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Billy Childish – Archive From 1959: The Billy Childish Story

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It used to be 1979. It’s now 2009. Billy Childish – author, poet, painter, musician, influence on everyone from Tracey Emin to The White Stripes – will be 50 in December. In that time – the time that U2 have only been U2 – Billy Childish has been The Pop Rivets, Thee Milkshakes, Thee Mighty Caesars, Thee Headcoats, The Buff Medways, The Del Monas, Jack Ketch & The Crewmen, The Musicians Of The British Empire and, of course, Billy Childish. And in that time, the time that music has convulsed and shapeshifted like Morrissey getting a lawyer’s bill, Billy Childish’s musical vision has remained extraordinarily similar. I remember hearing him on John Peel in the late ’70s, except then his band were called The Pop Rivets and I wouldn’t have known who he was. The song (not included here) was called “Beatle Boots” and, even at the time, even on a radio show where most of the songs were not over-produced, or over-tuneful, or excessively musicianly, “Beatle Boots” sounded like a compressed, one-take, rough headache of a sub-demo. It was great. And it marked, really, the end of Childish’s brief parallelness with New Wave music. Like Swell Maps’ Nikki Sudden, who began his career fitting in perfectly with post-punk and then veered off into his own world of Stones and Thunders, Billy Childish’s view of things has always been a highly personal one. People stroll into shot on occasion – Jack White, say, or Kurt Cobain (who seems to have fulfilled a Stephen King-like “I am the recommender” role to rough guitar music of the early 1980s) – and sometimes the big world lets Childish onboard for a while (his poetry and painting are now considered “proper” by art and literature types), but none of this seems to affect Childish, who is still entirely concerned with mapping out his own life and mind. One aspect of that life and mind only is collected here, and in brilliant quantity; a representative selection of the music Childish has made in the past 30 years. He’s run all those bands with the too-many “e”s in their names, and musically they are all variants on the same thing; Childish’s view of the world, seen through two kinds of punk, garage punk and, er, punk punk. It is in a way a sort of pop life in reverse compared to that of the bands he’s clearly in love with. Those bands, ’60s bands as not-that-disparate as The Kinks and The Kingsmen, if they developed, went forwards in time, but Billy Childish’s bands have gone backwards in time. It’d be slightly inaccurate (but tempting) to say that as Childish’s punk and post-punk contemporaries got into – looking just at the 1980s – funk, brass sections, Scott Walker, country rock, electro, David Bowie, hip hop and Chicago house and “developed”, they lost whatever it was they had, the primal wobbling thing that made them exciting in the first place, while each year Billy Childish and his bands got closer to the primal wobbling thing. And this is the thing that draws the admirers to him – he records with old mics! He sounds a bit like The Sonics! He sort of references bands six people love like The Beatstalkers! These songs, like Childish himself, do tend to shore up that viewpoint. There’s 51 of them on this double CD, and with the odd exception – the ulto-indiepop of The Musicians Of The British Empire’s “He’s Making A Tape” (“and it’s not for me!” sings The MBE’s Nurse Julie disconsolately), or the slightly Fall-ish “Mass Ignorance Culture” by Jack Ketch & The Crewmen – Archive From 1959 is a couple of hours of rough-arsed, broken-tongued garage rock which, once you stop playing Name That Riff and you set aside the idiosyncratic titles (“Punk Rock Ist Nicht Tot” by Thee Headcoats, “The Day I Beat My Father Up” by the same band), could be from any rough-arsed, broken-tongued garage band of the ’60s. Of course (well, of course-ish), that’s not really true. Music, as The Who once said, must change. Admittedly, they said it in a terrible song at a point in their career when they’d gone from being the greatest garage band in the world to being a weird, brandy-sodden, neurotic disco-rock band, but they were right. A pop world where everyone recorded at Toe Rag Studios and thought stereo was a channel too far would be a horrible place, just as a world where Elton John samples over a drum beat constitute a “mash-up” is not that good either. But as a personal vision of music, as a vehicle for a unique attitude, and as a compilation of 51 rough-arsed, broken-tongued garage songs, Archive From 1959 is great. DAVID QUANTICK For more album reviews, click here for the UNCUT music archive

It used to be 1979. It’s now 2009. Billy Childish – author, poet, painter, musician, influence on everyone from Tracey Emin to The White Stripes – will be 50 in December. In that time – the time that U2 have only been U2 – Billy Childish has been The Pop Rivets, Thee Milkshakes, Thee Mighty Caesars, Thee Headcoats, The Buff Medways, The Del Monas, Jack Ketch & The Crewmen, The Musicians Of The British Empire and, of course, Billy Childish. And in that time, the time that music has convulsed and shapeshifted like Morrissey getting a lawyer’s bill, Billy Childish’s musical vision has remained extraordinarily similar.

I remember hearing him on John Peel in the late ’70s, except then his band were called The Pop Rivets and I wouldn’t have known who he was. The song (not included here) was called “Beatle Boots” and, even at the time, even on a radio show where most of the songs were not over-produced, or over-tuneful, or excessively musicianly, “Beatle Boots” sounded like a compressed, one-take, rough headache of a sub-demo.

It was great. And it marked, really, the end of Childish’s brief parallelness with New Wave music. Like Swell Maps’ Nikki Sudden, who began his career fitting in perfectly with post-punk and then veered off into his own world of Stones and Thunders, Billy Childish’s view of things has always been a highly personal one. People stroll into shot on occasion – Jack White, say, or Kurt Cobain (who seems to have fulfilled a Stephen King-like “I am the recommender” role to rough guitar music of the early 1980s) – and sometimes the big world lets Childish onboard for a while (his poetry and painting are now considered “proper” by art and literature types), but none of this seems to affect Childish, who is still entirely concerned with mapping out his own life and mind.

