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Special Muse collectors magazine published by Uncut and NME

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A limited-edition Muse magazine has been published by Uncut and its sister-title NME. The special collectors magazine features 100-pages of archive material relating to the Devon band, with articles covering their entire career. It includes numerous features, extensive reviews, interviews and the stories behind the trio's songs and albums. The magazine is on sale now and is limited-edition. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

A limited-edition Muse magazine has been published by Uncut and its sister-title NME.

The special collectors magazine features 100-pages of archive material relating to the Devon band, with articles covering their entire career. It includes numerous features, extensive reviews, interviews and the stories behind the trio’s songs and albums.

The magazine is on sale now and is limited-edition.

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

Elvis Costello cancels Israel gig for political reasons

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Elvis Costello has announced the cancellation of two gigs in Israel, as a protest of the country's treatment of Palestinians. Writing on Elviscostello.com, the singer said he feared that playing the gigs in Caesarea on June 30 and July 1 could be seen as him supporting the country's government. "T...

Elvis Costello has announced the cancellation of two gigs in Israel, as a protest of the country’s treatment of Palestinians.

Writing on Elviscostello.com, the singer said he feared that playing the gigs in Caesarea on June 30 and July 1 could be seen as him supporting the country’s government.

“Then there are occasions when merely having your name added to a concert schedule may be interpreted as a political act that resonates more than anything that might be sung and it may be assumed that one has no mind for the suffering of the innocent,” Costello wrote.

He added: “I must believe that the audience for the coming concerts would have contained many people who question the policies of their government on settlement and deplore conditions that visit intimidation, humiliation or much worse on Palestinian civilians in the name of national security.

“Sometimes a silence in music is better than adding to the static and so an end to it. I cannot imagine receiving another invitation to perform in Israel, which is a matter of regret, but I can imagine a better time when I would not be writing this.”

Costello isn’t the first musician to deliberate over playing the country. Gil Scott-Heron and Carlos Santana are among the artists to have cancelled gigs at protest towards the government, although Paul McCartney played there in 2008.

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

The Rolling Stones on course to get first Number One album in 16 years

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The Rolling Stones are on course to have their first UK Number One album in 16 years this Sunday (May 23). Their re-released version of 'Exile On Main Street' is currently top of the midweek charts. If it stays in that position, it will be the first time the band have topped the chart since 1994's ...

The Rolling Stones are on course to have their first UK Number One album in 16 years this Sunday (May 23).

Their re-released version of ‘Exile On Main Street’ is currently top of the midweek charts. If it stays in that position, it will be the first time the band have topped the chart since 1994’s ‘Voodoo Lounge’.

The new release of ‘Exile On Main Street’ contains a host of newly-discovered, unreleased tracks by the band.

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

Paul McCartney to host webchat

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Paul McCartney is to speak to fans in his fist ever webchat tomorrow (May 20). The former Beatle, who is gearing up to head to Mexico as part of his current world tour, will take time out of his rehearsals to chat to fans online for 20 minutes from 5pm (GMT) tomorrow. He'll will also announce the w...

Paul McCartney is to speak to fans in his fist ever webchat tomorrow (May 20).

The former Beatle, who is gearing up to head to Mexico as part of his current world tour, will take time out of his rehearsals to chat to fans online for 20 minutes from 5pm (GMT) tomorrow. He’ll will also announce the winners of a competition run by Paulmccartney.com during the chat.

To take part in the webchat, head to Ustream.tv/paulmccartney.

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

The 20th Uncut Playlist Of 2010

Only had half an ear on new records these past couple of days, since Mark and I have been sifting through your many, many nominations for Great Lost Albums, following our special the other month. Pretty amazing discoveries there, that are going to keep us busy for a while. There is, though, one fairly auspicious new arrival that I can’t talk about for a bit: place your guesses here to be met with the usual devious, non-committal shrugs and so on. And if you have a moment, please check out a new blog, Electric Eden, by our colleague and friend, Rob Young. It’s been launched to coincide with the impending publication of Rob’s book of the same name, a history of visionary British folk music, which is the first music book I’ve been excited to read in quite a while. Plenty of interesting stuff on the blog already. 1 Heaven And – Bye And Bye I’m Going To See The King (Staubgold) 2 A Brand New Mystery Record 3 Cheikh Lo – Jamm (World Circuit) 4 Department Of Eagles – Archive 2003-2006 (Bella Union) 5 David Wrench/Black Sheep – Spades & Hoes & Ploughs: Songs Of Insurrection, Defiance & Rebellion (Invada) 6 Avi Buffalo – Avi Buffalo (Sub Pop) 7 Big Boi – Shutterbugg (Mercury) 8 Diskjokke – En Fid Tid (Smalltown Supersound) 9 Underworld – Scribble (www.underworldlive.com) 10 Steve Winwood – Revolutions: The Very Best Of Steve Winwood (Island) 11 Rangda – False Flag (Drag City) 12 Land Of Kush’s Egyptian Light Orchestra – Monogamy (Constellation) 13 The Teardrop Explodes – Kilimanjaro: Deluxe Edition (Mercury) 14 Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti – Before Today (4AD) 15 Endless Boogie – Full House Head (No Quarter)

Only had half an ear on new records these past couple of days, since Mark and I have been sifting through your many, many nominations for Great Lost Albums, following our special the other month. Pretty amazing discoveries there, that are going to keep us busy for a while.

Bobby Womack: ‘Damon Albarn is like Jimi Hendrix or Ray Charles’

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Bobby Womack has compared Damon Albarn to the likes of Jimi Hendrix and Ray Charles, both of whom he has worked with in the past. Womack sang on recent Gorillaz single 'Stylo' and has been performing live with the band. Speaking of the hook up to The Sun, he explained that working with Albarn had r...

Bobby Womack has compared Damon Albarn to the likes of Jimi Hendrix and Ray Charles, both of whom he has worked with in the past.

Womack sang on recent Gorillaz single ‘Stylo’ and has been performing live with the band. Speaking of the hook up to The Sun, he explained that working with Albarn had reminded him of some of his previous studio partners.

“He’s the same way [Hendrix and Charles were]. He’s very creative and thinks way out there, trying things that people don’t try,” Womack said, adding that “working with Gorillaz was different” because “their ain’t no ego – these guys are cool”.

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

Ronnie James Dio dies of cancer

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Black Sabbath, Rainbow and Dio singer Ronnie James Dio has passed away after losing his battle with stomach cancer. Dio, aged 67, had died on Sunday (May 16), after being diagnosed with the condition last November. His wife and manager Wendy Dio posted a statement on his official site Ronniejamesd...

Black Sabbath, Rainbow and Dio singer Ronnie James Dio has passed away after losing his battle with stomach cancer.

Dio, aged 67, had died on Sunday (May 16), after being diagnosed with the condition last November.

His wife and manager Wendy Dio posted a statement on his official site Ronniejamesdio.com which read: “Today my heart is broken, Ronnie passed away at 7:45am 16th May. Many, many friends and family were able to say their private good-byes before he peacefully passed away. Ronnie knew how much he was loved by all. We so appreciate the love and support that you have all given us.”

She added: “Please give us a few days of privacy to deal with this terrible loss. Please know he loved you all and his music will live on forever.”

Metallica drummer Lars Ulrich also paid tribute, writing an open letter on Metallica.com, where he explained that he has been a lifelong fan of the singer.

