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New Neil Young Album, ‘Dreamin’ Man’, Set For Release!

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Neil Young has confirmed that he will release the 12th album in his Archives Performance Series, called 'Dreamin' Man'. Set for release around November 2, 2009, 'Dreamin' Man' features Harvest Moon songs, performed solo and acoustic, before the album was originally released. Neil Young's Dreamin' ...

Neil Young has confirmed that he will release the 12th album in his Archives Performance Series, called ‘Dreamin’ Man’.

Set for release around November 2, 2009, ‘Dreamin’ Man’ features Harvest Moon songs, performed solo and acoustic, before the album was originally released.

Neil Young’s Dreamin’ Man track listing is:

“Dreamin’ Man”

“Such A Woman”

“Old King Rap”

“Old King”

“One Of These Days”

“Harvest Moon”

“You and Me”

“From Hank To Hendrix”

“Unknown Legend”

“Natural Beauty”

“War of Man”

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David Bowie Has New Species Of Spider Named After Him

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David Bowie has had a rare Malaysian spider named after him, by German spider expert Peter Jäger. The newly discovered giant yellow spider has been named Heteropoda davidbowie in tribute to rock legend Bowie. Jäger, who has identified 200 new species of spider in the last decade says he hopes to...

David Bowie has had a rare Malaysian spider named after him, by German spider expert Peter Jäger.

The newly discovered giant yellow spider has been named Heteropoda davidbowie in tribute to rock legend Bowie.

Jäger, who has identified 200 new species of spider in the last decade says he hopes to raise awareness of the endangered insects, saying: “It is working against time. Along with the species, we are also quickly losing genetic resources that have evolved over more than 300 million years.”

Neil Young, is another rocker who has had a species of spider named after him. In May 2008, the name ‘Myrmekiaphila neilyoungi’ was bestowed on a newly discovered trapdoor spider in California.

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Julian Cope – Peggy Suicide (Deluxe Edition)

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After the doomed pop compromises of 1988’s My Nation Underground, Peggy Suicide effectively signalled the start of Julian Cope’s mature phase. ‘Mature’ being a relative concept, of course, when you’re wearing a giant papier-mâché head and calling yourself Sqwubbsy. Still, liberated from most commercial ambitions, Julian Cope made his masterpiece, an expansive eco-concept piece that managed to be eclectic, psychedelic and surprisingly funky. “Safesurfer” remains his greatest eight minutes, ostensibly a Tamworth “Maggot Brain”. A second disc, predominantly of baggyish remixes, however, confirms once again that Julian Cope should stay well away from prevailing fashions. JOHN MULVEY Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk

After the doomed pop compromises of 1988’s My Nation Underground, Peggy Suicide effectively signalled the start of Julian Cope’s mature phase. ‘Mature’ being a relative concept, of course, when you’re wearing a giant papier-mâché head and calling yourself Sqwubbsy.

Still, liberated from most commercial ambitions, Julian Cope made his masterpiece, an expansive eco-concept piece that managed to be eclectic, psychedelic and surprisingly funky. “Safesurfer” remains his greatest eight minutes, ostensibly a Tamworth “Maggot Brain”.

A second disc, predominantly of baggyish remixes, however, confirms once again that Julian Cope should stay well away from prevailing fashions.

JOHN MULVEY

Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk

Uncut Album Reviews: Harmonia

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1976 might be stamped in rock’s history books as the year punk swept the UK, but it found Brian Eno on a very different course. One year before, Eno’s 1975 album Discreet Music, a serene synthesiser piece inspired by a period spent bedridden, had demonstrated his commitment to what would soon be known as ambient. Now, Eno was bound for a studio in Forst, rural West Germany, at the invitation of who he had referred to as “the world’s most important rock band”, Harmonia. The joint project of Hans-Joachim Roedelius and Dieter Moebius of Berlin’s Cluster and Neu! guitarist Michael Rother, Harmonia’s two albums to date, Musik Von Harmonia (1974) and Deluxe (1975) were among the best Krautrock had to offer, gentler than Can or Faust, but with their shimmering keyboards and mechanical rhythms, every bit as compelling. That the fruits of the first session, collected as Harmonia ’76’s Tracks & Traces (GRONLAND) 3*, was not released until 1997 casts a little doubt on its quality. But while feeling somewhat sketch-like – this is evidently the sound of an improvisatory trio finding their common ground – there are fine moments here, from the languid synthesiser bubbles of “Welcome” to the gaping black hole kosmische of “Sometimes In Autumn”. Rother soon split from Harmonia to go solo, but Brian Eno would reconvene with Roedelius and Moebius at producer Conny Plank’s studio in 1977. Joined by Can’s Holger Czukay and avant-garde composer Asmus Tietchens, the three-week session yielded not one, but two albums. The first, 'Cluster & Eno' (BUREAU B) 4* is crisper, with arrangements in tighter focus: “Wehrmut” wrings astonishing emotion out of minor-key synths, “One” is a mutant sitar raga that vacillates between melodies and Velvets-esque drone, and if “Ho Renomo” now reminds you of a mobile phone advert, it just shows how far ambient has seeped into the mainstream. The second album from the sessions, 1978’s 'After The Heat' (BUREAU B) 4* – released as Eno Moebius Rodelius – feels quite different. In fact, it’s an Eno solo album in all but name. Good job, then, that it’s a good one. Desolate piano and droning synth pieces segue into funk-inflected art-rock, and Eno sings on three tracks – notably “The Belldog”, which, with its soaring vocal and squirming sequenced bass, is surely a track LCD Soundsystem’s James Murphy has spun a few times. Three decades on and Roedelius and Moebius are still making music, touring with the revitalised Harmonia and working on solo material. Moebius’ newie, 'Kram' (KLANGBAD) 3* is somewhat patchy, prone to bouts of discordant proto-techno, but the likes of “Womit” remain firmly in the spirit of kosmische, a melding of crystal synths and gurgling bass that played quiet, or speaking-shakingly loud, has a transporting effect. LOUIS PATTISON Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk

1976 might be stamped in rock’s history books as the year punk swept the UK, but it found Brian Eno on a very different course. One year before, Eno’s 1975 album Discreet Music, a serene synthesiser piece inspired by a period spent bedridden, had demonstrated his commitment to what would soon be known as ambient. Now, Eno was bound for a studio in Forst, rural West Germany, at the invitation of who he had referred to as “the world’s most important rock band”, Harmonia.

The joint project of Hans-Joachim Roedelius and Dieter Moebius of Berlin’s Cluster and Neu! guitarist Michael Rother, Harmonia’s two albums to date, Musik Von Harmonia (1974) and Deluxe (1975) were among the best Krautrock had to offer, gentler than Can or Faust, but with their shimmering keyboards and mechanical rhythms, every bit as compelling.

That the fruits of the first session, collected as Harmonia ’76’s Tracks & Traces (GRONLAND) 3*, was not released until 1997 casts a little doubt on its quality. But while feeling somewhat sketch-like – this is evidently the sound of an improvisatory trio finding their common ground – there are fine moments here, from the languid synthesiser bubbles of “Welcome” to the gaping black hole kosmische of “Sometimes In Autumn”.

Rother soon split from Harmonia to go solo, but Brian Eno would reconvene with Roedelius and Moebius at producer Conny Plank’s studio in 1977. Joined by Can’s Holger Czukay and avant-garde composer Asmus Tietchens, the three-week session yielded not one, but two albums. The first, ‘Cluster & Eno’ (BUREAU B) 4* is crisper, with arrangements in tighter focus: “Wehrmut” wrings astonishing emotion out of minor-key synths, “One” is a mutant sitar raga that vacillates between melodies and Velvets-esque drone, and if “Ho Renomo” now reminds you of a mobile phone advert, it just shows how far ambient has seeped into the mainstream.

The second album from the sessions, 1978’s ‘After The Heat’ (BUREAU B) 4* – released as Eno Moebius Rodelius – feels quite different. In fact, it’s an Eno solo album in all but name. Good job, then, that it’s a good one. Desolate piano and droning synth pieces segue into funk-inflected art-rock, and Eno sings on three tracks – notably “The Belldog”, which, with its soaring vocal and squirming sequenced bass, is surely a track LCD Soundsystem’s James Murphy has spun a few times.

Three decades on and Roedelius and Moebius are still making music, touring with the revitalised Harmonia and working on solo material. Moebius’ newie, ‘Kram’ (KLANGBAD) 3* is somewhat patchy, prone to bouts of discordant proto-techno, but the likes of “Womit” remain firmly in the spirit of kosmische, a melding of crystal synths and gurgling bass that played quiet, or speaking-shakingly loud, has a transporting effect.

LOUIS PATTISON

Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk

Stereophonics Return To Cardiff Castle For Concert

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Stereophonics have announced a special one-off concert to take place at Cardiff Castle on October 3, to celebrate the November 16 release of their seventh studio album 'Keep Calm And Carry On'. The show, a return to the same venue the Stereophonics headlined in June 1998, will have ticket prices ca...

Stereophonics have announced a special one-off concert to take place at Cardiff Castle on October 3, to celebrate the November 16 release of their seventh studio album ‘Keep Calm And Carry On‘.

The show, a return to the same venue the Stereophonics headlined in June 1998, will have ticket prices capped to the same they were then, a mere £12.50.