One aspect of that life and mind only is collected here, and in brilliant quantity; a representative selection of the music Childish has made in the past 30 years. He’s run all those bands with the too-many “e”s in their names, and musically they are all variants on the same thing; Childish’s view of the world, seen through two kinds of punk, garage punk and, er, punk punk. It is in a way a sort of pop life in reverse compared to that of the bands he’s clearly in love with. Those bands, ’60s bands as not-that-disparate as The Kinks and The Kingsmen, if they developed, went forwards in time, but Billy Childish’s bands have gone backwards in time.

It’d be slightly inaccurate (but tempting) to say that as Childish’s punk and post-punk contemporaries got into – looking just at the 1980s – funk, brass sections, Scott Walker, country rock, electro, David Bowie, hip hop and Chicago house and “developed”, they lost whatever it was they had, the primal wobbling thing that made them exciting in the first place, while each year Billy Childish and his bands got closer to the primal wobbling thing.

And this is the thing that draws the admirers to him – he records with old mics! He sounds a bit like The Sonics! He sort of references bands six people love like The Beatstalkers! These songs, like Childish himself, do tend to shore up that viewpoint. There’s 51 of them on this double CD, and with the odd exception – the ulto-indiepop of The Musicians Of The British Empire’s “He’s Making A Tape” (“and it’s not for me!” sings The MBE’s Nurse Julie disconsolately), or the slightly Fall-ish “Mass Ignorance Culture” by Jack Ketch & The Crewmen – Archive From 1959 is a couple of hours of rough-arsed, broken-tongued garage rock which, once you stop playing Name That Riff and you set aside the idiosyncratic titles (“Punk Rock Ist Nicht Tot” by Thee Headcoats, “The Day I Beat My Father Up” by the same band), could be from any rough-arsed, broken-tongued garage band of the ’60s.

Of course (well, of course-ish), that’s not really true. Music, as The Who once said, must change. Admittedly, they said it in a terrible song at a point in their career when they’d gone from being the greatest garage band in the world to being a weird, brandy-sodden, neurotic disco-rock band, but they were right. A pop world where everyone recorded at Toe Rag Studios and thought stereo was a channel too far would be a horrible place, just as a world where Elton John samples over a drum beat constitute a “mash-up” is not that good either. But as a personal vision of music, as a vehicle for a unique attitude, and as a compilation of 51 rough-arsed, broken-tongued garage songs, Archive From 1959 is great.

DAVID QUANTICK

For more album reviews, click here for the UNCUT music archive

Son Volt – American Central Dust

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Uncle Tupelo's Jay Farrar’s recent work with Son Volt, the band he revived with a new lineup in 2005, seems preoccupied with disappearing worlds and the loss of arcane traditions. It’s a feeling deepened on American Central Dust, in which he takes stock of the global banking fiasco to give thing...

Uncle Tupelo‘s Jay Farrar’s recent work with Son Volt, the band he revived with a new lineup in 2005, seems preoccupied with disappearing worlds and the loss of arcane traditions. It’s a feeling deepened on American Central Dust, in which he takes stock of the global banking fiasco to give things a more piquant air of wistfulness.

The songs themselves are thoughtful, ambling between folk, country and mid-paced roots-rock. More roughed-up stuff like “When The Wheels Don’t Move” might have served better, but there’s light (sideways Keith Richards tribute “Cocaine And Ashes”) and dark (“Sultana”) in equal, engaging measure.

ROB HUGHES

For more album reviews, click here for the UNCUT music archive

The 27th Uncut Playlist Of 2009

A reminder, first off, that the excellent Arbouretum will finally be playing Club Uncut, next Monday, July 27, at the Lexington on Pentonville Road. Full details here, if you’re interested. Secondly, this week’s playlist. The Unthanks, perhaps obviously, are the renamed Rachel Unthank & The Winterset. “Here’s The Tender Coming” probably sounds like the best new arrival, at this point. 1 The Unthanks – Here’s The Tender Coming (EMI) 2 Jim O’Rourke – The Visitor (Drag City) 3 Masters Of Reality – Pine/Cross Dover (Brownhouse) 4 Air – Love 2 (Virgin) 5 Volcano Choir – Unmap (Jagjaguwar) 6 The Big Pink – A Brief History Of Love (4AD) 7 David Bowie – London Boy (Spectrum) 8 Noah & The Whale – The First Days Of Spring (Mercury) 9 Joan As Police Woman – Cover (Reveal) 10 Vowels – The Pattern Prism (LoAF) 11 Julian Cope – Peggy Suicide: Deluxe Edition (Universal Island) 12 Fairport Convention – Unhalfbricking (Island) 13 Hope Sandoval & The Warm Inventions – Through The Devil Softly (Nettwerk) 14 Times New Viking – Born Again Revisited (Matador) 15 Girls – Album (Fantasy Trashcan/Turnstile) 16 Big Star – Keep An Eye On The Sky (Rhino) 17 Pearl Jam – Backspacer (Universal Island) 18 Jimmy Webb & The Webb Brothers – Cottonwood Farm (Proper) 19 Richard Hawley – True Love’s Gutter (Mute)

A reminder, first off, that the excellent Arbouretum will finally be playing Club Uncut, next Monday, July 27, at the Lexington on Pentonville Road. Full details here, if you’re interested.

