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The Durutti Column’s Vini Reilly suffers ‘minor stroke’

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The Durutti Column's frontman Vini Reilly has suffered a minor stroke. Reilly, 57, spent four days in hospital following the recent stroke but has now discharged himself, according to the band's official website, Thedurutticolumn.com. The website post explains that he is now "well on the road to recovery", although he has lost some feeling in his left hand. Despite this, the message explains that Reilly has also been playing his guitar "regularly" since getting out of hospital. He is next due to play live at London's Southbank Centre on October 20 as part of the Paul Morley: The Tony Wilson Interviews gig. See Thedurutticolumn.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.

The Durutti Column‘s frontman Vini Reilly has suffered a minor stroke.

Reilly, 57, spent four days in hospital following the recent stroke but has now discharged himself, according to the band’s official website, Thedurutticolumn.com.

The website post explains that he is now “well on the road to recovery”, although he has lost some feeling in his left hand. Despite this, the message explains that Reilly has also been playing his guitar “regularly” since getting out of hospital.

He is next due to play live at London‘s Southbank Centre on October 20 as part of the Paul Morley: The Tony Wilson Interviews gig.

See Thedurutticolumn.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.

The xx win Barclaycard Mercury Prize 2010

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The xx's have won the Barclaycard Mercury Prize 2010. The London trio were awarded the gong, along with £20,000 prize money, at Grosvenor House last night (September 7). They beat the likes of Paul Weller, Mumford & Sons and Laura Marling to the prize. Speaking after their win, the band's Rom...

The xx‘s have won the Barclaycard Mercury Prize 2010.

The London trio were awarded the gong, along with £20,000 prize money, at Grosvenor House last night (September 7). They beat the likes of Paul Weller, Mumford & Sons and Laura Marling to the prize.

Speaking after their win, the band’s Romy Madley Croft said they are now planning to spend the prize money on a new recording studio.

“We made this album (‘xx’) in a converted garage at our record label,” said Madley Croft. “We felt very lucky at the time to use it, but I think we’d love to make our own studio, somewhere where we can just experiment and let Jamie [Smith, bandmate] produce.”

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.

Ash announce UK tour and ticket details

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Ash have announced a trio of new UK tour dates for this November. The band will play the Edinburgh Liquid Rooms (November 11), Dundee Fat Sams (12) and London O2 Shepherds Bush Empire (13). Meanwhile, frontman Tim Wheeler has said he thinks the band's headline appearance at Headstock festival this Saturday (September 11) in Nottinghamshire is going to be "even better" than their recent shows at Glastonbury and the Reading And Leeds Festivals. "When we're playing we always want to go out there and do a great show," he said. "But when you're a headliner there's something special because you're going out there at the end of the night and people really let their hair down. It'll feel really good to be a part of this whole event." To check the availability of [url=http://www.seetickets.com/see/event.asp?artist=ash&filler1=see&filler3=id1nmestory]Ash 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.

Ash have announced a trio of new UK tour dates for this November.

The band will play the Edinburgh Liquid Rooms (November 11), Dundee Fat Sams (12) and London O2 Shepherds Bush Empire (13).

Meanwhile, frontman Tim Wheeler has said he thinks the band’s headline appearance at Headstock festival this Saturday (September 11) in Nottinghamshire is going to be “even better” than their recent shows at Glastonbury and the Reading And Leeds Festivals.

“When we’re playing we always want to go out there and do a great show,” he said. “But when you’re a headliner there’s something special because you’re going out there at the end of the night and people really let their hair down. It’ll feel really good to be a part of this whole event.”

To check the availability of [url=http://www.seetickets.com/see/event.asp?artist=ash&filler1=see&filler3=id1nmestory]Ash 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.

Kings Of Leon announce UK arena tour and ticket details

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Kings Of Leon have announced a UK arena tour for this December. The band, who release fifth album 'Come Around Sundown' on October 18, will return to Britain this winter. They play: Manchester Evening News Arena (December 13) Sheffield Motorpoint Arena (14, 19) Birmingham NIA (16, 17) London O2 Arena (21) Tickets go on sale on Friday (September 10) at 9am (BST). To check the availability of [url=http://www.seetickets.com/see/event.asp?artist=kings+leon&filler1=see&filler3=id1nmestory]Kings Of Leon 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.

Kings Of Leon have announced a UK arena tour for this December.

The band, who release fifth album ‘Come Around Sundown’ on October 18, will return to Britain this winter.

They play:

Manchester Evening News Arena (December 13)

Sheffield Motorpoint Arena (14, 19)

Birmingham NIA (16, 17)

London O2 Arena (21)

Tickets go on sale on Friday (September 10) at 9am (BST). To check the availability of [url=http://www.seetickets.com/see/event.asp?artist=kings+leon&filler1=see&filler3=id1nmestory]Kings Of Leon 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.

U2’s manager: ‘Internet service providers need to stop illegal downloading’

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U2's manager Paul McGuinness has criticised Internet Service Providers (ISPs) for not doing more to stop music being illegally downloaded. McGuinness is calling on those in charge to take steps against customers illegally file-sharing on their networks. "I am convinced that ISPs are not going to help the music and film industry voluntarily," he wrote in an article for GQ. "Some things have got to come with the force of legislation, President Sarkozy understood that point when he became the first head of state to champion laws to require ISPs to reduce piracy in France. "In Britain, the major political parties have understood it, too. Following the passing of new anti-piracy laws in April's Digital Economy Act, Britain and France now have some of the world's best legal environments for rebuilding our battered music business." McGuinness also described "the graduated response" by which ISPs are required to issue warnings to serious offenders to stop illegal file-sharing is the way forward for dealing with the problem and was "immeasurably better than the ugly alternative of suing hundreds of thousands of individuals". McGuinness, who [url=http://www.nme.com/news/u2/37221]previously claimed Radiohead's pay-what-you-like plan for their 2007 album 'In Rainbows' backfired[/url], believes online music services such as Spotify could pave the wave forward providing it can demonstrate that not only can it collect revenue from its users and advertisers but that it fairly passes on those sums to the artists, labels and publishers". "Households will pay for a subscription service like Spotify, or they will pay for a service bundled into their broadband bill, to an ISP such as Sky and Virgin Media," he said regarding his future vision. "But many customers will also take out more expensive added-value packages, with better deals, including faster access to new releases." 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.

