Home Blog Page 668

October 2011

0
Hep cats and rockabilly dudes! 15 great tracks, including Dale Hawkins, Roy Orbison, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins and George 'Thumper' Jones Snooty friends at the time condescendingly dismissed Tyrannosaurus Rex as a camp parody of The Incredible String and tended to make what they thought were hi...

Hep cats and rockabilly dudes! 15 great tracks, including Dale Hawkins, Roy Orbison, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins and George ‘Thumper’ Jones

Snooty friends at the time condescendingly dismissed Tyrannosaurus Rex as a camp parody of The Incredible String and tended to make what they thought were hilarious bleating noises at any given mention of Marc Bolan. I loved them both, the String Band and Tyrannosaurus Rex, played My People Were Fair And Had Sky In Their HairÉ But Now They’re Content To Wear Stars On Their Brows and Prophets Seers And Sages Ð The Angels Of The Ages as much as The 5,000 Spirits Or The Layers Of The Onion and The Hangman’s Beautiful Daughter (it was a heady time, when people actually called their albums things like this). A bit later, I played Unicorn until the label started to peel away from the vinyl and was excited when Bolan ‘went electric’ on “King Of The Rumbling Spires”, which left a lot of his original fans aghast. Further fond memories from that distant time include seeing Bolan and Steve Took at the National Jazz And Blues Festival in 1968, Marc cross-legged on a little mat on the stage where the night before Jerry Lee Lewis had caused a commotion. They were at the foot of the bill, only played for about 15 minutes, but were totally wonderful.

How sad then in early 1976 to happen upon Bolan promoting the recent T.Rex LP, Futuristic Dragon, at a barely full Lyceum, that grand old London ballroom. The glory days of T.Rex were by now long gone. Bolan for the last couple of years had been hard at the brandy and cocaine, and it showed in his bloated appearance. Whither the Bopping Elf of yore? He was now a lardy man in what looked like a fright wig, his face a balloon beneath it. I have a vague but unsettling memory of him wearing dungarees, possibly bright yellow. He forgot the words to “Debora”, which was some going as it was hardly “Desolation Row” and, anyway, the names of how many animals, exactly, rhyme with the name Debora?

A year after the sad debacle at the Lyceum, I’m in Newcastle, where Bolan and a new lineup of T.Rex are playing the City Hall on the opening night of the tour to promote the Dandy In The Underworld album. There are genuine signs that Bolan has pulled himself out of some possibly bottomless well of obscurity. From the opening blast of “Jeepster” to the euphoric encore of “Hot Love”, the show is an unlikely triumph and Bolan looks great, too, with enough weight lost to squeeze into a pair of lurid leather pants. The fans go actually wild, hundreds of screaming girls rushing the stage as soon as he appears, many of them weeping. Bolan looks at them, smiles, and is clearly ecstatic at being back, the looming tragedy being that it won’t be for long…

Drug overdose ruled out as cause of Amy Winehouse’s death

0

Suggestions that Amy Winehouse died of a drug overdose have been formally ruled out after results from the singer's toxicology report found "no illegal substances" in her system. The report does say that alcohol was present, but stresses that "it cannot be determined as yet if it played a role in her death". A full inquest into Winehouse's death is still ongoing and will be concluded in October. The Winehouse family have issued a statement which reads as follows: "Toxicology results returned to the Winehouse family by authorities have confirmed that there were no illegal substances in Amy’s system at the time of her death. Results indicate that alcohol was present but it cannot be determined as yet if it played a role in her death." It continues: "The family would like to thank the police and coroner for their continuing thorough investigations and for keeping them informed throughout the process. They await the outcome of the inquest in October." 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.

Suggestions that Amy Winehouse died of a drug overdose have been formally ruled out after results from the singer’s toxicology report found “no illegal substances” in her system.

The report does say that alcohol was present, but stresses that “it cannot be determined as yet if it played a role in her death”.

A full inquest into Winehouse‘s death is still ongoing and will be concluded in October.

The Winehouse family have issued a statement which reads as follows: “Toxicology results returned to the Winehouse family by authorities have confirmed that there were no illegal substances in Amy’s system at the time of her death. Results indicate that alcohol was present but it cannot be determined as yet if it played a role in her death.”

It continues: “The family would like to thank the police and coroner for their continuing thorough investigations and for keeping them informed throughout the process. They await the outcome of the inquest in October.”

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.

Paul McCartney’s ballet composition to get October album release

0
Paul McCartney’s ballet composition, 'Ocean’s Kingdom', will be released by Decca on October 3. The ballet itself will open on September 22 at New York City Ballet. There will be four more performances of the piece in September and then five additional shows in January 2012. The show is 90 minu...

Paul McCartney’s ballet composition, ‘Ocean’s Kingdom’, will be released by Decca on October 3.

The ballet itself will open on September 22 at New York City Ballet. There will be four more performances of the piece in September and then five additional shows in January 2012. The show is 90 minutes long and takes the form of a love story set underwater, during which the peace of the ocean comes under attack from humans, reports Billboard.

‘Ocean’s Kingdom’ is made up of four movements and is conducted by John Wilson and performed by the London Classical Orchestra. Of the music, the former Beatle has said that he was: “trying to write something that expressed an emotion – so you have fear, love, anger, sadness to play with, and I found that exciting and challenging.”

There is an irony in the fact that it is Decca who are releasing ‘Ocean’s Kingdom’, as they were the label to reject The Beatles in the early 1960s, apparently saying that the band had “no future in showbusiness.”

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.

Hear Florence and the Machine’s new song ‘What The Water Gave Me’

0
Florence And The Machine have posted the first song to be revealed from their second album 'What The Water Gave Me'. 'What The Water Gave Me' will appear alongside 12 other tracks on the album, which does not yet have a title, but is scheduled to be released on November 7. It is available now throu...

Florence And The Machine have posted the first song to be revealed from their second album ‘What The Water Gave Me’.

‘What The Water Gave Me’ will appear alongside 12 other tracks on the album, which does not yet have a title, but is scheduled to be released on November 7. It is available now through FlorenceAndTheMachine.net.

The track is named after a painting by Mexican artist Frida Kahlo and has also been part inspired by the death of author Virginia Woolf, who drowned herself in a river by filling her coat pockets with stones.

You can see Florence working on the album at Abbey Road above, and hear the whole track at the bottom of the page.

Speaking to NME about the song, singer Florence Welch said: “At lot of the time when I’m writing, things will just appear. I was writing the song and this book on symbolism was lying around, and it had the painting in it. It’s nice to mix the ordinary with extraordinary.”

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.

Alice Cooper admits Rolling Stones influence on new single ‘I’ll Bite Your Face Off’

0
Alice Cooper has admitted that his new single 'I'll Bite Your Face Off' is a tribute to the early work of The Rolling Stones. The singer revealed that the track – which is released today (August 22) along with another new track, 'Caffeine', and is the first single to be taken from his new albu...

Alice Cooper has admitted that his new single ‘I’ll Bite Your Face Off’ is a tribute to the early work of The Rolling Stones.