Martha Wainwright Duets With Liam Frost – Free MP3 Download!

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Martha Wainwright has duetted with Liam Frost on song "Your Hand In Mine" which is to appear on Frost's forthcoming new album 'We Ain't Got No Money, Honey, But We Got Rain.' The album is not out until September 28, but you can download the Wainwright/Frost duet for free, now, from Stay Loose Recor...

Martha Wainwright has duetted with Liam Frost on song “Your Hand In Mine” which is to appear on Frost’s forthcoming new album ‘We Ain’t Got No Money, Honey, But We Got Rain.’

The album is not out until September 28, but you can download the Wainwright/Frost duet for free, now, from Stay Loose Records or MySapce/Liamfrost.

Manchester songwriter Frost has commented on working on the duet “Your Hand In Mine”, saying: “Martha’s an amazing artist, so it was great to work with her on my album. We’re not exactly Sonny and Cher, but we’d have definitely given Ike and Tina Turner a run for their money.”

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Bruce Springsteen, U2, Metallica To Play New York Rock N Roll Concert

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Bruce Springsteen, Metallica and U2 are just some of the huge names that have been confirmed to play a two-night celebration concert for the Rock N Roll Hall of Fame this October. Taking place at New York's Madison Square Gardens on October 29 and 30, other artists set to perform include Stevie Won...

Bruce Springsteen, Metallica and U2 are just some of the huge names that have been confirmed to play a two-night celebration concert for the Rock N Roll Hall of Fame this October.

Taking place at New York’s Madison Square Gardens on October 29 and 30, other artists set to perform include Stevie Wonder, Eric Clapton and Aretha Franklin.

More details to follow.

You can read a review of Springsteen’s last UK show, at London’s Hard Rock Calling last month, here.

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Pic credit: PA Photos

The Beatles Rock Band Game – 15 More Tracks Confirmed

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Following on from the official launch last month (June 1), another 15 Beatles songs that will appear on the forthcoming 'The Beatles: Rock Band' game have now been confirmed. 'The Beatles: Rock Band' goes on sale from September 9 and will feature 45 remastered Beatles songs, which users of the game will be able to play karaoke-style, performing three-part vocals, guitar and drums in different venues around the world from the UK to India and in the US. New tracks confirmed by Rolling Stone include “Paperback Writer” at the Budokan, “Can’t Buy Me Love” at the Ed Sullivan Theater and “Eight Days A Week” at the Shea Stadium. 'The Beatles Rock Band' will be available to play on Playstation 3, Wii and Xbox 360. Confirmed songs for 'The Beatles: Rock Band' so far are: “Twist And Shout” / Cavern Club “Do You Want To Know A Secret” / Cavern Club “Can’t Buy Me Love” / Ed Sullivan Theater “I Wanna Be Your Man” / Ed Sullivan Theater “Eight Days A Week” / Shea Stadium “Paperback Writer” / Budokan “And Your Bird Can Sing” / Budokan “Yellow Submarine” / Abbey Road Dreamscape “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” / Abbey Road Dreamscape “With a Little Help from My Friends” / Abbey Road Dreamscape “Within You Without You” / Tomorrow Never Knows / Abbey Road Dreamscape “Revolution” / Abbey Road Dreamscape “Birthday” / Abbey Road Dreamscape “Dig A Pony” / Rooftop Concert “I’ve Got A Feeling” / Rooftop Concert “I Saw Her Standing There” “I Want To Hold Your Hand” “I Feel Fine” “Taxman” “Day Tripper” “Back In The USSR” “I Am The Walrus” “Octopus’s Garden” “Here Comes The Sun” “Get Back” For more music and film news click here

Following on from the official launch last month (June 1), another 15 Beatles songs that will appear on the forthcoming ‘The Beatles: Rock Band’ game have now been confirmed.

‘The Beatles: Rock Band’ goes on sale from September 9 and will feature 45 remastered Beatles songs, which users of the game will be able to play karaoke-style, performing three-part vocals, guitar and drums in different venues around the world from the UK to India and in the US.

New tracks confirmed by Rolling Stone include “Paperback Writer” at the Budokan, “Can’t Buy Me Love” at the Ed Sullivan Theater and “Eight Days A Week” at the Shea Stadium.

‘The Beatles Rock Band’ will be available to play on Playstation 3, Wii and Xbox 360.

Confirmed songs for ‘The Beatles: Rock Band’ so far are:

“Twist And Shout” / Cavern Club

“Do You Want To Know A Secret” / Cavern Club

“Can’t Buy Me Love” / Ed Sullivan Theater

“I Wanna Be Your Man” / Ed Sullivan Theater

“Eight Days A Week” / Shea Stadium

“Paperback Writer” / Budokan

“And Your Bird Can Sing” / Budokan

“Yellow Submarine” / Abbey Road Dreamscape

“Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” / Abbey Road Dreamscape

“With a Little Help from My Friends” / Abbey Road Dreamscape

“Within You Without You” / Tomorrow Never Knows / Abbey Road Dreamscape

“Revolution” / Abbey Road Dreamscape

“Birthday” / Abbey Road Dreamscape

“Dig A Pony” / Rooftop Concert

“I’ve Got A Feeling” / Rooftop Concert

“I Saw Her Standing There”

“I Want To Hold Your Hand”

“I Feel Fine”

“Taxman”

“Day Tripper”

“Back In The USSR”

“I Am The Walrus”

“Octopus’s Garden”

“Here Comes The Sun”

“Get Back”

