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The Black Keys’ Dan Auerbach: ‘Talking about the death of rock’n’roll is stupid’

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The Black Keys' Dan Auerbach has said that people who argue that rock'n'roll is dying are "stupid". In an interview with WGRD, the frontman said that the debate over the health of rock music was "lame" and cited the popularity of bands such as Foo Fighters as proof that interest in guitar music w...

The Black KeysDan Auerbach has said that people who argue that rock’n’roll is dying are “stupid”.

In an interview with WGRD, the frontman said that the debate over the health of rock music was “lame” and cited the popularity of bands such as Foo Fighters as proof that interest in guitar music was on the wane.

Auerbach, who claimed earlier this month that he didn’t care about the state of rock music, said: “I think that it’s so lame of an argument, it seems so stupid. It’s like the press needs something to talk about. Being 16 years old and getting an electric guitar is never going to get old. There’s always going to be kids making music. There’s always going to be kids in bands.”

The singer went on to add: “Everything is cyclical. It’ll come back around and be popular. The Foo Fighters are like the biggest band in the world. They play stadiums. How is rock dead?”

In January of this year, Auerbach’s bandmate – drummer Patrick Carney – had claimed there was a current lull in guitar music and blamed the popularity of Canadian band Nickelback for its decline, adding: “Rock’n’roll is the music I feel the most passionately about, and I don’t like to see it fucking ruined and spoonfed down our throats in this watered-down, post-grunge crap, horrendous shit.”

The band, who released their seventh studio album ‘El Camino’ last December, spoke to NME last month, where they admitted they didn’t believe their stint playing arenas would last long. Carney commented: “By no means are we the best band on the planet. We happen to be one of the more popular bands around right now. Music is an ever-changing thing, and we’re lucky enough to be enjoying a brief moment near the top. But that won’t last very long.”

Earlier this week, a collaboration between Auerbach and BBC Sound Of 2012 poll winner Michael Kiwanuka was posted online. To listen to the track ‘Lasan’, scroll down to the bottom of the page and click.

The War On Drugs, London Electric Ballroom, February 28, 2012

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They start with the tropical strum of “Buenos Aires Beach”, from their debut album Wagonwheel Blues, whose balmy unfolding might strike you as an inappropriate opener for a chilly night in Camden, far from the sun-kissed climes the song so breezily evokes. But while it’s true that outside it’s cold enough again to make you shiver, in here, the Electric Ballroom as packed as I’ve ever seen it, it’s hot enough to make you faint. The crowd’s collective body heat is something you could burn your fingers on. I can’t get my coat off quickly enough, but by the time I’ve got my arm out of a particularly uncooperative sleeve, The War On Drugs have already rousingly dispatched “Buenos Aires Beach” and launched headlong into a deliriously exciting version of “Baby Missiles”, from last year’s attention-grabbing Slave Ambient, a sensational cavalcade of sound. It’s so breathtakingly essayed you hope they haven’t placed it too early in the set, a premature peak from which everything that follows will be a gradual descent. The opposite, of course, turns out to be very much the case. “Taking The Farm” was a brisk stomp on Wagonwheel Blues, bright and infectious. But it’s reinvented tonight as something much murkier, with a sucking undertow – only hinted at on record – that’s wholly reminiscent of the kind of vortex of noise John Cale brought to tracks on his Honi Soit album, like “Strange Times In Casablanca” or “Wilson Joliet”. It ends with the first of several completely mind-blowing jams, the increasingly charismatic Adam Granduciel hunched over a guitar he appears to be flaying alive, accompanied by a light show no less unhinged than the music we’re listening to. A stately “I Was There” slows things down momentarily to an elegant, sultry stroll that’s in no hurry to get anywhere, Granduciel disinclined to rush it along, saving his energies for what will shortly follow. It’s about now that I’m surprised to hear mention of my own name in the introduction to nearly 20 minutes of sensational sonic displacement - “Your Love Is Calling My Name”, “The Animator” and “Come To The City”, played back to back, as they appear on Slave Ambient, a huge noise, like the Neil Young of “No Hidden Path” set to a walloping Moe Tucker backbeat. The entirety of the three-song sequence builds up the formidable momentum of an avalanche or something coming at you that will only be stopped by a well-placed bullet between the eyes or failing that a strategic air strike. There’s some good footage of all this that you can see here. There’s something almost cleansing after this mayhem about the versions of “Best Night” and “Brothers” that follow. Granduciel’s guitar parts now have an amber glow, a startling clarity, lyrical and glistening. And now, here’s a surprise. Anything written about them to date is likely to cite the connections between War On Drugs and the so-called classic rock of Dylan, Springsteen and maybe Tom Petty, and also the architects of a different kind of noise, like My Bloody Valentine and Spiritualized. Less commented on perhaps is what they share with The Waterboys. It’s a connection made explicit tonight via a terrific version of “A Pagan Place”, with Granduciel’s impassioned vocal whoops appropriately reminiscent of Mike Scott, as they are on reflection elsewhere, punctuating a wild thrashing of acoustic guitars. There are actually only two of them being played, but the giant thrum they make sounds like the entire Red Army is up on stage strumming away with giddy abandon. Their own “Arms Like Boulders” is no less grand. What an epic this has become, recalling at points tonight the version of “When The Night Comes Falling From The Sky” Dylan recorded with the E Street Band and then left off Empire Burlesque. Now they’re playing something that will turn into “It’s Your Destiny” and you can feel them holding themselves back as it starts, a gathering storm, that when it breaks is torrential. Which leaves only a climactic “Needle In Your Eye #16”, a swarming mass of drenching guitar feedback and the kind of scalding keyboards John Cale brought to the Velvets’ “Sister Ray” anchored by another unswerving motorik backbeat that like just about everything we’ve heard so far is sensational. More, and soon, is the response of everyone I speak to on the way out, those of them who aren’t still speechless, anyway. Set List 1 Buenos Aires Beach 2 Baby Missiles 3 Coast Farm 4 I Was There 5 Your Love Is Calling My Name 6 The Animator 7 Come To The City 8 Best Night 9 Brothers 10 Black Water Falls 11 Comin’ Through 12 A Pagan Place 13 Arms Like Boulders Encores 14 It’s Your Destiny 15 Needle In Your Eye # 16 The War On Drugs pic: Darran Armstrong

They start with the tropical strum of “Buenos Aires Beach”, from their debut album Wagonwheel Blues, whose balmy unfolding might strike you as an inappropriate opener for a chilly night in Camden, far from the sun-kissed climes the song so breezily evokes.

But while it’s true that outside it’s cold enough again to make you shiver, in here, the Electric Ballroom as packed as I’ve ever seen it, it’s hot enough to make you faint. The crowd’s collective body heat is something you could burn your fingers on. I can’t get my coat off quickly enough, but by the time I’ve got my arm out of a particularly uncooperative sleeve, The War On Drugs have already rousingly dispatched “Buenos Aires Beach” and launched headlong into a deliriously exciting version of “Baby Missiles”, from last year’s attention-grabbing Slave Ambient, a sensational cavalcade of sound.

It’s so breathtakingly essayed you hope they haven’t placed it too early in the set, a premature peak from which everything that follows will be a gradual descent. The opposite, of course, turns out to be very much the case. “Taking The Farm” was a brisk stomp on Wagonwheel Blues, bright and infectious. But it’s reinvented tonight as something much murkier, with a sucking undertow – only hinted at on record – that’s wholly reminiscent of the kind of vortex of noise John Cale brought to tracks on his Honi Soit album, like “Strange Times In Casablanca” or “Wilson Joliet”. It ends with the first of several completely mind-blowing jams, the increasingly charismatic Adam Granduciel hunched over a guitar he appears to be flaying alive, accompanied by a light show no less unhinged than the music we’re listening to.