The singer revealed that the track – which is released today (August 22) along with another new track, ‘Caffeine’, and is the first single to be taken from his new album ‘Welcome 2 My Nightmare – was similar to Rolling Stones material from the mid 1960’s, and insisted that he had no problem “showing people where I get my songs from”.

He said:[quote]This is my tip-of-the-hat to early Rolling Stones. Like in 1964/65 when their songs were very Chuck Berry-orientated. They just feel so good, in the pocket. This song was begging to be in the live show. We’ve done it in four different continents now and no one had ever heard it. By the second chorus, the whole audience is singing ‘I’ll Bite Your Face Off’. It’s the perfect little three-minute hit single.[/quote]

He added: “I don’t mind showing people where I get my songs from. I can guarantee there were times when major acts took an Alice Cooper song and said ‘We want it to sound like that’. Because I’ve heard it and recognised it. I see it as a compliment.”

Cooper also spoke about ‘Welcome 2 My Nightmare’, which is a sequel to his 1975 album ‘Welcome To My Nightmare’ – his first record as a solo artist, and not as frontman of the Alice Cooper Group – and claimed it was more humorous than its predecessor.

He said: “This is Alice‘s nightmare 35 years later. Bob [Ezrin, producer] and I created this character and we know how to write for him. I play the part but we’re not writing for me, we’re writing for Alice. We kept the first ‘Nightmare’ album very personal to us, on this one we found more humour and we were more open.”

The release date for ‘Welcome 2 My Nightmare’ is September 12.

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.

Tom Waits new album details revealed – audio

0
Tom Waits will release his forthcoming album 'Bad As Me' on October 25. The bluesman will release a regular version of the 13 track album alongside a deluxe edition which includes three extra songs, 'She Stole The Blush', 'Tell Me' and 'After You Die'. The single 'Bad As Me' is available to purcha...

Tom Waits will release his forthcoming album ‘Bad As Me’ on October 25.

The bluesman will release a regular version of the 13 track album alongside a deluxe edition which includes three extra songs, ‘She Stole The Blush’, ‘Tell Me’ and ‘After You Die’.

The single ‘Bad As Me’ is available to purchase from today (August 23). The track is his first new solo material in seven years. Scroll down to listen to the song.

Waits‘ last solo release was 2004’s ‘Real Gone’, which was co-produced by Waits and his wife Kathleen Brennan. Waits made an announcement regarding the album on Tomwaits.com today.

In a short video he previewed snippets of tracks from the new album before cutting the music, and blaming the internet for his doing so, explaining “apparently there’s no such thing as ‘private’ anymore.”

He said: “I’m going to have to change everything. Here’s the way I see it – if you were having a birthday, and I came early, and I started eating your cake, maybe I opened up all your presents and I started playing with all your toys, you’d be OK with that?”

He then said he’d have to ‘rethink’ his plans, blaming a “few bad apples” for ruining it for everyone. The video then cuts to a car playing songs from the album, with people being frisked before they can enter and listen.

Watch the Tom Waits’ Private Listening Party video below:

The ‘Bad As Me’ tracklisting is:

‘Chicago’

‘Raised Right Men’

‘Talking At The Same Time’

‘Get Lost’

‘Face To The Highway’

‘Pay Me’

‘Back In The Crowd’

‘Bad As Me’

‘Kiss Me’

‘Satisfied’

‘Last Leaf’

‘Hell Broke Luce’

‘New Year’s Eve’

‘She Stole The Blush’

‘Tell Me’

‘After You Die’

Listen to single ‘Bad As Me’ below:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7hzW3gdPNCI

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.

Red Hot Chili Peppers: ‘Nick Cave is the greatest living songwriter’

0
Red Hot Chili Peppers have revealed that they believe Nick Cave is "the greatest living songwriter" and are constantly inspired by him. Speaking to the Guardian, the band reveal that they also take inspiration from classical composter Stravinsky in their work ethic, despite all the money they've m...

Red Hot Chili Peppers have revealed that they believe Nick Cave is “the greatest living songwriter” and are constantly inspired by him.

Speaking to the Guardian, the band reveal that they also take inspiration from classical composter Stravinsky in their work ethic, despite all the money they’ve made.

Bassist Flea said: “Creativity waxes and wanes. We’re very lucky. We’ve made bunches of fucking money. We could be sat on the beach eating burritos, but even when we’re pissed off with each other we sit in a room and work. Igor Stravinsky sat at his piano every fucking day. Some days it was rubbish and his wife was chewing his ear off – but he stuck at it. The same thing goes for Nick Cave, the greatest living songwriter. He goes to work! Every day. And that’s what we do.”

The band release their 10th studio album ‘I’m With You’ a week on Monday (August 29). The album is their first with new guitarist Josh Klinghoffer, who revealed he is still anxious about playing live with the band.

He said: “I’ve known the guys for a decade and this is what I’ve wanted to do for my whole life. Although, if I think about the hugeness of it all, it triggers my anxiety.”

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.

Bjork announces tracklisting for ‘Biophilia’

0
Bjork has revealed the tracklisting for her seventh studio album 'Biophilia'. The album, which has a physical release date of September 27, features 10 tracks on the standard version, with a bonus of three more on the extended digipak edition. 'Biophilia' includes both 'Crystalline' and 'Virus',...

Bjork has revealed the tracklisting for her seventh studio album ‘Biophilia’.

The album, which has a physical release date of September 27, features 10 tracks on the standard version, with a bonus of three more on the extended digipak edition.

‘Biophilia’ includes both ‘Crystalline’ and ‘Virus’, both of which have been made available online. The album’s app version, ‘Biophilia App’ is already available from iTunes now.

The singer has also recently unveiled the Ultimate Box Set version of ‘Biophilia'[/url], which comes with very hefty price tag of £500. This version will include a lacquered and silkscreened oak-hinged lid case containing the ‘Biophilia’ manual, along with 10 chrome-plated tuning forks, silkscreened on one face in 10 different colours, stamped at the back, and presented in a flocked tray.

The manual will be 48 pages hardbound, cloth-covered and thread-sewn, and the package contains two audio CDs including the main album and additional exclusive recordings.

Bjork headlines the Sunday night at this year’s Bestival. She will play the Isle Of Wight event on September 11.

The tracklisting for ‘Biophilia’ is as follows:

‘Moon’

‘Thunderbolt’

‘Crystalline’

‘Cosmogony’

‘Dark Matter’

‘Hollow’

‘Virus’

‘Sacrifice’

‘Mutual Core’

‘Solstice’

‘Hollow’ (Original 7 Minute Version)*

‘Dark Matter’ (With Choir & Organ)*

‘Nattura’*

* These songs will only appear on the digipak version of ‘Biophilia’.

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 name collaborative LP ‘Lulu’

0
Metallica and Lou Reed have named their collaborative album 'Lulu' and confirmed it has been given a release date of October 31. The metal titans and the former Velvet Underground man have launched a joint website Loureedmetallica.com and have posted a lengthy update about 'Lulu'. They wrote of ...

