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Morrissey launches verbal attack on Damien Hirst

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Morrissey has verbally attacked the artist Damien Hirst for the way he uses dead animals in his work. In an article for Interview Magazine, where Morrissey interviewed his friend, the artist Linder Sterling, the singer said Hirst - whose art has included a dead cow and calf cut into pieces and put ...

Morrissey has verbally attacked the artist Damien Hirst for the way he uses dead animals in his work.

In an article for Interview Magazine, where Morrissey interviewed his friend, the artist Linder Sterling, the singer said Hirst – whose art has included a dead cow and calf cut into pieces and put in a glass container – should have his head “kept in a bag”.

Speaking to Sterling, Morrissey said: “I dislike the ‘use’ of animals in art, such as in the work of Damien Hirst. But in your latest performance piece, ‘Your Actions Are My Dreams’, you have a woman serenely sitting atop a calmly satisfied horse, which is, of course, alive and healthy. Do you agree that Hirst‘s head should be kept in a bag for the way he’s utilised – and sold – dead animals?”

Sterling appeared to agree with Morrissey‘s sentiment, saying:

“Dead butterflies, cows, horses, humans, sheep and sharks – it reads like the inventory of a funerary Noah. How many halved calves suspended in formaldehyde does the world need? To my way of thinking, none.”

Morrissey met Sterling in Manchester in 1976, and later wrote The Smiths‘Cemetery Gates’ lyrics about their friendship.

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

Teenage Fanclub announce UK tour

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Teenage Fanclub are to tour the UK tour this May and June. The band will play eight dates on the jaunt, plus a show at London's KOKO as part of the Camden Crawl festival on May 1. They are also set to release a new album, 'Shadows', later this year. Teenage Fanclub play: Manchester Academy 2 (May...

Teenage Fanclub are to tour the UK tour this May and June.

The band will play eight dates on the jaunt, plus a show at London‘s KOKO as part of the Camden Crawl festival on May 1. They are also set to release a new album, ‘Shadows’, later this year.

Teenage Fanclub play:

Manchester Academy 2 (May 27)

Sheffield Leadmill (28)

Aberdeen Warehouse (June 1)

O2 ABC Glasgow (2)

Edinburgh Liquid Rooms (3)

Leeds Cockpit (4)

O2 Academy Bristol (6)

O2 Academy Birmingham (7)

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

Michael Jackson’s estate signs ‘biggest record deal’ ever

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Michael Jackson's estate have signed what is reputedly the worlds biggest record deal with Sony BMG. The label has agreed a $200 million deal with Jackson's estate to release ten 'new' albums over a seven-year period, with at least one of the albums to contain previously unreleased music. The cont...

Michael Jackson‘s estate have signed what is reputedly the worlds biggest record deal with Sony BMG.

The label has agreed a $200 million deal with Jackson‘s estate to release ten ‘new’ albums over a seven-year period, with at least one of the albums to contain previously unreleased music.

The contract could rise by a further $50 million (£33 million) if certain conditions are met, reports BBC News.

Rumours have long circulated about the amount of unreleased material Jackson had supposedly recorded before his death in June 2009. There has also been speculation that Jackson collaborated with major artists such as Lenny Kravitz on unreleased material.

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

Loscil: “Endless Falls”

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Quite a good run for the Kranky label of late, with a bunch of albums I’ve enjoyed a lot from Ken Camden, Jonas Reinhardt and Disappears. For the past week or so, though, I’ve been really taken with “Endless Falls” by Loscil, discreetly asserting itself as maybe the pick of the bunch. Loscil, it transpires, is the work of a guy from Vancouver called Scott Morgan, who also purportedly drums for Dan Bejar’s indie band, Destroyer. If Wikipedia is to be believed, “Endless Falls” is something like his eighth album, though while the name’s vaguely familiar, I can’t actively recall hearing any of his previous music. I should probably fix that, because “Endless Falls” is a hugely beguiling record. There are elements here that aren’t, to be honest, immediately appealing: the slightly corny sleeve image of raindrops on windscreen; the affinities with a certain school of crypto-classical music, which encompasses plenty of stuff that I like (Max Richter, say, some of Johann Johannsson’s early work) but also a good few things I’m less keen on, which have the whiff of Sigur Ros about them (some of Johann Johannsson’s more recent work, for a start); a somewhat self-conscious last track. And, yes, the title track does start with heavy rain and sombre violins, but stick with this one. Soon enough, Loscil starts moving into more abstract, ambient territory, where beats and crackle prove subtly dominant. Some tracks, like the superb “Lake Orchard”, for instance, are close in spirit and substance to Wolfgang Voigt’s Gas, and consequently wouldn’t sound out of place on one of Kompakt’s “Pop Ambient” comps. Other pieces, such as “Shallow Water Blackout”, “Showers Of Ink” and “Dub For Cascadia”, remind me more of a Jan Jellinek or Farben album from the early Noughties, or something from the same period on Mille Plateaux. It’s a tremendously engaging take on minimalism, and when the classical aspirations occasionally recur, they’re gently diced up in a manner which recalls, perhaps, Murcof’s digital attempts to reconfigure the sacred spaces of Arvo Part. Finally, there’s “The Making Of Grief Point”, which features some more impressive looming music, but also the (deliberately?) portentous pensées of Dan Bejar. Far be it from me to criticise someone for pretention, but I’m not entirely convinced that Morgan’s music is improved by having someone awkwardly intone, "I have lost interest in music: it is horrible," and "The answer to the making of grief point is picnic baskets filled with blood," over the top of it. At least he had the sense to pack the track away at the back.

Quite a good run for the Kranky label of late, with a bunch of albums I’ve enjoyed a lot from Ken Camden, Jonas Reinhardt and Disappears. For the past week or so, though, I’ve been really taken with “Endless Falls” by Loscil, discreetly asserting itself as maybe the pick of the bunch.

Public Image Ltd to record first album in almost 20 years

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Public Image Ltd look set to record their first album for almost 20 years after completing their forthcoming US tour. John Lydon says the reunited band will fund the record from money raised on the tour, and possibly record it at his home studio in Los Angeles. "We've got no backing – no record ...

Public Image Ltd look set to record their first album for almost 20 years after completing their forthcoming US tour.

John Lydon says the reunited band will fund the record from money raised on the tour, and possibly record it at his home studio in Los Angeles.

“We’ve got no backing – no record company, no sponsors, nothing like that,” Lydon told Billboard. “The only way we can make money is the touring, and then we can make a new album. It’s sort of like the old days of PiL, when the [Sex] Pistols went kaput; I had to scrimp and scrape out of my own pocket. Not much has changed.”

Lydon added that he’s been busy writing new material for the album.

“I never stop writing. Most of my influences have never really come from a musical act. It tends to be things like the poetic beat of a newscast. There’s a rhythm to the way it’s laid out. Movies can do that. Shakespeare and good poetry does that, and a bloody good book does that, or just a long walk.”

Public Image Ltd have not released a studio album since 1992’s ‘That What Is Not’.

The band kick off their US tour at the Coachella festival on April 16.

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

Noel Gallagher to be joined by Mani at first post-Oasis gigs

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Noel Gallagher's first gigs since leaving Oasis last August will see him joined by Primal Scream and former Stone Roses bassist Mani, and a string section. Gallagher is set to play two gigs in aid of Teenage Cancer Trust at London's Royal Albert Hall on March 25 and 26. In an interview with Talksp...

Noel Gallagher‘s first gigs since leaving Oasis last August will see him joined by Primal Scream and former Stone Roses bassist Mani, and a string section.

Gallagher is set to play two gigs in aid of Teenage Cancer Trust at London‘s Royal Albert Hall on March 25 and 26.

In an interview with Talksport radio yesterday (March 14), Mani said he would be joining Gallagher for the shows, while orchestral group Wired Strings have also confirmed themselves for the gigs.

Meanwhile, Liam Gallagher has spoken out about why he didn’t thank Noel when picking up Oasis‘ award for Best Album of 30 Years at this year’s Brit Awards for ‘(What’s The Story) Morning Glory?’.

Liam told blog Stopcryingyourheartout.com that he was trying to get his former bandmates more recognition by leaving out Noel, who wrote all the songs on the album.

“I’m sick of it all being about me and Noel,” he said. “The last couple of months has pretty much been all about me and him so I thought it was only right to mention the other lads who played on the album and the best fans in the world.”

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

LAURA MARLING – I CAN SPEAK BECAUSE I CAN

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2009 must have been a strange year for Laura Marling. Although she didn't release anything herself, she watched her backing band Mumford & Sons outflank the rest of the nu-folk flock and break through to the mainstream with a formula that eschewed rustic introspection in favour of something closer to Coldplay with mandolins. She also found her love life dragged into the public eye, with the fall-out from her break-up with Charlie Fink of Noah And The Whale splattered all over his band's endearingly maudlin second album, The First Days Of Spring (sample song titles: "My Broken Heart", "I Have Nothing"). In fairness, Marling actually came out of the episode pretty well, if she is indeed the girl whose voice Fink claimed could "summon the angels" and whose beauty could "waken the dead". Marling limits her response here to the song "Blackberry Stone", in which she gently admonishes an ex-lover (let's assume it's Fink, because everybody else will): "You never did learn to let the little things go... You never did learn to let little people grow". She does, however, offer closure: "I whisper that I love this night... To your soul as it floats out of the window." Accompanied by acoustic guitar and viola, joined only by piano and lightly brushed drums for the final chorus, it's actually a rare moment of clarity on a "coming-of-age" album where the now 20-year-old Marling - having traded in her waifish blonde locks for a stern, schoolmistress look - seems to be trying a bit too hard to prove herself. Her lyrics are often bound up in unnecessary layers of allegory and riddle, making it hard to gauge the emotional intent beneath. She starts off promisingly on "Devil's Spoke", sounding unusually fervent as she imagines being "Eyes to eyes, nose to nose/Ripping off each others' clothes". Second track, "Made By Maid" is equally fine, but for opposite reasons, Laura retelling an old English folk tale, letting the words tumble out ahead of the beat with charming nonchalance. It's almost as if the quieter tracks allow her to relax, while the full band numbers - fleshed out rather over-eagerly by a group containing several Mumfords and a Whale - subdue and constrain her. "Alpha Swallows" is a rather oppressive one-chord wallow about wanting to escape from London and the clutches of a destructive relationship. It's followed by "Goodbye England (Covered In Snow)", a paean to the Hampshire countryside that Laura instead considers home. It's a pretty song, but the sentiment veers towards the twee. Elsewhere "Hope In The Air" and "Darkness Descends" juggle handfuls of folk song cliches (mute prophets, lighting candles, leaving when the sun comes up) without anchoring them to strong enough melodies. We're not currently short on folky female singer-singwriters, but where Marling has the edge on most of her contemporaries is in the vocal department. Throughout the album, her voice is startling in its casual power and versatility, its Arcadian purity bolstered by a knowing pop confidence. Charlie Fink might have been right about its ability to summon angels. Now she just needs a set of songs that are as compelling as her voice; maybe the fact that she's already announced another new album for later this year is a tacit admission that she's not yet the finished article. Sam Richards Q&A LAURA MARLING Which song on the LP are you proudest of? Perhaps "Made By Maid" - it's the truest folk song I've ever written because it's a story from start to finish. I heard this old folk tale about a child being abandoned in the woods on the day it was born, and having to raise itself, then years later finding itself in a town and realising it's totally alien from everyone else. I thought that was a very interesting analogy for how the way you're brought up and what you know is the only thing that can define you. Are you more comfortable using fable and analogy that writing directly about your own experience? I don't think I'd ever write a word-for-word story about something that happened in my life - nobody needs or wants to hear about that. If I were to write completely first-hand I don't think I'd be expressing anything other than what I know has already happened. Why are you planning to release another album so soon after this one? It's been a while since the first album, so there's been a lot of time to write songs. We're half in the process of recording the next one. There was a kind of cut-off after the last song on this album, "I Speak Because I Can" - it felt like a natural end, and the songs written after it just seemed to be different, so they're on the next album. INTERVIEW: SAM RICHARDS

2009 must have been a strange year for Laura Marling.

Although she didn’t release anything herself, she watched her backing band Mumford & Sons outflank the rest of the nu-folk flock and break through to the mainstream with a formula that eschewed rustic introspection in favour of something closer to Coldplay with mandolins.

She also found her love life dragged into the public eye, with the fall-out from her break-up with Charlie Fink of Noah And The Whale splattered all over his band’s endearingly maudlin second album, The First Days Of Spring (sample song titles: “My Broken Heart”, “I Have Nothing”). In fairness, Marling actually came out of the episode pretty well, if she is indeed the girl whose voice Fink claimed could “summon the angels” and whose beauty could “waken the dead”.

Marling limits her response here to the song “Blackberry Stone“, in which she gently admonishes an ex-lover (let’s assume it’s Fink, because everybody else will): “You never did learn to let the little things go… You never did learn to let little people grow”. She does, however, offer closure: “I whisper that I love this night… To your soul as it floats out of the window.”

Accompanied by acoustic guitar and viola, joined only by piano and lightly brushed drums for the final chorus, it’s actually a rare moment of clarity on a “coming-of-age” album where the now 20-year-old Marling – having traded in her waifish blonde locks for a stern, schoolmistress look – seems to be trying a bit too hard to prove herself. Her lyrics are often bound up in unnecessary layers of allegory and riddle, making it hard to gauge the emotional intent beneath.

She starts off promisingly on “Devil’s Spoke”, sounding unusually fervent as she imagines being “Eyes to eyes, nose to nose/Ripping off each others’ clothes”. Second track, “Made By Maid” is equally fine, but for opposite reasons, Laura retelling an old English folk tale, letting the words tumble out ahead of the beat with charming nonchalance. It’s almost as if the quieter tracks allow her to relax, while the full band numbers – fleshed out rather over-eagerly by a group containing several Mumfords and a Whale – subdue and constrain her.

“Alpha Swallows” is a rather oppressive one-chord wallow about wanting to escape from London and the clutches of a destructive relationship. It’s followed by “Goodbye England (Covered In Snow)”, a paean to the Hampshire countryside that Laura instead considers home. It’s a pretty song, but the sentiment veers towards the twee. Elsewhere “Hope In The Air” and “Darkness Descends” juggle handfuls of folk song cliches (mute prophets, lighting candles, leaving when the sun comes up) without anchoring them to strong enough melodies.

We’re not currently short on folky female singer-singwriters, but where Marling has the edge on most of her contemporaries is in the vocal department. Throughout the album, her voice is startling in its casual power and versatility, its Arcadian purity bolstered by a knowing pop confidence. Charlie Fink might have been right about its ability to summon angels. Now she just needs a set of songs that are as compelling as her voice; maybe the fact that she’s already announced another new album for later this year is a tacit admission that she’s not yet the finished article.

Sam Richards

Q&A LAURA MARLING

Which song on the LP are you proudest of?

Perhaps “Made By Maid” – it’s the truest folk song I’ve ever written because it’s a story from start to finish. I heard this old folk tale about a child being abandoned in the woods on the day it was born, and having to raise itself, then years later finding itself in a town and realising it’s totally alien from everyone else. I thought that was a very interesting analogy for how the way you’re brought up and what you know is the only thing that can define you.

Are you more comfortable using fable and analogy that writing directly about your own experience?

I don’t think I’d ever write a word-for-word story about something that happened in my life – nobody needs or wants to hear about that. If I were to write completely first-hand I don’t think I’d be expressing anything other than what I know has already happened.

Why are you planning to release another album so soon after this one?

It’s been a while since the first album, so there’s been a lot of time to write songs. We’re half in the process of recording the next one. There was a kind of cut-off after the last song on this album, “I Speak Because I Can” – it felt like a natural end, and the songs written after it just seemed to be different, so they’re on the next album.

INTERVIEW: SAM RICHARDS

DRIVE-BY TRUCKERS – THE BIG TO-DO

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When he afterwards fetched up in New York, Bob Dylan liked to tell people he'd arrived there via a stint doing who knows what in a circus he'd run away from home to join, in search of adventure and the roustabout life. It was no doubt typical of many boys in the long ago days of Dylan's youth, growing up in places far from anywhere, to dream of fleeing the uneventful ho-hum of smalltown existence for a new world of gallivanting itinerancy, a life on the open road and the buck and roar of the fabled Big Top. It was one way, at least, of finding out what the country was made of. Growing up much later, down there in Alabama, restless teenage friends Patterson Hood and Mike Cooley shared a similar roaming yen for the endless highway and the horizon beyond it. Of course, by then, the lure of the Big Top had been replaced for them, and the many like them, with the beckoning holler of rock'n'roll, otherwise known in Drive-By Trucker mythology as The Big To-Do. Hood and Cooley signed up for it as soon as the recruitment office was open and from the start were in for the long haul, whatever the cost. Nearly 20 years after hitting, as they say, the road, they're still on it. It's often been a rough ride. They've had their share of set-backs, seen a lot of the same hard times as the people they've played their music to and for, with many comings and goings in the line-ups around them. The most recent departure, in 2007, after five years with the band, was the talented Jason Isbell, who brought to their already formidable repertoire knock-out numbers like "Outfit" and "Danko/Manuel", highlights of Decoration Day (2003) and The Dirty South (2004). Isbell's leaving, after 2006's A Blessing And A Curse, during an especially troubled time for the group, could have been a mortal blow. But they rallied, as they always have, driven as they are by the laudable conviction that as well as entertaining, their songs have something worth saying about more than merely this and that, like America and the turmoil therein, songs that have given voice to what Hood describes as "desperate people in troubled times". The Big To-Do is their 10th album, the second without the formerly totemic Isbell, and follows 2008's Brighter Than Creation's Dark, short-listed for the inaugural Uncut Music Award. Brighter... was their most diverse collection to date, a 19-track song-writing master class that on cuts like the bitterly sardonic "The Righteous Path", "The Man I Shot" and "The Home Front" took a hard and angry look at what America had become under George Bush. Some long-standing DBT fans were, however, vexed by the relative absence of the roaring guitar rock of earlier albums. Patterson now describes the album as "introverted". The Big To-Do, it's pleasing to report, rocks as hard and loud as anything they've previously done. The Truckers do here what they do better than almost anyone else - which is blow the fucking roof off, with Cooley, especially, on howlingly great form. Like Dylan's Together Through Life, however, the album's unfettered musical rambunctiousness only thinly disguises the harsh realities its songs variously confront. Searing opener, "Daddy Learned To Fly", for instance, with Hood and Cooley sounding as unstoppable as a Mack truck or Neil Young in headlong flight, is a song about overwhelming grief, perhaps inspired by the deaths last year of Southern legends Jerry Wexler and Jim Dickinson, both friends and supporters of the band. Elsewhere, there's much seething anger at America's economic meltdown and the havoc consequently wrought in hard-pressed communities, where unemployment was already, in a word, rife. Cooley's rockabilly tear-up, "Get Downtown", addresses this with typical bleak drollery, as does his fabulously no-holds-barred rocker "Birthday Boy". Hood's "This Fucking Job", though, is a furious maelstrom, powered by the riff from The Who's "I Can't Explain", that lays bare a terrible desperation. Redundancy of another kind concerns Patterson's yearning "After The Scene Dies", which imagines the closing down of the rock'n'roll club circuit that has for so long supported the Truckers and road warriors like them. On other fronts, there are vivid, blackly comic vignettes by Hood, like "The Fourth Night Of My Drinking", "Drag The Lake Charlie" and "The Wig He Made Her Wear" that recall the toxic humour of Warren Zevon, plus one of Patterson's most tender ballads, "Sante Fe". Bassist Shonna Tucker, whose "I'm Sorry Houston" was a highlight of Brighter Than Creation's Dark, contributes two more fine songs here - the melodramatic pounder, "You Got Another" and the irresistible "It's Gonna Be (I Told You So)". Where does the circus theme come into all this? Principally, via Wes Freed's album artwork and a song by Patterson called "The Flying Wallendas", about the legendary high-wire act of daredevil Big Top legend, who refused to perform with a safety net, even when it started costing them their lives in fatal accidents. Karl Wallenda, the troupe's founder, many of his family already dead, continued to perform, refusing to retire, until he too fell to his death. He was 73, and in his obduracy, Hood clearly sees something of his extraordinary band's own rugged determination to never give a fucking inch. Allan Jones Q&A PATTERSON HOOD We've just met in a bar. You're telling me about The Big To-Do. How would you describe it? It's a Big Rock record. It's dark and spooky at times, but also big, loud and hopefully a lot of fun. It's our most melodic album and probably comes closer to capturing some of the energy of our live show than anything we've recorded in a long time. Great to hear the guitars turned up to 11 again. What inspired that? We always want to move forward, but every now and then it's good to circle back and see where it all stands. It's a new decade and after all we've been through, this one could be construed as the rock'n'roll equivalent to a State of the Union address. You have enough material for a second album this year. Will that be The Big To-Do Part 2 or something different? About as radically different as this band can get. It's called Go-Go Boots and if The Big To-Do moves in a fairly straight line (for us) then GGB is the drunk driver weaving all over the place. I've also referred to it as our album of R'n'B murder ballads, but that's probably a little wishful thinking. If it were a movie it would be some kind of dark twisted noir, certainly more David Lynch than David Lean. INTERVIEW: ALLAN JONES

When he afterwards fetched up in New York, Bob Dylan liked to tell people he’d arrived there via a stint doing who knows what in a circus he’d run away from home to join, in search of adventure and the roustabout life.

It was no doubt typical of many boys in the long ago days of Dylan’s youth, growing up in places far from anywhere, to dream of fleeing the uneventful ho-hum of smalltown existence for a new world of gallivanting itinerancy, a life on the open road and the buck and roar of the fabled Big Top. It was one way, at least, of finding out what the country was made of.

Growing up much later, down there in Alabama, restless teenage friends Patterson Hood and Mike Cooley shared a similar roaming yen for the endless highway and the horizon beyond it. Of course, by then, the lure of the Big Top had been replaced for them, and the many like them, with the beckoning holler of rock’n’roll, otherwise known in Drive-By Trucker mythology as The Big To-Do. Hood and Cooley signed up for it as soon as the recruitment office was open and from the start were in for the long haul, whatever the cost.

Nearly 20 years after hitting, as they say, the road, they’re still on it. It’s often been a rough ride. They’ve had their share of set-backs, seen a lot of the same hard times as the people they’ve played their music to and for, with many comings and goings in the line-ups around them. The most recent departure, in 2007, after five years with the band, was the talented Jason Isbell, who brought to their already formidable repertoire knock-out numbers like “Outfit” and “Danko/Manuel”, highlights of Decoration Day (2003) and The Dirty South (2004).

Isbell’s leaving, after 2006’s A Blessing And A Curse, during an especially troubled time for the group, could have been a mortal blow. But they rallied, as they always have, driven as they are by the laudable conviction that as well as entertaining, their songs have something worth saying about more than merely this and that, like America and the turmoil therein, songs that have given voice to what Hood describes as “desperate people in troubled times”.

The Big To-Do is their 10th album, the second without the formerly totemic Isbell, and follows 2008’s Brighter Than Creation’s Dark, short-listed for the inaugural Uncut Music Award. Brighter… was their most diverse collection to date, a 19-track song-writing master class that on cuts like the bitterly sardonic “The Righteous Path”, “The Man I Shot” and “The Home Front” took a hard and angry look at what America had become under George Bush. Some long-standing DBT fans were, however, vexed by the relative absence of the roaring guitar rock of earlier albums. Patterson now describes the album as “introverted”.

The Big To-Do, it’s pleasing to report, rocks as hard and loud as anything they’ve previously done. The Truckers do here what they do better than almost anyone else – which is blow the fucking roof off, with Cooley, especially, on howlingly great form. Like Dylan’s Together Through Life, however, the album’s unfettered musical rambunctiousness only thinly disguises the harsh realities its songs variously confront. Searing opener, “Daddy Learned To Fly”, for instance, with Hood and Cooley sounding as unstoppable as a Mack truck or Neil Young in headlong flight, is a song about overwhelming grief, perhaps inspired by the deaths last year of Southern legends Jerry Wexler and Jim Dickinson, both friends and supporters of the band.

Elsewhere, there’s much seething anger at America’s economic meltdown and the havoc consequently wrought in hard-pressed communities, where unemployment was already, in a word, rife. Cooley’s rockabilly tear-up, “Get Downtown”, addresses this with typical bleak drollery, as does his fabulously no-holds-barred rocker “Birthday Boy”. Hood’s “This Fucking Job”, though, is a furious maelstrom, powered by the riff from The Who‘s “I Can’t Explain”, that lays bare a terrible desperation. Redundancy of another kind concerns Patterson’s yearning “After The Scene Dies”, which imagines the closing down of the rock’n’roll club circuit that has for so long supported the Truckers and road warriors like them.

On other fronts, there are vivid, blackly comic vignettes by Hood, like “The Fourth Night Of My Drinking”, “Drag The Lake Charlie” and “The Wig He Made Her Wear” that recall the toxic humour of Warren Zevon, plus one of Patterson’s most tender ballads, “Sante Fe”. Bassist Shonna Tucker, whose “I’m Sorry Houston” was a highlight of Brighter Than Creation’s Dark, contributes two more fine songs here – the melodramatic pounder, “You Got Another” and the irresistible “It’s Gonna Be (I Told You So)”.

Where does the circus theme come into all this? Principally, via Wes Freed’s album artwork and a song by Patterson called “The Flying Wallendas”, about the legendary high-wire act of daredevil Big Top legend, who refused to perform with a safety net, even when it started costing them their lives in fatal accidents. Karl Wallenda, the troupe’s founder, many of his family already dead, continued to perform, refusing to retire, until he too fell to his death. He was 73, and in his obduracy, Hood clearly sees something of his extraordinary band’s own rugged determination to never give a fucking inch.

Allan Jones

Q&A PATTERSON HOOD

We’ve just met in a bar. You’re telling me about The Big To-Do. How would you describe it?

It’s a Big Rock record. It’s dark and spooky at times, but also big, loud and hopefully a lot of fun. It’s our most melodic album and probably comes closer to capturing some of the energy of our live show than anything we’ve recorded in a long time.

Great to hear the guitars turned up to 11 again. What inspired that?

We always want to move forward, but every now and then it’s good to circle back and see where it all stands. It’s a new decade and after all we’ve been through, this one could be construed as the rock’n’roll equivalent to a State of the Union address.

You have enough material for a second album this year. Will that be The Big To-Do Part 2 or something different?

About as radically different as this band can get. It’s called Go-Go Boots and if The Big To-Do moves in a fairly straight line (for us) then GGB is the drunk driver weaving all over the place. I’ve also referred to it as our album of R’n’B murder ballads, but that’s probably a little wishful thinking. If it were a movie it would be some kind of dark twisted noir, certainly more David Lynch than David Lean.

INTERVIEW: ALLAN JONES

JOANNA NEWSOM – HAVE ONE ON ME

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It may be a stretch to call Joanna Newsom's third LP her down-to-earth pop record. Have One On Me does, after all, extend across three CDs of generally very long songs, features a harp duelling with a kora, and a dream sequence in which the singer arrives before her lover "on a palanquin made of the many bodies of beautiful women." On the back of an elephant. Nevertheless, there's a distinct sense that Newsom has moved on after the crenellated extravagances of her last album, 2006's Ys. There are no lavish orchestrations by Van Dyke Parks this time, instead Newsom fronts a more compact and mobile ensemble led by her live band's guitarist, Ryan Francesconi. The Pre-Raphaelite damselry has been superseded by some fiercely directional haute couture. Piano takes over from harp on five of the 18 tracks. An evasive indie boyfriend, Bill Callahan, has gone, replaced by a mainstream comedian, Andy Samberg, whose own musical endeavours include the rap "Jizz In My Pants". And where Newsom's voice was once an uncanny, shrill blend of the childlike and ancient, she now sings with a composure and soulfulness that stands comparison with Laura Nyro. Old, somewhat arbitrary categorisations for Newsom - acid-folk, say - have less use than ever when it comes to considering Have One On Me. "Good Intentions Paving Company", for instance, finds Newsom at the piano, leading her band off at a jaunty canter before sliding into an ineffably lovely, bluesy refrain. It's an intricate song, certainly, but there's a linear momentum which hasn't previously been evident in her songwriting. A passionate lyrical directness is more pronounced, too: after five minutes of gripping prevarications on love, performance and a plainly emotional car trip, she announces, "I only want for you to pull over, and hold me/Till I can't remember my own name." It's a classic Newsom epiphany - one of a good dozen on the album -and the formal end of the song, but the track rolls on gloriously for another 90 seconds or so: some wordless multitracked harmonies; limber drumming from the consistently innovative Neal Morgan; a touch of banjo from Francesconi; and a woozy, jazzy trombone solo, of all wonderful things. Throughout, in fact, Have One On Me is suffused with space, invention and playfulness, even in the face of Newsom's sometimes unnerving intensity. It's also exceptionally beautiful, from the revenant sigh of "Easy", to the stark song of parting, "Does Not Suffice", Gospel-tinged and worthy of Nina Simone, that closes the album some two hours later. Faced with such a marathon, it's tempting to comb the three discs for extraneous songs. But Newsom's vision is so pervasive, and the quality of her songs so high, that the size of this indulgent-looking package seems utterly justified. Ryan Francesconi deserves to share some of the credit, for the imaginative but unobstrusive arrangements that provide such subtle variety. Four songs feature Newsom alone with her harp, in an echo of 2004's The Milk-Eyed Mender, and a handful more find her discreetly tracked by a small string section. Elsewhere, though, Francesconi pulls off more audacious tricks. In "Go Long", a kora (played by Seattle-based scholar Kane Mathis, rather than a Malian griot) slips adroitly into the mix, flitting around Newsom's harp and asserting her claims to be influenced by West African music. Francesconi, who mainly favours a Bulgarian tambura (a kind of lute), punctuates "Baby Birch" with some empathetic clangs of fuzzy electric guitar. The 11-minute "Have One On Me" (the whole album is studded with references to drink and drunkenness, intriguingly) is a skewed jig, of sorts; a relative to "Colleen", Newsom's first studio collaboration with Morgan and Francesconi on the 2007 "Ys Street Band" EP. A buccaneering horn section figures, too, a recurring feature that helps give Have One On Me its peculiar swing. Along with "Good Intentions Paving Company", "You And Me, Bess" and "In California" currently sound like the highlights from this embarrassment of riches. The first is a rapturous coupling of Newsom's harp with trumpet, horn and trombone, who elegantly break out into jazzy extempores: the point at 4:53 when Newsom sings, "It seems I have stolen a horse," is unaccountably moving. "In California", meanwhile, has the ravishing gravity of something by Joni Mitchell from the back end of the '70s - "Paprika Plains", perhaps? Newsom will always be a divisive figure, open to accusations of whimsy, and for all the relative directness of Have One On Me, lyrics like "Her faultlessly etiolated fishbelly-face" (from "No Provenance") will provide bejewelled ammunition for her detractors. To devotees, however, it sounds very much like a second masterpiece: a different kind of epic to Ys, and one with enough hooks and charms to ensnare at least a few Newsom agnostics. Palanquins constructed from naked women? Nothing you couldn't find in a Lady Gaga video, surely... John Mulvey

It may be a stretch to call Joanna Newsom‘s third LP her down-to-earth pop record.

Have One On Me does, after all, extend across three CDs of generally very long songs, features a harp duelling with a kora, and a dream sequence in which the singer arrives before her lover “on a palanquin made of the many bodies of beautiful women.” On the back of an elephant.

Nevertheless, there’s a distinct sense that Newsom has moved on after the crenellated extravagances of her last album, 2006’s Ys.

There are no lavish orchestrations by Van Dyke Parks this time, instead Newsom fronts a more compact and mobile ensemble led by her live band’s guitarist, Ryan Francesconi. The Pre-Raphaelite damselry has been superseded by some fiercely directional haute couture. Piano takes over from harp on five of the 18 tracks. An evasive indie boyfriend, Bill Callahan, has gone, replaced by a mainstream comedian, Andy Samberg, whose own musical endeavours include the rap “Jizz In My Pants”. And where Newsom’s voice was once an uncanny, shrill blend of the childlike and ancient, she now sings with a composure and soulfulness that stands comparison with Laura Nyro.

Old, somewhat arbitrary categorisations for Newsom – acid-folk, say – have less use than ever when it comes to considering Have One On Me. “Good Intentions Paving Company“, for instance, finds Newsom at the piano, leading her band off at a jaunty canter before sliding into an ineffably lovely, bluesy refrain. It’s an intricate song, certainly, but there’s a linear momentum which hasn’t previously been evident in her songwriting. A passionate lyrical directness is more pronounced, too: after five minutes of gripping prevarications on love, performance and a plainly emotional car trip, she announces, “I only want for you to pull over, and hold me/Till I can’t remember my own name.” It’s a classic Newsom epiphany – one of a good dozen on the album -and the formal end of the song, but the track rolls on gloriously for another 90 seconds or so: some wordless multitracked harmonies; limber drumming from the consistently innovative Neal Morgan; a touch of banjo from Francesconi; and a woozy, jazzy trombone solo, of all wonderful things.

Throughout, in fact, Have One On Me is suffused with space, invention and playfulness, even in the face of Newsom’s sometimes unnerving intensity. It’s also exceptionally beautiful, from the revenant sigh of “Easy”, to the stark song of parting, “Does Not Suffice”, Gospel-tinged and worthy of Nina Simone, that closes the album some two hours later. Faced with such a marathon, it’s tempting to comb the three discs for extraneous songs. But Newsom’s vision is so pervasive, and the quality of her songs so high, that the size of this indulgent-looking package seems utterly justified.

Ryan Francesconi deserves to share some of the credit, for the imaginative but unobstrusive arrangements that provide such subtle variety. Four songs feature Newsom alone with her harp, in an echo of 2004’s The Milk-Eyed Mender, and a handful more find her discreetly tracked by a small string section. Elsewhere, though, Francesconi pulls off more audacious tricks. In “Go Long”, a kora (played by Seattle-based scholar Kane Mathis, rather than a Malian griot) slips adroitly into the mix, flitting around Newsom’s harp and asserting her claims to be influenced by West African music. Francesconi, who mainly favours a Bulgarian tambura (a kind of lute), punctuates “Baby Birch” with some empathetic clangs of fuzzy electric guitar. The 11-minute “Have One On Me” (the whole album is studded with references to drink and drunkenness, intriguingly) is a skewed jig, of sorts; a relative to “Colleen”, Newsom’s first studio collaboration with Morgan and Francesconi on the 2007 “Ys Street Band” EP.

A buccaneering horn section figures, too, a recurring feature that helps give Have One On Me its peculiar swing. Along with “Good Intentions Paving Company”, “You And Me, Bess” and “In California” currently sound like the highlights from this embarrassment of riches. The first is a rapturous coupling of Newsom’s harp with trumpet, horn and trombone, who elegantly break out into jazzy extempores: the point at 4:53 when Newsom sings, “It seems I have stolen a horse,” is unaccountably moving. “In California”, meanwhile, has the ravishing gravity of something by Joni Mitchell from the back end of the ’70s – “Paprika Plains”, perhaps?

Newsom will always be a divisive figure, open to accusations of whimsy, and for all the relative directness of Have One On Me, lyrics like “Her faultlessly etiolated fishbelly-face” (from “No Provenance”) will provide bejewelled ammunition for her detractors. To devotees, however, it sounds very much like a second masterpiece: a different kind of epic to Ys, and one with enough hooks and charms to ensnare at least a few Newsom agnostics. Palanquins constructed from naked women? Nothing you couldn’t find in a Lady Gaga video, surely…

John Mulvey

Shaun Ryder to play career-spanning gig at one-off Manchester Easter gig

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Shaun Ryder has announced details of a one off gig in Manchester featuring tracks spanning his career this Easter. Ryder is expected to debut new material alongside tracks by Black Grape and Happy Mondays at the gig, which takes place at the city's FAC 251 venue on Bank Holiday Sunday (April 4). H...

Shaun Ryder has announced details of a one off gig in Manchester featuring tracks spanning his career this Easter.

Ryder is expected to debut new material alongside tracks by Black Grape and Happy Mondays at the gig, which takes place at the city’s FAC 251 venue on Bank Holiday Sunday (April 4). He will be backed by a new live band for the gig.

Tickets for the gig go on sale at noon this Friday (March 19). See Factorymanchester.com for more information.

Meanwhile, Ryder is also due to play his first gig with Black Grape since 1997 on the Easter weekend in London.

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

Phil Spector to launch appeal against murder conviction

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Phil Spector is to launch an appeal against his murder conviction on the grounds of judicial error and prosecutorial misconduct. The producer is currently serving a 19-years-to-life jail sentence for the murder of actress Lana Clarkson, which he started in 2009. His lawyers now claim that he didn't...

Phil Spector is to launch an appeal against his murder conviction on the grounds of judicial error and prosecutorial misconduct.

The producer is currently serving a 19-years-to-life jail sentence for the murder of actress Lana Clarkson, which he started in 2009. His lawyers now claim that he didn’t have a fair trial, reports BBC News.

Spector‘s appeal was launched on Wednesday (March 10) in Los Angeles, with the lawyers arguing: “None of the… evidence involved events in which Mr Spector put a gun in someone’s mouth, much less fired it.”

They added that the prosecution in the case improperly asserted that Spector “had a history and propensity of violence against women and thus should be convicted based on his bad character and evil propensities”.

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

Metallica fans riot at Bogota gig

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Roughly 160 Metallica fans were arrested on Wednesday (March 10) following riots outside their gig in Bogota, Colombia. The troubles flared after hundreds of ticketless fans turned up to the US group's concert at Simón Bolívar Park and tried to breach barriers, reports Sky News. A 45-minute riot ensued, during which 1,500 police officers fought fans, backed up with trucks and tanks. Four fans and four police officers were injured. One was treated for a knife wound. Local police chief Ruben Castillo said: "The presence of police and riot teams was necessary because these misfits – there's no other name for them – damaged some windows in the surrounding area." Despite the trouble, the Metallica gig was not disrupted. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Roughly 160 Metallica fans were arrested on Wednesday (March 10) following riots outside their gig in Bogota, Colombia.

The troubles flared after hundreds of ticketless fans turned up to the US group’s concert at Simón Bolívar Park and tried to breach barriers, reports Sky News.

A 45-minute riot ensued, during which 1,500 police officers fought fans, backed up with trucks and tanks. Four fans and four police officers were injured. One was treated for a knife wound.

Local police chief Ruben Castillo said: “The presence of police and riot teams was necessary because these misfits – there’s no other name for them – damaged some windows in the surrounding area.”

Despite the trouble, the Metallica gig was not disrupted.

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

Bob Dylan rumoured to play Hop Farm festival 2010

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Bob Dylan is rumoured to be on the bill for this year's Hop Farm festival in Kent. A number of Dylan fansites, including Expectingrain.com are reporting that the songwriter will appear at the event, which is usually held every July. However, nothing official has been confirmed yet. A Hop Farm spok...

Bob Dylan is rumoured to be on the bill for this year’s Hop Farm festival in Kent.

A number of Dylan fansites, including Expectingrain.com are reporting that the songwriter will appear at the event, which is usually held every July. However, nothing official has been confirmed yet.

A Hop Farm spokesperson would neither confirm or deny that the singer will play the festival.

Dylan is set to play at Thomond Park Stadium in Limerick, Ireland on July 5, suggesting he could also play other gigs in the UK and Ireland around that time too.

Keep checking Uncut.co.uk for the latest Hop Farm news.

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

The 10th Uncut Playlist Of 2010

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Quite a lot of major action in the playlist this week, but before we get there, a quick plug for two Club Uncut shows in London we’ve just had confirmed. First up, we have Port O’Brien and Laura Gibson at the Borderline on April 6. Then, on May 12, I’m especially pleased to welcome Endless Boogie over for a show Upstairs@The Relentless Garage. For more details and a link for tickets, please have a look here. Here we go, anyway. Among the marquee names I’d like to draw attention to the terrific Loscil record that I’ll try and write about next week. Have fun… 1 Coconuts – Coconuts (No Quarter) 2 The National – High Violet (4AD) 3 Nicolai Dunger – Play (Fargo) 4 Harlem – Hippies (Matador) 5 Zalman Yanovsky – Alive And Well In Argentina (Rev-Ola) 6 Fleet Foxes – On A Good Day (Youtube) 7 Loscil – Endless Falls (Kranky) 8 Blinding Sunlight – Colder (Against It) 9 Crystal Antlers – Little Sister/Dead Horses (www.crystalantlers.com) 10 Rolo Tomassi – Cosmology (Hassle) 11 Shawn David McMillen – Dead Friends (Tompkins Square) 12 Mushroom – Naked, Stoned & Stabbed (4Zero/The Royal Potato Family) 13 LCD Soundsystem – Untitled Third Album (DFA/Parlophone) 14 Robert Wyatt – His Greatest Misses (Domino) 15 The Rolling Stones – Exile On Main Street (Polydor) 16 Caribou – Swim (City Slang)

Quite a lot of major action in the playlist this week, but before we get there, a quick plug for two Club Uncut shows in London we’ve just had confirmed.

Gary Numan announces intimate London gig

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[a]Gary Numan[/a] has announced details of a one-off London gig this April. Numan will play the capital's Scala venue on April 13 as a warm-up to his performance at this year's Coachella festival on April 18 and subsequent US tour. Tickets for the gig are on sale now. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

[a]Gary Numan[/a] has announced details of a one-off London gig this April.

Numan will play the capital’s Scala venue on April 13 as a warm-up to his performance at this year’s Coachella festival on April 18 and subsequent US tour.

Tickets for the gig are on sale now.

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

Gorillaz to tour with The Clash’s Mick Jones and Paul Simonon?

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[a]Gorillaz[/a] are to tour a series of intimate venues across the UK later this month. [a]Damon Albarn[/a] is rumoured to be recruiting former members of [a]The Clash[/a] Paul Simonon (who Albarn played with in [a]The Good, The Bad And The Queen[/a]) and Mick Jones to play live with the band for the dates. Both Simonon and Jones appear on [a]Gorillaz[/a] new album 'Plastic Beach'. [a]Gorillaz[/a] play: Portsmouth Wedgewood Rooms (March 21) Bristol Trinity (22) Cambridge Junction (23) Brighton Old Market (25) Birmingham Irish Centre (26) Lincoln Engine Shed (27) Tickets are only available to members of [a]Gorillaz[/a]' official fan club, G-Club. See Gorillaz.com for more information. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

[a]Gorillaz[/a] are to tour a series of intimate venues across the UK later this month.

[a]Damon Albarn[/a] is rumoured to be recruiting former members of [a]The Clash[/a] Paul Simonon (who Albarn played with in [a]The Good, The Bad And The Queen[/a]) and Mick Jones to play live with the band for the dates.

Both Simonon and Jones appear on [a]Gorillaz[/a] new album ‘Plastic Beach’.

