Home Blog Page 735

Pink Floyd sue EMI over royalty dispute

0
Pink Floyd's former members are suing their record label EMI over a dispute regarding royalty payments for tracks sold online. The band's lawyer Rupert Howe took their case – which was originally filed last April – to a court hearing in London yesterday (March 9), and said that his clients want...

Pink Floyd‘s former members are suing their record label EMI over a dispute regarding royalty payments for tracks sold online.

The band’s lawyer Rupert Howe took their case – which was originally filed last April – to a court hearing in London yesterday (March 9), and said that his clients wanted clarification on a contract with EMI that they negotiated in 1998 and 1999.

The contract is said to state that Pink Floyd albums should be sold as one and not separated into individual songs, reports Businessweek.com. Since the signing of contract, Pink Floyd songs were made available from download clients including iTunes.

Howe said of the contract, “It was unclear whether record companies would be selling direct to the consumer or through retailers.”

He added, “It’s a matter of fact that the defendant has been permitting individual tracks to be downloaded online and that therefore they have been allowing albums not to be sold in their original configuration.”

EMI lawyer Elizabeth Jones said that the contract did not cover online sales of the band’s music.

The case continues.

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

Belle And Sebastian, Vampire Weekend to headline Latitude Festival 2010

0
Belle And Sebastian, Vampire Weekend and Florence And The Machine will headline this year's Latitude festival. The three acts play the Suffolk bash on July 16, 17 and 18 respectively. Other acts playing the main Obelisk Arena area include Empire Of The Sun, The Maccabees and Rodrigo Y Gabriela. Gr...

Belle And Sebastian, Vampire Weekend and Florence And The Machine will headline this year’s Latitude festival.

The three acts play the Suffolk bash on July 16, 17 and 18 respectively. Other acts playing the main Obelisk Arena area include Empire Of The Sun, The Maccabees and Rodrigo Y Gabriela.

Grizzly Bear, Charlotte Gainsbourg, The xx, The Horrors and The National will play in The Word Arena at the event.

See Latitudefestival.co.uk for more information.

Tickets for Latitudefestival.co.uk are on sale now.

