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Paul Weller: ‘I think I’m an alcoholic’

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Paul Weller has discussed his battle with drink, stating: "I think I'm an alcoholic". In an interview with the The Times, the singer revealed he had given up drinking over a year ago because he feared that his hedonistic lifestyle was going to kill him. Weller, who releases his new album 'Sonik...

Paul Weller has discussed his battle with drink, stating: “I think I’m an alcoholic”.

In an interview with the The Times, the singer revealed he had given up drinking over a year ago because he feared that his hedonistic lifestyle was going to kill him.

Weller, who releases his new album ‘Sonik Kicks’ on March 26, said: “I feel fitter now. I go to the gym. Stopped drinking about 16 months ago… Time for a lifestyle change. I couldn’t keep doing it. It was killing me… I miss the silliness… I’m not one of those people who can just have a couple of drinks. If it’s two, it might as well be 20. If it’s 20, it might as well be 40…”

He went on to add: “I think I’m an alcoholic, definitely. Yeah. I would have thought so. It’s hard to know where a pisshead becomes an alkie. Fine line. But yeah, I think so.”

‘Sonik Kicks’ comes out on March 26 and contains a total of 14 tracks. It also includes guest appearances from Noel Gallagher and Blur‘s Graham Coxon. You can hear a track from the album, which is titled ‘Around The Lake’, by visiting the singer’s official website Paulweller.com.

Weller will play five new London shows to promote the album’s release. He will headline the UK capital’s Roundhouse venue on March 18, 19, 20, 21 and 22. Weller will perform ‘Sonik Kicks’ in full at the shows.

Radiohead announce more dates for ‘The King Of Limbs’ world tour

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Radiohead have announced more dates for their world tour in support of their latest album 'The King Of Limbs'. The band, who scheduled a string of shows in New Zealand last week, will play a second set of US dates in May and June. The new run of shows kick off on May 29 at the Concast Center in ...

Radiohead have announced more dates for their world tour in support of their latest album ‘The King Of Limbs’.

The band, who scheduled a string of shows in New Zealand last week, will play a second set of US dates in May and June.

The new run of shows kick off on May 29 at the Concast Center in Massachusetts and runs until June 16 when the Oxford band will play Downsview Park in Toronto. The tour includes 11 new shows in total and will take place either side of the band’s headline slot at Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival in Manchester, Tennessee.

The band have also booked assorted European shows and festival appearances throughout the summer, including slots at Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, Fuji Rock Festival and Bilbao BBK Live festival. They have also added a new date in Germany at the Lanxess Arena in Cologne on October 15.

The band are expected to confirm UK dates in the next few weeks and have previously hinted that the band will play arena shows than outdoor dates. The band last toured the UK in 2008.

Arcade Fire to release ‘Sprawl II’/’Ready To Start’ remixes for Record Store Day

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Arcade Fire have announced that they will be releasing remixes of their tracks 'Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)' and 'Ready To Start' to celebrate this year's Record Store Day. The Canadian band will release Damian Taylor remixes of both tracks on 12" vinyl on April 21, with copies are lim...

Arcade Fire have announced that they will be releasing remixes of their tracks ‘Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)’ and ‘Ready To Start’ to celebrate this year’s Record Store Day.

The Canadian band will release Damian Taylor remixes of both tracks on 12″ vinyl on April 21, with copies are limited to 1,000.

Arcade Fire released ‘Abraham’s Daughter’, their new track from the soundtrack to the new fantasy film The Hunger Games last week – scroll down and click below to hear it.

The track will play over the dystopian thriller’s closing credits and was recorded by the Canadian band last month. The film itself will also feature a track titled ‘Horn Of Plenty’ which has been written and recorded by Arcade Fire’s Win Butler and Regine Chassagne.

The Hunger Games is set to be released on March 23 in the UK and stars Winter’s Bone actress Jennifer Lawrence, Woody Harrelson and Elizabeth Banks.

Arcade Fire are currently working on the follow-up to their 2010 album ‘The Suburbs’.

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

Jack White makes solo live debut on ‘Saturday Night Live’ – video

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Jack White launched his live solo career on long-running US sketch show Saturday Night Live last night (March 3) The former White Stripes man performed two tracks off of his debut solo album 'Blunderbuss', due for release on April 23, on the show guest hosted by Lindsay Lohan. White also debuted...

Jack White launched his live solo career on long-running US sketch show Saturday Night Live last night (March 3)

The former White Stripes man performed two tracks off of his debut solo album ‘Blunderbuss’, due for release on April 23, on the show guest hosted by Lindsay Lohan.

White also debuted two new bands – one all-female, one all-male.

Scroll down the page and click to see videos of Jack White playing debut solo single ‘Love Interruption’ and the previously unheard ‘Sixteen Saltines’.

For ‘Love Interruption’, he was backed by a six-piece all-female six-piece band, while ‘Sixteen Saltines’ featured a five-piece all-male band, including a violin player.

The latter is a heavier rock song in a similar vein to that of The White Stripes and had White throwing himself around the stage.

The appearance precedes White’s debut solo live shows, which will take place at the end of this month in United States.

Jack White returns to the UK in the summer and will play at Radio 1’s Hackney Weekend on June 23-24, alongside Lana Del Rey and The Maccabees.

‘Blunderbuss’ is produced by the man himself and recorded at his Third Man Studio in Nashville.

To learn more about Jack White’s career, head to iTunes.com.apple.com/nme-icons, where you can purchase a special NME iPad app detailing the celebrated singer/guitarist/producer’s past 15 years in rock’n’roll.

A one-off NME Icons special issue magazine dedicated to White is also available – see Backstreet-merch.com for details of how to purchase.

Alex James: ‘Blur will unveil a tear-jerking new song at Hyde Park reunion gig’

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Blur will play a brand new song during their headlining slot at the Olympic Closing Ceremony Celebration Concert in London later this year - but will not be recording a new album, bassist Alex James has confirmed. On August 12, the reunited Britpop band will return to Hyde Park, the scene of thre...

Blur will play a brand new song during their headlining slot at the Olympic Closing Ceremony Celebration Concert in London later this year – but will not be recording a new album, bassist Alex James has confirmed.

On August 12, the reunited Britpop band will return to Hyde Park, the scene of three of their reunion shows of 2009, for a gig which will also feature The Specials and New Order.

Speaking about their plans to include a new song in the setlist on tonight’s (March 4) episode of Top Gear, James said that the unnamed track was “like a hymn, a real tear-jerker”.

He told host Jeremy Clarkson: “We’ve got a new song to unveil, I just listened to it this morning.”

It was unclear whether James was referring to ‘Under The Westway’ – which frontman Damon Albarn and guitarist Graham Coxon played during a two-song set at a pre-Brits charity gig for War Child at O2 Sheperd’s Bush Empire in London last month – or another new song.

When later asked by Clarkson whether there’s a new album on the horizon, James responded: “No, there’s not.”

The bassist also spoke about Blur’s five-song set at the Brit Awards 12 days ago (February 21), where they picked up the Outstanding Contribution To Music award, commenting: “It was utterly magnificent to get back together and smash those songs out again.”

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.”

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

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

Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwood’s album with Polish composer Krzysztof Penderecki streaming online

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Radiohead's Jonny Greenwood's album with Polish composer Krzysztof Penderecki is now streaming online in full. The guitarist's classical side-project, which is due for release on March 13, is being streamed at NPR.org. The album, which was made last autumn in Poland, consists of two pieces by Pe...

Radiohead‘s Jonny Greenwood‘s album with Polish composer Krzysztof Penderecki is now streaming online in full.

