Home Blog Page 681

Brian Wilson planning to retire from touring next year

0
Brian Wilson has said that he plans to retire from touring in around a year's time. Speaking to the Evening Standard, The Beach Boys man said his three London shows in September would almost certainly be the last time he toured the UK. Asked about if he ever thought about retiring Wilson said: "...

Brian Wilson has said that he plans to retire from touring in around a year’s time.

Speaking to the Evening Standard, The Beach Boys man said his three London shows in September would almost certainly be the last time he toured the UK.

Asked about if he ever thought about retiring Wilson said: “Oh God yes. Another year, maybe. This could be the last time I play here. I’m going to miss it, but I’m getting a little bit old for touring.”

He also said that he found touring “very hard work” and that it was getting more difficult as he gets older. “As I get older it gets harder for me,” he added. “But when I’m sitting down at the keyboard and my band’s behind me, I can do it.”

The composer also spoke about his ongoing battle with hallucinations, adding that he still hears voices in his head constantly. He explained: “What the voices say is still pretty much the same, negative things, ‘You’re going to die’, or, ‘You better watch out’, life-threatening kinds of things. Performing helps, but I’ll still have the voices there when I’m on stage. They’re always with me.”

Brian Wilson plays three nights at London‘s Royal Festival Hall, on September 16, 17 and 18. He is also booked to play Bestival in the same month.

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.

Carl Barat: ‘There is no Libertines future’

0
Carl Barat has said that there is "no future" for The Libertines with things standing as they are between him and Pete Doherty. The frontman was speaking in the new issue of NME which is out now. In the interview he alluded to a bust-up with co-frontman Doherty and suggested that the pair's relatio...

Carl Barat has said that there is “no future” for The Libertines with things standing as they are between him and Pete Doherty.

The frontman was speaking in the new issue of NME which is out now. In the interview he alluded to a bust-up with co-frontman Doherty and suggested that the pair’s relationship is too damaged for more band commitments to take place.

“We are all in very different places,” he said. “Right now is not the time for The Libertines. I thought the water under the bridge was under the bridge, but maybe it’s not. It’s a very fucking hard thing. Every time we talk it just brings it back up.”

He added: “I don’t believe we’re healed from the hurt. If our hearts heal up then we can break them all over again. But right now… it’s hard.”

Barat was speaking to NME at the recent London premiere of new Libertines documentary There Are No Innocent Bystanders[/url], directed by Roger Sargent. Get the new issue of the magazine for the full interview plus chats with the other band members, previously-unseen pictures from the premiere and a review of the film.

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.

The Killers to begin work on ‘piles of songs’ next week

0
The Killers will start working on new songs next week, according to drummer Ronnie Vannucci. The sticksman-turned-solo-artist told XFM that the band already had a "pile of songs" that they wanted to show off to each other, and they had already nailed a date to do it. "Tuesday [May 17] I think we ...

The Killers will start working on new songs next week, according to drummer Ronnie Vannucci.

The sticksman-turned-solo-artist told XFM that the band already had a “pile of songs” that they wanted to show off to each other, and they had already nailed a date to do it.

“Tuesday [May 17] I think we start doing some writing again,” he said. “We have piles of songs we want to show each other. We’re going to get back in that room and start working.”

Meanwhile, Vannucci will release his debut solo album ‘Big Talk’ on July 11. Speaking about the LP he said: “I needed to do this, it’s such a departure from what I’m used to, but now, having done it, it feels like the right thing to do. It all feels very natural. I can’t sit on a couch very long!”

The Killers will headline this year’s Hard Rock Calling Festival on June 24 in London.

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.

The 18th Uncut Playlist Of 2011

Weird list, I think. Two terrific albums from Preservation’s Circa offshoot, though. The mystery record that’s been intriguing so many of you , by the way, is going to be announced in about ten days. So I guess maybe one more week of prickteasing after this… 1 Damon & Naomi – False Beats And True Hearts (Broken Horse) 2 Jonas Reinhardt – Music For The Tactile Dome (Not Not Fun) 3 Weyes Blood – The Outside Room (Not Not Fun) 4 Robert Ellis – Photographs (New West) 5 Cankun – Jaguar Dance (Not Not Fun) 6 The Walker Brothers – I Can’t Let It Happen To You (Philips) 7 Roy Harper – Stormcock (Harvest) 8 Frank Fairfield – Out On The Open West (Tompkins Square) 9 Low – Africa (http://www.avclub.com/articles/low-covers-toto%2C53049/) 10 Quiet Evenings – Transcending Spheres (Circa) 11 Deep Magic – Lucid Thought (Circa) 12 Leon Russell – The Best Of Leon Russell (EMI) 13 Spindrift – Classic Soundtracks (Xemu) 14 That Record Again

Weird list, I think. Two terrific albums from Preservation’s Circa offshoot, though. The mystery record that’s been intriguing so many of you , by the way, is going to be announced in about ten days. So I guess maybe one more week of prickteasing after this…

John Lennon’s Beatles Strawberry Fields gates removed

0

The red gates that inspired John Lennon to write The Beatles' 1967 song 'Strawberry Fields Forever' have been taken down and put into storage. The gates had stood on the Strawberry Field site, which was a Salvation Army children's home in Woolton, since the Victorian era. The charity, which owns the gates, recently put them into storage at a secret location and have erected replicas, reports BBC News. The site is on the route of some bus tours that showcase the city's Beatles landmarks, with some organisers up in arms over the move. The site closed in 2005 and its long-term future remains undecided, although the charity hopes to develop a centre for children with learning difficulties there. Maj Ray Irving, director of social services for The Salvation Army, said: "Although care has been taken to ensure the original gates to the site have remained in good condition, inevitably time has taken its toll. This [replacing them with replicas] means that the original gates can be kept safe from further deterioration and with the replica gates in place, allow for an authentic experience for the many thousands of people who come on a musical pilgrimage to Strawberry Field." 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.

The red gates that inspired John Lennon to write The Beatles‘ 1967 song ‘Strawberry Fields Forever’ have been taken down and put into storage.

