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Wild Beasts Announce New Single And Headline Tour

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Wild Beasts will head out on a UK tour to celebrate the release of new single ‘All the King’s Men’ on October 05. The track will be the second single to be taken from album ‘Two Dancers’. The band are set to play a number of events, including Offset Festival in September, before heading ...

Wild Beasts will head out on a UK tour to celebrate the release of new single ‘All the King’s Men’ on October 05.

The track will be the second single to be taken from album ‘Two Dancers’.

The band are set to play a number of events, including Offset Festival in September, before heading out on their tour.

The string of nine headline dates throughout October will include gigs in Leeds, Brighton and London.

The band will then return to London in November to support White Lies at Brixton Academy (November 20).

Wild Beasts will play:

Thursday August 27 – Leeds – Dance To The Radio – pre-festival tent

Sunday September 06 – Hainault Forest – Offset Festival

Wednesday September 30 – Edinburgh – Cabaret Voltaire (headline)

Thursday October 01– Leeds – Cockpit (headline)

Friday October 02- Nottingham – Bodega (headline)

Saturday October 03 – Bristol – Thekla (headline)

Sunday October 04 – Birmingham – Hare and Hounds (headline)

Monday October 05 – Brighton – Hanbury Ballroom (headline)

Wednesday October 07 – Oxford – Academy 2 (headline)

Thursday October 08– London – Garage (headline)

Friday October 09 – Manchester – Academy 3 (headline)

Friday November 20 – London – Brixton Academy (supporting White Lies)

More Wild Beasts news

Dinosaur Jr, Biffy Clyro, Editors To Play Reeperbahn Festival

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Dinosaur Jr, Biffy Clyro and The Editors are set to play the Reeperbahn Festival which runs for three days from September 24. The festival is held in venues in the St Pauli District of Hamburg including Kaiserkeller where The Beatles have played. New talent on the bill includes Dananananakroyd, Pu...

Dinosaur Jr, Biffy Clyro and The Editors are set to play the Reeperbahn Festival which runs for three days from September 24.

The festival is held in venues in the St Pauli District of Hamburg including Kaiserkeller where The Beatles have played.

New talent on the bill includes Dananananakroyd, Pulled Apart by Horses and Fight Like Apes.

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Artic Monkeys To Play Special Fan Show In London

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Artic Monkeys have revealed that they will play a special London show and are giving members of their mailing list a chance to grab tickets first. The gig at Brixton Academy on Wednesday August 26 will be their first live appearance after releasing their third album ‘Humbug’ earlier that week (...

Artic Monkeys have revealed that they will play a special London show and are giving members of their mailing list a chance to grab tickets first.

The gig at Brixton Academy on Wednesday August 26 will be their first live appearance after releasing their third album ‘Humbug’ earlier that week (August 24).

The band have announced that there will be “very special guests” but have not revealed any names yet.

Fans must register for tickets by midnight on Wednesday (19 August).

More Arctic Monkeys news

Amy Winehouse To Finish New Album In Miami?

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Amy Winehouse will reportedly go to Miami with ‘Back to Black’ producer Salaam Remi to complete her third record. The singer has been working with Remi in the Caribbean and London and wants to finish the album in Florida, according to reports. But friends are said to be worried that returning ...

Amy Winehouse will reportedly go to Miami with ‘Back to Black’ producer Salaam Remi to complete her third record.

The singer has been working with Remi in the Caribbean and London and wants to finish the album in Florida, according to reports.

But friends are said to be worried that returning to Miami, where she married ex husband Blake Fielder-Civil, may be upsetting to Winehouse.

A source told The Sun: “Amy is looking forward to getting out to Miami again to finish the album with Salaam, as he was so good on ‘Back to Black’.

“All her friends are worried though. She has mentioned she might meet Blake when he leaves rehab in Sheffield.

There have also been rumours that the singer would like to get back with her ex and maybe even have children.

The source told the tabloid: “Even more worrying is the fact that she has been feeling broody. That would be the ultimate disaster – the spawn of Fielder-Civil.

