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ALI FARKA TOURE & TOUMANI DIABATE – ALI & TOUMANI

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Mali has become the country impossible to ignore. Always one of the continent's musical power-houses, the West African nation has been an omnipresent factor in African music's inexorable ascent over the past 30 years. Where other cultures have faded in and out, Mali has stayed a constant. Early on it was the '80s synths and soaring vocals of Salif Keita that flew the flag. More recently the exuberant duets of Amadou & Mariam, the feminist chamber pop of Rokia Traore, the hypnotic desert blues of Tinariwen and the wild ngoni fretboards of Bassekou Kouyate have all won international acclaim, helped along by Damon Albarn's evangelising. The clanging electric blues of Ali Farka Toure and the rippling kora of Toumani Diabate have been complementary forces throughout Mali's campaign to be heard. Toure's early releases, in the late '70s, were fallen on by European cognoscenti with astonishment - they were familiarly bluesy yet quite distinct from the American traditions they clearly shared. Diabate, a generation younger, arrived a decade later, immediately showing the crossover potential of the melodic kora by collaborating with flamenco group Ketama. It was thanks to their shared producer, Nick Gold, of pioneering label World Circuit, that Toure and Diabate finally worked together, recording the much garlanded In The Heart Of The Moon in a disused Bamako hotel in 2004. By then, both men had become international stars, their albums awarded Grammies and their talents sought out for groundbreaking collusions. Toure had playing alongside Ry Cooder and Taj Mahal, while Diabate had worked with Bjork, Albarn and Roswell Rudd. That the pair hadn't previously played together isn't so surprising. Age difference aside, they represent two very different strands of Malian culture. Toure belongs to the country's north, growing up 'a child of the river' and later acquiring a farm on the banks of the Niger. Self-taught, much inspired by the R'n'B he encountered as a young man - he was for years described as "Africa's John Lee Hooker", which irked both bluesmen no end - Toure etched out his own variation on Mali's traditions, the music Martin Scorsese has called "the DNA of the blues". Diabate, by contrast, is from the lusher south, a former child prodigy, born into a clan of griots, who can trace his lineage back 70 generations. The traditions of the kora, the 21-string African harp, are more ancient still, akin to the lore surrounding the sitar; both kora and sitar are considered sacred instruments, though both have nonetheless found their way into western pop. The impromptu London sessions that produced Ali & Toumani were to prove Toure's last - he died the following year, 2006. Since then Diabate has been busy. Following the Grammy award he received for In The Heart Of The Moon, he released Boulevard de L'Independence with his Symmetric Orchestra, then an inspired solo set, The Mande Variations, both pushing back the release of this current album. Diabate has created two laments to the fallen Mali blues maestro, once on The Mande Variations, and again with Vieux Farka Toure, Ali's son, on his eponymous debut. Vieux is himself a force to be reckoned with, one of a new generation destined to further internationalise African traditions; he's already dabbled with funk, reggae and remixes. His father's reputation has posthumously grown, helped by the rise of Tinariwen, whose own desert blues owe a clear debt to Toure's innovations. Toure's part in Ali & Toumani is some way from the pungent electric blues for which he is mostly celebrated, the music that blazed from his early Green and Red LPs or from later creations like The River. Here he offers a rhythmic backdrop of picked acoustic guitar - flowing as inexorably as his beloved river - against which Diabate's kora dances. It's a simple formula but it works brilliantly. One reason why is that Diabate adds more than the dazzling cascades of notes that first catch the ear. Part of Diabate's fame is founded on his ability to play rhythm, bass and melody lines simultaneously (thus turning the kora into a solo instrument for the first time), and here he regularly returns from his improvised flights to restate a number's basics alongside Toure. Try the twinkling "56", for example: the effect is to make the duo sound more like a trio. Almost all instrumental, with the occasional comment or chorus from Toure, the LP works, like its predecessor, as much through its mesmeric ambience as its hooklines. "Sabu Yerkoy" is the clear exception, with its call-and-response vocals, its stalking salsa rhythm, discreet drums and an elastic bassline provided by Cachaito Lopez, of Buena Vista Social Club fame, for whom this would also be a final session (he died in 2009). It's a charmer that reminds us of the transatlantic musical exchange that saw Africa's music exported with slavery, only for it to return and conquer centuries on when Cuban salsa became hugely popular in West Africa during the '50s and '60s. By contrast, "Be Mankan" is a stately, almost classical piece for kora, as is the more nimble "Fantasy". "Doudou" is a trance-out on which the two sets of strings gallop together, while "Warbe" is the bluesiest item here. With Toure more to the fore, both he and Diabate teasing out lines that wouldn't sound out of place in a Robert Johnson or Freddie King solo, it's pure alchemy. "Machengoida" offers a more austere, considered line of blues, with the duo taking it in turns to explore a simple, descending melody line in endless, varied detail. "Kalu Dja", the closer, is also the 'single' that will preface Ali & Toumani. It's a chiming, accessible piece that's emblematic of the album's rapport and spirit without being its stand-out. Such considerations scarcely apply, in any case, to a record that works by cumulative power, and whose approach lies somewhere between an acoustic jam session and a Ravi Shankar raga. Aside from being an album of spellbinding beauty, Ali & Toumani is also a posthumous valediction to Ali Farka Toure, and an affirmation that from Mali there is surely much more to come. Neil Spencer

Mali has become the country impossible to ignore. Always one of the continent’s musical power-houses, the West African nation has been an omnipresent factor in African music’s inexorable ascent over the past 30 years.

