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WIN TICKETS TO SEE BRIAN WILSON

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Brian Wilson is playing three dates at the Royal Festival Hall on London’s South Bank, on September 16, 17 and 18. He will be performing his latest album, Brian Wilson Reimagines Gershwin, in full – as well as plenty of Beach Boys and solo hits. We have a pair of tickets to give away to the sh...

Brian Wilson is playing three dates at the Royal Festival Hall on London’s South Bank, on September 16, 17 and 18.

He will be performing his latest album, Brian Wilson Reimagines Gershwin, in full – as well as plenty of Beach Boys and solo hits.

We have a pair of tickets to give away to the show of your choice, as well as a signed vinyl copy of the …Gershwin album.

We also have 5 copies of the …Gershwin album on CD to give away as consolation prizes.

To be in with a chance of winning one of these great prizes, just answer the question below correctly:

Which Beach Boys album is soon to going to be released, 45 years after it was recorded?

Email your name, address, a daytime contact number and specify which show you’d like to attend to:

uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com

We’ll need your entries by noon, September 14. The editor’s decision is final. Neither Uncut nor the South Bank Centre will provide transport or accommodation.

You can find more information here about the Brian Wilson show plus other events on the South Bank at:

www.southbankcentre.co.uk

Ask David Lynch

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David Lynch, long a hero of ours here at Uncut, will soon be answering your questions in our regular An Audience With... feature. There's so much to talk about - coffee, Transcendental Meditation, his new album, oh and perhaps some movies. So what would you like to ask him? What really happened t...

David Lynch, long a hero of ours here at Uncut, will soon be answering your questions in our regular An Audience With… feature.

There’s so much to talk about – coffee, Transcendental Meditation, his new album, oh and perhaps some movies.

So what would you like to ask him?

What really happened to Agent Cooper at the end of Twin Peaks?

Where’s the most unusual place he’s drunk a cup of coffee?

Was he really going to direct Return Of The Jedi?

Send your questions to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com by Tuesday, September 13. We’ll print the best ones – and Lynch’s answers – in a forthcoming edition of Uncut.

Good luck!

LAURA MARLING – A CREATURE I DON’T KNOW

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Laura Marling was born in Hampshire in 1990, the year of the Stone Roses at Spike Island, of Ride’s Nowhere, of the gathering wave of grunge – post-Bleach, pre-Nevermind – beginning its roll towards the mainstream. Yet she might just as easily have been born in Brooklyn in 1950, or Liverpool i...

Laura Marling was born in Hampshire in 1990, the year of the Stone Roses at Spike Island, of Ride’s Nowhere, of the gathering wave of grunge – post-Bleach, pre-Nevermind – beginning its roll towards the mainstream. Yet she might just as easily have been born in Brooklyn in 1950, or Liverpool in the 1980. From the moment Marling emerged, aged 18, with her remarkably assured debut, Alas I Cannot Swim, her music seemed to float high above the specifics of time, age and place.

Friendships (and romances) with members of Noah And The Whale and Mumford & Sons, who backed Marling on her second album, I Speak Because I Can, ensured she was filed alongside the new wave of Brit-folk, but her story is less neat and more interesting than that. A young woman with a voice of solid silver rather than fine gossamer, her youthful precocity was backed up by opaque, literate songs. That Marling owed a debt to a long line of poetic singer-songwriters was clear, yet she possessed not only the stamp of originality, but also the sense of someone making music not simply because they could, but because they had to.

I Speak Because I Can (2010) traced Marling’s move towards womanhood with a cool, clear hand. Like her first it had moments of greatness and was almost excessively lauded, yet among the plaudits the suspicion lingered that the praise was as much for what Marling could be as what she actually was.

Her third album allows little scope for such equivocations. In the 18 months between I Speak Because I Can and A Creature I Don’t Know, Marling has moved from her late teens into her early twenties, a period of significant and accelerated growth. Now 21, there’s a powerful sense of her music keeping pace with her life. A Creature I Don’t Know feels like a more wayward, somewhat wanton older sister to her first two records. It pulls at the hems of her music, musses its hair, smudges its lipstick. The musical and vocal inflections are mostly American; the vibe looser; the rhythms more adventurous. In short, the bookish pallor of old has taken on a distinctly golden hue. And it suits her.

A new playfulness leaps from the opening two songs, which are almost skittish. “The Muse” skips along on a jumpy, jazzy rhythm, all banjo, piano rolls, scratchy brushes and splashing cymbals. “I Was Just A Card” is a similarly upbeat piece of Cali jazz-folk, and would simply be a parody of peak-period Joni Mitchell – the same pure falsetto, the same rattling open tuned guitar, the same ingeniously meandering structure – were it not done with such skill and verve.

What’s immediately apparent is that Marling’s vocals have become more stylised, more soulful, more sexual, more assured. She switches from musky jazz elisions to tart spoken asides, from a mischievousness that recalls Mary Margaret O’Hara to the plainly rendered purity of Natalie Merchant. There’s even a touch of Rufus Wainwright’s theatrical grandstanding on the rousing Bierkeller chorus of “Don’t Ask Me Why”, a Spanish-inflected ballad which drifts into “Salinas”, a bluesy, bawdy affair about a mother with “long blonde curly hair down to her thigh”.

This vocal adventurousness reflects the increased dynamism of the music. If her previous records tended towards cool and aloof, Marling, producer Ethan Johns and their admirably supple group of musicians ensure that A Creature I Don’t Know feels several degrees warmer without sacrificing any intensity.