The gates had stood on the Strawberry Field site, which was a Salvation Army children’s home in Woolton, since the Victorian era. The charity, which owns the gates, recently put them into storage at a secret location and have erected replicas, reports BBC News.

The site is on the route of some bus tours that showcase the city’s Beatles landmarks, with some organisers up in arms over the move. The site closed in 2005 and its long-term future remains undecided, although the charity hopes to develop a centre for children with learning difficulties there.

Maj Ray Irving, director of social services for The Salvation Army, said: “Although care has been taken to ensure the original gates to the site have remained in good condition, inevitably time has taken its toll. This [replacing them with replicas] means that the original gates can be kept safe from further deterioration and with the replica gates in place, allow for an authentic experience for the many thousands of people who come on a musical pilgrimage to Strawberry Field.”

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.

Pink Floyd to release remastered back catalogue this year

0
Pink Floyd are set to re-release remastered versions of the albums in their back catalogue with EMI later this year. The band resolved a legal dispute with the label earlier this year and have now announced an extensive reissue campaign under the banner ‘Why Pink Floyd?', which will start in Sept...

Pink Floyd are set to re-release remastered versions of the albums in their back catalogue with EMI later this year.

The band resolved a legal dispute with the label earlier this year and have now announced an extensive reissue campaign under the banner ‘Why Pink Floyd?’, which will start in September this year. All 14 of their studio albums have been remastered and repackaged, and will be released on September 26.

On the same day special and deluxe editions of their classic album ‘The Dark Side Of The Moon’ will be released, with both a six-disc ‘Immersion’ box set and a two-disc ‘Experience’ box set coming out. They will also be released on vinyl and in digital editions.

On November 7, meanwhile, the band’s 1975 album ‘Wish You Were Here’ will be released in the same formats as well as a new compilation, ‘A Foot In The Door: The Best Of Pink Floyd’. Finally, on February 7 next year, their 1979 LP ‘The Wall’ will be available as ‘Immersion’ and ‘Experience’ collections and on vinyl and digital editions.

Roger Faxon, CEO of EMI Group said: ”This is a unique collaboration between EMI and one of the most creative and influential bands in history. We have worked together for more than a year on this programme which incorporates all the elements that have made Pink Floyd one of the most inspiring forces in modern music.”

See Pinkfloyd.com for more information.

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

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

Morrissey’s new studio album is ready

0
Morrissey has revealed that his new studio album is "ready" – but he still hasn't got a record label to release it on yet. The former Smiths singer suggested that his first new album since 2009 was in the bag and that he was getting a touch frustrated at not having sorted out how to get it in the...

Morrissey has revealed that his new studio album is “ready” – but he still hasn’t got a record label to release it on yet.

The former Smiths singer suggested that his first new album since 2009 was in the bag and that he was getting a touch frustrated at not having sorted out how to get it in the shops.

“The follow-up to [last album] ‘Years Of Refusal’ is ready and fluttering wildly against the bars,” he wrote in a statement to True-to-you.net. There is still no record label and the years shuffle like cards. My talents do not lie in DIY.”

Morrissey also mentioned his [url=http://www.nme.com/news/morrissey/56339]recent BBC Radio 4 interview, in which he branded the British Royal Family “benefit scroungers” ahead of Prince William and Kate Middleton’s wedding[/url], claiming the interview had been heavily edited.

“If my interview sounded chopped and cropped, that’s because it was,” he wrote. “I had spoken fluently about the royal dreading, but an Iranian censorship confiscated all of my views. It is distressing, but in all manner of British media in 2011 we are only allowed to hear the same old thoughts and feelings expressed over and over and over again.”

Read the full statement at True-to-you.net.

Meanwhile, the singer has recently announced details of three new live dates for July. He’ll play the Stoke Victoria Hall on July 5, the O2 Academy Leeds on July 7 and Middlesbrough Town Hall on July 8.

Tickets go on sale on Friday (May 13) at 9am (BST). To check the availability of [url=http://www.seetickets.com/see/event.asp?artist=morrissey&filler1=see&filler3=id1nmestory]Morrissey 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.

Depeche Mode’s Dave Gahan honoured at LA charity event

0

Depeche Mode frontman Dave Gahan has been honoured for his sobriety at an annual charity event in LA. The singer received the MusiCare's Stevie Ray Vaughan Award in recognition of his 15 years of staying free from drugs and his efforts to help others in similar situations, over the weekend. Gahan was presented with the award by Aerosmith singer Steve Tyler, whose own drug problems have been well documented. The Depeche Mode frontman later performed a selection of covers, including David Bowie's 'Cracked Actor' and The Damned's 'New Rose', before his bandmate Martin Gore made a surprise appearance for 'Personal Jesus'. Jane's Addiction and Paramore also played in front of a star-studded audience which included Smashing Pumpkins singer Billy Corgan and Billy Idol, reports Reuters Gahan survived a heroin overdose in 1996 and he has remained clean ever since. The annual event raises cash for the MusiCares Map Fund to aid artists with health or financial problems. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Depeche Mode frontman Dave Gahan has been honoured for his sobriety at an annual charity event in LA.

The singer received the MusiCare‘s Stevie Ray Vaughan Award in recognition of his 15 years of staying free from drugs and his efforts to help others in similar situations, over the weekend.

Gahan was presented with the award by Aerosmith singer Steve Tyler, whose own drug problems have been well documented.

The Depeche Mode frontman later performed a selection of covers, including David Bowie‘s ‘Cracked Actor’ and The Damned‘s ‘New Rose’, before his bandmate Martin Gore made a surprise appearance for ‘Personal Jesus’.

Jane’s Addiction and Paramore also played in front of a star-studded audience which included Smashing Pumpkins singer Billy Corgan and Billy Idol, reports Reuters

Gahan survived a heroin overdose in 1996 and he has remained clean ever since.

The annual event raises cash for the MusiCares Map Fund to aid artists with health or financial problems.