Metallica and Lou Reed have named their collaborative album ‘Lulu’ and confirmed it has been given a release date of October 31.

The metal titans and the former Velvet Underground man have launched a joint website Loureedmetallica.com and have posted a lengthy update about ‘Lulu’.

They wrote of the album: “‘Lulu’ was inspired by German expressionist writer Frank Wededkind’s plays ‘Earth Spirit’ and ‘Pandora’s Box’, which tell a story of a young abused dancer’s life and relationships. Since their publication in the early 1900s, the plays have been the inspiration for a silent film, an opera, and countless other creative endeavors.”

It continues: “Originally the lyrics and musical landscape were sketched out by Lou for a theatrical production in Berlin, but after coming together with the Metallica boys for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame concerts in New York in 2009 all guilty parties knew they wanted to make more music together. Lou was inspired enough by that performance to recently ask the band to join him in taking his theatrical ‘Lulu’ piece to the next level and so starting in early May of this year we were all camped out recording at HQ studios in Northern California, bringing us to today and ten complete songs.”

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.

HERE’S A HEALTH TO THE BARLEY MOW

In a Suffolk pub, an announcer is calling the regulars to order with imposing gravitas. A Sunday drink and sing-song has slipped into a serious and necessary ritual, one that magically propitiates the harvest gods by wishing luck to all the measuring pots that will contain the beer, and by drinking a health to the dispensaries of this golden ale, the landlady and landlord, who obligingly beam into the camera as they work their infernal levers. This is the famous Ship Inn at Blaxhall, recorded in Here’s A Health To The Barley Mow (subtitled ‘A Century Of Folk Customs And Ancient Rural Games’, the 1952 documentary that gives the title to this magnificent two-disc collection that spans a century of British folkloric documentaries and short films. Surprisingly, nothing like it has ever been compiled before; in folkloric terms, this rich new hoard of Anglo-Saxon gold bears the same relation to today’s ‘folk’ – the likes of Mumford & Sons – as a Fulani death march does to the glossed world pop of Youssou N’Dour. It opens with some of the rarest and most delicate treasures of English folk heritage. Collectors Cecil Sharp, composer George Butterworth and their colleagues, Helen and Maud and Karpeles, were preserved in 1912 on Kinora spools, a kind of crude cinematic flip-book. These are the only known moving pictures of Sharp, and the foursome execute short sequences of country dancing, set to a new fiddle accompaniment by violinist Laurel Swift. There’s an endearing bumblingness about it, with Sharp and Butterworth colliding at one point and sharing a chuckle. I began my book Electric Eden with a description of seeing these films screened in London, with precisely the same live accompaniment, and the swooning sensation of time-travel it inspired. The sensation is hardly diminished on DVD, and the pleasure is enhanced by the new knowledge that these sequences were shot in the grounds of Kelmscott Manor, the ancient country pile once owned by William Morris. The two DVDs are divided into four themes: “Dances And Songs”, “Extreme Sports”, “Mummers And Hobbyhorses” and “All Manner Of Customs”. Among the first, we find films from the 1920s and ’30s, including the grotesquely endearing fiddler Sam Bennett leading roister-doisters in the grounds of Sir Peter de Montfort’s House near Henley, built in 1220 (the affluent owners stroll into the frame, feigning interest while picking at their rosebushes). The grittier High Spen Sword Dancers and Bacup Coconut Dancers display English folk dance with the bells off; dancers with sticks and swords creating fluctuating configurations that transmit geometric patterns through time immemorial. Much of the appeal comes from the weird ambiguity between the innocence and fun on show, and the way these mysterious ancient actions have temporarily possessed people, like a brain-colonising fungus. Wake Up And Dance, from 1950, rendered in ravishing vintage-postcard colour, was part of a propaganda drive for members by the The English Folk Dance and Song Society (EFDSS), showing a folk parade having a pied piper effect on the townsfolk. The sense of a portal to dream-Albion continues up to 1989’s The Flora Faddy Furry Dance Day, experimentally edited, intercutting Super-8 and rostrum shots of esoteric engravings with current footage of Britain’s largest folk fair in Helston, Cornwall. The ‘extreme sports’ and customs comprise a vast resource of glimpses of the unknown Britain, that occult, heathen country that sometimes pops into view in the novels of Thomas Hardy, films like The Wicker Man and Jez Butterworth’s play Jerusalem. Suffice to say that Tar Barrel Rolling In Ottery St Mary and The Burry Man Of South Queensferry, both shot around 2000, are some of the most atavistic pieces of film anywhere. But the set would be worth it on its own for the inclusion of two films produced by Peter Kennedy in the early 1950s, Walk In St George and the Alan Lomax-directed Oss Oss Old Oss. Filmed in Dorset and during Mayday celebrations in Padstow, Cornwall, these Technicolor shorts paint England’s village culture in wonderfully alien, yet radiant hues. The magic of it is, that these films show a Britain instinctively known but rarely seen. Like the folk process itself, it’s as much about reminding us how memories are created and prolonged, and learning to remember anew. You’ll never look at a morris dance the same way again. Rob Young Pic credit: Brian Shuel

In a Suffolk pub, an announcer is calling the regulars to order with imposing gravitas. A Sunday drink and sing-song has slipped into a serious and necessary ritual, one that magically propitiates the harvest gods by wishing luck to all the measuring pots that will contain the beer, and by drinking a health to the dispensaries of this golden ale, the landlady and landlord, who obligingly beam into the camera as they work their infernal levers.

This is the famous Ship Inn at Blaxhall, recorded in Here’s A Health To The Barley Mow (subtitled ‘A Century Of Folk Customs And Ancient Rural Games’, the 1952 documentary that gives the title to this magnificent two-disc collection that spans a century of British folkloric documentaries and short films. Surprisingly, nothing like it has ever been compiled before; in folkloric terms, this rich new hoard of Anglo-Saxon gold bears the same relation to today’s ‘folk’ – the likes of Mumford & Sons – as a Fulani death march does to the glossed world pop of Youssou N’Dour.

It opens with some of the rarest and most delicate treasures of English folk heritage. Collectors Cecil Sharp, composer George Butterworth and their colleagues, Helen and Maud and Karpeles, were preserved in 1912 on Kinora spools, a kind of crude cinematic flip-book. These are the only known moving pictures of Sharp, and the foursome execute short sequences of country dancing, set to a new fiddle accompaniment by violinist Laurel Swift. There’s an endearing bumblingness about it, with Sharp and Butterworth colliding at one point and sharing a chuckle. I began my book Electric Eden with a description of seeing these films screened in London, with precisely the same live accompaniment, and the swooning sensation of time-travel it inspired. The sensation is hardly diminished on DVD, and the pleasure is enhanced by the new knowledge that these sequences were shot in the grounds of Kelmscott Manor, the ancient country pile once owned by William Morris.