These 10 songs are peopled by a rich cast of recurring characters – mothers, muses, sons, lovers, shape-shifting creatures – all of whom seem forever on the brink of something terrible. “The Beast”, a looming minor-chord crawl, is a six-minute exorcism of some violent, carnal urge. It begins as a whisper and rises to a nightmarish crescendo, guitars growling, drums like thunder on the mountain. Sonically it’s more PJ Harvey than Laura Nyro. Lyrically, Marling appropriates Judee Sill’s unsettling mix of the sexual and spiritual.

The beast also makes an appearance in “The Muse” and “Salinas”, but ultimately remains undefined. Marling isn’t keen on absolutes. She enjoys playing with the language of intimacy but shies away from the overtly confessional. She comes closest to revelation on “Night After Night”, five minutes of the artist alone with her gut string guitar and her darkness. Initially the song sails so close to Leonard’s Cohen’s “Famous Blue Raincoat” that when she sings “You were my speaker, my innocence keeper” the listener might be tempted to harmonise with “What can I tell you, my brother, my killer”. The song gradually stretches into the coming dawn, becoming almost indecently tormented – “my love is driven by rage” – as it does so. It’s a spell, an incantation, a confession which never quite makes clear exactly what’s being confessed. It might easily be the best thing she has ever done.

“Rest In My Bed” is similarly discomfiting, a gothic love song which promises that “the dark between my heart and his is as good as a diamond chain”. As if to restore some semblance of emotional balance, elsewhere the beauty runs clear and bright. The thrumming “My Friends” is a simple but joyous rush of accordion, banjo, cello and the kind of freight-train whoops which recall Fleet Foxes’ “Ragged Wood”; the closing passage feels like bursting out of some shaded copse into a patch of pure sunlight. “Sophia”, too, begins desultorily, the narrator “shy and tired-eyed”, but rises up on the back of Marling’s octave-leaping vocal before transforming itself, improbably but delightfully, into a lip-smacking country hoedown.

It’s deeply impressive. Not just because the songs and performances are stronger and more consistent than ever before, but because at 21 Marling seems so determined not to settle into a niche which could easily confine her. She has come a long way in a short time, and has undoubtedly got further to travel. For now, we should simply savour the sound of an artist setting herself new targets and hitting each one with real panache.

Graeme Thomson

JIMI HENDRIX EXPERIENCE – WINTERLAND

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It’s not exactly a new idea, but it’s still contrary to popular belief. What if Jimi Hendrix’s mythology rested on the sprightly concision and construction of his pop songs, rather than the entrail-sprawl of his extended guitar pyrotechnics? Never mind the solos, what about the tunes? It’s a thought that passes through the mind repeatedly during Winterland, (yet) a(nother) reissue from the Hendrix estate. A six-disc bootleg set, The Winterland Reels, has floated around for some time, but now Legacy have taken it upon themselves to make Winterland available as both a single-disc set, and a four-disc deluxe edition replete with booklet, interview, and heavy selections from Hendrix’s three-night stint at the storied venue, San Francisco’s Winterland Ballroom, from October 10–12, 1968. Performed just as the double album indulgence of Electric Ladyland was released, it captures the Experience just before their break, with guest appearances from, among others, the Airplane’s Jack Casady. It was also previously released in bowdlerised form, as a single disc, by Rhino back in 1987, and having gone the distance with the deluxe Winterland, there’s something to be said for tasting these live performances in a highlights-only, heavily edited context. That said, the best moments on the deluxe edition are almost worth laying down for. A beautifully poised “Little Wing”, from the October 12 show, is a great reminder of what an articulate, mythopoetic song writer Hendrix could be, and his solo, splitting the song’s happy-sad tenor wide open, is all hanging tones, diving into pools of wah-fuzz but mostly holding its breath above the water, the better to articulate the melancholy at the heart of what may still stand as Hendrix’s best song. The devastating, climbing-and-descending riff of “Manic Depression” has rarely seemed so drowsy, and the performance here from the 12th also shows off how limber Mitch Mitchell was, plotting a wild course across the song, accentuating its shape-shifting dynamics. On the other side of the fence, the guitar immolation of the 10th’s “Star Spangled Banner”, for a few disorienting minutes, is closer to Lee Ranaldo or Ascension’s Stefan Jaworzyn exploring the outer limits of what the guitar can do, the instrument in freefall until Hendrix pins it to the mast with the anthem’s melody. But it’s the playing on the October 11 set that’s particularly heady, with some great slabs of drone-out action scrawled across the jams: the version of “Tax Free” from this show slips in and out of rote blues meandering, but there’s a beautiful section at around the six-and-a-half-minute mark where Hendrix worries over a few notes, stretching them for all their overtonal properties while also tangling with the bass in a cat’s cradle of noise. Similarly, the ending of Dylan’s “Like A Rolling Stone”, the song already drawn and pulled like so much taffy over its 12 minutes, has Hendrix pulling out carillon notes, before driving the point home with hallucinogenic feedback. Winterland is full of such moments, where you’re reminded that another of Hendrix’s great skills was his understanding of the compulsive draw of the drone: that sometimes incremental shifts in tonal configurations could speak more eloquently than his trade-mark solos, hammer-ons and blues comping. So there’s some great music on here – but let’s not forget, there are also great portions of relative dead air. For example, the October 10 jams on “Tax Free” and “Sunshine Of Your Love” – which is stripped of its vocal melody, and thus the essential counterpoint to the monolithic riff that makes Cream’s original swing – may feature moments of rollercoaster-risky guitar playing, but by your third or fourth listen, they are, whisper it, deathly dull. This problem mars many live recordings from Hendrix and other musicians from this era – though considering the repeated alchemy the Grateful Dead pulled from the skies on their own Winterland set, it sometimes makes you think the Experience, at this point, weren’t quite as alchemical as we’re led to believe. The box itself seems a weird one, too – the single disc release acts as a good primer, but if Legacy are going to stretch to a ‘deluxe’ 4CD set, then why not stretch two further and make available the Winterland Reels 6CD bootleg in its entirety? There are more than enough Hendrix heads who would obsess over the full run, with its many peaks and troughs, goofy banter, go-nowhere jams, and then those moments of breathless suspension, when the Experience finally lock into space. Jon Dale

