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David Bowie – The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars

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40th anniversary clean up shows the devil in the detail... Ziggy Stardust: The Motion Picture – the album of Bowie’s 1973 ‘retirement’ show at the Hammersmith Odeon – was only released in 1983, and it was the first Bowie album I ever bought. The electric atmosphere of that night, when Ziggy’s time took its last cigarette, made the studio LP, when I eventually heard it much later, seem pale and restrained by comparison, and I’ve never quite been able to shake that feeling. Try this thought experiment, though: put yourself in Bowie’s kinky boots, back in late 1971, when he began work on this songbook. ‘Glitter rock’ (not glam yet) was little more than a single T.Rex TOTP appearance; Slade, Sweet, Mud, Gary Glitter et al were nowhere to be seen; the ‘concept album’ was still in the hands of prog rockers like King Crimson, Yes and Genesis. For an artist like Bowie, who had already tried on several stylistic hats in a series of different strikes on the charts with little success, this was surely a huge gamble. If anyone knew him at all, it was as the ringletted hippy of “Space Oddity” or the flouncy, cross-dressing queen of The Man Who Sold The World. To launch himself as a cropped, jumpsuited, bovver-boots rocker, brandishing an unwieldily-titled album which never quite made it clear whether he was posing as this Ziggy character, or merely singing his story, was, frankly, a daring step into the dark. The apex of Bowie’s glam period was, really, the Brechtian panto of Aladdin Sane – in many ways a very different, far more sophisticated record than Ziggy Stardust. But this 40th anniversary remaster certainly opens up some new crevices in the sound, allowing small production details to shine through like never before: the little violin-eddies at the end of “Five Years”, the razor-edge rimshots on “Soul Love”, and, on “Starman”, “Ziggy Stardust” and most others, the richly textured doubling of Bowie’s acoustic guitars with Mick Ronson’s phlegmatic Les Paul. And yet the clean-up serves also to accentuate the slightly clinical nature of Ziggy Stardust. It’s an experimental record, in the sense that Bowie was trying out an unknown formula – a concept album that almost, but not quite, tells a story; a tale of a space-age future rock group that sometimes sounds like a survival from the days of rock ’n’roll. The opening two tracks are decidedly undynamic: “Five Years” is a plodder, a dejected yelp from a disaffected hipster who’s just discovered apocalypse is round the corner. “Soul Love”, which paints a panorama of hippy indolence, is unbearably slow. Which makes the cojones-grabbing entrance of “Moonage Daydream” that much more powerful: something freaky starts to flicker at the mirror’s edge, a track that seems worthy of Ziggy’s off-world provenance. This is where the album picks up the slack, although Woody Woodmansey’s drums curiously lack presence, a drawback even this master hasn’t been able to fix. Bowie’s vocal performances are unusually passionless, too, apart from “Suffragette City”’s pumped-up hedonism and the bawling drama of “Rock ’n’ Roll Suicide”. The real wonder, it retrospect, is how Bowie got away with it. After all, Ziggy Stardust makes out it’s a concept album but leaves you to infer a ‘story’ from a song sequence with plenty of gaps; and he never quite seems to work out if he IS Ziggy on record, or if he’s merely telling Ziggy’s story from multiple perspectives. But that’s what makes Ziggy Stardust what it is: with The Beatles gone, it’s the first self-conscious pop star album – a record about fame, about rock’s messianic potential and its always-threatening end (you could read the “five years, that’s all we got” scenario as a metaphor for the truncated lifespan of the average pop idol). As Bowie’s subsequent path showed, the key to rock god immortality was to become a shapeshifting deity, perpetuating himself through self-transformation. Rob Young Q+A Ken Scott Ziggy Stardust obviously marked a turning point for Bowie – how clear was that during the recording? It wasn’t clear at all. It’s still not to me. Listening now I can almost see Hunky Dory and Ziggy being a double album. They were recorded so close together. “Queen Bitch” would certainly fit in with anything on Ziggy Stardust. No concept was discussed at all. The only thing said was that the album was going to be more rock and roll. How involved were the rest of the group in the way it sounded? It was a team effort. We all had input. It wouldn’t have been what it was without Ronno’s playing and orchestral arrangements, but it wouldn’t have been what it was/is without any of the team. Were there any particular difficulties, or special high points, while recording this album? KS: There were no difficulties. As far as highlights go, the whole thing. Every time David did one of his one-take master vocal performances or Ronno went down and did exactly what was needed without any prior discussion. I guess, as we’re still discussing it 40 years on, it worked. INTERVIEW: ROB YOUNG Uncut Springsteen App

40th anniversary clean up shows the devil in the detail…

Ziggy Stardust: The Motion Picture – the album of Bowie’s 1973 ‘retirement’ show at the Hammersmith Odeon – was only released in 1983, and it was the first Bowie album I ever bought. The electric atmosphere of that night, when Ziggy’s time took its last cigarette, made the studio LP, when I eventually heard it much later, seem pale and restrained by comparison, and I’ve never quite been able to shake that feeling.

Try this thought experiment, though: put yourself in Bowie’s kinky boots, back in late 1971, when he began work on this songbook. ‘Glitter rock’ (not glam yet) was little more than a single T.Rex TOTP appearance; Slade, Sweet, Mud, Gary Glitter et al were nowhere to be seen; the ‘concept album’ was still in the hands of prog rockers like King Crimson, Yes and Genesis. For an artist like Bowie, who had already tried on several stylistic hats in a series of different strikes on the charts with little success, this was surely a huge gamble. If anyone knew him at all, it was as the ringletted hippy of “Space Oddity” or the flouncy, cross-dressing queen of The Man Who Sold The World. To launch himself as a cropped, jumpsuited, bovver-boots rocker, brandishing an unwieldily-titled album which never quite made it clear whether he was posing as this Ziggy character, or merely singing his story, was, frankly, a daring step into the dark.

The apex of Bowie’s glam period was, really, the Brechtian panto of Aladdin Sane – in many ways a very different, far more sophisticated record than Ziggy Stardust. But this 40th anniversary remaster certainly opens up some new crevices in the sound, allowing small production details to shine through like never before: the little violin-eddies at the end of “Five Years”, the razor-edge rimshots on “Soul Love”, and, on “Starman”, “Ziggy Stardust” and most others, the richly textured doubling of Bowie’s acoustic guitars with Mick Ronson’s phlegmatic Les Paul.

And yet the clean-up serves also to accentuate the slightly clinical nature of Ziggy Stardust. It’s an experimental record, in the sense that Bowie was trying out an unknown formula – a concept album that almost, but not quite, tells a story; a tale of a space-age future rock group that sometimes sounds like a survival from the days of rock ’n’roll. The opening two tracks are decidedly undynamic: “Five Years” is a plodder, a dejected yelp from a disaffected hipster who’s just discovered apocalypse is round the corner. “Soul Love”, which paints a panorama of hippy indolence, is unbearably slow. Which makes the cojones-grabbing entrance of “Moonage Daydream” that much more powerful: something freaky starts to flicker at the mirror’s edge, a track that seems worthy of Ziggy’s off-world provenance. This is where the album picks up the slack, although Woody Woodmansey’s drums curiously lack presence, a drawback even this master hasn’t been able to fix. Bowie’s vocal performances are unusually passionless, too, apart from “Suffragette City”’s pumped-up hedonism and the bawling drama of “Rock ’n’ Roll Suicide”.