The guitarist’s classical side-project, which is due for release on March 13, is being streamed at NPR.org.

The album, which was made last autumn in Poland, consists of two pieces by Penderecki from the early ’60s and two by Greenwood including ‘Popcorn Superhet Receiver’, which featured in the guitarist’s film score for There Will Be Blood.

You can watch footage of a live performance from Greenwood’s part of the album by scrolling and clicking below.

The full tracklisting for ‘Jonny Greenwood/Krzysztof Penderecki’ is as follows:

‘Threnody For The Victims Of Hiroshima’

‘Popcorn Superhet Receiver: Part 1’

‘Popcorn Superhet Receiver: Part 2 A’

‘Popcorn Superhet Receiver: Part 2 B’

‘Popcorn Superhet Receiver: Part 3’

‘Polymorphia’

’48 Responses To Polymorphia: Es ist Genug’

’48 Responses To Polymorphia: Ranj’

’48 Responses To Polymorphia: Overtones’

’48 Responses To Polymorphia: Scan’

’48 Responses To Polymorphia: Baton Sparks’

’48 Responses To Polymorphia: Three Oak Leaves’

’48 Responses To Polymorphia: Overhang’

’48 Responses To Polymorphia: Bridge’

’48 Responses To Polymorphia: Pacay Tree’

Greenwood is also currently working on the score to the film The Master.

The movie is a drama set in the ’50s and is confirmed to star Philip Seymour Hoffman, Amy Adams and Joaquin Phoenix. It is due to be released sometime in 2013. The film is being directed by Paul Thomas Anderson, who also made There Will Be Blood.

Jay Farrar, Will Johnson, Anders Parks, Yim Yames – New Multitudes

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Alt Americana supergroup finish what their Daddy started. Huntington’s disease began its slow, remorseless work of destroying Woody Guthrie physically and mentally, in the late 1940s, just prior to the advent of the technology that might have permitted the capture of definitive, more or less modern-sounding versions of his songs. However, the fact that Guthrie’s original canon exists primarily as scratchy, lo-fi, live-to-tape performance – and unrecorded, unfinished scrawlings in notebooks – has kind of worked to its benefit, permitting uncountable successors the space to rework and interpret. Farrar, Johnson, Parker and Yames indisputably possess the necessary qualifications. Their combined histories in Son Volt, Gob Iron, Uncle Tupelo, Centro-matic and My Morning Jacket were at least sufficient to impress Nora Guthrie, Woody’s daughter and the custodian of his archives, who allowed the quartet to fossick through her father’s scrapbooks in search of snippets worth vivifying. New Multitudes is scarcely the first such project. Billy Bragg and Wilco (alma mater of Farrar’s former Uncle Tupelo compadre Jeff Tweedy) recorded two sets of previously unheard Guthrie lyrics under the Mermaid Avenue marque. Jonatha Brooke did something similar with The Works, The Klezmatics on Wonder Wheel and Happy Joyous Hanukkah. All faced the same challenge – that of paying due respect to a titanic figure while summoning the nerve to stamp their own mark on the material. Farrar, Johnson, Parker and Yames manage this with almost supernatural ease, though this may say at least as much about the adaptability and accessibility of Guthrie’s writing as it does about them. There are twelve tracks on New Multitudes (and a further eleven on a bonus disc issued with the limited edition). In no case have messrs Farrar, Johnson, Parker and Yames done the easy and obvious thing (ersatz campfire singalong) or the obtuse and perverse thing (attempting to haul Guthrie’s words beyond their natural milieu of recognisable Americana). Opening track “Hoping Machine”, indeed, is irresistibly evocative of Uncle Tupelo at their more stately, Farrar lending a song of optimism-despite-it-all (“Don’t let any earthly calamity knock your dreamer and your hoping machine”) an appropriately striving melody and hesitant arrangement. The four collaborators split lead vocal duties equally. In general, Farrar’s songs tend toward the gently pugnacious, Johnson’s to the sombre and guttural, Parker’s to amiably ragged country rock, Yames’ to ambitious excursions to the edge of where Guthrie’s songs might feel comfortable (“Changing World” is rendered as a punky, snotty lament that sounds curiously, and curiously aptly, like Wreckless Eric, while “My Revolutionary Mind” is a string-soaked torch ballad that builds to a cacophonous climax before cutting out with a suddenness unrivalled since Dinosaur Jr’s “Just Like Heaven”). Inevitably, “New Multitudes” is essentially an exercise in imagining how these songs might have sounded had their author lived long enough to record them. It says much for the chops and the passion brought to the project by the quartet, that Woody Guthrie also becomes plausibly a Slobberbone-style alt.country snarler (Johnson’s “VD City”), a Jackson Browne-variety west coast balladeer (Parker’s “Fly High”), a swaggering Tom Petty-ish southern rocker (Parker’s “Angel’s Blues”), or a reverent dustblown roots crooner very much in the vein of, funnily enough, Son Volt (Farrar’s closing title track). Any approach of Guthrie’s legacy is a step into a long, dark shadow – he is, along with his approximate contemporaries Robert Johnson and Hank Williams, no more or less than a founding father of modern American popular song. But his work endures because of its essential big-hearted hospitality – and Farrar, Johnson, Parker and Yames have made themselves right at home. Q&A Jay Farrar How would you quantify the continuing influence of Guthrie on American music? Woody seems to be that elemental source that had a ripple effect on American music. The ethos and musical aesthetic of Woody influenced the folk movement of the 1950s, which in turn inspired Bob Dylan. Woody might not have been the first person to write protest songs but he did show that music can have a powerful effect for generations down the line. There is a timeless message in Woody¹s music. When Woody didn't like the status quo he wrote a song with the intent to change the status quo. Andrew Mueller How intimidating ­ or otherwise ­ is the task of writing music for Guthrie’s lyrics? Maybe the initial walk up the steps to the archives was intimidating, but after finding inspiration in Woody¹s philosophy and work ethic, the music seemed to already be written. A connection would jump out with a certain set of lyrics or notes and the music would just be there. How much unused Guthrie stuff is still awaiting examination? Woody was prolific in a way that all writers can aspire to. Will, Anders, Jim and I only made it through a fraction of the material at the archives. The archives are ready for the next in line. How did you go about reconciling the influences and ideas of the four contributors? There was never any master plan and this project came to fruition through happenstance and visceral propulsion. From the start it seemed an approach that didn¹t focus on any singular theme or sound would be the best. There is a breadth and scope to Woody¹s artwork and songs that was apparent after visiting the archives. Woody wasn¹t afraid to tackle any subject from STDs to prostitution to street drugs. I guess our job here, which we found along the way, was to show another side of Woody Guthrie. Interview by Andrew Mueller

Alt Americana supergroup finish what their Daddy started.

Huntington’s disease began its slow, remorseless work of destroying Woody Guthrie physically and mentally, in the late 1940s, just prior to the advent of the technology that might have permitted the capture of definitive, more or less modern-sounding versions of his songs. However, the fact that Guthrie’s original canon exists primarily as scratchy, lo-fi, live-to-tape performance – and unrecorded, unfinished scrawlings in notebooks – has kind of worked to its benefit, permitting uncountable successors the space to rework and interpret.

Farrar, Johnson, Parker and Yames indisputably possess the necessary qualifications. Their combined histories in Son Volt, Gob Iron, Uncle Tupelo, Centro-matic and My Morning Jacket were at least sufficient to impress Nora Guthrie, Woody’s daughter and the custodian of his archives, who allowed the quartet to fossick through her father’s scrapbooks in search of snippets worth vivifying.