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

Mark Linkous interviewed: NME, June 8, 1996

I’m sure most of you have heard the grim news about Mark Linkous in the past few days. I can’t really add much to the memorials that have accumulated about him and his music; on the odd occasion when I met him – all well over a decade ago now – he always came across as a gentle and reserved man, who told harrowing personal stories but at the same time didn’t seem to give that much away about what he was actually like. I have, though, dug out this Sparklehorse piece I wrote for NME in 1996. As is so often the way of these things, it’s hard not to see an awful poignancy in his last couple of quotes. Every night for a week last January, Mark Linkous’ grandmother woke up crying. Every night she’d be terrified out of the dream state and wake traumatized, unsure of exactly what she found so troubling. After a few days, it became clearer, so she called Mark’s father: “Something is wrong with one of the boys,” she told him, convinced. “It’s OK,” he said, and revealed that one of Mark’s stepbrothers had broken his elbow playing football. Prescience confirmed, she relaxed for the first time in days. It was OK. But that night it happened again. And the next night. Then, at the weekend, the bad news reached her home deep in Virginia mining country. Grandson, former heroin addict and eccentric musical genius Mark had collapsed in a London hotel bathroom. Had lain unconscious for 14 hours with his legs trapped beneath him. Had been found by a maid, after his fellow Sparklehorse members had called round and been reassured when they heard his snoring. Had cut off the circulation in his legs and suffered a cardiac arrest when the medics tried moving him. Had, well, died for two minutes. Was now in St Mary’s Hospital, London, the place where they first discovered penicillin. Might never walk again. “My grandmother’s real witchy,” observes Mark four months later in San Francisco. From his wheelchair. He’s going to be alright now. Across the bay from San Francisco lies the substantially less glamorous city of Oakland, the scuzzy yang to its neighbour’s utterly languid yin. Mean Marshall’s is a big shed in a particularly desolate corner of the city; the place where old motorbikes go to die and – if they’re lucky – to be resurrected. There’s a beguilingly spooky mortuary air to the place on this sweltering May day, as great clouds of dust rise off the countless Triumphs and Nortons in varying stages of wellbeing. One of the healthier specimens featured in the first episode of Happy Days, reveals Marshall, an amiable old greaser with a greying thicket of beard. One day, Arnold Schwarzenegger turned up with $20,00 to try to buy it for one of his Planet Hollywood hellholes. Marshall just laughed. “Fuck them,” he said. This is where Sparklehorse choose to spend a free afternoon on their American tour. Tonight they will play the grand ballroom of psychedelia, the Fillmore West in San Francisco. Bill Graham and Jerry Garcia’s ghosts will not show up, but Mark Linkous will invoke the spirits of his Virginia homeland in his sad, funny, tender and wonderfully cranky little country pop songs. In the meantime, though, there are beautifully wrecked old bikes to dream about… “I’ve had motorcycles all my life,” explains Mark in his tiny, sleepy southern voice. “ My parents broke up and me and my kid brother lived with my mother for a while. She worked all the time in a factory and I started hanging out with motorcycle gangs like The Pagans. I thought I was, y’know, a bad boy. “My mom couldn’t really handle me so she sent me to live with my grandfather, for him to straighten me out, so I wasn’t allowed to have my dirt bike. After a coupla months I started going insane. When they did let me have my bike back I realised how therapeutic it is. I get really bad migraine headaches and if I have one I get on my bike and ride ‘til I get rid of it. It feels like flying.” As a little kid, Mark was “a pyromaniac in training”, pouring lighter fluid all over his toy guitar and torching it. By the time his strict but generous grandfather relented and bought him a proper guitar, he was more serious. First he played Led Zeppelin songs, the he turned punk, then he dropped out of school (only class enjoyed: parapsychology), moved to New York and joined a garage-pop band, The Dancing Hoods. They did OK, moving to LA in search of a deal where they were “big for about two minutes”, but never quite got signed. By some time in the late ‘80s (Linkous is enormously vague about dates), the singer was working for a record company, the bassist was on some sordid and unspecified downward spiral that would see him end up in Ryker’s Island jail, and the guitarist – Mark, of course – was living in a van, a heroin addict. “I got really bad,” he says ruefully. “I called my parents – they just thought I drank a lot – and I told them I’d been doing that shit for a long time and I needed help, so they flew me home and I went into hospital for a month, then went through rehab and all that shit. “But when I started getting straight, I started noticing all these things I’d forgotten about. I remember I was outside the rehabilitation place and I noticed a grasshopper, and I’d forgotten about grasshoppers. I just stared at it for a long time thinking, ‘Man, this is amazing, it’s like a little dinosaur or something.’ I just had this new perception of things I’d been oblivious to. So I started writing, writing a lot.” Cleaned up, Mark and his wife Theresa moved to an old house on a plantation one hour out of Richmond, Virginia. He wrote songs, hung out with David Lowery from Cracker (and once from Camper Van Beethoven), recorded them at Lowery’s studio and, via a suitably torturous route, was signed to Capitol. The rest is history, sort of. Those songs form the basis of ‘Vivadixisubmarinetransmissionplot’, Sparklehorse’s remarkable debut album. The title comes from a dream Mark had about swimming towards a submarine built by Civil War hero General Lee, and hearing an “old-timey band” playing inside it, distorted by the water. Dream logic inspires him a lot. There’s a surreal edge to many of the songs, as if the world’s being described by dazed and wondering eyes. So he “wants to make literal things poetic. That grasshopper seemed so beautiful to me – not to sound hippy – but being near death you just really appreciate and have to keep a close eye for things that are beautiful, y’know.“ And then there’s the eerie, creaky atmosphere to songs like ‘Spirit Ditch’, that Mark ascribes to coming from the south-western part of Virginia, where people live in dark hollows between the mountains. His cousins in the hills would tell of a witch who’d stop you from breathing when she walked by, and his grandfather reeled off ghost stories about dead miners asking for a light for their cigarettes. “I was walking along this strip mine when I was a kid,” Mark remembers. “They leave these big man-made cliffs where they’ve excavated for coal. It was in the snow, and up on the cliff there was this black horse. And as far as I walked, it walked with me the whole time. I’ll never forget that. It was really spooky…” In the past couple of years, Mark’s come to terms with being depressive. But last time he was in Britain, playing an NME Brats gig with the Tindersticks, he mixed a lot of Valium – to combat nerves and jet lag – with his prescription anti-depressants. That was when he passed out in the hotel bathroom, legs pinned under his torso. “I think when they straightened out your legs,” he explains, “from all the circulation getting cut off, those limbs produce all this potassium or something, and when they straighten your legs it goes to your heart and you have a heart attack. So I had a cardiac arrest when they took me to the hospital. I flatlined for a coupla minutes, then they shocked me and got me back going. I was there for three months, on dialysis for a while, and they ended up doing nine operations on my legs. “ Did you ever think you’d lose them? “Yeah, I was fucking terrified. I asked the doctor and he said, ‘I can’t promise you you’re not.’ That was at the time when they went in again and got all the dead tissue out, so luckily they didn’t need to amputate, but I lost the muscles that keep my feet straight, so these things come round like that…” He grasps the straps round his shins and explains how he should be able to walk again by September, maybe even in time for Sparklehorse’s show on the NME stage at Reading in late August. Then he explains, in his fractured, woozy, winning way (“I’m sorry, I lose my train of though – I’m still on medication”) exactly why this “thing”, as he refers to, happened: “Taking too many Valium was like trying to be free of your body in a way, just overindulging. It had everything to do with the drug problem, the whole idea of getting high. I have to get over that. After you’ve been intoxicated, you have to try really hard to function in the world the way it really is. It’s really hard to do that sometimes.” And you feel you have to do that more than ever? “ Yeah. Because, I mean, I never realized how many people love me.” Maybe there’s a realisation you’re lucky to be here now? “Yeah, there is,” he agrees, and he’s very, very quiet now. “I’m glad to be here now. I’m really glad to be here, y’know.” *(Thanks to Benoît Rajalu for helping me out with this)

I’m sure most of you have heard the grim news about Mark Linkous in the past few days. I can’t really add much to the memorials that have accumulated about him and his music; on the odd occasion when I met him – all well over a decade ago now – he always came across as a gentle and reserved man, who told harrowing personal stories but at the same time didn’t seem to give that much away about what he was actually like. I have, though, dug out this Sparklehorse piece I wrote for NME in 1996. As is so often the way of these things, it’s hard not to see an awful poignancy in his last couple of quotes.

The Flaming Lips’ Wayne Coyne recruits Justin Timberlake for new film

0
The Flaming Lips' Wayne Coyne has started work on a new movie, which he says he wants Justin Timberlake to feature in. Coyne's last foray into movies was 2008's 'Christmas On Mars', and, like that film, his new project will mostly be shot with Coyne's bandmates, friends and family in Oklahoma City....