It’s not exactly a new idea, but it’s still contrary to popular belief. What if Jimi Hendrix’s mythology rested on the sprightly concision and construction of his pop songs, rather than the entrail-sprawl of his extended guitar pyrotechnics? Never mind the solos, what about the tunes?

It’s a thought that passes through the mind repeatedly during Winterland, (yet) a(nother) reissue from the Hendrix estate. A six-disc bootleg set, The Winterland Reels, has floated around for some time, but now Legacy have taken it upon themselves to make Winterland available as both a single-disc set, and a four-disc deluxe edition replete with booklet, interview, and heavy selections from Hendrix’s three-night stint at the storied venue, San Francisco’s Winterland Ballroom, from October 10–12, 1968. Performed just as the double album indulgence of Electric Ladyland was released, it captures the Experience just before their break, with guest appearances from, among others, the Airplane’s Jack Casady.

It was also previously released in bowdlerised form, as a single disc, by Rhino back in 1987, and having gone the distance with the deluxe Winterland, there’s something to be said for tasting these live performances in a highlights-only, heavily edited context. That said, the best moments on the deluxe edition are almost worth laying down for. A beautifully poised “Little Wing”, from the October 12 show, is a great reminder of what an articulate, mythopoetic song writer Hendrix could be, and his solo, splitting the song’s happy-sad tenor wide open, is all hanging tones, diving into pools of wah-fuzz but mostly holding its breath above the water, the better to articulate the melancholy at the heart of what may still stand as Hendrix’s best song. The devastating, climbing-and-descending riff of “Manic Depression” has rarely seemed so drowsy, and the performance here from the 12th also shows off how limber Mitch Mitchell was, plotting a wild course across the song, accentuating its shape-shifting dynamics. On the other side of the fence, the guitar immolation of the 10th’s “Star Spangled Banner”, for a few disorienting minutes, is closer to Lee Ranaldo or Ascension’s Stefan Jaworzyn exploring the outer limits of what the guitar can do, the instrument in freefall until Hendrix pins it to the mast with the anthem’s melody.

But it’s the playing on the October 11 set that’s particularly heady, with some great slabs of drone-out action scrawled across the jams: the version of “Tax Free” from this show slips in and out of rote blues meandering, but there’s a beautiful section at around the six-and-a-half-minute mark where Hendrix worries over a few notes, stretching them for all their overtonal properties while also tangling with the bass in a cat’s cradle of noise. Similarly, the ending of Dylan’s “Like A Rolling Stone”, the song already drawn and pulled like so much taffy over its 12 minutes, has Hendrix pulling out carillon notes, before driving the point home with hallucinogenic feedback. Winterland is full of such moments, where you’re reminded that another of Hendrix’s great skills was his understanding of the compulsive draw of the drone: that sometimes incremental shifts in tonal configurations could speak more eloquently than his trade-mark solos, hammer-ons and blues comping.

So there’s some great music on here – but let’s not forget, there are also great portions of relative dead air. For example, the October 10 jams on “Tax Free” and “Sunshine Of Your Love” – which is stripped of its vocal melody, and thus the essential counterpoint to the monolithic riff that makes Cream’s original swing – may feature moments of rollercoaster-risky guitar playing, but by your third or fourth listen, they are, whisper it, deathly dull. This problem mars many live recordings from Hendrix and other musicians from this era – though considering the repeated alchemy the Grateful Dead pulled from the skies on their own Winterland set, it sometimes makes you think the Experience, at this point, weren’t quite as alchemical as we’re led to believe.

The box itself seems a weird one, too – the single disc release acts as a good primer, but if Legacy are going to stretch to a ‘deluxe’ 4CD set, then why not stretch two further and make available the Winterland Reels 6CD bootleg in its entirety? There are more than enough Hendrix heads who would obsess over the full run, with its many peaks and troughs, goofy banter, go-nowhere jams, and then those moments of breathless suspension, when the Experience finally lock into space.

Jon Dale

TROLL HUNTER

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Directed by André Øvredal Starring Otto Jespersen, Hans Morten Hansen In this inspired horror, wild trolls go on the rampage in the Norwegian countryside, killing livestock and causing all manner of mischief. The government has gone to extreme lengths to keep their existence a secret. Howeve...

Directed by André Øvredal

Starring Otto Jespersen, Hans Morten Hansen

In this inspired horror, wild trolls go on the rampage in the Norwegian countryside, killing livestock and causing all manner of mischief.

The government has gone to extreme lengths to keep their existence a secret. However, one troll hunter, Hans (Otto Jespersen), is so peeved at his working conditions that he invites a student film crew to accompany him on a hunt for the creatures.