For more music and film news click here

An All-Star Fairport Convention Concert: London Barbican, July 18, 2009

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Apologies for the delay in posting this review; among other other things, I’ve been distracted by moderating one of the strangest and busiest threads we’ve ever had on www.uncut.co.uk. But on Saturday night, I was lucky enough to see the All-Star Fairport Convention Concert part of Joe Boyd’s Witchseason Weekend at the Barbican. Essentially, Boyd convinced everyone who played on the first five Fairport albums – minus Martin Lamble and Sandy Denny, of course, and also Dave Swarbrick, absent due to “personal differences”, apparently – to take part in a kind of living museum exhibition of this astonishing band. So the evening begins with Judy Dyble, Simon Nicol, Richard Thompson and Ashley Hutchings trying to recreate their first ever gig with a delicate version of “Satisfied Mind”, then slowly progresses through those five wonderful albums, picking up and losing bandmembers and guest singers as they go on. Without Sandy Denny, of course, the focus inevitably shifts to Thompson’s playing, and those wiry, effortlessly precise leads he was essaying as early as “Time Will Show The Wiser” and “Jack O’Diamonds”. For his part, Thompson is a characteristically discreet presence at the side of the stage, leaving most of the intros to his old bandmates. Not for the first time, he looks a little like an army cadet leader, while Hutchings has the air of a CEO kicking back at the weekend. Simon Nicol, on the other hand, looks like a man who’d very happily been part of a folk-rock band for over 40 years. When they reach “Unhalfbricking” and an incandescent “A Sailor’s Life”, Chris Leslie from the current Fairport lineup brilliantly steps in for Swarbrick. But Denny, inevitably, is harder to replace. In the first half of the show, a phalanx of guests do decently enough; the best being Kellie While, who sings “I’ll Keep It With Mine” and “A Sailor’s Life” with requisite ethereal gusto. Kami Thompson does a nice enough job on “Autopsy” (incredible playing by the band here, not least from Dave Mattacks), but the lack of depth, of resonance, is telling. The weakest link, perhaps, is Linde Nijland, a Dutch protegée of Iain Matthews whose warbling take of “Fotheringay” is pretty, but lightweight. When the second half of the show begins with three-quarters of “Liege And Lief”, it becomes obvious what would have been a better plan. Kellie While’s mother, Chris While, handles these songs (as she did at the album performance at Cropredy two years ago), and it’s clear that her voice – mixing, as she explains, both folk and soul influences like Denny – has the real purity and strength of tone to do these songs justice. Ideally, she'd have covered all the Denny songs herself. She’s actually the only singer to make a mistake all night – charging into the chorus of “Come All Ye”, possibly due to over-enthusiasm and nerves. But While’s also the only singer with a confident enough presence to properly front this illustrious band, rather than bashfully guest with them. She needs to be strong, too, because it’s an actual shock to hear quite how loud and fierce the likes of “Matty Groves” can sound. It’s hard to imagine how disturbing these full-blooded attacks on the folk tradition must have sounded in 1969, not least the utterly frenzied “Medley”, with Hutchings’ basslines particularly muscular and aggressive. After all this, the “Full House” songs are a little of an anti-climax. Hutchings is replaced by Dave Pegg, blokey four-part harmonies and comedy dance shuffles are introduced, and the model for Fairport Convention’s long-term career, after that frantic early period, begins to reveal itself. A huge disappointment, too, that they don’t play “Sloth”; Thompson’s apparent shyness here means he doesn’t take any solo lead vocals until the last verse of the closing “Meet On The Ledge”. By then, the whole cast of this bewitching and exhilarating review are onstage, along with one other reluctant vocalist – Linda Thompson, bundled on by her children. It’s a testimony to the odd and engaging history of Fairport that this band and its satellites has managed to change lineups so often without many of the dropped members becoming entirely disenfranchised. That, though you may no longer be in the band, you’re still part of the family. How many other bands, I wonder, could pull off a similar trick?

Apologies for the delay in posting this review; among other other things, I’ve been distracted by moderating one of the strangest and busiest threads we’ve ever had on www.uncut.co.uk.

Ozzy Osborne’s Memoirs To Be Published Soon

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Black Sabbath founder Ozzy Osbourne's autobiography entitled 'I Am Ozzy' is set to be published in the UK on October 1. The long-anticipated memoir from the hellraising rock veteran is to be published by Sphere and Osbourne will be in the UK for promotional events, including two book signings aroun...

Black Sabbath founder Ozzy Osbourne‘s autobiography entitled ‘I Am Ozzy‘ is set to be published in the UK on October 1.

The long-anticipated memoir from the hellraising rock veteran is to be published by Sphere and Osbourne will be in the UK for promotional events, including two book signings around its release.

Commenting on the forthcoming book, Ozzy Osbourne has said: “It haunts me, all this crazy stuff. I took lethal combinations of booze and drugs for thirty fucking years. I survived a direct hit by a plane, suicidal overdoses, STDs. I have been accused of attempted murder. Then I almost died while riding over a bump on a quad bike at fucking two miles per hour. People ask me how come I’m still alive, and I don’t know what to say”.

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Liam Gallagher Angered At Oasis Gig

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Oasis frontman Liam Gallagher was angered by a fan in the audience during an intimate gig at London's Roundhouse last night (Tuesday July 21). Playing as part of the month-long iTunes festival, the BBC reports that Gallagher appeared to become upset after a fan threw pints of lager at the stage, on...

Oasis frontman Liam Gallagher was angered by a fan in the audience during an intimate gig at London’s Roundhouse last night (Tuesday July 21).