The Flaming LipsWayne Coyne has started work on a new movie, which he says he wants Justin Timberlake to feature in.

Coyne‘s last foray into movies was 2008’s ‘Christmas On Mars’, and, like that film, his new project will mostly be shot with Coyne‘s bandmates, friends and family in Oklahoma City.

However, the frontman has also spoken about Timberlake‘s planned cameo appearance.

“I’m going to try to get real actors too,” he told Billboard. “I’m in the process of begging Justin Timberlake to be part of it; if I’m lucky I’ll be able to wear him down in another year.”

Speaking about how long the project may take to finish, Coyne said: “I think everybody would be relieved if it all got done in six weeks and we could say, ‘Look at that!’ But because I get to do it with people I love and it’s my art, I don’t care how long it takes!”

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

Peter Hook announces spoken word tour

0
Peter Hook has announced a spoken word tour which will see him talk about his past, as well as showcase previously-unseen Joy Division and New Order footage. The tour, which is compared by Howard Marks, will take place across the UK in April and is billed as 'An Evening Of Unknown Pleasures'. Fans ...

Peter Hook has announced a spoken word tour which will see him talk about his past, as well as showcase previously-unseen Joy Division and New Order footage.

The tour, which is compared by Howard Marks, will take place across the UK in April and is billed as ‘An Evening Of Unknown Pleasures’. Fans will be able to quiz the bassist as part of the evening.

Peter Hook‘s ‘An Evening Of Unknown Pleasures’ will call at:

Birmingham Glee Club (April 11)

Bolton Albert Hall (12)

Worcester Huntingdon Hall (13)

Milton Keynes Stables (15)

Middlesbrough Town Hall (18)

Gateshead Sage (20)

Durham Gala (21)

Burnley Mechanics (22)

Cardiff Glee Club (25)

Oxford Academy (26)

Wakefield Theatre Royal (27)

Gloucester Guildhall (28)

Derby Assembly Rooms (29)

Norwich UEA (30)

Salford Lowry (May 1)

Hull Truck Theatre (2)

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

Beastie Boys to release new album in September?

0
Beastie Boys' Adam Yauch says the band are hoping to release their new album 'Hot Sauce Committee Part I' in September, as his treatment for cancer is going well. The band were due to release the album last year, but delayed it due to Yauch receiving treatment for cancer of the preaortic gland and ...

Beastie BoysAdam Yauch says the band are hoping to release their new album ‘Hot Sauce Committee Part I’ in September, as his treatment for cancer is going well.

The band were due to release the album last year, but delayed it due to Yauch receiving treatment for cancer of the preaortic gland and lymph node.

Speaking to Entertainment Weekly, the rapper said the band are likely to make a few changes to the album before its release.

“I feel better,” Yauch said. “It was touch and go there for a while, but I am finally getting my energy back.”

He added, “It was really disappointing to have to hold the record and postpone the tour, but doctor’s orders. We may or may not [release ‘Hot Sauce Committee Part I’] depending on how my health is come September. We want to but we have to play it by ear.”

Referring to the changes the band may make to the album, he said, “I was just talking to Adam [Horovitz, fellow band member] and Mike [D] today on the phone and we were talking about working on it a bit.

“We finished the record over a year ago, so we want to take a look at it and re-evaluate and make sure it is what we want to put out there and that we are still happy with it. I don’t think we will change it up too much.”

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

Rolling Stones to head into the studio this year?

0
The Rolling Stones' Keith Richards has hinted that the band are set to return to the studio later in 2010. The guitarist told Rolling Stone that although plans have not been finalised yet, the band could work on new material before the end of 2010. "There's no definite plans, but I can't see any o...

The Rolling StonesKeith Richards has hinted that the band are set to return to the studio later in 2010.

The guitarist told Rolling Stone that although plans have not been finalised yet, the band could work on new material before the end of 2010.

“There’s no definite plans, but I can’t see any of them [band members] stopping,” he explained. “I wouldn’t be surprised if we did some recording later this year.”

Richards also added that the band could change their style of touring in the future.

“Maybe we’ll search for a different way for the Stones to go back on the road, maybe not the football stadiums anymore,” he admitted. “Maybe something different. You can’t go around there in lemon-yellow tights forever.”

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

Radiohead pay tribute to Sparklehorse’s Mark Linkous

0
Radiohead bassist Colin Greenwood has paid tribute to Sparklehorse's Mark Linkous, who committed suicide over the weekend (March 6). [url=https://www.uncut.co.uk/news/sparklehorse/news/13991]The 47-year-old died on Saturday from a self-inflicted gunshot would, his family confirmed[/url]. Linkous t...

Radiohead bassist Colin Greenwood has paid tribute to Sparklehorse‘s Mark Linkous, who committed suicide over the weekend (March 6).

[url=https://www.uncut.co.uk/news/sparklehorse/news/13991]The 47-year-old died on Saturday from a self-inflicted gunshot would, his family confirmed[/url].

Linkous toured alongside Radiohead in the nineties, and suffered a drug overdose during a tour in 1996. He was wheelchair-bound for six months following the incident and never regained the full strength of his legs.

Speaking of Linkous‘ death, Radiohead bassist Colin Greenwood paid tribute to him on Radiohead.com.

“I was very sad to hear the news that Mark Linkous has died. He and his band toured with us in Europe, at the start of ‘OK Computer’, and they were great every night,” he recalled.

