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Paul McCartney claims The Rolling Stones envied The Beatles’ singing

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Paul McCartney has said that The Rolling Stones' Keith Richards admitted that his band envied The Beatles' singing prowess. In a new interview with the Radio Times, McCartney said: "I talked to Keith Richards a couple of years ago, and his take on it was: 'Man, you were lucky, you guys, you had fo...

Paul McCartney has said that The Rolling StonesKeith Richards admitted that his band envied The Beatles‘ singing prowess.

In a new interview with the Radio Times, McCartney said: “I talked to Keith Richards a couple of years ago, and his take on it was: ‘Man, you were lucky, you guys, you had four lead singers,’ whereas the Rolling Stones only had one.”

McCartney also said that the Stones‘ singer Mick Jagger used to call The Beatles “the four-headed monster.” He said: “We were an entity. Mick [Jagger] used to call us the four-headed monster. We would show up at places all dressed the same.”

The Liverpool legend added that he believed his bandmates were lucky to have even met, as they only missed being forced to do national service by a couple of years. “One of the most amazing things for The Beatles is that we just missed it,” he said. “A couple of years earlier, we would have been in the army, and it’s very doubtful that The Beatles would have formed.”

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.

July 2011

The astonishing story of the Mod legends and their ill-fated frontman, Steve Marriott:...

The astonishing story of the Mod legends and their ill-fated frontman, Steve Marriott:

Lou Reed announces two July UK shows

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Lou Reed has announced two new UK live dates for July. The singer, who also plays Hop Farm Festival underneath headliner Morrissey on July 2, will play gigs in Wolverhampton and London and in the same month. Reed headlines the former's Civic Hall on July 1, the day before he plays the Kent festiva...

Lou Reed has announced two new UK live dates for July.

The singer, who also plays Hop Farm Festival underneath headliner Morrissey on July 2, will play gigs in Wolverhampton and London and in the same month. Reed headlines the former’s Civic Hall on July 1, the day before he plays the Kent festival. He then plays the capital’s HMV Hammersmith Apollo on July 5.

The singer is also set to release a new DVD, Lollapolooza Live, this summer. The DVD was filmed during Reed‘s spell on the Lollapolooza tour in 2009 and sees him showcasing the music of his 1975 album ‘Metal Machine Music’.

Hop Farm Festival is set to be Reed‘s only UK festival appearance of the summer. The festival will be headlined by Prince, The Eagles and Morrissey.

To check the availability of [url=http://www.seetickets.com/see/event.asp?artist=Lou+Reed&filler1=see&filler3=id1nmestory] Lou Reed tickets[/url] and get all the latest listings, go to [url=http://www.nme.com/gigs]NME.COM/TICKETS[/url] now, or call 0871 230 1094.

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 HILL

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Directed by Patrick Hughes Starring Ryan Kwanten, Steve Bisley, Tommy Lewis Rookie lawman Shane Cooper (True Blood’s Ryan Kwanten) moves to a sleepy one-horse town to shield his pregnant wife from the pressures of city living. Only, there he learns that dangerous criminal Jimmy Conway (Tommy Le...

Directed by Patrick Hughes

Starring Ryan Kwanten, Steve Bisley, Tommy Lewis

Rookie lawman Shane Cooper (True Blood’s Ryan Kwanten) moves to a sleepy one-horse town to shield his pregnant wife from the pressures of city living.

Only, there he learns that dangerous criminal Jimmy Conway (Tommy Lewis) has escaped from jail and is heading over to settle some unfinished business.

Though Patrick Hughes’ tense, often gripping film – which unfolds, with a tip of the Stetson to High Noon, in the space of a day – is much less derivative than such a precis might sound.

The immense swathes of Outback offer an appropriate, almost eerie sense of scale, while Conway’s backstory gives rise to both a political and even a surreal dimension more typical of the offbeat Spaghetti Westerns of the ’70s.

It might be too far out there for admirers of the recent Aussie gangster drama Animal Kingdom, but Red Hill has an imagination and intelligence that stays long in the mind.

DAMON WISE

MERCURY REV – DESERTER’S SONGS (R)