Where other cultures have faded in and out, Mali has stayed a constant. Early on it was the ’80s synths and soaring vocals of Salif Keita that flew the flag. More recently the exuberant duets of Amadou & Mariam, the feminist chamber pop of Rokia Traore, the hypnotic desert blues of Tinariwen and the wild ngoni fretboards of Bassekou Kouyate have all won international acclaim, helped along by Damon Albarn‘s evangelising.

The clanging electric blues of Ali Farka Toure and the rippling kora of Toumani Diabate have been complementary forces throughout Mali’s campaign to be heard. Toure’s early releases, in the late ’70s, were fallen on by European cognoscenti with astonishment – they were familiarly bluesy yet quite distinct from the American traditions they clearly shared. Diabate, a generation younger, arrived a decade later, immediately showing the crossover potential of the melodic kora by collaborating with flamenco group Ketama.

It was thanks to their shared producer, Nick Gold, of pioneering label World Circuit, that Toure and Diabate finally worked together, recording the much garlanded In The Heart Of The Moon in a disused Bamako hotel in 2004. By then, both men had become international stars, their albums awarded Grammies and their talents sought out for groundbreaking collusions. Toure had playing alongside Ry Cooder and Taj Mahal, while Diabate had worked with Bjork, Albarn and Roswell Rudd.

That the pair hadn’t previously played together isn’t so surprising. Age difference aside, they represent two very different strands of Malian culture. Toure belongs to the country’s north, growing up ‘a child of the river’ and later acquiring a farm on the banks of the Niger. Self-taught, much inspired by the R’n’B he encountered as a young man – he was for years described as “Africa’s John Lee Hooker“, which irked both bluesmen no end – Toure etched out his own variation on Mali’s traditions, the music Martin Scorsese has called “the DNA of the blues”.

Diabate, by contrast, is from the lusher south, a former child prodigy, born into a clan of griots, who can trace his lineage back 70 generations. The traditions of the kora, the 21-string African harp, are more ancient still, akin to the lore surrounding the sitar; both kora and sitar are considered sacred instruments, though both have nonetheless found their way into western pop.

The impromptu London sessions that produced Ali & Toumani were to prove Toure’s last – he died the following year, 2006. Since then Diabate has been busy. Following the Grammy award he received for In The Heart Of The Moon, he released Boulevard de L’Independence with his Symmetric Orchestra, then an inspired solo set, The Mande Variations, both pushing back the release of this current album. Diabate has created two laments to the fallen Mali blues maestro, once on The Mande Variations, and again with Vieux Farka Toure, Ali’s son, on his eponymous debut. Vieux is himself a force to be reckoned with, one of a new generation destined to further internationalise African traditions; he’s already dabbled with funk, reggae and remixes. His father’s reputation has posthumously grown, helped by the rise of Tinariwen, whose own desert blues owe a clear debt to Toure’s innovations.

Toure’s part in Ali & Toumani is some way from the pungent electric blues for which he is mostly celebrated, the music that blazed from his early Green and Red LPs or from later creations like The River. Here he offers a rhythmic backdrop of picked acoustic guitar – flowing as inexorably as his beloved river – against which Diabate’s kora dances.

It’s a simple formula but it works brilliantly. One reason why is that Diabate adds more than the dazzling cascades of notes that first catch the ear. Part of Diabate‘s fame is founded on his ability to play rhythm, bass and melody lines simultaneously (thus turning the kora into a solo instrument for the first time), and here he regularly returns from his improvised flights to restate a number’s basics alongside Toure. Try the twinkling “56”, for example: the effect is to make the duo sound more like a trio.

Almost all instrumental, with the occasional comment or chorus from Toure, the LP works, like its predecessor, as much through its mesmeric ambience as its hooklines. “Sabu Yerkoy” is the clear exception, with its call-and-response vocals, its stalking salsa rhythm, discreet drums and an elastic bassline provided by Cachaito Lopez, of Buena Vista Social Club fame, for whom this would also be a final session (he died in 2009). It’s a charmer that reminds us of the transatlantic musical exchange that saw Africa’s music exported with slavery, only for it to return and conquer centuries on when Cuban salsa became hugely popular in West Africa during the ’50s and ’60s.

By contrast, “Be Mankan” is a stately, almost classical piece for kora, as is the more nimble “Fantasy”. “Doudou” is a trance-out on which the two sets of strings gallop together, while “Warbe” is the bluesiest item here. With Toure more to the fore, both he and Diabate teasing out lines that wouldn’t sound out of place in a Robert Johnson or Freddie King solo, it’s pure alchemy. “Machengoida” offers a more austere, considered line of blues, with the duo taking it in turns to explore a simple, descending melody line in endless, varied detail.

“Kalu Dja”, the closer, is also the ‘single’ that will preface Ali & Toumani. It’s a chiming, accessible piece that’s emblematic of the album’s rapport and spirit without being its stand-out. Such considerations scarcely apply, in any case, to a record that works by cumulative power, and whose approach lies somewhere between an acoustic jam session and a Ravi Shankar raga. Aside from being an album of spellbinding beauty, Ali & Toumani is also a posthumous valediction to Ali Farka Toure, and an affirmation that from Mali there is surely much more to come.