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

Arcade Fire joined onstage by Cyndi Lauper in New Orleans

0

Arcade Fire performed onstage with Cyndi Lauper at the New Orleans Jazz And Heritage Festival on Friday (May 6). The band have taken to covering Lauper's 1983 hit single 'Girls Just Wanna Have Fun' in their live set, and she joined them onstage to perform it with them as well as 'Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)'. You can watch a video of the performance by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking. Arcade Fire's Win Butler did not introduce the singer, simply saying to the crowd "We'd like to do one of our favourite songs from the 80s", at which Lauper walked onstage. Arcade Fire headlined the New Orleans Jazz And Heritage Festival, which also saw sets from Bon Jovi, Mumford And Sons, The Strokes, Wilco and The Decemberists. They return to the UK on June 30 to headline London's Hyde Park. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2pSCbNpWd9I Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Arcade Fire performed onstage with Cyndi Lauper at the New Orleans Jazz And Heritage Festival on Friday (May 6).

The band have taken to covering Lauper‘s 1983 hit single ‘Girls Just Wanna Have Fun’ in their live set, and she joined them onstage to perform it with them as well as ‘Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)’.

You can watch a video of the performance by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking.

Arcade Fire‘s Win Butler did not introduce the singer, simply saying to the crowd “We’d like to do one of our favourite songs from the 80s”, at which Lauper walked onstage.

Arcade Fire headlined the New Orleans Jazz And Heritage Festival, which also saw sets from Bon Jovi, Mumford And Sons, The Strokes, Wilco and The Decemberists.

They return to the UK on June 30 to headline London‘s Hyde Park.

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

REM’s Michael Stipe: ‘I tried to save Kurt Cobain’s life’

0

R.E.M frontman Michael Stipe has said he tried to get Nirvana's Kurt Cobain to record a duet with him in order to "save his life." Speaking to Interview Magazine, Stipe said he sent a plane ticket and driver to Cobain's home in Seattle to try and get him to come and record with him, but that the singer wouldn't leave his house. Asked about his failed attempt to record with Cobain, Stipe said: "I was doing that to try to save his life. The collaboration was me calling up as an excuse to reach out to this guy. He was in a really bad place." He continued: "I constructed a project to try to snap Kurt out of a frame of mind. I sent him a plane ticket and a driver, and he tacked the plane ticket to the wall in the bedroom and the driver sat outside the house for 10 hours. Kurt wouldn't come out and wouldn't answer the phone." Stipe denied that the collaboration was part of an album, saying that it had "become part of mythology." The R.E.M frontman also opened up about when he suffered from bulimia in the early 1980s, describing it as "a complete meltdown." He said: "I went through this difficult time when we were making our third record where I kind of lost my mind. That's when the bulimia kicked in. And that's when I got really freaky." Stipe described the illness as "a control thing" and said it lasted for "about a year. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

R.E.M frontman Michael Stipe has said he tried to get Nirvana‘s Kurt Cobain to record a duet with him in order to “save his life.”

Speaking to Interview Magazine, Stipe said he sent a plane ticket and driver to Cobain‘s home in Seattle to try and get him to come and record with him, but that the singer wouldn’t leave his house.

Asked about his failed attempt to record with Cobain, Stipe said: “I was doing that to try to save his life. The collaboration was me calling up as an excuse to reach out to this guy. He was in a really bad place.”

He continued: “I constructed a project to try to snap Kurt out of a frame of mind. I sent him a plane ticket and a driver, and he tacked the plane ticket to the wall in the bedroom and the driver sat outside the house for 10 hours. Kurt wouldn’t come out and wouldn’t answer the phone.”

Stipe denied that the collaboration was part of an album, saying that it had “become part of mythology.”

The R.E.M frontman also opened up about when he suffered from bulimia in the early 1980s, describing it as “a complete meltdown.”

He said: “I went through this difficult time when we were making our third record where I kind of lost my mind. That’s when the bulimia kicked in. And that’s when I got really freaky.”

Stipe described the illness as “a control thing” and said it lasted for “about a year.

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

Ray Davies added to Hard Rock Calling festival line-up

0

Ray Davies has been added to the line-up for this year's London Hard Rock Calling festival. The former Kinks man will play at the event on June 25 before headliners Bon Jovi. The bash takes place at Hyde Park - The Killers and Rod Stewart are set to headline the other two days of the event, on June 24 and June 26 respectively. Aside from the headliners Ryan Bingham and Evaline are the only other acts confirmed to play on the same day Davies is so far. See Hardrockcalling.co.uk for more information. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Ray Davies has been added to the line-up for this year’s London Hard Rock Calling festival.

The former Kinks man will play at the event on June 25 before headliners Bon Jovi. The bash takes place at Hyde ParkThe Killers and Rod Stewart are set to headline the other two days of the event, on June 24 and June 26 respectively.

Aside from the headliners Ryan Bingham and Evaline are the only other acts confirmed to play on the same day Davies is so far.

See Hardrockcalling.co.uk for more information.

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

Beastie Boys’ Adam Yauch cancer update: ‘Treatment is going well’

0

Beastie Boys have said that Adam Yauch's treatment for cancer is going well. Adam 'Ad Rock' Horovitz confirmed that the rapper is still receiving medical attention following [url=http://www.nme.com/news/beastie-boys/46215]his diagnosis of cancer[/url] of the preaortic gland and lymph node in July 2009. He also said that despite the recent release of new album 'Hot Sauce Committee Pt Two' they have no plans to tour. "He's doing OK," he said. "He's still in treatment, so it's not 100 percent. But things are looking good. We're not touring, we're just getting the record out – and we're not making any plans until he is better. Which is definitely going to happen." His comments come after Yauch released a statement in January saying [url=http://www.nme.com/news/beastie-boys--2/54481]reports that he'd been given the all-clear weren't true[/url]. Bandmate Mike 'D' Diamond admitted it has been a difficult for the band to come to terms with Yauch's illness. "It's a very strange thing. Unfortunately, we've had a high attrition rate of friends growing up in New York, but more from drug overdoses and crazy shit like that," he told The Guardian. He added: "This is, actually, the first time that a friend who is a contemporary - basically one of my best friends for life - called me up to say, 'Hey, I've got some really bad news', and having a really serious illness. And when you're friends for a long time, and one of that group of friends gets a very serious, potentially terminal illness, it's just kind of like, it's a game-changer." Despite going through a tough time, Horovitz said that Yauch's illness is likely to push them to more ludicrous extremes for the next album. "I have a feeling the next record is going to be the most insane party record you ever heard," he said. "Because if you go through something like what Yauch's going through. I mean, shit. After that, you must feel pretty good. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Beastie Boys have said that Adam Yauch‘s treatment for cancer is going well.

