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Album Reviw: White Denim – Fits

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Austin three-piece White Denim continue to make a case for the guitar-bass-drums trinity as rock’s holiest formation. They may not boast the sheer virtuosity of the Jimi Hendrix Experience – even if drummer Josh Block would probably give Mitch Mitchell a run for his money – but they do possess the telepathic rapport, economy and howling intensity of all the best rock threesomes. Bizarrely, this decade’s garage rock revival has given us more great duos than trios, but even Jack White realised you can only do so much without a bassist, hence The Raconteurs. On the other hand, it’s hard to imagine White Denim having the same streamlined potency as a four-piece. Three is undoubtedly the magic number here. Nominally White Denim are still a garage rock band but the joy of Fits is in the way they audaciously chance their arm at numerous other genres: prog, psychedelia, post-punk, country pop and even tropicália. There’s a thrilling discrepancy between their circumstances – they still record in Block’s caravan – and their ambition. You might have assumed that the gleeful bedlam of last year’s debut Workout Holiday was a happy accident, a result of staggered sessions and the fact that the album was essentially two EPs bolted together. But Fits was conceived as a singular entity, and if anything it’s even more gloriously schizophrenic and extreme then their debut. As the band put it, dryly: “Less medium to medium-hard songs and more songs that are medium-soft or hard-hard.” The hard-hard songs come first. “Radio Milk/How Can You Stand It” is a rampageous double-header, picking up the Minutemen math-punk thread that Workout Holiday left dangling. Three more songs stampede past with pulverising drums, screaming MC5 guitars and howled vocal hooks (occasionally in Spanish). Single “I Start To Run” is just as catchy as “Let’s Talk About It” but also faintly, mischievously wrong. It’s too fast, perhaps: Steve Terebecki’s punk-funk bassline left panting in pursuit of the breakneck beat. On the moody instrumental “Sex Prayer”, off go the fuzzboxes and in come organs. It’s like a Krautrock Soft Machine. “Mirrored And Reversed” prolongs the deep psych vibes, layering spectral vocals over a rhythm that could be classed motorik if the autobahn was bumper-to-bumper with hay trucks. Then, a real switcheroo. White Denim ask you to imagine turning the record over after the end of Track 7 to discover their mellow side. “Paint Yourself” is a downy country-funk caress, with singer James Petralli imagining he’s Devendra Banhart piloting Little Feat. “I’d Have It Just The Way We Were” adds a bossa nova woodblock to complement Petralli’s sunkissed crooning. Lovelier still, there’s “Regina Holding Hands”, the best straight-up song White Denim have written so far. An obvious but clearly heartfelt tribute to Shuggie Otis’ Inspiration Information, the chorus snatches your breath in the same way as Hall & Oates’ “She’s Gone” before submitting to the freewheeling groove. A more pragmatic band would have milked this, but with three-and-half-minutes representing an epic for White Denim, they’re already into the untypically bashful final track, “Syncn”, whose dusted drums and open arpeggios make you want to press play and listen again from the top. It’s a rare pleasure to hear a band so at ease with themselves, playing with no obvious aim or agenda beyond having a good time and hoping you do, too. The best thing about Fits is imagining how incredible these songs will be when played live. See you down the front. SAM RICHARDS *** UNCUT Q&A: WHITE DENIM'S JAMES PETRALLI Isn’t it cramped recording inside Josh’s caravan? It’s actually 40-foot long. You’d have to have a pretty large truck to haul it anywhere. It does limit the range of sounds you can get compared to a conventional studio, so a lot of creative work goes into the engineering of the music. It makes us more resourceful. To get some of the vocal and guitar sounds we’d face our amps up against the washing machine or this big washtub that Josh has. There are a lot of household objects on the recording! Was it a ploy to contrast Fits’ fast and hard first half with its mellower second part? Yeah, we saw a pretty clear division emerging in the songs we were recording for this album. So from that came the idea to sequence it like an LP with a 30-second pause in the middle where you could imagine getting up to flip the record over. Did any particular music have a direct influence on Fits? The first three Funkadelic records were an important reference point. And SF Sorrow by The Pretty Things. Is there anywhere you wouldn’t go musically? I don’t think so. Josh had the idea of getting on this swingbeat, Bobby Brown kind of thing. It was sounding a little too campy but we wouldn’t rule it out in future. We don’t rule anything out. INTERVIEW: SAM RICHARDS

Austin three-piece White Denim continue to make a case for the guitar-bass-drums trinity as rock’s holiest formation. They may not boast the sheer virtuosity of the Jimi Hendrix Experience – even if drummer Josh Block would probably give Mitch Mitchell a run for his money – but they do possess the telepathic rapport, economy and howling intensity of all the best rock threesomes.

Bizarrely, this decade’s garage rock revival has given us more great duos than trios, but even Jack White realised you can only do so much without a bassist, hence The Raconteurs. On the other hand, it’s hard to imagine White Denim having the same streamlined potency as a four-piece. Three is undoubtedly the magic number here.

Nominally White Denim are still a garage rock band but the joy of Fits is in the way they audaciously chance their arm at numerous other genres: prog, psychedelia, post-punk, country pop and even tropicália. There’s a thrilling discrepancy between their circumstances – they still record in Block’s caravan – and their ambition.

You might have assumed that the gleeful bedlam of last year’s debut Workout Holiday was a happy accident, a result of staggered sessions and the fact that the album was essentially two EPs bolted together. But Fits was conceived as a singular entity, and if anything it’s even more gloriously schizophrenic and extreme then their debut. As the band put it, dryly: “Less medium to medium-hard songs and more songs that are medium-soft or hard-hard.”

The hard-hard songs come first. “Radio Milk/How Can You Stand It” is a rampageous double-header, picking up the Minutemen math-punk thread that Workout Holiday left dangling. Three more songs stampede past with pulverising drums, screaming MC5 guitars and howled vocal hooks (occasionally in Spanish). Single “I Start To Run” is just as catchy as “Let’s Talk About It” but also faintly, mischievously wrong. It’s too fast, perhaps: Steve Terebecki’s punk-funk bassline left panting in pursuit of the breakneck beat.

On the moody instrumental “Sex Prayer”, off go the fuzzboxes and in come organs. It’s like a Krautrock Soft Machine. “Mirrored And Reversed” prolongs the deep psych vibes, layering spectral vocals over a rhythm that could be classed motorik if the autobahn was bumper-to-bumper with hay trucks.