Playing as part of the month-long iTunes festival, the BBC reports that Gallagher appeared to become upset after a fan threw pints of lager at the stage, one hitting him. Walking off the stage in anger, Liam said: “I hope you feel as uncomfortable as I feel.”

Noel Gallagher continued with his solo part of the show, playing The Masterplan, commenting: “I think someone’s in a bad mood.”

The iTunes festival continues with Graham Coxon and Esser, who play the same venue on Thursday (July 23).

Oasis’s Camden Roundhouse setlist was:

‘Rock ‘N’ Roll Star’

‘Lyla’

‘The Shock Of The Lightning’

‘Cigarettes & Alcohol’

‘Roll With It’

‘Waiting For The Rapture’

‘The Masterplan’

‘Songbird’

‘Slide Away’

‘Morning Glory’

‘My Big Mouth’

‘Half The World Away’

‘I’m Outta Time’

‘Wonderwall’

‘Supersonic’

‘Live Forever’

‘Don’t Look Back In Anger’

‘Champagne Supernova’

‘I Am The Walrus’

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Pic credit: PA Photos

Morrissey To Play Alexandra Palace

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Morrissey has announced a final London date for his winter tour 2009, which will take place at North London's Alexandra Palace on November 5. Support at the show will come from guests Doll & The Kicks, and tickets go on sale on Friday July 24 at 9am. Morrissey's remaining 2009 tour dates are: ...

Morrissey has announced a final London date for his winter tour 2009, which will take place at North London’s Alexandra Palace on November 5.

Support at the show will come from guests Doll & The Kicks, and tickets go on sale on Friday July 24 at 9am.

Morrissey’s remaining 2009 tour dates are:

Birmingham, Symphony Hall (October 23)

Swindon, Oasis Leisure Centre (24)

Bournemouth, Opera House (26)

London, Royal Albert Hall (27)

Leeds, O2 Academy Leeds (29)

Sheffield, Sheffield City Hall (30)

Salisbury, City Hall (November 2)

London, Alexandra Palace (5) – New date

Liverpool, Echo Arena (7)

For more Morrissey news on Uncut click here.

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Pic credit: PA Photos

Dinosaur Jr’s Lou Barlow – Free MP3 Available Now!

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Lou Barlow of Dinosaur Jr and Sebadoh fame is to release a new solo record 'Goodnight Unknown' on October 5, but as a teaser, a track from the album "Gravitate" is now available as a free download. The solo album is, according to Barlow (pictured centre above): "a cross between my later work with F...

Lou Barlow of Dinosaur Jr and Sebadoh fame is to release a new solo record ‘Goodnight Unknown’ on October 5, but as a teaser, a track from the album “Gravitate” is now available as a free download.

The solo album is, according to Barlow (pictured centre above): “a cross between my later work with Folk Implosion and my earlier work with Sebadoh… to my ears, anyway.”

You can download your free MP3 of Lou Barlow’s Gravitate from here or by simply inputting your email address here for the Domino records download:

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White Stripes Film To Premiere This Autumn

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The White Stripes are to premiere their documentary film 'Under Great White Northern Lights' at the Toronto Film Festival on September 18. Filmed on the Jack and Meg White's 2007 Canadian tour, the film by friend and video director Emmett Malloy is dubbed "A brother and sister's journey across the ...

The White Stripes are to premiere their documentary film ‘Under Great White Northern Lights’ at the Toronto Film Festival on September 18.

Filmed on the Jack and Meg White’s 2007 Canadian tour, the film by friend and video director Emmett Malloy is dubbed “A brother and sister’s journey across the great white north.”

You can watch the trailer for the forthcoming film here at whitestripes.com/film.

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Kasabian, Bat For Lashes, Glasvegas shortlisted for 2009 Mercury Prize

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Kasabian, Bat For Lashes and Glasvegas have all had their albums shortlisted for the 2009 Barclaycard Mercury Prize, in a announcement by Lauren Laverne in London today (Tuesday July 21). The 12 album shortlist, with the prize winner to be announced on September 8, also includes Florence & The ...

Kasabian, Bat For Lashes and Glasvegas have all had their albums shortlisted for the 2009 Barclaycard Mercury Prize, in a announcement by Lauren Laverne in London today (Tuesday July 21).

The 12 album shortlist, with the prize winner to be announced on September 8, also includes Florence & The Machine, La Roux and Speech Debelle for their debut albums.

The 2008 prize went to Elbow for their album Seldom Seen Kid.

Mercury Prize chair of Judges Simon Frith has commented on this year’s list, saying: “This has been a rich and creative year for British and Irish music. There are seven fine debut albums on the list and five outstanding records from more established acts, all marking out new ground. What most impresses is the imaginative verve with which British and Irish musicians continue to explore musical possibilities, push musical boundaries and refuse to be pinned down by genre.”

Kasabian and Florence & the Machine both have odds of 5/1 to win at William Hill. Bat For Lashes, Glasvegas

and La Roux are close behind at 6/1.

The 2009 Mercury Prize nominated albums are:

Bat for Lashes – Two Suns

Florence & The Machine – Lungs

Friendly Fires – Friendly Fires

Glasvegas – Glasvegas

Kasabian – West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum

La Roux – La Roux

Led Bib – Sensible Shoes

Lisa Hannigan – Sea Sew

Speech Debelle – Speech Therapy

Sweet Billy Pilgrim – Twice Born Men

The Horrors – Primary Colours

The Invisible – The Invisible

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Pic credit: PA Photos

Uncut’s Top Ten Most Popular Pages

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Uncut's Top 10 most popular stories, blogs and reviews for the last 7 days have been the following. Click on the subjects below to check out www.uncut.co.uk's big hits! The Uncut team is just back from this year's Latitude Festival, and the news everyone seems to be talking about is not Nick Cave...