“Her dad Mitch is going ballistic about rumblings of a reunion.”

More Amy Winehouse news

Michael Jackson’s father wants funeral on singer’s birthday

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Michael Jackson will be buried on August 29, the day that would have been his 51st birthday, his father has claimed. Joseph Jackson also told the New York Daily News that the burial will take place at the Forest Lawn Cemetery in Los Angeles. Jackson’s body was reportedly moved from a cemetery la...

Michael Jackson will be buried on August 29, the day that would have been his 51st birthday, his father has claimed.

Joseph Jackson also told the New York Daily News that the burial will take place at the Forest Lawn Cemetery in Los Angeles.

Jackson’s body was reportedly moved from a cemetery last week because the singer’s mother was worried it might be stolen.

Katherine Jackson wanted the coffin to be moved to a freezer room for security.

The burial had been delayed to allow for toxicology tests to be returned.

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Herman Dune Set For Indoor London Festival

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A Fistful Of Fandango festival has announced that this year’s line-up will include Herman Dune, Future of the Left and Art Brut. The gigs will take place over four nights in September at 229 on Great Portland Street. Also on the bill are Eugene McGuinness and Pete and the Pirates. The festival ...

A Fistful Of Fandango festival has announced that this year’s line-up will include Herman Dune, Future of the Left and Art Brut.

The gigs will take place over four nights in September at 229 on Great Portland Street.

Also on the bill are Eugene McGuinness and Pete and the Pirates.

The festival is run by the organisers of the Fandango club night which has seen the likes of Coldplay, Kasabian and Bloc Party play since it started 15 years ago.

The line up for A Fistful of Fandango will be:

Wednesday September 9

Herman Dune, Eugene McGuinness, Gaggle, Neil’s Children, Factory Floor, An Experiment on a Bird in the Air Pump

Thursday September 10

Future of the Left, Dinosaur Pile Up, White Belt Yellow Tag, Victorian English Gentlemen’s Club, Kasms, Kong

Friday September 11

Pete and the Pirates, Goldheart Assembly, Flashguns, Video Nasties, L.R.Rockets

Saturday September 12

Art Brut, Hatcham Social, The Molotovs, Chapman Family, Televised Crimewave, Lion Club

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Deer Tick Confirmed For Club Uncut

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We’re pleased to announce that one of the most promising new Americana bands around, Deer Tick, will be headlining Club Uncut on December 1. The Rhode Island band are making their first visit to the UK, on the back of their second album, “Born On Flag Day”, due soon on the Partisan label. The show will be at the The Borderline, Manette Street in London’s West End. Tickets are £8 in advance from www.seetickets.com. Doors open at 7pm, and we’ll let you know soon the identity of the support bands. More Uncut.co.uk music and film news

We’re pleased to announce that one of the most promising new Americana bands around, Deer Tick, will be headlining Club Uncut on December 1.

The Rhode Island band are making their first visit to the UK, on the back of their second album, “Born On Flag Day”, due soon on the Partisan label.

The show will be at the The Borderline, Manette Street in London’s West End. Tickets are £8 in advance from www.seetickets.com.

Doors open at 7pm, and we’ll let you know soon the identity of the support bands.

More Uncut.co.uk music and film news

U2 Hit Back At Carbon Footprint Critics

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U2 have hit back at critics of their tour’s carbon footprint. Environmentalists recently argued that the gigs have the same effect on the world as flying the 90,000 fans with tickets to the Wembley leg of their tour to Dublin. Other critics claimed that U2 will emit three times more carbon tha...

U2 have hit back at critics of their tour’s carbon footprint.

Environmentalists recently argued that the gigs have the same effect on the world as flying the 90,000 fans with tickets to the Wembley leg of their tour to Dublin.

Other critics claimed that U2 will emit three times more carbon than Madonna did during her 2006 string of dates.

But The Edge told BBC 6Music: “I think it’s probably unfair to single out rock ‘n’ roll.

“There’s many other things that are in the same category but as it happens we have a programme to offset whatever carbon footprint we have.”

Environmentalists and local residents joined together in July to protest outside Dublin’s Croke Park stadium about the tour.