Then, a real switcheroo. White Denim ask you to imagine turning the record over after the end of Track 7 to discover their mellow side. “Paint Yourself” is a downy country-funk caress, with singer James Petralli imagining he’s Devendra Banhart piloting Little Feat. “I’d Have It Just The Way We Were” adds a bossa nova woodblock to complement Petralli’s sunkissed crooning.

Lovelier still, there’s “Regina Holding Hands”, the best straight-up song White Denim have written so far. An obvious but clearly heartfelt tribute to Shuggie Otis’ Inspiration Information, the chorus snatches your breath in the same way as Hall & Oates’ “She’s Gone” before submitting to the freewheeling groove. A more pragmatic band would have milked this, but with three-and-half-minutes representing an epic for White Denim, they’re already into the untypically bashful final track, “Syncn”, whose dusted drums and open arpeggios make you want to press play and listen again from the top.

It’s a rare pleasure to hear a band so at ease with themselves, playing with no obvious aim or agenda beyond having a good time and hoping you do, too. The best thing about Fits is imagining how incredible these songs will be when played live. See you down the front.

SAM RICHARDS

***

UNCUT Q&A: WHITE DENIM’S JAMES PETRALLI

Isn’t it cramped recording inside Josh’s caravan?

It’s actually 40-foot long. You’d have to have a pretty large truck to haul it anywhere. It does limit the range of sounds you can get compared to a conventional studio, so a lot of creative work goes into the engineering of the music. It makes us more resourceful. To get some of the vocal and guitar sounds we’d face our amps up against the washing machine or this big washtub that Josh has. There are a lot of household objects on the recording!

Was it a ploy to contrast Fits’ fast and hard first half with its mellower second part?

Yeah, we saw a pretty clear division emerging in the songs we were recording for this album. So from that came the idea to sequence it like an LP with a 30-second pause in the middle where you could imagine getting up to flip the record over.

Did any particular music have a direct influence on Fits?

The first three Funkadelic records were an important reference point. And SF Sorrow by The Pretty Things.

Is there anywhere you wouldn’t go musically?

I don’t think so. Josh had the idea of getting on this swingbeat, Bobby Brown kind of thing. It was sounding a little too campy but we wouldn’t rule it out in future. We don’t rule anything out.

INTERVIEW: SAM RICHARDS

George Harrison – Let It Roll: Songs By George Harrison

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When I was a teenager in the wilds of Devon, running around covered in woad and screaming at cows, I bought the greatest rock book ever written – Roy Carr and Tony Tyler’s The Beatles: An Illustrated Record. It was, and is, a fantastic guide to The Beatles’ recordings together and separately, and its brilliance also lay in its opinionated text. Carr and, particularly, the late Tyler were not only full of praise for the likes of Revolver at a time when Pepper was ramped to a ’ 70s critical high, but they could also be splenetic about Paul McCartney’s early ’70s domestica, John Lennon’s experimental moods, Ringo Starr’s genial anonypop and – particularly “and” – George Harrison’s increasingly duff 1970s output. From enormo triple set to religious finger-pointing to lacklustre sessioneered pop rock, Harrison’s work was so harshly judged by these two (still) journalistic heroes of mine that I spent my teens and my twenties avoiding George’s work in favour of a lot of Wings and Ringo. And I felt smugly justified in this; after all, this is the man who wrote a Christmas song called “Ding Dong”. Now I am old and both Tony Tyler and George Harrison are gone and there is no-one to guide me but my barnacled conscience. And cautiously I have bought George’s solo records, and found them – well, by no means that bad. From the epic wallop of All Things Must Pass to the Maharishi-a-gogo of Living In The Material World, via some highly variable and (if the late film producer Don Simpson is to be believed) cocaine-fuelled mid-’70s albums, to the calm pop resurgence of Harrison’s 1980s work and his final testament, Brainwashed, George’s work stands up well. There are certain threads – unlike Lennon, who once claimed “I don’t believe in Buddha/ I don’t believe in Beatles” – Harrison not only had a religious No 1 (the classic Chiffons tune, “My Sweet Lord”) but also back-referenced The Beatles at least four times with “Here Comes The Moon”, “This Guitar Can’t Keep From Crying”, “All Those Years Ago”, and the lovely “When We Was Fab” (and he even back-referenced himself with the bitterly droll “This Song”, a single about the “My Sweet Lord” court case). There are those minor chord melodies, the sardonic vocals, and the later, Beatle- and Wilbury-infecting belief that Jeff Lynne’s drum machine was a universal cure-all, tish boom thud. And there was a uniquely modest but iron self-confidence. True, he had albums rejected by record companies, he lost court actions, he had to endure being labelled the third-best Beatle, and his last years brought unexpected and awful pain, but Harrison always had both the dry wit and ability to see things with the kind of clarity that the much louder Lennon is always given more credit for. You hear it on this compilation in the unusually upbeat “Blow Away” (memorably pastiched by John in the caustic “Happy Rishikesh Song”), the mordant “Cheer Down”, and in the song The Beatles were fools to turn down, the great “All Things Must Pass”. There are Beatles songs here, but from the Bangla Desh concert, the one that invented Live Aid and that Paul and John forgot to attend. And there’s that musical thread again: Harrison never had the zest for stylistic reinvention that all three of his exes had (even Ringo could go T.Rex or C&W when he felt like it), but there’s a continuity from the first recordings here right up to Brainwashed tracks like “Marwa Blues” and “Rising Sun”. You can, and possibly will, put this CD on and play it from start to finish and not ever think, blimey, that sounds a bit “of its time”. This is a very decent compilation. It’s not the Beatley makeweight of his first Best Of, and while it lacks some of my favourite singles (“Faster”, for example, or Harrison’s lovely warble through “True Love”) it also carefully omits some of the duffers of Saint George, like the oh my God-awful cover of “Bye Bye Love” which references Eric Clapton’s getting off with George’s first wife Patti (and anybody wanting, for example, to hear “His Name Is ‘Legs’”, a tribute to “Legs” Larry Smith from the Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band which features “Legs” Larry Smith on, er, legs, can still hear it, for 99p, on any second-hand shop copy of the ragingly dull Extra Texture). Let It Roll it is a proper career retrospective (it even collects some good songs recorded for those Buddhist propaganda movies Lethal Weapon II and Porky’s Revenge) and a toe in the water for anyone who, like me all those years ago (sorry) wonders just what George Harrison’s music might sound like. Despite the warnings of Carr and Tyler, I find I like this album and so, I think, will lots of people. DAVID QUANTICK For more album reviews, click here for the UNCUT music archive