Adam ‘Ad Rock’ Horovitz confirmed that the rapper is still receiving medical attention following [url=http://www.nme.com/news/beastie-boys/46215]his diagnosis of cancer[/url] of the preaortic gland and lymph node in July 2009. He also said that despite the recent release of new album ‘Hot Sauce Committee Pt Two’ they have no plans to tour.

“He’s doing OK,” he said. “He’s still in treatment, so it’s not 100 percent. But things are looking good. We’re not touring, we’re just getting the record out – and we’re not making any plans until he is better. Which is definitely going to happen.”

His comments come after Yauch released a statement in January saying [url=http://www.nme.com/news/beastie-boys–2/54481]reports that he’d been given the all-clear weren’t true[/url].

Bandmate Mike ‘D’ Diamond admitted it has been a difficult for the band to come to terms with Yauch‘s illness. “It’s a very strange thing. Unfortunately, we’ve had a high attrition rate of friends growing up in New York, but more from drug overdoses and crazy shit like that,” he told The Guardian.

He added: “This is, actually, the first time that a friend who is a contemporary – basically one of my best friends for life – called me up to say, ‘Hey, I’ve got some really bad news’, and having a really serious illness. And when you’re friends for a long time, and one of that group of friends gets a very serious, potentially terminal illness, it’s just kind of like, it’s a game-changer.”

Despite going through a tough time, Horovitz said that Yauch‘s illness is likely to push them to more ludicrous extremes for the next album.

“I have a feeling the next record is going to be the most insane party record you ever heard,” he said. “Because if you go through something like what Yauch‘s going through. I mean, shit. After that, you must feel pretty good.

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

Pink Floyd’s David Gilmour’s son pleads guilty to violent disorder

0

Charlie Gilmour, the son of Pink Floyd guitarist David Gilmour, has pleaded guilty to violent disorder. Gilmour has admitted to throwing a bin at a convoy of cars which included one carrying Prince Charles and Camilla Parker-Bowles. The incident took place on Regent Street in London on December 9 last year during a protest about student fees. According to the Daily Mail Gilmour pleaded guilty this morning at Kingston Crown Court. After giving his plea he was bailed until July 8 so he can complete his exams at Cambridge University. He was warned by Judge Nicholas Price though that he may face a spell in prison when he is sentenced formally in July. Price told Gilmour: "You have accepted counts of a serious matter and it may well be the course of one of immediate custody. This matter will come back to this court on July 8." The 21 year-old has since apologised for his actions, calling them "a moment of idiocy." Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Charlie Gilmour, the son of Pink Floyd guitarist David Gilmour, has pleaded guilty to violent disorder.

Gilmour has admitted to throwing a bin at a convoy of cars which included one carrying Prince Charles and Camilla Parker-Bowles. The incident took place on Regent Street in London on December 9 last year during a protest about student fees.

According to the Daily Mail Gilmour pleaded guilty this morning at Kingston Crown Court. After giving his plea he was bailed until July 8 so he can complete his exams at Cambridge University. He was warned by Judge Nicholas Price though that he may face a spell in prison when he is sentenced formally in July.

Price told Gilmour: “You have accepted counts of a serious matter and it may well be the course of one of immediate custody. This matter will come back to this court on July 8.”

The 21 year-old has since apologised for his actions, calling them “a moment of idiocy.”

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

UPSIDE DOWN – THE CREATION RECORDS STORY

Directed by Danny O’Connor Starring Alan McGee, Bobby Gillespie After he was in Ride, shortly before he was in Oasis, Andy Bell was the guitarist in a late Britpop group called Hurricane #1. As was often the case when Creation records were promoting an artist whose interesting qualities may not...

Directed by Danny O’Connor

Starring Alan McGee, Bobby Gillespie

After he was in Ride, shortly before he was in Oasis, Andy Bell was the guitarist in a late Britpop group called Hurricane #1.

As was often the case when Creation records were promoting an artist whose interesting qualities may not otherwise have been immediately apparent, a trip abroad was convened to reveal them. In Paris, the band were interviewed for a piece in NME, during which one of them described their new record as “rock’n’roll genius”. Bell rolled his eyes at this. “Those,” he said, like someone who knew what he was talking about, “are the most overused words at Creation Records.”

As he hardly needed to explain, they were words most often to be heard coming from the mouth of the label’s founder, hype man and high priest, the self-styled President Of Pop, Alan McGee. Factory records had a defining visual aesthetic and the intellect of Tony Wilson. Rough Trade had Geoff Travis and political conviction. The fortunes of Creation, a British indie label active from 1983 to 1999, meanwhile, seemed causally linked to the powers of McGee as an evangelist, preaching his gospel of rock’n’roll, the company’s balloon kept aloft, it sometimes seemed, solely by his hot air.

There have been books about Creation both very good (David Cavanagh’s My Magpie Eyes Are Hungry For The Prize)and not so very good (Paolo Hewitt’s This Ecstasy Romance Cannot Last). Upside Down, however, tells a simpler tale, however much the complexity of what actually happened at Creation might seem to resist it. This could have been, for example, a film built around the friendship of Primal Scream’s Bobby Gillespie and Alan McGee, one which predates Creation records and presumably still thrives, linking the label’s earliest records to its very last. It might profitably have examined the label’s role in what we mean by “indie” music, the meaning of which game Creation participated in and then helped irrevocably change.

Instead, it’s what you might call the Walk The Line version of Creation records – in which we come in near the end, and the arrival on horseback (actually in a first-class train compartment) of Noel Gallagher to save the day. When the end finally came (rather against the myth-making type of the label), Creation didn’t explode in a blaze of glory or devise one insane last job. Nobody died. Instead, Creation, for all the fanciful comparisons with the Roman Empire offered here, simply released a Primal Scream single and then ceded to the parent company to which it had sold a 50 per cent stake in 1992.