More U2 news

Patrick Wolf Throws Mic Stand At Stage Crew

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Video footage of Patrick Wolf spitting at and throwing equipment at stage crew has appeared on YouTube. The singer threw a mic stand and a stool when his set at the C/O Pop festival in Germany on Thursday (August 13) was cut short. Wolf told the crowd to “riot”, stuck his finger up at security and spat at them. In a separate incident earlier this year, the singer was arrested after spitting in a bouncer’s face in San Francisco. More Patrick Wolf news

Video footage of Patrick Wolf spitting at and throwing equipment at stage crew has appeared on YouTube.

The singer threw a mic stand and a stool when his set at the C/O Pop festival in Germany on Thursday (August 13) was cut short.

Wolf told the crowd to “riot”, stuck his finger up at security and spat at them.

In a separate incident earlier this year, the singer was arrested after spitting in a bouncer’s face in San Francisco.

More Patrick Wolf news

Radiohead To Play New Songs At Reading And Leeds

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Radiohead will play new material at Reading and Leeds festivals, according to band member Jonny Greenwood. The group are set to headline the events during the bank holiday weekend (August 28-30). Greenwood also announced that the band are giving away song ‘These Twisted Words’ for free. The t...

Radiohead will play new material at Reading and Leeds festivals, according to band member Jonny Greenwood.

The group are set to headline the events during the bank holiday weekend (August 28-30).

Greenwood also announced that the band are giving away song ‘These Twisted Words’ for free.

The track can be downloaded via a link on Radiohead’s blog.

He wrote on the site: “We’ve been recording for a while, and this was one of the first we finished. We’re pretty proud of it.

“There’s other stuff in various states of completion, but this is one we’ve been practicing, and which we’ll probably play at this summer’s concerts. Hope you like it.”

However, Greenwood did not confirm or deny the rumours of a new Radiohead EP that fans had thought might be released today.

More Radiohead news

Nirvana Debut To Be Re-released

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A special edition of Nirvana’s debut ‘Bleach’ is to be released to commemorate the album’s 20th anniversary. The remastered version will include a live recording of the band’s gig at the Pine Street Theatre in Portland in February 1990. ‘Bleach’: The Deluxe Edition will be accompanied by a booklet including unseen photos of the group and will be released on label Sub-Pop in September. The tracklisting will be: 'Blew' 'Floyd The Barber' 'About a Girl' 'School' 'Love Buzz' 'Paper Cuts' 'Negative' 'Creep' 'Scoff' 'Swap Meet' 'Mr. Moustache' 'Sifting' 'Big Cheese' 'Downer' Live at Pine Street Theatre 'Intro' 'School' 'Floyd The Barber' 'Dive' 'Love Buzz' 'Spank Thru' 'Molly's Lips' 'Sappy' 'Scoff' 'About A Girl' 'Been A Son' 'Blew' More Nirvana news More Uncut.co.uk music and film news

A special edition of Nirvana’s debut ‘Bleach’ is to be released to commemorate the album’s 20th anniversary.

The remastered version will include a live recording of the band’s gig at the Pine Street Theatre in Portland in February 1990.

‘Bleach’: The Deluxe Edition will be accompanied by a booklet including unseen photos of the group and will be released on label Sub-Pop in September.

The tracklisting will be:

‘Blew’

‘Floyd The Barber’

‘About a Girl’

‘School’

‘Love Buzz’

‘Paper Cuts’

‘Negative’

‘Creep’

‘Scoff’

‘Swap Meet’

‘Mr. Moustache’

‘Sifting’

‘Big Cheese’

‘Downer’

Live at Pine Street Theatre

‘Intro’

‘School’

‘Floyd The Barber’

‘Dive’

‘Love Buzz’

‘Spank Thru’

‘Molly’s Lips’

‘Sappy’

‘Scoff’

‘About A Girl’

‘Been A Son’

‘Blew’

More Nirvana news

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Musician And Producer Jim Dickinson Dies

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Jim Dickinson - who produced and recorded with the likes of The Rolling Stones, Aretha Franklin and Bob Dylan - has died aged 67. Dickinson, a great influence on the Memphis sound of the 1960s and 70s, had a career that stretched over four decades and his sons Luther and Cody formed the North Missi...