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In theory, the fourth album by the Buffalo sextet Mercury Rev should have lost the shock value it had in 1998, when Cosmic American Music was the preserve of a few obsessive Gram Parsons nostalgists. But Deserter’s Songs never depended entirely on the novelty of being out of place and out of time. It is still, 13 years later, the most purely beautiful American rock album of its era. Like many a great work, there are various reasons why it shouldn’t exist. Mercury Rev returned home from touring 1995’s ignored See You On The Other Side album determined to split. Leader Jonathan Donahue dealt with his depression by withdrawing from rock completely, finding comfort in records he’d loved as a child. His favourites were Talespinners For Children, a series of records featuring actors reciting fairy tales over classical music. Soon, Donahue was making rough home demos on piano of simple, ingenuous melodies, many of which are now available on this reissue’s bonus disc. Even while hiring a mini-orchestra of classical players and nervously approaching Buffalo neighbours Levon Helm and Garth Hudson of The Band to play drums and sax on “Opus 40” and “Hudson Line”, Mercury Rev recorded the songs with a resigned, what-the-fuck attitude, figuring, perhaps quite reasonably, that a market in love with OK, Computer wasn’t longing for a set of drifting, Disney-esque orchestral ballads featuring female sopranos, flugelhorns and the eerie whine of a bowed saw. They were spectacularly wrong. Deserter’s Songs was a commercial success because it captured a prevailing mood of pre-millennial dread, but dared to imbue it with a feeling of childlike wonder, and an implication that, if we really are standing at the end of the world, we may find that whatever’s next is an opportunity to be born again, and lost in awe and wonder It’s a concept album about saying goodbye (or walking away, as Donahue prefers to describe it) that defined the idea that the sadness of leaving lovers, homes, friends, the planet or even just a rock scene that doesn’t get you is always counterbalanced by the anxious joy of impending change, the search for adventure and new possibilities. Its opening shot, “Holes”, draws you immediately into its sonic world of stately shimmer and high, keening hooks led by Donahue’s fragile, friendly Neil Young voice. He’s singing about paranoia, but the song’s final line – “Bands/Those funny little plans/That never work quite right” – sounded amused and strangely resolved rather than wracked with complaint. The astonishing “Goddess On A Hiway” hints at inevitable apocalypse through ecological disaster, its huge chorus of “And I know/It ain’t gonna last” a joyous singalong that still swells the heart with pure, innocent pleasure. The angelic motif that carried the breathtaking “Endlessly” transforms a nightmare of infinite, repeated desertion into something transcendent, a lullaby for landing in the gutter and staring at the stars. By the time you reach “Delta Sun Bottleneck Stomp”, the old-school rock’n’roll hoedown that becomes an Italian house tune for a few golden moments, you feel as if you’ve taken a long drive through the American wilderness at night. Deserter’s Songs re-enters a world made for it, and by it. In 2011 we take the ambitious and anti-macho American alt.rock band for granted, but the record remains a unique experience, as well as a collection of great songs, performed, arranged and produced with a love born of ceasing to care what the world thinks. If Mercury Rev haven’t matched it since, that’s OK. Neither has anyone else. Garry Mulholland Q&A Jonathan Donahue Is it true, if Deserter’s Songs had not been successful, Mercury Rev would have split? It went further than that. The album was my way of calling it a day. Whatever it was we were doing seemed so far out of time with what was going on in the world. The world wasn’t exactly waiting for another Mercury Rev record. We didn’t have a manager or a lawyer or a label. So approaching Hudson and Helm to play with you must have been nerve-wracking. Yeah, it was. No one wants to be rejected by somebody that they feel inspired by. It was Amy Helm, Levon’s daughter, who whistled on the outro of “Opus 40”. She gained a certain whistling fame from this and went on to whistle on a burger chain TV ad which, she claimed, made her hundreds of thousands of dollars. The world sees Deserter’s Songs as your masterpiece. But do you? It’s a beloved record of mine because it came from somewhere that was purely genuine and purely guileless. But… I wouldn’t want to jump back down into that boiling cauldron again. I don’t really know how Deserter’s Songs made it to the light of day. INTERVIEW: GARRY MULHOLLAND

In theory, the fourth album by the Buffalo sextet Mercury Rev should have lost the shock value it had in 1998, when Cosmic American Music was the preserve of a few obsessive Gram Parsons nostalgists.

But Deserter’s Songs never depended entirely on the novelty of being out of place and out of time. It is still, 13 years later, the most purely beautiful American rock album of its era.

Like many a great work, there are various reasons why it shouldn’t exist. Mercury Rev returned home from touring 1995’s ignored See You On The Other Side album determined to split. Leader Jonathan Donahue dealt with his depression by withdrawing from rock completely, finding comfort in records he’d loved as a child. His favourites were Talespinners For Children, a series of records featuring actors reciting fairy tales over classical music. Soon, Donahue was making rough home demos on piano of simple, ingenuous melodies, many of which are now available on this reissue’s bonus disc.

Even while hiring a mini-orchestra of classical players and nervously approaching Buffalo neighbours Levon Helm and Garth Hudson of The Band to play drums and sax on “Opus 40” and “Hudson Line”, Mercury Rev recorded the songs with a resigned, what-the-fuck attitude, figuring, perhaps quite reasonably, that a market in love with OK, Computer wasn’t longing for a set of drifting, Disney-esque orchestral ballads featuring female sopranos, flugelhorns and the eerie whine of a bowed saw.

