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Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon designs ‘cruelty free’ shoe

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Bon Iver frontman Justin Vernon has 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 acr...

Bon Iver frontman Justin Vernon has 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”.

The project is hoping to raise awareness for Best Friends Animal Society, which is described as “an animal advocacy group which operates the nation’s largest sanctuary for abused and abandoned animals. Both Vernon and Una Kim, Keep’s founder, are proud adopters of rescued pets, pictures of whom often make appearances on both the band and Keep’s blogs.”

Advance sales for the shoe are running until July 1 and there will be a limited global instore release of the sneaker in October. Last year, Animal Collective teamed up with Keep for a similar project.

Bon Iver release a new live EP, the ‘iTunes Session EP’, today (June 19), which will include a version of Bjork’s ‘Who Is It?’. The band will then go on to headline this summer’s Latitude festival. They are also set to play Glasgow’s SECC on November 10.

Red Hot Chili Peppers to release singles series

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The Red Hot Chili Peppers are planning to release 18 previously unheard songs from the sessions for their last album, I'm With You. According to Rolling Stone, the band will begin on August 14 with the release of "Strange Man" and "Long Progression", and on September 11 they will release a follow-...

The Red Hot Chili Peppers are planning to release 18 previously unheard songs from the sessions for their last album, I’m With You.

According to Rolling Stone, the band will begin on August 14 with the release of “Strange Man” and “Long Progression”, and on September 11 they will release a follow-up, “Magpies” and “Victorian Machinery”.

“Some songs seem to have a lot more of an agenda than others,” said Chili Peppers guitarist Josh Klinghoffer in a statement. “Some songs play well with others and some songs need more attention and a little extra care. Here are some songs that seemed to want to pair up and take a later train. Keep your eye on them, they’re up to something . . .”

Each instalment will be available as a 7″ single and digitally.

Rolling Stones deny Glastonbury rumours

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The Rolling Stones have denied reports they will retire next year with a headline slot at Glastonbury. It was reported "sources" close to the band had indicated that their Glastonbury appearance will be their final date in a "handful" of shows in the UK and USA in 2012. It was also suggested that, ...

The Rolling Stones have denied reports they will retire next year with a headline slot at Glastonbury.

It was reported “sources” close to the band had indicated that their Glastonbury appearance will be their final date in a “handful” of shows in the UK and USA in 2012. It was also suggested that, as it is part of the group’s 50-year anniversary, it will be seen as a good time to call it a day on live performances.

Representatives for the band insisted there is no truth in the claim, which appeared in the Sunday Mirror yesterday (June 17) and they would not be playing at Worthy Farm next summer.

The veteran four-piece have never played Glastonbury before. A spokesman for the festival told The Guardian there have been no conversations as yet. He added: “Everybody in the year off thinks they’ve come up with the perfect Glastonbury lineup. But at the moment there isn’t anything to confirm or deny.”

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”.

Hear new Damon Albarn song

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Damon Albarn unveiled a new track at a poetry festival in London earlier this week (June 14) – scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to watch. Consequence Of Sound reports that the singer, who was performing at the Poetry Olympics at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, included a brand new song ...

Damon Albarn unveiled a new track at a poetry festival in London earlier this week (June 14) – scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to watch.

Consequence Of Sound reports that the singer, who was performing at the Poetry Olympics at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, included a brand new song in his set which he told the crowd he had recorded “last week”.

Although initial reports claimed that the bouncing and melodic acoustic track constituted new material from Blur, there has been no confirmation if the song will be used by the Britpop legends or if it will be released in one of Albarn’s other musical projects.

Last month (May 23), producer William Orbit told NME that he had been in the studio with Blur working on new material, but that Albarn had decided to halt the recording sessions. “The new stuff sounded amazing,” he said. “Then it all stopped suddenly. It was all over with Damon, and the rest of the band were like, ‘Is this it?’.”

In April, however, Albarn denied he was finished with Blur after earlier suggesting that their huge Hyde Park reunion gig to coincide with the close of this summer’s Olympics in August would be their final show, while last week (June 9), guitarist Graham Coxon admitted that he and his bandmates felt “pressure” from fans to record new material.

The band are due to warm up for the show with a short tour taking in dates in Margate, Wolverhampton and Plymouth, along with headlining Sweden’s Way Out West in the same month.

The Best Of 2012: Halftime Report

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Here we go, then: my 40 favourite albums of 2012 thus far. A very personal list, I should say, so please don’t think it constitutes any kind of canonical Uncut pronouncement. The theory is that these are all January-June 2012 releases, so apologies if any rogues have inadvertently been admitted (I suspect there may be a few things I’ve forgotten, too). As you’ll see, I’ve chickened out of putting them in anything other than alphabetical order, though at this point in the year I may well have played the unlikely pair of Julia Holter and Chris Robinson more than anything else. Links lead to previous blogs on that record, as you might have worked out. Next step, I guess, is for you to submit your own Top Tens in the Facebook Comments boxes below, and I’ll use the traditional dark mathematics to crunch them into something approximating a proper chart. Once again, thanks for all your engagement, feedback and support over the last six months, and of course beyond; it’s always really appreciated. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1. Damon Albarn – Dr Dee (Parlophone) 2. Arbouretum/Hush Arbors – Aureola (Thrill Jockey) 3. Beachwood Sparks – The Tarnished Gold (Sub Pop) 4. Sir Richard Bishop - Intermezzo (Ideologic Organ) 5. James Blackshaw - Love Is The Plan, The Plan Is Death (Important) 6. Blues Control – Valley Tangents (Drag City) 7. Neneh Cherry & The Thing – The Cherry Thing (Smalltown Supersound) 8. Leonard Cohen – Old Ideas (Columbia) 9. Cornershop – Urban Turban: The Singhles Club (Ample Play) 10. Dexys – One Day I’m Going To Soar (BMG) 11. The Dirty Three – Towards The Low Sun (Bella Union) 12. Dr John – Locked Down (Nonesuch) 13. Elephant Micah - Louder Than Thou (Product Of Palmyra) 14. The Entrance Band – The Entrance Band (Latitudes) 15. Chris Forsyth & Koen Holtkamp – Early Astral (Blackest Rainbow) 16. Go-Kart Mozart – On The Hot Dog Streets (West Midlands) 17. Gunn/Truscinski Duo - Ocean Parkway (Three-Lobed) 18. Julia Holter – Ekstasis (RVNG INTL) 19. Hot Chip – In Our Heads (Domino) 20. Howlin Rain – The Russian Wilds (Agitated) 21. Icebreaker & BJ Cole – Apollo (Canteloupe/Naxos) 22. Eyvind Kang - – The Narrow Garden (Kranky) 23. King Blood – Vengeance Man (Richie/Testoster Tunes) 24. Lubomyr Melnyk (Hinterzimmer) 25. The Men – Open Your Heart (Sacred Bones) 26. Orbital – Wonky (ACP) 27. Lee Ranaldo - Between The Times And The Tides (Matador) 28. The Chris Robinson Brotherhood – Big Moon Ritual (Silver Arrow) 29. Ty Segall & White Fence – Hair (Drag City) 30. The Ty Segall Band – Slaughterhouse (In The Red) 31. Patti Smith – Banga (Columbia) 32. Spain – The Soul Of Spain (Glitterhouse) 33. “Blue” Gene Tyranny – Detours (Unseen Worlds) 34. Spacin’ - Deep Thuds (Richie/Testoster Tunes) 35. Starving Weirdos - Land Lines (Amish) 36. Sun Araw/M Geddes Gengras/The Congos - FRKWYS Vol. 9: Sun Araw & M. Geddes Gengras meet The Congos (RVNG Intl) 37. Sun Kil Moon – Among The Leaves (Caldo Verde) 38. Jozef Van Wissem & Jim Jarmusch - Concerning The Entrance Into Eternity (Important) 39. Jack White – Blunderbuss (XL) 40. Neil Young & Crazy Horse – Americana (Reprise)

Here we go, then: my 40 favourite albums of 2012 thus far. A very personal list, I should say, so please don’t think it constitutes any kind of canonical Uncut pronouncement.