U2‘s manager Paul McGuinness has criticised Internet Service Providers (ISPs) for not doing more to stop music being illegally downloaded.

McGuinness is calling on those in charge to take steps against customers illegally file-sharing on their networks.

“I am convinced that ISPs are not going to help the music and film industry voluntarily,” he wrote in an article for GQ. “Some things have got to come with the force of legislation, President Sarkozy understood that point when he became the first head of state to champion laws to require ISPs to reduce piracy in France.

“In Britain, the major political parties have understood it, too. Following the passing of new anti-piracy laws in April’s Digital Economy Act, Britain and France now have some of the world’s best legal environments for rebuilding our battered music business.”

McGuinness also described “the graduated response” by which ISPs are required to issue warnings to serious offenders to stop illegal file-sharing is the way forward for dealing with the problem and was “immeasurably better than the ugly alternative of suing hundreds of thousands of individuals”.

McGuinness, who [url=http://www.nme.com/news/u2/37221]previously claimed Radiohead’s pay-what-you-like plan for their 2007 album ‘In Rainbows’ backfired[/url], believes online music services such as Spotify could pave the wave forward providing it can demonstrate that not only can it collect revenue from its users and advertisers but that it fairly passes on those sums to the artists, labels and publishers”.

“Households will pay for a subscription service like Spotify, or they will pay for a service bundled into their broadband bill, to an ISP such as Sky and Virgin Media,” he said regarding his future vision. “But many customers will also take out more expensive added-value packages, with better deals, including faster access to new releases.”

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.

Hans Chew: “Tennessee & Other Stories”

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As you might have noticed, I’ve been banging on about this one a lot over the last couple of weeks, and it seems to be shaping up, alongside maybe Joanna Newsom and Magic Lantern and so on, as one of my favourites of 2010. Hans Chew, to make things a little clearer, first came to at least my attention with his rollicking piano playing on the last couple of Jack Rose albums. Through Jack’s posthumous “Ragged And Right” EP, it also became clear that Chew figured in a rowdy cosmic Americana outfit from Brooklyn called D Charles Speer And The Helix: typical of musicians in Rose’s orbit, The Helix mix rootsy good times with parallel lives as practitioners of hardcore psych-out music, in The No-Neck Blues Band, Sunburned Hand Of The Man and the like (check out their “Distillation”, incidentally, for some heady Dead/"Europe ’72" vibes). Chew’s piano work on all this – loose and groovy, lascivious, honky-tonking – is great, but his contribution to this summer’s “Honest Strings”, the vast and cherishable album compiled by Three-Lobed Recordings in honour of Jack Rose, was still quite a shock. “The Heart Is Deceitful” revealed Chew as not just an able sideman, but a terrific and full-blooded singer-songwriter, too. That promise is borne out by “Tennessee And Other Stories”, nine originals and one cover made in the company of various fellow travellers from the Helix family, and housed in one of the loveliest sleeves I’ve seen in a while. The cover is of Tim Rose’s “Long Time Man”, or at least Nick Cave’s version of the same, and showcases Chew’s impressively soulful and weathered pipes, though it isn’t quite typical of the rest of “Tennessee…” Much of the album actually resembles an easy-going, if occasionally fatalistic, roadtrip through the southern states: “Long Time Man” is preceded by a fervid boogie-woogie (“New Cypress Grove Boogie”) and followed by “Forever Again”, which mostly matches the stride of early ‘70s Dr John. You could easily fill up a review of “Tennessee…” with sepia reference points: Leon Russell, Nicky Hopkins,Hargus ‘Pig’ Robbins, The Band, maybe something in the orbit of Delaney And Bonnie. The closing “Only Son” is even faintly reminiscent of Elton John – circa “Tumbleweed Connection”, I should hastily add. Usefully, though, Chew has a swing and feel for his material which makes him sound anything but an academic tourist.. Consequently, “Tennessee…” doesn’t come across like a pastiche of its influences, but a spirited and open-hearted, craftsmanlike work that could easily have been mislaid for the best part of the last 35 or 40 years. A lost classic from 2010, perhaps: Tennessee… is limited to 500 vinyl copies but, fortunately, apparently infinite downloads.

As you might have noticed, I’ve been banging on about this one a lot over the last couple of weeks, and it seems to be shaping up, alongside maybe Joanna Newsom and Magic Lantern and so on, as one of my favourites of 2010.

The 34th Uncut Playlist Of 2010

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Belatedly following this fine haul, another really good list this week, involving as it does a couple of high-security things which I can’t discuss at the moment and plenty I can. Afrocubism is a kind of summit meeting between various bits of the Buena Vista Social Club and the Mali scene (Bassekou Kouyate, Toumani Diabate etc) and is brilliant. And can I bang on again about the Hans Chew record, shaping up to be one of my favourites of the year? 1 Afrocubism – Afrocubism (World Circuit) 2 Sun Araw – Off Duty (Woodsist) 3 Various Artists – Imaginational Anthems Volume Four (Tompkins Square) 4 Barn Owl – Ancestral Star (Thrill Jockey) 5 Big Mystery Album 6 Faun Fables – Light Of A Vaster Dark (Drag City) 7 EMAK – A Synthetic History Of EMAK 1982-88 (Universal Sound) 8 Stereolab – Not Music (Duophonic UHF) 9 Sibylle Baier – Clour Green (Orange Twin) 10 Second Mystery Album 11 Hans Chew – Tennessee And Other Stories (Divide By Zero/Three Lobed) 12 Jim Sullivan – UFO (Light In The Attic) 13 Sharon Van Etten – Epic (Ba Da Bing) 14 Comets On Fire & Growing – Jams (Silver Currant blogspot) 15 Supersilent – Supersilent 10 (Rune Grammofon) 16 Sufjan Stevens – The Age Of Adz (Asthmatic Kitty0

Belatedly following this fine haul, another really good list this week, involving as it does a couple of high-security things which I can’t discuss at the moment and plenty I can.