Jespersen, one of Norway’s most famous and controversial comedians, looks uncannily like white supremacist Eugene Terreblanche.

He plays his role in such a gruff and earnest way – and øvredal directs in such deadpan realist fashion – you soon forget the absurdity of the premise.

The trolls themselves, feral beasts thrown into a rage whenever they smell Christians, appear a convincingly realistic menace. There have been many horror films since Blair Witch using the “found footage” conceit. This is one of the few to do so with any originality.

Geoffrey Macnab

Brett Anderson, Patrick Wolf to play shows in Oxfam shops

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Brett Anderson and Patrick Wolf are among the artists set to play gigs in a London branch of the charity shop Oxfam. The shows will launch the fifth year of the charity’s Oxjam fundraising music festival and will take place at the end of September. Fatboy Slim, Charlie Simpson, Man Like Me and Me...

Brett Anderson and Patrick Wolf are among the artists set to play gigs in a London branch of the charity shop Oxfam.

The shows will launch the fifth year of the charity’s Oxjam fundraising music festival and will take place at the end of September. Fatboy Slim, Charlie Simpson, Man Like Me and Mercury Prize nominee Ghostpoet are also all set to take part. The shows will also see the launch of ‘Kinshasa One Two’, the album by DRC Music, which was recently recorded by Damon Albarn in the Democratic Republic of Congo to raise funds for Oxfam.

The shows will take place in an as-yet-unannounced London branch of Oxfam. The shop in which the gigs will take place will be revealed the week before the shows. It will sell second-hand records during the day and be converted into a venue in the evening.

Of the shows Brett Anderson said: “In the early-’90s, Suede bought most of their clothes in Oxfam shops. It was always somewhere you could find cheap, interesting old things that no-one else had and, for a few years, it pretty much defined our style, so I feel a massive sense of homecoming with the Oxjam gig. The Oxfam shop is a great British institution that no high street should be without, and the Oxjam gigs are an extension of this blend of philanthropy and offbeat style.”

The line-up so far is:

Fatboy Slim, Kissy Sell Out, Man Like Me (September 26)

Brett Anderson, Patrick Wolf, Ghostpoet (27)

Charlie Simpson plus more TBA (28)

DRC Music album launch feat. Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs, Richard Russell (XL Records), Kwes (Warp Records) and more. (29)

Tickets are on sale now exclusively from wegottickets.com/oxjam

For more information visit Oxjam.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Foo Fighters, Mumford & Sons, Arcade Fire for Neil Young’s charity gig

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Foo Fighters, Neil Young, Mumford & Sons and Arcade Fire are among the artists set to play the yearly Bridge School Benefit concert, which is arranged by Young himself alongside his wife Pegi. All the artists appearing at the shows, which take place October 22-23 at the Shoreline Amphitheatre i...

Foo Fighters, Neil Young, Mumford & Sons and Arcade Fire are among the artists set to play the yearly Bridge School Benefit concert, which is arranged by Young himself alongside his wife Pegi.

All the artists appearing at the shows, which take place October 22-23 at the Shoreline Amphitheatre in Mountain View, California, will be performing acoustically. Other acts include Eddie Vedder, Tony Bennett, Beck, Jenny Lewis and Los Invisibles featuring Carlos Santana.

Profits from the weekend’s shows will go towards the Bridge School, which helps children with “severe physical impairments and complex communication needs”, reports Rolling Stone. The school was founded in 1986 by Neil Young and his wife to look after their son Ben and other children. The 1986 benefit show saw appearances from Bruce Springsteen, Tom Petty, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young and Don Henley.

David Bowie, Paul McCartney, Simon and Garfunkel, Elton John, The Who, Tom Waits and Metallica have all played the concert over the years.

Visit Bridge School Benefit for more information.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy to release new album in October

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Bonnie 'Prince' Billy is set to release his new album, 'Wolfroy Goes To Town', on October 31 on the Domino label. The follow up to 2010's 'The Wonder Show Of The World' will be Will Oldham's ninth album release under the Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy name. Collaborators on the album include members o...

Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy is set to release his new album, ‘Wolfroy Goes To Town’, on October 31 on the Domino label.

The follow up to 2010’s ‘The Wonder Show Of The World’ will be Will Oldham‘s ninth album release under the Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy name.

Collaborators on the album include members of Oldham‘s touring band, Van Campbell, Ben Boye, Shahzad Ismaily, Danny Kiely, Angel Olsen and Emmett Kelly. Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy will be touring the album this autumn in North America and mainland Europe. However, no UK dates have yet been announced.

The tracklisting for ‘Wolfroy Goes To Town’ is:

‘No Match’

‘New Whaling’

‘Time To Be Clear’

‘New Tibet’

‘Black Captain’

‘Cows’

‘There Will Be Spring’

‘Quail And Dumplings’

‘We Are Unhappy’

‘Night Noises’

Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy recently covered country legend Merle Haggard‘s ‘Because Of Your Eyes’, which you can hear below:

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

PJ Harvey wins 2011 Barclaycard Mercury Prize

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PJ Harvey has won this year's [url=http://www.mercuryprize.com]Barclaycard Mercury Prize[/url]. The winner was announced last night (September 6) at a ceremony at the Grosvenor Hotel in London. This was the first time in the competition's history that every one of the nominated artists was schedule...

PJ Harvey has won this year’s [url=http://www.mercuryprize.com]Barclaycard Mercury Prize[/url].

The winner was announced last night (September 6) at a ceremony at the Grosvenor Hotel in London. This was the first time in the competition’s history that every one of the nominated artists was scheduled to perform at the ceremony itself, although Adele had to pull out due to illness.