Jim Dickinson – who produced and recorded with the likes of The Rolling Stones, Aretha Franklin and Bob Dylan – has died aged 67.

Dickinson, a great influence on the Memphis sound of the 1960s and 70s, had a career that stretched over four decades and his sons Luther and Cody formed the North Mississippi Allstars.

The musician and producer passed away in a Memphis hospital on Saturday (August 15) after a three month battle with heart problems and intestinal bleeding.

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Howlin Rain Cancel Club Uncut Show

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Howlin Rain have cancelled their Club Uncut show on September 14, after bassist Ian Gradek unexpectedly left the band. The band have had to cancel all their forthcoming European dates. The band have sent their apologies to all of their fans and hope to be able to play in London again soon. Mean F...

Howlin Rain have cancelled their Club Uncut show on September 14, after bassist Ian Gradek unexpectedly left the band.

The band have had to cancel all their forthcoming European dates. The band have sent their apologies to all of their fans and hope to be able to play in London again soon.

Mean Fiddler would like to offer an opportunity for ticket holders to attend an alternative show. If you have hard tickets for the Howlin Rain show, these will be valid for either: William Elliott Whitmore with special guest Cate Le Bon at The Relentless Garage, London, on Monday 14 September, doors 7pm. Or Club Uncut presents Willard Grant Conspiracy with special guests The Duke And The King, on Friday 18 September, doors 6.30pm, also at the Relentless Garage.

If you have ordered tickets for box office collection, please contact your ticket issuer to choose which show you would like to attend.

With hard tickets for Howlin Rain, you will be able to gain entry to either show. Alternatively if you wish to claim a refund please contact your ticket issuer. All hard tickets will need to be returned untampered.

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Paul McCartney School Photo To Go Up For sale

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A photo showing Sir Paul McCartney when he was a schoolboy is to be auctioned along with 314 other pieces of Beatles memorabilia later this month. The shot of his class at Joseph Williams School in Liverpool in 1952 shows McCartney stood in the back row, reading a comic. The photo, which was previously unseen, was taken into The Beatles Shop near the Cavern Club in Liverpool A school photo of Ringo Star and a lithograph for the song ‘Yesterday’ will also be up for sale. Manager at The Beatles shop, Stephen Bailey told the BBC: "This is our 19th annual memorabilia auction and you would have possibly thought that the Crown Jewels would have long since been found and sold but that is just not the case. "I think that the present financial climate has concentrated people's memories and the extra cash that they will make comes in handy at a time like this." The auction will be held on 29 August at the Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts. More Beatles news More Uncut.co.uk music and film news

A photo showing Sir Paul McCartney when he was a schoolboy is to be auctioned along with 314 other pieces of Beatles memorabilia later this month.

The shot of his class at Joseph Williams School in Liverpool in 1952 shows McCartney stood in the back row, reading a comic.

The photo, which was previously unseen, was taken into The Beatles Shop near the Cavern Club in Liverpool

A school photo of Ringo Star and a lithograph for the song ‘Yesterday’ will also be up for sale.

Manager at The Beatles shop, Stephen Bailey told the BBC: “This is our 19th annual memorabilia auction and you would have possibly thought that the Crown Jewels would have long since been found and sold but that is just not the case.

“I think that the present financial climate has concentrated people’s memories and the extra cash that they will make comes in handy at a time like this.”

The auction will be held on 29 August at the Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts.