Uncut’s Top 10 most popular stories, blogs and reviews for the last 7 days have been the following.

Click on the subjects below to check out www.uncut.co.uk‘s big hits!

The Uncut team is just back from this year’s Latitude Festival, and the news everyone seems to be talking about is not Nick Cave, nor Grace Jones, but US TV actress Janeane Garofalo… Straight in at No.1 is the Latitude blog about her set.

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1. BLOG: Janeane Garofalo pulls comedy set – The US comedienne and actress caused a HUGE stir, when she pulled her Latitude Festival set after just 7 minutes on stage. Join in the debate here.

2. NEWS: PET SHOP BOYS COVER COLDPLAY AT LATITUDE – Disco re-working of Viva La Vida is just one highlight of the festival’s Saturday headline show (July 18).

3. NEWS: GOSSIP COVER QUEEN AS UNCUT ARENA FINALE – Beth Ditto and co. cause a bodysurf pile-up at Latitude .

4. NEWS: NICK CAVE AND THE BAD SEEDS CONQUER LATITUDE – The band revitalise Obelisk Arena crowd with dirty, bloody, hits set.

5. NEWS: GRACE JONES DEFIES RAIN TO PERFORM MENTAL LATITUDE SHOW – Hot pant-clad icon struts stuff in the Obelisk Arena.

6. REVIEWS: THE ROLLING STONES – DIRTY WORK/STEEL WHEELS/VOODOO LOUNGE AND MORE – The midlife crisis years, second batch of reissues from the stalwarts – read the Uncut reviews here.

7. REVIEW: DVD REVIEW: JEFF BUCKLEY – GRACE AROUND THE WORLD – Compelling three-disc set, with documentary, live shows and also includes previously unreleased songs.

8. LATITUDE BLOG – ULTIMATE REVIEW – Catch up with Uncut’s 50 reviews and observations from the Suffolk festival.

9. NEWS: ARCTIC MONKEYS NEW ALBUM PREVIEWED! -Find out the Uncut verdict on Humbug’s ten new songs

10. NEWS: RONNIE WOOD AS A VAMPIRE PAINTING UP FOR AUCTION – ‘Heart-breaker’ portrait of the Rolling Stone to raise money for charity

***

For more music and film news, updated daily, stay tuned to Uncut.co.uk/news

Plus don’t forget to sign up for Uncut’s weekly newsletter, go to the homepage, and enter your email address. You’ll find the box at the top left-hand side.

Pic credit: PA Photos

Last chance to get collector’s edition White Stripes’ Icky Thump LP

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Jack White’s own label Third Man Records is set to release a previously unheard mono 180gm LP version of the White Stripes' 2007 album Icky Thump, to registered subscribers only. The release, which comes in new customosied gatefold artwork, will be the first from The Vault, the Third Man Records ...

Jack White’s own label Third Man Records is set to release a previously unheard mono 180gm LP version of the White Stripes’ 2007 album Icky Thump, to registered subscribers only.

The release, which comes in new customosied gatefold artwork, will be the first from The Vault, the Third Man Records subscription service, which will send out an LP, a 45 and a T-shirt every three months.

The first batch’s 45 will be of The Dead Weather covering Pentagram‘s “Forever My Queen” and “Outside” by the Downliner Sect’s.

It is believed that Jack White has several rarities in his archive, including more from the White Stripes, the Raconteurs and the Dead Weather.

Registration will take place for three weeks prior to each quarterly release, and only enough vinyl for subscribers will be pressed. The albums are not intended to ever reach shops. So fans should go to thirdmanrecords.com/vault, to sign up for Icky Thump. Registration ends on Tuesday July 21.

For more White Stripes news on Uncut click here.

And for more music and film news from Uncut click here

Uncut’s Ultimate Latitude 2009 Review!

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So, the fourth edition of Latitude is over and you've been home for the hot soapy shower-of-your-life after four nights camping in a field in Suffolk - here, then, is Uncut 's Ultimate Latitude Review! We've been blogging our way throughout the weekend, so catch up with all the news, gossip and photos here! Obelisk Arena headliners Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, Grace Jones and Pet Shop Boys all performed highly-charged volatile sets - with Pet Shop Boys's disco-inferno-lised cover of Coldplay's "Viva La Vida" standing out particularly vividly. Over in Uncut's Arena, we were privileged to have Gossip, Spiritualized and Bat For Lashes topping the bill across the weekend. Other music highlights for us were, in no particular order:Thom Yorke's solo perfomance on the main stage, a rare appearance by The Vaselines, Wild Beasts and Doves' sunset performance, hugely reminiscent of Elbow's similar slot at Latitude last year. Uncut also caught up with shows by !!! and Editors as well as host of newer artists on the Uncut, Sunrise Arena and Woods stages, including - *Alela Diane, The Rumble Strips and Gurrumul *The Gaslight Anthem *Broken Records, DM Stith, Airborne Toxic Event, The XX *Camera Obscura and Passion Pit *White Lies *Wildbirds And Peacedrums, Marnie Stern and St Vincent *Band of Skulls *Squeeze *Regina Spektor *The Pretenders *Fever Ray *The Mummers *Divine Comedy's Duckworth Lewis Method *Chairlift, 1990s and Amazing Baby As well as the music of course, the Literary, Comedy and Poetry tents were packed throughout - particular favourites included Edwyn Collins and Grace Maxwell's moving conversation about recovery from serious illness, Radio 4 regular Jeremy Hardy, Simon Armitage and Vivienne Westwood. On the blogs, we've once again, also compiled our favourite snippets of overheard conversations - click here for part 1, part 2 and part 3. Hope you laugh as hard as we did, can you do better though? Send us your best Latitude eavesdrops! If you, too, were at this weekend's Latitude (July 16-19), or even if you weren't; You can catch up with all of Uncut's online coverage at the dedicated Latitude blog where you'll find all sorts of photos, witty observations and reports from the weekend. There will be a also be a full review following in the September issue of Uncut , out on July 31.

