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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

Glastonbury 2013 tickets onsale date named

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Tickets for next summer's Glastonbury Festival will go onsale in October. Tickets for the event, which will run from Wednesday June 26 to Sunday June 30 in 2012, will go onsale on October 7 at 9am (GMT). As with sales for previous years, anyone wishing to buy tickets will need to register in advance in order to be able to obtain their ticket. All ticket holders (not just the person who purchases the tickets for a group) must make sure they register in advance so that their ticket can have their photo printed onto it. Registration is open now at Glastonburyfestivals.co.uk and must be completed in advance of attempting to purchase tickets. See Glastonburyfestivals.co.uk for more information. Beyonce, Coldplay and U2 headlined the Worthy Farm event in 2011, while The Rolling Stones have already ruled themselves out of headlining next year's event.

Tickets for next summer’s Glastonbury Festival will go onsale in October.

Tickets for the event, which will run from Wednesday June 26 to Sunday June 30 in 2012, will go onsale on October 7 at 9am (GMT).

As with sales for previous years, anyone wishing to buy tickets will need to register in advance in order to be able to obtain their ticket. All ticket holders (not just the person who purchases the tickets for a group) must make sure they register in advance so that their ticket can have their photo printed onto it.

Registration is open now at Glastonburyfestivals.co.uk and must be completed in advance of attempting to purchase tickets.

See Glastonburyfestivals.co.uk for more information.

Beyonce, Coldplay and U2 headlined the Worthy Farm event in 2011, while The Rolling Stones have already ruled themselves out of headlining next year’s event.

Radiohead-run tour company under investigation after stage collapse

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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 which led to the death of the band's drum technician on Saturday (June 16). 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 reports. 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 in Toronto. Canadian Ministry of Labour spokesperson Matt Blajer said that it had issued orders "mainly to Live Nation", adding that stage blueprints which were signed and approved by an engineer have already been submitted for investigation. Blajer added that the number of companies operating on the site has posed a challenge to investigators:We're still trying to figure out who owns what, who’s responsible for what," Blajer said. "You've got lighting technicians, sound technicians, the band's people — we're trying to figure out who worked for whom. Drum technician Scott Johnson was killed in the incident on Saturday after a stage collapsed an hour before the Radiohead gig was due to start. Three other people were injured. 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.

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 which led to the death of the band’s drum technician on Saturday (June 16).

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 reports.

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 in Toronto.

Canadian Ministry of Labour spokesperson Matt Blajer said that it had issued orders “mainly to Live Nation”, adding that stage blueprints which were signed and approved by an engineer have already been submitted for investigation. Blajer added that the number of companies operating on the site has posed a challenge to investigators:We’re still trying to figure out who owns what, who’s responsible for what,” Blajer said. “You’ve got lighting technicians, sound technicians, the band’s people — we’re trying to figure out who worked for whom. Drum technician Scott Johnson was killed in the incident on Saturday after a stage collapsed an hour before the Radiohead gig was due to start. Three other people were injured.

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.

Watch video for unreleased Can track

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Legendary German experimental band Can have released a video taken from their new 3 CD boxset of unreleased tracks Can - The Lost Tapes. The video, for the track "Messer, Scissors, Fork And Light", has been directed by Nick Cave collaborators, Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard. Can - The Lost Tapes is a three CD compilation of recently unearthed and catalogued archive material from 1968 - 1975. You can read Uncut's review when it goes live on www.uncut.co.uk tomorrow. Meawhile, enjoy the video here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jUwBdGAbrMA

Legendary German experimental band Can have released a video taken from their new 3 CD boxset of unreleased tracks Can – The Lost Tapes.

The video, for the track “Messer, Scissors, Fork And Light“, has been directed by Nick Cave collaborators, Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard.

Can – The Lost Tapes is a three CD compilation of recently unearthed and catalogued archive material from 1968 – 1975. You can read Uncut’s review when it goes live on www.uncut.co.uk tomorrow.