Neil Spencer

Oscar Watch – at war with The Hurt Locker

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At the time of writing, the Oscars are three days away, and some folks, it seems, are getting jittery. Avatar, James Cameron’s lumbering 3D epic – seen by many as a shoe-in at Sunday’s ceremony – doesn’t appear quite the sure bet it was a few weeks ago. The reason? The significant head of steam built up by Kathryn Bigelow’s bomb disposal drama, The Hurt Locker. Doing the rounds of the Awards ceremonies, Bigelow’s film has conclusively trumped Cameron’s – 15 Best Picture awards for The Hurt Locker against 2 for Avatar. There’s been plenty of meat for hungry Oscar watchers to get their teeth into along the way, of course. There’s the David and Goliath tussle – Avatar’s $300m budget and phenomenal box office success vs The Hurt Locker’s slimline $15m; it’s the Little Film That Could. Then there’s the fact Cameron and Bigelow were once married. This appears to be a dead-end issue, in fact; Cameron and Bigelow are reportedly still close, and both sought each other’s advice on their respective movies. All the same, it’s interesting to see how, over the last few weeks before the Oscar ballot closed on Tuesday March 2, The Hurt Locker has become the target of a negative campaign. Among the most interesting, arguably, was a story in the Los Angeles Times on February 25, which questioned the film’s authenticity, with active soldiers and veterans claiming the film doesn’t depict combat accurately. I wonder quite how relevant an issue this really is. When has a war movie genuinely presented conflict as it really was? Looking back at the last significant wave of war movies – the canon of Vietnam movies from the Seventies – and they’re flawed in the way they portrayed the war. Of that initial slew of Vietnam movies - Coming Home, The Boys In Company C and The Deer Hunter – they touched on Viet Nam, but weren’t really about the conflict. The came Apocalypse Now, which might capture some of the extreme madness and horror (the horror…) fighting in the jungles of South East Asia, but had little to do with the accuracy of that conflict. That Coming Home, The Deer Hunter and Apocalypse Now are widely seen as occupying the upper echelons of that glorious canon of Seventies’ movies is based less on the veracity of their depiction of war, but down to other factors. For many, it’s Oliver Stone’s Platoon that stands as the first, real and accurate depiction of the war. But even that received as many brickbats and plaudits. Stone, decorated during his service in Vietnam, came under fire from the far-right, with Washington Times' writer John Podhoretz calling it "one of the most repellent movies ever made in this country." Meanwhile, John Wheeler, chairman of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund, said: “Platoon makes us real… it is part of the healing process.” All the same, in much the same way that its predecessors like Coming Home, The Deer Hunter and Apocalypse Now aren’t really Vietnam war movies, The Hurt Locker isn’t really a film about Iraq. It simply uses the setting as a way to examine the way certain men respond under pressure. But, more generally, I wonder since when has accuracy or truth telling been a prerequisite of the movies? Films are just films, surely?

At the time of writing, the Oscars are three days away, and some folks, it seems, are getting jittery. Avatar, James Cameron’s lumbering 3D epic – seen by many as a shoe-in at Sunday’s ceremony – doesn’t appear quite the sure bet it was a few weeks ago. The reason? The significant head of steam built up by Kathryn Bigelow’s bomb disposal drama, The Hurt Locker.

Natural Snow Buildings

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A nice surprise in the post yesterday, when a big box full of their beautiful CDs, records and cassettes turned up from Natural Snow Buildings. Seeing these actual objects for the first time – as opposed to just hearing their rapturous music – confirmed that they were as beautiful as their reputation suggested, further proving the meticulous craft and care with which Mehdi Ameziane and Solange Gularte go about their work. It also reminded me that I ought to post the piece I wrote for the magazine a couple of months ago, since I’ve never blogged properly about this extraordinary band. Here goes: A little before Christmas, a Bristol friend visited London to see a French duo who were supporting Fennesz and Grouper. The duo went under the name of Natural Snow Buildings and, to be honest, I’d never heard of them before. This wasn’t entirely surprising. Natural Snow Buildings may have released a formidable number of albums (way into double figures) over the past decade. But most of their albums have only surfaced in tiny numbers: "The Winter Ray" was reputedly limited to just 15 copies; "Daughters Of Darkness", a set of cassette tapes totalling six hours of music (heartily recommended by a correspondent here, incidentally) ran to 150. Even for a small cult band, this sort of behaviour looks on the surface like bloody-minded elitism. Maybe, though, Natural Snow Buildings are pioneering a newish model of disseminating music, where an obsessive few can purchase (by all accounts) exquisite, hand-crafted limited editions, and the rest of us are implicitly permitted to hunt down free downloads of the music. It’s not a business model that will guarantee a young band a lucrative career comparable to, say, that of The Pigeon Detectives. But for a generation of underground musicians content to let their work spread organically and discreetly, who have a realistic understanding that they’re not going to make fortunes by pursuing their music, it must start looking both artful and pragmatic. That said, after having been furnished with a dozen or so Natural Snow Buildings albums, I’d be very happy to see them receive some more publicity and acclaim, because large tranches of their catalogue sound quite gorgeous. This great, fragile avalanche of music has a cumulative impact, and it might not be until you’ve worked your way through a few of their records that their charm really emerges. My current favourite, "The Snowbringer Cult" (a 2CD set on Students Of Decay from 2008, extending to an unimaginably profligate 1,000 copies), is a fine example of what the couple – Mehdi Ameziane and Solange Gularte – do. Disc One showcases Gularte’s solo project, Isengrind, then Ameziane’s, TwinSisterMoon. Gularte works with brackish, delicate ambient drones, reminiscent of Popol Vuh, fuzzy ‘90s outriders Flying Saucer Attack and Matt Valentine’s forerunners of the US free folk scene, Tower Recordings. Ameziane, meanwhile, favours brittle folk songs, which he sings in an uncanny whisper that’s close in tone and spirit to that of Vashti Bunyan. On Disc Two, the pair hook up, balancing the two strains of noise and singer-songwriter craft with an elegance that reminds me of PG Six’s early work (an alumnus of Tower Recordings, as it happens). As you’ve probably intuited, an ineffable air of preciousness hovers around Natural Snow Buildings, compounded by their song titles – “The Bones Of A Raven's Meal”, “The Spears Of The Wolfe”, “Slayer Of The King Of Hell”, “Ghost Pathway Toward Midgard” – which suggest Gularte and Ameziane learned English from a libraryful of lurid, sub-Tolkien fantasy novels. Amazingly, though, a plausible mystique endures, too – and not just because original copies of their albums are as rare as sacred artefacts. Have a look around for their music, and let me know what you think.