New Multitudes is scarcely the first such project. Billy Bragg and Wilco (alma mater of Farrar’s former Uncle Tupelo compadre Jeff Tweedy) recorded two sets of previously unheard Guthrie lyrics under the Mermaid Avenue marque. Jonatha Brooke did something similar with The Works, The Klezmatics on Wonder Wheel and Happy Joyous Hanukkah. All faced the same challenge – that of paying due respect to a titanic figure while summoning the nerve to stamp their own mark on the material. Farrar, Johnson, Parker and Yames manage this with almost supernatural ease, though this may say at least as much about the adaptability and accessibility of Guthrie’s writing as it does about them.

There are twelve tracks on New Multitudes (and a further eleven on a bonus disc issued with the limited edition). In no case have messrs Farrar, Johnson, Parker and Yames done the easy and obvious thing (ersatz campfire singalong) or the obtuse and perverse thing (attempting to haul Guthrie’s words beyond their natural milieu of recognisable Americana). Opening track “Hoping Machine”, indeed, is irresistibly evocative of Uncle Tupelo at their more stately, Farrar lending a song of optimism-despite-it-all (“Don’t let any earthly calamity knock your dreamer and your hoping machine”) an appropriately striving melody and hesitant arrangement.

The four collaborators split lead vocal duties equally. In general, Farrar’s songs tend toward the gently pugnacious, Johnson’s to the sombre and guttural, Parker’s to amiably ragged country rock, Yames’ to ambitious excursions to the edge of where Guthrie’s songs might feel comfortable (“Changing World” is rendered as a punky, snotty lament that sounds curiously, and curiously aptly, like Wreckless Eric, while “My Revolutionary Mind” is a string-soaked torch ballad that builds to a cacophonous climax before cutting out with a suddenness unrivalled since Dinosaur Jr’s “Just Like Heaven”).

Inevitably, “New Multitudes” is essentially an exercise in imagining how these songs might have sounded had their author lived long enough to record them. It says much for the chops and the passion brought to the project by the quartet, that Woody Guthrie also becomes plausibly a Slobberbone-style alt.country snarler (Johnson’s “VD City”), a Jackson Browne-variety west coast balladeer (Parker’s “Fly High”), a swaggering Tom Petty-ish southern rocker (Parker’s “Angel’s Blues”), or a reverent dustblown roots crooner very much in the vein of, funnily enough, Son Volt (Farrar’s closing title track).

Any approach of Guthrie’s legacy is a step into a long, dark shadow – he is, along with his approximate contemporaries Robert Johnson and Hank Williams, no more or less than a founding father of modern American popular song. But his work endures because of its essential big-hearted hospitality – and Farrar, Johnson, Parker and Yames have made themselves right at home.

Q&A

Jay Farrar

How would you quantify the continuing influence of Guthrie on American music?

Woody seems to be that elemental source that had a ripple effect on American music. The ethos and musical aesthetic of Woody influenced the folk movement of the 1950s, which in turn inspired Bob Dylan. Woody might not have been the first person to write protest songs but he did show that music can have a powerful effect for generations down the line. There is a timeless message in Woody¹s music. When Woody didn’t like the status quo he wrote a song with the intent to change the status quo.

Andrew Mueller

How intimidating ­ or otherwise ­ is the task of writing music for Guthrie’s lyrics?

Maybe the initial walk up the steps to the archives was intimidating, but after finding inspiration in Woody¹s philosophy and work ethic, the music seemed to already be written. A connection would jump out with a certain set of lyrics or notes and the music would just be there.

How much unused Guthrie stuff is still awaiting examination?

Woody was prolific in a way that all writers can aspire to. Will, Anders,

Jim and I only made it through a fraction of the material at the archives.

The archives are ready for the next in line.

How did you go about reconciling the influences and ideas of the four

contributors?

There was never any master plan and this project came to fruition through happenstance and visceral propulsion. From the start it seemed an approach that didn¹t focus on any singular theme or sound would be the best. There is a breadth and scope to Woody¹s artwork and songs that was apparent after visiting the archives. Woody wasn¹t afraid to tackle any subject from STDs to prostitution to street drugs. I guess our job here, which we found along the way, was to show another side of Woody Guthrie.

Interview by Andrew Mueller

Game Of Thrones Series 1

It may inhabit a fantasy world far away, but HBO’s epic saga stalks familiar territory... Sky Atlantic’s launch promotion last year largely focused on two offerings courtesy of safe hands in the HBO stable. Boardwalk Empire (“from the makers of The Sopranos”) and David Simon’s post-Wire series Treme came pre-packaged with hallmarks of quality, presumably seen as easier “sells” than a drama based on a series of fantasy novels. However, to dismiss Game Of Thrones as a run-of-the-mill swords-and-sorcery yarn that might have characters from The Big Bang Theory coveting action figures and tie-in role-playing software, would be a mistake. Not that creators David Benioff and DB Weiss played down the other-worldly elements of George RR Martin’s original A Song Of Fire And Ice novels, but neither did they ignore the stories’ broader themes. Motifs familiar to earlier HBO successes are never far from the surface, be they political intrigue and power struggles (The Wire, The Sopranos, Deadwood) or troubled dynasties seemingly on the verge of collapse (The Sopranos again, Carnivale, Six Feet Under). This is meaty, multi-layered and most definitely grown-up television, its graphic sex and violence confidently underpinned by weightier concerns, not to mention superb direction, writing and performances. Four rival dynasties battle for control over the Seven Kingdoms of Westeros, unforgiving landscapes where seasons last for years rather than months. As the series opens, our chief protagonist is Lord Eddard “Ned” Stark (chiselled jaw and steely eyes provided by Sean Bean), a man with family headaches at home and more pressing life-or-death issues of the fields of war. Elsewhere across the Seven Kingdoms, Prince Viserys Targaryen (Harry Lloyd) forges a new alliance to regain the Iron Throne. Small wonder Benioff himself, perhaps only half-jokingly, describes the show as “The Sopranos in Middle Earth.” The “fantasy” tag may have initially been off-putting to some, but word-of-mouth boosted viewing figures and rapidly dispelled any notions that Game Of Thrones belonged in the same category as Xena or Hercules in the 1990s, or more recent 300 knock-offs like Spartacus. The action may take place in an ancient make-believe world, but the brutality, corruption, and all manner of other human failings are as tangibly real as in any modern-day drama. EXTRAS: Featurettes, commentaries, character profiles. Terry Staunton

It may inhabit a fantasy world far away, but HBO’s epic saga stalks familiar territory…

Sky Atlantic’s launch promotion last year largely focused on two offerings courtesy of safe hands in the HBO stable. Boardwalk Empire (“from the makers of The Sopranos”) and David Simon’s post-Wire series Treme came pre-packaged with hallmarks of quality, presumably seen as easier “sells” than a drama based on a series of fantasy novels.

However, to dismiss Game Of Thrones as a run-of-the-mill swords-and-sorcery yarn that might have characters from The Big Bang Theory coveting action figures and tie-in role-playing software, would be a mistake. Not that creators David Benioff and DB Weiss played down the other-worldly elements of George RR Martin’s original A Song Of Fire And Ice novels, but neither did they ignore the stories’ broader themes.

Motifs familiar to earlier HBO successes are never far from the surface, be they political intrigue and power struggles (The Wire, The Sopranos, Deadwood) or troubled dynasties seemingly on the verge of collapse (The Sopranos again, Carnivale, Six Feet Under). This is meaty, multi-layered and most definitely grown-up television, its graphic sex and violence confidently underpinned by weightier concerns, not to mention superb direction, writing and performances.