So, the fourth edition of Latitude is over and you’ve been home for the hot soapy shower-of-your-life after four nights camping in a field in Suffolk – here, then, is Uncut ‘s Ultimate Latitude Review! We’ve been blogging our way throughout the weekend, so catch up with all the news, gossip and photos here!

Latitude Festival 2009 – The Ultimate Uncut Review!

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So the fourth edition of Latitude is over and you've been home for the hot soapy shower-of-your-life after four nights camping in a field in Suffolk - here, then, is Uncut 's Ultimate Latitude Review! We've been blogging our way throughout the weekend, so catch up with all the news, gossip and photos here! Obelisk Arena headliners Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, Grace Jones and Pet Shop Boys all performed highly-charged volatile sets - with Pet Shop Boys's disco-inferno-lised cover of Coldplay's "Viva La Vida" standing out particularly vividly. Over in Uncut's Arena, we were privileged to have Gossip, Spiritualized and Bat For Lashes topping the bill across the weekend. Other music highlights for us were, in no particular order:Thom Yorke's solo perfomance on the main stage, a rare appearance by The Vaselines, Wild Beasts and Dove's sunset performance, hugely reminiscent of Elbow's similar slot at Latitude last year. Uncut also caught up with shows by !!! and Editors as well as host of newer artists on the Uncut, Sunrise Arena and Woods' stages, including; *Alela Diane, The Rimble Strips and Gurrumul *The Gaslight Anthem *Broken Records, DM Stith, Airborne Toxic Event, The XX *Camera Obscura and Passion Pit *White Lies *Wildbirds And Peacedrums, Marnie Stern and St Vincent *Band of Skulls *Squeeze *Regina Spektor *The Pretenders *Fever Ray *The Mummers *Divine Comedy's Duckworth Lewis Method *Chairlift, 1990s and Amazing Baby As well as the music of course, the Literary, Comedy and Poetry tents were packed throughout - particular favourites included Edwyn Collins and Grace Maxwell's moving conversation about recovery from serious illness, Radio 4 regular Jeremy Hardy, Simon Armitage and Vivienne Westwood. On the blogs, we've once again, also compiled our favourite snippets of overheard coversations, click here for part 1, part 2 and part 3. Hope you laugh as hard as we did, can you do better though? Send us your best Latitude eavesdrops! If you, too, were at this weekend's Latitude (July 16-19), or even if you weren't; You can catch up with all of Uncut's online coverage at the dedicated Latitude blog where you'll find all sorts of photos, witty observations and reports from the weekend. There will be a also be a full review following in the September issue of Uncut , out on July 31.

So the fourth edition of Latitude is over and you’ve been home for the hot soapy shower-of-your-life after four nights camping in a field in Suffolk – here, then, is Uncut ‘s Ultimate Latitude Review! We’ve been blogging our way throughout the weekend, so catch up with all the news, gossip and photos here!

Obelisk Arena headliners Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, Grace Jones and Pet Shop Boys all performed highly-charged volatile sets – with Pet Shop Boys’s disco-inferno-lised cover of Coldplay‘s “Viva La Vida” standing out particularly vividly.

Over in Uncut’s Arena, we were privileged to have Gossip, Spiritualized and Bat For Lashes topping the bill across the weekend.

Other music highlights for us were, in no particular order:Thom Yorke’s solo perfomance on the main stage, a rare appearance by The Vaselines, Wild Beasts and Dove’s sunset performance, hugely reminiscent of Elbow‘s similar slot at Latitude last year.

Uncut also caught up with shows by !!! and Editors as well as host of newer artists on the Uncut, Sunrise Arena and Woods’ stages, including;

*Alela Diane, The Rimble Strips and Gurrumul

*The Gaslight Anthem

*Broken Records, DM Stith, Airborne Toxic Event, The XX

*Camera Obscura and Passion Pit

*White Lies

*Wildbirds And Peacedrums, Marnie Stern and St Vincent

*Band of Skulls

*Squeeze

*Regina Spektor

*The Pretenders

*Fever Ray

*The Mummers

*Divine Comedy’s Duckworth Lewis Method

*Chairlift, 1990s and Amazing Baby

As well as the music of course, the Literary, Comedy and Poetry tents were packed throughout – particular favourites included Edwyn Collins and Grace Maxwell‘s moving conversation about recovery from serious illness, Radio 4 regular Jeremy Hardy, Simon Armitage and Vivienne Westwood.

On the blogs, we’ve once again, also compiled our favourite snippets of overheard coversations, click here for part 1, part 2 and part 3. Hope you laugh as hard as we did, can you do better though? Send us your best Latitude eavesdrops!

If you, too, were at this weekend’s Latitude (July 16-19), or even if you weren’t; You can catch up with all of Uncut’s online coverage at the dedicated Latitude blog where you’ll find all sorts of photos, witty observations and reports from the weekend.