Tickets for the show will be exclusively available through the band’s website www.stereophonics.com from 9am on Wednesday September 9.

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Sex Pistol John Lydon Reforms PiL for UK Tour

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Sex Pistols legend John Lydon has announced that he is reforming his other 70s band Public Image Ltd for a series of UK live gigs at the end of the year. PiL celebrate the 30 years since the release of their Metal Box in November 1979 with five live shows announced so far. Public Image Ltd will se...

Sex Pistols legend John Lydon has announced that he is reforming his other 70s band Public Image Ltd for a series of UK live gigs at the end of the year.

PiL celebrate the 30 years since the release of their Metal Box in November 1979 with five live shows announced so far.

Public Image Ltd will see John Lydon joined by Damned guitarist Lu Edmonds, former Slits drummer Bruce Smith and bassist Scott Firth.

The revived version of Public Image Ltd will play the following UK live dates, tickets on sale on Friday September 11 at 9am.

  • Birmingham, O2 Academy (December 15)
  • Leeds, O2 Academy (16)
  • Glasgow, O2 Academy (18)
  • Manchester, Academy (19)
  • London Brixton, O2 Academy (21)

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Muse – Resistance

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Muse’s frontman Matthew Bellamy is one of a breed of crackpots who believe that 9/11 was “an inside job”: that the 3,000 people who died in the Twin Towers – and, presumably, the victims of terrorism in London, Madrid, Mumbai, Delhi, Bali, Jakarta, Sudan, Somalia and so on – were not kille...

Muse’s frontman Matthew Bellamy is one of a breed of crackpots who believe that 9/11 was “an inside job”: that the 3,000 people who died in the Twin Towers – and, presumably, the victims of terrorism in London, Madrid, Mumbai, Delhi, Bali, Jakarta, Sudan, Somalia and so on – were not killed by Islamist terrorists but by some shady cabal comprising the CIA, MI6, Mossad, Gilead Sciences, Shell Oil and a phalanx of shape-shifting reptiles. Bellamy, an innocent, relentlessly curious autodidact who questions absolutely everything, is essentially prepared to believe any hare-brained conspiracy theory that counters the prevailing worldview.

However, the qualities that make Bellamy such a credulous conspiracy theorist are, perhaps, exactly the qualities needed in rock music right now. If you’re a rock star, why not question absolutely everything? Why cleave to this outdated punk notion that musicianship is A Bad Thing? Why settle for one catchy riff when you can crowbar half a dozen into a single song? Why not throw in an operatic aria, an electro beat, some thrash metal guitar shredding and the chords from a Liszt symphonic poem before you’ve even got to your first chorus?

The opening track on Muse’s first studio album in three years, “Uprising”, is a case in point. It takes a Goldfrapp-style schaffel beat and the “whoop-whoop” riff from Blondie’s “Call Me” and marries them to some leftist sloganeering (“Rise up and take the power back/Fat cats will have a heart attack”). And that’s about as orthodox as the album gets.

“Undisclosed Desires” employs a skeletal Timbaland breakbeat, a Prince digi-funk riff and some Spinal Tap-ish sentiments (“I want to exorcise the demons from your past”). “I Belong To You” starts of like a jaunty 10cc song, mutates into a Rufus Wainwright ballad, quotes from a Saint-Saëns opera and then goes into a jovial clarinet solo.

“Guiding Light” takes the bombastic pulse from Ultravox’s “Vienna” and bolts it on to a slice of U2-meets-Brian May stadium rock; “MK Ultra” sets the chords from a Chopin prelude to a heavy metal stomp; “Unnatural Selection” is Metallica-meets-Big Beat.

All these tracks, however, are dwarfed in scale by “United States Of Eurasia”, an audacious six-minute voyage through Mitteleuropa, the Balkans and the Middle East, which eventually finds peace in a string-drenched reading of Chopin’s E-flat Nocturne, and ends with the explosion of an Exocet. With nods to “We Are The Champions”, “Mustapha” and the multi-tracked harmonies from “Bohemian Rhapsody”, it sounds like Queen’s maddest moments crammed into a single song.

Yet we’re still not done. The album closes with Muse’s “Jazz Odyssey” a 14-minute piece in three movements called “Exogenesis”. It throws in the angular chord changes from a Shostakovich symphony, the arpeggios from a Philip Glass opera, the thumping piano octaves from a Grieg piano concerto and a Johann Strauss waltz. Oh, and lots of guitar.

Like the rest of the album, it’s bonkers – hilarious, maddening, ridiculous and slightly shit – yet never dull. As always, Muse’s dog’s dinner of instrumental quotations gels together largely because Matt Bellamy’s long, slow, sustained vocal lines always seem to calm down the madness and hold everything in place.