A stately “I Was There” slows things down momentarily to an elegant, sultry stroll that’s in no hurry to get anywhere, Granduciel disinclined to rush it along, saving his energies for what will shortly follow. It’s about now that I’m surprised to hear mention of my own name in the introduction to nearly 20 minutes of sensational sonic displacement – “Your Love Is Calling My Name”, “The Animator” and “Come To The City”, played back to back, as they appear on Slave Ambient, a huge noise, like the Neil Young of “No Hidden Path” set to a walloping Moe Tucker backbeat. The entirety of the three-song sequence builds up the formidable momentum of an avalanche or something coming at you that will only be stopped by a well-placed bullet between the eyes or failing that a strategic air strike. There’s some good footage of all this that you can see here.

There’s something almost cleansing after this mayhem about the versions of “Best Night” and “Brothers” that follow. Granduciel’s guitar parts now have an amber glow, a startling clarity, lyrical and glistening. And now, here’s a surprise. Anything written about them to date is likely to cite the connections between War On Drugs and the so-called classic rock of Dylan, Springsteen and maybe Tom Petty, and also the architects of a different kind of noise, like My Bloody Valentine and Spiritualized. Less commented on perhaps is what they share with The Waterboys. It’s a connection made explicit tonight via a terrific version of “A Pagan Place”, with Granduciel’s impassioned vocal whoops appropriately reminiscent of Mike Scott, as they are on reflection elsewhere, punctuating a wild thrashing of acoustic guitars. There are actually only two of them being played, but the giant thrum they make sounds like the entire Red Army is up on stage strumming away with giddy abandon.

Their own “Arms Like Boulders” is no less grand. What an epic this has become, recalling at points tonight the version of “When The Night Comes Falling From The Sky” Dylan recorded with the E Street Band and then left off Empire Burlesque. Now they’re playing something that will turn into “It’s Your Destiny” and you can feel them holding themselves back as it starts, a gathering storm, that when it breaks is torrential. Which leaves only a climactic “Needle In Your Eye #16”, a swarming mass of drenching guitar feedback and the kind of scalding keyboards John Cale brought to the Velvets’ “Sister Ray” anchored by another unswerving motorik backbeat that like just about everything we’ve heard so far is sensational. More, and soon, is the response of everyone I speak to on the way out, those of them who aren’t still speechless, anyway.

Set List

1 Buenos Aires Beach

2 Baby Missiles

3 Coast Farm

4 I Was There

5 Your Love Is Calling My Name

6 The Animator

7 Come To The City

8 Best Night

9 Brothers

10 Black Water Falls

11 Comin’ Through

12 A Pagan Place

13 Arms Like Boulders

Encores

14 It’s Your Destiny

15 Needle In Your Eye # 16

The War On Drugs pic: Darran Armstrong

The Monkees’ Davy Jones dead at 66

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The Monkees' singer Davy Jones has died at the age of 66. The Manchester-born entertainer died at his home in Florida earlier today (February 29) after suffering a heart attack in his sleep, according to his publicist Deborah Robicheau, reports the BBC. Jones began his career on Coronation Stree...

The Monkees‘ singer Davy Jones has died at the age of 66.

The Manchester-born entertainer died at his home in Florida earlier today (February 29) after suffering a heart attack in his sleep, according to his publicist Deborah Robicheau, reports the BBC.

Jones began his career on Coronation Street, but left the soap to train as a jockey. He soon began acting again, appearing in the stage version of Oliver! in both the West End and on Broadway. A solo album followed and in 1965 he joined The Monkees alongside Micky Dolenz, Michael Nesmith and Peter Tork.

The television show of the same name ran from 1966-1968, but the band stayed together for two years after the show finished recording. Jones sang lead vocals on their classic song ‘Daydream Believer’ and appeared in the cult film Head with the rest of the band.

The Monkees reunited a number of times over the years, the last being in 2011, but without Nesmith. The trio played a host of UK venues in May of last year as well as in the United States and Canada for what was billed as the band’s 45th anniversary tour.

Viral campaign launches for Ridley Scott’s Prometheus

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After this week's Oscars post-mortem it's a relief to find this viral clip designed to whet our appetites for Prometheus, Ridley Scott's maybe-it's-a-prequel to Alien. Those who've been following all this - and I am one - will know that Scott has been playing down quite how closely connected his new film, Prometheus, is to Alien. Scott gave an interview at the back end of last year, where he discussed the connection between the two films, which seem to hinge on the 'Space Jockey', the giant alien pilot whose body the crew of the Nostromo found on the derelict spaceship in Alien. But he was pretty emphatic that was where the connection ended. It might all be a smokescreen to deflect from some deeper truth about how Prometheus fits into the Alien universe. Truth be told, I'm kind of reluctant to dig too deep into all this: I'd quite like some surprises when I eventually get to see Prometheus. But I was pretty excited this morning when I clicked on the link to the Prometheus viral. In the clip, over at www.weylandindustries.com, you see Guy Pearce's Peter Weyland, CEO of Weyland Industries, delivering a TED talk in 2023, and handily getting out of the way a lot of exposition about the myth of Prometheus, which I presume will be referenced in some way in the film. I read an interview somewhere with Scott recently, where he talked about how, in the late Seventies, he always imagined the future would be run by big corporations - hence, Weyland-Yutani in Alien (never mentioned by name, but you see their logo everywhere) and the Tyrell Corporation in Blade Runner. Of course, Weyland-Yutani took on a larger and more sinister role as the Alien series developed. So it's great to see Pearce's Peter Weyland - slightly dodgy British accent aside - delivering his lecture. Has this vibed you up for Prometheus? Is it a good idea for Scott to revisit the Alien universe, or are you not fussed? Let us know.

After this week’s Oscars post-mortem it’s a relief to find this viral clip designed to whet our appetites for Prometheus, Ridley Scott’s maybe-it’s-a-prequel to Alien.

Those who’ve been following all this – and I am one – will know that Scott has been playing down quite how closely connected his new film, Prometheus, is to Alien. Scott gave an interview at the back end of last year, where he discussed the connection between the two films, which seem to hinge on the ‘Space Jockey’, the giant alien pilot whose body the crew of the Nostromo found on the derelict spaceship in Alien. But he was pretty emphatic that was where the connection ended.

It might all be a smokescreen to deflect from some deeper truth about how Prometheus fits into the Alien universe. Truth be told, I’m kind of reluctant to dig too deep into all this: I’d quite like some surprises when I eventually get to see Prometheus. But I was pretty excited this morning when I clicked on the link to the Prometheus viral. In the clip, over at www.weylandindustries.com, you see Guy Pearce’s Peter Weyland, CEO of Weyland Industries, delivering a TED talk in 2023, and handily getting out of the way a lot of exposition about the myth of Prometheus, which I presume will be referenced in some way in the film.

I read an interview somewhere with Scott recently, where he talked about how, in the late Seventies, he always imagined the future would be run by big corporations – hence, Weyland-Yutani in Alien (never mentioned by name, but you see their logo everywhere) and the Tyrell Corporation in Blade Runner. Of course, Weyland-Yutani took on a larger and more sinister role as the Alien series developed. So it’s great to see Pearce’s Peter Weyland – slightly dodgy British accent aside – delivering his lecture.

Has this vibed you up for Prometheus? Is it a good idea for Scott to revisit the Alien universe, or are you not fussed? Let us know.

