after the event, then, is a weird experience, not least because it’s a subtle, insidious record that repays close and multiple listens. My engagement with R&B has been pretty tangential for the past few years, so I might not be the best person to make recommendations in this sector, but I do like it a lot: there’s something fractionally dislocated, washed-out, other-worldly about the way Frank Ocean channels the vintage soul of Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye etc. And while the fuss about Ocean’s sexuality is notable and justifiable, let’s hope “Channel Orange” is celebrated for its quality, not just its backstory. Have a listen to the stream linked below, and let me know what you think. Moving on, plenty of other gold this week. The photo above is of Sic Alps, and is rather incongruous given that their new one is substantially mellower than most of their earlier work, and also maybe their best yet: some Alex Chilton vibes in places, I think. One of the mystery records can now be revealed, too: yet again, it’s Ty Segall, with his third excellent album of the year. Love, too, for the harmonious triumvirate of Fennesz, Evan Caminiti and Nico Muhly… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Josephine Foster – Blood Rushing (Fire) 2 The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion – Meat & Bone (Shove!/Bronze Rat) 3 Sic Alps – Sic Alps (Drag City) 4 Samara Lubelski – Wavelength (De Stijl) 5 King Tuff – King Tuff (Sub Pop) 6 Tussle – Tempest (Smalltown Supersound) 7 Fennesz – Aun: the Beginning & the End of All Things (Ash International) 8 Jeff The Brotherhood – Hypnotic Nights (WEA) 9 Nico Muhly – Drones & Viola (Bedroom Community) 10 The Fresh & Onlys – Long Slow Dance (Souterrain Transmissions) 11 Evans Pyramid - Evans Pyramid (Cultures Of Soul) 12 Various Artists – All Kinds Of Highs: A Mainstream Pop-Psych Compendium 1966-70 (Big Beat) 13 Frank Ocean – Channel Orange (Listen here) 14 Timmy’s Organism – Raw Sewage Roq (In The Red) 15 Los Lobos – Kiko: 20th Anniversary Edition (Shout Factory) 16 Lee Ranaldo Band & J Mascis – Albatross (Listen here) 17 18 Evan Caminiti – Dreamless Sleep (Thrill Jockey) 19 Ty Segall – Twins (Drag City) 20 Marty Marquis - Switched-On Goodbye Bread (Listen here) 21 Dead Rat Orchestra – The Guga Hunters Of Ness (Critical Heights)

Following music on Twitter, it sometimes feels as if a hyped album or a track is listened to for, at best, six hours now before it becomes in some way obsolete: if it’s not trending, it must be passé.

Playing “Channel Orange” the day after the event, then, is a weird experience, not least because it’s a subtle, insidious record that repays close and multiple listens. My engagement with R&B has been pretty tangential for the past few years, so I might not be the best person to make recommendations in this sector, but I do like it a lot: there’s something fractionally dislocated, washed-out, other-worldly about the way Frank Ocean channels the vintage soul of Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye etc. And while the fuss about Ocean’s sexuality is notable and justifiable, let’s hope “Channel Orange” is celebrated for its quality, not just its backstory. Have a listen to the stream linked below, and let me know what you think.

Moving on, plenty of other gold this week. The photo above is of Sic Alps, and is rather incongruous given that their new one is substantially mellower than most of their earlier work, and also maybe their best yet: some Alex Chilton vibes in places, I think. One of the mystery records can now be revealed, too: yet again, it’s Ty Segall, with his third excellent album of the year. Love, too, for the harmonious triumvirate of Fennesz, Evan Caminiti and Nico Muhly