When I was a teenager in the wilds of Devon, running around covered in woad and screaming at cows, I bought the greatest rock book ever written – Roy Carr and Tony Tyler’s The Beatles: An Illustrated Record. It was, and is, a fantastic guide to The Beatles’ recordings together and separately, and its brilliance also lay in its opinionated text. Carr and, particularly, the late Tyler were not only full of praise for the likes of Revolver at a time when Pepper was ramped to a ’ 70s critical high, but they could also be splenetic about Paul McCartney’s early ’70s domestica, John Lennon’s experimental moods, Ringo Starr’s genial anonypop and – particularly “and” – George Harrison’s increasingly duff 1970s output. From enormo triple set to religious finger-pointing to lacklustre sessioneered pop rock, Harrison’s work was so harshly judged by these two (still) journalistic heroes of mine that I spent my teens and my twenties avoiding George’s work in favour of a lot of Wings and Ringo. And I felt smugly justified in this; after all, this is the man who wrote a Christmas song called “Ding Dong”.

Now I am old and both Tony Tyler and George Harrison are gone and there is no-one to guide me but my barnacled conscience. And cautiously I have bought George’s solo records, and found them – well, by no means that bad. From the epic wallop of All Things Must Pass to the Maharishi-a-gogo of Living In The Material World, via some highly variable and (if the late film producer Don Simpson is to be believed) cocaine-fuelled mid-’70s albums, to the calm pop resurgence of Harrison’s 1980s work and his final testament, Brainwashed, George’s work stands up well.

There are certain threads – unlike Lennon, who once claimed “I don’t believe in Buddha/ I don’t believe in Beatles” – Harrison not only had a religious No 1 (the classic Chiffons tune, “My Sweet Lord”) but also back-referenced The Beatles at least four times with “Here Comes The Moon”, “This Guitar Can’t Keep From Crying”, “All Those Years Ago”, and the lovely “When We Was Fab” (and he even back-referenced himself with the bitterly droll “This Song”, a single about the “My Sweet Lord” court case). There are those minor chord melodies, the sardonic vocals, and the later, Beatle- and Wilbury-infecting belief that Jeff Lynne’s drum machine was a universal cure-all, tish boom thud.

And there was a uniquely modest but iron self-confidence. True, he had albums rejected by record companies, he lost court actions, he had to endure being labelled the third-best Beatle, and his last years brought unexpected and awful pain, but Harrison always had both the dry wit and ability to see things with the kind of clarity that the much louder Lennon is always given more credit for. You hear it on this compilation in the unusually upbeat “Blow Away” (memorably pastiched by John in the caustic “Happy Rishikesh Song”), the mordant “Cheer Down”, and in the song The Beatles were fools to turn down, the great “All Things Must Pass”. There are Beatles songs here, but from the Bangla Desh concert, the one that invented Live Aid and that Paul and John forgot to attend.

And there’s that musical thread again: Harrison never had the zest for stylistic reinvention that all three of his exes had (even Ringo could go T.Rex or C&W when he felt like it), but there’s a continuity from the first recordings here right up to Brainwashed tracks like “Marwa Blues” and “Rising Sun”. You can, and possibly will, put this CD on and play it from start to finish and not ever think, blimey, that sounds a bit “of its time”.

This is a very decent compilation. It’s not the Beatley makeweight of his first Best Of, and while it lacks some of my favourite singles (“Faster”, for example, or Harrison’s lovely warble through “True Love”) it also carefully omits some of the duffers of Saint George, like the oh my God-awful cover of “Bye Bye Love” which references Eric Clapton’s getting off with George’s first wife Patti (and anybody wanting, for example, to hear “His Name Is ‘Legs’”, a tribute to “Legs” Larry Smith from the Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band which features “Legs” Larry Smith on, er, legs, can still hear it, for 99p, on any second-hand shop copy of the ragingly dull Extra Texture).

Let It Roll it is a proper career retrospective (it even collects some good songs recorded for those Buddhist propaganda movies Lethal Weapon II and Porky’s Revenge) and a toe in the water for anyone who, like me all those years ago (sorry) wonders just what George Harrison’s music might sound like. Despite the warnings of Carr and Tyler, I find I like this album and so, I think, will lots of people.

DAVID QUANTICK

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

Dinosaur Jr – Farm

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Dinosaur Jr are an object lesson in how to mount a successful alt.rock comeback: simply pretend the previous 15 years never happened. Who’d have thought J Mascis would ever be reconciled with the jilted bassist who called him a “prime, stinking red asshole” and the drummer who railed against h...

Dinosaur Jr are an object lesson in how to mount a successful alt.rock comeback: simply pretend the previous 15 years never happened. Who’d have thought J Mascis would ever be reconciled with the jilted bassist who called him a “prime, stinking red asshole” and the drummer who railed against his “Nazi”-esque control-freakery? But here they are – Mascis, Lou Barlow and Murph – two albums into their unlikely comeback, distilling the essence of everything that makes Dinosaur Jr great.

Despite the supremely stoned cover cartoon, Farm veers more towards powerpop than sludge. “Friends” is a hunk of early Replacements roughage while “Over It” is The Knack tackling “Freak Scene”. Elsewhere, there’s desert rock desolation on “Said The People” while the epic bittersweetness of their commercial zenith Where You Been is gloriously recaptured on “Plans” and “See You”. The solos are majestic and Barlow even contributes a couple of thumpers. Nobody does this better.