The two DVDs are divided into four themes: “Dances And Songs”, “Extreme Sports”, “Mummers And Hobbyhorses” and “All Manner Of Customs”. Among the first, we find films from the 1920s and ’30s, including the grotesquely endearing fiddler Sam Bennett leading roister-doisters in the grounds of Sir Peter de Montfort’s House near Henley, built in 1220 (the affluent owners stroll into the frame, feigning interest while picking at their rosebushes). The grittier High Spen Sword Dancers and Bacup Coconut Dancers display English folk dance with the bells off; dancers with sticks and swords creating fluctuating configurations that transmit geometric patterns through time immemorial. Much of the appeal comes from the weird ambiguity between the innocence and fun on show, and the way these mysterious ancient actions have temporarily possessed people, like a brain-colonising fungus.

Wake Up And Dance, from 1950, rendered in ravishing vintage-postcard colour, was part of a propaganda drive for members by the The English Folk Dance and Song Society (EFDSS), showing a folk parade having a pied piper effect on the townsfolk. The sense of a portal to dream-Albion continues up to 1989’s The Flora Faddy Furry Dance Day, experimentally edited, intercutting Super-8 and rostrum shots of esoteric engravings with current footage of Britain’s largest folk fair in Helston, Cornwall.

The ‘extreme sports’ and customs comprise a vast resource of glimpses of the unknown Britain, that occult, heathen country that sometimes pops into view in the novels of Thomas Hardy, films like The Wicker Man and Jez Butterworth’s play Jerusalem. Suffice to say that Tar Barrel Rolling In Ottery St Mary and The Burry Man Of South Queensferry, both shot around 2000, are some of the most atavistic pieces of film anywhere. But the set would be worth it on its own for the inclusion of two films produced by Peter Kennedy in the early 1950s, Walk In St George and the Alan Lomax-directed Oss Oss Old Oss. Filmed in Dorset and during Mayday celebrations in Padstow, Cornwall, these Technicolor shorts paint England’s village culture in wonderfully alien, yet radiant hues. The magic of it is, that these films show a Britain instinctively known but rarely seen. Like the folk process itself, it’s as much about reminding us how memories are created and prolonged, and learning to remember anew. You’ll never look at a morris dance the same way again.

Rob Young

Pic credit: Brian Shuel

THE SKIN I LIVE IN

0
Directed by Pedro Almodóvar Starring Antonio Banderas, Elena Anaya There’s a strange Rubik’s Cube quality to the films of Pedro Almodóvar. From time to time, he will appear to be trying out entirely novel tricks – but then you look more closely and realise he’s reshuffled his favourite d...

Directed by Pedro Almodóvar

Starring Antonio Banderas, Elena Anaya

There’s a strange Rubik’s Cube quality to the films of Pedro Almodóvar. From time to time, he will appear to be trying out entirely novel tricks – but then you look more closely and realise he’s reshuffled his favourite devices into deceptive new combinations. At first glance, The Skin I Live In seems like something different – a Hitchcockian thriller with a discreet lacing of body horror. But look again, and you realise that this is a Frankensteinian recombination of elements from earlier Almodóvar films – among them, Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! and Law Of Desire.

In fact, Almodóvar is quite overtly revisiting his past here, as he’s reunited with the first legitimate star that he launched – Antonio Banderas. Returning to his Spanish roots after years spoofing himself in Hollywood, Banderas plays Ledgard, a wealthy plastic surgeon. Since the death of his wife, Ledgard has been trying to resurrect her beauty using an artificial skin of his own devising. His guinea pig is a young woman called Vera (Elena Anaya), who is both his patient and his captive, and who skulks around her luxury prison in a slinky flesh-toned catsuit. But Vera’s not what she seems, and neither is the film, which, just as we feel we’re getting a grip on it, leaps into a perplexing flashback with a whole new set of characters.

Typically, Almodóvar delights in misleading us. The tense opening section seems to set us up for a sinister medical drama modelled on Georges Franju’s definitively eerie 1960 chiller Eyes Without A Face. Suddenly there comes a dash of louche sexual farce, as Vera encounters a muscular Brazilian no-gooder who turns up dressed in a tiger suit, complete with tail. And when Almodóvar finally lets us know what’s really happening, it’s with an outrageous twist – revealed by Banderas in a one-liner that will make your jaw drop with disbelief.

Only a singularly confident, stylish director can seduce us into accepting a film that veers between the mock-solemn and the outright facetious – and still convince us he’s spinning a coherent moral fable. Once again, Almodóvar is playing with themes of power, identity and sexuality in a way that will have his academic admirers champing at the bit, but he does it with an entertaining waywardness that recalls his more eccentric ’90s films such as High Heels. The leads are compellingly intense – not to say sexy, in a thoroughly unnerving way. Banderas embodies a sophisticated, even highbrow sort of thuggishness, while Anaya is mesmerisingly enigmatic. Her performance is all the more unsettling as Almodóvar appears to have altered her features digitally to give her the sort of perfect skin that Lloyd Cole could only have dreamed about.

Jonathan Romney

GENE CLARK: TWO SIDES TO EVERY STORY

0

By the time Gene Clark arrived at RSO Records, Robert Stigwood’s disco house supreme, in 1977, the decade had beaten him up pretty badly. Three superb solo albums – 1971’s stark White Light, 1972’s Roadmaster, and the most dazzlingly ambitious singer/songwriter album of all time, 1974’s No Other – had elicited barely a nod from critics or the general public. His family had disintegrated, and drink and drugs were constant demons. His fall from grace would soon accelerate, when he embarked on a star-crossed reunion with his Byrds mates in McGuinn, Clark & Hillman. The record Clark cooked up for RSO, Two Sides To Every Story, reflected the stress. Unfocused and misshapen, in places slick and staid, it offered up cover tunes, an old Dillard & Clark remake, and, in a take on Ronnie Hawkins’ ’50s-era smash “Marylou”, the single most awful cut in Clark’s oeuvre. This partly explains why it has been out of print since a CD reissue on PolyGram in the early ’90s. But there’s a reason why mint copies have been selling for up to £200 on eBay. Even with the chaos and missteps, this is a record that overcomes its flaws, offering moments of hard-won beauty and open-hearted grandeur from an artist fighting for his career. Though producer/sidekick Thomas Jefferson Kaye was held over from the No Other sessions, Clark ditched his best touring band ever –the raw, lonesome Silverados – as recording got underway. Instead, pros like singers Emmylou Harris and John Hartford, pedal-steel ace Al Perkins, Dixie Flyers’ guitarist Jerry McGee, and fiddler deluxe Byron Berline were drafted in. Doobie Brother Jeff “Skunk” Baxter stretched the classic Clark sound into Toto territory with flashy guitar. Yet despite all efforts to gussie up Clark’s sound into something tolerable for the FM-Top-40 crowd, Two Sides… was a record supremely out of time. With punk raging and disco poised for chart domination, “Home Run King” – a bluegrass homage to the innocence of youth and baseball great Babe Ruth – felt, for all its sly social commentary, hopelessly archaic, Norman Rockwell set to music. In the fullness of time, though, “Home Run King” and a fine cover of Leadbelly’s lonely “In The Pines,” both featuring Doug Dillard on banjo, provide a striking echo of the duo’s halcyon country-rock innovations circa 1968-70. “Lonely Saturday”, a straight honky-tonk weeper likewise mines arcane Americana for inspiration, auguring a mythical Nashville record that could’ve really been something. Ironically enough, when Clark does overtly recall his Dillard & Clark days, on a remake of the group’s railroad thumper “Kansas City Southern”, it’s a souped-up, hard-rock rendition, replete with syncopated rhythms and spiky guitar leads. While infectious, its R’n’B-style arrangement feels forced, the D&C version’s rustic country-soul evaporating into mere bar-band bluster. “Give My Love To Marie”, perhaps the only death-bed, black-lung ballad released on a major in 1977, cuts deeper. Amid Kaye’s dramatic strings, Clark leans into the teary emotion of this song – a traditional-style folk piece written by Woody Guthrie heir James Talley – with one of the best vocals of his career. Still, moralism was hardly Clark’s forte. It’s a song of concretes and absolutes – “There’s millions in the ground/Not a penny for me,” he croons in his vulnerable tenor – and Clark’s muse was far more effective hanging in the shadows, subtly confronting the mysteries of nature, time, love, and existence. Which is exactly where Clark takes the album proper on its staggering final three tracks. With its haunting melody and mournful chorus, “Hear The Wind” is Two Sides’ pivotal cut, and perhaps Clark’s most graceful ballad ever. Similar to “The True One” and White Light’s title track, this is Clark at the height of his poetic powers, wading deep into the psyche of desire, enlightenment and redemption. “Past Addresses” is grimmer still, a prayer for inner peace amid personal disintegration (“My words can’t slight the truth to you/Tomorrow every trial of life is going to fall,” warns its protagonist) that gives way to a wistful dénouement. “Silent Crusade,” which completes this trilogy, represents a catharsis of sorts, though it would be seven years until Clark’s next solo album. Less song than simple elegy for transcendence, it points to a lifting of burdens: “Please take me drifting far away,” he sing-speaks in almost ghostly fashion, “From the wordy and worldly explanation/Of the space we call today.” Luke Torn

