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Van Morrison to headline Green Man Festival 2012

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Van Morrison will headline this year's Green Man festival. The 68-year old singer songwriter, who released his 33rd studio album 'Keep It Simple' in 2008, joins Feist in headlining the Welsh festival. Also confirmed to play are Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks, The Walkmen, Jonathan Richman, The...

Van Morrison will headline this year’s Green Man festival.

The 68-year old singer songwriter, who released his 33rd studio album ‘Keep It Simple’ in 2008, joins Feist in headlining the Welsh festival.

Also confirmed to play are Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks, The Walkmen, Jonathan Richman, The Felice Brothers, tUnE-yArDs, Of Montreal, King Creosote & Jon Hopkins, Michael Kiwanuka and over 30 other acts.

The event takes place in Wales’ Brecon Beacons from August 17-19. It was headlined by Explosions In The Sky, Iron And Wine and Fleet Foxes in 2011 with the likes of Laura Marling, The Low Anthem, Noah & The Whale, James Blake, Gruff Rhys and Bellowhead also playing sets.

See Greenman.net for more information about the festival.

The line-up for Green Man festival so far is as follows:

Van Morrison

Feist

Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks

The Walkmen

Jonathan Richman

The Felice Brothers

tUnE-yArDs

Of Montreal

King Creosote & Jon Hopkins

Michael Kiwanuka

Yann Tiersen

Scritti Politti

Junior Boys

The Time & Space Machine (live)

Damien Jurado

Bowerbirds

Field Music

Friends

Cass McCombs

C.W. Stoneking

Slow Club

Ghostpoet

Beth Jeans Houghton & The Hooves Of Destiny

Willy Mason

Dark Dark Dark

Daughter

Peaking Lights

Three Trapped Tigers

Megafaun

Islet

Joe Pug

Lucy Rose

Trembling Bells

Cashier No. 9

The Wave Pictures

TOY

Pictish Trail

Teeth of the Sea

Laura J Martin

Sweet Baboo

∆ Alt J

KWES

Gang Colours

Rocketnumbernine

Steve Smyth

Jamie N Commons

Stealing Sheep

Vadoinmessico

Treetop Flyers

Tiny Ruins

Seamus Fogarty

Chailo Sim

RM Hubbert

Mowbird

Goodnight Lenin

The Perch Creek Family Jug Band

Cold Specks

Richard Warren

Feist scoops three awards at Canada’s Juno Awards

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Feist has been honoured at Canada's Juno Awards, picking up three gongs including the award for Artist Of The Year. The singer also picked up adult alternative album of the year for 'Metals' and best music DVD for 'Look At What The Light Did Now' at the North American country's version of the Gra...

Feist has been honoured at Canada’s Juno Awards, picking up three gongs including the award for Artist Of The Year.

The singer also picked up adult alternative album of the year for ‘Metals’ and best music DVD for ‘Look At What The Light Did Now’ at the North American country’s version of the Grammys last night (April 1).

Adele meanwhile, to her list of ever growing titles after ’21’ was named international album of the year.

Arcade Fire were the big winners at last year’s event picking up four gongs including album of the year for ‘The Suburbs’.

Feist recently completed a short UK tour last month. She is due to headline the closing night at this year’s Green Man festival on August 19. For more information go to Green Man.

Arctic Monkeys’ Matt Helders: ‘We want to do a record that is like ‘Evil Twin’ and ‘R U Mine?’

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Arctic Monkeys' drummer Matt Helders has spoken about the band's plans for their new record and has revealed that they are keen to continue in the vein of recent single 'R U Mine?' and B-side 'Evil Twin'. Speaking to the Examiner, the drummer replied to a question about their new single by saying...

Arctic Monkeys‘ drummer Matt Helders has spoken about the band’s plans for their new record and has revealed that they are keen to continue in the vein of recent single ‘R U Mine?’ and B-side ‘Evil Twin’.

Speaking to the Examiner, the drummer replied to a question about their new single by saying: “The way ‘R U Mine?’ has gone we are more into doing songs like that for now. We are kind of into the idea of doing a record that is like ‘Evil Twin’ and ‘R U Mine?’.”

The band are currently in the middle of a lengthy stint across the USA and Canada as support to The Black Keys on their US arena tour and Helders also spoke about this, revealing that the band had been excited to appear as the opening act for the first time in their career.

He said of this: “We’ve been looking for a tour like this since we started because we’ve never done a support tour, not in England, not anywhere. We were trying to think what the right band would be, and we had some good offers that didn’t work out timing wise from other bands. For this (tour) we thought it would be stupid to turn down. It’s a massive tour, and I think we’ve done as much as we could on our own without doing something like this.”

The drummer also spoke about the band’s new track ‘Electricity’, which is due out later this month as the B-side to ‘R U Mine?’, saying: “When we recorded ‘Electricity’ we recorded ‘You & I’ which was the B-side to ‘Black Treacle’ and (recorded) another one that didn’t really work out. It was a good song, but it didn’t fit in with ‘R U Mine?’ so ‘Electricity’ was the one that seemed to make more sense. It’s really the only thing we’ve got that nobody has heard yet that is already recorded.”

Graham Coxon hints that Blur will play new material at Hyde Park reunion gig

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Graham Coxon has hinted that Blur could play new material at their Hyde Park show later this year. The reunited Britpop legends will return to Hyde Park, the scene of two of their reunion shows of 2009, for a gig which will also feature The Specials and New Order on August 12 – and Coxon has hi...

Graham Coxon has hinted that Blur could play new material at their Hyde Park show later this year.

The reunited Britpop legends will return to Hyde Park, the scene of two of their reunion shows of 2009, for a gig which will also feature The Specials and New Order on August 12 – and Coxon has hinted that the band may have some “surprises” up their sleeves for the show.

When asked if the band would be unveiling new material at the gig in an interview on the BBC, Coxon replied: “Mmmm, perhaps. There might be some surprises. I’m not sure what any of the other people in the group have said – we all say different things and then we all get told ‘Don’t say that’, ‘But they said that’, and [end up] getting intro trouble. But there’s going to be some surprises.”

Previously, bassist Alex James claimed that Blur would play a brand-new song during the show, describing it as a “tearjerker”, but it was unclear whether he was referring to ‘Under The Westway’ – which frontman Damon Albarn and guitarist Graham Coxon played during their brief set at a pre-Brits charity gig for War Child at O2 Shepherd’s Bush Empire in London last month – or another new song.

Speaking to NME recently, Blur confirmed they had been working on new material since reuniting, but were cagey about whether they’d record a new album, which would be their first since 2003’s ‘Think Tank’.

Pressed on whether any of their new songs would make the Hyde Park set, Coxon said he’d be “interested in playing new things” during the gig, adding: “We always used to play underdeveloped things and kick them into shape during the shows, but it isn’t the occasion for that. Obviously we’re not gonna play the same set we played in 2009, but there things that people always, always wanna hear.”

Earlier this year, producer William Orbit hinted he was working on new material with Blur in a series of tweets, while Stephen Street, who helmed a number of the band’s albums in the mid-to-late-’90s, has also expressed an interest in recording with them again.

Along with playing at Hyde Park, Blur are also scheduled to headline Sweden’s Way Out West festival in August.

Meanwhile, Graham Coxon is set to release his new solo album ‘A+E’ on April 2. The guitarist has described the album, which is the eighth of his solo career, as “cold, hard and gritty” and said there would be a “lack of romantic songs” on the LP.

Graham Coxon will tour in support of ‘A+E’ in April, playing 14 shows across the UK. These begin at Oxford’s O2 Academy on April 13 and run until April 30 when Coxon will headline Falmouth’s Princess Pavilions venue.

Sir Peter Blake recreates The Beatles’ ‘Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band’ cover

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The Beatles' iconic 'Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band' album cover has been redesigned by original sleeve designer Peter Blake on his 80th birthday. Noel Gallagher, Amy Winehouse, late Joy Division frontman Ian Curtis, The Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger and Paul Weller all feature in th...

The Beatles‘ iconic ‘Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band’ album cover has been redesigned by original sleeve designer Peter Blake on his 80th birthday.

Noel Gallagher, Amy Winehouse, late Joy Division frontman Ian Curtis, The Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger and Paul Weller all feature in the new collage entitled ‘Vintage Blake’.

“It’s a cross I bear, it’s an albatross I have to deal with,” Blake said of the original 1967 album cover. “What vaguely depresses me still is that I’m known pretty much as ‘Peter Blake – who did the cover of Sgt. Pepper’ when I’ve done so much else. Every so often I manage to forget it, but it comes back all the time.”

Other than Paul McCartney the remaining Beatles members have been cut out of the collage because of copyright issues, according to Blake.

Speaking about his inclusion Noel Gallagher told BBC News: “I was lucky enough to go down to his studio. We were fans and all the props were still there from the ‘Sgt. Pepper’ photo shoot.”