SAM RICHARDS

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

Picture credit: A Kendall

The 23rd Uncut Playlist Of 2009

Thanks for all your responses to the Favourites Of 2009 flam I posted last Friday; I’ve posted some further thoughts there, which’ll doubtless inflame the Decemberists and Felice Brothers fans (more or less on my own here in my apathy to the latter, incidentally; check this for Allan’s eloquent alternate take). Today, anyway, more prosaic matters; this week’s slightly understated playlist. Warming very much to the Fiery Furnaces’ new one, and will try and post a proper blog on that in the next day or two. All generally nice stuff here; Publicist, incidentally, is a new single project featuring the mighty Ian Svenonius, rambling over some New Order-ish disco courtesy of one of Trans Am. 1 James Yorkston & The Big Eyes Family Players – Folk Songs (Domino) 2 David Daniell & Douglas McCombs – Sycamore (Thrill Jockey) 3 Sharon Van Etten – Because I Was In Love (Language Of Stone) 4 Björn Olsson – Instrumental Music (Omplatten) 5 Real Estate – Fake Blues (Half Machine) 6 Publicist – Momma (Touching Music) 7 The Fiery Furnaces – I’m Going Away (Thrill Jockey) 8 Various Artists – Clap Your Hands And Stamp Your Feet: 24 Nederglam Tracks From The Early ‘70s (Excelsior) 9 Mos Def – The Ecstatic (Downtown) 10 Theo Angell – Tenebrae (Amish) 11 Various Artists – OHM: The Early Gurus Of Electronic Music (Ellipsis Arts) 12 Gareth Dickson – As You Lie (www.myspace.com/garethdickson) 13 Go-Kart Mozart – Go-Kart Mozart Tearing Up The Albums Chart (West Midlands) 14 Sian Alice Group – Troubled, Shaken Etc (Beautiful Happiness/The Social Registry) 15 Jay Reatard – Watch Me Fall (Matador)

Thanks for all your responses to the Favourites Of 2009 flam I posted last Friday; I’ve posted some further thoughts there, which’ll doubtless inflame the Decemberists and Felice Brothers fans (more or less on my own here in my apathy to the latter, incidentally; check this for Allan’s eloquent alternate take).

Teenage Fanclub and Super Furry Animals For Clapham Common Festival

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Teenage Fanclub and Super Furry Animals have both been announced to play at this year's Summer Sundae festival which takes place on Clapham Common on July 25 and 26. They will play on the Saturday, along with I Am Kloot and King Creosote. The Human League, The Futureheads and Camera Obscura will p...

Teenage Fanclub and Super Furry Animals have both been announced to play at this year’s Summer Sundae festival which takes place on Clapham Common on July 25 and 26.

They will play on the Saturday, along with I Am Kloot and King Creosote.

The Human League, The Futureheads and Camera Obscura will play on the already sold-out ‘Sundae’ Sunday.

The Summer Sundae 2009 line-up so far is:

Saturday July 25

Super Furry Animals

Teenage Fanclub

I Am Kloot

King Creosote

Marina And The Diamonds

Tommy Reilly

Telegraphs

Sunday July 26

The Human League

The Futureheads

Camera Obscura

Red Light Company

The Answering Machine

The Brute Chorus

For more music and film news click here

Blur Launch New Album With Free Record Store Gig

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Blur played a free gig at the Rough Trade East record shop on Monday June 15 in front of just 170 fans. The band, celebrating the launch of the new double album collection 'Midlife: The Beginner's Guide To Blur', played a greatest hits set for around an hour, closing with "This Is A Low." It was o...

Blur played a free gig at the Rough Trade East record shop on Monday June 15 in front of just 170 fans.

The band, celebrating the launch of the new double album collection ‘Midlife: The Beginner’s Guide To Blur’, played a greatest hits set for around an hour, closing with “This Is A Low.”

It was only their second show as a four-piece since announcing their regrouping, the first being on Saturday June 13 at the East Anglian Railway Museum near Colchester, a return to the site of their first-ever show.

Tickets for the surprise Rough Trade East gig were announced via Graham Coxon’s Twitter in the morning, with tickets going to the first 170 people to turn up at the O2 Brixton Academy box office at 11am.

Blur’s reunion tour is set to call at the following venues from next week:

Southend Cliffs Pavilion (June 21)

Wolverhampton Civic Hall (24)

Newcastle Academy (June 25)

Manchester MEN Arena (June 26)

London Hyde Park (July 2/3)

Oxgen Festival (July 10)

T In The Park Festival (July 12)

Blur’s Rough Trade East gig set list was:

‘She’s So High’

‘Girls And Boys’

‘Advert’

‘For Tomorrow’

‘End Of A Century’

‘Beetlebum’

‘Coffee And TV’

‘Tender’

‘Out Of Time’

‘Popscene’

‘Song 2’

‘Parklife’

‘This Is A Low’

For more Blur news click here

For more Uncut music and film news click here

Pic credit: Ian Buchan

Peter Gabriel To Perform At WOMAD

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Peter Gabriel has been announced he is to play a one-off show this year, at next months World of Music and Dance (WOMAD) festival. The performance on Saturday July 25 will be Gabriels only show in Europe in 2009 and all profits from the day will be donated to the human rights organistion which work...

Peter Gabriel has been announced he is to play a one-off show this year, at next months World of Music and Dance (WOMAD) festival.

The performance on Saturday July 25 will be Gabriels only show in Europe in 2009 and all profits from the day will be donated to the human rights organistion which works in more than 70 countries, Witness.

Gabriel explains: “I had no immediate plans to play in the UK. But when Festival Director Chris Smith heard I was looking for a suitable event for Witness.org, he generously offered me the Saturday at WOMAD. I’m delighted that my only show in Europe this year will be for a cause so close to my heart.”

Latest additions for WOMAD – which takes place in Charlton Park, Wiltshire from July 24 – 26 – include indie supergroup Mongrel and Mercury music prize nominated folk quartet Rachel Unthank and the Winterset.

A full line-up for the festival and ticket information is available here: www.womad.org

For more Peter Gabriel news click here

For more music and film news click here

Pic credit: PA Photos

Uncut’s 10 Most Popular: Thom Yorke Exclusive!

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Uncut's Top 10 most popular stories, blogs and reviews in the last week (w/e June 12) have been the following. Click on the subjects below to check out www.uncut.co.uk big hits! 1. NEWS: RADIOHEAD'S THOM YORKE TO PLAY SOLO SET AT LATITUDE! - The singer is to play an EXCLUSIVE midday show at next month's Suffolk festival. Don't forget Uncut will be keeping you in the loop of what's happening at Latitude at our specialist Latitude blog here. 2. NEWS: OASIS TO REISSUE BACK CATALOGUE ON VINYL - News that limited edition heavy-weight vinyls of their studio albums are to be issued follows on from the band's Heaton Park gigs this month. 3. ALBUM REVIEW: NEIL YOUNG - ARCHIVES VOL 1 - Straight in at No 1 last week, the Uncut review of the long - long - long- awaited first volume of Neil Young's Archives project. See what we think here and let us know what YOU think... 4. NEWS: THE SPECIALS ANNOUNCE NEW UK TOUR! - Final chances to the reformed group on their 30th anniversary tour... 5. NEWS:FLEETWOOD MAC'S PETER GREEN FESTIVAL DATE CONFIRMED - The blues guitarist's first UK show in 4 years is the latest announcement for the Cornbury Festival 6. ALBUM REVIEW: KASABIAN - WEST RYDER PAUPER LUNATIC ASYLUM - The album has just debuted at No.1 in the UK Album Chart (June 14), see what we thought of it here - Plus send us YOUR reviews, now that you've had a chance to hear it too. 7. BLOG: DAVID CARRADINE, 1936 - 2009 - Yarns, in rememberance about teaching Bob Dylan kung-fu, buying cars with Scorsese and an incident involving a dog and a very delicate body part... 8. NEWS: ARCTIC MONKEYS NAME THIRD ALBUM - The Josh Homme produced LP is out in August 9. NEWS: IGGY POP CONFIRMS THE STOOGES ARE IN TALKS TO REFORM RAW POWER GROUP - The singer talks to Radio 2 on Monday June 15, catch up on iPlayer all week. 10. FILM REVIEW: LOOKING FOR ERIC - Ken Loach's latest, Ooh Ah Cantona... For more music and film news click here Come back on Friday (June 19) for another news and reviews digest. Have a great week!