Far from being Radiohead for thickos – or Coldplay fronted by David Icke – on Resistance, Muse prove that they could be the last in a line of great British rock eccentrics, a trio of mad professors who should be cherished. And if you don’t agree, you’re clearly being controlled by shape-shifting lizards.

JOHN LEWIS

UNCUT Q&A: Matt Bellamy

What is the “Resistance” of the title?

Well, one is a resistance against the “general corporatocracy” that John Perkins describes in his book, Confessions Of An Economic Hitman, in which he shows how big corporations are far more powerful than all of our governments. The other resistance is the Gandhi-style peaceful resistance; the idea that love can cross boundaries between different religions and political views, to the point that you realise how pointless those beliefs actually are, and how those beliefs don’t define you.

Was there a conscious nod to Queen?

I’ll definitely hold up my hands and admit that the bit where the vocal harmonies kick in on “United States Of Eurasia” is a nod to Queen. I can’t really deny that! But I think it’s more what we have in common, which is bringing together heavy rock influences and classical influences. Otherwise Queen are well before my time – a band I’d associate with my mum’s generation!

Why the lengthy quotations from Saint-Saëns and Chopin?

I’ve started going to see operas in Milan, and I was blown away by Samson & Delilah by Saint-Saëns. That aria is one of the finest pieces of songwriting I’ve ever heard, and it fitted perfectly with that track. And the Chopin nocturne, that comes at the end of a track about Eurasia being a chessboard that America needs to dominate. So the whole song tries to capture that madness, that megalomania, and the Chopin piece is all that’s left in the aftermath of destruction.

INTERVIEW: JOHN LEWIS

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Adventureland

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Uncut film review: ADVENTURELAND Directed by: GREG MOTTOLA Starring: JESSE EISENBERG, KRISTEN STEWART, BILL HADER, RYAN REYNOLDS A wry, soulful teen romance with contemporary comedy elements intact, this has more in common with Greg Mottola’s inquisitive 1997 indie debut The Day Trippers t...
  • Uncut film review: ADVENTURELAND
  • Directed by: GREG MOTTOLA
  • Starring: JESSE EISENBERG, KRISTEN STEWART, BILL HADER, RYAN REYNOLDS

A wry, soulful teen romance with contemporary comedy elements intact, this has more in common with Greg Mottola’s inquisitive 1997 indie debut The Day Trippers than his huge hit, the broad yet big-hearted farce Superbad.

Apart from directing several episodes of Arrested Development, Mottola went quiet between the two, but the success of Superbad gained him the green light to make this semi-autobiographical, coming-of-age piece.

He’s learned how to give big audiences big laughs – Adventureland isn’t averse to a few sex/drugs/puke/punches-in-the-nuts gags – but this is the most reflective offering yet from the Judd Apatow axis. Its total recall of the ardour of youthful infatuation feels closer to something Eric Rohmer might have exhaled, or Linklater’s Dazed And Confused. It’s human, rather than cartoon-like.

It’s Reagan-era, 1987. James (Eisenberg, mainlining the vague, wide-eyed nerd he portrayed in Roger Dodger and The Squid And The Whale) is distraught to discover his parents’ economic woes mean he has to work all summer at a Pennsylvania amusement park, to fund his college future. Torn from his Replacements albums and Henry Miller books, he’s shunted onto a stall where “nobody is allowed to win the giant-ass panda prize”. Initially traumatised, he makes friends among other misfits there.

Where his personality fails, his pot stash succeeds. He falls in love with Em (Stewart), unaware that she’s having a passionless affair with an older musician and bullshitter (Reynolds). “I jammed with Lou on ‘Shed A Light On Love’,” he brags. “It’s called ‘Satellite Of Love’,” points out James. “Right, that’s what I said.” Em’s a mess of contradictions, so James becomes distracted by the carny hottie, of whom a colleague sighs, “That ass is a platonic ideal. A higher truth.”

Around this romantic quadrangle, over-qualified weirdos exchange quips and whines about the futility of existence. One is a Russian comparative literature graduate. “What career track is that?” asks his date. “Hot dog vendor, garbage collector,” he replies, “World’s my oyster.” The park plays Falco’s “Rock Me Amadeus” twenty times daily. “Sadism”, wail our likeable losers.

The surface humour is great (with Saturday Night Live regulars Bill Hader and Kristen Wiig in great form), but beneath the usual study of growing pains and frustrated libidos is shrewd empathy for the characters. Most of them learn something from this hothouse summer, but, realistically, some don’t.

There’s a keen sense of place, that place being Nowheresville, and of time (reinforced by a splendid soundtrack, and a score by Yo La Tengo). Much like its anti-hero, Adventureland is at first too gauchely intelligent for its surroundings, then learns to merge the best of what it is and what it isn’t. Gentle is the new gross, it seems.