They were spectacularly wrong. Deserter’s Songs was a commercial success because it captured a prevailing mood of pre-millennial dread, but dared to imbue it with a feeling of childlike wonder, and an implication that, if we really are standing at the end of the world, we may find that whatever’s next is an opportunity to be born again, and lost in awe and wonder

It’s a concept album about saying goodbye (or walking away, as Donahue prefers to describe it) that defined the idea that the sadness of leaving lovers, homes, friends, the planet or even just a rock scene that doesn’t get you is always counterbalanced by the anxious joy of impending change, the search for adventure and new possibilities.

Its opening shot, “Holes”, draws you immediately into its sonic world of stately shimmer and high, keening hooks led by Donahue’s fragile, friendly Neil Young voice. He’s singing about paranoia, but the song’s final line – “Bands/Those funny little plans/That never work quite right” – sounded amused and strangely resolved rather than wracked with complaint.

The astonishing “Goddess On A Hiway” hints at inevitable apocalypse through ecological disaster, its huge chorus of “And I know/It ain’t gonna last” a joyous singalong that still swells the heart with pure, innocent pleasure. The angelic motif that carried the breathtaking “Endlessly” transforms a nightmare of infinite, repeated desertion into something transcendent, a lullaby for landing in the gutter and staring at the stars. By the time you reach “Delta Sun Bottleneck Stomp”, the old-school rock’n’roll hoedown that becomes an Italian house tune for a few golden moments, you feel as if you’ve taken a long drive through the American wilderness at night.

Deserter’s Songs re-enters a world made for it, and by it. In 2011 we take the ambitious and anti-macho American alt.rock band for granted, but the record remains a unique experience, as well as a collection of great songs, performed, arranged and produced with a love born of ceasing to care what the world thinks. If Mercury Rev haven’t matched it since, that’s OK. Neither has anyone else.

Garry Mulholland

Q&A Jonathan Donahue

Is it true, if Deserter’s Songs had not been successful, Mercury Rev would have split?

It went further than that. The album was my way of calling it a day. Whatever it was we were doing seemed so far out of time with what was going on in the world. The world wasn’t exactly waiting for another Mercury Rev record. We didn’t have a manager or a lawyer or a label.

So approaching Hudson and Helm to play with you must have been nerve-wracking.

Yeah, it was. No one wants to be rejected by somebody that they feel inspired by. It was Amy Helm, Levon’s daughter, who whistled on the outro of “Opus 40”. She gained a certain whistling fame from this and went on to whistle on a burger chain TV ad which, she claimed, made her hundreds of thousands of dollars.

The world sees Deserter’s Songs as your masterpiece. But do you?

It’s a beloved record of mine because it came from somewhere that was purely genuine and purely guileless. But… I wouldn’t want to jump back down into that boiling cauldron again. I don’t really know how Deserter’s Songs made it to the light of day.

INTERVIEW: GARRY MULHOLLAND

Primal Scream to release ‘Screamadelica’ live on CD/DVD

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Primal Scream are set to release a live CD/DVD of their recent 'Screamadelica' live tour, which was filmed and recorded last year during their headline shows at London's Olympia. The package, which is titled 'Screamadelica Live!', is released on May 31 and will feature both a DVD and CD. The DVD...

Primal Scream are set to release a live CD/DVD of their recent ‘Screamadelica’ live tour, which was filmed and recorded last year during their headline shows at London‘s Olympia.

The package, which is titled ‘Screamadelica Live!’, is released on May 31 and will feature both a DVD and CD.

The DVD contains a filmed version of the band performing ‘Screamadelica’ in its entirety accompanied by a brass section and gospel choir, as well as a bonus filmed live set of the band performing eight classic tracks from their back catalogue, including ‘Rocks’, ‘Jailbird’ and ‘Country Girl’.

The live CD features only the ‘Screamadelica’ live set. You can watch a preview of the DVD by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking.

Primal Scream are set to perform ‘Screamadelica’ live throughout the festival season, with high-profile slots at Glastonbury and Bestival among those booked.

The tracklisting for ‘Screamadelica Live!’ is as follows:

Screamadelica

‘Movin’ On Up’

‘Slip Inside This House’

‘Don’t Fight It, Feel It’

‘Damaged’

‘I’m Comin’ Down’

‘Shine Like Stars’

‘Inner Flight’

‘Higher Than The Sun’

‘Loaded’

‘Come Together’

Rocks

‘Accelerator’

‘Country Girl’

‘Jailbird’

‘Burning Wheel’

‘Suicide Bomb’

‘Shoot Speed / Kill Light’

‘Swastika Eyes’

‘Rocks’

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.

WILD BEASTS – SMOTHER

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Wild Beasts have always felt like a band caught between ages. Sonically speaking, their two previous albums, 2008’s Limbo Panto and 2009’s Two Dancers, seemed the product of an era that gave us literate English guitar pop like The Associates, Orange Juice and The Smiths. But their songs themsel...

Wild Beasts have always felt like a band caught between ages.

Sonically speaking, their two previous albums, 2008’s Limbo Panto and 2009’s Two Dancers, seemed the product of an era that gave us literate English guitar pop like The Associates, Orange Juice and The Smiths. But their songs themselves were something odder, trickier to define; frequently modern in theme, but related in an archaic tongue more befitting of young men of Edwardian England than anything so contemporary. “Frock spill like alcopop around girls’ knees/Trousers and blouses make excellent sheets, down dimly lit streets” went one of vocalist Hayden Thorpe’s more notable lyrics, suggesting that even if the youth were engaged in copulation on the high streets of our nation, they did at least retain an excellent command of the English language.

Their frequently fine new album, Smother, serves to confuse Wild Beasts’ place in the fabric of time even further. Commencing with the insistent throb of a synth, opener “Lion’s Share” flags early that this is a record with aspirations beyond the bucolic indie of its predecessors. It was recorded at Bryn Derwen studios in rural Wales, a studio frequented by electronica artists such as Caribou and Four Tet. Still, Smother is not in any way a dance record. Rather, it makes use of synths and sampling software to heighten atmosphere and craft gorgeous, intricate textures – a tactic plainly seen on the elaborate, synthetic lead-off single “Albatross”.

The band have mentioned Talk Talk as a touchstone, and certainly, the mood here feels informed by their The Colour Of Spring in its heady, elemental mix of sensual songs and serene ambience. Indeed, ‘sensual’ is the key. Smother assembles 10 love songs – seven fronted by Thorpe in his fluttering counter-tenor, and three led by his hearty wingman, bassist/vocalist Tom Fleming.

Really, ‘lust songs’ might be more appropriate. Certainly, some more prudish listeners might get a bit of colour round their cheeks at Thorpe’s more risqué lines. “I take you in my mouth like a lion takes its game,” he sings, on “Lion’s Share”. “New squeeze/Take off your chemise/And I’ll do as I please”, goes his opening gambit on the eerie, nocturnal “Plaything”. While Two Dancers’ more caddish moments were leavened by wit and wordplay, here the language is more intimate and direct – albeit still partial to ambitious imagery. “Bed Of Nails”, in a very Wild Beasts moment, imagines the first sexual liaison between Frankenstein author Mary Shelley and her husband Percy, building to an electric climax that awakens her monster, so to speak: “It’s alive!” cries Thorpe.

Loop The Loop” and “Reach A Bit Further” are the tracks that most resemble Wild Beasts’ early work, built around exquisite guitars and rhythms that adopt a muscular canter. Still, this is plainly the sound of a more focused, mature band: Thorpe’s voice, once a peculiar whinny, has softened nicely, while lush synth washes add soft, watercolour shading. One of the finest surprises, meanwhile, is the quality of Fleming’s songs. As a vocalist, he’s probably been underrated – more conventional than Thorpe, he lacks his floridity of delivery and language – but his turns on the slow-jamming “Deeper” and “Burning” smoulder with barely suppressed passion.

The latter, in particular, is an album high-light, and one of Wild Beasts’ most striking moments to date. Some archaic stringed instrument, a zither perhaps, is sampled and rendered as shimmering electronic chatter, backdrop for a song apparently inspired by TS Eliot’s The Waste Land that depicts love in elemental, destructive terms: “You cast me up into the wind,” he sings, “You shuck my body from its skin…” It is simple in construction, but intense and moving, and a reminder that for all their occasional tendency to feyness and flourish, this is a band with fire in their gut. Smother smoulders. It is not only Wild Beasts’ finest album to date, but one of the best you’re likely to hear all year.

Louis Pattison

Q&A Tom Fleming

How did you find the recording process for this album?

Making and recording Smother was less ‘professional’ than ever. We spent three weeks in a studio in Snowdonia, where we added some full-band recordings and lovely synths to things we’d kept from earlier demos and home recordings. We’ve got into the habit of working quickly, mainly to try to make the distance between the start of an idea and the end of it as small as possible, so the original spark isn’t lost.

Mood-wise, it’s a very sensual record…

Two Dancers was a slightly younger aspect on the same things, I think. This time we felt calmer, less inclined to try to bang the door down. In some ways the record is personal, but no more or less than either of our others, and that ‘I’ in songs should never be trusted, never. We set out to make something beautiful, but quickly realised that beauty is always wrapped up in things that are not beautiful. The arrangement of “Burning” is very sparse, and the sounds are both synthetic and pretty crude, which is for us an important part of our approach to electronics – don’t be tempted by perfection!

INTERVIEW: LOUIS PATTISON

Bob Dylan interview reveals singer’s heroin addiction

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A previously-unheard Bob Dylan interview from 1966 has revealed that he overcame heroin addiction in the 1960s. The singer, who turns 70 this week, revealed in the interview that he became addicted to the drug while living in New York but subsequently got clean. It had previously been rumoured that he had taken the drug but he had not confirmed this on record. According to BBC News Dylan said: "I kicked a heroin habit in New York City. I got very, very strung out for a while, I mean really, very strung out. And I kicked the habit. I had about a $25-a-day habit and I kicked it." Dylan gave the interview on board a private plane to Denver, Colarado in March 1966 after a concert in Nashville, Tennessee to friend Robert Shelton. But the details of the interview have not come to light until now. Elsewhere on the tape the singer revealed he has contemplated suicide. He said: "Death to me is nothing. Death to me means nothing as long as I can die fast. Many times I've known I could have been able to die fast, and I could have easily gone over and done it. I'll admit to having this suicidal thing, but I came through." 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 previously-unheard Bob Dylan interview from 1966 has revealed that he overcame heroin addiction in the 1960s.

The singer, who turns 70 this week, revealed in the interview that he became addicted to the drug while living in New York but subsequently got clean. It had previously been rumoured that he had taken the drug but he had not confirmed this on record.

According to BBC News Dylan said: “I kicked a heroin habit in New York City. I got very, very strung out for a while, I mean really, very strung out. And I kicked the habit. I had about a $25-a-day habit and I kicked it.”

Dylan gave the interview on board a private plane to Denver, Colarado in March 1966 after a concert in Nashville, Tennessee to friend Robert Shelton. But the details of the interview have not come to light until now.

Elsewhere on the tape the singer revealed he has contemplated suicide. He said: “Death to me is nothing. Death to me means nothing as long as I can die fast. Many times I’ve known I could have been able to die fast, and I could have easily gone over and done it. I’ll admit to having this suicidal thing, but I came through.”

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.

Terry Reid: Club Uncut, London Jazz Cafe, May 21, 2011

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It is about five minutes into “The Frame” before Terry Reid arrives onstage at the Jazz Café. As his scratch band lock into limpid funk that sounds like it could go on forever (and very nearly does), Reid comes grooving down the staircase, an odd but endearing mix of West Coast rock gentry and bumbling shires uncle. Eventually, he makes his way to the microphone and reveals, wonderfully, that the superlungs are still in pretty potent working order. There’s a little more gravel in there, and the empathetic backup of BJ Cole on steel helps fill in on some of the higher ranges. Nevertheless, here is one of British rock’s great voices, in startling form. It might be better, actually, to talk of Reid tonight as being one of British soul and British country’s great voices, since it is those musical influences that figure strongest in a two-hour set of free-flowing expansions and frequent peaks. A good chunk of the songs come from 1976’s "Seed Of Memory", the best to showcase Reid’s passionate, improvising grasp of American music. These are loose songs, which he stretches into new shapes with every minute that passes: a clutch of new tunes often begin tentatively, with a kind of country orthodoxy, before being blown apart by Reid’s questing spirit. During a momentous version of “River”, he generously cedes the spotlight to his band (sharp after, by all accounts, one rehearsal, if generally more comfortable in funk mode) as they take hefty solos: a miracle of abstraction and control from Cole; a slightly hairy burst of session-man technoflash from the guitarist. Some 15 or 20 minutes in, though, Reid finds himself extemporising, a cappella, fearlessly exposed, and the thought occurs that it’s a travesty this free-flying master isn’t as revered as a contemporary kindred spirit, Van Morrison. Morrison, actually, is one of the very few artists of a certain stature and vintage that Reid doesn’t namedrop during a series of entertaining anecdotes that turn out to be as wide-ranging and ambulatory as his music. One, preceding a mighty take on “Seed Of Memory” itself, leaves me thinking that the song has been covered by Dr Dre: subsequent internet research suggests a new version is forthcoming featuring a rapper called De Mesa, purportedly an associate of Dre but not someone I’ve ever come across before. Another rambling yarn starts off about someone plausibly significant called Keith and takes in Don Henley, Joe Walsh and Carl Wilson’s wife in passing, but centres around a meeting between Steve Marriott and The Beach Boys. This is a preface, of sorts, to a solo, Latin-tinged version of Brian Wilson’s “Don’t Worry Baby” that only marginally outstays its welcome. It’s followed by another solo song; a rousing, incantatory “To Be Treated Rite” that’s possibly the highlight of the show. Reid, though, gives the impression that he has enough songs, stories and energies to keep going all night, and he has one good, self-deprecatory joke left, too. As “Rich Kid Blues” begins with all the thump and gravity of old, he steps up and begins singing “Stairway To Heaven” instead. “Well, it sounds like it,” he smirks. But as tonight’s show proves, Reid is anything but the nearly man of British rock.

It is about five minutes into “The Frame” before Terry Reid arrives onstage at the Jazz Café. As his scratch band lock into limpid funk that sounds like it could go on forever (and very nearly does), Reid comes grooving down the staircase, an odd but endearing mix of West Coast rock gentry and bumbling shires uncle.

Blondie to release first studio album for nine years in September

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Blondie have announced details of their first studio album for eight years, which is set to be titled 'Panic Of Girls' and will be released in September. The album, which has been produced by Jeff Saltzman [The Killers, Fischerspooner] and Kato Khandwala [Paramore, Papa Roach], was recorded princi...

Blondie have announced details of their first studio album for eight years, which is set to be titled ‘Panic Of Girls’ and will be released in September.

The album, which has been produced by Jeff Saltzman [The Killers, Fischerspooner] and Kato Khandwala [Paramore, Papa Roach], was recorded principally in the band’s home town of New York.

‘Panic Of Girls’, which is the follow up to 2003’s ‘The Curse Of Blondie’, contains covers of Sophia George‘s ‘Girlie Girlie’ and Beirut‘s ‘Sunday Smile’. Beirut‘s Zach Condon also appears on the album, providing guest vocals.

The band have additionally released the video for the album’s first single ‘Mother’, which you can see at the bottom of the page by scrolling down and clicking.

Blondie are set to play a number of UK festivals this summer, including appearances at Kendal Calling festival and Camp Bestival.

The tracklisting for ‘Panic Of Girls’ is as follows:

‘D-Day’

‘What I Heard’

‘Mother’

‘The End The End’

‘Girlie Girlie’

‘Love Doesn’t Frighten Me’

‘Words In My Mouth’

‘Sunday Smile’

‘Wipe Off My Sweat’

‘Le Bleu’

‘China Shoes’

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 plans to release poetry and prose

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PJ Harvey has announced her intention to release her paintings and prose along with her music. The singer-songwriter is enjoying acclaim for new album 'Let England Shake', but now she has revealed that she would like to expand her output to reflect her background in visual arts. She told Spinner....

PJ Harvey has announced her intention to release her paintings and prose along with her music.

The singer-songwriter is enjoying acclaim for new album ‘Let England Shake’, but now she has revealed that she would like to expand her output to reflect her background in visual arts.

She told Spinner.co.uk: “My initial beginnings were as a visual artist, not a musician. I was going to do a degree in sculpture… but then the path towards music opened up for me. I had an opportunity to make a record and it took me away from ever doing that.”

She revealed that she has never stopped working in the visual arts, saying: “I work on paintings alongside with songs. I take my work with me. As I write every day, I draw and paint every day and it’s just part of my life, so even if I am touring it comes with me, In fact, songwriting is, for me, a very visual project.”

But Harvey only recently worked up the confidence to showcase her work, after being a guest designer for Francis Ford Coppola‘s All-Story magazine. Now she is keen to do more.

She said: “I’d like to do more because I just moved into doing oil painting as well, which I’m really enjoying and I’d like to spend more time doing that. I’m also a keen writer, not just of songs, but of poetry, short prose, short stories. I’d like to release regularly my extraneous works, drawings and writings that aren’t songs, but just other things that I do.”

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.

Pete Doherty jailed for six months for cocaine possession

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Pete Doherty has been sentenced to six months in jail after pleading guilty to cocaine possession. the Libertines man appeared at Snaresbrook Crown Court in his hometown London today (May 20) to hear his sentence, reports the Press Association. The verdict came after a [url=http://www.nme.com/news/...

Pete Doherty has been sentenced to six months in jail after pleading guilty to cocaine possession.

the Libertines man appeared at Snaresbrook Crown Court in his hometown London today (May 20) to hear his sentence, reports the Press Association. The verdict came after a [url=http://www.nme.com/news/pete-doherty/49475]police investigation into the death of his friend, filmmaker Robin Whitehead in 2010[/url].

Judge David Radford, sentencing Doherty said: “From what I have heard and what I have read there is no doubt that you are a talented and successful musician. However, you have an appalling record of committed offences of the kind for which you fall to be sentenced today.”

Also sentenced today was Doherty‘s ‘For Lovers’ collaborator Wolfman, aka Peter Wolfe. he was handed a one-year jail term.

This is the third time Doherty has been jailed. In 2003 he was sent to prison for burgling his Libertines bandmate Carl Barat‘s flat then in 2008 he was jailed for breaching probation rules[/url].

The singer recently wrote a blog in which he claimed he had not supplied Whitehead with drugs despite her living with him. He also tried to distance himself further from the 2006 death of Mark Blanco in the blog.

He had been due to play a solo gig at the Glasgow Barrowlands venue tonight.

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.

Ask Leon Russell…

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The great Leon Russell – legendary musician, songwriter, arranger and producer, and a 2011 Rock’N’Roll Hall Of Fame inductee – is in the hot seat for Uncut’s regular 'Audience With' feature. As well as a string of masterful solo records, Leon has played alongside the very biggest names in music: Bob Dylan, The Rolling Stones, Elton John, The Byrds, The Beach Boys, John, George and Ringo, Willie Nelson, Marvin Gaye, Phil Spector, Frank Sinatra. That’s one hell of a CV. "What was it like playing at the Concert For Bangladesh?" "How does he feel about his songs being covered by artists as diverse as Ray Charles, Joe Cocker, Sonic Youth and Christina Aguilera?" "Where does he buy his awesome hats?" It’s up to you what to ask him, so email your questions to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com by Tuesday, May 24. The best questions, and Leon’s answers will be published in a future issue Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question!

The great Leon Russell – legendary musician, songwriter, arranger and producer, and a 2011 Rock’N’Roll Hall Of Fame inductee – is in the hot seat for Uncut’s regular ‘Audience With’ feature.

As well as a string of masterful solo records, Leon has played alongside the very biggest names in music: Bob Dylan, The Rolling Stones, Elton John, The Byrds, The Beach Boys, John, George and Ringo, Willie Nelson, Marvin Gaye, Phil Spector, Frank Sinatra. That’s one hell of a CV.

“What was it like playing at the Concert For Bangladesh?”

“How does he feel about his songs being covered by artists as diverse as Ray Charles, Joe Cocker, Sonic Youth and Christina Aguilera?”

“Where does he buy his awesome hats?”

It’s up to you what to ask him, so email your questions to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com by Tuesday, May 24.

The best questions, and Leon’s answers will be published in a future issue Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question!

The 19th Uncut Playlist Of 2011

All new arrivals this week, I think, though of course one or two of these albums have been round the block a few times one way or another. Not a vintage selection either, to be honest, but make of these what you will… 1 Felt – Bubblegum Perfume (Cherry Red) 2 The Caretaker – An Empty Bliss Beyond This World (History Always Favours The Winners) 3 Kourosh Yaghmaei – Back From The Brink (Now Again) 4 Marissa Nadler – Marissa Nadler (Box Of Cedar) 5 Zomby – Dedication (4AD) 6 Brian Eno And The Words Of Rick Holland – Drums Between The Bells (Warp) 7 Brian Olive – Two Of Everything (Alive Natural Sound) 8 Guanaco – Ardea Cinerea (Sweat Lodge Guru) 9 Washed Out – Within And Without (Weird World) 10 James Ferraro – On Air (Underwater Peoples) 11 Various Artists – True Soul: Deep Sounds From The Left Of Stax (Now Again) 12 REM – Lifes Rich Pageant: 25th Anniversary Edition (EMI) 13 Danny & The Champions Of The World – Hearts & Arrows (So Records) 14 Howlin Wolf – Live And Cookin’ At Alice’s Revisited (Raven) 15 A New Mystery Record

All new arrivals this week, I think, though of course one or two of these albums have been round the block a few times one way or another.

Previously-unreleased New Order song ‘Hellbent’ appears online – audio

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'Hellbent', a previously-unreleased song from New Order, has been made available online - click below to hear it. The track is taken from a new compilation album which will feature both New Order and Joy Division songs together for the first time. The compilation is titled 'Total: From Joy Divisio...

‘Hellbent’, a previously-unreleased song from New Order, has been made available online – click below to hear it.

The track is taken from a new compilation album which will feature both New Order and Joy Division songs together for the first time. The compilation is titled ‘Total: From Joy Division To New Order’ and comes out on June 6.

The tracklisting contains five Joy Division tracks, including key singles ‘Love Will Tear Us Apart’ and ‘Transmission’. It also features 13 New Order songs, including ‘Blue Monday’, ‘True Faith’ and ‘World In Motion’.

The tracklisting of ‘Total’ is:

Joy Division songs:

‘Transmission’

‘Love Will Tear Us Apart’

‘Isolation’

‘She’s Lost Control’

‘Atmosphere’

New Order songs:

‘Ceremony’

‘Temptation’

‘Blue Monday’

‘Thieves Like Us’

‘The Perfect Kiss’

‘Bizarre Love Triangle’

‘True Faith’

‘Fine Time’

‘World in Motion’

‘Regret’

‘Crystal’

‘Krafty’

‘Hellbent’

New Order – Hellbent (Previously Unreleased) by Rhino UK

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.

Pearl Jam to release book and album to accompany film

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Mookie>>>PJ from Pearl Jam on Vimeo.

Pearl Jam are set to release a book and soundtrack album to accompany their forthcoming Cameron Crowe-directed documentary Pearl Jam Twenty.

The film, due out in September, marks the 20th anniversary of Pearl Jam‘s formation – watch a preview of it by clicking below. A newly-announced soundtrack collection from the movie will have a tracklisting chosen by Crowe.

A Pearl Jam Twenty book is also set to be released. With a foreword written by Crowe and contents compiled and written by authors Jonathan Cohen and Mark Wilkerson, the book is being biled as an “aesthetically stunning, definitive chronicle of the band’s past two decades”. It will be published through Simon & Schuster.

Pearl Jam bassist Jeff Ament previously told Rolling Stone that “the whole movie is Cameron’s love letter to us – but it’s equal parts complimentary and really painful. It shows our growing pains and some real bad times. It was just really hard to watch.”

Mookie>>>PJ from Pearl Jam on Vimeo.

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.

Axl Rose has ‘three albums’ worth’ of new Guns N’ Roses songs

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Guns N' Roses frontman Axl Rose has got over three albums' worth of new songs recorded and ready for release, according to the band's guitarist DJ Ashba. In an interview with Australian radio station Triple M Ashba said the frontman "has a lot of great songs up his sleeve. He probably has three alb...

Guns N’ Roses frontman Axl Rose has got over three albums’ worth of new songs recorded and ready for release, according to the band’s guitarist DJ Ashba.

In an interview with Australian radio station Triple M Ashba said the frontman “has a lot of great songs up his sleeve. He probably has three albums’ worth of stuff recorded”.

He went on to talk about how Rose doesn’t seem too keen to show the world his new songs yet. He said the singer “just sits down at the piano and plays. I’m like, ‘This is amazing. People have to hear this song.’ And he’s like, ‘Ah, this is something I’m tinkering on.’ He’s just a genius when it comes down to music and I just cannot wait to sit down with an acoustic guitar and just write. He’s just got this gift that’s very, very rare.”

Guns N’ Roses‘ last release was their ‘Chinese Democracy’ effort in 2008 – the band’s first album of original material since 1991. The line-up now stands as Axl Rose on vocals, guitarists Ashba, Ron Thal and Richard Fortus, bassist Tommy Stinson, drummer Frank Ferrer and keyboard/piano players Dizzy Reed and Chris Pitman.

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.

Johnny Marr to release new Healers album in early 2012

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Johnny Marr has said that he will release his new album with The Healers in early 2012. The guitarist left The Cribs earlier this year to concentrate on other projects. He has now told Billboard that he was working on the new album at the moment and was hoping to stockpile enough new music to see h...

Johnny Marr has said that he will release his new album with The Healers in early 2012.

The guitarist left The Cribs earlier this year to concentrate on other projects. He has now told Billboard that he was working on the new album at the moment and was hoping to stockpile enough new music to see him beyond its release next year.

“I just want to write more than enough material to avoid ducking back into the studio to record a follow-up album,” he said.

Former Smiths legend Marr released his only previous Healers album, ‘Boomslang’, in 2003. He told the website that he was planning on assembling a new band line-up for it, but didn’t say who would be on board. “I want to take advantage of this point and when I set sail I want to set sail for a while,” he said.

As well as his Healers work Marr is also working on his autobiography and music for TV and film projects.

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.

Prince to headline Kent’s Hop Farm Festival

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[a]Prince[/a] is set to play his only UK show of 2011 at Kent's Hop Farm Festival on July 3. The singer will be headlining the newly-announced third day of the festival, which will now be taking place over three days: July 1-3. [a]The Eagles[/a] are headlining the first night of the bash while [a]Morrissey[/a] will head up the second night. [a]Bryan Ferry[/a], [a]Brandon Flowers[/a], [a]Carl Barat[/a], [a]Iggy And The Stooges[/a] and [a]Lou Reed[/a] are also on the bill for the event. More acts are due to be announced soon – see Hopfarmfestival.com for more information. Prince's only other scheduled 2011 European festival appearance so far is for Poland's Open'er event, which takes place on June 30-July 3. 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]Prince[/a] is set to play his only UK show of 2011 at Kent‘s Hop Farm Festival on July 3.

The singer will be headlining the newly-announced third day of the festival, which will now be taking place over three days: July 1-3. [a]The Eagles[/a] are headlining the first night of the bash while [a]Morrissey[/a] will head up the second night.

[a]Bryan Ferry[/a], [a]Brandon Flowers[/a], [a]Carl Barat[/a], [a]Iggy And The Stooges[/a] and [a]Lou Reed[/a] are also on the bill for the event. More acts are due to be announced soon – see Hopfarmfestival.com for more information.

Prince’s only other scheduled 2011 European festival appearance so far is for Poland’s Open’er event, which takes place on June 30-July 3.

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.

Pete Townshend’s autobiography to be released next year

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The Who's Pete Townshend will release his long-awaited memoir Who He? next year. Townshend has been writing the book for over 15 years and was cautioned by police in 2003 during its writing after accessing child pornography on the internet. When questioned by police about the material he cited res...

The Who‘s Pete Townshend will release his long-awaited memoir Who He? next year.

Townshend has been writing the book for over 15 years and was cautioned by police in 2003 during its writing after accessing child pornography on the internet. When questioned by police about the material he cited researching for the book as his reason for doing so.

He said back in 2003: “I believe I was sexually abused between the age of five and six and a half when in the care of my maternal grandmother who was mentally ill at the time. Some of the things I have seen on the internet have informed my book.”

He added: “If I have any compulsions in this area, they are to face what is happening to young children in the world today and to try to deal openly with my anger and vengeance toward the mentally ill people who find paedophilic pornography attractive.”

The Who guitarist has also described the book, which will be published by Harper Collins, as a “rite of passage”. It is expected to be published in the autumn of 2012.

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.