The story Upside Down tells, then, isn’t so much about life behind the scenes as it is about believing the hype. That’s not meant derogatorily: Alan McGee doesn’t just do most of the talking in this documentary – as a young promoter-turned-label-owner his talk was one of his most valuable commodities. Any kind of entertainment venture is about belief, and after McGee released The Jesus And Mary Chain’s successful “Upside Down”, he suddenly gained credibility as an indie rock rainmaker. Occasionally (as with his stewardship of Elevation, a major-funded pseudo indie) things went a little awry. More often than not (as when he negotiated a huge deal for the House Of Love’s Fontana LP to come out on a major) it went very well indeed.

Of course, all of this acumen might seem a bit at odds with what we think we know about Creation as an indie label. History, even rock history, is written by the victors and so here you will hear more from members of Oasis, Primal Scream, My Bloody Valentine, Ride and Teenage Fanclub than you will from Meat Whiplash, The Bodines or The Legend! But Creation routinely exercised aesthetic judgements – signing Felt, for example – without any great reward, and it would be nice to have heard more about what they thought they were doing then. Undoubtedly McGee was as passionate about the unsuccessful bands as the successful ones, so it’s a shame that Upside Down sometimes plays like a press kit detailing his capacity to pick winners.

But when Creation’s bands won big, they did win very big indeed. As such, this is a documentary that uses the label’s hit records as a vehicle to tell its story, and it is a fine experience to hear the circumstances of how some of this stuff came to be made. The acid house epiphany of Primal Scream that gave rise to Screamadelica. McGee’s stalking of Ride on their first British tour. The financial hardships wrought on the label by My Bloody Valentine’s Loveless album – wonderfully described by Bobby Gillespie as the last time music did anything new (“since then it’s been backwards.”)

What you won’t find here, however, is very much in the way of self-knowledge. It’s no particular exaggeration to say that if you were on or worked at Creation records in the 1990s, you were working in close proximity to some of the most powerful forces of that period: class A drugs, the music of Oasis, and an unstoppable, if sometimes misguided, self-belief. But even after all these years, and after his collapse and subsequent rehab it doesn’t seem that publicly McGee is remotely close to letting his guard drop from that bullish mindset.

Interviewees here are nearly all warmly disposed to McGee, while offscreen, tales abound of his generosity with his time, advice and encouragement. But save for a few interviewees remarking that they couldn’t understand his accent, and some gentle ribbing (John Robb: “The Jesus And Mary Chain aren’t riot people. But Alan McGee could start a riot in a paper bag,”) there’s not very much here that you might say attempted to deflate his public image. There’s no “I can laugh at myself now”, and certainly no “What was I thinking?”.

In this respect, it’s the last few minutes of Upside Down that are probably the most revealing. After his collapse, McGee largely sat out what many might see as the label’s Britpop glory years, regaining his health, but passing over the control of the label to his business partner, Dick Green. The parties in the office stopped, and the label become staffed by people who could do their jobs properly (much to the disappointment of Bobby Gillespie). In such a place, a sideshow grown into a functioning business, there simply wasn’t a great deal for McGee to do. Among all the grandstanding, it’s a rare moment of calm.

Upside Down, in the main, does a fine job: it makes you want to go and play the records, and salute the environment and personnel that helped them to be made. You wonder, though, about the omissions in the film. What, for example, about any other music being made? Or any other record label? Eventually, you realise it’s intentional. To McGee’s mind, after all, there simply were no others.

John Robinson

HANNA

0
Directed by Joe Wright Starring Saoirse Ronan, Eric Bana Sixteen-year-old Hanna (Saoirse Ronan) lives with her father Erik (Eric Bana) in a cabin in an isolated, snow-covered forest. A man with a past, Erik has raised Hanna as a sort of assassin-cum-super-soldier; soon she is loose in the world, ...

Directed by Joe Wright

Starring Saoirse Ronan, Eric Bana

Sixteen-year-old Hanna (Saoirse Ronan) lives with her father Erik (Eric Bana) in a cabin in an isolated, snow-covered forest.

A man with a past, Erik has raised Hanna as a sort of assassin-cum-super-soldier; soon she is loose in the world, where she attracts the unwanted attention of Cate Blanchett’s shadowy CIA operative Marissa Viegler.

Hanna marks an intriguing change of direction for Atonement director Joe Wright, who constructs a sleek modernist fantasy here – part junior Bourne, part Grimm Brothers fairy tale.

With her white hair, luminous skin and large blue eyes, Ronan resembles a feral forest sprite – an unusual teen-terminator.

While there are plenty of artfully constructed action sequences, Wright takes time to explore Hanna’s formative interactions with the real world. After all, this is a girl who can escape a maximum security CIA facility but has never seen an electric kettle before.

Michael Bonner

OKKERVIL RIVER – I AM VERY FAR

0
Okkervil River’s 2005 breakthrough album was an intense song-cycle called Black Sheep Boy. Written by Will Sheff during an isolated winter in rural Indiana, it was inspired by Tim Hardin, the ’60s singer-songwriter who surrendered his life and talent to a heroin addiction about which he was fata...

Okkervil River’s 2005 breakthrough album was an intense song-cycle called Black Sheep Boy. Written by Will Sheff during an isolated winter in rural Indiana, it was inspired by Tim Hardin, the ’60s singer-songwriter who surrendered his life and talent to a heroin addiction about which he was fatalistically unrepentant, even as it was killing him. The album was about as cheerful as you’d expect in the circumstances, which is to say, not very. It was the kind of record, however, around which cultish devotion gathers, and duly did.

Black Sheep Boy was followed in 2007 and 2008 by The Stage Names and The Stand Ins, two very different, conceptually linked albums of darkly sardonic, often cynical songs about fame, what people will do for it and what happens to them when stardom wanes or is snatched from them. Their songs were dense, allusive, touching and funny when they weren’t blatantly tragic, and full of clever pop culture references. Imagine The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars, written by David Foster Wallace, and you’ll be halfway to an understanding of them. They were also the most musically expansive things Okkervil River had so far done, echoes everywhere on them of Dylan, the Stones, The Velvet Underground, the Faces, Motown and Bowie.