He added: “If, for me, The Beatles and The Who and The Kinks and the Stones were the sound of the ’60s then Sir Peter’s work is the visual representation of that. When I look at his pop art stuff, I hear The Beatles. He’s as important as the music.”

The cover is set to feature at The Vintage Festival which brings together fashion, music and art from the 1920s to the ’80s at the Boughton Estate in Northamptonshire on July 13-15, as part of Blake’s 80th birthday celebrations.

Pulp play first full gig of 2012 at London’s Royal Albert Hall

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Pulp played their first full live show of 2012 at London's Royal Albert Hall last night (March 31). Taking place as part of this year's run of Teenage Cancer Trust gigs, the show opened with a number of questions being projected onto a large screen above the stage. The final one asked the crowd '...

Pulp played their first full live show of 2012 at London’s Royal Albert Hall last night (March 31).

Taking place as part of this year’s run of Teenage Cancer Trust gigs, the show opened with a number of questions being projected onto a large screen above the stage. The final one asked the crowd ‘Do You Remember The First Time?’ before Pulp appeared on stage to kick off with the 1994 hit.

The set spanned Pulp’s vast career, including the inclusion of ‘My Lighthouse’ during the encore. Jarvis Cocker spoke about how the song, recorded in 1983, featured his sister Saskia and her school friend Jill Talbot on backing vocals. The pair were invited onstage to contribute once again nearly 30 years later to huge cheers.

“Dunno what you’re clapping for…” quipped Javis, “…nobody bought it.”

Other guests included former Pulp guitarist Richard Hawley, who appeared for ‘Like A Friend’ and then remained for the duration, while support band Cat’s Eyes’ orchestral ensemble were purloined for ‘This Is Hardcore’. Violinist Natalie returned to take departed Russell Senior’s place for the band’s biggest hit ‘Common People’.

Jarvis later referenced the fact the band hadn’t played live in six months, aside from performing two songs at the NME Awards in February, when they also picked up this year’s Teenage Cancer Trust Outstanding Contribution To Music award.

He commented: “I think it’s going OK.”

Pulp played:

‘Do You Remember The First Time?’

‘Mis-Shapes’

‘Razzmatazz’

‘Something Changed’

‘Sorted For E’s And Wizz’

‘I Spy’

‘The Birds In Your Garden’

‘Bad Cover Version’

‘Like A Friend’

‘This Is Hardcore’

‘Sunrise’

‘Bar Italia’

‘Common People’

‘My Lighthouse’

‘Babies’

‘Disco 2000’

Patti Smith pays tribute to Amy Winehouse on new album ‘Banga’

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Patti Smith has announced full details of her new studio album, which is to be titled 'Banga'. The album, which is the 10th of the punk singer's career, will be released on June 4 in the UK and on June 5 in the United States. It is the singer's first album since her 2007 covers record 'Twelve' an...

Patti Smith has announced full details of her new studio album, which is to be titled ‘Banga’.

The album, which is the 10th of the punk singer’s career, will be released on June 4 in the UK and on June 5 in the United States. It is the singer’s first album since her 2007 covers record ‘Twelve’ and her first record of original material since 2004’s ‘Trampin’.

‘Banga’ was recorded at Electric Lady Studios in New York City and has been produced by Smith and her backing band of Tony Shanahan, Jay Dee Daugherty and Lenny Kaye. Television frontman Tom Verlaine and the Smith’s son Jackson and daughter Jesse Paris appear as guests on the album.

The album’s fourth track ‘This Is The Girl’ has been written in tribute to Amy Winehouse, while second track ‘Fuji-san’ has been penned for the people of Japan in the wake of last year’s earthquake. The album’s track ‘Nine’ is also reportedly a birthday song for Johnny Depp.

Patti Smith will play three UK shows this summer in support of ‘Banga’. She will headline Wolverhampton’s Wulfrun Hall on June 25, Cardiff Coal Exchange on June 26 and Bath Forum on June 28.

The tracklisting for ‘Banga’ is as follows:

‘Amerigo’

‘Fuji-san’

‘April Fool’

‘This Is The Girl’

‘Banga’

‘Maria

‘Tarkovsky (The Second Stop is Jupiter)’

‘Mosaic’

‘Nine’

‘Seneca’

‘Constantine’s Dream’

‘After The Gold Rush’

Julia Holter – Ekstasis

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EA new American maverick finds her voice... Getting out into the wider world is often considered the making of a bedroom musician; the moment that they break through their solipsistic tendencies and begin to produce music with the potential to connect. To point out that LA-based DIY-recording artist Julia Holter studied at CalArts, as did Ariel Pink and John Maus, and that she has frequently collaborated with Nite Jewel’s Ramona Gonzalez, may provoke certain misconceptions about the potential limitations of her work. However, if Ekstasis, her second full-length album, reveals anything about the hitherto relatively unknown 27-year-old, it’s that her approach is anything but environmental, even when recording at home. Ekstasis arrives fast on the back of Holter’s small but loudly acclaimed debut, Tragedy, released on LA-based Leaving Records last year. That LP followed CD-Rs and cassettes released on labels based in Vermont, Philadelphia and Yorkshire, and was based around Euripedes’ Hippolytus, taking many of its lyrics verbatim from the play’s dialogue. It doesn’t take a degree in classical literature to discern that Ekstasis, while rooted in Greek thought, is not the opposite of Tragedy. Its predecessor – complete with “Introduction”, “Interlude” and “Tragedy Finale” – lightly but grandly explored the wholeness of narrative form, and its thick-weft drones and creaks were difficult to separate out into individual pieces. Ekstasis (meaning a transcendent state) takes sensory experience and disconnect as its conceit, allowing its nine songs to exist alone, as well as part of a whole. The record alludes to a burgeoning vision that reaches far beyond the four walls within which it was made, establishing Holter’s maverick status in a lineage that stretches from Linda Perhacs – with whom she’s currently collaborating – to contemporary artists such as Julianna Barwick, whose vocal blanketing is a close relative of Holter’s kaleidoscopic incantations. Holter’s lack of domestic inclination runs surface-level and below ground. Ekstasis genuinely conjures other worlds as harpsichord undulates between rolling grooves and intricate drones, harmonium billows and blusters, and sax stutters carnally. Most strikingly of all, Holter’s layered, glowing madrigal vocal conveys a horde of abbesses using their voices to break down the walls of their cloister. She demonstrates her full range on opener “Marienbad”, named after Alain Resnais’ Last Year At Marienbad, a distinctly strange but deeply satisfying pop song. She starts with monosyllabic intonation, tapping out words like individual notes on a piano, before fracturing to a girls’ choir hell-bent on bastardising the liturgy, and cresting into breathy vocal fanfares without warning. This unpredictability helps divorce the idea of word from meaning, of sense from sensation: something that may well have come from Holter’s work with phonetic translation. At the start of “Marienbad”, she remarks, “I can hear a statue wonder why they’re so still” before wincing at “the human whisper so cold”, and she places obstacles between her faculties and emotions on the sweet helix of “In The Same Room” – “I can’t recall his face, but I want to” – and the spacey, empowered clank of “Goddess Eyes II”, where she laments, “I can see you/But my eyes are not allowed to cry.” “Goddess Eyes I” appears at the end of the LP, though its original incarnation creaked into being on Tragedy. It sums up that these aren’t traditionally ecstatic states, but uneasy conflicts: “This is not the quietness… This is ekstasis,” she intones in a trembling tone, before reversing the statement, eventually letting language dissolve into cries and caws as swing drums dally hellishly with looped cello and grunting sax. Despite exploring convoluted sensory planes, it’s remarkable that the cosmic Ekstasis – recorded in Holter’s home with only five additional musicians – feels surer of itself than Tragedy, a record rooted in millennia-old practice. It’s in that respect – and let’s be unequivocal here, not sonically – that Holter may warrant comparison to Joanna Newsom, as both define their own respective traditions that they then rewrite with each subsequent record. If anyone’s going to assess the limitations of Julia Holter’s work, it’s Holter herself. You can rest assured that she’ll seek to break them on whatever she does next. Laura Snapes Q&A Julia Holter You’re a teacher by day. What does that entail? I work at a continuation school with students who’ve flunked out, had kids or are on probation. I’m one of the few music people there.I have this group of girls who really want to learn piano, which is important. A lot of kids just want to record without learning to play. It’s not that you have to, but that kind of skill is disappearing. As a trained musician, does the amateur culture of experimental music bug you? No. You should just want to do something honest. I feel that certain artists don’t put a lot of soul into their technique. That’s not OK. I used to work at Human Ear and people would send demos they’d made in their bedroom, that sounded like shit. I was working on stuff for years before I got attention. It’s important to have your own time without worrying what others think. You were writing for years before you recorded anything, and didn’t tour while you were recording. Is self-restraint important? I’d have been happy if, in 2007 when I moved back to LA from college, more people had heard my music. I don’t think I intentionally held my music back as I’ve actually been very ambitious, but things just kept happening. I’ve never been good at promoting myself. INTERVIEW: LAURA SNAPES

EA new American maverick finds her voice…

Getting out into the wider world is often considered the making of a bedroom musician; the moment that they break through their solipsistic tendencies and begin to produce music with the potential to connect. To point out that LA-based DIY-recording artist Julia Holter studied at CalArts, as did Ariel Pink and John Maus, and that she has frequently collaborated with Nite Jewel’s Ramona Gonzalez, may provoke certain misconceptions about the potential limitations of her work. However, if Ekstasis, her second full-length album, reveals anything about the hitherto relatively unknown 27-year-old, it’s that her approach is anything but environmental, even when recording at home.