By the time Gene Clark arrived at RSO Records, Robert Stigwood’s disco house supreme, in 1977, the decade had beaten him up pretty badly. Three superb solo albums – 1971’s stark White Light, 1972’s Roadmaster, and the most dazzlingly ambitious singer/songwriter album of all time, 1974’s No Other – had elicited barely a nod from critics or the general public. His family had disintegrated, and drink and drugs were constant demons. His fall from grace would soon accelerate, when he embarked on a star-crossed reunion with his Byrds mates in McGuinn, Clark & Hillman.

The record Clark cooked up for RSO, Two Sides To Every Story, reflected the stress. Unfocused and misshapen, in places slick and staid, it offered up cover tunes, an old Dillard & Clark remake, and, in a take on Ronnie Hawkins’ ’50s-era smash “Marylou”, the single most awful cut in Clark’s oeuvre. This partly explains why it has been out of print since a CD reissue on PolyGram in the early ’90s. But there’s a reason why mint copies have been selling for up to £200 on eBay. Even with the chaos and missteps, this is a record that overcomes its flaws, offering moments of hard-won beauty and open-hearted grandeur from an artist fighting for his career.

Though producer/sidekick Thomas Jefferson Kaye was held over from the No Other sessions, Clark ditched his best touring band ever –the raw, lonesome Silverados – as recording got underway. Instead, pros like singers Emmylou Harris and John Hartford, pedal-steel ace Al Perkins, Dixie Flyers’ guitarist Jerry McGee, and fiddler deluxe Byron Berline were drafted in. Doobie Brother Jeff “Skunk” Baxter stretched the classic Clark sound into Toto territory with flashy guitar.

Yet despite all efforts to gussie up Clark’s sound into something tolerable for the FM-Top-40 crowd, Two Sides… was a record supremely out of time. With punk raging and disco poised for chart domination, “Home Run King” – a bluegrass homage to the innocence of youth and baseball great Babe Ruth – felt, for all its sly social commentary, hopelessly archaic, Norman Rockwell set to music.

In the fullness of time, though, “Home Run King” and a fine cover of Leadbelly’s lonely “In The Pines,” both featuring Doug Dillard on banjo, provide a striking echo of the duo’s halcyon country-rock innovations circa 1968-70. “Lonely Saturday”, a straight honky-tonk weeper likewise mines arcane Americana for inspiration, auguring a mythical Nashville record that could’ve really been something.

Ironically enough, when Clark does overtly recall his Dillard & Clark days, on a remake of the group’s railroad thumper “Kansas City Southern”, it’s a souped-up, hard-rock rendition, replete with syncopated rhythms and spiky guitar leads. While infectious, its R’n’B-style arrangement feels forced, the D&C version’s rustic country-soul evaporating into mere bar-band bluster.

“Give My Love To Marie”, perhaps the only death-bed, black-lung ballad released on a major in 1977, cuts deeper. Amid Kaye’s dramatic strings, Clark leans into the teary emotion of this song – a traditional-style folk piece written by Woody Guthrie heir James Talley – with one of the best vocals of his career. Still, moralism was hardly Clark’s forte. It’s a song of concretes and absolutes – “There’s millions in the ground/Not a penny for me,” he croons in his vulnerable tenor – and Clark’s muse was far more effective hanging in the shadows, subtly confronting the mysteries of nature, time, love, and existence.

Which is exactly where Clark takes the album proper on its staggering final three tracks. With its haunting melody and mournful chorus, “Hear The Wind” is Two Sides’ pivotal cut, and perhaps Clark’s most graceful ballad ever. Similar to “The True One” and White Light’s title track, this is Clark at the height of his poetic powers, wading deep into the psyche of desire, enlightenment and redemption. “Past Addresses” is grimmer still, a prayer for inner peace amid personal disintegration (“My words can’t slight the truth to you/Tomorrow every trial of life is going to fall,” warns its protagonist) that gives way to a wistful dénouement.

“Silent Crusade,” which completes this trilogy, represents a catharsis of sorts, though it would be seven years until Clark’s next solo album. Less song than simple elegy for transcendence, it points to a lifting of burdens: “Please take me drifting far away,” he sing-speaks in almost ghostly fashion, “From the wordy and worldly explanation/Of the space we call today.”