“His first two records were very important to me, and I carried his music from the tour into my life, and my friends’ lives too. He was softly spoken, with an old south courtesy I hadn’t heard before: he introduced me to Daniel Johnston‘s music, and the West Virginian writing of Pinckney Benedict. Mark wrote and played some beautiful music, and we’re lucky to have it. Rest in peace.”

Linkous was understood to be working on a new Sparklehorse album at the time of his death.

His 2009 collaboration album with Danger Mouse and David Lynch, ‘Dark Night Of The Soul’, is set to be officially released this summer.

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

Sparklehorse’s Mark Linkous commits suicide

0

The family of Sparklehorse's Mark Linkous have confirmed that the Virginia-born singer-songwriter died on Saturday (March 6) from a gunshot wound. He was 47. According to the New York Times, Linkous' manager, Shelby Meade, announced that Linkous shot himself in the heart near a friend’s home in Knoxville, Tennessee. Police responded to a call at 1:20pm (EST) with Linkous found dead at the scene. "It is with great sadness that we share the news that our dear friend and family member, Mark Linkous, took his own life today," Linkous' family told Rolling Stone. "We are thankful for his time with us and will hold him forever in our hearts. May his journey be peaceful, happy and free. There's a heaven and there’s a star for you." Linkous released the first Sparklehorse album, Vivadixiesubmarinetransmissionplot, in 1995, going on to release three further albums under the name including the acclaimed 2001 full-length It's A Wonderful Life. In 1996 Linkous died for two minutes after ingesting a dangerous mix of Valium and antidepressants in London during a tour supporting Radiohead. He was wheelchair-bound for six months following the incident. Linkous was working on a new Sparklehorse album that had nearly reached completion and was set to be released by the Anti- record label. His delayed multi-media project with Danger Mouse and David Lynch, called Dark Night Of The Soul, is finally due for a formal release this June. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

The family of Sparklehorse‘s Mark Linkous have confirmed that the Virginia-born singer-songwriter died on Saturday (March 6) from a gunshot wound. He was 47.

According to the New York Times, Linkous‘ manager, Shelby Meade, announced that Linkous shot himself in the heart near a friend’s home in Knoxville, Tennessee. Police responded to a call at 1:20pm (EST) with Linkous found dead at the scene.

“It is with great sadness that we share the news that our dear friend and family member, Mark Linkous, took his own life today,” Linkous‘ family told Rolling Stone. “We are thankful for his time with us and will hold him forever in our hearts. May his journey be peaceful, happy and free. There’s a heaven and there’s a star for you.”

Linkous released the first Sparklehorse album, Vivadixiesubmarinetransmissionplot, in 1995, going on to release three further albums under the name including the acclaimed 2001 full-length It’s A Wonderful Life.

In 1996 Linkous died for two minutes after ingesting a dangerous mix of Valium and antidepressants in London during a tour supporting Radiohead. He was wheelchair-bound for six months following the incident.

Linkous was working on a new Sparklehorse album that had nearly reached completion and was set to be released by the Anti- record label.

His delayed multi-media project with Danger Mouse and David Lynch, called Dark Night Of The Soul, is finally due for a formal release this June.

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

GREEN ZONE

0
DIRECTED BY Paul Greengrass STARRING Matt Damon, Amy Ryan, Brendan Gleeson, Greg Kinnear, Jason Isaacs With Tony Blair lately facing some pretty easy questions about the Iraq War, and the presence there or not of WMD, Green Zone arrives at a particularly apposite moment. Made by a director, Paul ...

DIRECTED BY Paul Greengrass

STARRING Matt Damon, Amy Ryan, Brendan Gleeson, Greg Kinnear, Jason Isaacs

With Tony Blair lately facing some pretty easy questions about the Iraq War, and the presence there or not of WMD, Green Zone arrives at a particularly apposite moment.

Made by a director, Paul Greengrass – who, with notable exceptions like the Bourne franchise – makes films that have their jumping-off points in fact, this is a movie that promises a lot. A thriller, yes, but one that asks some hard questions along the way.

Things get off to a pretty impressive start.

It is the early days of the war in Iraq, and we’re travelling along the same timeline as the humvees of Generation Kill, albeit with rather wobblier camerawork. In an insecure military HQ, a leading military official, General Al-Rawi (the Jack Of Clubs on the Iraq War playing cards) is preparing to go to ground. Bombs shake the foundations of the building. The night sky has been turned orange with missile fire.

Meanwhile, on the other side of the conflict, Roy Miller (Matt Damon) is a super-efficient Warrant Officer facing an unexpectedly calm scene. He’s wondering why his crack squad, detailed to find live WMD sites, keep coming up empty handed. Exemplifying the willingness to disobey orders, confront authority and completely drop off the grid that we have come to expect from unconvincingly rendered US military personnel, he sets about asking questions well above his pay grade. In this, he is aided by a helpful CIA chief (Brendan Gleeson).

What follows is a strange mixture of action thriller (the hunt for Al Rawi) and political thriller (the chase to get the bottom of the WMD mystery), and this multi-tasking is a project that proves too difficult to pull off.

Undoubtedly, Paul Greengrass is a fantastic action director, and here a memorable shootout in a kitchen confirms how he is unrivalled, cinematically speaking, in close-quarters, hand- to-hand combat.