Four rival dynasties battle for control over the Seven Kingdoms of Westeros, unforgiving landscapes where seasons last for years rather than months. As the series opens, our chief protagonist is Lord Eddard “Ned” Stark (chiselled jaw and steely eyes provided by Sean Bean), a man with family headaches at home and more pressing life-or-death issues of the fields of war. Elsewhere across the Seven Kingdoms, Prince Viserys Targaryen (Harry Lloyd) forges a new alliance to regain the Iron Throne. Small wonder Benioff himself, perhaps only half-jokingly, describes the show as “The Sopranos in Middle Earth.”

The “fantasy” tag may have initially been off-putting to some, but word-of-mouth boosted viewing figures and rapidly dispelled any notions that Game Of Thrones belonged in the same category as Xena or Hercules in the 1990s, or more recent 300 knock-offs like Spartacus. The action may take place in an ancient make-believe world, but the brutality, corruption, and all manner of other human failings are as tangibly real as in any modern-day drama.

EXTRAS: Featurettes, commentaries, character profiles.

Terry Staunton

Bruce Springsteen – Wrecking Ball

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An angry Boss attacks big business on his grim but brilliant 17th studio album... Bruce Springsteen has never been shy of confronting the gloomy and unpalatable downside of capitalism - indeed, some would say he rather revels in the bitter tears of working-class defeat - but he's never before sounded quite so bitter and angry as he does on Wrecking Ball. The contrast with his last studio album, 2009's Working On A Dream, is instructive: on that record, flush with the renewed hope furnished by Obama's election, he meditated optimistically upon the possibility of change, alongside the usual complement of blue-collar tableaux, with even a few cheery, almost euphoric, contemplations of a possibly positive future. Here, the few glimmers of light are themselves occluded by curtains of bitter irony and weary acknowledgement of defeat. It's as if this most engagingly demagogic of American underclass standard-bearers is having to fight grimly to stave off the lure of nihilism. On first hearing, the opener "We Take Care Of Our Own" sounds like a typical Springsteen anthem of uplift, a celebration of fellowship and communality that one can see being hijacked by politicians the next time Navy Seals pluck an American citizen from the clutches of Somalian pirates, or take out some high-level jihadist. "Wherever this flag flies," he sings, "we take care of our own". But then you start hearing what he's actually saying, and it's another "Born In The USA" moment, as he pours out condemnatory question after question: "Where's the promise from sea to shining sea? Where's the work that will set my hands and my soul free?". And the song's most potent image, "From the shotgun shack to the Superdome", transforms from a superficially bullish expression of inter-class community to something with a sting in its tail, the mention of the Superdome inevitably drawing one's mind back to Hurricane Katrina, when America signally failed to take care of its own. That disregard, he suggests, has spread across the entire country. And there's no dispute here about who's to blame: Wrecking Ball features the bluntest condemnations of bankers and big business yet expressed by a star of Springsteen's magnitude. "Up on banker's hill, the party's going strong; down here below, we're shackled and drawn" he avers in "Shackled And Drawn", one of several songs in which the dense, ebullient folk-rock textures blend with revivalist gospel touches, in a burlier, more muscular version of the hootenanny stylings of the We Shall Overcome Seeger Sessions album. In "Death To My Hometown", the big, sturdy beat, fiddle and tin whistle bring the flavour of an Irish rebel song to another condemnation of the "robber barons" who managed to destroy families and factories without firing so much as a single shot. But has Bruce ever been this bitter and bloodily corporeal before? "They left our bodies on the plains, the vultures picked our bones... the greedy thieves who came around and ate the flesh of everything they found..." Rather than the pained nobility of previous Springsteen anthems of dispossession, this has the visceral tang of a horror movie: capitalism as cannibalism. There's an inescapable impression that, decades on from the great romantic blue-collar gestures of Darkness On The Edge Of Town, The River and Born In The USA, he realises that for men and women thirty years older than then, losing one's job is so much closer to losing one's life. Hence the bitter truth behind a song like "This Depression", a slow, mournful piece streaked with Tom Morello's eerily yearning guitar, in which economic depression brings emotional depression, bluntly stated in a cry for help from his beloved: "I haven't always been strong, but never this weak". It's bleak, but not in the fancifully literate, cinematic manner of Nebraska; it's not a study in bleakness, it's just as grim as it gets. Again, there's an underlying acknowledgement that these slings and arrows of outrageous fortune are that much more wounding for those in their fifties and sixties than they were thirty years earlier, when the prospect of failure could be burnished with a Bukowskian lustre of romantic tribulation. Anger all but overtakes Springsteen in "Jack Of All Trades", where slow piano triplets carry his careworn delivery of the protagonist's sentimental determination to survive by taking any job offered. A trumpet and mandolin break piles on the poignancy as he reflects on how "banker man grows fat, working man grows thin", his stiff upper lip finally slipping to confide how "If I had a gun, I'd find the bastards and shoot 'em on sight". As the song ends, the Spectoresque welter of horns, guitars and chimes seems to chorus assent. The flipside attitude is expressed in "Easy Money", which deals with the corrosive trickle-down effect of toxic greed: if they can get away with it, reasons the benighted protagonist preparing for petty crime, why should I follow the rules? Elsewhere, "You've Got It" offers a Little-Feat-style steel-guitar tribute to a lover's indefinable qualities, while "Rocky Ground" dips into religious imagery of money-changers and an endangered flock as it looks to a new, less troubled dawn. And inspired by the demolition of Giants Stadium in New Jersey, "Wrecking Ball" itself was written some years ago, and first performed on the Working On A Dream tour, which perhaps explains the truculent tone of the song's resolute fatalism, which employs the failing building as a metaphor for the doomed nobility of human endeavour: "When all this steel and these stories drift away to rust, and all our youth and beauty has been given to the dust". "Land Of Hope And Dreams", one of several songs employing the kind of white gospel choir vocals used by Dylan on "All The Tired Horses", was written even earlier, back in the late '90s. A full-blown Springsteen anthem with added mandolin wistfulness, incorporating Clarence Clemons' final solo for The Boss, it's an updated version of those Woody Guthrie dustbowl ballads anticipating a new life in California; it's typically resolute and uplifting, but in this context its exultant spirit seems a touch bogus, though it's understandable he would want to end the album on a more positive note. Which gives the concluding "We Are Alive" which follows the run-out groove crackle an unexpected mordancy, as Springsteen gives voice to the graveyard dead: "If we put our ears to the cold grey stones, this is what they'd sing: we are alive". Set to a chipper Johnny Cash-style mariachi groove of banjo, whistle and horns, it's a strange but redemptive affirmation of the human spirit, and, in the face of endemic depression of all kinds, of endurance as the defining heroic act of our age. Andy Gill Please fill in our quick survey about the relaunched Uncut – and you could win a 12 month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks!

An angry Boss attacks big business on his grim but brilliant 17th studio album…

Bruce Springsteen has never been shy of confronting the gloomy and unpalatable downside of capitalism – indeed, some would say he rather revels in the bitter tears of working-class defeat – but he’s never before sounded quite so bitter and angry as he does on Wrecking Ball.

The contrast with his last studio album, 2009’s Working On A Dream, is instructive: on that record, flush with the renewed hope furnished by Obama’s election, he meditated optimistically upon the possibility of change, alongside the usual complement of blue-collar tableaux, with even a few cheery, almost euphoric, contemplations of a possibly positive future. Here, the few glimmers of light are themselves occluded by curtains of bitter irony and weary acknowledgement of defeat. It’s as if this most engagingly demagogic of American underclass standard-bearers is having to fight grimly to stave off the lure of nihilism.

