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We want your questions for Wayne Coyne

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The Flaming Lips frontman, Wayne Coyne, is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular Audience With… feature. So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask Wayne..? When working as a restaurant fry cook for in Oklahoma City, what were his specialities? A well-dressed man ...

The Flaming Lips frontman, Wayne Coyne, is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular Audience With… feature.

So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask Wayne..?

When working as a restaurant fry cook for in Oklahoma City, what were his specialities?

A well-dressed man by nature, who’s his favourite tailor?

Who would he most like to collaborate with next?

Send your questions to us by noon, Friday June 29 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com.

The best questions, and Wayne’s answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine.

Please include your name and location with your question.

Thurston Moore unveils new band, Chelsea Light Moving

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Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore has unveiled his brand new band, Chelsea Light Moving. As well as Moore, the band also features Keith Moore on guitar, Samara Lubelski on bass and John Moloney on drums. The band's first release, "Burroughs", is inspired by the last words of Beat author William Burroughs, reports Spin. You can listen to the track at Matadorrecords.com. The band are set to air another track later this week. Last week, it was announced that Sonic Youth's Kim Gordon and Thurston Moore are set to release a mini-album in collaboration with Yoko Ono, entitled 'YOKOKIMTHURSTON'. The six track album will be released on September 24 and will feature the 14 minute long single, "Early In The Morning". In October last year, Gordon and Moore announced that they were separating after 27 years of marriage. The announcement raised doubts over the future of Sonic Youth after Matador revealed that plans for the band remained "uncertain", even though they had previously hinted they would record new material in 2011.

Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore has unveiled his brand new band, Chelsea Light Moving.

As well as Moore, the band also features Keith Moore on guitar, Samara Lubelski on bass and John Moloney on drums.

The band’s first release, “Burroughs”, is inspired by the last words of Beat author William Burroughs, reports Spin.

You can listen to the track at Matadorrecords.com.

The band are set to air another track later this week.

Last week, it was announced that Sonic Youth’s Kim Gordon and Thurston Moore are set to release a mini-album in collaboration with Yoko Ono, entitled ‘YOKOKIMTHURSTON’. The six track album will be released on September 24 and will feature the 14 minute long single, “Early In The Morning”.

In October last year, Gordon and Moore announced that they were separating after 27 years of marriage.

The announcement raised doubts over the future of Sonic Youth after Matador revealed that plans for the band remained “uncertain”, even though they had previously hinted they would record new material in 2011.

Bruce Springsteen closes Isle Of Wight Festival 2012

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Bruce Springsteen closed the Isle Of Wight Festival last night (June 24) with a three-hour set ending in a cover of "Twist And Shout", the song made famous by The Beatles. Opening with "Badlands", the 62-year-old joked with the crowd about the coverage of the weekend's weather. "It looked bad on TV...

Bruce Springsteen closed the Isle Of Wight Festival last night (June 24) with a three-hour set ending in a cover of “Twist And Shout”, the song made famous by The Beatles.

Opening with “Badlands“, the 62-year-old joked with the crowd about the coverage of the weekend’s weather. “It looked bad on TV,” he told the crowd. “I didn’t bring my wellies, I think I left them at Glastonbury.”

Springsteen was in playful mood, taking a straw hat from a woman in the crowd and trying it on, noting “looks good”. Several times he descended from the stage in order to touch the hands of the crowd in the front rows, while during “Dancing In The Dark” he pulled a girl from the crowd in homage to its video, while also trying on her white cat hat for size.

The set featured several songs from his new album Wrecking Ball alongside classic hits. “There are hard times at home in the US and there are hard times here too,” he said before “Jack Of All Trades”.

Ending with a final run of classics including “Born In The USA“, “Born To Run” and “Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out”, Springsteen then said “I’m gonna leave you with a folk song,” before playing “Twist And Shout” – which The Who had also covered when they played the Isle of Wight in 1970.

Bruce Springsteen played:

‘Badlands’

‘No Surrender’

‘We Take Care Of Our Own’

‘Wrecking Ball’

‘Death To My Hometown’

‘My City Of Ruins’

‘Spirit In The Night’

‘Lonesome Day’

‘Jack Of All Trades’

‘Atlantic City’

‘Because The Night’

‘Working On The Highway’

‘Shackled And Drawn’

‘Waiting On A Sunny Day’

‘The River’

‘The Rising’

‘Out In The Street’

‘Land Of Hope And Dreams’

‘We Are Alive’

‘Born In The USA’

‘Born To Run’

‘Glory Days’

‘Dancing In The Dark’

‘Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out’

‘Twist And Shout’

Uncut Springsteen App

Tom Waits to perform songs from Bad As Me live for the first time

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Tom Waits is set to perform tracks from his most recent album, 2011's Bad As Me, live for the first time. The legendary singer songwriter will appear on the Late Show with David Letterman on July 9 and Late Night with Jimmy Fallon on July 10, where he will be playing songs from his 17th studio albu...

Tom Waits is set to perform tracks from his most recent album, 2011’s Bad As Me, live for the first time.

The legendary singer songwriter will appear on the Late Show with David Letterman on July 9 and Late Night with Jimmy Fallon on July 10, where he will be playing songs from his 17th studio album as well as appearing in conversation with the hosts.

News of the performances was announced via Tom Waits’ Facebook page, which read: “Tom will appear on late night television for Letterman on July 9 and Fallon on July 10. He will be talking with the hosts and giving the first live performance of songs from his latest recording, Bad As Me. Musicians joining Waits on stage include his son Casey Waits on drums, long time bassist Larry Taylor, guitarist David Hidalgo, keyboardist Augie Myers and guitarist Big Bill Morganfield.”

Both of Waits’ talk show appearances have been rescheduled from earlier in the year. Scroll down to listen to the title track from Bad As Me.

Blur to debut two new songs on live Twitter video stream

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Blur will debut two new songs next Monday (July 2) in a live video stream performance on Twitter. The band will perform "Under The Westway" and "The Puritan", written for their forthcoming sold-out Hyde Park gig on August 12, live from a secret UK location and it will be broadcast around the world ...

Blur will debut two new songs next Monday (July 2) in a live video stream performance on Twitter.

The band will perform “Under The Westway” and “The Puritan”, written for their forthcoming sold-out Hyde Park gig on August 12, live from a secret UK location and it will be broadcast around the world on Twitter.com/blurofficial at 6:15pm. Scroll down the page and click to hear versions of the songs.

An interview with the band will follow the performance of the first track before they will debut the second song at 7:15pm. Both songs will then be immediately available to download. A limited edition double A-side 7-inch single will be released by Parlophone on August 6.

Commenting on the live video stream performance, Damon Albarn said: “I wrote these songs for Hyde Park and I’m really excited about getting out there and playing them for people.”