“I made the pilgrimage to the Plaza Hotel to see if I could somehow grab a picture, an autograph, a moment, anything,” Ulrich wrote. “A few hours later you came out and were so kind and caring… pictures, autographs and a couple minutes of casual banter. I was on top of the world, inspired and ready for anything.”

The drummer added: “When we finally got a chance to play together in Austria in 2007, even though I may not have let on, I was literally transformed back to that little snot-nosed kid who you met and inspired 31 years earlier.”

Dio, who replaced Ozzy Osbourne in Black Sabbath in 1979, fronted Heaven & Hell and Dio before his death.

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

Buzzcocks classics get covered by The Whip, Mike Joyce and I Am Kloot

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Bands and artists including former Smiths drummer Mike Joyce, The Whip and I Am Kloot have come together to perform a series of covers of Buzzcocks songs. The acts, all performing as part of the [url=http://www.nme.com/jdset]JD Set[/url], tackle tracks by the Manchester punk legends including 'Ever Fallen in Love (With Someone You Shouldn't've)' and 'Orgasm Addict', and you can watch the videos on Uncut.co.uk's sister title [url=http://www.nme.com]NME.COM[/url] now. I Am Kloot frontman [url=http://www.nme.com/video?bcpid=26429438001&bctid=84983447001]John Bramwell performs his cover of Buzzcocks' 'Ever Fallen in Love (With Someone You Shouldn't've)'[/url] at Manchester's Blueprint Studio, while [url=http://www.nme.com/video?bcpid=26429438001&bctid=84357648001]The Whip and Mike Joyce tackle the same track live[/url]. Meanwhile, [url=http://www.nme.com/video?bcpid=26429438001&bctid=84983446001]Twisted Wheel's Jonny Brown and The Answering Machine cover 'Orgasm Addict'[/url]. See [url=http://www.nme.com/jdset]NME.COM/jdset[/url] and [url=http://www.thejdset.co.uk]Thejdset.co.uk[/url] for more information on the videos. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Bands and artists including former Smiths drummer Mike Joyce, The Whip and I Am Kloot have come together to perform a series of covers of Buzzcocks songs.

The acts, all performing as part of the [url=http://www.nme.com/jdset]JD Set[/url], tackle tracks by the Manchester punk legends including ‘Ever Fallen in Love (With Someone You Shouldn’t’ve)’ and ‘Orgasm Addict’, and you can watch the videos on Uncut.co.uk‘s sister title [url=http://www.nme.com]NME.COM[/url] now.

I Am Kloot frontman [url=http://www.nme.com/video?bcpid=26429438001&bctid=84983447001]John Bramwell performs his cover of Buzzcocks’ ‘Ever Fallen in Love (With Someone You Shouldn’t’ve)'[/url] at Manchester‘s Blueprint Studio, while [url=http://www.nme.com/video?bcpid=26429438001&bctid=84357648001]The Whip and Mike Joyce tackle the same track live[/url].

Meanwhile, [url=http://www.nme.com/video?bcpid=26429438001&bctid=84983446001]Twisted Wheel’s Jonny Brown and The Answering Machine cover ‘Orgasm Addict'[/url].

See [url=http://www.nme.com/jdset]NME.COM/jdset[/url] and [url=http://www.thejdset.co.uk]Thejdset.co.uk[/url] for more information on the videos.

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

Tom Jones to cover Bob Dylan, John Lee Hooker on new album

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Tom Jones is to release an album featuring covers of songs by artists such as Bob Dylan, John Lee Hooker and Billy Joe Shaver. Called 'Praise And Blame', the album is released on July 26. The album was produced by Ethan Johns (Kings Of Leon, Rufus Wainwright, Laura Marling). The tracklisting (ori...

Tom Jones is to release an album featuring covers of songs by artists such as Bob Dylan, John Lee Hooker and Billy Joe Shaver.

Called ‘Praise And Blame’, the album is released on July 26.

The album was produced by Ethan Johns (Kings Of Leon, Rufus Wainwright, Laura Marling).

The tracklisting (original artists in brackets where appropriate) of ‘Praise and Blame’ is:

‘What Good Am I’ (Bob Dylan)

‘Lord Help’ (Jesse Mae Hemphill)

‘Did Trouble Me’ (Susan Werner)

‘Strange Things’

‘Burning Hell’ (John Lee Hooker)

‘If I Give My Soul’ (Billy Joe Shaver)

‘Don’t Knock’

‘Nobody’s Fault But Mine’

‘Didn’t It Rain’

‘Ain’t No Grave’

‘Run On’

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

Arcade Fire announce new single details

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Arcade Fire are to release a new single in the next few weeks. Writing on their official website, Arcadefire.com, the Canadian band revealed that they are planning on getting a 12-inch vinyl release in shops soon. "Just finishing up pressing our new 12-inch," they wrote. "Should be in stores in t...

Arcade Fire are to release a new single in the next few weeks.

Writing on their official website, Arcadefire.com, the Canadian band revealed that they are planning on getting a 12-inch vinyl release in shops soon.

“Just finishing up pressing our new 12-inch,” they wrote. “Should be in stores in the next couple weeks. God willing.”

The band, who headline the Reading And Leeds Festivals this August, are expected to release a new album, possibly a double, later in 2010.

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

IGGY AND THE STOOGES – RAW POWER

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Is there some rock law about archive sets, where the less success you have, the more your work is catalogued, fussed over and released in luxury annotated collections? “Yes” would appear to be the answer, judging by the career of Iggy and/or The Stooges. With seemingly every gig they ever recorded now available, and with a million comps, remixed LPs and officialised bootlegs out there, bands like the Stooges rival the then-even-more-unpopular likes of Throbbing Gristle and Suicide for posthumous prolificacy. We’ve all become used to acts releasing more records after death than when alive, but it now seems that the Stooges – unloved and unsuccessful in their addled heyday – are about to rival one-man heritage sausage machine Neil Young in their updated back pages. You’ve probably, if you’re reading this, already got Raw Power by Iggy & The Stooges, the 1973 album by Ann Arbor’s unfinest. You may have the original Bowie-produced vinyl, the “original” CD, or even the 1996 “violent” CD remixes by Iggy Pop. Perhaps you even have the Georgia Peaches live bootleg, from the October 1973 concert at Richards in Atlanta. If you’re still reading this, you quite possibly have all of those items and are wondering what’s actually new in this collection. Good question; how many times have we obsessives bought some hand-tooled tool of a boxed set or limited edition padded out with dance mixes and something horrible with Elton John on backing vocals? Too often. I am happy to relate that this new Raw Power is nothing like that. Bowie’s original, insane, “tell the guitar to get DOWN from there” mix is restored, as mad and non-linear as it always was, but sounding as clean as hell ever can. (Some of Iggy’s ’90s mixes turn up right at the end, like weird relatives late for a wedding.) This is the best Raw Power has sounded since it was first humiliating people’s turntables in the 1970s. The live CD, which is the Georgia Peaches bootleg, sounds excellent, radio broadcast quality, and is notable for a) the frequency with which Iggy insults the audience and b) the length of some of the songs. It’s like being there, except Iggy can’t hurt you. And it ends with the Raw Power out-take “Doojiman”, where Iggy sings made up-noises for quite a while. It’s very good. The third CD is more of a grab-bag, but you won’t be bored. “I’m Hungry” is, essentially, “I’m Bored” and “Five Foot One”’s granddad over the backing track to “Penetration”. “Hey Peter” (“where you going with that sandwich in your hand?”) is a bit silly. And there are Japanese 45 mixes of “Raw Power” and “Search And Destroy” that are brilliantly rough. Listening to this not as a collector, you are continually impressed with James Williamson’s guitar playing, which is as near to free jazz metal as common sense will allow, with the relentless and also gleeful grind of the rhythm section (the Ashetons, sulking like they mean it), and of course Iggy himself. On this LP, he combines both the scariest elements of the early Stooges and, astonishingly, the South Park grinny loveable pop star that he would one day, absurdly, become. Most of us will be perfectly happy with a single Raw Power disc; the rest will consume this genuinely excellent set, with its booklets, photos and almost complete absence of dud moments, and wait for the forthcoming Arista collection of “Pumpin’ For Jill” remixes. I wish. DAVID QUANTICK