Simone Felice, St Pancras Old Church, London, September 2 2010

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What is it about Simone Felice and hushed and sacred places that make your voice drop to a whisper as soon as you walk into them? A month ago, in Woodstock, where I was interviewing The Duke & The King, Simone took me to the Church Of The Holy Transfiguration Of Christ, way up there on top of Mead Mountain, where it had been since 1891, and a favourite retreat of Simone’s when he was growing up. Tonight, he’s at St Pancras Old Church, which to the extent that it’s apparently one of the oldest sites of Christian worship in England is clearly not flippantly named. It’s a fabulous setting for the last date of his recent UK solo tour, candles flickering behind him, shadows looming around an altar, darkness clinging to high vaulted spaces, murmuring ancient voices, if you’re listening, in the joists, eaves and roof beams, a certain hallowed spookiness about the premises, from top to bottom. “Wow,” Simone says, looking around him as he settles down in a high back chair, the kind of thing you might find in the parlour of a witch. “There are ghosts in here,” he goes on, nodding knowingly, people in the front rows looking around now, too, trying to see what he can see or thinks he can, the congregation, for that’s what we as much as anything are, quite rapt, more than a little spellbound. You wouldn’t be surprised to hear a moaning wind about now, followed by some creaking of timbers untold ages old, a beckoning voice, the sort of thing, generally, the kind of vague creepiness, in other words, that will eventually freak you out if you dwell overlong on it. Simone gets a lot of laughs from all this all night, especially when a technical hitch during a lovely version of “Summer Morning Rain” makes it sound like one of his monitors is speaking to him and he does an extended and very funny riff on The Exorcist, which people around me laugh heartily at even as they seem at the same time a tad unsettled, which makes it even funnier. Even Simone jumps, though, when, later on in the proceedings he’s reading an extract from his new novel, Black Jesus, out early next year (the publishers are a company, he takes some relish in mentioning, are called To Hell). “What happened to the 20th century?” he reads in declamatory fashion from the pages of his manuscript, and on queue, a clock begins to chime ominously at the top of the hour, a droll knelling reply that inspires an hilarious version of “In The Air Tonight”, the audience, surprisingly word-perfect, joining keenly in. The songs Simone sings elsewhere are from more predictable sources, principally from the repertoire of The Felice Brothers (“Don’t Wake The Scarecrow”, “Radio Song”, “Your Belly In My Arms”, “The Devil Is Real”, “Mercy”) and The Duke & The King (“If You Ever Get famous”, “One More American Song”, “The Morning I Get To Hell”, “Union Street”, all from last year’s Nothing Gold Can Stay album; “Gloria” and “Shaky” from their forthcoming second album, Long Live The Duke & The King). There are some inspired covers, too, including a fine version of Tom Waits’ “Old 55” and a spectacular take on Neil Young’s “Helpless”, with the congregation now a choir and someone in the audience down front who I can’t see testifying like Aretha – “London, you got soul!” Simone yells, laughing, head flung back like a revivalist preacher, the crowd taking over entirely on the chorus, as Simone on his knees facing them starts in on a bit of “Amazing Grace”, before returning to the final verse and chorus of “Helpless”, his voice rising from hush to howl, a cresting moment. There’s also a new song, “The New York Times”, among the best things he’s written. He comes back for four encores – the two songs from the new Duke & The King album, a beautiful version of “Waterspider” from their debut and, finally, a gorgeous take on another Neil Young favourite, “Long May You Run”, with some cool lap steel from Mat Boulter, hi-jacked by Simone for these solo shows from UK Americana band The Lucky Strikes. Simone will be back in October with the full Duke & The King line-up. No one who was here tonight will want to miss them.

What is it about Simone Felice and hushed and sacred places that make your voice drop to a whisper as soon as you walk into them?

WIN TICKETS TO SEE STONES FILM!

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Ladies And Gentlemen... The Rolling Stones - the concert film of the band's 1972 North American tour in support of the Exile On Main Street album - has been digitally remastered and will be getting a limited cinema release in the UK from September 16. To celebrate, Uncut is delighted to be giving a...

Ladies And Gentlemen… The Rolling Stones – the concert film of the band’s 1972 North American tour in support of the Exile On Main Street album – has been digitally remastered and will be getting a limited cinema release in the UK from September 16.

To celebrate, Uncut is delighted to be giving away one pair of tickets to the film’s premier on September 7 at the Curzon Cinema in Soho, London.

We also have five pairs of tickets up for grabs for regional screenings taking place across the UK between September 16 and 21.

To enter the competition, all you have to do is log in and answer the question at the bottom of this page, and choose your closest venue and preferred date from the list here:

http://cinerock.net/tickets/the-rolling-stones/united-kingdom

The competiton closes on September 6. Please note that travel is not included in the prize.

Good luck!

Kings Of Leon reveal new single and album tracklisting

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Kings Of Leon have confirmed that the first single off their forthcoming album ‘Come Around Sundown’ is to be “Radioactive” and will be released on October 11. The single is one of 13 new songs on band’s fifth album, which hits stores on October 18 in the UK and October 19 in the US. In...

Kings Of Leon have confirmed that the first single off their forthcoming album ‘Come Around Sundown’ is to be “Radioactive” and will be released on October 11.

The single is one of 13 new songs on band’s fifth album, which hits stores on October 18 in the UK and October 19 in the US.

In addition, the release will be accompanied by a deluxe CD version that includes songs recorded live during the group’s June 30 concert at Hyde Park in London.

The new tracks were recorded at Avatar Studios in New York with producers Angelo Petragalia and Jacquire King who also produced the group’s previous effort Only By The Night.

The tracklisting of ‘Come Around Sundown’ is:

‘The End’

‘Radioactive’

‘Pyro’

‘Mary’

‘The Face’

‘The Immortals’

‘Back Down South’

‘Beach Side’

‘No Money’

‘Pony Up’

‘Birthday’

‘Mi Amigo’

‘Pickup Truck’

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.