Unfortunately for Green Zone, the bigger picture, where the film pulls back and asks us to consider the interests and agendas that led to war, and how the existence of WMD in Iraq post-1991 was a convenient pretext to topple Saddam is one with which now surely everyone is abundantly familiar. When Damon’s Miller finally deduces that he, along with the rest of the world, has been lied to, the reaction is not astonishment, but more likely, “Well, no shit.”

All round, Green Zone bears all the hallmarks of an impressive movie.

Damon is good as Miller, who I think we’re meant to regard as brave, efficient, but a bit on the thick side. The generally good Amy Ryan perspires in khaki as a journalist who wants to get to the bottom of the story, but discovers she is unwittingly perpetuating The Big Lie. Greg Kinnear shows his range as a goal-driven regime-changing politico, and Gleeson is bulky and unorthodox as his diametric opposite. Everywhere you look, all the signs are there to tell you that this is a powerful movie with something to say. You investigate, and guess what? There’s nothing there!

Somebody should really ask some questions about that.

John Robinson

SHUTTER ISLAND

0
DIRECTED BY: Martin Scorsese STARRING: Leonardo DiCaprio, Mark Ruffalo, Ben Kingsley A remote maximum-security mental asylum. An escaped inmate. A hurricane. A derelict lighthouse. Mind control experiments... You could be forgiven for thinking these might be the rather fruity ingredients from a v...

DIRECTED BY: Martin Scorsese

STARRING: Leonardo DiCaprio, Mark Ruffalo, Ben Kingsley

A remote maximum-security mental asylum. An escaped inmate. A hurricane. A derelict lighthouse. Mind control experiments…

You could be forgiven for thinking these might be the rather fruity ingredients from a vintage horror movie instead of the latest Martin Scorsese film.

Certainly, Shutter Island resembles nothing less than a lurid, gothic noir – in another decade you might reasonably expect to see Boris Karloff pop up as Shutter Island’s baleful German psychotherapist Dr Naehring. So what’s prompted Scorsese – on the back of his long-deserved Oscar win for The Departed/ – to make an unlikely detour into territory arguably more appropriate to RKO Studios circa 1940s?

In some respects, Shutter Island finds Scorsese in a familiar – and potentially not entirely welcome – position in his career.

In the past, following highpoints like Taxi Driver, Raging Bull, GoodFellas and Casino, he’s chosen to move out of his feted comfort zone with, one can politely say, mixed results. That’s New York, New York, King Of Comedy, Cape Fear and Kundun, in case you need reminding. Indeed, Shutter Island’s closest parallel might well be Cape Fear, a similarly playful exercise in shocks and jolts.

But if Scorsese could be accused of indulging himself on Cape Fear – all that overblown schlock and De Niro’s Henry Rollins-style tats – Shutter Island is a commendably restrained picture by comparison. That’s not to say it’s not without moments where Scorsese clearly has tremendous fun deploying jarring Bernard Herrmann-style strings, vertiginous camera angles and wildly distorted shadows. But these tropes are Scorsese’s fond riffs on German Expressionist cinema – where similar visual motifs gave shape to characters perilous psychological states. Entirely appropriate, then, for a film set in a mental hospital.

In fact, it could well be serendipitous that Scorsese was busy working on the narration for a documentary on Val Lewton – producer of classic 1940s horrors like Cat People, The Seventh Victim and madhouse shocker Bedlam – when he was sent the script for Shutter Island. Lewton is certainly a critical reference here – as is Preminger’s identity-swap drama Laura, Frederick Wiseman’s documentary, Titicut Follies and Samuel Fuller’s asylum expose, Shock Corridor.

Adapted from a novel by Mystic River and Wire writer Dennis Lehane, Shutter Island is set in 1954, as Leonardo DiCaprio’s US Marshal Teddy Daniels, and his new partner Chuck Aule (Mark Ruffalo), investigate the disappearance of inmate Rachel Solondo from the island’s Ashecliffe Hospital for the Criminally Insane. Solondo, we learn, was incarcerated after drowning her three children.

She escaped from a locked cell, through barred windows, leaving no trace of her whereabouts.

The only clue, perhaps, to her disappearance is a note Teddy finds under a loose floorboard in her cell: “The law of 4 who is 67”. But Teddy’s investigation is hampered on several fronts – a hurricane threatens to decimate the island, he suffers frequent nightmares about the atrocities he witnessed as a GI during the liberation of Dachau and, in elaborate fantasy sequences, he receives dire warnings from his dead wife.

Most obstructive, Teddy believes, to the immediate practicalities of solving the case are the Ashecliffe’s doctors and administrative staff, led by Ben Kingsley’s Dr Cawley.

Cawley practises “a moral fusion between law and order and clinical care,” remarkably forward thinking for the 1950s. But Teddy comes to mistrust Cawley – and Max Von Sydow’s affable but ominous Dr Naehring – who he sees as uncooperative, or at worst, deliberately obscuring some deeper secret operating at the heart of the Ashecliffe.

In fact, as the film progresses and Teddy appears to uncover darker and more insidious truths about the facility, he finds himself increasingly mistrustful of anyone’s motives, even his partner. And, as he begins to suspect he is being dosed with psychotropic drugs, his paranoia spills overboard.

This is DiCaprio’s fourth outing with Scorsese; at a comparable point in their careers, Scorsese and his other favoured leading man, Robert De Niro/, were on Raging Bull. Although it does both actors a disservice to compare their roles for the director, I’m reminded of a quote from Scorsese about Two Oscars Bob: “He isn’t afraid to be unpleasant, to be mean, to be a person that nobody likes.”