The New Uncut And REM Ultimate Music Guide

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Readers with a regular subscription received their copies of the new-look Uncut over the weekend, ahead of it going on sale generally. Thanks to those among them who have responded so promptly to our invitation to comment on the redesign and new content. Your views as ever are much appreciated and useful to us in shaping the kind of magazine you want. I’m happy to report the reaction so far has been broadly positive and enthusiastic, with a particular thumbs-up to the much-expanded review section, which was especially encouraging to note. There were good things said, too, about the features on Danny Whitten and Sun Records, and our cover story on the making of David Bowie’s Ziggy Stardust. I’ve lived with the album for 40 years and thought I knew everything about until Garry Mulholland delivered his copy and I discovered a lot of things I didn’t. Among the emails I started to receive on Sunday about the issue and new look one in particular stood out, from a reader named Alan Twyford. “Hi Al,” he began chummily, “you’ve invited us punters to comment on the new format of Uncut…” This was true enough, and Alan went on to tell me what he thought of the issue. In his considered opinion, the new Uncut could be further improved by a simple if brutal expedient, namely the immediate removal of my mug shot from my Are We Rolling? column on page three. Alan evidently found the picture quite disagreeable, describing it at one point as “a medical warning to us all” and concluding in something perhaps resembling a huff that it “confirms you have a great face for an iPod”. I’m not entirely sure what was meant by this, but I suspect it has something to do with the fact that Mr Twyford is clearly of the opinion I am probably not often mistaken in the street, or anywhere else, for, let’s say, Brad Pitt, fans of the ultra-buffed Hollywood hunk not likely to pause, open-mouthed, as I walk by, thinking, “It CAN’T be him!” This latter presumption in every respect is correct, there existing not even the merest resemblance between the leonine star of Troy and me. I once described Feargal Sharkey, in a review of one of his singles, as having a face like a bucket with a dent in it, a thoughtless remark that caused much noisy outrage at the time among fans of the squeaky-voiced Ulsterman and former Undertone. So I can barely complain about Reader Twyford’s comments. Besides, much worse has been said about me in far more colourful terms, by such as Tony Iommi, who took such exception to my face that he tried, and not without a certain success, to rearrange my features with his fists, the scars still visible if you know where to look. Anyway, maybe Alan has a point. Perhaps it’s time at least I had a new picture taken for the column, perhaps with a bag over my head if that will placate the disgruntled Mr Twyford. And at the risk of provoking similarly sharp-tongued reader asides, please continue to let us know what you think of the new issue, now that it’s on sale. As I said earlier, we welcome your thoughts - whatever they are. In other news this week, we’re just finishing the latest of our Ultimate Music Guides. This one is dedicated to REM, and features, as usual, in-depth new essays on every REM album from the Uncut team - I’ve pitched in with a piece on Green – plus a ton of brilliant and illuminating features from the archives of Melody Maker and NME, unseen for years. REM – The Ultimate Music Guide will be on sale from March 15. Have a good week. Allan allan_jones@ipcmedia.com

Readers with a regular subscription received their copies of the new-look Uncut over the weekend, ahead of it going on sale generally. Thanks to those among them who have responded so promptly to our invitation to comment on the redesign and new content. Your views as ever are much appreciated and useful to us in shaping the kind of magazine you want.

I’m happy to report the reaction so far has been broadly positive and enthusiastic, with a particular thumbs-up to the much-expanded review section, which was especially encouraging to note. There were good things said, too, about the features on Danny Whitten and Sun Records, and our cover story on the making of David Bowie’s Ziggy Stardust. I’ve lived with the album for 40 years and thought I knew everything about until Garry Mulholland delivered his copy and I discovered a lot of things I didn’t.

Among the emails I started to receive on Sunday about the issue and new look one in particular stood out, from a reader named Alan Twyford. “Hi Al,” he began chummily, “you’ve invited us punters to comment on the new format of Uncut…”

This was true enough, and Alan went on to tell me what he thought of the issue. In his considered opinion, the new Uncut could be further improved by a simple if brutal expedient, namely the immediate removal of my mug shot from my Are We Rolling? column on page three.

Alan evidently found the picture quite disagreeable, describing it at one point as “a medical warning to us all” and concluding in something perhaps resembling a huff that it “confirms you have a great face for an iPod”.

I’m not entirely sure what was meant by this, but I suspect it has something to do with the fact that Mr Twyford is clearly of the opinion I am probably not often mistaken in the street, or anywhere else, for, let’s say, Brad Pitt, fans of the ultra-buffed Hollywood hunk not likely to pause, open-mouthed, as I walk by, thinking, “It CAN’T be him!” This latter presumption in every respect is correct, there existing not even the merest resemblance between the leonine star of Troy and me.

I once described Feargal Sharkey, in a review of one of his singles, as having a face like a bucket with a dent in it, a thoughtless remark that caused much noisy outrage at the time among fans of the squeaky-voiced Ulsterman and former Undertone. So I can barely complain about Reader Twyford’s comments. Besides, much worse has been said about me in far more colourful terms, by such as Tony Iommi, who took such exception to my face that he tried, and not without a certain success, to rearrange my features with his fists, the scars still visible if you know where to look.

Anyway, maybe Alan has a point. Perhaps it’s time at least I had a new picture taken for the column, perhaps with a bag over my head if that will placate the disgruntled Mr Twyford.

And at the risk of provoking similarly sharp-tongued reader asides, please continue to let us know what you think of the new issue, now that it’s on sale. As I said earlier, we welcome your thoughts – whatever they are.

In other news this week, we’re just finishing the latest of our Ultimate Music Guides. This one is dedicated to REM, and features, as usual, in-depth new essays on every REM album from the Uncut team – I’ve pitched in with a piece on Green – plus a ton of brilliant and illuminating features from the archives of Melody Maker and NME, unseen for years.

REM – The Ultimate Music Guide will be on sale from March 15.

Have a good week.

Allan

allan_jones@ipcmedia.com

Dexys announce full details of new album ‘One Day I’m Going To Soar’

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Dexys Midnight Runners have announced full details of their new album 'One Day I'm Going To Soar', their first studio album for over 27 years. 'One Day I'm Going To Soar' will be released on June 4 and is the band's first studio album since 1985's 'Don't Stand Me Down'. It will be released under ...

Dexys Midnight Runners have announced full details of their new album ‘One Day I’m Going To Soar’, their first studio album for over 27 years.

‘One Day I’m Going To Soar’ will be released on June 4 and is the band’s first studio album since 1985’s ‘Don’t Stand Me Down’. It will be released under the name Dexys and features the band’s members Kevin Rowland, Mick Talbot, Pete Williams and Jim Paterson as well as new recruits Neil Hubbard, Tim Cansfield, Madeleine Hyland, Lucy Morgan and Ben Trigg.

Speaking about the album, the band’s frontman Kevin Rowland said: “I couldn’t have made this record five years ago. Or 10 years ago. Everything seemed to fall into place. I already had many of the songs around for a while written with Jim Paterson and others but was struggling to take them forward. Then I realised I needed heavyweight help and ran into Mick Talbot. Soon it became obvious that Pete Williams should play the bass.”

He continued: “It seems like the stars were aligned. Everything seemed to work, whereas previously, it hadn’t. It seemed there were so many people willing this to happen and keen to put in as much time and effort as was needed to make it live up to its potential. This is a Dexys record, not a Kevin Rowland record.”

You can hear the first two minutes of the album’s opener ‘Now’ by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking.

The tracklisting for ‘One Day I’m Going To Soar’ is as follows:

‘Now’

‘Lost’

‘Me’

‘She Got A Wiggle’

‘You’

‘Thinking Of You’

‘I’m Always Going To Love You’

‘Incapable Of Love’

‘Nowhere Is Home’

‘Free’

‘It’s OK John Joe’

The band will also play two UK live dates to celebrate album’s release. They will headline Glasgow’s Cottiers Theatre on May 6 and London’s O2 Shepherds Bush Empire on May 8. Tickets go onsale on Friday at 12pm.