A nice surprise in the post yesterday, when a big box full of their beautiful CDs, records and cassettes turned up from Natural Snow Buildings. Seeing these actual objects for the first time – as opposed to just hearing their rapturous music – confirmed that they were as beautiful as their reputation suggested, further proving the meticulous craft and care with which Mehdi Ameziane and Solange Gularte go about their work.

Sean Ono Lennon: ‘John Lennon Citroen TV ad keeps dad in the public consciousness’

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John Lennon's son Sean has defended his father's appearance in the new TV advert for the Citroen DS3. The former Beatle is seen in his late 60's heyday in the advert, which is then interspersed with footage of the new DS3 car. Responding to fans' criticism of the advert on his Twitter page, Sean O...

John Lennon‘s son Sean has defended his father’s appearance in the new TV advert for the Citroen DS3.

The former Beatle is seen in his late 60’s heyday in the advert, which is then interspersed with footage of the new DS3 car.

Responding to fans’ criticism of the advert on his Twitter page, Sean Ono Lennon said his mother Yoko Ono allowed the footage of Lennon to be used in the advert to keep him “in the public consciousness”, rather than for financial gain.

“She [Yoko Ono] did not do it for money. [It] has to do [with] hoping to keep dad in public consciousness. No new LP’s, so TV ad is exposure to young,” Ono Lennon said, adding: “Look, TV ad was not for money. It’s just hard to find new ways to keep dad in the new world. Not many things as effective as TV.”

Another tweet from Ono Lennon again denied that the advert was for financial gain, though saw him admit that he had only just seen the advert for himself.

“Having just seen ad I realize why people are mad,” he wrote. “But intention was not financial, was simply wanting to keep him out there in the world.”

Watch the Citroen DS3 advert featuring John Lennon on YouTube.

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

Tom ‘T-Bone’ Wolk passes away

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Hall And Oates bassist Tom 'T-Bone' Wolk has passed away, aged 58. New Yorker Wolk died on Sunday (February 28) of a heart attack, reports the Huffington Post. The bassist had also worked with Elvis Costello, Bette Midler, Robert Palmer, Carly Simon and Billy Joel throughout his career. Both Dary...

Hall And Oates bassist Tom ‘T-Bone’ Wolk has passed away, aged 58.

New Yorker Wolk died on Sunday (February 28) of a heart attack, reports the Huffington Post.

The bassist had also worked with Elvis Costello, Bette Midler, Robert Palmer, Carly Simon and Billy Joel throughout his career.

Both Daryl Hall and John Oates paid tribute to him on their official website, Hallandoates.com.

“To say that I am shocked is the ultimate understatement,” wrote Hall. “T-Bone was my musical brother and losing him is like losing my right hand. It’s not if I will go on, but how. T-Bone was one of the most sensitive and good human beings that I have ever known. And, I can truly say that I loved him.”

Oates wrote, “His character was pure and his unique and quirky personality touched everyone he encountered. His musical sensibility was peerless, any instrument that he touched resonated with a sensitivity and skill level that I have never experienced while playing with any other musician.

“He possessed an encyclopaedic knowledge of styles and musical history which he referenced to support all the artists that he played with over the years. He became our band’s musical director over time leading by example and by the deference and respect that everyone who played alongside him so rightfully accorded him.

“He made everyone he played with better. So many times when I’m working on a musical passage or part, I think to myself, ‘How would T-Bone play this?” and aspire to his level every time I perform.

“To this day I always keep one of his ‘I Love Vermont’ guitar picks with me wherever I go, and know in my heart that starting today the Heavenly Band just got one of the greatest multi-instrumentalist of all time and that band will from this day forward sound better than they ever have before.”

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

The Black Keys announce new album details

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The Black Keys have announced the release details for their next album 'Brothers', which is due out on May 17. Drummer Patrick Carney hinted that the album is more personal than the Akron, Ohio band's previous efforts. "Dan [Auerbach, fellow band member] and I grew up a lot as individuals and musi...

The Black Keys have announced the release details for their next album ‘Brothers’, which is due out on May 17.

Drummer Patrick Carney hinted that the album is more personal than the Akron, Ohio band’s previous efforts.

Dan [Auerbach, fellow band member] and I grew up a lot as individuals and musicians prior to making this album. Our relationship was tested in many ways but at the end of the day, we’re brothers, and I think these songs reflect that.”

The band produced the majority of the album themselves, though Danger Mouse worked on one track, ‘Tighten Up’.