Harvey accepted the award and £20,000 cash prize with a straightforward, composed speech, “First of all I’d like to say thank you very much for this award, and the recognition of my work on this album,” she said.

Harvey, the award’s first two-time winner, also made reference to her previous win, which famously took place on September 11, 2001, an event of course overshadowed by the terrorist attacks in the United States.

She said: “It’s nice to actually be here. I was in in Washington, DC, watching the Pentagon burning from my hotel window, so it’s good to be here. So much has happened since then. This album took me a long time write. It was very important to me, I wanted to make something that was meaningful not just for myself but for other people, hopefully to make something that would last.”

Harvey went on to thank “the people that have supported her throughout her career”: her manager, her record company Island, agents and “those who helped me make ‘Let England Shake'”.

The ceremony was broadcast on BBC Two and was hosted by Jools Holland.

The Barclaycard Mercury Prize was won in 2010 by The XX for their self-titled debut album.

The full list of nominees was:

Anna Calvi – ‘Anna Calvi’

Elbow – ‘Build A Rocket Boys!’

James Blake – ‘James Blake’

Katy B – ‘On A Mission’

Metronomy – ‘The English Riviera’

Tinie Tempah – ‘Disc-Overy’

PJ Harvey – ‘Let England Shake’

Gwilym Simcock – ‘Good Days At Schloss Elmau’

Everything Everything – ‘Man Alive’

Ghostpoet – ‘Peanut Butter Blues & Melancholy Jam’

King Creosote & Jon Hopkins – ‘Diamond Mine’

Adele – ’21’

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Metallica and Lou Reed confirm tracklisting for ‘Lulu’

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Metallica and Lou Reed have confirmed the full tracklisting for their joint album 'Lulu'. The collaboration, which is based around German playwright Frank Wedekind's 1913 play about the life of an abused dancer, is due for release on October 31, with the North American release following a day late...

Metallica and Lou Reed have confirmed the full tracklisting for their joint album ‘Lulu’.

The collaboration, which is based around German playwright Frank Wedekind‘s 1913 play about the life of an abused dancer, is due for release on October 31, with the North American release following a day later on November 1.

A number of the tracks are also set to extremely lengthy, with ‘Cheat On Me’ and ‘Dragon’ both over 11 minutes long, ‘Frustration’ and ‘Little Dog’ over eight minutes long and final track ‘Junior Dad’ a colossal 19 minutes and 28 seconds in all.

There is no word yet on whether any singles or videos will be released before the album or if the band intend to make any material available online prior to ‘Lulu’s formal release. You can see the album’s artwork by scrolling up to the top of the page.

Metallica are currently without a record label after completing their commitments to Elektra with recent album ‘Death Magnetic’.

The tracklisting for ‘Lulu’ is as follows:

‘Brandenburg Gate’

‘The View’

‘Pumping Blood’

‘Mistress Dread’

‘Iced Honey’

‘Cheat On Me’

‘Frustration’

‘Little Dog’

‘Dragon’

‘Junior Dad’

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Brian May, Roger Taylor celebrate Freddie Mercury’s 65th birthday in London

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Former Queen members Brian May and Roger Taylor celebrated Freddie Mercury's 65th birthday last night (September 5) at a charity event at London's Savoy Hotel. Stephen Fry, Chris Evans, Fearne Cotton, Ben Elton, Nicola Roberts and Matt Lucas also attended the auction for The Mercury Phoenix Trust, which raises money to help the global fight against HIV/AIDS. Freddie Mercury died of AIDS-related pneumonia on November 24 1991. Yesterday Brian May paid tribute to Freddie Mercury on a specially created Google blog. May wrote fondly of his former bandmate's attitude and approach to songwriting, calling him a "free spirit". He said: “Freddie was fully focused, never allowing anything or anyone to get in the way of his vision for the future. He was truly a free spirit. There are not many of these in the world. To achieve this, you have to be, like Freddie, fearless, unafraid of upsetting anyone's apple cart. To create with Freddie was always stimulating to the max. He was daring, always sensing a way to get outside the box.” May also said he believed that Mercury's presence in 2011 "seems more potent than ever" and of how his friend "devoured life". He wrote: “Freddie would have been 65 this year, and even though physically he is not here, his presence seems more potent than ever. Freddie made the last person at the back of the furthest stand in a stadium feel that he was connected. He lived life to the full. He devoured life. He celebrated every minute. And, like a great comet, he left a luminous trail which will sparkle for many a generation to come. Happy birthday Freddie!” To read the full blog post, visit Googleblog.blogspot.com/happy-birthday-freddie-mercury. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk. Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Former Queen members Brian May and Roger Taylor celebrated Freddie Mercury‘s 65th birthday last night (September 5) at a charity event at London‘s Savoy Hotel.

Stephen Fry, Chris Evans, Fearne Cotton, Ben Elton, Nicola Roberts and Matt Lucas also attended the auction for The Mercury Phoenix Trust, which raises money to help the global fight against HIV/AIDS. Freddie Mercury died of AIDS-related pneumonia on November 24 1991.

Yesterday Brian May paid tribute to Freddie Mercury on a specially created Google blog. May wrote fondly of his former bandmate’s attitude and approach to songwriting, calling him a “free spirit”.