CHRIS ROBERTS

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Fish Tank

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Uncut film review: FISH TANK Directed by: Andrea Arnold Starring: Katie Jarvis, Michael Fassbender, Kierston Wareing SYNOPSIS On an estate in Essex, the life of bored teenager Mia is transformed when her mother brings home a new boyfriend, Connor. Connor takes an interest in Mia’s dream of ...
  • Uncut film review: FISH TANK
  • Directed by: Andrea Arnold
  • Starring: Katie Jarvis, Michael Fassbender, Kierston Wareing

SYNOPSIS

On an estate in Essex, the life of bored teenager Mia is transformed when her mother brings home a new boyfriend, Connor. Connor takes an interest in Mia’s dream of becoming a dancer, and introduces her to new experiences, but as their friendship deepens, Mia finds herself questioning his motives.

***

Andrea Arnold is not a conventional storyteller. She has said, of Fish Tank, that it began with a single image, and grew from there. She didn’t say which image, and you could submerge yourself in its bleak vision of the Essex wastelands for a considerable time without encountering anything that was conventionally beautiful.

True, there is a white horse, tethered by gypsies in some scrub-land by the ring road, that the central character, Mia (Katie Jarvis) visits, as an escape from her loveless life on an estate with her feckless mother, Joanne (Kierston Wareing), and her little sister, Tyler, (Rebecca Griffiths).

And yes, late in the film, as the sense of aimlessness sharpens to something approaching tragedy, there is a breathless scene in which Mia runs through autumnal wheat fields. (Needless to say, the beauty is short-lived, and she arrives, rather fatefully, at a sandless beach, as if the land has run out with her luck). There are moments, too, of athletic grace, as Mia dances in an abandoned flat to her Discman; and a closing image, of a floating heart balloon, which does little to dispel the sense of emotional agoraphobia which has spooled out over the previous two hours.

Arnold has been over this terrain before, of course. Her Oscar-winning short, Wasp, depicted a similarly bleak life on a council estate. Her 2006 debut feature, Red Road (which, like Fish Tank, won the Jury Prize at Cannes) was compared to Michael Haneke’s Hidden, though the comparison was never precise. Haneke is a clinician of human cruelty who wraps his narratives in a structural criticism of cinema. Arnold’s films are more obviously in the tradition of social realism.

They’re not kitchen sink dramas, exactly, but they have much in common with the work of Ratcatcher/Morvern Callar director Lynne Ramsay (whose use of non-actors was borrowed from Robert Bresson and Bill Douglas). Arnold’s focus on working class characters has also earned comparisons with Alan Clarke. And it’s true, if you strip out the comedy, there are some odd echoes here of Clarke’s taboo-crossing Rita, Sue And Bob Too. Ken Loach isn’t far away, either, though Arnold is more interested in emotions than ideology.

The beginning is not propitious. The opening scenes, with angry texting, and girls fighting in a playground on an estate, watched over by tattooed boys, may be intended to set up the hopelessness of 15 year-old Mia’s surroundings, but the taunts of “skanky faggot!” and “cunt!” veer uncomfortably close to dumb nihilism. It might be realistic, but it’s not a place you really want to linger in.

But that mood soon passes, largely due to the performance of Kate Jarvis, a non-actor cast by Arnold after she witnessed her arguing with her boyfriend in an Essex railway station. It would be patronising to say that Jarvis isn’t acting, but Arnold’s direction produces a performance with no artifice. If Jarvis was self-conscious, it doesn’t show, possibly because her character is introverted to the point of anger, rarely opening up to emotional risk. When she does, the results are far from joyous, though the beauty of Arnold’s film is that it never judges the actions of its characters, or offers moral comfort to the audience.

What it’s about is hard to say. This is fuzzy terrain. It is about adolescence, and a teenage girl experimenting with womanhood. It is about emotional neglect, and non-nuclear families, and lives lived on the margins of the margins. It is almost about dancing, which offers Mia a sense of freedom she doesn’t get from anything else. But it’s not Billy Elliott. It’s clear, to everyone except Mia, that the audition she dreams of is a false horizon.

It is, in a strange way, a love story, and a sensual one at that. Mia’s life is turned upside down by the arrival of her mother’s boyfriend, Connor (Michael Fassbender, who played Bobby Sands so memorably in Steve McQueen’s Hunger). Connor is a playful soul, and charismatic, though his initial pleasantries are countered by Mia’s blunt refusal to engage with him, or anyone. “Are you always such a donkey knob?” she asks.