Ekstasis arrives fast on the back of Holter’s small but loudly acclaimed debut, Tragedy, released on LA-based Leaving Records last year. That LP followed CD-Rs and cassettes released on labels based in Vermont, Philadelphia and Yorkshire, and was based around Euripedes’ Hippolytus, taking many of its lyrics verbatim from the play’s dialogue. It doesn’t take a degree in classical literature to discern that Ekstasis, while rooted in Greek thought, is not the opposite of Tragedy. Its predecessor – complete with “Introduction”, “Interlude” and “Tragedy Finale” – lightly but grandly explored the wholeness of narrative form, and its thick-weft drones and creaks were difficult to separate out into individual pieces. Ekstasis (meaning a transcendent state) takes sensory experience and disconnect as its conceit, allowing its nine songs to exist alone, as well as part of a whole. The record alludes to a burgeoning vision that reaches far beyond the four walls within which it was made, establishing Holter’s maverick status in a lineage that stretches from Linda Perhacs – with whom she’s currently collaborating – to contemporary artists such as Julianna Barwick, whose vocal blanketing is a close relative of Holter’s kaleidoscopic incantations.

Holter’s lack of domestic inclination runs surface-level and below ground. Ekstasis genuinely conjures other worlds as harpsichord undulates between rolling grooves and intricate drones, harmonium billows and blusters, and sax stutters carnally. Most strikingly of all, Holter’s layered, glowing madrigal vocal conveys a horde of abbesses using their voices to break down the walls of their cloister. She demonstrates her full range on opener “Marienbad”, named after Alain Resnais’ Last Year At Marienbad, a distinctly strange but deeply satisfying pop song. She starts with monosyllabic intonation, tapping out words like individual notes on a piano, before fracturing to a girls’ choir hell-bent on bastardising the liturgy, and cresting into breathy vocal fanfares without warning.

This unpredictability helps divorce the idea of word from meaning, of sense from sensation: something that may well have come from Holter’s work with phonetic translation. At the start of “Marienbad”, she remarks, “I can hear a statue wonder why they’re so still” before wincing at “the human whisper so cold”, and she places obstacles between her faculties and emotions on the sweet helix of “In The Same Room” – “I can’t recall his face, but I want to” – and the spacey, empowered clank of “Goddess Eyes II”, where she laments, “I can see you/But my eyes are not allowed to cry.”

Goddess Eyes I” appears at the end of the LP, though its original incarnation creaked into being on Tragedy. It sums up that these aren’t traditionally ecstatic states, but uneasy conflicts: “This is not the quietness… This is ekstasis,” she intones in a trembling tone, before reversing the statement, eventually letting language dissolve into cries and caws as swing drums dally hellishly with looped cello and grunting sax.

Despite exploring convoluted sensory planes, it’s remarkable that the cosmic Ekstasis – recorded in Holter’s home with only five additional musicians – feels surer of itself than Tragedy, a record rooted in millennia-old practice. It’s in that respect – and let’s be unequivocal here, not sonically – that Holter may warrant comparison to Joanna Newsom, as both define their own respective traditions that they then rewrite with each subsequent record. If anyone’s going to assess the limitations of Julia Holter’s work, it’s Holter herself. You can rest assured that she’ll seek to break them on whatever she does next.

Laura Snapes

Q&A

Julia Holter

You’re a teacher by day. What does that entail?

I work at a continuation school with students who’ve flunked out, had kids or are on probation. I’m one of the few music people there.I have this group of girls who really want to learn piano, which is important. A lot of kids just want to record without learning to play. It’s not that you have to, but that kind of skill is disappearing.

As a trained musician, does the amateur culture of experimental music bug you?

No. You should just want to do something honest. I feel that certain artists don’t put a lot of soul into their technique. That’s not OK. I used to work at Human Ear and people would send demos they’d made in their bedroom, that sounded like shit. I was working on stuff for years before I got attention. It’s important to have your own time without worrying what others think.

You were writing for years before you recorded anything, and didn’t tour while you were recording. Is self-restraint important?

I’d have been happy if, in 2007 when I moved back to LA from college, more people had heard my music. I don’t think I intentionally held my music back as I’ve actually been very ambitious, but things just kept happening. I’ve never been good at promoting myself.

INTERVIEW: LAURA SNAPES

John Cale – Conflict & Catalysis: Productions & Arrangements 1966-2006

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The Velvet Underground man’s knob-twiddling years. You hire John Cale to produce your record; what do you expect? Logically, you might expect the unexpected, because as a musician, Cale has always been an artful butcher, pulling the guts from songs and snapping the sinews; then adding poetry, or discord, disquiet, or wit. You might also wonder which Cale was going to turn up: would it be John Cage or Dylan Thomas? Waldo Jeffers or Sister Ray? Well, this survey of Cale’s production work comes with a quote culled from Cale’s autobiography, in which he defines the role of the man behind the desk. The producer, he suggests, has to be “a catalyst, an ally, a co-conspirator”. Sometimes, that will mean introducing conflict. “I always try to approach it from the point of view, what would a Zen master do in these circumstances? That is not to give the artist a direct answer to all his questions, but to suggest a solution by other means.” Try telling that to the Happy Mondays. Actually, let’s start there. Cale’s stewardship of the Mondays’ Squirrel And G-Man LP is not regarded as a success. It was, Cale says, “a very quick nightmare”, made more nightmarish by his sobriety. “The band complained that I was on a health kick and that all I did was sit around eating tangerines.” In the circumstances, faced with the task of producing Bez’s maracas, eating tangerines may be the way to go. And Cale goes some way towards making the Mondays sound like a proper group. The palindromic rap, “Kuff Dam”, has a decent groove. If Shaun Ryder could sing, it might qualify as funk. It would certainly be less abrasive. Of course, if Shaun Ryder could sing, the Mondays wouldn’t be Happy: their appeal is based on the singer resembling a hod-carrier in the midst of a lost weekend. In fact, many of Cale’s more successful productions feature vocalists operating within the borders of their own peculiarities. Nico, who was Andy Warhol’s idea of a soul singer – which is to say, she sounded like the bored ghost of the embalmed Marlene Dietrich – has her mannerisms housed within an elegant production, with pretty piano framing her diction. True, she sings like a bad actor playing somebody who can’t sing, but it makes a kind of sense. Cale’s production of The Modern Lovers was regarded a failure. He quit before their debut album was complete, after a breakdown of trust with Jonathan Richman, but, really, he did a great job. “Pablo Picasso” chugs like the Velvets, and Richman inhabits a place between pathos and comedy while the guitar makes noises like insects being electrocuted. With Patti Smith – another vocalist in the process of finding her voice – you can detect the moment she stopped being a poet and became a rock singer. It occurs one minute and 43 seconds into “In Excelsis Deo/Gloria”. The Cale mix of The Stooges’ “I Wanna Be Your Dog” is more percussive, less neurotic, than the mix which made the original release. It also sounds more like The Velvets, which is a smaller problem now than it would have been in 1969. Cale’s later productions are less emphatic. There are novelties (Cristina’s “Disco Clone”), gnarly rock’n’roll (Harry Toledo & The Rockets’ “Who Is That Saving Me”) and absolute disasters (“Sex Master” by Squeeze). Sadly, there’s no place for Sham 69’s debut, “I Don’t Wanna”, which is a shame, because it would be nice to know whether Cale was that blame for the unfathomable success of Jimmy Pursey’s Hersham yobs during punk’s twilight. There are two stand-outs. The Velvet Underground’s “Venus In Furs” is fabulous theatre, while Eno/Cale’s beautiful “Spinning Away” marries Eno’s dreamy melodies with off-kilter rhythms. That’s the real lesson here. If you want a bit of John Cale, you need the whole John Cale. Anything less is a Zen tangerine. Alastair McKay

The Velvet Underground man’s knob-twiddling years.

You hire John Cale to produce your record; what do you expect? Logically, you might expect the unexpected, because as a musician, Cale has always been an artful butcher, pulling the guts from songs and snapping the sinews; then adding poetry, or discord, disquiet, or wit.