Hole’s Eric Erlandson writes book about Kurt Cobain’s suicide

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Former guitarist with Hole, Eric Erlandson, has written a book about the suicide of his friend, Kurt Cobain of Nirvana. Erlandson's book, Letters To Kurt, will be published on April 8 by Akashic Books. The New York Times reports that the 52 chapter offering will be made up of poetry, prose and 'free association' and will comprise "reflections on rock'n'roll, drug abuse and the loss of Cobain". Speaking to The New York Times, Erlandson, who played in Hole with Cobain's wife Courtney Love, said: "It just wasn't feeling right to write a memoir-style book and this one just came out of me a couple years ago. It felt like the right way to go, but at the same time, I had a lot of hesitation. At some point it just started to click and I started to honor it." He added that he has not discussed the book with his former bandmate, Love, saying: "Up until September of last year, October, she was asking me to play with her. But I felt like there was no transformation in our relationship at all. So that kind of worked its way into the book. I never mentioned to her that I had written the book, and I'm sure she's heard of it now." Had he not committed suicide in 1994 at the age of 27, Kurt Cobain would have turned 45 on February 20 of this year. Letters To Kurt will be published in the United States three days after the 18th anniversary of Cobain's death.

Former guitarist with Hole, Eric Erlandson, has written a book about the suicide of his friend, Kurt Cobain of Nirvana.

Erlandson’s book, Letters To Kurt, will be published on April 8 by Akashic Books. The New York Times reports that the 52 chapter offering will be made up of poetry, prose and ‘free association’ and will comprise “reflections on rock’n’roll, drug abuse and the loss of Cobain”.

Speaking to The New York Times, Erlandson, who played in Hole with Cobain’s wife Courtney Love, said: “It just wasn’t feeling right to write a memoir-style book and this one just came out of me a couple years ago. It felt like the right way to go, but at the same time, I had a lot of hesitation. At some point it just started to click and I started to honor it.”

He added that he has not discussed the book with his former bandmate, Love, saying: “Up until September of last year, October, she was asking me to play with her. But I felt like there was no transformation in our relationship at all. So that kind of worked its way into the book. I never mentioned to her that I had written the book, and I’m sure she’s heard of it now.”

Had he not committed suicide in 1994 at the age of 27, Kurt Cobain would have turned 45 on February 20 of this year. Letters To Kurt will be published in the United States three days after the 18th anniversary of Cobain’s death.

Gaz Coombes to play first ever solo show at Club NME on April 20

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Supergrass frontman Gaz Coombes is to play his first-ever solo gig at an exclusive Club NME show at London venue Koko on April 20. After six albums with Supergrass, and a number one in the form of 'I Should Coco' Coombes is set to release his debut solo album- 'Gaz Coombes presents… Here Come t...

Supergrass frontman Gaz Coombes is to play his first-ever solo gig at an exclusive Club NME show at London venue Koko on April 20.

After six albums with Supergrass, and a number one in the form of ‘I Should Coco’ Coombes is set to release his debut solo album- ‘Gaz Coombes presents… Here Come the Bombs’. Tracks from ‘Here Come the Bombs’ will be performed live at the special Club NME show.

Speaking about the album, Coombes said he was approaching the material as being a “blank page”. He added: “It was really focused on just what I wanted to get across, and on my inspirations – they were all my things that I’m into, whether it’s film, film soundtrack, or past artists that we didn’t really look at much in Supergrass. That was all really exciting.”

For more on Club NME head to NME.com/clubnme. For information and the latest ticket news head to KOKO.uk.com

Hear the first track from Noel Gallagher’s Amorphous Androgynous sessions

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Noel Gallagher has released 'Shoot A Hole Into The Sun', the first new material from his collaboration with Amorphous Androgynous, online. Scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen to the track. The former Oasis man, who has been working on the follow-up to his debut solo LP 'Noel...

Noel Gallagher has released ‘Shoot A Hole Into The Sun’, the first new material from his collaboration with Amorphous Androgynous, online. Scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen to the track.

The former Oasis man, who has been working on the follow-up to his debut solo LP ‘Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds’ with the duo, will put out the track as the B-side to his latest single ‘Dream On’.

‘Dream On’ will be released on March 12 via Gallagher’s own Sour Mash label.

The release of the material comes just weeks after Gallagher told NME that the collaboration had turned into a “right fucking saga”.

He explained that the dance duo had missed the deadline for finishing the album – October 23 last year – and thus the release had been pushed back: “Unfortunately for them, they’ve only delivered a couple of tracks and they’re trying to mix it while I’m on the road… and it’s not working.”

Gallagher added that he plans to continue working on the material during a break in touring this July, meaning the release is “more likely to be next year now”.

Noel Gallagher will be presented with the Godlike Genius Award at the NME Awards tonight (February 29). Gallagher, who will pick up the gong at the ceremony at London’s O2 Academy Brixton, said of his win: “I would like to thank NME for bestowing upon me such a great accolade. I have dreamt of this moment since I was 43 years old. I accept that I am now a genius, just like God.”

Meanwhile, a special collectors’ issue dedicated to Noel Gallagher is out now. Produced by the teams behind NME and Uncut, the magazine will feature Gallagher’s greatest interviews, unseen photos and a competition to win albums signed by the man himself. The issue is available on newsstands and digitally – click here to order your copy.

The Ninth Uncut Playlist Of 2012

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Up to our necks in it here, finishing the first Uncut Ultimate Music Guide of 2012. Hopefully a good few of you will have now seen our relaunched new issue with Bowie on the cover: please let me know what you think, either in the Facebook Comments below or via Twitter - www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey. Anyhow, here’s a quick round-up of this week’s listening, good and bad. Apologies for a couple of cryptic entries, and thanks for some very good recommendations last week on Twitter, that resulted in satisfying purchases of the Chapman and McLaughlin albums. The picture’s of Ty Segall & White Fence, by the way. Fine record. 1 Michael Chapman – Window/Wrecked Again (Beat Goes On) 2 Dr John – Locked Down (Nonesuch) 3 John McLaughlin – My Goal’s Beyond (Douglas) 4 Plankton Wat – Spirits (Thrill Jockey) 5 Willis Earl Beal – Acousmatic Sorcery (XL) 6 Mystery Album 1 7 Ty Segall & White Fence – Hair (Drag City) 8 Ty Segall/The Mysteries Of Love – It’s A Problem/I Could Be Better Than You (Permanent) 9 The Nightingales – No Love Lost (Cooking Vinyl) 10 Trembling Bells & Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy – The Marble Downs (Honest Jon’s) 11 Dean Blunt & Inga Copeland – Black Is Beautiful (Hyperdub) 12 Gaz Coombes – Here Come The Bombs (Hot Fruit) 13 Richard Hawley – Standing At The Sky’s Edge (Parlophone) 14 Mystery Album 2 15 Graham Coxon – A + E (Parlophone) 16 Pokey Lafarge & The South City Three – Middle Of Everywhere (Free Dirt)

Up to our necks in it here, finishing the first Uncut Ultimate Music Guide of 2012. Hopefully a good few of you will have now seen our relaunched new issue with Bowie on the cover: please let me know what you think, either in the Facebook Comments below or via Twitter – www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey.

Anyhow, here’s a quick round-up of this week’s listening, good and bad. Apologies for a couple of cryptic entries, and thanks for some very good recommendations last week on Twitter, that resulted in satisfying purchases of the Chapman and McLaughlin albums. The picture’s of Ty Segall & White Fence, by the way. Fine record.

1 Michael Chapman – Window/Wrecked Again (Beat Goes On)

2 Dr John – Locked Down (Nonesuch)

3 John McLaughlin – My Goal’s Beyond (Douglas)

4 Plankton Wat – Spirits (Thrill Jockey)

5 Willis Earl Beal – Acousmatic Sorcery (XL)

6 Mystery Album 1

7 Ty Segall & White Fence – Hair (Drag City)

8 Ty Segall/The Mysteries Of Love – It’s A Problem/I Could Be Better Than You (Permanent)

9 The Nightingales – No Love Lost (Cooking Vinyl)

10 Trembling Bells & Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy – The Marble Downs (Honest Jon’s)

11 Dean Blunt & Inga Copeland – Black Is Beautiful (Hyperdub)

12 Gaz Coombes – Here Come The Bombs (Hot Fruit)

13 Richard Hawley – Standing At The Sky’s Edge (Parlophone)

14 Mystery Album 2

15 Graham Coxon – A + E (Parlophone)

16 Pokey Lafarge & The South City Three – Middle Of Everywhere (Free Dirt)

Hear Regina Spektor’s comeback single ‘All The Rowboats’

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Regina Spektor has debuted 'All The Rowboats', the first single from her new album 'What We Saw From The Cheap Seats', online. Scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen. The album has been produced by Avenged Sevenfold/Maroon 5 man Mike Elizondo and is the follow-up to her 2009 fi...