On first hearing, the opener “We Take Care Of Our Own” sounds like a typical Springsteen anthem of uplift, a celebration of fellowship and communality that one can see being hijacked by politicians the next time Navy Seals pluck an American citizen from the clutches of Somalian pirates, or take out some high-level jihadist. “Wherever this flag flies,” he sings, “we take care of our own”. But then you start hearing what he’s actually saying, and it’s another “Born In The USA” moment, as he pours out condemnatory question after question: “Where’s the promise from sea to shining sea? Where’s the work that will set my hands and my soul free?”. And the song’s most potent image, “From the shotgun shack to the Superdome”, transforms from a superficially bullish expression of inter-class community to something with a sting in its tail, the mention of the Superdome inevitably drawing one’s mind back to Hurricane Katrina, when America signally failed to take care of its own. That disregard, he suggests, has spread across the entire country.

And there’s no dispute here about who’s to blame: Wrecking Ball features the bluntest condemnations of bankers and big business yet expressed by a star of Springsteen’s magnitude. “Up on banker’s hill, the party’s going strong; down here below, we’re shackled and drawn” he avers in “Shackled And Drawn”, one of several songs in which the dense, ebullient folk-rock textures blend with revivalist gospel touches, in a burlier, more muscular version of the hootenanny stylings of the We Shall Overcome Seeger Sessions album. In “Death To My Hometown”, the big, sturdy beat, fiddle and tin whistle bring the flavour of an Irish rebel song to another condemnation of the “robber barons” who managed to destroy families and factories without firing so much as a single shot.

But has Bruce ever been this bitter and bloodily corporeal before? “They left our bodies on the plains, the vultures picked our bones… the greedy thieves who came around and ate the flesh of everything they found…” Rather than the pained nobility of previous Springsteen anthems of dispossession, this has the visceral tang of a horror movie: capitalism as cannibalism. There’s an inescapable impression that, decades on from the great romantic blue-collar gestures of Darkness On The Edge Of Town, The River and Born In The USA, he realises that for men and women thirty years older than then, losing one’s job is so much closer to losing one’s life.

Hence the bitter truth behind a song like “This Depression”, a slow, mournful piece streaked with Tom Morello‘s eerily yearning guitar, in which economic depression brings emotional depression, bluntly stated in a cry for help from his beloved: “I haven’t always been strong, but never this weak”. It’s bleak, but not in the fancifully literate, cinematic manner of Nebraska; it’s not a study in bleakness, it’s just as grim as it gets. Again, there’s an underlying acknowledgement that these slings and arrows of outrageous fortune are that much more wounding for those in their fifties and sixties than they were thirty years earlier, when the prospect of failure could be burnished with a Bukowskian lustre of romantic tribulation.

Anger all but overtakes Springsteen in “Jack Of All Trades“, where slow piano triplets carry his careworn delivery of the protagonist’s sentimental determination to survive by taking any job offered. A trumpet and mandolin break piles on the poignancy as he reflects on how “banker man grows fat, working man grows thin”, his stiff upper lip finally slipping to confide how “If I had a gun, I’d find the bastards and shoot ’em on sight”. As the song ends, the Spectoresque welter of horns, guitars and chimes seems to chorus assent. The flipside attitude is expressed in “Easy Money”, which deals with the corrosive trickle-down effect of toxic greed: if they can get away with it, reasons the benighted protagonist preparing for petty crime, why should I follow the rules?

Elsewhere, “You’ve Got It” offers a Little-Feat-style steel-guitar tribute to a lover’s indefinable qualities, while “Rocky Ground” dips into religious imagery of money-changers and an endangered flock as it looks to a new, less troubled dawn. And inspired by the demolition of Giants Stadium in New Jersey, “Wrecking Ball” itself was written some years ago, and first performed on the Working On A Dream tour, which perhaps explains the truculent tone of the song’s resolute fatalism, which employs the failing building as a metaphor for the doomed nobility of human endeavour: “When all this steel and these stories drift away to rust, and all our youth and beauty has been given to the dust”.

“Land Of Hope And Dreams”, one of several songs employing the kind of white gospel choir vocals used by Dylan on “All The Tired Horses“, was written even earlier, back in the late ’90s. A full-blown Springsteen anthem with added mandolin wistfulness, incorporating Clarence Clemons‘ final solo for The Boss, it’s an updated version of those Woody Guthrie dustbowl ballads anticipating a new life in California; it’s typically resolute and uplifting, but in this context its exultant spirit seems a touch bogus, though it’s understandable he would want to end the album on a more positive note. Which gives the concluding “We Are Alive” which follows the run-out groove crackle an unexpected mordancy, as Springsteen gives voice to the graveyard dead: “If we put our ears to the cold grey stones, this is what they’d sing: we are alive”. Set to a chipper Johnny Cash-style mariachi groove of banjo, whistle and horns, it’s a strange but redemptive affirmation of the human spirit, and, in the face of endemic depression of all kinds, of endurance as the defining heroic act of our age.

Andy Gill

Please fill in our quick survey about the relaunched Uncut – and you could win a 12 month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks!

Metallica hint that they could release next album without a record label

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Metallica's Lars Ulrich has hinted that the band could release their next album without a record label. In an interview with Spin, the drummer confirmed that their deal with Warner had now expired following the release of their last studio album 'Death Magnetic' in 2008, and said that the metal l...

Metallica‘s Lars Ulrich has hinted that the band could release their next album without a record label.

In an interview with Spin, the drummer confirmed that their deal with Warner had now expired following the release of their last studio album ‘Death Magnetic’ in 2008, and said that the metal legends were discussing different release strategies for the next LP.

He said: “We’re free and clear of our record contract. The world’s our oyster. We can basically do whatever we want. And we’re going so start figuring that out.”

He went on to add: “We’re writing music and we’re going to be recording very soon. At some point we’re going to want to share that with people that are interested in listening to it. So we gotta figure out ways we want to do that, from giving it away in cereal boxes to getting people to do handstands for it. We could come up with something wacky.”

However, Ulrich did insist that the band wouldn’t employ an unusual distribution model for the sake of it. “This whole thing about who can come up with the coolest [release strategy] so it can be written about on 12 different blogs for six hours – mean sure, that’s all pretty cool and hip,” he said. “But at the same time you have to remember we have a very global audience. We have fans in India and the UAE and Russia. In a lot of these places there are still more conventional ways of getting music to people.”

Metallica will play a headline slot at this summer’s Download Festival as well as a series of other large European shows, performing 1991’s ‘The Black Album’ in its entirety. In October last year they teamed up with Lou Reed to release the album ‘Lulu’, which is based around German dramatist Frank Wedekind’s 1913 play about the life of an abused dancer.

Earlier this year, meanwhile, the band said that their next LP would be like a “heavier version” of ‘The Black Album’.