Meawhile, enjoy the video here:

Pearl Jam management executive charged with fraud

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The former chief financial officer for Pearl Jam's management company has been charged with 33 counts of theft. According to Associated Press, 54-year-old Rickey Charles Goodrich, of Navato, California, is alleged to have swindled $380,000 from 2006 until he was fired in September 2010. Prosecutors allege that Goodrich transferred the money from Curtis Management to fund personal use, including family holidays.

The former chief financial officer for Pearl Jam‘s management company has been charged with 33 counts of theft.

According to Associated Press, 54-year-old Rickey Charles Goodrich, of Navato, California, is alleged to have swindled $380,000 from 2006 until he was fired in September 2010.

Prosecutors allege that Goodrich transferred the money from Curtis Management to fund personal use, including family holidays.

Patti Smith – Banga

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Sweet music, heavy issues on first collection of original material since 2004... Patti Smith was the president of a fan club that had just one member,” wrote Luc Sante earlier this year, reminiscing about the artist’s nascent early 70s notoriety, “but a hundred idols.” Now in her 60s, releasing her eleventh studio album, this habit of passionate devotion clearly hasn’t deserted her. Reporting from the Banga launch party, Uncut’s Michael Bonner told of how while chatting to Patti, he quickly became aware of the “symmetries, references and associations that resonate through the album - among them, the lives and achievements of artists, explorers, A-list film stars, emperors and saints”. And so you won’t be surprised to find that the cast of Banga quite naturally includes Amerigo Vespucci, Amy Winehouse, Maria Schneider, Johnny Depp, Nikolai Gogol, Andrei Tarkovsky, Sun Ra, St Francis of Assisi and Neil Young. Not to mention Pontius Pilate’s dog. But the star of show is quite obviously Patti Lee Smith. Talking on a CBS breakfast chat show ahead of the release of “April Fool” she talked of how, when she first saw Jim Morrison as a teenager, her gut reaction, beyond rapture, bliss or lust was a mysterious, premonitory “yeah, I could do that”. It’s this casual chutzpah, the determination of the beanpole South Jersey schoolgirl to take the stage, carry the torch, quite naturally, undeferentially consider poets, painters and matinee idols, not just icons but conversational peers, that is still the most punk thing about her. The title track, and finest moment on the album, is a classic example of Smith’s radical democracy of reference. The song is named after Pontius Pilate’s dog as depicted in Bulgakov’s The Master and Margarita (the novel that inspired “Sympathy For The Devil” as well as sundry lesser tracks by Pearl Jam and Franz Ferdinand). Smith finds in Banga a symbol of enduring faith, a dog who stayed loyal and loving to its notorious master through his long torment following the crucifixion. In a stroke of absurd genius she chooses to marry this tale to a pounding revamp of the Stooges’ “I Wanna Be Your Dog”, and somehow alchemically transforms it from the anthem of scuzz-rock self-abasement into something heroically long-suffering and even noble. The trials of keeping the faith might be the key theme to the record. The album opens with “Amerigo”, a stately, string-swathed song told from the perspective of the first European voyagers to America. Commanded to baptise the heathens, they are instead impressed by the lovely liberty of the native Americans: “such a delight to watch them dance, free of sacrifice or romance”. It closes with a simple, plaintive take on “After The Goldrush”, Neil Young’s Silent-Running-style dream of elect spaceships fleeing the wasteland of the earth. With help from a schoolkid choir, Smith updates the coda to “look at Mother Nature on the run in the 21st century”. The betrayed promise of America and the despoiled Eden of the New World hang heavy over the album, and on many songs Smith casts her self as some oracle in reverse, attempting to justify the ways of man to God. Funnily enough this doesn’t stop it from being in many ways the sweetest album she’s ever recorded: “April Fool” is heavy with references to Gogol, but is rendered as light as a spring breeze by a shimmering, serpentine solo courtesey of long-time associate Tom Verlaine. “This Is The Girl”, the elegy for her fellow disciple of Ronnie Spector, Amy Winehouse, is a twinkling piece of 50s Lynch-pop drenched in blood and wine, making literal Brian Wilson’s ambition of composing “teenage symphonies to God”. By contrast the more ambitious numbers don’t always come off: “Tarkovsky” is an endearingly mad attempt to splice her poem “The Boy, The Beast and The Butterfly” to a riff from Sun Ra’s “The Second Stop Is Jupiter” which doesn’t quite fulfill its promise, while “Constantine’s Dream” is a dense meditation on the competing vocations of art and faith, via the lives of Francis of Assisi, Emperor Constantine, painter Piero della Francesca and Christopher Columbus that feels a little academic. These songs are too studious, feel too much the product of Smith’s evident scholarship, rather than her radical wildness. At her best, and across much of Banga, Patti Smith still dramatises the distance between South Jersey and the San Francesco basilica, the street tussle between the poet and the factory girl, the devotion of the mongrels of faith for the betrayers of salvation. Stephen Troussé