There will be a also be a full review following in the September issue of Uncut , out on July 31.

Beth Jeans Houghton: Club Uncut at Manchester Borders 18/07/09

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Beth Jeans Houghton tiptoes into the centre of Borders from behind a shelf of graphic novels, accompanied by her drummer. Wearing a black, almost-dinner dress that fans at her waist and a precarious pair of heels that could quite easily constitute a health and safety risk, her striking look is toppe...

Beth Jeans Houghton tiptoes into the centre of Borders from behind a shelf of graphic novels, accompanied by her drummer. Wearing a black, almost-dinner dress that fans at her waist and a precarious pair of heels that could quite easily constitute a health and safety risk, her striking look is topped off by a yellow and blue striped hat with peak.

Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds Conquer Latitude

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Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds have brought the fourth edition of the Latitude Festival to a close this Sunday (July 19) with a short, compact, but totally elecrtrifying set which dipped into the band's lengthy catalogue. Cave et al performed as Grinderman last year, and tonight return to Henham Park to bring energy and excitement to the fans who are by now, waning with last-night-syndrome. Read Uncut's full Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds revitalising rain-sodden fans review here, at our dedicated Latitude blog. The Obelisk Arena has seen many delights since Latitude kicked off proper on Friday (July 17) - including Pet Shop Boys, Doves, The Pretenders, Airborne Toxic Event and The Gaslight Anthem to name just a few. If you, too, were at this weekend's Latitude (July 16-19), or even if you weren't; You can catch up with Uncut's coverage at the dedicated Latitude blog where you'll find all sorts of nuggets from the event. Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds Latitude Festival full set list was: Tupelo Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!! Red Right Hand Deanna Midnight Man The Ship Song Henry Lee We Call Upon The Author The Mercy Seat There She Goes, My Beautiful World The Weeping Song Papa Don’t Leave You, Henry Stagger Lee If you, too, were at this weekend's Latitude (July 16-19), or even if you missed this year's event; You can catch up with Uncut's coverage at the dedicated Latitude blog. Pic credit: Richard Johnson

Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds have brought the fourth edition of the Latitude Festival to a close this Sunday (July 19) with a short, compact, but totally elecrtrifying set which dipped into the band’s lengthy catalogue.

Cave et al performed as Grinderman last year, and tonight return to Henham Park to bring energy and excitement to the fans who are by now, waning with last-night-syndrome.

Read Uncut’s full Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds revitalising rain-sodden fans review here, at our dedicated Latitude blog.

The Obelisk Arena has seen many delights since Latitude kicked off proper on Friday (July 17) – including Pet Shop Boys, Doves, The Pretenders, Airborne Toxic Event and The Gaslight Anthem to name just a few.

If you, too, were at this weekend’s Latitude (July 16-19), or even if you weren’t; You can catch up with Uncut’s coverage at the dedicated Latitude blog where you’ll find all sorts of nuggets from the event.

Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds Latitude Festival full set list was:

Tupelo

Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!!

Red Right Hand

Deanna

Midnight Man

The Ship Song

Henry Lee

We Call Upon The Author

The Mercy Seat

There She Goes, My Beautiful World

The Weeping Song

Papa Don’t Leave You, Henry

Stagger Lee

If you, too, were at this weekend’s Latitude (July 16-19), or even if you missed this year’s event; You can catch up with Uncut’s coverage at the dedicated Latitude blog.

Pic credit: Richard Johnson

Gossip Cover Queen As Uncut Arena Finale

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The Uncut Arena's final performance at this year's Latitude Festivalhas come courtesy of Washington trio the Gossip on Sunday (JUly 19). From the off, Beth Ditto asked if the crowd had their "attitude" and despite a 20-minute delay due to sound issues, the crowd responded with a resounding yes. Much stage diving was had by the fans, and the Gossip even threw in part of a cover of Queen anthem "We Are The Champions" as their finale. Another highly acclaimed US dance group !!! also headlined one of Latitude's smaller stages tonight. Bringing the Sunrise Arena to a bouncing halt after three days of passion and mayhem, !!! certainly gave the woods-based stage a strong finish. Read Uncut's full Gossip and !!! live reviews here, at our dedicated Latitude blog. The Uncut Arena has seen many great acts play over the weekend, including Spiritualized, Bat For Lashes, Saint Etienne, Squeeze and St Vincent. If you, too, were in the Uncut Arena, or if you missed this year's event; You can catch up with our coverage at the dedicated Latitude blog. Pic credit: Richard Johnson

The Uncut Arena’s final performance at this year’s Latitude Festivalhas come courtesy of Washington trio the Gossip on Sunday (JUly 19).

From the off, Beth Ditto asked if the crowd had their “attitude” and despite a 20-minute delay due to sound issues, the crowd responded with a resounding yes.

Much stage diving was had by the fans, and the Gossip even threw in part of a cover of Queen anthem “We Are The Champions” as their finale.

Another highly acclaimed US dance group !!! also headlined one of Latitude’s smaller stages tonight. Bringing the Sunrise Arena to a bouncing halt after three days of passion and mayhem, !!! certainly gave the woods-based stage a strong finish.

Read Uncut’s full Gossip and !!! live reviews here, at our dedicated Latitude blog.

The Uncut Arena has seen many great acts play over the weekend, including Spiritualized, Bat For Lashes, Saint Etienne, Squeeze and St Vincent.

If you, too, were in the Uncut Arena, or if you missed this year’s event; You can catch up with our coverage at the dedicated Latitude blog.

Pic credit: Richard Johnson