The tracklisting for ‘Brothers’ is:

‘Everlasting Light’

‘Next Girl’

‘Tighten Up’

‘Howlin’ For You’

‘She’s Long Gone’

‘Black Mud’

‘The Only One’

‘Too Afraid To Love You’

‘Ten Cent Pistol’

‘Sinister Kid’

‘The Go Getter’

‘I’m Not The One’

‘Unknown Brother’

‘Never Gonna Give You Up’

‘These Days’

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

Endless Boogie To Play Club Uncut

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Endless Boogie have been confirmed to headline our very own Club Uncut on Wednesday, May 12. The extraordinary New York band, led by Paul Major, will be getting down to business Upstairs @ The Relentless Garage in London. The group are currently putting the finishing touches to their second album, the follow-up to “Focus Level”, one of Uncut’s favourite albums of 2008. 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.

Endless Boogie have been confirmed to headline our very own Club Uncut on Wednesday, May 12.

The extraordinary New York band, led by Paul Major, will be getting down to business Upstairs @ The Relentless Garage in London. The group are currently putting the finishing touches to their second album, the follow-up to “Focus Level”, one of Uncut’s favourite albums of 2008.

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.

The 9th Uncut Playlist Of 2010

Bad news about BBC 6Music this week, though some of the slightly moist fanboy testimonies to a station that, ultimately, fills most of its airtime with what I’d call bog standard British indie haven’t been terribly edifying. A lot of the campaigning makes me slightly uncomfortable in the way that the whole Rage Against The Machine vs Simon Cowell business did. That rather sanctimonious conceptualising of ‘proper’ music always raises my hackles: just because you don’t like Leona Lewis, or Lady Gaga or whatever, just because it wasn’t performed live by some guys who know and respect the towering artistic legacy of, say, The Wedding Present, doesn’t mean it isn’t ‘proper’ music. It’s OK to just ignore it, rather than get upset about it. Of course the loss of 6Music will make it fractionally harder, I suppose, for these people to ignore that stuff, if they remain deadset on bothering with music radio, though God knows there are enough ways of constructing your own perfect playlist these days. And of course there are some things I do like on 6Music when I catch them; Freak Zone, Craig Charles’ soul show and so on. But while I’m all for the BBC providing a diverse cultural service, standing up against the combined horrors of Rupert Murdoch and the Honourable Ed Vaizey, I can’t help thinking that the Asian Network will be a much more substantial loss; something that isn’t being articulated so forcefully in the face of all the well-connected and organised 6Music boosters. Anyway, quite a lot of shall we say underwhelming records in this lot, I’m afraid. Pretty amazing CD that Allan’s putting together for the next issue, though… 1 Elliott Smith – Roman Candle (Domino) 2 Lone Wolf – The Devil And I (Bella Union) 3 FNS – FNS (Miasmah) 4 Silver Columns – Cavalier (Moshi Moshi) 5 Benni Hemm Hemm – Retaliate (Kimi) 6 Eddy Current Suppression Ring – Rush To Relax (Melodic) 7 Token Mystery Record 8 Elisa Randazzo – Bruises And Butterflies (Drag City) 9 Richard Bishop – Polytheistic Fragments (Drag City) 10 Shane MacGowan & Friends – I Put A Spell On You (IRL) 11 Sun City Girls – Torch Of The Mystics (Majora) 12 Mountains – Etching (Thrill Jockey) 13 The Fall – Your Future Our Clutter (Domino) 14 Lissie – In Sleep/Introducing EP (Columbia) 15 Big Audio Dynamite – This Is Big Audio Dynamite: Legacy Edition (Columbia) 16 Andy Pratt – Records Are Like Life (Polydor) 17 The Hold Steady – Heaven Is Whenever (Rough Trade) 18 Anibal Velasquez y Su Conjunto – Mambo Loco (Analog Africa) 19 The Next Uncut Free CD 20 Coconuts – Coconuts (No Quarter) 21 Foals – Total Life Forever (Warner Bros)

Bad news about BBC 6Music this week, though some of the slightly moist fanboy testimonies to a station that, ultimately, fills most of its airtime with what I’d call bog standard British indie haven’t been terribly edifying.

John Cale ‘can’t see Velvet Underground reunion happening’ any time soon

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John Cale has said it is unlikely The Velvet Undergorund will ever reunite. Cale admitted that he isn't currently in contact with Lou Reed, other than for business reasons. "I haven't spoken to Lou [Reed] in a long time, but we're in touch because of business," he explained. "There's no communal e...

John Cale has said it is unlikely The Velvet Undergorund will ever reunite.

Cale admitted that he isn’t currently in contact with Lou Reed, other than for business reasons.

“I haven’t spoken to Lou [Reed] in a long time, but we’re in touch because of business,” he explained. “There’s no communal effort to enjoy each other’s company any more.”

He added to BBC 6 Music that the thought of a reunion doesn’t hold any interest for him.

“It’s not something that I can see happening on the basis of the past,” Cale explained. “Anyone who wants to reform The Velvet Underground for a series of concerts, to make some money, I understand that, but you can’t do that.”

He added: “We don’t have Sterling [Morrison] any more. If I said that was something I was intrigued by, people would think I was cynical.”

Cale is set to play his 1973 album ‘Paris 1919’ at London‘s South Bank on Friday (March 5).

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

Paul McCartney announces UK gigs and festival headline slots

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Paul McCartney is to headline both this year's Isle Of Wight festival and London's Hard Rock Calling, as well as play a trio of his own shows in the UK and Ireland. The first of McCartney's non-festival shows in the UK and Ireland will see him play the Dublin RDS venue on June 12. He then headlines...

Paul McCartney is to headline both this year’s Isle Of Wight festival and London‘s Hard Rock Calling, as well as play a trio of his own shows in the UK and Ireland.