On Friday, Blur teased fans by posting times and the names of the tracks on their Twitter page.

The Puritan” post features a picture of a neon lettering stating “Hey puritan what you gonna do about it” while the shot which accompanies the “Under The Westway” tweet features a photo of the West London overpass emblazoned with the words: “Bring us the day they switch off the machines.”

Blur will embark on an intimate UK tour this August. The band play four shows, beginning at Margate’s Winter Gardens on August 1. They will then play two shows at Wolverhampton’s Civic Hall on August 5 and 6, before finishing off at Plymouth’s Pavilions on August 7.

The shows will act as a warm-up for the band’s huge outdoor gig at London’s Hyde Park on August 12, which sees Blur topping a bill that also includes New Order and The Specials. The gig has been put on to coincide with the closing ceremony of the Olympic games. Blur are also scheduled to headline Sweden’s Way Out West festival in August.

Blur will release a career-spanning boxset on July 30. Titled 21, the collection includes the band’s seven studio albums as well as over five hours of previously unreleased material including 65 tracks, rarities, three DVDs, a collector’s edition book and special limited edition Seymour seven-inch vinyl.

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

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HX1ccrvM-E4

Dark Horse

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Car crashes, comas, hepatatis and death. It's the return of Todd Solondz, of course! One encouraging trend I’ve noticed this year is the return of some leading lights from 1990s indie cinema. First, Whit Stillman emerged after a 13 year hiatus with Damsels In Distress, swiftly followed by Wes Anderson’s Moonrise Kingdom in May and now Todd Solondz is back with his first film since 2009’s Life During Wartime. Dark Horse is perhaps Solondz most straightforward movie – that’s to say, there’s no suicide, paedophilia or on-screen masturbation here – but it does at least find the director engaging with his favourite theme: suburban loneliness. Abe (Jordan Gelber), is a man of a certain age and girth, who still lives at home with his parents. “My parents need me!” He explains. “Grow up,” he’s told. “No one needs you.” His mother (Mia Farrow) mollycoddles him. Abe works – not very effectively – for his father’s real estate business. As his father is played by Christopher Walken, you sense this is not a healthy set of circumstances. Superficially, at least, this state of affairs seems not to trouble Abe unduly: the stereo in his bright yellow truck (resembling a giant Lego toy) pumps out air-punching, aspirational pop rock; he appears relentlessly upbeat. At a wedding, Abe meets the highly-medicated Miranda (Selma Blair), and you begin to suspect that in another universe, this could pan out as a romantic comedy with Seth Rogen or Zack Galifianakis playing the arrested adolescent opposite – God help us – Emily Blunt. Typically, Solondz prefers to grind out agonies for his protagonists – here you will find car crashes, comas, hepatatis and death. It’s the cinematic equivalent of setting fire to ants with a magnifying glass. Michael Bonner

Car crashes, comas, hepatatis and death. It’s the return of Todd Solondz, of course!

One encouraging trend I’ve noticed this year is the return of some leading lights from 1990s indie cinema. First, Whit Stillman emerged after a 13 year hiatus with Damsels In Distress, swiftly followed by Wes Anderson’s Moonrise Kingdom in May and now Todd Solondz is back with his first film since 2009’s Life During Wartime.

Dark Horse is perhaps Solondz most straightforward movie – that’s to say, there’s no suicide, paedophilia or on-screen masturbation here – but it does at least find the director engaging with his favourite theme: suburban loneliness. Abe (Jordan Gelber), is a man of a certain age and girth, who still lives at home with his parents. “My parents need me!” He explains. “Grow up,” he’s told. “No one needs you.” His mother (Mia Farrow) mollycoddles him. Abe works – not very effectively – for his father’s real estate business. As his father is played by Christopher Walken, you sense this is not a healthy set of circumstances.

Superficially, at least, this state of affairs seems not to trouble Abe unduly: the stereo in his bright yellow truck (resembling a giant Lego toy) pumps out air-punching, aspirational pop rock; he appears relentlessly upbeat. At a wedding, Abe meets the highly-medicated Miranda (Selma Blair), and you begin to suspect that in another universe, this could pan out as a romantic comedy with Seth Rogen or Zack Galifianakis playing the arrested adolescent opposite – God help us – Emily Blunt. Typically, Solondz prefers to grind out agonies for his protagonists – here you will find car crashes, comas, hepatatis and death. It’s the cinematic equivalent of setting fire to ants with a magnifying glass.

Michael Bonner

Jesus And Mary Chain Add New US Tour Dates

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The Jesus And Mary Chain have announced a new run of American tour dates. The band have just completed their first US tour in four years, and have now confirmed 18 dates to come starting in August. The band will play: August 2 – Buffalo, NY @ Thursday at the Harbor August 3 – Toronto, ON @ Ph...

The Jesus And Mary Chain have announced a new run of American tour dates. The band have just completed their first US tour in four years, and have now confirmed 18 dates to come starting in August.

The band will play:

August 2 – Buffalo, NY @ Thursday at the Harbor

August 3 – Toronto, ON @ Phoenix Theatre

August 4 – Montreal, QC @ Osheaga Festival

August 5 – New Orleans, LA @ House of Blues

September 6 – Atlanta, GA @ Variety Playhouse

September 7 – Raleigh, NC @ Hopscotch Music Festival

September 8 – Philadelphia, PA @ Union Transfer

September 9 – Washington, DC @ 9:30 Club

September 11 – Boston, MA @ Paradise Rock Club

September 12 – Boston, MA @ Paradise Rock Cub

September 13 – New York, NY @ Irving Plaza

September 14 – New York, NY @ Irving Plaza

September 15 – Detroit, MI @ Saint Andrew’s Hall

September 16 – Chicago, IL @ Riot Fest

September 19 – Madison, WI @ Majestic Theatre

September 20 – Indianapolis, IN @ Vogue

September 21 – Cleveland, OH @ House of Blues

September 22 – Grand Rapids, MI @ Orbit Room

Tori Amos to play one-off show at London’s Royal Albert Hall

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Tori Amos is set to play a one-off show at London's Royal Albert Hall on October 3. The singer-songwriter will be joined by The Metropole Orchestra for the show, which will happen around the time of the release of her brand new album, Gold Dust. Her 13th studio album will be comprised of re-working...

Tori Amos is set to play a one-off show at London’s Royal Albert Hall on October 3.

The singer-songwriter will be joined by The Metropole Orchestra for the show, which will happen around the time of the release of her brand new album, Gold Dust. Her 13th studio album will be comprised of re-workings of previously released material from throughout her career. She released her last record, the classically inspired Night Of Hunters in 2011.

Last year the musical written by Tori Amos that was set to debut at London’s National Theatre this year was ‘postponed indefinitely’.