Is there some rock law about archive sets, where the less success you have, the more your work is catalogued, fussed over and released in luxury annotated collections? “Yes” would appear to be the answer, judging by the career of Iggy and/or The Stooges.

With seemingly every gig they ever recorded now available, and with a million comps, remixed LPs and officialised bootlegs out there, bands like the Stooges rival the then-even-more-unpopular likes of Throbbing Gristle and Suicide for posthumous prolificacy. We’ve all become used to acts releasing more records after death than when alive, but it now seems that the Stooges – unloved and unsuccessful in their addled heyday – are about to rival one-man heritage sausage machine Neil Young in their updated back pages.

You’ve probably, if you’re reading this, already got Raw Power by Iggy & The Stooges, the 1973 album by Ann Arbor’s unfinest. You may have the original Bowie-produced vinyl, the “original” CD, or even the 1996 “violent” CD remixes by Iggy Pop. Perhaps you even have the Georgia Peaches live bootleg, from the October 1973 concert at Richards in Atlanta. If you’re still reading this, you quite possibly have all of those items and are wondering what’s actually new in this collection. Good question; how many times have we obsessives bought some hand-tooled tool of a boxed set or limited edition padded out with dance mixes and something horrible with Elton John on backing vocals? Too often.

I am happy to relate that this new Raw Power is nothing like that. Bowie’s original, insane, “tell the guitar to get DOWN from there” mix is restored, as mad and non-linear as it always was, but sounding as clean as hell ever can. (Some of Iggy’s ’90s mixes turn up right at the end, like weird relatives late for a wedding.) This is the best Raw Power has sounded since it was first humiliating people’s turntables in the 1970s. The live CD, which is the Georgia Peaches bootleg, sounds excellent, radio broadcast quality, and is notable for a) the frequency with which Iggy insults the audience and b) the length of some of the songs. It’s like being there, except Iggy can’t hurt you. And it ends with the Raw Power out-take “Doojiman”, where Iggy sings made up-noises for quite a while. It’s very good.

The third CD is more of a grab-bag, but you won’t be bored. “I’m Hungry” is, essentially, “I’m Bored” and “Five Foot One”’s granddad over the backing track to “Penetration”. “Hey Peter” (“where you going with that sandwich in your hand?”) is a bit silly. And there are Japanese 45 mixes of “Raw Power” and “Search And Destroy” that are brilliantly rough.

Listening to this not as a collector, you are continually impressed with James Williamson’s guitar playing, which is as near to free jazz metal as common sense will allow, with the relentless and also gleeful grind of the rhythm section (the Ashetons, sulking like they mean it), and of course Iggy himself. On this LP, he combines both the scariest elements of the early Stooges and, astonishingly, the South Park grinny loveable pop star that he would one day, absurdly, become.

Most of us will be perfectly happy with a single Raw Power disc; the rest will consume this genuinely excellent set, with its booklets, photos and almost complete absence of dud moments, and wait for the forthcoming Arista collection of “Pumpin’ For Jill” remixes. I wish.

DAVID QUANTICK

BAD LIEUTENTANT – PORT OF CALL NEW ORLEANS

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DIRECTED BY Werner Herzog STARRING Nic Cage, Val Kilmer, Eva Mendes Although it shares its title and a certain grubbiness with Abel Ferrara’s 1992 Bad Lieutenant, Werner Herzog’s film is a very different proposition. A surprise, you might think: after all, many of Herzog’s protagonists are ...

DIRECTED BY Werner Herzog

STARRING Nic Cage, Val Kilmer, Eva Mendes

Although it shares its title and a certain grubbiness with Abel Ferrara’s 1992 Bad Lieutenant, Werner Herzog’s film is a very different proposition. A surprise, you might think: after all, many of Herzog’s protagonists are eccentric loners, driven by madness and obsession, exactly the kind of character Harvey Keitel played in Ferrara’s film.

But Herzog, a director never known for taking half measures, pushes the original idea of a murderous, depraved and drug-addicted police officer way out there. While it’s true that there are very few actors who’ll take themselves to the edge like Keitel, similarly there’s no-one prepared to unleash his inner freak quite as fearlessly as Nicolas Cage.

Indeed, Herzog is reported to have instructed Cage to “turn the pig loose”. So, sporting one of the most terrifying hairpieces of his career, Cage does adrenalised, bug-eyed intensity as Terence McDonough, a coke-and-Vicodin addicted homicide detective who’s investigating a gangland murder in post-Katrina New Orleans. At the start of the film, McDonough injures his back saving a perp; the injury dogs him continuously, and he assumes a hunched, limping gait, somewhere between Richard III and Quasimodo. The murder case enables us to watch McDonough go about his increasingly deranged business. His interview techniques include cutting off the oxygen supply on an elderly lady’s respirator. He sees a dead man’s soul breakdance, and hallucinates a pair of iguanas – shot in super psychedelic close-up by Herzog – who serenade him with Johnny Adams’ “Release Me”. He’s up to his eyes in gambling debt, and to make matters worse, his girlfriend – call girl Frankie (Eva Mendes) – is having problems with a jilted client.

In lesser filmmakers’ hands, perhaps, this might have been frankly awful. But Herzog runs with the material. Shot in a harsh, bleached-out light, Herzog’s version of New Orleans is, in the wake of Katrina, a rotten and dilapidated Wild West frontier town, recalling LA in classic noirs. Everyone is either on the make or high. Kilmer does good second-string as McDonough’s partner, and there’s great turns from Brad Dourif, Jennifer Coolidge and Fairuza Balk. The story is grim, but, equally, it’s hilarious – Herzog mixing anguish, slapstick, irony and pathos in a way that mirrors McDonough’s own loopy mood swings. Certainly, it’s not a stretch to suggest that Herzog has in Cage found his most simpático lead since the great Klaus Kinski.

MICHAEL BONNER

FOUR LIONS

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DIRECTED BY Chris Morris STARRING Riz Ahmed, Adeel Akhtar, Kayvan Novak, Nigel Lindsay Chris Morris’ reputation as a fearless satirist, forged by The Day Today and Brass Eye, is so entrenched that you can forget that his work also has a whimsical sitcom aspect – look at his contributions to th...

DIRECTED BY Chris Morris

STARRING Riz Ahmed, Adeel Akhtar, Kayvan Novak, Nigel Lindsay

Chris Morris’ reputation as a fearless satirist, forged by The Day Today and Brass Eye, is so entrenched that you can forget that his work also has a whimsical sitcom aspect – look at his contributions to the amusing but insubstantial Nathan Barley and The IT Crowd.