The real wonder, it retrospect, is how Bowie got away with it. After all, Ziggy Stardust makes out it’s a concept album but leaves you to infer a ‘story’ from a song sequence with plenty of gaps; and he never quite seems to work out if he IS Ziggy on record, or if he’s merely telling Ziggy’s story from multiple perspectives. But that’s what makes Ziggy Stardust what it is: with The Beatles gone, it’s the first self-conscious pop star album – a record about fame, about rock’s messianic potential and its always-threatening end (you could read the “five years, that’s all we got” scenario as a metaphor for the truncated lifespan of the average pop idol). As Bowie’s subsequent path showed, the key to rock god immortality was to become a shapeshifting deity, perpetuating himself through self-transformation.

Rob Young

Q+A

Ken Scott

Ziggy Stardust obviously marked a turning point for Bowie – how clear was that during the recording?

It wasn’t clear at all. It’s still not to me. Listening now I can almost see Hunky Dory and Ziggy being a double album. They were recorded so close together. “Queen Bitch” would certainly fit in with anything on Ziggy Stardust. No concept was discussed at all. The only thing said was that the album was going to be more rock and roll.

How involved were the rest of the group in the way it sounded?

It was a team effort. We all had input. It wouldn’t have been what it was without Ronno’s playing and orchestral arrangements, but it wouldn’t have been what it was/is without any of the team.

Were there any particular difficulties, or special high points, while recording this album?

KS: There were no difficulties. As far as highlights go, the whole thing. Every time David did one of his one-take master vocal performances or Ronno went down and did exactly what was needed without any prior discussion. I guess, as we’re still discussing it 40 years on, it worked.

INTERVIEW: ROB YOUNG

Uncut Springsteen App

Graham Coxon on Blur’s future plans

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Blur's Graham Coxon has admitted that there is a "pressure" for the band to work together again in the future. Speaking to Music News, the guitarist said he and his bandmates were aware that their fans were eager to see the Britpop legends record new material, but insisted that they had no made concrete future plans. "We're all in a good place, we're all getting on really well," he said. "And that's just great for now. It's something that we have to seriously consider and bear in mind our legacy." He added: There is a pressure for us to do more, but we can't do it just because people want us to. We have to do it because it's right." Last month, Coxon's bandmate Alex James insisted he "loves" being in the studio with Blur. His comments came shortly after producer William Orbit told NME that he had been working with the band on new material, but that progress was stalled when frontman Damon Albarn brought the sessions to an abrupt halt. In April, 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. Click below to watch an NME video interview with Graham Coxon talking about the band's preparations for the show. 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.

Blur’s Graham Coxon has admitted that there is a “pressure” for the band to work together again in the future.

Speaking to Music News, the guitarist said he and his bandmates were aware that their fans were eager to see the Britpop legends record new material, but insisted that they had no made concrete future plans.

“We’re all in a good place, we’re all getting on really well,” he said. “And that’s just great for now. It’s something that we have to seriously consider and bear in mind our legacy.”

He added: There is a pressure for us to do more, but we can’t do it just because people want us to. We have to do it because it’s right.”

Last month, Coxon’s bandmate Alex James insisted he “loves” being in the studio with Blur. His comments came shortly after producer William Orbit told NME that he had been working with the band on new material, but that progress was stalled when frontman Damon Albarn brought the sessions to an abrupt halt.

In April, 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. Click below to watch an NME video interview with Graham Coxon talking about the band’s preparations for the show.

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.

Rare Sex Pistols “God Save The Queen” single sells for almost $20,000 at auction

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A rare Sex Pistols 7'' vinyl single sold over the weekend for just under $20,000 (£12,860) at auction. The record, which is 35-years-old, is a 7 inch promotional acetate and features the band's seminal single "God Save the Queen" and Never Mind The Bollocks album track "No Feelings", reports Whatsellsbest.com. The record was put out on the L.T.S record label, which makes it a substantial rarity. According to the sellers' listing; "This is one of only two copies known to exist." During the Sex Pistols short-lived career, they were dropped a number of times by various record labels due to their controversial image and musical output, meaning that a number of their singles were pressed by vinyl plants only a handful of times. These singles are now some of the most valuable rarities in music. The record sold on the UK auction website eBay for $19,672 (£12,629), which is substantially more than the price received for the other L.T.S pressing of "God Save The Queen", which fetched $16,000 (£10,766) in 2006. Other rare pressings of "God Save The Queen" on record labels A&M and Town House have fetched $17,000 (£10,925) and $23,000 (£14,780) respectively.

A rare Sex Pistols 7” vinyl single sold over the weekend for just under $20,000 (£12,860) at auction.

The record, which is 35-years-old, is a 7 inch promotional acetate and features the band’s seminal single “God Save the Queen” and Never Mind The Bollocks album track “No Feelings”, reports Whatsellsbest.com.

The record was put out on the L.T.S record label, which makes it a substantial rarity. According to the sellers’ listing; “This is one of only two copies known to exist.”

During the Sex Pistols short-lived career, they were dropped a number of times by various record labels due to their controversial image and musical output, meaning that a number of their singles were pressed by vinyl plants only a handful of times. These singles are now some of the most valuable rarities in music.

The record sold on the UK auction website eBay for $19,672 (£12,629), which is substantially more than the price received for the other L.T.S pressing of “God Save The Queen“, which fetched $16,000 (£10,766) in 2006.

Other rare pressings of “God Save The Queen” on record labels A&M and Town House have fetched $17,000 (£10,925) and $23,000 (£14,780) respectively.

Radiohead’s Thom Yorke to collaborate with Jack White?

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Radiohead's Thom Yorke has hinted that he could be set to collaborate with Jack White. According to Billboard, the singer made a cryptic announcement from the stage during the band's set at the Bonnaroo Music And Arts Festival in Tennessee, America suggesting that he and the former White Stripes m...

Radiohead‘s Thom Yorke has hinted that he could be set to collaborate with Jack White.

According to Billboard, the singer made a cryptic announcement from the stage during the band’s set at the Bonnaroo Music And Arts Festival in Tennessee, America suggesting that he and the former White Stripes man had some exciting plans in the pipeline.

Dedicating the track “Supercollider” to the Blunderbuss singer, he said: “This song is for Jack White. We saw him yesterday. A big thank-you to him, but we can’t tell you why. You’ll find out.”

Radiohead will tour the UK in the autumn, playing their first UK dates in over three years.

The band first play a show at Manchester’s Evening News Arena on October 6 before playing two shows at London’s O2 Arena on October 8 and 9. They will then undertake a full European tour. Caribou will provide support on all dates.

They have also booked assorted European shows and festival appearances throughout the summer, including slots at Fuji Rock Festival and Bilbao BBK Live festival.

Radiohead will play:

Manchester Evening News Arena (October 6)

London O2 Arena (8, 9)

Woody Allen – A Documentary

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Documentary on the legendary, bespectacled filmmaker... Woody Allen has been the subject of a documentary before: Barbara Kopple’s excellent Wild Man Blues, which trailed Allen and his band round Europe on tour. Along with some jazz, Kopple managed to capture a few slight but telling insights into Allen’s relationship with his wife Soon-Yi, the adopted daughter of his former partner, Mia Farrow. The gist was that Soon-Yi is unfazed and practical, very much the counterpoint to her neurotic husband. Such insights are absent in this documentary from Robert Weide, the executive producer on Curb Your Enthusiasm, and presumably a man who knows funny when he sees it. Bullets Over Broadway co-writer Doug McGrath recalls daily phone calls between Allen and his lawyers or the police, where “you’d hear the grisly exchanges” of the lawsuit between Allen and Farrow. But this is respectful documentary-making about a heritage artist. The best content finds Allen returning to the house where he was born – “It doesn’t look much, and it wasn’t” – or visiting the site of the Midwood Movie Theater, a favourite childhood hang-out, now the Brooklyn Eye Surgery Center. Allen shows us his Olympia portable typewriter, bought for $40 when he was 16, on which he’s written everything he’s done. Meanwhile, Allen’s former managers, resembling two of the arthritic Kansas City mob bosses from Martin Scorsese’s Casino, discuss Woody’s transition from gag writer to stand up and gradual emergence as a film maker. From then on, this is very much a straightforward chronological run through Allen’s movies, up to and including Midnight In Paris – “It’s like he’s Michael Bay all of a sudden,” says Owen Wilson, of Allen’s unexpected late period success. John Cusack, Sean Penn, Larry David and Diane Keaton are among the A-list contributors. Some of the movie off-cuts – particularly from Sleeper, that catches Allen in fits of laughter at Keaton’s clowning – are more revealing than a dozen celebrity testimonials. Michael Bonner

Documentary on the legendary, bespectacled filmmaker…

Woody Allen has been the subject of a documentary before: Barbara Kopple’s excellent Wild Man Blues, which trailed Allen and his band round Europe on tour. Along with some jazz, Kopple managed to capture a few slight but telling insights into Allen’s relationship with his wife Soon-Yi, the adopted daughter of his former partner, Mia Farrow. The gist was that Soon-Yi is unfazed and practical, very much the counterpoint to her neurotic husband.