Hear Arcade Fire’s new track ‘Abraham’s Daughter’ from ‘The Hunger Games’ soundtrack

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You can hear Arcade Fire's new track 'Abraham's Daughter', which is taken from the soundtrack to the new fantasy film The Hunger Games, by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking. The track will be play over the dystopian thriller's closing credits and was recorded by the Canadian band last month. The film itself will also feature a track titled 'Horn Of Plenty' which has been written and recorded by Arcade Fire's Win Butler and Regine Chassagne. Speaking to Entertainment Weekly about the track, Arcade Fire frontman Win Butler said: "Our whole approach was to get into the world and try to create something that serves the story and the film. There's something in the story of Abraham and Isaac that I think resonates with the themes in the film, like sacrificing children. So we made a weird, alternate-universe version of that." He added that the band wanted to create a song that could be played in the film's fictional fascist state of Capitol and an anthem that could be played at a huge sporting event. He said of this: "We were interested in making music that would be more integral in the movie, just as a mental exercise. And there's an anthem that runs throughout the books, the national anthem of the fascist Capitol. So as a thought experiment, we tried to write what that might sound like. It's like the Capitol's idea of itself, basically." Butler continued: "It's not a pop song or anything. More of an anthem that could be playing at a big sporting event like the Games. So we did a structure for that, and then James Newton Howard made a movie-score version of it that happens in several places in the film." Taylor Swift, The Decemberists, Kid Cudi and The Low Anthem wil also feature on 'The Hunger Games: Songs From District 12 and Beyond'. The Hunger Games is set to be released on March 23 in the UK and stars Winter's Bone actress Jennifer Lawrence, Woody Harrelson and Elizabeth Banks. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1N9qiDigLWI

You can hear Arcade Fire‘s new track ‘Abraham’s Daughter’, which is taken from the soundtrack to the new fantasy film The Hunger Games, by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking.

The track will be play over the dystopian thriller’s closing credits and was recorded by the Canadian band last month. The film itself will also feature a track titled ‘Horn Of Plenty’ which has been written and recorded by Arcade Fire’s Win Butler and Regine Chassagne.

Speaking to Entertainment Weekly about the track, Arcade Fire frontman Win Butler said: “Our whole approach was to get into the world and try to create something that serves the story and the film. There’s something in the story of Abraham and Isaac that I think resonates with the themes in the film, like sacrificing children. So we made a weird, alternate-universe version of that.”

He added that the band wanted to create a song that could be played in the film’s fictional fascist state of Capitol and an anthem that could be played at a huge sporting event.

He said of this: “We were interested in making music that would be more integral in the movie, just as a mental exercise. And there’s an anthem that runs throughout the books, the national anthem of the fascist Capitol. So as a thought experiment, we tried to write what that might sound like. It’s like the Capitol’s idea of itself, basically.”

Butler continued: “It’s not a pop song or anything. More of an anthem that could be playing at a big sporting event like the Games. So we did a structure for that, and then James Newton Howard made a movie-score version of it that happens in several places in the film.”

Taylor Swift, The Decemberists, Kid Cudi and The Low Anthem wil also feature on ‘The Hunger Games: Songs From District 12 and Beyond’.

The Hunger Games is set to be released on March 23 in the UK and stars Winter’s Bone actress Jennifer Lawrence, Woody Harrelson and Elizabeth Banks.

The Monkees see 3,000% increase in Spotify plays after the death of Davy Jones

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There has been a 3,000% increase in the number of plays of songs by The Monkees on Spotify following yesterday's death of singer Davy Jones. The music streaming site saw the increase from February 28 to 29, after news of the Manchester-born entertainer's death was announced. Jones died at his home in Florida, according to his publicist Deborah Robicheau. TMZ today reports that an autopsy was performed and doctors found that Jones died from "an abnormal heart rhythm caused by coronary artery atherosclerosis" or a severe heart attack. Jones' bandmate Micky Dolenz released a statement about his friend's passing, saying: "I am in a state of shock... The time we worked together and had together is something I'll never forget. He was the brother I never had and this leaves a gigantic hole in my heart. The memories have and will last a lifetime. My condolences go out to his family." Peter Tork, also of The Monkees released his own statement. He said: "It is with great sadness that I reflect on the sudden passing of my long-time friend and fellow-adventurer, David Jones. His talent will be much missed; his gifts will be with us always. My deepest sympathy to Jessica and the rest of his family. Adios, to the Manchester Cowboy."

There has been a 3,000% increase in the number of plays of songs by The Monkees on Spotify following yesterday’s death of singer Davy Jones.

The music streaming site saw the increase from February 28 to 29, after news of the Manchester-born entertainer’s death was announced.

Jones died at his home in Florida, according to his publicist Deborah Robicheau. TMZ today reports that an autopsy was performed and doctors found that Jones died from “an abnormal heart rhythm caused by coronary artery atherosclerosis” or a severe heart attack.

Jones’ bandmate Micky Dolenz released a statement about his friend’s passing, saying: “I am in a state of shock… The time we worked together and had together is something I’ll never forget. He was the brother I never had and this leaves a gigantic hole in my heart. The memories have and will last a lifetime. My condolences go out to his family.”

Peter Tork, also of The Monkees released his own statement. He said: “It is with great sadness that I reflect on the sudden passing of my long-time friend and fellow-adventurer, David Jones. His talent will be much missed; his gifts will be with us always. My deepest sympathy to Jessica and the rest of his family. Adios, to the Manchester Cowboy.”

Wilco, Spiritualized, Field Music for Wilderness Festival 2012 – ticket details

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Spiritualized, Wilco and Field Music are among the first acts to be confirmed for this summer's Wilderness Festival. The festival, which made its debut last year, takes place on August 10-12 in Oxfordshire's Cornbury Park. Also confirmed to play at this year's event are Rodrigo Y Gabriela, Storn...

Spiritualized, Wilco and Field Music are among the first acts to be confirmed for this summer’s Wilderness Festival.

The festival, which made its debut last year, takes place on August 10-12 in Oxfordshire’s Cornbury Park.

Also confirmed to play at this year’s event are Rodrigo Y Gabriela, Stornoway, Lianne La Havas, London Folk Guild, Cloud Control, Grant Lee Buffalo and a host of others.

The festival featured sets from Antony And The Johnsons, Mercury Rev, Guillemots and Laura Marling in 2011.

For more information head to Wildernessfestival.com.

The line-up for Wilderness Festival so far is as follows:

Rodrigo Y Gabriela

Wilco

Spiritualized

Stornoway

Lianne La Havas

London Folk Guild

Cloud Control

Giant Giant Sand

Grant Lee Buffalo

Jenny O

Field Music

Fatoumata Diawara

Miilagres

To Kill A King

Grandaddy reform to headline End Of The Road festival

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Grandaddy have announced that they have reformed and will be headlining this summer's End Of The Road festival. The California indie band split up in 2006 after 14 years together, but have now reformed to headline the Dorset event and have also promised they will play a number of other shows. A...

Grandaddy have announced that they have reformed and will be headlining this summer’s End Of The Road festival.

The California indie band split up in 2006 after 14 years together, but have now reformed to headline the Dorset event and have also promised they will play a number of other shows.

Also joining the folk bash, which will take place in Larmer Tree Gardens in Wiltshire on August 31 – September 2, are Willis Earl Beal, Alabama Shakes, The Deep Dark Woods, Dirty Beaches, Eagle And Worm and Porcelain Raft.

One evening of the festival will be co-headlined by Grizzly Bear and Tindersticks, with one headliner still to be confirmed. Midlake, The Antlers, The Low Anthem, First Aid Kit and over 30 others acts are also confirmed for the event.

For more information, visit Endoftheroadfestival.com.

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

Grandaddy

Tindersticks

Grizzly Bear

The Antlers

Delicate Steve

Doug Paisley

Driver Drive Faster

First Aid Kit

Frank Fairfield

I Break Horses

Jeffrey Lewis & The Junkyard

Justin Townes Earle

Moulettes

Mountain Man

Midlake

The Low Anthem

Alessi’s Ark

Cashier no 9

Dirty Three

John Grant

Jonathan Wilson

Lanterns On The Lake

Roy Harper

Veronica Falls

Beach House

The Antlers

I Break Horses

Jeffrey Lewis & The Junkyard

Justin Townes Earle

Moulettes

Robyn Hitchcock

Anna Calvi

Villagers

Abigail Washburn with Kai Welch

Cold Specks

Dark Dark Dark

Francois & The Atlas Mountains

Islet

Toy

Outfit

Elvis Presley: The Sun Years by Frank Skinner

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The new April issue of Uncut, out now, features a fascinating look at the history of Sam Phillips’ Sun Studio, which brought the world Howlin’ Wolf, Jerry Lee Lewis, Roy Orbison and others. Elvis Presley was one future star who cut his debut recordings at the Memphis studio – and in this archi...