Uncut’s Top 10 most popular stories, blogs and reviews in the last week (w/e June 12) have been the following. Click on the subjects below to check out www.uncut.co.uk big hits!

1. NEWS: RADIOHEAD’S THOM YORKE TO PLAY SOLO SET AT LATITUDE! – The singer is to play an EXCLUSIVE midday show at next month’s Suffolk festival. Don’t forget Uncut will be keeping you in the loop of what’s happening at Latitude at our specialist Latitude blog here.

2. NEWS: OASIS TO REISSUE BACK CATALOGUE ON VINYL – News that limited edition heavy-weight vinyls of their studio albums are to be issued follows on from the band’s Heaton Park gigs this month.

3. ALBUM REVIEW: NEIL YOUNG – ARCHIVES VOL 1

– Straight in at No 1 last week, the Uncut review of the long – long – long- awaited first volume of Neil Young’s Archives project. See what we think here and let us know what YOU think…

4. NEWS: THE SPECIALS ANNOUNCE NEW UK TOUR! – Final chances to the reformed group on their 30th anniversary tour…

5. NEWS:FLEETWOOD MAC’S PETER GREEN FESTIVAL DATE CONFIRMED – The blues guitarist’s first UK show in 4 years is the latest announcement for the Cornbury Festival

6. ALBUM REVIEW: KASABIAN – WEST RYDER PAUPER LUNATIC ASYLUM – The album has just debuted at No.1 in the UK Album Chart (June 14), see what we thought of it here – Plus send us YOUR reviews, now that you’ve had a chance to hear it too.

7. BLOG: DAVID CARRADINE, 1936 – 2009 – Yarns, in rememberance about teaching Bob Dylan kung-fu, buying cars with Scorsese and an incident involving a dog and a very delicate body part…

8. NEWS: ARCTIC MONKEYS NAME THIRD ALBUM – The Josh Homme produced LP is out in August

9. NEWS: IGGY POP CONFIRMS THE STOOGES ARE IN TALKS TO REFORM RAW POWER GROUP – The singer talks to Radio 2 on Monday June 15, catch up on iPlayer all week.

10. FILM REVIEW: LOOKING FOR ERIC – Ken Loach’s latest, Ooh Ah Cantona…

For more music and film news click here

Come back on Friday (June 19) for another news and reviews digest. Have a great week!

Bright Eyes’ Conor and Mike Team Up With Jim James and M Ward

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Bright Eyes' singer Conor Oberst and guitarist/producer Mike Mogis have teamed up with My Morning Jacket’s Jim James and songwriter M.Ward to make a studio album as a collective, the "Monsters of Folk." The self-titled debut release comes after playing live shows together; they went on the road i...

Bright Eyes‘ singer Conor Oberst and guitarist/producer Mike Mogis have teamed up with My Morning Jacket’s Jim James and songwriter M.Ward to make a studio album as a collective, the “Monsters of Folk.”

The self-titled debut release comes after playing live shows together; they went on the road in the US in 2004 billed as “An Evening With: Bright Eyes, Jim James and M. Ward.”

The fifteen track album, out through Rough Trade in the UK on September 22, is written, sung, played and produced by the quartet.

The Monsters of Folk track listing is set to be:

‘Dear God (sincerely M.O.F.)’

‘Say Please’

‘Whole Lotta Losin”

‘Temazcal’

‘The Right Place’

‘Baby Boomer’

‘Man Named Truth’

‘Goodway’

‘Ahead of the Curve’

‘Slow Down Jo’

‘Losin Yo Head’

‘Magic Marker’

‘Map Of The World’

‘The Sandman, the Brakeman and Me’

‘His Master’s Voice’

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Pic credit: Autumn De Wilde

The Specials Add Two New Tour Dates

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The Specials have announced that they will now play a third night at London's Hammersmith Apollo on November 27, after tour dates on Novemeber 24 and 25 sold-out as asoon as they went on sale on Friday (June 12). The band who have reformed only to celebrate their 30th anniversary have also added a ...

The Specials have announced that they will now play a third night at London’s Hammersmith Apollo on November 27, after tour dates on Novemeber 24 and 25 sold-out as asoon as they went on sale on Friday (June 12).

The band who have reformed only to celebrate their 30th anniversary have also added a second night at Wolverhampton’s Civic on November 10.

The Specials will now play the following venues later this year:

Cardiff Arena (November 1)

Bridlington Spa (2)

Blackpool Empress Ballroom (4)

Plymouth Pavilion (5)

Margate Winter Gardens (7)

Wolverhampton Civic (9, 10)

Edinburgh Corn Exchange (12)

Southend Cliffs Pavilion (18)

Brighton Centre (19)

Nottingham Rock City (21, 22)

London Hammersmith Apollo (24, 25, 27)

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Faith No More Confirmed To Play Reading and Leeds Festivals

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Faith No More have been confirmed to headline the NME/Radio One Stage at this year's Reading And Leeds Festivals following a triumphant show at this weekend's Download Festival in Donnington on Friday (June 12). Faith No More will play the Reading site on Friday August 28, then at Leeds on Sunday ...

Faith No More have been confirmed to headline the NME/Radio One Stage at this year’s Reading And Leeds Festivals following a triumphant show at this weekend’s Download Festival in Donnington on Friday (June 12).