It would be hard to make the same claim for DiCaprio, of course.

But he has a vulnerability that’s worked well for Scorsese across their previous collaborations and gave extra texture to the vengeful Amsterdam Vallon, arrogant Howard Hughes and beleaguered Billy Costigan. If you couldn’t imagine DiCaprio playing Jake LaMotta, equally I can’t see De Niro as Teddy Daniels. The impact of Teddy’s gradual unravelling is predicated around our sympathy for him; De Niro never did sympathetic.

Scorsese is absorbed here with tricksy notions of identity (at one point, Fight Club’s David Fincher was due to direct), and the cast around DiCaprio ensure that there are certain ambiguities to the way their characters play out. Ruffalo – a great supporting actor – brings subtle shifts to Chuck as his role develops. Kingsley and Von Sydow do their slightly creepy European actorly thing, and there’s a series of splendid cameos from Patricia Clarkson, Emily Mortimer, James Earle Haley and, memorably, Silence Of The Lambs‘ Buffalo Bill, Ted Levine, as Ashecliffe’s warden.

“Men like you are my speciality,” he purrs at Teddy with all the predatory confidence of a lion at feeding time eyeing up a light snack. “Men of violence.”

But, crucially, what Scorsese understands about horror movies is that the right location is everything. After all, what’s Dracula without his castle, or The Evil Dead without a rickety old log cabin stuck out in the middle of the woods? So the Ashecliffe itself becomes a character in its own right. An imposing red brick facility, it resembles a Victorian boarding school, overlooked by an ominous grey structure – an old Civil War fort, we learn, home to Ward C, where they “take only the most dangerous, damaged patients”.

Sure enough, once we get inside Ward C, it’s a maze of poorly lit tunnels, rusting metal staircases and dark corridors. You might wonder why there’s no flaming torches jutting out of walls – but that might be a step too far, even for Scorsese.

Michael Bonner

LCD Soundsystem announce new album details

0
LCD Soundsystem's James Murphy has revealed that his new album will be released on May 17. Murphy recorded the album at his studio The Manshun in Los Angeles, though in an interview with NME Radio, he admitted that he hasn't had time to think of a title for it yet. "This record's horrifying work t...

LCD Soundsystem‘s James Murphy has revealed that his new album will be released on May 17.

Murphy recorded the album at his studio The Manshun in Los Angeles, though in an interview with NME Radio, he admitted that he hasn’t had time to think of a title for it yet.

“This record’s horrifying work title is ‘Internet Sensation!’“, Murphy explained, adding that he comes up with a joke title for all of his albums before deciding on a proper one. “I was thinking, ‘What would a guy who’s been out of the music scene for a long time, and has kids [do to promote himself]?’. ‘We gotta be internet sensations, that’s what everyone is now!'”

The album, which is the third LCD full-length studio album, features songs including ‘Dance Yrself Clean’, ‘Drunk Girls’, ‘One Touch’, ‘All I Want’, ‘Change’ and ‘Hit’.

[url=http://www.nme.com/news/lcd-soundsystem/49601]Murphy is set to release his first film soundtrack, Greenberg[/url], on March 22.

Meanwhile, [url=https://www.uncut.co.uk/news/lcd_soundsystem/news/13982]Uncut is asking readers to write in with their questions for Murphy as part of our An Audience With… feature[/url].

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

Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwood’s film set for DVD release

0

2003 film Bodysong, which features a soundtrack by Radiohead's Jonny Greenwood, has been confirmed for DVD release later this month. Greenwood is set to provide an audio commentary on the March 22 release of the film, which is Directed by Simon Pummell. Bodysong features collages of footage including newsreels and home videos in an attempt to portray what Pummell says is a "celebration, and also an indictment, of humanity". Watch a clip of Bodysong here. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

2003 film Bodysong, which features a soundtrack by Radiohead‘s Jonny Greenwood, has been confirmed for DVD release later this month.

Greenwood is set to provide an audio commentary on the March 22 release of the film, which is Directed by Simon Pummell.

Bodysong features collages of footage including newsreels and home videos in an attempt to portray what Pummell says is a “celebration, and also an indictment, of humanity”.

Watch a clip of Bodysong here.

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

Belle & Sebastian recording new album

0
Belle & Sebastian are set to start work on their first album since 2006's 'The Life Pursuit'. Led by Stuart Murdoch, The Glasgow indie band, who have been on 'semi-hiatus' in recent years, sent a message to fans on their email list confirming that they have begun working on new material and are...

Belle & Sebastian are set to start work on their first album since 2006’s ‘The Life Pursuit’.

Led by Stuart Murdoch, The Glasgow indie band, who have been on ‘semi-hiatus’ in recent years, sent a message to fans on their email list confirming that they have begun working on new material and are set to start recording in Los Angeles soon.

“We’ve been in the studio these last few weeks writing some new tracks and shortly we will say cheerio to Glasgow for a while when we set off to LA to record our next album,” the email message explained.

A series of festival bookings for 2010 have also been confirmed for the band, via their website, Belleandsebastian.com. They will play Finland’s Ruisrock Festival (July 11), Norway’s Slottsfjell Festival (July 15) and Japan’s Fuji Rock Festival (August 1).

UK appearances are also expected.