Robert Plant: London Forum, September 2, 2010

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Yesterday, Michael posted a review of Robert Plant’s secret London show on Wednesday. Heading back from holiday in France, I missed that one – luckily, it turns out, since Plant only played seven songs then, and the show I caught last night at the Forum stretched to 20-odd. Those 20 include a good deal of covers from the excellent “Band Of Joy” album (hit the link for my preview of that one), a closing a capella rendering of the trad Grateful Dead standby, “I Bid You Goodnight”, and a clutch of, yep, Led Zeppelin songs. Of late, a fair bit seems to have been written about Plant’s retreat from rock: about the restraint of his singing, his immersion in American roots music, and his resilient desire not to do this again. Certainly, Plant and his group – a brilliant, faintly psychedelic bar band, of sorts, who seem at once good-timey and uncanny – artfully muck about with the old Led Zep songs so that “Over The Hills And Far Away”, in particular, reveal their identity with a slyness that would impress even a curmudgeonly re-inventer like Dylan. But still, as he coyly kicks his mic stand up behind him, Plant doesn’t seem like a man who’s rejected his heavy rock past, but one who’s merely decided to keep it on a leash. If anything, he and his bandmates appear to be ostensibly de-Paging the Zep songs, with “Rock And Roll” stripped back to, well, vintage rock’n’roll, fit and ready for Memphis juke joints and with a searing pedal steel solo from Darrell Scott. Scott gets a solo (more often on banjo, mandolin or acoustic) pretty much every time the musical director, Buddy Miller, takes one on his electric, and during a terrific “Misty Mountain Hop”, it seems as if the latter, especially, is taking fluent but assiduous care to make sure he sounds nothing like Jimmy Page. Miller, in fact, plays densely and psychedelically for much of the night, so that “Misty Mountain Hop” is as close to West Coast acid stomp – an enduring Plant obsession, of course – as anything else. The show’s pivot, and the Band Of Joy’s key song, perhaps, turns out to be “Gallows Pole”: a long, incantatory version that gradually accumulates intensity, harmonies and solos, and sits halfway between the downhome and the mystical – the former epitomised by Scott’s picking, the latter by Miller’s atmospheric strafe, a little like the better work of Daniel Lanois (which reminds me: we need to talk about some of Lanois’ recent business soon, too…). For a supposed roots musician, Miller is highly skilled at adding an ominous, ethereal glaze to the overall sound – on something like Low’s “Monkey”, predictably enough, but also on notionally gutsier revivals like “Rich Woman”. For much of the show, the sound is much heavier than you’d expect from listening to “Band Of Joy” and “Raising Sand”: even the five-part harmonies, led by Plant and Patti Griffin, on Richard Thompson’s “House Of Cards” come couched in a certain brooding fuzz. The six-piece swing, though, and a section through the middle of the show, where Miller, Scott and Griffin take leads, has a great roadhouse feel to it, especially when Griffin cracks open “Wade In The Water”. There’s a lot of gospel in the mix, though Plant is careful to give it an uncanny undertow, not least on a showstopping gothic take on “Satan Your Kingdom Must Come Down”. Ultimately, though, the image is of a rock star on a spectacularly rewarding trip through his own history and the history of the music he loves. Los Lobos’ “Angel Dance” sounds like it comes from “Led Zeppelin III”. “Houses Of The Holy” sounds like it comes from “Raising Sand”. Valhalla he is coming back, circuitously, with a washboard. 1. Down to the sea 2. Monkey 3. House of cards 4. Please read the letter 5. Misty mountain hop 6. Rich woman 7. Trouble (Buddy Miller) 8. 12 gates to the city/ Wade In The Water 9. All the King’s horses 10. Satisfied mind (Darrell Scott) 11. Move up (Patty Griffin) 12. Satan 13. Central two o nine 14. Angel dance 15. Houses of the holy 16. Tall cool one 17. Over the hills 18. Gallows pole # 19. Harm’s swift way 20. Rock and roll 21. Goodnight

Yesterday, Michael posted a review of Robert Plant’s secret London show on Wednesday. Heading back from holiday in France, I missed that one – luckily, it turns out, since Plant only played seven songs then, and the show I caught last night at the Forum stretched to 20-odd.

Neil Young announces new album tracklisting and release date

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Neil Young will release his new album, 'Le Noise', on September 27. The album features eight new songs and was recorded in Los Angeles with producer Daniel Lanois [Bob Dylan, U2]. Lanois has claimed that the pair have "taken the acoustic guitar to a new level", reports Billboard.com. The tracklis...

Neil Young will release his new album, ‘Le Noise’, on September 27.

The album features eight new songs and was recorded in Los Angeles with producer Daniel Lanois [Bob Dylan, U2].

Lanois has claimed that the pair have “taken the acoustic guitar to a new level”, reports Billboard.com.

The tracklisting of ‘Le Noise’ is:

‘Walk With Me’

‘Sign of Love’

‘Rescue Me’

‘Love And War’

‘Angry World’

‘Hitchhiker’

‘Peaceful Valley Blvd’

‘Rumblin”

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.

Factory Records’ designer Peter Saville creates new England FC shirt

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Peter Saville, the designer of sleeves for Factory Records bands including Joy Division and New Order, has created the new England football team shirt. The shirt, which has already been modelled by the squad, will be debuted to the public by the team tomorrow (September 3) as they take on Bulgaria ...

Peter Saville, the designer of sleeves for Factory Records bands including Joy Division and New Order, has created the new England football team shirt.

The shirt, which has already been modelled by the squad, will be debuted to the public by the team tomorrow (September 3) as they take on Bulgaria at Wembley for their Euro 2012 qualifying match.

Saville also worked with Suede, Buzzcocks, Roxy Music and Duran Duran.

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.