Such insights are absent in this documentary from Robert Weide, the executive producer on Curb Your Enthusiasm, and presumably a man who knows funny when he sees it. Bullets Over Broadway co-writer Doug McGrath recalls daily phone calls between Allen and his lawyers or the police, where “you’d hear the grisly exchanges” of the lawsuit between Allen and Farrow. But this is respectful documentary-making about a heritage artist.

The best content finds Allen returning to the house where he was born – “It doesn’t look much, and it wasn’t” – or visiting the site of the Midwood Movie Theater, a favourite childhood hang-out, now the Brooklyn Eye Surgery Center. Allen shows us his Olympia portable typewriter, bought for $40 when he was 16, on which he’s written everything he’s done.

Meanwhile, Allen’s former managers, resembling two of the arthritic Kansas City mob bosses from Martin Scorsese’s Casino, discuss Woody’s transition from gag writer to stand up and gradual emergence as a film maker. From then on, this is very much a straightforward chronological run through Allen’s movies, up to and including Midnight In Paris – “It’s like he’s Michael Bay all of a sudden,” says Owen Wilson, of Allen’s unexpected late period success. John Cusack, Sean Penn, Larry David and Diane Keaton are among the A-list contributors. Some of the movie off-cuts – particularly from Sleeper, that catches Allen in fits of laughter at Keaton’s clowning – are more revealing than a dozen celebrity testimonials.

Michael Bonner

Beatles museum in Hamburg closing due to ‘lack of interest’

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The Beatles museum in Hamburg, Germany will close down at the end of this month, according to reports. The five-storey 'Beatlemania' museum was opened in May 2009 but will apparently be shut at the end of June due to a lack of interest from Fab Four fanatics. Speaking to German newspaper Hamburge...

The Beatles museum in Hamburg, Germany will close down at the end of this month, according to reports.

The five-storey ‘Beatlemania’ museum was opened in May 2009 but will apparently be shut at the end of June due to a lack of interest from Fab Four fanatics.

Speaking to German newspaper Hamburger Morgenpost, manager Folkert Koopmanns said that the museum – which has over 1,000 pieces of memorabilia on display and is located in the same area where The Beatles played live shows when visiting the country in the early ’60s – has only had 150,000 visitors since opening three years ago.

“In view of the high deficits, there is no solution left but closure, if you want to act responsibily,” he said. “A privately run museum as big as Beatlemania is condemned to fail without public support. That’s a fact that we fought against until enthusiasm turned into resignation – a bitter experience.”

He added: “We had many hopes and wishes, unfortunately only some of them were fulfilled in the city which John Lennon used to say he became an adult.”

Punters may have not flocked to the Beatlemania museum, but the popularity of Fab Four-related memorabilia at auctions shows no sign of abating. Last month (May 22), a rare photograph showing The Beatles walking ‘backwards’ across Abbey Road was sold for £16,000, while a document showing how the Fab Four refused to play to segregated crowds was sold for $23,000 in 2011.

David Byrne and Arcade Fire’s Win Butler to discuss Byrne’s new book

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David Byrne and Arcade Fire's Win Butler are set to appear together on stage to discuss Byrne's new book, How Music Works. The event will take place on September 22, during the POP Montreal Festival in Canada. According to Pitchfork, the conversation will take place at the Ukranian Federation, co-p...

David Byrne and Arcade Fire’s Win Butler are set to appear together on stage to discuss Byrne’s new book, How Music Works.

The event will take place on September 22, during the POP Montreal Festival in Canada. According to Pitchfork, the conversation will take place at the Ukranian Federation, co-presented by POP Montreal’s Symposium and Librairie Drawn & Quarterly.

How Music Works is to be published in September by McSweeney’s, the American publishing house founded by novelist Dave Eggers.

The official description of the book says: “Acting as historian and anthropologist, raconteur and social scientist, he searches for patterns—and shows how those patterns have affected his own work over the years with Talking Heads and his many collaborators, from Brian Eno to Caetano Veloso… His range is panoptic, taking us from Wagnerian opera houses to African villages, from his earliest high school reel-to-reel recordings to his latest work in a home music studio (and all the big studios in between).”

POP Montreal takes place between September 19-23. The lineup includes Grizzly Bear, The Dirty Three, Julia Holter, Gang Gang Dance, Laetitia Sadier, and more.

Watch clip from LCD Soundsystem’s new documentary

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A clip from LCD Soundsystem's forthcoming documentary, Shut Up And Play The Hits, is online. The clip from the film - released in the UK in August - features the band performing "Dance Yrself Clean" from their This Is Happening album at Madison Square Garden last year. Shot on April 2, 2011, at the band's farewell show at New York's Madison Square Garden, the film has been directed by Dylan Southern and Will Lovelace and produced by Lucas Ochoa and Thomas Benski of Pulse Films, the same team that directed and produced the Blur documentary No Distance Left To Run. You can watch the clip here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BUecSR_kCQs

A clip from LCD Soundsystem‘s forthcoming documentary, Shut Up And Play The Hits, is online.

The clip from the film – released in the UK in August – features the band performing “Dance Yrself Clean” from their This Is Happening album at Madison Square Garden last year.

Shot on April 2, 2011, at the band’s farewell show at New York’s Madison Square Garden, the film has been directed by Dylan Southern and Will Lovelace and produced by Lucas Ochoa and Thomas Benski of Pulse Films, the same team that directed and produced the Blur documentary No Distance Left To Run.

You can watch the clip here:

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

Sam Lee: “Ground Of Its Own”