Faith No More will play the Reading site on Friday August 28, then at Leeds on Sunday August 30. The sold-out festival is set to be headlined by Arctic Monkeys, Kings Of Leon and Radiohead.

At Donnington, a red-clad eccentric Mike Patton led the band through their first major festival show since FNM’s1998 break-up, with a hit-laden set which spanned their 28 year career. Crowd-pleasers included “Easy”, “We Care A Lot” and even a cover of Lady GaGa’s “Poker Face”.

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James Yorkston & The Big Eyes Family Players: “Folk Songs”

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The last time I wrote about James Yorkston, I seem to remember some vaguely disinterested feelings about the extended Fence Collective family resulted in a bit of a spat with that scene’s loyalists. So avoiding context this time out, Yorkston has come up with what feels like a pretty fast follow-up to “When The Haar Rolls In”. “Folk Songs” is a long-promised collection of traditional songs, credited to Yorkston & The Big Eyes Family Players – though, in truth, the general vibes are very similar to the roiling flow of Yorkston’s usual accompanists. It’s a measure of his artful character, in fact, that “Folk Songs” could comfortably pass as a normal Yorkston album of original material, so comfortably does he inhabit these songs, learned from Anne Briggs, Peter Kennedy, Nic Jones, the Collins sisters and so on. Last time I used the phrase “rickety flurries” to describe the general way Yorkston and his players flesh out the songs, and the same applies here. The Big Eyes Family Players have a sort of ruffled elegance to what they do, with the fiddler in particular being understatedly excellent. In Yorkston’s notes, for the track “Martinmas Time”, he admits, “I think [Big Eyes leader] James Green stole the bassline he plays from the great German band Can.” That isn’t immediately apparent, but it does go some way to explaining about how these songs move. I often mention Yorkston in the same breath as another great Scottish contemporary folksinger, Alasdair Roberts. Listening to “Folk Songs”, however, it’s strikingly different to Roberts’ own set of trad arr.s, “No Earthly Man”. There, Roberts mostly treats the songs in a ghostly, dolorous, unanchored way. Yorkston, on the other hand, tackles most of these songs – like the aforementioned breezy “Martinmas Time”, or the rattling “Mary Connaught & James O’Donnell” and “Low Down In The Broom” (an almost jazzy swing, in places), at a bracing clip. He’s smart, too, to avoid stereotyping himself as a Scottish singer. “I Went To Visit The Roses” (featuring a harmonium apparently found dumped on an Edinburgh street) is Irish, but its rustic propulsion transforms it into something that flies free of regional connotations; perhaps some of Yorkston’s critics might see this as an inauthentic indie-fication of traditional musics, but it simply feels warm and open-minded to me. It is a record, though, that does make me think about the idea of regional music, chiefly because of a clutch of Nottinghamshire poaching songs being included, notably the wonderful “Rufford Park Poachers”. I grew up fairly close to Rufford, and spent a lot of time there, yet I’ve never heard the song before. I’m sure that betrays a certain ignorance of classic folk songs on my part. But I can’t decide whether it’s a little sad that I was never introduced to such a fine local song in my childhood – that local culture was so resolutely ignored – or whether it’s actually healthier for songs to flourish away from enclosed communities, then reach us circuitously and with vague accumulated poignancy? Good record, anyhow.

The last time I wrote about James Yorkston, I seem to remember some vaguely disinterested feelings about the extended Fence Collective family resulted in a bit of a spat with that scene’s loyalists. So avoiding context this time out, Yorkston has come up with what feels like a pretty fast follow-up to “When The Haar Rolls In”.

Blur To Play Surprise Free London Gig Tonight

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Blur have revealed that they plan to play a surprise gig in London on Monday June 15, to celebrate the launch of their new compilation 'Midlife: The Beginner's Guide To Blur. Graham Coxon said this morning on his Twitter: "mornin all! "midlife..." is out today and to celebrate we're gonna play some...

Blur have revealed that they plan to play a surprise gig in London on Monday June 15, to celebrate the launch of their new compilation ‘Midlife: The Beginner’s Guide To Blur.

Graham Coxon said this morning on his Twitter: “mornin all! “midlife…” is out today and to celebrate we’re gonna play some songs in london! ITS FOR REAL.”

The first 170 people to get to the Brixton Academy box office at 11am will get tickets for this evening’s intimate show, the venue of the actual show to be revealed later today.

The band made their live comeback at the weekend with a tiny show at the East Anglian Railway Museum near Colchester on Saturday June 13. It was Blur’s first proper live show, as a four-piece in nearly ten years.

More information from: Blur.co.uk

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Stone Roses’ John Squire To Sell ‘Statement’ Art

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Stone Roses guitarist and singwriter John Squire is to sell a piece of band-related original artwork, "Statement" through a Christies auction early next month. The piece was created to put an end to rumours that the Roses were going to reform earlier this year. The handwritten signed and dated statement on the 10 gauge steel box outline declares: "I have no desire whatsoever to desecrate the grave of seminal Manchester pop group The Stone Roses" The auction takes place on July 1, 2009. The full listing for the sale plus images and bidding details can be found here. John Squire's first major public art gallery exhibition opens on July 7 at: galleryoldham.org.uk For more music and film news click here

Stone Roses guitarist and singwriter John Squire is to sell a piece of band-related original artwork, “Statement” through a Christies auction early next month.

The piece was created to put an end to rumours that the Roses were going to reform earlier this year. The handwritten signed and dated statement on the 10 gauge steel box outline declares: “I have no desire whatsoever to desecrate the grave of seminal Manchester pop group The Stone Roses”

The auction takes place on July 1, 2009. The full listing for the sale plus images and bidding details can be found here.

John Squire’s first major public art gallery exhibition opens on July 7 at: galleryoldham.org.uk

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Neil Young Plays First 2009 UK Festival Show

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Neil Young headlined the final night of the Isle of Wight festival on Sunday (June 14) with his first UK performance of 2009. Highlights of the set, which saw Young in a fun festival mood, included extended versions of "Hey Hey, My My (Into The Black) and "Rockin' In The Free World." Sticking to ...

Neil Young headlined the final night of the Isle of Wight festival on Sunday (June 14) with his first UK performance of 2009.

Highlights of the set, which saw Young in a fun festival mood, included extended versions of “Hey Hey, My My (Into The Black) and “Rockin’ In The Free World.”

Sticking to familiar territory with the song list, to recent shows on this tour, Young teased the festival crowd saying he was looking forward to “cop a buzz” after the show.