Luke Torn

STEPHEN MALKMUS & THE JICKS: MIRROR TRAFFIC

0

When Stephen Malkmus bequeaths his notebooks and journals to the University Of Texas, as surely he must, what textual labyrinths await poring scholars! Straggly, scribbled soups, no doubt, of glorious nonsequiturs, goofily derailed cliché, bold insertions of modern-day lingo and doodle-strewn couplets. Malkmus is a kind of David Foster Wallace of Amerindie – each string of songs hotwired with their own internal logic boards, never tied together conceptually, pathologically digressive. Only when you listen closer, try to ‘get’ the song, do you realise that few of the lines actually fit together at all – it’s more as if Malkmus has snipped and pasted jottings from a crazed commonplace book or dream diary. But hey. Don’t beat yourself up about it. Just go with the slackbrain flow and you’ll be fine. It’s incredible to think that Slanted And Enchanted, the album that put Pavement on the map, was recorded 20 years ago. While Malkmus was out on the road with the reformed group last year, he also found time to tape Mirror Traffic, the fifth album by the band that, he’s claimed, is named according to the equation: “J from Jagger, plus Mick minus M”. While The Jicks corrall some of the best elements of American rock from the past four decades, ultimately they revive and occasionally extend Malkmus’ past achievements. Like The Fall, each album simultaneously answers expectations and slightly defies them. Also as usual, there are plenty of references to the process of making music itself – Kaoss Pads and distortion (“Asking Price”), the audience (“Fall Away”), toting guitars and riding in tour vans (“Senator”). Most strikingly, Mirror Traffic contains some of Malkmus’ most gripping guitar playing for ages, and there’s plenty of space allocated to his eely, vermiform lead lines that ooze into just about every song after the lyrics have wrapped up. He’s ably abetted by regular lineup of Joanna Bolme (bass), Mike Clark (keyboards and guitar) and Janet Weiss, the superb ex-Quasi/Sleater-Kinney drummer who’s sadly surrendering her Jicks badge with this release. Malkmus had me at “I caught you streaking in your Birkenstocks”, the first line of opener “Tigers”. Most of his vocals were laid down in a single day – the evidence is on “Stick Figures In Love”, where he seems to invent a line that doesn’t quite work and snortingly cracks up. Beck Hansen, who produced Thurston Moore’s recent, excellent Demolished Thoughts, flies the desk here, too, lending some kind of invisible clarity to the overall ambience. As on Moore’s album, it’s difficult to discern exactly what he’s done, but efforts have been made to lift it somewhere just above four dweebs rocking out in a smelly room. The group themselves sound relaxed and confident, stretching out in the slower numbers like “No One (Is As I Are Be)” and “Share The Red”. They even see fit to include a short instrumental fragment, “Jumblegloss”, which begins like some lost Cocteau Twins demo and fades out over swinging jazz drums. Malkmus tucks in some great one-liners: “I’m a 1-800 You-Can-Vent”(“Tigers”); “I ‘heart’ the part when you play the concerned friend” and “Sit-ups are so bourgeoisie” (“No One…”); “Sweet little peppercorn, I want out of your pie” (“All Over Gently”). On the laser-sharp “Senator”, Malkmus snarls a refrain about weapons-grade sludge for migrants and senators wanting blowjobs. This zesty anti-anthem, in the mould of LCD Soundsystem’s “North American Scum”, gets as close as Malkmus ever has to a perceptible political rage. And on “Asking Price” – “Too busy putzin’ round the internet/Revel in the disconnect” – he may be making an oblique point about misplaced faith in technology. But the album doesn’t allow many pauses for reflection. “Tune Grief” screeches off the block like Jonathan Richman at the helm of a bulldozer. Clark’s electric piano and theremin lend sarcastic tinges to “All Over Gently”’s sardonic relationship brush-off, and its skittering structure comes closest to Pavement’s demolition-derby approach to keeping the beat. “Long Hard Book” is one of several slower paced semi-acoustic tracks, with a pedal-steel frosting and an extraordinary treated-guitar coda. That’s Mirror Traffic, then: consistently entertaining, beautifully recorded, enough lyrical Malkmusings to occupy a generation of decoders, plus it rocks. A caveat? That perhaps that formidable intelligence might occasionally be more directed; that all the fragmentary crosstalk and canny snark might strive to get to a place beyond the disconnect – to a place where we can see not just the grin, but also the cat behind it. Rob Young

When Stephen Malkmus bequeaths his notebooks and journals to the University Of Texas, as surely he must, what textual labyrinths await poring scholars!

Straggly, scribbled soups, no doubt, of glorious nonsequiturs, goofily derailed cliché, bold insertions of modern-day lingo and doodle-strewn couplets. Malkmus is a kind of David Foster Wallace of Amerindie – each string of songs hotwired with their own internal logic boards, never tied together conceptually, pathologically digressive. Only when you listen closer, try to ‘get’ the song, do you realise that few of the lines actually fit together at all – it’s more as if Malkmus has snipped and pasted jottings from a crazed commonplace book or dream diary. But hey. Don’t beat yourself up about it. Just go with the slackbrain flow and you’ll be fine.

It’s incredible to think that Slanted And Enchanted, the album that put Pavement on the map, was recorded 20 years ago. While Malkmus was out on the road with the reformed group last year, he also found time to tape Mirror Traffic, the fifth album by the band that, he’s claimed, is named according to the equation: “J from Jagger, plus Mick minus M”. While The Jicks corrall some of the best elements of American rock from the past four decades, ultimately they revive and occasionally extend Malkmus’ past achievements. Like The Fall, each album simultaneously answers expectations and slightly defies them. Also as usual, there are plenty of references to the process of making music itself – Kaoss Pads and distortion (“Asking Price”), the audience (“Fall Away”), toting guitars and riding in tour vans (“Senator”). Most strikingly, Mirror Traffic contains some of Malkmus’ most gripping guitar playing for ages, and there’s plenty of space allocated to his eely, vermiform lead lines that ooze into just about every song after the lyrics have wrapped up. He’s ably abetted by regular lineup of Joanna Bolme (bass), Mike Clark (keyboards and guitar) and Janet Weiss, the superb ex-Quasi/Sleater-Kinney drummer who’s sadly surrendering her Jicks badge with this release.

Malkmus had me at “I caught you streaking in your Birkenstocks”, the first line of opener “Tigers”. Most of his vocals were laid down in a single day – the evidence is on “Stick Figures In Love”, where he seems to invent a line that doesn’t quite work and snortingly cracks up. Beck Hansen, who produced Thurston Moore’s recent, excellent Demolished Thoughts, flies the desk here, too, lending some kind of invisible clarity to the overall ambience. As on Moore’s album, it’s difficult to discern exactly what he’s done, but efforts have been made to lift it somewhere just above four dweebs rocking out in a smelly room. The group themselves sound relaxed and confident, stretching out in the slower numbers like “No One (Is As I Are Be)” and “Share The Red”. They even see fit to include a short instrumental fragment, “Jumblegloss”, which begins like some lost Cocteau Twins demo and fades out over swinging jazz drums.

Malkmus tucks in some great one-liners: “I’m a 1-800 You-Can-Vent”(“Tigers”); “I ‘heart’ the part when you play the concerned friend” and “Sit-ups are so bourgeoisie” (“No One…”); “Sweet little peppercorn, I want out of your pie” (“All Over Gently”). On the laser-sharp “Senator”, Malkmus snarls a refrain about weapons-grade sludge for migrants and senators wanting blowjobs. This zesty anti-anthem, in the mould of LCD Soundsystem’s “North American Scum”, gets as close as Malkmus ever has to a perceptible political rage. And on “Asking Price” – “Too busy putzin’ round the internet/Revel in the disconnect” – he may be making an oblique point about misplaced faith in technology. But the album doesn’t allow many pauses for reflection. “Tune Grief” screeches off the block like Jonathan Richman at the helm of a bulldozer. Clark’s electric piano and theremin lend sarcastic tinges to “All Over Gently”’s sardonic relationship brush-off, and its skittering structure comes closest to Pavement’s demolition-derby approach to keeping the beat. “Long Hard Book” is one of several slower paced semi-acoustic tracks, with a pedal-steel frosting and an extraordinary treated-guitar coda.