Sweet music, heavy issues on first collection of original material since 2004…

Patti Smith was the president of a fan club that had just one member,” wrote Luc Sante earlier this year, reminiscing about the artist’s nascent early 70s notoriety, “but a hundred idols.” Now in her 60s, releasing her eleventh studio album, this habit of passionate devotion clearly hasn’t deserted her. Reporting from the Banga launch party, Uncut’s Michael Bonner told of how while chatting to Patti, he quickly became aware of the “symmetries, references and associations that resonate through the album – among them, the lives and achievements of artists, explorers, A-list film stars, emperors and saints”. And so you won’t be surprised to find that the cast of Banga quite naturally includes Amerigo Vespucci, Amy Winehouse, Maria Schneider, Johnny Depp, Nikolai Gogol, Andrei Tarkovsky, Sun Ra, St Francis of Assisi and Neil Young. Not to mention Pontius Pilate’s dog.

But the star of show is quite obviously Patti Lee Smith. Talking on a CBS breakfast chat show ahead of the release of “April Fool” she talked of how, when she first saw Jim Morrison as a teenager, her gut reaction, beyond rapture, bliss or lust was a mysterious, premonitory “yeah, I could do that”. It’s this casual chutzpah, the determination of the beanpole South Jersey schoolgirl to take the stage, carry the torch, quite naturally, undeferentially consider poets, painters and matinee idols, not just icons but conversational peers, that is still the most punk thing about her.

The title track, and finest moment on the album, is a classic example of Smith’s radical democracy of reference. The song is named after Pontius Pilate’s dog as depicted in Bulgakov’s The Master and Margarita (the novel that inspired “Sympathy For The Devil” as well as sundry lesser tracks by Pearl Jam and Franz Ferdinand). Smith finds in Banga a symbol of enduring faith, a dog who stayed loyal and loving to its notorious master through his long torment following the crucifixion. In a stroke of absurd genius she chooses to marry this tale to a pounding revamp of the Stooges’ “I Wanna Be Your Dog”, and somehow alchemically transforms it from the anthem of scuzz-rock self-abasement into something heroically long-suffering and even noble.

The trials of keeping the faith might be the key theme to the record. The album opens with “Amerigo”, a stately, string-swathed song told from the perspective of the first European voyagers to America. Commanded to baptise the heathens, they are instead impressed by the lovely liberty of the native Americans: “such a delight to watch them dance, free of sacrifice or romance”. It closes with a simple, plaintive take on “After The Goldrush”, Neil Young’s Silent-Running-style dream of elect spaceships fleeing the wasteland of the earth. With help from a schoolkid choir, Smith updates the coda to “look at Mother Nature on the run in the 21st century”.