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I first came across the English folk singer Sam Lee just over a year ago, when I wrote about a tribute album to Peter Bellamy. Alongside more familiar names like The Unthanks and Trembling Bells, it was Lee’s version of “Puck’s Song” that stood out, as he cut a fine path through an artful mix of old folk recordings and incantatory drones. Somewhat slackly, I didn’t find out anything more about Lee at the time. Yesterday, though, his own debut album, “Ground Of Its Own”, turned up, suggesting that other people have paid attention: there is talk of academic residencies, Radio 2 Folk Awards, Arts Foundation Awards, radio shows on Resonance FM and so on (plus an intriguing backstory that seems to involve wilderness survival lessons from Ray Mears and burlesque dancing). It may be ignorant prejudice on my part, but recognition from the Radio 2 Folk Awards tends to make me think of a certain strand of youngish British folk that I’m not so keen on: attempted modernisers like Jim Moray rather than the likes of Alasdair Roberts that I favour. Lee’s album, though, is tremendous: a collection of traditional songs that he has assiduously sourced from the English gypsy and Scottish and Irish traveller communities, then blessed with courtly, uncanny, subtly radical treatments. Reading the sleevenotes and lists of instrumentation, “Ground Of Its Own” looks like it might be a dream jam session on Radio 3’s Late Junction show. Lee’s main instrument is a shruti box (an Indian harmonium-like instrument), and his calm and evocative vocals tend to be orbited by fiddles and cellos, muted trumpets, hammer dulcimers, jew’s harps, and a hang drum (the reverberant humming bowl familiar from “Ground Of Its Own” The Portico Quartet’s records). Their cumulative impact is brittle, twanging, quivering, inventive and, when needs be, playful. The opener, “Ballad Of George Collins” (originally about, says Lee, “the sexual hazards of water sprites”) has a sprightliness that suggests an acoustic reconfiguration of dance music. “On Yonders Hill”, meanwhile, has a ghostly jazz pull to it, thanks to the way a trumpet negotiates a path around Lee and another mysterious instrument of low vibrations that is listed as a “tuned tank drum”. Shirley Collins is on hand on the press release to sing Lee’s praises (there are a bunch of Sussex songs here, and “George Collins” is listed as having originally been collected by Bob Copper) along with Joe Boyd, and the album was mixed by John Wood, to complete a sense that Lee has been anointed by some of the more discerning Anglo-folk royalty. “Ground Of Its Own”, though, pulls off that much-attempted but rarely successful trick of sounding at once ancient and, in a relatively original way, contemporary. Lee has a compelling, slightly offhand way with a yarn (he often sings what seem to be notionally women’s songs), and an understanding of how drones can, in a folk context, be both earthly and transcendent. “The Tanyard Side” is superb, with the ebbing shruti box emerging out of a North Caucasian sample to create an unrooted, potent kind of kosmische music (I'm reminded of Roberts' "No Earthly Man", a little). Best of all, there’s the remarkable “My Ausheen (My Old Shoes)”, which revisits the “Puck’s Song” trick of blurring the edges between an old field vocal and Lee’s own performance. Spare strings rear, Lee harmonises with himself, and the whole thing builds to a graceful climax. When the church bells started ringing as I walked through the City to work this morning, I couldn’t tell whether they were inside or outside of my headphones. Just had a look and discovered Lee’s website - http://samleesong.co.uk/ - where you can hear some of this. Have a listen and let me know what you think. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

I first came across the English folk singer Sam Lee just over a year ago, when I wrote about a tribute album to Peter Bellamy. Alongside more familiar names like The Unthanks and Trembling Bells, it was Lee’s version of “Puck’s Song” that stood out, as he cut a fine path through an artful mix of old folk recordings and incantatory drones.

Somewhat slackly, I didn’t find out anything more about Lee at the time. Yesterday, though, his own debut album, “Ground Of Its Own”, turned up, suggesting that other people have paid attention: there is talk of academic residencies, Radio 2 Folk Awards, Arts Foundation Awards, radio shows on Resonance FM and so on (plus an intriguing backstory that seems to involve wilderness survival lessons from Ray Mears and burlesque dancing).

It may be ignorant prejudice on my part, but recognition from the Radio 2 Folk Awards tends to make me think of a certain strand of youngish British folk that I’m not so keen on: attempted modernisers like Jim Moray rather than the likes of Alasdair Roberts that I favour. Lee’s album, though, is tremendous: a collection of traditional songs that he has assiduously sourced from the English gypsy and Scottish and Irish traveller communities, then blessed with courtly, uncanny, subtly radical treatments.

Reading the sleevenotes and lists of instrumentation, “Ground Of Its Own” looks like it might be a dream jam session on Radio 3’s Late Junction show. Lee’s main instrument is a shruti box (an Indian harmonium-like instrument), and his calm and evocative vocals tend to be orbited by fiddles and cellos, muted trumpets, hammer dulcimers, jew’s harps, and a hang drum (the reverberant humming bowl familiar from “Ground Of Its Own” The Portico Quartet’s records).

Their cumulative impact is brittle, twanging, quivering, inventive and, when needs be, playful. The opener, “Ballad Of George Collins” (originally about, says Lee, “the sexual hazards of water sprites”) has a sprightliness that suggests an acoustic reconfiguration of dance music. “On Yonders Hill”, meanwhile, has a ghostly jazz pull to it, thanks to the way a trumpet negotiates a path around Lee and another mysterious instrument of low vibrations that is listed as a “tuned tank drum”.

Shirley Collins is on hand on the press release to sing Lee’s praises (there are a bunch of Sussex songs here, and “George Collins” is listed as having originally been collected by Bob Copper) along with Joe Boyd, and the album was mixed by John Wood, to complete a sense that Lee has been anointed by some of the more discerning Anglo-folk royalty.

“Ground Of Its Own”, though, pulls off that much-attempted but rarely successful trick of sounding at once ancient and, in a relatively original way, contemporary. Lee has a compelling, slightly offhand way with a yarn (he often sings what seem to be notionally women’s songs), and an understanding of how drones can, in a folk context, be both earthly and transcendent. “The Tanyard Side” is superb, with the ebbing shruti box emerging out of a North Caucasian sample to create an unrooted, potent kind of kosmische music (I’m reminded of Roberts’ “No Earthly Man”, a little).

Best of all, there’s the remarkable “My Ausheen (My Old Shoes)”, which revisits the “Puck’s Song” trick of blurring the edges between an old field vocal and Lee’s own performance. Spare strings rear, Lee harmonises with himself, and the whole thing builds to a graceful climax. When the church bells started ringing as I walked through the City to work this morning, I couldn’t tell whether they were inside or outside of my headphones.

Just had a look and discovered Lee’s website – http://samleesong.co.uk/ – where you can hear some of this. Have a listen and let me know what you think.

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

The Making Of… The Beach Boys’ ‘Good Vibrations’

The reunited Beach Boys' return to the stage is reviewed in the latest issue of Uncut, out now – and as their new album "That's Why God Made The Radio" is also fresh in shops, it seemed time to revisit this piece from Uncut's June 2007 issue (Take 121)… Brian Wilson, Mike Love and Al Jardine gui...

The reunited Beach Boys’ return to the stage is reviewed in the latest issue of Uncut, out now – and as their new album “That’s Why God Made The Radio” is also fresh in shops, it seemed time to revisit this piece from Uncut’s June 2007 issue (Take 121)… Brian Wilson, Mike Love and Al Jardine guide us through their perfect ‘pocket symphony’, three minutes and thirty-six seconds of avant-garde pop. Interviews and intro by Rob Hughes.

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Throughout 1965, while the other Beach Boys were out on the road, Brian Wilson stayed home, instead pouring his energies into a new kind of writing and production. Out went surf, girls and fun fun fun, and in came a preoccupation with webs of sound, complex arrangements and classical textures. As Wilson’s consciousness bloomed – a spiritual awakening fuelled by acid and weed – so had the music.

By the following February, in the middle of sessions for Pet Sounds, the 23-year-old began tinkering with a new song. Its inspiration was a childhood memory of a dog barking at him while out with his mother. “Don’t act scared,” she told him. “They pick up the vibes.”

The idea of tuning in to others’ vibes now fascinated Wilson. The song became a work-in-progress, snatched at during breaks in recording. Returning to it in April, Beach Boy Mike Love wrote fresh lyrics, and as Wilson smothered his cousin’s words with fuzz bass, clarinet, cellos, harp and a theremin, “Good Vibrations” began to take shape.

For his three-plus minutes of pop perfection (“his whole life’s performance in one track” according to engineer Chuck Britz) Wilson had used up 90 hours of tape from 17 separate recording dates with LA’s top sessioneers. The cost of recording was phenomenal: between $50,000 and $75,000.