Robert Plant & The Band Of Joy, One Mayfair, London, September 1, 2010

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“This,” says Robert Plant, gesturing round the former church that he’s chosen as the venue for tonight’s gig, “used be a house of the holy, now it’s obsolete. But it’s available for wedding receptions…” It’s funny the way Plant puts a slight tremble in his voice when he says “house of the holy”, the only reference he makes all night to his other band. Zepwatchers might also chose to read plenty into Plant’s use of “obsolete”, especially after his comment in The Independent last week – “I feel so far away from heavy rock” – further reiterated his position that more Zeppelin activity is about as likely as a Beatles reunion. But, in truth, Plant doesn’t really need Zeppelin any more. It’s a rare – and brave – thing to find a musician of Plant’s stature stepping away almost completely from the band that made his reputation. But with the Raising Sand and now Band Of Joy albums, Plant has clearly discovered new, equally fruitful pursuits. And certainly, he cuts a very relaxed figure, dressed in a long sleeved black shirt and blue jeans, running the Band Of Joy – singer Patty Griffin, guitarists Buddy Miller and Darrell Scott, bassist Byron House and drummer Marco Giovino – through a seven song set. It’s interesting how comfortable Plant seems playing to a 200-strong crowd (this is a secret gig, the audience made up mostly of competition winners, and one star spot: Jonathan Rhys Meyers). In many ways, Plant's a conspicuously unassuming presence. Consider the Lear jets, the Hyatts, the life well lived – tonight, we find him supping from a mug of tea or strumming a washboard. He does some funny dance moves - nothing more than little shuffles, really - that seem strangely bashful. The only rock star move you can spot is how he holds his microphone, with the stand slightly behind his right leg as he leans forward with it: the same stance he used in Zep. But for all Plant’s Deuchars-drinking, Wolves-supporting, down-home persona, he is a fantastically engaging performer. As an interpreter of other musician’s material – tonight there’s songs by Low, Townes Van Zandt and Richard Thompson – he appears tremendously sympathetic. His voice is warm and honeyed, only really unleashing the Valhalla howl as “Cindy I’ll Marry You Someday” reaches its climax. If there is one person here tonight who does look the part, it’s Buddy Miller, the Nashville-based singer/songwriter cast here as the Band Of Joy’s musical director. Wearing a red velvet jacket and a with a battered brown hat pulled down tightly over his grey hair, grizzled to an inch of his life, he appears somewhere between Neil Young and Jon Pertwee’s Doctor Who, with a touch of Worzel Gummidge thrown in. He does things with his guitar during set opener “Monkey” that almost out-Shields Kevin Shields. Elsewhere, Patty Griffin is a game foil for Plant, especially trading verses with him and Darrell Scott on the a capella introduction to “I Bid You Goodnight”. There’s a sense of democracy apparent here – and it reinforces the notion than this is a real band, not simply Plant with a bunch of hired hands along for the ride. It’s over, really, too soon. Robert Plant and the Band Of Joy set list: Monkey House Of Cards Cindy I'll Marry You Someday Satan, Your Kingdom Must Come Down Central Two-o-nine Angel Dance I Bid You Goodnight The Robert Plant & the Band Of Joy European tour begins tonight at the Forum, London.

“This,” says Robert Plant, gesturing round the former church that he’s chosen as the venue for tonight’s gig, “used be a house of the holy, now it’s obsolete. But it’s available for wedding receptions…”

It’s funny the way Plant puts a slight tremble in his voice when he says “house of the holy”, the only reference he makes all night to his other band. Zepwatchers might also chose to read plenty into Plant’s use of “obsolete”, especially after his comment in The Independent last week – “I feel so far away from heavy rock” – further reiterated his position that more Zeppelin activity is about as likely as a Beatles reunion.

Sex Pistols launch perfume range

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The Sex Pistols have launched their own perfume range. The unisex scent sees the band collaborating with Paris perfume company Etat Libre d'Orange, who have licensed the group's name via their promoter Live Nation Merchandise, reports Billboard.com. The Sex Pistols scent, which comes in packaging based on their 'God Save The Queen' single artwork, is currently available in France. It launches in selected shops in the US on September 10, though it is not clear yet when it will reach the UK. The band have not commented on their latest release, but Live Nation Merchandise insisted they were "closely involved" with the launch. There are also plans to launch a 'Never Mind The Bollocks' soap later this year. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk. Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

The Sex Pistols have launched their own perfume range.

The unisex scent sees the band collaborating with Paris perfume company Etat Libre d’Orange, who have licensed the group’s name via their promoter Live Nation Merchandise, reports Billboard.com.

The Sex Pistols scent, which comes in packaging based on their ‘God Save The Queen’ single artwork, is currently available in France. It launches in selected shops in the US on September 10, though it is not clear yet when it will reach the UK.

The band have not commented on their latest release, but Live Nation Merchandise insisted they were “closely involved” with the launch.

There are also plans to launch a ‘Never Mind The Bollocks’ soap later this year.

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

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

The Flaming Lips to perform ‘The Soft Bulletin’ in full

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The Flaming Lips are to perform their album 'The Soft Bulletin' in full in London next year. The band will perform the record in order at Alexandra Palace on July 1 as part of ATP's Don't Look Back gigs. Dinosaur Jr will also play the show, performing their 1988 album 'Bug', while Deerhoof will pe...

The Flaming Lips are to perform their album ‘The Soft Bulletin’ in full in London next year.

The band will perform the record in order at Alexandra Palace on July 1 as part of ATP‘s Don’t Look Back gigs.

Dinosaur Jr will also play the show, performing their 1988 album ‘Bug’, while Deerhoof will perform 2004’s ‘Milk Man’.

Tickets go on sale this Friday (September 3) at 10am (BST).

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.

John Lennon albums to be reissued to tie in with his 70th birthday

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Details of the reissues of a number of John Lennon albums have been revealed. Eight of the late Beatle's albums are being reissued on October 9 digitally and on CD, with the project being overseen by his widow Yoko Ono. The date would have been Lennon's 70th birthday. As well as the studio album further releases, a new 'stripped' version of his and Ono's 1980 'Double Fantasy' album, will be released. The new version was produced by Ono and Jack Douglas, who worked on the original album. The original album was released only weeks before Lennon's murder at hands of deranged fan Mark Chapman, which took place in New York on the evening of December 8 - only minutes after Lennon and Ono had completed a recording session. An 11-CD set, the 'John Lennon Signiature Box', will include 13 home recordings that have not been released previously. Essays from Ono and Lennon's sons Sean and Julian will be included. A 15-song compilation, 'Power To The People: The Hits', will also be released, as will a four-CD set, 'Gimme Some Truth'. The eight studio albums being reissued are: 'John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band', 'Imagine', 'Some Time In New York City', 'Mind Games', 'Walls And Bridges', 'Rock 'N' Roll', 'Double Fantasy', 'Milk And Honey'. See Johnlennon.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.