More Beatles news

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Om: “God Is Good”

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When the last Om album, “Pilgrimage”, came out, I made some kind of borderline lazy crack about it being virtually indistinguishable from its predecessor. Not much danger of being able to do that with “God Is Good”, this time. The fundaments of Om’s sound remain intact: meditative progressions on bass and drums, floating somewhere between Slint and Black Sabbath, with Al Cisneros’ whispered invocations to some unitive Godhead nestled deep in the mix. But this time there’s a new drummer alongside Cisneros – Emil Amos, replacing Chris Haikus – and a sense that Om’s ongoing mission to create devotional music has encouraged them this time to expand on their hypnotic rudimentary sound. It’s easy to draw parallels with the leap forward Sunn 0))) made on this year’s “Monoliths And Dimensions”, especially on “Alice”. The prospect of avant-metalheads channelling Alice Coltrane in their music is a strange, allbeit appealing, one, and it happens again here as “God Is Good” opens with “Thebes”, and a tamboura drone that has an uncanny similarity to the opening of Coltrane’s “Journey In Satchidananda”. Soon enough, “Thebes” evolves into a more traditional Om song: whispered incantations up to the eight minute mark, followed by about 11 minutes of similarly dirge-like heavy sludge. It’s a trick which is still pretty impressive, but it’s given new dimensions by the discreet new textures which Cisneros and Amos incorporate into their sound: something akin to a cello tone early on mingling with the drones, and a distinct piano around the six minute mark when the drums also arrive. “Meditation Is The Practice Of Death” initially seems less of a departure, and it’s at some point early in this second track that my tolerance for Cisneros’ somewhat po-faced, gothically portentous lyrics starts, as usual, to wane (it’s quite obvious why Om did a split with Current 93 a while back); I suspect I may be laughing at the wrong bits from time to time. The music, though, remains superb. There’s evidence of Amos’ looser, more ornate drumming, a newly subtle and melodic guitar-like tone that fleetingly appears, and some distinct dub reverb on a couple of drum rolls. Then, as “Meditation Is The Practice Of Death” moves into its final phase, there’s a beautiful flute solo, of all things. It acts as a precursor of sorts for the new vistas presented by the two parts of “Cremation Ghat”, both happily instrumental. “Cremation Ghat I” feels nebulously North African, and is faster and more urgent than Om and Sleep tradition, powered by clicking percussion and handclaps, with Amos virtually playing breaks and Cisneros essaying dry funk runs on his bass to create a different kind of trance from their normal opiated lurch. “Cremation Ghat II” is better still, with the tamboura foregrounded this time and a rich sound which aligns Om to Indian-tinged psychedelia and cosmic jazz far more than to their post-metal contemporaries. Cisneros has always talked about this range of music – and his esoteric knowledge is blazingly evident from his lyrics. But it’s thrilling to hear it being expressed so gracefully and powerfully in the way his music sounds now.

When the last Om album, “Pilgrimage”, came out, I made some kind of borderline lazy crack about it being virtually indistinguishable from its predecessor. Not much danger of being able to do that with “God Is Good”, this time.

Flight Of The Conchords – Series Two

Jemaine Clement and Bret McKenzie have not, it’s fair to say, been spoiled by success. The first series of Flight Of The Conchords, about the New Zealand duo’s useless attempts to find pop stardom in New York, resulted in largish cult acclaim, as well as that true rarity, a comedy spin-off album...

Jemaine Clement and Bret McKenzie have not, it’s fair to say, been spoiled by success. The first series of Flight Of The Conchords, about the New Zealand duo’s useless attempts to find pop stardom in New York, resulted in largish cult acclaim, as well as that true rarity, a comedy spin-off album that stood up to repeat listens.

For the second and apparently last series, however, little has changed – except, possibly, that Flight Of The Conchords have sunk even lower. Bret and Jemaine (their characters in the show, that is) remain failures as a band, as lovers and, mostly, as functioning adults.

They approach the world with the same sweet, ingenuous bemusement, and still hang out with the same tiny and dysfunctional crowd: Murray, their manager (played by Rhys Darby), a Kiwi even more naive – though substantially more self-deluding – than they are; Mel (Kristen Schaal), their sole, deranged fan, and her agonisingly stoical husband Doug (David Costabile); and the marvellous Dave (Arj Barker), a pawn shop clerk.