The first of McCartney‘s non-festival shows in the UK and Ireland will see him play the Dublin RDS venue on June 12. He then headlines the Isle Of Wight festival on June 13, before playing Glasgow‘s Hampden Park on June 20.

Following that gig, he will play Cardiff Millennium Stadium on June 26, then headline Hard Rock Calling on June 27.

Tickets for McCartney‘s Dublin, Glasgow and Cardiff shows go on sale on Monday (March 8) at 9am (GMT), while Hard Rock Calling tickets go on sale on Friday (5) at 9am. Isle Of Wight tickets are on sale now.

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

David Bowie, Bruce Springsteen selected in Uncut photographic collection

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David Bowie, The Byrds, Bruce Springsteen and REM are all featured in a limited edition print collection that has been curated by Uncut at Soniceditions.com. 20 images of the artists, along with the likes of Jimi Hendrix, Led Zeppelin and The Rolling Stones, appear The Uncut Collection, with framed...

David Bowie, The Byrds, Bruce Springsteen and REM are all featured in a limited edition print collection that has been curated by Uncut at Soniceditions.com.

20 images of the artists, along with the likes of Jimi Hendrix, Led Zeppelin and The Rolling Stones, appear The Uncut Collection, with framed prices starting at £59.

The prints are available to buy from Soniceditions.com/uncut now.

Speaking of collection, Uncut Editor Allan Jones said:

“Great photography is as important to Uncut as great writing. So we are naturally excited to be able to curate this selection of classic Sonic Editions images featuring some of our favourite bands and artists, including Bob Dylan, The Rolling Stones, The Beatles, Jimi Hendrix, The Who, Morrissey, The Byrds, The Doors and The Jam. There isn’t a wall that won’t look better with one of them on it.”

Uncut‘s sister-title NME have also curated a collection for Sonic Editions, which is available to view and buy at Soniceditions.com/nme.

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

Sir Richard Bishop, Alexander Tucker, C Joynes: Club Uncut, March 1, 2010

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Not one to apply layers of personal mystification to his music, the Cambridge musician C Joynes is telling the crowd at Club Uncut about his phlegm issues. Personable enough, he’s also a terrific guitarist, albeit one who it’d be more or less impossible to write about without mentioning John Fahey (which I did last time, writing about his, ahem, “Revenants, Prodigies And The Restless Dead”). Joynes makes for an ideal start to a fine and adventurous show: he has an exploratory jauntiness which locates the spirit as much as the spirituality in the Takoma school’s music, similar to the way Jack Rose handled tradition. He’s followed by Alexander Tucker, whose customary habit of building a melodic thicket of sound out of various loops and delays has become ever more artful in the couple of years since I last saw him. As usual, Tucker begins tentatively, picking out a doomy blues progression on his guitar. Soon, though, he’s picked up a cello and is layering sombre drones into the mix, as well as his high, keening vocals. At one point, there’s a high, screeching firestorm which reminds me of Tony Conrad, maybe, then a curious and brilliant passage where Tucker appears to be playing heavy metal on some kind of electric mandolin. This goes on, alternately dense and stark, for about 30 compelling minutes, as Tucker concentrates more and more on his cello. I’m not sure how much of his performances are improvised, and how much composed, but it’s as impressive as ever. As is Sir Richard Bishop, who mixes wry entreaties to be put on Uncut’s cover (“When you run out of rock’n’roll icons”) with some mindblowing solo electric guitar jams. A few years ago, I interviewed Richard Thompson in a Santa Monica guitar shop, and watched as he picked up various instruments and nonchalantly played amazingly complicated things on them, in a way which seemed absent-minded, if anything. Bishops’s playing is nothing like that of Thompson: among other names in my notebook, I can identify Sandy Bull, Django Rheinhardt, Dick Dale, Omar Khorshid. But what reminds me of Thompson is a similar effortless virtuosity. His skill at blending multiple global influences into a holistic style is pretty amazing, marking him out as a kind of gnostic explorer. He also has a fairly wicked sense of humour, essaying a few cranky vocal pieces – at least one, a jokey incest memoir, explicitly credited to the late Charles Gocher – that may well have been salvaged from the infinite back catalogue of the Sun City Girls. The highlights, though, come on those instrumental pieces: North African-rooted pieces from “The Freak Of Araby”; Hot Club-like flurries from “Polytheistic Fragments”; expansive psychedelic studies, delivered with a ringing clarity of tone; beautiful lyrical tunes, studded with unexpectedly bluesy controlled explosions (a hint of his forthcoming Rangda project with Ben Chasny and Chris Corsano, maybe) that eventually resolve themselves into, I think, the Beatles’ “She Loves You”. He also accedes to a request for “Black Eyed Blue”, then determinedly claims it’s a Black-Eyed Peas cover. There’s also a loop of some chanting that he deploys a couple of times between tracks, in lieu of his occasional whistling breaks. “In case you didn’t get the message the first time,” he says, “I think they’ve just purified all your ritual objects.”

Not one to apply layers of personal mystification to his music, the Cambridge musician C Joynes is telling the crowd at Club Uncut about his phlegm issues. Personable enough, he’s also a terrific guitarist, albeit one who it’d be more or less impossible to write about without mentioning John Fahey (which I did last time, writing about his, ahem, “Revenants, Prodigies And The Restless Dead”).