That’s Mirror Traffic, then: consistently entertaining, beautifully recorded, enough lyrical Malkmusings to occupy a generation of decoders, plus it rocks. A caveat? That perhaps that formidable intelligence might occasionally be more directed; that all the fragmentary crosstalk and canny snark might strive to get to a place beyond the disconnect – to a place where we can see not just the grin, but also the cat behind it.

Rob Young

Pearl Jam unveil tracklisting for ‘Twenty’ documentary soundtrack

0
Pearl Jam have unveiled the tracklisting for their 'Twenty' documentary soundtrack. The compilation, which is split into two discs, features 15 live recordings on the first disc and a further 15 B-sides, demos and rarities on the second disc. It has been given a release date of September 19, the d...

Pearl Jam have unveiled the tracklisting for their ‘Twenty’ documentary soundtrack.

The compilation, which is split into two discs, features 15 live recordings on the first disc and a further 15 B-sides, demos and rarities on the second disc. It has been given a release date of September 19, the day before the documentary will be shown in cinemas across the country.

The film, which has been directed by Almost Famous man Cameron Crowe, has been cut from 1,200 hours of rare footage and features recent interviews with the band members and live concert clips.

A book, also called Pearl Jam Twenty, will be released on September 12. Compiled and written by Jonathan Cohen with Mark Wilkerson, the book includes a foreword by Cameron Crowe as well as interviews with Bruce Springsteen, Neil Young and Dave Grohl.

The tracklisting for the ‘Twenty Official Soundtrack’ is as follows:

Pearl Jam Twenty (Disc One)

‘Release’

‘Alive’

‘Garden’

‘Why Go’

‘Black’

‘Blood’

‘Last Exit’

‘Not For You’

‘Do The Evolution’

‘Thumbing My Way’

‘Crown Of Thorns’

‘Let Me Sleep’

‘Walk With Me’

‘Just Breathe’

Disc Two (Rarities and Inspiration)

‘Say Hello 2 Heaven’

‘Times Of Trouble’

‘Acoustic #1’

‘It Ain’t Like That’

‘Need To Know’

‘Be Like Wind’

‘Given To Fly’

‘Nothing As It Seems’ (Demo version)

‘Nothing As It Seems’ (Live version)

‘Indifference’

‘Of The Girl’

‘Faithfull’

‘Bu$hleaguer’

‘Better Man’

‘Rearviewmirror’

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.

Bon Iver and James Blake set to collaborate

0
Bon Iver and James Blake are set to collaborate on a project entitled ‘Fall Creek Boys Choir’. Brit Blake announced the news via his Twitter account, though has so far been scant on the details about what form the project will take. Fall Creek however is the name of the town in which Justin Ve...

Bon Iver and James Blake are set to collaborate on a project entitled ‘Fall Creek Boys Choir’.

Brit Blake announced the news via his Twitter account, though has so far been scant on the details about what form the project will take. Fall Creek however is the name of the town in which Justin Vernon of Bon Iver owns a studio.

The tweet simply reads: “24th August 2011 – James Blake & Bon Iver ‘Fall Creek Boys Choir'”.

Bon Iver recently covered Peter Gabriel‘s ‘Come Talk To Me’ for the B-side to the band’s new single ‘Holocene’. Watch the video for ‘Holocene’ below. Directed by Nabil Elderkin, the video was shot on location in Iceland.

Says Elderkin of the video: “That place is the most magical place in the world, it looked like Mars to me, so I always wanted to shoot there.” The 12” version of the single is released on September 5.

Bon Iver are set to embark on their biggest UK tour to date this October. The tour is totally sold out.

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.

Sigur Rós to release live album and film

0
Sigur Ros are set to release a double live album and film from their last shows, which took place in 2008 at Alexandra Palace in London. 'Inni' will be released this November through the band’s label Krunk and documents the Icelandic group's final two shows before going on their 'indefinite hiatu...

Sigur Ros are set to release a double live album and film from their last shows, which took place in 2008 at Alexandra Palace in London.

‘Inni’ will be released this November through the band’s label Krunk and documents the Icelandic group’s final two shows before going on their ‘indefinite hiatus’ at the end of their world tour following the release of their fifth album. The live release features the whole show, with just one song omitted. The accompanying 75-minute film – directed by Vincent Morisset – will debut at the Venice Film Festival on September 3.

Inni is the band’s second live film, the first being 2007’s Heima, which documented a tour of their native Iceland. Director Morisset re-filmed the original digital footage on 16mm film, which was then refilmed again, through prisms and found objects. Footage of the band from 1998 onwards also features in the film.

The exact release date of ‘Inni’ will be revealed later in the year.

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.

Amy Winehouse’s Tony Bennett duet to help raise funds for her foundation

0
Amy Winehouse's duet with Tony Bennett is set to raise funds for the late singer's self-titled drug treatment foundation proposed by her family. The track 'Body And Soul' which is set to feature on Bennett's 'Duets II' album, out on September 19,was recorded with Winehouse at EMI's London Abbey Roa...

Amy Winehouse‘s duet with Tony Bennett is set to raise funds for the late singer’s self-titled drug treatment foundation proposed by her family.

The track ‘Body And Soul’ which is set to feature on Bennett’s ‘Duets II’ album, out on September 19,was recorded with Winehouse at EMI’s London Abbey Road studios.

Speaking about the recording sessions he told Billboard: “She was a little apprehensive about how to go about it, and I said to her, ‘I may be wrong, but it sounds like you’re influenced by Dinah Washington‘ and that just blew her mind. She just said, ‘Oh my God, you mean you can actually hear that? She’s my idol’ And that relaxed her, and that’s the record we ended up making.”

He also said he tried to help her during her troubles leading up to her death. Bennett added: “I was convinced I would be able to help her and talk her out of… taking drugs. The foundation is a great way to turn something positive out of this.”

The song will be the first recorded output to feature Winehouse‘s voice since she provided vocals for Mark Ronson‘s cover of The Zutons‘ ‘Valerie’ in 2007.

Other artists on the album include Lady Gaga, Sheryl Crow and Mariah Carey.

Meanwhile, Winehouse‘s father Mitch will meet members of the Government to discuss plans to set up the rehabilitation centre today (August 18).

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.

Nirvana’s Krist Novoselic to perform ‘Nevermind’ in its entirety

0

As part of the 20th anniversary celebrations for Nirvana’s seminal 1991 record ‘Nevermind’, the album will be performed live by former bassist Krist Novoselic. Novoselic will be joined by a number of local musicians to perform the album at the show at the Sky Church at the Experience Music Project in Seattle on September 20, reports Pitchfork. The Fastbacks, The Long Winters, Vaporland, Visqueen, Campfire OK, Valis – which feature former members of Screaming Trees - and Ravenna Woods. Apparently it is unlikely that Dave Grohl will appear at the show as Foo Fighters are playing a show on the same night in Cleveland. A special exhibition to celebrate 20 years of Nirvana's 'Nevermind' is set for September in London. For more information, visit Nirvanaexhibition.com. 'Nevermind' will be reissued on September 19. The Super Deluxe Edition of the album comes with a raft of rarities and remixes across its four CDs and one DVD. Only 10,000 copies of the Super Deluxe Version of the album will be released in North America, with another 30,000 for the rest of the world, including the UK. 'Nevermind' has sold over 30 million copies in the two decades since its release. It was the second studio album from Nirvana, the iconic grunge band made up of the late Kurt Cobain, Krist Novoselic and Foo Fighters mainman Dave Grohl. 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.

As part of the 20th anniversary celebrations for Nirvana’s seminal 1991 record ‘Nevermind’, the album will be performed live by former bassist Krist Novoselic.

Novoselic will be joined by a number of local musicians to perform the album at the show at the Sky Church at the Experience Music Project in Seattle on September 20, reports Pitchfork.

The Fastbacks, The Long Winters, Vaporland, Visqueen, Campfire OK, Valis – which feature former members of Screaming Trees – and Ravenna Woods. Apparently it is unlikely that Dave Grohl will appear at the show as Foo Fighters are playing a show on the same night in Cleveland.

A special exhibition to celebrate 20 years of Nirvana‘s ‘Nevermind’ is set for September in London. For more information, visit Nirvanaexhibition.com.

‘Nevermind’ will be reissued on September 19. The Super Deluxe Edition of the album comes with a raft of rarities and remixes across its four CDs and one DVD.

Only 10,000 copies of the Super Deluxe Version of the album will be released in North America, with another 30,000 for the rest of the world, including the UK.

‘Nevermind’ has sold over 30 million copies in the two decades since its release. It was the second studio album from Nirvana, the iconic grunge band made up of the late Kurt Cobain, Krist Novoselic and Foo Fighters mainman Dave Grohl.

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.

Tom Waits to release first new material in seven years

0

Legendary bluesman Tom Waits is set to make an announcement regarding the release of his first new material in seven years. Waits' last solo release was 2004’s ‘Real Gone’, which was co-produced by Waits and his wife Kathleen Brennan. He has now given clues as to new music on Tomwaits.com with a post that reads: "There have been rumblings and rumors. New music from Tom Waits, you say? Come to Tomwaits.com on Tuesday August 23rd, and Mr. Waits himself will set the record straight." However, the singer’s special announcement may have been inadvertently rumbled by information on Amazon. The music vending website has set up a pre-order page for a new Tom Waits track called 'Bad As Me', which will be released on August 23, the day of Waits' announcement. The listing page also features the single artwork and reveals that the track is three minutes 10 seconds long. There have been suggestions that the track will also share the name of Waits' rumoured new 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.

Legendary bluesman Tom Waits is set to make an announcement regarding the release of his first new material in seven years.

Waits‘ last solo release was 2004’s ‘Real Gone’, which was co-produced by Waits and his wife Kathleen Brennan. He has now given clues as to new music on Tomwaits.com with a post that reads: “There have been rumblings and rumors. New music from Tom Waits, you say? Come to Tomwaits.com on Tuesday August 23rd, and Mr. Waits himself will set the record straight.”

However, the singer’s special announcement may have been inadvertently rumbled by information on Amazon.

The music vending website has set up a pre-order page for a new Tom Waits track called ‘Bad As Me’, which will be released on August 23, the day of Waits‘ announcement.

The listing page also features the single artwork and reveals that the track is three minutes 10 seconds long. There have been suggestions that the track will also share the name of Waits‘ rumoured new 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.

London to host exhibition to celebrate 20th anniversary of Nirvana’s ‘Nevermind’

0

A special exhibition to celebrate 20 years of Nirvana's 'Nevermind' is set for September. Alongside photos, memorabilia and various artifacts relating to the band and the album, the exhibition will also display contributions from fans, which they are currently sourcing. Set to 'highlight the unique relationship the band enjoyed with their UK fans', people are being asked to send photos and descriptions of anything they think would work well in the exhibition to the curators. For more information on how to contribute, visit Nirvanaexhibition.com. The exhibition will take place at The Loading Bay Gallery on Brick Lane. Exact dates are yet to be released, but it will take place in September, the same month that 'Nevermind' is reissued. The Super Deluxe Edition of the album will be released on September 19, and comes with a raft of rarities and remixes across its four CDs and one DVD. These include the full remastered album, accompanying studio and live B-sides, rehearsal takes and the first full official release of producer Butch Vig's pre-album demos recorded at Smart Studios. A new perspective on the album is offered in the form of the 'Devonshire Mixes' - a Vig mix of the album that differs to original mixer Andy Wallace's version. Live recordings of BBC sessions and the band's 1991 show at the Paramount Theatre in hometown Seattle - the only known Nirvana gig shot to film - are also included, along with a 90-page bound book of rare photos and artefacts from the 'Nevermind' era. Only 10,000 copies of the Super Deluxe Version of the album will be released in North America, with another 30,000 for the rest of the world, including the UK. 'Nevermind' has sold over 30 million copies in the two decades since its release. It was the second studio album from Nirvana, the iconic grunge band made up of the late Kurt Cobain, Krist Novoselic and Foo Fighters mainman Dave Grohl. 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.

A special exhibition to celebrate 20 years of Nirvana‘s ‘Nevermind’ is set for September.

Alongside photos, memorabilia and various artifacts relating to the band and the album, the exhibition will also display contributions from fans, which they are currently sourcing. Set to ‘highlight the unique relationship the band enjoyed with their UK fans’, people are being asked to send photos and descriptions of anything they think would work well in the exhibition to the curators. For more information on how to contribute, visit Nirvanaexhibition.com.

The exhibition will take place at The Loading Bay Gallery on Brick Lane. Exact dates are yet to be released, but it will take place in September, the same month that ‘Nevermind’ is reissued. The Super Deluxe Edition of the album will be released on September 19, and comes with a raft of rarities and remixes across its four CDs and one DVD.

These include the full remastered album, accompanying studio and live B-sides, rehearsal takes and the first full official release of producer Butch Vig‘s pre-album demos recorded at Smart Studios.

A new perspective on the album is offered in the form of the ‘Devonshire Mixes’ – a Vig mix of the album that differs to original mixer Andy Wallace‘s version.

Live recordings of BBC sessions and the band’s 1991 show at the Paramount Theatre in hometown Seattle – the only known Nirvana gig shot to film – are also included, along with a 90-page bound book of rare photos and artefacts from the ‘Nevermind’ era.

Only 10,000 copies of the Super Deluxe Version of the album will be released in North America, with another 30,000 for the rest of the world, including the UK.

‘Nevermind’ has sold over 30 million copies in the two decades since its release. It was the second studio album from Nirvana, the iconic grunge band made up of the late Kurt Cobain, Krist Novoselic and Foo Fighters mainman Dave Grohl.

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.