“Good Vibrations” became the biggest Beach Boys single ever, and the media branded Wilson “a genius”. “I’m not a genius,” he countered at the time. “I’m just a hard-working guy.” ROB HUGHES

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Brian Wilson

Beach Boy, writer, producer

“Good Vibrations” is a wonderful tune. The other Beach Boys had a lot of input. We got together and had a discussion beforehand. We all wanted to do something different, make some music that would last forever. Not just surf songs and car songs. It was all about creating lasting music. And that led to “Good Vibrations”. It was one giant step forward.

I wanted something with real merit to it, artistic and smooth. Some people say it was written on acid. But I don’t accredit it to LSD, I accredit it to marijuana. I smoked marijuana just before I wrote it. I was playing at the piano and began singing about good vibrations, just fooling around. Then I came up with a little melody at the piano [sings it]. Tony Asher had written some original lyrics, but my cousin Mike Love had some great ideas. He came up to the house and said “What if I went, ‘I’m picking up good vibrations’.” And the rest is history. Stephen Foster [the 19th century American songwriter, who penned “Beautiful Dreamer” and “Camptown Races”] was a big influence on me, especially the sound of “Gotta keep those lovin’ good vibrations happenin’ with her”. I never would have thought of that myself.

Recording it was a long process, but I was determined to stick it out until the end. It took six weeks to record. We recorded it in five different studios and I wrote out each player’s part on music paper. We recorded the verses at Gold Star, the choruses at Western Recording Studios and the bridge at Sunset Sound.

The voices were all recorded at Columbia Studios in LA. I recorded the voices in sections. To begin with, I did the “Bop Bop Good Vibrations” parts. Then a week later, I said there should be something coming right after that. So I finally came up with the high parts, with the “Bop Bop” straight afterwards. The idea was to overlap and create a double dose of harmonies.

And the bass part was important to the overall sound. I wanted Carol Kaye to play not so much a Motown thing, but a Beach Boys-Phil Spector riff, inspired by Phil. Carol played bass with a pick that clicked real good. It worked out really well. It gave it a hard sound. And I was thrilled by Paul Tanner’s theremin sound. It was scary to hear that sound, but good scary.

Derek Taylor had done The Beatles’ publicity and took The Beach Boys on, too. When he first heard “Good Vibrations”, he said, “I call that a pocket symphony”. Isn’t that brilliant? The Capitol execs loved that tune. I remember the A&R man saying what a great pop record it was.

Mike Love

Beach Boy, lyricist

My first impression of “Good Vibrations” was that the band could have been James Brown’s Famous Flames. The original takes were very R’n’B. There are several different versions and it took months for my cousin Brian to decide which one would be the final one. Then he asked me to bring the lyrics over. And I kinda lagged on it. Being the Pisces procrastinator that I am, I left it until the drive from North Hollywood to the studio to write them. It took me about five minutes. We were in the yellow Convertible XKE I’d bought for my wife Suzanne, who was pregnant. We were driving down to the city and I asked her to take down these words.

We got to the studio, I wrote them out on a scrap of paper and Carl went ahead and sang the lead. And of course, I came up with the part that goes: “I’m pickin’ up good vibrations/She’s giving me excitations”. That’s my musical contribution.

This was before the Summer of Love, but there were definitely psychedelic rumblings on the West Coast. I felt “Good Vibrations” was The Beach Boys’ psychedelic anthem or flower power offering. So I wrote it from that perspective. The track itself was already so avant-garde, especially with the theremin, that I wondered how our fans were going to relate to it. How’s this going to go over in the Midwest or Birmingham? It was such a departure from “Surfin’ USA” or “Help Me Rhonda”.

So I thought the one thing that everyone can relate to is boy-girl. You know, “she’s giving me excitations”. Had that track not had anything to connect to people intellectually or emotionally, then it would have been a brilliant piece of music, but perhaps not gone to No 1.

Al Jardine

Beach Boy

Brian was absolutely at his peak back then. God, he was just like a freight train. We were hanging on for dear life. The Beach Boys were in and out of the studio day and night. We’d been busy touring Japan while Brian was composing it. We didn’t have much time to rehearse, so we just went for it. But Brian was so prepared. There were several edits, I recall. I was especially taken with the many mood changes in “Good Vibrations”. In particular, the part I call the Stephen Foster section. For me [sings] “Gotta keep those lovin’ good vibrations happenin’ with her” was similar to “Gonna lay down my heavy load, down by the riverside”.

I thought the tempo changes and chord changes were amazing. To this day, Brian has a wonderful sense of chord structure that baffles my mind. No one else sees it the way he does. And on “Good Vibrations”, you could even hear the different cue changes from one studio to another. For example, right at the beginning, the bass changes!

Brian’s reluctance to put “Good Vibrations” on Pet Sounds had a lot to do with “Sloop John B” being there instead. Capitol did want “Good Vibrations” on Pet Sounds. But I know he wanted to save it for Smile.

I never did any drugs at all. I tried to get through to Brian, too, but he just wasn’t able to see it. But he had lots of people coming up to him, wanting to be his best buddy, and get high. Brian took too much and became overwhelmed. But then he does credit some of his best work to drugs. “Good Vibrations” is very damn brilliant.

Carol Kaye

Wrecking Crew bassist

By that time, Brian was showing a lot of genius writing. He was growing all the time and we didn’t know where it would end. I didn’t know about the drugs until later on, but he did start doing things in piecemeal fashion. It was like he was scoring a movie. But 12 dates on “Good Vibrations” – at three hours a date – is a long, long time to spend on one song. It was very unusual. But the way he kept changing the music around was interesting. We knew he was trying to perfect a great hit. And we knew it was gonna be big.

Brian had all the sounds in his head. He knew what he wanted and wrote out the bass parts for me. They were written crudely – it wasn’t the work of an educated person – but we could read it. Brian was a really sweet guy, but he could be cocky when he wanted to be. It was that cockiness that comes with youth. But he was sharp, with very good ears. And he was completely engrossed in what he was doing.

Actually, we were never known as The Wrecking Crew back then. The first time that phrase was used was when Hal Blaine used it in his book [1990’s Hal Blaine And The Wrecking Crew]. And I’m the one who got him the book deal! I had no idea he was going to do something phoney like that and tell people we were known as The Wrecking Crew. It’s a lie. We were all independent people, there was no set band. I think sometimes Hal’s memory gets a little off…

Hal Blaine

Wrecking Crew drummer

It was monumental in concept and delivery. Brian was at the top of his creativity. He was such a young guy composing, arranging and directing, and all the while with no real score to work from. A brilliant young man.

Brian first heard me on the Phil Spector recordings. We became very good friends, a mutual admiration. He never considered a take ‘perfect’ unless I came into the booth and listened. With “Good Vibrations”, there were many sessions. I would listen to playbacks only when asked by Brian. My advice was only how a take felt. If it felt good, we had a good basic track.

I must also add that, in recent years, Carol Kaye has claimed there never was a Wrecking Crew, that “Hal Blaine made up that name in order to sell his book”. Somehow she’s forgotten that The Wrecking Crew was established in the early 1960s. The Hal Blaine book wasn’t done until the 1990s. She’s an elderly person who claims The Wrecking Crew was known as ‘the clique’. No one, except her, has ever heard of that name. Wake up to reality, Carol! Go start your own band!

FACT FILE

Written by: Brian Wilson/Mike Love

Performers: The Beach Boys, The Wrecking Crew [LA’s crack band of sessioneers that included Hal Blaine (drums) and Carol Kaye (bass)], Paul Tanner (theremin) plus other session musicians

Produced by: Brian Wilson

Released as a single in October 1966

Highest UK chart position: 1

Highest US chart position: 1

Black Sabbath’s Ozzy Osbourne: “Download’s going to be great”

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Ozzy Osbourne has spoken to NME ahead of Black Sabbath's headline slot at this weekend's Download Festival, promising their set will be "great". The reunited metal legends will headline the metal festival's main stage - which has been named the Jim Marshall Stage in honour of the amp pioneer, who p...