Barker takes a pleasingly bigger role in Series Two, expanding on his job of acting as an unreliable guide to New York. Part of the programme’s charm, though, is that this New York is only fractionally more populous and threatening than New Zealand (traffic and crowds are eerily absent), and that the notionally streetwise Dave is every bit as gauche as Jemaine and Bret. “Women,” he advises in Episode Nine, “like three things: men in kilts, Southern Comfort and Chris Isaak’s ‘Wicked Game’.”

Women, in fact, bring out the dubious best in Flight Of The Conchords. The finest episodes in this batch of ten come when one or both of the pair falls more or less in love. Episode Six, Love Is A Weapon Of Choice, finds them pursuing the same girl, like an indie Morecambe & Wise, and becoming preoccupied with dog epilepsy.

Episode Seven, Prime Minister, involves a woman with an Art Garfunkel fetish, and also Brian, the – unworldly, of course – Prime Minister of New Zealand. And Episode Five, Unnatural Love, may be their greatest half-hour, a treatise on the dangers of dating Australian women directed by Michel Gondry, who clearly shares Clement and McKenzie’s underplayed, whimsical aesthetic.

If there’s a problem with Series Two, it’s that the pair’s new songs don’t stand up quite as well as those, written over a period of many years, from Series One. The exception is “Carol Brown”, soulful indie-oompah with a neat video from Gondry and a ravishing chorus of Jemaine’s ex-girlfriends. It reveals, once again, how Clement and McKenzie would make very decent pop stars – if they weren’t cursed with the gift of being so funny, too.

EXTRAS:3* Behind-the-scenes documentary (dating from Series One), outtakes, innumerable ads for Dave’s pawn shop.

JOHN MULVEY

Bob Dylan Picked Up By Police During Search For Springsteen’s Home?

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Bob Dylan could have been on his way to visit Bruce Springsteen’s old home when he was picked up by police last month. Residents in Long Branch, New Jersey called the cops when they saw a scruffy looking man wandering the streets in the rain. Dylan claims he was just going for a walk but he was...

Bob Dylan could have been on his way to visit Bruce Springsteen’s old home when he was picked up by police last month.

Residents in Long Branch, New Jersey called the cops when they saw a scruffy looking man wandering the streets in the rain.

Dylan claims he was just going for a walk but he was close to the house where Springsteen wrote ‘Born to Run’ and ‘Thunder Road’.

The singer has also visited the childhood homes of Neil Young and John Lennon in the past year.

Police officer Kirstie Buble didn’t believe that he really was Bob Dylan until his manager showed her his passport when she drove him back to his hotel.

She told ABC News: “I’ve seen pictures of Bob Dylan from a long time ago and he didn’t look like Bob Dylan to me at all.

“He was wearing black sweatpants tucked into black rain boots, and two raincoats with the hood pulled down over his head.”

The singer says he was visiting Long Branch to play a concert with Willie Nelson and John Mellencamp.

More Bob Dylan news

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Glastonbury Fayre

A few months before the Midsummer Solstice in June 1971, film producers Sy Litvanoff and David Puttnam approached Nicolas Roeg to film a strange, underground free festival that was happening in Somerset. Roeg arrived at the freakshow with eight cameramen in tow, but after filming for a few days, he abandoned the project, waylaid by bigger films like Walkabout and Don’t Look Now. After being shunted around to various editors, it was eventually salvaged by Peter Neal, an amateur filmmaker who attended the festival. Neal artfully intercuts Roeg’s music footage with 160mm film taken by punters to create a slightly dream-like, fan’s-eye voyage around the festival fields, without any commentary. It serves as an almost anthropological examination of events happening away from the music: the building of the Pyramid Stage, the crazy preachers, the enormous spliffs, the sun worshippers, the mystical mumbo-jumbo, the naked hippies rolling in mud, the religious gurus and the impromptu outbursts of guitar playing, singing and drumming from stoned punters. Underappreciated at the time, the film was dismissed as a cheapskate English version of big-budget festival movies such as Woodstock or Monterey Pop. The live footage does include some dreck (sorry, Melanie), but there are actually a few cracking musical performances: Terry Reid opens the film with an incendiary version of “Dean”, while Traffic close it with a pulsating Brazilian-tinged “Gimme Some Lovin”. However, just as one can still idle away an enjoyable four days at Glasto without stepping anywhere near a music stage, the film captures how music has always been tangential to the Glastonbury Festival experience. Oddly this release sees Peter Neal relegated to the role of “completion director”, instead crediting the film (for the first time) to Nic Roeg. Pasting a big Hollywood name on the front is, presumably, intended to make it a more prestigious release, but Roeg’s witterings in the director’s commentary suggest that he was barely involved in the project and has only the dimmest memories of the festival (“hmm,” he observes at one point, “a lot of people had long hair in those days, didn’t they?”). An accompanying Making Of film makes a slightly shambolic job of setting the scene and explaining events. The film itself, though, beautifully transferred to disc for the first time, remains a fascinating, absurd, hilarious, cringe-making but ultimately quite moving record of a unique period in counterculture. EXTRAS: 2* “director’s” commentary from Nic Roeg, interviews with various performers and journalists. JOHN LEWIS