The theory is that these are all January-June 2012 releases, so apologies if any rogues have inadvertently been admitted (I suspect there may be a few things I’ve forgotten, too). As you’ll see, I’ve chickened out of putting them in anything other than alphabetical order, though at this point in the year I may well have played the unlikely pair of Julia Holter and Chris Robinson more than anything else. Links lead to previous blogs on that record, as you might have worked out.

Next step, I guess, is for you to submit your own Top Tens in the Facebook Comments boxes below, and I’ll use the traditional dark mathematics to crunch them into something approximating a proper chart. Once again, thanks for all your engagement, feedback and support over the last six months, and of course beyond; it’s always really appreciated.

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

1. Damon Albarn – Dr Dee (Parlophone)

2. Arbouretum/Hush Arbors – Aureola (Thrill Jockey)

3. Beachwood Sparks – The Tarnished Gold (Sub Pop)

4. Sir Richard Bishop – Intermezzo (Ideologic Organ)

5. James Blackshaw – Love Is The Plan, The Plan Is Death (Important)

6. Blues Control – Valley Tangents (Drag City)

7. Neneh Cherry & The Thing – The Cherry Thing (Smalltown Supersound)

8. Leonard Cohen – Old Ideas (Columbia)

9. Cornershop – Urban Turban: The Singhles Club (Ample Play)

10. Dexys – One Day I’m Going To Soar (BMG)

11. The Dirty Three – Towards The Low Sun (Bella Union)

12. Dr John – Locked Down (Nonesuch)

13. Elephant Micah – Louder Than Thou (Product Of Palmyra)

14. The Entrance Band – The Entrance Band (Latitudes)

15. Chris Forsyth & Koen Holtkamp – Early Astral (Blackest Rainbow)

16. Go-Kart Mozart – On The Hot Dog Streets (West Midlands)

17. Gunn/Truscinski Duo – Ocean Parkway (Three-Lobed)

18. Julia Holter – Ekstasis (RVNG INTL)

19. Hot Chip – In Our Heads (Domino)

20. Howlin Rain – The Russian Wilds (Agitated)

21. Icebreaker & BJ Cole – Apollo (Canteloupe/Naxos)

22. Eyvind Kang – – The Narrow Garden (Kranky)

23. King Blood – Vengeance Man (Richie/Testoster Tunes)

24. Lubomyr Melnyk (Hinterzimmer)

25. The Men – Open Your Heart (Sacred Bones)

26. Orbital – Wonky (ACP)

27. Lee Ranaldo – Between The Times And The Tides (Matador)

28. The Chris Robinson Brotherhood – Big Moon Ritual (Silver Arrow)

29. Ty Segall & White Fence – Hair (Drag City)

30. The Ty Segall Band – Slaughterhouse (In The Red)

31. Patti Smith – Banga (Columbia)

32. Spain – The Soul Of Spain (Glitterhouse)

33. “Blue” Gene Tyranny – Detours (Unseen Worlds)

34. Spacin’ – Deep Thuds (Richie/Testoster Tunes)

35. Starving Weirdos – Land Lines (Amish)

36. Sun Araw/M Geddes Gengras/The Congos – FRKWYS Vol. 9: Sun Araw & M. Geddes Gengras meet The Congos (RVNG Intl)

37. Sun Kil Moon – Among The Leaves (Caldo Verde)

38. Jozef Van Wissem & Jim Jarmusch – Concerning The Entrance Into Eternity (Important)

39. Jack White – Blunderbuss (XL)

40. Neil Young & Crazy Horse – Americana (Reprise)

Listen to REM’s Peter Buck debut solo track “10 Million BC”

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REM's Peter Buck has posted his first solo material online – scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to hear his track '10 Million BC'. The song, which surfaced via Slicing Up Eyeballs, is set to appear on the guitarist's debut album, although a title or release date for the LP have yet to be revealed. In March of this year, Scott McCaughey – Buck's Minus 5 band mate and frequent REM collaborator – confirmed that he had been working on the record and hinted that it would be released on vinyl only. It is likely that the LP will be the first album made by any of the members of REM since they split up in September last year, following the release of their 15th studio album Collapse Into Now. Last November, frontman Michael Stipe said it was "unfathomable" that he would make a solo LP, with reports suggesting that the singer is more interested in pursuing his artistic interests such as sculpture and photography. The band's bassist Mike Mills, meanwhile, has given no indication that he will record or release material by himself. All three members of the seminal alternative rock band, meanwhile, have repeatedly quashed any speculation that they will reunite in the future, with Mills describing the timing of their split as "perfect" and Stipe insisting that they will not play together again.

REM’s Peter Buck has posted his first solo material online – scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to hear his track ’10 Million BC’.

The song, which surfaced via Slicing Up Eyeballs, is set to appear on the guitarist’s debut album, although a title or release date for the LP have yet to be revealed. In March of this year, Scott McCaughey – Buck’s Minus 5 band mate and frequent REM collaborator – confirmed that he had been working on the record and hinted that it would be released on vinyl only.

It is likely that the LP will be the first album made by any of the members of REM since they split up in September last year, following the release of their 15th studio album Collapse Into Now. Last November, frontman Michael Stipe said it was “unfathomable” that he would make a solo LP, with reports suggesting that the singer is more interested in pursuing his artistic interests such as sculpture and photography. The band’s bassist Mike Mills, meanwhile, has given no indication that he will record or release material by himself.

All three members of the seminal alternative rock band, meanwhile, have repeatedly quashed any speculation that they will reunite in the future, with Mills describing the timing of their split as “perfect” and Stipe insisting that they will not play together again.

The Flaming Lips’ Wayne Coyne: ‘Our new album could be the best we ever make’

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Wayne Coyne has said that the band's new album could be the best Flaming Lips album that the band ever make. The Oklahoman band are set to release their collaboration-heavy LP The Flaming Lips And Heavy Fwends on CD and digitally on June 25 but, in an interview with Spinner, the singer said the ban...

Wayne Coyne has said that the band’s new album could be the best Flaming Lips album that the band ever make.

The Oklahoman band are set to release their collaboration-heavy LP The Flaming Lips And Heavy Fwends on CD and digitally on June 25 but, in an interview with Spinner, the singer said the band were already looking ahead to their new studio record.

Asked to describe the album, he said: “Big songs, big arrangements, big productions, big mixing. It feels to me like religious music from the future that’s like this distorted melody coming from somewhere else in the universe and we’re just sort of collecting them.”

The frontman, who also said that the record was “almost exclusively” about “internal fear, and an internal sadness about living/oblivion”, added: “I would say I think it could be the best Flaming Lips record that could ever be made.”

Earlier this month, Coyne became embroiled in a public spat with singer Erykah Badu, after she told him to “kiss my glittery ass” when he leaked an unapproved edit of the highly NSFW video to “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face“. Last week (June 9), however, Coyne insisted that vthe ideo was “wonderful” and claimed that Badu’s public display of rage was a means of garnering publicity.