I Am Very Far, the band’s first album in nearly three years (they took time off to work with Roky Erickson on 2010’s True Love Cast Out All Evil, which Sheff produced) sounds on first acquaintance like a return of sorts to the charred territories of Black Sheep Boy and the sometimes gruesome murder ballads that were scattered across its predecessors, Don’t Fall In Love With Everyone You See and Down The River Of Golden Dreams. There are bodies everywhere on I Am Very Far, most of them with their throats slit, a recurring image.

The record, though, is no gloomy compendium of gothic melodrama. The instances of individuals visited by violence quickly become emblematic of a wider woe, a world on fire, catastrophe looming, a dystopian outlook it shares with parts of Bowie’s Aladdin Sane and the whole of Diamond Dogs. Like Bowie, Sheff makes the apocalypse sound dangerously exciting, almost sexy, certainly not something you’d want to miss. There’s a lot that’s raw and exclamatory about this music, a kind of demented exhilaration, especially on the tracks recorded with what Sheff describes as the ‘giant’ Okkervil lineup assembled for these sessions, featuring two drummers, two electric basses, two pianos and seven guitarists, all playing in unison and recorded in single takes. The noise they make is thrilling. “Rider”, the first of these tracks, is like “Panic In Detroit” re-tooled in the anthemic manner of Springsteen or Arcade Fire – a bold unfurling, a majestic racket.

The tense, alliterative “White Shadow Waltz” (which seems to refer back to “Savannah Smiles” on The Stage Names and “Starry Stairs”, its sequel on The Stand Ins) and the incantatory “We Need A Myth” are similarly rousing, something feverish and hallucinatory about them. There’s an interlude on the latter, flooded with strings, that’s overwrought in the irresistible style of some of the things Jimmy Webb wrote and arranged for the actor Richard Harris on his A Tramp Shining and The Yard Went On Forever albums.

There’s a sense of reverie running through the album, too, as if dreams are being remembered or lived through, memories of better times glimpsed among current ruin on “Lay Of The Last Survivor”, “Hanging From A Hit”, “Your Past Life As A Blast” (appropriately reminiscent of Dylan’s “Series Of Dreams”), and “The Rise”, which nobly closes the album, Okkervil River’s best yet.

Allan Jones

FLEET FOXES – HELPLESSNESS BLUES

0

In a note written for journalists, Robin Pecknold includes a useful list of some of the musical influences at play on Fleet Foxes’ second album. Many will be familiar to anyone who appreciated the sunlit harmonies of the group’s 2008 debut: not least SMiLE-era Brian Wilson, The Byrds, Crosby, Stills And Nash, Van Morrison, Bob Dylan and Neil Young. Some are less mainstream, but provide an interesting insight into the breadth of Fleet Foxes’ ambition: so, let’s hear it for Peter, Paul & Mary, folk-song collector and balladeer John Jacob Niles, Judee Sill, Ennio Morricone, The Zombies, The Electric Prunes and Roy Harper. You can hear them all, sometimes all at once, if you listen closely to Helplessness Blues. The surf-speckled gospel harmonies that introduce “Lorelai” are as sweet and clear as any sung by The Beach Boys. The cinematic scope of the pretty folk instrumental “The Cascades” recalls Morricone, even if Fleet Foxes never quite get into the realm of the Spaghetti Western (it sounds more like alfalfa in the breeze than spurs on desert dirt). Roy Harper’s influence, Pecknold has acknowledged, can be detected in the layered vocals at the start of “The Plains/Bitter Dancer”. Pecknold doesn’t mention Joy Division, so I will, because Helplessness Blues is as passionately desolate as anything on Closer, the record which documented Ian Curtis’ romantic guilt and existential confusion. Ridiculous? Well, plainly, Joy Division were industrial and gothic in a way that Fleet Foxes are not: like Brian Wilson, the Seattle-band tend to spray ultra-violet light onto dark thoughts – but consider the opener, “Montezuma”, in which Pecknold appears to be mourning the death of the person he used to be, and upbraiding himself for being so self-centred. The song is apparently deeply personal, and its underlying mood is one of profound dislocation and loneliness. It doesn’t sound deathly, of course. It’s glorious, but beneath the tidal swells and eddies which flush around the melody, the tenor is funereal. Or take “Battery Kinzie”, which seems to be a transcription of a nightmare; a kind of blues set to a Simon & Garfunkel harmony “I woke up a dying man/Without a chance,” Pecknold avers at the start, and things don’t brighten after that. The singer has his reasons, of course. As he told Uncut last month, the three-year gap between Fleet Foxes’ first and second albums was not planned. The group were overwhelmed by their success, and the pace of events meant that work on new material kept getting pushed back. More importantly, Pecknold found his artistic perfectionism interfering with his everyday life, so that the process of dreaming the record, writing it, and doing justice to his ambitions for it, pushed everything else aside. He suffered ill health, sacrificed a relationship, and – this part is half-speculation – found his muse diverted. Hence, Helplessness Blues; the title is a self-mocking joke, but the album really is dominated by Pecknold’s weighing of his emotional baggage. This is especially true of the title track, which begins like a Simon & Garfunkel pop song before turning stormy. “What’s my name, what’s my station?” Pecknold sings, “Oh just tell me what I should do…” On the page, the words scroll like a break-up song, as the singer admits to his inability to control his life, even when he can sense it is drifting in the wrong direction. “And I don’t know who to believe/I’ll get back to you someday/Soon you will see…” But the singing elevates it to something universal, as he yearns for a cause – any cause, almost – to believe in, if only because it would save him the bother of fixating on his own problems. “My Generation” it isn’t, but you sense that Pecknold would rather eat his own tongue than pen a generational anthem. Fleet Foxes are always described as baroque, which usually means someone’s playing a glockenspiel, but on Helplessness Blues the band really do seem to be intent on expanding the geography of the pop song. Sometimes the tunes are only held together by J Tillman’s ominous tom-toms. Two songs (“The Plains/Bitter Dancer” and “The Shrine/An Argument”) are acknowledged as collages. On “The Plains/Bitter Dancer” the mood does tip into heavy metal portentousness, with lyrics which seem to suggest a kind of Satanic reckoning. But “The Shrine/An Argument” is an epic beauty, a psychedelic dream which starts out all summery and sweet, before dissolving into doubt and tempestuousness and – something of a shock this – a free jazz wig-out. There is sweetness, too. Pecknold began the writing process by penning songs he could sing on his own after being invited to support Joanna Newsom. His idea then was to embrace simplicity. Some of that remains. “Blue Spotted Tail” is a sweet folk song, bordering on naivety. It’s just a man with a guitar, humming to himself; a nursery rhyme, almost. And “Lorelai” is a painful romantic piece which starts prettily (“So, guess I got old”) before spiralling into choral harmonies. Nothing stays simple for long. Where does that leave us? Well in Helplessness Blues, Robin Pecknold is unduly harsh on himself. It is perhaps a problem peculiar to the folk idiom when the anger in your protest songs is directed at the mirror. But there’s something more persistent about the unease Pecknold is exploring here. His initial impulse may have been a rock singer’s gripe about the troubles that arrive when your dreams come true, but he has remoulded this very particular strain of self-absorption into something universal and timeless. In the coda to the song, “Helplessness Blues”, Pecknold makes a show of putting his troubles aside, as he imagines an ideal life. He’ll work in an orchard, he suggests, and his girl will wait tables. What he doesn’t add is the bit about living happily ever after. Because, for all that he is a romantic, Robin Pecknold is a realist, clinging to a dream – and it is a beautiful dream. Alastair McKay