He said: “Freddie was fully focused, never allowing anything or anyone to get in the way of his vision for the future. He was truly a free spirit. There are not many of these in the world. To achieve this, you have to be, like Freddie, fearless, unafraid of upsetting anyone’s apple cart. To create with Freddie was always stimulating to the max. He was daring, always sensing a way to get outside the box.”

May also said he believed that Mercury‘s presence in 2011 “seems more potent than ever” and of how his friend “devoured life”.

He wrote: “Freddie would have been 65 this year, and even though physically he is not here, his presence seems more potent than ever. Freddie made the last person at the back of the furthest stand in a stadium feel that he was connected. He lived life to the full. He devoured life. He celebrated every minute. And, like a great comet, he left a luminous trail which will sparkle for many a generation to come. Happy birthday Freddie!”

To read the full blog post, visit Googleblog.blogspot.com/happy-birthday-freddie-mercury.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Smashing Pumpkins announce November UK tour

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Smashing Pumpkins have announced a UK tour for November. The band, who now consist of singer Billy Corgan, Jeff Schroeder on guitar, Nicola Fiorentino on bass and Mike Byrne on drums, will play seven dates on the tour. These begin in Manchester at the O2 Apollo on November 11 and end at the O2 A...

Smashing Pumpkins have announced a UK tour for November.

The band, who now consist of singer Billy Corgan, Jeff Schroeder on guitar, Nicola Fiorentino on bass and Mike Byrne on drums, will play seven dates on the tour.

These begin in Manchester at the O2 Apollo on November 11 and end at the O2 Academy Birmingham on November 19. The run also includes two nights at London‘s O2 Academy Brixton on November 15 and 16.

The tour is in support of the band’s ninth album ‘Oceania’, which is due to be released in late 2011.

The dates are the band’s first in the UK since 2008, when they undertook a five-date arena tour. They are also the band’s first UK shows since their reformation without drummer Jimmy Chamberlain, who left in 2009.

Smashing Pumpkins will play:

Manchester O2 Apollo (November 11)

Glasgow O2 Academy (13)

Newcastle O2 Academy (14)

London O2 Academy Brixton (15, 16)

Sheffield O2 Academy (18)

Birmingham O2 Academy (19)

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Fleetwood Mac’s Lindsey Buckingham announces December UK solo tour

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Fleetwood Mac guitarist Lindsey Buckingham has announced a UK tour for December. Buckingham will play seven UK venues on the trek, beginning at Birmingham's Symphony Hall on December 8 and finishing up on December 19 at London Palladium. Buckingham, who released his sixth solo album 'Seeds We So...

Fleetwood Mac guitarist Lindsey Buckingham has announced a UK tour for December.

Buckingham will play seven UK venues on the trek, beginning at Birmingham‘s Symphony Hall on December 8 and finishing up on December 19 at London Palladium.

Buckingham, who released his sixth solo album ‘Seeds We Sow’ on Monday (September 5), is currently touring North America. The album is his first since 2008’s ‘Gift Of Screws’ and sees the guitarist operating as engineer and producer as well as sole songwriter.

The guitarist has recently indicated that he is confident Fleetwood Mac will reunite in 2012 after he and singer Stevie Nicks have completed the promotional duties for their new solo releases.

Lindsey Buckingham will play:

Birmingham Symphony Hall (December 8)

Salford Lowry Theatre (9)

Leeds O2 Academy (11)

Edinburgh Usher Hall (12)

Gateshead Sage Hall (13)

Southampton Guildhall (18)

London Palladium (19)

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Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Mikal Cronin: “Mikal Cronin”

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Before we settled on the “Music That Made Bolan Boogie” CD to go with this month’s issue, we toyed with a compilation of new, glam-influenced music. Miles Johnson, one of our designers, has been talking for a while now about a distinct glam strain appearing in American garage rock, and songs by Nobunny, King Tuff and The Smith Westerns, among others, would’ve almost added up to a decent CD. The cornerstone could have been something from “Ty Rex”, an EP of fuzzed-out Bolan covers that came out this spring on the Goner label. “Ty Rex”, as the title lets slip, is the work of Ty Segall, a Bay Area workaholic who last year made a terrific album called "Melted", planted with enough tunes amidst the ramalam to suggest he might be the next garage rock poster boy, after Kurt Vile, to step up an indie league or two. This summer’s Segall album, "Goodbye Bread", doesn’t quite do the job, being a little more Lennonish and dislocated than might have been expected. Segall moves fast, though, and the very latest recordings that he’s been involved with - both involving a new name to me, Mikal Cronin - are pretty fantastic. First, and most salient, Segall and Cronin have collaborated on a couple of exuberantly feral David Bowie covers, “Fame” and “Suffragette City”. As is now tradition for this column, these tracks are only available as an extremely limited edition on an arcane format - part of a book of flexidiscs titled “Castle Face Presents Group Flex”. Assuming that, like us, you don’t actually own this already rare artefact, it’s worth checking out the Segall/Cronin jams on Youtube (at http://bit.ly/p9Y1EG and http://bit.ly/pdPTPW). Better still, though, there’s Mikal Cronin’s self-titled album, produced by Segall and out this month on the Trouble In Mind imprint. Segall appears to come from Orange County, California, and also serves with a straight-up garage punk band, The Moonhearts (their own self-titled album from last year, on Tic Tac Totally, is good fun). "Mikal Cronin" is no less exciting, but draws from a much wider range: the very first seconds are filled with a capella harmonies indebted to The Beach Boys’ “Our Prayer”. Trouble In Mind’s crib notes for hacks reference The Everly Brothers and Nilsson, which initially seem a bit far-fetched, but repeated plays genuinely reveal a dazed, jangling melodicism. When the feedback dies down on, say, “Situation” or “Again And Again”, a real sweetness cuts through, while “Get Along” somehow reminds me of both the Everlys and the Nirvana of “About A Girl”. The thumping piano and home-baked grandeur of “The Way Things Go” is rather Nilsson-ish, for sure, and there’s even a whistling solo on “Hold On Me”, for what it’s worth. Not much glam, mind. If you want to check out Miles’ putative garage rock/glam scene, he’s pulled together a Spotify playlist at http://bit.ly/q2uf4T. Have a play and let us know what you think.