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

1 Josephine Foster – Blood Rushing (Fire)

2 The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion – Meat & Bone (Shove!/Bronze Rat)

3 Sic Alps – Sic Alps (Drag City)

4 Samara Lubelski – Wavelength (De Stijl)

5 King Tuff – King Tuff (Sub Pop)

6 Tussle – Tempest (Smalltown Supersound)

7 Fennesz – Aun: the Beginning & the End of All Things (Ash International)

8 Jeff The Brotherhood – Hypnotic Nights (WEA)

9 Nico Muhly – Drones & Viola (Bedroom Community)

10 The Fresh & Onlys – Long Slow Dance (Souterrain Transmissions)

11 Evans Pyramid – Evans Pyramid (Cultures Of Soul)

12 Various Artists – All Kinds Of Highs: A Mainstream Pop-Psych Compendium 1966-70 (Big Beat)

13 Frank Ocean – Channel Orange (Listen here)

14 Timmy’s Organism – Raw Sewage Roq (In The Red)

15 Los Lobos – Kiko: 20th Anniversary Edition (Shout Factory)

16 Lee Ranaldo Band & J Mascis – Albatross (Listen here)

17

18 Evan Caminiti – Dreamless Sleep (Thrill Jockey)

19 Ty Segall – Twins (Drag City)

20 Marty Marquis – Switched-On Goodbye Bread (Listen here)

21 Dead Rat Orchestra – The Guga Hunters Of Ness (Critical Heights)

Johnny Depp co-editing unpublished Woody Guthrie novel

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Johnny Depp is co-editing a unpublished Woody Guthrie novel, House Of Earth, according to reports in Rolling Stone and The New York Times. Inspired by his own experiences living during the Dust Bowl era, the story follows two west Texas farmers, Tike and Ella May Hamlin and their run ins with a ban...

Johnny Depp is co-editing a unpublished Woody Guthrie novel, House Of Earth, according to reports in Rolling Stone and The New York Times.

Inspired by his own experiences living during the Dust Bowl era, the story follows two west Texas farmers, Tike and Ella May Hamlin and their run ins with a bank and lumber company. Depp is co-editing the novel with Douglas Brinkley. Depp and Brinkley wrote an essay in The New York Times about the project, saying the book is a “meditation about how poor people search for love and meaning in a corrupt world, one in which the rich have lost their moral compasses. Even though the backdrop is the washed-out agricultural fields of Texas, the novel could just as easily be set in a refugee camp in Sudan or a shantytown in Haiti.”

Guthrie finished the novel in 1947, but set it to one side to concentrate on his songwriting.

House Of Earth will be published next year.

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Watch Tom Waits perform “Chicago” on Letterman

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Tom Waits appeared on Monday evening's edition of Late Night With David Letterman, where he performed "Chicago", from his most recent album, 2011's Bad As Me, live for the first time. Musicians joining Waits on stage included his son Casey Waits on drums, long time bassist Larry Taylor, guitarist D...

Tom Waits appeared on Monday evening’s edition of Late Night With David Letterman, where he performed “Chicago”, from his most recent album, 2011’s Bad As Me, live for the first time.

Musicians joining Waits on stage included his son Casey Waits on drums, long time bassist Larry Taylor, guitarist David Hidalgo, keyboardist Augie Myers and guitarist Big Bill Morganfield.

You can watch Waits’ performance on the CBS show below.

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Rolling Stones to officially release Tokyo 1990 bootleg

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The Rolling Stones are set to release a new bootleg from their archives this morning [July 11] Recorded at the Tokyo Dome in 1990, on the Steel Wheels tour, this is the fourth bootleg the Stones have officially released, following on from 1975's LA Friday, the Hampton Coliseum show in 1981 and 1973...

The Rolling Stones are set to release a new bootleg from their archives this morning [July 11]

Recorded at the Tokyo Dome in 1990, on the Steel Wheels tour, this is the fourth bootleg the Stones have officially released, following on from 1975’s LA Friday, the Hampton Coliseum show in 1981 and 1973’s legendary Brussels Affair set.

The Stones toured Japan for the first time in February, 1990, taking up a 10-date residence at the Tokyo Dome.

Tokyo 1990 is available to buy from www.stonesarchive.com at 11am GMT.

You can watch Mick Jagger and Keith Richards discuss the release here.

Meanwhile, A new photography exhibition called The Rolling Stones: 50 is set to open at London’s Somerset House this week.

The free exhibition will be held from July 13 – August 27 in the landmark venue’s East Wing Galleries and will coincide with the release of a book of the same time. The book will feature 700 shots and words from the band on their history, and will hit UK bookshops on July 12.

The exhibition will show a host of unseen and rare photographs, including more than 70 prints, with live shots, studio images and reportage pictures on display as well as contact sheets and negative strips.

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The Gaslight Anthem extend their October UK tour

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The Gaslight Anthem have extended their UK tour, which takes place in October. The New Jersey band, who will release their new album Handwritten on July 23, have added another show at London's O2 Academy Brixton on October 17 to the their tour. They will now play five dates, two of which will be at...

The Gaslight Anthem have extended their UK tour, which takes place in October.

The New Jersey band, who will release their new album Handwritten on July 23, have added another show at London’s O2 Academy Brixton on October 17 to the their tour. They will now play five dates, two of which will be at O2 Academy Brixton. Support on the tour will come from Blood Red Shoes.

Earlier this month, The Gaslight Anthem played a one-off show at London’s KOKO. They will return to the UK for appearances at Reading & Leeds Festivals at the end of August.

The Gaslight Anthem will play:

O2 Academy Brixton (October 15, 17)

O2 Apollo Manchester (October 18)

O2 Academy Glasgow (October 19)

O2 Academy Birmingham (October 20)

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