The singer was working on a theatrical adaptation of The Light Princess, an 1864 fairy tale by George MacDonald, which was due to open at the London Southbank venue’s Lyttelton auditorium in April 2012. A spokeswoman for the National Theatre said: “Development is continuing on The Light Princess and we’ll announce a new date for the production in due course.”

Isle of Wight Festival organisers insist no acts have pulled out after weather chaos

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No acts have pulled out of the Isle Of Wight Festival, despite heavy flooding throwing the event into chaos, a spokesperson has told NME. Earlier today, organiser John Giddings told the BBC that he would consider refunding ticket holders if they sent their tickets back. "I'm really sorry" he said. "I really appreciate all the support everyone has given us under the conditions... but the weather has been absolutely horrendous." The festival's site has already been hit by heavy rain, with the main car park for this weekend's event becoming waterlogged, leading to traffic congestion. Around 600 people were stranded on ferries overnight because traffic build-up meant passengers could not disembark. According to the latest Met Office forecast, today (June 22) will be pretty wet, with showers predicted to fall from around 10am (GMT) through to mid-afternoon. It should be dry after that though, meaning tonight's headliner Tom Petty should enjoy a rain-free set. Tomorrow (June 23) is expected to be dry throughout the day, with temperatures even reaching as high as 16 degrees. However, rain is predicted to hit the site after 7pm, meaning headliners Pearl Jam may well play to a damp crowd. Sunday (June 24) is the set to be the worst day for conditions, with rain expected to fall throughout the night and day, right up until the early evening, although it is predicted to stop for closing headliner Bruce Springsteen's set.

No acts have pulled out of the Isle Of Wight Festival, despite heavy flooding throwing the event into chaos, a spokesperson has told NME.

Earlier today, organiser John Giddings told the BBC that he would consider refunding ticket holders if they sent their tickets back. “I’m really sorry” he said. “I really appreciate all the support everyone has given us under the conditions… but the weather has been absolutely horrendous.”

The festival’s site has already been hit by heavy rain, with the main car park for this weekend’s event becoming waterlogged, leading to traffic congestion. Around 600 people were stranded on ferries overnight because traffic build-up meant passengers could not disembark.

According to the latest Met Office forecast, today (June 22) will be pretty wet, with showers predicted to fall from around 10am (GMT) through to mid-afternoon. It should be dry after that though, meaning tonight’s headliner Tom Petty should enjoy a rain-free set.

Tomorrow (June 23) is expected to be dry throughout the day, with temperatures even reaching as high as 16 degrees. However, rain is predicted to hit the site after 7pm, meaning headliners Pearl Jam may well play to a damp crowd.

Sunday (June 24) is the set to be the worst day for conditions, with rain expected to fall throughout the night and day, right up until the early evening, although it is predicted to stop for closing headliner Bruce Springsteen‘s set.

Stars announce new album ‘The North’

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Stars have announced that their new album will be titled 'The North' and that it will be released in September. The Canadian five-piece will release the record, which is their sixth studio album, on September 3. The album is the follow-up to their 2010 effort 'The Five Ghosts'. The band have al...

Stars have announced that their new album will be titled ‘The North’ and that it will be released in September.

The Canadian five-piece will release the record, which is their sixth studio album, on September 3. The album is the follow-up to their 2010 effort ‘The Five Ghosts’.

The band have also unveiled the album’s opening track ‘The Theory Of Relativity’, which you can hear by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking.

Three of the band’s five members have previously been part of Broken Social Scene, who announced in late 2011 that they were now on indefinite hiatus, leaving their many members to pursue other projects.

Stars have yet to announce any tour dates in support of their new album.

The tracklisting for ‘The North’ is as follows:

‘The Theory Of Relativity’

‘Backlines’

‘The North’

‘Hold On When You Get Love And Let Go When You Give It’

‘Through The Mines’

‘Do You Want To Die Together?’

‘Lights Changing Colour’

‘The Loose Ends Will Make Knots’

‘A Song Is A Weapon’

‘Progress’

‘The 400’

‘Walls’

The Best Of 2012 So Far: Additions, Footnotes etc…

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Pondering what to write about this morning, it occurred to me that there were more things to say about my favourite albums of 2012 so far, following up from this Top 40 that I posted last week. For a start, a bunch of records that I forgot to include: 1. Earth – Angels Of Darkness, Demons Of Light II (Southern Lord) 2. Kandodo – Kandodo (Thrill Jockey) 3. Motion Sickness Of Time Travel - Motion Sickness Of Time Travel (Spectrum Spools) 4. Panabrite – The Baroque Atrium (Preservation) 5. Plankton Wat – Spirits (Thrill Jockey) 6. Raajmahal – Raajmahal (Kelippah) 7. Terry Riley – Aleph (Tzadik) 8. Mike Wexler – Dispossession (Bella Union) Thanks to those of you who reminded me of some of these, and also to this next tranche of albums, which I think are worth a mention, even though I’m not 100 per cent sold on them: 9. Alabama Shakes – Boys & Girls (Rough Trade) 10. Mark Lanegan Band – Blues Funeral (4AD) 11. Tindersticks – The Something Rain (Lucky Dog) 12. Trembling Bells & Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy – The Marble Downs (Honest Jon’s) 13. Sharon Van Etten – Tramp (Jagjaguwar) I suspect 9-13 will be pretty familiar, but a few notes on 1-8, which seem to feature quite a concentration of longform synth/kosmische meditations of one kind or another, from Kandodo (Simon Price from The Heads, making ambient crust out of the Stooges’ “We Will Fall” and Sonic Boom’s early Spectrum records), to Motion Sickness Of Time Travel’s epic, glazed effort for the Emeralds’ label, which sits alongside Mark McGuire’s solo work as a bridge between ‘70s proto New Age and ‘90s dreampop, after a fashion. Raajmahal is one of a bunch of vinyl records made by and sent over by Decimus AKA Pat Murano, one of the the extended No Neck Blues Band family that also includes people like Dave ‘D Charles Speer’ Shuford. The Raajmahal s/t is a diffident, super-minimal drift set that reminds me a little bit of some of those Natural Snow Buildings records, but with a more pronounced weightlessness and space. Really lovely. Panabrite is straightahead kosmische synth that’s no less nice for all that, and is my favourite entry in Preservation’s Circa series since the Deep Magic and Quiet Evenings (featuring Motion Sickness Of Time Travel, incidentally) albums last year. Mike Wexler is a singer-songwriter with some arcane prog-folk inclinations, who hasn’t received the same levels of attention as most Bella Union artists. If you’ve got into “Dispossession”, I can vigorously recommend his “Sun Wheel” album that came out on Amish a few years back, and which I prefer. Finally, there’s this great new Terry Riley double CD trip, “Aleph”, that I didn’t even know existed until I picked up a tweet on the subject from The Wire’s Derek Walmsley last week. First time in a while that Riley has revisited the patient, unravelling organ reveries of “Descending Moonshine Dervishes” and “Persian Surgery Dervishes”, I think, and while the tuning of this particular just intonation can be hairy in places, the complete journey is hugely rewarding. Thanks for all your responses to the original list, by the way. I’m thinking that it may be hard to construct a readers’ chart out of them, but please keep them coming: always interesting to see your recommendations. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