The betrayed promise of America and the despoiled Eden of the New World hang heavy over the album, and on many songs Smith casts her self as some oracle in reverse, attempting to justify the ways of man to God. Funnily enough this doesn’t stop it from being in many ways the sweetest album she’s ever recorded: “April Fool” is heavy with references to Gogol, but is rendered as light as a spring breeze by a shimmering, serpentine solo courtesey of long-time associate Tom Verlaine. “This Is The Girl”, the elegy for her fellow disciple of Ronnie Spector, Amy Winehouse, is a twinkling piece of 50s Lynch-pop drenched in blood and wine, making literal Brian Wilson’s ambition of composing “teenage symphonies to God”.

By contrast the more ambitious numbers don’t always come off: “Tarkovsky” is an endearingly mad attempt to splice her poem “The Boy, The Beast and The Butterfly” to a riff from Sun Ra’s “The Second Stop Is Jupiter” which doesn’t quite fulfill its promise, while “Constantine’s Dream” is a dense meditation on the competing vocations of art and faith, via the lives of Francis of Assisi, Emperor Constantine, painter Piero della Francesca and Christopher Columbus that feels a little academic. These songs are too studious, feel too much the product of Smith’s evident scholarship, rather than her radical wildness. At her best, and across much of Banga, Patti Smith still dramatises the distance between South Jersey and the San Francesco basilica, the street tussle between the poet and the factory girl, the devotion of the mongrels of faith for the betrayers of salvation.

Stephen Troussé

New exhibition featuring rare photos of The Beatles goes on display in New York

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A new exhibition featuring photos of The Beatles' first tour of America has opened in New York. The Liverpool legends' first journey to the US and the height of the Beatlemania craze in the early 1960s was photographed by Curt Gunther, and a retrospective of his work, Unseen Beatles, is currently taking place at the Morrison Hotel Gallery in Soho, New York. Speaking of how close he was to the band, Gunther's son told Rolling Stone magazine: "He was there on every plane ride and in every hotel room. I think there was real, genuine affection between The Beatles and my dad." The photos the photographer collected include not just the band playing live, but also of their downtime, with them riding horses and goofing around with manager Brian Epstein. Peter Blachley, co-founder of the Morrison Hotel Gallery, said: "You can see it in the photographs. There were no handlers. Just, 'Hang out, you're one of the band now'." Alongside Gunther's photos are pictures by another photographer close to the band, Robert Whitaker, who famously posed the band with a number of dismembered toy dolls and raw meat for the album cover of US release, Yesterday And Today. The Unseen Beatles exhibition of Robert Whitaker and Curt Gunther's work is on throughout the Summer. For more info visit morrisonhotelgallery.com.

A new exhibition featuring photos of The Beatles‘ first tour of America has opened in New York.

The Liverpool legends’ first journey to the US and the height of the Beatlemania craze in the early 1960s was photographed by Curt Gunther, and a retrospective of his work, Unseen Beatles, is currently taking place at the Morrison Hotel Gallery in Soho, New York.

Speaking of how close he was to the band, Gunther’s son told Rolling Stone magazine: “He was there on every plane ride and in every hotel room. I think there was real, genuine affection between The Beatles and my dad.”

The photos the photographer collected include not just the band playing live, but also of their downtime, with them riding horses and goofing around with manager Brian Epstein. Peter Blachley, co-founder of the Morrison Hotel Gallery, said: “You can see it in the photographs. There were no handlers. Just, ‘Hang out, you’re one of the band now’.”

Alongside Gunther’s photos are pictures by another photographer close to the band, Robert Whitaker, who famously posed the band with a number of dismembered toy dolls and raw meat for the album cover of US release, Yesterday And Today.

The Unseen Beatles exhibition of Robert Whitaker and Curt Gunther’s work is on throughout the Summer. For more info visit morrisonhotelgallery.com.

Bon Iver announce UK and Ireland arena tour

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Bon Iver have announced a UK and Ireland arena tour for later this year. The folk band, who are already confirmed to headline this summer's Latitude festival, will play five arena shows in November. The dates are part of a full European tour. The gigs kick off on November 8 at London's Wembley Ar...