A few months before the Midsummer Solstice in June 1971, film producers Sy Litvanoff and David Puttnam approached Nicolas Roeg to film a strange, underground free festival that was happening in Somerset.

Roeg arrived at the freakshow with eight cameramen in tow, but after filming for a few days, he abandoned the project, waylaid by bigger films like Walkabout and Don’t Look Now. After being shunted around to various editors, it was eventually salvaged by Peter Neal, an amateur filmmaker who attended the festival. Neal artfully intercuts Roeg’s music footage with 160mm film taken by punters to create a slightly dream-like, fan’s-eye voyage around the festival fields, without any commentary.

It serves as an almost anthropological examination of events happening away from the music: the building of the Pyramid Stage, the crazy preachers, the enormous spliffs, the sun worshippers, the mystical mumbo-jumbo, the naked hippies rolling in mud, the religious gurus and the impromptu outbursts of guitar playing, singing and drumming from stoned punters.

Underappreciated at the time, the film was dismissed as a cheapskate English version of big-budget festival movies such as Woodstock or Monterey Pop. The live footage does include some dreck (sorry, Melanie), but there are actually a few cracking musical performances: Terry Reid opens the film with an incendiary version of “Dean”, while Traffic close it with a pulsating Brazilian-tinged “Gimme Some Lovin”. However, just as one can still idle away an enjoyable four days at Glasto without stepping anywhere near a music stage, the film captures how music has always been tangential to the Glastonbury Festival experience.

Oddly this release sees Peter Neal relegated to the role of “completion director”, instead crediting the film (for the first time) to Nic Roeg. Pasting a big Hollywood name on the front is, presumably, intended to make it a more prestigious release, but Roeg’s witterings in the director’s commentary suggest that he was barely involved in the project and has only the dimmest memories of the festival (“hmm,” he observes at one point, “a lot of people had long hair in those days, didn’t they?”).

An accompanying Making Of film makes a slightly shambolic job of setting the scene and explaining events. The film itself, though, beautifully transferred to disc for the first time, remains a fascinating, absurd, hilarious, cringe-making but ultimately quite moving record of a unique period in counterculture.

EXTRAS: 2* “director’s” commentary from Nic Roeg, interviews with various performers and journalists.

JOHN LEWIS

Les Paul 1915 – 2009: The Uncut Obituary

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The Uncut Obituary: LES PAUL 1915 - 2009 Few guitarists will ever make as much of an impact on the music world as Les Paul. As well as being a deftly intuitive player and a studio pioneer, he lent his name to an iconic instrument that became a cornerstone of rock ‘n’ roll, the “axe” of choi...

The Uncut Obituary: LES PAUL 1915 – 2009

Few guitarists will ever make as much of an impact on the music world as Les Paul. As well as being a deftly intuitive player and a studio pioneer, he lent his name to an iconic instrument that became a cornerstone of rock ‘n’ roll, the “axe” of choice for thousands of celebrated strummers and pickers down the years.