Pondering what to write about this morning, it occurred to me that there were more things to say about my favourite albums of 2012 so far, following up from this Top 40 that I posted last week. For a start, a bunch of records that I forgot to include:

1. Earth – Angels Of Darkness, Demons Of Light II (Southern Lord)

2. Kandodo – Kandodo (Thrill Jockey)

3. Motion Sickness Of Time Travel – Motion Sickness Of Time Travel (Spectrum Spools)

4. Panabrite – The Baroque Atrium (Preservation)

5. Plankton Wat – Spirits (Thrill Jockey)

6. Raajmahal – Raajmahal (Kelippah)

7. Terry Riley – Aleph (Tzadik)

8. Mike Wexler – Dispossession (Bella Union)

Thanks to those of you who reminded me of some of these, and also to this next tranche of albums, which I think are worth a mention, even though I’m not 100 per cent sold on them:

9. Alabama Shakes – Boys & Girls (Rough Trade)

10. Mark Lanegan Band – Blues Funeral (4AD)

11. Tindersticks – The Something Rain (Lucky Dog)

12. Trembling Bells & Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy – The Marble Downs (Honest Jon’s)

13. Sharon Van Etten – Tramp (Jagjaguwar)

I suspect 9-13 will be pretty familiar, but a few notes on 1-8, which seem to feature quite a concentration of longform synth/kosmische meditations of one kind or another, from Kandodo (Simon Price from The Heads, making ambient crust out of the Stooges’ “We Will Fall” and Sonic Boom’s early Spectrum records), to Motion Sickness Of Time Travel’s epic, glazed effort for the Emeralds’ label, which sits alongside Mark McGuire’s solo work as a bridge between ‘70s proto New Age and ‘90s dreampop, after a fashion.

Raajmahal is one of a bunch of vinyl records made by and sent over by Decimus AKA Pat Murano, one of the the extended No Neck Blues Band family that also includes people like Dave ‘D Charles Speer’ Shuford. The Raajmahal s/t is a diffident, super-minimal drift set that reminds me a little bit of some of those Natural Snow Buildings records, but with a more pronounced weightlessness and space. Really lovely. Panabrite is straightahead kosmische synth that’s no less nice for all that, and is my favourite entry in Preservation’s Circa series since the Deep Magic and Quiet Evenings (featuring Motion Sickness Of Time Travel, incidentally) albums last year.

Mike Wexler is a singer-songwriter with some arcane prog-folk inclinations, who hasn’t received the same levels of attention as most Bella Union artists. If you’ve got into “Dispossession”, I can vigorously recommend his “Sun Wheel” album that came out on Amish a few years back, and which I prefer.

Finally, there’s this great new Terry Riley double CD trip, “Aleph”, that I didn’t even know existed until I picked up a tweet on the subject from The Wire’s Derek Walmsley last week. First time in a while that Riley has revisited the patient, unravelling organ reveries of “Descending Moonshine Dervishes” and “Persian Surgery Dervishes”, I think, and while the tuning of this particular just intonation can be hairy in places, the complete journey is hugely rewarding.

Thanks for all your responses to the original list, by the way. I’m thinking that it may be hard to construct a readers’ chart out of them, but please keep them coming: always interesting to see your recommendations.

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

Radiohead to reschedule seven European shows following Toronto stage collapse

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Radiohead are set to reschedule seven shows following Saturday's stage collapse in Toronto, which killed crew member Scott Johnson and injured three others. The band have had to postpone seven European shows set for the end of this month and the beginning of July, as the accident also destroyed th...

Radiohead are set to reschedule seven shows following Saturday’s stage collapse in Toronto, which killed crew member Scott Johnson and injured three others.

The band have had to postpone seven European shows set for the end of this month and the beginning of July, as the accident also destroyed the band’s ‘unique’ lightshow and parts of their backline setup, all of which now needs to be replaced in order for the tour to continue. The statement reads:

Whilst we all are dealing with the grief and shock ensuing from this terrible accident there are also many practical considerations to deal with.

The following shows in Italy, Germany and Switzerland will be rescheduled, with new dates and refund information to be announced on June 27: Rome Hippodrome Capanelle (June 30), Florence Parco delle Cascine (July 1), Bologna Arena Parco Nord (3), Codroipo Villa Manin (4), Berlin Wuhlheide (6-7) and St Triphon Carriere des Andonces (9).

The band will pick up the tour in France at Les Arenes Nimes (July 10) and will go on to play the Bilbao BBK and Lisbon Optimus Alive festivals.

Yesterday it was revealed that four companies, including one run by the members of Radiohead, have been asked to comply with an investigation by the Canadian government into the stage collapse. Ticker Tape Touring LLP, which lists Johnny Greenwood, Philip Selway, Colin Greenwood, Ed O’Brien and Thom Yorke as board members has been identified by the Canadian Ministry of Labour as one of at least four companies involved in the collapse, the Toronto Star reported.

Toronto-based Optex Staging and Services, Nasco Staffing Solutions and concert promoter Live Nation have all been asked to comply with the investigation into the tragedy at Downsview Park.

The stage collapsed an hour before the gates opened to the public and queues were already forming outside the 40,000 capacity venue. Emergency crews were quick on the scene and the area was evacuated. The victims were all part of the team setting up equipment.

Both Radiohead and Keane, with whom Johnson also worked, have paid tribute to him.

Radiohead drummer Phil Selway wrote on the band’s website: “We have all been shattered by the loss of Scott Johnson, our friend and colleague. He was a lovely man, always positive, supportive and funny; a highly skilled and valued member of our great road crew. We will miss him very much. Our thoughts and love are with Scott’s family and all those close to him.”

Jack White brings ‘Blunderbuss’ to London’s Brixton Academy

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Jack White showcased his debut solo album, Blunderbuss, with an all male band at London's Brixton Academy last night (June 21). The blues singer and guitarist last played in the UK backed by an all female band in April, but this time took to the stage flanked by a seven-piece all male band. White's...

Jack White showcased his debut solo album, Blunderbuss, with an all male band at London’s Brixton Academy last night (June 21).

The blues singer and guitarist last played in the UK backed by an all female band in April, but this time took to the stage flanked by a seven-piece all male band. White’s set included material from his first solo album alongside tracks by his bands The White Stripes and The Dead Weather. He also performed “Two Against One” from the Rome album by Danger Mouse and Daniele Luppi, for which he provided guest vocals.

Speaking after “Hotel Yorba” – which received one of the biggest responses from the crowd – he said: “London is alive and well and kicking. You get one nice day of weather yesterday and you just spring alive don’t you?”

Fans greeted the band’s heavy version of The Dead Weather’s “I Cut Like A Buffalo” with a huge round of applause, while an extended version of “Ball And Biscuit” saw White playing on his knees, marking the end of the main set. For the encore, White, who was sporting black, white and grey trousers, and his band played “16 Saltines”, “The Hardest Button To Button” and “Take Me With You When You Go”.

Jack White plays at London’s Hamersmith Apollo tonight (June 22), and Radio 1’s Hackney Weekend this Saturday (June 23).

Jack White played:

‘Black Math’

‘Missing Pieces’

‘Weep Themselves To Sleep’

‘Hypocritical Kiss’

‘Top Yourself’

‘Hotel Yorba’

‘Trash Tongue Talker’

‘Dead Leaves And The Dirty Ground’

‘Two Against One’

‘I Cut Like A Buffalo’

‘Freedom at 21’

‘We’re Going To Be Friends’

‘On and On and On’

‘Poor Boy’

‘Ball And Biscuit’

’16 Saltines’

‘The Hardest Button to Button’

‘Take Me With You When You Go’

Photo: Andy Willsher/NME

Floods hit Isle of Wight Festival site

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Floods have hit the Isle Of Wight Festival site. The main car park for this weekend's event has become waterlogged, leading to traffic congestion, meaning that ferry operators Wightlink are having difficulty discharging passengers, according to BBC News. Bus services have also been affected. Local police are helping to clear the backlog of traffic en route to the festival site. Earlier today (June 21) a police spokesperson told BBC News: "Tracks are in place across muddy ground for motorists to reach an extra car park at the IoW Festival. Police motorcyclists are on patrol between Fishbourne, Whippingham, Wootton Bridge and Newport to help manage the flow of traffic on to the site as swiftly and safely as possible." Heavy rain and strong winds hit the site this morning, with the rain predicted to continue throughout the weekend and with temperatures reaching a high of 16C. The festival, which will be headlined by Pearl Jam, Tom Petty and Bruce Springsteen, officially kicks off tomorrow (June 22) and runs until Sunday. For more information about the festival, see Isleofwightfestival.com. Photo: Victor Frankowski/NME

Floods have hit the Isle Of Wight Festival site.

The main car park for this weekend’s event has become waterlogged, leading to traffic congestion, meaning that ferry operators Wightlink are having difficulty discharging passengers, according to BBC News. Bus services have also been affected.

Local police are helping to clear the backlog of traffic en route to the festival site. Earlier today (June 21) a police spokesperson told BBC News: “Tracks are in place across muddy ground for motorists to reach an extra car park at the IoW Festival. Police motorcyclists are on patrol between Fishbourne, Whippingham, Wootton Bridge and Newport to help manage the flow of traffic on to the site as swiftly and safely as possible.”

Heavy rain and strong winds hit the site this morning, with the rain predicted to continue throughout the weekend and with temperatures reaching a high of 16C. The festival, which will be headlined by Pearl Jam, Tom Petty and Bruce Springsteen, officially kicks off tomorrow (June 22) and runs until Sunday.

For more information about the festival, see Isleofwightfestival.com.

Photo: Victor Frankowski/NME

Ozzy Osbourne pulls show at the last minute due to ‘vocal concerns’

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Ozzy Osbourne pulled out of a show on his 'Ozzy And Friends' live tour last night (June 20), despite his scheduled stage time being only minutes away. The singer, who replaced almost all of his summer tour dates with Black Sabbath with 'Ozzy And Friends' shows while his bandmate Tony Iommi recovers...

Ozzy Osbourne pulled out of a show on his ‘Ozzy And Friends’ live tour last night (June 20), despite his scheduled stage time being only minutes away.

The singer, who replaced almost all of his summer tour dates with Black Sabbath with ‘Ozzy And Friends’ shows while his bandmate Tony Iommi recovers from cancer, was due to perform at the SAP Arena in Mannheim, Germany last night and only cancelled a few minutes before the set was due to begin.

Osbourne left it so late in fact that support band Black Label Society had completed their set and fans were waiting for him to emerge. He has blamed the cancellation on “vocal issues”.

Despite this, a representative for Osbourne told TMZ that the singer was in a good condition and the cancellation is simply down to vocal problems.

Fans at the SAP Arena show have been advised to check the venue’s website to make sure they receive refunds for the cancellation.

Black Sabbath are currently in the midst of working on a new album and told NME earlier this month that they have written “15 new songs” for the album. Scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to watch them discuss their new record.

Black Keys stage ‘secret’ Nashville gig for video shoot

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The Black Keys held a 'secret' gig last night (June 20) in Nashville. The band played an hour-long set at the Springwater Supper Club, according to Rolling Stone. The show was ostensibly a video shoot for the band's new single, "Little Black Submarines", taken from their 2011 album, El Camino. The video is directed by photographer, Danny Clinch. Along with "Little Black Submarines", which the band played twice, the Black Keys also played "Howlin' For You", "Next Girl", "Nova Baby", "Tighten Up", "She's Long Gone", "Lonely Boy" and "Gold On The Ceiling".

The Black Keys held a ‘secret’ gig last night (June 20) in Nashville.

The band played an hour-long set at the Springwater Supper Club, according to Rolling Stone. The show was ostensibly a video shoot for the band’s new single, “Little Black Submarines”, taken from their 2011 album, El Camino.

The video is directed by photographer, Danny Clinch.

Along with “Little Black Submarines”, which the band played twice, the Black Keys also played “Howlin’ For You”, “Next Girl”, “Nova Baby”, “Tighten Up”, “She’s Long Gone”, “Lonely Boy” and “Gold On The Ceiling”.

Dirty Three announce November UK and Ireland tour

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Dirty Three have announced a full UK and Ireland tour for later this year. The Australian trio, who released their eighth studio album Toward The Low Sun in February of this year, will play seven live shows across November. The gigs begin at Birmingham Glee Club on November 20 and run until Novemb...

Dirty Three have announced a full UK and Ireland tour for later this year.

The Australian trio, who released their eighth studio album Toward The Low Sun in February of this year, will play seven live shows across November.

The gigs begin at Birmingham Glee Club on November 20 and run until November 28, when the band will headline London’s O2 Shepherds Bush Empire. The band will also play Manchester, Dublin, Glasgow, Gateshead and Bristol on the tour.