‘The Flaming Lips And Heady Fwends’ was originally released as a double vinyl album for this year’s Record Store Day. The LP sees Coyne and co teaming up with a variety of artists including Ke$ha, Bon Iver, Yoko Ono, Nick Cave, My Morning Jacket and Tame Impala.

Photo credit: Andy Willsher

Radiohead stage collapse kills drum technician

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Radiohead's drum technician, Scott Johnson, has been named as the man who died after a stage collapsed before the band's concert in Toronto on Saturday (June 16). A relative confirmed to the BBC that the 33-year-old from Doncaster had died when the roof of the stage fell on top of him. A further t...

Radiohead‘s drum technician, Scott Johnson, has been named as the man who died after a stage collapsed before the band’s concert in Toronto on Saturday (June 16).

A relative confirmed to the BBC that the 33-year-old from Doncaster had died when the roof of the stage fell on top of him.

A further three people are injured, with one reported to be in a serious condition, in the incident at Downsview Park. Scroll down the page and click to view footage, shot from a helicopter, of the aftermath.

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

Speaking to the BBC, Alexandra Halbert, who was working in a nearby beer tent at the time of the collapse, said she heard a noise “that sounded like fireworks”.

She continued: “I turned around and the whole top part of the stage had collapsed, as well as the scaffolding. It seemed like there were a couple of minutes of hesitation and no one knew quite what to do. It was only afterwards that we all realised how serious it was.”

Radiohead later announced on their Twitter that the show would be cancelled and advised fans to stay away from Downsview Park.

They Tweeted:

Due to unforeseen circumstances tonight’s at downsview park tonight has been cancelled. Fans are advised not to make their way to the venue.

Radiohead (@radiohead) June 16, 2012

40,000 people were expected to attend the sold-out show in the Canadian city. Police are now investigating the cause of the stage collapse and have appealed for witnesses to come forward to speak to them.

The Rolling Stones to bow out at Glastonbury?

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The Rolling Stones will bow out from live performances with a headline slot at next year's Glastonbury festival, according to a tabloid report. The band have never played the Worthy Farm festival but a rumour suggests that they will be heading there for their first and only time next summer, accord...

The Rolling Stones will bow out from live performances with a headline slot at next year’s Glastonbury festival, according to a tabloid report.

The band have never played the Worthy Farm festival but a rumour suggests that they will be heading there for their first and only time next summer, according to the Sunday Mirror.

The tabloid newspaper reports that “sources” close to the band have indicated that their Glastonbury appearance will be their final date in a “handful” of shows in the UK and USA in 2012. It is also suggested that, as it is part of the group’s 50-year anniversary, it will be seen as a good time to call it a day on live performances.

One source revealed: “All four members have agreed that next year is the right time to have one final hurrah and put on the gig of their lives. It’s a case of now or never, and obviously Glastonbury is the most important festival on the circuit. Everybody’s incredibly excited… it’s a final bow.”

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 Bridge

The latest Scandi-TV import proves the Nordic crime wave hasn’t peaked just yet... Another gripping slab of Nordic noir, The Bridge isn’t simply the latest in the wave of imports arriving to feed our recent appetite for Scandinavian television. Shot late last year, it’s also the first to have been made after the much-chattered-upon international success of shows like The Killing, which, originally broadcast in Denmark in 2007, took four years to become an overnight sensation in the UK. Drawing over 1 million viewers on its BBC Four debut – a bigger audience than The Killing – The Bridge undoubtedly benefitted from its predecessors’ word-of-mouth buzz. But there’s more going on than that. A co-production between DR, the Danish broadcaster behind The Killing, and Sweden’s SVT, house of Wallander, the series feels very much a carefully calculated response to the region’s recent successes in exporting cop thrillers. You half suspect it was designed more for us tourists than domestic audiences. The bridge in question is the Øresund Bridge that connects Sweden and Denmark, and the story begins with the discovery of a woman’s body, placed on display exactly at the midway point: meaning cops from both countries must join forces to work together. Essentially, then, what we have is the Scandi-crime equivalent of one of those Spidey-Meets-The-Hulk style Marvel Comics team ups. A curious, self-aware quality permeates proceedings, most pointedly in the figure of the Swedish cop, Saga Norén (Sofia Helin). At first glance, with her complete absorption in her work and chronic lack of social skills, the character seems practically a goofy pastiche of The Killing’s ever-isolated detective, Sarah Lund – until, that is, you realise Saga actually has some high-functioning, Asperger’s-like autistic condition. Joining her from Denmark, and bearing the pastries to prove it, is Martin Rohde (the excellent Kim Bodina, from Nicolas Winding Refn’s Pusher), an easygoing, shambling, shagged-out Baloo Bear, nursing his own problems. The day before the killing, he had a vasectomy: “My nether regions are tender.” Odd couples don’t come much odder, but this is no comedy, and the sparks of warmth in their strange, sideways relationship become the only glimmers of light as things turn grisly and grim. On closer inspection, it turns out the body on the bridge is actually two bodies. Bits of them, anyway: half of it belongs to a Swedish politician; half to a Danish prostitute. You see, the serial killer, swiftly dubbed “The Truth Teller” by the media, has political points to make. The initial crime is only the overture to a vast, messianic mission, supposedly aimed at drawing society’s attention to itself, highlighting the plight of the homeless, the vulnerability of the mentally ill, the “failure of immigration policies” and on and on. Here, to self-conscious degree, the series deals in the familiar pop socio-political concerns that run through much Nordic noir, the stuff Henning Mankell explores in his Wallander novels and Stieg Larsson kicked in his Millenium Trilogy: beneath the abiding stereotype of the Scandinavian countries as content, liberal havens, something is rotten in Europe’s chill northern heart. Really, though, for all its slow-burning surface gloom and supposed political concerns, at heart, The Bridge, like The Killing, is pure pulp, with a diabolical-mastermind plot that has the relentless, hook-and-twist forward motion of an old cliff-hanger serial. For box set bingers, though, the true attraction is less to do with plot and themes, anyway, than the sheer mood the programme generates as it plunges us back into the crepuscular world we have come to love: nights in the forgotten zones of curious, unfamiliar cityscapes, where the light outdoors seems rubbed in copper and soaked in whisky, and rooms have the tinge of the aquarium or the mortuary. Damien Love

The latest Scandi-TV import proves the Nordic crime wave hasn’t peaked just yet…

Another gripping slab of Nordic noir, The Bridge isn’t simply the latest in the wave of imports arriving to feed our recent appetite for Scandinavian television. Shot late last year, it’s also the first to have been made after the much-chattered-upon international success of shows like The Killing, which, originally broadcast in Denmark in 2007, took four years to become an overnight sensation in the UK.

Drawing over 1 million viewers on its BBC Four debut – a bigger audience than The Killing – The Bridge undoubtedly benefitted from its predecessors’ word-of-mouth buzz. But there’s more going on than that. A co-production between DR, the Danish broadcaster behind The Killing, and Sweden’s SVT, house of Wallander, the series feels very much a carefully calculated response to the region’s recent successes in exporting cop thrillers. You half suspect it was designed more for us tourists than domestic audiences.

The bridge in question is the Øresund Bridge that connects Sweden and Denmark, and the story begins with the discovery of a woman’s body, placed on display exactly at the midway point: meaning cops from both countries must join forces to work together. Essentially, then, what we have is the Scandi-crime equivalent of one of those Spidey-Meets-The-Hulk style Marvel Comics team ups.