Bon Iver have announced a UK and Ireland arena tour for later this year.

The folk band, who are already confirmed to headline this summer’s Latitude festival, will play five arena shows in November. The dates are part of a full European tour.

The gigs kick off on November 8 at London’s Wembley Arena and run until November 10 when the band headline Dublin’s O2 Arena. They will also play dates in Manchester, Glasgow and Belfast.

Bon Iver release a new EP today (June 19). The EP, which is simply titled ‘iTunes Session EP‘, contains a total of seven tracks, all of which were recorded live. Among the tracks scheduled for release is a cover of Bjork‘s ‘Who Is It?’ and the band’s recent single ‘Holocene’.

As well as this, the band announced yesterday (June 18) that they have helped to design a sneaker for ‘cruelty free’ footwear brand Keep.

The double Grammy-winning musician has joined forces with Los Angeles based company Keep to make a ‘salmon’ pink canvas shoe, which features “herringbone accents” and “a black fishbone detail across the toe”.

Bon Iver will play:

London Wembley Arena (November 8)

Manchester Arena (9)

Glasgow SECC (10)

Dublin O2 Arena (12)

Keith Richards confirms July meeting to discuss Rolling Stones’ anniversary bash

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Keith Richards has confirmed that the Rolling Stones will meet in London in July to discuss their 50th anniversary plans. "It's all very hush-hush," Richards is quoted in Rolling Stone. "I'm going over to London for a bit, so I'll find out more then." The guitarist confirmed that the band will als...

Keith Richards has confirmed that the Rolling Stones will meet in London in July to discuss their 50th anniversary plans.

“It’s all very hush-hush,” Richards is quoted in Rolling Stone. “I’m going over to London for a bit, so I’ll find out more then.”

The guitarist confirmed that the band will also discuss whether they will record any new material, their first since 2005’s A Bigger Bang. “We’re going to talk about that in July and see. I mean, I’d love to get some tracks down and see what songs we’ve got. And that goes along with part of getting the band back together and getting things moving. So I’d love to cut some tracks, yeah.”

Richards also revealed that he’d still like to tour in 2013. “I’d like to get a couple of shows down and see how it goes,” Richards said. “But I’d love it.”

The band reconvened in April in New York, where they inviting a film crew led by director Brett Morgen to shoot footage for a documentary celebrating the group’s anniversary, due for release in September.

“We played everything, really,” said Richards. “We’re just getting our chops together. It was like playing in the garage, a maintenance check, you know?”

Earlier this week the band denied tabloid reports they were to bow out with a headline slot at next year’s Glastonbury festival.

In a Twitter post the band said, “Every year the @RollingStones are asked to play this UK festival..but playing Glastonbury is not in our plans”.

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

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.