Details of the reissues of a number of John Lennon albums have been revealed.

Eight of the late Beatle‘s albums are being reissued on October 9 digitally and on CD, with the project being overseen by his widow Yoko Ono. The date would have been Lennon‘s 70th birthday.

As well as the studio album further releases, a new ‘stripped’ version of his and Ono‘s 1980 ‘Double Fantasy’ album, will be released. The new version was produced by Ono and Jack Douglas, who worked on the original album.

The original album was released only weeks before Lennon‘s murder at hands of deranged fan Mark Chapman, which took place in New York on the evening of December 8 – only minutes after Lennon and Ono had completed a recording session.

An 11-CD set, the ‘John Lennon Signiature Box’, will include 13 home recordings that have not been released previously. Essays from Ono and Lennon‘s sons Sean and Julian will be included.

A 15-song compilation, ‘Power To The People: The Hits’, will also be released, as will a four-CD set, ‘Gimme Some Truth’.

The eight studio albums being reissued are: ‘John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band’, ‘Imagine’, ‘Some Time In New York City’, ‘Mind Games’, ‘Walls And Bridges’, ‘Rock ‘N’ Roll’, ‘Double Fantasy’, ‘Milk And Honey’.

See Johnlennon.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.

BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN UNVEILS MAMMOTH ‘DARKNESS…’ BOXSET!

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Columbia records are set to reissue Bruce Springsteen’s fourth album alongside previously-unreleased audio and video footage this November. The audio portion will include Darkness On The Edge Of Town remastered for the first time and 21 previously-unheard tracks from the Darkness... sessions. The DVD set features a new 90- minute documentary film entitled The Promise: The Making of Darkness on the Edge of Town, more than four hours of live concert footage from ’76-’78 and a 2009 performance of Darkness… in its entirety. In addition, the package will be accompanied by an 80-page notebook comprised of reproductions of The Boss’ original notebooks from the sessions, never-before-seen photographs and a new Springsteen-penned essay. The set will be available from November 15. CD 1: REMASTERED DARKNESS ON THE EDGE OF TOWN 1. Badlands 2. Adam Raised A Cain 3. Something In The Night 4. Candy’s Room 5. Racing In The Street 6. The Promised Land 7. Factory 8. Streets Of Fire 9. Prove It All Night 10. Darkness On The Edge Of Town CD 2: THE PROMISE (DISC 1) 1. Racing In The Street ('78) 2. Gotta Get That Feeling 3. Outside Looking In 4. Someday (We'll Be Together) 5. One Way Street 6. Because The Night 7. Wrong Side Of The Street 8. The Brokenhearted 9. Rendezvous 10. Candy's Boy CD 3: THE PROMISE (DISC 2) 1. Save My Love 2. Ain't Good Enough For You 3. Fire 4. Spanish Eyes 5. It's A Shame 6. Come On (Let's Go Tonight) 7. Talk To Me 8. The Little Things (My Baby Does) 9. Breakaway 10. The Promise 11. City Of Night DVD 1: DOCUMENTARY: THE PROMISE: THE MAKING OF 'DARKNESS ON THE EDGE OF TOWN DVD 2: DARKNESS ON THE EDGE OF TOWN (PARAMOUNT THEATER, ASBURY PARK, NJ, 2009) 1. Badlands 2. Adam Raised A Cain 3. Something In The Night 4. Candy's Room 5. Racing In The Street 6. The Promised Land 7. Factory 8. Streets Of Fire 9. Prove It All Night 10. Darkness On The Edge Of Town THRILL HILL VAULT (1976-1978) 1. Save My Love (Holmdel, NJ 76) 2. Candy's Boy (Holmdel, NJ 76) 3. Something In The Night (Red Bank, NJ 76) 4. Don’t Look Back (NYC 78) 5. Ain't Good Enough For You (NYC 78) 6. The Promise (NYC 78) 7. Candy's Room Demo (NYC 78) 8. Badlands (Phoenix 78) 9. The Promised Land (Phoenix 78) 10. Prove It All Night (Phoenix 78) 11. Born To Run (Phoenix 78) 12. Rosalita (Come Out Tonight) (Phoenix 78) DVD 3: HOUSTON '78 BOOTLEG: HOUSE CUT 1. Badlands 2. Streets Of Fire 3. It’s Hard To Be A Saint In The City 4. Darkness On The Edge Of Town 5. Spirit In The Night 6. Independence Day 7. The Promised Land 8. Prove It All Night 9. Racing In The Street 10. Thunder Road 11. Jungleland 12. The Ties That Bind 13. Santa Claus Is Coming To Town 14. The Fever 15. Fire 16. Candy's Room 17. Because The Night 18. Point Blank 19. She's The One 20. Backstreets 21. Rosalita (Come Out Tonight) 22. Born To Run 23. Detroit Medley 24. Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out 25. You Can't Sit Down 26. Quarter To Three

Columbia records are set to reissue Bruce Springsteen’s fourth album alongside previously-unreleased audio and video footage this November.

The audio portion will include Darkness On The Edge Of Town remastered for the first time and 21 previously-unheard tracks from the Darkness… sessions.

The DVD set features a new 90- minute documentary film entitled The Promise: The Making of Darkness on the Edge of Town, more than four hours of live concert footage from ’76-’78 and a 2009 performance of Darkness… in its entirety.

In addition, the package will be accompanied by an 80-page notebook comprised of reproductions of The Boss’ original notebooks from the sessions, never-before-seen photographs and a new Springsteen-penned essay.

The set will be available from November 15.