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

First Look – Chris Morris’ Four Lions

0

Thinking back to Brass Eye’s 2001 “paedophile special”, and in particular the furore it caused among certain sections of the media, it’s easy to see how misunderstood Chris Morris often is. Typically outraged, the Daily Mail described the episode as “a spoof documentary on paedophilia.” Which is missing the point. The programme was a savage attack on the media's own thoughtless, knee-jerk reaction to a serious issue. It clearly didn’t stop, though, large sections of the press demonstrating their own thoughtless, knee-jerk reaction to the show. It seems likely, I’m afraid, that those same sections of the media will be up in arms about Four Lions, Morris’ directorial debut, a “jihadist comedy”, no less, focussing on four wannabe suicide bombers in Sheffield. Which is a pity, as Four Lions is an extremely good film; far more than **just** a comedy about suicide bombers. It’s often tempting to try and guess exactly what Morris’s intentions are from project to project. Radio 4’s On The Hour – and it’s BBC TV extension, The Day Today – were as much about exploring the dynamics and specific technical details of news programmes as they were about sending-up of its po-faced self-importance. Jam - a personal favourite, and another radio-to-TV transfer - resided in an altogether more experimental place, a woozy 4am place of distorted dream logic. Nathan Barley – co-written with The Guardian’s Charlie Brooker – might well have sneered disdainfully at a certain London media archetype, but the show’s great trick was that, in the end, you sort of felt sorry for Barley, however repellent and idiotic a self-facilitating media node he may have been. So what exactly is Morris – and co-writers, Peep Show and The Thick Of It’s Jesse Armstrong and Sam Bain - doing with Four Lions? On face value, it is, indeed, a very black comedy about four radical Muslims – three young Asians, and one white middle aged convert – who plan to blow themselves, and others, up during the London Marathon. Taken as farce, the film works extremely well. Their leader, Omar (Riza Ahmed), intriguingly, the most conventionally “westernised” character here, is a family man who tells his son bedtime stories, where the animals in The Lion King have become suicide bombers. There’s Fessal (Adeel Akhtar), who is training crows to carry bombs, Waj (Kayvan Novac), who can barely tie his own shoe-laces, and Barry (Nigel Lindsay), a maniacal convert who thinks it’d be quite a good way to punish non-Muslims by blowing up a mosque. The film follows them from their safe house in Sheffield, to the mountains of Pakistan, where two of them intend to train with the Mujahideen, back to Sheffield and on to London, and their intended entry into Paradise. Of course, things don’t go according to plan. The four men are, on almost every level, utterly incompetent. But, equally, they’re extremely dangerous. After all, they have a garage packed with bleach and fertilizer. Morris has said that “terrorist cells have the same group dynamics as stag parties and five-a-side-football teams. There is conflict, friendship, misunderstanding and rivalry. Terrorism is about ideology, but it’s also about berks.” He cites examples like 9/11 hijacker Mohamed Atta, who when teased for urinating too loudly, apparently blamed Jews for making thin bathroom doors, and Khalid Sheikh Mohamed, who supposedly spent hours looking for a costume that wouldn’t make him look fat on camera. But in Morris’ universe, everyone in the film is stupid, not just terrorists. There’s Nighty Night’s Julia Davis as a whacked-out neighbour who buys the quartet’s story that they’re in fact a band meeting for rehearsals; or Morris’ regular Kevin Eldon and Smack The Pony’s Darren Boyd as a pair of police snipers who mistake a Wookie costume for a bear costume, with calamitous results, and Benedict Cumerbatch as an inept hostage negotiator. There is plenty of excellent comedy here, much of it quite uncomfortable. So what’s Morris’ point? Is he simply making topical farce – a black comedy that, in its way, while touching on contemporary issues harks back to the darker output of the Ealing studios? Or, are we to believe that Morris’ aim is to illuminate terrorists as fallible, bickering, ultimately human people? Certainly, it’s true that one of Morris’ ongoing concerns in his work is to rigorously mine his subject, however shocking or taboo it might be, in a manner that demystifies it. Critical to this, I think, is Omar. It’s certainly unsettling to see him sitting in his pleasant, airy suburban house with his attractive wife Sophia (EastEnders’ Preeya Kalidas), discussing blowing himself up in reasonable, assured tones while bouncing his son on his knee. After all, aren’t we conditioned to imagine our terrorists as bearded devils, holed up in remote caves, issuing chilling threats on crudely-shot video tapes? Which, surely, is Morris' point. Four Lions opens in the UK on May 7

Thinking back to Brass Eye’s 2001 “paedophile special”, and in particular the furore it caused among certain sections of the media, it’s easy to see how misunderstood Chris Morris often is. Typically outraged, the Daily Mail described the episode as “a spoof documentary on paedophilia.” Which is missing the point. The programme was a savage attack on the media’s own thoughtless, knee-jerk reaction to a serious issue. It clearly didn’t stop, though, large sections of the press demonstrating their own thoughtless, knee-jerk reaction to the show.

It seems likely, I’m afraid, that those same sections of the media will be up in arms about Four Lions, Morris’ directorial debut, a “jihadist comedy”, no less, focussing on four wannabe suicide bombers in Sheffield. Which is a pity, as Four Lions is an extremely good film; far more than **just** a comedy about suicide bombers.

Danger Mouse’s ‘Dark Night Of The Soul’ to be officially released

0
Danger Mouse's collaboration album with Mark Linkous from Sparklehorse and David Lynch is to be officially release by record label EMI, after the DJ/producer settled a legal dispute with the group. 'Dark Night Of The Soul', which features Frank Black, Iggy Pop and Super Furry Animals' Gruff Rhys, w...