The band are also booked to play at this summer’s End Of The Road festival alongside the likes of Beach House, Midlake, Veronica Falls and The Low Anthem

Dirty Three will play:

Birmingham Glee Club (November 20)

Manchester Cathedral (21)

Dublin Button Factory (23)

Glasgow Oran Mor (25)

Gateshead The Sage Theatre (26)

Bristol Trinity (27)

O2 Shepherd’s Bush Empire (28)

Graham Nash to write autobiography

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Graham Nash has signed up with Random House's Crown Archetype imprint for an upcoming autobiography, according to a report in The New York Times. The newspaper reports that Nash plans to start his tale with his childhood in Salford, England, and go on to cover his work with the Hollies, his move to...

Graham Nash has signed up with Random House’s Crown Archetype imprint for an upcoming autobiography, according to a report in The New York Times.

The newspaper reports that Nash plans to start his tale with his childhood in Salford, England, and go on to cover his work with the Hollies, his move to America, his lengthy history with David Crosby, Stephen Stills and Neil Young.

The book, as yet untitled, is due for release next Autumn. “I’ve had an incredible ringside seat to the last 50-odd years of rock & roll,” said Nash. “I think people will be very interested to know what the British Invasion was like, what Woodstock was like, what my friends are like, what trouble we got into, what heights we scaled. I think they’ll be interested in all of it.”

Yoko Ono, Sonic Youth’s Kim Gordon and Thurston Moore to release mini album

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The six track album will be released on September 24 and will feature the 14 minute long single, "Early In The Morning", reports Rolling Stone. In October last year Gordon and Moore announced their split. The rock couple released a statement through their label Matador Records revealing that they were separating after 27 years of marriage. The announcement raised doubts over the future of Sonic Youth after Matador revealed that plans for the band remained "uncertain", even though they had previously hinted they would record new material in 2011. The statement read: "Musicians Kim Gordon and Thurston Moore, married in 1984, are announcing that they have separated. Sonic Youth, with both Kim and Thurston involved, will proceed with their South American tour dates in November. Plans beyond that tour are uncertain." Sonic Youth released their 16th studio album The Eternal in 2009, while Moore's third solo album, Demolished Thoughts, came out in May 2011. Yoko Ono features on a track called 'Do It!' on the forthcoming collaborative Flaming Lips album, The Flaming Lips And Heady Fwends, which also features Bon Iver and Nick Cave.

The six track album will be released on September 24 and will feature the 14 minute long single, “Early In The Morning“, reports Rolling Stone.

In October last year Gordon and Moore announced their split. The rock couple released a statement through their label Matador Records revealing that they were separating after 27 years of marriage.

The announcement raised doubts over the future of Sonic Youth after Matador revealed that plans for the band remained “uncertain”, even though they had previously hinted they would record new material in 2011. The statement read: “Musicians Kim Gordon and Thurston Moore, married in 1984, are announcing that they have separated. Sonic Youth, with both Kim and Thurston involved, will proceed with their South American tour dates in November. Plans beyond that tour are uncertain.”

Sonic Youth released their 16th studio album The Eternal in 2009, while Moore’s third solo album, Demolished Thoughts, came out in May 2011.

Yoko Ono features on a track called ‘Do It!’ on the forthcoming collaborative Flaming Lips album, The Flaming Lips And Heady Fwends, which also features Bon Iver and Nick Cave.

Can – The Lost Tapes

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This huge set of unheard cuts, forgotten by the band, restates the pioneers importance... It’s a testament to how far out Can’s music still seems, over 30 years after the band originally split, that we try to understand it not by looking for musical answers, but by clinging to fantastical suppositions. There are whispers about magic, the better to understand the ghostly power of the band’s Tago Mago album. There’s the notion that the group consulted a practitioner of Santería, a religion of West African/Caribbean origin in which drumming forms part of the ceremony – and that he confided to Can drummer Jaki Liebezeit the secrets of his art. He was, needless to say, subsequently executed. Even the most basic, substantiated facts of Can’s decade-long career from 1968 (the band’s early base at Schloss Nörvenich outside Cologne, a castle owned by an art dealer, where the band on occasion played for his bemused guests; their subsequent home in a disused cinema at Weilerswist where the walls were lined with army surplus mattresses) seem to derive more from the imaginings of a novelist than the labours of a rock biographer. And then there’s the music. The work of a unit comprising German scholars of modern classical composition, a free jazz drummer, and extemporising vocalists from other cultures entirely, the band recorded themselves ceaselessly. What gave us landmark albums like Tago Mago, the melodic, groovy Ege Bamyasi and the hypnotic and minimal Future Days was not only the spectral voicings of Irmin Schmidt, the savage soloing of Michael Karoli, the warm Morse code bass of Holger Czukay and Jaki Liebezeit’s “unhuman” drumming, but a process of editing – the democratic band at benign loggerheads, kilometres of spliced tape rising to their experimental knees. From chaos, sublime beauty. If the studio was a castle, what must their vault be like? The Can Archive, one imagines, is a place of sprawling chaos, but infinite possibility. As The Lost Tapes goes some way to illustrating, again even that is not quite true. Certainly, Can ran tape on all their rehearsals, but they also approached their work economically and methodically – excerpting material from their tapes as they went with an eye to using it later, then recording over the unwanted tape. Compiled from 50 hours of such fragments, what is contained here, then, is a world away from that boxset staple, the “alternate take”. Instead, there is a rich mixture of the many areas in which the band explored: movie/TV soundtrack recordings, live tapes, promising but undeveloped rehearsal fragments, and hitherto unused compositions. All of which are valuable additions to our enjoyment of the core canon. The value here isn’t only that, though – it’s also the final testimony to, and product of, Can’s working methods. “Spontaneous composition” was Can’s aim, and it was something the band achieved by a highly developed (as Irmin Schmidt describes it, “magical”) sensitivity to each other as players. Here that tendency is abundantly represented in two Malcolm Mooney-fronted tracks “Waiting For The Streetcar” and “Deadly Doris”, wherein the singer’s improvised lyrics direct a savage tempo for two longform workouts. Likewise, this collection makes choice selections from the band’s live tapes, in which tracks like “Spoon” roam in the moment far from their original co-ordinates onto other maps altogether. It’s in these locations where terrifying forays like “AbraCadaBraxas” and “Networks Of Foam” were also birthed. “Spontaneous” however, did not mean Can achieved their finished product instantly. The Lost Tapes duly offers some thrilling glimpses inside the band’s studios, on the journey towards finished songs. On CD2, we can observe the gentle group playing of “A Swan Is Born” that highlights the gently thrumming of Holger Czukay’s bass, the background textures of Schmidt’s keyboards, and the enchanting melody plotted between them by Damo Suzuki – a journey that will eventually arrive at “Sing Swan Song” from Ege Bamyasi, one of the group’s most beautiful single works. On CD3, we again enter the derangement of “Mother Sky”, a gigantic composition in the world of Can, and which fans will have heard in versions long (as it appeared on Soundtracks at 14-and-a-half minutes) and succinct (as edited for the great version on the Cannibalism compilation). Here, we join the track at what sounds like the very first four minutes of its travels: Michael Karoli’s screaming guitar tone is in place, as is a tribal pounding from Jaki Liebezeit, but we have yet to uncover the octave pattern of Czukay’s bass riff that will pilot the track onward. Likewise, on CD3, “Messers Scissors, Fork And Light” finds the group in a space that’s familiar but different, the mood set by Irmin Schmidt’s lightly flanging keyboard. Suzuki’s vocals gently suggest we are arriving in the neighbourhood of “Spoon”, but without actually stopping outside the house. This, like other significant pieces on the album, derives from the band’s soundtrack work, and is a credit in part to the work of Jono Podmore. The man behind the Can remasters from 2004, it’s Podmore who has assumed for this project a similar role to that of Holger Czukay in Can – it has fallen to him to edit extant related fragments together in a coherent and a sympathetic way. These extend from freaky ambient recordings like “Evening All Day” (a ghostly piece that combines distant chatting, violin mangling and synth bubbling in jarring sequence), the contemplative “Private Nocturnal” (in which Czukay’s soft bass anchors some wafting synth and drifting vocal) to the violent (“Godzilla Fragment” which memorialises the band’s live noise tactic, the “Godzilla”) and frankly absurd (“The Agreement” is the sound of someone urinating). Podmore is also behind the set’s most satisfying elements – the suites constructed from unused soundtrack fragments. Of these, all excellent, the most powerful is “Graublau” (a collage of material intended for the film Ein großer graublauer Vogel) which is simply jawdropping, explaining the affinity between Can’s sense of momentum and group space and the way post-punk bands could use their intelligence to occupy a similar space. It’s great. It makes PiL sound like The Moody Blues. Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore recalled his first experience of Can as finding this notionally “rock” group coming from a place completely “outside of rock”. The Lost Tapes confirms that pleasing impression and applies it to the boxset format itself. Here is virtuosity without ego, spontaneity rendered anew, and archive material of real contemporary value. It marks a definitive end to the band’s journey. Outside of rock doesn’t go far enough. John Robinson Q&A Irmin Schmidt Were these tapes really lost? No, they were forgotten more or less. We always had tapes running, but 10 years’ tapes running all the time 12 hours a day would come to an unimaginably big pile, so we overplayed a lot of tapes. But perhaps a tape would have 10 minutes on it that we thought were good. So there were little snippets and bits and pieces of all kinds from all different periods on one tape. So it was all a big… chaos. So that’s why no-one wanted to touch it. But [Schmidt’s wife] Hildegard insisted I did this work. It was about 50 hours, but I found three hours that were really good. Did you have any idea what was in there? I knew especially there was the music that makes up “Graublau” on the album. I knew that one particularly because I had done a very special work for that film where I recorded at home lots of tapes and loops from shortwave radio. So these sounds are brought to the studio and then we played to it. Then I took that and went to the editing room and made a montage for the film from all of that. I remembered that as being one of the really nice pieces. The pieces I heard with Malcolm [Mooney, original Can vocalist] were totally unknown to me. When I heard them, I remembered we had played them – but I didn’t remember before. How did Can vocalists determine the character of Can music? Can is one composer – if one member changes, the components are different, and it becomes a different organism. Our singers were not what you would call “lead singers”. Their voices were their instruments. They were instrumentalists who used their voice for being a member of the composition. But of course, when one went away or another came, something in the group changed because we all played so intently listening to everyone else – the whole chemistry changed. How were things different with Malcolm and Damo? There was a rhythmical connection between Malcolm and Jaki for instance, so they together almost formed a rhythm group. Later, there was a very obvious understanding between Damo, me and Michael, melodically, particularly with Damo and Michael – Holger, Jaki and me were 10 years older than Michael and Damo. They were of the same age and that changed the chemistry. You tried out Tim Hardin as singer, didn’t you? No! We did not try out Tim Hardin, that’s wrong. We met him at the hotel where he was on tour – somewhere in Birmingham or Leeds, somewhere in England. He just… came with us to the concert and came with us onstage and it was fun. I think he did it a second time, because he was in the mood and on tour. But there was no question that he would have joined the group – neither of us had that idea. He was a singer-songwriter, a fantastic singer-songwriter, but he had to make his own songs and he would not have fitted in this kind of thing. Given the way you made music, were there a lot of arguments about the final composition? Of course, sometimes things had to be discussed, and sometimes there were different opinions about things. But we didn’t aimlessly jam for hours, there was always some kind of spontaneous idea, and then we had to find the essence of it. This we would play over and over and find the right groove. Sometimes we would fight, but that’s normal when you have four very strong personalities. We didn’t have any personal kind of… problems. There were 50 hours of tapes; this is three hours long. Is there more to come? This is the final extract from the archive. More, there isn’t. There are another 47 hours not worth releasing, which will definitely disappear. INTERVIEW: JOHN ROBINSON

This huge set of unheard cuts, forgotten by the band, restates the pioneers importance…

It’s a testament to how far out Can’s music still seems, over 30 years after the band originally split, that we try to understand it not by looking for musical answers, but by clinging to fantastical suppositions. There are whispers about magic, the better to understand the ghostly power of the band’s Tago Mago album. There’s the notion that the group consulted a practitioner of Santería, a religion of West African/Caribbean origin in which drumming forms part of the ceremony – and that he confided to Can drummer Jaki Liebezeit the secrets of his art. He was, needless to say, subsequently executed.

Even the most basic, substantiated facts of Can’s decade-long career from 1968 (the band’s early base at Schloss Nörvenich outside Cologne, a castle owned by an art dealer, where the band on occasion played for his bemused guests; their subsequent home in a disused cinema at Weilerswist where the walls were lined with army surplus mattresses) seem to derive more from the imaginings of a novelist than the labours of a rock biographer.

And then there’s the music. The work of a unit comprising German scholars of modern classical composition, a free jazz drummer, and extemporising vocalists from other cultures entirely, the band recorded themselves ceaselessly. What gave us landmark albums like Tago Mago, the melodic, groovy Ege Bamyasi and the hypnotic and minimal Future Days was not only the spectral voicings of Irmin Schmidt, the savage soloing of Michael Karoli, the warm Morse code bass of Holger Czukay and Jaki Liebezeit’s “unhuman” drumming, but a process of editing – the democratic band at benign loggerheads, kilometres of spliced tape rising to their experimental knees. From chaos, sublime beauty. If the studio was a castle, what must their vault be like? The Can Archive, one imagines, is a place of sprawling chaos, but infinite possibility.