[a]Gorillaz[/a] play:

Portsmouth Wedgewood Rooms (March 21)

Bristol Trinity (22)

Cambridge Junction (23)

Brighton Old Market (25)

Birmingham Irish Centre (26)

Lincoln Engine Shed (27)

Tickets are only available to members of [a]Gorillaz[/a]’ official fan club, G-Club. See Gorillaz.com for more information.

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

Pink Floyd win royalties dispute against EMI

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[a]Pink Floyd[/a]'s former members have won their High Court battle against record label EMI in a case relating to the online sales of their songs. A judge at the High Court in London today (March 11) ruled that the label was wrong to allow Pink Floyd songs to be sold individually on online sites like iTunes, reports BBC News. The band had taken EMI to court over a contract negotiated in 1998 and 1999 which stipulated that their songs should not allowed to be sold individually without prior permission. Lawyers for EMI had argued that the contract did not apply to online sales, because sites like iTunes were not launched when the contract was signed. EMI has now been ordered to pay £40,000 ($60,000) in costs, with a further fine to be decided in the future. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

[a]Pink Floyd[/a]’s former members have won their High Court battle against record label EMI in a case relating to the online sales of their songs.

A judge at the High Court in London today (March 11) ruled that the label was wrong to allow Pink Floyd songs to be sold individually on online sites like iTunes, reports BBC News.

The band had taken EMI to court over a contract negotiated in 1998 and 1999 which stipulated that their songs should not allowed to be sold individually without prior permission. Lawyers for EMI had argued that the contract did not apply to online sales, because sites like iTunes were not launched when the contract was signed.

EMI has now been ordered to pay £40,000 ($60,000) in costs, with a further fine to be decided in the future.

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

Port O’Brien To Headline Club Uncut

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April’s Club Uncut will be headlined by Port O’Brien. The nautically-obsessed Californians drop anchor at London’s Borderline on April 6. Support on the night comes from Laura Gibson. Tickets are £9.50, available from seetickets.com. A reminder, too, that our May Club Uncut will feature Endless Boogie. That one is on May 12, Upstairs @ The Relentless Garage in London. Tickets cost £7, and are available from seetickets.com. To read more about Endless Boogie, click here. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

April’s Club Uncut will be headlined by Port O’Brien. The nautically-obsessed Californians drop anchor at London’s Borderline on April 6.

Support on the night comes from Laura Gibson. Tickets are £9.50, available from seetickets.com.

A reminder, too, that our May Club Uncut will feature Endless Boogie. That one is on May 12, Upstairs @ The Relentless Garage in London.

Tickets cost £7, and are available from seetickets.com.

To read more about Endless Boogie, click here.

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

Coconuts’ “Coconuts” and Mushroom’s “Naked, Stoned & Stabbed”

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A couple of neat psych-ish things today that I’ve been meaning to write about for a while. First up, Coconuts, an Australian group relocated to New York, whose scouring dirges make them one of the more incongruously-named I’ve come across recently. “Coconuts” is a short and pleasantly intense debut album, amusingly described by No Quarter thus: “Words that come to mind while listening to Coconuts' debut album include 'ugliness', 'despair' and unmarketability'.” Fair to say, then, that it’s at the more wracked, less idealistic end of psych: imagine a peculiarly slothful, tribally-adjusted Loop, maybe, cosying up to the Not Not Fun roster (in particular the slightly gothic moments of Pocahaunted). The press notes by Daniel Lopatin (Oneohtrix Point Never)also mention The Dead C, which makes sense. The stunned agonies of “Lost Bitches” are a particular pleasure right now, while “Dark World” has cacophonous scraping affinities with “Venus In Furs” and points towards a refreshed, radicalised take on dronerock which Coconuts possibly share with another interesting new band, Disappears, who I’ll write about soon. Somewhat less harrowing, “Naked, Stoned & Stabbed” is the latest album by Mushroom, apparently a San Francisco collective with allegiances to Citay and Brightblack Morning Light, and centred on drummer Pat Thomas, who works for the excellent Water reissue label. Perhaps inevitably, a diligent handling of rock history pervades much of the album, from the jazz-folk reverie of “Celebration At Big Sur (The Sound Of The Gulls Outside Of Room 124)”, rich with the vibes – instrumentally – of earlyish Tim Buckley, to the closing singalong take on Kevin Ayers’ “Singing A Song In The Morning”. Reading the tracklisting is an enjoyable business in itself, actually: namechecks to Jerry Rubin and Tariq Ali; wry nods to contemporaries (“All The Guitar Players Around Sean Smith Say He’s Got It Coming, But He Gets It While He Can”; “The Freak Folk Walk By, Dressed Up For Each Other”); a song pithily christened “Indulgence”. A lot of this looks perilously like in-jokes, of course, a bunch of West Coast scenesters snickering among themselves. But happily, the music is nothing like that; the aforementioned “Sean Smith…” track, for instance, is a baked, rippling steel string guitar meditation, and the prevailing vibes are inclusive and laidback, a less thrusting cousin to Citay’s ‘70s pastoralia, with plenty of flute weaving through the fingerpicking and organ jams. How about some listening? Coconuts are here, and here are Mushroom.

A couple of neat psych-ish things today that I’ve been meaning to write about for a while. First up, Coconuts, an Australian group relocated to New York, whose scouring dirges make them one of the more incongruously-named I’ve come across recently.

Squeeze gig venue to receive ‘blue plaque’

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Squeeze's first gig venue is to receive its own unique 'blue plaque' later this month (March 23). Band members Glenn Tilbrook and Chris Difford are set to unveil the plaque at Greenwich Dance Hall in London on March 23 at 2:30pm (GMT). The plaque commemorates the group's first show in 1975, and is...

Squeeze‘s first gig venue is to receive its own unique ‘blue plaque’ later this month (March 23).

Band members Glenn Tilbrook and Chris Difford are set to unveil the plaque at Greenwich Dance Hall in London on March 23 at 2:30pm (GMT).

The plaque commemorates the group’s first show in 1975, and is part of a scheme set up by the Performance Rights Society For Music. Dire Straits, Jethro Tull and Blur already received the honour.

“It’s a pleasure to return to the place where we performed as Squeeze way back in 1975,” Tilbrook explained. “I still buy my cheese just up the road.”

Visit PRSforMusic.com for more information on the scheme.

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