The new April issue of Uncut, out now, features a fascinating look at the history of Sam Phillips’ Sun Studio, which brought the world Howlin’ Wolf, Jerry Lee Lewis, Roy Orbison and others. Elvis Presley was one future star who cut his debut recordings at the Memphis studio – and in this archive piece from the fourth ever issue of Uncut (September 1997), comedian Frank Skinner talks about the King’s early years and the huge impact the Sun recordings had on him.

“It was my brother, Terry, who’s 12 years older than me, who turned me on to Elvis. I was just a kid – I didn’t know the difference between the early hits or the film stuff in the ’60s. I used to buy Elvis Monthly, because it was the only place where you could read about him. The pop papers were full of The Beatles and The Rolling Stones, and Presley was making the worst music of his career.

When I got a bit older and started buying my own records instead of borrowing my brother’s copies, that’s when I fell in love with the Sun sessions. When you hear the Sun stuff for the first time, after having heard the later hits, it comes as a bit of a shock. His voice doesn’t seem as ‘Elvis-y’, it’s not as deep as you’re used to, and it’s really raw. And there’s something about the Sun recordings that make them sound like they’re from another world, a bizarre ‘otherness’ you never really get again with Elvis. lt’s not just his voice, though, it’s the way Sam Phillips recorded everything, particularly DJ Fontana’s drumming. It’s so primitive, it sounds like he’s drumming on a cardboard box.

‘Mystery Train’, in my opinion, is the best pop record ever made. If I was ever on Desert Island Discs and Sue Lawley asked me to narrow down the eight records l’d chosen to just one, it would be ‘Mystery Train’, no contest. If you turn it up loud enough and wipe your mind of everything else, you get this sense of restraint throughout it. You feel a tension in your body, you feel that Elvis and the music is gonna get bigger and louder, but it never quite does. Every time it comes to a new verse, you’re thinking, ‘This is the one, he’s really gonna let go,’ but it doesn’t happen.

He’s holding back, but you really want him to push it over the top. Then, right at the end, he slips into a falsetto – ‘Whoa!’ – and he’s gone! One of the fastest fadeouts of any record I’ve ever heard. I don’t know how deliberate it was, but it works brilliantly. The song leaves you with this feeling that the train is going on to somewhere very exciting, and that you’ll never get to go there. Listening to it is like watching the train go past: you see it for a short time, the rhythm is constant, and then it just disappears into the night. Just like the record itself.

But if you want to hear Elvis’ voice at its best, you’ve got to listen to ‘Blue Moon’. Again, there’s an amazing falsetto, and once more the whole sound is minimalist. The first version of the song I heard was the ‘Bom-ba-da-bomda-dingydangding’ version by The Marcels. It’s all very jolly, but Elvis finds these dark little spaces in it. The lyrics are very syrupy, but you forget about that because Elvis takes you somewhere else. A lot of the subtlety of Sun vanished when he moved to RCA, as the records sounded more and more ‘produced’, but you need room for a voice like Elvis’, you need some emptiness for it to fall into.

Also, he never had that camaraderie again. Elvis, Scotty Moore, Bill Black and DJ Fontana were an actual band. They were on the road together, crammed into the back of a van driving across the Southern States. It must have been so exciting to see him playing state fairs, on the same bill as a bunch of straight country singers. Imagine, the yodelling band goes off and then this bloke comes on gyrating and giving the crowd all these sexy looks. It was all very deliberate – he knew how to press all the right buttons.

Elvis was Elvis long before he went into a recording studio. When he was a teenager at school, he was walking round with sideburns, a pink jacket, and a guitar slung across his back. He was living the life before he’d put anything on vinyl. A local character, he’d be walking around Memphis and people would say, ‘Oh, look, there goes that Elvis bloke.’

There’s a theory that Elvis introduced black music to the white mainstream, but his Sun stuff was never really a fusion of any two styles. ‘Blue Moon Of Kentucky’ is pure country — you wouldn’t be surprised to see him wearing a cowboy hat when singing it. But then something like ‘Milk Cow Blues’ is so black – it was stuff like that which really scared America. He was seen in some quarters as a dirty undesirable, the way a lot of Americans perceived blacks at the time. Elvis was this terrible lowlife hybrid.

There’s still a permanent record of those days, at the Sun Studios on Union Avenue in Memphis. The walls still have the same old hardboard with holes in it for soundproofing, and there are some classic pictures from the era on the wall. It’s a truly amazing place – a real slice of not just musical history, but American history as well.”

Steve Van Zandt in Lilyhammer

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Thanks to Damien Love for reminding me to blog about this. It's been on my radar for a couple of weeks, but it's only since Damien emailed me a Youtube link to a trailer earlier today that I've finally got something to write about. Lilyhammer is the latest Scandinavian series to be picked up by BBC4, who're clearly enjoying the successes brought them by The Killing and Borgen. Lilyhammer, though, seems a pretty different proposition: principally, it is a comedy, with Steve Van Zandt playing (of course) a New Jersey mobster, Frank Tagliano, who enters the Witness Protection Programme and gets relocated to Lillehammer, in Norway, a town he claims to have loved since it hosted the 1994 Winter Olympics. From the trailer, it all seems like great fun, with Van Zandt channeling his Sopranos' character, Silvio Dante, some broad fish out of water comedy, and what looks like glimpses of a wider series arc, involving Frank's attempts to set up a club in Lillehammer. Incidentally, it looks like Frank's jumper, glimpsed here, might prove just as iconic as Sarah Lund's Faroese sweaters in The Killing. No word yet on when the BBC will air it, but for those with access to such things, all eight episodes of series 1 are being streamed over at www.netflix.com.

Thanks to Damien Love for reminding me to blog about this. It’s been on my radar for a couple of weeks, but it’s only since Damien emailed me a Youtube link to a trailer earlier today that I’ve finally got something to write about.

Lilyhammer is the latest Scandinavian series to be picked up by BBC4, who’re clearly enjoying the successes brought them by The Killing and Borgen. Lilyhammer, though, seems a pretty different proposition: principally, it is a comedy, with Steve Van Zandt playing (of course) a New Jersey mobster, Frank Tagliano, who enters the Witness Protection Programme and gets relocated to Lillehammer, in Norway, a town he claims to have loved since it hosted the 1994 Winter Olympics.

From the trailer, it all seems like great fun, with Van Zandt channeling his Sopranos‘ character, Silvio Dante, some broad fish out of water comedy, and what looks like glimpses of a wider series arc, involving Frank’s attempts to set up a club in Lillehammer.

Incidentally, it looks like Frank’s jumper, glimpsed here, might prove just as iconic as Sarah Lund’s Faroese sweaters in The Killing.

No word yet on when the BBC will air it, but for those with access to such things, all eight episodes of series 1 are being streamed over at www.netflix.com.

Peter Hook brands supposed Joy Division ‘Unknown Pleasures’ track ‘a bloody awful hoax’

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Peter Hook has branded 'Aerial', a track that surfaced online this week that purported to be an unreleased song from Joy Division's seminal album 'Unknown Pleasures' as a "bloody awful hoax". The track appeared online earlier this week and according to its accompanying description, was an unrelea...