Earlier on the Isle of Wight main stage, the Pixies paid homage to Young, who was on straight after, by covering the Bridge Foundation-inspired song “Winterlong” as part of their first UK show in nearly two years.

The Isle of Wight festival also saw artsists such as The Prodigy, Stereophonics and Maximo Park play.

Neil Young is set to return to the UK and Ireland from June 21, with two more festival headline slots; at Glastonbury and Hard Rock Calling.

Dublin, O2 Arena, Ireland (21)

Nottingham, Trent FM Arena Nottingham, UK (23)

Aberdeen, Aberdeen Exhibition Centre, Scotland (24)

London “Hard Rock Calling”, Hyde Park (27)

Glastonbury Festival (28)

Neil Young’s Isle of Wight Festival set list was:

From Hank To Hendrix

Mother Earth

Comes A Time

Heart Of Gold

Old Man

Hey Hey, My My (Into The Black)

Mansion On The Hill

Cinnamon Girl

Fuckin’ Up

Rockin’ In The Free World

Down By The River

A Day In The Life

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Pic credit: PA Photos

Gaslight Anthem, Phoenix and more confirmed for Latitude!

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The Gaslight Anthem, Phoenix and The Rumble Strips are the latest artists to be confirmed for the Obelisk Arena at next month's Latitude Festival. The Gaslight Anthem, the Springsteen-esque band, who also happen to hail from New Jersey, will bring their breakthrough album 'The '59 Sound’ to the l...

The Gaslight Anthem, Phoenix and The Rumble Strips are the latest artists to be confirmed for the Obelisk Arena at next month’s Latitude Festival.

The Gaslight Anthem, the Springsteen-esque band, who also happen to hail from New Jersey, will bring their breakthrough album ‘The ’59 Sound’ to the lush outdoor space at the festival.

Newly added for the Uncut Arena, which is headlined by Bat For Lashes, Spiritualized and Gossip will be the Divine Comedy‘s Neil Hannon’s new cricket-inspired project The Duckworth Lewis Method. The group’s cricket songs are not to be missed!

Also in the latest festival music announcement are former Ash guitarist Charlotte Hatherley and Emmy The Great.

Tickets for Latitude, which takes place at Henham Park, Suffolk from July 16 are just about still available for £150 for the weekend, get them from nme.com/gigs.

For a chance to win a pair of tickets with Uncut.co.uk, click here for our competitions page.

Keep an eye on www.uncut.co.uk and the official website – www.latitudefestival.co.uk – for all the latest updates.

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Telstar

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TELSTAR DIRECTED BY Nick Moran STARRING Con O’Neill, Kevin Spacey, Pam Ferris *** SYNOPSIS London, the early Sixties. Gay entrepreneur Joe Meek sets up his own production company in his Islington flat. There are some great records made – but Meek’s hallucinations, paranoia and drug intake...

TELSTAR

DIRECTED BY Nick Moran

STARRING Con O’Neill, Kevin Spacey, Pam Ferris

***

SYNOPSIS

London, the early Sixties. Gay entrepreneur Joe Meek sets up his own production company in his Islington flat. There are some great records made – but Meek’s hallucinations, paranoia and drug intake threaten to derail his talent. And then, there is a murder.

***

When Margaret Thatcher chose the 1962 hit, “Telstar”, as her favourite pop song, she may have been indulging a youthful memory of its eerie Space Race melody. Possibly her advisors were aware of the circumstances of its creation: producer Joe Meek delivered the record from a home-studio in a flat on Holloway Road in north London, and it became the first record by a British group to reach number one on the American charts. Short of being a greengrocer from Grantham, Meek could hardly have been more symbolic of Little English pluck. But it’s highly improbable that the Iron Lady was aware that Meek, for all his entrepreneurial flair, was a tormented gay man at a time before homosexuality had been decriminalised, or that he killed himself after murdering his landlady.

So any consideration of Meek’s life faces a choice: whether to celebrate his genius, mock his eccentricities, or shine a light into his darkness. Because – whichever way you slice it, the story is loaded with all three. Nick Moran’s film is based on his and James Hicks’s 2005 stage play, with Con O’Neill reprising his performance as Meek. The director does his best to expand the drama by opening with a groovy blur of Routemaster buses, the 2i’s coffee bar, the neon hoardings of Piccadilly Circus, and other shorthand symbols of a London on the verge of Swinging.

But, inevitably, there’s a sense of confinement. Meek’s makeshift studio was located above a handbag shop – on the stair, in the bathroom, down the hall – so much of the action takes place at close quarters. Meek’s house band, among them Ralf Little (as guitarist Chas Hodges) and James Corden (as Clem Cattini on drums), are stationed in one room, while Meek is elsewhere, fiddling with knobs. He also has a morbid interest in the occult, which is exacerbated by the fact that his heroes, notably Buddy Holly and Eddie Cochran, are sending musical messages from the other side.

The set-up is half sitcom, half car-crash. Perhaps Meek did see his flat as a sonic fortress, but his mood-swings and his paranoia – both exacerbated by a recreational intake of amphetamine-based slimming pills – tend to crash into the laddish comedy. He comes across as an irascible version of Uncle Bryn from Gavin and Stacey, when by some accounts he was scarier than Phil Spector.

Of course, it would overstating things to suggest that Meek’s talent could be compared to Spector’s. He couldn’t read or play music, but he was a brilliant innovator. The rocket launch that opens “Telstar” was a flushing toilet played backwards, while cosmic sound effects were coaxed from a Clavioline keyboard. This, remember, was 1962. Kraftwerk were still in kindergarten.

Meek’s musical illiteracy meant that he struggled to communicate with his musicians. Here, that means saying “bum titty bum, twang twang”. Perhaps that is how he expressed himself. But the difference between now and 1962 is that camp talk is no longer the secret language of an oppressed minority. It is the spent tool of mainstream comedy. (Speaking of which: Jimmy Carr pops up in the film, browsing for suitcases.)

But let’s not be too harsh. Moran’s film is not empty nostalgia. It is not The Boat That Rocked. It should be filed alongside Stephen Frears’ Joe Orton biopic, Prick Up Your Ears, because its breezy exterior conceals a thoughtful consideration of a strange moment in British pop culture. Meek’s eccentric creativity may have been short-sighted – the film shows him dismissing a demo-tape by The Beatles – but it took root.