Four Lions, his long-anticipated comedy set amid the 21st century jihad, is – perhaps surprisingly – spiritual kin to these latter efforts. Though the humour is grim, it is essentially gentle. Morris and the film’s writers – Peep Show creators Jesse Armstrong and Sam Bain – depict the modern holy warrior as hapless rather than evil, more to be pitied than blamed.

They have half a point. Amid the hysteria that’s surrounded the subject since September 11, 2001, the great unsayable has been that most terrorism is rubbish – planned by idiots, executed by morons. Such notable atrocities as 9/11, 7/7, Bali or Madrid were distinguished as much by their competence as their body counts – bids to smite the infidel have more often ended with the would-be perpetrator getting lamped by a Glaswegian baggage-handler or hauled off an aircraft with singed underpants.

Four Lions conjures a British terror cell of exactly this species of dunderhead. Omar (Riz Ahmed) is ringleader in the way that a one-eyed man ends up ruling a kingdom of blind men. Faisal (Adeel Akhtar) is a descendent of Pike, Manuel and Baldrick, harmless and decent, but paralysed by stupidity. Waj (Kayvan Novak) is the dim, enthusiastic cannon fodder necessary to any paramilitary outfit. Barry (Nigel Lindsay) is a white English convert to Islam, inevitably the most boneheadedly militant of the lot. Barry represents that gratingly persistent strain of the Left that will adopt any position, however foolish or disgusting, so long as it pits them in self-righteous opposition to their own country and culture. A few decades ago, a posturing buffoon like Barry would have been a Communist – and the inspiration for Wolfie Smith (Barry’s self-appointed role as “Founder of the Islamic State of Tinsley” is surely a tip of the turban to Citizen Smith’s Tooting Popular Front).

The characters are well acted, and astutely written. Especial care is taken not to turn Omar into a cartoon villain – in an obvious tug on our perplexed memories of the largely ordinary, even admirable, suburban lives of the 7/7 bombers, Omar is depicted as a doting father, adoring husband and genial chap, even to the extent of teasing more devout Muslims about their humourless piety. More crucially, he’s also a stock British comedy lead, believing himself – like Captain Mainwaring, Basil Fawlty and Edmund Blackadder – denied his glorious destiny by the imbecility of his colleagues, which in turn blinds him to his own failings.

The quartet journey to London, intending to visit righteous carnage upon the Marathon. What unfolds is funny without quite being hilarious, tragic without quite being affecting, the satire a series of gentle swipes which never quite threaten to rattle their targets. Perhaps Morris thinks it is statement enough merely to make any sort of satirical foray at Islam, however tentative. Perhaps he’s nervous. He’d have good reasons for this, of course. Theo Van Gogh, approximately Morris’ Dutch equivalent, made a more explicitly confrontational film about Islam in 2004, and was subsequently executed for his troubles on an Amsterdam footpath. And Van Gogh is scarcely alone in having been murdered or threatened with death for having the temerity to ask questions about what Muslims choose to believe.

For whatever reason, Four Lions rather shies away from considering what terrorists think, and concentrates its mockery on what they do. This does result in some moments of priceless slapstick, most of them involving the nice but pathologically dim Faisal, with his useless disguises and cunning plans for exploding crows. The difficulty, whether it was Morris’ intention or not, is that it all feels a bit affectionate, as if the subjects of Four Lions – and, by extension, all putative terrorists – are merely over-excited larrikins who’ll grow out of it eventually.

The single most venomous jab in the film is made at the British security services. In the climactic scenes, a confused police sniper misidentifies a suspect, brings down the wrong man, and says, “It must be the target, I shot it.” In itself, this is a brilliant line of Joseph Heller-esque circular logic. In context, this obvious reference to the death of Jean Charles de Menezes feels like cheap equivalence. The police officers who shot Menezes did not wake that morning intending to kill an innocent person. The bombers of 7/7, and their would-be comrades of 21/7, woke intending to kill as many as possible. Someone possessed of Morris’ rugged moral compass should be able to perceive the difference.

That said, Morris does deserve credit for resisting the common temptation to blame the victims of Islamist terrorism – there’s little credence given here to witless “root causes” theories with which many of Barry’s western fellow travellers excuse the depravities of terrorists. When Omar explains his plans for martyrdom to his son, he does so with clumsy, childish reference to The Lion King, and the internal ideological dicussions of the quartet are an (inevitable) echo of the deliberations of the People’s Front of Judea. There’s also a deft dig at the ridiculous post-9/11 conspirazoid tendency, in Barry’s idea for the cell to blow up a mosque to frame their enemies.

At the heart of Four Lions is the idea that we should perceive fanatics as humans, rather than demons. There is much to be said for this: it’s arguable that it would have been more constructive, after 9/11, for western press and polity to characterise Osama bin-Laden as a dingbat loser ranting in a cave, rather than an omnipotent bearded Blofeld. But by refusing to be quite as bitter and bleak as it could, and probably should, have been, Four Lions ends up feeling weirdly trivial, ultimately little more – though certainly no less – than a diverting knockabout farce. Damningly faint praise to find oneself singing about a Chris Morris film about terrorism.

ANDREW MUELLER

BAND OF HORSES – INFINITE ARMS

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Beyond the six-string fireworks and an ever-present vocal twang, the current generation of Southern rockers shares one common element with its wild and woolly forebears: the capacity for attaining a sort of spiritual elevation within passages of inspired musical interaction. You can find plenty of these goosebump moments in the work of Kentucky’s My Morning Jacket and Tennessee’s Kings Of Leon – and now in that of South Carolina’s Band Of Horses. On this third LP, Ben Bridwell’s band leave the lo-fi balladry and middling indie-rock rave-ups of their previous two LPs in the dust. That’s not to say these LPs didn’t have their stellar moments: “The Great Salt Lake” and “Funeral” from their 2006 debut, Everything All The Time, and “Is There a Ghost” from ’07’s Cease To Begin were searching visits to a rich Southern rock heritage. With Infinite Arms, however, Bridwell has surpassed himself. Not only has he re-connected with his Southern heart, relocating to South Carolina after starting the band in Seattle, but he’s also surrounded himself with a stable unit: four talented, like-minded players in drummer Creighton Barrett, keyboard player Ryan Monroe, lead guitarist Tyler Ramsey and bassist Bill Reynolds. The first two are on their second Horses record, the other pair joined during touring behind Cease To Begin. Maybe more important, though, are the developments in Bridwell’s songwriting, as he interweaves the elliptical verbiage of his past records with detail of an intensely visual nature. First track “Factory” opens in a hotel lobby, leading to brief eye contact with a stranger in the elevator, a stop at the snack machine and other mundane details that take on an air of mystery through musical context, conjuring up the sort of hyper-reality found in William Eggleston’s photographs. Like those pictures, the songs hint at storylines whose specifics you are left to piece together. Musical and visual juxtapositions permeate the album, taking centre stage on “NW Apt”, a nostalgic, atypically straight-forward series of aural snapshots picturing various places where Bridwell crashed while living in Seattle and touring the region; they’re paired with pile-driving drums and bludgeoning guitars, ending with the hum of an amp hanging in the air like a receding memory. On “Laredo”, the band deftly fuses the buoyancy of The Byrds’ “Feel A Whole Lot Better” with the jutting-jawed physicality of Neil Young and Crazy Horse’s “Cinnamon Girl” – yet the performance is bracingly modern in its aggression. First single “Compliments” features the close harmonies of Ramsey and Monroe over a “London Calling” strut, and they turn up again in close-mic’ed intimacy on Ramsey’s candlelit ballad “Evening Kitchen” and on the Morgan-penned country-rocker, “Older”. One of the album’s defining aspects is its vivid sense of the American expanse, stretching northward and westward from Bridwell’s Carolina, retracing his own journeys. The title track is a dreamscape that inhabits the woodsy Northwestern terrain of Fleet Foxes, with Bridwell’s stacked harmonies stretching heavenward. “On My Way Home” resonates with SoCal buoyancy, even as it yearns for Dixie. It’s a track that’s key to the album as a whole: far-reaching, but rich in local colour, gleamingly modern, thanks to Dave Sardy’s deft mix, but steeped in tradition. And while it sees Ben Bridwell leaving his lo-fi past behind, Infinite Arms is a neoclassic landmark that you’ll need to get on vinyl. This is a record that begs to be flipped over and played again. BUD SCOPPA