You might also wonder which Cale was going to turn up: would it be John Cage or Dylan Thomas? Waldo Jeffers or Sister Ray? Well, this survey of Cale’s production work comes with a quote culled from Cale’s autobiography, in which he defines the role of the man behind the desk. The producer, he suggests, has to be “a catalyst, an ally, a co-conspirator”. Sometimes, that will mean introducing conflict. “I always try to approach it from the point of view, what would a Zen master do in these circumstances? That is not to give the artist a direct answer to all his questions, but to suggest a solution by other means.” Try telling that to the Happy Mondays.

Actually, let’s start there. Cale’s stewardship of the Mondays’ Squirrel And G-Man LP is not regarded as a success. It was, Cale says, “a very quick nightmare”, made more nightmarish by his sobriety. “The band complained that I was on a health kick and that all I did was sit around eating tangerines.” In the circumstances, faced with the task of producing Bez’s maracas, eating tangerines may be the way to go. And Cale goes some way towards making the Mondays sound like a proper group. The palindromic rap, “Kuff Dam”, has a decent groove. If Shaun Ryder could sing, it might qualify as funk. It would certainly be less abrasive. Of course, if Shaun Ryder could sing, the Mondays wouldn’t be Happy: their appeal is based on the singer resembling a hod-carrier in the midst of a lost weekend.

In fact, many of Cale’s more successful productions feature vocalists operating within the borders of their own peculiarities. Nico, who was Andy Warhol’s idea of a soul singer – which is to say, she sounded like the bored ghost of the embalmed Marlene Dietrich – has her mannerisms housed within an elegant production, with pretty piano framing her diction. True, she sings like a bad actor playing somebody who can’t sing, but it makes a kind of sense.

Cale’s production of The Modern Lovers was regarded a failure. He quit before their debut album was complete, after a breakdown of trust with Jonathan Richman, but, really, he did a great job. “Pablo Picasso” chugs like the Velvets, and Richman inhabits a place between pathos and comedy while the guitar makes noises like insects being electrocuted. With Patti Smith – another vocalist in the process of finding her voice – you can detect the moment she stopped being a poet and became a rock singer. It occurs one minute and 43 seconds into “In Excelsis Deo/Gloria”. The Cale mix of The Stooges’ “I Wanna Be Your Dog” is more percussive, less neurotic, than the mix which made the original release. It also sounds more like The Velvets, which is a smaller problem now than it would have been in 1969.

Cale’s later productions are less emphatic. There are novelties (Cristina’s “Disco Clone”), gnarly rock’n’roll (Harry Toledo & The Rockets’ “Who Is That Saving Me”) and absolute disasters (“Sex Master” by Squeeze). Sadly, there’s no place for Sham 69’s debut, “I Don’t Wanna”, which is a shame, because it would be nice to know whether Cale was that blame for the unfathomable success of Jimmy Pursey’s Hersham yobs during punk’s twilight.

There are two stand-outs. The Velvet Underground’s “Venus In Furs” is fabulous theatre, while Eno/Cale’s beautiful “Spinning Away” marries Eno’s dreamy melodies with off-kilter rhythms. That’s the real lesson here. If you want a bit of John Cale, you need the whole John Cale. Anything less is a Zen tangerine.

Alastair McKay

Big Star: What’s Going Ahn

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Alex Chilton’s wild, idiosyncratic life after Big Star is examined in the new issue of Uncut (Take 180, May 2012), out now. But what happened before the demise of Chilton’s greatest group? They should have been rock superstars, but Rob Jovanovic explains how drugs, in-fighting and personal trage...

Alex Chilton’s wild, idiosyncratic life after Big Star is examined in the new issue of Uncut (Take 180, May 2012), out now. But what happened before the demise of Chilton’s greatest group? They should have been rock superstars, but Rob Jovanovic explains how drugs, in-fighting and personal tragedy meant Big Star had to settle for being the biggest cult band of all time (from Uncut’s Take 94, March 2005).

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It’s autumn 1974, and the 23-year-old Alex Chilton has just stormed out of Ardent Studios during early sessions for Big Star’s legendarily harrowing third album. He’s just punched a door with a glass panel. The blood-soaked towel and mixing desk are testament to his frustration.

This isn’t his first outburst. Just a few days earlier, the same mixing desk was dismantled and cleaned down because a bottle of gin, aimed at Chilton’s head by a lover, missed its target and landed on the console. Studio owner John Fry ordered a complete service of the equipment.

This time, though, Fry has a quiet word with producer Jim Dickinson: “We simply can’t have blood on the mixing desk,” he says. “Have a word with Alex about it.”

Chilton is in turmoil and his behaviour during the sessions – abusing substances, fighting with friends, challenging his producer – proves it.

The former poster-boy of blue-eyed soul is burrowing deep into Memphis’ underground. At the age of 16 he’d been lead singer with The Box Tops, whose “The Letter” was 1967’s biggest worldwide hit. He’d toured with The Beach Boys and The Doors, hung out at Dennis Wilson’s house and met Charles Manson. While on tour he’d got a girl pregnant, married her in his parents’ living room on his 18th birthday and divorced her within a year. He quit the band mid-tour and moved to New York with the aim of becoming a folk singer, all before his 19th birthday.

Then he formed Big Star, the most brilliant, influential and troubled cult band of them all.

They could have been contenders. Unfortunately, after years of disasters and debauchery, at least one member will be dead while another will have become one of rock’s mythical fuck-ups.

Our tale begins in Memphis, the birthplace of rock’n’roll. When Anglophiles Big Star emerge in the early ’70s, they arouse little local interest. On the wider scene, their Beatles-esque power pop is being phased out in favour of glam and prog. It will take decades for them to be appreciated. The four members are the same age as rock’n’roll. Chris Bell (born January 12, 1951) comes from a wealthy family who own a mansion in East Memphis. Andy Hummel (born two weeks later in Pennsylvania) is the son of a well-respected gynaecologist and Miss America 1947 – a local celebrity with her own TV show. Jody Stephens (October 4, 1952) is the youngest. Although Elvis is the local hero, the February 1964 appearance of The Beatles on The Ed Sullivan Show really catches his attention. Like millions of Americans, he decides to form a band. Bell is soon taking guitar lessons, Hummel opts for bass, Stephens takes up drums and a kid called Chilton finds that he has quite a singing voice at a high school talent show.

William Alexander Chilton (28 December, 1950) grew up in a liberal household where his father, an ex-musician, runs a theatrical lighting company and his mother runs an art gallery. His early years are marked by tragedy when his eldest brother suffers a seizure and drowns in the bath. The youngest of four children, he’s a mess of contradictions, equal parts cultured bohemian and sneering degenerate.

Hummel and Bell meet at Memphis University School. Both have played in bands, and Hummel starts going over to the Bell estate to practise. This becomes a meeting point for artists of all kinds: drummer Steve Rhea and multi-instrumentalist Terry Manning hang out, as does photographer Carole Ruleman (who later marries Manning), while singer Tom Eubanks and others come and go. Through Manning, this loose ensemble is introduced to John Fry at Ardent Studio. Bell, Manning and Eubanks soon record an album under the name Rock City (see panel, right).

Stephens takes part in the first off-Broadway college production of Hair, which leads to an appearance at the 1970 Atlanta Pop Festival alongside Jimi Hendrix. He then meets Hummel and joins the young musicians hanging out at Ardent.

Concurrently, Chilton has joined up with local band The DeVilles. They change their name to The Box Tops and record “The Letter”, before going on to produce four albums in four years. Despite the outward signs of a happy, successful band Chilton feels hemmed in by the production team of Dan Penn and Spooner Oldham. He desperately wants to record his own material. So he quits and heads for New York.

In 1970, he’s visited by Chris Bell, who he knows from Memphis, during a trip to sell demo tapes of a line-up called Icewater – a band that includes Bell, Rhea, Hummel and Stephens. The trip is a bust.

Early 1971 and Chilton is back in Memphis. He calls in at Ardent late one night to talk about pooling talents with Bell. Chilton has some acoustic-based songs from his stint in the Big Apple and tells the others he’ll sing one called “Watch The Sunrise”. He sits down with his Martin 12-string and plays the tune while Bell records it. Bell adds an acoustic intro and some backing vocals. The first song for the as-yet-unnamed group is complete.

“Just Alex and Chris on guitars – absolutely beautiful,” is how Andy Hummel remembers this early session. “There was some sort of chemistry.”

It’s a volatile chemistry, which is why the Chilton-Bell partnership is productive but short-lived. Both have strong views, with Chilton’s one-take approach contrasting with Bell’s studio polish. For now, the two writers set to work. Bell spends days overdubbing guitars and layers of soaring harmonies. The Ardent crowd are Beatles fans and worship George Martin. Byrdsian guitars and Beach Boys harmonies are also favoured.