In a note written for journalists, Robin Pecknold includes a useful list of some of the musical influences at play on Fleet Foxes’ second album. Many will be familiar to anyone who appreciated the sunlit harmonies of the group’s 2008 debut: not least SMiLE-era Brian Wilson, The Byrds, Crosby, Stills And Nash, Van Morrison, Bob Dylan and Neil Young. Some are less mainstream, but provide an interesting insight into the breadth of Fleet Foxes’ ambition: so, let’s hear it for Peter, Paul & Mary, folk-song collector and balladeer John Jacob Niles, Judee Sill, Ennio Morricone, The Zombies, The Electric Prunes and Roy Harper.

You can hear them all, sometimes all at once, if you listen closely to Helplessness Blues. The surf-speckled gospel harmonies that introduce “Lorelai” are as sweet and clear as any sung by The Beach Boys. The cinematic scope of the pretty folk instrumental “The Cascades” recalls Morricone, even if Fleet Foxes never quite get into the realm of the Spaghetti Western (it sounds more like alfalfa in the breeze than spurs on desert dirt). Roy Harper’s influence, Pecknold has acknowledged, can be detected in the layered vocals at the start of “The Plains/Bitter Dancer”.

Pecknold doesn’t mention Joy Division, so I will, because Helplessness Blues is as passionately desolate as anything on Closer, the record which documented Ian Curtis’ romantic guilt and existential confusion. Ridiculous? Well, plainly, Joy Division were industrial and gothic in a way that Fleet Foxes are not: like Brian Wilson, the Seattle-band tend to spray ultra-violet light onto dark thoughts – but consider the opener, “Montezuma”, in which Pecknold appears to be mourning the death of the person he used to be, and upbraiding himself for being so self-centred. The song is apparently deeply personal, and its underlying mood is one of profound dislocation and loneliness. It doesn’t sound deathly, of course. It’s glorious, but beneath the tidal swells and eddies which flush around the melody, the tenor is funereal. Or take “Battery Kinzie”, which seems to be a transcription of a nightmare; a kind of blues set to a Simon & Garfunkel harmony “I woke up a dying man/Without a chance,” Pecknold avers at the start, and things don’t brighten after that.

The singer has his reasons, of course. As he told Uncut last month, the three-year gap between Fleet Foxes’ first and second albums was not planned. The group were overwhelmed by their success, and the pace of events meant that work on new material kept getting pushed back. More importantly, Pecknold found his artistic perfectionism interfering with his everyday life, so that the process of dreaming the record, writing it, and doing justice to his ambitions for it, pushed everything else aside. He suffered ill health, sacrificed a relationship, and – this part is half-speculation – found his muse diverted.

Hence, Helplessness Blues; the title is a self-mocking joke, but the album really is dominated by Pecknold’s weighing of his emotional baggage. This is especially true of the title track, which begins like a Simon & Garfunkel pop song before turning stormy. “What’s my name, what’s my station?” Pecknold sings, “Oh just tell me what I should do…” On the page, the words scroll like a break-up song, as the singer admits to his inability to control his life, even when he can sense it is drifting in the wrong direction. “And I don’t know who to believe/I’ll get back to you someday/Soon you will see…” But the singing elevates it to something universal, as he yearns for a cause – any cause, almost – to believe in, if only because it would save him the bother of fixating on his own problems. “My Generation” it isn’t, but you sense that Pecknold would rather eat his own tongue than pen a generational anthem. Fleet Foxes are always described as baroque, which usually means someone’s playing a glockenspiel, but on Helplessness Blues the band really do seem to be intent on expanding the geography of the pop song. Sometimes the tunes are only held together by J Tillman’s ominous tom-toms.

Two songs (“The Plains/Bitter Dancer” and “The Shrine/An Argument”) are acknowledged as collages. On “The Plains/Bitter Dancer” the mood does tip into heavy metal portentousness, with lyrics which seem to suggest a kind of Satanic reckoning. But “The Shrine/An Argument” is an epic beauty, a psychedelic dream which starts out all summery and sweet, before dissolving into doubt and tempestuousness and – something of a shock this – a free jazz wig-out.