Joanna Newsom to headline Green Man festival 2010

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Joanna Newsom is to headline this year's Green Man festival. Other new additions to the bill for the Glanusk Park, Powys event include The Unthanks and Fionn Regan. Green Man takes place on August 20-22. The Flaming Lips, Field Music and Billy Bragg are also confirmed to play. See Greenmanfestival...

Joanna Newsom is to headline this year’s Green Man festival.

Other new additions to the bill for the Glanusk Park, Powys event include The Unthanks and Fionn Regan.

Green Man takes place on August 20-22. The Flaming Lips, Field Music and Billy Bragg are also confirmed to play. See Greenmanfestival.co.uk for more information.

The Green Man line-up so far is:

Alasdair Roberts

An Horse

Beirut

Billy Bragg

Cass McCombs

Field Music

Fionn Regan

First Aid Kit

The Flaming Lips

Henry’s Funeral Shoe

Jack Northover

Joanna Newsom

Matthew And The Atlas

Megafaun

O Children

Pete Greenwood

St Just Vigilantes

The Unthanks

Voice Of The Seven Thunders

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

Pavement kick off reunion gigs in New Zealand

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Pavement played their first gig since 1999 in New Zealand earlier today (March 1), taking to the stage at Auckland City Hall. The band, who announced their reformation last year, played a greatest hits set that included the likes of 'Shady Lane', 'Date w/IKEA' and 'Stereo', according to blog Cause ...

Pavement played their first gig since 1999 in New Zealand earlier today (March 1), taking to the stage at Auckland City Hall.

The band, who announced their reformation last year, played a greatest hits set that included the likes of ‘Shady Lane’, ‘Date w/IKEA’ and ‘Stereo’, according to blog Cause = Time.

Guitarist Spiral Stairs recently wrote on his blog that the band have been rehearsing around 40 songs for the jaunt.

Pavement‘s reunion tour comes to the UK this May.

The setlist from Pavement‘s Auckland Town Hall gig is:

‘In The Mouth A Desert’

‘Trigger Cut’

‘Loretta’s Scars’

‘Shady Lane’

‘Father To A Sister Of Thought’

‘Rattled By The Rush’

‘Perfume-V’

‘Summer Babe’

‘Kennel District’

‘Silence Kit’

‘Range Life’

‘Unfair’

‘Stop Breathing’

‘No Life Singed Her/442’

‘Fight This Generation’

‘Date W/IKEA’

‘Box Elder’

‘Grounded’

‘Gold Soundz’

‘The Hexx’

‘Give It A Day’

‘Cut Your Hair’

‘Stereo’

‘Spit On A Stranger’

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

U2 beat Springsteen, Madonna to biggest earning act in the US in 2009

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U2 have been named the biggest earning act in the US last year, ahead of the likes of Bruce Springsteen and Madonna. The band are reported to have made $109 million (£71 million) in total from record sales, touring and royalties according to Billboard's Top 40 Money Makers list. Following the Iri...

U2 have been named the biggest earning act in the US last year, ahead of the likes of Bruce Springsteen and Madonna.

The band are reported to have made $109 million (£71 million) in total from record sales, touring and royalties according to Billboard‘s Top 40 Money Makers list.

Following the Irish band are Bruce Springsteen ($57.6 million), Madonna ($47.2 million), AC/DC ($43.6 million) and Britney Spears ($38.8 million).

Coldplay were the biggest earning UK band with $27.3 million, while the late Michael Jackson grossed $17.3 million.

Billboard says its formula for working out the list is “top secret”, though it is be based around money earned from all aspects of selling music, including publishing and touring.

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

Sleepy Sun: “Fever”

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First off today, a quick reminder that Sir Richard Bishop is gracing Club Uncut at the Borderline tonight (March 1), with really strong support from Alexander Tucker and C Joynes. Tickets still available from Seetickets.com or on the door. See you there, hopefully. Meanwhile, Sleepy Sun’s “Embrace” was a big favourite last year, so it’s nice to report that its follow-up, “Fever”, pretty much takes off where that one ended. “Marina” is right up there with “New Age”, a capacious, blasted, shapeshifting psych-blues that again points up the Santa Cruz band’s affinities with Black Mountain. About four minutes in, though, “Marina” suddenly transforms into a tribal shakedown reminiscent of “Tusk”-era Fleetwood Mac. Soon enough, the stoner lurch returns, intensified and amplified. Nevertheless, it’s a palpable influence that crops up at intervals through the whole record – not least on the silvery boy/girl folk-pop of track two, “Rigamaroo” – that suggests Sleepy Sun are playing a different, possibly bigger, game than many of their psych contemporaries. What’s remarkable about “Fever”, perhaps – apart from the generally terrific music - is how neatly the band manage to fuse this crystalline pop (well, pop-ish, from a certain ‘70s rockist perspective) imperative with some monolithic desert jams that are heavy enough to match up to those of Dead Meadow. Re-reading my blog on “Embrace”, it strikes me I’m hitting on a lot of similar reference points but, again, I’m constantly reminded of Black Mountain, as the band switch back and forth from foot-down crunch to stark and airy spaces in which Rachael Williams can really breathe and stretch out. There’s a more countrified feel this time out on, say, the relatively brief “Ooh Boy”, where the molten guitars are left to seethe in the distance, a model of more-or-less restraint. Soon enough, though, they’ve moved further upfront into “Acid Love”, where fuzzy afterburn in the tradition of Earth backs up a distrait gospel sigh not dissimilar to Spiritualized (I guess this is where I drop the Brightblack Morning Light tag again). It’s easy to take the whole album – indeed, maybe all of Sleepy Sun’s two albums – as one continuous slow-burn, but there are also enough dynamic switches and neat ideas to promise that the band won’t get stuck in a rut anytime soon. The formula of reveries followed by rock-outs might be predictable – albeit hugely enjoyable – but the way they make some of the transitions can be imaginative: wait for the harmonica and breakbeat interlude that ushers in the final thrust of “Desert God”, particularly. Probably said this before as well, but I really ought to see this lot live…

First off today, a quick reminder that Sir Richard Bishop is gracing Club Uncut at the Borderline tonight (March 1), with really strong support from Alexander Tucker and C Joynes. Tickets still available from Seetickets.com or on the door. See you there, hopefully.