The songs are pure teen frustration and boy-girl heartache: lyrically, hanging out (“In The Street”), bust-ups (“Don’t Lie To Me”), parents (“Thirteen”) and the Vietnam draft (“The Ballad Of El Goodo”) loom large. Permeating the music, no matter how poignant or melodic, is a sense of dread.

As the sessions continue throughout 1971, the quartet take their name from a grocery store across the street – Big Star – and give the debut album an equally self-debunking title: #1 Record. The sleeve design is by Carole Manning; local artist Ron Pekar provides a neon star. It’s ready to go.

Ardent, however, is distributed through soul label Stax, which has no idea how to sell a white-boy guitar LP. Steve Rhea joins promotional whiz John King in getting the record reviewed everywhere from Billboard to Rolling Stone, but distribution lets them down – people can’t find the album in stores. Then Stax changes its distributor and for a while all the albums are recalled from the shops. The band are devastated.

As 1972 ends, and with no sign of sales picking up, Big Star start work on a follow-up, but tensions are high. Bell is behaving increasingly erratically, and fistfights break out between him, Hummel and Manning. Bell smashes a window and on one occasion attacks John Fry’s car. Things come to a head and Bell quits. He and Chilton agree to divvy up the songs prepared for the next album, but Bell is in such a bad emotional state he’s admitted to hospital. “The psychiatric floor of Baptist Hospital was like a prison,” remembers Fry. “It was frightening even to visit. Then Chris was moved to Mid-South Hospital, which was a psychological and rehabilitation facility with a more residential atmosphere.”

Bell is released into the care of his family in early 1973, but Big Star are finished. Chilton begins rehearsing and writing with other musicians. It’s only an ingenious ploy by John King that gets the three remaining members back together.

The Rock Writers Convention opens for business on May 24, 1973. King invites journalists from around the world to Memphis on the premise of forming a union. But he’s more interested in getting a captive audience for a local band showcase, with Big Star to headline as a trio. His strategy works: their performance assumes near-legendary status.

Notorious gonzo rock scribe Richard Meltzer makes the introductions: “Well, puke on ya momma’s pussy! Here’s Big Star!” From opener “Feel” to ad-libbed encore “The Letter”, the response is ecstatic.

Enthused, they reform for a second album. The result, Radio City, includes three tracks that Chilton recorded earlier in the year with drummer Richard Rosebrough and bassist Danny Jones. New material with Hummel and Stephens (who take more active writing and arranging roles) has a grittier, ‘live’ feel. The album swings manically from tender ballads (“I’m In Love With A Girl”) to full-tilt rockers (“You Get What You Deserve”). It also boasts “September Gurls”, their most famous song.

The release is scheduled for January 1974. Carole Manning comes up with another iconic design, this time using a photograph by William Eggleston titled The Red Ceiling. The photo on the rear of the album of Chilton, Hummel and Stephens steaming drunk surrounded by rednecks was taken during a night out at a watering hole down the road from Ardent – a favoured haunt. Hummel recalls the night the image was captured: “We wound up at TGI Fridays on Overton Square on rock’n’roll night. It was a major hell-raising scene. We drank a lot, stayed out all night and took all manner of drugs.”

Where Radio City is stocked, it sells well, but distribution is still a problem. Hummel has had enough. He’s in his final year of college, and decides to cut his losses. “I could either finish college and lead a more or less normal life,” he says today, “or I could drop out and go on tour. I was tired of being broke.” After college, he lands a job at General Dynamics in Fort Worth and has lived in Texas ever since.

John Lightman, a philosophy and psychology graduate, is drafted in on bass for the forthcoming tour. Chilton gives him copies of the two albums and tells him they’ll start rehearsals immediately.

Following shows in Memphis, they set off for NYC in winter ’74. Chilton is sinking into a drink-and-drugs mire, and sees Manhattan as the place to display his rock star credentials. Jealous that one of the band’s roadies has garnered some police attention when his radio is stolen from his hotel room, he throws a strop, ripping down the curtains in his and Lightman’s room and attempting to hurl a TV out the window. Because it’s bolted to the table, he almost gives himself a hernia. He drinks a bottle of whiskey and passes out on the bed instead. He’s gone from million-selling blue-eyed pin-up to cult hero who literally can’t get arrested.

The tour winds its way up to Massachusetts, through Canada and down into Ohio and Michigan, but often they arrive at a venue only to be told the show has been cancelled, and the gigs that do go ahead are sparsely attended.

Chilton deals with all this by drinking (one time, Lightman has to rescue him from a hot tub after he passes out). When the tour ends, Lightman quits, and over the summer Chilton throws himself into writing the band’s next LP.

Enter Jim Dickinson as producer, a man with a glowing CV. He’d performed with Aretha Franklin, played piano on The Rolling Stones’ Sticky Fingers album, and issued his own, Dixie Fried, in the early ’70s.

Chilton’s private life is in chaos by autumn ’74, and this is reflected in the sessions. His girlfriend, Lesa Aldridge, a senior in high school, helps write some of the material and sings on various tracks, though many of her contributions are later erased. Aldridge provides the perfect muse for Chilton’s tortured genius. She’s with him as he withdraws the last of his Box Tops money from the bank. But their stormy relationship can turn violent. One Ardent employee finds them fighting on the ground; when he tries to intervene, Aldridge screams at him to leave them alone.

The sessions drag on, with Chilton swallowing anything he can lay his hands on: Valium, Mandrax, Secanol, Demerol. According to eyewitness Richard Rosebrough, Chilton has “become a catastrophe”. Stephens will later describe him as a man possessed, baring fangs and drooling. “It was entertaining for a while,” recalls the drummer. “Then it got cruel.”

While Chilton dates Aldridge, Stephens sees her sister Holliday. They consider calling the album Sister Lovers, or even changing the band’s name to that. In fact, the album is never named or a track listing decided on.

Dickinson faces a constant battle, trying to keep Chilton in check. There’s no structure to the sessions and, when John Fry finally calls a halt to proceedings, no-one knows what songs will be on the album.

“Dickinson kept things focused,” Stephens recalls. “He held it together. There were times when Alex would do things that were unconventional. Jim could see the merit in these things. I liked the songs, but I couldn’t understand what Alex was doing.”

“People say the LP was unprepared or improvised but that’s utter crap,” says Dickinson. “Alex had demos for every song. John [Fry] told me that Alex had a key to the studio and he would go in during the middle of the night and fuck with the tapes.

“It was psychodynamically intense for sure,” he adds. “Alex set the tone of the recording on the night of the first session when he shot Demerol down his throat with a syringe.”

“I had a big drink’n’drugs lifestyle,” Chilton will admit. “I’d get up at four in the afternoon. Smoke a few joints; drink. Go to nightclubs; see some bands. Party all the time. I’d go into Ardent late at night after I’d been to bars and throw gin over the mixing board. Seemed a pretty revolutionary idea at the time. I was just trying to write something that seemed important. I feel that I discovered my muse… I finally began to write with confidence. There was a lot of Mandrax; you couldn’t get heroin in Memphis. But downs, generally. And unbelievable amounts of alcohol. If you take enough bad drugs and drink enough, you’re gonna be writing some pretty strange music.”

Chilton challenges Dickinson’s methods while working on a track called “Like St Joan” (later “Like A Kangaroo”, then “Kanga Roo”, and finally “Kangaroo”). Chilton and Aldridge go in late one night and record a vocal take and his 12-string guitar on the same track, so there’s no possibility of separation. Next morning he gives the tape to Dickinson and says: “If you want to be a producer, do something with this.” Dickinson adds Mellotron and guitar feedback.

“When I got into the feedback part Alex kind of lost his attitude and started participating,” says Dickinson. “He said later that that was the first place he ever trusted me. He felt it took his career 10 years forward into the future. ‘Holocaust’ is one of the songs that gives the LP its nihilistic reputation. The piano and melody resemble Yoko Ono’s ‘Mrs Lennon’, but it’s altogether darker and more desolate. The lyric is damning, the music fractured and intense.

“They’re incredibly sick arrangements; it’s pretty wild music,” Chilton says. “It’s a great hash of demonic sound.”

Fry and Dickinson fly to New York and California with the tapes, meeting with as many contacts as will entertain them. “We’d go in and play them and these guys would look at us like we were crazy,” recalls Fry. “They were pretty wide-eyed about trying to understand [the Sister Lovers tapes]. Half of it was they thought we were crazy, half was they were hoping against hope that this wasn’t going to be the next big thing and that they were about to miss it!”

It will take the outbreak of punk to convince a couple of small labels to take a chance on them. In 1978, one of the most disturbing collections of songs ever finally crawls into the shops as Big Star 3rd. But as far as the group are concerned: end of story.