Regina Spektor has debuted ‘All The Rowboats’, the first single from her new album ‘What We Saw From The Cheap Seats’, online. Scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen.

The album has been produced by Avenged Sevenfold/Maroon 5 man Mike Elizondo and is the follow-up to her 2009 fifth album ‘Far’.

Spektor will release the track digitally today (February 28) and has also confirmed that she will be releasing a 7″ single on Record Store Day featuring two Russian cover songs ‘The Prayer Of François Villon’ and “Old Jacket’.

‘What We Saw From The Cheap Seats’ is expected to be released on May 12, with Spektor set to tour across North America as the opening act to Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers for a large chunk of this summer.

Regina Spektor’s most recent release was a live album titled ‘Live In London’, which she put in November 2010. It was recorded live at London’s HMV Hammersmith Apollo in December 2009.

All The Rowboats by reginaspektor

New Order announce more UK tour dates

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New Order have added two new dates to their spring UK tour. The reunited band will play a show at Edinburgh's Usher Hall on May 6 and an additional gig at O2 Academy Newcastle on May 8. Before the Edinburgh and Newcastle dates, the band will play two hometown shows at Manchester's O2 Apollo on ...

New Order have added two new dates to their spring UK tour.

The reunited band will play a show at Edinburgh’s Usher Hall on May 6 and an additional gig at O2 Academy Newcastle on May 8.

Before the Edinburgh and Newcastle dates, the band will play two hometown shows at Manchester’s O2 Apollo on April 26 and 27, two shows at London’s O2 Academy Brixton on May 2 and 3, and gigs in Birmingham and Glasgow.

New Order, who are also set to play T In The Park, Bestival, Benicassim and a series of others festivals during the summer, announced in late 2011 that they had reformed, but that founding member and bass player Peter Hook would not be part of their line-up.

Instead keyboard player Gillian Gilbert, who hadn’t performed with the band for over 10 years, rejoined and bass duties were taken up by Tom Chapman, who was part of frontman Bernard Sumner’s recent project Bad Lieutenant.

The tour is the band’s first in the UK for over five years.

New Order will now play:

O2 Apollo Manchester (April 26, 27)

Birmingham Ballroom (29)

O2 Academy Brixton (May 2, 3)

O2 Academy Glasgow (5)

Edinburgh Usher Hall (6)

O2 Academy Newcastle (8)

Ask Gregg Allman

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Here's your chance to question the Southern Rock icon... With his autobiography, My Cross To Bear, due for publication soon, Gregg Allman will answer your questions for our An Audience With... feature. So, is there anything you've ever wanted to ask Gregg? What are his memories of the Allman Brothers' legendary Fillmore East show in 1971? Who are his favourite Hammond organ players? What rock autobiographies would be recommend? Send us your questions by noon, Friday, March 2 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com The best questions, and Gregg's answers will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question.

Here’s your chance to question the Southern Rock icon…

With his autobiography, My Cross To Bear, due for publication soon, Gregg Allman will answer your questions for our An Audience With… feature.

So, is there anything you’ve ever wanted to ask Gregg?

What are his memories of the Allman Brothers’ legendary Fillmore East show in 1971?

Who are his favourite Hammond organ players?

What rock autobiographies would be recommend?

Send us your questions by noon, Friday, March 2 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com

The best questions, and Gregg’s answers will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine.

Please include your name and location with your question.

The return of Cormac McCarthy

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The writer of No Country For Old Men and The Road is back, but not quite as you might expect... Cormac McCarthy has been in the news quite a lot lately. This is a pretty remarkable achievement in itself: McCarthy, the author of No Country For Old Men and The Road, is a fastidious defender of his privacy, while his work rate – 10 novels in nearly 50 years – is hardly prolific. All the same, a cursory Google News search today truffles out a number of recent stories involving McCarthy, including a couple of tantalising revelations. One was genuinely quite brilliant: he has copy edited heavyweight science books and thinks exclamation marks and semi-colons “have no place in literature”. One, meanwhile, was fun but throwaway: a Twitter account in McCarthy’s name was exposed as fake. “He doesn’t even own a computer,” rumbled his publisher. All the same, who could resist this sample Tweet: “An infant swimmer in the twitter ocean. Vigilant and raw and blithe.” But the news item carrying the most substance alerts us to fresh McCarthy writings. Not, sadly, a novel – his most recent is still 2006’s The Road – but in fact, an original screenplay. McCarthy has so far an intermittently successful relationship with movies. There was Billy Bob Thornton’s entirely dismal All The Pretty Horses – then far more successful adaptations of No Country For Old Men and The Road. There’s been some TV work, too, but I must admit I’ve not seen either 1977’s The Gardener’s Son, part of an American anthology series, or last year’s The Sunset Limited, directed by Tommy Lee Jones for HBO. This new project is called The Counsellor, and the turnaround seems remarkably speedy, considering the pace at which McCarthy usually operates. The screenplay was delivered in January (his publishers, it seems, were expecting a new novel), and Ridley Scott signed on as director a fortnight later. Scott has a history of sorts with McCarthy: about five years ago, he was linked to direct Blood Meridian, McCarthy’s novel about a gang of scalp hunters marauding through the American-Mexico borders in the mid-1800s. At the time, Scott walked away from the project – I’m pretty sure he said it was too violent. What little we know about The Counsellor suggests it’s in keeping with the No Country model – a successful lawyer gets involved with the drug wars in Mexico, with disastrous consequences. Producer Steven Schwartz claimed it “may be one of McCarthy’s most disturbing and powerful works.” An interesting thought, particularly if you’ve read Outer Dark or Child Of God, which are hardly for the faint-hearted. But then, a review of the script over here (spoilers!) identifies McCarthy’s characters as “morally depraved out of all human recognition”. All the same, I can’t get away from the nagging feeling that this is going to be a pretty slight genre piece – like No Country, which felt like a palette cleanser after the hefty Border Trilogy. I remember reading it in a couple of hours, thinking it great fun, all very Jim Thompson. What the Coens did with it for their adaptation was great, and along with There Will Be Blood and The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford, was very much part of a brace of high-end films about men doing things quite slowly. What can we expect from Scott’s The Counsellor, then? Hopefully, something leaner than Scott’s made in a long while. Anyone who’s seen the trailer for his Alien prequel, Prometheus, will have sensed the push-and-pull between trying to be faithful to the sweaty claustrophobia of his original film and the demands of the post-Avatar sci-fi blockbuster. Scott is capable of downsizing his movies – no planets were destroyed in either American Gangster or Matchstick Men, both of which I liked – but the model I hope he adopts for The Counsellor is Thelma And Louise. This might seem surprising, if you consider McCarthy favours exclusively male protagonists. But Thelma And Louise cleaves closest of all Scott’s films, I think, to the romantic idea of escaping from society – “to light out for the Territory”, as McCarthy’s idol Mark Twain describes it. Certainly, Thelma and Louise have something of the Huck and Tom about them. But, sure, we’ll have to see how this turns out. Scott’s already signed Michael Fassbender up as his counsellor, while various sources report a fairly predictable list of candidates for the movie’s villain – The Hurt Locker’s Jeremy Renner, the awful Bradley Cooper and, more intriguingly, Brad Pitt. I think Pitt is doing his best work at the moment – he was tremendous in Tree Of Life and Moneyball – and he has history with both Scott and McCarthy. Pitt got his break, of course, in Thelma And Louise – and if you can track it down on eBay, I can recommend his reading of the All The Pretty Horses audiobook. Whether whoever Scott casts will have the same presence/hairpiece as Javier Bardem in No Country, I really couldn't say.