But the aggression is designed to conceal her growing fascination. When her mother holds a party, and Mia is banished to another part of the house, she experiments with make-up and vodka and is almost unconscious when Connor carries her back to her bedroom. The atmosphere in the room carries a heavy charge, and is quite discomfiting. Mia is awake, and secretly enjoying the attention.

Yet Andrea Arnold’s direction is not straightforward. In this moment of adolescent longing she gives the camera a restricted view, bathing the room in red light. The sound drops away to leave nothing but anxious breaths: watching it, you are made to feel like an intruder. This scene, at least, has the unsettling aura of Haneke, as it simultaneously tempts and repels the viewer. And the sense of voyeurism continues when Connor loans Mia his camcorder, so she can film herself dancing.

To test it, she films him changing his shirt. If he feels this is inappropriate, he doesn’t mention it. Instead, he sprays himself with cologne, and leans towards her, asking her to inhale his scent. “Fox piss,” she says. Then, in an action that is suddenly strange and jarring, Connor treats Mia like a little girl again, and spanks her.

And so, the relationship develops. Connor brings Mia out of herself, and takes her out of her claustrophobic surroundings. Technically, what is happening is rape, but Arnold’s direction is so empathetic that it only feels slightly wrong, and faintly taboo. Then, reality bites.

So which image inspired the film? It’s guesswork, but there is something beautifully natural, and decidedly erotic, about the scene where Mia follows Connor into the middle of a reservoir. As her mother complains that she will ruin her £20 tracksuit, Mia is shown how to catch a fish with her bare hands. Guddled, it lies gasping for breath at the water’s edge.

ALASTAIR McKAY

Latest film and DVD reviews from Uncut.co.uk

Latitude Festival 2010 Early Bird Tickets On Sale Now!

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A limited number of early bird tickets for next year's Latitude Festival have gone on sale today (September 4), held at the 2009 price of £150. The 2010 event will start on July 16th and run for three nights at Henham Park Estate, Suffolk, celebrating it's fifth year! This year saw an incredibly diverse range of acts and events take part; from Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds to Vivienne Westwood and Janeane Garofolo. Limited weekend tickets are available here: Seetickets.com/Latitude More Latitude news and to catch up with 2009's fun Pic credit: Richard Johnson

A limited number of early bird tickets for next year’s Latitude Festival have gone on sale today (September 4), held at the 2009 price of £150.

The 2010 event will start on July 16th and run for three nights at Henham Park Estate, Suffolk, celebrating it’s fifth year!

This year saw an incredibly diverse range of acts and events take part; from Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds to Vivienne Westwood and Janeane Garofolo.

Limited weekend tickets are available here: Seetickets.com/Latitude

More Latitude news and to catch up with 2009’s fun

Pic credit: Richard Johnson

Nirvana’s Reading Festival Gig To Get Official Release

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An official CD and DVD of Nirvana's famous Reading Festival headline performance in 1992 is to be released on November 2. 'Nirvana - Live At Reading Festival' will be available as a CD/ DVD pacakage, as well as separately. A double 12" live album will also be released on November 16. 'Nirvana Live At Reading' features this set list: 'Breed' 'Drain You' 'Aneurysm' 'School' 'Sliver' 'In Bloom' 'Come As You Are' 'Lithium' 'About A Girl' 'Tourette's' 'Polly' 'Lounge Act' 'Smells Like Teen Spirit' 'On A Plain' 'Negative Creep' 'Been A Son' 'All Apologies' 'Blew' 'Dumb' 'Stay Away' 'Spank Thru' 'Love Buzz' 'The Money Will Roll Right In' 'D-7' 'Territorial Pissings' More Nirvana news and reviews on Uncut.co.uk

An official CD and DVD of Nirvana‘s famous Reading Festival headline performance in 1992 is to be released on November 2.

‘Nirvana – Live At Reading Festival’ will be available as a CD/ DVD pacakage, as well as separately. A double 12″ live album will also be released on November 16.

Nirvana Live At Reading‘ features this set list:

‘Breed’

‘Drain You’

‘Aneurysm’

‘School’

‘Sliver’

‘In Bloom’

‘Come As You Are’

‘Lithium’

‘About A Girl’

‘Tourette’s’

‘Polly’

‘Lounge Act’

‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’

‘On A Plain’

‘Negative Creep’

‘Been A Son’

‘All Apologies’

‘Blew’

‘Dumb’

‘Stay Away’

‘Spank Thru’

‘Love Buzz’

‘The Money Will Roll Right In’

‘D-7’

‘Territorial Pissings’

More Nirvana news and reviews on Uncut.co.uk

The Pogues Announce UK Christmas Tour Dates

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The Pogues have confirmed that they are to reunited, once again, for their annual Christmas tour. For the seventh year running, The Pogues will perform live at venues from Newcastle to London from December 9. The Pogues Christmas Tour 2009 takes place at the following venues: Newcastle O2 Academy...