Peter Hook has branded ‘Aerial’, a track that surfaced online this week that purported to be an unreleased song from Joy Division‘s seminal album ‘Unknown Pleasures’ as a “bloody awful hoax”.

The track appeared online earlier this week and according to its accompanying description, was an unreleased track from the Manchester band’s 1979 debut album. However, speaking to NME about the track, Peter Hook confirmed that it was a hoax. You can hear ‘Aerial’ by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking.

Asked if he’d heard ‘Aerial’, he said: “I’ve heard it. It’s a hoax and it’s bloody awful. They’re quite clever, these guys, they sound like college kids to me, they’ve captured the atmosphere quite well, but it’s a hoax. If Ian Curtis ever sang lyrics like that, I’d have kicked him up the arse.”

Hook added that he doubted there were any unreleased tracks left to be released from Joy Division, as the band “didn’t think for tomorrow.”

Asked if he believed there was the potential for any unreleased Joy Division tracks to be discovered, he said: “Everytime you hear about tapes being discovered, you think there maybe more songs, but I think I can safely say that there isn’t anything more to do with Joy Division to come out. There’s not much left over, when you’re young, you don’t think for tomorrow”.

Hook also revealed that he was recently given a tape which features a number of outtakes from the band’s 1980 album ‘Closer’ that has a series of radically different versions of the album’s tracks, but that he currently has no plans to release it.

He said of this: “I’ve got a tape that’s recently come into my possession, which is outtakes from ‘Closer’. It’s interesting because the songs are quite different, we changed the songs quite a bit in the studio and the songs are very different. I’m not planning to do anything with it at the moment.”

Hook also spoke about the recent discovery of Joy Division and New Order master tapes in Jamie Oliver’s restaurant in Manchester and revealed that the TV chef had treated him to a free meal to thank him for the free publicity.

“We did find the tapes in Jamie’s restaurant, I’ve had a look, I went in at the weekend and Jamie got the family and me a free meal to say thanks for all the publicity. If you go in the private room, you can still see the Joy Division vault; it’s still there.”

Peter Hook will play Joy Division‘s 1981 compilation album ‘Still’ in full at two shows at Manchester’s 251 venue on May 18 and 19. Charities Mind and Forever Manchester will both receive some of the proceeds from the shows.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8J_4ZUPyFEw

Hot Chip to release new album ‘In Our Heads’ in June

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Hot Chip have announced that they will release their new studio album, titled 'In Our Heads', in June. The album, which is the follow-up to 2010's 'One Life Stand', contains a total of 11 tracks and has been produced by Mark Ralph. It's their first for Domino Records. Speaking to NME about 'In ...

Hot Chip have announced that they will release their new studio album, titled ‘In Our Heads’, in June.

The album, which is the follow-up to 2010’s ‘One Life Stand’, contains a total of 11 tracks and has been produced by Mark Ralph. It’s their first for Domino Records.

Speaking to NME about ‘In Our Heads’, Hot Chip’s Joe Goddard said of the album: “It basically sounds like Hot Chip. We haven’t done anything particularly weird. We’ve made it on Conny Plank’s [Kraftwerk producer] mixing desk that he built. It’s a beautiful thing. That’s what brought everything together for the new record. It’s a continuation with our love affair of different kinds of dance music.”

The band will play a series of UK festivals during the summer, with slots at Lovebox festival, Bestival and Camp Bestival among those the band will play.

The tracklisting for ‘In Our Heads’ is as follows:

‘Motion Sickness’

‘How Do You

‘Don’t Deny Your Heart’

‘Look At Where We Are’

‘These Chains’

‘Night And Day’

‘Flutes’

‘Now There Is Nothing’

‘Ends Of The Earth’

‘Let Me Be Him’

‘Always Been Your Love’

Led Zeppelin comeback gig funds £26 million donation to Oxford University

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The money raised by Led Zeppelin's 2007 comeback show at London's O2 Arena has helped to fund a £26 million donation to Oxford University. The show took place as a tribute to the late Atlantic Records founder Ahmet Ertegun, who died in 2006. Tickets cost £125 and the money went to the Ahmet Ertegun Education Fund. Ertegun's widow, Mica, has now donated money from the fund to Oxford University, to help create scholarships for humanities students. The Daily Mail reports that the donation is one of the biggest ever in the university's 900-year history. The Mica and Ahmet Ertegun Graduate Scholarship Programme in the Humanities will help finance students studying for subjects including literature, history, music and art history. There will be 15 scholarships to start with, rolling into 35 each year as the programme becomes more established. Mica Ertegun and Led Zeppelin bassist John Paul Jones were both in attendance at Oxford University to see the programme launched. Jones said he was "very proud" that the money from the concerts had gone to the new programme, while Mica Ertegun added: "For Ahmet and for me, one of the great joys of life has been the study of history, music, languages, literature, art and archaeology." She continued: "In these times, when there is so much strife in the world, I believe it is tremendously important to support those things that endure across time, that bind people together from every culture, and that enrich the capacity of human beings to understand one another and make the world a more humane place."

The money raised by Led Zeppelin‘s 2007 comeback show at London’s O2 Arena has helped to fund a £26 million donation to Oxford University.

The show took place as a tribute to the late Atlantic Records founder Ahmet Ertegun, who died in 2006. Tickets cost £125 and the money went to the Ahmet Ertegun Education Fund.

Ertegun’s widow, Mica, has now donated money from the fund to Oxford University, to help create scholarships for humanities students. The Daily Mail reports that the donation is one of the biggest ever in the university’s 900-year history.

The Mica and Ahmet Ertegun Graduate Scholarship Programme in the Humanities will help finance students studying for subjects including literature, history, music and art history. There will be 15 scholarships to start with, rolling into 35 each year as the programme becomes more established.

Mica Ertegun and Led Zeppelin bassist John Paul Jones were both in attendance at Oxford University to see the programme launched. Jones said he was “very proud” that the money from the concerts had gone to the new programme, while Mica Ertegun added: “For Ahmet and for me, one of the great joys of life has been the study of history, music, languages, literature, art and archaeology.”

She continued: “In these times, when there is so much strife in the world, I believe it is tremendously important to support those things that endure across time, that bind people together from every culture, and that enrich the capacity of human beings to understand one another and make the world a more humane place.”

Bez on Happy Mondays reunion: ‘My performing days are over’

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Bez has revealed that he will not be performing with the Happy Mondays on their comeback tour this May and for their festival dates this summer. Speaking at last night's (February 29) NME Awards, the band's sidekick said that he will be heading out on the road with the band as a compere and DJ, b...

Bez has revealed that he will not be performing with the Happy Mondays on their comeback tour this May and for their festival dates this summer.

Speaking at last night’s (February 29) NME Awards, the band’s sidekick said that he will be heading out on the road with the band as a compere and DJ, but not as a dancer, as his “performing days are over”.

He explained: “I won’t be on the stage because my performing days are over. Basically I’m too old. I’m incapable of doing the job, I’m carrying too many injuries. All good things come to an end.”

The Madchester legends will reuniting with their original line-up to play dates in May, including a homecoming show at Manchester Evening News Arena, with support coming from Inspiral Carpets.

The run begins at Newcastle’s O2 Academy on May 3 and will include two shows at London’s O2 Academy Brixton on May 10 and 11, before coming to an end at with an extra date in London on May 19. They will also play T In The Park and there are rumours surrounding a possible Ibiza Rocks show.

Speaking about the band’s reunion and forthcoming tour last month, frontman Shaun Ryder said: “We all met up last week and some of the lads haven’t seen each other in over 10, 15 years. It’s as if we’ve never been apart – so good to all be in the same room again. We can’t wait now to get on tour and play the songs that made us famous.”