A curious, self-aware quality permeates proceedings, most pointedly in the figure of the Swedish cop, Saga Norén (Sofia Helin). At first glance, with her complete absorption in her work and chronic lack of social skills, the character seems practically a goofy pastiche of The Killing’s ever-isolated detective, Sarah Lund – until, that is, you realise Saga actually has some high-functioning, Asperger’s-like autistic condition.

Joining her from Denmark, and bearing the pastries to prove it, is Martin Rohde (the excellent Kim Bodina, from Nicolas Winding Refn’s Pusher), an easygoing, shambling, shagged-out Baloo Bear, nursing his own problems. The day before the killing, he had a vasectomy: “My nether regions are tender.”

Odd couples don’t come much odder, but this is no comedy, and the sparks of warmth in their strange, sideways relationship become the only glimmers of light as things turn grisly and grim. On closer inspection, it turns out the body on the bridge is actually two bodies. Bits of them, anyway: half of it belongs to a Swedish politician; half to a Danish prostitute. You see, the serial killer, swiftly dubbed “The Truth Teller” by the media, has political points to make. The initial crime is only the overture to a vast, messianic mission, supposedly aimed at drawing society’s attention to itself, highlighting the plight of the homeless, the vulnerability of the mentally ill, the “failure of immigration policies” and on and on.

Here, to self-conscious degree, the series deals in the familiar pop socio-political concerns that run through much Nordic noir, the stuff Henning Mankell explores in his Wallander novels and Stieg Larsson kicked in his Millenium Trilogy: beneath the abiding stereotype of the Scandinavian countries as content, liberal havens, something is rotten in Europe’s chill northern heart. Really, though, for all its slow-burning surface gloom and supposed political concerns, at heart, The Bridge, like The Killing, is pure pulp, with a diabolical-mastermind plot that has the relentless, hook-and-twist forward motion of an old cliff-hanger serial.

For box set bingers, though, the true attraction is less to do with plot and themes, anyway, than the sheer mood the programme generates as it plunges us back into the crepuscular world we have come to love: nights in the forgotten zones of curious, unfamiliar cityscapes, where the light outdoors seems rubbed in copper and soaked in whisky, and rooms have the tinge of the aquarium or the mortuary.

Damien Love

First Look – William Friedkin’s Killer Joe

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Welcome back William Friedkin and Matthew McConaughey - both missing in action, it seems, for some years now - with the terribly funny Killer Joe. Typically, for the director of transgressive genre pieces like The Exorcist and Cruising, one of the first things we see here is Gina Gershon’s lower half, naked. “It’s a bit distracting, your bush in my face,” complains her step-son, Chris (Emile Hirsch). Chris is in debt to some bad dudes because his mother “stole two ounces of coke from me.” Dismayed by such inappropriate parenting, Chris, his father (Thomas Hayden Church) and step mother Sharla hire Joe Cooper (Matthew McConaughey), a Texas cop sidelining as a contract killer, to murder Chris’ mother for her life insurance policy. Friedkin has never been one for understatement. What could have been a predictable piece of Jim Thompson-style pulp business becomes something much more subversive in Friedkin’s hands. Joe wants Chris’ barely legal sister, Dottie (Julien Temple's daughter, Juno), as an advance on his fee. One character is forced to fellate a piece of deep fried chicken. Another has their skull smashed in with a tin of Libby’s pumpkin puree. Friedkin doesn’t quite know when to stop. This is his second collaboration with playwright Tracy Letts after the similarly out-there Bug; the relationship appears to have revived Friedkin. As an actor, Matthew McConaughey has been in danger of getting lost in rom-com’s darkest woods – Ghosts Of Girlfriends Past, Failure To Launch, How To Lose A Guy In 10 Days. But with this and last year’s unexpectedly brilliant The Lincoln Lawyer, he seems to be channeling some terrific Woody Harrelson-style vibes right now.

Welcome back William Friedkin and Matthew McConaughey – both missing in action, it seems, for some years now – with the terribly funny Killer Joe. Typically, for the director of transgressive genre pieces like The Exorcist and Cruising, one of the first things we see here is Gina Gershon’s lower half, naked. “It’s a bit distracting, your bush in my face,” complains her step-son, Chris (Emile Hirsch).

Chris is in debt to some bad dudes because his mother “stole two ounces of coke from me.” Dismayed by such inappropriate parenting, Chris, his father (Thomas Hayden Church) and step mother Sharla hire Joe Cooper (Matthew McConaughey), a Texas cop sidelining as a contract killer, to murder Chris’ mother for her life insurance policy. Friedkin has never been one for understatement. What could have been a predictable piece of Jim Thompson-style pulp business becomes something much more subversive in Friedkin’s hands. Joe wants Chris’ barely legal sister, Dottie (Julien Temple’s daughter, Juno), as an advance on his fee.

One character is forced to fellate a piece of deep fried chicken. Another has their skull smashed in with a tin of Libby’s pumpkin puree. Friedkin doesn’t quite know when to stop. This is his second collaboration with playwright Tracy Letts after the similarly out-there Bug; the relationship appears to have revived Friedkin. As an actor, Matthew McConaughey has been in danger of getting lost in rom-com’s darkest woods – Ghosts Of Girlfriends Past, Failure To Launch, How To Lose A Guy In 10 Days. But with this and last year’s unexpectedly brilliant The Lincoln Lawyer, he seems to be channeling some terrific Woody Harrelson-style vibes right now.

Flaming Lips to give full release to Record Store Day album

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Flaming Lips are to release their The Flaming Lips And Heady Fwends album on July 30. The album was originally given a limited, vinyl-only release for Record Store Day on April 21 this year. Recorded in collaboration with artists including Nick Cave, Yoko Ono and Bon Iver, the album will be releas...

Flaming Lips are to release their The Flaming Lips And Heady Fwends album on July 30.

The album was originally given a limited, vinyl-only release for Record Store Day on April 21 this year.

Recorded in collaboration with artists including Nick Cave, Yoko Ono and Bon Iver, the album will be released by the band’s new label, Bella Union, on both CD and vinyl.

The track listing for The Flaming Lips And Heady Fwends is:

1. “2012 (You Must Be Upgraded) (w/ Ke$ha, Biz Markie & Hour Of The Time Majesty 12)

2. “Ashes In The Air” (Featuring Bon Iver)

3. “Helping The Retarded To Know God” (Featuring Edward Sharpe and The Magnetic Zeros)

4. “Supermoon Made Me Want To Pee” (Featuring Prefuse 73)

5. “Children Of The Moon” (Featuring Tame Impala)

6. “That Ain’t My Trip” (Featuring Jim James of My Morning Jacket)

7. “You, Man? Human???” (Featuring Nick Cave)

8. “I’m Working At NASA On Acid” (Featuring Lightning Bolt)

9. “Do It!” (Featuring Yoko Ono/Plastic Ono Band)

10. “Is David Bowie Dying?” (Featuring Neon Indian)

11. “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face” (Featuring Erykah Badu)

12. “Girl, You’re So Weird” (Featuring New Fumes)

13. “Tasered And Maced” (Featuring Aaron Behrens of Ghostland Observatory)

St Vincent and David Byrne announce details of new album ‘Love This Giant’

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St Vincent and David Byrne have announced details of their joint album ‘Love This Giant’, which is set for release on September 11. Recorded over two years, the pair wrote ten of the album’s twelve tracks together, with each artist submitting a track of their own. Speaking of the collaborati...

St Vincent and David Byrne have announced details of their joint album ‘Love This Giant’, which is set for release on September 11.

Recorded over two years, the pair wrote ten of the album’s twelve tracks together, with each artist submitting a track of their own. Speaking of the collaboration, St Vincent – real name Annie Clark, said: “There was no delineating what the roles were. It’s a collaboration I’m truly proud of.”

The pair first met in 2009, and subsequently shared song ideas online while Clark was on tour. Byrne later performed with Clark at her American Songbook show at Lincoln Center in 2010, and Clark contributed vocals to Byrne’s Here Lies Love album, released the same year.

The pair will have also announced a North American tour, of which Byrne said: “We’ll be doing these songs and a bunch of songs that we suspect people will know, with a group that includes eight brass players, a keyboardist and a drummer.”

The tracklisting for Love This Giant is as follows:

’Who’

‘Weekend in the Dust’

‘Dinner For Two’

‘Ice Age’

‘I Am An Ape’

‘The Forest Awakes’

‘I Should Watch TV’

‘Lazarus’

‘Optimist’

‘Lightning’

‘ The One Who Broke Your Heart (featuring The Dap-Kings and Antibalas)’

‘Outside of Space & Time’

The Chris Robinson Brotherhood – Big Moon Ritual

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Black Crowe's head music dives deep into the past... Chris Robinson’s belief that the occult energy of cosmic rock’n’roll is still capable of shifting the cultural axis has always seemed both heroic and faintly ridiculous. The middle-class suburban kid who put his faith in velvet loons, pre-punk virtuosity and the creative powers of strong weed is a self-confessed throwback, but 22 years after the first Black Crowes album you’d be hard pressed to question his commitment to the cause. As Big Moon Ritual emphatically demonstrates, if you’re going to dive into the past, you might as well dive deep. The opening declaration from the Chris Robinson Brotherhood, who include in their number ex-Cardinal Neal Casal and former Black Crowe Adam MacDougall, Big Moon Ritual is unapologetic head music. Formed by Robinson with the sole intention of taking the sound as far up and out as possible, CRB spent all of 2011 relentlessly touring California. Suitably bonded, in January they took their show into the studio, recording 27 songs (some of which will be released in October as a companion album, The Magic Door) in six days. The results are immersive and free-flowing (though not free-form), harking back to rock’s logo-free golden age. You can tell that Robinson has lately been performing with Bob Weir and Phil Lesh. The Grateful Dead’s expansive Cali-country-rock is a key touchstone (the band even has its own enthusiastic community of live show tapers), as are The Allman Brothers, Gong’s lunatic fringe, The Faces and The Stanley Brothers. None of these influences, of course, live far from Robinson’s home turf. Big Moon Ritual might be loose, but in no sense is it an exercise in absolute abandon: though the heads of these seven songs are in the stars, their boots are planted firmly in the certainties of strong, traditional melody. Each one feels like a little adventure. Opener “Tulsa Yesterday” flips from an immensely pleasing laidback country shuffle to shimmering space-soul, along the way earning the right to every one of its 12 minutes. The terrific “Rosalee” starts with a relentlessly funky clavinet groove – like The Band’s “Rag Mama Rag” let off the leash – then rapidly orbits some distant psych galaxy before burning back to earth. Gratuitous? Sure. Fun? Indeed, especially when Robinson’s rousing “air getting thinner, are we getting high?” refrain slams in, driving the song to its climax. There’s ample sustenance for the heart as well as the head. As emotionally direct as anything Robinson has recorded, “Beware, Oh Take Care” and “Reflections On A Broken Mirror” are big, tender ballads which showcase one of the great rock’n’roll voices in full flood. “Star Or Stone” is similarly affecting, a slow country-blues reminiscent of Sticky Fingers-era Stones at their most nakedly soulful. Full of ill portent and dark superstition - “I was thirteenth at the table when the wine was passed around” – it’s graced by a particularly elegant, unhurried solo from Casal, who throughout plays a blinder. Cowriter on three songs, his graceful guitar lines bring a silvery lightness to music that could easily become dull and heavy. In the end, only the clumpy, Moog-laced “Tomorrow Blues” remains earthbound, lifting off only momentarily during a dubby space-rock interlude which falls somewhere between The Doors’ “Roadhouse Blues” and Hawkwind. The sweet, languid closer “A Hundred Days Of Rain”, with its restrained echoes of Neil Young’s “Down By The River”, makes for a much more thrilling ride, and provides one final stage for Casal’s exemplary guitar playing. For all the length of the songs, The Big Ritual feels like a mere snapshot of some eternal jam session which might very well still be happening as we speak. The prospect of continued despatches from this corner of the stratosphere is a cheering one, particularly as you suspect future CRB missions will travel even further up and out. Graeme Thomson Q&A Chris Robinson Tour first, record second is very old school... We purposely set out not to make a record until we’d finished a whole year of touring, which turned out to be 118 shows. Those were the building blocks to our sound and our identity, so in the studio we just set up our road gear and went to it. It was the craziest session I’ve ever done. The true measure of success after 25 years is getting to a place where it feels like we finally have our own commune. This band and this record feels like that. Does CRB mean an end to the Crowes? Given a perfect storm I don’t ever see not having this band and not doing what we’re doing. The Black Crowes are important to me, but it’s best not to wake up the bear when it’s hibernating. I don’t have any weird negative feelings about it. Maybe down the line it will happen. Will CRB tour the UK? We’d really like to. It’s hard. People asked us, ‘Why did you play so many dates in California?’ Well, because you can drive around with a pound of weed and not get in trouble. Let’s face it, we have priorities as a band. INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

Black Crowe’s head music dives deep into the past…

Chris Robinson’s belief that the occult energy of cosmic rock’n’roll is still capable of shifting the cultural axis has always seemed both heroic and faintly ridiculous. The middle-class suburban kid who put his faith in velvet loons, pre-punk virtuosity and the creative powers of strong weed is a self-confessed throwback, but 22 years after the first Black Crowes album you’d be hard pressed to question his commitment to the cause. As Big Moon Ritual emphatically demonstrates, if you’re going to dive into the past, you might as well dive deep.

The opening declaration from the Chris Robinson Brotherhood, who include in their number ex-Cardinal Neal Casal and former Black Crowe Adam MacDougall, Big Moon Ritual is unapologetic head music. Formed by Robinson with the sole intention of taking the sound as far up and out as possible, CRB spent all of 2011 relentlessly touring California. Suitably bonded, in January they took their show into the studio, recording 27 songs (some of which will be released in October as a companion album, The Magic Door) in six days.

The results are immersive and free-flowing (though not free-form), harking back to rock’s logo-free golden age. You can tell that Robinson has lately been performing with Bob Weir and Phil Lesh. The Grateful Dead’s expansive Cali-country-rock is a key touchstone (the band even has its own enthusiastic community of live show tapers), as are The Allman Brothers, Gong’s lunatic fringe, The Faces and The Stanley Brothers. None of these influences, of course, live far from Robinson’s home turf. Big Moon Ritual might be loose, but in no sense is it an exercise in absolute abandon: though the heads of these seven songs are in the stars, their boots are planted firmly in the certainties of strong, traditional melody.

Each one feels like a little adventure. Opener “Tulsa Yesterday” flips from an immensely pleasing laidback country shuffle to shimmering space-soul, along the way earning the right to every one of its 12 minutes. The terrific “Rosalee” starts with a relentlessly funky clavinet groove – like The Band’s “Rag Mama Rag” let off the leash – then rapidly orbits some distant psych galaxy before burning back to earth. Gratuitous? Sure. Fun? Indeed, especially when Robinson’s rousing “air getting thinner, are we getting high?” refrain slams in, driving the song to its climax.

There’s ample sustenance for the heart as well as the head. As emotionally direct as anything Robinson has recorded, “Beware, Oh Take Care” and “Reflections On A Broken Mirror” are big, tender ballads which showcase one of the great rock’n’roll voices in full flood. “Star Or Stone” is similarly affecting, a slow country-blues reminiscent of Sticky Fingers-era Stones at their most nakedly soulful. Full of ill portent and dark superstition – “I was thirteenth at the table when the wine was passed around” – it’s graced by a particularly elegant, unhurried solo from Casal, who throughout plays a blinder. Cowriter on three songs, his graceful guitar lines bring a silvery lightness to music that could easily become dull and heavy.

In the end, only the clumpy, Moog-laced “Tomorrow Blues” remains earthbound, lifting off only momentarily during a dubby space-rock interlude which falls somewhere between The Doors’ “Roadhouse Blues” and Hawkwind. The sweet, languid closer “A Hundred Days Of Rain”, with its restrained echoes of Neil Young’s “Down By The River”, makes for a much more thrilling ride, and provides one final stage for Casal’s exemplary guitar playing.

For all the length of the songs, The Big Ritual feels like a mere snapshot of some eternal jam session which might very well still be happening as we speak. The prospect of continued despatches from this corner of the stratosphere is a cheering one, particularly as you suspect future CRB missions will travel even further up and out.

Graeme Thomson

Q&A

Chris Robinson

Tour first, record second is very old school…

We purposely set out not to make a record until we’d finished a whole year of touring, which turned out to be 118 shows. Those were the building blocks to our sound and our identity, so in the studio we just set up our road gear and went to it. It was the craziest session I’ve ever done. The true measure of success after 25 years is getting to a place where it feels like we finally have our own commune. This band and this record feels like that.

Does CRB mean an end to the Crowes?

Given a perfect storm I don’t ever see not having this band and not doing what we’re doing. The Black Crowes are important to me, but it’s best not to wake up the bear when it’s hibernating. I don’t have any weird negative feelings about it. Maybe down the line it will happen.

Will CRB tour the UK?

We’d really like to. It’s hard. People asked us, ‘Why did you play so many dates in California?’ Well, because you can drive around with a pound of weed and not get in trouble. Let’s face it, we have priorities as a band.

INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

Ringo Starr’s birthplace saved from demolition

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Ringo Starr's birthplace has been saved from demolition, according to UK Housing Minister Grant Shapps. The Beatles drummer's former home will not be knocked down by Liverpool City Council as part of their plans to regenerate the Welsh Streets area of the city, and it will now be refurbished. Acco...

Ringo Starr‘s birthplace has been saved from demolition, according to UK Housing Minister Grant Shapps.

The Beatles drummer’s former home will not be knocked down by Liverpool City Council as part of their plans to regenerate the Welsh Streets area of the city, and it will now be refurbished.

According to the BBC, the house on 9 Madryn Street, in Dingle, is one of 16 on the street spared from the bulldozer; although 400 homes in the area will be pulled down.

Speaking about the victory, Grant Shapps said a “tide of community spirit” had saved the home, which he described as being a “beacon of Beatlemania”.

He added: “But it’s also a lot more than that – a real example of communities having the power and voice to step in and save the places they treasure most. Its future will now be in the hands of local residents – if they can make a success of this street then many more similar houses and streets could be saved.”

Ringo Starr’s childhood home is currently boarded up and is covered in graffiti from The Beatles fans. Starr is currently working on a musical film, titled Hole In The Fence, with Eurythmics guitarist David A Stewart.

Yeasayer announce Setember UK tour

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Yeasayer have announced a short UK tour for September. The Brooklyn indie band, who announced recently that they will release their third studio album Fragrant World on August 20, will play three dates in the UK in September as well as an intimate London show in July. The gigs kick off at London's...

Yeasayer have announced a short UK tour for September.

The Brooklyn indie band, who announced recently that they will release their third studio album Fragrant World on August 20, will play three dates in the UK in September as well as an intimate London show in July.

The gigs kick off at London’s O2 Shepherds Bush Empire on September 27 before the band travel north to play Glasgow’s Arches venue on September 28. They round things off at Manchester’s HMV Ritz on September 29.

Before this, the band will headline an intimate show at London’s Lexington venue on July 11. They are also booked to perform at this year’s Latitude Festival on the following weekend.

Fragrant World is the follow-up to their 2010 second album Odd Blood and is due for release on August 20. The album will contain a total of 11 tracks, including Henrietta, which the band recently released.

That track was sent out to members of the band’s mailing list, with a physical CD containing the song sent to every person who had signed up to updates from Yeasayer. You can hear the track by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking.

Late last year, the band spoke about Fragrant World and said that it is shaping up to be “like a demented R&B record”. Multi-instrumentalist Chris Keating said of it: “It’s like an Aaliyah album if you played it backwards and slowed it down. Or David Bowie’s ‘Lodger’. Those two are major influences.”

Yeasayer will play:

London Lexington (July 11)

O2 Shepherds Bush Empire (September 27)

Glasgow Arches (28)

Manchester HMV Ritz (29)

Photo: Emilie Bailey/NME

Dr John – Album By Album

The pianist, singer and songwriter Mac Rebennack, known better as Dr John, faces your questions in the latest Uncut (dated July 2012), out now – but back in October 2010 (Take 161), he took us on a fascinating journey through his most important, and interesting, releases, from Gris-Gris to Exile O...

The pianist, singer and songwriter Mac Rebennack, known better as Dr John, faces your questions in the latest Uncut (dated July 2012), out now – but back in October 2010 (Take 161), he took us on a fascinating journey through his most important, and interesting, releases, from Gris-Gris to Exile On Main St. “We went to a nudist camp somewhere, we made up a song called ‘The Symphony Of Frogs’…”

______________________________

The early outing

LEONARD JAMES AND HIS ORCHESTRA

Boppin’ And A-Strollin’

(Decca, 1958)

A full decade before Mac Rebennack began trading as Dr John, his recording career begins. As a young man, Mac would play guitar in his native New Orleans with a number of R’n’B combos, often with sax player Leonard James. Not widely heard, this is a swiftly recorded local effort…

Dr John: “I’m always grateful to my father for telling me, ‘Your head ain’t on no school. My advice to you is to take that job on the road.’ My father used to fix the PA systems at clubs, and restaurants where they had music. Those were the days when people paid my father with fish, or ducks. Real things. Life was a lot simpler, and it was a gig, you know?

“Originally I was working with Leonard James’ band. I worked with bands like The Spades. The Dominos. The this, the that. But Leonard showed me how to hustle to get gigs. We used to play gigs in the 9th Ward of New Orleans at a grocery store. He’d walk in, and he’d have his sax case fall open accidentally…he’d start playing, give a guy a record. But he was a very vain cat, he had ducktails and all of that. So when he saw he was losing his hair, he joined the Air Force. He was playing saxophone in Air Force bands. We lost touch with each other. We were supposed to meet. I don’t know if he’s alive or dead – but there’s so many people like that.”

The Night Tripping Masterpiece

DR JOHN

Gris-Gris (ATCO, 1968
)

Having moved to LA to pursue a career as a session musician, Mac decided to unveil a concept project – Dr John, the Night Tripper, who would perform music deeply linked to New Orleans mystical tradition. Recorded after hours, it remains an eerie, stone-cold classic…

“When we started this whole Dr John thing we were trying to preserve the New Orleans voodoo scene which was called Gris-Gris… we were trying to preserve it. I had this whole album writ down. Either Sonny or Cher was cutting for Atlantic – it got done on their studio time. All of the guys on that record were from New Orleans. One thing about people from New Orleans, we know it’s better to hang together than to hang separated. I took a lot of sacred music, and asked some reverend mothers [Voodoo practitioners of New Orleans] if it was OK. I asked, if I didn’t sing the original spiritual lyrics to the songs, was it OK to do this record? And they told me ‘That’s OK’. But don’t do this, don’t do that.

“So it was easy: I was given a lot of instructions on certain things. But I was trying to help them in certain ways, too. When that record came out, they got me to front their [Voodoo] church and get it legalised with the state of Louisiana, so that when they heal people they wouldn’t go to jail. I gave the church to a guy called Noel, and he’s still got it rolling in South Louisiana. The spirit is strong. That music was important – they gave me so much so freely, that it was important for me to do something for them.

“They taught me how to cure people with plants, and what you look for in the earth. These days they call that homeopathical medications or whatever they calls it. In Louisiana this is part of Choctaw traditions, African traditions… It’s all in this little area between Louisiana and Mississippi – everything grows. I was always around so many blessed musicians… great guitar players, sax players, killer drummers. We did a whole voodoo show. We did what you would actually see [at a voodoo ceremony], but made it into showbusiness, which was taking what we used to do with minstrels and mixing it with stuff from the mardi gras Indians, like the fur suits I had. We had a guy that was a wild man for the Creole Wild West, way back in the game in the 1930s. I talked to the kids… they know about this stuff, but they don’t remember far back. But all of these people contributed something that made this music different, and we were trying to keep the spirit of all of that.”

The bad news album!

DR JOHN

Babylon (ATCO, 1969)

A strange set of circumstances sees Dr John and band arrive in San Francisco, where they fit – to their surprise – very neatly in with the countercultural vibe. The Vietnam war, and the assassinations of Martin Luther King and Bobby Kennedy contribute to the album’s heavy atmosphere…

“We went to a nudist camp somewhere, we made up a song called ‘The Symphony Of Frogs’, we were jamming to the frogs, Didymus [conga player Richard Washington] was playing the rocks. Little Charlie was playing his flute. Next thing, these nudists said, ‘You should come with us to San Francisco.’ So we go there, and people is givin’ us these pads to stay at. The Grateful Deads is putting us up at this pad. It was like ‘damn’. And our Gris-Gris started selling a little bit… it fit in with their thing. It was funny to all of us. Because kids used to say to us, little kids, ‘You guys are like dinosaurs – everyone’s doing acid, and you guys are shooting heroin.’ It was like, ‘Damn! How does this kid know?’ The saxophone player left the band from out there, because he kept seeing signs that said ‘Armageddon’. He left the band and got busted and was in Raiford State Penitentiary in Florida, on the chain gang. He sent me a letter and he said, ‘I feel much safer here than in Babylon.’ It was a strange letter to get, but it may have had something to do with the record, and all the things happening.”

Penitentiary blues

DR JOHN

Remedies (ATCO, 1970)

Managerial problems – Dr John has had a few. One adviser encouraged him to spend time in a mental hospital to get out of a drug conviction – the part-finished Remedies comes from this insane period. Contains the 17-minute prison reform polemic, “Angola Anthem”.

“My managers put me in a psych ward. These guys were very bad people – I had gotten busted on a deal, and they got me bonded out of jail, and so when they did I could have got a parole violation. All of this stuff was so unconnected to music that it’s hard to relate it. A friend of mine had just come out of doing 40-something years in Angola [the infamous Louisiana State Penitentiary], he was just someone special in my heart – called Tangleye. And Tangleye says, ‘I’m gonna sell you this song. Got it in Angola, but ain’t nobody ever cut this song…’ Even now guys I know getting out of Angola know this song. It’s still a horrible place to be. They feed people every 10 days or whatever.

“And that’s why I cut this song: I got a friend doing 300 years in one of these satellite penitentiaries, he got high blood pressure, cirrhosis of the liver, he don’t get no medication. People have no idea what it’s like in a cell when it’s just you, and they feed you whenever they feel like it. One of these guys told me, ‘You can taste the food before you eat it.’ And they stretch it too with the rats and whatever other critters these guys have as pets.”

The all-star jam

DR JOHN

The Sun, Moon And Herbs (Atlantic, 1971)

Originally planned as a triple concept, The Sun, Moon And Herbs ended up – via managerial shenanigans, missing tapes, etc – not being quite that. Recorded in London, Mick Jagger, Eric Clapton, etc turn up to guest…

“We were doing this record over here [in London], and they [Dr John’s managers] decided they were going to try and sell the tapes to [blues-rock label] Blue Thumb Records – and I was signed to Atlantic Records, so I ratted them out… Everyone who was part of that record talked to me and told me to go for it. We wanted to make a three-record set: a sun record, a moon record, an herbs record.

“The first record was this beautiful thing about the sun, and we had a song my mother wrote. I didn’t have all of my regular guys: most of the guys were straight-up addicts, so there was a lot of confusion getting them anywhere. I had to change guys just to get across the border. We had a lot of people from all over, from Africa, Jamaica. We had Eric Clapton, at the time when he had Derek And The Dominoes. But the point is that people all threw down to help with this. I seen a picture of Mick Jagger at the studio singing some back-ups. I seen a picture of myself with what looks like a joint in my hand, but it must have been a home-rolled cigarette – because I wasn’t into smoking the weeds.”

The cap-doffer

DR JOHN

Gumbo (Atlantic, 1972)

After four years of Gris-Gris theatre, Dr John and band decide to pay tribute to the music that inspired them. Spawns radio hit “Iko Iko”…

“All that stuff that we were wearing [for the Gris Gris shows] burned up in a fire at Studio Instrument Rentals, and it was hard to keep doing the show without any of the stuff we had started out doing the show with. But by the time of Gumbo… I’ll be straight up, instead of buying more stuff, I took the money and went and copped some dope with it. Atlantic was up for doing something different – it opened a door for us. But I’m sorry I called it ‘Iko Iko’, because Joe Jones had stolen that song when he made his record with the Dixie Cups and put his name on it – it was a James ‘Sugar Boy’ Crawford song called ‘Jock-A-Mo’, and Joe Jones got his hands on the money for that. When you copyright something – that’s who should get the money, period. When I got into this business, I was making a couple of recording dates a day, two gigs a night. My first wife and I couldn’t pay the rent. We were trying to run a ho’ house – and between all of that we couldn’t make the rent. We called that supplementing our income. But I couldn’t stop playing music.”

The high-profile session gig

THE ROLLING STONES

Exile On Main St (Rolling Stones Records/Atlantic, 1972)

At the LA sessions, Dr John attends and supplies some additional keyboards. He also brings in backing singers Tami Lyn, Shirley Goodman and old pal Didymus.