Thom Yorke debuts new songs at intimate Cambridge Gig

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Thom Yorke played three new tracks at his Cambridge gig last night (February 25) during a one-off benefit gig for the Green Party. The singer debuted the songs as part of a 19-song set - which included Radiohead tracks and some songs from 'Eraser', his 2006 debut album - at the Cambridge Corn Excha...

Thom Yorke played three new tracks at his Cambridge gig last night (February 25) during a one-off benefit gig for the Green Party.

The singer debuted the songs as part of a 19-song set – which included Radiohead tracks and some songs from ‘Eraser’, his 2006 debut album – at the Cambridge Corn Exchange.

The gig was performed in support of Tony Juniper, who accompanied Yorke as he crashed the UN Climate Change Conference in December.

Yorke explained his reasons for performing the gig, informing the crowd: “I am sick of politicians not talking about green issues. What fucking blows my mind is that half the country is supporting environmental issues yet we are not represented in parliament and the chance for that to change has got to happen.”

The three new songs Yorke played were ‘The Daily Mail’, ‘Give Up The Ghost’ and ‘Mouse Dog Bird’.

Thom Yorke played:

‘The Clock’

‘The Eraser’

‘Weird Fishes’

‘The Daily Mail’

‘Pyramid Song’

‘Harrowdown Hill’

‘Lotus Flower’

‘Give Up The Ghost’

‘These Are My Twisted Words’

‘I Froze Up’

‘Like Spinning Plates’

‘Black Swan’

‘Cymbal Rush’

‘Videotape’

‘Mouse Dog Bird’

‘Reckoner’

‘Airbag’

‘Atoms For Peace’

‘True Love Waits’

In other Yorke news, the singer recently christened his new sideproject Atoms For Peace, after the song on ‘The Eraser’. Alongside Yorke, the band features Red Hot Chili Peppers bassist Flea, Radiohead producer Nigel Godrich, Beck and REM cohort Joey Waronker and Mauro Refosco of Forro In The Dark. Writing on Dead Air Space, he added that the name “seemed bleedin’ obvious”.

Atoms For Peace played their debut show in Los Angeles last October, and are playing a string of gigs in the US this April.

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

Aerosmith announce London show

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Aerosmith have announced that they will play London's O2 Arena. The gig, on June 15, is part of the band's 'Cocked, Locked, Ready To Rock' tour. Singer Steven Tyler will definitely be involved in the gig, despite persistent rumours that he and the rest of the band are not working together anymore...

Aerosmith have announced that they will play London‘s O2 Arena.

The gig, on June 15, is part of the band’s ‘Cocked, Locked, Ready To Rock’ tour.

Singer Steven Tyler will definitely be involved in the gig, despite persistent rumours that he and the rest of the band are not working together anymore.

“Back by popular demand with more spit and fire than ever before, we’re coming across the pond and parting the waters as we go,” Tyler said in a statement, with Joe Perry adding: “Enough BS – we’re coming and everything is going to be set at eleven.”

Click here for tickets.

Rolling Stones reissue ‘Exile On Main Street’

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The Rolling Stones are to reissue their 1972 album 'Exile On Main Street' with 10 previously unreleased tracks on it. The album will be reissued on May 17, and will coincide with the broadcasting of a newly filmed documentary on the band called Stones In Exile. In addition to the original album, t...

The Rolling Stones are to reissue their 1972 album ‘Exile On Main Street’ with 10 previously unreleased tracks on it.

The album will be reissued on May 17, and will coincide with the broadcasting of a newly filmed documentary on the band called Stones In Exile.

In addition to the original album, the rerelease will also feature 10 previously unreleased Rolling Stones songs recorded in the same period, which were unearthed during work on the reissue project.

New tracks on the re-release include ‘Plundered My Soul’, ‘Dancing In The Light’, ‘Following The River’ and ‘Pass The Wine’. Alternate versions of ‘Soul Survivor’ and ‘Loving Cup’ are also included.

The release will be available as both the original 18-track album, and a deluxe edition with the 10 bonus tracks. Meanwhile, a super-deluxe package also includes vinyl, a 30-minute documentary DVD, and a 50-page collector’s book.

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

Karen Elson: “The Ghost Who Walks”

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This is pretty good, I think. Wasn’t terribly enamoured by the last thing I heard from Karen Elson, the Mildred & The Mice seven-inch, but this is nice, faintly menaced country pop, with some kinship, perhaps, to Neko Case. [youtube]WsNhwMDC1yM[/youtube] Looks like a full album’s on the way, produced by Jack White, presumably employing that somewhat underused band. Decent run for Third Man at the moment, after the Smoke Fairies, Wanda Jackson and Black Belles singles.

This is pretty good, I think. Wasn’t terribly enamoured by the last thing I heard from Karen Elson, the Mildred & The Mice seven-inch, but this is nice, faintly menaced country pop, with some kinship, perhaps, to Neko Case.