Beyond the six-string fireworks and an ever-present vocal twang, the current generation of Southern rockers shares one common element with its wild and woolly forebears: the capacity for attaining a sort of spiritual elevation within passages of inspired musical interaction. You can find plenty of these goosebump moments in the work of Kentucky’s My Morning Jacket and Tennessee’s Kings Of Leon – and now in that of South Carolina’s Band Of Horses.

On this third LP, Ben Bridwell’s band leave the lo-fi balladry and middling indie-rock rave-ups of their previous two LPs in the dust. That’s not to say these LPs didn’t have their stellar moments: “The Great Salt Lake” and “Funeral” from their 2006 debut, Everything All The Time, and “Is There a Ghost” from ’07’s Cease To Begin were searching visits to a rich Southern rock heritage. With Infinite Arms, however, Bridwell has surpassed himself. Not only has he re-connected with his Southern heart, relocating to South Carolina after starting the band in Seattle, but he’s also surrounded himself with a stable unit: four talented, like-minded players in drummer Creighton Barrett, keyboard player Ryan Monroe, lead guitarist Tyler Ramsey and bassist Bill Reynolds. The first two are on their second Horses record, the other pair joined during touring behind Cease To Begin.

Maybe more important, though, are the developments in Bridwell’s songwriting, as he interweaves the elliptical verbiage of his past records with detail of an intensely visual nature. First track “Factory” opens in a hotel lobby, leading to brief eye contact with a stranger in the elevator, a stop at the snack machine and other mundane details that take on an air of mystery through musical context, conjuring up the sort of hyper-reality found in William Eggleston’s photographs. Like those pictures, the songs hint at storylines whose specifics you are left to piece together.

Musical and visual juxtapositions permeate the album, taking centre stage on “NW Apt”, a nostalgic, atypically straight-forward series of aural snapshots picturing various places where Bridwell crashed while living in Seattle and touring the region; they’re paired with pile-driving drums and bludgeoning guitars, ending with the hum of an amp hanging in the air like a receding memory.

On “Laredo”, the band deftly fuses the buoyancy of The Byrds’ “Feel A Whole Lot Better” with the jutting-jawed physicality of Neil Young and Crazy Horse’s “Cinnamon Girl” – yet the performance is bracingly modern in its aggression. First single “Compliments” features the close harmonies of Ramsey and Monroe over a “London Calling” strut, and they turn up again in close-mic’ed intimacy on Ramsey’s candlelit ballad “Evening Kitchen” and on the Morgan-penned country-rocker, “Older”.

One of the album’s defining aspects is its vivid sense of the American expanse, stretching northward and westward from Bridwell’s Carolina, retracing his own journeys. The title track is a dreamscape that inhabits the woodsy Northwestern terrain of Fleet Foxes, with Bridwell’s stacked harmonies stretching heavenward. “On My Way Home” resonates with SoCal buoyancy, even as it yearns for Dixie. It’s a track that’s key to the album as a whole: far-reaching, but rich in local colour, gleamingly modern, thanks to Dave Sardy’s deft mix, but steeped in tradition. And while it sees Ben Bridwell leaving his lo-fi past behind, Infinite Arms is a neoclassic landmark that you’ll need to get on vinyl. This is a record that begs to be flipped over and played again.

BUD SCOPPA

THE ROLLING STONES – EXILE ON MAIN STREET (DELUXE EDITION)

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As chapters in Rolling Stones mythology go, the making of Exile arrives with particular hauteur. The location: a grand manor on the Riviera (“a sunny place for shady people,” as Somerset Maugham called it). Upstairs, a revolving salon of celebrities and hangers-on. Below, a muggy, basement studio presided over by a junked-out Keith Richards. This was the crucible where the Stones would alchemise their masterpiece, an 18-track distillation of blues, soul, country, gospel and rock, all shot through with the Stones’ brand of carnality, vitriol and (occasionally) nobility. While the sessions at Villa Nellcôte provided Exile with its core material and dense, crepuscular atmosphere, the album was the result of two years’ of sessions, stretching from London in 1970 to LA in early 1972, and called on a small army of session players to augment the five itinerant Stones. In particular, the female chorus added in the lengthy overdubbing sessions in LA helped to give a moody, gospel feel to several tracks. With the release of this deluxe edition, the time frame of Exile’s creation expands some 37 years, since the 10 bonus tracks on a second CD include several that have added new guitars and vocals to the original templates. There’s a degree of confusion about how much tinkering has gone on (even speculation as to whether Mick Taylor returned to overdub some lead guitar) but in effect, there’s now half of a new/old Stones album on offer. The joins between ancient and modern are not always easy to spot, though the cleaner sound of the opening tracks suggest the touch of producer Don Was, who was brought in to make sense of the jumble of old tapes, while versions of existing Exile numbers are clearly blueprints. “Good Time Woman” – an early version of “Tumbling Dice” – typifies the Stones’ creative process, being a routine Chuck Berry work-out before Jagger wrote proper lyrics and the female chorus was added to what became Exile’s only hit single. “All Down The Line” (not on the album but likely to be offered as an iTunes extra) followed the same arc, from the boogie with bodged lyrics that’s on show here to the driving rocker that saw release. “Loving Cup” arrives with the same lyric sheet but a more languid, countrified tinge, while “Soul Survivor” has near identical musical backing but vocals by Keith Richards (in rather fine voice). With Mick Jagger yet to arrive from Paris and Bianca to pen his lines, Keith whines entertaining gibberish like “I may be a fool, but you had my tool” and “with my big blind eye and my swollen nose”. Other intact survivals include “Title 5”, a bluesy instrumental with fuzz guitar – almost the Stones’ only surf record – and “Aladdin Story”, a cousin to “Paint It, Black” and one of Jagger’s put-down songs (“You think your love is all I crave/But I have better things to do than be your slave”). It might even predate the Nellcôte sessions. “Dancing In The Light”, also has the ring of an undoctored original. An almost jaunty piece with lots of stinging guitar, it lacks the haunted quality that would have found it a place on Exile’s final cut. “Follow The River”, a bust-up song whose slow, sweeping piano recalls “Wild Horses”, has a brand new vocal and strings and is misplaced here, its mawkish balladry having more in common with Elton John than the murky atmospherics of Exile. “Pass The Wine” would also seem to belong to some other time and place, maybe Los Angeles, being a funky, Latinate strut with Fender Rhodes piano and cooing female chorus. Wherever it originated, it’s pretty fine. “Plundered My Soul” has the same lumbering tempo and chord structures as “Tumbling Dice” though without a convincing hook, and sounds as if it’s been airbrushed up to date. More intriguing is “I’m Not Signifying”, a slow, dirty blues with Jagger delivering mumbled lines about “graveyard pearls” in an outrageous nasal Southern accent and musing “have you ever had the feeling baby, you’ve been here before?”. Some suspiciously bright guitar suggest it’s been tweaked. As for Jagger’s vocals, we know that he was prone to hamming it up on country numbers like “Sweet Virginia” – Mick never shared Keith’s regard for George Jones and Merle Haggard. Exile itself remains the tour de force it’s been since release in May ’72. Although it was an instant best-seller, the divergent moods of its 18 numbers (albeit sequenced into four themed vinyl sides) took some digesting, and critical reaction was initially lukewarm. With only “Tumbling Dice” as a hit, Exile’s numbers also proved less amenable to on-the-road treatment than the standouts from Beggars Banquet, Let It Bleed and Sticky Fingers. Where the sharp pop edges and mannered attitudes of those albums have not always aged well, Exile’s tradition-steeped sound has matured, whether it’s the jagged blues of Slim Harpo’s “Hip Shake” and Robert Johnson’s “Stop Breaking Down” or the spooky gospel of “Just Want To See His Face”. Beneath the murky sound and muddy vocals there’s a musical chemistry at work; never again would Richards and Mick Taylor provide such elegant foils for each other, Keith producing killer riffs, Taylor hitting sparky solos. With Jagger, Charlie Watts and Bill Wyman all semi-attendees, many of the tracks in Nellcôte were hatched by the coterie of Richards, Taylor (often doubling on bass), Bobby Keys and producer Jimmy Miller (on drums). Perhaps another reason for Exile’s endurance is that its fevered atmosphere often seems to describe the Stones and their milieu. Alongside Keith’s signature autobiography, “Happy”, and Jagger’s cutting portrait of Brian Jones on “Shine A Light” (“A smile on your face and tear right in your eye”) there are numerous tastes of moneyed decadence refracted in lines like “Oh what a beautiful buzz”, “diamonds, vaseline and disease”, “kissing cunt in Cannes”. Beyond its musical prowess, Exile is also a snapshot of the beautiful and the damned, a piece of 20th-century mythology that’s lost none of its power to seduce. NEIL SPENCER