The Pogues have confirmed that they are to reunited, once again, for their annual Christmas tour.

For the seventh year running, The Pogues will perform live at venues from Newcastle to London from December 9.

The Pogues Christmas Tour 2009 takes place at the following venues:

  • Newcastle O2 Academy (December 9)
  • Glasgow O2 Academy (10)
  • Sheffield O2 Academy (12)
  • Manchester Apollo (13)
  • Leeds O2 Academy (14)
  • Birmingham O2 Academy (16)
  • London Brixton O2 Academy (18, 19)

More Pogues news and reviews on Uncut.co.uk

Graham Coxon Announces One-Off London Gig

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Blur's Graham Coxon has announced a one-off London gig, to take place at The Barbican Hall on November 28. Playing as The Graham Coxon Power Acoustic Ensemble, the evening will feature special guests and artwork projections. Graham Coxon is also to release a new double-A side single through Trangr...

Blur‘s Graham Coxon has announced a one-off London gig, to take place at The Barbican Hall on November 28.

Playing as The Graham Coxon Power Acoustic Ensemble, the evening will feature special guests and artwork projections.

Graham Coxon is also to release a new double-A side single through Trangressive Records on September 28, featuring “Brave The Storm” and “Dead Bees”.

The single, the third from album ‘The Spinning Top‘ will be available for download only, when fans buy a unique numbered Graham Coxon artwork print.

Tickets available from the Barbican, here.

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Watch New Wild Beasts Video Now

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Wild Beasts have released the video for their forthcoming new single "All The Kings Men" prior to its release on October 5. The track is the second single to be taken from their acclaimed album 'Two Dancers' and is dedicated to the the "Girls from Rodean, girls from Shipley, girls from Hounslow, gi...

Wild Beasts have released the video for their forthcoming new single “All The Kings Men” prior to its release on October 5.

The track is the second single to be taken from their acclaimed album ‘Two Dancers’ and is dedicated to the the “Girls from Rodean, girls from Shipley, girls from Hounslow, girls from Whitby”.

Watch Wild Beasts’ “All The Kings Men” video here:

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Pic credit: Richard Johnson (Latitude 2009)

Radiohead’s Thom Yorke To Release New Solo Single

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Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke is to release a new double-A side solo record on September 21. The two new tracks "FeelingPulledApartbyHorses" and "The Hollow Earth" will be released on 12" vinyl on the 21st with a regular download following on October 6. Writing on Radiohead.com, Thom Yorke explain...

Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke is to release a new double-A side solo record on September 21.

The two new tracks “FeelingPulledApartbyHorses” and “The Hollow Earth” will be released on 12″ vinyl on the 21st with a regular download following on October 6.

Writing on Radiohead.com, Thom Yorke explains that the first track “FeelingPulledApartbyHorses” is a co-write with Radiohead guitarist Jonny Greenwood, who also plays on the track. Yorke describes the track as “a radical rework of an old tune that’s been kicking around without a home since 2001”.

He also describes new song “The Hollow Earth” as a “bass menace that was born out of the ‘The Eraser‘ period, but needed a little more time”.

More Radiohead news

Pic credit: PA Photos

Rolling Stones’ Charlie Watts Has Not Quit: Official!

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Rolling Stones drummer Charlie Watts has not quit the legendary rock'n'roll band, his spokesman has told Uncut.co.uk this afternoon (September 2). Claims made earlier today on Australian website undercover.com.au that Charlie Watts had quit The Rolling Stones were posted online at 10am (GMT), quoti...

Rolling Stones drummer Charlie Watts has not quit the legendary rock’n’roll band, his spokesman has told Uncut.co.uk this afternoon (September 2).

Claims made earlier today on Australian website undercover.com.au that Charlie Watts had quit The Rolling Stones were posted online at 10am (GMT), quoting an unnamed source in the band’s inner circle who said the drummer “will never record or tour with the band again.”

The story was subsequently picked up by a number of online news services before a statement was released to Uncut.co.uk at 5pm (GMT) by the band’s UK spokesperson.

The statement reads: “Contrary to a fabricated story that ran this morning on a small music web site in Australia, drummer Charlie Watts has not left The Rolling Stones.”

Charlie Watts joined the band in 1963.

The rumour comes a few days after the news that the police are planning to re-examine the death of the Stones’ former guitarist Brian Jones, who drowned in 1969.

More Rolling Stones news on Uncut.co.uk

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Pete Doherty Confirmed To Sing Michael Jackson Tribute Song

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Pete Doherty is the lastest singer to be confirmed for a Michael Jackson tribute which will take place as part of 'David Gest...My Life! A Musical Concert Extravaganza' this October. The David Gest revue is expected to see Doherty perform as part of an ensemble cast who will sing Jackson track "Hum...