CD 1: REMASTERED DARKNESS ON THE EDGE OF TOWN

1. Badlands

2. Adam Raised A Cain

3. Something In The Night

4. Candy’s Room

5. Racing In The Street

6. The Promised Land

7. Factory

8. Streets Of Fire

9. Prove It All Night

10. Darkness On The Edge Of Town

CD 2: THE PROMISE (DISC 1)

1. Racing In The Street (’78)

2. Gotta Get That Feeling

3. Outside Looking In

4. Someday (We’ll Be Together)

5. One Way Street

6. Because The Night

7. Wrong Side Of The Street

8. The Brokenhearted

9. Rendezvous

10. Candy’s Boy

CD 3: THE PROMISE (DISC 2)

1. Save My Love

2. Ain’t Good Enough For You

3. Fire

4. Spanish Eyes

5. It’s A Shame

6. Come On (Let’s Go Tonight)

7. Talk To Me

8. The Little Things (My Baby Does)

9. Breakaway

10. The Promise

11. City Of Night

DVD 1: DOCUMENTARY: THE PROMISE: THE MAKING OF ‘DARKNESS ON THE EDGE OF TOWN

DVD 2: DARKNESS ON THE EDGE OF TOWN (PARAMOUNT THEATER, ASBURY PARK, NJ, 2009)

1. Badlands

2. Adam Raised A Cain

3. Something In The Night

4. Candy’s Room

5. Racing In The Street

6. The Promised Land

7. Factory

8. Streets Of Fire

9. Prove It All Night

10. Darkness On The Edge Of Town

THRILL HILL VAULT (1976-1978)

1. Save My Love (Holmdel, NJ 76)

2. Candy’s Boy (Holmdel, NJ 76)

3. Something In The Night (Red Bank, NJ 76)

4. Don’t Look Back (NYC 78)

5. Ain’t Good Enough For You (NYC 78)

6. The Promise (NYC 78)

7. Candy’s Room Demo (NYC 78)

8. Badlands (Phoenix 78)

9. The Promised Land (Phoenix 78)

10. Prove It All Night (Phoenix 78)

11. Born To Run (Phoenix 78)

12. Rosalita (Come Out Tonight) (Phoenix 78)

DVD 3: HOUSTON ’78 BOOTLEG: HOUSE CUT

1. Badlands

2. Streets Of Fire

3. It’s Hard To Be A Saint In The City

4. Darkness On The Edge Of Town

5. Spirit In The Night

6. Independence Day

7. The Promised Land

8. Prove It All Night

9. Racing In The Street

10. Thunder Road

11. Jungleland

12. The Ties That Bind

13. Santa Claus Is Coming To Town

14. The Fever

15. Fire

16. Candy’s Room

17. Because The Night

18. Point Blank

19. She’s The One

20. Backstreets

21. Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)

22. Born To Run

23. Detroit Medley

24. Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out

25. You Can’t Sit Down

26. Quarter To Three

CERTIFIED COPY

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Directed by Abbas Kiarostami Starring Juliette Binoche, William Shimell Iranian maestro Abbas Kiarostami steps outside his home country, but not his usual philosophical domain, in this Italian-shot, somewhat literary two-hander – with dialogue in French, English and Italian. British opera singe...

Directed by Abbas Kiarostami

Starring Juliette Binoche, William Shimell

Iranian maestro Abbas Kiarostami<.strong> steps outside his home country, but not his usual philosophical domain, in this Italian-shot, somewhat literary two-hander – with dialogue in French, English and Italian.

British opera singer William Shimell plays a writer who meets a mysterious, nameless woman (a mercurial Juliette Binoche) and ends up accompanying her on a rural jaunt.

After discussing notions of reality and fakery, the pair start role-playing as a married couple – unless, of course, they really are spouses pretending to be new acquaintances.

Kiarostami keeps us guessing as the crisp dialogue moves through every conceivable variation on marital unease. This deceptively slim film might not be Kiarostami at his most heavyweight, but it’s a rewarding and mischievous slice of cerebral entertainment.

Jonathan Romney

RAY LAMONTAGNE & THE PARIAH DOGS – GOD WILLIN’ & THE CREEK DON’T RISE

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Take a long, deep draught of that album title and drink it down. Even if you were previously unaware that Ray LaMontagne was a bearded backwoods soul man of some infamy, the title of his fourth album instantly gives the game away: God Willin’ & The Creek Don’t Rise entirely bypasses the brash blare of the past 40 years of musical history – rap, grunge, new wave, punk and disco might never have existed – and instead buries itself deep in the pines, making old time music out of wood and wire. Despite gaining an immediate foothold with his towering 2004 debut Trouble, LaMontagne has always looked most comfortable lurking in the shadows of the past. Reluctant to somersault through PR hoops and with a sometimes painfully self-conscious stage demeanour, even low-level fame seemed burdensome. The 2006 follow-up, Till The Sun Turns Black, was utterly bleak, hamstrung by self-doubt and expressly designed, it appeared, to help him escape his unlikely status as a TV-advertised Radio 2 staple and get back to the business of being a ’70s-style music man who let the music do the talking. His first album without celebrated roots producer Ethan Johns at the helm, God Willin’ & The Creek Don’t Rise finds LaMontagne even further out of step with the times. And he’s rarely sounded so utterly engaged. Self-produced and recorded over two weeks at his home in rural Massachusetts, you can practically taste the wood smoke drifting up to the treetops. The soulful Stax horns and smooth strings of 2008’s Gossip In The Grain have gone, as have the occasional side-steps into Beatlesish pop and the lusty humour of songs like “Meg White”. Instead, this is a triumphant return to core values, one that delves deeper into the rough hewn country-blues of Trouble and where the rasping harmonica on “For The Summer” constitutes a major sonic augmentation. The Pariah Dogs have worked as LaMontagne’s live backing band for several years, and here they build an unfussy, loose-and-live framework around his spectacular voice – at times desperately raw, at others bathed in a soft, golden glow – as it tears into 10 songs of love and despair. You do worry about LaMontagne. For all his insistence that this isn’t straight autobiography, at times he sounds unspeakably alone, gnawing at some dreadful internal wound that never quite heals over. The gorgeous “New York City Is Killing Me” unfolds with an unhurried inevitability, the country boy adrift in the city and “tired of all this concrete, tired of all this noise.... wishing I was dead”. Like Van Morrison, LaMontagne is haunted by nostalgia and lost innocence, memories that gather like a storm waiting to break. On “Like Rock And Roll & Radio” he spends six minutes burning with a regret so deep it would be unbearable, were it not for the fact that the sound it produces is simply bewitching. “Are We Really Through” has a similar tortured beauty, but elsewhere the gloom is leavened by something more primal, even joyful. Opener “Repo Man” is an itchy slice of malevolent white boy’s funk, reminiscent of Tim Buckley’s Greetings From LA. When he finally tires of spraying vicious kiss-off sentiments in her direction, LaMontagne lays his errant woman across his knee for a spanking, an act still classified as marriage counselling in certain parts of the US. “Beg Steal Or Borrow” motors like a hillbilly version of The Velvet Underground’s “What Goes On”, but best of all is the reflective “Old Before Your Time”, a banjo-driven beauty that slides along with the gentle charm of a paddle-steamer. It ends with the louche jugband blues of “The Devil’s In The Jukebox”, LaMontagne “frying tomatoes on the griddle” as the guitars cook up a mean mess and the drums crackle like popcorn. It seems a fine place to leave him: banging around up country, a woolly alchemist turning all that pain into proud, earthy, wonderfully affirming music. Graeme Thomson Q+A Why did you decide to produce the album yourself? I just needed a change and I had a clear idea of what I wanted to accomplish. I’m really proud of what Ethan [Johns] and I did, but I enjoyed making a record this way far more than I enjoyed making it any other way. There were no lulls in the momentum, and working at home made a huge difference. We were in an old ballroom with 14-foot windows looking out over fields and hills, so recording didn’t feel separate from the outside world, it felt like part of the day: have breakfast, then walk in and start making music. It was really freeing, and it’s wonderful to hear that openness. Your music still often sounds like the work of a troubled man… You don’t want to be too personal. The goal is to let other people take the song and make it their own, but I know I’m not going to succeed all the time. I find it frustrating if people write it off as depressing music, I take that personally. You hate to be dismissed as this poor, sad guy, which just isn’t the case. I love life and I love my career. I mean, my favourite show is The Mighty Boosh! But you can’t close your eyes to sadness either. I’m just trying to make something beautiful. INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