As chapters in Rolling Stones mythology go, the making of Exile arrives with particular hauteur.

The location: a grand manor on the Riviera (“a sunny place for shady people,” as Somerset Maugham called it). Upstairs, a revolving salon of celebrities and hangers-on. Below, a muggy, basement studio presided over by a junked-out Keith Richards. This was the crucible where the Stones would alchemise their masterpiece, an 18-track distillation of blues, soul, country, gospel and rock, all shot through with the Stones’ brand of carnality, vitriol and (occasionally) nobility.

While the sessions at Villa Nellcôte provided Exile with its core material and dense, crepuscular atmosphere, the album was the result of two years’ of sessions, stretching from London in 1970 to LA in early 1972, and called on a small army of session players to augment the five itinerant Stones. In particular, the female chorus added in the lengthy overdubbing sessions in LA helped to give a moody, gospel feel to several tracks.

With the release of this deluxe edition, the time frame of Exile’s creation expands some 37 years, since the 10 bonus tracks on a second CD include several that have added new guitars and vocals to the original templates. There’s a degree of confusion about how much tinkering has gone on (even speculation as to whether Mick Taylor returned to overdub some lead guitar) but in effect, there’s now half of a new/old Stones album on offer.

The joins between ancient and modern are not always easy to spot, though the cleaner sound of the opening tracks suggest the touch of producer Don Was, who was brought in to make sense of the jumble of old tapes, while versions of existing Exile numbers are clearly blueprints.

“Good Time Woman” – an early version of “Tumbling Dice” – typifies the Stones’ creative process, being a routine Chuck Berry work-out before Jagger wrote proper lyrics and the female chorus was added to what became Exile’s only hit single. “All Down The Line” (not on the album but likely to be offered as an iTunes extra) followed the same arc, from the boogie with bodged lyrics that’s on show here to the driving rocker that saw release. “Loving Cup” arrives with the same lyric sheet but a more languid, countrified tinge, while “Soul Survivor” has near identical musical backing but vocals by Keith Richards (in rather fine voice). With Mick Jagger yet to arrive from Paris and Bianca to pen his lines, Keith whines entertaining gibberish like “I may be a fool, but you had my tool” and “with my big blind eye and my swollen nose”.

Other intact survivals include “Title 5”, a bluesy instrumental with fuzz guitar – almost the Stones’ only surf record – and “Aladdin Story”, a cousin to “Paint It, Black” and one of Jagger’s put-down songs (“You think your love is all I crave/But I have better things to do than be your slave”). It might even predate the Nellcôte sessions. “Dancing In The Light”, also has the ring of an undoctored original. An almost jaunty piece with lots of stinging guitar, it lacks the haunted quality that would have found it a place on Exile’s final cut.

“Follow The River”, a bust-up song whose slow, sweeping piano recalls “Wild Horses”, has a brand new vocal and strings and is misplaced here, its mawkish balladry having more in common with Elton John than the murky atmospherics of Exile. “Pass The Wine” would also seem to belong to some other time and place, maybe Los Angeles, being a funky, Latinate strut with Fender Rhodes piano and cooing female chorus. Wherever it originated, it’s pretty fine.

“Plundered My Soul” has the same lumbering tempo and chord structures as “Tumbling Dice” though without a convincing hook, and sounds as if it’s been airbrushed up to date. More intriguing is “I’m Not Signifying”, a slow, dirty blues with Jagger delivering mumbled lines about “graveyard pearls” in an outrageous nasal Southern accent and musing “have you ever had the feeling baby, you’ve been here before?”. Some suspiciously bright guitar suggest it’s been tweaked. As for Jagger’s vocals, we know that he was prone to hamming it up on country numbers like “Sweet Virginia” – Mick never shared Keith’s regard for George Jones and Merle Haggard.

Exile itself remains the tour de force it’s been since release in May ’72. Although it was an instant best-seller, the divergent moods of its 18 numbers (albeit sequenced into four themed vinyl sides) took some digesting, and critical reaction was initially lukewarm. With only “Tumbling Dice” as a hit, Exile’s numbers also proved less amenable to on-the-road treatment than the standouts from Beggars Banquet, Let It Bleed and Sticky Fingers. Where the sharp pop edges and mannered attitudes of those albums have not always aged well, Exile’s tradition-steeped sound has matured, whether it’s the jagged blues of Slim Harpo’s “Hip Shake” and Robert Johnson’s “Stop Breaking Down” or the spooky gospel of “Just Want To See His Face”.