The 25th Uncut Playlist Of 2012

A serene beginning this morning, with a new Terry Riley album, “Aleph”. Over on my 40 Favourites Of 2012 Thus Far blog, however, things became a little less genteel yesterday, as you can see in the comments thread at the bottom of the chart. Please join in; the general discussion about this year’s releases, that is, rather than the irate trolling. A mixed bag here in this week’s chart, but a few things worth explaining: the new Will Oldham is an EP of jauntily re-recorded old songs (including “I See A Darkness”) to coincide with Domino’s catalogue reissues. “Parsons’ Blues” is a single culled from the same sessions as Chasny’s forthcoming “Ascent”, with the reconstituted Comets On Fire on the team. Raajmahal is a really nice drifter, helmed by Pat Murano from NNCK that reminds me a little of a spacier Natural Snow Buildings. Some other entries, however, may be best left undiscussed… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy – Now Here’s My Plan (Domino) 2 3 The Lumerians – Transmissions From The Telos Vol. IV (Permanent) 4 Frank Ocean – Pyramids (Def Jam) 5 Frank Ocean – Nostalgia, Ultra (http://frankocean.com/) 6 Peter Buck – 10 Million BC (https://www.uncut.co.uk/listen-to-rems-peter-buck-debut-solo-track-10-million-bc-news) 7 Patti Smith – Banga (Columbia) 8 Catherine Irwin – Little Heater (Thrill Jockey) 9 Raajmahal – Raajmahal (Kelippah) 10 Bailterspace – Strobosphere (Fire) 11 Gonzales – Solo Piano II (Gentle Threat) 12 Six Organs Of Admittance – Parsons’ Blues (Drag City) 13 Various Artists – Air Texture Volume II: Selected By Loscil And Rafael Anton Irisarri (Air Texture) 14 Neil Young & Crazy Horse – Americana (Reprise) 15 Haim – Forever (National Anthem) 16 Spector – Enjoy It While You Can (Fiction) 17 CFCF – Exercises (Dummy) 18 The White Stripes – Party Of Special Things To Do (Sub Pop) 19 David Byrne & St Vincent – Love This Giant (4AD) 20 Scott Kelly, Steve Von Till, Wino – The Songs Of Townes Van Zandt (My Proud Mountain) 21 Townes Van Zandt – Our Mother The Mountain (Tomato) 22 Nathan Fake – Iceni Strings (Border Community) 23 Terry Riley – Aleph (Tzadik)

A serene beginning this morning, with a new Terry Riley album, “Aleph”. Over on my 40 Favourites Of 2012 Thus Far blog, however, things became a little less genteel yesterday, as you can see in the comments thread at the bottom of the chart.

Please join in; the general discussion about this year’s releases, that is, rather than the irate trolling.

A mixed bag here in this week’s chart, but a few things worth explaining: the new Will Oldham is an EP of jauntily re-recorded old songs (including “I See A Darkness”) to coincide with Domino’s catalogue reissues. “Parsons’ Blues” is a single culled from the same sessions as Chasny’s forthcoming “Ascent”, with the reconstituted Comets On Fire on the team. Raajmahal is a really nice drifter, helmed by Pat Murano from NNCK that reminds me a little of a spacier Natural Snow Buildings. Some other entries, however, may be best left undiscussed…

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

1 Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy – Now Here’s My Plan (Domino)

2

3 The Lumerians – Transmissions From The Telos Vol. IV (Permanent)

4 Frank Ocean – Pyramids (Def Jam)

5 Frank Ocean – Nostalgia, Ultra (http://frankocean.com/)

6 Peter Buck – 10 Million BC (https://www.uncut.co.uk/listen-to-rems-peter-buck-debut-solo-track-10-million-bc-news)

7 Patti Smith – Banga (Columbia)

8 Catherine Irwin – Little Heater (Thrill Jockey)

9 Raajmahal – Raajmahal (Kelippah)

10 Bailterspace – Strobosphere (Fire)

11 Gonzales – Solo Piano II (Gentle Threat)

12 Six Organs Of Admittance – Parsons’ Blues (Drag City)

13 Various Artists – Air Texture Volume II: Selected By Loscil And Rafael Anton Irisarri (Air Texture)

14 Neil Young & Crazy Horse – Americana (Reprise)

15 Haim – Forever (National Anthem)

16 Spector – Enjoy It While You Can (Fiction)

17 CFCF – Exercises (Dummy)

18 The White Stripes – Party Of Special Things To Do (Sub Pop)

19 David Byrne & St Vincent – Love This Giant (4AD)

20 Scott Kelly, Steve Von Till, Wino – The Songs Of Townes Van Zandt (My Proud Mountain)

21 Townes Van Zandt – Our Mother The Mountain (Tomato)

22 Nathan Fake – Iceni Strings (Border Community)

23 Terry Riley – Aleph (Tzadik)

Graham Coxon, Alt-J, Patrick Watson added to End Of The Road festival

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Blur guitarist Graham Coxon, Alt-J and Patrick Watson are among the new additions to this summer's End Of The Road festival. The festival, which will take place in Larmer Tree Gardens in Wiltshire on August 31 – September 2, will be headlined by Grandaddy, Midlake and a co-headline effort from Grizzy Bear and Tindersticks. Also newly confirmed for the festival are Savages, Creature With The Atom Brain, Gravenhurst, Abi Wade, Big Wave, Olympians, Horse Thief, Hurray For The Riff Raff, King Charles, The Step Kids, Woods, and Zachary Cale. They join a line-up that also includes Anna Calvi, The Antlers, First Aid Kit, Beach House, Veronica Falls, The Low Anthem, Toy, Islet and many others. For more information, visit Endoftheroadfestival.com. The line-up for End Of The Road so far is as follows: Grandaddy Tindersticks Grizzly Bear The Antlers Delicate Steve Doug Paisley Driver Drive Faster First Aid Kit Frank Fairfield I Break Horses Jeffrey Lewis & The Junkyard Justin Townes Earle Moulettes Mountain Man Midlake The Low Anthem Alessi's Ark Cashier no 9 Dirty Three John Grant Graham Coxon Alt-J Patrick Watson Savages Creature with the Atom Brain Gravenhurst Abi Wade Big Wave Olympians Horse Thief Hurray For The Riff Raff King Charles The Step Kids Woods Zachary Cale Jonathan Wilson Lanterns On The Lake Roy Harper Veronica Falls Beach House The Antlers I Break Horses Jeffrey Lewis & The Junkyard Justin Townes Earle Moulettes Robyn Hitchcock Anna Calvi Villagers Abigail Washburn with Kai Welch Cold Specks Dark Dark Dark Francois & The Atlas Mountains Islet Toy Outfit

Blur guitarist Graham Coxon, Alt-J and Patrick Watson are among the new additions to this summer’s End Of The Road festival.

The festival, which will take place in Larmer Tree Gardens in Wiltshire on August 31 – September 2, will be headlined by Grandaddy, Midlake and a co-headline effort from Grizzy Bear and Tindersticks.

Also newly confirmed for the festival are Savages, Creature With The Atom Brain, Gravenhurst, Abi Wade, Big Wave, Olympians, Horse Thief, Hurray For The Riff Raff, King Charles, The Step Kids, Woods, and Zachary Cale.

They join a line-up that also includes Anna Calvi, The Antlers, First Aid Kit, Beach House, Veronica Falls, The Low Anthem, Toy, Islet and many others.

For more information, visit Endoftheroadfestival.com.

The line-up for End Of The Road so far is as follows:

Grandaddy

Tindersticks

Grizzly Bear

The Antlers

Delicate Steve

Doug Paisley

Driver Drive Faster

First Aid Kit

Frank Fairfield

I Break Horses

Jeffrey Lewis & The Junkyard

Justin Townes Earle

Moulettes

Mountain Man

Midlake

The Low Anthem

Alessi’s Ark

Cashier no 9

Dirty Three

John Grant

Graham Coxon

Alt-J

Patrick Watson

Savages

Creature with the Atom Brain

Gravenhurst

Abi Wade

Big Wave

Olympians

Horse Thief

Hurray For The Riff Raff

King Charles

The Step Kids

Woods

Zachary Cale

Jonathan Wilson

Lanterns On The Lake

Roy Harper

Veronica Falls

Beach House

The Antlers

I Break Horses

Jeffrey Lewis & The Junkyard

Justin Townes Earle

Moulettes

Robyn Hitchcock

Anna Calvi

Villagers

Abigail Washburn with Kai Welch

Cold Specks

Dark Dark Dark

Francois & The Atlas Mountains

Islet

Toy

Outfit

Morrissey announces North American tour dates

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Morrissey has announced an extensive tour of North America. The singer, who recently reissued his 1998 debut album Viva Hate, will play 33 dates beginning in Boston on October 5. The tour eventually closes in Atlantic City on December 8. Morrissey will play his only UK show of the year at Manchest...

Morrissey has announced an extensive tour of North America.

The singer, who recently reissued his 1998 debut album Viva Hate, will play 33 dates beginning in Boston on October 5. The tour eventually closes in Atlantic City on December 8.

Morrissey will play his only UK show of the year at Manchester Arena on July 28.

The North American tour dates are:

10/05 – Boston, Massachusetts – Wang Theatre

10/06 – Waterbury, Connecticut – Palace Theater

10/10 – New York, New York – Radio City Music Hall

10/15 – Portland, Maine – State Theatre

10/16 – Burlington, Vermont – Flynn Center for the Performing Arts

10/18 – Albany, New York – Palace Theatre

10/19 – Niagara Falls, New York – Rapids Theatre

10/23 – Pittsburgh, Pennysylvania – Heinz Hall

10/24 – Columbus, Ohio – LC Indoor Pavilion

10/26 – Flint, Michigan – James H Whiting Auditorium

10/27 – Chicago, Illinois – Chicago Theatre

10/29 – Minneapolis, Minnesota – Orpheum Theatre

10/30 – Clear Lake, Iowa – Surf Ballroom

11/01 – Lincoln, Nebraska – Rococo Theatre

11/03 – Denver, Colorado – Ellie Caulkins Opera House

11/04 – Salt Lake City, Utah – Kingsbury Hall at University of Utah

11/08 – Seattle, Washington – Moore Theatre

11/10 – Bellingham, Washington – Mount Baker Theatre

11/11 – Portland, Oregon – Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall

11/14 – Davis, California – Robert Mondavi Center at UC Davis

11/16 – San Francisco, California – Davies Symphony Hall

11/17 – Reno, Nevada – John Ascuaga’s Nugget – Rose Ballroom

11/21 – Tempe, Arizona – Marquee Theater

11/23 – Las Vegas, Nevada – The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas at The Chelsea Ballroom

11/24 – Los Angeles, California – Staples Center Arena

11/27 – El Paso, Texas – Tricky Falls

11/28 – Wichita Falls, Texas – Kay Yeager Coliseum

11/30 – Pharr, Texas – Pharr Entertainment Center

12/01 – Beaumont, Texas – Jefferson Theatre

12/03 – Atlanta, Georgia – Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre

12/05 – Asheville, North Carolina – Orange Peel

12/07 – North Bethesda, Maryland – The Music Center at Strathmore

12/08 – Atlantic City, New Jersey – Showboat Resort and Casino – House of Blues

Beatles actor Victor Spinetti dies aged 82

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Victor Spinetti, the comic actor who appeared in three Beatles films, has died aged 82. The Welsh star appeared in a string of acclaimed movies as well as appearing on the West End and Broadway. He died in a hospice in Monmouth this morning after battling with pancreatic cancer, reports BBC. Once...

Victor Spinetti, the comic actor who appeared in three Beatles films, has died aged 82.

The Welsh star appeared in a string of acclaimed movies as well as appearing on the West End and Broadway. He died in a hospice in Monmouth this morning after battling with pancreatic cancer, reports BBC.

Once described by Paul McCartney as “the man who makes clouds disappear”, Spinetti was the only non-Beatle to appear in the films A Hard Day’s Night, Help! and Magical Mystery Tour.

Born Victorio G A Spinetti on 2 September 1929 south Wales, he attended Monmouth School before studying at the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama in Cardiff. He worked as a waiter and factory worker before his acting career took off.

Spinetti appeared in more than 30 films, including Zeffirelli’s The Taming Of The Shrew, The Return Of The Pink Panther, The Krays, and Under Milk Wood with Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton. He also appeared frequently on television and theatre as an actor and director.

George Harrison once told him: “You’ve got to be in all our films. If you’re not in them me mum won’t come and see them – because she fancies you.”

In 1968, he also worked with John Lennon to turn Lennon’s book, In His Own Write, into to a play which he then directed at the National Theatre – where Laurence Olivier was Artistic Director.

Victor Spinetti’s partner of 44 years, Graham Curnow, died in 1997.

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