Only Chilton pursues a career in music with any success. He spends the rest of the ’70s pushing the boundaries of taste. Returning to New York, he’s embraced by the punk community, helping to form The Klitz, an all-girl Memphis act fronted by Lesa Aldridge, and then a short-lived outfit with Aldridge and Karen Hampton called Gangrene And The Scurvy Girls. He also hooks up with Tav Falco, playing with his band Panther Burns.

On one trip down to Austin with Falco, their car is pulled over by police for speeding. Chilton throws a box of pot out the window, which miraculously goes unnoticed. While in Austin he agrees to give an early morning lecture at a university. Despite not getting to bed until six that morning, he arrives on time to take the students through a module of their American Studies course. Like I say, a mess of contradictions.

Chilton records his most coherent solo effort, Like Flies On Sherbert, in 1979, with Dickinson again at the controls. One journalist describes it as “like the Sun sessions produced by Brian Eno”. Chilton goes on to work with psychobilly rebels The Cramps, who enhance his bad-boy rep by regaling the music press with tales of him being chased over state lines by angry fathers whose teenage daughters he’d deflowered.

One unreleased track which offers an insight into Chilton’s state of mind at the time is “Riding Through The Reich”. A ghastly account of Nazi malice sung to the tune of “Jingle Bells”, he performs it live on Austin radio station KUT: “Riding through the Reich/In a big Mercedes Benz/Killing lots of Kikes/Making lots of friends/Rat a tat tat tat/Mow the bastards down/Oh, what fun it is to have the Nazis back in town.”

“The [telephone] switchboard is lighting up like a Christmas tree!” the engineer shouts to the show’s host. For Chilton, whose intention is to provoke and confound, it’s a case of job done, but this sorry episode suggests he is fast heading for that nightmare freakzone reserved for such twilight casualties as Skip Spence and Roky Erickson.

Around 1981, however, just as he’s about to turn 30, Chilton steps back from the brink. He leaves the music business and stops his relentless consumption of narcotics and booze. He moves to New Orleans where, over the next three years, he takes a number of jobs, including hotel dishwasher and tree surgeon.

In the months after the third album, Stephens drifts away from the idea of Big Star. He returns to college and later takes up a position at Ardent, where he earns his living to this day. Through the ’80s and early ’90s Big Star are cited as inspirations by everyone from REM and The Replacements to Teenage Fanclub and Primal Scream. In fact, it’s The Replacements’ manager, Peter Jesperson, who helps find Chilton a booking agent and gets him back on the road in the mid-’80s. Chilton makes his return supporting The Replacements at CBGBs in December ’84 (he will later produce the band, and Mats leader Paul Westerberg will write a song named after him).

Big Star’s albums are frequently reissued, often shoddily, until, in 1992, Rykodisc issue Sister Lovers on CD in its entirety, along with a live radio performance and a collection of Chris Bell’s solo work called I Am The Cosmos.

On the back of these releases, Chilton agrees to play a show of Big Star songs with Stephens, and the set is recorded for a live album. Only there’s no Chris Bell and no Andy Hummel. Instead, joining Chilton and Stephens are The Posies’ Jon Auer and Ken Stringfellow, and they superbly approximate the original band’s live élan. Sporadic performances thereafter include a trip to Japan in 1994, which means a lot to Chilton, as Stringfellow explains: “Everywhere he goes, there are memories, things he has to shut off or people he doesn’t want to know any more following him around,” he says. “In Japan it was totally neutral. It was solely based on the music and people were freaking out. He couldn’t help but be moved by it. Try as he might, we could see it in his face. But if you asked him he’d deny it.”

It’s hard to ask Chilton anything, since he ignores requests for interviews, even for cash money. When I was introduced to him before a show in 2002 in Oxford, Mississippi, he refused to even make eye contact. A semi-recluse, he lives in New Orleans, emerging only to play the odd solo show such as the SXSW music festival in March 2004. Sometimes he’ll play revival gigs with The Box Tops, but mostly he keeps himself to himself. One rumour has it he married a girl half his age. Another suggests he never recovered from the death of his mother, who perished in the late ’80s in a house fire. The enigma has become a myth.

And yet, astonishingly, the Mk III lineup of the band – Chilton, Stephens, Stringfellow, Auer – has recently been in a recording studio working on tracks for a fourth Big Star album, with a summer release mooted. Provisional titles are “Love Revolution”, “Turn My Back On The Sun”, “Lady Sweet” and “February’s Quiet”. Chilton, perhaps encouraged by the use of “In The Street” as intro music for TV’s That ’70s Show and “Bangkok” in Bridget Jones: The Edge Of Reason, hasn’t been this energised in years.

“Alex was way into it. He was there for the whole thing,” reveals Stephens of the 2004 sessions. “We recorded 15 songs and came back a month later, picked the best 12, and overdubbed those.”

The final tapes were taken to an LA studio for mastering, and they created such a buzz that Paul McCartney, in the area recording his own album, popped his head in for a quick listen. The ex-Beatle was apparently mightily impressed.

This year looks set to be the most successful of Big Star’s erratic career. There’s the new album (on Ryko), a biography, a tour (including, for UK fans, a show at the Barbican), even talk of a movie with an Oscar-winning documentary filmmaker poised to direct. Big Star’s time may be coming after all. As the man said: you get what you deserve.

Rob Jovanovic’s book Big Star: The Story Of Rock’s Forgotten Band is published by Fourth Estate, price £14.99. Thanks to Jody Stephens, Christian Patterson, Mike Wilson, Carole Manning and Ed Frank.

Ex-Guns ‘N Roses drummer Steven Adler: ‘The band is now Axl and his hacks’

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Former Guns N' Roses drummer Steven Adler has said that the band's new line-up should be called 'Axl and His Hacks'. Alder was part of the band's original line-up and will join up with singer Axl Rose and old members such as guitarist Slash and bassist Duff McKagan for their Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame induction, which takes place in Cleveland, Ohio on April 14, but the foursome will simply be attending and not performing. According to Antimusic, Adler has now said that although he and Slash would like to play at the event, Rose is scuppering plans for an onstage reunion – and he also claimed that the current incarnation of the band weren't worthy of its name. Following earlier comments from Slash saying that he would "love" to play the event, Adler said: "He's my brother. I know he's up for it. He wants to do it. I want to do it. just from what I hear, Izzy [Stradlin, guitarist]'s not gonna show up and Axl [Rose] will probably want to play with his hack band – his band of hacks." He went on to add: "Axl and His Hacks' – it shouldn't even be Guns N' Roses. He's just driving that name into the freakin' ground." The current line-up of Guns N' Roses are set to tour the UK later this year. The band, who are currently working on new material for the follow-up to 'Chinese Democracy', will play eight shows across the UK as part of a full European tour this May. They will play: Nottingham Capital FM Arena (May 19) Liverpool Echo Arena (20) Newcastle Metro Radio Arena (23) Glasgow SECC (25) Birmingham LG Arena (26) Manchester Evening News Arena (29) London O2 Arena (31, June 1)

Former Guns N’ Roses drummer Steven Adler has said that the band’s new line-up should be called ‘Axl and His Hacks’.

Alder was part of the band’s original line-up and will join up with singer Axl Rose and old members such as guitarist Slash and bassist Duff McKagan for their Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame induction, which takes place in Cleveland, Ohio on April 14, but the foursome will simply be attending and not performing.

According to Antimusic, Adler has now said that although he and Slash would like to play at the event, Rose is scuppering plans for an onstage reunion – and he also claimed that the current incarnation of the band weren’t worthy of its name.

Following earlier comments from Slash saying that he would “love” to play the event, Adler said: “He’s my brother. I know he’s up for it. He wants to do it. I want to do it. just from what I hear, Izzy [Stradlin, guitarist]’s not gonna show up and Axl [Rose] will probably want to play with his hack band – his band of hacks.”

He went on to add: “Axl and His Hacks’ – it shouldn’t even be Guns N’ Roses. He’s just driving that name into the freakin’ ground.”

The current line-up of Guns N’ Roses are set to tour the UK later this year. The band, who are currently working on new material for the follow-up to ‘Chinese Democracy’, will play eight shows across the UK as part of a full European tour this May.

They will play:

Nottingham Capital FM Arena (May 19)

Liverpool Echo Arena (20)

Newcastle Metro Radio Arena (23)

Glasgow SECC (25)

Birmingham LG Arena (26)

Manchester Evening News Arena (29)

London O2 Arena (31, June 1)

Paul McCartney joined onstage by Paul Weller, Ronnie Wood and Roger Daltrey

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Paul McCartney was joined onstage by Paul Weller, The Rolling Stones' guitarist Ronnie Wood and The Who singer Roger Daltrey during his set at London's Royal Albert Hall last night (March 29). The Beatles man, who was playing the show as part of this year's run of Teenage Cancer Trust gigs, was j...

Paul McCartney was joined onstage by Paul Weller, The Rolling Stones’ guitarist Ronnie Wood and The Who singer Roger Daltrey during his set at London’s Royal Albert Hall last night (March 29).

The Beatles man, who was playing the show as part of this year’s run of Teenage Cancer Trust gigs, was joined by the trio for a rendition of his classic hit ‘Get Back’. You can see video footage of the onstage collaboration by scrolling down to the bottom of the stage and clicking.

It was the second time in recent months that Wood has performed the track live with McCartney, after he joined him onstage at London’s O2 Arena in December last year.

The set, which featured 30 songs in all, drew from across McCartney’s career and included a cover of Jimi Hendrix‘s seminal single ‘Foxy Lady’. He aired 20 Beatles songs as well as cuts from Wings, The Firemen and ‘My Valentine’, a track from his latest studio album ‘Kisses On The Bottom’.

Paul McCartney played:

‘Magical Mystery Tour’

‘Junior’s Farm’

‘All My Loving’

‘Drive My Car’

‘Sing The Changes’

‘The Night Before’

‘Let Me Roll It’/’Foxy Lady’

‘Paperback Writer’

‘The Long And Winding Road’

‘Nineteen Hundred And Eighty-Five’

‘My Valentine’

‘Maybe I’m Amazed’

‘I’ve Just Seen a Face’

‘Blackbird’

‘Here Today’

‘Dance Tonight’

‘Eleanor Rigby’

‘Something’

‘Band On The Run’

‘Back In The USSR’

‘I’ve Got A Feeling’

‘Let It Be’

‘Hey Jude’

‘Day Tripper’

‘Get Back’

‘Yesterday’

‘Golden Slumbers’

‘Carry That Weight’

‘The End’

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o3r5xAkJHEM

Into The Abyss

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Werner Herzog's chilling Death Row doc... In 2001, Michael Perry and Jason Burkett committed triple homicide in Conroe, Texas, over a red Camero. When we meet them in Werner Herzog’s latest documentary, Into The Abyss, it’s the summer of 2010. Perry is on Death Row, eight days away from execution by lethal injection, while Burkett in serving life imprisonment. With grim testimonies from the victims’ families, the sheriff’s deputy, bystanders and a former captain of the Death House itself, you could easily accuse Herzog of lapsing into self-parody here: the misery is unrelenting. There is one amusing anecdote about squirrels, but other than that, this is bleak stuff. I’m reminded of Herzog’s quote from the 1982 documentary Burden Of Dreams: “The trees here are in misery, and the birds are in misery.” Superficially, Into The Abyss resembles one of those schlocky real-life crime shows you see on TV, with to-camera testimonies and contemporaneous footage (in this case, Herzog has access to the police’s crime scene videos). Indeed, there is a spin-off mini series called On Death Row. But, predictably, this is a more valid, forensic exercise. Herzog is less interested in the crime itself – a stupid, pointless thing – or what led Perry and Burkett to commit it (drugs, alcohol, poverty). "I've seen so many horrible things, I can't deal with them," says a bartender from a nearby town called, almost impossibly, Cut And Shoot, Texas. As you’d expect from the director of Fitzcarraldo, Aguirre: The Wrath Of God and Grizzly Man, Herzog is intent on highlighting the extremities of human behaviour. Interviewing Delbert Burkett, Jason’s father, himself serving several lengthy sentences, we are offered a clear-eyed reflection on wasted life. “Describe the feeling to me when you were handcuffed together with your own son,” Herzog, off camera, asks Burkett Snr. “I can’t,” he replies. “It don’t get much lower than that.” Michael Bonner

Werner Herzog’s chilling Death Row doc…

In 2001, Michael Perry and Jason Burkett committed triple homicide in Conroe, Texas, over a red Camero. When we meet them in Werner Herzog’s latest documentary, Into The Abyss, it’s the summer of 2010. Perry is on Death Row, eight days away from execution by lethal injection, while Burkett in serving life imprisonment. With grim testimonies from the victims’ families, the sheriff’s deputy, bystanders and a former captain of the Death House itself, you could easily accuse Herzog of lapsing into self-parody here: the misery is unrelenting. There is one amusing anecdote about squirrels, but other than that, this is bleak stuff. I’m reminded of Herzog’s quote from the 1982 documentary Burden Of Dreams: “The trees here are in misery, and the birds are in misery.”

Superficially, Into The Abyss resembles one of those schlocky real-life crime shows you see on TV, with to-camera testimonies and contemporaneous footage (in this case, Herzog has access to the police’s crime scene videos). Indeed, there is a spin-off mini series called On Death Row. But, predictably, this is a more valid, forensic exercise. Herzog is less interested in the crime itself – a stupid, pointless thing – or what led Perry and Burkett to commit it (drugs, alcohol, poverty). “I’ve seen so many horrible things, I can’t deal with them,” says a bartender from a nearby town called, almost impossibly, Cut And Shoot, Texas.

As you’d expect from the director of Fitzcarraldo, Aguirre: The Wrath Of God and Grizzly Man, Herzog is intent on highlighting the extremities of human behaviour. Interviewing Delbert Burkett, Jason’s father, himself serving several lengthy sentences, we are offered a clear-eyed reflection on wasted life. “Describe the feeling to me when you were handcuffed together with your own son,” Herzog, off camera, asks Burkett Snr. “I can’t,” he replies. “It don’t get much lower than that.”

Michael Bonner

Manchester’s Hacienda nightclub recreated in new London exhibition

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Parts of Manchester's legendary Hacienda nightclub have recreated for a new design exhibition. The exhibition is currently being held in London's Victoria and Albert museum and features the club's dancefloor, bollards and trademark striped girders, reports BBC News. The recreation is part of the museum's British Design 1948-2012 show, which showcases the iconic design in the UK since the 1948 Olympics. The exhibition features various elements from the club's design, created by architect Ben Kelly and designer Peter Saville, including the neon Kim Philby Bar sign. The Hacienda was opened in 1982 by Factory Records founder Tony Wilson and continued to function until 1997 when it closed after the label ran into financial trouble. The club hosted legendary performances from The Smiths and New Order as well as Madonna's first ever UK show. The club was recently celebrated in a book by former New Order bassist Peter Hook, which is titled Hacienda: How Not To Run A Club. To find out more about the exhibition, visit VAM.ac.uk.

Parts of Manchester’s legendary Hacienda nightclub have recreated for a new design exhibition.

The exhibition is currently being held in London’s Victoria and Albert museum and features the club’s dancefloor, bollards and trademark striped girders, reports BBC News.

The recreation is part of the museum’s British Design 1948-2012 show, which showcases the iconic design in the UK since the 1948 Olympics. The exhibition features various elements from the club’s design, created by architect Ben Kelly and designer Peter Saville, including the neon Kim Philby Bar sign.

The Hacienda was opened in 1982 by Factory Records founder Tony Wilson and continued to function until 1997 when it closed after the label ran into financial trouble. The club hosted legendary performances from The Smiths and New Order as well as Madonna‘s first ever UK show.

The club was recently celebrated in a book by former New Order bassist Peter Hook, which is titled Hacienda: How Not To Run A Club.

To find out more about the exhibition, visit VAM.ac.uk.

The Walkmen announce release of new album ‘Heaven’

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The Walkmen will release their brand new album, 'Heaven', on June 4. The New York band worked with producer Phil Ek (Fleet Foxes, The Shins, Modest Mouse) on their seventh album, which features Fleet Foxes' Robin Pecknold contributing harmonies to two tracks. Of the follow up to 2010's 'Lisbon',...

The Walkmen will release their brand new album, ‘Heaven’, on June 4.

The New York band worked with producer Phil Ek (Fleet Foxes, The Shins, Modest Mouse) on their seventh album, which features Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold contributing harmonies to two tracks.

Of the follow up to 2010’s ‘Lisbon’, frontman Hamilton Leithauser says: “We felt like it was time to make a bigger, more generous statement…”.

“There can be something brittle about our sound,” bandmember Paul Maroon said. In regards to working with Phil Ek he added: “He made it just a little bit warmer, a little bit stronger. When I play it in my car, it sounds strong, which I love.”

The Walkmen marked their 10 year anniversary with a series of anniversary shows in the US earlier this year. They released their debut LP ‘Everyone Who Pretended To Like Me Is Gone’ on vinyl for the first time ever in January.

Only 1,000 copies of their 2002 debut were pressed for the vinyl release. Further information can be found about the record at Thewalkmen.com.

Iggy Pop: ‘Music today is like cheap drinks in a bad supermarket’

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Iggy Pop has said that music today is like "cheap drinks you get in a bad supermarket". The Stooges man, who is the ambassador for Record Store Day 2012, posted a video on the official Record Store Day site suggesting that modern rockers lack authenticity. He said: "I think there are some ages,...

Iggy Pop has said that music today is like “cheap drinks you get in a bad supermarket”.

The Stooges man, who is the ambassador for Record Store Day 2012, posted a video on the official Record Store Day site suggesting that modern rockers lack authenticity.

He said: “I think there are some ages, like the one we’re living in, when the game is kind of rigged towards products that contain music – sort of like those cheap drinks you get in a bad supermarket where it says, ‘Contains 10% juice.'”

He went on to add: “There’s a lot of stuff out there with a bit of music to it, and I think that’s OK, but it reminds me of how bad it was to turn on American Bandstand in the 50s and see all the endless, gutless, dickless imitations of Elvis that the American industry decided to push on the kids.”

Last year, Iggy Pop revealed that he was working on new material with the Stooges, specifically with James Williamson, the guitarist in the band. The punk legend said that he and Williamson penned 10 tracks together at his house in Miami earlier this year and would continue to “keep writing” new songs, although he refused to confirm whether they would be released as a studio album.

This year’s Record Store Day takes place on April 21 and will see exclusive releases and special shows to celebrate independent record shops.

Speaking about his role as ambassador, Iggy said: “I got my name, my musical education and my personality all from working at a record store during my tender years. Small indie shops have always been a mix of theatre and laboratory. In the 50s and 60s the teen kids used to gather after school at these places to listen free to the latest singles and see if they liked the beat.”

The likes of Arctic Monkeys, Kasabian, The Clash, Laura Marling and Miles Kane will all issue new releases for this year’s Record store Day. For more information, visit recordstoreday.com.

The Black Keys’ Patrick Carney: ‘I only talk shit in interviews to entertain my bandmate’

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The Black Keys' Patrick Carney has claimed that he only talks "shit" in interviews to entertain his bandmate, singer Dan Auerbach. Speaking to Spinner, the drummer revealed that most of his barbed comments – with recent victims of his vicious tongue-lashings including Spotify's Sean Parker and ...

The Black KeysPatrick Carney has claimed that he only talks “shit” in interviews to entertain his bandmate, singer Dan Auerbach.

Speaking to Spinner, the drummer revealed that most of his barbed comments – with recent victims of his vicious tongue-lashings including Spotify‘s Sean Parker and Nickelback – were only made to “get a rise” out of the singer.

Earlier this year, Carney said that rock’n’roll was dying because of the popularity of Nickelback and described the Canadian band as “shit”, although he later apologised for his comments.

When asked if the press had been constantly asking them about his comments, he said: “Just that one interview in Canada. I didn’t mean to single out that band. I tried to apologise. I don’t want to seem like I don’t stand by my comments from earlier. Whatever. It’s like someone acting surprised that I don’t like a band like that. It’s like them being surprised that I don’t watch The 700 Club every Sunday. What the fuck?”

When asked what Auerbach’s reaction to his comments was, meanwhile, he added: “That’s usually why I end up saying retarded shit sometimes, is just to get a rise out of him.”

The drummer also hinted that the band could release a live album in the future, and said that he and Auerbach were planning on starting work on a new LP soon. “We booked some studio time for two weeks in July,” he revealed. “So I know we’re going to start working on the next album in a couple of months. We haven’t really talked about it. We just want to get in the studio and start.”

In addition to describing Napster founder Sean Parker as an “asshole” earlier this week (March 26), Carney also took a verbal pop at Carl Barat in December last year, when he claimed there was nobody he would rather punch in the face than the former Libertines co-frontman.

The Black Keys released their last studio album, ‘El Camino’, in December last year. The LP is their seventh studio effort and the follow-up to their 2010 record, ‘Brothers’.

Paul Simon to release 25th anniversary editions of ‘Graceland’

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Paul Simon has announced that he is reissuing his seminal LP 'Graceland' to mark its 25th birthday this June. The singer, who announced earlier this month that he will play the record in its entirety at this year's Hard Rock Calling in Hyde Park on July 15, will re-release the album on both CD an...

Paul Simon has announced that he is reissuing his seminal LP ‘Graceland’ to mark its 25th birthday this June.

The singer, who announced earlier this month that he will play the record in its entirety at this year’s Hard Rock Calling in Hyde Park on July 15, will re-release the album on both CD and vinyl on June 4.

The vinyl version comes with three extra songs, while the CD package includes five bonus tracks, an audio narrative titled ‘The Story Of Graceland’ narrated by the singer, and a DVD featuring the new documentary film Under African Skies, which sees Simon revisit South Africa, where he made the album 25 years later.

It will also be released as a special collector’s edition boxset, which comes with a DVD of Simon’s 1987 ‘African Concert’ from Zimbabwe, an 80-page deluxe book, a ‘Graceland’ poster and a handwritten lyrics pad. An ultra-deluxe boxset, meanwhile, will also boast the album on vinyl and a signed poster. For more information, see Paulsimon.com.

Simon recorded ‘Graceland’ in South Africa in 1985 after being inspired by South African township music. In doing so, he was accused of breaching the cultural boycott against the ruling regime. Despite this, ‘Graceland’ went on to sell 14 million copies worldwide and is often credited as Simon’s finest album, with hits such as ‘You Can Call Me Al’ and ‘The Boy In The Bubble’.

This April marks 25 years since Simon brought his original ‘Graceland’ tour to the UK, where he played six sold-out shows at London’s Royal Albert Hall. The series of gigs were blighted with controversy as demonstrators, including Billy Bragg and The Specials’ Jerry Dammers, protested Simon breaking the ANC’s cultural boycott of apartheid-era South Africa while making the record.

For the Hyde Park gig, Simon will once again be joined on-stage by Ladysmith Black Mambazo, the South African male choir who appeared on the original album recording.

Scroll down and click to view the trailer for Under African Skies.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JPFESqwh0ks

The Who’s Roger Daltrey speaks about planned collaboration with Paul Weller – video

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The Who frontman Roger Daltrey has revealed that he and Paul Weller are planning a future collaboration. The singer, who was speaking to NME, responded to a question about if he had any current recording plans by saying: "Paul Weller's been talking about an idea that he's been working on, which I...

The Who frontman Roger Daltrey has revealed that he and Paul Weller are planning a future collaboration.

The singer, who was speaking to NME, responded to a question about if he had any current recording plans by saying: “Paul Weller’s been talking about an idea that he’s been working on, which I’d love him to do. I’ve been very bad at finding material and he’s got this idea and he’s always said to me ‘Why don’t you sing more?’ and I always say ‘Find me some material’. So we’ll see if we can come up with something.”

Daltrey also spoke about The Who‘s chances of touring again, saying: “It’s five years on since we last toured heavily, it’s only just over a year since we last played together.”

He continued: “Equally, I’m not the same as I was five years ago, things need to move on and change and you need to reinvent things. It all depends on whether it feels right.”

The singer was speaking ahead of the Teenage Cancer Trust gigs which are currently ongoing. Daltrey is patron of the charity and is actively involved in organising the gigs.

The Concerts for Teenage Cancer Trust gigs are currently taking place at London’s Royal Albert Hall. Paul McCartney headlines the venue tonight (March 29), with Example and Pulp playing the following days.

The line up for the Teenage Cancer Trust gigs is as follows:

Paul McCartney (29)

Example (30)

Pulp (31)

Professor Green and Jessie J (April 1)

Comedy evening with Jason Manford and special guests (2)

Florence And The Machine (3)

The Flaming Lips’ Wayne Coyne: ‘I’m in talks to be on Ke$ha’s new album’

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The Flaming Lips' frontman Wayne Coyne has revealed that he could feature on Ke$ha's second album. The 'Tik Tok' singer is one of the many star-studded collaborators who has contributed to the Lips' Record Store Day project 'The Flaming Lips And Heavy Fwends' and, in an interview with Rolling Sto...

The Flaming Lips‘ frontman Wayne Coyne has revealed that he could feature on Ke$ha‘s second album.

The ‘Tik Tok’ singer is one of the many star-studded collaborators who has contributed to the Lips’ Record Store Day project ‘The Flaming Lips And Heavy Fwends’ and, in an interview with Rolling Stone, Coyne said that he could now return the favour by working with Ke$ha on her next LP.

He said: “I’m talking with Ke$ha about doing some tracks on her new record. We knew that she was a fan. She’s a lot of fun and crazy and open to ideas and she’s creative. She’s all these things that you don’t know.”

Coyne, who also said he was eager to record a collaboration with TV On The Radio and Diplo, revealed earlier this week (March 27) that they will be using the blood of some of the contributors to ‘The Flaming Lips And Heavy Fwends’ in the a limited-edition run of packaging.

Apparently Coyne has so far collected blood from Neon Indian, Prefuse 73 and Ke$ha. Only five or six blood discs will be made and, says the singer, will likely be bought by “interested rich Flaming Lips people”.