Les Paul began playing banjo and guitar professionally in 1928, when he was just 13, at a drive-in restaurant in his hometown of Waukesha, Wisconsin, and first dabbled in electronics and amplified sound by boosting the volume of his instruments so that he could be heard by outside diners. By the end of his teens he was playing in both country and jazz bands, and continued his technical experiments when his group’s music was being broadcast by radio stations in Chicago and New York.

By the late 1940s he’d moved again to Hollywood, where he married singer Colleen Summers, who renamed herself Mary Ford. The duo stunned the record industry with a series of releases that featured both Ford’s voice and Paul’s guitar multi-tracked to create a wall of sound, at a time when Phil Spector was still in short trousers. “Tennessee Waltz” was their first bit hit, followed by more million-sellers like “How High The Moon”, “Waiting For The Sunshine” and “Mockingbird Hill”.

The full orchestra effect of their recordings could be replicated for live performances by a device called the Paulveriser (arguably the pop world’s first synthesizer), an intricate black box of a contraption that Les hooked up between his guitar and a public address systems, but it was an earlier Paul prototype, a solid-bodied electric guitar he’d first built from scratch in 1938, that cemented his legend.

Gibson started mass-producing the instrument in the 1950s, although the company insisted that Paul merely licensed his name to a guitar their own boffins had fashioned and that he had had little to do with the nuts and bolts of the design. The controversy over who actually invented the model still rages intermittently, but the guitar itself was soon established as one of the most versatile and popular on the market.

Pete Townshend and Jimmy Page are arguably its most high profile players, although it’s a safe bet that almost every guitarist in the world has slung one round their neck at one time or another.

Paul and Ford divorced in 1962, and in later life the guitarist returned to his country roots, often making records in tandem with another influential musician, Chet Atkins. Just a few months before his death from pneumonia, Paul was still playing a weekly gig in a Manhattan nightclub where he would habitually invite members of the audience, including famous fans like Slash, Bruce Springsteen and Aerosmith’s Joe Perry, to join him on stage.

TERRY STAUNTON

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Reigning Sound: “Love And Curses”

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In the world of modern garage rock, Greg Cartwright seems to be a figure on a par with Mick Collins: multiple bands of fluid personnel; labyrinthine career history; general fiery habit of cranking it out and moving on. Currently, Cartwright is fronting the Reigning Sound, after stints with The Oblivians and The Compulsive Gamblers. “Love And Curses” is his first studio set in a while as far as I can tell, and it’s the sort of record that deserves an audience way beyond the often rather closed garage scene. Cartwright and his current line-up from Asheville recorded much of “Love And Curses” in Ardent, and you can see a certain Memphis lineage in a bunch of the songs, hear echoes of Alex Chilton and Tav Falco now and again. A stronger lead, though, is the way much of the album, heavy as it is on the organ thanks to newish recruit Dave Amels, draws on the sound and energy of “Blonde On Blonde”. Dylan’s influence on artists often ends up as a sort of nebulously awkward rethink of American roots music. But the Reigning Sound brilliantly tap into that broiling, indignant band sound he found in the studio and, even more so, on the road with the Hawks in ’66. I guess what we’re talking about here, really, is that thin, wild mercury sound, just as much to the fore in wounded ballads like “Something To Hold Onto” and “Love Won’t Leave You A Song” as it is on pointed ramalams like “Broken Things”. There’s an affinity, too, to another artist who drew on this side of Dylan, Elvis Costello: check out the thumping, wheezing “Debris”, which would’ve fitted pretty nicely onto “Trust”, or “The Bells”, where the organ is joined by some cascading, Steve Nieve-ish piano. Worth noting, too, that there’s a hearty catch to Cartwright’s voice on this one, especially, which recalls Springsteen a little. There’s room for one or two heavier garage workouts, too, like “Stick Up For Me”, but even here, on this faintly revolutionary fanfare for the common man, there’s a soulful grit, an understanding that a garage band can expand their remit a little without sacrificing any of their elemental power and thrust.

In the world of modern garage rock, Greg Cartwright seems to be a figure on a par with Mick Collins: multiple bands of fluid personnel; labyrinthine career history; general fiery habit of cranking it out and moving on.