Before we settled on the “Music That Made Bolan Boogie” CD to go with this month’s issue, we toyed with a compilation of new, glam-influenced music.

Brian May: ‘Freddie Mercury’s presence seems more potent than ever’

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Queen guitarist Brian May has paid tribute to Freddie Mercury on what would have been his 65th birthday. Writing on a specially created Google blog, May wrote first of how he was introduced to the singer, writing: "I was first introduced to Freddie Mercury, a paradoxically shy yet flamboyant young...

Queen guitarist Brian May has paid tribute to Freddie Mercury on what would have been his 65th birthday.

Writing on a specially created Google blog, May wrote first of how he was introduced to the singer, writing: “I was first introduced to Freddie Mercury, a paradoxically shy yet flamboyant young man at the side of the stage at one of our early gigs. He told me he was excited by how we played, he had some ideas and he could sing! I’m not sure we took him very seriously, but he did have the air of someone who knew he was right. He was a frail but energised dandy, with seemingly impossible dreams and a wicked twinkle in his eye.”

May wrote fondly of his former bandmate’s attitude and approach to songwriting, calling him a “free spirit”.

He continued: ” Freddie was fully focused, never allowing anything or anyone to get in the way of his vision for the future. He was truly a free spirit. There are not many of these in the world. To achieve this, you have to be, like Freddie, fearless, unafraid of upsetting anyone’s apple cart. To create with Freddie was always stimulating to the max. He was daring, always sensing a way to get outside the box.”

May also said he believed that Mercury‘s presence in 2011 “seems more potent than ever” and of how his friend “devoured life”. He wrote: “Freddie would have been 65 this year, and even though physically he is not here, his presence seems more potent than ever. Freddie made the last person at the back of the furthest stand in a stadium feel that he was connected. He lived life to the full. He devoured life. He celebrated every minute. And, like a great comet, he left a luminous trail which will sparkle for many a generation to come. Happy birthday Freddie!”

To read the full blog post, visit Googleblog.blogpsot.com/happy-birthday-freddie-mercury.

Brian May most recently appeared live with My Chemical Romance during their live show at last weekend’s Reading And Leeds Festivals.

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Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Pulp play ‘last ever’ show at Electric Picnic?

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Pulp ended their summer reunion tour at Ireland's Electric Picnic festival last night (September 4) with Jarvis Cocker hinting that the 90-minute set may have been their last ever gig. Before launching into set closer 'Common People', Cocker declared: "This may be the last time we're ever all on st...

Pulp ended their summer reunion tour at Ireland’s Electric Picnic festival last night (September 4) with Jarvis Cocker hinting that the 90-minute set may have been their last ever gig.

Before launching into set closer ‘Common People’, Cocker declared: “This may be the last time we’re ever all on stage together again.” Earlier in the set the Pulp frontman had told the 30,000-strong crowd in Stradbally, Co Laois, that: “This is the last gig of the tour, so if we start crying or get emotional, you’ll understand.”

However, his last words to the crowd as the band left the stage hinted that the band may yet return, with Cocker saying: “Maybe our paths will cross again.”

Pulp‘s set was similar to their ecstatically received sets at Glastonbury and Reading and Leeds festivals earlier this month, taking in crowd-pleasing hits ‘Mis-Shapes’, ‘Do You Remember The First Time?’ and ‘Common People’.

Throughout, a fired-up Cocker engaged with the crowd, peppering his between-song banter with quotes from Oscar Wilde, in reference to the names of one of the festival’s campsites.

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Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Iggy Pop breaks two bones in his left foot forcing US tour postponement

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Iggy And The Stooges have been forced to postpone their US tour after frontman Iggy Pop broke two bones in his left foot. The singer sustained the injury during the band's show at Peninsula Festival in Romania on August 27 and has been told by doctors that he must allow 6 – 8 weeks for the injur...

Iggy And The Stooges have been forced to postpone their US tour after frontman Iggy Pop broke two bones in his left foot.

The singer sustained the injury during the band’s show at Peninsula Festival in Romania on August 27 and has been told by doctors that he must allow 6 – 8 weeks for the injury to heal. This has meant the band have had to postpone their US tour, which was scheduled to start on Wednesday (September 7).

Iggy Pop has issued a statement about his injury, he said: “I hate this, I hate like hell to cancel or postpone anything. I only saw the doctor because it hurt so fucking much and I couldn’t fix it myself. Please be patient, I am so excited about these dates on the left coast.”

The band have promised to rescheduled these shows at the earliest possible opportunity.

Iggy Pop revealed last week that he has been working on new material with the Stooges, specifically with James Williamson, the guitarist in the band.