Beneath the murky sound and muddy vocals there’s a musical chemistry at work; never again would Richards and Mick Taylor provide such elegant foils for each other, Keith producing killer riffs, Taylor hitting sparky solos. With Jagger, Charlie Watts and Bill Wyman all semi-attendees, many of the tracks in Nellcôte were hatched by the coterie of Richards, Taylor (often doubling on bass), Bobby Keys and producer Jimmy Miller (on drums).

Perhaps another reason for Exile’s endurance is that its fevered atmosphere often seems to describe the Stones and their milieu. Alongside Keith’s signature autobiography, “Happy”, and Jagger’s cutting portrait of Brian Jones on “Shine A Light” (“A smile on your face and tear right in your eye”) there are numerous tastes of moneyed decadence refracted in lines like “Oh what a beautiful buzz”, “diamonds, vaseline and disease”, “kissing cunt in Cannes”. Beyond its musical prowess, Exile is also a snapshot of the beautiful and the damned, a piece of 20th-century mythology that’s lost none of its power to seduce.

NEIL SPENCER

Sun Araw, Magic Lantern, Pocahaunted

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Last autumn, after I’d placed a Sun Araw track on an Uncut psych CD called "Seeing For Miles", I fell into an occasional email correspondence with Cameron Stallones, the LA musician who records under that name. Mostly, I would tell Stallones that a couple of things were being sorted out for him, and that I loved his music. In response, he would talk allusively about being an impoverished artist, and punctuate his emails with some powerfully cosmic heptalk. One phrase he used kept coming back to me, not least because I saw him deploying it in various other places around the internet. “Mind psalm, get on it,” he said. Now I have no clue what this precisely means, but as a way of articulating something profound about his muggy, psychedelic dronefunk, “Mind psalm, get on it” seems to do a better job than any number of adjectival strings I can come up with. Since I started the Wild Mercury Sound blog, Stallones’music has been something of a recurring obsession, to the degree that I’ve pretty much exhausted a certain critical vocabulary - “sweaty”, “voodoo”, “tropical”, “heat-haze” and so on – to try and describe it. But then Sun Araw records, and the way they are packaged, are full of signifiers that summon up specific imagery: dense jungle foliage and a kind of occult geometrics; ghostly images of Bo Diddley and Stevie Wonder; an album called "Beach Head"; a single, "Boat Trip", with songs called “In The Trees” and “Canopy”. Last year’s "Heavy Deeds" was an ecstatic peak of sorts, with a stinging R&B organ driving the jams into territory that recalled Dr John as well as contemporary astral travellers like Brightblack Morning Light. This month, there’s a great weight of new Stallones music on the Not Not Fun label. First up, a new Sun Araw double album called "On Patrol". “An album for heavy-steamin' late nights in the city, inter-dimensional back alleys, ghost cabs, and midnight-sweat locker rooms,” says Stallones, pitching "On Patrol" as a deep cop show soundtrack. The concept isn’t entirely obvious from the eight long tracks, though some of the fuzzed-out layering that epitomised previous Sun Araw records has been stripped back to reveal starker, though no less hypnotic, tribal head-nodders. “Conga Mind” roughly resembles Terry Riley recording at Black Ark Studios, and features the lyric, “Mind psalm, on patrol. Get on it!” It’s fantastic. As is, more or less, the new Pocahaunted album, "Make It Real". Pocahaunted made a load of records a year or two back, with the focus on a sort of gothic post-punk chantsong: their "Chains" album was a sequence of hot dirges that slowly coalesced into a great version of Fleetwood Mac’s “The Chain”. "Make It Real" is their first in a while, with a reconfigured lineup that includes Stallones (he also guested on their excellent "Passage" album). The sound is now not entirely dissimilar to Sun Araw, especially the organ, but there’s a spindly post-punk vibe here, too, coupled with the wayward vocal invocations that posit Pocahaunted as a millennial Slits. Stallones’ Sun Araw trip originally grew out of a band called Magic Lantern, who have also reconvened for a superb third album, "Platoon". This one fleshes out Stallones’ trademark grooves with a freak-out rock battery, managing to be a little heavier and hairier – the 11 minute churn of “Friendship” is like a mystical take on "Funhouse", with added Eddie Hazel - while still radiating the horizontal intensity that Stallones seems to bring to everything he becomes involved with. Mind psalm power, I guess.

Last autumn, after I’d placed a Sun Araw track on an Uncut psych CD called “Seeing For Miles”, I fell into an occasional email correspondence with Cameron Stallones, the LA musician who records under that name.

Cornershop, Lissie, Trembling Bells, Ganglians: Club Uncut @ The Great Escape, May 16 2010

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Cornershop finished Club Uncut’s final night in Brighton with a set of psychedelic mantras and gorgeous pop, topping the best bill so far. Lissie’s spirited country pop kicked things off. More downhome onstage than the diva Sony are marketing her as, her songs are heartfelt if a little hokey,...

Cornershop finished Club Uncut’s final night in Brighton with a set of psychedelic mantras and gorgeous pop, topping the best bill so far.

Wild Beasts, Teenagersintokyo, Dead Confederate, The Fiery Furnaces: Club Uncut @ The Great Escape, May 14 2010

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The hiccup of The Slits’ no-show on day one of Club Uncut’s residency at Brighton’s Great Escape didn’t dampen spirits for last night’s more typically full-on and varied affair. Teenagersintokyo look like some last, lost Malcolm McLaren project. Singer Samantha Lim, with a bowl haircut and long white dress suggesting ancient Roman aristocracy, yelps enthusiastically at the front of an almost all-girl band (the drummer’s a bloke), with more than a hint of Karen O. A cover of Hall And Oates’ “Man-Eater” is their most obvious debt to the ‘80s, their least original feature. Sheer giddy enthusiasm at being on stage together carries the day. Last year’s debut album by Athens, Georgia’s Dead Confederate, “Wrecking Ball”, didn’t make much impression on me or many others in the UK, though J Mascis is a fan (and it did make Uncut Debut Of The Month - Ed). Listening more carefully sitting on Brighton beach before the show, I suddenly realise it’s a beautifully played, fascinating set of songs, mostly about war – either the one between the States, in Iraq, or between singer-songwriter Hardy Morris and his girlfriend. After a soundcheck slightly shorter than the Mesozoic Era, reminding you that they were signed by Nirvana A&R Gary Gersh, meaning someone expects great things, they kick off at brutal pace. Morris turns out to be a flop-fringed Crispin Glover lookalike, with a voice veering between a hick whine and Eddie Vedder bass. You can’t see the drummer for clouds of hair, the bassist’s beard makes him look like he served under Jefferson, or at least with Garth Hudson, and great soul organ drives everything forward. There’s glistening detail to the playing, and “Heavy Petting” ends with them jerking round the stage in boyish bedlam. But the ear-battering volume doesn’t let in much light or shade, or allow you to hear those songs, making the excitement flatten out. Highly promising, anyway. The Fiery Furnaces’ decision last year to make their seventh album “I’m Going Away” a set of relaxed, conventional songs paid dividends. It had the easy pleasure of Motown at times. Tonight, though, Eleanor Friedberger struggles to make herself heard over music leaning more towards clattering anti-folk tales. Brother Matthew is an anonymous, quizzical presence to her side, and it feels like a missed opportunity. Wild Beasts take the stage like a band who’ve been playing their second album “Two Dancers” for many months now, sheer adrenalin taking them over the top one more time. “Really need time off,” I think I hear one of them say, but this just adds dishevelled energy to their songs’ stock of heightened romantic imagery. “Hooting & Howling” still sounds sexy and arch, and Hayden Thorpe’s divisive, mountain-high vibrato still shivers appropriately. We’re all pegged out by the finish, and Wild Beasts look ready for new challenges. As are we, when we report on Club Uncut’s last night in Brighton tomorrow. Review: NICK HASTED

The hiccup of The Slits’ no-show on day one of Club Uncut’s residency at Brighton’s Great Escape didn’t dampen spirits for last night’s more typically full-on and varied affair.