There is sweetness, too. Pecknold began the writing process by penning songs he could sing on his own after being invited to support Joanna Newsom. His idea then was to embrace simplicity. Some of that remains. “Blue Spotted Tail” is a sweet folk song, bordering on naivety. It’s just a man with a guitar, humming to himself; a nursery rhyme, almost. And “Lorelai” is a painful romantic piece which starts prettily (“So, guess I got old”) before spiralling into choral harmonies. Nothing stays simple for long.

Where does that leave us? Well in Helplessness Blues, Robin Pecknold is unduly harsh on himself. It is perhaps a problem peculiar to the folk idiom when the anger in your protest songs is directed at the mirror. But there’s something more persistent about the unease Pecknold is exploring here. His initial impulse may have been a rock singer’s gripe about the troubles that arrive when your dreams come true, but he has remoulded this very particular strain of self-absorption into something universal and timeless.

In the coda to the song, “Helplessness Blues”, Pecknold makes a show of putting his troubles aside, as he imagines an ideal life. He’ll work in an orchard, he suggests, and his girl will wait tables. What he doesn’t add is the bit about living happily ever after. Because, for all that he is a romantic, Robin Pecknold is a realist, clinging to a dream – and it is a beautiful dream.

Alastair McKay

Low interviewed: “It had to do with realising I was the Anti-Christ…”

It is an average February day in Duluth, Northern Minnesota, which means that downtown, on the edge of Lake Superior, the temperature is minus 13 degrees. Writing about his birthplace in Chronicles, Bob Dylan evoked “the slate gray skies and the mysterious foghorns” of Duluth, “the merciless h...

It is an average February day in Duluth, Northern Minnesota, which means that downtown, on the edge of Lake Superior, the temperature is minus 13 degrees. Writing about his birthplace in Chronicles, Bob Dylan evoked “the slate gray skies and the mysterious foghorns” of Duluth, “the merciless howling winds off the big black mysterious lake… People said that having to go out onto the deep water was like a death sentence.”

Plenty of people who have fled Duluth might consider staying in this small, blasted city to be a death sentence, too. But as we drive near the old Zimmerman residence, Mimi Parker and Alan Sparhawk are telling tales of the winter with the sort of wry, tough pride that seems typical of the locals. There was an old woman, says Parker, who fell on an icy pavement a few weeks back and then had a small mountain of snow dumped on top of her by a passing snowplough. Some hours later a neighbour using a telescope – it’s unclear what kind of magical x-ray telescope – ascertained that someone was buried beneath this new snowdrift. Dug out, the woman proved relatively unscathed. “Just a little hypothermia, I think,” Parker notes, phlegmatically.

Sparhawk, 42, and Parker, 43, have lived in Duluth all of their adult lives, have been a couple since they were 17-year-olds at the same rural Minnesotan high school, and for the last 18 years have been two critical thirds of Low. The rock world has not been historically populated by bands with such a loyalty to their spouses and their hometowns, but then Low are not exactly an ordinary rock band.

For a start, it’s a push to describe much of their 11 albums as rock, since Low’s reputation has been built on a stealthy, hushed inversion of normative rock behaviour. In recent years, Sparhawk (vocals and guitar), Parker (vocals, minimal drumkit) and a succession of bassists (currently a keen, gangling local, Steve Garrington) have fractionally upped the pace and volume, and found their songs covered on Band Of Joy by Robert Plant. Nevertheless, it’s the space and air in their music for which Low have become acclaimed: a setting for Sparhawk and Parker’s harmonies to reverberate in a kind of sepulchral vacuum.

Their faith is unusual, too. The couple are both practising Mormons and, while much of Low’s music comes across as secular, there’s clearly a strong religious dimension to the band. “For me, going like his is spiritual,” says Sparhawk. He mimes the furious strumming of a guitar. “I’ve always recognised the spirituality of music.”

The connections between art, faith and life got a little complicated, however, when Sparhawk had a severe mental breakdown. Six years ago, he closed his eyes, shut his mouth, and became convinced that he was the Anti-Christ, with a crucial role to play in nothing less than the end of the world…

Kate Bush: ‘I’ve done most of the writing for a new album’

0
Kate Bush has revealed she has almost finished writing a brand new studio album. The singer, who releases 'Director’s Cut', a compilation of re-recorded material from her 1989 album 'The Sensual World' and 1993's 'The Red Shoes' on May 16, has said she is now putting together a new LP of origina...

Kate Bush has revealed she has almost finished writing a brand new studio album.

The singer, who releases ‘Director’s Cut’, a compilation of re-recorded material from her 1989 album ‘The Sensual World’ and 1993’s ‘The Red Shoes’ on May 16, has said she is now putting together a new LP of original material.

Speaking on BBC Radio 4‘s Front Row last night (May 4), Bush responded to a question about whether she was working on a new album by replying: “I’ve done most of the writing for it.”

She did not give a possible release date for the album, which will be her 10th studio LP, refusing to even say if it will be ready for release by 2012.

Bush did admit that she finds it “stressful” that there are such long gaps between her albums, adding: “It’s very frustrating the albums take as long as they do. I wish there weren’t such big gaps between them.”

She also said that though she would “hate to say that I would never do any live shows again”, she currently had no plans to perform onstage. She last played live in 1979.

Nick Cave and Neko Case duet for new series of True Blood

0
Nick Cave and Neko Case have collaborated on a cover of the Zombies classic track ‘She’s Not There’ for vampire drama True Blood. The duet has been recorded for the first episode of the forthcoming series of the popular US show. The new version of the song will close the episode, which shares...

Nick Cave and Neko Case have collaborated on a cover of the Zombies classic track ‘She’s Not There’ for vampire drama True Blood.

The duet has been recorded for the first episode of the forthcoming series of the popular US show. The new version of the song will close the episode, which shares its name with the 1964 song. The show will kick off the fourth season of the series in the US on June 26, reports Billboard.

The programme’s music supervisor, Gary Calamar, spoke about the collaboration yesterday (May 4) at the Musexpo conference in Los Angeles. “You always want to serve the show, but in the back of my mind I’m always thinking about the soundtrack,” he said, adding that the script asked for Santana’s version of the song to be used, which he overruled in favour of the Cave and Case version. “The key to a good soundtrack is having fresh recordings.”