“I tell ya what. They recently reissued that record, but the kick was hanging with Keith – he’s still the same Keith, like always. The other guys… Charlie was cool. But I felt some differences with some of the cats, just something I couldn’t put my finger on. But I tell you this: I brought Tami Lynn in to sing on that record, and Mick seen her – he couldn’t remember who the hell she was. But when Keith seen her he just grabbed her and hugged her and said, ‘I loved that record you cut, “I’m Gonna Run Away From You”.’ I used to think, damn man, he’s fucking high, but that touched me. We was doing some TV show in the States and he was on it, I get a note. I thought it was from a chick or something because it was like, ‘I’ll meet you any time, any place…’ And it was a note from Keith. I couldn’t read his writing but he was cool. He’s old school. He’s the same cat. Didymus was mad when they put the percussion credit ‘Amyl Nitrate’ on the track [‘Sweet Black Angel’]. You don’t want to get him too mad.”

The post-Katrina outpouring

DR JOHN AND THE LOWER 911

City That Care Forgot (Cooking Vinyl, 2008)

After the devastation of Hurricane Katrina, Dr John re-immerses himself in the New Orleans fonk. Displays a lesser-spotted Rebennack quality – righteous anger…

“So little is being done for the city of New Orleans. I was way angry – I was pissed off. I was so disgusted with the politics at the time. Even though we didn’t call him by name, there was a song about George Bush. We had a song about how the black cops were shooting the citizens during the storm. What’s all that about? All of South Louisiana is different to North Louisiana – North Louisiana people are much wealthier. We are a very poor area of a very poor state. We’re the United States equivalent of Haiti or somewhere like that. Some of the truths we said are only now coming out – it’s taken a long, long time. I don’t own a television – and I’m grateful for that. I hate to be lied to. If I’m gonna try and tell truths, I don’t get any from anything on the television. I get stuff from my grand-daughter, who I get working for me. She might get stuff off the computer machine. I don’t know how to work the computer machine – don’t want to know that stuff. I want to know the truth.”

The new album

DR JOHN

Tribal (Proper, 2010)

Alongside appearing in David Simon’s new show Treme (which, not having a TV, he hasn’t seen), Mac has a new, cool, album. It’s dedicated to Bobby Charles, composer of “See You Later Alligator” – and one of his longtime friends and collaborators.

“Bobby Charles was writing some songs for the record, and then he passed away. But there was one of them that he did, and that became the title of the record. Tribal… It’s kind of the theme of the record, we all one tribe, we all breathe the same air. There’s a song, ‘Potnah’, it’s the oldest song that Bobby and I wrote – round the time of The Last Waltz. I can’t remember when that was, but it was whenever that was [1976]. I don’t have memories about certain things, but I liked writing with Bobby. Guys, like Bobby, Doc Pomus, they’re easy to write with. Unfortunately I don’t have a lot of the demos for a lot of songs we had. We keep going through some bad changes in New Orleans because the city’s receding. It’s a lot to do with the oil business: for years and years it’s been cutting salt water canals into the wetlands, the islands are disappearing. Pretty much everything is disappearing that protects New Orleans from hurricanes.”

Bon Iver to release new EP next week

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Bon Iver have announced that they will be releasing a new EP next week. The EP, which is simply titled iTunes Session EP, which will be released on Tuesday (June 19) and contains a total of seven tracks, all of which were recorded live. Among the tracks scheduled for release is a cover of Bjork's ...

Bon Iver have announced that they will be releasing a new EP next week.

The EP, which is simply titled iTunes Session EP, which will be released on Tuesday (June 19) and 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”.

Bon Iver recently announced two UK dates for later this year.

Apart from headlining this summer’s Latitude festival, they will play shows in Glasgow and Belfast in November too.

They will first headline Glasgow’s SECC on November 10 and will then play Belfast’s Waterfront Hall Auditorium on November 11. The dates are part of a full European tour.

The tracklisting for ‘iTunes Session EP’ is as follows:

‘Beth/Rest’

‘Michicant’

‘Holocene’

‘Minnesota, WI’

‘Hinnom, TX’

‘Wash’

‘Who Is It?’

Cocteau Twins’ Elizabeth Fraser to play first show in 14 years

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Former Cocteau Twins singer Elizabeth Fraser is set to play her first full show since 1998. The singer will debut her new material, as well as perform re-interpretations of Cocteau Twins songs, at Bath Pavillion on Saturday August 4. The show is as a warm-up gig for her two sold-out nights at the Royal Festival Hall in London later in August, as part of this year's Antony Hegarty-curated Meltdown festival. Since the Cocteau Twins' split in 1998, Fraser has worked with a range of artists including The Future Sound of London, Craig Armstrong and Massive Attack – with whom she performed their classic track "Teardrop" from their 1998 album Mezzanine. Fraser says she has an album's worth of new material. It has not been confirmed when this will be released. Speaking of the physical strain involved in her singing, she said that performing Cocteau Twins songs was "like an endurance test” before adding, "I don't intend to do that again. I've been using my voice more gently."

Former Cocteau Twins singer Elizabeth Fraser is set to play her first full show since 1998.

The singer will debut her new material, as well as perform re-interpretations of Cocteau Twins songs, at Bath Pavillion on Saturday August 4. The show is as a warm-up gig for her two sold-out nights at the Royal Festival Hall in London later in August, as part of this year’s Antony Hegarty-curated Meltdown festival.

Since the Cocteau Twins’ split in 1998, Fraser has worked with a range of artists including The Future Sound of London, Craig Armstrong and Massive Attack – with whom she performed their classic track “Teardrop” from their 1998 album Mezzanine.

Fraser says she has an album’s worth of new material. It has not been confirmed when this will be released. Speaking of the physical strain involved in her singing, she said that performing Cocteau Twins songs was “like an endurance test” before adding, “I don’t intend to do that again. I’ve been using my voice more gently.”

Paul McCartney: ‘The Queen is fabulous, I’ve got a lot of time for her’

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Paul McCartney has praised The Queen, describing her as "fabulous" and even saying that he has "lot of time for her". The Beatles man, who turns 70 on Monday (June 18), headlined the Queen's Diamond Jubilee gig earlier this month and has now spoken to the Daily Telegraph about how much he admires t...

Paul McCartney has praised The Queen, describing her as “fabulous” and even saying that he has “lot of time for her”.

The Beatles man, who turns 70 on Monday (June 18), headlined the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee gig earlier this month and has now spoken to the Daily Telegraph about how much he admires the long-serving monarch.

Asked what he thought of The Queen, McCartney said: “She is the rock’n’roll queen. Weirdly enough, that is one of the things her reign will be remembered for. Queen Elizabeth I, we remember Raleigh; Queen Elizabeth II, it’s gonna be The Beatles.”

He continued: “To kids of our generation, she was a very attractive young woman, taking on this huge responsibility. She seemed very human. We all felt really proud of her. She’s fabulous. I’ve got a lot of time for her.”

McCartney also spoke about his ode to the Queen ‘Your Majesty‘ and said it represented just how far things have come in the way people are allowed to exercise freedom of speech.

He said: “It’s just a cheeky little song. It sort of sums up how things have changed, doesn’t it? You can write songs like that and not get sent to the Tower.”

Then asked if he approved of the Royals, McCartney added: “I totally understand the republican point of view but then I think if they got rid of the royals, who are you gonna replace them with? A politician? I’m not sure that would be an improvement.”

Earlier today, it was revealed that Paul Weller will release a new cover of The Beatles’ ‘Birthday’ on Monday (June 18) to help celebrate Paul McCartney’s 70th birthday.

Weller has recorded a cover of the Fab Four’s 1968 track, which served as the opening track on the second disc of The White Album and will release it on Monday as a download single with all the proceeds going to War Child. The track will only be available for purchase on Monday.