Pavement: Brixton Academy, May 13, 2010

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Searching the internet for setlists yesterday, I came across Pavement’s set from the Brixton Academy on November 20, 1999; the last time I saw them play live. That night, the setlist reveals, they played 20 songs, beginning with “Grounded” and ending with “Here”. Finally, the band trooped offstage, apart from Stephen Malkmus, who made his exit in the completely opposite direction. At some point during the aftershow party, the rumours were corroborated: Pavement had just split up. Tonight, the fourth of four at the Brixton Academy, Pavement begin again with “Grounded”, though “Here” turns up somewhere in the middle of a two-hour, 26-song set. When they finish with “Range Life”, however, Malkmus pulls the same trick he did 11 years ago, leaving the stage apart from his bandmates. It’s something, I’m told, he did the other night, too. Consequently, it’d be easy to cast Malkmus’ role in this entire Pavement reunion project as grudging, designed to raise some cash for Bob Nastanovich and to get the persistently nostalgic Scott Kannberg off his back for another few years. Plenty of reports from earlier shows suggested that Malkmus was at his most diffident and uninterested, messing about rather than taking the gig seriously. Pavement always messed about, though, albeit some members more than others; that was part fo the point. And apart from a bit of nonchalant guitar-throwing during Kannberg’s songs, and that (surely wry) departure, Malkmus actually appears more engaged than he often did during Pavement’s latter years. He has, frankly, good reason to be. For one thing, Pavement are arguably now the musicians he always wanted them to be, so that this epic show is generally tighter and heavier than before (Did “Elevate Me Later” used to sound so full and imposing?), without losing any of the erratic charm. They don’t make a single false start until the 16th song, for God’s sake. What’s more, these shows must feel like a vindication of sorts. While their ambivalent relationship to fame mitigated against some success, the rapturous acclaim accorded Pavement here must make them feel immensely proud; they really were, it transpires, one of the best and most influential bands of the ‘90s. Influencing great scads of indie is one thing, of course, and seeing the money is quite another. But one of the many wonderful and sometimes emotional things about tonight’s gig is that I’m reminded what a robust, classical rock band Pavement were, albeit a cherishably eccentric one. As Malkmus’s subsequent solo career has proved, it’s a scholarly love of arcane rock that underpins a lot of his ideas, and that illuminates some of the best songs in a hugely satisfying set: “The Hexx”, “Fight This Generation”, a sublime, pedal-steel-assisted “Father To A Sister Of Thought”. I’m also reminded that, while all those indie bands studied Pavement so hard, one of the many things they failed to appreciate was the importance of Bob Nastanovich. Nastanovich’s second-kit drumming and shouting can seem extraneous on paper, but live it’s integral to Pavement’s drive and dynamism. More often than not, it feels like “Unfair” is my favourite Pavement song, and it sounds that way here, not least because Nastanovich, prowling the stage like an unlikely rapper and bawling with gusto, is its fulcrum. More often than not, it also feels like “Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain” might just be the best Pavement album, and those songs, so often concerned with fame, longevity and expediency, seem especially poignant in the context of a revival. To be honest, though, sentiment possibly clouds judgment on a night when nostalgia may well have got the better of me: it all sounded great. How does everyone else feel?

Searching the internet for setlists yesterday, I came across Pavement’s set from the Brixton Academy on November 20, 1999; the last time I saw them play live.

Avi Buffalo, Summer Camp, The Ruby Suns – Club Uncut @ The Great Escape, Brighton, May 13, 2010

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Club Uncut has decamped to the seaside for the duration of The Great Escape, the three-day festival in which mostly new bands fill Brighton’s plentiful pubs and clubs. Our weekend starts, though, with a disappointment, when The Slits are a late cancellation, leaving a contingent of Northern Irish girls I meet here specifically to see them in a mood of gloomy resentment. “Europe’s really sick – California sick,” clarifies Long Beach native Avigdor Zahner-Isenberg giddily, as the band he’s named Avi Buffalo take the stage. Sub Pop are more excited by these new signings than they have been by anything for a while, and Zahner-Isenberg, a 19-year-old skate-kid, lives up to the building hype tonight. His band are in a classic ‘90s US indie mould, the single “What’s In It For” recalling Pavement at their “Cut Your Hair” poppiest, while red-cardiganed keyboardist (and Zahner-Isenberg’s on-off girlfriend) Rebecca Cooper helps suggest the warm nostalgic reveries of early eels, when every other song sounded like the "Hill Street Blues" theme. Drummer Sheridan Riley is still at school, visibly concentrating on her task like a challenging exam, adding to Avi Buffalo’s guileless charm. “No one could make you lose faith/ Unless for someone you love,” Zahner-Isenberg sings in his controlled yelp on “Jessica”, and his songs’ twisted wordiness and heavy romance, hard to entirely unpick, should ensure a cult following at least. The crowd’s cheers indicate something more. “We’re not The Slits,” Summer Camp’s bespectacled, sideburned guitarist/keyboardist says, helpfully keeping score. In truth, their first song sounds far more like A-Ha’s “Take On Me”, and their emphasis on evocatively antique Korg synths completes the retro-fitted ‘80s feel of their somewhat conventional ballads. The singer (the band are keeping their names anonymous, aiming at mystery), is a red-lipsticked brunette in head-to-toe leopard-skin, adding some glamour, but it’s the songs that could do with a little more thought. The Ruby Suns are Flight Of The Conchords-approved Kiwis, apart from leader Ryan McPhun, a Californian who seems to have adopted the latter’s deadpan unhipness, actually saying, “Cheers...big ears” by way of thanks to the enthusiastic crowd still packing the Pavilion Theatre at gone midnight when The Cribs, Johnny Marr and all, are playing next door. The warm, meandering psychedelia sometimes evident on excellent third album "Fight Softly" is replaced by South Seas exotica, and slammed, part-programmed kettle-drum chimes, essaying a sort of Pacific funk. Beats elsewhere veer between “Tomorrow Never Knows” and Afropop, and there are Beach Boys-style high harmonies too. The Ruby Suns finish with a touching tribute to the current issue of Uncut itself. “You could say this is a magazine cover, as much as a cover song,” McPhun explains, before an impromptu take on our current cover star Kate Bush’s “Running Up That Hill”, in which his vocals phase and crumple like backward-running, chewed-up tape. Tonight, Slits-style mishaps aside, Teenagersintokyo, Dead Confederate, Fiery Furnaces and Wild Beasts are all due on the bill. More on that tomorrow. REVIEW: NICK HASTED

Club Uncut has decamped to the seaside for the duration of The Great Escape, the three-day festival in which mostly new bands fill Brighton’s plentiful pubs and clubs. Our weekend starts, though, with a disappointment, when The Slits are a late cancellation, leaving a contingent of Northern Irish girls I meet here specifically to see them in a mood of gloomy resentment.