Ozzy Osbourne has spoken to NME ahead of Black Sabbath’s headline slot at this weekend’s Download Festival, promising their set will be “great”.

The reunited metal legends will headline the metal festival’s main stage – which has been named the Jim Marshall Stage in honour of the amp pioneer, who passed away earlier this year – on Sunday (June 10), after sets from the likes of Megadeth and Soundgarden.

Speaking to NME, Osbourne said of their upcoming performance: “If it’s half as good as last time, it’ll be great.” The band last played the Donington site in 2005 as part of Ozzfest. Osbourne continued: “You never know what’s going to happen, your voice could go, the band could blow up… fall off stage. Hopefully you’ll give them a good show; give the audience value for money.”

Guitarist Tony Iommi, who has been battling cancer, also told NME that after the band’s summer shows at Download and Lollapalooza in Chicago in August, the band plan to head back to Los Angeles to record their new album, before touring the world in 2013.

Download is the only remaining gig of their world tour to feature Iommi as he continues to receive treatment for lymphoma. The rest of the jaunt is billed as an Ozzy And Friends tour, which will see the likes of ex-Guns N’ Roses guitarist Slash and Zakk Wylde guest.

The festival, which will also be headlined by The Prodigy and Metallica, starts tomorrow (June 8) at Donington Park.

Watch Willie Nelson cover Pearl Jam

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Country music legend Willie Nelson has posted the video for his cover version of Pearl Jam's "Just Breathe" online. Scroll down to watch the video, which sees Nelson singing and playing guitar alongside his son Lukas while the pair go on a road trip together. The song is taken from Nelson's latest album, Heroes, which also sees him covering tracks by Coldplay and Tom Waits, as well as collaborating with rapper Snoop Dogg on the pro-cannabis track, "Roll Me Up". Willie Nelson recently insisted that legalising marijuana would save "a whole lotta" lives and money. The country singer told the Guardian that smoking weed wasn't "dangerous healthwise" and said it should be decriminalised. Asked whether the drug should be legalised, he replied: "It has to, because economically we need the money – why give it to criminals? Most people realise it's not a deadly drug like cocaine or cigarettes." Nelson – who was arrested in 2010 for marijuana possession – last month turned down Roseanne Barr's offer to be her Presidential running mate. Nelson has released over 200 albums and won seven Grammy Awards during his career. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ow-Cx9IX4So

Country music legend Willie Nelson has posted the video for his cover version of Pearl Jam’s “Just Breathe” online.

Scroll down to watch the video, which sees Nelson singing and playing guitar alongside his son Lukas while the pair go on a road trip together. The song is taken from Nelson’s latest album, Heroes, which also sees him covering tracks by Coldplay and Tom Waits, as well as collaborating with rapper Snoop Dogg on the pro-cannabis track, “Roll Me Up”.

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

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

Nelson – who was arrested in 2010 for marijuana possession – last month turned down Roseanne Barr‘s offer to be her Presidential running mate. Nelson has released over 200 albums and won seven Grammy Awards during his career.

John Cale announces new album details

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John Cale has announced details of his new album, Shifty Adventures in Nookie Wood. The album will be released on October 1 on Domino Records' Lucky Six label and is his first since blackAcetate in 2005. The tracklisting for Shifty Adventures... is: I Wanna Talk 2 U Scotland Yard Hemmingway Face To The Sky Nookie Wood December Rains Mary Vampire Cafe Mothra Living With You Midnight Feast Sandman (Flying Dutchman) Cale will also tour the UK in October. Dates confirmed are: Friday, October 5: HMV Picturehouse, Edinburgh Saturday, October 6: HMV Ritz, Manchester Sunday, October 7: Coal Exchange, Cardiff Wednesday, October 10: The Junction, Cambridge Thursday, October 11: HMV Institute, Birmingham Pic credit: Shawn Brackbill

John Cale has announced details of his new album, Shifty Adventures in Nookie Wood.

The album will be released on October 1 on Domino Records’ Lucky Six label and is his first since blackAcetate in 2005.

The tracklisting for Shifty Adventures… is:

I Wanna Talk 2 U

Scotland Yard

Hemmingway

Face To The Sky

Nookie Wood

December Rains

Mary

Vampire Cafe

Mothra

Living With You

Midnight Feast

Sandman (Flying Dutchman)

Cale will also tour the UK in October.

Dates confirmed are:

Friday, October 5: HMV Picturehouse, Edinburgh

Saturday, October 6: HMV Ritz, Manchester

Sunday, October 7: Coal Exchange, Cardiff

Wednesday, October 10: The Junction, Cambridge

Thursday, October 11: HMV Institute, Birmingham

Pic credit: Shawn Brackbill

Former Fleetwood Mac guitarist Bob Welch dies

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Former Fleetwood Mac guitarist Bob Welch has been found dead at his Nashville home. He was 66. According to police, the musician died of an apparent suicide. Local news network WKRN reports that Welch's wife found him dead of an apparently self-inflicted gunshot wound to the chest at 12.15pm local time on June 7. Police spokesperson Don Aaron said that a suicide note was recovered and added that Welch had recently been suffering from 'health issues'. Born in Los Angeles in 1945, Welch [far left in the picture] joined Fleetwood Mac in 1971, leading them through their transition period between the departure of founder Peter Green and the arrival of Lindsay Buckingham and Stevie Nicks in 1974. He played on five Fleetwood Mac albums, including Future Games and Kiln House. Welch formed the band Paris in 1975 and released two albums with the group, before going on to release his first solo record, French Kiss, in 1977. The album featured a version of the song "Sentimental Lady", which had originally been recorded for Fleetwood Mac's 1972 album, Bare Trees. He went on to release a host more solo albums, his last being 1999's Bob Welch Looks At Bop. Fleetwood Mac singer Stevie Nicks told Associated Press of her sadness at Welch's death. "I had many great times with him after Lindsey and I joined Fleetwood Mac," she said. "He was an amazing guitar player, he was funny, sweet and he was smart. I am so very sorry for his family and for the family of Fleetwood Mac." Watch Bob Welch perform "Sentimental Lady" with Christine McVie and Mick Fleetwood below: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rn4Kuv9LyDE

Former Fleetwood Mac guitarist Bob Welch has been found dead at his Nashville home. He was 66.

According to police, the musician died of an apparent suicide. Local news network WKRN reports that Welch’s wife found him dead of an apparently self-inflicted gunshot wound to the chest at 12.15pm local time on June 7.

Police spokesperson Don Aaron said that a suicide note was recovered and added that Welch had recently been suffering from ‘health issues’.

Born in Los Angeles in 1945, Welch [far left in the picture] joined Fleetwood Mac in 1971, leading them through their transition period between the departure of founder Peter Green and the arrival of Lindsay Buckingham and Stevie Nicks in 1974. He played on five Fleetwood Mac albums, including Future Games and Kiln House.

Welch formed the band Paris in 1975 and released two albums with the group, before going on to release his first solo record, French Kiss, in 1977. The album featured a version of the song “Sentimental Lady”, which had originally been recorded for Fleetwood Mac’s 1972 album, Bare Trees.

He went on to release a host more solo albums, his last being 1999’s Bob Welch Looks At Bop.

Fleetwood Mac singer Stevie Nicks told Associated Press of her sadness at Welch’s death. “I had many great times with him after Lindsey and I joined Fleetwood Mac,” she said. “He was an amazing guitar player, he was funny, sweet and he was smart. I am so very sorry for his family and for the family of Fleetwood Mac.”

Watch Bob Welch perform “Sentimental Lady” with Christine McVie and Mick Fleetwood below:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rn4Kuv9LyDE

New Julien Temple-shot Glastonbury Festival documentary to premiere next week on BBC4

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A brand new documentary about Glastonbury by filmmaker Julien Temple is set to premiere on June 15 on BBC4. Glastonbury After Hours: Glastopia was shot at last year's festival on location in the Shangri-La, Arcadia, the Unfair Ground, Strummerville, Block 9 and the Common areas. Temple directed 2006's acclaimed Glastonbury documentary film, which delved into the history of the festival, which is taking a fallow year this summer, before returning in 2013. Of the new film, Temple says: "This is the heart of the Festival that hasn't been shown; the radical core that makes Glastonbury still so very different from all the other festivals in the world. In the middle of the whole mad week, here are people talking about their politics, their ideas and the rest of their lives." He adds: "Glastopia is giving voice to people who don't normally have a voice in the media; a radical and alternative voice, born out the whole Festival experience." The 75 minute long Glastonbury After Hours: Glastopia will premiere at 10pm on Friday June 15 on BBC4. It will be followed by a screening of Radiohead's 1997 Pyramid Stage gig. Pic credit: Getty Images

A brand new documentary about Glastonbury by filmmaker Julien Temple is set to premiere on June 15 on BBC4.

Glastonbury After Hours: Glastopia was shot at last year’s festival on location in the Shangri-La, Arcadia, the Unfair Ground, Strummerville, Block 9 and the Common areas.

Temple directed 2006’s acclaimed Glastonbury documentary film, which delved into the history of the festival, which is taking a fallow year this summer, before returning in 2013.

Of the new film, Temple says: “This is the heart of the Festival that hasn’t been shown; the radical core that makes Glastonbury still so very different from all the other festivals in the world. In the middle of the whole mad week, here are people talking about their politics, their ideas and the rest of their lives.”

He adds: “Glastopia is giving voice to people who don’t normally have a voice in the media; a radical and alternative voice, born out the whole Festival experience.”

The 75 minute long Glastonbury After Hours: Glastopia will premiere at 10pm on Friday June 15 on BBC4.

It will be followed by a screening of Radiohead‘s 1997 Pyramid Stage gig.

Pic credit: Getty Images

Ry Cooder announces new album details

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Ry Cooder has announced details of a new album, Election Special, due for release on August 20 on Nonesuch/Perro Verde Records. The follow-up to last year's Pull Up Some Dust And Sit Down, Cooder's album is released a few months ahead of the forthcoming US presidential election, which will be held ...

Ry Cooder has announced details of a new album, Election Special, due for release on August 20 on Nonesuch/Perro Verde Records.

The follow-up to last year’s Pull Up Some Dust And Sit Down, Cooder’s album is released a few months ahead of the forthcoming US presidential election, which will be held in November 2012.

Cooder has written introductions to each of the tracks on the album:

Mutt Romney Blues

“Reverend Al Sharpton said, ‘How he treated his dog tells you a lot about him.’ Where did Mitt Romney learn that hollow laugh of his? A correspondence course on how to scare your dog shitless? He sure scares me, I don’t mind telling you.”

Brother Is Gone

“The only logical explanation for the Brothers I could come up with is, they made their deal at the crossroads with Satan. Satan will need to get paid, but in the meantime, they are doing everything in their power to hurt you and me. The big hurt.”

The Wall Street Part Of Town

“Is there a Wall Street part of town in your town? Start your own, it’s easy. When the police come, remind them that you pay their salary, such as it may be.”

Guantanamo

“There’s a beautiful Cuban song about a country girl from Guantanamo. The lyrics were written over a hundred years ago, and they say something about peace and freedom, so I guess the problem hasn’t been solved yet. Prisons are the new growth industry.”

Cold Cold Feeling

“The president, alone in the dark, walks the Oval Office floor. Before you criticize and accuse, walk a mile in his shoes.”

Going To Tampa

“As a mother, will Sarah Palin lead the Republican convention in a prayer for Treyvon? Will ‘Stand Your Ground’ stand? Don’t forget your bed sheet and keep your money in your shoes.”

Kool-Aid

“A lament for this guy Zimmerman, and all the many Zimmermans. Too late, they find their masters have given them gun rights and new ‘Stand Your Ground’ lynching laws instead of good paying jobs and secure futures. They drank the Kool-Aid, they really drank it down.”

The 90 And The 9

“A possible political discussion between a father and child. Here in Los Angeles, they allow military recruiters in public schools. If you speak against it, they come down hard on you. I don’t even know what name you give to a criminal conspiracy like that.”

Take Your Hands Off It

“Woody said, ‘This land is your land.’ There’s a famous photograph of a sign that reads, ‘Don’t let the big men take it away.’ On the other hand, James Baldwin believed the concepts of nationhood such as freedom, equality, and democracy are superstitions, nothing more.”

Wilco release new book

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Wilco has released a new book, The Incredible Shrinking Tour Of Chicago. The book is free and available now exclusively on Apple’s iBookstore for iPad at www.iTunes.com/iBookstore. It documents the band’s five concerts from December 2011 in their native Chicago, with live photography, reproduc...

Wilco has released a new book, The Incredible Shrinking Tour Of Chicago.

The book is free and available now exclusively on Apple’s iBookstore for iPad at www.iTunes.com/iBookstore.

It documents the band’s five concerts from December 2011 in their native Chicago, with live photography, reproduction poster art and set lists.

It’s accompanied by videos of two live performances captured backstage at those December shows, one featuring Wilco, Mavis Staples and Nick Lowe rehearsing The Band’s “The Weight” and another featuring Wilco and Staples rehearsing “You Are Not Alone”.

Wilco play the following European dates this summer:

8 June, Porto – Primavera Sound Festival – Portugal

10 August, Göteborg – Way Out West Festival – Sweden

11 August, Rees-Haldern – Haldern Pop Festival – Germany

12 August, Oxfordshire – Wilderness Festival – UK

14 August, Luxembourg – Den Atelier – Luxembourg

16 August, St. Polten – Frequency Festival – Austria

18 August, Hasselt – Pukkelpop – Belgium

19 August, Biddinghuizen – Lowlands Festival – Netherlands

10 OCT, Padova – Teatro Geox – Italy

11 OCT, Florence – Obihall – Italy

12 OCT, Turin – Teatro della Concordia – Italy

22 OCT, Stuttgart – Theaterhaus – Germany

23 OCT, Hamburg – CCH – Germany

24 OCT, Cologne – E-Werk – Germany

The 23rd Uncut Playlist Of 2012

A short week after all the jubilee bullshit, but a pretty hefty postbag these past two days, and some notable downloads, too, as you’ll see from this list. Please make sure you follow the link to that new Grizzly bear, if you have a chance, and maybe also check out “Baby”, the first track from the new Ariel Pink album, streaming at www.4ad.com. Possibly venturing up to the No Direction Home festival in North Nottinghamshire this weekend. Maybe I’ll see one or two of you there? Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Sun Kil Moon – Among The Leaves (Caldo Verde) 2 Grizzly Bear – Sleeping Ute (http://bit.ly/GB-SleepingUte) 3 Julia Holter – Ekstasis (RVNG ITL) 4 Yeasayer – Fragrant World (Mute) 5 6 James Yorkston – I Was A Cat From A Book (Domino) 7 Julia Kent & Barbara De Dominicis - Parallel 41 (Baskaru Karu) 8 Fergus & Geronimo – Funky Was The State Of Affairs (Hardly Art) 9 Calexico – Algiers (City Slang) 10 Sensations’ Fix – Music Is Painting In The Air (RVNG ITL) 11 The Marble Vanity – The Marble Vanity (Slow Fizz) 12 Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti - Mature Themes (4AD) 13 Huw M – Gathering Dusk (Gwymon) 14 Gonzales – Solo Piano II (Gentle Threat) 15 Various Artists – Holy Spirit: Spiritual Soul & Gospel Funk From Shreveport’s Jewel Records (Harmless)

A short week after all the jubilee bullshit, but a pretty hefty postbag these past two days, and some notable downloads, too, as you’ll see from this list.

Please make sure you follow the link to that new Grizzly bear, if you have a chance, and maybe also check out “Baby”, the first track from the new Ariel Pink album, streaming at www.4ad.com.

Possibly venturing up to the No Direction Home festival in North Nottinghamshire this weekend. Maybe I’ll see one or two of you there?

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

1 Sun Kil Moon – Among The Leaves (Caldo Verde)

2 Grizzly Bear – Sleeping Ute (http://bit.ly/GB-SleepingUte)

3 Julia Holter – Ekstasis (RVNG ITL)

4 Yeasayer – Fragrant World (Mute)

5

6 James Yorkston – I Was A Cat From A Book (Domino)

7 Julia Kent & Barbara De Dominicis – Parallel 41 (Baskaru Karu)

8 Fergus & Geronimo – Funky Was The State Of Affairs (Hardly Art)

9 Calexico – Algiers (City Slang)

10 Sensations’ Fix – Music Is Painting In The Air (RVNG ITL)

11 The Marble Vanity – The Marble Vanity (Slow Fizz)

12 Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti – Mature Themes (4AD)

13 Huw M – Gathering Dusk (Gwymon)

14 Gonzales – Solo Piano II (Gentle Threat)

15 Various Artists – Holy Spirit: Spiritual Soul & Gospel Funk From Shreveport’s Jewel Records (Harmless)

The Beatles – Yellow Submarine

Anybody familiar with the short Beatles cartoons produced for US TV (in which George Harrison appeared to have an Indian accent) would have expressed grave doubts that the same company, Brodax, might have been able to make not just a decent full length animated Beatle movie, but a brilliant one. And yet this is what happened. Despite a tortuous route to production and despite (or because of) an almost total lack of Beatles involvement, Yellow Submarine turned out to be probably the first great non-Disney animated movie, a modernesque collection of pop songs (the “Eleanor Rigby” sequence is a masterpiece of 1960s melancholia) and a genuinely funny film for children, adults and potheads. With a script by, among others, Eric “Love Story” Segal, voices by, among others, Paul Angelis and Lance Percival, and super animation (mostly dominated by Alan Aldridge), Yellow Submarine is a film whose Beatle contribution is entirely and solely musical (with great offcuts like “Hey Bulldog” and “It’s All Too Much”) yet which encapsulates the wit, optimism and sheer oddness of Summer of Love Fabs better than the actual Beatles could (it’s a lot better than Magical Mystery Tour, that’s for sure.) With a superbly sympathetic George Martin soundtrack and, in the Blue Meanies, some of the perviest screen villains of the 1960s, Yellow Submarine is a lot better than it could have been (if we’re honest, it’s a lot better than Help! as well). This new version is cleaned up to perfection and features lots of fun, if rather brief extras (though none briefer than the Beatles’ actual appearance in the movie). It would have been nice to have Martin’s soundtrack included as well as the spurious Songtrack album, but perhaps Apple are saving that for the next reboot. EXTRAS: “Songtrack” CD, Mod Odyssey (7 minute making-of documentary), original theatrical trailer, audio commentary by the producer and the art director Heinz Edelmann, storyboard sequences, interviews with writer Eric Segal, cast and crew, reproductions of animation cels, stickers, and a 16-page booklet including an essay by John Lasseter. 7/10 David Quantick

Anybody familiar with the short Beatles cartoons produced for US TV (in which George Harrison appeared to have an Indian accent) would have expressed grave doubts that the same company, Brodax, might have been able to make not just a decent full length animated Beatle movie, but a brilliant one.

And yet this is what happened. Despite a tortuous route to production and despite (or because of) an almost total lack of Beatles involvement, Yellow Submarine turned out to be probably the first great non-Disney animated movie, a modernesque collection of pop songs (the “Eleanor Rigby” sequence is a masterpiece of 1960s melancholia) and a genuinely funny film for children, adults and potheads.

With a script by, among others, Eric “Love Story” Segal, voices by, among others, Paul Angelis and Lance Percival, and super animation (mostly dominated by Alan Aldridge), Yellow Submarine is a film whose Beatle contribution is entirely and solely musical (with great offcuts like “Hey Bulldog” and “It’s All Too Much”) yet which encapsulates the wit, optimism and sheer oddness of Summer of Love Fabs better than the actual Beatles could (it’s a lot better than Magical Mystery Tour, that’s for sure.)

With a superbly sympathetic George Martin soundtrack and, in the Blue Meanies, some of the perviest screen villains of the 1960s, Yellow Submarine is a lot better than it could have been (if we’re honest, it’s a lot better than Help! as well). This new version is cleaned up to perfection and features lots of fun, if rather brief extras (though none briefer than the Beatles’ actual appearance in the movie). It would have been nice to have Martin’s soundtrack included as well as the spurious Songtrack album, but perhaps Apple are saving that for the next reboot.

EXTRAS: “Songtrack” CD, Mod Odyssey (7 minute making-of documentary), original theatrical trailer, audio commentary by the producer and the art director Heinz Edelmann, storyboard sequences, interviews with writer Eric Segal, cast and crew, reproductions of animation cels, stickers, and a 16-page booklet including an essay by John Lasseter.

7/10

David Quantick

Tupac Shakur hologram makers confirm plans to digitally resurrect Elvis

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The technology company behind Tupac Shakur's hologram have confirmed Elvis Presley is to be resurrected in a similar manner. After engineering the late rapper at this year's Coachella Music Festival, Digital Domain Media has teamed up with Core Media Group, the company that owns the licence rights to Presley, to digitally resurrect the late King of Rock 'n' Roll, reports Vanity Fair. He is expected to appear on film, television and apparently concerts as an option as well. Digital Domain Media Group Chairman John Textor said: "Elvis is the most iconic, most recognised performer on the planet, and we are thrilled to have been chosen to bring new performances and original shows where fans can have their own, new experiences of Elvis." As previously reported on NME, the boffins behind the technology were looking at an Elvis and Justin Bieber hologram earlier this year. Tupac's hologram addressed the Coachella crowd and also performed '2 Of Americaz Most Wanted' as a duet with Snoop Dogg during the gigs. It triggered speculation about whether any number of dead celebrities could be brought back to life, for shows or other events.

The technology company behind Tupac Shakur’s hologram have confirmed Elvis Presley is to be resurrected in a similar manner.

After engineering the late rapper at this year’s Coachella Music Festival, Digital Domain Media has teamed up with Core Media Group, the company that owns the licence rights to Presley, to digitally resurrect the late King of Rock ‘n’ Roll, reports Vanity Fair.

He is expected to appear on film, television and apparently concerts as an option as well.

Digital Domain Media Group Chairman John Textor said: “Elvis is the most iconic, most recognised performer on the planet, and we are thrilled to have been chosen to bring new performances and original shows where fans can have their own, new experiences of Elvis.”

As previously reported on NME, the boffins behind the technology were looking at an Elvis and Justin Bieber hologram earlier this year.

Tupac’s hologram addressed the Coachella crowd and also performed ‘2 Of Americaz Most Wanted’ as a duet with Snoop Dogg during the gigs.

It triggered speculation about whether any number of dead celebrities could be brought back to life, for shows or other events.