As The Lost Tapes goes some way to illustrating, again even that is not quite true. Certainly, Can ran tape on all their rehearsals, but they also approached their work economically and methodically – excerpting material from their tapes as they went with an eye to using it later, then recording over the unwanted tape. Compiled from 50 hours of such fragments, what is contained here, then, is a world away from that boxset staple, the “alternate take”. Instead, there is a rich mixture of the many areas in which the band explored: movie/TV soundtrack recordings, live tapes, promising but undeveloped rehearsal fragments, and hitherto unused compositions. All of which are valuable additions to our enjoyment of the core canon. The value here isn’t only that, though – it’s also the final testimony to, and product of, Can’s working methods.

“Spontaneous composition” was Can’s aim, and it was something the band achieved by a highly developed (as Irmin Schmidt describes it, “magical”) sensitivity to each other as players. Here that tendency is abundantly represented in two Malcolm Mooney-fronted tracks “Waiting For The Streetcar” and “Deadly Doris”, wherein the singer’s improvised lyrics direct a savage tempo for two longform workouts. Likewise, this collection makes choice selections from the band’s live tapes, in which tracks like “Spoon” roam in the moment far from their original co-ordinates onto other maps altogether. It’s in these locations where terrifying forays like “AbraCadaBraxas” and “Networks Of Foam” were also birthed.

“Spontaneous” however, did not mean Can achieved their finished product instantly. The Lost Tapes duly offers some thrilling glimpses inside the band’s studios, on the journey towards finished songs. On CD2, we can observe the gentle group playing of “A Swan Is Born” that highlights the gently thrumming of Holger Czukay’s bass, the background textures of Schmidt’s keyboards, and the enchanting melody plotted between them by Damo Suzuki – a journey that will eventually arrive at “Sing Swan Song” from Ege Bamyasi, one of the group’s most beautiful single works.

On CD3, we again enter the derangement of “Mother Sky”, a gigantic composition in the world of Can, and which fans will have heard in versions long (as it appeared on Soundtracks at 14-and-a-half minutes) and succinct (as edited for the great version on the Cannibalism compilation). Here, we join the track at what sounds like the very first four minutes of its travels: Michael Karoli’s screaming guitar tone is in place, as is a tribal pounding from Jaki Liebezeit, but we have yet to uncover the octave pattern of Czukay’s bass riff that will pilot the track onward. Likewise, on CD3, “Messers Scissors, Fork And Light” finds the group in a space that’s familiar but different, the mood set by Irmin Schmidt’s lightly flanging keyboard. Suzuki’s vocals gently suggest we are arriving in the neighbourhood of “Spoon”, but without actually stopping outside the house.

This, like other significant pieces on the album, derives from the band’s soundtrack work, and is a credit in part to the work of Jono Podmore. The man behind the Can remasters from 2004, it’s Podmore who has assumed for this project a similar role to that of Holger Czukay in Can – it has fallen to him to edit extant related fragments together in a coherent and a sympathetic way. These extend from freaky ambient recordings like “Evening All Day” (a ghostly piece that combines distant chatting, violin mangling and synth bubbling in jarring sequence), the contemplative “Private Nocturnal” (in which Czukay’s soft bass anchors some wafting synth and drifting vocal) to the violent (“Godzilla Fragment” which memorialises the band’s live noise tactic, the “Godzilla”) and frankly absurd (“The Agreement” is the sound of someone urinating).

Podmore is also behind the set’s most satisfying elements – the suites constructed from unused soundtrack fragments. Of these, all excellent, the most powerful is “Graublau” (a collage of material intended for the film Ein großer graublauer Vogel) which is simply jawdropping, explaining the affinity between Can’s sense of momentum and group space and the way post-punk bands could use their intelligence to occupy a similar space. It’s great. It makes PiL sound like The Moody Blues.

Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore recalled his first experience of Can as finding this notionally “rock” group coming from a place completely “outside of rock”. The Lost Tapes confirms that pleasing impression and applies it to the boxset format itself. Here is virtuosity without ego, spontaneity rendered anew, and archive material of real contemporary value. It marks a definitive end to the band’s journey. Outside of rock doesn’t go far enough.

John Robinson

Q&A

Irmin Schmidt

Were these tapes really lost?

No, they were forgotten more or less. We always had tapes running, but 10 years’ tapes running all the time 12 hours a day would come to an unimaginably big pile, so we overplayed a lot of tapes. But perhaps a tape would have 10 minutes on it that we thought were good. So there were little snippets and bits and pieces of all kinds from all different periods on one tape. So it was all a big… chaos. So that’s why no-one wanted to touch it. But [Schmidt’s wife] Hildegard insisted I did this work. It was about 50 hours, but I found three hours that were really good.

Did you have any idea what was in there?

I knew especially there was the music that makes up “Graublau” on the album. I knew

that one particularly because I had done a very special work for that film where I recorded at home lots of tapes and loops from shortwave radio. So these sounds are brought to the studio and then we played to it. Then I took that and went to the editing room and made a montage for the film from all of that. I remembered that as being one of the really nice pieces. The pieces I heard with Malcolm [Mooney, original Can vocalist] were totally unknown to me. When I heard them, I remembered we had played them – but I didn’t remember before.

How did Can vocalists determine the character of Can music?

Can is one composer – if one member changes, the components are different, and it becomes a different organism. Our singers were not what you would call “lead singers”. Their voices were their instruments. They were instrumentalists who used their voice for being a member of the composition. But of course, when one went away or another came, something in the group changed because we all played so intently listening to everyone else – the whole chemistry changed.

How were things different with Malcolm and Damo?

There was a rhythmical connection between Malcolm and Jaki for instance, so they together almost formed a rhythm group. Later, there was a very obvious understanding between Damo, me and Michael, melodically, particularly with Damo and Michael – Holger, Jaki and me were 10 years older than Michael and Damo. They were of the same age and that changed the chemistry.

You tried out Tim Hardin as singer, didn’t you?

No! We did not try out Tim Hardin, that’s wrong. We met him at the hotel where he was on tour – somewhere in Birmingham or Leeds, somewhere in England. He just… came with us to the concert and came with us onstage and it was fun. I think he did it a second time, because he was in the mood and on tour. But there was no question that he would have joined the group – neither of us had that idea. He was a singer-songwriter, a fantastic singer-songwriter, but he had to make his own songs and he would not have fitted in this kind of thing.

Given the way you made music, were there a lot of arguments about the final composition?

Of course, sometimes things had to be discussed, and sometimes there were different opinions about things. But we didn’t aimlessly jam for hours, there was always some kind of spontaneous idea, and then we had to find the essence of it. This we would play over and over and find the right groove. Sometimes we would fight, but that’s normal when you have four very strong personalities. We didn’t have any personal kind of… problems.

There were 50 hours of tapes; this is three hours long. Is there more to come?

This is the final extract from the archive. More, there isn’t. There are another 47 hours not worth releasing, which will definitely disappear.

INTERVIEW: JOHN ROBINSON