Meek drafted the template for boy bands. Fifteen years after “Telstar”, the world was in the grip of Rollermania, a contrived sensation curated by another gay huckster, Tam Paton. If the comparison seems contrived, remember that Bay City Rollers’ copyists The Dead End Kids had a 1977 hit with “Have I The Right?” a cover of a stomping Meek production for The Honeycombs, which packed an unnoticed gay subtext in its lyric. Here, to expose the song’s hidden meaning, “Have I The Right?” is the soundtrack to a Moroccan holiday.

Musically, Meek’s contribution is harder to quantify. He made records at a time when the juice was being squeezed from rock’n’roll. In those pre-Beatles years it made sense to wrap British youths in spangly jackets and send them into the provinces, supporting the likes of Gene Vincent (plausibly played here by Carl Barat). What the film is less good at is unpicking the weird power of Meek’s sound experiments. His interest in electronics started early, and his fascination with space was fanned by a stint as a radar operator in the RAF. (Listen to Thurston Moore’s 1997 recording of “Telstar”, and it’s plain that this strangeness endures.)

So, Meek was a space cadet. But was he also a punk? Releasing his own records may have been a side-effect being unable to fit in anywhere else, but he was also singular in his pursuit of an original sound. His business partnership with Wilfred Alonzo “Major” Banks seems implausible, not least because Banks is played by Kevin Spacey as a refugee from a Biggles adventure, but this was the era of the stiff upper lip.

Where did it all go wrong? Moran offers the pills, Meek’s shame at being arrested for cottaging, and a conspiracy of spurious lawsuits as catalysts for the producer’s collapse. But the suspicion remains that the real Meek was stranger still. Moran maps the decline, but doesn’t quite inhabit its paranoid tempests. Hearing human voices in the recorded meowing of a cat does not sound like the working of a stable mind.

And, just as you think the story couldn’t get any more bizarre, the titles roll, and it becomes apparent that Ralf Little’s character, Chas Hodges, later found fame with Chas’n’Dave. Another bit player was Mitch Mitchell, later of the Jimi Hendrix Experience, while the surname of the guitarist, Ritchie, was Blackmore.

After falling out with Meek, Major Banks sought his fortune in wheelie bins and artificial Christmas trees. You couldn’t make it up.

ALASTAIR McKAY

Gigantic

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GIGANTIC Directed by Matt Aselton Starring Paul Dano, Zooey Deschanel, John Goodman *** Brian (Dano), a mattress salesman, falls for Harriet Lolly (Deschanel) when she enters his store and falls asleep on a bed. She’s keen - “would you have any interest in having sex with me?” she asks, s...

GIGANTIC

Directed by Matt Aselton

Starring Paul Dano, Zooey Deschanel, John Goodman

***

Brian (Dano), a mattress salesman, falls for Harriet Lolly (Deschanel) when she enters his store and falls asleep on a bed. She’s keen – “would you have any interest in having sex with me?” she asks, spontaneously – but her wealthy father (Goodman) is as imposing as a grizzly bear. Brian must negotiate a path through crazy families and his own timidity. There’s also the curveball that he is about to adopt a baby from China.

Aselton’s debut, which he co-wrote, strains too hard to avoid cliches. The characters are unrealistically kooky, yet sharp-witted and flush with epigrams. Brian and Harriet often speak in non sequiturs for no other reason than to set up comic misunderstandings. There are wafts of Little Miss Sunshine, Donnie Darko and Junebug. Dano, impressive in There Will Be Blood, seems bewildered, while Deschanel plays cute like Bambi. Yet there’s an echo of Hal Ashby, or even Hal Hartley, in the subversion of easy truisms about relationships, and its primary note – mild anxiety – may make it a cult favourite.

CHRIS ROBERTS

Iggy Pop Confirms The Stooges Are In Talks To Reform Raw Power Group

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Iggy Pop has hinted yet again that a touted 'Raw Power' era Stooges reunion, with James Williamson on board is definitely "possible". Speaking to Mark Radcliffe for a BBC Radio 2 interview, to be broadcast on Monday June 15, Pop confirms that he is "in talks" with guitarist Williamson. Williamson ...

Iggy Pop has hinted yet again that a touted ‘Raw Power’ era Stooges reunion, with James Williamson on board is definitely “possible”.

Speaking to Mark Radcliffe for a BBC Radio 2 interview, to be broadcast on Monday June 15, Pop confirms that he is “in talks” with guitarist Williamson.

Williamson originally replaced Ron Asheton in 1971 and played with the Stooges for the album Raw Power, before leaving the band behind.

Iggy Pop who is in the UK to promote his new solo album Preliminaries – a “semi-concept album of New Orleans jazz and cabaret ballads, partly inspired by the cult French author Michel Houellebecq” as described in the Uncut review – also admits to Radcliffe that his language skills are not as great as the album suggests.

Pop jokingly says: “J’ai une demie connaissance de quelques mots et phrases français mais je ne parle pas français exactement.

(translation – I have a partial knowledge of a few words and phrases in French but I don’t speak French exactly.” Adding: “It’s mediocre, junior high school French I can manage.”

To hear the full interview with Pop, tune in to Radio 2 at 8pm on June 15.

It will also be available on iPlayer for 7 days after broadcast.

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Kasabian’s ‘West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum’ Inspiration Revealed

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Kasabian have commented on why they called their latest album 'West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum', as the album looks set to debut at No. 1 in the UK album chart this Sunday (June 14). Currently No 1 according to midweek chart figures, Kasabian's guitarist Sergio Pizzorno has said that the record's ...

Kasabian have commented on why they called their latest album ‘West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum’, as the album looks set to debut at No. 1 in the UK album chart this Sunday (June 14).

Currently No 1 according to midweek chart figures, Kasabian’s guitarist Sergio Pizzorno has said that the record’s title is named after the Yorkshire hospital High Royds – the same place that is also the title subject of the Kaiser Chiefs track “Highroyds”.

Pizzorno said to NME.com that: “The album isn’t about the place, I just first heard about it on a TV documentary, and the words just struck me. I love the way it looked and the feeling it evokes. Apparently, it was one of the first loony bins for the poor, before that it was mainly rich people who got treatment.”

He added: “The album cover comes from thinking about the words really. It’s us getting dressed up for a party at the asylum, looking in the mirror at the costumes.”

You can read Uncut’s four-star rated ‘West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum’ Kasabian album review here

Kasabian are set to appear for the second time on Glastonbury Festival’s Pyramid stage, this year, invited as ‘special guests’ to headliner Bruce Springsteen.

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