The writer of No Country For Old Men and The Road is back, but not quite as you might expect…

Cormac McCarthy has been in the news quite a lot lately. This is a pretty remarkable achievement in itself: McCarthy, the author of No Country For Old Men and The Road, is a fastidious defender of his privacy, while his work rate – 10 novels in nearly 50 years – is hardly prolific. All the same, a cursory Google News search today truffles out a number of recent stories involving McCarthy, including a couple of tantalising revelations. One was genuinely quite brilliant: he has copy edited heavyweight science books and thinks exclamation marks and semi-colons “have no place in literature”. One, meanwhile, was fun but throwaway: a Twitter account in McCarthy’s name was exposed as fake. “He doesn’t even own a computer,” rumbled his publisher. All the same, who could resist this sample Tweet: “An infant swimmer in the twitter ocean. Vigilant and raw and blithe.”

But the news item carrying the most substance alerts us to fresh McCarthy writings. Not, sadly, a novel – his most recent is still 2006’s The Road – but in fact, an original screenplay. McCarthy has so far an intermittently successful relationship with movies. There was Billy Bob Thornton’s entirely dismal All The Pretty Horses – then far more successful adaptations of No Country For Old Men and The Road. There’s been some TV work, too, but I must admit I’ve not seen either 1977’s The Gardener’s Son, part of an American anthology series, or last year’s The Sunset Limited, directed by Tommy Lee Jones for HBO.

This new project is called The Counsellor, and the turnaround seems remarkably speedy, considering the pace at which McCarthy usually operates. The screenplay was delivered in January (his publishers, it seems, were expecting a new novel), and Ridley Scott signed on as director a fortnight later. Scott has a history of sorts with McCarthy: about five years ago, he was linked to direct Blood Meridian, McCarthy’s novel about a gang of scalp hunters marauding through the American-Mexico borders in the mid-1800s. At the time, Scott walked away from the project – I’m pretty sure he said it was too violent. What little we know about The Counsellor suggests it’s in keeping with the No Country model – a successful lawyer gets involved with the drug wars in Mexico, with disastrous consequences. Producer Steven Schwartz claimed it “may be one of McCarthy’s most disturbing and powerful works.” An interesting thought, particularly if you’ve read Outer Dark or Child Of God, which are hardly for the faint-hearted. But then, a review of the script over here (spoilers!) identifies McCarthy’s characters as “morally depraved out of all human recognition”.

All the same, I can’t get away from the nagging feeling that this is going to be a pretty slight genre piece – like No Country, which felt like a palette cleanser after the hefty Border Trilogy. I remember reading it in a couple of hours, thinking it great fun, all very Jim Thompson. What the Coens did with it for their adaptation was great, and along with There Will Be Blood and The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford, was very much part of a brace of high-end films about men doing things quite slowly.

What can we expect from Scott’s The Counsellor, then? Hopefully, something leaner than Scott’s made in a long while. Anyone who’s seen the trailer for his Alien prequel, Prometheus, will have sensed the push-and-pull between trying to be faithful to the sweaty claustrophobia of his original film and the demands of the post-Avatar sci-fi blockbuster. Scott is capable of downsizing his movies – no planets were destroyed in either American Gangster or Matchstick Men, both of which I liked – but the model I hope he adopts for The Counsellor is Thelma And Louise. This might seem surprising, if you consider McCarthy favours exclusively male protagonists. But Thelma And Louise cleaves closest of all Scott’s films, I think, to the romantic idea of escaping from society – “to light out for the Territory”, as McCarthy’s idol Mark Twain describes it. Certainly, Thelma and Louise have something of the Huck and Tom about them.

But, sure, we’ll have to see how this turns out. Scott’s already signed Michael Fassbender up as his counsellor, while various sources report a fairly predictable list of candidates for the movie’s villain – The Hurt Locker’s Jeremy Renner, the awful Bradley Cooper and, more intriguingly, Brad Pitt. I think Pitt is doing his best work at the moment – he was tremendous in Tree Of Life and Moneyball – and he has history with both Scott and McCarthy. Pitt got his break, of course, in Thelma And Louise – and if you can track it down on eBay, I can recommend his reading of the All The Pretty Horses audiobook. Whether whoever Scott casts will have the same presence/hairpiece as Javier Bardem in No Country, I really couldn’t say.

David Sylvian – A Victim Of Stars

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A visionary musician, revealed under the make-up... When David Sylvian first became a presence on the pop scene on the cusp of the '80s, it was obvious that, like many of that decade's performers, he was hugely influenced, to the point of being besotted, by Roxy Music. Not only did he and his fellow travellers in the band Japan brandish the outlandish and flamboyant fashions of glam-rock, but Sylvian's voice was clearly modelled on Bryan Ferry's tremulous croon. The combination of that erogenous baritone and his pop-star looks seemed to point inevitably to a mainstream pop position alongside the Duran Durans and Culture Clubs when, in 1982, Japan found themselves with a bona fide hit single in the shape of the winsome "Ghosts", from the previous year's Tin Drum album. But it speaks volumes about Sylvian's ambitions that by then he had already effectively turned his back on "pop" music, breaking up the band to pursue more exploratory musical directions. Ironically, while his singing style was sometimes characterised as an affected copy of Ferry's already affected lounge-lizard style, in time the aesthetic balance between the two would shift the other way, as Sylvian found far better uses for the louche croon than Ferry's endless repetitions of a static position. Musically, too, he became far more adventurous than both Roxy Music and the New Romantic legions who echoed the original glam-rock innovations, his work paralleling that of questing artists like Scott Walker and Talk Talk. Across a series of artful solo albums, Sylvian delved ever deeper into the worlds of jazz, avant-garde and improvised music, ultimately reaching the point where, with 2009's Manafon, he would be constructing songs completely from improvised recording sessions involving the likes of saxophonist Evan Parker, guitarist Keith Rowe, pianist John Tilbury and laptop schemer Christian Fennesz, albeit somehow managing to impose a sense of "song-ness" on the pieces simply by dint of his vocal tracks. It's as if he's constantly striven to find out how little structure is necessary for there to still be a song, as such - a journey that has taken him to a position where his music has become an almost elemental presence. The track which opens this two-and-a-half-hour anthology of Sylvian's work cleverly embodies the course that his career has followed. It's a version - either a remix or re-recording - of Japan's hit "Ghosts" made for his 2000 compilation Everything & Nothing, on which the presence of apparently random blips and smudges of sound overlaid upon the song creates a link to the most recent pieces from Manafon, as if it were always intended to be heard this way. It's followed by a couple of singles - "Forbidden Colours", the haunting theme from the film Merry Christmas Mr Lawrence, and the double A-side "Bamboo Houses"/"Bamboo Music" - made with Ryuichi Sakamoto, who would become a frequent collaborator over the ensuing decades. Their Oriental tone, gamelan percussion, wooden and metallic synth textures, and the latter's innovative bouncy electro beats that would prove influential on subsequent generations of hip-hop producers, now sound more or less commonplace, an indication of how culture adapts and absorbs the new and unusual. Other important collaborators have included Robert Fripp, whose Frippertronic guitar glows at the heart of "Silver Moon" alongside BJ Cole's pedal steel; and synthesist/producer Burnt Friedman, with whom Sylvian and his brother, drummer and longtime accomplice Steve Jansen, formed the group Nine Horses, a sort of avant-rock lounge-music ensemble. Sylvian's own first solo single was "Red Guitar", a slice of jazz-funk lite blending oozing fretless bass, skittish drums and cool piano within a dipping groove. Perhaps helped by the success of "Ghosts", it reached the UK Top 20, which enabled Sylvian to pull off the remarkable feat of getting his 1984 full-length solo debut Brilliant Trees, an album featuring musicians such as Mark Isham, Jon Hassell, Kenny Wheeler and Holger Czukay, into the Top 5. The latter's strangulated French horn fills are still a wonder to behold. Secrets Of The Beehive (1987), found Sylvian further entrenched in chamber-jazz terrain, with the brooding horn colouration and lowering strings of tracks like "Let The Happiness In", "Waterfront" and "Orpheus" reflecting what was clearly a brooding, introspective personal character. But despite his introvert tendencies, Sylvian still managed to dominate 1991's Japan reunion as Rain Tree Crow, on which Bill Nelson's glistening sheets of guitar seemed more decisive musical contributions to tracks like "Blackwater" than those of the singer's former bandmates. The reunion was short-lived. A couple of years later, he collaborated again with Robert Fripp on The First Day, from which comes "Jean The Birdman", a fable of aspiration whose line "Ambition is a bloody game" seemed to sum up Sylvian's disillusion with the music industry in general. He would release no new studio album for the next six years, a period of inactivity eventually broken by the release in 1999 of Dead Bees On A Cake. It was a further refinement of his increasingly austere chamber-jazz aesthetic: in "Darkest Dreaming", wisps of steel guitar and electric piano ebb and flow in quiet ripples, while Djivan Gasparyan's duduk flute settles like the dust on a moth's wing. But in the nine-minute-long "I Surrender", he somehow managed to blend Kenny Wheeler's flugelhorn, Lawrence Feldman's flute and Mark Ribot's subtle curlicues of wah-wah guitar into a compelling ambience of erotic languour, the perfect habitat for a vocal that seemed to open up an abyss of yearning. By 2009's Manafon, the music has all but eroded away to just a few hints and flecks of sound on tracks like "Snow White In Appalachia" and "Manafon" itself, whose lyric speaks of rustic isolation and deep-rooted reproach. Tinted with austere streaks of strings and gentle swells of noise, these tracks offer spooky envelopments for Sylvian's vocals, which somehow impose the sense of recurrent structure that the music seems to deny. It's a fascinating exercise in the kind of minimalism that doesn't involve repetition, but rather erosion - an intriguing position to reach, especially for a musician who started out looking like a cosmetics model. As the years have passed, the made-up face has been worn away to reveal a truly interesting, uncategorisable artistic countenance. 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!