Pete Doherty is the lastest singer to be confirmed for a Michael Jackson tribute which will take place as part of ‘David Gest…My Life! A Musical Concert Extravaganza’ this October.

The David Gest revue is expected to see Doherty perform as part of an ensemble cast who will sing Jackson track “Human Nature” from the 1982 album ‘Thriller’.

The Gest musical show will tour the UK from October 1, however, Doherty will only appear at the London concert which takes place on October 14.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Foo Fighters To Release Two New Tracks

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Foo Fighters are to mark their fifteenth anniversary by releasing a career-spanning Greatest Hits collection - which will also feature two brand new tracks. Set for release on November 3, simply titled Foo Fighters - Greatest Hits, the new tracks are called "Wheels" and "Word Forward", both of whi...

Foo Fighters are to mark their fifteenth anniversary by releasing a career-spanning Greatest Hits collection – which will also feature two brand new tracks.

Set for release on November 3, simply titled Foo Fighters – Greatest Hits, the new tracks are called “Wheels” and “Word Forward”, both of which were made with Butch Vig.

Other tracks pencilled in for the collection include: “The Pretender,” “All My Life,” “Learn To Fly,” “Best Of You,” “Times Like These,” “My Hero” and “Everlong”.

More Foo Fighters news on Uncut.co.uk

Noel Gallagher posts full statement about quitting Oasis

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Noel Gallagher has posted a full statement about his decision to quit Oasis, the band he formed with his brother Liam in 1991, on Friday (August 28). Writing on his blog at Oasisinet.com, on Saturday (August 29): the band's chief songwriter ultimately blames a "lack of support from management and b...

Noel Gallagher has posted a full statement about his decision to quit Oasis, the band he formed with his brother Liam in 1991, on Friday (August 28).

Writing on his blog at Oasisinet.com, on Saturday (August 29): the band’s chief songwriter ultimately blames a “lack of support from management and bandmates” a a reason behind his decision.

Noel Gallagher‘s full statement reads as follows:

“Dearly beloved, it is with a heavy heart and a sad face that I say this to you this morning.

“As of last Friday, August 28, I have been forced to leave the Manchester rock ‘n’ roll pop group Oasis.

“The details are not important and of too great a number to list. But I feel you have the right to know that the level of verbal and violent intimidation towards me, my family, friends and comrades has become intolerable. And the lack of support and understanding from my management and bandmates has left me with no other option than to get me cape and seek pastures new.

“I would like firstly to offer my apologies to them kids in Paris who’d paid money and waited all day to see us only to be let down AGAIN by the band. Apologies are probably not enough, I know, but I’m afraid it’s all I’ve got.

“While I’m on the subject, I’d like to say [sorry] to the good people of V Festival that experienced the same thing. Again, I can only apologise – although I don’t know why, it was nothing to do with me. I was match-fit and ready to be brilliant. Alas, other people in the group weren’t up to it.

“In closing I would like to thank all the Oasis fans, all over the world. The last 18 years have been truly, truly amazing (and I hate that word, but today is the one time I’ll deem it appropriate). A dream come true. I take with me glorious memories.”

“Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have a family and a football team to indulge. I’ll see you somewhere down the road. It’s been a fuckin’ pleasure.”

For more Oasis news, you can visit Uncut’s news archive or live4ever

Them Crooked Vultures Announce UK Tour

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Them Crooked Vultures have announced their first UK tour, with the rock supergroup set to perform six live gigs in December. Them Crooked Vultures – featuring Led Zeppelin's John Paul Jones, Foo Fighters' Dave Grohl and Queens Of The Stone Age's Josh Homme recently made their live debut secret...

Them Crooked Vultures have announced their first UK tour, with the rock supergroup set to perform six live gigs in December.

Them Crooked Vultures – featuring Led Zeppelin‘s John Paul Jones, Foo Fighters‘ Dave Grohl and Queens Of The Stone Age‘s Josh Homme recently made their live debut secretly supporting the Arctic Monkeys at their Brixton Academy show last week (August 26). They also made another non-billed appearance at the weekends Leeds Festival (August 28) and Reading Festival (August 29).

Tickets for Them Crooked Vultures newly announced tour dates go onsale on Friday (September 4) at 10am.

Them Crooked Vultures 2009 UK tour dates are:

  • Plymouth Pavilions (December 10)
  • Portsmouth Guildhall (11)
  • Blackpool Empress Ballroom (13)
  • Birmingham O2 Academy (14)
  • Edinburgh O2 Academy (15)
  • London HMV Hammersmith Apollo (17)

More Uncut.co.uk music and film news