The punk legend has said that he and Williamson penned 10 tracks together at his house in Miami earlier this year and would continue to “keep writing” new songs, although he refused to confirm whether they would be released as a studio album.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Uncut Playlist 33, 2011

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Pretty auspicious new arrival this morning, as you can see from Number 23 at the bottom of the list; sounding good, albeit 44 years too late. Plenty of other nice things here, anyhow. If you missed my somewhat frantic return to blogging last week, there are pieces on Pulp live, Stephen Malkmus, Lindsey Buckingham and a well-populated one on Wilco’s “The Whole Love”, plus my complete Gillian Welch/David Rawlings interview from the spring. 1 James Blackshaw – Holly/Boo Forever (Important) 2 Feist – Metals (Polydor) 3 Dean McPhee – Son Of The Black Peace (Blast First Petite) 4 Hiss Golden Messenger – Plowed: Live in Bovina (Paradise Of Bachelors) 5 Oneohtrix Point Never – Replica (Software) 6 Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings – Soul Time! (Daptone) 7 Wilco – The Whole Love (dBpm) 8 The Field – Looping State Of Mind (Kompakt) 9 Ricardo Donoso – Progress Chance (Digitalis) 10 Liz Green – O, Devotion! (Play It Again Sam) 11 Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks – Mirror Traffic (Domino) 12 Lindsey Buckingham – Seeds We Sow (Eagle Rock) 13 James Blake & Bon Iver – Fall Creek Boys Choir (Atlas) 14 The Youngbloods – Ride The Wind (Warners) 15 Jean-Claude Vannier – Rouses Sang Rouge (Twisted Nerve) 16 Blitzen Trapper – American Goldwing (Sub Pop) 17 Meg Baird – Seasons On Earth (Wichita) 18 Fool’s Gold – Leave No Trace (Iamsound) 19 Roedelius – Wasser Im Wind (Bureau B) 20 Erkin Koray – Meçhul: Singles And Rarities (Sublime Frequencies) 21 Lil Wayne – Tha Carter IV (Cash Money/Universal) 22 Kurt Vile – So Outta Reach (Matador) 23 The Beach Boys – The Smile Sessions (EMI)

Pretty auspicious new arrival this morning, as you can see from Number 23 at the bottom of the list; sounding good, albeit 44 years too late.

Laura Marling: ”A Creature I Don’t Know’ has more of my stamp on it’

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Laura Marling has said that she wrote her new album 'A Creature I Don't Know' by herself to stop other people from getting their "grubby mitts on it". In an interview with The Guardian, the singer claimed that writing and demoing material on her own and allowed to put her own stamp on the LP – s...

Laura Marling has said that she wrote her new album ‘A Creature I Don’t Know’ by herself to stop other people from getting their “grubby mitts on it”.

In an interview with The Guardian, the singer claimed that writing and demoing material on her own and allowed to put her own stamp on the LP – something she did not feel she’d been able to do with her previous two records.

Marling, who releases ‘A Creature I Don’t Know’ on September 12, said that her debut album ‘Alas I Cannot Swim’ belonged as much to her ex-boyfriend and Noah And The Whale singer Charlie Fink, who produced the LP, as it did to her.

She also suggested that her sophomore effort, ‘I Speak Because I Can’, was heavily indebted to producer Ethan Johns.

When asked about starting to prepare material for the album on her own, she said: “It was quite an interesting way of doing it because it allowed to put my stamp on it before anybody else put their stamp on it. With the first two albums – Charlie produced ‘Alas I Cannot Swim’, and it’s as much his album as it is mine, and with ‘I Speak Because I Can’, the style of the drumming and the bass playing is very much a representation of the characters who were playing on that album, and Ethan stepping in as well.”

She went on to add: “This time I thought: ‘Well, I’ve got the confidence now, and I know what I want it to sound like, so before anybody else gets their grubby mitts on it, why don’t I put my stamp on it?”

Laura Marling will go on an 11-date tour of UK cathedrals this October after the release of ‘A Creature I Don’t Know’. She will play:

Exeter Cathedral (October 14)

Winchester Cathedral (15)

Guildford Cathedral (17)

Gloucester Cathedral (18)

York Minster (21)

Sheffield Cathedral (22)

Manchester Cathedral (24)

Bristol Cathedral (25)

London Central Hall Westminster (26)

Liverpool Anglican Cathedral (28)

Birmingham Cathedral (29)

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Iggy Pop reveals he is writing new material with The Stooges

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Iggy Pop has revealed that he has been working on new material with James Williamson, the guitarist in his band The Stooges. The punk legend told Rolling Stone that he and Williamson had penned 10 tracks together at his house in Miami earlier this year and would continue to "keep writing" new song...

Iggy Pop has revealed that he has been working on new material with James Williamson, the guitarist in his band The Stooges.

The punk legend told Rolling Stone that he and Williamson had penned 10 tracks together at his house in Miami earlier this year and would continue to “keep writing” new songs, although he refused to confirm whether they would be released as a studio album.

Williamson, who assumed the mantle of lead guitarist for The Stooges on their classic 1973 LP ‘Raw Power’, returned to the line-up in 2009 to replace the band’s founding guitarist Ron Asheton, who passed away in January of that year.

Pop – who had hinted last year that he was contemplating working and recording on new material with Williamson – confirmed that writing sessions had already taken place, but suggested that he would prefer to “make the score for an intelligent video game” rather than release a traditional LP.

He said: “We started trading stuff by MP3 back and forth as soon as we started. We actually did get together this spring. He came to my house in Miami and we wrote 10 things. I think we like about half of them. We’ll keep writing. I think he’d like to make an album and I’d like to make more the score for an intelligent video game. So as far as what the former might be, I don’t know.”

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.