A visionary musician, revealed under the make-up…

When David Sylvian first became a presence on the pop scene on the cusp of the ’80s, it was obvious that, like many of that decade’s performers, he was hugely influenced, to the point of being besotted, by Roxy Music. Not only did he and his fellow travellers in the band Japan brandish the outlandish and flamboyant fashions of glam-rock, but Sylvian’s voice was clearly modelled on Bryan Ferry’s tremulous croon.

The combination of that erogenous baritone and his pop-star looks seemed to point inevitably to a mainstream pop position alongside the Duran Durans and Culture Clubs when, in 1982, Japan found themselves with a bona fide hit single in the shape of the winsome “Ghosts”, from the previous year’s Tin Drum album. But it speaks volumes about Sylvian’s ambitions that by then he had already effectively turned his back on “pop” music, breaking up the band to pursue more exploratory musical directions. Ironically, while his singing style was sometimes characterised as an affected copy of Ferry’s already affected lounge-lizard style, in time the aesthetic balance between the two would shift the other way, as Sylvian found far better uses for the louche croon than Ferry’s endless repetitions of a static position.

Musically, too, he became far more adventurous than both Roxy Music and the New Romantic legions who echoed the original glam-rock innovations, his work paralleling that of questing artists like Scott Walker and Talk Talk. Across a series of artful solo albums, Sylvian delved ever deeper into the worlds of jazz, avant-garde and improvised music, ultimately reaching the point where, with 2009’s Manafon, he would be constructing songs completely from improvised recording sessions involving the likes of saxophonist Evan Parker, guitarist Keith Rowe, pianist John Tilbury and laptop schemer Christian Fennesz, albeit somehow managing to impose a sense of “song-ness” on the pieces simply by dint of his vocal tracks. It’s as if he’s constantly striven to find out how little structure is necessary for there to still be a song, as such – a journey that has taken him to a position where his music has become an almost elemental presence.

The track which opens this two-and-a-half-hour anthology of Sylvian’s work cleverly embodies the course that his career has followed. It’s a version – either a remix or re-recording – of Japan’s hit “Ghosts” made for his 2000 compilation Everything & Nothing, on which the presence of apparently random blips and smudges of sound overlaid upon the song creates a link to the most recent pieces from Manafon, as if it were always intended to be heard this way.

It’s followed by a couple of singles – “Forbidden Colours“, the haunting theme from the film Merry Christmas Mr Lawrence, and the double A-side “Bamboo Houses”/”Bamboo Music” – made with Ryuichi Sakamoto, who would become a frequent collaborator over the ensuing decades. Their Oriental tone, gamelan percussion, wooden and metallic synth textures, and the latter’s innovative bouncy electro beats that would prove influential on subsequent generations of hip-hop producers, now sound more or less commonplace, an indication of how culture adapts and absorbs the new and unusual. Other important collaborators have included Robert Fripp, whose Frippertronic guitar glows at the heart of “Silver Moon” alongside BJ Cole’s pedal steel; and synthesist/producer Burnt Friedman, with whom Sylvian and his brother, drummer and longtime accomplice Steve Jansen, formed the group Nine Horses, a sort of avant-rock lounge-music ensemble.

Sylvian’s own first solo single was “Red Guitar“, a slice of jazz-funk lite blending oozing fretless bass, skittish drums and cool piano within a dipping groove. Perhaps helped by the success of “Ghosts”, it reached the UK Top 20, which enabled Sylvian to pull off the remarkable feat of getting his 1984 full-length solo debut Brilliant Trees, an album featuring musicians such as Mark Isham, Jon Hassell, Kenny Wheeler and Holger Czukay, into the Top 5. The latter’s strangulated French horn fills are still a wonder to behold.

Secrets Of The Beehive (1987), found Sylvian further entrenched in chamber-jazz terrain, with the brooding horn colouration and lowering strings of tracks like “Let The Happiness In”, “Waterfront” and “Orpheus” reflecting what was clearly a brooding, introspective personal character. But despite his introvert tendencies, Sylvian still managed to dominate 1991’s Japan reunion as Rain Tree Crow, on which Bill Nelson’s glistening sheets of guitar seemed more decisive musical contributions to tracks like “Blackwater” than those of the singer’s former bandmates. The reunion was short-lived. A couple of years later, he collaborated again with Robert Fripp on The First Day, from which comes “Jean The Birdman”, a fable of aspiration whose line “Ambition is a bloody game” seemed to sum up Sylvian’s disillusion with the music industry in general.

He would release no new studio album for the next six years, a period of inactivity eventually broken by the release in 1999 of Dead Bees On A Cake. It was a further refinement of his increasingly austere chamber-jazz aesthetic: in “Darkest Dreaming”, wisps of steel guitar and electric piano ebb and flow in quiet ripples, while Djivan Gasparyan’s duduk flute settles like the dust on a moth’s wing. But in the nine-minute-long “I Surrender”, he somehow managed to blend Kenny Wheeler’s flugelhorn, Lawrence Feldman’s flute and Mark Ribot’s subtle curlicues of wah-wah guitar into a compelling ambience of erotic languour, the perfect habitat for a vocal that seemed to open up an abyss of yearning.

By 2009’s Manafon, the music has all but eroded away to just a few hints and flecks of sound on tracks like “Snow White In Appalachia” and “Manafon” itself, whose lyric speaks of rustic isolation and deep-rooted reproach. Tinted with austere streaks of strings and gentle swells of noise, these tracks offer spooky envelopments for Sylvian’s vocals, which somehow impose the sense of recurrent structure that the music seems to deny. It’s a fascinating exercise in the kind of minimalism that doesn’t involve repetition, but rather erosion – an intriguing position to reach, especially for a musician who started out looking like a cosmetics model. As the years have passed, the made-up face has been worn away to reveal a truly interesting, uncategorisable artistic countenance.

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!

Jack White confirms a second summer festival appearance

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Jack White has confirmed his second European solo appearance of this summer. The former White Stripes man will play Belgium's Rock Werchter festival, which takes place in Rotselaar from June 28 – July 1. Also confirmed to play at the Belgium event are Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds, Pearl ...

Jack White has confirmed his second European solo appearance of this summer.

The former White Stripes man will play Belgium’s Rock Werchter festival, which takes place in Rotselaar from June 28 – July 1.

Also confirmed to play at the Belgium event are Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds, Pearl Jam, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Florence And The Machine, Justice, The Cure, Elbow and Snow Patrol.

For more information about the event and for full ticket details, visit Rockwerchter.be.

Jack White will release his debut solo album ‘Blunderbuss’ on April 23. The album contains a total of 13 tracks and will be released through Third Man Records/XL. White will be appearing on US comedy show Saturday Night Live on March 3 to play tracks off the record.

Prior to his appearance at Rock Werchter, White will play a series of live shows in March in the United States. He is also confirmed to appear at Radio 1’s Hackney Weekend on June 23-24, alongside Lana Del Rey and The Maccabees.

Bruce Springsteen to play ‘intimate’ show at SXSW

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Bruce Springsteen will be performing an 'intimate' show at South By Southwest in Austin, Texas next month. The rocker, who is the keynote speaker at the music industry conference and festival, will be performing on the evening of March 15 at a small, undisclosed venue in the city. Tickets will be...

Bruce Springsteen will be performing an ‘intimate’ show at South By Southwest in Austin, Texas next month.

The rocker, who is the keynote speaker at the music industry conference and festival, will be performing on the evening of March 15 at a small, undisclosed venue in the city. Tickets will be gained by a raffle, with South By Southwest badge holders being asked to enter a draw in order to win tickets for the show. Entries can be made for the draw from March 12-14 on site at SXSW and winners will be contacted on the day of the show.

For more information, visit: sxsw.com/springsteenticketdrawing

Bruce Springsteen recently revealed that his new album ‘Wrecking Ball’ – set for release on March 5 – is inspired by a “critical, questioning and often angry patriotism”. He explained that the songs were inspired by the economic troubles the US is facing and the issue that “no one has been held to account”.

Speaking to The Guardian, Springsteen said: “What was done to our country was wrong and unpatriotic and un-American and nobody has been held to account. There is a real patriotism underneath the best of my music but it is a critical, questioning and often angry patriotism.”

The album, which follows 2009’s ‘Working On A Dream’ and 2010’s outtakes collection ‘The Promise’, features an appearance from Rage Against The Machine‘s Tom Morello.

Springsteen will deliver the keynote speech at South By Southwest on March 15, before kicking off his US tour three days later in Atlanta. He will visit the UK in the summer, beginning at Sunderland Stadium of Light on June 21 before moving on to Manchester Etihad Stadium (22), Isle Of Wight Festival (24) and London Hard Rock Calling (July 14).

Elbow and Paul Weller to play Cheshire observatory

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Elbow and Paul Weller will headline this summer's Live From Jodrell Bank event. The event takes place at Cheshire's Jodrell Bank on June 23 and 24. Joddrell Bank is an observatory located 20 miles from Manchester which houses the third largest telescope in the world. Elbow will headline the eve...

Elbow and Paul Weller will headline this summer’s Live From Jodrell Bank event.

The event takes place at Cheshire’s Jodrell Bank on June 23 and 24. Joddrell Bank is an observatory located 20 miles from Manchester which houses the third largest telescope in the world.

Elbow will headline the event’s first night on June 23, with Weller following on June 24. As part of the event’s ticket price, punters will be able to attend hands-on science workshops, lectures and experiments.

Weller releases his new studio album ‘Sonik Kicks’ next month, while Elbow are currently working on new material for the follow-up to 2011’s ‘Build A Rocket Boys!’. You can watch a video interview with Weller discussing ‘Sonik Kicks’ by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking.

See Jodrellbanklive.co.uk for more details about the event.

Sex Pistols’ John Lydon: ‘I’d like to have a cake fight with the Queen’

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Sex Pistols' frontman John Lydon has claimed that he'd like to "have a cake fight" with the Queen. Speaking in the new issue of NME, which is on UK newsstands and available digitally from tomorrow (February 29), the singer spoke about the controversy surrounding the punk legends in 1977, when the...

Sex Pistols‘ frontman John Lydon has claimed that he’d like to “have a cake fight” with the Queen.

Speaking in the new issue of NME, which is on UK newsstands and available digitally from tomorrow (February 29), the singer spoke about the controversy surrounding the punk legends in 1977, when they released their single ‘God Save The Queen’ to coincide with the Silver Jubilee.

Responding to rumours that the Queen had personally banned the single from taking the top spot in the UK Singles Chart in favour of Rod Stewart’s ‘I Don’t Want To Talk About It’/’The First Cut Is The Deepest’, he said: “That’s a lie, isn’t it? Those poor people, they’re born into a hamster cage and they have no say on anything. In that respect the Queen and I are in agreement!”

However, Lydon joked that he still wouldn’t fancy getting together with the monarch to smooth over the controversy. When asked if he’d like to meet her to discuss the matter, he quipped: “Oh yes, but I well know what I’d do. I’d have a cake fight.”

The singer also spoke about the outrage caused by the band’s manager, Malcolm McLaren, when he hired a boat for them to play on as it sailed down the River Thames and past the Houses of Parliament over the Jubilee weekend. He claimed that, when asked by police “Which one’s Johnny Rotten?”, he had pointed at Richard Branson so he could avoid a beating.

Watch Radiohead debut new tracks ‘Identikit’ and ‘Cut A Hole’

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Radiohead debuted two new songs during the first show of their 2012 world tour in Miami last night (February 27). The band, who will be touring throughout 2012 in support of their new album 'The King Of Limbs', kicked off the tour at Miami's American Airlines arena and played new tracks 'Identiki...

Radiohead debuted two new songs during the first show of their 2012 world tour in Miami last night (February 27).

The band, who will be touring throughout 2012 in support of their new album ‘The King Of Limbs’, kicked off the tour at Miami’s American Airlines arena and played new tracks ‘Identikit’ and ‘Cut A Hole’ as part of their set. You can see live footage of both tracks by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking.

The tracks were part of a 24-song setlist that drew heavily from ‘The King Of Limbs’. It also featured the little aired ‘Meeting In The Aisle’ from the band’s ‘Airbag EP’, reports Consequence Of Sound.

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.

The band are expected to confirm UK dates in the coming weeks, but are yet to say when this will be. Guitarist Ed O’Brien has previously hinted that the band will play arena shows in the UK rather than festival dates.

‘Identikit’

‘Cut A Hole’

Radiohead played:

‘Bloom’

‘The Daily Mail’

‘Magpie’

‘Staircase’

‘National Anthem’

‘Meeting in the Aisle’

‘Kid A’

‘The Gloaming’

‘Codex’

‘You and Whose Army?’

‘Nude’

‘Identikit’

‘Lotus Flower’

‘There There’

‘Feral’

‘Idioteque’

‘Separator’

‘Airbag’

‘Bodysnatchers’

‘Cut A Hole’

‘Arpeggi’

‘Give Up the Ghost’

‘Reckoner’

‘Karma Police’