Danger Mouse‘s collaboration album with Mark Linkous from Sparklehorse and David Lynch is to be officially release by record label EMI, after the DJ/producer settled a legal dispute with the group.

‘Dark Night Of The Soul’, which features Frank Black, Iggy Pop and Super Furry AnimalsGruff Rhys, was leaked online last year through peer-to-peer sites because of an “ongoing dispute” between Danger Mouse (real name Brian Burton) and the label about its release. Instead, ‘Dark Night Of The Soul’ came out as a picture book featuring photos by Lynch and a blank CD with a sticker saying, “use it as you will” on it.

Now, Burton says the dispute has been resolved, leaving the album available to be officially released.

“The problems of last year are last year, so hopefully it will be out soon in June or something like that,” Burton told BBC News.

An EMI spokesperson confirmed the news, saying: “We can confirm that EMI are working with Brian Burton again, and are delighted to be doing so. Further information on releases will follow shortly.”

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

Brian Eno announces Brighton Festival details

0
Brian Eno has announced details about this year's Brighton Festival, which he is curating under the title Guest Artistic Director. Eno is leading the programme for the May 1-23 festival, and as well as music, events are tailored towards theatre, books, debate and outdoor events. Talvin Singh is am...

Brian Eno has announced details about this year’s Brighton Festival, which he is curating under the title Guest Artistic Director.

Eno is leading the programme for the May 1-23 festival, and as well as music, events are tailored towards theatre, books, debate and outdoor events.

Talvin Singh is among the musical acts confirmed to appear at the event, along with Leafcutter John and the London Philharmonic Orchestra.

“This festival’s reputation rests on its commitment to presenting new and original talent in unexpected combinations – crossing the boundaries with ease and lightness,” Eno said.

He added: “I’m excited about working in Brighton: I love the city, and I have great respect for the festival, which has consistently placed itself at the cutting edge of the creative arts in Britain.”

See Brightonfestival.org for the full line-up and timetable details.

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

Portishead and Goldfrapp members team up to score 1928 film

0
Portishead's Adrian Utley has teamed up with Goldfrapp's Will Gregory to work on the soundtrack for 1928 film The Passion Of Joan Of Arc The pair are set to premiere their new score live during a screening of the Carl Theador Dreyer film at Colston Hall in Bristol on May 7. Six electric guitarists ...

Portishead‘s Adrian Utley has teamed up with Goldfrapp‘s Will Gregory to work on the soundtrack for 1928 film The Passion Of Joan Of Arc

The pair are set to premiere their new score live during a screening of the Carl Theador Dreyer film at Colston Hall in Bristol on May 7. Six electric guitarists will join them onstage, and the musicians are due to be helmed by conductor Charles Hazlewood.

See Colstonhall.org for venue information.

In other Goldfrapp news, the band are set to release new album ‘Head First’ on March 22.

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

ASK LCD SOUNDSYSTEM

0
James Murphy is in the hotseat soon for our An Audience With... feature, and we're after your questions to put to him. Murphy, of course, is the New York musician who, under the LCD Soundsystem guise, has been making fine, literate electronic music since 2002. Indeed, 2007's Sound Of Silver was ou...

James Murphy is in the hotseat soon for our An Audience With… feature, and we’re after your questions to put to him.

Murphy, of course, is the New York musician who, under the LCD Soundsystem guise, has been making fine, literate electronic music since 2002. Indeed, 2007’s Sound Of Silver was our Album Of The Year here at UNCUT.

So, what better way to welcome James Murphy back to active service – there’s a new album due in May – than by popping him into the UNCUT chair to answer your questions.

Perhaps you’ve always wondered how on earth he nearly ended up writing for Seinfeld? Or whether he’s ever found his edge again? Or indeed, what silver sounds like..?

Send your questions to: uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com by Friday March 12.

CLUSTER – QUA

0

Cluster remain one of the most unusual and unsung of the original Krautrock wave. Their airy excursions into abstract electronic sound lack the propulsive rhythms of Neu! or the whimsical experimentalism of Faust. Impressively, though, their first studio album in 14 years suggests the partnership of Hans-Joachim Roedelius and Dieter Moebius still has inspiration to burn. Seventeen tracks, some just interludes, others stretching out to seven minutes in length, Qua runs the gamut from cold space-station ambience to serene minimalism to shuffling electronica, while maintaining a commendable consistency. "Xanesra" employs slow, emotive washes of synth occasionally invaded by rather more abrasive sound effects, while "Malturi Sa" is bubbly avant-dance that one might venture was reminiscent of Mouse On Mars, if one was not aware where they picked up such tricks in the first place. Louis Pattison

Cluster remain one of the most unusual and unsung of the original Krautrock wave.

Their airy excursions into abstract electronic sound lack the propulsive rhythms of Neu! or the whimsical experimentalism of Faust. Impressively, though, their first studio album in 14 years suggests the partnership of Hans-Joachim Roedelius and Dieter Moebius still has inspiration to burn.

Seventeen tracks, some just interludes, others stretching out to seven minutes in length, Qua runs the gamut from cold space-station ambience to serene minimalism to shuffling electronica, while maintaining a commendable consistency.

“Xanesra” employs slow, emotive washes of synth occasionally invaded by rather more abrasive sound effects, while “Malturi Sa” is bubbly avant-dance that one might venture was reminiscent of Mouse On Mars, if one was not aware where they picked up such tricks in the first place.

Louis Pattison