Take a long, deep draught of that album title and drink it down. Even if you were previously unaware that Ray LaMontagne was a bearded backwoods soul man of some infamy, the title of his fourth album instantly gives the game away: God Willin’ & The Creek Don’t Rise entirely bypasses the brash blare of the past 40 years of musical history – rap, grunge, new wave, punk and disco might never have existed – and instead buries itself deep in the pines, making old time music out of wood and wire.

Despite gaining an immediate foothold with his towering 2004 debut Trouble, LaMontagne has always looked most comfortable lurking in the shadows of the past. Reluctant to somersault through PR hoops and with a sometimes painfully self-conscious stage demeanour, even low-level fame seemed burdensome. The 2006 follow-up, Till The Sun Turns Black, was utterly bleak, hamstrung by self-doubt and expressly designed, it appeared, to help him escape his unlikely status as a TV-advertised Radio 2 staple and get back to the business of being a ’70s-style music man who let the music do the talking.

His first album without celebrated roots producer Ethan Johns at the helm, God Willin’ & The Creek Don’t Rise finds LaMontagne even further out of step with the times. And he’s rarely sounded so utterly engaged.

Self-produced and recorded over two weeks at his home in rural Massachusetts, you can practically taste the wood smoke drifting up to the treetops. The soulful Stax horns and smooth strings of 2008’s Gossip In The Grain have gone, as have the occasional side-steps into Beatlesish pop and the lusty humour of songs like “Meg White”. Instead, this is a triumphant return to core values, one that delves deeper into the rough hewn country-blues of Trouble and where the rasping harmonica on “For The Summer” constitutes a major sonic augmentation. The Pariah Dogs have worked as LaMontagne’s live backing band for several years, and here they build an unfussy, loose-and-live framework around his spectacular voice – at times desperately raw, at others bathed in a soft, golden glow – as it tears into 10 songs of love and despair.

You do worry about LaMontagne. For all his insistence that this isn’t straight autobiography, at times he sounds unspeakably alone, gnawing at some dreadful internal wound that never quite heals over. The gorgeous “New York City Is Killing Me” unfolds with an unhurried inevitability, the country boy adrift in the city and “tired of all this concrete, tired of all this noise…. wishing I was dead”. Like Van Morrison, LaMontagne is haunted by nostalgia and lost innocence, memories that gather like a storm waiting to break. On “Like Rock And Roll & Radio” he spends six minutes burning with a regret so deep it would be unbearable, were it not for the fact that the sound it produces is simply bewitching.

“Are We Really Through” has a similar tortured beauty, but elsewhere the gloom is leavened by something more primal, even joyful. Opener “Repo Man” is an itchy slice of malevolent white boy’s funk, reminiscent of Tim Buckley’s Greetings From LA. When he finally tires of spraying vicious kiss-off sentiments in her direction, LaMontagne lays his errant woman across his knee for a spanking, an act still classified as marriage counselling in certain parts of the US. “Beg Steal Or Borrow” motors like a hillbilly version of The Velvet Underground’s “What Goes On”, but best of all is the reflective “Old Before Your Time”, a banjo-driven beauty that slides along with the gentle charm of a paddle-steamer.

It ends with the louche jugband blues of “The Devil’s In The Jukebox”, LaMontagne “frying tomatoes on the griddle” as the guitars cook up a mean mess and the drums crackle like popcorn. It seems a fine place to leave him: banging around up country, a woolly alchemist turning all that pain into proud, earthy, wonderfully affirming music.

Graeme Thomson

Q+A

Why did you decide to produce the album yourself?

I just needed a change and I had a clear idea of what I wanted to accomplish. I’m really proud of what Ethan [Johns] and I did, but I enjoyed making a record this way far more than I enjoyed making it any other way. There were no lulls in the momentum, and working at home made a huge difference. We were in an old ballroom with 14-foot windows looking out over fields and hills, so recording didn’t feel separate from the outside world, it felt like part of the day: have breakfast, then walk in and start making music. It was really freeing, and it’s wonderful to hear that openness.

Your music still often sounds like the work of a troubled man…

You don’t want to be too personal. The goal is to let other people take the song and make it their own, but I know I’m not going to succeed all the time. I find it frustrating if people write it off as depressing music, I take that personally. You hate to be dismissed as this poor, sad guy, which just isn’t the case. I love life and I love my career. I mean, my favourite show is The Mighty Boosh! But you can’t close your eyes to sadness either. I’m just trying to make something beautiful.

INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON